Cover for No Agenda Show 1465: Satheist
July 3rd, 2022 • 2h 59m

1465: Satheist

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0:00
We got the dead body right here.
0:02
Adam curry Jhansi Devora July 2 2022 This is your award
0:07
winning keep on nation media assassination episode 1465. This
0:11
is no agenda,
0:13
preparing for bug protein and broadcasting live from the heart
0:17
of the Texas hill country here in FEMA Region number six in the
0:20
morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry
0:22
from Northern Silicon Valley where it fought in three days
0:26
earlier than usual. Global warming. I'm John Cena boring.
0:32
Buzzkill. Yeah, man, the global warming is going crazy.
0:39
Normally it fogs in on July the fourth so
0:42
there it is. Are you pissed off again about the fireworks
0:47
actuation.
0:48
But now it's fogged in early. It's already fogged any
0:51
fireworks? You know? I don't know.
0:54
But this is every single year is the same in SAM in sales every
0:58
year every year and you complain every single year and nothing
1:01
ever changes. So is there climate change or not?
1:06
Yeah, well, looking at the mudflats. I'd say no,
1:10
you have not looked at the mudflats in quite a while but do
1:12
even have to get him every day. But I only see the good
1:15
news to produce a segment
1:18
was that was that jingle we had
1:22
that you've been apparently very busy. Oh, here it is here. It is
1:25
cause of what's happening in Greenland right now. The maps of
1:29
the world will have to be redrawn. This is what would
1:33
happen
1:34
to San Francisco Bay.
1:38
There you go. He's looking out the window. He's he's looking at
1:41
the mudflats. What do you see?
1:44
Mud? No change since 1870.
1:49
No change. Well, climate change related. Okay. Last night, one
1:55
of our
1:55
Wait, you're going to tell me what was going on. It kept me so
1:58
busy this morning. It's what
1:59
I'm saying. Climate change related climate? Yes, of course,
2:03
it has to do with climate change. We're having an
2:05
exceptionally warm weather here in the hill country. We did not
2:09
get a lead of the rain that the rain sticks produced, which is
2:12
unfortunate. But that's kind of how Fredericksburg was chosen by
2:16
the American Indians and the Germans. And our air conditioner
2:21
went out. One of our two compressors went out last night.
2:24
This This was interesting, because the studio is it really
2:28
only has one wall that connects to the house. And so it's its
2:31
own little hot box. Oh, man, I was tripping out this morning
2:36
sweating. But here in Hill Country, you can call and
2:40
someone comes out within an hour.
2:45
They come out with what they came
2:46
out. They came out and fix it within an hour.
2:49
No, yes. In this day and age. And I said
2:53
I said oh my goodness. I said You're here already. I said I
2:58
figured you know I think Tina even left a voicemail. Hey, can
3:01
we just get on your list? Because I know a lot of air
3:04
conditioners are breaking up. The guy says no, I was just
3:06
waiting for your call.
3:09
It was beautiful. I said German background that area.
3:13
Yeah, maybe it efficiency. Yeah. efficiency, efficiency.
3:17
Efficiency. You make everything
3:18
you're doing that up in before the Angeles Washington months go
3:22
by I know. That's why I was so happy and totally surprised.
3:26
Like, Oh, this isn't nice. Yeah, so that kept us kind of be and
3:30
all it was was the capacitor which shouldn't have blown
3:33
a cap bust cap. But yeah, it didn't blow unfortunately. If it
3:37
blew, you would have heard it. And now of course I can't blow
3:41
once and there's computer.
3:43
Oh, that can be in a computer. That can be a good one.
3:46
Oh, well if it's in a room, it's it's as the exact same. I'd say
3:51
decibel rate rating as a cherry bomb. That's how loud it
3:56
is. The kids even know what cherry bombs are anymore. But
3:59
they still sell them. I think they call them don't they just
4:02
call them meds these days. I don't call them cherry bombs
4:04
anymore. Although Cherry Bomb is
4:07
round and red. Yeah, right like a cherry. Right. I
4:10
don't think they sell those anymore.
4:12
Now at MATC it Well, it sounds like almost an M ad going off in
4:17
the house. Very, very loud.
4:21
My dad would tell me that. Back when he was in high school. They
4:24
would flush cherry bombs down the toilet.
4:27
Oh yeah. Do your kids always talk about that? But I've never
4:30
I don't think they actually do it.
4:32
And I think he got expelled for it. It sounds like something he
4:35
wouldn't
4:36
love you doing get expelled then I'd say yeah, probably did it.
4:40
So no more advanced kids actually, instead of having to
4:45
light something and throw it down, which stinks up the place.
4:48
Yeah. You take it about a one inch cube as sodium. Flush that
4:54
baby down the toilet. There you go. What happens then? Well,
4:58
sodium when it hits water starts to produce copious amounts of
5:00
hydrogen in the heat,
5:02
sweet.
5:04
And then it didn't blows.
5:09
Nice, no smoking in the boys room, that'll teach you. So the
5:13
Dutch farmers cranked it up a notch, this is fantastic. They
5:18
are literally spraying shit under government buildings now.
5:22
And good. And the only mainstream report I can really
5:25
find outside of the Netherlands is from Sky News.
5:27
So massive protests going on here in the Netherlands right
5:32
now, where Dutch farmers are protesting against rules that
5:35
would limit carbon and nitrogen emissions out of their farms,
5:39
massive, massive protests, they're blocking highways and
5:42
blocking traffic. I've seen them even spraying with newer on
5:46
government offices here and some of the clips, which I don't
5:48
think we'll show you this morning. But there's a real big
5:50
point to this. Net Zero is really going to hurt. And do not
5:56
let anybody tell you otherwise, we have this whole big idea that
6:01
here in Australia, we can just, you know, slide on over to net
6:04
zero and everything will be fine. It doesn't work that way.
6:07
Because once you start really doing it, you're talking about
6:10
cutting down agriculture, you're talking about how are you going
6:13
to feed people already, just last month, I just checked 9.9%
6:18
inflation last month in that country, and largely as a result
6:22
of these green policies, net zero. And of course, you know,
6:25
all the troubles that they're having in Europe at the moment.
6:28
But we in Australia must not allow ourselves to imagine that
6:32
this sort of thing cannot happen here will not be imposed upon us
6:35
here as we go for netzero or that this will somehow be
6:39
painless, there is a lot of pain, and frankly, a really fear
6:43
that we are only just beginning to see the tip of it. And I
6:47
think it's a real memo for Australian policymakers to
6:50
change course. Now before we hit the iceberg,
6:53
we'll read so what is so completely mad about this is
6:57
that the EU have arbitrarily decided oh, you can't have more
7:00
than 30% of nitrogen or something ammonia in the soil.
7:04
And it's all these small it's always the small business people
7:08
the mum and dad farmers it's all these small plots these farmers
7:11
traditional Heartland has relied on this forever they want to
7:14
wipe them out. So they've said oh, all of you you've got too
7:17
much nitrogen in your soil. So we're coming the government
7:20
comes shuts down your farm. So I mean, this is just insane. But
7:25
as James says Rita This is the future for Australia we talked
7:29
about electric vehicles and those idiots in Wentworth and
7:32
worrying are and all the rest going on about their electric
7:34
cars. The reality is they're going to come after your farming
7:38
land that's what they're going to do. Yeah,
7:41
so no, so the Dutch are very mad analysis now the Belgian farmers
7:46
and the German farmers will be joining the Dutch farmers next
7:49
week they're locking down all the highways and although not an
7:53
official word they're going to stop delivering to supermarkets
7:58
people have no idea what's going to hit it's gonna be really bad
8:03
by the way don't you remember was about out eight nine years
8:07
ago we talked about on the show the French develop the idea of
8:11
of spewing crap on the side of Yes, yes. Remember the French
8:16
had some therapists all about something that French farmers
8:19
they don't manure? They will know but they also had some sort
8:23
of a combine you know some sort of a wheat gathering thing and
8:26
they spray
8:27
it you spray it
8:29
out yes about 30 feet and they're coating the some
8:33
Parliament buildings with
8:34
it. And that's pretty much what the Dutch farmers are doing so
8:36
they get what I think is what we would call here the shit kicker
8:40
which is a piece of farm equipment and they just turn it
8:44
around and pointed right at the government building and I I will
8:47
say one of our producer Richard pointed out that was talking
8:51
about how those pissed off farmers were hitting police vans
8:54
with a sledgehammer in each hand yeah yeah I should have known
8:59
better but those are the they're called the Romeo's these are
9:02
undercover cops and their whole you know they're agitators like
9:06
what we saw it you know the phony baloney undercover X
9:11
agents at one six Jan six. Oh yeah. The insurrection? And I
9:15
went back and I looked at the video and yeah, the guys have
9:17
earpieces in and they're pretending to be protesters so
9:20
they're just there to make everybody look bad. I think the
9:22
farmers do a good enough job though with the with the shit
9:24
kickers.
9:25
I liked that. That. Yeah, I liked the idea.
9:28
A climate activist in London glued his hands to a Van Gogh
9:33
frame.
9:34
Two of them two people, two people, one person on each side
9:38
of the frame. I mean,
9:43
will this did they really think this will work? I mean, this
9:47
results in anything except not being able to view Van Gogh from
9:51
closer. That's the only thing that will result in but some of
9:55
these. They're coming out of everywhere. Jonathan nut jobs.
9:59
This is I cut this down. This is Betsy Rosenberg she I guess she
10:04
started green TV green tv.com. And she was asked to come on
10:09
some talk show. And because, you know, the Supreme Court said,
10:13
Hey, EPA, you don't have the right to rule over emission
10:18
targets for every single state. So now we've got to come out and
10:22
go nuts. And I just have it cut out. So she was arguing with
10:26
another guy and the other guy is clearly you know, he's like
10:28
climate change bullcrap. And so all of that back and forth, I
10:32
cut out I just left in all of the little memes and slogans and
10:38
words, she's trying to trying to come up with a new catchphrase
10:43
that will, you can just hear that she's a propagandist. And
10:47
of course, not a climate scientist,
10:49
the courts of the EPA overreached, and did so at the
10:52
direction of the executive branch a check in ballots. Why
10:56
not just go to Congress now,
10:57
because Congress has shown that it's completely incapable of
11:01
acting on climate change. And climate change is getting worse
11:04
by the day, the heat waves, the droughts. Everything that you
11:08
see around you is a result of climate change in terms of
11:10
extreme weather events,
11:12
everything you see around you everything, John, everything is
11:15
everything is everything. So Congress doesn't RAM brakes.
11:18
Yeah, app, this is really this. They're kicking the carbon can
11:21
down the road. It's basically just saying, we'll make sure
11:24
that we don't do anything, probably until it's too late.
11:26
And it is late in the game. I cannot believe in mid 2022 When
11:30
99.9% of all climate scientists which I don't think you are,
11:35
Alex, I saw that you studied computer science in college
11:38
doesn't make you an expert on climate change. I'm not a
11:40
scientist either. But I believe science and we have a good here
11:43
brain go Oh, shit. I'm not a science. I should probably
11:45
mention that. Oops. All right, Alex, you could hear it. You
11:48
could hear the gears crunching
11:49
I saw that you studied computer science in college doesn't make
11:52
you an expert on climate change. I'm not a scientist either. But
11:55
I believe science and we have a problem in this country with eco
11:59
illiteracy. Illiteracy
12:01
go illiteracy.
12:02
And this kind of just really distorting of the situation does
12:07
not help. And we have no time to waste. I mean, do you not
12:10
understand what's happening? I was just in Rome last week. The
12:13
river is so low you can
12:15
I love it where she says I was just in Rome last week probably
12:17
for a conference you know talk about netzero it you can almost
12:21
see the sand. They declared a state of emergency they call it
12:24
state of calamity there because the Latvia region Rome is in is
12:29
so dry and that the heatwave just went across Europe twice.
12:33
We just went through two heat waves here while I was away. I
12:36
mean, records are are breaking and temperatures are melting.
12:40
It's just beyond belief. We have four
12:44
temperatures. I can't I'm so upset. I can't talk straight
12:47
temperatures are melting
12:49
and that the heatwave just went across Europe twice. We just
12:52
went through two heat waves here while I was away. I mean,
12:55
records are are breaking and temperatures are melting. It's
13:00
just beyond belief. We have 420 parts per million of greenhouse
13:03
gases in the atmosphere right now.
13:05
I love the 420 meme. Thanks, lady.
13:07
It's gone up exponentially quickly, compared to what
13:11
happened before the last 20 to 50 years. I mean, what about
13:15
that is normal? And by the way, every time you see
13:18
time to respond to Alex, Alex, I'll give you time to respond.
13:21
Let's let Betsy finish what she was saying. Oh,
13:24
thank you. There's a signature when you when you see somebody
13:27
in Oklahoma or Texas who has been hit by a tornado or a
13:30
hurricane of fire. Extreme wildfires are a huge problem.
13:34
When they say we've never seen anything like this. We've never,
13:37
we can't prepare for this. We can't.
13:39
This is interesting. Because she talks about a signature. And for
13:46
her to say, you know, what she means is hey, there's something
13:49
you should pay attention to. People keep saying we've never
13:52
seen this before. This has never happened before. This is
13:55
something Yeah. But for her to call that a signature. I don't
14:00
know that sounds like something Norman Lear would put in a
14:03
document. You know what I mean? Make sure you put the signature
14:07
and all your reports
14:09
need some time to respond? Yeah,
14:10
yeah. There's something very fishy about her trying to slip
14:13
that in. As though it's a meme that's hasn't been fully formed.
14:18
And she picked up on some part of it and threw it in there just
14:21
because she's, she's if you listen to her, she's just
14:23
throwing everything at it. You know, she's thrown. She's gone
14:26
nuts. Alex, Alex, I'll
14:28
give you time to respond. Let's let Betsy finish what she was
14:30
saying. I just I just
14:31
want to say thank you. There's a signature when you when you see
14:34
somebody in Oklahoma or Texas has been hit by a tornado or a
14:37
hurricane of fire. Extreme wildfires are a huge problem
14:41
when they say we've never seen anything like this. We've never
14:45
we can't prepare for this. We can't build back whole towns and
14:48
parts of cities have been leveled like Hiroshima bombs. Oh
14:52
from the storms on steroids that we've never seen before. What
14:55
about that is a joke?
14:56
Where are the whole cities that have been leveled like
14:59
Hiroshima? bombs
15:01
paradise.
15:04
Hmm, that but that wasn't from extreme weather.
15:06
She was talking about torlys A fire, extreme weather, extreme
15:11
weather fire weather calls caused the fire. Okay. Not the
15:15
fact that the land management and the fire management budgets
15:20
of California were cut, probably 50% word I heard in California
15:26
to go elsewhere. You know, Gender Studies. Don't blame
15:32
that.
15:34
Now I was I was funny you say that I was rereading industrial
15:39
society in his future last night. For those who don't know,
15:43
this is commonly known as the Unabomber manifesto.
15:47
Right.
15:49
Professor Ted, and so and I'm reading through just the
15:52
introduction. And right away he says, schooling will be turned
15:57
into technological psychology, you know, every exercise will be
16:01
meant to shape and opinion, people will be who come out will
16:05
be taught not to make waves to be kind to everybody. In fact,
16:11
what he says in so many words is they will be over socialized
16:15
under informed, and they will be given doctrine that they will be
16:18
taught in schools and he wrote this, but early 80s. This what
16:23
we're what we're witnessing here is what he warned for the reason
16:27
he blew people up because he wanted this published, of
16:29
course, it did get published and no one cared. I don't know if
16:32
anyone actually read it. No, no one cared. Alright, stop killing
16:36
people. It's well worth it's well worth a read. It's just
16:43
saying this leads to
16:48
climate change.
16:49
You got a climate change issue?
16:51
Well, I think so. I was I'm sorry. I was engrossed with that
16:56
clip so
16:56
I can understand.
16:58
What do we got? We got Oh, interesting. I guess there's a
17:06
bird flu outbreak we got to deal with. We're going to talk about
17:10
global warming in Iraq.
17:12
In Iraq, no less.
17:14
In other news, Iraq is experiencing record temperatures
17:17
during a summer heatwave that's caused both droughts and
17:20
sandstorms. It's yet another side effect of global warming.
17:24
One place that's hard to get creative and dealing with the
17:27
soaring temperatures. The zoo in Baghdad.
17:30
Oh, man.
17:32
There was a report I had in the previous I think it was a
17:35
previous episode. And before that, I have my it was the same
17:40
thing. It was almost exact same report looks look for the word
17:43
Iran because they were talking about global warming and Iran.
17:49
Here it is. Temperatures on Iran soared to 126 degrees Fahrenheit
17:54
Monday. Last week, the heat index soared to 165 degrees
17:59
Fahrenheit and parts of Iran due to high heat and high humidity.
18:02
Oh 65. That seems rather hard to know.
18:07
But that was temperature. That wasn't the temperature if you'd
18:09
listened carefully. That's bullcrap. Oh, let me listen
18:12
carefully. The temperatures on Iran soared to 126 degrees
18:16
Fahrenheit Monday. Last week, the heat index soared to 165
18:21
degrees Fahrenheit and parts of Iran due to high heat and hiking
18:25
index. Yeah. What is this heat index?
18:27
The heat index is like the new
18:31
scale Oh, so then they it's just really temperature. 105 degrees
18:36
feels like 126
18:40
that kind of thing. Oh, man.
18:42
We should figure that out, then maybe that's a wet bulb moment.
18:47
Key index and the wet ball when those two meet, you're screwed.
18:51
You're screwed. So this, of course leads to you know, this
18:58
Dutch thing which and I think the Dutch are the canary in the
19:00
coal mine here that because of nitrogen, they are telling
19:06
farmers you have to close down. And you know, it's it's a
19:10
mystery. This
19:11
is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. The fact that
19:13
he even got that this far is amazing to me.
19:16
Well, the Dutch are very docile.
19:21
They must be they Well,
19:23
except for the farmers, the farmers saying no, I want to
19:26
pass this on to my kids. My kids love it. It's a family business.
19:30
You know, we love our animals. And we don't agree with what
19:34
you're doing now. Remember, the Netherlands has the formula
19:37
formerly known as the Royal Dutch DSM chemical factory has
19:42
switched to becoming the world's leader in taste and texture.
19:47
Products for soy and insect based protein is 8 billion euros
19:55
a year so they know what they're doing and they're doing all
19:57
kinds of indoor agriculture. You know, growing stuff and
20:03
vertically instead of, you know, the growing it in warehouses the
20:08
use and all kinds of chemicals.
20:11
Delicious coming from no split. No,
20:13
it's crap, of course. But just to get us ready for this here in
20:18
the United States PBS, which is now PBS, they receive more
20:24
funding from the public than NPR. I think PBS is are they not
20:28
more tied to the government? I mean, by
20:32
the SPS is the Corporation for Public Broadcasting money, which
20:36
is contribute. It's just a giant consortium of money that comes
20:39
in every which way. And the government contributes to it
20:42
too.
20:42
Yeah. And of course, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and
20:46
Arthur Daniels Midland and all the
20:49
all the all the agriculture companies
20:51
all the biggies. Monsanto, Monsanto, so they have a
20:55
division called PBS Learning met media Learning Media. This is
21:00
where you can learn through media. And they have a right
21:06
there on their homepage. Today they have a lesson, because this
21:10
is learning media, environmental benefits of eating insects. I'm
21:16
sure you're kind of interested. What environmental benefits of
21:24
eating insects. Let's have a listen.
21:28
Forecasts predict that by 2050, the human population will have
21:33
swelled to over 9 billion. If current eating habits continue,
21:39
that would mean a doubling of meat production
21:41
explained to me how if we're 8 billion now when we go to 9
21:46
billion, why do we have to double meat production? I don't
21:52
quite understand.
21:54
That's a good one. And you know, that was so obvious. It just
21:56
went right by everybody know?
22:00
What is it with one extra billion that we have to double
22:03
the meat production?
22:05
Well, the question needs to be asked,
22:08
Is this crazy? Well, it is of course based on current trends,
22:11
current trends,
22:14
and current trends are away from eating meat
22:18
continue, that would mean a doubling of meat production
22:22
ominous drums but that could prove very damaging to our
22:26
planet. How we produce meat is awful for the environment so
22:32
to produce
22:34
you've got this is the whole reason for the clip is this lady
22:40
how we produce meat is awful for the environment. So to produce
22:45
more meat than we already do is incredibly problematic.
