No Agenda - 1613 - "Fossil Fools"
Episode Date: December 3, 2023No Agenda Episode 1613 - "Fossil Fools" "Fossil Fools" Executive Producers: Sir Onymouos of Dogpatch and Lower Slobbovia Dame Pluma: Protector of the Feathered Whales Sir Dirt Sir Protecter of the ...Driftless Area Carl Post Ulrich Hörkens Shaun Boyce René Bernhardsgrütter Associate Executive Producers: Millennial Fred Ryan DiAsio Steven Rivas Sir Edward of Tatten Hall, Baron of Flyover Country Dame Beth Joe Deffen Blank D. W. Baronet John of the St Clair Lowlands Linda Lupatkin Become a member of the 1614 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Sir Gary of Casco Point on Lake Minnetonka > Baronet Sir Not Sure > Sir Not Sure Baron, Keeper of the Tri-Lakes Sir Julian > Sir Julian, Baron of the Santa Cruz Mountains Sir FOD Father, Baronet > Sir Edward of Tatten Hall, Baron of Flyover Country Knights & Dames Pluma> PLUMA: DAME OF THE FEATHERED WHALES Wirt Fuller> Sir Dirt John Brownlee > Sir Protecter of the Driftless Area John Cooper > Baronet John of the St Clair Lowlands PhD Graduates: Wirt Fuller Art By: Sir Dirty Jersey Whore End of Show Mixes: Neal Jones - Jesse Coy Nelson Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1613.noagendanotes.com Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Full Summaries in PDF No Agenda Lite in opus format Last Modified 12/03/2023 16:53:52This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 12/03/2023 16:53:52 by Freedom Controller
Transcript
Discussion (0)
They are freaked out.
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, December 3rd, 2023.
This is your award-winning Gibbon Nation Media Assassination episode 1613.
This is no agenda.
Watching the real WEF and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country
here in FEMA Region No. 6.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where everybody's saying the same thing.
Go Niners.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
In the morning.
Nobody's saying that.
Oh, yeah.
Nobody cares about football.
That's all they say.
Nobody's watching football anymore.
No.
So here's the question for you oh and ask adam or just a
regular old no i just i'm just asking a random question all right so i'm listening to all these
different shows and i heard this on the rising and i heard on different networks and it goes
on and on about the death of sandra day o'connor and henry kissinger the two of them and she's all
she's the best and hen Henry Kissinger was a famous.
He's the worst.
Famous guy, but he's the worst.
He killed millions and he's a war criminal.
Yes.
When was this?
When did he kill millions?
When did he kill anybody?
Well, he's.
Why is he a war criminal?
What did he do?
What did he specifically do?
Do you know?
Because I tried looking it up.
Yes, I do.
I do.
He died while being Jewish at the wrong moment.
This is the wrong moment.
This is what happened.
Oh, that could be it.
Elon's kind of getting away with it.
He's making problems for everybody.
It's like we need another Jew to blame.
There's no better Jew to blame than the dead jew who can't
defend himself come on it's obvious anything to keep the genocide joe stuff out of the way
anything and they're going after everybody this was uh this was hilarious this is hillary clinton
i even know where she's walking and there's's protesters. Yep, there they are, the Palestinian flags.
You're supporting genocide!
You're supporting genocide!
Can't you see?
Can't you see?
You're supporting genocide!
You're supporting genocide!
Hillary, Hillary, you can't hide!
Hillary, Hillary, you can't hide! Hillary, Hillary, you can't hide!
You're supporting genocide!
You're supporting genocide!
Hillary, Hillary, you can't hide.
You're supporting genocide!
What did Hillary do?
Existed. Just existed. Existed.
She's not even Jewish, that I know of.
No, but she's...
Listen, this is so off the hook. This is exactly the
counterbalance we needed in the world to have, you know, the people who have been abused by the
elites, namely children, for the longest time to turn on them and they don't know what to do.
And now, oh, this is so beautiful. Turkish radio and television, you know, they get on the TikTok and they got these, you know, cute young women who are, you know, even on the Turkish radio television homepage, these videos are filmed in portrait mode because they're intended for TikTok.
So they don't even go on television, but they try and get them to go viral.
And this is the kind of, you thought Elon Musk had a problem?
No, no, no, no, no.
How are famous global brands involved in Israel's war on Palestine's Gaza?
These brands directly helps the Israeli economy.
An Israel economy is the fuel that feeds its military and allows it to bomb Gaza and carry out a genocide against the Palestinian people.
So the idea is these brands, because they do business in or with Israel,
they are fueling the genocide.
The world's leading brands reach nearly every household around the globe.
It is difficult to find a home in which at least one of these brands is not present.
In 2022 alone, these three companies earn more than 200 billion dollars
procter and gamble has been part of the israel market since 2001 procter and gamble is almost
yeah oh they've been part of the procter and gamble is a what we call fmcg fast moving consumer
goods company yeah paper towels soap oh no they're fueling they're fueling the genocide
now they have gained attention with a significant multi-million dollar investments in israeli
medical companies and research centers this brand is so popular in israel that it is found in 98
percent of israeli households famous luxury brand lou Vuitton. They invested millions of dollars
in Israeli diamond production companies,
which are the cornerstone
of the Israeli economy.
I didn't know that diamond production
was the cornerstone
of the Israeli economy.
Did you know that?
Well, I think we did a thing
in the West recently.
I thought it was Russia.
Russia.
Yeah, Russia.
Anyway, they are linked
to the sale of Israeli Ahava products
that are produced in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The owner of Louis Vuitton is known for having made significant investments
in Israeli security companies amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars.
Louis Vuitton, Louis, you're a problem.
Next up is HP.
According to the BDS movement,
in addition to supplying technology to the Israeli army and police.
HP.
Microsoft is next.
I'm telling you.
Anything.
If you do business with Israel, you're going to be boycotted.
Or at least you're going to be called out.
I'm going to give a slightly different angle on this.
Okay.
Because there's something suspicious about the way this is being done.
And the end result is what I saw today.
I was watching a little previews of some of the football,
and they cut to a Bud Light commercial.
And the Bud Light commercial is a bar full of dudes with Peyton Manning,
the old-time spokesperson for ex-football players, Emmitt Smith, and some other hot shots, they have to pay these guys a fortune.
He goes to the bar, orders Bud Light, and he says, I'll tell you what, let's have Bud Light for the whole bar.
So they buy the bar, and Peyton manages throwing passes with the cans, which cans you can do with.
And so he's throwing, and it's Bud Light.
They had to pay this guy a boatload of money to do this.
And this, all of this is going to result in heavy advertising to make up for the bad press.
This seems almost like it's orchestrated by the media itself to extract more money from these poor companies in advertising.
Interesting.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's, what's the, the UFC, the Dana White's outfit.
Yeah.
They also have a huge, like, $100 million deal or something with Bud Light.
Yeah, it's costing nothing but money to get back on track,
and that's going to be the same proctor
going after a proctor and gamble i mean who's really behind this this means they're going to
have to advertise more than before that's a good point and boom you're gonna but it's a bonanza
yeah okay i'll take your point i mean there's they're certainly jumping on it but hillary
clinton can't advertise something
if your brand has been besmirched yeah you gotta what can you do about you can go to the editors
and say hey you guys have hurt our feelings you know we didn't do anything wrong we just do the
stories the way they go here why don't you talk to this guy head of the advertising department
this guy has brown shoes talk to him for a moment he take care of you. I take that as a good point.
I take that as a fair point.
Fair point.
Well, I would like to start today because it dawned on me after hearing Prince Charles speak at COP28.
And I know you got a couple of clips as well.
I'm going to lead you into them.
That all this, oh, the World Economic Forum,
oh, they're going to do the Great Reset.
That is bull crap.
These guys,
they're getting,
I don't know if they'll do it with COP28
or if it's going to be COP29,
but they are coming for you.
They are coming for your money.
They're coming with a global carbon tax.
They're changing the quote-unquote global financial system.
They're pricing carbon.
They're all in.
They're getting closer.
And it kind of hit me when I heard,
this is something you won't hear at the World Economic Forum.
Klaus Schwab, give me a break.
No, when you address this audience like this.
Your Highness, Secretary General,
Your Majesties,
Your Royal Highnesses,
Presidents, Prime Ministers,
Ministers, ladies and gentlemen.
Rattle your jewels, please.
I would like to extend...
Wow, that's a great clip.
I mean, these are
the people who make stuff happen.
They make things
happen. Not those...
I'm going to call you Your Royal Highness from now on.
Yes, Your Excellency.
Ministers, ladies and gentlemen,
I would like to extend my
heartfelt gratitude to
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed
al-Nakhiyan.
This is not, you know, the Saudis weren't royal until the 70s.
You know, they were Bedouin sheep farmers.
And now, oh, Your Highness, Your Royalty, thank you so much.
For his warm invitation to speak to you at the opening of COP28.
you with the opening of COP 28.
Eight years ago, I was
most touched to be asked
to speak at the opening of COP 21
in Paris. I was so touched.
Which, of course, culminated
in the Paris Agreement.
A landmark moment
of hope and optimism
when nations put differences
to one side for the common good.
I pray with all my heart that COP28 will be another critical turning point
towards genuine transformational action at a time when already,
as scientists have been warning for so long,
we are seeing alarming tipping points being reached.
More than tipping points, plural.
Yes, alarming.
Now, by the way, isn't, he says eight years ago,
but isn't it seven years ago when it's COP21?
You have COP21, then 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, seven years ago.
It's not eight years ago.
Well, that's Miranoka.
Who cares? Who cares? I do.
Let's get to the money. Because if they can't do the
math of just going back
8 years or 7 years, how can they
tell us what's going to happen with the climate
100 years from now? Well, he does this.
You're right. You're correct.
4 trillion, 5 trillion.
A small difference. Public finance
alone will never be sufficient.
No!
But with the private sector firmly at the table...
Soak the companies and the public.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
This is coming.
This is coming.
Firmly at the table.
It hasn't come yet.
Huh?
What?
I say, yeah, it might be coming, but it hasn't come yet.
We can still fight it.
And a better, fairer international financial system combined with the innovative use of risk reduction.
Tools like first loss risk guarantees.
Stop.
What is he talking about?
I looked it up.
I bet you did.
With tools, tools, tools like.
Tools like first loss risk guarantees.
First loss risk guarantees.
This is a type of insurance.
First loss policy is a type of property insurance policy
that provides only partial insurance in the event of a claim, the policyholder agrees to accept an amount less than
the full value of a damaged, destroyed, or stolen property.
And what's the benefit in that?
In return, the insurer agrees not to penalize the policyholder
for under-insuring their goods or property.
So, I'm not exactly sure.
Wait a minute.
I'm not exactly sure, a minute i'm not exactly sure but there's something about and we have enough boots on the ground people who can explain to me how they're using this
insurance clear insurance scam but i just don't know how it works yet but they're going to use
this somehow to soak everybody for him to to say this, something's up.
I agree. You don't bring something like this in out of the blue to a
conference like this and state it as some sort of tool.
Oh yeah. We could mobilize the trillions
of dollars we need. How many? In the order of four and a half
to five trillion a year to drive the transformation we need. A year? A year! How many?
A year?
A year!
A year!
A year.
Four and a half to five trillion.
Isn't that... Isn't that the GDP of the United States?
I think that's where...
I mean, is that a coincidence?
The entire GDP a year year our entire economy per year
what uh-huh well it's let's continue to listen secondly how could we ensure that finance flows
to those developments most essential to a sustainable future well first of all we set
up businesses in africa and we just wait for the money boat to come in.
And then we pretend we're helping the black people in Africa.
Duh!
And away from practices that make our world more dangerous.
Yes, yes. Dangerous to me because they will want to kill me if I'm still in the West.
Across every industry in every part of the world.
Oh, yeah.
I have, for instance, been heartened by some of the steps
taken by parts of the insurance sector,
which plays such a vital role
in incentivizing more sustainable approaches
and providing an invaluable source of investment
to reduce the risks we face.
Okay, I think that they're going to run the money
through insurance companies.
Insurance companies are just banks.
I mean, it's not anything special, right?
It's just a bank, and if they get a claim, what insurance companies typically do is,
no, I'm not going to pay you.
That's the first thing they say.
So I think that somehow they are going to run the money through the insurance companies.
I'm not quite sure how yet.
But the first thing that has to happen was addressed by Queen Ursula, who is not the queen of the dancing scene in this one.
She only got a short little bit on the big stage.
And then, oh, man, she had her own little side session, which, the audio she even said oh the audio is no good
i couldn't even clip it it was so bad so she she was completely marginalized in this but she came
and she said what she's supposed to what she did wrong that would this would happen she's she's a
failed politician from germany her job is to do what they tell her to do and they said you
ursula make sure you focus on the one point and drive it home.
The future of energy will be clean. It will be affordable and it will be homegrown.
Homegrown fuel. And finally, on finance, we must meet the 100 billion target this year.
Europe consistently delivered. Last year, the European Union contributed close to $30 billion in public
climate finance. And of course, the European Union will contribute to the new loss and damage fund.
Loss and damage fund. I'm telling you, John, they're doing something here.
It's about insurance. It's this loss and damage. It's first loss policies. Something going on.
As of today, Team Europe is contributing.
Team Europe? Wait a minute. What today, Team Europe is contributing. Team Europe?
Wait a minute.
What's this Team Europe all of a sudden?
Is it a soccer game?
I guess.
The new loss and damage fund.
As of today, Team Europe is contributing
more than $270 million so far.
What?
We must get the fund up and running.
Where's the $4 trillion? No, no, this is just this year. This year,
Team Europe is behind. They must work harder, Team Europe. $270 million is nothing. No,
there's nothing. This is horrible. So far, we must get the fund up and running and we must do it
fast. So they're doing a green fund. This is the first lost policy fund.
They're going to do green bonds.
But we all know more is needed.
We need to reform the international financial system.
Because we need a carbon tax.
We need a strong green bond market.
Green bond market.
And we need more carbon pricing there it is ladies and gentlemen thank
you fellow leaders dear friends i wish for a successful cop 28 many thanks that's right
there you go we need more carbon pricing carbon pricing so we can know exactly how much to tax
you if you pollute then you will pay a tax and that somehow go we
wash that through the insurance companies and we sit in africa and we steal it from you i i cannot
see any other way these are the evil people of the world they have been captured and and we're so
we've been so hammered by this incessant climate change that even people with reasonable thought patterns like
well you know it was climate change and we that just it's not it's just a thing it's hard for
anyone to say no this is not true in germany as they're getting ready to fly their private
there's no evidence that it was really flying their private jets but it's regardless cop 28 starts the world
is boiling and munich sees the sees 44 inches of snow which they haven't seen ever it's record
snowfall the planes can't take off okay have a clip oh good let's play did you get a the uk also
is is completely snowed under now what do you get yeah weather bavarian blizzard it's called
and a bavarian blizzard has dropped record snow amounts on much of germany austria the czech
republic and switzerland the storm knocked out power to thousands installed travel across the
region grounding flights burying highways and forcing mass transit to close uh two more clips
and i'm gonna lead right into your clips,
because I've seen the title, so I know more or less what you're going to do.
The first thing is we have to play something by the United Nations Secretary General,
who is a troll.
He might even be wearing a wig, this guy.
He's a little troll, and he always cracks me up with his pronunciation of things.
He does it on purpose. I don't know no well maybe maybe it's day two at cop 28 in dubai and the calls for urgent action continue
we cannot save a burning planet we have fire holes of planet wait you're missing the beauty
continue we cannot save a burning planet via firehose of fossil fuels.
We cannot save a burning planet with a firehose of fossil fuels.
Fossil fuels is what it is, you fossil fuels.
Via firehose of fossil fuels.
We must accelerate a just, equitable transition to renewables.
Renewables.
The science is clear.
The science is clear.
No, it's not.
It's clear.
It's clear.
The science is clear.
The 1.5 degree limit is only possible if we ultimately stop burning all fossil fuels.
Stop burning the fossil fuels.
Stop it.
But it's not going to stop at fossil
fools no it's going to go to fossil food fossil fuels normally get the most attention at the
annual climate summit but on friday there was a breakthrough on another crucial part of tackling
climate change what we eat more than 130 countries including the u.s. eu you can even hear the bug
sound effect in the report you hear the
crickets in the report it's this is subliminal they're giving you cricket sounds because that's
what you'll be given to eat what we eat more than 130 countries including the u.s eu brazil and china
have signed an agreement aiming to make food production more sustainable it's the first
agreement of its kind and could be a very important one.
The world's food system is responsible for one third of greenhouse gas emissions
and 15% of fossil fuel, with huge amounts of food wasted in some countries,
as well as overconsumption of industrial produced meat and processed foods.
For many campaigners, small-scale farmers in local communities
are a key part of the solution key part of the solution so they've signed some deal we don't
know what it is but i'm gonna guess it's bugs and then we have our vice president because if you're
gonna have queen ursula you might as well bring in queen Kamala. Around the world, there are those who seek to slow or
stop our progress. Like podcasters. Leaders who deny climate science, delay climate action,
and spread misinformation. Podcasters. Corporations that greenwash climate inaction
and lobby for billions of dollars in fossil fuel subsidies.
Uh-huh.
In the face of their resistance and in the context of this moment, we must do more.
Yeah.
Harris also announced the U.S. is pledging $3 billion to the Green Climate Fund.
The international fund is dedicated to supporting climate action in developing countries. the biden administration outlined plans today to reduce u.s methane emissions
the cbc susan ormiston is in dubai with more on the progress being made i'm going to stop it here
because i saw that you had methane clips so when that popped up when that popped up and of course
you understand these things you know a lot about few fools fossil fools fools
fools from your time in the government as a uh as a horrible government worker in an administrative
state yeah deep state you are you are in a deep state what are you gonna do nothing so um first
let's go back to uh this nonsense about and i maybe maybe there's something I don't know, but
this idea of, they always
keep using this,
Harris said it in there about
oil subsidies.
Yes.
What subsidies, what?
What are they? What are these subsidies
for the oil industry? If I recall, there is, and it's not just for oil companies,
there is a U.S. production tax benefit.
There's an oil depletion allowance.
That's the big tax break.
I buy an oil well.
It's worth a million dollars because there's a million dollars worth.
As I pump the oil out out it becomes slowly worthless i get an oil depletion allowance a tax benefit
for for that because now that now my asset has become worth nothing uh-huh after i pumped all
the and sold all the oil so you get to depreciate your million dollar initial investment well you
i don't know how what the exact how the math works but it's
but that's i think what they're always talking about and of course if you eliminate that it's
not going to stop anything it's just going to jack up the price of gasoline yeah which now is
275 for regular here in texas so we can we can handle some 550 well now By the way, the curious thing about our being 5.50, it's also an oil production state.
We produce oil in this state.
The good news is...
And we have most of the refineries in this state.
