0:00
I like me some bubbles. You like your bubbles? I
0:02
like bubbles. Adam Curry. John C. DeVore. It's Thursday, July
0:06
16, 2026. This is your award-winning Give Our Nation Media
0:09
Assassination episode 1886. This is no agenda. Suffering from rain
0:16
stick backscatter and broadcasting live from the heart of the
0:20
Texas Hill Country right here in FEMA region number six.
0:24
In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern
0:27
Silicon Valley where I'm wondering what is Microsoft Hello and
0:31
why would I want it to enhance my experience? I'm
0:34
John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the morning.
0:39
Wait a minute. Isn't Microsoft Hello a really old product?
0:45
cropped up this morning on a boot. On a boot?
0:49
I booted a machine that says, hello, would you like
0:51
to install Microsoft Hello to enhance your experience? What is
0:56
it? What is Microsoft? I don't know. I never saw
0:58
or heard of it. It sounds like, you know, when
1:01
you said that, the first thing I thought of was,
1:03
remember the old Mac 512? And you boot that up
1:06
and it would have that cursive, hello. Yeah, the little
1:09
hello guy. The little hello, yeah. I'm sure it's some
1:12
kind of AI thing. can't be because your your system
1:17
that was co-pilot no copilot schmopilot but your system doesn't
1:21
upgrade copilot schmopilot copilot schmopilot copilot schmopilot i tell you
1:29
isn't it but isn't that in uh Isn't your system
1:34
un-upgradeable? Yeah, I know. It's Windows 10. That's interesting. So
1:42
maybe... It must be, they must have upgraded your... What's
1:48
that browser called? Edge. Oh, that's possible. Your Edge browser.
1:53
Yeah. Microsoft, remember they integrated the browser into everything? They're
1:58
always screwing with you. It became such a nightmare. Everybody
2:03
was creating viruses. There was a point when I think
2:07
of Windows, you just couldn't turn it on. It's like,
2:10
don't turn it on today. It's not a good idea.
2:13
Oh, yeah, because it was Tuesday. Patch Tuesday. They were
2:17
going to load up some junk that was going to
2:19
ruin your machine. No, it wasn't Patch Tuesday. It was
2:22
when they had Internet Explorer and, you know, like, well,
2:26
we're integrating the Internet into everything. So you open up
2:29
your files, you know, a file window, and it would
2:32
be connected to the Internet. Just in case. Just in
2:36
case. Just in case. Just in case. You need to
2:39
browse the web. Oh, my goodness. Oh, we've come a
2:42
long way. We've come a long way. And thank you
2:46
very much for the... For the rain stick. You're killing
2:51
people. You're the one who insisted. Well, it was a
2:53
request by a producer. And I was in Amsterdam and
2:57
I did not have my rain stick with me. And
3:00
you were pointing it at Colorado, but as always, it's
3:04
the backscatter. It's the butt of the stick. I just
3:07
pointed straight up in the air. Well, the radials must
3:11
have been somehow bouncing off the ionosphere. It has rained
3:15
here for five days, almost nonstop. You haven't been there
3:19
for five days. How would you know? What do you
3:21
mean? We came back on Monday. Okay, four days. But
3:25
it was raining on Sunday. How would I know? I
3:28
know people here. I thought you didn't get out much.
3:34
And if you recall, last year in July, it was
3:37
July 4th, July 4th weekend, we had a very similar
3:41
scenario where we had just a storm front just hovering
3:45
over all of the hill country, and it wound up
3:48
killing a couple hundred people, you know, kids in holiday
3:52
camps. It may not be... As bad, well, for a
3:58
couple of reasons. One, The alert system is just going
4:03
off nonstop now. Three times in the middle of the
4:05
night. And for some reason on the iPhone, you can't,
4:07
well, you can. You can turn it off and say,
4:09
don't give me alerts. But that's kind of like the
4:13
whole point is if there's something, you know, some dire
4:17
situation, you kind of want to be alerted to it.
4:21
But I think they're overdoing it now, which is bad
4:24
because they didn't do it as much last year. Yeah,
4:26
it's like crying wolf. A little bit. Well, I got
4:29
two earthquakes. alerts over the last couple weeks yeah for
4:33
there was no earthquake in either case there was no
4:37
earthquake yeah and there was none around there wasn't an
4:40
earthquake anywhere in the vicinity and i got one of
4:42
them was duck and cover and the other one was
4:45
find something to hold on to no yeah stand in
4:49
the doorway Anyway, it is bad here. They're talking about
4:55
a 35-foot wall of water coming down the Guadalupe River.
4:59
This is not good. Kerrville, which is about 25 minutes
5:03
down the road, stores and restaurants are flooding. First of
5:09
all, let's get one thing so everyone out there knows
5:13
this. What is your elevation? Well, my elevation here is
5:19
almost 1,400 feet. 1,400 feet. You're almost on a mountain.
5:24
Pretty much. So people don't have to worry about you.
5:27
People like John C. Dvorak and Mimi Dvorak, who called
5:31
me yesterday. Mimi insisted. So I'm in the car. I
5:35
knew you were at elevation. I'm in the car. Driving
5:38
back from a meeting. And, you know, this one thing
5:43
I don't want to see the day before a show
5:45
day is JCD real cell phone pop up on my
5:49
dashboard. I can only think a couple things. I'm like,
5:54
he's in the hospital. He's in the hospital. This is
5:57
it. Oh, no. He's in a car wreck. No, I
6:00
thought hospital. Somebody shot him. No, I'm going to have
6:04
to deal with that. Like, what are we going to
6:07
do now? And then it's you and Mimi on the
6:12
speakerphone. Hey! Are you wet yet? And Mimi, she is
6:19
a max velocity storm chaser groupie of epic proportion. It's
6:27
really bad near you. Don't go to the east, you're
6:29
gonna drown. There's storm chasers in Fredericksburg. She really loves
6:35
that stuff. She is a weather junkie. Yeah, yeah, so
6:40
I had to make the call. And you were telling
6:43
her, like, he's at elevation. There's no problem. She wouldn't
6:48
believe it. I'm just putting that out there so other
6:54
people don't ever, you know, start to think that, oh
6:58
my. Well, it usually takes a couple days and then
7:01
you get people from Holland. Are you okay? You know,
7:04
because you can see how the news kind of trickles
7:07
through. You need to have some dead people and, you
7:09
know, some horrible pictures and a single baby shoe floating
7:14
by. Then people are like, oh, wait a minute. Isn't
7:16
that where Adam lives? And I love it. It's appreciated.
7:19
I like that people care and they want to check
7:22
in on me. But yeah, we're pretty safe here. Although
7:25
there was a tornado just like 30 minutes down the
7:29
road. That doesn't happen very often. Certainly not in the
7:33
hill country. Onward. Onward with the top news item. I
7:42
don't care what you say. Breaking at this hour. Right
7:46
now, officials can't pinpoint the exact source or sources of
7:50
this outbreak. It's a food or waterborne disease caused by
7:54
a parasite, cyclospora. And pinpointing precisely where it's coming from
7:59
is a challenge. Michigan is bearing the brunt with more
8:02
than 2,600 reported cases, including 44 that have landed people
8:07
in the hospital. Joining us to explain what all this
8:10
means and how to stay healthy is Dr. Omer Awan.
8:14
He's at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Dr.
8:18
Awan, thank you so much for being here. To start
8:21
off with, if I were to ingest this parasite, how
8:26
do I know that I've got it? What are the
8:28
symptoms people should look out for? Well, the typical symptoms,
8:31
William, are things like nausea, fatigue, bloating, and of course,
8:36
explosive watery diarrhea. symptom that's been getting a lot of
8:40
attention because this is really different because most stomach bugs
8:44
usually the watery diarrhea lasts about two or three days
8:48
with the cases of cyclosporiasis the diarrhea can last weeks
8:52
if not months and that's what makes this so problematic
8:55
this is this is what's kind of crazy this month's
8:58
business and apparently um you can get it a week
9:03
before the symptoms appear tonight 34 states grappling with cyclospora
9:09
parasite that can be found on fresh produce making Americans
9:12
sick. Michigan zeroing in on lettuce. Its top doc says
9:17
there is a clear preliminary signal pointing to the leafy
9:20
green. Why do you suspect lettuce? We've interviewed about a
9:24
thousand out of the 3,000 cases we have so far.
9:27
Lettuce seems to be an ongoing exposure for those who've
9:30
been impacted. Federal officials say Michigan is one of four
9:34
Midwestern states where the cases could be linked. Taco Bell
9:38
today confirming It removed limited ingredients at select restaurants while
9:42
authorities continued their broader review, noting public health officials have
9:46
not confirmed a link to Taco Bell. The Washington Post
9:50
reports federal and state health officials are investigating the chain,
9:54
citing two individuals familiar with the probe. CDC did not
9:58
comment.
10:00
Dr. Bagdasarian. So there was no location that came up
10:04
in 100% of cases, but there certainly were restaurants and
10:07
fast food chains that did come up. Including Taco Bell?
10:11
You know, I'm not going to comment on those specifics
10:13
right now. The CDC says it's confirmed 1,645 cases of
10:18
cyclosporiasis and is aware of 5,100 more. Christina Serafino says
10:24
she ate fresh fruits and vegetables hiking last month and
10:28
got sick for weeks. Just really strong gas and bloating
10:32
pains. And on top of that, you're not eating, so
10:35
you're hungry and you're having hunger pains also. I mean,
10:43
this is unlike... members of our producing audience being Patriot
10:49
Front. members of which one is by the way for
10:53
later Um, A lot of people have this bug. friend
11:00
of Sir Beavenhour, producer for 16 or 17 years. Yes,
11:03
I had it three nights ago, contracted it, contracted it.
11:07
One of the beachside resorts at Myrtle Beach. Only lasted
11:12
one night. The next day was pretty much gone. See,
11:14
I don't think that he had it. I don't think.
11:17
No, now if you're going to have it for a
11:18
month, that sounds more like, you know, one of the
11:22
quick bug, whatever it's called. Well, here's a please redact
11:26
my name if read on air. It's one of our
11:28
nights. Because if word got back to my wife that
11:32
I was sharing this, I'd probably be a knight experiencing
11:34
homelessness. Listen to this. My wife seems to have come
11:41
down with the explosive diarrhea, or as I read in
11:44
an article, ferocious diarrhea. That's even better. went first looking
11:49
it up. She's actually got it pretty bad, and for
11:51
about a week, she could barely function away from a
11:53
toilet. After about a week and a half, she decided
11:56
to go to the urgent care to see if there's
11:58
anything they could do. They sent her home with a
12:00
test sample kit, plastic bowl, and other cups to retrieve
12:05
said sample. They should put you in a bed and
12:09
give you fluids intravenously and then maybe send you home.
12:14
Asked her to bring the sample back to the lab.
12:16
She did. A day later, told that she was she
12:19
had tested positive so this tests PCR I'm sure but
12:23
there's also nothing that can be given to you to
12:25
get rid of it you just have to fight it
12:27
out she was so what's the point of the test
12:30
exactly she was told some people can get over it
12:33
in days she's now on about three weeks fortunately it's
12:37
become less explosive Yeah, I would think so. So last
12:43
night. Balls have got to get tired at some point.
12:46
I woke up at like 1.30 and I felt really
12:51
bad. And I did not have, not to be too
12:54
graphic, I did not have explosive diarrhea. But it wasn't
12:58
good. And I'm thinking. man, what am I going to
13:02
do? This, this is horrible. I feel miserable. And I
13:06
actually... Stop tape. What do you mean stop tape? Stop
13:11
tape. Why? During the show, you can do it. If
13:15
you stop tape, we'll understand. Stop tape. No. I'll be
13:19
right back after a word from... Well, and here's the
13:25
point. So I'm like, oh, man, what can I take?
13:28
You know, I just feel miserable. And I took two
13:30
tablespoons of the Manuka gold honey. slept like a baby,
13:34
woke up perfectly fine. I don't know if it's related,
13:37
but... That's all I could think of. Like, what can
13:40
I do? Which is the plain honey? Well, it's the
13:44
honey with all the stuff in it. The be well
13:46
honey. The be well honey? Yeah, be well. It has
13:50
a... Because apparently cumin or... Q-cumin. Is that Q-cumin? Is
13:56
that the molecule of cumin? Curcumin. Curcuma. Is that different
14:01
from cumin? Yeah. What is curcumin? It's more like pepper.
14:06
Oh, because I think that's in the be well honey.
14:09
They got a lot of stuff mixed in there. That
14:12
is supposed to neutralize this bug. But let's just think
14:15
about this. Now we're being quacks on the show. This
14:21
is not medical advice. We're not advising you on anything
14:25
medical. But I'm thinking about this. Do you know that
14:28
more people die from diarrhea globally than anything else? Yeah,
14:33
and mostly in India. Yes, just poop their brains. out
14:36
and then they die. something. I don't know if they
14:41
don't have the right curry or whatever. And the next
14:44
thing you know, they're dead. It's really bad. I mean,
14:49
by a long shot, the amount of people globally who
14:51
die from diarrhea is much more than, certainly more than
14:54
gunshot wounds. Yeah, best of all in India. Well, could
14:58
this, I'm just throwing it out there, because of the
15:01
nature of this thing, could this possibly be a gain-of-function
15:04
bioweapon? Oh, come on. That hasn't come up in the
15:10
conversation yet. No, but they don't really know how you
15:14
get it. I know. They keep talking. They blame lettuce
15:18
for everything. Well, lettuce and taco. There's a lettuce-hating component
15:23
of society that doesn't like the salad eaters of California.
15:27
But there's also some warfare going on amongst the fast
15:30
food guys because Taco Bell is the one that is
15:32
in the crosshairs. Tonight, Taco Bell saying they have voluntarily
15:37
removed some ingredients at select locations as the food-borne parasite
15:41
cyclosporiasis rapidly spreads across the U.S. The company stating public
15:46
health officials have not confirmed a link to Taco Bell
15:50
or any specific ingredient supplier, restaurant, or retailer, adding they
15:54
will closely monitor the situation. State health officials say there
15:58
have been more than 600 new cases of cyclosporiasis in
16:02
Michigan alone since yesterday. Health officials now pointing to lettuce
16:06
as a possible source of the outbreak state. We're continuing
16:09
our trace back investigation on multiple produce items including the
16:13
lettuce. The CDC confirming cases in 34 states. Today warning
16:18
that cases in Michigan, West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio seem
16:22
to have a similar source. The parasite spread through contaminated
16:26
food or water can cause severe digestive issues including diarrhea.
16:30
Symptoms usually begin about one week after becoming infected. It
16:34
was really bad. There were there were moments where I
16:36
was literally just camped out in the and like I
16:40
don't care I'm just gonna lay on this floor David
16:42
the CDC is telling doctors to stay alert health officials
16:45
say thoroughly washing your fruits and vegetables even if they're
16:48
labeled pre washed is an important step in preventing illness
16:53
good advice sounds awful Stephanie Ramos tonight thanks good advice
16:56
sounds awful thanks a lot Steph let's get my I
16:59
have an NTD clip about the same thing you should
17:02
pipe play it it's under cytos shit ptosis you have
17:09
No deaths. to two weeks after infection. The primary symptom
17:41
is diarrhea. Other symptoms can include loss of appetite, cramping,
17:45
and fatigue. The CDC is urging doctors to specifically test
17:50
patients with prolonged gastrointestinal illness. Officials say the outbreak may
17:55
involve multiple clusters, with evidence pointing to a common source
17:59
in Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia. Investigators have not
18:03
identified a specific contaminated food, although lettuce and salad greens
18:08
are the main suspects how about this what if it's
18:12
contaminated glp1 Everybody's on that stuff. Gastro. But they had
18:21
this interesting idea. Here's a question that I have. Since
18:26
they have this test that somebody would yell, I went
18:29
in, I had to take the test. Why don't they
18:32
just grab a bunch of food and start testing it?
18:35
Well, this is why I'm bringing it up. Because it
18:39
doesn't seem like anyone is coming up with any normal
18:42
solutions in their kind of... With 5,000 cases, you'd think
18:45
you'd be able to... When you do tracing, you say,
18:48
where'd you go? Where'd you eat? Where'd you go? Where'd
18:49
you eat here? Where'd you eat here? But then there's
18:53
this very odd, oh, it doesn't kick in until after
18:56
a week. Since when is that a thing? telling you
18:59
something else is going on here. I like my gain
19:02
of function angle, but I think I'm... I'm looking more
19:07
at... It's got a GLP-1. I mean, just one batch
19:12
being contaminated. Or, you know, something. Could be anything. It
19:19
seems to me that they should have... Normally they would
19:22
have isolated. The car's by now. Yeah, whenever it's... What
19:29
is the other foodborne illness? They always trace it back
19:35
to some tomato at some supermarket. Or listeria. Listeria, yeah.
19:40
Listeria, they got no problem. Boom, there it is. But
19:43
this one, oh, we don't know. Lettuce, maybe. Yeah, maybe
19:47
lettuce could be Taco Bell. Not even close. You know,
19:54
I'm looking at lettuce in the supermarket like, I think
19:56
I'll just have my salad with cucumber. I don't want
19:59
any lettuce right now.
20:00
We don't frequent Taco Bell. But just something is wrong
20:05
with this. The bell's gone overpriced. Something is wrong with
20:09
this story. Well, we're checking in on disease. Might as
20:13
well get a little Ebola update. What's your reaction when
20:16
you hear the CDC warning about how quickly this is
20:18
spreading? The pace of the spread, Diane, is really concerning
20:21
here. The trajectory shows exceptional rapid growth. Right now, this
20:24
Ebola outbreak is already half the size of the outbreak
20:27
that we saw in 2018. That was the second largest
20:30
outbreak recorded in history. And that took two years to.
20:33
combat. Right now we're only two months into this current
20:36
outbreak and as James was stating this is the Bundy
20:38
Bujo strain. This strain does not have a targeted vaccine
20:41
or a targeted therapy but the main concern here is
20:44
in contact tracing. The World Health Organization is estimating that
20:47
these estimates are likely an underestimate as tens of thousands
20:51
of people still need to be traced back. Do people
20:55
in the US or other countries need to be worried
20:57
about this? Our concern here and our risk, excuse me,
21:00
our risk here in the United States is relatively low.
21:02
Wow. Low. I did get a text message from Homeland
21:08
Security. Because, you know, well, because we're global entry members.