22:49
Problematic pound of beef compared to a pound of corn,
22:53
take seven times more water and 100 times more land. This
22:58
contribute love
22:58
comparing beef to corn. And what does that even about beef to
23:03
corn Hey, you should stop eating beef eat corn paired
23:05
to a pound of corn takes seven times more water, you know
23:09
and you can stop right there because this something has to be
23:11
said, you know this false narrative that false comparisons
23:15
the there's another word for where you take one thing and
23:18
compare it to something this has nothing to do it. I mean beef
23:20
lives, you know, grazing grazing land is usually can't be used
23:25
for anything else. A lot of beef has grown on this. You see it
23:28
all over every country. You got it all over Texas, we have it
23:31
all over California. Just huge areas swaths of what amounts to
23:35
weeds eventually, because they turn brown and then they catch
23:39
on fire. But that we have acres and acres of this can easily be
23:44
used for grazing and as it does take hundreds of acres of it,
23:47
but it's used for nothing as you can't grow corn on it. You can't
23:50
do jack shit with it. But But beef can eat off of this land
23:55
and they can grow from it. And yes, it does take a lot of water
23:59
to because it rains everywhere when it rains and so you're
24:03
gonna count the water coming from the sky landing in this in
24:06
this otherwise useless land. Sure. But this is bullcrap.
24:11
Because it's just amazing to me that they keep promoting it.
24:14
The term you're looking for is false equivalency.
24:17
false equivalency. This is the one of the worst examples and
24:22
you're hearing it right here on your, your friends from PBS
24:26
already do is incredibly problematic.
24:29
To produce a pound of beef compared to a pound of corn
24:33
takes seven times more water and 100 times more land. This
24:38
contributes to droughts and high levels of deforestation. Many
24:43
scientists and policymakers are now suggesting that if we hope
24:46
to
24:48
how does that cause droughts.
24:51
All this contributes to produce a pound of beef compared to a
24:56
pound of corn takes seven times more water and 100 times more
25:01
land. This contributes to droughts and high levels of
25:05
deforestation.
25:06
I don't think it I mean, does it actually contribute to a
25:09
drought? A drought is a weather related event,
25:11
take the you can take the logic of these people, and you count
25:15
the car, cow farts. Seriously, I think it's gonna from methane
25:22
from cow farts contributes to global warming, technically. So,
25:28
yes,
25:29
okay. Many scientists and policymakers are now suggesting
25:34
that if we hope to feed everyone, we need a fundamental
25:38
change.
25:41
It's not to say that conventional animal agriculture
25:43
can't fit in with the sustainable food system. But the
25:46
mass production and the way that we're doing it now is simply
25:49
unsustainable.
25:51
I agree with that the
25:52
answer may lie in exploiting a special ability found in many
25:56
invertebrates.
25:58
special ability
26:01
it turns out that insects have the potential to make protein
26:04
far more efficiently than other animals. The reason lies in
26:11
their physiology, this physiological difference has a
26:14
major effect on the quantity of resources they need to grow.
26:18
Since insects aren't wasting energy trying to keep their
26:21
bodies warm, most of the calories they eat can be
26:24
converted into nutrients that we can Denny a much higher
26:27
conversion efficiency with an insect than you would with a
26:30
mammal. When it comes to generating animal protein
26:34
efficiently, insects rule to produce a pound of beef requires
26:40
nearly 10 pounds of feed. for growing a pound of insects needs
26:46
less than two pounds. One pound of beef also requires over 2000
26:53
gallons of water there it is. That the same weight of insect
26:58
can take less than 12 gallons. If you're farming an insect, you
27:04
don't need to feed them nearly as much as you would a mammal of
27:08
the same size. Insects offer so much promise they're a really
27:12
accessible form of protein that you know potentially could feed
27:15
the world.
27:15
Oh, thank you PBS. I feel good about that. Now. You know, by
27:22
their logic you know, there's there's a there's a there's an
27:27
there's a middle between beef and bugs. And that's obvious to
27:33
eat the humans. Now we take less resources. But yet we're on
27:39
tastier than bugs.
27:41
So we got to be tastier than both what isn't? Well, you know,
27:44
I would like to see the cafeteria at PBS serve bug
27:46
dishes and see how far they get
27:50
the the commercial that advertise the Swedish food
27:57
company oof, they did the bizarre burger. Had Halloween at
28:02
Halloween and it was like oh, this tastes just like human
28:04
flesh. They got to know those rules those rules gave the ad an
28:08
award. Ghouls man these people are ghouls seriously
28:15
wow it's really even know about this. Oh, yeah, it didn't play
28:20
out here.
28:20
Yeah, yeah, it hasn't played anywhere probably but it got an
28:24
award
28:34
and we did have we did have our first taste like blue. We did
28:38
have our first climate lockdown. Where Curacao you remember the
28:45
member the Dutch family that are nomads and have been traveling
28:48
around for two and a half years. Go through Africa. He's donate
28:52
he donated a couple of weeks and maybe two months ago. As send a
28:55
picture and then of the of the masks on the on the goats. Yeah,
29:01
okay, ring a bell. So he says Adam and John after two and a
29:05
half years of traveling we finally settled down in the old
29:07
Dutch colonial Island Curacao. The island is an independent
29:10
nation. Of course still they need money and requested from
29:13
the Netherlands. Well, a funny thing happened last week and I
29:16
think we are the first in the world to have it. I think we had
29:18
the first climate lockdown ever. Last week, Wednesday was a storm
29:23
coming towards the island named Bonnie. This area of the
29:26
Caribbean typically does not have a lot of hurricanes. So our
29:28
prime minister gave us gave a press conference where he told
29:31
us how serious the matter was. And also set a curfew at four in
29:34
the afternoon schools were closed for two days no shops
29:37
were allowed to open. You were not allowed to go out at all
29:40
after 4pm. And the storm of course completely missed them.
29:45
Nothing happened. In the press conference after the storm, the
29:51
breeze the Prime Minister didn't acknowledge he was overreacting
29:54
but instead only mentioned there were too many people on the
29:56
street after the curfew. We should obey the government
29:58
better because climate change is real. Oh people next time it may
30:03
be real you see, that's what he's saying.
30:08
Interesting. I got to I guess a couple more climate. Yeah good.
30:12
Thanks. I get to ocean climate change protests. You heard about
30:15
this. Oh, they're mentioned in moan about the ocean now.
30:21
Lisbon Portugal.
30:22
Hundreds of Procrit have given us an AMI warning but okay in
30:25
Lisbon, Portugal.
30:28
protesters marched Thursday outside the UN ocean conference
30:31
demanding meaningful action to help pollution protect marine
30:34
life and slow the warming of the Earth sees the conference
30:38
brought together some 7000 scientists, activists and heads
30:42
of state Greenpeace oceans policy adviser Laura Mellor
30:46
spoke at a protest outside the talks
30:48
why activists are peacefully trying to peacefully protest
30:51
outside the conference when you the real losers the ocean
30:55
destroyers are out there depleting the oceans as we
30:59
speak.
31:01
The ocean destroyers who's that
31:03
dip day you know them them. But here's an interesting one
31:10
because this is an example of AMI doing a little a character
31:13
assassination while she's in the bushes trying to read a news
31:16
story. And I want to see if you can figure out who she's where
31:22
she gets his report, which is pretty straight up. She decides
31:25
to let's give it give the needle to somebody that she doesn't
31:30
like because I don't know why she doesn't like him. I will
31:33
mention something I'm going to point this out when this happens
31:36
in these various clips. Most of the people on the left and Amy
31:40
it would be right up there with them are atheists wouldn't you
31:46
think so? Would you do kind of agree with that? Yeah,
31:49
that sounds fair. Sure.
31:51
How if somebody is an atheist, why are they so concerned about
31:55
Indian sacred rituals and sacred rights and sacred objects and
32:00
sacred land?
32:01
I agree at least Bill Maher is is consistent. All Crowl Yeah,
32:06
but this is you know, but she's also sensitive you know, as
32:10
you're supposed to be in the media say sacred land.
32:14
Everyone's an idiot for being religious, but the Indians okay
32:17
with that kid, that's just beside the point because I don't
32:19
know where that clip went. But here's the Supreme Court. Now
32:22
you tell me even figure out who she's pushing just out of the
32:25
blue just gives the needle to
32:27
the Supreme Court's voted to sharply limit the Environmental
32:30
Protection Agency's power to regulate carbon emissions from
32:33
power plants. The court six to three ruling in the case of West
32:37
Virginia versus EPA is seen as a major victory for the fossil
32:41
fuel industry and a result of a decade's long attempt to limit
32:45
the regulation of corporations and
32:47
I just make a guest now now that we still have 28 seconds to go.
32:50
Can I just say
32:51
that this would have been a good ask Adam. Yeah,
32:53
here we go. Orange Man bad. I'm just gonna say she's gonna blame
32:56
Trump. That's just my off the cuff. Guess No, wrong. Okay.
32:59
Sure. Not him.
33:02
Liberal Justice Elena Kagan slammed the decision wrote the
33:06
dissent, quote, the court appoints itself instead of
33:10
Congress or the expert agency, the decision maker on climate
33:15
policy. I cannot think of many things more frightening,
33:20
unquote. Joining the majority opinion was Trump appointee
33:24
justice Amy Kony Barrett, whose father helped lead the American
33:28
Petroleum Institute for two decades.
33:31
Oh, well, they had Trump in there. I knew it was true.
33:35
Right? I didn't remember that. But yeah, you I give you a half
33:38
a point. Thank
33:38
you. It was Trump and Jason. I feel like
33:40
J Trump was a genius as he says pot climate. Yeah.
33:45
What was up with that?
33:47
Every time I heard the first time doing it, did she is she
33:50
talking about
33:51
climate? Did she mean hot climate? Or one night? Oh, no.
33:55
She said pot climate.
33:57
Oh, I just want to hear that. That was very odd indeed, here
33:59
some climate
34:00
policy or agency, the decision maker on pot climate policy.
34:07
So it's just a flub, because she she's supposed to say climate
34:11
policy and somehow it comes out as pot
34:13
through decision maker on pot climate policy.
34:17
Like that's a good one pot. You know what? I would like to be a
34:22
part of pot climate policy. I think it's very important. The
34:26
list there. We need to be able to grow stuff. Come on. So I
34:29
do have the I do have one more notch broad climate thing is
34:33
curious. Yeah. And it was a lot of clicks. Okay, so we have a
34:37
Jamaal Bowman. Okay, who was in the climate he was he comes on
34:42
to talk about the climate problems. And he was this is
34:46
interesting. Because they transition to another guy, but
34:50
listen to this Jamaal Bowman one, listen to this. And then
34:55
then, something weird happens.
34:57
That's Congressmember Jamaal Bowman We're joined now by Mr.
35:01
Foley. He's the former head of the Environmental Justice
35:04
Program at the EPA, the Environmental Protection Agency.
35:12
EPA have climate climate issues
35:15
claim how much justice? Oh, I thought
35:18
they were regulating pollution and all the rest of it the
35:22
Environmental Protection Agency. What is this is reminding me of
35:26
the clip we had the last show where the Fed is not supposed to
35:30
deal with, with with diversity. Diversity, justice. Yeah.
35:35
I read that whole bill. Again, it's it's insane. To me, it's
35:40
not even
35:41
for the for the nation that is not going to get passed. That's
35:44
what usually that's what you say why I mean,
35:48
well, a good can't get through the Senate.
35:50
It can. It depends on who's compromised.
35:53
It well, they need 1010 Republicans to join in this
35:56
they're going to have oh, is
35:57
it isn't isn't one of those 6060 votes thing?
36:01
Yeah. That's true. And I ended up with this, I had this sub
36:07
clip called one dash five, which is the is the lies clip, play
36:12
this.
36:13
You are the you are the environmental justice, head of
36:19
the Environmental Justice Program at the EPA, which goes
36:22
to the issue of the disproportionately impacted
36:26
communities of color in this country, but you look more
36:29
globally at the world and who is most affected when the US is
36:33
historically the largest polluter in the world?
36:37
That's a lie.
36:38
We're not historically the largest
36:40
or ugly. Yeah, if you go back to the 1800s. During the Industrial
36:45
Revolution, you can probably make the case that we were
36:49
polluting more than
36:49
anybody else. Yeah. Okay, that's fair. But now it's got to be
36:52
China, China and India. India even more. So. China probably
36:58
could be. It's it's touching go with those two. But Japan, India
37:02
doesn't care. China and India are far worse.
37:07
Doesn't care, either. They put it in all the agreements, and we
37:11
don't care. We're putting it in writing for you. We're not going
37:13
to change until you know 2020 2030s. When
37:17
the 2030s when they start to think about it.
37:19
Oh, okay. That's what I mean. 2050 They won't do the
37:22
Netherlands. You know, they're all of a sudden, they're like,
37:25
oh, you know, we got some problems here. We got some plot
37:28
problems with our with our energy. So they're there. Let me
37:33
finish the sentence. So they'll say sorry, so they they just
37:37
said, would they just approved two nuclear plants, which will
37:39
be done in about 10 years?
37:42
Yeah, they take forever to build course. It's crazy. Yeah, it's
37:47
dumb. So the other thing is, if you listen to that clip, again,
37:50
she talks this, he, he's the climate justice guy at the EPA,
37:55
and he's also supposed to be in charge of world affairs when it
37:59
comes to climate
37:59
justice. And again, let's listen again.
38:01
You are the you are the environmental justice. Head of
38:06
it, the environmental justice head doesn't sound like a title.
38:09
But okay, just program at the EPA, which goes to the issue of
38:13
the disproportionately impacted communities of color in this
38:17
country. But you look more globally at the world and who is
38:21
most affected when the US is historically the largest
38:24
polluter in the world?
38:25
Oh, so he's really he works for the world. He doesn't work for
38:28
the US government. He works to police us because we're hurting
38:32
the other countries.
38:36
kind of deal is that we're paying this guy. Not anymore.
38:40
He's former head. Well, that means somebody else took his
38:44
job. So somebody's getting paid to do this.
38:48
Environmental Justice.
38:50
Let me just see, when it comes to clip to clip to
38:53
ha seconds. It's the Biden
38:56
administration must declare a climate emergency immediately,
39:00
and use every single power at
39:03
its disposal.
39:05
Staff is the Executive Vice President of National Wildlife
39:07
Federation, also the CEO and founder of revitalization
39:10
strategies. Mustafa, welcome back to Democracy Now. First,
39:15
hold on a second. I got it. I gotta change. I gotta make it.
39:19
This was actually the original clip, change, clip change and
39:23
that change? I'm sorry, this is the original clip. dad moved
39:26
into the other guy. That's how it started. So let's start with
39:29
that in mind.
39:30
Okay. By the way, this the environmental justice head, and
39:34
it's literally PBS has that headline, EPA environmental
39:39
justice head resigns. He resigned he left. So why I'm
39:47
gonna find out as we listen to the clip, the Biden
39:49
administration
39:50
must declare a climate emergency immediately, and use every
39:55
single power at its disposal.
39:58
I'm sorry, he resigned in 2017 under Trump because Trump,
40:03
Trump's
40:04
executive vice president of National Wildlife Federation,
40:06
also the CEO and founder of revitalization strategies, we
40:10
stop a welcome back to Democracy Now first respond to the court's
40:15
ruling.
40:15
Well, you know, this radical court, the decision that they
40:18
came down with is deeply disappointing. It is also
40:22
destabilizing, and it is deadly. My grandmother says that when
40:26
you know better, do better, the court knew better, it just
40:30
decided not to do better. And because of that, they've put
40:33
people's lives in danger. And they have also put in place
40:37
steps that will accelerate the climate crisis. We have to you
40:42
know, continue to engage with frontline communities to make
40:45
sure that they are going to have the resources they need to be
40:48
able to navigate this decision as their lives have literally
40:51
been put in the crosshairs.
40:52
Sounds like we should have had his grandmother running the
40:54
show. She has a cool slogans.
41:03
Let's go to clip three. Tell us what the original biolay Stop
41:07
stop. Now we're back to the climate justice guy. Oh, yeah.
41:10
Dynamite.
41:11
Tell us what the original case, West Virginia versus EPA is how
41:17
did this all begin?
41:19
Well, it began because of the Clean Power Plan. And of course,
41:22
we need to go back to the Clean Air Act and just share with
41:26
everyone you know that Congress stated at that time that the
41:30
Environmental Protection Agency had a right and responsibility
41:34
to make sure that they were addressing the air pollution and
41:36
protecting public health and the environment. Fast forward to the
41:40
Clean Power Plan, which was actually put in place to be able
41:44
to minimize the impacts that were happening from carbon
41:48
pollution to put in place the rules that are necessary to make
41:51
sure that we have a safety net across our country rules to be
41:54
able to lower the carbon emissions. So the case that they
41:58
brought forward is a number of states who did not want EPA to
42:02
be able to have the ability to do that, and as was stated
42:05
earlier, was driven by the fossil fuel producing states,
42:11
and those industries were the main drivers.
42:14
So the ruling comes at a time when climate scientists are
42:19
urging rich nations to significantly cut down
42:22
greenhouse gas emissions and divest from fossil fuels. Of
42:26
course, this not only impacts the United States, this decision
42:30
will reverberate around the world, talk about how it will
42:35
impact the US is plan to cut carbon emissions by what 50% By
42:43
the end of the decade, something that President Biden reference
42:46
when he talked about this decision being devastating, it
42:49
makes it
42:50
much more difficult to be able to achieve the goals that the
42:53
IPCC and the National Climate Assessment has shared with us,
42:56
you know, domestically in our country, just to actually anchor
43:00
folks and some facts we've got between 200 300,000 people who
43:03
die prematurely from air pollution,
43:05
climate locked down climate locked down.
43:09
You're gonna die. How do they know this? By the way?
43:11
I don't know, the former head of the some thing.
43:15
They're dying of air pollution. Yeah, we've heard this for the
43:19
or the years, we keep hearing this. I mean, somebody might
43:22
have emphysema and air pollution doesn't help. And by nothing
43:27
helps. Hold on. Well, yeah, this is not good. Is the last one
43:35
this is the EPA decision is about the EPA decision by the
43:39
courts, which is the worst thing that's ever happened, of course.
43:44
Here's some quotes from Democracy Now.
43:46
Capping carbon dioxide emissions at the level that will force a
43:49
nationwide transition away from the use of coal to generate
43:53
electricity may be a sensible solution to the crisis of the
43:57
day. But it is not plausible that Congress gave EPA the
44:01
authority to adopt on its own such a regulatory scheme.
44:04
Roberts said, liberal Justice Elena Kagan slam that decision
44:09
writing in the dissent, what is
44:11
this journalism? Amy?
44:14
She likes to say slam she used to use slammed every time with
44:16
Trump, as it was slightly but he is slammed and there's some some
44:21
other term she used it was was inappropriate. But so
44:27
well, let me finish anyway, let me let me finish her clip.
44:29
That was the first part was that was Roberts his comment? And
44:32
then Kagan has some opposite to say to
44:35
Elena Kagan slam that decision writing in the dissent. Whatever
44:40
else this court may know about it does not have a clue about
44:44
how to address climate change. And let's say the obvious the
44:49
stakes here are high. Yet the court today prevents
44:53
congressionally authorized agency action to curb power
44:57
plants carbon dioxide emissions do Justice Kagan went on to
45:01
write the court appoints itself instead of Congress or the
45:06
expert agency, the decision maker on climate policy. I
45:10
cannot think of many things more frightening
45:13
you God, but slash nothing's more.
45:20
The courts not saying hey, just throwing it out is saying no,
45:23
this you can't do that. They're not saying that they're gonna do
45:26
it. That's what she implied the secret. Listen to what Kagan
45:29
said. What she wrote was she read it correctly, she implied
45:32
that the courts gonna take over. That's what she implied is
45:35
bullcrap. I don't know what's wrong with this woman. Kagan and
45:38
Sotomayor are two terrible justices.
45:43
Yeah, they certainly don't, you know, it's so poorly understood
45:48
this. The three branches of government in you know, that
45:52
people are so insane right now. It's like, No, we did just did
45:55
not legitimate. We have to get rid of the Supreme Court. It's
45:57
no good, you know, Congress, they're the ones that do it all.
46:02
The Supreme Court bullcrap. As if even you know, because this
46:06
is this is all coming. This is going back to the origins of the
46:10
United States, with states rights. This is what's being
46:13
presented and states rights like this haven't been recognized in
46:17
a long time. Probably not really during my lifetime at all. So
46:23
when it comes to, obviously, Roe v. Wade is one was okay, this
46:27
has got to go to the States. Same with with emissions. And
46:31
I'm sure it's going to happen with with education. And it's
46:35
about time because all you hear these people saying is that we
46:38
need to make rules rules have to have rules, not laws, rules, but
46:41
just make some rules for everybody, to rule followers
46:45
rules. Now, if if people were smart, who are interested in
46:49
their future in the United States and elsewhere, you would
46:52
probably look to the European Union and see how they're doing.
46:55
How did that work with the energy vendor in Germany, the
46:58
energy transition? I have a couple of clips that address
47:02
that specifically. This is the editor of what is this the
47:06
Australian? The Australian isn't the environmental editor, Graham
47:10
Lloyd, these all
47:11
started a lot earlier than when Putin rolled his tanks into
47:15
Ukraine in February, didn't it?
