Cover for No Agenda Show 1537: Dig Up Canada!
March 12th, 2023 • 2h 57m

1537: Dig Up Canada!

Transcript

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

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

0:00
John C Dvorak: hook line and sinker. Adam curry Jhansi
0:03
Devora.
0:03
Adam Curry: Sunday March 12 2023. This is your award
0:06
winning combination media assassination episode 1537. This
0:10
is no agenda, observing Daylight Savings Time and broadcasting
0:16
live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country on average and
0:18
number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry
0:21
John C Dvorak: and from Northern Silicon Valley where it's wet.
0:25
I'm Jhansi Dvorak.
0:31
Adam Curry: Thank you for that exhilarating weather reports
0:34
from Sun northern silicon. It's wet. What's weird in Southern
0:37
California too. That's gonna screw up the Oscars.
0:42
John C Dvorak: Oh, that's right. The Oscars are today. Tonight.
0:45
Yeah,
0:46
Adam Curry: I have a report of the Oscars but I have a pre
0:49
report Hold on a second. Well, I can
0:51
John C Dvorak: tell you who's gonna win the Best Picture. Tom
0:54
Cruise. Everyone everywhere, everything all the time. That
0:58
movie Who's Who is that by? By this Chinese used to be a
1:03
Chinese film. Listen to this important
1:04
Adam Curry: report from now this was interesting. This is who and
1:07
so it's the Indian news service. Your friend but they cut to an
1:12
Indian dude. Reporting on behalf of Voice of America. Which is
1:17
kind of concerning.
1:19
John C Dvorak: Oh, yeah, that makes it sound as though wi O
1:22
and maybe a front.
1:23
Unknown: You know, this year's Oscar preparation is very
1:26
hectic. Because of the past few days in Los Angeles. It's been
1:29
raining nonstops. So actually, yesterday, they have a lot of
1:33
buckets lying on the floor to capture rainwater. And Oscar
1:37
statues as you can see behind me like there was covered in a rain
1:40
jacket to prevent rain from like damaging it. And you know, this
1:45
year, as you mentioned, is very different for the red carpet
1:48
because it's actually champagne color. Now according to the
1:51
academy CEO Bill, he said that the reason for this change of
1:54
color is because he wants it to be more luxurious, while Jimmy
1:58
Kimmel mentioned that they wanted no blood to be shared in
2:01
this year's Oscar obviously referencing to the last year,
2:04
last year slap when Chris Rock was slapped by Will Smith. Now
2:10
it's time that the Academy Award has changed its color from red.
2:13
In fact, before in 1961, before that, it was actually green. And
2:19
carpet itself is actually 152 meters long, and about 285
2:23
kilograms. So it requires 18 people to actually set up and
2:27
about 900 hours now the Hollywood stars will make their
2:30
way not gray carpet but this champion colored carpet all the
2:35
way here all the way towards the Dolby Theater on my left I just
2:38
Adam Curry: love the stats that the commentators have I love all
2:42
these little nuggets of information to let you know that
2:45
the red carpet was once green.
2:48
John C Dvorak: Oh my 900 hours because union
2:52
Adam Curry: Right exactly. It's champagne not based champagne,
2:57
champagne. It's champagne. Yeah. It's my way a sponsor if you
3:02
John C Dvorak: had a color if you had a champagne with that
3:05
color of liquid in the glass, you'd think somebody pooped in
3:08
it
3:12
Adam Curry: oh Ma'am, did you think that the MO a Shawn Dawn
3:15
is a sponsor? Is that why it's champagne champagne even though
3:18
it's beige? There's gotta be some tie into this Come on.
3:22
John C Dvorak: Maybe this guy really? Got to be well, they're
3:26
all they usually serve champagne. Well actually not at
3:30
this event. They're the new tables again are going to have a
3:32
seating what's how's it going to be?
3:34
Adam Curry: By you asking me like, like, I know, like, like
3:37
to report it Entertainment Television all of a sudden, like
3:40
I'm Ryan Seacrest. No, no. No. And for those of you tuning in
3:48
from around the world, as many do live on Thursdays and
3:51
Sundays, big changes afoot here in the United States.
3:54
Unknown: And it's that time of year again, get ready to lose an
3:57
hour of sleep. Daylight Saving Time is upon us clocks. Go ahead
4:00
spring forward at 2am but there is an effort to make the change
4:04
permanent. A bipartisan group of senators has introduced
4:07
legislation that would keep the same time throughout the year
4:11
Adam Curry: over 15 years we've been doing this merry little
4:14
podcast together and it's the same report every year. Well,
4:17
we're gonna we're gonna make it permanent. We're gonna stop this
4:20
insanity.
4:21
John C Dvorak: Yeah, every year before that,
4:24
Adam Curry: every and before that every year. I actually
4:28
didn't feel too bad this morning. Usually I feel much
4:32
worse. I don't know why. But how did you feel getting up?
4:36
John C Dvorak: I felt okay. Yeah. Now you have an hour later
4:41
though. I mean, I was I've had to do the short 10 instead of 11
4:44
that kind of kept me short on my pre show rituals.
4:48
Adam Curry: But what do you mean you didn't you didn't get up an
4:49
hour earlier? No. Oh, you just wake up when you feel like
4:53
waking up. You don't set an alarm and you just wake up
4:55
John C Dvorak: an alarm for the same time I've always set the
4:57
alarm and I just offset the the target time for the show. So
5:01
Adam Curry: preparation be damned. Like screw no agenda
5:05
I'll just work an hour shorter. Is that what I'm hearing? So you
5:08
John C Dvorak: know what you've heard? Yeah, no yeah, no Yeah.
5:11
No. You are saying to me yes, you should get up earlier and
5:16
ruin the pacing and everything you've developed over the years
5:20
a screw up to show for me so you can show some you know, you
5:23
could be
5:25
Adam Curry: Yeah, that's what I'm that's what I'm angling for,
5:28
John. That's, that's exactly. Actually I'm very happy that you
5:30
woke up at your at your normal body clock circadian rhythm
5:34
time. Because you're not as grouchy in previous years.
5:37
You're like really a bit old
5:40
John C Dvorak: brother.
5:42
Adam Curry: And mind you. This is now one of the most dangerous
5:45
vocations in the world. That's us being podcasters.
5:50
Unknown: Now to that horrific crime near Seattle, Washington,
5:53
a podcast her and her husband allegedly killed by a stalker.
5:56
Police say a 38 year old truck driver from Texas broke into the
5:59
couple's home and shot them before turning the gun on
6:02
himself taking his own life. The woman had filed a protective
6:06
order against him.
6:07
Adam Curry: Why are you chuckling it's not that funny.
6:09
It's a dangerous a dangerous
6:11
John C Dvorak: no I'm not chuckling at that I'm chuckling
6:12
at the fact that what good does it do you to go shooting
6:16
somebody and then shoot yourself nobody knows anything?
6:20
Adam Curry: Well that's not I mean, I have a longer report if
6:23
you're really interested but this this guy was it here's what
6:26
scared me a little bit about it and I'm actually I'm gonna play
6:28
Unknown: it for he said i Police say this. eight year old Ramin
6:31
Hodaka rom res he stopped shot and killed podcaster Zori
6:35
Sadeghi and her husband before appearing to take his own life.
6:40
Appearing hostage situation. Shooters not. A neighbor says
6:47
their security camera caught the commotion overnight there was
6:50
blood curdling to hear investigators say Hodor Quran
6:53
Reza, he listened to today's live podcast for people who
6:56
speak Farsi looking for jobs in the tech industry and befriended
7:00
her through a chat app. They communicated but things quickly
7:03
escalated.
7:04
This is the absolute worst outcome. You know for a stalking
7:09
case. This is every victim every detected. Police Chief's worst
7:14
nightmare.
7:14
ABC News has learned just a week before her death, Sadeghi filed
7:18
a request for an order of protection against the suspect
7:21
alleging and chilling detail a pattern of behavior that made
7:25
the 33 year old fear for her safety now pay attention
7:28
according to the orders today. Laughter voicemails more than 10
7:32
times a week sending flowers even sending her husband more
7:35
than 20 messages a day writing he won't let me go.
7:41
Adam Curry: There are many people who EMAIL ME 10 times a
7:44
day who send gifts to the PIO box. Who who say they won't let
7:50
me go. You don't have that not like that. I don't know. But
7:56
it's any any one of these people could flip in a heartbeat?
8:02
John C Dvorak: You never know. Yes. And you never know why. I
8:04
mean, I can see that the I didn't know the background of
8:07
this. But she's doing a farsi podcast. This is already Middle
8:11
Eastern politics, which is the most dangerous sort of politics.
8:16
Yeah, it was nuts. A shame.
8:22
Adam Curry: It's horrible. It's a bad day for podcasting. Very
8:25
bad day for podcasting. That's okay, because we're going to
8:28
crack down on crime. And I'm just going to I'm not going to
8:34
actually spike it. But I'm pretty sure that the ball I'm
8:41
going to reference here is President Biden resurrecting the
8:46
1994 crime bill, which he was as Senator Biden was the
8:53
John C Dvorak: was the co sponsor.
8:54
Adam Curry: I think he I think he he introduced it, I don't
8:57
think he was just the co sponsor. And this went hand in
9:00
hand with front page, I think was it was Newsweek or Time
9:04
Magazine, even New York Times little yummy. It was the
9:07
predators, the nine year old predators and we had to crack
9:10
down on him. And then we got this whole Corrections
9:12
Corporation of America, the real crackdown arresting hundreds of
9:17
1000s mainly black men. And wouldn't you know it
9:20
Unknown: so folks look Magga Republicans are calling for
9:25
defunding the police department.
9:27
Adam Curry: Now. This is beautiful. I have to say when it
9:30
comes to twisting the truth, there's lying and lying, lying.
9:35
There's nothing better than saying hey, it was actually the
9:37
Magga Republicans who wanted to defund the police. It wasn't it
9:41
wasn't the crazy squad or anything like that. No, it was
9:43
the Maga Republicans and he ties it into the investigation of
9:49
FBI. So he's like, Oh, it's law enforcement. It's really the
9:52
Maga Republicans whoever wrote this concept for him, which he
9:56
somehow was able to get out. It brilliant. So
9:59
Unknown: folks, look Okay. Magga Republicans are calling for
10:03
defunding the police departments and to funding the FBI. Now
10:07
that's a good one. I like that one. Well, guess what? Gary
10:13
tries to provide funding that is going to keep community safe and
10:15
secure. We talked about how about crime was outraged. My
10:21
budget invests in public safety, and includes funding for more
10:25
training, more support for law enforcement at a time and expect
10:30
to pay men play many roles. We expect our cops to be social
10:34
workers, we accept them to be psychologists and mental health
10:38
counselors. You know, more cops are killed responding to
10:42
domestic violence calls than anything else. To know that.
10:47
Well, folks, I don't want to defend them, they need more
10:51
help. We don't expect a cop to be everything from a
10:53
psychologist to a counselor. These departments need more
10:59
investment in this kind of help. And we're going to find proven
11:03
strategies for accountable effective community places so
11:06
Copson know the communities they serve. In the communities know
11:11
them. We got to get cops back on the street, back in the street
11:16
and the communities they know. Where they know the people where
11:20
they stop in and they know the guy who owns the liquor store.
11:23
They know the preacher who runs the local school, the local
11:27
ministry, they know the person who runs the local grocery
11:30
store. Well, we did that in the Biden crime. No crime person
11:34
just plummeted. You did that Joey? Because I know, folks,
11:42
Adam Curry: folks. Yeah, it was very successful. You're 94 crime
11:45
bill. Okay.
11:48
John C Dvorak: It's a good investment. The here's a good
11:51
way. He's describing some sort of small town America, where the
11:55
cops are roaming around on Monday to beat Yeah, you know,
11:58
yeah. You know, just go to the cab, just roam into the giant
12:03
Safeway and know who the owner is corporations. Nobody, they're
12:10
kidding.
12:11
Adam Curry: Well, yeah. Anyway. It was. I just, it's like, there
12:18
you go. He's going into the 94. Crime Bill. And it's like, it's
12:21
like, problem reaction solution. And just blame it on Magga.
12:26
Republicans. Beautiful. That
12:28
John C Dvorak: was just to pick my nose.
12:30
Adam Curry: No, I am. I am stunned by it. I have not heard
12:34
a
12:35
John C Dvorak: lot of factcheck false. I'm sure it was all over
12:38
the place.
12:38
Adam Curry: No, only on your no agenda show. Sorry, people are
12:43
way too obsessed with dying. you've
12:46
Unknown: conducted a number of studies on the health impacts of
12:48
daylight saving time. What is your research shown regarding
12:51
the consequences of this practice on our health?
12:54
Adam Curry: Now, what could the consequences of Daylight Saving
12:58
Time Time shifting have? We do this every year, by the way
13:02
makes up this year? It's even a little bit funnier? Because we
13:07
have numerous left COVID And we have
13:09
John C Dvorak: courage depression.
13:11
Adam Curry: No, no. Oh, no. Yeah. So
13:13
Unknown: basically, our body has a natural biological clock
13:17
control processes, different processes in our body, for
13:21
example, the sleep cycles, physical activity for
13:24
consumption. And what our research found, as well as many
13:27
studies from the world is that if we disrupt the natural
13:31
biological clock, it can increase the incidence of
13:33
different diseases, such as heart disease, increased the
13:36
risk for heart attack, stroke, and even diabetes and cancer.
13:40
Adam Curry: There you go. heart attack, stroke and cancer.
13:45
John C Dvorak: Same thing that COVID does.
13:47
Adam Curry: Exactly, exactly. But depression wise, there is
13:53
well not really depression, but there's something there's
13:56
something going on on tick tock. You know, I'm gonna save that.
14:00
I'm gonna save that. We'll save that for later.
14:01
John C Dvorak: No, douche. Tick tock, now, tock, tick tock,
14:05
Adam Curry: tick tock update everybody. Women, and all I
14:10
found are white women, but women on tick tock are complaining
14:14
about their Adderall, Vyvanse or Ritalin. And if you recall,
14:23
there was a while back there were a couple of stories that
14:26
there seemed to be a shortage. Maybe that was during the supply
14:30
chain, that there was a shortage of the precursors or something
14:34
for Adderall. And there was some replacement. Not quite sure.
14:40
Although violaceum it would be meth. Yes. Correct. They talk
14:43
about it. It's D meth or something. But what's happening
14:48
is women. It's not working for them anymore. They're blaming
14:53
the shortage, although Vyvanse as far as I know, has not
14:56
changed. And I think that we may be just reaching a point If you
15:00
hear how long these women have been on Adderall or Vyvanse I
15:05
mean, is it possible that meth at a certain point just you just
15:09
become kind of used to it? It doesn't work for you anymore. Is
15:12
that possible? Do you know anything about meth?
15:14
John C Dvorak: Nope, I have no no. I have no idea. Well, I put
15:17
them out I may have does it make sense to get used to your biases
15:20
or more of this stuff? Whatever.
15:22
Adam Curry: I put a little I put a little supercop together for
15:26
Unknown: your 100% not receiving Adderall coming from someone who
15:29
was diagnosed ADHD and has been on this medication since I was
15:32
nine. I'm currently 26 I did some research to
15:35
Adam Curry: get nine and currently 27 taken meth for her
15:38
whole life because
15:39
Unknown: I haven't been able to function lately. So this is my
15:41
bottle and I swear to you, it used to say Adderall, XR 20
15:46
milligrams, not D amphetamine. When comparing dexedrine and
15:49
Adderall directly, Adderall showed the ability to decrease
15:52
symptoms of ADHD overall. And there is no evidence that
15:56
dexedrine could I personally think they're giving us
15:59
dexedrine during this shortage, but that's just me.
16:01
Yeah, no, they're not working. I had to go take a drug test for
16:06
my new job. And so of course, I woke up that morning took my
16:09
veins like two or three hours later I go to this drug screen.
16:14
I just got my results back today. There is no embedded
16:18
means in my system.
16:19
Is it just me or is anyone else's Adderall just not
16:24
working? I'm on like a 20 milligram extended release. And
16:30
I feel like ever since everyone's been talking about
16:32
the shortage and stuff, like all the new bottles that I get, and
16:38
like, I feel like they only maybe work on Sundays or I have
16:41
to drink like coffee to like, maybe get it to kick in. I don't
16:45
know. Y'all
16:46
may have figured out what my Vyvanse isn't working. I was
16:49
diagnosed with ADHD 10 years ago, and I've been taking ADHD
16:53
meds on and off for 10 years. And this shit is different.
16:57
Okay, this is for anyone who takes any sort of like stimulant
17:01
Adderall, Vyvanse, Ritalin, Concerta, any of those shortcuts
17:05
my language, this should this should is not working. I don't I
17:09
don't know what they're giving us. But it's not it. It's not
17:12
Adam Curry: if I love how fast they're talking, they seem to be
17:15
high anyway, it
17:16
Unknown: this isn't a real they're giving us a sugar pill a
17:19
placebo something. Every single morning I used to take this I
17:22
would get like the instant butterflies in my stomach, I
17:24
feel the need to go to the restroom. And it would be this
17:26
extreme focus all day. And like a terrible, terrible feeling.
17:30
Before I go to bed, a little bit of anxiety, and I couldn't fall
17:33
asleep. None of that. Now granted, it's helped my sleep.
17:36
But that's how I know it's not working. So there's discourse
17:39
about ADHD meds not working lately, and there's been like a
17:42
national shortage. And I'm noticing it to some of my
17:46
Vyvanse works and sometimes it doesn't. So I'm gonna stop
17:49
making a chart. Because I'm gonna right now it's not
17:52
working. So when it works, I can feel a come up or just like sit
17:55
there for a little bit. I'm like, yep, meds are kicking in.
17:57
And then I do stuff like make appointments or clean or do my
18:00
homework or read. And I don't make stupid little jokes
18:03
constantly in my head. And I took it it I should have come up
18:07
by now. And I'm thinking a lot of dumb stuff. So today's dose
18:10
is not working and they are from the same bottle. And but the
18:14
other day it was working. So today I'm gonna go get my
18:17
refill. Because Walgreens said I have five days to get it or
18:20
they're going to just put it back because why don't they just
18:23
automatically send us the ADHD meds like they really expect us
18:26
to come get it. Anyway, I'm gonna make a chart and when it
18:30
works when it doesn't work, and I will report back in
18:32
approximately a month.
18:34
Adam Curry: I'm sorry, I hear junkies.
18:39
John C Dvorak: I'm here. Are you hearing correctly?
18:40
Adam Curry: Oh, this this. This saddens me. It's funny, but it
18:44
saddens me to know and then these women are addicted.
18:49
They're junkies. I'll bet you they're listening at 2.0 speed
18:52
to
18:54
John C Dvorak: maybe you got they're not listening.
18:57
Adam Curry: No, no, they're not listening. But this is epidemic.
19:00
And so the minute if something changes, and I don't know if it
19:03
changes. I mean, if you've been taking it since you were nine
19:07
and you're 26 now yeah, okay, maybe maybe you're maybe you're
19:11
just immune to it just doesn't work well enough. And that one
19:15
lady said, Well, you know, I take some coffee and I feel a
19:18
little bit better. That This to me is like wow, this is sad.
19:26
John C Dvorak: Well, they couldn't be right. Because I
19:29
noticed this myself with certain drugs. They'll take once in a
19:32
while. Over the counter, for example, the peroxan which is
19:38
Aleve. Uh huh. I find that the generic Aleve the approximate
19:44
generic doesn't work at all.
19:48
Adam Curry: That's interesting. You say that because when my
19:51
when I had my first surgery in my mouth, I could take ibuprofen
19:57
I got these big 600 milligram ibuprofen, but I try I don't
20:00
believe that an actual brand name Eleaf did nothing. Just
20:04
nothing. And that was brand names. I don't know. I don't
20:07
know. Maybe the Chinese are screwing us over.
20:10
John C Dvorak: They could be, or the Indians, most of this stuff
20:12
comes from India. Well, this Vyvanse or whatever it is, is
20:16
interesting. I never heard much about it before. It's another
20:19
verb. I've taken it. Oh, yeah. What is it like?
20:23
Adam Curry: Well, I took it once. Because what? Oh, just see
20:26
what my daughter was on. She's not on it. This is a long time
20:29
ago. This is 2011 I think. And she was taking Vyvanse I'm like,
20:34
Well, let me try one of these. See what that's like. I was
20:36
tripping balls. It's a it's a time release. And I mean, that
20:42
thing is 1214 hours. He's just just just really I got little
20:48
sweaty, Speedy. I'm not a you know, my drug has always been
20:51
marijuana. My drug is the opposite of Vyvanse. I hated it.
20:55
I can't believe anyone would would voluntarily take that
21:00
John C Dvorak: so it's another very it's a variation, a major
21:04
variation of an of an amphetamine and feta mean. So
21:08
it's speed. Yeah. How's he get away with selling this stuff to
21:12
the public at large is beyond me. Well,
21:15
Adam Curry: I think this is the telemedicine that's what I'm
21:18
learning the telemedicine systems like the one you we
21:22
talked about the one that Weight Watchers bought so that they
21:27
could prescribe ozempic to their clients and pretend like it's so
21:31
it's our it's our program don't worry about program and says
21:34
it's what's working. In fact, I got a note from one of our
21:41
producers, I'm over 50. And for numerous reasons can't lose the
21:44
weight weight, the way I used to. My last physical had me as
21:48
pre diabetes, ie I had to make a change, or I will have type two.
21:53
And by the way, we all have we're all pre diabetic, trust
21:56
me, we're all pre cancerous pre debt, we're all pre debt. My
22:00
wife and I started started using majorna, which is like ozempic.
22:03
For Weight Loss, I lost 20 pounds in the first month, the
22:06
cost is $300 for four shots that taken weekly. The Diabetes
22:11
version is about 1000 a month and sold in special injectors.