21:15
And, you know, if you've traveled to Uganda, you better,
21:19
like, come and see us. Immediately. Oh, so on the
21:23
way back, traveling back from, you know, in the new
21:27
security state. uh that is uh the european travel story
21:32
a little bit that's a minor travel story So when
21:36
you leave Schiphol Airport... First you check in, you show
21:40
your passport, then you go to the exit, the Customs
21:45
and Border Patrol exit for the Netherlands. We don't have
21:48
that in America, but in the EU when you leave
21:52
they check you. And it's all automated. Your picture is
21:55
already in their system. So you all wait in little
21:58
lines and then you get up to the booth and
22:01
the little doors open and then you get in the
22:03
booth and then the doors close and then you have
22:06
to put your passport on the little shelves and it
22:09
eats your passport. And then it says, wholesale! And then,
22:13
camera goes up and down, gets you right in the
22:16
eye, the lights go on. And then a clock, like
22:20
a spinning wheel of death appears, like, please wait, please
22:24
wait. And so Tina went through, no problem, I go
22:27
in there. The guy comes over, he says, do it
22:32
again. Okay, put it in. And red lights flashing. And
22:38
they're over there looking at some terminal. They come in.
22:40
They say, well, you have to go over to that
22:43
line, you know, the line with a thousand people. You
22:46
got to go through that line for a manual exit
22:50
check because we have two traveler profiles of you. So
22:54
what does that mean? Well, we just got new software.
22:59
I'm like, uh-huh. So he just got new software, and
23:02
there's two traveler profiles. I don't even know what that
23:05
means. But there's two traveler profiles, and we don't know,
23:10
the system doesn't know which one to choose. So you
23:12
got to go talk to those guys. So I go
23:13
in that line. It takes about 15 extra minutes. And
23:18
I said, here's my passport. And I said, they sent
23:21
me over from the machine because I have two traveler
23:24
profiles. And this guy says, no, I only see one.
23:27
You're good to go. It's like, what is that? It's
23:30
like, yeah, we got a new software. This is troubling.
23:37
It's already breaking down. Unbelievable. But something interesting did happen.
23:45
This is one of these so-called silent airports. So the
23:49
whole thing is automated when you... What does that mean?
23:51
Well, I'm going to tell you. So they don't have...
23:55
They have signs and lights and they don't have... you
24:00
know, like speakers everywhere. You know, go on. Please follow
24:06
the red footsteps. Move to the left. Go over there.
24:09
Wait. Stop. Slave, shut up. It's not your turn. Wait.
24:13
Go. Go. Carousel sex. So they don't have that. Instead,
24:18
they have signage. And so you signage that yells at
24:23
you. Well, and here's the interesting part. So you go
24:27
through the security line and then there's a stop point
24:31
and they have these carousels and then, and the carousels
24:34
go round and round and then one is free and
24:37
it's like a little slot and you cozy up to
24:40
the, to the open slot and the carousel and a
24:42
bin pops out underneath. You pull that out, put it
24:45
on top, put your bag on, and then you go
24:47
towards the body scanner. And so this sign is saying,
24:51
wait, it's just, it's silence, wait. And then it'll go
24:57
arrow and then tell you what number to go to.
24:59
You know, we're like sheep. And I'm in this line.
25:03
I keep hearing something. What am I hearing? And I
25:05
thought my glasses were hitting my hearing aids. And then
25:09
as I get closer to this sign, I hear it
25:11
says, wait, wait. Number six. Go. Now. Wait. Stop. It
25:17
was coming through my hearing aids. So they have this
25:21
LE Bluetooth, low energy Bluetooth that is breaking into my
25:24
hearing aids to tell me where to go. And apparently
25:29
it works on AirPods and all kinds of other Bluetooth
25:32
devices. It's for blind people. Yeah. Well, blind people with
25:37
hearing aids, I guess. It was pretty interesting. I didn't
25:42
know you could just break into someone's LE Bluetooth, low
25:45
energy, and then just talk to them. Yeah, it's overriding.
25:50
Yeah, you can do that with RF. Hmm. Well, so
25:54
you can do that to AirPods as well? I think
25:58
so. Cool. It's just like a broad spectrum signal. It's
26:04
a real... It just blows everything away. Okay. Well, this
26:07
is cool. So it's just the same as a jammer
26:08
would do. Right. But it's a really interesting experience because
26:11
someone's talking in your head and you're like, what is
26:14
going on? What the what? So it would be cool
26:16
to just walk, drive down the street, have a little
26:19
antenna sticking out of the car and just go... Look
26:25
at it, yo. Turn around. And we have to have
26:28
the earbuds in. I want one of these systems. You
26:30
need a big linear amp in the trunk. Yeah, a
26:34
heater. And you can just blow through everything. I want
26:37
one of these. That's a cool little device to have.
26:40
Hotty, what you doing? Watch out for the poop. There
26:47
was a period during the CB radio fad, which I'd
26:52
call it what it is. Back in the day. And
26:53
these guys would have these, and it was notorious. These
26:56
guys would have these linear amps. Yeah, the heaters. We
26:59
called them heaters. And they would blow. And so I
27:02
was driving past one once with just listening to FM
27:05
radio. And it went right into my radio. Oh, yeah,
27:08
of course. Of course. right away. Yeah, so you could
27:13
easily do what you're describing. Well, if anyone knows... It'd
27:16
be annoying and you'd probably get... It's illegal, but, you
27:19
know, it'd be fun. I'm sure I can... I'm sure
27:22
I can get something off of Timu. Yeah, you probably
27:28
could. No doubt. I just bought a couple of... Okay,
27:31
so they got this new technology. I don't know what
27:34
it's called. It's got some stupid name. I should bring
27:36
these. I got to bring these in. We'll talk about
27:38
them. I bought two. They're a new type of walkie-talkie.
27:43
They're long range. And Bao Feng makes them. Oh, the
27:47
10 water? The illegal 10 water? Is that the one?
27:50
Maybe. Could be. I don't know. But you get two
27:54
of them, and you can get four of them, you
27:56
get six of them, on Teemu. And it's like, they're
27:59
like 12 bucks for two of them. It looks like
28:06
a... Wow. How is that? I'll bet you that'll broadcast
28:10
to any Bluetooth, just as long as you stay... I'm
28:13
sure it's really, really well-tuned. Oh, man. Well, it's Bao
28:17
Feng, so it's not like junk. Those guys are the
28:20
best. I mean, whatever it is. But it's so cheap.
28:25
It's like, oh, yeah, we'll be competing with these guys
28:29
sometime soon. No, no. I carry a Baofeng in my
28:32
luggage all the time, just wherever I go. And the
28:35
battery, I haven't recharged it in five years. Same thing.
28:39
I have a Baofeng that I drag around, and it
28:42
just never, the batteries never die. How does that work?
28:46
What kind of magic do these guys have? You just
28:48
turn it on. Oh, full bars. There's the battery. Chup,
28:51
chup. We're good to go. It's crazy. I have no
28:53
idea. Crazy. Hey, so... yesterday I was driving around like
29:00
why are all the flags at half staff I couldn't
29:04
I couldn't figure it out. Like, why are the flags
29:07
that have half staff? It's because of Lindsey Graham. Yeah.
29:11
I didn't know that. I didn't know that there was
29:12
a general order for half staff or half mass. I
29:15
don't know there was an order. I think people were
29:17
just doing it. Well, we have some new information about
29:21
Lady G's untimely death. And there's a little update here.
29:26
Tonight, new video showing more than a dozen FBI agents
29:30
fanning out across the Washington home of the late Senator
29:33
Lindsey Graham. The FBI shutting down the street as investigators
29:37
spent several hours on scene, taking photos and searching the
29:41
property. Two law enforcement sources familiar with the scene tell
29:45
NBC News their work is out of an abundance of
29:47
caution. So far, no evidence has emerged to suggest foul
29:51
play. A preliminary medical examiner's report revealed Graham suffered from
29:55
a tear in the main artery of his heart, but
29:58
they are still waiting on a toxicologist.
30:01
Wow. That isn't very typical, I don't think. Like, send
30:07
the feds in, the FBI, to go check it out.
30:09
Oh, there was a bunch of... No, there was... The
30:13
part you missed was there was a bunch of insistence.
30:17
on the part of various legislators and others that they
30:21
autopsy him. Because, oh, you know, he just came back
30:24
from Ukraine. Something suspicious could have happened. Oh, he was
30:28
just talking about the Chinese. Something suspicious could have happened.
30:31
Oh, he just hates the Russians. Something suspicious could happen.
30:34
So they got all bent. Everyone got... You know, it's
30:37
amazing. adult adult persons of above average intelligence. We'll text
30:46
my wife. Hey, um... What does Adam know about Lindsey
30:50
Graham? It's really too coincidental that he just came back
30:54
from Ukraine. And of course, you know, there's a story
30:57
that he was visiting a drone plant in Ukraine and
31:01
the Russians took it out. And all I can say
31:04
is, well, why would you cover that up? Why would
31:07
that have to be kept secret? I mean, and especially
31:11
the news. It's a great, it's a better story than
31:13
aortic rupture. Yeah, hey, Lindsey Graham was blown up in
31:18
a drone fa- Have we lost the ability to think
31:24
a little more simplistically and just, okay? Do you know
31:28
what I mean? You know what I mean? Yeah, Occam's
31:30
razor's dead. Yeah, Occam's razor is indeed dead. And there's
31:36
also, I mean, that's a good one. The world isn't
31:41
quite as complicated as people think it is. At some
31:45
point, the world just became like, oh, everything's just crazy.
31:50
There's elites everywhere. We're just killing everybody. There's a degree
31:55
of truth to some of it. If you just think
31:59
logically, why? Why would anyone do? It's like the Charlie
32:03
Kirk thing. It's the same thing. Well, so-and-so killed him.
32:08
The deep state killed him. Israel killed him. J.D. Vance
32:12
killed him. Everyone killed everybody. I'm like, well, why didn't
32:15
they just kill him? Why did they have to go
32:19
through this elaborate ruse and then get a patsy and
32:24
his family to cooperate? It's like, at what point is
32:29
this just not make any sense? Right away, it doesn't
32:34
make any sense. You know, it's just like, come on.
32:40
It's actually funny. Where's my... I had a couple of
32:44
clips about this. J.D. Vance was on Rogan. Yeah, I
32:53
saw a clip of it. Yeah, what clip did you
32:55
see? I don't know. It wasn't that interesting. I agree.
33:01
It wasn't super interesting. Here it is, let me see.
33:09
manse. And those two guys, I don't know, I didn't
33:14
see enough of it. I only saw clips. I didn't
33:16
see that they actually watched the show. I wonder if
33:19
those, they don't seem like they have personalities that would
33:22
jive. Who Joe and, uh... And J.D. Vance? Yeah. This
33:32
is very interesting. Can't I find this? Well, at a
33:39
certain point, now I'm kind of mad about this. I
33:42
had these two J.D. Vance clips all specked out. Yeah,
33:46
and this sucks. But he was talking about propaganda and,
33:52
you know, he's kind of jumping on the Israel is
33:55
doing stuff bandwagon. It was kind of interesting. See you
33:59
next time. What is this? Libya basically turned into a
34:03
failed state. You had a refugee crisis, you had people
34:06
pouring into Europe, pouring into other parts of Asia, other
34:09
parts of Africa. Now that's about Libya. Here he is.
34:11
This is the one. I don't even mind an effort
34:13
to try to influence, you know, foreign governments try to
34:17
influence the United States all the time. You know, Israel
34:19
does it, other countries do it. It's just sort of
34:22
the nature of the beast. What bothers me is actually
34:26
when Americans allow, meaning American leadership, allows influence to affect
34:33
their judgment and to affect what they are advocating for.
34:37
That's what really bothers me. People are always going to
34:40
try to influence the United States of America whether they're
34:42
allies of ours or enemies of ours. But again when
34:47
I open up the pages of Time magazine and I
34:50
see that there's a literal foreign influence campaign being funded
34:53
to tank the very deal that I was pursuing and
34:56
oh by the way many of the people who were
34:58
receiving that money were actually attacking me in completely dishonest
35:02
ways, you know, my response to that is, well, go
35:04
to hell. I'm going to do what I have to
35:06
do for the American people. I represent Americans first. Yeah,
35:10
he was referring to some kind of Israeli campaign in
35:13
that, which I thought was interesting. And this whole... Preliminary
35:20
hearing with, you know, for what's the kid's name? Ryan.
35:28
who said he killed Charlie Kirk. Oh, yeah, that guy.
35:32
Yeah. It's like... It is. How can that not stop
35:39
everybody from the exploding microphone nonsense? The defense is not
35:45
using this. Because it was a shape charge, man. The
35:50
defense is not saying, we'd like to show you Exhibit
35:53
A with the Egyptian military aircraft that were circling around.
36:00
There's none of that. And I think the tide is
36:04
turning. Well, you're an optimist today. Yeah. Some international travel
36:10
always kind of screws you up. Something I've observed. Oh,
36:16
I think the tide is turning. Okay. But then again,
36:20
I get what's going on. Good for you. Well, it's
36:25
so weird because for at least 15 years, I was
36:29
all in on all this stuff. And it's just all
36:32
bullshit. All of it. All of it. Yeah, well, you
36:35
got that part right. No, but you were the one
36:37
always setting me straight, and now I'm like, you know.
36:41
Ladies and gentlemen, most of this stuff is just BS.
36:46
It doesn't make it quite as exciting. The show is
36:48
built on a lie. It doesn't make it very exciting,
36:53
you know, and that's to our detriment. But if you
36:58
just want to get spun down a little bit and,
37:00
you know, and talk some sense, you know, I think
37:03
we're the place for you now. We've always been the
37:06
place. Well, let's play a couple of offbeat clips then.
37:12
Why? You're always like, offbeat, screwball. Well, this is not
37:16
that offbeat. This is the hearing for Todd Blanche. Oh,
37:21
yes. Trying to worm his way into the job that
37:24
he should get. There were a couple of good hearings
37:27
on the Hill. There was quite a few, actually. In
37:30
fact, right now Congress is in session. They had a
37:33
fraud hearing and the Democrats refused to show up to
37:36
it. Of course. I thought that was worthwhile. Why would
37:39
you do that? Nick, surely he's there. Forget it. We're
37:41
not coming. So, um... Play this. This is my favorite
37:46
clip. This would be my favorite clip for the day,
37:48
actually. Okay. This is Todd Blanche having to deal with
37:52
this, with... White House idiot from Rhode Island on C-SPAN.
38:00
Let me ask about the FBI. How long do you
38:03
intend to put up with that Kash Patel character? Are
38:06
you good with his airplane jaunts? Are you confident he's
38:09
not drinking on the job? Are you sure none of
38:11
his travel is a pretext for vacation activities like snorkeling
38:15
Olympics and visiting girlfriends? Are you sure he knows what
38:18
he's doing? Do you vouch for him? Are you willing
38:21
to look at whether he lied to this committee? That's
38:23
an extraordinarily obnoxious question, Senator, and I have full faith
38:29
in Director Patel work that he's doing every day. Great.
38:32
You got to own that. You got to own that.
38:35
What is this chasing his girlfriend around with the government
38:38
plane? I didn't hear this one. I haven't heard it
38:41
either. He's just making it up. I like the guzzling
38:43
beer. The guzzling beer. This guy is just the biggest
38:51
dick in Congress. And here he continues. This is as
38:55
it goes on. He just reads, he reads him the
39:00
riot act. He reads Blanche the riot act and just
39:04
wraps with, he doesn't even ask him a question. He
39:06
just goes off. One last thing, if I may. You
39:10
have refused to exclude January 6th rioters from your anti-weaponization
39:14
fund. You have refused to put in writing that the
39:17
slush fund is dead. Indeed, you signal to allies that
39:21
payouts are still on track. You have vacated seditious conspiracy
39:25
convictions against members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers.
39:28
You hired January 6th rioter Jared Wise, who had urged
39:32
the mob to kill police officers. You've scrubbed press releases
39:37
about January 6th prosecutions and called the releases partisan propaganda.
39:42
You denied that Trump encouraged any violence on January 6th.
39:47
You've cleaned house of every attorney who worked on a
39:49
case related to Trump. Justice for violent rioters meant that
39:55
every one of them was either pardoned or had their
39:57
sentence commuted.
40:00
I hope that our colleagues who are concerned about what
40:02
happened on January 6th take that into account. Thank you.
40:06
Would you like to respond? I would. Almost everything the
40:09
Senator just said, and he's protected, he's allowed to lie,
40:13
but almost everything he just said was absolutely false. Starting
40:18
with the fact that I have never... I have never
40:21
said that any sort of violence against law enforcement is
40:24
appropriate. I have never said that publicly. I have never
40:27
said that in a speech, and I certainly do not
40:29
believe it. I did not hire the person referenced. And
40:33
that is, again, something that just happens not to be
40:36
true. When I talk about what happened with the convicted
40:41
January 6th defendants, I talk about what President Trump did.
40:44
He has the absolute right to pardon anybody for any
40:49
reason he sees fit. And every one of them got
40:51
pardoned or commuted. I am not celebrating that. It is
40:54
a fact. And the fact that my department had to
40:57
take action in response to those pardons by dismissing some
41:00
cases is exactly what I have to do under the
41:03
law. And it's what I did. So that the narrative
41:06
that the senator just suggested and put on me as
41:09
something I believe is absolutely not true. Outrage. Outrage, I
41:14
tell you. But Blanche did screw up. And the news
41:18
media pounced on this. Ha ha ha! We got you
41:22
now Blanchie! The moment tonight with maybe the most staying
41:26
power at today's confirmation hearing for Todd Blanch coming during
41:30
friendly questioning about his relationship with the President. I'm his
41:34
lawyer. Was his lawyer. Whoops! Oh no! Oh no! He
41:40
said the quiet part out loud! I'm his lawyer. Was
41:45
his lawyer. And now I'm the Deputy Attorney General. no
41:50
longer the president's personal lawyer, likely adding to Democrats' concerns
41:54
that Blanch, if confirmed as Attorney General, would do President
41:58
Trump's bidding to go after political rivals. Who you are
42:01
is someone willing to sacrifice everything you once believed in
42:04
for that title. Blanch spent some 15 years at the
42:08
DOJ before moving to private practice, representing then-candidate Trump in
42:12
his 2024 hush money trial in New York, now as
42:16
acting AG, touting progress. But facing pointed questions about why
42:25
he signed off on a controversial settlement after President Trump
42:28
sued the IRS, the DOJ initially agreeing to an extraordinary
42:32
$1.8 billion so-called anti-weaponization fund. The settlement fund's just not
42:37
moving forward. Since scuttled in the face of intense opposition,
42:41
including from Republicans like Senator John Cornyn, who remains undecided.
42:46
I'm not going to make a decision until I have
42:50
to. Reminder from your No Agenda show. We've done this
42:53
before. This is nothing new with presidents putting their personal
42:57
attorney or legal confidant atop of the DOJ. John Kennedy
43:03
put his brother. That's right. He had Robert. George Washington
43:07
had Edmund Randolph, his private attorney. Harding had Harry Doherty,
43:13
his personal attorney and campaign manager. Nixon had John Mitchell,
43:18
his own law firm partner. Reagan had William French Smith
43:22
and Edward Meese, both personal attorney and legal advisor, and
43:27
George W. Bush had Alberto Gonzalez. This is nothing new.
