No Agenda - 1690 - "Corn Sweat"

Episode Date: August 29, 2024

No Agenda Episode 1690 - "Corn Sweat" "Corn Sweat" Executive Producers: Sir Onymous of Dogpatch and Lower Slobbovia Sir Knight Z Viscountess Dame 4NLadyB4, Protectorate of Olde Town Grayson in NE G...eorgia Mark Goll Kathy Knight Associate Executive Producers: Rob the Constitutional Lawyer Eli The Coffee Guy Sir Not Space Force Linda Lu Duchess of jobs and writer resumes Thomas Weaver Become a member of the 1691 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Dame 4NLadyB4 > Viscountess Dame 4NLadyB4, Protectorate of Olde Town Grayson in NE Georgia Knights & Dames Zaryn Dentzel > Sir Knight Z Christian Greulich > Sir Loin of Winter Haven Art By: Francisco Scaramanga End of Show Mixes: Prof J Jones - DeezLaughs - 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) 1690.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 08/29/2024 16:46:03This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 08/29/2024 16:46:03 by Freedom Controller  

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 It's hot. In the morning everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where we're all wondering what the hell Kamala said in the interview that's been taped and edited. I'm Johnston DuBois. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill in the morning. You barely made it through it. It was hard. It was hard. When is that air tonight? Yeah, air is tonight at 9 Eastern. It'll be groovy. It'll suck. It'll be all edited down. CNN, a bunch of journalists are going along with the program. Oh, whatever you say, we'll cut this out, we'll cut that out, we'll take this and that. It's going to be just gross.
Starting point is 00:00:57 Who says they won't sabotage her? You never know. We don't know who's playing what these days. I agree with that theory. Anything could happen. In fact, the latest thing with Kennedy. I do have a quick Kennedy thing that nobody seems to want to point out and I'm going to point it out. On Jen Psaki's show, Kerry Kennedy came out to bitch about her brother. Yeah, she has the same voice. That was the joke. I was I was into that I'm sorry. I'm sorry
Starting point is 00:01:29 You said no one wants to talk about it. I thought that everyone Was a hint Is that now is that genetic I thought that he had some kind of well, yeah, it's a just It's called a spasmodic dysphoria or something. It's got some crazy name. But it's, I carry Kennedy first. I got a clip here. Yup, I got it.
Starting point is 00:01:53 I can't understand a word of her, by the way. I completely dig it out and separate and dissociate myself from Robert Kennedy Jr. and his flagrant and inexplicable effort to desecrate and trample and set fire to my father's memory. We shouldn't be laughing. She can't help it. No, I'm not laughing. I'm laughing at the fact that we're laughing that she can't get what she was trying to get out. She couldn't say it, but nobody has pointed this out except you just now.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Oh. That she has this same disorder. And I looked into it. So I read about it. Oh, Dr. Dvorak is in. It's caused by all kinds of different things. One out of 50,000 people have it. How about this? Is it caused by inbreeding? No. Oh. That's the thing. There is no evidence that there's anything genetic about it.
Starting point is 00:02:46 So what are the odds that somebody else in the family would have it unless it is genetic and they've got it all wrong? No, stay away from my anus port, I guess. There's something in the water up there that's no good. There's something screwy about the fact that she has the same ailment. But anyway, back to the other thesis. So start looking into it. I think it was a Breitbart or a Daily Caller,
Starting point is 00:03:11 maybe Daily Caller that brought out the fact that it was Cheryl Hines that told Bobby to talk to Trump. Yeah, the Daily Caller. Well, he also talked about it on Tucker's interview, which was a good interview. Did you see it? Did you see the whole thing? No, I did not. Well, he also talked about it on Tucker's interview, which was a good interview. Yeah. Did you see it? Did you see the whole thing? No, I did not. But I know about the situation. And since she's, she's already bitched about the fact that he's joined forces with Trump, what's going on here?
Starting point is 00:03:38 What do you mean? Well, she first, she says that she told him that, you know, he didn't want to talk to Trump because it would upset her. She says, no, no, no, go ahead and talk to him. So he talks to Trump and they make a deal. And next thing you know, he's on the Trump transition team. This is so interesting. We had a dinner last night with some of our friends
Starting point is 00:03:59 who now actually think that the part of RFK is played by JFK jr But they said the first thing because you know, we sit down I haven't seen him for a couple weeks sit down there He's a plant. He's a plant RFK jr. Is a plant he's there to ruin everything as is Tulsi So is Tulsi. So he'd maybe a plan, but not to ruin everything. Which is what you're implying. Well, okay.
Starting point is 00:04:30 You're implying that he's a plan. You know, I saw- No, but he's not a plan. I think Cheryl, we felt that she may be his handler. We know it's a daughter-in-law, I think. That's a CIA person that wrote a book. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. That she's the campaign manager.
Starting point is 00:04:45 And then it turns out that Tulsi is, and I think she's in the 321, or she's in some group, which is a... Intelligence group. ...is an intelligence operation. Well, let's recall that RFK Jr. said he wanted to clean up the CIA. And so we have the Uncle Don old school CIA, and then we have the woke nut job CIA. But I think it goes much deeper. I mean, much, much deeper. I've been reflecting on this. And, you know, the title of the show is No Agenda. but at this point, all the wickedness and these nasty,
Starting point is 00:05:27 horrible people, they're narcissistic psychopaths. They really are psychopaths. And they've turned our country into a robber's den. I mean, everything. just because this is how it works all the way down the line. So my my other stepdaughters coming in for my birthday which is very nice she's coming in from Chicago and so she texted Tina this morning says oh man the TSA is now look you know you have you get that picture taken in the TSA line now you can opt out of it but of course most people don't. And if the picture that they take of you does not match the picture on your ID,
Starting point is 00:06:11 you're taken out of the line. This is new. And people are freaking out about it. Even though it's supposed to be a test and you don't have to do it. And this is, and by the way, I hate the game, not the players, because we have plenty of TSA agents and I'm sure have to do it. And this is, and by the way, I hate the game, not the players, because we have plenty of TSA agents and I'm sure they're just as annoyed by this.
Starting point is 00:06:29 TSA just tweeted the other day randomly because it hasn't come up for at least nine or 10 months, the tweet reads, peanut butter is a liquid. We said what we said. There was a whole segment on the, on the Gutfeld show about this. Screw these people. Screw this system. Screw all of it. Peanut butter's a liquid.
Starting point is 00:06:49 Screw the IRS. They had some rationale for it. That was quite interesting. Yeah, OK. Yeah, I mean, yes, I've seen the rationale for it. But it's beside the point. This stems back to 2007 when a couple of nut jobs had some things that they never actually mixed and never exploded on the plane.
Starting point is 00:07:08 Yeah. Well, that's like the shoe bomber. Same thing. He had some firecrackers in his heel. Meanwhile, we've got people fighting on airplanes, beating on each other. Throwing punches. Beating on each other. it's time to clean this up and I I choose to believe RFK jr. I choose to believe that he is 70 years old and he says hey I think I can save some kids and I'm all for it because in ten years I'm gonna be 70 it's gonna be no one left for Social Security and
Starting point is 00:07:41 Medicare it's gonna be done There'll be no one working. They will have no more kids. I know you may not care anymore, but I care. I don't care anymore. Close the hatch. Close the hatch behind us. That's funny. behind us.
Starting point is 00:08:04 So the, uh, that's funny. So the possibility that the two of them coming in, two strong characters with a fan base. And Tulsi, and Tulsi, I think she's. Yeah, no, I said the two of them. Oh yeah. Okay. I said the two of them coming in Tulsi and Kennedy, both with some sort of and Tulsi and Kennedy both with some sort of intelligence connections may be there to keep Trump from doing the screw-ups that he's done in the past
Starting point is 00:08:31 which like hallelujah yes exactly yeah hiring your your buddy Burks my buddy oh now it's my buddy. Okay. And Fauci and people like John Kelly. I was looking at John Kelly. And Bolton. How about Bolton? Oh Bolton. Late in the game. By the time Bolton came around you'd think he'd have a clue. So this whole op that is Kamala Harris, which it is, and of course the media loves this. Look at all the polls. Neck and neck. She's a little above Trump.
Starting point is 00:09:09 We've got a horse race people. Advertise now. It's like, oh, okay. Yeah, it's advertised now. Spend your money. We don't want to see anything left in the coffers. We're the media. And you can't, and all of it, all media is now no good.
Starting point is 00:09:21 And we'll get to Telegram in a moment, but I need some of your historic knowledge for this. Eric Pee Pee, who's one of the developers on Podcasting 2.0, he sent me a documentary, and it's called, let me see, it's called The Ball of Confusion, and it's about the 1968 DNC. And of course, there's a lot of a lot of may have seen this documentary.
Starting point is 00:09:48 Well, these are very short clips. But I just want to get your historic knowledge because Hubert Humphreys was of course, there at the DNC. And where's Hubert Humphreys? Where was Hubert Humphreys from? Minnesota. Exactly. So listen to what Hubert Humphrey, where was Hubert Humphrey's from? Minnesota. Exactly. So listen to what Hubert Humphrey was talking about back then in 1968 at the DNC. He was a real optimist in politics and he called it the politics of joy. And if ever there was a phrase that didn't fit 1968, it was that.
Starting point is 00:10:22 Here we are the way politics ought to be in America. The politics of happiness, the politics of purpose, and the politics of joy. And that's the way it's going to be to all the way from here on out. Yeah! He believed in the Johnson domestic policies. His conundrum was Vietnam. So very similar. This is history not repeating, but rhyming right down to, well, this blew me away. So of course we had Nixon in, not at the DNC obviously, but Nixon in the race. Let's just replace Nixon right now for Trump in this clip.
Starting point is 00:11:04 The charge against Nixon was he couldn't win. George Romney withdrew before the first primary in New Hampshire. Rockefeller didn't amount to much, so he was really running against himself. One of the things that now is almost an accepted fact is that Nixon had a quote secret plan to end the Vietnam War that he had uttered these words. He never said them. The story as I understand it is that Rockefeller told a reporter that Nixon's running around saying he has a secret plan and the reporter reported it in Nixon's mouth. And for years Nixon sought to dispel that. Said he never said it.
Starting point is 00:11:56 Now that sounds a lot like Judy Woodruff saying oh Trump told Netanyahu to keep it going so that he could stop the war. Right which he had to walk back. Which he had to walk back but then this clip makes it even more interesting in the context of Trump and Bibi Netanyahu. We now know that Richard Nixon had asked Anna Schenald, who was the chairman of the Republican Women for Nixon, to be a back channel to the South Vietnamese, to encourage them not to participate in peace talks in Paris under the Lyndon Johnson administration because they would get a better deal with the Richard Nixon administration. If in fact Richard Nixon played a hand in curtailing the peace talks in Paris, there's no doubt that that's a violation of the Logan Act, and the Logan Act essentially prevents
Starting point is 00:12:43 American citizens from getting in the way of American foreign policy. It is essentially treason. Now Nixon, even though he was the former vice president, was a private citizen at that time. So he would have been covered by the Logan Act. LBJ was furious! They're contacting a foreign power in the middle of a war at the mistake. And it's a damn bad mistake. When he heard what Nixon's people at least were doing and what Mrs. Chanalt was doing, he was deeply angry. He wanted to expose Nixon but realized that if he did so it would be obvious that he knew because of illegal wiretaps. I just love this.
Starting point is 00:13:27 So that's exactly what I... Talking about a den of thieves. Yes. Yeah. So, you know, perhaps Trump is being wiretapped at Mar-a-Lago. Judy Woodruff hears about it. You know, she thinks it's from Axios because the old bag can't remember. Sorry to be ageist about it.
Starting point is 00:13:45 And everyone's like, oh, shh. We can't let anybody know that we actually know what's going on. Yeah. Well, they wiretapped him at Trump Tower and they made a big fuss about the fact that all we didn't, even though it turned out that they did and it was discovered that they did, but they denied it. This is ridiculous. And then this one of course this is what LBJ did seven days before the election. I have now ordered that all air naval and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam cease.
Starting point is 00:14:24 Yeah that would be perfect for, it just sounds like Joe even. I ordered Israel stop bombing. And my how think, this is the last one, my how things have changed since the DNC of 1968 when reporters were actually there reporting on protests and what was going on and this is a famous clip I'd forgotten all about it this is Dan Rather who was trying to report on protests inside the DNC. Mayor Daley
Starting point is 00:14:58 really did have goons in that convention hall and any delegate who got out of line or started indicating that he or she was going to dissent, generally speaking, was either shown the door or was beaten up. Take your hands off of me. Unless you intend to arrest me, don't push me, please. I know you won't, but don't push me. Take your hands off of me unless you plan to arrest me. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Walter, as you can see.
Starting point is 00:15:30 I'm sorry to be out of breath, but somebody belted me in his stomach during that. What happened is a Georgia delegate, at least he had a Georgia delegate sign on, was being hauled out of the hall. We tried to talk to him to see why, who he was, and what the situation was. And at that instant, the security people, well, as you can see, put me on the deck. I didn't do very well. I think we've got a bunch of thugs here, Dan. So, you know, contrast that with the 2024 DNC,
Starting point is 00:15:57 where people hold up a site, there's no reporting on it from the mainstream, only someone who happened to have a cell phone. And because they got the thugs in there, everyone's under control. Shut up, shut up and play along. This is the game. We're all in it. Joy. It's joy people. The politics of joy.
Starting point is 00:16:17 Yeah. Yo, John Chancellor was also beat up at the, at the convention. Who was John Chancellor? He was a very famous correspondent. I think he was on NBC. Oh. There was a good, yeah, there was that report of, from what rather was one of many of these guys and they were out there reporting and they were actually doing a real job of it
Starting point is 00:16:36 as opposed to today where you just have a bunch of, in fact, what they, what the Democrats did in this convention was bring in a bunch of influencers. Yes. Yas Queen. So the place was crawling with them. It's modern political warfare. So I kept looking for joy and there is a- Joy.
Starting point is 00:16:58 Yeah, because- She's on MSNBC. Who? Oh, Joy. Joy. Now, I kept looking for the politics of Joy and these things just happened in the past four months. Kamala Harris's 2024 presidential campaign is being propelled by the Black Joy movement,
Starting point is 00:17:16 which emphasizes celebrating black humanity beyond trauma and oppression. And this has resonated deeply with her supporters in the face of political challenges and racial identity debates. Yes, this is the black joy. There's even an exhibit in Tennessee. We only seem to truly focus on black people's trauma. And while that is valid, while that is important and while that needs to be studied, so does our joy.
Starting point is 00:17:40 Highlighting and showcasing our ability and our audacity to find joy in spite of everything that has been thrown at us is something that we should not only celebrate, but honor. And of course we had a Black Joy Parade, which you and I missed. What is Black Joy? Black Joy is the joy of not only being black, but just the culture that comes with it. Black Joy to me means the ability to express yourself authentically. Us being able to come here is super important for the children, for the seniors, for everybody in between. We're bringing okla to the world. This is what we're like on everyday
Starting point is 00:18:17 basis but we want everybody to see the black joy that we have. We don't spend enough time celebrating ourselves. We don't spend enough time just likeking in our own glory, if you will. And we deserve it. So it's all subversive. We should all be basking in our own glory. It's all subversive. We don't spend enough time basking in our own glory. No, we should do that more often on weekends.
Starting point is 00:18:41 Oh no, we work on weekends. This whole campaign, the media, the entire administration, that more often on weekends. Oh no, we work on weekends. This is this whole campaign, the media, the entire administration, all of the agencies. I mean, I don't know if we can ever reset all of this, but man, what a bunch of jagoffs. All of them. It's all just corrupt and narcissists and sociopaths, psychopaths and sociopaths. They're crazy and crazy I tell you. And it seems to be being encouraged by social media. Yes, yes it is.
Starting point is 00:19:22 And I'm part of it. You are. I mean, I admit to it. I mean, I'll take a look at these, these TikTok mainly, these psychos that are on TikTok with their, you know, guys that pretend to be women or want to be women or think they're women or whatever, and they're all made up and they're ugly. It's not like they're attractive women. They're very demure. They're very demure.
Starting point is 00:19:48 They're not even demure. They're psychotic. And there's something compelling about watching a psychotic person rant about something. I don't know what it is. It's like, why is this person even available to do this? They should be literally locked up. Why is this person even available to do this? They should be literally locked up. They should be in an institution. Well, it's part of the program though. I mean, the fact that it's all out there to such a degree
Starting point is 00:20:16 and the algos are bringing it to you clearly because the only time I see any of this stuff is when you post it. So the algos are tuned, They're flying tuned into you. They got him. Hey, look at this guy. He's going to post all this crazy stuff. He's nuts. They're completely tuned into you now. So, and I think I'm going to change my thinking.
Starting point is 00:20:39 Wait, before you continue with this thesis, they're not tuned into me so much because I don't even have an account. It's people sending them to me. I look at that and then once I'm on that looking at one psycho, the algorithm then gives me another psycho. Well, I'm just talking about X. But I'm not being targeted. But on X, I think you are. And you have an account on X. You're reposting this stuff on X. I don't know what you're doing on TikTok. I mean, TikTok, I mean, I can't get on TikTok.
Starting point is 00:21:13 I refuse because I know what will happen. This is great. You get sucked in. You get sucked in. You get sucked in. So I think I'm going to change my opinion or my original thesis on this Telegram thing. And I know you have two clips. Let me just do this back.
Starting point is 00:21:31 I have two clips. Let me do this background. Let me do this background or see if it lines up with you. Telegram founder Pavel Durov has been put under formal investigation and released under judicial supervision of allegations his messaging service is being used for illegal activities. Allegations include that the platform is being used for child sexual abuse material, drug trafficking, fraud and abetting organized crime transactions. Earlier this week, President Emmanuel Macron denied political motivations were at play.
Starting point is 00:22:02 It is up to the judiciary and full independence to enforce the law. The arrest of the president of Telegram on French soil took place as part of an ongoing judicial investigation. It is in no way a political decision. It is up to the judges to rule on the matter. But the Kremlin claims otherwise, saying Girov's detention caused shock throughout the world. But it seems to me that, well, it would not be an exaggeration to say that the whole world experienced a greater shock than ever before from the actions of representatives of the collective West. Following Durov's arrest, Telegram said in a statement that it abides by EU laws and its moderation is within industry standards. Durov is banned from leaving France due to the investigation.
Starting point is 00:22:49 So whenever a statement comes out saying, this is not political, it's political. But why? Pavlov is not a politician. So and I admit freely, I'm somewhat influenced by the interview that Mike Benz did with Tucker, which I watched yesterday. Are you familiar with Mike Benz? We've played some of- I am familiar with Mike Benz, but I did not see this interview.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Do you have a clip? I don't have a clip. And I have a question. What does Mike Benz do for a living? That's my question, because he seems to be everywhere telling everybody exactly how the State Department works and how the blob works, but how does he make money? He's everywhere, but does he have a lot of ads? Or does he, that's just a question
Starting point is 00:23:37 that no one seems to be asking. So- You just asked it, we should find out. Yeah, I hope to find out. So the thinking, and by the way, it's also influenced by this email from one of our producers who talks about the privacy features of Telegram,
Starting point is 00:23:52 which turns out is not as great as I thought it was. Ah. Yeah, so the early, I'm gonna read verbatim here. The early team behind- I felt that it was always full of holes, but- Oh, it's worse than you think. The early team behind the start of Telegram led by Nikolai Durov, that's Pablo's brother, I think, consists of six ACM champions, half of them PhDs in math, but they're not cryptographers.
Starting point is 00:24:13 Of course, there's only a handful of really good cryptographers in the world probably. Instead of using known standards like PGP or GPG that are well tested. They created their own encryption standard. Here we go. And our boots on the ground dude named Ben says, there are weak parts in it that will not surprise you if some three-letter agency might have compromised the telegram security. Another big red flag is that by default, the encryption of messages is not on. Turning it on is only possible in a chat to another person. You have to actively select that you want this encrypted. So there's no encryption in channels or groups, which is the main use of Telegram.
