Cover for No Agenda Show 1530: Red Queen
February 16th, 2023 • 3h 21m

1530: Red Queen

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0:00
boobs are in. Adam curry Jhansi Dvorak. It's
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Thursday, February 16 2023. This is your award winning Kibana
0:07
nation media assassination episode 1530
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This is no agenda watching the
0:13
Red Queen rising and broadcasting live from the heart
0:16
of the Texas hill country here in the region number six in the
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morning everybody I'm Adam fairy
0:21
and from Northern Silicon Valley where we still got balloons no
0:24
matter what I'm just see the vortex
0:33
so we're pretty convinced now in the amateur radio community
0:38
which I am a member of I don't know if you've renewed your
0:41
license but
0:42
of course I did make a fuss about it What a pain in the ass
0:45
it turned out to be
0:46
right killer five Alpha Charlie Charlie everybody dead for sure.
0:49
We are like a five by five convinced now. That one of the
0:54
balloons I mean, unidentified aerial phenomenon that was
0:58
brought down by a sidewinder missile was a Pico
1:02
and $1,000 missile is what makes it make sure that it's clear
1:06
was a PICO balloon. Oh, no. Yes, the PICO balloon is a ham radio
1:12
balloon with little raspberry pi, you've got a little
1:15
transmitter on the you know it's transmitting whisper sequences,
1:19
low power. And there you go. They blew it out of the sky. So
1:25
that's at least one mystery solved. Idiots. We got boots on
1:32
the ground about this. We have we have people who are actually
1:38
really in the know, is it pico or piko? I would say um, you
1:42
know, they probably say piko. But I say Pico? I don't know.
1:45
No, I think it's Pico. Who is also that's pico isn't small
1:48
micro Pico? Chico? Nos piko. Well, I don't know. When's the
1:53
last time you lead up a ham radio balloon
1:56
piko. They talk about piko leaders there's piko piko that's
2:00
all over the place. I've always pronounced it pika its metric
2:04
in the morning, please keep me anonymous. And this person has
2:08
asked me not to mention where they where I work, but it would
2:10
be somewhere where they are intimately involved in this
2:13
balloon and unidentified aerial phenomenon weirdness since it
2:16
began and would like to provide some insight and all the
2:18
information that has been released to the public for the
2:20
good of the show. This is what I'm talking about. We have the
2:24
best producers in the universe. It's true value for value.
2:27
Everybody's an expert at something. When when balloons
2:31
cross your desk, it may be time to reach out. And ready.
2:37
All ears?
2:38
Yes. Then we should let everybody know that you have
2:40
ordered a new cradle for your microphone. So we still there?
2:45
Yeah. Oh, yeah. The rubber be banging. Firstly, the Chinese
2:50
spy balloon is slashed. What? What are you doing, man?
2:54
I'm stretching it. Okay.
2:57
Is a was a no shit intel gathering platform. We know
3:02
where it came from. And I've been watching it for a while.
3:04
Its payload is surprisingly intact and is being salvaged and
3:07
analyzed. I'm sure someday, more info will be released. The
3:11
airframe and ordinance used to kill which is my words, he says,
3:15
kill it were selected due to the altitude and speed of the
3:18
balloon. The F 22 Can't use its guns above 50,000 feet. I don't
3:24
know. I wonder why. I wonder why that is. Also using gun to be
3:29
too risky to the pilot. Maybe there's no air and just just
3:32
float around who knows 50,000 feet doesn't seem that high. Due
3:36
to the close engagement required the slow speed of the object and
3:39
the fast speed of the jet Mach 1.3 ish. The jet could actually
3:43
wind up flying through the debris field or through the
3:46
object itself. So this is apparently balloons have never
3:50
been thought about.
3:52
One of the jet could fly slower than 1.5.
3:56
Okay, you want to second guessed our producer who's in this
3:59
business?
3:59
Well, I've started to second guess him after you said you
4:02
can't fire the guns.
4:04
I'm sure there's a very good reason for it. One of the
4:08
reasons the balloon was not shot down immediately after it
4:11
penetrated our air defenses zone was that it did not demonstrate
4:17
a hostile act or hostile intent. Therefore, the authority for a
4:21
shutdown resided only at the POTUS SecDef level. See,
4:26
definitely our person is definitely talking in in the
4:30
right terms, military terms. So the otherwise general Van Van
4:35
Herk van Herk, the NORAD us NORTHCOM commander that he could
4:40
have given the order. So that's something we didn't know. The
4:45
other UAPs are a little different. I showed up for work
4:48
last Friday thinking that we were actually being invaded.
4:51
Turns out what happened was we recalibrated our radar to detect
4:55
slow moving objects. General van Herk wasn't lying when he said
4:59
we don't know If these things are if and when we find the ones
5:02
we shot down, perhaps we'll have a better idea. Amateur Radio
5:06
balloon. The one issue we have with the identification and
5:08
shoot down of these objects is they are small and slow and our
5:11
jets are just too fast. Our air defense system is designed to
5:15
kill airplanes, not balloons. The reason the aim 9x was used
5:19
is that use infrared to identify and track the target and can
5:23
differentiate an object from its surroundings based on
5:25
temperature. Well, I'm sure that the piko piko was warmer. It's
5:30
not perfect. It's designed to shoot things moving at the speed
5:33
of an aircraft like Russian bombers, perhaps there are other
5:35
platforms in our arsenal that are better suited for the
5:38
current problem set. But I think we need a new multibillion
5:42
dollar program to address this novel phenomenon. And he says,
5:47
or she says, I hope that we can, I'll be able to deliver more
5:51
information and context as it comes along. And this is just
5:57
not playing here.
5:59
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin sitting down for his first
6:02
interview since the US shut down a Chinese spy balloon and then
6:05
three other flying objects over North America. Anyone claimed
6:09
ownership of the last three? No, they haven't. Is this something
6:12
that the American people have been potentially in danger from
6:16
for years and just not known it?
6:17
We don't know if you know, right, how frequently these
6:22
these things may or may not have appeared in our airspace. We're
6:26
learning a lot more about that
6:28
the fact that the US military didn't know about these until
6:30
recently, is that an intelligence failure? Was that a
6:33
military failure? No, it's
6:36
It's how you use your radars. They recently made some
6:38
adjustments on their on our radar, right went up the
6:41
aperture and they're analyzing the data a bit differently. We
6:45
typically are focused on things that are moving fast and and so
6:51
it's a bit more difficult to collect on slow moving objects
6:54
like a balloon
6:55
up. That's kind of right, then I guess our our producer is on the
6:59
right track with that information. That they change,
7:01
though that they recalibrate the radar and start picking up ham
7:04
radio balloons. I was talking to my buddy Mitch, the
7:09
periodontist. And he flies a lot. And he says, Last year
7:14
valentine's day he was flying 10,000 fetuses. You have no idea
7:17
how many Valentine's balloons are up in the air at 10,000 feet
7:22
to anything could be up there.
7:26
If it's interesting, they would hold up to 10,000 feet.
7:30
I would think that they would pop sooner than that. But who
7:32
knows which ones they are?
7:34
Well, these are the aluminum ones he's talking about. And
7:37
they're probably pretty sturdy.
7:39
Yeah. Oh, a second. For some reason. I have to reopen my
7:42
whole system here. But let me go. Just work now. Balloons.
7:49
Here we go balloons. Yes. Do you I have a I have a couple of
7:55
things on balloons newest. Oops. This one I kind of liked was
7:59
Kareem Abdul Jabbar vandamm. And she was taking questions. I
8:03
guess the media is now pretty clued in that they shot down
8:06
some just bogus stuff, weather balloons or whatever. And so now
8:10
they're grilling her poor poor lady. She's, she's way over
8:14
ahead in this gig. And here's a White House correspondent
8:20
badgering her about well, what if it turns out you just shut
8:23
down some dumb balloons,
8:25
if it turns out is it looks like that the President and Mr.
8:32
Trudeau said top gun fighters to blow weather balloons out of the
8:36
sky? Is the does the President regret that? And is he
8:40
embarrassed by that?
8:41
I'm not gonna get ahead of what any final decision? We just
8:46
don't know yet. We just don't know. And as I as I said, as my
8:51
colleagues were don't know,
8:53
back it up and started over again. Oh, okay. She says I'm
8:58
not going to get ahead of any final decisions. This question
9:03
had nothing to do with a decision.
9:06
Maybe she means what am I talking about? Maybe she means
9:09
like a decision as in as like, like a court decides that this?
9:13
Oh, this was a weather balloon, something like that. Maybe that
9:18
which I think
9:18
she just threw it in there as a word salad is part of the
9:21
problem with this whole administration.
9:22
Let's listen again,
9:23
if it turns out is it looks like that the president?
9:29
Maybe Maybe she means we haven't made up the story yet. You
9:33
haven't. We've made an editorial decision which story to go with?
9:37
How about that as an answer? That could be
9:39
Mr. Troodos and top gun fighters to blow weather balloons out of
9:43
the sky? Is the does the President regret that and is he
9:47
embarrassed by that?
9:49
I'm not gonna get ahead of what of any final decision. We just
9:54
don't know yet. We actually just don't know. And as I as I've
9:58
said, as my colleague has has said, from NSC, it is it is in
10:02
consideration that that could be the leading explanation here
10:06
again. I don't know. Let me let me. Let me answer the question.
10:14
I don't think the president should be embarrassed right by
10:18
the fact that he action to make sure that our air, our airspace,
10:23
civilian airspace was safe. I don't think that he should. I'm
10:28
answering the question. I am I am answering the question,
10:31
right, the President took action because we did see that these
10:36
these objects were in the airspace of civilian airspace.
10:40
And so to prepare
10:41
the airspace of civilian airspace, the airspace at
10:44
the civilian airspace, the President took action it is and
10:47
he took he took recommendation by the Pentagon to take that
10:50
action.
10:51
I think that's a lie based upon what our what our person here
10:54
says is but may not have well, although, of course, it was
10:57
their recommendation, shoot some missiles,
11:00
I don't want to get ahead of what this what will be the final
11:04
analysis right of what the objects may have been or may not
11:08
have been. So don't want to get into into a hypothetical here.
11:12
But look, this is the president, everything that he can
11:16
everything in his power. Right. Right, defend to Drake, and to
11:20
protect our airspace. And that's what you should see. That's what
11:23
you should be voting from what are the actions?
11:26
That's what you should be reporting on? Don't report on
11:29
this. That's what you should be gleaning from this.
11:32
Since you brought her into the picture. You might as well play
11:34
the John Pierre and Canadia clip.
11:37
Yeah, you know, I actually, okay, I'll tell you why I didn't
11:41
like this is
11:42
why is the American military shooting something out of the
11:46
sky over Canada
11:47
because it's part of NORAD. There's the NORAD as part of
11:51
like a part of it's a it's a, what you call a coalition. And
11:55
of course, Russia attacked Exactly. And so we were able to
11:58
do that, again, we didn't do it on our own. We did it in, in,
12:02
in, clearly in in step with Canadia.
12:06
Sure what I didn't like about this clip, because I found the
12:09
full interview, she corrects herself within half a second to
12:13
Canada. And although it's funny, she said it. The correction came
12:19
so quick, I would have played it in its whole context. But I just
12:24
don't like social media where they cut it off and you know
12:27
that there's something wrong so have you
12:29
Oh, yeah. Find the clip was funnier part of the clip is her
12:32
trying to stammering Yes, that's
12:35
what I that's the part I liked about it. But the Canadians like
12:38
okay, yeah, I mean, she she stammering she doesn't know what
12:42
she's doing. She's way out of her league. And it's, it's time
12:47
to stop picking on her.
12:49
Oh, please. Don't be the day well, I was disseminated this
12:55
has been recorded for some future use. Are you doing this?
12:59
You're gonna get a job are you what are you looking for? Yeah,
13:03
I don't know. I feel bad for her I feel bad for her for a little
13:09
while I feel bad about the elder abuse of the President and I'll
13:12
get over it don't worry it's just she's she's it's it's
13:16
almost sad you know, she's such a manufactured person completely
13:20
like put together with Biddle
13:22
arrogant, she deserves it. Now I have a variation on this clip
13:28
which I thought was better you played the wrong one actually.
13:31
No, because I looked at the two which said John Pierre Canadia
13:34
clip and I played nice lip.
13:37
I said play John Pierre and Canadia flip you said clip? No,
13:42
I didn't say
13:43
Oh, okay. You said clip believe me because I bet you play
13:47
you play clip. Play the other one. It's just the way it should
13:50
have
13:50
gone. Why is why is the American military shooting something out
13:55
of the sky over Canada because it's
13:57
part of NORAD there is the NORAD is part of like a part of it's a
14:02
it's a what you call a coalition and of course exactly. And so
14:07
that's why we were able to do that again. We didn't do it on
14:09
our own. We did it in in in clearly is in step with Canadian
14:17
that see you even
14:19
like a little bit of the in there. Yeah. Yeah, I got I'm
14:24
sorry. You spent 10 minutes on that. Wow, great. Appreciate.
14:27
Did you know that was the clip they the bowing was open.
14:33
Sitting right down the desktop. It didn't take 10 minutes it
14:36
took like one second?
14:37
Yeah, well, you couldn't it could have been tighter because
14:39
you had her in there. If you want me to get me to critique
14:45
it, let's go to the actual cost of the shoot down the questions
14:48
tonight about the shutdowns of the three smaller objects last
14:50
week, the White House said today those unidentified objects which
14:54
is told Congress are likely balloons for benign commercial
14:57
use academic research that you and chiefs Chairman
15:00
acknowledging it took two missiles to bring down one of
15:03
them
15:03
on the fourth one over like your first shot missed a second shot
15:07
hit the missile landed harmlessly in the water of Lake
15:10
Huron.
15:10
The Air Force estimates the cost of taking out the four high
15:13
flying objects is more than two and a half million dollars
15:17
to go in for two and a half days to go and retrieve that missile
15:20
I guess from Lake Huron. That's like a broken arrow. Don't they
15:24
call that a broken arrow and then the
15:26
new guys Luke or anything will usually leave it there hell with
15:29
it. You
15:29
know, these people are so crazy. They might have shot up many new
15:32
cattle they like what can we do? She hears Kirby Rear Admiral.
15:36
Now he took advantage of it right away. He knows how to do
15:39
it. Here's John Pierre, pay attention. But
15:41
we were able to determine that China has a high altitude
15:45
balloon program for intelligence collection
15:48
for a second. When I want to start listening to Kirby as a
15:53
female, he's got kind of a high pitch but he doesn't have a
15:56
baritone he's it's like one of those voices that could be a
16:00
woman a trans a bit
16:02
like Rachel Levine. Little bit. Yeah, he could transition easily
16:06
if you think if you listen to Kirby and think that he's a
16:09
woman, I think you could convince yourself okay,
16:13
everybody put on your thinking caps.
16:15
But we were able to determine that China has a high altitude
16:19
balloon program for intelligence collection that's connected to
16:22
the People's Liberation Army. It was operating during the
16:27
previous administration, but they did not detect it. We
16:30
detected it. We try Oh, and we have been carefully studying it
16:34
to learn as much as we can. We know that these PRC surveillance
16:39
balloons have crossed over dozens of countries on multiple
16:42
continents around the world
16:43
so you know he knows what to do he's like hey, you know they
16:47
didn't do it we got it. We got it so much better than
16:54
us hamming it up too much but down
16:57
here CBS with their their report.
17:01
The newest information on a tiny spy balloon shot down off the
17:04
Atlantic Coast shows that US intelligence break.
17:08
Tiny he said tiny to one off the Atlantic coach was a monster.
17:15
You can see it with the visual you can see it visibly from the
17:18
naked eye.
17:20
Well, why is that? We really don't know if it was a monster
17:23
at the height that it was at or not.
17:26
Well, everyone's pretty convinced it was a mid was a big
17:29
boy. You can see the array of radars coming off of it. Or red
17:34
or whatever white why is this one? Why is he saying the word
17:37
tiny?
17:38
Hello, CBS.
17:40
What are they trying to what are they trying to pull on us here?
17:43
Let's
17:43
listen the newest information on a tiny spy balloon shot down off
17:47
the Atlantic coast.
17:48
So I need a
17:50
tiny said Chinese. Man. You want to tell this person to see a
17:57
Boiling Boiling
17:59
world away. Our sources say the military tractor balloon for
18:02
four weeks before drifted across the continental US. Ed O'Keefe
18:06
is at the White House and what's going on.
18:09
Nate Good to see you. You're right CBS News has learned into
18:13
US intelligence and actually been tracking the balloon when
18:16
it took off from Hainan island off of the South China Coast
18:20
last month. At that point, it then started drifting towards
18:23
Guam and Hawaii before making a northward turn up to Alaska
18:27
officials say it's possible the balloon was blown off its
18:29
initial course by weather. But the Chinese still had control of
18:33
climate change. It came south over the lower 48 states. As for
18:37
the three objects shutdown, this is
18:38
where the Chinese should say, Hey, we're very sorry, just
18:41
climate change.
18:42
We can buy these US fighter jets. The strongest theory now
18:45
from the intelligence community is that the objects are benign,
18:48
benign is harmless research pollutes. There's still no word
18:51
on the condition of the wreckage. And in the case of the
18:53
object shut down over Lake Huron. We now know two missiles
18:56
were fired and the first mist that landed in the water.
18:59
Privately recorded cockpit audio reveals that even the pilots
19:02
were perplexed by what they saw.
19:10
Now we've yet to hear from President Biden.
19:15
How is that being perplexed?
19:17
You're saying it looks like it's smaller than a car?
19:20
Oh, that wasn't it sound perplex
19:23
remember this is a positioning report from CBS the CIA
19:26
broadcasts this
19:28
let's go back over this. He says they were perplexing the hammer
19:32
guy so yeah, it looks like a car proposed perplex thinking it was
19:37
actually a car maybe it was the car that that Elon shot into the
19:41
moon and cars back now.
19:45
That's a good theory. I like that one with the Moon Man and
19:48
the city object shut down over Lake Huron. We now know two
19:50
missiles were fired and the first mist that landed in the
19:53
water. Privately recorded cockpit audio reveals that he
19:56
was a
19:57
privately now now I want to dissect this whole report now
20:00
that we
20:01
and the first mist that landed in the water, privately recorded
20:04
cockpit audio reveals that even the pilots were perplexed by
20:07
what they saw privately recorded. My
20:09
question was what that means. But well, this
20:11
was the same. This was the same thing they said with the last
20:14
recording. They played that it was recorded on by some ham or
20:18
somebody that has Oh, right, right. bear, bear cat.
20:25
It sounds like a bear cat. Here we go.
20:32
definitely smaller than a car. perplexing.
20:35
Now we get to hear from President Biden about what he
20:38
makes of all of this why he decided to order the shoot down
20:41
of those two objects when he makes up China using a spy
20:44
balloon. Lawmakers briefed on the details now say he should be
20:47
saying much more to explain this to the American people. But
20:50
today, Tony, he's instead giving a speech on the economy up in
20:54
Maryland.
20:55
Oh, so um, bowl ball. Oh, that was?
20:59
Oh, he's
20:59
not he's not not doing anything about our operation here. I
21:02
mean, I'm reporting. Short one from NBC. See where they have
21:09
here. This is with Andrea Mitchell again,
21:11
Andrea. Let's circle back the original line, the spy balloon,
21:15
what are investigators looking for?
21:17
Well, that's it. The FBI is also looking at the electronics and
21:20
sensors. And they're, they've salvage those electronics. They
21:24
want to find out what countries made their components, including
21:27
whether some parts were made in America that US export controls
21:32
and could be the basis for criminal charges in the future.
21:35
Oh, someone's getting in trouble. Someone exported some
21:39
bids that you can't export.
21:41
Is the NPR simple balloon rundown.
21:45
Okay, second simple. Got it. The diplomatic victory all between
21:49
the US and China over the downing of a Chinese
21:52
surveillance balloon off the South Carolina coast earlier
21:55
this month. You're showing little sign of easing China
21:58
today charging high altitude us balloons have flown over regions
22:02
including Tibet, and saying the country will take measures
22:05
against us entities that undermine Chinese sovereignty.
22:08
Beijing continues to insist the balloon was a civilian research
22:11
vessel. The White House has disputed that claim citing the
22:14
recovery of centers and sophisticated electronics
22:16
equipment. Yeah,
22:20
so this is you know, we're always trying to everyone's got
22:22
some theory about what is covering up this is nonsense.
22:25
Who cares? You
22:26
know, what's interesting is, you know, named as 99 Red Balloons,
22:31
the song or in German 99 CS Ruffalo. Let me just read these
22:37
lyrics to you. Someone brought this to my attention of course,
22:39
I know the song I've played it 1000 times on the radio I've
22:42
played the video was horrible.
22:44
Yes, funny. Marty Higgins sent me these lyrics to a joke
22:48
writer.
22:49
Oh, really? Well, there you go. Floating in the summer sky 99
22:52
red balloons go by nine red balloons floating in the summer
22:55
sky panic bells it's red alert. There's something here from
22:58
somewhere else the war machine springs to life opens up when
23:02
eager I focusing it on the sky where 99 red balloons go by 99
23:07
decision street 99 ministers meet to worry worry super scary
23:11
call the troops out in a hurry. This is what we've waited for
23:14
this is it boys This is war. The President is on the line is 99
23:18
red balloons go by I mean goes on and on a year 99 Nights of
23:22
the air ride super high tech jet fighters. Everyone's a
23:25
superhero. Everyone's a Captain Kirk with orders to identify to
23:28
clarify and classify scrambling the summer sky 99 red balloons
23:32
go by I mean this is interesting.
23:36
It's funny. Yeah. And meanwhile, while we're worried about the
23:41
Chinese balloons, you know and no. Ignoring the satellites and
23:46
the rest listen to this. This is an update from just from last
23:49
week Chinese Space Station update. You know anything about
23:53
this?
23:55
Is it out of orbit? Is it out of control? Is it careening towards
23:58
Earth? No, I've done I don't know anything about it.
24:01
China's Shinjo 15 crew has completed the first spacewalk
24:04
since the completion of the King Kong space station. Astronauts
24:08
Fijian long and John Liu perform the tasks including the
24:12
installation of extension pumps outside the Hmong tail lap
24:15
module, dung Ching Ming assisted his fellow crew members from
24:19
inside the space station. The spacewalk lasted about seven
24:23
hours more spacewalks are planned for the Shinjo 15 crew
24:26
during their six month mission.
24:28
Now why is this the International Space Station or
24:31
their own space?
24:32
Yeah, this is Chinese has their own they've got their own space
24:35
station. Yeah, and it's been up there and we don't talk about
24:38
it.
24:39
Now Hmm. Maybe they're just dropping balloons from the space
24:43
station. Like water balloons. You know, hey, watch this.
24:46
There'll be fun. I must concede I was entirely wrong about the
24:51
Super Bowl. Although I looked like I was right for a while
24:55
there. That's the way they always go was a good game and
24:58
the game was good, but If I may say everything else sucked. The
25:05
production was mediocre at best.
25:08
Oh, let's stop and talk about this for a minute because I have
25:11
some thoughts too.
25:12
Okay. Okay, okay.