Wednesday, I'm having dinner with the oil baron, so I'll get a full breakdown of exactly this topic.
Good.
Because he has oil wells, so that'll be easy.
Dude, what's your tax benefit he'll tell me
yeah yeah he'll tell you and it's probably a pretty good deal i mean that's one of the reasons
it was done to encourage people to get this oil out of there may i remind you
oil baron okay so yeah i'll bet it's a pretty good deal. So let's go to COP 28.
I think we'll go with the first to start with the Harris stuff I have.
This is COP 28.
One Harris PBS.
At the United Nations COP 28 climate conference in Dubai, Vice President Harris pledged three billion dollars toward a global fund to help poorer nations adapt to climate change.
The United States also committed to doubling energy efficiency
and tripling the use of renewable energy by 2030.
Harris said the time for action is now.
The urgency of this moment is clear.
The clock is no longer just ticking.
It is banging.
It's banging.
And we must make up for lost time.
And we must treat the climate crisis
as the existential threat that it truly is.
Who says banging?
Banging.
The clock is banging.
Banging.
No, she was very explicit on the banging.
Isn't it just banging?
Yeah, she said banging.
Yeah, why not just say banging?
What is that?
Banging.
Banging.
Banging.
Well, she's got that.
She has some South Asian accent actually buried in there.
Okay.
All right.
Banging.
Banging.
Banging.
Okay, we wrapped that? Yeah, that's wrapped. Yeah, she wrapped it. Oh, okay. Well, she's done yakking away. Yeahanging. Banging. Okay, we wrapped that?
Yeah, that's wrapped.
Yes, you wrapped it.
Oh, okay.
Well, she's done yakking away.
So let's go to COP28-2 methane.
COP28-2 methane.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I got you.
I got you.
Officials also announced a major new initiative aimed at getting methane emission to near zero by 2030.
Okay. Now, methane emission, I know one part of methane is burning off your gas wells. Is
that talking about that in this case or something else? It's hard to say what they're talking about.
I think they're talking mostly about refineries leaking. And cow farts.
Methane. No, they're not talking about
the cow. It's mostly
belches, it turns out. Oh, okay.
Because they're ruminants and they belch
the methane out of their mouth.
The
problem with this whole thing, and I'll
put this right up front, is that
natural gas
is methane. They won't
say natural gas.
They just keep saying methane, methane.
So you can't, I mean, if you turn your stove on, you're leaking methane all over the place.
That's methane.
Got it.
Natural gas is 97% methane. So this is a roundabout way, this whole methane thing is a roundabout way, and I would say a chicken shit way, of getting rid of gas stoves, gas furnaces, and gas heaters.
You know, it's a shame that Boone Pickens isn't still alive because he was the big promoter of natural gas as an alternative to liquid petroleum products.
And he would throw a bunch of money at this nonsense
and end it right now
because you can't do what they want to do
without getting rid of your gas stoves.
Even though they don't want to talk about it.
Oh, no, no.
We never said anything about gas stoves.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
We're just trying to stop.
This is very interesting.
It's not about gas.
It's not about gas.
This is very interesting.
This is a scam. it's a total scam if anything people are very aware of the war on gas stoves
um you know then everyone denies it no no no we're not doing that that's not true yeah but
but now they've just done a little switcheroo and they just call it methane or dare i say methane in the uk yeah
methane methane uh but they're lying they're lying they're really saying no more no more cheap energy
because methane gas natural gas is quite affordable um i think it's quite safe am i not
is it's quite safe well unless it accumulates in a house and then someone lights a match.
Yeah, it's safe.
It's safe compared to almost everything.
It's been around for a long time.
It's safer than hydrogen.
Let's put it that way for sure.
Yes.
Yes, I agree.
All right.
So we have to get rid of it.
Got it.
But this is exactly what you said.
It's a scam.
And here we go.
And this is the methane series. Now,
this is COP28 Methane One. At the COP28 summit in Dubai today,
50 oil and gas companies representing about 40 percent of global production pledged to reduce
methane emissions to near zero by 2030. Methane is a byproduct of oil and gas production that
can trap 80 times as much heat as carbon dioxide in the short term.
The companies, including industry giants like ExxonMobil, Shell and BP, say they'll achieve this by plugging leaks at their facilities and ending the practice of burning off excess gas with flares.
At the same time, the Biden administration announced new rules to enforce major elements of that agreement in this country.
Ah, there it is. There's your war on gas stoves now a couple of things in this clip uh he says that 80 what was it 80 uh methane is 80x in terms of uh greenhouse gas emissions 80x co2
yeah well how come this hasn't been addressed before?
We're always talking about carbon, carbon, carbon, carbon, and referring to CO2, CO2, CO2, which is a parts per million thing in the atmosphere.
It's hardly anything.
But they keep talking about it.
But meanwhile, methane, why now?
Does it have very low carbon dioxide emission?
What?
I'm sorry? Does
burning natural
gas have a low... It's lower
than burning coal. Yeah, that's what
T. Boone Pickham was always doing.
Yeah, lower than coal, lower than a lot of
stuff. So it's not a good narrative.
Well, this ADX,
this is raw methane going
into the atmosphere.
And then he says that the refineries are getting... Now, the refineries, one thing that's never mentioned is methane is a product they sell as natural gas.
They don't want it leaking all over the place.
They're giving away product.
It's like letting the wine barrel overfill and going down the sewer.
This is not what they want.
So this is in the best interest of the oil refiners to plug any leaks there are.
So they're always for that.
So this is not a concession by any means because they want to do this because they lose money otherwise.
So this is bullcrap, this narrative.
Well, how about this?
So maybe they're like, yeah, that's good.
Give us some subsidies so we can plug up our leaky stuff.
I believe that's in the background.
I'm sure there's something.
Is there also not an element of F Russia in all of this,
since Russia has a lot of natural gas?
I didn't think of that, but that's obviously the case.
And so you have that aspect.
And the other thing is, and then the refiners are going to try to stop flaring so much.
Natural gas, when it gets into the system and they had to get rid of it, they sent it to the flare.
But when it gets burned in the flare, it gets burned.
There's no natural gas coming off that flame.
No.
So that's bull crap.
And that's just bull crap.
OK, just they just go after.
OK, OK, I got you.
OK, it's bull crap to go off.
But again, I think the whole thing is about the stoves.
But let's go with methane, too.
Earlier, I spoke with Fred Krupp, the president of the Environmental Defense Fund, who was at COP 28.
I asked him, what makes this deal so important?
John, I've been at this for a long time, and in my 30-plus years of doing this work,
I don't think we've ever had as good a day for the climate as we had today.
First, we had the U.S. EPA announcing the strongest methane rules for the oil and gas sector on the planet. Second, we had 50 companies representing 40% of
global oil production, pledging to virtually eliminate their methane pollution. And then
third, we saw an announcement from the U.S. and China that they've agreed to incorporate methane
in the future into their pledges internationally. And methane, John, is 80 times more powerful as a greenhouse gas than
carbon dioxide pound for pound in those first 20 years. And so reductions now that will happen as
a result of these three actions mean that storms will be less ferocious, temperatures will be lower
than they would otherwise be over the next 10 years.
Thanks to the actions that were pledged today.
Storms will be less ferocious, said the weatherman.
Over the next 10 years, because of this one action, which is meaningless, this meaningless action, which isn't going to do jack until they get rid of the stoves and heaters.
But now here's the problem they had.
Like, the hurricane season just ended.
What was the big, massive hurricane on the East Coast
that took out, like, half of a state and killed millions?
What was the big storm this year?
Yeah, carry on.
Well, there was a bad storm on the little piece of Florida,
on the Gulf side, interestingly.
But it didn't take out millions of people.
It wasn't like the big storms, like Katrina.
No, no.
Which was-
But if you recall when Katrina happened, this was going to be the standard of excellence
every year, and it's going to get worse and worse.
What was this year's big storm?
It was that little storm you're talking about.
But this is the problem.
The problem is people don't
look at history they're not taught history they're told to just oh just listen listen to me listen to
me this is the worst and it's coming from our so-called leaders so people go okay because people
have other things to do like figure out how to pay the rent now let's go back to this guy and
his commentary this is right here what he said this meaningless methane
bull crap which isn't going to do jack is going to be used as well we since we passed this this
is the big deal we passed it at cop 28 and look that we didn't have so many hurricanes it's already
starting to clear up a little bit they need because the cycle the weather cycle is based on
sunspots, is switching onto
the other, going down the other way,
and they've got to come up with some reason.
Quick. A quick
fix. And this
guy just told you what it was.
Wait, wait, wait. They need the quick fix
so they can then take credit for it.
Yeah. See?
Storms are less. Temperature's
coming down. Thanks to us we're not phone finger
number one everybody that's right so we can predict in 10 years that everything will be much calmer
it'll be cold it'll be cold it's going to be cold it's going to get cold it's going to get very cold
everybody let's go maybe maybe hold on maybe that's what King and Charles meant by tipping point.
Where's the tipping point, people?
Tipping points.
Tipping points.
And the tipping point is that temperatures are going down.
Everything's going down because the sun cycle...
What is it?
What cycle is it?
I forget.
They number them.
Every 11 years, we go through the sun cycle.
I know it.
As a ham operator, you know these things.
So we're going down to the bottom of the cycle.
I think we have two more years left, and it's over and then we yeah we did it we did
it everybody we're in africa now send us our trillions and then you will send us our trillions
so we can make sure we don't we don't backtrack exactly okay methane three and is this a long-term
solution to the problem is this a sort of short-term quick fix?
Well, we have to both do methane to reduce temperatures in the short term, and we cannot stop working.
In fact, we have to accelerate our work on eliminating carbon dioxide.
The oil and gas industry took this one step, but they have to do a lot more than this.
We have to move away from reliance or dependency on fossil fuels as quickly as we can but while we're
still using them we have to eliminate this very powerful greenhouse gas methane okay so from the
national weather surface surface surface surface surface we are two years away from the top of sun of solar cycle 25 the peak will be expected
solar maximum july 2025 so there is that's the peak of solar cycle 25
so that's that's why the you know hurry up
yeah find some panicky thing we can do.
Yeah.
All right.
Here we go.
This is the last of these clips.
This agreement is voluntary.
The oil companies have to do what they promise to do.
And a lot of environmental groups don't like that.
They say there's no accountability mechanism or guarantee the companies will follow through.
What do you say to that?
Well, I think it's good to be skeptical of pledges at the COP.
A lot of pledges that have been made at this conference of the parties year after year aren't delivered on.
In this particular pledge, we structured it to have accountability built in.
So the oil and gas companies are agreeing to report their emissions by monitoring them and then sending them to an international independent third party.
In addition to that, the Bloomberg Philanthropies today announced a major $25 million gift to not only the Environmental Defense Fund,
but it will stand up an accountability partnership that will make data transparent.
And so we'll be able to see exactly who is meeting this pledge and who's not.
So I've heard it four times now.
The Environmental Defense Fund.
Yeah, that's this guy.
He's the head of it.
But is this, well, is that a global thing?
I think it's American. Seems like it's New York. 9013C, whatever it is it is that a global thing i think it's american seems like it's new york 3c whatever
it is seems like it's new york based might be founded in 1967 so yeah that's good you know
it was founded during the it was that was found if i'm not mistaken, the Environmental Defense Fund was founded during the heyday of anti-pollution, real pollution activity.
1967, a group of scientists forms the organization, sets out to ban DDT.
Oh, it was the DDT.
That's right.
It was a DDT thing.
It came out of Rachel Carson's bestseller, Silent Spring, which is really about DDT.
Then in 1970
it was efforts to ban
whale hunting. Remember that one?
Oh yeah. Which was an attack on
Japan as far as I can remember.
Horrible Japanese
killing whales.
I got
this one minute 22
second clip.
I forget where I got this from.
And it's a brief history.
Before you go, I want to comment on the last.
Okay.
Yeah.
So this, I just want to, this is a refinery story.
Having worked at a refinery in the lab.
And I, this is, I don't think they're evil by any means.
I like refiners.
I think they're evil by any means i like refiners i think they're all great but i'm this this is the way reporting goes we have to do a monthly coliform test of the effluent that comes
off of the refinery uh water supply and it goes and you get a sample and then you do this little
test and it's for it's called coliform and it's a type of bacteria it's a bacterial test, and it's called coliform, and it's a type of bacteria.
It's a bacterial test, and if it shows up,
that means you've got contamination in the water that's going into the San Francisco Bay.
And it would go like this,
which means there's sewage in there.
I don't know how it even gets in there,
but it will get in there.
And it's a little elaborate test.
It's kind of a pain in the ass.
It's got nothing to do with the refinery at all, but you have to do this test.
So you do the test, and you do this test once a month, I think, as I recall.
And you do the test once a month, and you do the test, and it goes,
oh, shit, we got coliform.
And then you go, well, or somebody says, okay, we'll do the test tomorrow.
Yeah.
It came out okay.
Okay, send that one in.
Oh, so you just take whatever's handy.
You take the test that passes.
Nice.
And that's how you do it.
And I'm not, no one's going to convince me that that's not the way it's done everywhere by everybody because it's like bull crap test to begin with.
Because in fact, you take the test every day of the month and it would be 90 or about 25 days of no problem.
And then maybe there's a day in there.
So it's kind of like something happened.
It's kind of like a COVID test.
Yeah.
So the Environmental Defense Fund, indeed, a 501c3.
So the Environmental Defense Fund, indeed, a 501c3.
How much do you think they were given in 2022, according to their Form 990?
$100 million.
How about $385 million?
They have $452 million in assets, you know, because they play the stock market of course and their mission is to build a vital
earth for everyone by leveraging environment oceans health environment health public health
children leveraging children fine here's a brief history of this cop outfit, because it started a long time ago,
and we're still not dead.
General Boutros Ghali.
The Earth Summit in Rio was the first time
that more than 100 heads of state and government
gathered together in one room to talk climate,
establishing sustainable development
as a basis for international cooperation,
at least in theory.
The world is our garden, and together we must cultivate it.
Five years later, the Kyoto Protocol was signed.
Developed countries pledged to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions
by at least 5% compared to 1990 levels.
One big problem, the world's biggest emitters,
the US, China and India, were not bound by the text.
In 2009, the aim of COP15 in Copenhagen was an international agreement to fight climate change.
Although the US and China helped draft a last-minute joint statement, it was not widely
adopted. The 2015 edition in France was considered a resounding success. The Paris Agreement was the
first treaty to commit the entire international community to the fight against climate change,
pledging to maintain the rise in the global average temperature to, quote,
well below two degrees compared to pre-industrial levels.
Signatories also agreed to assess their efforts every five years eight years on the un says much
more must be done to meet the goals set in paris so to just wrap this part up these are the real
people who are doing a an actual slow global reset it is really happening they are going to
price carbon every action you take as a human being, it'll start with businesses.
The businesses, they get some deal.
I'm sure this insurance scam somehow works.
Someone's going to tell us how that works.
Business will get some insurance payoff.
But ultimately, it's going to come from the individual humans.
But you travel.
You're going to be charged for your poop.
Yes.
How much do you poop?
That's right.
You're going to be, if you're a big pooper, then sorry,
Anderson Pooper is going to be poor in the future.
So it's just going to be everything you do,
there will be a climate tax.
That's why they're pricing carbon.
And we only have to look from Texas a little bit up to the north
to see that this is in play in Canada.
And it was and they're joking about it.
Do you have a Trudeau and Paul Levy air the two sides of the political spectrum laughing about it?
Now, what what happened here is they were jamming a carbon tax into aid for Ukraine, I believe.
Yeah, right. And the classic and the conservators went no no no
we're not we're not gonna we're not gonna pass this with that thing in it but it's all just a
big joke to them denialism of the conservative party of canada is putting future white christmases
at risk and that's why on this side of the house, we stand for Christmas.
Yeah, what a clown show. It's a clown show.
It's a clown show.
Hold on.
The Honorable Leader of the Opposition.
Mr. Speaker, that has to be the angriest and most caustic Christmas message I've ever seen.
angriest and most caustic Christmas message I've ever seen.
No, this is a guy, he hasn't phased out coal despite his theatrics over there, Mr. Speaker.
What he's doing is phasing out food because Canadians can't afford it. Now, as he raises carbon taxes on the wonderful farmers that bring us, bring it to our table. Why won't he ax the tax on farmers so that Canadians can eat, heat, and house themselves?
And why doesn't he be a little less like Scrooge and a little more like Santa Claus?
So if we make it another 10 years, I would say sketchy likelihood at best,
we will be talking about bug recipes on this very podcast
because they're doing it this is the while we're all arguing about klaus schwab
and although i like it's funny the uh the klaus schwab songs and everything it's funny i love the
klaus schwab material i mean it's funny but it's very funny but it's really the wrong thing these are the
people and this is huge the amount of people who are in these cop meetings and they're living it up
i mean and they're flying around they're doing around their private pierre came in there of all
places dubai which is a long haul for anyone to go to. It's a great trip. Pierre flew in special, special, you know, to do everybody's hair.
Look, I know women and hair.
Queen Ursula's hair was done.
So either she had her personal hairdresser fly with her or Pierre was there waiting for her.
How about a wig?
She's actually bald.
No, no, no.
This is no wig. This is no wig.
This is no wig.
You know, she, I believe, may be responsible for a huge, huge loss,
you know, theft, maybe, of money with the Pfizer deals,
which she did on her own phone.
Of course, you know, we can't show those text messages.
There's no records.
I mean, there's no, yeah, exactly.
There's no records.
These people are stealing from our children's future.
They're stealing from our future.
Our immediate future.
We don't have much future left and they're stealing from it.
But meanwhile, let's all feel good by stories like this.
And finally tonight, the new technology that could redefine what it means to go electric.
Here's Maggie Vespa.
By the way, nothing funnier than having a reporter work on climate change and electrified
cars whose name is Vespa.
Are you kidding me now?
Vespa the scooter.
Vespa, really?
Electric.
Here's Maggie Vespa.
On its list of claims to automotive fame.
Okay, here we go.
Detroit can add America's first electric avenue.
The battery was at 66%.
We've been driving a few minutes, and now it's at 68%.
Woo!
Exactly.
A public road able to wirelessly charge EV batteries as they drive over asphalt.
The technology is under our feet.
Like it's under the surface of the road.
Literally.
The secret?
Rubber-coated copper coils embedded in the road that correspond with a special receiver
under the vehicle.
The technology developed by Israel-based Electrion, who touts similar projects in several countries,
including Sweden, where NBC's
Kelly Kobiea got a look last year. So we're being charged right now. We are being charged.
Tell me why this is safe. This is perfectly safe. This system is only active when you have a
validated vehicle with the receiver. Validated. The price tag for the project to ultimately cover one mile
of road, just under six million dollars, according to state officials who say the
costs will plummet as they expand and in the next few years, license receivers to the public.
