Cover for No Agenda Show 1473: Meth Raging
July 31st, 2022 • 3h 17m

1473: Meth Raging

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0:00
That's what your mom used to say.
0:02
Adam curry, John C. Devora. July 31 2022. This is your award
0:07
winning get my nation media assassination episode 1473. This
0:11
is no agenda, fighting for the ELS and the GS and broadcasting
0:16
live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here and FEMA
0:19
reached number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam
0:21
curry and from Northern Silicon Valley where we're noticing
0:25
Biden's down again. I'm Jhansi, Dvorak. Raglan Buzzkill.
0:32
Is that the most hilarious thing a news report you've ever seen?
0:37
I have a question for you. Yeah, how you doing?
0:41
Oh, thank you for asking. I feel like I'm still a body buzz, you
0:46
know, and I'm a little shaky, shaky, but that's probably the
0:51
caffeine and the weed didn't help. But otherwise good to go.
0:54
Ready for a show. Rock and roll.
0:58
So you're, and you sound better? Thank you. Not
1:04
pushing through it, you know,
1:06
not 100%. But it's better than though last time it was the
1:09
first time I've ever seen you fail.
1:11
I will say I will say just about this ba ba five variant. It
1:18
isn't it is still not the same as a summer cold. There's some
1:22
fatigue that is that I just don't remember from summer cold.
1:26
And the only other thing I'd say is what I just have to repeat.
1:29
If everyone gets this thing. I mean, no wonder we're in a
1:33
second quarter of negative GDP. I mean, this this knocks you on
1:37
your ass for about a week. You know, it's like this slows shit
1:41
down. It's really bad.
1:45
But you're back on your feet.
1:46
I'm on my feet. Yeah, I'm
1:47
on my feet. You don't Andy, have you tested recently?
1:49
I didn't test at all for this. I probably would I do this so I
1:54
could for the show. I had COVID Trust me Tina to know for this
1:59
show. So I
1:59
had I have a whole bit I could go into about how Biden take
2:04
stupid crap would with this is the Prometheus what is that drug
2:08
is hiking packs? Low COVID packs low. COVID. Yeah, pack slow.
2:12
COVID. So he takes the pack SLOVAN. And just like everyone
2:15
says you take it it's good for however long to take. It comes
2:19
back
2:19
and then it comes back.
2:20
What good is it?
2:22
Everything that they've said that was wrong has been proven
2:25
with the President. That's the best part. Include right down to
2:29
the they say packs low COVID. I like packs a little bit myself.
2:34
Well, whatever it is, I'll say this The somebody sent me a link
2:38
to a medical journal some phony medical journal. Where were they
2:42
praising Biden for taking PAC SLOVAN. And, and it's a good
2:46
thing. It says in the article literally, it's a good thing.
2:50
They didn't give oxy. What's Clora hydro hydro Chloroquine
2:58
and hydroxychloroquine? No, ivermectin. No, they said
3:02
specifically in the article. Oh, really good thing. They didn't
3:05
give him hydroxychloroquine. And then I was reading from this
3:09
mention ivermectin. They didn't say that. But that's what other
3:12
people are saying. So heaven forbid, they take these any of
3:16
these cheap drugs which are more or less harmless, and they're
3:19
taking red,
3:19
which, which I took and so you know, we're probably good to go
3:23
but that guy needs I took him and I kept working. I didn't
3:28
really stop working well,
3:29
by is still working too. Well on Zoom when you call. He doesn't
3:33
work. Yeah, that's good. So
3:36
here's my question, though. Whatever happened to
3:38
asymptomatic spread? Did that just get thrown out the door? I
3:43
mean, that was the whole reason from that's still the whole
3:45
reason for masking. You know, you might be sick and not know
3:48
it and then you could kill grandma. Yeah, but that's not
3:51
that's just oversight. If you got it now you know, five days
3:55
and then the yield test positive for weeks. Don't worry about it.
3:58
Just go back to work. Yeah, huh. And these are the this is the
4:04
problem is the human race forgets very quickly these days.
4:10
That's where our shows here.
4:12
But it's getting harder for us, Johnny Boy. I mean, we were
4:15
still able to catch the videos that are coming back after three
4:17
years, but one of these days we're just we're gonna get Dale
4:21
used.
4:22
Oh, well, you know, WWE people helping us I get since you
4:25
brought it up. You brought a how easy people forget. Yeah. I have
4:30
a pair of clips. Nice about people forgetting it's pretty
4:34
much people forgetting. This was Ron DeSantis. He's on your
4:39
friend. Here we go hair. What's your name here? Hey, Laura.
4:45
Oh. Oh, Ingram. froward. Sorry. Hair Ingraham it
4:51
is I'll tell you somebody, you know when I used to let him tune
4:54
in when she was on the radio. I don't know what kind of mic they
4:58
had on or what they were doing. I don't think they like Because
5:00
I was I swear to you when you heard her on the radio sound
5:03
like a dude. It's Laura Ingraham here. It was great that it was
5:11
like one of those squeaky voice said like low testosterone,
5:14
dude. They still sound like a dude. Okay? But Frau Ingraham
5:21
had on Ron DeSantis. Okay, so here we go DeSantis. And he's
5:26
making some commentary about leaving California
5:28
Joining us now. And I'm delighted he's with us, Governor
5:31
Ron DeSantis. from the great state of Florida Governor, why
5:34
are these failed left wing governors deciding to hit you
5:38
all of a sudden? I mean, you're just the guy. You're the man of
5:40
the moment.
5:41
Well, I think if you look at like California, they never lost
5:43
population from the founding of the state until this current
5:47
governor has been in office. Now they're hemorrhaging people.
5:49
Illinois is hemorrhaging people, New York and their tax bases are
5:53
going getting narrower.
5:56
Okay. Is that fact is that as as California never diminished in
6:02
population until now?
6:03
Well, I've heard this a couple of times now. So I've decided to
6:06
go back to December 17th 1971, Republican governor of
6:12
California, Ronald Reagan's on The Dick Cavett Show,
6:15
where are people leaving the state for the first time in
6:18
history, I was surprised to hear this back. But I always grew up
6:21
knowing that people were moving by the rate of 400 a day to
6:24
California sending I believe in this year for the first time,
6:27
they're hauling out of here, we're being someone who
6:30
predicted that I'm not at. I've not been too surprised. They've
6:34
always been people leaving. Well, we've always had them
6:37
coming in, they've been coming in fast, but they change the
6:41
balance tide is turning in our favor. But I think what happened
6:45
is when, when a state grows to the size of California and has
6:51
large urban centers, it loses some of the appeal that we're
6:54
bringing the people here, the people were coming here in a
6:57
kind of a pioneering sense, it was a new frontier, and New
7:00
Start new jobs and futures and so forth. Now, when you grow up
7:03
to be well, being the most populous state of the union, you
7:07
lose some of that. And you find people here leaving for the same
7:10
reason they're leaving states back here, they're going to
7:12
Alaska, Arizona, Oregon to Washington get what they used to
7:15
get here. Let's kind of start.
7:21
Huh? So the first time first time first time, so I call
7:25
bullshit on Frau Ingraham, she should have said something. No.
7:30
And what's perhaps even more interesting, and I just I'd like
7:34
to know if the absolute numbers are true, but I would presume
7:37
because of immigration, this is how California has kept up with
7:40
the with people leaving.
7:43
Oh, yeah, for sure. Or,
7:45
or is it gotten so bad that California is now also rejecting
7:49
immigrants? And they're just sending them all to Texas?
7:53
Well, that would be a positive thing. Well, you know,
7:58
California has always had I really wonder if it's, I mean,
8:02
it grows in bits and spurts. But it's not the first time. And I
8:09
don't know where they get this. And I'm sure the numbers have
8:11
been jiggered with over and over again for tax benefits and tax
8:15
purposes and ways to gouge the government. The federal
8:18
government in particular, they're trying to do it now.
8:20
It's very rammed we
8:21
have this many people send more money. Yeah,
8:24
that kind of thing. Yeah. And so I just thought I'd point that
8:30
out. Yeah.
8:31
That's appreciated. And let me point out that, you know,
8:35
California is get in more trouble. Especially your
8:39
backyard, John, right there in San Francisco. I don't know
8:42
what's happening this weekend. It's
8:44
going to be a busy weekend in San Francisco. And there's
8:47
concern that a big party this weekend could spread Monkey Park
8:52
for the mayor declared a local health health emergency just
8:56
yesterday, and we see various video content have found some
8:59
people are reconsidering their plans to attend a rather risque
9:03
San Francisco.
9:05
It's called the Dory alley street fair or up your alley.
9:08
And over the years, it's earned a reputation for being a smaller
9:11
but racier version of the Folsom Street Fair. And this year, lots
9:16
of people are reconsidering their plans to go to that event
9:19
and related dance parties because of the ongoing monkey
9:23
pox outbreak. It very escaped the declaration of a public
9:26
health emergency by San Francisco Mayor London breed was
9:28
enough to convince San Francisco resident Larry Novita to skip
9:32
the Dory alley street fair this Sunday. I'm just
9:34
gonna hang out in the neighborhood here. And just
9:39
listen to what's going on at Dory
9:41
through friends
9:42
but others have come to San Francisco just for the event.
9:45
I think everyone kind of mitigates their own right
9:47
towners. And, you know, personally, I'm vaccinated, and
9:53
I had monkey pox.
9:54
So he's hoping others take appropriate precautions.
9:57
So it's a painful experience, you
9:59
know, There's a lot of unknown, you know, questions that even
10:03
doctors aren't able to answer and it's just scary. Okay, now
10:08
that this is interesting, so the guy's been vaccinated. He's had
10:12
monkey pox. And yet he says, you know, there's so much unknown.
10:15
They're scary. I see that you have monkey pox clips, so I'm
10:19
going to hand it to you. I
10:20
have the lead. Thank you.
10:23
Oh, wait, but wait. But wait, wait, wait. I want to frame it
10:26
though. We need to frame this with a clip. I didn't play from
10:30
the last episode, which is
10:32
before it before you do anything before I play my clips. I've
10:37
been in the Bay Area forever.
10:42
Forever since would
10:45
I've no. I've known about the Pride Parade. I've known about
10:52
the Folsom Street thing, which is very it's like a bunch of
10:56
nude men. You know, dry humping each other. That's pretty much
11:00
what it is. In public. Yeah. I've never even heard of this
11:05
thing. This must be outrageous. I have never heard of it.
11:10
Well, I think that is a very good point. And by the way, you
11:16
should hang up your assless chaps in shame that you've never
11:18
heard of this one.
11:20
I know, I have never
11:24
heard of it. You are the kind of guy who would know you would
11:27
know I mean, all kidding aside, you know about you know about
11:30
all the shit that's going on, you know what's happening in a
11:32
town you know, everything.
11:34
I know, what's I know, whatever, buddy in the Bay Area knows
11:38
generally but I keep up with things. But I have never heard
11:42
of this event. Now. It's either new or it's more at a real event
11:46
or it's so lewd. And so gross debt. Nobody wants to talk about
11:51
it, which is my guess must be an embarrassment to the city.
11:57
I'm not so sure. I mean, I think I think this whole monkey pox
12:00
thing has there's a different reason behind it.
12:03
Okay, we'll play your clip. And then but this
12:06
clip is important because this is Tim un, who was the World
12:10
Health Organization's high impact events preparedness unit
12:14
head. That's incredible title, high impact events preparedness
12:21
unit head. And, and we just need to play this because this is the
12:25
official word about monkey pox. And where we are and what we
12:28
know about it and what the science is and about the
12:30
vaccines
12:31
have been discussing with those manufacturers what is available
12:34
in 2022. We have a rough understanding about the three
12:39
vaccines that are existing at the moment are being mentioned
12:42
in the Doubletree interim guidance for immunization. So on
12:46
the MVA bn vaccine, we do know that at the moment, 16 point 4
12:52
million doses exist in bulk, which means they require fill
12:56
and finish. We have roughly 1 million of those already in
13:01
Finland, Finnish a situation on the other third generation
13:05
vaccine, the LC 16. In Japan, we know from the manufacturer, that
13:11
this is only being produced for the Government of Japan. And we
13:15
have good discussion with the Government of Japan, how to make
13:18
some of these accessible to other countries. And thirdly, on
13:24
the so called second generation vaccine AKM 2000. We know that
13:29
roughly 100 million doses of this vaccine exists with various
13:34
member states in their national stockpiles. So this is the
13:37
supply situation in 2022. And we're evaluating with the
13:42
manufacturer what will be more available in 2023. And these are
13:46
ongoing discussions, I would like to underline one thing that
13:49
is very important to who we do have uncertainties around the
13:54
effectiveness of these vaccines, because they haven't been used
13:57
in this context. And in this scale before, and therefore, we
14:02
are calling and working with our member states that when these
14:06
vaccines are being developed, that they are delivered in the
14:09
context of clinical trial studies and prospectively
14:13
collecting this data to increase on our understanding on the
14:17
effectiveness of vaccines. Thank you.
14:19
It's a clinical trial. They don't know what what it's going
14:25
to do. And everyone's just lining up.
14:29
Well, they're small. They're all smallpox vaccines.
14:32
I understand. I understand. But that makes it even worse. What
14:37
is this? I don't even know if it's mRNA. I have no idea. No,
14:40
no, no. But there's three generations of it now. And what
14:44
he's saying is when they're delivered, they should be
14:47
delivered in the context of a clinical trial.
14:50
I because they'd never been used on Monday. Yeah,
14:53
but I don't think that the the men who have sex with men who
14:57
are lining up to get a vaccine as freshly in New York City and
15:01
in San Francisco, that they're being told, Hey, by the way, you
15:04
know, you're part of a clinical trial. Do you think?
15:07
I bet I'm betting money that they're signing something? Oh,
15:10
signing
15:11
okay. But it's not something you're hearing on the news. Oh,
15:15
by the way, will you just know us at your own risk?
15:21
Okay, well, when you hear the origins of the monkey pox, this
15:25
story is one of the better pieces that they've done. And
15:28
this came from NPR it was done as a kind of as an investigative
15:32
report. You get you get find out two things. There's something
15:36
screwy about this particular monkey pox and little boys seem
15:39
to be involved once once again in very obviously they don't
15:43
bring it in and disgusting manner you did. But that's the
15:47
first thing that comes to me. What did I do? You brought the
15:50
little boys into this conversation.
15:52
I didn't say anything about little boys ever. What are you
15:55
talking about?
15:56
It was the last show? No, no. Well, it's in the play. Now.
16:00
This here we go. Monkey pox origins one.
16:05
Nearly 800,000 additional doses of the monkey pox vaccine will
16:09
soon be distributed throughout the United States. According to
16:12
health officials. This comes as the world is struggling to stop
16:15
the largest recorded monkey pox outbreak in history. More than
16:20
18,000 cases have now been detected in at least 78
16:23
countries, and PRs Michael Indu Cliff has an exclusive story
16:27
about where this outbreak began. But first, McLean, you have a
16:30
story about the doctor who treated some of those first noon
16:34
cases. And then he tried to warn the world that monkey pox had
16:38
become an international threat.
16:40
That's right as my the story actually starts five years ago
16:44
with a doctor named Dinair are gonna back in 2017, he saw
16:48
what's perhaps the most important patient of his career,
16:51
they brought my attention to a young boy, an 11 year
16:54
old boy with a very strange rash that looked like blisters.
16:58
He had skin lesions that appeared. It's very unusual,
17:01
very large, affecting your face and all over the body.
17:05
Akona is an infectious disease specialist at Niger Delta
17:08
University in Nigeria. And when he saw the size of the lesions
17:11
or pox, he wondered it the boy had what was then a rare
17:15
disease, a
17:15
very rare disease, the suspicion of monkey pox just came up. So
17:20
again, I tested the boy and he was right. Monkey pox. At the
17:23
time iguana thought that this monkey pox outbreak would
17:25
activate always had the way it had been described in textbooks
17:29
and scientific papers since the 1970s. That is, the virus came
17:33
from an animal like a rodent or a monkey.
17:35
Yeah, it was this speculation that this young boy played with
17:39
monkeys around the community,
17:42
and that the virus doesn't spread very easily between
17:44
people because it's not very contagious, especially between
17:47
healthy adults.
17:49
Ah, don't play with monkeys kids.
17:53
The one thing that came out of this, this first clip to me was
17:58
it's a very rare disease. Yeah. Read mentioned in books. That's
18:02
not what we're told over here. No, it's it's a thing. It's all
18:06
over Africa.
18:08
By the way, you were right. The context of was a men who there
18:14
were two children who had monkey pox, which was traced back to
18:18
men who have sex with men. You're right. And that was the
18:21
report.
18:22
Yeah, there's your as your clip not mine. But Benny back to
18:27
this. This was thinking what we're kind of told that oh, it's
18:35
all over Africa. Yeah. Yeah, that's what I understood by the
18:39
way the reporting was going now I just needed the African
18:41
doctors like he had to he was looking at this look it up and
18:45
do a double take what what? No, okay, this gets better actually.
18:50
So here we go.
18:51
You know, fix many children, because when they're playing
18:54
outside, they often come into contact with animals. So
18:56
previous outbreaks were small, only a few dozen cases in rural
19:00
areas. And going on other doctors thought that this
19:03
outbreak back in 2017 would be the same
19:06
without okay could be the regular monkey pox that we know
19:10
has been described in the Central Africa. But a few weeks
19:12
later, a Guinta started to become concerned, the outbreak
19:16
began to grow very rapidly, cases popped up not just near
19:19
this boy. But all over.
19:22
You're seeing cases just suddenly appearing across the
19:25
country. The virus
19:26
seemed to be spreading further and faster than expected. And it
19:29
wasn't kids getting infected, but rather men in their 20s and
19:32
30s.
19:33
Young men active men, that's very, very unusual at that time.
19:37
These men didn't fit the typical profile for monkey pox either.
19:40
They weren't handling animals. They were middle class men
19:43
living in busy modern cities, and their rashes weren't in the
19:46
typical places on their bodies. Instead of being on their faces
19:49
and extremities. The mid had blisters around their genitals.
19:52
Oh, nice. Did MPR put that sound affecting? No What'd you say?
20:01
Well, she started to do a dramatic over it, by
20:04
the way couldn't hear it.
20:05
I heard I heard it. Yeah. I think you should have started
20:09
earlier.
20:10
The No, I put this out, obviously. But it was a boying.
20:16
Everyone heard it. I think that it's disgusting. That again,
20:22
this is something else that another new piece of news when
20:26
we hear about it, and that in the show the elements of it
20:29
don't show somebody's hand. Yeah, there's a hand by some of
20:33
the hand. Hahaha, think about that. That's what your mom used
20:39
to say, to the bee on the palm of the hand hand. You see it on
20:43
it, they never mentioned that is predominantly the pucks around
20:47
the genitals. So this is more new news unknown to the, you
20:52
know, we're
20:52
not getting it. Now I understand why that guy in my clip was
20:55
saying it's really painful.
20:58
Yeah. Okay, onward. They were very, very extensive. During a
21:04
very extensive data lesion that appeared,
21:06
Aquinas started to investigate these patients more and found
21:09
that many of them had high risk sexual behaviors, multiple
21:12
partners sex with prostitutes, Aquinas started to realize
21:15
something huge that the virus had changed. And for the first
21:20
time, it was starting to spread through sexual contact.
21:23
We have already proposed that sexual route is something that
21:25
we need to look really look at.
21:27
Interesting, so fascinating, because it's so different than
21:29
what you see in the textbooks. Right?
21:32
Right. Yeah, completely different. Well, they're not
21:35
affecting children. We're not females, why not the elderly?
21:39
Why are we having young men 20 to 40 years, only
21:43
acquainted knew these findings had massive implications. And
21:47
then the virus no longer needed to jump from an animal. Instead,
21:50
it could now easily jump from human to human. And that meant
21:53
the current outbreak in Nigeria would be extremely difficult to
21:56
stop it. Monkey pox was no longer just a threat to
21:59
communities in West Africa, but a threat to the world. So I'm
22:03
going to try to warn Nigerian health officials years ago, they
22:06
wouldn't listen. At an international meeting. He tried
22:09
to bring up the possibility of sexual transmission. Somebody
22:13
told him to be quiet. The way
22:15
we had one meeting, somebody said I should not say it.
22:17
Really. I've experienced Yes, one meeting like this. Somebody
22:20
said I should not say it that it is not possible to we should not
22:23
worry. Jump ahead. Five years later,
22:25
tonight, the World Health Organization sounding the alarm
22:29
on the rapid spread of monkey pox,
22:31
more than 70 countries now reporting cases, the US nearing
22:35
2900 infections, York City
22:37
is the epicenter of the outbreak in the US.
22:40
For the first time in history. Monkey pox is spreading across
22:43
the world. And just as a growing up predicted through sexual
22:46
contact.
22:47
All right, my claim. I mean, that, to me is a wild backstory,
22:51
this scientist who had all this important information, but he
22:54
could not get anyone to pay attention to it. I mean, it's
22:56
really mind boggling.
22:58
So this does not spread to women at all.
23:05
Well, at least his observations back in Africa, and then
23:08
everybody says that they've the claim is that this is where it
23:11
began. And this is still going on in a major way. It was at the
23:14
last clip you played. No, no, there's one more. There's one
23:17
more that play that and, yeah, that's what it sounds like. And
23:20
the other thing is, is the is that it somehow has to meet the
23:27
stench of Fort Dietrich.
23:29
You know, and thank you because I didn't want to go all crackpot
23:33
right away, but it sounds totally like, hey, you know
23:36
what? depopulation, maybe if we start with the gays. Now, a
23:45
little monkey pox that really only spreads when you're in very
23:49
intimate contact, and it just doesn't affect women. That has a
23:55
fort Dietrich stench about it.
23:56
Sure. Yes. Here we go.
23:58
Yeah. You know, in fact, Gwen has insights and knowledge go
24:01
even further. He says the outbreak in Nigeria back in 2017
24:05
never actually stopped health officials just stopped looking
24:08
for cases. And the outbreak went underground. And eventually, it
24:13
actually turned into this huge International Outbreak we're
24:16
fighting right now.
