Cover for No Agenda Show 1886: Cytoshitosis
July 16th • 2h 48m

1886: Cytoshitosis

Transcript

The transcripts of No Agenda are automatically generated and therefore, not fully accurate. Discretion is advised.

Click the text to start playing from that position in the show. Click the timestamp to copy a direct link to that position to your clipboard in order to propagate the formula.

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
0:00 0:00