22:14
For me, it was a simple choice, do this now or do it later with
22:17
diabetes. So he's been convinced we can afford to do this but but
22:24
you know, when I say we can afford to do this, in fact, the
22:27
amount we spend his savings saved a not eating out with
22:30
these drugs, your appetite drips, and drips, and you really
22:33
don't want to eat all that much. I bet I'll bet the five answers
22:36
to this class of drugs has been used in Hollywood and by the
22:39
elites for decades, finally available to those of us in the
22:41
upper middle class, aren't you happy? He says if I were blessed
22:46
with great self control of my eating, I would not be in this
22:49
situation. I'm a realist. So he certainly has given up. He says
22:52
he can't he can't do it. He doesn't have the he doesn't have
22:57
the willpower. The willpower. Yeah. But these telemedicine
23:02
health guys, these are the ones these are the ones that are
23:07
prescribing all kinds of stuff. And, and by the way, big story
23:13
about cerebral cerebral is another one of these telehealth
23:19
apps. Well, they got caught sharing millions of their
23:24
patients data with advertisers.
23:28
John C Dvorak: Oh so much for HIPAA.
23:31
Adam Curry: That's great. If an individual creators cerebral
23:34
account the information disclosed Me included name phone
23:36
number, email address, date baba, baba, bah, online self. In
23:41
addition, the individual has completed any portion of
23:44
cerebral online Melf health self assessment, the information
23:47
disclosed may also have been included in the service the
23:49
individual selected, so they just sold that now they're
23:51
getting fined for it, but it's not like you're hearing much
23:54
about it. Yeah. It's really it's really nuts.
24:02
John C Dvorak: The allopathic medical system is out of
24:04
control.
24:05
Adam Curry: Yeah, well, how about this? This is you'll love
24:08
this Wall Street Journal. March is a special time for college
24:15
basketball fans who kick back on the couch for days to watch the
24:19
two week NCAA Tournament known as March Madness. It has also
24:25
become a shining moment for some neurologists who see the games
24:29
as a perfect time to peddle vasectomies. Yes, the idea of
24:34
pairing male family planning with March Madness appears to
24:38
have been very successful so how about that?
24:45
John C Dvorak: How does that work
24:46
Adam Curry: is vast vast madness there you'll see the commercials
24:49
vast madness along with March Madness. I
24:51
John C Dvorak: have not seen any of these commercials. They say
24:53
it's coming.
24:54
Adam Curry: They say it's coming. Kleenex or advertising
24:57
VAs madness recover On the couch glued to the TV guilt free
25:04
John C Dvorak: yeah forget to be washed all these grades. Oh,
25:06
that's Oh man as well maybe
25:07
Adam Curry: I want to watch the games. Don't interrupt me. Well,
25:10
you can if you're recovering from your vasectomy. I wonder
25:15
how many of our producers have been tricked into this.
25:19
John C Dvorak: I think half of our producers have had a
25:20
vasectomy, or they complain about a report or
25:24
Adam Curry: they're about to leave us
25:27
Unknown: to back off they
25:28
Adam Curry: got really mad. It's like you can't talk about EVs.
25:32
You can't talk about vasectomies. You can't talk
25:35
about it.
25:35
John C Dvorak: I'm sure people will warming's out. Hey,
25:37
Adam Curry: man, I have ADHD to stop busting. I'm a math guy,
25:42
you do whatever you want. I was a druggie for all my life. That
25:47
marijuana still still tobacco was well. Dodge is things like,
25:54
wow, they got a hold of us now that God has bought the balls
25:58
literally.
26:01
John C Dvorak: Well, you did play a Biden clip. I want to get
26:02
a couple Biden clips out of the way. All right. Biden is not
26:08
very good at math.
26:12
Unknown: I just met I won't embarrass them by pointing out I
26:14
don't want I don't have permission. But I just met a
26:17
woman who has healthcare costs that are 600 $600,000 A year
26:22
$7,000 A month? Well, guess what? How can you possibly deal
26:28
with that? Well, we just dealt with.
26:32
Adam Curry: So that sounds like he multiplied by. He did an
26:35
extra 10 times there. Were eight.
26:39
John C Dvorak: Well, it says seven and six. It wasn't even
26:41
that it was
26:45
Adam Curry: what? Who knows what he was thinking?
26:49
John C Dvorak: Well, then there's this this one here,
26:50
which is funnier. And he did. He says it twice to make sure it's
26:53
even that you don't miss it.
26:55
Unknown: More to show I really, it's all my fault. Well, look, I
27:01
think we got a good job report. I'm happy to report that our
27:04
economy has created over 300,000 new jobs last month. And that's
27:09
on top of a half a million jobs we added the month before. All
27:14
total, we've created more than 12,000 12,000 jobs since it took
27:18
office. nearly 8000 of the manufacturing jobs. That means
27:23
overall, we've created more jobs in two years than any
27:26
ministration has created in the first four years. And I think
27:30
all this matters. It's no accident.
27:32
Adam Curry: No. Goodness. You're still mass bumping.
27:40
John C Dvorak: I don't know why. Oh, sorry. That was my fault.
27:42
Now. I knew I did that. I've just got to be careful. Well,
27:44
the job Oh, that's Biden's ability to capitalize. Yeah.
27:49
Adam Curry: Well, jobs are going to change. Pretty soon. You're
27:52
gonna have a lot more unemployed. I've been following
27:54
the Silicon Valley Bank. closure.
27:58
John C Dvorak: I wouldn't say quite a lot of people are
28:00
blaming Peter Thiel. Did you get that far?
28:02
Adam Curry: Oh, I got much further than that. Oh, would
28:04
take us there. Okay. Well, first of all, whenever I get an email
28:09
from Andrew Horowitz saying yeah, this could be pretty big.
28:12
I pay attention on Horowitz he's a pretty level headed guy. Cool.
28:17
Yeah. He doesn't really go too nuts. Well, I have two reports.
28:21
And then we can we and I 100%. five by five agree that Peter
28:25
Thiel started the bank run. But let's listen to some of the
28:29
mainstream reporting. Here's ABC, from
28:31
Unknown: New York to California today panicked customers
28:34
scrambling to pull their money out of Silicon Valley Banks,
28:38
only to find them close all our money's
28:41
in the bank. I don't know how we're gonna do our payroll. I
28:44
don't know what we're gonna do. Now.
28:45
It's the biggest bank failure since the 2008. Financial
28:49
crisis. Regulators this morning, shutting down and seizing the
28:52
assets of the bank, a go to lender to the tech industry.
28:56
Many of those businesses today cut off from their cash, I hope
28:59
to get most of it back. But that's definitely concerned. It
29:02
all came crashing down in just 48 hours, as the bank tried to
29:06
shore up its finances. The panic only spread on Wall Street, the
29:10
bank stock plunged and customers started pulling their money out.
29:14
Once that happens, it's just inevitable it's going to fail.
29:16
high interest rates have left many tech companies with less
29:19
cash on hand, forcing them to withdraw more to meet their
29:22
expenses.
29:23
This is a bank, perhaps a handful of banks that are
29:28
getting nailed by the fallout from the from the problem the
29:31
tech sector. And it's not a economy wide or a banking system
29:36
wide
29:36
problem. We pressed the White House on what this means for the
29:39
tech world. How concerned are you that we could see a ripple
29:43
effect just throughout this specific sector? I just want to
29:45
re emphasize that we
29:47
are in a fundamentally different position that, you know with the
29:51
reforms of the global financial crisis of 2007 2008 we've put in
29:56
place stress tests and other tools that our regulators have i
30:00
to provide more resilience to our banking system.
30:02
Adam Curry: Alright, so what happened here is a is not crypto
30:07
related, although there are some there's some exposure there with
30:10
a stable coin USDC, which I fully expect to collapse because
30:14
stable coins are crap. What happened here is, is really
30:21
Yeah, the big banks the big for too big to fail, they had to
30:25
over capitalize, they've been stressed tested, but all the
30:28
other regional banks, smaller banks like Silicon Valley Bank,
30:32
they actually argued the the CEO of Silicon Valley Bank, argued
30:38
to weaken regulations. And I believe since COVID, they didn't
30:42
even have to have 10% of reserves. And the biggest
30:47
problem for that for that was is almost a classic idiot bank move
30:51
is they invested in bonds that you have to hold to maturity,
30:58
htm is what it's called. I mean, you can't just sell them off. So
31:01
they had a lot of these bonds, which are because the interest
31:04
rates have gone up so quickly. And as we know, prices of bonds
31:08
work inversely to interest rates, that means they're worth
31:11
less money if you want to go and sell them. And this went so
31:15
fast, which is what what our Federal Reserve has been doing,
31:20
that they found themselves overexposed, like $1.8 billion,
31:24
and they started selling these unprofitable bombs. That's when
31:29
Peter Thiel on Wednesday, I think told all of his portfolio
31:33
companies, so I don't know how many of those are, it could be
31:36
10, could be 20, could be 100. But these are companies that
31:38
he's invested in either directly or through maybe one of the
31:42
venture capital firms. He started calling everybody say,
31:45
take your money out, take your money out, take your money out,
31:47
that is what triggered an actual run on the bank when everyone's
31:51
going, Oh, crap, let's take our money out. And they didn't have
31:55
the cash on hand, they were $900 million short and just couldn't
31:59
give anybody the cash. This was, I guess, kind of expected the
32:03
regulars regulators came in and shut it down. And the way these
32:08
things work is if you every bank account in America has an FDIC
32:12
Bank, which I think they all are, they are insured up to
32:16
$250,000 per account. So on Monday, if you had a million
32:20
dollars in an account, you'll get 250,000. At minimum, that's
32:24
that's what's going to end whatever else happens. We're
32:26
going to see before we move any further into some of the
32:30
details. The way Silicon Valley works, and I've witnessed this
32:35
twice. Once when I took my company public in 1996. We went
32:42
we took it public with a brown shoe small New York firm, but we
32:46
went around to the big the big companies. And they immediately
32:49
bring in Wilson Sonsini, which is Silicon Valley's law firm,
32:55
very, very famous, I think the as at Wilson Sonsini, who's kind
32:59
of like called the godfather of Silicon Valley and one of the
33:01
two, you may know that better than I do. And that's, you know,
33:04
and they'll, they'll run, you know, deals through, they'll
33:07
play on both sides of deals. It's incredible what a what kind
33:11
of monopoly they have. But when we raise money from Sequoia
33:16
Capital, Kleiner Perkins shirt below raunchy rock Sriram. But
33:20
the main, the main two were Sequoia and Kleiner Perkins,
33:23
immediately, as a covenant in the deal. And you're going to
33:27
bank at Silicon Valley Bank. And if you remember you, and I
33:31
bought a lot of lunches and wine with an SVB credit card. And so
33:39
the way it kind of works is they have their money at SVB. Or at
33:44
least chunks of it. And you know, okay, we're gonna raise
33:47
this money, you get the money, and it really is just
33:49
transferred from one Silicon Valley Bank account to the next
33:52
one. And because you're in this trusted circle, which the bank
33:57
connects everybody, you can then get easy debt financing. Oh, you
34:00
need a $2 million line of credit, no problem. And so it's
34:04
very incestuous. And I'm pretty sure a lot of the owners, the
34:09
bank shareholders, the bank were the same people. So a lot of
34:14
yeah, just incestuous exposure. And because of this, they say
34:19
50%, I would say, maybe 75% of every single venture capital
34:25
back for him, not just in Silicon Valley. We're talking
34:28
firms in Sweden, in Denmark, in the Netherlands, in the UK,
34:33
everywhere. If you raise money through a big event, not even a
34:37
big one, but one of the 350 or 400 venture capital firms,
34:41
you're going to have a bank account of Silicon Valley. So
34:45
this is going to create a large culling of the heard in time.
34:50
Yeah, because payroll coming up on the 15th payroll money had
34:55
already been sent into Silicon Valley Bank or sent or supposed
34:58
to be sent from it to the payroll companies, they didn't
35:01
go out. So and so now. People aren't going to get paid.
35:06
Obviously, there's a lot of companies that are, I'd say the
35:09
majority of venture capital backed companies are not
35:12
profitable. They had no they, they already had to fire people
35:16
rein stuff in because No, it's going to be tough if you're
35:20
based on advertising and may not make any advertising money for
35:23
the next four years. So how are you going to get through they
35:26
got a line of credit from Silicon Valley Bank, that's
35:28
everything's dried up. So we're gonna see firms collapsing in
35:33
the next few days in the next few weeks. Let's go to CBS.
35:36
Unknown: Following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank this
35:39
week, officials in Washington are expressing concern
35:42
when banks experience financial losses, it is and should be a
35:47
matter of concern.
35:49
Silicon Valley Bank is the 16th largest in the country, with
35:53
$209 billion in total assets late last year. According to the
35:58
FDIC, the bank is known for serving tech startups and
36:02
venture capital firms
36:03
Silicon Valley Bank failed largely because of its links to
36:07
the tech industry, because technical getting nailed by
36:12
sorry.
36:13
John C Dvorak: Says It failed because of its links to the tech
36:16
industry.
36:17
Adam Curry: Oh no, no, you're gonna hear every single boat
36:19
bull crap. You're gonna hear all kinds of bullshit stuff in the
36:23
next few days,
36:24
Unknown: largely because of its links to the tech industry,
36:28
because tech is getting nailed by all the rising interest rates
36:33
and changing consumer preferences.
36:36
Regulators shut down the bank. Do you want to
36:38
Adam Curry: want to call out I'm happy to stop you want to
36:40
comment?
36:40
John C Dvorak: No, I'm just saying this guy's whoever this
36:42
analyst is is full of crap. Surprise, surprise,
36:45
Unknown: a rising interest rates and changing consumer
36:48
preferences.
36:49
On Friday, state regulators shut down the bank transferring
36:52
control of his assets to a new institution controlled by the
36:56
FDIC. In a statement, the agency said customers would be able to
37:00
access their funds no later than Monday morning. But it only
37:04
insurance deposits up to $250,000. The bank serves some
37:09
major companies like Roku, Pinterest, Shopify and Etsy,
37:14
which warn sellers that some deposits may be delayed, small
37:17
business owner Amber fields now swept up in the chaos,
37:21
and another three are in small business, I get this in my home,
37:25
those funds, feed my family and
37:27
pay my bills. The effect is also being felt overseas, with
37:31
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying his government
37:34
will take steps to assist businesses that are impacted.
37:38
Adam Curry: Ah, yes, I should have mentioned Israeli companies
37:40
as well. Of course, there's a lot of investment from Silicon
37:43
Valley and Israeli companies. So it's going to it's going to
37:45
affect a lot. Now, here's a couple of fun, fun little
37:48
things. Silicon Valley Bank CEO Greg Becker. He actually until
37:54
this happened, he was on the board of directors for the San
37:58
Francisco Federal Reserve Bank. The what is it? The what's the
38:05
guy's name? The who was it? I think the not maybe the Chief
38:13
Operating Officer. Or maybe Yeah, I think was the chief
38:18
operating officer. He actually was at Lehman Brothers, when it
38:22
collapsed. So you know, there was just they were very involved
38:25
in diversity, equity inclusion focused on lots of important
38:29
things like that. And meanwhile, they just weren't exposed to all
38:34
kinds of problems. Now, what this also did and hasn't been
38:38
mentioned that much, but will be is it made people around
38:42
America, certainly nervous about regional banks and regional
38:45
banks, just like Silicon Valley Bank, did not have to have the
38:48
same type of over capitalization. That the big,
38:53
too big to fail banks have. And so there's their stocks were
38:56
down, you will see what happens. But what is happening this
39:00
weekend, as people are, you know, their bank runs happen
39:03
because people have no faith, it may not even be an actual
39:06
problem with the bank. So if people just saying all weekend
39:10
long, oh, man, you know, the regional bank, you go down, but
39:13
to get your money out of the bank, there could be a run on
39:15
regional banks. And that could actually be very serious. But
39:19
it's not because there's necessarily anything wrong. Now
39:23
we go to CNN, who literally could not get anyone better than
39:26
Robert Reich. To explain it to us.
39:29
Unknown: What does this mean for people outside of Silicon Valley
39:33
Bank? Universe? What does it mean for the average borrower,
39:37
if anything?
39:39
So far, it doesn't mean anything. But the big question
39:42
is one of contagion. That is what we saw in 2008 was when one
39:47
big bank, a couple of others started to fail, could not pay
39:52
their depositors could not actually pay up what they owed.
39:56
They were closed, and regulators had to And moving very, very
40:00
quickly about we ended up with a financial crisis. Because of you
40:06
know, one vague banking card easily starts tipping over other
40:10
cards, it's a house of cards. Now, we don't know yet about
40:13
contagion, we what we do know is that this bank was obviously
40:18
over extended. And this is related to the Fed because as
40:22
interest rates went up, and as and this bank was lending to a
40:25
lot of startups, this bank simply could not handle it. I
40:29
think that this is the biggest economic news today, it is not
40:34
this jobs report, the Drudge Report was good. And it's kind
40:38
of signals to me a soft landing. But I think that in terms of
40:41
what the Fed is going to do, this bank implosion of this
40:46
potential contagion may reverse Jerome Pauwels direction, it may
40:53
lead to, instead of a half a point increase at the March
40:57
meeting, it may lead to no increase at all. In fact, it's
41:01
even conceivable that interest rates start dropping at the fear
41:05
that we're going to be in deep trouble.
41:08
Adam Curry: So I'm sure this is what a lot of people certainly
41:11
in the tech sector would love, hey, let's get that quantitative
41:15
easing, let's get money cheaper. Again, we need to have cheap
41:18
money, which of course will only result in higher inflation for
41:22
you know, you for the prices for your, your groceries, etc. And
41:26
so now we're in the what are we going to do phase and we've got,
41:31
typically, you know, they can find a buyer for bank like this,
41:35
like JPMorgan Chase would be a good one that get it for for
41:38
almost nothing. And anyone who had money in there might lose
41:43
10%, maybe more. You know, that depends on the deal that they
41:47
cut. But already, Washington and Silicon Valley are talking about
41:54
a special vehicle, the Federal Reserve, we need a bailout. This
41:59
is this is going to be interesting. If if the Federal
42:04
Reserve forces, you know, however they do that forces a
42:09
bailout. You know, and this is really only it's only $100
42:14
billion. I mean, you know, the money we gave, so called gave to
42:17
Ukraine could fix this problem. But if you start going down that
42:22
road, you know, who knows where it's going to end up,
42:24
Unknown: you have advocated for the Fed to stop increasing the
42:28
interest rate why we before this issue with Silicon Valley Bank,
42:33
as simply because I don't see any wage price. Inflation wages,
42:38
according to Jerome Powell are pushing up prices. Well, that's
42:41
simply not the case. Look at today's report, for example, we
42:45
are seeing the smallest wage increase in over a year, prices
42:49
continue to rise. That is absolutely true. But wages are
42:53
not pushing them up. It's not that workers are doing so
42:55
wonderfully well. But what's pushing up many prices
42:58
domestically in big companies that want to increase their
43:02
profit margins. And so they have monopolies or near monopolies
43:06
oligopolies. They are using the opportunity using inflation as
43:10
an excuse to put up their prices. So this is at its at its
43:14
bottom here. It really is an antitrust monopolization issue.
43:18
It is not a Fed interest rate problem.
43:23
Adam Curry: The venture capital firms, 350 of them have written
43:27
an open letter. Say that hey, you know, we'll work with any
43:30
new owner if you find one. But we get stories like this. More
43:35
than 60%. John, of community solar financing involves Silicon
43:41
Valley Bank, we will not be able to stop climate change if these
43:44
companies go out of business. Oh, yeah. Good one. Oh, yeah.
43:47
Oh, yeah. Wait for it. You can just wait for that to happen.
43:51
It's like, oh, no, these are none of these companies are
43:54
making any money. And they're not supposed to. That's why
43:56
they're venture funded. But it also may just be a great moment
44:00
for the venture capital money companies to write off a whole
44:04
bunch of really bad investments because everyone's just looking
44:07
for, you know, it's a crapshoot. Hey, let me get the next
44:10
unicorn. Yeah, we'll invest in that and invest in this. It's
44:13
kind of it's been very fun to watch Jason Calacanis. He's now
44:17
tweeting in all caps. He's beside himself. Because he, you
44:22
know, he, he's like an angel investor, and his whole it's a
44:28
very simple process, but basically, he gets people to
44:32
give him money, he invest their money, and then he pitches those
44:36
companies to actual venture capital firms. I'm kind of
44:40
giving an abbreviation. So he, he's holding a bag, a machine,
44:45
not personally, but his investors are gonna be holding a
44:47
big bag of crap. Now, when something like this happens, I
44:52
am typically all ready to jump in and say hi, this is how they
44:57
introduced the central bank digital currency. You do not
45:02
have to do that. Because everyone else is doing it for me
45:05
like General Flynn,
45:07
Unknown: I want people to go read executive order 14067
45:11
Executive Order 14067 signed by Uncle Joe, the Eighth of March
45:17
of 22. And it went into effect 13 December 2022. So just this
45:22
past summer, and there are already corporations and
45:27
elements of our US government that are already beta testing
45:29
what's called Central Bank, digital currency, Central Bank,
45:33
digital currency. That's what that executive order is all
45:36
about.
45:36
Adam Curry: And this was accentuated on Friday on Tucker
45:40
show, which I do not watch anymore, but the people sent me
45:44
the clip. So how could I avoid Kristi, noem? Who was the
45:47
governor of what is she South Dakota? I think she saw it.