43:31
No, it's not only new, but John Yoo, that guy,
43:34
that Berkeley professor of law who's also the guy who
43:38
penned the torture note. who's quite good as an analyst,
43:44
he shows up on Fox quite a bit. He says
43:47
it's common and it should be expected. Yeah. But, you
43:52
know, the news media does not do what I just
43:56
did. It's so easy. It's so easy. Anyway, there was
44:00
another hearing. There were some good hearings. Federal Reserve Chairman
44:06
Warsh. Warsh. was interrogated by Al Green. Al Green, the
44:11
idiot. This is so good. Al Green is a moron.
44:17
Who is going to be out next year after November
44:20
because he lost his primary. Yeah, he is. But he
44:25
starts off, he tries to pull the old churchy card.
44:28
Chair recognizes the gentleman from Houston, Texas, Mr. Green, who
44:31
is a ranking member of our subcommittee on oversight and
44:34
investigations. Mr. Green. Over here, Mr. Chairman. Thank you. Thank
44:38
you, Mr. Chairman. ranking member as well and welcome you
44:45
to the committee, Mr. Chairman, but I would also say
44:48
to you that I will pray for you. insincere. And
44:53
I'll pray for you because many of the questions that
44:57
have been predicated today. hinge upon a belief that you
45:03
will sanction the president's desires. It is thought among the
45:09
general public that you're in the position you're in. Because
45:14
the president could not. had the influence that he wanted
45:18
to have with the prior chair, and he believes he
45:20
can have it with you. So I hope that you
45:23
will stand firm. and honor your commitments that you're making.
45:29
though some of them are not firm commitments, as I
45:31
understood your language. So this whole hearing was all about,
45:35
will you stand up to him? Will you do what
45:37
is right for the banks? Will you do what is
45:42
right for everybody except the American people and stand up
45:45
to the president when he criticizes you? And man, I'm
45:49
so happy that Al Green will no longer be representing
45:52
any part of Texas. This guy truly is an idiot.
45:56
And I think they gave these questions to him. To
45:59
make him look even stupider. You indicated that you're interested
46:02
in war. I appreciate this. Huh? But I believe you
46:07
should also be interested in speculative bubbles. Speculative bubbles. So
46:12
they gave him the bubbles questions. My assumption is that
46:15
you are. Are you interested in bubbles, speculative bubbles? I
46:19
love speculative bubbles. I like me some bubbles. You like
46:22
your bubbles? I like bubbles. Mr. Chairman? We've got a
46:27
wide lens. We spend a lot of time thinking about
46:30
what's happening. I'm going to take that as a yes.
46:33
Now, given that this old, like, yes or no question,
46:36
I'll take that as a yes. This is so boring
46:39
and tedious, you people. You're interested in speculative bubbles. Let's
46:42
just talk about a bubble that occurred. Now, what kind
46:44
of bubble occurred? What kind of bubble could you think
46:47
of that they gave to Al Green, not the sharpest
46:50
crayon in the box? What kind of bubble? Well, the
46:53
only bubble out there right now is the AI bubble,
46:56
so it has to be that. No, no, no, no.
47:00
President Trump's meme coin, dollar sign Trump. Meme coin. Dollar
47:05
sign Trump. His meme coin profited an average of $1.74
47:13
million per day. Over his first year. Can't believe I
47:17
missed that boat. $1.74 million a day. This amounted to
47:22
approximately $636 million in total royalties and licensing fees generated
47:30
at its launch. While this was happening... During that same
47:36
period of time, nearly 1 million investors lost a combined
47:41
$3.8 billion. This is because that meme coin Lost Value
47:48
Oh. Dropped precipitously in value. Precipitously. It was a bubble.
47:53
By the way, it is nothing. Anybody who's listening to
47:57
me, if you've invested in a meme coin, you've invested
48:00
in nothing. Zero. Zero. Okay, so... Hold on a second.
48:05
Does he know that the chairman of the Federal Reserve's
48:12
monetary policy has got nothing to do with meme coins?
48:15
But he's going to come back. He's using that. This
48:19
is why it's so funny. He's using that term speculative
48:23
bubble to show that whenever the president wants something, it
48:27
only behooves the president personally and screws everybody else out
48:31
of money. And then here comes the crux. This is
48:35
really one of the funniest things I've heard in a
48:37
long time. I think that we should concern ourselves with
48:42
these speculative bubbles. And whether you like it or not,
48:47
you have to concern yourself with it because when you
48:50
lower interest rates, You lower the rates such that there's
48:54
more capital available for people to use for speculative reasons.
48:58
Okay, let's just hold here for a second. So this
49:02
num nut is going to tell us that we should
49:05
have higher interest rates because otherwise we'll get speculative bubbles.
49:09
There's no other benefit that you can think of of
49:12
lower interest rates other than it's going to benefit people
49:16
to create speculative bubbles, even though, as you pointed out,
49:19
the AI bubble is done just fine with interest. rates
49:23
at 5% so you have to be concerned about it
49:25
whether you want to or not because you don't want
49:28
to see a speculative bubble. Can I have your assurance
49:32
that you will be concerned about these speculative bubbles, Mr.
49:35
Chairman? So, Congressman, we want a resilient, strong, safe financial
49:42
system. And we are looking at financial markets and we're
49:46
looking at the real economy to make sure we deliver
49:48
on what we can. Some of these other subjects are
49:51
really more in your purview and responsibility. They're in my
49:53
purview. Excuse me for interrupting, but I have to. They're
49:56
in my purview, but only because I...
50:00
choose to have them in my purview and I make
50:02
an issue of them. I have to vote on them.
50:04
But they're in your purview too because you decide whether
50:07
the rates go up or down. And if you lower
50:08
them, then people can engage in these speculative bubbles such
50:14
as the Trump meme coin. And they can lose a
50:18
lot of money. Oh, brother. Can you imagine having to
50:22
sit through that? I mean, that represents people. Well, this
50:27
reminds me of that other character that's in Congress who
50:32
thinks the islands can flip over. The Maldives. The Maldives
50:38
will tip over from climate change. No, from population. Oh,
50:43
population. Too many people on one side of the island.
50:46
And then there was this, I think this was Elizabeth
50:49
Warren. Hank Johnson is that guy. So it's all just
50:54
about, will you be independent? Do you work for Donald
50:57
Trump? Yes or no? Who is this? Sounds like Hiromu.
51:02
No, it's not Hiromu. If I'm permitted to say, we're
51:04
an independent central bank. We're honored to be independent. Our
51:08
independence came from you. Okay, that's enough. Thank you. That's
51:14
enough. Don't answer the questions with truth. Yeah, it was
51:17
the Federal Reserve Bill of 1913. them are voting on
51:32
interest rate policy. Yeah, she's Spanish. She's from Costa Rica?
51:37
Where is she from? I don't know her. I don't
51:40
know. It's not in my notes for some reason. I
51:42
have not heard that voice before. No, it's not my
51:46
it's not my intuition to engage in hypotheticals. But I'll
51:49
tell you this. The Supreme Court says an easy way
51:52
out. The Supreme Court said that the Federal Reserve and
51:55
the conduct of monetary policy is independent. The extent there
51:59
were questions about it, the court's answer to those questions.
52:02
So what would you do? I would continue to do
52:06
my job. If the president publicly pressures you to pursue
52:11
a different course than the one you believe is in
52:14
the economic, that you believe the economic data supports, will
52:18
you follow the president's wishes or follow the data? My
52:24
commitment to you is to follow the law and follow
52:27
the data. Follow our very best judgment. If you decide
52:30
this is the way to go, this is where the
52:31
data shades and he publicly criticizes you and tells you
52:35
how disappointed he's in you and all of that. If
52:40
he shames you in public, will you still do your
52:43
job? What the data tells you to do. I will,
52:47
Congressman. You ready for that? I'm ready to follow the
52:52
law and I'm ready for the Fed to deliver on
52:55
the expansive remit that you gave us. It's just like.
53:00
This is so embarrassing. It's just embarrassing that these people
53:05
are in Congress even. Well, luckily the left side of
53:09
the party is going to wipe them all out shortly.
53:11
That'll be good. Yeah. You mean the DSA-ers? Yeah. Yeah.
53:16
Warren was in fine form, too. She kept yammering about
53:19
some secret meeting. Did you know about the secret meeting?
53:23
Do you know about a secret meeting? What's she talking
53:27
about? Can you just answer the question about the vice
53:30
chair and her secret meeting? Sure, I'm happy to, to
53:34
the extent I can. I had some secret meeting about
53:36
something where something got leaked or I don't know. How
53:40
would you know about it if it was a secret?
53:42
That's what he's saying. I'll share it with you. The
53:45
vice chair has been an excellent colleague in my first
53:48
seven weeks. I'm aware of the letter you sent to
53:50
the inspector general. Out of an enormous respect for him,
53:55
his investigation, what he chooses to do with it. I'm
53:57
going to leave to him to do without trying to
53:59
micromanage that. And I'd be interested in the judgments that
54:03
he comes to. So you will support his investigation. Have
54:07
you made your own investigation? Did you ask her if
54:10
she spoke at a secret meeting during the blackout period?
54:13
I agree with the suggestion. Elizabeth Warren is a tool.
54:18
She's just annoying. Then we had the nominee for... Uh...
54:26
Director of National Intelligence Jay Clayton. who I believe is
54:30
highly qualified. He's been in the spook business for, I
54:34
think, 20 plus years. And he has been nominated to
54:39
step in once. bull in the china shop is done
54:43
uh bill pulte yeah and uh And, you know, so,
54:49
and again, it's just these questions like, It's so embarrassing
54:53
that this is what our government is doing on a
54:55
day-to-day basis. I believe he had the most electoral votes.
55:00
So he won the election. He followed our process, had
55:04
the most electoral votes, was declared the winner. Who won
55:07
the 2020 election? You know, I'm not going to do
55:11
this with you. Who won the 2020 election? I think
55:13
I've answered the question. We can keep doing this. We've
55:16
tried umpteen different ways to give to the ability to
55:19
just acknowledge that Joe Biden was the president. I've acknowledged,
55:24
Senator, that Joe Biden was the president. As you see,
55:28
he would not answer, at least not directly. And the
55:30
Georgia Democrat, John Ossoff, who you saw a bit of
55:32
there. No, no. They want him to say, and this
55:36
is a director of national intelligence. I don't see what
55:38
it has to do with who won the election, but
55:40
they want him specifically to say Biden won the election.
55:47
And he says, well, you know, he got the most
55:49
electoral votes. You refuse to answer a basic question about
55:55
who won a presidential election? But you asked to lead
55:59
America's intelligence community? What does that have to do with
56:05
anything? Isn't it humiliating to be unable to answer this
56:09
question? It's humiliating to sit there and have to listen
56:12
to these questions. To have to indulge the president's delusions.
56:19
We know, you know, everybody in this room knows the
56:24
truthful answer to that question. Why can you not give
56:28
it? I think I gave you the answer. So then
56:31
they bring on Senator Mark Kelly. This will wrap it
56:37
up. Senator Mark Kelly joins me now. Senator, it's good
56:39
to see you. You heard probably some of the Republicans
56:42
in the last session. You know, a lot of them
56:43
think a lot of people watching might think this is
56:45
Democrats want to get the Republican, you know, get the
56:47
Trump people to say this. But you went on to
56:49
make a more important point, I think, which is if
56:51
he won't say a simple fact that Joe Biden won
56:53
the election, will he stand up to the president when
56:56
the president needs to hear tough intelligence or when there's
56:59
a debate or dispute with the president about key facts
57:02
in maybe a sensitive national security situation? Did Jay Clayton
57:06
give you confidence today that he will be that man
57:09
if he's to confirm to this job? Absolutely not. And
57:13
it was, John, it was rather disappointing. I mean, the
57:16
entire hearing, I didn't hear anything that gives me any
57:20
kind of reassurance that this guy is going to do
57:22
the job the way the American people deserve. This is
57:25
a critical position. And the American people's safety is on
57:30
the line here. He's going to direct 18 intelligence agencies.
57:34
And what we're trying to get at here is if
57:36
he can't in that room, I mean, the president's down
57:39
the street at Pennsylvania Avenue. I mean, he's not looking
57:43
right at them. What is he going to do when
57:44
he's sitting in the Oval Office or the Situation Room
57:47
and the president disagrees with him? But he has studied
57:50
the intelligence, and this is a critical national security issue,
57:54
and the safety of the American people are at risk.
57:57
Is he going to tell the president that he's wrong?
58:00
And I don't see any evidence that he would do
58:02
that. So I was incredibly disappointed today. Just so disappointing.
58:08
And then the big controversy is the search for the
58:14
leaker. about Air Force One. And I think you and
58:19
I might disagree on some of these issues with journalists.
58:24
This is... This is a setup of it. Exclusive CNN
58:28
reporting tonight on the investigation into leaks about security shortcomings
58:32
of the new Air Force One. Last week, you'll remember,
58:35
the president flew the old plane instead of the new
58:37
one when he left the NATO summit. The White House
58:39
claims it was so that U.S. service members could tour
58:42
the new one. The New York Times said it was
58:44
because the Qatari gifted plane lacked key defense systems. And
58:47
the president was incensed by that reporting. Now we've learned
58:51
some government officials have been asked to turn over their
58:53
phones at the White House as part of a leak
58:55
probe. And as Evan Perez joins us now with more.
58:57
Evan, what more have you learned about this White House
59:00
probe? Yeah, this was an extraordinary scene at the White
59:02
House last Friday where Kash Patel, the FBI director, and
59:07
Susie Wiles, the chief of staff, essentially helped orchestrate what
59:10
was hours long numbers of people from the White House,
59:14
people who may have known about the president's trip, were
59:18
brought in, their devices were taken from them in some
59:20
cases, and they were being questioned by FBI agents because
59:24
of this leak hunt. of course, is trying to figure
59:27
out who in the government could have possibly leaked this
59:30
information to the media. And the president, as you pointed
59:33
out, John, is very, very obsessed, very much obsessed with
59:37
this. And that, again, took place at the White House.
59:40
We have a statement from the White House about this
59:42
unusual scene. They said leaks that jeopardize the safety of
59:46
the president, his staff, and a traveling press pool are
59:49
dangerous and a threat to national security. The White House
59:52
takes these leaks seriously and would do everything legally to
59:55
ensure or the individual or individuals are caught and it
59:58
does not happen.
1:00:00
Again, that's, of course, from the White House this evening.
1:00:03
So, you know, I've been thinking about this and the
1:00:07
not disclosing your sources. I don't think that is actually
1:00:12
protected under the First Amendment. The First Amendment gives the
1:00:16
press the freedom to print whatever they want. It doesn't
1:00:21
give them the freedom to not do their civic duty
1:00:26
for national security, etc. I think it was actually, there
1:00:29
was some... Supreme Court cases. that overruled this. And, you
1:00:36
know, it's... I don't know if, I don't think it's
1:00:40
protected under the First Amendment. You disagree? No, it probably
1:00:44
isn't. Yeah. Okay. I never thought it was. It's just
1:00:48
a gentleman's agreement. Look, you're going to tell me something,
1:00:50
I'm going to protect you. Right. Can't make me talk.
1:00:56
There was the Bandsburg v. What's protected is you can't
1:00:58
testify against yourself. Right. Bandsburg v. Hayes in 1972, 5-4
1:01:05
Supreme Court decision. Uh... The this was the court consolidated
1:01:12
three different cases of reporters who had investigated drug synthesis
1:01:15
and the Black Panther Party. When called before grand juries,
1:01:18
the reporters refused to name their anonymous sources, arguing that
1:01:21
doing so would dry up their news gathering pipelines and
1:01:25
destroy. Here comes press freedom, which is not the text.
1:01:29
It's freedom of the press. And the court ruled the
1:01:33
public's interest in prosecuting and deterring crime via the grand
1:01:36
jury system outweighs the incidental burden placed on the press.
1:01:40
But the press, they just keep on going about free
1:01:44
press, man. It's free, free press. Joining us now to
1:01:47
discuss this is Will Creeley. He's the legal director for
1:01:50
FIRE.org, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. Will, thank
1:01:55
you for joining NewsHour. It's an honor. Thank you for
1:02:00
having me. journalists have in this case? Well, the law
1:02:05
has been clear for a long time that somebody else's
1:02:08
illegal conduct does not remove speech about a matter of
1:02:11
public concern, like the president's new jet from First Amendment
1:02:15
protection. There's no federal shield law, but the heart of
1:02:19
the First Amendment does indeed protect this kind of activity.
1:02:23
What we're seeing here should be a last resort. Subpoenaing
1:02:26
reporters is a shot across the bow designed to get
1:02:30
people to stop asking about subjects the administration would rather
1:02:34
not talk about. And it's chilling. In this case, the
1:02:37
subpoenas were issued to these five New York Times reporters
1:02:40
and some were served at their homes. Is that unusual?
1:02:43
And why do you think it was done in that
1:02:45
way, in your opinion? It is unusual, and it's theatrical.
1:02:49
It's designed to send a very clear message. Stop asking
1:02:53
questions, sit down, and shut up. I'm awfully tired of
1:02:57
federal law enforcement agents showing up on people's doorsteps about
1:03:00
protected speech, and unfortunately, this is just the latest in
1:03:03
a pattern. This administration has evinced a real hostility to
1:03:07
press that should concern Americans no matter their politics. It's
1:03:10
designed to get people to sit down and be quiet.
1:03:14
Yeah, I wonder if we still have that clip. What
1:03:16
was the guy's name? Thank you. Rosen is the guy
1:03:19
who got busted. Rosen, that's right. And they throw him
1:03:22
in jail, right? Yeah. Let me see. Obama was the
1:03:26
worst for this, and they never bring it up. No,
1:03:29
no, it's all Trump invented it. Give me a break.
1:03:32
Was it Jay Rosen? No. No, it's not Jay Rosen.
1:03:36
He's the professor. Jay Rosen. Who was it? Who was
1:03:41
it? Which Rosen? Let me see. Jail? Maybe I can
1:03:46
find it that way. No. Obama I can't seem to,
1:03:50
that was, it was quite a long time ago. I
1:03:52
don't know if we even have those clips from back
1:03:54
in the day. I don't know if the archive goes
1:03:58
back far enough. We probably do, but it's not going
1:03:59
to be easy to find. Yeah. But yeah, Obama's doing
1:04:03
it, but so is, you know, everybody bitches and moans
1:04:06
about the press. The press bitches and moans about the
1:04:09
press. That's who bitches and moans about the press. Everybody
1:04:11
bitches and moans. Yeah, I got one more clip here.
