Cover for No Agenda Show 1881: Cow Cartel
June 28th • 2h 52m

1881: Cow Cartel

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0:00
I'm sorry. I'm going to stop talking. Adam Curry. John
0:03
C. Dvorak. It's Sunday, June 28th, 2026. This is your
0:07
award-winning Get My Nation Media assassination episode 1881. This is
0:12
no agenda. and broadcasting live from the heart of the
0:18
Texas Hill Country here in Region number six in the
0:21
morning, everybody. Northern Silicon Valley where the Democrat Socialists haven't
0:28
taken over yet. I'm John C. Dvorak. VOD and Buzz
0:35
That's amazing. The whole Sunday shows were filled with people
0:39
talking about it. It is great. Yeah, it is great.
0:43
And before we do that, how was the meetup? The
0:47
meetup was fair. Fair? It was about 20 people. It
0:50
wasn't that many. Oh. But we had the, there was
0:53
the regulars and, uh... Uh... It was a good meetup.
0:58
Well, I'll tell you that, um... People should tag No
1:02
Agenda Show on their Instagram pictures. This is what you
1:08
do. This is how you... Oh yeah, well, I think
1:10
that's good advice. This is what you do. Tina said,
1:13
hey! Hey, John had a meetup. Look at that. Because
1:17
she's on Instagram and it showed up for her. So
1:19
you're... your evil or Jay's evil plan is working. The
1:23
Instagram, we're going viral with the Insta. You know, I
1:26
was thinking about these meetups. We've been doing meetups for
1:30
how many years now? Ever since it actually began with
1:35
you and the Hot Pockets tour. Right. Oh, wow. So
1:38
that was 2000. Dying, I want to say. Yeah, 2000.
1:44
And then it gravitated toward the trailer that you couldn't
1:49
write off. Well, I tried, and that didn't end well
1:54
for me. But since then, you know, we had, we
1:58
were using, we were using meetups. even for a little
2:01
while and people hated it. Yes, we were for a
2:03
very short time. People hated it and then Sir Daniel
2:06
came in. And then all of a sudden they wanted
2:07
us to pay. Oh, yeah. Yeah, right. We're not going
2:12
to pay for a scheduling website. And then Sir Daniel
2:14
stepped up and said, hold my beer. And he made
2:18
noagendameetups.com. I was thinking, because at first the meetups were
2:24
you and I attended, and then people started doing meetups
2:27
where we weren't there, so they had our heads on
2:30
sticks. I don't see as many heads on sticks anymore
2:32
as we used to. No, I haven't seen a head
2:33
on stick for a couple of years. Yeah, so that's
2:36
over. The heads on sticks are over. And it's. global
2:40
phenomenon we had meet up in Ukraine we just had
2:44
one in Berlin we have them in Japan we have
2:46
them in Australia we have them in Brazil we have
2:50
them in the Netherlands the UK not many in France
2:54
actually There's the one with the Gardere. Yes, Baroness Isabelle,
3:00
yeah. Um... Pastor Brian had a message this morning about
3:04
loneliness. Despite our hyper-connected world, 57% of Americans are lonely,
3:13
and it's a majority of men. Now, his obvious message
3:18
is that, you know, with Jesus, you don't have to
3:20
be lonely. But I was thinking, what an important... The
3:24
important thing these meetups are, because I was just looking
3:27
at the picture of you and your people there at
3:31
the meetup. And this is a very disparate group. These
3:34
are people probably don't visit the same bars normally or
3:38
the same... you know, hangouts. And some people may never
3:43
get out of the house or just think, you know,
3:45
like, or can't find people to hang out with. I
3:49
think these meetups, everybody knows that you can come to
3:52
the meetup and you're going to have one thing in
3:54
common. It doesn't matter what. angle you approach it from
3:58
or what you think about politics or the world or
4:01
life we have you have something in common it's like
4:03
oh we all uh we all have our amygdalas in
4:06
check and we just want to hang out and have
4:08
have a drink and chat And I think we are
4:11
actually combating loneliness in the world. So I want to
4:17
up the ante on these things. All right, all right,
4:19
here we go. Guests. Bring a guest? I'm going to
4:24
have Brunetti come to one of the meetups. He's going
4:26
to be the celebrity guest. Oh, celebrity guest. Oh, that's
4:30
a good one. We've had a fair amount of celebrities
4:34
throughout the years. Yeah, but they're not celebrity guests. But
4:39
he's not really a... celebrity guest because he listens to
4:42
the show. He's a producer, although only an associate executive
4:45
producer. No, he's been executive producer. Don't get him mad.
4:50
He won't do the gig. He won't do the gig.
4:55
Does he have a rider? I'm not doing the gig.
5:00
If Adam keeps insulting me. Come to think of it,
5:04
he hasn't called me in a while. I'm a little
5:06
worried about that. Probably for good reason. Yes. So I
5:11
think then you get the Mercy Me guys. Oh, yeah.
5:15
We've got Jackie Green up here in Sacramento. He should
5:17
come down. I mean, there are people. uh we have
5:22
celebrities we can use as shills we have celebrities we
5:26
have celebrities we should be using people that come to
5:29
the meetup we needed an extra gimmick though what do
5:33
you mean extra gimmick for the well some sort of
5:35
thing like a certificate that you came to the meetup
5:38
or you know just something Just something a little extra.
5:43
I don't know. Wait a minute. It's like the sticker
5:45
guy who always comes to our Albany meetup and he's
5:48
always dropping off stickers. Hey, the no agenda shop, no
5:51
agenda sticker club. That's a good deal. Well, they're making
5:56
some terrific... Their stickers are... I'll have those. this world.
6:00
They're fabulous. And of course they're, you know, they're derived
6:03
from no agenda art generator, but the one I got
6:07
the, like the, the legal tender I got in the
6:09
mail the other day. And some other ones. It's good.
6:13
And they're the perfect size for sticking anywhere. You just
6:16
stick them up on stuff. Stick them. Stick them everywhere.
6:19
People like, oh, that's. a pretty near toll booths. That's
6:22
my recommendation. As you're driving through with your easy pass.
6:26
You can do it. Well, if you get an easy
6:28
pass, it's not going to do much good there. So
6:31
what is the gimmick then when we have our celebrity
6:34
appearances at the meetups? I don't know. We have to
6:38
start thinking about it. Okay. The most emailed response. to
6:43
this podcast? Is it about Iran? Is it about the
6:46
war? Is it about the economy? Is it about the
6:50
midterms? No! The most response I have received this week,
6:54
I don't know about you, because it's hard to spell
6:56
Dvorak. is Mahjong. Well, that's interesting. One of our dames,
7:04
or dame in waiting, she's not quite yet, who was
7:08
at the meetup, had from the 70s a Ma, because
7:12
I guess in the 70s, Ma Zhang had a moment
7:15
of popularity, and she had a Ma Zhang necklace. that
7:20
she had gotten in the 70s in New York. Wow,
7:24
that's great. She said, what do you think this is?
7:26
And she shows it, and I said, that's a Mahjong
7:29
tile. I know that much. Of all of them, I
7:33
got so many different emails. This is from Sarah in
7:36
Brentwood, Tennessee. ITM Adam and John, Mahjong Mania has indeed...
7:40
taken hold with the suburban ladies of America. My neighborhood
7:44
friends in the 40-plus club paid to learn from a
7:46
pro two years ago, and it's become our favorite girls'
7:50
night in activity. It's not just a silly game for
7:54
bored women. It's a booming industry. There are countless companies
7:58
that sell designer tiles. Oh, here's, how about a no
8:02
agenda Mahjong set? I'm thinking of something here. Design, the
8:07
average for these designer tiles, $500 a set. Whoa. Two
8:12
of my good friends have ten sets each. They are
8:15
the most enthusiastic collectors of our group. You can find
8:18
tiles to match any aesthetic. any hobby or a session
8:21
or podcast. I added that. One of our girls is
8:25
a diehard Swifty. Hook her up with Darren. And she
8:30
bought the Taylor tiles? What? that tailor tiles for around
8:35
$500. My friend who loves Jesus and America has a
8:39
native. Thank you. to design a no agenda mahjong set
9:01
exit strategy where is this person from at Brentwood Tennessee
9:06
Yeah. Again, this is one of the advantages of living
9:10
in California. This is not out here. No, you guys
9:14
are boring. We've got cool stuff. Oh yeah, there's nothing
9:17
more exciting than a night in maw- John don't know
9:24
i mean oh yeah now you're right i don't know
9:28
don't knock it i mean we still play baccarat pinochles
9:33
it was the thing the one that got me last
9:35
show pinochle i still don't know i don't know is
9:37
that a card game i don't even know I think
9:39
it's potato chips. I'm not sure what you play it
9:42
with. It's a pinochle with a shuffleboard on the wall.
9:44
I have no idea. I never understood it. Anyway, let's
9:49
get back to the communism because that is fantastic. It's
9:52
so funny. and the defense by some. uh is yeah
9:58
i have a thesis when we're done I like that.
10:00
I'll kick it off. I know you have a couple
10:02
of clips here, so let me kick it off. Just
10:03
a couple. This is Senator Tim Kaine. This is from
10:07
this morning on Spank the Nation. And he was just
10:14
aghast about how stupid Trump's comments were. Senator, I want
10:17
to ask you a little bit about what's happening. here
10:20
at home. There were three far left candidates handpicked by
10:24
New York City Mayor Mamdani who won last week over
10:28
more centrist candidates. Some are looking at that and saying
10:32
the reach of the left wing of your party seems
10:35
to be expanding. And here is what President Trump said.
10:39
Take a listen. It's becoming a communist party. These are
10:43
not social democrats. These are hardcore godless communists. They're godless
10:49
communists. All communists are godless. They don't believe in God.
10:53
This is the most serious threat to our country since
10:57
its existence. What do you make of that attack here?
11:02
And do you have concerns that the progressive platform of
11:07
some members of the party will make it more difficult
11:10
to win in other parts of the country headed into
11:13
November? Margaret, what the president said is just... goofy word
11:19
salad. I'm not an expert on New York House races.
11:22
I am an expert on Senate races. And we have
11:25
got Senate candidates all over this country. working to flip
11:29
red seats blue by focusing on the president's mismanagement of
11:34
the American economy. Families are suffering cost increases because of...
11:38
Chaotic tariffs, illegal war, and focus on goofy things like
11:43
ballrooms, arches, and the reflecting pool. I don't know if
11:48
this is a new term they're trying to launch, goofy.
11:50
I mean, it used to be weird. That was a
11:52
pretty good one, even according to Scott Adams. Rest in
11:55
peace. Goofy may be a new term. trying to launch
11:59
it's possible i mean the idea of calling what trump
12:01
said word salad to try to deflect from the usage
12:05
for that of that phrase i mean i aimed at
12:09
certain democrats it is it is i think a very
12:12
good characterization of communism They are godless. Am I wrong?
12:20
Well, Marxism technically rejects religion. Right. Yeah, because the state
12:27
should be the religion. Yeah, yeah. So it wasn't goofy,
12:31
and it wasn't an attack. Well, I know what he's
12:33
talking about. It wasn't an attack. But ABC. this week,
12:39
they had the man himself on. They had Mum Donnie
12:42
on. and discuss this. And this might flow nicely into
12:48
your clips, I think, because I think I know what
12:50
you have, because I actually was going to clip it,
12:53
but I saw you come in with it, so I
12:54
figured I wouldn't do it. Here he is, the Muslim
12:57
mayor of New York. And you're hearing some not just
13:01
dismissive, though. There's resentment. And this is from fellow Democrats
13:04
who think that this could jeopardize Democratic chances in the
13:08
fall. I mean, you've got Josh Gottheimer, a Democratic member
13:11
of Congress, says, many of us believe, as do I,
13:14
if you're a socialist, you are not a Democrat. And
13:17
in fact, they They put out a manifesto today. Have
13:20
you seen this thing? Sounds pretty socialist to me. Hold
13:22
on. Wow. There's an irony. Yes. Yeah, manifesto, which is
13:29
always, you know, that's a communist idea. Either that or
13:33
you're a mass murderer or you killed Charlie Kirk, one
13:36
or the other. Yeah, yeah, it's true, yeah. It's a
13:38
bad idea. Yeah. Manifestos. Usually not seen as a good
13:42
thing. Unabomber. You know, all these kinds of... Although the
13:46
Unabomber's manifesto was more like a... a guidebook for the
13:50
future. And in fact, they put out a manifesto today.
13:53
Have you seen this thing? Sounds pretty socialist to me.
13:55
It's not a communist manifesto, it's a moderate manifesto. Moderate
13:59
manifesto, really? Saying, we are capitalist, not socialist. We believe
14:04
in a growing, fair, and competitive economy. Entrepreneurship, ownership. I
14:08
mean, this is a direct response, they've made it clear,
14:11
to what you did here on Tuesday. Well, I mean,
14:14
you know, that's great, but what's a party if not
14:16
its voters? And I'm proud to sit in front of
14:18
you as... The mayor of our city having received more
14:20
than a million votes a little over, a little less
14:23
than a year ago. And when we're talking about these
14:26
incredible congressional candidates, they won their races and they won
14:29
their races with a vision of what politics should be
14:32
and one that actually speaks to working people. And for
14:34
a lot of people who ask themselves, what does democratic
14:37
socialism mean? And you can tell them the answer at
14:40
a theoretical level. It's the choice to extend democracy from
14:43
the ballot box the rest of their lives. But in
14:45
terms of what it means over these last seven months,
14:47
we've seen a city with democratic socialist principles at the
14:51
heart of it within our administration. And what we've delivered
14:53
has been record lows when it comes to murders and
14:57
shootings. There's no one left. That's why it's record low.
15:00
Everyone's leaving New York. And the rest, they're soy boys
15:04
and girls. So is it pragmatic democratic socialism? I think
15:07
democratic socialism at the heart is pragmatic. Because if we
15:11
cannot deliver for working people, then what is this for?
15:14
I'm not interested in writing a manifesto or frankly in
15:16
reading one. I'm interested in delivering. And that's exactly what
15:19
we've been showing. But they're saying that if you're a
15:21
socialist, you're not a Democrat. I mean, there's a room
15:24
in the party. for both of these views. Yes, here
15:29
I am. And here are so many more. And I
15:32
think what makes our party a beautiful party is the
15:34
fact that it's a big tent. That we have people...
15:37
But you've also said it has to be a party
15:38
with a... spine with a backbone yes even a tent
15:41
has to stay up yes so you know does it
15:44
have to stay firmly for these ideas that you're talking
15:47
about that others are calling dangerous i think it has
15:50
to stand for working people and i think it has
15:52
to be willing to fight for working people and i
15:54
think that there are fight working people these are uh
15:58
liberal white women who are offended by the prospect of
16:04
a party that knows who it fights for and goes
16:06
every day to work for that because what we've seen
16:09
over many years is a willingness to not only explain
16:13
away the status quo but frankly even to look to
16:15
benefit from the status quo and that's not what working
16:18
people are looking for from our party. It's so disappointing
16:21
when I hear this interview with ABC, like not even
16:23
getting to the core of the policy, who pays for
16:26
what, how do you do this rent freeze, how does
16:30
it work economically? It's just like, this is the word
16:33
salad. So there was also a take, it's not just
16:36
Democrats, you've probably heard what President Trump had to say
16:39
about you and about the candidates you supported. And he
16:43
warned that if socialists win, and he calls you communists,
16:46
but you will start living in squalor. There'll be no
16:51
food, no housing, no military, no law and order. There'll
16:55
be nothing. And he had a few other choice words.
16:59
By the way, he also said he still likes you.
17:04
But what do you make of what he, I mean,
17:06
the Republicans are gonna make you the poster child for
17:10
the Democratic Party. Let them. We don't have to ask
17:14
ourselves what life looks like if a socialist wins. I
17:17
won last November. And over the course of these last
17:19
six months, what we've delivered for working people are the
17:22
very things we were told were impossible. We've delivered free
17:26
childcare for two-year-olds for the first time in New York
17:28
City history. We've delivered tens of millions of dollars back
17:32
to tenants who were taken advantage of by bad landlords.
17:34
We've delivered 165,000 potholes being paid. And we've done all
17:39
of these things while also delivering the lowest recorded crime
17:43
in our city's history. That's what it looks like to
17:45
have democratic socialism. And what you're seeing is that New
17:47
Yorkers experienced this for six months and made the decision
17:50
that they wanted to see more of it on the
17:52
national stage as well. I'm thinking if there's a democratic
17:55
socialist in San Francisco and they... fix the potholes you
17:59
might convert. So they have this situation which you run
18:06
into a lot, which is crimes down. This reminds me
18:09
of the D.C. situation where they just misreport. So you
18:14
take your police department, you put them under someone's thumb
18:16
and you say, no, no, no, this is not a
18:18
crime. You don't report this. You don't report that. You
18:22
leave this off the books. You leave that off the
18:23
books. They do that in Fredericksburg, too, for the tourists.
18:26
No, no, that's not a crime. So it's a common
18:31
way of lowering crime statistics, which is to lie. And
18:36
it's been done in city after city and these guys
18:38
love to do that. So that's bull crap. But the
18:42
potholes, John. Yeah, the potholes, it was true. Yeah, is
18:46
it true? Do you think it really closed the potholes?
18:49
Well, I'm sure... I'd like to know how you get
18:51
a hundred... What did he say? 160,000? What was the
18:54
number? I think it was 165,000. Hold on, let me
18:57
see. Potholes? That many potholes? Holy moly. The first time
19:00
in New York City. Who's doing the paving? Let me
19:02
listen. We've delivered tens of millions of dollars back to
19:06
tenants who were taken advantage of by bad landlords. We've
19:09
delivered 165,000 potholes being paved. 165,000 potholes being paved. They
19:15
delivered. That's a lot. That's a lot. Being patched is
19:23
probably the right term. Well, paved over. patch. I think
19:27
that's a plus. That's one of your core issues. Yeah,
19:35
it is. Well, for good reason. You ever hit a
19:36
pothole? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, well, that old Lexus of yours
19:40
doesn't do too well when it hits a pothole. No,
19:43
it does fine, but it's just... Feel that in your
19:45
teeth. It's not good. No. Did you want to play
19:50
something here? Well, unless you have more. I do. I
19:53
have a couple more. Yeah, play yours out, and then
19:56
we'll play the analysis. This is from David Sachs. But
19:59
let's play your
20:00
first and then we move toward analysis. All right, we
20:02
have Senator Chris Murphy. also on Spank the Press. Let's
20:09
first off start with your reaction to the latest primary
20:11
results out of New York. You've heard President Trump say
20:14
that these candidates aren't socialists. He's gone as far as
20:17
to call them communists. As someone who identifies as a
20:19
communist, Is this a moment of reckoning for establishment Democrats?
20:25
I think you're going to have different candidates being nominated
20:28
in New York City and suburban Connecticut. This is a
20:31
party that is also nominated and won with candidates like
20:34
Abigail Spanberger and Mikey Sherrill. I want us to be
20:38
a big tent party. I mean, I've been saying this
20:40
for years. I think that it's actually a sign of
20:44
a party that is alive and growing when there's a
20:47
contest of ideas inside the party. So I'm not a
20:50
democratic socialist, but I do believe that the Democratic Party
20:54
has been historically way too timid in taking on corporate
20:58
power. I think our party should. have bigger ideas. I
21:01
put one on the table last week, a $25 minimum
21:04
wage. And I think we do have to have answers
21:08
for the way in which corporations and billionaires are taking
21:12
over and corrupting our politics. So I do think that
21:16
there is somewhat of a trend that candidates who are
21:20
confronting concentrated corporate power in a meaningful way are winning.
21:26
And I think that that is something that the Democratic
21:28
Party should pay attention to. This is not the right
21:30
message. This is the wrong message. Israel is taking over
21:34
our government. It's not the billionaires. Come on, it's AIPAC.
21:38
We all know it's AIPAC. This... kind of softening up
21:43
these guys, like what you heard, which is kind of
21:46
what the Democrat Socialist message is, corporations are bad. Yeah.
21:50
And they should be nationalized. This would get, I don't
21:54
have the clip, but Gavin Newsom, unless you have it.