47:18
Yeah. Hi, Peter did and really the sort of initial wishes
47:22
referring
47:22
to of course, is the price of oil and gas prices around the
47:25
world
47:25
did and really the the sort of initial call preceded the war in
47:31
Ukraine. And it came when there was a drought in wind all across
47:36
Europe during the last summer. So reserves of gas that would
47:41
ordinarily have been stockpiled to use in winter, were used due
47:46
to the absence of renewable power, which set up a cascading
47:50
disaster that has now resulted in dramatically higher prices.
47:56
Fears that they have are going to be shortages and blackouts,
48:00
and a mad scramble across Europe to return to coal, gas and other
48:05
things. And it's interesting to look at long Berg's analysis he
48:09
is saying, well, for all the money that has been spent,
48:13
there's been very little return that is most evident in in
48:18
Germany. But it's all down to the Evan Jellicle desire to have
48:24
renewables at the expense of everything else. If you look at
48:28
the situation in Australia, where there's been a lack of
48:32
exploration for for gas in particular, that is mirrored
48:36
right across the European continent. they've rejected the
48:40
great advances that were made in the United States with shale oil
48:44
and gas. And even though they have the reserves, they haven't
48:48
been able to exploit them. This is what's led really to a global
48:52
shortage of of the commodity. And, you know, there's a
48:56
discussion in Europe as to what extent Russia has pre planned a
49:00
lot of this by encouraging people to campaign against
49:03
resource development in their own countries.
49:06
I love it. So now that everything is failing, Damn that
49:10
Putin. This was his long game. I had no idea we were foiled again
49:16
by Putin. Putin and you know, the Nord Stream one pipeline the
49:21
original is going to be shut down for maintenance on July 11.
49:26
Yeah, will that open will that reopen soon? Well, you know, so
49:29
it's already dripping you know, I don't said likely but what
49:33
this really if you want to talk about the long game, it's the
49:36
the med pipeline with the with the Leviathan fields and
49:40
everything down there off. So you know, that the Israelis and
49:43
Palestinians are fighting over, that's going to be the mat
49:46
that's going to be the most massive longest underground
49:49
pipeline ever built. So there's lots of lots of things at play
49:56
here that it this is all just one big shot. Oh, it with
50:02
Siemens energy, the guys who are supposed to bring us the
50:06
revolution for Germany, for all of the EU with their hydro gene,
50:11
as they say they mean hydrogen. But that's a hydro gene. And
50:16
Siemens CEO of Siemens infrastructure was interviewed.
50:20
This is this is all on your own news. It's fantastic. They just
50:24
anything to make you feel better about. I mean, what are they
50:26
what are they paying now they must be paying 15 to $17 a
50:30
gallon. For gas in, in the EU, it's got to be
50:36
close to that failure of natural gas and the prices of the
50:38
heating oil, the rest of history is up like a
50:41
rocket, it's skyrocketed. So any good news is good news.
50:46
Yes. How can consumers actively participate in the energy
50:50
transition?
50:51
Oh, consumers, you can actively participate in energy transition
50:55
that energy Bandha.
50:56
That's a very important point, every kilowatt hour, which is
51:00
not being consumed does not need to
51:02
be produced. So stop using that's how you do it stop using.
51:05
So therefore, you know, reducing consumption being very mindful
51:09
buying renewable energy, and perhaps also driving an electric
51:13
car. Which Siemens technologies actually could enable this
51:17
participation. Starting with the the car charging that I just
51:22
mentioned, with our electric charging infrastructure, of
51:24
course, we provide a full blown solution, AC and DC charging,
51:28
which is blown up but those of you integrate renewable energy
51:31
projects. I
51:33
think it's interesting. He says we have full blown solutions for
51:36
AC and DC charging. That's interesting. Are there any DC
51:41
electric vehicles that were aware of DC
51:44
or DC? Or DC?
51:46
But they charge AC? As far as I know, I don't think they charge
51:49
DC Sure they do.
51:54
I'm pretty sure they charges. Do you know what that box? Is? That
51:57
converter? You did? You?
51:58
No, no, no, you plug you plug it straight into 240? The car they
52:02
had now of course it has to be in the car is
52:04
a box in between?
52:07
No, if the only the only the only box that you have
52:12
is sending 240 straight to that. Yes, yes.
52:14
Yes. Yes, you can put 240 straight into the Tesla.
52:18
Absolutely. But the trans the transverter. The WHAT IS IT
52:24
trends. The converter, I'm looking for the world, the
52:29
inverter, the inverter is in the car, that box on the wall is
52:32
just it's just to charge you more money. I have one in the
52:36
garage here. It's just it's a 240 outlet and anyone can roll
52:40
their car away.
52:41
You can if it's if two cars running on DC, there's got to be
52:45
a way to just bypass the AC and go straight DC to be more
52:49
functional, more efficient, would
52:50
it but who has DC charging in their home? And don't tell me
52:53
that's the box? Because I don't think it is nobody
52:55
i Okay, let's assume that's the case. I'm gonna go along with it
52:59
because I'm not looking at up. But if there's a effect, if
53:04
there's a way of doing DC charging, it'd be more
53:05
effective. And he's talking about DT like a DC charger like
53:08
a station?
53:09
Yeah. That's why I'm not understanding because as far as
53:12
I know, all cars, all cars use AC to charge. I'm just asking
53:16
you a question. We don't have the answer
53:17
one solution for Hey, we
53:19
shouldn't use masking, we should stop asking.
53:22
Let's just stop asking questions
53:23
to the infrastructure of
53:26
this, we're talking about this. So there's a place where they're
53:28
going to put four hydrogen pumps we're talking about hydrogen
53:32
here. Yeah, hydrogen pumps over here on this gas station near
53:36
me. I go over, they don't know anything about it. But if you
53:40
look at all the listings and everything Oh, where's where
53:43
hydrogen is gonna go in. And they have all these places where
53:46
hydrogen is gonna go into and get your hydrogen car and you
53:48
and fill it up here and there. Well, this guy
53:50
this guy actually has a term for it.
53:53
Which I'm like my gas station not having pumps.
53:56
No for the for the hydrogen for the hydrogen not going to call
53:58
it hydrogen. Hey, how bad is that market? Hydrogen? No,
54:03
they're not going to they're not going to market it as hydrogen.
54:06
Of course not. That that makes you think boom. That makes you
54:10
think Hindenburg No, no, no, no, they've no hydrogen was always
54:14
downplayed. The Hindenburg was probably a PR stunt to make it
54:17
even worse, although that was not whatever. He has a term for
54:22
it.
54:22
Would you say? He said wasn't hydrogen in the in the
54:26
Hindenburg.
54:27
Initially, we went through this initially, it was always hilly.
54:31
He was always extremely hilly. And because it was a natural
54:34
resource, and then they
54:35
went to hydrogen half Yeah. And then they went to hydrogen and
54:37
then the first should work and the first not the first voyage
54:40
of the Hindenburg. But the 12th voyage of the Hindenburg blew up
54:44
when they were using hydrogen.
54:46
Sure, so I'm in a blow up eventually.
54:50
Starting with the the E car charging that I just mentioned,
54:53
with our electric charging infrastructure, of course, we
54:56
provide a full blown solution for AC and DC charging which is
54:59
important On get it into great renewable energy projects, as
55:04
well, as you know, digitalization is the enabler
55:06
for the energy transition. So we provide grid software and
55:10
intelligent building software who is helping this to bring
55:14
more transparency and take better decisions? Is there any
55:17
flagship project, which you can mention in this context? There's
55:22
there's many around the world. But if I mentioned just as the
55:26
fire Township, the city of one zero, for example, where
55:29
everything comes together, so the newable energy, solar wind,
55:33
and then even a hydrogen hydrogen plant where we can
55:36
create, if you will, and then we have battery storage, yes, it's
55:39
totally independent as an island also in the micro grids
55:42
supported with our software. And then also we have, of course,
55:46
the, we have, of course, the immobility and charging
55:51
infrastructure included as well.
55:53
Okay. E mobility, but the most important one E fuel, it's not
55:57
hydrogen, it's E fuel E fuel.
56:00
Oh, he said hydrogen in his little presentation. He
56:02
mentioned it twice. He said
56:03
specifically for the E fuels. So he said hydrogen, you listen,
56:08
you'll hear it. He said, hydrogen fuel for the for the E
56:11
fuels,
56:12
comes together. So renewable energy, solar, wind, and then
56:16
even a hydrogen hydrogen plant where we can create, if you
56:19
will, and then hydrogen
56:21
plant where we create E fuel. You see, the hydrogen plant
56:24
won't be your guest. It will, but we'll just won't call it
56:27
that. We'll call it E fuel.
56:30
So that's probably to refer to the fuel cell. So if you Yeah, I
56:36
can see you're trying to pull that off
56:37
without pay. He's the CEO on a press junket. Hello. That's what
56:41
you do. That's what you
56:43
do. And he's what is he talking about this island? With an
56:46
island? Yeah, you can have electric Hi, all these different
56:48
things, because you can't go very well.
56:51
He's talking about a small town, which he's calling an island
56:54
because it's one of those tests because they
56:55
lose it.
56:57
Because no one lives there is deserted island. Yeah. Now, but
57:02
remember, this is what Queen Ursula told us. That's why I've
57:06
got new sorts out on Siemens. You gotta keep an eye on these
57:11
fuckers.
57:12
So you have a Google thing on Siemens,
57:15
do we have a Google thing on Siemens, and we have 1000s 1000s
57:19
in your pocket? And we have anyway, yes, because we have
57:21
1000s of producers who are also trolling for this. Our people
57:24
are smart. That's why they're producers, they pay attention to
57:27
this stuff. Now in the United States, we don't have rationale
57:33
like E fuel, we just say shut up.
57:36
They say that this could be a long a war measured in years.
57:40
And I think everybody understands why this is
57:42
happening. But is it sustainable? What do you say to
57:44
those families who say, Listen, we can afford to pay for 85 A
57:48
gallon for months, if not years, this is just not sustainable.
57:54
What's heard from the President today was a clear articulation
57:57
of the stakes. This is about the future of the liberal world
58:00
order. And we have to stand firm
58:01
Shut up. The future of the liberal world order, there it
58:06
is. Biden advisor,
58:09
that was the dumbest thing anyway,
58:11
Brian Deese. Well, of course, but that's it's because the
58:14
truth came out for a moment.
58:17
Well, on the topic of the dummies in that in the White
58:20
House, yeah. Have you seen this blonde chick? Who sounds exactly
58:23
like Kamala Harris.
58:25
blonde chick, okay. Is this a woman John or just a blonde
58:31
chick? Who does everything? Is she? Is she a spokes Hall?
58:37
No, she's a on tick tock. She's a tick talker. She's a good
58:40
looking blonde.
58:41
Do you know her name?
58:43
I know that you can find her name. But she's, she's famous
58:47
for sounding exactly like Camela hair. I mean, she does. It's an
58:50
invitation to I'm sure she doesn't talk like this all the
58:53
time. But I've also heard another I think Camela is
58:57
someone that that a lot of women can do. But I will I've got a
59:00
62nd clip of her talking and sounding like Camela and you
59:05
have to imagine this is a blonde woman who looks Nordic. Doing
59:11
Kamla Harris.
59:13
Okay, if you wake up, okay, she's already nailing it. And
59:19
don't want to smile. If it takes a little while. Okay. Listen,
59:27
lyrics open your eyes. Okay? And look at the day, okay, I look at
59:34
the day. And listen, you'll see things in a different way. Okay.
59:45
Listen, full stop. Don't stop thinking about tomorrow. Okay?
59:53
Don't stop because it'll soon be here. Okay. It'll be here better
1:00:02
than before. Okay, yesterday is gone. Yes, he's gone. Okay. It's
1:00:08
gone. And listen, most of it is gone. Yeah.
1:00:15
Elsa Kurt
1:00:16
is her name. Okay. Elsa is perfect slug is sweet.
1:00:21
Kurt. That's good. That's good. He's
1:00:24
Dale's it.
1:00:26
That's very good. And I love that she just reciting the
1:00:29
lyrics to Fleetwood Mac was playing in the background.
1:00:32
That's really good. Outstanding. Hey, JP Morgan predicts oil will
1:00:37
be $380 a barrel.
1:00:40
That means this peak
1:00:42
all whenever, during the last year is happening.
1:00:45
Yes, Goldman Sachs making these predictions. And gold in the
1:00:49
thing was headed toward 100. And I think it just may be corrected
1:00:52
for a very short time dropped back down, then it collapsed. In
1:00:56
fact, oil was negative money for a while, like a few days. But
1:01:01
Goldman Sachs at that point at 200. There was nothing that as
1:01:06
soon as they went said 200 It was started going down and kept
1:01:09
going down.
1:01:11
Didn't we track it on the show? Why don't we like tracking to
1:01:13
see if it could hit 200 Come on hit 200 We were looking to ever
1:01:16
get never made. It never went up sad.
1:01:19
I think this was going to happen this time.
1:01:21
Now let's just briefly on inflation, because this is
1:01:24
something that that folds, its headline inflation, which is
1:01:28
food and energy. The two things we've spoken about for the past
1:01:30
hour. Someone sent me this clip of Milton Friedman, from 40
1:01:35
years ago, Milton Friedman, when just the importance of Milton
1:01:37
Friedman and economics is important in economics.
1:01:42
Milton Friedman, yeah, yeah, he's the supply. He's the guy
1:01:46
who defined supply side economics perfectly. And he's
1:01:49
the one who explained stagflation. He was the he was
1:01:53
the every time we have a economic downturn, one. One
1:01:58
economist in particular always shows up, because no one could
1:02:02
explain what happens. It's like, what I don't know what's going
1:02:04
on. I mean, now they're blaming Putin. So all the old theories
1:02:09
go out the door, and one new guy comes up and says, hey, just
1:02:12
listen to me. And I'm gonna tell you what's happening. And that
1:02:14
was Friedman, and he was the last of the great economists.
1:02:19
Here's made it made it made a name for himself.
1:02:22
Here's Milton Friedman, 40 years ago, predicting our current
1:02:26
predicament
1:02:26
in the modern era. The important next step is to recognize that
1:02:34
today, governments control the quantity of money. So that as a
1:02:39
result, inflation in the United States is made in Washington and
1:02:44
nowhere else. Of course, no government any more than any one
1:02:49
of us like to take responsibility for bad things.
1:02:53
We're all of us human. If something bad happens, it wasn't
1:02:56
our fault, then the government is the same way. So it doesn't
1:03:01
accept responsibility for inflation. If you listen to
1:03:05
people in Washington and talk, they will tell you that
1:03:08
inflation is produced by greedy businessmen, or it's produced by
1:03:13
grasping unions, or it's produced by spendthrift
1:03:17
consumers. Or maybe it's those terrible Arab sheiks who are
1:03:22
producing. Now, course businessmen are greeting. Who of
1:03:28
us isn't. Trade Unions are grasping who of us isn't. And
1:03:34
there's no doubt that the consumer is a spendthrift. At
1:03:38
least every man knows that about his wife, Milton, but none of
1:03:43
them produce inflation, for the very simple reason that neither
1:03:47
the businessman nor the trade union, nor the white house wife
1:03:53
has a printing press in their basement on which they can turn
1:03:57
out those green pieces of paper, we call them money. Only
1:04:01
Washington has that printing press. And therefore only
1:04:04
Washington can produce inflation.
1:04:08
There you go from the man I gotta get to that clip as a as
1:04:12
an ending that I don't have.
1:04:13
Here. There's more to that, because it gets really good. Oh,
1:04:17
man. What he does, he starts pointing out, for example, the
1:04:22
inflationary situation that took place during the Confederate
1:04:25
War, when the North bombed the printing presses of the
1:04:31
Confederates and they couldn't print more money. High
1:04:34
innovation stopped dead. Really, no, it went to zero there was no
1:04:42
inflation. And then when they got there, they rebuilt a
1:04:46
printing press operation and some other town where the North
1:04:48
couldn't bomb it. And they started printing money like
1:04:51
crazy. Deflation cranked up again money. A good example. Oh,
1:04:55
that's fine.
1:04:56
Well, now if you ask the other side of the equation, the scent
1:04:59
Row banker for the United States the Federal Reserve the
1:05:02
chairman, Jay, Jay Jerome J. Jake Powell, Jerome Jerome calls
1:05:09
our kid Jerome.
1:05:11
Jerome. Jerome. Jerome.
1:05:15
That's from the What's his face? The time had Jerome Jerome get
1:05:19
my mirror? Here is Powell. And he blames not himself, not the
1:05:24
money printer. It's obvious who's to blame? Was your
1:05:27
customers
1:05:27
talking about gray buck? What's your gray box? Is there
1:05:30
something that you wish you knew that would help in setting my
1:05:34
pricing policy on the one?
1:05:36
Yeah, no, I go back to the same thing, really, which is, what
1:05:40
did we what did we get wrong? And that really was looking at
1:05:43
these supply side issues, and believing that they would be
1:05:47
resolved relatively quickly. And that by that I mean, there was
1:05:51
going to be there were going to be vaccinations everyone would
1:05:53
get vaccinated. So the millions of people who dropped out of the
1:05:56
labor force would come right back in. So we just wouldn't be
1:05:59
under such pressure. That didn't happen for a range of reasons
1:06:02
that didn't happen.
1:06:03
Oh, there it is. Because not everybody got vaccinated. They
1:06:07
expected everybody to jump on the VAX train put it in all of
1:06:11
their models, because of course, everybody will just get
1:06:14
vaccinated. Right? Right.
1:06:17
Exactly what that's got to do with it. The price of bread is
1:06:20
beyond me. But okay.
1:06:22
Oh, will exactly what Milton Friedman said. They'll blame
1:06:25
anything and everything except themselves. There was a I don't
1:06:31
understand it. But I remember the former New York banker told
1:06:34
me that the banks were the about the reverse repo market, which
1:06:39
is now $2.3 trillion. It's doubled in, you know, six months
1:06:44
or something. It's crazy. I said, Now the banks are doing
1:06:46
that, because they're pissed off at the Fed. And so when this
1:06:51
this article from Zero Hedge, which you know, that they're
1:06:54
kind of like the golf gossip brag for for Wall Street, but
1:06:57
they have some pretty, I think they're pretty accurate in a lot
1:06:59
of their analysis,
1:07:00
like Zero Hedge, I think it's got a lot of good stuff.
1:07:04
One point 55% Is the current fed repo rate, which means every
1:07:11
single day, $100 million is created or saved or created, and
1:07:17
given to the banks for parking their money with the Fed. And in
1:07:22
addition to that, we also found out maybe two or three shows
1:07:26
ago, the Fed had removed all reserves, reserve capacity for
1:07:33
the bank. So instead of 10%, they didn't have to have any.
1:07:37
And this is the part that I don't understand. So their
1:07:39
reserve requirement is zero. I'll just read from Zero Hedge,
1:07:44
thus converting the trillions in reserves held at the Fed from
1:07:47
excess reserves to just regular reserves. And so that also now
1:07:53
gets because their reserves are parked at the Fed, I guess. So
1:07:57
that's an additional $141 million dollars a day. So what
1:08:01
Zero Hedge is saying is that the way this is working, where we're
1:08:04
supposed to not be printing as much money with quantitative
1:08:08
easing are going to tightening, that the banks are throwing so
1:08:11
much money into these reverse repos, that it's a quarter of a
1:08:15
billion dollars a day of money that's being created, that has
1:08:19
nowhere to go except into inflation. I know. That was
1:08:25
exactly how I felt about it. I don't quite understand it. Okay,
1:08:29
but when I when Zero Hedge says it, I'm like, oh, maybe it's
1:08:32
true. It's got to be something there.
1:08:37
There was a case, inflation, be us.
1:08:41
So just sticking on. On the unvaccinated those nasty, dirty
1:08:46
bastards who are the cause of inflation? If only they had been
1:08:50
like Dr. Fauci, if only they had gotten their double boost their
1:08:54
double evacs and their double boost, like Dr. Fauci, they
1:08:58
probably be doing much better. Right now.
1:09:00
Dr. Anthony Fauci had a resurgence of COVID 19 symptoms
1:09:04
after a five day course of Paxil IVIG treatment for Fauci is at
1:09:07
one and said he first tested positive for COVID Two weeks ago
1:09:11
with very minimal symptoms. Once he began to feel worse and given
1:09:14
his age doctors prescribed Paxil vape. After the five day course,
1:09:18
Fauci tested negative for three consecutive days, but then had a
1:09:21
positive test. On the fourth day. He started feeling really
1:09:26
poorly and much worse than in the first go around. He said,
1:09:29
doctors would Fauci back on packs of eight and after four
1:09:32
days, he says he feels reasonably good, but not without
1:09:36
symptoms.
1:09:37
Man, I don't wish anyone to die.
