0:00
Yeah, it's because you're in the chat room pumping yourself.
0:03
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, June 25th. Award-winning
0:08
Kimbo Nation media assassination episode 1888. This is no agenda.
0:13
Not quite 88, 1880, there we go. We're broadcasting live
0:19
from the heart of the town. Right here in FEMA
0:21
region number six. In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
0:25
Yeah, from Refinery Row, I'm John C. Dvorak. Crackpot and
0:29
Buzzkill! In the morning! Oh, no, no, no. Crafty Glockenspiel.
0:36
You should have said with the Glockenspiel. Yeah, like a
0:39
like. A whole four seconds left in the donut. I
0:42
dropped the ball. I dropped the ball. You had four
0:43
seconds left in the donut, man. You left the donut
0:46
hole open. Okay, turn down your speakers just a little
0:51
bit. Just a tad for me. I had to turn
0:54
him up because I was listening earlier to your little
0:56
presentation and it was uh... What presentation? the songs you
1:00
play oh you mean and then uh the slop it
1:03
was too low and it was it wasn't crisp the
1:06
slop apocalypse muddy muddy what is this what is this
1:10
muddy stuff Yeah. So I turned it up. Ah, okay,
1:14
you turned it up. I gotta tell you something. It'd
1:17
be my never-ending quest to find something to watch. Tina
1:23
and I decided, hey. Let's watch the West Wing. That's
1:28
an old show. It's a very old show. Yeah. And...
1:33
Did you find it gross? Yes. And I'll tell you
1:38
why. Now, when did this show air? In the 90s,
1:41
I think. Was it around Clinton times? It was reflective
1:46
of Clinton. Yes. So it's Martin Sheen. Um... What's his
1:54
face? Rob Lowe. Uh... CJ, forget the actress's name. Anyway,
2:00
so I think it was kind of the first time
2:02
that America, or the world really, got to see how
2:07
kind of the office of the president works, how everything
2:10
works in the West Wing. And I'm sure it's... It
2:13
went from 99 to 2006. Interesting. um And I'm sure
2:21
it was. reasonably accurate. You know, the press, the... the
2:28
the deals that they're doing with all of the senators
2:31
and representatives and But I'm watching this and I'm like,
2:35
this is... Total mind control propaganda. for the Democrat Party.
2:43
Well, I think everyone knew that at the time. Well,
2:46
I never really watched it, so... I couldn't watch it
2:50
because of that. Well, we weren't doing the show then,
2:53
so otherwise I'm sure we would have discussed it. So
2:56
first of all, there's all this virtue signaling. The thing
3:01
went off. As soon as they got wind that we're
3:03
going to start this show. They stopped. They canceled the
3:06
show. yeah this virtue signaling about dei you know there's
3:12
not a single black person in the entire west wing
3:16
but then they hire some black kid to be the
3:17
president's body man And it's all this pandering. Oh, we're
3:21
so good to blacks. And then, you know, and then
3:26
Syria blows up. a plane with military doctors and 298
3:35
Americans are killed and the president wants to go and
3:38
kill. you know, like, hey, we got to deliver a
3:41
proportionate response. And everyone's like, no, that's not who we
3:45
are. *laughs* It's like, you should get some clips from
3:50
this show. You know, I might have to. And then
3:52
the whole gun control thing. Oh, my Lord. If you're
3:54
going to watch this show, you're now obliged to get
3:57
clips because I'm sure there's some gems. I mean, the
4:00
whole gun control thing where they know that it's meaningless,
4:04
but we got to do this for the base. And
4:07
then they have, so apparently there's a budget surplus. And
4:11
this one secretary is saying, well, if you have a
4:14
surplus, why don't we return it back to the American
4:16
people? And they're laughing at her. Ha ha ha! We
4:18
don't return that to... We're Democrats. It's like the whole
4:22
thing was just they didn't do that. Yes Literally literally
4:28
literally you shouldn't have voted for us. I mean it
4:30
was I'm just what and Tina's like Can you actually
4:33
handle this I said it's really educational for me This
4:37
seeped into the minds of people. It really did. That's
4:42
the idea. Yeah. Yeah, I know it's propaganda. Yeah, I
4:47
don't think anything has that power like that had back
4:49
in the day. This was it. This is what people
4:55
were watching. We didn't have streaming. We didn't have much.
5:02
Maybe, but was it better back then is the question.
5:05
Was life better? So I think we should just rip
5:09
it with your 3x3 because this is clearly the news
5:12
that everyone has to talk about. Experiment by JC Dean.
5:18
Comparing stories from A, B, C, D. CBS and NBC
5:25
It's the top news stories, everything. Oh, it's what all
5:29
the top three channels are doing, the most important things
5:32
in the world. And John has collected three of them.
5:35
So we play three by three. See, aren't they the
5:38
same? And the background on this is that. I wanted
5:41
to emphasize that there was some good stuff going on.
5:44
Besides the thing that was discussed in the newsletter, Tulsi
5:47
Gabbard. No, you're kidding. Tulsi Gabbard and the corruption in
5:54
the drug industry and the labs overseas and Obama being
5:59
a creep. And then we have a clip which I'll
6:03
play after these clips, which I can't find anywhere. All
6:08
right. Except I end up with an Andy Go clip.
6:12
I think you pronounce it no. Well, no go. No
6:16
or go. No go. Andy no go. Andy no go.
6:19
who can barely enunciate, and he's just kind of low
6:24
energy. Talk about low energy. Yeah. There's just news. There's
6:27
real interesting news. But no, no, no. No, no, no.
6:31
This is the important stuff that they want to yak
6:34
and yak about. Let's start with ABC. ABC it is.
6:37
Tonight, the iconic reflecting... pool under tight security, police on
6:41
horseback, the National Guard on patrol, and newly installed cameras.
6:46
It's been just two weeks since the $16 million taxpayer-funded
6:50
renovation. The blue paint already peeling. The water green with
6:55
algae. The pool could soon be drained for repairs. the
7:00
renovated pool would last for years. - You can be
7:04
very proud of it, it'll last for... - A million
7:06
years. - 50 to 100 years before you have to
7:09
do anything. - Today he blamed the damage on vandals,
7:12
but provided no evidence. - No evidence! - They cut
7:14
it. - No evidence! - They cut it very violently.
7:16
- He claims someone slashed the bottom of the pool
7:19
and pulled up the paint. We have a, I think,
7:22
290, 300 foot slit right through it. Probably a box
7:26
cutter or a knife of some kind. He said vandals
7:29
were also to blame for the algae blooms. They put,
7:32
somebody said, fertilizer in the water. If you put fertilizer
7:35
in the water, you get algae. Reporters pressing the president.
7:38
National Guard, please. How would these vandals have gotten so
7:42
close to do something like that? I mean, we didn't
7:47
have a lot of them then. Who would think that
7:49
somebody would go into a pool and take a knife
7:51
and start cutting it? David, the president says five people
7:54
have been arrested. We've asked multiple agencies, including the Department
7:57
of the Interior and the U.S. Park Police. For evidence
8:00
of vandalism, nothing yet. And again, David, we are now
8:03
learning that the price tag for this renovation is much
8:06
higher than we thought, more than $16 million in taxpayer
8:11
money. Oh my lord, as we come on the air
8:13
at this hour, this is just a scandal. Taxpayer-funded money.
8:17
You know, I got algae in my pool right now,
8:19
too. Algae happens. By the way, the fertilizer in the
8:23
thing is a good gag. That works? They keep saying
8:27
no evidence. Five or six people were arrested, but yet
8:30
there's no evidence? Well, how did they get arrested? Well,
8:33
there's no evidence. You're just rousting people on the street.
8:36
I mean, come on, ABC. I will say. During the
8:40
West Wing, we've only watched three or four episodes. The
8:44
reflecting pool is beautiful. It's blue. I don't know what
8:48
happened. It looked really nice on the TV. um Let's
8:54
move to, and by the way, talking about taxpayer money,
8:57
just as an aside. Yeah. Here in California, they've spent
9:01
$144 million on... On an overpass for birds, for cougars
9:11
and bears, an overpass over a freeway, I think five,
9:17
it's called an animal. thing. They're supposed to be a
9:21
walk-through so animals can walk across the freeway and go
9:27
to the other side safely. This is crazy. 144 million.
9:32
They can't finish it. This was in the episode we
9:35
watched last night. where there's some wolf And the wildlife
9:42
people want $900 million. And they actually buckle. And they,
9:48
okay, we should probably do that. you It's like this
9:53
is the same thing. Nothing changes. Nothing changes at all.
9:56
Yeah, okay, let's go to... That was ABC Let's Go.
10:00
Go to NBC. President Trump also tonight pledging to start
10:04
repairs on the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool around the 4th
10:07
of July, accusing vandals of damaging it during renovations. Gabe
10:11
Gutierrez is on the National Mall tonight. And Gabe, they
10:14
beefed up security there. Yes, Hallie, we've seen new security
10:18
cameras, National Guard members. and police officers from across the
10:21
country here. And tonight, they're also adding fencing around the
10:25
pool, as President Trump is doubling down on his claims
10:28
that vandalism's to blame for the reflecting pool's recent issues,
10:32
including aggressive algae and peeling paint. He says that someone
10:37
sliced the bottom of the pool with a knife, although...
10:40
administration has not released any evidence of that. The president
10:44
says six people have been arrested so far. The land
10:46
market recently undergone a 14 million dollar renovation that involved
10:52
painting the bottom a darker shade of blue. Now today
10:55
the pool is looking a lot less green. The company
10:59
responsible for the cleanup says The algae has been killed,
11:02
but it's been settling at the bottom of the pool
11:04
where it's now being vacuumed up. Thank you. Do you
11:09
have the clip where they talk about how it was
11:12
the president himself who did this? I don't think so,
11:16
but let's listen to the key clip, which always is
11:19
CBS. Ed, some reflecting pool news tonight. The president now
11:23
claiming vandals have attacked this pool that he's been renovating.
11:26
What can you tell us? That's right, the president says
11:29
the pool, which has turned green because of algae and
11:31
has seen part of its bottom peeled off, now has
11:34
to be drained and repaired again because he says vandals
11:37
cut a 350-foot gash along the bottom of the pool.
11:40
pool. I asked him about it. Do you have any
11:42
proof of the slit? We didn't have a lot of
11:44
them then. Who would think that somebody would go into
11:46
a pool and take a knife and start cutting it?
11:48
But do you have proof of that, that they used
11:50
a knife? Do you have photos or videos? Well, let's
11:52
put it this way. When you have a 350, I
11:54
think it's 350, not 250, a 350 foot slit from
11:59
one end to the other. You think that's proof? The
12:04
U.S. Park Police says it arrested five people on vandalism
12:07
charges and issued citations to five others. All right, well,
12:11
it seems like something's going on. They got five arrests
12:14
and five citations. And again, they're making a big fuss
12:16
over the one arrest of some Olympic guy. Let me
12:20
just... intercede with this Anderson Pooper clip. The U.S. Park
12:24
Police are asking for the public's help in identifying the
12:27
person seen in this video, the reflecting pool, in connection
12:29
to what they call, quote, a destruction of government property
12:33
investigation. They say this video was recorded last Friday at
12:36
approximately 3.36 p.m. This comes after the president again claimed
12:40
on social media that he was media today that vandals
12:42
damaged the reflecting pool. Also, the president said six people
12:45
have been arrested in connection with that alleged vandalism and
12:48
seven others have been cited for the damage. That's after
12:51
parts of the blue sealant have been seen floating in
12:54
the water with the president now claiming there's a 350
12:56
foot long gash. There's also been the algae that turned
13:00
the pool green last week, but no proof given yet
13:03
that vandals poured fertilizer into the pool to feed the
13:05
problem, as the president has also claimed just days after
13:09
work was completed on the no-bid $16 million plus renovation.
13:13
However, there's been speculation or questions raised online asking if
13:16
the presidential motorcade driving in the pool during the construction
13:20
early May along with other equipment, may have caused or
13:23
contributed to the problem with the blue coating. Recently, Adam
13:27
Kovach, a reporter with Scientific American, wrote, quote, the bottom
13:30
of the pool may also have been affected by the
13:32
presence of heavy equipment and trucks and a presidential motorcade
13:36
that drove through at one point while the coating was
13:38
being prepared and applied. Ah, there you go. He did
13:40
it himself. He did it himself. What did he drove
13:43
through? Driving through the pool? Yeah, when it was... Yeah,
13:49
he drove the motorcade. I guess they jumped right over
13:54
the edge there and just drove it all the way
13:56
down. Who knows? The fact that this was news is
14:00
just beyond me. It's dumb. You know, they're making this
14:03
big news story. And then I, as I'm listening to
14:06
all these other real news stories and the ones I
14:08
mentioned earlier, I had to listen to this. Here's the
14:12
Antifa report out of Texas, which I think would lead
14:16
the news if I was the editor. This is independent
14:19
journalist Andy Ngo. Today, Antifa learned what don't mess with
14:24
Texas really means. Two federal judges in Fort Worth sentenced
14:30
eight members of the North Texas Antifa terror cell to
14:33
a collective 450 years in federal prison. This is not
14:40
just historic. sentences in length. It's also the historic first
14:45
federal anti-terrorism convictions in U.S. history. And this is not
14:50
the end of their legal woes. They still face state
14:55
charges of domestic terrorism, conspiracy, and attempted murder. Eight other
15:02
members of the cell that were convicted are scheduled to
15:05
be federally sentenced next week. Read my report. I have
15:10
exclusive details from what happened in the courtroom. There was
15:13
crying. Read about it at ngocomment.com. Subscribe to support. You
15:20
know, PBS NewsHour did pay some attention to this. Oh,
15:23
did they? I'm good. I'm glad. Because it seems to
15:27
me that this was a suppressed story, and I think
15:32
the reason is pretty obvious. You don't want to... If
15:37
you're major mainstream, you don't want to... promote this story
15:41
you want to talk about the reflecting pool and give
15:43
people ideas yeah do you know hey you know what
15:45
these fertilizer they they say it was fertilizer i don't
15:48
know maybe it wasn't fertilizer prove it but you know
15:50
fertilizer will do that fertilizer could do it i'm just
15:53
saying why don't you test it go home get if
15:55
you can afford the fertilizer And so exactly. It's funny.
15:59
So the point is that you tell people, hey, these
16:03
guys got like 50 years in prison. One got 100.
16:06
No, one got 100. Okay, got 100 years in prison.
16:10
Don't publicize that because that might dissuade somebody from continuing
16:16
this practice of being a jerk. Here's a PBS. In
16:20
two federal courts yesterday, a group of protesters received unusually
16:24
long sentences after the Justice Department accused them of being...
16:28
Where do you think they're going to take this? Where
16:30
do you think? Unfair. What is the comparison they shall
16:34
make? I don't know. You will. The sentences range from
16:40
30 to 100 years in prison, longer than the harshest
16:44
sentence handed down to any of the convicted rioters in
16:47
the January 6th attack. And there we are. We are
16:50
20 seconds in and already is compared to January 6th.
16:54
Back on the U.S. Capitol in 2021. All of those
16:57
people have since received. pardons or commutations from President Trump.
17:02
Our justice correspondent, Allie Rogan. That's terrible. Yes, because that's
17:05
not a false equivalency. It's more. These nine protesters were
17:09
arrested after they demonstrated outside a migrant detention facility in
17:13
Texas last year. During the protest, a police officer was
17:16
shot in the neck. He survived. Their case is the
17:19
first to incorporate new guidance from a presidential declaration last
17:23
year that labels Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. That's
17:28
despite the fact that Antifa is a decentralized movement, not
17:31
a single organization. It's not real. And that there is
17:34
no federal charge of domestic terrorism under existing U.S. law.
17:39
Oh, okay. That's a good point. Okay, I'm giving you,
17:43
right off the bat, I'm giving you a borderline clip
17:45
of the day for getting that one and topping me.
17:49
Oh, but it's not over yet. Let's bring in Paul
17:52
Butler. To discuss the implications of this sentencing, I'm joined
17:55
by Georgetown Law Professor... Oh, yeah, the implications. of the
17:59
sentencing. Don't! Do it! Former federal prosecutor Paul Butler. What's
18:06
that? Yeah, the implication, don't shoot a cop. Good to
18:09
see you. Welcome back to the NewsHour. It's great to
18:11
be here. I'd like to ask first about these decades-long
18:15
sentences that were passed down. The longest was 100 years
18:19
in... prison. Most of the others received sentences of 50
18:22
to 70 years. You're familiar with the allegations against these
18:26
defendants. Are these sentences typical? No, they're not. The sentences
18:31
are extremely harsh. They're sentences that are more typical for
18:36
people who have committed murder or stolen. millions of dollars.
18:41
Compare these defendants to two other sets of defendants. One,
18:45
they're co-defendants who were accused of the same conduct, but
18:49
pled guilty. They're going to be sentenced next month. Well,
18:53
that's what happens. If you plead guilty, you get a
18:56
different sentence, usually less. funny enough. Looking at around 15
19:01
years, we can also think of the 1,500 people who
19:05
were prosecuted in connection with the attack on the Capitol
19:09
on January 6, 2021. The most any of those defendants
19:13
received was 22 years compared with the 30 to 70
19:18
years that these defendants received. Okay, so let's just set
19:22
it all out and just please, people. Antifa is not
19:26
real. You can't label it a terrorist organization. It doesn't
19:30
exist. It doesn't come from anywhere. It's just not real.
19:33
The birds are not real. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch
19:36
released a statement in which he said, in part, the
19:39
sentences handed down today may... terrorists who attack law enforcement
19:45
and federal facilities will face swift and uncompromising justice. Calling
19:49
them Antifa terrorists. What do we know about Antifa and
19:53
whether or not this terrorism label is really accurate? It's
19:56
not real. It's just not real. I'm telling you. Never
19:58
heard of them. What is that?
20:00
FIFA is not a formal organization. It doesn't have a
20:03
leadership structure. They have a logo. Yeah, they do have
20:06
a logo. Who did the logo? And why do they
20:10
all use it? First, it's more of a network of
20:14
people on the far left who are opposed to fascism.
20:18
President Trump has labeled it. a domestic terrorist organization. Now,
20:23
there is such a thing as a foreign terrorist organization,
20:26
but the law doesn't provide any classification for domestic terrorists.
20:31
So it's a misclassification. They should all be let go.
20:35
More significantly... Five of the alleged Antifa members. pled guilty
20:41
and they supported the prosecution. But on the stand, they
20:47
denied that they and any of the co-defendants were members
20:52
of Antifa. They said what brought them together was that
20:55
they were a member of a book group, of that
20:58
Emma Goldman. They're a member of a book club, John.
21:01
I knew those book clubs were bad news. Nothing good
21:07
comes from book clubs. Antifa. They said what brought them
21:10
together was that they were a member of a book
21:13
group. Why did he yell book when he says that?
21:17
Because he's outraged by it all. It's a book group.
21:20
A book group. Together is that they were a member
21:24
of a book group of the Emma Goldman Reading Society
21:29
that read books by revolutionary authors. Named after a famous
21:34
anti-fascist protester. Yes, okay. Well, I have one more. We'll
21:39
just wrap this up because... It's clearly a message. What
21:43
sort of message do you think the Department of Justice
21:46
was sending? John, let me ask you. When the Department
21:51
of Justice sentences people to 30 to 100 years, what
21:55
kind of a message do you think that is sending
21:57
to people? To protesters, by the way. They're telling them
22:00
to stop. protesters. It's protesters. In pursuing these sentences. And
22:06
do you think we're going to see this in future
22:08
cases against protesters, especially those who are protesting? These were
22:13
terrorists. They tried to kill some guys. It was like
22:17
an ambush. It was terrible. That Texas story was... ridiculous.
