No Agenda - 1685 - "Favela Ready"
Episode Date: August 11, 2024No Agenda Episode 1685 - "Favela Ready" "Favela Ready" Executive Producers: Sir Cross Threaded Wheel Stud Dame Cici Reid Hunthgy Sir Victor the Baron of the Willamette Valley Sir JackAsh Sir Matthe...w Sir pursuit of peace and tranquility, Viscount of the lands of red clay and the cherry blossoms Jason and Theresa Wrich Associate Executive Producers: ANONYMOUS Dan Richman PG_Kelly Linda Lu Duchess of jobs and writer resumes Joshua PARKER Become a member of the 1686 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Baron Sir pursuit of peace and tranquility > Sir pursuit of peace and tranquility, Viscount of the lands of red clay and the cherry blossoms Sir Victor, Baronet of the Willamette Valley > Sir Victor the Baron of the Willamette Valley Knights & Dames Tim Del Vecchio > Sir Yankees Fan Sir Cross Threaded Wheel Stud Art By: Darren O'Neill - darrenoneill@getalby.com End of Show Mixes: Sir Hey Citizen - David Keckta 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) 1685.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 08/11/2024 16:37:48This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 08/11/2024 16:37:48 by Freedom Controller
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Discussion (0)
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, August 11, 2024.
This show award winning, Kibble Nation Media,
assassination episode 1685.
This is No Agenda.
Vaping in the boys' room 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.
From Northern Silicon Valley, we have throngs of people created by AI.
What a winner.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
In the morning.
I spent significant time looking at that yesterday.
That?
At the throngs of people.
Well, there's more than one or two examples.
Here's the only thing.
I cannot find any evidence the Harris campaign has actually posted any of these pictures.
Seems to me that people are making them and then saying, look what they posted!
Does that include the airplane one?
Which is my favorite.
Yeah, the airplane.
I found the origin of the airplane one.
It's an AP picture and the way it was done is there, I guess the hair, they're copying
everything.
The Harris campaign, Harris Waltz, Haywaltz campaign.
Harry balls. Harry. There you go, Harry Balls.
They're doing hanger appearances.
So it was a shot that was, it was a shot from the back of a hanger was cropped.
And that by itself already gives an illusion that people are all the way up to the plane.
And then, you know, there's probably some other stuff
put in there, but I, what I, and I did Google image,
I tried everything I could.
I couldn't find any evidence that the Harris campaign,
the Harry Balls campaign actually posted that picture.
That's my problem with it.
I haven't done that research.
And I think a lot of the stuff eventually
Originate on Facebook. So you'd have to go to Facebook to do this and you know that no, that's a good point. That's a good point
Some some producers have been looking for me and they they haven't got much further than the AP picture either
Although it doesn't look like the AP picture has been doctored
But there's a lot of shenanigans going on.
There's, you know, they're doing appearances in, you know, at free
concerts with a bunch of, you know, with some Spotify Latino star.
And then they'll do a little pregame.
So, yeah.
But ultimately it's kind of working because I think Trump is responding,
oh it's not true, it's fake.
So they're kind of getting under his skin with all this nonsense.
But that's a meme.
What's a meme?
I'm not absolutely sure they're getting under his skin,
but I keep hearing that on CNBC and
on our CNN and MSNBC that he's getting under his skin.
In fact today, that guy Steele,
the black guy who used to be Republican.
He used to be the head of the Republican party, yeah.
Which was a sign, a bad sign,
since he never was a Republican, it seems.
Now he is the substitute host for Jen Suckey.
Well, of course, he's always on MSNBC.
He does Sunday mornings with Robin Sanders, he used to run the Bernie campaign.
Oh yeah, he's always on that show.
So he was on This Morning going on and on about us getting under Trump's skin.
Oh, okay.
Well, I thought he had responded to the crowd size. I don't have proof of that.
I do have proof of them saying that. And of course, now that you mention it, I guess that
right away we have to discredit it. Here's Joy Reid.
I want to play this lie that Donald Trump did in his string of lies yesterday that really
is- String of lies. String of lies.
Show title already, everybody.
A sundowning press conference that he did.
This is a story he told about Willie Brown.
Shouldn't it be the necklace of lies or something?
I mean, string of lies is, I don't know, let's keep it there.
Oh yeah, this is the Willie Brown story.
This is funny.
And I want you all to note that he talked about Willie Brown.
All right, take a listen.
I know Willie Brown very well.
In fact, I went down in a helicopter with him.
We thought maybe this is the end.
He told me terrible things about her.
Okay.
That's not who he meant.
Trump was never in a helicopter with Willie Brown.
Willie Brown came out with a statement.
He laughed when he heard Trump's allegations is that he's nothing but respect and admiration
for Kamala Harris, for Vice President Harris.
Willie Brown says he looks forward to electing her to be the president and says the debate
will probably be unfair because Trump is so inept.
The Brown that he meant was Jerry Brown.
Jerry Brown, who was the governor, but said that he's never said anything bad about Vice
President Harris either.
It was Gavin Newsom who was in a helicopter with Trump when they were
surveying wildfire damage. And he said that he remembers Trump worrying about the helicopter
crashing, calling the town pleasure instead of paradise and suggesting California rake
its forests. Trump never had an emergency landing in a helicopter.
Okay. So I played the wrong clip because I had the crowd clip. I'll play that in a minute.
But since we're on this, a couple of things, string of lies.
There was actually been two, well, there was a horrible crash
with the Trump helicopter in 89, where everyone died.
But he had a tail strike when he was on it.
There was another instance when Ivanka and Jared
had an engine issue.
So it's not like he's never had a problem in the helicopter,
but I could not find, have my my fly boys looking
we're trying to find ATC we're trying to find NTSB reports I
cannot find any emergency landing from any Trump
helicopter other than those two, two times but Trump is seems to
be adamant about it. And that would be pretty stupid if you didn't know.
I think you remember something like that.
But I watched like 20 minutes of Willie Brown interview, which is not even worth clipping.
He doesn't deny it.
He just says, no, no, no, he doesn't know what he's talking about.
He didn't deny it at any point in that.
I don't know if you saw that in like the restaurant.
Does Willie Brown just live in the restaurant in San Francisco? He's in there
during the day, everyone's putting the tablecloths on. It's like, Mr.
Brown, your table's ready. Well in the olden days when Stars was still in
business, which was the restaurant to go to, I went there a number of times with
Mimi and
Willie Brown was always there.
Yeah.
So it's more likely that it didn't happen because
Willie Brown lives in the restaurant than
Trump is lying.
Here's a small crowd clip.
This is from CNN.
Yesterday, Trump went so far.
This is why we're talking about this today.
He compared the attendance of the rally that he
held on January 6th, 2021,
which of course was right before the Capitol insurrection.
Many of those people walked down the mall to the Capitol
to one of the most iconic speeches
that's been delivered here in America.
Look at Martin Luther King when he did his speech,
his great speech, and you look at ours,
same real estate, same everything,
same number of people, if not, we had more.
This is a whole new level.
MLK.
The thing about his obsession with crowds is,
my mother always taught me when a man is arguing
about size of anything, in this case,
crowds, where there's an obsession.
This is a family morning show.
It is.
I'm just saying, all I'm going to say is he's probably insecure.
I'll just leave it there.
I think women know what I'm talking about.
Whether it's your car, it's your crowd, it's your, you know, whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
So that's probably the only thing he said about it.
So they are trying to bring back a lot of stuff.
Seems like the media is really...
I can only think of it this way.
We screwed up before.
Can we go back and take a look at what we did and rejigger it?
Maybe that'll make a difference.
They're definitely preoccupied.
I mean, it's, it was even difficult to get other topics for today.
It's just like, what is going on?
It's like everyone's hair on fire, running around on social media.
Turn on the television, same thing.
Um, this was, This was interesting though.
We know that in Nevada, which is the big service sector, Trump, almost a month ago,
I think at this point, said, he told this whole story about this waitress, server.
And he was like, Mr.
Trump is so hard.
And he says, how about this? I've've got an idea how about no taxes on tips so when
Kamala Harris when Harry Balls was in Vegas this is what happened.
Vice President Harris touchdown. Oops sorry this one. And it is my promise to
everyone here when I am president we will continue our fight for working
families of
America.
Including to raise the minimum wage and eliminate taxes on tips for service and hospitality
workers.
That's pretty awesome.
Just take it from Trump and just lay it out there like it's something new.
That was good.
I would have advised that.
That was the Bill Clinton trick.
Oh, do tell.
Bill Clinton, they always said, was the best Republican candidate that Democrats ever put in there.
He would do that constantly.
Whatever the idea was from the other side of the aisle, he'd make it his.
And he did it very consistently.
And after a while, I said, well, okay.
It's good.
I mean, I can't falter for it.
It's like not bad at all.
Well done. CBS though, they
were doing, they did a kind of an excellent propaganda piece
with poll numbers. And also, what's really good now is
they're doing the picture of Kamala versus Trump. And so
Kamala is all smiley and joyful. And Trump, it's the grumpy.
It's the picture from the mugshot. So you just look at it and you see, happy over here.
Mean, mad guy over here with all kinds. I mean, just listen to it and you'll see what they're
doing over at CBS. Vice President Harris touched down in Las Vegas Saturday
and rallied supporters with her running mate Tim Walz.
With your help, this November, we will win.
We will win.
It capped a week-long battleground blitz
with packed arenas listening to her take on former President
Trump.
I know Donald Trump's type.
But she shut down the crowd when they chanted, lock him up, about Trump.
Hold on, hold on.
The courts gonna take care of that.
We just don't beat him in November.
We don't beat him in November.
A new New York Times, CNN College poll finds Harris ahead among likely voters in three
key states, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Former President Trump held fundraisers in Wyoming and Colorado Saturday after a
Montana rally Friday night.
We're going to evict crazy Kamala.
But this moment before Trump spoke is grabbing attention.
Celine Dion's My Heart Will Go On played for the crowd.
The singer released a statement saying,
in no way is this use authorized,
and Celine Dion does not endorse this or any similar use.
Meanwhile, the Trump campaign says it was hacked.
Politico first reported receiving internal campaign research documents
from an anonymous sender.
The Trump campaign suggesting Iran may be behind the hack.
Now this was rather interesting.
First of all, we've got some spokesmen from the Trump camp saying,
we were hacked by Iran.
Huh?
Microsoft coming out immediately.
Oh, yeah.
No, that was a...
And they always do this.
Spear phishing.
Don't we just say fishing?
Why does the media always say spear fishing?
Cause I suppose it's cause it's targeted as opposed to mass
mailing, I guess. I don't know. I don't know why they do that.
It's, it's odd. By the way, Trump should just call her kooky camera.
This crazy camel is no good.
Kuki would be better.
He's still fishing around for some, I don't, I don't get why he hasn't used cackling.
That's the one that we both think is better.
Cackling, but I, Kuki would work.
The Iran thing is kind of interesting because, uh, in security circles, Iran is
notorious for being possibly better hackers than the Ukrainians.
Mm-hmm.
And, uh,
I suppose they'd rather have Kamala in. I don't know what the deal is with this particular hack.
Well, I think it's, to me, first of all, Microsoft comes out right away.
Microsoft, you know Microsoft is notorious.
They're leaky as a sieve.
So they also just did a deal with, where is it here?
They just did a deal with Palantir to sell AI systems into the intelligence community.
And Microsoft just can't be trusted.
I mean, come on.
We can't.
No, they got back doors that go right straight to the NSA.
So, and what was that?
What actually came out, I guess, ProPublica, the same guys who did the, you know,
all the rushing Russian information.
Another group that can't be trusted.
Yeah.
So to me, it's more like, and what came out? Oh, we have a 271 pages on research on JD Vance.
One portion which was marked possible vulnerabilities.
Hello, that's what you do when you vet a candidate.
Totally.
That's all you do.
So this document is not interesting, but it could be a little signal, because
that's the one thing everyone forgets is the intelligence community,
they hate Trump the most.
I really have to believe that.
That, you know, they like to be in control, the military industrial complex,
you know, even big pharma to a degree.
I think he's got MIC kind of placated with his iron dome over America.
Imagine what that's going to cost us.
Big beautiful ships.
So, Trump, we'll get our money.
We don't have to go to war maybe.
I think they're okay, but the intelligence agencies, just as they were saying, well, you know, it's,
uh, this is all Russian disinformation.
Now it's like, Oh, Iran did it.
Oh yeah.
Iran who knows?
You know, and now it gives them the opportunity to put out some other bogus
stuff and just say, Oh, it's from the Iran hack.
You know what I mean?
Totally, totally.
And I hate to use that word.
You know, I ran into Michael Hayden.
Totally.
Totally.
The bald guy, Michael Hayden, who's also one of the big Sines on that 51 guy.
You ran into him?
No, I ran into his post on Twitter.
Oh, okay.
He has an account.
On Twitter.
And it might as well just be Rob Reiner.
He is totally preoccupied with hating on Trump and extolling the virtues of Camilla.
Yeah, she's the damnedest thing I've ever seen. People should look it up and it's got a check mark.
It's general Michael Hayden is our general or whatever he is.
He's air force general, I guess.
And he goes on and on.
He was head of the CIA and NSA.
And he's just nuts.
Yeah. Well, again, those guys like to run everything.
CIA ran Obama.
I can totally see it.
Here's a shorty. Same thing, I guess. Same story.
The Trump campaign also announced today it was hacked.
The breach was first reported by Politico, which received internal documents from an
anonymous account.
The Trump campaign is now blaming hackers from Iran.
Wait a minute.
Oh, sorry.
Politico.
I thought it was ProPublica.
Politico.
Um, hmm.
Yeah, it was Politico.
Politico.
Wait, what is this?
I thought you were talking about ProPublica doing something else.
That's what I thought it was.
They're always involved in something.
What was it?
The Trump campaign also announced today it was hacked. Politico. Politico. Politico was Politico. Wait, what? I thought you were talking about pro-public.
That's what I thought it was.
They're always involved in something.
The Trump campaign also announced today it was hacked.
The breach was first reported by Politico, which received internal documents from an anonymous account.
The Trump campaign is now blaming hackers from Iran.
Yes, I remember what one was saying. It was from an AOL.com account. And I can tell you with some authority that many former intelligence people and current
intelligence people use AOL.com accounts.
Why?
I don't know.
I have no idea.
Maybe because back when the AOL…
Code?
Could be code.
Maybe back in the day when the AOL accounts were available.
You know, I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don no idea. Maybe because back when the AOL- Code? Could be code.
Maybe back in the day when the AOL accounts were available.
You know who had an AOL account?
Pachanik.
Pachanik had an AOL account.
There's other guys.
There's for some reason they have AOL accounts.
So I'm not sure.
I didn't even know-
I probably still have an AOL account.
I had Dvorak at AOL.com, but I don't know how to access it.
I don't know.
That's the problem.
I have no idea. I don't know remembering a password.
I don't know how to do it anymore.
Glenn Greenwald made a good observation about Kamala Harris,
and I'll revamp this clip that we played two shows ago.
Remember when the protesters started yelling at her and she said,
I'm talking, you know?
I'll play it again, it's just short.
Tax breaks to billionaires and big corporations.
He intends to cut Social Security and Medicare.
He intends to surrender social security and Medicare.
He intends to surrender our fight against the climate crisis and he intends to end the
Affordable Care Act.
You know what?
If you want Donald Trump to win, then say that, otherwise I'm speaking.
So Greenwald posted a page from Animal Farm, classic, classic novel, Orwell's Animal Farm.
I'll read it to you.
We pigs are brain workers.
The whole management and organization of this farm depend on us.
Day and night we are watching over your welfare.
It is for your sake that we drink that milk and eat those apples.
Do you know what would happen if we pigs failed in our duty?
Farmer Jones would come back.
Yes, Jones would come back.
Surely comrades cried squeal
or almost pleadingly skipping from side to side
and whisking his tail.
Surely there's no one among you
who wants to see Jones come back.
Very good observation from Greenwald.
There is, the pig the pigs and animal farm.
It's fantastic.
Yeah.
Well, that's what it looks like.
Yeah.
Now, amidst all this, I've had a couple of thoughts about this
when actually it was Nancy Pelosi popped up this morning in my feed with a, I'm
not sure who she is.
She's been showing up everywhere.
Yes.
And you've got to wonder why.
Let me see.
This was...
I want to stop you as you go on to this.
You have to wonder why.
Is it possible that Biden is going to rebuke his being kicked out?
Wait, I have a thought about that. Listen to what Pelosi says here. And this is about
the letter that appeared on a Thursday right at the beginning of our show day. No White
House letterhead looked like a signature that was at least not what he has used before,
so possibly forged.
And here's what she said.
This just came in this morning.
I didn't accept a letter as anything but a letter.
I mean,
I mean, there are some people
who were unhappy with the letter.
Let me say, some said that some people
were unhappy with the letter.
I'll put it in somebody else's mouth. because it was a, I don't even know.
It didn't sound like Joe Biden to me.
It really didn't.
So what is she saying here?
She's saying that Joe Biden didn't write it.
The Jill might've written it or someone else.
Well, actually, if you start looking into it, Mike Donald wrote the letter.
Oh, that's his campaign guy?
No, Mike Donilon is more than his campaign guy.
If you look him up in the Wikipedia, you'll find out that Mike Donilon, who is the brother
of Tom Donilon, Black Rock, the two brothers are in it together.
Tom Donilon is the one who Seymour Hersh
thinks is running everything.
But Mike Donilon is the guy that's in the White House.
He takes credit for writing the letter.
He said so much.
It's not like a big mystery.
I don't know why this is becoming a mystery to everybody.
Nobody wants to talk about this guy.
He did, I mean, he's been is becoming a mystery to everybody. Nobody wants to talk about this guy. He did.
I mean, he's been running Biden since 81 or so. It's all listed in there.
It was also Bill Clinton's, uh, he was in Clinton, chief of staff
in for the state department.
It says chief of staff in former Bill Clinton state department, former
national security advisor to Obama.
There you go.
Yeah. No, this guy's running things. And he, if you look around, admits that he wrote the letter.
Oh, I didn't see that. I didn't know that. Well, why is Nancy Pelosi being so weird about it if
it's out there that he wrote the letter? I don't know where she's getting, she's weird about something. And Donald and quit left in January.
And then came, he supposedly quit in January,
but yet he wrote the letter, which was in July.
So he's never really left.
He's just still hanging around.
And now they have Paul Podesta and people like that
running the show.
This something is very fishy about all this.
And I liken the idea that Biden's going to come out on the first day of the
conventions, hey, I didn't quit.
I ever wrote that letter.