1:09:39
No, this is does. This sounds like the end of Fauci? It does.
1:09:43
That doesn't sound good when an old person says I'm feeling
1:09:46
quite poorly. Huh, that doesn't sound very good. I mean,
1:09:53
well, this last round of COVID has a long after life, it gets
1:09:58
kind of lingers in and fool around with it. With this packs
1:10:04
livid thing in some of them and who knows what else ended and
1:10:07
weaken your immune system below the shots?
1:10:10
Well, yes, we do have some data on the safety and efficacy of
1:10:16
the shots. Because this is how it was sold to us safe and
1:10:20
effective anybody can take it safe and effective, you're all
1:10:23
good to go. Here's some data which comes from the epic times.
1:10:26
This right
1:10:27
here is a company called Lincoln national. It's a fairly large
1:10:31
life insurance firm that's quite literally so old that when it
1:10:34
was started, the founders actually asked Abraham Lincoln
1:10:37
son, whether it was okay to use his father's likeness in their
1:10:41
company branding, he agreed. And over the past 117 years, Lincoln
1:10:45
national has grown to be the fifth largest Life Insurance
1:10:47
Company in all of America. However, things aren't so hot
1:10:51
right now in the life insurance business evidenced by the fact
1:10:54
that last year meaning in 2021, Lincoln national reported a 163%
1:11:00
increase in death benefits that were paid out under their group
1:11:03
life insurance policies. Now this development came in the
1:11:06
form of annual statements which Lincoln national filed with the
1:11:09
different state insurance departments throughout the
1:11:11
entire country. And these documents were first obtained by
1:11:14
the Crossroads report through an open records request.
1:11:17
Hmm, boy, yeah, you know, you can phony up the numbers all you
1:11:22
want. But at some point, it comes down to the more insurance
1:11:27
companies, these guys come forward and say, hey, you know,
1:11:30
we know what these numbers are supposed to be. These aren't the
1:11:32
numbers we're, you know, that you guys are telling us because
1:11:36
we got the dead body right here, or here or the morticians that
1:11:40
find that goop and it was blood, the
1:11:43
worms, long wormy goop. In Australia, they're recognizing
1:11:47
vaccine adverse events and they are compensating people for it.
1:11:51
I find this very interesting because this does not go along
1:11:54
with the entire indemnification or immunity that the vaccine
1:12:00
manufacturers certainly or people who vaccinate you,
1:12:05
they're all indemnified. They're all immune from any type of
1:12:10
lawsuit. But Australia is just saying, Well, you know what, a
1:12:14
lot of people got hurt. So we're gonna start shelling out money.
1:12:17
It's been a long road to recovery for Mattie John.
1:12:21
It's a really uncomfortable and quite a frightening experience.
1:12:25
He felt like he was having a heart attack. Two days after
1:12:29
getting the Pfizer vaccine.
1:12:31
I just got this sharp pain that I've never experienced before
1:12:34
and the center of my chest,
1:12:35
diagnosed with severe pericarditis. He was off work
1:12:39
for 10 weeks, you constantly
1:12:41
worry, I suppose that anxiety around. I suppose we're talking
1:12:45
about your heart
1:12:46
Maddies not alone. It's estimated 79,000 People who've
1:12:50
suffered adverse reactions to vaccines. Now the government's
1:12:55
offering compensation claims under $20,000, we'll need
1:12:59
evidence from your doctor claims over $20,000 assessed by a team
1:13:05
of legal experts, the highest fee got reserved for only the
1:13:09
most serious of cases 600,000 could cost the government a lot
1:13:13
of money, Daniel low power a works at Shine Lawyers. He's
1:13:17
looked closely at the government's scheme.
1:13:20
If you do suffer pericarditis, it can result in you being out
1:13:24
of pocket. You know, you might have to see a cardiologist you
1:13:27
might need procedures. So it is definitely appropriate that
1:13:30
there is a vaccination scheme there to compensate those
1:13:33
people. But like
1:13:34
all schemes, there are limitations to make a claim you
1:13:37
must spend at least one night in hospital. And that's a clause
1:13:41
that makes Mattie John ineligible. He was admitted to
1:13:45
hospital twice, but never stayed the night. That
1:13:48
is a little bit frustrating. And out of pocket a fair bit But in
1:13:52
saying that too. It is what it is. And
1:13:55
that's why this game is now open.
1:13:59
That I don't understand why they're doing this though,
1:14:02
aren't they opening themselves up to all kinds of issues?
1:14:05
Well, there's legal systems not the same as ours.
1:14:08
Right. But other countries will see this and people will go like
1:14:11
a Australia's recognizing it. Why can't you recognize it? For
1:14:15
me? It's just going to create more problems, whether they do
1:14:17
anything about
1:14:18
it or not. You're assuming this information gets out?
1:14:21
I'm sorry, what am I even thinking? How about this
1:14:23
information? Then? For two years, two and a half years, the
1:14:27
debate from almost the very beginning that versus lab. Did
1:14:31
it come from a wet market and a bat that had come from the lab
1:14:33
in Wuhan, you Jhansi Dvorak are the only one who has offered a
1:14:38
viable alternative to this debate. And Professor Jeffrey
1:14:43
Sachs, who for two years chaired the lancets COVID. Commission,
1:14:50
the Lancet, no slouchy publication, it's the
1:14:53
publication I would say the lancet universally trusted.
1:14:56
Here's what he said about the debate.
1:14:58
I'll add one per vocative statement, we could take it up
1:15:02
later, it may shock you or not shock you. Or you may say I
1:15:05
already know that Professor Sachs, but I chaired the
1:15:08
commission for the lancet for two years on COVID. I'm pretty
1:15:13
convinced it came out of the US Lab of biotechnology, not out of
1:15:18
nature, just to mention after two years of intensive work on
1:15:22
this, so it's a blunder in my view of biotech, not an accident
1:15:28
of a natural spillover. We don't know for sure, I should be
1:15:33
absolutely clear. But there's enough evidence that it should
1:15:37
be looked into and it's not being investigated. Not in the
1:15:41
United States, not anywhere. And I think for real reasons that
1:15:46
they don't want to look underneath the underneath the
1:15:51
the rug control.
1:15:53
So most people would hear that and say, Oh, he's talking about
1:15:56
the Wuhan lab and I disagree. I think what he's saying is this
1:15:59
is from a US bio lab in the United States which would make
1:16:04
sense for Dietrich.
1:16:07
Yeah, that's what I take it was moved to Wuhan. But it was
1:16:12
developed here. It was moved to Wuhan for further development
1:16:16
another one since it's a piece of shit lab everyone's always
1:16:19
said it was the leaky piece of shit lab. So he says shit lab
1:16:23
that broke let the stuff out all over the place. And next thing
1:16:26
you know, the Chinese are totally freaked out by it
1:16:29
probably arrived at us and there's some we're just seeing a
1:16:32
lot of diplomatic stuff going back and forth. It makes no
1:16:34
sense unless you think of it in those terms. That you know, it's
1:16:38
our thing and they don't you know, they don't want to and so
1:16:40
we the Chinese did something like you better never blame us
1:16:46
for this. Yeah. Okay. From a bad Yeah. Bad.
1:16:52
Oh, yeah. We'll take that. We'll take that. Yeah, I know. The
1:17:00
world is going to shit man. I don't think we've ever seen it
1:17:02
this crazy. Have we ever seen
1:17:03
it? It's always been this crazy. That's the great thing about it.
1:17:06
And with that, I'd like to
1:17:07
thank you for your courage and say in the morning to you the
1:17:09
man who put the C's in counting cow farts ladies and gentlemen,
1:17:13
say hello to my friend on the other end, Mr. John C. Dvorak
1:17:17
in the morning do Mr. Adam curry Oh, so in the morning the whole
1:17:21
shift said see boots on the ground, feed in the air in all
1:17:26
the names and nights out there.
1:17:28
And subs in the water in the morning to the trolls and the
1:17:30
troll room their troll room.io Hello. Good to see everybody
1:17:34
here. We should probably count them. All right. Hey, scurry out
1:17:37
of the way there trolls how many we have for a holiday weekend?
1:17:40
Not bad. 2008 2008? Yes, 2008 was a Sunday. And it's a holiday
1:17:46
weekend people are stuck at the airport. Everyone's at the
1:17:52
airport, believe me. We will have clips about that later. The
1:17:57
troll room is there for you. It is a place for you to enjoy the
1:18:00
full maximum value of your no agenda show but not just that
1:18:04
all have no agenda nation 24/7 There's a stream there. And I
1:18:10
think having built a very unsuccessful one. I think this
1:18:13
is the most successful podcast network. It's all talk no
1:18:16
commercials. It's beautiful. And a lot of them are live and you
1:18:20
can listen to that stream live and you can chat about it with
1:18:24
fellow friends. Typically, it's trolling and you're trolling the
1:18:27
host you're trolling each other but it's a lot of fun. There's
1:18:29
very low moderation as far as I can tell him that troll room and
1:18:32
has never really been for what is it now 13 years of things
1:18:35
been going so we appreciate all the trolls showing up of course
1:18:39
you can also follow us on our Mastodon our accounts are Jhansi
1:18:42
Dvorak at no agenda social.com Adam at no agenda social.com You
1:18:47
can follow those accounts and once you do then of course you
1:18:51
will you'll federate because this works across this is really
1:18:54
is the future of social media. Eventually they'll all move to
1:18:58
this kind of model. So get a leg up get claim your space now
1:19:02
start a mastodon server, you can do it for five bucks a month.
1:19:06
It's turnkey operation. Definitely worth it. I want to
1:19:12
thank the artist for episode 1464 We titled this bomb
1:19:17
Rotterdam I did not get a phone call from my daughter so I guess
1:19:21
she didn't listen or didn't catch Rotterdam was not afraid
1:19:24
of our titles put it that way. And this art was a hattrick
1:19:29
three peat for capitalist agenda. The new Bitcoin sperm
1:19:33
right there beautiful. We both laugh.
1:19:37
We definitely have to note that this was a repurposing of an old
1:19:41
art piece he had done previously. Oh, I hadn't. Did we
1:19:44
talk about that? I didn't know if that had happened. Well,
1:19:46
you'd click on his thing and you'll see it and it's recent
1:19:51
too. But it's it was in different colors that he had but
1:19:53
he designed this little sperm that he was proud of. So you can
1:19:57
see it was going to keep using it forever.
1:20:00
Oh, I see life is good now. Yeah, but he needed the
1:20:03
interesting that was 1463 He had a similar one. You're right, he
1:20:09
was just going to keep pushing that sperm on us until we
1:20:11
finally accepted it. Yeah, you're right.
1:20:13
This was a tough one because there was a lot of good art
1:20:18
but there were there were problems. Well,
1:20:21
the one that we both seem to like was Darren O'Neill's tube
1:20:25
job
1:20:28
and we it was really well done it was cheesecake it was
1:20:31
relevant and just like I probably said you know
1:20:37
it think it was me ironically. Because but also when a white
1:20:43
posterized it that I thought was weird but he is the use of
1:20:48
Photoshop outline trick in any well that
1:20:53
was just thrown down the misogyny I think the put the
1:20:56
misogyny filter off as if that makes any difference.
1:21:00
No, if that helped. Then it was
1:21:04
you'd like to Turkey you were pushing back hard for the turkey
1:21:07
the I'm offended Turkey the I'm offended turkey or the I'm
1:21:10
offended Turkey. It was good. That was a little tick tock low
1:21:14
but when but when we looked at it as works I said it was just
1:21:18
too messy. There was stuff it was missing. Yeah, it was no it
1:21:23
was missing cohesion or something. I mean, yeah. Um, no
1:21:26
hard lighter.
1:21:26
Make Turkey great again, I'll make turkey yay again. Again,
1:21:31
yeah. And she I just thought that piece was just it was too
1:21:35
understated. The logo could have been bigger. The other thing
1:21:38
could have been bigger.
1:21:39
The one I liked, which the execution was just not right on
1:21:42
was from Taunton Neil, which was the wheeled grabber with Trump
1:21:45
grabbing the little plastic wheel on the back of the car.
1:21:49
Yes, I liked that one too, but it just didn't have the right
1:21:52
execution
1:21:54
It was nice piece it was funny it was it was fun. It was the
1:21:57
funniest Yeah, but it just didn't quite work and back and
1:22:01
I'm looking at she also did that and he also did boom, boom
1:22:05
Rotterdam and I believe the imagery she's using is from
1:22:09
Missile Command. If I'm not mistaken an old Apple game from
1:22:14
the Apple two days
1:22:17
interesting. And
1:22:19
if I could be wrong
1:22:21
the thing with that is that Rotterdam is not wrecking I mean
1:22:25
I see the Euro mast I see the bridge it would be completely it
1:22:28
would be lost on everybody Okay,
1:22:30
last time we all I got was the obviously Missile Command when
1:22:34
you
1:22:34
have the title there of the of the art Yeah, then you
1:22:37
understand it but we don't publish the title of the art
1:22:42
anyway, there's a lot I thought there's a lot of good stuff I
1:22:44
even liked and no agenda Taco Bell from dirty Jersey whore.
1:22:51
Dirty Jersey whore who says she assuming it's a woman I'm sure
1:22:55
it's dude are you kidding? Could be a duty obviously to do two
1:23:00
things neither one that good but the toggle belting was well
1:23:04
executed but yeah
1:23:06
Sir sir sir side real the no agenda wall which we didn't talk
1:23:10
about during the selection process which is the Pink Floyd
1:23:13
wall with lettering I thought it was nice and nice piece as a
1:23:19
just I don't know I liked it. I don't even see its way down at
1:23:22
the bottom
1:23:25
I still don't see you see the NATO
1:23:27
was finished flag. NATO is worth about next to it to the right.
1:23:33
To the right where it just says no agenda wall is on my computer
1:23:38
just comes up as is so it's so
1:23:43
light. It's the Pink Floyd album cover of the wall with the same
1:23:47
lettering. Okay. Have you ever heard of Pink Floyd? You know,
1:23:52
the pretty popular guy
1:23:53
went to see the wall presentation by John Waters live
1:23:57
so
1:23:58
you missed the actual wall from the presentation you saw alive.
1:24:01
That's interesting.
1:24:02
Well, the wall was in bricks. It was bricks.
1:24:05
It's bricks here.
1:24:07
It's white.
1:24:08
Okay, let's go look at the album cover for the wall. From Pink
1:24:15
Floyd and lo and behold, it is white with bricks.
1:24:23
Well I'm saying the presentation live is not white. Oh, that's
1:24:30
just a cover of that album.
1:24:31
Yeah, well I would have thought that they would have doesn't
1:24:34
matter you can't see it doesn't exist and look right on that's
1:24:38
all we need to know if it doesn't look right on your
1:24:40
computer then it's no good. That's how we that's how we do
1:24:43
what everyone has a veto in
1:24:45
this game. He also had the he did a coat
1:24:48
hanger. Yeah, we don't do coat hangers. So
1:24:51
I'm watching the French protests of the of the French are
1:24:55
protesting our court actions.
1:24:58
Are you really make a big fuss? Oh, you protesting Roe v. Wade.
1:25:01
Yeah, yeah big big time. Yeah, it's like an international
1:25:07
thing. This is really out of control. This internationalism
1:25:09
is globalism. So they were protesting to coat it when they
1:25:13
had coat hangers. The big thick plastic ones
1:25:19
no
1:25:20
I'm not kidding.
1:25:22
They don't really understand the coat hanger process I guess
1:25:25
that's interesting. I don't
1:25:26
I don't know maybe they don't use wire coat hangers at all.
1:25:30
Using them now if you
1:25:31
bring this up now I feel I should play my my Roe v Wade
1:25:34
clips. We'll do it right after the break.
1:25:37
Okay, promises promises Yes, where were we did I disclose
1:25:45
that I closed that out? I guess well, we thank capitalist agenda
1:25:48
very much for capitalist agenda hattrick three in a row the
1:25:52
three peat typically a good artists will now pull back a
1:25:56
little bit and let others have a chance in our world of equity.
1:26:00
I would say do for Jay used to do just keep being beaten back.
1:26:06
Exactly quit and out of the blue.
1:26:08
Do like the Dutch guy did it. Just beat everybody and then
1:26:12
quit and then don't even don't even send a note anymore. I'm
1:26:15
done with you all. Although he's still pretty active on no
1:26:18
agenda, social complaining. We appreciate the work that all of
1:26:23
our artists do. Of course, it's fantastic. It's one of the
1:26:28
highlights of the show when the show's over. We love the show we
1:26:30
had a good time and then we still get to choose some funky
1:26:33
ass art. And look inside of your crazy ass brains. It's it's a
1:26:37
joy it really is. I appreciate it. And as we move closer
1:26:40
towards our 50th anniversary and show 15 102 celebrations coming
1:26:44
up this year. Thank you again to all the producers who have made
1:26:47
this possible for all this time. No commercials. No deplatforming
1:26:52
We're still here. We've never missed a show. We've never had
1:26:56
as far as I know we've never we ever missed the show. We've
1:26:58
never missed a show ever. No never missed the show. And we've
1:27:03
been able to sustain this in this What started as an
1:27:05
experiment and it's turned into it's turned into a into its own
1:27:11
entity value for value is known over the world people don't even
1:27:14
know it comes from this podcast now. It's really interesting to
1:27:18
hear people just throw that out there value for value like I
1:27:20
don't wonder where you got that from. So we deliver you value in
1:27:24
mp3 form. You send it back in many ways time talent, treasure
1:27:27
and Tony Cabrera from no agenda shop checks in today with some
1:27:32
treasure he of course is in Peachtree, GA Peachtree City,
1:27:35
Georgia $618.99 In The Morning John Adam dropping off our
1:27:41
latest tribute composed of shekels from no agenda Knights
1:27:44
and Dames who have picked up souvenirs at the shop honoring
1:27:47
the best podcast and all lands in the universe. No jingles new
1:27:50
carpet new no karma to keep the show rolling. And we thank you
1:27:54
very much. That's no agenda shop. No agenda shop.com Another
1:27:57
one of those great examples where we have no deal. We don't
1:28:00
have meetings. Tony puts it together Tony make some happen.
1:28:05
When he's got some cash to donate. He donates. Everybody's
1:28:07
happy the artists get paid the shop makes it run. The show
1:28:11
continues to go. Thank you, Tony. You got it and you get it.
1:28:15
Derek Winkies next, and he's in Clarkston, Michigan. 47704 Time
1:28:22
for an accountant to do some accounting. He's an accountant
1:28:25
because he's a tax guy with all kinds of yay. He's got a his
1:28:30
thing is a lot of letters after his name for 7704 to bring my
1:28:34
total of 205 over the past 12 years. So he wants to be
1:28:38
knighted sir EA of the tax domain. You got it. It could
1:28:42
have been Baron edited. birthday is July 1 You know he gets that
1:28:47
on those 58 Thanks for all you do. Your efforts are vital as we
1:28:50
navigate the coming worldwide depression. While tough times
1:28:54
are here this will also be time of great opportunities to keep
1:28:59
the optimism and humor flowing. No jingles no karma is true.
1:29:03
He's in Clarkston, Michigan, and these are taxes done. look him
1:29:07
up. He's Derek Winnick Winky wa N ke during
1:29:10
times of economic depression great art is always created. I
1:29:14
mean, great things great creativity comes out of it. Look
1:29:18
at the 70s we got disco and roller skates. I mean it was
1:29:21
great creativity goer.
1:29:23
Movie business definitely.
1:29:25
And Nicholas Everett's is in Gallatin, Gallatin, Tennessee
1:29:29
333 to 34 our favorite number plus a little bit, no doubt to
1:29:34
be at the top of the list knighthood achieved Nicola says
1:29:37
henceforth large doctors are Nikko of the Gallatin hills,
1:29:42
goat karma to the family Meg's Papa de Nana, Ginger of the
1:29:45
north and Sir EagleEye Yeah, karma to everyone at Vandy, who
1:29:49
saved me especially the hot nurse in level one trauma floor.
1:29:56
Well, that's interesting. I wouldn't mind no, that was all
1:29:59
allowed. Got karma you've got karma
1:30:14
Maria plus mark in Greenwood Indiana to 40 Right away we got
1:30:19
very by the way the donations were miserable for July 4 But
1:30:23
we only have certainly for Independence Day I would have
1:30:26
expected a little more
1:30:27
yeah we got more for Canada Day
1:30:30
from American from Americans
1:30:33
Yeah, yeah 240 ITM John Adams donation which is my first
1:30:38
donation was the result of winning a raffle at our most
1:30:41
recent crossroads of America indie no agenda meetup nice. One
1:30:47
the big big money I highly encourage those who listen to
1:30:51
the greatest podcast in the universe to attend their nearest
1:30:54
meet up as they are a wonderful reprieve. There are wonderful
1:30:58
reprieve from the stressors of the M five M and give you much
1:31:02
needed opportunity to meet meet like minded people from all
1:31:06
walks of life. Can you please give it a well deserved karma to
1:31:09
a great group of critical thinkers as well as my smokin
1:31:13
hot wife and three human resources who are often in
1:31:17
attendance with me, if not too much trouble. I'd like to hear
1:31:23
the hip hop version of the Divorce Act donate as is one of
1:31:27
the my less is one of the less my favorite lesser played.