22:22
And remember that terrorism by definition is a political act
22:28
which this clearly was they're even saying it in this
22:30
report so it's a it's that's why you get a
22:33
classification of a terrorist administration policies like the immigration crackdown
22:38
last year after the murder of charlie kirk President Trump
22:42
signed the National Security Presidential Memo 7. It's a directive
22:48
that says that the government should use its law enforcement
22:52
resources to focus on domestic terrorist organizations. And he said
22:59
domestic terrorist ideology. could include anti-capitalist views, people who have
23:06
extreme views on race and gender and immigration, and even
23:12
people who are opposed to what the director described as
23:17
traditional teachings on marriage and the family. The concern is
23:22
that prosecutions based on this directive chill free speech. People
23:29
who demonstrate, even people who are resisting the administration, have
23:35
First Amendment rights to free speech and freedom of assembly.
23:41
cross the line, as these defendants did with acts of
23:45
vandalism, of course they should be brought to justice. The
23:49
concern is when people are labeled terrorists based on their
23:53
political views, that chills free speech. Chills. Chills. Chills. You
23:59
know what? Here's my suggestion. Why don't these members of
24:03
the book club start a podcast? You can make a
24:07
difference. It would be a good one to listen to.
24:09
You can start a podcast. You can make a difference
24:11
with a podcast. There may be one already. You don't
24:13
know. Do you? No, I don't. There's too many podcasts
24:17
to keep track of. I know you've tried. Oh, it's
24:20
impossible, especially with the... Slopcast now. tens of thousands of
24:26
episodes of text-to-speech nonsense. You should just go look. Charlie
24:33
Kirk podcast. Oh, my goodness. There are a hundred of
24:36
them. Charlie Kirk. Really? Oh, yeah. What they do is
24:40
their systems are set up. So whenever something hits the
24:43
news... Then immediately they spin up a podcast about it.
24:48
So people go looking. What kind of listenership do they
24:51
get? Oh, it's a total scam. So they go to
24:55
Megaphone, which is Spotify's subsidiary or one of the other
24:59
podcast hosts. And... So you get a free account. So
25:03
it costs nothing to spin this up. And they jam
25:07
two ads at the front of the podcast. And then
25:10
there's been an incredible increase, funny enough, about 30% now
25:15
of all podcast downloads, which is this ridiculous metric the
25:19
podcast industrial complex tries to use to... sell ads. which
25:23
we don't do because value for value is the true
25:25
way. And there's been this increase of web browsers listening
25:31
to podcasts. So it's all scams. So you fire up.
25:35
podcast and then you fire up your you know your
25:38
30 different web browser clients around the around the world
25:42
and it starts downloading and then you can start making
25:44
money if as long as you have enough of them
25:47
You know, if you have enough episodes, enough podcasts, and
25:51
you have enough. you know phony downloads i'm just going
25:54
to call this phony it's fake it's phony downloads Then
25:58
you can make some money. But this is ephemeral. You
26:01
can't make enough money. It's going to go away eventually.
26:04
But no one's actually listening. I mean, I'm sure that
26:07
some people listen to it. You know, I've listened to
26:10
a text-to-speech podcast of something I was really interested in.
26:13
I got through most of it. They're short. It's okay.
26:17
like financial news that no one has the time to
26:22
voice it. Okay. But it's not worth listening to two
26:27
ads. So that's that's the advertisers have a clue here.
26:33
No, they're idiots. This isn't doing them any good. I
26:36
think they're idiots. It's based on charts and dashboards. Look,
26:42
boss. I'm a media buyer. I got a lot of
26:46
downloads. You sound just like one. That's one of your
26:48
better voices. And they're 19 years old. This is not
26:50
a woman. No offense. Yeah, I can't do that. They're
26:53
19 years old. Clearly, she or he knows about podcasts.
26:59
I bought all the best podcasts. I've got to do
27:04
a good job. It's a medium buyer. Yeah, it's the
27:08
media buyers. I know. I know exactly what you're talking
27:11
about. Yeah, they just show a dashboard. Oh, the dashboard
27:14
looks good. Number go up. Hockey stick to the right
27:18
and up is good. No. No, no, no. No, that's
27:23
not, that is not a way. And, you know, I
27:25
told you about that whole group. They're trying to figure
27:28
out how to harmonize. podcast listening across the whole spectrum,
27:34
including YouTube videos. So if someone has listened to a
27:39
podcast for 30 seconds, that's a play. That's a play.
27:43
They listened to the show. They heard all the ads.
27:45
That's a play. Move on, people. It's so fake. Is
27:50
it any different from Nielsen? It's just an agreed fake.
27:54
Everyone's soaking the advertisers. What is this sentence? I know
28:00
half of my advertising money is... is working, I just
28:03
don't know which half. Yeah. Yeah. Nothing has changed. That's
28:08
why value for value. I don't want to rip off
28:10
some advertisers and I don't want to have to show
28:12
them a dashboard. Can you imagine that? John, it's time
28:16
for the meeting with the advertisers. God. Do you have
28:19
the dashboard? That's it. That's you, Adam. I got to
28:23
do a newsletter. Do you have the dashboard ready? Could
28:27
we please see the stats? Get the dashboard ready. Could
28:29
we please see the stats for the dashboard? I mean,
28:31
for the newsletter. Do you have the open rate? We
28:33
need the open rate in the dashboard. I need to
28:35
show that. Come on, man. Value for value is the
28:39
way. It's the international lifestyle that we chose. We'll be
28:45
thanking people later for supporting us. Yeah. There was a
28:49
little thing I caught, you know, amongst all of the
28:52
Iran news. There was one thing I caught and I
28:54
delved into it and I thought it was kind of
28:56
interesting. It's not really widely discussed. This is the president,
29:00
you know. He was asked... outside about hey you know
29:04
it doesn't seem like anyone's going to inspect anything you're
29:07
giving a trillion dollars to iran and doing all this
29:11
and i caught something in this one They're wrong. They're
29:20
wrong. They know they're wrong. They told us. and we
29:23
have it down 100% inspections. From your view, Mr. President,
29:32
when will those inspectors actually be on the ground? Nobody's
29:43
ever had done this should have been done for 47
29:45
years by other presidents and we have Iran in a
29:48
position where Their military has been totally wiped out, their
29:52
leadership has been wiped out, their radar has been wiped
29:55
out, everything has been wiped out. They have not a
29:59
good negotiating position.
30:00
But despite that and money that will be taken out
30:04
of Iran is going to go to our farmers to
30:07
give corn, soybeans, wheat to Iran because they have a
30:11
hunger problem. They have a food problem. They have a
30:14
medicine problem. They got a lot of problems and they
30:16
have an inflation. Their inflation now just at 300 percent.
30:20
We're doing very well with Iran. They got 99 problems
30:23
and a nuke ain't it. So I heard that. I'm
30:25
like, hey, let me find someone talking about that. There
30:28
weren't any real reports, but I did find this on
30:31
Bloomberg where Vice President J.D. Vance explains how this is
30:37
going to work. I want to say one last thing.
30:39
I've seen some misreporting about frozen or unfrozen Iranian assets.
30:45
One of the other things that we wanted to do,
30:47
and it wasn't as high of a priority for us
30:49
for obvious reasons, but we wanted to make sure that
30:51
we set up a process where if... if we ever
30:55
unfreeze Iranian assets, we can ensure that those, that that.
30:59
money, that Iranian money, goes to help the people of
31:03
Iran and not to fund terrorism. So Jared Kushner actually
31:06
came up with a very interesting solution with the Qataris,
31:10
where basically, again, if there is any frozen Iranian assets
31:16
that are unfrozen, then we have approval over that process.
31:20
The Qataris have approval over that process. And then the
31:24
money would actually go to buy American soy, American corn,
31:28
and American wheat for the benefit of the Iranian people.
31:31
And as much as I see some of the press
31:34
misreporting on this, and of course buttressed by what the
31:37
Iranians are saying, or not all Iranians, I want to
31:39
be clear. There are a lot of Iranians who are
31:41
telling the truth about what happened yesterday, but you see
31:44
some social media reporting that gets this wrong. But fundamentally,
31:47
what Jared and the Qataris and the entire team here
31:50
and Bergenstock accomplished is, to me, a classic Trump deal,
31:55
where if Iranian assets are ever unfrozen, they're going to
31:59
go to make... American farmers richer and to feed the
32:03
Iranian people. Well, that sounds like a decent deal. No
32:07
one told me that. Yeah, I heard that too, and...
32:11
Do they use soy? What are they going to do
32:17
with it? It's like the Chinese... chew up soy like
32:20
there's no tomorrow they use it for all kinds of
32:22
things they're eating fermented they make soy sauce they do
32:25
this they do that they're eating mulch right now So
32:28
soy would be a plus. Ow! I mean, I... It's
32:37
so interesting to see all the hate. When I heard
32:40
that the first thing I thought though was the soy
32:43
thing because You know, for soy oil, I mean, what
32:47
I just didn't I still don't understand. I wish is
32:51
there an Iranian out there, one of our boots on
32:54
the ground folk that can tell me what they would
32:57
do with soy. Do this is like some major thing
32:59
they have. need for in Iran? You're really antscrewing on
33:04
this one. I mean, come on. Well, do you think
33:06
that? I don't think so. Because that's what his main
33:10
point was. No, it wasn't his main point. He had
33:13
a whole bunch of other... medicine. Uh, tacos. Yeah, tacos
33:19
in there. Tacos? What tacos? Some Big Macs, some Big
33:22
Macs, corn. Corn is, they need corn. He has said
33:26
corn. Everybody needs corn. You're just harping on the soy.
33:30
I'll stop. I don't know anything about soy anymore. The
33:35
whole reason for that is because gay General Patton Besant...
33:40
He's a soybean farmer, so he needs to get a
33:42
little Benny in all this. The price of soy needs
33:45
to go up. This is market manipulation. If anything. I
33:49
do have a counter story here from PBS that's rather
33:54
short. Let's focus now on some of the economic effects
33:57
of the war with Iran. About a third of the
33:59
world's... fertilizer supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and
34:03
its effective closure is causing shortages and price spikes for
34:07
fertilizer during the crucial spring planting season. I think this
34:11
spike is because Antifa is buying fertilizer and putting it
34:15
in the reflecting pool. That has led to fears of
34:17
both elevated food prices and lower crop... yields across the
34:21
globe. This morning, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told PBS News'
34:26
Liz Landers that, quote, everything was on the table to
34:29
fix the problem for American farmers. Clearly this, I think
34:32
we're at 36 days for the conflict, has elevated the
34:35
issue of fertilizer. important it is for American farmers and
34:39
frankly for our food supply. The good news is that
34:42
about 80% of our farmers actually last fall locked in
34:46
their fertilizers. So as we're moving into planting season, it's
34:49
only about 20 to 25% of our farmers that didn't
34:51
lock that in. We're working directly to ensure that we
34:55
can get them what they need and it won't bankrupt
34:58
them. Yeah, she makes a good point. Today's modern farmer,
35:02
they hedge. They buy all kinds of things ahead of
35:05
time for this very reason. So... I don't know if
35:09
it's really that bad. They had a whole bunch of
35:11
farmers calling in. Yeah, it's bad. It was real bad.
35:15
You know, it's interesting to me that the left who
35:19
wants to banish... Nitrogen. Nitrogen. It pretty much banished the
35:23
oil industry. How about nitrogen? And the oil industry provides
35:28
fertilizer for the farmers. It provides fuel. It provides helium
35:33
for the semiconductor business. You know, if you want to
35:37
kill Western civilization, yeah, kill the oil industry. Yeah, they
35:44
do want to kill that. Down with capitalism. Yes, it's
35:49
horrible. I don't get it. I mean, why does anyone
35:52
fall for that? Well, I'm seeing on the quad screen
35:56
all day that the Democrat Party is now really worried
35:59
about how many members are. Out and out socialists. Well,
36:04
that's because I don't have a clip. Or maybe I
36:07
do, but I don't know where it is. I can't
36:08
find it. My list is too long. Of the, you
36:11
know, four of these Mamdani Democrat socialists got. nominated or
36:19
beat their primary contender in the Democrat. party knocked out
36:22
normal Democrats in Democrat-controlled areas where they're going to automatically
36:28
win and end up in Congress, and they all hate
36:30
the country. Literally. Well, I do have a very short
36:34
Mamdani clip because it went around under the heading of...
36:40
Not exactly, but it is. concerning what he says here.
37:02
Government can provide the resources. Yeah, get ready. Get ready
37:06
for your immigrants. What did he just say? He said,
37:09
what did he say? Bring more people over and we'll
37:11
just pay for it. That's exactly what he said. Hasim
37:13
alaykum. That's exactly what he said. Which I found. Somewhat
37:21
distressing. Yeah, I would think. Why would you do that?
37:26
These New Yorkers are stupid. There's a very good, if
37:30
anyone wants to watch it, a good 45 minutes Nick
37:33
Shirley special. Oh! His most recent one was walking down
37:37
Canal Street in New York. In New York, which used
37:41
to be, I always used to go to Canal Street.
37:43
Canal Street was the best. Let me go buy a
37:45
Folex. You could go there and get good quality knockoffs.
37:50
Bags, watches, belts. Bags, watches, pins, all kinds of things.
37:54
Chinese. It was legendary. When I lived in New York
37:58
and friends from Holland would come over to stay, they'd
38:00
be like. Hey, can you take me to Canal Street?
38:03
I want to go to Canal Street to buy a
38:05
Rolex. Yeah, you bet. We'd have to go every single
38:08
time. And you could actually walk there. It was safe.
38:11
It was safe. But now, besides the fact that it's
38:15
expanded to an extreme and it's run by North Africans
38:20
and the Chinese have been rousted. When I was Chinese,
38:23
it was good because you'd walk down Canal Street and
38:26
you'd look at the stuff on the sidewalk and then
38:28
some Chinese lady would come up and say, hey, I
38:31
got a better bag for you. I got a good
38:33
price. Come on inside. Yeah, and they'd take you in
38:35
the back. And it was kind of freaky because am
38:37
I going to get killed here? Well, if you didn't
38:40
get killed the first time, you're not going to get
38:42
killed. down into the basement like look at this bag
38:45
oh that's just like the real deal well i got
38:48
some rolexes from that area that were uh not the
38:53
you know the ones that they sell on the street
38:55
are the usually quartz movement But they have some, they
38:58
have for everyone to spend the big dough. like up
39:03
to $40 for a watch when those ones on the
39:06
street are like $15. But the $40 watch and that
39:10
little higher sometimes, they had an actual movement that included
39:15
self-winding movement inside and they had a smooth second hand.
39:20
They're perfect. There's no way that unless you're a real
39:24
expert at it, you could tell it wasn't a fake.
39:26
I love the Rolexes that had the battery mechanism in
39:29
it. You could literally see it going click, click, click.
39:33
Click, click, click, yeah. All right, so first of all,
39:36
I'm amazed that you were allowed to. Is it legal
39:38
for you to watch a Nick Shirley documentary in California?
39:41
I thought that was illegal. You can't watch it anymore.
39:44
Wasn't that Nick Shirley Law? The Nick Shirley law was
39:50
passed, but it means that Nick Shirley or anybody, no
39:53
journalist, nobody can go around busting these... schools
40:00
were these fake operations that are all throughout California and
40:03
reveal that they're run by migrants. Yeah. No. That's basically
40:08
what the law was passed. We can't do that. We
40:11
can't do that. No, we can't do that. You don't
40:13
want to do that because it's money. It's money, you
40:15
know. They're funneling the money so somebody some Some creep
40:20
in the background can get all the money. So I
40:24
think what was most interesting that happened yesterday, politically speaking,
40:28
about Iran is... And it was kind of odd how
40:31
it happened. First, there was a resolution. You know, the
40:37
War Powers Act was enacted, which means. Hey, we don't
40:41
think you should do war. which is, we've discussed this
40:45
on the show a couple episodes ago, go to bingit.io,
40:49
is deemed by most to be unconstitutional. And if Congress
40:53
really wanted to stop war, they would just stop payments
40:57
to the War Department. Yeah. But they don't do that.
41:00
They send a strongly worded letter. And then the president
41:05
went to have lunch with him. And all of a
41:07
sudden, Cassidy got read in. And he's like, oh, yeah,
41:12
no, I think we should probably have a do over
41:15
and let's vote against it. Did you get any clips?
41:20
I didn't hear about Cassidy going backwards. Oh, yeah. Oh,
41:24
yeah. Let me see if I have. He did. He
41:29
got they took him to the to the White House.
41:32
And they read him in. He's like, oh, okay. All
41:35
the reporting I heard was they just got into a
41:37
big argument and Cassidy's a dick. No, no, no. Let
41:41
me see if I have it here. Let me see.
41:45
Hold on. I have some clip on this. I might
41:47
even have a clip about it. Let me see. Let's
41:50
see if this is it. A shouting match on Capitol
41:53
Hill as the president met with Republicans behind closed doors.
41:57
Sources say Trump lashed out at. senators who have voted
42:00
symbolically to limit his war powers. Trump reportedly calling Louisiana
42:04
Senator Bill Cassidy a lunatic. He asked, why would anybody
42:09
vote for the war power guy? As he continued, I
42:12
said, is that a rhetorical question, or would you like
42:15
to really know? He said, I'd like to know. I
42:18
stood. and said you have not told the American people
42:21
what's going on. Cassidy, who recently lost his reelection bid,
42:24
admits losing his temper. I'm not going to be bullied
42:29
when I'm trying to get answers from the American people.
42:31
Yeah, that's not the clip. Well, here's a clip from
42:33
the BBC that is the one that I was kind
42:36
of basing stuff on. This is Trump war powers Cassidy.
42:40
Yeah. President Trump has had a fiery closed-door meeting with
42:46
Republicans in the U.S. Senate where he confronted them over
42:50
a vote on Tuesday when four Republicans joined Democrats in
42:54
rebuking him over the Iran war. More details from Harold
42:58
Griffith. The president's daily assertion... The war in Iran has
43:01
gone very well, hasn't convinced everyone within his own party.
43:05
A meeting with Republican senators intended to ease relations has
43:09
said to have become angry and confrontational. There were reports
43:12
of a shouting match between Mr. Trump and one critical
43:15
senator, Bill Cassidy. He's sided with Democrats on a measure.
43:19
calling for military action to be halted unless Congress gave
43:23
its approval. Mr. Trump, etc., demanded that Mr. Cassidy sit
43:27
down as he questioned the president. The center later told
43:30
reporters he wouldn't be bullied. Here's the article. This is
43:34
from ABC. In reversal, Senate votes to block... War Powers
43:39
Resolution Delivering Trump a Win. Hours after President Donald Trump
43:44
blasted Senator Bill Cassidy for supporting a war powers resolution
43:47
that narrowly passed the Senate on Tuesday, Cassidy helped to
43:50
deliver Trump a victory by voting with the majority of
43:52
Republicans late Wednesday to block a separate resolution aimed at
43:56
reining in the president's war powers. And even... Rand Paul
44:01
voted present instead of against. So, and apparently, from what
44:07
I understand. um Rubio. I think it was Rubio. Took.
44:13
Cassidy back to the White House, sat him down and
44:16
said, look, here's what's going on. We're trying to ruin
44:19
the British Empire and the city of London. You think
44:23
he did that? I don't know. Yeah, so shut up.