21:56
Oh, I do have it, yeah. Gavin Newsom basically came
22:00
out. He didn't say it, but he's such a weenie
22:03
that he saw what was going on. He said, this
22:05
must be a trend. Because it's going in that direction.
22:08
First you have Mondami, then you got these three guys.
22:11
I'm jumping on board. And he gives a talk about
22:14
how we should just a national billionaire's tax. It's time
22:18
for a national billionaire's tax and a new. Social contract.
22:21
I just got to pat ourselves on the back for
22:23
that transition. I'm sorry. Oh, you know, you do that
22:26
too often. It was so slick. It was so slick.
22:30
And you spiked the ball. I'm sorry. You constantly ruin
22:33
these things. I know, I know. I ruined it. There's
22:35
radio guys everywhere going, wow, that was awesome. And I
22:39
ruined it. You're right. It's time for a national billionaire's
22:41
tax and a new social contract. Think about this, just
22:45
10% of people, 10% of people in this country own
22:48
two-thirds of the wealth. A 30-year-old for the first time
22:52
in American history is not doing better than his or
22:57
her parents. That's a five-alarm fire. That's bullshit. It's not
23:01
the first. Hold on. The first time in American history
23:03
you're telling me that during the Great Depression that that
23:06
situation didn't happen over and over? Why are you trying
23:10
to get into history here? It makes no sense. He
23:13
said for the first time in history. He's the one
23:16
that used the word. A 30-year-old for the first time
23:19
in American history. is not doing better than his or
23:23
her parents. That's a five alarm fire. American wages have
23:27
stood still and the costs across the spectrum, cost of
23:31
living, have skyrocketed. The system is fundamentally broken. The federal
23:36
tax code, the corporate tax code, and the inheritance tax
23:39
code. seem to be written for a different set. Oh,
23:41
that was my favorite. The inheritance tax code. Take it
23:44
away. Your children get nothing. Americans, it's time for an
23:48
economic reset. A true minimum tax. Great reset. A true
23:51
minimum tax on billionaires that ensures the people at the
23:54
very top pay at least the tax rate their own
23:57
workers pay. We also should... And this tax-free lifestyle loan.
24:02
This is the gimmick that allows the ultra... Wait a
24:05
minute, wait a minute. Can I get a tax-free lifestyle?
24:07
Am I doing something wrong here? Is there a way
24:09
to get a tax-free lifestyle? I guess so, if you
24:14
don't have enough money. Oh, I don't have enough money
24:17
to have a tax-free lifestyle. So he's going on about
24:20
as if... as if these guys are paying no taxes
24:25
and not contributing. I mean... Well, this is the same
24:28
lame argument that you should be paying the same tax
24:31
rate as your secretary. because they have capital gains or
24:36
different tax structures, because they're not taking a salary. It's
24:42
like, okay, okay. Tax-free lifestyle loan. This is the gimmick
24:48
that allows the ultra-wealthy to... By the way, the number
24:52
of people that can pull that off is very low.
24:55
Most billionaires are paying a lot of taxes, including Elon
24:58
Musk. Yeah. Yeah, quite a bit of tax money. Borrow
25:02
against their stock portfolios while reporting no taxable income. Well,
25:08
yeah. permanent American aristocracy of inherited wealth. Time as well
25:25
to return to the pre-2000s. Hold on a second. Oh,
25:28
yeah. Does this guy study history and realize that the
25:30
third generation of most of these super wealthy people break
25:33
the bank? They lose all the money? Yeah, on dumb
25:37
stuff. On dumb stuff? Is it taken advantage of? Meanwhile,
25:40
the third generation with rare exceptions, unless there's trusts and
25:45
all kinds of safety things that are built in by
25:48
the original guy. Yeah, they blow it all. They blow
25:51
it all. They blow it all. And of course, this
25:54
immediately affects farmers. You want to pass on your farm
25:57
to your kid. Yeah. Why would I do that? Right.
26:00
You can't pass your farm off. My podcast. So it
26:03
gets taken over by Cargill. I mean, is that what
26:05
he wants? Cargill to own everything? I can't pass off
26:09
my podcast and my daughter. I mean, this is horrible.
26:12
Can you imagine Christina and Jay doing the podcast? Hello.
26:18
Hi. Hi. Time as well to return to the pre-2017
26:24
corporate tax rates. And time to close those offshore loopholes
26:28
once and for all. And as AI reshapes the country...
26:33
Hold on a second again. You just move the company
26:36
to Ireland is what they do. They don't go offshore.
26:40
in a half-baked manner when you jack it up back
26:43
to 35% or 40% tax rate. You just say, just
26:47
move the company. Take them right out of the USA.
26:50
You get no taxes. Is that what you're looking for?
26:53
Gavin Newsom is a handsome man. I'm going to vote
26:57
for him. Pre-2017. He looks like Beavis. tax rates and
27:02
time to close those offshore loopholes once and for all.
27:06
And as AI reshapes the country, every American should own
27:12
a piece of the future it builds through a national
27:14
public equity fund. This is the Bernie thing. Trickle-down economics?
27:18
Yeah, this is what's happening. Yeah. He's caving into the
27:21
stupid ideas because he thinks this is his route to
27:24
the presidency. He may be the sucker when I do
27:27
my analysis about what I think is going on. He
27:30
may be the... Let's finish. 38 seconds. I'm sorry. I'm
27:32
going to stop talking. ...trip builds to a national public
27:36
equity fund. Trickle-down economics, it's been a... Well, nearly 50
27:40
year experiment that has failed. Record corporate profits flowed into
27:44
stock buybacks and executive compensation. It's time to stop pretending
27:49
otherwise. We're nearing the 250th anniversary of this country's revolution.
27:53
The system the American founders built, well, was designed to
27:56
prevent the concentration of power in a few hands what
28:01
where in the constitution was that put What constitutional amendment
28:08
or what bill of rights, where is it that we
28:11
set it up to stop the concentration of wealth? Is
28:13
that accurate? if it's in the Constitution, which is a
28:19
small dog. I never noticed it. Is it in the
28:22
fine print, Gavin? But we've allowed that concentration to happen
28:25
anyway, slowly and in plain sight over the course of
28:29
decades and decades. But we can reverse it. We can
28:32
reverse it together. It's time to democratize the American economy.
28:38
our democracy. All right, so I might as well play
28:41
the... The gaggle with the president, just to kind of
28:44
close this out. President Trump, great night for democratic socialist
28:50
candidates last night in the New York primaries they swept
28:53
and knocked out two incumbents. You're from New York. Why
28:57
do you think it is that now the endorsement of
28:59
Zoran Mamdani means more than the endorsement of Hakeem Jeffries.
29:05
Well, they're going radical left. They're going, really, you know,
29:08
you talk about the Democrat socialists. You talk, really, it's
29:12
really communists. These people, I watched that woman last night.
29:16
That's not a socialist. I know socialists. That's it. That
29:19
woman is a communist. And, you know, what they don't
29:24
say is that I was 16 and 0 last night.
29:27
But mine were a little more boring, a little more
29:29
mainstream. They were Republican conservatives. But we were 16-0. And
29:35
if you look over the last two and a half
29:36
years, we're about 347 in... Just about all. That's pretty
29:41
good. But nobody writes that. But he picked three. They
29:46
won. They beat a guy named Dan Goldman, who's a
29:48
loser. He was one of my prosecutors, one of my
29:51
many prosecutors that they used on me. Dan Goldman, not
29:55
a good prosecutor, fortunately. But he's now looking for a
29:58
job.
30:00
I was very surprised to see, you know, because he's
30:02
a pretty liberal guy. When they go more liberal than
30:07
Dan Goldman, they're really into Never Never Land. And then
30:11
the final question. Does this tell you that the Democratic
30:14
Party's 2028 nominee will likely be or could likely be?
30:19
A democratic socialist. Well, it should make it easier for
30:22
Republicans. Because most of the nation is composed of sane
30:28
people. They don't want to... You know, if you look
30:31
throughout history, go back thousands of years, you've always had
30:36
socialism and communism by different names. It's never, ever worked.
30:41
It's not going to work this time. It's never, ever
30:45
worked. I don't think it actually has ever worked. It
30:47
doesn't seem like that's ever paid out. It worked for
30:50
a while. It works, of course. A couple of years
30:53
is great. People love it. Fantastic. So here's David Sack.
30:59
He's on your favorite podcast. I saw this on the
31:02
All In. Yeah, Sax was also the... The crypto czar
31:08
and the AI czar. Yeah, it's very thoughtful. Yeah, it's
31:11
thoughtful. And I thought this analysis was quite good. I
31:14
mean, I think the choices of the future are going
31:16
to be communism or if you want to call it
31:19
socialism. of the Democrat Party or nationalism in the Republican
31:22
Party. I mean, that is where we're headed. Those are
31:24
the two populist directions. But let's look at what these
31:28
DSA candidates stand for. So let's look at what their
31:33
platform is. They actually say they want to abolish the
31:36
Senate. They want to abolish the carceral state. That means
31:40
basically police forces and prisons. They want to abolish ICE
31:45
and grant amnesty for all. They do not support any
31:48
deportations whatsoever. And I should say, while he's doing this,
31:51
they have a picture of the manifesto on the screen.
31:56
where this is he's reading it almost verbatim from there
32:00
one-page manifesto. They want to replace the president and Supreme
32:04
Court with an executive and judiciary that is chosen by
32:08
and subordinate to Congress, which basically now I guess this
32:11
means this House. And with respect to House elections, they
32:15
want to abolish the Electoral College. They want to replace
32:17
the two-party system with a multi-party democracy. and they want
32:21
to expand the House of Representatives implement. Proportionate representation and
32:25
ranked choice voting in all elections. So this would be
32:27
a total makeover of our constitutional system. They want to
32:31
free Palestine. They want public ownership of major corporations. They
32:35
want to defund the Department of War. This is a
32:37
very radical organization. And you would laugh at a lot
32:41
of these types of proposals, but you can't really laugh
32:44
at it anymore because these guys are taking over the
32:46
Democratic Party. And you can see the Democratic establishment is
32:50
in complete panic right now because they have lost control
32:53
of the party to Zoram Mamdani and his allies. That's
33:01
the end of your clip. Well, it goes on. I
33:06
cut it there for time. Yeah, that's the outline of
33:11
what they're up to. And here's kind of his analysis
33:13
of where this is headed. Take this one race here,
33:16
New York 13. You've got this ally of Hakeem Jeffries.
33:19
longtime incumbent congressman, Espelot, I guess is his name. He
33:24
is the chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and he
33:27
was defeated by an unemployed. 32-year-old PhD candidate. She's never
33:32
had a job. She's been in college for 10 years,
33:35
I guess, writing this PhD thesis. And I think even
33:39
by DSM, standard she might be kind of a lunatic
33:41
so she has declared that she wants to end Western
33:45
civilization. She wants to eradicate Western civilization. She actually said
33:49
she used the American flag as a napkin to clean
33:53
her hands. She attended a rally one day after October
33:56
7th celebrating the slaughter of Israeli civilians. I mean, she's
34:00
very... pro-Palestine, but even to the point of celebrating Israeli
34:04
civilian deaths. She calls white women ugly colonizers. She's called
34:09
for the complete defunding of the police and abolishing all
34:11
prisons and borders. Doesn't want a single deportation. Hates the
34:15
police. Openly calls them pigs, or has on social media
34:18
before. calls U.S. service members war criminals, and says the
34:23
U.S. is a disgrace of a country. She's written favorably
34:26
about communism and seizing the means of production. This is
34:29
basically the new Democratic Party. It's going to be, even
34:32
if the Democrats do take the House in November and
34:35
Hakeem Jeffries becomes Speaker, this is going to prove to
34:38
be a huge headache for him. managing all these new
34:41
DSA members because they do not actually see the traditional
34:45
establishment wing of the Democratic Party as an ally. They
34:48
see it as an obstacle. This is the DSA co-chair
34:51
Josh Block said, we're using the Democratic Party as a
34:55
ballot access vehicle. Oh my God. Not because we share
34:58
its goals. We build our own organization, get elected under
35:02
the Democratic label, caucus with Democrats when it's useful, and
35:06
push our own agenda from the inside. We see the
35:08
Democratic establishment as an obstacle, not a home. Didn't that
35:12
already fail with the squad? Wasn't that exactly what the
35:14
squad tried to do? Well, that were justice Democrats, if
35:18
you recall. They became DSA, but they were originally just
35:24
as Democrats. No, AOC was always DSA. She was recruited
35:28
and trained by DSA. I thought she was a justice
35:33
Democrat at first. I'd have to look it up. I'm
35:35
pretty sure. Well, this is to me as a CIA
35:38
op. Ha ha ha. You know what? The thing is,
35:45
this is not what is going to matter in elections.
35:50
Well, let me do my analysis. Do your analysis, please.
35:53
Because the CIA op, and this was indicated because of
35:56
that Stefanik, not Stefanik, but this. That woman that's in,
36:00
the CIA woman that's in Michigan. Do we have a
36:06
clip? Do we have a clip? No, I don't have
36:08
a clip of her. But she kind of sided with
36:10
these guys. They're kind of pushing this. This is a
36:13
mirror image of what happened in the 72 election. Ah,
36:18
here we go. History at work, ladies and gentlemen. you
36:22
So during Nixon got into office. Wait, wait, stop, stop,
36:27
stop. Where do you do this analysis? I just have
36:30
to point out that there is a whole side Nixon
36:33
thing going on right now with J.D. Vance. So that
36:37
is interesting. That may be a signaling. Pardon me. Part
36:40
of the signal or part of the signaling? Signaling. Okay.
36:44
All right. And so we had the CIA guy. Let's
36:47
say the CIA did what? Ron Paul said, which is
36:52
they took over the country. And so they were the
36:55
ones responsible for Nixon getting in in '68 because Hubert
36:58
Humphrey should have won. um He's a good guy. Everyone
37:02
hated Nixon, but somehow he gets in. So they help
37:05
him get in. So he gets in in 68, and
37:08
he is running in 72. He's not finishing the war
37:12
like he's supposed to in the way he's supposed to.
37:14
Something's up. He was a good guy. Wrong. An anti-war
37:21
movement begins with Gene McCarthy. And he gets things started.
37:26
He's going to be the candidate. I got to meet
37:29
him. He was at Cal Berkeley giving a speech, and
37:32
I talked to him afterwards. And some radical was yelling
37:35
at him. He was very calm and collected. He didn't
37:38
have a bunch of Secret Service. or anything is a
37:40
really nice guy. And then he got pushed aside by
37:44
Robert Kennedy because they saw that he was making headway.
37:47
And we don't want that because the guy was, you
37:50
know, sincere and he wasn't connected and who knows what.
37:53
So Kennedy gets in, but we don't want him either.
37:56
We bump him off. So they shoot him. And R.F.K.
38:01
Jr. still thinks it was a scam. Yeah. Who shot
38:04
him. He's got his own theories. And okay, we'll go
38:06
along with that. So he's out. And so they move
38:09
in to stooge George McGovern, who I also met. He
38:13
gave a speech at Berkeley, and I went and chatted
38:16
with him for a while. And he was a really
38:17
nice guy, and I voted for him. And George McGovern
38:21
came in as the... Didn't they shoot McGovern too? No,
38:24
they didn't shoot McGovern. And so McGovern came in, but
38:28
he was the patsy. He was too left-leaning and he
38:33
was too, you know, he was anti-war, but not in
38:37
a good way. He was just, it was a setup.
38:41
And they put him in and he got annihilated by
38:45
Nixon in 72. It was the biggest landslide in U.S.
38:48
history to this date. And so, uh... That's kind of
38:54
the setup they're doing this time. Now, what happened to
38:56
Nixon was he started... being mean to the CIA, wouldn't
39:01
play ball, wanted to break him up. And they had
39:03
all, you know, they'd already set him up with this,
39:05
as we read in the book, Family of Secrets by
39:09
Russ Baker, who outlines very carefully what happened to Nixon
39:13
when it came to Watergate. The whole thing was a
39:16
CIA operation. And it was set. sitting there waiting to
39:20
be imp, waiting, it was done. It was a done
39:22
deal. All they had to do was pull the trigger
39:25
and then Nixon would be out because he wasn't playing
39:28
ball. And he wasn't. Okay. So he wasn't playing ball,
39:31
so they pulled the trigger on him and get him
39:33
out of there. All right. And so that was the
39:36
whole thing. This could happen again. Which is, which is.
39:38
Just as an aside, this is exactly what Vance is
39:41
saying. Vance is saying the, he says they, but we
39:46
all know what he means. They got Nixon out and
39:49
that's what they tried to do with Trump in the
39:52
first term. This is the analogy he's making right now,
39:55
which apparently just looking at the quad screen is starting
39:57
to walk back a little bit.
40:00
He said it. Yeah, I think that's true. But they
40:04
didn't really do the same. The number they did on
40:08
Nixon was... It was flawless. It was fantastic. Uh... And
40:14
so actually it worked with him. He had the personality
40:17
that he caved. Trump is his stronger personality. I think
40:22
he got through it. And they also, there's some thought
40:25
that Trump was given the... the 2016 election by the
40:31
CIA to begin with. And it was apparent that he
40:34
wasn't going to play ball, so they make his life
40:36
a little miserable. And then they rousted him in 2024.
40:40
2020 because Biden did that ridiculous election and they put
40:45
the idiot in and so that Trump got back. But
40:49
this is a setup to make sure that these Democrats,
40:53
socialists are sidelined because we don't need the aggravation of
40:57
these people being too high up in government. So they're
41:01
going to put a stooge who's going to run against
41:05
either Vance or Rubio, and they're going to get annihilated.
41:09
not to the extreme that McGovern did, but maybe, and
41:12
that the whole thing is set up for that. And
41:14
so this Democrat socialist thing, which is bogus, that election
41:19
in New York, there was only 10%. turn out it
41:21
was all immigrants it was pathetic the whole thing is
41:26
a setup to get some to get these guys to
41:29
follow the bernie's this was in the newsletter too by
41:32
the way you should have read that yes to sit
41:34
to follow the bernie sanders idea that whereas you're not
41:37
left enough so you got to go more left go
41:40
completely radical, which is nonsense, and run some screwball. And
41:46
it may be Newsom trying to worm his way into
41:48
this position to get killed. But whoever runs in 2028
41:53
against the Republicans is going to get wiped out. Now,
41:57
how about this setup? Okay, so everyone at this moment.
42:00
all the analysis only about the midterms. Right, but they're
42:05
not looking ahead. The midterms, they're the lost cause. The
42:11
midterms are a lost cause. The Republicans, there's no way
42:14
they can hold the House. They maybe will hold the
42:17
Senate because of the stupidity of that guy in Maine.
42:22
He's going to lose to Susan Collins. Susan Collins has
42:25
a machine or something up there. She's just going to
42:27
get in again. Well, so the playbook, as I see
42:31
it, for the midterms is not a bunch of commies
42:33
and socialists. The playbook is Muslim. That's what the Republicans
42:38
are pushing, and they're pushing it hard. Because, you know,
42:42
one of those DSA... uh candidates is uh muslim didn't
42:48
the jewish guy like start doing the muslim prayer guy
42:51
went to a muslim meetup I think the fix is
43:01
in on this. A producer sent me, you know, the
43:04
Daily Wire, they have a podcast. It's the Morning Wire
43:07
where you get your news. Yeah, I've never heard it.
43:11
Oh, it's a decent, you know, it's like 18 minutes,
43:15
19 minutes. Gives you kind of an overview from their
43:18
perspective. Of course, they're doing video. they should never have
43:21
done. This is some nerd in like an over-lit studio.
43:26
I have... It's just, okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It annoys
43:32
me. But at the very end... And this is the
43:36
audio of it. And so you can imagine the pictures.