Starting point is 00:24:59 There's no encryption possible in channels or groups. Only the secret chats are encrypted. And of course, most people start, I think they've changed it now, but most people have started their account with your own mobile phone number, which is why you don't have a telegram account. And all of the photos and files you share are all stored on their closed source servers for an unlimited time, also unencrypted. So this is a beautiful system. And I think it's very possible, this is what Mike Benz was saying, that the Russians either
Starting point is 00:25:38 they have access to the encrypted stuff or they have some other access and this is hurting the use of Telegram by Ukrainians which is almost everybody in Ukraine is using Telegram because Telegram is what you use or used to use when you started some kind of color revolution. Pay a couple of guys in Germany, we saw that. Was it the Belarus uprising I think? Two guys in Germany are managing the Telegram channel. Well, that's suspicious. And that this is why they want to try and get to Pavel because this is one of the last systems that the agencies and the State Department have
Starting point is 00:26:21 to control revolutions and get people all riled up, not by subverting their messages necessarily, but by using it as the main, it comes across as trustworthy. So I think this is where we need to have a hard look at Elon Musk, not Elon himself. I mean, I've never liked him. You know, he's like, oh, freedom of speech, freedom of speech. But he isn't actually running X. That's Linda Jacarino. Well, before you continue, let's play my two Durov clips. Okay.
Starting point is 00:26:57 Just about the arrest. These are generalized. It's not anything. It's just I just want to get them out of the way. In France. I'm sorry. Yeah. Oh, yeah. In France, authorities have issued preliminary charges against Telegram's EO Pavel Durov for allegedly allowing illegal activities on his social media platform.
Starting point is 00:27:14 He's been released from custody on bail, but is not allowed to leave France. Durov was arrested on Saturday at a Paris airport as part of an investigation that opened last month. Russia-born Durov is also a French citizen. Allegations against him include allowing his platform to be used in connection with child sexual abuse, drug trafficking, fraud and organized criminal activities. French prosecutors also alleged that Telegram refused to share information or documents with investigators when required
Starting point is 00:27:45 by law. French media AFP reports that Dourav is also under investigation for, quote, serious violence against one of his children in Paris. Oh, oh, I hadn't heard this part. That's interesting. A little twist. Serious violence. So that's the leverage.
Starting point is 00:28:04 Pavel, you serious violence against that's the leverage. Pavel. You serious violence against one of your kids Pavel. Look at this picture Pavel. What's that in your mouth Pavel? Part two. After Durov's arrest Telegram issued a statement saying quote, it is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.
Starting point is 00:28:27 Elon Musk, the billionaire owner of X, who has called himself a free speech absolutist, has been speaking out in support of Durov and posted hashtag free Pavel. Yeah, you know, so it seems to me that a guy whose main source of income is the US government could possibly be compromised to create a great free speech platform that now can be used instead of Telegram. And I'm not saying that Elon himself is behind it because if anyone is running that place, not for advertising success because we know is running that place, not for advertising success, because we know that's not working, it's Jacarino, who is a total mainstream insider, NBC Universal, starred the Peacocks, was part of the Peacock streaming
Starting point is 00:29:17 service team, ad council. She actually was in the Trump administration, didn't know this, president's council on sports, fitness and nutrition. Why? Why? Why? I didn't know that either.
Starting point is 00:29:30 That's kind of obscure. And this is the best part. She has a twin sister. Oh, the old twin. The old twin sister bit. Now she's the one that keeps saying, freedom of speech, not freedom of reach. So maybe she has her fingers on the dial. You know, and amidst all of this, all of a sudden we got Zuckerberg going,
Starting point is 00:29:56 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has acknowledged being pressured by the Biden administration to censor content during the pandemic. In a letter to the House Judiciary Committee, Zuckerberg says senior administration officials push the company to censor certain posts about COVID on Facebook and Instagram. Zuckerberg saying, I feel strongly that we should not compromise our content standards due to pressure from any administration in either direction. And we're ready to push back if something like this happens again. Zuckerberg also said he regrets hiding content about Hunter Biden before the 2020 election, including information about Biden's laptop after the FBI warned it may have been Russian disinformation. And we just need to play a nice little supercut, reminding us how the M5M treated us, the citizens, their customers,
Starting point is 00:30:36 or really were their product, about the Hunter Biden laptop. Never forget. Obviously, we're not going with the New York Post story right now on Hunter Biden. Never forget. We don't want to waste our time on stories that are not really stories. Who even thought to make that story up? It's a story that many intelligence experts say has all the hallmarks of a foreign interference campaign. It looks like it's tied to Vladimir Putin in Moscow. This is a Russian intelligence disinformation campaign. Foreign intelligence operation.
Starting point is 00:31:18 Foreign intelligence operation. Russian intelligence. Rudy Giuliani was not fed passively Russian disinformation. He ordered off the menu. This is a classic example of the right-wing media machine. And he's in the midst of a scandal. He's not. And he's taking... He's not. No. We should note Hunter Biden isn't running for president. That argument has been debunked. There is no evidence that Joe Biden did anything wrong. For all we know, these emails are made up.
Starting point is 00:31:45 It just lacks credibility. Okay, I would love if you guys would start doing that digging and start doing that verification. No, we're not going to do your work for you. It was peter a little bit. Sorry, sorry. A main player in there was Stelter at least three times. And then of course, morning Joe jumps in. These guys, of course, Felter's out.
Starting point is 00:32:07 But these guys are so corrupt at MSNBC, CNN in particular. All of them, John, all of them. Yes, but not to the extreme. Come on. The extreme that you get when you go to MSNBC is off the scale. At least they fake it a little bit at the other networks. Again, I blame Robert, the guy who runs Comcast. He's the guy behind the whole thing. Anyway, it appears to me that Elon may not have his fingers on the knobs and
Starting point is 00:32:39 that Jacarino is the one we need to be looking at. I'll give Elon the benefit of the doubt, but he did buy Twitter for $44 billion. Banks can't unload this debt. They've got $17 billion worth of debt, which they want to sell for 30 cents on the dollar because that's what the debt is now valued at. So why?
Starting point is 00:33:00 Oh, just because you have money and you believe in free speech? Maybe, maybe. Well, another thing is I wonder how much of Elon's money this is because there's a lot of Saudi money. It's not. That's the point. Everybody has influence in this thing. That's my point. So that would account for the fact you'd have somebody else come in and actually, Elon being a front man. Yes. And it's always great.
Starting point is 00:33:27 It's always great when they're making fun of the other team until it switches. You know what I mean? It's like it's always great when they censored the bad guy stuff, but when they turn around and use the same tools on you, then it's not going to be so good. So I'm just saying we need to be wary of that and that the only place left for true free speech is podcasting. I knew you were going there. You know I was getting there. And listen to, and so now there, this is the psy-op that's been going on for a long time and it came to a head again this week. Pod is dead. Podcasting evolved away from Apple towards YouTube.
Starting point is 00:34:07 Oh, it's the everyone watches podcasts on YouTube. It's only YouTube. They are trying so hard and to a degree succeeding at convincing everybody that podcasting is dead. It's only YouTube now. Why haven't you heard this at all? Well, I'm in the business. I'm in at all? Well, I'm in the business. I'm in the business.
Starting point is 00:34:26 Well, I'm in the business too. But you're not in the business. No, I'm not running a whole... Infrastructure. ...system, but yes. And I would be okay if they... I mean, they should at least offer to compromise me. I'm a little disappointed by that.
Starting point is 00:34:44 Yeah, where's the money? I don't know. The podcast index is truly... least offer to compromise me. I'm a little disappointed by that. Yeah. Where's the money? I don't know. The podcast index is truly an, oh man, so many of these, a lot of these hosting companies are in on it. I'm not a lot, some of them. I mean, it's a mess. You mean on the corruption?
Starting point is 00:34:58 Yeah. I believe so. Yeah. I believe so. Yeah, you're probably right. You, like you said, you're- Take it down. Take it down.
Starting point is 00:35:04 Take it down. Oh yeah down, take it down. Oh yeah, there's some taking down going on. They've already got Spotify for sure because Spotify, they've got section 230. This is why Zuckerberg, I think, is trying to cut bait and like, oh, well, Trump's going to get in. So I might as well say, hey, you know, because they cleared his letter clearly says they coerced us under a threat of section 230. Cue the ex Facebook people going out and doing interviews.
Starting point is 00:35:40 It was peak COVID and peak debate about what was right or wrong information and the White House openly pressured tech companies to moderate the conversation. We don't take anything down. We don't block anything. Our point is that there is information that is leading to people not taking the vaccine and people are dying as a result. And we have a responsibility as a public health matter to raise that issue.
Starting point is 00:36:04 Zuckerberg says he now believes the government pressure was wrong and he's ready to push back if it happens again. Do you believe that Facebook is trying to suppress certain types of information? No, I don't. Katie Harbath is Facebook's former director of public policy and left in the spring of 21. Is this a form of censorship what he described? He makes clear that they made their own decisions about this content.
Starting point is 00:36:28 I think that's really important. All of the platforms did. She argues that Zuckerberg's admission is an example of walking a fine line at a time of court challenges to tech companies over content moderation and regulation threats. I think this is consistent with Metta wanting to pull back from politics and news overall and very much trying to stay out of this political fray this time. Meaning while the letter may say one thing,
Starting point is 00:36:54 social media's relationship status with Congress remains complicated. Let me clarify on the hosting companies. What I learned is that a lot of these so-called platforms like Spotify, Apple as well, Amazon and iHeart, TuneIn, if you want your podcast there, it's not just like you put out your RSS feed and then they say, oh, I'm going to put this in. No, your hosting company automatically opts you into their terms of service, which is exactly why we're not on Spotify, because they had terms of service. Like, I'm not going to sign any terms of service. So that's how the minute something happens that is not liked by the system, they can now just go to the hosting company and say,
Starting point is 00:37:45 pull the plug, terms of service violation done, you're out, bye. Per episode or per feed itself. So this- Yeah, and the problem of course is that with something like Spotify and people sort of saying, listening to our podcast on Spotify. Yeah, idiots, idiots.
Starting point is 00:38:03 But yes. They don't. But let's say that we're a Spotify podcast and what would happen is that there'd be so many people gravitating toward that. And once they pulled a plug on us, they would have, they'd be like fish out of the water, you know, flapping around. Where are we going to go? I don't know. And then you'd forget about the podcast. You'd never find it someplace else. And then you're done. It's done. And then you're done. The podcast is ruined. Yeah. Yeah. You have to do your own. It has to have a home base that's outside of these systems.
Starting point is 00:38:33 Now, when I signed up, I don't hate even, I don't think my login even works anymore on Apple, but Apple also had terms of service. I don't know if that, I'm sure it has changed since COVID, a lot changed during COVID. So to bring it all back around, there's not a lot of places, if any, that we can really trust for freedom of speech. Because you may think that you're in the Bozo filter, Linda Iaccarino may be dialing you down. Certainly YouTube,
Starting point is 00:39:07 oh yeah, get everybody on YouTube. That's where podcasts are great. Use a modern podcast app, people. One that uses the index, podcastapps.com. We will see what happens to Pavel, but I would say that the longer they keep him, although he's out on 5 million euro bail, can't leave France, I would say that it's going to become less trustworthy for everybody. And then where do you go? Signal literally takes money from the US government, well, NGOs, they're funded by the US government. So no. You know, WhatsApp, which is a Facebook product or, yeah, a meta product. No. So the control system is closing in on us.
Starting point is 00:39:58 And meanwhile, we're just here living the value for value life with no impact whatsoever. We have no impact. We have no impact. We don't have impact in a threatening sense. And why is that? We do have impact in a subversive sense. I like that. Explain.
Starting point is 00:40:24 Well, in other words, we have a subtext to everything we do, which is truth. Yes. And kind of truth and understanding, which is a big deal. In other words, figuring out what the news really means, who's behind it, and what you just broke down with a Jacarino woman. With a twin. That sort of thing. With a twin. And a twin, yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:47 That's all. Elon may not know. Elon may think that he's talking to Jacarino, but it's the twin. And so that sort of thing gets into the public subconscious, and that has a subversive effect on the way people think about things because they have some sort of realization that you wouldn't normally have. And it's nothing you can really stamp out. It's just, it's subtle. And so that's what we do. That's why there's nobody really,
Starting point is 00:41:15 that's why you like we don't appear to have influence. So we're kind of like the, uh, the Paul Revere of podcasting. We just ringing the bell. We're just ringing the bell. We're the Minutemen. Okay. Well, I'm happy. I'm happy that we're doing it for sure. I'm happy. And- Well, the people are happy that we're doing it. Yeah. Oh yeah. And they propagate. That's the main thing. I don't care whether you're happy or not. And they do meetups and people in the meetups like, what are these people?
Starting point is 00:41:47 And they go stand over there. What are they talking about? And they learn things. So we're a slow roll. We're like the molasses of influence. The molasses of subversion. Exactly. I think I've figured out what... This is actually quite good.
Starting point is 00:42:06 And it was predicted, it was all over the place during COVID and we never really followed through on it. And I think that we're finally getting there. I'll start with this clip just because you understand what the true evil is in our world. It's not viruses anymore. No, no, it's mosquitoes. Listen, there's a lot going on, especially here in South Florida where we already have experienced West Nile and dengue and Zika.
Starting point is 00:42:38 And now we have this illness to concern ourselves with. Sloth fever or sloth flu is what it's sometimes called. Decades ago, researchers first investigating the virus found it in a sloth and it was thought the animals helped spread the disease. You might've gotten it from a sloth that had been bitten by a midge. You might not have.
Starting point is 00:42:59 You might've gotten it from a midge that had bitten somebody else. Okay, so mosquitoes, they add in midges because it's just funny because it makes you think of midges. Love the midges. So mosquitoes and what creates mosquitoes? And this is the part that we stop thinking about. And to health watch this morning, the mosquitoes are bad out there and we are looking at new concerns over diseases spread by those mosquitoes. A New Hampshire man recently died from Eastern equine encephalitis. I knew I was gonna screw that one up. It's a rare illness. No vaccine, no treatment. In Massachusetts, some towns in response are
Starting point is 00:43:33 now spraying for mosquitoes and also urging people to stay inside in the evening and nighttime when the mosquitoes are out. CBS News medical contributor Dr. Celine Gounder asked the CDC director Mandy Cohen if climate change is affecting these kinds of outbreaks. You know the impact of heat on our health and climate change is not only impacting us as humans but it's changing where mosquitoes and ticks live and thus what diseases are moving around in different regions. We're just seeing more bugs and some of those bugs are becoming resistant to our control methods. Due to climate change. That's right, dudes, we forgot all about this. They kept saying, oh no, the next pandemic will come from
Starting point is 00:44:15 climate change. Eastern equine encephalitis. Equine means horses. We're not horses. What can you tell us about it? Why is it hurting people? Well this is something that we see with many infectious diseases that the host might be another animal maybe a bat Which is what we suspect with COVID for example or that with Ebola But in this case what we think is happening is horses perhaps other animals are the host Mosquitoes are biting them and then transmitting that infection to humans. And what's better than mosquitoes? Because it's just as scary. Oh, I walked outside and saw a mosquito. Oh, I've got to wear a hazmat suit to my pickleball game.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Oh, no. And it's all because of climate change. So the CDC director, Cohen, talked about the big factor of heat playing a significant role. And we know the CDC has said mosquitoes are the world's deadliest animal. What more can be done when it comes to addressing these issues finding treatments and vaccines? Well climate change is creating the right breeding ground for mosquitoes. So you have hotter, more humid, longer summers which means people are coming into contact with mosquitoes that much more, and so therefore mosquito-borne infections.
Starting point is 00:45:27 What can we be doing? Well, the really most important thing is to be controlling the mosquitoes. So there are some traditional ways of doing that. You want to drain your standing water. You want to be spraying. And there are some newer technologies there to control mosquitoes that don't involve pesticides. Some of those are being piloted in places like the Florida Keys where you have lots of mosquitoes. But we still have a lot to
Starting point is 00:45:49 go in terms of developing treatments or vaccines. Now, let us all remind ourselves that it is Bill Gates, because of course, wherever there's something nasty, there's the nasty man himself, Bill Gates, who was genetically modifying mosquitoes so they wouldn't reproduce. They don't talk about that right now. At least I haven't found any clips. And in 2007, he was already talking about mosquitoes. Remember when he released mosquitoes into the TED conference? Illegally. Yes. And was like, you should have been arrested on the spot.
Starting point is 00:46:21 Yes. And it was like, you should have been arrested on the spot. So put all of that together, climate change, Bill Gates, mosquitoes, and you know, but it's like I guess they in Massachusetts and we played that clip on the last show. Like, Oh, you might want to stay inside because you know, climate change mosquitoes. Oh no. And right. Just as an aside before you continue,
Starting point is 00:46:45 there has been less and less mosquitoes in this area. We have none. Yeah, I know. I know. And there's two things going on that have to be addressed with the mosquitoes. One, it's windier than usual. And when it's windier, the mosquitoes, once they get it, they are not a bug that is, that can fly around in a wind. They just get blown to someplace else. They get blown away and there's the end of them.
Starting point is 00:47:13 And so we've had more wind than usual, which is that you could say, well, climate change is causing winds. And if climate change is causing winds, the winds are blowing away the mosquitoes, so there can't be more mosquitoes. There is a problem, there's a conundrum in logic with these mosquitoes. You drive on the freeway, right? From time to time? I do drive, of course I drive. When's the… Well…
Starting point is 00:47:37 I can't get on the freeway. What are you talking about? Of course I drive on the freeway. Just asking because now the next… the follow-up question is when's the last time you had to scrape bugs off of your windshield? Excellent point. When I was a kid we would drive down 99 or whatever to say to LA or we were just driving anywhere. All you, well there's two things here I've talked about this too. Is that you used to get so many, you just get the windshield be filled with bugs. But the car's aerodynamics have changed so much that the bugs don't hit the windshield anymore.
Starting point is 00:48:17 They go up and over. That's one supposed reason. But you have a 30-year-old Lexus. Excellent point. Very aerodynamic car. supposed reason, but you have a 30 year old Lexus. Very aerodynamic car. But, but besides that, but it doesn't excuse the fact that the grills, which aren't as aerodynamic, don't have the bugs either. So there's something we don't have the flying insect problem. We had,
Starting point is 00:48:44 I'd say 50 years ago. No. But, even though this morning it was 72 degrees in August in Texas where my lawn is green for the first time that I've lived in Texas for 15 years, somehow it's the hottest year on record. This morning, record-breaking heat spreading across more of the U.S. it's warmer than I like it's a little hard to breathe the higher temperatures a growing concern as a new study shows growing number of related deaths in the u.s. skyrocketed by 117 percent between 1999 and 2023 we saw more heat related deaths wait wait, wait. Yes. Stop the clip. Do they give us
Starting point is 00:49:27 actual numbers or they're just going by percentage? No, no, just percentages. So it went up 100% from one to two. Well, we also have 100% more people homeless on the streets who may just be frying and dying. There's that. Between 1999 and 2023. We saw more heat related deaths in 2023 than we ever have in the 20 some years of records and that's definitely still an undercount. More than 21,000 heat related deaths were reported over the last two decades. Scientists citing climate change. Wait, stop it again. It gets better at the end.