Could you see this actually being used broadly? I can. Yes. We want to get rid of this myth of
range of guiding. You want to know that when you get to a location you're able to charge your vehicle motor city once again hoping to lead the charge into america's future oh lead the charge
the brilliant brilliantly written i tell you let's go have a beer
now six million dollars by the way the potholes problem in this country eliminates even the closest concept.
That concept is not doable.
The potholes will eat into the charging grid that's under there.
It doesn't electrocute someone.
It's ludicrous.
And, you know, the price is obviously, I mean, it's crazy, of course.
Six million dollars for one mile.
But, and that's, you know, I'm sure, I'm just going to guess.
Plus you have to have a meter on your car because you're not going to give you the electricity for free.
No, and I'm just going to guess that, I don't know, maybe some venture capital company had something to do with this.
You know, this is where your green money is going to.
And, you know, right on cue with all of this, and I have to give it to him,
Elon Musk is a dynamite marketer.
He knows what he's doing.
I'm going to go cause a ruckus.
I'm going to go cause a ruckus.
And then the next day, I'm going to go cause a ruckus and go cause a ruckus. And then the next day I'm going to launch my Cybertruck.
After two years of delays and production snags, Tesla has finally handed the first Cybertrucks over to customers.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk says it has an extra safety feature.
Why did you make it Bulletproof?
I'm like, why not?
Do you want to, how tough is your truck?
Bulletproof, he says.
Elon Musk says the cheapest version of Cybertruck will cost just under $61,000.
That's more than 50% over the price Musk floated when he announced the vehicle in 2019.
Dude, we were supposed to be able to have our Teslas do taxi service three years ago if i recall correctly yeah he's a great
bullshit artist yes but i mean he uses the momentum and he comes out with the cyber truck and
oh the amount of just drooling over this thing drooling i mean it's not new we've seen this
truck before and he bashed it with a hammer, and it made a dent in it.
No, it wasn't a hammer.
It was a steel ball, and it broke the window, the so-called unbreakable window.
So we know about this truck.
It's uglier than sin, and there's a few floating around.
People have seen them on the road.
They're here and there.
They're prototypes, I guess.
But, you know, this truck's going nowhere but yeah he gets all the publicity he needs and then they keep following up because they're looking for more stuff about elon elon elon and boom you
get it's beautiful yeah he's a genius yeah i have to give him that now there are some
transportation things that are very much under attack. And the first one is air travel.
Now, we know that there's a shortage of pilots.
We understand the issues.
Unions keep striking.
They want more money, particularly the cabin crew.
And I'm not talking about cockpit, but cabin crew.
They really don't want you, as a human, to have a nice time flying around on vacation doing business
they don't want it's ugly it's nasty you know you're polluting the world i mean they come up
with stuff like this sir richard branson was in the mood to brag after making history his 787 flew
from london to new york using 100 aviation. It's a blend of processed cooking oil, animal fat, and corn-based kerosene
using 70% less carbon than normal flights,
but Branson admits the fuel is in short supply and it's expensive,
so there's a long way to go before this is streamlined.
It costs more.
Never going to happen.
It's never going to happen.
Of course not.
It costs more.
And by the way, they have these.
Significantly more.
Significantly more.
It costs a fortune. And it dirties the engines. Because it has to be re-refined, so it's like a And by the way, they have these... Significantly more. Significantly more. It costs a fortune.
And it dirties the engines.
Because it has to be re-refined, so it's like a pain in the ass, and it stinks when you burn it.
It dirties the engines.
There's all kinds of stuff that does not make this a great deal at all.
But Richard Branson, another great marketer, because that's really what he is.
He's a great marketer.
Got to give him that.
He doesn't run Virgin.
He sold that great marketer. Got to give him that. He doesn't run Virgin. He sold that a decade ago.
And then the final one, this has me somewhat concerned, although it runs right into our
trans-Maoist agenda, where for years, the Federal Aviation Administration has only been hiring,
has only been, has actually forced airlines to hire minorities, qualified or not.
And now we're down to, I think, an actual crisis.
I've been hearing a lot about this, and that's the following story.
Tonight, disturbing new allegations and questions about the safety of American air travel.
That was shocking.
According to the New York Times, over the past two years,
multiple air traffic controllers have been reported for falling asleep on the job,
others allegedly directing traffic under the influence of alcohol and illegal drugs.
The Times reports one air traffic controller showed up to work drunk,
joking about making big money buzzed,
adding another controller routinely smoked
marijuana during breaks, citing dozens of interviews and government documents not reviewed
by NBC News.
The newspaper describes an overworked staff at times struggling with mental and physical
health.
As thousands of controllers retire, 77% of critical ATC facilities are understaffed,
according to a recent government report.
Shortages coming with serious close calls at U.S. airports also under scrutiny.
23 this year alone.
The Air Traffic Controller's union writing,
the article does not portray the professionalism and skill with which air traffic controllers
perform their complex and stressful duties every day.
But both the union and
faa acknowledge there are staffing issues something the faa says it is working to fix
with so many lives at stake okay so i don't know the truth of it but i hear from a lot of atc
personnel and they say we're pretty stressed um and I would like to say, I would like to offer,
I don't know if being a pilot gives me any advantage,
but if I can go train and pitch in on the weekend, I will.
I don't smoke weed anymore.
But I think if you had a call out and said, hey, we have a shortage,
but we'll accept everybody, not just gays, blacks, and women,
Everybody, not just gays, blacks, and women, regardless of their capability and ability, this would not be a problem.
Americans like air travel.
We are an air travel country.
So, I'm up for it.
But I'm sure many other pilots who have private pilots, yeah, we'll pitch in.
That's the American way, not this bull crap.
It's so tiring, these stories, so tiring.
It's a good story.
Yeah.
All right, now there's been a debunking of a debunking of something that was debunked.
Of a debunked, of a debunking of a debunking of something we didn't even cover because you in particular thought it was bullshit
to begin with yes when i saw this video which is now many of you probably seen this the new zealand
database admin whistleblower yeah yeah that's already a stretch already yes i i looked at the
video and i was like you know and i now of course I clipped a minute of it just so we can talk about it.
But initially, I was like, this is not, this is not, you know, the whole thing had Brideon written all over it.
Sorry.
I was thinking BitChute.
Right.
Well, I was involved with building a project to help with implementing a vaccine payment system for our providers.
It's called a pay-per-doll system.
So it means that every time someone gets vaccinated,
they get a payment for it as a provider.
And I helped build it.
I implemented it.
And when I was looking at the data, which is part of my job,
I noticed some discrepancies with the date of death.
People die within a week of being vaccinated.
So what did you notice when you first started to look at this data
as you were building it?
Well, as soon as the system went live,
we noticed that people were dying
almost straight away after being injected.
So that sort of prompted my curiosity a bit.
And so I dug a little deeper.
I am a scientist by nature.
I love science.
It's my all-time favorite.
I've got a master's degree in science.
I have a master's degree in science. I have a master's degree in science.
Wouldn't that be a, by the way, would it be a master of science?
Would you have a master's of science degree?
When we say I've got a master's of science degree, you wouldn't get a master's degree in science.
There's no such thing.
There's no degree that you said master's of just science.
It was stuff like this that made me go, eh, whatever.
We'll see what comes of it.
Because I don't want to waste anybody's time.
We're not the Tim Pool Show.
Like, what?
Because first of all, I think we already believe this.
We already believe that the vaccine has caused much despair.
I don't need to see any data per se, but now it's a story.
And then, so you send me a sub stack, Igor's newsletter.
It's pretty good, by the way, generally.
Generally, it's pretty good. And he says, I analyzed the leaked New Zealand whistleblower
data and suggest to be wary of it. And he says, bad data, inconsistent story. I don't know this Igor. I mean, he's honestly,
I did some research on this guy. I'm like, well, you know, he says he runs his own data.
It appears the data looks legit, but there's big pieces missing from it. So you and I are kind of
like, well, I think this maybe was just a bull crap story story. But then, Jimmy Dore has Steve Kirsch come on his show.
Now, Steve Kirsch, actual Masters of Science, I believe, from MIT.
He even has an auditorium at MIT named after him.
He's done quite well.
What did he do?
Did he make his money with the optical mouse?
Was that his main claim to fame?
No, I don't think that.
I don't remember.
He lives around here somewhere.
I've contacted and talked to him a couple of times over direct mail.
I've got his phone number.
And he's one of these guilt-ridden guys because he was a big promoter of the vaccine.
Infoseek.
The search engine Infoseek. Infoseek. Yeah. Infer of the vaccine. Infoseek. The search engine. Infoseek.
Infoseek. No, Infoseek. I thought it was Infosek. No, the search engine.
And then he had frame technology, which Adobe bought.
He's been around. Yeah, he's a really sharp
guy. But he seems to be a guy
who's living a life of guilt because it seems that he promoted
the vaccine and then he discovered it was bullcrap this was bad and he turned it became a
major major anti-covid vaccine guy yes major he did all right way beyond what we we just deconstruct news stories we don't take sides so
this is now jimmy dore got him on right away i thought that was pretty good my point my point
being that steve kirk you said he's a sharp guy there's no doubt about it he's a sharp guy so for
him to go out on this limb he clearly believes in what he's saying. And I pulled a couple of clips from it.
Well, I got the data.
And I think I was the first person in the world outside of the whistleblower to get the data.
So it got uploaded to my – I have a Wasabi server.
We need one of those, John.
We need a Wasabi server.
Whatever it is, I want one.
And the data was uploaded in the November 9th.
And the whistleblower asked me to keep it quiet until November 30th.
And on November 30th, I had a speech in the MIT auditorium, the Kirsch auditorium.
It's named after me.
And they actually let me speak there because a student group was willing to sponsor my speaking there.
And they actually let me speak there because a student group was willing to sponsor my speaking there.
But they couldn't find an MIT faculty member who was willing to sponsor me to speak about the truth about the COVID vaccines.
But fortunately, a student group invited me. And so I spoke about this huge data dump from New Zealand.
And they've confirmed that it is legitimate data from a legitimate
source. And that data shows there's no way you can analyze this and come to any other conclusion
other than the vaccines have killed massive numbers of people, about one in a thousand,
which means the vaccines have killed 675,000 people in America and 13,
about 13 million people worldwide.
All right.
He has my attention and he's going to go into some by the,
and by the way,
on this show months and months and months ago,
we had the one in a thousand number.
Oh yeah.
This is not necessarily new.
None of this is new to us.
So this kind of leads me to believe that this data has been out for at least a month.
People have had it.
I'm sure Kirsch wasn't the only guy.
Perhaps we have this controversy, dare I say, thrown into the ether so that it can be summarily dismissed by mainstream to say, nah, you know, these guys, nut job, master of science, whatever, Steve Kershaw,
anti-vaxxer, maybe it's just been thrown into this, this Tumblr so that,
you know, it can be dismissed as a bunch of nut jobs.
Thank you.
It's all the records in a particular database in the New Zealand ministry of
health. records in a particular database in the New Zealand Ministry of Health. So this is one third
of all the vaccination records for New Zealand. And so with this data, which includes the death
data and the date of birth, we can calculate everything we want to calculate in order to show
whether the vaccines are safe and effective.
There's only one way to do this calculation.
And there's only one result of the calculation.
And there's only one way to interpret the results of the calculation.
And it shows massive numbers of people killed.
Effectively, 13 million people were killed by their governments worldwide and this data proves it now
there are people who are skilled at gaslighting people and trying to convince them that this data
shows something other than what it does so there he's saying looks like there could be some psyop
going on that's how you know the curry devorek consulting group analyzes everything is
yeah we do so then he's going to go into the analysis of the data because this is not a new
analysis that's been done as you just said we had this information the correct way to analyze this
data is to do a time series cohort analysis which is the most sophisticated analysis that's available for data like this.
This is what the epidemiologists use. This is what the UK Office of National Statistics use
to prove the vaccines are safe and effective. So it's a known technique. It's generally accepted
in the community, and it's the most sophisticated technique. And it was only the UK ONS which used the sophisticated technique.
And, of course, their data was very flawed.
But even then, it still showed the same signal as in the New Zealand data,
and we see the same signal in the U.S. Medicare data, which is all gold standard data.
So you have the UK, New Zealand, and the United States of America all showing the same result,
which is you take these vaccines and your risk of dying the next day is higher than it was the day before.
And it keeps going up and up and up.
So this to me is a very level-headed dissection or analysis of the data because we were promised
safe and effective we know effective fell by the wayside this right away the safe side is what's
in question so you know the entire um the entire reason i believe for this to be so controversial
is to make it dismissible by government agencies because they are hiding it as
witness in his third and final clip. So for dose two, for example, in the United States of America,
we have the Medicare data that proves this. In the United States of America, you take dose two,
your risk goes up every single day for 365 days in a row.
And it goes up at the end of 365 days.
It's climbed by 26% over baseline, 26% over baseline.
It should be falling by 4% because this is Medicare data.
And the Medicare mortality is about 4% per year.
So this data when you you
look at these people who've been vaccinated um with with dose two and you take them and you look
at how they die over time there should be like four percent of them should die over a period
of uh of 12 months and what we're finding is an accelerated death rate that is about, it's 30% differential from the 4% it's supposed to go down.
So there's no doubt about it.
You can't have the death curve march up in a straight line for 12 months without any fluctuations whatsoever. It is like clockwork.
It is the most beautiful graph I have ever seen. And I just got it recently from a whistleblower
inside of Health and Human Services because the CDC doesn't disclose this data. They have the
data. The CDC has access to this Medicare data with vaccines and deaths.
They refuse to analyze it. So long live the dude's name, Ben. They're not all as articulate
like our boy there in New Zealand because it didn't come out right and he didn't find the
right partner to blow the whistle with. But I i like steve kirsch the way he talks about
this analysis i think sounds good particularly if you add to it this one minute clip from the gold
standard peter mccullough the man cannot be taken down because of his credentials who said this just
this last week now enter the vaccines since 2021 the vaccines have ravaged the population in the world.
Worldwide, two-thirds of people took a vaccine.
The United States COVID community state study shows 75% of Americans took a vaccine.
Thankfully, 25% didn't.
I was the only public health and public figure in the United States in writing to question the vaccines before they came out.
And I did it as loudly as I could.
The COVID-19 vaccines in the United States, 94% of Americans took a messenger RNA vaccine.
It is the genetic code for the potentially lethal spike protein part of the virus. It was the worst idea ever
to install the genetic code by injection and allow unbridled production of a potentially
lethal protein in the human body for an uncontrolled duration of time.
Everything we've learned about the vaccine since they've come out is horrifying so to to be clear
i certainly don't think everybody who was vaxxed is going to die there's no evidence of that
but anecdotally and you and i just talked about this the other day and i'm going to go into all
of our i'm going to do that after i get back from Indianapolis. It'll be next, maybe Thursday show.
I am going to take a look at the increase in producers who have in their notes mentioned friends or spouses dying and the amount of cancer karma requests.
You and I anecdotally have seen these go up
yeah tripled
yes well you're saying tripled
I'm going to get the actual number
so there's that
but will this ever really be discussed
at the level it should be
no doubtful doubtful
why would it be
it's an embarrassment
Steve Kirsch added in a in a slash today that's what you do on X you slash No. Doubtful. Doubtful. Why would it be? It's an embarrassment.
Steve Kirsch added in a slash today.
That's what you do on X, you slash.
Slash?
Yeah, I call it a slash.
It's formally known as tweet.
You slash on X.
You can now sue the mRNA COVID vaccine manufacturers for damages,
and the FDA is required to take the COVID vaccines off the market.
Why?
Adulteration, which we talked about.
The plasmid bioactive contaminant sequences were not pointed out to the regulatory authorities.
It is considered adulteration.
He says he got off the phone with his lawyers and he says that you can sue.
I'm sure that there are already lawsuits in the making.
Yeah, there's plenty.
For what good it'll do.
None.
No, probably not. It's a concerted effort by the making. Yeah, there's plenty. For what good it'll do. None. No, probably not.
It's a concerted effort by the media at the very top of the
pyramid and the government.
Yes.
And the media is still,
I can turn on the TV right now
and hear somebody tell, oh, get a shot, get a COVID,
get a COVID shot, another COVID shot's
good for you. And it
never ends.
In fact, what did I read?
I read the other day, you know, we had the triple-demic last year.
This year, they're talking about, I don't have a clip of it yet.
We're waiting for the first one to pop up.
Syndemic.
S-Y-N.
Syndemic.
What's that mean?
Well, I guess that's more than three.
Syndemic.
Let me see if it's popped up anywhere yet.
By the way, I wanted to get back to this.
We were talking about the cop thing.
Do you know what cop stands for?
Don't look it up.
Citizens on patrol?
Exactly.
I knew that.
Obsendemic.
Obsendemic.
that syndemic syndemic syndemics model of health focuses on the
bio-social complex which consists of
interacting co-present or sequential
diseases and the social environmental
factors oh yes climate change that's not
going to catch you climate change is
killing us no I know what it's doing it
stands for conference of the Parties.
Oh, interesting.
What does that even mean?
Well, the parties are having a party.
You're in Dubai.
Believe me, you're going to be partying.
It's a conference of partying.
Yeah, well, that makes sense.
And meanwhile, we have a new term, finally, for this China thing.
Well, there's a health warning out of Ohio this week after a rise in childhood pneumonia cases.
Some are calling it white lung syndrome.
We're going to get to that in just a second, what exactly that is.
I want to talk to Dr. Florin with Lurie Children's Hospital about this.
He is in charge of a pediatrician.
He's a pediatrician at Lur Laurie Children's Hospital about this. He is in charge of a pediatrician.
He's a pediatrician at Laurie Children's Hospital.
So it seems like at least around here in our newsroom and all my friends,
I feel like everybody's been sick, not just for like a week or two,
but they have this sort of lingering cough that seems to last for weeks. Wait for it.
Listen, there's something coming up that I clipped just for you.
The whole reason for this clip, you're just going to talk over it and cough.
I play these, I'm not playing.
I only play these.
I am mum.
I play these clips for you.
I'm not playing it for anybody.
All my clips are for you.
They have this sort of lingering cough
that seems to last for weeks.
Is it something out of the ordinary
or is this something that happens sort of every year
and we're just sort of overreacting to it this time around?
Yeah, no, it's a great question. think yeah no brother yeah no it's a great question it doesn't get any better than that yeah no it's a great question the only thing missing was yeah
no it's a great question look we're reacting to it this time around yeah no it's a great question
i think we're all hypersensitized after what we experienced. Anyway, this is why. So it is interesting that it's Ohio. As we know,
Ohio has direct flights from China. So maybe they brought over some white lung syndrome.
And that, of course, has led some Republicans to take a well-known step in these types of
operations. A health alert tonight. Both of Florida's U.S. senators urging the White House
to stop travel to and from China.
Senators Marco Rubio and Rick Scott are among several Republican lawmakers
warning about a mysterious respiratory illness they say is spreading in the Asian country.