44:26
And then he went back and they voted against it.
44:31
South of the South. Now. Clearly the news, the news,
44:36
has not told us this. And we still think that.
44:39
Yes, we do. In fact, all these clips I have
44:43
just back me up and don't give me the obvious
44:48
new news. They didn't bring it up. No. Or the
44:50
Rubio part, which it would be Rubio that would have
44:53
to pull that stunt. Yes. Let's look up. There's a
44:57
couple of. things. Try this. Trump gas prices war powers.
45:01
Yeah, okay. President Trump tonight at the massive Pennsylvania plant
45:06
that makes Mack trucks, touting the U.S. economy with himself
45:10
in the driver's seat. Oil is going to come charging
45:13
down, and with oil comes everything else. to falling oil
45:17
and gas prices after the preliminary peace deal with Iran.
45:21
Ship tracking data showing crossings through the Strait of Hormuz
45:24
nearly tripling this week, but with traffic still below pre-war
45:28
levels. And now a new flashpoint has emerged in the
45:31
negotiations. The U.S. saying Iran has agreed to allow U.N.
45:35
nuclear inspectors in. But the Iranian regime claims it made
45:39
no new commitments. The president was asked about those denials
45:43
today. They're wrong. They know they're wrong. They told us
45:46
inside and we have it down. That's the same clip
45:49
where he said we're going to take their money and
45:51
buy soy. I'm sure that NBC left that part out.
45:57
Right, I'd cancel the meetings right now. The president's set
46:00
to speak with Republican senators largely skeptical of the initial
46:04
deal behind closed doors tomorrow. I think we've got to
46:07
give the president an opportunity to get his work done
46:10
while at the same time making clear that none of
46:12
us trust the Iranians. I think anybody that's been critical
46:16
of it has to be educated, even if they're friends
46:19
of mine, because we have Iran in a position that
46:23
nobody's ever had. Everything has been wiped out. But tonight,
46:26
the Senate with a rare rebuke of the president's war
46:29
effort in Iran, joining the House in voting to direct
46:32
the president to end it or seek congressional approval. Four
46:35
Republicans joining nearly all. Democrats to pass the symbolic resolution,
46:40
which does not have the force of law. Garrett, you
46:46
are just getting in a new response from the White
46:47
House to that Senate vote. And the Democrats have pushed
46:59
this effort to end a war that the White House
47:01
says is now already over. Yeah, I thought you were
47:04
going to play this bit, which is about the gas
47:07
prices. Trump also tackling another issue, gas prices. He's asking
47:12
the Justice Department to investigate whether oil companies are price
47:15
gouging, keeping prices at the pump high, even as... oil
47:18
prices fall in the wake of the Iran peace deal.
47:22
The oil prices have come down so much and we
47:25
are not seeing anything at the pump by comparison to
47:28
where it should be. We should be, in my opinion,
47:31
at... $2.25 right now at the pump. And we're higher
47:36
than that. Yeah, he's threatening to investigate. Investigate price fixing.
47:41
Which is probably... You know, these guys, they don't react
47:45
that quickly. No, it takes a couple of weeks. They're
47:47
filled up. The gas stations are filled with expensive gasoline
47:52
they got to sell at expensive prices. He should know
47:54
that. I'm surprised. I don't know what to do. There's
47:56
something... He's just... He's just showboating there. He did that
48:02
speech, which is the beginning of your clip. He brought
48:05
out an old routine. But he delivered it so much
48:09
better this time. about um the most favored nation's status
48:15
for medicine. The fat pill bit. No, he joked with
48:21
his buddy, the guy was still fat. Oh, it's so
48:23
good. I just- You have it? Yeah, I have it,
48:26
of course. Under my administration, the most favored nation agreements
48:29
on drug prices that we just did are delivering the
48:33
largest prescription drug price cuts in history. with numbers like
48:38
400 500 and even a 600 reduction from where it
48:43
was how does that work help me understand the numbers
48:47
if something is a hundred dollars and you have a
48:50
600 reduction is it then do you get 600 paid
48:53
do they give you 600 dollars It's a mathematical trick.
48:58
It's not good. Think of that. That alone should win
49:01
us the midterm. And the fake news back there refuses
49:05
to talk about it because they know how good it
49:07
is because they can't produce it. They've been trying to
49:10
do it for years. Favored Nation. We pay the highest
49:13
drug price in the world by far. As an example.
49:17
For the fat drug, which Bo and Tony don't need
49:20
to take. I don't know who Bo and Tony are.
49:22
They're probably, you know, the machinists there. But now he
49:25
gets into his favorite bit. And he really, he does
49:28
a good job this time. But a lot of people
49:30
are taking, who takes the fat drug? So in New
49:33
York, think of it, it was costing a fortune. Many,
49:37
many times it was costing $1,300. And in London, it
49:43
was $87. And a friend of mine who's extremely fat,
49:47
sloppy, but very brilliant. He's a brilliant businessman, but he's
49:51
a slob, there's no question about it. Very neurotic person,
49:56
which you need some... But he called me up, he
49:58
used to call me Donnie.
50:00
That's a sign of great respect. But he said, President,
50:06
I just came over here and I bought, I won't
50:08
say Ozempic or whatever the hell it was, but I
50:11
bought the fat drug. I said, I didn't know you
50:14
use it because it's not working. Oh, that's a trick.
50:19
That's a good one. He's begging me not to use
50:21
his name because I won't, but he's a very successful
50:23
guy. He's actually a pretty well-known guy, brilliant business guy,
50:26
worth a lot of money. And he checked, he just,
50:29
you know, he said, well, how come... In London, I
50:32
just sent out and I'm paying $87 and in New
50:35
York, I'm paying $1,300. I say because that's the way
50:40
the prices are rigged. I just thought it was great.
50:43
It's not working. Yeah, he didn't adjust. It's smoother. It's
50:48
good. It's really good. I think it's nice. It's funny.
50:52
At least there's some funny. There's some funny in there.
50:55
Uh, let's see, what are we yammering about? the About
51:00
America 250, about the fair, it's no good. Oh, yeah,
51:04
I got a rundown from the BBC on the fair.
51:07
It's a little long, but it covers everything. 250 fair
51:12
rundown BBC. The 4th of July this year marks two
51:14
and a half centuries. These are really over-modulated, John. I
51:17
don't know how I got that way. Well... Operator error
51:21
is what I'd say. Well, that's what I'd have to
51:23
assume. Yeah. The 4th of July this year marks two
51:26
and a half centuries since the adoption of the Declaration
51:28
of Independence in 1776. And Donald Trump has just opened
51:33
the Great American State Fair in Washington. It's described as
51:37
an exposition across the Capitol. which will celebrate various aspects
51:40
of American culture and history. Those timeless American principles did
51:45
not just win a revolution, but they built us into
51:49
the greatest, strongest, and most exceptional nation the world has
51:54
ever known. There has never been anything like it. the
51:58
United States of America, and together we are making it.
52:02
bigger and better and stronger and far more exceptional. than
52:08
ever before. You're exceptional. So we're calling it the semi-quincentennial
52:12
celebration, which is a real mouthful. I spoke to our
52:15
correspondent who's at the event, Hal Griffith. It's a mixture
52:18
of nostalgia, talking about the USA's 250-year history and pulling
52:23
on that sort of a state fair and childhood memories
52:26
that some people have. And then, yes, it's also got
52:28
the hallmarks of a Trump rally, lots of MAGA hats,
52:31
plenty of stars and stripes, and the main act of
52:34
the president himself, who, after some musicians, pulled out. is
52:38
at the top of this bill. Yeah, just tell us
52:40
what the festivities will involve over the next few days.
52:44
And it seems like these celebrations come for weeks. Yeah,
52:47
16 days all together in what, well, one person from
52:50
the stage described would be the most epic party in
52:53
all American history. What does it mean? Well, it means
52:56
lots of stalls. on the Mall between the Monument and
53:00
Capitol Hill. And then events like this where people come
53:04
out and cheer, hear some singing and get all patriotic
53:07
together. If you want to spend $20 on a roast
53:10
turkey or on maybe some pretzels, then there's lots of
53:13
food from around America on offer as well. So as
53:16
I said, it's drawing on that sort of sense of...
53:18
nostalgia and patriotism, but there are political overtones and a
53:21
military overtone as well. In fact, we just had a
53:24
B-2 bomber fly overhead at the end of one song,
53:29
and the words military might come up on the screen,
53:31
showing American military dominance and sending that message that America
53:37
sees itself as the most... powerful country in the world
53:39
still. That's right, Limey. That's right. That's who we are.
53:44
We have people from Fredericksburg. They're all going together. They're
53:49
going to go to this thing? Oh, yeah. I'd love
53:51
to go to it. They're excited. They're taking the kids.
53:54
They've got all their American flag outfits. Of course. Because
53:58
it's 4th of July. It's a big party. And then
54:02
all the socialists. It's no good. Military might. Yeah. That's
54:08
what we do. We have drill teams. We've got drum
54:11
cadences. We've got flyovers. Yes. We rock! Come on! Now,
54:18
the president is getting scammed. I got to tell you.
54:21
This whole... I gotta tell you. I gotta tell you.
54:24
He's being scammed. He doesn't know anything about AI, computers,
54:28
or anything. And so now this report comes out. You
54:33
can tell because he talks about quantum. Oh, I'm getting
54:36
to that. That's the punchline. First, we go. Back to
54:39
the Mythos AI, why all of a sudden we had
54:42
to shut down Fable or, you know, Mythos, Fable 5,
54:48
Mythos, whatever these models were. Here is the bullcrap story.
54:52
So you'll recall the way that we got here is
54:55
Anthropic developed Mythos. And they... restrained themselves from releasing it
55:00
and partnered with the federal government, allowed access to a
55:04
few sort of trusted large players. And the concern there
55:08
was that Mythos was so powerful, it could easily identify
55:12
all of these security glitches, where it would make it
55:15
very easy for nefarious actors to hack. This is some
55:19
quality reporting, ladies and gentlemen. When we talk about security
55:22
glitches, you know it's quality. It's so powerful, it could
55:25
easily identify all of these security glitches, where it would
55:30
make it very easy for... You know what? Windows, that's
55:32
a security glitch. Various actors to hack into various systems.
55:37
Fable 5 was... supposed to be mythos with a lot
55:39
of guardrails. So it was supposed to be sort of
55:41
like the safe version of mythos. Then you have Amazon
55:45
reportedly coming in and saying, hey, we found some problems
55:47
with Babel 5. We don't think that this is tenable.
55:50
We think that this is unsafe. The Trump administration reacts.
55:53
They say, okay, no one, no foreign national can have
55:55
access to this. This basically de facto makes it. so
55:58
that Fable 5 has to be pulled. So all of
56:01
that is a long way of saying we're now getting
56:02
some more information about mythos and just how powerful and
56:07
potentially concerning it really was. Let's put this Economist excerpt
56:12
up on the screen here. So they said here that
56:15
on June 11th, Mark Warner... The vice chair of the
56:18
Senate Intelligence Committee said that General Joshua Rudd, who leads
56:21
the National Security Agency and the Pentagon Cyber Command, had
56:24
told him mythos broke into almost all of our classified
56:29
systems, not in weeks, but in hours. In hours, mythos
56:35
was able to break into all of our most. classified
56:38
systems. Okay, so that's the story. But if you really
56:41
go and dig a little bit deeper than these. these
56:45
breaking points people. So they did the same thing that
56:52
I think was Anthropic did with the, oh, look, if
56:55
you let the AI into your... email it'll start blackmailing
56:59
you this was a completely controlled controlled environment that you
57:03
know they found some vulnerabilities that are quite frankly not
57:07
all that shocking they didn't break in and take anything
57:11
you know so it's it's another marketing exercise by anthropic
57:16
and everyone fell for it, including our smart people within
57:20
the security state. And so now that leads our president,
57:26
who is totally being bamboozled, to sign the Quantum Innovation
57:32
Executive Order. Quantum Technologies represents the next generation of innovation
57:37
across... computing, sensing and networking with enormous significance for our
57:41
country's economic growth. Scientific research and cyber security is really
57:47
a big deal that we're doing today and The country's
57:50
doing really well, as you know. In 2018, I signed
57:54
the National Quantum Initiative Act into law, which led to...
57:58
doubling the federal government investment in quantum research and development.
58:02
I think you all know about that. That helped unleash
58:05
billions of dollars of private investment in America's quantum industrial
58:09
base. Quantum industrial base? What is the quantum industrial base?
58:17
It's nothing. Two dollars. of private investment in America's quantum
58:20
industrial base. Promoting significant scientific and technological progress, like progress
58:27
like we've never seen before, actually. We want to keep
58:30
that positive momentum going in America with the orders that
58:34
I'm signing today. And these will really have a place
58:38
in a big... Let him finish. Step forward. We're already
58:41
the leader by a lot. A lot. We're going to
58:43
be now the leader by a lot. We're the leader
58:45
by a lot. The first executive order launches a national
58:48
effort to produce a quantum computer capable of performing important
58:53
scientific calculations and to develop quantum enabled sensors. Time travel.
58:58
five years and we're going to be investing in American
59:01
quantum leadership like never before. This is so what a
59:06
scam. He's got no he's got that one part right
59:09
progress like we've never seen before. Because there's no progress.
59:13
There's no progress at all. Here's the kicker though he
59:17
signed two. quantum executive orders. This isn't much discussed. Uh...
59:23
Not just for quantum innovation, but also securing the nation
59:27
against advanced cryptographic attacks, the so-called post-quantum crypto. We're all
59:33
gathered in New York City. Right. Because Trump had... approved
59:38
these two executive orders and we knew it was time
59:40
that we needed to get in gear. Right. So you
59:42
guys are in gear. It's a race. It's a, it's
59:44
something that it's going to happen. And when it happens,
59:47
it could be, it could be a calamity to humankind.
59:50
If we're not prepared, 100%. I mean, we are bullish.
59:55
We're extremely excited about quantum computing. We've seen. huge leaps
59:59
in innovation.
1:00:00
And Quance was a double-edged sword. as much as it
1:00:03
can contribute to the welfare and into the innovative science
1:00:08
fields, it's a serious security threat. And that is why
1:00:12
you see Trump not just releasing one executive order, but
1:00:14
two. One, promoting the quantum space and the technology, but
1:00:18
a second... trying to get the government to adopt new
1:00:21
security standards. And this is a psyop that continues, you
1:00:27
know, quantum's going to break Bitcoin. It's like... It may,
1:00:35
if it ever works, it may break. The cryptography on
1:00:39
your bank login. Yeah, that would be a real problem.
1:00:43
Well, you can break that anyway with just brute force.
1:00:46
Nah, that's Shaw 256. It's kind of hard to break
1:00:50
with brute force. I disagree. I don't think anyone has
1:00:55
really demonstrated that. password cracking, yeah, but not the encryption.
1:01:01
Well, that's what I'm talking about. That's all it counts.
1:01:03
But the encryption part. So You know, there's definitely a
1:01:08
need for quantum safe encryption, but come on. This has
1:01:14
got to be the pivot of this AI business. And
1:01:17
I do have one other. clip that I want to
1:01:19
play about we're so far ahead. We're miles ahead. We
1:01:26
are winning the AI race. China's International Supply Chain Expo
1:01:30
is a technology showcase exhibiting, for example, artificial intelligence live
1:01:35
translation. Even if overseas technologies are fast... Ruh-oh! What is
1:01:59
this new metric I'm hearing? 50 cents to $3. Per
1:02:13
task. What is this per task? I don't know. Is
1:02:19
Darren O'Neill gonna have to pay $3 per image? Is
1:02:24
that a task? The thing is, it might be that
1:02:26
Darren's got the whole thing localized. JC, by the way,
1:02:29
told me that he's got it. There is a localize,
1:02:32
because you want to localize. And he says, oh, yeah,
1:02:34
that's what everyone's doing. Yeah, that's what I keep saying.
1:02:36
And he says, and he's got the product for you.
1:02:39
I said, send him, add him a note. Of course
1:02:42
he didn't. No, of course not. But I already have
1:02:44
a product. I have a product running right now. Well,
1:02:47
the one he suggests is this. He says that it's
1:02:49
absolutely the best everyone agrees with. It's a Chinese product.
1:02:53
Is yours Chinese? The model is Chinese, yes, Quinn. I
1:02:58
don't know if that's it or not. I'm running 3.6.
1:03:00
But all I know is there's something about these Chinese
1:03:02
models. You put them on local and you can do
1:03:03
the whole thing. Yes. And everyone loves it. This is
1:03:06
what I've been saying for months. It's local. Everything, almost
1:03:11
not everything, but a lot of what I do is
1:03:13
local. It's fantastic. And they have now models that do
1:03:17
music. local not that i've tried that Images have been
1:03:22
around for a long time. All of it. And everyone's
1:03:26
moving towards that. You know, these data centers, there's too
1:03:29
many data centers. And they're going to come online in
1:03:32
2028? Okay. Okay, that's gonna be fun. Good. Let's listen
1:03:37
to the rest of this clip. but better than Google's
1:03:40
Gemini. It's also far cheaper per task, about 50 cents
1:03:44
US compared to Fable at nearly $3. Western leaders have
1:03:48
heavily focused on AI, most recently meeting with the heads
1:03:51
of Anthropic and OpenAI at the G7 summit. Chip who
1:03:55
developed GLM while the US banned the export of chips
1:03:58
needed for... high-tech AI and the company also known as
1:04:01
Zed AI announced its new model 24 hours after anthropic
1:04:05
revealed the US government ordered it to suspend foreign nationals
1:04:09
accessing its advanced models whatever I'm looking at the troll
1:04:13
room and I see Darren Oh says he used the
1:04:15
Mac studio which would mean he's he could He indeed
1:04:18
might be. Yeah, he says he's using Quen local to
1:04:22
do images. So this is where Apple is doing something
1:04:26
very interesting. they have this unified memory. So you load
1:04:30
up your Mac with 128... gigabytes of memory and it
1:04:36
can apply that to GPU or CPU processes. and you
1:04:42
know their max silicon um is pretty good i mean
1:04:46
for for doing some of this now AMD and, you
1:04:50
know, they've got the Ryzen chip. And I, I read
1:04:54
yesterday that. OpenAI is coming out with chip themselves everyone's
1:04:58
going to be doing chips to put in your computers
1:05:02
That's what it's going to be. And these data centers...
1:05:07
Good luck. What was that noise? I'm trying to, I
1:05:13
can't replicate it. It was good. No, you can't. It
1:05:15
was good. you Good luck. Yeah, I know the data
1:05:22
center seems to be just a joke. I guess joke
1:05:27
is a good word. So, shifting gears for just a
1:05:31
second. My boy was in D.C., went to visit the
1:05:36
president. Which boy of you which boy Mark Rutte, you
1:05:41
know the NATO. Oh, yeah, he was he was the
1:05:44
rage And he had PowerPoint slides. He's like, Mr. President,
1:05:49
let me show you. You are trillion dollar Trump. I
1:05:52
want to show you what this president was able to
1:05:56
achieve. And I start with this chart. This chart is
1:06:00
about the Trump trillion. The Trump trillion. The Trump trillion
1:06:04
shows you the English. The Trump what? I can barely
1:06:06
hear this. The Trump trillion. The Trump trillion. Trillion as
1:06:10
in trillion dollars. The Trump trillion? Yes, the Trump trillion.
1:06:13
He has it right on the slides. About the Trump.