24:18
So you're saying that the outbreak today is in fact the
24:20
very same one that was in Nigeria back in 2017. How do we
24:25
know that? Yeah,
24:26
you know, there's new genetic evidence that hasn't been
24:29
published yet. Showing that this outbreak this International
24:32
Outbreak we have started in Nigeria way back even years
24:36
before this little boy showed up in a goin his office.
24:40
What it means before that, oh man, I know I'm yearning for
24:47
more do I have to listen to NPR?
24:50
I gotta come up with anything when they did. That was their
24:53
best report they've done for a while now. Two other monkeypox
24:56
clips that are kind of kind of interesting. And this is the NPR
24:59
one. Monkey pox in jail. By the way before we play a clip,
25:05
knowing what you now know from that last report, monkey pox in
25:10
jail How is that spread?
25:12
Monkey pox has arrived in the Cook County Jail in Illinois,
25:17
confirmed its first case of an inmate with the disease this
25:19
week. And some public health experts worry the virus could
25:24
spread quickly in jails and prisons throughout the country.
25:27
As NPR is Martin Kosti reports.
25:29
People who work in corrections health care are having some deja
25:32
vu right now. And Spalding is a physician researcher at Emory
25:36
University.
25:37
I feel like we've just been through
25:39
in some respects it feels exercise that people are aware
25:43
because of COVID that outbreaks can occur in jails and prisons.
25:47
Yes. Well, of course, we understand how that works.
25:50
Are they doing they're Come on John. I say you know what she
25:55
did she put a stop to it is what they should do. Let's go to
25:58
second part of that clip.
25:59
I mean, the guards are in on it.
26:01
Here's another one. By the way. Here's another thing I learned.
26:04
I'm learning a lot today. Yes. There's something in here that
26:07
is like what why didn't know this was going on.
26:11
But she says the pandemic experience does not mean that
26:14
jails are necessarily ready for what's coming now. Homer Venters
26:18
is the former chief medical officer for New York city jails.
26:21
Now he inspects conditions at correctional facilities around
26:23
the country. And he says the fact that monkey pox is
26:26
transmitted by skin to skin contact makes him especially
26:30
worried about the intake pens at jails. Those places are often
26:35
filthy, rarely cleaned, and people are packed together very
26:40
tightly, shoulder to shoulder skin contact for hours,
26:44
sometimes for days. Another thing he worries about is co
26:47
pays many jails and prisons charge inmates nominal fees to
26:51
get medical services. He says that makes some inmates
26:54
reluctant to get symptoms checked out, say a rash. I
26:58
strongly encourage elimination or co pays period. But
27:02
especially in times like this where we want to know when
27:05
people are sick. Some jails took that advice as COVID loomed. One
27:09
of them was the south correctional entity or score
27:11
south of Seattle, Devon Schrems, the executive director, I
27:15
just I'm not sure that that would have occurred to us
27:17
medical codes were a pretty standard form of practice and
27:20
jails and the community. Because of COVID. We looked at all of
27:24
the barriers that might keep somebody from reporting
27:26
symptoms.
27:27
Trump says they got rid of co pays permanently, and that'll
27:30
now help with monkey pox.
27:34
co pays
27:36
Did you know this? You know, I do know a little bit about the
27:41
amount of money you need to have in jail. And the whole system
27:45
that set up to send your your loved one your loved inmate
27:50
money through J pay and these types of incredible scams. Yeah,
27:55
that doesn't surprise me. I didn't know about the co pays
27:58
but I had the whole thing is you're in there and they they
28:01
bleed you dry while you're in there.
28:04
It's unbelievable at co pays. I thought they just had a dog you
28:08
got sick doctor you I'm sick. Oh, well, you're gonna have to
28:12
co pays 20 bucks. Why I'm in jail and I get 20 bucks. Well,
28:18
you can do me a favor to elder's homage to that? Yeah, of course.
28:23
But from the sounds of it. I it just just, it's unbelievable.
28:28
Well, this this monkey pox has. I mean, it's particularly in
28:34
this moment in time with all of our gender divert our gender,
28:38
our gender furcation There you go, gender furcation all the
28:44
pronouns and everyone being super sensitive towards each
28:48
other. That somehow No, you look at the British papers. You can
28:54
make jokes about this one, though. Oh, maybe. Maybe people
29:01
who are at risk of getting monkey pox or to go on a bum bum
29:05
vacation as the it's okay to make gay jokes about monkey pox.
29:11
All of a sudden, somehow. Even in kind of mainstream shows. The
29:16
chief
29:17
of the World Health Organization said this week that queer men
29:20
should limit their sexual partners.
29:22
Notice it's queer men here. This is very interesting to leverage.
29:26
Very interesting. Yeah. You're very men calling themselves
29:31
queer, used to be a verboten? I still don't think they use the
29:36
term amongst themselves. I've only heard here is the queer who
29:41
is the women, but non binary women.
29:46
Typically,
29:48
typically, at least from our clips from tick tock,
29:50
and that's tick tock is our Bible.
29:52
The chief of the World Health Organization said this week that
29:56
queer men should limit their sexual partners to lower the
29:59
risk of infection and reduce the spread. So do you agree with
30:03
that medical recommendation? We did.
30:06
Now that I've heard it a second time, I'm actually annoyed by
30:09
it.
30:10
Yeah. It's off script. This is off script no matter what.
30:14
Whatever it
30:14
is queer me queer men who gave what? What textbook are they?
30:20
What style guide? Are they looking at? What AP guide? Are
30:23
they looking at? All of a sudden is said of gay males. It's queer
30:28
men.
30:30
It's like this whole thing is
30:32
and how did it switch over from men having sex with men to all
30:35
jump? Where is gay? Well, this is like, Man,
30:39
this is the only one I've heard with this with. I mean, I have
30:43
here this is Where'd you get this? This is from in the
30:46
bubble. It's so this is it's a podcast version of something. I
30:52
think it's
30:53
was it comes out as something that's very professional.
30:56
It's NPR show. NPR? Yeah. No, I'm sorry. laminata media. Oh,
31:03
interesting. Andy Slavitt we know Andy Slavitt don't we say
31:08
Andy Slavitt
31:10
lemon nada media. Yeah, this is one of those those old gimlet
31:15
Neumann my Exactly.
31:17
This is one of those. One of those outfits that was purchased
31:23
for a lot of money for that just has a lot of investment because
31:27
it does a lot of programming. Look if you want to make money
31:29
in podcasting and advertising and sponsorship, do an LGBTQ Qi
31:35
P k plus podcast, they will flock to you. Flock I tell you,
31:41
because it's a check mark for all businesses. We need to do
31:45
some some SNR ESG. Let's Hey, we need a LGBTQ plus podcast. Yeah.
31:52
Okay, let's let's advertise you got to check. Anyway, so here it
31:57
is. Let's listen to let's finally get to the point that
32:00
they are they are somehow their their next level with this queer
32:03
men stuff.
32:04
The chief of the World Health Organization said this week that
32:07
queer men should limit their sexual partners to lower the
32:11
risk of infection and reduce the spread. So do you agree with
32:15
that medical recommendation,
32:16
we released a document and we being me and two colleagues of
32:21
mine who are both mph public health professionals, asking
32:25
yes, for our community, until vaccine is more widespread, to
32:30
consider risk reduction until we get a better biomedical
32:35
response. You know, if we say canceled sex parties closed on
32:39
us, it's just not going to happen. But if we give people
32:42
options, you know, I might have coined the term Angel autumn,
32:46
the best thing I've ever written in my entire life, if we say
32:48
hey, wait till September, October, have an angel autumn
32:51
Pumpkin Spice Latte. You know, think about using condoms,
32:55
limiting your number of high risk events and sex partners.
32:58
But you know, you got to give people something to say this is
33:01
temporary and options to still enjoy themselves.
33:06
Anal autumn everybody that was even offended by that. Yeah, but
33:10
but this is but this is the thing. It's like, it's just
33:13
seems to be okay to make all these jokes. And I don't know, I
33:18
have a very bad feeling about what what is whether, monkey how
33:23
monkey pox is exactly related to this, I'm unsure. But the
33:27
discussion that's going around it. And then as you already
33:29
pointed out, this is a
33:31
disease that the majority of people who have it in this
33:34
country are men who have sex with other men
33:36
are men who have sex with men, male
33:38
to male sexual contact, men who have sex with men, male to male
33:42
sexual contact women who have sex with men who have sex with
33:45
men, men who have sex with men,
33:47
men who have sex with other men, with men, men
33:51
who have sex with men, men who have sex with men, men who've
33:53
had sex with men,
33:54
men who have sex with men.
33:57
Okay, so men who have sex with men is generally the term that
34:01
is used. So we're not using gay anymore, and it seems very
34:04
confusing, but it became very clear with this next clip, that
34:10
this is about removing gays from the LGBTQ, let's just keep it at
34:16
that. So we have lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer,
34:22
removing them without having to remove the letter. You see, the
34:30
LGBTQ is so embedded in everybody's brain
34:34
that says traditional, it's the Yeah, it's the OG it wouldn't
34:39
work if it's just all of a sudden it's a BT Q. You know,
34:43
like, what kind of shitty sandwiches that no LGBTQ, so
34:47
they're trying to remove those people from the group by just
34:52
marginally marginalizing them into something else another
34:55
category so you're gay. Well, you're not are gay because are
34:59
gay. is queer. I think that's where that transition comes
35:03
from. So you are just men who have sex with men. And they're
35:07
going to do the same thing. I think you're right. And they're
35:10
going to do the same thing with the L. This essentially this is
35:14
a tick tock lesbian turfs. You listen. No, no, no, no, no, no,
35:17
here. No, but
35:18
they're all turfs. They,
35:19
of course they're turfs. So it's men who have sex with men and
35:22
turfs. And here's a lesbian on Tik Tok to explain,
35:26
so apparently I missed this. Lesbian is now an umbrella term,
35:31
it doesn't apply to women who are attracted to women anymore.
35:36
That's been canceled. Now, not only can lesbians be attracted
35:39
to men, but they can also be men. So therefore, there are no
35:43
more lesbians, right? Because, well, because genital
35:48
preferences are apparently transphobic. So therefore, we
35:50
can no longer have an actual homosexual. But because we don't
35:56
want to remove the letters from our long alphabet group, we're
36:01
going to create a new definition for lesbians. Why don't you just
36:08
take the L off the front of your group, I hereby petition you,
36:12
since it no longer exists. And it is transphobic I hereby
36:19
petition you to remove the lesbian from your group
36:23
completely.
36:24
Well, of course, that's not going to happen because it's
36:26
their brand. And they never want to lose the brand. So this is a
36:31
political political party, this political party of queer they
36:36
should just call it that, but instead,
36:38
I think, I think that's what they're gonna do. I think that's
36:41
what they're trying to do. I think they're trying to remove
36:44
all those letters and go to queer.
36:46
Yes, yes, the queer party. And, and, you know, and queer is or
36:54
trans, and I think they're gonna then have a little problem with
36:57
taking it all the way to queer. I think trans trans is the way
36:59
to go. Because transsexual trans Yeah,
37:04
yeah, the trans community.
37:06
ISM, trans humanism. What do you mean, the trans community
37:09
doesn't? Our trans community works very well. Let's use it in
37:14
a sentence. We need more money for our trans community, we need
37:17
more rights for our trans community. Here's what's
37:20
disappointing. 15 years of this show, gay gays and lesbians have
37:26
never had a problem emailing us. It's silent, John. It's silent.
37:35
And why do you believe that to be the case?
37:37
I think they're they're either I think they're afraid I think
37:40
they see what's going on. And there are a lot of them we're
37:44
trying to figure stuff out but they're not they're not
37:46
communicating to us for some reason. But this is a
37:51
cancellation of lesbians and gays. And it's like everything
37:56
else. Everything else that is difficult or is it requires some
38:01
thoughtful discussion. Let's just simplify the term you know,
38:08
for one thing, two things have happened one is the the idea of
38:12
sexuality has been removed in favor of gender Yes, gender a
38:19
gender studies would be this is sexuality Gender Studies has
38:22
been moved over transsexual we've already noted is being
38:25
changed to transgender homosexuality is not even in the
38:32
mix. It's
38:33
it's it's not possible. It is not. A
38:35
woman was pointing that out. Because she's a homosexual lady.
38:41
Yes. Who used to describe herself at least amongst her
38:45
peers as a lesbian. And now she can't do that. She's She's
38:50
nailing it. She's got it. I think this is these guys are
38:53
getting a clue. And, and there's no game in any more than just
38:58
men who have sex with men. In other words, men. Yep, there you
39:03
go.
39:04
There you go. And they are the source of disease, men men,
39:09
source of disease
39:13
and all the problems in the world.
39:16
It was funny this is from CDC. How does monkey pox spread it
39:22
can also be spread by respiratory secretions during
39:25
prolonged face to face contact or during intimate physical
39:28
contact such as kissing, cuddling or sex. In addition,
39:31
pregnant people can spread the virus to their fetus through the
39:34
placenta. What not that was exactly what couldn't happen
39:41
well, it could be bullshit well it's pregnant when you say
39:44
pregnant Exactly. This is not a control it well. It is. It is
39:53
it's very open he can and by the way did the fact that you're
39:57
getting no bothers me I know information back and forth
40:02
between the gays that are listening to the show. I think
40:07
everybody's is flat footed here.
40:10
It's it just went real fast and but but just look at the media.
40:13
What what is it about saying gay is there? Where was the
40:18
technical memo that said it's men who have sex with men. And
40:22
by the way, since when is men only a male? I mean, this is
40:26
what this has to be on purpose. This has to be watched this now
40:31
will really screw them up. I mean, this has got to be this
40:35
has got to be some kind of psychological operation. I mean,
40:39
it is we just don't know exactly who's driving it. But it's via
40:43
who
40:43
is driving is to the CIA. Are they doing anything about it is
40:48
the FBI is a George Soros. Oh, no. Is it Glenn Beck? Yeah,
40:54
there you go.
40:56
Glenn Beck.
40:57
It's Alex Jones. That's who it is. By the way, I watched the
41:02
Alex Jones documentary on the new one on Apple TV, which I
41:07
thought was cool that Apple TV has it on there.
41:10
Yeah, this is the one done by that redhead. Yes. The one from
41:13
the INCEL movie
41:15
in Selma. And I have to say that now, when you take it we have an
41:21
Alex Jones documentary is two hours long. And you have a lot
41:25
of Alex Jones clips at high volume at freakout level. After
41:30
about an hour and a half. You're tired, you're just like, Yeah, I
41:33
think two hours is too long for a movie like that. And
41:37
that's on the on the director that was just too much too many
41:40
things were paced together. There is other stuff of Alex
41:43
Jones. But what hit for me it was because a lot of historical
41:47
footage. He was very influential on my basic awakening to what's
41:51
going on in the world. I do want to recognize that and we have
41:54
played him jokingly for years but we've always said look, the
41:57
dude is right. It did turn the frogs gay. A lot of a lot of a
42:01
lot of stuff he said is right.
42:04
As as a genesis of awakening, I really dispute this. His
42:09
importance. Maybe for you I find from the beginning because I
42:13
still have some old clips. I don't have them handy of him
42:16
from 1999 When the y2k thing came about, and he went live on
42:23
the air, and the tapes of him if anyone can dig these up of him
42:28
going, Oh, it's starting its beginning. And he was he was one
42:30
of the guys that was promoting the end of the world. 9099 y2k?
42:35
Yes, situation. I found it. But I just thought it was such
42:39
bullshit. He's also done other things that
42:43
just stop there for a second. So I'm not quite sure why you said
42:45
as for the Genesis, you dispute that that's my that's my
42:48
Genesis. No. And I indeed, filled up the bathtub and had
42:54
cash in my freezer. So I've also gone down the rabbit hole leaves
43:00
in cold cash. Yeah. So I've also gone down that rabbit hole with
43:04
Alex Jones. So for good and for bad, but a Deaf I just might.
43:08
The only point I'm making is he was influential in some of the
43:12
basics. You know about the globalists, the globalist system
43:18
that that ended his documentaries. I thought those
43:21
those made a difference. And now he's now he's getting squashed
43:27
like a bug.
43:28
I don't know. He's getting squashed. He's got a new book
43:31
coming out. I thought the whole thing was well timed is very
43:33
well market. He's got to he was on an abandoned show, and
43:37
they're getting banned. For having gay sex. Have
43:40
you been following the bankruptcies of his companies
43:43
and the endless lawsuits?
43:46
Oh, Jones. Yeah. Yeah,
43:48
I mean, he's going to be it's going to be 10s of millions of
43:51
dollars and Okay,
43:52
well, that that I'm not aware of and I didn't see this
43:55
documentary. But I'm just saying he's doing a pretty good job of
43:57
self promotion at the moment. And that which is all I'm paying
44:00
attention. Oh, sure. Sure. But his he's on banner. He's got a
44:03
book, which I wonder who wrote the book. There's no way he
44:06
wrote it. In my humble opinion, as a writer, it seems more like
44:13
something somebody else did. And he detached his name to in some
44:16
ghost writing fashion. And Bannon loves the guy. Yeah. And
44:24
he loves band. And it's really something to see the two
44:28
together. I'm thinking about monkey parks here. Should be
44:30
there Thursday now.
44:32
All right. All right. Something I saw the other day at at the
44:37
heb here in Fredericksburg, which kind of blew me away the
44:41
other day, a week ago. Last time I was out. They already were
44:46
putting out their Halloween displays. In July in July. Isn't
44:51
that little early?
44:53
I would say it's at least two months early. Yeah. So I don't
44:55
know if at least a month or I mean you can put it out so
44:58
people can get prepared I really well this subject plays
45:02
tip if that makes no sense. You know, the every single day they
45:06
gotta go outside they gotta put up all the Halloween stuff that
45:09
they have for sale. No one's in the Halloween mode yet, but
45:12
okay, maybe they're trying to dump inventory. They're afraid
45:14
they're not going to get rid of doesn't matter. In the United
45:18
States, we don't care about anything, particularly when it
45:21
comes to our food. We just don't care what we eat. And that's
45:26
because we get stories like this tonight Hershey, one of the
45:29
world's largest chocolate makers is warning of a shortage of
45:32
KitKats Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, and other sweets this
45:36
Halloween. As it struggles to ramp up supply. Hershey said
45:39
lack of key ingredients can be blamed in part on the war in
45:43
Ukraine. Halloween accounts for about a 10th of Hershey's annual
45:47
sales. They do cocoa now in Ukraine.
45:52
Interesting. So that's what we have to do today. I mean, what
45:55
are they doing? Ukraine is gonna they don't grow peanuts though.
46:02
This is
46:02
That's bull crap. Are you this is just more preAP yes is a
46:08
promotion dative ad that's what and he be being here. I have a
46:12
native ad today.
46:14
Well, I was gonna talk about some foodstuff because I have a
46:16
Dutch farmer I'd like us to listen
46:18
to. Okay, let's go that way. Because and this
46:22
this Dutch farmer, his name is Eugene frontman. And he is a
46:27
longer time listeners of the no agenda show will love it because
46:32
he speaks what we call stained coal angles, which is the OG
46:37
black coal English, which means raw and in your face, which is
46:41
very much the way I've always portrayed the Dutch people
46:44
speaking. Yes. Okay.
46:46
Your best voice? Well, this guy except for the grumpy guy who's
46:50
who's always emailing us. Well, it's
46:53
this guy. This guy is the OG when it comes to that.
46:57
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is show you
47:00
don't Vamana I'm a dairy farmer from the older city in the
47:05
middle of the Netherlands. Someone asked me if I could send
47:10
a message what's going on in Holland? What's all about the
47:13
farmer protest? And why are Dutch farmers angry?
47:17
I mean, is this guy compelling to listen to or what?
47:20
Well, he says Dutch instead of Dutch, like you say,
47:24
Well, okay, this is a variation. I mean, he's, he's anglicized
47:28
he's, he's he's doing better than most, but
47:32
he's great voice very understandable. Yeah,
47:34
we do need to know that these the protests have not stopped.
47:37
You know, the protests in the Netherlands, it continues to
47:39
block roadways. there is strife a lot of and of course, I'm just
47:44
looking at Twitter and new stories. A lot of Dutch people
47:47
are not like, oh, you know, okay, we understand your because
47:50
they don't we understand your problem farmer. But you know,
47:53
can you stop now, because you're ruining my day. And they don't
47:56
really understand. So it's farmers like this, who are
47:59
trying to explain to the Dutch people, how bad this is,
48:04
for the farmer protests are already here since two and a
48:08
half years, the first of October 2019. We remember, Dutch farmers
48:13
had a very big protest. We all went to The Hague. And actually,
48:18
there was more like some protests about the wind, which
48:22
was glowing already, probably for 30 years. Dead Sea.
48:25
I love this. I love these old school sayings. It was like the
48:29
thing that was blowing for 30 years. What does that mean? It's
48:34
something that boiling
48:35
and boiling under the surface. Yeah, it's been boiling under
48:39
the
48:39
surface. The wind has been blowing this way for 30 years
48:42
exact. By the
48:43
way. As I listened to scan, I think the way you do this voice,
48:47
I have a suggestion. Okay. And I noticed that I just noticed that
48:52
by now that I think about it. I think all these guys do that.
48:55
And this one thing you leave out, which is the which is the
48:58
log okay, it's a moment when you're when you're translating
49:06
in your head, and instead of saying anything, right, you
49:08
become like a kind of, it's similar to the Berkeley Hummer
49:11
where you always had to be making noise. And it's long,
49:15
what you're thinking. So there's always sound coming out.
49:20
Okay, okay, bear that in mind for my next time. I'm sure.
49:25
We all went to The Hague. And actually there was more like
49:29
some protest about the wind weather which was blowing
49:34
already probably for 30 years that somewhere there's a problem
49:37
in the environment. There's a problem with pollution.
49:40
agriculture sector gets pointed at as a main cause of all
49:44
problems. Here you go. After that, after the biggest protest,
49:49
the nitrogen problems came up and nitrogen problems aren't
49:53
new. 30 years ago already. Nature people start talking
49:58
about nitrogen ablution which would make the rain shower and
50:04
all these, our rain would cause lots of damage to the nature
50:08
parks to forests. And when you would hear these voices, older
50:13
nature would be gone in a few years. Well, 30 years later
50:17
nature still there, most of it is in excellent condition.