Yeah.
I want my votes back.
Hello.
It could be that or I mean, you know, I've been watching Veep.
We've been binge watching.
Yes, you're using this as the parallel universe to analyze the situation currently underway.
Yes.
And last night, yeah, I mean, yes, exactly. Last night, we got to the episode where Selena
Meyer is campaigning for president and she has a debate and she comes in second, some douchebag
baseball coach does much better. And then all of a sudden she gets word the president is going
to resign because his wife keeps trying to commit suicide and
she's going to be president.
And I thought, wouldn't that be so there's two ways.
And remember, I also watched Dave.
I mean, all this stuff just keeps popping up for me.
It's like, you know, so the options are Biden keels over
dead at the right at the beginning because he's
scheduled to speak on the first night I think. So he keels over, you know, or dead just keels over
or that daddy long legs guy comes in and keels over. That could be one option. The other is
Biden comes out and says, hey, I want you like you say, I want my votes back. I didn't do it.
Like you say, I want my votes back. I didn't do it.
I was...
Or he just says, you know, I'm looking at the National
Enquirer, which I picked up at HEB because that now is that
still Trump's guys who run the National Enquirer?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So front page, real reason Biden quit.
It's not what you think.
Untold story.
So.
Well, there you go.
There's your tease.
I got you to buy it.
Of course.
Well, I was reading it and the article is almost at the end.
And so I'm reading it as the belt is going and I felt like such a douche.
I'm like, okay, I guess I have to buy it now because they can see me leafing through the
whole thing. But then they have,
old Joe won't last four more years. Shocking reason. Biden quit presidential race.
And then they have some psychologist, Holly Schiff, who basically says, now he's got dementia.
Well, what reason was there otherwise? I mean, that was a fake. That was bogus.
That's a breakthrough thought. It was bogus. That's a breakthrough thought.
That's bogus. Totally bogus. Now.
Well the possibility, I kind of agree with these, these different scenarios.
And we have to, we got till the 19th to keep dreaming them up.
But the other possibility is that, you know, that he real,
I think it now, as I look back on the debate, I think they, you know,
cause they're always going to get jacked up. Up Joe's was missing and we're always wondering why.
Is it possible that they actually gave him a sedative instead of his normal
amphetamine cocktail or whatever they do to get him jacked up?
So he, so he was out there just having you in a daze and he just know what to do.
He figures this out.
He gets rid of the doctors who screwed him over for the debate, gets another
guy, you know, Dr.
Feel-good character in there to jack him up.
So he is all wired to the gills, uh, on the, uh, on the 19th.
And that's when he freaks out and wants his votes back.
This could be fun.
It's very possible.
I went to YouTube and let me see where's Joe.
What's he doing?
Cause you haven't heard much about Joe
and it's really not Joe.
It's really Jill.
New at 11, President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden
are heading to New Orleans.
They will attend a Biden cancer moonshot event in the city
on Tuesday. Details are limited on what time and where. They have not been released yet. In March
of 2023, the First Lady visited the Louisiana Cancer Research Center in New Orleans to stress
the importance of cancer research. You remember Dr. Jill, you know, she should have been surgeon
general because she's a great doctor according to Whoopi Goldberg. So they're still out
there, they're still, you know, twiddling around. I mean it could be super fun. It
would be so boring if he just gets up there and goes and there's nothing. It
would be great. And just think about it. If, and I have not seen the rest of V, but if she becomes president, then
immediately there's all kinds of issues that come into play.
A, first of all, Trump's merchandise sucks.
He's got to redo all that, that can basically up the GDP of China for all the new hats.
Second, can she then be blamed for everything that's happening?
Which I mean, can she even campaign as much with two wars and Iran and all this stuff going on?
And could that be a rug pull from Obama? Who knows? I mean, we're just dreaming here, but man.
I know we're having nothing but fun.
Yeah, that's true.
We're dreaming up screwball ideas and scenarios.
That could happen.
Any one of them could happen.
Yeah, but I don't hear anyone else coming up
with these screwball ideas.
Just us.
I don't know why.
Well, it's because you got the partisan media.
You know, if they were a partisan,
like the No Agenda Show, where we don't really take necessarily sides,
we just look for explanations that make sense.
A lot of this makes sense if you think about it.
It was presented by Trump that Biden might do that.
But once that thought is triggered, then you have to take it to some, you know, some logical extreme and say, well, what happens if he does this or that?
And then what would happen if Biden went and said, I want my votes back? Chaos. It would be great.
Well, then there's the lone wolf out there who showed up on for some reason now a no agenda fan favorite Jesse Waters
and I always your turn I always the balls in your court now your turn to play
Jesse Waters but I cut him out of my clips here's Bobby the op we finished the trial today we had
a one-week trial in Albany the DNC is trying to get me off the ballot in New York State and then
all the other states. So they're essentially suing me in every state. In order to get on
the ballot in this state, they made so many signatures. You need to get 47,000 signatures
in 45 days. They tried to make it insurmountable. We got 150,000 signatures. We got a million signatures nationally and we're now on the ballot.
We have enough signatures now to get on the ballot in every state. Something everybody said we couldn't do.
There's a million Americans who want to vote, who want to see my name on the ballot.
But the DNC strategy is to make sure that they will not see me on the ballot. My father and uncle
when they were running the Democratic Party, their big objective was to make sure that every
American could vote. And today the DNC is about making sure that people don't have that opportunity.
Now if it's true what he's saying, why? Why are they so worried about him? Other than, man, Joe
could do something really wacky and
Then Bobby the op might pop up all of a sudden. I think a lot of people are so sick of everything
They'd be like, ah, the most sane guy right now seems to be RFK jr. Rogan would come out for him
Lots of people would say yeah, this guy's the only guy who's to even though there's a lot of problems with him
You know what I mean? Yeah.
I, well, they just worry he's going to siphon votes away from the Democrat
ticket.
Yeah.
I don't think it's any more to it than that.
Maybe.
You don't know.
I mean, Jill Stein's not going to sucker any votes away anymore.
Mary Ann Williams, Mary Ann Williamson.
Here's the Swift O op somewhat in play.
And it is my promise to everyone here when I am president.
Oh, sorry, wrong one. I'm not good today at my.
Yeah, you've you've.
I'm sucking. I'm sucking man.
Taylor Swift.
Falling apart.
Yeah, I am.
Did Taylor Swift endorse Kamala Harris? The megastar has yet to make a public endorsement,
but fans think an Instagram post from two days ago on Swift's account
contained a silhouette eerily similar to Kamala Harris as a telltale sign.
Ooh, telltale sign, eerily similar.
Mmm.
Who cares what Taylor Swift's gonna do?
Well, she has all those 13 year olds who can't vote. It's very important.
Uh, uh.
Well, they can vote if it's a Democrat state.
If they're 13?
Oh, any age, it doesn't matter.
Six.
You're good kid, come on in.
Do you know your address?
Can you tell me your address?
You don't need to see,
I don't have to show ID, don't worry about it.
I have two more Pelosi clips. Maybe there's something in here we can glean. Tell me your address. Tell me your address. You don't need to see it. You don't have to show ID. Don't worry about it.
I have two more Pelosi clips.
Maybe there's something in here we can glean because she was, she is everywhere suddenly
saying that thing about Biden.
There's something going.
This is what makes me think something's up because why?
Why is she anywhere?
Well, here she is.
And they always call her the Speaker Emeritus.
When did that title show up?
Do they call Kevin McCarthy the Speaker Emeritus?
Am I the VJ Emeritus?
Yeah, you would be by their standards.
Are you columnist Emeritus for PC Magazine?
Emeritus, yeah, PC Magazine Emeritus.
I like it.
I like VJ Emeritus.
I'm going to use that from now on.
Hello, Adam Curry. It actually sounds like a good name for guys doing mixing. Yeah, mixologist. Mixologist
specifically for mixing drinks, never mind.
When Joe, Lara Logan's husband, introduced me to General Flynn, he should have said,
this is a VJ Emeritus. Oh, the other right honorable
Adam Curry, VJ Emeritus. Here's Joy Reid again with Nancy.
I do want to talk a little bit about that. You're from, emerged from that San Francisco
political world. Of course, you are from Baltimore, you're from Beemore, but you came up in San
Francisco. And there's something about the Bay Area.
Beemore? Who says Beemore? And there's something about the Bay Area. Let me just list- Be more. Baltimore is be more.
I've never heard be more.
Maybe it's a Joy Reid thing.
I don't know.
Be more.
Be more.
You came up in San Francisco
and there's something about the Bay Area.
Let me just list them.
The late great Harvey Milk, Diane Feinstein,
Jerry Brown, the former governor,
yourself, Speaker Pelosi,
Gavin Newsom, the current governor, and of course, Vice President Harris.
What are they putting in the water in the Bay Area that creates so many powerful people?
Don't forget Barbara Boxer.
Don't we're so proud of her as well.
Wait a minute, Kamala is from, she's from Oakland, not San Francisco.
Or do you consider that to be the San Francisco?
Same water as the San Francisco?
Have the same water as Oakland?
Yeah, hitchhitchy.
Oh, there you go.
One of the things that is in the water is that we're an intellectual resource in almost
every issue you can name.
It's a hotbed of activity where they're talking about saving the planet, saving our rights, fairness in every way in our economy. But we also respect each other.
We are not all in the same place on the spectrum. We don't always agree, but we respect each other.
And we do not take down anybody. So we're always building strength.
We respect each other, everybody.
Respect.
She says, respect.
No, but I'm saying, expect.
Here's the second part.
Kamala, you have to give her credit.
She is politically astute.
She won a tough district attorney race.
She won a tough attorney general race.
And then, of course, it got easier for the speaker—excuse me, me the Senate race and now running for president of the United States so women
what does that mean easier for the Senate race why was it easier for did
she just step into it I can't remember I believe she just stepped into it is it
did someone died in I think Finstein died and they just put her in temporarily
and then she ran because you know she was the incumbent which was the Obama's
I'm guessing I'm not I don't know this for a fact because I don't remember the sequence of events necessarily
well if you if you recall
Obama became senator when they took that
Star Trek Deep Space Nine
Seven of Nine lady and came up with the whole, my husband raped me.
Right, the scenario of the sex cult or whatever the hell it was.
Yes, sex cult, whatever that was.
Yes.
Yeah.
All right, here's the rest.
Officially strong.
Something about it.
Personally, well, you know, personally a person of values and politically astute.
Let's talk about some of the things that you've written. a person of values and politically astute. So, again, we like to think that whether it's in the water or it's in the air or it's
just in our tradition in the Bay Area, we're very proud of the positions we take and the
friendships we develop and the respect we have for differences of opinion.
What is she signaling here?
Is this a San Francisco, like, Hoffman deal or what is the point?
I have some clips that might explain some of it because Newsom is going after the homeless.
Well, yeah, he's throwing them out.
He's throwing into the Bay.
We don't even know where he's putting them.
Throwing them into the Bay.
He's got a ramp.
into the bay. He's got a ramp. He's looking for 2028 as is two or three other, or as are two or three other of these Democrats, including Whitmer for president. And he, and I think
Shapiro is probably one of them. And so he's going to try to clean up the state and he's
got four years to do it.
So he's starting with the homeless.
Yeah, we can play these clips when you're done with your,
which you got to do it.
No, no, no.
Well, the only other thing is Kamala Harris
ran against Sanchez.
So it wasn't handed to her,
but it was a landslide 68 to 30 something.
Yeah, well that's because it's rigged.
I hate to say that, but California elections are rigged.
Yeah, let's do it.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
California, I've said this before, the states that, whether you have rigged election, you
got Washington state.
Nobody likes these people that are running Washington state, but they get in with big
votes all the time because it's all mail-in ballots.
So it's very easy to corrupt.
Everyone has been studied to death.
Everybody knows mail-in ballots are no good.
California also relies on them to an extent. Washington is a hundred percent.
So a hundred percent mail-in ballots in Washington state.
So they are, they've captured Washington state. Oregon is similar.
California is similar. They did captured.
It doesn't need to be that bad like it is in Washington.
Minnesota is captured.
I've always felt that Massachusetts and Illinois for sure is totally corrupt.
So let's just go back to Biden doing something unexpected that they may be expecting.
And maybe this is, she, I didn't see the whole interview, so maybe she talked about Newsom.
But if you've got Kamala Harris, all of a sudden being president, wouldn't
that be a moment for Newsom to pop in and say, Hey, let me take it over, baby.
How's he going to do that?
Just by saying exactly that this is Democrat party.
You can vote when you're 13.
You can just step in and say, Hey, let me take it over, baby.
I think the, I think originally when Obama came up with the scheme to get rid
of Biden, we have to, I'm going to assume that scenario is true.
And then Biden screwed him by announcing that Kamala is going to be the candidate.
And people always say the following, the analysis goes like this.
Uh, well, you can't bring in Newsome, you can't bring in anybody because you've
got a woman of color at the top of the ticket,
and she's the next one in line, you have to give it to her.
And so you have to take that argument and say,
well, how would Obama manage to get around this situation?
Obama could do it.
Obama could ordain anybody and come out, him and Michelle could come out and say this is the way it should be
Yes, I come doesn't matter it could be a black guy could be a white guy could be any it doesn't matter
We've lost Obama's listen if Kamala becomes president even for the next
What is it the next?
Four months we had our black female president.
That would be great.
And she, and you yourself said she's lazy.
She doesn't want to do anything.
And then think about it.
I was the first female, not just female, but black president.
She is rich for the rest of her life,
can go off, do her own thing.
And then she could even say, you know, I've got two wars here.
I'm going to take care of stuff.
By the way, no taxes on tips.
And here's Newsom to run.
I know I'm going off kilter here, but why not?
I think it's premature for Newsom to be honest about it because he still has the California
situation.
This is why he's starting to clean up the place because it's hanging over his head.
That sucks.
Like the sword of Damocles.
That sucks.
The homeless situation in California is out of control and there's no way you can run
it.
But four years from now when it's all cleaned up and he takes credit for it, it's a different
story.
So I don't think you can slip Newsom in at this point.
You can slip somebody else in, but no.
They're stuck with this woman.
Okay.
All right, well, let's hear your Newsom clips.
Well, here's Newsom going after the homeless
and it's become somewhat controversial.
Here's clip one.
Two weeks ago, California Governor Gavin Newsom
put out an executive order. He urged cities
and counties in the state to remove homeless encampments. This past week, he upped the
pressure saying he would take state funding away from counties that didn't show, quote,
demonstrable results. It's a move that puts the Democratic governor closer to conservatives
on this issue than to the progressives in his own party. To break down the details and politics of this, I'm joined by reporter Anna Scott in
Los Angeles.
She covers housing and homelessness with the California Newsroom, which is a collaboration
of NPR stations in the state.
Hey, Anna.
Hey.
Hey.
Hey.
So, Anna, the governor said that he would cut counties off from state funding if they
didn't cooperate.
Is this a real threat?
Did he give any specifics on this?
Oh my God. This is NPR, isn't it? How did they learn to talk like this?
Yeah, I think it's a real threat. Not a lot of specifics yet, but the state provides a lot of
funding to cities and counties for all sorts of different efforts to fight homelessness.
The Newsom administration has spent around $24 billion,
in fact, on this for things like buying commercial buildings to turn into housing or funding
new shelter beds, to name just two things of many. He didn't threaten to cut any particular
funding stream yet from any specific place, but his office told me he's ready to redirect
money away from any county that's not meeting milestones set by the state.
And he did call out Los Angeles County specifically and said leaders here need to act with more
urgency on this issue.
Question what county does is that favela spot you've got you've got picked out?
Well it's San Francisco is San Francisco County. So just after that, I believe that would be in San Mateo County.
So he could say, you know what, no money for you, here's a favela.
Well, I don't think he's got the favela mentality, yet.
You need to talk to your governor. You've got some good ideas.
You need to talk to your governor. You've got some good ideas.
He's...the idea of a favela there in South San Francisco is probably the best spot to do the experiment.
And of course the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles.
And the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles, that whole area is ripe.
Favela ready.
It's favela ready. Nah, there's a show title.
Write that one down.
I will.
Favela ready.
Yeah, it's favela ready.
There's plenty of places in LA that are favela ready.
Yeah.
All right, part two.
So, Anna, what exactly is Governor Newsom
wanting counties to do that they're not already doing?
Well, it's not completely clear other than get rid of more encampments.
But the problem is people need places to go.
And we're short on affordable housing.
We're short on shelter beds here in LA County.
Now LA has made a lot of progress in recent years on adding beds and affordable housing
units.
But the problem is in spite of that progress, it's really not visible yet to most
people who are walking around and looking at this terrible crisis on the streets.
So then in that case, what would make a visible difference here? Just more housing for everyone?
Yes, more housing. That's the simple answer because that's what is at the root of the crisis,
a shortage of cheap places to live that has built up over decades.
Hmm, I'm waiting.
This is not true.
The drug crisis is part of the problem.
They don't mention that.
It's got nothing to do with housing.
There's plenty of people and it's documented to an extreme of guys who say, go into here.
This is a place for you to stay.
I'd rather be on the street.
Yes, correct. And this happens constantly.
Your friend down in Texas must run into this.
Well, that's where he finds people.
Because drug addicts, the main reason,
according to Alan Graham, the reason from
Community First Village, the main reason
people become homeless is catastrophic loss
of family or community.
And when you are on the streets, you usually fall into drugs or you're already in some kind of drug issue.
And that's why they all congregate because then you have a community of druggies.
And they look out for each other, you know, it's a whole thing.
That is now your new community.
So yes, and by the way, Newsom does have a plan, but I'm interested in your final clip
on this first, unless you have something else.
No, I have another clip.
Now, like I said, California, Los Angeles in particular are making progress on that,
but it's a really big gap to close.
And on top of that, the crisis is at such a magnitude that you also have to help all
the people who are already on the streets get into the housing and stay there. And everybody
who's out there probably needs a different intervention. So it becomes very hard to fix.
Now the federal, state and local governments all share responsibility
for different pieces of these fixes, but of course they can always point fingers at each
other.
Right. And Anna, just quickly, are there politics at play behind Newsom's most recent statements
here?
Oh, yes, of course. He's a politician. I spoke with a long time Democratic political
consultant about this. Newsom's been talked about as a possible future presidential candidate, but the homelessness crisis in California is a huge weakness for him.
And so it makes sense that he's distancing himself from the responsibility a bit and saying
publicly to local officials, look, the state's given you everything you need, money, support.
Now you have to act. I've done all I can. But really, there's not a quick fix to this.
