Cover for No Agenda Show 1172: Vapegoat
September 12th, 2019 • 2h 52m

1172: Vapegoat

Transcript

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

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

0:00
new Oliver wasn't staged atom curry
0:03
John C. Dvorak Thursday September 12
0:06
2019 this is your award-winning chemo
0:08
nation media assassination episode 11 72
0:11
but this is no agenda printing
0:14
homelessness in 3d and broadcasting live
0:17
from opportunities on 33 in the frontier
0:19
of Austin Texas to cap load the drone
0:21
star state in the morning everybody
0:23
hi madam Curie and from northern Silicon
0:25
Valley where we feel so bad about the
0:28
departure of John Bolton I can't tell
0:30
you I'm Chauncey Dvorak ya cryin over
0:38
that one
0:41
what took him so long
0:44
how'd he get there in the first place
0:45
that's the thing no one can there's
0:47
still unanswered question well I think
0:49
there mmm it cannot be a coincidence
0:52
that the Taliban banana cancels or the
0:56
Trump cancels the Taliban after they
0:58
blow something up and Bolton's gone the
1:00
next day
1:01
you got to think that may be connected
1:05
well it's definitely a coincidence
1:12
sure so yeah that was some news but I
1:16
found the news for me that I wanted to
1:20
start with today and hopefully everybody
1:23
paid attention because we laid out in in
1:28
some detail on the previous episode
1:29
exactly what was going on with the vapor
1:32
wars big boars and women wait who got to
1:36
jingling great wars and to the tea
1:42
exactly as expected yeah and I think I
1:48
even said pay attention because you see
1:49
how it really works where the media is
1:52
complicit and politicians are complicit
1:54
and the president is complicit and it's
1:57
all to get a couple of big players a
2:00
solidified spot in the marketplace that
2:03
crushes everybody else and this is the
2:06
vapor Wars I'd late I think now there is
2:10
there is important information that
2:12
needs to be conveyed in particular to
2:14
members of our audience because I also
2:17
got a boots-on-the-ground report from
2:18
Justin the drug dealer because we have
2:21
different vaping technologies that are
2:24
being conflated in particular by the
2:26
mainstream let's start with the number
2:29
one issue that I have with their
2:31
communication ecigs cigarettes is
2:35
bullshit they use that term to equate
2:39
vaping with cigarettes okay there are no
2:43
e cigarettes anymore the thing that
2:45
comes closest is the Joule which is
2:48
called a Joule not an e-cig it's called
2:50
a Joule it's a vape and there's one
2:54
other you identify John woos or
2:56
something or
2:57
some of it you know I saw I saw the ad
2:59
they have a shitty ad because I can't
3:01
remember their name da I was just gonna
3:05
say the same thing it's not a shitty ad
3:07
by enemies it's a really well produced
3:09
ad except for that one fact it's kind of
3:12
I can't remember their name whose vuz e
3:15
could that be it boosts I think so it's
3:19
something else it starts with an M I
3:20
believe and it's a cuter devices cooler
3:24
looking little device than the jewel no
3:26
it's the booze I think this there's
3:28
always one of lose ya think it's the
3:31
booze yeah yeah it's it's it's the same
3:34
same idea vu se no well I'm going to be
3:40
hold up my opinion on that being the
3:42
name until I see the ad again let me see
3:45
if I can remember it anyway continue
3:47
alright so let me talk about the three
3:49
basic vaping technologies first there is
3:52
the sub ohm tank and this is a baton in
3:56
int and the different sizes for
3:58
everything in general it's a battery and
4:00
that can be a very large battery and a
4:02
tank that holds the liquid and in that
4:04
is the coil and it's called sub ohm
4:07
because of the resistance of the coil is
4:09
under 1 ohm and resistance and with
4:12
that's the stuff that if you jack it up
4:14
enough you can blow huge vape clouds if
4:16
you're if you are experimental and you
4:20
try other types of coils you can short
4:22
the battery and kill yourself so you
4:24
know most people go and blow yeah most
4:27
people go for a pretty simple system I
4:29
have the what do I use the smock SM okay
4:33
Spock the stick v8 and and the tank that
4:38
goes with it and those are I would say
4:40
fairly safe then we have the vape pen
4:45
for which you can at which is very thin
4:47
looks like a pen that's just a battery
4:49
and the controls to turn it on or off or
4:51
store it and you will buy little
4:54
cartridges with vape liquid in that or
4:57
you can get a very tiny tank that you
5:00
can fill up yourself and that we call it
5:03
a vape pen and then there's also of
5:05
course the
5:07
the sticks that we the vapes that we
5:09
talked about which is jewel and the
5:13
booze and they have a little cartridge
5:16
that is prefilled that you snap right on
5:19
to the end because that thing is
5:20
essentially just a battery and so it's
5:21
got the coil it's got a prefab coil and
5:25
the and the juice in there then we have
5:29
THC which is now there's many ways
5:32
people do this and I'm not going to get
5:34
into the more esoteric versions of it
5:36
but you have the vape pen and you can
5:38
buy a cartridge just like with the
5:40
e-liquid only it has the THC in it which
5:44
is then there's some additives in there
5:48
which actually help and you'll make it
5:50
vaporize and let me start with that
5:53
because that is where there is some
5:54
actual danger this is more important
5:57
than this whole vaping bullshit because
5:58
I'm sure I like to vape THC but I became
6:01
very wary a while ago when I started
6:04
coughing off a one I talked to Justin
6:06
the drug deal I said this is no good and
6:08
he really did a deep dive and brought me
6:10
a report so what's the problem is the
6:14
people who package and sell THC vape
6:19
cartridges to the consumer with pretty
6:22
colors and and often with you know
6:24
things to attract children I'm sure but
6:27
they're just taking a pre-made mixture
6:30
which they buy from what they believe is
6:32
a reputable source and they put it in
6:34
there and you're even dank there's a
6:36
whole bunch of these big known names
6:38
that do this then you have the
6:39
manufacturing itself which is not
6:43
inexpensive you know just to build a lab
6:45
will cost years five hundred thousand
6:46
2/4 3/4 of a million dollars and you
6:51
have this combination of some oils and
6:55
some other liquids that make it vaporize
6:58
not unlike the liquid vape only we've
7:03
seen a number of these manufacturers
7:05
maybe one maybe more who started putting
7:08
other shit in there such as the vitamin
7:10
E acetate just to get it to be more
7:13
liquid and to vaporize that is where the
7:16
actual danger is you
7:18
want to be vaping that stuff it can be
7:20
checked by anyone who has the test
7:23
equipment which is just chemical testing
7:26
so my drug dealer does that for me but
7:29
if you if you are worried in general the
7:34
liquid in your THC tank should be not if
7:37
you tip it back and forth it shouldn't
7:40
flow very quickly in fact it should be
7:41
almost like syrup or kind of like
7:43
molasses then you're probably okay
7:45
so that's important because I don't want
7:47
anyone dying from that shit and we'll
7:49
hear that they may have found a culprit
7:52
for these bogus manufactured carts
7:54
because these guys just buy him in China
7:56
off of Alibaba and put their stuff in
7:58
there and the manufacturers just think
8:00
they're getting the same thing they
8:01
always do and if they don't people die
8:03
bad now let's get to the vaping thing
8:07
the whole mission was to get state laws
8:10
in place with hundreds of lobbyists to
8:14
have very lenient laws for tobacco
8:17
flavored ie
8:19
the main business of jewell tobacco
8:21
flavored vape products and to push
8:24
everybody else out because they wouldn't
8:27
be able to afford the FDA testing
8:29
procedure for your more and more popular
8:33
vape liquids which are wood ones with
8:35
different flavors and fruity and even
8:38
mint actually nor menthol it got better
8:43
for them because of all this conflation
8:46
of people dying and we don't know what's
8:47
going on and saw scary
8:49
the FDA stepped in and created a rule
8:52
above everybody else which is absolutely
8:55
the best and they announced it with the
8:58
president and the first lady you could
9:00
not have asked for more if you are the
9:02
big player in the vape industry here's a
9:05
clip from the president in the Oval
9:09
Office well they become very rich
9:11
companies very fast and the whole thing
9:13
with vaping is is they been very
9:17
profitable and I want companies look you
9:20
know that I fight for
9:21
these very hard and I am what companies
9:23
he fighting for prayers fight that's why
9:26
I'm fighting with China that's why I'm
9:28
fighting with other countries if you
9:30
look at European Union and if you look
9:32
at Japan and if you look at so many
9:36
others including South Korea and many
9:38
others were constantly dealing with them
9:41
to make it good for our companies
9:43
because I view it as jobs I view it as
9:45
income for our country and jobs vaping
9:49
has become a very big business as I
9:51
understand it like a giant business in a
9:53
very short period of time but we can't
9:55
allow people to get sick and we can't
9:57
have our youth be so effective you see
10:00
this is where pisses me off because
10:03
there's no evidence anyone got sick from
10:05
an eliquid vape experience but
10:10
definitely from the THC and here the
10:12
president's saying ah we don't want the
10:13
kids to guess that's how the first lady
10:15
got involved she's got a son the people
10:22
were obsessing over this one line on
10:23
Twitter instead of focusing on that yeah
10:26
instead of focusing on what's actually
10:28
happening now I gonna well it's not
10:30
really his son the heads exploded Oh
10:34
what is he saying can't allow people to
10:36
get sick and we can't have our youth be
10:39
so affected and I'm hearing it and
10:41
that's how the first lady got involved
10:42
and she's got a son together that is a
10:47
beautiful young man and she feels very
10:49
very strongly about it she's seen it
10:52
we're both reading it a lot of people
10:54
are reading it but people are dying with
10:57
aping so we're looking at it very
10:59
closely and you know if nothing else
11:01
this is a conference that's going to let
11:03
people know about it because people are
11:04
gonna watch what we're saying and
11:06
parents are gonna be a lot tougher with
11:08
respect to their children a lot of
11:10
people think vaping is wonderful it's
11:11
great it's really not wonderful that's
11:14
that's one thing I think we can say
11:16
definitely commissioner it's not a
11:18
wonderful thing it's big problems we
11:21
have to find out the extent of the
11:23
problem it's so new and so no but we're
11:25
gonna find out and I hope that parents
11:28
that you know they have children and the
11:32
children are a certain age I hope
11:33
they're going to be able to make wise
11:36
decisions maybe basically what we're
11:38
saying today
11:39
okay so complete misinformation blah
11:42
blah blah for sure
11:45
children and I'll just say under 18
11:47
should not be vaping nicotine or
11:50
anything none of that is good for you
11:52
and the developing body and and
11:53
marijuana isn't good for you either if
11:56
your brain is still developing but let's
11:58
see what is really going to happen so we
12:00
have the Health and Human Services
12:02
working together with the FDA and here's
12:06
the actual announcement and you'll see
12:08
what happens is the big guys win the
12:10
thousands of little companies who built
12:13
the industry with their eliquid 's will
12:16
be squashed today president Trump
12:18
announced that the Food and Drug
12:19
Administration will be finalizing
12:22
guidance that removes all flavored
12:25
e-cigarettes from the marketplace other
12:27
than tobacco flavor D cigarettes why is
12:30
that important we are seeing an absolute
12:32
surge in high school and middle school
12:35
kids using these flavored products mint
12:38
menthol fruit flavor alcohol flavor
12:41
bubble-gum we've gotta stop it we're
12:43
gonna have a whole generation of
12:44
children addicted to nicotine and that's
12:46
just horrible and President Trump as the
12:48
great public health leader that he is is
12:49
gonna put a stop to it we're gonna let
12:51
these tobacco flavor to be cigarette
12:53
products remain on the market until they
12:55
apply for FDA approval but that's just
12:57
because adults may need them to help
12:59
with stopping smoking cigarettes or
13:01
cigars but if we see actions that target
13:05
these products towards kids or make them
13:06
available to kids or if we see kids
13:08
start flowing into tobacco flavor in
13:09
e-cigarettes we're coming after that too
13:11
so under the guise of Oh kids will start
13:15
vaping because they're attracted to the
13:17
yummy flavors as far as I know kids were
13:20
always attracted to smoking things to
13:22
cigarettes and menthol and whatever but
13:26
that's the cover because Jul makes the
13:30
most popular tobacco products oh by the
13:33
start of the new year all of the or
13:36
actually will be probably about nine
13:38
months all flavored liquids will
13:42
be banned unless you get an FDA approval
13:47
which is exactly what these small
13:49
companies can't afford
13:51
it'll cost up to a million dollars per
13:54
flavor that you want to introduce to the
13:57
market and of course we'll see Joule
13:59
expanding their line from their tobacco
14:02
flavored they'll bring back or they
14:04
probably never even get rid of their
14:05
menthol and they'll bring in their own
14:07
and all the small guys are effed
14:10
in fact jewel left the vapor Technology
14:14
Association over this dispute then of
14:19
course the vapor the vapor Technology
14:21
Association is pissed because these guys
14:23
participated in screwing them out of
14:26
existence what I have here I have the
14:31
final
14:34
wait a minute that's not the one I
14:36
wanted here's the MSS CNBC who talked a
14:40
little bit about the huge market in jest
14:43
of course the fact of the matter is that
14:45
we did a study and there are almost
14:48
14,000 vapor companies in the United
14:50
States almost 12,000 dolls are retailed
14:53
vape shops often times mom and pop shops
14:55
and they sell a wide variety at a
14:57
diverse product range of flavored vapor
14:59
products to adult smokers you take those
15:01
flavors off of the market precipitously
15:03
and what will happen is those shops will
15:05
shut down we're talking about a total
15:08
economic impact of a hundred and sixty
15:09
six thousand jobs 70,000 of which are
15:12
direct retail jobs you take those
15:14
products out of the market there is no
15:15
business model for people just selling a
15:17
stock of flavor and the real harm here
15:21
is the fact that those consumers that
15:22
are buying those products from them will
15:24
have two options both bad and worse the
15:27
first option is that they go back to
15:29
smoking and that's not what we're saying
15:30
it's what the FDA said an open court in
15:33
June what they said in court was that
15:35
dramatically and precipitously removing
15:37
vapor products from the market will lead
15:39
to an increase in smoking and and the
15:43
worst case is that it leads to more
15:44
black market problems because that is
15:46
what the American consumers have said
15:48
they will do they'll go to smoking or go
15:50
back to the black market so there's your
15:53
there's your situation and I don't know
15:55
if the president is just completely
15:57
uninformed and dumb I'm afraid he
15:59
actually it hasn't in with Altria and
16:02
someone lobbied and word got up to him
16:05
like oh yes this is really what's
16:07
happening people are really dying but
16:09
they're not they're not dying from the
16:11
e-liquid now long term I don't know it's
16:14
only been around for ten years so we
16:16
don't know the long-term health effects
16:17
of vape liquid but for sure you have to
16:21
be careful with your THC and get it from
16:23
a reputable source who has tested it
16:26
you
16:28
and that's what I got
16:32
you question then okay when was vaping
16:35
technology and invented was it patented
16:38
and when did the patent run out and why
16:39
don't we hear about this
16:42
uh I don't know if that's a great
16:45
question because I never said it was a
16:47
great way to call it that um it's a
16:53
question that's been on my mind because
16:54
it seems to me that somebody could have
16:56
cleaned up on this you know if it was
16:58
patented well why wouldn't it well
16:59
here's your smart here's here's another
17:02
minor twist to the story every single
17:05
vaporizer device comes from China every
17:08
single one so I don't know who if you
17:12
know who or if there's even a patent I
17:14
have no idea may it may be very very old
17:17
that the idea is not new vaporizers are
17:21
not new but China makes everything
17:24
that's just another interesting little
17:26
ripple in this whole rig even make our
17:29
own a little battery wad I would think
17:33
Elon Musk came up with a safe one but no
17:38
so yeah I think it's uh I think it's
17:40
just Chinese have flooded the market I
17:42
don't think it makes any different no
17:44
one can make it cheaper I don't think
17:45
there's any any companies here that make
17:47
that could be wrong but I'll find out if
17:49
if there's US made I'll buy that I'll
17:51
use that they did find a scapegoat thank
17:55
goodness in the illegal vape making
17:57
business in the manufacturing this is
18:00
people this is Wisconsin past me in the
18:03
past is this one of the largest drug
18:04
operations you've had in Kenosha I don't
18:05
think it was but of this type
18:08
it's the largest we've ever had and as
18:10
far as I know it's probably one of the
18:12
largest in the country
18:13
they found 31200 vape cartridges filled
18:21
already ready to be shipped out each was
18:24
filled with one gram of THC
18:26
they found approximately 98 thousand
18:30
vape cartridges unfilled and what they
18:32
would do is they would hire people and
18:35
they would they would actually pay them
18:37
in dollars an hour and they would take
18:42
THC oil which is on the screen here and
18:45
they would take a syringe and they
18:46
inject it into the cartridges they make
18:49
it sound really scary but the problem is
18:51
these guys who is now known as the vape
18:54
goat
18:55
was probably cutting it he was cutting
18:57
it up with vitamin E trying to you know
18:59
to dilute it make it work better with
19:03
less THC make more money and you just
19:06
can't be vaporizing chemicals it's not a
19:10
good idea
19:11
you know glycerin all right you know we
19:13
have that in a lot of stuff in your in
19:15
your birthday cake but you know vitamin
19:18
E that was never part of the original
19:19
formula so that's what we really have to
19:22
be careful about and all this is
19:24
squashing and an entire industry will be
19:26
gone gone in a year
19:30
very disappointing
19:33
you're actually disappointed yeah I'm
19:35
very disappointed in my government and
19:37
I'd see the president like that's fu man
19:40
get a fucking clue
19:43
or get a clue even I get a get a clue
19:46
yeah it said find that extremely
19:49
disappointing and and the worst part is
19:52
the mainstream media shocked and
19:54
dismayed no I predicted it what are you
19:57
talking about
19:57
hi I didn't imagine it would come
20:00
through why are you even bringing up
20:01
that it that you're disappointing the
20:03
present when you already predicted this
20:04
behavior I'm disappointing okay
20:07
you should have been pre-decided I think
20:09
I was pre disappointed but I did I
20:12
wasn't prepared for the actual letdown
20:14
of it all but it's fun to watch the m5m
20:19
collude and conflate all these different
20:22
stories into scaring everybody I'm going
20:24
along with the program I have to stop
20:28
you now you used the word conflate way
20:31
too often in this report no I actually
20:34
the reason I did it is because the
20:37
previous report I said conflate and I
20:39
said no that's not the word and I went
20:41
back and looked it up and decided to use
20:43
it for the report I've used it twice but
20:45
thanks what about fucking me no no three
20:48
okay four all right fine I'm just
20:51
telling you yeah you're supposed to
20:52
report these things yes
20:55
okay I got it
20:58
I think that summarizes the whole thing
21:01
is ever that there's still missing
21:04
patent and also I think it might be
21:07
interesting to know how this who started
21:09
this craze in the first place which
21:11
craze the vape craze yeah on that that
21:14
is an interesting question I don't know
21:16
but it's--but 10 years I know but
21:18
someone someone is ground zero of this
21:24
yeah someone somewhere just gets no
21:27
credit yeah it's probably some hipster
21:32
with a man bun so yeah we may not want
21:34
to find the answer to that it probably
21:37
is some hipster with a man bun as a
21:39
matter of fact the next big piece of
21:44
news would undoubtedly be brexit
21:48
Wow what's news about brexit oh well we
21:52
got a whole bunch of fun things
21:53
happening I mean you know of course now
21:56
the the Parliament is in prorogue so
22:00
they have been suspended
22:03
well actually here's the BBC who have a
22:05
little recap of what happened this week
22:08
in brexit it's been a long and often
22:10
dramatic parliamentary session and as it
22:13
came to an end it was a long and
22:15
dramatic night as a ceremony for
22:19
corrugation got underway a group of MPs
22:21
staged a protest around the Speaker's
22:24
chair holding up signs saying
22:29
do you want to make the point that this
22:33
is not a standard or normal corrugation
22:40
require any assistance and from you mr.