1:31:30
Jingles. Love is lit and may you never find an exit strategy.
1:31:35
June 25 crossword roads of America indie nogen immediate
1:31:38
report attached attached lovers lit Maria plus mark of the
1:31:43
Greenwood next month the CEO a nd meetup July 24.
1:31:48
I'm trying to think that Chris said the hip hop version. I'm
1:31:52
not sure if there's a hip hop version of the donut What is
1:31:54
this?
1:31:57
You've got dog, dog dog
1:32:05
karma? I don't know of a hit. Do we have a hip hop version of
1:32:09
that?
1:32:10
I don't know.
1:32:11
Sorry. You'll have to send it to me or let me know I have no
1:32:14
idea. Thank you very much Maria and Mark. And do nav is in St.
1:32:19
Charles Illinois. Row a ducks two two 2.22 This donation and
1:32:23
celebrate our balanced fair, factual and independent media.
1:32:26
Oh wait, that was the other planet so we need the best
1:32:31
podcast in the universe to keep us sane Happy Independence to
1:32:34
you John and Adam and all the producers thank you in
1:32:38
less than our shortlist is Sir Benny in Indianapolis $200 And
1:32:43
he writes from Sir Benny to Dame Swan a happy birthday. You know
1:32:50
you leave she's on the list.
1:32:52
Yes, she is. That was it. Yeah, yeah. Very short. And he and I
1:32:56
thought that it would we would do the I expected some Fourth of
1:33:01
July stuff in there. And especially since in the
1:33:04
newsletter you put something in there that I did not know which
1:33:07
July 2 which happens to be today date of
1:33:10
July 2 is yesterday today's you
1:33:12
know today's the second no today's the third holy crap that
1:33:15
was yesterday. Right? Yeah. That is the actual date of the
1:33:20
Declaration of Independence.
1:33:21
No, no, no, it is the day of independence the day we declared
1:33:25
independence. The second is the day that was declared merited
1:33:29
documents are all signed on the fourth and fifth and sixth and
1:33:32
seventh and eighth and backdated.
1:33:38
It was interesting you know what
1:33:40
the edge and my favorite part about the it wasn't a newsletter
1:33:43
but John Adams says July 2 will remain and in the Americans mine
1:33:49
is celebrated for eons. Really? Yeah. Well, about
1:33:57
100 years later so I really feel that the you know, is this
1:34:06
liturgy? Is that the term we've lost a lot of our of our
1:34:11
traditions in the United States I'm sure it's the same
1:34:14
everything canon
1:34:15
would be the right term for this Canon. Our canon we lost our
1:34:19
canon Yeah, the Canon is like the things you're supposed to
1:34:22
know.
1:34:23
And Presidents Day you know that's universally known as
1:34:27
mattress sale day. I think Memorial Day and veterans day no
1:34:32
one it's all confusing. No one knows exactly which is which and
1:34:35
who are we thanking? It's just we just add thanks for
1:34:37
everyone's service you know, we don't give it
1:34:39
nobody cares. Nobody cares. Armistice Day is gone. VJ Days
1:34:43
Gone
1:34:43
independent Independence Day. Used to be called Independence
1:34:47
Day Happy Independence Day. And of course that morphed towards
1:34:50
Fourth of July which means more sales, you know, around the
1:34:53
Fourth of July sales basically sales food, loans and a A buddy
1:35:00
of mine. Actually, he's the Steven B's the developer of
1:35:05
curio caster. And we had him on podcasting 2.0 On Friday, and I
1:35:09
needed to have a get a little audio check from and he was
1:35:13
reading this thing of like, what are you reading from? I said,
1:35:17
Oh, I'm reading from the Fourth of July passage from Laura
1:35:21
Ingalls Wilder from one of her books. And Laura Ingalls Wilder,
1:35:26
for those who don't recognize the name, she wrote the Little
1:35:29
House on the Prairie, which was a whole series, I think, nine
1:35:31
books. And the sixth or seventh book is Little Town on the
1:35:38
Prairie, which is in South Dakota. And it's it's so
1:35:42
different about how this how this and that was 100 years,
1:35:46
more than 100 years after, after the declaration of independence.
1:35:50
And they all went to the town square, and they all bitched
1:35:53
about the Brits, and they all bitched about the king, and you
1:35:57
know, I have just a little bit of a speech here. Well, boys,
1:36:02
I'm not much good at public speaking. But today's glorious
1:36:04
today's the glorious force or the arty, we're talking the
1:36:07
fourth and not the second 100 years later. This is the day and
1:36:10
date when our forefathers cut loose from the desperate of
1:36:13
Europe. There weren't many Americans at the time, but they
1:36:15
wouldn't stand for any Manik terrorizing over them. They had
1:36:18
to fight the British regulars and they're hired assassins, and
1:36:21
the murdering scalping Redskin savages, those fine gold laced
1:36:25
aristocrats turned loose in our settlements, and paid for
1:36:29
murdering and burning and scalping women and children. A
1:36:32
few barefoot Americans had to fight the hold of them and lick
1:36:34
them and they did fight them and they did lick them. Yes, sir. We
1:36:38
licked the British in 1776. We licked them again in 1812. And
1:36:42
we backed all the monarchies of Europe out of Mexico and off
1:36:45
this continent less than 20 years ago and buy glory. Yes,
1:36:49
sir, by old glory right here waiting over my head. Anytime
1:36:52
the despots of Europe tried to step on America's toes will lick
1:36:55
him again. And that those
1:37:01
days are over. We like him but we licked their butts.
1:37:06
Thank you to these executive and Associate Executive producers of
1:37:09
episode 1465. It is the Patriot edition. And I'm sorry, the
1:37:14
Independence Day edition you can get that coveted credit which
1:37:18
was claimed in the newsletter, which is the no agenda show
1:37:22
Independence Day 2022 edition. We thank you very much for that.
1:37:26
These titles of course can be used anywhere that titles are
1:37:29
recognized and accepted. IMDB is one place LinkedIn is another
1:37:33
just dropped, put it printed on some business cards, drop them
1:37:36
off at the bar, see what happens. If you'd like to learn
1:37:38
how to become an executive producer or just a producer go
1:37:41
here.
1:37:41
vo.org/and a thank you
1:37:45
again to everybody who came in to help us for episode 1465
1:37:49
Our formula is this. We go out we get people in the mouth
1:38:09
it's really worth it's very odd. But reading, I started reread
1:38:13
all of Little House on the prairies. Very short book. And
1:38:16
you just look at they went in a covered wagon, across the
1:38:22
westward. And all they had was the wagon, you know, whatever
1:38:26
flour and stuff they had with them a gun, which with musket
1:38:30
balls, and an axe, some nails. It's amazing how happy they
1:38:37
were. And look at all the look at all the technology and crap
1:38:40
we got now we're nothing but unhappy bastards. We're just not
1:38:43
happy. I mean, I'm happy. But in general, I think well, you know,
1:38:52
let me tell you, let me give you an example. Because you promised
1:38:55
we could do this right after the break. Here is someone who's
1:38:58
very unhappy. This is ultra Jeff. He's from Texas. Ultra
1:39:02
Jeff is and we have many liberals in Texas who would vote
1:39:05
for the Democratic Party. And here's his rant.
1:39:08
I'm not going to shut up about this. I'm not because I can't
1:39:12
yell at the Republicans, they're not going to change they are who
1:39:15
they are. With that. We're not going to change them. You can't
1:39:19
shame them. You can convince them. You can't trick them. You
1:39:23
can't fucking out plan them. But I can yell at the Democratic
1:39:26
Party. I should probably say not safe for work. And I can tell
1:39:29
them where they can least make one fucking small change to stop
1:39:31
pissing me the fuck off every hour right now. Stop sending me
1:39:36
Stop sending me fundraising requests, right. Okay. The
1:39:42
Republican Party had a plan for the last 50 years to overturn
1:39:44
Roe v. Wade. We had a leak five weeks ago, telling us that this
1:39:48
exact thing was going to happen. And your response after five
1:39:52
weeks of careful study and planning and thought has been to
1:39:57
send us nonstop fundraising emails. Alright, so let me sleep
1:40:02
real quick list Mark warmer, Mark Warner. He's the Democratic
1:40:05
senator from Virginia. He's worth $214.1 million. Don buyer.
1:40:10
He's the democratic Virginia House member. He's worth $124.9
1:40:14
million. Dean Phillips. He's the he's a Minnesota House member,
1:40:18
he is worth $123.8 million. Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the
1:40:23
fucking house of the Democratic Party from California is worth
1:40:27
$114.7 million. Dianne Feinstein who doesn't know where the fuck
1:40:31
she is right now. The senator from California part of the
1:40:34
Democratic Party is worth $87.9 million. million. You guys want
1:40:42
money? Fucking call your guy. You call them every week to do
1:40:46
insider trading. Stop fucking send me emails. Stop sending me
1:40:51
fucking texts. Stop fucking written poems and singing
1:40:54
goddamn karaoke. You have power? You have it during those seats.
1:40:59
We're the ones who are powerless. Stop fucking
1:41:01
pretending you're protesting. If you don't want to fucking do it,
1:41:05
or it's too hard. Fucking retire your riches shit. You don't need
1:41:10
to do anything. If I had $114.7 million. Nancy Pelosi, you know
1:41:15
I do first thing I get my fucking husband a driver. So we
1:41:18
didn't get a goddamn DUI. Second thing you know? I do. I've been
1:41:21
on fucking boat. I've been on a fucking boat.
1:41:24
What I find so interesting of this rant is that not once it
1:41:27
doesn't appear to come up in him in his mind? Let's vote them
1:41:32
out. This does not come up in his mind. It's only yelling and
1:41:37
bitching and shaming. And I'm sad that he didn't say stop
1:41:40
asking me to chip in because that would have really made it
1:41:42
Yeah, that would have made.
1:41:44
I heard this clip and I said key words the chip it
1:41:50
was the same way. I'm like, Oh man, I'll play it. But I wish he
1:41:53
would have said Stop asking me to chip in. So he just doesn't
1:41:58
see the obvious and he said we have no power. What? What?
1:42:03
That's exactly the opposite of what we should be recognizing on
1:42:06
a day like today. We have the people always hold the power.
1:42:12
But not if you just sit at home and all you can use do is drop F
1:42:15
bombs and complain about how rich everybody is. That's not
1:42:19
gonna work
1:42:20
this as I may see, it was just a typical Democrat.
1:42:23
Well, and I think I think we need to just say typical
1:42:26
socialists because that's it's it's so obvious.
1:42:31
I think you're right is more socialist, the Socialist let the
1:42:34
government do everything. Why? Why aren't you doing about this
1:42:38
atheist and social say theist? Socialists and Atheists say
1:42:42
yes, like atheist control, say
1:42:45
theist. But it's really as a part of that. It's because when
1:42:49
you're an atheist, you believe the state is God. You know,
1:42:55
that's where that's your daddy. You know, you don't have a cloud
1:42:58
Daddy was the CEO of a cloud daddy, or a sky Papa. No, you
1:43:03
have the state and you believe the state is going to take care
1:43:05
of you. And that's the same group because I saw the
1:43:08
professionally printed signs that started this crap down
1:43:11
under
1:43:11
from Washington DC to Swanston Street. These fury knows north.
1:43:21
America's decision prompting action on Melbourne streets as
1:43:25
1000s stormed the city in solidarity
1:43:29
in solidarity.
1:43:31
Women of all ages and their support is defending their right
1:43:34
to have an abortion.
1:43:38
It's terrifying and makes me want to cry. It's scary. No one
1:43:41
else should be making laws about what we want to do that bodies.
1:43:44
No one should be forced to be pregnant, no one should be
1:43:46
forced to give birth.
1:43:47
It's been one week since the US Supreme Court overturned 50
1:43:51
years of precedent revoking Americans constitutional right
1:43:55
to abortion, effectively banning it in 13 states in Melbourne was
1:44:01
we will rise up and fight you. I just think it's disgusting that
1:44:08
they can't choose what they want to do with their
1:44:10
bodies. We need to show that we care about the people that are
1:44:12
over there. And we need to show that we won't stand for this
1:44:15
happening here either.
1:44:16
It feels like we've gone back in time as opposed to progressing
1:44:19
and going forward. Now it's about to get really interesting
1:44:21
in this particular protest because we know in the United
1:44:24
States, these protests have typically been kind of snarked
1:44:29
out it's like Oh, you were you didn't agree with bodily
1:44:31
autonomy when it came to vaccinations. There's clip after
1:44:36
clip of man on the street course it's edited. Asking these
1:44:41
protesters the very that very question well, isn't bodily
1:44:44
isn't the vaccination mandate? Isn't that also an issue with
1:44:47
bodily autonomy now that and then the brain freezes. So
1:44:51
you'll hear that same thing happened here in Melbourne?
1:44:56
Warrants impact laws in Australia but obviously you
1:44:58
today say well abortion may be legal, it's not accessible for
1:45:03
all and can cost some women 1000s of dollars.
1:45:06
It's a postcode lottery, we're fighting for an expansion,
1:45:08
actually a public health care so that all women can genuinely
1:45:12
exercise their reproductive rights.
1:45:15
But they also had to fight off opposition. Men identifying as
1:45:20
Christians were thrown out after having
1:45:22
I love this men identifying as Christians. This is this is a
1:45:26
new term. I love it. They're not really Christians. They're just
1:45:30
identifying as Christians seductive, right.
1:45:34
But they also had to fight off opposition. Man identifying as
1:45:39
Christians were thrown out, after having coffee thrown on
1:45:42
them.
1:45:43
God has spoken. He said, he's against abortion. And the Bible
1:45:46
says against abortion. So we come in and tell people with
1:45:48
truth that
1:45:49
they stay for death, we stand for life, hallelujah. But it was
1:45:52
the anti vaccination demonstrators who prompted a
1:45:54
response from public order police. The tiny crowd booed by
1:46:00
pro abortion protesters after claiming that we're fighting for
1:46:04
the same cause. For many of these women and their children,
1:46:08
motivation to march was simple.
1:46:10
We can just live our own lives, instead of having to have a baby
1:46:14
that we might not want.
1:46:16
And for others, it's a matter of life or death.
1:46:19
It's okay to things because it's almost done. So first of all,
1:46:23
the anti vaxxers showed up and said, we're on the same side
1:46:27
with you on bodily autonomy, and they got kicked out by the
1:46:30
police. And then this poor little girl, who is all of eight
1:46:37
or nine years old, and looking at her mom the whole time she's
1:46:39
talking Well, this is important, because you know, so you don't
1:46:43
need to get a baby you don't want to have did the education
1:46:46
of this child missed the entire, you know, the whole sex part. If
1:46:51
you don't want to have a baby that you don't really want to
1:46:54
have, did they miss that whole thing? Because it doesn't seem
1:46:57
like that's the that's the education path here was simple.
1:47:00
We can just save our own lives. Is that having to have a baby
1:47:04
that we might not want?
1:47:06
And for others, it's a matter of life or death. Take it from
1:47:09
those who've been there.
1:47:12
I wanted it's even to healthcare.
1:47:19
Yeah, so and the signs were the socialist signs. I forget what
1:47:27
it's called now like Australia, socialists, something if you
1:47:31
could see them.
1:47:33
Yeah, Workers Party of some sort. And these
1:47:35
poor people, these poor women who are there, and some man I
1:47:38
presume, they really think that they're doing good, but they're
1:47:40
being played for as their tools, their political tools, and
1:47:44
they're being mobilized and activated and they don't quite
1:47:47
understand it.
1:47:48
Who says it's got nothing to do with Australia? You'd think not,
1:47:52
but Okay, let's go to France. We have the same situation. And
1:47:56
like you said, this is worldwide, as though the United
1:47:59
States and I want to mention those I did get this clip. I
1:48:02
tried and tried to try it. It was all over France. 24 trying
1:48:05
to get this woman saying that. And I'm gonna say essentially
1:48:10
saying, Oh, well, it's important. What happened there
1:48:13
because what happens in the United States, it affects us all
1:48:17
worldwide. said that? Yeah. Yeah. Well take it you're in
1:48:22
France, and this is Whoa, die. We thought that was a bad thing.
1:48:26
I thought that was bad. A
1:48:27
French person would not say that in my lifetime.
1:48:31
Well, they're saying it now. And here we are in France. Let's go
1:48:33
to France, anti abortion. Fear.
1:48:36
A week after the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade,
1:48:40
many countries in the world have seen rallies calling for the
1:48:43
right to abortion. Here in France in different cities, such
1:48:46
as Leone breast and Paris. demonstrators are demanding for
1:48:50
the right to terminate a pregnancy be protected by the
1:48:54
Constitution. Earlier first, we first spoke with Denise biology,
1:48:58
Professor of Public Law at the University of Paris, and he
1:49:02
explains why the so called Simran Veilleux is not in the
1:49:05
French constitution.
1:49:06
The right to abortion is not set in stone in the marble of the
1:49:11
written words condition. It's not entrenched in the
1:49:13
Constitution. It is protected though by the Constitutional
1:49:16
Court can say Constitutionnel in France, it has done so by some
1:49:20
kind of recursion by balancing exercise between the freedom of
1:49:24
the women and
1:49:26
what do you call that? A foot a large What do you call it?
1:49:30
has done so by some kind of brick collage.
1:49:33
What does that word he's used
1:49:34
as I said read collage or some sort of I don't know what the
1:49:37
word is.
1:49:37
And it sounds like they have a very similar thing to Roe v.
1:49:40
Wade in France here,
1:49:41
I think, I think yeah, probably is similar.
1:49:46
I mean, was protected, though by the Constitutional Court can say
1:49:48
Constitutionnel in France, it has done so by some kind of
1:49:51
PicCollage break, dancing exercise between the freedom of
1:49:56
the women and the dignity of I have the baby of the embryo. So
1:50:02
as of now we see in the US protection by a Constitutional
1:50:05
Court is probably not enough. Everything can change
1:50:09
politically in France. As of now most parties are not against
1:50:12
abortion, even the National Front has said by the mouth for
1:50:17
the most minimal event that they're not against the freedom
1:50:22
to abortion. But then again, probably there is a sense in
1:50:25
Europe now and especially in France, that setting in stone,
1:50:29
the right to board the freedom to board in the in the written
1:50:33
constitution to entrench it, as we lawyers say, might be a good
1:50:36
idea and it's made to be more difficult than in any other
1:50:40
parliamentary statutes. to entrench any close in the
1:50:44
written constitution, there is a process which begins with
1:50:47
Parliament's so the bill would have to be voted in in the same
1:50:53
phrasing by the Houses of Parliament. Hmm,
1:51:00
brick by brick collage is the word is the word of the day,
1:51:05
brico large, the construction or creation of a work from a
1:51:08
diverse range of things that happened to be available? Like
1:51:12
the show, the show was a collage collage. We are a brick collage.
1:51:17
Hmm, well, that's fine.
1:51:18
And then they were there. And they showed the protests and
1:51:20
they were just the same as the ones everywhere else you'd like
1:51:23
here? How about there's a bunch of women walking down the street
1:51:27
with signs printed by the socialists about bitching and
1:51:30
moaning? It's legal. Let me I'm still shocked in California that
1:51:35
Danny was protesting.
1:51:37
Let's try this on for size. This is a shock to the globalist
1:51:41
system, the liberal world order. And they realized right away
1:51:45
that this radical Supreme Court has lifted up the covers and
1:51:51
said America, you're actually free. And they can't have that
1:51:55
in their countries that cannot go on. So that's why they
1:51:57
immediately start these protests. I don't think this has
1:52:01
happened ever Well, and that's not true. Black lives matter. We
1:52:04
also Black Lives Matter protestations for
1:52:06
God's sake. The vaccination frenzy and fury is all just
1:52:13
looks like the same game, all part of it. Black Lives Matter
1:52:19
is a good example. But I don't think it holds a candle the
1:52:21
vaccination mania?
1:52:23
Well, I'm just talking about the protests. And in this case,
1:52:27
they're protesting against a move of freedom by the United
1:52:31
States Supreme Court. And and so that's why they're conflating it
1:52:35
saying, Oh, well, they took away your rights, they obliterated
1:52:39
the constitutional rights of women, which is just factually
1:52:42
not true. Most women woke up in their state and was exactly the
1:52:45
same as the day before. So I think there's a little panic,
1:52:51
I think the globalist angle has is got to be it. Because what
1:52:56
else could it be? Is this global?