Well, I'm disappointed now because I saw your clips come in,
people should know, John and I don't talk in between shows,
we don't discuss what we're gonna do,
he sends his clips, I don't listen to them.
I look at the titles just to see what he has covered.
So I see a three-parter on Newsome,
I didn't clip in my Newsome stuff. Because he has covered. So I see a three-parter on Newsom. I didn't clip in my Newsom stuff
because he has proposed the solution and I'm very disappointed, surprisingly not,
in NPR. They didn't mention it. It is the Cares Court. Have you heard of this?
Maybe. I have the PDF. I have the one-pager PDF here. Governor Newsom's new plan to get Californians in crisis off the streets and into housing, treatment and care. It is the Community Assistance Recovery and Empowerment Court,
CARE Court, a new framework to get people with mental health and substance use disorders, the support and care they need. So what happens is they take you to court.
I'm sure there's a reason why it's called court. And then they put it's a court. Yes. And then they
so care court connects connects. This is great. Care court connects a person struggling with untreated mental illness and often also substance use
challenges with a court ordered
care plan for up to 24 months.
So you have its jail for druggies. Each plan is managed by a care team in the community and can include
clinically prescribed individual
interventions i.e. our drugs,
with special, with several support services,
medication, and a housing plan. The client-centered approach of these convicts
also includes a public defender and supporter,
what is it, support, like pom poms?
Yay, go you.
To help make self-directed care decisions
in addition to their full clinical team.
So he's going to rouse them,
and by the way, this is a $14 billion multi-year investment
that will also provide 55,000 new housing units and treatment slots.
Well, 55,000 is not enough.
But they have slots. They just put you in the wall in a slot in the wall. Slots.
And a more than 10 billion dollar annual investment in community behavioral health services. Dude, bonanza.
The governor's comprehensive approach combines a focus on bridge housing
under the bridge i guess to quickly rehouse unsheltered individuals with behavioral health issues
all while more new units come online while also transforming medical to provide more behavioral
health services to people struggling the most so he's's created a court. You get rousted, you go to court, you're a druggy, you got
problems, take our meds, sleep here. Or else. Or else. Yes. I'm surprised the MPR
didn't catch on to that. That's odd. I am too, now that you mention it. Because he
has a solution.
It's a kind of a weird one.
It's a totalitarian solution.
There you go.
Yes, totalitarian.
By every definition.
Yes.
Yeah, you go into court.
And it's done by edict, if you haven't noticed.
They mentioned that it's all executive orders.
So there's no legislature involved or anybody, any input whatsoever.
This is just a totalitarian mechanism that he put in place and the key to it is this
phony baloney kangaroo court, which is exactly what it is.
Yep. There you go.
Yeah. Very good for him.
Well, and I think it's a model for all of America.
Well, that's the point he's going to try to make when he runs for president. Well, and I think it's a model for all of America Well, that's what these good. That's the point
He's gonna try to make when he runs for president. The problem is he still has that
he still is
Got that greasy kind of slick and he's with that gravelly voice. He's got some issues with his presentations
Especially when you compare them to the Jewish Obama
the Shapiro
Shapiro Shapiro sounds just like Obama.
He's got the cadence. He's got the better speeches.
He's a much more dynamic speaker than Newsom.
Newsom's not very good compared.
Doesn't matter.
You know, doesn't matter.
People just vote what they're told to vote.
Well, it doesn't matter because they're going to just choose somebody, if you're going to say that.
But they're going to choose somebody.
They're going to choose Shapiro.
I don't think America's ready for a Jew president.
I really don't.
Think about it.
I don't think that, I don't really believe that.
I don't think any, I mean, there's probably a few people that wouldn't
appreciate it, but the Nazis, I think Nazis in general nobody cares that much about especially a guy like that guy
He's pretty neutral
Coming out talking about a screamer. He goes all off the off the rail
He's like Dean scream almost
No, yes, yes
Oh
Man, I thought I had a Dean scream clip of him. Yes. Yes. Oh man, I thought I had a Dean Scream clip of him.
Yes.
He was going off the rails.
I didn't clip it crap.
Yeah, because it didn't matter because he's no longer in the running.
Oh yeah, his voice is all skipping and stuff.
Yeah.
Maybe I can find it.
No, I don't think he's the right guy.
Well, the other thing that you notice on these networks that say that Trump is whatever that
word was we used earlier, freaked out about something or other, which he's not.
Oh, here it is.
Here it is, Joe.
Listen to this.
Hold on.
In America, where no matter what you look like, where you come from, who you love or
who you pray to, that this will be a place for you.
And listen to the beginning of the speech.
And are you ready to look the next president of the United States in the eye and say, hello,
madam president.
Are you ready to?
Run, run!
A little overdone.
Well, that's a good example.
I have to say, I'll give you points for that.
Okay.
Because that's not his nuts.
All right.
So the other thing is they're condemning Trump
for not doing enough rallies. And, uh,
Oh really? Not enough rallies. I thought he was doing all kinds of rallies.
Well, they claim he's not doing as many as he could. And of course,
this is just a kibitzing. He has, he said in his press conference,
he gave an hour press conference, which is reasonably good amount of time,
since nobody else is doing them. And he says, look,
I'm not going to do a lot of work until we,
until the convention is over.
And I think he's smart in that regard because the convention will change the
dynamics of everything. He has to see what happens.
Well, he's throwing out there this, I want three debates and, uh,
Kamala is not, not biting. She's like one debate. Hey, actually,
I have a clip here.
Vice president Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump
take their campaigns to Western states
as they also prepare to meet face to face
in their first presidential candidates debate.
I'm glad that he's finally agreed to a debate
on September 10th, I'm looking forward to it
and hope he sells out.
Trump called for three debates.
I think it's very important that we have them,
I hope she agrees to them, September 4th, September 10th, September 25th.
Harris and her running mate,
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz,
after stops in Michigan and Wisconsin,
are in Arizona Friday,
a key stop in a multi-day battleground state blitz.
Both sides are heavily courting the Latino vote
in the final three months of the campaign.
Harris on Friday picked up the first ever presidential endorsement of the oldest Latino
civil rights organization in the US.
The League of United Latin American Citizens is expected to join Harris for a rally this
weekend in Nevada.
Trump traveled to Montana for a fundraiser and to campaign for a Senate candidate.
He's insisted he has not adjusted his campaign since Harris became the Democratic nominee. I haven't recalibrated strategy at all. It's the
same policies, open borders, weak on crime. She's, I think she's worse than
Biden. While Harris has surged in recent polls, the Trump campaign has dismissed
it as a honeymoon moment. Both the Trump Vance ticket and the Harris-Walls ticket
are ramping up appearances in the handful of
battleground states, building momentum for a high stakes
debate in September. That could be a make or break moment for
either campaign.
Well, she's only planning on doing one from what I can tell.
She has not responded. But we'll see about that. My team is
working on an interview. Yeah, but, but, but, but, but.
Yeah, you're right.
Trump is probably just sitting backs like crazy.
Joe could come out jacked up.
Joe could return, you know, Jill now doing the injections herself.
She doesn't trust anybody.
Maybe Hunter.
Hey dad, I got some good stuff.
And he knows how to do it.
You know, did I read somewhere that that that wacky woman from the secret service who resigned,
that she had like a partial DNA hit on the Coke in the White House and she obfuscated it?
She wanted the evidence destroyed.
Well, clearly, clearly.
Yes, this is, yes, this has been discussed in what you just said, that they had a partial
DNA hit and she wanted the evidence destroyed and they wouldn't do it because it was a violation
of some process and it never got destroyed.
That's what she was angling for.
But we don't know who the partial DNA hit was.
They ended the investigation.
They could do that.
So that's what she did.
So meanwhile, as if it never happened, you know, there was an assassination attempt.
And man, if you look at Instagram, I looked at my daughter's on Instagram.
That's the only way I can keep up with what she's doing.
She doesn't tell me everything.
So I got to go look.
What are you doing?
She's going into the jungle again.
She's doing another reality show.
I think it's like girls in the jungle.
So it's all these kind of cute girls and they throw them in the jungle.
Oh God, it's like naked and afraid.
Yeah, well.
And so I'm scrolling around and
I see people posting things like, it was shrapnel. He didn't get assassinated. There was no assassination attempt.
There was just some shrapnel.
Shrapnel from what?
Exactly.
I mean, if you ever watch the clip of him getting shot,
the teleprompter, which is where they say the shrapnel came from,
was intact. The teleprompter was not hit. I'm just saying people have so... It's as if it never
happened. I mean, it was an amazing moment in American political history. It's like,
we're just back to calling him Needle Dick and else. We just know good, get this guy crazy, weird, weird Vance, weird Trump, blah,
as if it never had, no one is disturbed by it.
And I have a couple of clips here.
This is, so now we have new body cam footage, which really shows us nothing.
But the secret service, body cam footage.
It does.
Told them they need to post the guys over here.
I told them that the secret service, I told them that Tuesday.
I told them to post the guys over here.
What?
I thought you guys were on the roof.
No, we're inside.
I told them to post the guys over here.
I wasn't even concerned about it because I thought someone was on the roof.
I thought that's how we, they kind of had to do it. I thought you guys were on the roof. I thought you guys were on the roof. I thought you guys were on the roof. I thought you guys were on the roof. No, we're inside. I told them to post the f***ing guys over here.
I wasn't even concerned about it because I thought someone was on the roof.
I thought that's how we... I was like, how the hell can you lose a guy walking back and
wait until you get your ass kicked?
I talked to the Secret Service guys, they're like, yeah, no problem, we're going to post
guys over here.
So to put it into context, Ryan, what we're listening there is this local law enforcement
officer, again, just approximately 10 minutes after somebody fired or Thomas Matthew Crooks
fired eight rounds at Donald Trump, saying, look, I told the Secret Service we needed people
back here because he's standing behind the building or the buildings where the shots
were fired from.
And then he says, I told the Secret Service that on Tuesday, presumably there was a site
walkthrough.
Obviously, the shooting happened on a Saturday, July 13th.
So that was at least several days beforehand.
So there's, you know, a new analysis. Okay, but everything is secret service, secret service. I just want to revisit briefly
the theory that we've discussed. This was a very typical FBI six-week cycle.
We've been on this for over a decade and it comes and goes but when it's on the six-week cycle the FBI
some typically some poor
Weak-minded brother is singing al-aqbar online and they they sigh up in for a couple of months
Hey, man, you should go blow something up
And then the guy goes out there just like crooks had a phony baloney detonator with bombs. We don't even
know if the bombs actually worked because we've heard nothing more about them. That's when the
van was whisked away or was it in his car? We don't know. There's some circumstantial evidence
of FBI cell phones and near the FBI, whatever it is, a lot FBI stuff and it's a very typical FBI setup
It's like make it look like someone was gonna try and kill the president with bombs
We even had the mainstream almost as if they were as if someone
Triggered it and said the wrong thing or they were ready for it. Oh Trump falls down afraid of loud noises
And but then the kid went rogue and he brought a rifle and he took some shots
So lo and behold, so this is our six-week cycle theory
We've we've heard this from people who are in the know lo and behold. I'm really from waters to the pool boy. Here we go
Tim pool had an FBI former FBI
agent on his show
Often called a whistleblower. I don't know show often called a whistleblower.
I don't know if he's a whistleblower, but he, he, everybody, everybody's a whistleblower.
I know, I know. But when you tell the truth, you're a whistleblower and he lays out the
six week cycle. Exactly. When the FBI charts their progress, they're looking for a thing that are called stats.
This is something that all law enforcement, you know, this is like quotas, if you will.
And so we need to have stats that say, I have X number of cases in this field and I have
X number of arrests in this type of category.
We're going after MS-13, we're going after organized crime, blah, blah, blah.
We're doing these counterintelligence investigations.
They have a thing that's called a disruption, which means the plot basically got foiled, and they have a thing that's called a dismantlement, which means that this network
was taken apart. And you get more points for a dismantlement than you do for a disruption,
if my memory serves it, maybe backwards, but I think it's that.
So the thing is, is these guys are literally going for gold stars on a board, and you think,
okay, well, would they, you know, sacrifice public safety to do this? If they thought
they can get away with it safely, they will. And the second thing is the oldest reason that's ever existed, it's greed. The senior executive
service in all federal governments, but definitely in the FBI that I was able to experience, they get
paid a five-figure bonus. It's like between 30 and 50, maybe $60,000 if they hit all their metrics.
So they are incentivized to get arrests in certain categories. They're incentivized to do these sort of things.
Okay, sounds pretty much like the six-week cycle. We always thought it was for the budget
so they can justify the budget. Now it turns out, and I'm going to take this guy at his word,
that it's an individual star collection thing. You get more money if you can
disrupt something. And then remember we had that kind of rogue Iran thing or Iran the Iranian one to take him out
Remember that yeah, well listen to this part. Vice President Kamala Harris and former sorry
I'm so bad today. Here we go
The FBI went so hard on January 6th that they overdid the number of hours that they're allowed
to assign to domestic terrorism because they have to spread themselves to international terrorism
and domestic terrorism. They massively overdid it for DT, which is the abbreviation. They did
it so badly that they sent out section chiefs from headquarters to all the field offices
regionally and said, listen, we need you to go through all of your domestic terrorism cases
and find connections to international terrorism so we can recategorize your hours.
Imagine like an attorney bills hours, the FBI assigns the work of an agent against certain
types of categories of cases.
So they had too many what are called 266 cases, those are the domestic terror.
They needed more 415 cases.
And in order to do that, they were like, hey, did you find a dude who is a white supremacist
but he was in a chat room somewhere that later on an al-Qaeda guy went into because we can tie them together
and make this a 415 instead of a 266.
It's the dumbest thing possible.
But when you understand we're talking about bureaucracy here, here's the scariest part
for me.
This has been going on for 20 years.
Yeah.
So that takes us right back to this.
The FBI arresting a Pakistani national in connection
with an alleged plot to assassinate
former president Donald Trump.
There you go.
They wanted a 415, so they just throw that in.
Good to go.
I completely believe this.
Well, I think we both do.
I think this has been believed by us
in one form or another.
Now, what we did, the missing information is the bonus.
Yes. Now we know.
Which is more impetus than just the budget.
It's even better. It's even better.
Because you get personal benefits. You don't just,
I'm doing it for the good of the agency. Yeah.
So it makes it even more, it makes even more sense if you bring that into play.
Yes, yes, yes, exactly.
Yeah, the Pakistani, yeah, that's a good one.
Sure, sure.
Wow.
Everybody's all in on this.
Yeah, meanwhile, everyone is all yelling about crowd sizes and AI and Cabinless.
She's hiring people, $250 to sit in the crowd. Yeah, duh. Actually, she's, she's hiring people $250 to sit in
the crowd yet.
Duh.
That's just $15 an hour.
Oh,
yeah, that's, that's,
whether that's that's another thing.
That's all you read.
Probably true.
That's all you read on X news social.
It's all about that.
It's just, it's boring.
Here's Elon Musk.
He keeps, because I follow him, he keeps posting,
X is the number one news app, okay.
Yeah, he's been pushing that idea.
Yeah.
Now here's the, while we're on this FBI stuff,
there is a couple of kind of parallel weirdnesses going on.
We gotta stop using the word weird.
We have to stop that.
We're using it too much.
I told you.
I called you out.
I know, I'm glad you did, but you just, yeah.
I know, it's bad.
It's bad.
It's bad, but it's bad.
It's one of those bad, I don't like it.
We've been influenced by Tim Waltz.
How bad are we?
Which, according to-
So they're going after, for some reason, Scott Ritter,
yeah, the FBI visited him and Tulsi Gabbard.
She's on that, that fly checker out list or something.
She's irked about it. Yeah, I can imagine.
But what's interesting is that two of them have both discussed this.
Scott Ritter discussing it everywhere he can,
but the best discussion comes off of RT, which he works for.
And I want to play these two clips
and then play Tulsi's clips.
And then see if you can find the commonality,
the commonality between what they both say.
The FBI and the police have raided the New York home
of former US Marine Corps intelligence officer
and current RT contributor, Scott Ritter.
He addressed his followers on social media platforms,
explaining that the FBI has concerns over his link
with RT and Russian media outlets, but...
FBI has executed a search warrant on my home
the search warrant was based upon what they deemed to be probable cause that I
am in violation of the foreign agent registrations act it worked for RT of
course and they executed a search warrant looking for electronic devices, my computers, my cell phone, things of that nature.
Based upon their questions, it appears that they are primarily concerned about my relationship with RT and Sputnik.
Scott himself was not detained in the raid, which is the latest in a string of actions targeting the former UN weapons inspector. Back in June, the US
State Department seized his passport, taking him off a plane as he traveled to attend the
St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. It comes as the threat of assassination has
been hanging over Mr. Ritter for quite some time after he was added to a notorious Ukrainian
kill list for his views on the conflict. Scott says that alternative stance, the US government has effectively declared war on him.
Okay, so far it just sounds like harassment.
Well, the fact that they took him off of a plane.
Oh, I didn't know that part.
I didn't know that part either. I didn't know anything about the kill list.
So this is, RT's actually giving us better reporting
Yeah, so what's the surprise?
shocker
Here's the second part of this. This is absurd in the extreme this this raid on my home was designed to have a chilling effect
I'm to make me think twice about speaking out, about writing, about doing podcasts.
And as I told the FBI, and I'll tell you now, there isn't a snowball's chance in hell that
I'll back down because I'm doing nothing wrong.
Today, the United States government declared war on me.
They declared war on my ability to write, my ability to speak, my ability to interact
with the American people and indeed with a broader
international audience. So be it. We're at war. It's not a war I plan on losing.
Scott Ritter, well, another RT contributor, former Senate aide to Joe Biden, Tara Reid
has repeatedly stated she's been harassed by the FBI too and says there's an ongoing
witch hunt for Americans who hold a different point of view.
He spoke out against the war in Iraq and revealed that the government lied, the US government lied
about the weapons of mass destruction. He spoke out, George Galloway famously spoke out,
and he was a whistleblower, he has been a whistleblower. And then, you know, he was put in prison for charges that he was, you know,
convicted of. And he did his time, he's served his sentence. So I don't think it's related to that
sentencing at all. I think, again, it's just a pattern of what you're seeing in the United
States, which is the surveillance state and authoritative government government, that we have the illusion of free speech,
we have that illusion of a right to travel, but in reality, it's only allowed if we say
what the United States wants people to say.
Otherwise, you're at risk.
Many say that unfortunately the intelligence cabal has really taken over the United States government.
And I think you have seen that pretty clearly just in the recent events around the 2024 election.
Well, yes. No surprise to us. As an aside, someone mentioned in the troll room that we
were on a weird kick previously around Obama time and I went to bingit.io?