43:39
It's like. Twin Towers coming down. all kinds of horrific
43:44
images. And I only heard the audio and I was
43:48
like, wow, this is crazy. At the very end, it's
43:50
like, you know. The Muslim takeover coming in 2027, or
43:57
is it already here? 2027. Yeah. Did anybody do statistical
44:02
analysis? Listen to this. We'll be back this evening. And
44:05
this is at the very end of the podcast. Just
44:07
for no reason, no tease or anything, this just pops
44:10
in. We'll be back this evening with more news you
44:12
need to know. terror warning in Northern Virginia. Radical Islam
44:18
has designs openly on the West. - Recorded a terror
44:21
plot on New Year's Eve. - Violence attack over the
44:24
Halloween weekend in Michigan. - Protests on college campuses showing
44:27
no signs of stopping. you beheaded. Muslim Takeover 2027 or
45:27
is it already here? Is that what it says? Yes!
45:32
And this is the Shapiro outfit, so you know that
45:35
this is part of some Republican machine that is... that
45:39
is doing this and that's going to be the play.
45:43
It's like, you don't want these Muslims, they're going to
45:45
kill you. That's the play. I'm telling you, that's the
45:48
play. That's what they're going to do. Well, that's dumb.
45:52
Yeah, but it's working. What, is it? Yeah, I think
45:56
so. If you want to get people to the polls...
45:57
Well, wait, listen. Well, hold on. Do you think it's
46:00
working enough that the Republicans can hold the House? I
46:05
really haven't run the numbers, and to be honest, I
46:07
really don't. I can tell you, no way. I really
46:09
don't care. No way. Well, I'll take that bet for
46:12
a buck. Two. Oh, you're trying to get your money
46:17
back, huh? Yeah. Yeah, I'm down $2. I'm going back.
46:20
I'm going for it. $2. Everybody write it down. Okay.
46:26
Bill Maher. caught on to uh what i said and
46:31
what you questioned i i i'm presuming you kind of
46:35
what did i question the tourists loving america here for
46:39
the World Cup. Oh, yeah. I still question it. You
46:42
said, well... I like it. I'm not saying... And I
46:44
decide... I try to figure out what it is. I
46:46
think it's the Chamber of Commerce. They're trying to get
46:48
more European tourists. *laughs* No, man, it's real. I saw
46:55
bullshit. It's you know, everybody's talking I got into a
46:59
Big argument at the dinner table. With everybody over this,
47:02
because I was with Mimi on the phone. Yeah. And
47:05
she's bought into it. JC's bought into it. Although he
47:09
backed off a little bit. He's got his own. He
47:12
listened to me, unlike the rest of them. And everyone
47:15
else is all hook, line, and sinkers. Like they got
47:17
a hook in their mouth and they're being dragged. dragged
47:20
out of the water with a fishing pole. Really? This
47:24
is what you think? I've said my piece. You're the
47:29
man who actually believes these whatever girls are that stupid.
47:33
I got a great whatever girls clip for today. But
47:37
you're telling me that this is not real. You're telling
47:40
me. all these videos are not real. No, there's one
47:43
or two. There's a couple that are real. They're all
47:46
real. It's so obvious. Oh, please. From the man who
47:50
posts Biden telling everyone to listen to the No Agenda
47:53
show. Come on. Yeah, that's my point. Here is Meyer
47:58
with the setup. And finally, new rule, let's all give
48:02
it up for soccer being the greatest sport. No, no.
48:09
Not the game itself. That sucks. I mean, there's more
48:13
scoring at a Star Trek convention. Good one. But I
48:22
am loving that the World Cup has brought to our
48:25
shores all these people who are doing Americans the service
48:29
of reminding us just when we needed it on our
48:31
big 250 birthday that actually this place is kind of
48:36
awesome. And, uh, yes, I know, how dare I, how
48:46
privileged when there are so many problems and threats and
48:49
people left behind. All true. I could give you the
48:52
statistics where we are not good enough and have done
48:55
so many times. Infant mortality rate, 54th in the world.
49:00
Women in government, 85th, overdose deaths, lack of health insurance.
49:05
Yes, many problems. But that's because the name of our
49:09
country is America, not utopia. Okay, so good lead in,
49:13
good lead in. And if anything, if this is any
49:16
kind of op, it's a brilliant move by Trump. It
49:19
was like... this is going to be great. He saw
49:21
it. He understands this is going to be great for
49:24
America. And the result is not so much that tourists
49:28
want to come to America. The result is that Americans
49:31
feel good about their country for the first time. 20
49:36
years. Like, oh, you know, and hey. You're the Costco
49:42
guy. You're the Europeans. Can you believe it? We go
49:46
to this place called Costco that John C. Dvorak told
49:49
me. You get the best wine. Bordeaux for $2.99. You
49:53
buy it in a case. It's fantastic. America is great.
49:57
There actually are some good things about us.
50:00
Even with all the ICE nonsense, we have more immigrants
50:03
than the next four countries combined. We have to fight
50:07
for it, but still have freedom of speech and assembly
50:11
and trial by jury. And even if you're found guilty,
50:14
you can still ask a Kardashian to get you a
50:16
pardon. *laughter* Other countries struggle just to have water. Here,
50:26
we make it put on a show. In the desert,
50:29
no less. We have drive-thrus for both church And sex
50:41
toys. That's right. You can buy a dildo, then ask
50:46
the Lord to forgive you for it without ever leaving
50:49
your car. We have this Strongest intellectual property, the most
51:02
innovative R&D, the highest GDP, the most valuable companies, and
51:06
the most trillionaire. *Dramatic music* Now look, maybe it's a
51:14
coincidence, but I think it's something in the American system
51:17
and character that we have the highest number of Nobel
51:19
Prize winners. and invented the light bulb, the telephone, the
51:23
smartphone, the airplane, personal computers, and the party-sized bag of
51:27
extra flame and hot cheese. Plus, you can believe in
51:37
whatever crazy religion you want here and... 24 states have
51:40
legal weed and our pop stars can juggle knives. Happy
51:45
4th everybody! And that's what I thought was interesting is
51:48
that he... You know, they call it the great American
51:51
sleepover where your cousins were told you to never go
51:54
visit your other cousins because the parents hate each other.
51:57
But that's not really that's one result. which may be
52:00
good for the Commerce Department, but the real result is
52:02
this. People like Bill Maher, he's a negative guy on
52:06
a lot of things in the country. He's a negative
52:08
guy. Yeah. And so I think that that's a very
52:11
positive thing. Anytime Maura goes off on one of these
52:15
tangents, yeah, of course it is. Yeah, so I think
52:18
that's positive. Yeah, that's what you have to do. I
52:20
like this. So let me just set the scene. So
52:23
it's the dinner table. It's... JC, is his wife with
52:28
him? Did y'all get together? Yeah, she is. I forget
52:32
her name. Jesse. Jesse, I'm sorry. JC and Jesse. You've
52:37
got Jay and Brandon. And Brennan. Brennan. Sorry. Brennan. -
52:43
Thanks. I'll get back to him. I'm sorry, Brennan. He
52:48
says he calls me a deadbeat. No, no, no. That's
52:50
your word. Don't you put that in my mouth. No,
52:53
he knows better. Wait, he still doesn't have a job?
52:57
What? Anyway. That's beyond the point, beside the point. And
53:01
Mimi is on the speakerphone? Yeah. Now, is she eating
53:09
dinner as well at the same time? No, she's just
53:12
yakking about something. And it was like this came up
53:16
in the conversation because somebody mentioned it. They said, "Oh,
53:19
you know, what about these stupid videos?" And I didn't
53:23
say that. But they mentioned the videos and that just
53:26
set me off. I had a deal with Adam on
53:30
this and he won't buy into it either. No, no.
53:33
Because I know people in Europe. It's such a phony
53:36
deal. It's like walking down Broadway. No, I just disagree.
53:41
It's not- these videos are not phony deals. You, when
53:46
you get suckered. You're all in. Why do you think
53:55
I'm getting suckered? What evidence do you have for this?
53:57
There's no evidence. You're saying it's your commentary. You're falsely
54:01
claiming this without evidence. Yeah. The evidence is apparent. We
54:10
don't need evidence. Now, on the flip side of patriotism...
54:14
The, uh... Freedom 250. Maul is not such a success.
54:22
That's not the message I'm getting. Really? Yeah, we got
54:27
some people who wrote in some boots on the ground.
54:29
They didn't say it's a dog. No, it's not the
54:32
crowd size for the president's speech. That's the only thing.
54:36
I'm sure. Well, that's different. People I know here are
54:39
either going just before the 4th or they're actually going
54:43
on the 5th or the 6th. But you want to
54:44
go on the 4th for the fireworks. I think you
54:47
would. I think you would. 800,000 shells? Bombs bursting in
54:52
air. This is a... No. Then on July 4th, we
54:57
will have the greatest... on the National Mall? Your favorite
55:01
president will be speaking. So please show up. Because if
55:07
we have two empty seats, you know what's going to
55:09
happen? The fake news is going to say he didn't
55:11
fill out the arena. I mean, he doth protest us
55:14
so much. I can't do it! That's too much. He's
55:21
not protesting. He's right. I was looking at today's headlines
55:25
on the phony baloney. You go to a web browser
55:27
now, you get all these... Headlines are one of them.
55:31
Are you using Edge? I use Firefox. Oh, okay. And
55:37
they've done it. now and it means it's over and
55:39
so everyone is doing it did you crazy not to
55:42
and so one of the headlines was Trump says nobody
55:45
walked out of the speech but two people were seen
55:48
leaving I mean he does protest is so much we're
55:55
the problem he seems to be the problem When it
55:58
comes to empty seats, clearly showing the vulnerability that this
56:03
exposes, the lack of attendance, the lack of enthusiasm, and
56:06
people walking out looking for non-political, I guess, most generous
56:11
description. Did you even talk to them? Acts. Yeah, I
56:15
think, yeah, that's a good point. They're good at it.
56:20
That's what they do, man. Yeah, I think this celebration
56:25
would have been a lot better had Trump not made
56:29
himself the center of it. But unfortunately with Donald Trump,
56:32
he's incapable of doing that. I mean, he wants to
56:36
be at the center of every bit of this. America
56:38
250 celebration. And last night, I think you saw how
56:42
the crowd feels about that. As soon as he came
56:44
on, the crowd started to thin out. And I think
56:47
come the 4th of July, because the fireworks are at
56:49
the end, you might not see that as much. But
56:52
last night, there was nothing to look forward to after
56:54
Trump. So they got their pictures and they head for
56:56
the gates. So there's a change at Ms. Now. Ms.
57:00
Now. And... I think we already called this. They are
57:04
going to do podcasts on their channel. And they have
57:09
a deal with Crooked Media. yeah you know it was
57:12
pod save america and then the most interesting person from
57:16
nicole what so They're literally going from the same dumb
57:20
people. Now the same dumb people with headphones and a
57:24
microphone in their face. And this is rampant. I see
57:27
it on Bloomberg. I see it on BBC. I'm seeing
57:30
it all over. And it's terrible. It's so fake. It's
57:35
fake and terrible. Yeah. Baking Gay. It is exactly what
57:40
it is. I wasn't going to say it. Yeah. What
57:44
is this? Cheap. It's cheap. What is it? Do you
57:50
guys get some of those Logitech cams? I don't even
57:54
know, I, you know. You use your own mic. No,
57:58
no. You use your own mic. You get a mic.
58:01
It's often, like Bloomberg, they're still doing it in the
58:04
same set. BBC is at night. It's the BBC nighttime
58:09
set. They just do less camera switching, and everyone's got
58:12
cans on and a mic, and they're talking down, not
58:15
looking into the camera. not looking in the camera or
58:17
you know at the at the other person you know
58:20
the kind of looking down at the mic And I
58:22
think that someone just say these podcasts man, this is
58:25
the podcast is where it's at everybody and a podcast
58:28
of course It's video. Just look at Joe Rogan. Look
58:30
at we need that. We need Joe Rogan type success
58:33
Let's bring the consultants in well, yes We, as you
58:37
can tell from our LinkedIn profile, we are podcast consultants.
58:42
How many podcast consultants hit you up on LinkedIn? Lots.
58:46
A lot of them. I get probably two or three
58:50
a week. Yeah, I'm a pod. I can help you
58:52
grow. There's either that or the SEO. But this is
58:56
mostly pod. Oh, you know, we do this. We can
58:58
get your numbers up. I can help you grow your
59:00
show. Yeah, they help you grow. Grow your... Well, we
59:05
got about a million listeners. You're going to do what?
59:08
Grow your show. And they said, well, you know, it's
59:12
really about the style because a podcast, it's really, it's
59:16
this... of video. It has nothing to do with our
59:22
style of video. I don't know where this voice comes
59:25
from, but that's what I imagine these people sound like.
59:30
So that's what they're doing. That voice is, that's not
59:33
your best. No, no, I can do better. I can
59:35
do better. I mean, you can be more accurate. That's
59:41
a funny voice, but it's not for these people, for
59:45
the consultant class. I've never spoken to one, so I
59:49
couldn't really know. I think you've spoken to one, but
59:53
you don't know it. My login for some reason on
59:57
LinkedIn is like whenever I...
1:00:00
Whenever I... So I... They want me to log in
1:00:04
again. And I have my password. And they say, well,
1:00:07
we haven't seen you in a while. We don't recognize
1:00:09
this device. This is Omachi Arch Linux. So we need
1:00:13
to confirm this with you. We're going to send you
1:00:15
a code to adamatcurry.com. And the code comes six hours
1:00:20
later. And then I put the code in. This code
1:00:23
has expired. Yeah, I love that. It's a loop that
1:00:27
I can't seem to get out of. I don't know
1:00:30
why. It just comes with it. It's happening on Instagram,
1:00:33
too. Instagram suddenly worked again. I mean, that's one of
1:00:38
our producers listening who fixed it. me there. I'm pretty
1:00:41
sure. Yeah, we need someone, some producer that works at
1:00:44
X. Yeah, that would be nice. So we can get
1:00:47
our, so we don't have a, we're not throttled. Let's
1:00:53
see, we have a couple different places we can go.
1:00:54
I'd say, first of all, we have our first... A
1:01:00
conviction? It's not the most satisfying one, but listen, we
1:01:05
have a conviction of Mustache Man. Breaking news. Breaking news.
1:01:10
National Security Advisor John Bolton just pleaded guilty in his
1:01:13
classified documents case. Bolton was indicted last year on 18
1:01:18
counts related to his handling of sensitive... government information. Now
1:01:21
prosecutors said he shared it with two relatives for possible
1:01:25
use in a book he was writing. As Mr. Bolton
1:01:29
just admitted, he put our national security at grave risk
1:01:33
in violation of the law. Our system of classified information
1:01:38
is designed to protect... sensitive information that would jeopardize national
1:01:43
security if mishandled. And the national defense information at issue
1:01:47
in this case was classified at the highest classification. Classified!
1:01:53
Classified! The Hill had a little longer report, which gave
1:01:57
us some more detail. Well, before you play it. I
1:02:01
have the old Bolton. I'm glad you got that. Here
1:02:05
it is. Wait, let me set it up. This was
1:02:08
right after Trump got the Mar-a-Lago raid. Yep. Bolton got
1:02:13
on all the shows, and this is what he said.
1:02:15
Then he has committed very serious crimes. This is a
1:02:20
devastating indictment. I speak here as an alumnus of the
1:02:23
Justice Department myself because not only is it powerful, it's
1:02:27
very narrowly tailored. They didn't throw everything up against the
1:02:30
wall to see what would stick. This really is a
1:02:33
rifle shot, and I think it should be the end
1:02:37
of Donald Trump's political career. Bye. Ha ha. He who
1:02:42
digs a pit for another will fall in it himself,
1:02:45
they say. Breaking news from the federal courthouse in Maryland.
1:02:49
Former Trump National Security Advisor John Bolton has just pleaded
1:02:52
guilty to a singular count of unlawfully retaining national defense
1:02:57
information. Prominent Trump foe has now admitted that after he
1:03:01
left the White House during President Trump's first term, that
1:03:04
he unlawfully kept diary-like entries about his day-to-day work. Specifically,
1:03:10
John Bolton is pleading guilty to one of the 18
1:03:14
counts he was originally indicted on by a grand jury
1:03:17
last fall. That indictment accused him of transmitting thousands of
1:03:21
diary-like entries to two relatives in preparation for a potential
1:03:26
book. But John Bolton now avoiding those 17 counts by
1:03:29
agreeing to plead guilty to a singular felony charge of
1:03:33
retaining national defense information. As part of this deal, he's
1:03:36
agreed to pay a roughly... $2 million fine. And now
1:03:40
the question becomes, will he face prison time? This deal
1:03:43
means that he could face up to five years in
1:03:46
prison. But that's going to be a question for U.S.
1:03:48
District Judge Theodore Chuang. He's the appointee of former President
1:03:52
Obama, who's assigned to oversee this case. And it is
1:03:55
up to him to decide whether John Bolton will be
1:03:57
able to face up to five years in prison. will
1:03:58
ever be behind bars. He already has set that sentencing
1:04:02
date. We are expecting John Bolton to come back into
1:04:05
court to learn his punishment later this year on October
1:04:08
28th. But already, this is a major shift for the
1:04:12
prominent Trump foe and former national security advisor. When John
1:04:15
Bolton was first charged, he had... claimed that he was
1:04:19
a vindictive prosecution victim, part of a retribution campaign by
1:04:23
the Trump administration. But today, in a federal courtroom, John
1:04:27
Bolton now admitting to one of these charges. And as
1:04:30
he entered that guilty plea, he told the judge, quote,
1:04:33
when asked if he's guilty, I am your honor. I'm
1:04:36
sorry for it. So this is a win. It's shallow.
1:04:40
It doesn't feel like a win. Like, who cares? Yeah,
1:04:44
Bolton, I mean, it's good for the knowledge in the
1:04:46
people because we always thought he was a creep. Yeah,
1:04:48
totally. I still think he was a part of that
1:04:51
fart club in New York, although we can never seem
1:04:53
to agree on that. The Fart Sniffing Club, remember that?
1:04:58
Yeah, it's just some creation of yours. Must be. But
1:05:01
then we have... And there's a couple of victims of
1:05:04
the Epstein files. We'll get to Starmer in a moment.
1:05:08
But Leon Black voluntarily came in to give his deposition.
1:05:14
He has run Apollo Global Management. I think he's had
1:05:17
some... some scandals or some stuff in the past, maybe
1:05:21
unrelated. But this didn't go too well for Mr. Leon
1:05:25
Black. Black testified before the House Oversight Committee today. Things
1:05:29
broke down when Republicans and Democrats demanded answers about nondisclosure
1:05:34
agreements with women in Epstein's orbit. some of whom now
1:05:38
assert they were victims of Epstein's abuse. After Black ended
1:05:42
the interview, the committee issued two subpoenas. I have just
1:05:48
issued two subpoenas to Mr. Black. One for all the
1:05:54
NDAs that he is party to. and second for a
1:05:59
deposition on July 16th. So this is a result of
1:06:05
refusing to answer specific questions about the NDAs and the
1:06:10
terms. We believe that information is vital to our investigation.
1:06:17
I will. Remind everyone that Mr. Black came in voluntarily,
1:06:23
but they are... refusing to disclose that so i have
1:06:28
issued the subpoena and we are handed it to him
1:06:30
as we speak and this cannot be coincidence after the
1:06:35
first ladies Uh... sudden statement where she said, hey, let
1:06:41
these victims testify before Congress. It can be in enclosed
1:06:46
committee. It doesn't have to be public. They will not
1:06:49
be violating their NDAs when Congress requests that you disclose
1:06:53
that. Uh, so I feel like there's kind of no...
1:06:57
coincidence here about these ndas because this is what it
1:07:01
real boils really boils down to And, uh... And it's
1:07:05
not looking good for Black. Black's attorney spoke to reporters
1:07:09
after he left Capitol Hill. Mr. Black came here voluntarily
1:07:14
to assist the committee. They made it premeditated. political decision
1:07:19
to serve him with subpoenas after less than an hour
1:07:22
of questioning and before they even asked a single question
1:07:26
about his legitimate payments to Epstein. I want to be
1:07:30
clear, as Mr. Black said in his opening statement, he
1:07:34
never abused a woman. He never was with an underage
1:07:38
woman. He never engaged in sex trafficking. He never paid
1:07:42
Epstein for access to women. He was never blackmailed by-
1:07:46
Is this Truman Capote? Who is this? I don't even
1:07:48
know if it's a man or a woman. Truman Capote.