50:21
So it's just like every other climate change bullshit story.
50:25
You know, this has been going on for 30 years, all by the time we
50:28
hit 2022. And you know, there's going to be nature will be
50:31
destroyed. And the farmer says, Here you go, and he's standing
50:34
in front of his cows who all look pretty happy and tasty,
50:37
actually,
50:38
we'll do an hour of yes, people started talking about nitrogen
50:41
emission, ammonia from agriculture sector. There's also
50:47
nitrogen pollution, because of the traffic because of the
50:50
industry and nitrogen oxides. But they don't talk about it a
50:55
lot. And when a Nigerian problem is called and all on, it's
50:59
focusing most of the times on agriculture sector only.
51:04
Okay, so that's his background, I would say that's a better
51:07
background, or than you've seen anywhere on television, any M
51:10
five m. news report?
51:14
Well, from that perspective, for sure, they're not going to tell
51:17
you that.
51:18
So. So and then this is a longer clip. But that's the only other
51:24
one I have, because the other guy went on for 10 minutes,
51:27
which you know, well worth it in the show notes is you'll find a
51:30
link. So the industry came up with solutions years ago, and
51:35
wanted to propose and in fact, propose those. And none of those
51:40
were good enough. So he's going to tell a little bit about the
51:42
industry solutions, and then versus what the government was
51:44
doing. And he'll take it all the way all the way home and explain
51:47
what is really happening here, which we kind of know. But it's
51:50
good to hear it from a farmer himself, who obviously is not
51:53
stupid.
51:54
When it started, agriculture sector came together all bodies,
51:57
like the dairy industry, pork industry, chicken industry, you
52:02
could ever call whatever industries together made a big
52:06
plan. There was a lot of solutions in it. He tried to
52:10
work to solve the problem. Our government in the meanwhile,
52:14
went on with making other plans, which was older than the latest
52:20
Neoplan few weeks ago. And it's terrible. It's idiots. And it's
52:25
an it's of no use.
52:27
I got to remember that it's terrible. It's idiot, and it's
52:29
of no use exactly.
52:32
What they did is they divided the hole up in different
52:36
regions, some regions have to lower their emissions by 12%,
52:40
some of the regions have to lower their emissions by 4675 or
52:45
95%. In the meanwhile, how are you reticle system is
52:51
said your reticle which means the legal system,
52:54
this on this moment that no innovations in agriculture
52:57
sector are allowed to use. So there are different techniques
53:01
for lowering your emission. But when you are asked for a court,
53:08
and a judge will look into your innovations, they will say you
53:12
can't use it. So the only reason the only thing to lower your
53:17
emissions right now is just getting your head back. And
53:22
actually, you're probably coming at the main cause of it all.
53:29
Nitrogen is more like we call it the stick to beat the dog. He
53:33
has to camouflage the real.
53:35
I don't think I've ever taught you this one.
53:38
Stick to beat the dog stick to beat the dog.
53:42
It's a great what
53:43
was it? What's it? What's it referred to?
53:46
Well, it's the same from the old country of course, but what it
53:48
means is nitrogen is just used as a stick to beat the dogs.
53:52
There's farmers in the flesh. Yes, the farmers are the dog and
53:56
nitrogen is just the latest stick they're using to beat the
53:59
dog. Which kind of leads me to think about the Dutch might have
54:03
been really cruel to dogs back in the day.
54:07
So probably a lot of people are cruel to dogs. It's a real
54:11
problem, right? Yeah,
54:12
yeah, the main cause of it all. State nitrogen is more like we
54:19
call it stick to beat the dog. He has to camouflage the real
54:23
costs. Some left wing parties and all ons and probably all
54:27
over the worlds he said to say movements, they want to get rid
54:30
of Animal Industries, they want to have a transition to more
54:34
plant based food, transition to vegetarians. We have all the all
54:40
the all the stuff together. We also have a body like that and
54:46
they asked for 50% reduction of our national Earth has probably
54:50
on this moment the main cause of it all. We're not talking about
54:53
nitrogen tonight. They just want to reduce the national Earth for
54:57
every farmer all around the world and also Every citizen
55:00
knows that cutting back to hurt isn't the cause of any problems,
55:05
you know, we are producing food, two thirds of agricultural land
55:09
on the planet can only be grown by grass. And you need cows like
55:14
this, for making grass into meat or into milk or whatever you
55:18
want. Whatever problem is emissions with pollution on the
55:23
world, you are asking about whether it's not chemical. But
55:27
farming is probably a part of the problem. But most of it all,
55:31
it's part of the solution. So this farmers now are getting
55:37
angry everyday, more government is not listening. And what we
55:42
are fearing for is we have to leave our land. And that's also
55:47
a deeper agenda behind it. You know, and they just want to have
55:51
farmers land 62% of the area in in all on this farm to buy
55:56
farmers. And what they want to do is they want to have the land
56:00
cheap. So they're making it nature first. And when they have
56:04
the land in their hands, they can build houses on it houses we
56:07
don't need by Dutch citizens, because average Dutch couple is
56:13
getting 1.8 1.9 kits. So what's the problem of the demand for
56:18
houses that we get 100,000 refugees, refugees in this
56:23
country every year? That's why they have to build houses. Well,
56:27
that's a shortcut of, of our problems. Right now. Farmers are
56:31
getting angry, they're not listened by by the government,
56:34
every solution we came home with. They don't take it. And
56:40
what we see right now when we have to reduce our national hurt
56:44
when we have to reduce hours by ourselves, farms will break down
56:47
on this moment when the plan of the government is coming
56:50
through. Probably 3040 50% of the farmers have to fear for the
56:54
future. That's why we're on the streets. That's why we're
56:57
protesting. That's why the protests are going on. And
57:02
actually quite happily, all around the world. People started
57:06
looking at Holland, what's happening there? Well, what the
57:09
what the warning from the Dutch farmers is that every citizen
57:12
from Holland freshly but also in Europe, probably around the
57:15
globe. Have to look at what do we want to have to eat in a few
57:21
years time?
57:23
Apologies for the length but I feel this really kind of set it
57:26
all up. Now. You know what's going on? Why they're pissed
57:28
off, and it's a worldwide problem.
57:31
Well, the joke's on him because nobody's paying attention to
57:34
this over here anymore. We got our few days of stories, and
57:36
that was it.
57:38
Well, it's not a joke.
57:41
Well, joke on him. Yeah. All right. He said that people are
57:46
paying attention and they've decided to quash this
57:48
information. I insisted until you brought this up. I'm glad
57:52
you did. Even though it's lengthy, he was still amusing.
57:55
Because it brought brought to the attention of our, our
57:59
producers that this is ongoing. Yeah. And I was thinking about
58:04
this, you know, when I was driving up to North, and most of
58:10
them once you get past el Sobrante, or actually run el
58:16
Sobrante. All almost all the way up the drive all the way
58:19
Sacramento is all fallow. Yeah, hillsides filled with grass
58:26
that's gonna burn and burns and burns and burns constantly.
58:30
Yeah. That used to have some cattle on it didn't used to have
58:33
a lot. But there were heads of cattle here and there. And
58:37
they'd be munching away on the grass. And we didn't have as
58:39
many fires. Because you can't farm on this land. I mean, you
58:44
might be able to put a vineyard on there. You know, but you just
58:48
it's like he said, most of the land is grassland grass. Yeah.
58:53
And there's tons of it. And you can put in a bunch of animals on
58:56
there and they'll eat digress instead of letting it just burn
58:59
and then turn
58:59
it into milk and cheese and meat. Yeah, it's amazing now
59:03
instead, now instead of paying attention to that, we have spam
59:07
being locked up in plastic cases in New York City. Because people
59:12
are stealing the spam because you know that's good food. And
59:17
Scientific American reports eating too much protein makes P
59:20
a problem pollutant in the US so Oh, yeah. This is you eating
59:26
meat is peeing nitrogen slaves. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And by the way,
59:34
there's
59:34
a there's a recipe going around for spit or I saw it on the TV.
59:39
It's spam french fries. It's you take the spam from the can I've
59:43
never yet
59:44
you know to be honest, but I have never eaten spam in my
59:46
life.
59:46
I don't know I don't have you there but I but I would try this
59:50
to cut the spam at the strips and then you do the triple your
59:54
flower it eggwash panko deep fat fry you I get that a shot
1:00:03
what is what no no what is spam?
1:00:06
Spam is a whole hog ground up by it's just a it's a mixture of an
1:00:14
edible meat from from, you know from a pig
1:00:19
it's the shit no one else wanted is that it basically
1:00:21
last season deliciously I understand
1:00:26
but the root, the root of all of this is still the the globalists
1:00:31
who believe that climate change, and all our problems are
1:00:36
happening because we have too many people that steal the root
1:00:41
of this. Did you see Bill Maher?
1:00:44
I missed it.
1:00:45
Oh my goodness.
1:00:47
This is you off the rails? Yes, I
1:00:50
have clipped it for you. Since you clip it. Let's go. So this
1:00:53
is one of his new rules. This I just took a piece of this long
1:00:57
rant, so stop whenever you want. Me, and here we go. And finally
1:01:02
new rule the recent report that informed us that
1:01:05
sorry, before I get stuff start that he was on hiatus. So he was
1:01:10
away for a month. And I think he had a little talking to you
1:01:14
know, kind of that chat that the mansion got in the basement when
1:01:17
he had COVID that Boris Johnson had when he was in hospital with
1:01:23
COVID
1:01:25
kind of talking to this best exemplified by the movie
1:01:28
network. Yes, exactly. Ned Beatty brings in gets this gets
1:01:32
his talking to but he does the talking. Then it Beatty does it
1:01:36
talking to the host the way of the world.
1:01:40
Alright, so here's Bill Maher, after talking to back from
1:01:43
hiatus.
1:01:43
And finally new rule. The recent report that informed us that in
1:01:47
November of this year, the population of the earth will hit
1:01:50
8 billion is not good news. And those who are regarded as such
1:01:56
should be treated for tick tock brain. The Secretary General of
1:02:02
the United Nations of all people said that welcoming our 8
1:02:05
billion was an occasion to celebrate our diversity. Yes,
1:02:10
you want to comfort that people of all races will be
1:02:12
contributing to an already unsustainable carbon footprint
1:02:16
and choking and starving equally.
1:02:21
Now listen to the crowd. Oh, yes. Too many people we're all
1:02:24
gonna die. Funny. Have you seen what?
1:02:31
Sorry. Earlier Nick Clippy said when he says United Nation
1:02:34
versus United States only hear that.
1:02:38
And those who are regarded as such should be treated for tick
1:02:40
tock brain. Before that, the Secretary General of the United
1:02:46
Nations
1:02:47
nights. That's right.
1:02:50
Secretary General of the United States states
1:02:53
exactly what he was thinking, move back to where we weren't
1:02:56
starving equally.
1:03:03
Know what has been happening with the climate in recent
1:03:06
years. Did you see England last week. England is pretty far
1:03:10
north but the runways are melting. Our farmland is
1:03:14
shrinking due to scorching temperatures and drought. One
1:03:17
out of four people on Earth is food insecure. What we used to
1:03:21
call hungry was another one. And billions faced some form of
1:03:29
water scarcity. Water isn't the only thing we're running out of
1:03:33
clean air quality soil, rain forests, wetlands, the precious
1:03:38
metals that make our phones work. We're even running out of
1:03:41
sand, sand, which may not seem important, but without it, you
1:03:47
can't make concrete or glass like for Windows. So you can
1:03:51
look outside and see the world ending.
1:04:00
Clap clap nihilists.
1:04:03
All of this is not unrelated to there being ever more people on
1:04:08
Earth who tend to use things. Tracy stone Manning is our
1:04:12
Director of the Bureau of Land Management and she said if there
1:04:16
were fewer of us, we would have less impact. We must consume
1:04:20
less and more importantly, we must breed fewer consuming
1:04:24
humans. Yes, I thought this useless eaters.
1:04:29
Well, yeah, we can stop and hear exactly this. This is what he
1:04:32
feels
1:04:33
humans. Yes, I thought this was dumb. And until Until very
1:04:43
recently, it was but now there's a growing movement of people
1:04:48
more worried about population decline. Decline. That's what we
1:04:52
should be celebrating. But Elon Musk says the biggest
1:04:57
problem the world will face in 20 years. His population
1:05:00
collapse.
1:05:02
Oh, come on up all the excuses not to wear a condom.
1:05:07
So he went on for for quite a while. This kind of begs the
1:05:11
question. I mean, is this now just accepted all of a sudden
1:05:14
that climate change and all the adverse weather events, which by
1:05:18
the way, are more frequent and more severe than ever before in
1:05:21
history, that that is because we have too many people. That is
1:05:25
That's it. I mean, that's basically what he's saying. And
1:05:29
he sounds all in on it to me.
1:05:33
Well, for a guy with his mana money he has that he can donate
1:05:36
$1 million to a campaign of Barack Obama. This is pretty
1:05:42
elitist. This is like guy, man, you know, I'm in the boat. Shut
1:05:47
the hatch. Yeah. Yeah. That's pretty obvious. It's I don't
1:05:52
know how far this is going. Likely the only people that
1:05:56
nobody is paying attention to this, as you like to point out,
1:06:01
because you like watching waters world's man on the street? Yes,
1:06:06
I do. think anybody is paying as much attention to this as they'd
1:06:10
like to believe. Well, then only too many people. If he went to
1:06:15
their man on the street, how many people are there in the
1:06:17
world? And how much can the world sustained? Or he just fly
1:06:20
over Arizona? Yeah, you know, oh, well, do things come to
1:06:25
mind. There's a lot of room pay. And be there's a lot of sand
1:06:29
too. I'd like to know where this sand thing comes from. We're
1:06:32
running out of sand. That'll be the day
1:06:35
now. You know what that is? That's the erosion story. I
1:06:39
think because there's several islands that have erosion but it
1:06:44
turns out that it's the erosion is happening because sand is
1:06:47
being sucked up offshore for sale. And, you know, that's the
1:06:53
black market and sand. I mean, sand is being stolen from from
1:06:56
countries and you know, they're gonna tip over these islands.
1:06:59
Yeah, the Flipped red.
1:07:00
Right over. But I don't understand what you're saying.
1:07:04
But it will at least the people who listen to this podcast care,
1:07:08
because this this has got I mean, yes, he went on for
1:07:11
another three minutes, discrediting exactly what you
1:07:14
were saying. And then there's these idiots who think that
1:07:17
there's enough space Yes, space. It's not like that. Where you're
1:07:21
gonna get your water from where you're gonna get your, your
1:07:24
you're
1:07:25
gonna just getting close. I'm working on satellite
1:07:28
Cadency as well. You're gonna get this from we can get that
1:07:31
from okay. Get that from your from your Maga crowd working on
1:07:37
it. I'm feeling good about my my Bill Maher. Yeah, I'm
1:07:41
actually it's when you're weak if you don't do impressions,
1:07:44
no, this is well known, except for
1:07:46
the generalized Dutch voice. Yes.
1:07:50
Well, speaking of extreme weather, do you mind would you
1:07:53
stick with climate change for a moment since it's kind of what's
1:07:57
next after the monkey pox blows over? Yeah, you gotta be I
1:08:03
gotta. I got a few climate stuff here.
1:08:05
It has been a most unusual week. Wildfires threatening Yosemite
1:08:10
scorching heat baking the Pacific Northwest
1:08:12
baking. Baking. Did she say baking baking? i You're in the
1:08:17
Pacific Northwest, aren't you?
1:08:19
We're not really I have a place in the Pacific Northwest has
1:08:22
been hot for a week.
1:08:23
Are they baking? I'm asking you this is NBC. So I take them
1:08:29
seriously. Are they baking in the Pacific?
1:08:33
Let me give you a perspective. Because Mimi's up there. She
1:08:35
stuck up there. So it's been raining and it's been freezing
1:08:40
cold. coldest month in the history of the state. July you
1:08:46
can Washington. Now there's a heatwave. It just flipped a
1:08:50
switch and for about a week and it's continuing until next
1:08:54
Monday. I believe it's been hot. Today, I think and what was
1:08:58
yesterday's baking hot heat 85
1:09:01
has been a most unusual week. Wildfires threatening Yosemite
1:09:06
scorching heat baking the Pacific Northwest. Biblical
1:09:10
rains and floods in the nation's midsection.
1:09:13
Biblical rains John biblic mean like Noah, like the ark.
1:09:18
Yeah, we need an ark. This is what are you getting? This is
1:09:21
this this is the nightly news and NBC has gotten worse.
1:09:27
I think they've gotten better because this is hilarious.
1:09:30
All the hallmarks of climate change.
1:09:34
The hallmarks what is a hallmark? Is it just a mark in
1:09:38
the hallway?
1:09:39
Yes, enjoy where people used to pee.
1:09:42
This is exactly the fingerprint the signature that we would
1:09:46
expect with global warming due to the increase in greenhouse
1:09:49
gases from human activities.
1:09:51
But scientists are surprised by the intensity
1:09:55
breaking these temperature records for example, by so far,
1:09:59
several degrees It goes beyond what we expected. At this point,
1:10:03
yours has warmed almost two degrees since 1880. With most of
1:10:06
the warming happening since 1975. Warmer air can hold more
1:10:11
moisture, and so produce more rain. Just climate change,
1:10:16
create an environment that makes rainfall more intense
1:10:21
climate change creates an environment that's super charged
1:10:24
as rain storms. And that means when conditions are right, we
1:10:27
can get these catastrophic rain events several inches per hour.
1:10:31
This week, Kentucky indoor deadly one in 1000 year rain and
1:10:36
flood events
1:10:37
one in 1000. I had not heard this either one ever that one in
1:10:42
the 1000s in
1:10:43
your rain and flood events.
1:10:46
I'm gonna lose everything I have for sure. But it's better than
1:10:50
losing my life.
1:10:51
precipitation events are more frequent and intense across the
1:10:55
country. With the biggest increases in the Northeast and
1:10:58
Midwest. On Tuesday, St. Louis got more than twice as much rain
1:11:03
in a single day, as it does in an average month of July
1:11:07
historic statistics in a mind boggling week showing us the
1:11:11
future is now
1:11:13
the future is now so now they can predict the future. Nobody
1:11:17
can ask you. Yeah.
1:11:20
If it's once in 1000 years, that means it must have happened 1000
1:11:23
years ago was there global warming then?
1:11:27
They Well, you know about
1:11:30
Alberta, Alberta, Alberta.
1:11:31
They might have had biblical rains.
1:11:34
Now this was your global Oh, okay. There was there was
1:11:36
biblical rains. That's what happened. Yeah, it was like a
1:11:39
warming then. I liked some global warming.
1:11:42
No, in fact, I liked the biblical I'll take it. That's
1:11:45
right. It's an act of God. Not of people shut up. That take
1:11:50
that. I'd take that any day. But luckily we have solace there is
1:11:55
help us on the way people this is good. Good news, if we can
1:11:58
get it all together, because we took that Joe Manchin rat
1:12:01
bastard. We took him he got his COVID Wink wink, nudge nudge or
1:12:04
took them down in the basement. Good old Chuckie Schumer roughed
1:12:07
him up.
1:12:08
Today's Senate Democrats are rallying behind a deal that
1:12:11
would make the largest climate investment in US history,
1:12:14
provide tax credits for buying electric vehicles and lower
1:12:17
health care premiums for millions of Americans. It came
1:12:20
after a sudden reversal from moderate Democratic Senator Joe
1:12:23
Manchin, who just days ago up ended talks over concerns about
1:12:27
inflation. But now he's on board.
1:12:30
I just felt there was an opportunity here to really give
1:12:33
us an energy policy with security that we need for our
1:12:36
nation, but also driving down the prices the high price of
1:12:38
gasoline driving down inflation was my number one goal.
1:12:43
Yeah, so what they really did here is they pretty much just
1:12:46
renamed it the inflation Reduction Act and like, oh,
1:12:49
yeah, that's cute. That's all they really did. And this this
1:12:52
boob thinks that by spending more money you're going to
1:12:55
reduce inflation. Okay,
1:12:57
well, he actually got he got himself a deal some sort of free
1:13:02
money should West Virginia. Like a lot of
1:13:04
Oh, no, he got he did great for the state, but don't get me this
1:13:07
bullcrap. Oh, yeah.
1:13:09
No, he's lying. Yeah, no, it's bull crap. He's he says, All
1:13:13
these guys are all liars. Well,
1:13:15
it seems now that he, unlike what you would hope to see, you
1:13:20
know, the, hey, here's kind of a moderate guy. It's, it's weird
1:13:24
that a Democrat is running a red state like West Virginia to
1:13:27
begin with. And, you know, he's like, hey, you know, I'm not
1:13:31
gonna, I'm not going to participate in the stuff that's
1:13:33
going to hurt my state. And so maybe there's a little bit of a
1:13:36
moderate Democrat, we could use that on all sides of of our
1:13:40
political discourse. It turns out, no, he's just a lying whore
1:13:44
like the rest. And what he did is he uses he wants power. He
1:13:49
wants to be the guy who makes it happen. It seems obvious from
1:13:53
this statement that he makes was
1:13:54
my number one goal. The bill
1:13:56
includes 369 billion to fight climate change 64 billion to
1:14:01
lower premiums for Americans buying their own health
1:14:04
insurance, Medicare would be allowed to negotiate the price
1:14:07
of prescription drugs.
1:14:08
How did Trump do this already? Did we fix all that we were the
1:14:13
most favored nation status or was that all executive order
1:14:18
they turned back what happened?
1:14:20
This I don't know this drug thing they keep doing it doesn't
1:14:24
change a thing. Know that I've seen whether Trump did something
1:14:29
or these guys are trying to do something is bullcrap. The
1:14:31
farmer guys, they run, they run the roost, the bankers a top or
1:14:36
the top guys, and they're in intertwine with the industry
1:14:40
military industrial complex and they're the frontman for them.
1:14:43
Yeah. And then the farmer guys are second there's like second,
1:14:47
second banana, banana. Banana,
1:14:49
Medicare will be allowed to negotiate the price of
1:14:51
prescription drugs passing along the savings to consumers and
1:14:55
grasping for medication with out of pocket expenses capped at two
1:15:00
$2,000 It would be paid for by raising taxes on big
1:15:03
corporations.