Holy crap. We would say the word weird eight, nine, ten times an episode.
It's terrible.
It really is. It's bad.
Okay. So yes, the intelligence community runs the country. Duh. All right.
Yeah. Hello.
Gotcha.
Yes? runs the country. Duh! All right. Yeah. Hello. Gotcha.
Yes? They have not contributed much to the show recently. It's really annoying. Well, where are those AOL.com addresses people? Come on, step it up. So we have
Tulsi on watch list and here she's off the deep end here, but this
interesting that the fact that it seems to me
that she should be happy that there's three air marshals on every flight she takes. You feel like
a lot of safety around you, you know what I mean? So what exactly did Tulsi Gabbard do? Oh is this
Frau Ingram? I'm. I should have warned you
Because everything is traced back to her Tulsi's appearance on Frow's show
Frows show
After she criticized the Biden administration
Right here on the angle, whatever. I haven't watched her in a while, but this is very, that's very strange.
It's no different.
It's always better.
You know, this isn't a side,
I've mentioned this on the show once before.
She used to have a radio show.
Yes.
I think maybe she still does.
No, I don't think so, but she had a radio,
a syndicated radio show, and it was a later show.
It wasn't like during the day,
it wasn't done drive time or anything.
So I tune into it every so often by accident
as I'm going through the channels, if it was later.
And I'd hear it and I always swore,
it sounded like a guy, she sounds like a male on the radio.
For some reason, she just sounds like a male tenor,
not a guy with a baritone voice, but she sounds
male-ish. And I was always stunned by that. Let's return. See, our foreign policy decisions are being
made by unelected people in the military industrial complex who are profiting from us being in a
constant state of war and the national security state that has more power to undermine our freedoms and
liberties when we are in a state of war. Kamala Harris does not have the strength
to stand up to the military industrial complex. Okay that's wild. Joining me now
Tulsi Gabbard former U.S. Congresswoman, Fox News contributor. Tulsi, now you serve
this country in uniform even getting deployed to Iraq. Thank you for going, unlike Tim Walz.
And now you're being surveilled.
I mean, it's a form of surveillance, or hassling, and intrusion upon your freedom to move by
the government.
What is this?
I mean, I didn't believe it really when I first heard about it.
I said, oh, that can't be.
But how does this make you feel?
Laura, this is a clear act of political retaliation.
There's no other way to put it.
You laid out the sequence of events the very next day after my conversation with you on
the air warning the American people about how dangerous a Kamala Harris presidency would
be.
I was placed on this domestic terror watch list, which is called the Quiet Skies list
under the Department of Homeland Security.
The clear pain and real visceral hurt that comes from this is, as you mentioned, like
many Americans, I enlisted because of the terrorist attacks on 9-11 to go after the
Islamist terrorists who attacked us on that day and to now have my own government now turn around and put me
on a domestic terror watch list, it hits to the core and is the ultimate sense of betrayal.
Okay.
Yes, it is a betrayal.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's kind of an amusing betrayal.
I have nothing to add to that.
I have noticed just one of those aside things.
Tulsi does not look good on her if they shoot her from the left side.
Have you noticed this?
She does have angles that make her look better.
Yeah, that straight front on is good and on her, let me see, her right side, the left side
makes her look very old and kind of crackly and then you know that blonde. Her left specifically?
Yes. Her left side, not looking at her left. No, her left side specifically. And that's also the side with the blonde lock.
Oh.
Yeah.
Tell them to look at it.
Be on the lookout for it.
Once you see it, you can't unsee it.
Yeah, I probably have to look at it.
Okay, two.
We look at why they are doing this.
It has a chilling effect.
It sends a warning both to me and to anyone else who
even thinks about daring to criticize our own government, which is a guaranteed protected
right under the First Amendment, that we will be subject to a violation of our Fourth Amendment
right to privacy through this kind of surveillance. And that's the biggest stress that's been
caused by this entire situation, Laura, is now forever.
I will always be looking over my shoulder wondering if and how our government in any of these different agencies
is surveilling me, watching me. Are they reading my text messages? Are they listening to my phone calls?
Yeah, I was going to say yes, yes and yes. That's what I would guess at least.
Now, in a letter from whistleblower attorney Tristan Levitt, he writes that the special mission coverage in
Ms. Gabbard's case reportedly involves two explosive detection canine teams, one transportation
security analyst and explosives, one plane close TSA supervisor, and three federal air
marshals on every flight Ms. Gabbard boards.
Well, do they get her first class seating?
I just find the whole thing peculiar, but did you notice the commonality with the Scott
Ritter clip?
Airplane.
Using the term chilling. Oh. Which you actually noticed when he said it.
Yeah.
Chilling.
Chilling effect.
She says it right at the beginning of that clip.
And I listened to the Ritter clip and he said, this is like code.
Hmm.
You saw they're both, let me hear Tulsi again say chilling.
We look at why they are doing this.
It has a chilling effect.
Did Ritter say that in his first or second clip? I don't remember.
I don't remember what he said, but he said it at a point where you picked up on it.
I was like, probably the second ship.
It's not just chilling, it's chilling effect.
It's exactly the same wordage.
Which is like, well, okay, I guess it does, but
it just seems like a coincidence that of all the people that are being, well, hold on a sec.
They are both military. So DIA CIA.
So it could be the DIA code for chilling, see, chilling effect.
Well I don't know what to make of it, but I just, I did notice it and it was clear as
day and it was the exact same coded language, which always, especially from these two events,
which are nowhere near each other, but they're using the same coded language.
So this is bothering me.
Okay, final clip for Tulsi.
Literally like the Soviet Union, China today, North Korea, any totalitarian regime, but
Donald Trump is a totalitarian, right?
He's the dictator and waiting. Okay
Yeah, this is just and this is what what we know about and we know about it because of these brave whistleblowers from the Air
Marshal Service who are coming forward
What I'm questioning is what are the things that are happening in our government that I don't know about how long have they been?
Surveilling me. This is just the recent occurrence. I would not be surprised to know that there are other government agencies who are also
being weaponized against political opponents, those who dare to challenge this regime of
the Biden Harris administration.
And that that's really what it comes down to and why they have to be stopped.
They are guaranteed the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
I cannot be free.
And you pointed to this.
Yes, exactly.
I cannot be free so long as my government is breathing down my neck and watching my
every move.
I disagree with her here.
I do not think that these agencies or these divisions, and I'm specifically looking at the military industrial base
or the intelligence community,
they're not all in on anybody except themselves.
And as is witnessed by the heavily military
industrial base funded APAC.
It's been one of the most expensive primaries in history.
AIPAC spent 8.5 million dollars for Wesley Bell's campaign to defeat Missouri representative Cory Bush.
She's been a member of the progressive congressional group, the Squad, and a target of AIPAC
because of her critical stance on Israel's war on Gaza since October 7.
Cori Bush is the second member of the squad who has been unseated in a similar AIPAC strategy
in the primaries this year.
Democratic representative from New York, Jamal Bowman, was defeated by pro-Israeli centrist
George Ladimer.
AIPAC put nearly $15 million into Ladimer's campaign trail.
The results showcase the political and economic power of AIPAC and deep divisions among Democrats
over Israel's onslaught on the besieged strip.
But it's not only Democrats who are being targeted.
A Republican representative from Virginia, Bob Good, has lost his seat against John McGuire,
who was endorsed by the Republican-Jewish coalition.
The group attacked Congressman Good after his vote against financial aid to Israel.
AIPAC says these victories are, and I quote, further proof that being pro-Israel is good
policy and good politics on both sides of the aisle.
Meanwhile, unsated Congress members and their supporters slam AIPAC for spending millions
of dollars, and I quote called again to brainwash voters.
Now wait wait the Republican Jewish Alliance is that what she said? What is
it three guys?
Let me listen what you well this is TRT so let me hear what she said.
Meanwhile, unsaid Congress members and their supporters slam AIPAC for
spending millions of dollars.
And I called again to brainwash voters.
I don't know where she said that.
I don't think.
You know, you're just back for the...
But the whole, the whole point is that thing is funded by the, by
the military industrial base.
Sure.
You know, it's, it's, and, you know, the Jews are just basically in it just,
you know, as a sideline,
because look at what they're doing.
Look at how they're ramping up Iran.
And I was listening to a couple other podcasts about Iran.
I don't think Iran's gonna do anything.
I think they're just gonna sit back.
They're not gonna retaliate.
I think they killed the guy themselves.
Yeah, oh yeah.
He was annoying.
He's hanging out, He's over there.
It's they don't like the, the, uh, the, uh, Shia anyway.
You know, there is that thing we brought it up in the last show that there's difference in the religions.
And it's better to have Israel waiting.
I mean, that's terror.
You know, you're waiting, like, do I have to go into my bunker?
Do I have to get into my bomb shelter?
Meanwhile, the USA has to spend millions of dollars
in fuel and efforts to keep all these ships
going around and around.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, it's a horrible situation.
No, it's a great situation.
Lots of money, lots of money.
Back to Tulsi Gabbard and the fact that she probably
is not being targeted by
intelligence.
She's being targeted though, by the Democrat, I've said this before, I'll say it again,
the Democrat party is a cult.
She quit the cult.
She quit the cult and became kind of an independent Republican type.
And they're going after for that reason.
And that's the only thing that's going on, is that.
Okay.
You quit the party.
This happened to anyone who's ever been a Democrat.
It lasts for about a decade.
Well, have they been targeting you since you quit the Democrat party?
That was in 1979.
Oh, so you're done.
You're out now.
Oh, it's been done for years.
I mean, I've been long.
You've been deprogrammed. You're good. It's like, who cares about that guy?
I've been out of that. Yeah. But it's a cult. And so when you quit a cult,
they always go after you right away and they keep hounding you. So you either come back
into the cult or then you just, you know, it takes forever though. So I think that's what they're
doing to her., freaking her out.
So we just put another three and a half billion for Israel to spend on US weapons, according
to CNN.
We're positioning ships, big beautiful ships.
It's great.
Just keep it rolling for a little bit.
And then we have this, this was very odd, this story.
Well, here's the setup, 30 seconds.
Senior EU officials have joined a growing chorus
of condemnation after an Israeli airstrike
on a school compound killed dozens in Gaza City.
The EU's top diplomat, Joseph Varell,
expressed his horror at the attack,
which Gazan officials say killed more than 90 people
sheltering in the school.
Egypt and Qatar are demanding an urgent investigation, and the U.S. has said it's
quote, deeply concerned about the strike. Israel has repeatedly claimed that Hamas uses schools
as cover in the wake of the October 7th terror attacks. So the way they make it sound and I've
could have clipped in 20 of these. The way that they can- I have the NPR version if you want to play it before you analyze it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I do want to hear that.
Where is it?
Under Israel.
Got it.
Hit it.
Vice President Harris, ahead of a campaign rally in Las Vegas tonight, said once again
that there have been too many civilian casualties in the Israel-Hamas war.
Israel has a right to go after the terrorists that are Hamas, but as I have said many, many
times, they also have, I believe, an important responsibility to avoid civilian casualties.
The school was being used as a shelter for Palestinians displaced by the war in an area
where people have been displaced since the war started in October. The Israeli military
says they were targeting a Hamas command center within the school.
The attack came early this morning when many people were praying in an area used as a mosque.
And then you have the 14-second version, which is the shortest of them all, on PBS, which
is called Last Israeli Strike.
An Israeli airstrike in Gaza hit a school today killing at least 80 people.
The strike happened during morning prayers according to witnesses. Israeli defense forces
say Hamas militants were operating out of the school. Hamas disputes the claim. Okay, so all
the other reports I heard was according to the Hamas medical information source, in addition to that, when they say
school, school, school, it was a Saturday.
I looked it up.
There's not a lot of kids who go to school in the Muslim faith on Saturday, but they
kind of make it sound like they killed kids.
They certainly started that way.
And I think they did kill some senior
dude, didn't they? It's kind of omitted from the reports.
I thought that senior dude that was killed was in some other operation.
Could be. But this is now being used as a wedge.
This is one of these examples where- I'm sorry. This is a spokes hole from the
US State Department. This is one of these examples where the law of unintended consequences in war
creates some just disastrous consequences. As the White House said today, although we
understand and recognize that Israel needs to target terrorists, that they're deeply concerned,
and that Israel needs to take more precautions to protect civilians.
From the American point of view, what they're using this for, hopefully, is to give some concern, and that Israel needs to take more precautions to protect civilians.
From the American point of view, what they're using this for, hopefully, is to give some
more momentum for the ceasefire hostage deal, that it kind of underscores the urgency.
It's kind of a now or never time, which is why we're hoping to have a kind of diplomatic
train of representatives from the United States with this August 15th date set
for this week to finally bring the table the parties to the table and reach
agreement. In a very sad and tragic way today's event gives the United States
additional leverage and pressure because while there is this tragedy that took
place this morning in Gaza there's another disaster looming on their
northern border with Hezbollah.
The Israel understands that they need the United States to back them up right now while
they're standing and bracing for retaliatory attacks on both Iran and Hezbollah.
They're heavily dependent on the United States for weapons and other assets, intelligence.
So what in the best case scenario this morning's event can do is to create some kind of
momentum and incentive for the United States to say to Israel, look, we need some concessions
from you to reach that ceasefire in Gaza. You need us more, in fact, than we need you at this point.
And Netanyahu, it's time to seal the deal. Okay, working a deal would look good for Kamala.
Okay, working a deal would look good for Kamala. That's from the State Department, so I'll take that as some genuine information.
But still, we got to keep the ships in the region.
Can't be giving up on that.
Speaking of…
Yes?
I wanted to talk about Ukraine before we...
Oh, goodness.
...get about that.
Mainly because of the Ukraine going into Russia, and I have the three clips.
Yeah, so they say.
Well, you know, maybe it's true, maybe it's not.
I'm suspicious, yeah.
But I have the three clips. One is the newest Ukraine into Russia NPR clips 55 seconds
Oh
Yes newest yeah got it Ukrainian president Zelensky is praising his country's troops for their incursion into Western Russia
Which caught the Russian military by surprise as in peers Greg Myrie reports
These were Zelensky's most explicit remarks so far on Ukraine's ongoing offensive.
In his nightly video address, President Zelensky said he'd receive updates on the operation
to, quote, push the war into the aggressor's territory.
He went on to say that the offensive is exactly the kind of pressure that's needed, pressure
on the aggressor.
Ukrainian officials have been tight-lipped about the offensive that began with Tuesday's
surge into Russia's Kursk region. But some information is starting to emerge. Ukrainian
troops are beginning to post on social media from inside Russia. They show themselves tearing down
Russian flags and standing in front of road signs to indicate they've entered a village or town.
Okay.
Now I've, I've read reports, everything from Putin is freaked out.
He's rushing around state of emergency in Moscow.
And then I see reports of him going, well, there's something going on.
We got to take care of that.
I'm sorry.
Also some reports about, I don't have the guy's name and I,
and I feel bad about it,
but there's some general that has been running things,
this Ukraine thing and they're trying to get rid of them.
On the Ukraine side or the Russian side? No, no, on the Russian side.
Oh, typical Russian way of getting rid of somebody. Yeah.
So I have two analysis clips.
There's Ukraine analysis one and two. Let's just play these and then we can talk about it.
Olga Robinson there. Well, we can bring in Peter Dickinson now. He is editor of Ukraine
Alert at the Atlantic Council Think Tank. Peter is joining us this evening from Kiev. Very
good to have you with us, Peter, once again. And so I have to say we've not been hearing that much from Ukrainian
authorities specifically about this.
I did see one comment from one Ukrainian MP, of course, I'm sure who
you're very familiar with, Alexei Kontcharenko, who told the BBC that
Ukraine was trying to take back military initiative here.
What do you make of what is happening?
Well, you're absolutely right.
The Ukrainian authorities have been very tight-lipped about
this whole affair. They've said very little. President Zelensky has alluded to it in some
of his recent comments, but nothing specific and certainly nothing that would give a clear indication
of what Ukraine's ultimate intentions are. And that fits with a broader pattern of surprise.
ultimate intentions are. And that fits with a broader pattern of surprise.
The Ukrainians managed to plan this operation.
It seems to be a fairly sophisticated
and complex military offensive,
and prepare it and plan it over presumably
an extended period without anybody being aware
of these preparations.
So certainly the Russians were taken by surprise.
It would seem that Ukraine's Western partners were taken by surprise.
And frankly speaking, most people in Kiev here were also taken by surprise.
So they seem to have achieved quite a remarkable success given the openness of the battlefield these days,
the sort of ubiquity of drones and the sense, certainly on the battlefield in East and South
Ukraine, that there is no real opportunity for secrecy.
Here, Ukraine has shown that they can still have, they can still spring a surprise.
Valery Garisimov, who replaced Nikolai Makarov and currently serves as the commander of all
Russian forces in Ukraine, considered one
of the most powerful men in Russia and one of three people to hold access to Russia's
nuclear weapons.
That's the guy you're talking about.
Could be.
Meanwhile, this report from the BBC is kind of weird.
Like it kind of confirms your...
You say kooky instead of weird.
Did I say weird again? You say kooky instead of weird
Did I say weird again said literally said weird?
Flag on I wish you know, I I'm not as good as you as turning this stuff off
But you have to keep hounding me I will trust me
Kooky.
Maybe that, you know, what really gets to me, to my, you gets that,
you had that submarine sound honking sound.
Okay. Put it at the ready and just honk me when I do it.
There you go.
Okay. All right.
It's at the ready.
Yeah.
And that, of course, just annoys our listeners and producers because it's like, why are these
guys so upset?
Why are these guys preoccupied with what they say?
Yeah.
Well, it's a thing.
It's just a thing.
We do this because we do, it's part of our schtick.
Here we go, part two.
Well, talking about that surprise, I mean, we did also hear that Washington was reportedly
surprised by this.
And you know, I was at the NATO summit just a few weeks ago there in Washington, DC, and
there was this continued conversation about using longer range missiles to strike military
targets deeper within Russia.
And many of the Baltic leaders that I spoke to all for it. Washington didn't back it at that stage. So I just
wonder what do you think some of these Western military partners will be making
of what we're seeing? Well I think that's one of the big questions of
this operation and perhaps also one of the reasons behind this operation. Again
you're quite right to say that there has been a lot of resistance
from Ukraine's partners, particularly the US and particularly Germany, about the use
of Western weapons in Russia, against Russian targets within Russia. And Ukraine's been
pushing very strongly to have those restrictions lifted, to have the right to be able to attack.