22:43
Stevenson you wouldn't have the foggiest
22:45
idea where to start in seeking to
22:47
counsel me on this table I require no
22:50
response from you
22:55
and then there were cries of shame
22:57
directed at conservative MPs as they
23:00
left the chamber
23:06
it all followed a fiery debate in the
23:09
Commons where MPs again rejected the
23:12
idea of a snap election in mid-october
23:14
and Boris Johnson again reiterated that
23:18
he has no intention of delaying brexit
23:21
this government will not deny brexit any
23:24
further we will not allow the emphatic
23:26
verdict of the referendum to be slowly
23:29
suffocated by
23:34
while the opposition run from their duty
23:37
to answer to those who put us here they
23:40
cannot hide forever
23:46
commander when welcome when the people
23:48
will finally get their chance to deliver
23:51
their verdict mr. speaker say what I'm
23:58
just saying his keys he is well just
24:01
play the whole thing but it seems that
24:02
he right there either said there's gonna
24:05
be a people's vote or there's gonna be a
24:07
new election he's saying the verdict was
24:32
to leave and they will get their chant
24:37
he'd finally they'll get the chance to
24:38
decide who was good and bad I think
24:40
that's his his way of saying we are
24:42
gonna have an election but Boris
24:44
Johnson's being attacked on two fronts
24:47
one is the legality of the prorogue
24:50
which we discussed and there's been kind
24:53
of floating out there that he could be
24:54
arrested because it's illegal and in
24:57
essence what he did is he lied he lied
24:59
to the Queen did you lie to the Queen
25:02
when you advised her to Peru to suspend
25:05
Parliament absolutely not
25:07
and that an indeed as I say that the
25:10
High Court in in England plainly agrees
25:13
with us but the Supreme Court will have
25:16
to decide we need a Queen's Speech we
25:17
need to get on and do all sorts of
25:18
things so I'm not sure where that is but
25:21
the latest and this is almost like you
25:25
know anti-trump Ian's stuff what they're
25:26
doing now they've they figured out how
25:28
to bring Boris Johnson down everybody
25:31
they've here's here's the story JA Boris
25:34
Johnson's backers so his his campaign
25:38
funders and people who support his
25:39
mission are all making hundreds of
25:42
millions on shorting the market and it's
25:45
clearly collusion
25:47
so the BBC interviewed one of these
25:49
donors Crispin O'Day who has already
25:54
made 220 million pounds from shorting
25:57
the markets I don't know exactly what
25:59
he was shorting but he's shorting and
26:01
hurting the markets sorry time
26:03
expression matino hora in Boca the
26:07
morning has gold in its mass and never
26:10
has one felt so much that that idea as
26:16
this morning really I discover Crispin
26:19
has two reasons to be cheerful brexit
26:21
and bonds overnight he's made two
26:24
hundred and twenty million quid betting
26:26
markets will collapse as his campaign
26:29
succeeds I still think tomorrow they're
26:32
gonna take it all away from you me
26:33
that's because I've lived for too long
26:35
in the the yer a world he might have
26:39
been up all night but he there I'm
26:42
feeling fresh as a daisy they got the
26:47
perfect guy with the evil laugh well
26:53
that's not very clear on what this guy
26:55
did I mean he's obviously playing that I
26:57
mean the only thing the only thing that
27:00
I can see somebody like that can make
27:02
that much money overnight is playing
27:03
currency well you could play you beat
27:06
this bullcrap the report said bonds
27:10
which is possible is fine well the
27:14
shorting bonds I'm just telling you what
27:17
the report what world are bonds shorter
27:20
bonds going down I'm just telling you
27:22
what the reporting is what the reporting
27:24
saying reporting is saying there should
27:26
that Boris Johnson's backers have been
27:30
shorting the market and and they know
27:32
exactly what Bo Joe's gonna do and so
27:34
they're just cleaning up it's all of its
27:37
bullcrap they're just making stuff up to
27:40
make Boris Johnson look bad which is
27:41
what you do but what really came out to
27:44
the forefront this week was operation
27:47
yellow hammer and we talked about yellow
27:50
hammer in January as the secret plan for
27:55
what the UK will do in the worst case No
27:57
Deal brexit scenario it was kind of
28:01
laughed at as off was this and it
28:03
doesn't exist it's not real now it's out
28:05
in the open now it turns out to be real
28:07
the British government's worst case
28:09
brexit scenarios makes for a bleak
28:12
potential panic buying and public
28:15
disorder the no deal departure could
28:17
means the veer disruption to cross
28:19
channel reef problems for fuel medical
28:22
and fresh food supplies and protests and
28:24
counter protests across the country
28:27
operation yellow hammer was published on
28:29
Wednesday after a request from lawmakers
28:31
prepared on August the second it says
28:34
public and business readiness for a No
28:36
Deal outcome would likely be low the
28:39
document states lorries could have to
28:40
wait up to two and a half days to cross
28:43
the English Channel and British citizens
28:45
could face more immigration checks that
28:47
EU border posts disruption could last a
28:50
possible three months information
28:52
sharing between police and security
28:54
services would also be affected
28:57
documentation yellowhammer first came to
28:59
light in the Sunday Times newspaper on
29:01
August the 18th Michael Gove minister in
29:04
charge of No Deal preparations said then
29:06
that the document was not up-to-date
29:08
despite handing the information over on
29:11
Wednesday he refused to do the same with
29:13
advice from government advisers about
29:15
suspending Parliament
29:19
so that's just a big fracas I was also
29:23
yeah it's like
29:25
one thing in there there's no police
29:27
won't be able to talk to each other
29:28
because of this oh yeah yes the the net
29:31
what's the internet gonna go down they
29:33
all the power green oh no this is can't
29:36
bring any power over all right well I'm
29:40
gonna take you there this is part of
29:42
black vulture see see black we have
29:46
yellow hammer and black vulture these
29:48
Brits man they're nuts in Parliament so
29:51
black vulture is showing all these
29:52
things that the that will happen but
29:55
also what the EU was planning so when we
29:58
talk about the police not being able to
29:59
communicate that's because of the
30:01
technology they're using these digital
30:03
radios and gosh I guess the EU controls
30:06
the frequencies or something of that
30:08
nature and then we had Lord James of
30:11
Blackheath who's kind of a backbencher
30:13
blowhard although he talks softly and he
30:16
threw the bombshell down in Parliament
30:19
saying well let me just tell you you
30:21
know we better get out because if we
30:23
don't you know the European army is
30:25
gonna take over
30:26
we have this wonderful paper called the
30:28
yellow hammer which tells us all the
30:29
dreadful things which will happen if we
30:30
do go no go now my secretary has got an
30:33
alternative list which I have compiled
30:35
it called the black vulture which is my
30:37
list of the things which they don't know
30:39
about which will happen if we don't go
30:40
no no deal and the first of those has if
30:43
it creates for the crowd but the second
30:46
will somebody please tell us the truth
30:48
about the European defence Union is it
30:52
by far the biggest issue facing the
30:54
British public and they know nothing
30:55
about it officially can we please have a
30:57
proper account of what it entails is it
31:00
really true that the government has
31:02
entered into private agreements with the
31:04
European community that they will on
31:06
completion of remain or whatever it is
31:09
to be transferred to the European Union
31:12
in Brussels the entire control of our
31:14
entire fighting forces including all
31:16
very quickly
31:18
you may you may just my lords but it has
31:22
been done and you must check it out it
31:24
is too important to ignore we must know
31:27
the truth of this we must have clear for
31:29
the whole public to know I it is true
31:32
and I think we should be taught I have
31:34
understanding that it is intended that
31:36
the oath of every serving member of our
31:39
forces will be canceled and they will be
31:41
required to undertake a new of loyalty
31:44
to Brussels and we have had in recent
31:48
months I understand a series of a series
31:52
of people sent from our armed forces to
31:56
create and install the command and
31:59
control centers to be used for the
32:01
controller back to that we have been
32:03
ceased to have any control over their
32:06
use application or deployment so a lot
32:09
of fear mongering going on like that one
32:12
yeah I decided black vulture and by the
32:16
way long term whatever he said is is
32:22
totally it has to be true because that's
32:24
the way this thing is set up to go even
32:27
though we promise no European army well
32:31
we are well you and I have both
32:33
documented many a moment when they're
32:35
talking about European armies because of
32:37
well you can't trust the United States
32:39
you know NATO and all the rest so that
32:42
they're already headed that way yeah and
32:44
and
32:47
and it at some point it would be one
32:49
unified European army and the band of
32:52
Brits will be part of it if they remain
32:55
which they will well here's here's a
32:59
thought that I had and it it explains a
33:03
few things that we've discussed
33:04
previously so the UK they held it
33:07
actually I have the I have the compa
33:10
Lodge of the referendum just here all of
33:12
the politicians all the Talking Heads
33:15
from the beginning of this saying up
33:17
it's it's gonna be a referendum it's one
33:19
referendum we're not gonna do a second
33:21
one it said whatever the people say it's
33:23
go there will be no second referendum
33:26
the second referendum argument simply
33:28
doesn't hold water no I don't think we
33:30
need a second referendum
33:37
there's no second book we will not be
33:39
taking a decision like this again in our
33:42
lifetime this is a once in a generation
33:45
vote once in a generation choice the
33:48
once in a lifetime decision there once
33:51
ever chance or once-and-for-all decision
33:54
a one-off choice between staying in or
33:57
leaving completely they won't be another
33:59
referendum on Europe this is it if with
34:03
budgets like to quit then we're out for
34:05
good there's no going back you vote to
34:07
leave we're out that's it
34:10
we're going whatever the British people
34:12
decide we work together constructively
34:14
to make that happen I don't think it
34:17
would be right for Parma to try and
34:18
unravel the decision that the public
34:20
have made the British Parliament
34:21
Parliament should deliver what is
34:23
required of that decision of the beach
34:25
people we would have to accept the will
34:27
of the public whatever the result is we
34:30
have to respect it labour accepts and
34:32
respects the results of the referendum
34:34
have we've got to accept result yes on
34:36
Parliament should respect that
34:38
referendum result which said that all
34:39
the way through we respect the decision
34:41
of the British people
34:42
we respect the votes of the referendum
34:45
and we have to accept the decision of
34:47
the referendum one genuinely accept the
34:50
results the Labour Party accepts that we
34:52
are leaving the European Union Britain
34:54
is leaving the EU we're leaving the
34:56
European Union we live in the European
34:58
Union we're leaving the European Britain
34:59
is leaving the European Union yes when
35:02
even the European Union we are leaving
35:04
European Union will leave the EU in
35:07
March 2019 so of course March came and
35:15
went and the will of the people has not
35:17
been done it has not been executed
35:19
everybody was clear you heard it right
35:21
there one vote that's it in or out
35:24
winner take all we're good to go your
35:27
democracy in action and Parliament who
35:30
represents the people have not done this
35:33
that's because they don't want to do it
35:35
but there's something that really stands
35:36
out like a sore thumb with that
35:38
clip-clip osh which is the new mean that
35:43
keeps floating around well when people
35:45
voted to leave they were voting to leave
35:48
with a deal No yeah that's that's what
35:52
they're trying to weasel in there's zero
35:55
evidence of that I don't remember it at
35:57
the time and now they keep saying well
35:59
people voted to leave but they voted to
36:02
leave with no they didn't they would
36:04
just what you said if it that one guys
36:06
just says something like we're yeah
36:08
we're vote leave we're out that's what
36:11
they voted for they voted to just get
36:13
out they didn't vote for a deal they
36:15
voted to get out now here's the
36:16
difference between the United Kingdom
36:18
who have as they themselves say an
36:20
unwritten Constitution a BBC repeats it
36:24
everybody says an unwritten Constitution
36:26
and the United States that has a
36:28
constitution in our preamble we have an
36:31
important part governments are
36:33
instituted among men deriving their just
36:35
powers from the consent of the governed
36:37
that whenever any form of government
36:39
becomes destructive of these ends it is
36:42
the right of the people to alter or to
36:44
abolish it and to institute new
36:46
government laying its foundation on such
36:49
principles and organizing its powers in
36:51
such form as to them shall seem most
36:53
likely to effect their safety and have
36:55
penis this is why we have the first
36:58
amendment because you're allowed to
36:59
stand up and say screw you we should
37:02
take you guys down if that doesn't work
37:05
and this is where we really differ
37:07
because the unwritten Constitution of
37:09
the United Kingdom lets you talk a big
37:11
game but if that doesn't work we have
37:14
the Second Amendment and this if this
37:16
what's happening in the United States it
37:19
wouldn't happen the vote would be a vote
37:21
and we be done and we'd be gone because
37:23
the politicians would be afraid of the
37:26
amount of guns pointing at them if we
37:28
did not do the will of the people this
37:32
is this is the exact reason why the
37:35
threat has to be there because they're
37:37
not gonna go you and I know it they're
37:39
never going to leave then the European
37:41
army I'm sure will take over the British
37:43
army or whatever you know dad's army
37:46
so this is this is your reason right
37:48
here so scoff all you want Brits with
37:51
your knife crime but just the threat of
37:53
Americans having enough guns to take out
37:55
every politician and form our new
37:58
government makes them do what we want
38:00
them to ultimately well except with
38:04
vapes I don't think it's quite such an
38:08
issue as remaining in the European Union
38:12
whether you can vapor a flavour or not
38:14
but okay they should be careful
38:18
get some well you're on a roll here with
38:20
this you just a second time and within I
38:24
think two or three shows that you have
38:25
gone on this the reason for the Second
38:28
Amendment rant aimed mostly at the Brits
38:31
because it's a perfect example well it
38:34
is a very good example I'm not gonna
38:36
argue it but it's interesting that you
38:38
something has triggered this in you
38:42
this has something to do with the Brits
38:45
yes because I live there I know how the
38:48
British people think and they are
38:49
outraged even the ones that want to stay
38:53
I just can't believe that that what
38:56
their what their representatives are
38:57
doing and
39:01
what do they have tire irons pitchforks
39:04
you know vape vape sticks what what if
39:07
they kind of take to this through what
39:09
are they gonna go to Westminster with
39:11
nothing nothing well luckily there's one
39:13
guy one guy you can always count on the
39:16
common man of the British people to say
39:19
it like it is and that's Ringo Starr the
39:22
people voted and you know they have to
39:26
get on with it not certainly it's like
39:27
oh well we don't like that vote and what
39:31
do you mean you don't like that but do
39:33
you add the boat this is what one let's
39:35
get on with it would you have voted that
39:37
way will you voted for breakfast yet I
39:38
would have already to get out but don't
39:41
tell Bob Geldof why did you vote that
39:44
way Ringo because I think it's true I
39:47
think it's a great move I think you know
39:49
to be in control of your own country
39:51
here's a good move and I think a lot of
39:54
the Brits think like Ringo Ringo is the
39:57
common man yeah in common
40:00
multi-millionaire to be in control of
40:03
your own country's a good idea is that
40:06
like this great thought for the day what
40:12
were you guys doing before this dude the
40:15
only song he wrote was when I'm 64 so
40:17
give him a break okay he's not already
40:19
way over 64 he's not the master of crows
40:24
he's just uh octopus's garden yeah that
40:27
was kind of good
40:29
yeah so is it a my trigger yeah because
40:32
it's obvious that what is it yeah you
40:35
listen to what what's going on like
40:37
every single politician take away the
40:40
guns buyback how's that working out for
40:43
Australia you know this no no and it's
40:48
not it should be magical politician on
40:52
the Democrat side of the ledger yes well
40:55
yes be specific here well they're the
40:57
one number of Republicans that are all
40:59
in with the Democrats on that issue is
41:02
extremely it's like a couple of people
41:04
it shouldn't be Republican right but
41:07
that's the conversation right now
41:08
oh yeah and you know and and it devolves
41:13
into it should be for sport for hunting
41:17
you don't need you need to take out
41:19
twenty politicians you need a big
41:21
magazine but let's not bullshit about it
41:25
let's just this it's in the Constitution
41:27
it says it right there this is why we
41:29
have it and we like shooting stuff in
41:33
general like blowing stuff up we've got
41:36
a big country good space to blow stuff
41:38
up yeah you go out to the Arizona
41:40
deserts and you can just shoot all you
41:42
want if you nobody even hear the bullets
41:44
and the sounds of the gun yeah so I
41:47
think you know we can't have the same
41:49
stupid conversation and everyone else is
41:51
having you know we already have
41:58
background checks
42:03
that's probably yes they're nice maybe
42:06
not carry and common sense gun laws
42:10
that's another one of my favorites it's
42:14
common sense you don't need that
42:16
scary-looking thing well now you know
42:19
why because if the Brits had guns this
42:21
would not be the situation
42:24
that's just simplest way to explain it
42:27
yeah but it'd have to be a law yeah you
42:29
can't just give them guns now I mean the
42:32
problem is if you don't have if you're
42:33
raised with that with the goodness kind
42:36
of suppressed notion about a gun
42:40
ownership and it's been there for
42:42
hundreds of years
42:44
yeah and it's beaten into you if you all
42:46
of a sudden cut that loose and gave her
42:48
when guns they'd be shooting the place
42:51
up they'd be going nuts yeah this would
42:53
be entertaining it would be great for
42:56
the show but so there's this thing
43:00
they're stuck yeah I don't see a friend
43:03
of mine in London the other night over
43:04
every tie was on skype because he's
43:05
doing this is another writer and he's
43:07
doing a story and I was asking him about
43:09
what he thought about all this and he I
43:11
said do you think is his John's gonna
43:13
get us out on the 31st or would it the
43:16
biggest 31st it's no chance no no no way
43:20
and the Brits will just go oh good I can
43:28
hear him if they give up people just
43:30
give up at a certain point and then you
43:32
know forget about it
43:35
sad well more importantly in another sub
43:42
segment uh insofar as climates concerned
43:46
you know Greta was on the Democracy Now
43:51
show and there's a couple of items in
43:52
cat to two short clips
43:54
Greta Thun Berg the autistic now climate
43:58
change protest or yeah can you what you
44:02
pronounce your name Greta Sundberg it's
44:04
moon Berg tune burst
44:06
I think it's tune Berg you want to hear
44:09
how it's pronounced I'd love to hear how
44:12
it's pronounced yes wait let's hear her
44:14
tell us how to pronounce it pronounced
44:18
Sundberg okay so why don't we start at
44:22
the beginning there's a great
44:24
controversy and it's how you pronounce
44:26
your name can you say your full name for
44:29
us and that's the Swedish version okay I
44:37
got it I can do is I'm sorry I didn't do
44:39
the accent okay give it to us let's
44:43
compare let's go no there's no G in
44:45
there yes she does she swallows the G
44:48
did you make so why don't we start at
44:52
the beginning there's a great
44:53
controversy and it's how you pronounce
44:56
your name can you say your full name for
44:59
us and that's the Swedish version and
45:06
yes you come to the United States people
45:08
are calling you by different names can
45:11
you hum Berg I mean but I think it's