1:04:13
You mentioned this, but this is not the first time
1:04:15
that the Trump administration has tried to subpoena or question
1:04:18
journalists about stories that are critical of the administration or
1:04:22
the president. Is this a pattern that you're seeing? How
1:04:26
would you describe this kind of behavior? against the Washington
1:04:33
Post, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal. Just
1:04:35
last week, my colleagues were in Iowa State Court defending
1:04:38
a pollster, Ann Seltzer, against charges filed by the president
1:04:43
alleging that her poll constituted consumer fraud. It's beyond the
1:04:47
pale. It is a direct attack on the First Amendment's
1:04:50
protection of our free press. In the 250th anniversary of
1:04:53
our country, we should demand better. How does this administration
1:04:58
compare to previous administrations? I mean, other presidents and other
1:05:02
administrations have asked reporters to reveal their sources, but how
1:05:06
does this moment compare to those? That's right. Other presidents
1:05:10
have done it, but this is not something we should
1:05:12
get used to. Just because other presidents have done it,
1:05:14
and they have of both parties, isn't a grounds for
1:05:18
justification. We shouldn't normalize this behavior. We should ask for
1:05:21
the freest press we can demand. That's what we deserve.
1:05:26
under the First Amendment. That's what we are guaranteed beyond
1:05:29
deserved. Again, I think that you have to look at
1:05:31
this in the larger context of the president's attacks on
1:05:35
the press. Really, almost from day one, attacking the press
1:05:38
has been a trademark of his. And the result is
1:05:42
a chill on speech. It's a chill on speech. There's
1:05:45
been no chill. It's worse than ever. Where's the chill?
1:05:50
Hello? I don't know. I don't see any chill. No.
1:05:54
I see people moaning groaning more than ever. Anti-Trump. Trump's
1:06:01
fault. So the president had kind of a very interesting...
1:06:06
interesting change of heart over the Straits of Hormuz. Where
1:06:12
first he started, he said, hey, man, we're going to
1:06:16
charge everybody some money. We're going to charge everybody 20%,
1:06:21
which came out of nowhere all of a sudden. Trump
1:06:25
changing his tune after oil prices soared and American Gulf
1:06:28
allies called to complain. Kings and emirs and all of
1:06:34
the people that we all know and we all love.
1:06:36
And they said, we'd love to do it a different
1:06:38
way. We'd love to invest in the United States with.
1:06:41
Billions and billions of dollars. Can we play that clip
1:06:46
on the last show? What's that? It wasn't that last
1:06:48
show clip. No, no, this is a new clip. No,
1:06:52
no, no. I think that happened on the, on the
1:06:54
last. No, it just happened after the show. Sunday. When
1:06:59
it did 20%, that was after the show. No, it
1:07:04
must have been somebody brought up on Horowitz. That's what
1:07:07
I think. But tonight, one thing is clear. The Strait
1:07:09
of Hormuz is closed. Iran firing on multiple cargo ships
1:07:14
and on American allies in the region. So then the
1:07:17
new gambit came in, which is, you don't have to
1:07:20
pay a toll, but just invest in us. I was
1:07:22
wondering if you could explain your changing thinking on the
1:07:25
Strait of Hormuz, applying a 20% fee. How did you
1:07:30
get to the decision you just made? basically don't take
1:07:35
anything, we don't need the oil at all. And it
1:07:39
wasn't important for us, but it was important for allies.
1:07:41
I was called by different people, different countries, kings and
1:07:45
emirs and all of the people that we all know
1:07:48
and we all love. And they've been, frankly, they've been
1:07:51
very strong partners. And they said, we'd love to do
1:07:54
it a different way. We'd love to invest in the
1:07:56
United States with billions and billions of dollars. We would
1:08:00
like to invest tremendously in the United States. Tremendously. opposed
1:08:04
to charging a fee. And I like that actually, because
1:08:07
I don't think anybody should be able to charge a
1:08:09
fee for the straight or for any other straight relationship
1:08:15
in terms of other sections of the world. I don't
1:08:18
think anybody should be really in that position. But we
1:08:21
were doing it as a reimbursement. The Gulf states are
1:08:24
going to invest a tremendous amount of money into the
1:08:27
United States. And that was very satisfactory to me. I
1:08:31
think it's actually much better. a couple of analysts on
1:08:35
CNBC and you know I was like what what is
1:08:38
he doing this is completely stupid why would you even
1:08:42
say oh you want 20% this is is he just
1:08:45
pulling stuff out his butt as usual or is there
1:08:47
something behind it and then to change it around to
1:08:50
well you guys you should be paying 20% but instead
1:08:53
as long as you invest billions and billions and billions
1:08:56
and trillions of dollars in America will protect you you
1:08:59
don't have to do that but now I'm listening to
1:09:01
these analysts and it seems like The Strait of Hormuz
1:09:12
may even just be made redundant at some point. off-ramp
1:09:34
to this conflict. Daniel, you hinted at something very important
1:09:39
here that perhaps it's a political tactic during negotiation. By
1:09:44
the way, none of the two parties completely abandoned the
1:09:47
negotiating table and that perhaps explains why the market is
1:09:51
not in a panic mode. I mean, you would expect
1:09:53
in a period of so-called ceasefire to continue to see
1:09:56
this kind of tit-for-tat actions.
1:10:00
As long as the two parties are still talking, and
1:10:02
that's something we should remember, I think that gives us
1:10:05
some hope that these are more targeted, limited attacks and
1:10:08
not really a fully-fledged war, as we saw, let's say,
1:10:11
two months ago, for instance. So there could be a
1:10:14
tactic to force both parties to stick to the negotiations,
1:10:17
to reach a deal at a certain point. But, of
1:10:20
course, the market does not like this kind of uncertainty,
1:10:24
and that's why we are seeing these kind of developments
1:10:26
overnight in oil prices. I think even under the worst-case
1:10:31
scenario, some oil continued to flow through the Strait of
1:10:35
Hormuz. Yes, some of it continued to flow through the
1:10:38
Strait of Hormuz, but all of these countries, they're all
1:10:42
scrambling and they're all building alternative transit routes, which is
1:10:47
pipelines and all kinds of other things. But it remains
1:10:50
to be seen what is the next chapter for Hormuz.
1:10:52
More importantly, while this is happening, something else equally important
1:10:56
is happening, are continue to looking to look for alternatives
1:11:02
to divert away from hormones. So who knows maybe by
1:11:05
the time the hormones crisis is resolved we don't need
1:11:08
to rely as much on hormones to get oil and
1:11:11
gas and other products out of that strait. Here's one
1:11:14
other analyst about it. For global trade it does affect
1:11:18
the flow of trade and all that but You do
1:11:21
see trade adapt, move to other routes. For example, DP
1:11:26
World Port has other ports around the world, and those
1:11:30
operations have increased. So you'll see expansions in other alternatives.
1:11:34
For the UAE itself, all focus is on Fujairah right
1:11:37
now. What doesn't make the headline enough is that the
1:11:44
cost of shipping insurance will stay up for a while.
1:11:47
So businesses will go where there's less friction, where there's
1:11:51
less cost. So we expect to see more activities within
1:11:57
from Fujairah's side. So they're just moving into other ports.
1:12:01
They're moving it out. I think this whole idea is
1:12:05
just to make the whole straight kind of irrelevant. I
1:12:09
don't know if it can be done. Well, if you
1:12:11
look at the shipping, the thousands of ships that are
1:12:14
around, it won't be overnight. No, it won't be overnight,
1:12:18
but they've got the pipeline, which is funny enough. Wasn't
1:12:20
that a Clinton thing back in the day? The pipeline,
1:12:23
taking it up to Turkey and then from Turkey, getting
1:12:26
it into Europe and taking it over to the Black
1:12:29
Sea and just all these different routes. I think the
1:12:31
pipelines, we're going to have to be doing a pipeline
1:12:34
episode again soon. Well, we're due. Yeah. I think there's
1:12:40
something. Something is up with this. this, the whole thing.
1:12:45
Well, I mean, there are, there are theses out there
1:12:48
that, that said this was the whole thing was to
1:12:51
shut down the straight of her moves. Well, that wouldn't
1:12:53
surprise me. wouldn't surprise me. Well, I guess the only
1:12:57
thing I've got is they're bringing it to complicate matters.
1:13:01
Here's a clip. The Iranian conflict is now targeting the
1:13:06
Houthis. Next, the Treasury Department has announced sanctions against an
1:13:09
underground network that has been helping the Iranian regime obtain
1:13:13
weapons. This comes as Iran is threatening to use the
1:13:15
Houthi terrorist group to expand their attacks on commercial shipping.
1:13:19
NTD's Jason Perry has the details. The United States continues
1:13:23
to increase its efforts to help secure the Strait of
1:13:26
Hormuz. And on Wednesday, the Treasury Department announced another round
1:13:30
of sanctions connected to the Iranian regime. The Treasury's Office
1:13:34
of Foreign Assets Control has sanctioned targets involved in an
1:13:38
international network helping to get weapons for Iran's Islamic Revolutionary
1:13:43
Guard Corps. Details of the sanctions include two individuals in
1:13:48
Russia and one in Italy accused of assisting Iran to
1:13:51
get weapons. Vanguard Tactical Supply Limited, which served as an
1:14:00
intermediary in helping Iran get weapons. The fresh round of
1:14:04
sanctions comes after Iran's attacks on vessels in the Hormuz
1:14:08
Strait. However, Iran has warned that if U.S. strikes continue,
1:14:13
Iran could expand attacks on commercial shipping to the coast
1:14:16
of Yemen through its proxy, the Houthi terrorist group. The
1:14:20
Houthis are located near another strategic waterway for global trade,
1:14:24
the Bab al-Mandeb Petros Katinas, research fellow at the Royal
1:14:30
United Services Institute, explains. He said the Houthis don't need
1:14:50
to attack every ship. They just have to complete a
1:14:53
limited number of successful attacks. insurance cost for commercial vessels
1:14:59
to skyrocket, causing ships to avoid the Red Sea altogether
1:15:04
and take a much longer route around the southern tip
1:15:07
of South Africa. All this energy that we're creating here
1:15:12
in the United States, we're getting another data center in,
1:15:17
I think, near Austin. And they will be, I think
1:15:21
they'll be generating 750 kilowatts of... gas-fired energy. And we
1:15:30
were talking about the data centers maybe being utilities. decentralizing
1:15:38
the energy, the electricity sources in America. And I got
1:15:44
an email from an old friend of the show who
1:15:46
apparently still listens, Atomic Rod Adams. No, we haven't heard
1:15:51
from him forever. For years. Yeah. And I want to
1:15:56
share this because, you know, this is what he does.
1:15:58
He was a... Was he a commander of an atomic
1:16:02
submarine? Yeah, he's a... Now I think he became a
1:16:07
nuclear consultant. A nuclear consultant. Then things were bad for
1:16:10
a while. Business was down, particularly during the Biden administration.
1:16:15
You and John mentioned advanced nuclear demonstrations during Sunday's show.
1:16:19
As you stated, four new reactors started operating on or
1:16:22
before July 4th. You don't hear much about this anywhere.
1:16:26
I was lucky enough to be present for the final
1:16:27
two of them, Deployable Energy on June 30th and Allo
1:16:31
Atomics very early, 1220 a.m. on July 4th. It was
1:16:35
cool to be boots on the ground as an observer
1:16:37
for these historic events. I also witnessed Valar Atomics producing
1:16:41
the first electricity from an advanced reactor. Those success stories
1:16:45
are likely to be joined by two to four more
1:16:47
new reactors by the end of the summer. The reactor
1:16:50
pilot program, which helps to speed reviews, approvals, and facility
1:16:54
construction, includes 11 projects and is designed to continue to
1:16:58
provide acceleration even after reaching the interim goal of having
1:17:02
three start by July 4. There's a tremendous amount of
1:17:05
energy and excitement in the nuclear industry, stimulated by a
1:17:08
collection of four executive orders, all signed on May 23,
1:17:11
2025. likely to see any new nuclear plant construction. He's
1:17:18
probably right. but he might be interested in learning that
1:17:21
many of the advanced nuclear companies are headquartered in California.
1:17:26
So he says California's got a couple of them in
1:17:28
Torrance and El Segundo, Oakland, Santa Clara, Berkeley. Hey, Berkeley,
1:17:35
California, deep fishing in Berkeley, right around the corner. In
1:17:38
Texas, there's a whole bunch of them. Well, this is
1:17:41
good. This is what we need. Yeah, I agree. I
1:17:45
think it's cool. It's good that we're doing that. We
1:17:48
couldn't get any of that stuff done forever. No, because
1:17:53
of one or two mishaps. Now I would say the
1:17:57
most interesting... legislation to pass which still doesn't mean that
1:18:03
we're going to get get anywhere with it is the
1:18:07
What is it? The Protect the Sunshine Act? You hear
1:18:12
about this? No. Yeah, this is it. It's a debate
1:18:16
that has consumed a lot of time, literally. But yesterday,
1:18:19
Congress took its biggest step yet toward ending the twice-yearly
1:18:23
changing of the clocks. The House passed the Sunshine Protection...
1:18:26
Say what? Yeah, yeah, this was overplayed on Fox and
1:18:31
every place in between. This is, this is, every year
1:18:36
or every couple of years we get this story. It's
1:18:38
like a rerun of old news. Well, they're trying. They're
1:18:41
trying something new. They're not, they're getting, it's... This, this
1:18:52
is, this is not Fox, as an aside. This is
1:18:57
PBS. changing the clocks we are joined now by scott
1:19:00
yates founder of the lock the clock alliance it's always
1:19:04
good to see you so you've been pushing for this
1:19:06
for years we've seen momentum before it's not become law
1:19:10
why might this time be different Well, we've never seen
1:19:13
it pass the House before. I mean, it's never gotten
1:19:16
to the floor for even to be able to have
1:19:18
a vote. So this is just a huge step forward.
1:19:21
And I think it shows the kind of momentum that
1:19:23
we have. And I think it shows the excitement over
1:19:26
an issue that's actually bipartisan. I was pleased to see
1:19:30
a wide margin, both among Republicans and Democrats voting for
1:19:34
it. So I think with that kind of momentum, we
1:19:36
can go over to the Senate and say, look, this
1:19:38
is what the people want. the country and in the
1:19:44
House vote yesterday. We've never been this close, John. This
1:19:46
has been the first time. We're getting somewhere with this.
1:19:50
But I think this is good. We got to check
1:19:52
the prop bet market on this baby. This is a
1:19:57
solid no. Well, would they?
1:20:00
But this guy, what this Yates guy is saying is
1:20:02
they need to push it to the states. This is
1:20:04
going to make it even more fun. So the states
1:20:06
can decide what time zone they want to be in.
1:20:09
This makes my head spin. In your view, what do
1:20:11
we gain by stopping the twice yearly changing of the
1:20:14
clocks? One of the things I was really encouraged to
1:20:17
hear yesterday were all different politicians kind of getting up
1:20:20
and talking about the health detriments of the clock changing.
1:20:24
You know, it wasn't that long ago that we just
1:20:26
thought of changing the clocks for daylight saving time was
1:20:28
kind of annoyance. of it as deadly, but now the
1:20:31
research is really clear that it really is deadly and
1:20:34
very disruptive. It's bad for schools, it's bad for businesses,
1:20:38
it's bad for everybody. The only thing that we don't
1:20:40
agree on completely is on which time zone we should
1:20:43
be locking into, but I think we've got a solution
1:20:46
to be able to address that without having to have
1:20:49
the clock change twice a year, which is what I
1:20:52
think most people actually are the most interested in. It's
1:20:55
just they don't really care that much which one we
1:20:57
lock into. They just don't like the switching. What's the
1:21:00
solution? Well, the solution is actually an amendment that I
1:21:02
proposed back when it was in the Senate last year
1:21:05
to have a two-year implementation period. And what that allows
1:21:09
is for each state to be able to have enough
1:21:11
time and the school boards to weigh in and everybody
1:21:15
in a state to be able to say, look, this
1:21:17
is a time that makes the most sense for us.
1:21:19
Anybody that says they've got a perfect solution that works
1:21:22
for every state in the country has some other agenda
1:21:25
they're trying to push. who sits and also works for
1:21:31
Indiana, well, that's just not possible. So I think if
1:21:35
we have a two-year implementation, which is an amendment that
1:21:38
was accepted and is now part of the Senate version,
1:21:40
that would give people of, for instance, Indiana and Michigan,
1:21:44
a couple of states that I think would be really
1:21:45
well served to be on permanent standard time to be
1:21:48
able to make that decision. So it's kind of crazier
1:21:51
than I thought it would be. So each time zone,
1:21:55
each state would be able to determine what time 7
1:21:59
o'clock is. So today we have two hours difference between
1:22:04
California and Texas. It might be one hour. Can you
1:22:08
imagine if every state just, what's the time there? Well,
1:22:12
we're in Indiana. I mean, Arizona still does its own
1:22:15
thing, and Indiana until recently used to have their own
1:22:17
time. Yeah. So it's not that unusual. But every state
1:22:20
might get a little funky. No, the whole thing's a
1:22:23
joke. These things never come to fruition. It's just going
1:22:26
to keep going. Once it was established, they can't get
1:22:29
rid of it. Because I was kind of convinced, kind
1:22:33
of like you, that, well, this is interesting. Gutfeld they
1:22:40
had the little group of comedy comedians on there and
1:22:43
it was just was split right in the middle no
1:22:45
it should be daylight savings time all the time no
1:22:48
it shouldn't because then in the morning and during the
1:22:50
certain time of year it'll be too dark for the
1:22:52
kiddies and they have to pick up they won't be
1:22:55
able to see the bus when it comes and they're
1:22:57
gonna get it mugged and killed so think of the
1:23:00
children we can't do daylight savings all year but wait
1:23:03
there's but then if we do standard time all year
1:23:06
round then it's too dark at night nobody's gonna go
1:23:08
out and shop is gonna be bad for commerce. This
1:23:11
is not working. So there's a solution for this which
1:23:15
came in the same week as this news. Yeah, take
1:23:18
the Earth out of orbit. No, no, no. It's the
1:23:21
new company, Reflect Orbital. This is, so if you don't
1:23:26
like the fact that your kids have to walk to
1:23:28
school in the dark. Well, then you just rent some
1:23:32
time from Reflect Orbital and they can spread some sunlight
1:23:36
on a five kilometer patch of Earth. reflect orbital plans
1:24:01
to have more than 50,000 satellites in action by 2035.
1:24:05
However, some astronomers, wildlife experts, and others oppose this idea
1:24:10
completely. They claim that the light from the mirrors could
1:24:13
distract airplane pilots, could wreak havoc on astronomical observations, and
1:24:17
interfere with sleep-wake cycles. I think this is very cool.
1:24:21
I'm surprised it's not an Elon Musk operation. Yeah, that's
1:24:24
not happening either. Yeah, it is. What a screwball story.