And Ukrainians have been very vocal, saying they cannot be
expected to win a war whilst they're being asked to fight essentially with one hand,
tight-mined their backs.
So what we're seeing now with this very open and for the first time an actual direct invasion
of Russia by the Ukrainian military is them saying, well, you don't need to fear escalation.
You don't need to fear Russia's red lines
because actually Russia will not react
in some dramatic fashion in terms of escalation.
There's nothing there.
It's essentially a bluff.
So I think Ukraine is calling the bluff.
Well, they didn't do this necessarily with our stuff.
They did it with F-16s, they did it with drones,
which is yay for Eric Schmidt.
I have no idea what's going on with this.
And maybe they did or didn't use our stuff, but they're not supposed to use our stuff.
Not without permission.
I don't know.
This is going to develop into, this is not a good thing.
I don't think.
Oh, we called their bluff. Okay. Well, you don't know. This is gonna develop into, this is not a good thing. I don't think. Oh, we called their bluff.
Okay, well, you don't know that.
What was the bluff?
That we're not gonna do anything?
Just the whole thing makes no sense.
It just seems like they had a plan to do something like this
and they did it to prove they could do it.
It was just meaningless.
Yeah.
All right. That's all I got on just meaningless. Yeah. All right.
That's all I got on your crane.
Okay.
Just on the military front, one of our dudes named Ben checked in.
Centcom Central Command has some kind of cyber event going on.
It's been going on throughout the whole weekend.
kind of cyber event going on. It's been going on throughout the whole weekend.
And even sentcom.mil is unresponsive, which is their main website.
And you didn't hear about that anywhere else.
No, it'd be Iran again.
Could be Russia, could be Ukraine.
I like Iran.
And I, and while we're, while we're on that, I have a CrowdStrike EULA lawsuit update from Rob.
Clownstrike?
Yeah, Clownstrike.
I'll write that down.
Yes.
Clownstrike, you know, the boys, David Boyce, they're suing.
Yeah, the big boys.
The big boys are suing.
So Delta is really mad.
They're saying, hey, man, because of you guys, we lost a lot of money.
But Rob got a hold of Delta's reply to CrowdStrike's response, which was sent by David Boyce himself.
And Rob says it's interesting because it touches on the contractual limitations on
damages that CrowdStrike or ClownStrike has cited. Boyce has not yet invoked the F word meaning
fraud but he does allege quote gross negligence and quote willful misconduct and to support these
allegations he cites CrowdStrike's own reports when they came out with a very
technical reason for what had happened. As for fraud, he makes a not-so-veiled suggestion that
discovery will dislodge even more evidence. The letter speaks of a second bug that made the problem
even worse. In response to CrowdStrike's claim that Delta caused its own troubles through bad IT operations, Boyce argues that Delta was just relying on CrowdStrike and Microsoft.
So they're estimating damages at half a billion dollars.
So this EULA thing may fall apart.
Wouldn't that be great?
It would be great if it actually falls apart because then it opens the door to...
Everything.
What it does is it opens the door to better quality products.
Amen.
Because right now it uses the all-purpose excuse to make crap and sell it.
And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in clown strikes.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only Mr. John C. DeVore!
In the morning to you, Mr. Adam Crane.
The morning ship has seen boots and graphite in the air, subs in the water,
and dames and knights out there.
Hello, troll count!
I didn't, I think I counted most of them.
Oh, 2358.
Good troll count.
We have more trolls in the troll room than Kamala Harris has at one of her rallies.
This is good.
Way to go trolls.
How many?
I didn't get the number.
2358.
For Sunday?
Yeah.
It's down 100.
It is down 100, but we're also at one hour and 40 minutes because you insisted upon doing
Ukraine.
And if there's anything that scares trolls off, it's Ukraine news.
It's almost as bad as Africa news.
The trolls are in the troll room.
You can join them at trollroom.io.
We highly recommend that.
It's fun.
We are one of the few podcasts that have figured out this is the way to do them.
You do the show live.
You have, in essence, a live studio audience, although much bigger than the phony, baloney
Hollywood guys.
And you can say, and you're interacting.
I'm reading what people are saying.
Clip custodians sending me links.
I was like, oh, it's this guy from Russia.
This expands.
We have producers.
We have over 2000 producers who are on our ass throughout the entire show. This is, this expands. We have producers, we have 2000, over 2000 producers
who are on our ass throughout the entire show.
This is good.
This is how it should be, because it's value for value.
Know what I'm saying?
Everyone contributes.
We also recommend that you use a modern podcast app
to listen and be alerted when we go live
or any of the shows that go live, no agenda stream.
They have a ton of live shows there, but there's others as well. There's even a Mastodon account. I think it's at Podcast Live or
something. You can see whenever a podcast goes live, there's a lot. There's always somebody going
live and you can be alerted in the podcast app where you get all of your podcasts. We recommend
you drop your legacy app because so many more features.
And with all the deplatforming that's going on three to four a day from Spotify and from
Apple, why don't you just keep listening to the podcast that you want to and support them
all through the modern podcast, podcastapps.com.
Value for value is still our model, although we are desperately seeking an exit strategy.
We got another note from somebody who knows about the cable business and that wasn't quite
so rosy as the previous one with the spreadsheet.
The thing that stuck out for me was, if you guys are going to own cable, forget putting
it out as a podcast.
They'll never go for it.
You get those notes from that producer? Yeah, I got them.
Yeah.
I don't know.
It didn't, didn't sound as great to me.
I thought they were just negative Nelly stuff.
I mean, you can say this about anything, any project you want to do.
You'll find some expert and it's usually an expert.
Yes, typically.
We'll have a million reasons why it won't work, which is just a good sign.
And we really know the reason why it won't work is because we don't want to do any work.
Yeah, that's why we're going to go away.
We're going to do this.
Oh yeah, we're doing this because Mimi wants it.
That's why we're going to do this.
It's going to happen.
We don't have any advertising. It turns out
most podcasts don't have advertising. Wall Street Journal ran a big article saying,
all the money goes to the top 1% of podcasts. I got to say that's probably true.
Most of the money and even that it's all down. It's down. You know, their CPMs are, they're down and that's not even taking into account inflation.
You know, it's not good out there.
And by the way, it's not good on cable.
It's not good anywhere.
You'd think we're in some kind of recession, John.
Yeah, you'd think.
What does the hair and hooker index say?
Have you checked recently? Well, no, but there's been a number of articles written about the,
they use hair and hookers, they use hair and strippers.
Oh, well.
And the stripper count is different than hookers, because the hooker theory,
you can just look and you can see.
You don't have to go in anywhere.
With the strippers, they have to actually ask the
strippers you have to ask them and so the hook the hair part which you do you
have to ask the hairdressers and they'll tell you well you know people aren't
doing as much and you have to ask the hookers. I'm sorry not the hookers
the strippers you have to ask the strippers are you get are the tips as
good as they used to be. That's right. And the guy, she'll say, well, you know, maybe not because you've been better.
Yeah.
And, um, what's that girl gonna do?
Have you called Raven recently?
Have you checked in with Raven?
Raven's she's down in Mexico and so, uh, getting a butt lift.
So, uh, so we're not the only ones who noticed this, but you know, it's hard to say.
I mean, I get a lot of notes from people saying, I know that you're bitching about
the donations being weighed down, but we're broke.
Yeah, there's that.
Absolutely.
Well, I mean, an entire tech network basically went out of business.
The other thing is if you broke, if you bought a Starbucks coffee in the last month, are you that broke?
Yeah, people make choices.
Well, they should make the choice against the Starbucks coffee and send us the...
What is it?
What is one of those coffees?
Nine bucks?
$18?
$18?
I don't know, it's very expensive these days. That's okay. Well, the model remains
the same. If you want us to stay, then support us. It's that simple. It's that simple. Now
for today, we have some people to thank in our time, talents and treasure equation, because
that's what it is. Dame Kenny Ben came in with the artwork that we chose for episode 1684 titled that No Guff.
Nice throwback, callback to the old times, old timey language, no guff.
And we didn't find a lot of very inspiring art.
And this was, yeah, I think we both said, yeah, this is good. And Dame Kenny Ben made a very
simple piece, but nice, nice font that she used, kind of a, what is this, a typewriter font?
Is that what this is? Yeah, it's one of the typewriter fonts.
And she just put words on there, bizarre, quirky, wacky, kooky, no agenda, agenda Adam Curry John C. Dvorak functional and for my money very
usable because that was what was playing in everybody's mind this weird word with
Tim Waltz getting credited for it so it worked it was spot-on now there were
other things you know the thing is I remember I was pushing for packet filtered.
Yes, you were.
From Sir Shug.
I thought it would be misunderstood.
I don't think many people would get it.
You didn't like it at all.
You hated it.
I didn't hate it.
I just said I don't...
You pulled rank and said, we're going to do Bazaar, quirky, wacky, kooky.
No, I did not.
I did not pull rank.
This is a lie.
It's a string of lies you keep stringing up. It's no good.
I eventually agreed that the... Well, there was a lot of... We haven't done a pure font or type
true cover for years. We have not. And they're very kind. It is a good, it's, it's legit. So it was very legit. It was, it was super legit. It was good.
It was good. And I liked it. I liked it. Um, a lot of AI again,
AI, I mean, it's just going down. There was a big study that came out.
Let me see. Um,
adverse impacts of revealing the presence of artificial intelligence technology in product
and service descriptions on purchase intentions.
The mediating role of emotional trust and the moderating role of perceived risk.
Synopsis according to CNN, brand should avoid this popular term, it's turning off customers.
So people do, according to the study,
this is the Journal of Hospitality Marketing and Management,
but they did have 5,000 people in the study.
AI is not a good thing to promoting your product.
Take that Apple iPhone,
of course they have Apple intelligence, which is different.
But they...
I can see this being a fact.
It's annoying to hear it all the time, constantly.
AI, this AI, that.
You know, it's bogus.
Yeah.
Most of it isn't AI.
It's just some algorithm or something.
Yeah, exactly.
But people are turned off by it.
So good job, Tim Cook.
See how that works out for you.
And of course, because this also sucks.
I mean, most AI art just is no good.
I like the AI art that came in that has a picture of, of it's called Cuddly Timmy and it's a bear
eating spaghetti or something.
That came in today.
That, that isn't from-
By Dropco.
I think it came in before today.
Because I saw it a couple days ago.
Submitted July 11th.
July 11th?
What?
No.
Seems to be inaccurate.
Yeah, I think everything seems like it's July. So I think it came in today, August 11th.
That does seem to be inaccurate.
Well, whenever it came in, I'm pretty sure I saw yesterday the day before.
Yeah, but not on a show day.
It wasn't on a show.
It wasn't there.
But whatever the case, I just like it because it looks like that guy,
Tim, the tampon Tim because it looks like that guy, Tim, the tampon, Tim, it looks like him and it's, but it's a,
it's a cuddly teddy bear looking thing.
I don't know what prompts he did to get that to work, but, uh,
I thought it was very funny personally. And it's all AI.
Well, so far, I mean, by the way, artists jury is still out. I'm not,
I'm not all in like John is yet.
And all I see is AI stuff. More AI. Stop it.
Nick Clipcrestodian just did a pixel. He's a pixel Mike.
This is the anti AI art. Okay. Well, even prompt jockeys are appreciated here.
Well, even prompt jockeys are appreciated here. NoahGenderArtGenerator.com, everybody can participate.
You can play along while you're listening.
You can see what people are uploading.
It's always fun to see what artists think is going to catch our attention.
I'm very anti-AI.
And when it comes to art, it just all looks kind of the same.
It's like, okay.
And you can use it as a tool.
You can use it as a tool. You can use it as a tool.
But just a bigot. You're bigoted.
Yes. I am AI bigoted. AI, B I G O T. I am AI bigot. That's correct.
So thank you very much, Dame Kenny Ben, another fine Dutch master of the arts.
Now let's thank our producers who came in with the treasure of the time
talent treasure equation
Now of course we appreciate anyone who gives up their Starbucks to support the show you can do it for every single episode
You can do sustaining do date donations go to no agenda donations calm
We do like to highlight just like Hollywood our executive and associate executive producers
That's why you get a credit the credit is usable anywhere credits are recognized
your your LinkedIn profile you can use it there as there's something for your
resume or even open an IMDB account if you don't have one and $200 above gets
you an associate executive producer we read your note $300 and above executive
producer and we read your note and $300 and above executive producer, and we read your note.
And am I reading this correctly that Sir Cross Threaded Wheel Stud came in,
then saved the week?
Yeah.
Wow.
It's actually three, he considers this and we have to obviously credit three
people.
Three donations.
Yes.
Three donations of 11, 111.11.
donations. Yes. Three donations of 11111.11. But if you, if you do a 333, what is it? This is a rubelizer donation. 333333 rubelizer. Yeah. India, Tangle, Mike, standby, 33, 33, 33, Robolizer out.
Now I don't know, now is he, is this a new guy being knighted as Sir Cross-Threaded Wheelstead?
Because I don't-
I believe so.
I don't remember this name.
I'll read his note here, which is penned-
Do we have him on the list to be knighted? We do not. That's why I'm questioning it.
Ah, so okay. Then we have a conundrum. Well, I mean, I don't have his name. He says,
well, here's okay. Here's why I thought he should be on the list. ITM to switch your rules.
111111 for my sweet sister Dame Cece. 111111 for Reed Huntley in honor of his late father who was my cousin and a help to them?
Help to all.
Oh, okay, help to all.
Selfishly I take credit for 111111.
Please award me the title of Sir Cross-Threaded Wheel Stud.
Thanks for sharing your insights.
So, I don't...
Yeah, so he needs to be knighted.
Okay, but I don't know his name, so we just say congratulations.
Well, since he didn't...
I mean, it's on the check I can go get his name But since he didn't put it on his note
I assume that he wants not to be known by his name, but I sure crossed the road wheel stud
Well, he will be knighted today and I think appropriately so and we thank you very very much
I'm gonna just throw out a gratuitous karma for him. That's awesome. You've got karma
No You've got karma. Now, onward with Sir Victor in Corvallis, Oregon, 67371.
With this donation of 640 plus fees, I'm upgrading from baronet to baron. All right. And you're on the list for the upgrade. And my new title, Sir Victor, Sir Victor the Baron
of the Willamette Valley in Corvallis, Oregon.
Okay, we got you.
Thank you, Sir Victor.
Sir Jack Ash in Snohomish, Washington, 388.88.
And this is a, a, a congratulation for John Amimi,
ITM gents, congrats to John Amimi,
very respectfully, Sir Jack Ash. And we thank you, Sir Jack Ash.
This one here blows up my spreadsheet.
You might want to take it.
Sir Matthew in Hanover, Pennsylvania, 33342.
He says, I've been a man overboard for too long.
My last donation was in 2017.
Please de-douche me.
You've been
Deduced I have been back listening for the last six weeks or so since before the assassination attempt on Trump with this being a
Momentous year of my life. I'm requesting some various forms of karma
Okay on July 24th. I turned 40 July 29th. I celebrated 18 years of marriage with my wonderful wife. I also made my wife filet John's steak au poivre with roasted sweet potatoes risotto.
After a battle with our local school district over the placement of my youngest son, we
got an autism support classroom open where they should already have one.
After 15 years working with my in-laws as a financial advisor, we have begun ownership
transition so they can finally retire.
A big hiring karma please as we search
for an additional licensed advisor
to help support our clients.
Thanks for all that you both continue to do.
Glad to be back at the table enjoying a nice old fashioned.
Adam, dealer's choice of jingles please.
That blows out my spreadsheet too.
He says the ones I put together for my
night hood were a nightmare.
Sir Matthew and night since 2017, one of the
founding producers back in 2010 PS in 2023, I
was diagnosed with celiac disease and ADHD.
So that was fun.
Unfortunately, I did the Moderna COVID vaccine
in 2020, which triggered the celiac. Maybe.
Maybe anything is possible. Do you have a,
do you have a jingle that you'd like to play for him?
I think we've have,
have not played the share a secret jingle forever.
Okay. Okay. Let's play the share a secret jingle.
Oh, there's no winning.
We don't like to foster a competitive atmosphere, but we laugh a lot.
Now everyone hug and share a secret.
Yeah, good choice.
And a karma.
He did need some karma, so I'll give him that.
You've got karma.
Onward with...
Sir Pursuit of Peace and Tranquility of three three two three three he sent a note in keeping it simple ITM
He says the nation for August three three three three three love the show
Please grant me the tile of Viscount per accounting below and he's got all the accounting
Adam, please throw in a penny to align my total donations with the universe
throw in a penny to align my total donations with the universe. There it is. No jingles, no karma, sincerely sir, pursuit of peace and tranquility in the
lands of red clay and cherry trees. Beautiful. He's got a lot of numbers
to add it up. Hey there's Jason Rich, I know Jason Rich, he's a rancher, he's a
good rancher, up in Colorado I want to say. Let's read rancher, he's a good rancher, caught up in Colorado, I wanna say.
Let's read his note, 333.
ITM Gents, longtime listener, second time donor.
Yes, our regenerative ranching business,
which includes direct to consumer beef and hogs,
one of the founding members of the beef initiative,
now also includes agritourism, farm stays,
and our on-farm store.
Our August and September bookings have fallen off
so we are offering a 20% discount to no agenda listeners with code
ITM20 on our booking website richranches.holidayfuture.com.
That's W-R-I-C-H-R-A-N-C-H-E-S richranches.holidayfuture.com.
Come visit Western Colorado, enjoy local food and wine,
shake your rancher's hand
and support a small regenerative ranch.
Thank you for your courage, Jason and Teresa Rich.
Rick, he says Rick, I always pronounce it rich,
but I guess it's Rick.
And you can also find him on Airbnb.
That's so nice, thank you very much, Jason.
And I met him at White Oak Pastures in Georgia when I went down there. You can also find him on Airbnb. That's so nice. Thank you very much, Jason.
And I met him at White Oak Pastures in Georgia when I went down there.
Nice guy.
I'll give them both a karma.
You've got karma.
I have another long note from Anonymous in St. John's, Arizona, 202.
I started listening to No Agenda in 2017.
This is my fourth donation. I think the reason No Agenda in 2017. It was my fourth donation. I think
the reason No Agenda donations are down is No Agenda has a lot more competition from
independent dissident voices over the last couple of years. Thanks mainly to Rumble and
X and even YouTube as they're relaxing their censorship.
Oh, please. YouTube is censoring people left and right.
Which gives brings us to the bonus clip.
Yeah. Yeah. This was kind of a sad moment.
Longtime Google.
I got it. I got it.
OK. One more time. Let's just pretend we didn't do any of that.
Longtime Google executive and former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki has died.
