No Agenda - 1631 - "Pulling a Johnson"

Episode Date: February 4, 2024

No Agenda Episode 1631 - "Pulling a Johnson" "Pulling a Johnson" Executive Producers: Aric Toon SDG Priscilla OLeary Christopher Lowry Baron NBS of the Trading Floor Sir Lump the grump Danielle Dou...gherty Baron Twice Knighted Sir George South Florida Franny Sir Julian - The Duke of Bastrop County - Me and Jesus Song Associate Executive Producers: Sir Ara Derderian Sir Il Pope Di Ciclismo Carla Heidsma Sir Erik the Grease Monkey Matt Lee Paul Schneider Rob Alter Linda Lupatkin Sir Reeshmeister Sir Spencer Sumner, Viscount of Alberta Become a member of the 1632 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Knights & Dames Danielle Dougherty > Dame DonkeyPuncher of the roundpen Sir Spencer, Baronet > Sir Spencer Sumner, Viscount of Alberta Art By: Francisco Scaramanga End of Show Mixes: Rexo - Tom Starkweather - Sir Seatsitter 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) 1631.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 02/04/2024 16:43:05This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 02/04/2024 16:43:05 by Freedom Controller  

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Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Oh, right, right, right. That's exactly what it is. Adam Curry, John C. DeVora. It's Sunday, February 4th, 2024. This is your award-winning Cuba Nation media assassination episode 1631. This is no agenda. Analyzing the info mavericks and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley,
Starting point is 00:00:26 where now I'm wondering whether it's pronounced Gouda or Gouda. I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the morning. Well, you came to the right show for that. That's right. Because it is officially Gouda. Gouda.
Starting point is 00:00:43 Gouda. You got to do the G. Gouda. The what? The G. Gouda. Is it Gouda? No, it's Gouda.
Starting point is 00:00:54 Gouda. I couldn't hear it with all this windstorm going on. Gouda. Also, not just famous for cheese, but also famous for? The small town in Holland. No, no. Yeah, the small town in Holland, Gouda, is famous for its cheese and one other export product. Can you name the product?
Starting point is 00:01:15 Wooden shoes. No. Stroopkoffel, whatever that pancake is. Stroopkoffel. Hey, that's a good one. That's show title right there. Stroopkffel, whatever that pancake is. Stroopkoffel. Hey, that's a good one. That's show title right there. Stroopkoffel. No, candles.
Starting point is 00:01:32 Candles. Didn't you know that? No, never heard of it. Oh, my God. I bet you that Gouda exports, that more candles come from Gouda than anywhere else in the world. Well, the reason I brought this up is because I'm watching a cooking show that I don't normally watch. But I watch it.
Starting point is 00:01:51 It's pretty interesting. It's called The Scandinavian Cook. And this guy floats all over the place in Scandinavia, and he tells stories about one thing or another, like the big sausage strike. Anyway, so he says, and he's making some food at the end. He says, then I'm going to take, and he says, gouda. He's going to put some gouda cheese. He says, you can use a hard cheese or use gouda. I'm thinking gouda.
Starting point is 00:02:13 I never heard that pronounced. I always thought it was gouda because that's the way we pronounce it in California when we buy it at the store. And now it turns out it's not even gouda, it's gouda. Gouda, it's Gouda. Gouda. I would say in America, most people say Gouda. But you say Gouda. I like some Gouda cheese. No, Gouda.
Starting point is 00:02:34 If you don't put the G in there, otherwise it's not worth it. Well, it's not going to work anyway. But if you say Gouda, you have to say Gouda. No one else will understand you in America. You got you say Gouda, you have to say Gouda. No one else will understand you in America. You got to say Gouda. You have to say Gouda. Got to say Gouda. But where did the word Gouda come from then?
Starting point is 00:02:51 I mean, who mispronounced it the first time? I mean, come on. People pronounce things differently in different countries. My name in Holland is Adam. Or, or, alternatively, Edum. Hello, Edum. Edum. Edum.
Starting point is 00:03:07 E-D-D-U-M. Edum. Edum. Come here then, Edum. Yes. So, and boy, did I hate it. I hated it when people called me. Adam.
Starting point is 00:03:18 Hey, Adam. Would you ever hear Adam? Like Adam? Like A-T-U-M-N? No, that's just the way you say Adam in Holland. Adam and Eva. Adam and Eva. Anyway.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Well, it's obvious what's going down now in this political year of 2024 in the United States. We have two teams. We have, what is that? Is that feedback? What am I hearing? You're hearing the storm. That's the storm? It sounds like nails on a chalkboard.
Starting point is 00:03:48 It's bad. Here's the strategy. We have the Democrats on one side, and their strategy is war! Kill! War! War! Iran! War! Bomb them! Bomb them! Bomb them! War! And they got some Republicans to participate in that. And then on the right, in this corner over here, we have the Republicans and their
Starting point is 00:04:10 invasion at the border, illegal migrants! And they will do anything possible to keep both of these things going. And I would like to start in my backyard with the caravan to take back our border. That was caravan of God. Yes. God's army.
Starting point is 00:04:30 It's God's army, which resulted in a hundred people going to the border. This is one of the most exciting rallies we've ever seen. Today, protesters from around the country flocked to a small Texas border town to vent frustration over illegal immigration. CBS's Jason Allen is there for us tonight. Jason. Nikki, good evening. This event has been peaceful here today with a lot of these people telling me that they felt called to be here. Hundreds of them caravaned from.
Starting point is 00:04:59 By the way, notice all the God references. They were called to be here. They're laying it on thick over at CBS. Here today with a lot of these people telling references. They were called to be here. They're laying it on thick over at CBS. Here today with a lot of these people telling me that they felt called to be here. Hundreds of them caravaned from Virginia here to this South Texas ranch to protest the Biden administration's handling of immigration issues here at the southern border. A small but fervent group of people rallied to take the border back in South Texas. I think we all as a nation want this to end, both Democrats and Republicans. The gathering was part religious revival and part Trump rally.
Starting point is 00:05:34 Let me tell you, I've been watching this, I've been getting some boots on the ground. This was not religious revival by any stretch of the imagination. No, it's Satan. This is CBS trying to make everything out to be. Yes, yeah, God's army. Democrats and Republicans. The gathering was part religious revival and part Trump rally. We need God to fix this because we can't fix this. We don't know who these people are.
Starting point is 00:05:57 They could be our enemies. The rally happened near Eagle Pass, where there's a standoff between federal and Texas authorities over border control. CBS's Camilo Montoya-Galvez is there. The Texas National Guard is blocking federal agents from patrolling this section of the U.S.-Mexico border near Eagle Pass. As you can see, it has been fortified with razor and concertina wire. The U.S. Supreme Court has allowed the Biden administration to remove the wire, but Texas Governor Greg Abbott has vowed to keep it in place. Some Eagle Pass residents say they are not pleased with the national attention. I think the political fight is up in Washington, and it's at the Capitol in Texas.
Starting point is 00:06:37 It's not down here. At the rally, people say they had to be here to send a message. If we stay at home and sit on our butts, we're going to get mowed over. This country will be gone. Be gone. Tomorrow, Governor Abbott is going to be in Eagle Pass with about a dozen other Republican governors.
Starting point is 00:06:54 CBS News has learned that there were threats that Border Protection learned about as a precaution moved some migrants out of a processing facility that was nearby. Oh, yes. So there you go. It was, as predicted, a complete wet turd. There's nothing going on.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Sir Gene is down there, and he sent me a couple of videos. And, you know, it was a press event. That's all that it is. It's a small little park that is, you know, an area where they've closed it down, locked it down. Yeah, we can't let the Border Patrol come in. And then half a mile further up, there's an open gate. And three miles further up, there's not even a fence.
Starting point is 00:07:29 So the whole thing is a farce. And today, I was waiting for it to happen. I couldn't get any clips on time of Abbott showing up with a whole bunch of other Republican governors. Of course, yeah, this is not political at all. the Republican governors. Of course, yeah, this is not political at all. Oh, and the timing is perfect for Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, a Republican extraordinaire, to pull this stunt. He has signaled that this bipartisan Senate immigration reform bill is dead on arrival in the House. As you speak to him, do you suspect there'll be anything that can change his mind on that? Well, Willie, it will be very interesting to hear his
Starting point is 00:08:05 answer on that point, because yesterday he made this surprise move. He introduced a standalone piece of legislation that would aid Israel. That is significant because aid to Israel was a part of that border package that Priscilla was just talking about, as well as aid to Ukraine. So the question is, Willie, was that move aimed at effectively killing that border deal? As Priscilla just mapped out, former President Trump has effectively been calling on Republicans to kill the deal. Basically, he thinks it would be a political gift to President Biden in the middle of this tough reelection campaign. I spoke to a top Republican lawmaker overnight who said there is concern about not only what this means for the border deal, but what this would mean for Ukraine aid. What message does this send? All right. So what he did here was he ripped apart instead of trying to go through this process of which everyone was pushing for was one big aid package for ukraine israel and that had
Starting point is 00:09:07 to have some border stuff and they got some border stuff and instead he pulled what we'll now call a johnson and he said oh no i'm because of course the speaker of the house introduces the bills oh no i've got a new bill uh we're going to uh send 17.4 billion, which, as if it's nothing, that's $17,500 million to Israel, which is not that I'm going to send a big check like Publishers Clearinghouse. There's more bombs, more bombs, more cool stuff that we're making. So they had Mike show up on Meet the Press this morning with your pal there. What's her name again? Kristen Welker. Welker, right.
Starting point is 00:09:50 And she asked the obvious question. Mr. Speaker, as you know, that bill that you passed in the House would be dead on arrival in the Senate. Your Republican colleagues in the Senate have said as much. So I guess my question is, did you propose this standalone Israel aid package to kill this compromise deal in the Senate? No, we've made very clear what the requirements of the House were, and that is to solve the problem at the border. Apparently, the Senate has not been able to come to an agreement. They've been suggesting text should be filed maybe today, but we've been told the same thing for months now. We've been awaiting their action. We cannot wait any longer.
Starting point is 00:10:30 The House is willing to lead. And the reason we have to take care of this Israel situation right now is because the situation has escalated, of course. I mean, the Hamas terrorists have not relented in their attacks on Israel. We're now having, of course, U.S. personnel being fired upon there. And of course, with the retaliatory strikes that are taking place, the heat has been turned up there. Israel has never been in greater need of our support. Oh, yeah. And the House is serious about that. I believe we'll pass this with a wide margin and
Starting point is 00:10:59 take care of that responsibility. Oh, yeah. Oh, so Mike, he really, he really, he really relented on that one. Oh, yeah. They really need really relented on that one oh yeah they really need never needed more than ever there was a small moment of clarity when he said this the president of the united states opened the border we documented 64 specific actions that joe biden and his agencies have taken to create this catastrophe they did it intentionally that's why his approval rating is in the tank. 60% of the people disapprove by your latest poll. The reason the presidency is imperiled, as your opening monologue stated, is because this is an abject failure of leadership. The American
Starting point is 00:11:35 people are done with this. The border has to be secured. The president has the authority right now. He doesn't need another act of Congress. He could do it right now, but he's unwilling to do it. And that's the message you'll be hearing over and over again along with all the other great stories of migrants wreaking havoc inside our borders um i think what's what happens now is a couple of things um first all the the immigration is it's not it's not even through the border, on the ground. And remember, when you see these videos, look at how clean their clothes are. Their shoes, sparkling clean. No suitcases, nothing.
Starting point is 00:12:15 They're not carrying anything. That gets shipped on a big lorry. You don't have to carry anything besides the lorry when you have a credit card with a bunch of money. Well, there's that. It's not a credit card, it's a debit card honest it's it's all the money's already there it's not even credit it's it's good good to go boots on the ground boots on the ground from one of our producers uh was in the bush intercontinental airport going to la for business 10 refugees on the flight, all carrying bags from the IOM, the International Office of Migration.
Starting point is 00:12:49 They put their logo on them? Yeah. I have pictures. Yes, I have pictures. He took pictures. Oh, I've got to put that in the newsletter. That is so arrogant. And lanyards with IOM lanyards. Can you believe it?
Starting point is 00:13:12 This is all being shuttled over through it's all on purpose it's all by design they're raising 7.9 billion dollars the iom is through amy pope former uh state department uh aficionado and the whole thing and it's that's there's even one one part that's even worse these info mavericks that are just sticking in my craw and i put brett weinstein up there not a bad guy but people get directed and you get directed by people who send you messages and you know you got you get insiders we have them all the time they've sent me on wild goose chases before i'd like to mention things like um quantum dots you don't have to mention quantum dots quantum dots but i do have something else that you will have to mention but we'll do it later okay um
Starting point is 00:14:03 But I do have something else that you will have to mention, but we'll do it later. Okay. So along with this, along with this report from our boots on the ground, our producer says 90% of the people I'm seeing are military age men. And that is, so that is what the info mavericks are directing you towards the whole idea is to get you to think about this they just change the battlefield don't go looking at what's really happening think about military age men and we've been hearing this over and over again and and how did this start you know it's all of a sudden it's just oh military age men oh they're sending chinese in they're going to take us over from inside out and so
Starting point is 00:14:48 brett weinstein was on talker again to talk about his trip to the darien gap this was amazing all of a sudden he's he's the roving reporter and i pulled i pulled a little clip of him and and heather uh talking about his i think heather's always there no well no this is this is the dark horse podcast i didn't want to pull their podcast i didn't want to pull the talker clip you know this it's more interesting to pull it from there from the home podcast uh so brett what's your thesis um after going through um the darian gap the hypothesis that i want to put i mean hypothesis forward yeah good not a thesis. No, I'm sorry. It's a hypothesis.
Starting point is 00:15:26 What's the difference between a thesis and a hypothesis? There is actually a slight difference. Hypothesis would be the word you'd use in academia for pretty much the same thing. As far as I'm concerned, they're synonymous. But hypo is more. And also a thesis is something that's produced necessarily. So in other words, I wrote a thesis. I don't have a thesis.
Starting point is 00:15:49 A hypothesis is probably more technically correct. Someone wrote it for him, maybe. Well, listen to his hypothesis. The hypothesis that I want to put forward is that the economic migration that is so evident that you saw at the first camp is actually
Starting point is 00:16:04 cloaking this second migration with his traveling a different route, which is housed separately. So I have to add to this. So he went to the Darien Gap and he saw two camps. One was like South Americans, people from Venezuela, Ecuador. You know, hey, we want a better life, hey? They said it just like that, too.
Starting point is 00:16:29 Oh, please. They said it just like that. Nice try, senor. But then there was this other camp where he was not allowed to film and it was filled with Chinese. With his traveling a different route, which is housed separately and which on the ground has an absolutely distinct character and is treated in the inverse way by the authorities. They don't want it observed. They can't prevent you from seeing it from the edge of the camp, but they do not want you getting any deeper into the thing. They don't want you photographing it. And it's not obvious why they would have a different policy.
Starting point is 00:17:01 In fact, the opposite policy as they did in the main migration. So anyway, the hypothesis that I want to put on the table, and I'm not saying that I necessarily believe that this is true, but I do believe it is plausible. Okay, so that means he didn't write it. He's been given this hypothesis. I also want to say at this point,
Starting point is 00:17:19 I'm going to change the definition of hypothesis because I can see this coming to conspiracy theory there you go the economic migration out of south america is cloaking a migration of largely military age chinese migrants who are motivated by something distinct from they're not fleeing the ccp it's not obvious that they are concerned about the view of the ccp it appears that they are actually facilitated by it that they've left china with the knowledge of the ccp and that they have joined this migration which we now try to talk about as one thing but if if it's two things, that will confuse things. So his hypothesis, which he doesn't necessarily agree with, is that the International Office of Migration is obfuscating these military-aged people.
Starting point is 00:18:17 He had a picture of old women, was what I saw. But okay, these military age people who have been sent by the CCP, which I guess the International Office of Migration is bringing in to take over the United States from the inside out. will beat China because their population is declining and we have an increasing population, not by young people having children and starting families, but by open borders. And I think this is a part of it. And I think they want these Chinese. They're probably really smart Chinese. You know, the good ones who got skills who got skills to do stuff yeah we can get them those chinese very easily through the h1b program that they don't
Starting point is 00:19:12 have to sneak into the country especially the skilled ones but how about this for some sort of a uh counter argument to all this first of all this bit about chinese losing his population is a bunch of people that are on that bandwagon but they don't explain the fact that oh yeah they're not going to have anybody working for the old people they can't explain away the fact that 30 to 40 percent of the young people in china can't get work there you go and that's true how does that make any sense with in the scheme of things? I'll bet they're military-aged. If their population is declining and they're out of control,
Starting point is 00:19:49 they can't get workers. I bet they're military-aged. Well, they're young people. They're all military-aged. The whole thing is we want them here. We have to remember that this was 20, 25 years ago. You could walk across the border. There were corporations there going, hey, yeah, come on over. We'll bring you back at the end of the day.
Starting point is 00:20:11 How about my hypothesis? Oh, all right. Yours will be conspiracy theory. The United States has a similar situation to China. We have all these young people that will never put up with being conscripted. It's just not going to happen. That boat has sailed. We're going to have a volunteer army for the rest of our days of mercenaries and whoever. So we'll bring them in over the border. Hey, you want to become an American citizen? Here's your path. Join the army, put in four years.
Starting point is 00:20:46 You can re-up if you want for two more, and you'll become an American citizen after your term of duty. We're going to put you in the army. I'm with you on this. And you're going to fight for America. I'm with you on this. And the reason why is because of Steadfast Defender 24.
Starting point is 00:21:03 Are you familiar with Steadfast Defender? No. Steadfast Defender 24. Are you familiar with Steadfast Defender? No. Steadfast Defender. Well, here's a little backgrounder. NATO has kicked off its biggest military exercise in decades. The alliance will carry out four months of drills. Steadfast Defender 24. Let me play it out because I'm going to prove your point here.
Starting point is 00:21:22 That's the name. And it aims to showcase NATO's ability to deploy forces from North America and elsewhere to reinforce Europe. 31 NATO members and Sweden are taking part in the exercises, which will involve around 90,000 troops. The drills include naval vessels, dozens of aircraft, and more than 1,000 combat vehicles. For more now, I'm joined by Aileen Matleib.