1:06:16
He made it. a huge mistake by going off mic
1:06:19
on this because everyone's mics are focused on the two
1:06:21
chairs in the oval and then he goes over into
1:06:24
his powerpoint *Groans* Somebody's got to teach him a lesson.
1:06:30
Trump trillion. The Trump trillion shows you the increase Europeans
1:06:35
and Canadians are paying. into defense since you took office
1:06:39
in 2017. A trillion dollars from the Canadians and Europeans.
1:06:44
This is fantastic. Trump 45 plus Trump 47. Ah, it's
1:06:48
together. Suspect by the Europeans and the Canadians of 1.2
1:06:52
trillion. Look at the effect of Trump 47. So the
1:06:55
isolated effect. Of the extra defense spending in 2025 and
1:06:59
2026, you see almost $140 billion extra spent nominal. Anyway,
1:07:05
it goes on and on about a trillion dollars that
1:07:07
we are spent at Europe and Canada. Canada are spending
1:07:11
on American weapons. It is jobs, many jobs, and it
1:07:15
is great. Thank you, Mr. President. You are the best.
1:07:19
That was the whole point of his. The audio is
1:07:21
pretty bad, actually. So. Good for him. There's that. It
1:07:29
was kind of nice to see. Rand Paul. Definitely trying
1:07:34
to pick up on the Fauci thing. after Tulsi Gabbard.
1:07:37
Yeah, trying. He's trying. This is short. Anthony Fauci has
1:07:42
been influencing the process. And it, from the very beginning,
1:07:49
looks like his interference in a lot of different segments,
1:07:52
his interference in the scientific journal articles. interference in intel.
1:07:57
But he had a 40-year abuse of power career. You
1:08:01
know, people talk about J. Edgar Hoover. J. Edgar Hoover's
1:08:04
got nothing on Anthony Fauci. 40 years of placing all
1:08:08
his lieutenants in all the positions. And then after 9-11,
1:08:12
the funding for bio research and bioterrorism. went through the
1:08:16
roof and he became the kingpin that had access to
1:08:20
all of that money. So it just, you know, I
1:08:24
go on for hundreds of pages in my book talking
1:08:27
about this because the abuses of power and what he
1:08:29
did are, you know, endless. So, you know, he gets
1:08:34
an interview with the New York Post. on their video,
1:08:37
on their website, and you can't get anywhere else because
1:08:40
ABC has much more important bio news. If the thought
1:08:44
of mice and rats makes your skin crawl, then the
1:08:47
phrase mutating mice probably sounds like something out of a
1:08:51
horror movie. Mutating mice? Who cares about Fauci? We've got
1:08:55
mutating... mice researchers say it's a real growing problem right
1:08:59
here in philadelphia they show a much higher mutation frequency
1:09:05
than we thought before so surprise yes it is a
1:09:08
recent rutgers university study found that mice are genetically evolving
1:09:12
to become resistant to the poisons designed to kill them
1:09:16
also called rodenticides. The researchers looked at samples from New
1:09:19
York City, Washington DC, New Jersey, and Philadelphia and its
1:09:23
surrounding suburbs. From those samples we found that about 70%
1:09:28
of the mice populations contain mutations. They studied rats too.
1:09:33
Don't worry, they're not mutating yet. but they are still
1:09:36
evolving, learning how to outsmart extermination efforts. I love rodenticide.
1:09:41
I think that's a cool title. Rodenticide. Have you ever
1:09:45
heard of it? It's categorized as rodenticide? Yeah, of course.
1:09:48
Oh, I never heard of that. Never heard of that.
1:09:51
Well, let's go to this story then. Talking about gloom
1:09:55
and doom. Hmm? How about the Tesla strikes the home?
1:09:59
Yeah, that happened.
1:10:00
Texas. I don't know if they figured out yet if
1:10:03
it was on autopilot or not. At the end of
1:10:06
a cul-de-sac in Katy, Texas, just outside Houston, a doorbell
1:10:09
camera captured a Tesla crashing into a house at high
1:10:12
speed. 76-year-old Martha Avila was standing in the front room.
1:10:16
She was pronounced dead at the hospital. The Harris County
1:10:19
Sheriff's Office says 44-year-old driver Michael Butler told them he
1:10:23
had automated driving assistance engaged and failed to drive in
1:10:27
a single lane, left the roadway, and struck the residents.
1:10:30
Law enforcement says they found no signs of intoxication. Avila's
1:10:35
daughter, Jennifer Barber, took this video. She was just in
1:10:38
the wrong place at the wrong time. Speaking with our
1:10:41
Houston station, KHOU, she described the horror of seeing her
1:10:44
mother. She was pinned against the wall because he pushed
1:10:49
her fridge against the roof. Tesla has not responded to
1:10:52
CBS News' multiple requests for comment. In a safety report,
1:10:55
the company says Tesla's in self-driving mode, paired with a
1:10:58
human's, quote, active supervision, have... fewer collisions per mile driven
1:11:02
than the estimated U.S. vehicle averages. Even in automated driving
1:11:06
mode, Tesla emphasizes drivers are responsible for being in control
1:11:09
of the vehicle at all times, unlike this driver in
1:11:12
video captured on an Atlanta freeway last week. And when
1:11:16
these systems are working, it's almost impossible to pay attention
1:11:19
the right way. It invites you to not pay attention.
1:11:23
I don't know if it's his fault or the car's
1:11:25
fault or like what really happened. I think this brings
1:11:29
a couple of things to mind. One, first of all,
1:11:32
Elon says that the car couldn't be going that fast.
1:11:36
Under with the auto driving because it does it's not
1:11:39
allowed to in residence residential areas period. And so he
1:11:43
says something's fishy. That's possible. And the other thing is,
1:11:46
we haven't talked about it on the show, and I
1:11:47
think we probably should get some clips and talk about
1:11:49
it a little bit, but the new laws that were
1:11:51
passed for 2026... vehicles that have to have cameras in
1:11:58
them to watch your eyeballs. falling asleep. And they can
1:12:02
be taken over. They can be their kill switch. Yep.
1:12:05
has been implemented in all the 2026 cars. Yep. And
1:12:10
which means I'm not going to buy a 2026 car
1:12:12
because it's not only got a kill switch, it's the
1:12:16
number of factors. One, it has a kill switch. Two,
1:12:18
it can be turned off remotely. Three, it can be
1:12:21
controlled remotely so they can drive you off a cliff.
1:12:24
They. I think you should wait for the 2028 model.
1:12:27
It'll be much better. And then there's also the aspect
1:12:32
of hackers. If anybody doesn't think that hackers... I can't
1:12:39
bypass whatever they're trying to pull in 2026. I don't
1:12:43
care. Especially the engineers who put together... something, I don't
1:12:47
care if it's Ford or Toyota. Those engineers, those software
1:12:51
engineers that work for Ford and Toyota are not, I
1:12:55
mean, they're not dummies, but they're not the kind of
1:12:57
guys that are hackers. The real killer guys, the guys
1:13:01
who, you know, get paid the enormous amount of money
1:13:04
or they're just fun loving. Yeah. Like screwballs. Like Bemrose.
1:13:08
Bemrose. Ben Rose would be probably in that league. Yeah.
1:13:12
But we have a number of them in that league.
1:13:14
Uh, uh, Kobol, I think is probably definitely in that
1:13:17
league. he should. He should start a new business. So
1:13:23
some of these guys are jokers, and they would love
1:13:26
to just take a car and just drive it alongside
1:13:29
and just kill it. Turn it off. off remotely or
1:13:34
make the guy weave or something or, you know, or
1:13:37
in the case of a... evildoer have you drive off
1:13:40
a cliff this is and there's something very suspicious about
1:13:44
this wreck i think we have uh acid in the
1:13:48
troll room says this is actually my job He says,
1:13:51
cars are quite well secured, but they had to catch
1:13:54
up a little bit. We'll send this boots on the
1:13:56
ground, man. I'd like to know. I'm sure there's a
1:14:01
EULA once you open the door. So I just want
1:14:06
to do a little off topic here. Okay. Because I'm
1:14:09
going to ask you a question. Because this came up
1:14:11
on the DH Unplugged show, me and Horowitz. And Andrew's
1:14:15
moment. By the way, that's Tuesday's DH Unplugged. dhunplugged.com. Closer
1:14:21
to the pin. Great show. Fantastic. Brought to you by
1:14:25
Interactive Brokers. No, no. They dropped our sponsorship. Oh, they
1:14:29
dropped the sponsorship? Yeah, now we're just going for begging
1:14:33
for money. Support those guys with some value for value.
1:14:36
I thought it was unfair. It's live, 9 o'clock Eastern,
1:14:40
8 Central. Do your own calculation for Alaska and Hawaii.
1:14:44
So it's a very good show. It's a great show.
1:14:47
This came up in the conversation, and I'm going to
1:14:49
ask you about it. All right. Because I asked the
1:14:52
kids and I asked everybody out here and everyone's going,
1:14:56
what are you talking about? Horowitz is under the impression.
1:15:00
that the entire country has been caught up in a
1:15:03
Mahjong. fad where everybody wants to play Mahjong now. Yes!
1:15:11
He is correct! Well, that out here. Well, you're not
1:15:15
part of the country. Yeah. There are. Here in Fredericksburg,
1:15:22
so it may only be red states, but here in
1:15:25
Fredericksburg... There are multiple mahjong clubs. I know personally of
1:15:31
a woman who has a mahjong room. specifically to play
1:15:36
mahjong and I have to say. My wife, the keeper,
1:15:41
has gone to a Mahjong meetup. with some of these
1:15:45
women. there is indeed a mahjong mania taking place. Well,
1:15:52
I would like to hear from some of the people
1:15:54
out there who find their Mahjong desperate. Now there is
1:15:58
no Mahjong. Because this whole thing sounds ludicrous. Hallmark just
1:16:04
had a Mahjong movie. *laughs* These trends, they happen. I
1:16:10
mean, it's like Twister. Twister. Yeah, it's just like Twister.
1:16:16
You know, the ladies, they get together, they play mahjong,
1:16:19
and all you hear is clickety-clackety, clickety-clackety, clickety-clackety, oh, the
1:16:22
mahjong. Oh, she has a beautiful mahjong set. It's pure
1:16:25
ivory. It's just so fantastic. It's beautiful. She has a
1:16:27
mahjong room. Yes. Yeah, this is true. All right, well,
1:16:34
I stand moderately corrected. We'd like to hear boots on
1:16:38
the ground for sure on this. We'd like to get
1:16:40
a little more detail from more than just Texas and
1:16:43
Florida. But I myself was surprised. I'm noticing that there's
1:16:48
a coincidence. Texas and Florida both, neither one have state
1:16:53
income taxes. Maybe it's just that. Because they have no
1:16:57
income tax? They play Mahjong? Yeah, that's his correlation means
1:17:02
causation. That means Washington State. Yeah, this should be happening
1:17:07
there. I have to, of course, Mimi has not reported
1:17:09
this. I remember back in the late 70s in Holland,
1:17:14
there was also a Mahjong craze. And all the ladies
1:17:17
were playing mahjong. All of my friend's mothers were playing
1:17:20
mahjong. I think I might have even learned how to
1:17:23
play it at some point. I wouldn't remember. Aren't you
1:17:27
matching things, matching symbols? I don't know. I've never played
1:17:30
it. There's games I don't know. I don't know Mahjong,
1:17:34
I don't know Canasta. I have no idea how that's
1:17:37
played. Do you know how to play backgammon? I do
1:17:39
know how to play Backgammon. I'm pretty good at it.
1:17:41
I forgot. But I don't know how to play P-Knuckle.
1:17:44
P-Knuckle. Even the word makes me not want to play
1:17:46
it. I wonder if there's a Mahjong league or something.
1:17:54
Don't believe. What's that? Book of Knowledge. Is there a
1:17:57
Mahjong league or national club in the United States? I
1:18:01
haven't talked to the book of knowledge at all. He's
1:18:03
feeling a little bit lonely, so let's see if he
1:18:05
has a Mahjong league or national club. According to the
1:18:12
book of knowledge, yes. In 1937, A number of Mahjong
1:18:17
enthusiasts met in New York City to standardize the game.
1:18:21
And it was at that meeting that the National Mahjong
1:18:25
League was founded. It is now celebrating 89 years of
1:18:29
Mahjong. And the league started with 32 members and today
1:18:34
numbers over 350,000. Wow. It has been rated 350,000. Oh
1:18:42
my. I wonder what the prize is. Nothing. Oh, well,
1:18:49
they're playing for money. They might play for money. I
1:18:51
don't know. I got a couple of clips here that
1:18:53
are kind of hanging out that I've been wanting to
1:18:55
get rid of. Terrorism in Canada By the way, the
1:19:01
Canadians... Wait, wait. I told the Canadians, we have a
1:19:05
lot of Canadian listeners and we're not giving them enough
1:19:07
attention. And I do want to say that Canada Day
1:19:10
is coming on July 1st. And we're going to celebrate
1:19:14
it. We will be celebrating. Yes. Yeah. What we are
1:19:16
dealing with in this case. is a recurring and similar
1:19:21
modus operandi, and that is criminals for hire. At a
1:19:25
press conference, Toronto Police Chief Myron Demke linking 27 Toronto-area
1:19:31
shootings, including incidents at synagogues and the U.S. Consulate in
1:19:35
March. Young people are hired to carry out attacks against
1:19:39
various targets. And in order to get paid, they're required
1:19:43
to film their attacks. There are multiple networks operating like
1:19:47
this, say police. They're working with the RCMP and FBI
1:19:51
to figure out who is hiring the shooters. All young,
1:19:55
all recruited. through encrypted apps like Signal, Telegram, and WhatsApp.
1:20:00
Superintendent Joe Matthews. Multiple people are recruiting multiple youth in
1:20:04
each cell. We're aware of that, we just do not
1:20:07
know the scope of it. While investigating the shootings, Toronto
1:20:10
Police Constable Mark Penizzotto was shot and killed during an
1:20:14
early morning raid on an apartment building last week. Three
1:20:18
people have since been arrested. two in connection with the
1:20:21
consulate shooting, one of them unconscious in hospital facing first-degree
1:20:26
murder charges in Penazotto's death. A fourth person is still
1:20:30
at large. Linda Penazotto is the officer's mother. Our family
1:20:34
is going to make a plea to the general public.
1:20:37
Please support our police. I wonder if it's Antifa. Ah,
1:20:43
it probably is. That's interesting. Yeah, so they have this
1:20:49
issue going on up there. Canada's kind of falling apart.
1:20:53
Yeah. I don't know if you noticed. yeah yeah i
1:20:57
noticed people don't see the canadians that are complaining about
1:21:00
it you know Canadians are good at complaining, but I
1:21:02
don't know if they can complain their way out of
1:21:04
this one. Police will have to access the messaging apps
1:21:07
and use wiretaps in their investigation or get the suspects
1:21:11
they've arrested to flip, says... Oh, okay. So this is
1:21:15
a... Sorry, we have to spy on you now, Canadians.
1:21:18
Ian Scott, former director of the Ontario... Special Investigations Unit.
1:21:22
Flip the ones at the bottom of the food chain.
1:21:25
We want them to give us the information of who's
1:21:28
hiring these individuals, what's the connection. Last month, the FBI
1:21:33
arrested Iraqi-Iranian National Mohammed al-Sadi, a senior member of U.S.-designated
1:21:38
terrorist organization Katab. and Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. He's
1:21:44
allegedly tied to nearly 20 attacks and attempted attacks internationally.
1:21:49
In the indictment, al-Sadi is accused of planning, coordinating, and
1:21:53
claiming responsibility for those attacks, including two in Canada, one
1:21:58
believed to be the consulate shooting. Michael Arnfield. You may
1:22:02
have a transnational group or some kind of organized entity
1:22:06
that has really a bottomless well of potential contractors. They've
1:22:11
arrested some. There'll be others out there. So the key
1:22:15
is to break up the network before more shooters can
1:22:18
be recruited. While Toronto police won't confirm whether there's a
1:22:22
connection with al-Sadi. They're confident these criminal networks extend beyond
1:22:27
Toronto with the goal of creating fear in our communities.
1:22:31
Nah, I'm gonna have to counter this. This is not
1:22:35
Iran. This is clearly Israel because that is their plan.
1:22:40
You see. Israel plans to have all kinds of false
1:22:44
flags. Blame it on Iran. And they might even light
1:22:49
off a nuke and blame it on Iran. And if
1:22:51
you don't believe me, believe Tucker Carlson. We know Israel
1:22:55
tends to double down, especially with with the Likudniks. We
1:22:59
have all these intelligence people and military over there saying.
1:23:01
We need a new 9-11 to show America to get
1:23:04
in line. Iran's about to do a new 9-11. Oh,
1:23:07
yeah, yeah, we know who's heavily involved in 9-11. Clearly,
1:23:10
the Likudniks, Israel, along with some of their own elements,
1:23:13
bare minimum stand down, Building 7, the bombs in the
1:23:16
buildings. So I'm really concerned that all Israel has left
1:23:19
is nuclear blackmail and or a... Nuclear false flag or
1:23:23
something like it to blame Iran. I really think that's
1:23:25
on the table. What does Tucker Carlson think? I think
1:23:28
you're clearly right. I mean, they're saying it out loud,
1:23:30
so we're not guessing. I mean, you just interpret their
1:23:33
statements, which need very little interpretation because they're pretty direct
1:23:36
statements. And I think they reflect reality. That's reality. That's
1:23:40
reality. What reality? Wow. Oh, well, this is this whole
1:23:44
Tucker thing has taken a whole new turn. And it
1:23:47
stems from one quote. He's been doing a lot of
1:23:50
interviews. One quote in one interview. Here's the quote. How
1:23:54
could I or any American voter support a political party
1:23:57
that's not loyal to the United States that puts the
1:24:00
interests of a foreign country above? those of its own
1:24:02
citizens. Like, that's, you know, it's not possible to vote
1:24:06
for people like that. So, no, I'm out. And if
1:24:09
I'm out, then I think a lot of other people
1:24:11
are out. Oh, if he's out... You left the beginning
1:24:14
of that clip off. No, there's more important clips. It's
1:24:18
more important. Do you have it? No. It's more important
1:24:21
clips. Because... No, I'm just saying the beginning of the
1:24:23
clip says I'm not voting Republican. That's... he's out. He's
1:24:28
out of the Republican Party. Marjorie Taylor Greene, if Tucker's
1:24:31
out, I'm out. If Tucker, everyone's going to leave the
1:24:34
Republican Party. Everybody's going to leave the Republican Party. And
1:24:38
here's... That's where the old phrase, Tuckered out, comes from.
1:24:41
And here's the, I love this clip. This is Tucker
1:24:45
on. uh who's this this is some kid everyone's trying
1:24:49
to be a younger joe rogan right now Uh, this
1:24:54
is... I can't remember. Neil or something. People should just
1:24:59
be themselves. Listen to this. I mean, Trump is, again,
1:25:01
a slave of others. He's not running anything, right? He's
1:25:04
a he's subject to the whims of others. I. Did
1:25:07
my best to sell Trump, the idea of Trump, to
1:25:11
people on the basis of claims that are now clearly
1:25:14
false. So I did that. I just grieve for what
1:25:19
his decisions. in the Middle East have done to the
1:25:22
country. And not just the war with Iran, but being
1:25:25
a slave of Israel. What? You're an American, dude. This
1:25:29
is humiliating to you. Not that I care, but to
1:25:32
me, I do care. In my country, I care a
1:25:34
lot. You can't be a slave to a foreign power.