1:52:57
Yeah. Here's a local report. Good Morning America about Roe
1:53:02
v. Wade. One week later. Let's see. Let's get an update
1:53:05
one week after the Supreme Court ruling. And with the president
1:53:11
facing growing pressure, Biden is ramping up his rhetoric, the
1:53:15
first and
1:53:15
foremost thing we should do is make it clear how outrageous
1:53:20
this decision was
1:53:21
the president pushing Congress to enshrine abortion rights into
1:53:24
law. And for the first time, Biden now says he supports
1:53:28
making an exception to change the Senate rules. So the
1:53:31
Democrats could do this with just a simple majority, rather
1:53:34
than 60 votes.
1:53:35
I believe we have to codify Roe v Wade in the law. And the way
1:53:40
to do that is to make sure the Congress votes to do that
1:53:43
top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell calling Biden's
1:53:46
comments and inappropriate attack on the court that
1:53:49
undermines equal justice and the rule of law but even with
1:53:53
Biden's backing a rule change is not going to happen to moderate
1:53:57
Democrats are opposed the President's critics even members
1:54:00
of his own party are calling for him to do more demanding shaping
1:54:04
executive action to counter the court
1:54:06
I'm the only president they got and I'm feel extremely strongly
1:54:12
that I'm gonna do everything in my power was
1:54:14
in the meantime protests across the country you know, they try
1:54:17
to they try to keep it so Biden didn't say anything stupid on
1:54:23
these reports. I mean, we we play the stupid stuff but the
1:54:26
mainstream media will skate it of course. But this one they
1:54:30
fucked up because this was a stupid thing. He just said
1:54:33
listen, play that a little bit again
1:54:35
playing for him to do more demanding sweeping executive
1:54:38
action to counter the court
1:54:40
I'm the only president that God and I'm feel extremely strongly
1:54:46
that I'm gonna do everything in my power with
1:54:48
in the meantime, pro Tucker.
1:54:50
I feel that I'm going to do everything in my power. It's
1:54:53
like a performative I feel strongly that I'm going to do
1:54:56
everything in my power
1:54:57
Biden. Biden is are walking for formative that's all the guy
1:55:01
does. A Joey but Joey sit down with me talking about this.
1:55:05
I'm the only president they got. And I'm feel extremely strongly
1:55:11
that I'm gonna do everything in my power was
1:55:16
extremely strongly.
1:55:18
And I'm gonna do everything in my power was
1:55:20
in the meantime protests across the country rage on a one shot
1:55:26
while the reality sinks in
1:55:29
I want to explain to our foreign foreign producers, but also a
1:55:34
lot of producers right here in America. How why this why this
1:55:39
is such a big deal and why it is as particularly around Fourth of
1:55:43
July. I'm just going to go back to Laura Ingalls Wilder for a
1:55:46
moment to give you a little feel of what it was like over 100
1:55:51
years ago, 100 years after the declaration of independence. So
1:55:55
again, it's Fourth of July, her dad is swinging Mike singing My
1:55:59
Country Tis of Thee sweet land of liberty and that ends with
1:56:02
protect protect us, they might Great God our King. So here's
1:56:06
what she wrote very short. The crowd was scattering away Lera
1:56:10
Stewart's Laura stood stockstill. Suddenly she had a
1:56:12
complete new thought, the declaration, and that song came
1:56:16
together in her mind. And she thought, God is America's King.
1:56:19
She thought Americans won't obey any king on Earth, Americans are
1:56:23
free. That means they have to obey their own consciences. No
1:56:27
king bosses, PA, he has to boss himself. When I'm a little older
1:56:32
pawn ma will stop telling me what to do. And there's an
1:56:34
anyone else who has the right to give me orders, I will have to
1:56:37
make myself be good. Her whole mind seemed to be lighted up by
1:56:41
that thought, this is what it means to be free, it means you
1:56:43
have to be good. Our fathers God, author of liberty, the laws
1:56:47
of nature and nature's God endow you with the right to life and
1:56:50
liberty, than you have to keep the laws of God for God's law is
1:56:54
the only thing that gives you a right to be free. And that's the
1:56:57
point. America was based on the idea that all of these rights
1:57:02
were given to us by God, our Creator, and the Constitution
1:57:07
and the Bill of Rights is only to show what the government did
1:57:13
well to forbid the government from doing certain things in
1:57:17
certain areas. And it's only been 100 plus years. And I think
1:57:21
the true meaning of that, or how people grow up and feel has been
1:57:25
completely eradicated.
1:57:28
What has been subverted by the social murderous
1:57:30
averted? Thank you. Yes, averted, but it's
1:57:33
not eradicated because it's there. It's still there.
1:57:36
Obviously under Yes. Yeah. All you have to do is shake.
1:57:40
Hill Country. Texas, and you'll get it not eradicated here.
1:57:45
Exactly. But that's that's where America,
1:57:49
that country? Except the media centers? Yes. I was probably
1:57:53
very Christian and think, Well, it's even if they're not
1:57:56
Christian. They're not atheist, usually. And they're, and
1:58:02
they're, they tend to follow some of these old ideas, and
1:58:05
they educate their kids properly. It's the media centers
1:58:09
that are the problem and New York, California, Washington, I
1:58:13
will put Seattle in their in their educational systems, you
1:58:17
go into the fly over states. And you things are pretty normal.
1:58:24
Yeah.
1:58:26
But that's just so people understand that all this noise
1:58:30
about the Supreme Court took away constitutional rights.
1:58:33
That's just factually untrue. When you
1:58:35
do a word search in the Constitution, look for the word
1:58:37
abortion, see if it's in there, where's the constitutional
1:58:39
right, and by the way, the rights the Constitution doesn't
1:58:43
grant rights. It prevents exact it prevents the government from
1:58:47
taking away rights. That's what it's for. And then the Bill of
1:58:52
Rights is there. Just to reiterate, reiterate, these are
1:58:56
the one by the way. Yeah. And people have pointed out that, in
1:59:00
fact, we've had an expert that two years ago, he played a clip
1:59:02
of the guy going over the 10th Amendment, which is quite
1:59:04
interesting, the 10th amendment so important. It's about states
1:59:08
rights, that it had to be put it's in the Constitution, but
1:59:11
it's also in the Bill of Rights is the only one that's double
1:59:14
dipping up. Yeah. Because it's like, Hey, this is important.
1:59:18
But okay, so So the Supreme Court took away some rights for
1:59:24
the first time ever rights have been taken away.
1:59:27
We were talking about the legality of federal money being
1:59:30
spent on abortions, and I couldn't remember why I thought
1:59:33
that was illegal. And of course, one of our producers stepped up.
1:59:37
It's the Hyde Amendment. We knew that
1:59:42
is the height of the Hyde Amendment. I recalled height,
1:59:46
high height, his height.
1:59:48
You know, Henry wasn't Hank Hancock. I can't remember. Was
1:59:53
it a hanger was someone else? Yeah, Hank was Henry right.
1:59:56
Henry J. Hyde. And we had Hank, we call I'm Hank for short.
2:00:02
Though I've got just a switch around here. Joe mentioned the
2:00:05
atheist which I've done twice now I'm going to play this clip.
2:00:09
This is a weird one. I guess our government is giving away money
2:00:14
our taxpayers money to various atheist, specifically atheist
2:00:20
NGOs overseas. Oh, yay.
2:00:23
And is it because they're atheist NGOs has just happened
2:00:26
to be atheist do they identify as atheist?
2:00:29
Play the clip
2:00:31
House GOP members are challenging the legality of
2:00:34
certain large state department grants. The Department says the
2:00:38
grants are for international organizations that are quote,
2:00:41
committed to the practice and spread of atheism and humanism,
2:00:45
concerns grants of as much as $500,000 each. The money goes
2:00:50
towards atheists humanists, nonpracticing and non affiliated
2:00:54
individuals and the recipients are based in South Central Asia,
2:00:57
the Middle East and North Africa. The GOP members
2:01:01
challenge is penned in a June 30. Letter to President Biden
2:01:05
and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, the letter says it is
2:01:09
one thing for the department to be tolerant and respectful of a
2:01:12
wide range of belief systems and to encourage governments to
2:01:15
respect the religious freedom interests of their citizens. It
2:01:19
is quite another for the United States government to work
2:01:22
actively to empower atheist humanist non practicing and non
2:01:26
affiliated and public decision making. It says the same program
2:01:30
would be considered unconstitutional in the US. The
2:01:33
letter signers also want to know how the program advances the
2:01:37
foreign policy interests of the United States.
2:01:40
Hmm. Hill said all about
2:01:43
I don't know. That was news to me. Um, I want to point out this
2:01:49
during a COVID like a quarter of France's churches were burned to
2:01:56
the ground. Yeah, that is NGOs. Yes. That these NGOs getting
2:02:01
that yeah, we've given
2:02:03
them money to burn churches that's what we're doing
2:02:06
Yeah, we really need a review of this given people money I mean,
2:02:09
it's out of control as well as witness the inflation is just
2:02:16
given away money to everybody except Except to the American
2:02:18
people who it's all right Europe, you get the same
2:02:22
Australia you get the same I love this big protest for
2:02:26
freedom and rights in Australia. The most lockdown country of all
2:02:30
COVID Hill What if and only second only to Beijing to
2:02:34
Shanghai? Second only maybe might even topped it a little
2:02:39
more humane about it, possibly. But you know, throwing people
2:02:43
into camps and stuff. Come on. And you know, and that was just
2:02:47
to get people ready?
2:02:48
Because you know, yeah, so they just bitching about our
2:02:51
shipping? Well,
2:02:51
you you thought the you thought the COVID camps were bad and
2:02:56
cramped. Now this is where people are winding up now with
2:02:59
with Oh gee, Australia has inflation to
2:03:01
cost of living pressures are forcing some Melburnians to
2:03:04
downsize to spaces smaller than a room. The high tech sleeping
2:03:09
pods are the latest answer to a rental squeeze as more July the
2:03:14
first relief looms.
2:03:16
As Victoria's housing affordability crisis deepens
2:03:20
unique setups like these Space Shuttle hubs are offering short
2:03:24
term solutions for
2:03:25
renters desperately needing somewhere to sleep.
2:03:28
I have a lot of in between us. They stay here while they look
2:03:31
for another place. The landlord says more than 80% of his pods
2:03:36
in Abbotsford are booked out to date that we raise 250.
2:03:41
So these pods, they'd look like you're in it like you walk into
2:03:47
a laundrette because it's just these round circles that has
2:03:51
doors are stacked three high.
2:03:53
Yeah, they used to have these in airports or they try to explain
2:03:56
No, no.
2:03:58
I know what you're talking about the little eco thing. Little eco
2:04:01
pot it's smaller than that. Well, even smaller and you don't
2:04:05
have all the cool lighting. It's just like a dog kennel
2:04:08
basically. Like a cat one of those cat play things without
2:04:13
the fuzzy stuff. Wow. And it was it was interesting. Tina and I
2:04:18
were talking about, you know, the rental prices because our
2:04:20
kids are all dealing with rent prices increasing like 30%. And
2:04:26
just on a lark, I said, you know, let me go take a look at
2:04:28
that. So I had the place posed to divorce in downtown Austin
2:04:34
was it was a great two bedroom pad had a nice view. And it was
2:04:39
a pad it was a pad. I had the stripper pole. It was a bachelor
2:04:41
pad. It was awesome. Pay said it was a pad.
2:04:45
Yeah, no, it's the 70s term.
2:04:46
And it costs me at that time with garage and a storage unit
2:04:53
$2,800 a month for I think it was a view is up in The air had
2:05:00
a great view 13 or 1300 square feet, I think that same
2:05:05
apartment and I know and they've changed money to hundreds a lot.
2:05:09
Well, that was 50. That was in 2015.
2:05:13
Yeah, it was expensive. That was an expensive place.
2:05:16
Well, yeah, but it was half studio half. One bedroom was
2:05:19
studio. The other one was was where I live. And it had a
2:05:23
stripper pole. Come on. What's the problem? That's worth a
2:05:26
couple of 100 bucks right there. So that was Austin in 2015. That
2:05:31
same apartment, guess what it costs today? 2800. Then, seven
2:05:36
years ago, what do you think it costs today? With without
2:05:40
without garage and without the storage unit?
2:05:42
Without garage without the storage unit? That garage is
2:05:46
important? Yeah, I would say just based on what's going on
2:05:51
around here. That would be 37 to 4247.
2:05:56
Five.
2:05:57
Wow. That is a rip off.
2:06:02
No kidding. I mean, even for two people, you can afford that. And
2:06:08
it's just a piece of shit. We called it the penitentiary.
2:06:11
It was literally a piece of shit. As you reported when you
2:06:14
used to live there was it was dog poop everywhere. And
2:06:18
it was leaky. You know, I was sick all the time from the
2:06:21
construction and the pollen that came in through the balcony door
2:06:24
and everything was just leaky. You had no full time attendant
2:06:29
downstairs. It was it was crap. And now 47 Five. I mean, that's,
2:06:38
I mean, it and there's been getting getting getting snapped
2:06:43
up left and right.
2:06:45
That people are dumb. Or maybe you had to pay if you're paying
2:06:50
47 Five. That's it. That's a mortgage. No good a three
2:06:55
bedroom house and pay less than 47. Five John,
2:06:59
we pay less in mortgage. Yeah, you got a big three acres, three
2:07:05
acres.
2:07:08
Three acres in a dog, the dog comes free.
2:07:10
And you know what, and you can you can did come free actually.
2:07:14
And you could zoom in from here just as easy as from downtown
2:07:17
Austin because no one wants to go to work.
2:07:21
That's unbelievable.
2:07:24
And meanwhile, out here in Fredericksburg on Main Street.
2:07:29
Excuse me. There's five shops in a row all empty. And you know
2:07:33
why? They can't get people to work here who also can live
2:07:39
here. It's unaffordable.
2:07:42
So people have experienced that was affordable. And
2:07:45
it was affordable just as we got in. And then it ended. And then
2:07:51
everyone started, everyone started snapping up homes,
2:07:54
turning them into B and B's because that's the big business
2:07:56
here. Why would you create a rental home when you can make an
2:08:01
Airbnb out of it? For you know, in four days, you've got a
2:08:05
month's rent. So that's so now they literally cannot get people
2:08:09
to work in stores and they're offering waitress, waitress,
2:08:13
waiter. Food server jobs. I'm sorry. Almost 20 bucks an hour.
2:08:19
19 bucks an hour. 19 bucks an hour and you get tips. No, no
2:08:25
one comes in.
2:08:26
So the California is we're moving to Austin for a while.
2:08:30
And this seems to have stopped I keep track of these things.
2:08:33
Yeah, yeah. I get mortgage news mortgage week they get all these
2:08:37
publications. And the new places guess what the new places were
2:08:42
number one spot to go if you're going to get the hell out of
2:08:45
these these places like California where you want it in
2:08:47
Texas or is it somewhere else is not in Texas anymore.
2:08:51
So we had Texas that we had Florida, which I think is still
2:08:56
still high on the list and Idaho.
2:08:59
Before it is the smart money because you don't pay taxes in
2:09:03
Texas, right? No. Chattanooga, Tennessee is number one.
2:09:06
Tennessee is also great place but it's going to it's going to
2:09:10
get screwed. It's going to become like well,
2:09:11
I was looking at Tennessee. So they attend Chattanooga. I've
2:09:14
been there once I've been there most places in Tennessee small
2:09:16
state. And I've always liked that people are friendly, the
2:09:19
food is good. It's got some low rent areas. So I'm looking at
2:09:23
Chattanooga, just to check it out not to because I'm gonna go
2:09:26
there because I'm not leaving. Let's face it. And
2:09:30
I know you're not you're definitely not going to go up to
2:09:32
Washington State where vaccine vaccines will be mandated this
2:09:38
this fall and we're just in closing until Inslee is out and
2:09:41
they put someone with sanity in there. You're not moving there.
2:09:44
Well, that's for sure. But anyway, so let's take a look at
2:09:46
Chattanooga. The median home price now in for Chattanooga for
2:09:52
a nice place three bedrooms, two bathrooms just to kind of a nice
2:09:55
house is about $275,000 So I'm looking at which is reasonably
2:10:02
good. And what
2:10:03
are we talking about? Just like a three bedroom? Three? Bathroom
2:10:07
kind of a, you
2:10:07
know, don't you? It wouldn't be two and a half. That's
2:10:09
about Indiana. My sister in law is looking at about 295 I think
2:10:13
for that kind of
2:10:14
okay, so yeah, just sub 300,000. So I'm looking at this and I'm
2:10:18
thinking and you know, that's pretty good. I can see people
2:10:21
moving there if they can find something to do there. But then
2:10:24
I looked at the Zillow has these these did the Zillow price. No,
2:10:29
they have the charts of historic prices. A year ago, you could
2:10:35
have bought that house for 125. And so I look at Chris I'm
2:10:41
looking as oh my god, I shouldn't have bought a house
2:10:44
with three places you could have sold them a year later doubling
2:10:48
your money all leveraged money you could have would have been
2:10:50
in Bonanza, you could
2:10:52
have just sent a check to Sir Patrick Coble, he would have
2:10:54
taken care of everything for it would have been so easy. Money,
2:10:58
easy money, he would have loved the
2:11:00
way the way things are going. I think there's 275 $300,000
2:11:03
places are going to probably go up to about five 600,000 Oh, my
2:11:07
goodness. That's just the way it is the whole country because of
2:11:10
this, besides the bogus inflation and the rest of it
2:11:13
real estate's your best bet.
2:11:14
Well, tell me how it's going to be after this next report, which
2:11:18
is a shorty from J Capital Research. She's the co founder
2:11:24
and Stephensons Oh, financial lady.
2:11:26
So my base case for China? Yeah, I think that the Chinese economy
2:11:31
is really going to go through a crash. And I think that China is
2:11:35
going to spew deflate deflation into the world pretty soon, like
2:11:40
along about third quarter this year.
2:11:42
Why so soon? And why is it going to be so contagious?
2:11:46
Because the demand for commodities goes down. China is
2:11:51
responsible for a huge amount of commodity consumption. And so as
2:11:56
their demand declines, then commodity prices decline. And
2:11:59
that's an international effect. But But I think the key thing is
2:12:03
that the renminbi has got to depreciate, and as the renminbi
2:12:06
depreciates fast, what pushes deflation into the world? What
2:12:12
do you think?
2:12:14
Well, there's a couple of things going, going on. There's a move
2:12:20
right now to for the Chinese to take over as the as the reserve
2:12:26
currency, and they can't do it if that happens. And so they and
2:12:31
they manipulate the currency pretty well. And I don't see
2:12:34
commodity prices going down from lack of demand that that's just
2:12:38
not going I don't know what she's thinking about that. I
2:12:40
just don't see it. I don't see the Chinese think changing that
2:12:43
much. I mean, the ghost cities are already there. They've
2:12:46
already been accounted for the numbers are in there. It's
2:12:49
already been so
2:12:50
you see no change. You see just steady as she goes. Yeah. All
2:12:57
right. Well, that makes me feel a little better. I guess.
2:13:01
I don't care what happens in China necessarily, although they
2:13:04
were so dependent on them. I guess we that
2:13:06
would that would be one. Well, I'd rather than all that just
2:13:09
went away or most of it so we could figure out what we have to
2:13:13
do here. Nothing. Nothing works as motivating as not having food
2:13:17
or medicine or pain. Yeah, that will be good. But what's really
2:13:22
happening? Of course, it'll be good is the opposite. Wales has
2:13:26
now just announced their basic income pilot, which will consist
2:13:32
of 1600 pounds a month to care leavers. And in cash, and this
2:13:38
is a good one. This should be enshrined in law everywhere. But
2:13:42
when the child leaves the home, then the government takes over.
2:13:47
They and they start paying them 1600 pounds a month. And you can
2:13:52
still work in anything. You make an addition to that you can keep
2:13:56
that don't you think every parent in the world is cheering
2:13:58
that on?
2:14:00
Oh, yeah, I would say so. But it's so it just reeks of
2:14:03
inflationary, of course.
2:14:05
Of course, but this is all the and of course, this is just
2:14:08
basic income and no one has universal basic income that that
2:14:13
is what is touted as possible.
2:14:15
Yeah. Is that going to happen? I don't know if ever Well, they
2:14:20
tried that in Russia before during the Soviet era where you
2:14:23
had all these people would make work, work jobs, and they got
2:14:27
you know, some sort of subsistence living didn't work
2:14:32
out
2:14:36
yeah.
2:14:39
That mean it died back the clips.
2:14:42
Well, okay. Let me give you this clip. This is something we knew
2:14:46
what happened. This being one of the busiest travel weekends in
2:14:49
the United States and globally, it's all following in lockstep.