Starting point is 00:21:46 She is a research fellow at the Center for Security and Defense at the German Council on Foreign Relations. It's good to have you with us. This is NATO's biggest exercise that we've seen in decades. Why now? I think it should be clear that NATO is not acting in a vacuum, but rather that NATO is reacting to what Russia has been doing since essentially 2014, violating the sovereignty of Ukraine. And obviously, that has
Starting point is 00:22:14 been reinforced by Russia's full-fledged invasion of Ukraine starting in February 2022. And that is why NATO is in the process of planning this, this big exercise, actually the biggest since the end of the Cold War. So, so this is now underway. This was just a few days before it started. And what did we hear all over Europe? This is a psychological operation on the Europeans. Yeah, it's Russia. And then oh conscription what boris johnson oh yes lieutenant johnson reporting for duty read my column in the daily mail everyone's go like i'm not going to be conscripted i'm not going to go you can't conscription is drafting i'm not going to go into i'm not going to do that then we had sweden uh sweden oh. Well, you know what? The commander in chief over there,
Starting point is 00:23:07 Bidane, General Michael Bidane, urges fellow Swedes to, quote, prepare themselves mentally for war. The civil defense minister, Karl Oskar Boland, stressed that war could come to Sweden. The German minister of defense, Boris Pistororius shared his wild guess that a russian attack on a nato country could occur within less than 10 years the dutch admiral rob bauer oh yes we need to be resilient we have to have a whole of society approach they are doing everything they can to get cold war going and they need to do it now because they need money. See, France just ordered 1.1 billion euros of vehicles, helicopters, some other pew-pew stuff.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Because they know the minute Trump comes in, the gravy train is over. This is their last hurrah. They're doing everything they can. They're trying to scare everybody into this. And I think you're right. It's like Americans, we've given up. We're like, no one wants to go into that woke bull crap. We're not going to go into the army and the air force.
Starting point is 00:24:14 No, no. Get some Chinas. I think you're absolutely right. That's the deal. It's all the military industrial complex is running roughshod on the whole world right now no one's in control of them they just do whatever they want blow stuff up and then and even get the speaker of the house johnson to all right you know you here's 17 billion so it's a tip for these guys but it's enough for now just a tip people have to realize this this is what's going, but it's enough for now. Just a tip. People have to realize
Starting point is 00:24:45 this is what's going on. It's just all military. Everything we can do for war, war, war, war. That's a moneymaker. And it will be very interesting to see what Tucker comes up with who has been spotted in Moscow if he actually goes...
Starting point is 00:25:02 Why? Oh, yeah, to interview Putin. That's the big rumor. goes. Oh, yeah. Yeah, to interview Putin. That's the big rumor. Oh? Yeah. Yeah. Well, Putin will run circles around that guy. Well, Putin will get exactly what he wants.
Starting point is 00:25:15 Yeah. No, he will. That's what I meant. This whole thing is, it's really disgusting. And then, you know, instead of, instead of, I mean, just what this 86, here, let me play this one clip. And then I think it looks like you got enough stuff here to cover it. But I just wanted to play this one.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Where is it? In the region here. Yes, this is from our last show. in the region here. Yes, this is from our last show. Just remember, we had a huge, huge gathering in Congress, in the halls, the hallowed halls of Congress, and this
Starting point is 00:25:52 is what came out of it. Mr. Zuckerberg, you and the companies before us, I know you don't mean it to be so, but you have blood on your hands. No, no, Lindsay. Actual blood is on the hands of dead people with 86 military strikes. We're just bombing all kinds of Lindsay has blood on his hands. Yes, yes. It's unbelievable. And so let's get Jake Sullivan out. Let's get him out and talking to everybody. Jake, Jake, Jake, Jake. How many did we kill? What did we get? What's going on? How'd we do? So the president has been very clear from the beginning, which is that when American forces are attacked, we will respond. And we've responded several times over the course of the past few months.
Starting point is 00:26:34 And then when three Americans were tragically killed, the president ordered a firm and serious response, which is now underway. It began with the strikes on Friday night, but that is not the end of it. Not the end! We intend to take additional strikes and additional action to continue to send a clear message that the United States will respond when our forces are attacked or people are killed. I mean, this message that they keep talking about, I think the message is clear, especially because you keep saying it. But this is not over.
Starting point is 00:27:15 At this point, we are still assessing the question of how many casualties there were. Blood on your hands. Among the militia groups and our military will continue to provide the president with those assessments. We do believe that the strikes had good effect in degrading the capabilities of these militia groups to attack us. And we do believe that as we continue, we will be able to continue to send a strong message about the United States' firm resolve to respond when our forces are attacked. Jake, do you know if any civilians were killed? Do you know if any militant leaders were killed? We do not have at this time any confirmation of any civilian casualties. Our military is still looking at that. What we do know is that the targets we hit were absolutely valid targets from the point of view of containing the weaponry and the personnel that were attacking American forces.
Starting point is 00:28:09 So we are confident in the targets that we struck. And I will defer to a final analysis, the question of who was taken out among militant leaders. I've got to stop you from these clips. I got to stop you from these clips. You've jumped from the Texas trucking to now we're overseas all of a sudden with a bunch of stuff in the middle that you've just passed over. It was kind of a work of genius, but the show's got to go on for three hours. Well, my point was, this is just two sides of a political coin that's being tossed up in the media and republicans are all about the border and then you know personally i think uh you know the war stuff may be a little
Starting point is 00:28:54 more important that's where all our money goes to yeah but that's since we started domestically i wanted to stick with it because i got a bunch of domestic clips I want to play. All right. As opposed to jumping into the war already, which includes the three by three. And over analysis of the attacks with the B-1 bombers. Yes. God.
Starting point is 00:29:18 Yes. And I should just as an aside, I'll probably mention it, but as an aside, the B-1 bombers aren't even stationed over there. They're stationed in the United States. Well, are you going to do domestic or? I just have to put this point in. A B-1 bomber cost $173,000 an hour to operate.
Starting point is 00:29:42 Just want to throw that in there if you want to talk about money wasting. Yes, I wanted to talk a little bit about Mallorca because Mallorca is going to get impeached. And there was another big issue on the Meet the Depressed show that you mentioned earlier because he was on there. And she was hounding him about this,
Starting point is 00:30:00 saying it was political. But the reason I would like to play some Mallorca clips is because this is actually, just for the benefit of the audience, this is an amazing historic event to try to impeach a cabinet member. The last time it happened was 150 years ago. And who was that?
Starting point is 00:30:17 I don't even know. It was somebody in somebody's cabinet. And it was just some, I don't know, maybe the war guy but i want to start with a majorca analysis from ntd uh okay on wednesday morning that this is the one impeaching majorca me yeah yeah on wednesday morning a house panel approved articles of impeachment against homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas he's accused of breaching the public trust i see what i know that's why i asked you meant this clip joining us now to explore the impeachment of homeland security secretary
Starting point is 00:30:54 alejandro mayorkas no you were playing the right clip no this one says mayorka analysis ntd this one says mayorka analysis ntd, the other one just says impeaching Mallorca. Oh, okay. Well, why don't you skip the Mallorca analysis, go back to impeaching Mallorca. Okay, okay. And by the way, I think it's Mallorca's. Mallorca is a seaside village in Spain.
Starting point is 00:31:19 On Wednesday morning, a House panel approved articles of impeachment against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. He's accused of breaching the public trust and refusing to comply with the law. And just hours later, House Speaker Mike Johnson accused Mayorkas of being partly responsible for the fentanyl crisis. Moms and dads, brothers and grandmothers, all of us are losing loved ones to a drug that is being smuggled across the border in droves. Where in the world is Secretary Mayorkas on all of this? He is the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. It's his responsibility to prevent these harmful drugs from flowing into our country.
Starting point is 00:31:56 The full house could vote on Mayorkas' impeachment as soon as next week. Who was that speaking in the house? Who was that? I'm sorry, I couldn't hear you. Who was that speaking in the house? Who was that? I'm sorry, I couldn't hear you. Who was that? Is the wind that bad? It's that bad. Who was speaking in the house there? Who was saying?
Starting point is 00:32:15 That was Johnson, wasn't it? That's what I thought it was. I mean, this is also, I mean, they don't care. They don't care about people dying in the streets. They don't. This is all they can leverage the fentanyl thing better than they can leverage bringing the soldiers over yes no they totally can leverage that and that and that's again it's part of oh just let them die
Starting point is 00:32:35 so we can talk about it it's well i don't think they're that callous but oh no it's it's something you can leverage to get some attention to the fact that you're trying to impeach this guy and they're going to impeach him in the House. But it's not going to go anywhere after that, which, you know, begs the question, why bother? But they hello. Election year. Hello. Exactly. Let's go to clip two. And on the note of how this impeachment is unfolding, Democrats are calling this a political stunt. What's your understanding of the legality here? Of course, an impeachment is not, strictly speaking, a legal proceeding. It is, as our founders, in particular Alexander Hamilton, one of the authors of the Federalist Papers, told us, that it is a political tool, but it's a very serious one. And as one of
Starting point is 00:33:28 the federal courts with regard to these cases involving Mr. Mayorkas has said, look, if in fact you in the Congress disagree with what Mr. Mayorkas is doing, don't come to us. You have a tool available to you, that is the Congress, and it is impeachment. So the courts have basically told the Republicans in the House of Representatives, you have a tool at your disposal. It's up to you to use it. That tool is impeachment. Question. is this the same type of process with an impeachment of a president where both houses have to impeach no the impeach technically once you're voted for impeachment you're exactly the same yeah the house impeaches you and then he goes to the senate for trial oh okay all right so so it's exactly the
Starting point is 00:34:25 same right according to uh johnson uh when he was grilled by um by kristin this morning the show that you were referring to earlier she was yellowed up again by the way she was really yellowed up yeah i saw the hands i put a little they tried to lighten your hands a little bit. Not even trying. No, no, I don't think they're trying. No, I looked at the hands. Now you've got me looking at people's hands. You can't not look at the hands. You should sit on your hands.
Starting point is 00:34:53 It's no good. So Johnson, he says, well, it's not as political as it was with the Democrats going after Trump because they didn't do all the procedure. Because you're supposed to go through a series of meetings and committees and blah, blah, blah, one thing after another before you even bring it to the House. You just don't bring it straight up the way Nancy Pelosi did. So he claims because of procedure, it's apolitical, which is nonsense now hold on let me ask you another
Starting point is 00:35:26 question so if they impeach him in the house it means nothing correct it's just that you're embarrassed but he doesn't get thrown out does he get thrown off the job no okay only if the senate convicts him would he then be fired and maybe served? Yeah, he's fired, yeah. Yeah. So this is not going to happen. Exactly. All right.
Starting point is 00:35:54 Do you want to take the higher branch? You're right. This is all election posturing. Yes. But it's historic because it's the fact, and that's the only reason I wanted to play these clips, because there's a lot of interesting little tidbits. The guy that she's interviewing is the guy who was on the impeachment committee against Clinton. And he's got a lot of experience with this. And so he has got some funny things to say that are interesting to note. And the fact is that if you do have it, it seems to me you have a guy who's the head of the Homeland Security. That's a big deal that can't keep fentanyl from coming into the country.
Starting point is 00:36:31 He's doing a shitty job. And that's what I think the point they're trying to make. I never liked this Mayorkas guy anyway. But you're not a House representative. It doesn't matter what we think. This is a fact. Can I interject one clip just because we're talking about impeachment yeah this i don't know if you saw this the pbs frontline documentary about january 6th yeah i did see it i'd like to play a little clip here because this this accentuates the point of all of these
Starting point is 00:37:06 impeachments and hearings just being tv show is that okay yeah go for it thompson's committee had gathered a trove of information the challenge what to do with it The one thing that we knew was the information that we have is compelling. The thing we needed to do was tell that to the American people in a compelling way. So that's why we brought in a former president of ABC News. Yeah, I got a call pretty much out of the blue. Out of the blue. From the January 6th committee. They wanted a storyteller.
Starting point is 00:37:46 And while they were brilliant, they were brilliant lawyers. Storytelling for a mass audience is not what they do. To bring in a guy like this who would think outside the box really did prove to be fruitful. And it was Goldston who really began to envision this as, in a way, a kind of miniseries, that there would be sort of nine episodes, and that these episodes would tackle particular themes.
Starting point is 00:38:09 Attack on the Capitol. The investigation. The first hearing was primetime television. As the nation is about to witness a defining moment, the first hearing before the country, the results of the January 6th investigation. This is an extraordinary moment in American history. When it came to that first hearing. Notice the parallel. Extraordinary moment in American history.
Starting point is 00:38:30 Never impeached a cabinet member in 150 years. Extraordinary moment. This investigation. This is an extraordinary moment in American history. When it came to that first hearing, we knew how high the stakes were. The federal government is about to hold its first primetime hearing. We were either going to, you know, make people realize that this was important, you know, or once you've lost them, you've lost them for good.
Starting point is 00:38:56 On the evening of June 9th, 8.01 p.m., the doors opened. My heart was beating pretty fast on June 9th. The doors opened. My heart was beating pretty fast on June 9th. And it was a real question of, can we do it? Is this going to work or not? Come on, team.
Starting point is 00:39:13 All right, everybody, here we go. Here we go. I'm in this tiny control room right up the stairs from Cannon Caucus. And we count down to the start of the hearing. And at that point, what can you do? And we're live, people, we're live. Here we go. In three, two, one. The select committee to investigate the January 6th attack on the United States Capitol will be in order, without objection.
Starting point is 00:39:42 We wanted to make sure that this was a presentation that would grab the audience and hold on to him chairman thompson loved to say it's got to pop so we of course called this as it was taking place we we talked about them bringing in this abc news guy we talked about them doing this prime time they didn't even do a series they did a couple of them prime time my question is if this is out there it's on pbs frontline if everyone knows that this happened if everyone saw it go down why don't the republicans do this they're not doing it right well i'm i'm gonna disagree with this oh i think that when the democrats decided to get an abc producer in and
Starting point is 00:40:27 put it on prime time it had the veneer of a tv show yes which nobody really takes that seriously because they've seen so many of them i think it i'm with you i think with you all right i think it i think the credibility went down not up because of the overproduction values created by the ABC guy. He was putting on a TV show. It might have been Law & Order. I watch Law & Order all the time, and I don't want to change my vote or anything afterwards. It's just pure. It becomes entertainment, and my system, my my entertainment desiring system sees it as
Starting point is 00:41:08 entertainment but treats it as entertainment i'm out of there after that and i can go off and do something else i think this was a huge flop but you're telling me that taylor swift won't change your vote from trump to biden no she won't all right let's get back to your Mallorca clips. I think I'm on clip three. Now, on that note, Speaker Mike Johnson is saying it is Secretary Mayorkas' job to prevent harmful drugs from flowing into our country and secure our border. How would a Mayorkas impeachment help secure the border? cure the border? Well, that's a very, very good question, because even if Secretary Mayorkas were impeached and then removed, which is highly unlikely, given the fact that you need a two thirds majority in the in the Senate to convict and remove him and the Republicans are in the
Starting point is 00:41:59 minority over there, you know, he would be replaced by presumably somebody else ready, willing and able to carry out Mr. Biden's policies. So unfortunately, it's probably not going to solve the issue. But I think impeaching Mr. Mayorkas is called for and would send a very clear message, at least to the American people, that a majority of the house of representatives is doing everything that it can to correct the awful uh policies and failure to abide by the law on our southern border yeah yeah yeah i'm basically saying what you said yeah and and now i have to ask the question why did they interrupt all this with that stupid blood on your hands zuckerberg bit what was the point of that it hasn't stopped anyone from using social media was that just a flare now now you got me thinking about that i haven't
Starting point is 00:43:00 considered that and that was well that was well that was a Senate hearing, if I'm not mistaken, right? Yes. And I looked at the bills that they were talking about, and I went through them, you know, as I do, like really through, like the Kids Online Safety Act, COSA. And all I find, yeah, I see some stuff in there, like some interesting terminology, like addictive feeds. Okay. But all the stuff is everything you'd expect. You know, in two years, we'll implement this. You have to, you got to adhere to guide.
Starting point is 00:43:35 Nothing spectacular. I mean, it's complete performative nonsense. Well, how about this? Johnson himself has said this, that the senate's not going to do anything this and it's and he as one of the reporters said he got feedback from the senate republicans that they're not going to do anything the senate is so divorced from the house and so forth the republicans in the senate are so divorced from the house they're just doing Republicans they're just doing stuff that this may have been
Starting point is 00:44:05 the Zuckerberg thing. We may just cover up the fact that this impeachment is going on so it doesn't draw any attention to it. Right. Thinking people would care, which they don't. Smokescreen. Let's listen to the last clip and then we can maybe
Starting point is 00:44:21 figure it out. On that note, what do you see as the next steps in this case? Some are saying it could die in the House, the Senate, as you just pointed out. Or could we actually see a conviction? What do you see next? It will, of course, now that the committee with jurisdiction, Mr. Green's Homeland Security Committee, has reported out two articles of impeachment to the full House. It will be up to Speaker Johnson to schedule a vote. Now, whether or not the Republicans will be able to secure a majority for that, you know,
Starting point is 00:44:52 is itself a question because of the very, very slim majority that they have. But hopefully they will have a majority. And if, in fact, a bare majority votes on either one or both of those articles of impeachment, it will, in fact, go over to the Senate and the Senate will have to conduct a trial and then vote on whether or not to convict and remove Mr. Mayorkas. So this is a political ploy. This is done just before the election. So the Republicans in the House. Well, they got a little bit of runway before the election. Yeah, but if they get the impeachment to go through, which will probably take a month, and then they have to send it to the Senate, this thing will drag on close to the election.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Because they're just not going to be able to ram it through that fast. It's a slow process. And Johnson has made a point of making it a slow process by going through all these committees, and then there's the Biden impeachment coming up. Oh, goodness gracious. So we have... It's just all political.
Starting point is 00:46:01 It's just keep it going, keep it going. The reason for the political... It's okay, I'm out campaigning against the Democrat, or I'm already an incumbent Democrat, and I got a Republican coming up against me, and the Republican can say, this person voted, would refuse to vote for the impeachment of the man who's poisoning the country with fentanyl. Blood. Poisoning the blood. Poisoning the blood.
Starting point is 00:46:24 He's got blood on his hands. So, it's all, yeah, totally political. But what else is new with this House and Senate? Well, then I might as well bring this up because I've determined now that the Taylor Swift op is actually people talking about the op. That's the op. By the way, that was at the meetup. I went to the Albany Mallard Club meetup. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:53 And that's what exactly, exactly what they were talking about. The op. They were talking about Taylor Swift. I have a couple of clips just to just to accentuate the point uh because that's all it's super bowl um marketing obviously yeah uh but so first they won't need her after this there's this fake clip that's going around which was sent to me several times by people saying look at this good morning taylor swift is not a psyop taylor swift is not a psyop taylor swift is not a cyop taylor swift is not a cyop taylor swift is not a cyop taylor swift is not a cyop taylor swift is not a cyop taylor swift is not a
Starting point is 00:47:33 cyop so they took that video the very famous video of all of the uh what was that news outlet that all had the same screen clear sinclair yeah and they just added this these voices over it okay here's what actually is going on have you ever wondered why or how she blew up like this well around four years ago the pentagon psychological operations unit floated turning taylor Swift into an asset during a NATO meeting. So is Swift a front for a covert political agenda? Primetime obviously has no evidence. If we did, we'd share it.