Starting point is 00:50:03 If you're going to play this kind of garbage, you're going to get stopped a lot. It's ABC, man. She says, if you're going to play A, always becoming... Climate change. So, if you're going to play this stuff, I have to interrupt it because she said, she said something very peculiar in there. She says, we have, don't get these numbers, but it's and we have this number that's more than ever before and it's under counted. Yeah. Well,
Starting point is 00:50:31 how do you know it's under counted if you never have these numbers? Because it's a lie. This is all psychological warfare and we're propagating it for free for them. Well, no, we're actually, I think we're counter propagating it. We are, we are, we are. But this notion that it's under counted. Wait until you hear what she says, what he says at the end. 20 some years of records and that's definitely still an under count.
Starting point is 00:50:55 Definitely, it's not just under, it's definitely under counted. If it's definitely, then give us the real count lady. More than 21. If you know it's an under count, it's definitely an undercount, what is the real number? Then you should be able to do it. She's not going to tell you. It's not interactive that way. She can't hear us.
Starting point is 00:51:12 And by the way, did she ever give actual numbers or just percentages? No, no, just 117%. More than 21,000 heat-related deaths were reported over the last two decades, scientists citing climate change. The weather so hot after starting their first day of school yesterday, students at 63 public schools in Philadelphia will be sent home early today and tomorrow. We do not have air in our cafeteria and in our auditorium. What?
Starting point is 00:51:40 What? There's no air. There's no air? No air. I think she means air conditioning, but yeah, we'll do the Dvorak. What? No oxygen? No air?
Starting point is 00:51:52 Air in our cafeteria and in our auditorium. Some schools in Iowa also dismissed early due to high temps and no AC. At seven o'clock it was already 86 or 87 degrees. Oh no. By the time I leave at one it'll be in the 90s Well, hey, this is considered good weather 87 it's beautiful if you people go to Hawaii just to be an 87 degree weather It's called now you're dying from it. It's called the summer in Detroit students will be sent home early again today
Starting point is 00:52:22 Frustrating parents they knew the weather was going to be rather hot, and they know they don't have accommodations in a school to where they're providing AC. The heat fueling more calls to invest federal funds and outfitting more schools with AC. The extreme heat continues for several days. Triple digits are possible in Nashville today, and Chicago could set a record. I've been to Chicago before this climate change nonsense. And it could set a wet record but it's not going to. But wait it gets better. I lived in Chicago. Yeah. It's hot and humid it's terrible in the summer. Listen to the last numerical statistics you'll love it. With feel like temperatures in parts of the Midwest
Starting point is 00:53:05 reaching 100. Did you hear it? I, you know, I was watching this with Jay the other day. Feels like, feels like, feels like, it feels like. Now it's just feels like temperature. Yeah, it feels like temperature. It feels like, oh, and then they, here's the worst part. They put a map up and they put all these temperatures up, but they weren't temperatures at all. They were all feels like. Yes. So you had one 15, one 10, and it was just a map of all these very high temperatures, but it would, none of them were real. They're all feels like,
Starting point is 00:53:43 and you could feel, well, right now, let me think right here in the in the podcasting room it feels like 200 degrees. Well maybe I should take this shirt off it feels like 200 degrees. No don't take the shirt off. Whatever you do. Digits are possible in Nashville today and Chicago could set a record with feel-like temperatures in parts of the Midwest reaching 115 degrees. As for that study on heat-related deaths, researchers say the uptake has been especially high in the last seven years, which scientists say proves the impact of climate change. Due to climate change.
Starting point is 00:54:22 It's all due to climate change. Oh, the last seven years, and because it's happened in the last seven years, not the last one million years, by the way, but the last seven years proves it proves it because it's gone on for seven years, supposedly gone on for seven years. We don't even know that to be true. So, they got the hot weather, it's moisture. We also have corn sweat. I didn't pull the clip, but that's another new one.
Starting point is 00:54:50 What's corn sweat? Corn sweat is, you know, when it gets warm, then every living plant exudes moisture. And so they show a map and like,, oh look at this in the corn region. It's very bad mosquitoes because of corn sweat. You blew it, didn't get that clip. Well, I can actually find it for you. No, don't worry about it. You already gave away the punch line.
Starting point is 00:55:23 Here, corn sweat. Let me see. Scientific American. Here, corn sweat. Let me see. Corn sweat. Scientific American. Here we go. Corn sweat and climate change brings sweltering weather to the mid-east. A heat wave is set.
Starting point is 00:55:33 Corn sweat. So it's corn sweat that's bringing the weather. Is that what it said? Yeah. There's a reason why this map of corn production looks so similar to this map of heat risk in the US today. And the answer... Heat risk. Another good one, John.
Starting point is 00:55:46 Heat risk, heat risk. Oh, I like that one, that's a show title. Heat risk. In the US today. And the answer is corn sweat. Yes, corn sweat. Corn sweat is a truly excellent term for something that's really known as evapotranspiration.
Starting point is 00:56:00 It's something that- Evapotranspiration! This is why I didn't pull the clip, because it's not a news clip, it's some... some... He-she thing talking. ...conspiration. It's something that all plants do, it's releasing water into the atmosphere when it grows to regulate temperature.
Starting point is 00:56:16 But corn does this especially well, and where there's lots and lots and lots of corn grown, like in the Midwest, it actually has a measurable impact on the humidity of the area. Corn sweat. I think that's the show title right there. Corn sweat.
Starting point is 00:56:33 I'm agreeing. Corn sweat. So man, we're just making it up as we go along. What can we sigh off these idiots with now? Corn sweat. Oh, good one. And you know what comes from corn sweat? Mosquitoes.
Starting point is 00:56:49 And what comes from mosquitoes? Sloth fever. And Zika. And dengue. And dengue. Yes. Yeah, and sloth fever. And equine encephalitis.
Starting point is 00:56:58 Yeah, there's 11 cases a year on average every year, year in and year out, and there's one so far. Which I think is... So let's just get that out of the way. Parfylitis. Yeah, which is 11 cases a year on average every year here in a year out There's one so far which I think is let's just get that out of the way, which I think is treatable with ivermectin I believe Could be yeah so it's
Starting point is 00:57:16 Weird and they're just it's building. It's a strategy of tension. Just build it up build it up build it up Oh, think of the children there. Why don't the children. Why do the schools not have air conditioning? We spend hundreds of billions of dollars a year on stupid books and- Stupid books. Stupid books. Really stupid books that go into the schools. Dumb books. Oh, my first blow job at 12. But we don't have AC for these children. By Bill Clinton, by the way. Yeah, hey, hey, oh. We need to stop this. We need schools have AC. Yes, not the ones in the report. Not in Chicago. apparently not in Chicago.
Starting point is 00:58:06 Did you go to school when you lived in Chicago? I did, of course. Did they have air conditioning? I don't remember. Did they have heating in the winter? You'd hope they would. Boy, you have to have heating in the winter. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:18 It's cold too. Yeah. Chicago has got extreme climate. Yes. Always has though. It gets super cold in the winter and miserable and it gets extremely hot and muggy in the summer and there's a good period of time. There's probably four months out of the year just before summer and just after summer where it's really super nice.
Starting point is 00:58:42 It's so nice. Yeah. Oh, so nice. That's it. You get four, four, Tina comes from Chicago. She knows. Ridiculously nice. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:52 It's always been, but she didn't hear about corn sweat because she grew up in Indiana. Corn sweat. Never heard of corn sweat, strangely enough. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:02 Well, there we go. All right, back to you, Bob. Well, what else we got here? Well, I'm going to let you do some stuff. You know, I want to get this out of the way. I didn't want to get these clips, but I'm going to do them. This is about Jack Smith and re-jiggering the idea. Oh, good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. This is good. I didn't want to get them, but it turns out that there's interesting material in here.
Starting point is 00:59:23 This is, I got four, it's four-parter, plus an analysis. So it turns out to be a lot more than I wanted, but it's all short. I mean, one of the clips is 13 seconds, so it's not gonna kill anybody. So let's go with Jacks. And this is all from NTD. This is NTD. Democratic Congressman Jamie Raskin called the superseding indictment against former President Donald Trump a heroic and
Starting point is 00:59:46 There's something quietly heroic about Jack Smith insisting on going forward to make sure that this plot come to light Donald Trump tried to interfere with the peaceful transfer of power with so Jacksmith is trying to make the law work in the way it was intended to Wow That's exactly right. He's trying to make the law work in the way it was intended to. Wow. That's exactly right. He's trying to make the law work. Trying to make it work. Trying to make the law work. He just admits it. He's just finagling everything to try and squeeze it into the law to make it work. All right. Jamie Raskin is a dick.
Starting point is 01:00:22 Jamie Raskin is a problem. He'saskin is a problem He's he's a he is I'd say top of the list of people we need to get out of there Yeah, he's a terrible person. He said he looks evil if you look at him. He's just an evil looking guy. Yeah, and And he's like all in he has this theory that it is I don't have the clip on this list But he came out with saying we're gonna not let Trump take office if he wins. Yeah, he has this theory that it is, I don't have the clip on this list, but he came out with saying, we're going to not let Trump take office if he wins. Yeah. He said, uh, we're going to have to have a secret service protection for everybody in Congress because we're going to get him out. And, you know, basically saying we'll have a civil war, but we'll be protected. Yes.
Starting point is 01:01:01 I heard that clip. Basically is what he said. Exactly. Yeah, that's what he said. He is a very, uh, horrible, he's a horrible man. Okay, part two. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson posted on social media that Donald Trump continues to be the most persecuted politician in the history of the US. Speaker Johnson added that special counsel Jack Smith has brought yet another bogus indictment and that Americans are sick of his corruption and shameless lawfare.
Starting point is 01:01:27 Democratic Congresswoman Zoe Loughbrant from California aimed her criticism at the Supreme Court's ruling last month on presidential immunity and blamed former President Donald Trump for the events of January 6. made really a radical decision granting Trump immunity, a bizarre case. The judge has to have an evidentiary hearing to find out what is the evidence supporting this slimmed down indictment. But I mean, one thing is abundantly clear. The former president summoned a mob to Washington. Who was that speaking? Our local idiot Zoe Loughbrin.
Starting point is 01:02:11 Oh, Zoe is still around? Wasn't Zoe a trans? No, no. No, I think of someone else. No, she just looks trans. She's an ugly woman from the Bay Area. Oh, they're so judgmental. Well, we're handsome, luckily. That's what we do.
Starting point is 01:02:32 Yes, we are. You can make a judgment about somebody being ugly when they're ugly. I mean, I don't think there's any reason not to make this judgment. I'm with you. I'm glad you said it. You know, I've never been condemned for that. People are afraid of you and they can't spell your last name so they don't know how to email you. So they email me instead.
Starting point is 01:02:52 Okay. So we go, now we get to hear something that you may have heard elsewhere. Let's go to clip three. Senator and vice presidential candidate JD Vance defended the Supreme Court's ruling regarding presidential immunity and dismissed the superseding indictment against former president Donald Trump as election interference. And you know, the way that I think about it is try to make this nonpartisan. Barack Obama ordered drones to strike an American citizen in Yemen.
Starting point is 01:03:18 That's like the definition of murder unless you recognize the president has some immunity in conducting his official act. There's Vance doing the translation, doing his job. What he does, he does it well. And the fact is, and nobody keep, he's the first guy I noticed that really brought it up, which is that Obama, if you didn't have this immunity decision by the Supreme Court, Obama would be liable for murder.
Starting point is 01:03:46 And the only thing Vance didn't do is bring up the fact that after murdering the American citizen, he murdered his son a few days later. Yeah, well, you know. That innocent 16-year-old kid. Drinking a coffee. Drinking a coffee. Drinking a coffee. Mining his own business.
Starting point is 01:04:02 But no, that's okay. Yeah, that's good. That's good. Allining his own business. But no, that's okay. That was good. That was good. All right, onward. It is important to note that despite criticism against special counsel investigations against former president Donald Trump, House Republican leadership has decided not to pursue the strategy of defunding the Department of Justice through the appropriations process.
Starting point is 01:04:23 What? Wait. This is the, the reason I ended with this clip was, this is the typical Republicans and they've been doing this and they do it and do it and they, Holly just did it with a, by bringing on one of the Granholm. Showboat and then nothing happens. Yeah, showboat, in fact he actually, for all practical purposes, he had, I don't have the clip, but he had Granholm. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:50 And he's lecturing her about how she lied. Wait a minute, she lied to Congress? Where is the indictment for lying to Congress? Now, if it was a Republican in the olden days and the Democrats were running Congress, they indict them. Yeah, they're much better at that. You're indicted for lying to Congress. They're much better at that stuff.
Starting point is 01:05:09 Or more sincere. What's there to do? You just send the indictment through. They won't do it. They just keep harassing them, haranguing them, and looking good by being a showboater like Hawley. And then you do nothing. You do absolutely nothing.
Starting point is 01:05:23 These Republicans are ridiculous. I would have more respect for Hawley and then you do nothing. You do absolutely nothing. These Republicans are ridiculous. I would have more respect for Hawley if he just said, hey, Granholm, you're ugly and you got big ears. I'd have respect for him if he said that, but no. I wouldn't call her ugly. Oh, okay. I have some stuff here on this. Well, there's the last clip.
Starting point is 01:05:43 This is the analysis. It was a long analysis. I only took, I have part one, but I didn't clip anything else. Earlier, we spoke with Zach Smith, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation and former federal prosecutor about the superseding indictment. Zach Smith, thank you so much for joining us. Great to have you back on the show. Now, to begin, what changes were made to this newest indictment?
Starting point is 01:06:04 The original four charges haven't changed, so what's different here? Yeah, this is a little bit of an unusual situation for a superseding indictment. A superseding indictment typically means that prosecutors are adding additional charges against a defendant, but that's not what Jack Smith did in this case. As you mentioned, Jack Smith left the four original charges intact, but he essentially changed the factual predicates underlying those charges. For instance, he removed references to Donald Trump's conversations with Justice Department officials in the wake of the 2020 election. He added some language to make clear that in his view, certain actions
Starting point is 01:06:41 Donald Trump took in his private or political capacities rather than in his official capacity. And he also added some additional language relevant to some of the other charges, again, trying to emphasize that those were private rather than official acts. And the reason Jack Smith took these actions, the reason he made these amendments, is to try to get around the immunity ruling that the US Supreme Court recently released where the court said that presidents, including Donald Trump, are immune from prosecution for acts they take in their official capacity while in office. So I have an analysis from our constitutional lawyer, Rob, who read everything.
Starting point is 01:07:25 And I shall read this for us right now. It's relatively short. Under the SCOTUS ruling, the charges can't go forward unless Smith can show that the alleged conduct is either one, an unofficial act, or two, an official act that doesn't fall within the outer perimeter of the president's official responsibility and is not manifestly or palpably beyond his authority. This is a difficult burden for Smith to satisfy. The outer perimeter beyond his authority language captures a vast range of presidential conduct, this is all as per the Supreme Court, so it will very likely encompass the conduct alleged in the
Starting point is 01:08:06 new indictment. To the extent it does, the courts must presume that Trump is immune and Smith will have to overcome that presumption, according to Rob's very tall order. And remember, there's still the lingering issue raised by Justice Thomas that Jack Smith's appointment is invalid under Article 2 Appointments Clause because there's no law that establishes Smith's office. If Trump wins the election this case will die DOJ doesn't prosecute sitting presidents as a matter of policy and one thing he says would you keep in mind if the M5M and Dems claim that this is a nail in Trump's coffin they will have to simultaneously retreat from their incompatible
Starting point is 01:08:45 claim that SCOTUS gave Trump total freedom to do whatever he does or whatever he wants to do. Really, all this is is just a setup for questions during the debate. That's all that this is. That's why Trump immediately started fundraising off of it as witnessed by another 8 million text messages. It's really, it's so lame. Let me guess, these are on a phone that you carry with you for some reason? You're carrying a phone around wherever you go? It's just a text number. So, this is, it's all just a text number.
Starting point is 01:09:29 So this is, it's all just about this debate. Can you call back by the way, when they send you one of these messages? Let me see. That's a very good- I would call them back, say hello, you keep sending me these messages. You wanna talk, what's the reason for this? That's a very good question, let me see.
Starting point is 01:09:42 This is an alert from Donald Trump. Okay. I was just indicted again. Please. Read my response to special counsel. No, I'm not going to read them to call them back. Let's see if I'm going to call and. We check the number and dial again. Oh, it's not in service. Let's try another one. Let's, cause I have a lot from president Trump. This is Donald Trump Jr. Let's call junior.
Starting point is 01:10:08 Let's see what juniors. Give him a call. See what he says to say. Oh, disconnected right away. Um, let me see. Uh, from Trump who was asking for $10. Let's see. And invalid number.
Starting point is 01:10:28 Now this is all. Wait a minute. It's a two one three number, too You're giving getting phone calls a message phone calls in other words the message through a phone Mm-hmm, and you call the number and the number is bogus wait here. This is this is no different than a number from Taiwan and China Philippines India Bomb, India, Bombay. Let's call Rand Paul. Let's see what he has to say. He's in Virginia. Oh, no, no invalid number. Oh, okay. Oh gee. Isn't that crazy? Well, I can't even hang up. If you can't call him back, why would you send him money? It sounds like you don't know who it is you're sending to.
Starting point is 01:11:02 Could be anybody. Could be anybody. Yes. Yes, yes, yes. Yeah, well, welcome to the modern era. Yes. Hey, I got an interesting clip here from our buddy, Becky Worley. Have you spoken to Becky recently? No, I should have lunch with her.
Starting point is 01:11:22 I used to have lunch with her once a year. Yeah, but she's in LA, isn't she? No, she's in the peninsula as far as I know. And then she moved. You need to go up there. You need to go visit her and the kids. It's not up, it's down. Oh, don't you go down there. Go down to Becky Worley. I've always liked Becky Worley. I mean, I always feel sad because she is nothing like the stupid reports they make her do. But she's playing the game. She's got kids and a wife and you know, she's got a...
Starting point is 01:11:54 Yeah, she is a hard worker. She's good at what she does. She's always was behind. She was a producer originally. I'll always be behind. I first met her when she was at MSNBC when it was a different kind of network. And she was always the producer of shows. But she had the look and feel of a person who had front of camera. She was good looking on camera. She's phototeligenic. She's a little harsh in person, a little more, well, what is it? That's not the right word, harsh. Maybe it is the right word. She's a good looking woman in person. Yes, he's not ugly like Jamie Raskin.
Starting point is 01:12:32 No, it's like, but she's telegenic and she's very good on the camera. I guess she's always felt that way. And so once she got to the other side of the camera, she stopped doing producing, from what I can tell. And she's good. I think she's very talented. She's personable. Well, I think she is adding something to the hair and hookers report for the economy. And it's something I've not yet asked the zoomer about, but I take this to be very credible
Starting point is 01:13:01 luxury or affordability, right? But what if you could have them both? That's the premise fueling a rise in Gen Z and millennial shopping for so-called dupes instead of brand name goods. But what's the downside as we all search for value? This morning influencers are touting so-called dupes with pride. Don't go buy leggings for that much money when you can get these for half the price. It's the same product. It's the same. It's the same thing. It's always really fun to find a really great affordable alternative to something because you're helping your friends out
Starting point is 01:13:36 and you can tell them like, Hey, you've been using this, here's this and then they can put more money towards bills instead of foundation. Anna Pothier has a series on our socials where she breaks down the active ingredients and high end products and shows less expensive options with the same components. Everything that's highlighted in yellow here is also highlighted in yellow here. Saving money on items is now becoming something that's a little bit in vogue. It's cool to be wearing something that is less expensive but looks like the expensive
Starting point is 01:14:07 brand. And Herzog, who wrote a book on counterfeits, says these so-called dupe products are different from illegal knockoffs. A dupe product doesn't necessarily mean counterfeit. What it does mean is that it is a similar product, but less expensive than the original product. When you're talking about a counterfeit item, you're talking about an item that's pretending to be like the original item down to the name of the item.