1:15:05
What kind of a deal is out of pocket expenses capped at
1:15:10
$2,000?
1:15:13
It's almost what you get in jail. You co pay
1:15:17
$2,000 Holy mackerel, yeah. Yeah, you won't pay, don't
1:15:22
worry, you won't have to pay more than $2,000.
1:15:25
Well notice who's reading it, you know, a well paid news
1:15:27
model. It's all fine.
1:15:30
She's reading right through it, she's plowing right through
1:15:33
instead of stopping and saying, kind of a deal is this.
1:15:37
And seniors would pay less for medication with out of pocket
1:15:39
expenses cap to $2,000
1:15:42
Seniors, that's for the seniors who knows what everybody else is
1:15:45
gonna have to pay
1:15:46
expenses capped at $2,000. It would be paid for by raising
1:15:50
taxes on big corporations and the wealthy. If the bill passes,
1:15:54
it would be a huge victory for President Biden.
1:15:57
They leave out the $129 billion for the IRS police $129 billion
1:16:07
to go in force, taxation law, what are the chances they're
1:16:11
going to surround Wall Street? And beseech them for the
1:16:15
paperwork? Or is this just going to result in more harassment of
1:16:20
the middle class basically, because you know, we can send
1:16:23
agents out into bars and restaurants and see how many
1:16:26
people are eating and see if they're probably lying about
1:16:28
their income? Guess what? They're going to go and go into
1:16:32
stores? And let me see I see more product here than it's
1:16:36
being
1:16:36
rung up there with a counter and they checked it tip. Yep. Oh,
1:16:39
yeah.
1:16:39
clickety, click the Foley home, to look at your car to look at
1:16:43
your social media of there's gonna be a lot of that. Oh, so
1:16:47
you're on vacation there, huh? Let's just see if we think you
1:16:52
can afford that. And then. And then the one thing that I think
1:16:58
this, well, let me just finish this
1:17:00
report, today insistently would help fight inflation and a way
1:17:03
Americans will feel
1:17:04
put simply put, the bill will lower health care costs for
1:17:08
millions of Americans. It will be and it will be the most
1:17:12
important investment, not hyperbole, the most important
1:17:15
investment,
1:17:15
not hyperbole, which means it's hyperbole
1:17:18
we've ever made in our energy security.
1:17:23
So what's left open there is the 50% corporate tax, which is not
1:17:29
defined, of course of any documents I've seen yet. But
1:17:31
what that is, is part of the global globalist corporation
1:17:35
tax, which is pegged at 15%.
1:17:38
Would you agree? Yeah, quick coincidence. Coincidence?
1:17:41
I think not. And then we have the carried interest loophole,
1:17:48
which is a multi like $50 billion annual boon for money
1:17:55
people. So they get they don't have to pay taxes, or they pay
1:18:00
capital gains taxes over the way they make money versus if you're
1:18:04
just selling a product in your store. You pay income tax. But
1:18:10
this will all be used for someone who we were wondering
1:18:12
about. And I think that she has now popped her head up. And we
1:18:16
were just saying, Where is cinema? And there she is,
1:18:20
let's pass the bill needs the support of all 50 Senate
1:18:23
Democrats, and tonight Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona won't say if
1:18:27
she's voting yes. Are you comfortable with the passage?
1:18:32
Excuse us? Have you spoken to the President about it, but
1:18:36
after more than a year of stalled negotiations, the leader
1:18:39
of the House progresses, says they are on board.
1:18:42
I think we should get this done. The American people deserve it.
1:18:45
We need to we need to show them that we can deliver it. Let's
1:18:48
just get it done.
1:18:49
All right. So let's bring in Rachel Scott, as we always do.
1:18:51
And Rachel for this to pass. They need every single Democrat
1:18:54
in the Senate, of course to vote yes. Majority Leader Chuck
1:18:56
Schumer telling Democrats in so many words to stay focused and
1:18:59
to stay healthy. Yes, David
1:19:01
Schumer not only needs the support of all 50 Senate
1:19:04
Democrats, but he also needs them to be physically present
1:19:07
here on Capitol Hill in order to vote on that legislation. As of
1:19:11
now, Senators Joe Manchin and Viktor Orban are recovering from
1:19:14
COVID-19 that could complicate the timeline for Democrats who
1:19:18
are looking to get this bill passed by the end of next week.
1:19:20
David
1:19:22
So cinema cinema sees her moment.
1:19:27
Yeah, well, she should surprise some other senators and stick
1:19:32
their head up and try to you know, get some attention but
1:19:35
they haven't got the guts to do it. They're afraid they're gonna
1:19:37
get voted out.
1:19:40
So I don't know what the chances are of this, of this passing at
1:19:45
all. It's gonna pass. You think
1:19:48
although the one thing they're leaving out of all these reports
1:19:51
is still has to go to the to the secretary, the person who does
1:19:56
can decide whether they can do this on a majority vote. It's
1:19:59
still unclear, it makes nice 60 votes.
1:20:03
Oh, that's stipulation. Oh, and they're not talking about it.
1:20:07
Why would that be? Why would they need 60 votes?
1:20:10
What because you need 60 votes to pass anything in the Senate.
1:20:13
That's just a filibuster rule. That's why they have this 60
1:20:16
vote, which is right but this isn't always simple majorities
1:20:19
you can't do it unless there's exceptions made specifically for
1:20:22
these things. And then there are some exceptions for certain
1:20:26
kinds of bills that have already been built in and they're trying
1:20:28
to analyze whether this bill would be one of those except
1:20:31
right doesn't look like it is necessarily
1:20:33
reconciliation bill or something like that. Yes, I
1:20:40
had been there was discussing it's like it's a done deal.
1:20:43
Yeah. Well, I can't wait to see what those climate what those
1:20:48
climate to funds will be used for.
1:20:51
We have to line someone's pockets.
1:20:53
With that I'd like to thank you for your courage say in the
1:20:56
morning to you the man who put the sea in the crazy sex parties
1:21:00
in San Francisco please welcome John C Devorah back
1:21:16
in the morning to you trolls there in the troll room at troll
1:21:19
room dot I oh nice to see all the trolls hanging out in the
1:21:24
troll room because that's the place to be on Thursdays and
1:21:26
Sundays we don't you're going to do at work. Come on, man. Get
1:21:29
hop in the troll room troll around. This is where everyone
1:21:31
listens to the shows live 24/7 We have no agenda stream.com
1:21:35
running. You'll find your troll room and the stream right there
1:21:40
it troll room.io or use one of those funky fresh brand new
1:21:44
podcast apps pod verse and pod verse curio caster a couple of
1:21:50
them already use the live functionality. So the podcast
1:21:54
app you use to listen to the podcast will alert you tell you
1:21:57
hey, they're going live and you open it up right there in your
1:22:00
app and you've got the chat room. You've got the live
1:22:02
stream, and you got the trolls you can be a part of that. Let
1:22:05
me see how many trolls we have with us today. Come on. Out of
1:22:08
the way there. 2303 for today. Oh, that's pretty good.
1:22:12
That's, uh, we were averaging 22 on Sunday. So that's nice
1:22:16
jump. Nice jump. Oh, good to have y'all here. Of course, you
1:22:19
can also follow us at no agenda social.com It is a mastodon
1:22:23
server. You can no longer join, although we're gonna we're
1:22:27
probably going to do a purge again, pretty soon. I think we
1:22:29
have room for maybe 1500 new accounts. Since you know people
1:22:34
leave and some bought stuff. And so I don't have to talk to to
1:22:39
Aaron or about that. But I think we're ready to do another
1:22:41
opening. But in the meantime, you can get an account at any
1:22:44
Mastodon server and follow Jhansi Dvorak at no agenda
1:22:46
social.com. Follow me Adam at node in the social.com. And once
1:22:50
you follow us, you'll see that everything will start to flow
1:22:53
and you can follow other people.
1:22:54
And those are not email addresses.
1:22:58
You're just shouting into the wind Devorah. People will never
1:23:03
hear what you just said. Of course, we want to thank the
1:23:06
artists for episode 1472. And we chose a piece which was done by
1:23:13
correct a record who was just on fire. We did have a dispute
1:23:17
about this one but this is the no agenda, TV Guide, Season
1:23:21
Finale poster tune into the show trial. That correct a record
1:23:26
brought was this one of our few choices was because I can
1:23:31
recall.
1:23:32
I'll tell you about a couple of things. One you hate. You did
1:23:36
not like this. I didn't say you didn't hate it. But here's what
1:23:39
your comment was. It was I said I like it because I liked it
1:23:44
right away, because it's got this TV Guide looking thing with
1:23:47
the no agenda logo in the background. And your comment was
1:23:50
nobody knows what that means anymore. That's not even though
1:23:54
no, no, nobody knows what that means anymore. And you know, I
1:23:59
would tend to kind of agree, but we have such a broad ranging
1:24:03
audience, but your argument was that the TV Guide logo, yes is
1:24:08
so old and unused and unrecognizable, that you are
1:24:13
going to reject a piece.
1:24:15
So a version of that is true. I thought that TV Guide was
1:24:21
probably not as widely known anymore. I could be wrong, but
1:24:25
then also downplaying when I went I liked the way you apply
1:24:29
it. When I went to TV guide.com The the traditional TV rounded
1:24:35
corner screen logo is no more they don't even use the logo
1:24:39
themselves anymore. It's just a red square now,
1:24:43
which is ludicrous but okay, yeah. Well now the other piece
1:24:47
that I liked that you're rejected from some other reason
1:24:51
was it was a capitalist agendas recession motel, which was I
1:24:57
just thought was a good piece of art. It
1:24:59
was no I know Oh, I know why rejected that. Yeah, you
1:25:02
rejected it because you thought it was biased and political
1:25:05
because it had a donkey on the top. Yeah. And then the
1:25:10
Democrats didn't cause the recession. That's factually
1:25:15
untrue. Neither did the Republicans. The Federal Reserve
1:25:18
caused the recession. So and I, we have no agenda so we just
1:25:23
have this donkey up. There's like we're making fun. How often
1:25:27
have we ever used the dumb? The dumb elephant in art? Never. I
1:25:32
think we have.
1:25:33
It's both at the same time. Yes. It was a nice piece. There's
1:25:38
nothing wrong with that. But yeah, I
1:25:40
took exception to that. You're correct. You took exception
1:25:43
exception.
1:25:44
The one I liked the most. Was the mask up down low. The guy
1:25:50
with the mask on his butt. I mean, that's the one I wanted.
1:25:54
And you vetoed it. Why? What do you have against buts?
1:25:58
Yeah, I've it because I thought it was mediocre art. And then I
1:26:01
noticed since then, that it was I think it may be lifted from
1:26:05
someplace. So I
1:26:06
think everyone's doing it now. Yeah. Yeah, it may have been
1:26:09
lifted or everyone's just doing it. I'd seen it around. See what
1:26:15
other things were there. It wasn't it was really a poor
1:26:18
showing. It wasn't a huge amount. Maybe people are sick of
1:26:21
listening to our critique.
1:26:23
Now, you know what it is? I think it's I think the content
1:26:26
of that particular show was not lending itself to some cool
1:26:29
Marquardt.
1:26:30
Yeah, that can be true, that can be true. You can follow along
1:26:34
with this art and this spectacular contest that artists
1:26:38
hold amongst themselves. It's a big part of our value for value
1:26:40
proposition. They don't you know, the the work that our
1:26:44
artists do that bring us fresh artwork for every single episode
1:26:47
is not even taken into account. In podcast surveys. I was
1:26:53
reading a survey recently talking about album art and what
1:26:56
people find important in album art.
1:26:59
And
1:27:01
the only consideration is, it should be art. It's always the
1:27:06
same art. And it might it might have people say oh, it wouldn't
1:27:10
be good to know which guest is on the show or some shit like
1:27:13
that. I guess kind of the way Rogan does it. But to me, it's
1:27:17
like no, that's completely wrong. This is this is it's like
1:27:21
liner notes are back you know, remember you bought a song and
1:27:24
then you had an album and you had the cover and the liner
1:27:27
notes and this Yeah, and cool photos and stuff. That's what
1:27:31
this
1:27:31
is. By the way. How many was how many Beatles albums have you
1:27:34
seen with the exact same cover?
1:27:35
Yeah, right. Yeah, we are the Beatles of podcasting. Take it,
1:27:41
think about it. Think about that. Let that sink in.
1:27:46
Think about let that sink in for thinking Maris
1:27:49
marinate in that will. Yeah. So artists are very important to us
1:27:54
and near and dear and we think it was gonna make sure I got it
1:27:59
right. That was correct the record for bringing us the
1:28:02
artwork, number 214 72. And they guess he's on his way to ease
1:28:06
had hattricks so he can do it again. And of course you can
1:28:10
also see these in the new podcast apps new podcast
1:28:12
apps.com The artwork goes along in sync with what's going on in
1:28:16
the show. It's well worth it and easy to find sections when
1:28:20
you're looking for it later on. Thanks again. Artists we love
1:28:22
you know agenda art generator.com. And our
1:28:26
Hey, hold it I'm holdings episode 1252. A donkey
1:28:35
standalone donkey wearing a mask. And having instead of the
1:28:42
stars across it was a Chinese star with the four other stars.
1:28:49
Donkey Ah,
1:28:50
but that's different. That's saying the that saying the
1:28:54
Communist Party and the Democrats are working together
1:28:57
whatever you're talking about on that show? Yeah. Okay. Well, I
1:29:04
stand corrected with
1:29:05
you. I'm still looking at. Like, I couldn't get me to give you
1:29:08
credit because I am actually stunned how few how how seldom
1:29:13
is the word I'm looking for. Any, either the donkey or the
1:29:16
elephants have been used. That's the only one I can find because
1:29:19
we're
1:29:19
inherently kind of non political. That's why we don't
1:29:21
do that. Well, we are non political but no inherently like
1:29:26
saying inherently it sounds artists are political. And they
1:29:28
were the artists here. The artists are a bunch of Magha I
1:29:31
mean, it's crazy. The artists and let's thank our executive
1:29:36
and Associate Executive producers. For episode 14 We had
1:29:42
73 already love this. We kick it off with Jeremy Cleary from
1:29:47
Chester springs, Pennsylvania 768 And he adds one penny in
1:29:53
there so I don't know exactly why he's doing that. But I will
1:29:56
grab hot I'll guess I'm gonna say I'm gonna grab it for the
1:29:59
pot before he says anything longtime listener first time
1:30:02
caller here. Thank you, John and Adam for your tireless media
1:30:05
deconstruction. I started listening in 2015 during pizza
1:30:09
delivery drives and the show helped me maintain my sanity and
1:30:12
regular sized amygdala throughout college in shockingly
1:30:15
liberal Chapel Hill Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Yeah,
1:30:19
yeah, here we're still working on hitting more friends and
1:30:22
acquaintances in the mouth. This podcast is the only one have
1:30:26
ever listened to with regularity especially of love the meetups,
1:30:29
shout out to the local Philly 76 crew, and I'm all Jide for the
1:30:33
August 6 Phillies game tailgate this amount of brings me to
1:30:38
knighthood at last please dump me sir stunk straighter of the
1:30:41
Philly suburbs for the roundtable I have no requests
1:30:44
other than Tabasco sauce thank you for your courage jingo
1:30:48
request trains good plains bad climate gate. Oh, he does. Yeah,
1:30:53
he is. I don't want 2015 is pretty good. You know a lot of
1:30:57
this stuff. Climate gate Hillary's at what point what
1:31:00
difference does it make? And Hillary swooped capped off with
1:31:04
a regular plain old fashioned karma we got that for trains?
1:31:09
Planes bad to the gate to the gate to the cloud at this point
1:31:23
does it make sense I'd like to know she comes. Be careful
1:31:35
you've got karma Oh, man,
1:31:42
she's still swooping.
1:31:44
Okay, Episode 949. Artists comic strip blogger did an elephant
1:31:54
and what was the art? It was an elephant just an elephant
1:31:58
looking at in episode title was bro Splosion.
1:32:04
Over Oh Splosion
1:32:06
rose blush
1:32:07
Bluejeans you go back and listen to that episode.
1:32:11
Bro. Splosion Nice.
1:32:13
Okay, you're up. I'm up. Looking at Orange. I'm
1:32:18
not up. Good bad Chef Rob McHugh. Our cook. Chef in New
1:32:23
York and Greenlawn came with 500 bucks. We haven't heard from him
1:32:27
for a while. Oh, I posted some Gosh awful recipe. And I think
1:32:32
he tried it and he hasn't talked to me since I could not live
1:32:35
another day. Not donating my business account. Not donating
1:32:41
my business account. Okay. had extra $333.33 I was driving on
1:32:47
the Southern State Parkway in Long Island. My exit 33 Oh, god,
1:32:53
my birthday is August 1 49. trips. Reverend Al J. Okay.
1:32:58
Okay. I think he's done there. Now he's asking for some
1:33:01
requests. Okay. Yeah, he doesn't put spaces between his words 49
1:33:07
trips. Reverend Al Jedi, biscuit birthday and ants. I love you
1:33:14
mean it. Chef Rob and McHugh. Okay,
1:33:17
and how do we actually have I don't know if we have a GED
1:33:23
separately.
1:33:24
GOP in fighting is escalating. Political says Democrats are
1:33:29
outright Jide they always give me a biscuit on my birthday.
1:33:35
They are Judy and Dean's proof I got a chance to get hands on All
1:33:59
right, thank you chef. Marian Roman Roman from New York New
1:34:07
York for 33 dot 33. And she has a greeting comrades. Well done.
1:34:14
Our preferred pronoun please join me in celebrating my
1:34:17
brother my brothers Joe while he him 43rd birthday today and his
1:34:22
recent engagement to very she her no agenda keeps us connected
1:34:27
and no agenda keeps us connected and sane. Please give him a vis
1:34:33
biscuit first birthday. I love you Joe. They always give me a
1:34:36
biscuit on my birthday. Well, okay, if you're gonna do
1:34:41
Comrades, I guess you can do per other pronouns.
1:34:44
Male Hark, meanwhile, is a Millennial. Millennial male
1:34:48
millennial mill. That's right. 38383838383 Hi, Adam and John,
1:34:56
do you know that Oregon was the 33rd state accepted into the US
1:35:00
actually didn't know that no that No. The donation was
1:35:03
collected in my backyard barbecue meet up in Portland
1:35:06
last night. So please credit Oregon local 33 Swiss rain
1:35:12
Portlanders sweet big thanks to Liam Scott, Charles Stephanie,
1:35:15
Terry, Tim and Luke. All Christian names appears. I am so
1:35:21
grateful to have you as my friends we challenge another
1:35:24
meetup to match this donation until then I declare Portland as
1:35:28
the number one city in the no agenda universe for the summer
1:35:32
of 2022. Can someone dethrone us before the autumn equinox? We
1:35:37
hope so love millennial male Oh, so
1:35:39
we have a meet up competition going now.
1:35:42
as well. She started it.
1:35:43
I like it. All right. I mean, I was sure that there's the state
1:35:47
of Texas is probably thinking they can kick Oregon's Aspen.
1:35:50
Okay.
1:35:50
Oh, yeah, anybody can kick Oregon SAS. Ooh, fightin
1:35:54
words. Mark Stokes Barry is in Centennial Colorado. 337 dot 31
1:36:01
see what this is about. I donated for my brother Sean
1:36:04
Stokes Barry in the amount of 337 dot 31. And we'd like to
1:36:07
wish him a happy birthday. He turns 47 today, July 31. He's on
1:36:10
the list. We found y'all when Adam was on the Tom Woods show
1:36:14
and it's become our favorite podcast please do show. Ben de
1:36:20
deuced keep on keepin on from wack ass Colorado, Mark Stokes.
1:36:24
Barry. Thanks, Mark.
1:36:27
Steven Dean, vibe count of the Fox Valley in the Chicago
1:36:32
suburbs and us way go. Illinois 33333. With this executive
1:36:39
donation of three, three 3.33. I'm requesting a double shot of
1:36:43
karma. One for a job I've interviewed for and the other
1:36:47
for keeper karma. For some reason. Every time I asked her
1:36:51
smokin hot girlfriend karma, it wears off after six months. And
1:36:56
you keep her as opposed to girlfriend. It's past time for
1:37:00
that. Steven Dean Vikander the Fox Valley and Chicago suburbs,
1:37:06
jobs,
1:37:06
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs.
1:37:16
Here's your double. Sir Kyle Burnett. Do you happen to have
1:37:21
this note on hand? Yeah.
1:37:22
Oh, yeah, sure. And I can read it right here because it's an
1:37:25
extra piece of paper. Good. He says, ITM I bought a DVD copy of
1:37:32
Wag the Dog online it was 33% off. Oh, coincidence? I think
1:37:37
not. This donation makes me a baron. Please name me Baron.
1:37:42
Grape drink. I don't know if he's on the list. Rob. Great.
1:37:45
Let me take a look. Berry grape drink.
1:37:50
I saw I requested a protectorate of the Wisconsin ledge AV a fist
1:37:55
and Aava in Wisconsin. Are you kidding me?
1:37:58
What's what's? What's AAVs vineyard
1:38:02
AV stands for app it's an appellation except for any parts
1:38:07
currently controlled by others. Hail apple. Sir Kyle Hale apples
1:38:16
written very large.
1:38:17
We used to he used to say that a lot. Hail apple. What
1:38:20
happened to that? Hail apple.
1:38:24
Come and goes since you have the papers there. Sir Alexander
1:38:27
Black Knight of middle Cascadia and Duvall, Washington. 301 82.
1:38:32
What's his note? Oh. Oh, I'm sorry. No, we miss Clayton
1:38:37
Moses, Clayton Moses in Anchorage? Yeah, I don't have
1:38:41
anything from Clayton
1:38:42
No, I does. Oh, we actually there is some from Clayton she's
1:38:46
I have to look it up. Um, read the Bible. Don't worry. We'll
1:38:49
get back to Clayton okay. It was something screwy it was came oh
1:38:54
wait a minute. It says get printed out
1:38:56
shingles that's an Eric says that was literally the entire
1:39:05
note gene.
1:39:06
Ya know, I have to know the note. Okay. You might as well do
1:39:09
it. No, I got it right here. I'm gonna tell you the problem.