She had lung cancer. She played a key role in the success of Google, coming on as one of the first employees after
renting her garage to Google's founders.
For almost a decade, Wojcicki was the head of YouTube, which she'd urged Google to acquire.
Susan Wojcicki, also a wife and mother of five, was 56 years old.
56, man. Lung cancer is the worst. My mom died of lung cancer.
Yeah. Kind of a turbo version.
Yes, it took. Yeah.
My mom was alive a lot longer than Susan's sickness. That went very, very fast.
Turbo, gee.
And she really liked censoring all of that misinformation about COVID and
vaccines.
Yep.
Don't want to say anything about it.
Little irony there, but not the time to speak ill of the dead.
No, no sir.
That said,
no agenda is still my go-to source for reliable independent information of
what's really going on in the world. You guys have a serious,
you guys have serious competition these days.
And almost every other source I follow is utilizing
value for value, but all in all, you guys are still the best.
However, value for value is spreading.
And those of us who are willing to financially support
quality work, we spread much thinner than we were
even two or three years ago.
Well, hold on a second.
It would be just dandy if everybody
had a sustaining donation.
You can lower the amount.
Everyone spreads it out.
That's a pipe dream.
But that would be good,
but people don't do that.
No.
I took Adam's advice and refused to have my photo taken
by TSA on a recent flight from Phoenix to Oakland.
I've already been photographed
for their facial identity
database, however, the sneakiness of this program
is what caused me to refuse continued participation.
The TSA agent told me no problem and just made sure
my ID matched my boarding pass.
However, when I went through the hands up,
don't shoot computer screening, I was flagged
for suspicious items
in both my crotch and buttocks area.
Hey, what's that in your pants?
I had to be patted down like a criminal.
I complained to TSA supervisors, but to no avail.
Good luck.
The flight was then delayed, in my honest opinion,
due to my noncompliance.
I have good reason to believe TSA was reviewing
the video from my encounter, trying to determine if they had reason to ban me from my flight.
Eventually they cleared the flight for boarding and I was able to board without incident.
Although I had, it's a chilling effect by the way, without incident,
although I had airline personnel giving me suspicious looks during the process.
What's that in your crotch?
My father grew up in El Cerrito. We took the ride there during my trip to the Bay area.
I'd talked about John and Adam with my parents many times,
jokingly acting like I actually knew you guys. Obviously I don't,
but sometimes it feels that way from being a long time listener to the
podcast. And he says, I was disappointed.
I missed the Bay area meetup and half jokingly told my
parents that we should try to find John's house and stop by.
Yeah.
I'm sure John would be happy to hear that my parents talked me out of this.
What are you packing?
Anonymous?
Anyway, thank you very much.
Dan Richmond, Alchua, Florida.
Been a while.
Ella, Alachua.
Alachua, there you go, thank you.
Or something like that.
$200.66, been a while guys, please deduce.
You've been deduced.
Adam, you were in the recent Bon Jovi documentary on Hulu filmed in 2022 to 2023.
Yes, hopefully I was credited as VJ Emeritus.
It featured John Bon Jovi constantly surrounded by masked servants.
Not only that, he's also lost his voice and his mind.
Sad, yeah.
If you just go on YouTube and look for John Bon Jovi lost his voice, oh man.
What happened?
Oh, he can't sing anymore.
He can't hit the notes.
Did he blow his vocal cords out from the screaming?
I think so.
I mean, he just can't.
It was like,
Oh, living on a prayer.
He's like,
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, Yeah, I would think that really does always put a lot of stirring on his voice But it could happen PG Kelly's next on the list. He's in Los Angeles, California 200 bucks
Adam John and the rest of the no agenda listeners
I come to you in great need many of you already know that I lost my sister PG Chris Linda one year ago today
I've been working with attorneys and finally found out that
Does I find found one that does both
medical records reviews as well as medical malpractice wrongful death
long suits if wrongdoing is found there are many odd issues with Lindas Karen
the Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center and question and question that
questions so it should say that investigating. My attorney is anxious to get started.
However, I spent all my money.
I reach out to you and help raising funds
so I can move in the next step,
the medical records review, donate, promote, share,
they'll link, whatever you can do to get the word out.
And it's helped fund Linde's extensive medical records
review and it's, I never heard of this operation. Give, Give send go. Yeah, it's the Christian crowdfunding site. Give send
Oh gives send to go justice for Linda with a Y
Prayers are welcome. Bless you all PG Kelly PG. Yeah, he's been listening to the show
I think from the from show episode number one
He's been around been around for for a long, long time.
All right.
All right, brother.
We hope that works out.
It's a give sango.com slash justice number four Linda with a Y.
And there's another Linda John, you might as well.
Well, Linda LuPatkin, she's up.
She's in Lakewood, Colorado, believe it or not.
And she's says she would like some jobs, Karma.
And then she says for a resume that gets resume, resume, resume, resume, resume, resume, resume
that gets results, visit imagemakersinc.com.
Your go-to for all your executive resume and job search needs is Image Makers Inc. with
a K. And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and Resume,
and writer of resumes, and she's good, everyone likes her.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
Hey, there we go.
You've got karma.
That little freeze.
Hey, that's it.
Oh no, we have one more, Joshua Parker in Round Rock, Texas, 200.
Associate executive producer.
He says, keep up the great work.
I'm just chipping in for some of that sweet, sweet jobs karma.
Josh Parker from Austin.
Thank you, Josh.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You got karma.
There you go.
That's our list of executive and associate executive
producers. We appreciate you all very, very much. These credits are real, as I said earlier,
and of course we'll be thanking everybody above $50. We don't go below that for reasons of
anonymity, but we appreciate everyone who does a sustaining donation. You can give up at least
one Starbucks for the show. Think about it. four more years. Thank you all again for supporting the show for episode 1685. Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Order! Order! Shut up, slave!
Shut up, slave!
Shut up, slave!
Yowza. Do I have a couple of clips that'll probably liven things up?
Okay.
It's about deep fake porn.
Well, it's about time.
So...
Or as we like to say, Veep fake.
And so here we go. This is a four-parter. This is from PBS.
What? A four-parter on PBS?
Yeah, PBS.
Wow. Wow. Who expected that?
That's it?
Deep fake porn PBS is the first clip.
Sexual images posted online without one's consent have long been a problem. That's it. Deepfake porn PBS is the first clip.
Sexual images posted online without one's consent have long been a problem, starting
with revenge porn.
But deepfake and AI technology's ability to manipulate photos and even videos has made
things worse.
Even Taylor Swift has been a victim of AI-generated sexual images. Now Google has announced new steps to combat sexually explicit deep fakes in their search
results.
But there is no one-size-fits-all solution for this complex problem.
Parash Devey is a senior writer at Wired who's been reporting on all of this and joins us
now.
Parash, thank you so much for joining us.
How quickly have we seen the
rise of non-consensual sexual images online? And what is driving this?
I mean, it's huge. It's a huge problem. The doubling of these reports over the last couple
of years is what we've been seeing in places like the UK and the US. And it's in part driven
by those deep fakes that you were talking about.
It is also driven in part by the porn industry, right? And this is all part of the porn economy
now. People are paying to download images and videos of this nature.
The non-consensual nature, yes. But I would draw a distinction between porn and this non-consensual
image-based sexual abuse, which is not considered porn.
You know, porn is generally viewed as more consensual.
Now, I just want to say,
one of our producers, Eric Pepper,
decided he was going to send me every single back issue
of Wired magazine that he possesses,
which has been quite tedious. I go to the PO box and the guy
comes out with like, what is this? Comes out with a trolley. And Wired magazine has been wrong on
just about every single cover they have ever published. Seriously, the web is dead. This
machine will change the world. The web is dead.
One pill to a race.
You should take shots at some of these covers and put together a compendium to prove this
point of yours that you're making.
Well there's a lot of AI stuff from 2002.
That was the, yeah, okay.
I mean it's all, it's all, everything they've done is wrong.
So okay, let's hear about, let's hear what the what the well this it doesn't mean that this guy's off
I actually had was skeptical of this character cuz he came from wired but then at the same time
He's actually making some decent points. Okay, he's
It's okay. It's okay. It's okay. All right. Well, it's not a cover. It's a PBS special
Yeah, okay
according to the company, Sensity, 96% of deep fakes are sexually
explicit and feature women who didn't consent to the creation of the content. Who is most
vulnerable to being victimized in this way? It's everyone. There's been recent surveys
that have shown it's men, it's young boys. There's a huge trend that have shown it's men, you know, it's young boys.
There's a huge trend of sextortion that's been happening.
It's anyone that has their photo on the internet, which at this point is pretty much all of
us.
Google has said, Parash, that it will reduce the prominence and relevance of deepfake images
in its searches.
That addresses deepfakes, but what about actual images that are used without consent?
Does Google go far enough to address those victims?
So Google already takes those measures that you described, that they've just recently
applied to deepfakes.
But what I've reported recently is that the key issue here is that there are numerous
ideas on the table that Google could adopt to reduce the burden
on victims of image-based sexual abuse.
These are ideas proposed by survivors, their advocates, even employees within Google.
And Google has just refused to adopt these ideas in part because they're worried about
over-censorship, in part because they're worried it's coming off as too much of a regulator
of the internet. But there are some basic ideas here that it's just unfathomable why they haven't pursued
them.
Well, if Google does that, I'd say time to short your alphabet stock.
Who wants to use them now?
They're no good.
Well, like you said, they haven't done Jack.
No, but they're threatening.
Part three. You use this term, image-based sexual abuse.
Can you describe some of what happens to victims
who find themselves in this situation?
Yeah, I mean, it's people who might send an image
consensually, you know, that they've taken themselves
a selfie, and then they've shared it with a friend.
And then, you know, that friend has seeking revenge, something goes wrong in that relationship,
they post it online.
This could be surreptitious recordings of people.
There's a number of ways someone could be, you know, suffering from this issue.
And then the big issue is then they have to go to the place where they were traumatized,
go to the internet and find all these images, try to get it taken down.
It's a lot of burden on the actual victims or survivors here to get rid of all this material
from the internet.
And it takes years and years sometimes.
Well, that's something that all of us parents deal with.
And we talk to our children.
If your photo shows up on online, it could be there
forever.
How difficult is the process for victims to take this stuff down?
And how willing are the technology companies to meet victims halfway and help them?
One of the things that's remarkable here is that there's a whole cottage industry of companies
that have popped up charging sometimes thousands of dollars, you know, per sort of project
or initiative to help victims get their images taken down.
So this problem is so bad that there's like an economy that has been created around it.
And these companies help the victims find the images.
They even use AI to automatically find the images as they pop up, immediately take down
notices. But it is, immediately send take down notices.
But it is a pain.
Sometimes companies will ask for identity verifications.
You have to send them your ID or they might question whether it was actually non-consensual.
Maybe you've been an OnlyFans creator and then you have images of yourself leaked online, Google
might question, well, are you still commercializing those images?
It's a whole mess that these survivors have to go through.
It sounds to me like this guy is an OnlyFans creator.
As an aside, just saying.
Oh, okay.
Let's finish it up.
Besides tech companies, who else can be addressing this problem?
Is this a law enforcement and regulatory policy problem as well?
Absolutely.
One of the things that I heard consistently from employees at Google and reporting my
story was that why aren't law enforcement doing more to go after the criminals?
Why haven't we criminalized-
Got work to do.
More of this behavior across
the country?
There's, you know, most states
have criminalized aspects
of this.
But there's certainly not enough
effort from law enforcement
to go after the underlying
criminals, in part because, you
know, sometimes they may be
overseas.
Or even when they are brought
to justice, you can't actually
maybe get them in jail
or get them to pay up the damages that they're supposed to.
That is Paresh Devey, a senior editor at WIRE joining us.
Thanks so much, Paresh.
Gosh, I'd hope there'd be some kind of big payoff
on that one.
No, it was just a flop.
It was a dud.
It was a dud.
It ended off, the cops didn't do anything
and you're gonna take years to get rid. It sounds like a flop. It was a dud. It ended off. The cops didn't do anything. You're going to take years to get rid of it.
It sounds like a ridiculous situation that probably wouldn't exist if the porn laws in
general, if they were a little more, I'd say, like they were in the fifties.
Oh, is that's what you want? A very popular stance.
It's not popular and it's not what I want. I'm just saying that
that would solve the problem. Let me do a couple other AI stories. I have two. The first one is in
your backyard. New at 11, they say their neighbors are too noisy. Only the new neighbors aren't
people. They're Waymo cars honking in a parking lot and neighbors say it's keeping them up all night.
NBC Bay area's Alyssa Gord shows us what they're seeing and hearing. That sound honking is waking up neighbors lately in this
South of Market neighborhood. I get woken up at you know four o'clock in the morning and I look
down and I'm convinced now it is coming from the Waymo's. Neighbors shared videos of driverless
Waymo cars filing into the lot and backing into spots, which appears to trigger honking from the other Waymos.
The cars are robotic and they're honking at each other and there's no one in the
cars when it's happening and that's absurd.
That I think is the most frustrating thing apart about this is that there's just nobody to talk to.
Like Furbies.
And even at the corporate level, you know, I'm finding it difficult, not impossible."
Neighbors say they've reported this to Waymo and are now taking to social media to get the
company's attention. In a statement, Waymo says it's aware its cars may briefly honk while
navigating its parking lots. Waymo says it has identified the cause and is in the process of
implementing a fix. But these residents say they want to see a more neighborly response from the new autonomous
vehicle company on the block.
We love having them there.
We just would like them to stop honking their horn at four in the morning repeatedly.
You make a good point.
Well, that's the story that went by.
I'm here and I haven't heard this story.
It's great.
Well, if you heard the honking, you'd be all over it.
You imagine that the honk and you're right.
It's like Furbies.
I found this to be quite interesting.
JP Morgan, who doesn't know him, is now deploying AI chatbots and knowledge LLMs across all of
their 60,000 employees.
You recall back in April, JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon said that generative AI was, in his
opinion, going to be as potentially significant as the advent of things like electricity and
the internet.
Then it would ultimately be sort of a coach sitting on every employee's desk, sort
of helping them out, helping him write emails, generate reports, do research, things like
that.
And now we have an idea of what he was really talking about.
So they rolled out to about 60,000 employees and ultimately, I believe, hope to have it
really ubiquitous within the bank, a program called LLM Suite. LLM Suite is essentially
their front end, their wrapper, their portal into large language models of OpenAI, which
is the LLM behind ChatGBT. Ultimately, will be the LLM behind several other models. Will
be a portal to several other models of LLMs.
And so this is essentially going to be sitting on JP Morgan's
employees' desks and is going to be helping them do cognitive tasks.
And it's really kind of a surprising advent for this technology, Andrew.
Well, so this was CNBC, which I like it when they do negative stories. It wasn't really that negative, but Andrew Ross Sorkin did ask an
intelligent question, you know, ever since the deregulation of the banks,
you know, you can both be a bank and an investment bank and they're supposed
to be the, here it comes, Chinese wall.
Remember that, John, the Chinese wall? Yeah, the old Chinese wall. What was the Chinese wall. Remember that John, the Chinese wall?
Yeah, the old Chinese wall.
What was the Chinese wall supposed to do?
Separates one thing from another so they don't interact.
Well, how does that work in this case?
You recall last year they actually banned, they restricted chat GPT from employee use
and that's because they really didn't want to expose their proprietary JP Morgan data to the models and train the models of open AI.
So they're containerizing their data and this is an ability for them to use the data of
JP Morgan without exposing it to the outside world.
But yeah, they're going to be able to use it to do research, to do sort of specific
tasks.
Right, but I'm saying even inside, but I'm assuming there's going to be even more Chinese walls inside.
I mean, they're going to have to containerize all sorts of parts of this.
So the folks in the wealth management business can't be searching stuff that would exist
in the banking business.
The bankers shouldn't be searching stuff from the analysts.
How does this all work?
I don't know.
I would assume that's right, Andrew, that there are specific rules and obviously walls
between the different parts of the business. You wouldn't want parts, you know, for instance,
in wealth management folks to get potential data access from the investment bank, for
instance. And, you know, they really took, I mean, it took them about a year to create
this portal. And I think it's really because they want to do it in a way that was data secure.
Andrew.
Yeah.
Data secure containerize, please.
Doubt it.
What could possibly go wrong?
Well, short, short JP Morgan.
If there's a Chinese wall or not, I'd like to have some rationale for this.
For the Chinese wall?
I'm no, I mean, they deregulated the bank so they can do all these different things. They can be insurance companies,
they can be investment bankers, they can be venture capitalists, they can be banks, actual banks.
They can do all these things. So what if they interact with each other?
I just want to go into that LLM and say how how much did Jamie Diamond pay Epstein?
Show me that.
Show me that.
I want to know.
It would be nice to go into the LLM and exploit its knowledge base.
Yes.
Only if it's containerized though.
So since we're in big tech, AI, the socials, we must go to the United Kingdom, still in chaos.
Oh, do I have any clips on this?
I have clips.
I have a couple of good ones, I think.
The first one is-
I have one.
Now, first I'm gonna put a little bit of parameters
around what's going on here.
So there is, you know, this talk of, you know,
we're arresting anybody who does something wrong online.
And I do have a copy of the online safety act,
which now this was passed in 2023.
It's still kind of being implemented,
but it puts new duties on tech firms to protect
their users from illegal content, which under the Act can include content involving hatred,
disorder, provoking violence, or certain instances of disinformation.
In the riots that have taken place in the UK since the three little girls were stabbed at the Taylor Swift
dance-a-thon
more than 700 or actually 741 arrests have been made
How many of those do you think relate to online offenses which seems to be the only thing I read about on Xnew social?
This is a question for me? Yes.
I'd say a hundred.
Not even.
Thirty-two.
Okay.
Thirty-two.
But here is the, here's some honcho saying, we're coming after you.
We will throw the false force of the law at people.
And whether you're in this country committing crimes on the streets or committing crimes
from further afield online, we will come after you.
Talk to me about that because we have seen some high profile figures whipping up the
hatred. You talked about it in there with the officers in fact about this being added
to by online commentary. I mean I'm even thinking of the likes of Elon Musk getting involved.
What are you considering when it comes to dealing with people who are whipping up this
kind of behaviour from behind a keyboard and maybe in a different country.
Keyboard warriors!
Being a keyboard warrior does not make you safe from the law.
You can be guilty of offences of incitement, of stirring up racial hatred.
There are numerous terrorist offences regarding the publishing of material.