They sent a letter to President Joe Biden today saying in part that travel should immediately be restricted,
quote, until we know more about the dangers posed by this new illness
yeah lock them down lock them down lockdowns coming lockdowns and now a clip that is pulled
specifically because you know a lot about this dr mandy cohen assured lawmakers yesterday that a new
virus is not causing the surge listen to this We do not believe this is a new or novel
pathogen. We believe this is all existing, meaning COVID, flu, RSV.
CNN chief medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta joins us now. Sanjay, good morning. Always good
to have you on. What could be behind this and how concerned should people be?
One thing that appears to be complicating things, especially in China, is also bacterial infections.
They seem to be a large part of what's driving this as well. And they have a lot of antibiotic
resistance in China. So this is something that we're really keeping an eye on. If you look at
deaths associated with antibiotic resistance around the world, it's close to 5 million a year.
People may not realize that big. In China alone, 600,000. So this is also, I think, further complicating things with
regard to this uptick. They're likely to get it under control, but they got to keep an eye on this
problem. I mean, you know, in China, for example, many antibiotics are sold over the counter.
So that just sort of fuels the problem. There's also a lot of antibiotic use in livestock.
So there's all these different places we have to sort of curb the use of antibiotics.
And I will tell you this, it takes a long time to develop new antibiotics. It can take 10 to 15 years, which is why there are people around the world right now who are trying to find alternative sources of antibiotics.
to find alternative sources of antibiotics.
They're scouring the bottoms of the ocean with ships,
and they're looking even within nature to see if something can serve as an antibiotic.
Now, we've discussed this in the history of the show
many times, and you know a lot about it.
I do?
Yeah.
I do know one thing, is that the drug companies,
these hotshots that are making billions of dollars
with vaccines and the fact that they make more money with that and they're not liable for anything, have given up on researching antibiotics.
They've stopped.
Their antibiotics labs have all been closed down.
They don't care anymore because they're just after the money.
And the government's done nothing to counter this.
That's the big thing.
I told you you know a lot about it.
I'm just grousing.
Meanwhile, sad news for Pfizer.
They've had to halt the development of their twice-daily weight loss drug.
They were trying to hop on the semaglutide train, the GLP-1 drugs.
the semaglutide train, the GLP-1 drugs.
Sad day.
They halted it because up to 73% of people in the test experienced nausea,
up to 47% reported vomiting, and 25% experienced diarrhea.
I thought that was the feature of these drugs.
I thought so, too.
I thought that's how it works. You can lose weight that way.
That's how it works.
Vomiting, I mean, you can do it yourself.
It's called bulimia, but nobody wants to weight that way. That's how it works. Bumming. I mean, you can do it yourself. It's called bulimia.
But nobody wants to do that anymore.
We did hear from our psychiatrist.
Remember the one who told us about how controlled the psychiatrists are when it comes to telling children after one visit,
yep, you're a boy.
You got to get on some drugs.
Remember this one?
Yeah.
All right. yep, you're a boy. You got to get on some drugs. Remember this one? Yeah. Right. So it turns out she just wanted to say, and she wrote a very long piece in here and she comes from a background.
Her mom was 400 pounds her entire life. She had, this is interesting, watching her over the years,
I learned how to hoard and sneak food, eat it very quickly because otherwise she would eat it
first, which I thought was a funny line. I adopted and created many food games I would play to try
and control my cravings and intake. Nothing worked. I was overweight most of my life. She says that she
had the food noise in her head. Now, her obesity came from childhood trauma.
Basically, she wanted to not be attractive because of abuse that she had as a young child.
This is very well known.
This happens a lot, especially to young girls.
But she ends by saying, 34 years old now, at 34 years old, I'm now 43.
Everything changed.
I sought out Overeaters Anonymous, the sister program to Alcoholics Anonymous.
Now, they, of course, have a religious part to this.
So she's embraced God and spirituality.
But along with that, came a very strong influence to not eat foods that contained sugar and over-processed foods.
Then she has lost 115 pounds.
She actually sent two pictures before and after.
So she is just saying that the food noise is real, but it's coming from sugar addiction and processed foods,
which is the real problem, which is the issue that we have.
And I saw this in the
netherlands where we used to go to the butcher get your beef we went to the actual baker and we got
our bread the milkman dropped the milk off in the in the bottles and everyone biked to school
no matter what weather you know and now you go look they're look, they're getting fat. They're getting obese because they've got processed food.
They've got fast foods.
We got all kinds of stuff.
All bad intake.
And it's about to get worse.
Now for business news.
TikTok is one of the world's.
That's not what I wanted.
I'm sorry.
I forgot to cut it.
Stay competitive with higher.
Oh, sorry.
I like when you do the big grandiose lead in i screw it up
the wall street journal reports that the chain has been working for the past this is mcdonald's
seven years on improving its signature hamburgers after a test run in australia these 50 tweaks
which include a brioche bun fresher pattiesies, and more sauce, well, they'll be unveiled in the United States. Now, why is McDonald's doing this? Well, to stay competitive
with higher-end chains that have taken a $2.4 billion chunk out of the United States' $72
billion burger market. Needless to say, the rollout is massive, with tens of thousands
of McDonald's workers across the globe.
No news yet, though, Will, about when these changes will come to the European McDonald's burger.
So McDonald's is going to make 50 5-0 improvements to its hamburger.
How about better meat?
Well, how about they've been devolving their burgers.
I haven't had one.
I do like to do a quarterly report for Horowitz's show.
And I'm here, too, and try to have one of these.
I can't.
Last time, I couldn't even eat it.
But I do get the ice cream cone once in a while when it's hot out.
But when I do that, I go through the normal line, the drive-thru, and I look at the menu.
Yes.
And I got to bring the camera and go get another ice cream cone because this, what, a quarter pounder is like $11?
Well, there's that.
It's like 10 bucks for a Big Mac?
These used to be, when I was a kid, this used to be the 15-cent hamburger place.
15 cents.
That 15 cent burger now is almost three bucks.
I mean, what?
The inflation doesn't know.
No, I know.
I've got the inflation tables.
This is way beyond inflation.
And in the same during the same period, the quality has gone nothing but downhill.
Well, there's a couple of things.
One, minimum wage requirements,
mainly in California for fast food workers,
unionization.
This has all been predicted.
Well, you know, if you want to do that,
then, you know, the price of your burger is going to go up.
But I'm very curious to see, A,
what they did to improve their burger 50 steps.
Nothing.
That's got to be taste and texture products they're mixing in.
Two, get ready for every morning show in America.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, let's try the new burgers.
All the native ads are going to start coming in.
It's going to be great.
That will be fun.
But meanwhile, if that's too expensive for you.
This is the best burger I think I've ever eaten.
Here's the line.
I would write this line and put it into the script that somebody has to say this.
It'd be El Roker to be good at this.
I think this is the best burger I've ever eaten.
This reminds me of the burgers I had when I was a kid.
That's the line I'd write.
It's like they've gone back to the base.
Whatever McDonald's has done, it's magic.
They got better cows.
And this goes back to the burger I tasted when I was a kid.
I'm telling you, it's burger classic.
If you can't afford that, we have a solution for you.
Well, macaroni and cheese that has no dairy, newly released today by Chicago-based Kraft Foods.
It's called Not Mac and Cheese, and it was developed with Chicago startup NotCo.
Kraft is offering two versions,
original and white cheddar.
The fake cheese will be made out of fava beans
and coconut oil powder.
It follows other plant-based products,
cheese slices and mayonnaise released earlier this year.
Looks like mac and cheese.
Tastes like mac and cheese.
Not mac and cheese.
Few slaves can get used to mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Tastes like mac and cheese. Not mac and cheese. You slaves can get used to mac and cheese.
Mac and cheese.
Mac and cheese.
Macaroni and cheap cheddar melted together.
Mac and cheese.
Mac and cheese.
Mac and cheese.
So it doesn't even have cheap cheddar in it anymore.
And we've been on the mac and cheese thing for 14 years, maybe even longer.
We have said this would be the future
of food, and here we are,
right again.
The future of food.
We were wrong on the fact that it would be cheese.
It's not even cheese.
It's fava beans or some damn thing.
Processed
by a refiner.
It's disgusting.
It's unbelievable.
No, it's believable.
It's believable.
This is where we are.
This is where we're at.
This is it.
So I'm going to play three clips that are a different topic.
Okay.
Because this is coming to a head,
and the clips are, it says F-E, I think it's Georgia,
but it's F-E-O-R-G-E versus the SEC.
Oh, yes.
Yeah, yeah. This is a great case.
And this case is interesting because it's it's it may or may not.
I'll tell you what the issue is after we play a few of these clips. Let's play clip one.
The Supreme Court is considering how much authority federal government agencies have. The Biden administration has appealed a lower court decision in favor of
hedge fund manager and conservative radio jockey George Darkeese. The SEC fined Darkeese and barred
him from the industry after finding he committed securities fraud. The lower court then ruled that
Darkeese should have been allowed a jury trial. We turn now to our legal correspondent Arlene
Richards to sort out the arguments. Arlene, in layman's terms, what happened here?
Well, to state it simply, the SEC is a government agency,
and for years it has been initiating claims against individuals through its in-house tribunal system
rather than going to an outside court.
Now, Congress gave them that power under the Securities and Exchange Act.
They used the same system in this
case, which fined and barred George Garcese for securities fraud. Now, he appealed to the Fifth
Circuit Court of Appeals. Garcese's attorney argued that the SEC's powers should be restricted
by the Seventh Amendment of the Constitution, which gives individuals the right to a jury trial.
At oral argument today, he said that basic securities fraud is a typically common law claim,
and therefore this client should have gotten a jury trial in a federal court.
So this case is about what is the extent of those Seventh Amendment restrictions in securities fraud cases where the SEC is seeking penalties.
cases where the SEC is seeking penalties. In this case, the Fifth Circuit also ruled that the SEC's actions violated Articles 1 and 2 of the Constitution. So the court effectively
invalidated three aspects of the SEC's operations. Yeah, this could change the entire
administrative slash deep state. Yeah did this the problem is this case
is stepping on the upcoming case about chevron deference yes yes which is better that's that's
the case which is a killer because it's about some guy in a fishing boat where he had to hire
inspectors and he had to pay the for the inspector government inspectors to be on his boat.
And it was just a complete... The problem with administrative law, it was always accepted by the...
After your clips, I have a 45-second clip that explains Chevron deference.
Okay.
So the point is that the Chevron deference case will be the one that can screw over administrative law because of abuse of power, which is what's happened with that upcoming case.
This case is a bad case because it could step in and under some circumstance create a precedent that would screw the other case.
Oh, so this guy is is he a
shill no i don't think so i think this is just an accident but they've everyone's glommed onto it
knowing the potential for it being destructive insofar as the chevron deference case is concerned
which everybody's freaked out about they are freaked out because what that case would
do is take away these kangaroo courts and all the rest of it. It has to be all rethought.
It's a major, major case. This case here, they screw it up. Let's play part two.
So presumably the SEC followed the same proceedings that it usually does to handle
suspected fraud. How is this case or the proceedings different from other
cases? Well, the proceeding itself was not different, but I think the issues raised on
appeal were different. And of course, the Fifth Circuit's decision was unexpected. Now, the court
decided that Congress violated the Seventh Amendment when it gave the SEC the power to
initiate administrative proceedings and seek penalties,
and that by giving them this power, the SEC has unrestricted authority to choose cases and seek remedies without going to a federal court.
And the Fifth Circuit said fraud actions like this case should be handled under federal common law and not by independent agency action.
under federal common law and not by independent agency action. It seems like the Fifth Circuit unilaterally changed a law or proceeding that has always been used by the SEC. What was the
Biden administration's response to the ruling? Well, the Biden administration is, of course,
very concerned about this ruling. Notably, the SEC's five-member commission is appointed by the
president with the consent of the Senate. So this ruling undercuts the administration's authority. Their response to this decision
is that the SEC has a longstanding practice of filing cases under the Securities and Exchange
Act. It uses an administrative proceeding that sends these cases to an administrative law judge,
and that judge reviews evidence, holds hearings, and hears
arguments. If the defendant doesn't agree with the decision, he has the right to appeal to a
court of appeals, which is what happened here. So, in other words, he got due process. They argue
that the Fifth Circuit made significant errors in its ruling because Congress does, in fact,
have the power to appoint individual matters
to agencies, even if they involve common law issues.
This is kind of the same thing with the IRS, where the IRS, who have guns, by the way,
they've showed up at my office with guns.
They, you know, if you want to appeal a ruling by the IRS, you can, but you got to have like
$100,000 to mount a case, which is why
most people don't do it. But this guy is a Wall Street guy. So he said, screw it, I'm going for it.
Okay, part three. They also argue that Congress's power to delegate matters to agencies doesn't
depend on whether or not the case is uniquely suited for agency review.
Now, what are some of the concerns expressed by the Supreme Court justices today during oral argument?
Well, I think the biggest concern here is what effect this change would ultimately have.
And one of the justices noted that this involves asking the court to change the law.
And she expressed concern that it would require changing
the powers of all federal agencies.
Garcese's attorney said this could be fixed by giving the people a choice of which tribunal
can review the case.
But I think many of the justices were concerned that the federal courts would now be burdened
with an increase of cases.
And actually, some experts have said this decision
is particularly troublesome for federal banking regulators who solely rely upon in-house tribunals.
Those regulators don't have the option to file claims in federal courts. But the court today,
Tiffany, seems to be considering the suggestion that individuals should have an option to choose
the tribunal. So here is a 40, I think it's a 45 second explainer from last year, November last
year about the Chevron deference case. Tony asks off topic, but can you explain Chevron deference
and the rule of lenity? The Chevron is not a use of force doctrine. So it's not my area of expertise, but just general legal knowledge. Chevron was the Supreme Court case in
which the Supreme Court essentially said that if there's an administrative decision by part of the
executive branch, the EPA makes some kind of administrative decision. It's not a statute
passed by the legislature, by Congress, signed by the president. It's not a law in that sense. It's not case law. It's not an appellate court ruling. It's just the EPA makes
an administrative decision that that is treated much as if it were a statute or was case law and
is equally binding. The effect is to give the administrative state, the bureaucracy, incredible
power and authority that many argue, I would argue, they should not have. And so that could
go back and
then the administrative state would have to adhere to the rules as passed by congress and congress
has to be more specific because they always has to do some work yeah because they just go yeah
that's good we'll let the epa figure it out we'll let the irs figure it out we'll let the scc figure
it out the irony of the whole shervon deference case which i think is underappreciated
especially in its ironic form is that it came out of the reagan administration oh really and it came
out because because they loosened that reagan told the epa no no no you guys are too strict
you've got to pull back these various you know these these these requirements loosen
regulations because it was you know and so they did so they loosened regulations and got sued
for loosening regulations by dropping the standards they got sued by a bunch of environmental groups groups that went to the probably Kennedy. It went.
Bet you.
I don't know.
But it went back to the Supreme Court.
They said, look, did they say, look, they said, look, here's what we're going to do because they ended up I think Chevron got involved by being sued because they took advantage
of the new looser regulations.
And then they got sued by
the local uh environmentalists and they the whole thing went to court and the supreme court said
look look they said uh what what we have here is a situation where we have to we have all these
administrative laws it it you whatever they say goes and so if they want to loosen the law, fine.
If they want to tighten it, fine.
And that's the way it is.
And then that became the Chevron deference.
And so the environmentalists kind of lost the case.
But that's where it started.
So nobody thought about, well, instead of getting looser
and making less regulations because you just do it on demand,
I'm a regulator, these regulations, I'm going to change them all to nothing you get a bunch of assholes in there
doing crazy stuff like making requirements that are unobtainable which is where we are now and so
now this case is uh you know it's abuse of power it's a very interesting kind of a switcheroo there
which happens this is what what happens when you try to overdo things since you bring up um reagan i
watched the arnold schwarzenegger documentary on netflix yeah it's a three-parter and for the it's
so it's three hours basically the first two and a half hours you're like wow america is great
what a great country.
Look at this guy.
Look at what he did.
Look at how America worked for him.
It's just everything is beautiful.
It's like apple pie almost.
It's so good.
It's so beautiful.
And then it gets to the part where Arnold Schwarzenegger runs for re-election as governor of California.
for re-election as governor of california and he goes he got that he put the this the state in debt for 222 billion dollars for solar crap for climate change because he decided to work oh i got a hands
across the aisle and and he left i mean it was the other states were worse by the time 2008 came around. But it's really disappointing to see how kind of a good guy got completely captured because he tried to be nice.
Co-opted.
Yes, he tried to be nice.
And those exact same climate change rules and regulations that he put into California is what Obama what obama nationalized this even this it's all
in there obama went hey arnold was great let's do this for the for all 50 states and it was it was
it was yeah thanks to his his wife well he well he was maria and i think they were divorced by then
no i don't think so i think when he first started with the climate stuff he was already oh yeah could be could be that was really near the end when when he was yeah stooping his uh
maid well no that was that was 96 is when joseph was born i mean it wasn't no no when he got caught
well you know that kid was pretty old by the time he got caught he was 14 you know how that
went so yeah of course he was you know he was the governor and he was in sacramento and so you know
it's very difficult on a family and they were going to uh uh they were in therapy together and
one day he's in therapy and the therapist says okay maria wants to ask you a question
and she says yeah is joseph
your son and he said well at that point i just told the truth and then boom it was all over
and he's it's kind of sad because he's alone now you know he's he's 75 he's got a small donkey
that he lives with yes the donkey's there the donkey's in the house. Donkey's walking around. It's kind of sad.
It was not a good ending,
but it just shows that everything was great
and then he got co-opted
and then just went down the tubes.
And I can see his thinking.
We got sun in California.
We should turn that into energy.
Well, it didn't work out that way.
I'm going to replay one of the two clips we had from Richard Haass with Morning Joe,
which we played a week and a half ago, because there is news on the Ukraine-Russia front that
is important to discuss, and there's no clips, so I'm going to replay this.
How long do our allies in Europe, who've all done, I think, together, NATO's done an
extraordinary job. How much longer do we continue pushing, I think, what many people in the Pentagon
would think is the unrealistic goal of Ukraine driving every last Russian out of their country?
It's exactly the right question, Joe.
And what concerns me is when people get disillusioned and increasingly come to where you and I are,
that as desirable as it is, it's simply not feasible.
They're going to increasingly say, and we're hearing it in the House, we're hearing it in parts of Europe,
why should we keep doing this?
We're already stretched.
We're trying to support Israel.
We're worried about Taiwan.
And even if we give everything we need to give or want to give to Ukraine, it still won't lead to success.
What I argue, therefore, is the United States needs to have some very direct conversations with Ukraine, with President Zelensky,
talk about reducing their emphasis on liberating land, increasingly put all their emphasis on holding on to what they've got.
In the long run, diplomatically through sanctions, yes, we can try to see the rest of their territory return.
