Cover for No Agenda Show 1644: Shock Opera
March 21st • 3h 22m

1644: Shock Opera

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0:00
Adam Curry: But no, it's China boots China.
0:03
Unknown: Adam curry Jhansi Devorah on
0:06
Adam Curry: March 21 2020 For this jewel horde winning media
0:09
assassination episode 1644. This
0:12
Unknown: is no agenda, exposing
0:15
Adam Curry: marketing mayhem and broadcasting live from the heart
0:19
of the Texas Hill Country here. Reason number six in the
0:22
morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry.
0:24
John C Dvorak: And from Northern Silicon Valley, we noticed that
0:27
Takara Fuji lost his first match and apples getting sued on
0:31
Genesee
0:34
Adam Curry: Hill there it is. There it is. The Sumo report.
0:42
Everybody's smiling. Everybody's going to want it everybody's
0:46
happy. But what about this Apple's getting sued business
0:48
manager heard
0:49
John C Dvorak: that just broke this morning breaking breaking.
0:52
Breaking
0:53
Adam Curry: colon all uppercase break egg. I love it when people
0:57
post a screenshot of another social network with breaking.
1:01
John C Dvorak: The breaking,
1:02
Adam Curry: breaking. Breaking our breaking is so crazy. It's
1:08
like it's not breaking. It's just a news report. It's just
1:12
the
1:12
John C Dvorak: headlines. It's what's funny is that Fox, the
1:15
beginning of pretty much everybody show. news breaking
1:18
news. Breaking something's great breaking breaking.
1:22
Adam Curry: What? What is the news is breaking what is Apple
1:25
getting sued over over their web browser?
1:29
John C Dvorak: Well, that wouldn't be a good idea. Yeah.
1:31
What is it? The Justice Department's going after them
1:35
for being a monopoly? Our government is going after a one
1:40
of our biggest companies for being a monopoly and ruining
1:44
their smartphone business because their phones. I'm not
1:47
kidding. Kind of because your phone stinks. What? And it's too
1:52
expensive women
1:55
Adam Curry: is that the actual suit is like your phone syncs
1:58
stinks and it's too expensive. Garland
2:01
John C Dvorak: came up and he gave a I wish I had a clip of it
2:03
because it just happened. It's break. When breaking is
2:06
breaking. Went in front of the podium. It says the apple is
2:10
monopolizing the business. They're producing a lousy
2:12
product pretty much is what he said. Wow,
2:15
Adam Curry: they literally invented the category didn't
2:17
they? Oh, yeah. Oh, that's interesting. Yeah, that's what
2:24
commies do. But
2:26
John C Dvorak: that is what happens when you're not coughing
2:29
up enough. Oh,
2:30
Adam Curry: that's what it is. Tim Collins cook should know
2:33
better.
2:35
John C Dvorak: He knows better although this may also be a ploy
2:37
may be Tim Collins, let's say he goes to the Justice Department
2:41
says you know wouldn't be a bad idea to sue us right now.
2:44
predicament in China. And we just do just for you guys. And
2:48
Adam Curry: what that's not going to help their stock price
2:50
which is already somewhat suppressed. Would you not say
2:52
yeah, it
2:53
John C Dvorak: probably will not help the stock price.
2:55
Adam Curry: Well, so that's what the algo told you today. What is
2:59
everyone? What is your algo told you to worry about today? I've
3:02
heard too. One is the squatters Have you followed this the
3:08
John C Dvorak: squatters squatter stories they they're
3:10
making this into a big mess of news story. I don't think any
3:14
clips on it. But yes, squatters, squatters,
3:17
Adam Curry: the illegal immigrants. I'm sorry. The
3:20
newcomers. Newcomers and newcomers are coming Weisen are
3:24
going to squat in your house. Now most of the stories seem to
3:27
be coming from New York and Chicago where you probably can't
3:29
squat in somebody's house.
3:32
John C Dvorak: Wouldn't big story story where there's two or
3:35
three lines here going on. One is of course the TIC tock video,
3:41
which is I I sought by couldn't call Yes. Spanish. Yeah.
3:45
Adam Curry: It's like, hey, hey, I look like an angry brown man.
3:50
I'm coming to sit in your house. I'm squatting and
3:52
John C Dvorak: he had all these clues about how you gonna squat?
3:55
Yeah. And then there was the arrest of some woman who tried
4:00
to go into her own house in New York. There was New York, New
4:03
York. Yeah. They arrested her and left the squatters in place.
4:08
Adam Curry: So in the Netherlands, squatters rights
4:11
have been a thing for as long as I've been in when I was went to
4:15
the country and because
4:16
John C Dvorak: of the UK, the UK well and they call them crackers
4:20
Adam Curry: in the in the Netherlands crackers, KR a ke RS
4:25
crackers because they crack your house and they crack right in.
4:30
And the only way to stop it because there is a there is a
4:34
legal right you have a legal right if there's a house that is
4:37
empty and that means there's no bed no table no chairs by IE a
4:42
house that someone's trying to sell usually. Although you
4:45
should stage it always people talk to your local real estate
4:48
professional. Then they can go in there and they can just crack
4:53
it and go they can they can live there. So usually people pay
4:57
where they used to pay I think now they just say hey you would
4:59
you'd like to Live in this mansion for 100 euros a month
5:03
and then they throw down a mattress and a table and some
5:05
IKEA stuff and good to go it's then It's auntie crack. So
5:11
that's, that seems to be the it actually kind of works because
5:15
you solve some you know some housing problem for students who
5:20
get a dynamite pad for a while and you keep the crackers out.
5:26
But here in Texas we have a different system. Michelle, can
5:29
I just shoot you?
5:31
John C Dvorak: Yes. TJ says has got the right idea. Absolutely.
5:36
Adam Curry: But it's being played up on all the algos.
5:38
Everybody. And this just shows how then this is not. To me,
5:44
this is not an organic thing. This is being jacked up. This
5:48
this is this is a tick tock algo being jacked, either people know
5:54
who know how to do it, or by Tiktok themselves. For all I
5:57
know. It's the
6:00
John C Dvorak: I think it's people that know how to do it.
6:02
We need to find these people. Yeah, they
6:04
Adam Curry: should be jacking our stuff up. I have some some
6:08
takes on that I some tick tock takes later on. But first we
6:11
need to go to the other algo that's getting everybody
6:14
worried. And of course we have a little supercut
6:16
Unknown: to latest now in the race for the White House. And
6:18
the incendiary speech from Donald Trump at a rally over the
6:20
weekend with praise for the January 6 convicts, attacks on
6:24
immigrants as subhuman and a warning of a bloodbath for the
6:27
country if
6:27
he's defeated. It's true that Trump started out by talking
6:30
about cars, but listen again. And yet he did explicitly says
6:34
if that will be the least of it. So as you hear he certainly did
6:38
start off by talking about car makers and apparently a
6:40
bloodbath. He's not elected for the whole car industry. But he
6:43
stopped himself and then elaborated, saying, quote, that
6:46
would be the least of it. He knew what he was doing. We're
6:49
not stupid is
6:50
clear what he meant? And what are Trump's sort of rhetorical
6:53
gifts, if you will, as he speaks just vaguely enough and just
6:57
circuitous ly enough that people can kind of read into different
6:59
meanings. He allows himself a little wiggle room and a little
7:02
out.
7:02
Americans aren't stupid.
7:04
We just have to win this election. Because he's even
7:07
predicting a bloodbath. What does that mean? He's going to
7:09
exact a bloodbath. There's something wrong here.
7:13
He was talking about a bloodbath. Sometimes a bloodbath
7:16
means a bloodbath. And when he finishes by saying, and that's
7:20
just going to be the least of it seriously, it's
7:23
Adam Curry: so phenomenal. Even after we warned them not to do
7:27
this, they still went ahead and just did it. It's the media is
7:33
so dishonest. They will even say, you know, I'm going to put
7:38
this all in context for you for a minute, okay? Because people
7:41
say you've got to put it in context of context of what he
7:45
said. Well, Jen Psaki is a spin Meister of epic proportions in
7:49
this context,
7:50
Unknown: every woman otherwise it's irresponsible. Well, if
7:53
they want us to consider the full context, let's do just
7:56
that. Because the full context is that Trump kicked off the
8:00
same exact rally by saluting the people who were convicted for
8:03
the deadly assault on the US Capitol on January 6, all to the
8:07
tune of the national anthem, sung by a choir of imprisoned
8:10
insurrectionists.
8:11
Adam Curry: Now, they weren't actually I don't think they
8:13
actually been imprisoned as insurrectionists. But okay.
8:17
Unknown: Some of the first words out of Trump's mouth last night,
8:19
same rally, were thanking those writers and calling them great
8:22
patriots. The full context is that he also said in the same
8:26
rally quote, If the selection isn't one, I'm not sure that
8:29
you'll ever have another election in this country.
8:32
skipped
8:33
Adam Curry: a couple of words there too. But there's some
8:35
weird carrier wave some I don't know what that is. It's probably
8:37
in her voice.
8:38
Unknown: The full context is that he went on to say some
8:40
undocumented immigrants are quote, not people. And of
8:43
course, the full context is that this is much bigger than one
8:47
single speech. Here we go humanizing language. This is
8:52
what Donald Trump has been preaching for
8:55
Adam Curry: yours. Oh, let's bring out some more of these
8:57
truths. In January.
8:59
Unknown: He warned that there will be quote Bedlam in this
9:01
country if his criminal prosecution derailed his
9:04
campaign. Late last year he echoed the dehumanizing language
9:08
of Adolf Hitler, comparing his political opponents to vermin
9:12
and saying immigrants are, quote, poisoning the blood of
9:15
our country. I love it,
9:16
Adam Curry: how she pretends to provide context around a false
9:19
narrative with false narrative without context of other other
9:23
occasions it this is so meta. Last
9:25
Unknown: month, he said there would be potential death and
9:28
destruction if he was charged in the Manhattan criminal probe.
9:31
And during his first term, he flat out refused to condemn the
9:34
political violence at a white nationalist rally in
9:37
Charlottesville, Virginia, saying there were very fine
9:40
people on both sides. In 2020 report, there's
9:44
Adam Curry: an old cow she drugged out of the canal Lee
9:46
asked his defense secretary about
9:48
Unknown: shooting people who were protesting the death of
9:50
George Floyd saying, can you just shoot them? Just shoot
9:54
them? Shoot him. And of course, his very words inspired violence
9:59
on Jane He raised 620 21 When he told a crowd of his supporters
10:03
to walk down to the capitol and fight like hell, because, quote,
10:07
you'll never take back our country with weakness. Trust me.
10:11
I could go on and on. Yeah, you could. We all know by now that
10:15
Trump's allusions to political violence are not nearly
10:18
rhetorical his supporters take them literally the big problem
10:23
here that show called voters so no we did not miss the full
10:27
context this was not some knee pandering off message comment.
10:31
This is his message
10:34
Adam Curry: so she she literally goes out of her way to not
10:36
explain the context by taking other things out of context it's
10:40
unbelievable how dishonest she will be struck by like she
10:44
John C Dvorak: shouldn't be not I have a super cut pics showing
10:48
the other side of the equation. Yes, we should we have the same
10:52
media people using bloodbath casually left and right in their
10:57
own with their own narratives, not thinking twice about it. We
11:00
have to
11:01
Adam Curry: give credit to rob do suffer sir do suffer. I think
11:04
he put this together over the Info Wars. But as
11:06
Unknown: politico.com reports tonight on the quote bloodbath
11:10
at the RNC headlines
11:12
calling it a quote bloodbath, a bloodbath. Not only is it going
11:15
to be a bloodbath, but after they leave New Hampshire, it's
11:18
a bloodbath on her home turf, that's really tough has left a
11:22
lot of corpses in his wake. I mean, we haven't counted the
11:24
bodies as part of the quote Magga drive to take over
11:27
Maricopa County. And the headline refers to it as an
11:30
impending bloodbath. Columnist
11:31
Charles blow has a new piece for The New York Times and titled A
11:34
Biden bloodbath. 2018
11:36
midterms, you can bet that
11:38
they 100% of fearing a slaughter. In fact, the word
11:41
bloodbath and massacre come up frequently, the Republican Party
11:45
will be destroyed, he's going to be a bloodbath.
11:47
There's going to be a bloodbath one way or the other. For Bernie
11:50
Sanders, it's been a bloodbath. They're shaping up to be a
11:53
bloodbath.
11:54
Adam Curry: This is all before 2022 This is amazing how many
11:57
times the M five M is used the term bloodbath head off
12:00
Unknown: a bloodbath in next year's crucial midterm off
12:03
year elections are often a bloodbath,
12:05
this week's bloodbath for Democrats, a bloodbath at the
12:08
ballot box,
12:09
there could be a Republican blood man, they'll
12:11
talk about a bloodbath, some bloodbath I
12:13
have to talk about you and it's gonna
12:15
be a bloodbath all day long
12:16
is in for a bloodbath hasn't been a bloodbath on the way down
12:20
with
12:20
Donald Trump.
12:21
bloodbath be a bloodbath predicted to
12:24
be a bloodbath may not be the bloodbath it would be a
12:26
bloodbath, more
12:27
of a bloodbath,
12:28
it's going to be a bloodbath in November
12:30
possible viden bloodbath,
12:32
this November,
12:34
a bloodbath on Wall Street, there's
12:35
gonna be a bloodbath in Alabama into a bloodbath,
12:38
obviously there was a bloodbath it was a bloodbath we're down
12:41
800
12:41
John C Dvorak: points,
12:42
Unknown: this bloodbath its Department of Homeland Security
12:44
and it's a bloodbath today
12:45
there was going to be this bloodbath election bloodbath it
12:49
could be a bloodbath for that bloodbath possibly bloodbath
12:52
that went through with the Attorney General like vas 99
12:54
days out the bloodbath is gonna look like resided over a
12:57
bloodbath
12:58
in the diplomatic corps.