1:25:36
Stop. So, President Trump is a slave to Israel. This
1:25:40
is a... playing right into either. Tucker's insane desire to
1:25:45
always be successful in broadcasting. Which I think is most
1:25:50
likely. And it's a genius position to take. Because you're
1:25:56
going to get a lot of people who are going
1:25:58
to be watching you and listening to you doing this.
1:26:00
kind of along the... Well, like you, you clipped the
1:26:03
crap out of him right there. Well, of course, but
1:26:05
we deconstruct media, so that's the whole point of our
1:26:08
show. This is media. Podcasting is valid. But it also
1:26:13
could be that maybe he actually does want to run
1:26:16
for president. Or has some... Well, let's hope. Me too.
1:26:22
And if anything, he's trying to clear the field by
1:26:27
connecting other possible contenders to Israel. But I do think
1:26:32
to the extent the United States government can influence Israel,
1:26:35
one is with the stick, which is funding. No mas.
1:26:40
We're not gonna- pay for any more civilians in Lebanon
1:26:43
or Gaza or the West Bank. but also the carrot,
1:26:47
which is, it's okay. It would be helpful if somebody,
1:26:51
Marco Rubio is a close friend of Israel, been supported
1:26:54
almost exclusively by the Israeli lobby and the Cuban lobby,
1:26:57
his entire political career, he's got a million. This is
1:27:01
how we take out Rubio. Rubio, he's with Israel. He's
1:27:08
with Israel. And say, let's just tone it down a
1:27:13
little bit. There will be a tomorrow. Like you're talking
1:27:16
yourselves into an apocalypse that doesn't need to happen. Please.
1:27:21
You know, the kind of the helpful outsider offering perspective.
1:27:24
You know, when you're some disaster happens in your life
1:27:27
and your best friend comes over, your college roommate shows
1:27:29
up to have a beer and says it's going to
1:27:30
be OK tomorrow. And that's like the pivotal moment. That's
1:27:33
the beginning of recovery. No one has done that for
1:27:36
Israel. And I don't know why. Because it's in our
1:27:40
interest calm Israel down because as you just said correctly
1:27:42
it's not a conspiracy theory they are kind of out
1:27:47
of options other than to do something really crazy where
1:27:50
lots of innocents die. And I don't see how that's
1:27:52
good for anyone. Well, I think if we have a
1:27:56
Tucker Massey ticket, that would be totally the way to
1:27:59
go. Tucker Massey. 2028. Thank, thank the Lord that Alex
1:28:04
Jones just asked him straight up. Do you want to
1:28:07
put the rumors to bed here? You're not planning to
1:28:09
run for president or are you? Of course I'm not
1:28:11
planning to run for president. I mean, of course I've
1:28:14
done, you know, I've never said or done anything that
1:28:17
would suggest I have an interest in political office because
1:28:20
I. don't, I never have, had an interest in political
1:28:23
office. Ever. Ever. It's just not kind of what I
1:28:26
do for a living. It's not what I'm interested in.
1:28:27
I really don't like politicians. One of the things I
1:28:30
regret, and I've always liked Trump, I'll just say personally,
1:28:33
I don't know why, because he's hilarious. It's funny how...
1:28:36
And there are a couple of other- He's very funny.
1:28:38
Funny guy. He's very funny. He's very funny. So maybe
1:28:42
Joe just wants to be a Joe. Tucker wants to
1:28:45
be the next Joe Rogan, who will be credited, and
1:28:48
I doubt that. Joe Rogan really. Helps Trump become the
1:28:54
47th president. But it does seem like Tucker wants to
1:28:58
be in the game. Well, you said. You said God
1:29:01
would have to appear to you for you to run
1:29:02
for president. So should we all pray that Jesus appear
1:29:06
to you and tell you to run for president? I
1:29:08
don't want to run for president. I do want to
1:29:11
be involved in offering an option of some kind. I
1:29:14
don't know what that would look like. But it's not
1:29:17
democracy when no matter who you vote for, you get
1:29:19
the same result. You know you'd beat Marco Rubio. I
1:29:25
mean, you need to run for president. It's just like
1:29:28
the options are Gavin Newsom and Marco Rubio. I don't
1:29:32
think I mean, I this is I know Trump is
1:29:34
very convinced that Gavin has a shot. And Gavin has
1:29:37
an advantage in that he's a sociopath who will say
1:29:40
anything without. while passing a light exam. And he can
1:29:43
talk, unlike Kamala. Oh, he can talk. By the way,
1:29:47
Marco is an underrated talker. He's an excellent talker. Speaks
1:29:51
without notes. But both of those guys, I mean, come
1:29:53
on, is that really the option? There you go. So
1:29:58
that was.
1:30:00
Thank you. You're right. Excuse me. That was a takedown
1:30:05
of Rubio. Oh, totally. The gratuitous little aspect of discussing
1:30:12
Newsom was meaningless. That was aimed at Rubio. That was
1:30:17
a Rubio hit piece. Yep. Yep. And I don't think
1:30:21
it was very well executed. Well, I mean, hit pieces,
1:30:25
I'm very familiar with how they work in journalism. and
1:30:32
It was very poorly done. They got nothing. That got
1:30:37
nowhere. That did nothing to hurt Rubio in any sh-
1:30:40
way shaper no no all it did was hurt tucker
1:30:43
by by indicating to us or you in particular that
1:30:47
tucker's out to get rubio It was signaling. I think
1:30:52
it was signaling. It wasn't very well done. I think
1:30:55
Tucker... This is the same Tucker who used to wear
1:30:59
the bow tie. The same Tucker who lives in- guitar
1:31:01
cutter he's got a house there he loves the place
1:31:04
he he had the bow tie back in the 90s
1:31:07
the bow tie guy you know he's a chameleon and
1:31:10
he's a media chameleon Yeah, he was on MSNBC, then
1:31:15
he was working for CNN, then he worked for Fox.
1:31:18
Yeah. Yeah. The only other guy that was like that
1:31:21
was this guy, was it Ed Schwartz? Was it Ed
1:31:26
Schwartz who was on? Schwartz. Yeah, it was the guy
1:31:29
who was on MSNBC, and he was like a real,
1:31:32
he was early days of the show. We used to
1:31:34
clip him. Schwartz, I think, was his last name. I
1:31:37
think it was Ed Schwartz. And then he went to,
1:31:39
next thing you know, he's working at RT. No, that
1:31:42
wasn't... Schwarz. Wasn't it Ed Schwarz? Somebody in the chat
1:31:45
room may know who I'm talking about. No, I think
1:31:47
it was Schultz. Wasn't it Schultz? I thought it was
1:31:50
Schwarz. Ed Schultz. Ed Schultz. Here he is. Ed Schultz?
1:31:56
Yes. Ed Schultz. Just moments ago, the United States Senate
1:32:00
voted... 62 to 36. This was the scene in the
1:32:04
United States Senate. Only 36 Democrats. That's him. That's Ed
1:32:09
Schultz. Yeah, that's the guy. Yeah, Schultz, Schwartz. Yeah, he
1:32:12
was a big Republican hater on MSNBC. Then he went
1:32:15
to RT where he became a Democrat hater. So I
1:32:19
think that Tucker is. doing a smart media move here.
1:32:24
I mean, there is, there's... By being a big phony?
1:32:28
Well, yeah, that's what he's always been a phony. He
1:32:31
doesn't know what he said. He's like, I never, those
1:32:34
words never left my mouth. Yeah, I never said that.
1:32:38
I can't imagine I ever said that. No. He sees
1:32:42
the audience and the audience is sitting right in our
1:32:45
troll room. What's the guy's name? I can't remember. Come
1:32:49
on, post. The guy who already started, before we even
1:32:52
start the show, can't wait to hear how Israel is
1:32:56
holy and great. That guy. That guy. I'm trying to
1:33:02
look for it. That is Tucker. Get out of the
1:33:05
chat room. He hasn't posted in an hour. Oh, that's
1:33:08
too bad. One is many. His name is One is
1:33:11
Many. One is Many. But this is, the audience is
1:33:16
there. And it's a big audience. The audience who truly
1:33:20
believes. that Israel is to blame for all of our
1:33:23
problems, including your hangnail. It's all that. Trump is controlled
1:33:28
by Netanyahu. The entire Congress is controlled by AIPAC. Heaven
1:33:34
forbid that they were controlled by... AARP or the National
1:33:39
Association of Realtors who are well aipac is lockheed indirectly
1:33:43
that's lockheed money that's true it's lockheed money it's it's
1:33:47
all military industrial complex they are controlled by the military
1:33:50
industrial complex for sure But that's not Israel. Anyway, we've
1:33:56
been through this a million times. Yeah, well, it's still
1:33:59
fun. We're never going to. convince anybody who doesn't who
1:34:02
just believes it's the elders of the the protocols of
1:34:06
the elders of zion it's true i have the book
1:34:10
we read the read the documents got it right here
1:34:13
get a 9-11 false flag and blame it on the
1:34:17
rat they're crazy tucker what do you say gonna be
1:34:19
president That was pretty good. That was pretty good, right?
1:34:24
That brings us to Candice, another genius. Oh, man. Did
1:34:29
I tell you about the... Uh, the guy on the
1:34:32
no agenda group? who was posting about He says that...
1:34:37
You never talk about canvas because... You have a relationship
1:34:41
with Rode, and it was a Rode microphone that killed
1:34:44
Charlie. you hadn't heard that one. Oh my goodness. Oh
1:34:48
yeah. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. You get all kinds. I
1:34:53
love them. The genius of Candace Owens. I love. I
1:34:58
love it when people do that. I'm just like, wow.
1:35:00
Thank you for putting an X on your face so
1:35:03
I can pray for you. Okay, I have to tell
1:35:05
you guys something before we get into comments because I
1:35:07
need to know that I'm not the only person who
1:35:08
didn't know this. Okay, I didn't know this, but also
1:35:11
Savannah didn't know this. So at least two of us
1:35:12
didn't know this. I was on the walk with my
1:35:14
husband and it was... thundering, I think. And I was
1:35:18
like, oh, no big deal. We can keep walking because
1:35:19
there's no lightning. And he was like, what do you
1:35:21
mean by that? And I said, you know, like, it's
1:35:24
just thunder. Lightning is the problem. And then my husband
1:35:27
was like, you know that it can't thunder without lightning,
1:35:29
right? That lightning, that thunder is the sound of lightning.
1:35:34
My mind was completely blown. I promise you, in my
1:35:36
35 years of living, I had never heard that. And
1:35:39
I just need to know in the live chat right
1:35:40
now. If this is just a girl thing, because me
1:35:43
and Savannah didn't know this, or is this literally just
1:35:46
me and Savannah are the only people in the entire
1:35:47
world didn't know this? Or are you shaken to your
1:35:50
core as I was yesterday and as Savannah was this
1:35:53
morning, learning that thunder is the sound of lightning? I
1:35:57
don't know, guys. I have to just kind of share
1:35:58
with you random tidbits of my life. Are you sure
1:36:01
this isn't the whatever girls? What is this? What are
1:36:06
you trying? What kind of fast one are you trying
1:36:07
to pull on us right here? Well, nothing. You know,
1:36:10
I watched this over and over trying to figure out
1:36:13
if it was AI. I can't kind of determine that
1:36:16
it is. I think it's real. Yeah, it could be.
1:36:19
And I think she's. that dumb well hold on a
1:36:22
second you're the guy now on x posting AI videos
1:36:27
very poorly done, I might add. They're not that poorly
1:36:30
done, and in fact, it's going to be the tip
1:36:33
of the day. So don't kill the tip of the
1:36:35
day before we get to it. They're poorly done, and
1:36:38
it's obviously not... credible that Joe Biden says that he
1:36:43
listens to the No Agenda podcast. That's clearly, you know,
1:36:47
it's like, okay. You don't think? It's like a boomer
1:36:49
move from... Oh, boomer. There you go. You're insulting your
1:36:54
elders. Yes, I am. All you wanted to do is
1:36:56
insult boomers. This is ageism at its peak. peak ageism
1:37:01
with you calling this boomer. I didn't write the code.
1:37:06
If I really wanted to do ageism, I'd call you
1:37:08
from the great generation. Which I'm not. Okay. I'm not
1:37:16
that old. Yeah, okay. But I'm old! So how about
1:37:20
this? Why don't you have your... your little robot generate
1:37:24
a candace owens for us and and it should be
1:37:27
something like this Israel is not responsible for anything. Just
1:37:31
ask John and Adam. They know it all. Go listen
1:37:33
to the No Agenda show. Although it's kind of sketchy,
1:37:38
Adam has relationships with Rode, who won't send me a
1:37:41
free box. after all the promotion I've done for them.
1:37:44
Because, you know, that thesis about road, I think, is
1:37:48
valid. What do you mean? You hate them. Yeah, but
1:37:53
what they're saying is we don't talk about Candace because...
1:37:57
No, we don't talk about Candace because the clip's like
1:37:59
the one I just played. She's an idiot. No, the
1:38:03
thesis goes, hmm, you never talk about Candace Owens, probably
1:38:08
because of your relationship with Rode, who have Israeli engineers
1:38:12
who engineered the microphone that killed Charlie Kirk. Yeah, that's
1:38:16
a bit much. That's a great thesis. It's great. And
1:38:21
then there's all those. um AI images of a Bibi
1:38:26
Netanyahu handing. Um, Erica Kirk, a Golden Road Microphone Award.
1:38:33
I didn't see these. You should forward these or post
1:38:38
them. Oh, man. Since we're on the topic, I got
1:38:41
three whatever girls to. I want to play one. Oh,
1:38:44
okay. Just one of them. Just one. All right, one.
1:38:46
We'll play one. Here we go. Well, let's play number
1:38:48
eight. Eight it is. What decade was World War I?
1:38:53
I'm going to say 1920. 1860s. 1860s, okay. 1815. Go
1:39:00
ahead. 1790s. I skipped history. What was the primary decade
1:39:04
of World War II? 1990s. 1950s. There was 1900. That's
1:39:10
essential. What's the decade? What's the difference? What's the difference
1:39:17
between a decade and a century is what you're asking?
1:39:20
Okay, 1800. That's still a century. How much is a
1:39:25
quarter of an hour? 25 cents. Yeah, 25 minutes. 250
1:39:31
feet. Yep, 250. A quarter of an hour is 250
1:39:34
feet. What is 34 plus 66? I don't know. I'm
1:39:38
just like 112. What is 100 minus 66? 100 minus
1:39:42
66. That is the question. Is 44. 100 minus 34.
1:39:47
56. Okay. Come on. What's a quarter of an hour?
1:39:55
25 seconds. It's a national security issue here.
1:40:00
Well, this, you know, I started listening to these things
1:40:03
and I've decided because there was a clip going around
1:40:06
of Charlie Kirk talking about how the CIA runs everything.
1:40:10
And I listened to these girls and I'm thinking, maybe
1:40:13
there's good reason that the CIA is running everything. Give
1:40:17
them more control, please. Give them more control. We can't
1:40:21
have this. What's a quarter of an hour? 25 feet.
1:40:26
That's great. That is good. That is really good. Something
1:40:31
we haven't, well actually I won't even give it away
1:40:35
because the clip gives it away itself, but a little
1:40:38
bit of sports ball news. I am still following the
1:40:41
football and enjoying it very much. I am. I like
1:40:46
it. So thrilling. Yeah, well, it beats sumo wrestling in
1:40:50
my book, but that's just me. The ball, brother. Not
1:40:53
even close. Hey, did those guys take the fat drug?
1:40:57
They should take the fat drug. It's probably not working
1:41:00
on him. Anyway, FIFA is bad. Bad, bad, bad. FIFA
1:41:05
is the International Football Federation and they are bad. Now
1:41:09
later kick-off times and mandatory water breaks, two of the
1:41:12
measures FIFA have introduced to the Men's Football World Cup
1:41:15
in North America to try and mitigate the impact of
1:41:17
extreme heat. No, no, no, no. It's for commercials, dude.
1:41:23
Totally. It's not for extreme heat. It's for commercials. But
1:41:26
you can already feel where this BBC report is going.
1:41:30
But some games have been played in very high temperatures,
1:41:32
and there's a renewed focus on that issue today via
1:41:35
a number of protests. Climate activists will be outside... Four
1:41:38
World Cup stadiums calling on sporting organisations to cut ties
1:41:42
with the oil and gas industry. The Saudi oil giant
1:41:45
Aramco is particularly in their sights. David Wheeler is a
1:41:48
former professional footballer who's backing the campaign. The World Cup
1:41:53
in the past has been played in some very hot
1:41:55
places in extreme temperatures. Yeah, Qatar. Is this one so
1:41:58
different? do you argue? There are some areas where it's
1:42:01
not so dangerous, but in areas like, especially Mexico, Kansas,
1:42:07
Miami, for example, you've got that combination, the kind of
1:42:11
perfect storm of having high temperature, high humidity, and exposure
1:42:15
to the sun with little wind as well at times.
1:42:19
It's a combination of all those things which make it
1:42:21
that bit more extreme, which means that when the body
1:42:24
sweats and the evaporation of that sweat cools the body
1:42:27
down, it actually no longer works in those conditions. So
1:42:31
the body is essentially cooking and it isn't able to
1:42:34
cool down by its own natural means. So you're now
1:42:36
supporting this campaign and we're going to see protests. today
1:42:39
outside various stadiums, specifically calling for FIFA to end fossil
1:42:44
fuel sponsorships and Aramco very much in their sights. Why
1:42:49
are you supporting that specifically? We need to stop using
1:42:54
fossil fuels as quickly as possible. We need to, as
1:42:57
much as possible, leave fossil fuels in the ground. And
1:42:59
I think promoting the use of fossil fuels, especially fossil
1:43:03
fuels that are, you know, Aramco's majority owned by the
1:43:08
Saudi state, which is known for its human rights abuses.
1:43:11
So not only is it on the human rights grounds,
1:43:13
but also in terms of if you're promoting something that
1:43:17
is seriously important to... to stop burning fossil fuels if
1:43:21
you're promoting it in one of the most popular competitions,
1:43:24
if not the most popular and most watched competitions in
1:43:26
the world. It kind of goes completely against everything that
1:43:30
the public want to see. Due to climate change. Yes,
1:43:33
of course. And all those wonderful tourists who are filling
1:43:36
up our stadiums, they should just take... The electric boat,
1:43:42
I think, is how they're going to come over. Hold
1:43:45
on, hold on. I have another climate change. My daughter
1:43:49
right now is in the middle. She's 90 degrees in
1:43:52
Rotterdam. Hold on, let me write that. 90 whole degrees.
1:43:57
They don't have any air conditioning there. Okay. This is
1:44:01
not a country that is geared towards 90 degrees. And
1:44:05
she is nine months pregnant. Oh, that's not fun. No,
1:44:09
it's not fun at all. It's not fun. Across Europe
1:44:12
on Wednesday, more than 90 million people sweltered through temperatures
1:44:16
above 35 degrees Celsius. In the United Kingdom, the June
1:44:21
record was broken at more than 36 degrees. In Spain,
1:44:25
more records. This heatwave the country registered its highest daily
1:44:30
average temperatures for June since at least 1950. It was
1:44:35
a terrible night. It was so hot. You turn on
1:44:38
the fan and the air is just... It's hot. You
1:44:40
can't sleep. Europe is the world's fastest warming continent, with
1:44:45
temperatures rising at a pace more than double the global
1:44:48
average. How does that work? One reason is that the
1:44:50
continent is close to... What? Say what? How does one
1:44:54
area warm up in global warming? You got global warming.