All of those offences are in play if people are provoking hatred and violence on the streets
And we'll come after those individuals
Just as we will physically confront on the streets the thugs and the yobbs who are taking who are causing the problems for communities
Now I really like how this is played out
Online and I really only have X and mastodon
Because it's always captioned by they're going to extradite Americans.
I don't think so. But I would say if you're posting on X, if you're posting, hey,
go and kick those immigrants ass, you probably should not visit the UK.
visit the UK. Here is an example of someone being convicted to 20 months for an online crime. You have been committed for sentence having pleaded guilty to an
offense of publishing written material which is threatening, abusive or
insulting intending thereby to stir up racial hatred.
The context of your offending is that it arises out of the civil unrest and disorder in many parts of the United Kingdom.
On the night of the 2nd and 3rd of August, the Britannia Hotel in Leeds was attacked by people who
threw missiles which damaged windows. At the time there were 210 occupants, many of whom
were foreign refugees and asylum seekers. You took to social media in order to encourage others towards participation
in the attacks upon the hotel. As is recognised on your behalf, this offence is so serious
that an immediate custodial sentence is unavoidable. Would you stand please?
The sentence that I pass has been reduced by one third to reflect your guilty plea.
The sentence is one of 20 months imprisonment.
Now, you know, is this the clip?
Do you never see the guy?
Correct.
And there's no background.
You don't see anybody but this guy.
I think this is staged.
Could be.
There could be, but that does seem...
I saw this clip.
I said, this is phony.
There's some phony about this clip.
Could be, there may be some specific rules
about what you can film and what angle you can film.
But I just like to say, so there's a lot of people,
we have a lot of keyboard warriors in America.
I'd be like, oh yeah, come and take it, come and take it.
Limey, we kicked your ass.
Well, this is true.
We already did this, we tried it, you came, we kicked you out,
we killed you both.
I will remind everybody that if it were, if it had not switched to the immunity,
uh, president Trump might actually be in some trouble because even in the United
States, there are some limitations to your freedom of speech.
You can't, I mean, inciting a riot or an erection, as everyone said, meaning
insurrection, there are some limitations around what you can do.
Am I correct in saying that, John?
Just want to make sure I'm correct.
I don't know that you are.
Isn't it, you can't yell fire in a crowded theater?
They always say that, but where's the law against it?
I don't know.
That's what I'm asking.
So as far as I'm concerned, you can say fire in a theater and you might get beat up, which
would be appropriate.
Very appropriate.
But it seems like this has just become a, I mean, literally, Twitter slash X is now all this.
And I've tried to get out of the algo hole and it's just all this.
It's just all of...
Oh my God.
And the way that's playing out in the UK is they're using it to come after people.
Nigel Farage is one. I did more to get rid of the BMP as a political force
in Britain than anybody else in the country. You amplified this misinformation. No, no,
no, no, Tom. No, you did. You were getting this wrong. Because you said some report suggests.
Give us clarity. You didn't just say that though, Nigel. I did. You also said the internet
was awash with all sorts of theories, all of which proved to be unfounded unfounded yes but that's what led to the riots in Southport but you indulged
in those theories I've still been told whether this person was on a list or not
I don't know the answer no one do you know I don't know but this is a
legitimate you think we deserve to know absolutely I think the police need to
say my question is still valid your question is valid but not in the way that
you put it because you know what you're doing
You suggested some reports suggest that he was known to the security service that he came on in a boat that he was an asylum
Seeker that's not true. And I didn't know my question. I did you know that I was a true
I don't know now whether this man was nice. Why are you promoting those reports because I want to know the truth
I wanted to know it then, I want to know it then, and I want to know it now.
So he uh... What the hell crappy show is that where they talk all over each other? Oh that's
LBC, that's where that's where it's all playing out on LBC. But it really seems like they want
us, they want to get somebody, they want a guy, and that guy is Tommy Robinson.
For Tommy Robinson, a man who has been stirring up anti-Muslim hatred online for decades is back in the spotlight,
accused of influencing the worst riots Britain has seen in over a decade by spreading anti-Muslim disinformation to his 900,000 followers on X.
So before people get on quick and condemn the angry men, that anger is justified.
So who is Tommy Robinson? Tommy Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon,
is a well-known anti-Muslim far-right figure in the UK. He co-founded the English Defence
League, an anti-Muslim organisation, in 2009. Robinson's anti-Muslim activities heightened a few years later when grooming gang scandals
in towns across England rocked the UK.
Robinson took lines from Islamic scriptures to suggest on-street grooming as a uniquely
Muslim issue.
Twitter banned Robinson in 2018 and Metta followed suit a year later for his anti-Muslim
posts. Under Elon Musk's Twitter takeover,
Robinson's account was reinstated in late 2023.
Over the years, Robinson has raised millions of pounds
in donations from followers.
A Guardian investigation in 2018 found that he also receives
financial, political, and moral support
from foreign groups and individuals,
including US think tanks,
right-wing Australians and Russian trolls. So where is Tommy Robinson now?
Robinson has been abroad since 28 July. He left the UK on the eve of a court
hearing over contempt of court proceedings. He has since been spotted on
a luxury resort on Greek administered Southern Cyprus. Now with far-right
violence, clothing disorder across the UK and arrests underway, many are asking,
what will happen to Tommy Robinson? Well, they want him. They want him.
For sure, they want him. By the way, there's only one case, case law in
First Amendment that I can find. It's Brandenburg versus Ohio, a from 1969 landmark decision of the
United States Supreme Court interpreting the First Amendment to the US
Constitution. The court held that government cannot punish inflammatory
speech unless that speech is quote directed to inciting or producing
imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action,
which seems iffy. Well, that precludes a yelling fire in a crowded theater.
Yes. Yes, which is very old.
Yes, which is very old.
It's just kind of accepted. I think it's just one of those agreed, you know, you agree.
So if you're online and you're saying, hey go beat up some
immigrants, that could be a problem. If there's a riot underway, that could be a problem.
It's just interesting to see what's happening in general.
It's just, it's like, wow, all the keyboard warriors are out and the
memes are hilarious, of course.
And you're like, yeah, this will get you locked up for 20 months in the UK.
It's like, yeah, okay.
Great memes, everybody.
So, I think they'll think they'll calm this down.
The mainstream has already,
man, the front pages for the 8th of August
was all the same picture.
In the UK, they do this nightly and say,
here's all the papers for tomorrow.
And they show you the front pages,
all the same with people saying, United, Britain stands firm against thugs
and yobbs. Thousands take to the streets to counter threats from far right. And there it is. We've
always said that this was about the far right. I have an NPR clip from the UK called UK Odd Report.
It's only 17 seconds. Across the United Kingdom today, thousands of people turned out for anti-racist rallies.
After anti-immigration, riots took place this week,
following the stabbing deaths of several children in a seaside town.
In London, people gathered outside the right-wing Reform UK party's headquarters.
Blame it on Farage.
Yes, far right. That's it. Very subtle. Yeah,
far right. We've been tracking this for months, years, far right, far right, far right.
It has now emerged that the government in London has started flagging content it deems to be
misinformation, but also something referred to as concerning content.
X is among those who have been asked to remove posts which British officials consider to
threaten the country's national security.
And while reports say Google, Metta and TikTok are complying with these demands, X is said
to be resisting them.
That's right, Elon, free speech.
The accusations that social...
That's because they don't have enough people.
It's like, oh brother, we have to do what? Forget it. The accusations that social sites are providing a platform for hate while allegedly unaccountable
for that what is coming from cabinet members and MPs alike.
Well, the bottom line is I'm all for X, Y, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, Z, is coming from cabinet members and MPs alike. Well. They're a sentence structure.
Yeah, not good.
But the bottom line is,
I'm all for X being a free for all,
do whatever you want.
Although I see zero posts or anything from the left.
I think they've all.
Oh, don't, oh please.
I haven't seen it.
Go find the Michael Hayden threads
and then just go down the line
and click on any of those people that are, yeah you're right Michael, yeah Trump
sucks. No, no wait, but wait, wait, that's freedom of speech not freedom of reach.
It's not popping up is my point. Well not it, yeah because you've already been, the
the Elgos have defined you I guess and they're not gonna going to give you that stuff. You have to go seek it.
You can find it.
I mean you could find porn on X too, if you go seek it. I mean, it's all there.
Yes, you can. It's mediocre porn.
It's usually a link.
Not that I know.
But please, you know, the, the, the GM lawsuit and, you know, don't expect advertisers to show up.
What was that all about?
Seriously.
I mean, freedom of speech and advertising, they're perpendicular. Advertising is always censorship, if only for the
competing product. You know what I mean? It's like we're...
No, advertising is an anathema is the word you're looking for.
Anathema, thank you. An anathema is a free speech.
By the way, if you want both, you're not going to... It's really going to be tough.
Yes. Where was Eli the coffee guy today?
Missing in action.
I didn't see him.
Missing in action.
So, but, but you know, we talk about, I talk about Black Rifle.
I talk about other kinds of coffee because he's not advertising.
He's mentioning his code.
Maybe that's why he didn't send in a donation today.
I don't know.
Well, because you mentioned something.
I don't remember you plugging some other coffee.
I could possibly plug other coffee. You get so much free stuff from Eli.
You can't drink it fast enough.
Because I like Black Rifle. I like Black Rifle.
Tina has had his decaffeinated. But my point is...
Oh, it's decaffeinated.
Yeah. My point is... you can't be yelling at advertisers, but I know what's happening.
I know what the plan is.
And it's interesting because that lawsuit was not just Elon against Garm, the Federation of World Advertisers Rating System,
which has apparently folded, was like two guys.
Probably.
Most likely.
But it was also Rumble.
Rumble.
It could be Rumble.
It could be Bitch.
No, it was Rumble.
And what Rumble is now doing is they are going after
advertisers who won't advertise. So they're making this.
That's the old way of doing things. They're saying, Hey,
Dunkin donuts. You don't want to advertise. We're going to see,
you know, that's the true publishing model, by the way.
People don't want to realize it. But that is the old model.
It goes way back into the twenties and thirties,
especially in the newspaper business where they, you know,
would take over some city,
you got two or three newspapers that are competing,
but they'd all want these like Macy's to average.
Where's your Macy's advertising?
How come you guys aren't average?
You know, this is the type of sales,
there's different kinds of sales.
You go in and say,
hey, you guys didn't advertise in the newspaper, the last Sunday paper, you
know, you got a big sale coming up, how come you didn't advertise?
Well, you know, we really can't afford, oh really?
I don't think you can afford not to advertise unless you want us to roll out this scandalous
news about how you're treating your employees.
Yeah, exactly.
What's that in your mouth, Duncan?
So, that's the way it used to be. Now they're so passive.
You wonder why they went out of business, all these newspapers. They don't have any many balls anymore.
Well, it could be changing. Could be changing. That's what Rumble is doing. Rumble is creating a...
Well, Rumble's got the right idea. That is the old fashioned... It sounds corrupt because it is, but it's the old way of doing things.
It works. It works. Yeah. So,
but in general, I mean,
don't expect a lot of advertisers to be lining up your door if you tell them to
go F themselves and you have,
I know you guys can go F yourselves. Okay.
All right. Good. We're out of here.
A quick update on this since everyone wants to know and I am the
aviator, the airman on duty. Brazilian airline Voipass has
confirmed that all 61 passengers and crew were killed when one of
its planes crashed in Sao Paulo state. The ATR 72 aircraft went
down in a residential area in the city of Vinheto, around 80
kilometers north of Sao Paulo city.
Social media videos show the aircraft tumbling out of the sky as you can see here.
Authorities say they found the black box and are working to determine the cause of the crash.
So the news this morning is on X of course, there were six cancer doctors on that plane,
it was taken down.
Well, I want to hear you. I was going to send you a note because I saw it.
A couple of the videos are pretty spectacular because it shows the plane in a flat spin.
Which is like, oh, there you go.
You're not surviving this.
No.
But it was like, I looked up the ATR 72 and it has on the wiki page has all the
list of all the accidents it's ever had. Yep. And 90% of all the accidents it's
ever had was icing issues. I guess the plane ices up real easy and then it
craps out. Yeah there's a so there's two things this I believe this was icing. There were severe icing conditions at 17,000 feet
where they were flying. And all turboprops always have to be aware of icing conditions,
particularly T-tail, which is what the ATR is. And the things you have to do to get out of icing, the first thing is you immediately have to reduce your engines.
And from what I could tell, that's just from what I could hear, didn't sound like they did that until they were almost down at the ground.
So it might have been inexperience or poor training, But this was nothing more than a very,
and icing, August, Brazil, Southern Hemisphere, you bet.
Very unfortunate, day wrecker for sure.
But not some kind of hit job on cancer scientists.
It was icing.
And I think it was also the,
you remember that plane crashed with the,
one of the wives of the
9-11 victims who was making a big deal about stuff.
And then that plane crashed.
It was also icing.
I don't know if you remember that.
We followed that for a while.
I don't remember that.
It was, it's always like, well, who was on the plane?
This is when you're in that flat, a flat spin.
No, this, there's no recovery pretty much. Not in that kind of aircraft.
So that's an aircraft to avoid if you can.
Yeah, if you look at the Wiki page for that aircraft, there's a lot,
it has a lot of issues.
Although there's lots of these planes out there too, so it would be unfair.
But it's always icing.
Yeah, the Dutch City Hopper, a lot of those planes are like that.
So be careful of icing.
Now on the cancer tip, oh boy, what could this be?
Diseases of all sorts become more common as we get older.
But now a new study shows millennials are at higher risk of developing certain cancers
compared to baby boomers.
And what doctors say could be driving that increase.
I would never have thought of anything seriously wrong with me at all, being so young.
Brina Dillman was 41, healthy, a busy working mom.
Dillman couldn't believe she had colorectal cancer.
But researchers say there's growing evidence younger people are more likely to develop certain cancers than their parents.
What we want to understand now is why are these individuals not only being
diagnosed with cancer at young ages, but why are they also facing poorer outcomes than the generations before them?
Miranda Fiddler-Banudia is a research scientist at the University of Calgary.
She worked with the American Cancer Society on a study that found in the US, 17 of 34
cancers are being diagnosed more often in younger adults.
Fiddler Benudia says the risk of developing some of them, including small intestine, kidney
and pancreatic cancer, were two to three times greater for millennials born around 1990 compared
to baby boomers.
And then we also found for some of these cancers that mortality was also increasing in these
younger people. Yeah, I'm just going to say it because come on now. Come on. The number one
group who wanted to go out during COVID, what was the requirement? Gee, did they take that into
consideration in this survey, this test, this puzzling? It's so puzzling. Overall, did they take that into consideration in this survey, this test, this
puzzling. It's so puzzling. Overall, death rates from cancer have been dropping, but the American
study found there was a higher risk of death for young people with certain cancers, including
endometrial, testicular and colorectal cancer. We don't want to freak people out. It's not,
these are still very low numbers overall. Thank you. Dr. Shadi Ashamala is a cancer surgeon in Toronto.
While the new study is American, he says cancer cases are rising in younger Canadians too.
His hospital, Sunnybrook, opened the first colorectal clinic for younger adults.
Dr. Ashamala says more can be done.
So we're actually winning in the population over 50 and those colorectal cancer rates
are going down in populations that we're screening and so
screening is absolutely the key. Check in with your body when something doesn't
feel right, seek advice from your doctor. Bryna Dillman was a patient at
Sunnybrook Hospital, now 46, she's thankful her cancer was caught early. I'm
so grateful to my doctor who did not brush this away.
Doctors say it's not entirely clear what's driving the increase in cases,
but 10 of the 17 cancers rising in younger adults are obesity-related.
Scientists suspect changes in diet, more sedentary lifestyles,
and early exposure to environmental chemicals could be factors.
Yes, of course. Of course they could be factors. Of course chemicals could be factors. Yes, of course.
Of course they could be factors.
Of course they could be factors.
I am so sick of this.
You think it'd be a factor.
Nobody ever wants to,
why don't they mention, at least mention the vaccine.
Why don't they do that?
Come on.
Well, now let's go to San Francisco
because there's another,
I mean, it looks like they've cracked the case.
They've cracked the case of severe illness in kids.
It was 2020 and Dr. Aaron Bodansky
kept seeing a high number of children coming into the ICU
with a mysterious inflammatory disease.
They had severe inflammation of all of their bodies,
but in particular, their lungs and really their hearts.
Turns out this was happening to children across the world
and no one knew why.
The illness came to be known as
multi-system inflammatory syndrome in children. What could have happened across
the world that that affects all these children? It's so baffling. Or MIS-C. The
only thing we knew was that they had previously had a SARS-CoV-2 infection.
As cases intensified, doctors suspected the severe
inflammation was connected to the immune system to keep children alive. Medical
personnel acted on that hunch. We used medicines to suppress and calm their
immune system, which thankfully worked extremely well to save their lives. This
has been a puzzle that researchers and clinicians across the country and in fact across the world have tried to figure out and yet it has
eluded almost everyone until now. After years in this lab they cracked the case.
Okay so I'm gonna stop here for a second and by the way I don't want anyone to
get cancer and I'm absolutely sure that the unhealthy sedentary lifestyle
microplastics, we're not eating
food anymore, I guarantee you that does not help. But I would just like to have
one study, one study that goes mainstream with that just look at the
side effects of the vaccination. It would be nice to know and now this guy gives
such a screwball explanation for what- Hold on a second.
No, no.
There's plenty of studies that show this.
They just don't want to talk about it.
That's what I said that goes mainstream.
That's what I said.
I was very specific.
Well-
I was very specific.
Depends.
Yeah.
Okay.
I was specific about it.
But listen to what this guy says and tell me,
what is he really saying?
So the aha moment was realizing that that unusual reaction Listen to what this guy says and tell me what is he really saying?
What is he saying?
To me it sounds like a kind of a convoluted way of saying it was something that matched
COVID that was inside our immune system.
You mean like mRNA vaccine?
Or is it some other thing that we don't know about?
Listen again.
Realizing that that unusual reaction to COVID matched something in our own immune system.
So it acquired a target against COVID that matched us.
So it was attacking both at the same time.
What does that mean?
Wow, that's an interesting deconstruction of the gobbledygook that this guy expressed.
But what he's actually saying was,
and most people who had COVID were still encouraged to get the shot.
Yes, particularly kids.
So there's that element.
But what he's saying is there's a X factor
that causes both the COVID and this immune thing.
But he doesn't just say what the X factor is,
the X factor in your argument would be the Vax.
Or, you know, remember there was HIV in these vaccines,
there was all kinds of stuff in there.
Maybe not every single one.
And I don't want to freak anybody out.
If you feel good, you feel good.
It is a small percentage, but holy crap, this is weird.
Hila.