1:39:12
Okay, here comes the problem. He sent the note in via and it's
1:39:16
only a fluke that I caught it. He sent it in via the no agenda
1:39:20
social. Okay. So as a note that came in I know as gender social
1:39:25
and it's got a happy birthday on it. So you're gonna have to
1:39:27
write that in at Jhansi DEVAR. Hey, sending a donation to 333
1:39:33
My name is I donated this what it says my name is I donated
1:39:40
under Clinton Moses through PayPal. Here is my note quote a
1:39:45
happy birthday to Sir Elaine. protectorate of the near point
1:39:50
please add to birthday list hit for July 31. Okay. Done. No, you
1:39:57
did it.
1:39:58
I just put it on. Yeah.
1:40:00
Good. Okay, so that was that that's the reason this came up
1:40:03
this way. But what about he has no drizzled Oh, jingles? No,
1:40:06
it's
1:40:07
what a jib.
1:40:09
So sir, maybe those I don't know. Okay, Sir Alexander Black
1:40:14
Knight and middle Cascadia is next 301 82 from Duvall,
1:40:16
Washington. And he wrote in and notice on paper. Here's a 10182
1:40:23
in honor of the two finest airborne divisions ever feel
1:40:25
that the Screaming Eagles and the all Americans? Oh yeah. So
1:40:29
that's two times that I was enjoying some books 301 82 Oh, I
1:40:34
see. I was enjoying some older episodes. So here's an
1:40:36
additional $100 Because Sir Chris Wilson is simply a mad
1:40:40
genius. Yes, he is. And lastly, here's 100 bucks bucks to keep
1:40:45
your racket going. rack to D to health karma for all if time
1:40:50
allows. Course. Time all the good work Sir Alexander Black
1:40:54
Knight of middle Cascadia. All right, brother. Thank you. Here
1:40:59
we go.
1:41:00
You've got Armand. And then we have Brian, the preacher, our
1:41:10
first Associate Executive producer from Pflugerville. Home
1:41:15
of the Schlitterbahn in Texas. 222. dot 26. Good day,
1:41:21
gentlemen. Jingles don't trust China goat scream stop rapping.
1:41:24
I'll keep it short. No, you didn't.
1:41:26
I've been listening. I couldn't even see it.
1:41:29
I've been listening for a long time. Well, certainly before
1:41:31
Episode 1300 and decided I just needed to stop being a douchebag
1:41:34
and donate. Yes, please do doo dee doo. I'm sending a row of
1:41:40
ducks with one underwater. That's what the 26 is for.
1:41:44
Because I'm a dude named Ben dealing with customer network
1:41:48
operations issues. I'm basically drowning, but loving the work.
1:41:52
Okay, that is the hallmark of a true dude named Ben. Drowning
1:41:58
but loving the work. I'd like to call out Greg Abbott. No, not
1:42:02
the governor of Texas. Although he is a douchebag as well. The
1:42:05
other guy he's my buddy. He's a douchebag still, if you can give
1:42:10
the governor of this great state of douchebag call out that'd be
1:42:12
awesome. I also need to thank sir self proclaimed future JCD
1:42:18
he's my crazy English. Kind of get English candy gets up in
1:42:26
Montana who hit me in the mouth a couple of years ago. No idea
1:42:30
what the means. The state that stinking ring really hurts by
1:42:33
the way does happen. Anyways, I decided I needed to donate when
1:42:37
my last beer tag was $33 and my last interaction with the tech
1:42:41
Texas DPS Department of Roads department of speed traps was
1:42:48
because I was 33 miles over the speed limit. I'd send more money
1:42:51
but you know the ticket hit my donation budget will stop
1:42:54
speeding. Thanks for all you do man one day I'm hoping to meet
1:42:58
Adam. Oh man. What is this? His keeper and their wonderful dog
1:43:03
in the person? Of course JCD I'm old enough to remember your PC
1:43:08
Magazine days and well if you're around I'll buy you a beer or
1:43:12
glass of wine if it isn't premium to praying for both of
1:43:16
you your families and your work may the Lord bless you and keep
1:43:19
you all praying for your continued success. The future
1:43:22
sir preacher of the Texas Republic thanks for all you do
1:43:25
Brian the preacher from Pflugerville Texas
1:43:27
no no trying don't trust China China is as HoH bone put off Why
1:43:32
are you laughing? Shut up
1:43:37
you've got shot Shut up
1:43:41
Stefan pro cop Pro Cup Pro Cup I'm not sure he's in Vienna
1:43:46
Austria. tu tu tu tu tu we love the Austrians we do a little
1:43:52
value for the immense value you provide me for my birthday? On
1:43:58
the 31st of July. Me with for my birthday Okay, thanks for the
1:44:04
great work and institution like no agenda show is really missing
1:44:08
in the German speaking world was missing Deutschland sat here
1:44:13
Goten Yeah, karma please.
1:44:15
Go and Yak Okay. Do we do that? I guess we could do that. You've
1:44:24
got you've got ah sir marks note handy by any chance.
1:44:36
Yeah, yes, actually. Mark Jeremy Dyson, Duke of Japan and
1:44:43
disputed islands. Yes. tu tu tu tu tu he has a little thing we
1:44:48
have to we should do. Yes. I was. He said. A note to wish
1:44:57
Dame Astrid is safe trip. back to Italy today. She has to
1:45:02
travel back for a sad farewell no one era ends but now a new
1:45:07
ones have already started stay strong. We'll be thinking of
1:45:10
you. Uniting everyone on the lake love and lit Sir Mark
1:45:16
and I'm going to send her some yet karma for the trip.
1:45:19
You've got karma
1:45:25
Dayton Ohio is where big sweetie sends in a row of ducks. Two,
1:45:31
two 2.22 in the morning John and Adam first time donor here I've
1:45:33
been waiting to donate since I first got into the show a few
1:45:36
months ago. The reason for my donation is to celebrate my dad
1:45:39
aka sir Egghead Night of the Long shadows of trash mountains
1:45:43
birthday wishes on July 31, which is
1:45:47
July 31. Birthdays is crazy.
1:45:50
It's a lot more than you'd expect. Anyway, I don't want to
1:45:53
make this note too long or also end up on John's watch list.
1:45:56
Jingles I would like our massive dumps I love bugs. And noodle
1:46:01
gun and a mac and cheese. Well, I think we can do all of that.
1:46:06
Please read on the August. No, wait. Sorry. There we go. Happy
1:46:11
Birthday dad from big sweetie. Little Islam and PJ sucks. I'm
1:46:17
like a cool family to me.
1:46:19
They did dumps they call them dumps big massive dumps
1:46:26
I'm sorry. That's not the one you want to do that over again.
1:46:33
That would really suck it was my birth dad hate it. He
1:46:35
did dumps they call them dumps big massive dumps
1:46:51
with the blue I got to my pasta Glocks locked and loaded live
1:47:07
mac and cheese sorry, Long COVID
1:47:11
Long COVID Just Jocelyn Cardinia us in Warner New Hampshire 220
1:47:20
Probably pronounce it cut Dennis there. Just wanted to DT she
1:47:27
says please read on the August 1 show yeah, we'll do it tomorrow
1:47:33
Hi just wanted to de douche my dad you've been de deuced Joseph
1:47:40
air of Warner New Hampshire. He has been listening consistently
1:47:46
for eight years and then appearance she's got major
1:47:50
douche Wow happy 53rd birthday on August 1 Love you so much
1:47:55
Papa Jocelyn
1:47:59
Jackson more with 202 dot O two nice Palindrome but I do not
1:48:06
have a note I presume you don't have one either. No I get
1:48:09
nothing from okay so in that case no note you get yourself a
1:48:12
double karma
1:48:15
you've got pharma now you got the TG of decide I tuned in $2
1:48:25
and he says no jingles Dutch jobs karma from my son please.
1:48:30
And House renting karma for me. Thanks TJ of the side i
1:48:35
i can do it live if he wants that kind of karma here for just
1:48:41
Dutch jobs karma or does he want her bom bom bom bom karma let me
1:48:54
give him a proper jobs,
1:48:56
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs.
1:49:00
You wouldn't want to screw up as karma. Paul St. Laurent Laurent
1:49:07
is in Renton, Washington. $200 Emergency house selling karma
1:49:11
jobs karma three way if possible, please, huh. Trying to
1:49:15
get the hell out of Washington State and the market has gone
1:49:18
off a cliff. Thank you for your courage. It's all in one here
1:49:21
combat karma. Is that so is the Washington State market has gone
1:49:27
off a cliff?
1:49:28
What? Maybe where he has it depends. It's spotty. So same
1:49:32
thing all over the cars. I
1:49:33
mean, it's it's crashing or it's it's out of control. Which one
1:49:36
is
1:49:36
well, we don't crashing is you know if it goes down 10%. That's
1:49:42
not that's crashing by most people's standards when it comes
1:49:45
to real estate. And so it's probably down a little bit. Dan,
1:49:51
it depends on where he is. If he's in Seattle, it shouldn't be
1:49:54
changing that much. And I don't think he is. So that's our group
1:49:57
of producers Associate Executive and executive producers for show
1:50:01
1473 And we want to thank each and every one unknown ones who
1:50:05
really make the show sing it isn't the first half and then we
1:50:08
have the rest of our people coming in later. And
1:50:11
if you're wondering what these odd amounts are about, that's
1:50:13
because we don't force anyone into telling you how much you
1:50:16
have to subscribe to us for or, or you can't listen unless you
1:50:21
pay some money now, we consider this to be a very valuable
1:50:25
service. That's why we provide it openly freely for all to us.
1:50:30
That includes our show notes and includes all the clips that we
1:50:33
that we provide. Anybody can can we have search engines we have
1:50:38
so much so much happening and that has all been provided from
1:50:43
producers as well or hosting or no agenda meetups, the no agenda
1:50:48
social.com The the Art Generator and just goes on and on and on.
1:50:53
And that's why we're still here after almost 15 years, and still
1:50:57
hanging in there. And you only thing you have to do if you want
1:51:01
to provide some some value back is just tell us how much it was
1:51:04
worth to you. That is something only you can determine. If you'd
1:51:07
like to learn more, we have a website you can sing along
1:51:09
vor.org/and A thank you again for producing episode 1473.
1:51:17
Our formula is this. We go out. We hit people in the mouth
1:51:40
right. Yes. All right. All right. This let me see this. I
1:51:49
think we should do a quick little update on bad things with
1:51:54
the vaccine. Just so we stay up to speed because this is not not
1:52:00
going away. The evidence is is just too big. That seems to be
1:52:05
issues with with vaccinated people are getting sick.
1:52:10
Let's make sure we start from the beginning with Biden COVID.
1:52:15
Again, don't kit
1:52:17
oops, sorry. Oops, sorry.
1:52:19
Here we go. President Biden says in a tweet he is again positive
1:52:22
for COVID. Those ease experiencing no symptoms. As
1:52:26
appears Tamra Keith reports. Biden's physician says that
1:52:29
after several days of testing negative he tested positive this
1:52:33
morning,
1:52:34
Dr. Kevin O'Connor had been on the lookout for what's known as
1:52:37
a rebound infection. When Biden first came down with COVID. He
1:52:41
started on a five day course of the antiviral treatment packs
1:52:44
loaded. It reduces symptoms and can speed recovery. But what's
1:52:48
thought to be a small share of patients experience rebound
1:52:51
infections as has happened with Biden
1:52:54
seems like every even patient has experienced
1:52:57
where seems like to me that's where they were discussing
1:52:59
making you take it for 10 days. One of
1:53:01
our producers his wife is a nurse and provides Paxil COVID
1:53:07
as outpatient treatment, which of course it should be. And I
1:53:11
said how's it going bad? Maybe 40% works for 40% of the people
1:53:16
that take it it has some effect. That's not a great ratio. For
1:53:23
the miracle drug, the Pfizer pill is here. Remember that the
1:53:28
Pfizer pill it's gonna get why do we have a game changer? Oh,
1:53:33
yeah, the Pfizer big game changer. Let me see if the
1:53:36
Pfizer buddy we have Pfizer pill. What is this? Oh, yeah,
1:53:40
here's here's here's a clip, a short clip from NTD one of yours
1:53:44
I think
1:53:44
here's an update on that COVID-19 antiviral pill by
1:53:47
Merck. The FDA panel has immersed the antiviral drug, but
1:53:51
the vote was a narrow 113 to 10. Ultimately, the panel found that
1:53:56
the benefits outweigh its risks, which include potential birth
1:54:00
defects if used during pregnancy. Now the vote was just
1:54:04
a recommendation. The FDA is expected
1:54:06
I think this was this was after Pfizer already got there. Go
1:54:10
ahead here it is. Pfizer's? No, no, it isn't it packs love it is
1:54:14
a Pfizer pill is not a Merck no
1:54:16
I know. But I think Merck tried to put a pill through and then
1:54:18
they got squashed by corruption
1:54:21
by Pfizer. Exactly. Here's the Pfizer. You're listening to this
1:54:24
following Pfizer's worldwide rollout of its COVID vaccine.
1:54:27
This morning. Another potential breakthrough in the fight
1:54:30
against the pandemic fight Pfizer saying early trial
1:54:33
results of its antiviral COVID pill show it reduced the risk of
1:54:37
hospitalization or death by 89%. More than 1200 people included
1:54:42
in the study were considered high risk and started taking the
1:54:45
pills within three days of developing COVID symptoms. The
1:54:49
drug now on track for potential authorization in early 2022. Not
1:54:54
far behind another COVID pill developed by Merck. Right,
1:54:58
you're right What happened to the Merck pill?
1:55:01
That went nowhere?
1:55:03
Of course not.
1:55:04
It's not it had the wrong name on it. Alright, Biden COVID
1:55:08
again to
1:55:10
is an option was not that good. Onward with your clips.
1:55:14
Yes. This is cropping up everywhere we had to go to North
1:55:20
of the border to get an example of it in Albert, Alberta, Canada
1:55:24
unknown causes was the leading cause of death in Alberta last
1:55:28
year. That category leads the way over dementia, which has
1:55:31
been in the top spots since 2016. And COVID-19, which began
1:55:36
adding to the provinces death tally in a big way in 2020.
1:55:40
I think it's probably multifactorial. So there's play
1:55:42
many things playing to that the number of deaths with unknown
1:55:46
right has gone up over the
1:55:48
last just happens three years starting in the five hundreds in
1:55:52
2019, rising to over 14 120 20 and doubling to more than
1:55:58
30 320 21. Before that the category didn't even rank Dr.
1:56:04
Daniel Gregson believes lack of resources, delayed access to
1:56:08
health care services, and post COVID complications have
1:56:11
contributed to the increase,
1:56:13
we'd have this impression of, you know, surviving COVID. And
1:56:18
that's the end of it. And that's not necessarily true. Greg's in
1:56:23
points to
1:56:24
a larger study out of the US that found people who had COVID
1:56:27
19 are at a higher risk of heart disease, stroke, pulmonary
1:56:31
embolisms and death, compared to those who haven't been infected,
1:56:35
the risk is even higher for those who end up in hospital or
1:56:39
in the ICU with COVID.
1:56:40
One would expect that some of those patients are going to, you
1:56:43
know, survive the COVID and then die at home from other other
1:56:46
complications.
1:56:47
I mean, I can listen to these reports. At no point did they
1:56:50
say hmm, could it be anything? Anything with the vaccine? At no
1:56:57
point?
1:56:57
Will you hear that? It's unbelievable to me. Now,
1:57:00
it's a disservice and it's criminal. And we know that they
1:57:03
lied. Yeah.
1:57:05
If you read, like, we don't get too many newscasts for that
1:57:09
woman. But if you read the like, just the newspapers in India,
1:57:13
they have no qualms about pitching about these problems,
1:57:18
no qualms?
1:57:19
Well, because their information is different.
1:57:23
Yeah, because their information is not bought and paid for by
1:57:26
the pharmaceutical industry like it is here.
1:57:29
Correct. And here is the king Peter McCullough. And he is
1:57:34
highlighting another huge issue with the vaccines Makala
1:57:38
infallible credentials, people,
1:57:40
we know that loaded on lipid nanoparticles, this dangerous
1:57:43
genetic code and Spike protein go everywhere in the body. You
1:57:46
know, all the autopsy studies have shown us in the brain, it's
1:57:49
in the hearts in the bone marrow, it's in the reproductive
1:57:52
organs. There's a range of sperm count and motility. Those men
1:57:56
who are at the lower range clearly with vaccination,
1:57:59
they're going to be brought into the infertile range. And it
1:58:02
takes months and months and months to recover. So just by
1:58:05
the time they recover their their take a mandated booster
1:58:08
they go back into the infertile range, I can tell you as a
1:58:11
medical doctor, every man should be concerned. Now importantly,
1:58:15
female ovaries have a set number of eggs from birth. So as the
1:58:21
genetic code is installed into ovarian cells, and the spike
1:58:24
protein is produced in the ovary, not not only is it
1:58:27
triggering irregularities and menses, but almost certainly is
1:58:31
causing death and destruction of those precious ovarian cells,
1:58:35
those eggs, eggs are being destroyed, and so on a more
1:58:38
probable than not basis. One would conclude with serial
1:58:42
injections every six months, women could be rendered in
1:58:46
fertile.
1:58:47
So that would be very helpful to have a booster every six months
1:58:51
to render the population in fertile. Yeah. I mean, besides
1:58:57
that, these variants that are created when Tina and I had
1:59:01
COVID in February, and you think we have some kind of immunity
1:59:05
but no, because because our variant came from a vaccinated
1:59:11
person I guess or it propagates that way maybe it's maybe it's
1:59:15
Yeah, wasn't
1:59:15
a woman in Utah where she went to visit was Yeah, yeah Jackson
1:59:19
double booster and
1:59:20
by the way, she feels horrible about it.
1:59:23
She feels very or she should but Well, I mean she can do about us
1:59:27
a system
1:59:28
I know but she feels really bad systemic and keeps and keeps
1:59:31
apologizing because I'm like, I'm just gonna give it everybody
1:59:35
if you want to shut her up, so you should never gotten a VAX in
1:59:37
the first place. Oh,
1:59:38
that's such a nice thing to say. No, how were your friends? Do
1:59:44
you have friends call you ever again and no friends? No, I
1:59:47
didn't think so.
1:59:49
Friends,
1:59:50
but if so, what were going before the show, we had friends
1:59:54
okay. We had we had a social life. This show came along um,
1:59:59
no friend No fret now. But this is besides the fertility issue.
2:00:09
Is this boosting just going to create a new variant that I can
2:00:12
get every six months as well? Is that where they're going with
2:00:16
this?
2:00:19
I have no idea where this is going to head but like I said,
2:00:22
if they just stopped giving people shots, it might go away.
2:00:25
No, and I'm in full agreement with you on that. Even though
2:00:28
it's You're not a doctor and somebody, I'm hardly a doctor.
2:00:31
No, but still, it's like, come on this. But the media is just
2:00:37
presses ahead. Everything is obvious as the nose on your face
2:00:41
that this is not working. It's bullcrap. And they just keep
2:00:44
pushing, pushing, pushing. Yeah. If no shame working. No, it's
2:00:49
not. No shame. No shame.
2:00:52
Well, the money keeps coming in. That's what you got no shame.
2:00:57
Shame if you get a new car every two years numerous new bends.
2:01:00
I mean, do you think Jake Tapper sits there and and and that he
2:01:06
really doesn't feel like a he's an incredible he'll to talk
2:01:10
about men who have sex with men instead of gay? A Do you think
2:01:15
that all these stupid things these people that is anyone who
2:01:19
has a brain there and a conscience? No. How does that
2:01:24
they
2:01:24
they're unaware I think they're just they've been so you know,
2:01:27
out of it. And there is the milieu the milieu itself debase
2:01:33
these things. And first ends at some point, some have decided
2:01:37
that gay men well, we can't say gay. So let's say men having sex
2:01:44
with men. How's that? Oh, yeah,
2:01:45
that was that was that's a talking point that came from
2:01:48
somewhere.
2:01:49
Yeah, it did. But it had its it had a Genesis. And everybody
2:01:53
picked up on it because they thought it was a good idea that
2:01:55
they weren't thinking oh, well, that's, that's sneaky. I don't
2:01:58
think they I think these people are mostly sincere. Pathetic to
2:02:06
us, Amelia. Amelia user, very powerful. Yes. Yeah. Okay.
2:02:15
I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna, I'm going to lead you into your
2:02:18
segment,
2:02:19
which is my famous segment, which is going to be around as
2:02:24
soon as they keep coming. Yeah,
2:02:25
let's go, wait. I'm going to lead you into it, which means
2:02:29
I'm going to lead you into it.
2:02:32
Okay, I have to be led your way to be led.
2:02:35
The second time this show you haven't gotten my cue. So I'm
2:02:39
going to lead into it with a clip that starts off from tick
2:02:43
tock. Because this because you're the Tick Tock guy now,
2:02:47
which was was a very good explanation of the use of
2:02:51
pronouns and what what the pronoun what the whole pronoun
2:02:55
Gambit is about. And we inherently know this, but wait
2:03:00
until you hear this when someone
2:03:02
has trauma. They feel very powerless. And what the
2:03:05
transgender movement has done is they've created people who feel
2:03:10
very powerful by saying someone is a transphobic by not calling
2:03:15
me by my pronoun, is giving a young person who still needs
2:03:20
guidance and still needs parents power over every adult in their
2:03:24
life, which actually creates more chaos and more floundering
2:03:28
inside of them. It's doing them a disservice.
2:03:32
That in to me, that is exactly the intent of it. It has nothing
2:03:36
to do with anyone's feelings or any bull crap like that. It is a
2:03:40
control mechanism. That is screwing up parents mainly and
2:03:46
other unsuspecting adults.
2:03:50
Which is most of them. Yeah. Well, let's go to some tick tock
2:03:54
Stan, and let's start with the this was a lax mom. This is a
2:04:00
lax model and what is the LAX mom? Lax you know at LAX is all
2:04:04
this guy is like lazy, you know, laid back? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Laid
2:04:07
back to an extreme. She's wearing polka dot glasses. I
2:04:10
start with that. She's got a nose ring. And she's lacs. And
2:04:14
she's got a three year old who just decided that two three year
2:04:17
olds just decided he's a girl. So it's A cian as it gets a
2:04:22
little confusing because of the pronoun pronoun idiocy. But
2:04:26
listen to this is a mom that if this was your mom, you'd be in
2:04:29
big trouble.