1:44:57
It's global, not local. We have... My grass is still
1:45:01
green here. We have had so much wonderful rain. The
1:45:06
grapes are loving it. Now, bad peach season. Very bad
1:45:09
for the peaches. But the rain has just made our
1:45:12
grapes so good. Yeah, and then in some, you're going
1:45:16
to, five years from now, it'll be just the opposite.
1:45:18
Rising at a pace. more than double the global average.
1:45:22
One reason is that the continent is close to the
1:45:24
Arctic Circle, where ice is rapidly disappearing and no longer
1:45:29
reflecting the sun's rays. It's being replaced by darker surfaces
1:45:34
such as vegetation and rocks. Rocks! Rocks! And darker surfaces
1:45:38
absorb more solar energy. energy than ice or snow. You
1:45:41
know, it's the Jewish space lasers, man. Another explanation could
1:45:47
be that changes in high pressure and low pressure systems
1:45:51
are drawing more hot air from North Africa. Satellite gusts
1:45:55
have become more frequent over the last two to three
1:45:57
decades and are causing more heat waves. And a third
1:46:00
surprising factor is that air quality has improved. Certain pollutants
1:46:05
used to have the side effect of reflecting sunlight and
1:46:08
limiting the passage of the sun's rays. But underpinning it
1:46:12
all is human-induced climate change, which according to a study
1:46:16
published earlier this week is currently producing temperatures two to
1:46:20
four degrees warmer. Scientists say that the burning of fossil
1:46:23
fuels such as coal, gas and oil are driving these
1:46:27
more frequent and intense heat waves due to climate change.
1:46:32
Oh yeah, it's all there. You know, I remember, it's
1:46:36
interesting they said hotter since 1950. Okay. So it was
1:46:39
hot. It was hot in 1950. I remember the 70s
1:46:44
in Holland was very, very hot. The Summers. Cyclical. Of
1:46:50
course it's cyclical. Let's listen to one of the guys
1:46:53
who founded Greenpeace on a little climate lecture. This old
1:46:57
clip again? Yeah, I love this clip. This is an
1:47:01
old clip. Patrick Moro. It's a good clip. The guy
1:47:04
is dead. Well, the guy who's the Weather Channel guy
1:47:08
is the dead guy. This guy's still alive. Patrick Moore?
1:47:11
I think so. He should be dead. One of my
1:47:13
missions is to turn on its head the idea that
1:47:17
carbon dioxide is a pollutant and somehow dangerous when in
1:47:20
fact it is the most important nutrient for all life
1:47:23
on earth and without it this would be a dead
1:47:25
planet. So I say not only is carbon dioxide good,
1:47:29
it is essential and it's a good thing that we
1:47:32
are putting some more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere because
1:47:35
it was running low before we came along. If we
1:47:38
had definitive proof that CO2 was causing serious problems and
1:47:42
we could prove it, don't you think they would write
1:47:44
that down on a piece of paper somewhere so people
1:47:46
could read it? They don't have definitive proof, period, in
1:47:49
science. I'm a student of the philosophy and history of
1:47:53
science and I know that the scientific method has not
1:47:57
been applied in such a way as to prove The
1:47:59
carbon dioxide is causing the earth to warm. You think
1:48:02
in a few years, say 50 years from now, people
1:48:05
will go, that was a really stupid period in our
1:48:07
history when we tried to change all our energy policies
1:48:10
to cut this gas? I am firmly of the belief
1:48:13
that the future will show that this whole hysteria over
1:48:17
climate change was a complete fabrication. Yeah, wasn't he the...
1:48:22
the president or the founder of Greenpeace. Yeah. Yeah. He's
1:48:26
still alive. He's 79. Yeah. There's a really good movie.
1:48:30
I remember, gosh. I think I went to see it
1:48:33
in the theater during the times of the show. Um...
1:48:40
It was, oh, and it featured him. And I remember
1:48:44
reporting that, you know, it was like some blockbuster movie
1:48:47
was on the same weekend. And I think there were
1:48:50
five people. It was a CNN movie. Let me see,
1:48:54
and then... client, man, movie. Was CNN actually? I can't
1:48:58
believe CNN would be promoting. Yes, yes, I think it
1:49:01
was. CO2? I think it was, let me ask the
1:49:04
book of knowledge instead of guessing here. Book of knowledge.
1:49:07
What was the movie that included the founder of Greenpeace
1:49:12
that CNN had in theaters briefly probably about 15 years
1:49:16
ago? And that's a tough quest for the book of
1:49:19
Madeline. Yes, let's see if we can do it. We're
1:49:25
waiting with anticipation. Oh, it's scribbling away. It's going deep
1:49:30
in the archives. Probably. Oh, here we go. According to
1:49:34
the Book of Knowledge, the film you seek is how
1:49:37
to change the world. A 2015 documentary directed by Jerry
1:49:42
Rothwell. It documents how the founding members of Greenpeace created
1:49:47
the Green Movement, centering on activist Robert Hunter and his
1:49:51
part in the creation of Greenpeace. It was screened in
1:49:55
120 UK and 70 US cinemas. On September 9th,
1:50:00
Presented stateside with. And that's it. Nice. Nice abbreviation. How
1:50:10
to change the world. It might have been that. remember.
1:50:15
to change the world movie. That was good stuff. Yeah,
1:50:20
I think this is it. Yeah, maybe. Yeah, I think
1:50:24
this is it. Well, anyway, so this is, I just,
1:50:26
I got to get that out of the way. I
1:50:28
got one more clip to get out of the way.
1:50:30
You want to hear this is a The Hey Yo
1:50:34
Clip Hey, yo. And the next time that my family
1:50:39
wants to Ask me why I don't date or like
1:50:41
why I'm never gonna get married or anything. I'm gonna
1:50:42
tell them what just fucking happened to me. I made
1:50:45
up with this guy. Everything's kind of going really good
1:50:46
at first. Like, you know, the first introduction is kind
1:50:49
of like you're a little shy. So you're like, yeah.
1:50:52
So that was the first few minutes. Well, then, like,
1:50:54
I don't know. At some point he gets really bold
1:50:57
and like just puts his fingers in my mouth. Like,
1:51:01
no warning. Just like... And like the freak in me
1:51:05
was kind of like, you know what, I'm gonna roll
1:51:07
with this. I kind of liked it. I don't, anyway.
1:51:13
So to kind of reciprocate that, I like grab a
1:51:15
fistful of his. And then he... He kicked me out.
1:51:21
Like, permanently. Like, I can never go back to the
1:51:24
dentist's office ever again. Yeah, you really need to get
1:51:30
off social media. This is really, but you are hurting
1:51:33
the show with clips that you used to call screwball
1:51:37
clips. You're not allowed to say that anymore. And this
1:51:39
is just, what is this? I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.
1:51:43
I know I slipped it in. a gag, you know.
1:51:50
I was trying to, I have another thing. No, no,
1:51:52
no. I'm going to play some real news because this
1:51:55
is also barely spoken about. And this is the... fraud
1:52:01
the big fraud today we are announcing federal and state
1:52:04
charges all of which were charged or unsealed at some
1:52:08
point over the past two weeks the past 14 days
1:52:11
coordinated nationwide action Since June 8th, we've charged 455 defendants
1:52:19
across 56. and 45 U.S. states and territories. As alleged
1:52:27
in the various indictments, these individuals participated in health care
1:52:31
fraud schemes involving over $6.5 billion in false claims submitted
1:52:39
to Medicare. Medicaid and other health care programs. That is
1:52:43
literally... Exactly. two years of military funding for Israel. We
1:52:51
can do much better than this fraud, people. Come on
1:52:54
in, Kash Patel. I also want to highlight the Vice
1:52:57
President's brilliant idea to put together a most wanted fraudster.
1:53:00
lists. The FBI has always had our top 10 most
1:53:03
wanted fugitive list. But we, in two weeks ago, I
1:53:06
think we were all in Ohio where we announced our
1:53:08
most wanted fraudsters list. And in just the last two
1:53:10
weeks, thanks to the help of the American people and
1:53:13
the world, we have apprehended two of the most wanted
1:53:16
fraudsters already. This is the reach of the United States
1:53:19
government. This is the reach of... This team, the interagency
1:53:22
and state and local partners focused on one mission and
1:53:24
one mission alone to combat fraud and make sure the
1:53:27
American public's precious taxpayer dollars go where they're supposed to
1:53:30
go to the American people that need them the most
1:53:33
and not to these criminals who are stealing from us
1:53:37
day in and day out. Now, the problem, you can't
1:53:39
just... You can't just grab them. Until they arrest Gavin
1:53:41
Newsom, I'm paying no attention to this. One more from
1:53:45
RFK. The allegations in these cases are particularly disturbing. Some
1:53:49
defendants allegedly ordered medically unnecessary tests. Others prescribed products that
1:53:55
patients did not need. Some allegedly fueled opioid. to increase
1:54:00
their own revenue. In certain cases, patients allegedly died, all
1:54:06
believing they were receiving legitimate Medicare, medical care from providers.
1:54:11
who only viewed them as billing opportunities. Yeah. These defendants
1:54:16
did not simply break the law. They violated the trust.
1:54:19
patients place and medical professionals there you go there's something
1:54:23
they're doing the whole system is that way yes yes
1:54:27
no i could i could tell that when i was
1:54:28
in the hospital Yeah, do you have your final bill
1:54:31
yet? I'll bring it up when it's important. with. Instead
1:54:38
of the sad puppy, perhaps? you I've been dying to
1:54:44
hear the movie review clip, which should be the last
1:54:47
one before we take a break. All it is is
1:54:49
just a reaction to that new, what's that movie, the
1:54:52
Spielberg movie? Oh, Disclosure Day? Yeah. Have you seen it?
1:54:58
No, of course not. I'm gonna watch it when it
1:55:00
comes on TV. Yeah. But it's supposed to, well, this
1:55:04
is the review. On the shemometer, this film rates an
1:55:07
absolute zero. Brr. It's... We already had a boots on
1:55:14
the ground for one of our producers who said it
1:55:15
was no good. It was incoherent. It didn't make any
1:55:18
sense. Incoherent is the main thing. Yeah, it doesn't make
1:55:20
any sense. I believe that to be true. Spielberg whiffed
1:55:25
on this one. He whiffed. What is the big movie
1:55:29
again? It's a toy story. Come on. Oh, yeah. It's
1:55:32
totally kicking ass. Americans. Yeah. Everyone who's listening to this
1:55:36
podcast and the other dog out there is Supergirl. Oh,
1:55:41
I heard it's like, it has no color. Like it's
1:55:44
a wash for some reason. Oh, I didn't know that.
1:55:46
Yeah, washed out color and it's just no good and
1:55:50
stupid villains. Yeah, Hollywood's out of ideas. Bring back Dana
1:55:55
Brunetti. That guy had some ideas. Wow. Well, you know,
1:55:58
Musk is sponsoring... Musk is sponsoring a couple of, Wahlberg
1:56:07
and Mel Gibson to start a new studio. Oh, I
1:56:11
bet it'll be. MGM. Musk, Gibson, and what's his name?
1:56:20
Malberg. Molberg. So maybe they could have him run it.
1:56:29
Well, that would be good. I'd be interested in that.
1:56:34
Listen, people are sick and tired of it. He doesn't
1:56:40
like anything. Who? Brunetti. Now, Brunetti's has been. He missed
1:56:46
this opportunity. No, he's not a has-been. He just doesn't
1:56:48
want to be. Oh, cool. That's why. As far as
1:56:52
he's concerned, working the farm is more fun. I'm a
1:56:55
don't-want-to-be-been. Yeah, I got it. People are sick and tired.
1:57:00
of what Hollywood is pumping out. They're tired of it.
1:57:03
People are sick and tired of social media. They're sick
1:57:07
and tired of cable news. They're sick and tired of
1:57:10
political nonsense. And that's why people are enjoying football. Because
1:57:15
it's just fun. People are loving football. It's only 10%
1:57:19
of the entire... United States and maybe of the world
1:57:22
a much smaller percentage of the world is on social
1:57:25
media arguing about stuff. It's really not that big a
1:57:29
deal. And people who listen to the show, they know
1:57:32
that. That's why they come here, get a few laughs,
1:57:34
like, yeah, that's right. I knew it. I knew it
1:57:37
was all stupid. I knew in the end what it's
1:57:40
all really about. It's not that important. It's just fun.
1:57:46
After the show, do you lie down depressed from hearing
1:57:50
all this? Or are you enlightened and happy and go
1:57:53
cook some dinner? Some people, I think, get depressed. Oh,
1:57:57
I'm very sorry. Then we are missing our mark. If
1:58:00
we're making people depressed. Here's a little snippet from a
1:58:03
podcast. This is another thing we need to start talking
1:58:06
about. And this refers back to the 2026 autos with
1:58:13
the kill switch. And this is the right to repair
1:58:16
clip. This is just a little snippet from a podcast.
1:58:20
to order a McFlurry from McDonald's only to hear that
1:58:22
the ice cream machine is broken again? - The franchises
1:58:26
that I spoke to, they were like, "We know how
1:58:27
to clean the machine, "we just don't know how to
1:58:29
reset it "so that it actually works again." - Turns
1:58:31
out the right to repair McFlurry machines is tied to
1:58:34
a much bigger fight, the right to repair your own
1:58:37
stuff. - Right to repair is one of the few
1:58:39
things I've ever covered as a journalist where there is
1:58:43
very broad bipartisan support. It's an issue where like 90%
1:58:48
of Americans agree that this is an ideal worth fighting
1:58:51
for. I'm Morgan Sung, host of Close All Tabs from
1:58:53
KQED. In this episode, how farmers, hackers, and tech nerds
1:58:58
teamed up to challenge some of the world's... biggest manufacturers.
1:59:01
Now this has been going on for quite a while.
1:59:04
What is the guy, Troll Room, what is the guy's
1:59:06
name? He does a podcast. He sits in a big
1:59:09
chair with a mic in front of his face. like
1:59:12
a big high-back chair. He's always been talking about this,
1:59:16
about iPhones, that you're not allowed to repair those, John
1:59:20
Deere trackers. Yeah, the John Deere thing has really got
1:59:23
people pissed off. Even your car. You don't have the
1:59:25
right to repair your car. You can't. You can't. Open
1:59:28
up the hood. There's a big plastic thing over there.
1:59:31
Lewis Rossman. But you could technically pull the computer out
1:59:34
and put another one in. Lewis Rossman. And that's illegal.
1:59:37
No, Lewis Rossman. And that is why I'm a big
1:59:39
fan of the John Deere thing. fan of Open source
1:59:43
operating systems. Let me say it properly. GNU Linux. Not
1:59:47
just Linux. GNU Linux. Because if you don't say Linux,
1:59:52
then you get Molotov cocktails come flying through your window.
1:59:56
Then Richard Stallman bitches. That's what it all amounts to.
2:00:00
Stallman groupies here. Stallman groupies who are always saying, excuse
2:00:04
me, when you talk about Linux, technically you're talking about
2:00:07
GNU Linux. That means only part of it is Linux.
2:00:11
The other part is GNU. Yeah. So I'd just given
2:00:15
up on it, and I'd just say, GNU Linux. I'm
2:00:18
a big fan of that. Because you can't... What, a
2:00:22
saying-ganoo? Yes. of running open source stuff in my life.
2:00:30
can't repair anything. Yeah, or don't buy a 2026 car.
2:00:33
There you go. And with that, I want to thank
2:00:34
you for your courage. Say in the morning to you,
2:00:36
the man who put the sea in crazy canvas. Say
2:00:38
hello to my friend on the other end, the one,
2:00:40
the only, Mr. So John C. Mr. Adam Crane, I'm
2:00:47
going to ship a sea booster around feet in the
2:00:48
air, so there's no water and damage to the nights
2:00:49
out there. Where's your crash? Oh, you're not home. No
2:00:51
crashing symbols. All right, everyone, let me count to three.
2:00:57
Wow, 1261. Everyone's done. Everyone's dying from the heat wave,
2:01:01
man. That's what's going on there. Well, there's a lot
2:01:04
of flooding going on around here, the East Coast. Oh,
2:01:07
really? You have flooding going on? I didn't realize that.
2:01:09
No, it's tornado systems. We're just tearing up the place.
2:01:12
Do you get tornadoes in California? No, never. There was
2:01:17
one, about one. Every few years there's one that shows
2:01:21
up, but it's not really a Midwestern style. It's like
2:01:24
just kind of a whirlwind that hits the valley once
2:01:28
in a while. Yeah. Doesn't do any, doesn't tear a
2:01:31
roof off. No, we get proper storms here, man. No,
2:01:34
we don't get proper storms. No, we get really proper.
2:01:37
We have earthquakes. Yes, don't you do for one? Southern
2:01:41
California is due for one. Yeah. Not Northern California, though.
2:01:45
Not yet. When was that big one that broke down
2:01:48
the stadium and the highway and everything? Loma Prieta in
2:01:52
1989. I think you do. Come on. No, no. Southern
2:01:57
California is way overdue. It's going to be in Southern
2:02:00
California, then we'll get one, maybe. You think it would
2:02:03
rip right through Hollywood? Beverly Hills? I heard. Well, it's
2:02:08
mostly the outskirts. Tina wants to go on a vacation.
2:02:11
She says, I'd really like to go see California. Southern
2:02:14
California. She's never been here? She's been to Northern California,
2:02:17
never to Southern California. Oh, this is a big difference.
2:02:20
Yes. I suggested Catalina Island, please. Let's go anywhere. Catalina
2:02:25
Island. She's like, you know, I think I would really
2:02:29
like to see Los Angeles and Hollywood and Beverly Hills.
2:02:31
Okay, that's a day trip. And that's it. And you
2:02:36
will be... No, you can spend a couple of days
2:02:37
in the... in that area. I'd be very disappointed. But
2:02:40
the thing is, California... Well, Beverly Hills is still clean.
2:02:43
California is so beautiful. It's just such beautiful nature. It's
2:02:47
a hellscape. But it's... It's beautiful. That's cool. Yeah. There's
2:02:53
something to be said about it. No doubt. Hey, those
2:02:57
trolls who are listening live, they're listening live on a
2:02:59
modern podcast app, which I highly recommend you get. Because...
2:03:03
More increasingly, podcasts are doing live streams. which is really
2:03:09
fun. I mean, we have a live studio audience built
2:03:13
right in and they're helpful. trolls we call it the
2:03:16
troll room in this case they're helpful sometimes irritating and
2:03:20
they entertain themselves quite well you know yelling at each
2:03:23
other and then giving each other plus plus I'm gonna
2:03:26
give you plus plus that means karma so if you
2:03:29
do someone's screen name plus plus then they get a
2:03:32
karma you can see what their karma is If you
2:03:36
do minus minus, then they lose karma points. Yeah, that's
2:03:41
really... Someone give me a plus plus. Let me see
2:03:44
what my karma points are. Give John a plus plus.
2:03:47
See what the answer is. Let me see. So, uh...
2:03:51
Come on. The stream must be lagging a little bit.