1:07:52
He never paid Epstein for access to women. I think
1:07:56
it's a dude. He was never black. moved by Epstein.
1:08:00
Black said he never knew anything. He never did anything
1:08:02
wrong. And he has no knowledge of any wrongdoing. He
1:08:07
paid Epstein a lot of money. He paid a lot
1:08:09
of money to others to conceal things and avoid further
1:08:12
legal action. He never knew anything or did anything. Perhaps
1:08:17
a subpoena and the threat of perjury before congress will
1:08:20
shed more light on all this yeah maybe it will
1:08:23
and then we have Another political victim of Fallout of
1:08:26
the Epstein Files. Unfortunately, it's not in America. But Keir
1:08:31
Starmer, we must remember. That this all happened because of
1:08:36
Mandelson. Mandelson was his guy. What do you mean, well?
1:08:41
I think that report that came out about the $250,000.
1:08:46
Raped girls in England didn't help much. Oh, no. Although
1:08:51
no one is talking about it, that's some sort of
1:08:53
screwy cover-up. Well, have you seen Citizen Vigilante? Oh my
1:08:58
god. Yeah. Wow. If people don't want to watch it,
1:09:04
just watch the last 15 minutes. Well, I started watching
1:09:07
it. I'm like, holy crap. Go watch the last 15
1:09:10
minutes. No, I'm going to watch the whole thing. I'm
1:09:13
halfway through. I'm just saying the last 15 minutes summarizes
1:09:17
it. been marketed and this just came out of nowhere
1:09:20
um elon musk post the whole video on yeah elon
1:09:24
musk post the old video he's but no one they
1:09:28
germans banned the movie screw him i'm gonna post it
1:09:30
on x that's because he's got a elon's got a
1:09:33
hard on for the eu because they keep trying to
1:09:36
to cut X out of the picture. Well, the marketing
1:09:41
is phenomenal. The marketing is, they won't allow this to
1:09:44
be seen, which there's no evidence of that. There's no
1:09:47
evidence that it was foreboding anywhere. Well, we don't know.
1:09:51
I mean, I'm not in Germany. Maybe one of our
1:09:53
German listeners can tell us. And it's not even set
1:09:56
in Germany. No, it just, no, it said.
1:10:00
Well, where is it set? It seems, I'm not sure,
1:10:03
I think Norway or Denmark. It's hard to tell. It's
1:10:07
a little hard to tell. Not you mention it. It
1:10:10
starts off as Europe. Yeah, Europe. Yeah, like that innocuous
1:10:15
Europe. So, yes. But it does it proves a couple
1:10:19
of things It's a good idea for a story, but
1:10:21
it also proves that Armie Hammer... Yes. Can't act. Well,
1:10:26
he probably is terrible. I wonder if he financed it
1:10:29
with some of the Arm and Hammer inheritance. I don't
1:10:34
know. There's one name that's attached to it. I don't
1:10:37
think it's him. Let's put it this way. This is
1:10:38
not a Dana Brunetti production. It's bloody though. The acting
1:10:44
is not up to par. But it's bloody. It's extremely
1:10:48
violent. The violence is off the chain. Anyway, here's Starmer
1:10:54
giving it up. This week marks 10 years since Britain
1:10:58
voted to... to leave the EU. It sounds like NPR
1:11:02
is just so sad somehow. And in those 10 years,
1:11:07
Britain has lived through six prime ministers, gearing up now
1:11:10
for number seven. I was trying to remember when you
1:11:13
took over the London beat, Lauren, like what prime minister
1:11:15
were we on? We were on five, Rishi Sunak. He
1:11:20
was new. And now, so I've seen the end of
1:11:24
Rishi Sunak's term, all of Keir Starmer's term. And you're
1:11:28
telling me that these British tourists who are coming to
1:11:30
the World Cup in America and see this nonsense going
1:11:34
on in their own country, and they've been told that
1:11:37
we have a horrible political system. It's no good. They're
1:11:40
going through their sixth prime minister now. They know what's
1:11:44
up. They know what's up before they came here. So
1:11:48
that's insincere. That's why they say, hey, it's not that
1:11:52
bad in America. We don't have rape gangs. You know,
1:11:59
in... In Florence. My nephew was robbed at the train
1:12:04
station. By a bunch of immigrants. This is crazy! The
1:12:12
10th prime minister in 10 years, and that looks to
1:12:15
be Andy Burnham. Who we're going to talk about in
1:12:17
a second, but first. I want to take us all
1:12:19
the way back. Andy Burnham, we've got to talk about
1:12:21
this guy. He's another stooge. He's great. Many news cycles
1:12:25
ago, all the way back to Monday. The question my
1:12:28
party is asking now is whether I am best placed
1:12:33
to lead us into the next general election. I have
1:12:38
heard the answer of my parliamentary party to that question.
1:12:45
And I accept that answer with good grace. Grace. Every
1:12:50
decision I've taken has been about putting the country I
1:12:54
love first. Yes. That is why I will resign. as
1:12:59
leader of the Labour Party. And here's President Trump. I
1:13:02
don't know anything. I see that he was, I guess,
1:13:03
the mayor of a town. A town. He was extremely
1:13:07
liberal. Extremely. So that means he probably won't open up
1:13:13
the notes. You know, I gave Keir Starmer some pretty
1:13:17
good advice. I said, open up. the North Sea. Go
1:13:21
to Aberdeen, which was the hottest city in the whole
1:13:25
continent. It was the oil city. It was the oil
1:13:28
of Europe. And they closed everything. It was terrible. I
1:13:32
saw it before my eyes, and I couldn't believe it.
1:13:36
The North Sea is loaded. And here is the man
1:13:39
himself. Molly, what happens next? What do we know about
1:13:42
a timetable for when exactly he steps down? Right, so
1:13:45
while this was not a total surprise, what labor leaders
1:13:48
and what many people in the country were waiting to
1:13:50
hear is what would actually be the process. And he
1:13:52
did lay that out in his speech. So we have
1:13:54
a little bit of a timeline. Nominations for his replacement.
1:13:58
other Labour leaders who could possibly take over. That will
1:14:01
open up July 9th. Then there are two options based
1:14:04
on the British political system. So if there is only
1:14:06
one candidate, Savannah, it will be an orderly transition, what
1:14:09
British journalists are calling kind of a coronation. It will
1:14:12
pass from Keir Starmer to the next person. And I
1:14:16
know we're going to get to him. Andy Burnham is
1:14:18
the runaway favorite. He is the former mayor of Manchester.
1:14:21
He just won a parliament seat by a resounding margin
1:14:24
on Friday. I'm sorry, I thought I had a clip
1:14:26
of him. Maybe it's this one. UK Prime Minister Keir
1:14:28
Starmer has announced that he'll resign just two years after
1:14:31
winning a landslide election victory. He becomes the sixth British
1:14:35
Prime Minister in a decade to quit. extraordinary level of
1:14:38
churn in a country long known for political stability. In
1:14:42
an emotional statement here in Downing Street, Starmer said he
1:14:45
accepted that the Labour Party no longer thinks he's the
1:14:48
right person to lead it. The party will now choose
1:14:50
a new leader who will also become prime minister within
1:14:53
weeks. Nominations open on the 9th of July, they close
1:14:56
a week later, and... The new leader will be in
1:14:58
office by September the 1st. It could also happen a
1:15:01
lot quicker than that. The leading contender to replace Starmer
1:15:05
is the ex-Greater Manchester Mayor, Andy Burnham, who last week
1:15:09
won a special election for a seat in Parliament. Where
1:15:12
is he? He expressed purpose of coming to London to
1:15:14
challenge Keir Starmer. There's enormous... I'm sorry, I thought I
1:15:28
had a recording of him. I don't have it for
1:15:30
some reason. I should mention something one analyst did on
1:15:34
one of these foreign channels about... which mirrors my commentary
1:15:40
about McGovern. And the 70s and Nixon, which was that
1:15:46
the British Parliament and the British prime ministerships had gone
1:15:52
extremely left wing in the 70s, resulting. I think it
1:15:57
was in 78 when Margaret Thatcher ended up, the Iron
1:16:01
Lady took over as a conservative and they ran the
1:16:05
government fairly for years after that. And this is supposed
1:16:10
to be another iteration of that lefty, which is leftist,
1:16:13
these guys. The Labor Party is... You know, they're against
1:16:17
freedom of speech, they're for pro-immigration, open borders, all the
1:16:21
same stuff that DSA is doing. And they're getting trounced.
1:16:26
And this is going to end up with some Thatcherite
1:16:30
type character eventually. Civil war. Civil war. Civil war. Civil
1:16:35
War. Civil War. We never see these so many times.
1:16:36
wars everyone talks about. Well, okay. When you get those
1:16:45
guys from the north all mad, you know, they come
1:16:48
down and they start marching the streets with their pitchforks
1:16:51
and their shovels and their torches. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's
1:16:57
amazing how you hear Tommy Robinson. I hear people talking
1:17:01
about Tommy Robinson. Tommy Robinson, I heard one of his
1:17:03
recent little presentations. He is quite good. Yeah, he is
1:17:08
a criminal. He is a criminal, but he's really good.
1:17:12
He's a he's a hater. He's far right hater, but
1:17:15
he's really good. He's very good at what he does.
1:17:18
And he's been over here in Texas telling everybody the
1:17:21
Muslims are going to kill us all. No. Yes! Oh
1:17:24
yeah. Tommy Robinson was in Texas? Oh yeah. When was
1:17:28
this? I'd say maybe six weeks ago, two months ago.
1:17:33
Oh, he was on Laura's... He was on a Laura
1:17:36
Logan show. He was here! I could have gone over
1:17:39
and said hi! You should have gone over and said
1:17:41
hi. They didn't tell me. I just saw it come
1:17:44
through on my feed. Like, oh, Tommy was here. Okay.
1:17:47
Yeah. He was going to churches everywhere, riling everybody up.
1:17:51
Muslims are going to get you. You got maybe 18
1:17:55
months. 18 months. 18 months, look at us. 18 months,
1:17:59
okay. Let me write this down. Yeah, that's what I
1:18:04
said. Yes, and yes, for those of you... wondering, Cecile
1:18:09
the giraffe has been found. Cecile the giraffe is safe.
1:18:13
We had a giraffe escape, but it wasn't really here.
1:18:16
We have giraffes. here in Fredericksburg, but that wasn't one
1:18:19
of our giraffes. No, it's just the local ladies, right?
1:18:23
People here, Hill Country. Oh, that must be where Adam
1:18:28
is. Hill Country is pretty big. Uvalde is Hill Country,
1:18:31
and that's a four and a half hour drive. So,
1:18:34
yeah, it was not here. But we do have giraffes.
1:18:38
Rand Paul not letting up on Fauci. We have two
1:18:43
clear-cut cases against him, lying to Congress, which is a
1:18:47
felony, but also destroying public records. We now have emails
1:18:51
that he distributed to Francis Collins and others saying, hey,
1:18:55
read this and then destroy it. That is against the
1:18:57
law. You're not allowed to do that in the executive
1:18:59
branch. It's clear. You know, his only argument is, oh,
1:19:03
it wasn't about government. And it clearly was. And I
1:19:05
think a jury would decide. So I still would prosecute
1:19:08
him. And I went digging for some. Yeah, good. By
1:19:12
the way, since we've already determined that this whole covid
1:19:15
because the MRNA and this. stuff from Robert Malone. And
1:19:19
we played the clips and this is all a CIA
1:19:21
deal. And the CIA, you know, came up with MRNA
1:19:25
and they started Moderna. We know that it was done
1:19:28
by the operation in Silicon Valley, one of the investment
1:19:32
arms. And they can't admit they're wrong about it. They're
1:19:36
behind the whole. thing. They're behind the five. Fauci's never
1:19:38
going to get prosecuted for anything because he was going
1:19:42
along with it. And, you know, he played ball. And
1:19:46
Rand Paul's going to get himself beat up by another
1:19:48
neighbor if he keeps this up. Here is the analysis
1:19:51
of whether this is actually possible or not, considering the
1:19:53
pardon that he received from President Biden. Paul was on
1:19:57
our show last. week and said Dr. Fauci's preemptive party.
1:20:00
from President Biden should be challenged in court. Take a
1:20:03
listen to what he had to say. We've never had
1:20:06
a pardon that's gone to court that was granted for
1:20:09
an unspecified crime. So he's been pardoned for any crime
1:20:12
he might have committed over a 10-year period. He's never
1:20:16
been charged with a crime. So how do you pardon
1:20:18
someone in advance? of a charge and for any crime
1:20:22
they might be charged with over a 10-year period. So
1:20:26
I think a court could look at this and say,
1:20:29
that's way too broad. If you didn't specifically pardon him
1:20:31
for something, he's not pardoned. So I think it should
1:20:34
be challenged in court, and I think it's worthwhile. But
1:20:37
he's guilty of several felonies. of lying to Congress on
1:20:41
gain of function, but he's also guilty of destroying records.
1:20:44
That one's an open-shut case. So, Jonathan, from a legal
1:20:47
standpoint, Senator Paul, I mean, he has a bit of
1:20:50
a point there. There was no crime to be pardoned
1:20:52
at the time. How strong is that argument that a
1:20:56
pardon this broad and unspecified could be challenged? Yeah, I
1:21:01
think that he had a number of good points within
1:21:03
there. Remember, the pardon only applies to federal offenses, not
1:21:07
state offenses. So if any state offenses apply, that wouldn't
1:21:10
cover him. But I think the point is sort of
1:21:12
this overly broad question. A pardon, typically he's right. It
1:21:17
doesn't have to be something that's been charged or convicted,
1:21:19
but it... usually has to be specified as I'm pardoning
1:21:22
you for this crime or this cause course of action.
1:21:26
So I think that's a problem. The secondary problem is
1:21:29
there's the auto pen issue that we've all talked about,
1:21:32
but for it's okay if it's signed by an auto
1:21:35
pen, but the question is, did president Biden knowingly and
1:21:37
violent knowingly and intelligently. sign off or delegate this pardon.
1:21:42
So that's a secondary question as well. But this is
1:21:44
certainly a unique situation to have such a broad pardon.
1:21:48
I think what ultimately helps Fauci is the courts typically
1:21:53
are going to give a lot of deference to the
1:21:54
federal, to the executive branch on these types of things,
1:21:58
particularly for pardons that are... primarily that they are an
1:22:01
executive function. So even if the court doesn't believe that's
1:22:05
too broad and believes that maybe not knowingly and voluntarily
1:22:09
made, they still may not want to weigh into it.
1:22:12
But my there's certainly legitimate questions. Can I, can I,
1:22:17
here's a question for you. Blah, blah, blah. Yeah. Yeah.
1:22:22
Here's a question for you. All right. They keep bringing
1:22:25
this up. Yeah, he says the auto-panned. We don't know
1:22:28
that Biden, he knew what he was doing. But hey.
1:22:32
Newsflash, Biden's still alive. Why doesn't somebody go over and
1:22:37
ask him specifically? Hey, you know about this pardon? Did
1:22:41
you know anything about it? Just show it to him
1:22:44
and say, did you sign? What is this? You mean
1:22:48
like from the news media or? I don't care. News
1:22:52
media, Congress, one of Rand Paul's secretaries, anybody. They keep
1:22:58
talking about, we don't know that boy. even knew he
1:23:00
was signing a thing for fauci the guy's still alive
1:23:03
go ask him Well... It's not a bad idea. But
1:23:11
that would kind of ruin the fun of doing a
1:23:14
podcast. Well, no, it's maybe that one particular topic. speculate
1:23:20
and... Yeah, speculate and shoot the shit. Shoot the shit
1:23:23
a little bit. Blah, blah, blah. Get a close-up with
1:23:26
my cans on my head. Yeah, that's what you do.
1:23:30
You need those cans on your head. So the UFO
1:23:35
UAP thing is falling apart. That's just not going nowhere.
1:23:40
Well, that's because the movie's over. The movie came out.
1:23:43
It's a dud. It's a dud. Nobody likes it. It
1:23:45
didn't happen. And now, this was NBC, so they caught
1:23:49
up with the people who supposedly, from the New York
1:23:52
Times, are responsible for the modern disclosure movement. What? Yeah,
1:23:59
exactly. And here's an interview on NBC with him. This
1:24:04
whole thing, and even when you hear them, you're like,
1:24:06
what? These people started this? I can tell you, we
1:24:09
do know exactly where this whole modern day disclosure push
1:24:12
started. It traces back to a very specific New York
1:24:16
Times story. You might have read it where a reporter
1:24:18
met... Two national security and Pentagon insiders ready to blow
1:24:21
the whistle on secret programs the government had on UFOs.
1:24:25
And guess what? We caught up with the three of
1:24:28
them today at Congress. And this Pandora's box that we
1:24:32
now see, this UAP disclosure push, it all started with
1:24:38
the three of you, right? I would say it started
1:24:41
with the two of them and then they came to
1:24:44
me. I would say it started with this guy. I'm
1:24:49
not, I had nothing to do with it. There's your
1:24:52
answer. Was there like a secret bench or was there
1:24:56
a handoff? We met in a hotel. These people sound
1:25:05
like morons. These are the people who started this? Are
1:25:20
you serious? Well, a New York Times reporter found two
1:25:23
of these people. Yep. And started shooting the crap with
1:25:27
them and then ended up with the story that started
1:25:29
the whole thing. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. And the whole thing was,
1:25:33
I don't know. Yeah. The whole thing is, I don't
1:25:35
know. Yeah, we were having lunch. Ugh. I said, I
1:25:38
think we got some UFO doc somewhere. I don't know.
1:25:42
Here's a couple more clips. Do you anticipate the release
1:25:46
of some higher fidelity video that could completely put this
1:25:50
issue to bed? So, first of all, it's not up
1:25:52
to me. But I will tell you, there are efforts
1:25:56
behind the scenes. to do exactly that. That decision is
1:26:01
not mine. But I think if you were to ask
1:26:03
Chris or Leslie or myself, you know, there are efforts
1:26:08
underway right now to try and compel some of these
1:26:12
organizations to strip the metadata of some of these videos
1:26:15
and provide them to the American people. The American people
1:26:18
can see exactly what some of us have already been
1:26:22
exposed to in the past. The more sophisticated or the
1:26:25
more compelling from our terms the video is, the harder
1:26:28
it is to get it declassified. I'm not sure what
1:26:30
this strip the metadata has to do with it. This
1:26:33
is very odd. This is another thing they came up
1:26:37
with. the Nancy Guthrie bullcrap. where these guys are trying
1:26:42
to extract a bitcoin. They said, well, TMZ says to
1:26:47
the guy, "Well, send us at least some pictures or
1:26:50
something." And the guy says, "No, because the metadata will
1:26:53
make it so I'm identifiable." Well, the metadata is on
1:26:56
there already. if they're going to give away this phone
1:26:59
that was buried somewhere. Yeah, metadata, you can get rid
1:27:03
of metadata. Almost any photo editor will take the metadata
1:27:07
out. Right, but why does NASA or the Pentagon have
1:27:11
to take away the metadata? I don't understand. Yeah, well,
1:27:13
that's the other thing. What difference does it make? And
1:27:15
here's the last one. It's usually just telling you what
1:27:17
you want to do. camera it was. Well, speaking of
1:27:19
photos. A month ago during the second Tronch release, there
1:27:22
were multiple files and videos released by NASA itself where
1:27:27
they have pictures taken from the surface of the moon
1:27:30
during the Apollo mission where they have taken pictures, photographs
1:27:34
of some sort of anomalous activity above the surface. Now,
1:27:38
what did NASA say following that release? They said it
1:27:42
is quite possible that what we are seeing here are
1:27:44
actual things. These are not lens flare or anything like
1:27:48
that. And keep in mind, if you look at that
1:27:51
contextually to what we had orbiting the moon at that
1:27:54
time, we had one thing only, and that was a
1:27:56
lunar orbiter waiting to a rendezvous with the lunar lander.