Starting point is 00:48:13 It's a coordinated marketing campaign by Democrats to leverage celebrities to excite their base into coming out and voting. Why alienate your fans of Swifties? voting why alienate that your so you had uh what's his name on there uh jesse waters at the beginning jesse waters jesse waters and what he i i thought you i thought you were going to play something else because i saw this clip where he actually did on his show i don't know what that that was his show or the five. He had a clip of some... We played that clip. We played the whole clip of that psychological op. We played the whole thing. Yeah, with the woman
Starting point is 00:48:51 talking about, you know, Taylor Swift's a good idea. Yeah, we played the whole thing. Yeah, so why is he kind of saying that doesn't exist? That just seems that that was incongruous. This is just a compilation of idiots on television participating in the op, which is just to get people to watch television and go online.
Starting point is 00:49:13 To watch football. And for Megyn Kelly to talk about it and everyone to talk about it. That's the whole point. Whatever you do, don't look at the bombs. Don't look at the bombs. Don't look at the bombs. Look at the border. Look at the border. Look at Taylor Swift. Look at Taylor Swift. Primetime obviously has
Starting point is 00:49:29 no evidence. If we did, we'd share it. It's a coordinated marketing campaign by Democrats to leverage celebrities to excite their base into coming out and voting. Why alienate your fans, the Swifties? You know, they come across from every political ideology. Why put yourself in one area? Don't get involved. Don't get involved in politics. We don't want to see you there. Let's not forget that Taylor Swift has made a career
Starting point is 00:49:56 off of writing songs about picking the wrong man. So I don't think we should take advice from her now. CBS actually took it one step further and brought in an analyst. All right, they're considered America's favorite couple. You know them, pop star Taylor Swift. Is the Super Bowl airing on CBS? What station does it air on this year?
Starting point is 00:50:13 Oh, I thought it was on Fox this year. Oh, okay. All right, they're considered America's favorite couple. You know them, pop star Taylor Swift and Kansas City chief star Travis Kelsey. But the attention on their relationship is also inspiring some truly bizarre conspiracy theories online. Some on the far right are claiming the two are part of some kind of liberal plot to swing the election toward Joe Biden. So how did these made up theories quickly spread? Jolene Kent has the story.
Starting point is 00:50:44 Jolene, tell us. A pop icon dating a superstar athlete, mixing a trip to the Super Bowl, and you have the ingredients for an alt-right conspiracy built for the age of the Internet. So is Swift a front for a covert political agenda? Right-wing media outlets have spent weeks parroting the baseless claims that Taylor Swift and Travis Kelsey
Starting point is 00:51:04 are at the center of a liberal plot against former President Donald Trump. Build them up, build them up, build them up. And then at the moment of truth, they're going to endorse Biden. But the bad blood between Taylor Swift and Trump goes back years. In 2018, she endorsed two Democrats in Tennessee. They say that I like Taylor, she's about 25% less. And during the 2020 election, she threw her support behind Joe Biden. Their meteoric rise in popularity in recent months has riled up some Trump diehards, including former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, leading many to speculate
Starting point is 00:51:40 without evidence that the Super Bowl outcome is, quote, rigged to give Swift a bigger platform to endorse Biden again. So now now we're bringing sports ball into it. This whole thing, the whole thing is advertising for the Super Bowl. And then. Yeah, oh, absolutely. And they brought in some A.I. How quickly did these conspiracy theories proliferate? So these will typically start to simmer in the dark web and kind of the fringe. Dark web, John. Oh, it's the dark web. He should have said podcast, but it's the dark web. This is where it simmers in the dark web. These will typically start to simmer in the dark web and kind of the fringes and underbelly of the internet. And then at some point, they gain
Starting point is 00:52:24 traction. Can you, do you have a directions to the underbelly of the internet. And then at some point, they gain traction. Do you have directions to the underbelly of the internet for me? I'd really like to check that out. I'd like to check that out from time to time. Around other events, in this case it was the Super Bowl. Waseem Khaled is the CEO of Blackbird AI, a company that monitors disinformation.
Starting point is 00:52:41 Here, we can see all these individual little small conversations all starting to connect. Khaled showed us how his company's AI-driven platform has been tracking conspiracies about Swift and Kelsey for months. So here we actually see that spread. We see it snowballing and we can actually see a narrative evolve, grow and become more harmful over time. In fact, often when we color code something red, they could be bot-like activities. This is proof that social media can take a kernel of a lie and turn it into an entire coin on the cob. Longtime pollster Frank Luntz believes that Trump and his base may have turned on Swift because
Starting point is 00:53:21 they worry about her influence on the younger electorate. Last year, more than 35,000 new voters signed up in one day after Swift encouraged her Instagram followers to register to vote. And for groups looking to undermine Swift or anyone else's influence, Khaled says the disinformation playbook is abundantly clear. Whether financial motives or ideological, that the tradecraft that's developed, much like cyber attacks developed over the years, it's designed to be an attack on human perception. This whole, it's unbelievable. This is all just filling airtime. Yes, and I will say it is CBS. You were right. Your first guess was correct. CBS is carrying the game. So we have a lot of CBS bull crap on here. That's why.
Starting point is 00:54:07 The other thing is, I heard, by the way, 25,000. But let's say she got, what, 35,000 people to register to vote? Wow. I was questioning in the last show the idea that she has 275 million followers. And if they are eligible to vote at all. Well, let's assume that maybe half of them are. But let's assume a third of them are, which is almost 100 million people. You can only get 35,000 out of that group.
Starting point is 00:54:37 It's worse than our getting people to donate to the show in terms of percentage. Wow. Taylor Swift can't even get us to get people to donate to our show. Can't even get our numbers. So that's like bogus. It's all, and they should, what is the Grammys airing on tonight? It's an op. The op is talking.
Starting point is 00:55:01 Weren't the Grammys last Sunday? No, they're this Sunday. They're tonight. I thought they were. sunday they're tonight they're tonight they were no they're tonight they're tonight i was i was reading on the just going from my news rundown i'm looking at the winners various people win no no this has got to be tonight oh okay well i may be wrong now now i'm am i going now you're wondering you're wondering about yourself 66 hold on 66 annual grammy awards 66 by the way should be filled with lots of devil stuff oh yeah well it's always that's gonna be good let me see uh 60 66 is this yeah february 4th 2024 it's tonight okay and they will have watching and they because uh thanks to covid they will have a 16
Starting point is 00:55:47 minute dead segment oh they get the dead segment is 16 whole minutes yep that's how that's how many people are dead and it says thanks to covid no that's some editorializing by yours truly. Just briefly on the AI thing. It's a lot of dead. You know, comic strip blogger has put together something called the no agenda GPT. Yeah. And there's a link in the show notes.
Starting point is 00:56:19 And so people tried it out. And so there was a question about no agenda social. And here's what the, what the AI came back with the platform was created as an initiative to do the right thing for the community but face challenges in moderation and management it was run by adam curry initially then managed by others including ryan seacrest at one point I love AI. It's a comedian's dream. It goes along, you know, singing these fine,
Starting point is 00:56:52 it's just going along and doing its thing, and then some bomb, some ludicrous bomb is dropped in there. I love it. This is the same thing with self-driving vehicles, as it turned out, that vandals, like at a stop sign yeah uh you know you could write put under stop war and then the car won't see the sign correctly yeah and i mean there's just all these little things you can do to a self-driving car to make it to confuse it because it it's crap it's it's junk there's the whole idea if it wasn't for vandals, and I actually thank the vandals. There was a thing that happened recently about the Taylor Swift nude pictures.
Starting point is 00:57:33 There was somebody being interviewed about this on PBS. Again, talking about the op. The op, that's just what it is. It's part of the op. By the way, if you want to take part at least in your own little way in the op that's just what it is it's part of the op and by the way if you want to take part at least your own little way in the op go to duck duck go type in taylor swift ai nudes oh brother and i didn't want to do it but after i watched this thing on pbs are these things even out there anymore yeah they're not it's millions of I mean, some guys got it's unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:58:06 And so you holy mackerel and some of the lewd material is just beyond the pale. But so I'm listening to this woman and the guy asks her, he says, so who's responsible? Who does this sort of thing? And then she doesn't know what to say. She's the tech expert. She goes on and on. thing and then she doesn't know what to say she's the tech expert and she goes on and yeah and what i would have said was vandals we have they're in our midst they do their thing and it's and it's a good thing they're there because it alerts us to the fact that these these problems exist and can be exploited so easily by what amounts to just a bunch of punk kids. It's really nothing new. You know, they're just better.
Starting point is 00:58:47 There's nothing new and you can't catch them. They're just better, that's all. There's nothing new, you can't catch them unless they're dumb. But that, but I, but you know, the more, I think we talked about on the last show, I think that was set up just to, you know, it was two days before the Zuckerberg blood on your hands thing. So I think that they're just abusing Taylor Swift now.
Starting point is 00:59:07 She should get out of the public eye. This is a very, very dumb idea. This is going to backfire on her. It will not end pretty. Yeah, that's your basic thesis about media in general. Yes, you use it for... And every time you always say it, and then about a year later it happens. Boomerang's back, yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:23 You spike the ball and we're done. Thank the vandals. Yes,'re done thank the vandals yes we shall thank the vandals um i just want to go back to uh because i know you have a three by three um about this this whole the whole reason for launching b1 bombers and which is i think a lot more expensive than one intercontinental ballistic missile or what trump did you know let's target one dude let's get sulimani he died like a dog you know which gave i was always thinking they did the whole idea of these predators where you could pinpoint you know who you want to kill i mean they could do with even American citizens. But to send a $173,000 an hour bomber from the United States to the Middle East and back.
Starting point is 01:00:11 It's not really targeting. It's not surgical strikes. I mean, you're carpet bombing with those things. Yeah. It's a beautiful plane, though. It all started with tower 22 and what we were led to believe is that tower 22 had one of its drones coming back and they turned off whatever security systems they had and then the iranian drone snuck in a one-way drone which means it's one of those
Starting point is 01:00:41 lawnmower ditties which really have a very they have a very limited range so where that was launched from is interesting but you know so there's been a lot of uh analysis about tower 22 and i don't know if you've seen the satellite picture uh tower 22 doesn't have a runway they have uh, and they have a helipad, and they have a helicopter taxiway. So what drone was coming back? It wasn't a Reaper drone. That needs a proper runway to land. That's a good point.
Starting point is 01:01:18 And every single American aircraft has what's known as an IFF, if friend or foe transponder. So if something's coming in, you don't turn off the receiver. This thing stinks. I'm not believing that this went down the way we've been told. Whenever we lose something, the first thing we want is we either destroy or we retrieve our transponder nobody wants anyone to unless the iranians now maybe have an iff transponder i'm getting this from boots on the ground and the idea of um this iranian lawnmower drone coming in without a transponder, which has a limited range. I'm told two kilometers. I'll give it 20 kilometers. It doesn't matter. Where did it come from?
Starting point is 01:02:12 It stinks, stinks, stinks. It all stinks of, let's just go and bomb something. We don't, we're not even, we don't have no pictures. Did we even bomb anything? I mean, honestly, do you have any pictures? When we did Iraq, we did shock and awe. That's what I was hoping for. Show me shock and awe. No, we just said 86. We don't know if we killed anybody.
Starting point is 01:02:36 We got some militants. I'm even questioning that. Yeah, you are. Can I play a couple of Kirbyby clips because he's always the most fun to listen to when it comes yeah i just want to mention and before i play the three right three i do have a bunch of clips from el jazeera about the situation and i kind of concentrated on a iranian professor at the university of tehran to remind us a number of things that i forgot about and that it's going to be a kind of a uh it's a very interesting uh you want to do you want to play
Starting point is 01:03:11 those first or you want to do the well what's kirby say here in your clips it's kirby it's always fun to listen to kirby he's a typical navy bonehead rear admiral joining us now to discuss more of this from washington is Security Council spokesman John Kirby. John, good morning to you. It's great to have you back. So we've heard from you and repeatedly from the administration that these strikes against the Houthis are intended to degrade their capabilities. But so far, it hasn't stopped them. Is there any expectation that the result will be different or more definitive after this latest round? Well, we'll see what happens.
Starting point is 01:03:47 The Pentagon is doing an assessment right now to see what the effect was. Not only the strikes in Iraq and Syria on Friday night, but the strikes in Yemen yesterday. We are continuing to go after their ability to hit us. And in the case of the Houthis, to hit international shipping. We are trying to take away their capability, make it harder for them to throw these punches. Again, we think we've achieved good effects in both rounds of these strikes, both in Yemen and Iraq and Syria on Friday night. But we're still doing the assessment on that. You know, I've always seen these videos
Starting point is 01:04:21 and the video, it shows the missile going and then all of a sudden there's a big flash and then the camera goes dead and that assessment is clear but there's none of that but john isn't that the criticism though like is degrading their capabilities enough i mean what do you say to these shipping companies who've had to travel thousands of miles to avoid this area because they don't have safety and security in the Red Sea. I tell them that the president has put together a coalition of 20 some odd countries. Doesn't he know the exact number is just 20 some odd? I'm telling you, John, this stinks. It's a good catch. You would know. Yeah, yeah. They know the number. Yeah, of course they know the number. It's none.
Starting point is 01:05:08 Ships and aircraft and other capabilities in the Red Sea to try to make that passage as safe as possible. Now, we can't guarantee that there still won't be attacks on their ships, but we are doing everything we can with the international community to protect that shipping. We know how vital a waterway the Red Sea is. All right.
Starting point is 01:05:24 Does he ask him the simple question, which I would ask if I was the guy there, which is, the Houthis captured a ship and they're using it as a tourist attraction. Why don't we go recapture that ship? Because I didn't know they were a big tourist country
Starting point is 01:05:39 where they're always looking for tourist attractions because I understand now that the ship is tourist attraction number one and the Seattle fish market where you toss the fish is number two for the toothies. They've been in Seattle for a while. They're going there to look at the fish. I mean, who are we kidding here? No, instead, let's remind our viewers of some important information. And it's important to remind our viewers there are multiple operations happening here, because separately, you noted earlier, the U.S. launched those retaliatory strikes against Iranian-backed groups in Syria and Iraq.
Starting point is 01:06:09 Of course, this is a response to the three Americans who were killed in Jordan. Is there more to come with that operation and how soon? And I hate to be morbid about it, but we haven't – I don't think President Biden was at the caskets coming home, which you should be, certainly if you're playing it up this big. Oh, he was there? Was he looking at his watch? In fact, I took a photo of a screenshot of him. He had the look on his face was, I've never seen. I mean, it's the worst Biden look he could possibly have his mouth.
Starting point is 01:06:42 It's just that screwball look he has. Yeah, he was standing there with his wife. I hate to be morbid, but, you know, I've seen three pictures, three black Americans, brown, brownish black, one a woman, which Kareem Jean-Paul Pierre Cardew didn't even know because, you know, she couldn't say, oh, three of our folks or folks didn't even know i mean is this stock photography i mean i'm really starting to question this now well now with ai you can just make faces make new faces i'm questioning there is more to come what you saw friday night was just
Starting point is 01:07:19 the first round uh and it's not going to be the last one by any stretch i won't get ahead of military operations one way or another what they're going to look like when they not going to be the last one by any stretch. I won't get ahead of military operations one way or another, what they're going to look like, when they're going to come, but the president has been clear. We are going to respond in a forceful way. Three Americans were killed. Dozens were wounded. We have got to respond in a strong and aggressive way
Starting point is 01:07:39 and we'll continue to do that. But there will be more. There will be more response options as a result of that attack. Now, the obvious question is, why were you just yapping and yapping and yapping for a week and telling everybody it's coming like you're doing again why did it take nearly a week though to carry out those strikes did that give the militants time to regroup hide and protect their resources oh protect their resources well it takes it takes time to develop the target sets uh to make sure you've got uh enough visibility uh on the targets that you're going to develop the target sets to make sure you've got enough
Starting point is 01:08:05 visibility on the targets that you're going to go after, so you can be sure you're hitting what you're aiming at, and we feel like we did. We have the most sophisticated weapons in the world. You've got to make sure you're hitting what you're aiming at, and we did. Where's the video? But that takes time to
Starting point is 01:08:21 develop. You know, there's also the weather. Weather? That can be a factor in something like this. I mean, the strikes that we took on Friday night were using manned aircraft, including bombers from the United States. And, of course, you want to make sure that your pilots are safe and secure as they conduct these vital missions. Is this like D-Day where we had to wait for the weather to clear up? Is that where we're at now? So weather plays a factor in all that. But it wasn't an exorbitant amount of time here.
Starting point is 01:08:45 We needed a little time to prepare ourselves. And as for your other question, I'm sorry I interrupted you, but you also asked about whether the Iranian-backed groups, I'm sorry, the militia groups moved anything around. I can't speak to that specifically. We do the best intelligence assessment that we can in terms of developing these targets. So he knows nothing. We know nothing. The weather was not cooperating. Did you call anybody over there? Did you say did you pick up the phone and say, hey, stop killing our people or anything like that? I wanted to just pick up on something you said recently that the U.S. is not speaking directly. No direct channels with Iran in the region. Why not? Some say that's exactly what should be happening to prevent further escalation.