Starting point is 01:14:37 But experts do say buying these products brings up other issues worth considering. Dupes do not come with extended warranties. You have a very specific time that you need to return that in. This is what the shopfluencers are doing. Let's just face it, everything comes from China here. Everything we buy in America, pretty much everything comes from China. And you can get the exact same product, and they're not talking about brands like Gucci But everything else from the from the makeup products, which I looked it up the Amazon influencer program
Starting point is 01:15:13 Number one is games online games. You can get 20% big on the games right after that. It's beauty and makeup products Which is a big deal on the, as you know, all the makeup tip influencers. And I think that this is an interesting development and it goes right along with the lab grown diamonds. It's all part of the same thing. We got a note from Jessica who used to work in the diamond industry and She says lab-grown diamonds are a great way to sell jewelry to people who cannot afford the price tag of natural diamonds They're also a good way for jewelers to make money as you can slap a huge mark up to a lab-grown
Starting point is 01:15:55 And it will still still come out cheaper than the real thing She says however people discover when they get divorced and try to sell their lab-grown diamond back to a jewelry shop. It's basically worthless Yeah, it makes nothing but sense Makes nothing but sense So we're just living in this fantasy land of expensive products, which you don't really need to buy the expense You're the king of this. We should do tips on dupes a dupe tip. Well, I've always been a fan of these things. Of course, you're a frugal man.
Starting point is 01:16:29 And I have, well, for good reason. Yeah. And I've always had been a fan of the Canal Street counterfeit watch business. I think it's not what it once was. It's gone. It's gone. It's gone. But my favorite counterfeit watch, and I became pretty good at spotting other people who have counterfeit watches. I've gone out to dinner with business. Do you think, you know, you're kind of an expert on this. Is this watch that my mother-in-law gave me? Is this a real Rolex?
Starting point is 01:17:01 Well, that's counterfeit. That's not a dupe. That's a counterfeit. Yeah it's a counterfeit. Counterfeits are part of the, they poo poo counterfeits. No no, I believe, I think like you, that a lot of, especially when it comes to bags, handbags, it's all from the same factory. It's the same stuff. I went to Korea one year and there's areas where you can get these bags. Bags. And they had Eddie Bauer bags that I know that... Well, there's a blast from the past.
Starting point is 01:17:33 It was a while ago. Is Eddie Bauer still a brand? And it was these Eddie Bauer bags and they were beautiful and they had the logo, everything was there. And I realized a lot of this stuff that you get from these counterfeiters is not really counterfeiters. And it was Eddie, these Eddie Bauer bags and they were beautiful and they had the logo. Everything was there. And I realized that a lot of this stuff that you get from these counterfeiters is not really counterfeit. It's end of run.
Starting point is 01:17:53 End of run. Yes. They overproduce, they overproduce and they get an order for 10,000, they crank it up and then they can't stop the line fast enough. And there's an extra thousand to fall off the back. What do we do with these? So they sell them at cost or twice cost. Like, and so instead of 50 bucks for the bag is 10 or $8. But now you're seeing that the brands, the companies that advertise on
Starting point is 01:18:23 television, they have a problem. I'm surprised that Becky even was allowed to do this, this particular item that she did, because it's going to cut into these huge, luxurious brands. The margins, yeah. Yes. Because those guys make more, the margin is their game. Oh man. You know, when my first wife had had a cosmetics company
Starting point is 01:18:48 The only reason I agreed to it is one to shut her up and the second one Well, there's two reasons the second was the margins were incredible. It's just goop You know you like eyebrow pencils. It all comes from one factory in Germany or at least back in the day I don't know Germany produces anything anymore, the men's Schwann, Schwann pencils. This is where you get all your pencils including your H2, HB2 pencil, everything. It all comes from one factory and it's all about the packaging. It's all about packaging. That's where you mark it up. We're living in a fake world, John. Mark it up. We're living in a fake world, John. We are.
Starting point is 01:19:26 It's fake. It's phony. And it's only a matter of time until they call compounded GLP-1 dupes. They're already trying to make it look like it's counterfeit because, oh, we can't cut it. It's the same thing. We can't cut into the margins. It's the same chemical.
Starting point is 01:19:44 A chemical is a chemical. Sodium chloride is salt no matter how you cut it. That's right. No matter how you make it, no matter how you let it evaporate from the water, no matter how you get sodium chloride, it's still sodium chloride. I'm laughing at the troll room. The world is fake and gay. Okay, well, you summed it up.
Starting point is 01:20:06 There you go. And just to prove these margins, how crazy it is and the fake world we're living in, which you can opt out of, Eli Lilly made a nice interesting move the other day. Tonight, the drug maker Eli Lilly is making its popular weight loss drug, ZepBound, more affordable for anyone whose insurance won't cover it. ZepBound will now be sold on the Eli Lilly website with a prescription. The cost is about half of the retail price.
Starting point is 01:20:33 It's half. Why is it half? And this of course is not for people- And they're still making money. Yes, this is not for people with insurance. This is for people whose insurance won't cover it. And all of a sudden it's half. But okay, let's put it on Medicare so everybody else can pay for it at full price, full markup.
Starting point is 01:20:50 No, no, no, no, no, no. Maybe one day people will catch on. I don't know. No. No. How's that going to work? How's that even possible? If they listen to this podcast. Well, we'll have a million people that kind of catch on, but even so, we've noticed, even though listeners to our podcast, the producers, every so often they come up with some note that they send us that they've,
Starting point is 01:21:15 they've lockstuck, they've been hook, line and sinker into some scam of some sort that, you know, you hope that they were, would be immune to based on what we keep saying. Do you have an example? Do you have an example? I don't have one off the top of my head, but it happens all the time.
Starting point is 01:21:33 It's sad. It's just that you can't beat back mainstream media and its brow beating of the public. Well, it is slowly, slowly disintegrating. No, it's not. Yes, it is. You're a dreamer. You're the idealist. I have hope.
Starting point is 01:21:55 I have at least 10 more years of hope on you. That's why I'm still in that hope phase. Good luck. 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 corn sweat. Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one and only Mr. John C. DeVorent. Good morning to you Mr. Adam Curry. In the morning all ships and sea boots from the ground feed in the air.
Starting point is 01:22:17 Subs in the water. And all the dames and knights out there. Well let me check this out. This is very odd. The troll count seems to be low. Joke out. This thing very odd. The troll count seems to be low. We must have, uh, the corn sweat has devoured them. 1870 seems low for a Thursday. Don't we usually have more on a Thursday?
Starting point is 01:22:35 No, we usually have 1700. Let me see. Oh, I'm sorry. You're right. Let me see. Now the last Thursday was 1889. Oh, you're right. No, it's about right. I'm sorry. You're right. 1870. So we're on par. Hey trolls, how you doing? Are you corn sweating in that troll room? You can join them by the way,
Starting point is 01:22:56 by going to trollroom.io. You can listen to the No Agenda Stream 24 seven live. Huh. So we're on tune in. You know the app TuneIn? No, I don't. It's a streaming radio app and you can use TuneIn to listen to radio streams from radio stations and the No Agenda Stream is on there. It's been on there for a long long time. Yeah, that's good but when you tap on it because I have it in the car this for some reason and it has it
Starting point is 01:23:28 You know, you can get serious XM and tune in. Okay. Okay, so I listen to tune in and it starts off with two ads They're just jacking ads in front of stuff That's lame Okay, this this is a ripoff. So don't use TuneIn. It's a ripoff. Or Spotify. It's a ripoff. What is the best way to listen to the No Agenda show in the car?
Starting point is 01:23:51 Well, there's two ways. I would suggest you get a modern podcast app because not only will you be driving in the car and all of a sudden, it'll alert you through your Android Auto or your CarPlay, or if you just have your phone with you and it's connected to Bluetooth and the Modern Podcast app will say, Hey, no agenda show is live. You tap on it. It's the same place you get your podcast and it starts playing. Now we do not recommend you enter the troll room while driving. You can, but you know, we don't recommend it.
Starting point is 01:24:22 But you can use trollroom.io to get in, log in, make an account and everything. And that's where the trolls are. Podcastapps.com. If you want to continue to listen to your favorite podcasts before they get jacked and you get all those great new features. Unlike everybody else, like the Kelsey Brothers, holy moly. Did you hear this nonsense this this?
Starting point is 01:24:46 Promotional bull crap. I'm gonna play it for you new 30 the Kelsey brothers are taking their new Heights podcast to new Heights Financially Jason and Travis Kelsey signed a new deal with Amazon's wonder That is worth reportedly a hundred million dollars over three years The brothers said they are excited about the partnership and are thrilled to start season three. The podcast has been around since 2022 and has won multiple awards,
Starting point is 01:25:11 including podcast of the year at the 2024 iHeart Podcast Awards. We need an award. We've gotten awards. We don't pay to enter anymore, so we don't get awards. Because every awards show now, you have to pay to enter. Yes, this is a fact of awards. You have to pay to win. So we don't do that.
Starting point is 01:25:33 What the I Heart Awards, please. The I Heart Awards for people that are on I Heart. Yes, exactly. This is a scam. Well, also... And I never heard of this podcast, by the way, and I like sports. Well, this, if you read the release carefully, it's the same as call her daddy. What they're saying is it's all about blow jobs.
Starting point is 01:25:54 It's, it's a distribution deal and wonder E which was purchased by Amazon. They will be able to sell ads. So the deal can be worth up to $100 million. Exactly. So they're getting a minimum guarantee. And I'm not discounting that most advertising money on television and streaming goes into football specifically. So there's a lot of money that people will put into this. But it's this, oh, it's 100 million, oh, podcasting, it's still doing great.
Starting point is 01:26:30 No, podcasting is a vow of poverty, people. More power to them, A, and it's no sweat off my balls. There you go. So instead of paying to enter awards and getting beat up on the football pitch, John and I decided we'll just do podcasts twice a week and we'll ask people to support us if they think what we do is worth anything, if we have improved your life in any way.
Starting point is 01:26:55 Some people say it helps them. Some people say, you know what? I feel better listening to the No Agenda show because we're lighthearted. We're not so serious. I literally saw Megyn Kelly. Oh, I like Megyn Kelly, don't get me wrong, but she was yelling at Caitlin, the CNN lady. She is yelling. She's all emotional on that thing. But she was yelling, Caitlin, here's a tip, smile from time to time. And this whole rant she does,
Starting point is 01:27:24 she's not smiling. And in the meantime, she's not smiling. Here's a tip smile from time to time and this whole rant she does Exactly and she has a beautiful smile, but will she smile no is like pot kettle. Hello. Oh Everyone's unhinged We're not unhinged. We're just poor But today value came in in multiple ways The first thing we want to do is thank our artists who always support us with their time and their talent. It's part of the trifecta, Time, Talent and Treasure. And they support us by making artwork that fits with the show. They're doing it during the live show. It's amazing. They do this, in this case, in the evening hours after dinner for the Dutch masters who are working on things. And a Dutch master who lives in
Starting point is 01:28:05 Chicago brought us the artwork for episode 1689 and that was Darren O'Neill with the Ozempic ice cream. It was a classic no agenda product. Comics for blogger right away. He's like, this is, you can't do this, this is not fair use. Yes it is. It is not fair use yes it is very use about what is that art piece stolen no he says because you're using the brand name Ozempic no no no exactly tell him tell him John this is a as a parody or a humor and not for the purposes of cloning a product this is totally legal yes and and by the way when comics or a product. This is totally legal.
Starting point is 01:28:45 Yes, and by the way, when comics or blogger freaks out, it's really good art. Then you know it's good art. Well, he had a good piece that I thought was good, but you hated it, which was his jazz queen butt. I didn't know, I did not hate it. It was a Caledon. It was a Caledon.
Starting point is 01:29:02 Pitch's ass or something. I did not hate it. I said to you, I would be all for it if the letters actually look like they were on the jeans and they just didn't. And you agreed with me in my hate. I did. Yeah, exactly. See? We'd other pieces are, oh, we haven't said the W word yet. There was a tip jar for that. I think we're doing quite well. What else was there?
Starting point is 01:29:29 Oh, that's right. There was a lot of Yas Queens, a lot of Yas Queens. Yeah. But we were like, yeah, it was a little overplayed at that point. We had kind of done that. I did like the very demure, very mindful cheesecake, but you thought it was too simple. And also the same- Where was this?
Starting point is 01:29:48 That was a comics or blogger piece, but again, the letters didn't look like they were really on the t-shirt. Yeah, they weren't mapped. Mapped, thank you. They weren't surface mapped. No, no. And that's- Which you can do with Photoshop.
Starting point is 01:30:00 I mean, it's very- Yeah, but AI. Well, it's not easy. But AI, this is all AI. AI won't do it. AI can't do it. I mean, it's very, well, it's not easy. But AI, this is all AI. But AI won't do it. AI can't do it. AI should, can't figure that out. Oh, how did, how were the earnings
Starting point is 01:30:09 for our favorite AI company yesterday? All I saw on CNBC. Did you see it? Yeah, all day. Oh, oh, this, everyone's waiting. Oh, it's down. It's down five and a half percent. I guess they didn't do so.
Starting point is 01:30:23 No, they actually, they beat expectations and people are still selling. Ha ha ha. Yeah, there's something going on. Yes, it's called the blow up of AI nonsense. Have you, you don't have chat GPT, do you? I, no, I just, if I'm ever gonna use it, I use it online. Well, here's what you wanna type in.
Starting point is 01:30:44 And I think it, Elon Musk has online. Well, here's what you want to type in. And I think it were, Elon Musk has corrected Grok on this one, but if you type in, how many Rs are in the word strawberry, every AIF I have used, including the ones I run here at home, say there are two Rs in strawberry, even though there's clearly three. Isn't that interesting? And what's the point of this exercise? To prove that AI sucks? Yes, yes, of course it is.
Starting point is 01:31:13 That means there's no intelligence. It's just splitting stuff up into tokens. And you can assume that Grok was fixed by hand. Oh yeah, of course it was. That's how you do it. They will all be fixed by hand. You have to go tweak it. Yeah, where did I learn about this? On X. So of course, you. That's how you do it. They will all be fixed by hand. You have to go tweak it Yeah, where did I learn about this on X? So of course, you know, this is this is what you do
Starting point is 01:31:30 You launch it brought it up. You launch it on X First you hand tweak it and then you point out everyone else is screwed up. Yeah, that's the way you go. Exactly. It's called marketing. It's good. It's good. It's good marketing. It's good marketing Was there anything else that we liked? I don't think there was much. I don't think there was anything else. Actually, it was pretty lame. It was demure. I did use, I'm not using that word, that should be banned. Okay.
Starting point is 01:31:56 I did use one piece that was the girls whispering to each other from Scaramanga as the newsletter. Oh, yeah. It was a nice, But that was a good piece for the newsletter. Because it wasn't, you know, it wasn't. I'm passing some news on. It's good for a newsletter. Hey, listen to this. It's like Betty and Veronica, these two. The Scaramanga piece.
Starting point is 01:32:16 That's good. Well, thank you. Well, except that Veronica's a brunette and this girl's a redhead. Details. Details. Thank you very much, Darren O'Neillill for bringing us the artwork for episode 16 89 We appreciate it. We appreciate the work that all of our Dutch masters do you guys are awesome? That I don't use that word lightly anybody can upload art to know agenda art generator comm it's simple
Starting point is 01:32:38 Go ahead try it out and you too can be excoriated for doing it wrong. We're happy to do it for you. Yeah, this is valuable. It is very valuable. Now let us thank our executive and associate executive producers. We ask everybody to just send treasure, whatever the show is worth to you. Value is very subjective to your own means. So if that's $5 for a show, that's fine by us. Anybody can go to noagendadonations.com, set up a sustaining donation. We do like to thank, because we never continue the program if we waited for everybody to support us with $5.
Starting point is 01:33:20 In fact, we tried that 17 years ago almost, and it didn't work until we said, hey, just send us whatever it's worth to and it didn't work until we said, hey, just send us whatever it's worth to you. And that's why we have executive producers, $300 and above. We read your note and associate executive producers, $200 above when we read your note and you get an official credit, which you can use anywhere. Credits are recognized.
Starting point is 01:33:38 It includes your LinkedIn profile, of course, and your social media profile, but more importantly, imdb.com, where there are over a thousand Noagender producers. And we kick it off with he's back, he is back. He comes in about once a month, seronymous of Dogpatch and lower Slabovia. Now, normally a 3333 donation would be a rubbalizer, Normally, a 3333 donation would be a rubalizer and he didn't do 3333. He did 3322, which I'm presuming includes a couple of $2 bills because he always sends
Starting point is 01:34:16 cash from an undisclosed location. I'm going to give him the rub izer anyway, but He says John This is a long note for you. So you have to read it. No, no, that's not for me to read He's he's that's a reference to the fact that it's extremely long note and I hate long notes So that means I have to read it. Yeah. All right Thank you to all the producers that support this show. Oh, by the way, I should mention just as a... Historically, he sends in kind of short, often short notes.
Starting point is 01:34:54 Yes. Every once in a while, no note, and he makes a little stanza with no note on it. He's a little graphic, and then sometimes reasonable notes. And I think he's finally built up enough credit to do as long a note as he wants. And this is one of them. So I'm not objecting to it. I will come to his house and wash his car.
Starting point is 01:35:18 Thank you to all the producers that support this show. By the way, his car is a Rolls, it's gotta be. It must be. Including the professional insight from so many regions and professions and the time, talent and treasure that make this a unique source of insight into advertisers' safe products and messages and how advertisers use different outlets to reach different audiences. The Cours d'Ivoire Consulting Group is extremely effective in helping identify targeted audience just by sharing the message sources.
Starting point is 01:35:44 Like many Americans, I have naturalized US citizen family and friends and my extensive travel outside the US over the past few months garnered one question from both groups. What's going on? Naturalized citizens have a keen perspective of politicized governments as many came to the US to leave politicized countries. They are unhappy that their work to be US citizens is being shortcut for political purposes. They reinforce the US educational system programming towards social agenda rather than the three Rs. Education is creating a less valuable citizen and workforce and they include their own children as victims as they seek to be normal Americans and seek private education when possible.
Starting point is 01:36:31 Many countries, this is important stuff that you're saying here. This is good. Many countries I travel to have polarized political environments where violence overcomes civility in political discourse. International contacts ask me if the US is the ideal place to send their children to be educated and gain citizenship. They see the leading global economy and military superpower moving towards a Caligula-like society like the one they left. Take note people, because where are we going to escape to? The two wars underway have far greater impact than seems to garner attention in the US global
Starting point is 01:37:07 trade is more affected outside the US. COVID taught us the term supply chain issues to justify delays in higher costs. NOAA general listeners already know grain exports from Ukraine, Russia to Africa is causing severe issues and starvation. China is a leading exporter of goods to the Suez Canal and is severely impacted by the Houthi Red Sea attacks of goods to the Suez Canal and is severely impacted by the Houthi Red Sea attacks. The Defense Industrial Base, which he says DIB, of non-US actors are more aggressive than
Starting point is 01:37:39 the often maligned US DIB participants. Drone and missile manufacturing outside the US is far beyond US capability and while less sophisticated using DOS level attacks will overwhelm so-called Iron Dome defenses and both sides know it. Hezbollah has 150,000 missiles. AI as in actual intelligence nice Sees non-us defense industrial base pushing a more aggressive agenda than us D I B's Unlike us moral values these countries do not value of lives as Americans US military is working to learn what others are experiencing and working to adapt to these wars, but our political leaders remain oblivious to the reality of these wars.
Starting point is 01:38:27 How much leadership, how much will leadership cause U.S. citizens to suffer, either to prepare for war or suffer before surrender? If you believe history rhymes, the Treaty of Versailles, A Concise History by Nyberg, it's about 100 pages, is an interesting book of poetry for today's events. No jingles, no karma. And then he parked his rolls. That's a good note, something to listen to,
Starting point is 01:38:56 because he's saying real stuff here. He should do a podcast. Yeah, well, he does one. Ours. He just did one. I'm going to give him the Rub-A-Lizer. India, Tango, Mike, standby, 33, 33, 33, Rub-A-Lizer out. There you go. Rub-A-Lizer jingle for astronomers of Dogpatch and Lower Slobovia.