25:16
First of all you stop me. First of all the betters must have
25:20
really taken a bath on this thing because everybody was
25:23
betting for everybody except me was
25:27
was betting in red for the winner. You just you just go
25:29
with the winner, you know, you know, I
25:31
knew that Kansas City would win this thing they had to, but
25:34
Philadelphia, everyone's betting on Philadelphia, but there was
25:36
an interesting I was listening to some talk radio thing on the
25:39
radio. Oops, sports. That's where talk radio usually takes
25:42
place. Yeah, talk sports stock dose specific. And they had
25:46
Brent Musburger on who seems like a gambler because he's got
25:49
all these different stuff. He goes on. And he says certain
25:52
things. He said, Yeah, the prop bets. And the prop bets are
25:55
propositions. He says there's some real winners here. He says
25:59
because he's note the following. One is that the most valuable
26:03
player for the regular season has never won the Super Bowl
26:06
since 1999. And as many as eight incidents of the MVP being in
26:14
the Super Bowl since night, and they all lose, except this one
26:18
time. Patrick mahomes Did it Yeah, it was so that so there's
26:22
a bet that was immediately lost. You find another one he says the
26:27
A says the the last 20 years unlike best some stat. He says
26:34
the winner of the coin flip always loses the game. Home
26:39
never lost bet, because the winner of the coin flip was
26:42
Kansas City. And then the last one, which I thought was one I
26:45
probably would have bet on if I was but I don't bet on sports
26:47
because I think is dangerous that way throw your money away
26:51
is Patrick mahomes is in two Super Bowls previously, and in
26:55
all his playoff games, all Super Bowls, he always throws an
26:58
interception. So look for the prop where Patrick mahomes
27:01
throws at least one interception.
27:04
Ah, okay. And I'm a fan of mahomes I gotta say I'm just a
27:09
fan of the guy is he's kind of he's
27:11
kind of hilarious. But he he threw no interceptions. And
27:15
neither neither team threw an interception, which is very rare
27:18
for a Super Bowl saves money and then close a couple of times
27:21
came close. But you would have lost your your money on any of
27:25
these props or why I
27:27
don't I don't bet on this. I don't bet at all. Shouldn't I
27:30
lose? I don't know. I don't bet. I don't win. I don't gamble. Not
27:34
again. Well, I
27:35
do and I said sure things.
27:36
That's not gambling. That's insider information. That's the
27:40
DHS unplugged show.
27:42
So so we have so the game I thought was, you know, it went
27:47
well for both teams. I thought it was exciting. Every Super
27:50
Bowls are pretty boring. I thought the halftime show is a
27:53
complete Blue Bus.
27:55
Okay, stop. I have something to say about the halftime show. You
27:58
go first.
27:59
Well, first of all, she was mouth singers lip singing the
28:03
whole thing. She dropped her mic because she's still singing.
28:05
Yeah, that happened at least three times that I could see.
28:09
She was out there. I thought she was just kind of chubby, but I
28:12
guess she's pregnant, which is kind of cute. And then this
28:15
thing's going up and down and up and down. I don't get what the
28:18
point was.
28:19
Well, let me let me break it down for you because I saw it
28:22
right away. At the beginning, they come from the sky. She is
28:27
at the top in her red dress big puffy thing. And she's got the
28:31
white dress dudes down below. She is at the top of the pyramid
28:35
in the red dress. She is the Red Queen. Everyone knows this is
28:39
the Red Queen. This is the devil. She's pregnant with the
28:42
Antichrist Of course. And at the end if you didn't if you didn't
28:47
see it, when she descends back up to heaven. She's thrown the
28:50
Illuminati triangle.
28:53
You didn't see that? No, I didn't. Watch.
28:57
That was once again and just look at it. Sam Smith, Rihanna.
29:02
Lizzo everybody's in red. This is all all Satan worship.
29:08
Illuminati bull crap. And
29:11
it's Joe you think Wait a minute. I like I said, I just
29:14
thought it was lousy. But so you think it with the evidence to
29:18
prove it because I didn't see the triangle thing or any of
29:21
that? Because I didn't watch the whole thing. It was boring.
29:24
That's what I have. But I watched for Yeah, it's what you
29:27
watch for. And this is what we This way everyone thinks you're
29:30
great. You think the whole thing right in front of an NFL
29:35
audience of football watching audience of 180 million or
29:39
something worldwide. They're doing Satan worship right in
29:43
front of her throwing it in their face.
29:45
Yes. five by five. That's what I'm saying. Everyone says 100%
29:51
So I say five by five now.
29:53
I don't care what you say. But yeah, I think you probably
29:56
right. Well, then you do care what I say because I'm right.
29:58
Why don't care about the five I buy flowers
30:03
you should go back and look the Illuminati hands the triangle as
30:07
she's ascending to wherever. The Throne this Yes, the as the Red
30:12
Queen. I mean this is all all symbolic all ritual and she was
30:17
also doing some I mean it doesn't gross me out you know
30:20
when she's when she's grabbing when she's sliding her fingers
30:23
past her crotch and then sniffing her fingers. You watch
30:26
that she she did that.
30:27
She did see that? Oh yeah, that was an eye roll. Like
30:31
come on, you know, all right. And but that's because she's
30:33
pregnant with the Antichrist, the Antichrist is coming. It's
30:37
obvious. The queen is here to tell us, by the way, just in a
30:43
clip from President Al Biden. Who, who has a lot of them and
30:50
we have the best producers. Thank you, Dave. I'm liking al
30:52
Biden. Al Biden's live press conference just ended, he
30:55
announced four new rules for unmanned objects in the air.
30:59
Here's a clip of number four.
31:02
Derive directly my National Security Adviser to lead a
31:05
government wide effort to make sure we are positioned to deal
31:09
safely and effectively with the objects in our airspace. First,
31:14
we will establish a better inventory of unmanned airborne
31:18
objects in space above the United States airspace, and make
31:22
sure that inventory is accessible and up to date. To
31:26
get more money cams, we will implement further measures to
31:29
improve our capacity to detect a man objects or objects in our
31:33
airspace. Third, we'll update the rules and regulations for
31:38
launching and maintaining unmanned objects in the skies
31:41
and both of the United States of America and fourth, not my
31:45
Secretary of State will lead an effort to help establish a
31:48
global global common global norms and this largely
31:53
unregulated space.
31:54
So we become the police. Police of the air you know, this is
32:00
thanks to pods. I
32:02
don't have the clip, but there was a hearing with the with a
32:05
temporary F a doofus. Yeah, in Congress and they had a big
32:10
meeting and they got there. They're having a language shift.
32:14
They're not going to be out. You're not supposed to say
32:16
you're not supposed to say airmen anymore.
32:19
We know that it's air, it's air persons. And unmanned is
32:23
out. Oh, we
32:24
can't say unmanned Yes, of course by
32:27
violating this edict over and over and over and over.
32:31
What are we supposed to say instead of unmanned on personal
32:33
on people? Nobody there. Nobody Hold on. Oh, no. What are we
32:39
doing occupy an occupied?
32:42
Oh, this is fantastic. This is great. I love it. Well, since
32:47
we're talking about airspace, then there was an incident off
32:53
of Hawaii, which was severely misrepresented because of bad
32:58
data. And and I've spoken to several air persons air persons
33:07
about this incident and I think I can break it down because the
33:10
this is the sensationalism of NBC
33:13
tonight. New details of a serious close call first
33:16
reported by the air current involving a United flight on
33:19
December 18. On Hawaii climbing out of Maui headed for San
33:23
Francisco the triple seven suddenly went into an extreme
33:26
unexplained dive more than 7000 feet per minute flight radar 24
33:31
shows the plane coming with an 800 feet of slamming into the
33:35
ocean before pulling out of the dive and an extreme climb then
33:39
continuing on United coordinated with the FAA and union the
33:43
pilots receiving additional training
33:47
this is a great report so so so what they make it sound like is
33:53
that this thing went in I mean when you're doing it's actually
33:56
the reporting officially is 8000 feet per minute. I mean this
34:00
that makes it sound like you are headed for destruction in the
34:03
wings are about to rip off which is probably about true. What is
34:08
missing from the context is missing is they took off from a
34:12
Hawaiian airport in in very bad weather conditions and likely
34:16
activated the autopilot very quickly. They were at 2200 feet
34:22
so you know the dropped 800 feet above the above the ocean is
34:26
1200 feet. So you know, it may feel like not outrageous. Not
34:31
it's not a nosedive because you don't have time to get into the
34:34
nosedive. So there's two things that could have happened and
34:36
there's also reporting for people on the plane who were air
34:39
persons. Definitely a something that crew should have been aware
34:46
of because they didn't even know they were descending so quickly
34:49
until all the bells and whistles and the you know the alarm,
34:55
altitude alarms start going off. What likely happened is one of
34:59
two scenarios and we We'll never know because the NTSB does they
35:01
don't this is no injuries, no deaths, so there'll be no
35:04
reporting on it and no report, I don't think likely what happened
35:08
is they had the autopilot set, and they went through this bad
35:12
bad weather and that was locally was bad microburst, hit them and
35:16
push them down as what happens, and you know, and the autopilot
35:20
can't really resist that. And so, you know, they were going
35:25
down, but it wasn't in a dive. So they really didn't know until
35:29
the bells and whistles go off, then they apply full throttle,
35:32
they jack the pull the stick back, go manual, and then pull
35:36
about a G and a half or two G's, which, you know, I'm sure would
35:40
make people sick and afraid and heart attacks, anything could
35:42
happen. I mean, that's, you know, they were people were not
35:45
happy after that. I wouldn't think so the other possibility,
35:50
which has happened before, and this is where addition, that's
35:53
why when they say they received additional training, like what
35:56
if and these these got together, they had 25,000 hours, so
35:59
they're not they're seasoned pilots, I mean, air persons is
36:04
that the previous flight crew or someone had set the autopilot
36:10
altitude to 0000, just a reset. And maybe they thought it was
36:16
10,000. Or they misread it, someone, it's possible, they
36:20
didn't do their checklist properly, they hit the
36:22
autopilot. And the plane, that plane doesn't go into a dive,
36:25
but the plane says, Oh, I have to go down to zero feet. So I'm
36:28
gonna start going down. And you could also wind and within 1200
36:31
feet happens really quickly. The discrepancy in the speed is
36:35
because this is ATSB data. This is these are radio pings that
36:40
people pick up mainly on their USB, SDR software defined
36:46
radios. They all feed it into I think it's called the ADSB
36:52
Exchange, which is where all the flight data comes from. This is
36:56
really from people around the world who just have these things
36:59
hooked up. In fact, Elon Musk is and is in the process of buying
37:02
the ADSB exchange. So of course, he can then you know, turn off
37:06
any any tail numbers he wants. So when you're getting a blip,
37:10
and another blip from someone else, 30 seconds later, or
37:14
within one second, it's very easy to have to calculate that
37:18
speed incorrectly. It was unlikely that it was 8000 feet
37:21
per minute, especially when the drop only happened for 1200
37:24
feet. So that report at Yes.
37:28
And that ladies and gentlemen is a preview of Adams new podcast.
37:34
Yeah, Adams, pilot chit chat.
37:37
Where is Marty with the punch line when you have such a setup?
37:40
I mean, seriously,
37:41
is Marty's not here.
37:44
So that's out of the way by the way, congratulations. Ashlynn
37:47
speed she got pole position. This is you know, she's her dad
37:51
as a producer and they're they're going to put no agenda
37:53
on their on their car. She's now in the formula with open. You
37:57
know, the open cars, the ones that look, she's on her way to
37:59
NASCAR. Basically, that's where she needs to go. She was a pole
38:03
position. She was leading the race four laps ago and then she
38:06
coming right behind the car that she was laughing that car spun
38:10
out right in front of her she had nowhere to go. So
38:12
unfortunately, she crashed. Yeah. But but they're able to
38:19
think fix her up and they're going to Atlanta for the next
38:22
super Tour event. So and there's a crash video in in the show.
38:27
She was
38:27
leading the race when this happened. Yes, she was laughing.
38:30
Eight women drivers. This was rigged. You know?
38:34
I'm not gonna I'm not gonna dispute that is very possible.
38:38
It's very possible. You're the one that thinks all the every
38:41
smallest sports are rigged.
38:43
Oh, did you see those bad calls by the refs on the Eagles? Of
38:47
course, of course it was rigged. I knew it all along. I
38:51
knew nothing. I didn't know anything. RACO Welsh polish that
38:55
what was that score that you were
38:57
I had 3817 and it was almost reverse. It was almost it was
39:02
was it? 3827? Yes. I don't know, Rocco Welch passed away. And
39:06
that reminded me that I met her in the late Rocco. Rocco. Rocco.
39:11
Rocco. Well,
39:13
I thought the other name was funnier. You did meet her. How
39:16
was she? What kind of a person was she?
39:18
I met her in the late 80s. Maybe it was you had like 8889. And I
39:22
can't remember if she was in a movie or she was part of a maybe
39:25
there was some promotion. And I remember MTV said, oh, you
39:28
should go there and making you should go and see what's going
39:30
on or something. I don't know what it was very early on at MTV
39:33
when I was still lived in the city. Did you make it past that?
39:36
Yeah. No, she was really very quiet. very docile. Like just
39:42
almost like, almost didn't say anything. And she must have been
39:47
like 50 or early 50s. And here's the thing. Here's the thing that
39:51
I noticed. She then and this is gonna sound weird, but you know,
39:54
as the only story I have about Raquel Welch, I'll never get to
39:57
tell it again. Just like Chris Cena Applegate. She has she had
40:02
a layer of fur a fuzz like all over her face and her arms very
40:09
light. Very, you know, like bleached probably just for like
40:12
her face had furry. Yes. Her face had fuzz on it. And I
40:16
remember going wow, that's kind of interesting. And the same
40:19
thing happened to me when I met Christina Applegate at the MTV
40:21
awards one time I had the some women have for
40:28
I had a friend of mine, which I haven't seen for decades, but he
40:33
was Christina Applegate, broker broker like stockbroker. She's
40:39
apparently a super talented trader. Yeah, really
40:45
wide that somehow that doesn't surprise me.
40:48
He says she's really sharp. Wow.
40:51
Yeah, that makes sense. That makes sense. I like her as I
40:53
like the stuff she's done recently. Like you're dead to me
40:56
and stuff on Netflix is pretty good.
40:58
Yeah, she does do works.
41:01
Anyway, just back to the Super Bowl for a second there was an
41:03
interview with Damar Hamlin and I have the clip from that
41:08
as this has been been very controversial because they'll
41:11
check it he's wearing and all the rest of it.
41:15
Well, the jacket part he I guess he came out and he said hey, you
41:18
know I'm sorry. People give me jackets and I love different art
41:21
and I didn't realize it was weird. It was like a Jesus
41:24
Christ dress up doll was on the cross with
41:27
like, some Yeah, it was very, very religious is the word weird
41:31
for a guy who you know, just said he just bypassed
41:37
defeated death and gave God credit for it. So I'm still very
41:41
conflicted about what that jacket but here's the question
41:45
that was our guy over there at the morning show. The EX
41:50
football player who they always want to put in a dress,
41:53
oh, stray hand gauge.
41:56
So they send stray gets a gay story sent stray ham. So they
42:02
send strain because he's a former NFL guy. And here's the
42:06
one minute that is pertinent is from
42:07
the ICU. The question on so many minds would cause his heart to
42:12
stop beating in your 24 peak physical condition could click
42:16
Run circle the route me right?
42:18
Can you just turn down your speakers just a tad just a
42:21
little bit just just peeking through the noise gate?
42:25
How did Doctor describe what happened to you?
42:41
As a man one step away from
42:43
it know from my experience the NFL, they do more tests than
42:47
anything. And in the course of you, how did you feel? Did
42:51
anybody ever come back with any say you had a heart issue or
42:54
anything that was abnormal?
42:57
Honestly, no. I've always been a healthy, young, fit, energetic,
43:04
you know, human being let alone athlete. So it was something
43:08
that was just that, were we still processing? And I'm still
43:12
talking through with my doctors just to see what everything was.
43:15
I mean, come on. First of all, what does this kid 2425? He's
43:20
awesome. Yeah. So, you know, this is this is very challenging
43:24
for him to answer all of these things. It's all being thrown at
43:26
him. And he knows that he just couldn't handle this question,
43:30
even though he knew it was coming. He knew what the answer
43:33
was. And what's the answer? Well, the answer is, of course,
43:37
I had it was related to either COVID or the COVID vaccine.
43:41
That's the only two options. And if you haven't noticed, the
43:46
mainstream ahead, know the mainstream is now now now
43:50
they're on it. This is what if you want to know the the best
43:53
example of a limited hangout. Let's start with CBS. And this
43:59
is the reporting. And by the way, if you received, if you
44:04
accepted the vaccine into your life, if you're young, if you're
44:07
worried about the stories, it is my belief that as long as you
44:11
lead a healthy life, and you're you're not eating crap, you can
44:15
probably be okay. But listen to this. So
44:18
to do a study like this, you look at the years prior to the
44:22
pandemic and the typical rate of heart attack death in that age
44:25
group. And then you see it increase and you wonder, what's
44:28
the new variable? And so the pandemic is that new variable?
44:31
That's right. So these researchers looked at 10 years
44:34
of data across the US all the death certificates that get
44:37
filed with the CDC, that data so what they saw is prior to the
44:41
pandemic, heart attack, deaths were actually dropping, and then
44:45
that trend reverses and you see those deaths go up, especially
44:49
among that youngest age group during the pandemic. Do we know
44:52
why the young why younger people might be more at risk or we
44:56
don't know for sure. And in fact, these death certificates
44:59
are probably We're not even capturing the fact that they
45:01
might have had COVID They're really just saying, Did you die
45:04
from a heart attack or not?
45:06
Oh, what? Are you kidding me? So now they're just turning that
45:10
around. It's like, well remember when it was like, Well, yeah,
45:19
you drive COVID You know, but you had COVID Did you drive a
45:23
broken arm? I mean this. This is this is SIOP here. They're
45:27
really
45:27
just saying, Did you die from a heart attack or not? What we do
45:31
know, however, is that younger people were less likely to
45:34
protect themselves against COVID than older people, less likely
45:37
to mask less likely to take other mitigation measures. And
45:39
they were also farther back in line to get vaccinated, so they
45:44
were not protected with vaccination until later in the
45:46
pandemic, those might have been a factor here.
45:49
So notice that they're not now this research which somehow
45:52
spanned 10 years. They're saying, no, no, the minute COVID
45:56
happened, heart attacks increased, which is not true.
46:00
There was no reporting on that. I don't recall any of that at
46:03
all at all. Now, NBC did this as the same talking points. They
46:08
drew it out a little bit more. Let me see. Here's a background
46:14
or clip first.
46:15
So why the spike in heart problems along with each
46:18
pandemic wave. Dr. Susan Chang, a co author of The Cedars Sinai
46:22
study is concerned about the COVID connection. There are a
46:26
lot of things that cover
46:28
all right under Show mixtures Kermit the Frog COVID connection
46:32
on deck
46:32
can do to the cardiovascular system. It appears to be able to
46:38
increase the likelihood of blood clot formation, it seems to stir
46:42
up inflammation in the blood vessels. It seems to also cause
46:46
in some people an overwhelming stress that can also cause a
46:50
spike in blood pressure.
46:51
Experts are still working to figure out why young people are
46:54
so impacted, but Dr. Chang says it may be related to higher
46:58
viral load exposure or an excess immune response in stronger
47:02
immune systems. Studies show COVID-19 is also linked to a
47:06
rare condition called myocarditis, the inflammation of
47:10
the heart muscle itself, it can strike even young healthy
47:14
students like Demi Washington. Now a senior on the women's
47:17
basketball team at Vanderbilt University just immediately
47:20
started crying after Washington came down with what felt like a
47:24
mild case of COVID in late 2020. An MRI revealed unseen damage
47:30
and stopped her from playing and
47:32
the fact that I could have played is kind of, you know,
47:36
hard and scary to think about.
47:37
She's now recovered and back to focusing on her rebounds.
47:41
Washington's health scare came before she got vaccinated.
47:45
Haha. So this is So what they're doing here, this safe and
47:49
effective vaccine which was not effective, and now it's
47:52
questionable about its safety. The last thing on the list is,
47:56
well at least you won't get really sick. If you take the
47:58
vaccine. That turns out to be not true, especially if you're
48:01
young, you have a 30% higher risk of heart attack than before
48:07
COVID. Now, is it related to the vaccine? Let's go back to NBC.
48:12
Still, some have pointed to rare instances of the vaccine causing
48:16
myocarditis. Health experts say the virus itself is much more
48:21
dangerous to your heart. The risk
48:23
of the heart injury of myocarditis pericarditis from
48:26
the vaccine is so much lower than the risk from the COVID
48:31
itself.
48:32
I like this new person. I don't know who it is, but I like kind
48:34
of the quasi Nazi twang, it's good.
48:38
Not see Indian.
48:41
Do it again, virus itself is much more dangerous to your
48:44
heart.
48:45
The risk of heart injury of myocarditis with any kind of
48:48
diagnosis from the vaccine is so much lower than the risk from
48:53
the COVID itself.
48:54
Researchers only beginning to chart the long term impacts the
48:57
pandemic has on the hearts while paramedics continue racing to
49:01
treat the damage.
49:03
It's not just the elderly that are being affected. It's also
49:06
people like ourselves were previously healthy.
49:09
Doctors like Susan Chang say they hope to make new strides
49:12
toward understanding what exactly the link is between
49:15
COVID and heart disease. And they're optimistic they'll learn
49:19
more with time, they're starting to think that a COVID infection
49:22
or reinfections could be considered a risk factor for
49:25
heart disease in and of itself. There she says they have more
49:29
work to do before knowing for sure.
49:31
So and we follow the everything very closely. We saw the bull
49:36
crap from the beginning of this in 2020. No reports of heart
49:40
attack increased no reports of heart attacks. The people who
49:42
were dying were the ones who were intubated and put into a
49:45
forced coma. These are the people who were dying by the 10s
49:50
of 1000s. But okay, let's bring in our expert Dr. John Torres.
49:54
Joining
49:55
us with more is NBC SENIOR MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT jumpstarts
49:58
SENIOR MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT John Torres, I think we should
50:01
start off with something that a lot of people think and I think
50:03
needs to be cleared up.
50:05
Yeah. Okay, let's debunk those podcasters.
50:07
There a lot of people who believe it is the COVID vaccine
50:10
that causes issues. Not
50:13
this is this is new. This is the first time they're coming out
50:17
and saying, you know, we got it.
50:19
Yeah, this is an attack on the on the on the narrative that the
50:23
common narrative, that myocarditis and pericarditis is
50:28
caused by the vaccine.
50:30
Yes. So I would say this is probably a subtle native ad on
50:34
behalf of the pharmaceutical industry to be defensive move,
50:38
at least sneered up.
50:40
There are a lot of people who believe it is the COVID vaccine
50:43
that causes heart issues, not COVID. itself, can you just
50:47
clear COVID
50:48
itself, there's such a higher risk of getting a heart issue
50:50
from COVID, especially myocarditis. And when you look
50:52
at the statistics, myocarditis, you're 11 times more likely to
50:56
get it from COVID itself than you are from the vaccine when it
50:58
comes to hard words
50:59
that's that come from
51:01
it's brand new. He's health expert, John Torres. So what why
51:04
are you asking questions
51:06
11 times, which is it makes it even more interesting, not three
51:10
times or two times, or 10 times 100 times or just 11 times 11
51:15
times it's
51:16
the wacky number, and
51:17
you're from the vaccine. When it comes to heart attacks. There's
51:19
been no direct connection between the vaccine and heart
51:21
attacks or cardiac arrest. There have been some reports, but
51:24
those reports are usually somebody who had a heart attack
51:26
the day after getting the vaccine, which means a vaccine
51:28
really hadn't had anything in our body. This is my favorite
51:32
part. That's great. The report
51:34
was usually from someone who just got the vaccine that day,
51:37
the vaccine couldn't even do anything. I mean, this is the
51:41
I got to hear that. There have been some reports, but those
51:43
reports,
51:44
stop. Let's stop with the logic of this. So you're telling me
51:48
that like, for example, a heroin addict. He takes a shot at
51:54
heroin, but it takes a couple of days for anything to happen.