45:20
funny that everyone pronounces it
45:22
differently differently so that it's
45:24
just I don't mind anyone pronouncing it
45:27
wrong there's no wrong way to pronounce
45:30
it everyone pronounces it in their own
45:32
way so say again how you were born what
45:35
your parents called you Wow the
45:41
derivative stuff on democracy now did
45:43
they get into any conversation about how
45:47
she's been abused
45:48
since she's for the past five years by
45:50
her parents Santeria world it turns out
45:53
it doesn't even seem like her parents
45:55
were really the the base abusers because
45:58
they were somewhat responsible they
46:00
stood they do have this discussion I
46:02
didn't pick up I didn't pick up any and
46:04
the good climate changed I just was
46:07
trying to draw other things out of this
46:08
this interview and this one is her on
46:12
her she became a depressive when she was
46:14
eight because because of climate change
46:17
because she started reading and nobody
46:20
was guiding her so instead of giving her
46:22
any skeptical you know no they probably
46:24
were encouraging her oh yes
46:26
no II that's horrible you're going to
46:28
die it yes Trump's will this but it
46:30
turns out that her parents weren't all
46:32
in and she got depressed but listen this
46:35
is her it's AG long clip it's two
46:38
minutes and but it is fascinating
46:41
because this poor girl at eight at the
46:44
age of eight who has Asperger's and
46:46
discusses it Bill Gates has a very
46:49
similar ailment so it doesn't really
46:51
hurt their ability to focus that's for
46:54
sure in fact it enhances it and so she
46:57
is so she's a focused little girl and
46:59
she went into a deep depression and it
47:01
lasts over a year and this was his
47:03
eighth it's really a disgusting
47:07
sad but in some ways disgusting story he
47:10
went through a crisis in that period
47:12
after you were eight years old can you
47:14
talk about what you went through yeah it
47:16
was after that I sort of caught up with
47:20
reading about it and I understood and
47:25
that made me very depressed of course
47:28
and when when you are the only one who
47:32
really reacts about this crisis and
47:36
everyone else seems to just okay it's
47:40
very important but I am too busy with my
47:43
life and I just thought that it was very
47:47
strange that no one else was behaving
47:50
in in the logical way and so I more with
47:55
that logical way have been to do
47:58
something your concept zone and to
48:02
realize that okay we cannot continue
48:05
like we have done now we need to do
48:07
something drastically and I and I'm
48:09
going to do everything I can do to help
48:12
to push in the right direction and but
48:16
no one seemed to do that my parents were
48:18
just like continuing like before my
48:20
classmates every one of my relatives I
48:24
mean no one was no one seemed to care
48:29
about these issues except me and that
48:32
was a strange feeling and so you just
48:37
send it into a depression yes it was of
48:41
course caused by many reasons but that
48:44
was I think the biggest reason to it
48:47
because I just thought that's everything
48:51
is just so wrong and everything is so
48:53
strange and everything is so sad and why
48:57
isn't anyone doing anything about this
48:59
and so then I fell into a depression and
49:03
[Music]
49:05
it lasted for maybe a year or something
49:10
and then I you stop talking yeah I
49:14
stopped because I have selective mutism
49:21
or at least had they said if sometimes
49:24
grows away that I only spoke to some
49:28
people might teach you for instance my
49:30
parents some members of my family and so
49:35
on and I stopped eating almost entirely
49:41
I only it was a lot of weights because I
49:47
was just so depressed nothing seemed to
49:49
matter anymore well I'm actually glad
49:51
they showed this and I hope parents
49:52
watch this and got a clue nobody watched
49:58
it to get a clue this is what they
50:00
always I know it is audience cuz all
50:02
that's that poor woman
50:04
we do more about climate change no
50:06
deport the poor child got the press
50:09
because of all the the climate change
50:12
talk you say that nice I'd say that yeah
50:16
but that's not the way the anyone else
50:19
is gonna see it
50:21
well maybe there's a few people who
50:22
listen to our podcast phew well IKEA
50:26
season I hope so this out you know I
50:30
don't want to say we're outliers but I
50:32
mean the way they were playing it has
50:34
destroyed this poor girl you know she's
50:36
client would he do something but climate
50:38
change you wouldn't have gotten
50:39
depressed that's the way I'm imagining
50:42
them looking at it from that perspective
50:45
yeah anyway so she was on there doing
50:52
her thing she says she has selective
50:53
mutism that's really what we talked
50:56
about that on the Scott Adams interview
50:58
when he was having his problem with oh
51:00
she had mutism too but and it was like
51:04
it was also selective I don't recall it
51:06
the term though selective mutism well he
51:08
never used the term selective mutism I
51:10
never heard the term that term until she
51:12
said it but it was the same thing where
51:14
you can talk this guy could talk fine
51:17
talk to anybody I think there's maybe a
51:24
couple people he could talk to but he
51:26
couldn't talk to anybody else and that's
51:27
what this would happen to her she
51:29
couldn't talk to anybody certain people
51:32
I mean I thought I could I could
51:34
continue until deep in my night in my
51:35
90s doing podcasting of what could
51:37
really stop me but hey what if I develop
51:39
selective mutism it's possible that
51:42
would be horrible happen to anybody well
51:45
it depends on your perspective would it
51:46
be horrible or not well it's not great
51:48
as a podcaster
51:50
yeah probably I'm guessing no although
51:54
although talking a parent can be with
51:57
selective eaters you can talk to nobody
51:59
and from what I can tell most podcasts
52:02
really talk to nobody so I think you
52:04
should still be relaxed yeah that's
52:09
right I have far fewer tics when doing
52:11
the show all by myself
52:12
because you know I'm talking to nobody
52:15
oh well there you go
52:19
but selective mutism I have I have the
52:21
latest chant from the extinction
52:24
rebellion crowd they have a new is it a
52:26
new chance I believe it is
52:34
altogether no planet well that's
52:40
interesting because I was hearing it
52:42
wrong
52:42
what do you think they were so is
52:44
hearing something something there's no
52:46
two terms I thought it was some anti try
52:48
goodness if you play it again and listen
52:51
for it no to term okay I really don't
53:03
hear no two terms
53:05
no two chirps there's a no future yeah
53:13
but it's like business to turn whoever
53:15
miked that chant needs to be arrested oh
53:18
it was just the thigh bone video
53:21
swooping across a bunch of people that's
53:23
all it was
53:24
oh I went I did maybe say that I could
53:27
do that quickly I went to the community
53:30
first village here in Austin who are
53:33
solving the unhoused problem in their
53:35
own unique and incredibly successful way
53:38
no gay little update first of all the
53:40
the guy who started this Allen Graham
53:42
has a podcast and I'd listened to a
53:44
couple episodes he started this I think
53:47
about 11 years ago and so he took me on
53:51
it to I went to insist it's south it's
53:54
past the airport a little bit it's a I
53:56
think they have 250 people renting tiny
53:59
homes a variety of different types of
54:01
dwellings ranging from 275 dollars a
54:04
month to $500 a month and the 275
54:08
there's communal bathrooms and cooking
54:10
etc at the 500 it's like almost like an
54:13
RV pretty much so you have everything on
54:15
board and two people per per house or
54:19
proced rupture but he took me on the on
54:22
the tour and uh what was most
54:25
interesting I think for the show is that
54:28
the concept for what they're doing
54:31
community first the community first
54:33
village is based on a book called
54:36
chasing well not really the book but on
54:39
experiments that were detailed in
54:41
chasing the screen
54:43
and then I didn't I think I think I
54:46
recognized that the title of the book
54:48
but then when he said the author is
54:49
Johann Hari then it hit me like ah of
54:52
course Johann Hari is the guy who wrote
54:55
connections that we talked about
54:57
extensively which is also you know part
55:00
of that outgrowth is our meetups how
55:01
important it is to have human
55:03
face-to-face contact that we played a
55:05
couple clips back back then and what
55:08
Hari details in his book that was
55:10
researched from the 70s where they threw
55:12
a rat into a cage with food water and
55:15
cocaine and within 60 days the rat was
55:19
coked out and died they same cage except
55:22
they built a couple tunnels and had a
55:24
few structures and they put more than
55:26
one rat in there and after 60 days they
55:29
were flourishing there were baby rats
55:31
coming now five percent of the coke had
55:33
been used because the rats did like the
55:35
coke but they were not dying they were
55:38
in fact they were flourishing and so he
55:41
used one example he says if you're
55:43
downtown and John over here walks out of
55:46
his house in the morning without his
55:47
pants on this dick is hanging out I'm
55:49
using his words then what you do
55:52
downtown Austin as you call the cops and
55:54
have him picked up and he goes through a
55:55
whole process and it's not necessarily a
55:58
positive thing it may not have a
56:00
positive outcome but in the community
56:03
first village he walks outside and his
56:05
thing is hanging out and the neighbors
56:07
will come over and say hey ma'am you
56:09
know you put your pants on this is not
56:11
OK and he'll probably go oh shoot I put
56:12
the pants on and let's go talk to
56:14
somebody and just make sure you're okay
56:16
and the according to him because we talk
56:20
a lot about drugs the number one reason
56:22
people become homeless is loss of family
56:25
which I think you could also substitute
56:27
for loss of community and the success
56:30
rate they have and these are people who
56:32
are referred by multiple organizations
56:35
in Austin from the arch the first step
56:37
Caritas if you have social security if
56:42
you have disability that's typically
56:44
enough to actually pay for your rent you
56:45
have to have some kind of sustainable
56:47
income to pay your basic rent and if you
56:50
don't have a job there's multiple jobs
56:52
on-site and they're now expanding to 500
56:55
more
56:56
capacity for 500 more people so it'll be
57:00
a total of you know about 700 people in
57:02
this village where people are
57:04
functioning they're going into Austin to
57:06
work they have a community there's no
57:08
trash people do drugs in their homes
57:11
they don't do crazy stuff they don't run
57:13
around like nut jobs typically they have
57:16
you know car detailing service of course
57:19
they got hand handicrafts etc and they
57:21
do it all on six million dollars a year
57:24
yeah that's all that this organization
57:26
needs to keep running okay they get
57:29
nothing from the city nothing from the
57:30
state they do it all themselves and I
57:32
know I saw it working it seems to be
57:34
really a really good program and they
57:38
had the one of the first tiny homes that
57:40
was 3d printed on premises so I took a
57:42
look at that I was kind of cool how's it
57:44
look it's well it looks like play-doh
57:47
you know if you were to guess what it
57:50
looks like when they're making it the
57:53
thing is they're not cost the cost
57:54
effective yet so it's just too expensive
57:57
you know they put a tiny house down from
57:59
wood boom it's done this you got to put
58:01
down a big concrete slab and that's
58:03
really expensive you still have to put
58:05
the roof on and there's no three print
58:08
3d printing the roof but now maybe maybe
58:13
I'll that I'll get cheaper over time but
58:14
there's just building little tiny homes
58:15
and it's working
58:17
how many places does he have
58:21
yet right now for 250 people so there's
58:24
over a hundred homes or 100 tiny homes
58:26
and phase 2 adds an additional 250 or
58:30
300 I think homes can they scale up to
58:34
40,000 people which is what we have over
58:37
in the San Francisco area now I asked
58:38
him about that and he said we're never
58:40
gonna go you we're never going to leave
58:43
Austin do anything outside of Austin but
58:45
they do monthly symposia now seminars
58:49
and they give the whole blueprint the
58:51
exactly how you can replicate this and
58:53
and those symposia czar full and people
58:57
are trying to replicate this all over
58:59
the world now trying to create this kind
59:00
of village so there was a very
59:07
interesting to see a different take on
59:09
what causes homelessness and how to
59:13
solve it by providing community and it's
59:16
it's not it's like I got an email from
59:18
some guy you guys are full of shit with
59:20
you we did how were you complaining
59:23
about them building houses affordable
59:25
housing you know this is all part of the
59:26
housing first that's the the that is the
59:29
California theory that that you're going
59:31
on it was invented in California and
59:35
that's they even has a wiki page housing
59:38
first is relatively recent innovation
59:40
and what I want to say solution but
59:42
they'll call it innovation in human
59:43
service programs and social policy
59:45
regarding treatment of people who are
59:47
homeless and is an alternative to a
59:49
system of emergency shelter transitional
59:51
housing progressions as their concept
59:56
isn't this I think is what Austin is
59:57
following rather than moving homeless
1:00:00
individuals through different levels of
1:00:02
housing whereby each level moves them
1:00:04
closer to independent housing housing
1:00:07
first moves the homeless individual or
1:00:09
household immediately from the streets
1:00:11
or homeless shelters into their own
1:00:13
accommodation but this just it's proven
1:00:16
it just doesn't work this is
1:00:17
California's system housing first
1:00:21
and Austin is following that nicely
1:00:23
except for you know I guess community
1:00:26
first village is probably taking up 15%
1:00:30
of the homeless population maybe they'll
1:00:33
get to 25 or 30 but the Austin is
1:00:37
spending tens of millions and the wine
1:00:39
that you know that's gonna spend 8
1:00:40
million on a shelter you could fund the
1:00:43
whole village for a year
1:00:48
well you sound like you should be the PR
1:00:50
guy for this guy well it's a non-profit
1:00:52
they need some help yeah we'll help um
1:00:55
yeah well I'm going to MLS org mobile
1:00:58
loaves and fishes and it is
1:01:00
religious-based although there was no
1:01:02
pushing that I saw or witnessed which
1:01:06
some glitches are we talking about I
1:01:09
don't know the whole thing is a is a
1:01:11
ministry so I don't know I didn't ask I
1:01:15
wasn't interested listen I would ask cuz
1:01:17
there's always some tax angle well it's
1:01:20
a non-profit so that their tax angle is
1:01:22
there you know if they publish a 990 I
1:01:25
look at all that they do about eight
1:01:26
hundred nine hundred thousand a year in
1:01:28
rent now from their from their residence
1:01:33
and they didn't have a whole Medical
1:01:35
Center with sixteen people full-time on
1:01:38
staff it's fantastic solutions are there
1:01:42
but you know it's not invented in City
1:01:44
Council
1:01:46
not what the Californians are doing so
1:01:48
it could never be right yeah although we
1:01:51
do is the best you guys got it nailed
1:01:54
for sure
1:01:57
tent city
1:02:00
yeah that's a community it is but you
1:02:05
need to have community members who are
1:02:08
not in exactly the same boat
1:02:13
but yes this is why you see people
1:02:15
congregate and create their own
1:02:17
community and their community sadly as a
1:02:19
community of typically drugs
1:02:21
yeah there's share needles yeah so you
1:02:25
need to understand the community aspect
1:02:27
and put them in a better situation
1:02:31
well this is your exit strategy 3d
1:02:37
printing and homes for the homeless
1:02:38
everybody I'm retired
1:02:40
see ya sayonara I have a feeling that's
1:02:43
not going to work
1:02:47
all right well then maybe with that
1:02:50
since you didn't jump in with anything I
1:02:52
can last for a little I say let me jump
1:02:55
kind of befuddled to jump in with
1:02:57
anything here what am i doing up this
1:03:00
pad a little bit with a jump in
1:03:06
now I'd like to thank you for your
1:03:11
courage and say in the morning to you
1:03:12
the man who put the see and community
1:03:14
John well in the morning to you mr. Adam
1:03:19
Kerr also in the morning I'll ships to
1:03:21
see boots on the ground feet in the air
1:03:22
stops in the water and all the Dames the
1:03:24
night's up in the morning to art roles
1:03:26
in our No Agenda stream control room
1:03:30
where you're always there hanging out
1:03:32
how many trolls do we have here today
1:03:34
let me have a quick look low count 921
1:03:38
hmm did everyone retweet that we were
1:03:40
live that's where you can always listen
1:03:42
to our show live many shows live in fact
1:03:46
right before our show there's need
1:03:47
arunoda is a great priest stream this
1:03:49
morning so that no agenda stream comm is
1:03:51
where you want to check that out and
1:03:53
also in the morning to comic strip
1:03:56
bloggers who did a piece of artwork that
1:03:59
was perhaps the mote ly simplest we've
1:04:02
seen with such an enormous explosive
1:04:06
laughter effect and this of course was
1:04:09
the Milania Sharpie enhancement
1:04:15
that we use for our album art on episode
1:04:17
11 71
1:04:21
yes it was the again comic strip
1:04:25
bloggers came in with simplicity yes to
1:04:28
win the day it's it was it was so simple
1:04:32
because we had we had some pretty
1:04:34
intricate pieces of art 471 we had so
1:04:39
you had some vaping stuff was it was
1:04:41
anything that we did we also did we look
1:04:44
at anything else that we liked
1:04:46
do you recall yeah there was one piece
1:04:48
that I thought was headed it what was
1:04:51
that no I'm looking at it now Oh Darrin
1:04:55
O'Neal had the disciples that was okay
1:04:58
uh it was it was really it was good and
1:05:03
we just looked that we both looked at it
1:05:04
and just cracked up and when you have an
1:05:06
explosive laughter right off the bat
1:05:08
it's got to be the one now yeah well
1:05:11
sure a lot better than explosive
1:05:13
diarrhea we we did
1:05:17
to have a slight conflict having the
1:05:21
first lady as the artwork prominently
1:05:25
showing her bosom and then calling the
1:05:27
episode slutty vegan yes it was a
1:05:33
consideration but then we went a screw
1:05:36
it we might as well go for it I think
1:05:37
people it was we had to use the art and
1:05:40
we had to use the title some reason yes
1:05:42
there was no better title that's for
1:05:44
sure
1:05:45
and saying alright that that piece
1:05:47
really stood out and really want to
1:05:49
thank comics for bloggers for that
1:05:51
because it just nailed it finally that
1:05:53
Apple pencil came in handy happy to hear
1:05:56
that no agenda our generator dot-com is
1:05:58
where you can upload your artwork for
1:06:00
consideration as album artwork for the
1:06:03
current show it's a tough racket man
1:06:05
people are doing these while we talk on
1:06:08
the show it's it's incredible what our
1:06:10
artists do and you can see all of their
1:06:12
work at No Agenda our generator calm and
1:06:14
we thank all of them for their courage
1:06:16
and their art artistry and we also like
1:06:21
to thank our producers that particularly
1:06:23
ones who help us in financial manner and
1:06:26
we do our associates associate executive
1:06:28
producers and the executive producers up
1:06:30
front and we have a couple for today I
1:06:32
think even better we have to do is do
1:06:34
right we have two associates two
1:06:36
executives so it's a Sur otaku Baron of
1:06:39
the North East Texas and Red River
1:06:42
Valley from Louis Lewisville Texas 911
1:06:47
911 guy the palindrome I offered this
1:06:51
palindrome movie I mean we had 90 119
1:06:54
was a palindrome week we've got 911
1:06:57
which was yesterday which was a 18 years
1:07:01
since 9/11 and and it's the only
1:07:05
palindrome in the whole series of 9/11
1:07:08
celebrations nine one one one nine and
1:07:11
II and so I offered it up see if anyone
1:07:14
would take it and he did and I'm glad he
1:07:16
did because I
1:07:18
[Music]
1:07:20
you might as well play that while we're
1:07:22
at it and he he's our top guy when a
1:07:27
couple of vices last barbecue
1:07:29
competition Bank on Labor Day here's a
1:07:31
donation to remember September 11th oh
1:07:33
well it's a drunk donation so I can't
1:07:35
remember much more what I wanted to say
1:07:37
but I just wanted to make sure that
1:07:39
people remember the date oh by the way
1:07:41
can you give me some jcd mac and cheese
1:07:44
karma to round this out some sir otaku
1:07:47
baron of North East Texas in the Red