Starting point is 01:39:23 Thank you as always for coming in to save our month Zarin Denzel in Port Townsend, Washington Cute little town if ever there was 530 if I add up other donations, I should be at night in the night area can I just be night Z or need oh do I need a weird name tonight's night Z is perfect night Z listening to you too keeps me sane and are you the best five to six hours of my week huh I'm hitting as many people in the mouth as I can. Well, beautiful. Thank you. And you Zarin will be night Z later today. Dame foreign lady before the cooler Georgia,
Starting point is 01:40:15 dacula, dacula, dacula, uh, 471 cents. Dear Johan and Adam. It says here. It says Johan. Johan. Yeah. Hello, Johan. ITM gentlemen, very pleased to enclose a check to you for 470 and one cent. This amount brings me not only an executive producership for my 76th birthday on September 2nd, but takes me to the next tier of damehood. Whatever level comes after Baroness, which is, what is after Baroness?
Starting point is 01:40:44 Viscountess? Viscountess maybe? I have also recently moved and would like to request a change to my protectorate if it pleases the peerage committee I would like the protectorate of Old Town Grayson in Northeast Georgia we have checked it's all good thank you both for what you continue to do no jingles just some R2D2 karma for all the producers. Cheers, Dame Forend, Lady Before. And what does she say here at the bottom? He says, PS John, I typed this for easier reading. Love you both! You've got karma. See all these complaints of mine always pay off with people making a comment. Yeah, big payoff.
Starting point is 01:41:30 Big payoff. Big payoff. Mark, we have, what is it, Mark, what is it? Yeah, Mark. Mark Goal? Yes. G-O-L-L? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:42 In Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Is it Guelph? Does anybody know how to pronounce this? Yes, Guelph sounds good to me. Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Is it Guelph? Does anyone know how to pronounce this? Yes, Guelph sounds good to me. Guelph. Sounds good to me. 350, 58, no, no, no, nothing. So he gets a double up Karma.
Starting point is 01:41:52 And he doesn't do. You've got a double up Karma. Kathy Knight is in Mesa, Arizona. The 333.33, our last executive producer for the show. ITM, I appreciate you two so much. I'm chipping in to do my part so you can continue providing us with the best podcast in the universe. Thank you for your courage.
Starting point is 01:42:12 No jingles, no karma. Sincerely, Kathy Knight. Thank you, Kathy Knight. We appreciate it. And speaking of the devil, Rob, the constitutional lawyer in Spring Branch, Texas comes in with $211.23. Rob, the constitutional lawyer here says, happy birthday Adam. Oh, thank you.
Starting point is 01:42:34 As a sexagenarian. Sexagenarian, yes. I'd have to look into that. I'm sticking with it. Maybe he's talking about you being sexy. Yes. You now qualify for free legal advice at many elder law clinics. But stay young, visit rob.lawyer instead.
Starting point is 01:42:59 Yes, that's the URL rob.lawyer. We fight for you and Gitmo Nation. And he asked me privately, since it didn't fit in the message, if I could add his usual open up Adam Curry jingle and karma to ward off Jack Smith and his overzealous ilk. Mr. Adam Curry. Open up the door, Mrs. Curry. Now!
Starting point is 01:43:28 You've got karma. Eli the coffee guy is next. We're in his executive or associate executive producers here. He's from Bensonville, Illinois, 20829. Over the weekend I met an awesome fellow producer at the farmers market, he says. She echoed the same sentiment that so many producers I've spoken to have shared. Those who listen to No Agenda through COVID say you guys helped keep her sane amid the media madness. Well, we hope we continue to do that because it's only crazier now. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:43:58 For those who only listened to No Agenda for the past few years, I suggest going into the archives and checking out the 2016 election shows history doesn't often repeat itself But it does indeed rhyme Can I get a don't be a not denier jingle for and for producers that can't visit us at a local farmers market? Visit gigawatt coffee roasters calm and use code ITM 20 for 20% off your online order stay caffeinated says Eli the coffee guy the science is in science and let's go to Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood Colorado who requests jobs karma and says for a resume that gets results she has a lot
Starting point is 01:44:42 of fans by the way visit image makers inc.com for your go to as a go-to for all your executive resume and job search needs. That's image makers inc. with a K as a K. And work with Linda Lou, Duchess of jobs and writer of resumes. Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got karma. And finally on our list, last associate executive producer, $200.33. Sir, not Space Force here. Sir, not Space Force here. Sir, not Space Force here. I think it's Sir, not Space Force. I have exciting news. I've written two apps now available in the Apple store, Birdship, a musical puzzle game, and Digilore. That's D-I-G-I-L-O-R-E, a modern podcast app. Oh, how about that? Free coupon. Email ITM at machinepublishers.com with subject ITM.
Starting point is 01:45:48 with subject ITM. Yeah, it's, I think it's iOS only. He told me about this. I have not seen it, but I'm excited about it because, you know, more independent podcast apps the better. Thank you very much, Sir, SirNotSpaceForce here. I will say that we have one more associate executive producer because it came in as Australian Dollary Do's which is well over $200. Okay. Thomas Weaver with a... I'm doing this reluctantly because of the length of the note. Yes. But Thomas Weaver from Blackwall, New South Wales comes in and the number is probably around 210 I'm guessing. Yeah, he's good time donation So a D douche ing would be a wonderful. Thank you You've been D douche also birthday birthday shout out for myself. He's got that on we're on you're on the list
Starting point is 01:46:37 I first came across you via hearing Adam just over a year ago on the TFTC with Marty Bent. Oh, Marty Bent. He's got a huge podcast. And he's my friend. Who's? I don't know anything about this. Oh, Marty Bent is in Austin.
Starting point is 01:46:56 It's the TFTC podcast. He used to be in finance. Oh, finance. And he left finance and went into Bitcoin mining and all. He is a cool dude. I think he has now two young kids, moved from Florida, I think it was in Pennsylvania, I think it was in Philly, moved to Austin a couple of years ago. We've had dinner with him and his wife, lovely couple.
Starting point is 01:47:24 Young, young John, young, half our age. Well, my age. Thomas Weaver continues. So here I am swapping some of my Aussie dollary dues for your American cuck books, as Marty would say. And let me tell you, the Australia to USD turnaround is terrible, we are to USD turnaround is terrible. We are truly the land down under.
Starting point is 01:47:48 Yes. But on the plus side, I'm a regenerative farm worker and I've had the pleasure to have met Texas Slim. Oh, there you go. In person and converse with him. Get grass-finished meats at will and listen to the best podcasts in the universe whilst on my daily chores of feeding the animals. You know, Texas Slim was on some TV show recently.
Starting point is 01:48:12 I saw him. Oh yeah, he gets around. He's trying to save. He's a very skinny guy with a big Texas hat. You know, I told him, because he would do interviews and he put on a baseball cap and I said, bro, no, you need to always have the hat on when you're doing an interview.
Starting point is 01:48:29 Otherwise, you're just a skinny dude with a hat. Now you're Texas Slim, you see, Texas Slim is perfect. He gets around. Well, he took your advice. Yes, and he's trying to help feed children. And he's a very erudite character. Erudite is the correct word. And I won't, anyway, continuing, and I won't use this donation to shamelessly plug the
Starting point is 01:48:50 business I work for, no, instead I will plug my smoking hot girlfriend's business, Meals for Mamas, an amazing ready-made meal delivery service for postpartum mothers and their partners. It's utilizing organic ingredients, grass finished meats, even some from our farm, and a delicious assortment of healthier snack options as well delivered fresh throughout New South Wales. Act and now Act, ACT, ACT and now Queensland. I think ACT is central. Yeah, something. Yeah, somewhere.
Starting point is 01:49:24 Sorry everyone, yeah, somewhere. Sorry everyone, only in Australia. Go to Meals. That should be a four, I think. I think he mistyped that. Four mamas, not dollar sign. Meals number four, mamas. I think you're probably right.
Starting point is 01:49:38 Mealsmamas.com.au to learn more. As for you, Adam and John, a grass-finished steak straight from the farm and a brilliant Aussie Shiraz or Cab Sauvignon for John too. We'll be here waiting for you if you ever decide to visit. Thanks again for all the stellar work you guys do, Thomas. Well, I hear you guys will soon be our 51st state, so it'll be easy. We pretty much we pretty much own them now don't we with our what was it military boys there oh yeah yeah we
Starting point is 01:50:10 take all over take it over hey that's great anyway that's our that's our group of well wishers and producers associate executive and executive producers for show 1680 and thank you again to everyone else who came in with with donations and notes we will be reading numbers above 50 for the donations and sometimes a note, depending on what's in it, in our second segment. And of course, thanks to everybody who comes in under $50 for reasons of anonymity and those sustaining donations. Go to noagendadonations.com and thank you for producing $16.90.
Starting point is 01:50:42 Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. What up? What up? Shut up, slay. You mistakenly said 1680. Did I say 1680? I meant 1690.
Starting point is 01:50:53 No, I said 1680. Oh, oh, well. Yeah, well, that's why I do all the production. Yeah, that's right. I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it.
Starting point is 01:51:03 I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it.. No, I said 1680. Oh, oh, well, yeah. Well, that's why I do all the production. Yeah, that's right. So I can screw it up. Which I do from time to time. It does happen. All right. I see you got lots of clips. So lay it on me. Well, let's see what we got. You want some funny clips? You want some good clips? Yeah, no, give me some funny clips. Well, let's well. Oh, well, I don't have any funny clips. He said. Oh, okay Let's talk a little bit about Let's catch up with the Middle East with an update. These are show that I can do a clip blitz
Starting point is 01:51:38 Middle East really it says everyone's just okay. Let's go each other over there. Here's a good one. Here's a good one Did you know this was going on the sag after strike? Everyone's just okay. Let's go here each other over there. Here's a good one. Here's a good one Did you know this was going on the sag after strike? Wait, I thought we already had a sag after strike. Oh how wrong you are. There's still another one They just keep coming this video game actors have remained on strike since july This follows months of negotiations with major gaming companies The strike aims to ensure equal protection for union voice actors and motion capture performers against what they say is unregulated use of artificial intelligence. Introduced Christina Corona reports from Southern California.
Starting point is 01:52:18 We're here in the city of Burbank outside Warner Brothers Studios where members of SAG-ACTRA are picketing as part of their strike against major video game studios. When do we want it? When do we want it? When do we want it? The video game companies are rightly isolated when you look at the studios, the streamers, the record labels. We've been able to achieve the necessary protections for our members with all of those companies and yet for some reason the video game companies refuse to achieve the necessary protections for our members with all of those companies
Starting point is 01:52:45 and yet for some reason the video game companies refuse to make the same fair deal." Several video game actors and voice actors said they are striking for fair contracts primarily to oppose unregulated use of artificial intelligence. Something where we know that we have something in writing that when we go in to do one session, that doesn't mean they can just reuse, digitally reproduce our voice for future needs. It's ensuring that we can still do what we love to do for people in moving forward
Starting point is 01:53:16 and we're not phased out by robots. Voice actor Sam Quasman mentioned many actors have worked their entire career for only a modest return. We're fighting for our lives, basically. We spend all this time learning our lines and taking acting lessons, singing lessons, dancing lessons. I mean, you're trained for your career and then you wind up with a couple hundred bucks. Start a podcast.
Starting point is 01:53:39 Listen, I have a question. So the nanny spent all this time setting up this no AI for what I thought was SAG after, but they didn't think to include the video game industry? Yeah, it seems so because wait, I'm in close the hatch. Huh. And are we going to see Angelina Jolie go on strike for the video game actors? Are they lesser than? Do they not count even though their industry is 10 times as big as the movie industry?
Starting point is 01:54:10 Yeah, that's the irony. Will they go on strike? The irony is the industry is huge compared to the film entertainment side of it. So will they go on strike? These scabs are just going to continue to work. They don't care about their brothers and sisters who also had to learn how to act and sing and read lines and whatever else they were doing. I think you can figure it out. No. One voice actor raised concerns that AI is costing them jobs as AI generated voices can be manipulated to say inappropriate
Starting point is 01:54:43 or offensive things which then are falsely attributed to them causing issues with their agencies. And the address over here like, no, wait, that was not me. Someone cloned my voice through some program and like I would never say any of this stuff. So the AI protections are definitely what is worth fighting for, for livelihoods. AI is not coming. It's already here. I have never heard that guy in a video game. He might be a voice guy that, you know, changes his voice. Well, I will tell you right now, if AI could take over this podcast
Starting point is 01:55:20 and we could be on the beach chilling like Bob Dylan, I'm all in. But it can't. It can't. it can't even count the Rs in strawberry. Huh? The thing that's kind of interesting when you think about this particular complaint is Mel blank. Oh, Mel blank was a notorious prick who did all the voices for every character in the Warner Brothers cartoons. He did Bugs Bunny, he did Elmer Fudd, he did Porky Pig, he did all the characters, every
Starting point is 01:55:53 character. In fact, it was all the vocalizations and all the commercials and all the comic cartoons that Warner Brothers came out with and it was voiced by Mel Blank and Mel Blank would make a fuss according to the rumors that who knew. He'd make a huge fuss if they brought in one single guy to do one single voice in any of the cartoons he was involved in which was all of Warner Brothers cartoons, all the Bugs Bunny, all the Daffy Duck, all that stuff. Are you sure he did Elmer Fudd? Because people are saying that's not true.
Starting point is 01:56:30 I believe so. He was a man of one of these. I ran into one of these guys when I was doing a radio show. I ran into the guy who took over Tigger's voice, which Tigger used to be done by Paul Winchell in the Winnie the Pooh series. Tigger was done by Paul Winchell. He was the one who developed the voice. And Paul Winchell died and they were still doing these Winnie the Pooh movies and this guy who was on the show, he was a voice guy. And he took over and I didn't know anything that this even
Starting point is 01:57:05 happened and he did a bunch of voices for me including Tigger and he sounded he was one of those guys who could just mimic voices like you know like an impressionist or even better and he could do he had about 12 or 13 very distinctive voices that he could do but Tigger was one of them and I could be wrong about breaking breaking news breaking news breaking Steve Webb og godcaster texts me we text As a voice actor I can confirm mel blanc blank
Starting point is 01:57:40 Did elmer fudd doesn't mean it is voice. He might've just done it. But okay, he did Elmer Fudd. He did all the voices and Warner Brothers cartoons. If you look at, cause they give credit on there, there's only one guy's name. But, uh, yes. But so, so what was the difference between, you know, AI doing some voices for these cartoons or one guy doing all the voices and not letting anybody else work. Where's the strike then?
Starting point is 01:58:09 I mean, it seems to me that that was unfair. By the way, no, this is good. Leanne Webb sent me an email. She is the much better half of Steve Webb regarding John Tesh. I have wondered what happened to John Tesh. Well, a couple years ago she saw him at the coach house in Arizona, I think. He's surviving a very rare form of cancer, but still performing. He performed, of course, in entertainment tonight with Mary Hart.
Starting point is 01:58:44 He's still around. And then I got a note from the boys from Mercy Me, who are Knights at this point, and they had some John Tesh trivia. Did you know that he wrote the NBA theme song? No, I did not know that. That's pretty, that's trivia. That is extreme trivia. That's news you can use right there. Yes. That's a lifetime of income. You can retire. You can retire on something like that.
Starting point is 01:59:12 It was like Paul Anka when he wrote the Johnny Carson song. Tonight Show theme. Yeah, the Tonight Show theme. And since the show went up for 30 years, he was just gold. You know, you just make money every show. But can you hum the NBA theme song? No, I can't. And so the Mercy Me Boys said that they met him on a cruise. They were performing on a cruise and they said, you and John should do a no agenda cruise. Yes. Let me look on my list of things I want to do.
Starting point is 01:59:44 I can hear Horowitz already going, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, let's do a cruise. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, there it is. Is that number? Oh, it's been X'd out. No, it doesn't seem to be. It's not in the cards.
Starting point is 01:59:56 Yeah, I have a feeling it's not in the cards. A cruise. Oh boy. And then someone else emailed me saying, hey, we should do a no agenda con. You know, like, which I said, we do that twice a week. No, no agenda con, like a big, where everyone, all producers from all over the world can come and hang out together. The world's largest meetup.
Starting point is 02:00:18 And I thought about it and said, I think this has popped up in the past. And the reason why we always say no is because people always want the same thing. And then you can do a live show on stage. Yeah. And like, no. Everyone could hang out together, have a drink, but what are we gonna do?
Starting point is 02:00:41 There's no tricks, there's no act, there's nothing. We need to do sessions. We'd have to work on a comedy act, a routine. Rowan and Martin kind of a laugh in routine. Who's on first? It's not, again, not in the cards. What we've been doing is what we're doing and that's about it.
Starting point is 02:01:06 We don't have... We have a microphone company coming. I'm not allowed to promote it anymore. Do you know how many people... We have to hold off on promotion until we actually get the microphones done. And then we have... Is there anything else that we're going to do on the side? Not really.
Starting point is 02:01:24 I think that'll be about it. No, no, that's about it. We gotta, I mean, I have the publishing company and you've got a bunch of other podcasts and Podcasting 2.0, that keeps you busy. We're doing work, I mean, we don't, but we're not doing a cruise and we're not doing a con. Podcasting 2.0 is zero income. That's just to keep this show going.
Starting point is 02:01:43 I'm doing it for the show and anyone else who wants to do a show. Well, it's actually very philanthropic effort. That's what it is. Yes. Where's my Nobel Peace Prize? You'll get it. Sure. Well, if Obama could get one. So we're still awaiting the return of the astronauts on that failed Boeing Starliner thing.
Starting point is 02:02:08 Is that the Starliner? Yeah, was the Starliner? I have a clip I want to play before you get to that, which is similar. This is like a thing that makes me cringe. This is the SpaceX clip and it is the private thing they're going to do. You know, Elon has not gone up in the space yet that I know of. He's smart.
Starting point is 02:02:32 Because it's, and I think by the way, this is just, I don't know if it's a red book prediction, but we've lost astronauts when we had the billions of dollars and you know, you send them up and something goes wrong. It kills these guys. Although they're all alive in different places in the country. But yeah, that could be the one that came in and the tiles were falling off the bottom and the thing blew up and everyone got to see it.
Starting point is 02:02:57 And then Challenger went up and they blew up. I mean, people, and then the guys who sat on the, on the launch pad, they burned up, they burned up in the pit. Yeah. Three of them. That was bad. And of course that's suspicious that one, but the, something's going to happen on one of these things and it's going to be, it's going to really destroy the business. It's going to be a day wrecker. It's going to destroy. Yes. I agree. It's going to end the business, a day wrecker. But this one, this particular one, this destroy, yes, I agree it's going to end the business a day wrecker, but this
Starting point is 02:03:25 one, this particular one, this is, they're going to send up people higher than ever before, maybe through a radiation belt, I'm not even sure. The Van Allen belts, really, we're going through those? Then they're going to make them go outside and roam around. Oh, spacewalk. I mean, this does not sound like a good thing. SpaceX's historic Polaris Dawn mission is delayed once again. This time it's because of bad weather.
Starting point is 02:03:48 Four private astronauts were said to be launched into space this morning, but SpaceX said bad offshore weather is predicted in the area where the crew will eventually splash down at the end of the mission. During the mission, SpaceX plans to conduct the first ever private spacewalk, as well as gather data from dozens of experiments. The mission commander said the crew must be absolutely sure of re-entry weather before launching. That's because the supplies they are carrying are limited. The mission had already been postponed from yesterday after engineers discovered a helium leak in one of the rocket's components.