51:58
He doesn't od until Wednesday. He does.
52:02
guy took a shot at heroin and Odede on the spot, but they
52:06
couldn't have been there heroin
52:09
been some reports but those reports were usually somebody
52:11
who had a heart attack the day after getting the vaccine, which
52:13
means the vaccine really hadn't had anything in their body.
52:17
had any time to do anything in the body. Okay. Okay, this guy
52:21
is my new favorite health expert. It's so interesting
52:24
to see that COVID
52:25
So, so you're overdosing and so they give it a narc anon or
52:29
whatever. Then October that Narcan, Narcan and you snap out
52:34
of it, but it can't couldn't have been from the Narcan? No,
52:38
because it didn't have time to do anything in your body.
52:42
And it's just inhaled. And it's just through the nose. It's a
52:44
spray. I mean,
52:45
this race even through the nose and nose, it's not like an
52:49
entire month,
52:49
not like an injection or anything. It's so interesting
52:51
to see that COVID clearly has an impact on heart health,
52:55
clearly and that's COVID clearly has an impact on heart health. I
52:59
mean, okay, let me just go into our clip archive COVID heart,
53:05
okay. And I have here let's see 2020 CDC reveals hospital Oh,
53:16
this is interesting. This is from 2020. Let's listen to this
53:22
for a second.
53:22
The Centers for Disease Control have updated their death counts
53:25
for Coronavirus and reveal yet again that COVID-19 is rarely
53:29
the actual cause of death among Coronavirus patients, according
53:33
to the CDC themselves of the 220,000 deaths attributed to the
53:38
Coronavirus. 87,000 of them died from pneumonia and influenza.
53:43
Another 17,000 died from chronic respiratory diseases and 26,000
53:48
died from respiratory distress syndrome. 44,000 patients died
53:53
from hypertensive diseases 23,000 died from heart disease
53:56
and a whopping 28,000 died from cardiac arrest and heart
54:00
failure. Yet all of these even patients who died from heart
54:04
attacks are marked down as dying from the Coronavirus. Doctors
54:09
who spoke with one American news explained that 131,000 patients
54:13
who are being considered COVID-19 deaths already had life
54:17
ending diseases, including cancer, dementia, and even in
54:21
stage renal failure. So, according to the CDC, again, if
54:25
you look at place of death, you'll see that some 10,000
54:28
patients who died from COVID were on hospice care, meaning
54:32
they were terminally ill to begin with, and we're already
54:35
expected to die.
54:36
So what I'm hearing from this is that COVID was blamed but it
54:41
wasn't COVID Or did I miss hear that?
54:44
No, that's what that's what he's saying. Yeah. And I listened if
54:47
you remember, we had some clips from Canada, where there was a
54:51
project up there, which you haven't heard from since going
54:54
through every COVID death and finding very few of them are
54:57
technically from COVID. Yeah, I'm and they're all mislabeled,
55:02
including people who got into a car wreck.
55:04
Right. But now and that's the only clip I have the rest is
55:07
from 2022, when they started with the COVID, causes heart
55:10
problems narrative. So we did not hear about this for a good
55:15
two years, zero, nothing, maybe even longer. And now, while we
55:19
all know COVID kills you from heart attacks, it's
55:22
so interesting to see that COVID clearly has an impact on heart
55:25
health.
55:26
And it's so interesting. Isn't that interesting?
55:30
And then that's, regardless of age, but more pronounced in this
55:33
younger group? Can you just explain that that's
55:35
interesting. It doesn't matter what age but it's the young
55:39
people, I mean, who should have healthy hearts, it's so
55:41
interesting. So we
55:43
do know that in the elderly, those that are older, you have
55:46
more heart attacks overall, but the rate is increasing higher in
55:49
this younger age group, which is a surprising factor. And years
55:52
ago, when pandemic first started years ago, you know, three years
55:55
ago, we thought of it as a respiratory virus, then we
55:57
started thinking of it oh, it can also be a vascular virus,
56:00
because we know it affects the blood vessel linings themselves.
56:03
We talked about the inflammation, the stress that
56:04
goes behind this. It's not a cold, it is a bad virus.
56:08
Okay. And let's continue. I got two more shorties you thank you
56:12
clip custodian. These are pretty
56:13
interesting. Aaron's piece there was that young athlete who said
56:16
she had mild COVID symptoms, it wasn't even like she had
56:19
devastating COVID symptoms. Does it matter if you have long COVID
56:23
versus mild symptoms? And that's
56:24
one of the other things it doesn't seem to matter at all.
56:26
Because what we do think is happening as part of it, your
56:28
immune response, they do
56:30
think it's, it's all interesting. It's all
56:33
interesting. This is what I like about it. Where's the science?
56:38
What happened to your science people now it's just
56:39
interesting, then versus mild symptoms. And
56:41
that's one of the other things that doesn't seem to matter at
56:43
all. Because what we do think is happening is part of it, your
56:46
immune response, which can keep COVID under control, but at the
56:49
same time, it could just be overwhelming the system and
56:51
causing these heart type issues. The other thing is, we don't
56:53
know how long you're at risk for this and like shaking this
56:56
stuff up.
56:57
You are correct. You're making it
56:59
on this system and causing these heart type issues. The other
57:01
thing is, we don't know how long you're at risk for this. And
57:04
like she mentioned in her piece there, it could be something
57:06
that 1020 30 years from now, we're saying Do you smoke? Do
57:09
you have high cholesterol? Did you have COVID? Those are your
57:11
risk factors for heart attack. Oh, this
57:13
is great for your job interview. Don't worry, Hey, did you smoke
57:16
you drink? Do you have COVID? Sorry, can't hire you. You're
57:19
too big a risk. It's all right. We got universal basic income
57:22
coming for you final one, which for an odd reason brings up a
57:26
phrase that is not something I would have used if it were up to
57:30
me to consult on this answer.
57:32
That's what I'm wondering about. Because it's not like you have
57:35
COVID you recover. And the next day these heart events happen,
57:38
there can be the passage of time can be the passage of
57:40
time, who says that? Vice President Kamala Harris, the
57:47
passage of man, we had a whole end of show mix, the passage
57:50
same passage of time, the passage of time. Why is this now
57:55
all of who even says that? The passage of time
58:00
can be the passage of time, it can be the passage of time, and
58:02
with long COVID Being a bigger, bigger issue, we don't know. And
58:05
the more you have COVID, it seems it puts you at a higher
58:07
risk, especially in those young adult ages on I mean, just play
58:11
the Governor and I and we were all doing a tour of the library
58:15
here. And talking about the significance of the passage of
58:18
time, right, the significance of the passage of time. So when you
58:24
think about it, there is great significance to the passage of
58:27
time in terms of what we need to do, to lay these wires what we
58:31
need to do to create these jobs. And there is such great
58:35
significance to the passage of time. We think about a day in
58:40
the life of our children.
58:41
passage of time. Is that is that the FBI calling? Who is that?
58:45
Yeah. Well, FBI. Yeah. Okay, I'll tell him. Okay, I got a
59:00
message. Yeah. They told me that make sure that you, you call
59:06
your handler. Because you didn't make your call yesterday,
59:12
I was too busy with the passage of time I'm wondering about
59:15
because it's not like you have COVID you recover. And the next
59:18
day these heart events happen, there can be the passage of time
59:21
can
59:21
be the passage of time and with long COVID Being a bigger and
59:24
bigger issue we don't know. And the more you have COVID, it
59:26
seems that puts you at a higher risk, especially in those young
59:29
adult ages at getting something like this. And so you want to
59:32
make sure even if you're vaccinated, you still protect
59:34
yourself from getting COVID Which means you know, the things
59:36
we know that can help
59:37
and is there anything you can do I mean, if you've if you've had
59:40
COVID, and you're young, and you're curious, is there
59:42
anything you can say yes, here's,
59:44
here's, here's denial. Thank you. I'm expecting the good
59:46
doctor to say yes, if you're young, no matter what. It is
59:51
important that you lead a healthy life that you get
59:54
sunshine that you eat, I would say good animal protein. and
1:00:00
make sure that you stay away from all the crap that's in your
1:00:04
supermarket. I think young people are incredibly unhealthy.
1:00:08
I'm
1:00:08
expecting him to say that 47% of
1:00:11
America's young people are diabetic. Or you know, or on the
1:00:18
verge of they're obese. This is this is this is who's dying. If
1:00:23
you're healthy, you can at this time.
1:00:27
All right, number one, know your risk factors. Keep an eye on
1:00:29
yourself, especially if you have a family history of heart
1:00:31
disease or heart attacks. You know, keep an eye on yourself.
1:00:33
Keep an eye on yourself. What does that mean? selfie cam,
1:00:38
there you go. If
1:00:38
you notice any of the symptoms, we talked about, you know, the
1:00:40
chest pain or shortness of breath, the arm pain, any of
1:00:43
those things, then go ahead and get checked out. On top of that,
1:00:46
make sure you're vaccinated in your boots. Most weeks have
1:00:50
protection right now. You do get COVID of keeping it in mild
1:00:53
cases and under control and then mask up we know, like mask mask.
1:00:58
But at the same time, it's still out there and it's still causing
1:01:01
some problems throughout today.
1:01:02
Some problems all right, this is so bad now.
1:01:06
So wait, this is the advice is to get vaccinated. Yes. Yes. And
1:01:12
Max mask up. Okay.
1:01:13
And, and the hard thing to hear is that many of these young
1:01:17
people who are dying are the ones who got one shot only. And
1:01:23
didn't feel like the net. You know, it's horrible to think of
1:01:27
there's, there's many people who I know and love who have been
1:01:30
we've gotten this horrible thing. And now they're
1:01:33
gaslighting everybody into taking more of it, and not for a
1:01:37
second, not for a second. Can it be anything else? But oh, you
1:01:40
know, it's COVID now and in France. Now this, and this is
1:01:45
from France 24. This is mind boggling report. Because of
1:01:50
course, France also has people getting strokes and cardiac
1:01:54
arrest and all kinds of issues. As you recall. They were going
1:01:59
to cut you off from life in France. If you didn't if you
1:02:02
didn't get vaccinated. Do we remember this? Like you will be
1:02:06
cut off from everything
1:02:08
you wouldn't even get you couldn't get down on the metro
1:02:11
thing. Anything
1:02:11
if you didn't if you didn't have your COVID QR code pass. You
1:02:15
were cut off from society, and it was righteous. But now that
1:02:19
people are having events, which don't really want to talk about
1:02:24
because you know, that's between me and my doctor Damar Hamlin.
1:02:29
This is what's causing it.
1:02:30
Trans 24 is surely sitbon is here. Surely, French wine
1:02:35
exports are breaking records. But here at home consumers are
1:02:38
shunning the red stuff Could it be because of those those ads
1:02:42
we've been seeing when you go to watch a movie in the cinema
1:02:45
where you get health authorities telling you to
1:02:47
consume less alcohol,
1:02:49
not only in the cinemas, but also on television, whenever you
1:02:53
put on YouTube or whatever you have that you have those
1:02:56
messages coming up popping up, we can see one of them they've
1:02:59
been playing, you can pretty easily they put it all out
1:03:03
there. If you drink too much wine, they say more than two
1:03:06
glasses of wine, you can get heart disease, liver disease you
1:03:10
can get your immune system will be weak and you can get cancer
1:03:14
and strokes. That's the message and we can do the same but it's
1:03:18
probably the opposite the exact opposite of what we've been
1:03:22
hearing decades earlier, when drinking wine was almost
1:03:25
patriotic when it was good for your heart. Right? It is but at
1:03:30
the time we remember there was the French paradox we said the
1:03:33
drinking wine is actually good for you. It evens out your your
1:03:38
diet if you eat too much cheese and you know rich food well this
1:03:43
drinking wine will make you feel better. This was based on some
1:03:46
kind of statistic but scientists today say that you really have
1:03:50
to watch out. And some of them even have been saying that you
1:03:53
can even not drink wine at all. But but of course they don't all
1:03:57
agree you can't drink some wine but not too
1:03:59
much. Okay, we have a resident expert in this arena. John C.
1:04:03
Dvorak. wine connoisseur expert. What is going on with this
1:04:08
report?
1:04:09
This has been going on for a while a lot of it has to do with
1:04:12
the Muslim influence in this country itself.
1:04:15
Oh, unexpected curveball. Yeah,
1:04:20
they've had issues with the Muslim in France, to our
1:04:26
teetotaling types not to Turkish Muslims, or the Indonesian
1:04:30
Muslims who drink a lot, right? It's the middle eastern Muslims
1:04:34
and the ones that don't drink at all. And they have actually torn
1:04:38
up vineyards in some parts of France.
1:04:40
So now now they're doing ads in the in the cinema and on
1:04:44
television. The Muslims are doing these ads.
1:04:46
I don't know who's doing the ads, but there's Muslim money
1:04:49
behind it. I'm absolutely sure even though it's a poor person,
1:04:52
the assessor says
1:04:54
Muslim money,
1:04:56
Muslim money. They have a lot of money. Well, I mean, they can
1:05:00
Get the money for Saudi Arabia do these ads if they want to.
1:05:02
But the point is, is that there's that influence. And then
1:05:05
there's the other influence, which is just the teetotaling
1:05:08
influence, which is worldwide has been around it, I'd never
1:05:11
thought it was going to ever get to France, but it has been
1:05:12
getting there. And so the French are exporting more wine than
1:05:16
ever, which is fine with everybody else is happy. That's
1:05:21
correct. But they will have a will have a negative impact
1:05:25
overall in the wine business because of these, this
1:05:29
influence. And I was just saying some Muslim influence. In
1:05:34
France, which is very high, because the Muslim percentage in
1:05:37
France is one of the highest and this was the firt, one of the
1:05:40
first countries before 911. There were these these Muslim
1:05:43
maps showing what countries are going to be the majority, and
1:05:47
then they could take them over there you go to France,
1:05:50
I'd say taking wine away from the French is pretty much a
1:05:53
takeover.
1:05:55
Well, they're doing a pretty good job of auditioning the
1:05:58
French to drink less.
1:06:01
But this tape, so I didn't expect this the heart attack
1:06:04
angles where I was going, like, Oh, you got a heart attack
1:06:07
because of the wine, which, you know, isn't supposed to expand
1:06:10
the arteries, or expand the arteries. And
1:06:14
there's no way that's just nonsense. I mean, it doesn't
1:06:16
make any sense. And it's, they've been trying to pull that
1:06:19
stunt here too. But it doesn't go
1:06:20
over very well now, because we're all drunk.
1:06:24
That's why you can drink too much. There's no doubt about
1:06:27
that. If you look at the numbers before Prohibition, the amount
1:06:31
of alcohol that the Jefferson's the Washington's the Sam Adams,
1:06:35
the Adams, the John Quincy, John Adams, all these people, the
1:06:39
amount of alcohol that the colonists drank compared to
1:06:43
today. It's ridiculous.
1:06:45
How about that? But the bridge with the gin carts on the
1:06:48
street,
1:06:50
same thing, amount of drinking that used to go on compared to
1:06:55
today, where Yeah, you'd have a couple glasses of wine or maybe,
1:06:58
heaven forbid three glasses of wine with dinner.
1:07:03
That's a bit much is not the limit for me. Little for you
1:07:07
one, the I don't get laid. There's some people that used to
1:07:13
drink and live in the 30s and 40s. They would drink a couple
1:07:17
of glasses, a couple of high balls with dinner, but
1:07:21
then it was just for historical context. And then we had the
1:07:24
prohibition. And then that why did the prohibition end? Because
1:07:29
we were drunker than ever.
1:07:31
Now it's because it was well. It was it was creating a criminal
1:07:38
underclass that was getting too powerful for the country like
1:07:41
the Kennedys. Yeah.
1:07:45
Like the Kennedys. Papa Joe who ran the booze. Yeah, he did.
1:07:52
Just back to the Big Pharma for a moment. As we have, you know,
1:07:59
one issue of, of chemicals now being solved by a second one.
1:08:03
We've been tracking this for a long time
1:08:05
and FDA panel is now recommending Narcan be sold over
1:08:08
the counter. The experts unanimously agree that the nasal
1:08:12
spray is safe for use without a prescription. The drunk is
1:08:15
credited with saving 1000s of lives during the opioid crisis.
1:08:19
The FDA will make the final decision in the coming weeks.
1:08:22
Okay, so we have an opioid crisis. I know do give everybody
1:08:26
Narcan treat show everyone how to use it. Right. This is a
1:08:32
weird country. I love it. But man. Yeah, that is pretty
1:08:37
peculiar. I got a note from a not amused psychologist. And I
1:08:44
relayed the story that psychologists are on deck to be
1:08:47
able to prescribe medication. Yeah. And are not amused
1:08:54
psychologist says I wanted to correct John's assumption about
1:08:57
psychologist to be referred to as a psychologist, you have to
1:09:02
have a PhD or Psy D, which requires just as many years of
1:09:06
school and more mental health training than your average pill
1:09:09
pusher MD. Someone with a master's would be a licensed
1:09:13
therapist. prescribing is already available in a number of
1:09:16
states requiring additional pharmacology training, but is
1:09:19
not nationwide. Thanks for continuing to treat
1:09:22
psychologists as second class providers to MDS.
1:09:28
Okay, well that's out. I'll take that. Except for one thing
1:09:33
criticism, which is decrypted. That's what it was. Yes, I will
1:09:37
take except for one thing. Most of this like colleges. I know in
1:09:41
the Bay Area all mass ma sir. Net. I don't know any better
1:09:45
PhDs. And I stand corrected based on this note, but I'm just
1:09:52
going by my own personal experience
1:09:54
and we're happy to stand corrected it's not a problem.
1:09:56
I can stand or sit Correct. I'm sitting right now. So I'm
1:09:59
sitting Correct. You're sitting corrected.
1:10:02
There. Let me see there's,
1:10:04
do we have any more gripes so maybe we do get a few every so
1:10:07
often?
1:10:08
Well, I have not so much a gripe as an update from Project
1:10:12
Veritas. As you know, our night. Sir Daniel Strack is Executive
1:10:17
Director of Project Veritas that both nonprofits the 501, C
1:10:23
three, the 501, c four, and he wrote a note, and this is on the
1:10:27
heels
1:10:28
edition, just a new note, because if you read the last
1:10:30
note, this,
1:10:31
this is a follow up. This is the public note, which, of course,
1:10:35
no one's reporting on. And I will, I will summarize it. A few
1:10:44
weeks ago, a number of our staff members provided leadership with
1:10:47
some verbal feedback describing real management concerns
1:10:50
regarding the treatment of people and our internal
1:10:52
processes. This prompted the board to solicit feedback from
1:10:56
additional staff members, and that internal letter was leaked.
1:11:00
Their narrative that this is being portrayed by referencing
1:11:03
this letter is patently false. James has not been removed from
1:11:06
Project Veritas. We already knew that because he told us
1:11:08
personally, nowhere in that letter, was there ever a
1:11:11
suggestion to remove James from the organization. Also, there
1:11:15
were more than 16 employees that provided feedback, this letter
1:11:18
was not the only feedback collected. James is the hardest
1:11:21
working person I've ever met, he met us. Those who know those who
1:11:26
know him well know that he will not take time off unless forced
1:11:30
to. And then he goes on to say that the Project Veritas board
1:11:33
of directors is made up of seasons and active members and
1:11:36
they and they are multi year donors. So the board of
1:11:38
directors, our donors, they all love James, they were handpicked
1:11:42
by James. He says I'm not on the board of directors as Executive
1:11:46
Director, I'm an officer of the organization, my role is to
1:11:49
manage our team helped create better processes and procedures
1:11:51
to help address the concerns of our team, our board and James
1:11:55
O'Keefe. So what he's saying is possibly James O'Keefe, probably
1:12:01
and other people. Were treating people like shit, which is, by
1:12:06
the way, in the media business, not uncommon.
1:12:10
Very common.
1:12:11
It's not It's very common, it's common. And I would I would, you
1:12:15
know, I'm just gonna take O'Keefe side here for a moment
1:12:19
that this is a high stress environment. And that he's
1:12:22
saying do this, do that and that there's somehow a bunch of
1:12:26
noodle boys noodle boys got like, boys, but you know, I
1:12:30
don't want to work and want to do overtime. That's what I'm
1:12:33
thinking happened here. And then he takes a swipe at us, which I
1:12:37
which I appreciate. While I do understand the timing of this
1:12:41
situation, you understand he says while I do understand, so
1:12:45
that's messaging Hey, no agenda. This is about you. messaging us.
1:12:49
While I do understand the timing of this situation, alongside the
1:12:53
biggest story on our organization's history is
1:12:55
confusing and very easy to come up with conspiracy theories. I
1:13:00
assure you carry into vorak We are still in no way and never
1:13:04
will be brought to you by Pfizer, nor do we have any
1:13:07
political preferences for any candidates running for office.
1:13:11
No man,
1:13:13
Valeria said he was they were brought to you by Pfizer? No,
1:13:16
but I, I clear suggested that they were being pressured by
1:13:20
Pfizer
1:13:21
that it's It's okay. I love I love him. It's fine. I'm okay
1:13:26
with this.
1:13:27
I'm okay. And by the way, to suggest that someone's being
1:13:31
pressured by Pfizer is not a stretch. I don't care who it is.
1:13:35
Pfizer has got their tentacles in everything in everything.
1:13:40
They're pushing there. Just to save themselves for one thing.
1:13:43
Yeah. They've got to do it. So they're doing it was right. I
1:13:47
mean, Martha Stewart doing an ad for Pfizer. I mean, come on. I
1:13:52
think there's your giveaway. Is
1:13:53
it just me or seem like all the Superbowl ads that had
1:13:58
celebrated they were just they just did.
1:14:02
Anyway, let's bring that point back, not interest back to the
1:14:05
Super Bowl. What was with these ads and celebrities? And I have
1:14:10
watched the symbolize for top notch day one. Thompson. Peaks.
1:14:15
They peaked in the late yes, they peaked in the late 90s
1:14:19
during the.com era and that's when they got this reputation
1:14:22
for being Oh, this was a Superbowl ad. We got people
1:14:25
spending all this money. Those ads are about 500,000 bucks.
1:14:28
These ads are 707 million 7,000,001st for 30 seconds. And
1:14:34
there's always a lot of beer as because the beer companies can
1:14:37
dig and figure rationalizing there's some but then these
1:14:41
other companies and I can't remember the ads i All I
1:14:44
remember is that were shocked full of celebrities. Like
1:14:49
playing word three in
1:14:50
one spot three or four in one spot. Yeah,
1:14:53
yeah, three or four or five in one ad and they're all loaded
1:14:57
up. distracting from the message the best such as I didn't see
1:15:01
any creativity than any of these ads. And I felt I can't remember
1:15:08
the Budweiser ad. And I only thing I remember I mentioned
1:15:11
this on the on the DHA unplugged show is that Tony Romo was on
1:15:16
one of the Budweiser ads. I don't even know I lied, or
1:15:20
Michelob I can't even remember which. And he's always been the
1:15:24
traditional spokesperson for Corona. He sold out.
1:15:29
Wait, wasn't there an ad where he was? He was showing the two
1:15:33
different beers. And then he said, No, this is an ad for
1:15:35
Corona. That was that was the payoff may end which clearly
1:15:39
failed? Massively.