12:59
In my opinion blood blood blood,
13:01
blood bath, the Democrats
13:02
are on it to get sales turned into a blood that
13:05
Adam Curry: all right let's go to a serious journalist who
13:07
should know better I'm quite sure that we can get some a
13:10
little bit of sanity out of Lawrence O'Donnell on MSNBC
13:14
Collier sure Larry save the day today. The Biden Harris campaign
13:18
said Donald Trump has shown us who he is time and time again
13:23
and released this video. He's literally playing a democrat
13:27
party ad on his show.
13:31
Unknown: Oh, get elected, it's gonna be a bloodbath and it's
13:34
going to be a bloodbath for the country. You also had people
13:41
that were very fine people
13:44
are more willing to condemn white supremacists and militia
13:48
groups. Please stand back and stand by
13:53
for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6.
13:58
A lot of Pardons and commutations January 6
14:01
defendants. Yes, absolutely. Tell
14:03
your supporters now no matter what, no bias, and it's going to
14:07
be a bloodbath.
14:15
Adam Curry: It's gonna be a bloodbath. Lawrence taget.
14:17
Perhaps some of you are feeling fear tonight.
14:23
Unknown: Because of Donald Trump's words. That's what he
14:27
wants you to feel. He wants you to fear. He wants your fear.
14:38
Don't give it to him. Oh,
14:40
Adam Curry: but it's working, Larry, because Sonny Halston of
14:43
the view is almost crying out of fear.
14:46
Unknown: He is saying things like this. I don't think you're
14:48
going to have another election if I don't win, or certainly not
14:52
an election that's meaningful. He's saying the loud the quiet
14:56
part out loud. If I am not elected, we are going to See
15:00
January 6, again. And I think we need to be on guard, but make
15:05
sure that we preserve our democracy. Our country looks the
15:08
way that it should look like all of us. It's a good country.
15:13
That's what America was built upon. Yeah.
15:17
Adam Curry: I don't know how she got there from bloodbath. But
15:20
these people are scaring themselves. Literally scaring
15:25
his own team. The M five M team will do anything for money. It's
15:31
It's so unbelievable, because it was so clear. They still were
15:35
able to take the whole context thing and just say, Oh, well,
15:39
but we know what we're gonna do. We know what, yeah, it's
15:42
context. Montek. We understand what he's talking about. He's
15:45
talking about blood sugar, blood, bath and death and
15:48
destruction.
15:50
Unknown: Shortly after the speech to trump campaign tried
15:53
to clean up those comments, insisting in a statement to NBC
15:56
News, that former President was only talking about a bloodbath
15:59
for the auto industry and auto workers. And before everyone
16:03
gets triggered, and is shocked, because this is a shock opera,
16:06
that we have to, unfortunately endure, because we're constantly
16:10
shocked by what he says. But don't let that shock. Don't let
16:15
that trauma, it's trauma. Let you forget what you're hearing.
16:19
That's
16:19
Adam Curry: some NLP right there. Wow, that's
16:22
John C Dvorak: a good one.
16:23
Adam Curry: Don't let the trauma that you have deep in the
16:26
recesses of your mind come up front, don't be afraid of the
16:29
trauma, the shock opera?
16:32
John C Dvorak: Well, I wrote a sub stack on this. You did I put
16:35
it in the show notes even and thank you for doing that. And I
16:38
want to mention something else that we don't have any clips on
16:41
but just to mention a
16:42
Adam Curry: Divorce Act on substack.com.
16:46
John C Dvorak: That even the fact checkers, Snopes being the
16:50
head of the pack on this one took the took the bloodbath
16:56
comment as true. And they use the rationale that the words
17:03
that there will be a bloodbath, just those words alone. He
17:07
actually said those words, they took it, they didn't have any
17:10
context aspect to it. They just says yes, he did say that. So
17:15
it's true. And then they used an example of people reflecting on
17:22
this, which was a tweet that somebody posted, where he is
17:26
where the tweet the tweet guy in some occupied Democrats or one
17:31
of these week guys added added the word violent. Trump says
17:37
there'll be a violent bloodbath and Snopes that that slide. I
17:42
mean, it's pathetic, how everybody works in concert.
17:46
Adam Curry: But then the point of your article was something
17:48
else. Yes.
17:49
John C Dvorak: The point of the article, just to summarize, was
17:52
that Trump brought up a good point about the Chinese building
17:57
a big factory to build to do a workaround on the on anything,
18:02
because if the Chinese suspect Trump's gonna get in office,
18:04
he's gonna put the kibosh on a bunch of things, including maybe
18:08
add some tariffs, which he did last time. Well, you can't do
18:11
that if you're coming in from Mexico. And he's made the
18:14
comment that I'm going to tax them 100%. I in the in the
18:18
column I mentioned, I don't think he can be agreement that
18:22
Trump put together. The Canadian Mexico United States Trade
18:27
Agreement won't allow it. He can't do that. If the Chinese
18:31
are going to build a bunch of cars and bring them in from
18:33
Mexico. Hey, there will be a bloodbath. And nobody's
18:39
discussing that at all, including Fox.
18:43
Adam Curry: Well, what kind of high standard you hold Fox to?
18:48
John C Dvorak: Well, I'm just saying Fox at least caught on
18:51
with the phony baloney, bloodbath comments, but all they
18:54
did if you watch any of their shows is mock the mainstream.
18:59
They didn't bring up the point about you know, is it possible
19:02
that the Chinese could move stuff in and I mentioned in the
19:04
newsletter another which I didn't put into such that column
19:08
is they're already got a mega factory down there building
19:11
modular homes that they may flood our country with.
19:14
Formaldehyde
19:15
Adam Curry: homes,
19:16
John C Dvorak: maybe, really,
19:18
Adam Curry: because they actually I have to say, I looked
19:20
at these BYD cars they look kind of cool if just for in the city.
19:24
They've
19:25
John C Dvorak: done a MIT they've built a million of one
19:27
of one of the models already they build that's a massive
19:31
operation. A golf cart that cost seven or eight No, it's more the
19:35
size of a small Honda. Yeah,
19:39
Adam Curry: but but you can have a golf cart. Someone wrote us
19:42
from China, probably some CCP agent and said these things
19:47
actually cool you do its BYD build your dream and you can
19:53
configure the car to say do I want 15 USB ports I want 10
19:59
cupholders. was somehow not quite sure how it works. But he
20:02
was saying no, you can build it however you want. It's, it's all
20:05
modular. Like okay, what was that car that was modular that
20:09
you could determine we had one of those not that I don't know
20:14
some other car
20:17
John C Dvorak: the point is is that this is the real issue here
20:19
it's not what would Trump said Can they
20:23
Adam Curry: actually have something they could they could
20:25
slam him on and they're overlooking it for the folks
20:29
here breaking, breaking bloodbath breaking
20:34
John C Dvorak: she could go after him on this because they
20:36
can say well, you're the one they came up with this agreement
20:39
is modernized NAFTA. And now the Chinese are gonna roll in town
20:44
and you can't do anything about it. Why don't they talk about
20:46
that? No, that's not not an issue. It was the site even
20:49
though that is the issue the Saigon
20:52
Adam Curry: was the car you could configure the site on?
20:55
John C Dvorak: Yeah, well, you know, and I remember the science
20:58
Adam Curry: what was cool because we get those I mean,
20:59
basically by the media not bringing attention to this and
21:04
by Trump's own trade agreement they're going to burn down
21:10
America with these with these millions of Chinese cars that
21:12
explode in your garage so it's really it's a national security
21:15
issue at this point. You know, it
21:22
John C Dvorak: not only come in cheap cheap very good best price
21:25
they come in with Best Price wipe out all of our electric
21:29
cars and then they'll blow up all our house. Exactly.
21:32
Adam Curry: There's your strategy with your military age
21:34
men fear it's the cars now actually there's there's a much
21:40
bigger danger much much bigger danger I'm I am I mean, I peel
21:47
back some layers on Oprah which believe me is a lot of layers
21:53
and all my G this this issue of the GLP one drugs that they you
22:04
know, that are just flooding America and because of our
22:10
severe sugar addiction, which we have you know, the world has it
22:15
but we're we're the champions of sugar addiction, the sugar and
22:20
the processed foods the process, you know, the carbs, GMO fruit,
22:25
fructose, and of course number one alcohol and alcohol which
22:29
already has sugar plus sugar. I mean, how many? How many shows
22:33
have you seen talking about these? The sugary alcohol
22:37
drinks? I mean, especially the morning shows, they're always
22:41
drinking them. everywhere, everywhere. You know, we have
22:47
this this just happened you remember that? cosmics the the
22:50
McDonald's their new concept this is like a sugar what
22:53
John C Dvorak: happened to that Oh, option
22:55
Unknown: for breakfast in the morning in the morning was
22:57
Dallas McDonald's opening its concept restaurant cosmics it is
23:03
located on the corner of Campbell and Preston roads and
23:06
Far North Dallas there are some food items but the focus is on
23:10
drinks and coffee lots of coffee I'm told and specialty drinks.
23:13
This is the first location in the States. Yesterday customers
23:17
getting an opportunity to try out those new offerings. We had
23:20
to get the drinks in the drive thru and then come inside and
23:22
get food because you got to try every every facet of it. You got
23:26
every angle. It's so cute.
23:30
title says it plans to open more cosmix restaurants in the Dallas
23:34
area within the coming months.
23:36
Adam Curry: These are obesity fill up stations.
23:39
John C Dvorak: Especially those fat Texas you know Texas, big
23:42
square people. They're huge. Well,
23:46
Adam Curry: we all know if you've all seen the mean America
23:48
in the 1970s America in the 2024 I mean we are fat we're fat. And
23:54
that's
23:54
John C Dvorak: because have you seen that my favorite meme is
23:57
showing says the reason for for ocean sea rise shows 70 shot of
24:03
a bunch of thin people and then a bunch of fat souls in the
24:06
water on the beach.
24:08
Adam Curry: It's funny but it's really sad because we're not our
24:12
government are CDC, the Health and Human Services then that
24:16
talking about this? No, no keep eating your sugar. Go just walk
24:22
around in the airport. People are standing in line all unhappy
24:27
looking waiting for a Cinnabon. Sugar. More sugar. I need sugar.
24:32
We're addicted. It's it's this this is the by the way, don't go
24:37
after the sugar industry. Those guys are more dangerous than the
24:40
cocaine industry. They'll kill you in a heartbeat if you start
24:43
talking about it too much. But now we have this fix, which is a
24:49
ozempic We'll go V Manjaro and death bound. So we have all
24:56
these. These so called DIB drugs for diabetes. Ah, it's magic.
25:02
Oh, it's magic. It works so well. You can keep eating all
25:06
this schlock as much as you want blowed up on sugar. This, this
25:11
will take it away. It's just going to take it away. So we
25:15
know that Oprah gave off her board seat on Weight Watchers
25:19
who are now in the game, they purchased a telehealth company,
25:23
which by itself is an unbelievable development in
25:27
American health care. Any drug you want? You just Yeah, I just
25:31
went on the website. Click Click Click answer five questions.
25:34
Yeah, I entered them truthfully. Yeah, sure. And you got your
25:38
drug. You got your drug. It's no problem in the mail. It's
25:41
beautiful. Now from Amazon now from what's his face. Dallas
25:47
boy, Mavericks boy, Cuban Mark Cuban. Mark
25:51
John C Dvorak: Cuban. Yeah.
25:52
Adam Curry: And Oprah also gave up all her shares. She donated
25:56
them to the Smithsonian Institute, Black Studies
25:59
Department for which you can take a fantastic deduction
26:03
because it's a proper 501 C three. And she could always just
26:07
turn around and buy those back in the open market as a public
26:10
company. It's not like, not like that removes any conflict of
26:15
interest. So she had the big the reason why she did that was for
26:19
this big ABC special. Did you see the special?
26:23
John C Dvorak: I avoid it. I'm sorry. I figured you'd watch Oh,
26:26
Adam Curry: I watched it. And I was appalled. I mean, I was I
26:31
was appalled. Blown away. In fact, watching this was almost
26:36
like being in the future. Where I was watching a documentary,
26:41
you know, these documentaries of the drug companies now that got
26:44
everybody hooked on oxy or on fentanyl. And now you're going
26:48
back in the documentary, and you show that everyone's making
26:51
money, they're partying, they're doing blow, they got hookers and
26:54
everything. And they Oh, well, we're killing people. Yeah,
26:57
whatever. It felt like I was watching one of those in the
27:00
future. And we're now seeing how people were tricked into getting
27:04
into this stuff. And even better by having the government pay for
27:08
it. That's what the special was about. And Oprah said, Well,
27:13
wait. Yes.
27:14
John C Dvorak: But you mean the government pay for it? They paid
27:17
for this special?
27:18
Adam Curry: No, they're gonna pay for this drug, you know that
27:20
that's what they're allowing? No,
27:21
John C Dvorak: you are what you mean is the drug? Yes. Because
27:24
Medicare Medicaid, because it's
27:26
Adam Curry: life saving. So, in this hour long special on ABC,
27:32
not for one moment was our nutritionist, anyone talking
27:36
about eating healthy foods staying away. In fact, the word
27:40
processed food was mentioned once at the very beginning. In
27:44
the setup,
27:45
Unknown: Dr. W. Scott Bush has been studying the disease of
27:49
obesity. And please note,
27:51
Adam Curry: throughout this entire special, John, obesity is
27:54
not because you're addicted to sugar, and you're eating this
27:59
poison. As a disease. It's a disease for
28:05
Unknown: nearly two decades. For six years, he has been the
28:09
director of obesity medicine in the bariatric and metabolic
28:13
Institute at Cleveland Clinic,
28:16
your weight has been stable, it's come up a little bit here.