1:07:49
River Valley 73 from kilo 5 Victor Zulu
1:07:52
and for those of you who don't know the
1:07:55
phonetic alphabet but John that is K v
1:07:59
VV yes 33 kilo 5 alpha Charlie Charlie
1:08:10
where did that come from hold on
1:08:14
[Music]
1:08:16
that's interesting hmm sometimes I start
1:08:21
to lose clips for some reason well Mack
1:08:25
and chief cheap cheddar macaroni melted
1:08:27
together why the hell can't I find that
1:08:29
you erased it no no no no no no I'm
1:08:33
sleepwalk I mean everybody tells me this
1:08:35
oh how about this one yes this is it my
1:08:43
goodness I feel like a fool today found
1:09:03
it was that was a variation yes Joel
1:09:08
Tucker meanwhile comes in from Largo
1:09:10
Florida not Key Largo 33333
1:09:15
a happy late birthday Adam I do have a
1:09:18
93 birthday but as well wishes come late
1:09:21
because it's what douche bags do you
1:09:24
know he's not on the birthday list he
1:09:26
didn't ask to be on it but ya know if
1:09:28
you want to put him on the birthday list
1:09:29
well you asked for a D do so let's do
1:09:31
that for sure
1:09:33
[Music]
1:09:36
please play China is asshole
1:09:40
followed by that's true and if it's not
1:09:43
too much some goat Karma thank you both
1:09:46
okay so it was Joe or Joel Tucker Joel
1:09:49
Tucker okay
1:09:54
you've got karma this time we try to get
1:10:02
our loot the visa to China you're going
1:10:06
at the top in front of the line it's
1:10:07
time to flip through somebody go China
1:10:10
what what is this China a whole a whole
1:10:13
that's all that's all what is that what
1:10:17
is this whoa I'm sorry I'm just saying
1:10:21
this is what you're gonna get harassed
1:10:23
mark Mik Minh in Lexington Massachusetts
1:10:28
203 33 becomes a for social executive
1:10:32
producer longtime boner
1:10:33
please deduce me and give me some jobs
1:10:35
karma as I just lost my job
1:10:37
no thanks a lot for the sanity oh well
1:10:40
we hope this helps
1:10:42
[Music]
1:10:51
[Music]
1:10:54
Brian Calderon 202 be our last associate
1:10:59
executive producer in this short list
1:11:00
today while clearing out the house I
1:11:02
stumbled upon a box filled with stuff
1:11:04
from grammar school through her junior
1:11:06
high and what did I find from 1998 to 99
1:11:10
I was introduced into the Feinstein or
1:11:13
Feinstein 33 plus Club huh that's
1:11:17
interesting
1:11:18
I can't make this up pick attack he has
1:11:21
a pic attached some writing hey Dad Eric
1:11:24
sent them together in the email yeah
1:11:25
yeah it's a sign from the above to help
1:11:29
produce this episode of the show I'm so
1:11:31
appreciative of last time I donated I
1:11:34
asked for in ICU karma and it worked
1:11:38
NICU the sunday show my son was allowed
1:11:41
to come home that following Monday not
1:11:42
only to straddling both dimensions help
1:11:44
in raising a toddler and dealing with
1:11:46
other insane millennial parents but it
1:11:49
aids me and my freelance work as a
1:11:51
copywriter marketer seriously you both
1:11:54
helped me figure out just how much
1:11:56
amygdala Juice needs to be peppered in
1:11:58
to copy this time I'd like some jobs
1:12:01
karma Nancy please jingle request China
1:12:06
is ask
1:12:07
and that's true Oh same combo yeah of
1:12:12
course huh
1:12:13
random numbers that's how the craps
1:12:18
table works
1:12:18
a jingle request China's asshole that's
1:12:21
true shoutout
1:12:22
producer Christine who I hit in the
1:12:24
mouth as as and is the inventor of the
1:12:27
No Agenda invisible hat yes drone hat is
1:12:34
flying
1:12:38
great invention jobs jobs jobs and job
1:12:50
and that's it that's our list of our
1:12:54
four well-wishers and producers for show
1:12:57
1172 tidy and balanced lists and we
1:13:02
appreciate that this is our value for
1:13:04
value system that's how it works where
1:13:07
we do a show we ask you was it worth to
1:13:12
you then wait could you spend your time
1:13:13
in a different way or how have you
1:13:15
ballad your time in other situations
1:13:17
particularly comes to entertainment and
1:13:18
news products and this is what people
1:13:22
come up with and it warms my heart and I
1:13:24
can't wait to thank more people in our
1:13:25
second donation segment but these four
1:13:28
have to have an executive producer title
1:13:31
and associate executive producer title
1:13:33
which you can use anywhere credits are
1:13:34
recognized they are important and they
1:13:36
are real and you can support us for the
1:13:39
next show which will be on Sunday please
1:13:41
remember us at Dvorak org slash and now
1:13:46
you can go I don't tell everybody
1:13:47
exactly what's going on with the fake
1:13:49
wars our formula is this we go out we
1:13:53
hit people in the mouth
1:13:56
[Applause]
1:14:05
[Music]
1:14:11
so I managed to step over on your beat
1:14:14
oh you weren't wait um wait sealed
1:14:18
indictments yeah no she thought about
1:14:21
not to seal that that's still yours
1:14:24
sealed indictments no I went to CNN oh
1:14:28
my goodness I I will admit I've been
1:14:31
watching more CNN these days than MSNBC
1:14:34
a CNN still kind of pretends MSNBC so
1:14:39
how do they pretend Adam erin burnett
1:14:41
well i'm sure during the day or erin
1:14:43
burnett is she could be on MSNBC she has
1:14:46
so much hate and she makes stuff up she
1:14:49
doesn't just tell it give us the news
1:14:51
she she embellishes it with what the
1:14:54
person is thinking and all this crazy
1:14:56
stuff which is just so full of and
1:14:59
beyond any sort of journalism I have
1:15:01
five clip you all right first of all
1:15:05
let's start with and I went in there to
1:15:07
there's actually really three clips
1:15:09
because there's this one standalone clip
1:15:11
and the other ones are related but did
1:15:15
you first of all this got me right off
1:15:16
the bat which is this is her discussing
1:15:19
the firing of John Bolton and this is
1:15:21
the clip called blindsides Bolton
1:15:25
yo sorry hold on here we go front
1:15:28
tonight
1:15:28
it was personal we are learning more
1:15:30
this hour about the bitter breakup
1:15:32
between Trump and Boulder the source
1:15:34
tells CNN that President Trump turned on
1:15:36
his now former national security adviser
1:15:39
he thought Bolton made him look bad this
1:15:42
week Trump wanted to humiliate Bolton in
1:15:44
exchange
1:15:45
there's molten at the White House a 44
1:15:48
a.m. this morning work as usual taking a
1:15:50
phone call outside he then went in and
1:15:52
led a meeting with top administration
1:15:54
officials and then BOOM BOOM the
1:15:58
operative part of that tweet quote I
1:15:59
informed John Bolton last night that his
1:16:02
services are no longer needed at the
1:16:03
White House well that's not Bolton's
1:16:06
version now sources tell CNN Trump was
1:16:08
livid the sources seems to be the source
1:16:10
so story about how Bolton told Trump
1:16:13
that hosting the Taliban at Camp David
1:16:14
was a bad idea now Trump of course was
1:16:17
resoundingly slammed for that summit
1:16:19
9/11 anniversary he felt Bolton was the
1:16:22
one who made him look bad tonight Bolton
1:16:24
is fighting back no so the president
1:16:26
says he's the one who fired Bolton when
1:16:27
he did it last night Bolton saying no
1:16:29
way he resigned quote I offered to
1:16:31
resign last night and President Trump
1:16:33
said let's talk about it tomorrow Trump
1:16:35
wanted public embarrassment for Bolton
1:16:37
he let him come to work and take that
1:16:39
call and be on camera a press contain I
1:16:41
think Bolton was going to appear at a
1:16:43
briefing with the Secretary of State
1:16:45
Mike Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Steve
1:16:47
Nugent who were also blindsided by Trump
1:16:50
Smith on the guidance to be here so for
1:16:54
YouTube decided by what occurred today
1:16:57
that he's no longer with the
1:16:58
administration was adduced to you today
1:17:00
because last night I'm never surprised
1:17:09
it was quite astounding to see the
1:17:13
mainstream's defense of Bolton and to to
1:17:18
just much micro focus on on by being
1:17:23
fired I mean these people never been
1:17:25
fired before well here's the other thing
1:17:28
this the report took away she does it
1:17:30
cuz she's making stuff up she's talking
1:17:32
about how somebody had to humiliate him
1:17:34
you know no sources sources told me
1:17:36
sources sources and then she says they
1:17:38
were blindsided and then they would then
1:17:39
they cut to a clip where a reporter asks
1:17:42
as they were blindsided and after
1:17:45
Burnett asserts that they were
1:17:48
blindsided and then they asked if
1:17:51
they're blindsided and neither one of
1:17:52
them said they were blindsided so this
1:17:54
was a switchback this is bullcrap
1:17:56
they never said they were blindsided
1:17:57
they said well nothing surprises and
1:18:00
then they cracked up and laughed about I
1:18:03
think it was hilarious and that no one's
1:18:05
bowled David they were blindsided they
1:18:08
didn't look like they were not perked
1:18:11
blindsighted people know anyway so but
1:18:15
let's go away I do have this blind size
1:18:17
bolt and clip - after okay this is the
1:18:20
second part of this clip so I guess an
1:18:21
extra clip sorry this is the follow-up -
1:18:24
after that we watch these guys laugh all
1:18:27
the falling the falling they're
1:18:29
guffawing and they're laughing and
1:18:31
Burnett comes back on and says listen to
1:18:34
what her interpretation of this is so we
1:18:36
maybe listen just to the end again of
1:18:39
the the question about being obliged she
1:18:42
had this really good idea here we go to
1:18:46
be here so for you
1:18:50
that he's no longer with the
1:18:51
administration was it news to you today
1:18:53
because last night you were spoken here
1:18:55
I'm never surprised I think about what
1:19:03
Trump thinks hearing that I mean look at
1:19:05
their faces again
1:19:06
yeah decided freeze it they get it they
1:19:10
work for a person whose sudden rage and
1:19:12
focused on personal slights means that
1:19:14
nothing is normal and nothing can
1:19:16
surprise them one source close to the
1:19:18
administration telling CNN today after
1:19:22
the president's well whatever word you'd
1:19:24
like to use resignation firing it's a
1:19:27
real snake pit run by a neurotic
1:19:28
president who is hard to manage and who
1:19:30
brings out the worst sensibilities and
1:19:31
people this is sedition but it wasn't
1:19:42
that which is one example of what
1:19:44
they're doing that here's another one
1:19:45
yeah so CNN this is CNN boosting Liz
1:19:48
Warren crowd and or in this case a new
1:19:51
clip is CNN boosting this warrant crowd
1:19:53
sighs this is another where they started
1:19:55
obsessing over I mean they have Trump
1:19:58
dead to rights on some of this stuff and
1:20:00
they could easily they could use that
1:20:02
against them but instead they go
1:20:03
overboard and they make a big scene and
1:20:06
then they embarrassed themselves in a
1:20:08
very peculiar way and I want to see if I
1:20:10
can ask you to try to find it but you
1:20:13
probably won't be alert for it but
1:20:15
there's a moment in this in these two in
1:20:18
this two clip set that these people
1:20:21
should be ashamed of themselves but
1:20:22
let's play CNN boosting Liz Warren crowd
1:20:26
sighs Elizabeth Warren getting ready to
1:20:27
speak to a big crowd in Texas you see
1:20:30
that live there it is a red state that
1:20:32
she wants to put into play and you know
1:20:34
when you look at all those people
1:20:35
gathering she's not yet on stage it does
1:20:38
bring to mind something interesting some
1:20:40
of her crowds lately have even exceeded
1:20:42
some of trumps bragged about crowd sizes
1:20:45
so he's bragged about crowds recently
1:20:46
and then she's pulled a crowd even
1:20:48
bigger i'll find now keith Boykin former
1:20:50
Clinton White House aide and Scott
1:20:51
Jennings former special assistant to
1:20:52
President George W Bush so Keith you
1:20:54
know as we look at that crowd here we'll
1:20:55
put him back up there waiting for she's
1:20:57
rising in the polls her crowd tonight
1:21:00
wherever she is
1:21:02
a by far her crowds overall are the
1:21:04
biggest in the Democratic field and as I
1:21:06
point out rivaling Trump's in some cases
1:21:08
if it's a sign he should be worried was
1:21:10
it in this book yeah I would say I would
1:21:14
say she's rising in the polls is what I
1:21:16
heard
1:21:19
her crowd size was the biggest in the
1:21:21
Democratic field bulls
1:21:23
oh no that's got to be Bernie Bernie's
1:21:26
always been the biggest they won't
1:21:28
mention his crowd size because they're
1:21:30
they don't want Bernie but women don't
1:21:33
talk about size John don't you know that
1:21:37
so they'll talk about size if it's
1:21:39
Elizabeth Warren sighs oh but Bernie you
1:21:42
know the biggest crunch so she puts in
1:21:43
this bogus meme that oh the biggest
1:21:47
crowd sighs and the democrat party she's
1:21:49
getting her rising in the polls
1:21:51
she is rising in the polls ended by one
1:21:53
two notches she's not jumping up in the
1:21:56
polls okay she went up a point but this
1:22:01
really galled me because again this is a
1:22:04
poor reporting you can't say that when
1:22:07
and they completely ignore Bernie's
1:22:09
crowd sizes which in many cases have
1:22:12
always exceeded Trump's crowd sizes
1:22:15
that's why Trump never brings it up in
1:22:17
fact did I not see Trump moved his north
1:22:19
carolina venue and i don't know what
1:22:23
happened but he was a lot less Boesky
1:22:25
about it and it seemed to be a much
1:22:27
smaller venue than I expected when I
1:22:29
watched some of his just a little bit
1:22:31
actually now it did have the effect he
1:22:35
wanted because the special election
1:22:37
there in both elections Republicans won
1:22:39
but yeah crowd in fact I gotta tell you
1:22:42
I think Trump's rallies are I mean
1:22:45
they're no longer really TV interesting
1:22:47
for TV because it hasn't come up with
1:22:50
any good new material
1:22:52
yeah his materials stale it's very
1:22:55
follow up on the truck on the boosting
1:22:57
Liz Warren crowd CNN boosting was Warren
1:23:00
crowd - these crowds are getting the
1:23:02
attention of President Trump they are
1:23:03
and they're and they're they're working
1:23:05
him listen I have clouds that are many
1:23:07
times what her crowds are nobody ever
1:23:09
talks about him nobody wants to talk
1:23:11
about him with her the other day they
1:23:13
say she at 15 if you really count them
1:23:15
up it looked like about eight or nine
1:23:16
and the biggest story was her crowds
1:23:19
that's like a small crowd from me yes
1:23:23
when I hear something like that I want
1:23:25
to laugh and then I realize this is the
1:23:26
reality of the world we live in
1:23:28
okay in the under estimating her as a
1:23:31
challenger it's actually his sort of
1:23:33
obsession there as as strange as that
1:23:35
was proof that he is not under
1:23:37
estimating her
1:23:38
well I think he's probably watches more
1:23:41
news coverage of this primary than any
1:23:43
of the three of us sitting here and so
1:23:45
when he sees news coverage it says
1:23:46
somebody's getting big crowds
1:23:48
obviously that perks up his ears look I
1:23:51
think they're gonna run against her if
1:23:52
she's the nominee the same way they run
1:23:54
against any of them you know they're all
1:23:55
basically coming out for the same kind
1:23:57
of programming across you know economic
1:24:01
immigration national security issues and
1:24:03
so I think they'll end up treating her
1:24:04
the exact same way and try to make it a
1:24:07
real choice instead of a referendum on
1:24:09
him do you want a more left-leaning
1:24:11
socialist country or do you want more
1:24:13
you know free-market you know type of
1:24:15
programming that I'm offering may try to
1:24:19
do that but he's gonna be yelling about
1:24:20
Pocahontas and crowds now the worst of
1:24:27
the group is the what is the last one
1:24:29
and this is about their touch she's got
1:24:33
some guy on who's a pollster or is not
1:24:35
upholstery yeah I guess he's one of
1:24:37
these strategies pollster I don't know
1:24:39
but he's talking about the approval
1:24:42
ratings of the president which are 40
1:24:45
they've always been pretty pretty there
1:24:47
was no good yeah but the approval rating
1:24:50
of the president is discussed in a way
1:24:53
that I this is really has to be look
1:24:56
deconstructed and to see how bad CNN
1:25:00
isn't and really all right question
1:25:03
before we get into their question before
1:25:05
we get into it so we have the polls and
1:25:08
then we have approval ratings which are
1:25:12
either are they deduced from polls or is
1:25:15
a different type of poll I mean it's all
1:25:17
bullshit we know because the Hillary was
1:25:20
going to win 99 percent but it's a poll
1:25:24
but they always have but it's a specific
1:25:25
poll by specific it's a specific poll
1:25:29
done by specific operation honest
1:25:32
specifically select a group of people
1:25:34
okay so it's manipulation it's a little
1:25:37
new Alice not as much as you might
1:25:39
imagine it's it's probably fairly I mean
1:25:42
it it tends to lean left so slightly
1:25:45
wrong but let's go with this let's
1:25:48
listen to this and and because now all
1:25:50
of a sudden there's some new new angles
1:25:52
this CNN approval rating generality
1:25:54
number one his approval rating is now at
1:25:58
39% okay which is the lowest for him and
1:26:01
I believe nine months Obama though was
1:26:03
only a 43% at this point in the first
1:26:06
term Clinton was only at 44 they both
1:26:08
want now I know in the world of
1:26:10
political polls you could say 39 verses
1:26:11
43 big difference but you know it
1:26:13
doesn't sound like a big difference does
1:26:15
the does this low approval really matter
1:26:17
well yes no I don't think that the five
1:26:19
point spread between Obama and Trump is
1:26:22
really statistically significant in
1:26:23
terms of where Trump stands what's more
1:26:26
important is the larger trend and the
1:26:28
fact that for the entirety of his
1:26:30
administration he has never once been
1:26:32
above 50% and the public opinion poll
1:26:35
averages that's never happened in modern
1:26:37
polling before we've never seen any
1:26:39
president in modern history who's been
1:26:41
so despised really hold on a second
1:26:46
don't say really to that the point is is
1:26:50
that the approval rating does not is not
1:26:52
an indication of your despising somebody
1:26:56
it's a matter of you approving the job
1:26:59
they're doing it's like what's the
1:27:00
approval rating it's not you don't get a
1:27:02
pull thing do you have a just hate the
1:27:05
president you just hate or despise who
1:27:08
despise Trump not like find annoying
1:27:14
despise and hate or what should is
1:27:17
despise higher than hate I think so
1:27:20
we've we should do the hate hate we
1:27:23
should do the hate poll and so the
1:27:24
approval rating now has somehow it
1:27:26
becomes a despicable rated so if you get
1:27:30
the 30 so now there was 39% of the
1:27:32
public the way that there couching this
1:27:34
and they continue to do this as the
1:27:36
follow-up clip indicates she'll use the
1:27:38
word despise again to pound at home so
1:27:41
this was planned so no way you would put
1:27:44
this in there unless you planned it so
1:27:46
this is just a propagandistic trick but
1:27:48
so what they're saying is that third
1:27:50
only third only 39% of the public
1:27:53
doesn't despise Trump that's great good
1:28:00
job everybody
1:28:01
where does loathe fit in on the scale
1:28:04
I don't know this uh is I think is less
1:28:07
than hate but more to despise it's kind
1:28:09
of a simmering hate I'm telling you you
1:28:15
need to do a cosmic weenie bit about
1:28:17
this list in there so so despise is not
1:28:24
the when you talk about the approval
1:28:26
rating of the president it's got nothing
1:28:28
to do with despising the president even
1:28:31
though I'm sure a few people that voted
1:28:32
no I don't approve his job do despise
1:28:36
him but that's not what the poll is
1:28:38
although they now made us think that
1:28:40
because they slipped that in and then
1:28:42
later on clip to here as there's the two
1:28:45
who are still chatting Aaron had to
1:28:49
throw the word in again that even though
1:28:51
she's flubbed it which is funny
1:28:53
which mazed it indicates to me that it
1:28:54
was something rehearsed or something
1:28:56
they tried because yes when you flub
1:28:58
show like that that's when we flub and
1:29:04
choke choke choke but she says it again
1:29:08
to just to make sure that the public is
1:29:10
a win can now associate the approval
1:29:14
rating of the president with despising
1:29:17
the president is disgusting interesting
1:29:20
point you made great keep it that people
1:29:22
he won with a pretty despising that's
1:29:25
numbers right so we want despising set
1:29:28
of numbers she choked oh gosh I don't
1:29:35
know what she was supposed to say
1:29:36
despicable set of numbers but she said
1:29:38
despising set of numbers that's bitch
1:29:42