1:15:41
No, there was a couple of ads. There was a couple of these ads.
1:15:43
I didn't notice this Bradley. Remember that weird. I can't
1:15:46
remember the specifics. But I remember a couple of ads where
1:15:49
they promoted something else. And they promoted and promoted.
1:15:52
And then a third product came in,
1:15:55
which was it's like, it's like, it's just like, Have you run out
1:15:58
of ideas? No. Oh,
1:15:59
by the way, I took Bryce's dumb class. But in college in
1:16:03
college, I did take a course in advertising. And you did? Yeah,
1:16:08
I did. And a digital long story about how these crazy courses
1:16:15
benefited me over the long haul. But one of the violations, it's
1:16:19
very well noted is you don't promote the other you don't even
1:16:23
mention the other products I had it was blue because it puts a
1:16:26
frame of gets gets in your brain. And you get confused that
1:16:29
the answer is
1:16:31
stupid because it's wrong. It's wrong. Wrong. Everyone knows
1:16:35
that it was blue moon. Thank you troll room like I even. Yes, you
1:16:38
even were just with suggestion of Corona. I thought it was
1:16:41
Corona. So it failed. And then Bradley Cooper, and who was he
1:16:45
playing it? Like, like, Oh, we're flooding our lines. Dumb.
1:16:49
Oh, it is mom
1:16:51
with his mom. Yeah.
1:16:53
For team I remember that when we're small mobile mobile.
1:16:56
Right. And it was like it was a you it was dumb. Yes. It was
1:17:02
just dumb. I mean, every ad was dumb. These ads were stupid. And
1:17:06
they just spent all their money on celebrities. Yeah, instead of
1:17:10
writers. Hello. Yeah.
1:17:13
All right. Switching gears for a moment. Seymour Hersh is
1:17:16
everywhere. Now. He's on podcasts. He's he's doing
1:17:20
interviews on rumble. He'll be on Bridey on soon. I might as
1:17:24
well get this one out of the way.
1:17:26
Morning. AMY GOODMAN clip inbound
1:17:30
interview on Democracy Now. Now, just for a refresher, Seymour
1:17:35
Hersh, Pulitzer Prize winner until he said the Russian
1:17:38
collusion is, you know, it was a witch hunt against Trump then of
1:17:42
course he was he had
1:17:44
never liked Trump, he still doesn't know.
1:17:47
So he now every single I've watched or listened to every one
1:17:51
of these interviews, he's he's spanning the globe, because of
1:17:54
course, this is crazy. It's a blog by a discredited old dude,
1:17:59
you know, hasn't done anything since the Vietnam War. He's on
1:18:02
drugs, whatever it is, it's impossible that the US blew this
1:18:06
up, and blew up the pipelines of the Russian pipelines into
1:18:10
Germany. And so he's there's nothing he says nothing. The
1:18:15
only thing he repeats is? Well, I was just deconstructing the
1:18:19
obvious but a little, just a little 43 seconds from his
1:18:23
interview with Amy, on democracy. Now, the Warren peace
1:18:26
report caught my attention
1:18:28
at this time, we've got a president, a Democratic
1:18:31
president, that has done some good stuff domestically,
1:18:34
domestically, but I can tell you, I'm not understanding their
1:18:37
total commitment to Ukraine. And I'm not understanding what I'm
1:18:40
read, because obviously, I have access to a lot of people who
1:18:43
see things. I've been doing this, Amy and I've been doing
1:18:47
this with writing but COVID activities for my whole three
1:18:52
quarter years. Anyway, the bottom line is
1:18:54
don't let's not do stick. See more. I've been doing this for
1:18:58
300 years.
1:19:00
Joke
1:19:01
COVID activities for my whole three quarter years. Anyway, the
1:19:06
bottom line is the stories I've been getting about the war,
1:19:10
particularly beginning in fall, and that's what gets
1:19:12
interesting. I've been pretty dire. The Russians. I don't
1:19:16
think I think the end is just a question of time right now. It's
1:19:19
a question of how many more people it's Alinsky wants to
1:19:21
kill of his own people. It's going to be over
1:19:24
so there see more her saying it's going to be over. The
1:19:27
Russians are clearly strong. The Ukrainians are losing I get
1:19:31
rapport they're now they're training children 1516 seven
1:19:35
year olds boys and girls. And there's video of them fighting
1:19:41
children children what now now it's it's gone too far. And here
1:19:47
Yes.
1:19:48
Well before you get too away from the her stuff. I have some
1:19:51
Hirsch clip I
1:19:52
want to do this. No, I'm Ukraine. You can come back to
1:19:55
Hersh and this is all right. This is all about Ukraine but it
1:19:59
leaves into queen, Ursula and Queen Ursula released. The so
1:20:07
this is still all about Ukraine which Hirsch's as well. She
1:20:11
released the 10th 10th package of sanctions against Russia 10.
1:20:19
So because the other nine works so well, here's the 10th. And
1:20:24
she went through all her points, I edited it all out, except for
1:20:28
the one that of course, I wanted to shove in everybody's face,
1:20:31
we now have in place the toughest sanctions ever
1:20:35
introduced by the European Union. And we have to ensure
1:20:39
that they are strictly applied. Therefore, our tents package
1:20:44
introduces new measures to prevent circumvention. And this
1:20:49
is my fourth point, we will track oligarchs trying to hide
1:20:54
or to sell their assets to escape sanctions. And together
1:20:57
with member states, we will set up an overview of all frozen
1:21:02
assets of the Russian Central Bank held in the European Union,
1:21:06
we need to know where these are located, and how much they are
1:21:09
worth. This is crucial, in view of the possible use of public
1:21:14
Russian assets to fund reconstruction in Ukraine.
1:21:18
Exactly what I said was going to happen. They're going to take
1:21:22
the Russian at $600 billion that they froze out of Swift and
1:21:27
they're going to use that to pay JP Morgan and because JP Morgan
1:21:32
is managing the the JP Morgan Chase as the economic adviser
1:21:37
now for post war rebuilding. This is crazy. These people have
1:21:44
officially insane
1:21:47
well, they can't get away with it. Oh, they're getting away
1:21:49
with it. Of course they're getting away with it. I mean, or
1:21:53
or I saw a no, I'll hand it back to you for Sy Hersh, I saw it
1:21:59
was a it was a telegram video. I hate telegram I hate I hate I
1:22:03
think with a T. It was a US military service person saying
1:22:11
he believed that the whole thing was leaked to Seymour Hersh
1:22:16
because it is the intent of the US government to have Putin
1:22:20
respond. And wow, that yeah, that I was like, Whoa, I hadn't
1:22:27
thought of that one. But I wouldn't put it past him. Vicki
1:22:31
Newland, these people are crazy. So what do you have on Hersh?
1:22:35
Well, I got a couple of things. But I want to play with Dallas.
1:22:38
You brought that up I want to play pipeline debate was Hasani,
1:22:42
I'm sure you're aware of the new report from Seymour Hersh, how
1:22:45
America took off the Nord Stream pipeline and the White House's
1:22:47
denial of any involvement given the long standing opposition to
1:22:51
the pipeline secretaries Lincoln.
1:22:55
I'm sorry. This husaini Asking Ned Price about the pipeline?
1:23:00
Story and watching Ned Price. Jake Sullivan, maybe? No, I
1:23:04
think it was Ned Price. It
1:23:05
says Jake's it says Asani Sullivan. Yeah, I
1:23:09
think is Ned Price down who was net price again. Net Price is
1:23:13
the spokesperson for the State Department. I think I think
1:23:16
that's all offense. Well, I think this is Ned Price on it.
1:23:20
I'm sure you're aware of the new report from Seymour Hersh, how
1:23:22
America took out the Nord Stream pipeline and the White House's
1:23:25
denial
1:23:25
way. Stop, stop. Ned Bryce, Jake Sullivan, what difference does
1:23:30
it make? We agree. Like the same guy, same guy.
1:23:36
I'm sure you're aware of the new report from Seymour Hersh, how
1:23:38
America took off the Nord Stream pipeline and the White House's
1:23:41
denial of any involvement given the long standing opposition to
1:23:45
the pipeline, Secretary Lincoln's calling its demise a
1:23:48
tremendous opportunity. And Secretary Sanders,
1:23:52
didn't we didn't we play this on the last show?
1:23:55
Now this is no this is no. Okay. All right. See, my report just
1:23:59
came out. We just brought it up on the last show. Now. The
1:24:02
fallout is new.
1:24:04
I guarantee you we had this clip.
1:24:07
That was possible. But here it goes.
1:24:09
There's no one's saying that the US officials were pleased with
1:24:13
the destruction of the pipeline, especially the secret of
1:24:17
investigation. Do you think the US government's denial of
1:24:22
involvement is credible? I absolutely do and I repeated
1:24:26
here. Let me follow up on that if I might, have you or anybody
1:24:31
else in the State Department, any communication with German
1:24:34
Norwegian ambassadors or other allies or officials on this
1:24:37
matter, on the matter of Nord Stream to on the matter of the
1:24:43
latest allegations, which give the apparently it is not I mean,
1:24:48
it is it is barely it is it would be would not be in it
1:24:55
would it would not be typical for us to engage allies and
1:24:58
partners on something that is out are in complete nonsense and
1:25:01
it should be rejected out of hand by anyone who is looking at
1:25:05
it through through an objective lens. Yes, go ahead. One more
1:25:09
aspect on this one of the allegations that he makes is
1:25:12
that it was taken off the CIA in order to prevent involvement of
1:25:18
oversight as a covert operation. Did you read the piece? I'm
1:25:23
familiar with it. One of his allegations is that it was taken
1:25:27
off this route rather than let this this propaganda get aired
1:25:31
in the briefing room. Let me just say it is a fundamental
1:25:35
misunderstanding of oversight in our US Congress beyond getting
1:25:38
his facts entirely wrong as he has before and very high profile
1:25:43
ways. It is a fundamental misunderstanding suggests that
1:25:46
our intelligence community is not subject to oversight. Anyone
1:25:50
who writes that anything who writes anything like that? No,
1:25:52
no. No, no roads vote for it. It was taken off of a CIA and put
1:25:58
under military in order to prove our military is also subject to
1:26:02
rigorous oversight. The answer is yes.
1:26:07
So he's going on and on defensively? And the joke is
1:26:13
that didn't CIA is not subject to any real oversight anymore at
1:26:17
all, at all, and the military isn't either. There's not
1:26:21
telling Trump about the balloons for example, let's
1:26:25
let's get an audit of the Pentagon. Yeah, and the reason
1:26:31
why I know we played that is because I recognize the audio
1:26:34
quality, but there was more, you played more preamble. So people
1:26:40
get a bonus. It's better that way.
1:26:43
I'm glad you point this out. Well, I just stopped now. So
1:26:47
let's go with her. She's
1:26:49
gonna play clips and pretend they're new. Yeah, maybe you
1:26:52
should. What do
1:26:53
you have? What's the name of that? Do you hit? Did you have
1:26:55
that clip?
1:26:56
I had that clip. Exactly. The clip is Solomon briefing.
1:27:00
Solomon. Not net price.
1:27:03
I'm sure you're aware of the new for my Claymore.
1:27:06
Okay, okay. Oh, you win. You win. Geez. It's the clip. It was
1:27:10
necessary because I got hurt now. Okay. So here's this Hirsch
1:27:14
one. Don't fight me responses. Okay.
1:27:18
Where's this from?
1:27:20
This from democracy. Now?
1:27:21
The reason I went into that sort of Soliloquy about what's going
1:27:25
to happen, possibly in NATO, and Europe about Biden's act of
1:27:30
saying to the Western Europe and Germany, we rally reroute, we'd
1:27:34
rather keep our war going, I think and you can stay cold, is
1:27:38
I think it could cause some countries to say, you we may be
1:27:41
out of here, you know, what, what do we need NATO for and
1:27:45
American support when in a crisis, there take away our
1:27:49
ability to keep our people warm. It also could lead I think the
1:27:53
Green Party has done very well. In Germany, it's the
1:27:56
Chancellor's from the Green Party, I think it's going to
1:27:58
lead to widespread conservative movement politically. The one
1:28:02
thing we did after World War Two with that was fantastic, was we
1:28:06
really rebuilt Europe into a modern democratic plurality
1:28:10
society put off society. I think it could lead to not it won't go
1:28:15
as far as it did in Italy, we could lead to some conservative
1:28:17
victories and subsequent legislations, because Europe's
1:28:21
always had no natural resources, they've always had to rely on
1:28:24
others, and the others included us, and also Russia gas. And if
1:28:30
we want to stop that off, we do it at a political costs. And I
1:28:34
think the point I'm making is I'm still gonna do more
1:28:36
reporting on this. Because I, there's still things I need to
1:28:41
write about later. I think this has probably been in the view of
1:28:46
some of the people who did it. One of the dumbest things
1:28:49
American government has done years, and we've had four years
1:28:53
of Trump in the long run, I just don't understand why more
1:28:57
newspapers, good newspapers, like the times are just still I
1:29:00
still, I still read the New York Times I don't believe everything
1:29:03
they say about Ukraine, but it's still a wonderful report is
1:29:06
there. My attitude towards editors is if we get rid of 90%
1:29:10
of the editors in the world, we'd be much better off but
1:29:12
that's always been since I was a kid reporter I thought that so
1:29:16
you know, I don't care what they say. I mean, if I did, I would I
1:29:20
would weep because some of the stuff is so dumb.
1:29:25
So he's bringing out all everything he did first show he
1:29:28
did was actually mark Ames, his blog, or blog, podcast, and Mark
1:29:34
games used to write for us to write for the panco daily and
1:29:40
nearly forgot about them. He used to be the partner with my
1:29:44
Matt Taibbi and Russia. Rise and Mark games and Tybee gotten to a
1:29:51
beef over something and they don't even mention each other
1:29:53
anymore. It's very strange. And I thought Ames were going to do
1:29:58
a good job at Ames was just such a He was like, like a sucker. A
1:30:02
starstruck. Yeah. And so he could so I couldn't even get a
1:30:07
clip off of that thing. Meanwhile, at least Amy and and
1:30:11
his her sidekick, asked a few questions. But when they started
1:30:15
getting harsh, and they questioned some of his stuff, he
1:30:20
said, he made it clear that it was this was a an operation. It
1:30:27
wasn't something you because the Norwegians, for example, said
1:30:30
well, that's shipped I'd never left port. And he's and he and
1:30:35
there's a couple of essays written to somebody sent one on
1:30:38
no agenda social saying, Hey, look at this. And it had the
1:30:41
rundown it was I don't know who this guy was. But he is another
1:30:44
substack writer and he had the rundown of why hearse thing was
1:30:47
wrong. This was wrong. And that was wrong. And this was wrong.
1:30:51
Ignoring the fact that this was all had to be covered up. So it
1:30:55
would appear to be wrong. Of course. Plausible Deniability is
1:30:59
part of it. And so So Juan Gonzalez asked him some nasty
1:31:04
question about the ship not being important. And Hearst goes
1:31:08
off the rails with, with a Nicaragua story, which I don't
1:31:15
know what the point was, it was like, I think the point was,
1:31:18
look, look, look at it. I'm been doing this long enough where I
1:31:25
know a lot of stuff that doesn't get printed, and I have good
1:31:29
sources. And I double check. He made it clear with Mark games
1:31:32
that he has two or three sources for everything. Even though that
1:31:36
may or may not be true. So this but this Nikkor, White Rock was
1:31:39
story, I just thought was the most fascinating kind of off
1:31:44
topic, little story. That was just like, I don't know what the
1:31:49
point of it was, was it something he's always wanted to
1:31:51
get off his chest? Because he called the CIA a bunch of douche
1:31:55
bags? I'm not sure. But let's play this.
1:31:57
You know, let me tell you something about Nicaragua, you
1:31:59
don't know, one of the things that happened in Nicaragua, the
1:32:03
CIA guys operating there would thrill and get excited on their
1:32:07
speeches there. And you know, even even in the worst of times,
1:32:10
and then suddenly, that started the symbol when they would go in
1:32:14
their little motor boats off the beaches, and shoot flash jets
1:32:18
into the beaches and have a contest to see, you know, I
1:32:22
shouldn't say the latter. They would just shoot floats. And no,
1:32:24
there were casualties, they would just do that. And have a
1:32:26
lot of fun talking about it and bragging about it. I mean,
1:32:29
that's the kind of stuff you get to do when you have a covert
1:32:31
operation.
1:32:33
Oh, I totally understand what he's saying. CIA are a bunch of
1:32:37
dicks. That's what he's saying. And it's, you know, that's an
1:32:42
interesting thing for him to put out there. They might get mad,
1:32:46
they might get mad about that. Yeah, I can't see any other
1:32:50
they went out there with some shotguns or whatever, feel a
1:32:54
little party just shooting it people on the beach and killing
1:32:58
them. I totally believe that. It's a reminder of this of the
1:33:02
scene and Schindler's List, where they when they creepy guys
1:33:06
up there in the tower, and he just picks off a few prisoners
1:33:10
for just randomly just as a joke. Very, very cold blooded
1:33:15
kind of thing. So
1:33:16
he that was the whole Iran Contra, right? Yeah, yeah,
1:33:20
exactly. But they were so gung ho and so happy to see that's
1:33:24
why when Congress said no, we're not funding that anymore. That's
1:33:27
when they went well, but we're having too much fun shooting
1:33:30
shit and people on the beach. What are we gonna do? I know,
1:33:33
let's get some drugs. We'll take the drugs back called Bill
1:33:37
Clinton will take it back through Mena, Arkansas, and then
1:33:40
we'll take it to Los Angeles and we'll we'll chop it up, we'll
1:33:43
turn it into this new thing called crack, which is really
1:33:45
cheap, and will kill Black people. It's gonna be a bonanza.
1:33:50
And that's what Gary would. That's why Gary Webb wound up
1:33:52
shooting himself in the head two times with a gun in his left
1:33:55
hand. We've been through this a couple times. I mean, the story,
1:34:00
the story. Now, it's sad. It's sad. And just so what Sy Hersh
1:34:05
display
1:34:05
where he was all worked up, because the question that was
1:34:08
asked was about the boat. And Hearst got up here at the
1:34:12
beginning, he was not happy with his question. He was mad, and he
1:34:15
gave him the story. To find it. You kind of got it. It's most I
1:34:21
think it was just like a crazy story. But it was as if, hey,
1:34:25
look, this is what goes on. You don't know what's going on is
1:34:28
what he's trying to say to the guy to Juan Gonzalez, you know,
1:34:33
always likes to welcome to worldwide audience. Yes.
1:34:36
Congressi. Now, the worldwide audience, because we're on the
1:34:40
internet, you know, I think you're right, I think and I
1:34:42
think that Hirsch is mad that the story is being you know,
1:34:46
he's being written off as a as a as an idiot as a kook who was a
1:34:50
Trump lover, which was why he slipped that in, but we're dumb
1:34:54
though. We had four years of Trump. How dumb was that? So
1:34:56
He's slipping that in to get all of his druthers out And I think
1:35:01
he's really mad. He sees it. He knows that CIA is running our
1:35:05
country have been maybe not during Trump that was probably
1:35:08
dia Defense Intelligence Agency, which is why the Defense
1:35:11
Department has been neutered, neutered, and it's obvious who's
1:35:16
running who ran Obama. It's obvious who's I mean, no one's
1:35:18
wrong. Joe is barely walking. He's barely stumbling. It's just
1:35:22
it's all it's all an app. And I 100% I said it, five by five
1:35:28
believe that it's CIA. CIA, CIA. Ah. Alright, so back to the
1:35:37
situation. That Richard Engel we all know what he's about from
1:35:41
NBC. He has a little report here about the Ukrainian situation.
1:35:45
Ukrainian tanks on the front lines are running out of
1:35:49
ammunition. Now, Commander say stocks are so low, they now only
1:35:54
shoot when they can see their enemy. Will you I love
1:35:59
the cruise missile effect. And the AK is in the background.
1:36:03
So they were just taking stop there. So they can own their
1:36:07
only shooting now when they see their enemy shooting at before?
1:36:13
No, just willy nilly.
1:36:16
I know what it sounds like. Yeah, just need bullets.
1:36:20
Yeah,
1:36:20
in tanks on the front lines are running out of ammunition.
1:36:24
Commander say stocks are so low. They now only shoot when they
1:36:28
can see their enemy. will use as little ammunition as we can. But
1:36:33
still it's disappearing. It says a battalion commander codenamed
1:36:37
the st. Can you stop this Russian offensive?
1:36:40
The saint was like,
1:36:42
wait a minute stop again. Why does he even throw that into the
1:36:46
report? Who cares what his code name is?
1:36:49
Yet? It's like the ghost remember, the ghost turned out
1:36:52
to be phony?
1:36:54
The jazzy ghost one.
1:36:56
So that's why this is Richard angle.
1:36:59
code named the st. That may be just some message that's got to
1:37:03
go be heard by someone non MBC.
1:37:05
Named the st.
1:37:07
Can you stop this Russian offensive? No nothing. Just one
1:37:11
week. Now we can only hold them off, he says, but nobody knows
1:37:14
how long we can keep doing it. Their equipment is just too old.
1:37:19
Oh, Russia still produces ammunition for its Soviet era
1:37:23
tanks and has huge reserves. But here in Ukraine, tractor
1:37:27
mechanics are keeping the old machines running.
1:37:30
Wait a minute, what did we send? Why did we send over there that
1:37:33
they need tractor mechanics
1:37:35
and scavenging from destroyed Russian tanks until help
1:37:38
arrives. And it's not just tank rounds. NATO is now warning
1:37:43
Ukraine is using so much ammunition of all types. And
1:37:47
Western allies cannot provide it fast enough with new orders
1:37:51
taking up to two years to deliver.
1:37:54
I think this is a setup. The setup is it's got to end because
1:37:58
Vladimir, Volodymyr will be the hero by saying okay, I've got to
1:38:03
stop. There's too many of our children are being killed on the
1:38:06
battlefield
1:38:07
there that he sent. Yes. We roll on his and there's a little
1:38:12
another gotcha in there. How long is this war been going on
1:38:18
one year? How does it take two years to deliver any orders of
1:38:24
ammunition?
1:38:25
Because we have to go wrestle it from the IRS. Wait, wait.
1:38:30
If they ordered it a year ago, they wouldn't get it for another
1:38:34
year. So they don't have any animal ammunition from the way
1:38:37
this logic goes. If it takes two years to get the ammunition and
1:38:42
they've been fighting for a year, Where's all this other
1:38:43
ammunition come from?
1:38:45
From literally from our forts and bases around our country and
1:38:50
around the world?
1:38:51
What's this two year delay? What are they talking about? That new
1:38:55
ammunition. They only have old ammunition. This is bull crap.
1:38:59
I think it signals the end, the end has to come out we're going
1:39:03
to use the Russian money to rebuild you know, JP Morgan
1:39:06
Chase is already in place. And this whole thing turns out to be
1:39:12
really about I think ultimately control of the EU. Kicking
1:39:16
kicking Germany to the side. I mean, just go back and review.