1:28:00
There were no satellites orbiting the moon back then. So,
1:28:04
we now have photographs, we now have audio tapes of
1:28:07
astronauts having conversations about something. The real question is, what
1:28:13
else do we have? Nothing. There's nothing. It was never
1:28:18
anything. It's nothing. And everyone's disappointed. No one more disappointed
1:28:23
than Sean Ryan. What do you think of Sean Ryan?
1:28:28
I'm not quite sure what I think of this guy.
1:28:31
I'm not even sure who he is. Do I know
1:28:34
Sean Ryan? Your name rings a bell. Yeah. Is he
1:28:37
a podcaster? Yes, he's a podcaster. Does he wear cans?
1:28:42
No. Interestingly, no. He has like a lounge, like a
1:28:47
man cave, and there's two big leather seats, and he's
1:28:50
bald, and he's supposedly a CIA... Consultant. military, one of
1:28:58
these guys. And so he's, and sometimes it's like six-hour
1:29:02
podcasts, which is too long for Sean Ryan. Oh, God,
1:29:05
yeah. So he has physicist Brian Keating on, and Sean
1:29:09
Ryan has had it with this. He's had it. He
1:29:11
can't believe this is nothing. This is all bull crap.
1:29:14
What do you think about all this alien stuff? You
1:29:16
know, it's either the most exciting time to be alive
1:29:20
or it's going to be the most depressing time to
1:29:22
be alive. You know, it's like, imagine you keep asking
1:29:26
a girl out. She'll say, yeah, soon, soon I'll disclose
1:29:29
my intentions to you. And, you know, you're just kind
1:29:31
of waiting in the wings and you keep hearing things
1:29:34
are going to happen. It's going to come out. Finally,
1:29:35
we're going to know the truth. and the whole community
1:29:39
is thinking about things and is excited about things. And
1:29:41
then, I'm sorry to say, I've just been completely underwhelmed.
1:29:44
This last release by President Trump and Department of War,
1:29:48
Pete Hegsa, I tore through that like a kid on
1:29:52
Christmas morning or as soon as it came out. What
1:29:55
did you find? I found, you know, really it's a
1:29:59
nice round.
1:30:00
number, I found like zero. I found zero that really
1:30:03
interested me. And worse than that, I found things that
1:30:06
were, you know, your background, you're used to dealing with
1:30:09
kind of like psyops and a good friend, my friend
1:30:12
Chad Hosh, he was, he was everybody is into psyops
1:30:15
by the way. So many people on podcasts now. Yes.
1:30:18
I taught everyone how to do. psyops this is my
1:30:21
job in the army is my dad did the cia
1:30:24
i taught psyops and i'm here on your podcast in
1:30:27
the psyops he was in u.s army served in iraq
1:30:30
You know, they have exposure to things, right? They're going
1:30:33
to prime you for certain things. I call these PSYOPs,
1:30:37
S-C-I-OPs. because it sounds so outrageous. It titillates the mind,
1:30:45
especially if you're a nerd like me. I want to
1:30:47
know about extra-dimensional beings. I want to know about non-humanoid
1:30:51
biologics. And all I get to hear from people I
1:30:54
respect, some people I've talked to, you know, I've got
1:30:57
the square root of your podcast. my size but i
1:31:00
talk to a lot of same people you've had the
1:31:02
opportunity and honor to talk to and it's always you
1:31:05
know hyperventilating because he's on a podcast he's a physicist
1:31:09
like trust me bro or i heard or somebody said
1:31:12
this and i can't say that and in the military
1:31:14
i completely understand it i understand you've seen things you've
1:31:17
done things you're not going to be able to talk
1:31:19
about things. You're a scientist and you go on a
1:31:23
show like my friend Stephen Bartlett's show and you get
1:31:26
10 million views and one night you say, well, I
1:31:28
heard from somebody who heard from somebody and you're a
1:31:31
physicist like the people that have come on recently on
1:31:35
his show. It frustrates me because that's not the way
1:31:38
science works. This is exactly what's going on on the
1:31:41
podcast. Everyone, oh, I'm a physicist, but I'm on a
1:31:44
big podcast. Oh, I get to go into a rogue
1:31:47
and talk about UFOs. And finally, finally, Sean Ryan is
1:31:51
figuring out that this is bull crap, but he has
1:31:54
the wrong angle. I used to think there was something
1:31:57
to this alien shit. I really did. Now I don't.
1:32:01
You know, I just don't. You know, I've interviewed. so
1:32:06
many people about this. And I'm not talking about. Avi
1:32:13
Loeb, but... You know, the thing is... Well, one thing
1:32:19
that one red flag to me is you got all
1:32:22
these all these people out there that are screaming disclosure.
1:32:25
We want disclosure. They're demanding it. But none of them
1:32:29
are really working together. That's right. You know, and so,
1:32:33
you know, behind closed doors, off camera, they're all talking
1:32:36
shit about each other. Exactly. It's like, It's like, oh,
1:32:39
you want disclosure, but only if you're the fucking one
1:32:42
to disclose it, right? You don't want to work with
1:32:44
anybody else, actually. Say what? You just swear constantly? Yeah,
1:32:50
well, that's another point. You've got to do that on
1:32:51
your podcast. Otherwise, you know, if you don't have cans,
1:32:55
you might as well be swearing. You know, figure this
1:32:57
out. You just... You want to be the guy. That's
1:33:01
what it is. Yeah, so that's like one thing. Another
1:33:06
thing is I find the timing very odd of the
1:33:10
release of all this shit. Now, we know why the
1:33:14
timing of this was, right? Yeah, the Spielberg movie. Promote
1:33:19
the movie. Exactly. We've been talking about this for, we've
1:33:23
been doing this show almost 19 years. We've been talking
1:33:25
about this for 19 years. We've seen it over and
1:33:28
over and over. It's always in conjunction with a movie.
1:33:31
There's always a Hollywood entertainment product that comes with these
1:33:34
stories. But that's not the Sean Ryan conclusion. the latest
1:33:40
batch of the Alien conspiracy thing is, you know, stopped
1:33:45
right at the height of the Epstein stuff in the
1:33:49
Iran war. Whether you're for it or against it or
1:33:52
whatever, it's very unpopular. You know what I mean? And
1:33:55
so it's like, give them aliens. You know what I
1:33:59
mean? That's how I think about it now. I'm just
1:34:01
like, this is fucking bullshit. Of course you drop it
1:34:03
right now. Exactly. And so I think the timing alone
1:34:07
is discrediting. Because it's about a movie, Sean. It's not
1:34:13
about, oh, oh, Epstein files, give them aliens. Okay. That's,
1:34:18
I mean, that's what CIA has developed in our country?
1:34:24
These are the people who did COVID? Yeah, well. It's
1:34:29
hard to think. Like I said, they don't ever admit
1:34:31
they're wrong. Let's talk about Ebola, get these clips out
1:34:34
of the way. Ebola is still going on. They haven't
1:34:37
done anything about it. And they finally found out why.
1:34:41
Today I'm joined by NPR Global Health Report. Wait, you're
1:34:43
going to have to... Okay, the problem I have, I
1:34:46
have two problems here. One, it says NPR one, and
1:34:48
there's just NPR? Yeah. Which one are you going to
1:34:51
play? The one that just says NPR. Right. How long
1:34:55
have we been working together, bro? I just was. fearful.
1:35:00
And today I'm joined by NPR Global Health. And by
1:35:02
the way, Ebola spelled E dollar sign B-O-L-A. For what
1:35:06
reason, I don't know. Today I'm joined by NPR Global
1:35:10
Health reporter Jonathan Lambert. Hey, John. Hey, Gina. Hey, John.
1:35:13
Hey, Gina. So you're here today to talk about the
1:35:16
ongoing Ebola outbreak. Yeah. It's been just about the only
1:35:19
thing I've covered over the past month and a half
1:35:21
or so. The outbreak has gotten really big, really fast.
1:35:25
It's already the third largest Ebola outbreak on record. That's
1:35:28
terrible. So, we're... The sincerity... All right, stop depressing. The
1:35:33
sincerity is great. This is, besides sounding so scripted and
1:35:38
corny... This is their science podcast, the NPRs. This is
1:35:43
their science. This is a high-end, high-end science podcast. That's
1:35:48
terrible. Besides it being, like, really terrible and stuff. It's
1:35:52
terrible. It's really terrible. Third largest Ebola outbreak on record.
1:35:56
That's terrible. So... you That's terrible. Oh, this is fantastic.
1:36:05
You know what? Right off the bat, I think you
1:36:08
actually deserve a borderline for this. It's just so good.
1:36:14
Even though you doctored it with some editing. You doctored
1:36:17
it, but still, it's worth it. I didn't take it.
1:36:19
He didn't take anything away from it. No, he didn't
1:36:20
take anything away. That's terrible. So where did the numbers
1:36:24
stand right now? As of now, there are over 1,000
1:36:27
confirmed cases and over 250 confirmed deaths, but the toll
1:36:31
is likely much higher. Why is that? Why is that?
1:36:38
- What? What? Ebola kills people? Why is that? Fire.
1:36:43
Why is that? Well, many cases and deaths are probably
1:36:47
going uncounted. The outbreak is centered in a region of
1:36:50
the Democratic Republic of Congo that's really remote and battered
1:36:53
by a lot of ongoing conflict. I see how that
1:36:57
could make responding to the outbreak. AI podcast? This sounds
1:37:01
like one of those notebook LM things. That's terrible. I
1:37:05
mean, it might as well be. I know it's terrible.
1:37:08
I'm not going to argue the point of ongoing conflict.
1:37:13
I see how that could make responding to the outbreak
1:37:15
a lot harder. Now, what has happened here? I think
1:37:18
something else is going on that we have stumbled onto.
1:37:22
These people are talking to their chat bot all day
1:37:25
long. They're starting to talk like the chat bot. Mmm,
1:37:28
that's terrible. I can see where that would be really
1:37:30
bad. You might be right. There's something going on here.
1:37:33
It's ongoing conflict. Mmm, I see how that could make
1:37:36
responding to the outbreak a lot harder. Yeah, and the
1:37:39
virus got a head start. It was likely circulating for
1:37:42
months before officials realized that it was. That's made it
1:37:45
harder to... I am going to make an Ebola podcast
1:37:51
with AI and the female voice will literally do that.
1:37:56
Mmm. Yeah, I see what you mean. Ah, yeah. Officials
1:38:01
realized that it was. That's made it harder to rein
1:38:04
in, which is really worrisome for a disease that, on
1:38:07
average, kills about half the people it infects. So do
1:38:10
scientists have a sense of how bad it could get?
1:38:14
Well, the CDC projects that in the absence of robust...
1:38:17
control measures, as many as 20,000 people could be sick
1:38:21
by August. If it continues at that pace, it could
1:38:24
rival the 2014 to 2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa,
1:38:27
which killed over 11,000 people. And there are concerns that
1:38:31
it could spread more widely in the region. So today
1:38:34
on the show, how this became one of the largest
1:38:36
Ebola outbreaks in history and what has to happen to
1:38:40
treat patients and get it under control. Wow. And we'll
1:38:46
spruce it up a little bit with some of our
1:38:47
own bits here. Okay, so they get back and they
1:38:50
get into the groove here. You can guess who they
1:38:54
blame. Trump. For the whole thing. Trump, World Health Organization,
1:39:01
we pulled out of the World Health Organization. Trump, you
1:39:03
got it right the first time. You don't have to
1:39:05
go any further. But let's go with the NPR one
1:39:08
clip. Although something I said. I was telling Tina last
1:39:12
night in bed, I was saying, you know... A friend
1:39:15
of mine, he went to have his heart checked out.
1:39:18
And he asked him kind of on the, you know,
1:39:22
like, hey, have you seen more people with heart issues
1:39:24
ever since? COVID and the vaccine and the cardiologist goes,
1:39:29
oh yeah, absolutely. It's a lot more. And he said,
1:39:33
is that because of this? But it's not because of
1:39:35
the vaccine. It's not because of the vaccine. Tina says,
1:39:38
what was it, climate change? I mean, my wife is
1:39:41
good. She could do this podcast. She could inherit it
1:39:45
with our daughters. Yeah. And today I'm joined by NPR
1:39:50
global health reporter Jonathan Lambert. Hey, John. Hey, Gina. Hey,
1:39:53
John. Hey, Gina. So you're here today to talk about
1:39:56
the ongoing Ebola. Wait, is this a different one?
1:40:00
Yeah. Sounds exactly the same. This is the exact same
1:40:05
clip, John. Oh, is it okay? Oh, brother. Sorry, okay,
1:40:10
go to clip three. Well, what is number two? The
1:40:15
number two is gone. We're going to number three. Because
1:40:19
this is where they start to... They attribute blame. They
1:40:24
attribute blame and it's going to go right to where
1:40:26
everyone thinks. This is so much propaganda, it's sickening. But
1:40:30
you need to say, SOT3, SOT3. What? That's what Megyn
1:40:35
Kelly is. Sound on tape, SOT, SOT 3. You have
1:40:39
to cue me. SOT3? Countries like DRC that experience a
1:40:44
lot of Ebola outbreaks have really beefed up their surveillance
1:40:47
systems. For instance, they've built up lab infrastructure so they
1:40:50
can test samples that might be from Ebola patients. U.S.
1:40:54
foreign aid really helped build up those systems, and in
1:40:56
recent years, it's helped outbreaks get... declared relatively early on.
1:41:00
Okay, so usually they're caught pretty early, but you're saying
1:41:03
that didn't happen for this current situation? No. So when
1:41:07
the outbreak was declared on May 15th, that initial death
1:41:10
toll had already reached 65. I track outbreaks like these
1:41:14
pretty closely, and when I saw that announcement, I had
1:41:17
this moment of panic. that I'd somehow missed earlier reports
1:41:21
because the numbers just seemed too big for a new
1:41:23
outbreak. Oh, wow. Oh, wow. Now, health officials suspect the
1:41:26
outbreak wasn't new then, and it likely started months ago,
1:41:30
perhaps as early as February. So why was there a
1:41:33
delay in declaring it? A few reasons. Like I said,
1:41:36
it's a tough region to work in because it's remote.
1:41:38
and there's conflict, and the species of Ebola that's spreading
1:41:42
is a rarer one. It's called Bundabujo, and there have
1:41:44
been only two other outbreaks of it, in 2007 and
1:41:48
2012. Genetically, it's like 30% different than the more common
1:41:52
species. Unfortunately, that means that the tests that DRC typically
1:41:56
uses can't detect it. So cases that seemed like Ebola
1:42:00
kept turning up negative. So how did they eventually tell
1:42:03
it was Ebola? Health officials shipped samples to a bigger
1:42:07
lab in Kinshasa, DRC's capital, where they did more sophisticated
1:42:10
tests. But even that process was delayed. Early samples weren't
1:42:14
shipped properly, and there were delays in those shipments. Wow.
1:42:17
Yeah, and these outbreak surveillance activities are the kind of
1:42:21
thing that used to be heavily supported by U.S. foreign
1:42:24
aid, including by USAID. Bye. There it is. Very good.
1:42:33
And there's more? But wait, there's more? Well, no, well,
1:42:36
they have to... Spike the ball. It's not just you.
1:42:40
We're going to talk about USAID. Let's make sure we
1:42:43
focus a little bit more. And after the Trump administration's
1:42:47
massive cuts last year, I'm sure it was affected. Yeah,
1:42:50
a lot of it is gone. The State Department has
1:42:53
said that it's false to claim that those cuts impacted
1:42:56
the Ebola response. but I've spoken with a lot of
1:42:58
global health experts who think it contributed. Ha ha ha.
1:43:04
Yep. Oh, man. It's our fault. That's right. It's your
1:43:08
fault. It's Trump's fault that the Ebola thing broke out.
1:43:12
That's right. It's so obvious. Let's boil it down. It's
1:43:15
Musk's fault. He needs to be taxed. Ha ha ha!
1:43:20
Take away half his company. Yes. Well, I might as
1:43:24
well do my... Data center to desktop segment here. as
1:43:30
the AI trade continues to look more and more like
1:43:34
it's just not going to be quite as valuable as
1:43:36
everybody thought it was. Uh, we go to, uh... This
1:43:40
is, well, this is actually What's-His-Face from the All In
1:43:43
pod. But either way, I profoundly believe the future is
1:43:47
composable models. And you're going to every enterprise. You're going
1:43:51
to have what Andrej Karpathy called the Council of LLMs.
1:43:55
You're going to have, you know, you're going to have
1:43:56
Grok. You're going to have Anthropic. you're gonna have open
1:43:59
AI, Google, you're gonna have at least two of those.
1:44:01
I would argue Grok should always be one of the
1:44:02
two because of its dedication to the truth. And it
1:44:05
will tell you as a business owner, a politically inconvenient
1:44:07
truth that you need to know for your data. But
1:44:09
you're also going to have your own open weights model
1:44:12
that you RL'd on your data. And you're gonna put
1:44:16
those two together. the frontier models, and your own model,
1:44:20
and you are going to get real Pareto-dominant outcomes. And
1:44:26
half the queries are going to go to the open
1:44:28
source model, maybe 85%, and only the hardest ones are
1:44:32
then, maybe they all go to open source first, and
1:44:35
only the hardest ones are then checked. by the frontier
1:44:38
models so and this by the way is gavin baker
1:44:40
i think was a early investor in uh in spacex
1:44:44
and all the ai stuff this is the future it's
1:44:47
coming and a misconception that a lot of people have
1:44:51
is that open source models are you know somehow bad
1:44:54
for ai They're awesome for the AI infrastructure providers. They
1:44:58
just shift economic value from the margins of the frontier
1:45:02
labs. to the infrastructure. And that's not bad for AI.
1:45:08
That's great for them. It's great for them. It's great
1:45:10
for them. But I do think there's still a role
1:45:13
for these frontier models, and it may be true. To
1:45:16
date, frontier tokens are capturing 90% of the economic value,
1:45:20
and open source tokens are probably 80% plus of tokens
1:45:23
processed. And those ratios may be here to stay, but
1:45:26
I just think composable models. are the future. There you
1:45:30
go. Frontier tokens versus composable models. We have more buzzwords.
1:45:35
Yeah, it's ridiculous. I've been burning a lot of Frontier
1:45:38
tokens lately. Have you now? The Frontier token is just
1:45:42
as crazy. And then CNBC identifies the... Didn't we have
1:45:49
a... Yes, the token maximization burn is a problem. Welcome
1:45:55
back. OpenAI and Anthropic have commanded premium AI pricing, but
1:45:59
is that advantage fading ahead of their public debuts? Our
1:46:02
Kate Rooney has that story. Hey, Kate. Hi, Leslie. So
1:46:05
OpenAI and Anthropic have seen this eye-popping revenue growth during
1:46:08
what has been just a spend-at-all-cost attitude in corporate America.
1:46:12
Experts tell me that... Maybe why these AI giants are
1:46:15
both racing towards public markets to sell that AI growth,
1:46:19
while these numbers still at this point look that good.
1:46:22
So both have filed confidentially. Anthropic, when you look at
1:46:24
the revenue, it was a $47 billion run rate. That
1:46:27
was up 4x from last year. OpenAI's run rate, when
1:46:30
you look at revenue, it's roughly doubled from a year
1:46:32
ago. the growth rates for Anthropic and OpenAI are what
1:46:39
they expect to be the fastest they're ever going to
1:46:43
be. absolutely hitting a peak at least according to Darren
1:46:57
Kamara he's the CEO of AI squared he says the
1:47:00
peak here is using the most expensive models for simpler
1:47:03
tasks within organizations as he put it employees don't need
1:47:06
these powerful models on the market to write email so
1:47:09
the pressure it's coming from all sides here So that
1:47:13
should be, I hear OpenAI has. delayed their IPO now,
1:47:16
that's a bad sign for them. Uh-oh. That's a bad
1:47:21
sign. That's not good. And I saw, when you tell
1:47:24
Horowitz on Tuesday, DH unplugged everybody. Tuesdays, 9 p.m. Eastern,
1:47:30
they go live, shows out. Does he put it out
1:47:33
the same night or is it Wednesday morning? No, no,
1:47:36
he puts it out faster than you do. Oh, well,
1:47:39
the show is a third of the length, and it's
1:47:42
scripted. We don't have to get sensitive about it. No.