28:20
But I think that's the difficulty. Obesity is a complex
28:24
disease, cause there's many inputs from genetics to
28:27
environment, the food environments change, we're not
28:30
sleeping as much our microbiome is changing, maybe due to that
28:34
change process food. What we've learned through science is that
28:39
the brain controls our body fat and our food intake and our
28:43
metabolism. So in regulates how much body fat we have in our
28:47
body, and how big those fat cells are. Obesity is a
28:51
dysfunction of that regulatory system that's supposed to
28:55
control our body fat in a specific range. So when you lose
28:59
weight, your body will intentionally slow your
29:02
metabolism down, it'll intentionally make you more
29:05
hungry, all in an attempt to get back to where it used to be. The
29:09
body is built to maintain our weight or adipose tissue or body
29:13
fat. And some people are more prone to holding on to their
29:19
fat, they have a higher weight setpoint. And so people who are
29:24
dieting are basically trying to restrict their caloric intake
29:28
because that's what we've been told, almost trying to hold
29:31
their breath under water. And what do we see when that
29:34
happens? We have to come up for air, our body is going to make
29:37
us unable to continue to lose weight, and we will naturally go
29:42
back to where we previously were.
29:45
Adam Curry: So here's here's what they're trying to tell us
29:48
that this is a disease and it's in your brain. Because your
29:51
brain has a body set point. This is why I'm saying it's like I'm
29:55
watching a documentary from the future. They're making this
29:57
stuff up. So your body has a set Point, and it will make you eat.
30:03
So you can't help it you a will make you eat now, I'm not going
30:08
to disagree if you compare alcoholism to this as a disease
30:14
because yes, it's it's you are hooked on alcohol you are. And I
30:19
think that's generally accepted alcoholism is a disease, which
30:23
also contains a lot of sugar, of course. So this is now this is
30:27
the point, one point of this special is to hammer into your
30:31
brain, it's a disease, it's not you has nothing to do with you
30:35
or the pie hole everything goes into. And by the way, people who
30:40
are have this real issue, but the lying and the end the
30:45
uncertainty of the long term effects of these drugs. It's not
30:50
even known, but they are shoving it down your throat with Oprah
30:53
at the right at the helm. And this is not just a disease,
30:57
John, it's a it's a complex disease.
31:00
Unknown: Many people have the disease of obesity. Everybody
31:05
who is overweight does not have the disease of obesity. But if
31:09
you have the disease of obesity, you're always gonna go back to
31:13
that setpoint. If you don't have it, then you can diet lose
31:18
weight exercise, all of the things that we've heard over the
31:21
years is, Am I on the right track? Absolutely. Are you all
31:23
following this? Because if you all are tracking, it means the
31:26
rest of the world track. But
31:27
there's a spectrum of obesity as well. It's not one disease, the
31:30
spectrum is many different subtypes of the disease. So it's
31:33
complex, quite complex. And that's why it is so wrong to be
31:38
shaming people. Because you don't understand the complexity
31:41
complexity of each person's situation.
31:44
And this and I think, as Amy said, this is just a reflection
31:47
of someone's uneducated belief.
31:52
Adam Curry: You're on educated Shut up. It's it's a spectrum
31:55
where else we heard this, oh, autism, it's a spectrum whereby
32:00
everybody can be on the spectrum. These are the tricks
32:03
they employ. Now, this category of drug has been around for 18,
32:08
minimum 18 years, but they've never really been able to sell
32:14
it the way that they're selling it now. Part of that is in the
32:20
last I mean, certainly since the lockdown, we have just ballooned
32:23
certainly as a nation, because everything contains sugar,
32:27
everything is GMO, all the foods we are eating are unhealthy. But
32:32
there's one extra thing we didn't have. That was a magic
32:35
marketing machine. Dr.
32:36
Unknown: Velazquez is here. Were you all surprised in your
32:40
practices when people started losing weight?
32:43
Yeah, I mean, I think we have we've already been using other
32:46
medications for the last 1020 years. But these were just a
32:50
little bit more effective. I mean, we hadn't seen
32:53
1020 years for diabetes for obesity. You know, we were when
32:58
this was the announcement.
33:03
And I ain't I think, you know,
33:05
I go to the nobody told me, you've been doing this for 20
33:11
years. He wasn't
33:13
mainstream, then we didn't have tick tock. That was our problem.
33:15
Adam Curry: Okay. Ah, there's the first clue. We didn't have
33:19
tic toc. That was our main problem gonna circle back to
33:22
John C Dvorak: that interesting the way they said problem.
33:25
Adam Curry: Oh, of course, because it was a marketing
33:28
problem. 100% I'm gonna, I'm gonna get back to that in a
33:31
moment, the marketing problem. So these are, by the way, that's
33:34
a doctor. So there's two doctors she has on the show. And, and
33:38
they have they're very, very knowledgeable. They know
33:40
everything about this. Because they've been doing this for a
33:43
long time. And by the way, you're going to be on it for
33:46
life.
33:47
Unknown: And do you have to be on it for the rest of your life?
33:49
Yeah, the data would support that when we have good trials
33:52
showing that when these patients stopped the medication, that
33:55
disease comes back,
33:56
both of you are consultancy.
33:58
John C Dvorak: Will you stop it for a second? I just want to
34:01
complain about the blank. The change in language world? Oh,
34:06
yeah. The use of the word disease, which always implied to
34:10
me, something that was contagious, it had a vector and
34:14
it had a bacteria or sort of foundational reason for
34:19
existing. It now it's everything gambling, gambling is a disease
34:25
Smokings a disease. Being fat is a disease. None of these things
34:30
have got anything to do with with vectors at all. It's what
34:33
they usually come from. This is like the redefinition of
34:35
vaccine. That's right, where they give you a genetic shot or
34:39
some sort and that's somehow a vaccine because they've
34:41
redefined it. This redefinition, which I have a couple of clips
34:45
of about something else. Later in the show, is just getting on
34:49
my nerves.
34:50
Adam Curry: It's only going to get worse. And, and this is what
34:53
this to me this what tanks. What these people are doing here is
34:58
more dangerous than coal. Within the COVID Vax. I think I don't
35:03
know if I have this on the clip, but somewhere Oprah talks about,
35:06
there's 2 billion P obese people in the world. So that's so a
35:11
disease has 2 billion people. Hmm. No, no, because it's a lie.
35:17
All this is a lie. It's what you're putting in your mouth.
35:20
This is when people go on the carnivore diet. They're like,
35:23
Oh, yeah, I want all beef and look at me, I'm great. It's not
35:26
because of the beef, it doesn't hurt. But you stop eating all
35:29
the other crap. That's the magic bullet right there. But let's go
35:33
back and listen to these doctors. She has a very
35:36
interesting question.
35:38
Unknown: And do you have to be on it for the rest of your life?
35:40
Yeah, the data would support that when we have good trials
35:43
showing that when these patients stopped the medication,
35:46
John C Dvorak: again, the tone of the answer is as if it's a
35:52
positive thing. That's right. And is really frightening to
35:57
listen to this. You can back it up and started over. But the
35:59
tone of the jury had to be honest for the rest of you. Oh,
36:02
yeah. That's great. Yeah, that's great. Yes, you do. And that's a
36:05
good thing. How is that a good thing?
36:10
Adam Curry: Oh, man, I can't wait until we get through this
36:11
whole it's only 37 seconds. But when we get through it, you can
36:14
love it even more. And
36:15
Unknown: do you have to be on it for the rest of your life? Yeah,
36:18
the data would support that when we have good trials showing that
36:21
when these patients stopped the medication, the disease comes
36:24
back. Both of you are consulted.
36:26
John C Dvorak: Stop again.
36:27
Adam Curry: I'm not going to rewind it all the way.
36:31
John C Dvorak: Okay, yes. Use of the word good. Uh huh. In her
36:35
explanation, we have good trials. Yeah, is another
36:38
positive reinforcement term to make it sound like oh, yeah, you
36:41
have to be on the rest of your life. It's good. Did the
36:45
associative wording is just unbelievable. That was really a
36:49
fascinating piece of propaganda
36:52
Unknown: gets better these patients stopped the medication,
36:55
the disease comes back.
36:56
Both of you are consultants to the drug companies. What does
36:59
that mean?
37:00
What that means is that they're looking for expert opinion to be
37:02
able to deliver high quality care to patients.
37:05
You know, I've been involved with some of these companies and
37:08
developing educational programs and modules for medical students
37:12
and medical trainees to learn more about the disease of
37:15
obesity from also running clinical trials with future
37:18
medications. Okay, so
37:20
the obesity epidemic among children,
37:22
Adam Curry: they are paid consultants for the
37:24
pharmaceutical companies that they're talking about. And oh
37:28
purchases. What's that about? Oh, yeah, well, I guess they
37:31
could pay me for my expertise. And the other guy's like, boy, I
37:34
do educational programs is called Marketing. These are
37:38
marketing shills paid doctors this is this is what got
37:44
everyone in trouble with oxy because the doctors are bought
37:48
and paid for they're sitting right there with Oprah on ABC
37:52
primetime, saying, oh, yeah, no, I'm a consultant. I get paid by
37:56
these companies is great. It's it's, it's mind boggling. Oh,
38:01
but wait, there's more. After I'm just going to presume Oprah
38:04
gave all her shares up took the tax benefit, and could have
38:08
easily repurchase the shares in the public market. Let's bring
38:11
on the lady from weightwatchers. Okay,
38:13
Unknown: so I recently made the decision to not continue serving
38:17
on the board of weightwatchers. And I made that decision because
38:21
I wanted no perceived conflict of interest for any special Oh,
38:26
there's none here all products so that I could have a
38:29
conversation with you for some marketing, the SEMA Sistani, the
38:34
CEO of Weight Watchers. And now weightwatchers has changed its
38:39
philosophy and has purchased a company that is in the weight
38:45
loss medications. Can you tell us why that philosophy changed,
38:49
Adam Curry: the philosophy has changed because it's a disease
38:52
Oprah,
38:53
Unknown: we are the most clinically tested, evidence
38:55
based science back behavior change program.
38:59
Adam Curry: Roll the prompter roll the prompter, we
39:02
Unknown: were missing the third prong, which was biology, there
39:05
could be somebody who needs medications because they have
39:08
that biological underpinning and therefore, what is so important
39:13
is for us to provide that care and also to help people release
39:18
the shame for all those people who came side by side and took
39:22
on the behavior change. Some of them walked away without the
39:26
success. And to those people. I want to say it's not your fault,
39:30
not your fault.
39:31
Why do we need Weight Watchers? If we've got zip bound and we go
39:36
V.
39:37
Weight Watchers is not just about weight loss, it's about
39:40
community. It's about education, and it is about care. That's our
39:45
new philosophy is to help people live longer, happier lives with
39:50
wait healthcare. No,
39:51
Adam Curry: you're now a drug pusher. You bought a company
39:54
that does telehealth and they and Oprah just put you on
39:58
television to make sure everybody Go to the well known
40:01
Weight Watchers brand. And buy ozempic. And we'll go V from
40:05
you. Well done Oprah. Now, let's talk about let's talk about the
40:11
risks. This is my favorite, because we bring in America's
40:15
favorite doctor, Dr. Jenn from ABC, listen to this, people
40:21
Unknown: often don't realize that these were first FDA
40:23
approved in the United States for help in managing type two
40:26
diabetes almost 20 years ago. So we have extensive safety and
40:32
efficacy data, they have a good track record. However, when you
40:36
talk about risks, I think you need to ask four questions. What
40:39
are the risks of taking these drugs? Versus what are the risks
40:43
of not taking these drugs?
40:46
Adam Curry: This is so good. So if you don't take these drugs,
40:50
which obviously have some risks, you could die of a heart attack,
40:54
you can die of all kinds of things that come with obesity.
40:57
So she's going to say that it's the risk is lower taking the
41:02
drugs than not taking the drug? Oh, you don't want to raise your
41:06
risk by not taking the drugs? And
41:08
Unknown: what are the risks of not taking these drugs? What are
41:11
the benefits of taking these drugs? And what are the benefits
41:14
of not taking these drugs, we know conclusively that if you do
41:18
not treat or manage the conditions of overweight or
41:21
obesity, the risks are significant increased risks of
41:25
heart attack, stroke, various types of cancer, that has to be
41:29
part of this decision making analysis. So take a very rare
41:33
potential risk or side effect of this class of medication. But if
41:36
a risk is noted to occur one out of every 100,000 times that's
41:42
rare, that's one case. But if all of a sudden, a million
41:45
people are on that drug, you're going to see that rare risk or
41:49
side effect 10 times. Oh,
41:51
Adam Curry: my doctor chin hang your head in shame. So yeah,
41:56
there's a rare side effects. So you know, you'll see a couple
41:59
people in 100,000. But if everyone's on it, it's gonna
42:02
seem like a lot of people have side effects. So keep that in
42:04
mind. I'm Dr. Jen, America's favorite doctor. Dr. Death is
42:09
what I call her. So let's bring back the doctors let's let's
42:13
talk about the side effects, which as far as I know, there is
42:17
an increased risk of suicidal tendencies, there have been
42:21
people who have completed have brought suicide to completion.
42:24
That is how the I have it in the show notes. That is how some of
42:28
the studies call it they've brought suicide to full
42:33
completion. There's also all kinds of things for people with
42:37
thyroid, and but yeah, we've tried it on my so what are you
42:40
worrying about, but
42:41
Unknown: they do have side effects?
42:43
I think that they've gotten over hyped medicine side effects. But
42:46
the important part is that they're mild. It's over high,
42:49
moderate, and the research studies. Yeah,
42:51
I want to talk to Have you answered this question about
42:53
serious health effects down the road. Yeah,
42:55
like we can speak to that. So there's been a lot of hype
42:58
around like pancreatitis, gallbladder complications,
43:01
concerns for thyroid cancer. So there, this has really not been
43:04
shown in human studies that this is
43:06
Adam Curry: because you don't have human studies on it. You've
43:09
done it. This is showing up in mice. Oh, and we don't want to
43:13
test that in humans. The mice knew they died, but it's just
43:15
mice shins
43:16
Unknown: concerns for thyroid cancer. So there, this has
43:19
really not been shown in human studies that this is a
43:21
downstream complication. And that really, that the risk is
43:24
less than 1%. And so when we're talking about any medication,
43:27
people who have
43:28
it, it is an issue for them. So
43:32
John C Dvorak: one more thing. Yeah, sure. 1% is one out of 100
43:36
Not one out of 100,000 As you've already divorced in your brain.