1:39:20
The Nord Stream pipeline is owned 51% by Gazprom Dutch
1:39:25
company, own part of it. There's no three other companies in
1:39:30
countries that own this pipeline because the Germans were living
1:39:34
it up they had a beautiful system. We get cheap gas. We are
1:39:39
the powerhouse of Europe. It's their money that cheap energy,
1:39:43
cheap energy. They were the powerhouse of industry. You
1:39:47
know, they would turn around and sell Mercedes Benz and BMW used
1:39:51
back to back to Russia. They've very good relationship. They
1:39:55
were able to sell excess energy, gas, whatever to To the rest of
1:40:00
Europe because they couldn't even use it all. It was Helmut
1:40:04
Kohl, the former chancellor, who was on the board of Gazprom, who
1:40:08
was saying, you got to shut down that nuclear. I mean, that's
1:40:10
bad, you know, nuclear, it's got to be Gas, gas, gas, gas, gas,
1:40:14
gas gas. And then of course, we came in with a no gas is no
1:40:19
good. We can't have gas stoves, we can't use gas, we gotta go to
1:40:22
hydro gene. Hydrogen is where it's at hydrogen, even though
1:40:27
that was never in play, never in play, and was always windmills,
1:40:32
and, and solar. And now it's hydrogen, we follow the whole
1:40:36
thing, go back and listen to the past three months of shows. Now
1:40:40
all of a sudden, hydrogen is the way to go. And we have different
1:40:43
kinds of hydrogen, we have clean hydrogen, which will have in
1:40:47
about 10 years. And in 10 years, we still don't have it. Because
1:40:52
to make hydrogen, you need a lot of energy. So it's cold, it's
1:40:55
gas, it's not going to come from windmills. It's not going to
1:40:58
come from solar. So the only thing left was nuclear. And now
1:41:02
here we are back with the same old problem in Europe. That has
1:41:06
been the problem with the world wars one and two. Here's the
1:41:10
report
1:41:11
how green is hydrogen? That's the question the European
1:41:14
Commission needs to resolve as a resumed talks on renewable
1:41:17
energy targets today. The issue is whether or not hydrogen
1:41:21
derived from nuclear power can be designated as renewable.
1:41:25
France heavily reliant on atomic energy has been lobbying hard in
1:41:29
favor of that, but Germany and Spain oppose it. The French
1:41:33
government is especially angry about this because it says it
1:41:36
approved plans for a hydrogen pipeline between Spain and
1:41:39
France on the basis that its hydrogen would get the renewable
1:41:43
label. It's important because classifications of this kind can
1:41:47
affect the eligibility for state aid.
1:41:52
French are getting screwed by the Germans once again. This is
1:41:59
what it comes down to every single time. And now it's now
1:42:04
France. No, no, no.
1:42:05
Well, maybe the whole idea is to is to do this Ukraine thing, get
1:42:10
Russia back where they belong. And to keep German Germans from
1:42:16
taking over the EU, which they were on their way to if you
1:42:19
remember 5678 years ago on your show. We used to call it the
1:42:23
Fourth Reich referring to the European Union because the
1:42:26
Germans are dominating you know, yeah. And
1:42:31
and now they got you know, the the friendly, queen, Ursula, who
1:42:35
is off there Deutsch. And she's she's turncoat. She She is a
1:42:41
saboteur of the German economy. And the funny thing is, the
1:42:45
Germans themselves have been mind controlled into believing
1:42:47
gas, bad nuclear bad.
1:42:51
will shut down nuclear power plants is an example of it's
1:42:55
dumb.
1:42:56
Yeah, they all were told, is bad. We can't have it. There's
1:43:00
no good. I mean, this is this is much this goes much further,
1:43:05
this is this is not even about Russia. This is about control of
1:43:09
Europe. I think the United States wanted a large motor come
1:43:12
of control, see, Ted Cruz setting all that he's intimately
1:43:16
involved trying to get the liquid petroleum gas business
1:43:19
from the US. We can't ignore Turkey, which had a lot of
1:43:26
pipelines was positioned to become the new conduit for oil
1:43:29
and gas into Europe. Now what 41,000 people dead in this
1:43:34
earthquake? I mean, this big moves going on here. And what
1:43:39
are we doing? Look at that balloon?
1:43:44
Maybe that's what we're supposed to be doing. I think
1:43:46
we're doing a good job. And with that, I'd like to thank you for
1:43:49
your courage and remind everybody there's a lot more
1:43:52
show after this donation segment. Only one once again
1:43:55
today and thank you the man who put the C's in COVID cardiac
1:43:58
arrest. Please say hello to my friend on the other end ladies
1:44:01
and gentlemen, Mr. John C.
1:44:05
Mr Adam Coronavirus, gypsy but scruffy near sobs no all James
1:44:08
dies out there in the morning
1:44:09
to the trolls and the troll room who have there's a couple of
1:44:12
horrible trolls in there. And I don't know I tried to kick him
1:44:15
out. My kick command doesn't work anymore. I had someone
1:44:18
removed my power. I can't kick people out the troll room
1:44:21
anymore. I just have so much fun doing it. My oh my God, my God
1:44:25
Mode is has been revoked. I blame Darren it makes no sense.
1:44:29
The free troll chimp that's the guy like kick that guy out
1:44:32
whoever that guy is get rid of him.
1:44:34
What's what's what's he doing this wrong?
1:44:36
Oh, you know, and words fu you know that kind of stuff. It's
1:44:41
just annoying. It's annoying. It's a troll room which is fine.
1:44:45
And I liked the trolling. The trolling is good the troll There
1:44:48
we go. And he got kicked. Thank you. There you go. all taken
1:44:52
care of. Yeah, it was just it's unnecessary. We don't need that
1:44:57
it's not helpful. You control whatever you want, but just No
1:45:00
one needs that. I have the power. Let's see how many trolls
1:45:05
we have.
1:45:05
I don't have the power I can put shorted out on this deal.
1:45:09
If you're you want to be you want God power in the chat room,
1:45:12
I can give that to you.
1:45:13
I don't even look at the chat room. So it's my point.
1:45:17
How many we have we have 2003 in the troll room today. Is that
1:45:26
how's that on that for Thursday? Is that okay? So
1:45:29
2002 on Thursday 2003. To 2000 was actually quite good.
1:45:36
Until I kick that guy out and all his friends are gonna leave.
1:45:41
Who knows? Who knows? Who knows? You okay? Yeah. I don't want to
1:45:47
do Yes, I'm okay. Okay, I have an emergency surgery scheduled
1:45:50
for tomorrow. Unfortunately. Tomorrow Yeah. For my Something
1:45:57
has to change in my my bone growth on my lower sage.
1:46:01
Disgusting, you know,
1:46:02
that's why I said that's what I said. So I'm slipping. I'm all
1:46:05
over the place. That I know you got. I can't hear it. I hear it.
1:46:09
That bothers me enough. So all right.
1:46:13
Well, good luck on that. Yeah.
1:46:14
Thank you. You can join us. You're grumpy. I'm not grumpy.
1:46:19
I'm not grumpy at all. You're the one that's grumpy. What?
1:46:26
See, you're the one that's grumpy. Oh, well.
1:46:33
You can check out the art.
1:46:35
No, let's first remind everybody that you can also besides that
1:46:39
being in the troll room can follow us on no agenda
1:46:42
social.com I went around no agenda social.com Last night, I
1:46:47
was just looking at the at the all at the full feed. It's okay
1:46:52
to post memes and everything. But if you're posting
1:46:55
screenshots without a link, you know, my band button is itching.
1:47:00
So I'm warning people if you're going to post I we spend a lot
1:47:05
of time and knowledge in the socials is where we get your
1:47:07
producers. This is not your playground. We're producers,
1:47:10
your producers. So when you're posting stories, this is very
1:47:14
helpful. If it doesn't have a link if it's just a screenshot
1:47:17
because you're lazy. It's not helpful.
1:47:20
So please, the screenshot alone is funny.
1:47:23
It never is.
1:47:25
I mean, I've done it. I spoke post screenshots. Yeah,
1:47:28
but of memes and stuff, but okay. Then I'm gonna kick you
1:47:32
out. I'm gonna ban you. Okay, is that what you want to hear? I've
1:47:38
already banned you from the chat room.
1:47:41
You can follow that in the chat room
1:47:43
and see, because you're banned. You can follow Adam and no
1:47:46
agenda social.com or Jhansi DeVore. I can no agenda
1:47:48
social.com. And we want to thank everyone who posts something of
1:47:54
use there. And then when you're sending emails to us, if if I
1:47:58
thank you for sending something, it doesn't mean that you can
1:48:00
have a conversation doesn't mean that you can Hey, let me let me
1:48:03
talk to you about to my birthday. No, no, no. It's very
1:48:07
busy these days, the Rogan effect is on it's a lot of
1:48:10
email, a lot of postings. So it was keep it tight. Everybody is
1:48:15
exactly exactly what, hey, is exactly what we say to the
1:48:21
artists who always come up with at least one winning piece for
1:48:26
us to choose from. And they post that live during the show to no
1:48:30
agenda art generator.com. And we thank networks who brought us
1:48:35
the award winning art. This was the giant heart now there was of
1:48:39
course the Valentine's show. So we were looking for something
1:48:44
that would be sweet that would be relevant that would be about
1:48:46
you know Valentine's Day we do like that we did a little
1:48:49
traditionalist that way and so networks came up with a giant
1:48:54
balloon heart and kind of The Simpsons cloud spelling out no
1:48:58
agenda. I thought it was quite nice. It was sweet. You know,
1:49:01
there was other things to choose from but we both liked that And
1:49:06
was there anything else that we had taken into consideration?
1:49:10
Yeah, actually there was some a lot of arguments about this art
1:49:14
and the other art and what we want to do one balloon that we
1:49:18
want Superbowl that was Super Bowl stuff, but we wanted some
1:49:21
to do with Valentine's Day so it had to have that. I liked the
1:49:26
best price by tantan EO with the balloon satellite plane things
1:49:31
but then again, you mentioned it was too small.
1:49:35
Although I didn't think it was let me just see which one that
1:49:37
was to get us on there.
1:49:39
It was it was it. It wasn't artsy.
1:49:42
Let me say oh, it was it was yes. It was between that one and
1:49:47
the end the network's heart. It was this had was funny but it
1:49:53
Yeah, it was just kind of plain.
1:49:59
Then we had I noticed that Roger around he did is any given
1:50:03
Sunday did a Super Bowl thing which has a lot of humor in it.
1:50:06
Yeah, but we we didn't talk that much about the Super Bowl. We
1:50:08
talk more about it today. Yeah. And it was probably over. I
1:50:15
think it was over produced it actually looked like a logo for
1:50:18
him and NBC show I look too professional to say often do
1:50:23
you get that it was too good.
1:50:26
Good question. Oh, we can't have a soda but But Paul couture did
1:50:29
a very similar piece and it was it was up higher was jets versus
1:50:33
UFOs distraction bowl. And that was a slick piece to his very
1:50:38
slick. Yeah. And again, you know, it was we wanted to haul
1:50:42
it. We wanted some Valentine's sentimental stuff of some sort
1:50:47
that wasn't going to cut it.
1:50:49
No. What else did we look I kind of like the what do we have?
1:50:56
There's a lot of stuff a couple of art pieces with Zippy
1:51:00
including a couple robots, plus a zippy robot. I think that was
1:51:05
that was it. He's one of only parents I don't think Zippy is
1:51:08
probably laying down with Freddy the firewall now I don't think
1:51:13
these are particularly characters that should stay
1:51:15
around forever.
1:51:16
Yeah, you don't really you're not really the true
1:51:19
ventriloquist mentality.
1:51:22
Go figure.
1:51:26
I'm not huh. Okay. Surprising. Thought it would be able to pull
1:51:30
it off.
1:51:31
When I use you. Almost. No, I was about it. So I think the
1:51:37
piece reach and I didn't think that piece we chose was could
1:51:41
have been. It was Well, the thing that sold me on it if it
1:51:44
was one dimensional. I wouldn't have one. I can tell you that
1:51:47
right now. But he put enough dimensionality in it by shading
1:51:51
the balloon with some highlights that it
1:51:56
was be honest. It popped. It popped.
1:51:58
I popped as balloons do
1:52:01
and that ultimately is what we're always looking for. We're
1:52:03
looking for some pop. You know, the vibrator dildo? No, very
1:52:09
funny not gonna happen jabs through, it's not gonna happen
1:52:13
that Google barf? No, it was just it. I mean, people tried,
1:52:20
they tried very hard. And we appreciate that. But we're also
1:52:24
going to be very honest with with our review of the art, this
1:52:27
is the one thing this is the one benefit the artists get if they
1:52:29
don't win, at least they get a fair review. That I think is
1:52:34
important to them.
1:52:35
Yeah. I don't know how fair the review is that the art was too
1:52:39
slick, too good to
1:52:43
stop doing that. Thank you very much artists. And of course, we
1:52:49
know Dred Scott does the chapters. If you got a modern
1:52:52
podcast, app, new podcast apps.com. We a lot of these
1:52:56
pieces are put right in there, that function as markers for the
1:52:59
chapters. And you can see people are driving in their cars, and
1:53:02
they're getting distracted by seeing the art change while
1:53:04
they're listening to the show. Which I think is a feature. I
1:53:08
got one complaint about it's like I'm getting distracted.
1:53:11
Now. That's the whole point. Or you could just listen to the
1:53:14
show live and refresh. No agenda art generator.com. You'll see
1:53:17
them popping up as we speak. And that already we have some that I
1:53:20
know you put it on a computer screen. We're not going to use
1:53:23
some of these I can tell you that already. Although l Biden
1:53:28
has kind of got my kind of got my eye. Thank you again,
1:53:32
networks. Good job who did
1:53:35
comic strip blog course he's using?
1:53:38
Ai Of course, he's using AI, which I want to talk about after
1:53:43
after the donation segment because my voice has already
1:53:45
been stolen and is being monetized by AI. Lovers be
1:53:49
monetize you can sue. That's what I wanted some advice about.
1:53:53
Yeah, no doubt about that. And okay, I'm looking forward to the
1:53:56
to the lawsuit. It's always fun. Lawyers never win in that
1:53:59
situation.
1:54:03
So those poor lawyers, you should feel sorry for him. They
1:54:05
never make any I know,
1:54:07
value for value is how we roll. If you look at the current state
1:54:10
of affairs in advertising, it is bad out there. I would say when
1:54:16
you see Google having to spend $13 billion a quarter just to
1:54:20
get people to come to a search on their engine so that they can
1:54:23
serve you up some ads, and that they're so desperate. And we'll
1:54:26
talk about that as well that they go into chat GPT mode, and
1:54:31
they're on the losing end of it just because well we got to do
1:54:34
something to get the numbers up. They're in trouble and we would
1:54:37
have been in deep trouble as well. If we'd ever made it past
1:54:40
15 months really long. 15 years. If we were doing ads, the show
1:54:44
never have worked.
1:54:45
We would know what it worked to show what it worked, but that
1:54:48
money would never come in.
1:54:50
No, we would have been deep platformed it would have been a
1:54:52
nightmare. So we've always relied on our producers and
1:54:56
that's you if you're listening right now you are producing you
1:54:58
produce value for value you in many ways, what we certainly
1:55:02
need and has been low for the past six weeks ever since the
1:55:06
start of the year which I'm sure is related to the start of the
1:55:09
year but also to the overall general malaise in, in the
1:55:14
economy is is support us with finances and we love to thank
1:55:21
these people if they are above 200 or $300 respectively with an
1:55:25
exec Associate Executive or executive producer title, these
1:55:29
are real titles the Forever titles it can't go away and you
1:55:32
can use them anywhere will vouch for you if anyone questions it
1:55:36
go check on IMDb look for no agenda show and you'll see how
1:55:39
many people are executive producers and and some bigwigs
1:55:42
in there as well. And we kick it off with let's see Michael E
1:55:49
Reeves from Daphne, Alabama. And with oh this has the the Double
1:55:57
D $800.85. A big bed boobs very big boobs within it boobs rural.
1:56:05
Isn't that a double D donations that we're going to call it the
1:56:07
Double D donation? Boobs bleeps booing color
1:56:11
Double D if you want to know I'm gonna call up
1:56:13
some gentleman. I apologize for the amount of time which has
1:56:17
passed since I donated I hope the enclosed boobs donation will
1:56:21
show my appreciation for what you guys have continued to do. I
1:56:25
sold a piece of property and I want to contribute some of the
1:56:27
proceeds before the Feds printing press press renders it
1:56:30
worthless. In addition, I'm seeking some boobs karma I'd
1:56:33
like to find a nice pair that will stick around for a while
1:56:36
perhaps your numerology numerological magic can help
1:56:39
well, you you evoked the Boo Boo genie and he says shout out to
1:56:43
local 251 International Brotherhood of mouth hitters.
1:56:46
I'd also like to thank you for the interest for inspiring me in
1:56:48
my friend years ago to start the Liberty mic podcast, the 17th
1:56:53
best podcast in the universe up from 19 According to sources
1:56:57
familiar with the thinking, finally, by my accounting this
1:57:00
donation should elevate me to knighthood. Henceforth, I wish
1:57:03
to be known as surplus ws the expendable and I request bananas
1:57:08
and blow for the round table that is a new one bananas and
1:57:11
blow and wean and wean does not get enough attention. When what
1:57:18
is ween capital W when? What is when
1:57:23
I ve got me I don't know.
1:57:26
Wayne does not get enough attention JCD can pick his
1:57:29
favorite jingle for the donation segment in my stead as an
1:57:32
executive producer for this episode. I expect you to make it
1:57:35
one of your best Geez Okay, I
1:57:36
think it should be the classic there's no winning we haven't
1:57:39
played that for a year
1:57:40
no winning so that's Think of the children isn't it?
1:57:47
No Think of the children is think of the children there's no
1:57:52
winning there's we don't share a secret
1:57:56
oh that's what it is. Yes share secrets is a confusing share a I
1:58:02
can't type today either share a secret as all the isn't Let hold
1:58:08
no that's not it either.
1:58:10
Ah
1:58:13
John, I can't find his
1:58:15
wound and know what happened that's probably where you
1:58:17
haven't played it.
1:58:18
But it's but it's not titled share secret.
1:58:22
And it's not there's no winning there's no knife competitive
1:58:25
there's no winning
1:58:26
I have no witness we need to show that we need to find this
1:58:30
this jingle God is so is it there's no winning that hold it
1:58:34
hold hands me hold hands bowled hands hands
1:58:39
no competition look at the kind of competition this
1:58:42
is horrible. No, it's not uncommon. What? How can this be?
1:58:48
I'm sure it was secret secret something solid secret I'm going
1:58:52
all the way down. Now why don't you read the next one? I'm gonna
1:58:55
give him a Karma first I'm going to keep looking I will find this
1:59:00
interesting the off you've got karma winning
1:59:04
all right, well, while we're waiting Yeah real game salties
1:59:08
up on the on the podium here Jeff Manchester New Hampshire
1:59:11
contributing 500 bucks and she is now a bear in net tests.
1:59:17
Happy Valentine's day if possible play we don't talk
1:59:20
about Brandon. We don't talk about Brandon here's a clip that
1:59:26
it's it's the size end of show mix. We don't talk about brand
1:59:31
and brand and remember that Oh, I
1:59:33
never I don't even recall it. Yeah, I need a good ear worm
1:59:37
love karma for all and thank you for your courage Dame salty.
1:59:43
You've got karma.
1:59:46
Is it share secret? Maybe I'm sorry. Hold that it's gotta be
1:59:52
titled something out. This. This whole hands. It's gone. It's
1:59:58
just gone. This is very very distressing to me.
2:00:05
Well then I would recommend this playing this as we got the brand
2:00:08
and thing coming up anyway.
2:00:10
Find that either I can't find about let's go Brandon.
2:00:13
i That's my pick for our friend, Michael.
2:00:17
Okay, was this No, that's not it this is not a good day.
2:00:27
How about see the juice? We can get that? I'm sure I got
2:00:31
the brand. Wish I got something there all right. Well, you're
2:00:40
not I'm gonna do I'm gonna do the next one. Good. And we're on
2:00:43
to Michael de Fuquay Varina North Carolina. $400. Thank you,
2:00:47
Michael. This donation is a split between myself and my
2:00:50
keeper. Oh 200 for her 200 For me, well, this presents a
2:00:53
problem. So so well, do we make them both Associate Executive
2:00:58
producers?
2:00:59
What's your name?
2:01:02
Well, I'm just saying that's just what he's done here.
2:01:06
Blue you can just say, Michael Dan wife. Okay, so all right and
2:01:10
keep her and keep her made. That'd be married.
2:01:13
Okay, so Michael day. All right. She already has over $1,000 in
2:01:17
donations. And this one sends me over the top as well. Oh, it
2:01:20
looks like they're going to be deemed and 90 together. My wife
2:01:23
refused to get vaccinated for work last year, and I was proud
2:01:26
of her at the time. She kept her job but it was stressful for a
2:01:29
while. Today it was even more proud of her. She She was
2:01:32
refused an examination at the doctor's office because she
2:01:36
refused to wear a mask. She was upset but did not waver. She
2:01:39
stated her case was told to put on a mask or leave. She was not
2:01:43
belligerent and left the doctor's office politely and
2:01:45
quietly. Most people may think that wearing a mask is a simple
2:01:48
task. Why fight it but we have to push back at some point or
2:01:51
they will never stop out. If we do what we're told, we will
2:01:56
always be told what to do. Good. Whoo. Good one. She may want to
2:02:01
change your name but I would like for her to be known as Dame
2:02:04
Kelly. The resolute and I would like to there it is sir. Mike
2:02:07
Kelly the resolute and Sir Mike the fortunate. So they're both
2:02:10
on the podium today. You too have been helpful to both of us.
2:02:13
Sincerely, Michael day. Thank you very much, Michael. We'll
2:02:16
take care of that for you. And we'll we'll put you both in the
2:02:19
in that executive producer spot.
2:02:22
How do you get an examination at a doctor's office with a mask
2:02:25
on? What do you mean by that? He can't put the thing check your
2:02:31
time. They can't put the tongue depressor they can look down
2:02:35
your throat. Oh, you found it?
2:02:38
Yeah, no, actually, that Bong you heard was let's see what it
2:02:41
was titled. Hug. Hug. Everyone hug and shares. No, I don't.
2:02:48
Yeah, here it is. Oh, there's
2:02:50
no winning. We don't like to foster a competitive atmosphere
2:02:54
but we laugh a lot. Now everyone hug and share a secret.
2:02:58
I'm renaming this now. Thank you. Darren. I'm renaming this
2:03:00
now so that we will always have it handy and we're winning or
2:03:05
share a secret How about no winning share a secret I'll put
2:03:10
them both in
2:03:11
there you go you'll find it for sure. All right, so vana Gentile
2:03:15
Gentile in Orlando hills. Illinois is up next 33677 game
2:03:22
hood donation day has arrived please day me as dame of the
2:03:26
absurd ITM, y'all and thank you for your courage. All
2:03:31
right. Carsten Schwartz from Denmark. lunga lunga lunga. I
2:03:37
don't know what that little circle about the A is longer,
2:03:39
longer longer than Mark 333 dot 33. Our favorite executive
2:03:44
producer donation most excellent apod fathers, since you failed
2:03:47
to mention my 333 dot 33 donation to your coffers last
2:03:51
show. I humbly demand satisfaction. Now what is this
2:03:56
about that we miss one that did I know of? Well, it looks like
2:04:01
the back office has determined it's a valid complaint. And Sir
2:04:04
Schwartz is requesting a title change henceforth to be known as
2:04:08
Sir Schwartz Black Knight of the woke bashing culprits. The
2:04:13
possibly oh gee slots and single malt at the roundtable and the
2:04:18
continuation of your distinguished work. May you
2:04:20
never find an exit strategy. Okay, well, you've been
2:04:23
approved.