45:50
Yeah. And she mentioned that the UCC update. In fact, Article
45:56
Nine UCC is the universal commercial code. I think it's
46:01
something that originates with lobbyist in Washington, DC, it
46:05
goes to the states, the states have to ratify it, you know,
46:10
states just like any other politician, you know, Hey, you
46:13
want what I just ratified this, how much you give me for my
46:15
reelection campaign. 10 grand, okay, fine. It's too complicated
46:18
to read. Anyway, she she vetoed this in the South Dakota, bill
46:25
that was passed by the lawmakers,
46:26
Unknown: I became aware of this bill, it wasn't introduced until
46:30
almost halfway through our legislative session, we started
46:32
reading through this bill that was over 110 pages long, it was
46:36
sold as an update to the guidelines of the universal
46:39
Commercial Code backed by all of our financial institutions, or
46:44
banks. As we started reading through it, we saw the section
46:48
of the bill that changed the definition of currency. And
46:50
essentially what it did was paved the way for a government
46:53
led cbdc. And it also banned any other form of cryptocurrency or
46:59
Bitcoin or digital currency that existed. So for me, it very
47:04
clearly was a threat to our freedom. In South Dakota, we are
47:07
the session that completes its business earliest in the year,
47:11
we are the first ones to really look at this bill and find out
47:14
the truth of what's in it. And I did veto that bill. I'm asking
47:18
my legislators to change their minds, to make the right
47:21
decision and help me kill this bill once and for all. But I'm
47:24
telling you attacker, we've got the same language coming to over
47:27
20 other states, I believe, it's to pave the way for the federal
47:30
government to control our currency and thus control
47:33
people, it should be alarming to everyone and it's being sold as
47:37
a UCC guidelines update, there's no rush to do this. We need to
47:41
be smart and make sure that we're doing what we can to
47:44
protect people. I find it ironic that we also are having this
47:47
discussion at the same time, we have banks and credit card
47:49
companies talking about coding gun and ammunition in a separate
47:54
code so they can track it. So not only can they tie these two
47:57
issues together, if the government doesn't approve of
48:00
what you're purchasing, if they have the only form of digital
48:03
currency out there, and that is endorsed and utilized in the
48:05
country, they can control how you spend that money and does
48:08
take away all your freedom.
48:11
Adam Curry: So from a perspective of what does that
48:15
mean for you at home? First of all, don't panic. If you have
48:18
more than $250,000. In one bank account, what are you doing?
48:22
Someone should have advised you differently. So I think the FDIC
48:25
insurance, although there was if you recall, about a year and a
48:30
half, during COVID, there was a whole shuffle at the top of the
48:34
FDIC, they kicked out the chairman of the board and they
48:37
brought in some woke crazy people. So who knows what that
48:40
what's going on there. If this could be a part of anything? I
48:42
don't know. There's I don't I do not think this is going to be
48:47
the introduction of central bank, digital currency this
48:49
particular moment, it's possible you could go to sleep, it's
48:53
great that happens over the weekend. All these things are
48:55
always supposed to happen over the weekend, you might wake up
48:58
with instead of dollars Fetty coin or $50. It wouldn't mean
49:01
that much to you. Except of course for the obvious control
49:04
that can be implemented. It is interesting as a side note that
49:08
Elon Musk has openly been entertaining the idea of may may
49:12
be buying Silicon Valley Bank, I don't think he will, it seems
49:15
like a hassle. He's getting his licenses to do so anyway to
49:19
create the x.com that he's always dreamed of. But that
49:22
would be an interesting, an interesting thing for it to
49:26
happen. So just sit tight and don't panic is what I would say
49:30
aye, aye. But it's clear that we're being set up for something
49:35
like this in the future. And that's my report.
49:40
John C Dvorak: Well, it's a good report. I don't think we're
49:42
being set up for anything necessarily. I just think this
49:44
was a stupid idea to have everything concentrated in this
49:48
one SIV be because of the entire valley being somewhat corrupt in
49:53
that manner. What's the point of having every company in Silicon
49:57
Valley and every individual and every payroll go through just
50:00
one single bank without backup,
50:03
Adam Curry: we may we may find out who knows I mean you don't
50:06
really know but it
50:07
John C Dvorak: was just got to be corruption involved. There's
50:09
no other possibility of course,
50:11
Adam Curry: of course. And it was so I was Why
50:14
John C Dvorak: should Why should my venture capitalists tell me
50:16
what bank to work with? Do you want
50:18
Adam Curry: the money son? We had covenants in our deal. We
50:22
had time saying but why? Well, because I think that they were
50:25
all they were shareholders.
50:29
John C Dvorak: Yeah, that would be it. That's called corruption.
50:33
Adam Curry: Called coercion. I don't know if it's corruption,
50:35
but I don't know. We'll see how bad it will certainly be a
50:39
calling of a lot of crap that needed to go anyway. It
50:43
simultaneously helps the Federal Reserve with exactly what
50:46
they've been complaining about like well, you know, the job
50:49
markets too strong we got to have more unemployment. Maybe
50:52
this will help. I don't know how many people will be unemployed
50:55
where the collapse of many companies will know in 60 days
50:59
and maybe even less I think this will be the story for the next
51:02
week. And and we'll just have to pay attention because it's very
51:07
possible someone or some people will be really pushing the fear
51:13
and I don't see you know what, tonight at the Oscars if there's
51:17
a lot of Silicon Valley Bank jokes, then you'll know that
51:20
it's coming
51:22
John C Dvorak: I don't think they can deliver a joke
51:26
Adam Curry: they can change the carpet
51:29
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I think carpet was on sale to call this
51:35
dog shit brown carpet champagne we got it she
51:39
Adam Curry: champagne you my dear friend Sean Panya I if
51:43
they're gonna do anything wild with Central Bank digital
51:46
currency at whatever level whatever version it won't happen
51:49
until the Ukraine war is over. I think that's that's that's what
51:54
I'm waiting for.
51:56
John C Dvorak: Well, let's listen to some you look Ukraine
51:59
clips I have a bunch Oh good. The word logistics clips these
52:03
are all this is actually I consider these these five clips
52:06
to be an excellent backgrounder on Well, I don't know what
52:10
they're trying to accomplish. It seems as though they're looking
52:13
at this war some way to stress tested the the defense industry
52:19
in some way. Oh, because they can't make enough stuff. For
52:23
these Ukrainians. These guys are unbelievable, but let's go with
52:26
Ukraine war of logistics. One been
52:28
Unknown: 80 years since a war with logistics on this
52:31
industrial scale. Ukraine fires as many 155 millimeter artillery
52:36
rounds and about
52:37
Adam Curry: horses from who did this report because I liked that
52:39
editing right off the bat.
52:40
John C Dvorak: This is that may have been me. This is NPR alle
52:45
Unknown: Ukraine fires as many 145 times
52:49
John C Dvorak: throughout this report, there are scattered some
52:54
really new explosions, rocket launchers and machine guns. And
53:00
he's talking to one guy in an office and you're hearing this
53:03
stuff. Psycho Washington DC is under attack.
53:07
Adam Curry: Wait, I had I had this that's that's the new
53:14
Ukraine war sound effect we picked up earlier so we'll see
53:17
if they use that one.
53:18
Unknown: Ukraine fires as many 155 millimeter artillery rounds
53:22
in about five days, as the US produces in a month. Many of
53:26
them are forged finished at 1500 degrees and painted here and
53:32
1950s factory in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The machinery is
53:37
decades old. But until now it's suited us needs Iraq and
53:41
Afghanistan. We're not dueling artillery battles. But today,
53:48
the 20,000 artillery shells the plant creates every 30 days is a
53:51
fraction of Ukraine's needs. Ukraine's defense minister
53:55
Alexei Resnikoff recently wrote to the European Union and let
53:58
her describe to PBS news hour that Ukraine can only fire 1/5
54:02
of what it could because of munition shortages. We saw that
54:06
ourselves on the outskirts of Baku in eastern Ukraine. This
54:11
team told us they did not have enough artillery to fire
54:14
constantly Oleksandr commands and artillery unit in the 93rd
54:18
brigade
54:19
Do you have what you
54:20
need in order to complete this fight?
54:23
Unless yet? We do have equipment but we need more. And we need
54:27
more and more and more because they won't stop until we stop
54:31
them.
54:32
The current rate of Ukraine's ammunition expenditure is many
54:36
times higher than our current rate of production.
54:41
Last month, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said
54:43
defense industry couldn't deliver fast enough and how to
54:46
expand quickly.
54:48
This is now becoming a grinding war or attrition. And the war of
54:52
attrition is a war over logistics.
54:55
Adam Curry: Yeah, no one wants to pony up we just we're just
54:57
not making them the old am making
55:00
John C Dvorak: Opening up as much as we can in Scranton, now
55:04
the
55:05
Adam Curry: president's home
55:07
John C Dvorak: so what's the what's the last war of attrition
55:13
that we've had in the last 100 years?
55:16
Adam Curry: What is in this context? What does attrition
55:19
mean?
55:20
John C Dvorak: That means you just keep killing people Iraq
55:25
there at World War One that was the classic war of attrition
55:30
there was nothing no strategy there wasn't any just killing
55:34
everybody as fast as you can they kill as many as you can and
55:37
they can they kill as many as they can you kill as many as you
55:40
can. And that's the attrition we're talking about people. So
55:44
this is a this is basically a war of well of war of attrition,
55:49
where you just keep killing this is a killing mess. This is a
55:52
world war one style. outbreak or we
55:56
Adam Curry: call it World War 1.5. Okay, sorry, I didn't mean
56:02
to piss you off.
56:04
John C Dvorak: Worldwide domain. That's the SP that people listen
56:06
to the show.
56:08
Adam Curry: I wonder how those bombs sound at 2x speed. Pew
56:11
pew, pew.
56:13
John C Dvorak: Yeah, that's exactly what they sound like. So
56:16
right there. He's telling us that this is a version of World
56:20
War One. Don't the world then did last great war, the last
56:24
war. I mean, this is unbelievable. It's given it
56:27
away. Okay, let's go to clip two sorry. The
56:30
Unknown: US Defense industrial base is not fully prepared to
56:35
conduct an industrial style war or to deter that kind of war.
56:40
SETH JONES directs the international security program
56:43
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and
56:46
recently wrote a report about a shortage of material and
56:49
materials in a wartime environment.
56:52
The US has had an operational plan for major war, but I think
56:56
what hasn't happened is to tie those plans directly to
57:00
acquisitions needs right now.
57:03
Already, the US has sent from its stockpiles more than $32
57:06
billion worth of weapons, including more than a million
57:09
155 millimeter shells, 1600 shoulder fired Stinger anti
57:14
aircraft missiles, 8500 javelin, anti tank weapons 1800 Phoenix
57:20
ghost drones and 38 High Mobility Artillery Rocket
57:23
systems
57:24
what the US has been able to do is use a range of stockpiles of
57:29
weapons. The challenge, though, is that a number of those
57:32
stockpiles are now decreasing, and the production lines are
57:36
rising to levels that we need them for future contingencies.
57:42
It's not only about Ukraine, the military always plans for
57:45
contingencies including a war in the Pacific with China. What was
57:49
Adam Curry: that thing that just slid off there? That sounded
57:52
like a
57:53
John C Dvorak: like time Mars probably. So we've given them a
57:58
million shells. And they're telling us is not enough. We
58:03
need five times more. They've shot a million shells. It were
58:10
to watch a million shells. Yes,
58:14
Adam Curry: a million a million I tell you, why not.
58:23
John C Dvorak: Okay, let's go to clip three.
58:25
Unknown: And now the defense department is spending billions
58:28
to increase production, including modernizing the
58:31
Scranton plant, as seen in these before and after photos.
58:35
Already, production has increased nearly 50%. Overall,
58:39
the army hopes to increase artillery production 500% In the
58:43
next two years, the largest production expansion since the
58:46
Korean War, build a plant as the Undersecretary of Defense for
58:50
Acquisition and sustainment. I spoke to him on Wednesday, and
58:54
began by asking him whether the West could meet Ukraine's needs
58:57
for artillery,
58:58
we will do our best and we have been doing our best to meet the
59:01
demand as it comes in. And, of course, the devils in the
59:03
details as to which caliber but yes, the piece showed the 155
59:08
millimeter we have already funded the factory at
59:11
significant amounts to get their production rate ultimately up at
59:14
five times that amount, which is almost unprecedented and it's
59:17
not just producing But what we're also buying and getting
59:20
from around the world and different stocks to supply with
59:22
the Ukrainians need every day. We try to move something to the
59:26
left whether it's finding equipment and another country we
59:28
can ship in, or anything we can do to find stocks as we
59:31
just saw Ukrainian soldiers just a few weeks ago I started back
59:33
when they told me they didn't have enough that was an
59:36
artillery piece and older artillery piece. Soviet era I
59:39
was with another mortar unit. They said they didn't have
59:41
enough mortars also firing Soviet era mortars This isn't
59:45
only about American European weapons, it's also about getting
59:48
Ukraine older weapons which many other units still use, right?
59:51
That's exactly right. It's a constant challenge of do we find
59:55
or produce the old Soviet or Russian equipment? Or do we give
59:58
them the new equipment and And that's we go through that every
1:00:01
day.
1:00:01
Adam Curry: It kind of reminds me in the Netherlands, as you
1:00:04
know, on December 31, you can go pick up your pre purchase
1:00:09
fireworks and you can legally set well, they changed the rules
1:00:13
a bit this year, but you can legally set it off for New
1:00:17
Year's Eve. And it's like, you know, we'd go and we'd have our
1:00:21
parents, you know, vouch for us, or whatever we get, we get our
1:00:24
big bag, and we but of course, we'd have that a week in
1:00:27
advance, and we'd be shooting stuff off. And then it's just
1:00:30
like, then it's just on the 31st all day long, just as much as
1:00:34
you can just write that from our mind my mind than just blowing
1:00:39
stuff up. But it's it's doing nothing. It's it's just blowing
1:00:45
it. Are they just blowing up our stockpiles?
1:00:47
John C Dvorak: That's what it looks like.
1:00:49
Adam Curry: So what happens if China wants to fight us? We got
1:00:51
nothing.
1:00:54
John C Dvorak: to crank it up. Yeah. Well,
1:00:56
Adam Curry: then we'll crank it up. No, this is this makes no
1:01:01
sense.
1:01:01
John C Dvorak: Well, they make the point that the Korean War we
1:01:05
had that we cranked it up. So I looked at the military budget
1:01:09
for the Korean War. And during that era, the military budget
1:01:13
for the United States during that when we had it cranked up
1:01:15
because of the Korean War. The military budget was 44 point 9
1:01:20
billion, which is less you know, less is this bit in the back of
1:01:25
a list that's balanced it for inflation. Does it make it
1:01:30
Adam Curry: 400,000? Maybe even 400 400? million? Yeah, that's
1:01:33
still half half of our current budget.
1:01:35
John C Dvorak: Yeah, less than half. But that boy, that's what
1:01:39
we're cranking it up. But
1:01:40
Adam Curry: that budget is not going into ammunition. I look at
1:01:43
the email every day, I saw another one $3 billion to Hawaii
1:01:49
to build a dry dock. Okay, I'm sure we need it. Now, that just
1:01:55
it's just being spent on junk. Not will not ammo,
1:02:03
John C Dvorak: Glarus, good except for
1:02:04
Unknown: but on air defense, specifically, I've been told
1:02:06
they're running out of s 300, parts weapons all over the
1:02:09
world. And so therefore, they have to go to West,
1:02:11
I think I think for air defenses, and frankly, for
1:02:13
ground forces, what you're seeing is having to go from the
1:02:17
old Soviet systems to almost certainly western systems for
1:02:20
the reasons you said.
1:02:21
And this is all of course, before we get to Ukraine Spring
1:02:24
Offensive, you are trying to figure out how to get all these
1:02:27
armored vehicles and their parts into Ukraine. How do you know
1:02:30
that they'll have enough of those munitions, those parts,
1:02:34
those modern weapons, to be able to launch some kind of counter
1:02:36
offensive in the coming week, what
1:02:37
we're doing is working with the Germans, the poles and the other
1:02:40
countries, when we have a shortfall in parts save for a
1:02:43
certain version of leopards to scour and find those parts, even
1:02:46
to the extent we can find advanced manufacturing to 3d
1:02:48
print. So we're working on each one. And the idea is to make
1:02:52
sure that there are enough parts to sustain for each model. Why
1:02:55
not
1:02:55
give Ukraine the longer range weapon known as the attack them,
1:02:58
which would fly 180 miles that it's been requested that so far,
1:03:02
the administration has refused? Yeah,
1:03:04
it's been a policy decision to date that the long range weapons
1:03:08
which we have been providing, which is about an 80 Kilometer
1:03:10
precision guided weapon is sufficient and range for the
1:03:13
targets that they have, I think for when you get into types of
1:03:17
capabilities are well beyond it, you get into policy issues, and
1:03:21
sustainment issues of whether or not it's an escalatory thing.
1:03:24
If I could, though, intelligence officials told me that
1:03:26
specifically the capacity of the attacker and the range of the
1:03:30
attack and is a red line for the Kremlin in terms of what Ukraine
1:03:33
would be able to hit if it were to use that weapon in Russia.
1:03:37
But why is that a concern given that Ukraine has promised not to
1:03:40
use American weapons inside Russia? Like we're not,
1:03:44
John C Dvorak: Oh, no. Promise not to use it?
1:03:47
Adam Curry: We're not going to send anything to Moscow.
1:03:56
So those trusted Yeah, we should trust them when they say that we
1:03:59
should just try.
1:04:00
John C Dvorak: Yeah, they promise. We'll just trust them.
1:04:02
Because they've never been known for the dishonest ever,
1:04:06
Adam Curry: ever. It's Ukraine. You can trust Ukraine? That's
1:04:09
not correct. So
1:04:09
John C Dvorak: it sounds like that there. You're still using
1:04:11
Soviet gear that we have to supply parts for? Yeah. And we
1:04:15
have to scrounge the parts from all over the place. And we even
1:04:19
have to put the Soviet gear we have to, to 3d print some of
1:04:25
these things, which probably don't have templates,
1:04:27
necessarily, but I'm sure there's enough engineers around,
1:04:30
they can 3d print some of these parts, which is the future. And
1:04:36
it's just a fiasco at this point. But at least there's some
1:04:42
kind of light at the end of the tunnel, maybe. But you have to
1:04:46
listen to this clip. And you can kind of tell that what the
1:04:50
Ukrainians would think is not necessarily what we're thinking
1:04:53
how this thing comes to an end, which you think is going to be
1:04:56
sooner than later and I'm not going to disagree with that, but
1:04:59
I'm not totally convinced. But there is a little guy, there's a
1:05:02
funny little gag at the end of this guy, this assistant,
1:05:07
defense guy. So here we go. Well, I
1:05:10
Unknown: think it's one of the concerns. I think there's
1:05:12
multiple concerns. And the other piece of it is what to what
1:05:15
extent it will make a big difference in the battle. And
1:05:17
those are all part of the calculation.
1:05:19
To what end? Are you trying to procure weapons for Ukraine to
1:05:24
receive all of its territory that it has lost since 2014.
1:05:28
We're providing everything we can that we believe they need.
1:05:31
And I would say this, we are going to be there with them
1:05:34
until it's over and as long as we need to, and not for the
1:05:38
least of which is that we think it's expensive. Now, if Putin
1:05:41
prevails, it'll be really expensive. And so this is really
1:05:44
that important. And we were going to provide her the
1:05:46
equipment they need
1:05:47
Ukraine argues they won't be over until it receives his
1:05:49
Crimea.
1:05:51
That that may be their view.
1:05:54
Adam Curry: That may be their view.
1:05:57
John C Dvorak: Play to the end again, and don't step on it
1:05:59
because he giggles
1:06:00
Adam Curry: Oh, oh, I didn't hear the giggle. I'm sorry, but
1:06:02
they need
1:06:02
Unknown: Ukraine arguing won't be over until it receives his
1:06:05
Crimea.
1:06:06
That that may be their view.
1:06:10
Adam Curry: Oh, wow. Oh, wow. Well, already Solinsky was
1:06:14
denied appearing in the Oscar ceremony tonight.
1:06:18
John C Dvorak: Yes, good for them.
1:06:20
Adam Curry: Well, here's what I like about the story. He has an
1:06:23
agent William Morris entertainment pleated made a
1:06:27
plea to the academy to spotlight Zelinsky
1:06:31
John C Dvorak: he hasn't we can't even get a mortgage agent
1:06:34
I mean, Mike
1:06:34
Adam Curry: Simpson Hey, Mike Simpson William mortgage eight
1:06:37
entertainment agent. What? Thank you, we should be able to get
1:06:42
you as a as an agent for John's bit part.
1:06:46
John C Dvorak: And minify even that yeah, there you go.
1:06:48
Adam Curry: Admitted money at minimum.
1:06:50
John C Dvorak: Unbelievable that this guy has the gall. He also
1:06:54
they also tell you I'm using an agent I think is funny, but the
1:06:57
gall it takes Hey, we have our own we're doing something here a
1:07:03
you know, it's like, what do you want to get involved with the
1:07:06
it's an award show? Yeah.
1:07:09
Adam Curry: Well, I'm telling you, I My feeling is it'll be
1:07:13
all Silicon Valley jokes tonight about Silicon Valley Bank jokes.
1:07:17
I will bet you $1 Now okay, well, we're getting a lot of
1:07:20
dollars here. Okay. $1 You see, I haven't gotten
1:07:23
John C Dvorak: one yet. Okay. $1 right. $1 that this will be easy
1:07:28
to do. That. Will if there is any jokes, there'll be less than
1:07:32
five total.
1:07:33
Adam Curry: No, no, no, no, no. What do you mean? What did you
1:07:37
say? You're pegging it at five. I have to have five jokes about
1:07:40
that to win.
1:07:40
John C Dvorak: Oh, everything's gonna be about Silicon Valley
1:07:43
jokes. Well, blah, blah. But he meets on one joke is counts.
1:07:49
Adam Curry: Let's say three.
1:07:53
John C Dvorak: Okay, I'll take your five. I'm not afraid.