1:24:28
They'd give me a crap for a screwball story. They're
1:24:31
demoing it. They already have one up there. And so
1:24:34
you say, okay, let there be light, and they just
1:24:37
reflect. You know, there's things called street lamps. No, but.
1:24:41
Let's say. Why do you need a satellite? Light up
1:24:44
the street. I lost my key somewhere in the yard.
1:24:48
Let's order some light for five minutes. Yeah, that would
1:24:53
be so inexpensive, you can be sure. Well, just reflecting
1:24:57
some light. Yeah, 50,000 of them. How much space junk
1:25:02
do we actually have? I don't know. There's enough of
1:25:06
the Starlink satellites to go around. Too much going on.
1:25:09
They should put Starlink's mirrors on them. Yeah, I see
1:25:15
him regularly flying by. regularly so biden's come out with
1:25:20
a book oh he's coming out with a book in
1:25:22
november uh-huh and he produced a uh a little video
1:25:27
of him talking about this book coming out wait a
1:25:30
minute don't tell me this is another uh listen to
1:25:33
no agenda show segment no no this is actually this
1:25:37
is biden uh-huh uh and i have two clips because
1:25:40
i have a short version which is the segment that
1:25:44
i want to i want you to listen to saying
1:25:49
okay so let's play the long promotion for the book
1:25:52
okay Since I left the presidency, I've had a lot
1:25:56
of people ask me, "Joe, what have you been doing?"
1:25:58
"Joe!" "Joe!" I've been spending a lot of time with
1:26:04
my family. I'm dealing with a cancer diagnosis and I've
1:26:07
been getting treatment and it's been going really well. I
1:26:11
want to thank all those of you for their prayers
1:26:13
and support and well wishes. This meant the world to
1:26:15
me and to Jill. I've written a book about my
1:26:20
time as president. It's called Promise Me America. It's coming
1:26:25
out in November, and it's available for pre-order now. It's
1:26:28
about the challenges we face as a nation, about the
1:26:31
decisions I made. why I made them. country through COVID,
1:26:41
rebuilding our economy and restoring our democracy after the attack
1:26:46
on January 6th. Any donation as long as we're in
1:26:50
Afghanistan. Strengthening NATO and supporting Ukraine. It's about why I
1:26:57
chose to run for re-election and why I chose to
1:27:00
step aside. Is this a coloring book that he is
1:27:03
releasing? Or is it actual words? Be nice. I get
1:27:09
the segment there that where he mumbles a bit. Tell
1:27:13
me what he says. Any donations, longest one I've got.
1:27:17
Strengthening NATO. Okay, something about the war in Afghanistan. Let
1:27:21
me listen again. Any of our nation's longest war in
1:27:24
Afghanistan. Strengthening NATO. Strengthening NATO. Wow. Wow. So is he
1:28:05
going to do an audio book? Because that would be
1:28:08
genius. I'd buy it. Wow. Yeah, so I'm going to
1:28:16
be competing with him with my book. I'm going to
1:28:18
be talking to Mimi about it. Yeah. My memoirs. Yeah,
1:28:22
your book would be great. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Here's what
1:28:26
I understand about books. There's no money in it. No,
1:28:30
it's not the idea. Well, I'm not running for president.
1:28:34
What's the idea? Well, if you ever run for president,
1:28:37
you've got the book. Right. What do you do a
1:28:40
book for if there's no money in it? You have
1:28:42
to get, it's a service. It's like, why do we
1:28:45
do this podcast before we don't get any money? It's
1:28:47
a service. I know, but I already do a public
1:28:50
service. Now I've got to do another service? Well, you
1:28:53
know, you haven't done the, yeah. The thing is. Yeah,
1:28:56
exactly. It never ends. But here's what I realize. Because
1:29:02
throughout the years, I've written blog posts and stuff. And
1:29:07
I think I've told almost every single story on the
1:29:09
show at some point, which is good because I have
1:29:12
transcripts of everything. I'm worried that my recollection of things
1:29:17
may not be the way it actually happened. Someone comes
1:29:21
out of the woodwork and says, hey, you're full of
1:29:23
crap. What do you do in that case? Oh, that's
1:29:29
going to happen. Yeah, well, of course it is. But
1:29:33
then what do you do? You say, that's the way
1:29:36
I remember it. Okay. I just can't slander anybody. Well,
1:29:41
that's easy enough. Well, but I got to tell my
1:29:43
Richard Marks story. Unless they're dead. I got to tell
1:29:45
my Richard Marks story. Is he dead? No, but he's
1:29:49
litigious. He's very litigious. He's crazy. Richard Marks is crazy.
1:29:52
You don't even mention him in the book. But it's
1:29:54
a great story. No, now we- Well, why don't you
1:29:58
call him up? No! And tell him it's-
1:30:00
If you can tell the story. I don't need his
1:30:02
permission to tell the story, do I? Well, if you
1:30:04
don't want to get sued, maybe. Well, see, now I
1:30:07
don't want to do a book. Boy, you're easy. What
1:30:14
a pushover. The worst thing about Richard Marks, who I
1:30:18
had a... I don't even know who... You're talking about
1:30:20
somebody nobody knows who you're talking about. Are you kidding
1:30:22
me? Richard Marks in the 80s and 90s had number
1:30:26
one hits back to back. You know, just because you
1:30:29
don't... He was the Marks Brothers? Who are you talking
1:30:32
about? I will play you a Richard Marks song. He
1:30:38
sings? He's a singer? Yes, he's a singer. Yes. But
1:30:42
what group? Richard Marks. He's just Richard Marks. I never
1:30:48
heard of him. No, I'm not surprised you've never heard
1:30:51
of him, but he's quite famous. me see what He
1:30:58
has all new songs. Where's his biggest hits? Uh, wait,
1:31:03
what was it? Right here waiting for you? Right here
1:31:06
waiting for you, Dick Mark. This kind of stuff. Oh,
1:31:16
this is the kind of stuff I don't like. That's
1:31:18
probably why I never heard it. No, of course not.
1:31:20
This is boring. Look at... Oh, that's Bryan Adams. Hold
1:31:25
on a second. Light some candles, people. Wait, that's Bryan
1:31:28
Adams. That's not even Richard Marks. Oh, you don't even
1:31:29
get the right guy. Here we go. This is him.
1:31:32
This is him. There's your... Sounds the same. 1980s DX7
1:31:37
synthesizer sound. He comes out of the smoke. Oh yeah,
1:31:43
this is good. Oh yeah, he's got his blue jeans
1:31:45
on. Sits down at the piano. You don't remember this
1:31:52
song? No. It sounds like a dime a dozen. It's
1:31:59
a long intro. Hold on. Okay, you can stop it.
1:32:02
No, I want to hear him sing now. Anyway. So,
1:32:08
I made a joke about his hair once on MTV,
1:32:11
which was okay. You know, I had hair. Did he
1:32:13
have long hair, short hair, or bald? He had big
1:32:16
hair. He had big hair like you had. Yeah, and
1:32:18
I said, there's Richard Marks with his hair at number
1:32:21
four on the top 20 countdown. He tried to get
1:32:23
me fired. Thank you. He literally tried to get me
1:32:26
fired. For what? Because I made fun of him. How
1:32:31
did you make fun of him? You said he had
1:32:32
hair. I'm telling you. He went to Abby Conowitz. He
1:32:36
went to Rick Krim. The irony would be if he's
1:32:39
bald now. No, he's not. Well, no, the hard part
1:32:42
is, you know who he's married to? You won't know
1:32:46
her either. Daisy Fuentes. Nick Fuent is his sister? You're
1:32:52
hopeless. This book is not for you, okay? This book
1:32:55
is not for you. Don't worry about it. Don't read
1:32:59
it. Mimi and I will make a book, and we'll
1:33:01
make a book, we'll make a book. And I want
1:33:03
to do that whole download the PDF, and if you
1:33:06
want to buy it, then value for value, just send
1:33:08
me some money. You'll get something out of it. No,
1:33:11
we'll get nothing. You'll get nothing out of it. No,
1:33:13
you'll get something. You just want me to do it
1:33:15
so I can go on a promo tour and promote
1:33:17
the show. I think it would benefit for not having
1:33:19
anything about Richard Marks, though. No, no. Because that was
1:33:22
a legendary fight. This is legendary. Wow. And then we
1:33:27
were on a live... You're unselling the book as we
1:33:31
speak. you radio show and he says I hope you
1:33:36
get cancer that was Richard Marx That was kind of
1:33:40
cute. Yeah, so there's good stories there. It's good stories.
1:33:44
Let's play this clip, fun fraud testimony, NTD. Fun fraud
1:33:49
testimony. And following a string of major criminal fraud cases
1:33:52
in federal programs, Senate lawmakers hear from investigative journalists and
1:33:56
watchdogs on how to stop billions in taxpayer fraud before
1:34:00
it happens. NTD correspondent Jason Blair has the takeaways. When
1:34:04
a fraudster commits fraud, he or she steals from all
1:34:07
of us. The Senate Homeland Security Committee is looking to
1:34:10
tackle widespread fraud being exposed across the country. Chairman Rand
1:34:15
Paul compares the federal government to private businesses that verify
1:34:19
payments up front. Washington pays first and asks questions later
1:34:23
if it asks them at all. No private business would
1:34:26
survive this way. A bank confirms an account exists before
1:34:30
wiring the money. A credit card company flags suspicious changes
1:34:34
in seconds. Paul highlighted major criminal cases in Minnesota. Prosecutors
1:34:39
have now charged 15 people in Minnesota with schemes involving
1:34:43
more than $90 million. One autism services scheme alone, $46.6
1:34:49
million. The Justice Department calls it the largest Medicaid autism
1:34:53
fraud case in its history. Independent journalist Nick Shirley, whose
1:34:57
investigations helped expose those Minnesota cases, tells the committee the
1:35:01
problem is nationwide. Now the highest government-funded daycare in Minnesota
1:35:05
has pleaded guilty to daycare fraud, and the largest autism
1:35:08
bust in American history has been exposed. Journalist James O'Keefe
1:35:16
describes undercover work that contributed to a federal prosecution. We
1:35:20
recorded a woman named Brown handing over cash as payment
1:35:22
in exchange for a homeless person to register to vote
1:35:25
in a federal election. Now that is a federal crime.
1:35:29
Ranking member Gary Peters describes bipartisan legislation he helped pass
1:35:33
to stop conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical companies. After learning
1:35:37
that a company was being paid with tax dollars to
1:35:40
advise the government on oversight of the pharmaceutical industry, while
1:35:44
simultaneously being paid by pharma companies to help market their
1:35:49
drugs. You know, the fraud in America, I got a
1:35:53
stat here. where this was. have the budget. It, here
1:36:00
it is. Nine days. of improper federal payments. Equals the
1:36:08
entire annual budget we send to Israel. Nine days. Two
1:36:14
weeks of only Medicare and Medicaid fraud. I mean, it
1:36:18
is out of control. Yeah, can you imagine what it
1:36:21
would be like with Medicare for all? Oh, pfft. Please.
1:36:26
We'd be broke. The whole country would be down. Did
1:36:29
I tell you that when I went to visit Lex,
1:36:31
remember my first boss on his estate? Yeah, Lex. Lex
1:36:34
Luthor. Yeah, on his estate. He's got an estate. The
1:36:38
guy has made so much money from art. I mean,
1:36:41
do you walk through? We went to the Modern Museum
1:36:44
of Art in Amsterdam, the Stedelijk Museum. He's got better
1:36:47
stuff at home, yeah. Oh, let me tell you. Do
1:36:49
not go to the Stedelijk Museum. It is a jip.
1:36:53
It's a total, like, what is this? It's a jip.
1:36:56
It's stupid. It's a jip. It's a jip. It's like,
1:37:00
oh, there's some sand on the floor with two shoes.
1:37:05
And the title is Wim T. Schippers is gone. Go
1:37:11
to Lex's house. Oh, there's five Warhols. Can you get
1:37:16
me an invite so I can go to his house
1:37:17
someday and look at his art? Yeah, I think so.
1:37:20
Well, you should have been there for the expo when
1:37:22
he had his... Well, it's too late now. I'm just
1:37:25
saying now. You know, you go to the bathroom. There's
1:37:28
two Keith Herrings. He has pop art. And then he
1:37:31
has these photos. He's got... photo of the Beatles at
1:37:35
the at the Cavern Club. Cavern or Tavern? Or was
1:37:37
it Cavern Club? In Berlin. You've never seen this photo
1:37:41
before. It's before the one that everyone has always seen.
1:37:44
I mean, he's got the most amazing stuff. Anyway, what
1:37:48
was my point? I don't know. It was about fraud.
1:37:52
Yeah, it was something important. Oh, about the health care
1:37:55
system. Medicare for all. So the Netherlands, oh, they've got
1:38:00
free health care. It's great. So when he needed something,
1:38:03
and he's 81 now, he cannot go to a doctor
1:38:07
and pay the doctor privately. He has to wait in
1:38:10
line for weeks or months like everybody else. Why? I
1:38:13
thought you could do that. No, not in the Netherlands.
1:38:16
Nope. Nope. What about under the table? No, they won't
1:38:22
do it. He says, I've tried everything. Yeah. He says,
1:38:26
you have to go. Yeah. If you get a specialist,
1:38:29
then you might for something very specialized, you might be
1:38:32
able to get in within a week. But in general,
1:38:34
back of the line, everybody's treated the same. It's equity.
1:38:40
It sucks. It's equity. You're getting all feisty now. It's
1:38:45
equity. So just when you thought AI couldn't get any
1:38:48
worse, introducing Anthropics Claude for teachers. You're also a mom.
1:38:55
This is Amadai. This is the CEO's sister who's also
1:39:00
in management at the company. You're also a mom. Is
1:39:04
this something you would hope to see in your children's
1:39:07
school someday? I personally feel really, really excited for what
1:39:10
it means. Oh, really, really, really, really excited. Kindergarten this
1:39:14
year. And I'm really hopeful that his school will adopt,
1:39:17
you know, Claude for teachers to help tailor curriculum for
1:39:22
him and for his classmates. There are going to be
1:39:24
parents who hear this and feel nervous because parents have
1:39:29
watched their kids with smartphones and screen time and social
1:39:33
media. And they've seen the unwanted, unintended consequences that they
1:39:39
weren't really prepared for. This is in the hands of
1:39:41
teachers now. nervous that this new technology is going to
1:39:48
repeat those same mistakes. I completely understand and relate to
1:39:52
this worry. And I think a key difference here is
1:39:56
that cloud.ai remains for eight.
1:40:00
18-year-old users and above only. So individual students below the
1:40:06
age of 18 won't have access to the tool directly.
1:40:09
And I think this isn't because we necessarily feel worried
1:40:13
that this is a terrible thing to give to kids.
1:40:17
But I think the reality is we just don't know
1:40:20
enough about AI's impact on the developing brain. So let's
1:40:24
just use it on kids. For Anthropic to feel comfortable
1:40:27
giving access to students directly. We know that AI can
1:40:31
hallucinate. It can make mistakes. If this chat bot were
1:40:36
to make a mistake, if it were to give the
1:40:39
wrong information or bad advice or reinforce bias, who would
1:40:44
be accountable for that? These models are not foolproof. They
1:40:48
do make mistakes. And part of how we have worked
1:40:51
with teachers in developing this technology and really listening to
1:40:55
their questions and concerns is helping to, you know, when
1:41:00
an AI might be entering unknown territory, what are the
1:41:04
signs to look for? could possibly go wrong. Do not
1:41:10
let your children into a school where they have clawed
1:41:13
for teachers. This is not a good idea. I'd say.
1:41:20
Here, I got an AI story this week. All right.
1:41:24
Google. Big Google. And what does the future hold for
1:41:27
the news industry as more people read AI-powered news summaries?
1:41:31
NTD's David Lam asks an expert. Some news publishers are
1:41:36
concerned about being asked to join Google's new pilot program
1:41:40
for AI-powered article overviews. According to a report in The
1:41:44
Information, content would be shared in Google News and Gemini
1:41:47
AI, giving Google broad rights on how to use the
1:41:51
content. Matthew Gilbert, a senior lecturer of marketing, shares his
1:41:55
thoughts on the current landscape of news summaries. it links
1:42:05
to the actual articles but before any of that you're
1:42:08
getting summary and what's interesting is I think a lot
1:42:12
of people if they already see what they already need
1:42:14
they're not going to even click through beyond that. Currently
1:42:17
the Google News Showcase platform pays publishers to create and
1:42:21
curate online news content through a licensing program but publishers
1:42:26
fear that if they opt out of the new pilot
1:42:28
they may risk losing the fee they currently receive when
1:42:31
Google shares their articles. Gilbert also notes that there's a
1:42:35
risk to articles that feature deep investigative content. There's a
1:42:39
real big risk that what you're producing gets lost in
1:42:42
the shuffle or doesn't even get seen at all because
1:42:46
if all that it's looking for is the sort of
1:42:48
top level shorthand takeaway, that deeper investigation that more important
1:42:54
information is not going to get read. Google says that
1:42:57
for years it has produced 24 billion monthly visits to
1:43:01
news websites. Chances are their content will still probably in
1:43:05
some way or another still be getting fed into the
1:43:07
AI system whether or not they even are aware of
1:43:09
it or not. Yeah, this news is broken. They need
1:43:13
to stop this. This value for value by individual journalists
1:43:18
is, I think, the only way to go. Maybe. That's
1:43:23
your opinion? Yeah, my opinion is maybe. You're an independent.
1:43:30
There's a restaurant, by the way, in the Bay Area
1:43:31
that's doing value for value. Do they call it value
1:43:34
for value? No, they don't, but it's definitely value for
1:43:38
value. Have you been? No. And what do they do?
1:43:41
Just pay whatever you think the meal was worth? Yeah.
1:43:44
Or can you also choose to wash up? What do
1:43:48
you mean? Oh, you mean do the dishes? Yeah, time,
1:43:52
talents, and choices. Wash up. Yeah, wash up or, you
1:43:55
know, like, I don't know, set tables. I don't know
1:43:58
about that. Maybe. I don't think so. I think you
1:44:01
should go investigate. Get in that old Lexus of yours,
1:44:03
drive over there, and go take a look. Maybe I
1:44:07
will. Maybe I'll get out of the house and check
1:44:09
it out. And you should record it and you should
1:44:11
say, this sucks. I'm not giving you any money. Just
1:44:14
do that. And then Google can take and summarize it
1:44:16
and I get nothing out of all the effort. No.
1:44:20
Your sub stack is value for value. Can't people send
1:44:22
you money if they want to to the Oasis? Yeah,
1:44:24
they can send me money. Do they send you money?