must have thought to herself that
1:29:44
sounded smart
1:29:46
cuz it's stupid play that clip again so
1:29:49
we can just see how stupid that really
1:29:51
is it's an interesting point you made
1:29:53
great keep it that people he won with a
1:29:57
pretty despising from set of numbers
1:29:59
right so we want it's a pretty despising
1:30:01
set of numbers it's completely weird
1:30:04
well it's a non sequitur makes it's a
1:30:06
just a senseless yeah
1:30:08
whatever she's died who knows what she's
1:30:10
talking about but she had them for some
1:30:12
reason get that word and again to make
1:30:14
sure that we were but she screwed
1:30:16
so the effectiveness was shot shot to
1:30:20
hell but you could tell what she did
1:30:21
what they're up to but I was so I would
1:30:24
turn on CNN I get this and I'm thinking
1:30:26
to myself that I only have these clips
1:30:27
nice thinking of myself this is a
1:30:29
terrible network well I'm glad you
1:30:32
caught that because I cannot watch Erin
1:30:35
Burnett anymore I used to really enjoy
1:30:38
watching her on CNBC in the morning she
1:30:40
was kind of you know bubbly and she was
1:30:42
not dumb she and she knew I did a show
1:30:45
about ten times was she nice and when
1:30:48
you met was it only we are long distance
1:30:50
distance I wasn't in the studio with her
1:30:52
and it was quick she's quick-witted very
1:30:56
quick and she was into a great team with
1:30:58
Mark who died as she left and the guy
1:31:00
died like six months later her co-host
1:31:02
mark course his name again I don't know
1:31:06
it's hard for me to watch but the reason
1:31:09
why she is not white well the reason why
1:31:13
Bernie Sanders is just ignored is
1:31:15
perhaps because he says stuff like this
1:31:19
anybody here know how much Amazon paid
1:31:23
in taxes last year I talked about it all
1:31:27
of the time and then I wonder why the
1:31:29
Washington Post which is owned by Jeff
1:31:32
Bezos who owns Amazon doesn't write
1:31:34
particularly good articles about I don't
1:31:35
know why so that would kind of explain
1:31:39
you don't get in wopo you get bad press
1:31:41
and whap oh oh you're not gonna do very
1:31:43
well on CNN on the end right the New
1:31:45
York Times put it put a woman who is a
1:31:49
Bernie Sanders hater on him and she
1:31:53
writes all that Bernie Sanders material
1:31:55
I had her name I don't remember it if
1:31:58
you look at the New York Times Bernie
1:32:00
Sanders article you see this woman over
1:32:02
and over again not all of them but most
1:32:04
of them and she and she is just a pit
1:32:07
bull I mean she is hates Bernie Sanders
1:32:10
and she makes it clear in the articles
1:32:12
at Bernie's no good Bernie's got the New
1:32:15
York Times I mean the New York Times
1:32:18
against both Bernie and Trump but you
1:32:20
know it's it's a little more sinister
1:32:22
that they're against Bernie so much
1:32:24
there was there against Bernie there
1:32:26
against I suppose Dubois Poe and so
1:32:29
okay so a couple things they've got to
1:32:32
be for Liz because liz is now tight with
1:32:35
hills and that's important when Hills is
1:32:38
close to somebody they pay attention
1:32:40
they've been talking behind the scenes
1:32:42
we don't know exactly what's going on
1:32:43
but it's interesting and if Hillary
1:32:46
Clinton is on the side of one candidate
1:32:48
that's going to be an anointed one so
1:32:50
that's one of the main reasons a lot of
1:32:53
money
1:32:54
the New York Times finally printed
1:32:55
something earlier this week about all
1:32:58
the money she raised from big big donors
1:33:02
and lobbyists and corporations before
1:33:04
she went on the I'm not gonna take any
1:33:06
money trip she's using money from her
1:33:08
2018 campaign which was left over from
1:33:13
her senatorial campaign ten million
1:33:17
dollars from there so she's got money
1:33:19
there's there's money to spend there's
1:33:20
PAC so they know what side their bread
1:33:23
is buttered on but there's so much I
1:33:28
mean you heard Bernie Sanders sounding
1:33:31
like Donald Trump it's in fact it's a
1:33:34
it's almost verbatim a line from Trump
1:33:36
yeah I talk crap about Amazon and then I
1:33:40
get bad articles in The Washington Post
1:33:42
well how can that be and this came up on
1:33:45
a podcast Matt Taibbi spod cast I'd like
1:33:48
Maddie there's a lot of outstanding
1:33:49
working at a couple of people on and
1:33:51
they they kind of came to a no agenda s
1:33:53
conclusion which seems to only happen
1:33:55
when you do a podcast and not when you
1:33:57
do something on mainstream make when
1:33:58
they get up there and they say oh you
1:34:00
know who owns the newspaper doesn't have
1:34:01
any impact on our coverage or you know
1:34:04
who advertises in our channel doesn't
1:34:05
have any impact on how we cover things
1:34:07
everybody knows that's bullshit right
1:34:09
look I've worked for news organizations
1:34:11
that and I've have come up against the
1:34:14
problem of criticizing an advertiser
1:34:16
before like it comes up and and all and
1:34:18
beyond that it on an unconscious level
1:34:20
it's it's that's where it works is that
1:34:24
works at the point of higher you know
1:34:26
that if you start being a jerk about
1:34:28
certain things you're not going to get
1:34:29
promoted right companies hire in the
1:34:31
first place right and it was
1:34:33
yeah it's not all over and that's why
1:34:35
people like Jennifer Rubin and Max B
1:34:37
rise to the op-ed page and you know and
1:34:40
the glenn kessler is the world will
1:34:42
write will do fine the point is denying
1:34:44
all this just completely undermines the
1:34:47
credibility right press with with huge
1:34:49
swathes of the public left at right Wow
1:34:52
Wow Matt you sound like Trump people are
1:34:56
making this point are like people who
1:34:58
just accused the press of being biased
1:35:00
against Hillary Clinton oh right yeah
1:35:03
you know I would be holding right I mean
1:35:05
like bias exists everywhere and it's
1:35:08
just a question of like how effrontery
1:35:09
what you are but it's the denying it
1:35:11
that makes it difficult he's a voice
1:35:16
coach I think Matt could do with a
1:35:18
little work too but here's the big news
1:35:22
this is groundbreaking this is some big
1:35:25
ass news after five years running a
1:35:29
National Public Radio NPR my former boss
1:35:33
yarl mone formerly known as Lee masters
1:35:37
on WMMR but he went when he were started
1:35:42
he was the CEO of NPR I met him during
1:35:45
that time I gave him some ideas which he
1:35:47
never followed up on remember I did that
1:35:50
conference in New York and we chatted
1:35:51
for a bit and yeah you're getting
1:35:53
nowhere now getting nowhere
1:35:54
well it and he also had a open-heart
1:35:57
surgery a year and a half ago and he
1:35:59
only he promised to do five years and he
1:36:02
would get everything set up for the next
1:36:03
person to come in and take over and it
1:36:06
has happened and we have a new CEO of
1:36:09
NPR and I think they made an outstanding
1:36:14
choice if you want to propagandize the
1:36:19
American people NPR has a new CEO his
1:36:22
name is John Lansing a veteran media
1:36:25
executive who has experience in cable TV
1:36:27
and public service media he's taking
1:36:29
over for Ural Mon who was stepping down
1:36:31
after fulfilling his five-year term NPR
1:36:34
media correspondent David Falcon flick
1:36:36
is reporting on this hi David hey Ari
1:36:38
tell us about who John Lansing is John
1:36:41
Lansing started out as a young man a
1:36:42
teenager is he as a photojournalist at
1:36:44
work
1:36:45
in TV news from Rome Italy to be the
1:36:47
head of of local / local television
1:36:52
stations for the scripts company and
1:36:53
then headed their basket of cable
1:36:55
channels which included the the Food
1:36:57
Network HGTV and a couple others
1:36:59
he's more recently since 2015 was
1:37:02
appointed by President Obama to be the
1:37:03
head of what is now called the US agency
1:37:07
for global media overseas international
1:37:09
broadcasters like The Voice of America
1:37:11
Radio Liberty Radio Free Europe and
1:37:14
others that reach hundreds of millions
1:37:15
of people each month broadcast abroad
1:37:18
but not here probably offering people
1:37:21
both news and also programming offering
1:37:24
people propaganda Voice of America and
1:37:27
Radio Free Europe it's propaganda
1:37:30
against the Russians like it's
1:37:32
propaganda all over the world and this
1:37:35
guy's been running it and now he's gonna
1:37:37
run your National Public Radio Smith
1:37:40
Monday anybody horrible I mean I think
1:37:44
it's funny that you you brought this up
1:37:47
and you're totally correct but it's not
1:37:51
gonna change anything you're already a
1:37:56
propaganda arm of the Democrat Party I
1:37:59
mean what's gonna change they're gonna
1:38:00
be worse it's any worse
1:38:03
they can do so much better
1:38:06
there's not there's not enough loathing
1:38:08
there's not enough more than enough
1:38:11
loathing yeah there's more propaganda
1:38:14
works by being less overt like they are
1:38:18
currently so maybe he'll back it off a
1:38:19
little bit well let's listen to the rest
1:38:21
of the soft form of diplomacy
1:38:22
what has defined his tenure over the
1:38:24
last four years at the US agency for
1:38:26
global media we have to remember they're
1:38:33
talking about the new boss so they're
1:38:34
all nervous his tenure over the last
1:38:38
four years at the US agency for global
1:38:40
media well it's been renowned you know a
1:38:42
decade ago or so I did a lot of reports
1:38:45
on how dysfunctional that agency was and
1:38:47
it was over a series of of
1:38:49
administrations he's brought real order
1:38:50
to it as its first CEO instead of
1:38:53
stalling a clear line of command a
1:38:55
clarity of the direction philosophically
1:38:57
a great greater degree of insulation
1:38:59
from sort of political infighting on the
1:39:02
board after all the board is appointed
1:39:04
by the government and in and and there
1:39:07
is some sense of at times partisan
1:39:09
efforts to pressure these in journalists
1:39:12
that are protected by statute but he's
1:39:14
also been a champion for the idea of a
1:39:17
free press abroad the importance of it
1:39:19
in companies excuse me in countries that
1:39:22
want to have emerging democracies and
1:39:25
it's been a message that he's been
1:39:26
resilient about and it's been a message
1:39:28
that resonated here at home as well as
1:39:31
journalists and the idea of a free press
1:39:33
unfettered has at times come under
1:39:35
attack from the highest office in the
1:39:36
land
1:39:39
mind you that had what eleven CEOs in in
1:39:43
the past ten years remember that before
1:39:45
yarl came in it was it wasn't the guy
1:39:48
from Sesame Street yeah he lasted nine
1:39:52
months it's not easy to run that to run
1:39:55
that place because just the Lib tardes
1:39:58
and I said it you said it Wow
1:40:03
I said it so this is Lansing guy and if
1:40:06
you look at his background the way they
1:40:08
described it he has to be a spook of
1:40:10
course he's a spook and then what makes
1:40:12
it even more clear that it to me that
1:40:14
he's a spook he doesn't have a wiki page
1:40:17
entry oh my goodness how can
1:40:19
be possible in fact when you go to the
1:40:21
the end B I went look I tried to find
1:40:23
first I couldn't find it so then I went
1:40:25
to the NPR wiki page and there there
1:40:28
Daria's listed as a key people John
1:40:32
Lansing CEO and it's and it's lit up
1:40:34
like it's like it's like there's a link
1:40:35
right but the link is to John Ten Eyck
1:40:38
Lansing jr. some dead 18 cent is 19th
1:40:43
century to century lawyer right mmm well
1:40:47
that's not him
1:40:48
no and then there's no other John
1:40:51
Lansing that I can find so I mean this
1:40:53
is a I would I'm just guessing a spook
1:40:57
yeah I I think you should so now if you
1:41:00
want to get your CIA news you don't have
1:41:02
to go to CBS anymore which because
1:41:04
they're having trouble with their anchor
1:41:06
and they don't want to deal with that so
1:41:08
you see the best your best place to push
1:41:10
the CIA message is right out of mpr
1:41:13
perfect I like it so creative that was a
1:41:17
good move CIA yeah it's it's an
1:41:19
improvement over that XM TV guy I mean
1:41:21
they kept it to three-letter acronyms
1:41:23
but they had to move up in the alphabet
1:41:25
and go from hands to the seas that there
1:41:29
is a on the house.gov website there is a
1:41:35
bio it's not really a wiki bio but it's
1:41:39
a bio and it's kind of what they said on
1:41:42
NPR same thing it's not much else but
1:41:45
yeah I mean he must be it doesn't even
1:41:47
talk about his education and where do
1:41:50
you go to school
1:41:55
yeah probably went to Georgetown or
1:42:00
American University or or Johns Hopkins
1:42:03
those good ones for sure sure well
1:42:08
Rhodes Scholar there was a big meeting
1:42:15
at Jackson Hole big Jackson Hill meaning
1:42:19
where all the central bankers get
1:42:21
together as a party you and I will never
1:42:23
be invited to I'm pretty sure and there
1:42:27
was a lot of a surprising talk this is a
1:42:32
meeting by the way I asked him but we
1:42:33
talked about this on the DHN plug show
1:42:35
mm-hmm and I was curious was this like
1:42:37
the Allen and company meeting what kind
1:42:39
of a meeting is this was actually put on
1:42:40
by the Fed yeah it's it's the central
1:42:43
bankers meeting it's the feds party I
1:42:45
think is the way it's it's it's coin so
1:42:48
the feds party they have all the central
1:42:50
bankers come in and the director or the
1:42:54
whatever's exact title is of the Bank of
1:42:57
England Mark Carney who I think is
1:43:01
actually Canadian he dropped a bomb he
1:43:05
had this speech like hit the luncheon
1:43:07
speech which is an important one cuz
1:43:09
everyone's gonna be there and they're
1:43:10
all chatting and and all of a sudden he
1:43:13
starts coming out with well you know the
1:43:15
financial system has clearly gotta
1:43:17
change because not going so well and you
1:43:20
know maybe we should consider some kind
1:43:22
of cryptocurrency and this shook up a
1:43:25
lot of people in nothing no not us you
1:43:28
know I only heard about it days after
1:43:30
like oh that's interesting
1:43:31
but when you think about it to have this
1:43:35
guy from the Bank of England to the
1:43:36
Federal Reserve's party and say well you
1:43:39
know the central banking I don't know we
1:43:40
got to change it we haven't done so well
1:43:42
the transcript is available I put it in
1:43:44
the show notes it's quite interesting
1:43:47
quotes such as there will be a change in
1:43:51
our unsustainable monetary system so
1:43:55
when you're sitting around with a bunch
1:43:56
of central bankers you know you can
1:43:58
imagine a lot of spit-takes going on
1:44:00
people like what the hell is he talking
1:44:02
about and Mark Carney was questioned by
1:44:06
member of parliament
1:44:07
Steve Baker in the UK and I pulled three
1:44:12
clips from that I found the most
1:44:13
interesting and I think that you know it
1:44:15
kind of gives you an insight as to what
1:44:18
he meant and we'll start with the there
1:44:20
will be changed in this unsustainable
1:44:23
monetary system the things that you've
1:44:26
said here do you think it's possible to
1:44:28
avoid a long term fundamental structural
1:44:31
change in the monetary regime I I think
1:44:36
that there will be a change now measured
1:44:40
over measured over decades it's very
1:44:42
hard to predict the exact that which is
1:44:44
unsustainable tends to go on for longer
1:44:46
than you think and then happen more
1:44:47
quickly than you expect to paraphrase
1:44:50
Rudy Dorn Bush but I think that these
1:44:55
structural flaws in the end in the
1:44:58
system will ultimately result in a
1:45:01
change and the rise of China and the
1:45:03
relative rise of China will also result
1:45:04
in a change through these two forces and
1:45:07
the question I'm trying to raise is do
1:45:11
we get ahead of that change or do we
1:45:12
help manage that change and effect some
1:45:15
sort of rebalancing of the system and to
1:45:17
be absolutely clear on when I say we I'm
1:45:20
talking not about the talk about the
1:45:24
central banks the public side as opposed
1:45:27
to the private side coming up with an
1:45:29
entirely different decentralized system
1:45:32
so this is partly where we may part
1:45:35
company at that point yeah exactly in
1:45:40
favor of choice but just to be clear so
1:45:42
he's talking about a decentralized
1:45:44
system which is not what the Federal
1:45:47
Reserve wants as we've mentioned before
1:45:49
yeah almost every transaction hits the
1:45:52
New York Fed one way or the other and
1:45:54
that's how we can shut down countries
1:45:57
like Iran etc this is quite a power
1:45:59
powerful tool and here's this guy just
1:46:03
saying no no it's clearly as stuff is
1:46:05
wrong it's got a chip we got to
1:46:06
decentralize it it's when you say
1:46:08
decentralize my ears prick up I'm like
1:46:10
all right let's use Bitcoin no well no
1:46:13
such luck but
1:46:15
yes some thoughts one of the issues
1:46:17
which is linked back to the speech is
1:46:19
whether or not there are going to be
1:46:21
central bank digital currencies in order
1:46:25
for there to be instantaneous costless
1:46:27
payments domestically and potentially
1:46:32
cross-border
1:46:32
which will be to the benefit of citizens
1:46:35
and businesses and particularly small
1:46:36
medium-sized businesses but all
1:46:38
businesses and the question is whether
1:46:42
if that could could that happen
1:46:45
and the answer is yes it could happen in
1:46:46
fact mr. holiday is helping to lead our
1:46:48
efforts and thinking about how the
1:46:50
various ways and there's more than one
1:46:52
way you could do it and various avenues
1:46:54
to do it but the question is if you do
1:46:58
have that happen does it make sense to
1:47:01
do it on a coordinated fashion with some
1:47:05
of the core central banks which brings
1:47:08
benefits in and of itself from a
1:47:10
cross-border perspective but happens to
1:47:12
be a component of a more seamless
1:47:14
rebalancing of how transactions are
1:47:18
priced so a lot of big words to say well
1:47:21
you know people are actually doing this
1:47:23
very thing you're asking me about with
1:47:25
Bitcoin today so yeah I think we could
1:47:29
probably come up with some kind of
1:47:30
digital crypto thing that would work and
1:47:32
we probably have to do that because they
1:47:34
have to compete and this got so out of
1:47:36
hand that the French finance minister
1:47:39
was asked the question about well and of
1:47:43
course when you when you think about
1:47:44
this now this is being said like well we
1:47:47
need to change the financial system we
1:47:50
need to decentralize we need to have
1:47:52
some form of digital currency and of
1:47:55
course that's what Facebook is trying to
1:47:57
do with Libre they're taking a basket of
1:48:01
currencies China US Europe etc and
1:48:05
they're using that as a quote/unquote
1:48:07
stable coin to be able to manipulate the
1:48:10
price of it obviously and just using the
1:48:13
digital properties of it for being able
1:48:15
to do transactions and I think that's
1:48:18
why they were they were ready for this
1:48:20
to happen and the French finance
1:48:21
minister Bruno Lamar is having none of
1:48:25
it
1:48:25
I want to be very clear I fully share
1:48:28
the concerns expressed by Stephen
1:48:31
manoosh in about deliver we do not want
1:48:35
any private company to have the
1:48:37
possibility to create a sovereign
1:48:40
currency we have sovereign currencies
1:48:42
Dada
1:48:43
euro and other sovereign currencies
1:48:46
which are obliged to fulfil some
1:48:48
commitments and some requirements so we
1:48:51
cannot accept to have any exchange
1:48:55
currencies being with the same kind of
1:48:59
power and the same cap of all as the
1:49:02
sovereign currency so I think that there
1:49:04
is a need for regulation there is a need
1:49:07
for very strong commitments and
1:49:08
obligations for that project
1:49:11
and for the time being I think that the
1:49:15
necessary requirements are not fulfilled
1:49:18
by the project Navarre and it's not
1:49:22
going to happen because there is a plan
1:49:24
in place and this Member of Parliament
1:49:28
Steve Baker who is asking the questions
1:49:31
really goes we're going back to Mark
1:49:34
Carney now the president of the Bank of
1:49:37
England he starts to insinuate what is
1:49:41
going how this is going to work and I
1:49:42
think I know what it is let's listen to
1:49:44
the question-and-answer first to me it's
1:49:49
the highlight of what we're third
1:49:50
explained in the long term nothing I
1:49:52
should emphasize those watching lives in
1:49:53
the long term that we've got a system
1:49:54
which is unsustainable and cannot
1:49:56
go on longer than anyone expects and
1:49:58
then will change faster than anyone
1:50:00
expects it feels to me like that in such
1:50:02
a moment of change globally will need
1:50:04
leadership from global institution dr.