2:14:53
This morning, the July 4 Holiday Getaway is well underway, but
2:14:57
1000s of flight cancellations and delays laze mean big crowds
2:15:01
and big frustration. But canceled trucks and this surging
2:15:08
number of travelers and Pandemic related staffing shortages have
2:15:11
airlines struggling to keep planes taking off. Delta pilots
2:15:16
hitting the picket line yesterday, demanding better pay
2:15:19
and better schedules.
2:15:20
We've now flown more overtime in the first six months of this
2:15:23
year than we did in 2018 and 2019. Combined than those years
2:15:27
those are record years for the airline industry.
2:15:30
The CEO promising passengers the airline will do better writing
2:15:34
quote, If you've encountered delays and cancellations
2:15:36
recently, I apologise at American pilots are now being
2:15:40
offered a 16% Raise. Others are getting triple pay to staff
2:15:45
regional flights. The head of the TSA says his agency is
2:15:48
staffed for the holiday with 1000 workers on standby if
2:15:52
needed. We had
2:15:53
last Sunday, the highest number of passengers since the pandemic
2:15:55
so I expect that we're going to see something similar ballpark
2:16:00
to to last weekend
2:16:01
airports overseas facing the same problems in Amsterdam,
2:16:04
American Airlines is now suspending ticket sales to the
2:16:07
US.
2:16:11
Watch, this is the same thing KLM had to do because of the
2:16:15
lack of pilots as security staff just people wanting to work in
2:16:19
general. They said we're just not going to sell you any
2:16:21
tickets because we can't even we don't know if we can fly it. So
2:16:26
don't even ask us for tickets. I just have to
2:16:30
get tickets to the US. Yeah. Why is specifically because of our
2:16:36
problems.
2:16:37
Well, that's very simple.
2:16:39
It's America. It's American Airlines. So American Airlines
2:16:42
flies to the US typically. I did I forgot to mention this 10
2:16:48
Downing Street. This is like you know, saying number 10 would be
2:16:52
like saying the White House is considering 50 year mortgages
2:16:58
that can be passed down to your kids. Oh,
2:17:02
you know, this is not the first time this has cropped really I
2:17:05
love this idea. It never worked out. Well. No, of
2:17:08
course not. You just saddled your kids up with debt. It's a
2:17:12
funny idea. It's a great idea. And you inherited the house
2:17:17
along with a 50 year mortgage generation topic. It's exactly
2:17:22
the opposite of generational wealth generational debt is a
2:17:25
great way to go. You will have nothing you will be happy.
2:17:32
So I have one clip of from Great Britain this are just part of it
2:17:37
is from France 24. But this is about a cockamamie scheme which
2:17:41
is in play and going on where the British are shipping to
2:17:46
Rwanda. The EU for Wanda. Here's the update. UK Rwanda
2:17:52
government's controversial plans to deport undocumented migrants
2:17:56
that arrive on its shores to Rwanda have sparked widespread
2:18:00
criticism. In Rwanda itself. There are already hundreds of
2:18:03
asylum seekers waiting for their request to be processed. Some
2:18:06
have been there for years as in cottony tells us
2:18:09
for the asylum seekers who end up at the shore camp in
2:18:12
southwestern Ronda, it is all about patients. More than 1000
2:18:16
people have come through here since 2019. When Rwanda agreed
2:18:19
to offer shelter to refugees stuck in Libya, residents live
2:18:23
in small units. There's a cafeteria and a center where
2:18:27
people can learn skills such as weaving and hairdressing. For
2:18:30
many, it's a welcome reprieve after experiencing truly awful
2:18:34
moments. When I was in Libya, I tried to see for time, and I
2:18:39
failed, but the people here we're all waiting for
2:18:42
governments and administration's around the world to process
2:18:45
their asylum requests. Some have been waiting for years, making
2:18:49
the cachorro camp increasingly feel like an open air prison. So
2:18:53
much so that Ismail Bonaga says he might just return to Libya,
2:18:57
to try to make his way across the Mediterranean. Once again,
2:19:01
the me is gonna go more folder one one,
2:19:03
I submitted my case to go to Canada, but since December,
2:19:06
authorities keep giving me different reasons for why my
2:19:08
case has been delayed and still not approved. I see other asylum
2:19:12
seekers here have already left Assura but I don't know the
2:19:15
reason why I'm still here.
2:19:17
My was Moodle, as the UNHCR says they have not had a single
2:19:21
request to stay in Rwanda permanently. So far, more than
2:19:25
600 asylum seekers had been resettled in Canada, Finland,
2:19:29
France, and Sweden.
2:19:32
What the report doesn't really point out is that these every
2:19:36
day this like 75 to 100 people arriving by boat rubber dinghy
2:19:42
across the English Channel. Had this this is who they want to
2:19:46
immediately turn around and deport.
2:19:49
Yeah, well, that's what they're doing.
2:19:51
Yeah. It's just, there are a lot of people who don't even know
2:19:57
where Rwanda is, and they show up like that. Okay, you're going
2:20:00
Rwanda
2:20:01
you go by, to him. So what you know Franklin Roosevelt did a
2:20:07
similar thing with with the immigrants coming up from the
2:20:10
Central and South America, Central America and Mexico.
2:20:13
During his era. He he's the one he shipped them to. Jakob Tanner
2:20:20
some he had there some area, and they put them all on a boat is a
2:20:24
very, very controversial Democrats don't like talking
2:20:27
about this. But he put them on these these ships and then
2:20:31
shipped into the Catan or someplace like that. I think you
2:20:34
can look into it and find out where exactly, but it was so far
2:20:38
away from everything. They it, the word got out. And that was
2:20:40
the end of our immigration crisis during the Roosevelt
2:20:43
administration.
2:20:46
It was the end of the immigration crisis.
2:20:48
It pretty much did. Yeah, no one wanted to come. Yeah, because
2:20:52
they're gonna get shipped to this crazy place in the middle
2:20:54
of nowhere.
2:20:55
So it's a genius plan. Well, it worked. Well, no this but the
2:21:00
Rwanda thing is, I mean, of all the place. Oh, no,
2:21:02
I think so. I think Rwanda things a genius plan to Yeah,
2:21:05
it's cruel. Of course, it's incredibly unfair.
2:21:08
And yeah, of course, it's unfair, but man, does it work? I
2:21:12
mean, of all the places you could be shipped to, I mean,
2:21:15
Australia, you know, that's where they used to send them to
2:21:18
the penal colony. Now Rwanda, and like, No. Even Africans will
2:21:25
be like, No, I don't want to go to that country.
2:21:28
Me Well, the London has this. At the biggest they had a Gay
2:21:33
pariet Gay Pride parade. In London, but 1 million.
2:21:39
Did we have a monkey pox outbreak? Not yet. But here's
2:21:43
the here's a report,
2:21:44
revelers face paint, rainbow flags and much happiness set the
2:21:48
tone for a record breaking Pride Parade in central London this
2:21:51
Saturday, more than a million people gathered to celebrate 50
2:21:55
years of Pride March made a change to the first one in 1972
2:21:59
with only a few hundreds marches then surrounded by heavy police
2:22:03
presence. Here are some reactions in the crowd.
2:22:06
50th anniversary I mean, my heavens was a milestone. What a
2:22:10
difference in society. Between then and now. Even just the
2:22:16
freedom to do this, when previously, there will be no
2:22:21
audience suggests the police now look at the most popular event
2:22:25
in the whole
2:22:30
thing, nuts I grew up with, with pride parades in the
2:22:34
Netherlands. Yeah, we have the we have the big AIDS monument in
2:22:38
Amsterdam, and the pride parade was a originally a parade
2:22:46
through the canals. And you would have boats and the boats
2:22:49
would be, you know, people dressed up and dancing and you
2:22:52
know, flam, very flamboyant. But it was it was always a fun thing
2:22:56
to watch and, and just see everyone kind of, but he wasn't
2:23:00
exclusively pride. But now what I've noticed with these pride
2:23:06
parades, there's a lot of nudity, which seems to be
2:23:09
something of the past two or three years. Well, I guess
2:23:13
skipping COVID But the past couple of years. I mean, like
2:23:15
just a lot of nudity not me. We even saw what's her face,
2:23:20
Christina Aguilera in the US with a with a dildo strapped on
2:23:24
this kid.
2:23:25
That was the worst looking thing ever.
2:23:27
It was. Yeah, it was a green dildo was highly offensive.
2:23:30
It was it was a giant, you know, it was huge.
2:23:33
It was a rubber thing.
2:23:34
It was a strap giant but it was huge. It was like and it was
2:23:37
green. It
2:23:38
was unreal. It
2:23:39
was bigger than a basketball.
2:23:40
It was giving people unrealistic expectations. It was not it was
2:23:44
that was I was insulted by the expectations Thank you very much
2:23:48
anyways, it's time for the millennial minute. So listen,
2:23:51
cuz it's super important. Okay. Wow, you like that millennial
2:23:57
minute little,
2:23:58
that's about as good as it's gonna get,
2:23:59
but she wanted to be called the hot millennial assistant. She is
2:24:04
indeed an assistant to one of our producers. And she says I
2:24:07
want to be called the hot millennial assistant. Okay, also
2:24:10
known as the MA. So let's now that we're on this LGBTQ tip of
2:24:18
BLM plus noodle boy, let's play a few of these clips. We start
2:24:23
with well, even though she's not necessarily millennial, she has
2:24:27
all the traits. Yeah, I was asked as a Paris Hilton. Yeah, I
2:24:30
was asked
2:24:30
by President Biden and their team to go DJ for like the that
2:24:36
summit dinner with all the leaders of the world. But it was
2:24:39
the same night of Britney's wedding, and then I'm like, No,
2:24:42
I'm not gonna miss that. They're like, we'll send the helicopters
2:24:44
and you can fly back and forth. And I'm like, I'm not going to
2:24:46
be the one like landing in and out of Britney's wedding in a
2:24:48
helicopter like
2:24:49
mom, so I just had to cancel on the president.
2:24:58
Did you? Did you sound Am I canceling that it was an
2:25:01
emergency? Well, it was an emergency because Britney Spears
2:25:04
had he was getting bets
2:25:05
yeah
2:25:06
It's Britney bitch. Yeah, of course.
2:25:09
So the question is What the hell are they thinking they want to
2:25:13
hurt a DJ, the g7 summit a bunch of stiffs and you're gonna have
2:25:19
Paris Hilton waving arms around the air and playing you know, to
2:25:23
hip hop. What what did you need they thinking you
2:25:27
need to go right now and look at the art gallery Expo that they
2:25:32
all had their picture taken all of these elite douchebags so
2:25:38
Macron and Johnson and root n Ursula and all of them. You just
2:25:45
just go look g7 Art Expo. This whole thing is filled with horns
2:25:52
and blood and nudity and, and gore and Devo stuff. Just it's
2:26:00
almost like the Denver Airport
2:26:02
and at this one piece. This is like a sculpture of garbage.
2:26:06
Yeah. What do you see? With the horns, the horns, I've seen the
2:26:12
horror. There's so there's this one there on both sides. It's
2:26:15
all the it's the group shot. And in the middle is this painting
2:26:18
it's big art piece and it was a painting. And it's clearly meant
2:26:22
to depict a holy person. Probably Jesus except that you
2:26:26
know, so it has a halo, but they're not Jesus. No, there's a
2:26:29
skull with syringes sticking in the skull. It's got bare breasts
2:26:35
and it's got horns. And they're like all smiling my yay here we
2:26:39
are at the g7 I mean it's like Damien Hirst gone bad it's
2:26:47
really incredible what these people are into all kinds of
2:26:50
crazy shit. It's like that the tunnel opening I mean, these are
2:26:55
these are cultist type people that Baphomet that's what I'm
2:26:59
Baphomet symbolism. It's all their Moloch like
2:27:02
I can't find one. What you have to send me a link to these
2:27:08
pictures and use them in the newsletter. Okay. Oh,
2:27:11
when you see them, you'll be You won't even want to use them in
2:27:14
the newsletter you'll be disgusted.
2:27:16
Well, that's possible. I think Lee discussed that
2:27:20
they're inviting them in now. We do have demons on Earth. And
2:27:24
these demons usually work at companies that have been tricked
2:27:26
into following ESG environmental social governance guidelines,
2:27:32
because the
2:27:33
demons who create the ESG to trick the companies
2:27:37
well the companies are following step and this this is almost
2:27:41
like an A new noodle boy clip to me except it comes from CNBC,
2:27:45
the financial network and hiring practices
2:27:49
great salary 401 K match paid time off sounds good, but that
2:27:54
may not be enough to attract good employees anymore.
2:27:57
As CNBC is Sharon Epperson reports. Tonight more workers
2:28:00
are considering a company's values as a reason to accept a
2:28:03
job offer. In his recent job search new college grad Tyrese,
2:28:09
Thomas focused on salary and benefits, but only in companies
2:28:13
that shared his values.
2:28:15
Innovation, impact equity are things that are incredibly
2:28:17
important to me.
2:28:18
Thomas was an intern at a tech company in the summer of 2021.
2:28:22
In the midst of Black Lives Matter protests and a raging
2:28:25
pandemic that was changing workplace dynamics,
2:28:28
like saw how important it was for employers to show that they
2:28:33
have this these allegiances with, you know, these affinity
2:28:36
organizations, and these individuals who are working for
2:28:39
them. And so it's super important for me to be able to
2:28:41
find a organization that aligns with my values,
2:28:43
workers are split on whether they want business leaders to
2:28:46
speak out more on social, environmental and political
2:28:49
issues, including constitutional and reproductive rights.
2:28:53
research finds that addressing these issues can influence a
2:28:56
company's ability to attract and retain talent Paul was advises
2:29:01
companies on HR strategy and workforce development, the
2:29:04
best companies are going to listen to many opinions. And you
2:29:08
know, they're not always going to agree with you, but you want
2:29:10
a company that's going to listen to you people want to feel seen
2:29:13
and heard. Even though the company may not completely agree
2:29:16
with them all the time.
2:29:17
A recent survey finds more than half of us employees say they
2:29:20
will be willing to take a pay cut to work at a company with
2:29:24
values they agree with 56% wouldn't even consider a job at
2:29:28
a company that has values they disagree with.
2:29:31
There is more of a social lens put on companies to them what
2:29:35
they're doing about things and what they stand for.
2:29:37
Tom has just started his first full time job as an associate
2:29:41
project manager at an E commerce company.
2:29:44
He's hoping his generation can change the way business gets
2:29:47
done.
2:29:48
And if we can just you know, find and crush organizations to
2:29:52
kind of live up to you know, these expectations. We can have
2:29:55
significant results for ourselves for our careers for
2:29:58
our peers and In the future
2:30:02
how is this going to work out John C. Dvorak business
2:30:04
consultant poorly Exactly.
2:30:09
These companies all be out of business within five years
2:30:14
and if you're not yeah and these people will not have jobs
2:30:18
no that's especially their job I'm taking less pay working over
2:30:21
here because I like them
2:30:22
yeah cuz I like it so much.
2:30:24
Yeah. Here's a guy who this is an interesting little clip as be
2:30:31
my last clip of the day by the way. This is USA journalist and
2:30:36
editor there got made a tweet, too, that only women can give
2:30:43
have babies. Oh, we
2:30:45
Oh, third rail Danger, danger.
2:30:49
Yeah, we got fired. He's no longer at USA Today.
2:30:52
The former editor at USA Today is speaking out. Citation of
2:30:57
today's news industry. And an interview with The Epoch Times
2:31:01
he said the leaders of ganache and USA Today need to return to
2:31:05
older values.
2:31:06
There's there's a screenshot
2:31:07
of David Masse do worked as an opinion editor at USA Today
2:31:11
until March. He recently revealed that the media outlet
2:31:14
demoted him in August last year for tweeting that only women
2:31:17
could get pregnant. He tells the Epoch Times what he thinks has
2:31:20
gone wrong with USA Today's journalism practices.
2:31:23
I think what's going wrong with reporting at USA today is that
2:31:30
we don't talk to sources that we disagree with, or quote people
2:31:35
that the reporter disagrees with. And I think it's really
2:31:39
important in in news stories, to have both sides and to have
2:31:44
people that you talk to who challenge your views.
2:31:48
Matthew explains that USA Today and its parent company, Gannett
2:31:52
became increasingly liberal because the company hired young
2:31:55
reporters to replace more experienced and expensive
2:31:58
journalists. And these reporters fresh out of college come from
2:32:02
an overwhelmingly liberal environment.
2:32:03
They went one small step at a time. And they found themselves
2:32:09
with a staff that was too overwhelmingly political to too
2:32:14
liberal. And they didn't have the spine to demand that they
2:32:21
that these young reporters adapt to USA Today's values. So they
2:32:25
changed USA today to make it more like there's their report.
2:32:30
The
2:32:30
former editor says he thinks journalism and big companies
2:32:33
like Gannett are going off the rails. People who
2:32:36
who think that that journalism is about the facts and being
2:32:41
honest with our readers need to stand up for the values that
2:32:44
made journalism important and influential in this are
2:32:47
increasingly being abandoned by our by our industry
2:32:52
will not only need to get fired, he'll never work again.
2:32:56
He started up with some he started up a online news
2:33:01
operation. I can it's called straight arrow I think. Yes,
2:33:05
straight arrow. And it's financed by some billionaire
2:33:09
guy. Who who's paying the bills.
2:33:13
Why isn't that exactly how news has always been in the United
2:33:16
States where we had yellow journalism? We had big rich
2:33:21
people financing journalism. Yeah, that always
2:33:25
got rich. I mean, that Hearst, for example, got rich off the
2:33:28
journalism. So does he go to the beginning of Hearst it was
2:33:32
really a mining company Hearst mining that really made all the
2:33:35
money, George first believe right, but
2:33:39
it's always been a loss leader for companies like this. Was it
2:33:42
Strauss family who owned who owned the New York Times now?
2:33:46
It's
2:33:48
now it's a Mexican guy.
2:33:49
I don't know if it's just the Mexican guy thought there
2:33:51
was I know it's a Mexican guy. I think it was the 30s Carlos
2:33:54
Slim. Yeah. Yes. Is a part of it. And I think I think era
2:33:59
bones that another third
2:34:01
and China and China provides the cash flow. So it's a beautiful
2:34:04
thing. There you go. Boom.
2:34:05
I'm gonna show my son moved by donate to no agenda. Imagine all
2:34:09
the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.
2:34:19
And we do have a few people to thank for show. 1465 I think
2:34:24
Correct. 1465 and we start with Stephanie Francis in Chandler,
2:34:31
Arizona. $180.18. And this was a 60 Oh, 60 dot o six. Boobs times
2:34:40
three, six boobs. Nice. And it's got a birthday. You
2:34:43
ever have too many?
2:34:46
It's a birthday call for a husband. loving husband, sir.
2:34:49
Don't do cn Paulo Mado in Oviedo, Florida, 101 Baron
2:34:59
lakukan in here Euston, Texas $100 John robe and a $100 Sir
2:35:03
gear is Night of the second hand memes in that landisville
2:35:07
Pennsylvania 808 Daniel heard in Concord new North Carolina 808.
2:35:13
That's interesting a number because here comes through Kevin
2:35:16
McLaughlin, Duke of America and lover Duke of Luna and lover of
2:35:20
American boobs. 808. Boobs. Robert Umbarger in Langhorne,
2:35:28
Pennsylvania 808. Wow. Happy fourth and boobs he writes. Dame
2:35:35
Lilly of the happy Hummers in Santee, California. A oh eight,
2:35:43
sending a boob donation for his son
2:35:45
nice. He loves oops, or she says, Hey, man, there's nothing
2:35:51
wrong with boobs.
2:35:54
Chauvin out Shavon Allah mon I'm guessing he's What's it
2:36:00
pronounced in French? He's in St. George, Louisiana, where
2:36:03
they speak a kind of a French Huguenot French 7476 Christianne
2:36:12
Moreno in Costa Mesa, California. 7422. Our lease,
2:36:20
Jenna Orly hourlies, AR el Ys de Jenna, and he's an interesting
2:36:25
and interesting man because his name comes in his all caps in
2:36:28
Bethpage New York. 7246 Rebecca Clarke 7122 in Las Cruces, New
2:36:34
Mexico, Monica Kidwell in Floyds knobs There you go Indiana
2:36:41
5678 5678 Brian Furley five 510 Sir dancing Mike rhymes with
2:36:48
enclosure. Marysville Tennessee. He's got a birthday so D 252.
2:36:55
Okay, Eric.
2:36:56
Oh, no, that's that's his hot wife Denise. DeLozier Oh, Dillo
2:37:01
rhymes with enclosure disclosure.
2:37:03
Yeah, that's gonna that's gonna be your problem later. Eric
2:37:07
whole goal in Maryrose Deutschland $52. And that's the
2:37:13
first time I've seen either mole rows come through. Yes, yes.
2:37:18
And Hoko with uhm, loud. Yeah, it must be those must be those
2:37:22
new PayPal fees. They've improved the service.