2:03:55
I'm sure it lags a lot. Here we go. I
2:03:56
have. 22,436 karma points. Yep. and that just went up
2:04:03
by one how about john how about john's car here
2:04:06
we go you have 21,462, so I'm beating you on
2:04:12
the karma. Yeah, it's because you're in the chatroom pumping
2:04:15
yourself. Pumping myself? Yeah, I've heard. That's illegal. In multiple
2:04:24
states. No, there's no pumping myself. Anyway. So the modern
2:04:30
podcast app. We'll alert you. So, you know, usually your
2:04:34
podcast is stuff that's already been recorded. Well, now it
2:04:37
gives you an alert and you hit that alert and
2:04:39
then you're listening to the stream live. And people, there's
2:04:42
something about live streams that people like. And it's also
2:04:46
much more real for us. You know, we get real-time
2:04:48
feedback. We're not editing this show after the fact. You
2:04:52
know, everything you hear is done live, live to tape.
2:04:55
And within 90 seconds of publishing, the modern podcast apps
2:04:58
pick it up. So what are you waiting for? Get
2:05:00
a new one. Stop using those legacy apps where they
2:05:03
also sometimes just de-platform a show and then it's gone.
2:05:06
You don't even notice it. None of these apps that
2:05:08
are using podcastindex.org have that problem. We have spoken many
2:05:14
times throughout this episode about the downside of advertising and
2:05:17
the scam that it is in podcasting in particular. And
2:05:20
we chose never to do that because we hate dashboards.
2:05:24
Dashboards down with dashboards. Instead, we chose the international lifestyle
2:05:29
of value for value, where we give you the show
2:05:32
in any format you want. It's out there. People can
2:05:35
do whatever they want with it. And they have even
2:05:37
putting it on CDs. They've rebroadcast it on terrestrial radio
2:05:43
stations. All kinds of things. Hey, man, can you guys
2:05:46
give me a clean version of the show? No? No.
2:05:50
Well, I can't broadcast it then. Well, that's why it's
2:05:53
a podcast. It's beautiful. clean it up yourself and broadcast
2:05:57
it. We had a guy in Chicago doing that. Yeah,
2:05:59
it didn't last very long. No, because he got tired
2:06:03
of it. I don't know why. He got tired of
2:06:05
cleaning up the show. Oh, you can't say that on
2:06:07
radio. Um. So we give you all the value right
2:06:13
there up front. There's no... No obligation from you, really.
2:06:17
No, there's a moral obligation, and that is to keep
2:06:20
this show going. And we'd like to make it to
2:06:21
20 years. At least that would be fun. We make
2:06:24
it to 20 years. um that means we have to
2:06:27
pay the bill so you need to give us uh
2:06:29
funding to do that and uh it's real easy you
2:06:32
there's no set amount, whatever value you get out of
2:06:35
the show, you send that back to us at noagendadonations.com.
2:06:39
But really, time, talent, and treasure are the three T's
2:06:42
of the formula. So boots on the ground. What did
2:06:45
we call for earlier? Mahjong experts. We have more producers
2:06:49
than any program anywhere, hands down, because we have... In
2:06:53
effect, no listeners. We only have producers. And there are
2:06:56
producers who give and producers who are douchebags. We didn't
2:07:00
make that up. That was made up by you guys
2:07:02
yourselves. So people are douchebags. Some people get douched. Some
2:07:06
people get dedouched. It's all by your own hand. And
2:07:12
we... We appreciate Darren O'Neill, who apparently is using a
2:07:17
Mac studio. create his artwork for noagendaartgenerator.com. I don't think
2:07:24
he won the pick of the art last time. Let
2:07:27
me see. Who was it that we picked for art?
2:07:30
Oh, it was Dan OBGYN. Yes, OBGYN. Yes, because Dan
2:07:35
came up with a very, we love the classics. When
2:07:38
it's a holiday, particularly Father's Day, which is increasingly ignored
2:07:43
by culture today, dads are no good, they're doofuses, they're
2:07:47
stupid. And it was nice to see this where dad's
2:07:51
in his big Chesterfield. chair knock off Chesterfield He's smoking
2:07:56
his pipe. Mom's got a piece of chocolate cake. The
2:08:00
kid's lighting the pipe. You got a little radio there
2:08:03
playing the No Agenda Show, episode 1878. 79, sorry. The
2:08:08
dog is even in on it with his slippers. Classic.
2:08:12
Classic classic. Yeah, take it from the Saturday Evening Post
2:08:15
style. Explain that. I don't think anyone knows about the
2:08:18
Saturday Evening Post. Well, the Saturday Evening Post, Norman Rockwell
2:08:24
did tons of covers for the Saturday Evening Post and
2:08:28
became famous for a style that the Saturday Evening Post...
2:08:32
pretty much adopted. What was the Saturday Evening Post? It
2:08:36
was a magazine that came out once a week. And
2:08:40
it was, you know, one of the many dead magazines
2:08:44
in the world that had certain characteristics. And the main
2:08:47
characteristic was these fabulous covers. Right. So we can't get
2:08:53
sued for that? What would you get sued? I don't
2:08:56
know. I don't know. Do we using anything from Norman
2:08:58
Rockwell or the corpus just had it all in there?
2:09:01
Someone's getting sued. No, the corpus took a look and
2:09:04
said, yeah, I can copy that. other um no problemo
2:09:10
let me see was there anything else there was a
2:09:11
lot of Father's Day. I like the one next to
2:09:13
it. I like Jeffrey Reyes. Happy Father's Day. It was
2:09:16
similar, I think. Hold on. It wasn't similar. It was
2:09:19
different. It was more traditional. Yeah, yeah. It was very
2:09:23
different. We had, there was a lot of Father's Day
2:09:29
stuff, but no. What was the one that was funny
2:09:33
but we definitely couldn't use and there's the two kids
2:09:36
by the dad's crotch that was a weird one blue
2:09:38
acorn which was the bottom of the page hit the
2:09:42
dad with a ball there's that one the scaramanga that
2:09:46
was funny and then okay mvp happy transparent day yeah
2:09:51
okay no But it's all AI, so I don't think
2:09:56
anyone should feel bad if we don't pick you.
2:10:00
because it didn't really cost you much anyway. Not yet,
2:10:02
at least. Pretty soon it'll be $3 per task. You
2:10:05
heard that here first on the No Agenda Show. And
2:10:08
now let us thank the people who... sent in a
2:10:12
treasure to us. We thank everybody, $50 and above, never
2:10:15
under 50 for reasons of anonymity. And we see all
2:10:18
of you. We appreciate you very much. for and especially
2:10:22
those recurring donations. And people just keep giving us 11-11,
2:10:26
12-12, 33-33. That is so appreciated. But we always want
2:10:31
to highlight our executive and associate executive producers. Now these
2:10:36
are people who are fortunate enough to be able to
2:10:38
send us $200 or more. You not only... are guaranteed
2:10:41
that we read your note. Please keep it within normal
2:10:43
length. But we also give you the title, a real
2:10:46
Hollywood title of Associate Executive Producer. $300 or more, Executive
2:10:50
Producer. And we start, and we also have, how many
2:10:52
left on the Red Heart? The Red Knight Order of
2:10:57
the Hearts? Probably seven. Seven left. So in addition, if
2:11:01
you are not already a night or a day. Um,
2:11:05
Then you get a ring. You get a knight or
2:11:07
a dame ring, but also a beautiful pin. That means
2:11:10
you're a red knight. The ring order just came in,
2:11:13
finally, from China. Why do you have to say that?
2:11:18
How about Italy? Or just nothing. Because Italy would get
2:11:22
them from China. Sarcastic the Nomad, who has been a
2:11:26
long-term supporter of the show, he's from Glenmore, Pennsylvania, comes
2:11:29
in with $1,000, and he says, I am hoping to
2:11:33
acquire one of the last remaining Red Knight titles and
2:11:36
join the Order of the Heart. And you have, sir.
2:11:39
Please promote... the Northern Alabama meetup this Sunday, June 28th.
2:11:43
Show up, folks. Madison, Huntsville, Athens, Decatur, and parts unknown.
2:11:48
It's like a party. Sarcastic the Nomad, and yes, sir,
2:11:51
you will be inducted into the Order of the Heart
2:11:57
very shortly, and thank you very much. Onward with Ian
2:12:00
Cummings in Kingsville. Texas. Where's that? I have no idea.
2:12:06
295. Might be King's Ranch, maybe. I don't know. This
2:12:11
is the final donation needed to knight my father Timothy,
2:12:14
Sir Timothy. Night. of the Bowman and Croft. Comancroft. Is
2:12:21
that what it says? Requesting Glenn Fittich, 12-year-old. Komencroft. And
2:12:26
Haggis. Mm-hmm. Komencroft. He almost didn't make it to Father's
2:12:31
Day, but thanks to all the prayers and support he
2:12:32
puffed through, a harrowing weekend. His blood counts had dropped
2:12:36
low enough that he needed dialysis to survive the night.
2:12:40
due to sepsis from chemo. Wow. That's not fun. Also,
2:12:46
can he get a goat karma and an F cancer,
2:12:48
please? Sincerely, Nate or Ian. Ian Cummings. Cummings in Kingsville,
2:12:54
Texas, a KQN, the Knightsville Naval Air Station. Oh. Ooh.
2:13:00
Excellent. There's an air station there, so there's... KQNI, I'm
2:13:04
thinking that's the... Oh, KQNI. Yeah, that's the ICAO identifier.
2:13:09
I think. It's not a, I don't think that's a
2:13:12
ham call. That's a identifier. I could be wrong though.
2:13:15
But yes, of course we have that for your dad.
2:13:21
You've got karma Up next, coming in with, let's see,
2:13:31
$360, Tally Wiener. Tally Wiener, everybody. Tally Wiener. New York,
2:13:37
New York. Nice to see ya. ITM, happy Father's Day
2:13:41
from EPA region number two. John and Adam, I sent
2:13:46
an email to adam at curry.com hoping to pass to
2:13:49
Rob, the constitutional lawyer. Yes, I have done so. Good
2:13:53
karma, please. Happy to join executive producing. We say thank
2:13:56
you very much. You've got karma. I always pass everything
2:14:02
on to Rob, the constitutional lawyer. Sir Eric Wilka in
2:14:05
Opelika, Alabama, 333.33. ITM Citizen John and Citizen Adam. ITM.
2:14:13
ITM. Writing to say... that the good sumo karma is
2:14:19
mostly safe and effective. I've had my best tournament performance
2:14:23
to date. Taking bronze in middleweight. Wow. Two others from
2:14:28
the club got silver in heavyweight and silver in openweight.
2:14:32
Outside of the pros in Japan, there are weight classes
2:14:35
and openweight. is any size. Unfortunately, we did have one
2:14:42
injured, but he should be back training. You get injured
2:14:45
a lot. Back training in a month or so. Very
2:14:49
proud and grateful for my teammates at Black Dragon Bahia.
2:14:55
or beya beya not sure beya uh i appreciate you
2:14:58
john for rec recommending everyone look up and watch the
2:15:00
sumo match. I got hooked from YouTube clips, got to
2:15:05
see it live at the World Games in Birmingham and
2:15:08
thankfully found... a place to regularly train. I highly recommend
2:15:14
everyone give it a try, even if you don't want
2:15:16
to go into any bouts. The drills, exercise, and the
2:15:21
conditioning. from practice are great the practice training and motivation
2:15:26
helped me drop around 60 pounds Well, that's kind of
2:15:31
the opposite of what you're supposed to do. I was
2:15:32
going to say, aren't you supposed to be fat? Isn't
2:15:34
that the whole idea? You're supposed to be gaining weight.
2:15:37
Yeah. And finally, keep the weight off. uh love the
2:15:40
show keep up the great work can i please get
2:15:42
a jobs karma thanks sir eric wilka So do you
2:15:48
have to be fat to participate in the sumo? No,
2:15:51
like you said, they have weight classes in the United
2:15:54
States. I didn't even know they did this in some
2:15:57
of the schools. No, you don't have to be fat.
2:16:01
Well, it seems like only the champs are fat. So,
2:16:04
I mean, could I benefit from sumo? You? Yes. Okay.
2:16:13
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. Guess
2:16:21
not. Sorry, my mic went off. Oh, okay. Coming in
2:16:25
hot with $333.33. That's our favorite number. Manuka Gold from
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Hudson, Florida. And Manuka Gold says, this is the Manuka
2:16:33
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is asking if the skin cream we offer on ManukaGold.com
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to moisturize, man. Moisturize. I've moisturized my entire life and
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It's a new code. They got a new code. Courage
2:17:29
to tracking the success of our show, John. Seeing which
2:17:32
shows work. Courage. Like, hmm, let's see, Adam did the
2:17:38
read. It was better when Adam did the read. John
2:17:40
Hatchett funny bits in there. He's got a joke and
2:17:43
he had the whatever girls that we boomed. We need
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to put it on the dashboard. Try using code courage
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to receive 20% off your order at ManukaGold.com. As always,
2:17:53
keep up the fight, gentlemen. Sincerely, the Manuka Gold family.
2:17:56
And we thank you very much. Onward with Isobel. Oh,
2:18:01
the Baroness, yes. Yeah, she's in Mont-Laison, France, France, 288.
2:18:08
Uh, maybe we're Gardere. Donate, donate, donate to no agenda,
2:18:12
she writes. Uh... And then she continues by saying, so
2:18:16
worth it are they. And so proud was I. of
2:18:20
my longstanding allegiance to the show that I chose the
2:18:23
title Dame Isobel Pearson, first female listener of No Agenda.
2:18:28
That's right. It's a fact. It's a fact. Partly succinct,
2:18:32
but nevertheless symbolic to me. For 18 years, I have
2:18:36
ensured a continuous stream of sanity, which has guided me.
2:18:40
through my divorce from the UK into the warm embrace
2:18:44
of Gascony. It probably got her divorced in the first
2:18:47
place. I inject my personality and passion to bring my
2:18:51
Pure Garderas to life. Pure Garderas is a retreat destination.
2:18:58
A luxury chamber of CHAMBRE CHAMBRE Chambre d'hote. And live
2:19:04
music venue in spectacular surroundings where I host with grace
2:19:08
and assurance. I let my No Agenda credentials speak for
2:19:11
themselves. We're the number one choice in the south of
2:19:13
France for No Agenda Network. uh 15 off the coat
2:19:17
off with the code itm15 this is a donation karma
2:19:21
in progress. Email me for bespoke packages. Anything is possible.
2:19:27
Pure Gardner, P-U-R-E-G-A-R-D-E-R-E-S. P-U-R-E-G-A-R-D-E-R-E-S at gmail.com. Baroness Isabel Pearson, formerly
2:19:40
First Female Listener. But she's still the first female listener
2:19:44
of No Agenda. Baroness Isabel Purgat. Hey. Thank you, Baroness.
2:19:50
So we're leaving on Wednesday to go to Holland. Yeah,
2:19:55
you gonna take a run by her place? Well... So.
2:20:00
Take the channel. The baby. Well, this is what I
2:20:02
was going to say. The baby. Hopefully the baby arrives
2:20:05
when we're there. We're not coming back until the 13th.
2:20:09
And that'll be way too long for me to be
2:20:12
with the depressed socialists of the Netherlands. uh but maybe
2:20:18
with the depressed uh frank of French. So what I'm
2:20:21
thinking is, because I'm sure we'll have to go back
2:20:23
in August. If the baby comes early, then it's good.
2:20:27
Then we don't have to see him for a month
2:20:29
or two. So maybe it would be September. But I'm
2:20:32
thinking it might be kind of nice to go over,
2:20:35
see the baby, and then take a little jaunt down
2:20:38
to the Baroness. This place, she's got bespoke packages. Well,
2:20:43
maybe I should put you up for free. Well, that's
2:20:46
not the point. The point is it might be a
2:20:48
nice little getaway. I'd like to know what kind of
2:20:53
bespoke package do you have for us, Baroness? I wonder
2:20:56
what kind of... She's in Gascony. Yes. I can give
2:21:01
you some wineries to visit while you're there. I want
2:21:03
to go to her place. She should be the one.
2:21:05
Well, yeah, well, you're not going to just stay there.
2:21:07
You're going to roam the countryside. You're going to rent
2:21:09
a car. I hear she has a nice package. Yeah.
2:21:13
Daniel White, Gladewater, Texas. Our second associate executive producer today
2:21:18
after Baroness Isabel. $250. Jingle, listen to that horn. Please
2:21:23
add, that's the foamer. Please add me to the birthday
2:21:25
list for the 29th. America is celebrating, this is a
2:21:28
$250 donation. America is celebrating its 250th this year and
2:21:32
I'm hitting the big 5-0 to mark the occasion we're
2:21:35
having a meetup on Sunday the 28th in Longview, Texas.
2:21:38
There will be cake. and plenty of shenanigans y'all be
2:21:41
good now uh this is dirty jersey whore i know
2:21:44
who you are daniel MY GOD Listen up! Yeah, definitely.
2:21:53
If you're in the opportunity to go to Longview on
2:21:55
the 28th, Dirty Jersey Whore is a force to be
2:21:58
reckoned with. Awesome dude. Big supporter. Well, here's Daymaster Klein
2:22:04
in Tokyo. Daymaster. Oh, Tokyo. 2-22-22. Dear John and Adam,
2:22:10
Father's Day is gone. But you are the best. Sorry,
2:22:15
I'm getting clogged up here. You're the best fathers in
2:22:18
the universe all year round. I learned that following a...
2:22:22
Father's advice is good. So I am listening to No
2:22:25
Agenda twice a week and especially take to heart the
2:22:28
tip of the day. My daughter's father is the coolest,
2:22:34
and I'm being surrounded by wonderful fathers every day in
2:22:37
the office. Fathers are just plain awesome. I love them
2:22:40
all. Ah. That's sweet. Dame Astrid, Archduchess of Japan, and
2:22:45
all the disputed islands in the Japan Sea. Yes, Ned.
2:22:49
Dame Astrid is wonderful. Also been with us for a
2:22:53
long time. Coming to us from Zwolle in the Netherlands,
2:22:57
$210.60. he sends Martijn Milder. He says, hey, I've been
2:23:01
a listener since the COVID times. Can I get a
2:23:04
de-douche? You've been de-douched. And I'd also like a Karma
2:23:10
jingle, please. Many thanks, Martijn Milder in Zwolle, the Netherlands.
2:23:16
You've got karma. Let's go with Linda Lupatkin in Castle
2:23:21
Rock, Colorado. 200. She says, jobs karma. Your resume has
2:23:29
about 10 seconds to make an impression, and most don't.
2:23:32
For a resume that gets results, go to ImageMakersInc.com. Linda
2:23:36
helps professionals and executives position their experience. So employers see
2:23:42
their value. That's image makers with a K and Linda
2:23:45
Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes. Best
2:23:49
Linda. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. And we do have
2:23:59
one straggler here in the 200s. Eric from Parts Unknown
2:24:02
and he says this is at $200. A partial switcheroo.
2:24:06
Hmm. He wrote in two checks for $100 each, and
2:24:10
we decided to bump them in two. So he gets
2:24:12
the executive producer credit. But he has a switcheroo. But
2:24:16
there's two separate checks for two people, right? But he
2:24:18
wants switcheroos here. Yeah, well, you got two switcheroos. I
2:24:21
don't know what to do. Oh, two switcheroos? Okay, two
2:24:23
switcheroos. The robot's going to be very confused trying to
2:24:26
figure this one out. Oh, that would be great. We'll
2:24:28
see what the robot does. These two checks are from
2:24:30
my great friend Scott Auld, who surprised me. Uhhhh... Oh,
2:24:37
with a $55 de-douching. episode 1873. Now I'm returning the
2:24:42
favor. $100 for Scott and $100 for me. Stay caffeinated,
2:24:47
says Eric. It's a half switcheroo. We'd credit Eric and
2:24:51
Scott. All right. There we go. It's a partial switcheroo.