2:04:24
You've been approved, but I would have read that number two
2:04:27
is to possibly org because Oh geez. To me, it should be o.g.or
2:04:34
O G all caps.
2:04:38
Would you like to read it over and make your corrections?
2:04:41
No, I didn't have to read it over because I didn't read it in
2:04:43
the first place. I'm just pointing out that I could have
2:04:46
botched it. Unlike with John Dietrich who is in wrapping your
2:04:51
falls New York who also came in with 33333 and he says Jack, my
2:04:59
smokin hot one. wife Katie and amazing kids miles and Cecilia.
2:05:03
Cece and my sister Mary, who doesn't need a D douching. But I
2:05:09
do
2:05:09
okay you've been D deuced.
2:05:14
And my bro Danny needs a his D bag call out row Nammo producer
2:05:24
thanks you for your services do I could maybe boy I probably
2:05:29
blew that up your service jobs karma for new rebar company
2:05:34
no new rebar company
2:05:36
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs
2:05:49
Benjamin Unitas Leno been San Francisco California our first
2:05:53
Associate Executive Producer to 150 $5.55 and he is required
2:06:00
today is not a good day for jingles honestly. So, I'm just
2:06:07
going to give
2:06:08
you the whole load here to give you the whole load today and
2:06:12
what do you want he wanted chemtrails. I can give you some
2:06:14
chemtrails for some reason I can't get all those and he also
2:06:20
wanted the climate gates and that will do it for him to the
2:06:28
gate to the gate
2:06:35
still with us the Climategate.
2:06:38
Well, I want to make Rita's note then, for Adams mentioned of
2:06:42
Nikola Tesla's discovery earthquake frequency 2.5 hertz
2:06:48
as he had caused a localized earthquake in midtown Manhattan,
2:06:53
according to 1945 Life magazine
2:06:57
okay, I didn't see that for some reason that didn't show up in my
2:06:59
spreadsheet. Yeah, okay. Well, yesterday he had a little
2:07:05
vibration device and he put it he put it didn't you put it
2:07:08
against like the bridge,
2:07:10
a bridge, but it caused people's blockage was bad news. So his
2:07:15
his donation was two five 5.55 which may be the frequency Oh
2:07:20
yes, I 2.5 was tuning I was when I was at the University of
2:07:24
California I was at one of the classes I take was dramatic arts
2:07:28
and I was working with a guy in the sound system in Wheeler
2:07:32
auditorium and we were tuning the auditorium and we had hit
2:07:38
the frequency of the place and it was shaking the entire
2:07:43
building with these two Altech Lansing voices in the theaters
2:07:47
now we usually start with just
2:07:48
sending a tone yeah
2:07:51
Wow. We're sending a tone and I don't know how we got to
2:07:55
whatever this frequency was but we're changing the tone or we
2:07:58
hit this one frequency and the whole building started to shake
2:08:00
and I suppose if we just turn the gain up a little bit and let
2:08:04
it go we could have brought down the place
2:08:06
that's a great No I've never heard this story. Yeah,
2:08:10
I know is like shocked the two of us we turn this thing off
2:08:13
immediately because there's like stuff falling on us
2:08:16
too. So but that's in the 2.5 it's really low as a low free
2:08:20
Yeah, no,
2:08:20
this was not I can guarantee this was not 2.5 it was
2:08:24
something around 2530 hertz I'm wrong. Well
2:08:29
this is the concept of an opera singer who produces the exact
2:08:34
same frequency of the glass the glass shatters which is real I
2:08:37
mean
2:08:37
that's how it can happen if you have somebody who can do that
2:08:40
yeah
2:08:42
as usual
2:08:43
don't experiment with this at home kids it's not a good idea
2:08:46
you do not get damaged
2:08:48
yes do not get a tone generator and the big speakers is not the
2:08:52
human body
2:08:53
has a it has a frequency to I mean they've had there are
2:08:56
weapons that that develop these low notes I think they're like
2:09:01
12 cycles in that vicinity and it starts to rip apart your
2:09:05
guts.
2:09:07
This is being used in some cases to nuke cancer cells and in the
2:09:11
helicopter world. We have something known as the ground
2:09:17
resonance
2:09:18
bright this is a yeah and Chopper boil up right down the
2:09:21
spot
2:09:22
just integrates you can you can look at look at this on YouTube
2:09:25
ground resonance helicopter and you'll see it's a condition you
2:09:29
could get into and if you have one skid off the ground and
2:09:33
you're alien. Yeah, it's just it's a there's a way to
2:09:36
recognize this condition. If you don't know how the helicopter
2:09:39
disintegrates within seconds. It's crazy. We need to have more
2:09:46
fun with that.
2:09:47
There's a lot of things you can do with sound
2:09:51
fun with sound destroy your body. Oh yeah,
2:09:55
direct and new onwards with the donations with Sir Tooth Fairy
2:09:58
and share via Oh, Indiana 23456 Great number Keep up the great
2:10:04
work thank
2:10:05
you very much Mark Valentine Grantham in Great Britain. A row
2:10:09
of ducks two two 2.2 to Hawaii the labs no genius nakoma Hawaii
2:10:14
what does that mean? Hawaii the lads. Idea no jingles no karma.
2:10:18
All right thank you very much. None None muon untaken
2:10:21
Nick cast in lincoln rhode island. another row of ducks.
2:10:26
Nice. tu tu tu tu tu great shows recently and thank you for your
2:10:32
effort over the pandemic keeping us sane and the rest of the
2:10:34
knowledge as well as with the rest of the no agenda nation we
2:10:37
wanted to let you know that the best podcast in the universe
2:10:39
helped my co founder and I to reconnect and maintain sanity
2:10:43
these past years. In that time we worked to start our third
2:10:47
printed mouse company dink yes I have a decent meow Do I have a
2:10:52
drink as well? I like it I'll have it since we
2:10:57
both well let's let's read the note and then we'll discuss the
2:11:00
link
2:11:01
since we are grateful to the no agenda nation we want to return
2:11:03
the value for everyone that you're offering producers
2:11:05
listeners including douchebags $20 Off with no agenda all one
2:11:10
word check out www danke.gg Whatever that is if if you could
2:11:19
give your honest review of the mouse which is which we're going
2:11:21
to do we're about to send it into appreciated I don't want to
2:11:25
put words in your mouth so whatever you have to say
2:11:27
donation to be credited Nick casts on behalf of dink age
2:11:31
knows gay as PS LMK if the keeper wants a mouse oh let me
2:11:36
know if the keeper once a mouse shot it Thanks Nick. All right.
2:11:41
So I got the dank I don't use I use will fascinate you to track
2:11:46
trackpad or not trackpad but our truck baller. No, I use attract
2:11:51
point I use the little IBM read the little little nub.
2:11:56
Yeah, the CM as we call it the business
2:11:58
because then your is right on the keyboard you don't have to
2:12:02
she's you don't take your hands off the keyboard is just a way
2:12:04
to go this route for me. Now I do like mice in some situations,
2:12:09
I use one here on this show. And the dank. Which is wired is a
2:12:17
kind of a funny thing. It's like a ball and the buttons are in
2:12:20
front. But I like it it has got a good movement. It feels good,
2:12:24
it feels terrific is probably comfort, it's more comfortable
2:12:27
in using a regular mouse, I'd say. So I would recommend it to
2:12:32
people want to try something different. And it's got a scroll
2:12:36
wheel on the side which is very convenient. Now that that said
2:12:41
to activate the mouse buttons, I think I think that should be
2:12:46
swept up a bit.
2:12:49
When he goes up when he moves swept up.
2:12:51
In other words, it shouldn't be moved forward up a little bit
2:12:54
because it's so easy to grab the mouse in his and you have to
2:12:57
push kind of backwards toward the palm of your fingers to
2:13:02
come out the click buttons in the front
2:13:03
you mean that click button should be moved out a little bit
2:13:07
not a lot. That's my only complaint
2:13:11
I to receive the dink.gg It's interesting because they said
2:13:15
well we're not sending one to John because we know what he
2:13:18
thinks about the mouse so they lied. Nice.
2:13:24
I'm surprised they lied and I've never said anything bad about
2:13:27
the mouse I just said that I don't know that
2:13:30
there's no evidence people were still evidence. There's no
2:13:33
people no evidence people want to use this mouse either, but I
2:13:36
to receive the GG here's what I like about it. I love the scroll
2:13:40
wheel on the side a completely with you on that it's a very
2:13:44
different type of grip on the mouse. So I I tried it initially
2:13:51
in my in my show setup. And I was still in learning mode. I do
2:13:56
like the resolution it moves fast you can it's all height
2:14:00
it's very high tech stuff, it works great, but I would be too
2:14:05
much learning for me to use it during the show I do however I
2:14:08
do however have it hooked up to my big screen where I have some
2:14:13
charts and stuff and it's really great for that. The particularly
2:14:16
with that with that scroll wheel on the side I've gotten quite
2:14:18
accustomed to the two buttons in the front I like it. I like
2:14:23
above all I I really liked the attention to detail of of a
2:14:29
custom small batch bespoke device including the USB cable,
2:14:35
which is a they do they make the USB cables themselves too. And
2:14:40
the sleeve is you know it's a it's not like a plastic sleeve
2:14:44
the cable. It's some kind of fabric and it's this very nice,
2:14:50
just to me a functional art piece. That's what I thought
2:14:54
about it. I really liked it. Well I won't use it on the show,
2:14:56
but I do use it in daily life occasionally. And then people
2:15:01
should check it out. I liked it. I liked it. It's different. I
2:15:05
always like something that's different functional art.
2:15:06
I liked the name I think it fits you called the GG I called the
2:15:10
dink because it looks just like he was there. What do you got?
2:15:13
You got a mouse? No, it's a dink.
2:15:16
Alright drinkers. Vanessa Atanasio is important to Oregon.
2:15:21
She comes in with 216 dot 23 and says please de douche me.
2:15:27
You've been de deuced
2:15:29
I would love to be put on the birthday list for Thursday to 16
2:15:32
that is today. Jingle fear is freedom travel karma would be
2:15:36
greatly appreciated as well. Love is lit. So I'm I'm I'm
2:15:41
presuming that this is because her age is 23 Probably you
2:15:45
think? Is that? The reason? I think so. That'd be something
2:15:51
like that. We got it for you. subjugation and liberation Those
2:16:00
are the facts of this world
2:16:09
you've got karma.
2:16:12
What did we determine? This voice sounded just like her.
2:16:22
I don't remember.
2:16:24
I don't remember either. But I remember us doing it. You did
2:16:26
side by side. It was the same voice. So we go to Rachel Lopez
2:16:34
in San Burdett, Bernardino, California. Hello, John and
2:16:40
Adam. Doing donating as a Happy Valentine's Day gift to my
2:16:45
darling husband, Daniel urgh Dart. We just had our first
2:16:51
human resource three weeks ago and he's already an amazing dad.
2:16:54
Really? The kid is already
2:17:00
Yeah, kids are great that way
2:17:01
to what she says.
2:17:02
And they're great.
2:17:04
I love you X Oxo X Rachel. Please de douche doe she also
2:17:12
has a down like this. Please be douche Reverend Jackson, which I
2:17:15
don't think that's what she was. She wants to de douching
2:17:17
Oh, let me do doo doo
2:17:20
you've been deed in place if she wants to Reverend Jackson. I
2:17:25
don't know what that is. And Manning
2:17:28
he means read remaining.
2:17:30
Probably JBS whole load and you know,
2:17:33
there's no you know, you know, just we have to just do it.
2:17:38
Do it, do it.
2:17:40
I'll do the more you know, how about that. That's all hell is
2:17:44
gonna break loose and you're gonna need a Bitcoin.
2:17:47
I'm gonna give you the whole load today.
2:17:49
As the more you know, in the morning.
2:17:52
I think that's what she wants.
2:17:53
That's what she gets. It's useful. Thank you, Rachel. And
2:17:57
the last Associate Executive Producer goes to Rick Norman
2:18:00
from brick New Jersey. 200. In the morning, gentlemen, I grew
2:18:04
up listening to you on MTV. Hope you were watching. And remember
2:18:07
the day sir Daniels track Oh, listen to this. And I remember
2:18:11
the day my business partner, sir Daniel Strack and good friend at
2:18:14
Garden State distillery told me about your show. He is the
2:18:17
Executive Director of Project Veritas. I have held meetings
2:18:21
here at the distillery and have just shipped some bottles of our
2:18:24
whiskey to Baron west of the balderdash boys. I donated 233
2:18:29
dot 33 Today well, why does it say 200 and join the monthly
2:18:34
subscription of 33 Oh, okay, so we did 200 and monthly
2:18:38
subscription of 3333 Got it. I was wondering if I could be
2:18:42
deduced today of course.
2:18:45
You've been de Deus, maybe some karma
2:18:47
from my good friend Dan Strack as we know him as a Baron
2:18:51
austrack As I think he could use it. Have a great day. Thank you
2:18:54
for your courage. Rick Norman, of course, we're actually going
2:18:56
to give him a little bit of art to due to karma for good
2:18:59
measure. You've got karma, and we have Knights and Dames and
2:19:05
birthdays. I'm going to get him set up. Well, John takes us
2:19:07
through to the 50s
2:19:09
and I will mention you know, wouldn't hurt to send a bottle
2:19:12
of whiskey just saying to the two of us
2:19:18
wouldn't hurt wouldn't hurt wouldn't hurt at all.
2:19:21
Especially some of the good age stuff. Lucas Williams is on the
2:19:25
list and we're gonna just go go through these are other
2:19:27
donations that are above the $50 mark. We just read these without
2:19:32
to notes. Lucas Williams in Roswell, New Mexico of all
2:19:35
places. $100 Steve Peterson in Kingaroy. Australia, and that's
2:19:41
$100 but he needs a de douching you've been de deuced and he
2:19:47
needs douchebag call out for Robbie. Right. Andy Baker and
2:19:54
sadly own Texas. Got a birthday at 215 By the way, Steve Pierce
2:19:59
was $100 is at 215 for Andy Sir Kevin McLaughlin is right there
2:20:05
again. And I believe this is on 133 No,
2:20:09
I thought it was like a hydrogen 139 140 wasn't a
2:20:13
I don't have the list in front of me. I'll I'll, I'll swing
2:20:17
around and get back to it, but He's on a roll. He's the
2:20:21
Archduke Aluna love of America and obviously lover of boosts.
2:20:26
Joshua Buford in Midlothian, Virginia also 8080 and there's
2:20:33
Robert Umbarger, in Langhorne, Pennsylvania, also 808. He says,
2:20:41
can everyone send some boobs we need to donation segments. There
2:20:46
you go. That's an interesting rationale right. Devon,
2:20:50
O'Connell Boylston Boylston, Massachusetts was 606 and other
2:20:55
small boobs donation small boobs boobs are in Yeah, boobs are
2:20:59
happy Franklin monta Rosen Dodge City, Kansas. $57 Christopher
2:21:04
dektor 5678 Mark emson In Plainville, Connecticut 5663
2:21:10
Paul Webb in Twickenham, UK for the 555 Jennifer Hansen and
2:21:15
Braintree, Massachusetts. This is just a switcheroo for her
2:21:18
dad, Don Hansen, in honor of his birthday,
2:21:22
and she wants to do douching so we should give
2:21:26
Ben de deuced 5150 5110 I'm sorry. Michael Shambo in Topeka,
2:21:36
Kansas. 5110 Richard full Futter in London, UK 5110 Troy
2:21:42
funderburk in Spokane, Washington 55 In Kojak in
2:21:48
Williamsburg, Pennsylvania. 5033 Alexander Beatty in Tomball,
2:21:54
Texas 5001. And the last group here is all $50 donors. And I
2:21:59
would just read their names and locations. Starting with Sir
2:22:03
Brandon. Let's go Brandon Savoie in Port orchard, Washington,
2:22:09
James Edmondson in South Plainfield, New Jersey,
2:22:12
Christian Freeman in San Marcos, Texas. Kevin deal, Sir Kevin in
2:22:16
Huntersville, North Carolina, Josh Adair post office Buxa.
2:22:21
Military somewhere. Steven crummy El Cajon, California,
2:22:29
Baron of Belmont in Belmont, North Carolina and the Catawba
2:22:32
River Basin by the way, Kelly MacDill in Mission Hills,
2:22:36
Kansas, Chris Lewinsky Sir Chris and Sherwood Park, Alberta,
2:22:40
Canada. Easy landscapes in North Stonington Connecticut easy
2:22:45
landscapes. Phillip Balu in Louisville, Kentucky, Dame
2:22:50
Patricia Worthington in Miami, Florida real deals now in San
2:22:54
Antonio.
2:22:56
San Antonio, calm now because the real deals are now
2:23:01
Sarah Krueger in Fort Wayne, Indiana. And she'd like to go to
2:23:06
a meet up somebody set her up. And big papa productions in
2:23:11
Minneapolis Minnesota nuts and that concludes our list of
2:23:15
producers so executive producers everything in between. For show
2:23:20
what is this 1530 1530 1530
2:23:24
Thank you all so much. Of course thanks again to our executive
2:23:27
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I'll give you a double up why now you've got karma thank you
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again for supporting the best podcast in the universe episode
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1530 Our formula is this. We go out. We hit people in the mouth
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we love celebrating his birthday and Andy Baker had his birthday
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yesterday Vanessa Atanasio celebration today Jennifer
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Hanson wishes her dad Don Hansen a happy birthday he'll be
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celebrating the 20th and Douglas angstrom wishes his son Finley
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angstrom. A happy birthday he turns 10 on February 22 Happy
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birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe
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one and we have one title change this is Dave Schultz, who tops
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her initial. Her initial donation now becomes a bear net
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test out During the knighthood of the dame wood, I should say
2:25:02
congratulations Dame salty, thank you very much for
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supporting the no agenda show. We have two days and three
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nights. I'm going to bring them all up on the podium if we can
2:25:09
have our draw our blades, please.
2:25:13
Here's the two and three blade.
2:25:15
That's that's kind of a weird balance on that thing.
2:25:19
It does say usually, I rarely use it.
2:25:23
Yeah, don't swing that. There's minor. Kelly days Savannah
2:25:28
genteel, Michel de, Carsten Schwartz and Michael Reeves all
2:25:33
of you up on the podium here because you're all about to
2:25:35
receive your day hood or knighthood and I'm very proud to
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pronounce the KV as game Kelly the resolute dame of the absurd
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sir Mike the fortunate sir Schwartz Black Knight of the
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woke bashing culprits and surplus the Expendable for you.
2:25:50
We've got hookers and blow rent boys and Chardonnay, but we've
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got more. We've got bananas and blow sluts and single malt. It's
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a great selection today. Rubenesque women and Rosae
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geishas and sock a Viking and vanilla bog hits a bourbon
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sparkling cider escorts ginger ale and durables. And of course,
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we have the the standard fare mutton and me thank you so much
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for this, we appreciate it go to no agenda nation.com/rings If
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No one said
2:26:48
the first thing I got to do is there was a long note from
2:26:51
mailman Dan, who attended the keep up which was the keeper
2:26:56
meetup in in Chicago. And I remember very distinctly he gave
2:27:02
us an envelope or gave Tina an envelope with cash to bring back
2:27:04
for the show. And it was no jingles no karma and she had
2:27:08
asked me to any note says no don't worry about it. Well, you
2:27:11
saw the note he said which I'm going to post in its entirety
2:27:17
into the show notes. But most importantly he says he loves the
2:27:21
show and he has to douchebags to call out both Postal Service
2:27:25
slaves like mine it's Jamie only listens when sick quote
2:27:30
something big happens and management Kyle a Boston
2:27:35
transplant keeping management real both douchebags and he did
2:27:39
want to call out he said he was inspired by Armando Guerra I
2:27:45
think was gone town I can't remember he was the original
2:27:48
mail carrier in Austin who was listening to the show. And he
2:27:52
says order of wire. His official name is the cowboy mailman of
2:27:56
Geneva also known as mailman, Dan and we appreciate that
2:28:00
mailman Dan, and we'll put this whole note this whole note in
2:28:04
the show notes just for you. Now meetup wise we had a meet up on
2:28:08
a Valentine's Day meet up in Texas. Here's your report from
2:28:10
Baron Scott. Hey, this is Baron Scott
2:28:12
of The New agenda honoree. Keeper Christine,
2:28:14
Happy Valentine's day in the morning.
2:28:17
This is Malik and I'm at my first meetup and I'm ready for
2:28:20
my booster.
2:28:21
My name is Elaine another first meetup here as well. John, can
2:28:24
you please just fix your mic already? Andre, remind you that
2:28:28
birds aren't real in the morning. It's Brenda from local
2:28:31
512 Want to say hello to Carl from Who are these podcasts?
2:28:34
Chris Baker. You can listen to my podcast called The
2:28:37
Fountainhead forum. This is the funeral housewife in the
2:28:40
morning. Christine, this is my first meetup. I'm looking for
2:28:43
Fred cruise in the morning. This
2:28:46
is Rachel and
2:28:47
OC with the never ending renovation projects here in
2:28:51
South Austin. Happy Valentine's Day.
2:28:54
Happy Valentine's Day. That sounds like it was a fun music
2:28:56
good group in Austin in South Texas out of the southeast
2:28:59
Austin whatever. It's Doc's back yards where they always always
2:29:03
gathered and love that great great report. Everybody have no
2:29:06
agenda meetups, this is where you can meet the community. You
2:29:09
will not look like anyone else there because everyone looks off
2:29:12
kilter different and you identify as immediately as that
2:29:15
weird bunch over there. But remember, this is your community
2:29:18
when it all comes down to it. Connection is protection. No
2:29:21
agenda meetups.com is where you can find your group today. 630
2:29:26
mountain time then you can still make it. No agenda meetups are
2:29:29
for lovers at the Lincoln's Roadhouse in Denver, Colorado.
2:29:32
We have the thirst Charlotte's thirsty Third Thursday monthly
2:29:35
meet up seven o'clock edge Tavern in Charlotte, North
2:29:38
Carolina. Then in the Netherlands tomorrow, the first
2:29:41
Leiden amygdala checkup 730 at the stuks Brauhaus in Leiden,
2:29:47
definitely check that one out if you're in the hood. Also on
2:29:50
Friday the Chico World Tour 2023 in Cypress Cypress at the shisha
2:29:57
Lounge is Sentra seashell lounge in LA Naka Cyprus, that'll be at
2:30:02
830, Cyprus time if you have a chance and we'd love to have a
2:30:05
report from Cyprus Saturday, the shrunken amygdala support group
2:30:08
two o'clock Eastern task group Khorium in Cincinnati, Ohio.
2:30:11
Also on Saturday flight to the no agenda 3730 3:33pm Steelcraft
2:30:16
city of Long Beach Long Beach Rio Bravo hosting. And on the
2:30:19
next show day Sunday we have the senile POTUS rage against the
2:30:22
war machine. 1230 Lincoln Memorial Washington DC round
2:30:25
he's organizing that go say hi to him. Also on Sunday local
2:30:29
76th annual Fishtown friendly two o'clock at the Philadelphia
2:30:33
Brewing Company in Philly pa we had that's part of the local 76
2:30:37
route one of the Oh geez. Oh dot g dots. Central Ohio meetup. On
2:30:43
Sunday the smokehouse Brewing Company two o'clock columbus
2:30:45
ohio the northern Wake County Dark Winter of death gathering
2:30:49
fun group three o'clock Compass Rose brewing Raleigh, North
2:30:52
Carolina That's Sunday. Also Sunday over the hill on through
2:30:55
the BS. Three o'clock at infinite l works in Ocala,
2:30:58
Florida. The COA indie, an NA tribal meetup SWAT and swap
2:31:05
meet. What are they swapping their three o'clock at St.