But for right now, let's have 80 percent of this country safe, 80 percent of this country rebuilt.
I would actually propose to cease fire as an interim arrangement to expose the Russians for what they are so we
can rebuild support for Ukraine in this country. But we've had two fighting seasons. The idea that
one or two or three more years of this is going to result in success, I simply don't see it.
Russia's on a war footing. They have access also to arms from North Korea and Iran. So I just think
anytime in foreign policy, anytime in life, there's a big gap between what you're trying to do and your ability to do it.
You've either got to increase your means or lower your goals. And I think here,
the only realistic option as a tactical measure is to lower our goals.
So we took that as an obvious signal to Morning Joe.
Well, let's make sure that we re-mention the fact that this guy ha's talking
to morning joe as the head of the council on foreign relations yeah big big cheese and he
goes on morning joe really so yeah makes no sense he may even be just be friends uh with scarborough
and say hey bro like i doubt it so now we know that there was an article in the economist which
we missed um and for it to be in the economist all, which is very left-leaning with the new editor who's been there a couple of years, that both the military generals or the leaders of the Russian military and the Ukrainian military, both named Valery, interesting interesting valera valerie um have been talking
and they have decided they're going to end this thing uh seymour hirsch wrote about it in a pretty
good sub stack everyone in europe is talking about this the peace talks an american businessman who
spent years dealing with high-level ukrainian diplomatic and military issues and government
told me earlier this week but there are lots of questions between a ceasefire and a settlement.
The veteran journalist Anatoly Levin wrote this week
that the battlefield situation in Ukraine
and thus the ceasefire negotiations for peace settlement
are becoming more and more necessary for Ukraine.
He said that it was exceptionally difficult for the Ukrainian government
headed by Volodymyr Zelensky to agree to talks,
given its repeated refusal to negotiate
with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The driving force behind of those talks has not been Washington
or Moscow or Biden or Putin but instead the two high-ranking generals who run the war,
Valery Gershmov of Russia and Valery Zalozhny of Ukraine. And on the table is everything that we heard here from Haas, 80%. They'll keep their
80%, the 20% that they have recaptured, which is what it was about in the first place.
Interestingly, on the table appears to be the allowance for Ukraine to become a NATO country,
as long as they do not have any weaponry on the new border, as it is now,
and it can be defensive only.
And that would be the concession that Putin makes.
They keep Crimea, they keep the Donbass region,
and Ukraine can then become a NATO country,
which is like, wow, has Putin learned nothing?
But okay.
But it seems like this is happening.
And even in The Economist, First Lady Olena Zelenska told The Economist she does not want President Volodymyr Zelensky to lead another term and he needs to find something new in life.
She doesn't want him to be president anymore.
So I think this is, it feels like this is probably a handful at home she looks like it a handful at home um so it looks like this is really happening
it's coming to an end now of course they have to hit i loved uh uh the end of uh Hersh's sub stack.
The two generals may continue to talk and Putin may indeed be interested in a settlement that gives him permanent control of Crimea and the four provinces he has claimed.
But Zelensky remains the wild card.
The American official said that Zelensky has been told that this is a military to military problem to solve and the talks will go on with or without you if necessary.
The American official told me,
we can finance his voyage to the Caribbean,
which kind of goes in line with those two yachts he supposedly just bought.
Well, he's got yachts.
He's also got houses all over the world.
That was a documentary on YouTube done by Scott Ritter
that was very detailed on all the houses
that Zelensky's managed to accumulate all over the world.
So, yeah, they can get him out of there if they want to.
I got a weird Ukraine clip that I wanted to play, which is, this is just off the wall.
I was collecting good news clips, and this is from a Shreveport, Louisiana, local station.
And this is from the Shreveport, Louisiana, local station.
And I guess there's a bunch of and I think I don't know how this isn't a violation of the Logan Act. Play this clip. The war in Ukraine rages on.
And today, a delegation from the Ukrainian parliament met in downtown Shreveport to inform the public about the state of the war and how crucial economic investments from American businesses are needed
to help rebuild that country. Our Madison Edwards spoke with members of the Ukrainian parliament,
and he has more on what they discussed. So what was it, Madison? Well, Jeff, Louisiana and the
Ukraine share similar port exports. That's why the members of the parliament are asking the
local Shreveport citizen to help their cause and for business leaders in the area to invest
in the rebuilding of the nation. Louisiana is a major trading partner of Ukraine and the Ukrainian
delegation met in downtown Shreveport to discuss strengthening ties between the state and Ukraine
through business, energy, agriculture, and humanitarian efforts amid the ongoing conflict.
Member of Parliament David Arik Amiya says
Shreveport and Ukraine share similar business exports.
So the thinking here is that this is Mike Johnson,
Speaker of the House's home state.
He's their congressman.
Yeah, this is definitely a way of getting to him.
Influence operation.
I mean, so what it sounds like is,
well, of course, the Biden administration wants no end because, I mean, let's because then the focus will come back to him and Hunter, which, of course, is what we're going to be wasting our time with for the next year.
Thanks, Republicans in Congress.
That, you know, so neither the Biden administration or Zelensky want to give this up.
Give me credit, man.
So we need a solution so everybody can bow out.
And I mean, maybe this is something for the Curry Dvorak Consulting Group.
We need a solution so everybody can save face.
Yeah, a lot of face saving needed here.
This report went on for a long time.
I didn't clip the whole thing. I saw it.
I saw the whole thing.
Well, the one point that they kind of made in there is
these guys, this group of
parliamentarians from
or parliament members from
Ukraine are going to hit like 10
states along the
part of the country.
This is part of the rebuilding. This is the rebuilding part.
Yeah, they're trying to set the stage.
But it seems pretty screwy if you ask me.
I think the win would be Ukraine becoming a NATO country.
That's an obvious win for the U.S. White House.
All right, we got them, but they're nowhere near being prepared for that.
Has Sweden even been approved yet?
No, Sweden's still, I think, still in limbo.
Finland has.
Finland got their approval.
So, I mean, they need something.
Now, it's possible also the following.
Let's say that deal is done where, yeah, you can join NATO.
But joining NATO does have to have a majority, not a majority, but a unanimous consent with all the NATO members.
Including Russia.
No, I'm just kidding.
There are people actually would believe that.
I know, I know.
We've seen clips where, oh, I don't know why.
Yeah, we've seen clips.
We've seen it.
So you do a behind the scenes deal with Turkey.
Ah, Turkey A.
Turkey A and tell them, hey uh nix this okay and then you
nix it or even even uh putin could do that deal i mean somebody could do it because turkey doesn't
care at this point they'll don't they're the ones screwing up the sweden uh yeah yes yeah yeah
yeah yeah so it's possible that they won't.
I mean, yeah, okay, we can let them in, but we won't let them in.
Well, no, we'll let them in.
We're all forward.
Good to go.
U.S., Europe, they all say, okay, it's going to be great.
They're going to be NATO.
That is the stepping stone towards full European membership, which they also won't get.
No, they can't.
That would be the worst thing that europe could do europe doesn't
they don't want another greece on their hands so and then you're right then then we have worse then
we have turkey a just be the the the foil the foil continuous foil like nope nope nope nope nope
but but i mean it's it's a beautiful it's a beautiful thing that it's coming to an end. I'm so happy.
We need less war in our lives.
We could do with less.
That thing is a mess.
That is just a rubbleization of parts of the country.
Well, they have the rebuilding project all good to go.
I mean, everybody's ready, and I'm sure there's-
There's money to be made.
There's tons.
Well, there's money in the-
How about that?
How about we give you Russia's money, the 300 billion
that's been on the table for a long time. I'm sure that Russia's written it off.
You know, they're trying to screw Russia with the methane bull crap. So they could still kind of,
kind of have their anti-Russian stance. I mean, there is something new.
This was so funny. We've been through this so many times with russia but okay here it is one more time gay clubs
across russia have been raided just days after the country ruled the lgbt plus community was
extremist the reports from moscow followed the highest court in russia banning what it called
the global lgbtq movement human rights groups have slammed
the actions so this hasn't quite hit in the u.s yet i'm expecting it because what happened is
48 hours after the russian government and really what they're after is one lgbtq organization
which is a non-pro an ngo who course, are weaponizing LGBTQ,
just as it's done here in the U.S.
They say, hey, you guys are an extremist organization.
You're not allowed anymore.
This is not new.
Russia has gotten rid of all kinds of NGOs
because they usually are agencies,
particularly for the United States, CIA, MI5, MI6, whatever, MI5.
MI6.
But this is being twisted to say 48 hours after they outlawed LGBTQ, they invaded all the bars, they raided the bars, which was for, I guess they were looking for some, they were trying to do some big drug bust.
So that might catch a storm. They might use that. which was for, I guess they were looking for some, they were trying to do some big drug bust.
So that might catch a storm.
They might use that.
I mean, that could be a way to refocus the Palestine energy,
you know, because something has to happen with that.
The Palestine energy is a problem.
It's a real problem.
Because they're just losing losing grip over that so you know we need to uh remind everybody that trump is a dictator and uh the worst uh scenario imaginable in your life is
if trump is re-elected president again you say donald trump if he is i'm sorry this is liz cheney
on cbs you say why does anyone even give her a mic for this reason and this reason only?
You say Donald Trump, if he is reelected, it will be the end of the republic. What do you mean?
He's told us what he will do. It's very easy to see the steps that he will take.
People who say, well, if he's elected, it's not that dangerous because we have all of these checks and balances, don't fully understand the extent to which the Republicans in Congress today have been co-opted.
One of the things that we see happening today is a sort of a sleepwalking into dictatorship in the United States.
Dictatorship.
It's a replay.
It's a replay.
Crock and crap.
And everyone's slapping it up.
Like there's no tomorrow is Liz Cheney.
And Liz Cheney has got to be the lowest form of human.
well,
there was a Gavin Newsom,
uh,
this DeSantis debate debate which was a complete waste
of an hour and a half five million viewers apparently yeah well that's more than i expected
hannity's not a slouch well um true so i i didn't clip any of it and i wasn't about to
and it was a lot of talking over each other but But I did get a 15 second clip of Capehart. Yeah.
Who saw the who saw the whole thing and he had all these things to say about it.
And and he did this little ditty. Do you think that Governor Newsom's appearance,
though, helped the campaign of President Biden in any way?
I do, because when I watched the debate, almost every in every sentence, it was Biden, Harris,
Biden, Harris, Biden, Harris, President Harris. It was promotion. It was a promotion.
That's great. Well, here's here's boots on the ground what's happening
chicago which now is finally building migrant camps in the city um with the huge tents which
should have been up a long time ago because it's 16 degrees in chicago and all the migrants who
have been partially bussed in from Texas, but others
have been flown in and others choose willingly to go to Chicago.
Welcome to Chicago.
Yes.
But these tents, which will house, I think, a couple thousand migrants, are in black neighborhoods.
We've been following this for a while.
Yeah.
And this has now come to a head
where the black Chicagoans are saying,
we're voting Republican.
And any Republican candidate in the city of Chicago,
now is your time.
Because we are done with the Democrats.
Wendy Johnson, Governor President,
and President Biden have shown us what they think about the black community we are done with the Democratic Party. Wendy Johnson, Governor Prince of Wales,
has shown us what they think about the black community
all over this country.
And so we're standing here today to say,
okay, if that's what it is,
we win it. We don't have to
support the Democratic Party.
We don't have to continue
to support people who
are not going to support us.
And the Democratic Party here in this city, in this state, and in this country is not supporting us.
You got the Republicans on one side and the Democrats on the other side.
Guess what? They're part of the same bird.
So it doesn't matter anymore which party we go with. But I'll tell you this.
I'd rather deal with the snake that's outfitting himself of the Republican Party than the snake that's coming up in the Democratic Party.
We're not going to continue to stand for this.
We're not going to continue to allow our state representatives, our congressmen, our aldermen, and our mayor to let us know that
we don't matter.
Just like you're going to show us that we're going to matter, we're going to show you.
It's going to be a great day in the city of Chicago when a Democratic convention comes
here, and then they found out in March that a lot of black voters took Republican ballots.
Deal with that.
That's right.
Deal with that.
Yeah, that's right.
The convention coming in March in Chicago.
Every time they do one in Chicago, it becomes a riot, riotous situation.
It's harkening back to the 68 convention.
It's a cycle.
It must be.
How many years is it?
60 years it would be.
No, it's 60 years.
Yeah, 60 years.
60 year cycle.
It's like the certain stock market moves.
Yeah, so you have 60 years later, you get about 60.
It'll be a real bad look if the cops are beating blackheads, I'll tell you that.
Oh, they will.
They'll be beating them.
Yeah, but it'll be a bad look.
Yeah, it was a bad look when they were beating the students in 68 the democrat hey we need to bring that back beat students we
need to bring that back they're crazy beat them students beat them students um one of our producers
uh was intrigued by our discussion of uh vice presidential picks for President Trump.
Oh, yes, we have picks coming in.
Well, he has the odds.
He has the odd makers from the sports bet in Australia, which I thought was interesting.
Oh, this is interesting.
Okay.
So I guess the lowest number is the most likely, right?
So it's one in six.
That is more likely than one in 40, correct?
Yeah, I would think.
All right.
So in order of appearance, one in six, Kristi Noem.
She's South Dakota?
Yeah, South Dakota governor.
One in 6.5, Elise Stefanik, which was unknown to me.
I've heard her name, but I can't think of what she is.
I don't know where the Aussies came up with this.
Well, they'll bet on, look.
I know, they'll bet on anything.
Because they got nothing better to do in Austria than bet on stuff.
They haven't got guns.
The country's dead.
Sorry, Aussies, but you got screwed.
She is a Republican congresswoman from New York.
Oh, yeah, I know who she is.
She hasn't got a prayer.
Okay.
7-1, Vivek Ramaswamy.
Then it goes to 10, 1-10, Nikki Haley.
Then we go 1-12, Tim Scott.
Tied with Tucker Carlson.
No, brother.
I know.
This is where Australia goes off the rails.
Then at one in 14, Carrie Lake.
Carrie Lake has been, a lot of people are pushing Carrie Lake.
I don't think President Trump wants her to possibly upstage him in certain cases.
Yeah, she's an upstager.
No doubt about that.
She's an upstager.
Yeah, that could be a problem.
Then my potential pick, one in 21, so those odds are not good, Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
Then we get into just, you know, like Marsha Blackburn, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Ben Carson, Gregory Abbott.
No.
Then Marco Rubio.
I mean, it just, I mean, and let's see odds at one in 41 is Tulsi Gabbard, Bobby the Op at 41, J.D. Vance at 41.
So the odds have it at Kristi Noem, at least Stefanik. That's, you know, she could be, she's definitely had made the right moves.
I could see Kristi Noem being a good candidate.
Man, the South Dakotans are not happy with her.
Now what?
No, they just haven't been.
Craig, who's one of our producers.
She brags a lot about being the greatest governor in South Dakota in the history of the state. Now they have all kinds of issues
with it. There's lots of stuff she's done that the
South Dakotans don't like.
Particularly the conservatives.
I'll have Craig
Weinberg. Have him write it up.
He'll write it up for me. He'll tell me succinctly
what it is. But I know because
that's when
Megyn Kelly, last time I was on,
emphasis on last time I was on. emphasis on last time I was on.
Probably the last time you were on.
Yeah, she's like, Christy, Christy, no.
And I said, no, South Dakotans don't like it.
That's not true.
Okay, Megan.
Your imitation of Kelly is almost spot on.
I mean, I can't tell if she's actually in the studio with you.
I know.
It's like we switched over to New York.
She's now going into acting.
Who?
Megan.
Does she know him?
No, Megan Kelly.
Yeah.
Everyone's okay.
So Daily Wire are doing movie projects now.
That's what that CEO guy, that's what Boring always wanted to do.
So I guess they're
doing a yeah i'm reminded of of remembering yahoo was run by that guy from hollywood
ah what was his name it started with a b i think i can't remember somebody that
the troll room might remember it was but he was such a hollywood he was going to turn everything
into like he was going to start using yahoo money to produce movies yeah and and then and then they finally spent all his time in la he never was up
here yeah and then they threw the whole thing to marissa meyer and just let it go to crap
yeah what was the name of what was that guy's he was a real hollywood guy
troll room doesn't know but anyway so daily wire doesn't know that But anyway, so Daily Wire. Troll Room doesn't know? That stuns me.
Troll Room's not paying attention.
They're trolling.
That's what they do.
They're too young.
They're too young to know this stuff.
I mean, we could look it up.
I mean, let's see.
Yahoo.
Who cares?
Now I got to know Yahoo.
Let's do it.
Consult the book of knowledge.
Terry.
Wasn't it Terry something? Terry something. Terry. Terry. Mm-hmm. Terry, wasn't it Terry something?
Terry, Terry, Terry, Terry Semmel.
Terry Semmel.
Terry Semmel.
I did that from memory.
Well, good for you.
Thank you very much.
Anyway, so the Boring Company, Boring, the Boring Company, Boring, the CEO of Daily Wire.
So he's all on the the movie tip and so they're doing an
animated short or as series which i think that's what megan's going to be acting in and of course
what everyone's talking about is lady ballers uh the movie you heard about lady ballers haven't
you oh yeah yeah and i and i think this is a mistake, to be honest about it. I think it's counterproductive.
I like humor.
What's a mistake?
What is their mission?
Is their mission just to have...
No, what you're saying, you're like the guy who owns a little store in the corner
and the guy across the street selling junk jewelry.
So you sell junk jewelry. And then another guy down the street does knife sharpening.
So you do knife sharpening. And pretty soon the store that you started to sell something or other
is now just a store full of different junk processes. Wow. I hadn't thought of explaining
it that way. Well, that's what what it is know what you do and do it
well so this is like us all of a sudden well you know while we're at it why don't we you know do
this and that no well so they have some big names that they have in this in this movie
then it's an anti-woke movie and you know it's like
movie and you know it's like it just seems like why do you you're doing an anti-woke movies as bad as doing a woke movie tell us good story there you go that's it it's just as bad as doing
get politics out of it i mean that's what you're talking about yeah i think you're i think that's
that's what i'm saying yeah is it just yeah let's let's do a good movie there you go try making a good entertaining film that people enjoy just a movie
we'll all enjoy watching that everybody can go and watch well i guess that's what barbie was
maybe a lot of everybody went and watched it yeah it was i was dumb. I still haven't seen it. I can't bring myself to watch it.
You won't get past,
you will not get over 10, 20 minutes into it.
There's no way.
No, I'm...
Because it's silly.
It's a silly promotional film.
Yes, yes.
It's very pink, though.
And I will say this,
when the Oscars come out,
if they don't give set decoration
or art director to the person who did that movie, they're screwing up because it is stunning.
Stunning.
So before we take a break, I think we should probably discuss Israel and Hamas.
I have blips.