1:07:55
You're gonna take the five. I'm gonna take the five. I was just
1:07:58
about to give into the three. Drop the ball. I'm gonna take
1:08:01
the
1:08:01
Adam Curry: five. But I'll have to write you a check for my
1:08:03
Silicon Valley Bank Account. Bloomberg came up with an
1:08:08
interesting little ditty the other day. Yeah, EU has no clue
1:08:13
of whereabouts of 86% of frozen Russian bank central bank
1:08:17
assets. You know, there's a $300 billion that was supposedly
1:08:22
frozen or scattered. They can't find it. They couldn't find more
1:08:25
than 36 point 4 billion. And then you have Medvedev. Medvedev
1:08:31
met Vijay Medvedev. He said, Oh, May I May I point out? They have
1:08:36
$300 billion worth of foreign assets frozen in Russia.
1:08:42
John C Dvorak: So that's a wash a quid
1:08:44
Adam Curry: pro quo. That's our wash. Yeah. It cancels each
1:08:47
other out. He says he did a happy coincidence. It would be
1:08:54
enough to recall recompense Russia for what might be stolen
1:08:57
from Russia. Well, that's kind of interesting. I didn't No one.
1:09:01
No one broadcast that. No, heaven forbid. Anyway, we're
1:09:05
still using evil Putin and Russia to try and capture the
1:09:10
rest of the countries in the EU sphere to try and get him into
1:09:15
NATO and try and get him into into the war. But you see what's
1:09:22
going on in Georgia, Moldova, though is the interesting one
1:09:25
is, you know, QQ one of our producers, he's from Moldova.
1:09:28
And he says, you know that the President of the woman who
1:09:32
thinks she's president or prime minister, isn't that guy
1:09:35
Moldova? No, Moldova is a woman I what am I say? Oh, I'm
1:09:38
thinking to Belarus, Moldova is a woman that, you know, but
1:09:42
she's all in on EU, but the Moldovans may not be all in on
1:09:48
EU and NATO. And here's Kirby reacting to a question from a
1:09:53
White House correspondent who I've never seen asked a question
1:09:56
before, and she looks Israeli in a way but I'm not sure where
1:10:00
she's from
1:10:01
Unknown: Lee has said that there was a Russian plot to sort of
1:10:05
overthrow her government and break Moldova's path to Europe.
1:10:09
It was something that President Solinsky himself had also warned
1:10:13
about. What is the US says assessment of this possible
1:10:18
plot? And more broadly, what is the concern about Russia's
1:10:22
attempts to sort of influence these got these pro European
1:10:27
governments in the region, even though it's right now focused on
1:10:30
Ukraine about other countries in the region?
1:10:33
So we'll see about that is deeply concerning reports.
1:10:41
Certainly not outside the bounds of Russian behavior. And we
1:10:48
absolutely stand with the modem Moldovan government and the
1:10:53
Moldovan people
1:10:54
we have no confirmation from US side of things
1:10:58
I know of no independent confirmation but we're certainly
1:11:00
not questioning their capacity the will of the of the Russians
1:11:06
and Mr. Putin to try to do that is perfectly right at page Iran
1:11:10
average playbook.
1:11:11
Adam Curry: Oh page numbers playbook Yeah, I was gonna was
1:11:13
talking about oh, he's gonna take over Moldova I don't think
1:11:18
I don't think Kirby was ready for this question. Because you
1:11:23
know, they're so focused on Georgia trying to make it look
1:11:26
like Russia and of course if there's a government in their
1:11:30
day to day wants nothing to do with the with the west they
1:11:33
don't want to be part of NATO or whatever they're sick and tired
1:11:37
of all this crap. Michigan Moldova. Just take a look at the
1:11:40
map. I'm gonna refresh my memory and will those in such a great
1:11:43
spot
1:11:45
John C Dvorak: so Moldova, if I'm not mistaken, has that
1:11:47
little strip of land as butted up against Ukraine? That is
1:11:51
correct. Considered Russian?
1:11:53
Adam Curry: Yes, it's on the southwestern flank, I think.
1:11:58
John C Dvorak: Yeah, something like that. But it's right there.
1:12:00
And it's like a buffer between the Ukraine and main part of
1:12:04
Moldova and they the Russia has been wanting to get capture that
1:12:08
they can't seem to
1:12:09
Adam Curry: right near Odessa and it borders on Romania.
1:12:14
John C Dvorak: Yeah, there's a lot of talk right now that the
1:12:16
Russians are really angling to get Odessa i think that's lost
1:12:21
cause at this point I don't
1:12:23
Adam Curry: think they care I think they want Dawn boss they
1:12:25
want to you know that's what they want that's the
1:12:27
John C Dvorak: if you look at some of the takeover maps where
1:12:30
they take over a big chunk of Ukraine Odessa is included
1:12:33
they'd love to own all the ports because there's money there but
1:12:39
at the Odessa is cannot go to the Russians and probably never
1:12:43
will but it's been discussed
1:12:47
Adam Curry: so any well that could be for for for you know
1:12:51
five years from now when this thing cranks up again that could
1:12:53
go get that but I don't know I'm just not seeing much movement at
1:13:00
the Moldova thing is is weird. It's weird. Does that mean that
1:13:04
we need we can't send anything anymore? We have no we have no
1:13:07
ammo. We got nothing. I don't I don't know what that what the
1:13:11
plan is. They may be at a stalemate. And that that little
1:13:15
laugh tell you had there that little giggle Oh, my God. Yeah,
1:13:18
that's what they think. It looks like it's ending.
1:13:23
John C Dvorak: That's a giveaway. This is well, that's
1:13:25
what and it's not answering the question either. It's like
1:13:28
saying, you know, do you think that next the the Ukrainians
1:13:35
want to take they want to take back Crimea? And he says, Yeah,
1:13:38
I've heard that's what they think. Kind of. I don't Yeah,
1:13:42
like, I don't think so. That's not they're not getting that's
1:13:45
not part of it. We'll be here forever if that happens.
1:13:48
Adam Curry: Yeah. Goodness. I wish I wish we knew a little bit
1:13:52
more.
1:13:53
John C Dvorak: I wish they stop it.
1:13:55
Adam Curry: What stopped the war? Yeah. Well,
1:13:59
John C Dvorak: they have the wherewithal they have,
1:14:01
supposedly we have diplomats that are professionals. And
1:14:04
meanwhile, of course, we lost, you know, the war between Saudi
1:14:08
Arabia and Iran, which is mostly a Pyrrhic I guess, whatever you
1:14:12
want to call but they had a proxy war going on in Yemen
1:14:16
between the two and it was brokered to peace by the
1:14:19
Chinese.
1:14:20
Adam Curry: This was beautiful. I have a clip pre conciliation
1:14:23
Unknown: between old enemies.
1:14:26
The declaration signed by our kingdom, Iran and China was in
1:14:31
Canada Jose senang
1:14:32
SMent on national television in Saudi Arabia followed the
1:14:35
release of a joint statements with Iran to Middle Eastern
1:14:39
countries brought together around a table in China and
1:14:42
reestablished diplomatic relations in tissue if I were
1:14:46
YouTube.
1:14:47
Testing this thing, we agreed to open a new chapter between the
1:14:51
Islamic Republic of Iran and Saudi Arabia after having no
1:14:56
ties for seven years, while observing the interests of both
1:14:59
countries.
1:15:00
It's a masala shahadi This video released by Iranian state media
1:15:06
shows Iranian and Saudi officials alongside China's most
1:15:10
senior diplomats. Sunni Saudi Arabia cut ties with
1:15:14
predominantly Shia Iran in 2016, after an attack on its embassy
1:15:19
in Tehran, carried out by Iranian protesters after the
1:15:22
Saudi execution of a Shia cleric re establishing ties could have
1:15:27
wide implications across the Middle East, particularly in
1:15:31
Yemen, whether two rival Gulf powers are locked in a proxy
1:15:34
war, as well as in Iraq and in Lebanon, Riyadh, and Tehran will
1:15:39
reopen their embassies and will also restart economic and
1:15:43
security deals signed in 1998 and 2001. The White House
1:15:49
welcome the rapprochement saying is a means for us to deescalate
1:15:53
tensions in the region. Because Beijing meanwhile, praised the
1:15:57
wisdom of the two countries.
1:15:59
Adam Curry: I think this is a baller move by China. Freely
1:16:03
cool. They did this, because now they've got Saudi Arabia, Iran,
1:16:09
Russia, they got a pretty formidable front. Now in the
1:16:12
front, they got a formidable group. And what does that do for
1:16:16
our sales of weapons and training and advisors to Yemen.
1:16:20
Does that end is that over now is there as
1:16:22
John C Dvorak: well, we were selling to Saudi Arabia, and
1:16:24
they were using it in Yemen.
1:16:26
Adam Curry: Yeah. Believe me, we have advisors helping them out
1:16:29
in Yemen.
1:16:29
John C Dvorak: But I'm sure Yeah, I think it puts the kibosh
1:16:32
on it it doesn't change the fact that the Saudis will probably
1:16:35
still keep buying our F 16. Or F 30. Fives I'm not sure what
1:16:39
we're selling,
1:16:40
Adam Curry: China is going to negotiate the peace between
1:16:43
Russia and Ukraine. This is the this is the way
1:16:45
John C Dvorak: that was the that was the thesis that showed up in
1:16:49
the show about a month ago. And the fact that they did this
1:16:54
little side bit, which is like okay, look, here's how it works.
1:16:58
We're going to show you how good we are. And then they negotiate
1:17:02
you want so let me pick two crappy countries that hate each
1:17:04
other. Let me show you how we get these two to get together.
1:17:08
Yeah. And they got him together out of the blue by the way, I
1:17:12
didn't know about this happening know that we weren't given any
1:17:17
any heads up on this by the media, that's for sure. There
1:17:22
was no precursor at all. So boom, this happens. Okay, now we
1:17:26
can deal with the rest of it. We can hook these two guys, we can
1:17:30
get the Ukraine thing. It's an embarrassment. Oh, yeah. We
1:17:34
praise a bullcrap. Dr. People should be ashamed of themselves.
1:17:39
They're
1:17:39
Adam Curry: not they're completely a blip. They don't
1:17:41
they have a board. I don't
1:17:42
John C Dvorak: believe it. Okay, so they can't be How can you be
1:17:46
humiliated like this? Oh, they say, well, that's great.
1:17:50
Adam Curry: Oh, they're humiliated. But they want to
1:17:52
save face. And China is going to let them save face. They're the
1:17:55
kings of saving face. And everything. I talked about the
1:18:00
pivot to China. I'm going to give you two examples right now.
1:18:03
The first one is Avril Haines. She represents the US. I think
1:18:08
the National Intelligence Director,
1:18:10
John C Dvorak: she is the dumbest woman I've ever seen in
1:18:13
the intelligence community.
1:18:15
Adam Curry: Well, she's running it and this report, sadly, cut
1:18:18
it down. 48 seconds has some music under it. But this is from
1:18:21
testimony in Senate
1:18:22
Unknown: in brief, the CCP represents both the leading and
1:18:26
most consequential threat to US national security and leadership
1:18:29
globally, and its intelligence specific ambitions and
1:18:32
capabilities. Make it for us our most serious and consequential
1:18:36
intelligence rival. During the past year, the threat has been
1:18:40
additionally complicated by a deepening collaboration with
1:18:43
Russia, which also remains an area obviously, of intense focus
1:18:46
for the intelligence community. We do see them providing
1:18:49
assistance to Russia in the context of the conflict. And we
1:18:54
see them in a situation in which they'd become increasingly
1:18:58
uncomfortable about the level of assistance and not looking to do
1:19:03
it as publicly as might otherwise occur. And given the
1:19:08
reputational costs associated with it, yeah,
1:19:11
Adam Curry: sure. They don't care about the reputation. So
1:19:13
just bear with me for a second. It behooves everybody for China
1:19:18
to and the Ukraine conflict, because we are already moving
1:19:22
away from Ukraine. You're not on the Oscars, your agent, fire
1:19:25
your agent get a new one is not going to work. We're not going
1:19:28
to let you on the Oscars that happened that that right that I
1:19:31
know it's over in America, if you're shunned from show
1:19:34
business as the end of your career, and he's an actor,
1:19:38
comedian. So we have the intelligence committee. Oh, yes.
1:19:40
Well, actually, this is why they're very, they're very
1:19:42
sophisticated. They got balloons, so we need some money
1:19:45
for our intelligence. Okay, great. So we got the dumb Avro
1:19:47
Levine over there. I have here in front of me a memorandum
1:19:52
John C Dvorak: who is not Avril Levine Rachel Levine.
1:19:56
Adam Curry: No, no. Abra Levine is a singer who Aren't you gonna
1:20:00
John C Dvorak: be Chicago right? Here? Right? Yeah, sorry.
1:20:03
Adam Curry: Who is I believe Rachel Levine's daughter. So
1:20:06
that's very possible. I don't, I don't know. I have in front of
1:20:09
me memorandum for all Department of Defense personnel dated
1:20:13
stamped March 2 2023. From from our Secretary of Defense, you
1:20:18
know him if you wouldn't recognize him because he has a
1:20:20
mask and a shield on. I'd like to read a little bit from this
1:20:24
memorandum. Since day one is Secretary of Defense, I have
1:20:27
been guided by three priorities, defending the nation, taking
1:20:32
care of our people, and succeeding through teamwork.
1:20:36
Wow, what is he running at the Silicon Valley startup idiot.
1:20:41
Over the past two years, we've made tremendous progress in all
1:20:43
three arenas. I'd like to thank each and every one of you for
1:20:46
your commitment and hard work. As we look to the year ahead,
1:20:50
these same three priorities continued to guide all that we
1:20:53
do. So he's prioritize these challenges. I'm going to give
1:21:00
them to you in order of appearance and order of priority
1:21:04
number one,
1:21:05
John C Dvorak: this is the order of priority order of priority.
1:21:08
So number one is the most prior buy the most prior, the most
1:21:12
high priority
1:21:13
Adam Curry: highest priority. Exactly. defend the nation,
1:21:19
prioritize China as the pacing challenge. And increasingly
1:21:26
aggressive China is trying to shape the international rules
1:21:29
based system New World Order to suit its authoritarian
1:21:33
preferences. This is a generational challenge and the
1:21:36
department will rise to meet it. To do so we must embrace
1:21:41
integrated deterrence, which charges us to coordinate our
1:21:44
efforts across all warfighting domains, theatres and the
1:21:48
spectrum of conflict to create new and more complex dilemmas
1:21:52
for adverse adversaries. More money,
1:21:55
John C Dvorak: adversaries. Yeah,
1:21:57
Adam Curry: that's what I meant adversaries. Thank you. We must
1:21:59
continue to break down stovepipes across the department
1:22:02
stovepipes across the environment, improve our
1:22:05
cooperation with the interagency and Congress and work with our
1:22:08
allies and partners to improve operational planning, blah,
1:22:12
blah, blah. So, we are to strengthen our deterrence
1:22:15
posture in the Indo Pacific but developing new concepts and
1:22:19
capabilities Kuching deepening our alliances and partnerships.
1:22:23
Hello Philippines, expanding our activities and operations Hello
1:22:28
right off the coast of China. As the threat from PRC evolves, we
1:22:31
will provide Taiwan self defense capabilities consistent with the
1:22:35
budget we need, I'm sorry, with the Taiwan Relations Act,
1:22:38
alright, to tackle the acute Russian threat. We will not be
1:22:45
drawn into Putin's war of choice, but we remain resolved
1:22:48
to defend every inch of NATO territory. Working closely with
1:22:52
our allies. We've already strengthened NATO's eastern
1:22:55
flank and will continue to strengthen our collective
1:22:57
defence and deterrence. It's over addressed advanced and
1:23:03
persistent threats. The department will also remain
1:23:06
vigilant against dangers including North Korea, Iran and
1:23:10
the global terrorist organizations. innovate and
1:23:13
modernize. Here we go. America's dynamism has always been at the
1:23:17
heart of our strategic advantage to tackle emerging challenges.
1:23:20
We are modernizing every aspect of the joint force from
1:23:23
hypersonic weapons to our joint warfighting concepts comms our
1:23:28
joint warfighting concept and American concept vehicles. From
1:23:33
data analysis to artificial intelligence GPT war version, we
1:23:38
are also accelerating the development of advanced
1:23:40
technologies to deliver new capabilities to the force. This
1:23:43
sounds like a Silicon Valley pitch. And then of course, on
1:23:49
the list, meters meet the climate crisis.
1:23:53
John C Dvorak: Well, this number one, no, no,
1:23:56
Adam Curry: this is number four. I'm giving them to you in
1:23:58
John C Dvorak: order number of four. You've already given me
1:24:01
about 10 of them. No, I gave you one.
1:24:04
Adam Curry: One was China. Two was Russia. Three persistent
1:24:07
threats. Oh, yeah. Fours innovate and Myrt and more than
1:24:10
modernized, and five I'm sorry, is meet the climate crisis. Our
1:24:13
strategy and planning addresses for security implications of our
1:24:17
changing climate. We are developing new platforms to
1:24:20
mitigate logistical risks in contested environments.
1:24:24
John C Dvorak: Whatever happens to the fish there on the streets
1:24:27
of Miami flopping on
1:24:29
Adam Curry: the streets of Miami or is the fish that was honest
1:24:38
this. There they are.
1:24:43
Unknown: flopping people are noticing the largest downpour in
1:24:46
the history of the UK was just a year ago. Last fall and there
1:24:51
have been wave after wave of these downpours, the sea level
1:24:55
predictions and low lying coastal areas not least on the
1:24:58
banks of the Thames. are ones that people are now taking into
1:25:03
account all the terms that are flowing I was in Amsterdam
1:25:07
earlier this week. And believe me, they're looking very
1:25:11
carefully at this my, in making this movie I went to Miami Beach
1:25:16
I saw a fish from the ocean, swimming in the streets. Yeah,
1:25:20
Miami Beach flopping flopping around during the highest of the
1:25:24
high tides. That's happening on a regular basis,
1:25:27
John C Dvorak: regular, regular basis. That was some photos of
1:25:30
the more recent examples. So the
1:25:32
Adam Curry: second part was taking care of our people. I'll
1:25:35
just run through this quickly grow our talent to grow our
1:25:39
talent. Does that mean to remain the strongest fighting force in
1:25:42
the world? We must recruit and retain the best of America.
1:25:45
Yeah, once you Jack us up with vaccines we don't want that
1:25:48
helps. That grows your talent, build resilience and readiness,
1:25:53
whatever, ensure accountable leadership, we write and then
1:25:57
succeeding through teamwork, join forces with our allies and
1:26:00
partners, sell them some crap they don't want strengthen
1:26:03
partnerships across America and build unity within the
1:26:07
department. So there is really nothing about you the Ukraine
1:26:11
war is not the existential threat that it was. There's no
1:26:14
whatever it takes, we're gonna defend NATO. It's all about
1:26:18
China. So China gives us it's a gimme. It's like, it's almost
1:26:22
like hey, this is great. Thanks, China. And now we got Iran to do
1:26:26
what we're very worried about running their work with China.
1:26:28
We've got Taiwan Oh, very well, they're gonna take and you know
1:26:31
what, China will probably just not do anything until 2027 It
1:26:36
just go and we're just going to build
1:26:37
John C Dvorak: up what they might not do anything. The
1:26:38
latest from burns, though had the 2027 predictions now he's
1:26:43
now backing off saying what you just said. You know, they might
1:26:47
not do anything,
1:26:49
Adam Curry: then why would they?
1:26:50
John C Dvorak: Why would they watch us flailing around like
1:26:53
idiots if we
1:26:54
Adam Curry: were smart? We just continued to build up our
1:26:57
financial resilience because ultimately the China's trying to
1:27:02
put together I think a financial group now no bricks is basically
1:27:08
that but a Financial Group and make their money the rich
1:27:12
someone's got to be the reserve currency of green energy. I
1:27:16
guess it's not going to be it's not supposed to be oil or or gas
1:27:19
or anything. So I just see this as a non starter which we're
1:27:24
going to be it's going to be fear mongering on the news every
1:27:27
single day. All across the western world be afraid China
1:27:32
China, China, China, and you know, and maybe there'll be
1:27:34
little things I do here and there. But I just I don't see
1:27:38
it. I think it's it's great. They want more money, they don't
1:27:40
care they just want to blow stuff up and on TV pitch for
1:27:44
more money. We have no one to actually go and fight anymore.
1:27:50
We have we have like 50,000 Ready troops we don't even have
1:27:53
the half a million that we're supposed to have. Which is
1:27:58
really bad.
1:28:01
Unknown: Um over the
1:28:06
Adam Curry: over the past week, we had Queen Ursula came over to
1:28:13
visit Ursula Queen Ursula, the President of the European Union
1:28:18
Commission thing is for commission. So after Schultz
1:28:22
came over and Schultz Of course, like hey, man, you know, we got
1:28:25
to like step out of this Ukraine thing. Let's blame it on the
1:28:28
Ukrainians. So we have an out clean Ursula comes in because
1:28:32
now it's time to go back to the Green Deal. The hydrogen clean
1:28:36
hydrogen. Yeah. So she
1:28:38
John C Dvorak: flies over the same way that in and out, in and
1:28:42
out, no comes out or flies over? I mean, again, because they
1:28:46
don't trust any other form of communication. But okay.
1:28:51
Adam Curry: Well, she did do a she gave a speech, addressed the
1:28:55
media. And if you recall, the big problem with the European
1:28:59
Union and the US is the inflation Reduction Act, where
1:29:05
we say we made this you know, a lot of money was it a trillion
1:29:08
and a half dollars?
1:29:10
Unknown: I think it was the Yeah.
1:29:12
Adam Curry: How's that working out by the way has inflation
1:29:15
tempered any it keeps going up crazy. And the and, and, you
1:29:21
know, all kinds of subsidies are a trillion and a half dollars,
1:29:24
lot of money that we put up for green, green initiatives, except
1:29:30
in there, it's like well, you know, we'll we'll give subsidies
1:29:33
for electric vehicles and hydrogen stuff, but it has to be
1:29:37
60% us made. And somehow that was a fast one that was pulled
1:29:42
because this is what Queen Ursula has been bitching about.