Starting point is 02:04:24 Oh, he's also got a helium leak in one of the rocket's components. Oh, he's also got a helium leak. Yeah, helium leak. Yeah, I'm all for sending up satellites, you know, it's fine, but yeah, going up into space. Sure. Yeah. KLM has just announced, so we have the Boeing astronauts on the International Space Station. They won't come back until February is now reported and they're going to send their Boeing capsule back down. Watch that thing.
Starting point is 02:04:54 Do you want to take over under on this? Will this thing explode on the way down or will it be safe? I'm like, oh. Well, that's not really an over and under. No, that's just plus or minus. It's either going to. Plus or minus. It's either gonna blow up or not. Well.
Starting point is 02:05:08 I would say it's gonna come back okay. I think so too. Not that I'd risk my life on it. Well, that's why they're not risking their life on it. Because the fact that you'd even discuss it as blowing up. Isn't it? Doesn't seem very, very good. Not great. So KLM has now said they are switching from Boeing to Airbus and KLM is Air France. That's a big order they're losing.
Starting point is 02:05:39 Airbus is cleaner, quieter, more economical and doesn't have the doors popping off. That was not in the press release, but I'm just going to add that. And in China, we have another competitor doing much better than Boeing is. Air China and China Southern Airlines will become the second and third Chinese carriers to fly China's homegrown C919 passenger jet. The two carriers took delivery of the aircraft at Chinese plane maker Comac's base in Shanghai. These are the eighth and ninth planes that Comac has delivered. China Eastern Airlines has already been flying seven of these aircraft since May last year. There you go. What's a C919?
Starting point is 02:06:25 It looks like a 737. I think it's going to be a competitor. Is that big? Oh, yeah. It's a dupe. It's a dupe of the 737. Yeah, they look nice. It's a Comac C919.
Starting point is 02:06:39 They look nice. It looks like a 737. You're right. It probably is a copy of an old one. It's a dupe. It's a dupe. It's a dupe. It's a dupe. Now, I'm not sure if this was a Boeing
Starting point is 02:06:50 aircraft. I have not received... We're doomed once the Chinese get into this. This is a very sad thing that took place. People don't really... This could be a maintenance issue. It could be an aircraft issue. Again, I don't know if it was Boeing or Airbus, but this is a sad thing that happened.
Starting point is 02:07:07 This morning, Delta Airlines searching for answers after two employees were killed on the job inside the airline's maintenance facility on the Atlanta airport grounds. A third worker is being treated for serious injuries. We're responding to 1775, May 9, Jackson-Gene Boulevard, Delta TOC 3, reference to an explosion. Emergency crews rushing to the Delta Wheel and Brake Shop early Tuesday morning. The airline says employees were working on a tire when the wheel component suddenly ruptured.
Starting point is 02:07:35 Delta describing it as a heartbreaking accident. It killed 58-year-old Mirko Marwig and 37-year-old Luis Aldarondo. It was away from the main airplanes. You have this high pressure, big piece of metal, big piece of rubber, and if it fails for some reason, catastrophically can cause damage and injury to people nearby. A Delta employee describing the chilling scene to first responders saying, quote, I walked toward where the explosion occurred and saw a body lying face down, not moving with blood all around.
Starting point is 02:08:06 The accident investigators will probably look at the two metal rims around that tire and look for some sort of a fatigue failure. Was that airplane old? Was that tire old? Or was it somehow some part of the way that the tire was put together that caused this mishap? Doesn't Delta fly Boeings?
Starting point is 02:08:21 that caused this mishap. Doesn't Delta fly Boeing's? Yeah, but this is probably, this is component. It's like certain trucks have these types of tires. They'll still blame Boeing. Well, yeah, well that's the idea. They're still gonna blame them, yeah. Sorry about that.
Starting point is 02:08:42 Well, Boeing's got issues. I see there's a Comac 919, there's a 929. So they're building big jets. Yeah. I'd probably fly it. And Honeywell's involved with them. Oh really? The Americans are going to help.
Starting point is 02:08:56 Really? Yeah. I'd probably fly it. I wouldn't, I'm not too afraid. I wouldn't go on a spaceship. I'm not too afraid. I wouldn't go on a spaceship, but. I'm taking a rocket. Here's a. I'm taking a rocket and shoot it up there
Starting point is 02:09:12 and I'll be on it and floating around for a few minutes. This is a story trending everywhere. It's an outrage, it's crazy. It's no good. I mean, it's just a California story, so. But it was doing the rounds, so we might as well discuss it since one of us is in California. We're now going to a live look at the state Capitol.
Starting point is 02:09:31 Right now, California lawmakers have about three days to pass new laws for the year. The deadline is Saturday at midnight. Lawmakers today sent Governor Newsom a bill that would allow undocumented people to apply for the state's first-time homebuyers program. That program has no money for the foreseeable future, but that didn't stop lawmakers in the state assembly from approving it in a 45 to 15 party line vote. The proposal specifically prohibits the California Housing Finance Authority from rejecting a person's application based on their immigration status. The bill made national headlines as California is facing a housing crisis
Starting point is 02:10:06 with some of the highest costs in the nation to own a home. We need to remind ourselves that we are a nation of immigrants and here in our state we remind ourselves all the time of the value of those who are continuing to come here and to make our economy better. So for those who are paying their taxes, who are doing things right, who have a good credit score and who can qualify for a loan, we are saying that we want you to set roots here in our great state if you qualify. Governor Newsom will have until September 30th to sign or veto this bill. Apparently that's not the way the story is told on this clip.
Starting point is 02:10:46 Oh, hold on. Can I just say something that Governor Abbott of Texas, he has now commissioned signs to be put up in Mexico that says free homes that way, pointing towards the north. Yes, smart move. Free homes in California is the clip. Oh, is that literally the clip name? Oh, I see it. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:11:09 A California proposal could make illegal immigrants eligible for housing aid. People could get up to $150,000 in loans to help buy a home paid for by the state. Entities David Lamb reports. The new proposal would expand home-buying loans to illegal immigrants. On Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill in a 25-14 vote. California's Home Purchase Assistance Program would cover up to a 20% down payment or closing costs capped at $150,000. It's called Assembly Bill 1840, which was introduced by Assemblyman Joaquin Arambula.
Starting point is 02:11:45 And it prevents the state's home purchase assistance program from disqualifying an applicant based on their immigration status. Applicants would need to be first-time homebuyers, and at least one borrower needs to be a first-generation homebuyer, such as someone whose parents don't own a home or they've been through foster care. The homebuyer would have to repay the down payment loan plus a portion of the profits if the house is sold later on. So that's the increased value of the home. Now, as of Wednesday, it's in the assembly before going to Governor Gavin Newsom's desk. Well, it wasn't that different.
Starting point is 02:12:22 Well, they emphasize the fact that this is for illegal immigrants mainly. Yes. Well, of course, that's what California is all about. It's to improve your economy. Now, so 20% 150,000- This has so much of 2008 written all over it. It does. That's a $750,000 home, which at today's interest rates pretty steep price
Starting point is 02:12:49 You know Yeah, it might not be workable You mean but Newsom if he's smart he'll veto it so he can keep on his you know, cuz otherwise he's gonna get Everything Newsom does from now on is assuming that Trump's gonna be president and he has to has to be very careful that he's not going to have this stuff thrown in his face. Hey, but wait a minute. This would work great for your favela idea. Free favelas. You can get a down payment on a favela.
Starting point is 02:13:21 The idea of the favela itself is self-sufficiency. It's free. It's free. It's free. The idea of the favela itself is self-sufficiency. It's free. It's free. It's free. I love that idea. Well, let's continue to stay in California with the cleanup operation just in time for the Olympics, just in time for the 2028 election.
Starting point is 02:13:40 This is Rousting the Homeless. We're back now with our Homeless in America series. Earlier this summer The US Supreme Court ruled that cities can find or even jail people for sleeping outside Seen as Nick walt went to San Francisco a city with a notorious homeless problem Which is now aggressively sweeping homeless encampments from its streets You gotta go But you know where you're gonna go
Starting point is 02:14:10 Okay, okay, okay. We're in the Mission District, it's a little after 7am. Is this the first time you've been involved in one of these sweeps? No, no, no. And this is the first time they've been so quiet at night. Do you think you'll be in a shelter tonight? Well, let's hope yes. The Supreme Court ruled that cities can now cite, fine, or jail these people even if they have nowhere else to go. We have the ability to now enforce the law. Mayor London Breed introduced what she calls a very aggressive strategy. They issued around 25 citations in the first two weeks. You're criminalizing something that a lot of people can't help They have no other choice and that would be the case if we weren't offering people a place to go inside
Starting point is 02:14:50 They haven't offered your shelter The city says no one from this morning sweep ended up in a shelter not one This is the afternoon sweep. We're in Soma, South of Market. The issue is this is the 34th time the city has swept this area this year alone. 34th time. That's a little twist on the story. Doesn't seem to be working very well. I know whatever they're doing in San Francisco, a lot of it has an impact and the
Starting point is 02:15:28 homeless are moving probably wisely to Oakland. Right across the road from you. Well, it's far enough away. I'm not worried about it, but I was in Oakland the other day driving around and it's worse than ever in a homeless situation. There's encampments under every overpass, which seems like, you won't find a freeway overpass where there aren't a bunch of tents. And then there's a huge park on the corner of MacArthur and Broadway for people who want to check it out. And there's just tent city. The whole park
Starting point is 02:16:01 isn't completely filled, but it's a borderline favela, but not the right kind. The right kind needs a view. Yes. It's a favela with a view. That's part of the formula. I don't see anybody doing anything about anything in Oakland. I have a second part to this report.
Starting point is 02:16:21 More than 4,000 people live on San Francisco streets. to this report. something where it's cubicle-like, I won't do it man. I won't do it. I stayed in prison 20, 23 years. Do you really think I want to be closed up in a room with bars and s*** in it? No, I don't think so. I'd rather sleep outside. Since the Supreme Court's decision, cities and towns in states across the country are now proposing, passing and enforcing anti-camping laws. Across California, state authorities have started sweeping encampments. I'm here on behalf of 40 million Californians that are fed up. I'm here because I'm one of them. But more than 50 academics told the Supreme Court there's no evidence that criminalizing homelessness works. No evidence!
Starting point is 02:17:24 In fact, there's a lot of evidence that it's counterproductive. It's all Brits by the way who are representing your news. Well what we want to be able to do is use the penalties as a way to get people to commit to going indoors. You've spent a lot of money from the city sweeping that same street. To me that is the definition of madness. But what I'm saying to you is the next option that we have for people who are refusing what we're offering is we will be citing. And you'll maybe in the next couple of months take a look at our data and see whether or not this is working. And if it's working, we'll continue. If it's not, we need to pivot and to try something else.
Starting point is 02:18:03 Pivot! Pivot! We're going to pivot and try something else, like flame throwers or something. What are you citing somebody? They're homeless, they're living in a tent, they got no income, they got no job, they got nothing and you're going to give them a ticket? There. There's a $20 ticket, $50 ticket. This is no strategy. This is just sweep them up, sweep them under the rug.
Starting point is 02:18:28 It's no strategy. There's no strategy. Turn Oakland into a big park. It's not a strategy. It's very sad. It is. Well, they let it fester. That's the problem.
Starting point is 02:18:43 Well, yeah. This could have been solved if they had stopped it a decade ago. They let it fester for political reasons. That's what they did in Austin. Yes, of course. It's the same thing. Yes. Yes. Yes. The robbers den. You know, you remember the knife attack in Solingen, Germany? Yes. In fact, I have a clip that references it. Oh, well let me play the clip and I can tell you some interesting details. What is the name of this clip?
Starting point is 02:19:11 That's a good question. Well, you brought it up. Well, I mean you tricked me. I did not trick you into anything. Oh, here it is. No. No. Do you have it? I don't see a knives clip. No, it's under, it came out either maybe the UK news. Oh yeah, I think it came out of here. This is when, I think this is, yes, it's in here. There's a two-parter. It's UK news. It's about Starmer.
Starting point is 02:19:40 Oh yeah, hanging out with the German dude. Yeah, here. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is seeking, hanging out with the German dude. Yeah, here. British Prime Minister Keir Stammer is seeking to reset relations with the European Union as he meets in Berlin with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The two leaders have agreed to work on a treaty covering issues from defense to trade. Yeah, let's just say defense. I'm absolutely clear that we do want a reset. I've been able to repeat that here today, a reset with Europe, a reset with the EU. That does not mean reversing Brexit or re-entering the single market or
Starting point is 02:20:13 the customs union." Scholz said Germany wanted to take this outstretched hand. The United Kingdom has always been an indispensable part of the solution to the major issues affecting the whole of Europe. This has not changed since the UK left the European Union. The new cooperation treaty would deepen collaboration in science, technology, business and culture while increasing trade. Britain and Germany said they hoped to sign the cooperation treaty by early next year. At the heart of this treaty will be a new defense agreement.
Starting point is 02:20:47 There it is. An agreement that builds upon our already formidable defense cooperation. The deepening defense cooperation comes ahead of a possible scaling back of US support for NATO if former President Donald Trump returns to the White House early next year. Trump has said he would not defend allies if they do not increase their defense budgets. He don't think he said that. Well, indirectly he says if you don't pay your fair share is what he said. But yeah, it's a fair share thing.
Starting point is 02:21:16 Yeah. So where's the knife stuff in the second clip? It's the second clip. Stammer also highlighted cooperation on the shared European challenge of illegal immigration. The issue is a hot topic in Germany at the moment following a knife attack in Zollingen that killed three people and wounded eight more, allegedly carried out by a suspected Islamic extremist from Syria. Stammer reiterated his plan to tackle the people-smuggling gangs behind the UK's small
Starting point is 02:21:42 boat crisis, which charged migrants thousands of dollars to cross the sea from France to Britain. He suggested the Joint Action Plan could involve authorities intercepting boats in transit across Europe to stop them reaching the northern French coast. Hmm. Have you ever taken the before the channel? This one of the ferry boat ferries across the English channel. It's called the vomit express. It's unbelievable.
Starting point is 02:22:10 I don't do not understand how a small boat can make that trip. Well, a lot of them don't. I guess not. A lot of them don't make it. Well, back to the knife attack, which was referenced in that clip. I thought I remembered the name Solingen. I couldn't put my finger on it.
Starting point is 02:22:29 Do you know the nickname of Solingen or what they call it? No. The City of Knives. The Solingen Knife Company comes from there. There is a knife, yes. It's called the City of Knives knives leave it to the city of knives Ironic. Yes, the irony is nuts and now the the Berlin police commissioner Came out with some tips and tricks
Starting point is 02:22:57 to employ if This happens and you're around and someone is going crazy stabbing people the the police commissioner said do something unexpected like making a phone call or singing very loudly. This is the brilliant idea how to thwart yourself from being stabbed to death by a knife attack. Just sing loudly. Wow. Yes. And then this very sad news from NPR regarding knives.
Starting point is 02:23:35 All right, here's a question. What is a knife without a blade? That is not a riddle or a Zen Buddhist paradox. It's a question that the maker of the Swiss Army Knife has just answered in the form of a new line of pocket knives without blades. They will still have the screwdriver, fear not, also the nail file, the bottle opener, but not the classic flip out blade. Victorinox, the company behind the ubiquitous multi-tool, has made hundreds of millions of Swiss Army Knives since the late 19th century, but this is a first. The company's CEO told Swiss media this week that the decision was made because some countries have increased the regulation of knives in response to violent crime.
Starting point is 02:24:15 Yeah, this is not the first time Victorinox has had to pivot based on current events. When sharp objects like pocket knives were banned from planes after 9-11, the company leaned into watches and luggage and leisure wear and even fragrances. The new bladeless pocket knives are in development now, and aficionados will still be able to purchase the classic Swiss Army knife. I love this story. We should do hammers that are just a piece of wood with no head on it. It's a screwdriver without a shaft.
Starting point is 02:24:48 What is a Swiss army knife without a blade? Dumb. Yes. I mean, what does the world... I remember you say, hey, they're banning knives and ingots. No, it's not true. There's no knife. Yes.
Starting point is 02:25:02 And meanwhile, we're running around with nine mills everywhere. Yeah. It's a better idea. Because when you shoot somebody, everybody notices because it makes a lot of noise. They're very loud. It's very noticeable. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:25:17 So you can run out of the way with some of the knives. They can be stabbed. Scatter. People left and right. Scatter. Yes. You can scatter. Yeah. Unless of course you're President Trump and you're just walking around with an AR-15
Starting point is 02:25:30 and you're hanging out. You hear the latest details? You see they had pictures of the gun. I have the FBI investigate shooting NTD, which details what they did. Well, let me play mine first because NTD is such a do-me-do. Yeah they do to complete a job of actually giving you the information. Well listen to this, there's only one little bit in here that I think is good. The FBI giving an update this afternoon on its investigation into the
Starting point is 02:25:58 assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania. That update including the release of some new pictures, showing the gun, backpack, and undetonated explosive device belonging to the shooter, Thomas Crooks. Investigators saying that they have been able to conduct an extensive analysis into the research he conducted before the attack. However, they say no clear motive has emerged. Investigators say Crooks searched the dates and locations of campaign rallies for both Trump and President Joe Biden. Today, the FBI also saying that
Starting point is 02:26:30 Crooks was on the roof for just six minutes before he fired eight rounds at the former president. Trump's ear was injured in that shooting. One rally goer was killed. Two others were injured. Oh, it was only six minutes. Six minutes! Are you kidding me? And listen to how that was reported. Oh, it was only six minutes. What?
Starting point is 02:26:55 He was on the roof for six minutes. That's outrageous. Six minutes is a- if we stopped talking right now for six minutes, everyone would stop tuning in. Six minutes is a long time. I agree. Of especially dead air. But so the guy gets up on the roof, he's up there for six minutes, I would say over five minutes before anybody even saw him.
Starting point is 02:27:21 No, you just say only six is how you report on it. Well that's the way to report only six, but six is, you got all these guys, all spotters guys, you know. I mean, people do a mechanical bull for eight seconds. If that. Do we want to play your NTD report or did mine cover it?
Starting point is 02:27:41 I think it's pretty much the same story. It's a little longer. No, it's the same length. 46 seconds. No, it's the same, basically the same story. Okay. Let's go to this catch up with some campaigning news. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 02:28:00 What you got? It's a campaigning news. It's the name of the clip. I'm sorry. I'm cueing you. I missed the cue. I'm cue you. Cueless. Well, Vice President Harris is in Georgia.
Starting point is 02:28:10 Former President Donald Trump is holding campaign events in battleground states this week, the very states that could decide the election. NTD's Washington correspondent Jack Bradley has an update on Trump's campaign. Former President Trump is holding campaign events this week in key battleground states. Now nothing is scheduled for the former president, but his running mate Ohio Senator J.D. Vance has two rallies today. He's speaking in Erie, Pennsylvania and in De Pere, Wisconsin. Tomorrow Trump is holding a town hall in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and on Friday a rally in Johnson Town, Pennsylvania. Trump said he'll be attending the scheduled presidential debate hosted by ABC on
Starting point is 02:28:48 September 10th in Philadelphia. He initially wanted to ensure the same rules as the debate with CNN with President Biden rules including that candidates microphones should be muted while the other is speaking and they'll be standing and they cannot bring notes. RFK Jr., who recently dropped out of the presidential race and endorsed Trump, has pulled his name off the ballots in several states. He remains on the ballots in Michigan and Wisconsin, both of them swing states. Even though Kennedy tried to remove his name, state laws don't allow it. It'll be interesting to see if that actually impacts the votes.
Starting point is 02:29:23 This all comes as Trump's campaign added Kennedy and Tulsi Gabbard to his presidential transition team. Gabbard is a former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii who ran for president in 2020. Okay, a couple things. One, I think we should analyze and think for a moment about the next person who will join the Trump campaign. There has to be more. They can't be shooting all their wad on RFK Jr. and Tulsi.