43:41
Yep. The idea of one in 100,000 Well, one and 100,000 That's not
43:45
that much. But when you say 1% Yes, you could, you might as
43:50
well say one in 100, which is a little different. Yeah, this
43:54
whole six xx M magnitude, it's 1000 times more this
43:58
Adam Curry: this is this is a sales job and it's disgusting.
44:03
Unknown: And so when we're talking about any medication,
44:05
people who have it, it is an issue for them. So if anybody
44:08
has a history specifically of modularity, thyroid cancer
44:11
medullary thyroid cancer is very very rare. So if they do have
44:15
that we're not prescribing that medication. So we have to be
44:18
able to keep up with knowing the data and recognizing that it's
44:21
rare but it's there and we have to always screen rare
44:24
Adam Curry: but they're it's rare, but they're and and you
44:27
know we all have to screen. Okay, final clip from the
44:31
Special. Now now, this is what just I my mouth hung open. They
44:38
brought in two reps from the actual pharma companies. From
44:44
Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk, sat them together. Arch Rivals, sat
44:52
them together, which which Oprah kept making a big deal about
44:55
this is so awesome. I mean, they are so serious about Got this
45:00
disease and the spectrum of disease that they just want to
45:05
help you. That's why they're sitting side by side. And they
45:09
looked and sounded like marketing ladies to me, but they
45:13
are there to pitch the most important part and this will be
45:16
used over and over again in the halls of Congress.
45:19
Unknown: Miguel Morris is the Senior Vice President for Novo
45:24
Nordisk the Danish company behind ozempic and with govi and
45:28
Rhonda Chico is the Group Vice President for Eli Lilly, the
45:33
American pharma company that manufactures and sells Manjaro
45:38
and zip bound and they've been sitting together this entire
45:42
hour. I wanted to ask you, in the Novo Nordisk offices, when
45:49
this hit tick tock and became like a sensation, what was going
45:54
on back there?
45:56
It was actually over two decades ago, that Novo Nordisk made a
45:59
stand that Obesity is a disease, and that the shame that society
46:04
keeps on people who are dealing with excess weight and obesity
46:07
needs to stop
46:08
that show. Can you both talk about access, first of all,
46:12
running out of the drugs? I guess that's because the demand
46:17
was so high, correct. unprecedent
46:19
demand, I think people are getting the memo, like you're
46:22
talking about, and people are really understanding that this
46:27
is a disease, and they're seeing treatments that are showing this
46:30
efficacy. And so they're going out, and they're speaking to
46:33
their physicians. And so it is unprecedent. It is also very
46:37
lot of physicians who are not informed about it, correct? Yes,
46:41
correct. So we, the job's not done. So
46:43
access is complex, just like the disease itself is complex.
46:47
Obesity medications are not covered to the same extent. And
46:50
that's why that out of pocket cost is what it is, when
46:53
you look at obesity, that it's nowhere near the coverage that
46:58
we need. Well, I
46:59
thank you both for being here the first time it
47:04
Adam Curry: happened. Okay, Oprah well done. So as I start
47:11
to dive into this, all of a sudden, I start to figure it
47:14
out. That this is also the Tick Tock problem in general, tick
47:19
tock has figured out they have they have entire hashtag pages
47:24
that they maintain for obesity, and they and all the influencers
47:30
are tagged by this. Tick tock is not is not. They're not putting
47:37
the influences in there. The influencers are paid by the drug
47:40
companies, they're paid to do their thing. And I think it's
47:45
hundreds of 1000s of them. Tick tock is responsible for the algo
47:50
and for the hashtag, and for making sure that it gets pushed
47:54
into everybody's face. And this is why Google in particular and
47:58
meta, of course, they are so pissed off, because these guys
48:02
have basically figured out the remote control when in the 80s,
48:06
what was the what was the big thing that got us all hooked on
48:08
television, it wasn't television, per se, it was the
48:10
clicker, click, click, click Yes, click, click, click, click,
48:13
click, and that's what tick tock is swipe up, click, click,
48:16
click, click, it's the same mechanism on you know, hyper,
48:20
hyper arised. So now they've got all these different things that
48:23
these drugs are going to cure dementia, inflammation, heart
48:27
issues, depression, addiction to anything lower risk of alcohol
48:32
abuse disorder, this is the this is going to this is going to be
48:37
it and it's going to fix everything, even though we don't
48:40
really have the trials and there's 1% and problems on this
48:42
code stuff. And you could probably fix a lot of this by
48:45
eating different things. Not eat no one talks about it by
48:49
lowering your intake of sugar. And I have to say if you look at
48:53
all the television shows, particularly the morning shows
48:56
that are rampant on cable and on local television, all the latest
49:01
sitting there drinking their sugary alcohol drinks, that
49:04
everybody's talking about cocktail so we're just taking in
49:06
more and more sugar. And then I came across this and that all
49:11
came home. The the stigma of obesity is the next frontier.
49:18
The stigma of depression is already all over Tik Tok. And I
49:24
think tick tock is cleaning up I think they're making so much
49:28
money by by manipulating their algos to put these influences in
49:34
front of mainly teenage girls, because they are now had gone
49:40
all out on the marketing of depression. And if you look at
49:44
the drugs that the children are on from Prozac to Lexapro, I
49:48
mean I can't even tell you all the different brand names that
49:50
they have. Here's an interview with one of those influencers
49:54
who talks about how this works. What a hot girl pills.
49:59
Unknown: Oh god pills out Are SSRIs or antidepressants. It's a
50:02
way that Gen Z goes seem to describe their antidepressants
50:06
on tick tock. There's also silly girl pills. There's also all
50:10
kinds of mental health merchandise with pills on them.
50:14
There's Prozac pillows, there's antidepressant trying cases.
50:17
That's a common phrase now, like hot girls take Lexapro, girls
50:23
take sertraline, all kinds of stuff like that. Not only is
50:26
there the normalization of these mental health diagnosis, but the
50:29
absolute glamorization of them now and you've got like kids
50:32
putting their mental health medication and diagnosis in
50:35
their Twitter bios, young people putting them on their Tinder
50:38
profiles. Like you can't say it's stigma anymore. That's the
50:41
wrong context, especially for things like anxiety and
50:45
depression, autism, ADHD, I'm sure there's areas of it that
50:48
are stigmatized, but the way these campaigns talk about it,
50:51
it's as if it's 10 years ago.
50:54
Adam Curry: This is what they're doing. These pharma rats have
50:57
captured our children, particularly girls. They're
51:01
glamorizing their antidepressive meds hot girls, this is T shirts
51:07
hot girls take Lexapro, you can buy it right there from the
51:10
influencers. Oh, look up, go to my Etsy score. A store? Oh, I've
51:14
got my Prozac pillow. I'll put it. Oh, yes. Kids at school. Oh,
51:19
yeah. You laugh but they do laugh. The demon has a hold of
51:24
our children. Is it social media? Yeah, there's all kinds
51:28
of issue. The real problem is Big Pharma has our children,
51:32
they have them by the balls, because all of them have balls.
51:35
Now. They have them by the balls. And they're controlling
51:39
them. And they're glamorizing these drugs, get your kids off
51:43
of this stuff. This is unbelievable. And it just makes
51:48
so much since now I know why Google is so mad about tick
51:51
tock. They're getting all the pharma money. All of it, because
51:56
they figured out the magical formula. Well, this was around
51:59
for 18 years, it never worked before what happened? Tick
52:01
John C Dvorak: tock that's actually the real thematic
52:04
aspect is exactly it. Even Oprah was made fun of the fact that
52:09
it's been around forever. So it's been around for 18 years.
52:13
And only now they're making hay and what's the coincidence tick
52:17
tock would be it.
52:20
Adam Curry: What do you mean the coincidence? It's a coincidence
52:23
John C Dvorak: of what how do you start marketing? What what
52:25
mechanism allowed this thing to now become popular and marketed
52:30
properly? It didn't it wasn't possible before. Because it's
52:34
been around for 18 years. So what's the coincidence? Yeah,
52:37
Adam Curry: they have they have tick tock tick tock influencers
52:40
and tick tock will sell you the algorithm promotion? Keating
52:46
show
52:47
John C Dvorak: you a package
52:48
Adam Curry: Oh yeah, we just one second. There's the think I have
52:51
it here the here's
52:52
John C Dvorak: what we're gonna do for you. Diggy gay sit in
52:54
front of one of the guys, the buyer. And you say, here's what
52:58
we've got. Nobody else has has this. And then they outline it.
53:01
Well, you know, I've seen these guys send their sales pitch.
53:04
They write it all out and have a whiteboard maybe and they'll
53:08
show me exactly how it's going to work and what it's going to
53:10
cost and how long it's going to take. And again, nobody else can
53:14
do it.
53:15
Adam Curry: At Tiki I'm reading from their own page on tick
53:17
tock, tick tock. We're proud to be a platform that offers a safe
53:21
place where people feel comfortable sharing their
53:23
personal stories and openly discussing well being and we're
53:26
constantly inspired by our community support for one
53:29
another. This hashtag mental health awareness month, we're
53:32
announcing the launch of new initiatives aimed at promoting
53:35
positive mental well being combating stigma and providing
53:39
support to our community. Dude, they they're they're not even
53:44
bashful about it. You can buy the hashtag. Oh, boy. Yeah, but
53:48
because the kid why? Because they're killing children. They
53:52
know it. This is why it feels in the future. We may not be doing
53:56
the show, but in the future there's going to be a
53:59
documentary they may even put this audio in it. Where these
54:04
podcasters figure it out, but they will just podcast that know
54:07
that I doubt no one listened to them. And here's an even Oprah
54:12
was in on it. It is it's it's sad. And these meds they lock
54:18
the demons inside of you. These aren't helping you. These are
54:23
these No way. Oh, yeah, I'm sorry. Yeah. You know now that
54:28
Finland has doubled their intake of SSRIs they're now the
54:32
happiest country in the world.
54:35
John C Dvorak: I have that clip. Oh, you do? But before that I
54:39
want to play the ADHD clip. PMA three. Good Morning, America.
54:45
Three is on board. There's yucking it up the whole time.
54:49
Here we go.
54:51
Unknown: What's got these rising rates of ADHD better across the
54:54
country? What are we learning about this?
54:57
These are new numbers from the CDC and I just Want to show you
55:00
some of these numbers because they are concerning. So if you
55:02
look at the years from 2020 to 2022, the rates of ADHD
55:07
diagnosis in children from five to 17, and increased by 2.5%,
55:11
since 2019, and the rate is higher among adolescents, those
55:15
aged 12 to 17. And boys are twice as likely to be diagnosed
55:19
and girls. And this accounts for almost 6 million children aged
55:22
three to 17. So far I've been diagnosed with in the United
55:24
States, it's concerning. It's something that we need to be
55:27
paying pay attention to, because it not only affects, obviously,
55:30
their social interactions, but just their development, learning
55:33
education. So why boys more than girls? That's a great question.
55:38
I think that there's a lot of structural societal questions
55:40
that we have this is probably nuanced and complicated, to be
55:43
honest, tomorrow that we won't be able to find a specific
55:45
answer. I think one of the reasons why we're seeing these
55:48
rising rates are a couple of factors. Number one, a decrease
55:51
in stigma around the diagnosis, many people are talking about
55:54
it. So people feel more comfortable, there's more
55:56
awareness about the symptoms. So parents know when to bring this
55:58
up with their physicians and their their child's doctor. And
56:02
then also just in terms of access, there's more access for
56:05
those who are seeking out help, because they're just more people
56:08
know about it. And so hopefully, this leads to more people
56:10
getting that diagnosis. Maybe it's not necessarily more people
56:13
getting ADHD, or just being able to find it better, which is also
56:17
good.
56:17
Adam Curry: Did he mention what drugs you can get if you have
56:19
the diagnosis, and denied the stigma? You're not afraid of the
56:24
stigma? We need where's our Federal Trade Commission? We
56:28
need all kinds of Oh, come on, let's at least pretend we need a
56:33
we need all kinds of government organizations to come in and
56:37
stop this. They're marketing death to our children. They
56:41
don't even know companies
56:42
John C Dvorak: own the media, the media tells government what
56:44
to
56:45
Adam Curry: do. They don't even know how SSRIs work.
56:48
John C Dvorak: No, I that's the funny part. They just kind of
56:51
work, just work. In the same GMA three months will play their
56:56
happiness report, so we can at least get that out of the way.
56:59
New
56:59
Unknown: info in the Happiness Report. America is less happy.
57:04
The first time it surprisingly, I guess it's not a surprise to
57:07
many people. But America has fallen out of the top 20. So
57:10
this is a new Gallup poll where they basically analyzed citizens
57:13
of 140 nations, and they ranked the world's happiest countries,
57:18
and America has normally sat in the top 20. But for the first
57:21
time, it's fallen out of that install into number 23. But I
57:24
think as we were talking during the break, the most interesting
57:27
thing about this is that millennials are seem to be the
57:30
unhappiest compared to those who are in the boomer category. And
57:34
there are a lot of reasons why I can suspect that that might be I
57:37
was actually saying it could be the pressure from IG and
57:40
Facebook and all of the social media attention there. But how
57:43
can we change that? Get those numbers up? You know, there are
57:46
there are I think number one, to your point, I think that there
57:49
is something to be said about social media, they always say
57:51
Comparison is the thief of joy. So it's definitely an aspect of
57:54
that. But there have been proven scientific studies in terms of
57:57
what benefits us the most to get our happiness out. Number one
58:00
physical activity, obviously improving those endorphins,
58:03
sleep, you want to make sure that you have a routine and then
58:06
avoiding certain food groups during wintertime especially
58:09
when we feel down we reach for those carbs. I know I reach for
58:11
French fries, because that causes that surge in sugar and
58:15
sometimes even endorphins and dopamine because you're so
58:17
excited to habit. But avoiding that and switching to lean meats
58:21
can help you stabilize your emotions and eat better
58:23
throughout the day. Also practicing gratitude keeping a
58:26
journal. And then lastly, and most importantly, again,
58:29
avoiding comparison. I think that that's one of the most
58:31
important factors here.