2:04:30
Look, another helpful question. Kids have to go to the
2:04:33
pediatrician a certain number of times for the first few years of
2:04:36
their life. It's to make sure they get fully vaccinated or
2:04:39
growing on time. Development is as it needs to be yatta yatta
2:04:44
Yatta, yatta yatta year checkup, they ask a question to see if
2:04:48
the children know the difference. So the pediatrician
2:04:52
looked at bug and she said, Are you a boy or a girl? bug looked
2:04:57
her in the eye and said I'm a girl. The doctor kind of looked
2:05:00
Give me I was like, all right. Never heard about it before but
2:05:03
whatever. And ever since that day she has told us that she's a
2:05:07
girl. A little under a year ago she started correcting us on her
2:05:11
pronouns.
2:05:12
I'm not a him I'm are her. Don't call me he,
2:05:17
mommy and Matt He, um, she. It has been two and a half years
2:05:21
now that she has been out.
2:05:22
I told her father when I figured she was getting close to telling
2:05:25
him herself, didn't want him to respond poorly.
2:05:32
Whoa. The five year old trans kid has to come out to her dad
2:05:38
herself. What in the world
2:05:45
the kid's name is bug. That was odd. We're gonna name our kid
2:05:51
honey. I think bug would be a good name for a kid.
2:05:55
It's probably just a nickname.
2:05:57
Whatever. So here we go. Let's go to a Minnesota principal.
2:06:02
This is a woman who is an administrator in a school. This
2:06:05
is where you know the schools are in bad shape because she is
2:06:08
totally oblivious to any of this she thinks is fabulous. And so
2:06:12
he or she is describing sorry describing how she is reading
2:06:17
and things a really important book to refer for distributed by
2:06:19
the way. kindergartener book, first graders book. Jack not
2:06:24
Jackie.
2:06:26
I've been doing some reading this summer. And so I thought I
2:06:29
would share a couple of books because you have a little bit of
2:06:31
time left to do some reading. I also read Jack not Jackie by
2:06:36
Erica Silverman phenomenal read. So if you're a K 123 even. It's
2:06:42
a really good read called Jack not Jackie. And I really enjoyed
2:06:47
that. And I'm excited. It'll be on our shelves in the media
2:06:50
center this fall.
2:06:51
Phenomenal read. It's just a phenomenal read. Phenomenal
2:06:56
read. Have you read Jack now Jackie?
2:06:59
No, I have not been I'm tempted to get a copy. Yeah.
2:07:03
For Prosperity.
2:07:04
So now we go back to our or now non binary queer teachers. And
2:07:11
there seems to be endless numbers of them. And this is the
2:07:14
non binary queer teacher. And her name is MCs. And she wants
2:07:19
to make sure you call her that for sure. Especially if you're a
2:07:21
student,
2:07:22
I mean, non binary elementary school teachers. So here's how I
2:07:25
talk to my students about pronouns and such. Hi, my name
2:07:28
is mix gay, it's mix. So kind of like cookie mix, or mixing bowl,
2:07:34
that sort of thing. That's how it's pronounced. That is my
2:07:36
name. That is the name that I'm comfortable with is the name
2:07:39
that makes me happy. And I would like it. If you referred to me
2:07:41
as such. See, I'm not a Mr or miss cycle by mix, because
2:07:45
that's what makes me happy. Now you have a name that you like to
2:07:48
be called other than the name that's on the paper, right? So
2:07:51
same thing, I have a name that I prefer to be called. And that's
2:07:55
the one that you're going to use for me, okay. Now, I don't
2:07:58
consider myself to be a boy or girl. I just see myself as a
2:08:01
person. So that's why I go by MIT. So I'm actually non binary,
2:08:05
I'm not really comfortable with feminine terms being used for
2:08:08
me, if you can find some alternatives, that will be
2:08:10
great. My pronouns are they them? And she heard thank you so
2:08:13
much for asking, What are yours? Talking about gender is not
2:08:18
something that's out of the realm for children. Honestly,
2:08:21
the most understanding people when it comes to my identity
2:08:23
have been the students that I work with. So it's important to
2:08:27
be yourself. Because being openly you it's probably the
2:08:32
most important thing you can do for the kids of this generation.
2:08:36
I'm gonna have to ban Tiktok videos with piano music that's
2:08:41
drowning out the actual I
2:08:43
know it was, it was an exception, but also I thought
2:08:47
something
2:08:47
struck me. Yeah, are these these? This just reminds me of
2:08:54
the coddling of the Yahoo employees, turn of the century
2:08:57
2000 where they had slides and plushy things, and sleeping
2:09:04
pods, and all the all of Silicon Valley eventually went to this.
2:09:09
Is this somehow, like, what parents want their kids to be
2:09:15
accustomed to that everything's feels good and warm and fuzzy?
2:09:20
And it's always a great environment. And there's no, no,
2:09:24
just it's all good and woozy and let's be friendly and use all
2:09:28
cool names for each other. This is all part of the same thing.
2:09:33
God I hope not. It's your feels like it. Well, something's
2:09:36
amiss. That's all I can say. When you have these teachers,
2:09:42
and there's not just one or two of them alone, when you listen
2:09:45
to them talk about their cohorts. It's like 10, there's
2:09:49
maybe 20 teachers in some environment and two of them are
2:09:55
non binary, queer, and then three or four of the rest of
2:09:59
them are are kind of helpers or assist that what it is one woman
2:10:03
you said there was a word she used for to describe them but
2:10:08
they were cooperative What's it in that phrase where they were
2:10:14
your ally ally their allies or, or something like that. So
2:10:19
there's sort of like so you have 20 Teachers there's two of these
2:10:22
careers three allies and then that's leaves with 15 other
2:10:30
teachers but they but they're cowed the other ones are
2:10:34
intimidated by these these few because they have arguments that
2:10:38
nobody's ever dealt with. Yeah, right. It's hard to deal with I
2:10:43
mean, we're having trouble ourselves and nobody like you
2:10:48
said nobody's communicating with us so we don't have any outside
2:10:52
we have zero input except a few pissed off parents everyone's
2:10:56
well right in I'm taking my kid out of school. I'm gonna self
2:10:59
homeschool right? Yeah, that's pretty much it's great. It's
2:11:04
fantastic. You could feel like doing that but doesn't help us
2:11:07
in our analysis that's for sure. So yeah, something is going on.
2:11:12
I have a couple other ones here I can play once it kind of
2:11:16
disgusting both of them are disgusting but one is kind of
2:11:20
discussing this is a this is a girl
2:11:24
oh this is not drinks girl.
2:11:26
Yeah the drinks Yeah, I've seen this Yeah, I've seen this she's
2:11:28
talking about if you're in a C a mag a person spit in their drink
2:11:33
this is this the kind of pleasant Democrat I consider
2:11:36
this just like the democratic norm. This Chuck Schumer
2:11:40
mentality. And fi as she's like, visually she's like, kind of no
2:11:47
makeup but she's wearing these. These weird plastic glasses that
2:11:51
are a kind of an iodine color red, translucent red. They're
2:11:56
very strange looking. All these women wear funny glasses. Warby
2:12:00
Parker. But listen to what she has to say.
2:12:04
Normalize spitting in the drinks of Trump supporters. Are you at
2:12:09
a bar or brewery or restaurant in which you did not expect to
2:12:12
see your trump supporter because their website and decor
2:12:17
otherwise declared that they are LGBTQI plus friendly. Maybe
2:12:21
they've got a pride flag. Maybe they've got a DLM flag in their
2:12:24
window. But you still for some reasons, you know, ungodly Trump
2:12:27
supporter and heaven forbid they're also wearing Trump
2:12:30
merchandise. Well, take an unfinished drink from a table in
2:12:34
it, bring it over to them and tell them that you bought them
2:12:36
one and then pray to whatever glorious creature gets you out
2:12:40
of bed in the morning that they'd take a sip of it and
2:12:43
suffer for the rest of the day. Thank you. Goodbye.
2:12:45
Yeah, this so this is this is the weaponized non de weaponized
2:12:50
queers. There it is. That's the whole point, get him get him get
2:12:54
him to this point where they're just completely under your
2:12:57
control, and they respond to pronouns and, and all of all of
2:13:02
this and then and then weaponize him and make him spit and drinks
2:13:05
which is this you could say this is violence. This is this is a
2:13:09
cruelty by
2:13:10
violence is very vile and welcoming. How does it account
2:13:13
for Equity Diversity, all of you know, let's all be one. This
2:13:18
whole thing is out the window and you're spitting in drinks
2:13:21
because somebody's got some Trump merchandise on them. Or
2:13:26
whatever. I mean, you can identify any but you identify us
2:13:31
don't like that looks at me spit in their drink. This is not
2:13:34
civilized.
2:13:35
No. No. It's not Yes, she's
2:13:40
okay with it.
2:13:42
Alright, let's get back to reality because these people
2:13:44
clearly don't live in it. Let's look at the reality of inflation
2:13:49
and the energy of the self inflicted energy crisis,
2:13:53
completely self inflicted here in the United States, as well as
2:13:57
certainly Europe has inflicted a huge pain upon themselves. And
2:14:03
the leaders who are using this to shepherd in their zero carbon
2:14:09
economy do not care what's going to happen to the people and if
2:14:13
we look at the United Kingdom, where people are much closer to
2:14:17
poverty than than the accent let you believe. Here is an ITV
2:14:22
report about the gas cap now there's a cap in the United
2:14:26
Kingdom where your home or the the the amount of money that gas
2:14:34
companies can charge for natural gas when talking about car gas
2:14:38
natural gas is capped. And that's about to change. The
2:14:42
impact
2:14:43
of the bike and gas prices is going to be absolutely
2:14:46
devastating. The latest prediction for the price cap is
2:14:51
it will go up 77% On the first of October, taking someone with
2:14:57
typical usage from the current 1971 pounds a year, which was
2:15:03
already up over 50% to 3500 pounds a year. And then in
2:15:09
January, it'll go up again. Now that 1500 pounds a year spike is
2:15:16
simply unaffordable for millions of homes, and is likely to put
2:15:21
around 10 million people or more into fuel poverty. The impact of
2:15:27
it is frankly, catastrophic and intervention is needed and
2:15:32
needed now,
2:15:33
then it's not going to come. There will be no intervention.
2:15:36
We have to go through the pain together people
2:15:40
start burning coal again,
2:15:43
though, people are going to start burning anything they can
2:15:45
get their hands on. Sri Lanka melted down.
2:15:52
Sri Lanka is a mess. Now it
2:15:54
was inflation and all based on the same climate change
2:16:00
strategies. But NPR is quite happy to report there is a
2:16:05
silver lining, John, that they you know people can buy gas. You
2:16:11
had to have a pass a gas pass to be allowed to buy gas for your
2:16:16
car. What do you think the silver lining is of all this
2:16:19
collapse in Srilanka? According to NPR, our national treasure
2:16:25
close.
2:16:26
Environmentalists say there is a silver lining to Sri Lanka's
2:16:30
fuel rationing amid soaring energy costs and inflation.
2:16:34
People are swapping their cars for bicycles and peers Lauren
2:16:38
Playa has more from Sri Lanka's capital Colombo.
2:16:42
This is good news. We have bikes.
2:16:48
Well, cars wait in line for ration fuel Mayor Rosie Cena.
2:16:52
Nika announced the construction of new bike paths across Colombo
2:16:56
that was a copy of the material with the correct key remark for
2:16:59
all the Sri Lankans who now find it faster and cheaper to cycle
2:17:02
instead,
2:17:03
this kind of hidden blessing doctor,
2:17:05
a seller of a DERA is a cycling activist who has long preached
2:17:09
the health benefits.
2:17:11
Obviously not happy to see the economic crisis and transport
2:17:15
breakdown. But I'm happy that people have started cycling.
2:17:18
There's no
2:17:19
official data on just how many bikes have replaced cars here in
2:17:22
recent weeks. But bike mechanics say their business is booming
2:17:26
during this country's worst ever economic crisis. Lauren Frayer
2:17:29
NPR News. Colombo, Sri Lanka,
2:17:31
do you see what's happening? They're already celebrating the
2:17:34
climate change implementation. They're already moving. Oh, the
2:17:39
people on bikes. They're biking. They're happy to shoot it seems
2:17:44
great as a silver lining. I mean, they're already creating
2:17:50
the fluff human interest pieces of how successful this has been.
2:17:54
Well, do they even have a government left? Is there anyone
2:17:57
left in Parliament? Does it look like you're still doing
2:17:59
backflips into the Prime Minister's pool the President's
2:18:02
pool?
2:18:03
It's hard to say. So thing I've seen is still packed with
2:18:07
people.
2:18:08
Now another issue. The one we have in the United States is the
2:18:10
homelessness close to my heart because I lived in shithole
2:18:15
Austin while they let that run rampant. And a reminder, the
2:18:19
reason why this political move is being made by governors and
2:18:25
mayors is under the guise that moving someone's tent is
2:18:32
considered cruel and unusual punishment, therefore a
2:18:36
constitutional violation. This was what started years ago in
2:18:40
Boise, Idaho. We tracked it since then. And ever since that
2:18:45
became accepted amongst governors and predominantly
2:18:49
liberal mayors. They have not been moving people in tents. So
2:18:55
one of the top places for this is Oregon. And downtown Oregon,
2:19:02
I mean, there is a lot, a lot of homelessness, a lot of camping,
2:19:08
a lot of drug abuse, and now it's moving into the suburbs.
2:19:12
And boohoo
2:19:14
I'm living in a nightmare neighborhood.
2:19:16
It's really scary. For years
2:19:18
these neighbors have been watching the city's homeless
2:19:20
crisis spread across parts of Southeast Portland. Now it's
2:19:24
right outside their front door.
2:19:26
I want to cry I just want my house back. Christina Hartnett
2:19:30
lives on 80th In Powell where a majority of the campers stay. My
2:19:33
lawn is now becoming a public bathroom. She fears leaving her
2:19:38
house just to go to work.
2:19:40
And it is scary when you have grown men meth raging in your
2:19:44
driveway. The last thing I feel safe doing is going out and
2:19:48
saying hey, can I can you please move so I can go to work.
2:19:51
Calling the police and city is an everyday chore
2:19:54
with little reward. So far, no one has come to help us
2:19:58
Central City concerned claims to Our crews assessed this site
2:20:01
Thursday, it was one of about 1900 Other campsites reported
2:20:05
just this week. In the past 10 days, they found 272 encampments
2:20:11
that pose a greater health and safety risk, which is why they
2:20:14
haven't removed the camps in this neighborhood. But just
2:20:17
getting the city to come out and assess it has been a full time
2:20:20
job.
2:20:21
I have to report from like four different four different
2:20:25
bureaus. And I have to report that report to report and I have
2:20:28
to report that report to a second report. And it's the only
2:20:32
way to get any kind
2:20:33
of traction. I feel like nobody hears us. Nobody cares about us.
2:20:39
No, you didn't care. He was NIMBY, not in my backyard, and
2:20:44
then it came to the southeast. Oh, I'm sorry. I don't feel bad
2:20:49
for these people at all. For years they stood by like, oh,
2:20:53
well, you know, poor people, that you kids cruel, unusual
2:20:56
punishment. We were Portland. We love we love everybody. And now
2:21:02
they're pissing in your front yard and they're meth raging. I
2:21:04
love that meth raging.
2:21:06
I like meth raging, raging. Well, let's take a look at how
2:21:08
they're dealing with this. My favorite story for today?
2:21:12
Because it's in Texas. Here we go. This is this beautiful scam
2:21:18
that Abbott has decided to pull to screw up DC this is the this
2:21:24
is fantastic recording the immigrants. Yeah, hold
2:21:27
on a second. Here we go.
2:21:29
And over in DC Mayor Muriel Bowser says the nation's capitol
2:21:33
is now dealing with a humanitarian crisis. It has to
2:21:36
do with illegal immigrants. And now she's asking for the
2:21:39
military's health entities. Jason Perry has the story.
2:21:43
So I've asked for the deployment of the guard as long as we need
2:21:46
the guard to deal with the humanitarian crisis that we
2:21:50
expect to escalate.
2:21:52
That crisis being the flow of bus after bus heading to
2:21:55
Washington from Texas and Arizona, all voluntarily
2:21:59
transporting illegal immigrants. Texas Governor Greg Abbott and
2:22:03
Arizona governor Doug Ducey don't appear to be slowing down
2:22:06
the bus trips to Washington anytime soon. There reason.
2:22:10
Here's Abbott en que te Kate last week, the people in
2:22:13
Washington DC seem to have a different standard. They think
2:22:16
that it's okay to have the open border situation. As long as it
2:22:20
remains in places like Texas. We wanted to make sure that because
2:22:24
Joe Biden has never come to the border. We want to take the
2:22:27
border to Joe Biden and let them understand what we are having to
2:22:30
deal with right here. And they are only dealing with about the
2:22:34
number of migrants that we have come across the border per day.
2:22:37
According to a letter obtained by NBC four reporter Mark
2:22:41
Seagraves, Mayor Bowser says over 4000 people have arrived at
2:22:45
the nation's capitol since April. It indicates that Bowser
2:22:48
requested the national guard on the 19th but reporters Seagrave
2:22:52
says no answer yet on her request. We reached out to the
2:22:55
Office of the Secretary of Defense and the White House for
2:22:58
comment. But we didn't hear back before airtime.
2:23:00
Oh, now there is an update to this from the from the White
2:23:05
House. This is Kareem Abdul jumpier. She is the spokes hole
2:23:12
for President Biden. And she was queried on this by Peter Doocy,
2:23:18
who is now just coming into his own because he's figured out how
2:23:21
to really get under her skin. Really, really needle her good.
2:23:27
Did you see this exchange?
2:23:29
No, I didn't. I'm all ears
2:23:31
that DC mayor sent the White House a letter asking for
2:23:35
National Guard help with migrants have been bussed here
2:23:39
from Texas and Arizona, is the President gonna approve that
2:23:42
request for the National Guard.
2:23:43
So as to your question on the National Guard, I refer you to
2:23:46
the Department of Defense, they will have that answer for you.
2:23:50
We have been in regular touch with Mayor Bowser and her team.
2:23:53
And I said this before I said this last week about Republicans
2:23:57
using migrants as a political tool. And that is shameful. And
2:24:01
that is just wrong. There is a process in place for managing
2:24:05
migrants at the border. This is not it what they're doing
2:24:08
currently, that that includes expelling migrants as required
2:24:12
by court order under Title 42, transferring them to ICE custody
2:24:17
or placing them in the care of local NGOs as they await for the
2:24:22
proper processing again. So what Republicans are doing the way
2:24:25
that they're meddling in the process, and using migrants as a
2:24:29
political pawn is just wrong.
2:24:31
So a couple of things. And there's a second part to this.
2:24:35
One, I just love migrants. Let's just stop with the migrants.
2:24:38
These are illegal asylum seekers who don't get a hearing they get
2:24:43
let in and let loose. And there's
2:24:46
sometimes they're put in airplanes and via the government
2:24:49
and shipped to, you know, a faraway place in the middle of
2:24:52
the night in the middle of it but that's that's what is true
2:24:55
in the middle of the night.
2:24:56
To be fair, she says there's a process Yeah, the process is
2:24:59
Throwing it anywhere but in your sanctuary city of Washington DC,
2:25:03
which they proudly announced sanctuary city. But I think
2:25:07
isn't Austin a sanctuary city to?
2:25:11
I think so. Yes. Because your sense. Mayor,
2:25:15
anyone who wants to go camping, Tarrytown, homeless or asylum
2:25:20
seeker, I'll give you a free tent. Let me give you a couple
2:25:22
addresses. Here's the follow up to the White House's preference
2:25:27
would be for small towns in Texas and Arizona to have to
2:25:30
take care of these migrants rather than a large
2:25:33
metropolitan. Washington.
2:25:35
That is not one thing. I said that there is the art. They're
2:25:40
sending migrants to big cities on purpose using them as a
2:25:43
political ploy.
2:25:44
I'll go to big cities, where should they? I just laid it out.
2:25:48
There's a big city and now mayor says she's the National Guard.
2:25:53
Because that's because Republicans are using they're
2:25:56
using migrants who are coming here for who knows? Because they
2:26:02
are they're dealing with humanitarian issues back in
2:26:05
their country. They're coming here for a better life, and they
2:26:08
are being used. Peter, they're being used by Republican
2:26:12
governors. That is what's happening in this
2:26:14
just make the President want to say this is causing a lot of
2:26:17
burdens on small cities, big cities, maybe I should just
2:26:20
close the border. What I'm saying
2:26:21
is what Republicans are doing is wrong. And there is a process in
2:26:24
place, and we should follow the process. There's a legal process
2:26:27
in place, and they should follow it. Okay.
2:26:29
Thank you. So there was more to this. Did you know that the the
2:26:34
current administration is building or completing or
2:26:40
restoring parts of a wall?
2:26:44
Yeah, that just started.
2:26:46
What is Arizona
2:26:47
site it started outside of air, one of the cities in Arizona
2:26:51
Tempe or to not Tucson? Tempe, I think one of the Southern was
2:26:57
cities. Because if people are it's just become an issue too
2:26:59
much, right? Because it's out of control. Yeah. Well, this was an
2:27:04
even better exchange. But this is the new man, Matt Lee used to
2:27:08
be our boy over there to the State Department. And did this
2:27:12
is Matt Lee even alive?
2:27:14
Yeah, he's still at the State Department.
2:27:16
But he did. I don't get the fireworks from him anymore. I
2:27:21
don't know. Did he have COVID? Little chat maybe years ago?
2:27:26
Here's Ducey again. Now this is about this this wall in Arizona.
2:27:29
Why is divided administration building a border wall in
2:27:33
Arizona.