Yeah, let me let me kick this off with a morning joke clip just to get us into the mood.
A little deeper into the New York Times report that Israel knew Hamas was planning a wide scale assault a year before the October 7th terrorist attack.
One year, according to the Times, Israeli officials obtained an approximately 40 page document, which they codenamed as, as said,
Jericho Wall. It outlined point by point exactly the kind of devastating invasion that led to the
deaths of about 1,200 people, probably many more. The Times writes, Israeli military and
intelligence officials dismissed the plan as aspirational,
considering it too difficult for Hamas to carry out.
The problem with that is, and we're going to talk to Jackie about this very soon.
And the reporter behind this piece.
Right. The problem with that is that Israel needs U.S. funding.
We need to know what we're funding. Are we funding Benjamin Netanyahu?
Are we funding his designs to stay in power? Are we funding an operation where we have to look
and guess, okay, well, is this in the best interest of the Israeli people? Or is this in
the best interest of a prime minister who deliberately focused on the West Bank,
deliberately turned a blind eye to this plan for a year, a year where it's specifically laid out?
So I'm not so sure that Congress and the president want to approve even more money for Israel
until we know that there's actually somebody running Israel.
There it is.
That even the Israelis support.
The Israelis don't trust Benjamin Netanyahu.
I think this is the way they want to manage this crisis because you can't.
Regime change.
Yes.
You can't hate the Jews, but everybody can hate Bibi.
That's an easy one.
I mean, even our own knights, like, you know, screw Bibi Netanyahu.
He's no good.
And now it's like, oh, we don't want to be funding him.
Yes, regime change, which would make the woke Israeli population very happy.
Yeah.
This is interesting
because we already had Richard Haas
on the show.
So we know there's a conduit
between the Council on Foreign Relations
and this stupid show.
So this is just,
this is the talking points from the CFR.
Yep.
We have to assume that.
I think so.
So the talking points, so the CFR wants Yep. We have to assume that. I think so. So the talking points,
the social,
the CFR wants to get rid of BB for whatever reason.
And this bull crap with this report,
like,
Oh,
and he kept ignoring it day after day.
It's like,
as though they were shoving in his face every single day.
And he's not get that out of there.
He looked at it like a million other reports you get when you're in the job
like that.
And they come past your desk and, oh, that's interesting.
Oh, that's interesting. There's a different one every day
and they're all doing different things.
You choose one or the other and your guys are supposed
to tell you what's important and what's not.
And if the head of the chief of intelligence
tells you this is going to happen,
you take it seriously. But if it's just some random
report that goes through, this is bull
crap. I think they can make him
the new Putin.
He has the face for it.
Let's be honest.
By the way, he's looking like he's losing weight on the spot.
He's getting tired.
He's getting tired looking.
He's getting tired of this.
So they're going to oust him in some way, shape, or form.
But also focus the energy not on Israel, but on Bibi Netanyahu.
That is, that's a way out of this.
They need a way out.
They being America.
And using this phony bologna report as a ruse is a great idea.
Yes, that's, there you go.
That's our CIA.
Sometimes they have a good one.
Yeah, and the whole report could be bogus for all we know.
It could be bogus.
Everything he said, we don't know any of it to be true.
He kept ignoring the report, blah, blah, blah.
We don't know that one thing he said Scarborough said.
We don't know that any one item is actually true.
No, it's unnecessary. We know that.
Russia, Russia, Russia.
Very perfect phone call. Very fine people. Come on's unnecessary. We know that. Russia, Russia, Russia. Very perfect phone call.
Very fine people.
Come on.
We don't need that.
Just repeat stuff.
Very fine people.
My favorite.
Just repeat it over.
Dave Rubin tried to correct that.
He was on with Bill Maher.
There's always somebody
trying to correct it to no avail.
Yeah, and he was on with
the old coot, the USMC hoodie, pink hoodie wearing guy.
He used to be married to Mary Matlin.
Oh, that guy.
Yeah, the bald guy, the old coot.
The bald old fart, yeah.
Yeah, and he was like, very fine people.
And Dave Rubin is like, well, you you know he's and and just everyone laughed over him
Dave Rubin could not could not could not get the correction in no we're not gonna happen James
Carville thank you Carville yeah Carville yeah you know no no you can't even understand I couldn't
clip it because you can't understand pretty much like that yeah you can't understand him anymore
can't all right so what clip do you
have what clips do you have about this well i got the update the as of yesterday the update on the
on the whole thing of course it's from pbs and so it will have a uh certain uh anti-jew as jew
hate slant but it's okay this is the gaza update Hold on. Hold on. Elitist voices of America.
This is NPR or PBS. Tonight, hopes for another pause in the fighting in Gaza anytime soon have
dimmed considerably. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered his negotiators
home from Qatar, saying the talks there had hit a dead end. Since fighting resumed, at least 200 Palestinians have been killed,
bringing the death toll since October 7th to more than 15,200.
Those numbers from the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.
Meanwhile, the focus of Israel's renewed aerial bombardment of Gaza has shifted from the north.
Yeah!
Nat pops. We got to remind everybody remind everybody nat pops that's what you do
as a video editor good work israel's renewed aerial bombardment of gaza has shifted from the north
in the southern gaza city of han yunus the streets are engulfed in smoke the israeli military has
dropped leaflets urging residents of the city and the surrounding area to evacuate further south.
But beleaguered Gazans say there is nowhere to go.
They seek refuge wherever they can find it, like this makeshift camp outside Al Nasser Hospital.
We fled the north before coming here.
We went to various places.
There's no safe place in Gaza. Our houses are gone. Our property is gone. Our money is gone. Some died, some handicapped
in the hospital. What is left to cry for? And then they tell us we will get aid. Where is it?
As the wounded fill Al Nnasser hospital today that aid
50 trucks full according to the palestine red crescent society entered through the rafa crossing
along the egyptian border the first relief since the ceasefire ended friday yesterday israel had
blocked aid from getting into gaza you know what's interesting that sir Sir Brian of London is in Israel.
He's been giving me his boots on the ground.
On Friday, he sends me a text message.
He says, well, ceasefire's over.
Rockets are incoming.
But I didn't hear anybody report on that.
I heard one report of rockets incoming.
But before the ceasefire was over, before it was they started launching rockets yeah israel yeah now the the thing about these reports and all of them have the same thing it's the it's the uh palestinian health authorities that has the the head count
of the dead what is that all about well they're the authority they're the authority they're the
health authority they're not the death authority they're not the government well they're the authority. They're the authority. They're the health authority. They're not the death authority.
They're not the government.
Well, they're the health.
They're the authority.
I find it peculiar that this one non-agency or who knows who they are has got the death count.
Probably some guy in an apartment in London.
You know, I think of the same thing.
Like the Syrian guy.
Forget who that was.
Remember that guy?
I thought it was a girl. No, no, no. It was the Syrian guy who was who that was. Remember that guy? That was a girl.
No, no, no. It was the Syrian guy who was the authority, and he was in London.
He's a Syrian authority.
Just making it up as he goes along. So, okay, let's go to part two of this.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the fighting would not stop until Israel meets its objectives.
We will continue the war until we achieve all its goals, and it's impossible to achieve those goals without the ground operation.
The ground operation was necessary to bring the results until now, and it is necessary to bring the results moving forward.
With hopes of a renewed ceasefire dissipating, Vice President Kamala Harris spoke with reporters in Dubai, laying out the Biden administration's vision for peace. Five principles guide our approach for post-conflict Gaza. No forcible displacement,
no reoccupation, no siege or blockade, no reduction in territory, and no use of Gaza as a platform for terrorism.
We want to see a unified Gaza and West Bank under the Palestinian authority.
And Palestinian voices and aspirations must be at the center of this work.
Wow.
Wow.
Waffling much.
Waffling.
She's waffling.
Does she have absolutely no emotion whatsoever
when she discusses anything?
She just reads like a robot?
Yeah, sounds like it. Sounds about right.
She's an idiot.
Unlike the emotion
and the sportscasterish vibe
of this CNN report.
Both Israel and Hamas have indicated they were ready to restart
fighting if the negotiations fell apart
and if the truce expired.
And that's exactly what happened right around 7 o'clock this morning.
We have seen the skyline of Gaza.
We have heard the strikes the IDF is carrying out in Gaza.
So this war is very much back on as both Israel and Hamas had promised.
We have seen Israel carrying out strikes in southern Gaza.
According to authorities there, that is where they said they would focus the second phase of their operation. Meanwhile, Israel has dropped leaflets in parts of southern Gaza.
Interestingly, those leaflets have a QR code that brings you to a map with Gaza broken up into very
tiny parcels. It seems as if Israel will try to evacuate these parcels of civilians along established
evacuation routes in an attempt to avoid civilian casualties as the
fighting resumes at pace. Worth noting that Secretary of State Antony Blinken was just here.
He said Israel had to have a concrete plan to protect civilians before they launch the second
phase of their operation. Well, that is now here. He also said Israel needed a plan for more
humanitarian assistance. And yet aid trucks outside of Gaza that have already been inspected by israel according
to an eyewitness on the ground there have not gone in since this morning so phil it is very
much a question of whether that humanitarian aid has now been cut off with the fighting resumed
yeah we know that's not true because yesterday's report showed they came through
poppy harlow broke it down for us This hospital simply cannot take more children with the wounds of war.
There are children everywhere. These children are sleeping.
There was a bomb literally 50 meters from here.
This is a war on children.
A war on children, stark words from a UNICEF spokesman
as the truce between Israel and Hamas has ended.
He was speaking from one of the last remaining hospitals
that is operating in Gaza.
The Hamas-controlled Palestinian health ministry
says 6,000 children have been killed in Gaza
since the October 7th terror attack.
That's all you need to know.
It's a war on children.
That's it.
That's all.
It's a war on children.
And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage.
In the morning to you,
the man who put the sea in the war on children.
Ladies and gentlemen, say hello to my friend on the other end,
the one and only Mr. John C. DeFore.
Well, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry.
In the morning, all ships and sea boots on the ground,
feet in the air, subs in the water,
and all the dames and all the knights out there.
Hello, trolls, trolls, trolls, trolls.
We got
2,073
trolls in the troll
room. 400 low.
They're eventually just going to have to take
this as the new normal.
No.
Okay.
All right. I would say by christmas
we'll be back to doing the executive producers in after the first hour because it'll be very short
i know i know look i've been around this gig i know how that goes i've been around this gig man
uh but for now uh we're we're still very happy to report we have 2,073 trolls hanging out with us in the troll room which you can join
them there's room for 400
apparently go to trollroom.io
and join in the fun
you can log in right there
listen to noagendastream.com
listen to it live as we come to you live every
Thursday and Sunday and of course before
our show is the
fabulous Darren O'Neill who
celebrated Ozzy Osbourne.
Oh, my God.
He played his songs.
They're terrible.
They're not terrible.
Ozzy's songs are good.
Oh, please.
Oh, bah humbug.
Come on, man.
What do you want, Lawrence Welk?
Darren, play some Lawrence Welk for John on Thursday.
Uh-huh.
That's right.
That's the way to go counter-argument is
Lawrence Welk. Yeah.
Ozzy is classic, man.
He sucks.
Wow. All right. John at
Dvorak.org. You can't
mess with Oz.
That's un-American.
Stinks.
You can also be alerted when we go live,
when any of the shows go live.
Actually,
if you subscribe to the podcast in a modern podcast app,
go to modern podcast apps.com.
I'm using podcast guru right now.
I like it a lot.
He's got a lot of cool features in there.
Or you can just,
you know,
join us at no agenda,
social.com where I have not posted a single post since the last show, and I will continue my boycott because it's horrible.
They're all over you about you're a Musk hater.
You even told the guy that he should be kicked off.
I did.
Well, you are at least paying attention.
I said, hey, knock it off.
You're making a fool of yourself.
Or quit.
Quit the platform.
Yeah, and did you see his reply?
No.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I didn't know that you couldn't deconstruct the media deconstructors or have an opinion or make a joke.
Yeah, the guy's a jerk, this guy.
Get rid of him.
Take him off.
I'm not doing anything of the kind.
I'm watching
well he thinks he thinks you're a big a-hole because he thinks i am now too because i defended
you thank you i appreciate that no i'm just this is now a social experiment i'm just watching it
devolve into into mush it's chaos yes people are you know i used to try and you know manage it a
little bit tell people you know try and calm stuff down.
I'm not.
I'm left to their own devices.
Even people who believe they're on the same team of love will just, you know, everyone is traumatized.
And everyone's yelling and one-upping.
I'm reminded of John Conway's The Game of Life, a very early computer program that came out in probably the late 70s.
It was great.
It was just for regular old-fashioned screens before graphics came along.
And these little communities would crop up, and they would show you how they grew and shrunk and grew and shrunk.
And they never stabilized, and they all went extinct.
And I'm reminded of that when i see what's going on there well that's what it's always going to be it reminds
me of the no agenda forums that was a thing that was lively and then it just went extinct because
it was they went nuts no what happened with no agenda forums is they kept saying you need to
post over here you need to participate
and i was like i got no time for that well you don't love us and i said well there was that
what the real killer for them was they started their own podcast the round they counter program
it was called the round table wasn't it i think something like that yeah yeah and it turns so
they were just this this podcast that nobody paid attention to
it's just these no that's not the problem they tried to do a podcast about our podcast every you
know twice a week and it turns out oh it's really hard well actually that's more than another one
yo agenda was more along those comic strip blogger yeah yeah and his buddy had there's two guys and
they was all he was grouse about our show.
Yeah, yeah. And then
when the show, that's when the show first started
and then when it got like
two hours long and then it got
close to three hours, they couldn't do it.
Couldn't hack it.
Failed out.
We smothered
them with love. No, no,
what you should do,
and I'm a proponent of the troll room.
I think it's good for people to go to trollroom.io
during the show, go in there and go,
I hate you, you suck, because it just scrolls off
and it goes away and then nothing really happens.
It's good, you get it out of your system.
I think it's a really, that is the place to go then and you also can't post memes that's
another good thing about it you know it's just text so you have to be crafty with words you know
you have to have some talent talent it's not a real thing yeah anyway use net Now, what was the what was the email system that you went to the bulletin boards?
Remember, you would write an email and then it would it would upload and it would.
But that wasn't MCI mail was doing.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
It was through the bulletin board.
It wasn't CompuServe email.
No, no, no.
Before that, it wasn't the source.
No, before that, it was. It wasn't FidoNet, was. No, no, no. Before that. And it wasn't the source email.
No, before that.
It was.
It wasn't Fidonet, was it?
Yes, Fidonet.
Yes, that's it.
Nailed it.
Fidonet.
Yes.
And you'd have to wait a day.
You'd have to wait for the phone lines to open up.
The guy would have a bulletin board with five phone lines.
You'd have a daemon and keep dialing. To have a bulletin board back in the day, you had to have X number of phone lines coming in. So you'd have people with 10, 20 phone lines you have a demon and keep dialing to have a bulletin board back in the day you had to have x number of phone lines coming in so you'd have people with 10 20 phone lines which was a
good thing for the phone companies well it was all local calls you had to find a bulletin board
with a local local number so you could be because you know long distance no one could afford it
especially not at 300 baud or whatever we had. That was 300 baud.
Remember those days?
And then it quickly went to 1,200.
So there you go.
And then we got the Hays compression protocol.
Yeah, baby.
Yeah, Dennis Hays.
Remember that?
Good times.
Yeah, I do.
I remember all that stuff
because I had all that gear.
Now I have five gigabits per second fiber
in my lifetime.
Okay.
Just because you have two networks that don't even get one in total.
I have two networks that both get one. You're getting one to the local head end, to the ping.
You're not getting any.
Well, that's just true with everything.
Right.
So don't give me this.
You're not getting two.
Well, you're not.
It's not about the speed. It's about the amount of things i can have simultaneously i can have my tours and i
can have my umbral and my start nine and we can dream yes yeah i see why is that funny to you? It's just funny. All right.
We are a value for value show.
We pioneered the concept.
Do you know that even the Noster guys are now calling themselves value for value?
Yeah, eventually we'll be forgotten.
Well, I think this already happened.
I have a feeling we're way, way past that point.
Yeah, man, Jack Dorsey invented value for value.
That's how that went.
I saw that coming a long time.
Thanks, Jack.
At Jack.
Yeah, so we decided long ago that the only way to be able to speak freely is to not have advertising or any corporate interests or any anything that that is other
than just us and the audience which we never called listeners we decide to call you producers
because that's what you do you send us clips you send us articles boots on the ground your insights
your knowledge sometimes even your humor but we had talking about that we had i didn't i may or
may not read these today probably in the show coming
up we have at least three people that i got email from who work in the facilities at these various
water plant facilities yes and they have all the insight about this this is bull crap and they're
using you know passwords the default passwords default passwords that anyone can hack in.
And there's no reason it's on the net.
We have people that do.
That's why when you ask for somebody who knew about this insurance scam,
it'll show up.
We'll get it.
It'll show up because we, it's astonishing.
I have to say at some point,
it's astonishing the people that we have that work in every single industry.
I was talking to somebody about the show recently.
And they asked me, well, you know, we're talking about,
what's your demo, he asked me.
What's our demo?
Did you kick him in the shins and poke him in the eye? I kicked him right in the balls.
And so I said, the great thing about our show is we have no demo.
It's little kids to old men, old women and everything in between and engineers and,
and everything pilots.
I mean,
there's preachers,
everybody.
It's astonishing.
The demo.
Yeah.
Every race,
creed,
religion,
background,
everything.
Yes.
We have,
we have a world demo.
Just tell them that our demo is the world well that's probably easier on them than kicking them in the balls well it's too late now i mean the guy will
never talk to you again pissed off about it so the way that works is if you get any value out of the
show and if you don't you got to question your life because why you well you could be hate listening
it could be hate listening yeah You could be hate listening.
We do have hate listeners.
Oh, you know,
shows that I hate to listen to,
I listen to regularly.
Yeah, you're a hate listener.
You go out and find shows you hate.
No, there's only one show I hate.
And I listen to that twice a week.
By the way, she's on TV now.
She's on a Sunday
CNN panel show.
I can't wait for the clips.
Oh, brother is right.
Led by that ex-Fox guy.
What's his face?
What ex-Fox?
There's a bunch of them.
Sanchez?
No, no, the guy who left Fox.
The famous dad.
What's his name?
Tucker Carlson.
Other famous.
No, the news guy who went, I'm leaving this Fox.
You Republicans.
I'm a liberal.
Oh, Shepard Smith.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
I'm throwing out as many names as I can.
Chris Wallace.
Oh, Chris Wallace.
That guy.
Yeah.
He moderates it.
He is just a, well, it's dud meets dud. Chris Wallace. That guy. Yeah. He moderates it. And Kara Swisher is one of them.
He is just a, well, it's dud meets dud.
Dud meets dud.
Ooh, I got to write that one down.
Dud meets dud.