58:33
Adam Curry: Oh man, he says it right there. I need some sugar.
58:37
I'm not happy. I need some sugar.
58:39
John C Dvorak: Give me some shade it does. And but the thing
58:41
that always crops up in these, there's a couple of weird things
58:44
that crop up keeping a journal.
58:48
Adam Curry: I don't know what that's all about. But
58:51
John C Dvorak: I've noticed that before keeping a journal and by
58:54
the way, I recommend keeping a journal to two writers. anyone
58:58
thinks they're gonna be a writer someday?
59:00
Adam Curry: Well, you know, we so not only the kids, but the
59:02
teachers are now on the so called anti sad pills. We had
59:05
the clip on the last show. But the teacher saying I'm taking
59:09
anti sad pills, and I got a note from SoCal the fearless Jedi
59:14
Knight of the orange fleet. And he says the teachers on drugs as
59:18
a result of the terrible shape of our schools as well as the
59:20
wide availability and pushing of anti sad pills. While the lady
59:24
on the Tiktok is weak for needing pills right after
59:27
student teaching. My wife is a 13 year 13 year middle school
59:31
teacher a couple of years ago considered taking anti sad
59:34
pills. And this was with a firm sustained. This was a firm
59:40
sustained for them not quite sure what that means. disdain
59:42
probably, luckily I convinced her otherwise and found natural
59:45
methods to fix the issue. I wouldn't be surprised if a lot
59:49
of teachers are users the school system is so bad. The teachers
59:53
stay because they're either passionate or out of guilt or
59:56
they want to get that pension. They think they don't have any
59:59
better options kid You're allowed to do whatever they
1:00:01
want. Teachers don't have the power because they would, you'll
1:00:04
be called racist. Even at a Christian school, my wife
1:00:08
recently escaped to same issues to a lesser extent certain
1:00:11
minority students and their parents feel entitled to the
1:00:14
lecture parents. My wife is incentivized to not punish
1:00:18
certain minority students because then she'd have to deal
1:00:21
with those parents and have to over explain her actions. The
1:00:24
administration won't stand up to these parents. This is this is a
1:00:28
drain, we're circling it going down going down sucking us now.
1:00:35
Now. There is there are some obvious issues with social
1:00:39
media. And you know, there's a lot of people out there with
1:00:45
books and you know, Abigail Schrier is back out on the, on
1:00:49
the promotion path with her book, talking about how, you
1:00:53
know, we're putting these children in too much therapy
1:00:56
and, and always asking, How are you feeling? Are you feeling
1:00:59
okay? Are you feeling happy? Which of course makes the kid
1:01:02
you know, say, well, am I happy? No, I'm probably not happy.
1:01:05
Boom, entered the happy the anti sad pill. Jonathan Haidt is back
1:01:11
out. He did the original coddling of the American mind.
1:01:15
And now he's out with we're right rewiring our kids brains.
1:01:18
And his his solution in this book is well, we need age
1:01:23
verification on social media. It's all about social media now
1:01:27
and completely skipped over the drugs. One in eight kids is on
1:01:30
drugs in America, one in eight people in America are on these
1:01:33
drugs. It you know, you and I are sheltered when it comes to
1:01:38
that. This is normal. This is just the most normal thing. And
1:01:43
if we don't speak up about it, it's just going to keep going on
1:01:46
and on and on. So you so you have a tick tock clip you want
1:01:51
to is that appropriate for right here? No,
1:01:54
John C Dvorak: actually, this tick tock clip is talking about
1:01:57
momentum toward getting legislation against that's good.
1:02:00
Yeah, that's good. I'm gonna play it. Yeah, I want to play
1:02:02
the Senate
1:02:03
Unknown: today receiving a briefing on Tiktok from US
1:02:06
intelligence agencies. This comes just days after the House
1:02:09
passed a bill aimed at addressing the app's affiliation
1:02:12
with Communist China. The legislation requires Tik Tok to
1:02:16
divest from the Chinese parent company bytedance Or outerspace
1:02:19
a banned from US App Stores. Despite overwhelming support for
1:02:23
the bill in the House, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer
1:02:26
has not yet indicated how the Senate plans to proceed. If the
1:02:30
bill gets through the upper chamber, President Biden has
1:02:33
said he's willing to sign it. Well,
1:02:36
Adam Curry: I mean, it's so clear now, this is why Mnuchin
1:02:39
wants to buy it. He's like, pros, we need this thing. If we
1:02:45
can get this thing, we're gonna get all that farmer money. He's
1:02:49
not stupid. He knows exactly what's going on. Then I know how
1:02:54
to fix this. But that we can't do that without talking about
1:02:58
the Missouri V Biden case, which, as our constitutional
1:03:03
lawyer, Rob predicted, has now come to the forefront. Now the
1:03:07
media can't stop talking about it. This is the the basic
1:03:11
complaint is during the pandemic, the Biden
1:03:15
administration, I believe, also the Trump admitted or during the
1:03:18
Trump administration, but certainly the bite the White
1:03:20
House would call the social media companies and say, Hey,
1:03:26
take that post down. That's this information. And they threatened
1:03:29
by saying, Well, you know, we got section 230, you might want
1:03:34
to do what we say. So we have audio from the Supreme Court.
1:03:40
This was quite interesting, and a lot of different one, not a
1:03:43
lot, several news outlets paid attention to it. Start with the
1:03:49
PBS news hour.
1:03:50
Unknown: The first one was about social media companies. And
1:03:54
whether the Biden administration violated the First Amendment
1:03:57
when they flagged COVID misinformation to tech giants
1:04:00
like Facebook and X formerly Twitter, where were the justices
1:04:04
on this case in particular? Well,
1:04:06
the crux of the case. And the second case as well is really
1:04:10
how do you tell when the government has crossed the line
1:04:13
between what's permissible persuasion and unconstitutional
1:04:18
coercion? In fact, just the Chief Justice framed that as the
1:04:21
question, how do we measure this is significant persuasion
1:04:27
enough? You know, what else? In fact, the lawyers for the states
1:04:34
that brought this lawsuit said, you don't even need coercion?
1:04:38
You just need inducement and encouragement, which Justice
1:04:42
Kagan said was wow, that's so broad. That's so expansive. So
1:04:46
they're really trying to find out, you know, where where is
1:04:48
the line here? And did the Biden administration cross it and the
1:04:52
justices didn't seem entirely sympathetic to the challengers
1:04:56
here the states of Missouri Louisiana and five in the vigils
1:05:00
who brought the lawsuit, because they saw a couple of problems
1:05:04
with the case first, did these individuals in the states even
1:05:08
have the right the legal right to sue here? They couldn't the
1:05:11
justices couldn't see a clear line between standing the claims
1:05:15
that the individual said their posts had been taken down
1:05:19
because of government action that Justice Kagan said at one
1:05:22
point, there was such a time gap between the communication by the
1:05:26
government and what happened to their posts on Facebook. Was it
1:05:30
government action? Or was it the platform's own action? So I my
1:05:35
sense of the argument afterwards was that they're leaning towards
1:05:40
the majority is definitely leaning in favor the Biden
1:05:43
administration here. That's the general
1:05:45
Adam Curry: consensus, Politico saying that everyone's Oh, no,
1:05:48
that was looks like Biden administration is gonna be good
1:05:50
on this. Of course, really, the problem is, and just to
1:05:55
reiterate, the First Amendment states that the government
1:05:59
cannot censor speech. That's the whole idea is not saying what
1:06:04
the government can do. It's saying the government cannot do
1:06:08
that. But of course, back when the framers put this together,
1:06:11
there was no internet. Should
1:06:13
Unknown: the US government be allowed to tell social media
1:06:16
companies that people's posts are false or harmful? And if it
1:06:20
does, is that the same as pressuring the outlets to remove
1:06:24
them? Complaints came from the Republican led states of
1:06:27
Louisiana and Alabama, and five users who say their posts
1:06:31
opposing COVID vaccines during the pandemic were targeted.
1:06:35
Justice Department lawyer Brian Fletcher told Supreme Court
1:06:39
justices, the government wasn't curtailing citizens free speech,
1:06:43
but exercising its own I
1:06:45
think that the government is entitled to to speak for itself.
1:06:47
It's a feature of our constitutional democracy
1:06:50
to lower courts disagreed, deciding that federal agencies
1:06:54
or coercing social media outlets blocking rights guaranteed in
1:06:58
the First Amendment. The same point Louisiana's Solicitor
1:07:02
General Benjamin aguinaga, argued here,
1:07:05
if the government says our view of that is that it's false, they
1:07:08
can absolutely say that. But if they do more, and they say you
1:07:11
need to take this down. That's a problem first amendment issue.
1:07:14
But the court seems reluctant to restrict the federal government,
1:07:18
especially on health and safety issues, Justice Catan G. Brown
1:07:22
Jackson,
1:07:23
some might say that the government actually has a duty
1:07:26
to take steps to protect the citizens of this country, John
1:07:31
Watson, a journalism law professor at the American
1:07:34
University in Washington, to a large extent the First Amendment
1:07:38
is dysfunctional. But he says the Constitution never
1:07:42
envisioned the internet a platform for billions to say
1:07:46
whatever they want, true or not. So I have to
1:07:50
Adam Curry: play a longer clip of the freshman justice Catan G.
1:07:56
Brown Jackson, the woman who could not define what a woman
1:07:59
is, during her Senate hearing, this woman is disqualified from
1:08:05
sitting on the Supreme Court. I
1:08:07
John C Dvorak: want to do a mere culpa here because I thought she
1:08:10
would be okay. But the more that I see of her in these various
1:08:15
cases she is she is like a, she's dumb. And I mean, she's
1:08:22
appears to she has good ways of putting things but she's, she is
1:08:26
not a good justice. She doesn't have any, her logic is skewed.
1:08:30
So it's like she doesn't even understand how the system works
1:08:33
at all. She's a terrible Supreme Court justice. She's
1:08:36
Adam Curry: got her ideas about it, Justice Jackson.
1:08:39
Unknown: So my biggest concern is that your view has the First
1:08:43
Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways
1:08:47
in the most important time periods. I mean, what would what
1:08:52
would you have the government do? I've heard you say a couple
1:08:55
times that the government can post its own speech, but in my
1:08:58
hypothetical, you know, kids, this is not safe, don't do it is
1:09:03
not going to get it done. And so I guess, some might say that the
1:09:09
government actually has a duty to take steps to protect the
1:09:14
citizens of this country. And you seem to be suggesting that
1:09:17
that duty cannot manifest itself in the government encouraging,
1:09:21
encouraging pressuring fresh platforms to take down harmful
1:09:26
information. So can you help me because I'm really I'm really
1:09:30
worried about that. Because you've got the First Amendment
1:09:33
operating in an environment of threatening circumstances from
1:09:38
the government's perspective, and you're saying that the
1:09:40
government can't interact with the source of those problems.
1:09:46
Adam Curry: I just gotta stop it here for a second. During World
1:09:49
War Two, there was a large campaign because the government
1:09:53
could not tell people to shut up and the camp and they had a
1:09:57
campaign. It was loose. slips, sink ships, but they could not
1:10:03
block people from reporting on what was happening. But now
1:10:07
Catan g brown Jackson is like, well, if kids are jumping out of
1:10:11
windows, the government has to step in. No, no justice in
1:10:18
Unknown: your honor, I understand that in saying that,
1:10:20
I guess what I tell you is that our position is not that the
1:10:22
government can interact with the platform's there, they can and
1:10:26
they should, in certain circumstances like that, that
1:10:28
presents such dangerous issues for society, and especially
1:10:31
young people, but the way they do that has to be in compliance
1:10:35
with the First Amendment. And I think that means they can give
1:10:37
them all the true information that the platform needs and
1:10:40
asked to amplify that. Would
1:10:42
Adam Curry: you? Would you like to hear a second clip from
1:10:44
Qatar? Brown? Jackson,
1:10:47
John C Dvorak: I can't get enough of this. Right.
1:10:49
Unknown: You're just saying that I guess I fought when you say
1:10:52
the way they do that is consistent with the First
1:10:54
Amendment is that they have to show that they have a compelling
1:10:57
interest to do what they're doing. In other words, wow, you
1:11:00
want us to take the line, wait
1:11:02
Adam Curry: a minute. The government can can stifle your
1:11:05
speech, as long as they can show a real interest that that it's
1:11:08
really, really important. This has this one woman read the
1:11:12
Constitution on the Bill of Rights.
1:11:19
John C Dvorak: She's like a classic. federal government
1:11:23
should be running everything. states rights, or men shouldn't
1:11:28
even be considered. They should just trample us it just does
1:11:32
exactly the wrong kind of person should be on the Supreme Court.
1:11:36
Unknown: The First Amendment is that they have to show that they
1:11:38
have a compelling interest to do what they're doing. In other
1:11:41
words, you you want us to take the lines to be between
1:11:46
compulsion and encouragement. And what we're looking at is the
1:11:49
government can't compel maybe they can encourage. I'm
1:11:53
wondering whether that's not really the line. The line, is it
1:11:58
does the government pursuant to the First Amendment have a
1:12:01
compelling interest in doing things that result in
1:12:06
restricting the speech in this way? That test, I think takes
1:12:11
into account all of these different circumstances.
1:12:14
Adam Curry: Man, get her out of there impeach
1:12:18
Unknown: that we don't really care as much about how much the
1:12:21
government is compelling, or maybe we do but in the context
1:12:23
of tailoring and not as sort of a free standing inquiry that's
1:12:28
overlaid on all of this. Does that make sense? It
1:12:31
does, Your Honor. And I apologize for missing guidance
1:12:34
earlier. So the way I think about that is I've been
1:12:36
discussing the standard and I thought we've all been discussed
1:12:39
as
1:12:39
Adam Curry: the Lord. Now. Here's Gorsuch, he had something
1:12:42
to say he brought in a section 230.