2:27:34
So we are not. We're not finishing the wall. We are
2:27:40
cleaning up the mess the prior administration left behind in
2:27:44
their in their failed attempt to build a wall. And I just want to
2:27:48
be very, very clear here on day one. We returned the money, the
2:27:53
$8 billion the prior administration took from our
2:27:56
military, we gave that back to the military, for military
2:28:00
families, for schools for bases. That's what that money was being
2:28:04
used. That's what it was taken away from. And so again, what
2:28:07
we're doing is cleaning up the mess that the prime
2:28:10
administration has done
2:28:11
what President Biden when he was a candidate said there will not
2:28:14
be another foot of wall constructed in my
2:28:17
administration. So what changed?
2:28:19
We are not finishing the wall.
2:28:22
If walls work in that part of Arizona, is this the
2:28:28
administration trying to get migrants to cross somewhere else
2:28:32
like in Texas, what what is the
2:28:35
we are not finishing a wall, we are cleaning up the mess that
2:28:38
the prior administration made, we are trying to save lives.
2:28:41
This is what is this is what the prior administration left behind
2:28:45
that we are now cleaning up
2:28:48
by finishing the wall is this we are not finishing by filling in
2:28:54
finishing.
2:28:54
We are not finishing.
2:28:56
I mean this. This is really, to me a very interesting exchange
2:29:01
because she, she her talking point is we're not finishing the
2:29:05
wall. And he's saying, Well, what are you doing then? And
2:29:08
she's not saying we're putting stuff. Exactly what I asked why
2:29:12
is this happening? What are you doing? Well, we're not finishing
2:29:15
a wall. Are you filling something and we're not
2:29:17
finishing a wall? It's as if does she not hear Him?
2:29:22
They have this administration seems to have talking points and
2:29:27
rules about what they can and cannot say. And it's obviously
2:29:31
not determined by her. It's the people behind Biden. They've got
2:29:37
this thing about if you if we say that, like lawyers or men
2:29:41
who have sex with men, Valerie Jarrett and Obama were up and
2:29:47
Obama they have the some weird think way of thinking where if
2:29:56
they say one thing, then it opens the door. or to God knows
2:30:01
what. And so they, they, I've seen this before they do this
2:30:06
constantly. They just won't say something.
2:30:08
And he followed up with, of course putting her own stupid
2:30:13
words right back in her face. I'm going again, just as if he
2:30:19
isn't speaking a foreign language by
2:30:21
failing. And is this is this racist? Because in 2019, when
2:30:29
the former guy proposing a wall, you said that it was his racist
2:30:35
wall. So how is this any difference? I'm just having a
2:30:37
hard time understanding how is this any
2:30:38
I'm not even sure how you get to your first question to this
2:30:41
question that you just asked me. I will say this a border wall,
2:30:43
I'm answering your question. A border wall is ineffective use
2:30:48
of taxpayer dollars. So it's ineffective of taxpayer dollars
2:30:52
dollars that actually went to the military that the last
2:30:56
administration, the prior president took from the
2:30:59
military, which took away from schools, which took him Okay,
2:31:02
so I get it. So what they did was, they said, look, we got to
2:31:06
do something about this wall. We got to do something. This is
2:31:10
it's it's insane. What's happening here in Arizona, we
2:31:13
got to build something. How do we how do we justify this shit?
2:31:17
We were all we told it was a racist Trump, but it's no good.
2:31:20
Just tell him we're not finishing the wall. And what did
2:31:25
she say? She said, Well,
2:31:29
she just she didn't say anything. No, he gave the money
2:31:33
back.
2:31:33
Yes. Like this is not the racist wall. We gave the money back to
2:31:38
the military. This is something different. This is saving lives.
2:31:45
I'm sorry. We're saving lives effective use of not effective
2:31:49
use of taxpayer money,
2:31:51
taxpayer dollars. So it's ineffective of taxpayer dollars
2:31:55
dollars that actually went to the military that the last
2:31:59
administration, the prior president took from the
2:32:02
military, which took away from schools, which took away from
2:32:05
military bases. That's what that money that he pulled away from
2:32:10
to build this wall that he wanted, that is ineffective, by
2:32:14
the way which I just said. Just recently, CBP reported that new
2:32:19
bollard fencing along the southwest border was breached.
2:32:22
3272 times between fiscal year of 2019 and 2021. Requiring 2.6
2:32:30
million in repairs. It's ineffective. We are not
2:32:33
finishing a wall, we are cleaning up the mess that the
2:32:36
last administration made. Okay.
2:32:39
Ah, okay, there we go. So since there was only a stupid fence
2:32:43
and no wall, it has to be patched the whole time. Okay.
2:32:49
The sad thing is, is that the American people a they'll never
2:32:53
see this reporting. Because you know, it's not this reporting is
2:32:57
not done on an island where someone gets voted off. Then
2:33:01
people would watch.
2:33:03
And this woman's no good.
2:33:05
And people just don't remember that. They forgot already. It's
2:33:09
like we got a mental block.
2:33:13
She doesn't have the skill set of the redhead.
2:33:19
SmartOS skill set? No,
2:33:21
she has no skill sets. The redhead would in this situation,
2:33:24
she would slow down and she'd look at him and she'd give him
2:33:28
that that snide love. She do her whole look and body language
2:33:35
thing and then say, welcome Peter shipped in the next person
2:33:38
to do Eliza. This woman is no good. She's got no talent. She's
2:33:43
just a ethnic higher.
2:33:46
Diversity higher.
2:33:49
No. She's going to screw it up.
2:33:54
You got to think on the
2:33:56
go Ukraine.
2:33:58
Yes, let's do some Ukraine.
2:34:00
I had this one. You crank his eyes. Listen to this. And I'm
2:34:03
thinking Okay. Let's go back and remember that in Mariupol the
2:34:13
guy guys that were stuck dead of the soldiers that Nazis that
2:34:16
were down in the, in the steel mill the factory in the in the
2:34:20
labyrinth of tunnels. They were there was reports that you you
2:34:25
have to stay here you're gonna fight to the death. And if you
2:34:28
get out of there, and then if you leave or you know, shoot
2:34:34
you, we're gonna kill you. Yeah. So then we have this report. And
2:34:39
listen to this is the Ukraine similar Ukraine clip I have.
2:34:43
Ukraine is calling on the UN and the Red Cross to investigate the
2:34:46
deaths of more than 50 prisoners of war held by Russia. President
2:34:51
Vladimir Zelensky says those organizations bear the
2:34:54
responsibility for the soldiers safety and perish. Brian Mann
2:34:57
has more
2:34:57
dozens of soldiers being held at the lenica prison and eastern
2:35:01
Ukraine were killed in an explosion Friday. Russia claims
2:35:04
the blast was caused by the Ukrainian military and
2:35:07
accusation Ukraine rejects. In his latest broadcasts, Alinsky
2:35:11
said many of the prisoners in the camp were soldiers who
2:35:14
served in the defense of metta EUPOL who were captured
2:35:16
following a deal negotiated by international mediators, the UN
2:35:21
and Red Cross acted as guarantors of the life and
2:35:23
health of our soldiers. Now they must react He said, He also
2:35:28
called on the organization's to protect 1000s of other Ukrainian
2:35:31
POWs. The Red Cross says it's seeking access to the prison to
2:35:34
gather facts.
2:35:37
Yeah, what do you think? You think the Russians killed these
2:35:40
prisoners? Or do you think the Ukrainians killed the prisoners
2:35:43
as the Russians said it happened? I don't know. It's
2:35:47
it's I don't know either. But you pretty much know what
2:35:50
happened is these guys have been doing this all along. You guys
2:35:54
all bailed out on us. We're gonna just blow up the damn
2:35:56
prison kill you. It does and then to make all these demands.
2:36:01
Oh, Vol. Vol. Volodymyr He's a moron Voldemort. Voldemort says,
2:36:07
You guys gotta use your responsibility. You know these
2:36:10
guys are you know, what did you do? What are you gonna do about
2:36:12
it? Give us some more money. Give us some more missiles. Tell
2:36:14
the man sick of this
2:36:15
guy. Aldermore is a dead guy. Biden's a dead guy. The Queen is
2:36:20
Dead. Oh, and by the way. Did you see the news about the pope
2:36:26
considers retiring. Was it that you said that that would not
2:36:30
happen?
2:36:32
Yeah, it was me. Yes. As you said it would not happen. Yeah,
2:36:35
I
2:36:35
told you, the guy's gonna retire. Because we need the
2:36:39
great reset. And then we got to get rid of everybody. All the
2:36:42
old people are out kind of the same time. And then we'll have
2:36:46
all the new whatever that is. Staying with Russia then. This
2:36:54
report
2:36:55
Blinken would not confirm details of the US offer or
2:36:58
speculation of a prisoner swap to bring home both Greiner and
2:37:01
American Paul Whelan the security executive was arrested
2:37:05
in Moscow in 2018 on espionage charges and has been sentenced
2:37:09
to 16 years in prison.
2:37:11
Yeah, you only hear about Greiner Of course as put on Time
2:37:17
Magazine and some homage to Harriet Tubman was interesting.
2:37:22
She was have you seen that? grinder and Time magazine cover?
2:37:26
Oh my goodness, if they took the Tubman vibe anyway.
2:37:31
Well put grind around a $20 bill then
2:37:33
they they mind but this is of course about Whelan. They want
2:37:38
Whelan I don't think they see we don't think they care about
2:37:42
Reiners
2:37:43
they gotta get good well it's a good excuse to get Whelan in.
2:37:48
arms dealers have been sitting there as a as a pawn for years
2:37:52
now
2:37:53
the merchant of death there's something weird going on. It's
2:38:01
like a red scare all of a sudden you know, it's not it's not
2:38:05
enough to have Ukraine and all this situation. We got to bring
2:38:11
it closer to home. Hey, it worked before let's freak
2:38:14
everybody about out about Russian spies
2:38:16
this morning. A department of defense contractor and his wife
2:38:20
are being held without bail in Hawaii, suspected of being
2:38:23
Russian spies. authorities arrested 66 Year Old Walter
2:38:27
Primrose for identity theft last week is accused of living for
2:38:31
nearly 30 years under the name of a dead Texas infant named
2:38:35
Bobby fort. His wife Gwen Morrison also accused of
2:38:39
illegally changing her name to a deceased Texas child. Julie
2:38:43
Montague. Charging documents say the couple agreed to assume the
2:38:47
identities of deceased American born infants and have been fully
2:38:51
living in these fraudulently assumed identities since 1987.
2:38:55
Prosecutors alleged the couple obtain social security cards,
2:38:59
driver's licenses and passports and Primrose got a job with the
2:39:03
US Coast Guard in 1994, earning him a secret Level Security
2:39:07
Clearance when he joined the Department of Defense in Hawaii
2:39:11
when searching the couple's of Oahu home authority said they
2:39:14
found old pictures of them in Russian KGB uniforms apparently
2:39:18
taken in the 1980s. Morrison's attorney claiming the picture
2:39:22
was a joke. My client wants everyone to know that she is not
2:39:26
a spy. Authorities also say they found in invisible ink kit
2:39:30
documents with coded language called monetary base maps.
2:39:34
Neighbors didn't suspect anything unusual was going on
2:39:37
Bobby's to
2:39:38
do the yard and he swore headphones and he just kept
2:39:40
himself the
2:39:41
couple is not being charged with espionage. But experts think
2:39:45
these fraud charges are just the beginning.
2:39:47
I get the real sense that the government is looking at much
2:39:51
more serious charges and that they have charged them with
2:39:55
identity theft to hold them
2:39:58
in court prosecutors Hold Primrose a flight risk with
2:40:02
troubling possible overseas connections, is convicted on all
2:40:05
charges he faces 17 years in prison. Mona Andrew.
2:40:11
So just like the Americans,
2:40:13
by the way, wasn't exactly the same story line,
2:40:17
do you think maybe they want to trade these Jumoke instead of
2:40:20
the the merchant of death. That's why they brought these
2:40:22
guys out into the open. And it was given these guys their
2:40:25
spies.
2:40:26
Well, they, the way I learned when I see this story, I'm
2:40:30
thinking we knew all along Clearly, our, our agencies, our
2:40:36
people new and so they are watching them and are keeping
2:40:39
tabs on him or finding something, you know, something
2:40:42
valuable. Or maybe we've given them tried to give us lip balm
2:40:45
recently and it worked. Or
2:40:47
we gave him some some shitty information. And now we want to
2:40:50
send them back
2:40:52
to Yeah, that's a good one.
2:40:55
I don't I don't know if anyone in our intelligence services is
2:40:58
in fact that cunning anymore.
2:41:01
Well, there's historically that cunning Yeah. And there's gotta
2:41:05
be some old timers still there that are that cunning. Not many.
2:41:11
No, probably not. They're all woke.
2:41:14
Last Russia clip for me is you know, when this first started
2:41:20
member, Russia was posting memes at the airport and doing all
2:41:24
kinds of fun stuff. They're back now and now they're now they're
2:41:29
just trolling everybody. So this is a beautifully made spot. The
2:41:33
voiceover it may be fake, but I don't know. To me this is just a
2:41:37
good troll. Whether it came from Russia or not.
2:41:40
Is Russia. Delicious? squizzy. Beautiful women. GPS reach
2:41:51
history. World famous literature. unique architecture.
2:41:58
fertile soil, cheap electricity and water. Belay. Cheap taxi and
2:42:06
delivery. traditional values. Christianity, no canceled
2:42:15
culture, hospitality, vodka and the economy that can withstand
2:42:22
1000s of sanctions die. Move to Russia. Delay. Winter is coming.
2:42:32
day hell was that?
2:42:35
Yeah, I mean, it was posted as if a real produced in Russia.
2:42:42
Yeah, well, obviously it wasn't.
2:42:44
I loved but I love the winter is coming. I wonder what lay
2:42:50
behind that. What's the point
2:42:52
and while it's a troll move is what it is. And it's a good one
2:42:55
good one. It's hilarious. Trying to avoid the voiceover could
2:42:58
have been better better that's that's what made it shit that if
2:43:01
they had done a better that voiceover
2:43:03
Yes. Somebody was like me doing it. You know? Hey, you know some
2:43:06
phony voice. made me laugh though. Yeah, it's definitely
2:43:12
amusing. Let's get since you're doing world stuff that's just at
2:43:15
least keep up with a rock versus falling apart.
2:43:19
Okay.
2:43:21
In Iraq, 1000s of followers of an influential Shiite cleric
2:43:25
stormed into Iraq's parliament, protesting government formation
2:43:29
efforts led by his rivals from Iran backed groups. The
2:43:33
protesters followers of Mikado solder used ropes and changed
2:43:37
chains rather to topple cement walls around the heavily
2:43:40
fortified Green Zone today, and then headed into the assembly
2:43:43
building for a citizen is the second such breach this week.
2:43:47
Isn't the Green Zone. Isn't that our zone?
2:43:50
Yeah, it's a play. Well, I think a lot of us are gone. But it was
2:43:54
it was supposed to be this impenetrable wall around this
2:43:58
very large areas of almost the size of Hayward. And its use the
2:44:03
green zone. Yeah, was a huge area where he had and I knew a
2:44:06
guy that was stationed there. He was a contractor. He wasn't in
2:44:09
the army. And he described it to me it's like this law where
2:44:15
there's suburban style American houses and tracks Sure, with the
2:44:19
lawns and when had a lawn and walls pools all kinds of pools.
2:44:24
So it's just like this little American the middle of this in
2:44:28
the middle of Iraq, and that's where the embassy was gonna be
2:44:30
that big giant embassy that are building this monstrous embassy
2:44:33
that we abandoned right, you know, the whole thing was a
2:44:36
fiasco and so I guess they're breaching it this is what I
2:44:45
understand is this bad
2:44:47
Well, what you're going to see probably in the United States in
2:44:50
the media is going to be more pronoun shit and and other
2:44:55
unimportant other important things, then anything that's
2:44:58
going on in the world, any Whereas especially protests
2:45:01
about farmers inflation or, or, you know, Argentina, I think is
2:45:06
on the verge of collapsing.
2:45:09
Yes, it is, you know, the economy's about to go. And we
2:45:14
got to take advantage because of the introduction of state
2:45:17
introduction. Yes, introduction of certain socialist ideals I
2:45:22
mean, people were had like a lot of their everything that was
2:45:26
ever getting
2:45:26
paid and now they they're getting universal basic income
2:45:29
and that, hey, we got to cut back on that. And people are
2:45:31
like, what?
2:45:33
Yeah, that's the Yeah, that's basic income has an issue, and I
2:45:38
think is being played out in Argentina.
2:45:42
I have one more clip I want to play before we take our last
2:45:45
break here. And that is regarding the January 6 Gen 616.
2:45:49
insurrection. Hi. Worst thing ever happened since since? What?
2:45:56
The coup the coup? Yes.
2:45:59
And this is Kosh Patel, who at one point was good in the in the
2:46:05
Defense Department. And he lays out very clearly why no matter
2:46:10
how good the production chi was, man, it was just amazing to hear
2:46:16
Bill Maher say. I mean, they really nailed it with the with
2:46:20
the production. They really shot. It was me, dude, there's
2:46:22
no way Trump is guilty. They should lock him up. It's clear
2:46:26
from that production. Because it was a great production. And he
2:46:29
even said they was the Democrats it was the Republicans
2:46:32
prosecuting as if Liz Cheney in the star chamber is a Republican
2:46:40
prosecuting. So so the reason why it's not insurrection is
2:46:45
because of the memo that you already clued us into months
2:46:49
ago. And here's Kash Patel, just to explain exactly why this does
2:46:54
not fit the technical description of insurrection, or
2:46:57
the legal one, or even a moral one.
2:46:59
So my view is the one that the law demands. It's pretty simple.
2:47:05
This is not an insurrection. And insurrection happens when
2:47:09
someone ie a president united states basically hijacks the
2:47:12
military or piece of the military to take over the
2:47:14
government. Now, how would that have been possible when
2:47:19
President Donald Trump as we have extensively recovered on
2:47:21
the show? In the days before January 6, authorize up to
2:47:25
20,000 National Guardsmen and women as the law requires? We at
2:47:29
the DoD took that authorization request to Nancy Pelosi and the
2:47:32
Capitol Police. They said no, we took it to Mayor Bowser. And she
2:47:36
said no, it's literally impossible for President United
2:47:39
States to be charged with insurrection when he authorized
2:47:43
the security of the United States Capitol on the day it was
2:47:46
supposed to collect and garner the vote count to install the
2:47:49
next president United States. On top of that, in November ish of
2:47:55
2020. President Trump's GSA government service agency, who
2:48:01
was responsible for transitioning governments signed
2:48:04
off on a presidential authorization that said,
2:48:07
transfer the power from Trump administration to Biden
2:48:11
administration. That can't happen unless President Trump
2:48:14
said to do that. And then we at the Department of Defense, I can
2:48:17
speak personally were ordered by the White House to transition to
2:48:21
the Biden administration. And we did the largest transition in
2:48:25
Department of Defense history in terms of access to documents and
2:48:29
personnel all during COVID. And I wrote an article on that that
2:48:32
I published when I was Chief of Staff. But those two things
2:48:35
taken even alone, disprove the Select insurrection narrative,
2:48:39
when you combine them, the fact that the President President
2:48:42
Trump authorized security for the capital, and he ordered the
2:48:46
transition of government. He could legally and factually not
2:48:50
have been orchestrating a coup to conduct an insurrection.
2:48:55
sounds right to me. Yeah, totally. But that's not enough.
2:49:01
You see, wasn't the the producer of the January 6 Season one
2:49:06
trial? He was an ex ABC guy, right?
2:49:09
Yeah, ABC is Good Morning America, I think are one like
2:49:13
that.
2:49:13
Well, so they're still producing the show that just doing a
2:49:17
little side show over Good Morning America. And I'm pretty
2:49:20
sure that this was set up by the very same producers
2:49:25
this morning. The controversial live golf tournament is
2:49:28
underway. But before the golfers teed off, they were met with new
2:49:33
criticism for participating in the Saudi back series. Families
2:49:38
of 911. Victims led a protest before the opening round Friday
2:49:42
expressing their frustrations with the players and former
2:49:45
President Donald Trump, who hosted the tournament at his
2:49:48
Bedminster Golf Club.
2:49:50
Today we call for accountability. Today we call
2:49:53
for justice. The Saudi Arabian government and whoever attaches
2:49:56
their name and reputation to this force must be called out
2:50:00
for what they're doing. We're standing
2:50:01
here on the backyard of where 750 people were turned to dust
2:50:05
families of the victims accusing Trump of turning his back on the
2:50:09
US.
2:50:10
Nobody's gotten to the bottom of 911. Unfortunately, they should
2:50:13
have as to the maniacs that did that horrible thing to our city
2:50:18
to our country
2:50:18
in 2016. Trump directly blaming the Saudis for the attack on
2:50:22
911, who blew up the World Trade Center.
2:50:25
It wasn't the Iraqis it was Saudi. If we take a look at
2:50:28
Saudi Arabia open the documents, because frankly, if you open the
2:50:32
documents, I think you're gonna see that
2:50:33
it was Saudi Arabia.
2:50:34
Last year, the FBI declassifying those documents under President
2:50:38
Biden detailing connections al Qaeda and most of the hijackers
2:50:43
had with Saudi nationals. The Saudi government has always
2:50:46
denied any involvement. Tim Frolik, a 911 survivor, calling
2:50:51
out the former president,
2:50:53
Mr. Trump. We now have the documents. Simply, you lied to
2:50:58
our face.
2:51:00
And despite that criticism in October, Trump will host another
2:51:03
Saudi back tournament, this time at his South Florida golf club.
2:51:07
The world is burning. Countries are failing. It's going to be a
2:51:12
cold winter in many parts of the Western world. But oh, no. We
2:51:17
need to go after the former president more more and more and
2:51:22
more.
2:51:25
I've never seen anything like it. I'd never seen such fear.
2:51:29
Fear of Trump coming back. You mean? Yeah, they are. They are
2:51:33
so because they know. If Trump gets in, they all hang
2:51:40
out. They're gonna hang the first time they didn't. Yeah,
2:51:42
I know. That's that's the thing. You know, it's like, I don't
2:51:45
know, man. I don't know if the handgun will ever take place.
2:51:48
Yeah, it won't. Oh, come on.
2:51:53
Uses hope it does. You're hopeful. You're hopeful person.
2:51:56
Yeah. Well, you know what I'm waiting for.