1:50:06
hell doing work with what kind of
1:50:08
institution might provide such global
1:50:10
leadership on monetary reform such
1:50:12
circumstances where should we look for
1:50:15
leadership to move this conversation
1:50:17
forward for the whole world
1:50:19
well I meander there are a number of
1:50:21
international financial institutions who
1:50:23
are charged with thinking about just
1:50:24
these questions and you know their names
1:50:27
some of them are also through that
1:50:29
acronym but I hope within that and Mark
1:50:34
is very much in the forefront of our FSS
1:50:37
institution to put ideas on the table
1:50:39
for reforming all of these things London
1:50:44
and the UK still is home to one of if
1:50:49
not the world's biggest global financial
1:50:51
center we have over the years this
1:50:55
institution given huge amounts of
1:50:56
thought to redesign of international
1:50:59
monetary system and I hope we can
1:51:02
continue very much in in that vein so we
1:51:09
our hope would be among others only that
1:51:13
I save you because I'm very confident
1:51:15
you will be amongst those but I'm also
1:51:16
confident that the IMF will be amongst
1:51:18
them and I'm not promise I won't press
1:51:20
you too far on this but the journalists
1:51:21
watching will know where I'm coming from
1:51:23
and will afford up to my Twitter feed I
1:51:24
feel confident and will metal do you
1:51:27
think that the IMF should be led by a
1:51:28
politician or do you think it should be
1:51:30
led by somebody who really understands
1:51:32
these issues in detail and can
1:51:35
articulate what should be done in order
1:51:37
to address these going through causes is
1:51:39
that a question the minister back
1:51:41
I think I've made my point for those
1:51:42
watching I wish you will so when I heard
1:51:47
that I was like oh wait a minute so he's
1:51:50
saying really do you think that who
1:51:53
should be running the International
1:51:54
Monetary Fund who should really be in
1:51:56
charge to be a politician or someone who
1:51:58
knows what's going on now we know that
1:52:00
fifi Lagarde just left the International
1:52:03
Monetary Fund to become the president of
1:52:06
the European Central Bank now I'm I'm
1:52:09
not schooled in in monetary system so
1:52:15
I'm gonna go out on a limb and then jump
1:52:17
in wherever you think appropriate the
1:52:20
the central banking system is in trouble
1:52:22
be and that's why we see negative
1:52:24
interest rates because there's just the
1:52:26
simplified I think the the way you
1:52:28
create more money in our current system
1:52:31
globally pretty much is with debt and
1:52:34
we're out of it it's just no more debt
1:52:37
to be created at least you know we were
1:52:40
stretching it very very thin so we need
1:52:42
to create new money enter Fifi Lagarde
1:52:45
before leaving she promised to paint the
1:52:51
European Central Bank her new place of
1:52:55
work Green and what she means by that is
1:53:00
the green bonds that are being
1:53:05
structured and/or created right now at
1:53:07
the International Monetary Fund backed
1:53:10
by SDRs the Special Drawing rights and
1:53:14
we've been talking about this for the
1:53:16
entire length of the show I think 10
1:53:17
years at least
1:53:18
then the SDRs are based on a basket of
1:53:22
currencies sound familiar with the US
1:53:24
dollar
1:53:25
the Chinese wampum we've got the the
1:53:28
euro in there a couple more and they're
1:53:32
going to create this money
1:53:34
it'll be represented as a bond now it
1:53:37
could be a digital bond and there is now
1:53:41
already an announcement been made that
1:53:44
under the euros European Central Bank
1:53:47
the euro systems asset purchase program
1:53:49
they will be buying these green bonds
1:53:52
now this is where
1:53:54
gets a little fuzzy for me but I think
1:53:55
that is the next the next bubble they're
1:54:00
going to inflate is all of this money
1:54:02
that's going to be created and we have
1:54:05
to buy them because if we don't the
1:54:09
earth will die and we will die with it I
1:54:11
think that's the messaging we're going
1:54:13
to see is here's this bond it's a green
1:54:16
bond they're calling it the green bond
1:54:18
and we need to buy these because
1:54:21
otherwise the earth will just be
1:54:23
destroyed from climate change and that's
1:54:26
how they're going to create trillions of
1:54:27
new of new money
1:54:30
well I don't know if that's anything
1:54:33
close to what's happening but the green
1:54:36
bond idea is interesting to me because
1:54:38
they they have all these obligations to
1:54:41
pay all these other countries mm-hmm I
1:54:43
mean we've supposedly the Paris Accords
1:54:46
I mean all these climate deals that
1:54:48
Trump refuses to sign on to are largely
1:54:51
just scams to get get our money ship
1:54:55
through a bunch of little islands and
1:54:58
people that need bright here that want
1:54:59
free money mm-hmm and we've already been
1:55:02
pretty good at giving and that's
1:55:03
possible at this that this debt they're
1:55:05
not creating new money to create a new
1:55:07
debt which creates new money it's that's
1:55:09
that's the same if you want a different
1:55:11
side with the same coin
1:55:14
it increases the money supply mm-hmm yes
1:55:18
that's what it does there's no new money
1:55:21
it increases the money supply yes
1:55:23
correct oh there's a bunch of money
1:55:25
flying around that you can use and the
1:55:27
new monetary people are the whole thing
1:55:30
just be becoming nuts it needs a reset
1:55:33
but I don't like it I don't like going
1:55:38
over there and free well the green bonds
1:55:41
are from the IMF and she's going over
1:55:43
there saying she's gonna buy them from
1:55:45
where she used to work at the IMF I mean
1:55:46
hello oh wow that good yeah that's a
1:55:49
good little focus but they're happening
1:55:53
then I mean it's a loan for what I mean
1:55:57
a bond is alone is like you you you take
1:55:59
you're getting money from the center
1:56:01
from a bank you're getting it from the
1:56:02
public or the or the government's right
1:56:05
and so I'm Apple yeah I decided float
1:56:09
some bonds to get some more working
1:56:14
income cuz I don't know why add Apple
1:56:16
doesn't need it but let's just say they
1:56:17
do it so they get some bonds out there
1:56:19
and people buy up the buzzer so they get
1:56:21
a bunch of money but they course have to
1:56:22
pay that back overtime with interest
1:56:25
mm-hmm and if it's as if it's the if it
1:56:29
goes beneath the interest rate then they
1:56:32
actually the better it works the other
1:56:35
way the value goes up well if it goes
1:56:39
below the interest rate goes below zero
1:56:41
then the money is actually extracted and
1:56:45
in the reverse force for the bank's get
1:56:47
more and more money right because the
1:56:49
they're holding the bonds and so that
1:56:52
bonds are whenever they sold the bonds
1:56:55
they sold the bonds
1:56:56
my head's exploding okay is ridiculous
1:56:58
what you're talking about is right now
1:57:01
the system is in you know borderline
1:57:04
collapse mode yes yes that's what it
1:57:06
sounds like and it could collapse and if
1:57:09
it does it'll be I don't know what what
1:57:11
to tell you I don't know what's gonna
1:57:12
happen it's a mystery it'll be a Potter
1:57:16
- mystery yeah well these are no small
1:57:19
statements that these guys are making at
1:57:22
loser freak out they don't know what to
1:57:23
do
1:57:24
they already screwed up I think that's
1:57:26
the that's the message that needs to be
1:57:28
communicated they're they're freaked out
1:57:30
because they screwed up and they don't
1:57:31
know what to do then and it seems like
1:57:34
everyone is directing it's actually
1:57:37
going the wrong way yeah with this
1:57:39
negative interest rate thing that's not
1:57:40
with the way that anybody wants nobody
1:57:43
wants to see that it's only getting
1:57:45
better it's negative interest rates are
1:57:48
just doing better and better every day
1:57:50
well they haven't gotten to us yet so
1:57:52
we're hanging in there the United
1:57:54
States's above it that's why we attract
1:57:57
so much money which keeps everything
1:58:00
propped up didn't we have it a clip on
1:58:02
the last show that someone said yeah it
1:58:04
could come here pretty soon yeah they've
1:58:06
been saying that for a while but it
1:58:07
hasn't yet right but it actually
1:58:09
happened in your and is happening in
1:58:11
European countries so it can't happen
1:58:15
anyway I remain a Bitcoin maximalist I
1:58:17
think that's still the safest way to go
1:58:19
for my ten dollars a week imagine all
1:58:25
the people who could do this oh yeah
1:58:27
[Music]
1:58:29
I know I just don't sell everything and
1:58:36
buy just all in we have a bit a couple
1:58:40
maybe to buy no one for sure we have a
1:58:42
Bitcoin millionaire up in the Seattle
1:58:45
area
1:58:45
oh it's one of our producers and he just
1:58:49
retired he's about I think he seems to
1:58:52
be about in his 30s and he got in early
1:58:55
and stayed in and got filthy rich and
1:58:59
his the omelet is he on the on the list
1:59:01
for today oh she's not should have a
1:59:06
meet up in that's about it yeah no
1:59:10
donations for you but hey hi I'm at the
1:59:12
meet up Paul al Burris starts us off
1:59:15
with 100 $23.45 Jason says the show is
1:59:20
outstanding
1:59:21
mr. piehole comes in with a 120 321
1:59:24
Christopher pie food in Buckeye Arizona
1:59:28
one 11.11 anonymous $100 from new york
1:59:32
ron van dyke $100 from holland anonymous
1:59:37
$99.99 it's interesting we have 9999
1:59:40
anonymous at 100 anonymous went penny
1:59:43
more it happens or carries in drackett
1:59:45
massachusetts or dry i don't know how to
1:59:48
pronounce that is a dry cooked dry coot
1:59:50
bracket bracket Kalin mr. in Northville
1:59:56
Michigan 90 119 and these are the 91 19
2:00:00
this was the gimmick the palindromes the
2:00:03
palindrome the 91 19 keel in this door
2:00:06
and 91 19 was also struck ariza sir
2:00:11
Kevin McLaughlin Earl of Luna in Locust
2:00:14
North Carolina also 91 19 stanley Jones
2:00:18
Sikeston Missouri got a birthday
2:00:21
birthday two days ago William Cornell 91
2:00:26
19 name Laura of the snowy Cascades and
2:00:29
Sammamish Washington Washington 91 night
2:00:34
house caramel artwork she says we sold
2:00:37
in three days
2:00:38
nice
2:00:41
a Christopher wrote eager in a Roger
2:00:45
wrote ger I don't know in Meeteetse
2:00:48
Wyoming Amy meet Ted see meet Ted see 91
2:00:52
90 that's it that's our hole that was it
2:00:55
and he wants some new human resource
2:00:57
karma for the newest Rutger born on nine
2:01:00
one one nine so we had seven people that
2:01:05
took up the ballot the pound drums don't
2:01:08
work anymore no I think I think we do
2:01:12
they used to work you know it's better
2:01:14
when when the producers come up with
2:01:16
their own number sequences that seems to
2:01:19
catch on when we do palindrome yeah the
2:01:21
first couple times people liked it as a
2:01:22
number but they still did they hate us
2:01:26
despise and loathe despise
2:01:31
these numbers say that they that were
2:01:33
despised Peter nuyk nuyk Coolidge Nakula
2:01:39
what do you think new collage I think
2:01:41
yeah maybe 808 and Alexander soles
2:01:45
burger 800 ate those are also
2:01:47
palindromes but they're also boobs it's
2:01:49
a combination of balance the bestest
2:01:52
palindrome Susan now sand Petrolia
2:01:57
Ontario Canada uh 75 79 no note Matthew
2:02:05
Mungle 69 Lauren Lawrence de Bruyne
2:02:13
5860 Lawrence the brown lauenstein Brown
2:02:18
he actually sent a note in that that we
2:02:21
should read I thought you would have had
2:02:25
that
2:02:27
I think I have a copy of it here oh he's
2:02:30
yeah he's got it here says he's a nice
2:02:32
gem donation birthday my father bought
2:02:35
boss Dubrow
2:02:37
on 12 September douchebag here he needs
2:02:39
a douchebag call-out he's a douchebag
2:02:41
call it - Simon pass he needs car my
2:02:47
help with the name pronunciation Adam -
2:02:49
John email with attachments sent as
2:02:51
background information yeah hold on a
2:02:54
second because it was it was a I'm
2:02:56
surprised you didn't you didn't receive
2:02:57
it was a note written in longhand
2:03:01
I just get any nobody know it the male
2:03:04
division in the mail I got no note hmm
2:03:08
I'm trying to open it up ah here we go
2:03:11
Dear John C Devore I can Adam curry fan
2:03:13
of your
2:03:15
Uniting since I was a precocious
2:03:18
twelve-year-old reading my father's PC
2:03:21
magazines in the late 80s early 90s
2:03:24
your column was the most entertaining
2:03:26
and understandable to my young mind long
2:03:30
time listener and
2:03:33
occasional donor through the this is
2:03:35
longhand so through the no agenda show
2:03:37
the two of you have affected my thought
2:03:40
pattern in such a way that I am no
2:03:43
longer employable or dateable keep up
2:03:47
the good work
2:03:50
I'm no longer employable nor datavault
2:03:53
keep up the good work so call out my
2:03:57
childhood friend Simon pass as a
2:03:59
douchebag we did that just a minute ago
2:04:00
but that can never hurt please add my
2:04:06
dear father Buster Brown to the birthday
2:04:08
list as he turned 71 on the 12th of
2:04:10
September today congratulations boss
2:04:12
I've been hitting him in the mouth to no
2:04:16
avail despite the fact that he appears
2:04:18
to independently have similar world
2:04:21
views I always get great value for my
2:04:26
donations as John mispronounces my name
2:04:29
and has done so for the past five times
2:04:31
thank you
2:04:32
Louden stirrer Brown that's nice that's
2:04:38
a nice note so now what do we have what
2:04:40
we'll do
2:04:41
he needs we did the the douche bagging
2:04:45
and all throw him to Karma form in a
2:04:46
minute
2:04:47
indeed onward Gwendolyn Adams in
2:04:52
Sarasota Florida 5555 serve Baba the
2:04:55
High Point another birthday guy to D 546
2:04:58
Eric Schneider in Reid's town Wisconsin
2:05:02
55:33 Daniel Galloway in Marietta
2:05:05
Georgia
2:05:06
$55 Denon Christian Spokane 5495 Omar
2:05:11
Bongo Bongo Lam
2:05:19
he says Omar Bongo from e-i yeah sure
2:05:23
ob mr. Bongo Bongo Bongo land am Bongo
2:05:30
baronet's for economic hitman 51 he's in
2:05:34
$50 in once and he's in Houston
2:05:36
hi Kimberly Redman in Toronto Ontario
2:05:38
these are all $50 donors name and
2:05:41
location if available Kimberly Redman
2:05:44
and Toronto drew Moe check-in
2:05:47
Cerrito California Kevin Silverman in
2:05:50
Severn Maryland and ray Klaus Robert
2:05:55
Kerr back in essexville Michigan sure
2:05:59
creak creak and rostov-on-don and uh in
2:06:05
rostov-on-don ie was the 50 is that I
2:06:09
are just I mean I would think that's our
2:06:10
numbers Russian he says he's in Russia
2:06:12
hmm what's I oh maybe he's got a mile in
2:06:16
it
2:06:16
ie would be Ireland yeah but he's in
2:06:19
Russia he probably has an ISP or
2:06:21
something that runs I don't know that's
2:06:25
what we're getting that Robert Dagenais
2:06:27
in Fairfax in fact if you're in Russia
2:06:30
or trying to
2:06:30
I mean it's China they kind of tolerate
2:06:33
VPNs but not for long Russia I don't
2:06:39
know I don't know how you do it how you
2:06:41
get around the restrictions robert Daken
2:06:45
in Fairfax Virginia
2:06:46
Fairfax Roy 10 we need more donations
2:06:50
from Fairfax wink-wink nudge-nudge Roy
2:06:53
10 hava in pine knocker very good
2:06:56
Jonathan Farris and liberal Kansas and
2:06:59
last but not least for Kyle mired there
2:07:01
in Atlanta Georgia I want to thank all
2:07:04
these folks for contributing to show
2:07:07
1170 whatever it is to and I do even
2:07:11
know what I wanted to read before we got
2:07:12
off to the other stuff it's just a
2:07:13
donation note from another previous
2:07:15
donation gosh this is from Julian Julian
2:07:20
aus I'm donating with my own money but I
2:07:24
have my mom's credit card because I
2:07:25
don't have my own also this donation is
2:07:27
in Canadian dollar so I'd like to claim
2:07:29
full credit of $100 even though it will
2:07:32
come in as less continuing on I've been
2:07:34
listening to no agenda since last
2:07:36
November says my dad hit me in the mouth
2:07:39
and a DNA as part of my school
2:07:42
curriculum hmm I'm 15
2:07:46
Wow since then I've come to love your
2:07:49
analysis of the news as well as the
2:07:51
random bits of in this is a this is a no
2:07:53
reason I'm reading this is a note from a
2:07:54
15 year old who grabbed enough
2:07:57
you gave us a donation of $100 in
2:07:59
canadian money since then I've come to
2:08:02
love your analysis of the news as well
2:08:03
as the random bits of information I
2:08:05
picked up listening to the Shona even
2:08:06
planned to get an iPhone 5 yeah turning
2:08:09
into an OTG phone similar to Adam smoked
2:08:12
it nice
2:08:14
well I might fail yeah we're good make
2:08:16
sure to send Adam notes to help you yeah
2:08:18
I hope yeah if you need it of course a
2:08:19
lot of my family listens to your show
2:08:22
but not many of them have donated every
2:08:25
as previously mentioned I'm 15 and as
2:08:28
the youngest consistent listener in the
2:08:31
family I'd like to request a D douching
2:08:33
for myself as well as douchebag
2:08:40
call-outs for ready yeah get the button
2:08:44
ready Adam now a juice bag bonanza and
2:08:59
now that I've called them all out as
2:09:01
douchebags I'd like to do a birthday
2:09:03
shout out for my dad David his birthday
2:09:05
is on the 14th and just so I must be the
2:09:07
best dad in the university oven though
2:09:09
he won't agree to sponsor my knighthood
2:09:12
[Music]
2:09:14
gotta put this on the list so this is
2:09:17
tell me again that who's from David
2:09:18
House right
2:09:20
well that's but it's from from Julia
2:09:24
Julia we don't have a date to we at 14th
2:09:28
okay with no age we don't have the ink
2:09:31
okay just thank you so much for the
2:09:34
showing the amygdalas that Migdal a
2:09:36
shrinking news deconstruction you
2:09:38
provide for all the producers I'm hoping
2:09:40
to donate again soon and eventually gain
2:09:42
virtue signaling title of no agenda
2:09:45
Knight of the round table until my next
2:09:47
donation Julia
2:09:48
that's a beautiful note I love that
2:09:51
great good that was really a nice No
2:09:54
thank you Julia well done
2:09:57
very nice and that's includes our we are
2:10:00
well-wishers well thank you everybody
2:10:02
for participating in our value for value
2:10:05
Network it is after all your podcast
2:10:07
you're the one that produces it in more
2:10:09
ways than one not just financially but
2:10:11
you do a lot of work and we're the
2:10:13
packagers it's kind of like the THC
2:10:15
vapes I also I went to the P o box my P
2:10:19
o box at 18 to 0-9 Austin Texas seven
2:10:23
eight seven six zero I go once every two
2:10:26
weeks and finally yeah I have my make
2:10:31
Hillary run again hat from Mexico weed
2:10:35
mug from Mac I have I got the weed mug
2:10:38
on the last trip this is the the Hat
2:10:41
made in China of course from maxsa made
2:10:44
in China Park Jesus you get a button I
2:10:46
did not get a button but Maxine Waters
2:10:49