1:44:26
Does it work? Yeah, I get some money. Okay. Well,
1:44:28
then it works. The system works. You're living the new
1:44:32
international lifestyle. Enjoy. It sucks. It stinks. Thanks. So we
1:44:38
know about the Apple OpenAI lawsuit. Do you have any
1:44:43
thoughts on that? Yeah, it's a gem. That's just my
1:44:50
thought. Maybe. My thought is maybe. You can't have maybe.
1:44:54
Everything I say, you can't just come back and say
1:44:56
maybe. I think maybe is the theme for today. Maybe
1:44:59
what? Maybe what? Maybe what? Maybe they'll win. Well... Maybe
1:45:06
or not. What are you thinking about in this lawsuit?
1:45:09
Well, I'm just going to lead it into a clip
1:45:11
because OpenAI, supposedly they revealed what they're doing. And it
1:45:17
sounds... Dumb. screen-free AI companion designed for your house. It
1:45:52
does sound really similar to Amazon's. Alexa would be a
1:45:56
portable battery-powered device, would help control smart home devices, answer
1:46:00
questions, play music. As I mentioned, has been extremely secretive
1:46:04
about these plans. Rumors have ranged from a wearable pin
1:46:08
to some sort of earpiece. No comment from the company,
1:46:11
but sources I've talked to say the designs could change.
1:46:13
It's still very much in the works, and this report
1:46:15
does also say the device may launch the end of
1:46:19
this year. OpenAI's entire hardware push, though, is now very
1:46:22
much under fire after Apple on Friday sued the company
1:46:25
and its top team members over allegedly stealing intellectual property
1:46:30
devices. Overall, it's been a major strategic push for this
1:46:33
company. It did pay $6.5 billion to buy iPhone designer
1:46:38
Johnny Ives' startup late last year. So a screen-free... Yeah,
1:46:42
we talked about this on the last show, too. No,
1:46:44
we did not. Yes, we did, because we talked about
1:46:47
specifically You and I both agreed that Silicon Valley does
1:46:50
this all the time. And we specifically talked about Johnny
1:46:54
Ives. Yeah, but we didn't talk about the device. This
1:46:56
is new. You didn't know about the device. No, the
1:46:57
device. No, the device. This is Alexa. Well, I don't
1:47:00
know. Visit? Yeah, set timer. I think it's just a
1:47:09
chatbot block. Play my play. That would be worse. Set
1:47:14
timer. Okay. You want to talk about the weather? What's
1:47:19
it going to talk to you about? Hey, people talk
1:47:23
to their chatbots all day long. So might as well
1:47:26
have it in the house. Oh, God, can you imagine?
1:47:31
No, it's not for me, but yeah, I can imagine.
1:47:34
I mean, yeah, I can. They don't have any other
1:47:37
business. What is this super cut you have? I might
1:47:40
as well drag you through it, drag you through these
1:47:42
last few minutes. I just got a kick out of
1:47:44
these super cuts. This is when Elon, somebody put these
1:47:49
together recently. When Elon Musk bought Twitter. They were all
1:47:57
over it. And we're talking about everybody that hated this
1:48:01
whole idea. And I got two super cuts that talk
1:48:06
about, first of all, was the end of Twitter. Elon
1:48:09
Musk has managed to bring Twitter to the brink of
1:48:12
collapse in just three weeks. This is the end or
1:48:16
was the end of Twitter. What does one come back
1:48:19
from destroying Twitter, burning it to the ground? Elon Musk
1:48:22
burning the business to the ground. platform formerly known as
1:48:28
Twitter thanks to his decisions. Twitter is really in an
1:48:32
ever quickening death spiral. They're going to have a hard
1:48:34
time just keeping the lights on over at Twitter given
1:48:38
this mass exodus. Advertisers but also users heading for the
1:48:43
exits. It's a shithole right? Elon fuck that shit up.
1:48:46
There's better engagement on threads. He is not a media
1:48:49
platform owner. He's never done this. He doesn't know what
1:48:51
he's doing. It has to be just a question of
1:48:53
time before whether it's Mastodon or some other that actually
1:48:57
operates in a responsible way, takes over all of the
1:49:01
Twitter users. We will go there. Elon Musk can, you
1:49:05
know, this could be all fun and games for him.
1:49:06
At the end of the way, he's going to drive
1:49:07
this business into the ground. There will be nothing left.
1:49:10
All advertisers are gone. You can't have a major brand
1:49:13
in this country and be putting your ads on platforms
1:49:17
like this that are unsafe for children, that are spreading
1:49:19
misinformation about COVID. It's actually killing people. He's a dangerous
1:49:23
man. I've said it many times on this show. about
1:49:27
media deconstruction I think that that qualifies as clip of
1:49:31
the day. Wow, that's an obscure catch. It does. Well
1:49:35
so then we have after it didn't collapse in three
1:49:39
weeks like everyone predicted. What did we say? You said
1:49:44
the Fediverse was gonna take over everything! The Fediverse is
1:49:49
the way to go, man. Decentralized, baby. It's cool. The
1:49:53
Fediverse. Ask Comics for Blogger. He's been kicked off every
1:49:56
single instance on the Fediverse ever. And then the one.
1:50:00
Once he's allowed on, he says, this is no good.
1:50:03
I can't syndicate with no agenda, no authority social. The
1:50:11
most censored Fediverse node on the network is no authority.
1:50:17
The most censored. And all they do there is they
1:50:21
do these... Fediverse was co-opted by the left. That's the
1:50:26
problem. Your whole idea originally, which I'm mocking now, but
1:50:30
in fact, it could have been true, except it was
1:50:34
co-opted by the left, which they do, and it's ruined
1:50:38
it. Well, it depends on how you view it. That's
1:50:43
the way I view it. Okay. That's the way you,
1:50:46
like we have podcast index.social and it's, it's beautiful. It's
1:50:50
not political at all. It's just about podcasting 2.0. It
1:50:54
is a fan. It's a fantastic system works really well.
1:50:58
And people can still follow or, or, or, you know,
1:51:01
jump in if they want to. And that has not
1:51:04
been ruined by, by any, any political stuff at all.
1:51:07
It's really good. And there's no moderating. sit around blocking
1:51:12
people and telling them to stop. The only one instance
1:51:17
that I block, and that's noauthority.social. good and then you
1:51:21
know because i don't i don't have the time to
1:51:23
be blocking poast and, you know, was it shitposters.social. Once
1:51:31
in a while I get all these direct messages because
1:51:36
they have these contests. The faggot of the month. and
1:51:40
then oh god yeah and i was up against some
1:51:43
dude from sweden i lost You lost? You weren't faggot
1:51:47
of the month? I was not faggot of the month.
1:51:49
Oh, that's a shame. I know. Well, there's one more
1:51:52
shorter clip, which is the super cut of after the
1:51:57
three weeks was over and they didn't flop. They started
1:52:00
calling Twitter a cesspool. Elon Musk has turned X, formerly
1:52:04
known as Twitter, into a cesspool. Twitter X is just
1:52:08
such a cesspool now. But it's also a cesspool. Everything
1:52:10
that goes on, it's a circus cesspool. Twitter right now
1:52:13
is a cesspool. Twitter is a cesspool, or X, I
1:52:16
guess it's called now. Cesspool. Just bad information lies. Cesspool.
1:52:20
Twitter is becoming a deeper, darker. The cesspool of disinformation
1:52:23
and chaos has now really become a cesspool of mis-
1:52:26
and disinformation. The Twittersphere as it is has really gone
1:52:29
berserk lately. It's got to become almost a cesspool of
1:52:33
misinformation. Arguably, it's never been this successful. I know. I
1:52:38
think it's, yeah. And I think particularly with the XAI
1:52:42
integration. And now the thing I did predict. And Grok
1:52:46
helps a lot being on there. The thing I predicted
1:52:49
is the money stuff. That's coming. I predicted that years
1:52:52
ago. And that's coming. I agree. You have and hasn't
1:52:54
happened. But I'm not saying that that's a bad prediction.
1:52:58
I think the Fediverse prediction was a bit much. But
1:53:01
that other one about the money, yep. Yeah, that's happening.
1:53:04
Apparently it's already in beta. And from what I understand,
1:53:07
And... If you put your money into the X wallet,
1:53:11
and I have no idea how it's going to work.
1:53:15
you'll get 6%. I don't know how we... Ooh, it's
1:53:18
going to be a fintech company. Yeah. Fintech. Fintech. Oh,
1:53:29
you cracked me up, Dvorak. Fintech, yes. That's another buzzword
1:53:34
from the past. Fintech. Would it have something on banking
1:53:40
about money and fintech? What was it? Ummm... Was that?
1:53:45
Oh yeah. The clarity act. Yeah. That's what everybody's waiting
1:53:52
for, the Clarity Act, so we can... What's the Clarity
1:53:55
Act? The Clarity Act is supposed to give clarity on
1:53:58
how stable coins work and... I think the main thing
1:54:04
is, the way I understand it, and there's probably a
1:54:07
lot more in the clarity act. The main thing is
1:54:11
the guys who are doing stable coin. They want to
1:54:15
be able to give people interest on their deposits. And
1:54:20
the banking sector is going, no, you can't do that.
1:54:24
That's our business. And if you want to do that,
1:54:27
you should become a bank. Subsequently, I think Circle, USDC,
1:54:31
has become a bank. So I have two clips from
1:54:35
Loomis. Senator Loomis is the one driving this. take that
1:54:50
vote. Can you give us some color on that? We've
1:54:54
continued to work on ethics language that the Congress has
1:54:59
to live under and the president has to live under.
1:55:03
So some of the issues are things like can a
1:55:06
state attorney general sue an elected official? For some reason,
1:55:10
they're talking about something other than... the clarity act here.
1:55:16
You're talking about ethics? I don't know what that clip
1:55:20
is. You guys, your clip. Yeah, I don't think that
1:55:22
clip is not valid. But I do have a Jesse
1:55:25
Waters clip. about our money as jesse the paid a
1:55:30
visit to the treasury and hung out with uh Our
1:55:34
General Patton on the down low. Tonight we're taking you
1:55:37
somewhere the cameras usually don't go. The Treasury Department's secret
1:55:41
vault. And we found something that's never been seen before.
1:55:45
Beautiful room. And here is the Treasurer's vault from 1863.
1:55:53
And, you know, Jesse, I can't let you pass the
1:55:55
gate. No? Too much money in there, Jesse. All right,
1:55:59
you don't trust me. Well, it's not you. It's not
1:56:03
you. that before yeah exactly and so what used to
1:56:06
be in this vault or what's in this vault now
1:56:09
well i can't tell you what's in there now but
1:56:11
americans used to come and catch their checks here that's
1:56:14
that's exactly what i was thinking i can't show you
1:56:16
what's in there now because there's no money there's no
1:56:18
actual cash in there where they came here yeah or
1:56:21
banks could stop the clip Hey, what was this? What
1:56:26
ever happened to the visit to Fort Knox that we're
1:56:28
supposed to see by these Fox people? Or someone's going
1:56:32
to go visit Fort Knox and show the gold? That
1:56:34
was Elon. He was going to live stream it. Yeah,
1:56:37
what happened to that? Well, they don't want to embarrass
1:56:40
anybody because there's no gold. Well, I can't tell you
1:56:43
what's in there now, but Americans used to come and
1:56:45
cash their checks here. That's where they came here? Yep,
1:56:49
or banks could present and get greenbacks. Solomon Chase, who
1:56:54
was the Treasury Secretary during the Civil War, created the
1:56:59
greenback. We used to have, states used to have their
1:57:03
own money, banks used to issue their own money, greenback
1:57:07
so people could swap for greenbacks here. Were there silver
1:57:10
coins? Were there gold coins? Were there certificates? All of
1:57:13
the above. Okay. And we still have all those, but
1:57:16
now most people use currency. I hear there might be
1:57:22
a new brand of currency around the corner. Well, it's
1:57:26
the same currency, just different series. And it's going to
1:57:29
look different. Well, it's going to have one big change
1:57:33
on it. They have for the 250th, the president The
1:57:37
President's signature is going to be on it for the
1:57:39
first time, so I think it's fitting. Donald Trump is
1:57:43
President during our 250th anniversary, so it'll be the President's
1:57:47
signature and my signature on it. so much for my
1:57:50
$250 bill idea. I mean, have you seen these? That's
1:57:56
not collectible. Is that collectible? No. I don't think so
1:58:00
either. Although there's going to be this gold $1 coin.
1:58:04
With Trump on it. Well, there's the coin that I
1:58:07
have with Steve Jobs on it. Yeah, that's pretty collectible.
1:58:10
Yeah, I'd say. Boots on the ground, a note. We
1:58:14
finally have one. A producer and knight of the no
1:58:18
agenda roundtable. Gentlemen, I've been a longtime listener of the
1:58:21
show. I've been a knight since 2020. I was listening
1:58:23
to episode 1884, Code Brown, when I heard the challenge
1:58:27
for any producers who are members of Patriot Front to
1:58:30
step forward. Okay, here he is. I'm a member, photographer,
1:58:34
and social media influencer. Patriot Journal on Instagram for Patriot
1:58:40
Front. This is like the marketing guy. Okay. I'm sure
1:58:43
if you look hard enough into my donations, you can
1:58:46
figure out who I am. Well, we have no time
1:58:48
to do that. We're not doing that. We're not doing
1:58:51
that. Just tell us or we don't care. I don't
1:58:53
mind. I don't even want to know. With all that
1:58:55
said, I ask that you keep any and all personal
1:58:57
information private. You ask why we wear the mask. I
1:59:00
do so for my wife and children. Our opposition, Antifa,
1:59:04
Marxists, etc., to run to our employers and claim we
1:59:10
are Nazis. Historically, they are often successful. And then he
1:59:14
says something interesting, because the influencer, after all. Would you
1:59:17
guys be interested in interviewing the leader of Patriot Front,
1:59:20
Thomas Rousseau? I can't make any promises, but I believe
1:59:24
he would be up for it. My Instagram account is
1:59:26
also a wealth of information, from answers to commonly asked
1:59:29
questions to speeches, etc. I'm happy to answer questions as
1:59:32
well, but I do not speak on behalf of the
1:59:34
organization. Only Thomas does. I would say no. We don't
1:59:40
really do interviews. I don't think so. Something might be
1:59:44
done. Hey, you might do it. for a best of
1:59:48
show. We'll call it the Nazi episode. We could do
1:59:51
a couple of Nazis.
2:00:00
Oh, man. Actually, what would be fun would be do
2:00:04
the patriot front guy and do the head of the
2:00:08
Democrat socialists. Oh, yeah, together, like a debate. In the
2:00:12
same room? No, I don't think they would get along.
2:00:14
Host a debate. You should host a debate. You should
2:00:18
debate him. Whatever happened to those? That was a thing
2:00:21
for a little bit there, podcasters debating each other. I
2:00:25
missed those days. Those days were good. Nobody cares about
2:00:28
podcasters. With that, I want to thank you for your
2:00:32
courage, say in the morning to you, the man who
2:00:34
put the C in the cytoshitosis, say hello to my
2:00:38
friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr.
2:00:40
John C! ...in the morning our ships to sea, boots
2:00:50
to the ground. Feet in the air! In the water
2:00:54
and all the games tonight. Hey, in the morning to
2:00:56
you trolls in the troll room. Stop moving around. Let
2:00:59
me catch you. There we go. Peak trollage of 1,339.
2:01:07
It's kind of typical for a Thursday. Good to have
2:01:08
everybody here. Up 100 from last show. They are listening.
2:01:12
Last Thursday. Listening live to our stream because this is
2:01:16
a live-to-tape program. No editing. No going back on multi-tracks
2:01:21
and fixing little stumbles and brr's and err's. No, no.
2:01:25
We are just professionals. Fix it in post. We are
2:01:27
professionals. And we give you the real deal. Thursdays. Okay.
2:01:36
And, uh... That means that when you want to, you
2:01:41
can just listen live to us. You can also, and
2:01:44
I think that's a big part of our success formula,
2:01:46
actually. People like live. There's something about it that gets
2:01:52
like emergency or urgent, emergency pod. Even if they can't
2:01:59
listen live, they know that it has a live feel
2:02:02
to it. Don't you think most podcasts feel dead? Just
2:02:05
dead. Oh, the NPR ones for sure. The people who
2:02:10
host those are dead. But these days, and oh man,
2:02:14
I am so grateful. A lot of podcasts do feel
2:02:16
dead. Yeah, just dead because it's like, yeah, you know,
2:02:20
they don't have the excitement. They're not walking on the
2:02:22
high wire like we are. Yeah, right. Tightrope. Tightrope walking.
2:02:27
I'm on the tightrope. And I'm so happy we never
2:02:29
went to video and did YouTube. And I see this.
2:02:33
So Tina, she used to listen to Megyn Kelly religiously.
2:02:38
Religiously. Now, with video, everybody just, including Megyn Kelly herself,
2:02:45
they just cut segments. So it's like five minutes here,
2:02:49
seven minutes there. And so she's scrolling along on Instagram
2:02:54
or whatever. And they go, oh, yeah, I watched the
2:02:56
Megyn Kelly show. Do you really watch the show? No.
2:02:59
No. No, I just get a clip. I think this
2:03:01
is, well, you identify what I thought about this too.
2:03:05
You identified a problem because I don't watch, Rogan show
2:03:10
once in a while. Yeah. I don't think I've watched
2:03:12
one for about a year because I just see these
2:03:14
little segments and I figured that's the best of the
2:03:16
show. Hey. It's like best of. Something amazing just happened.
2:03:22
Tina just texted me and said, I'm listening. She might
2:03:27
have the explosive diarrhea. Are you not feeling well, babe?
2:03:32
She never listens to the show. She's this amazing. She
2:03:37
says, ha. Hot you. I'm listening now. I always say,
2:03:42
why don't you listen to the show anymore? She says,
2:03:44
because I get you live here. I get all your
2:03:46
conspiracies. I'm sick of it. I think that's what she's
2:03:50
really saying. I'm sick of it already. So anyway, but
2:03:54
she's my canary in the coal mine. So when something
2:03:57
bubbles, because she's watching people working out. She's an Instagram
2:04:03
girl. Reels. Then she gets in the dog algo. though
2:04:09
i have to say you know see the dogs doing
2:04:11
stuff and cooking, man, it's still all with cheese. But
2:04:17
then once in a while, she gets in the podcast,
2:04:19
Algo, and it's literally just these, same with Rogan. I
2:04:22
don't know if, how many, I just don't think a
2:04:24
lot of people watch an entire two or three hour
2:04:27
Rogan anymore. Don't they just get the best of clips
2:04:31
and just watch that? There's millions of these accounts that
2:04:34
post little clips. You know, I got on an interesting
2:04:39
algo stream. On Instagram? Yeah, on Instagram. Chick-fil-A. Uh-huh. Every
2:04:49
other thing was a Chick-fil-A post. People in cow costumes,
2:04:53
people, just one thing after another. It must have been
2:04:56
a hundred, and they're all native ads of some sort.