1:29:46
For months now. We've played several clips, and I guess they
1:29:50
struck some sort of deal.
1:29:51
Unknown: We agreed on a transparency dialogue.
1:29:54
Concerning the incentives.
1:29:56
Adam Curry: What's your transparency dialogue? Because I
1:29:58
like a podcast, I think Podcast transparency dialogue. That's
1:30:01
what
1:30:02
Unknown: we need on a transparency dialogue concerning
1:30:05
the incentives that are given given to the clean tech industry
1:30:09
for us is important on both sides of the aisle
1:30:11
Adam Curry: like this. We kind of overlooked this. But it used
1:30:15
to be green tech, you remember that was Kleiner Perkins, who
1:30:18
put together a whole bunch of investments in companies for
1:30:20
green tech. Now, which clean tech and clean tech is, is
1:30:26
hydrogen, as far as I can tell, clean tech
1:30:28
Unknown: industry classes important on both sides of the
1:30:30
Atlantic to know what kind of incentives are being given to
1:30:35
the clean tech industry, to make sure that we joined forces to
1:30:39
boost the clean data industry that is crucial and paramount
1:30:44
for reaching a circular economy. A net zero economy a
1:30:49
few weeks ago, we
1:30:50
had already an agreement concerning electric vehicles
1:30:54
accessing the American market. Today, we agreed that we will
1:31:00
work on critical raw materials that have been processed in the
1:31:07
European Union, and to give them the access to the American
1:31:11
market as if they were sourced in the American market. We will
1:31:15
work on an agreement with that is concerned.
1:31:17
Adam Curry: There you go. So it's for the raw materials that
1:31:20
we're going to dig we're going to dig up parts of Europe, which
1:31:22
I think actually will be Canada. So it's like a it's a pass
1:31:26
through. Because Ursula went to Canada and said, hey, you know,
1:31:29
we need your raw materials. We need your green stuff. Because
1:31:34
you have a lot of gas and then you shipped out to us and then
1:31:37
we'll probably ship it off to America. They're doing some kind
1:31:39
of some kind of deal so that they dig up other countries.
1:31:44
John C Dvorak: Dig up Canada. That's a good Alberta is just
1:31:48
ripe to be dug up.
1:31:52
Adam Curry: Dig up Canada.
1:31:54
John C Dvorak: Yep. Canada meanwhile,
1:31:56
Adam Curry: we have nothing to worry about. Because our
1:31:58
national laboratory in the US has cracked the battery
1:32:01
technology code. We'll be able to go 1000s of miles on one
1:32:08
charge. It'll charge in five minutes. Oh, it's
1:32:13
John C Dvorak: I didn't see this.
1:32:14
Adam Curry: Oh, goodness. It the coming Evie batteries will sweep
1:32:17
away fossil fuel transport with or without net zero. I wish I
1:32:22
wish I had a clip I'll just read the first paragraph, the Argonne
1:32:26
National Laboratory in the US has essentially cracked the
1:32:30
battery technology for electric vehicles, discovering a way to
1:32:33
raise the future driving range of standard EVs to 1000 miles or
1:32:38
more. It promises to do so cheaply without exhausting the
1:32:42
global supply of critical minerals in the process. Why?
1:32:45
It's almost like zero point energy. I have seen these
1:32:49
stories so many times. Oh, how many times have we seen the new
1:32:56
battery technology?
1:32:59
John C Dvorak: Yes, go we have to remember everyone should
1:33:01
remember all battery technology, except for little bitty things
1:33:06
like the membrane and some of the packaging and all the rest
1:33:10
of it. All battery technology was beaten to death in the
1:33:13
1800s.
1:33:14
Adam Curry: Yeah, we had battery cars in the 1800s. And then once
1:33:18
the gasoline powered engine came along, I wouldn't want to screw
1:33:21
that battery piece of crap. We've been through this. It's
1:33:25
the argon argon i f battery. It's a global breakthrough.
1:33:32
John C Dvorak: Well, I'm skeptic I'm
1:33:34
Adam Curry: very skeptical. Because we've heard this
1:33:38
John C Dvorak: nothing new in battery technology. 2005
1:33:41
Adam Curry: I have a report here 2005 New Scientist and
1:33:45
rechargeable battery that can be fully charged in six minutes
1:33:48
last time times as long as today's rechargeables and could
1:33:50
provide burst of electricity up to three times more powerful in
1:33:54
a in a Nevada lab. Pa 2011 a pioneer in battery research who
1:34:01
already successful launch a three and a $50 million company
1:34:03
to supply batteries to like to GE and Chrysler has done it
1:34:06
again. Only this time it represents the complete
1:34:09
reinvention of battery technology as we know it. It
1:34:13
will fully replace fossil fuels, especially oil. So we've seen
1:34:19
this
1:34:19
John C Dvorak: and you could probably get that was 2011 Yeah,
1:34:22
probably go back another 10 years and you'll find some Mills
1:34:27
Adam Curry: This is my setup for your battery for I have no idea
1:34:29
where your clips are but I figured I'd say yep, I
1:34:33
John C Dvorak: have no idea. Okay, this is just a bag. Okay,
1:34:36
I get the battery clips.
1:34:38
Adam Curry: I see batteries for cars. I'm like this. I got to
1:34:40
set them up. This is perfect.
1:34:42
Unknown: Yeah. Play the clip.
1:34:45
John C Dvorak: To play clip. Boy, let's go with batteries.
1:34:47
Unknown: Do I want to go electric or hybrid? The Biden
1:34:51
administration would like you to the administration wants at
1:34:53
least half of new car sales to be electric in 10 years. To make
1:34:57
that happen. Car manufacturers need batteries, lots of them.
1:35:01
But here's the thing, China has a tight grip on the materials
1:35:04
and production needed to make those batteries. According to
1:35:07
the International Energy Agency 75% of the world's lithium ion
1:35:12
batteries 2021, the US made only 7%. This is yet another area
1:35:17
where the US and China are competing on the global stage.
1:35:20
So we thought this would be a good ask how the US can make
1:35:23
progress on electric cars and renewable energy when China
1:35:27
dominates the market. We call almost Hochstein for that he's
1:35:31
the Special Presidential coordinator for global
1:35:33
infrastructure and energy security in that role. He
1:35:36
advises President Biden on energy as a national security
1:35:40
matter. And his portfolio runs across agencies. So we thought
1:35:43
he'd be a good person to talk about this. And he's with us
1:35:45
now. Mr. Hochstein? Welcome. Thank you so much for joining
1:35:47
us.
1:35:48
It's great to be here. Michelle, it's really great to have this
1:35:50
conversation.
1:35:51
Thanks for that. So to start us off, is the US in a race with
1:35:55
China to acquire the materials for these car batteries.
1:35:58
I think we're in a race, not necessarily within China, but
1:36:01
we're in a race to ensure that we have for the United States, a
1:36:06
diversified sourcing of these batteries and solar. So it's not
1:36:11
just about the battery. So if you think about the way you just
1:36:14
presented, Michelle, we have the battery in it has a number of
1:36:18
components, and the car has even more components. And they are in
1:36:22
places like Sub Saharan Africa, from South and Central America,
1:36:26
Southeast Asia, and we have to source those. So one thing
1:36:29
President Biden wants to do is make more of those batteries
1:36:31
here at home. We want to do more money here at home. But we know
1:36:34
we can't mine in the United States for everything that we
1:36:37
need. No, we won't have
1:36:39
Adam Curry: it. Go dig up Canada. Much better. Right?
1:36:44
John C Dvorak: Well, there's some mines since I think the
1:36:45
Carolinas have some lithium mines that Nevada is another
1:36:49
place. Of course, Nevada. This numbers were just I didn't know
1:36:56
this. I didn't know that China made 75% Of all the batteries
1:37:00
and we made 7%. When did that happen?
1:37:05
Adam Curry: I don't know. What happened. By the way, it wasn't
1:37:08
that I read something about lithium, like the stock stocks
1:37:12
for lithium are way down. For some reason I read something.
1:37:16
John C Dvorak: So yeah. Do you know why I don't know why that
1:37:19
is? I looked into it. Okay. But I couldn't figure out it's just
1:37:23
who knows what, what's going on with lithium. But we have two
1:37:27
facilities, the United States, two lithium companies, and
1:37:30
there's a bunch of us you want to have this. Canada has a
1:37:34
couple of lithium plays that run on the on one of those. I think
1:37:38
that I don't even know if it's existing anymore. But they used
1:37:40
to have a stock exchange on the west coast of Canada that was
1:37:45
just did mining stocks. That was called a mining stock exchanges
1:37:49
to be penny stocks. And you can invest in some of these Penny
1:37:54
lithium stocks. I think it might not be a bad idea. But anyway,
1:37:58
Adam Curry: we don't offer financial advice. Disclaimer.
1:38:03
John C Dvorak: That yeah, I agree. Don't Don't listen to us
1:38:05
Adam Curry: ever, ever, ever buy bitcoin? Don't listen to me.
1:38:12
John C Dvorak: Just don't listen to him, especially you know,
1:38:14
okay.
1:38:16
Adam Curry: Protect yourself from a banking collapse. Here
1:38:19
you go.
1:38:21
Unknown: Part two, we don't want China to control the supply for
1:38:24
the whole world, just like we didn't want Russia to control
1:38:27
the supply of energy for its neighbors. So we have to learn
1:38:30
from the mistakes of the Russia war. And now implement that
1:38:34
here. And make sure that when you
1:38:37
Adam Curry: learn from our mistakes from the what is the
1:38:39
Russia war, to Russian warrior? What Russian war? You know, the
1:38:44
one in Ukraine? Yeah. What does it have to do with with lithium?
1:38:48
John C Dvorak: You tell me, man good. So
1:38:50
Unknown: we have to learn from the mistakes of the Russia war.
1:38:53
And now implement that here. And make sure that when you buy that
1:38:57
electric vehicle, or you install that solar panel, that it's not
1:39:02
controlled by one country.
1:39:05
John C Dvorak: You mean China, which controls 100% of the solar
1:39:08
panels. This guy is great,
1:39:11
Unknown: not controlled by one country.
1:39:14
So a factsheet, released by the White House last month said,
1:39:17
quote, The US is increasingly dependent on foreign sources for
1:39:20
many of the processed versions of these minerals. Globally,
1:39:23
China controls most of the market for processing and
1:39:26
refining for cobalt, lithium rare earths and other critical
1:39:30
minerals and quote, as I said, this is from the White House.
1:39:33
Yeah, how did we get to this point where China essentially
1:39:36
has control over this market and the US is playing catch up.
1:39:39
Over the last 10 years, China has invested in acquiring mines
1:39:45
in primarily Africa and southern South America. So they own a lot
1:39:48
of mining. They own a lot of the refining and processing of those
1:39:52
materials. When they come out of the ground. You got to turn them
1:39:55
into battery grade material, and then they want to build the
1:39:58
batteries and we wanted things cheap. So we were willing to buy
1:40:03
whatever was on the market at the lowest cost China then
1:40:06
reduce the costs subsidizing it. We bought the cheap stuff from
1:40:10
them and our own industries went out of business.
1:40:12
Adam Curry: So what happened to Elon giga factory? I thought he
1:40:16
had all the answers.
1:40:19
John C Dvorak: Well for him,
1:40:21
Adam Curry: I mean, correct me if I'm wrong, but China controls
1:40:25
him. I mean, aren't they the biggest?
1:40:28
John C Dvorak: Well, he's got a plant there. And they always
1:40:31
threatened him with one thing or another. Shut up.
1:40:33
Adam Curry: Shut up. Iran Shut up. Shut up. Iran. Oh, we tap
1:40:38
you on half your money. Your Tesla. That was my usual thing,
1:40:43
personally. Yeah, very good. Yes, very good.
1:40:45
Unknown: interested in why this happened,
1:40:47
the why it's not as much as the constituency. But maybe even to
1:40:52
the country, what the Chinese wanted to do was to take away
1:40:56
our industry, we even sued them under the Obama administration,
1:41:01
and accused them of anti dumping, meaning that they were
1:41:04
selling product for less than what they was costing them to
1:41:07
produce. And so because we didn't think ahead of what does
1:41:12
this do the entire industry, they essentially took us out of
1:41:15
business. And we didn't really care because we think about
1:41:19
things in a free market, we always talk about we want this
1:41:22
to be in a free market. And one actor in this free market was
1:41:27
acting exactly the opposite. They were subsidizing and
1:41:30
pouring money into it and using their influence around the world
1:41:33
to take over the supply chain. And once we lost the supply
1:41:37
chain, we lost the industry. So if in 2010, we were the dominant
1:41:41
solar power manufacturer. Today, we barely even exist. But that's
1:41:47
all about to change.
1:41:48
Adam Curry: Oh, it's all about the change as we dig up Canada,
1:41:56
John C Dvorak: but it never goes into how it's about to change.
1:41:58
Well,
1:41:58
Adam Curry: the big change they're pushing for is hydrogen.
1:42:01
And I was the New York Times had a pretty big article about
1:42:06
Australia, that Australia would be the will be the world's
1:42:09
biggest hydrogen producing nation, because they're going to
1:42:14
put probably Chinese solar panels all over the Outback.
1:42:19
Yeah. This is great.
1:42:24
John C Dvorak: As you know, we always forget, we always forget
1:42:26
Michael Moore's documentary that he the last one that was famous
1:42:33
that he did, which is still available, you got to scrounge
1:42:36
it up someplace about the environmental movement.
1:42:40
Adam Curry: Yeah, it was all about nuclear being the best
1:42:43
thing.
1:42:43
John C Dvorak: Well, that's what turned out to be but he kept
1:42:46
showing example, after example of failed experiments for green
1:42:52
energy, including that giant solar panel that was set up down
1:42:57
in the Arizona desert.
1:42:59
Adam Curry: Oh, yeah, I forgot about that. Huge.
1:43:02
John C Dvorak: Just be this would be similar to what was
1:43:04
what's gonna happen with the the Outback is huge. It was a big
1:43:11
giant lash shop that you went to visit it was just as in
1:43:15
shatters, it was in tatters? It was, it was a mess,
1:43:18
Adam Curry: or the Outback certainly is big. You can put,
1:43:21
John C Dvorak: you know, how many panels can you get, who's
1:43:23
going to monitor it, you know, okay, and they're all Chinese
1:43:26
and Chinese are going to, you know, sell a lot of panels. But
1:43:29
I'm always thinking about this, you know, there's, there's some
1:43:32
economic thinking where if you know, somebody's going to pour,
1:43:36
throw money away, and they're gonna sell you a solar panel for
1:43:40
10 bucks, and 10 bucks of it is their subsidy. And you're
1:43:44
actually getting the solar panel, you're paying 10 bucks,
1:43:47
but you're actually getting $20 for the solar panel, right? That
1:43:51
this is a benefit. It's a net gain in wealth to the receiver.
1:43:56
And the Chinese have done this in their entire history. And
1:44:01
they always make a fundamental error at the end, they'd never
1:44:04
cornered the market correctly. This happened with Chinese and
1:44:08
this and the Japanese silk industry. The Japanese were
1:44:12
developed a silk industry and they're making these fine silks.
1:44:15
They had the worms and all the restaurants somehow, I guess,
1:44:18
over just in the bottom of the 14 1300s 1400s. It was long time
1:44:23
ago. And the Chinese smuggled some of the silkworms out
1:44:26
because they didn't know about this and started making silk.
1:44:29
And it took a while but you can make a lot of bugs and so they
1:44:31
started making soap and they started making soap that was
1:44:35
good enough to compete with the Japanese stuff. And they would
1:44:39
lowball them. They would sell it for 1/10 The price was good,
1:44:43
best price and and this continued and continued to to
1:44:46
put the Japanese silk people out of business
1:44:50
Adam Curry: or they come into a shoe. What does that
1:44:53
John C Dvorak: all hell's breaking loose around here
1:44:54
Adam Curry: and what's going on? That's right near that's closer
1:44:57
than normal.
1:44:59
John C Dvorak: I don't know what They are okay. Anyway
1:45:02
Adam Curry: I like to soak story keep going
1:45:04
John C Dvorak: so they put this the show guys in Japan had a
1:45:07
business basically took over the world silk market and that
1:45:11
became you know silk trading was a big deal during the Silk Road
1:45:14
and that was called that for a reason because people were
1:45:17
trading everything they could get to get this Chinese silk
1:45:20
they never jacked up the prices What an idiot knows best price
1:45:28
to get the best price we took over the market why should we
1:45:31
jack up the prices and that's always kind of been their
1:45:35
attitude it's like we got a product is making money Where's
1:45:38
not like us we always think everything in terms of what we
1:45:41
do right corner the market you know do bunker hunt cornering
1:45:45
the silver market. Let's just jack it up.
1:45:49
Unknown: No, man's to DC
1:45:53
Adam Curry: now seems like they're they're at the door,
1:45:55
John.
1:45:56
John C Dvorak: Yeah, go down the aisle let him in.
1:45:59
Adam Curry: Meanwhile, as we're on this green energy kick, which
1:46:02
is just a stupid thing, people just aren't having it. I love
1:46:05
the Brits. You know, the the Ulez the Ultra Low Emission zone
1:46:11
which is only a part of London right now, but they want to make
1:46:14
it a lot of London. Where you know, you you you come into the
1:46:18
Ulez zone and you come in with the wrong vehicle and you get a
1:46:22
bill and so now the Brits are just cutting the wires paying
1:46:27
the lenses black ripping them off sewing them in half. Good.
1:46:32
Yeah, of course. It's good. You need this kind of vandalism.
1:46:35
This is insane what this mayor is doing. Sadiq Sadiq Khan.
1:46:43
They're going to install 20 750 of these things. By August.
1:46:53
People are
1:46:54
John C Dvorak: not having it. pellet guns,
1:46:58
Adam Curry: pellet guns. See, what else do we have? Whoa.
1:47:06
Sorry. I don't have anything else on the climate change. Do I
1:47:12
have anything here? Oh, I do actually. I'm sorry. Yes, I do
1:47:16
have some climate change. This is the Netherlands. You know,
1:47:20
there's a big vote coming up on the 15th I think it's the
1:47:24
provincial elections and feared builders is out who's been under
1:47:28
protection for a while, maybe 15 years or so because there's a
1:47:33
there's a what's it called against them? Not the jihad but
1:47:37
a firefight get him? fatback FatBar thought
1:47:42
John C Dvorak: oh, ah, oh,
1:47:42
Adam Curry: it had been because he was anti immigration. And he
1:47:45
said no, we were not built. We're not immigration country.
1:47:48
We're not built for all of the Turlock
1:47:52
John C Dvorak: like that is not built for a big input of all
1:47:55
kinds of foreigners at all, at all, at all. And so is it make
1:47:59
any sense
1:48:00
Adam Curry: when so this was about shutting down the 3000
1:48:02
farms. The farmers are out protesting again, they went all
1:48:06
the way down to Brussels. And you know, we studied this
1:48:09
closely. This is one of the the Tri Cities projects where they
1:48:14
want the Netherlands as you called it to be a bedroom
1:48:17
community. And so of course, fielder's is out with his, with
1:48:22
a security detail and he answers a question about about the
1:48:25
former eliminations, what do you make of the
1:48:27
Unknown: of the nitrogen emission reducing policies? What
1:48:30
do you think the real story is?
1:48:33
I think it's it's leftish rubbish. The real aim here is to
1:48:37
get rid of our farmers for some leftish nitrogen kind of agenda
1:48:42
to make room for even more immigrants, asylum seekers and
1:48:47
build houses and centers for them. And it's something that is
1:48:52
totally different than the current Elite is telling the
1:48:57
people
1:48:58
Adam Curry: I like leftish I like like that. Instead of
1:49:01
leftists, I like leftish, I like left
1:49:03
Unknown: dish dish.
1:49:04
Adam Curry: It's a nice dish we make here at the restaurant,
1:49:07
it's left dish, it's leftovers. And of course, climate change is
1:49:11
killing us left and right and making our travel very, very,
1:49:14
very unpleasant.
1:49:15
Unknown: In the past week, several airline passengers have
1:49:18
been severely injured or killed when their flights experienced
1:49:22
severe turbulence on March 1, seven people were hospitalized
1:49:26
and the plane cabin was left a mess. When Lufthansa flight
1:49:30
encountered significant turbulence over Tennessee A few
1:49:33
days later, a woman flying on a business jet was killed when the
1:49:36
aircraft was violently shaken and forced to divert to
1:49:39
Connecticut scientists expect turbulence like this to become
1:49:43
more frequent change Yep, they're
1:49:46
Adam Curry: scientists expect to get him you're gonna die in the
1:49:48
sky. We're gonna die in the sky people.
1:49:52
John C Dvorak: I had a I was on a plane once and it first
1:49:56
traveling somewhere and I was sitting next to another a guy
1:49:59
who travelled a lot he was like a salesman he was traveling
1:50:03
probably two thirds of the month. So we get into this it
1:50:08
probably done this get into these horror story exchanges
1:50:12
Adam Curry: while I was on a flight one time. Yeah. So
1:50:15
John C Dvorak: I we got we got into this turbulence discussion
1:50:18
and I said to him, we flew over a the worst turbulence I've ever
1:50:23
experienced, we were coming in over Ontario. And it turns out
1:50:27
that we were told later because it threw the plane everywhere,
1:50:30
everywhere. It's just It was a horrible experience that wings
1:50:33
were about to break off. Somebody said Are they were?