gravel Allah sent this to me make
2:10:51
Hillary run again it's I it's a great
2:10:53
it's a great hat it melts now people
2:10:56
don't always you know they'll send me
2:10:58
stuff directly from Amazon which is not
2:11:00
a great idea because I don't know who
2:11:02
it's from so I got this investigate
2:11:05
childer burg t-shirt which I'm not quite
2:11:08
understanding the reference I understand
2:11:10
the Bilderberg joke but and I don't know
2:11:13
who it's from so I'd like to know and
2:11:15
then I another I got a nice book but
2:11:19
again I don't know who from the master
2:11:21
switch by Tim Wu I think you have a copy
2:11:25
as well John coming at this from Tim Wu
2:11:28
didn't he did signed
2:11:33
no you think you said telling me Tim
2:11:36
Wu's no no no no Tim would you say Tim
2:11:39
woo the book is by Tim woo yeah why
2:11:42
wouldn't he send us the book because the
2:11:44
note says hi Adam here is a book you
2:11:46
will enjoy John is looking forward to
2:11:48
reading his copy centralization and new
2:11:51
media felt very na bought my copy on
2:11:54
impulse in 2011 a local borders
2:11:56
liquidation poetic wedding but Tim whoa
2:12:01
isn't he the guy who is credited with
2:12:03
coining the phrase and termina in the
2:12:06
concept of net neutrality not that I
2:12:10
know of yeah I think he's the guy I
2:12:11
think he's the one that coined the term
2:12:14
so I can hate read this now let's see
2:12:18
whoo I think that's the guy
2:12:20
net neutrality let me see
2:12:25
yeah he's the guy huh yeah he's the guy
2:12:29
he came up with that okay so I'll hate
2:12:31
read that thank you very much and we
2:12:36
have a couple things to take care of we
2:12:39
got some Karma's so we got some new
2:12:41
human resource car and we got some that
2:12:43
job karma and we got some what else
2:12:48
although some other karma let's do all
2:12:50
that right now after I remind you that
2:12:52
you can also be mentioned if you support
2:12:55
the show you can do it for this coming
2:12:57
Sunday show all you do is visit this
2:12:59
very easy to remember website for org
2:13:04
jobs jobs and jobs let's vote for jobs
2:13:10
you've got
2:13:22
well today is the 12th of September 2019
2:13:26
we do have a list of birthdays firstly
2:13:28
belated birthday - Joel Tucker who
2:13:30
celebrated on the 9th
2:13:32
Stanley Jones also bladed birthday for
2:13:34
his September 9th celebration Lawrence
2:13:37
the brown says happy birthday to his dad
2:13:39
Buster Brown celebrating today sir Bob
2:13:41
of high points his happy birthday to his
2:13:43
brother Sir Andrew and Julia says happy
2:13:46
birthday to her Dave dad David knows
2:13:48
noose and he celebrates on the 14th
2:13:50
happy birthday for everybody here at the
2:13:52
best podcast in the universe so I have a
2:14:06
list of course of some meetups for you
2:14:08
but first a recap of the orlando meetup
2:14:11
it was not great
2:14:14
says dame meow dicin Adam I want to
2:14:17
provide a recap of the Orlando meetup
2:14:19
from tonight sadly the organizer was a
2:14:21
no-show and texts or calls from myself
2:14:24
and other attendees went unanswered on
2:14:27
top of that the venue was locked so the
2:14:30
five of us plus one extra friend had to
2:14:33
make our own plans he went to a brewery
2:14:35
down the street ate some food had some
2:14:37
drinks for a few hours and it was a
2:14:38
generally nice time my boyfriend and I
2:14:41
printed your heads for sticks but we
2:14:43
forgot them
2:14:44
lots of fails for this meetup but we
2:14:46
will definitely be trying again some
2:14:48
good news is that we learned the that's
2:14:49
true ladies live in Central Florida area
2:14:52
and we're hoping they host a seminar so
2:14:54
some of us can stop by all in all it was
2:14:57
an enjoyable low-key night and we will
2:14:59
make another attempt at an area Meetup a
2:15:02
dame me out listen and I'm sorry to hear
2:15:04
that this we try to avoid these things
2:15:06
but you know it's completely volunteer
2:15:08
and it typically does work out very well
2:15:11
you can go to no agenda meetups dot-com
2:15:14
you can find out what's near you and if
2:15:16
there isn't one you can create one
2:15:18
yourself but if you're gonna do it you
2:15:19
should probably show up and for the 14th
2:15:22
coming up this week we have Pittsburgh
2:15:24
PA and the El Paso Las Cruces meetup on
2:15:27
the 19th Toronto the 20th Southeast
2:15:30
Louisiana Nelson British Columbia South
2:15:32
East London and Wilsonville Oregon four
2:15:34
in one day on the 21st Eastern North
2:15:37
Carolina Minneapolis and Boulder Creek
2:15:39
if you're in Arlington Virginia
2:15:41
we were gave you shout out earlier
2:15:42
September 22nd is your date to hang out
2:15:44
the 26th Las Vegas and Luxembourg
2:15:47
there's only 30,000 people who love live
2:15:49
in Luxembourg it will be at the meet up
2:15:53
27th of September San Antone in Texas
2:15:56
the 28th Victoria BC and also in
2:15:59
Copenhagen and Havre de Grasse Maryland
2:16:02
that's where you will be able to hang
2:16:05
out with people get some in-person close
2:16:08
up connection with people who don't get
2:16:11
triggered and people you probably would
2:16:13
never know
2:16:14
we're listeners of the No Agenda show
2:16:15
moreover they're all producers so we'll
2:16:20
hopefully have more reports and more
2:16:21
meetups on the next show and right now
2:16:23
we've got
2:16:25
[Music]
2:16:26
[Applause]
2:16:27
[Music]
2:16:32
sir otaku the Baron of the Northeast
2:16:35
Texas and the Red River Valley has
2:16:37
dropped his status once again with
2:16:40
another thousand dollars in total
2:16:41
donations to become the earl of
2:16:43
northeast texas and the red river valley
2:16:46
we congratulate him on his new title and
2:16:49
you can always go to ITIM slash peerage
2:16:54
to find out exactly where everyone
2:16:56
standing is and in the event of calamity
2:16:58
who is in charge of what region of the
2:17:01
world that's what our knights and dames
2:17:02
and and titles above that adieu our
2:17:05
bearings for sure they have
2:17:07
protectorates and they are the people to
2:17:09
talk to when this shit hits the fan and
2:17:11
thank you again for everything and
2:17:14
supporting the No Agenda show no Knights
2:17:17
or no Dame's today just one title change
2:17:20
that's odd yeah well
2:17:25
happens all right so where were we
2:17:29
um will
2:17:34
I've go uh yes and something I'm
2:17:37
following up on something we talked
2:17:38
about and something I couldn't find so I
2:17:42
did want to circle back to that we'll
2:17:44
start off with another obsession of the
2:17:47
m5m mainstream certainly in the United
2:17:50
States and just for a to mix it up I
2:17:53
figured I'd bring in Jimmy Kimmel to
2:17:55
tell us the day's news instead of
2:17:57
meeting with the Taliban yesterday Trump
2:17:59
spent the day lashing out at John Legend
2:18:02
and Chrissy Teigen for realies
2:18:03
apparently he's watching a town hall at
2:18:06
NBC last night probably waiting to hear
2:18:10
his name mentioned it was upset that
2:18:11
John Legend didn't give him a shout-out
2:18:14
for the bipartisan criminal justice
2:18:16
reform bill that he signed so he got out
2:18:19
his thumbs and he wrote guys like boring
2:18:22
musician John Legend and his filthy
2:18:24
mouth wife who wasn't even there by the
2:18:26
way are talking about how great it is
2:18:29
but I didn't see them around when we
2:18:30
needed help getting it past his filthy
2:18:33
mouth what what is what we can't have
2:18:36
all these filthy mouth women around what
2:18:37
the Taliban is coming over guys Trump
2:18:41
hates women who talk dirty unless
2:18:43
they're spanking him with a forbes
2:18:44
magazine so Chrissy Teigen responded to
2:18:48
this she wrote lol what a ass bitch
2:18:56
etc and for that she got more than
2:18:58
500000 lights there's almost 10 times as
2:19:02
many he's like is he god for his tweet
2:19:04
about her which i think means she's our
2:19:06
no president right Oh what I found
2:19:12
interesting they bleeped
2:19:15
the pussy part so what she was tweeting
2:19:17
over and over again it was a hashtag his
2:19:20
pussy ass bitch president why would they
2:19:23
bleep the pussy and leave the ass bitch
2:19:26
in that makes no sense not a weird isn't
2:19:30
it
2:19:31
yeah cuz they save grabbing by the pussy
2:19:33
yeah that's well I don't know why
2:19:35
instantly you know grabbed by the pussy
2:19:37
grabbed by the pussy but now they bleep
2:19:39
it yeah so pussy ass bitch became a
2:19:43
trending topic and it was just like it
2:19:46
really this is all that we can obsess
2:19:47
over and that gave me reason to go back
2:19:50
and find the fine John Legend clip from
2:19:53
NPR where he claims that really the only
2:19:56
people who are creative
2:19:59
our Democrats well we've always been
2:20:01
liberal musicians actors it's almost by
2:20:05
disposition we deal with the gay and
2:20:09
lesbian community all the time so we're
2:20:10
going to feel like they should have to
2:20:12
let you get married just like we do we
2:20:15
deal with people of all colors and all
2:20:17
races and we travel to different
2:20:19
countries all the time to perform so
2:20:21
we're going to have a more global view
2:20:23
and a more inclusive view it's almost by
2:20:25
nature and by and by circumstance of the
2:20:29
things that we do so
2:20:31
if America doesn't want to consume the
2:20:35
art of people who are liberal minded
2:20:38
there's not going to be a lot of art for
2:20:39
them to consume as simple as that
2:20:41
because the best artists most of them
2:20:43
are liberal sorry there are some country
2:20:46
artists that I know where they are
2:20:47
conservative I have a lot of country
2:20:49
artists that are friends and believe me
2:20:51
some of them are liberal but they don't
2:20:52
make a big deal out of it because they
2:20:54
know it'll eliminate their base
2:20:56
I'm telling you most creative people are
2:20:59
liberal
2:21:00
just so you know
2:21:02
and they say things like pussy ass bitch
2:21:05
it's pretty liberal is very create very
2:21:09
create very very liberal very creative
2:21:11
liberal oh yes John Legend now this next
2:21:18
clip was one of the few times they tried
2:21:22
to create some good news the mainstream
2:21:25
let's put some good news out there I
2:21:27
don't think you saw this video because
2:21:30
as you'll hear in this clip they say it
2:21:34
went viral but their numbers are odd
2:21:35
this was the two the two kids two little
2:21:38
boys black boy and a white boy and they
2:21:40
see each other on the sidewalk and they
2:21:42
run towards each other and they hug each
2:21:44
other did you see this video out there
2:21:46
in the wild by any chance probably
2:21:48
didn't did you
2:21:48
I think I did right so oh so cute
2:21:52
so cute but the reason I play this clip
2:21:55
is a because they they're trying to make
2:21:57
it go viral and be I just couldn't
2:21:59
resist listening to this guy without
2:22:01
with y'all
2:22:04
twenty six month-old Maxwell and 27
2:22:08
month-old Finnegan pure joy at the sight
2:22:10
of one another running to give each
2:22:12
other hug much bigger than their size
2:22:14
the innocence of it all is exactly why
2:22:17
it's going viral they just took off
2:22:19
towards each other and I just got my
2:22:21
phone out as quickly as possible and
2:22:22
just try to record it and they are just
2:22:24
too cute together and are you ready for
2:22:27
this another minute is this guy of talk
2:22:29
cute is an understatement michael says
2:22:31
narrows Maxwell's dad shot the video he
2:22:33
says he's not normally one to post a lot
2:22:35
of private things on Facebook but
2:22:37
explains why he decided to in this case
2:22:39
with all the racism and hate going on I
2:22:41
just think it's a really beautiful video
2:22:42
the reason that it's getting attention
2:22:44
because it is with a little black boy
2:22:46
and a little white boy and one's mind
2:22:50
right you know or just changed their
2:22:52
view on things you know then it's
2:22:53
totally worth it
2:22:54
at last check it's gotten over 300
2:22:56
shares and sixty-five hundred views
2:22:58
that's viral the comments are mostly
2:23:01
positive but there are some naysayers
2:23:03
definitely not staged and it was just a
2:23:06
lucky moment and I got it on camera and
2:23:07
now with all the attention that it's
2:23:09
getting it's just gonna be a great story
2:23:11
to tell him when he's older the
2:23:12
pint-sized best friends have known each
2:23:14
other for over a year now it's a special
2:23:16
relationship and their parents are good
2:23:18
friends as well
2:23:21
and there's not anyone else that comes
2:23:23
close to Finnegan status in Maxwell's
2:23:25
eyes great to spread the love and to
2:23:27
show people that kind of love and beauty
2:23:28
in the world yes thank you very much
2:23:30
I'm 650 plus all the love and beauty in
2:23:33
the world now I didn't even think about
2:23:38
cuz I did see this I just said yeah I
2:23:40
just visualize you yeah yeah but now
2:23:47
that he mentioned it now I'm convinced
2:23:51
it's staged the core thing he if he
2:23:53
didn't say I just like to tell right
2:23:55
yeah I didn't staged it no it wasn't
2:23:58
staged but I'm thinking about it totally
2:24:03
to kids into doing this and you get the
2:24:05
camera ready because for one thing you
2:24:06
can't if the kids were running and
2:24:08
they're gonna go hug and they just you
2:24:10
can't get your camera out in time you're
2:24:11
not gonna make this it's just it's not
2:24:13
gonna happen it's just bullcrap
2:24:15
so he staged this oh he's okay kids on
2:24:17
the count of three run to each other
2:24:19
gives you the biggest hug you can and
2:24:21
they probably did okay let's do a safety
2:24:25
[Music]
2:24:26
okay that was great let's do one more
2:24:29
for safety how much I hated that that
2:24:36
was great great segment Adam perfect
2:24:38
let's do one more for safety
2:24:39
you liked it or you didn't like it
2:24:42
yeah what's the safety bullcrap so they
2:24:47
staged it was obviously staged cuz these
2:24:50
kids see each other all the time why
2:24:52
what's always what's the deal you know
2:24:54
that now they're hugging each other so
2:24:55
what yeah yeah a stage great
2:24:58
thanks pal some happy booting that
2:25:02
polluting the minds viral video arena
2:25:06
was staged crap but of course nobody
2:25:08
does that
2:25:09
never why do we do that there was a
2:25:14
thing I think it was in busts Jeter
2:25:15
wanted they should have top five viral
2:25:18
videos that were staged oh yes so I went
2:25:22
through him and there was a couple in
2:25:24
there that I remember seeing and I had
2:25:25
no idea they were staged remember which
2:25:28
one yeah I'll remember the one you you
2:25:29
probably saw it it's some I think it's a
2:25:31
black girl but it's some girls little
2:25:33
just slightly over
2:25:34
I look slightly chubby and to add to the
2:25:38
thing is she's gonna she's danced in on
2:25:40
the camera in this she's gonna do us
2:25:42
she's gonna stand on her hands or
2:25:44
something against the door and then
2:25:46
somebody opens the door she falls
2:25:48
backwards into a table of candle yes yes
2:25:51
yes that was that's the place on fire
2:25:53
that was staged
2:25:55
it's totally staged huh good one yeah
2:26:00
that's right that was impressive you can
2:26:04
fool me with a state and there's the
2:26:06
number all along but it's like I can see
2:26:08
being fooled
2:26:09
I mean thought of were the ones that
2:26:10
we've all seen and we know were staged
2:26:12
like the Eagle coming down and grabbing
2:26:14
the baby on the golf course well yeah I
2:26:17
think that was not that was edited that
2:26:18
wasn't staged that was just shoot it was
2:26:21
a fake fake fake
2:26:24
but yeah a couple of OTG items OTG
2:26:31
off-the-grid baby OTG yes well you
2:26:35
probably saw that well I saw it and then
2:26:37
what a waste of time the Apple special
2:26:39
events where you know it's a big camera
2:26:43
thanks that's great but they're also
2:26:48
they announced iOS 13 and we also have
2:26:52
Android 10 coming up and face bag is
2:26:56
very worried about this so they have
2:26:59
Paul McDonald the engineering director
2:27:01
has posted a it made a blog post just in
2:27:07
starts off like this
2:27:08
Facebook is better with location it
2:27:12
powers features like check-ins and makes
2:27:14
planning events easier it helps improve
2:27:16
ads and keeps you and the Facebook
2:27:19
community safe how does it keep you safe
2:27:22
it keeps you safe just shut up and don't
2:27:24
question the bad man features like find
2:27:28
Wi-Fi and nearby friends use precise
2:27:31
location even when you're not using the
2:27:34
app to make sure that alerts and tools
2:27:38
are accurate and personalized for you
2:27:40
your Android or iOS location settings
2:27:44
allow you to control when you share your
2:27:45
device's precise location with apps like
2:27:48
Facebook that's why we're letting you
2:27:51
know that Android and iOS have released
2:27:53
new versions of their operating systems
2:27:55
which include updates to how you can
2:27:57
view and manage your location the newest
2:28:00
version of Android gives people more
2:28:02
visibility into and control over when
2:28:05
apps can access the devices precise
2:28:07
location the new version of iOS called
2:28:10
iOS 13 will send people reminders about
2:28:13
which apps can access their precise
2:28:15
location information when they're not
2:28:17
using the app and how many times each
2:28:19
app has accessed it so I'll skip forward
2:28:23
a little bit if you decide to update
2:28:26
you'll have the option to allow when you
2:28:29
good your apps to access your precise
2:28:30
location either while you're using the
2:28:32
app or when you're not we understand
2:28:34
this may be confusing if you're already
2:28:36
use
2:28:37
Facebook's background location setting
2:28:39
this update may cause a few instances
2:28:41
with Android and Facebook location
2:28:43
settings will be out of sync a long
2:28:46
story short they're doing everything
2:28:48
they can to tell you that you should not
2:28:50
be worried when you see your phone
2:28:51
telling you that Facebook is tracking
2:28:53
your precise location and and this comes
2:28:56
back to what we've always said it is
2:28:59
location is everything
2:29:01
you're the location of where you are
2:29:03
tells you so much about a person where
2:29:07
are you I'm at the doctor's office Bing
2:29:09
we know that where I'm at the bank being
2:29:11
where you I'm in an office Oh probably
2:29:13
your office being without telling
2:29:15
anybody without posting without even
2:29:17
speaking you are telling these companies
2:29:19
exactly what you're doing and what your
2:29:21
life is about and you need to delete
2:29:23
these apps from your phone because now
2:29:25
they can easily access where they can
2:29:27
continue to easily access your location
2:29:30
although not entirely precise even when
2:29:32
you're not using the app delete this
2:29:35
crap off of your phones then for the
2:29:39
credit karma users amongst us and other
2:29:43
credit the score based apps there's
2:29:46
we've looked at the data points there
2:29:48