Ah, ah. Ah, weird. Ah, ah.
Ah, ah.
Ah, ah.
Ah, ah.
No, you caught yourself.
I did.
No, let me go back.
I'll play it one more time.
Realizing that that unusual reaction to COVID
matched something in our own immune system.
So it acquired a target against COVID that matched us.
So it was attacking both at the same time.
Now they're hoping to use their findings
to advance science.
Knowing that a virus can provoke
an autoimmune reaction later on,
and having this proof allows us to potentially
develop therapeutics and diagnostics
for anything like this that might occur in the future.
Now listen to her.
Now these scientists are hopeful this finding will help understand
other diseases including type 1 diabetes or MS that we know are linked to viruses.
Diabetes and MS are linked to viruses?
Well she said specifically diabetes type 1 which means your pancreas craps out.
But that's because of a virus now?
I don't know that. That's what she just said. Linked to viruses and MS linked to viruses. I don't know.
All right. You're asking me questions out of the blue. I would like to lift everybody up with a
short good news. I have very good news for you. Ozempic may have another side effect.
Have you heard about the-
It's good news?
It's a good news side effect?
It's a good news side effect?
Better sex.
Of course.
Yeah, there you go.
Jacqueline Smith had a healthy sex life until she began taking Ozempic to lose weight.
That's when she noticed some dramatic changes.
Smith, 35, and her husband of seven years
went from having sex several times a week
to doing it daily, sometimes more than once.
Well, I'd say this thing needs to be on Medicare stat.
Ha ha ha ha.
What a crock.
Yes. I'm gonna show my support by donating to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, on No Agenda in the morning.
NoAgendaDonations.com is how you can support this valuable work that we feel we do for you.
We give it away to everybody. No hoops, no levels, no jumps, no premium content behind firewalls. You support
us if you get any value from the show. And here are the people, $50 and above, who supported
us today very kindly. John, will you read them off for us?
Yeah, we had a little top heavy today, so there's not that many but we're gonna start with Greg Hoi Hoi Hoi
in Pacifica California 133.33 followed by Michael Henry parts unknown 92.72 and he wishes us a happy or me and me a happy anniversary thank you very much very nice sir johnny be good in 92.72
congrats on 36 years of wedding bliss never had a fight fight. Uh, what did I cook?
I cooked filet mignon.
Yes.
Yes.
I've been cooking that a lot.
Yes.
Some reason.
It's good.
It's filet.
Where do you get your filet mignon?
I get, I get the, if I can't find them, if they have them, I get the
ultra hyper trimmed at Costco, the whole giant piece, the entire filet.
Oh, that $110 hunk?
That's one price.
It's more?
It's good for two meals and you can make a roast out of the big fat end of it.
As a roast beef, the filet mignon roast beef is a very appreciated dish.
Maybe if you're nice, maybe Jason Rick will send you something from the ranch in Colorado.
Yeah, well I'm sure it's going to be far superior to anything I can buy on the open market.
Costco, yeah, for sure.
Well, Costco's not that bad.
Sir Cam or Chris Baylor in Kerrgraft in Wisconsin, 89 and 97.
He has a very long note here.
He's got a birthday, so that's things to always say.
Oh, he does give you a pronunciation guide for kakana.
Yeah.
For kaka.
Kaka.
Kaka. Kaka. Kaka-na. Kaka-na. Kakauna. Yeah. Yeah. For Kaka. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka.
We'll never forget. Kakauna. I'll never forget. I say, what do I say? Kakauna. Kakauna. Kakauna.
Something like that. Kakauna. Kaka. Kakauna. Kaka. Kaka. Kaka.
Kelly Hubbard, $88. Happy anniversary. Baron of the Gitmo Nation coffee pot
88 also have these are the left over anniversary donations I appreciate them Rita Harrington
Dame Rita and Sparks came in with 88 I'm up to speed and spun down she says.
Thanks to our media deconstruction.
Mike McCoy in Schomburg, Illinois 8008 is a boob donation.
And it's in support of Kevin McLaughlin who came up is next in conquer North Carolina
8008.
Tina always asks me, she says, to Kevin McLaughlin come in again the the Duke of Luna? I say, you bet. Every single show. He never ever forgets.
It's been going on for about three years.
Yeah, it's amazing. Thank you.
Maybe even longer.
Thank you.
Todd Banner in the Troll Room. Hey Todd. Medford, Oregon, 55-55.
Mark Hardwick in Aledo, Texas, 53, 33.
I think you missed Sir Greg with 55, 55.
I think we missed him.
Sir Greg, 55, 55.
I missed him.
Also, Mark says, I'm Mark Hardwick, not Mary Hardwick.
Sorry.
Which I call the Marriott Saga Larsson in Sweden, 52, 23.
And since he came in from Sweden, I'm going to say once the wish is beautiful
and amazing partner, Ronnie, a happy birthday today.
He is my absolute favorite person. Also want who introduced me to your show a couple years
ago.
This is Saga, Saga, which I guess is a female name.
Maybe.
You don't know.
They're Swedish, maybe.
They're Swedish, Swedish.
Amanda Adams in Fort Wayne, Indiana, 5310, happy anniversary.
Bad, ah, here we go.
Oh, where is their location?
Bad ideas supply.
Look them up.
You can look them up on Google.
Bad ideas, so they make all kinds of things
that you can burn with.
They make like fireplaces for your patio.
Made out of steel.
William Spain in Springdale, Arkansas.
50. Oh, now we got the 50s already. Took that long, not long at all.
I'm just gonna go name and location, starting with
William and then Stephen Schumach in Xenia.
Michelle Petty in Grand Forks, North Dakota.
Tom Del Vecchio in Blandin, Pennsylvania. Andrew Grasso in Mineola, New York.
John Spade in Edmond, Oklahoma. Mike Moon in Athens, Georgia.
Steven Crummey in El Cajon, California. Michael Raguse. Raguse, maybe Ragusa?
In Tustin, California. Brenda Forcad,od, I'm guessing in Poles bow, Washington, cute little town.
If you ever get a chance to go through it, David Keck to in sun tan valley,
Arizona with a long note, uh,
he's our end of show mixer.
David Keck to what does he, what does he say?
Uh, oh, the odometer showed me two sets of 33 clear indicating it's time to donate.
Thank you for suffering my tip of the day, jingles, and humoring me by playing my end
of show mixes.
And last on the list is Elizabeth Little in Louisville, Texas.
And it's a short list full of 38 people which is not a lot
Want to thank them all for helping us get show 16. I don't know. What's the number 16 85?
85 off the ground and 15 away from a
1700 that's a big deal. Here is your Adam Curry. Dr. Pepper can test. Ah, I got a good one
Got a good one
these are the I got a good one.
These are the producers who support the show and there are producers who come in under
$50 who also support the show.
We do not mention them for reasons of anonymity.
Again, we plead that you consider in addition to any mentionable donation, a sustaining
donation.
It really does help.
We appreciate it thank you so much for supporting the best podcast in the
universe for those who need it here's a little bit of extra karma for you you've
got karma and again know what you're the donations calm
sir Matthew turned 40 on July 24th that's a belated happy birthday I'm no match for you wishes Faith Ann Basur a happy one turning 50 today. Saga Larsen wishes her beautiful amazing partner
Ronnie Bashiri a happy one and Maddie McClure
wishes Nick Chapman a happy birthday.
He turns 42 on August 21st, well in advance and well meant.
Happy birthday from everybody here
at the best podcast in the universe.
It's your birthday, yeah.
Toot, toot, toot, toot, toot, toot, title changes.
Turn and face the slaves. That's changes. Yes, we do have two title changes today.
Baron Sir Pursuit of Peace and Tranquility now becomes Sir Pursuit of Peace and Tranquility
Viscount of the Lands of Red Clay and Cherry Blossoms.
A beautiful title if ever seen one
and Sir Victor Baron out of Willamette Valley.
Now is Sir Victor the Baron of Willamette Valley
as he upped his peerage earlier on.
We thank you both for supporting the best podcast
in the universe.
We have two nightings today, a layaway night.
No, I only have two.
What about the guy that we- That's the second one? Oh, okay. Yes, sorry
And so that is sir cross and we're just going to we don't know his name
But if he wants to let it be known later, we can always add that
But we have a layaway night Tim Del Vecchio and he says hey, I've been asleep at the wheel of my regular contribution on autopilot
I realize this is how it happens people become nights all of a sudden. Hey, I've been asleep at the wheel of my regular contribution on autopilot. I realized this is how it happens. People become knights all of a sudden.
They're like, Hey, wait a minute. I passed knighthood level a few shows ago.
I listened to every show and really appreciate the work that you both put in to deliver knowledge
and entertainment to us all. I haven't been deduced yet. So please deduce me.
Whoops! I'm not even going to stand here and consult the book of knowledge.
Alright, no, I'll de-douche instead.
You've been de-douched.
And he would like to be Knighted Sur Yankees fan if that's available.
I believe it is. Keep up the great work, ITM Tim Del Vecchio.
So Tim, I've got a blade right here.
John, if you can bring out your blade, then we can get these guys up on...
There you go. Very nice, then we can get these guys. There you go very nice, okay?
Something is right today
I'm off on all the buttons
Cross and Tim step on up both of you have become Knights of the Noah gender roundtable
sir cross of course did that with a massive triple donation and
Tim with a layaway
night plan they both worked so I'm very proud to pronounce the KB as Sir Yankees
fan and Sir Cross threaded wheel stud for you gentlemen we have hookers and
blow rent boys and Chardonnay along with that some diet soda and video games some
harlots and Haldol pepperoni rolls and pale L's redheads and rise beers and
blunts, Ruben
S. Ruben and Rosé, vodka manila, bong hits and bourbon, ginger ale and gerbils, breast
milk and pablum.
But of course there is always the mutton and the mead here for you.
Enjoy that at the round table and while you're pigging out there, yes I see you, Sir Tim. Please go to NoAgendaRings.com. Check out the
beautiful Cygnet rings that we have on display there. One of them is for you. If you give us
your address and your ring size, there is a handy ring sizing guide on that site, NoAgendaRings.com.
And as always, it comes accompanied with a certificate of authenticity and sticks of wax
for you to sign and seal your important
correspondence.
Welcome gentlemen to the round table.
No one should know meetups.
It's not your party.
Yeah baby, the party.
I thought I had a, I thought I had a meetup report.
I have two promos so I might as well play those.
This is a repeat promo, but it is coming up.
It is the Austin slash San Marcos float meetup.
It's a big deal.
You float on the river and then you have a meetup later on.
Take me down to the river
where I can hold your body close to mine.
This is Baron Scott.
And Kieber Christine.
It's time again for the 4th Annual Central Texas Float Meet set for Saturday, August
17th.
We will start on the 72 degree spring fed San Marcos River.
Then we'll move the party over to the Ivers River Pub overlooking the river in the heart
of San Marcos.
Go to no agenda meetups for details and to RSVP to both the morning three-hour float and the afternoon meetup.
Remember connection is protection on the river.
There you go Baron Scott and Dame Christine and of course we have the Kansas City meetup always fun.
It's Sir Spencer here inviting all the Kansas City Noagenta Knights, Dames and even the Lames to the next meetup at a hidden gem burger joint in North KC.
Hamburgers!
What kind of hamburger?
They got these big, juicy, home-style grass-fed beef burgers.
No, no, no, no, no.
Where'd you get them?
McDonald's, Wendy's, Jack in the Box?
No, no, no, this is Tay's Burger Shack on Armour Road we're talking about.
I hear they got some tasty burgers.
I ain't never had one myself, how are they?
Why don't you come find out for yourself
next Sunday, August 18th at 3.33 p.m.
Catch some amygdala therapy with your No Agenda fam
and we'll have you saying.
Mm-hmm, this is a tasty burger.
RSVP at NoAgendaMeetups.com.
All right, Spencer, another No Agenda stream favorite.
Here's what's coming up Meetup-wise.
We do have one, actually a couple taking place today.
The Margarita Meetup, now you needed to RSVP for that one.
It's at Palm Beach Gardens in Florida.
The Ricky Princess is hosting that, so hopefully we'll get a report.
We Drink and We Know Things, the Soviet Sunday edition of the Meetup 3BR Distillery, Keyport,
New Jersey, well underway as we speak.
The Save Democracy and Cat Ladies Meetup, 330 in Indianapolis.
So y'all can, they're underway there.
That's Sir Mark and Dame Maria.
And that is at the St. Joseph Brewery and Public House.
We have the Noagin the Southwest New Hampshire Meetup taking place in Keam, New Hampshire
at the Keam New Hampshire meetup taking place in Keam, New Hampshire at the Keam, New Hampshire local burger.
Then on Thursday, our next show day, the Deutschbags in the USA, 5 o'clock at the Norwegian in
Rockford, Illinois, and the Monsoon Dodgers summer meetup, 6.30 at the Denver Museum of
Nature and Science Park.
Also, Charlotte's thirsty third Thursday meetup, 7 o'clock at Ed's Tavern in Charlotteville North Carolina many more meetups to take a look at they are
producer organized we sometimes we come to them otherwise we usually just hair
with there with heads only on sticks if at all possible they are fun to go to
you will meet interesting and wildly different people from anything you have
ever met
But you will all get along because we all know connection is protection
No agenda meetups calm if you can't find one near you start one yourself. It's easy You wanna be where you want me, trigger all hells and lame
You wanna be where everybody feels the same
It's like a party
Yes
I have two ISOs, we always like to choose them before we end the show
It's an ISO that we will end the show with
Do you have any ISOs at all actually? Yeah you do. Yeah I have a bunch of ISOs. Okay well I'll do mine first. This is
amazing! Hmm not bad, not bad. What? Say it again. This is, well you didn't hear it? Not really. Let
me play it again. This is amazing! This is amazing! Okay that's no good. Damn, this could be bigger than Obama.
Okay, you're underwhelmed. How about you?
Wow.
So you didn't even try.
I didn't.
You're right.
I was busy with other stuff.
Oh, that's why I get this simple once.
Let's go with thank you.
Thank you.
That's not bad.
Can't go wrong with that.
We can't go wrong.
Thanks so much. Thanks so much.
Thanks so much.
No good.
No good.
And then was up.
What's up with that?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Maybe I'll do a combo today.
Let me see.
What's up with that?
Thank you.
That sounds pretty good.
You don't like that.
You think?
Well, how about if anything, I just like-
How about the other way around?
Thank you and what's up with that?
Let me try that one.
Let me see what we do.
Thank you.
What's up with that?
Okay.
I can do that.
That works for me.
Thank you.
What's up?
I just have to remember.
Hey everybody, about time to go.
But before we do, it's always your favorite moment of the show.
That's the one everybody would like to take you. your favorite moment of the show. Green fires for you and me.
Just the tip with JCB. That's right everybody, we'd like to take you
out of the show with a tip of the day.
All right, this is a screwball tip.
Unlike all the others.
People who just know lube involved.
People who have a mouse or rat problem in their environment.
Yeah, it happens. The latest thing now is to use these birth control mechanisms.
What? And the animals can't reproduce and the generation dies off right on the spot. The product
is called Evolve for mice. Wow. You look for a product called evolve and I got Mimi came up with this idea,
uh, as a tip. And I said, well, you know,
cause everybody did like my idea of you get a mouse or rat or son where you use
a blue trap, you can't catch him. You just poison them with the deadliest stuff.
You can't, Oh no hawk is going to eat the thing and then he's going to die
because I guess this happens once in a blue moon where some poor animal, you know, sees
a dying mouse or something and then they eat it. But no, because of all the guilt ridden
people in the family, the other one is for rats.
They don't want to kill. They don't want to kill.
Contrapest is another brand to look for, which is for rats.
Contrapest, wow.
And Evolve is the other brand. So this, you want to get rid of your pests, vermin, as I would like to refer to them, which includes to me, deer.
Vermin.
You can do that with deer? You can give this to deer as well. No, no. The thing about this stuff, it only works on these rodents.
So it's actually one of the safer products out there.
Wow. All right. Excellent. Castrate your rats. Beautiful.
And now John C. Dvorak with the tip of the day.
And only the tip. Thatvorak with the tip of the day.
And only the tip. That's all we got for you.
Alright everybody.
Coming up next on the No Agenda Stream or one of those modern podcast apps.
We have...oh!
Abs in a six pack.
That's Sir Seatsitter.
I haven't heard him on the screen in a bit.
That's beautiful.
Make sure you listen to him.
Hitachi Wonton is the title of that episode.
Well, that offers a lot of perspective.
End of show mix is Dynamite Mix from Sir Hey Citizen.
Also, you heard him earlier with a donation
David Kekta. And we will be back on Thursday to bring you more media
deconstruction. We just keep it rolling day in day out. Four more years coming to
you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country right here in Fredericksburg
Texas. FEMA region number six. In the everybody. I'm Adam Curry and from Northern Silicon Valley where
It's overcast again and kind of chilly. I'm John C. Dvorak. We return on Thursday
Please join us then until then remember us at no agenda donations.com adios mo foes are who we who we and
such Adios, mofos, a hooey hooey, and such.
Donations segments are getting too short What will it take for you to show your support? Donations are down Oh no no no no
Look at those sacrilegious tears Oh we won't get four more years
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Give back some value or the show will end, donations are down Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Look at those high puppy tears Oh we won't get four more years
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Or we won't get four more years
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Donations are down
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I think everyone should donate
At least the cost of their cable bill.
Huh? Yeah.
Suggestion. donations are down oh no no no no
look at those sad puppy tears
oh we won't get four more years
donations are down
down down down down down
donations are down 50%
overall donations are down
donations are down
help us out
donations are down donations are down. Donations are down. Help us out. Donations are down.
Donations are down.
Donations are down because you block comics or bloggers.
Donations are down.
Look at those sad, the big tears.
Or we will get four more years.
Donations are down.
Everything's about priorities.
And so whether it's time, whether it's talent,
whether it's treasures, all of those things,
we have to place a priority on how we invest them.
Brace yourselves, freedom lovers, because we're about to dive into a story that'll
send chills down your spine. The UK is threatening to extradite and arrest social media users, including Elon Musk, for their posts.
Humanity's really tough to kill.
There's nothing like tyranny getting up in your grill to get you to get your head screwed on straight.
And now it's time to screw that sucker on straight like a laser beam.
So if you retweet that, then you're republishing that and then potentially you're committing that offense.
And we do have dedicated police officers who are scouring social media.
Their job is to look for this material
and then follow up with identification risks and so forth.
And then he added the cherry on top with whipped cream and nuts.
The best podcast in the universe!
MoPo
Dvorak.org
slash N.A.
Thank you.
What's up with that?