1:12:44
Unknown: Mr. On that point, you mentioned core, you've mentioned
1:12:48
coercion repeatedly as in terms of threats. Can there also be
1:12:51
coercion to your view in terms of inducements? We think there
1:12:55
can I think be often a threat or an inducement is sort of the
1:12:57
flip side, one or the other? I think in the next case, you
1:13:00
could construe it either way, threat of prosecution offer
1:13:03
leniency. So we acknowledge that can be both, but it has to be a
1:13:06
threat or an inducement of some concrete government action, not
1:13:09
just a more government speech, and hypothetically, and I'm not
1:13:12
saying this happened here, but with a threat or an inducement
1:13:16
with respect to any trust actions qualify as coercion?
1:13:19
Sure. And the threat or an inducement with respect to
1:13:24
Section 230? qualify? So I think that one's harder for two
1:13:28
reasons. One is that these are executive branch officials who
1:13:31
don't have the ability to unilaterally enact 230 reform. I
1:13:34
think the question, they have a power to influence that
1:13:37
influence. And but the question is, was that would that be
1:13:39
enough to say we're going to, if you don't do x, we're going to
1:13:43
change our position on section 230. So potentially, yes, as to
1:13:48
legislation. 230, if I could just get this out there I think
1:13:50
is different, because 230 is about content. Moderation. It's
1:13:53
a it's about to this very issue. And I think a government
1:13:56
official has to be able to say I support section 230 reform,
1:13:59
because I'm concerned about these things. And also, in the
1:14:01
meantime, I think platforms should be doing that. I
1:14:03
understand that. But in terms of advocating for change of section
1:14:07
230. That could be coercion, in your view, if it were framed as
1:14:10
a threat to our position, how it wasn't done, and How about how
1:14:13
about saying you're killing people? Could that be coercion,
1:14:18
in some circumstances that if you don't change your moderation
1:14:21
policies, you're you're responsible for killing people?
1:14:25
I think that one is much harder. That's a statement that
1:14:27
President Biden made off the cuff. I'm
1:14:29
not I'm not. Listen,
1:14:31
I'm not talking about the context, specific issues. And I
1:14:34
understand you have arguments there. But could that in some
1:14:38
circumstances, an accusation by a government official, that
1:14:42
unless you change your policies, you're responsible for killing
1:14:45
people? Could that be coercion? So I find it hard to imagine a
1:14:49
situation where that sort of public statement could be all
1:14:52
acknowledges you say context matters a ton, and so I don't
1:14:54
want to say it's impossible. All I'm saying is it didn't happen
1:14:57
here.
1:14:58
Adam Curry: So what They're all talking about the wrong thing.
1:15:01
I'm not a lawyer, but I can read and section 230 Is not that
1:15:05
complicated. It's not about the blocking and D, platforming and
1:15:10
algo wising all of that is permitted as per section 230.
1:15:15
The main point is section two, the under the Good Samaritan
1:15:24
section, civil liability, no provider or user of an
1:15:30
interactive computer service shall be held liable on account
1:15:34
of or be treated as a publisher or speaker of any information
1:15:39
provided by another information content provider, ie, if you
1:15:44
post something libelous, or something dangerous, and
1:15:49
something that makes someone killed himself or sparks an
1:15:52
insurrection, or whatever it is, the platform, the interactive
1:15:57
computer service, as they call it, cannot be held liable for
1:16:00
that. If that provision was changed, everything would change
1:16:06
overnight down everything. Yes. And so I am proposing, and we're
1:16:11
going to I want an amicus brief to the court. I am proposing
1:16:15
that we change simply by one simple change to Section 230. No
1:16:21
provider or user of a paid interactive computer service. We
1:16:27
all agree that if you are not paying for the service you're
1:16:31
using you are the product. Everyone agrees with this? Yeah,
1:16:36
no, I'm the product. They're marketing. To me. They're
1:16:38
marketing pills. They're marketing, diet stuff. To me,
1:16:41
they're doing all kinds of stuff. Hey, if you're paying for
1:16:44
that service, even if it's $1 a month, which I doubt most people
1:16:47
would pay, then you should have no liability. Because an
1:16:52
interactive computer service can also be a web hosting service,
1:16:55
it could be wordpress.com. So you know, obviously if you're
1:16:59
providing a service and someone's paying you for it, you
1:17:02
know, there's a difference. So you shouldn't be held liable.
1:17:06
But if you're getting it for free, because you the the
1:17:09
interactive computer service, you are using those people as
1:17:14
your product, you absolutely should be held liable.
1:17:18
John C Dvorak: That's never gonna happen. That's this is the
1:17:22
the amicus brief the whole, the thesis where you could I don't
1:17:25
I'm not signing it. The thesis is that these systems are like
1:17:31
community bulletin boards, just like a bulletin board. It used
1:17:34
to be the grocery stores used to have them checked out. Yes. And
1:17:37
you could post anything you want up there. And if somebody goes
1:17:39
up there and seasoning and tear it down, if they want,
1:17:44
Adam Curry: I can't tear down your post, you can report me, I
1:17:48
can't tear it out. It's not if that's apples to oranges, the
1:17:51
community board is not making money off of your posts in the
1:17:55
supermarket. There's a big difference. These are not
1:18:00
information content providers. These are marketing companies.
1:18:04
John C Dvorak: Safeway store is making the money and that is
1:18:06
this one little add ons benefits you
1:18:09
Adam Curry: like you You are pro death. I'm just saying there's a
1:18:15
very simple solution. And an Yeah, I know it's a heavy lift.
1:18:20
Because everyone's in the pocket of Silicon Valley, the drug
1:18:24
companies, there's absolutely no incentive to do it other than
1:18:26
the people that maybe want to protect their children. I
1:18:30
John C Dvorak: don't understand why if you want to pay for this
1:18:32
service, it should be more wide open than if it was free. What
1:18:37
What Why is there a financial difference in the way you see
1:18:40
things? Oh, because
1:18:42
Adam Curry: I think that then you are, there's a contract.
1:18:46
Because you have a payment, you have a contract, which is not
1:18:49
the same as a EULA. And you're agreeing to certain things and
1:18:53
no one will do it. It'll shut it
1:18:54
John C Dvorak: down. Same as a EU law, it will be a EU law. But
1:18:59
Adam Curry: then you're okay. I'm telling you that this is the
1:19:03
way to go. Because they will shut these companies down. You
1:19:06
want to be you want to live dangerously pay the entrance
1:19:08
fee. You're good to go. That's the way I see it. Yeah, well,
1:19:15
small. I agree. It's a It's not necessarily something that will
1:19:19
ever happen in our lifetime. But we're not going in a good
1:19:22
direction. The mark the pharma companies have everyone by the
1:19:26
BA LL. S. And they're just going to kill us all. They're gonna
1:19:31
kill us. Because eventually it was like, oh, yeah, this is
1:19:33
great.
1:19:34
John C Dvorak: I'm not gonna do that. I'm not arguing against
1:19:38
that thesis. I'm all in now. They own it. They own the
1:19:42
mainstream media. Because of their ads. I was watching what
1:19:45
was I watching the other day? Oh, no, I was like some of the
1:19:48
clips I got today. I got from ABC News. And ABC News is all
1:19:52
pharma ads. And it's like I'm skipping through these ads one
1:19:56
after another stuff I never heard of. And it's just one
1:19:59
thing after or another and it's just it's horrible. I mean, they
1:20:04
own the mainstream media, the mainstream media makes policies
1:20:07
based on what they tell them to do. That's right. It's so
1:20:10
obvious, right?
1:20:13
Adam Curry: Meanwhile, the other Biggie the other
1:20:18
John C Dvorak: time you clear your throat No, I'm waiting for
1:20:20
bullshit. No, that's the exact same throat.
1:20:26
Adam Curry: I know it's it's exactly the same when we play
1:20:35
the other doing it the other Goliath in the room is the
1:20:38
military industrial complex. Now, this is so brazen. We know
1:20:42
and by the way, I think the EU should be slapped for this. They
1:20:46
are putting the SWIFT system and even more parallel than it
1:20:49
already is. This
1:20:51
John C Dvorak: is that's gone. I put together a clip but I have a
1:20:55
clearable. I have to talk I have to clip.
1:20:57
Adam Curry: So the SWIFT system is, in essence, a bunch of
1:21:04
banks. Everybody has an account with the bank. And when you send
1:21:07
money from one bank to the other bank or through your bank, it's
1:21:12
not like the money transfers over the wire. No, they just
1:21:15
it's just a messaging system, the SWIFT system and they say,
1:21:18
Hey, take five bucks from that account, put it into that
1:21:21
account. And of course, all the central banks have big accounts,
1:21:25
including Russia, and they have about $300 billion sitting
1:21:28
around in the SWIFT system of which over 200 billion is that
1:21:32
Euro clear? They're the clearing house. You might have heard of
1:21:36
automatic Clearing House Ach, they are the clearing house in
1:21:41
the EU. And so they're sitting on over 200 billion euros worth
1:21:45
of Russian money and they want it they want it so bad. They
1:21:49
want to take that money. Everybody wants that money
1:21:51
because stupid America stupid Republicans stupid Trump won't
1:21:55
send weapons to Ukraine. Oh, wait a minute. We're not
1:21:58
actually sending weapons to Ukraine, the military industrial
1:22:01
base, the military industrial base needs that money. We need
1:22:05
that money. We need that money to build stuff to buy stuff to
1:22:08
pay our people to keep the GDP up. We need that money. Money
1:22:11
money. Well, we'll take the interest of the money. Yeah,
1:22:14
yeah, there you go. We'll take the intro. We'll call it a
1:22:16
windfall profit. But let's make sure that 90% of it still goes
1:22:21
to us to the military industrial base. Now
1:22:24
Unknown: the European Union appears set to use frozen
1:22:27
Russian assets to fund the purchase of arms for Ukraine.
1:22:31
The US foreign policy chief Joseph Burrell says he will
1:22:34
present the plan to the bloc's leaders this week. The
1:22:37
draft plan would see 90% of the revenues from seized Russian
1:22:41
assets being funneled towards an EU run weapons fund for Ukraine.
1:22:45
nearly 300 billion euros worth of foreign currency gold and
1:22:49
bonds belonging to the Russian Central Bank were frozen by the
1:22:52
West following Russia's invasion of Ukraine 70% of that is held
1:22:57
by the Belgian based institution Euro clear over the next four
1:23:01
years, the profit generated by frozen Russian state assets is
1:23:04
expected to be worth up to 27 billion euros. So far, the EU
1:23:10
member states have mostly agreed to spend this money on Ukraine.
1:23:13
But whether the funds should be used for humanitarian
1:23:16
infrastructure is as yet undecided. US foreign policy
1:23:22
chief Josep Perl six potential for weapons purchases.
1:23:25
So after the discussion today, I've seen the Dureza strong
1:23:30
support. There are some members have stated want to have more
1:23:35
details. But there is such a thing as strong support to take
1:23:39
the revenues, the windfall profits and to use it to support
1:23:43
Ukraine, how the military to increment the resources,
1:23:47
European peace facility can also to support the development of
1:23:51
the Ukrainian defense industry.
1:23:54
Adam Curry: But it's not Burrell or the Commission who will
1:23:56
decide that will depend on the Council of member states meeting
1:24:00
this Thursday and Friday, if they do this, the European Union
1:24:06
who would ever use the SWIFT system again? Well, those eight
1:24:09
holes it they can block your money and they'll take all your
1:24:13
all your interest and your profit. Why would anyone use
1:24:17
that? And that is the backbone of the US dollar in the Euro
1:24:21
dollar it and that we're allowing this
1:24:24
John C Dvorak: worry. Where's the bankers out there? Noticing
1:24:29
that this is an issue. They're the ones you're gonna end up
1:24:32
screwed in the end?
1:24:33
Adam Curry: Well, I'm sure that I'm sure now that it's just
1:24:37
John C Dvorak: not a good idea. It's a
1:24:39
Adam Curry: horrible idea. And then notice how well they're
1:24:42
fighting over the money now. Pay I get that money get that money.
1:24:46
It's worth up to 29 billion euros. Yeah, but you have to
1:24:49
send it to us. Send it to us the war machine. And it's not. It's
1:24:54
not weapons for Ukraine. No, it's going to Raytheon and
1:24:59
Boeing. Ah, boy, yeah, okay. Go for it boys. By
1:25:07
John C Dvorak: the way, I have a horrid friend of a friend God
1:25:11
who came up with a conversation one of those, one of those who
1:25:15
worked at one of the sub contractors for Boeing. And his
1:25:20
claim is that the problem at Boeing is corporate culture is
1:25:26
when the company moved to South Carolina for most of his
1:25:29
manufacturing, thanks
1:25:31
Adam Curry: to Nikki Haley.
1:25:33
John C Dvorak: Thanks to Nikki Haley. They lost the extreme
1:25:38
safety, quality control corporate culture of the Seattle
1:25:42
area and replace it with whatever the hell's going on in
1:25:46
South Carolina and not have they can't do the
1:25:48
Adam Curry: job. Nikki Haley and Lindsey Graham do we need to say
1:25:51
more? That's the culture there. You
1:25:53
John C Dvorak: end up with a culture that doesn't give a
1:25:56
shit, basically. And that's Boeing's problem.