now adding in to your credit score which
2:29:50
where is turning slowly into a social
2:29:53
credit score in addition to your pin
2:29:57
this is now being proposed as law that
2:29:59
all of these companies will need to
2:30:01
report this and act upon it
2:30:03
not just your your utilities ie do you
2:30:06
pay your your utility bills on time
2:30:10
which is now being added to your social
2:30:13
credit score but also which magazine
2:30:17
subscriptions you have and Goldman Sachs
2:30:21
ally financial discovery financial
2:30:24
services are all now incorporating the
2:30:28
information on magazine subscriptions
2:30:32
which I believe the post office is
2:30:34
probably helping them with since
2:30:36
whenever you move and I've moved a
2:30:37
couple times four times in Austin or
2:30:40
five times in Austin alone they always
2:30:43
try to sell you magazine subscriptions
2:30:45
now so I'm pretty sure that the post
2:30:48
office the US Postal Service is somehow
2:30:50
involved in
2:30:51
this information I don't I I don't think
2:30:54
they know I really disagree with that
2:30:55
it's too much work
2:30:57
the the date if there's databases out
2:30:59
there that you can purchase that will
2:31:01
get you all this information easy enough
2:31:03
it's already there now first off is not
2:31:05
gonna give you anything
2:31:06
okay so what's out there but then it but
2:31:09
they're now incorporating it so if you
2:31:10
subscribes to a garden in violation of
2:31:15
my privacy for people to know all my new
2:31:17
magazine subscriptions this is like what
2:31:20
web pages of I'm browsing it's it's very
2:31:22
similar and so if you subscribe to
2:31:24
gardens and guns which is a real
2:31:27
magazine is a good magazine
2:31:30
it's an austin-based magazine no less
2:31:32
gardens and guns or you know who knows
2:31:36
what you subscribe to could be a whole
2:31:39
bunch of things that is that will now be
2:31:44
known to the credit scoring social
2:31:47
scoring companies and well I guess if
2:31:50
you what difference does it make to them
2:31:52
what magazines I subscribe to
2:31:55
well what there's seriously well this
2:31:57
are trying unless gardens and guns is
2:32:00
like for boating or I don't know well I
2:32:04
guess would they also use an ammo and
2:32:07
all the rest of motorcycle week I mean
2:32:09
do what difference does it make to them
2:32:10
let my said affect my credit score but
2:32:12
let me tell you the example they use in
2:32:15
this article
2:32:18
there was a because you caught me a
2:32:22
little off guard like in paraphrase a
2:32:24
woman had a bad credit score for some
2:32:27
reason and she could not get credit to I
2:32:29
don't to buy a house or something and
2:32:32
they they went in they looked closer oh
2:32:36
here it is
2:32:37
Christina Segura 24 had a low credit
2:32:40
score from unpaid medical debts when she
2:32:43
applied for financing from from fin tech
2:32:47
startup Mert Merritt eyes which is a
2:32:50
credit score based company providing
2:32:53
with loans the company which funds
2:32:54
higher education skills based training
2:32:56
used her high school transcript to
2:32:58
approve her loans totaling nine thousand
2:33:01
to attend pipe Welding school merit eyes
2:33:05
considers factors such as improvements
2:33:07
in grades signs of students challenge
2:33:09
themselves etc so they just want to have
2:33:13
more social information about you to
2:33:16
make their determination of how
2:33:18
creditworthy you are and I can see where
2:33:22
the you know if you would subscribe to
2:33:25
Harvard Business Review
2:33:27
mmm that will be good
2:33:29
garden and guns probably not this is
2:33:34
illegal
2:33:36
is it it should be
2:33:40
between face bag trekking and tracking
2:33:42
your location when you don't even you
2:33:44
which is encouraging stalking by the way
2:33:46
if you're a woman or like our little our
2:33:50
15 year old that just sent that note in
2:33:52
who wants to go OTG mmm-hmm if I was a
2:33:55
woman I would have all that stuff turned
2:33:57
off because I don't want to be tracked
2:33:59
because people can hack through these
2:34:01
systems and you get some creep yeah
2:34:03
who's just following you around is a
2:34:05
stalker well if they psych I always
2:34:07
thought this was inviting stalkers yeah
2:34:13
sure does nobody ever mentions that this
2:34:15
is like inviting stalkers because it's
2:34:18
technology man it's cool it's cool
2:34:25
all right well I'm sufficiently grossed
2:34:28
out sorry
2:34:31
don't make it up let's catch up on some
2:34:35
stuff okay
2:34:36
there was an interesting little uh well
2:34:39
first there's a guy from the Great Bay
2:34:40
an expert on the Great Barrier Reef came
2:34:44
on they came on to discuss some of the
2:34:47
bullcrap he got fired fired from he was
2:34:50
that what he's like the number one
2:34:51
expert on the Great Barrier Reef and he
2:34:54
got fired from some University for
2:34:55
telling him that dull we were hearing
2:34:57
his bullcrap but anyway here's some of
2:34:59
it well thank you very much don't let's
2:35:02
all heard that the Great Barrier Reef is
2:35:03
on its last legs and it's being
2:35:05
smothered by sediment polluted by
2:35:07
fertilizers and pesticides it's killed
2:35:10
by dredging and of course climate change
2:35:12
so who who here put your hands up
2:35:15
believes that story is true as a matter
2:35:17
of interest right let's in traces so I
2:35:20
mean out there almost everybody believes
2:35:22
it true there's literally hundreds of
2:35:23
millions of people around the world who
2:35:25
think that so you you guys now have got
2:35:28
a little bit of a tricky question
2:35:30
because you've been told is dead and you
2:35:32
believe it's dead so how are you going
2:35:36
to tell this am I just our whistleblower
2:35:38
or and the world has been conned or am a
2:35:41
complete lunatic and of course the way
2:35:43
you decide is that you listen to my
2:35:46
arguments that this is the libertarian
2:35:48
way but unfortunately that's not the way
2:35:50
of a modern University as we will see in
2:35:52
a minute so I'll give you before we go
2:35:55
into my little tricky situation with the
2:35:57
University I'll give you some some facts
2:35:59
about the universe about the reef
2:36:02
climate change is supposed to be killing
2:36:04
all the corals but did you know that
2:36:06
most of the corals that live on the
2:36:08
Great Barrier Reef also live in
2:36:09
Indonesia and Thailand where the water
2:36:11
is one or two degrees hotter and they
2:36:13
actually grow 50% faster they're in fact
2:36:16
probably more coral bleaching which
2:36:19
you've heard such a lot about is not a
2:36:21
new phenomenon it's been going on for a
2:36:22
hundred million years or so it's like a
2:36:25
bushfire it looks terrible but the the
2:36:27
corals rapidly recover from it he goes
2:36:32
on and I was one thing after another
2:36:34
everything you've heard about the corals
2:36:36
is bogus
2:36:38
this guy's the coral expert get the
2:36:43
whole I got to get this whole speech
2:36:44
because then he goes after his universe
2:36:46
that fired and because he kept he kept
2:36:48
he kept contradicting people that were
2:36:51
just dropping these lies and if
2:36:53
apparently if it is what if things do
2:36:55
warm up the corals will grow fifty
2:36:57
percent faster oh man
2:37:00
I haven't wondering you know I remember
2:37:03
the Greta turned Bergen team assuming
2:37:07
gaming mmm cumin yeah she what happens
2:37:11
with that girl when she when she flips
2:37:14
and goes on and finds out that she's
2:37:17
been that most of his bullcrap oh we
2:37:19
burned her at the stake no no she's just
2:37:22
be a dynamo she seems like the kind of
2:37:26
person to be very easily worked two
2:37:30
weeks trip on that boat press boat but
2:37:37
you haven't given me for today isn't I
2:37:39
so I thought I had one in here I don't
2:37:43
see any ISOs and we do need something
2:37:45
well you have the China China asshole
2:37:49
okay when in doubt you can always roll
2:37:53
that one out yeah I got an old Democracy
2:37:56
Now clip I want to play this is again
2:37:58
something we haven't been talking about
2:38:00
much it's kind of got out of the news
2:38:03
cycle it kind of will come back but it's
2:38:05
the water scam which we used to talk
2:38:07
about quite a bit now it's kind of
2:38:09
fallen by the wayside but it's being
2:38:12
maybe brought back by democracy now 17
2:38:16
countries representing around one
2:38:18
quarter of the world's population are at
2:38:20
risk of running out of water this
2:38:22
according to new data published Tuesday
2:38:24
by the World Resources Institute the
2:38:27
countries which include India Iran and
2:38:29
Qatar are facing extremely high water
2:38:32
stress meaning they're using up almost
2:38:34
all of their water reserves several US
2:38:37
cities and states such as Los Angeles
2:38:40
and New Mexico are also considered to be
2:38:42
under extremely high water stress the
2:38:46
number of afflicted regions will
2:38:47
continue to climb due to global heating
2:38:50
the World Resources Institute says water
2:38:53
stress is the biggest crisis no one is
2:38:56
talking about its consequences are in
2:38:59
plain sight in the form of food and
2:39:01
security conflict and migration and
2:39:03
financial instability
2:39:07
she said
2:39:09
I don't know if this clip was just old
2:39:11
no it's not that old
2:39:12
she said global heating yeah she said
2:39:15
global heating I noticed that too it's
2:39:17
kind of odd yeah you mean it's not the
2:39:19
climate crisis the climate emergency a
2:39:22
global warming its global heating I
2:39:24
think that's a more like an anglicized I
2:39:26
think the Brits use that sometimes
2:39:28
global heat global heating
2:39:31
and then one I don't know what the point
2:39:33
of that was to she's usually Ron bored
2:39:35
with the climate emergency yeah yeah a
2:39:39
climate crisis yes and she also was
2:39:42
either one of those water stress another
2:39:44
good one so in the newsletter I put this
2:39:47
little item about I guess dan Rather
2:39:52
came out with a tweet that said you know
2:39:56
Trump talked about fighting Nazis you
2:39:59
know there oh he went back to the fine
2:40:01
people on both sides yeah and then but
2:40:03
he took it further he said that he
2:40:05
called Nazis fine people that's what he
2:40:07
said it is he's dead rather the bastion
2:40:10
of news reporting guy who you know got
2:40:14
fired for this for a really bad story on
2:40:17
George Bush Maya in which people lived
2:40:20
show us all defended him because they
2:40:21
thought it was a real story but even
2:40:23
though it was Bogut if this was the
2:40:24
letter this was written supposedly
2:40:27
during the forties or during George
2:40:29
Bush's time and not in the 40s but I
2:40:33
guess during the Korean War some period
2:40:34
of time it was so long ago that you that
2:40:37
it was obvious it was not there was a
2:40:40
fake because they had the th was in
2:40:43
small up lower innocent 11th with a T
2:40:47
Asian no and it's not like Microsoft
2:40:48
Word does it shrinks it and puts it up
2:40:50
there that you couldn't do that back in
2:40:52
the day so rather and he gave his pissed
2:40:55
and he kept working but I have to say
2:40:58
you know these guys he's but that these
2:41:01
guys these writers and reporters that
2:41:03
are just locked in and they refused to
2:41:05
listen to reason and of course Scott
2:41:07
Adams jumps in and just his cuz he's a
2:41:10
big oh let me guess let me guess and
2:41:12
then Dan Rather went oh you're right
2:41:14
Scott I'll stop doing that yeah well
2:41:17
that obviously didn't happen but I do
2:41:19
reminded me of this clip that I've been
2:41:21
sitting on which is where we're beta or
2:41:24
or ik is confronted by someone from
2:41:27
daily the caller or some I don't know
2:41:29
some right-leaning operation about this
2:41:33
hoax because beta o rourke is the big is
2:41:36
probably the biggest promoter of it of
2:41:38
Trump saying and back people up
2:41:42
Trump never said that they refined
2:41:45
people on both sides
2:41:48
except after he made a disclaimer saying
2:41:51
I'm not talking about the Nazis and the
2:41:54
white nationalists very clearly did that
2:41:57
yeah and so that's what you know so we
2:41:58
have this two sides that well he he said
2:42:01
that but he still said find people so
2:42:03
here's but here's the way the Democrats
2:42:06
are and they hate to pick on Democrats
2:42:09
but this is beta O'Rourke not listening
2:42:12
to the guy and just going on with his
2:42:15
pitch I really decided now here I
2:42:18
despise beta O'Rourke the President
2:42:22
Trump after charlottesville said that he
2:42:25
condemned the white supremacists and the
2:42:26
neo-nazis totally are you aware that
2:42:29
you're misquoting him or partially
2:42:31
quoting him not quoting the full extent
2:42:33
of his remarks in Charlottesville are
2:42:34
you concerned that that might inflame
2:42:35
tensions rather than heal divisions no I
2:42:37
believe in in the truth and in being
2:42:40
honest about what the president's doing
2:42:42
and it's not just that he referred to
2:42:44
Klansmen as very fine people it is that
2:42:47
he attempted to ban all people of one
2:42:49
religion from this country for
2:42:51
constantly warned of an invasion of
2:42:53
killers and rapists and animals from
2:42:56
Central America and Mexico though we
2:42:58
know that they commit crimes at a far
2:43:00
lower rate than those who are born in
2:43:02
this country this is a very coordinated
2:43:05
attack on minorities in this country on
2:43:09
the most vulnerable and the defenseless
2:43:11
for political gain for the president and
2:43:13
he knows full well that it not only
2:43:15
offends our sensibilities as a country
2:43:17
it is leading to violence and the taking
2:43:20
of lies as we saw you know past but he
2:43:22
said he wasn't referring to the
2:43:24
neo-nazis it's just a quick just a
2:43:26
clarification he said he wasn't
2:43:27
referring to the Klansmen it's very fine
2:43:29
people that he was referring to
2:43:30
nonviolent protesters left and right
2:43:33
he has openly courted the support of
2:43:37
white supremacists oh I got my hair cut
2:43:41
yesterday and the lady who cuts my hair
2:43:43
grew up in El Paso and you know went to
2:43:46
the same school as Bobby is Bobby by the
2:43:48
way not bad it's Bobby O'Rourke
2:43:51
robert francis bobby and even people in
2:43:56
El Paso are like yeah we like will is
2:43:58
worn better so if you can't make it in
2:44:02
your hometown something's wrong
2:44:06
the guys is dick correct well I have one
2:44:11
last thing to share Joe sent this in I
2:44:14
think it's worth noting since we haven't
2:44:17
really gotten and I trust our boots on
2:44:19
the ground reports from our producers
2:44:21
out of my wife and I had the pleasure of
2:44:23
attending an event with Ruth Bader
2:44:25
Ginsburg over the weekend she lives
2:44:28
because of her recent treatment but I
2:44:30
was pleasantly surprised to see and hear
2:44:32
hear her in relatively good health she
2:44:34
had a man and a woman escort her by the
2:44:36
arms as she processed one of whom was
2:44:38
certainly for security reasons as well
2:44:40
as physical aid once she was up on
2:44:42
little stage and seated she was very
2:44:44
lively
2:44:44
she stood several times throughout the
2:44:46
ceremony to deliver her pieces spoke
2:44:48
with a strong with as strong of a voice
2:44:50
as any diminutive 86 year old lady could
2:44:53
be expected to do the impressive part
2:44:55
the impressive part was the vigor with
2:44:58
which she stood pop right up every time
2:45:00
it was her turn if it comes up feel free
2:45:02
to share the antidote don't identify me
2:45:05
or the wedding
2:45:05
okie-dokie just know I was very curious
2:45:09
about her health she appears to be doing
2:45:11
well all things considered love and
2:45:13
light joe says so there you go she
2:45:15
lizard yes I think just grabbed a lizard
2:45:23
lizard I wonder did you see dart her
2:45:29
tongue in an ounce so she smells coming
2:45:35
up on no agenda stream comm we have Oh
2:45:38
mo facts meet the parents the mo facts
2:45:42
with Adam Curry and I have a couple of
2:45:44
good mixes the Darby's returned once
2:45:46
again these are new guys on the scene
2:45:48
also we have Jesse coy Nelson
2:45:52
sir Chris and Sir Felix Wilson and Who
2:45:59
am I missing here and Freddie got
2:46:01
fingers there you go as your end of show
2:46:04
mixes we always welcome them and coming
2:46:08
to you from the opportunity zone it's
2:46:10
number 33 here in the frontier of Austin
2:46:12
Texas FEMA region number six in the
2:46:14
governmental Maps if you're looking for
2:46:16
us in the morning everybody
2:46:17
I'm Adam curry and from Northern Silicon
2:46:19
Valley I'm John C Dvorak we return on
2:46:21
Sunday with another episode of
2:46:23
deconstruction for you right here on no
2:46:25
agenda remember us at Dvorak org slash
2:46:27
na until then adios Mose and such
2:46:33
[Music]
2:46:47
Jumbo's and length of Trump clowns
2:46:50
they're trying to start some hail
2:46:52
dossier never happy without a water cell
2:46:56
yeah mama they had a do it but I'm kept
2:47:00
dragging on he's a coward
2:47:04
we choke finally trumpet weeded now both
2:47:09
things I see is not when both we could
2:47:13
have addressed each also cover mean I'll
2:47:17
always be a Dodger will never be in a
2:47:21
5x5 wfdys us to watch eliminate North
2:47:28
Korea eliminate North Korea maybe
2:47:30
couldn't stop that you were young his
2:47:33
head and crash I've always had a problem
2:47:37
with both and every time I think Trump
2:47:39
is making progress Bolton putts in and
2:47:42
here ooh is it a 20 white Bolton is a
2:47:44
Chicken Hawk didn't want to serve in the
2:47:46
Iraq war didn't want to sit in the Iraq
2:47:49
once in Afghanistan they want to serve
2:47:51
in Vietnam 2015 year wrote a piece for
2:47:54
the New York Times saying we ought to
2:47:56
bomb Iran but if we had done that then
2:47:57
what do you think we do now well I think
2:47:59
Israel could have done it 15 years
2:48:01
before we'd be in a much better place
2:48:04
[Music]
2:48:21
disrupt as many people as possible by
2:48:24
vegan process to specialized farms like
2:48:27
this one out and California reads
2:48:28
crickets for human consumption if you
2:48:30
grab something like the Kyle you can
2:48:31
always start me to sell it as well
2:48:33
[Music]
2:49:11
it's coming
2:49:15
sorry candy that sorry candy that sorry
2:49:23
[Music]
2:49:38
citizen is the belief that humans are
2:49:41
superior to all other poisonous whether
2:49:46
that's in actually farms their flesh
2:49:48
whether that's when they're locked up in
2:49:50
twos
2:49:50
well why no that's when they're brought
2:49:51
into schools you know for children to
2:49:54
have a bit of amusement on their lunch
2:49:55
break
2:50:01
[Music]
2:50:55
Oh
2:50:58
[Music]
2:51:12
[Music]
2:51:34
here comes the train that gets stuck in
2:51:37
everybody's head hit it so net
2:51:40
[Music]
2:51:44
I'll keep you sane
2:51:51
slowly
2:52:00
[Music]
2:52:06
the Borak dog /
2:52:11
[Music]
2:52:22
OPA Borat dot org slash and a
2:52:29
[Music]
0:00 0:00