1:47:47
Jeez. You're right. It's kind of an offhanded compliment that
1:47:52
you get it out so fast. I don't even know
1:47:55
why I responded. I'm just so sensitive. So he posts
1:48:03
an interview with some guy. on X and I saw
1:48:06
it. It's like, oh yeah, you know, the best thing
1:48:08
for the AI trade now is invest in people who
1:48:11
have big battery storage. I'm like, what? So, yeah, because
1:48:16
at peak hours, the AI is going to switch to
1:48:18
battery power. I don't know. Was that on the Disciplined
1:48:24
Investor? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. I'm like, what? Like, okay.
1:48:29
For what, 45 minutes? How long is that going to
1:48:32
last? I don't know. This is hilarious. That's too funny.
1:48:37
Um, let me see. There was something... It was actually
1:48:42
something kind of concerning. You know, I've been seeing a
1:48:45
lot of those videos of people finding tick boxes. Have
1:48:49
you seen the tick box? Oh, the tick box. Yeah,
1:48:52
the tick boxes. And it's these boxes that are just
1:48:54
out in the wild. And they're just teething, seething with
1:48:58
ticks. Ticks. And... This is from the Farm Journal. And
1:49:04
I, you know, I'm with Texas Limb that. You know,
1:49:09
this is a... A targeted operation. Litter up! Well, it's
1:49:15
against the American ranchers and the op is by the
1:49:19
big meat packers. There's only three of them, I think,
1:49:21
maybe four, three. They're mainly foreign owned and they just
1:49:25
want to bring crap cows up from South America and
1:49:29
they want to continue doing that because there's drugs being
1:49:32
smuggled and probably people being smuggled along with these. cattle
1:49:36
transports. I don't know if they put the drugs in
1:49:39
the cow, but there's clearly a correlation between cartels and
1:49:45
cows. The cow cartel. And this was on the Farm
1:49:49
Journal. Well, Travis, thanks for joining us today. On June
1:49:52
9th, you posted some photos of your cattle. covered in
1:49:56
ticks and they're quite devastating. So can you tell us
1:49:59
what happened?
1:50:00
to these animals and when the last time was that
1:50:02
you check them after seeing this. So that was on
1:50:08
Saturday. We were in the hay and right beside these
1:50:12
cattle. Walked through them. The one I posted a picture
1:50:18
of was a... She was broke to show. She was
1:50:20
a show cow. So I actually laid hands on her
1:50:23
in the pasture field. Tuesday, the guy at least this
1:50:27
farm from called, and he says, you have a heifer
1:50:29
laying out here. So we came out here, and that's
1:50:31
how we found her, just covered in ticks. And Monday,
1:50:35
driving through her, you couldn't see any on her. And
1:50:39
Saturday, I actually laid hands on her and never saw
1:50:43
a tick or anything. And we did have them tested
1:50:47
and it was the Asian longhorn tick on every farm.
1:50:50
Every tick we got was that species. Have you ever
1:50:55
seen ticks like this before? Your pictures are unbelievable. Never.
1:50:59
My dad said they had them. 30 or 40 years
1:51:03
ago, we were in the dairy business and had them
1:51:05
pretty bad one year, but nothing. Nothing like that. It's
1:51:09
still bad. Like you, you can walk to the gate
1:51:13
to open the gate out of the side by side
1:51:15
and you'll have five or six crawling up your pant
1:51:17
leg. That's not good. I don't know. This feels like
1:51:22
something nefarious is going on. And we don't hear anything
1:51:25
about the screwworm anymore. Screwworm just came and went. Yeah,
1:51:31
I don't know. Very suspicious. Well, we got ranchers out
1:51:34
there. They'll let us know what they think. We have
1:51:37
the best producers in the universe. after all. The TPS
1:51:42
big win, or as the headlines go, Supreme Court hands
1:51:48
Donald Trump a big win. Hands him a big win.
1:51:53
And this is the temporary protective status, which we've been
1:51:56
talking about for the length of this show. And probably
1:51:59
ever since the Haitian earthquake. And it's kind of interesting
1:52:04
because didn't... Obama and Clinton and Bush, didn't they raise
1:52:11
hundreds of billions of dollars for Haiti? Yeah, and don't
1:52:16
send your blankets or your water. Just send your cash.
1:52:19
Yeah. But somehow the Haitians, who, as you know, are
1:52:24
eating the dogs. They never got any of it. They're
1:52:25
eating the dogs. Well, yeah. I got definitely the Haitians
1:52:30
are being kicked out of the country, too. Do I
1:52:32
have a clip on that? I have a Tom Homan,
1:52:37
a short clip about. the immigration. The TPS decision that
1:52:43
the U.S. Supreme Court just 6-3 about They can allow
1:52:48
so the president has the constitutional authority to make it
1:52:51
temporary and not permanent. It's the right call. You know,
1:52:54
I've been doing this since 1984. TPS has never been
1:52:57
temporary. That's why the whole is. The statute exists. Temporarily
1:53:02
give people protection while the country's in turmoil or after
1:53:05
they suffer a hurricane. But the problem is, no administration.
1:53:09
I've had the guts to actually follow that statute. President
1:53:13
Trump has the guts to follow the law. So temporary
1:53:15
means temporary. When the condition of that country gets better,
1:53:18
they need to go home. There are millions of people
1:53:21
standing in line wanting to be part of the greatest
1:53:23
nation on earth. And that goes back to my earlier
1:53:25
point, people say, "Why are you arresting them if they're
1:53:27
not going to live under 10 years?" because he cheated
1:53:30
the system They may have been there 10 years, but
1:53:33
let's remember, when you enter the country illegally, it's a
1:53:35
crime. And they're doing that, putting themselves in front of
1:53:37
the line, while millions of people are taking their tests.
1:53:40
doing their background investigation, paying their fees to be part
1:53:43
of the greatest nation on earth. So temporary means temporary,
1:53:46
and I'm grateful for that decision. I know a lot
1:53:49
of people want to send blankets or water. Just send
1:53:52
your cash. Yep, just send your cash. Now they got
1:53:55
a lot of cash, and then didn't they build one
1:53:58
hotel, the Bill Clinton Hotel? couple of homes on the
1:54:01
other side of the island sean penn built a couple
1:54:04
of homes and then they had the the islands where
1:54:07
the cruise ships rolled up And there was like a
1:54:11
Hooker's Paradise. Yeah. And then Clinton's, was it? Clinton's brother?
1:54:17
who got the gold rights in Haiti. And then there
1:54:20
was... I forgot about that part. And then they were
1:54:22
smuggling out kids. The whole thing was... Yeah, it was
1:54:26
tawdry. Tawdry, yes. I was going to say sketchy, but
1:54:29
tawdry is a better word. And so now it's time
1:54:32
to go. And, you know, of course, now is the
1:54:35
problem. Well, in NPR, all they did was moan about
1:54:38
this. And they said, well, these... poor people they they're
1:54:41
locked into the community they've been here for some over
1:54:44
a decade and they got jobs and family and it's
1:54:48
a shame and i more i was thinking about yeah
1:54:51
you what tolman indicated was yeah you do temporary thing
1:54:56
and you never ship them back that's been the strategy
1:55:00
We just don't ship them back, ever. No, in fact,
1:55:02
we ship them in, and we ship them to specific
1:55:05
locations where factories need cheap labor. Yeah, so they can
1:55:08
vote Democrat. And they can eat the pets. They ate
1:55:12
the dogs. I still think Trump won on that line.
1:55:16
He did. You're eating the dogs! Oh, no, no. Let's
1:55:19
get... Let's get the, let's get it good. Let's get
1:55:21
the... Uh, hold on, where is it? Here we go.
1:55:24
They're eating the dogs! Oh man, so good. you Ha
1:55:32
ha ha ha! In context, it's even funnier. Because, you
1:55:38
know, uh... Kamlo is on some sort of a roll.
1:55:41
And he interrupted her with that line. Here's the out
1:55:45
of the blue. Here's the full line. In Springfield, they're
1:55:49
eating the dogs, the people that came in. They're eating
1:55:52
the cats. They're eating. They're eating the pets of the
1:55:56
people that live there. And this is what's happening in
1:56:00
our country. And it's a shame. It's a shame. Yeah.
1:56:04
It's a shame. It's a shame. It's a shame. That's
1:56:07
the line of the day. It's a shame. It's a
1:56:10
shame. They're eating the dogs. Yes. All right. What else
1:56:14
you got? You want to roll one more out here?
1:56:17
Well, I've got a couple of things but if a
1:56:19
lot of interesting things you got airline organization crashes yeah
1:56:22
this is good let's play that airline organization crashes thing
1:56:26
this is something fishy about this the most recent close
1:56:28
call happened this weekend confusion as a delta flight aborted
1:56:32
its landing in boston after a cockpit collision alert warned
1:56:36
that an american jet was just 300 feet away on
1:56:40
an intersecting runway. 4161, where you going? Takeoff 3161. Today,
1:56:50
a stunning revelation from the organization that represents the nation's
1:56:54
airlines. There are many more, thousands of more of near
1:56:57
misses. than are probably out there in the public and
1:57:00
that, you know, get the headlines. There are hundreds of
1:57:03
them every single day. But only a fraction make the
1:57:05
news. The FAA says most reported incidents are not close
1:57:09
calls and that runway incursion rates have decreased more than
1:57:12
10% since last year. In April, the FAA says two
1:57:16
southwest planes came with... than 500 feet of each other
1:57:19
over Nashville. And a close call between two regional jets
1:57:25
at New York's JFK Airport. And following horrific crashes in
1:57:34
Washington, Louisville, and New York. This has been... A year
1:57:38
when we've had many, many serious close calls. The pilots
1:57:41
union and NTSB want Congress to require all planes to
1:57:45
have precise GPS-based air traffic receivers that show surrounding air
1:57:50
traffic, something the American Airlines crew did not have in
1:57:53
the fatal midair crash over Washington. If we don't have
1:57:56
a deadline, it'll never happen. While the Senate wants to
1:57:59
set a deadline, the House has declined, concerned that it
1:58:02
would create an excessive burden on airlines and aircraft owners.
1:58:07
Well, a couple things about this. First of all, the...
1:58:11
We have more air traffic controllers than anybody, any podcast
1:58:16
anywhere. And I'm a little, just a, just, I have
1:58:20
a twinge of disappointment that no one has contacted me
1:58:23
with their opinion on this. um I think a couple
1:58:30
of things happened in the particular case of the crossed
1:58:34
runways. The air... This is not abnormal, this type of
1:58:39
clearance for you have a one-on-final, which is kind of
1:58:44
short final, and you have one taking off. That's not
1:58:46
abnormal. Two things, though. The controller did not say clear
1:58:51
for departure immediately or make it fast. There's a whole
1:58:54
bunch of things you hear from... air traffic control, which
1:58:58
means go now and move in. There's a whole bunch
1:59:01
of ways they say it. That didn't happen. And it
1:59:04
still took about 30 to 40 seconds before the American
1:59:08
airline took off. But then there's also. From what I
1:59:13
understand, all these major airports have the runway lights. incursion
1:59:17
system that's probably not what it's called And it's automatic.
1:59:21
It's not something ATC flips on. So if there's an
1:59:24
aircraft incoming or that is about to cross the runway,
1:59:29
red lights light up all across the runway. We don't
1:59:31
know if that worked or not or if it was
1:59:33
ignored. So that's a safety measure that was. put in
1:59:36
specifically for this. But ultimately, it's all about military contractors
1:59:41
with the next-gen aviation system. That's what everybody wants. Yeah,
1:59:45
you were as that anyway. That's what they want. They
1:59:47
want more gear. More gear, new gear. New gear, more
1:59:52
gear. Yeah, that's probably what it is. Yeah, of course.
1:59:55
And that's what you do. That's what these stories are.
1:59:57
Yes. Say a prayer for your air traffic.
2:00:00
controllers because they do a great job and for your
2:00:02
pilots and you know what shit happens 33 000 flights
2:00:07
a day over the united states exactly exactly it's a
2:00:10
lot the most dangerous part of flying is driving to
2:00:13
the airport It's just the truth. It reminds me of
2:00:17
one of my, we have these stories called Phyllis. stories
2:00:20
it's my mom oh she always said you've you've said
2:00:24
stories that your mom would tell us you i didn't
2:00:27
never knew her name was phyllis yeah phyllis so she
2:00:30
so we had these stories wait the most legendary phyllis
2:00:33
story is that the chinese are stealing our toilet paper
2:00:36
oh yeah the toilet paper story but this she has
2:00:39
she has this one too This is another classic. There's
2:00:41
also the brown chicken eggs. But... Phyllis stories. So this
2:00:47
story, so I'm going on some trip. And, uh... It's
2:00:52
just a classic response to anything I ever said to
2:00:56
her. She says, why are you going on a trip?
2:00:58
I said, I'm going to Europe. "Oh, it's so unsafe.
2:01:01
It's so unsafe to fly." I said, "Mom, there's 33,000
2:01:06
flights a day, every day. How unsafe could it be?"
2:01:10
She says, "Oh my, no wonder there's so much air
2:01:14
pollution." It's just like, without missing a beat. *clap* So
2:01:22
that's where you get it from. Now I understand. It's
2:01:25
all Phyllis. It's the Phyllis DNA that's running through your
2:01:29
veins. That's what's going on there. And with that, I
2:01:31
want to thank you for your courage. Say in the
2:01:33
morning to you, the man who put the seas in
2:01:35
the... What do we have? Uhhhh... Or was it? Oh,
2:01:41
the cow cartel. They're the cow cartel. No, cow cartel.
2:01:44
Cow cartel. Everybody say hello to my friend on the
2:01:46
other end, the one, the only, Mr. John! Subtitles by
2:01:58
the Amara.org community Trolls in the troll room, don't move,
2:02:04
let me count you! doing better. What do we have
2:02:09
here? 1563. There you go. Over one and a half
2:02:14
thousand people listening live to this podcast. Top that, Sean
2:02:19
Ryan. We do it live, baby. That's with no editing.
2:02:23
We also won't do it six hours. Well, we've done
2:02:25
six hours once. 7.5. Was that it on the 1,000th
2:02:30
anniversary? Was it episode 1,000? Was that when we did
2:02:33
that? It was 10th anniversary. Oh, 10th anniversary. Well, okay.
2:02:39
19 will be such a dis- disappointment. Just 19 years,
2:02:44
not even 20. I've got to make it to 20
2:02:46
at least. Before we start getting into any of this,
2:02:49
I want to make an announcement. There's no more Red
2:02:51
Knights available. What? How about the guy that just emailed
2:02:56
today? Did he get in? That's the last one, that
2:02:59
guy. He got in? Oh, okay, cause I- saw that
2:03:01
i'm like no the guy's he took the rest of
2:03:03
them oh okay oh he's coming in with a rubble
2:03:06
this will be on this thursday show he's coming in
2:03:08
with a rubbleizer donation he's gonna scarf up the end
2:03:13
of the thing oh so they're they're done they're they're
2:03:15
scarfed they're they're out he he came in and got
2:03:17
him for his whole family yeah jay did a double
2:03:20
count today and we're We're done. Okay. Wow. All right.
2:03:23
I mean, but maybe by popular demand, we'd make some
2:03:25
more, but it has to. Nah, I don't think. Probably
2:03:28
not. You're healed. I mean, let's be honest about it.
2:03:31
It's done. You're back. We saved you. We gave you
2:03:34
a reason to live. You're here. You're here. I got
2:03:37
a reason to live. No agenda show. Hey, hey, are
2:03:43
you knocking this? Come on, man. Yes, the no agenda.
2:03:48
It's like slave labor. Forced to do this show. Wake
2:03:54
up, get up. Get back to the show. That's exactly
2:03:58
what Mimi was saying. And maybe the public. We have
2:04:05
to do this show or else. The funniest was your
2:04:08
family, not concerned at all. No, we just got to
2:04:10
give them a reason to live. Let's show them the
2:04:12
cash. Oh, that's right. We laugh a lot. On this
2:04:20
show? That's for sure. People who are listening live, they're
2:04:24
using one of those modern podcast apps. Get one now
2:04:27
today. What are you waiting for? Stop using legacy stuff.
2:04:29
It's really not worth it. You can listen to us
2:04:32
live when we go live. If not, don't worry about
2:04:34
it. Within 90 seconds of publishing, you'll get a notification
2:04:37
on the modern podcast app. Podcast apps. dot com So
2:04:41
we're value for value. which is kind of interesting how
2:04:46
we have a lot of recurring value for value dones.
2:04:48
We got to talk about Manuka Gold, though. They got
2:04:51
to slow down a bit on their notes. Have you
2:04:55
noticed this? Hello? Yeah. Yeah. I didn't look at today's.
2:05:01
Oh, no, you'll see. So the beauty of Value for
2:05:06
Value is that we give you the show. We're not
2:05:09
forcing you to subscribe to anything. We're not taking money
2:05:13
out of your bank account every single month, unless you
2:05:16
want us to. But we just want you to return
2:05:18
the value whenever you feel. that you've received value from
2:05:21
the show. It could just be a laugh. It could
2:05:23
be a career opportunity. It could be something that made
2:05:27
you feel smart around the water cooler. Are there still
2:05:29
water coolers in businesses? I don't even know anymore. I
2:05:32
don't know. People just, no, probably not. Once in a
2:05:35
while you'll see one. Yeah. Well, where do people hang
2:05:38
out? Do they even hang out anymore? It's part of
2:05:40
the loneliness epidemic. They're on there looking at their phones.
2:05:43
And the loneliness epidemic. Did Pastor Jimmy bring up Satan's
2:05:48
tool? It was Pastor Brian. Oh, Brian, one of the
2:05:52
Brians, one of the four Brians, he come up there?
2:05:55
Was he holding up Satan's tool, the Antichrist, called a
2:05:59
smart... phone and blamed the whole thing on that because
2:06:01
that's the real issue he actually did Well, good for
2:06:05
him. But it was an iPad, but he did. An
2:06:08
iPad? Yeah. Well, he had to do it for effect
2:06:12
because he needed to show. Oh yeah, because he probably
2:06:16
is on the phone all day like everyone else. PB
2:06:21
is a good guy. PB1. We got a lot of
2:06:24
PBs over there. So, yes. Where was I? You've confused
2:06:28
me. We are value for value, which means if you
2:06:34
support the show, we will thank you. If it's above
2:06:37
$50, we'll thank you on the show. If not, we...
2:06:40
For reasons of anonymity, we don't do anything below $50.
2:06:43
And there's a lot of people who send very small
2:06:45
amounts, which is all appreciated. Everybody should be sending some
2:06:48
small amount at some point in time. considering we have
2:06:51
a lot of people listening. It would be nice if
2:06:54
everyone did it. We know that doesn't work. Oh, so
2:06:58
Wikipedia. which is Wikimedia. Someone sent me their latest fundraising
2:07:05
drive, and they're about the same as us. They say,
2:07:07
you know, of all the people who use Wikipedia, now
2:07:09
Wikipedia is no longer an outstanding product. Wikipedia sucks. They
2:07:13
really ruined that product. but in their own value for
2:07:18
value ask. They say about 2% of people who use
2:07:23
Wikipedia support it. And they're doing millions. They're doing millions.
2:07:29
Yeah, because 2% of their usage is off to charge
2:07:31
hundreds of millions of people. Yeah, they're doing quite well
2:07:34
there. Or at least they're hanging it. Um, and so
2:07:38
we- No, they're doing well if there's- We have a
2:07:42
promise that if you are able to support us with
2:07:45
$200 or more, not only will we give you an
2:07:48
official Hollywood title, and it's real because Hollywood, you can
2:07:51
go look at it. Lots of Hollywood people have this,
2:07:53
and these are the Hollywood people who soon will be
2:07:55
special guests at your meetup. You get the associate executive
2:07:59
producer title. And we will read your note. Guaranteed. within
2:08:04
reason. $300 or more, you get an executive producer credit,
2:08:08
and we will read your note within reason. So what
2:08:10
a lot of people have done is they receive value
2:08:12
from the show, and it's family business. You got Eli
2:08:16
the coffee guy, Linda Lupakin, and they'll have a little...