1:26:00
Adam Curry: I have an update on the whistleblower because the
1:26:03
retaliation complaint has been revealed in this
1:26:07
Unknown: 32 Page complaint. Barnett's lawyers lay out the
1:26:10
crux of a Federal Labor lawsuit against Boeing. His lawyer tells
1:26:15
me Barnett did not want to destroy the company. He wanted
1:26:19
to save the company. John Barnett was at Boeing for 32
1:26:23
years a quality manager for more than half of those years. He
1:26:27
spent his final seven years at Boeing in South Carolina on the
1:26:31
production line for the highly touted 787 Dreamliner. In this
1:26:36
whistleblower retaliation lawsuit. Barnett says he and
1:26:39
other quality managers were pressured by Boeing upper
1:26:42
management to violate FAA standards as well as Boeing's
1:26:46
own policies. Barnett stated he was worried about a catastrophic
1:26:51
event. The issues he cited included documenting inspections
1:26:56
never performed, incorrect serial number data not being
1:27:00
fixed, defective parts that were not fully documented and made
1:27:04
them put back on airplanes. Titanium slivers being left on E
1:27:08
nuts and not cleaned. The concern there that is that they
1:27:12
could start a fire and defective parts in the personal oxygen
1:27:16
tanks. When Barnett filed ethics complaints. He says Boeing
1:27:20
fought back with negative performance reviews and keeping
1:27:23
him from transferring out of bowing South Carolina. Barnett
1:27:27
also said he was harassed, humiliated and treated with
1:27:31
scorn and contempt by upper management. John Barnett stated
1:27:35
that he took an early retirement due to the hostile work
1:27:38
environment, he was in the middle of depositions in this
1:27:41
case, when he was found dead. The corner says from a self
1:27:45
inflicted gunshot wound, but the case is expected to go to trial
1:27:49
this summer. There it is.
1:27:53
Adam Curry: And as we do here in America, Shut up or I'll kill
1:27:57
you.
1:27:58
John C Dvorak: That's about well in South Carolina, that could be
1:28:01
an issue. Yeah, we did. I did get a note of one of our
1:28:04
producers is a pilot for 787. No. And he says about the
1:28:10
rebooting he says the three three redundant computers that
1:28:14
do have to be rebooted every and he had a figure of ours, they
1:28:18
just do that. And if they all go out, the plane just returns
1:28:22
completely to manual control and is not that big of a deal. Yeah,
1:28:26
Adam Curry: well, that sounds like that was just some
1:28:28
passenger saying something. Yeah, that's what I'm guessing
1:28:31
they're probably trying to move focus away from whatever really
1:28:36
happened. ployment on Boeing. Blame it on Boeing. Hey, yes,
1:28:44
John C Dvorak: this is we're talking about language. I get
1:28:46
these two clips out of the way. Okay. These are these are irked
1:28:52
gays.
1:28:54
Adam Curry: It's my favorite kind of gay.
1:28:56
John C Dvorak: The first one is a clip of in irked gay male
1:29:03
commenting on a gaslighting trans dude, or I don't know what
1:29:08
they them. I don't know what this person is. But this guy's
1:29:10
commenting on
1:29:11
Adam Curry: them. I'm not participating in pronouns
1:29:13
anymore. We're not doing that yet.
1:29:15
John C Dvorak: So it's hard to get your dog. It's impossible.
1:29:17
In fact, there was the mic favorite clip was the one where
1:29:19
I changed my pronoun every day. Okay, well, Tina
1:29:23
Adam Curry: was talking to someone the other day. And I
1:29:25
watched him when he was flying back from Florida to sat next to
1:29:28
a lady she said, you know, half the kids in in. She said she has
1:29:33
an 18 year old and a 15 year old. She has the difference in
1:29:37
the five years, which of course a lot of that was COVID like the
1:29:40
18 year olds, three years, but Okay, three years. What did I
1:29:46
say? 1515 Okay, three years or three years COVID That, you
1:29:52
know, the 18 year olds peers are still kind of okay. But the 15
1:29:58
year old, half the class identifies as queer nine but non
1:30:02
BAP non binary or trailed and the kids, the minute a kid
1:30:06
switches there, right? The kids switch Oh, this is she and that
1:30:10
just say her and she and the programming is so strong. And of
1:30:14
course the kids are aren't all queer and gay and non binary and
1:30:18
trans. They just don't want to be one thing straight because
1:30:22
they've been told that's a problem. You're problematic.
1:30:26
Yep. All right. And so
1:30:28
John C Dvorak: here's a guy bitching about another guy and
1:30:31
here we go gay gaslighting. Did you
1:30:33
Unknown: people attacking other LGBTQ people is probably coming
1:30:39
out of feeling bullied, no other traumatized No, not wanting to
1:30:47
upset dad. Not wanting other people like us to confuse the
1:30:54
streets and therefore it feels like a life and death issue.
1:30:59
Like your dad not being able to understand you and being violent
1:31:02
with you. Maybe
1:31:03
daddy issues like really, genuinely saying that people
1:31:06
like myself who call out the disgusting behavior happening
1:31:09
inside of the LGBTQ community in under our umbrella have daddy
1:31:13
issues we're not bullying gay people because we have daddy
1:31:16
issues. We are exposing people hiding in our community who
1:31:20
exhibit highly suspicious behavior regarding children if
1:31:24
you act like pedophile and say it's all about rainbow love and
1:31:26
acceptance Well, we are going to call you out some moment to
1:31:28
recognize the level of gaslighting happening here. The
1:31:31
reality is people like myself are fighting tooth and nail to
1:31:34
number one protect children from clips like you who hide
1:31:37
underneath the rainbow umbrella. And number two, save our
1:31:40
community before we wind up back where we started.
1:31:44
John C Dvorak: Yeah, the back where we started thing is an
1:31:46
interesting theme. And I think it's starting to show up here
1:31:49
and there and this this whole there's there's a there's an
1:31:52
undercurrent of a revolution taking place in the LGBTQ blah
1:31:58
blah blah community if there is one, and I think this one is
1:32:03
another evidence another more evidence is this. This
1:32:06
particular clip which is the pissed off lesbian, hate
1:32:10
Unknown: to say I told you so but they want to get rid of
1:32:12
regular gay and lesbians now because being gay or lesbian is
1:32:15
racist and everyone should be trans now, the organization
1:32:18
GLAAD which is a Trans activist organization is now saying that
1:32:22
being gay or lesbian is just a subcategory of being trans. They
1:32:25
removed biological sex from the equation and replace it with
1:32:29
gender. So you're no longer gay or lesbian. You are same gender
1:32:32
loving, but what is gender? So these are the new terms to erase
1:32:37
gay people and have everyone be trans now because you are no
1:32:39
longer gay, you are attracted to masculinity and you are no
1:32:42
longer a lesbian, you are just attracted to femininity. But why
1:32:46
would they do this? Because it validates men, it validates men
1:32:50
because it validates men who identify as women who claim that
1:32:52
they're lesbians, it validates their identity. How far can they
1:32:56
actually take this? Like, this is why the LGB needs to be
1:33:00
separated from the teeth. Because on one side, you have an
1:33:03
orientation and on the other side, you have mental illness.
1:33:06
Yeah, you heard me right. I said what I said,
1:33:09
Adam Curry: I'd recommend a podcast for you, John. And for
1:33:12
anyone else who's interested. The disaffected podcast, which
1:33:15
is a pissed off gay guy who talks about this and talks about
1:33:20
the mental illness and he's in he's, it's a good, good podcast,
1:33:24
he talks about Cluster B, and typical narcissistic personality
1:33:29
disorder. That's what all this is enhanced by drugs sold to you
1:33:34
through social media. Ah, particularly Hall
1:33:38
John C Dvorak: back. Oh, yeah.
1:33:39
Adam Curry: I'm good at that. So
1:33:41
John C Dvorak: I just, yeah, there is something going on. And
1:33:44
there's a new symbol they have and she uses it, which is
1:33:48
instead of LGBTQ Yeah. LG Bell G with a Buddhist scissors emoji.
1:33:56
T Q.
1:33:57
Adam Curry: O, we cut it. Okay. I got it. LG that
1:34:00
John C Dvorak: and this is I think this is a real trend,
1:34:04
Adam Curry: though it is. But but haven't I warned about this.
1:34:08
But it kept saying oh, the LGBTQ community. I've always said
1:34:12
there's no community.
1:34:13
John C Dvorak: That's not a community. There's no There's no
1:34:15
community and Ellen, the gees barely get along together.
1:34:18
There's barely a there's a no agenda meetup community.
1:34:23
Adam Curry: Yet. There is however, something apocalyptic
1:34:26
on our horizon, John. There is something very bad about to
1:34:30
happen. We've been tracking this throughout the progress of the
1:34:35
show, and now a rare double event. Spring
1:34:39
Unknown: the birds are back. The flowers are back. But for the
1:34:42
first time in centuries, billions of cicadas are also
1:34:46
about to be bad. Yeah,
1:34:48
John C Dvorak: many
1:34:48
Unknown: 17 of 13 doesn't overlap too often.
1:34:51
As entomologist, Dr. Frank Rose alluding to there in a few
1:34:55
weeks, the bird of cicadas that emerges every 13 years and the
1:34:58
brood that emerges every 17 years are going to pop out of
1:35:02
the ground at the same time, which last happened in 1803.
1:35:06
Some are even calling this spring and summer, the cicada
1:35:09
pocalypse. What should we do when there are millions of them
1:35:12
here all of a sudden,
1:35:14
oh, just controlling them all going away. If we don't control
1:35:17
them, they are not harmful.
1:35:20
Well, they may not be that harmful. But cicadas are still
1:35:25
quite the loud neighbor for the four to six weeks that they move
1:35:28
into your backyard. Some cicadas can even reach over 100
1:35:31
decibels. Why are cicadas so loud? What
1:35:34
are they talking about?
1:35:36
They're talking about girls. Yes, according to Dr. Frank,
1:35:39
we're just going to have billions of males audibly
1:35:41
competing with each other to grab the attention of the female
1:35:44
cicadas. When
1:35:45
they come out. They have to be quick before they get eaten.
1:35:48
They have to find a mate and mate.
1:35:51
Now to be clear, it's mostly the 13 year cicadas impacting the
1:35:54
South in Appalachia, while the 17 years the kid has hit the
1:35:57
Midwest, but in states like Illinois, they might get both in
1:36:00
the same forest. Sorry, guys. Also, it's about to get real wet
1:36:06
apparently, because according to the National Academy of
1:36:08
Sciences, a new study finds that cicadas have the fastest
1:36:12
urination Villa velocity in the world at three meters per
1:36:17
second. That's more than elephants and horses. So I think
1:36:21
the Windy City is about to get real fun this summer.
1:36:26
John C Dvorak: Well, that part I didn't know I
1:36:28
Adam Curry: didn't know that either. Cicada pocalypse, but I
1:36:30
think we should capitalize on this. And we've we've
1:36:35
John C Dvorak: had producers that suggested this. Well, we
1:36:38
have we have
1:36:39
Adam Curry: a publishing company now. We need a cicada cookbook.
1:36:45
Oh god. No. Just a thought.
1:36:50
John C Dvorak: You know, there is. I think we could put a
1:36:52
couple of cicada recipes in the newsletter. If anyone has any
1:36:57
good ones, but I don't wouldn't have it. I mean, I know what you
1:36:59
mentioned. I know that people do eat these things. Yes. See? See?
1:37:04
It's just like tastes like lobster. No, it
1:37:07
Adam Curry: does not. Taste like lops okay, I
1:37:10
John C Dvorak: don't know. I don't know what it tastes a
1:37:11
pride taste. Heard
1:37:12
Adam Curry: of lobster from the sea. It's lobster from the tree.
1:37:16
John C Dvorak: There you go. You already got a jingle?
1:37:19
Adam Curry: Hey, I can't even get you to jump on board with
1:37:22
Slenderman I mean, I'm just throwing out exit strategies
1:37:24
left and right
1:37:25
John C Dvorak: here you are full of them. The problem is with the
1:37:29
cicada thing it only comes and goes right
1:37:31
Adam Curry: that's why that's why it's a delicacy. You gotta
1:37:34
move fast. It's a delicacy. Yes,
1:37:36
John C Dvorak: of course dairy. I did read about this by the way
1:37:39
and there are people that do eat these things. And I go I'm gonna
1:37:43
go do more research and get to some of those recipes and post
1:37:45
them yeah, if you live in Chicago Darren only a homeless
1:37:51
has all they moved all these migrants to Chicago and a lot of
1:37:55
homeless. They can eat it this is an opportunity
1:38:08
tasted like Texas news, Texas news. I got
1:38:11
Adam Curry: I got Texas news. I have Texas news for you. I got
1:38:13
some real Texas news. We're in the news. So the eclipses
1:38:17
Unknown: coming right April a small budget hotels in Texas.
1:38:20
This is from Bloomberg, they are charging more than $1,000 a
1:38:25
night for a room because people are flocking to these small
1:38:27
Texas towns and that is eight to 10 times more than what they
1:38:31
normally charge for it so they're sparking up these prices
1:38:34
Texas which I didn't know this why they go to Texas it because
1:38:37
it has a lower chance of cloud cover. So that's why people go
1:38:41
to Texas to see this. So it's
1:38:42
April 8, so the wine country in in Fredericksburg, a hill
1:38:45
country town in the zone of totality will be at its best.
1:38:51
April 8 Once $1,028 with taxes for King crazy. So what are we
1:38:57
seeing here? I'm seeing an eclipse glimpse. Yes,
1:39:00
but if you miss it, here's the thing. There won't be another
1:39:03
one covering like such a large part of the country until 2045
1:39:08
John C Dvorak: they're always adding another Eclipse what?
1:39:12
They always do that but this is my whole life. It's been Oh,
1:39:16
this will be you'll never see another eclipse in your entire
1:39:19
life if you missed this one, but we're in the zone of totality.
1:39:23
Yeah, you're in this you've always been in the zone of
1:39:25
totality.
1:39:29
Adam Curry: This is true. Yeah, genius. Can I tell you the
1:39:35
genius come in right, sir Jean?
1:39:37
John C Dvorak: Yes, you're gonna pay 1000 bucks in your house.
1:39:39
No, no, no, no,
1:39:40
Adam Curry: we've turned all kinds of people down. Hey, can I
1:39:44
can I borrow
1:39:45
John C Dvorak: the price? I think you're going the wrong
1:39:46
way. Oh, by the way, we're
1:39:48
Adam Curry: worried about fires people gonna be camping
1:39:50
everywhere. And jeans companies bringing his shotgun his ar 15
1:39:55
His hand guns his thermal vision and his night vision to a
1:39:59
company bum off the land, good jeans the guy you want in a case
1:40:03
like this.