Anyway, back to value for value.
So here's an example, although it's a sad example,
because Sir Paul Couture created the No Agenda Art Generator for us,
noagendaartgenerator.com. And he's maintained that thing for well over a decade we had one before that but
i mean it's it really that is true value because he changed the structure of it at least midway
and you know there's over and just smooth as silk over 24 25 000 always smooth as silk 24 25 000 Over 24, 25,000 pieces of artwork.
This is where the artists compete.
This thing went belly up, hardware failure,
and he has just been pulling his hair out trying to get it back online.
So he has a temporary page up and we've got all kinds of solutions.
But the point is, we never would have started that.
We would never have been able to afford to pay someone to do that.
We would look at the monthly bill and go, eh.
I can hear you go, eh, why are we paying for this?
And it goes for all kinds of things.
We have never had to do any of that.
All we have to do is deconstruct media and assemble a show twice a week.
And we're so grateful that's value for
value yeah and the volunteerism is a big part of it that's not something you can just do if you're
commercial entity no selling ads try it invites i mean our show invites volunteerism we get we get
reports that are voluntarily submitted we get the art that's voluntarily done. We have somebody doing the art generator voluntarily.
And that's what, it's a big deal when you can get a system together that has a lot of volunteerism.
Yeah.
Because you end up getting astonishing product until it crops out.
Well, yeah, I mean, obviously.
It has its ups and downs.
There's some downside, yeah.
But the downside is kind of quaint.
No, I like it because we can't yell at anybody.
No, you can't.
What are you going to do?
I'm working for free, you prick.
If we had been paying for this, we'd be like,
get that thing back up.
I can't believe it.
And now we're like, I'm not spun up over it.
I'm not mad.
You're fired.
I'm not mad.
It's like, oh, I feel bad.
I feel bad for Paul that he's trying to fix that.
And it's a pain in the butt.
I'm sure it's a miserable situation.
It wouldn't have taken him this long.
No doubt.
So with that, that's the time and talent portion.
We also have the treasure, the three Ts of value for value, time, talent, treasure.
And we love to thank our executive and associate executive producers right at the top of our list.
We always read out the amounts.
We give the notes that people have sent in.
And we are very...
But we got to thank the artist for the last artwork.
Well, I don't know who it was because remember, you sent it to me and be said, I don't know who did it.
But the artist who did it should send us a note and say, Hey, give me some credit here.
So I can put your name into the credits, which are just empty because I didn't know who had done that.
Cause it was something you would just collected.
I collected.
Yeah.
collected and i collect what i yeah normally before i do a newsletter i go into the art generator and i find two or three pieces of art that i might want to use for the newsletter and
then i'll place it into the newsletter and see if it works and uh that piece was rejected and or i
used it i'm not don't remember but whatever the case is that so I always have a bunch of pieces sitting in my files that I just looked at.
Your email, you mean?
You email yourself?
No, I do it directly.
I do just the save images.
Oh, right-click save images.
Nice.
Yeah, I don't do any email stuff.
All right.
So, yes, we'd like to thank our executive and associate executive producers.
And we start off with a guy who has always been there for us, usually about once a month,
Sir Animas of Dogpatch and Lower Slobovia.
And he sends, now this is not an atypical number for him because he likes $2 bills.
He sent us a row of ducks, 22-22, which i'm going to presume was in cash and included two
dollar bills at least one one two dollar bill yes and uh he says thank you to and he always has a
typewritten note we have very little idea about um about this producer synonymous of dog patch
lois lobovi other than he's He's anonymous. He keeps himself anonymous.
He's anonymous, and he is a patron saint for us.
Thank you to all the producers, and congratulations to the many that now use the pronoun doctor.
That's a pronoun we stand behind.
And thank you to John and Adam for being effective altruists,
working on holidays, finding the best use of your remaining lives,
is to deconstruct news and entertain wait a minute is he is he predicting our doom here working on holidays
and finding the best use of your remaining lives that's you and i john is to deconstruct news and
entertain the dedicated producers it is good to see americans fight the effort to impose theological beliefs into law by so-called conservatives.
Having a little experience with countries committed to conservative theological laws of my faith,
implementing some of these laws can cause even those with strong morals to question their interpretation.
No, that's deep.
That's deeper than normal, I think, for seronomists.
Well, he must have been given a parking ticket or something, I'm guessing, in Saudi Arabia.
Which comes with a beating.
John has often referenced shanty towns as an alternative to tent cities.
And I would say you've promoted the idea.
Yes, I have.
The political term at the time was Hoovervilles.
Yes, under have. The political term at the time was Hoovervilles. Yes, under President Hoover.
That was in the 30s.
But worldwide is what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about the shanty towns that are everywhere but the United States, not the Hoovervilles.
Go on.
He continues.
But go on, Kara.
With elections in the offing, perhaps they can be namediden towns or trump towns could work well but the
incumbent usually gets naming rights no jingles no karma but thank you so much john mr dog patch
and lois lobovia you always have the best you cut right through it even if it if it's cutting
through us we love you for it thank you yeah hoovervilles were, because they had this homeless situation back in the 30s,
and it was like, it resulted in these little, it's nothing like today.
As far as I can tell, I've looked into it.
What we have going on today in certain cities, New York would be one of them,
Chicago, San Francisco, although they're not there, I know what happened to them.
And Berkeley had a big town of homeless, I don't know what happened to them and uh berkeley had a big town of homeless
i know what happened to them um yeah well they set up a same place some acreage and yeah them
do their own thing pluma's up and she is pluma i think it's kai kai kai kai kai kai hawaii kai Kai, Kai, Kai, Kai, maybe. Kai, Kai, Hawaii. Kai, I, in Hawaii.
I asked the guy once,
did you pronounce it Hawaii or Hawaii?
And he says, you pronounce it Hawaii.
I said, well, thanks.
I said, well, thanks.
And he said, you're welcome.
Oh, boy.
Did that joke writer write that one for you?
Jeez.
It's from my vaudeville days.
Yes, of course.
She came in with 1-1-1-1-1-1.
Nice.
Satchela Richards.
She says,
Paramaniana, gents.
Oopsie doopsie dame pluma protector of the feathered whales from here to Hawaii
with a correction and a make good for show 1612 and a few dollars for your troubles.
I'll say.
So she donated $1,000 and she wanted a make good for show 1612 and a few dollars for your troubles. I'll say. So she donated $1,000
and she wanted a make good
so she donated another $1,100 to do it.
That's what I call a producer.
That's the producer.
Please note,
Soul Sister Kelly Origo's birthday
is December 4th,
not January 4th.
Oh, no.
My mistake,
so credit her with those 5111 bonus bucks
and give her another birthday biscuit, if time allows.
I have a birthday biscuit for her.
They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.
I also received my PhD was somehow skipped over
during the massive pronunciation ceremony,
and I can't legitimately claim my damehood
until I feel that sword touched down on my shoulder
and upon my wee amygdala.
P.S.
Maui boots on the ground coming soon.
Spoiler alert.
No real solutions for the survivors on the table yet.
Surprised?
Mahalo.
Nua.
Loa.
For your courage and the supportive community you've co-created.
Bluma.
Oh, thanks, Bluma.
Yeah, we got everything all set up for you.
Wirt Fuller is in Batavia, New York,
although with a name like Wirt and a place like Batavia,
you'd think it would be Deutschland, but no, New York.
$1,000 with a handwritten note on Native American Rights Fund paper,
which I thought was interesting,
and says, John, I guess I don't exist.
I know this is possibly late,
but I will never get a chance again
for a doctor near my name,
so here is my check for $1,000.
I will give this before Kathy Hochul
takes everything from New Yorker
and Joe B. takes the rest.
I need karma for my sister and who will be leaving soon.
I will miss her.
Apple pies.
It's like, that's a cool Tourette's.
Just throw random name of pies in your note.
It's a cool Tourette's.
Apple pies.
I'm sure I've given enough for knighthood and would like to be Sir Dirt.
Karma to all
from Vert Sir Dirt. Now, so
does he, are you going to send him a
doctorate? Yeah, well, and he
sends the details of the address and the
rest. Okay.
He came in on time. Yeah, okay.
Well, here's a karma as he requested.
You've got karma.
I'm going to put apple pies for the round table, just in case.
Just add that for a second.
Maybe that's what he meant.
I like it, though.
Apple pies!
Josh Brownlee in Decorah, Iowa.
Could be Decorah, but I think Decorah, maybe.
I don't know.
444.66 gets me to 1,000.
I guess I get a knighthood plus PhD.
No, you get a knighthood.
What I really want, however, is jobs karma for my wife who just got laid off last week.
You can now call me, sir, protector of the driftless areas.
Grandma's hummus for the roundtable, please.
You got it.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and and jobs let's vote for jobs
karma and then we have carl post from regalsville pennsylvania 336 merry christmas happy birthday
to my smoking hot wife donna post what are you Eh, it's the same old signature seltzer.
Original.
You know, you'd think you'd do something with a show
and get something new to drink.
Yes, I will.
And the next time you hear a can opening,
it's going to be something wild.
Oh, I can't wait.
Merry Christmas, happy birthday
to my smoking hot wife, Donna Post.
Here's an executive producer for your suffix
to keep up with your DR, doctor uh and it says oh no i'm sorry there's a little i'll reread that so this is for
donna here's an executive producer for your suffix to keep up with the doctors and cpas at work
yes well done good idea Well done. Good idea. Ulrich.
Ulrich.
Ulrich.
Ulrich.
Horkins.
Horkins.
Horkins.
In Wiener Neustadt.
It's like New Wienerville.
Really?
Yes.
New hot dog.
New hot dog Austria.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, they have a good...
Austria's got great food.
Yeah. Well, they have a good, Austria's got great food. Yeah.
I started listening to you after Adam's appearance on Peter McCormick's podcast, What Bitcoin Did.
I'm hooked.
Yeah.
So what podcast was this I never heard of?
It's called What Bitcoin Did.
It's very popular.
Very popular podcast.
Okay.
Well, you can get a more popular podcast.
Well, you could do some too, you know.
You're the pretty boy.
The donation is also in celebration of my 61st trip around the sun,
which finishes on the 2nd of December.
Please add me to the birthday list.
You're on it.
Thanks for everything and keep up the exceptional work.
Jingles, please.
You like boom shakalaka, little girl.
Yay. And some jobs karma for work. Jingles, please. You like Boom Shaka Laka, Little Girl, Yay, and some Jobs Karma
from my smoking hot girlfriend,
Eva. Greetings from
Wiener Neustadt,
Austria, New Wieners Town,
Ulrich,
Ulrich, Herkins.
Ding, ding, ding, boom, boom, shaka laka,
boom, boom, boom, boom, shaka laka,
boom, boom, yay!
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, Listen, but please de-douche me with my 333 donation.
You've been de-douched.
And thank you for all you guys do.
Please share some jobs, karma.
We are all self-employed, so it's namely... So is it named differently?
No, it's jobs, karma.
For our online shop, we've created the Atlanta tennis monsters characters and made really cool
shirts by Mark Sundermeyer,
AKA Mark,
the artist who needs to be called out as a douche bag.
I did hit him in the mouth last year,
special no agenda code for 20% off Mark's Atlanta tennis monsters.
T-shirts is no agenda 23.
If anyone wants to help a brother out,
Oh,
can John do his sales voice for atlantatennismonsters.com?
Yeah, I can.
I had to put that up.
Hold on.
Okay.
Sean voice book.
Which where is it?
Oh, there it is.
Facebook is... Which, where is it?
Where do I...
Oh, there it is.
Hey, go to atlantatennismonsters.com
and get yourself some great, great t-shirts.
Wow.
Is that the voice?
Yeah, that's the voice.
I think that's the one.
I was thinking of creating a shirt
that says everything I learned about podcasting
I learned from Adam Curry.
Now, just don't.
Just don't. Please don't. Lastly, can we request podcast
card before our Atlanta tennis podcast? Is that a thing?
If not, can it be? Well, of course it can. If I give it to you, absolutely. Thanks.
And if you ever need a tennis expert, send me a note. Sean Boyce and my smoking hot wife
and business partner, Giovanna Buford, Georgia.
Jobs, jobs, jobs,
and jobs. Let's vote for
jobs.
Karma.
Now we have a
$333
donation from Switzerland from
Rene Bernhards
Bernhardsgruter
Which means St.ard's greeter
oh maybe not but it sounded funny well it sounds like it yeah 333
and i'll give him a double up no no there you go you've got
karma takes us to our first associate executive producer,
Millennial Fred, 250.
See attached note.
And let me see.
Millennial Fred says,
Donation.
Dear John and Adam,
Adam and John,
here are some options for your retirement plans.
Work until you drop.
Preferred by most, if not all.
Shows your value.
Or potential final episodes 3333 or 2133 or 2121 or 2112 adam check your po box sincerely millennial fred i will do that
that will do millennial fred thank you do you still have the old P.O. Box, too? No, I have my P.O. Box 1849 in Fredericksburg, Texas.
What about the old one?
No, no, no.
That's long gone.
Did you make sure it was forwarded?
Am I an idiot?
Of course.
Well, that's a question that needs full show.
Go for it.
Okay.
Ryan Diasio in Fishers, Indiana.
Row of ducks, 222.22.
Thank, and a great note, best note.
Thank you for your courage.
See you in Indy.
Yeah.
Steven Rivas, City of Industry, California.
Row of Ducks 222.22.
Greetings.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I didn't have these lined up.
Of course.
Another Trump, I'm going to come because it's so funny.
So funny.
I'm going to start.
I'm going to have to start outlawing this one.
Trump, come.
All right, Trump, come.
And then orange.
Sorry, I didn't have these prepped for some reason.
I got the orange.
Where's the orange?
Orange yell is like an orange. Orange is a big orange. Do I have the orange? Yes, I have the orange. Where's the orange? Orange yell is like an orange.
Orange is a big orange.
Do I have the orange?
Yes, I have orange yell.
Goat karma from my bros.
McDowb and G.
Thank you.
P.S.
Bad male chimp.
Spank that monkey.
Ha ha.
I'm going to come.
Orange.
You've got. You've got...
You've got...
There you go.
Sir Fodfather in Indianapolis, Indiana, 222.22.
And he's also known as Ted Patnell.
In the morning, thank you saviors of sanity for all you do.
May you never find an exit strategy as
proof that I do occasionally give a duck. I present the enclosed row of ducks, the value of
which shall hoist me over the bar from baronet to the exalted title of baron. Should the purge
committee find no objection, the title Sir Fodfather shall be retired,
and I shall henceforth be known as Sir Edward of Tatton Hall,
Baron of Flyover Country.
Jingle, little girl, yay.
And he says, I just made just in time for a visit from Adam and Tina to the Circle City.
Woo-hoo.
See you in December, Adam.
And John, you are cordially invited as well.
Come on down.
Love is lit.
Yes, tomorrow, Tina the Keeper and I will be flying to Indianapolis for a meetup tomorrow evening.
And we're very much looking forward to it.
We spoke to Mark and Maria, who organize all of these meetups.
And so apparently they have a stage there and they had a great idea, which I agreed to.
They want to do a Ask Adam.
So everybody will be writing down their Ask Adam.
Funny, you had the same reaction I had, except I was quiet about it.
I went, okay, yeah, great idea.
So we'll do that.
But I have a condition.
The meetup report, which is always very professionally produced from the indie crowd, I want you,
first thing that comes to your mind, I want you to, instead of your typical, you know,
no, I want you to tell me the thing you are most grateful for this year.
That is what I want everybody to do for the meetup report.
That is so we need to shake these things up a little bit.
See you there.
Oh, please.
Dame Beth is in Tucson, Arizona, 222.
Hi, old boys.
Here's my annual birthday gift to myself.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I forgot the yay.
Here's my annual birthday gift to myself
supporting the Beat podcast in the universe.
I hope she meant best.
Born on 12-2 at 2-2-2-2, hence the dollar amount.
Tucson slaves watch for a meetup in the new year.
No jingles, no karma.
Dame Beth, Baroness of Baja, Arizona.
I don't have a name on line 15.
No, I don't have a name on line 15 no i don't have a name either funny enough the the the amount is
typical or at so we're gonna get a make good from whoever sent us 207 dollars and 49 cents let's
give them a double up karma whomever they are you've got then we have joe deafen new baltimore michigan 200 uh in the morning john adam today december
30 is my birthday happy birthday and what better birthday present to myself than becoming a
producer of the best podcast in the universe this is also my first donation please deduce
you've been deduced. Was hitting the mouth.
I was hit in the mouth by a buddy last year
and I've been faithfully listening since.
Please also call this buddy out as a giant douchebag.
Douchebag.
He knows who he is.
For jingles, can I get a biscuit for my birthday?
Yes, of course you can.
A little Reverend Al and a goat karma.
Well, we can definitely give you a little Reverend Al.
We love doing it.
Goat karma as well.
They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.
You've got karma.
And I think you got on the birthday list this year marked as such dw in lake mary florida
a two hundred dollars no uh note whatsoever give him a double up karma or a she you've got
karma all right then we have john cooper, who is in China, Michigan.
Is there really a place called China, Michigan?
Probably.
Wow, that's rough.
China, where are you from?
I'm from China.
What?
You don't look it.
It does kind of suck.
I'm from China.
I can't go to Indy as a peasant, so I tallied my donations to learn my 2053 makes me an instant baronet.
Please pronounce to Kate me as Baronet John of the St. Clair Lowlands with rye whiskey and grilled beef at the round table.
No jingles, no karma.
Many thanks.
John Cooper from China, Michigan.
And then last on our list, I believe it's last,
is, yes, Linda Lou Patkin.
Ha!
She's in Lakewood, Colorado, and she wants jobs coming.
By the way, for a remarkable resume that gets results,
go to ImageMakersInc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs.
That's ImageMakersInc with a K dot com.
Or just find Linda Lou Patkin under the show's producer list.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You've got karma.
Congratulations and salutations to these executive and associate executive producers.
Why congratulations?
Because not only have you supported the best podcast in the universe with your producership,
these are titles that are real and usable anywhere credits of this nature are recognized, which is show
business. So you can use it in your LinkedIn profile, use it on your resume. And of course,
you can, if you don't have one, you can open up an IMDb account. They are universally recognized
there. Almost a thousand executive and associate executive producers in IMDb, including some real
heavy hitters from Hollywood itself.
And thank you all so much for supporting us.
We really appreciate it.
And we also want to thank everyone who came in under $50 for reasons of anonymity.
We never mention any names under that amount.
But we have a lot of people who just give us $5 from time to time when they can.
We love you just the same.
Thank you so much.
The value is in the amount that is valued to you and what you can afford so thank you for
anyone who will support us in any amount and john will take us through the 50s and then we'll get
into our meetups and a couple other things sir m andrew jones starts us off 111 11 cents and he
also actually did send in a nice card isn't he the book guy m andrew jones i
remember him he's he sends us books we've read his books i think we've read his books well he
does also draws he drew a little mountain on his card it's very cute he says thanks uh sir ted in
menden new york 111 11 uh just 111 dollars baron latikin uh in houston texas 100 dollars john Just $111. Baron Lattican in Houston, Texas, $100.