2:04:59
I don't know how they're doing it, but Chick-fil-A was
2:05:03
just producing tons of these Instagram posts from all over
2:05:06
the place. Damnest thing I've ever seen. Huh. And how
2:05:11
long were you in this algo hole? As far as
2:05:15
I know, I'm still in it. If you want to
2:05:20
be alerted when we go live, you need one of
2:05:22
these modern podcast apps. These have been around, they're mature
2:05:27
now, these apps. They're, you know, five, six years, these
2:05:29
new apps have been around and they are still much
2:05:32
better than the legacy apps. If only for this reason,
2:05:36
that when you subscribe to the podcast, when we go
2:05:40
live, and there's several other, a lot of live podcasts,
2:05:43
certainly in the No Agenda Nation realm, Gitmo Nation, you
2:05:47
get a note, you get boom, your app, goes, hey,
2:05:50
the boys are going live. And a little art, you
2:05:54
know, like, oh, a tap, boom, you're listening. And I
2:05:56
think maybe even more important, because of the pod ping
2:06:00
technology we deployed across hundreds of thousands of podcasts that
2:06:04
use this now. But of course, Apple and Spotify don't
2:06:07
use this. So when we publish the show, within 90
2:06:10
seconds, your app notifies you. So it's no longer refreshing
2:06:14
and waiting, where's my podcast? No, boom, it just happens
2:06:17
right away. As you heard earlier, we are enjoying the
2:06:22
benefits of the new international lifestyle known as value for
2:06:26
value, which is the only way to go. We don't
2:06:29
have to worry about anything. We say, well, I guess
2:06:33
slander would be one, but we don't have to worry
2:06:35
about pissing off advertisers or misreading something or giving the
2:06:40
wrong promo code. None of that stuff. All we have
2:06:44
to do is just do the show, which we do
2:06:48
kind of as a public service, We like continuation. We
2:06:51
like doing the show. And the only way that we
2:06:55
can do that is if you support us. And you
2:06:57
do that by returning whatever value you got from the
2:06:59
show. So there's no set number, no set amount of
2:07:03
times. We will tell you honestly when donations are down.
2:07:08
If we don't say anything, then donations are good. They're
2:07:11
a little bit down today, but it's not horrible. It's
2:07:15
kind of been the same forever, hasn't it? Yeah, it's
2:07:18
been... dull. Dull? Well, really? I mean, you know, it's
2:07:25
been low, generally. Yeah. It's been higher. But it's consistently,
2:07:31
but it's not like... you know, bouncing all over the
2:07:35
place. It's just about this and, you know, here and
2:07:37
there, plus or minus a few donations. It's amazing how
2:07:42
it kind of evens out. with, you know, like just
2:07:47
when the numbers are really bad, then someone will come
2:07:50
in with a big donation. It's really interesting how it
2:07:53
works. I mean, we could write a book about that,
2:07:55
but why would we? There's no money in it. Haven't
2:08:00
we considered that? Didn't someone at some point want us
2:08:02
to write a value for value book? I thought I
2:08:05
got it. It's really more of an essay. It's like
2:08:08
half a book. It's like half a sub stack. Anyway,
2:08:14
you can support us in multiple ways. Time, talent, and
2:08:17
treasure. That is the system. And a lot of people
2:08:22
do things for us. Set up websites, run different things
2:08:26
for us. It's really quite amazing how much people are
2:08:29
willing to help. Boots on the ground helps enormously. And
2:08:34
show art. Artwork is always good because we see that
2:08:37
as promotion. Whenever we post a show, it also shows
2:08:41
up in your podcast app. shows who has done this
2:08:45
before AI we were definitely like one of three shows
2:08:49
that did it consistently had new artwork for every single
2:08:52
show because it was so hard to make and we've
2:08:55
trained people to doing things in a certain way and
2:08:58
you know what works and we know what works And
2:09:02
it's an attention grabber. So when we saw the artwork
2:09:06
by Jeffrey Rhea for episode 1885, we titled that one
2:09:10
Adult Daycare. We went, yeah, that's the one. It was...
2:09:15
I guess that's a Code Brown ED explosion. Yeah, something
2:09:21
like that. There's a bathroom. But it's nice. It was
2:09:24
no agenda. Curry and Dvorak. I think Jeffrey Rhea is
2:09:28
a hybrid artist. I don't think this is all AI.
2:09:31
He's never told us. I'm just thinking. Or has he?
2:09:34
I'm just thinking that he's a hybrid artist. We have
2:09:36
a lot of those hybrid artists. Yeah, in other words,
2:09:39
you do the AI and then you take and drop
2:09:42
it in Photoshop and fix it. Do some stuff. Yeah,
2:09:44
do some stuff. And let's see. I mean, like color
2:09:49
balance. Hello. How much work does that take? I love
2:09:54
when you say, I can fix this by color balancing.
2:09:56
I'm like, I'm not going to wait for that. No,
2:09:58
just choose something from Darren.
2:10:01
Let's see. We actually had some funny art, just funny
2:10:04
for us. No more Darren O'Neill. That was Miss Cho
2:10:11
Ho. Um... Well, some comics for blogger put a lot
2:10:16
of stuff up there, including Darren O'Neill even did a
2:10:19
no more Darren. Stop Darren slop. All stuff we'd never
2:10:24
use, but we got a laugh out of it. Appreciate
2:10:26
that. um yeah his yeah there's a big number of
2:10:31
no more darren yeah we kind of like the the
2:10:36
instructor jumping out of the airplane but it's kind of
2:10:39
gruesome No. Yeah. Yeah. I liked the blue acorn Sam
2:10:45
I.M. with the cat in the hat with the green
2:10:47
brain. And you thought that was too gruesome. I can't
2:10:51
remember. I'm looking for it. Oh, that one. Yeah, I
2:10:54
don't like that at all. I don't like his neck.
2:10:57
I don't like the brain. What's wrong with the brain?
2:11:01
It looked nice. Sick. All right. Jeffrey Ria, thank you
2:11:05
very much for your contribution to the best podcast in
2:11:09
the universe. It is highly appreciated. Now we go to
2:11:12
the treasure portion. These are people who support us, $50
2:11:15
and above. We'd like to thank everybody, not under 50
2:11:17
for reasons of anonymity. And there are a lot of
2:11:20
people who give us very small amounts, you know, $2,
2:11:22
$3, $3.33, $11.11, $12.12. So the list would just be
2:11:30
a little bit too long. But we always like to
2:11:32
highlight, people who are in the fortunate circumstance to be
2:11:35
able to give us an executive or associate executive producer
2:11:39
donation so it's 200 or more not only are we
2:11:42
guaranteed to read your notes which people take advantage of
2:11:45
in interesting ways But we will also give you the
2:11:49
title, showbiz Hollywood title of associate executive producer, $300 or
2:11:55
more, and you get the executive producer credit. And these
2:11:58
can be used in any Hollywood situation. So it's the
2:12:00
real deal, including imdb.com or put it on your LinkedIn
2:12:04
or in your social media profile, on your letterhead. And
2:12:06
if anyone ever questions that, we'll be happy to vouch
2:12:09
for you. So our first executive producer and coming in
2:12:13
straight away with $1,000 plus the fees, which is $30.26,
2:12:18
is Sir Dan the Man. Sir Dan the Man's been
2:12:21
around for a while. He's from Cape Coral, Florida. And
2:12:24
he has a longer note here. Let me see what...
2:12:28
And at first, request for a kidney. He has a
2:12:31
request for a kidney? This is the first? This is
2:12:35
a no agenda first to know what he's about to
2:12:37
read. He needs a kidney? No, his wife does. Well,
2:12:41
let's see what's going on. Dear Adam and John, I'm
2:12:43
writing as a long-time No Agenda listener and supporter to
2:12:46
let you know I'll be making this show donation of
2:12:48
$1,000. I appreciate the work you do and the community
2:12:51
you've built around the show. Normally, I would remain semi-anonymous,
2:12:54
but these are not normal times for my family. I
2:12:57
want to humbly ask you to share this message with
2:12:59
the No Agenda community about my wife, Linda, and her
2:13:01
kidney transplant journey. A few weeks ago with no warning,
2:13:06
we found out that she is in end stage renal
2:13:10
failure. Dr. Dvorak, what does that mean? It'll make sure
2:13:14
kidneys stop working. And you have two kidneys. So both
2:13:19
kidneys have failed, I guess? Yeah. You only need one.
2:13:24
We have started GoFundMe to help with the medical and
2:13:26
related expenses that come with transplant care, recovery, travel, and
2:13:30
ongoing support. Most importantly, Linda is also in need of
2:13:34
a kidney donor. And anyone who will be willing to
2:13:37
get tested can start the process at www.mcdonor. mtilivingdonor.org mtilivingdonor.org
2:13:50
If any fellow producers or listeners feel moved to help,
2:13:53
whether by donating, sharing the fundraiser, or considering living donor
2:13:57
testing, it would mean a great deal to our family.
2:14:00
So I'll put this link in the show notes, in
2:14:03
the credits. Thank you for considering the request, and thank
2:14:06
you for the laughs, the insight, and the community you
2:14:09
continue to create. I'm grateful to be able to support
2:14:11
the show, and I would be deeply grateful any help
2:14:14
spreading the word for Linda. And he wants a mac
2:14:17
and cheese and a jobs karma and all the health
2:14:20
karma we can spare. So I'm going to up the
2:14:22
ante here. If any No Agenda producer donates their kidney
2:14:27
to Linda, I will take you out to dinner personally.
2:14:29
I will come to wherever you are in the country
2:14:32
and I will take you out to dinner. But it's
2:14:35
only if it's your kidney. Now if it's your kid's
2:14:38
kidney, you get two dinners. Guaranteed. Well, we certainly hope
2:14:44
for the best, Sir Dan the Man, for you and
2:14:46
for Linda. You slaves can get used to mac and
2:14:49
cheese, mac and cheese, mac and cheese, macaroni and cheese,
2:14:53
cheddar melted together, mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac
2:14:57
and cheese. Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for
2:15:05
jobs. That is definitely a first. Definitely a first on
2:15:10
the show. Yeah, definitely. Mr. Lips is up. He's at
2:15:12
346.46. He has a note that's just the opposite. It's
2:15:17
short. Thanks for all you guys do. Love you both.
2:15:20
Mr. Lips. Love you mean it, Mr. Lips. Hey, there's
2:15:23
Manuka Gold in Hudson, Florida. 333.33. Manuka Gold, the entire
2:15:29
family, says, keep fighting the good fight. From Manuka Gold,
2:15:32
and thank you for the nice feedback on Sunday. We
2:15:34
just placed an order with Gigawatt Coffee. cross-promotion. We're excited
2:15:40
to try it. We're truly passionate about natural health, and
2:15:43
there is real science for the health benefits of coffee.
2:15:46
Not only is it amazing for brain health, but it
2:15:49
also lowers the risk of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. And on
2:15:53
a personal note, as someone who took care of my
2:15:55
mother full-time for six years while she battled Parkinson's, I'm
2:15:58
a faithful drinker of dark roast black coffee, and that
2:16:02
seems to be gigawatt coffee's specialty. I can't wait to
2:16:05
report back. And don't forget, for those of you who
2:16:08
want to, You can stop by and visit us at
2:16:10
ManukaGold.com. Use code FREEDOM for the whole month of July
2:16:14
for an extra 20% off. This one is from Kelly
2:16:18
and the entire Manuka Gold family. Thank you, Manuka Gold.
2:16:22
It's interesting. Gigawatt also sent Jace a birthday gift of
2:16:25
coffee. Oh, this is so nice. Small family business. We
2:16:30
have another interesting note here. This is Rosalind K. Price
2:16:34
in Birmingham, West Midlands, UK. $3.33. you Thank you. I'm
2:16:41
a choreographer in the UK who got canceled in 2021.
2:16:45
And since then, I've set up a support organization. And
2:16:49
we should link to it. www.freedominthearts.com. Freedominthearts.com. All one word.
2:16:58
Your show gives me and my family strength and hope.
2:17:03
So I looked into this. Yeah. This is a very
2:17:07
famous person. In fact, I sent you a show notes
2:17:13
memo, which has a link to her interview on GB1
2:17:18
out of the UK. Yeah. On YouTube. I haven't seen
2:17:22
it yet. I haven't seen it. It's fascinating. She was
2:17:26
a famous choreographer in the UK that did all these
2:17:30
very elaborate productions. the Rosie Kay dance troupe. Really? And
2:17:39
she just mentioned at a house dinner party to some
2:17:44
new group of dancers, she just casually said, well, I
2:17:48
don't know if trans does impinge on, it seems to
2:17:52
be a trans thing. Yeah. Impinges a bit on women's
2:17:56
rights. And she got canceled because there's a whole structure
2:18:00
set up to get her fired from her, her own
2:18:04
company. And the whole thing is very interesting. She describes
2:18:09
some of it or some of the mechanisms to fight
2:18:11
against it on this website. Yeah, they got toolkits and
2:18:14
all kinds of stuff here. But the story in the
2:18:19
video is more interesting than her website. So we're here,
2:18:23
myself, Rosie Kay, and this is Denise Farmy in the
2:18:26
red over here, to launch the new Boycott Crisis and
2:18:30
the Art Beyond Boycott toolkit. You know what? So for
2:18:35
her, I think she should join the new international lifestyle
2:18:41
of value for value. This is the kind of person
2:18:44
who could do that. Maybe. Yeah. We're happy that we
2:18:48
give you and your family strength and hope. That's so
2:18:51
nice. Thank you, Rosalind K. Price. That's nice to know.
2:18:56
We're doing good, John. Yeah, we're doing good. That's us.
2:19:00
We're doing good for people. I like that. Peter Muir
2:19:03
is in Houston, Texas. $327. Thank you, Peter. I've been
2:19:06
listening to you guys for about 16 years at least.
2:19:09
And one of those weirdos, and was one of those
2:19:13
weirdos that went back to the beginning when it was
2:19:15
bare bones. I guess I'm paying it backwards now. ITM
2:19:19
times 34. ITM times 34. X34. I'm not sure what
2:19:26
X34 is. I don't know what that means. Thank you.
2:19:30
Sir Dave D-A-H-A-P. DAHAP. It's all caps. DAHAP? In Gladstone,
2:19:37
Missouri. It must mean something. Yeah. Uh, $257.94. This is
2:19:46
the first associate executive producer. Happy birthday to the BC
2:19:50
country ITU heading to Tanzania. Tanzania. Tanzania. Tanzania. I knew
2:19:59
that.
2:20:00
Didn't sound right. Tanzania. Tanzania? What? Where's Tanzania? I don't
2:20:06
know, man. Tanzania. Heading to Tanzania for a few weeks
2:20:13
to help an NGO that works with victims of human
2:20:17
trafficking. Wow. Traveling karma, please. We'll keep an eye out
2:20:21
for more Africa news. It's a crowd pleaser. Sir Dave
2:20:26
Dahab. You've got karma. Over to Indianapolis, Indiana, $2.57 and
2:20:35
94 cents. I'm pretty sure that's $2.50, a freedom donation,
2:20:39
plus some fees, Sir Digi. And he says, this is
2:20:41
from Sir Digi. And we thank you very much, Sir
2:20:44
Digi. And then we go to Jeremy Brogan in Amherst,
2:20:49
Ohio. $250.15. Now, I realize he put the fees in,
2:20:54
too, because he sent in a check. That's $0.15. $0.15
2:20:59
process. Nice. Compared to $7.94. Right, right. Hello, people. Mm-hmm.
2:21:06
ITM, gents, a slightly late and matching quarter millennium donation
2:21:12
plus fees. Yeah, plus fees. Can I ask you a
2:21:15
question about? fees? 15. Let me ask you a question.
2:21:19
Yeah. So if someone sends us $250 plus fees, so
2:21:24
that's $257.94, don't we get docked over the $257.94 for
2:21:30
fees? I'm not sure how they do the calculation. Okay.
2:21:36
All right. But that money is what we get. All
2:21:39
right. We'll carry on. Thank you, John, for making me
2:21:45
cry while shaving when reading my son Connor's note for
2:21:50
my birthday. Father's Day slash Father's Day. Now he wants,
2:21:55
oh, okay, this is for you, sorry. He wants suffering
2:21:59
succotash with a we're all going to die. And then
2:22:04
he says five to eight more years. Jeremy Brogan, Amherst,
2:22:10
Ohio. on with your five to seven more years. Suffering
2:22:15
succotash. I'm Scott. Simon. Nailed it. Hey, there's Sir Cal
2:22:28
from Lavender Blossoms in Northville, Michigan with 227.72. I've never
2:22:32
met him for a while. I'd love to hear from
2:22:34
our boy, Cal. Thanks for all you do. Keep it
2:22:36
up. John, tip of the day. Drink motherwort tea for
2:22:41
calming and healing the heart. Love yous, Sir Cal of
2:22:45
Lavender Blossoms. I'm pretty sure LavenderBlossoms.org is still up and
2:22:51
still operating, aren't they? We haven't looked at them in
2:22:53
a while. Oh, yeah, for sure. Let me see. Lavender
2:22:56
Blossoms. Because he grows that lavender himself. Lavender, is it
2:23:04
Lavander? Lavender. Hmm, I don't know. It doesn't look like
2:23:09
it's up. I might not be doing it right. Thank
2:23:12
you very much, Sir Kyle. We appreciate you. Now we
2:23:15
have, you have to pronounce his surname. I would pronounce
2:23:20
it Miles Vredenburg, Miles. But you apparently, it's a Dutch
2:23:26
pronunciation, it would be different. Yeah, Vredenburg. What about his
2:23:31
first name? Miles? Miles? Miles Fredenberg. And that translates to
2:23:39
Freedom Mountain. Freedom Mountain. Miles Freedom Mountain in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
2:23:46
Or it could be Berg. Just Freedom Berg is probably
2:23:48
more accurate. 20115 As an American, I'm curious to hear
2:23:54
the correct Dutz pronunciation. Oh, he doesn't even know. That's
2:23:57
good. That's a good one. That's good. First and foremost,
2:24:04
please de-douche me. You've been de-douched. I could also use
2:24:09
some jobs. I'm a dude named Ben looking for an
2:24:11
exit strategy. Thanks for all you do. I appreciate you
2:24:15
folks. Miles Fredenberg from Commie, Cambridge. Massive two shits. jobs,
2:24:23
jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got karma.
2:24:52
and executives position their experience so employers see their value.
2:24:56
That's Image Makers Inc. with a K and Linda Liu,
2:25:00
Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes, best Linda.