Starting point is 01:09:28 Yeah, call somebody. It's not like we haven't had direct communications with the Iranians before. What I said was we haven't had any direct messaging. Oh, they're DMing now. They were DMing. I'm sliding into your DMs, Mullah, but we're not doing that anymore. Direct communications with the Iranians before. What I said was we haven't had any direct messaging
Starting point is 01:09:47 to the Iranians. Are they using Facebook, do you think? Or are they using WhatsApp to DM? Iranians, since the attacks... But isn't now that pivotal moment for that discussion, those direct talks? No, we've got to shoot more
Starting point is 01:10:03 crap. We're sending a pretty strong signal with these strikes that we took on Friday night and I guarantee you that we're going to be sending another strong signal to the Iranians and to the groups that they're backing, the IRGC and the groups that they're backing over coming days. John Kirby, thank you so much for
Starting point is 01:10:19 your time this morning. We do appreciate it. To me, this is outrageous. It's outrageous. that brings me to some different group eclipse okay there's this guy joe pachinko he's a colonel uh retired uh oh boy who they brought on this was yesterday this is brought on the pbs is that retired in air quotes i think so yeah because when you listen to him talk he talks in a he talks as a group and and the group he represents is the intelligence community okay it's never said mentioned but when you read between the lines just listening to him he's getting information
Starting point is 01:10:56 why does he have any of this information he's a retired colonel what does he do for a living they never say but he's somehow an expert on the in on the topic and they brought him in the first time i've ever seen this guy and he's actually pretty good uh as a spokes you know as a spokeshole for whoever as well this is p sorry pbs weekend one as we come on the air tonight the united states is carrying out a second wave of airstrikes against dozens of iran-backed houthi targets in yemen we got to start using that. As we come on the podcast today, here's what's going on. A two-day assault is in response to last weekend's drone strike in Jordan that killed three U.S. troops and injured dozens more.
Starting point is 01:11:37 Last night's air assault struck sites in Iraq and Syria used by Iran-backed militias. Pentagon officials said it took just 30 minutes Friday night for B-1 bombers and other U.S. aircraft to hit more than 85 targets. Iraq and Syria said the attacks killed at least 34 people, both members of Iranian-backed militant groups and civilians. Joe Baccino is a retired U.S. Army colonel. He was the top spokesman at Central Command. Joe, talk about how you design an event like this, a retaliatory strike like this. Is CENTCOM the guys who let all the planes come through on 9-11? Wasn't that CENTCOM? Central Command, I have no idea if they let the planes come through or not.
Starting point is 01:12:17 I think so. Talk about how you design an event like this, a retaliatory strike like this. On the one hand, you want to do something strong enough to get their attention. But on the other hand, you don't want to do anything too strong. So, John, there's basically a range of options from low level of violence to high level of violence. You know, the high level, you're talking about strikes inside of Iran. Low level, you're talking about the kind of little precision strikes we've done, we've been doing since November. This is about what we've done, you know, just tonight and then last night is in the low to medium range. Okay. So you present these options to the White House. The Pentagon makes a recommendation. Ultimately, the National Security Council and the White House renders a decision.
Starting point is 01:13:08 council and the white house renders a decision just it's buchino with a b b-u-c-c-i-n-o and he is under inspector general investigation as of may 5th 2023 that's interesting okay look yeah so they and they when they said b1 bombers bombers bombers that implies there's more than one yes i agree so i just wanted let's say three this is like a billions of literally billions of dollars well millions and millions no billions no it depends well probably a billion it just just seems expensive there's markup There's markup. There's markup. You're talking wholesale. We're looking at retail prices here. Yeah, of course.
Starting point is 01:13:50 They're rampant. The whole thing is, I hate to say it because we have lots of military personnel, but I think they know as well. Everything is corrupt. And there was this young man, 18 years old at the church, and he's going off, you know, he's a Marine. He did his basic training. Now he's going to California. He'll be in the region within six months. It's disgusting.
Starting point is 01:14:15 Yeah. Onward. What does the response from Iran and from these militant groups, what does it tell you? I'm cautiously optimistic right now. Iran has denounced the strikes, but they haven't said anything about a retaliation. And there are signals here that Iran wants to pull back on some of these Shia proxy groups, that maybe they've gotten a little bit out of control or out of the control of Ismail Kani. they've gotten a little bit out of control or out of the control of Ismail Kani. He is the senior commander of the Quds Force in Iran, in Tehran. And so maybe he wants to pull them back.
Starting point is 01:14:51 So I'm optimistic about that. Does he have that control? Is he able to pull them back? What we're hearing is that, you know, you think about Qasem Soleimani, you know, this powerful figure, shadowy figure who really controlled these forces so tightly for so long. When he was struck, that really degraded Iran. It really took away their capability, but it also took away their ability to control these loose groups in Iraq, in Syria, in Jordan, in Yemen. And they've gotten a little bit out of control, and now he's trying to pull them back. So there's concern in Tehran. There's concern in D.C.
Starting point is 01:15:26 Nobody wants to escalate. So I'm optimistic about that. We don't want to escalate. We're going to do more. We're going to do more. I'm reminded of the – we had a clip. was a scam between and we're still in close contact with Iran to make sure that they get
Starting point is 01:15:46 their monies and some other and stop their nuke program to some extent or at least be in bed with them and all this is a cover for the fact that we're really working with Iran I mean I don't know if that's even a possibility but
Starting point is 01:16:04 that's what this one guy claimed, if you recall that clip. I'm trying to think. I don't have that per se, but I did hear, I don't know if I clipped it this morning, that what is being done here is seen as nothing. They're doing nothing to Iran. I think it was probably Mike Johnson. He said that, you know, we should be cutting their money off doing stuff like that. Yeah. Hold on a second. I think I have it here. Yeah, listen to this. What Jake Sullivan just said, I listened to that interview. It was interesting.
Starting point is 01:16:42 We need to make absolutely clear to Iran that nothing is off the table. You know, we maintain peace through strength. That was the Reagan doctrine. That's what President Trump bombed them again, continued. And that's what we have to do right now. We should not be appeasing Iran. That's what the Biden administration has been doing for the last three years. We are projecting weakness on the world stage. And frankly, Kristen, that is why our adversaries are acting so provocatively. What we need to be doing right now is turning up the heat on Iran. We need to act to decimate the Iran Central Bank, the assets that they've held there. We need to lean on international banks to seize the assets of Iranian proxies.
Starting point is 01:17:22 We need to put big-time pressure, maximum pressure on their oil exports. There's a lot that we could do to Iran to send a message instead of this appeasement strategy. It's just simply not working. Including strikes, Mr. Speaker? Including strikes, just to be clear? It should not be off the table. Let me give you just a quick example. This is from this morning. In the Trump administration, we used a drone and three missiles to take out Qasem Soleimani near Baghdad. That sent a strong message, and it quelled all of the activity there. What we're doing right now, we're using potentially hundreds of munitions to strike close to 100 targets so far, but we're not going right to the heart of the matter. I think that's a real problem.
Starting point is 01:18:03 So I think you're right. far but we're not going right to the heart of the matter i think that's a real problem so i think you're right and i think johnson is is agreeing here by saying we're not really doing anything to iran we're just shooting some stuff we're just spending money and we should we should cut off their banking yeah ain't gonna happen no because well if we do then we just work with russia we just bring in pallets of dollars. Remember that? Yeah, they send in like $4 billion in cash. Yeah, just drop it off in cash.
Starting point is 01:18:31 No problem. By the way, this Buccino guy, he was suspended last year from command. And a command climate survey found that 97% of his staff reported a hostile command climate. Two-thirds of them reported low morale. Roughly another quarter reported they witnessed sexual and or racial harassment. This is an interesting guy to bring on PBS. Yeah, that's what you mentioned. Good work. I think we're on clip three. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:00 Some Republicans in Congress have criticized the Biden administration for what they say, waiting too long. This strike was last weekend that took a full week. What do you make of that? What do you say to that? Oh, I agree. I agree. Look, if there is an intellectual thrust of the Biden foreign policy, it's conflict avoidance and, you know, avoidance of escalation. And that's generally a good impulse for an American president. Here, it doesn't serve us well. And if you look at the history of Iran, it doesn't serve us well here. For five days, we've been talking about this. For five days, we've been talking about what we're not going to do.
Starting point is 01:19:36 And I think it signals to Iran that they can continue to kind of push us around. They can continue to strike at our bases. And we're not going to make them feel pain. Because what we do to the Houthis here in Yemen, what we do to these Shia groups in Iraq and Syria, it doesn't really manifest in pain in Iran. Yeah. So that goes right along with what Mike Johnson just said. It's not really doing anything to Iran. We're just spending money and getting everybody all riled up.
Starting point is 01:20:11 And I guess the thinking there is, hey, I'm a war president. You better hurry up and someone's got to declare war. How much longer can President Biden be authorizing this stuff? Not much. I think half of it's illegal already. All of it's illegal. It's not gonna work as a work that's the idea this old political idea that once you've got a war president you gotta keep them in office don't change a warring team yeah that no one's buying that uh i mean they may have bought it in the 50s, but no. I think I got one more. Yeah, one more.
Starting point is 01:20:46 Flying bombers halfway around the world to do this. Obviously, there are operational reasons for this. They carry a tremendous amount of payload. They can fly supersonically. But was there also a message being sent? This is all about a message. So the message here is more important than anything you've hit, anything you've destroyed, any of these Shia groups that you've killed. The B-1 bombers are important because they can fly under radar coverage. And if you're going to hit inside Iran, you're going to hit inside Iran with a B-1 Lancer.
Starting point is 01:21:16 What comes next? Well, I think what comes next is you're going to see more passes in Iraq and Syria, like we did last night. You're going to see maybe more strikes on the coast of Yemen. Here tonight, we hit the capital. I don't think we'll do that again. I think we'll hit coastal battery sites. I think this will go into next week, for a few days into next week, and then we'll see. Then we kind of wait. Did Iran get the message? How is Iran going to respond? How are these Shia groups going to respond? That's what's next. So it'll be the same sort of targets or the targeting change? No, you're going to see the same kinds of targets, the same level of violence. And really, you're going to see these bunkers.
Starting point is 01:21:53 There's a lot more bunkers. So these these complexes that, you know, you think about Dorazor in in the east there in Syria and Abu Kamal. These are complexes that have hundreds of bunkers within them. And so, you know, there's a lot more targets you can hit there. We hit 85. That's really not very much. There's a lot more we can do here. Joe Pacino, retired U.S. Army colonel. Thank you very much. Retired. Do you still want to talk more war?
Starting point is 01:22:22 Wait, wait, wait. Maybe this guy was put on the PBS NewsHour as punishment. A lot of these guys don't like to do these things. That's a good point. And it's like, okay, we need a spokesperson for this. Yeah. You put him on. Because I've never seen him before, and he's not bad. No, no.
Starting point is 01:22:42 He does kind of give away the fact that he's got more information than you think he should have. Unless you have to work for him. Doesn't sound like such a cool dude to work for. Well, maybe he'll straighten out. No, he doesn't sound like a good guy. He's not a manager. Can I switch to something else for a minute? Because we're going to lose people.
Starting point is 01:23:03 We might as well play Africa and China clips. You got Africa? No, no, no. I have... Have you ever seen this guy? He does a YouTube channel. He used to be a tech lead at Google. He's an Asian guy. Kind of a...
Starting point is 01:23:22 Like a know-it-all kind of dude. But he's a very popular youtube uh youtuber okay and uh he laid out a oh should i say a hypothesis about what's happening is how many tech i think the big question i keep hearing is all these tech layoffs you know uh even jack dorsey laid off a whole bunch of people. And it's been hundreds of thousands in the past couple of years of technology people have been let go.
Starting point is 01:23:52 Yeah. And I think as I was listening to Dvorak Horowitz on Plugged, you know, this consensus is, it's not like there's some bad news coming. Something else is going on. And it's not necessarily that we oh we're headed into some horrible recession uh and this guy had a kind of an interesting um thesis i want to share it because to me it was like yeah that makes a lot of sense and it and it it kind of started
Starting point is 01:24:20 with elon musk you want to hear it of course tech layoffs are surging over 25 000 roles already cut just in the month of january we saw paypal cutting nine percent of their roles 2500 people gone microsoft cut 1900 people from their gaming division unity cut 1800 people that's 25 of their workforce amazon twitch cut 35 discord cut 17 and there's a whole string of other layoffs in the tech industry here. We have a tech jobs chart here showing a notable decline in tech roles according to Indeed where jobs in software, IT, and information has just gone downhill. Coding may just be dead. I mean we're talking massive fundamental changes underway here. Coding is dead. Apps are dead. Now amidst this backdrop of tech layoffs, this comes at an interesting time when so
Starting point is 01:25:09 many YouTubers are quitting, retiring really rich. So there's this wealth gap between 9 to 5 employees and influencers, which is something I've talked about before, where we have these two class of people, right? Half of millennials are basically poor. They can't afford anything and they're stuck in these dead and nine to five jobs and the other half, they're raking it in with Lamborghinis
Starting point is 01:25:30 and Gucci and Rolexes, living in these mansions, traveling all the time. And isn't it funny, we now have the social media trend that watch me lose my job on TikTok. As the tech workers are filming their layoffs and sharing them on social media for views. So while their nine to five jobs are burning down, their social media channels are thriving.
Starting point is 01:25:49 And you see these people finally wakening up to that. And I think this may have something to do with the extreme dissatisfaction of younger generation of workers. Because it is. I'm seeing these trends. A lot of the I'm quitting YouTube is just to get views like, oh, I didn't quit. No. Oh, you begged me to stay. But there's a lot of money has been made. We even just saw a recent renewal by Joe Rogan, although it's not quite the same as as his initial deal. Same goes for Call Her Daddy. You know, they're they're upfront and revenue sharing deals. But I think people are seeing this and then what used to be the big hero, you know, their upfront and revenue sharing deals. But I think people are seeing this. And
Starting point is 01:26:26 then what used to be the big hero, you know, oh, he's a ninja, ninja coder. Remember that? Remember we were hiring ninjas, ninja coder, and they were making two, three, 400 grand. I mean, lots of money. And this guy says, you know, no, we've, we've, we're done. We've built it all. So here's what I think is happening. We essentially reached a local maximum in technology where we invented basically digital drugs, social media, where everybody is now just addicted to this digital opioid. And they're just vegetating in front of their screens, watching short videos, TikTok videos, YouTube videos like this one. And nobody really wants to do anything else. People are just totally content. People don't need to buy anything. They don't need to download new
Starting point is 01:27:09 apps or websites. It's kind of like building someone a TV and then asking them if they want anything more from you and the apps or websites or services. No, they just want to watch their shows now. And so in a way, content became the new software where a lot of value creation shifted from the tech stack, the infrastructure of building that first TV. Now that it's built, we don't need the builders for that. We just need someone to maintain this TV. And then value shifts into the show's creation. It's kind of like the movie industry where the sound engineers and the stage engineers and production designers, they don't really get paid much, but it's the show stars who get paid the most
Starting point is 01:27:45 and so similarly at the time when twitch is laying off 35 of its staff software engineers managers college educated nine-to-five folks its top star and streamer pokemane is leaving twitch voluntarily she's not being laid off here folks with rumors of her finding a potentially 75 million dollar deal so it's just funny there is this divide where some people are leaving the company because they're fired and then some people are leaving because they're they're retiring basically they're done this rings true to me have has there been any new exciting app any new development i mean we have really nothing i mean ai really where's where's all the coders for that i mean sure buzz killed you there's there's definitely a a market for them but not not for
Starting point is 01:28:34 not for not the level that we had before oh we've got to build all this stuff out and you know once instagram created their version of tiktok and tiktok is tiktok i you know, once Instagram created their version of TikTok and TikTok is TikTok, you know, this guy calls it the low opportunity era. But still, with all of this quitting, whether voluntarily or not, I think it reflects a low opportunity, low growth, stagnant era that we're living through where there's just nothing really exciting going on. A lot of technology that should have taken off like Web3, the Metaverse, AI, it didn't really get too far. You know, AI may have some potential, but it's also the playground. Mostly big tech companies that have the data and GPUs to train on, most normal people aren't going to be doing that.
Starting point is 01:29:15 The ChatGPT store was kind of a buzz. It was just rappers on ChatGPT. You've got Apple Vision Pro, pretty expensive, limited market. And that should be clear by now apps and websites are long dead people stopped using those as soon as they began vegetating on short form videos and so with everybody vegetating on digital drugs the game industry is also suffering because it simply costs too much per minute of entertainment we can see u.s consumer spending on gaming here which is down 14.5% in the past three years, and it's basically a stagnant industry in an area where there continues to be inflation and rising costs.
Starting point is 01:29:52 So a lot of companies are seeing weak consumer demand. All the meanwhile, YouTube ad sales soared $9.2 billion in a blowout quarter as they're firmly back in growth mode after a quiet year last year. I don't know to me it sounds sounds very plausible that this just they're done building we got nothing we got no other ideas except quantum computing but that's still on the horizon that's still on the horizon it's an interesting hypothesis. I can't argue with it. I mean, there are people that,
Starting point is 01:30:32 this has always been the case in high tech. I remember going back into the late 70s when you first had the S100 bus come out. The S100 bus. Remember those days, people? I don't. What was the s100 bus i have no idea what that is it was a bus you know a back plane that had 100 pins on it and it was called the s100 bus and it was developed uh i think the altair is the first one that they developed a kind of a quasi version that got formalized and became a standard.
Starting point is 01:31:05 It was in play until the IBM PC came along with its own bus. RS-232. Is that what replaced it? RS-232 is an interface protocol. Oh, okay. I don't know what you're talking about. I don't either. I'm just throwing stuff out. there was this guy, there was the early days of microcomputing,
Starting point is 01:31:26 which is what it was called. There was all these graphic guys that come along and then there was a guy, one guy who came out with the thing called a Hercules card. It was Hercules. I think there may have even been around here, Hercules maybe, but Hercules, it made this graphics card that became kind of a quasi standard because it was so
Starting point is 01:31:46 good the guy made a shit ton of money I mean not by today's standards but by the standards back then yeah a shit ton of money and he as soon as he cashed out he just took his put on some sandals and moved to Mexico
Starting point is 01:32:02 and he never was heard from again and I knew the guy yeah I'm rich I'm out of here put on some sandals and moved to Mexico and he never was heard from again. And I knew the guy. It was just like, yeah, I'm rich. I'm out of here. I'm done. Smart man. He didn't, he didn't, was not a serial entrepreneur.
Starting point is 01:32:14 Didn't, didn't go, didn't fall for that scam. Like how to spend your, oh, I'll, I'll use my own money. Dumbest thing I've ever done. I'll use my own money to make more money. Dumbest thing I've ever done. So this type of personality in tech is, is, is not an unusual character that would just develop something, make enough money to get more than get by. But, you know, you think you got a lot of money and you don't. I mean, you do for like a year or two and then they bail out and they go away. And so maybe there is an element to that going on.
Starting point is 01:32:41 There's one other thing that he said, which is it, which think is something that is very dh unplugged uh and it all started with elon and i think he has a point here i think it was really elon musk who kicked off all of the firings when he fired 80 of twitter's workforce saving the company massive amounts of money cutting bloat and so a lot of other tech ceos probably saw that too and realized they wanted to cut through all of the management blow as well. So Instagram here is also announcing they're cutting a level of management. The TPM role or technical program manager is essentially being eliminated on Instagram. In what Mark Zuckerberg called the year of efficiency aimed at removing layers of management, the result was thousands of layoffs last year and reduction in management ranks. And this effect was probably also compounded by overhiring during the pandemic, as well as hopes that AI can possibly help improve some of the efficiency of current workers.