John Robine, $100.
Kevin McLaughlin is up there already.
Concord, North Carolina.
Boobs, 8-0-0-8.
The ultimate pick-me-up, he writes.
William Alston in El Paso, Texas, 8-0-0-8.
He says, thanks for the infotainment.
Texas, 8008.
He says, thanks for the infotainment.
Sam Deaton in Signal Mountain, Tennessee, 7258.
Jose Paredes, Paredes, Paredes, Paredes,
in Wichita, Kansas, 6993. He's got a wife call out for his
wife call out for her
birthday wife call out
Sheila
Jim Barrett in North
Wales Pennsylvania 6666
Peretti's was 6933
if I didn't say Kevin McLaughlin's back
with 6006 with the comment
boobs are perfect
boobs are perfect.
Boobs are the perfect gift for,
that's what it says.
Boobs are the perfect gift for any occasion,
except the grammarian's occasions.
Peter Chong, and that was 6006.
Peter Chong in Lakewood, Washington, 5510.
Brian Furley, 5510.
Jordan Poino in Salem, Oregon, 50. Oops, these are all $50 donors were there already. It's a short list. Starting with, okay, Justin, that's Justin Heiner.
And he's just in time. Tony Lang, Castle Pines, Colorado. Dotted mine, Lincoln, UK.
James
Sharametta in Napanuck, New York.
Kurt Patrick in
Naimo, British Columbia.
And for some reason, I'm starting to pronounce
that wrong. Is that the dog? Charles...
What? Did I hear the dog?
I didn't
play a dog. No, I thought I heard the basset hound.
No, there's no dog here
that dog don't hunt
I love my truck and I love what I do
Kurt Patrick in Nanaimo
let's go 50
Charles Peterson with a D
in Albuquerque
Jacob Martinez in El Monte California
Brett Farrell who I believe is in New York City
and last on this short list very short donation list today Martinez in El Monte, California. Brett Farrell, who I believe is in New York City.
And last on this short list, this is a very short donation list today,
as we expected after the promotion was over.
Baroness Knight in Edmond, Washington.
That's our group.
We have a couple of make goods
and things that need correcting.
Three in total.
Sir Gary, who came in under 50 and did want us to read his note uh sir gary of casco point on lake minnetonka here fantastic show
this week i'm writing and attaching a spreadsheet showing that he's exceeded the level needed as of
december to become a baronet if i may put in a shameless plug for a noble organization i am state
director for bugles across america atlesAcrossAmerica.org.
Our sole purpose is providing live taps free of charge for any U.S. veteran funeral honor services.
Oh, how beautiful.
By the way, this, I got this note and I said, wow, this is a very famous organization.
And they did some local stories about them.
Yes, that's exactly what they do.
They bring out the bugler, and they can give taps to some of these funeral systems.
And this guy is the head of it, I guess.
Wow.
And I'm astonished.
This is an example of the kind of astonishing producers we have.
I mean, this is like I was taken aback.
Well, I wouldn't mind uh a little no agenda bugle
recording honestly something we could play on the show yeah especially after a short donation
segment i think taps would be appropriate i don't want taps i just want something like i want a
charge thing or whatever but anyway uh our sole purpose is you're right this is a very famous
organization providing live taps free of
charge for any u.s veterans funeral honor services the military authorized the use of a recording of
taps for these events in the year 2000 since then our founder tom day and some 4 000 volunteers he
has assembled take care of this last tribute to our veterans oh i see so the military went
we'll just do it we'll just use a recording and they said yeah i got one here on my
phone yeah yeah god bless you guys for doing that if you could just give the website ask people to
remember when their veteran passes on that there's good chance that they'll have a recorded taps
performance rather than having a heartbeat behind those sacred 26 notes just go to the website put
in the date and details and someone will contact you and be there for your veteran.
That's not too big of an ask.
We love that you do that.
What's the website?
Well, I mentioned it three times.
BuglesAcrossAmerica.org.
BuglesAcrossAmerica.org.
BuglesAcrossAmerica.org.
That's BuglesAcrossAmerica.org.
Sir Not Sure says, Dear John Adams,
Sir, donated for show 1611.
I wanted to express the value I receive is priceless
when every news source tries to cover up the truth.
You guys kept me sane through the so-called pandemic
at a time when fear was shoved down our throats.
I would like to claim...
He did the 3-3-3-3-3-3 donation.
I would like... Yeah, and he had no note, three, three, three, three, three donation. I would like,
yeah.
Then he had no,
no big one.
Yeah.
We needed a note.
I would like to claim the title Baron keeper of the tri lakes. If approved by the peerage committee,
I would also like to call out Alex Rashaw as a douchebag.
Thanks for bringing me to your show though.
Love is lit.
Thank you guys for Mark Rashel.
And finally, sir. Julian says I was Thank you, guys, from Mark Brashel. And finally, Sir Julian says,
I was originally knighted back in episode 1184,
titled Ejexit,
with a knight name that I found to be funny at the time,
but is not family friendly.
My last donation on November 20th
put me well over the necessary level in donations,
which I do believe makes me a baron.
For my title change, I would
like to be known as Sir Julian Baron of the Santa Cruz Mountains if this territory is available.
John, available? Yeah, it's good, but what was his old name that he didn't like? Well,
it's apparently not good, but the note gets more interesting. This is truly the best podcast in
the universe, and I don't know where I'd be without it, and I'm grateful that you two do
what you do. You guys always say that couples that listen together stay together well
that idea is being tested right now and because of me I would really appreciate all the relationship
karma I can get right now stop don't laugh no and he has a note sorry but, but it's like, wow, this is a bad thing. He has a note.
To the love of my life, babe, I love you from the bottom of my heart.
And I don't know what I'd do without you.
I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.
Julian.
You've got karma.
See, I would say he messed it up big time.
He did something.
He did something big time.
Not getting vaxxed.
You're just making things worse.
The guy's trying to patch things up, man.
Like, have a heart.
Have a heart.
Have a heart.
Thank you, everybody, for supporting the best podcasts in the universe,
especially our execs and associate executive producers. Thank you for supporting us here for
episode 1,103.
Our formula is this.
We go out.
We hit people in the mouth.
1613.
I'm out of control.
Order.
Order.
1613. Shut up, Sl13! Shut up, slave!
Shut up, slave!
It's your birthday, birthday!
I'm so much in love!
Yeah, we do have a couple of birthdays to celebrate.
We have Ulrich Herkens, who turned 62 yesterday.
Dame Beth also celebrated yesterday.
Joe Duffin turns 27 today.
Jose Paredes wishes his wife Shayla a happy birthday.
She's celebrating today.
Zach Taylor turns 54.
Pluma, happy birthday to Keeley Rigo for tomorrow.
And on the 5th, my uncle Donald Gregg will be turning 96 years old.
Happy birthday, Uncle Don.
And Carl Post wishes his smoking hot wife Donna Post a very happy birthday.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the Best Podcast in the universe.
It's your birthday, yeah.
Title changes.
Turning facelessly.
Nice changes.
Don't want to be a douchebag.
And you heard a couple of those title changes.
Here they are listed in appropriate order.
We have Sir Gary of Casco Point on Lake Minnetonka becomes a baronet.
Sir Not Sure becomes Sir Not Sure Baron, Keeper of the Tri-Lake.
Sir Julian, Sir Julian Baron of the Santa Cruz Mountains.
And Sir Fodfather becomes a baronet.
Sir Edward of Tatton Hall, Baron of flyover country.
Thank you all very much for supporting us here at the no agenda show.
It is highly appreciated.
We do have a Dame,
which is a,
of course there was the pluma that we messed up and we have a couple of
nights.
So let's get a nice one to rest on pluma shoulder there,
John.
Here you go.
Ooh,
that is a nice one.
Come on up.
Pluma.
Sorry. Sorry. We messed it up. And word fuller a nice one. Come on up, Pluma. Sorry.
Sorry we messed it up.
And word fuller, John Brownlee, John Cooper.
Hop on over here if you don't mind, please.
I'm very proud to pronounce the K-D as...
Pluma, Dame of the Feathered Whales.
Sir Dirt, Sir Protector of the Driftless Area.
And Baronet John of the St. Clair Lowlands.
For you, we have Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay.
Along with that, Apple Pies, Grandma's Hummus, Rye Whiskey and Grilled Beef.
And of course, on deck, Redheads and Ryes.
We've got Rubinette's Women and Rosé, Gaseous and Sake, Bong Hits and Bourbon, Ginger Ale and Gerbils,
Pressed Milk and Pablum, Sparkling Cider and Escorts and, sparkling cider and escorts, and mutton and meat.
Everybody loves the mutton and meat.
And I would also like to welcome Wirt Fuller as a doctor,
and he can also go to noagendaringes.com,
noagendaringes.com,
where you will see pictures of your beautiful knight or dame rings.
Also, it comes with wax to seal your important correspondence with.
In addition to that,
a certificate of authenticity.
All you have to do is make sure that you give us an address to send it to
and a ring size.
All of that will be,
make it a lot easier to get that to you.
Thank you so much for being here for us.
The best podcast in the universe indeed it's like a party we had a meetup taking
place in the netherlands no uh audible report but this was tilburg cafe kardinsky and uh let's see
our producer there said to john adam the meetup in Tilburg went well.
Baron Robbins, our detective, Duderacci, were joined by four first-timers who had traveled from afar.
Roland, a recent associate executive producer, Ambro, Katrina, and Ralph and Dog Turbo.
We had great conversations, true quality time well spent.
Thanks to all, and thank you for your courage.
And we go over to the report from Denver.
Denver meetup. Checking the shift handoff
notes from the Netherlands meetup.
We drank a lot of beer.
A bunch of people were smoking weed but they were trying to hide it
from us. And mirror nuking.
A lot of mirror nuking in the conversations.
I guess we'll keep the meetup going
on our global, round the world
no agenda meetups.
Thanks everybody.
Great meetup. is sir r i have georgia on my mind colorado care bear at the denver meetup t-dome itm josh dissension
checking in from north aurora this is m andrew jones still napping for humanity this is cory
in the morning sir seuss there here thank you Thank you, John, for actually spelling my name
or saying my name correctly.
Brian Furley.
That's the way you say it.
In the morning!
In the morning!
Meet-ups.
Today, a meet-up in Cheyenne is underway,
I believe, at Chronicles Distillery
in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
On tomorrow, we have the December Indy
No Agenda Meet-up.
That's right.
The Flyin' to Flyover Country event at the Dugout Bar, and
I will be there with my keeper,
kicking off at 7 o'clock. Looking
forward to it. It's going to be a blast.
On Wednesday, the fourth monthly
Webster County Wet Your Whistle Meetup,
5 o'clock at Community Tap and Pizza,
Fort Dodge, Iowa.
And the next show day, Thursday, Five Forks, first Thursday, 6 o'clock at community tap and pizza fort dodge iowa and the next show day thursday five
forks first thursday six o'clock at bullwinkle's tavern in simpsonville south carolina and the
north wake thanksgiving recovery circle of trust at excuse me tepid water
tepid water yes compass rose brewery raleigh north carolina and on the way man we got a lot of
meetups all the way through christmas and beyond including december 22nd sofia bulgaria looking
forward to a meetup report from that uh we have houston texas brooklyn new york brooklyn on the
9th very interesting and february 3rd albany california the get john out of the house 2.0 meetup you going
yeah it looks like it yeah i guess so i'm excited that'll be good so finally you'll you'll get out
of the house again what what it happens twice a year it's amazing how that works those of you
know agenda meetups um make sure you go to at least one of these in your lifetime and once you
do it's like pringles you you can't you got to eat them all of these in your lifetime. And once you do, it's like Pringles.
You can't, you got to eat them all.
You can't stop because just like we said earlier,
our demo is the world.
You will be thrilled to meet people that you might not have had a conversation with.
Otherwise, it is the companion to the podcast.
Go out, meet some of your producers.
Noagendameetups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start one yourself.
And remember, connection is protection.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you won't be.
Drink it or hell's blame.
You want to be where everybody feels the same
it's like a party
it's always like a party
they truly are parties
it's a great party
I mean it's just like a party that's on fire
not like a
collection of parties
cop
I only have one
I feel bad I'm falling down you should
feel bad what is it we're getting t-bagged there's no doubt about it what we're getting t-bagged
there's no doubt about it we're getting t-bagged yes we're getting t-bagged there's no doubt about
it it's tucker for whatever reason i don't know what the hell that's about okay it's not good it's
no it's no good i have three that are usable, but let's see which one you like.
Okay.
All right.
Requisite one second long.
Okay.
Start with the top.
That means something.
And that means something.
Ooh, I'd like the uptalk on that.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, I do too.
I like that one a lot.
Devastated.
I was devastated.
No, I still like the first one better.
Okay.
And then not right.
Something wasn't right.
I think this is...
Yeah, but all of them,
it's interesting,
I didn't notice that when I clipped them,
but they all have an up talk
and they're all...
Yeah.
But this is...
And that means something.
I like that one the best.
Yeah, I think that works.
That really is good.
Oh, hold on a second.
Now it's time for...
Google U with JCD.
Ah, people love this segment.
They listen to the end of the show.
Oh, I don't believe that for a minute.
Yes, people love the good news segment.
It puts them in a good mood.
They're happy.
They're happy like, oh, now I can leave this program and just feel good about myself.
Yes. Yes, people are telling me program and just feel good about myself. Yes.
Yes.
People are telling me I love the good news.
Nobody's done this, but OK, it's true.
Good news.
This is the good news clip for today.
It's about the dog named Mudge.
Firefighters leaped into action, saving a 100-pound Great Dane trapped in a deep hole.
This happened off of Old South Road and Lake Wheeler Road.
Tonight, we talk to Mudge's owner about the rescue mission.
This is Mudge in happier times.
And this was Mudge on Saturday afternoon.
The 100-pound Great Dane fell into an old well 50 feet deep.
Oh, no.
We called 911 right away,
and, you know, they come out,
but they don't have the,
they have to call the right department
that has the right equipment.
You know, they had to bring
that tripod situation
with all the climbing harnesses
and everything to get down there.
Crews from Cary Fire,
Fairview Rural Fire,
and Swift Creek Fire
Departments responded. They used a rope rescue technique. It took hours and plenty of patience,
but crews were able to lift Mudge out. I don't know, but unscathed, I just can't even believe it.
It's quite the drop, and it is covered up now, by the way. It's completely covered up, so yeah.
And it is covered up now, by the way.
It's completely covered up.
So, yeah, you know, part of me kind of wonders, yeah, part of me kind of wonders, you know, did she fall to save someone else?
So how did Mudge get down in that old well?
We found out Mudge's owners, the Houdins, recently purchased the property.
And the well sits quite a distance from the family home.
They didn't think it would be a problem, but now they know differently.
Mudge is now home safely, and her family couldn't be more thankful for first responders.
They did all this for my dog.
I mean, and she is part of our family, truly, so God bless them. I mean, they were very, very organized when they showed up.
They had a plan.
They knew exactly what to do.
I was so happy for Mudge. Now, that well was covered before with barbed wire. The family
has now covered it with some rebar so it doesn't happen to anyone else.
A good news story from JCD. Happy vibes for you and me. And we all feel better now he's done his bit.
So back to reality, that's turning to shit.
Yay!
Good news, good news, good news.
Well done, John.
There's nothing like a good news story that's about a dog.
Yeah, a dog.
It's always good.
It's always good.
There's nothing wrong with it.
Nothing wrong at all.
And we come to the end of our media deconstruction
for this day. Thank you so
much for supporting us, dragging
us through.
We hope you enjoyed it. Hope you learned something.
Hope you got some value from it.
We've got
That Larry Show coming up next on the
tube, on the wires.
It's episode 442, titled Mary Griftmas.
Oh, that's going to be good.
That Larry Show.
End of show mixes, Neil Jones, Steph Jacobson, and Jesse Coy Nelson, who never disappoints.
Looking forward to meeting everybody in Indy tomorrow evening.
Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region No. 6.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C. Dvorak.
And with that, we bid you adieu.
We look forward to seeing you again on Thursday.
I'll have my meet-up report and all kinds of groovy stuff, no doubt, because the news never stops, nor does the deconstruction.
Remember us at Dvorak.org slash N.A. until Thursday.
Adios, mofos, a-hooey, hooey, and such.
This was straight out of Putin's playbook.
Putin's playbuns, playbuns, playbuns, playbuns, playbuns, playbuns.
Well, we know this is definitely part of the Russian playbook.
Russian playbush, Russian playbush, Russian playbush, Russian playbush.
And the Russian philosophy, the Russian playbook will not change. So I think that is the Russian playbook, Russian playbook, Russian playbook, Russian playbook. And the Russian philosophy, the Russian playbook will not change.
So I think that is the Russian playbook.
It is part of the Russian playbook.
The tactics look familiar.
Like a page from Russia's playbook.
Because of what he called Russia's playbook on murdering people.
Clearly Russia benefits the most from this.
And it does fit the Russian playbook.
The Russian playbook.
The Russian playbook. the Russian playbook. But what Putin is doing in Ukraine is actually straight out of a Russian military planner's playbook.
The country planner's playbook.
Putin's playbook.
Putin's playbook.
Putin's playbook.
Putin's playbook. Putin's playbook.
When the Republican Party adopts Russia's authoritarian playbook.
So Ukraine is a country, Russia is a bigger country, Russia is a powerful country.
Russia decided to invade militarily, unprovoked.
Basically, that's wrong.
We respect the sovereignty, the territorial integrity.
Right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right.
We as America are saying that's wrong.
And we will stand with Ukraine in saying that that is wrong.
We know that what Russia is doing is wrong.
There needs to be severe consequence.
You'll hear on the news their bad behavior.
You'll hear on the news their bad behavior.
That's what the issue is essentially their bad behavior
you'll hear on the news their bad behavior that's what the issue is essentially
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right
right, right, right, right, right, right, right, right.
If you take out Saddam, Saddam's regime, I guarantee that it will have enormous positive reverberations on the region.
Like Judas of old, you lie and deceive.
If you take away the Soviet Union and its chief proxy, the PLO, international terrorism would collapse.
proxy, the PLO, international terrorism would collapse.
Are there any other nations that you would recommend that the United States launch preemptive attacks upon at this point?
The answer is categorically yes, is Iraq and Iran.
But a third nation, by the way, is Libya as well. Libya is trying very rapidly to build an atomic bomb capability.
All stand together to stop Iran's march of conquest, subjugation, and terror.
No matter on which side of the aisle you sit,
you stand with Israel.
Podcast in the universe.
Mopo.
Dvorak.org slash N-A.
And that means something.