1:50:37
Yeah, so somebody said oh, yeah, that they tested the B one
1:50:41
bombers flies fluid flies around, if you catch the, you
1:50:44
know, if you get into the turbulence of that thing,
1:50:47
atmospheric river atmospheric river, it throws you all over
1:50:51
the place. I'm telling the guy the story says, really? And he
1:50:55
says, you know, first of all, did all the overhead cabins pop
1:51:01
open and throw luggage all over the place and hit in the head?
1:51:06
And I said, No. Then he said, well, then you never been in
1:51:09
turbulence.
1:51:11
Adam Curry: By the way, the solution to turbulence is a
1:51:14
short slow down, believe it or not. And that lady who was she
1:51:20
was on the plane with her husband on the private jet. I
1:51:22
can tell you what, most of the people who are injured from
1:51:27
turbulence don't have their seatbelts on.
1:51:30
John C Dvorak: Yeah, that's absolutely true part because
1:51:33
because the plane drops 10 feet and you're sitting there you go
1:51:36
up 10 feet and hit your head on the ceiling. And
1:51:39
Adam Curry: I'll tell you that I am I always have my seatbelt on
1:51:43
always. I mean, I'm pilot pilots are not stupid. And the lady in
1:51:48
the in the private jet she did not ever seatbelt on and she
1:51:53
died from a laceration to the head who knows she probably got
1:51:56
thrown and hit her head on
1:51:58
John C Dvorak: flying all over the last. And most people in
1:52:01
private jets don't use seatbelts.
1:52:03
Adam Curry: I remember Ray lane, Kleiner Perkins. This was when
1:52:07
he took me and Blum and Marta on his Galaxy, which is a huge jet
1:52:13
really not challenged as a good challenger as a global
1:52:16
challenger to fly from San Francisco with I guess it was
1:52:20
what airport to LA for the launch of the Tesla which was
1:52:28
the Roadster at the time which Elon did in or really Sequoia
1:52:33
Capital Elon did it in a in an airplane hangar and first of all
1:52:38
it was it was wall to wall private jets five of them from x
1:52:42
Pay Pal guys just it was everyone came in the private
1:52:45
jet. And this was and this was a new jet that Ray had. And so I
1:52:50
sat up front in the jump seat between the two pilots because
1:52:53
you know it was only it's a short flight from San Francisco
1:52:55
to LA I'm like I'm gonna fly up front. So I didn't need to sit
1:52:58
the back drinking cognac. So as we're landing new plane somehow
1:53:07
the pilot made an error and the nose wheel brake was locked. So
1:53:14
you land on the on the two on the main landing gear and as the
1:53:17
nose wheel came down the minute that hit you know, it was like
1:53:21
of course they unlocked it very quickly. But Ray Lane was in the
1:53:24
back sitting across from Rana Marta and he had literally said,
1:53:28
this thing is so smooth you don't even need your seatbelt.
1:53:31
He went flying forward with his glass of whiskey, everything it
1:53:34
could have been a really really bad situation. Because these
1:53:37
people are arrogant you get rich you get stupid. Really
1:53:42
unbelievable. And so this is the tip. This is a tip we're gonna
1:53:47
give you that is a valid tip. Always wear your seatbelt even
1:53:51
when doing seatbelt sign us off everybody. Keep it on. Keep it
1:53:58
on.
1:53:59
John C Dvorak: Yeah, unless you have to go to the bathroom.
1:54:01
Adam Curry: Yeah, and even then wait until you're absolutely
1:54:03
certain that there's not a little lick of turbulence and be
1:54:07
at least 30,000 feet before you even consider that.
1:54:14
John C Dvorak: Well that's our tip for the day kind of tip bows
1:54:17
kind of arrogant, elitist tip that you'd get if your accounts
1:54:22
are lousy donations in the next segment. And with
1:54:24
Adam Curry: that I'd like to say in the morning to you and thank
1:54:27
you for your courage the man who put the sea and dig up Canada
1:54:30
ladies and gentlemen, please say hello to my friend on the other
1:54:32
end Mr.
1:54:38
John C Dvorak: Kraus in the morning ships at sea boots on
1:54:40
the ground feed near subs in the water and all the damos nights
1:54:42
out.
1:54:43
Adam Curry: We noticed what is happening to trolls and the
1:54:45
troll room who we always say in the morning to the lips. Let's
1:54:49
count them right away. Oh, hello, whoa, whoa, whoa, it's
1:54:56
already down to 1450 foot No. What do we have no.
1:54:59
Unknown: Right I'm gonna I don't think this is accurate now Hold
1:55:01
Adam Curry: on What do I'm not getting a count? What's my count
1:55:04
here? 2333 There you go. 2333 and I'm going to keep refreshing
1:55:11
because people are so stupid. They leave during the donation
1:55:17
segment which by the way, it's going to be short today, but
1:55:20
this is where the best content takes place. 2309 We already
1:55:24
lost 27 Shame on them. Shame on them just by
1:55:29
John C Dvorak: mentioning that
1:55:30
Adam Curry: out it goes 2352 We're down we're debt 2309
1:55:35
Unbelievable. These people should be ashamed of themselves
1:55:38
they do not care about the people who support the program.
1:55:42
Because that's what this is. And you know what the people who
1:55:44
leave they're not they're not supporters?
1:55:49
John C Dvorak: No, they probably aren't and they don't care about
1:55:51
us discussing the art 2287 2287 Why they really Belfast Oh yeah.
1:55:57
Adam Curry: Oh yeah, they bail like little bitches.
1:56:00
John C Dvorak: I'm out of here. Donation segment all they're
1:56:03
gonna do is bake from laying
1:56:05
Adam Curry: the chanting. Yeah, well, that's what we do. Anyway,
1:56:09
for those trolls still remaining. We love you. Thank
1:56:12
you for staying with us. Keeping it going strong. In fact, turn
1:56:15
up the volume. You will not regret it. What is this Adam? I
1:56:21
listened to donation segment, but after the count, I can go
1:56:23
have a life. Okay. And that is noodle, man. 33 unblock him
1:56:29
forever. Noodle man little man douche man is what you mean. All
1:56:35
right. Thank you to the trolls. We do appreciate the trolls.
1:56:38
They're very helpful. And they can be helpful during the
1:56:41
donation segment as well. That's why we'd love having you here.
1:56:43
You can go to troll room.io That's how you participate. You
1:56:46
got a little chat box there. You can listen to the stream live.
1:56:50
We do this twice a week Thursdays and Sundays. And it's
1:56:53
like having a live studio audience. You know, it's and
1:56:56
sometimes we named check yet. I mean, if your noodle man 33 You
1:57:01
know? Oh, and Doug gave we give karma for that guy. Oh, man.
1:57:06
It's unbelievable. How mean people are 2243. We've lost 150
1:57:11
right there. Alright, let's get to work. All right, good idea.
1:57:15
Of course, you can also download one of those brand new and
1:57:19
modern podcast apps at podcast apps.com. And if you get pod,
1:57:23
pod verse or podcast addict, then it'll actually give you an
1:57:27
alert when we go live with the show. You log in, boom, you're
1:57:29
in the troll room, we've got the stream live, even if you can't,
1:57:32
if you miss it, it's your podcast app, you can listen to
1:57:34
it, and you will get notified within 90 seconds of publishing.
1:57:38
You do not get that from Apple. You don't get it from Spotify
1:57:40
from Google Amazon. That is part of podcasting. 2.0 You can also
1:57:47
follow us at no agenda social.com It's Adam at no
1:57:50
agenda. social.com John C. Dvorak at no agenda. social.com.
1:57:53
We're all on the mastodon tip. We've been doing that for five
1:57:56
years. So we're established. And I don't know if you I don't
1:57:59
think you can get any more slots on our server. But you're more
1:58:03
than welcome to follow us from any Mastodon instance, that has
1:58:07
a million of them. There is more than a million now. There's not
1:58:09
quite a million, but there's a lot. It's quite a lot. And yes,
1:58:13
indeed, we always like to thank our artists who brings us the
1:58:16
artwork, which we choose from no agenda, art generator.com You
1:58:20
can go there. Now if you're listening, live and refresh, and
1:58:23
you'll see what the artists are doing as we speak. You can also
1:58:27
see one of the many many choices we had for the previous episode,
1:58:32
which was episode 1536. We titled that killer clown. And
1:58:37
this art was loved by many came to us from Roger round eat
1:58:43
second in a row. He's going for the hat trick. This was the
1:58:47
turtle Mitch upside down with little Chinese crown of course,
1:58:54
signifying Mitch McConnell and we have we have an update on on
1:58:58
the the the minority leader on on Mitch on the journal I don't
1:59:04
think so. We didn't that for this show. We don't. Okay, well,
1:59:07
we hope he's okay. We don't know. By the way, the extra
1:59:11
seems to stop our bitching stopped it and that's really
1:59:13
cool. Thanks. If you're still here, trolls we love you. We'll
1:59:16
be giving away a car to one of you later today. Roger Thank you
1:59:22
so much. What would we let me just take a look and just take a
1:59:25
look at
1:59:25
John C Dvorak: what very funny comment to make about this art
1:59:28
in the no agenda social. Yeah, he says that's what I needed to
1:59:32
know I needed to humiliate someone's appearance, humiliate
1:59:37
and he went on and on about, you know, just everything bad about
1:59:40
the art in terms of being negative imagery. And he says
1:59:44
that's how you win.
1:59:47
Adam Curry: And you could have been a part of that conversation
1:59:49
if you were following along. I don't know agenda social.com Now
1:59:53
there were a number of pieces. Let's see what did we see we had
1:59:58
some Schultz pieces by The way you said that lots of people
2:00:03
know the Hogan's hero Hogan,
2:00:06
John C Dvorak: I go God that's where we got our some of our
2:00:08
early jingles based on Hogan. I got exactly
2:00:11
Adam Curry: to both of them over 40. So,
2:00:16
John C Dvorak: okay, anybody who's under 40 That's familiar
2:00:19
with Hogan's Heroes and Schultz saying I see nothing or anything
2:00:25
like that send an email to adam@curry.com saying I'm in
2:00:29
that mode John's right. I would put $1 on it, but I won't I got
2:00:34
the dollar running on the fire jokes.
2:00:37
Adam Curry: We also have $1 running on something else.
2:00:39
John C Dvorak: I can't remember. That's longterm in
2:00:42
Adam Curry: December, but I don't know what it was for.
2:00:45
Anyway, let's take a look we had. So we have some some shell
2:00:49
stuff. We had the pre show mixed cassette tape. Now that didn't
2:00:58
work. We had doped gold. We had some just weird stuff. That
2:01:04
wasn't anything real. I liked the mastermind. He walked away
2:01:08
with it. He did but I liked the changes here, which was the
2:01:12
Ukraine flag being peeled back to show to reveal the Chinese
2:01:15
flag. I liked that. Well. I liked that one. I didn't like
2:01:17
the cursive letters that were used instead of bold curry
2:01:20
Dvorak and changes here. And you said you didn't even see that
2:01:24
what it was you couldn't even parse it.
2:01:27
John C Dvorak: Right. Which was mentioned they say Yeah, kinda.
2:01:31
But
2:01:31
Adam Curry: no, I liked that one. Round he actually had to be
2:01:36
at two different color backgrounds. And we went with
2:01:39
the obvious beautiful Chinese red.
2:01:42
John C Dvorak: Yeah, he probably I'm guessing that he did the
2:01:45
first one. And then he is thinking about what can I do to
2:01:48
improve it? And because they all artists do that they if they if
2:01:53
they think is not quite 100% there and then so when he put
2:01:58
the red background of the Chinese flag, and then the stars
2:02:01
around his head, yellow may look even more like the Chinese flag
2:02:06
and that was a winner. I don't know if the other one would have
2:02:10
won. Hmm
2:02:13
Adam Curry: Well, the one we looked at was Matthew dropped co
2:02:15
Tucker's big dud we actually consider that for a second
2:02:18
because it was higher good higher up on the list. Yeah,
2:02:22
then then the the round anyone
2:02:27
John C Dvorak: like to drop copies right away?
2:02:29
Adam Curry: Yeah, you did but then once we once we saw once we
2:02:33
saw what I'm saying it just seems like Are you hearing me
2:02:37
okay, because people are saying that the stream is stuttering I
2:02:39
don't know. You sound good. Okay, well then we're fine then
2:02:42
somewhere else. From January 6 stuff I think that's it and then
2:02:50
all the other stuff is new. I do love Taunton Neil, who keeps
2:02:54
trying to get us to talk about I guess she's a she's into
2:02:58
crocheting
2:03:00
John C Dvorak: Yeah, she she must be
2:03:02
Adam Curry: and well what the crochet community believe it or
2:03:06
not, there's a crochet community a quite a
2:03:08
John C Dvorak: bit and there's a knitting community as a crochet
2:03:10
there's an embroidery community have meetings that got a lot of
2:03:13
Americans show sewing machine shops, and you go into a bunch
2:03:18
of women go in there they all get a machine to dick around
2:03:21
with so they learn how to do certain tricks.
2:03:25
Adam Curry: So what what they were trying to do and what has
2:03:28
been very disappointing to the crocheting community see this is
2:03:31
the kind of content that people are missing out on if you want
2:03:35
to have an artificial intelligence create a crocheting
2:03:41
I guess, is it a pattern or whatever the crochet errs go to
2:03:45
template. Yeah. And so they would upload a picture of curry
2:03:49
Dvorak. And, and the crocheting template that came out was not
2:03:56
really cool looking for us couple of balls. Yeah, we look
2:04:00
really stupid. It was no good. It was no good. So I don't think
2:04:04
we're ever going to choose anything. We're probably not
2:04:06
even going to talk about the topic except in the donation
2:04:08
segment where all the good stuff happens to Neil. Interesting,
2:04:13
our stream is dead. I have no idea why my people I'm
2:04:16
connected. I have no no idea what people are having a
2:04:18
problem. Okay, mothers have to deal with it. And you know what,
2:04:22
that's what happens when everyone leaves all of a sudden
2:04:24
in the streams can be their fault, their fault. Thanks,
2:04:27
trolls. Good work. And thank you very much, Roger. roundy. Two in
2:04:32
a row. The way it works here is if you get three in a row, you
2:04:35
get a hat trick. And that comes with all kinds of prizes. Yeah.
2:04:41
John C Dvorak: That in two bucks give you a cup of coffee. This
2:04:44
is
2:04:44
Adam Curry: a value for value program. That's why you don't
2:04:46
hear and we could be playing ads, by the way with a million
2:04:50
listeners per show. That's 1000 CPMs. Let's say we read two
2:04:55
spots about $25. We could do $50,000 In Episode Two
2:05:00
John C Dvorak: Yeah, for as long as until they found this out
2:05:03
Adam Curry: until they figured out what we were talking about.
2:05:06
And we'll be over very quick. So we exist by the grace of the
2:05:11
people who feel they've received value from this program. And
2:05:15
let's be honest, you got a lot of value today. You don't have
2:05:18
to worry, you know what's coming up. You'll be the smart person
2:05:21
in the room, Monday at school or at work, and I know what's going
2:05:25
on with the Silicon Valley Bank thing. I know what's going on.
2:05:28
We're moving to China. Don't worry, don't be freaked out.
2:05:32
Don't get so upset. You'll be the one that has that calm. And
2:05:37
that piece over you. Surely that is worth some value. And to some
2:05:41
people it is and they return that in the form of time, talent
2:05:45
and treasure, which is all we request. Many people do lots of
2:05:49
things for us. We have people who also helped produce the
2:05:52
program with clips and, and websites and other boots on the
2:05:56
ground information. But of course, we also need some
2:05:59
treasure and the time talent and treasure department and Rob wing
2:06:02
is our top executive producer today. He's from Essex from
2:06:05
Epping in Great Britain $500 And he says hey John and Adam and
2:06:11
said he has a longest donation no but since it's short and he's
2:06:14
the top I'm going to read it all on a second there we go. Hi,
2:06:24
John, Adam Rob wing from Essex here for those that don't know
2:06:27
Essex is in the UK it's much like East London but with lots
2:06:31
of trees. Big fan of the show for ever since I heard Adam on
2:06:34
JRE around three years ago broken donation I really
2:06:37
appreciate all you guys do and of course what the producers do
2:06:40
before we go further I have to admit this is my first donation
2:06:43
so obviously I need to de douching obviously you need that
2:06:48
Unknown: you've been de duced
2:06:53
Adam Curry: nice to see things are unraveling with the lockdown
2:06:56
files you in the UK. Apparently the telegraph paper has enough
2:07:00
content for the next three months. Oh, this is the the
2:07:03
WhatsApp chat files. So I'm looking forward to when they get
2:07:08
to the vaccine efficacy. It's not getting a huge amount of
2:07:11
coverage in the UK for reasons the listeners will understand.
2:07:14
But the information is starting to get out there more and more
2:07:16
even the BBC reported on it and that's saying something you
2:07:19
think there will be more outrage but either people aren't aware
2:07:22
or like my douchebag brother in law, Ronan drone. Ronan, they
2:07:29
simply don't want to know but these are the same people that
2:07:32
were happy to belittle me or lump me in with the Flat
2:07:34
Earthers at the time for questioning the narrative or for
2:07:37
not taking the vaccine accepting the vaccine into my life. I'd
2:07:41
appreciate a douchebag jingle for the inlaw just done Lastly,
2:07:45
I want to thank my smokin hot wife Laura who appreciate you
2:07:48
keeping my amygdala small love his lips as Rob and he wants a
2:07:53
Don't eat me. Bow Jaiden Okay, oh hold on a second. Don't eat
2:08:00
me bow Jaiden Where is where is that bow? Jaiden Don't eat me.
2:08:07
Is it? Is it we have a bow
2:08:11
John C Dvorak: Don't eat me. Yeah, but I bow Jaiden all I
2:08:13
Adam Curry: have is Hillary This is very weird. Don't eat me bow
2:08:17
Jaiden
2:08:20
John C Dvorak: get bored Jaden.
2:08:21
Adam Curry: Yeah I'm looking at Bo Jaiden oh here we go for some
2:08:24
reason. Oh apostrophe go figure
2:08:31
followed by a good karma we got it for karma.
2:08:39
John C Dvorak: jermichael Clink is up next. clink clink clink.
2:08:45
Oh god. Lombard Illinois, ITM guys, okay, I can take a hint.
2:08:54
All the Hogan's Heroes talk talk last show it's been a while
2:08:58
since my last donation ah ha drummed up a donation if you
2:09:05
could play Fletcher yelling Hogan
2:09:09
Adam Curry: that would that doesn't exist
2:09:11
John C Dvorak: I don't think it does either. We had Fletcher do
2:09:13
all this stuff based on the based on
2:09:15
Adam Curry: Hogan but we never actually but you know what, as I
2:09:17
was because I looked just to make sure Fletcher has done some
2:09:21
outrageous stuff for us if you don't mind. We had that one. And
2:09:28
we had
2:09:29
Unknown: ladies and gentlemen. It is time to Ramallah eyes.
2:09:36
It's a little bit funny. No, it's not
2:09:44
Adam Curry: he has done so much. Oh, I don't know where that came
2:09:49
from. Oh, this is a good one.
2:09:52
Unknown: Ah, happy birthday.
2:09:56
Adam Curry: Anyway, no, we don't have that one. So you just got a
2:09:58
nice night.
2:10:00
John C Dvorak: Hill says one end. Oh, I hope so.
2:10:02
Unknown: I hope so.
2:10:05
John C Dvorak: All right. Well, that was
2:10:06
Adam Curry: it. Oh, yeah. Well, that was easy. way he wanted to
2:10:13
wait a minute, but yeah, but what does that tell you? We miss
2:10:16
Masimo I think we missed Massimo. Yeah, we missed out.
2:10:19
Yeah. Masimo Cattaneo Oh, I miss Masimo okay, you can read that
2:10:23
when he's from Noosa Heads in Queensland, Australia. John,
2:10:26
Adam, please expect this bag of threes. That's 333 dot 33 from
2:10:31
Masimo from kin kin Queensland, Australia, the equivalent of
2:10:34
goats Gulch from my Damond I go karma for everyone, because we
2:10:39
will need it and donate every once in a while. People cheat.
2:10:41
Oh, thank you. You've got karma.
2:10:48
John C Dvorak: I believe that was Chow. When I say she out.
2:10:54
Okay, Ciao. Ciao, ciao to David in Grapevine, Texas. Switcheroo
2:11:01
for Dame Karen. Okay, we can do that up done. New Jersey and big
2:11:09
goat to my best girl, the newly minted Dame Karen who will be
2:11:13
celebrating her birthday on 313 as a dame because a birthday to
2:11:19
you. I'm not she's on the list that we usually put some yellow
2:11:21
in here. I know this isn't exactly. I know. This isn't the
2:11:25
exact ring she keeps asking for. But hopefully it will do for
2:11:31
now. No agenda has been the official podcast of the road
2:11:35
trips. And as we come to realize our exit strategy of life on the
2:11:40
road. We look forward to many more years and at least one more
2:11:46
presidential campaign.
2:11:49
Adam Curry: Season of wishful thinking wishful thinking this
2:11:52
John C Dvorak: coming verb placeholder name will be named
2:11:55
Karen keeper of the travel hounds. And she will have a Pino
2:12:01
Taj from the Stellan bike region, and black in red snapper
2:12:07
and asparagus. Oh, ISAC. I was confused by the React she's
2:12:11
getting a ring but she's getting our ring. She wants a wedding
2:12:14
ring.
2:12:14
Adam Curry: Oh. Now we understand now the monkey comes
2:12:18
out of the sleeve. We got it.
2:12:20
John C Dvorak: Okay, and she says black and red snapper and
2:12:23
asparagus. Happy birthday. Damn, Karen.
2:12:27
Adam Curry: I was going to ask you we had a wine. The other
2:12:32
night we were invited to a dinner. And I enjoyed this very
2:12:36
much. I wanted to mention it to Utah ask you what you thought it
2:12:39
was a Spring Mountain vineyard ellevet 2004
2:12:47
John C Dvorak: Are you for Spring Mountain Vineyards a very
2:12:48
famous place it was this literal set for the soap opera Falcon
2:12:56
Crest.