Starting point is 02:29:49 We've got to have more coming in. Oh, I never considered this. Oh, there's got to be another big name that joins. It has to be a surprise, like Al Franken. That'll never happen. But someone of great stature, could there be anyone who is not a complete capture cuck? Which is rare in that party. But it has to be a disaffected person who sees it, it'll reveal it's the reveal will take place after the debate.
Starting point is 02:30:29 And it will depend on how the performance of Kamala goes. You know, they kept trying to force the idea that she could have notes. And you know what that means? She'd have a binder with tabs, a big giant binder with tabs. And she'd be flipping it over and reading from these notes. We need, but I think we need someone from show business like Clooney, which will never happen. But at that level. No, Clooney's out. No, but at that level, someone big, maybe not.
Starting point is 02:30:57 I mean, No, show business doesn't really have a, I mean, Has no cachet. I don't think this is impactful and these people are all pathetic. Yeah. I don't know. I don't see anybody on the horizon. I like the idea. Oh, he needs it. He needs to do it. It has to be someone. How about Mike Rowe? Mike Rowe would be a good one.
Starting point is 02:31:21 Yeah, but Mike Rowe's already voting for him. Is he? As far as I can tell, he's a Republican. Yeah. Okay. Mike Roe won't work. How about Bill Mar? That would be interesting. I'll give you that one. Bill Mar? But he hates Trump so much that for him to change, to change at this point, it would be incredible. I just don't see it. I mean, it would be great, but he's such an ideologue. And he really hates Trump.
Starting point is 02:31:57 He says he hates Trump. Yeah. Disrually. Well, but he can still say, I hate him, but he's got the right ideas. He could do that. And I saw this, I saw an ad for this on X or it wasn't an ad because I have premium free. Oh, you paid.
Starting point is 02:32:15 No, I got it for free because I, you'd say I got the blue checkmark. You have the blue checkmark too. You don't get ads. You don't get ads. I don't get any ads. You get ads? I mean, once in a while, I think there's an ad in there. No, I think it's just a, I think
Starting point is 02:32:30 it's just a post and I thought it was a joke, but it wasn't. Hello everyone. This is your favorite president, Donald J. Trump with some very exciting news by popular demand. I'm doing a new series of Trump digital
Starting point is 02:32:45 trading cards you all know what they are we've had a lot of fun with them it's called the America first collection 50 all-new stunning digital trading cards it's really something these cards show me dancing and even me holding some bitcoins here's the best part I'm doing great things for my Trump digital card collectors. First, there's the real physical Trump cards. Purchase 15 or more of my Trump digital trading cards and we'll mail you a beautiful physical trading card. It's really, I think, quite something. Each physical trading card has an authentic piece of my suit that I wore for the presidential debate and people are
Starting point is 02:33:25 calling it the knockout suit. I don't know about that, but that's what they're calling it. So we'll cut up the knockout suit and you're going to get a piece of it and we'll be randomly autographing five of them, a true collector's item. This is something to give your family, your kids, your grandchildren. Number two is to purchase 75 of my trump digital trading cards And you will also be invited to join me for a gala dinner at my beautiful country club in Jupiter, Florida We really have tremendous dinners with my collectors have a lot of fun together. We're gonna have a good time
Starting point is 02:34:00 Okay, so I need to say a few things about this Unbelievable first of all this definitely tops the Bible, by the way. Yeah, well, the Bible he was just endorsing, he wasn't actually selling it, but this he's selling. And so these are NFTs, which is exactly the opposite of what the Bitcoin people want, which is just dumb. And then they say, oh, I even got some Bitcoins or whatever, but these are NFTs.
Starting point is 02:34:28 Gary Gensler has just come out and said, NFTs are securities. So he can expect another lawsuit. Oh, oh. Yep. They're unregistered securities. You watch, he came out with it yesterday and it's true. Of course they are. They are unregistered securities because you can trade them.
Starting point is 02:34:47 Hello? They're called trading cards. So Pokemon card is like NFT. Is it now going to be subject to a securities exchange commission? Are you telling me that? No, because those are real cards. This is the digit. It's an NFT.
Starting point is 02:35:03 It's a little different than a Pokemon trading card It's the same with with all these cryptos they're all they're all they've all been deemed not Commodities, but they've except for Bitcoin. They've been deemed securities I'm just I'm just It's obvious what's going to happen. Yeah, they're going to sue him and he's going to make a fuss. Maybe it was designed for that. But it's dumb.
Starting point is 02:35:31 And they cost $99. Yeah, $7,500 you get invited to the gala. Okay. Well, you can just donate $7,500. I don't think so. Well, maybe. He just said it. I know what the price is.
Starting point is 02:35:43 Oh, yeah. Well, that means the place will be packed with people and you'll never get to meet him. Yeah. No, no, that's $75,000 to meet him for a picture. Oh yeah. Yeah. He knows what he's doing. Poll. Poll came out. According to Axios, more Americans embrace COVID-vax untruths,
Starting point is 02:36:06 which is an interesting choice of words. Untruths. Yeah. Big picture. So they say they don't embrace COVID lies. Yes. The big picture, says Axios, the findings from the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg Public Policy Center are further evidence of how intense backlash to the government at times muddled
Starting point is 02:36:25 COVID response eroded trust in public health jeopardizing preparedness efforts to address future crises of mosquitoes Uh what they found 28 percent of respondents to the survey incorrectly believed That covid 19 vaccines have been responsible for thousands of deaths. Wait, wait, how can you incorrectly believe? Thank you. I'm glad you caught that. They incorrectly. You believe something. You just believe it. You believe it. I believe that the sky is green. You're incorrectly believing it.
Starting point is 02:37:00 He believes the sky is green, although he's incorrect. They should have said believe without evidence. My favorite phrase, it turns out. This is up from 22% in June 2021. The percentage who know this is... Guy's falling. Okay. So the percentage who know this is false, decline to 55% from 66%. 22% believe the false idea that it's safer to get a COVID infection than to get the vaccine up from 10% in April 2021, months after the COVID shots were rolled out.
Starting point is 02:37:43 The percentage of those incorrectly believing that the COVID-19 vaccine changes people's DNA nearly doubled to 15% from 8%. Wow, you stupid Americans. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Meanwhile, and I'd like to get some confirmation on this because it comes from a sub stack. In August, 33 nurses died suddenly.
Starting point is 02:38:11 Yeah, that's what's his name. There's one guy, I can't remember his name offhand, who does a sub stack. Mark Crispin Miller? Mark Crispin, yeah. Miller. Is he full of crap? This is all he does. No, he's not full of crap. Okay.
Starting point is 02:38:26 He just documents every buddy he can find who died before the age of 70, even though he does, he goes beyond that too, uh, who they don't have a cause of death and he just lists them all as, as people who died from the Vax. Well, he's not saying that. He's not, no, this is what he, no, well, he's implying, implying it. He's implying it. Yes, with died suddenly. He's not saying it, but that's what he's saying. Well, we have a lot of nurses and doctors who are producers.
Starting point is 02:38:52 I'd love to hear if they are seeing similar numbers of their colleagues dying suddenly. I know a lot of these colleagues have quit the business because they wouldn't get the shot. Because what they saw from people wouldn't get the shot. Yep. Because what they saw from people who did get the shot and the next thing you know they had to get the shot, they said, no, I'm not going to get the shot. I'm out of here. And that's caused a problem, same as in the military, with people who quit.
Starting point is 02:39:18 Baron Sir Spud the Mighty says that X apparently is still banning the hashtag died suddenly. What? I thought it was free speech over there. That's Linda the knob twiddler. Can't trust Linda. And then our Surgeon General came out with an interesting statement this week, as summarized in this clip. I don't think it's a surprise
Starting point is 02:39:45 that parenthood is stressful. Desiree Terry is the mother of three children. I think we've all been feeling it for a really long time and it's wonderful to actually have some numbers to back it up. Terry is talking about the findings in a new Surgeon General Advisory. Dr. Vivek Murthy says 48% of parents feel completely overwhelmed. That tells us we've got a real challenge and there's a lot that's driving that. Parents are not only contending with the usual stressors that come with being a parent, worrying about finances and safety, but they're also worried about how to manage social media and
Starting point is 02:40:18 phones for their kids. Associate Professor of Child Psychiatry at the University of Chicago, Dr. Hollad Efzel, says parents' well-being is crucial when it comes to a child's well-being. Efzel also says the finding about the role of social media in a parent's life was very revealing. Murthy also says employers should provide more paid leave for parents and access to affordable child care and have policies in place that support parents and their mental health.
Starting point is 02:40:48 What kind of psychological warfare is this? I don't know. What do you think? Well, don't have kids. That's what it sounds like to me. Oh, if you weren't worried enough about the cost and social media, it's going to stress you out. Yes, my daughter just turned 34. I'm still stressed out.
Starting point is 02:41:10 It's what you do as a parent. It's one of the joys. That's why I want them all to have kids, to get back at them and laugh. What do you think it is? I have no idea. Psychological warfare. It sure feels like it. Every kid's nuts cut off.
Starting point is 02:41:27 There you go. Okay, that'll do it. Do you want to play one more clip or should it just go straight into the John Paul and George and Reagan? Yeah, let's play that. This is from a Gutfeld show. I'm wondering if you can guess this. This is Tom Shalhou was the host.
Starting point is 02:41:42 He's a funny comic who does Biden as an imitation. He's very good at it. This is hobbies that turn off women. Oh. But before we play it, what would you guess? Podcaster and day trader. Let's listen. Those aren't hobbies.
Starting point is 02:42:01 Those are vocations. The internet gets reactive to hobbies deemed unattractive. Tonight we examine a viral social media post purportedly ranking men's hobbies by how attractive they're perceived by women. And much to my dismay. Oh, wait a minute. Let me think. Let me think.
Starting point is 02:42:18 Collecting Star Wars figurines, is that on the list? Yes. Ah, ah, ah, I got one. Another one would be Star Wars figurines. Video gaming. Video gaming. Oh, you saw this. No, no I did not.
Starting point is 02:42:34 I'm just thinking of what I find detestable. Posting Gutfeld is near the bottom of the list. Now we couldn't verify the scientific authenticity of this poll, but when has that stopped us? According to the chicks of this chart, playing video games is the number one fast track to the friend zone, followed by things like collecting figurines, doing magic, gambling, and even building model trains. You're four for four. You have model trains. Wow. You're four for four. You have model trains.
Starting point is 02:43:08 I know you've got a model train set somewhere in that house. Not really. Yeah. You've got them in boxes. I do have from when I was a kid. Collectibles. I liked trains a lot. I didn't build model trains necessarily, but I do have kept an engine from the fifties
Starting point is 02:43:23 that probably is worth something. But I haven't sold it. So it doesn't, that can't prove anything. But, I know guys as adults that do trains, and I do, and I do enjoy seeing a good train layout. It's very fascinating. There's a very famous, used to be disc jockey in Holland Eric Dschwart. And he came up a little bit before me and he wound up being co-owner of a very big, very popular radio station once commercial stations were Radio 538. And he has a train in his backyard that he can sit on.
Starting point is 02:44:03 Oh, that's, Walt Disney had one of those. And so now he's, I think he's, well, obviously still a shareholder. I don't think he works necessarily anymore in the radio business. He's probably about five years older than me. And now he drives the tram. He's a tram conductor in, I think in, I don't know if it's Rotterdam or Amsterdam
Starting point is 02:44:28 and he's always posting pictures. Well going to work today, gonna drive the tram. Wow that's a guy who's dedicated to do something about it. You know a train you know a train and pushing the lever and making it go. Yeah, there's no evidence he hangs out with hot chicks. Oh my God! Woo! Listen to that horn! We have a lot of fun things to talk about. We have a nice stacked birthday list.
Starting point is 02:45:12 We have a number of produced meetup reports, which I like them. I like it when people produce them, but we've had a lot of very successful meetups. And of course we have the tip of the day and our end of show mixes. But first we're going to thank our producers who came in above $50 below. We don't mention for reasons of anonymity. And as always, we have people on there who are on the sustaining donations program, which can get you to knighthood. It happens all the time.
Starting point is 02:45:40 John, would you please read us through down to the fifties? I'll read a few before you have to read one, which is starting with Curtis Ritchie in Sherbourne, New York. It came in with a hundred bucks. And right away, right at the top is Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina. 8008 is the Archduke of Luna. And now we have a Knight, and we will read these notes when they come in at these low levels and this is Christian Grulish in Winter Haven, Florida 8.008. He says hey fellas so many puppies to feed this week I've sent my donation of 8.008 through the usual method and now for some careful accounting I'm a knight of the no agenda show very exciting much
Starting point is 02:46:21 Muchly happy and accounting is below if it's okay with the peerage committee I wish to be referred to as Sir Loin of the Winter Haven. From here on, that's fine. For the roundtable, I would like Skyline Chili Four Way Bean and Jameson Blackberry Whiskey. We have both of those for you lined up at the table. It's been a genuine pleasure listening to John and his various interpretations and pronunciation of my last name.
Starting point is 02:46:43 To aid John with future donations he may just refer to me as Sir Loin of Winterhaven on my way to becoming a duke. Well, please mention that in your future donations so we get that right. God bless you both. You are true patriots of our great country. Sincerely and respectfully Christian Grulich, Sir Loin of Winterhaven, P. PS, and for a winning resume that'll get you noticed, contact the lovely Linda Lu Patkin at ImageMakersInc.com, that's ImageMakersInc.com with a K, and enter code BONGENO to see what is next. He's in Herton, Holland, $75. Herton, that's good.
Starting point is 02:47:33 Dana Carroll in Laughlin, Nevada, $72.27. Jorge Alvarez in Pontevedra Beach Florida, 7171. Craig Kohler in Evansville, Indiana, 6502. And these are following, well, we got Gaucho Woodworking, of course. Look them up. They're listed on the Google. Gaucho Woodworking, they make great cutting boards and such. Redondo Beach, California, 63-52. This is karma for Adam's birthday. And it says my birthday plus my right knee replacement on Adam's birthday. Poor guy.
Starting point is 02:48:12 Now, I'm just going to read these are 62, 29 and 60s. These are all birthday shout outs. I'm just going to go read the name of the individuals and if there's a location for some reason the location only shows up a few times but Mansour Rod prison O'Leary the guy's name is prison I don't think so I hope maybe he's from the prison in O'Leary Michael Belcher Kevin McLaughlin once again. Oh, thank you, Kevin. Alan Schaff, Steve Niles in Santa Cruz, Trevor Hoagland, William Baker, B-A-K-K-E-R. Bucker. Maria Rickard Hong, Nutritional Healing.
Starting point is 02:49:01 OK. Kelly Hubbard. Sir Jubjub. One of my favorite names. Night of the Jiggly Bits. Night of the Jiggly Bits. That's right. Sir Jubjub.
Starting point is 02:49:15 Uh, Derek Tipton, Jamie Buell, uh, Baronette Benjamin Ritgers, Angela Pickering, Dan King, Cameron Linga. Hold on. Dan King also asked for a D-douche for his freeloading brother, Matt King from Central Point, Oregon. You've been D-douched. Caught it. Caught it. Good catch. Cameron Linga, Brian Bellin, Brian Mass, Walter Hillback.
Starting point is 02:49:54 Very long thank you note there. Yancy Summerer, Gerald Preston, Schumann Roy, Sir B Boop. And that ends the group. Well, the next show will be your official birthday show on Sunday. Yes, this is my birthday week is what we're celebrating here. And I will be working on my birthday. Well, no. No, your birthday is Tuesday. Well, you might be working, but it won't be on this show.
Starting point is 02:50:24 No, my birthday is Wednesday. No, you might be working, but it won't be on this show. My birthday is Wednesday. No, I thought it was Tuesday. The third. It's Wednesday. And then I'll be working Thursday while on a so-called vacation and Sunday, the Sunday after that, because Tina's taking me to Mexico. So that's my birthday present. So I will be working.
Starting point is 02:50:41 Your birthday is what day? Is the what? The third of September. That's Tuesday. Well, I'll be celebrating it on Wednesday. It's Tuesday. I'm sorry. Tuesday. 60 is like, I don't really want to know about it. It's too late. So cheer me up everybody with a donation.
Starting point is 02:51:00 Yeah. $60 donation to Adam for his birthday Sunday show. Let's try to boost the Sunday show with congratulations. And you get $600 would be cool. Yeah, that would be cool. It's all right. Steve Bannstra comes in with $59.93. Oh, it's an egg. Eggs donation over easy, $59.93. Oh, backwards.
Starting point is 02:51:22 Oh, that is eggs. Yeah, it is. Yeah, that is eggs. It is eggs. Yeah, that's cool. If you flip it over. Yep. That's interesting. Eggs over easy. TooManyEggs.com.
Starting point is 02:51:31 Yeah, TooManyEggs.com. Geek Rolling in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, 5856. Nicholas Oman in Dilworth, Minnesota, 58, 56. I don't know what that number comes down to. He needs some travel karma. We'll give it to you at the end. Yes, put some travel karma at the end for him. Joshua Stewart in Bowling Green, 55.
Starting point is 02:51:56 He says he's been listening for over a decade and now he requests a deducing. Is it the first time that he's donated? He's from Bowling Green, Kentucky. He's from the summer ozempics of bowling green I'll deduce him for that You've been deduced Here's a William Edelman in Jacksonville, Florida
Starting point is 02:52:19 Came out 55 which is a 20% cut of the David a day the Dana Brunetti unclaimed property donation drive. An excellent idea, I might add, which was one of our tips of the day. Surprise of astonishment in Yukon, Oklahoma, 5444. Another missing name, oh no, it's Mark Hardwick in Aledo, Texas, 5333. Kyle Tack in Yankton, South Dakota, 5272, and that's a happy birthday call out. A my, for himself. Yep, for Willa. No, for Willa.
Starting point is 02:52:54 Willa. Willa Tack. Okay, for Willa. Michael Friedle in Kansas City, 5272. Scott Nelson in Council Bluffs, Iowa, 5001, and now the rest are 50s and we're going to go through them, name and location if I have a location, starting with Brian Emenheiser in Lancaster, Michael Elmore in Gastonia, North Carolina, John Taylor in Florissant, Colorado, Aaron Weisgerber in Bend, Oregon, Richard Gardner, who I believe
Starting point is 02:53:27 is in New York City but doesn't say, Zev Green in Teaneck, New Jersey, Iheaki Esparza Eliragia in Mexico City, I think, David Steele in Mobile, Alabama. We need more Mexico City people. We do. They got 13 million people who are plus living there. Lee Thompson in Meridian, Idaho. Justin Kaler in Bluffton, Indiana. Edwin Torres in San Antonio, Ryan Wickenhagen in Townsend, Georgia, and last, Baron Alan Bean in Beaverton, Oregon, who's been with us since almost the very, very beginning, who once sent a $50 check-in and says, as long as you guys are good, I'm going to send a $50 check-in once a month.
Starting point is 02:54:24 And he has been giving this month ever since. Does he have a title? He's a baron. Oh, okay. Well, then he has a title. He's probably higher than that, but he still goes by baron. Oh. Well, that's it? He used to live in Oakland. Well, thank you very much, baron, and thank you to everyone who supported episode 1690 of the best podcast in the universe,
Starting point is 02:54:47 because we have the best producers in the podcast. It's easy to check. You can ask anybody. Someone was saying the other day, this one podcast, the dire of a CEO has 65 people working on the podcast. And I said, so what? We've got tens of thousands of producers working on the podcast. Does he pay those 65 people?
Starting point is 02:55:07 He does. Are they volunteers? No, I think he pays them. They go to an office and everything. What? Yeah, no, he'll be poor soon. Don't worry. He does all kinds of other things.