2:08:19
Plug. You know, we're happy to read the plug. But...
2:08:24
You know, there's a limit because it's a beautiful system.
2:08:28
Is it really advertising? No, because we don't have any
2:08:31
conversations. We don't set a rate. We don't have a
2:08:34
rate card. We don't have a meeting. We don't have
2:08:38
a meeting. We don't have to provide statistics and our
2:08:42
CPM value, which by the way, when you think about
2:08:45
it, the whole fact that podcasting. that people sell ads
2:08:50
based on cpm it can only be erased to the
2:08:53
bottom when you insert ads at your pre-roll. I mean,
2:08:58
there's four million podcasts. It's going to be $5 million
2:09:01
within a year with all the AI slopcasts that are
2:09:04
going out there. And so there's just all this inventory
2:09:08
that means it's only becoming less valuable. Yeah, too much
2:09:12
inventory. Yeah, I mean, it's unlimited inventory. How much podcast
2:09:16
do you want? Infinite. Infinite. Thank you. It's infinite. So
2:09:20
it's... It's not a winning strategy. And it's annoying. So
2:09:24
we decided, we'll just do it this way. And, you
2:09:26
know, I love the small businesses because they get as
2:09:32
much a kick out of the No Agenda community as
2:09:35
we do because people send notes and they thank them
2:09:38
for their product and they give them their... testimonials. And
2:09:43
so you'll see we have a couple of those today.
2:09:45
And some of them are really funny, but just really
2:09:47
Manuka Gold really got me today. So first we start.
2:09:51
Well, you give them enough plugs right now, you don't
2:09:53
even have to read their note. No, I'm not going
2:09:57
to be like that. You're getting... Well, I'm just...
2:10:00
I wasn't really suggesting. I'm just saying. I'm going to
2:10:02
scold them. It's not as though they don't get banged
2:10:04
for their buck. I'm going to scold them. Now, what
2:10:07
is this? Is this meetup money that came in here
2:10:10
at the top of the list? No, this is money.
2:10:12
No, you just skip it. It is the, okay, the
2:10:16
old legacy account. Yeah. which was the old $5, $2,
2:10:20
$1, it has been building up for about 10 years.
2:10:27
Nickel and dime, nickel and dime. That's about five years
2:10:31
worth. I had to move it over because I got
2:10:34
to move it over. I got to move it over.
2:10:38
It's got to be moved over, so I moved it
2:10:40
over for load balancing. We needed the money. Load balancing?
2:10:45
Holy moly. All right. I love the load balancing. Okay,
2:10:49
so I can just ignore that. Yeah, just ignore that.
2:10:52
All right, so then we go to... Uh, Brendan Flemer?
2:10:56
Am I saying that right? Am I on the right
2:10:58
note here? I didn't even see this note initially, so
2:11:01
I have some work to do here. He comes in
2:11:04
with $1,000, which is very much appreciated. And he says,
2:11:08
ITM. No, no, no, you're David Rosa. Oh, I'm sorry.
2:11:11
I got the note first. Oh, David Rosa. I'm sorry.
2:11:14
There you go. David Rosa comes in from Clarkson, Michigan.
2:11:17
$1,000 plus fees, $1,030.26. And he says, so glad that
2:11:23
John, the patriarch of the order of the heart, is
2:11:26
on the mend. He's done. He's good people. By the
2:11:29
way, is there still progress being made on the Rub-A-Lizer
2:11:32
challenge coins? Well, this is a question for you. The
2:11:38
answer? We need the answer. No, not yet. Well... Soon.
2:11:43
It's not that we're completely done with the heart donation.
2:11:47
It's time to get to work. Okay. I'll talk to
2:11:53
Paul about it. See, I wanted to make Paul do
2:11:56
it because Paul. Yeah. For some reason has a neck.
2:12:01
For certain kinds of designing. For challenge coins. Yes, he
2:12:04
does. And his challenge coin is still the best of
2:12:07
all. We had a lot of people doing challenge coins
2:12:10
and designing them. But Paul's is, he's got a, I
2:12:15
don't know what it is. It's just some sort of.
2:12:19
It's all I can call it. Yeah. For doing this
2:12:22
stuff. And I have to talk him into it because
2:12:24
it's work for him. Oh, well, Paul, we'd love it.
2:12:27
We'll love it if you could do that. He doesn't
2:12:29
listen to the show. Really? I don't know. He does
2:12:33
the art generator but doesn't listen to the show. I
2:12:36
mean, people, they do that. All right. All right. happens.
2:12:40
Yes. Okay. Next. You're up. This is the note. Yeah,
2:12:44
this is from a note. This is, uh... Brendan Flemer
2:12:49
in Bismarck, North Dakota. And he's the one who sent
2:12:53
in the $1,000. Very short note, ITM. I couldn't think
2:12:56
of a witty night name that hasn't already been. claimed.
2:13:00
So I'm just going to go with my given name.
2:13:03
Jingles. He does have some jingle requests. Yes. Biden to
2:13:07
full load, two to the head, Obama, you might die.
2:13:11
a little story this mini story and then he has
2:13:14
a round table request yes of uh Flesh. Kalu, flesh
2:13:20
Kalu. Fresh Kalu. and corn boot guy. Kombucha, corn bootcha.
2:13:30
Kombucha. It says corn here. No, it doesn't. Keep up
2:13:33
the extraordinary. By the way, kombucha. We talked about this
2:13:37
earlier. It's bad. It's dangerous. If something is dangerous, the
2:13:41
best mycologists in the country, it's a witch's brew. It
2:13:46
can't be duplicate. Nobody knows what's even in that mother.
2:13:49
It's just a bunch of different animals living there. Hey,
2:13:54
when you give us the vinegar book, we'll believe what
2:13:56
you're saying. Until then. I'm just saying. There's no evidence.
2:14:00
I don't... drink it. Keep up the exemplary. Work. Soon,
2:14:07
Sir Flimmer. I'm going to give you the whole load
2:14:10
today. There you go. And we move on to Knight's
2:14:17
John. Uh... who is from Tucson, Arizona, and he sends
2:14:22
in 626. dollars and 26 cents I don't see, do
2:14:29
I have this note? Yeah, it's a note. It's the
2:14:31
second note on that same page. Oh, well, could you
2:14:34
read it? Because for some reason I closed that one.
2:14:36
Okay, I see you've added it. John, this donation is
2:14:37
62626. It's for my palindrome birthday on June 26th. We've
2:14:43
been skipping these palindromes. The whole week has been palindrome
2:14:47
week. Like today's show, 1-881. Yeah. Yeah. This is a
2:14:51
great way to connect birthdays to donations. To boot, I'll
2:14:58
be... six seven As near as I can tell, most
2:15:04
people can expect to get one of these in a
2:15:05
lifetime. I'm sure the numerology nerds out there can do
2:15:09
some predicting and forecast show donations on this basis. Yeah,
2:15:13
they can, and the show donations are down. Maybe this
2:15:16
will keep John smiling. No. Thank you for your courage.
2:15:21
Knight John, protector of the pocket protectors and keeper of
2:15:25
his 15 grandchildren. Now there's a guy that does his
2:15:28
work. Jingles, F-35 Karma and WTC7. Okay, this is what
2:15:34
I didn't have. F-35 Karma. And he wants to WT.
2:15:39
Well, I'm wanting to do WTC seven first. Because that's
2:15:43
a better sequence. WTC7 won't go away. You've got... Karma.
2:15:58
I'll do the next two because I got Manuka Gold
2:16:00
coming up too. 333 from, let's see, this is from...
2:16:07
Wait, no. I'm sorry. I made a mistake. Manuka Gold
2:16:10
comes first. I'm a mess today. I'm a mess. I'm
2:16:13
a mess. You're a wreck. I'm a mess. I'm a
2:16:15
wreck. Here it is. Manuka Gold. Hudson, Florida, 333.33. You
2:16:20
noticed too long, Manuka. Hi, gentlemen. As always, the Manuka
2:16:24
Gold family is thrilled to support the show. We've enjoyed
2:16:26
all the fun ITM comments when you place your orders,
2:16:30
and it's nice to hear from all the like-minded people.
2:16:32
On Thursdays, it's my fault. Adam noticed we changed the
2:16:36
20% off. code to track what works, so we might
2:16:38
as well make the code fun for all of us
2:16:41
and solve a long-standing debate in our family. Who do
2:16:45
you think needs Manuka Gold's pain relief gel more? Rocky
2:16:50
after Apollo in Rocky 1? Or Rambo? Oh, God. Or
2:16:55
Rambo. after the Russian got hold of him in Rambo
2:16:59
2. Cast your vote with your 20% off code at
2:17:02
checkout. Use either Rambo or Rocky. See, you're pushing it,
2:17:06
Manuka. Don't you think they're pushing? Am I wrong that
2:17:09
they're pushing it here? Well, belaboring is the word I'd
2:17:14
be using. Belaboring, yes. And I don't think it's... The
2:17:18
gag is not that funny. Did you know that Sylvester
2:17:22
Stallone was... banned from ever traveling to Russia because of
2:17:25
that movie? No, is he still banned? I think so.
2:17:30
Feel free to explain your vote in the order notes.
2:17:32
If you don't need top quality Manuka honey products this
2:17:34
week, feel free to contact us through our email on
2:17:37
manukagold.com. and put in a vote. Oh, so you don't
2:17:39
have... No purchase necessary is what you're supposed to say.
2:17:42
Everyone can play. We have our own opinions, but we'll
2:17:45
see if the majority agrees. Stay tuned. Yes, sir. You
2:17:51
don't get to do your own segment. That's not how
2:17:55
it works. And I was going to do a really
2:17:57
nice testimonial from Tina. But now I'll have to wait
2:17:59
because you used up all your time with your Rambo
2:18:02
versus Rocky. And we thank you so much for supporting
2:18:05
us. you All right. You're going to do the next
2:18:11
one too, you said. No, I'll do it fine. Hunt.
2:18:16
Dieffenthaler. Perns? Hans Dieffenthaler? turns boca raton mouth of the
2:18:24
rat me 333.33 this is long overdue please deduce me
2:18:30
you've been deduced hello from the southernmost island in the
2:18:35
caribbean archipelago Oka-Raton. I found no agenda during COVID when
2:18:42
I had a longing for simpler times and wondered what
2:18:45
Adam Curry from MTV was up to. Can you imagine?
2:18:50
Oh man, we're locked down from COVID. I wonder what
2:18:53
Curry is doing. And I go to YouTube and see
2:18:56
Adam's appearance on Rogan, which was just before the lockdowns.
2:18:59
I felt like I found my tribe and immediately had
2:19:03
an amygdala resizing. I'm going to cut this short and
2:19:06
just say thank you for everything. John, you gave us
2:19:09
a scare, but glad you are here. Sorry I couldn't
2:19:11
do this sooner, but better late than never. Cheers, and
2:19:14
until the next donation, kind regards from Hans. Thank you,
2:19:18
Hans. Thanks for the compliment. Yes. Dr. Don. and Dame
2:19:24
Audra. They were at the meetup. Did anyone come in
2:19:29
with cash donations? Like no blankets, water, but cash? Well,
2:19:34
this is interesting because everyone comes in with all the
2:19:36
donations from the meetup were cash. except for one. Except
2:19:40
for one. Do you have them all or are they
2:19:43
on the spreadsheet? They're all mixed in. They're in here.
2:19:46
There was no consolidation. Okay. All right. It wasn't necessary.
2:19:52
So they just blend in right in. So we got
2:19:54
a note. Hello, boys. Thank you for your courage. A
2:19:58
little feedback. for crazy
2:20:00
Steve, please don't ever schedule a meetup on Pride weekend.
2:20:05
What, did he have a... The traffic through the Bay
2:20:08
East Bay was horrendous. Worse than legacy podcast apps. Ha
2:20:15
ha. Many thanks to you, John, and that may have
2:20:18
been the problem with the meetup being so... poorly attended.
2:20:22
Half of our audience was in the parade. They're in
2:20:24
the parade. Not I think about it. Many thanks to
2:20:29
you, John and Adam, and the entire No Agenda back
2:20:31
office for the gift of the best podcast in the
2:20:33
universe. I love Dr. Don and Dame Audra. Bricks and
2:20:37
Man and Mini-Figs steals from old people. That's some code
2:20:42
for something. Now, this is the... What is this Apple
2:20:44
notepaper? Well, he works at Apple. He's one of the
2:20:48
Apple guys that watches the show. He watches the show?
2:20:52
Wow, those guys at Apple. What am I saying? With
2:20:56
the cans on. He's blind, so I'm sorry I said
2:21:00
that. But you brought it to my attention. You're the
2:21:03
worst. Uh, he brought... and gave me the new one
2:21:12
dollar apparently every state's got one these these commemorative one
2:21:17
dollars that were sold out He has a bag of
2:21:20
'em. of the one dollar coin california commemorative coin official
2:21:25
real coin With Steve Jobs on it. No way. So
2:21:31
Steve Jobs got on the coin. Like a real dollar.
2:21:36
You can spend it in the store. Yes, it's an
2:21:38
actual U.S. currency. What? And it's got Steve Jobs on
2:21:44
it. It was funny when Brandon looked at the coin.
2:21:49
He says, does Steve Jobs' depiction on the back look
2:21:52
like that Ramirez guy, the serial killer? Does it kind
2:21:57
of look like him? And so everybody was, you know,
2:22:03
the same. I had the same reaction. Everybody had the
2:22:07
same reaction. This can't be real. Yeah, it doesn't make
2:22:09
sense. Because this is supposed to be. It was determined
2:22:11
that Steve was the most important Californian that we could
2:22:15
put on this coin. So California minted this? themselves no
2:22:21
no this was minted from the u.s the regular whoever
2:22:25
stamps out the coins back i think philadelphia besant did
2:22:28
it himself personally so so these coins then they only
2:22:32
made a limited number they're already selling for six bucks
2:22:34
looks they're going to go to 20 And, uh... I
2:22:39
was thinking what it. All the people that could have
2:22:42
been put on this coin, Californians, why they picked Steve
2:22:46
Jobs, I don't know. But at the same time, according
2:22:49
to Don, they sold out. I'll bet they did. In
2:22:54
12 minutes. And he got a bag of them. He
2:22:59
got a whole bag. He gave his gift to other
2:23:02
Apple people. Oh, that's cool. I don't know how cool
2:23:05
it is. As an aside, I apologize. I had no
2:23:09
idea the... Rocky vs. Rambo would be such a hit.
2:23:14
The Troll Room is still arguing over it. Oh, well,
2:23:20
okay. Well, I take it back. great promotion we've been
2:23:22
wrong before at least we admit when we're wrong so
2:23:25
uh that's right anyway so they that was i thought
2:23:29
was uh yeah well that's cool that's cool i'm glad
2:23:32
you got one where's mine Actually, Brunetti wants one too.
2:23:38
When Brunetti comes to the... As the guest star of
2:23:43
the meetup, you're probably going to do it at the
2:23:45
end. You're dodging the question. About what? Where's mine? Well,
2:23:50
you had to go and hold it, Don. Maybe he's
2:23:53
got a couple left. He might send you one. He
2:23:56
didn't give me one to give you. Let's put it
2:23:57
that way. Okay, well, that's obvious. You weren't at the
2:23:59
meetup. I've met Steve Jobs and I should get one.
2:24:03
I met Steve Jobs, too. Yeah, for an hour privately.
2:24:09
I met him when he was during the Apple II
2:24:12
era. Oh, well. When he was not quite the a-hole
2:24:15
he later became. He was very nice. What were you
2:24:18
guys doing privately? Talking. Uh-huh. Eli the Coffee Guy is
2:24:23
back. He's in Bensonville, Illinois, and he's back with his
2:24:27
$200 plus the date, $6.28. And we love hearing from
2:24:32
Eli the Coffee Guy. He says, as America gets ready
2:24:34
to celebrate its 250th anniversary, I want to reflect on
2:24:38
our nation. on the nation are forefathers built. There's still
2:24:43
no freer or greater place on earth than the United
2:24:46
States of America. Patriots rebelled against Britain and its oppressive
2:24:50
taxes by dumping tea into the Boston Harbor. In its
2:24:54
place, we adopted coffee. Gigawatt is just keeping the tradition
2:24:59
alive. And stay caffeinated, says Eli, the coffee guy. Linda
2:25:15
Lou Patkin is up. She's in Castle Rock, Colorado and
2:25:18
says, Jobs Karma, your resume is about 10 seconds. you
2:25:23
to make an impression. And most don't. For a resume
2:25:26
that gets results, go to ImageMakersInc.com. Then it helps professionals
2:25:32
and executives position their experience so employers see their value.
2:25:38
That's Image Makers Inc. with a K. And Linda Liu,
2:25:41
Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes. Jobs, jobs,
2:25:45
jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got karma.
2:25:53
And we still have a couple more 200s here. Steve
2:25:55
Peterson is in Kingaroy. That's in Queensland, Australia, 200. And
2:26:00
that would be probably, oh, wait, he will be an
2:26:04
executive producer because it is $303.12 in the dollary dollarettes
2:26:11
from Australia. So we do honor that number. And he
2:26:14
says, G'day! Kokinda is right. Check out the Fabian window.
2:26:19
A deliberately hot world being forged by elitist clowns and
2:26:23
Australia's leaders are all in. The exchange rate sucks. $200
2:26:28
USD is $3.03 and 12 Australian cents. Wow, that is
2:26:33
pretty bad. That's a third less. You know, the countries
2:26:37
that suck the most right now... that really suck the
2:26:41
most are the UK, Canada, and Australia. Well, Germany's pretty
2:26:46
bad. Yeah, yeah. And you got your Hollanders there, you
2:26:50
know. Well, I'm going to be giving you boots on
2:26:52
the ground Thursday. We leave on Wednesday. We're going for
2:26:55
almost two weeks to see if we can time it
2:26:57
with the arrival. You're going there for the baby's birth.
2:26:59
We hope so. What do you mean you hope so?
2:27:02
Well, I mean the kid might be delayed. What if
2:27:07
the kids... Or it could be born while you're in
2:27:10
the air. Well, that's okay. That would be okay. It's
2:27:15
going to save me money going back. What, are you
2:27:19
gonna take- the baby with you? No. The extra discount?
2:27:23
If the baby's born after we've already left, we have
2:27:25
to go back, of course. Oh, jeez. That's right. I
2:27:30
told Christina, like, can you jump up and down a
2:27:32
bit? Yeah. to jump up and down. It's pizza. Pizza.
2:27:39
Oh, pizza. Pizza, is that what it does, pizza? Yeah,
2:27:42
a big slice of pizza, and boom, you have a
2:27:44
baby. Okay. That's a known fact. It works for everybody.
2:27:48
And, you know, of course, we'll have a Curry grandbaby
2:27:52
donation amount. We'll have all kinds of fun stuff. Think
2:27:54
of the show, John. Think of the show. Ah. All
2:27:59
right, uh... Oh, Robert, we got one last one. Robert
2:28:02
Montoya in Pleasant Hill. 200 bucks. No note. Well, no
2:28:08
note. That means a double up karma for you. You've
2:28:10
got. And we thank these executive and associate executive producers
2:28:17
for episode 1,881 profusely. We appreciate it very, very much.
2:28:22
And, of course, you get these official Hollywood credits, associate
2:28:25
executive producer or executive producer. They are valid wherever Hollywood
2:28:28
credits are recognized. And that includes your LinkedIn profile and
2:28:32
your IMDb. And we thank you. Our formula is this.
2:28:35
We go out. We hit people in the mouth. We'll
2:28:53
thank the rest of our time, talent, and treasure supporters.
2:28:56
$50 and above. You know what we forgot? We completely
2:28:59
forgot the artwork. And I'm not sure how that happened.
2:29:02
No, that's funny. I should have caught it. Should we
2:29:04
do that real quick before I do the 50s? Sure.
2:29:07
Yeah. That's part of the time, talent, and treasure. We
2:29:11
had episode 1880, the Antifa Book Club, the artwork, which
2:29:16
was funny. It was good. Of course, it's Darren O'Neill.