2:12:56
Adam Curry: Oh, I love Yes, I'd love Falcon Crest. We'd love
2:12:59
Monza of LeMans LeMans Oh, man. What was that guy's name Lorenzo
2:13:03
de mas Lamaze Lorenzo Yeah,
2:13:06
John C Dvorak: they were very popular winery back in his 70s
2:13:09
ca when they first cropped up, and they've always had decent
2:13:13
one. I haven't had a Spring Mountain line probably for 20
2:13:16
years. So I can't tell you much about it.
2:13:18
Adam Curry: Well, because it was a 2004 so literally almost 20
2:13:22
years ago. Yeah, it was great. Was really dynamite.
2:13:26
John C Dvorak: Was it a Cabernet?
2:13:29
Adam Curry: Yes kind
2:13:30
John C Dvorak: of characteristics today? Yeah, I
2:13:31
think a Cabernet artistica mirlo
2:13:34
Adam Curry: No like a Cabernet it's it was bold. I would say
2:13:38
Minton by medium not you know if you have smooth tannic it was
2:13:42
dry a little bit acidic. Tasted notes of blackberry, plum, dark
2:13:47
fruit, oak tobacco chocolate. Enough little leathery, earthy
2:13:50
smoke. Reading from the app,
2:13:53
John C Dvorak: bird Haitian orange and my all time favorite.
2:13:57
Adam Curry: Edward Musial of Waterford, Michigan 222 dot 10
2:14:01
row of ducks and then a stick in return for hours of beans
2:14:05
listening in the spirit of red pilled America support what you
2:14:09
love or it goes away. This is so true. F guess or F canceled for
2:14:15
Derek hunter. He says
2:14:21
Unknown: you've got karma
2:14:23
Adam Curry: words. True words were never spoken Edward. Thank
2:14:27
John C Dvorak: you. Yeah, actually that's quite something
2:14:30
to note. Brian agro in Cumberland Michigan. ITM please
2:14:36
de douche me. You've been D deuced. Other ways donation.
2:14:43
21687. And I should if I didn't mention it, but our Texan is 313
2:14:50
The switcheroo for Dame Karen. I don't know if I said the price.
2:14:54
Oh, Kimberly Maine, by the way, not come on in Michigan.
2:14:57
Cumberland, Maine. IGN. Please do Wish me a possible exit
2:15:01
strategy for you. He's got to deduce. Sorry. Turn me turn the
2:15:06
show. Turn the show no. Turn the after show. More from what are
2:15:13
you reading now? I'm trying to figure out what he's saying. He
2:15:16
Adam Curry: says turn the after show mixes from COVID into a
2:15:19
Broadway musical Can you not read? It's
2:15:21
John C Dvorak: just so no, I've got blurry vision this reason
2:15:25
all right. Please call my brother, Dan a douchebag. Bring
2:15:31
back to three by three jingles. Three by three and John's ot G
2:15:37
OTG going to OTG and that's not mine. That's just my song. Brian
2:15:42
agro of Cumberland Maine. Welcome back to three by three
2:15:47
jingles three by three. Okay. He wants to do
2:15:49
Unknown: this show. Send your cash. You will obey. Now it's
2:15:55
time for a three by three. Experiment by JC talking about
2:16:00
comparisons don't refund ABC, CBS and NBC
2:16:06
Adam Curry: three and here's what he asked for.
2:16:10
Unknown: John Cena Borak Bakelite today's Teddy K he's an
2:16:15
OTG
2:16:15
Adam Curry: kind of guy right? That's not the one I think this
2:16:20
is the one OTG going oh, that's your song Baby right there.
2:16:24
Who's
2:16:25
John C Dvorak: gonna guy? Yeah, and then you did a bit on OTG
2:16:30
TMZ Yeah,
2:16:31
Adam Curry: we don't do that anymore. Because we lost
2:16:33
everybody to tick tock so yeah, now we're just telling people to
2:16:38
not listen at two times speed you know not kill yourself.
2:16:42
Thank you, Brian. Nice idea. Yeah, not gonna happen. We do
2:16:47
have some I received five column five and of show mixes all
2:16:51
beautiful songs. I received a couple like from Sir Brian with
2:16:55
an eye which are meant to be the equivalent of shoving bamboo
2:16:58
sticks under your fingernails John, so I'm going to refrain
2:17:01
from playing that. But it was good. It was good by the old
2:17:04
standards. So get your singing caps on people. Sir Baron John
2:17:10
Helmer from Shawnee Kansas our last donation This is very short
2:17:14
eight donors for executive and Associate Executive producers.
2:17:17
This is very very poor showing.
2:17:20
John C Dvorak: Yes seven actually.
2:17:23
Adam Curry: The UK right seven were to 1537 in the morning John
2:17:27
Adams sending value for value $200 plus a show donation of
2:17:29
1537. That's interesting way to do that like that. No jingles
2:17:33
but I'd like a shot of sales karma to meet quota for the
2:17:36
second half of our fiscal year. Thank you for your courage sir
2:17:39
Baron John, Helmer Shawnee, Kansas so I will give you some
2:17:42
of that sales karma so we're gonna go real quick here through
2:17:50
the through the $50 donation. John's gonna give it to him when
2:17:54
I get set up for our meetups everything short today and be
2:17:56
very
2:17:57
John C Dvorak: $2 Yeah, they are the meetups a short to learn
2:18:01
today dollars and 85 cents comes from Peter Berg. Rajesh nig.
2:18:06
Rajesh, Nick, we love
2:18:07
Adam Curry: this guy. We can't nobody can pronounce your
2:18:10
pronunciation guide brother. We
2:18:12
John C Dvorak: were struggling Thornton. Colorado struggling
2:18:15
Adam. Burt generic Burgener in couple brother Copperas Cove
2:18:22
Copperas Cove Texas 100. You should not have debt goes.
2:18:27
Anonymous. I got that one. In Vorhees New Jersey. 100. Surely
2:18:33
and Gurney Ville I'm sorry. Guerneville Yeah, there you go.
2:18:37
Used to be called Gurney Ville when I was a kid they always
2:18:40
flood flood it's flooded flooded city. 100 Boom. Kevin McLaughlin
2:18:46
locusts, North Carolina $8 and $80.08 love that Chris O'Hara in
2:18:52
Hummelstown Pennsylvania 7773. I'll get a count on Kevin
2:18:58
Mickelson's record. Okay, so getting into the Guinness Book.
2:19:04
Adam Curry: You know, we could we could probably enter that.
2:19:07
Yeah, it's worth probably worth try it.
2:19:09
John C Dvorak: Worth a shot. Devin Roderick Painesville
2:19:13
Washington. 75. Peter Wait a minute. St. Peter Peters on
2:19:20
again. From righteous stick Peter righteous niggy In
2:19:25
Thornton, Colorado. He's back was 6934 Not at all public
2:19:32
school teachers bent on what that means. Sir Kevin McLaughlin
2:19:35
is back with 606 A small booth small boobs nice for these two
2:19:40
guys. We'd be doing poorly. Yeah. Michael Bundy in
2:19:44
Knoxville, Tennessee. 606 also small boobs. Adam keeps dragging
2:19:50
and unresectable he's
2:19:51
Adam Curry: no John. I don't do that. This John. What? What are
2:19:54
you talking about? I'm father of eight human resources. We had
2:19:58
the snip to be done with Kids The jokes are just part of
2:20:01
accepting consequences of the choices we make. I don't rag on
2:20:05
them. I'm proud of you
2:20:08
John C Dvorak: and well, you've done well. You've done your
2:20:10
part.
2:20:11
Adam Curry: Yeah, you should just I mean, you must be tired
2:20:13
brother. That's all I can think.
2:20:15
John C Dvorak: 30 days probably still tired. Norristown
2:20:17
Pennsylvania 5555 clock boy
2:20:24
Adam Curry: clock boy has a message for us Don't forget to
2:20:27
set your bombs forward one hour. Oh man, remember Obama he had
2:20:33
clock boy come to the White House.
2:20:35
John C Dvorak: Oh yeah clock boy the phony Highland heights and
2:20:37
Kentucky's with this clock boy because of 5510 Yeah, then the
2:20:40
next thing you know he moved to Libya. This is the clock boy
2:20:43
situations what got me kicked off. Initially from the note
2:20:47
from the from twit he'll report show.
2:20:50
Adam Curry: Yeah, because you were saying it was bull crap.
2:20:52
And they were all in on clock boy. Oh, yeah, they
2:20:55
John C Dvorak: bought cluck boy hook line and sinker, which is
2:20:58
what you can expect on most podcasts? Yeah, not this one.
2:21:02
David shrinking me get her. in Woodbridge, Virginia 50. These
2:21:06
are $50 donors. There's not too many of them. Margarita and Eden
2:21:10
hood in Orangeville, California, Carrie Cunningham in Warrenton,
2:21:14
Virginia. Gavin McGoldrick in San Francisco, California
2:21:19
Fletcher Scaife, Scapy Scapy and Wilson, North Dakota. Gary Mau
2:21:25
in Woodland Hills, California, Michael Wendell in Matawan New
2:21:29
Jersey. chasten I borrow in Northridge, California. Stephen
2:21:35
crummy in El Cajon, California. Sure. 33 megahertz in Kelowna
2:21:42
Kelowna I think is Kelowna BC and he's got a funny little note
2:21:49
there and then William dole gay I would last but not least 31
2:21:54
Total donations in Bristol Ville Ohio really poor I don't
2:21:58
understand why fell off like that.
2:22:00
Adam Curry: Well, it's because people are like, man, and no
2:22:02
more good indoor show mixes we're just we're not gonna
2:22:05
donate.
2:22:06
John C Dvorak: Well, they're gonna get a good one today.
2:22:09
Adam Curry: Apologies everybody. What happened is some douchebag
2:22:13
unleashed a DDoS attack on our stream the minute we hit the
2:22:16
donations because it's funny, you know, it's funny to do that.
2:22:20
Why don't we not stream anymore? I'm tired of it. I'm tired of
2:22:23
trolls. I'm tired of the stream being being attacked. We're
2:22:27
under attack John.
2:22:30
Unknown: You love it?
2:22:34
Adam Curry: Was that it? That was it. Right? That was it?
2:22:36
Yeah,
2:22:37
John C Dvorak: that's it. That's our full group of well wishers
2:22:39
and supporters for show 1537 Want to thank each and every
2:22:43
one,
2:22:43
Adam Curry: man. Yeah, make no mistake. We love you. Thank you
2:22:45
for supporting our show. Thank you for supporting your show. It
2:22:48
is after all, the best podcast in the universe because of you.
2:22:51
If you'd like to learn more about where you can donate
2:22:54
evora.org/and
2:22:57
Unknown: A special
2:22:57
Adam Curry: thanks to our executive one wasn't one
2:23:00
executive know what we had three executive producers for
2:23:04
executive producers and three Associate Executive producers.
2:23:08
Hey, you're gonna look good on the credits today. They are
2:23:11
forever credits they are they will stay with you for as long
2:23:14
as you live and beyond register them@imdb.com They are accepted
2:23:19
there you'll see lots of heavyweights in the
2:23:22
entertainment industry have these credits of course I am
2:23:25
your LinkedIn or on your resume it all looks good and unlike the
2:23:29
phonies in Hollywood you'll be watching tonight at the Oscars
2:23:32
we will vouch for you if anyone ever questions them thank you
2:23:35
for supporting the no agenda show for episode 1537 heart
2:23:39
formula
2:23:39
Unknown: is this we go out we hit people in the mouth
2:24:02
Adam Curry: Well, we're gonna keep everything short today.
2:24:04
David Buss four wishes his grandson Michael Big Mike Mr.
2:24:08
Happy Birthday you're turning three on the 10th Ah love the
2:24:12
entertainment keeper of the travel hounds wishes Dame care
2:24:15
and a happy birthday. Her birthday is tomorrow and we say
2:24:17
happy birthday to everybody here at the back office and the front
2:24:20
office of the best podcast in the universe. And we have one
2:24:25
Dame to bring up on onto the now she's getting a ring today. Not
2:24:29
the ring she may be wants but it'll be a good start this ring.
2:24:33
Unknown: Yep. You're gonna go. Yes,
2:24:35
Adam Curry: because you're getting you're getting double
2:24:36
teamed by the blades there. Karen. Step on up on the podium
2:24:40
please. Thanks to the man who you would like to be your
2:24:44
husband. He's he's getting a step in the right direction with
2:24:47
this one. He has supported you in the amount of $1,000 or more
2:24:50
therefore we are very proud to pronounce the Kate you today as
2:24:53
Dan Karen, keeper of the travel hounds for you. We've got rent
2:24:57
boys and Chardonnay. I don't think you need the hookers. And
2:25:00
bloke certainly not for for your man now wouldn't want to have
2:25:04
make a mistake there. Also, we've got a Pino Taj from the
2:25:07
Stellenbosch Regan region and black and red snapper and
2:25:10
asparagus along with that in case you want it back to Manila,
2:25:13
we got some bong hits and bourbon we got some ginger ale
2:25:16
and Jerboas to get breast milk and pablum, but you might enjoy
2:25:20
the mutton in Mead and scurry on over to Noah the
2:25:23
nation.com/rings Anyone can go take a look at these. They're
2:25:26
beautiful rings, they're Signet rings so you can seal your
2:25:29
official correspondence with it. We do supply some wax for that
2:25:33
along with your official certificate of authenticity and
2:25:36
thank you again for becoming a dame and thank you to your
2:25:39
future husband for supporting us and supporting you. Here on the
2:25:42
no agenda
2:25:43
John C Dvorak: show no one
2:25:51
Adam Curry: we have no meetup reports. But we do have a promo
2:25:54
so let's play that.
2:25:56
Unknown: We interrupt your regularly scheduled programming
2:25:59
to bring you an urgent announcement from the Pacific
2:26:01
Northwest. The North Idaho sanity brigade will return to
2:26:04
their regularly scheduled Thursday Nate a meet up at the
2:26:07
Selkirk Abbey and Post Falls. And remember folks listening to
2:26:11
podcasts at 1.5 Makes you will marry.
2:26:15
Adam Curry: A marry that's an insult I haven't heard since the
2:26:19
14th
2:26:20
John C Dvorak: I don't know what it is. I don't know what that
2:26:22
insult is
2:26:23
Adam Curry: assisity I guess Yeah, marry guess. Monday we
2:26:28
have a meetup scheduled for you at Springfield Springfield,
2:26:31
Missouri six o'clock and Blair's all American Sports Bar and
2:26:35
Grill that Springfield, Missouri. By the way you can
2:26:38
find all of these or read along if you want to know agenda
2:26:40
meetups.com on Tuesday pretty fly for a Pie Guy I Yes. John
2:26:45
314 Pi day, Tuesday I forgot it again bra who I had I forget it
2:26:52
again. Today's to what Yeah, but we can't do it on Thursday. You
2:26:58
get another failed promotion from your no agenda show.
2:27:02
Thursday at Greenlee pizza company in Greeley, Colorado
2:27:05
March 15 Wednesday, Fort Wayne red pillars club 33. They meet
2:27:10
at 633 heads of Xian nose Italian eatery. It's on DuPont
2:27:14
Road in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Oh the Indiana's man they're great.
2:27:18
Hoosiers. And then on our next show day Thursday, the Tucson
2:27:21
ladies and gentlemen start your livers pre St. Patrick's Day
2:27:25
meet up Do you know what that's going to be about? That's a four
2:27:27
o'clock at canyons crown in Tucson Arizona Dane Beth
2:27:30
organizing for you also on the next show day North Idaho Sandy
2:27:33
brigade. You just heard their promo right there so Kirk Abbey
2:27:36
post Idaho photo Idaho Falls. Also on Thursday, the mealworms
2:27:43
are for chickens not children conference 630 at Lincoln's
2:27:45
Roadhouse, Denver, Colorado, Charlotte's thirsty Third
2:27:49
Thursday coming up at seven o'clock edge tavern, Charlotte,
2:27:52
North Carolina, and then we have what March 17 Gary, Indiana. Are
2:27:57
you kidding me? Gary, Indiana. My goodness. I want a meet up
2:28:03
report from Gary, Indiana. The Indiana is out of control St.
2:28:06
Louis, Missouri on the 17th Oklahoma City on the 18th point
2:28:10
Magoo Mugu, California is at Point Mugu on the 18th Mount
2:28:15
Laurel township New Jersey Blue Island Illinois Chicago on the
2:28:18
18th star Idaho in the 18th sheep shop put up she she's
2:28:25
shocked she shopped Bavaria Germany shout go ahead hit me
2:28:30
with a Hogan Oh God also on the 18th Cincinnati Ohio
2:28:36
independence township I mean we have just it all the way through
2:28:41
March with the all the way through April and we I think we
2:28:45
even have May we have all over the world Toms River April 15 Oh
2:28:50
my God, no stomping grounds. It's no agenda meetups. This is
2:28:53
where you get to be with your community. If you feel you don't
2:28:57
fit in if blush to be honest, most of us don't if you're
2:29:00
listening to the no agenda show you're different than most but
2:29:03
there may be a few around you there may be more than you know
2:29:05
even in Gary Indiana no agenda meetup.com As we can find your
2:29:09
community year near you remember connection is protection
2:29:14
sometimes you want to go hang out with Bom Bom you won't be
2:29:23
triggered you will be safe is like always like a party. I came
2:29:35
ready for bear with my ISOs today What do you have?
2:29:38
John C Dvorak: It's good because I really didn't have much but I
2:29:40
got a couple but but you play yours first and see if I can
2:29:42
topple
2:29:43
Adam Curry: okay. I start off with this one. Now my baby Shut
2:29:50
up. Okay,
2:29:54
Unknown: so much bullshit.
2:29:55
We're drowning in it.
2:29:57
Adam Curry: A little crude, truth and justice. are on our
2:30:00
side. Kind of like that one.
2:30:03
John C Dvorak: This little muted really crazy stuff.
2:30:07
Adam Curry: Amy I like that one. How about this one?
2:30:09
Unknown: It activates your amygdala.
2:30:11
Come on, come
2:30:12
Adam Curry: on. And then
2:30:14
Unknown: the good guys, the bad guys.
2:30:16
Adam Curry: Hey, go I like crazy stuff and I like it activates
2:30:19
your amygdala. Those two are good.
2:30:22
John C Dvorak: I like crazy stuff because it reflects the
2:30:24
show. Okay, really
2:30:25
Adam Curry: crazy stuff. All right. What do you have?
2:30:28
John C Dvorak: Well, I have a door shutting desk. Something is
2:30:31
ISO door shows that we're holding the door. Hold
2:30:36
Adam Curry: on. Let me just I mean if you want a door door, I
2:30:41
got an open door it was door closed door close. I got a door
2:30:46
close for you. That's a
2:30:50
John C Dvorak: door that sounds like a cartoon door.
2:30:53
Adam Curry: And your other ISO. Yeah,
2:30:56
John C Dvorak: this I think is a good ending to the show because
2:30:58
it tells you what the show is all about instructive. really
2:31:02
instructive. Now really crazy stuff.
2:31:07
Adam Curry: Are we really instructive or really crazy
2:31:09
stuff? Okay,
2:31:10
John C Dvorak: I think mine's clear. Yeah, but you're right
2:31:14
now go with crazy. Okay, thank you.
2:31:19
Unknown: Let's see, oh,
2:31:21
Adam Curry: this is interesting. It's been three years. It's been
2:31:25
three years since this crazy period started. These are
2:31:29
Unknown: the sites the nation will never forget the
2:31:31
devastation from COVID-19, leaving its mark on millions of
2:31:35
families. But three years later, this trusted resource tracking
2:31:39
the pandemic for all to see is gone. Johns Hopkins University
2:31:43
posted its final update before discontinuing its COVID Tracker
2:31:47
because of a lack of available data. CBS News CHIEF MEDICAL
2:31:50
CORRESPONDENT Dr. John Le Puth points out even if the spotlight
2:31:54
is
2:31:54
Adam Curry: Jamba poop on doc janela poop
2:31:58
Unknown: because of a lack of available data. CBS News CHIEF
2:32:01
MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT Dr. John Le pook points out that the
2:32:04
spotlight has dimmed COVID is not over.
2:32:07
Oh, there are still hundreds of people dying each day in the
2:32:09
United States. The question is, how do we start getting back to
2:32:13
a more normal daily life.
2:32:15
The virus isn't going away. Neither has the pain of the 1.1
2:32:19
million lives lost to COVID in this country. But the pandemic's
2:32:23
impact on our everyday lives is fading. The Biden administration
2:32:27
plans to end the COVID public health emergency declaration in
2:32:30
may not fast enough for conservatives who opposed
2:32:33
vaccine mandates. We chose freedom over Fauci as the
2:32:38
pandemic changed parts of American life forever. Plus,
2:32:42
there's the toll on public trust,
2:32:44
there has been a devastating collision of public health and
2:32:48
politics. And that's something we're going to have to address
2:32:50
with better communication,
2:32:52
better explanation and better investment in our public health
2:32:55
system.
2:32:57
Adam Curry: Do we actually have a public health system? Is that
2:32:59
a correct characterization?
2:33:03
John C Dvorak: I've that's a good question. I have no idea if
2:33:06
we I don't know. No,
2:33:07
Adam Curry: I mean, the NIH I
2:33:09
John C Dvorak: think there's local there's
2:33:11
Adam Curry: we don't we don't have a public housing so we got
2:33:13
public health control. Yeah, and that's about it.
2:33:18
John C Dvorak: We don't think we have about public health is due
2:33:21
to fluoride report and get that Oh, I
2:33:23
Adam Curry: heard about this. It's like it's been a lawsuit or
2:33:25
something taking place. Well, let's
2:33:27
John C Dvorak: find out. Okay, here we go. Oh,
2:33:29
Adam Curry: man, just say early days of no agenda. I was I was
2:33:33
moaning and groaning about fluoride in the water.