Starting point is 01:33:34 Although general consensus seems that AI is not behind the current wave of layoffs, that is coming later on. Another potential factor behind tech layoffs is Section 174, a new tax bill that came into effect last year, which essentially made software engineering salaries non-deductible in the first year. You have to amortize that cost over five years, with only 10% deductible in the first year. The industry is changing these days. Everybody and their dog is coding.
Starting point is 01:34:02 Immigrants are coding. Fresh college grads are coding. Chat GPT is coding. It's becoming an oversaturated field where employers are realizing they don't need to pay you 300 to 500K and free cafeteria food for two hours of work a day. So it's the R&D tax credit that Joe Biden overrode that with an executive order. Yeah. So no wonder. Yeah, that I didn't know.
Starting point is 01:34:28 Yeah, I didn't know it either. I can see that. That becomes a big deal. You have to change everything. And then... Because it changes the way you do the books. And then... Which reminds me, since you brought up,
Starting point is 01:34:37 you said Zuckerberg was mentioned. I should mention this. Can you check the price of Meta stock? I think it's probably way beyond the four hundred dollars that uh i was willing to bet we would never reach yeah you weren't willing to bet you made a five hundred dollar bet oh i did i thought you didn't take it no i didn't take the five thousand dollar bet you wanted to make okay well here's the clip calling names and we've got a whole panel of douchebags who are gonna narc on you constantly they're dead no they're not that it's like facebook how's that four hundred dollar stock doing it's getting you wait you wait i will
Starting point is 01:35:21 bet you five hundred dollars right now that Facebook will never get back to $400. Unless they do some, yeah, unless they. The bet's on. I'll take it. And with the same float. Can somebody record this, please? With the same float. You're not allowed to manipulate by changing the float with a split or reverse split.
Starting point is 01:35:41 That's bull crap. The float is never the same. There'll be some issuances. There'll be some buybacks. There's a million reasons that the float won't stay the same. With a split or reverse split. Now you're adding a bunch of disclaimers. Never mind. You don't want to do the bet.
Starting point is 01:35:55 Oh, I'm done. $5,000. $5,000? No, I'm going to tell you this. Pussy! Pussy! I'll do the $500, but the reason I won't do the $5,000 is because you can't afford it. I'll never get paid. Point made. Point made. You're afraid.
Starting point is 01:36:16 You're afraid. I have no fear. So, yes, I was alerted to this. I honestly did not remember the way that went down. It was about two years and four months ago, episode 1492. And after having hearing that, because, of course, people sent that to me, I apologize. I was not only, I defaulted to my carnal mind. I'm ashamed and embarrassed because I called you names, and I really, I repented for this. I am very sorry, and I want to thank you for having grace on me for not taking my $5,000,
Starting point is 01:36:58 and I will gladly pay you the $500 from the bet, and I'm sorry. Well, thank you very much for being sorry uh the five thousand dollar bet yeah you're right you should thank me for not taking the bet i i but i in there i did say you wouldn't pay it because you're not going to pay a five thousand dollar bet nobody does and that's my tip to people out there who want to bet with people. When somebody makes an outrageous bet, don't do it because you're just going to cause friction. If I even get the $500,
Starting point is 01:37:32 I'll be surprised, but I will take it and it will go to a charity. Can I send it to you in Bitcoin? Come on. I don't have a wallet. I'll set you up with a wallet. You never know. I mean, it's like kind of doubling down for you if you rather have cash okay i'll send it i'll send a pallet of
Starting point is 01:37:54 dollars now we could i am sorry i that was very embarrassing i heard that and i was unhinged and as i said i defaulted to my my uh i defaulted to my my carnal mind it was there's not good uh that's i don't like what i heard there yeah so uh i will if you want i'll put the bet in abeyance if you want to do double or nothing for facebook hitting a thousand no i'm done i i will uh i'll take my lashes. I'll take my lashes. I'm not going to go there. Nope. No, I'm done. I've never been good with stocks. I mean, I'm the guy that sold all my Bitcoin at $900 thinking this is dynamite. Hey, you still, I've said it before and I'll say it again. We're talking about this on DHM Plug.
Starting point is 01:38:42 I've said it before and I'll say it again. We'll be talking about this on DHM Plug. If I had bought, say, $200 worth of Bitcoin at 25 cents, the likelihood of me keeping it past $400 a Bitcoin is probably nil. The only way you can do that is you buy it for 25 cents and then somehow lose track of it, and then suddenly, years and years later find the key to the kingdom the old wallet that's kind of what that's kind of what happened but it gets the story is actually worse because i took the money from the bitcoin i sold and i day traded it
Starting point is 01:39:21 I sold and I day traded it. Wow. Why don't you go into commodities while you're at it? All right. Since we're doing old clips, I want to play something that just aired. I want to play a classic no agenda clip. This showed up on Tucker Carlson. Some guy named Callie, Callie Ed, I think his name is. And he has like a healthy, you know, he's a healthy medicine guy.
Starting point is 01:39:51 What do they call it these days? There's a term for it. I keep forgetting. Wellness. A functional medicine doctor. Oh, I haven't heard this. Oh, yeah. Functional medicine doctor. And he promotes, you know, everything except pharmaceuticals.
Starting point is 01:40:01 And he's on with Tucker. And he brings out a, this clip was sent to me by many people, usually for the same reason. He says, oh, listen to that. I cut it down a little piece here. But you're saying that pharma buys TV spots not to convince people to ask for specific drugs from their physicians, but to subvert the news business?
Starting point is 01:40:23 This is an open secret working for pharma. I never even the news business? This is an open secret working for pharma. I never even thought of that. This is an open secret. The kind of silly ads you see between the news breaks, the points of that is not, it's largely to impact the customer, but pharma has already got that. They've already bought off the doctors. They're good on that. No, this is an open secret. The news ad spending from pharma is a public relation lobbying tactic, essentially, to buy off the news. The news is a refer. They're not investigating pharma. Oh, I've noticed. The news has become basically a referee that you are a terrible anti-science Luddite for asking why, you know, the shots that we require our kids to get that fundamentally by their own advertising change the immune system of that child for life.
Starting point is 01:41:18 Why it's gone from 20 to 70 to even ask that question. The news referees that and calls you anti-science when the two largest vaccine makers in the country are literally criminal enterprises. Black, Smith, Klein, and Merck in the past five years has settled two of the largest criminal penalties in American corporate history for bribing and misleading, bribing doctors and misleading, creating misleading research who are the two largest vaccine makers so you literally have the media playing referee that you can't even ask a question so this was a big revelation for tucker carlson and uh he was what we've been talking about for how many years well i went into decade i went i went into bingit.io and which there's a new version coming by the way which will be
Starting point is 01:42:02 killer and i uh i was able to go back. I mean, we had other mentions of advertising, but this was the most succinct No Agenda episode 343 from September 29th, 2011. Here we go. Let's go back and see what we said at the time. What choice does he have? He's running a commercial show that has sponsors on a network that relies, like everyone else, on drug advertising. What's he supposed to do? He can take the donation model and make less money.
Starting point is 01:42:34 I mean, I don't know what you expect the guy to do. He has no choice in the matter. He is like everybody else in the media. Everything that people watch out there is bought and paid for by big pharma. Big pharma is right now probably one of the biggest advertisers. They're making so much money on some of these sketchy drugs that, you know, you can't say what. And then you have the vested interest of the war on drugs. Yeah, but it's important for people to know because Jon Stewart does come across as the voice of reason.
Starting point is 01:43:02 A telling like it is guy. Yeah, but he's not. He, too, is beholden to the pharmaceutical industry in this case. It's a six minute clip so I'm not going to play it but there's a link to the actual video. There you go. 13 years.
Starting point is 01:43:16 13 years. It's always been a theme with us. Yep. And that has to be. And we always mention it we're one of the two countries in the world that allow pharmaceuticals to add prescriptions to to advertise prescription drugs on tv you know they've always advertised aspirin yeah yeah but but they control they control all the messages but they get the mech it's a mechanism of control so they own
Starting point is 01:43:42 the media the media has been been co-opted, captured. Remember the capture? They've been captured by big pharma, so they can't say anything. Now, it is... This is news. What's going on in Canada right now, I pray this does not come to the United States. What is happening there, this is about M.A.D.E., which is just, I love the acronym M.A.D.E.
Starting point is 01:44:09 because you think of a maid. Yeah, I'm coming in here. I'm going to sweep around. Oh, I'm going to kill you, which is medically assistance in dying. And Canada has put a pause on this, and this is very disappointing to the death industry in Canada. The federal government is defending its decision to delay the expansion of medically assisted death to include those suffering from mental illness.
Starting point is 01:44:38 It's the second time they've pressed pause on the legislation. James Cowan is a member of the board of directors for the advocacy group Dying with Dignity and he joins me now. James Cowan, it's good to speak with you. Get ready for this ghoul. So your organization says the work has been done to move forward now. How do we reconcile that with the reports and the statements from various governments saying Canada's just not ready to do this? Well, I think you have to go back and look at what was said at the time that the postponement, the sunset clause was extended last year. And Minister Lemetti was very clear as to what the markers were.
Starting point is 01:45:11 There needed to be the consideration of the report of the expert panel. There needed to be an educational program developed so that clinicians could be prepared for this. There needed to be better data collection. The regulators across the country needed to have time to prepare regulations and guidelines. And all of those markers have been met. So there are obviously some people in this country who do believe that the system isn't ready, but many more, and particularly those who are actually engaged in doing assessments and delivering MAID. They testified before the committee that they were ready.
Starting point is 01:45:59 And so I'm personally disappointed that the government now intends to kick the ball down the road for some indefinite period of time. I don't know how long that is. But I'm more disappointed for the relatively few Canadians who meet the very strict criteria and were hoping and waiting for the day when they'd be able to apply for MAID and if they were successful to receive that service. It's a service. It's a service.
Starting point is 01:46:34 And what this was about was they didn't want to include mental disorders. People want to die because they are depressed. I mean, that's like one of the hallmarks of depression and this guy wants to kill people over it's it's baffling to me it was kind of baffling about the whole thing is that the canadians have got this mi maid deal They would find somebody, then they put them through, I don't know what they do to them, but they die. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:47:09 And, you know, everybody's happy about it. In the United States where we have Executioner's Row, we can't put anyone to death because, oh, you know, this doesn't work. That doesn't work. We can't get any more of this drug. I mean, how can the Canadians so casually put the normal citizens to death and we can't put anyone to death who's on death row? We can't kill criminals. How does that work?
Starting point is 01:47:31 I think we both had a clip about that, about they were going to suffocate some guy. Use nitrogen. Yes, suffocate some guy. That was the latest one. Yeah, I think I had a clip a couple of shows ago. Yeah, here it is. Alabama is set to execute a criminal with nitrogen gas tomorrow, a method never used before. The U.S. Supreme Court just declined to block the state. The man in question survived a different method of capital punishment two years ago.
Starting point is 01:47:57 I'm always surprised. Like, oh, don't kill him. That's cruel. You can't. But killing babies? That's cool. That's all good. Let's go protest for that i'm always i'm always baffled by our attitude towards death in the united states
Starting point is 01:48:10 well i'm baffled by the republican and democrat schism regarding this the democrats are okay with killing babies and but they're not okay with death row oh no we can't have the death penalty yeah that's what i'm saying the republicans are just the opposite they're not okay with death row. Oh, no, we can't have the death penalty. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. The Republicans are just the opposite. They're not good with killing babies, but kill these bastards in jail. So, I mean, it's just like both sides seem to have a, like, you know, maybe you should switch some views back and forth. I'm the only person I kind of think is not a hypocrite is one that doesn't want to kill babies or death penalty or kill everybody. Yeah. And if we're going to kill everybody, I want the prime time rights.
Starting point is 01:48:51 I've said this for many years. Yeah. This is your goal in life. This will be my exit strategy. I want to produce that. Oh, you'd be worth countless billions. Billions. I'd be able to pay off that $500 bet in a heartbeat.
Starting point is 01:49:07 Well, you never pay off the $5,000 bet, that's for sure. I can do the three by three, or we can go through the Iranian professor, which I could also push off. Well, why don't I do two quick, fun climate change clips? And then we can do the three by three. How does that sound? All right. All right. So the first one is very underreported, and it is climate change related,
Starting point is 01:49:33 but the farmers in Europe are on the move everywhere. All countries. They're not very well covered, by the way. At all. Tractors clogged the Luxembourg Square in Brussels Thursday during an EU summit. Their goal? Deliver their message of less bureaucracy and better prices. A movement that started several weeks ago in the south of France has now erupted across Europe,
Starting point is 01:49:56 with farmers now blocking roads in Portugal, Belgium, Germany, Poland, Romania, Italy, and Spain. And in France, the anger has moved from the provinces to Paris. Earlier this week, farmers blocked major arteries into Paris with their tractors. And yesterday, almost 80 people were arrested outside the international food market to the south of Paris after farmers descended on the area and were met by armored vehicles. Their anger is centered around the need to make more money. They generally say they need less red tape, less environmental restrictions, and protection from cheap foreign imports. France has proposed giving livestock
Starting point is 01:50:28 farmers 150 million euros per year to ease their concerns. The EU Commission has responded by suggesting they'll limit Ukrainian imports of sugar, poultry, and eggs. They say they'll also ease restrictions on the use of land left fallow for environmental reasons. But the plans still need to be approved by the 27-country member bloc and the European Parliament. By the way, not a mainstream clip. You cannot get a mainstream clip that overviews all of these protests on all of these roads.
Starting point is 01:50:55 No, there's nothing. We're not covering it. And especially with the farmers where they have the armored tanks and the tractors on one side. It's unbelievable. And this is going on all over the place. And a lot of it does have to do with this Ukraine war
Starting point is 01:51:09 because you just saw the little clip in there. Oh, yeah, no. All the Ukraine. Cargill owns Ukraine farms. And so let's move them into Europe. You know what? And I want to do the last climate change clip. But I got a PDF from one of our producers um and it's uh you know i'm
Starting point is 01:51:29 gonna open it up here this is um celebrating 10 years in ukraine 10th anniversary of boeing in ukraine a decade of growth i did not know this in january 2014 that's the year of the Maidan Putsch. That's when the United States primarily took over the entire country. The very first engineers walked into the brand new Boeing Engineering and Technology Center in Kyiv, Ukraine. A decade later, Kyiv is home to almost 1,200 engineers. Together, they support engineering for almost all of Boeing's commercial platforms. Initially, the site started operations with no more than 50 engineers focusing on engineering products related to the second generation 737 and the Boeing 757. What are the chances that some of these things are coming out of Ukraine? And 10 years? 10 years of Boeing in Ukraine?
Starting point is 01:52:27 Did you know this? No, I didn't. Until you just said it right now i didn't know it i mean that's really they're why are we sending them any jets why don't they just make some f-35s right there in ukraine that's boeing they do the 777 the 777 the 777x the 737 they do the 737, they did the 787 program, as well as payload design for 737 and 777 and the eco-demonstrator, whatever. The local Boeing team made the courageous decision to continue their work during the war. Boeing Global is providing unwavering support, ensuring the safety of employees. I mean, come on. It's like, that's the last thing you'd expect. Boeing's been there for, they're celebrating 10 years.
Starting point is 01:53:07 We're not being told anything. This is not news that you're watching, people. Stop it. And get off social media while you're at it. Meanwhile, of course, they take and bomb the Antonov plant. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Which makes a better jet than Boeing. It's got more engines.
Starting point is 01:53:25 Definitely got more engines. Definitely got more engines. All right, here's my final climate change clip. It's a classic because he brings back some super tropes that we love. It's Christiane Amanpour, the globalist on CNN International, with her fellow globalist, Al Gore. and International with her fellow globalist Al Gore. So I just want to ask you, you know, James Hansen, the NASA expert who was one of the first on climate warnings, has warned that, you know, unless there's some massively radical thing to happen very soon, the magic 1.5 degrees number will, you know, will be surpassed. And there seems to be a struggle over the experts over that. Where do you come down on that? I like how she talks about the magic 1.5 number.
Starting point is 01:54:12 That's kind of a setup. It's a magic number. Yeah, which is exactly right. You have to write language there. It's a magic number. Well, I have the deepest respect for Jim Hansen and also for his colleagues who have a slightly different view, but they agree on most things. You know, half of the calendar days in 2023 were actually above 1.5. What? And in November, there were two days above a two degree margin above the pre-industrial temperature. So, yes, we we're running out of time to solve this in time, and we're running some unacceptably high risks with large global systems that are important for the flourishing of humanity that are now being destabilized. So, the sooner the better. The issue you're referring to is over how sensitive the climate is to more and more greenhouse gas pollution.
Starting point is 01:55:11 And ultimately, they agree on far more than they disagree. They're all saying the same thing. We got to switch away from fossil fuels as quickly as possible and stop using the sky as an open sewer. That's the basic problem. Well, he's back to the sky as an open sewer that's the basic problem he's back to the sky as an open sewer we're putting 162 million tons up there every day and the accumulated amount it stays on average each molecule for about 100 years and the accumulated amount today christian is trapping as much extra heat as would be released by 750,000 Hiroshima-class Oppenheimer-era atomic bombs exploding on the Earth every single day. He's expanded it to Oppenheimer-era.
Starting point is 01:55:54 This is beautiful, Al. I love it. Well, he gets a movie reference in. Yeah. Oh, yeah. So for you dummies out there who don't know anything. About Hiroshima about hiroshima the old bomb and all the rest of it we have to bring in the movie reference so you dummies
Starting point is 01:56:11 can understand what i'm trying to talk about here nobody's listening to me 750 000 hiroshima oppenheimer era bombs. A day. I want that on a t-shirt. It's beautiful. Al Gore. Al Gore. Gotta love him. All we need is a price on carbon.
Starting point is 01:56:36 Once we get that price on carbon, we're good to go. Then everybody can shut up. Did I tell you? Did we talk about the fact that the IRS has created some rules? They've stopped a lot of them. But if you have a company, it could also just be an LLC. If you do something that creates carbon credits, you can sell those. So you don't have to be a big corporation.