2:51:59
1000 for the shaved heads are walking with a tar all over and
2:52:02
feathers.
2:52:03
Yeah, that and 1000s of sealed indictments. Donate to no
2:52:08
agenda. I imagine all the people who could do that. Oh yeah,
2:52:11
that'd be fun.
2:52:19
We have a few people to thank not a lot, but we have a few.
2:52:23
For second part here for show 1473 chick Chad Gunther in
2:52:29
Tucson Arizona comes in right off the top. And 8933 kind of a
2:52:36
low off the top number here. We have an anniversary of a debt
2:52:41
but to buy a house.
2:52:42
Chad and Missy the 33rd anniversary 3333 And they never
2:52:47
had a fight.
2:52:51
Yes, for a couple of days. They're good for him. And hi
2:52:55
Missy. Robert Umbarger, in Langhorne, Pennsylvania 808. B
2:53:01
says we're nailing it recently we're nailing it. Aaron Slagle
2:53:05
in Lititz. He's actually in Lititz, Pennsylvania and he game
2:53:11
808 Beautiful. Can you believe that? Oh, my
2:53:14
God. It's I mean, talk about your coincidences.
2:53:18
Sir Kevin McLaughlin. Meanwhile, he's the Duke Aluna is a lover
2:53:21
of American lover of boobs. And he's back with 8083 Love
2:53:27
your donation Sir Kevin McLaughlin.
2:53:29
He's going to be a Grand Duke shortly. glary glary glary
2:53:33
Blatt, Gary Blatt in Wayne, Pennsylvania. 7777. Melissa
2:53:37
Adams 75 and bones decor and that is Alabama
2:53:41
switcheroo. Which drew Yeah,
2:53:43
it's for a big brother John Adams wrote tonight hoods so
2:53:48
John Adams gets credit for this and the birthday goes out to one
2:53:52
of the two of them. Dame Nancy of the confused in San Bruno
2:53:57
California 6842. Jim Bharath in north Wales, Pennsylvania, 6666
2:54:04
Craig Kohler and Evans Evansville, Indiana. 6502. James
2:54:09
Buel and Vista California 606. Small tits. Game Carol watcher
2:54:15
of birds in Urbana, Illinois. 606 She says where she makes
2:54:22
breakfast. You guys crack me up. Keeping her informed. Jonathan
2:54:28
peas in mum. Mumble minute, give me a guess. Maumelle booth 606 s
2:54:39
in Arkansas. Rebecca. Grace NiaK I'm guessing Grace NiaK in
2:54:45
Aiken, South Carolina 5555.
2:54:48
And they need some baby making karma. We'll throw that in the
2:54:51
end. You get
2:54:52
it? Now we go to Frederick's Burg Virginia Harry pilgrim 5510
2:54:58
shoot in Thai guy and she bellecote Illinois 3333 Andrew
2:55:06
Watson in Fairhope, Alabama 50 Oh, little red bar already down
2:55:11
to the 50s quickly. Let's start really running them off name and
2:55:15
location. Andrew Watson Shane Grubb and Cleveland, Tennessee.
2:55:19
valen chan in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, UK is back with
2:55:25
another 50. So that's 100 for ballon Chan. Brittany Crum in
2:55:29
Wyandotte, Michigan
2:55:32
and she says, Today is her sweet boyfriend Evans birthday, and
2:55:37
he's a huge fan of our podcast. And she would like to deduce him
2:55:42
and have him on the birthday list. We got him on the
2:55:44
birthday.
2:55:46
Ben de deuced I sent her a note back You got lucky is what I'm
2:55:51
gonna say. What was your nice and her note back and I said why
2:55:54
don't you listen to the show? Right? Oh, yeah, I can't. I
2:55:57
listened to the show. Once in a while. I don't listen as much as
2:56:01
I should. And then she
2:56:03
and then she hung up on you.
2:56:06
Matt Stevens in Waycross, Georgia. Kyle man in Cincinnati,
2:56:12
Brent chikki in Lake Worth, Florida Joe Woods in Ocean
2:56:16
Grove, New Jersey. Herbert tests in spring Texas Jason maror in
2:56:23
Portland, Oregon, Julie Minh Mindanao Mindon minna de el Mina
2:56:31
de ojo in Costa Mesa, Claire Thornhill in Toronto, Ontario
2:56:36
est Steve it out in Varaha. Wisconsin. Andrew Sawyer in
2:56:44
Duncan BC. Your spasm Christopher. Oh, Colin in
2:56:49
Austin, Texas. Ray Howard in Kremmling. Colorado, followed by
2:56:55
Terry Lange in Castle Pines, Colorado. And last but not
2:56:58
least, the fabulous Sir Brian Watson in Raleigh, North
2:57:01
Carolina. Want to thank all these folks for helping us out
2:57:04
and making this show happen for show 14 seven three?
2:57:08
Yes. And of course, thanks everyone under 50 who come in
2:57:11
for reasons of anonymity. Also, we have many sustaining donation
2:57:15
programs you can become a member of you can even make one up your
2:57:18
own just keep it on a regular basis. That is a base that helps
2:57:21
us during the slower shows couple of make goods, people who
2:57:26
weren't able to get their notes in for whatever reason. I'm
2:57:30
sorry.
2:57:30
I want to also mention that there's a couple that is a
2:57:35
switcher row down in the $30 range. We don't do them down
2:57:38
there. And we do have a birthday for someone down at the bottom
2:57:44
that needs to be put on the list is not yellowed out, if you
2:57:48
would.
2:57:50
Can you give me the name? Yeah. Wow.
2:57:54
J O A O. l vez. But his for his six his daughter's sixth
2:58:00
birthday. And what day and he's in Portugal, Portugal. Today
2:58:07
Today is seventh 28th. Okay. All right. We lowered notes I should
2:58:16
mention that people really don't look at these sometimes don't
2:58:18
even get him.
2:58:20
So I always look at him but I don't always I don't always see
2:58:24
the notes. I mean, it's yeah, there's a place for him and we
2:58:27
do what we can to make everybody
2:58:29
do the best we can and we do the best we can we do the best that
2:58:32
anyone can. We really do.
2:58:33
So here's some make goods. These are people who did their best
2:58:36
but somehow weren't able to get the note to us. This is for Sir
2:58:40
Duden Cink he sent a two boob donation. I think two shows ago
2:58:46
now switcheroo for a smokin hot wife Amy Milan, Dame slammy or
2:58:50
slammy who turned a redacted years old on the 26th we did
2:58:55
have her on the birthday list. And he continues by saying she
2:58:58
really does have the best boobs in the universe gray thanks for
2:59:01
sharing and he's from Bastrop Roderick pow had a note of was
2:59:07
missing a note for the last episode he donated 899 84 Hola.
2:59:13
Hola, amigos. Please accept my Harry boob donation 89984 Ooh,
2:59:19
yeah, got it. For all the work you do. The joy you bring
2:59:23
knowledge you share on Saturday you maintain and all of us this
2:59:26
will be my second donation please do.
2:59:30
You've been de Deus.
2:59:32
I will use this time to thank from the hearts bottom all the
2:59:36
people who went through the effort of registering and
2:59:38
donating to donor see.com If you want to find me go to donor
2:59:42
see.com Look for my name our power one love he says okay, and
2:59:48
those who are make goods again, thank you for supporting the
2:59:51
show. We had to have a website if you ever interested in you
2:59:55
know, I'd like what these guys are doing my amygdala feels kind
2:59:58
of the proper size. Maybe I should It sends some value back
3:00:01
go here for.org/and Here's that karma has requested you've got
3:00:09
karma Well, you just heard it wow bez Happy Birthday into his
3:00:21
daughter's sixth birthday was on the 28th Marian Roman Happy
3:00:24
Birthday to her brother Joe while 43 Today, Mark Stokes
3:00:28
marry his brother Shawn 47. Today Stefan ProComp is
3:00:33
celebrating today as well. Big sweetie Happy Birthday to his
3:00:36
father a sir Egg Head Night of the Long shadows of trash
3:00:39
mountain celebrating today. Melissa Adams his big brother
3:00:43
John Adams. It's his birthday along with Clayton Moses who
3:00:46
says Happy Birthday to serve Elaine for his birthday on the
3:00:50
31st It's today chef Robin clear McHugh cure those mccluer that
3:00:55
killed McHugh. I'm sorry, Chef Rob McHugh. 49 Tomorrow. Jocelyn
3:00:59
Kadena has heard that Joseph hare of Warner in New Hampshire
3:01:04
will be 53 tomorrow and Brittany crumbs has Happy Birthday to her
3:01:08
sweet boyfriend and we say happy birthday to everybody here from
3:01:11
the bit from everybody here at the best podcast in the
3:01:14
universe. Change I don't want to be one title change sir Kyle
3:01:29
goes from Baronet with the addition of total $1,000
3:01:33
additional support for the show to Baron and he will become
3:01:36
barren grape drink is one of the most interesting names we've
3:01:40
heard in a long time. Yeah, we do appreciate your support very
3:01:44
much. Also, we have support from Roderick PAO and James Cleary
3:01:49
they both become nice today so let's get them up on the video.
3:01:54
That isn't so handsome blade
3:01:55
you got yes the grape drink one.
3:02:00
All right rotor a cow Jeremy Clary. Both of you supported the
3:02:04
no agenda show in the amount of $1,000 or more I'm very proud to
3:02:07
pronounce to Kate the as Sir peacock of Mount liberty, Sweden
3:02:12
and Sir stocks trader of the Philly suburbs for you. We've
3:02:16
got hookers and blow rent boys and Chardonnay. Just a little
3:02:20
bit of extra Tabasco sauce by request. Perhaps you'd also like
3:02:23
some Rubenesque woman and Rosie to serve you or geishas and sock
3:02:27
a vaca vanilla bong hits and bourbon sparkling cider Ness
3:02:29
scores ginger ale and journals a fan favorite. Maybe some breast
3:02:34
milk and pablum beer and blanc snout, not your style, we've
3:02:37
always got the mutton and the mead. And while you're enjoying
3:02:42
that mountain in Mead with extra Tabasco, go to no agenda
3:02:47
nation.com/rings and give us your information so that we can
3:02:51
get the ring out to your official night ring which is a
3:02:53
signet ring looks great when you hit someone in the mouth but
3:02:56
also we give you the wax to seal your important correspondence.
3:03:00
Make it look very official and your official certificate of
3:03:03
authenticity. And thank you again for becoming knights here
3:03:06
and welcome to the ever ever crowded roundtable the knights
3:03:11
in the dames know what
3:03:22
I was thinking about how we have no friends. And you know with no
3:03:29
agenda meetups, which are really something that develops almost
3:03:33
next to the show has always been produced or organize you know,
3:03:37
someone local somewhere says hey, let's have a meet up. And
3:03:40
then you know, we talk about it. Or maybe they talk about it
3:03:44
locally. And then before you know it this grew out. And then
3:03:47
we have sir Daniel, he built a whole website for it. No agenda
3:03:50
meetup.com. And now, these are real communities. And a lot of
3:03:55
these places have mailing lists, and they've got telegram groups
3:04:00
and they and they communicate regularly and they do they'd
3:04:04
like to do these events. I would say that what's with what's
3:04:08
coming now, in the next probably 12 months. If you think it's
3:04:13
Argentina and Sri Lanka and all these countries, if that's
3:04:18
limited in scope, if you don't think you're going to witness
3:04:20
any kind of issue here anywhere in the world in general, you're
3:04:25
going to want to have a team of people that you can reach out to
3:04:28
and it's got to be diverse because you got to come to the
3:04:31
table. All you need is no one knows exactly what's going to
3:04:33
happen. But I think being at a no agenda meet up and meeting
3:04:37
people and having a community is going to benefit anybody in the
3:04:42
crap that is coming down the pike very soon. So let's hear
3:04:46
how some of those communities have had their recent meetups
3:04:48
Willamette Valley. Hey, John
3:04:50
Adam, this is m of the Mid Valley aka MX adam.com on the
3:04:54
art generator here with Dane Draya Madamme of midvalley
3:04:59
Hey, A danger at the hub city meet up having a great time and
3:05:04
no mac and cheese in sight.
3:05:06
This is Sir Shawn we're building back better for someone else
3:05:09
in morning. This is producer Tyler. Resist we much this is
3:05:13
Dame Kristen. In the morning in the Morning John and Adam don't
3:05:16
touch the monkey
3:05:17
in the morning is Trevor The Machinist love you mean it this
3:05:20
is Sammy. Oh and I am voted number one likely to be spooked
3:05:27
in the morning, this is B Dubs. Not tonight, but definitely not
3:05:30
a douche bag and I gotta give a quick birthday shout out to my
3:05:33
dad Bruce.
3:05:34
All told it was a very successful meetup no triggering
3:05:38
great time had by all and the best beer and fries and the mid
3:05:41
Willamette Valley ITM don't trust
3:05:43
Samantha the spook. See, you got spooks you got all kinds of
3:05:50
stuff was spooked. A town crier you name it. Knoxville. Come on
3:05:53
in with your report.
3:05:56
Hi, hi, this is number A. Anyway, the Knoxville Meetup is
3:06:03
in full bloom. And here are some of the other people who have
3:06:08
arrived in the morning. I'm writing a eulogy for Joe Biden
3:06:12
in the Morning John and Adam. Hey, John, can
3:06:14
you turn your speakers up? I need some more feedback. Hi,
3:06:16
John. And Adam, this
3:06:17
is Crystal love you
3:06:19
in the morning John and Adam. I'm me and my wife are trans are
3:06:23
recent transplants to Knoxville, Tennessee. In the
3:06:26
morning, no agenda tribe. This is Billy Bones night of Twin
3:06:29
Peaks. Billy bugs happily relocated to the
3:06:31
East Coast. Here's what's coming up but you can still catch the
3:06:38
Honolulu inaugural In fact, you can definitely catch it. That'll
3:06:41
be the downtown Art Center today in Honolulu, the local 360
3:06:47
meetup in Skookum brewery Arlington Washington that is at
3:06:51
two o'clock today. Open garden meet up three o'clock Amsterdam
3:06:54
time probably already passed by since that was today as well.
3:06:57
I'm sure we'll get a meet up report from them. The Dutch
3:06:59
group is crazy. And we have the best damn meet up in East Texas
3:07:04
Piney Woods chapter 433 So you can head over to retos pizzeria
3:07:09
in Longview, Texas and join that the local 719 meet up public
3:07:15
house at the Alexandria Colorado Springs six o'clock this
3:07:18
evening. Rational drinkers club seven o'clock at stodgy brewing
3:07:22
in Fort Collins Colorado. Do you hear my man I'm when I breathe
3:07:27
in. It's I can hear the whistling Hold on Why what I was
3:07:41
saying is what I was saying I could hear the whistling in my
3:07:45
in my chest when I would breathe in.
3:07:47
Really breathe in
3:07:52
I'm trying to get rid of it so I can finish this segment I don't
3:07:58
want to gross everybody out. That was really disgusting. What
3:08:01
happened
3:08:01
there? Hey, you got a cough button. That's what
3:08:04
I use. And then you went like Hello. Hello. Hello.
3:08:09
I was supposed to be transitory breathing.
3:08:14
Tomorrow the Adelaide meet up kicks off in order to be
3:08:19
announced. Location you need to go to a no agenda meetups.com to
3:08:25
find out where? On Tuesday vancouver island there 33rd of
3:08:29
July Jubilee at 430 at Smith's pub Victoria BC and on Thursday
3:08:36
our next show day the no agenda summertime shindig six o'clock
3:08:39
at City Park Denver Museum of Nature and Science and the
3:08:43
shawangunk Ridge meetup the second one in at the ridge and
3:08:49
that is in wallkill New York. That's it? Yeah, we do have an
3:08:53
entire August already booked up. We're probably booked up through
3:08:58
September. Not that there isn't room for more there always is.
3:09:02
If you'd like to attend one of these get yourself into a
3:09:04
community that you can count on that will not be triggered by
3:09:09
anything and that may actually turn out to be very helpful in
3:09:12
the days ahead. Go to no agenda meetups.com If you can't find
3:09:15
one near you Here's an idea. Start one yourself it's easy to
3:09:20
go with the day you want to be like like a party indeed. Okay,
3:09:45
you got any
3:09:45
ISOs I think I do. I have three ISOs How many do you have?
3:09:50
I have three ISOs Well, why
3:09:52
don't you play your three ISOs and I'll play my three eyes. Oh
3:09:54
wait, no, I have one ISO I'm sorry. I'll play one I have one
3:09:58
I've just one ISO And as always, okay, don't talk over my ISO.
3:10:03
Wow. And as always, well commander forever works better
3:10:09
with video longer. Yeah, it's too long. Okay, I got three. One
3:10:14
of these might be okay.
3:10:15
I hope so.
3:10:17
I do do. Let's start with a miserable
3:10:22
go outside oops, sorry miserable, really miserable
3:10:27
so muffled really miserable and really muffled okay.
3:10:33
Okay, you don't like that. We're just gonna look up, go outside
3:10:36
and look up.
3:10:39
Cookie enough to cookie.
3:10:42
Okay, then the last one is good.
3:10:44
That was really good. No, that's the one. You knew that was going
3:10:48
to be the one.
3:10:49
How do I do what you do? I saved the best for last course.
3:10:52
And I only had one. So it was no good. So there you go. I gave it
3:10:55
to you and you win.
3:10:58
Yay. One last clip. Okay, good. Because it's so underreported
3:11:04
and nobody wants to talk about it. Because if you remember that
3:11:06
no one's ever saw some of his old previous hacks of huge
3:11:10
American databases. Oh, I don't know who did it. Maybe North
3:11:14
Korea when we know it was the Chinese. So here's another
3:11:16
massive hacks China's style
3:11:18
three hostile foreign actors breached the US federal court
3:11:22
system and a 2020 cyber attack. That's according to New York
3:11:25
Congressman Jerrold Nadler and Thursday he revealed that the
3:11:29
three carried out an incredibly significant and sophisticated
3:11:32
cyber attack against the federal courts document management
3:11:36
system. He added that the security breach had a disturbing
3:11:39
impact on pending civil and criminal litigation, as well as
3:11:43
ongoing national security or intelligence matters. The US
3:11:46
judiciary issued a statement about the breach on January
3:11:50
6 2021, saying that its case management electronic case file
3:11:54
system had become a victim of an apparent compromise. The system
3:11:59
allows attorneys to file case documents such as pleadings,
3:12:02
motions and petitions with the court online. The judiciary
3:12:06
added the breach happened because of vulnerabilities in
3:12:09
its system that greatly risk compromising highly sensitive
3:12:13
nonpublic documents, especially sealed filings. Nadler said that
3:12:18
the judiciary committee learned in March of the startling
3:12:21
breadth and scope of the system's security failure.
3:12:25
I didn't hear anything about that I can't recall.
3:12:30
The Chinese trying to track down some of their own people. And
3:12:35
they go with this. If they get a hold of these secret dot you
3:12:37
know, the ones that are sealed because the guy goes on from
3:12:40
China. You know, I moved over here I'm naturalized. But, you
3:12:43
know, they're threatening my family. Well, let's look and see
3:12:46
what he's up to.
3:12:47
So do they have sealed indictments then they can have
3:12:50
access to that.
3:12:51
That's what it looks like. Of all the things probably 10,000
3:12:54
of them
3:12:55
all the things they could do on the hack? They don't get the
3:12:58
10,000 Sealed indictments. What are you up to China? What
3:13:03
they're up to is they're tracking Nancy shooter down
3:13:07
or up to is is not being reported at all by our corrupt
3:13:10
media, I guess called corrupt.
3:13:12
Mine as well. Everybody else's, every institution except you're
3:13:18
no agenda show. Because we accept the vow of poverty of
3:13:24
being podcasters. And so have the douchebags who are up next
3:13:29
live on the no agenda stream the Battle of the douchebags, Part
3:13:33
Six. Who knew there were five preceding it sir seats that are
3:13:38
blueberry, lavish and Charlie Robinson. They will be live
3:13:40
there. And we will be live with you once again on Thursday, very
3:13:46
much. Looking forward to seeing you all back here. Until then,
3:13:49
coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country FEMA
3:13:51
Region number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam
3:13:54
curry.
3:13:54
And I'm from Northern Silicon Valley where I remain on Jhansi
3:13:58
Dvorak
3:13:59
we return on Thursday right here same time, same no agenda
3:14:03
channel. Please join us if you don't mind. And remember us at
3:14:06
Devora. org slash na we really appreciate it. See you Thursday,
3:14:10
everybody. Adios MoPhO knows
3:14:21
everybody's afraid of this intro face down. Agenda 2030. We'll
3:14:34
come to as we march to a freedom sound
3:14:51
let's go freedom now. Everybody's got an in house. So
3:14:55
far away. Maybe
3:15:00
Red black industries silica they put against the flag in
3:15:06
Argentina globalist are coming for you
3:15:20
yes everybody's learning how to harness
3:15:44
has led the way and Albania and Italy to protest get bigger
3:15:50
everybody's waiting for you alright let's go freedom now
3:16:09
everybody's gonna have a look
3:16:23
shall we say? Not everything that I want me not even close
3:16:27
not even
3:16:28
forget to many Americans justice and fairness and economic
3:16:33
opportunity are still just empty promises need to be fulfilled
3:16:37
give people give people hope and part of the lower cost
3:16:42
guns I'm too shocked. I believe this is not a rightist?
3:16:47
Absolutely.
3:16:48
But it's about the here and now. As we go forward in the near
3:16:51
future,
3:16:52
thank you can't be pro insurrection pro God promised
3:16:58
direction pro democracy can't be pro insurrection and pro
3:17:02
marriage
3:17:03
isn't everything we want to have? How many times have I said
3:17:05
that? You cannot judge something for what it doesn't do, but
3:17:09
respected for what it does. And what this does do is quite
3:17:12
remarkable. In terms of our investments in protecting the
3:17:16
planet,
3:17:16
I believe that we should protect just as you do every single day
3:17:22
as members of critically important organizations. So
3:17:25
we think we have a clear contrast in terms of why we are
3:17:29
here, what our life is and how we go forward. Thank you. What
3:17:34
do you say? So what happened? Any questions? boruch.org/in A
3:17:50
that was really good.
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