2:33:36
Unknown: And TD reached out to the HHS for comment, but didn't
2:33:39
immediately hear back. During fall of last year. A US District
2:33:42
Court Judge lifted a stay on our protective order that order
2:33:46
shielded the NPT is recent study on the toxicity of fluoride from
2:33:50
release. Most recently in February meeting, the National
2:33:54
Institute for Environmental Health Sciences agreed to
2:33:57
publicize the NPT report. The institute is expected to post
2:34:01
the report on npTL website before March 15. The posted
2:34:05
documents could play a major role in the second trial phase
2:34:08
of the ongoing legal battle. A previous review on fluoride
2:34:12
Adam Curry: I'm sorry, by the way, I for some reason I played
2:34:14
report to first but we'll just finish it
2:34:17
Unknown: conducted by the NPT found that fluoride is presumed
2:34:20
to be a cognitive neurodevelopmental hazard to
2:34:23
humans. However, the report said the conclusions were based on a
2:34:27
higher amount of fluoride that is found in US drinking water.
2:34:30
Advocates of fluoride use argue it could prevent tooth decay.
2:34:34
The next court hearing in the case is scheduled for April 11.
2:34:37
I really
2:34:38
Adam Curry: apologize. This is the first clip that should have
2:34:40
been played prior.
2:34:41
Unknown: A study on the potential dangers of fluoride is
2:34:44
expected to be released soon as part of a lawsuit against
2:34:47
government agency. According to plaintiffs, the Department of
2:34:50
Health and Human Services previously blocked the study's
2:34:53
release
2:34:53
the fluoride Action Network or Fhn filed a lawsuit against the
2:34:57
US Environmental Protection Agency or EPA back in 2017. Fa n
2:35:03
is trying to ban the use of fluoride in public water
2:35:06
supplies in the US. The National Toxicology Program or NPT
2:35:11
conducted a study on fluoride toxicity. However, the NPT
2:35:15
hasn't publicized this study yet. internal emails seem to
2:35:18
indicate that the study wasn't published because the federal
2:35:21
government interfered in its publication. The attorney for
2:35:25
the plaintiffs received internal CDC emails through a Freedom of
2:35:29
Information Act request. The emails were quoted in this court
2:35:32
filing, stating as h Levine has put the report on hold until
2:35:36
further notice, as h Levine is a reference to the United States
2:35:40
Assistant Secretary of Health Rachel Levine. The attorney
2:35:44
claims that the emails confirm that the CDC was opposed to the
2:35:48
NPT releasing the report and that leadership at the top
2:35:51
levels of the Department of Health and Human Services
2:35:54
intervened to stop the report from being released.
2:35:57
Wow.
2:35:59
John C Dvorak: bombshell. They're trying to kill us.
2:36:02
Adam Curry: Well, we always knew that. I mean, the way I've
2:36:05
always heard the story is fluoride in your water is a
2:36:09
runoff product from heavy industry. Yeah, aluminum may be
2:36:14
one of them. In order to hoodwink the people into into
2:36:18
putting it into their own water, they say well, you know, it's
2:36:22
good for your teeth, it'll protect your teeth.
2:36:25
John C Dvorak: Yeah, turns out there's no evidence of any of
2:36:26
this. Do you know the
2:36:28
Adam Curry: whose waters heavily fluoridated Austin Texas with
2:36:34
the price which explains why they're so liberal Miss Hardaway
2:36:39
is fluoride in my
2:36:42
John C Dvorak: school Mimi single handedly prevented the
2:36:44
fluoride did Florida Florida desalination of the water supply
2:36:51
up in Port Angeles Area good for her, tracked it down to us one
2:36:55
company nationwide does behind I think they have a contract with
2:36:59
the some contract to get rid of all this debt. It's hard to get
2:37:03
rid of fluoride. So you, but it's not hard to get rid of it
2:37:07
if you can dump it in water supplies and let it just dilute
2:37:10
it way down. And you know, nobody will notice. Of course at
2:37:14
this point when companies Delta Dental.
2:37:17
Adam Curry: Alex Jones has been on this for decades, and I knew
2:37:21
that this was bad when I read legacy of ashes which is about
2:37:27
the CIA includes my uncle Don, and right there it said that
2:37:31
they would often the CIA would put fluoride into the enemy
2:37:35
camps water supply to make them nice and docile. So that they
2:37:39
could go in. Yes, that is in that book, override the overrun
2:37:44
the camp. And when I asked Uncle Don, is this all true? He said,
2:37:47
Yeah, that's pretty much the way I remember it.
2:37:58
He upped the war on
2:37:59
Unknown: chicken continues with a recent bird flu outbreak is
2:38:02
prompting health officials to consider rolling out new
2:38:04
vaccinations for birds. Highly contagious, bird flu continues
2:38:09
to mutate that disease has devastated poultry populations.
2:38:14
And this most recent outbreak, 58 million birds have died an
2:38:18
all time high. The Biden administration has not
2:38:20
officially approved these kinds of vaccinations for birds yet,
2:38:23
but if it gets the green light well, it actually won't be the
2:38:26
first time and many poultry are already vaccinated for diseases
2:38:30
including bronchitis
2:38:34
Adam Curry: I didn't know that we were vaccinating chickens
2:38:36
against bronchitis.
2:38:44
Now, Canada, gotta Blame Canada. This is from Popular Mechanics.
2:38:48
I'm not sure where they reporting on it. A hybrid breed
2:38:52
of super pigs. Super pigs, super pigs. A mix of domestic pig and
2:39:00
wild boar is running wild in Canada and are migrating south.
2:39:06
Highly intelligent and possibly invincible super pigs are
2:39:10
invading America. You know, we have a lot of wild wild hogs in
2:39:17
Texas. And they are they are a real problem. They're super
2:39:22
problem everywhere they show up. Super problem for the regular
2:39:25
ones. But how about the Super
2:39:27
Unknown: pigs?
2:39:31
John C Dvorak: Well, you know, we should kind of maybe get the
2:39:36
kids in high school, teach them about gun safety and go out and
2:39:42
damn pigs, the super pigs,
2:39:44
Adam Curry: the Edom the super pigs have
2:39:45
John C Dvorak: become I will say that by the way. Baby wild boar
2:39:49
tastes unbelievably tasty.
2:39:51
Adam Curry: The Super pigs This is why they're highly
2:39:53
intelligent super pigs have become adept at fending off
2:39:56
recreational hunters sometimes with entire sounders. That's a
2:40:02
term for a group of pigs turning nocturnal. To avoid that that's
2:40:06
turning nocturnal to avoid the hunting. Other times the
2:40:08
Sounders will disperse, making them harder to locate or change
2:40:12
their patterns and retreat to forest or wetlands. The best
2:40:15
strategy at reining in the Super pigs has been employing the
2:40:17
Judas pig concept. Have you ever heard of the Judas pig?
2:40:23
John C Dvorak: Is that where they tag one pig? Yeah,
2:40:25
Adam Curry: exactly. The GPS collar. Judas pig. Wow, well,
2:40:33
that's, that's gonna be interesting. hunting at night.
2:40:36
That's a whole different
2:40:37
Unknown: challenge. Yeah,
2:40:39
Adam Curry: that's gonna be a problem.
2:40:43
John C Dvorak: If they start showing up, like raccoons, and
2:40:46
you got something going on. So I have I found a clip. This is an
2:40:50
interesting clip. It's got nothing to do with anything
2:40:52
we've talked about. It's about the elections. Okay. And I
2:40:55
thought this was a good rundown that we should all know, which
2:40:58
is that this is running, it says running fo fo E. But this is
2:41:04
from from Brooks and Brooks. And she'll and he actually explains
2:41:08
something nicely. Because it keeps cropping up. Why don't
2:41:12
people when they start running for president, they keep running
2:41:15
and running, when they should bail out. But now it's not that
2:41:19
easy to do a listen to this.
2:41:21
Unknown: He said the bigger thing is these Republicans have
2:41:23
to know when to get out. How does that strike you?
2:41:26
Well, he's right. In theory, it's it's a lot harder in
2:41:28
practice. Because if you're running for president, you're
2:41:31
raising a ton of money. And so you build up these war chests.
2:41:34
And suddenly a couple of weeks go by, it doesn't look so good
2:41:37
at you want to look at your donors and say I'm sorry, you
2:41:39
wasted your money, you're not allowed to give him the money
2:41:41
back. So and you have to spend it that election cycle. And so
2:41:45
it's actually hard to withdraw, because you have this pot of
2:41:48
money there. And the instinct is to say, Oh, just stay in, I've
2:41:51
got this money, I might as well see what I got and spend it. And
2:41:54
so since it's structurally hard to get out for this fundraising
2:41:57
reason I've described, a lot of them are going to face the
2:42:00
temptation to stay in longer than they should. And that will
2:42:04
that will split the field. I think it's a real problem for
2:42:06
anybody who does not want Donald Trump to be the nominee.
2:42:10
Adam Curry: I didn't know that.
2:42:12
John C Dvorak: I wasn't unfamiliar with it myself.
2:42:14
Adam Curry: It's interesting, you know, Bobby Kennedy is he's
2:42:17
hinting at Iran. Of course, you can't actually say I'm running
2:42:20
because then there's all kinds of changes with the money, I
2:42:22
guess. Oh,
2:42:23
John C Dvorak: yeah. You get yourself in trouble right now
2:42:26
and only hint and there's certain ways you can hint.
2:42:29
Adam Curry: Well, the hint is out because they're looking for
2:42:31
money. I'm gonna see what was it was this. I had it somewhere.
2:42:38
But it's like, oh, here it is the
2:42:41
Unknown: what is the website?
2:42:43
Adam Curry: Team kennedy.com. Join Robert F. Kennedy joined
2:42:47
Bobby's movement for a free and fair America for all. You know,
2:42:52
the minute we said, Hey, Bobby Kennedy, I might vote for that
2:42:54
guy. People like man, he's tied to Big Pharma tied to DISH TV.
2:43:03
John C Dvorak: Those are the same guys who quit the chat room
2:43:05
during the donations.
2:43:06
Adam Curry: Exactly. Well, then another 1000 got DDoS out of
2:43:10
existence. Stupid trolls. Someone does that on purpose
2:43:14
just to piss me off.
2:43:16
John C Dvorak: We have to sell. They are successful. Yeah, that
2:43:20
worked. Worked. Well, the last clip I've got for the day, okay,
2:43:26
is the least get to know this is the reparations. We have a
2:43:30
situation in California where we're, nobody else is doing it.
2:43:33
We've never were a slave state. We're always in a neutral state.
2:43:37
But that's beside the point. I love
2:43:39
Adam Curry: it. Yeah, you're gonna you're gonna give
2:43:41
reparations we're gonna do a $50,000
2:43:45
John C Dvorak: every black guy in the state who qualifies? And
2:43:47
then again, making them qualifies an issue because well,
2:43:50
some of them don't qualify, but we were working on it. And we're
2:43:54
gonna give everybody everybody by the way all the black
2:43:56
community the entire black community is all for this.
2:43:58
Unknown: The California Task Force studying reparations for
2:44:02
black residents wants to revive a reconstruction error agency as
2:44:06
part of its first in the nation statewide reparations plan
2:44:11
Adam Curry: 50,000 Seems a little insulting
2:44:16
John C Dvorak: Well, that's just one of the suggested amount some
2:44:19
people have suggested half a million
2:44:21
Adam Curry: Yeah. President I saw a 5 million I thought I
2:44:24
thought I thought 5 million initially that could
2:44:26
John C Dvorak: have been in in play. Yeah, the higher it goes
2:44:29
the less likely it's going to happen. That's everyone's got to
2:44:32
have to deal with that. 50,000 to me, is a lot for someone who
2:44:37
didn't do jack shit.
2:44:39
Adam Curry: No, I I've talked with Moe about this often by the
2:44:42
way he has that horrible flu so didn't have a show this week.
2:44:45
He's down and out. And he says the amount is well first of all,
2:44:50
he says you know, how can we can do the was it the inflation
2:44:55
Reduction Act for one and a half trillion? You He wants to T
2:45:00
word. He wants reparations for all black Americans has to equal
2:45:04
up to a trillion but only if there's atonement, it has to be
2:45:08
a trillion. And you have to say you're sorry. And it went it
2:45:12
would be and he bases that on a legal thing, which has some
2:45:15
validity. But this 50,000 Really? And then, and then what
2:45:20
happens then we have the spreads to other states, and every
2:45:23
state's going to do that. And who and this is California
2:45:26
money, or is it all?
2:45:28
John C Dvorak: It's gonna spread to every state? Because nothing
2:45:31
is gonna happen, right?
2:45:33
Adam Curry: And unfortunately, the 50 you here's your $50,000,
2:45:37
it's in Silicon Valley Bank.
2:45:40
Unknown: stock stock,
2:45:42
Adam Curry: it's better Silicon Valley Bank stock. Goodness,
2:45:47
goodness gracious, I do have this one clip something going on
2:45:51
in Canada. We've been tracking this for quite a while beasts a
2:45:54
Bill C 18. And from what I understand, and Bill C 18. The
2:45:59
idea is, it would force companies who publish bits and
2:46:05
links of new stories to for Canadian companies to pay
2:46:13
Canadian news organisations money for the links they put up
2:46:18
and the Yeah, from what I understand the well let's listen
2:46:20
to the clip. And the more we can figure out what's going on
2:46:22
Unknown: Google is flexing his digital muscles on some
2:46:25
Canadians and now Heritage Committee MPs want them to
2:46:28
answer for it. The MPs have summoned top executives to
2:46:31
testify on Monday after the tech giant move to temporarily limit
2:46:35
news access for about 4% of its Canadian users. It's just a
2:46:39
test. In the event that parliament passes Bill C 18, the
2:46:42
online news act, it will compel tech giants to compensate media
2:46:46
companies for republishing and linking to their content on
2:46:49
their platforms. It's something that some experts are opposed to
2:46:53
including my next guest, Michael, guys. Thanks for
2:46:55
joining me. Oh, thanks
2:46:57
for having me.
2:46:58
So Google is throttling access to Canadian news for some of its
2:47:01
users in response to this legislation. If this bill is
2:47:05
passed in its current form, do you think Canadian news will
2:47:08
just disappear from Google entirely?
2:47:11
I think it's a real possibility, if we're honest about and I
2:47:14
mean, all they've done, I'm not sure that throttling is
2:47:16
necessarily the right word. I mean, obviously, they've removed
2:47:19
the links to some Canadian to news sources for about 4% of
2:47:23
their user base. But given how popular they are, that still
2:47:26
affects quite a number of people. But given the costs
2:47:30
associated with this legislation, the government
2:47:32
envisioning that Google could be required alongside Facebook to
2:47:36
pay 35% of the news expenditures for every newsletter outlet in
2:47:41
the country just for linking to their content. I don't think we
2:47:44
should be particularly surprised that a company like Google would
2:47:47
say, Listen, if that's the requirement, if you link you
2:47:49
have to engage in that kind of payment or don't link, they're
2:47:53
going to at least look at the prospect of not linking at all.
2:47:56
Adam Curry: Yeah, so they have to pay 35% of the news
2:47:59
organizations cost.
2:48:01
John C Dvorak: Hey, welcome to 9090 Check the calendar. We went
2:48:05
through this in
2:48:07
Adam Curry: Canada or just in America I remember in
2:48:09
John C Dvorak: America, Canada around the world. The whole
2:48:11
thing about links you can't link to my content. You're stealing
2:48:15
content. You're stealing photos. Oh, deep
2:48:18
Adam Curry: linking is is bad is killing the music industry? Or
2:48:22
whatever? No, that was home taping. Yeah,
2:48:25
John C Dvorak: yeah. So this is the this started with a frame
2:48:28
long last frame, which they used at home.
2:48:33
Adam Curry: From your classic right, we still use frames and
2:48:36
the blink tag here and there was a blink tags gone only on the
2:48:40
dot h i think
2:48:41
John C Dvorak: the cat running back and forth across the screen
2:48:43
is the best Oh no,
2:48:44
Adam Curry: it was a whack the monkey the monkey punch the
2:48:50
monkey and whack the Mole. That's what it was. I remember
2:48:54
John C Dvorak: that these guys are idiots. This is the this is
2:48:57
telling you how stupid the media is at the highest levels.
2:49:02
Adam Curry: Correct. And then because the media benefits it's
2:49:05
not going to benefit the small news organization is going to
2:49:08
benefit the big guys as it always does
2:49:10
John C Dvorak: not going to benefit anybody because you're
2:49:11
gonna get cut off and access what Google's gonna do. No links
2:49:15
to you. And who carries you to do
2:49:18
Adam Curry: who cares about Google? It's like the like well
2:49:21
John C Dvorak: who cares about anybody linking but they're
2:49:23
trying to nail everyone who links so screw does anyone who
2:49:26
doesn't want to be linked below robot tag in there don't link it
2:49:30
should be on there probably in the in the code. Yeah.
2:49:34
Adam Curry: Yeah. Google is going down, man. It's gonna take
2:49:37
a while but you know, people are on Tik Tok. No one cares. No one
2:49:40
cares about Google. No one cares about fate. Have you noticed
2:49:43
that meta is just no longer discussed? I think they shut
2:49:47
that thing down. I think that you're not going to hear about
2:49:50
metta and the metaverse at all.
2:49:54
John C Dvorak: It's well I if I didn't have $1 already hanging
2:49:57
on the your wife
2:50:00
Adam Curry: All right, well, we'll go for the Oscars first
2:50:02
and then we'll see how we how we fare later on. It's about
2:50:06
averages really, for me, just got to average out $1 a year,
2:50:10
which is pretty much what we're doing so far.
2:50:14
John C Dvorak: But on today's show, today's show
2:50:16
Adam Curry: will support us divorce.org/na. We appreciate
2:50:19
everyone who did support us. So always, always helpful, always,
2:50:24
always appreciated. We have end of show mixes only two, if you
2:50:29
don't hear your mixes because they're long. If you do the
2:50:32
songs, that's great, but you couldn't cut at least one verse
2:50:35
out. And now we got to deal with that. Hey, citizen and Phantom
2:50:40
Bill both brought his outstanding end of show mixes,
2:50:44
the kind that John loves, and AppNexus no agenda stream.com If
2:50:49
you're still in the troll room troll room.io behind the schemes
2:50:52
with blueberry and lavish coming to you from the heart of the
2:50:55
Texas Hill Country FEMA Region number six in the morning,
2:50:57
everybody. I'm Adam curry
2:50:59
John C Dvorak: and from Northern Silicon Valley where as I look
2:51:01
out on the scene, it's gloomy, but it's not wet. I'm John C.
2:51:06
Dvorak. We
2:51:07
Adam Curry: return on Thursday right after Pi Day with another
2:51:11
episode of deconstruction tailor made for you remember us at the
2:51:16
vortech.org/na Until then adios mofos and such Anna Hui Hui
2:51:35
Unknown: Johnson gazing out of his window wondering rowdy show
2:51:42
me excuse says he recovered down the funny jams get them sad is
2:51:49
fat seems those times gone and now it hurts him so much no
2:51:57
agenda has a little Mastodon instance that the no agenda
2:52:04
listeners every day they post as many memes as this really admins
2:52:14
have to crack down and cat listens and may you know drop
2:52:22
off a show mixes like you used to it means that you are
2:52:36
listening to
2:52:43
a user with broadcast obsession is subscribing to this fable the
2:52:49
feed navigates his way to get it setting to increase the rate of
2:53:00
audio when He sets it up to 2.5 times to maximize information is
2:53:16
Elvis fading and he doesn't know why it's causing damage to his
2:53:22
personal relationships
2:53:24
yeah don't
2:53:25
hear me you know
2:53:33
like you used to do
2:53:49
Adam Curry: wasn't gonna bring this up John was really absorbed
2:53:52
today he feels at the end of show mixers are no goods they
2:53:54
suck. It's not anything the way it's supposed to be. He songs
2:53:58
parodies are very hard to do a lot of during lockdown, but you
2:54:01
just hate everything that covered everything you hate all
2:54:03
it's horrible.
2:54:03
John C Dvorak: There's not one mix in the entire collection.
2:54:06
Adam Curry: Of course many controls you can also find,
2:54:08
reach or follow on Norwegian social.com which I also will say
2:54:12
is getting a little rowdy. People are a little unhinged.
2:54:15
I've used in an even bigger note in the social.com or people just
2:54:17
hosting me all day long. Oh my goodness. It costs a lot of
2:54:20
space. People don't care. You guys are very untangle
2:54:23
ungrateful. Stop DMing me I do not respond to DMS on Noah
2:54:27
social.com.
2:54:28
John C Dvorak: I just don't notice them because they don't
2:54:29
have no lag. There's no flag. So I click on an on accident. Boom.
2:54:32
There's a bunch of DNS and all backed up. You
2:54:35
Unknown: know, drones aren't taking and shoumik says like you
2:54:41
use too many means you.
2:54:59
John's complaining This domain Adams trying to give us chain
2:55:06
COVID to more practical way to eat in and Christ to tell me
2:55:12
that he's
2:55:19
still need
2:55:27
to go into toilet yours is to think that haven't you heard
2:55:35
when debo with all that being Christ you know it and he said
2:55:43
it can be a show me
2:55:54
I don't wants to keep your blood because China wants to steal my
2:56:01
cream with my cash. I got the rash and everybody brings it on
2:56:06
me Christ you know it can be show me
2:56:22
John C Dvorak: all of the after show
2:56:26
Adam Curry: okay
2:56:28
Unknown: so we talked about locked down when we said the job
2:56:34
was to stay SATs have come in you can cry skin no weight and
2:56:43
he said he can be
2:57:11
MOPO boruch.org/in a
2:57:16
John C Dvorak: really crazy stuff
0:00 0:00