2:29:19
This was... Our president with his snorkel coming out of
2:29:22
the reflecting pool filled with algae with his own. A
2:29:25
lot of people like that piece. Because it's a good
2:29:27
piece. It's humorous. Yeah, it's very humorous. Although the AI
2:29:31
kind of, if you look at it carefully, there's what
2:29:35
looks like a P-51 trainer. Airplane with a banner with
2:29:41
no agenda and the ropes of the banner are on
2:29:44
the... far side of the Washington Monument, which seems a
2:29:48
little unlikely. Yeah, seems unlikely. Seems a bit unlikely. um
2:29:54
but it was a great piece and yes and that's
2:29:57
what it is sometimes darren o'neill man he just
2:30:00
has it. He's got that magic. Let's see, we looked
2:30:03
at other things, though. I think there was something that
2:30:05
I liked that you didn't like. There was not much.
2:30:07
I kind of like the... Well, the Scrabble, you're right,
2:30:12
it wasn't all that great. Well, the Scrabble is what
2:30:14
Jay used for the newsletter. So she did like it.
2:30:16
Because she's been putting it together. And I call her
2:30:18
up and say, what are you using? this yeah i
2:30:20
think it's really good looking and i said that's what
2:30:24
adam said yeah and then so i find it very
2:30:26
irksome some people like hey i like the no agenda
2:30:30
in the reflecting pool we've already done one of those
2:30:32
gags the gag is over A lot of rodenticide, a
2:30:37
lot of dead rats, rats deteriorate. This is a little
2:30:40
gruesome. Yeah, no dead rats. But there also wasn't a
2:30:43
lot. There wasn't a lot. It was only like maybe...
2:30:46
There was no inspiration. We get lots of art when
2:30:49
people get inspired by something we say. And so the
2:30:52
Antifa Book Club, which is what the title of the
2:30:54
show was, Blue Acorn did an Antifa Book Club art,
2:30:58
which blowed up. Is it great? piece of art but
2:31:01
it's too small for the art as just a poster-sized
2:31:06
image. And it's really, it's a waste because it was
2:31:10
really good. But blowed up. It would be nice on
2:31:14
the wall or something. Yeah, that was one of the
2:31:16
pieces. That would be huge to be appreciated. All right,
2:31:20
now we continue with our 50s and above. And we
2:31:24
left off with the Duke of San Francisco, who sends
2:31:27
us $160. Thank you. Robin Tolbert from Topeka, Kansas, 133.33.
2:31:32
We love the 33s. James Powers in Carnegie, Oklahoma. 100,
2:31:38
Lydia of the Shire. Let me mention something about Lydia.
2:31:41
So she's at the meetup. And with the, I want
2:31:46
to thank her for the bag of, she has dropped
2:31:49
off a bag of giant Meyer lemons, which I've never
2:31:53
seen them quite that big. And some other goodies in
2:31:57
the process. She's about to become a dame. Okay. $100
2:32:02
on her way. Sir Zolbat, 100. C-C-P-E-N-O. Was that a
2:32:09
meetup person? I don't know. Maybe. CCP ENO, $100. Coming
2:32:14
in with $80.08, 8-0-0-8, try it on your calculator, Kevin
2:32:18
McLaughlin, he is the Archduke of Duna, lover of America,
2:32:21
and... He's from Concord, North Carolina. And he says, 1881,
2:32:25
Laus Deo, which translates to praise be to God, inscribed
2:32:29
on top of the Washington Monument facing east towards the
2:32:32
rising sun. The more you learn, the more you know.
2:32:36
John Albarini, $70.26. Rebecca Haw. was 63. And she says,
2:32:43
John and Adam, I love you both. This is number
2:32:45
three of several to count down to my birthday. Oh,
2:32:47
yeah, she's doing the birthday countdown. July 18th when I
2:32:50
turned 63, born in 1963, hence the 63 donation amount.
2:32:55
I'll be a dame by my birthday. Hugs from your
2:32:58
boots on the ground in Italy. Rebecca is in Italy.
2:33:01
Last name sounds like Haw. Yep, I got it. Les
2:33:03
Starkowski in Kingman, Arizona with a small boobs, $80.06. Nathan
2:33:07
Gwynn. Sorry? You said 80. You said $80.06. I'm pretty
2:33:14
sure I said $60.06. Well, it sounds like 80 to
2:33:16
me. Nathan Gwynn, Jackson, Tennessee, 5272. Foster Birch, New York,
2:33:23
New York, 5272. Double nickels on the dime from Anonymous
2:33:26
in Port Orchard, Washington. Interview and jobs, Karma, please, Anonymous.
2:33:31
What is this with the interview? I don't know. He's
2:33:35
giving an interview. All right. Well, he wants to give
2:33:38
that at the end. There's no such thing. This thing
2:33:42
is an interview jingle. Catherine van Tuy in Rotterdam, 50.
2:33:48
Richard Gardner. $50. Aaron Weisgerber, Bend, Oregon, $50. Bobby Bowe
2:33:55
in Bluegrass, Iowa, $50. And that's it. Those are our
2:33:58
50s, but we do see you, $49.99s. You are there
2:34:00
for a reason. And for that very reason, we will
2:34:03
not mention you. We keep all of those anonymous, but
2:34:05
we are very grateful for your support of the No
2:34:07
Agenda show. And anybody can support the show with your
2:34:10
time, your talent, or your treasure. It's really not that
2:34:12
hard. All you have to do is go to noagendadonations.com.
2:34:17
Noagendadonations.com. We accept all forms of payments. including crypto. You
2:34:24
can send your stable coin. I don't think we've ever
2:34:26
received a stable coin donation. You know, $35 trillion worth
2:34:30
of stablecoin transactions. No agenda show has not seen a
2:34:33
single one. I'm skeptical. Not yet. Not yet. And we
2:34:39
thank you. We thank you for supporting us. a recurring
2:34:42
donation, any amount, any frequency. Just go to noagendedonations.com. Here's
2:34:46
the jobs karma, no interview. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:34:52
Let's vote for jobs. Mama. ♪ I say, I say
2:35:01
♪ Well, it's going to be a real short one.
2:35:04
All we have is one listed on the birthday calendar.
2:35:08
Knight John turned 67 on June 26. So we say
2:35:12
happy birthday to you, sir, from everybody here at the
2:35:14
best podcast in the universe. We have a couple of
2:35:20
orders of the heart. It's always nice. Let's bring it
2:35:22
right in. *Badass music* Thursday will be the last time
2:35:39
we get to play that jingle and what fun it
2:35:41
has David Rosa and Brendan Flemer both today become red
2:35:48
knights in the order of the heart and we congratulate
2:35:51
you and we salute you both gentlemen. Thank you very
2:35:54
much for your support. this right now. We have a
2:36:11
layaway night coming up here. So let me read the
2:36:15
layaway nights. This is from Jason Chapman. He says, started
2:36:22
on the $4 a week plan back in late 2022,
2:36:26
knighthood seemed unobtainable. But weekly donations do add up. A
2:36:30
boobs donation and a couple over 50 helped as well.
2:36:33
I just donate and forget. Well, I just added it
2:36:36
up and I haven't updated the spreadsheet since November and
2:36:39
BAM! I'm a knight! Please see attached accounting. Yes. We
2:36:42
checked it. Please knight me Sir L.P. McHenry, Knight of
2:36:45
the Fox River Valley. That's L.P. McHenry. Just read the
2:36:50
letters L and P and the CD McHenry. Gotcha. All
2:36:52
I need at the round table is just some hookers
2:36:54
and blow. They're all lined up for you. If I
2:36:56
could just get a shut up slave jingle. Shut up
2:36:59
slave. I'll be happy. Gotta stick with the plan and
2:37:01
next. goal is producer credit. I'll add it to the
2:37:04
Christmas list. Hope this wasn't too long. It was not.
2:37:07
Thank you very much, Jason Chapman. John, get your blade
2:37:09
out because he's stepping up on the podium. And along
2:37:13
with him, we have... Brendan Flemer, both of you have
2:37:18
supported the show in a accumulated total account. So I'm
2:37:24
very proud to pronounce the Kate both of you as
2:37:26
Knights. We have Sir Flemer and Sir L.P. McHenry, Knight
2:37:31
of the Fox River Valley for you. We've got Hookers
2:37:34
and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay. We've got Fliske Kikloo
2:37:37
and Kombucha. Along with that, we also have some Harlots.
2:37:41
and we also have some mutton and the meat. It's
2:37:52
a very big favorite here at the No Agenda Roundtable
2:37:57
of our Knights and Dames. Head over to noagendarings.com. for
2:38:01
your red knight pin if you are eligible for one
2:38:05
and that'll be it for that special. We brought John
2:38:09
back to life. Mission accomplished, everybody. Thank you very much.
2:38:13
Give us your ring size and tell us where to
2:38:15
send it because they are signet rings. They always are
2:38:17
accompanied by a beautiful set of wax sticks. They are
2:38:22
sticks indeed, and a certificate of authenticity. And welcome to
2:38:25
the Roundtable, our brand new Knights of the Know Agenda.
2:38:28
Know Agenda! Earlier, the whole show, we've talked about the
2:38:38
meetups, how important they are. They're important to your mental
2:38:41
health. And we finally have a report from Berlin and
2:38:45
they took their sweet time. In the morning, Adam and
2:38:48
John. This is Augusto, the Britannian. We are here in
2:38:52
Berlin, Germany. Today was a lovely day for a meet-up.
2:38:55
It was 33 degrees in the afternoon. Hi, everyone. Here's
2:39:02
from Berlin. Augusto hosted another lovely meetup, much nicer than
2:39:08
the ones that I've hosted. And we're here with several
2:39:12
lovely people. There's five of us all together. And we,
2:39:17
yeah, had some drinks and some food and some... fun
2:39:22
and it's really been a good time good people Hello,
2:39:28
greetings from Berlin. Even though we are in Germany, there
2:39:31
are no Germans among us. So if you are a
2:39:32
German and you want to come to the next meetup
2:39:35
in Berlin, please do. We have a Brazilian, two Americans,
2:39:39
I'm Polish, and we have a French guy too. I've
2:39:43
resisted. Greetings from Berlin. This is the first time I
2:39:46
ever even heard of this podcast. Yeah. But yeah, these
2:39:51
are some very nice people and I've had a lovely
2:39:53
evening. There was all of this discussion about what am
2:39:57
I going to say? What are you going to say?
2:39:59
Everyone wants to
2:40:00
hear us, what they're going to say. But one thing
2:40:03
that we thought we needed to mention is that the
2:40:06
servers here in Berlin are zero interested to be part
2:40:10
of our meetup report. Selkiri, when she farts, she takes
2:40:15
her ass for a trumpet. Okay. He probably said... That
2:40:19
actually tells us something. That's interesting information. Germany has been
2:40:25
so suppressed with free speech. That's right. No, no, no.
2:40:31
No, no, no, no. Put me out. I got nothing
2:40:33
to do with that. I don't want to get arrested.
2:40:34
No, exactly. The Gestapo are on their way. No, I
2:40:36
don't want to. Yeah, that's exactly right. Wow. That is.
2:40:39
pathetic. Yeah, sorry for you Germany. Well thank you, thank
2:40:43
you guys for your Berlin meetup report and it sounds
2:40:47
like at least there are some sane people in Germany
2:40:49
these days. We also have a meetup in Alabama taking
2:40:52
place as we speak, the Northern Alabama meetup at Mellow
2:40:55
Mushroom in Decatur and just underway in longview texas at
2:41:00
rotolo's pizzeria the east texas meetup and half century celebration
2:41:05
I think it's Dirty Jersey Whore's birthday. On Thursday, our
2:41:08
next show day, the Northern Wake No Agenda Pre-Freedom Fest
2:41:12
250 meetup at 6 o'clock at Saints and Scholars in
2:41:15
Raleigh, North Carolina. And, of course, no meetups on the
2:41:18
4th. but we do have one on the 3rd in
2:41:20
Oklahoma City, the 11th in Eagle, Idaho, the 14th Scottsdale,
2:41:24
Arizona, the 15th in Asheville, North Carolina, the 16th in
2:41:27
Charlotte, North Carolina. I guess they need two. Anaheim, California,
2:41:31
the 25th. Leo Bravo doing that one in Alpharetta, Georgia
2:41:34
on the 30th. And many more meetups on the calendar.
2:41:37
find it at noagendameetups.com. This is truly something that will
2:41:42
give you connection with other human beings. It gives you
2:41:44
immediate protection because these people will be your first responders
2:41:48
in any emergency, guaranteed. Go to noagendameetups.com. Find one near
2:41:53
you. If you can't, it's easy to start one yourself.
2:41:56
There's no cost. Just put it. together and put it
2:41:58
at noagendameetups.com. Always a party. ♪ Mix and dance ♪
2:42:06
you ♪ To say ♪ We do have end of
2:42:21
show mixes coming up from the trifecta, just Baker, Johnny
2:42:25
B, and MVP. We've got John's tip of the day,
2:42:28
and I do not see any ISOs from you today.
2:42:31
I felt so bad about winning the last one. Oh.
2:42:34
When I thought you had a better ISO, I'd do
2:42:37
it. refer to that one, but you probably can't find
2:42:39
your old ISOs from the last show. I probably can.
2:42:42
Which is the one you like better? Well, if you
2:42:46
play them, I can tell you. I think it was
2:42:47
the first one. Let's see. I think it was. There's
2:42:54
nothing else like that on planet Earth. Was it that
2:42:57
one? That was a good one. I have this one.
2:43:00
These guys are great entertainers. Very smart. Very funny. I
2:43:04
have new ones. I have new ones. It's highly entertaining.
2:43:07
And I have another new one. That was great. I
2:43:10
kind of like that one. I'm a little partial to
2:43:12
that. I like the first one from the, that you
2:43:16
played just... Vegas was the last show. This one? There's
2:43:19
nothing else like that on planet Earth. That's the one?
2:43:22
Yeah. Okay, we'll do that one. But first, we have
2:43:25
to listen to John, because he's got another tip of
2:43:27
the day. ♪ It's for you and me, just the
2:43:33
two of us with JCB ♪ And sometimes, Adam. Alright,
2:43:39
I got a wine tip from Costco. All right. Wake
2:43:43
the kids. Only because people keep wanting these wine tips
2:43:46
from Costco. That's all we really want. I'm going to
2:43:48
try to get a couple in a month. Okay. This
2:43:52
is a 2020. Now, this isn't. This is for people
2:43:57
who are really Chardonnay aficionados. I don't know if you
2:44:00
want this wine. This is for the ABC people. ABC?
2:44:07
Anything but Chardonnay? The women who use the term ABC,
2:44:12
which means anything but Chardonnay. Right. There's a bunch of
2:44:17
people that started to hate it. They don't like it.
2:44:19
Like the buttery, the delicious buttery Chardonnays. They don't like
2:44:23
oak. They don't like this. They don't like that. This
2:44:26
is a, but they like a crisp, clean Chardonnay. But,
2:44:31
you know, like a Chablis would be a good example
2:44:34
from France. Yes. In France, they have the range of
2:44:37
Chardonnays that's only... Equaled by California. We have an incredible
2:44:42
range of quality Chardonnays. Yeah, which is probably our best
2:44:46
grape, in fact. Now, you did one of these recently.
2:44:48
You did a... An ABC wine recommendation. Yeah, but it
2:44:54
wasn't a Chardonnay. It was actually a true ABC wine.
2:44:56
Okay, okay. This is a Chardonnay that... qualifies because it's,
2:45:01
I consider it very well made, unobtrusive Chardonnay for people
2:45:05
who don't like Chardonnay necessarily. And maybe if you like
2:45:08
Chardonnay, you'd like this wine too. It's the Ferrari Carano,
2:45:12
which they always make a good wine. It's a Sonoma
2:45:14
Valley operation. F-E-R-R-A-R-I-C. A-R-A-N-O. 2024 Sonoma County Chardonnay. And it's
2:45:26
available at Costco for $15.98. Wow. That's a pretty good
2:45:31
price. It's a reasonable price. What is it? Some of
2:45:36
the ladies here, they're drinking something else. They all go
2:45:39
for nuts. not blanc de blanc that's that's bubbly right
2:45:42
blanc de blanc is bubbly Blanc de Blanc is typically
2:45:46
a sparkling wine. Yeah, what is the other, something else
2:45:49
that... Not a V&A. Sauvignon Blanc? No. Maybe... I'm trying
2:45:55
to say... Pinot Blanc? I don't remember. I'm going to
2:46:00
have to find it. Well, thanks a lot. That was
2:46:02
useful. Not useful at all. Not useful. You know, Matt
2:46:06
Long came up to me. Hey, this reminds me of
2:46:08
the old, John, hey, John, I had this fabulous wine
2:46:12
at this restaurant. I can't remember. It was unbelievable. Really?
2:46:15
What was it? I don't know. Get all the details
2:46:21
at tipoftheday.net, noagendafund.com. Great advice from you and me, just
2:46:29
the tip with JCB. And sometimes, I don't. Created by
2:46:33
Dana Burnetti. Yeah, all right, everybody. That's it. I will
2:46:37
be flying out of here on Wednesday. and landing Thursday
2:46:41
morning and doing the show for you until midnight because
2:46:44
I love you and we do this as a public
2:46:46
service. We love doing it. We love it. And before
2:46:51
we go today, we have end of show mixers, mixers,
2:46:55
mixes as a tease from Just Baker, MV. and Sir
2:46:59
Johnny B. It is a trifecta. You will love it.
2:47:02
It's very, very good. The lyrics are finally getting together.
2:47:05
Good job, boys. Good job. So we'll return on Thursday.
2:47:08
We hope that you tune in because if you want
2:47:10
to make sense of what's happening in your world, why
2:47:12
the media is talking such bullcrap, we'll deconstruct it for
2:47:16
you. And in Until then, I am coming to you
2:47:20
from... the heart of the Texas Hill Country, where we
2:47:25
have our giraffe back. In the morning, everybody, it's Fredericksburg
2:47:28
calling. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, I'm
2:47:32
John C. Dvorak. We'll be back. Stop. I'll be back
2:47:35
on Thursday. Remember to support the show. Your time, your
2:47:39
talent, and your treasure at noagendadonations.com. Until Thursday, adios, mofos,
2:47:45
hooey, hooey. and such. Chasing away ♪ ♪ of the
2:48:09
night From the red clay to the no- Whoa! Hey
2:49:44
In the blue, keep a sleep, run deep, renegade creeps,
2:49:46
door-to-door cheap, with apathies, chloroform, so the shoe and some
2:49:49
thick in the safe seat, keep Empire 4-pack, NYC chair,
2:49:52
West Coast mayor stack, corridor crew holds power, while the
2:49:55
base snoozes, they lead with free Palestine, it's the fix.
2:49:58
for local decline.
2:50:00
We'll see you next time. ♪ Got slept clocking virgins
2:50:06
on a parental wifi ♪ ♪ Playing with ideologies resuming
2:50:09
reality ♪ and just do those as the ♪ Shipperless
2:50:13
love ♪ Wins. Safe districts. But nationwide it's McGovern 20.
2:50:20
Selling miseries red sweet blue sleep the ground games elite
2:50:44
while the district's deceased Socialism's a- Only cells in the
2:50:59
deep of the misery. Most hearts reject the red dialect,
2:51:02
but the knees You're supposed to be They just crashed
2:51:18
the scene, little turnout, big upset, door knock, winning machine.
2:51:20
Talking free Palestine while I'm just buying fries And half
2:51:23
of them still live at home, surprise What's my party
2:51:26
again? What's my party again? They're running la- Same boat
2:51:32
or same trend, I'm still asking yo, what's my party
2:51:35
again? To fund this and that, nationalize every brand. Never
2:51:39
had a job, but they got a master plan. Party
2:51:41
bosses losing grip, rebel storm 2028's gonna be a wild
2:51:47
spin What's my party again? What's my party again? Feels
2:51:50
like McGovern's ghost is laughing with friends Crime, talk, culture
2:51:52
fights, chaos never ends No, I'm stuck yelling, hey, what's
2:51:55
my party again? ♪ In the U ♪ Adios, mofo.
2:52:05
Dvorak.org slash N-A. like that on planet Earth.
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