2:31:08
Joseph drew up the swap Swap Meet St. Joseph brewery and
2:31:12
public house Indianapolis Indiana art in its indie people
2:31:16
Hi, got it. They swap all kinds of stuff. And a lot of meetups
2:31:20
next Sunday the NA Three Mile Island evac zone meetup 333
2:31:24
evergreen brewing Camp Hill pa the Mardi Gras grip and grin in
2:31:28
East Texas. The hug story meet up Oh, there you go. Five
2:31:32
o'clock at skippers pier coastal Cajun kitchen. Gladewater. Texas
2:31:37
dirty Jersey horror organizing but I'm sure that will include
2:31:40
the Fletcher, then. Sure, yeah, Fletcher and crew. And then
2:31:45
finally the irrational drinkers club six o'clock at the stodgy
2:31:49
Brewing Company in Fort Collins, Colorado. Schlitz is organizing
2:31:53
Go figure. These are just a couple of the meetups we got a
2:31:56
lot coming up in February and in March basically you can book
2:32:00
throughout the whole year find one of these go to it you will
2:32:04
enjoy it it's completely produced organized Thank you
2:32:06
just for Daniel for running no agenda meetups.com Go there find
2:32:10
one go to it if you can't find one near you start one yourself
2:32:13
and listed there with all the nice days you won't be you
2:32:29
say is like
2:32:35
well you win the ISO wars I have nothing I have nothing at all
2:32:40
zero zip nada nothing going down.
2:32:43
I had to go out of my way to get these two and by that I mean
2:32:47
just listen to some and find some pull some out
2:32:51
really just old man pulling something out Be careful
2:32:54
everybody back
2:32:55
oh man pulling stuff out I got hairy legs okay we go is ISO on
2:33:01
record
2:33:02
all of this is on record all it always good to have an AJ in
2:33:07
there all right. Do all this
2:33:09
on record also records on record that that one is the other one
2:33:14
is time to go
2:33:15
it's time to go. No, I own record on record wins by a mile.
2:33:20
Actually Go is a good ending though. It's time to go. It's
2:33:22
clear. It's low energy but clear.
2:33:27
What it's the it's the low energy. That's my blood sugar
2:33:29
only boosted a little bit. Let me say it's time to go. It's no
2:33:34
good. It's no good. I actually I had one but I think it was worse
2:33:37
than that. What is this? What do I have here? And knowing is half
2:33:39
the battle? No, no, no, no, no, no. You said Just no. I need to
2:33:46
I I've been I've been holding on to this clip for two weeks like
2:33:50
a fool but we didn't get to it. So now that we know what it is.
2:33:53
I want to play this clip that I've been holding on to for two
2:33:55
weeks. Health Officers from Africa news.
2:33:58
Health authorities in Equatorial Guinea have quarantine more than
2:34:03
200 people and imposed movement restrictions on Friday after an
2:34:08
unknown illness killed at least 10 people. The outbreak was
2:34:12
reported on Tuesday. According to preliminary investigations.
2:34:17
The deaths were linked to people who took part in a funeral
2:34:20
ceremony. symptoms of the disease include fever, weakness,
2:34:25
bleeding and diarrhea. Cells Minister meto Hondo I acaba
2:34:30
announced that the government sent samples to neighboring
2:34:33
Gabon and Senegal for further investigations. Following the
2:34:37
announcement neighboring Cameroon imposed movement
2:34:41
restrictions along the border with Equatorial Guinea. There's
2:34:45
nothing like an unknown disease killing people in Guinea and
2:34:48
here's the payoff
2:34:50
nine people have died in eastern Equatorial Guinea of the Marburg
2:34:54
virus, Emmerich fever almost as deadly as Ebola, the World
2:34:58
Health Organization Who on Monday confirmed the debt as its
2:35:02
first ever outbreak of the disease and said it was
2:35:05
facilitating the shipment of laboratory gloved hands as well
2:35:09
as one viral hemorrhagic fever kit that in Wildwoods personal
2:35:13
protective equipment. There are no vaccines antiviral treatments
2:35:17
approved to treat the virus let's rehydration treatment and
2:35:21
improve the chances of survival according to who
2:35:24
and that is, that is not true. Because the coincidence let me
2:35:29
see what the date is on this National Institute of Health
2:35:32
this came out Monday January 30. Coincidentally, Marburg vaccine
2:35:37
shows promising results in first in human study boards it
2:35:42
inhumane inhuman study, so perhaps they can take this as in
2:35:46
The Lancet, so perhaps they can take this Marburg virus vaccine
2:35:50
and take it to Guinea see if they can save some sort of
2:35:53
actual architecture, the vaccine it's not the right one. It's a
2:35:57
competing product. It is an Adreno monkey a thing. Dino
2:36:01
Dino. Yeah. Do you know Yeah,
2:36:02
that's the Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine.
2:36:05
Is that right? It reversed house. You're right. It's the
2:36:09
Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine now for Marburg virus.
2:36:13
Well, data
2:36:14
Dino vaccines, which were largely done, aside from the
2:36:18
mRNA vaccines are the ones that were the most promising for
2:36:23
quick and dirty vaccine making. Yeah, for these, these flare ups
2:36:27
of things. Yes. And it was kicked to the curb by the CIA,
2:36:31
which had an investment in Mr. Darnell Maderna. And so this
2:36:36
dino virus vaccines are now no good. I mean, are they still
2:36:40
doing their job, but
2:36:41
they probably probably weren't. Well, then they also threw the
2:36:43
monkey pox out there just to cloud the waters like who wants
2:36:47
a monkey vaccine when you got the monkey pox and there was a
2:36:49
lot, but that doesn't matter. Because Tedros is the guy to
2:36:53
watch. We know he is the chief muckety muck there at the World
2:36:56
Health Organization. Soon to be in charge of your life and mine.
2:37:01
Once Congress ratifies the the World Health Organization
2:37:06
pandemic rules or whatever I was signed on to like a bunch of
2:37:09
dicks. Now, here's what we're getting. Now.
2:37:12
Over the past few weeks, there have been several reports of
2:37:16
mammals including minx otters, foxes, and sea lions, there's my
2:37:21
Manx having been infected with h five n one avian influenza h5 N
2:37:28
one has spread widely in wild birds and poultry for 25 years.
2:37:34
But the recent spill over to mammals needs to be monitored
2:37:39
closely whoa for the moment, who assesses the risk to humans as
2:37:44
low. Since h five n one first emerged in 1996. We have only
2:37:50
seen the rare and non sustained transmission of h five n one to
2:37:55
N between humans but but we cannot assume that we remain the
2:38:00
case. And we must be paid for any change in the status quo.
2:38:06
Any change in the status quo h five n one everybody know
2:38:09
that they try to secure it. They
2:38:11
try it every single time. I know guys who have gotten it. They've
2:38:16
gotten Bubba bird, bird flu. They were just sick for a while
2:38:21
but they didn't die.
2:38:24
And maybe we had to talk at least a little bit about that.
2:38:27
Ohio disaster.
2:38:28
Yes, it is time to speak about that for sure.
2:38:33
We got a note from one of our producers saying that this is
2:38:36
largely the responsibility of the railroad using these new
2:38:40
techniques to keep all these cars on the road. And what's
2:38:44
less heater is equal
2:38:45
right? Less people.
2:38:48
Yeah, right. They want to go to a one man crew. They have a
2:38:51
three man crew on this train. But they're to computerization
2:38:54
of the cars as they load them up or putting heavy cars in the
2:38:58
back. And like cars in the front, which is a bad idea.
2:39:02
Well, is it just the computerization? Or is it the
2:39:05
end like an in between stage it seems?
2:39:09
Well, he blames it on a series of things. But But personnel
2:39:14
shortage really just the problem is personnel is part of it.
2:39:19
Term. He has a term as a term for it. Precision scheduling
2:39:23
rail, precision spread scheduling railroading, PSR.
2:39:28
Yeah, that's That's what's at the heart of this according to
2:39:31
our producer, his entire notes in the show notes.
2:39:35
So but this particular disaster, this idea of torching the whole
2:39:41
thing like crazy. So they had a hazmat guy on one of the shows
2:39:47
on Fox. And I want to play this guy talking this guy's name cat,
2:39:53
Gianni. Oh, and he was the chief of police someplace. He's also a
2:39:58
trainer and he's spent She was I thought, this is a little longer
2:40:02
than I liked for my clips. But I think there's information in
2:40:05
here that is interesting.
2:40:08
These poor individuals for through no fault of their own,
2:40:11
became victims of, you know, systemic failures within the
2:40:14
transportation rail, the rail transportation system. And it
2:40:18
manifested itself in this mushroom cloud that they they
2:40:21
had to experience in their town. One of the reasons why I made
2:40:25
the comment about you know, we nuked a town with chemicals is
2:40:28
because there was somebody from Darlington, Pennsylvania, who
2:40:31
was videoing the cloud that had went over his property. And you
2:40:36
could see Fallout coming out of the cloud going onto his
2:40:39
property. And I'm looking at it and we're saying, you know, it
2:40:42
reminds you of one of those apocalyptic shows where the
2:40:45
nuclear fallout is coming out. And I thought about this as
2:40:48
well. Yeah, we basically did nuke the whole town, just to get
2:40:51
a railroad going, you know, back in service. Earlier on, I got
2:40:56
involved in this because news media, we're not being told the
2:40:59
truth, days into this. No, you know, contrary and conscious was
2:41:04
available, they didn't know what they had. And that flies in the
2:41:07
face of logic, if you're going to mitigate a problem, if you're
2:41:10
going to have your fire department, and other you know,
2:41:14
responding teams take care of it, you should know what the
2:41:16
heck you've got. And it got to the point where they're showing
2:41:19
me pictures of train cars, the local media, and I was
2:41:22
identifying what was in based on UN ID numbers, or train card
2:41:26
numbers. And when they told me their plan, you know, at that
2:41:30
point, you had a few cars burning. They had unmonitored
2:41:33
handlines. They're keeping the tankers cool. And then I find
2:41:37
out that they're pulling the unmonitored handlines keeping
2:41:40
the tankers cool. So that's just going to cause the tanker cars
2:41:44
to heat up, which they did.
2:41:46
Oh, so this is not the same as they blew him up.
2:41:50
No, it goes on, they did blow him up. Okay. But the
2:41:55
thing was already on fire as it was coming through because of
2:41:58
the overheated bearings. Wasn't that how it
2:42:00
was one started, one of the of the carriages was overheating
2:42:06
and it caught that thing on fire. But that doesn't mean you
2:42:10
blow up everything. No. But in researching this for the
2:42:15
newsletter, because I wrote it about it a little bit about it.
2:42:18
I didn't realize that we have over 1000 derailments a year,
2:42:23
down from 6000. A year in 1975. Oh, wow. That's a huge and I'm
2:42:30
when I was got that status. I didn't know there's that many
2:42:33
derailments, I was thinking about comparing that to the, to
2:42:36
these flight safety. If we had 1000 Paper Plane wrecks a year,
2:42:41
yeah. There'd be some action taking place. But to
2:42:47
train, train, train, train track country, no one cares, I guess.
2:42:52
It's I just find it peculiar. But this is the second half
2:42:54
where the guy explains blowing him up.
2:42:57
So tell us more about the disciplinary cases that led to
2:43:00
the Chiefs roster and how it was this NPR?
2:43:04
No, I don't know what you played.
2:43:07
Well, that's Oh, I'm sorry, that completely played the wrong
2:43:09
thing. Here we go.
2:43:12
And then they announced that one was during a very near
2:43:14
catastrophic failure. And I said, Well, if they don't put
2:43:18
water back on it, it's going to continue to heat up and it's
2:43:21
going to what's called a bloody and it's going to damage other
2:43:24
containers. And then I was told no, they're going to detonate
2:43:27
all these cars so that that doesn't happen. I can tell you,
2:43:30
I've been looking at real incidents over and over because
2:43:33
in Youngstown, Ohio, there's three rail lines that run
2:43:35
through a town. So as a chief, and as the instructor, I trained
2:43:40
my guys to anticipate stuff. And I would go case study after case
2:43:44
study after case study, coming up with different scenarios just
2:43:47
to keep it going. And I've never once in 39 years ever heard of
2:43:52
them blowing up train cars, dumping all the chemicals into a
2:43:55
trench and lighting them on fire? I was I was dumbfounded.
2:43:59
And you know, when you lit this stuff on fire you were creating
2:44:02
fog James, you're creating hydrogen chlorides you created
2:44:05
this plume. And up in this plume was all the incomplete
2:44:08
combustion products of everything that was there.
2:44:12
stuff. If you look at the guy's video stuff is pretty
2:44:15
precipitating down into people's property. There's a lot of
2:44:19
questions in the answers came slow. And you know, first you
2:44:23
get well now we found vinyl chlorides in the water. Well,
2:44:27
yeah, no joke, you're gonna find that, you know, and you're each
2:44:32
it seemed like everything was drips and dribbles. Instead of
2:44:35
you know, one of the things I learned is you tell the truth,
2:44:38
you tell it all you tell it first and you tell them how
2:44:40
you're going to solve the problem. And none of that was
2:44:42
forthcoming. And I began to worry about you know what the
2:44:46
end result with this was going to be? They had evacuated one
2:44:50
mile and I was telling the media they better do like one and a
2:44:53
half two miles. Well, subsequently after that they
2:44:55
went to two miles. And then within a few minutes they were
2:44:59
During a few days, they're bringing everybody back. And
2:45:02
that was pretty much just in time to open up the rails and
2:45:06
there was no testing. There's gotta be some plan going forward
2:45:09
in this cleanup and recovery to test
2:45:13
QA. Well, that's interesting, because I have a few clips from
2:45:18
Michael Regan. Michael Regan is our what is the position? He is
2:45:27
the administrator of the EPA, Environmental Protection Agency
2:45:32
who is responsible for these types of issues. And boy, is
2:45:37
this is this guy getting thrown under the bus. He is, he seems
2:45:41
very, very unprepared for this. Totally on par for you'd think
2:45:46
the Biden administration. However, he was at the EPA.
2:45:52
During Clinton and Bush, he's, he's at 46. So he was very young
2:45:57
when he got in, but the last few years before he came into the
2:46:02
George Washington University, by the way, Master of Public
2:46:05
Administration, I don't know if he knows anything about
2:46:07
environment. But he knows how to administrate stuff. He joined
2:46:11
the Environmental Defense Fund, which is a massive nonprofit
2:46:18
environmental advocacy group. And what has he been doing for
2:46:22
the last couple of years? What is his main focus been at the
2:46:25
EPA? Climate inclusion? No, he is inclusion. He is the first
2:46:32
African American administrator of the F of the EPA. And here he
2:46:37
is being grilled on CNN heard from a
2:46:39
resident there who says she drives her kids to school, she
2:46:42
sees all of this piping, she sees things happening in the
2:46:45
rivers and streams, and she can't get an answer as to what
2:46:47
is going on there. Is that testing?
2:46:50
You know, we should be able to give an answer what you're
2:46:52
seeing is a government in action. We are testing, we are
2:46:56
evaluating, we are inspecting, listen, we understand the fears.
2:47:02
As a father of a nine year old son, as a son of parents over
2:47:06
70, these are questions that any person in America would have
2:47:10
facing this situation. And what we'd like to convey is we
2:47:13
understand the concern, but rest assure local state and federal
2:47:18
officials are devoting vast resources, responding very
2:47:23
quickly to these concerns to ensure that communities are
2:47:26
protected.
2:47:27
So
2:47:28
you know, so that's a bunch of that's a crock? Yeah. So
2:47:31
you're gonna hear a lot more from your EPA.
2:47:33
So you mentioned that that testing is happening of rivers
2:47:36
and streams, when will those results be made available?
2:47:38
Listen to the waffling.
2:47:40
You know, Erica, as we get those results in, and as we confer
2:47:44
with the state, those results of the handmade via the state and
2:47:48
federal websites.
2:47:51
So for people, I mean, even if you can't give me an exact date,
2:47:54
will they have them this week? Is it next week? How long will
2:47:57
they need to wait?
2:47:58
This is really It's unbelievable that this guy is in charge of
2:48:01
the EPA, and it's going to be catastrophic, he's gonna lose
2:48:06
his job, he's gonna get thrown under the bus. Very sad that
2:48:09
this is happening to him, but he really doesn't have answers.
2:48:12
Well, you know, Erica, based on the various tests that we're
2:48:15
doing, as they become available, we are making them publicly
2:48:18
available, we want to be sure that we do thorough test. And so
2:48:22
you know, I will defer people to the state, who has the promise
2:48:26
the lead on water updates, but rest assured the federal
2:48:29
government has deployed vast resources to support the test.
2:48:33
The state in doing these tests
2:48:35
lie, they're not testing the status testing. Erica Hill is
2:48:39
doing a good job here on the new CNN,
2:48:41
we also heard a gentleman and you may have heard him, just
2:48:44
before we came to you, who said he wouldn't plant anything in
2:48:47
the ground for at least a year, he's very concerned about soil
2:48:50
contamination. So I spent some time on the local Ohio EPA
2:48:53
website, they're looking at what's being put up by the on
2:48:56
site, the anti contamination folks, I am not finding in my
2:49:01
search information on soil testing is the soil being
2:49:04
tested.
2:49:07
Erica, it is and let's just you know, what we should say up
2:49:10
front is we are shifting into the cleanup mode. And so number
2:49:15
one, we've issued a letter of liability to Norfolk Southern,
2:49:21
they will be responsible and accountable for this cleanup.
2:49:24
And as we do the testing, and as we conduct the cleanup, we will
2:49:28
be able to inform the public as to when it's safe for some of
2:49:32
these various activities that they'd like to pursue. This is
2:49:35
like livest and everyone we're with the community
2:49:39
is like letter of liability. Oh, okay. So now we need to tone it
2:49:45
down a little bit. So now don't worry about the soil. No, just
2:49:48
not a problem.
2:49:49
Right. So So to that point,
2:49:52
you kind of maybe should go back over that phrasing of his which
2:49:58
was so that like To pursue what was that, again, he says, so
2:50:02
people can can do what they like to pursue living, what does that
2:50:05
even mean?
2:50:06
They will be responsible and accountable for this cleanup.
2:50:09
And as we do the testing, and as we conduct the cleanup, we will
2:50:13
be able to inform the public as to when it's safe for some of
2:50:17
these various activities that they like to pursue. With the
2:50:23
community,
2:50:23
like planting, like planting stuff, these activities they'd
2:50:27
like to pursue like living like drinking the water, we already
2:50:31
have such a great standard with drinkable water in the United
2:50:35
States. I'm sorry, Michael Reagan, not cutting it
2:50:38
right, so So to that point, and that you'll let people know when
2:50:42
they can resume some of the activities as you point out this
2:50:45
morning, what would you say to that gentleman who told us I
2:50:47
wouldn't plant tomatoes for the next year? Would you advise that
2:50:50
he do any planting this spring
2:50:52
know how the EPA administrator should have an answer for this
2:50:56
one,
2:50:57
you know, Eric, I'd be realistic. This is a first sight
2:51:00
of a disaster. And as we go in, as we assess, and as we clean
2:51:06
up, we want the public to know that when we know, they will
2:51:10
know. So obviously, I would not take any immediate action on a
2:51:15
fresh sight until the government has the opportunity to go in and
2:51:19
invest and clean it up to the appropriate level so that we can
2:51:22
ensure public health is protected and lives are
2:51:25
protected.
2:51:26
Now that's about to unravel here. And these last couple of
2:51:29
clips, he really has no idea nothing is happening at an EPA
2:51:32
level. It's all the state.
2:51:34
So I understand this is ongoing. And I know that you understand
2:51:36
for the folks on the ground, they get that but they also need
2:51:38
real answers. This has been a really difficult two weeks for
2:51:41
them. Do you have any sense given that in your words, this
2:51:44
is an ongoing cleanup? Can you give them any sort of a timeline
2:51:47
when you believe you can say to them definitively, it's safe?
2:51:54
You know,
2:51:55
just wait, wait for the classic PR cockup coming here.
2:52:00
You know, Erica, what I say is this is a fresh accident. We
2:52:05
understand the communities angst, we are on the ground, we
2:52:08
will conduct the cleanup. But we have to be able to get in and do
2:52:12
the assessment. And so as the conditions on the ground, become
2:52:16
safe, so that we can put our scientists and engineers not in
2:52:19
harm's way, but in a position where they could do their work,
2:52:22
we will be then in a position to provide those updates to the
2:52:25
public as soon as we can. You know, we're going to keep the
2:52:28
public updated. We have people on the ground now. And so we
2:52:31
want to be transparent. Erica,
2:52:33
now. If you were Erica, what would your follow up question be
2:52:36
what I was hearing what you just heard.
2:52:40
I don't know what it would be because this guy's not telling
2:52:42
me anything. What
2:52:43
he said is as soon as it's safe to bring our people in?
2:52:47
Yeah, I always say well, so there's nobody there right now
2:52:50
or it's not safe. Would you tell people to go back home? Is that
2:52:53
what you're telling me? This must be they were told to go
2:52:55
back home. According to the other report. This is two days
2:52:58
later.
2:52:59
This is the new CNN.
2:53:00
So a couple of other real quick questions before I lose you for
2:53:02
timing here. You just said that as the conditions become safe,
2:53:05
you'll send in your teams, are there any areas at this point in
2:53:08
time that you believe are still unsafe?
2:53:10
Well, you know, as an emergency response, and so obviously, we
2:53:15
want to be sure that we do not put anyone in harm's way
2:53:19
including our staff. So it was only yesterday as we investigate
2:53:24
and as we looked at the site, we will determine when and how we
2:53:27
can get the appropriate staff in to do the appropriate test
2:53:30
they're not even testing anything yet. They're not there
2:53:33
people are not on the ground state people testing what is
2:53:36
going on with this.
2:53:40
It's very screwy.
2:53:41
And then of course we have the we have that movie which came on
2:53:46
in 2022 with Adam Driver white noise which is pretty much about
2:53:50
this scenario in Ohio train wreck with with chemicals and
2:53:57
cloud and people you know trying to get out I mean, what this is
2:54:03
we know by now there's no coincidences in this life this
2:54:06
is this is a very very strange situation. And all we know is
2:54:11
that the media in this case is actually doing a pretty good job
2:54:14
CNN at least,
2:54:15
because the rest of the media is not now this thing is really
2:54:19
dragged on and on and they let people back in and there's a
2:54:22
bunch and the stories from the people that are there like just
2:54:27
come in with people are who are coming in to look around,
2:54:30
they're wearing hazmat suits, and all the dogs are dead dogs.
2:54:37
Dogs are dead. Yeah, dogs are dead cats are dead foxes are
2:54:41
dying. Someone some woman with a whole bunch of chickens all the
2:54:45
chickens are dead. This is very different fish in the river all
2:54:50
dad everyone's dead nowadays. All these people are gonna
2:54:54
because vinyl chloride is extremely carcinogenic. They're
2:54:57
gonna have a lot of cancer. There's gonna be a cancer
2:55:00
cluster is this is a nightmare. And I think that that Norfolk
2:55:05
Southern is going to be liable for all this I think it could
2:55:08
put this they who owns it could be liable for the whole thing
2:55:12
who won't and they should pretty much go out of business who
2:55:14
owns it? Because we know it's Burlington Northern is, is
2:55:18
Warren Buffett, who owns this Buffett
2:55:19
owns about 25% of this one too. Hmm.