Starting point is 01:57:09 You can be a small LLC, and you can plant some trees. We've talked about this strategy before. Yeah, like 10 years ago. Yeah, but now they are allowing it. You can sell your energy tax credits to any other company. Yeah. They're trying to... What's the mechanism. They want,
Starting point is 01:57:27 I'm sure that they'll have some exchange. I don't know, but, but there, this is, this is from the tax guys who are telling me this. And this is all, it might be on the books,
Starting point is 01:57:36 but it doesn't mean you can do it. Um, well, it's, it says it right there and I'd have to look it up cause it was a couple of shows ago. I guess we didn't talk about it. But yeah, this is part of the Inflation Reduction Act.
Starting point is 01:57:49 You get half of anything that you do, you get tax credit for. So if you just buy a car, like an EV, you don't even have to use the EV. You can write off half of it in tax credits. Don't even have to drive it it says it i don't think inflation is going to come down anytime soon i think i think we're in for uh what are they talking about oh we'll be cutting interest rates oh now it'll be march oh maybe it may be i don't think it's going to happen at all. I don't think they should be cutting them.
Starting point is 01:58:28 No, they should be raising them. The economy is going the way Biden claims, which is watching Welker on that show. Oh, my God. You know, the things are going so well. We've got no interest, no inflation, and there's no unemployment. Everything's the best economy ever. I don't understand why the people don't see this and vote for Joe. I got an angry message about our millennial Gen Z.
Starting point is 01:58:54 There's so many beautiful emails we receive from people. We get tons of good mail. The Gen Zs like to write. Yes, very long. And some of them love their job and you know they they they just grind away and the things that they were hoping they would they would do the things they were hoping to get into now that you know they're just doing it as a hobby and they have they've bought homes and they don't live in cities and they watch Little House on the Prairie.
Starting point is 01:59:32 But I got this one from this one person who was like, you know, boots on the ground, how bad the job market actually is. I work construction, had to leave the job. My boss violently attacked my mother. I got a job as a cashier. My boss ghosted me after I was hospitalized. Just a horrible story. And so I write back and I say, well, you know, that's not really much. I mean, you've had some bad breaks, but it's not like that doesn't happen to lots of people. And I get the message back. You and John are a couple of old pussies. You would have hung yourself a long time ago in my shoes.
Starting point is 02:00:08 Okay. Well, that kind of ended that conversation. Yeah. Unless you got the wrong guy in dialogue. That's right. All right, let's hit it, everybody. And now it's time for 3x3. Experiment by J.C.D.
Starting point is 02:00:21 There we go, everybody. Comparing stories from ABC, CBS, and NBC. The never-ending 3x3. It's the never-ending 3x3, which means we have a 3x3 and a plus, and we're going to see just how programmed the news is. Of course, this flows through to your social media. It's all the clips you see. Megyn Kelly will get all upset about it.
Starting point is 02:00:41 And remember, code Bongino at checkout. Let's start with mary bruce at abc oh nice tonight the powerful retaliation the u.s had promised unleashing a major counter-strike on iran-backed militants in iraq and syria a direct response to the drone attack that killed three american soldiers and injured more than 40 on a remote U.S. base in Jordan. The U.S. saying the airstrikes began at 4 p.m., hitting 85 targets in seven locations inside Iraq and Syria, including command and control operation centers and intelligence hubs, taking out rockets, missiles and attack drones belonging to militia groups and their Iranian sponsors who facilitated attacks against
Starting point is 02:01:25 U.S. and coalition forces. The U.S. dropping more than 125 precision munitions from multiple aircraft, including B-1 bombers that flew from the U.S. President Biden tonight saying this is the first wave of a response that will continue at times and places of our choosing. And warning, the United States does not seek conflict in the Middle East or anywhere else in the world. But let all those who might seek to do us harm know this. If you harm an American, we will respond. Notably, none of today's strikes hit Iran directly. The president remains concerned, not wanting to start a wider war. Just hours before, a powerful reminder of the weight of these decisions. The president
Starting point is 02:02:11 performing one of his most solemn duties as commander-in-chief, witnessing the dignified transfer of the three service members killed in Jordan. One by one, their flag-draped cases carefully carried across the tarmac. The president placing his hand over his heart alongside the first lady and Defense Secretary Austin, honoring the fallen. You know what gets me about this? It's like if you hurt an American, we're going to come and get you with our B-1 bombers. How about the fentanyl? We all recognize where it comes from.
Starting point is 02:02:45 How about Gonzalo Lira? You know, the guy who the Ukrainians killed him. It's so disingenuous. Yes, because you're right. The whole thing's a facade. It's bull crap. And by the way, don't most of these ceremonies, when they come over,
Starting point is 02:03:01 they're draped right out of the thing. They have the families there. They didn't have the families. I remember the families there because i remembered the time that during they didn't have families there no it was just biden and red flag the phony lloyd austin and the red flag and the and the and the wife but you you remember the because usually the families that because i remember that one time there's a bunch of people that came over and Hillary was the secretary of state and the woman, I think we had a clip of it,
Starting point is 02:03:30 the woman was, she said, Hillary is so cold, it was like hugging a lizard, you know, she went on and on about it. Yes, yes, I remember that.
Starting point is 02:03:41 It's like, where's the families? Which brings me, the reason I even bring that up is because you brought up yeah this may whole thing may be a uh a i general phony it's i hate to think i hate to think and of course if there's a family that is grieving over their service folk and that's horrible but if they weren't even there that doesn't make it uh we have uh we have military uh people they'll tell me what's going on you know isn't the family by definition flown in for this i always thought they were i don't know i mean most of the time i've seen this event which they don't like to show anymore they stopped doing it after the vietnam
Starting point is 02:04:23 war but they did it this time as a photo op for Biden, obviously. Even though he has such a look on his face, they can't use the photo op for anything. It's just like he has a grimace on his face, like he doesn't like being there or something. It was very peculiar. Wow, wow. All right, well, let's go back to the three by three
Starting point is 02:04:44 and let's move to NBC with Peter Alexander. Oh, I hope we have a launch sound. The American retaliatory strikes have begun. U.S. Central Command saying late this evening, U.S. forces began striking more than 85 targets in Iraq and Syria using numerous aircraft, including long range bombers flown from the U.S. The targets, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Quds Force and affiliated militia groups, hitting their command and control operations centers and intelligence centers, rockets and missiles, and unmanned air vehicle storage, among other sites. President Biden tonight saying, our response began today.
Starting point is 02:05:23 It will continue at times and places of our choosing. Adding, let all those who might seek to do us harm know this. If you harm an American, we will respond. The U.S. strikes come in response to that deadly drone attack by Iranian-backed militias that struck Tower 22, a desert outpost in Jordan, killing three U.S. service members. That attack among more than 160 i'm sorry i gotta stop this have you in any of these reports or any report have you heard the names of these three service members yeah you have heard the names yeah yeah they read the names off on a couple of shows okay killing three u.s members. That attack among more than 160 against American targets by Iranian-backed militias since October.
Starting point is 02:06:09 President Biden had previously authorized limited strikes in response that even he acknowledged had not deterred the militias. And the president has been under pressure to respond more forcefully, especially after American service members were killed. All of it just hours after the commander-in-chief performed one of his most solemn duties, attending the dignified transfer at Dover Air Force Base, as the remains of those three U.S. service members returned home. The president and first lady joining the grieving families of 46-year-old Sergeant William Rivers, a soldier...
Starting point is 02:06:40 They say that they joined the family. I saw the pictures of them standing there. I didn't see any family people, but okay, if he says so, maybe there were. The president and first lady joining the grieving families of 46-year-old Sergeant William Rivers, a soldier's soldier, his cousin said, 24-year-old Sergeant Kennedy Sanders, whose family said she was always full of life, and 23-year-old Sergeant Breonna Moffitt, her parents remembering how she could light up a room the u.s today also launching preemptive strikes on the iranian
Starting point is 02:07:10 backed houthis all i see is pictures of them with other service personnel people in uniform i don't see necessarily with families but okay i mean i i don't want to harp on it too much but well the way he also put it, if you parsed it, it could have been that Biden met with the families elsewhere. They weren't on the tarmac necessarily, if you listen to the way he presented that. But whatever. That was Peter Alexander.
Starting point is 02:07:41 Now we're going to move to Nancy Cordes, one of the top rung of the reporters for CBS. Pentagon officials say two. Oh, come on, CBS. Is that a nut pop? They start off with like a little fart. How about a... I think they show...
Starting point is 02:07:59 Pentagon officials say... I think they put the sound in differently, but if I'm not mistaken, most of these reports always show the B-1 bomber taking off. Oh. Which is quite a pretty sight. I mean, the B-1 bomber is just a beautiful product. It's no Antonov.
Starting point is 02:08:15 Pentagon officials say two B-1 bombers were among the military aircraft used to strike more than 85 targets in Iraq and Syria. Two. Used to strike more than 85 targets in Iraq and Syria. Two. The targets included command and control centers, weapons depots, and drone storage facilities. All of them linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guard and affiliated militia groups. Oh, they're affiliates. The strikes were approved by the president and launched just a few hours after he welcomed the bodies of three fallen service members back to U.S. soil. Welcome.
Starting point is 02:08:47 Welcomed. Welcome. This is this is disgusting. Welcome back, boys. Girl. Boys. Welcome back. Come on.
Starting point is 02:08:55 We were stationed in Georgia. Usage is dubious. It's dubious. By the president and launched just a few hours after he welcomed the bodies of three fallen service members back to U.S. soil. All three were stationed in Jordan at a U.S. outpost known as Tower 22 that came under fire last Sunday. I can tell you right now there's going to be a movie titled Tower 22. It will be Amazon Prime or Netflix. The base is here.
Starting point is 02:09:23 Well, you know, the title itself is there. Yeah. For the taking is well you know the the the title itself that's there yeah for the taking yep it's a good title base's air defense system had been temporarily taken offline to allow a u.s drone to return from a mission safely an iranian made drone this this is the lie this is the lie no that came under fire last sunday the base's air defense system had been temporarily taken offline to allow a u.s drone to return from a mission safely okay so i just want to know what was this a helicopter drone i'd like to know a little bit more and why did you have to take your air defense systems offline this is very this is very i'm with you 100 and i said 100 i'll say it again i'll take 100 i'm with you uh 99.9
Starting point is 02:10:14 percent an iranian made let's go drone struck sleeping quarters at the base wounding 40 and killing army reserve soldiers will rivers briannaonna Moffitt and Kennedy Sanders. We know that you can definitely feel our pain. President Biden called their anguished families this week. Look, I know, I really do know. I got one of those phone calls. This is, oh my God. This is not, this is not how you do this you don't air the phone calls oh let's do a zoom call and let's release it to cbs that's a good point i've never seen those are private calls that should don't wouldn't go on
Starting point is 02:10:55 the air that is unless it unless it's staged wrong u.s officials blamed the attack on the Islamic resistance in Iraq, an umbrella group of Iran-backed militias. I don't think the adversaries are of a one-and-done mindset. And so they have a lot of capability. I have a lot more. Wary of setting off a wider war, the U.S. has avoided striking Iran directly, despite at least 165 attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria since the Israel-Hamas conflict began last October. Iran's president warned today, we will not start a war, but if a cruel force wants to bully us, the Islamic Republic of Iran will give a strong response. This is some rocky level crap they're pulling here.
Starting point is 02:11:53 This is dumb. I can't believe I'm ashamed. I'm ashamed. I am ashamed. I'm ashamed of this. Ashamed of what they're doing. Ashamed of the reporting. Ashamed that people watch it. Ashamed there what they're doing. Ashamed of the reporting. Ashamed that people watch it.
Starting point is 02:12:06 Ashamed there's money in this. Bring back Taylor Swift. That's what we're good at. All right, here we go. It's a CBC. This is like the bonus clip. And this is Chris. Oh, we didn't do CBS yet.
Starting point is 02:12:17 Well, that was CBS. That was CBS with a bad net pop. Yeah. Okay, let's go to CBC and wrap this thing up. At 4 p.m. Eastern time, U.S. military forces struck more than 85 targets in Iraq and Syria. These strikes were against Iranian Revolutionary Guard targets and other Iranian backed militia. The facilities that were struck included command and control operation centers, intelligence centers, rockets and missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicle storages
Starting point is 02:12:46 and logistics and munition supply chain facilities. Syrian state media says the strikes hit near the border between the two countries and several people are dead. Used in the attack, and again, this is from U.S. Central Command, aircraft, including long-range bombers flown from the U.S., as well as 125 smart weapons capable of precise target hits. U.S. President Joe Biden said then, Paul, that the U.S. will respond. And today, the president is in his home in Delaware after spending the afternoon at Dover Air Force Base at a ceremony for those fallen soldiers. Well, speaking of Biden then, any word on this from the White House? The president just issued a statement, Paul, shortly after the strikes. He said in part, and let me just read it to you exactly as it is
Starting point is 02:13:34 written. This afternoon, at my direction, U.S. military forces struck targets at facilities in Iraq and Syria that the IRGC and affiliated militia used to attack U.S. forces. Our response began today. It will continue at times and places of our choosing. The United States does not seek conflict in the Middle East or anywhere else in the world, but let all those who might seek to do us harm know this. If you harm an American, we will respond. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin added to that in his own statement, Paul. He said the president and I will not tolerate attacks on American forces. We will take all necessary actions to defend the United States, our forces and our interests. Which again brings up your point about what about that journalist guy character that's been detained in Ukraine?
Starting point is 02:14:28 No, he was killed. He was he died in prison. Oh, I didn't know he died. Yeah. Oh, yeah. This is a weeks ago. Yeah. So they don't care about him.
Starting point is 02:14:37 What do we do about that? No, nothing. We don't care. No, we don't care. No, but what we have to do, we have to spend months and months and months crying about, what's that guy, the journalist, the Washington Post journalist? Khashoggi. Oh, Khashoggi. Khashoggi.
Starting point is 02:14:52 He wasn't even an American. And we didn't go over and blow up, he wasn't American. Well, that's why we didn't go blow up Saudi Arabia. Well, there's probably other reasons we didn't blow up Saudi Arabia. I'm just going to say this is all theater. And I don't know, I'm still reeling over the fact
Starting point is 02:15:11 that Israel somehow let guys come over with motor gliders and the fence was open. The military-industrial complex, writ large, is out of control. And they don't care. I think complex writ large is out of control and they don't care i think well the don't care part is like i think they do care and they and i think your earlier thesis oh i'm sorry hypothesis hypothesis yes was um about once they know once trump gets
Starting point is 02:15:43 in this is the game might be over. So let's spend, spend, spend. Let's have some fun. Let's rack up the money, fatten up the bank account, set up a Swiss account, unless it's ready to party. When Trump comes in,
Starting point is 02:15:54 we'll take some time off. It's all ending, people. It's all ending. And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage saying in the morning to you, the man who put the C in the cutting bloat. Ladies and gentlemen,
Starting point is 02:16:03 say hello to my friend on the other end, the one and only Mr. John C. DeBorah. Well, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam Kerr. Also, in the morning to all ships and sea boots on the ground, feet in the air. Subs in the water. And all the dames and knights out there. And in the morning to the trolls in the troll room listening online.
Starting point is 02:16:23 They are our live studio audience. I'd like you all to stop. Don't move around. Hold on a second. Stop talking. You can't get them to sit still. Not for a second. They're like cabbage patch kids.
Starting point is 02:16:34 21-23 today on the troll count. Short. Short. Yes, you shouldn't make fun of their physical appearance. They're all midgets. They're all very short. Here's a word for you. What was the word? I missed it.
Starting point is 02:16:51 I said midget. Midget? Can't say midget. You can't say midget anymore? No, you can't be able to say midget. Oh, you have to say little person. I mean, unless you're my age for the last 25 years. They are short trolls indeed.
Starting point is 02:17:06 Well, those trolls are listening at noagendastream.com or probably logged in at trollroom.io. Well, we have a chat room. You can listen live. You can listen to all kinds of dynamite programming on noagendastream.com. No commercials. It's all value for value. Everyone helping each other out. It really is a beautiful community that we have there.
Starting point is 02:17:28 And you can also always listen to those in the modern podcast apps. Since they got so much grief for promoting Podverse, they all promote Fountain. Fountain, they have a new version of it. You gave me grief. You gave me grief. You accused me of taking money on the sly from the open source well you're gonna need it they can pay that 500 bucks off i get it now he's right
Starting point is 02:17:50 uh hopefully i'll get 500 bucks from uh from oscar mary over there at fountain he and his brother literally work on that together but they have a new version out and it's very fast and it has a quick alerts and uh the cool thing about all of these apps, which you can find at modernpodcastapps.com, is as soon as we publish the show, 90 seconds later, you get an alert. You don't have to wait around like any of the other legacy apps. We are value for value,
Starting point is 02:18:17 going all the way back to those clips that you heard early on. And it makes sense because we clearly could not get any advertising ragging on the big pharma and medical industrial complex as early as episode 343. So we decided, you know what, we'll just have everybody support us. And it caught on and people have been supporting us now in our 16th year.
Starting point is 02:18:43 We appreciate it. We put the value out there without hurdles or paywalls it caught on and people have been supporting us now in our 16th year. We appreciate it. We put the value out there without hurdles or paywalls or any other complications. Anybody can copy these shows, put them on their own server. And back in the day, people used to put them on CDs and distribute them. That's kind of fallen out of vogue. For a while, people were putting on USB sticks and everyone got afraid of that because it's an attack vector so now you just copy it onto onto social media throw it anywhere you want people like hey you should put it on x why don't you put it on x i don't care all we want
Starting point is 02:19:16 is we want more people to hear more people be able to access it and send us some some value back when you feel it's appropriate time talent or treasure, or treasure, we accept all of it. The time and the talent comes in so many different ways. People organizing meetups. Actually, we had dinner last night with producer Ashley and her husband Ben. They were coming through Fredericksburg for her 40th anniversary. They had organized, I think, one of the first Minneapolis meetups in the middle of winter and had 30 people show up
Starting point is 02:19:48 and were just blown away by the community that is comprised of the No Agenda slaves and producers. We also love it when you send us treasure that does keep the lights on everywhere, and we want to start by thanking our executive and associate executive producer. Oh, wait, before we do that, let's thank our artists almost passed over it we need to thank the artists who brought us the artwork because this is a big piece of time and talent we have multiple pieces to choose from
Starting point is 02:20:15 every single show and we want to thank nestworks uh i said 40th but tina's texting me did i not say 40th birthday did i say 50th or 100th birthday? Did I make her older than she is? You got a back channel going on with Tina as you're keeping you honest? Yeah, of course. Hello, she's a producer. She does a lot for the show. Stuff you don't even...