2:37:26
Greg noseley noseley in noseley in Cumberland, BC 5150 Anthony
2:37:33
Zahn merace in Albuquerque, New Mexico. 5150. Le Pellegrin in
2:37:39
Eastlake, Ohio. 5033. And that's a birthday call out, got hit
2:37:44
through Canary Cry news talk in 2020. With that she needs a de
2:37:49
douching by the way. You've been deep
2:37:53
and we also need to deduce Anthony's marches. Best friend
2:37:58
Christian, you hit him in the mouth in March 2020. You've been
2:38:02
de deuced.
2:38:05
He also says Joe Biden was an inside job.
2:38:09
No kidding.
2:38:10
The following people are $50 donors. It was just name and
2:38:14
location. Here they go. Maurice Chu Sumanth Sumanth. Samantha
2:38:20
ready and Austin, Texas. Andrew Watson in Fairhope, Alabama.
2:38:25
Shane Grubb, and Cleveland, Tennessee. Loretta Vandenberg,
2:38:32
and Pravin Sol, Louisiana. We got a lot of Southerners today,
2:38:37
David Keyes in Riverside, California, Steven apt. In
2:38:42
Varaha. Wisconsin, Clara Thornhill in Toronto, Ontario
2:38:48
Christopher Oh Cohen in Austin, Texas. Tony Lang in Castle
2:38:54
Pines, Colorado. James sheremeta in Napa knock New York, Joseph
2:39:00
Barnes in Oakland, California. And a Drake in Wrightstown.
2:39:06
Indiana. Andrew sire Sawyer in Duncan BC. Steven crummy in El
2:39:13
Cajon, California, Robin Nunn maker in Missouri City, Texas.
2:39:19
And last but not least, Kenneth Horrocks, I'm hoping in Castaic,
2:39:25
California want to wish all these people a Happy Fourth of
2:39:29
July and also wish us the Fourth of July and thank them all for
2:39:32
helping the show, the Fourth of July special,
2:39:35
a special thanks to everyone who came in under $50. Typically,
2:39:38
for reasons of anonymity, we have those 4990 nines and
2:39:41
they're appreciated. But you can also get an A whole bunch of
2:39:44
different subscriptions. You can even make up your own for a
2:39:46
regular donation. And we appreciate those people very
2:39:50
much along with our executive and Associate Executive
2:39:52
Producers quick. Going back to Stephanie Francis for a moment.
2:39:57
I just want to read her since we have a little time This was the
2:40:00
the triple the triple small booth donation. Now I just
2:40:04
wanted to read it because he has a lot of things here. The first
2:40:06
set is first birthday which was on June 27, which I miss
2:40:10
donating because we were out of town, please add them to the
2:40:13
birthday list. He's on the second set as for upcoming
2:40:15
anniversary on July 10, which again will be out of town. So
2:40:20
making sure I don't miss it. And for six wonderful years together
2:40:24
and they never had a fight. Make sure because she probably was
2:40:28
not aware of the $200 limit for note reading and she did ask for
2:40:32
a great jingle okay, you know what? Not I don't know. No, no,
2:40:39
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. You're my house. Drinking.
2:40:47
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Not at all. Shame on you. You've
2:40:54
got karma. And remember, go here to find out more about producing
2:41:00
the no agenda show.org/n
2:41:04
A
2:41:12
and here's our birthday list for today. It is the third of July
2:41:15
2022. Sir Benny says Happy Birthday to Dame Swanee
2:41:19
Stephanie Francis as you just heard her loving husband Sir Don
2:41:21
Francis. June 27. She loves you a lot nude Derek Winky 58
2:41:26
yesterday on the first I should say Dame Lilly of the happy
2:41:29
Hummers Happy birthday with her son Liam 24. On July 3 Today,
2:41:33
sir gears night of second hand means to his son to his son his
2:41:37
boob loving son Jacob, who turns three on the fourth. I bet he
2:41:42
really does love him. Sir. Dancing Mike to his smokin hot
2:41:45
wife Denise Dillos your 52 on the fifth. Maria O'Connor to her
2:41:50
piping hot partner toady who will be 50 on July 6, and Le Eli
2:41:55
Pelegrin 34 on July 10. These are our birthdays happy birthday
2:41:58
for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. No
2:42:03
titles today but we do have two nights to bring up to the podium
2:42:08
for their night ego. Perfect One. Derrick Winky Nicholas
2:42:14
Everett's gentlemen both of you supported that no agenda show
2:42:17
and the amount of $1,000 or more that gives you rights bragging
2:42:21
rights and it puts you right up here at the round table with the
2:42:23
no agenda Knights and Dames I am very proud to pronounce the Kate
2:42:27
v as Sir EA of the text domain and Sir Nico of that Gallatin
2:42:32
Hills gentlemen, both of you are now knights of the no agenda
2:42:35
roundtable for you. We've got the obligatory hookers and blow
2:42:38
rent boys and Chardonnay, but also we've got fish pie,
2:42:41
fellatio. Rubenesque Scrivener, Rosae, geishas and sock a bucket
2:42:44
Manila, sparkling cider and escorts ginger ale and Jerboas
2:42:47
we got some breast milk and Pavlin pepperoni rolls and pale
2:42:50
ales, even some harlots, how dull but maybe you just want
2:42:54
some of that good old fashioned mutton and Mead. It's always on
2:42:58
the menu. And you need to go to no agenda nation.com/rings Let
2:43:03
us know exactly where we can send you a ring your wax which
2:43:07
you can use to seal your very important correspondence along
2:43:11
with your certificate of authenticity. And we thank you
2:43:14
very much for being big time producers of the no agenda
2:43:18
podcast. No one said
2:43:26
yeah, we only have one before the next show. And we'll talk
2:43:31
about that after we listen to a couple of meetup reports. We had
2:43:34
the big martinis and meatballs meet up this was at the pork
2:43:38
freedom festival. It sounds like they had a good time.
2:43:44
2020 toe post COVID 2600 People here maybe 3000 It's crazy.
2:43:53
Anyways, this is an amazing meetup. Martinis and meatballs
2:43:57
is seven days again. All right. I'm gonna pass the phone is is
2:44:07
Nick from New Hampshire. The government's not real. Don't
2:44:10
touch my stuff.
2:44:11
And this is Rob Lee from New Hampshire birds aren't real
2:44:13
either. But the Free State of New Hampshire
2:44:15
is very real.
2:44:17
I love my husband's penis and I set it on no agenda again. This
2:44:20
is Sarah Brown. Thanks for talking about it. A long, long
2:44:24
time ago. Adam, you guys are the best.
2:44:26
Laura from Seattle, Washington.
2:44:29
Get off my lawn.
2:44:30
Michael from Blacksburg Virginia. Adam, you gotta come
2:44:34
to Porcfest David we will much about that be committed I don't
2:44:40
ever remember talking about someone's penis. Do you
2:44:45
That's disgusting. Exactly.
2:44:47
Often New Orleans we go
2:44:49
to Jupiter at the moose is loose official meet up at New Orleans
2:44:53
Louisiana and I'm here with
2:44:55
Sean neither the northern Everglades cousin of Ron. Sir my
2:44:59
my
2:44:59
my show ona in New Orleans Louisiana Aye
2:45:02
sir lone wolf Don't eat me Joe Biden sir my my Chaloner wife
2:45:06
where all the women at
2:45:09
and there's not a dry team this place love you guys meet at
2:45:12
ITM Lehren peace. And the last meetup report comes to us from
2:45:18
Portland. This was a millennial male I think hosted this one the
2:45:21
Portland millennial meetup.
2:45:23
In the mornings millennial male reporting live. In Southeast
2:45:28
Portland, Oregon. We are on high alert. They're addicts. There is
2:45:33
a tick somewhere there was a tick on a dog exited the dog but
2:45:39
we have not relocated the tick. High Alert. We are jumping on
2:45:42
tables jumping on benches. Nobody wants to take on them.
2:45:46
It's not a joke. Oh, just a ginormous dog.
2:45:50
Symbol master running for Oregon State Representative district
2:45:55
three going back to the word wind doc. It's only been a
2:45:58
Democrat on the ballot for 18 years. It's nice to have a
2:46:02
reprieve there were ticks.
2:46:08
It was beer. Time was had.
2:46:13
Mel, Mel. You got to ride the levels. Mel. Did you understand
2:46:19
anything of that report? No, it's a mess. Mel. Got to work on
2:46:25
the mix a little bit but thank you for the report. To the only
2:46:29
a meet up I can mention until the next show day is Wednesday
2:46:32
but it will be a big one. It's July 6, the Eindhoven summertime
2:46:35
meetup that kicks off at 630 in the Lola lowlands. Time take
2:46:44
lowlands time take part in the second na meetup the hidest the
2:46:47
hippest city of the lowlands, well, it will be in Eindhoven it
2:46:50
will be at the kettle house located in stripe s. So if
2:46:55
you're in the lowlands, you definitely want to check that
2:46:58
out as a huge group that participates in the Netherlands.
2:47:02
Other countries other places July ninth Brockport New York
2:47:05
Oxbridge, Ontario, Canada, Berlin, Germany on the 10th
2:47:09
Arlington, Virginia Santa Fe, New Mexico, Plainfield, Illinois
2:47:12
on the 14th, Atlanta, Georgia, and it just keeps on going all
2:47:16
the way into August. These are the no agenda meetups you can
2:47:19
find them at no agenda meetups.com There's no
2:47:22
obligation all you do is just show up and bring your happy no
2:47:25
agenda attitude, because that's what it is. It's a community and
2:47:29
it doesn't matter who you are, where you're from, what status
2:47:33
you are of anything you will be universally accepted. There's no
2:47:36
triggering just a good hang and respect all round no agenda
2:47:39
meetups.com If you can't find one near you start wanting
2:47:43
to go hang out with the all the Dyson days.
2:47:49
You won't be triggered everybody feels the same. It's like doo
2:48:05
doo doo doo doo. No K ISOs. I only have one is crap. I have
2:48:11
to. I'll play my crap. Russia, Russia, Russia. That's all I
2:48:15
got.
2:48:16
I know that.
2:48:17
I know. It's Biden.
2:48:19
Just a second time you've played Biden. And I haven't played
2:48:23
Biden since the last time you told me no Biden.
2:48:27
I know. That's why I put it in there. Just to just to I'm going
2:48:30
to play Biden from now on Okay, here we go. Try this one
2:48:33
chickens.
2:48:38
I'm already in on that one. I don't know if this next one can
2:48:41
top it. John.
2:48:42
This one is gone. It is gone. No,
2:48:46
no chickens. Chickens are the way to go. Chickens are great.
2:48:52
Love your chickens.
2:48:55
Okay, I can play one last clip and we can leave or you can play
2:48:59
a bunch of clips.
2:49:00
I would like to play too. Okay,
2:49:03
let me play my one just so you bring us up to date on Stacey
2:49:06
Abrams. This is from the last show. You had to look it up.
2:49:09
Stacey Abrams in Georgia election in TD. This is what
2:49:14
were the status of Stacey Abrams. She knows she's running
2:49:16
for governor again even though she's already been because she
2:49:19
already won didn't she didn't she isn't governor. I thought
2:49:21
she she has again
2:49:23
total of 102 sheriffs and Georgia have joined Georgia
2:49:26
Governor Brian Kemp and a statement condemning democratic
2:49:29
gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams over her support of what
2:49:32
they call soft on crime policies. The state has 159
2:49:36
sheriffs, thank you very much. A Republican is seeking a second
2:49:41
term he will be competing against Abrams in the November
2:49:43
election. The Governor and the sheriff's statement reads Stacey
2:49:47
Abrams has repeatedly shown complete disdain for law
2:49:49
enforcement and the risks we take every day putting our lives
2:49:52
on the line to serve our communities. Miss Abrams
2:49:55
actively serves on the governing board of and has profited from
2:49:58
an anti police organization Run which openly advocates for
2:50:01
abolishing prisons and stripping local police departments of
2:50:04
their funding. The organization they are referring to is the
2:50:07
Marguerite Casey Foundation, a Seattle based grant making
2:50:10
group, Abrams became a board member of the foundation in May
2:50:13
2021. Less than a month later, she was one of the board members
2:50:17
supporting the foundation's rollout of an anti police
2:50:19
initiative. The group has given grants to groups including the
2:50:22
movement for black lives and Louisville community bail fund.
2:50:26
A group's Twitter posts also show that it supports the
2:50:28
abolish the police and defund the police movement. The
2:50:31
sheriff's statement goes on to say quote, We are grateful to
2:50:34
have the support of Governor Kemp and his administration and
2:50:37
we call on Stacey Abrams to disavow the dangerous policy she
2:50:40
supports. A spokesperson for Abrams campaign told Fox News
2:50:44
digital that Abrams does not support defunding the police
2:50:47
and, quote, he's a longtime supporter of investing in law
2:50:50
enforcement alongside Building Community Trust and fostering
2:50:53
law enforcement accountability.
2:50:56
Where was the Cygwin? She should have zagged? Yeah, where
2:50:59
was that report from?
2:51:01
New Tang Dynasty? Ah, well, I'm gonna go in here that anywhere
2:51:04
else? Well, no,
2:51:05
of course not. You're gonna we're gonna keep that with
2:51:07
governor's we're gonna keep it with police and with guns. And
2:51:11
this will be my last clip. This is the unelected governor of New
2:51:16
York pokel. She was lieutenant governor. So when Andrew Cuomo
2:51:21
resigned, she became the default governor. And I'm sure she's
2:51:24
running again because, well, them she knows what she's doing.
2:51:29
Now they've, after the Supreme Court decision regarding
2:51:34
concealed carry in New York, the right to have a gun, she's come
2:51:39
up with I think 10 or 30 new rules. We're just we don't care.
2:51:42
We're just going to do this. And here was the press conference.
2:51:45
It was enlightening was specially with this question
2:51:47
from a journalist, do you have the
2:51:49
numbers to show that it's the concealed carry permit holders
2:51:53
that are committing crimes, because the lawful gun owner
2:51:57
will say that you're attacking the wrong person? It's really
2:52:01
people that are getting these guns illegally that are causing
2:52:04
the violence, not the people going and getting the permit
2:52:07
legally. And that's the basis for the whole Supreme Court
2:52:10
argument. Do you have the numbers,
2:52:13
I don't need to have numbers. I don't need I don't have to have
2:52:17
a data point. To to say that this is going to All I know is I
2:52:20
have a responsibility to the people to state to have sensible
2:52:24
gun safety laws. And this one was not devised by the local
2:52:27
administration. It comes out of an administration from 1908. And
2:52:31
I don't need a data point to make the case that I've had
2:52:33
responsibility to protect the people of the state,
2:52:36
somebody who's going to go do a mass shooting or something like
2:52:38
that. Why not go get a concealed carry?
2:52:40
I never said there's any correlation between our solution
2:52:43
here. And the buffalo case. In fact, I signed a package of 10
2:52:48
laws following buffalo that dealt with the issue. The issues
2:52:51
that were raised there, the
2:52:53
locals gun laws passed after the tops grocery store shooting in
2:52:56
Buffalo raised the age at which a New Yorker can purchase a
2:52:59
firearm to 21. But now there are questions about whether
2:53:02
restricting public spaces under the new bills infringe on second
2:53:06
amendment rights, but they can't practice self defense because of
2:53:10
the restrictions.
2:53:10
My point, let me let me give you you like statistics, you'd like
2:53:13
numbers. I said at the outset, five people for 100,000 have
2:53:19
died from gun violence in the state of New York. The guns are
2:53:24
the states that have more liberal laws, you know, carry
2:53:27
guns everywhere you want on the theory of self protection. Their
2:53:31
average is about 28.6% More people are dying in those
2:53:35
states.
2:53:36
Wow, I'd really like to see those numbers. Do you think
2:53:39
that's true? It seems the exact opposite. And maybe it's not
2:53:42
states maybe it's cities? I don't
2:53:45
know. She does. She's annoying. She's gonna get reelected
2:53:49
because she's an income that and Democrats always vote for their
2:53:52
own if they're incumbents always. So shake because that's
2:53:56
what they do. Yeah. So you go Oh, incumbent Democrat. Yep.
2:53:59
Click as she is a creep. Yeah, actually worse than then Cuomo.
2:54:06
Yeah.
2:54:08
Yeah, she has a lot of creep to her that's for sure. Members,
2:54:10
where she's like, I am God. Basically, when she said that,
2:54:13
um, God now. Don't you remember that?
2:54:18
Vaguely.
2:54:18
I just really did put her he cringe about her. Okay. And she
2:54:22
looks cringy I'll just leave everybody with this. And then
2:54:26
poof, I'm preparedness for potential cyber pandemic, the
2:54:31
company that handles unemployment benefits for 40
2:54:36
Different states has been cyber hacked, and they will not be
2:54:39
able to send out your checks. And there's no end in sight as
2:54:45
to when they'll be able to do that. But don't worry. Let's
2:54:48
protest row. that'll that'll do it.
2:54:54
And we'll point it ending.
2:54:57
Yes. Well, we'll The reason I say it is it'll pro Probably
2:55:00
this shit will hit the fan because you know, we're past the
2:55:02
first of the month and people are going to be waiting for the
2:55:04
checks and maybe it'll be a new story we'll see. Because that's
2:55:07
what we do. Look at our mission statement at no agenda show.net
2:55:12
And stay tuned to no agenda stream.com There's the troll
2:55:16
room up next, live on the stream hog story five minute limit with
2:55:21
Fletcher Blaney and special guests, Nick the rat. Oh, my
2:55:26
you've I mean, how can you not tune in for that. End of show
2:55:31
mixes we've got Nicholas Heron Rolando Gonzalez and Neal Jones
2:55:35
coming to you from the heart of the Texas hill country here in
2:55:37
FEMA Region number 60. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam
2:55:40
curry
2:55:40
from Northern Silicon Valley where it's fogged in. I'm John
2:55:44
C. Devorah. We return
2:55:45
on Thursday. Happy Independence Day, everybody. We'll see you on
2:55:49
Thursday for our next show. Remember us at the vorak.org/na
2:55:54
N as always audios and search.
2:56:04
More people died who got the vaccine, then who got in who got
2:56:10
the placebo. In other words, the vaccine killed more people than
2:56:14
the placebo did. But see everybody is focused on how many
2:56:17
lives we can save from causing. And they're not focused on how
2:56:21
many deaths were caused by the vaccine caused by the vaccine.
2:56:27
The vaccines have saved 10,000 lives over the course of a year,
2:56:32
we turn this country upside down, turn this country upside
2:56:38
down to save 10,000 lives. But we actually didn't save 10,000
2:56:43
lives. Because when you look at the various numbers, and you
2:56:47
look at it 12 different ways that didn't even use Varus to
2:56:50
come up with at least 150,000 people who have been killed by
2:56:53
the vaccine or killed by the vaccine, the vaccine, say you
2:56:57
killed 150,000 In order to maybe save 10,000 lives. And that's a
2:57:03
gift of the the actual variant matches the vaccine, which had
2:57:07
dozens and dozens
2:57:10
of you have many different feelings. But what is happening
2:57:13
the adults of the United States are failing the children of the
2:57:16
United States. So if you're really concerned
2:57:19
how many deadbeat dads are there millions
2:57:22
if you want a perfect example of toxic masculinity, some of you
2:57:26
are really excited would be better if it was incompetence,
2:57:29
because at least we can do something about that and they
2:57:31
want to say the word conspiracy
2:57:32
theories when we talk about it, and others are somewhere in
2:57:34
between are waiting to see how it's all right. I feel that way
2:57:39
too. No. This is not a real functioning democracy, people
2:57:59
are innocent until well alleged to be involved in some type of
2:58:02
America. Let's not confuse the tactical, strategic and create a
2:58:05
weapon of mass. Magnetic we
2:58:07
now understand better, how little we
2:58:10
need to stand up and speak loudly.
2:58:16
Prior to your use of mass violence, the use of torture and
2:58:21
concentration camps filtration camps to deport people
2:58:25
on mass acknowledges someone has to be a loser, why not me?
2:58:32
Thank you everyone. I think if we ever allow ourselves to get
2:58:37
to the point that we feel we need boots on the moon to
2:58:41
protect some assets to protect an American flag or, or an
2:58:45
Apollo landing site or historic landmark, we're in trouble.
2:58:51
If Russia and China or other actors are going to seek to
2:58:55
undermine our capabilities in space, we're going to be ready
2:58:57
for that.
2:59:03
I also would like for our adversaries to know what we can
2:59:05
do. There are some things that we can do that I think would
2:59:08
help shield their enthusiasm for aggression.
2:59:15
I possess a stellar convertor the most powerful weapon in the
2:59:20
universe in the universe, the universe.
2:59:25
We do not want there to be war in space. We do not want there
2:59:28
to be conflict. We want all of mankind to enjoy its benefits,
2:59:31
but.
2:59:42
mopho.org/in
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