2:25:04
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've
2:25:12
got karma. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. You're going all
2:25:21
RoboCop again. I'll do this one. Something's weird with your
2:25:25
connection all of a sudden. Yeah, you're no good. I
2:25:32
think you said change networks. I would say that's a
2:25:34
good idea. And I will read the donation note from
2:25:37
unblockmevpn.com. In the meantime, from Honolulu, Hawaii, $200. ITM, protect
2:25:45
your privacy and freedom with Unblock Me VPN on the
2:25:48
Apple and Play stores. Others on our website at unblockmevpn.com.
2:25:54
Two free servers, 22 paid, unthrottled, cancel anytime, trained on
2:25:59
the great firewall to make it the best VPN out
2:26:02
there. Give thanks. Are you back? Keep going. Did you
2:26:10
switch? Because you're good now. No, I didn't switch yet.
2:26:13
But I have a feeling it's not just you. I
2:26:16
think it's a routing issue because every single time it
2:26:18
happens... My YouTube TV, the quad screen goes into a
2:26:23
circle. That would seem like it's not me. Yeah, well,
2:26:27
it's the connection between me and California because no one
2:26:30
has had any... Has any had any issues in the
2:26:34
stream is still good. The chat rooms up, so I
2:26:36
don't know. Scam likely go away, scammer. Our final associate
2:26:43
executive producer is Sean. at InvestorPortalPro.com. What is this? Houston,
2:26:50
Texas, $200. A long-time listener, first-time caller, no need to
2:26:55
de-douche. Well, okay. Listen up if you've got a business
2:26:58
and have clients or investors. Oh, we need some investors.
2:27:04
If you're already sharing documents, tracking distributions and accounting or
2:27:07
managing communications, you know how important it is to keep
2:27:11
everything secure, organized and easy to use. If you've been
2:27:15
looking for a better way to handle fundraising, waterfall or
2:27:18
capital calls and other automation and payments, then yes, yes,
2:27:23
Investor Portal Pro fits right in. This is new. Investor
2:27:29
Portal Pro is 100% employee-owned, built for clean professional investor
2:27:34
and shareholder presentation and trusted to just work. This is
2:27:38
quite the ad here. Visit InvestorPortalPro.com or text 212, well,
2:27:44
that's an old school New York number, 212-658-0862 and use
2:27:49
the code ITM for 20% off. That's InvestorPortalPro.com or 212-658-0862.
2:27:57
Love some jobs, Karma. And do you have anything with
2:28:01
Art Bell? I don't think we have anything from Art
2:28:03
Bell. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.
2:28:11
You've got karma. And that concludes our Executive and Associate
2:28:15
Executive Producers for episode 1,886. We appreciate what all of
2:28:21
you have done for us today. We'll thank everybody right
2:28:24
after we tell you once again that these credits are
2:28:27
real and Hollywood style. Our formula is this. We hit
2:28:32
people in the mouth. for our Value for Value treasure
2:28:50
supporters, $50 and above. Stefan Trockels in Soos, Deutschland, $110.11.
2:28:56
We see your pal in Rome. And he said he
2:28:58
was happy to have met Joe from Michigan today in
2:29:00
his local restaurant. It was founded in 1638. Wow, that's
2:29:06
an old restaurant. There is the Archduke of Luna, Love
2:29:10
of America and Boobs for Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North
2:29:13
Carolina with his every single show boob donation, $80.08. God
2:29:17
bless America and boobs, he says. Juraj Kojak in Prague
2:29:22
checks in with a boob donation. Thank you. Hello, Prague.
2:29:25
James Edmondson, South Plainfield, New Jersey, double nickels on the
2:29:28
dime. Lane Lamoureux in Gilbert, Arizona, $55. And says it's
2:29:33
Lane, your buddy in Baghdad, far from the green zone,
2:29:36
22 kilometers, in fact. Apart from a few times ordinance
2:29:39
has flown over campus walls, we're in a green bubble.
2:29:42
Summer break is here. The pools are open. Luke Munnell
2:29:46
in Los Angeles, California, $52.72, and we hit the 50s.
2:29:50
Whoa! That was fast. Uh, Samitra Saravana in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
2:29:58
50 bucks, thank you. Sir Kevin Dills.
2:30:00
We'll see you next time. Podcasts in the universe. It
2:30:32
really means a lot and it keeps the show going.
2:30:34
So thank you. And if you'd like to support us,
2:30:36
go to noagendadonations.com. Anytime you feel like it, anytime you
2:30:40
feel like you got some value out of this podcast,
2:30:42
send it back to us. You can even set up
2:30:44
a recurring donation, any amount, any frequency, noagendadonations.com. And we
2:30:55
have only two birthdays today. We have end of show
2:30:59
mixer Sir David Kechta, who wishes Helena Kechta a very
2:31:03
happy birthday. She turned 16 yesterday. Happy birthday, Helena. And
2:31:09
Sir Dave wishes country ITU a happy birthday. We say
2:31:12
the same. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best
2:31:14
podcast in the universe. and he sent a note, 'cause
2:31:43
it's under the normal amounts that we read notes. Tribune.
2:32:01
Much better value for value. With the No Agenda show,
2:32:03
I wish to change my moniker to Baronet Sir Gary
2:32:06
who plays taps. I've been state director for buglesacrossamerica.org for
2:32:12
many years. I've led my state's 173 volunteers providing live
2:32:17
taps free of charge for any veterans' honor services. Wow,
2:32:21
that's very cool. If you'd mention my organization, remind families
2:32:24
of vets when they are arranging honors to ask if
2:32:27
they have a live bugler, BAA's website is an easy
2:32:30
portal to make sure those 24 notes have a heartbeat
2:32:34
behind them. It's always free of charge and always deserved.
2:32:37
Hoping your search for an exit strategy continues to be
2:32:40
a failure in the morning. And yes, with that, Sir
2:32:43
Gary, you become a baronet Sir Gary who plays taps.
2:32:47
And we thank you for your continued support of the
2:32:51
show. Very nice. Hey, it's time for the meetups. Meetup
2:33:02
reports. When it rains, it pours, so to speak. Here
2:33:05
is the Keller, Texas meetup report. Hello, NOAGENDA Nation. This
2:33:10
is Yeoman Zag here at What's on Tap in Keller,
2:33:13
Texas. I'm having a beer by myself, but as a
2:33:17
friend of mine says, that's okay. The journey to a
2:33:20
well-attended meetup is a beer by yourself. In the morning.
2:33:24
Aww, in the morning. I'm sorry no one showed up.
2:33:27
We sent some pictures, though. It was kind of cool.
2:33:29
Here's the Scottsdale, Arizona meetup report. This is Lynn, the
2:33:33
hostess with the mostess at the Scottsdale No Agenda Media
2:33:36
Deconstruction Meetup. And it has been amazing. Hi, this is
2:33:42
Dame Stephanie at the Scottsdale Meetup enjoying some tacos and
2:33:45
some great company. Quick shout out to the Blonde Squad
2:33:49
plus Trish. Hey, this is Sir Don Baron of Chandler
2:33:53
enjoying some tacos and some cold beers. Love is lit.
2:33:58
Hey, this is Bruce and here at the Scottsdale meetup.
2:34:01
First time, our new listener and here enjoying company of
2:34:06
like-minded individuals. Hey, this is Gina from Phoenix at the
2:34:11
Scottsdale meetup. I want to give a shout out to
2:34:13
my brother Dale in Cannon Beach for hitting me in
2:34:15
the mouth about three years ago. ITM John and Adam.
2:34:20
Hey, I'm Mike. I'm a douchebag. And no agenda people
2:34:24
are cool. Okay, Regina, I don't listen to the show,
2:34:28
but maybe I will. In the morning, John and Adam.
2:34:32
This is Rick from Mesa. We're here at Loco Patron.
2:34:36
Our host, Lindsay, is awesome. And I love the show.
2:34:42
Hey John and Adam, this is your conscience speaking. I
2:34:46
know what you did. Just kidding. I don't know what
2:34:49
you did and I don't care. This is Kenny. Bye
2:34:53
now. Hey, this is Scott Sanders in North Scottsdale. We
2:34:56
dodged the monsoons and the dirt, wind, so we're all
2:35:00
clean and we enjoy our meetup. I'm not as weird
2:35:06
as my husband. I don't listen to the podcast. I
2:35:08
apologize, but I'm sure it's amazing. I love the No
2:35:13
Agenda crew. They are awesome. They've been amazing guests. The
2:35:17
No Agenda meetup people are some of the most interesting
2:35:20
and fun people ever in my life. Great shout out
2:35:22
to Lindsay who set up the whole thing, the whole
2:35:24
mastermind behind the project. Everyone here seems to lead great
2:35:27
lives and seem like amazing people. And I hope to
2:35:29
see them again soon. Well, there you go. Long, but
2:35:33
a lot of people at the Scottsdale, Arizona meetup. And
2:35:35
you hear it there. The people are fun. There's amazing
2:35:39
people. You will meet so many cool people at a
2:35:42
No Agenda meetup. People you just might have never, ever
2:35:45
encountered anywhere else. but because of the show, because of
2:35:49
the nature of Knowage and the Nation and Gitmo Nation,
2:35:52
you'll get together, you're going to enjoy it. And sometimes
2:35:55
people even get married. Well, in the beautiful evening, it's
2:36:03
Sir Scott the Jew. It's another meet-ups wedding. came out
2:36:16
for us. Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, Stella's on the Hill hosts
2:36:20
a great wedding. Beautiful couple, Holly and Jeff, in the
2:36:24
morning. Here at the impromptu meetup at the wedding overlooking
2:36:28
beautiful Coeur d'Alene Lake. And I want to say congratulations
2:36:31
to the happy new No Agenda couple. And as a
2:36:34
reminder to Jeff and Holly, the couple that No Agenda's
2:36:37
together stays together in the morning. This is a dude
2:36:41
named Jeff, and I just have to say I met
2:36:44
my smoking hot wife at a no agenda meetup. So
2:36:48
get out there, find the connection that is your protection.
2:36:52
Come on, you dorks, get out of the basement. Good
2:36:54
things happen. Here in beautiful sunny Coeur d'Alene. Celebrating Jeff
2:36:59
and Holly's wedding in the morning. This is Holly the
2:37:02
bride. Thank you, No Agenda Meetups. That's how I met
2:37:04
my keeper. It doesn't get more No Agenda than that.
2:37:11
Oh, isn't that wonderful? We've had several weddings happen here
2:37:18
on the show. We've had proposals on the show, and
2:37:21
it's nice to hear that we made another love connection
2:37:24
at a No Agenda meetup. There you go. Now, is
2:37:26
that an endorsement or what? I don't need to say
2:37:29
anything else other than we have a meetup taking place
2:37:32
today in Charlotte, North Carolina, Edge Tavern. It's Charlotte's Thirsty
2:37:36
Thursday Monthly. It'll be on at 7 o'clock tonight. On
2:37:39
Saturday, the meetup down at the sea at Warehouse No.
2:37:42
9, No. 9, No. 9. nine that is in san
2:37:45
pedro california and guess what warehouse number nine 333 pacific
2:37:50
time Coming up this month, what's left of it, on
2:37:54
the 25th of July, three, Spicewood, Texas, Anaheim, California, and
2:37:58
Fort Wayne, Indiana. On the 26th, Squim, Washington. Will Mimi
2:38:02
be attending? Do we know? No, I don't know. Okay.
2:38:06
Just say maybe. Just say maybe. Maybe. Oh, yeah, maybe.
2:38:10
Maybe. Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, their next meetup, July 30th. Who
2:38:14
will be the next bride? And also on the 30th,
2:38:17
Alpharetta, Georgia. These are the No Agenda meetups. What a
2:38:19
great place to go hang out with people. It's completely
2:38:22
free of charge to make them, set them up, to
2:38:24
go to attend them. It's very easy to do. Go
2:38:28
to noagendameetups.com, and you will find out very quickly how
2:38:32
to put it all together. You can list it there,
2:38:35
and if you can't find one near you, why don't
2:38:37
you just start one yourself? It's super easy, and they
2:38:40
are always guaranteed a party. ♪ Mix and date ♪
2:38:51
Drink it all I'm thinking, I was just looking at
2:39:03
all my systems here. When you started to RoboCop. YouTube
2:39:08
TV went down. My anthropic Claude codes all disconnected. I
2:39:15
think there might have been a minor earthquake somewhere. in
2:39:18
in california something happened in california i think the whole
2:39:22
internet burped over there Possible. Yeah. Troll Room, check it
2:39:27
out. So let me know if something happened. Because it
2:39:29
was the weirdest thing. Go to the USGS earthquake site.
2:39:33
They have all of them up today. Yeah, see if
2:39:35
something's going on. Or if it was just some internet
2:39:38
glitch. You know how that works. We have John's tip
2:39:41
of the day coming up in just a few, along
2:39:43
with our end-of-show mixes. But we always like to end
2:39:46
the show with the humans versus the machine. It's the
2:39:49
end-of-show ISOs, isolated clips. I bring people, John brings machines.
2:39:55
I'm going to start mine because I don't think I
2:39:56
will win. Here's my first. Oh, that was hilarious.
2:40:01
Actually, that's not too bad. I kind of like that
2:40:03
one. How about this one? Thank you very much. And
2:40:09
always from the well. Incredible job. Thank you so much.
2:40:14
I think they're kind of flat. Yeah, I don't know
2:40:17
who they're thanking. Yeah, us. Us. I have two celebrities
2:40:22
here, politicians. Amazing. Yeah, I got Kamala Harris. John and
2:40:27
Adam are John and Adam, and they are both good
2:40:31
podcasters as long as they podcast. It's very long. She's
2:40:38
long-winded. What can I say? Yeah, long-winded. Yeah. Let's try
2:40:41
Obama. Day! Don't know if you can find a better
2:40:45
podcast than No Agenda. Yeah, okay. A definite winner. Very
2:40:50
good. Hey, it's time for John's tip of the day.
2:40:52
Great advice for you and me. Just the tip with
2:40:57
JCB. Adam. product. No, I only do those once a
2:41:05
month. Oh, okay. Ah, good. No, this is a cool
2:41:10
product. This is a summer product for the people in
2:41:12
the Northern Hemisphere. These things are fantastic. And this is
2:41:17
a pretty good one. And this comes in various lengths.
2:41:21
Depending on your patio. Uh-huh. This is a, and I'll
2:41:25
spell it, Mel, M-E-L-L-B-R-E-E, Melbrae Mister. For outside patio. They're
2:41:36
$19 for a 30-footer. They're pre-assembled misting cooling systems with
2:41:41
eight brass nozzles. Oh, I love these things. These are
2:41:44
great. And Texas has them all over the place. Yeah,
2:41:48
of course. Texas, of all places, would love these things
2:41:52
because they're good for the patio, backyard, garden, greenhouse, chicken
2:41:59
coop, doghouse. And what it does, and I've run, You
2:42:03
set it up and it puts out this extremely fine
2:42:07
mist of water and it creates evaporative cooling in the
2:42:13
vicinity of the mist. Yeah. So it's nice. It feels
2:42:17
great. Now, do you just hook it up to the
2:42:19
outside tap? Is that what you do? Yep. You hook
2:42:21
it up to the outside tap and just string it
2:42:24
all over you wherever you want to put it and
2:42:26
then turn it on. Turn it on, dead man. And
2:42:30
what does this product cost? 19 bucks. Wow. What is
2:42:34
it called? That's for the 30-footer. Okay. It goes up
2:42:38
in price if you want like 60 foot. And the
2:42:40
brand once again? Melbrae, M-E-L-L-B-R-E-E. I'm telling you, if you
2:42:47
want to stay cool during the summer months, John's Tip
2:42:49
of the Day is the place for you. Free advice
2:42:53
for you and me, just the tip with JCB. sometimes
2:42:59
add Created by Dana Burnetti. Of course, you can find
2:43:02
all of John's tips at tipoftheday.net and noagendafun.com. And we
2:43:07
come to the end of our broadcast day. As you
2:43:10
know, we do it twice a week on Thursdays. End
2:43:12
of show mixes coming up. We've got Bonald Crabtree, Just
2:43:17
Baker. Let's see, we've got Sir Johnny B. And I
2:43:23
put Oisteen Bergers in abeyance. I'm sure we'll get to
2:43:29
it. It's always his own compositions. And coming up next
2:43:35
on the NO Agenda stream, or if you're still listening
2:43:37
in your modern podcast app, we have the Millennial Media
2:43:41
Offensive, very popular podcast. They'll be coming up next. And
2:43:46
we will return with you on Sunday. Of course, that
2:43:50
all depends on whether there's an earthquake in San Francisco
2:43:54
or not. If you guys keep your internet connection up.
2:43:58
I haven't heard anything, so I guess it was just
2:44:01
a temporary blip or glitch. So coming to you from
2:44:05
the... Say what? What'd you say? I didn't say anything.
2:44:09
I thought you said something. Coming to you from the
2:44:11
heart of the Texas Hill Country, where we are still
2:44:13
suffering from the rain-stripped backscatter. In the morning, everybody, I'm
2:44:18
Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where people are
2:44:21
hearing voices, I'm John C. Dvorak. We'll be back on
2:44:23
Sunday. Remember us at noagendthedonations.com. Until then, adios, mofos, a-hooey-hooey,
2:44:28
and such. Yeah Lights gone. Bye. ♪ ♪ Nope. Is
2:45:08
it CIA mask? Nope. Rumors flying like confetti in a
2:45:11
storm, but he's just in a nursing home. In Super
2:45:14
HD 4 Solid. Say the old turtle's still kicking. Tucked
2:45:41
away where the cameras don't reach. Came back with a
2:45:45
face that looks like it filed for an extension on
2:45:48
the years. Some whisper, it's a stand-in, wearing someone else's
2:45:54
skin. We won't solve the riddle here. Details keep stacking
2:46:01
in. Turtle crawled out of whatever hole they had him
2:46:04
in, looking brand new, like time decided to run backwards
2:46:07
just for him and nobody else in the room. Holding
2:46:09
up today's paper like it's non-clad proof, he's still drawing
2:46:11
breath, while half the internet's convinced they rolled out a
2:46:13
new one, no matter who knows how to do them.
2:46:15
As some claim they slapped the flesh-colored forgery straight from
2:46:17
the three-letter crowd. The kind that sweats and blinks on
2:46:20
command when the lights get too loud. Others say they
2:46:22
just swapped the frame and kept the same voice on
2:46:24
the line. Either way, the picture's dropped and now the
2:46:26
timeline doesn't quite align. The turtle shell, whatever shell they
2:46:44
had to me. For the whole new time The show
2:46:48
won't close. That's never how this goes, but the glow
2:46:51
up is glowing, and the story keeps pulling at the
2:46:53
loose ends, it shows. Triple Mitch. Or mask me Or
2:47:02
a model Mitch Worth a second glance Value for value.
2:47:09
Outro Music you you you for a crime. mofo devorek.org
2:48:45
slash n a day don't know if you can find
2:48:49
a better podcast than no agenda