Starting point is 02:20:38 She's going to be very happy about the $500. Yeah, rub it in. She's listening. I know, yeah listening I know yeah I know believe me trust me I know what's going to happen there I said 40th anniversary or 40th birthday yeah I got a back channel she's the best man
Starting point is 02:20:57 you should be happy where's your back channel with your family are they listening nobody cares hey Nestworks brought us the artwork for episode 1630 uh that was titled potty mouth parrots uh which is a title you were just dying to get out there and uh there were a number of candidates i have to go look at the submitted art. The one we chose by Nestworks was Zuckerberg with blood on his hands, with a go bag that had a little transistor radio and a toothbrush in there.
Starting point is 02:21:34 Oh, I missed that. Oh, you didn't see the transistor radio and the toothbrush? Well, I mean, looking at it now, I see it's obvious. I didn't get the cane, though. What was the cane reference to? I think it's the Monopoly guy, isn't it? Oh, right, right, right. That's exactly what it is.
Starting point is 02:21:51 The guy should have the top hat and the whole thing perfect. Yeah, yeah. Oh, I missed that, too. This Neswork's piece was dynamite. Yes, the more you look at it, it's like the Mona Lisa. The longer you look at it, the more you see. It's just beautiful. It's a perfect piece. But you's like the Mona Lisa. The longer you look at it, the more you see. It's just beautiful. It's a perfect piece.
Starting point is 02:22:06 But you did like the piece next to it. Yes, Francisco Scaramanga had a go bag submerged in the water with fish. I just like the go bag idea, so I was okay with it. I think the Nestworks go bag was funnier. Yeah, I didn't get the fish and the goldfish. Because you were complaining about flooding. It was your go bag
Starting point is 02:22:31 because you were flooding. Sweet Cheeks submitted a, that looks like a kind of designer go bag, which I wasn't quite sure. That's not a Louis Vuitton. Looks like a Gucci maybe. I'm not sure.'s not a Louis Vuitton looks like a Gucci maybe I'm not sure
Starting point is 02:22:47 it does look Louis Vuitton to me I think it's Gucci that design is not I think that's Louis number of people sent in Taylor Swift Taylor Swift which nah we're probably not going to do Taylor Swift no Taylor Swift's verboten don't do Taylor Swift
Starting point is 02:23:04 there were two, uh, swearing parents, which didn't quite, didn't quite hit it. Um, a little sigh up on the Prairie. Funny,
Starting point is 02:23:14 but not great execution. Um, I kind of liked Dame Kenny Ben's false flag. It was just cute. Um, but you nix that. And was there anything else we liked or was that it I didn't think the false flag indicated much of anything
Starting point is 02:23:31 no it was just the this works piece was hard to beat we appreciate the work of all of our artists of course that's a great example of time and talent being put in there doing it live you can look at it at noagendaartgenerator.com another perfect example of time and talent being put in there, doing it live. You can look at it at noagendaartgenerator.com.
Starting point is 02:23:47 Another perfect example of time and talents are Paul Couture, who puts that together for us and keeps that running. And this upgrade is just phenomenal. It's so beautiful the way everything's set. And artists have beautiful profile pages now with more information than ever. is now with more information than ever. So this is the only way that podcasts really can survive is by support from the people who listen, who we do not call listeners. We call you producers and you have an obligation to produce. It can be boots on the ground. It can be a jingle. We have lots of those. We've got some ton of good news jingles as requested. Artwork, you name it. There's lots of ways you can participate just go
Starting point is 02:24:25 and hit somebody in the mouth or send us some treasure we definitely need that and we want to thank our executive and associate executive producers and we kick it off with um this is from the al the albany meetup this is the get john out of the house meetup and the credit for this i guess they had some mechanism you'll have to tell us, goes to Eric Toon. Toon, T-O-O-N, 52833. It's amazing how they got the magic number in there. Now, was this, do you know anything about this? About what?
Starting point is 02:24:59 About how this, the mechanism. How did Eric, the guy who does the meetups, uh, in who did the meetup became, uh, decided that he's going to collect all the money that he can. And he went from person to person. Okay. And he cumulated, but there's others that sent it,
Starting point is 02:25:14 gave me a, a, the proper form, which is a, a check or something in an envelope with a note. I know they listed on the, in this, uh,
Starting point is 02:25:23 yeah, they're in there. Oh, good. There's only a couple in there. Oh, good. There's only a couple of them. Oh, good. Because most of it came through the third party. Do you want to give us a quick little update on the meetup?
Starting point is 02:25:32 It was about 45 people, it seems to me. Wow, that's good. It was a big meetup. Was my head on a stick? No, your head was not on a stick, nor was mine. And I think that's slowly fading into the past and that idea. And everyone was, it was a wide variety of people, including a poet from Berkeley. We read one of her poems once, a truck driver who drives logging trucks.
Starting point is 02:26:02 Nice. And he says, yeah, everybody, if you're a trucker, you'd listen to podcasts, which is what you do. I know. And we had a, a guy who invented some new for a new form using mems of a headset.
Starting point is 02:26:19 Mems. What are mems? Mems. Mems. Mems. M E M MM-S. Look it up. Micro Electronic Magnet or something.
Starting point is 02:26:29 It's a small movable MEM. It's going to be the next big thing. It always will be. It'll be the next big thing. It always will be. He invented that? Did he have an example? No, no.
Starting point is 02:26:42 He took MEMS and made a microscopic speaker that then if you put it in earbuds, since it has no, there's no latency with the sound, it's crystal clear. It's a fabulous, it's going to be, if they get it out the door, a fabulous product. How many MEMS did he have in this thing? There's one MEM per side. So two MEMS? Yeah, many MEMS did he have in this thing? There's one MEM per side. So two MEMS? Yeah, two MEMS. Nice.
Starting point is 02:27:10 Okay. And he was there with his fiancee, who was so, she was adamant about the Taylor Swift, Kelsey, phony baloney relationship, and she was going to kill somebody about it. This is what I Kelsey only dated black girls. What's she doing? What's he doing with this white woman? Oh, I heard he was gay. That was the latest.
Starting point is 02:27:35 I know she's supposed to be gay. Taylor Swift is supposed to be a lesbian. Nah, that's the latest. No. Oh no. And here we are participating in the and by the way yes we are and by the way just download some of those photos she's obviously a lesbian you can
Starting point is 02:27:51 tell me what she's up to it's in the photos thanks john that'll be in the newsletter well in the newsletter for next sign up to the newsletter people sign up to the newsletter so that was just generally a good group. And there was a variety of people, as usual, that was attending. But I'm going to keep an eye on these MEMS guys. MEMS, all right. MEMS is my word. My exit strategy.
Starting point is 02:28:23 Sell these things. Yeah. Yeah, it these things. Yeah. Yeah, it was just a good meetup. All right. Jay showed up with Brennan and... Hey, when are they getting married? April. Didn't you get your invite?
Starting point is 02:28:38 Yeah, but I saw the... Are they registered somewhere? Because we got to send them a gift. I'm thinking of sending them $500. Can't afford it. All right. All right. Let's move on with our next executive producer.
Starting point is 02:28:53 Well, next is SDG in Oakland, California, who came in with $350.58. And he just wants karma. Or she could be a she. It's SDG. That person wants karma with a twist of Rev Al. R-E-S-P-I-C-T. You've got karma. That was $350.58.
Starting point is 02:29:20 And Priscilla O'Leary is in Ramona, California 343.75 and this is in memory of Paul a faithful listener we're sorry that we've lost Paul thank you Priscilla and Christopher Lowry which is similar from St. Pete
Starting point is 02:29:40 Beach in Florida also 343.75 which is 33333 plus. Oh, plus. Yes. Thank you. I do believe I'm overdue for a donation. Your hard work's appreciated.
Starting point is 02:29:53 Thank you. Thank you very much. Baron NBS in Chicago, 33369. We know what that's about. ITM, John and Adam. The firm paid out my share of last year's profits. Here's your cut. Thanks for everything you do.
Starting point is 02:30:08 No jingles. All goat karma. Baron NBS of the trading field. Sorry, didn't mean to do that. You need goat karma. There we go. You've got karma. Lucas Hohen in Sandown, New Hampshire.
Starting point is 02:30:24 333.33. Please knight me as Sir Lump the Grump. I'm a dude. Oh, Lucas, yeah, I was always thinking he was a dude. I'm a dude, so I don't know what my ring size is. But my smoking hot girlfriend told me hers. I think I get that hint. In other words, she's getting the ring.
Starting point is 02:30:46 Love you guys. Karma to all. Space Force jingle, please. Space Force. You've got karma. I'm taking some orders here that I see for the round table, which I hadn't put in yet for our next donation. And that is from Ryan George, Yorkville, Illinois, 333.33,
Starting point is 02:31:09 one of our favorite donation amounts. We love it. Adam got me jizzed up to donate. Please make this a switcheroo. It's a donation from my smoking hot girlfriend, Danielle Doherty. All right, let me do that switcheroo right now so we make sure that she gets that credit. Done.
Starting point is 02:31:26 Got it. This will make her Dame Donkey Puncher of the round pen. Can we have mangoes and sticky rice at the round table? Yes, you can. And what does he ask for here? Some, of course, some of our favorite jingles. Trump, I'm going to come. Of course, followed by the whole load yep
Starting point is 02:31:47 yeah that's a it's a well-known combo and a rev al crown hog day and i don't that's not an iso per se i think is it uh maybe it's still in a series yeah i think maybe it's at the beginning of teleprompter i'll see if i can get a teleprompter. I'll see if I can get it a teleprompter. I'm going to come. I'm going to give you the whole load today. Resist. We much. We must.
Starting point is 02:32:13 They're all jitty about a shutdown. The Tortoise in the race. Then co-author of Hubris. You too. Lead singer Bono. Fran Drescher. Sigouranoy weaver suspect jahar sanayev rush limbaugh rush limbaugh rush i don't know if it's in here it's not in here i'm sorry i can't that's we don't know where we don't know where it is we don't know where it is baron twice night is sir george
Starting point is 02:32:42 in garland texas three three3-3-3-3. In my case, the sad puppy wasn't needed. This donation was already settled when I woke up in the middle of the night at 3-33. Thank you for your courage. No jingles, no karma.
Starting point is 02:32:58 All right. That's easy. Hey, Sir Julian from Page, Texas. 3-33. What about South Florida Franny? Oh, I'm sorry. I 333. What about South Florida Franny? Oh, I'm sorry. I missed South.
Starting point is 02:33:07 Hello, South Florida Franny. I'm sorry. South Florida Franny, 33333, says today, my Viking hunk Peter turns double nickels. He's the love of my life and a fabulous father to our three human resources. Please give him this shout out. Happy birthday, Kimo Sabe. Love you, babe.
Starting point is 02:33:26 I should ISO that. That was pretty good. Thank you both for the six plus hours a week, keeping us informed and laughing out loud. You are true national treasures. I hope you never find an exit strategy. I don't know. Mems on deck.
Starting point is 02:33:37 Many blessings. South Florida Franny. And now you get to thank Sir Julian. I get to thank Sir Julian. He's from the big Bastrop meetup. That's him and his dame. He's in Page, Texas, according to this. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:33:50 333. Gentlemen, Sir Julian here, a good friend of mine, has a budget for promoting the latest drop from country music artist Dusty Black. Clearly the smartest thing to do to spread the word about this song is to get a mention on the best podcast in the Black. Clearly the smartest thing to do to spread the word about this song is to get a mention on the best podcast in the universe. The song is titled Me and Jesus, and he's got a link, a link to, link, L-I-N-K dot two slash me and Jesus. And it can be found on all the major streaming services. Proceeds from the song are going to charity. No jingles, no karma.
Starting point is 02:34:26 Sir Julian, the Duke of Bastrop County. Hey, Sir Julian, hit me up. I want to put it on Value for Value. We got that in the apps now. We're doing all kinds of cool stuff with that. Thank you, Sir Julian. Hey, look who's back with an associate executive producership as Sir Eric Derdarian.
Starting point is 02:34:43 Yeah, there he is. From Tribuco Canyon, California, 250. He says, thank you. Well, thank you. Well, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. No, thank you.
Starting point is 02:34:53 Sir, Sir, Sir 2, is it the Roman numeral 2? Pope de Ciclismo? Yeah, I think so. Pope de Ciclismo in Rio Verde, Arizona? I believe so. 250 bucks. Thanks for all you do. Sir to Pope de Cyclismo.
Starting point is 02:35:14 I'm thinking it's Sir Eel Pope de Cyclismo. Oh, so Eel. Maybe. I think it is. Carla Heidsma is in Zeewolde the netherlands that's not anywhere near howda but she does give us 225 for an associate executive producership and since there's no note she will receive a double up karma you've got karma sir eric the grease monkey in concord virginia2.22. It's a row of ducks.
Starting point is 02:35:45 Thank you for your courage. No jingles, no karma. Sir Eric the Grease Monkey. And with a nice row of ducks, 222.22, we have Matt Lee who sent us a note with a picture of his odometer, which shows 22,222 miles. John and Adam, I stopped by the grocery store a few days ago as I placed my truck into park. I was hit in the mouth
Starting point is 02:36:09 by my odometer. Thanks, guys. No jingles, no karma. He says, I'll leave it up to you. No need to read my note. It isn't terribly interesting. No, it was nice.
Starting point is 02:36:19 I like that. It's always fun to see what people donate for. Paul Schneider, 2048080 add me to the birthday list for february 4th thanks you got it you're done rob alter kansas city 200 associate executive producer no notes so for you also a double up karma you've got karma so there we have l have Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado. 200 bucks asking for jobs, Karma, 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.
Starting point is 02:36:56 Or just find Linda Lupatkin under the show's producer list. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs and sir reishmeister is in mountain view california i hope he still has a gig there it's been weird in mountain view two hundred dollars also he was at the meetup oh he was that's it two hundred dollars and uh yeah he left a note that just says, hey, thanks for the memories. Well, I'm going to give him a single karma then for that. You've got karma.
Starting point is 02:37:34 And that concludes. No, there's actually one more. You have to read the next one. Oh, I see it. I see it. Yes, because it's $230.23 in Canadian dollar rates. Sir Spencer Sumner in Sherwood Park, Alberta, Scandinavia. see it yes because it's 230 dollars and 23 cents in canadian dollar at sir spencer sumner in sherwood park alberta candenavia and of course we respect the canadian dollar reduce and this
Starting point is 02:37:53 will be a title change should the peerage committee approve from sir spencer baronet to sir spencer sumner viscount of alberta i'm sure that's okay. I do not hear any objections. There is no other Viscount of Alberta. With deference to Sir Robert Goschko, Viscount of Sherwood Park and Stracona County, who has already laid claim to where my family and I call home. Okay, so you're good. It has been nearly 10 years since I first donated to the show.
Starting point is 02:38:23 By the way, I should mention you could jump him become a duke take over the whole province and then make him your slave it has been nearly 10 years your serf 10 years since I first donated to the show and over 15 years since I started listening
Starting point is 02:38:40 as I began listening in high school and turned 30 late last year Noah Jenner has been with me Noah Jenner has been with me. You're an old man now. Noah Jenner has been with me for over half of my life. I don't know how I feel about that. It's a test case for something. It doesn't feel good to me somehow.
Starting point is 02:38:57 My keeper, Patricia, and I welcomed our first human resource, James, last fall. I'm grateful. What are you drinking? Topochico. Oh, from, you know, I thought it was from Texas, James, last fall. I'm grateful. What are you drinking? Topo Chico. Oh, from, you know, I thought it was from Texas, but it's not. It's from Mexico. It's from Mexico. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:39:12 You never said you thought it was from Texas. You said that's what they drink in Texas. That's what we drink in Texas, yes. Yeah. My keeper, Patricia, and I welcomed our first human resource, James, last fall. I'm grateful to be living in a non-spun-up state and to be raising our son with the same outlook and values. I'm sure he will be a fine human resource. The show continues to have a profound impact on my life and by extension, the lives of
Starting point is 02:39:35 my wife and son. Thank you for all you do. Sir Spencer, Sherwood Park, Alberta, and we will have your title change coming up shortly along with a night to day, and we've got some meetup reports. And again, thanks to all the executive and associate executive producers who came in for us on this episode, 1631. We thank everybody who donates. All you have to do is send some back. If everybody sends some back, these donation notes, these segments will be short.
Starting point is 02:40:04 It's not how it works. It's not how it works. It's not how it's ever worked in 16 years, but our gratitude remains the same. And John will take us through the notes, which include all the way up to $50. Yeah, let's start with Colleen Cahill from San Francisco, 133.33. Got a birthday coming up for her wonderful fiance, Michael. Coming up for her wonderful fiance, Michael. Brian Warner, Battle Creek, Michigan, 105.35. Baron Lattik in Houston, Texas, 100. John Robine, 100.
Starting point is 02:40:37 Daniel Shuler in Caledonia, New York, 100. Eric Ecuador in Richmond, Virginia, 100. Angela Garcia, she was at the meetup, $100. She had, oh, she, should be on here. She needs a de-douching. You've been de-douched. She also mentioned it was a Rogan donation. Oh, Rogan donation.
Starting point is 02:41:04 So Angela Garcia was interesting. She has one of those, I don't know, I never asked her. I usually ask people what they do. I forgot to ask her. She has a show business face. I don't know how to put it other than the other ways. She has exaggerated features that belong on stage. Does she have a big head? Her head is not as big as yours, but it's the right size for a show business.
Starting point is 02:41:29 I have a small head. What are you talking about? She needs to go into show business. Okay. She'd get picked all the time, left and right. She's distinctive looking. Looks like a, she looks like an actress. I'm thinking The Bachelorette.
Starting point is 02:41:48 Maybe. Anonymous, that's a hard game. Just go into Cat, I'll call you better off. Anonymous, $100. See attached note two. I don't have it. Take a look and see if there's anything on there for us. Yes, hold on.
Starting point is 02:42:00 He says, Anonymous says, you should mention the P.O. Box on the show more often. I'm sure there's a lot of paranoid listeners who want to donate but don't want anyone to know or leave a digital trail. Well, it's on noagendadonations.com. Yeah, it's also on devore.org.na. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:42:19 And I put it in the newsletter. Yes. But I'll mention it. Box 339 El Cerrito 94530 And you can run that back if you need to. Richard Hufford in Tempe, Arizona, $99.99.
Starting point is 02:42:36 Paul Eaton in Albuquerque, New Mexico, $99.00. David Cox in Dallas, Texas, $800.00. I need a de-douching. You've been de-douched. Kevin McLaughlin comes in with 8-0-0-8. He's the Archduke of Luna. He says, ladies, remember, at 45,
Starting point is 02:42:55 you should consider an annual mammogram screening. Christian... Hold on, hold on. I want to say something about... The new thing is thermogram. That's the new thing the ladies are getting, a thermogram. Thermogram? Yeah, so instead of the mammogram is really, it's a very horrible process.