2:24:54
It's exactly what he said. Thank you very much to
2:24:56
the executive and associate executive producers. We appreciate you. Of
2:24:59
course, these titles, once again, are real Hollywood titles. Anywhere
2:25:03
those are recognized and honored, like imdb.com, they can be
2:25:07
put to use. And thank you for supporting us here
2:25:09
for episode 1,880. Our formula is this. We hit people
2:25:16
in the mouth. Everybody, $50 and above as we hit
2:25:33
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, $123.45. Thank you, Mansour Rod
2:25:38
in Alpharetta, Georgia. Sir Skip Logic, Spring Hill, Tennessee, 105.35.
2:25:42
$100 from Kellen Price. And there's Sir Kevin McLaughlin, the
2:25:48
Archduke of Luna, lover of America and boobs, every single
2:25:50
episode. He sends in $80.08. Kids, if you have a
2:25:53
calculator, you get the joke. And he says, God bless
2:25:56
America, land that I love. Stand beside her and guide
2:25:59
her through the night. with a light from above. From
2:26:01
the mountains to the prairies to the oceans white with
2:26:04
foam, God bless America, my home sweet home. God bless
2:26:08
America, my home sweet home. And boobs. 7777 from Luke
2:26:14
Barnes in Salem, Oregon. And he says, God bless the
2:26:18
both of you for being the. only news deconstructors to
2:26:21
not bend the knee to advertising money that is often
2:26:24
so wickedly used. *burp* And he says he has a
2:26:30
sweet Easter egg for the show in his new book
2:26:32
series, The Universal Testaments. Neoteric, verse 1. I hope the
2:26:38
pending popularity of my work and Progress 9-book series drums
2:26:41
up even a little support for our favorite hosts. Well,
2:26:44
you'll have to send me a copy of this book.
2:26:46
Now I need to see it. Dame Becky comes in
2:26:49
from Arlington, Washington with the... Uh, 6996. Yes, we see
2:26:55
the palindrome there. Rebecca Ha! from the USA and Italy.
2:27:00
Number one or eight in a countdown to my 63rd
2:27:03
when I'll be 63 in July, born in 1963, hence
2:27:07
$63, which he sent in. Love you guys. And all
2:27:09
the trolls and dames and knights, more out there in
2:27:11
the morning. No G in the morning. And Rebecca comes
2:27:15
in again. with 63. I love you both. This is
2:27:19
number two. towards my birthday of 63 from year 63
2:27:22
in order to be a dame by my birthday. Wait,
2:27:26
is she being, is she being damed? Did this get
2:27:29
missed? Uhhh... This is uh, this is concerning. Frogs from
2:27:40
your boots on the ground, Italy. Okay. It's towards her
2:27:45
63rd birthday donation, so... Let's make sure that if we
2:27:51
miss it, if we screwed it up, that we do
2:27:52
it right for you, Rebecca. Yeah, we'll get it made
2:27:54
good if it's... Yes, well, it's July, so maybe she's
2:27:59
close to... Yeah, maybe you got more coming. Weatherford, Texas,
2:28:03
$60.06, 6-0-0-6. The small boobs from Matthew Elwart, same from
2:28:08
Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona, and a rare triple small
2:28:11
boob as Dame Liberty Mon from Vista, California comes in
2:28:15
with that amount. Baron Henry of Outpost West Rancho Palos
2:28:18
Verdes in California. California, 5992. Sir John, Herber Springs. Arkansas.
2:28:26
Double nickels. Heber Springs? Did I say it wrong again?
2:28:30
Heber Springs? Double nickels on the dime, $55.10. With this
2:28:35
donation, I mount the 5K Ridge of Viscount. Wow. Sir
2:28:40
John, Knight of St. Patrick, patron saint of engineers. Thank
2:28:44
you very much. The upgrade is coming, this show. Eric
2:28:47
Hulls. Or Holsey in Katy, Texas, 5483. And he's glad
2:28:52
that you're healthy. Well, physically. Surprise! Night of Astonishment, Yukon,
2:28:59
Oklahoma. 5444. Donald Seeley in Edmond, Oklahoma. Oklahomans together, 5272.
2:29:06
Kristen Grulich in Winter Haven, Florida, 5150. Puppy chow, okay.
2:29:12
Sir Richie Rich, 5150. Birthday on June 25th. We got
2:29:16
you covered. Alex Delgado and Aptos Color. California kicks off
2:29:20
the 50s. Stefan Trockels in Soest in Deutschland, 50. Brad
2:29:24
McDonald in Mason, Ohio, 50. Scott Van Gelder in Centerville,
2:29:29
Massachusetts, 50. And Michael Myers in Diamond Head, Mississippi, $50.
2:29:34
And that wraps it up. But I see you, $49.99s.
2:29:37
I see everything down the list. We look at them
2:29:39
all. We read all the notes. And we appreciate you
2:29:41
very much. Thank you for supporting us. You can do
2:29:43
so by going to noagendadonations.com. Consider giving us a recurring
2:29:48
donation. Any amount, any frequency, all you do is go
2:29:51
to noagendadonations.com and decide, what value did I get from
2:29:54
the show? Should I give these guys something? Should I
2:29:57
return the value? If you like the show, we recommend...
2:30:00
No agenda donations dot com. And of course, we always
2:30:08
like to mention the birthdays if you want to be
2:30:11
on the list. It's notes at noagendashow.net. Sir Richie Rich
2:30:14
celebrating today. And Daniel White will be hitting the Big
2:30:17
5-0 on June 29th. Happy birthday. I'm everybody here at
2:30:20
the best podcast in the universe. Slay ♪ Strange ♪
2:30:33
Yeah, well, you just heard him, Sir John Knight of
2:30:36
St. Patrick, patron saint of engineers, hit the... 5k mark
2:30:40
it's all cumulative so we really appreciate that amount of
2:30:44
support and you are here by officially a Viscount here
2:30:48
at the no agenda roundtable and we thank you very
2:30:50
much for that incredible support and we do have as
2:30:53
discussed earlier one order of the heart a red knight
2:31:01
You're of purpose, right? $1,000 to nab one of those
2:31:16
seven remaining red knight pins. The order of the heart
2:31:19
again. It comes in a beautiful package. It comes with
2:31:22
a certificate of authenticity and, of course, that pin which
2:31:25
you can proudly display at any meetup or anywhere. Noage
2:31:28
and the people gather together. Congratulations. Welcome, Red Knight, Order
2:31:33
of the Hearts. Behold! is I got my blade out
2:31:50
already because we have one night to bring into the
2:31:52
round table. If you can, uh, hello, do you have
2:31:55
a blade there at Jay's house? Hold on, let me
2:31:57
find it. Oh, there it is. Got it right here.
2:31:59
Oh, very nice. Sir Timothy, thank you very much for
2:32:04
your support of $1,000 or more. That brings you into
2:32:08
the coveted roundtable of the NO Agenda Knights and Dames,
2:32:12
and you will now officially be knighted as Sir Timothy,
2:32:16
Knight of Cromencroft. And for you, sir, we have Hookers
2:32:20
& Blow, Rent Poison Chardonnay. This is for your dad,
2:32:23
of course, the Glenn Fittich 12-Year and Haggis. I wonder
2:32:27
what was smelling so bad. Hey, your dad may also
2:32:30
appreciate pepperoni rolls and pale ales, beers and blunts, Rubenesque,
2:32:33
women and rosé, geishas and sake, vodka, vanilla, bungheads and
2:32:36
bourbons, sparkling cider and escorts. ginger ale and gerbils and
2:32:39
as always at the round table the mutton and the
2:32:42
mead and we certainly are praying for your dad and
2:32:45
we hope that you can help him out get that
2:32:47
ring the rings are in so we can get them
2:32:49
to you pretty quick go to no agenda rings.com let
2:32:51
us know the ring size and where to send it
2:32:54
and we'll get that out to you post haste and
2:32:55
thank you all once again for Supporting the No Agenda
2:32:59
Show. No Agenda. place in fact uh tomorrow we have
2:33:11
the zona spooky kinder meeting in Berlin, at the Volksbar
2:33:16
in Berlin, Germany. get all the details. So the organizers,
2:33:21
the battalion Augusto, Secretary General of Sao Paulo, Wow, so
2:33:25
he's in Germany right now. at noagendameetups.com. Get all the
2:33:29
details. Rotterdam returns. The first Rotterdam No Agenda Meetup tomorrow,
2:33:33
8 o'clock. Amazing Rotterdam time at the Hachse Bluff. in
2:33:37
Rotterdam, the Netherlands. On Saturday, the June mac and cheese
2:33:40
meetup at one o'clock at Don Chavez in Cibelo's Mexican
2:33:45
Grill in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Also on Saturday, the Northern
2:33:48
Silicon Valley get John out of the house meetup. That'll
2:33:51
be at 3.33 p.m. Pacific at Club Mallard. He will
2:33:54
be there in Albany, California. Take pictures while you can.
2:33:59
And the talent offering to Houston area no agenda producers
2:34:03
at City Orchard in Houston, Texas, also tomorrow. These are
2:34:06
all great things to go attend. You will not be
2:34:09
disappointed. On Sunday, our next show day, the Northern Alabama
2:34:13
meet up at 3.30 at Mellow Mushroom. Decatur, Alabama. Heard
2:34:16
about that one earlier. And also the East Texas meetup
2:34:19
and half century celebration for Dirty Jersey Whore. He turns
2:34:23
50 and go visit him and celebrate with him at
2:34:25
Rotola's Pizzeria in Longview, Texas for July. Just to give
2:34:30
you an idea of what's coming up. Raleigh, North Carolina.
2:34:32
Eagle, Idaho. Scottsdale, Arizona. Asheville, North Carolina. Charlotte, North Carolina.
2:34:36
In Los Angeles, California, it truly is a worldwide international
2:34:41
phenomenon. Go to noagentameetups.com to find out where you can
2:34:45
join one of these meetups. This is where you will
2:34:47
get connection that always gives you protection. The people you
2:34:50
meet at the meetup will be your first responders in
2:34:52
any emergency. If you can't find one near you at
2:34:55
noagentameetup.com, Start one yourself. It's easy, it's free, and always
2:34:59
a party. ♪ Makes and ♪ you Yes, we know
2:35:21
we have an exciting tip of the day coming up.
2:35:24
John promised that to us earlier on in the show.
2:35:27
Also, end of show mixes, which are dynamite. But first,
2:35:31
we select an ISO. And this is where John, once
2:35:34
again, tries to trick us into believing. that true celebrities
2:35:38
are endorsing the No Agenda show. But I will go
2:35:42
first with my real ISOs. There's nothing else like that
2:35:46
on planet Earth. was reasonable. Yeah. What do I do
2:35:51
with this information? Kinda funny? And then always going to
2:35:56
the well. These guys are great entertainers. Very smart. Very
2:36:00
funny. Come on. Come on. It's three seconds. Three seconds
2:36:05
exactly. You're saying that because yours are actually violate the
2:36:09
three second rule. They're four seconds. Maybe they're good. I
2:36:12
don't know. Which one first? Well, one of them is.
2:36:15
It's a good example of the kind of stuff that
2:36:18
goes around that needs to be posted online and you
2:36:21
would bitch and moan about it, but it's a good,
2:36:24
and it could be end of show, maybe not, but
2:36:26
this is Elon Musk. I have no idea why John
2:36:29
and Adam are throttled on X. I have nothing to
2:36:32
do with it. We are throttled on X. I've been
2:36:35
at 99,000 for, what, 10 years? Yeah, we're throttled on
2:36:39
X, and he's got nothing to do with it. 10
2:36:41
years. Let me see what my current count is. Hold
2:36:44
on a second. Let me just check. Let's see, what
2:36:47
is your current kind? You've got to be around the
2:36:48
same. You can't be much higher. No, I'm 100,000.4. I'm
2:36:52
99. I've been as high as 100. I'm always 99k.
2:36:55
Yeah, they won't let you go over 100. I don't
2:36:58
know what the deal is with you. It's me. What
2:37:02
are you going to do? All right, next. Here's Trump.
2:37:07
As your president, I intend to make the No Agenda
2:37:09
show a national treasure immediately. actually wasn't too bad. You
2:37:15
know, at least you can hear what he's saying. Musk
2:37:17
is like... I have no idea why John and Adam
2:37:19
are throttled on X. I have nothing to do with
2:37:22
it. No, I prefer this. You know, I prefer this
2:37:24
is better. As your president, I intend to make the
2:37:26
No Engender show a national treasure immediately. We already were
2:37:30
national treasures, Mr. President, but we'll take your ringing endorsement
2:37:33
any day. And right now it's time for to learn
2:37:37
how to do this. It's fast for you and me
2:37:42
Just the tip with JCB. And sometimes Adam. Okay, so
2:37:48
what I've done, both these clips came from this site.
2:37:53
And I've been looking at all the different sites that
2:37:55
do celebrity impressions and voices. They've done the sampling. And
2:37:59
we have a couple of people in our producership operation
2:38:03
that can do this, and they've done it. And we've
2:38:05
taken clips from the producers, too. The one problem is
2:38:12
I think a lot of these sites are all the
2:38:14
same and they're just packaged differently you know that like
2:38:17
this typical scam now are these free are these free
2:38:21
they're free for like doing two or three clips and
2:38:26
then oh sorry you have to zoom blah blah you
2:38:29
know you have to pay now so and you don't
2:38:32
get them right I found one that has a limited
2:38:36
number of celebrities. But... An unlimited number of these clips,
2:38:42
all the clips I've had in the last, I'd say,
2:38:44
couple of months come from this site. But they've only
2:38:48
got the following celebrities. Elon, Donald Trump, Kamala, Joe Biden.
2:38:53
Mark Zuckerberg, who is quite good, by the way. Zuckerberg
2:38:56
is good. Barack Obama, which is not very good. Kanye
2:39:01
West, who is, I don't know if it's good or
2:39:03
not. Joe Rogan, which is not very good. And Tom
2:39:06
Cruise, which is excellent. The Tom Cruise voice is terrific.
2:39:11
And Snoop Dogg. Yeah, which is mediocre, but it's okay.
2:39:15
So I get all this from... And you can do
2:39:18
as many as you want. And they'll give you a
2:39:20
nice little video that you can post. You've seen these.
2:39:23
You hate them. But they're cheap and easy. And I
2:39:27
have made a hundred of these things. And they've never
2:39:29
asked for money. And the site's very simple. It's called
2:39:33
elontalks.com. They never asked for money. Never have asked for
2:39:40
money. There's got to be some kind of scam going
2:39:43
on here. I have no idea what the deal is,
2:39:45
but they've never asked for money. Clip after clip after
2:39:50
clip, I've done at least 50. clips that I've downloaded
2:39:54
and used on Twitter. ElonTalks.com
2:40:00
And make some of your own. Pass them around. Try
2:40:04
to plug the No Agenda show if you can. as
2:40:07
a favor to this tip of the day. And you
2:40:09
can find more tips like this at noagendafun.com, tipoftheday.net. It's
2:40:15
fast for you and me Just the tip with JC.
2:40:20
And sometimes, Adam. Created by Dana Burnetti. Man, you're trying
2:40:26
to juice the algos, huh? Before you know it, you're
2:40:30
going to say, hey, man, we should be streaming live
2:40:31
on X because that's where everybody is. Yeah, we should
2:40:35
do video. We should do video. Yeah, let's do video.
2:40:39
Yeah, that's not happening. I'm in my underwear. Wow, a
2:40:44
visual nobody needed. Even this lady in the show. No,
2:40:47
you got it. No, we did. Danny Luce, Just Baker,
2:40:51
MVP, and Sir Johnny B, all representing in the end
2:40:54
of show mixes. Thank you, gentlemen, for doing that for
2:40:57
us. You'll like them. There's some toe tappers in there.
2:41:00
fun because the lyrics are getting better and better. Also,
2:41:04
Josh is coming up next on the No Agenda stream
2:41:07
with the Disaffected podcast. Have you ever thought about these
2:41:11
women, the whatever girls, cluster B? You'll get it all
2:41:16
from Disaffected. And we return. Sunday. of your media deconstruction,
2:41:23
have a laugh as we show you what's really going
2:41:26
on in the world outside of the media spin, because
2:41:28
it's all bull crap. We got dynamite grapes right now.
2:41:38
And from... refinery row where we've got dynamite grape stew
2:41:42
somewhere. I'm John C. Dvorak. Remember us at noagenthodonations.com until
2:41:46
Sunday. Adios, mofos. Ahooey, hooey. And such. drop back so
2:41:59
I Check this, four hot stories of the news dismissed.
2:42:01
Intel cooked up, whole squad in a stew. Mainstream froze
2:42:03
like, nah, we're through. Fauci in the mix, rule book
2:42:05
on fire. COVID lab rooms run higher and higher. Biolab
2:42:07
funding overseas. Heat big outlets vanish like we didn't see.
2:42:09
UK bombshell headlines shook off media talking about a big
2:42:11
boy's duck. Podcast rise, truth on deck. No agenda with
2:42:14
a mic like fact check. Blacklist this, blacklist that. Stories
2:42:16
disappear like a magic act. If it's real, say it.
2:42:19
If it's fake. Slay it. Silence is the trick and
2:42:21
they still try to play it. For value, keep the
2:42:24
signal tight. Cipher in the dark, but we bring that
2:42:29
light. CIA program. This is the clip, right? is pushing
2:42:48
that through the administrative state structures. Malone 6 Wow What
2:43:05
you're seeing is the power of the intelligence community. Malone
2:43:09
6. Wow. This is a CIA program. A CIA program.
2:43:20
He was pulled out of the crash. Malone 6. Wow.
2:43:30
push their agenda. Malone? Wow. This is a slave program.
2:43:44
No agenda, shining light on the blackout on the bombshell.
2:43:51
Tulsi stepped from the DNI vault with four thunderclaps to
2:43:54
try to erase Obama Intel cookout spying on the tower
2:43:57
now cuffs for the chef who cooked the case then
2:44:00
the russia hawks files brandon clapper come in the treason
2:44:03
frame the class flip the script but the outlets play
2:44:06
the silence game ouchies gain a function fiasco chinese lab
2:44:09
connection in the mix virus possibly crafted there but they
2:44:14
black the origin fix fourth overseas the stars and stripes
2:44:22
gain our function shadows with no Siding for. types across
2:44:28
the pond the UK dropped the red gang inquiry bomb
2:44:30
quarter million British girls grooming gangs mostly foreign-borns Thomas step
2:44:34
down the scandal stairs but the press look the other
2:44:36
way complete media embargo what are they scared to say
2:44:39
Democrats If these stories are fake, then why the full
2:44:46
information disease? On our bombshells, zero column inches wide. Even
2:44:53
to disprove them, they won't let the truth collide. Our
2:44:55
media, the only ones keeping the signal alive. No agenda
2:44:58
digging deep while the mainstream... Let's go more than ever
2:45:02
because it's obvious when needed value for value the fuses
2:45:05
let the blackout can't to persistent MF-er. It always finds
2:45:09
a way to sever the chains of deception when the
2:45:11
gatekeepers pull the lever. out on the bombshells ♪ Bombshells
2:45:19
♪ ♪ Short cut his patriotic ride right through the
2:45:46
basin right through the drain leaving a trademark Tyler Shannon
2:45:54
the water is good So keep marching on those *SALUTE
2:46:02
TO THE DRIVER WHO CLEARED OUT THE SITE* into a
2:46:17
is fixed in a brand new way. H-N-A. intend to
2:47:03
make the No Agenda show a national treasure immediately.