Starting point is 02:55:19 But what do you need that money? I mean, if you're going to be paying people to work full time. He also has, this was the big news at podcast movement, which was in Washington, DC on a Wednesday, a Thursday and a Friday, which doesn't sound like a great, you know, when school's back, I mean, I don't know how many people showed up. This guy, this, I forget his name, Bartlett, I think his name is, he's very famous, very famous podcaster. When he does interviews with people, he has a CO2 monitor in the studio and when it hits a thousand parts per million,
Starting point is 02:55:51 then he stops the interview because he says then people won't be thinking straight. That was the big news that came out of the podcast world this past week. What? Yes. Yeah. A thousand parts per million. Then you can't think straight. He claims. Is that true?
Starting point is 02:56:12 Well, I don't know if it's true or not, but what, what, why don't you just open up window, dude? Thank you all very much. All especially those who came in under $50 for reasons of anonymity or if you're on one of our many possibilities for your own sustaining donation, please remember us, support us, send us some value back. Go to noagendadonations.com. Here's the goat karma for those who want, including Sir CB who needs some garage sale
Starting point is 02:56:42 karma. You've got karma. Noagendadonations.com. CB who needs some garage sale karma. You've got karma. NoAgendaDonations.com It's a birthday, birthday on No Agenda. Here is the birthday list. We've got Tim Kimbrel turned 55 on the 25th. Kyle Tack wishes Willa a happy one, Turn 13 on the 25th as well. Andrew
Starting point is 02:57:07 Andre Mackie turned 17 today. How about that? Sean O'Connor turning 41 today. Thomas Weaver turns 38 today. Dame Foren Lady B4 turned 76 one day before me. I'll be 60 60 but she turned 76 on September 2nd and Gaucho Woodworking shares a birthday with me on September 3rd. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe! Well, not only does she turn 76 on September 2nd, but today she becomes a Viscountess, Dame Foreign Lady Before, now becomes Viscountess Dame Foreign Lady Before. Protectorate for her is the old town of Grayson in northeast Georgia. A classy dame indeed, a Viscountess no less. Congratulations.
Starting point is 02:58:07 Two knights, finally got some knights to bring up here to the round table. So get out your blade, John. There you go. Don't bring out your Swiss army knife because it doesn't have a blade. No, it's just a corkscrew on it. Zarin Densel, Christian Grulich. Step on up, gentlemen. Both of you have supported the Noah Jenner Show in the amount of $1,000 or more. That qualifies you for a knighthood. It's just as good as one of those that the King of England gives away, only we actually give you something cool that you can wear every single day. So I'm very proud hereby to pronounce the KV as Sir Knight Zee and Sir Loin of Winterhaven. For you gentlemen, as have the effervescent mutton and mead and when you're done snacking on that go to NoAgendaRings.com check out the beautiful rings we have the signet
Starting point is 02:59:07 rings for Knights and for Dames and we deliver that to you with a certificate of authenticity and wax which you can melt down and seal your important correspondence with thank you both for supporting the No Agenda show and welcome to the roundtable of the No Agenda nights and days. No Agenda Meetups! It's gonna go public! Yeah baby! So we may not do anything big centralized like a No Agenda Con, but we love our meetups and everyone else in the,
Starting point is 02:59:40 all the other producers seem to love it. These are producer organized meetups. You go to noagendameetups.com, you can register your meetup or you can find one near you. And people like telling us how much they enjoyed it. Here is the report from Keen, New Hampshire. Hey there, this is the noagenda meetup in Keen at the Jamaican restaurant.
Starting point is 03:00:01 And we had a lot of fun. There was four of us, three of us repeats and one person got hit in the mouth. In the morning John and Adam, this is Crypto Duke. Maybe sometime you'll come out here. You know it's not too far from Plymouth Mouse. Oh but we'll never get the grumpy guy to come here. Okay bye bye. All right the tip is to record an acquired location. Let's see how Tulsa did. Hey, Shmeery What where do I find the wildest and weirdest? Conversational threads in Oklahoma the Tulsa no agenda. Don't be a douchebag meetup
Starting point is 03:00:35 Hey John and Adam, this is Alan and Tulsa I called this meetup together to let everyone know that I'm ending my campaign and I'm endorsing the Curry Devorak ticket for more years. It's Hallie. Howdy, John and Adam. We're just here at this white Christian nationalist meetup looking to repeal the 19th. Hey, John, Adam, this is David. You guys podcast is so informative, but what is Aleppo? In the morning guys, this year I'm voting Linda Lepatkin.
Starting point is 03:01:10 Aleppo, that's in Syria. You know what Aleppo is. Spearfish South Dakota, come on in with your report. Good evening. This is Jessica. We interrupt this broadcast to bring you breaking news from the Cow Peak No Agenda Meetup of the Black Hills. Our very own Juan Miguel is on the scene.
Starting point is 03:01:34 Let's go to him now live for more details. Hey Jessica, thank you. I'm here at the Crows Beak Brewery here in Spirited South Dakota. It's an incredible scene, lots of energy, lots of activity. I think we even have midgets. I'm not sure, they may also be small children. Over here we have a table of people for the No Agenda Meetup. Let's see if we can get some comments from them.
Starting point is 03:01:59 In the morning, this is Jessica. The company is great and the green kombucha tastes better than it looks. In the morning Adam and John this is Caitlin coming to you from the Cow's Peak meetup in Spearfish South Dakota and I saw a guy wearing a t-shirt that said put a hog between her legs. Everybody this is John Dale having a good time here at the Crow Peak Brewery here in Spearfish South Dakota in the morning. In the morning this is Casey and we're at the first ever Snow Peas No Agenda meetup in Spearfish, South Dakota in the morning. In the morning, this is Casey, and we're at the first ever Snow Peas, Snow Agenda meetup in Spearfish, South Dakota
Starting point is 03:02:29 at the Crow Pig Brewery. Hey, my name is Jose. I came down here to Fort to get some beers after working on the roof all day, and they have some beers, so I got a beer. I'm not sure what is new agendas thing is all about. I just want to know my social credit score. Aww.
Starting point is 03:02:51 In the morning! Back to you Jessica. Wait, what? John Dale actually emailed me. Is it okay if we say Midgets in the Meetup Report? Like, you do you you bro whatever you want. Now we go over to London, merry old England. Here is Guf and his report from his meetup. From the Gitmo Nation, the UK, in the morning.
Starting point is 03:03:18 Who's my favorite? Look, I do believe it's that John John C? I think it's called John C, 100%. I'm Elliot from Croydon and I am a douchebag. In the morning John and Adam, this pub quiz is rigged like your elections. This is Gwuff the Cock at the London No Agenda Meat Hub, longest standing member, part two, and I'm perfecting my pitch for the V4V TV channel. Yeah. Hi John, hi Adam. Seven threes from G7OLH, I've been listening to you on the airwaves and I've enjoyed every
Starting point is 03:03:58 moment of it, so take care, bye. Need the money? John and Adam, the Inns, shops, the salad here. Thank you for your courage. Steve at the London Meetup in Fitzrovia. Awesome experience. Lovely ice. Gone off.
Starting point is 03:04:13 This is Suzie from Melbourne, Australia, reporting from Meetup at some pub called The Law of the Land. And I encourage you all to come to this meet up with Greg Greer and everyone else called No Agenda and if we could come back again next year we would and John agrees. And there's the bell. I may have a bit of a hangover tomorrow due to climate change. Coat Bongino! Okay, and a happy birthday song.
Starting point is 03:04:49 Thank you very much. Well, it sounds like everyone had a good time there in the UK. Time for us to visit, John. We've got a lot of people, a lot of producers. Oops, a lot of producers over there. Yeah, we do. Having a good time, obviously. Here's what's coming up today.
Starting point is 03:05:01 The North Georgia Monthly kicks off at six o'clock at Cherry Street Brewing in Alpharetta, Georgia. On Sunday, the first annual No Agenda anti-TAM battlefield meetup. Anti-TAM. Anti-TAM. That's at 10 o'clock in the morning at Anti-TAM National Battlefield. Oh, that's in Maryland, Sharpsburg, Maryland. And also-
Starting point is 03:05:24 And that's, you're mispronouncing it. How do I pronounce it? Because you mispronounce it. I can't, it's an Antimony or something. You literally spelled A N T I E T A M. Antietam? Antietam? Hey, it's at the national battlefield of that place in Sharpsburg, Maryland. It's a very famous Civil War battle. Yes, go there. And the annual South Jersey Pig Roast Meetup, 5 o'clock at Medford Lake,
Starting point is 03:05:54 New Jersey. Oh, that's Dame Wend of the Lakes. You've got to contact her for details. It's probably at her house. So go to noagendameetups.com for that. Coming up on September the 2nd. So you're going gonna cook a pig? I think so. It's the annual South Jersey Pig Roast Meetup. So yes, they're gonna cook a pig. Cooking up a pig. This is an interesting one.
Starting point is 03:06:13 Plymouth, Massachusetts. I was just there. I would have loved to have been in a meetup. Instead, they're doing one post visit and they sent a promo. In a world on the brink of war. It took 80 years to build. Where whispers of rebellion
Starting point is 03:06:29 echoed through the colonies. What if it's right on the water? Based on a true story. It symbolizes the America. It really does. Of love, romance and Adam and Tina's visit last month. The British will be here soon.
Starting point is 03:06:46 We shall stand our ground and fight them to the death. This is America, you dumb son of a bitch, OK? The British are coming! The British are coming! This Labor Day. James Wimeth, Massachusetts. The 81-foot tall monument was commissioned by the Pilgrim Society.
Starting point is 03:07:03 At the National Monument to the Forefathers in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The anarchists, the agitators, the deluders, and people who in many instances have absolutely no clue what they are doing. Find out what it really means Think of it. An entire nation founded on saying one thing and doing another. To be an American. And we will call that country the United States of America.
Starting point is 03:07:35 The Adam and Tina We're Here meet up coming Monday, September 2nd at the National Monument to the Forefathers in Clymouth, Massachusetts. That's pretty cool. Too long. Yeah, it Tumut, Massachusetts. That's pretty cool. Too long. Yeah, it's too long, but... By the way, it's pronounced Antietam. Antietam. Okay. That's pretty cool though.
Starting point is 03:07:53 So finally, we're going to put the National Monument to the Forefathers on the map. Can you imagine the no agenda meetup there? It's in a cul-de-sac. It'll be interesting to see what the neighbors have to say about y'all. I'm sure they won't be pleased. One more promo for North Florida. Ahoy Florida producers! You are cordially invited to a summoning of the seas at our September meetup in St. Augustine on Sunday September 15th at 2 p.m. Join us for a round table full of seafood and sangria to hear all the tales of the No Agenda crew.
Starting point is 03:08:30 Don't forget to cast your vote for our November to Remember Meetup Adventure. RSVP for this meetup and more, all at noagendameetups.com. It's like a party. Ah, there you go. And we have many more to mention. I'm going to skip them since this was a very long meetup segment.
Starting point is 03:08:49 But I do want everyone to know, October 18th, Matt Long, Matt Long, who was a well-known person here in Fredericksburg, Texas, is organizing a meetup right here in Fredericksburg. Curry and The Keeper will be there. Many more, I'm sure, who are in the Texas region will be coming in Fredericksburg. Curry and The Keeper will be there. Many more, I'm sure, who are in the Texas region will be coming to Fredericksburg. Come to our lovely town, Bookan Air B&B. You don't wanna stay at the Motel 6.
Starting point is 03:09:15 And come join the meetup. I think that's on Friday, I think, October 18th, Fredericksburg, Texas. Those are the meetups. Many more can be found at noAgendaMeetups.com. If you can't find one near you like Fredericksburg, Texas, then start one yourself at NoAgendaMeetups.com. It's easy and always a party. Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
Starting point is 03:09:39 You want to be where you want to, Triggered on hell's blame. You wanna be where everybody feels the same. It's like a party. It's like a party! Yes indeed, just like a party. Um, I only have one ISO, so why don't you do yours and then I'll play mine, which I think is gonna win. Okay, let's start with the podcast is so good. Iso, so why don't you do yours and then I'll play mine, which I think is gonna win Okay, let's start with the podcast is so good. Oh That one might win. Let's see
Starting point is 03:10:18 Wow, it's really a low level you didn't make that yourself someone else did that for you. Let me try that again That has no dynamics. Sexism. This is blatant sexism. Well, that would be appropriate for this show. Who was that? Uh, Megyn Kelly? Exactly. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 03:10:41 And for our last celebrity entry, Nailed It. Mmm, nailed it. Nailed It. Nailed It. Who is that? Who does that? Who said that? He has an adnoidal voice and he's podcasting all the time. Scott Adams. Who? That was Scott. Scott Adams. Oh, no, no, can't do Scott Adams.
Starting point is 03:11:05 Here's my, I only have one entry. Fricking crazy. Hmm? What? Fricking crazy. You don't like fricking crazy? It sounds like he's saying breaking. No, freaking.
Starting point is 03:11:15 All right. Well, I think we go with Megan. This is blatant sexism. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with.
Starting point is 03:11:23 I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go with. I think that's the one we go. All right. Well, I think we go with Megan. This is blatant sexism. I think that's the one we go with. I think so too. Yeah, I think that's a good one. Now everybody, it's time before we wind up the show. It is Choms' Tip of the Day.
Starting point is 03:11:36 Greetings guys, for you and me. Just the tip with JCB. And sometimes Adam. There's a really good book. I'm going to plug a book. Come into the mic. I can't come in any closer without banging my nose. I'm going to plug a book called Might of the Chain. I don't like the title, but the book is fantastic.
Starting point is 03:12:06 Might of the Chain? Might. Might of the Chain. Forging Leaders of Iron Integrity, another subtitle. I don't like that either. But the book itself is fabulous. It's by Mike Studeman, a rear admiral, former retired, who is actually something of a spook. He's now working for MITRE as a national security fellow. And this book is, it's outrageously interesting. In fact, it's got a blurb by Henry Kissinger that says thoughtful and engaging.
Starting point is 03:12:43 When I read the blurb, I said, oh, that's one of those blurbs that you just write. I used to be an associate with John Brockman, the New York agent. And he told me very early on, he says, you know, Alan Watt, the guy who wrote all the books on Zen Buddhism, he said, that guy, if somebody mentioned blurb, he says, I'm in. And he would write the blurb. He would write any blurb for anybody. And I've taken that same, I felt the same way. I'm always weirded out by people who say, oh, no, I have to read it first. I have to do this. So I read this thoughtful and engaging by Kissinger. I said, he's one of those guys just writes phony blurbs. No, this book is the most thoughtful book I've ever run into at
Starting point is 03:13:29 least for a couple of years. It's just loaded with information. If you are a business manager, a guy who wants to get into management or if you're in the military, it's about leadership and it's just so full of tips. It's great. It's a meta tip. It's really a good book. So it's called Might, I don't like the title. It could have been called a lot of different things, but Might of the Chain by Studeman. Get a copy if you want to have something good to read.
Starting point is 03:14:02 Wow. A reading tip. That doesn't happen often. No, I think once a month I'm going to try something good to read. Wow! A reading tip! That doesn't happen often. I think once a month I'm going to try to do a book. No commercials. More content. Your No Agenda Tip of the Day. There it is. Your No Agenda Tip of the Day, everybody. Beautiful. And that concludes our broadcast time.
Starting point is 03:14:24 Let's see. Yep. yep, it's time. End of show mixes, Professor J. Jones, we got Dee's Laughs and David Kekta, all coming in with end of show mixes. Good to have you boys on board as usual. End of show, let's see, that means we have something coming up next. Ah, yes, Behind the Schemes with Boobury and Lavish, live. Is it live?
Starting point is 03:14:47 I don't know if they're live, but they're on the No Agenda Stream, which is 24-7. There's no reason to even turn, you know, what we say in the old days, lock it in and rip the knob off. NoAgendaStream.com, TrollRoom.io. And coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, right where the future meetup in Fredericksburg, Texas will be taking place, FEMA region number six. In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where I remain, I'm John C. DeVorek.
Starting point is 03:15:18 We will be here on Sunday. Please join us for more media deconstruction. You know you want it. You know you need it Remember us at Noah Jinn the donations comm until then adios mo foes a hooey hooey and such I think that sounds pretty good I think that sounds pretty good. Everything is in context. Pick up the kids and pay your bills.
Starting point is 03:15:51 Look, lost and confused. So she'd lower everyone's income? Yes. I think that sounds pretty good. Is that a good thing? That is a good thing. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? Who the hell is in charge?
Starting point is 03:16:06 I don't know what's wrong with you young people. Because she is smart and she is more reliable. Who the hell is in charge? What do you think about Donald Trump? He started World War III. Yeah, yeah, that's just not true. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? I think that sounds pretty good.
Starting point is 03:16:29 The leader who's tough, tested. Yeah, yeah, that's just not true. A total badass. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? Look, lost and confused. So she'd lower everyone's income? Yes. Everything is in context.
Starting point is 03:16:48 Is that a good thing? That is a good thing. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? They don't care about trees at all. At all. At all. Who the hell is in charge? Because she is smart and she's more reliable. They don't want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking.
Starting point is 03:17:08 They don't want well-informed, well-educated people capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that. That doesn't help them. That's against their interest. That's right. I don't know what's wrong with you young people. The leader who's tough. Hey, this scorching torrential heat is happening globally in Canada and it's unrelenting. Here we go. Stand up.
Starting point is 03:17:31 And one climate scientist at Berkeley, you may have read this, said that this is absolutely gobsmackingly bananas and that's coming from a scientist. Oh no, a scientist used the word gobsmack! Yeah, malicious malaria, mosquitoes are back Another Gates invention with hysteria, meant to attack Stick a thermometer in this jacuzzi planet, scorching tarantula heat I think I know who planned it, gobsmackingly bananas Oceans a hot tub, and now they wanna cancel winter in Canada
Starting point is 03:18:02 It's pretty chilly here all year Survey everything and stop Almost nothing old is the new fear What's the cost for your citizenship, my boss? It's a Jacuzzi planet! I'm so cross Claiming privacy is necessary to protect the neck Only real way to keep the masses really in check
Starting point is 03:18:18 Cause they don't really rally Distracted with the day to day The grind, I mean the dreck They don't really rally Distracted with the day to day, the grind I mean the dreck They don't really rally, distracted with the day to day, the grind and the dreck Global citizen never made sense to me You can only live your life as a private sovereign entity Can we all agree? Collectivism over your individuality is a hell of a schism If you're gonna stick a thermometer in the planet
Starting point is 03:18:44 to get an accurate temperature, wouldn't you stick it into the planet's butthole? Or Toronto, as it were? I already made... Sorry. Wow, Toronto. I know. I think that, listen, we...
Starting point is 03:18:56 Today is actually, I believe, an anniversary in terms of Dr. King, right? And I was just in South Africa, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the
Starting point is 03:19:04 United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, and I was in the United States, Today is actually, I believe, an anniversary in terms of Dr. King, right? And I was just in Selma and we celebrated and acknowledged the 59th anniversary of Bloody Sunday. I think it's really important that we as Americans always embrace our history, the parts that we're proud of and the parts that we're not proud of but that we can't forget. And we should all agree that we should teach history, we should learn history if we're to ever have an accurate idea of where we want to go and where we don't want to go in the future. And that means also acknowledging the importance of diversity. It means acknowledging the importance of the fact that everyone should have equal opportunity to compete and equity. And of course inclusion, you know, hey, let's look around the room and see who's not here.
Starting point is 03:20:00 And did we leave the door open? Kamala, you've done a horrible job. You've been the worst vice president in the history of our country. Kamala, you're fired, you're fired. Get out, get out. Yas Queen. Yas Queen.
Starting point is 03:20:16 The best podcast in the universe. Dvorak.org slash n a this is blatant sexism

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