Starting point is 02:43:15 The thermogram is they use a sensor to see if you're heating up. It's a different process, a different type of sensor. heating up it's a different process a different type of sensor christian christian christian groylish groylish in lakeland ohio 8008 sir herb lamb hey there he is in sugar hill georgia him again yeah 8008 saw the bat signal had to donate sir christopher patrick hill in parkerville washington uh western australia i'm sorry western australia 8008 and that came in from australia via stripe we now have stripe nice that you can donate via and uh it makes it so i go to noagendadonations.com. There's a little link there. So we had nothing but trouble, like New Zealand, you couldn't donate to the show. That's right.
Starting point is 02:44:12 Alexander, except for sending a check, and they don't even know what a check is there. Alexander Salasauer in Shaker Heights, Ohio, 75. Daniel Carroll, Laughlin, Nevada, 72, 27. Sir Becoming Heroic in Shererville, Indiana, 6886. Jiggly Boobs, that's the one he's trying to make that take hold. Christy Jensen, meanwhile, in Huntington Beach, California, 6611. And she's trying to make this take hold, which is 6611. Dangling balls and double dicks.
Starting point is 02:44:59 For the ladies. Okay, Christy. For the ladies out there. I don't see if that goes anywhere. Undoubted. Christy. Christy. For the ladies out there, I don't see if that goes anywhere. Yeah, undoubted. Christy. Christy. Cameron Ling in North Branch, Minnesota, 6131.
Starting point is 02:45:13 Sir Ladyboy in Mount Laurel Township, New Jersey, 6006. Formerly known as Bobby Brindlehorse. Yeah. With an I, Bobby with an I Tim Hizzle 5809 another donation from PayPal thanks PayPal
Starting point is 02:45:37 we love PayPal I don't understand why they that's got to be a refund or something they're listening over there hey these guys are using us, let's send something to them I don't understand why they... That's got to be a refund or something. No, they just love us. They're listening over there. They're like, hey, these guys are using us. Let's send something to them. Okay, now in Peru, Indiana, we have a guy named Gerald...
Starting point is 02:45:52 Prizbuski, I'm guessing. Prizbuski. You never know. Prizbuski. But he's there in Peru, Indiana with $57. And he says he's literally giving his plasma for this program at $11.11 a month. Wow. He wants to de-douche.
Starting point is 02:46:16 You've been de-douched. Donating plasma. I think so. Joseph Witzos in Spokane, Washington, 5678. That's time, talent, and treasure all in one. Yeah, and plasma. Brian Furley, 55, 10. Alex Rickman in Peck, Michigan, 55, 10.
Starting point is 02:46:31 Sir Tom Dory in DeForest, Wisconsin, 55, 10. Douglas Pilgrim in Hingham, Massachusetts, 55. Sir JubJub in Elkton, Florida, 55. Get rid of the puppy. Lydia Terry in Clifton Park, New York, 53. Sir Touchy Puss in Bozeman, Montana, 52.72. John Ferretti, 52.72. Angela Pickering in Sour Lake, Texas.
Starting point is 02:46:59 Sour Lake, Texas, 52.72. Bill Johnson in Grovetown, Georgia. $52.72. What's karma for a mom? We'll give you that at the end. This is cheaper than therapy. Now we finally got to the $50 donors. Charles Peterson in Albuquerque. James Sharametta
Starting point is 02:47:19 in Napanoc. Jacob Martinez in El Monte, California. Kurt Patrick in Ninamo, BC. Lynn Malinowski in Stafford, Virginia. Foster Birch in New York, New York. Susan Kritnich in Columbia Heights, Minnesota, Simon Chong in Lawrenceville, Georgia. Ralph Johnson in Lake Isabella, California. Brian Watson in Raleigh, North Carolina. Sir Brian Watson, that is. And Walker Phillips in San Rafael, California.
Starting point is 02:47:56 Brett Farrell in Oklahoma City. Aichi Kitagawa in San Francisco. Sir Mix in Fort St. John, B.C. San Francisco, Sir Mix in Fort St. John, B.C., and J.B.Y. Ketelar in Amsterdam. And he says, I'm probably the biggest douchebag ever. Apologies. Been with Adam since the Daily Source Code. Please de-douche.
Starting point is 02:48:20 You've been de-douched. And that is our group of donators for the show 1631, which helped boost it from its doldrums that it was going in with. And I want to thank all these people and thank the sad puppy. Man, the wind is really howling there on your end. It's crazy. A 50-mile-an-hour wind blast in the house. Yeah, is the house literally moving on its foundation?
Starting point is 02:48:44 No, but the tree next to the window is. Oh, that's what that to the window is. Oh, that's what that screeching sound is. Oh, okay. Well, thank you all very much. And of course, we want to thank everyone who came in under $50. That is for reasons of anonymity, people who do $49.99 and all the way down to the lot of $4 still. That's from the early days. And thank you to some of these people who showed up again and for people who said, it was time for deducing it's been a long time that's very much appreciated that's how it should work that is how value value operates and we love you for it and of course we have a karma here for the people who requested it you've got karma for a mom out there and thanks again to our executive and associate executive producers for episode 1631.
Starting point is 02:49:28 Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Water. Order. Squirrel. Shut up. And if you want to become a producer, go to noagendadonations.com. It's your birthday, birthday.
Starting point is 02:49:52 On no agenda. Colleen Cahill wishes her fiancé Michael a happy birthday. He turned 33 two days ago on the second. Franny says happy birthday to her husband. Kimo Sabe, 55 years old today. Paul Schneider celebrates today as well. Jeff Moore will be celebrating on the 6th. And Sir Matty of Central Oregon wishes his dad, Fred Kuzins, a very happy birthday, as do we.
Starting point is 02:50:15 And we're praying for healing there, Fred. Thank you all so much, and happy birthday on behalf of everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. It's your birthday now. Title changes. Turn podcast in the universe. And we have a super non douchebag who gets his title changed. Sir Spencer, you heard him. He's been a baronet for a long time. And with his upgrade today, he becomes Sir Spencer Sumner, Viscount of Alberta, and we're waiting for him
Starting point is 02:50:47 to make the jump to Duke. Thank you very much, Sir Spencer. We have one dame and one knight to bring into the round table here. We got the one dame, one knight sword. That's the one. I've seen it before. Up on the podium, please,
Starting point is 02:51:02 Danielle Doherty and Lucas Hohn. Hohn! Both of you scored the Noah Jenner show in the amount of $1,000 or more, which you can do and find out more at noagendadonations.com. And now you become a knight and a dame, and I'm very proud to pronounce the K-V as Dame Donkey Puncher of the Round Pen and Sir Lump the Grump. For you, we've got Hookers and Blow. We have Rent Boys and Chardonnay.
Starting point is 02:51:25 Buy special requests, mangoes and sticky rice. Also, Harlots and Howl Doll, pepperoni rolls and pale ales, geisha, sake, vodka, vanilla, bong, hit some bourbon, sparkling cider, and escort ginger ale and gerbils, breast milk and pavlum. We've got cowgirls and coffin varnish,
Starting point is 02:51:39 which is tasty. And, of course, mutton and mead, which you, yes, I can see you both like the mutton and mead. While you're munching on that and sippington and mead which you yes I can see you both like the mutton and mead while you're munching on that and sipping on the mead go to
Starting point is 02:51:48 noagendarings.com everybody can take a look at those beautiful knight and dame rings to get yours it's personalized it is a signet ring
Starting point is 02:51:56 so it comes with wax to seal your important correspondence and a certificate of authenticity at noagendarings.com is where you will be able to give us
Starting point is 02:52:04 your ring size. It has a handy ring sizing guide and an address to send it to. And if you are the lucky recipient of a No Agenda PhD in Media Deconstruction, go to that same website and give us the information so we can send out your certificates, your diplomas, because they are ready, willing, and able for you. No Agenda Meetups! Yes, the No Agenda Meetups. This is where you can hang out with your community. As we've said before, there's no spelling community without unity. If you want connection, which is protection,
Starting point is 02:52:43 you have to go to a No Agenda Meetup. And this is exactly what happened in rogersville alabama this is that dame stitchy woman from rogersville alabama at the first rogersville meetup at mms's and i am here with hey this is sweet cheeks from clarksville tennessee peggy from pulaski tennessee and susan from muscle shells alabama in the morning hey men there's chicks over there. There'll be another one, I'm sure. Go get them.
Starting point is 02:53:10 You want some unity? It's in that community in Rogersville, Alabama. And, of course, we have a meetup report from the Get JCD Out of the House meetup. Hey, this is Evan behind the lines with Genocide John. Happy to be here. In the morning. This is Sir Recal is Sir Crazy Steve II. We're here at the Get John
Starting point is 02:53:27 Out of the House meetup, and I just saw Lloyd Austin in the corner of the bar. Hanging out with some pigs in human clothing. This is soon to be Sir Chandice Roy, and we got John out of the house. This is Joey C., and I want to say to everybody here, let's give John a big
Starting point is 02:53:43 In the Morning! Everyone's drinking Polar Seltzer. In the Morning. Thank you, John and Adam. We love you guys. Wow, you were cutting it up there. You got everyone on here just laughing about what you're drinking.
Starting point is 02:54:00 It was staged. The comedic stylings of John C. DeVore. I can meet her purport. Beautifulvorak in the Meetup Report. Beautiful. Only one meetup to mention until the next show, which will be on Thursday. On Tuesday, the 6th of February, the Naperville Free Thinker Society meets at 6 o'clock at Quigley's Irish Pub in Naperville, Illinois. On the horizon, on the 10th, is the big no agenda austin meetup at doc's backyard sunset valley is what we call that you can find out more about it no agenda meetups.com the 17th
Starting point is 02:54:31 fort wayne we have tallahassee florida toms river new jersey garden city idaho los angeles california i'm sure that's leo bravo indianapolis indiana on the 18th florence kentucky singapore singapore singapore singapore on the 22nd. Kilkenny, Ireland on March the 2nd. There's so much coming up. We are truly international. That's what the No Agenda Nation is, is an international community. You definitely want to go to one of these.
Starting point is 02:55:01 Man, you need to cut the branches on that tree. Yeah, I'm noticing. Is that a crazy thought i'm gonna have to get an arborist out here because when we have these southern winds it's a very rare condition uh it blows the tree into the uh yes into help john get an arborist exactly i need an arborist it's a tree dude uh out here we call that bird dog with a chainsaw if you'd like to learn more about the no agenda meetups you can go to no agenda meetups.com easy to search easy to find places near you if you can't find a meetup near you just like the people in rogersville start one yourself sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
Starting point is 02:55:48 You want to be where you want to be. Triggered or held to blame. You want to be where everybody feels the same. It's like a party. It's like a party. I got a couple. I will say this tree that's blowing around here is an oak, a very old oak. And it's very dense. It's a very dense oak.
Starting point is 02:56:11 And it's delicious. It's delicious? Have you tasted the oak? Well, I use it for barbecues. Oh. Oh. Now, don't you have to... It's a living oak, though.
Starting point is 02:56:23 Don't you have to dry it? It doesn't take very long. cut to take the trimmings if it's trimmings it takes about six months there's a big chunk yeah maybe okay but i have a pile of wood for when's the last time you uh you cooked out last Friday. What did you make? I made a, what did I do? I made filet. No, it wasn't the filets. I can't remember. I made either chicken,
Starting point is 02:56:56 oh no, I had Korean style, you know, when the Koreans make this very thin sliced meat that you can cook just instantly. That's what I made. Very good. It's like the shabu-shabu meat.
Starting point is 02:57:11 Shabu-shabu. When you barbecue it. All right, I'm going to hit you with my ISOs. They're not all great. The two by Rachel Maddow. Yeah, right. Them and What Army. Okay.
Starting point is 02:57:21 I think that's a non-starter. Another one by her. Government Sh smoverment i have uh i want to be a globalist how do i get in and let people enjoy things no you talked over that i'm gonna play that again play the first one again what the? The Globalist? No, the Rachel Maddow one. Oh, you like that one, huh? Okay.
Starting point is 02:57:49 Yeah, right. Them and What Army. Them and What Army. No, I don't like it because I couldn't understand what she said. She says, yeah, right, blah, blah, blah, blah. Yeah, Them and What Army. Government smoverment. Yeah, what's that got to do with the show? was government smoverment yeah what's that gonna do with the show nothing it's nothing it's lame go what are your what do you do what are your
Starting point is 02:58:10 eyes i don't have much better but i have better than that let's see what we got here hold on it looks like you're recycling uh not necessarily okay i got we great i tell you what we're great okay we're also very modest yes wow good job wow good job i like that one a lot and then wow wow wow wow no i like wow good job okay because that you know that'll that'll make me feel like we we did a good job wow good job yeah Wow. Good job. Yeah, that's good. I like that a lot. I got good news.
Starting point is 02:58:48 I got good news. I got good news. I got good news. Oh, yeah. Good news, everybody. John's got good news, but he was not able to keep it to one minute, so this better be really good news. It's 1.35.
Starting point is 02:59:02 It's still under two. Yeah. You were trying to keep it under one. I had to leave this stuff in. I could have edited it down a little bit. I took some spaces out, but it's too good of a report. I believe this came from Virginia. This is good news. The girl and the chickens. A little girl in Blacksburg is looking to add old hens that farmers no longer want or need since they no longer lay eggs to
Starting point is 02:59:26 her aging flock. Yeah, 10 News photojournalist Greg Moore shows us the passion behind her unique rescue project. So I've got these smooshy apples to the chickens. They love almost any food. We have four chickens. Hi girls. This one is Fiona. Hi investigator. And then the other white one over here is Featherfoot. And that's a brownie in there. A lot of people think of chickens as egg or meat dispensers. But I see them as animals with personalities. This is Featherfoot. I want to adopt more. She's a pretty, fluffy chickie. And investigator. Even when she was itty-bitty, she was out there playing with the chickens. I got you, chickie. I got you, chickie. She could barely even talk at the time, but she was herding chickens. It was pretty cute.
Starting point is 03:00:16 Mom, chickie. Mom, chickie. They're really nice to just hang out with, so sometimes I like to take my schoolwork out there and do it with them. with. So sometimes I like to take my schoolwork out there and do it with them. She says that she wants to start her own chicken sanctuary. Look, is that yummy? Your chicken rescue center. So that's one of her dreams. If you have a dog or cat that you really love and you give them lots of snuggles and treats and toys, I do sort of the same thing for my chickens. I like to hold them and snuggle with them. Oh, how cute. That's adorable. Yeah. I mean, chickens with personalities. They're just her pets. Don't think of that so much. That's what America's about, ladies and gentlemen. That's what I'm talking about. Local good news covers that just makes you feel good about the world. You know
Starting point is 03:01:02 what I'm saying? Do you know what I'm saying, John? Come on. The visuals were even better. The nat pops were fantastic. I mean, that's what you don't want to hear launching missiles. You want to hear chickens. You want to hear little babies going, hey girls, that's beautiful. Good news.
Starting point is 03:01:19 Good news. Good news. Good news. Good news. Yeah, very good news. And I appreciate the new jingles, everybody. That's super good news. We have a whole scala of good news jingles to choose from right now. It's very, very good. We have some end-of-show mixes coming up.
Starting point is 03:01:44 We got Rexo. We got Tom Starkwe up. We got Rexo, we got Tom Starkweather, we got some classics. Classics on the way. You can find all of the credits in the credits for the show at noagendashow.net. And coming
Starting point is 03:01:59 up next, let me see. Oh! Oh, if you want to know the latest in podcasting it's the podcasting 2.0 show episode 166 titled country clever well you definitely want to see that you want to listen to find out what's up get one of those modern podcast apps coming to you from the heart of the texas hill country right here in FEMA region number 6, where it's not as blustery as over there on the West Coast. In the morning, everybody,
Starting point is 03:02:30 I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where yeah, it's blustery, it rained all night, but it stopped raining, it's just windy. I'm John C. Dvorak. We'll be back on Thursday with more of the best podcasts in the universe. Remember us at noagendedonations.com. Till then, adios, mofos, or hooey, hooey, and such.
Starting point is 03:02:48 Oh, my God! All right. Yeah! One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, car train. Ooh! And they're going to... Woo-hoo! Calm down.
Starting point is 03:03:06 Listen to that horn. I stay out too late. Got nothing on my face. That's what she was saying. That's what she was saying. I don't follow mandates. i just look the other way at least that's what she will say that's what she will say but i keep breathing can't start quarantining it's like i got this freedom in my mind saying We'll be right back. Take it off. And the Karen's gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate. All the rules I'm gonna break, break, break, break, break.
Starting point is 03:04:07 But I'm still gonna take, take, take, take, take. Take it off. Take it off. I rarely even sneeze. And if I do, it's allergies. And that's what they don't see. That's what they don't see. This whole thing is overblown. This whole thing is overblown. Make the rules up as they go. See you next week. Thank you. Take it all. And the Karen's gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate. All the rules I'm gonna break, break, break, break, break.
Starting point is 03:05:07 But I'm still gonna take, take, take, take, take. Take it all. Take it all. Take it all. Take it all. Take it all. Take it all. Take it all.
Starting point is 03:05:20 Take it all. Take it all. Take it all. Hey, hey, hey. Just think, boy, you've been getting down and out about the media and the dirty, dirty elites of the world. You could have been getting out into the streets. My best friend brought his new girlfriend. She's like, oh, my God, please put on a mask. So the lady over there with the crazy-eyed stare just called her, baby, give me a break, break, break.
Starting point is 03:05:50 Yeah. Because the government will say, say, say, say, say that a mask will mitigate, gate, gate, gate, gate. But I'm just going to take, take, take, take, take. Take it off. Take it off. And the camera's going to hate, hate, hate, hate, hate. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off.
Starting point is 03:06:29 Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off. Take it off.
Starting point is 03:06:43 Rising intonation. Someone makes a statement, but it sounds like I'm asking a question non-renormalizing pitch escalation syndrome hiya Pfizer you got any extra shots sleeves up I'm a Pfizer girl in a COVID world
Starting point is 03:06:59 I'm the classic mRNA tactic 95% there's no argument Got no contagion with my vaccination Come on visors, let's go party With a fast time Come on visors, let's go travel Only if it's essential
Starting point is 03:07:18 Oh, we're having so much fun We'll have to do this again for my second shot Oh, I love you, Ben. The best podcast in the universe. Opo. Dvorak.org slash N-A.
Starting point is 03:07:37 Wow. Good job.

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