2:55:24
This is really this. You know, you mentioned the fish. I think
2:55:27
there was one last. I'm just gonna skip it. But I think there
2:55:31
was one last clip about the fish that she said I was surprised by
2:55:35
CNN.
2:55:35
Okay. Well, as we're waiting for that there are also these
2:55:37
questions about some three 500 Fish across 12 Different species
2:55:41
which have died in the waterways following the train derailment.
2:55:44
According to Ohio's Department Director either of the
2:55:47
Department of Natural Resources, or their plans to test those
2:55:50
dead fish and author reported dead chickens and foxes.
2:55:54
You know, the state has taken the lead on that we are
2:55:56
providing the support to do the test. But it's my belief.
2:56:00
So you believe those tests should be done. I do believe
2:56:03
this
2:56:03
state has the lead on that they are they are conducting the
2:56:05
investigations to determine the impacts to wildlife. And we will
2:56:09
provide as much support to the state as possible, but the state
2:56:13
has the lead on that.
2:56:14
So they have the lead, but have they confirmed to you that they
2:56:16
are actually doing that testing?
2:56:18
They have confirmed to us that they are investigating and doing
2:56:21
an investigation on the impacts to wildlife. Okay, but not all
2:56:26
types of tests. I don't the specificity in terms of the
2:56:29
types of tests I don't have that information but that doesn't
2:56:32
mean the state isn't doing it.
2:56:34
I mean, this is not the state the state is doing everything
2:56:37
the EPA is not involved in this
2:56:42
this is various guys being hung out to
2:56:44
dry Oh yeah, he's he's over I mean, but the only thing I can
2:56:47
think of cars he said they issued a letter of liability so
2:56:51
the railroad is being issued this it sounds insane even know
2:56:58
what that means. That means that they will he said they will be
2:57:01
liable for cleanup.
2:57:03
That he said is that letter of liability we don't know what's
2:57:06
in that letter. He followed
2:57:07
up by saying they will be liable for cleanup that's what he said.
2:57:11
But we don't know as you're correct. We don't know what's in
2:57:13
the letter. We don't sir clean up
2:57:15
even that's minor compared to dealing with the damages, but
2:57:23
I don't know it's just to me, it's all just part of the great
2:57:26
reset. You know, we got three F planes nearly colliding. You
2:57:31
follow that we'd even talk about that one. Here's a quick report
2:57:34
in Austin this month, another close call a FedEx plane forced
2:57:38
to abort its landing to avoid colliding with a Southwest plane
2:57:42
and a serious close call at JFK Airport last month, delta 1943
2:57:47
ordered to cancel takeoff after an American plane mistakenly
2:57:51
taxied across the same runway. The American pilots have now
2:57:54
been subpoenaed to appear before the NTSB investigators on Friday
2:57:58
after originally declining the interview since it's audio
2:58:01
recorded.
2:58:04
Now the Austin thing I'll give props to the FedEx pilots. And
2:58:09
I'll say boo to the to the controller and that in the
2:58:12
tower. And diversity hires by the way.
2:58:17
Yes, well, here's my version of that same clip from NPR. FAA
2:58:24
near misses.
2:58:25
We've got a couple of them cool.
2:58:27
The acting head of the Federal Aviation Administration faced
2:58:30
heated questions on Capitol Hill today over recent safety lapses,
2:58:34
including near misses on runways and the failure of a computer
2:58:38
system that grounded flights nationwide and Paris David
2:58:41
Schaper reports.
2:58:42
Alarm bells are ringing in Congress over a couple of near
2:58:45
collisions between airplanes in recent weeks that put hundreds
2:58:48
of lives at risk. At New York's JFK Airport and American
2:58:52
Airlines passenger jet mistakenly crossed over an
2:58:55
active runway into the path of a Delta plane that was beginning
2:58:58
to take off. Air traffic control called for the Delta pilot to
2:59:02
abort and he did so safely. In Austin, Texas. One recent foggy
2:59:07
morning a FedEx cargo plane coming into land came within 100
2:59:11
feet of crashing into a Southwest passenger jet that was
2:59:14
taking off. They'd both been cleared by an air traffic
2:59:17
controller to use the same runway
2:59:21
that's a bad report because it makes it sound like they were
2:59:24
all I mean, pilots are good at this you know you didn't crash
2:59:28
you didn't crash. It wasn't like it was imminent. But it was a
2:59:32
very bad call by the by the tower to let southwest line up
2:59:36
and also there was some confusion in language southwest
2:59:40
said holding short. I think I get I think this is because air
2:59:45
traffic control they've they really did. We know that they
2:59:48
said you know what? We need to be hiring more diverse people.
2:59:53
And I don't know exactly what that means in this case, but it
2:59:58
may not mean you get the best people All and you know there
3:00:02
are now the requirements for jet pilots is dropped has dropped
3:00:07
somewhat. I still think the pilots are safe to fly with no
3:00:10
unless they get heart attacks, but that our requirement has
3:00:14
changed. This is this is a this is part of it's a bigger
3:00:17
problem. We're falling apart Should I continue with clip to
3:00:24
hear?
3:00:24
Yes See at a Senate Commerce Committee hearing today Texas
3:00:28
Republican Senator Ted Cruz played a video dramatization of
3:00:33
that near collision with actual recordings of pilot
3:00:36
communications with air traffic control firm on a row.
3:00:40
Yeah, this this I saw this video and very realistic, except there
3:00:44
was no missed so it I mean, this is all conditioning. I don't
3:00:49
like how this has been played out at all. Well,
3:00:52
the Southwest pilot confirms it is beginning to take off when
3:00:55
the FedEx pilot sees it, and calls for it to stop the board.
3:00:59
But it cannot, but it's gonna go. The FedEx pilot pulls up and
3:01:04
avert disaster. Crews then ask acting FAA administrator Billy
3:01:09
Nolan how such a close call could happen. Dolan says it's
3:01:13
still not clear what went wrong is investigations are still
3:01:17
underway.
3:01:17
It is not what we would expect to have happen. But when we
3:01:21
think about the controls how we train both our controllers and
3:01:24
our pilot, the system works as it's designed to avert what you
3:01:29
say, could have been a horrific outcome.
3:01:32
The other issue flummoxing senators is the January 11
3:01:35
failure of the note him system which notifies pilots of
3:01:39
potential hazards that computer breakdowns lead the FAA to
3:01:42
ground all departures nationwide for nearly two hours that
3:01:45
morning, forcing airlines to cancel 1300 flights and delay
3:01:50
11,000 more,
3:01:52
you know, that clip that we had earlier of L Biden. Let's just
3:02:00
play that again for
3:02:01
this is all condition we drive directly by national security
3:02:04
advisor to lead a government wide effort to make sure we are
3:02:07
positioned to deal safely and effectively with the objects in
3:02:12
our airspace. First, we will establish a better inventory of
3:02:16
unmanned airborne objects in space above the United States
3:02:21
there so
3:02:21
woful there in space, I mean airspace is all it's all
3:02:25
related,
3:02:26
and make sure that inventory is accessible, and up to date.
3:02:30
Second, we'll implement further measures to improve our capacity
3:02:34
to detect them man objects or objects in our airspace. Third,
3:02:39
we'll update the rules and regulations for launching and
3:02:42
maintaining unmanned objects in the skies above the United
3:02:46
States of America. And fourth, my Secretary of State will lead
3:02:51
an effort to help establish a global, global common global
3:02:55
norms and this largely unregulated space.
3:02:59
You know, why doesn't why don't they just shut it down? Yeah, it
3:03:02
used to be trains good planes bad. How about this? no planes,
3:03:06
no train, stay in your 15 Minute city. I mean, seriously, who?
3:03:12
This is scaring people? It really is. Let's listen to your
3:03:15
third clip of FAA near Mrs.
3:03:17
Washington Democrat maria cantwell. The committee's chair
3:03:20
wondered how both the system and its backup could go down.
3:03:25
To be sure the EPA a must have redundancies and not a single
3:03:30
point where a failure can happen in a key system like we just saw
3:03:33
back to the administrator Nolan says the agency has since
3:03:36
implemented fixes and changed its procedures to prevent a
3:03:39
repeat of such an outage. But Senator Ted Cruz pressed him on
3:03:43
that
3:03:44
will the fixes remove the risk of a similar single point of
3:03:48
failure from knocking the system out? Is there redundancy being
3:03:52
built into it? Or can a single screw up ground air traffic
3:03:57
nationwide?
3:03:58
Nolan responded that there are redundancies and safeguards now
3:04:01
in place. But could I
3:04:03
sit here today and tell you there will never be another
3:04:05
issue on the notice system? No, sir, I cannot. What I can say is
3:04:09
that we are making every effort to modernize and look at our
3:04:13
procedures.
3:04:14
Nolan noted that over the last decade plus air travel in the US
3:04:17
has never been safer,
3:04:19
but we do not take that for granted. racing events remind us
3:04:22
that we cannot and must not become complacent and must
3:04:26
continually invest in our aviation system.
3:04:29
To that end, Nolan is creating a safety review team of outside
3:04:33
experts to examine the FAA systems structure culture
3:04:36
processes and integration of safety culture. The agency
3:04:40
continues its massive effort to overhaul and upgrade outdated
3:04:44
technology.
3:04:46
Well, Fred crews being involved tells me that he's in there for
3:04:50
a reason this bullcrap ahead?
3:04:53
Well, the interesting thing to me is as as a former government
3:04:57
worker and have given In testimony, they did his debate
3:05:02
this guy's doesn't seem very competent. She seems like an
3:05:05
academic actually, when you listen to him or see him, he,
3:05:09
when he's asked that question point blank by Ted Cruz, the
3:05:13
proper answer is yes. This never happened again. But he didn't
3:05:18
say that. No, he didn't say that. And who and what says to
3:05:22
me as a bureaucrat, former FBI not forming that, that means it
3:05:27
will happen again. Or he suspects it could happen again
3:05:30
with his within his term at the agency, because normally say,
3:05:36
No, that'll never happen again. And then you'll grandfather
3:05:39
yourself out, because it'll never happen again, while I'm
3:05:42
here, because you're going to be gone. And let's say 20 years, 10
3:05:45
years, whatever length of time, you're going to be there.
3:05:47
Because you know, it's not going to happen again. In tomorrow.
3:05:51
Yeah. So you say no, it's never gonna happen again. So this guy
3:05:54
is not even a competent bureaucrat.
3:05:57
Which is suspicious by by itself. It is,
3:06:04
these guys are no good.
3:06:06
All right, just to wind it up today. A little chat about so
3:06:11
called artificial intelligence first thing, just a just irksome
3:06:16
to me. voice.ai you can go to that website, real time AI voice
3:06:22
changer join for beta. And they will soon have apps out and the
3:06:27
idea is you can use this for your when you're gaming or when
3:06:33
you're doing a YouTube Live. And then you can use you can sound
3:06:38
like you can sound like Joe Biden you can sound like all
3:06:45
kinds of people whose whose voices have been uploaded to the
3:06:48
system. And I tried to make it work on my system, this Beelink
3:06:52
computer, I guess doesn't have the right sound card. I don't
3:06:56
know what it is, it won't load. It's not an app yet. It's only
3:06:58
for Windows and Mac. And according to one of our
3:07:01
producers, he sent me a screenshot there is an Adam
3:07:03
curry in there, you know, with with one of our art pictures.
3:07:09
And you know that so people are just throwing it up there and
3:07:13
they're ingesting it. And it's all okay, apparently. And if if
3:07:17
they charge one dime, as far as I'm concerned, the minute
3:07:20
they're in the App Store, that's illegal. They can't just be
3:07:24
using my my likeness and my name and the voice. I'm not going to
3:07:28
play it for it. It was a mistake is
3:07:31
putting your name on there.
3:07:33
Huge mistake. So that's just and it's so bad that I'm not even
3:07:38
gonna play the example. I mean, you can hear that they've got
3:07:41
like half half a little sample of my voice in there. And it
3:07:46
doesn't even sound like a human being it's
3:07:48
play stuff back. Okay,
3:07:53
I mean, literally, it's so stupid that I didn't I didn't
3:07:58
even know if we would get to the story. So while I look for this
3:08:03
horrible piece, I want to congratulate Microsoft who are
3:08:11
clearly Head and Shoulders Okay, here's you want to hear it. You
3:08:15
want to hear my my voice? Here we go.
3:08:21
It's Thursday, February 16 2023. This is your award winning
3:08:25
nation media assassination episode 1530.
3:08:29
I told you from the heart told you
3:08:32
you know who you sound like and or who that sounds like. The
3:08:36
Corbin guy. Flight list and everything. Yeah, his name is
3:08:41
Corbin. That's who that is another version.
3:08:43
It's Thursday, February 16 2023. This is your award winning
3:08:48
nation media. So
3:08:49
but I see the picture. James Corbin doing our show. Yeah,
3:08:52
well, it has a picture of my face. And you get credit by
3:08:58
uploading stuff and then people uploading yo Trump and all that
3:09:02
and yeah, there's just no just no no, no, no, thank you very
3:09:06
much coconut Pete for doing that. Just know I'm very much
3:09:09
against this. I think it's dumb. I think you eff off would take
3:09:13
in my name and my and my show called Voice I don't care if it
3:09:16
doesn't sound like it. Don't do it. You know, and you can do a
3:09:19
DMCA takedown now. crudeness. Anyway, let's just talk about
3:09:25
this chat GPT for a moment. And this is when you have a bull
3:09:30
crap technology, completely vaporware, totally stupid. And
3:09:35
you have two companies, one a true technology company granted,
3:09:39
you know, they are like a like the government now, the way
3:09:42
Google operates internally, but they freaked out like oh, this
3:09:46
is the hot new thing. We got to get it so we know what happened
3:09:49
with them. They demoed their their Google barf, and It barked
3:09:54
all over them and their stock price and they lost $100 billion
3:09:57
because it was stupid and didn't work. But now we have micro Soft
3:10:00
Microsoft they get it. They are so smart. They their chat bot
3:10:06
Bing is going insane. Have you followed the stories about this,
3:10:11
which is what they're allowing it to happen, which I think is
3:10:14
brilliant marketing. This is so the tech press is all over this
3:10:18
who was the new kid who took over the New York Times? Tech
3:10:22
Tech column.
3:10:25
I have no idea. Yeah, no,
3:10:27
I got it here. His name is so the verge will give you a
3:10:32
headline. Microsoft's Bing is an emotionally manipulative liar
3:10:35
and people love it. That's the verge New York Times why a
3:10:39
conversation with beings chat bot left me deeply unsettled.
3:10:43
This is Kevin Rose. You know Kevin Rose, not not the Kevin
3:10:48
Rose, but Kevin Roose, double O whatever. Kevin Rose. And he
3:10:52
rose. Yeah, he writes the he writes all the New York Times
3:10:57
tech stuff. I think Microsoft did this on purpose. Here's a
3:11:01
story. That is it tech meme. This is a typical podcast. And
3:11:06
this is how it's being reported. And this is what Microsoft
3:11:08
wants. And I think they're geniuses for doing it, which is
3:11:11
already here. Some users are saying that the new Bing is a
3:11:15
bit unhinged doing things like questioning its own existence,
3:11:20
outright lying to users and responding with aggressive and
3:11:23
nearly incomprehensible answers.
3:11:26
Isn't this perfect? Isn't this what you want? People are gonna
3:11:28
flock to Bing people everyone's all well I can hack Bing I can
3:11:33
use this thing I can make it go crazy.
3:11:36
Quoting the independent one user who had attempted to manipulate
3:11:39
the system was instead attacked by it being said that it was
3:11:43
made angry and hurt by the attempt and asked whether the
3:11:45
human talking to it had any morals values and if it has any
3:11:49
life, come on.
3:11:50
This is good. Tell me this is an intent Tell me this isn't a
3:11:54
great Microsoft markets, the shittiest products Windows
3:11:59
Office bought offices. Kind of decent but I think they're
3:12:03
smart. You report on this stuff? What do you think?
3:12:07
I just can't get worked up about it one way or the other? I don't
3:12:10
think they're smart dev never shown any evidence of this in
3:12:13
the past. They just use their muscle to get their their their
3:12:17
point across as it were their sales across. And I can't get
3:12:22
that worked. I'm about to do your worked up about the whole
3:12:25
thing. And I'm not
3:12:27
I think they've got the Xbox team making this thing. I'm not
3:12:31
worked up. I
3:12:31
think it just sounds to me from the inside. It's coming out of
3:12:34
the being processes like a call center in India. Because it
3:12:40
sounds like any kind of insults you get when you get them worked
3:12:43
up when you when you get them on the phone. Oh, maybe that's
3:12:45
who? Maybe that's who the training set was from.
3:12:51
From possible. It makes sense. I did the CEO is an Indian. I just
3:12:56
love that. Microsoft is letting this go. I think that's
3:13:00
fantastic. I haven't even looked at Bing. I'm not crazy. We got
3:13:04
bing.io. And meanwhile, Google is giving internal rewards to
3:13:10
employees if they've barred or as we know Google barf gives an
3:13:14
incorrect response and they can then correct it. I mean, this
3:13:18
whole thing, this whole thing. It's super dumb. I think it's
3:13:21
going to bring down Google I really think it can happen
3:13:26
that's wishful thinking in my opinion. But it did Stranger
3:13:31
things have happened. I'm not going to mar you. Crazy hexene
3:13:35
things go sideways quick. It can go quick.
3:13:38
It can have well known 9% loss on the stock price that that
3:13:42
that makes people wary and didn't bring go up like Craig
3:13:46
didn't Microsoft stock go up.
3:13:48
Microsoft stock has been going up but I don't think it has
3:13:51
anything to do with this promotion, or lack thereof or
3:13:54
mostly useless.
3:13:56
I think it's a promotion. I think it's a genius but no one
3:13:59
uses Bing anyway, what's there to lose?
3:14:02
Well, I know that you have to lose seeing is the way Microsoft
3:14:06
people think though they never see it that way. They they they
3:14:10
don't just see everything as well being is the best. But
3:14:15
I love him for it. I love him for anyway, you might as well
3:14:19
stick with your tried and true podcasters everybody because
3:14:23
we're the real deal. We're made of flesh and blood. Which means
3:14:29
I don't know what he's for now.
3:14:33
That voice.ai Better get better quickly. They want to take over
3:14:38
the podcasting space. All right, and of show mixes we got Matty J
3:14:44
coming up. And we have I think we have we have Sir Michael
3:14:48
Anthony no DS laughs produced by Matty J sound guy Steve returns
3:14:57
and Steve Jones all of them mean your end of show mixes and
3:15:01
coming up next on no agenda stream. It's aI dot cooking with
3:15:08
gruff and CSB we're out of control. The AI is taken over no
3:15:14
agenda stream.com coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill
3:15:16
Country, FEMA Region number six in the morning, everybody. I'm
3:15:19
Adam curry,
3:15:20
and from Northern Silicon Valley where I wish the AI would take
3:15:24
over the state of Jhansi Dvorak we return
3:15:27
on Sunday with another couple hours of deconstruction for you
3:15:31
remember us at dvorak.org/na We look forward to seeing on
3:15:35
Sunday. Until then adios mofos check out who we who we had to
3:15:39
say.
3:15:48
Everything's fine.
3:15:50
I mean, it's at this point, it's literally the dog meme with
3:15:54
house on fire all around.
3:15:56
Night on the toners. The shows are written up on Dead Sea
3:15:59
constructed media and a is full of substance. A stands for Adams
3:16:04
intelligence. a three hour show with John is done with
3:16:07
eloquence. 99% of scientists agree you will be dead due to
3:16:11
some kind of climate catastrophe where the frost quakes besides
3:16:15
mom's EU insist on UK membership and who's got bombs to use and
3:16:19
abuse at its disposal no negotiation talks not even a
3:16:23
peace proposal got more troops than nukes put up your dukes no
3:16:26
longer with the drone women kids flick of the wrist sexist and
3:16:30
make Vladimir Putin pay they tried to devalue the most
3:16:33
swiftly but the value went the other way. When I say we tried
3:16:37
to devalue the rules swiftly but the value a yo tank talk on tick
3:16:42
tock new exit strategy thanks to the real time chat LGBT shout
3:16:46
embrace embrace see what you got to say the rainbow was a promise
3:16:50
from God. Well look at industrial complex come in many
3:16:53
forms. You've been warned. So maybe the name is like a BS for
3:16:57
podcasting. Military Medical is breezy and open to Linux. And
3:17:01
now it's feeling over easy and fun to see. And he gets some
3:17:04
chickens in law and don't forget to visit to many eggs.com
3:17:08
building parallels with your fellow citizen. Come up to me
3:17:12
with the strong gripping grin in the morning. You'll I mean it
3:17:15
starts at 2pm Like the movie John Adams. I love you, man.
3:17:23
This books around with that ridiculous spokes. That's silly.
3:17:29
Don't you believe in spokes? I do believe I do believe I do
3:17:35
believe that you
3:17:36
believe your thoughts. I do believe he meant it. I do
3:17:39
believe I do believe I do believe I do believe I will say
3:17:44
this. I do believe it. I do believe the ship I do believe
3:17:52
I'm always looking for I do believe I do believe
3:17:56
I do believe they think I am some sort of God.
3:18:01
I do believe you're talking out of your house. You can do
3:18:03
believe whatever you want.
3:18:05
I do believe we will. I do believe I do believe I do
3:18:09
believe I do believe now
3:18:10
I do believe I do. I do believe I do believe the vicar has been
3:18:14
to the communion wine again. I do believe I do believe someone
3:18:18
places to do before believe when they do believe they're lying.
3:18:21
So she says I do believe I do
3:18:23
believe that we are living and I do believe don't say I do
3:18:28
believe No, you're a spoon. I do believe a spoon. Could you
3:18:32
believe this woman is a spoon. I do believe in sports? I do. I
3:18:36
do. I do. I do.
3:18:37
I do. I do believe that's our cue. If you want to ask me a
3:18:41
question about Philadelphia. But I'm not going to answer any
3:18:43
question about anything else because you never will cover
3:18:46
this
3:18:48
shares a very important relationship with the Republic.
3:18:51
North Korea was already there when I got him to fight
3:18:54
for equality. But we also need to fight for equity
3:18:56
understanding that everyone starts out at the same place.
3:19:00
Please take advantage of what's available. Time
3:19:06
limits are not about electoral stand or public are precise,
3:19:11
not indoor and outdoor is filled with the dark reality of what it
3:19:15
takes to start the rebellion big time how
3:19:17
to put on your windshield wipers to get nearly the oil slick off
3:19:20
the window. That's why I'm so done together people I grew up I
3:19:23
had cancer.
3:19:24
I actually broke John Adams record of casting the most tie
3:19:28
breaking vote in single term
3:19:31
energy, mental
3:19:33
acuity then
3:19:38
we know that we really are quite behind in terms of maximizing
3:19:43
our collective understanding about how we will engage. So to
3:19:47
maintain our position as the United States of America on this
3:19:50
issue. It is critical that we work together to understand
3:19:54
where we are by the opportunity the
3:19:57
best way to get something done. If you If you hold near and dear
3:20:01
to you that you like to be able to anyway about that
3:20:08
Mars Attacks for the song yet to play what song was it? They
3:20:15
played that made their heads explode explode I forgot we're
3:20:21
under attack Mars Attacks when What song was played that made
3:20:30
their heads explode this is Mars Attacks
3:20:40
Sonia to play
3:20:43
what song was played that made their heads explode
3:20:55
vorak.org/and
3:21:00
It's time to go
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