1:40:06
John C Dvorak: Let's listen to these clips on the Texas
1:40:08
immigration law. This would be the first clip which is Texas
1:40:11
immigration law clowns. Oh, clowns
1:40:14
Adam Curry: Hold on a second.
1:40:16
Unknown: Here we go. It was last night here. We reported the
1:40:19
Supreme Court had cleared the way for Texas to move ahead with
1:40:22
its own new immigration law making arrests and deportations
1:40:25
on its own, at least for now. Well, tonight that law is back
1:40:28
on hold amid questions and confusion over how to enforce
1:40:32
it. ABCs Maria via real from El Paso tonight,
1:40:36
tonight uncertainty at the southern border with the law
1:40:39
that would allow Texas to arrest deport or imprison anyone they
1:40:43
believe may have entered the US illegally. Now in legal limbo.
1:40:48
We
1:40:48
are not going to prioritize this. We are unfamiliar with
1:40:51
federal immigration law. That's not our job responsibility.
1:40:55
Adam Curry: You know, this has already been blocked. Right.
1:40:59
John C Dvorak: And did you know that's what we're talking about?
1:41:01
Well, but
1:41:02
Adam Curry: it was blocked. The Supreme Court unblocked it. And
1:41:06
this morning of the lower court blocked it again.
1:41:08
John C Dvorak: Yeah, that's what this clip is about. Now,
1:41:10
Adam Curry: it didn't sound like it. Okay. No, if
1:41:11
John C Dvorak: you listen to it against it, the Supreme Court
1:41:13
let it go. And I got blocked again by the fifth. Fifth
1:41:17
Circuit. Yes. Yeah, that's what this is. But what was
1:41:20
interesting on that clip, which does say what you just said,
1:41:24
it's this guy at the end was a law enforcement guy saying, we
1:41:27
don't really we don't care this. We don't want to do it. They do.
1:41:31
They care, probably. But they don't want to do it because it's
1:41:34
off. That's not what Abbott is saying. will advocate say what
1:41:38
he wants and we got to have it in this clip, too. Let's go to
1:41:40
part two.
1:41:43
Unknown: Two got it. Overnight, the US Supreme Court ruled the
1:41:46
law known as SB four could temporarily take effect while it
1:41:51
was challenged in a lower court of appeals. hours later that
1:41:55
appeals court blocked the Texas law, again, in anticipation of
1:42:00
oral arguments on the case today, the legal whiplash
1:42:03
leading to confusion and frustration in border
1:42:06
communities like El Paso
1:42:08
that's a racial profiling issue as well. That's our concern. Our
1:42:11
department has been very, very fortunate to not have any racial
1:42:15
profiling complaints for several years, and we want to maintain
1:42:18
that standard.
1:42:20
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I'm another cop. This time in El Paso going
1:42:24
on about racial profiling is that that's a concern.
1:42:27
Adam Curry: Well, it is it I mean, yeah, well, I
1:42:29
John C Dvorak: guess it is, or he wouldn't have brought it up,
1:42:31
but it's like, okay, so you don't want to do anything
1:42:34
either. So now there was Texas is all talk, but the the law
1:42:39
enforcement operations down there don't want to do any of
1:42:42
this.
1:42:42
Adam Curry: Excuse me. You're talking about El Paso. El Tardo.
1:42:47
Okay. The El Paso they're the ones who sent the buses full of
1:42:51
protesters up to Austin to protest SB four. The El Paso is
1:42:55
Beto country man. That's why they're all like that.
1:43:01
John C Dvorak: It doesn't sound like Texas to me, let's play
1:43:04
Adam Curry: was not it's like Austin. It's like Austin on the
1:43:06
border. Or three,
1:43:09
Unknown: some officials in San Antonio, Fort Worth and Austin
1:43:13
also voicing their concerns. But tonight Governor Greg Abbott
1:43:17
standing firm saying Texas has the right to defend itself. As
1:43:21
DPS troopers and state guardsmen along the border prepare,
1:43:25
they will continue to use every tool or strategy they can to
1:43:29
arrest people jail, these people crossing the border.
1:43:33
David is part of the battle over SB four here in El Paso when all
1:43:36
along the southwest border, there has been a sharp decrease
1:43:39
in the number of migrant apprehensions we're seeing about
1:43:42
4000 a day and that is a big decrease from what we saw those
1:43:46
record breaking numbers back in December. Yeah,
1:43:49
Adam Curry: that's the true result of this is that people
1:43:52
are not coming over the border anymore. They're flying still,
1:43:55
I'm sure. But the word is out. It's a pain in the butt. You
1:43:59
don't want to go. It has decreased. There's an interview
1:44:03
out there with a an Uber driver, who's also a podcaster. I should
1:44:07
get a clip of her who isn't. I don't know which which comes
1:44:11
first your podcasts are then an Uber driver or you're an Uber
1:44:14
driver with a podcast, I'm not sure. And she was making $5,000
1:44:20
A week from people ordering Ubers to go pick people up at
1:44:25
the border. And that just disappeared almost overnight.
1:44:30
She says it's done. So that is the result ultimately. So it has
1:44:37
some desired effect. But at the end of the day, the federal
1:44:41
government is in charge of the board and they should not allow
1:44:43
this to happen.
1:44:45
John C Dvorak: Well, if you're flying people in it up to 300
1:44:47
over 300,000 Flying him in from out of the country into our
1:44:51
country. Yes. And giving him money in a credit card and a
1:44:55
phone. Yes. It doesn't sound like the federal government
1:44:58
really doesn't want them to They
1:45:00
Adam Curry: want them and I have some proof here. Why they want
1:45:04
them actually got a note from a banker actually hold on a
1:45:07
second. Let me read this boots on another banker. Yes. Well,
1:45:11
ITM Adam and John. I'm a career banking professional. I'm not an
1:45:16
insider. Sorry to hear that. No way he qualifies it. I'm a
1:45:21
career banking professional. I'm not an insider, but I'm an
1:45:23
adviser to the Insider. So this is this is what you want. Name
1:45:28
withheld, for obvious reasons. I've heard you. I've heard you
1:45:31
connect bankers and mass migration, I think you're onto
1:45:33
something. The goal here though, is to get wage inflation in
1:45:38
check. So we can get so we can go back to irresponsible
1:45:41
monetary policy. Central banks do not control inflation,
1:45:46
because it's bad for society. You know, they control
1:45:48
inflation, because it's terrible for banks. You can't lend money
1:45:52
and an interest rate that is lower than inflation, or you'll
1:45:55
go bankrupt. But interest rates also can't go up. Everyone is so
1:45:59
indebted from 20 years of near zero interest rates, raising
1:46:03
them more will drive a wave of defaults and banking collapses,
1:46:06
think SVB. What kind of inflation is bad for banks?
1:46:10
Well, asset inflation is good for banks, because it increases
1:46:14
their investments and also strengthens the value of
1:46:17
collateral held against loans. wage inflation, is what the
1:46:21
bank's worry about. So how do we keep the party going? Mass
1:46:25
immigration, assets go up, wages go down. It's highly possible.
1:46:30
It's a global banking conspiracy, because this wave of
1:46:33
immigration is coinciding in highly indebted Western
1:46:36
democracies around the world how they do it through lobbyists by
1:46:40
complaining about worker shortages causing inflation by
1:46:44
threatening the government with stress test reports and directly
1:46:48
via their own insiders like Janet Yellen. And here's an
1:46:51
example of this wage control from NBC.
1:46:55
Unknown: in major cities across America. Officials say they've
1:46:58
reached a breaking point, struggling to handle the record
1:47:01
number of arriving migrants, but here in small town, Fremont,
1:47:04
Nebraska, where there are just 39 workers for every 100 job
1:47:08
openings, some are encouraging even more illegal migrants to
1:47:11
come. We
1:47:12
need these people they need this work done. This is what feeds
1:47:15
feeds the nation in the world. Many
1:47:16
of the openings are at this half billion dollar chicken plant
1:47:20
opened in 2019. Young locals often move away leaving those
1:47:24
slaughterhouse jobs to migrants, like this entail Hernandez
1:47:28
mostly Spanish with Hispanic migrants, although it is hard
1:47:31
although it is heavy, they endure. He says the difference
1:47:35
with an American citizen is that every time he finds a job, when
1:47:38
he sees it as hard he leaves it he says Hernandez and his wife
1:47:43
are also pastors to the growing Guatemalan community. Once this
1:47:49
town of 27,000 was nearly all white, now one out of six are
1:47:53
Latino. Since 2018, the school district added almost 800 non
1:47:58
English speaking students in
1:47:59
Adam Curry: Nebraska. It's great yeah, such a border town in
1:48:02
Nebraska. And of course, they are living the American dream
1:48:06
meatpacking
1:48:07
Unknown: is the biggest industry here in Fremont. The state's
1:48:09
Chamber of Commerce has Nebraska needs to welcome more migrants
1:48:12
to fill jobs like these. But some residents here are
1:48:15
resistant to that change. Voters back to town ordinance twice,
1:48:19
which says locals must tell the city that they are here legally
1:48:22
before they can rent housing. The city cannot always verify
1:48:25
the information but people say the law remains on the books to
1:48:28
send a message. Councilman Paul van Baron supports it. Why was
1:48:32
it brought up
1:48:33
since it asked the city council to do something because it was
1:48:36
pretty obvious that we were become a haven for illegals.
1:48:39
He argues slaughterhouses paying low wages to migrants lowers
1:48:43
incomes for citizens and criticizes increased costs for
1:48:46
migrant children at local schools. The sheer
1:48:49
pressure of bringing in numbers of people has resulted in a
1:48:53
considerable burden to the taxpayers. Let's
1:48:55
city councilman Mark Johnson, who's lived in the area since he
1:48:58
was 10 years old is against that ordinance. So bad look for our
1:49:02
city and he says Fremont needs to embrace change.
1:49:05
Immigration is crucial. A lot of people would live in grew up
1:49:08
here. Don't stay they they they move out is critical for us to
1:49:14
have the people that we've got your back at
1:49:16
the church Vicenta tells us he regularly gets about three hours
1:49:20
of sleep a night. But still he and his wife Maria say they
1:49:24
found their new hometown be one so I knew now I live the
1:49:28
American dream as they call it. I'm happy because I have
1:49:31
everything she tells us. State officials say they often have
1:49:34
problems with undocumented workers using fake IDs just this
1:49:38
month for migrants were charged with using them to get
1:49:41
slaughterhouse jobs
1:49:42
Adam Curry: and headline from March 18. Wages in the US are
1:49:47
falling at a striking pace that this
1:49:50
John C Dvorak: is this is we have a President Joe Biden who
1:49:54
promote union isms good paying union jobs, and this is what he
1:49:59
gets gives us this is the same kind of flip flop not a flip
1:50:03
flop is a switch or ru where he you know talks about cutting
1:50:07
fossil fuels but let yet he pumps more oil than then Trump
1:50:11
did. Right. But when
1:50:12
Adam Curry: we're threatened bull crap with these threatening
1:50:15
the wrong people, we're threatening politicians but we
1:50:18
should be threatening bankers who want to see the change
1:50:22
because well
1:50:22
John C Dvorak: the Democrat Party is the party of bankers.
1:50:26
Yeah, it has been since Clinton. Yeah.
1:50:29
Adam Curry: It's the bankers man. It's the bankers. They're
1:50:34
doing
1:50:35
John C Dvorak: good paying union jobs, my ash. Dignity.
1:50:44
Adam Curry: Just getting by. So you can retire. Oh, where's that
1:50:49
Obama clip?
1:50:50
John C Dvorak: That that's a good one.
1:50:52
Adam Curry: Just getting by. Here we go. I have it here. All
1:50:56
right. It's Thursday, July. Oh, that's not it. I thought, Oh,
1:51:01
man. Oh, the Obama American dream.
1:51:04
Unknown: In the end, the folks I hear from in letters or meet
1:51:07
when I travel across the country, they aren't asking for
1:51:10
much. They're just looking for a job that covers their bills.
1:51:13
They're looking for a little financial security. They want to
1:51:17
know that if they work hard and live within their means,
1:51:19
everything will be all right. They'll be able to get ahead and
1:51:22
give their kids a better life. That's the dream each of us has
1:51:26
for ourselves and our families. And so long as I have the
1:51:29
privilege of serving as President, I'll keep fighting to
1:51:32
put that dream within the reach of all Americans. Have a great
1:51:36
weekend, everybody. Thanks.
1:51:38
Adam Curry: So I can dream. Thanks, Obama. That's the
1:51:42
American dream just getting by just getting by when
1:51:45
John C Dvorak: I've had kind of a quasi ask Adam clip, which is
1:51:50
the it's not a technical one, but I just wanted to play the
1:51:54
clip and then ask you a question. This is the missing
1:51:56
student in Nashville, which everybody's covering.
1:51:58
Unknown: We turned out of the search for that missing college
1:52:00
student last seen on surveillance and police video in
1:52:03
Nashville that search now intensifying tonight. This
1:52:06
evening. Here the new term the search expanding now beyond
1:52:08
Nashville. Authorities have now shut down a dam and ABCs faith
1:52:11
Hubei in Nashville force. Tonight,
1:52:14
the source for Riley strange stretching beyond Nashville
1:52:17
authority shutting down a dam to search through debris 30 miles
1:52:21
downstream from the riverbank where the missing college
1:52:24
student was last seen. His family is still hopeful, but
1:52:27
bracing for the worst. Put
1:52:29
yourself in our
1:52:29
shoes. Everybody knows everybody's thinking.
1:52:34
Those conversations are starting to happen. That's not what we
1:52:37
want.
1:52:38
In Nashville, the United Cajun Navy searching the Cumberland
1:52:41
River. It's been nearly two weeks as Riley vanished during a
1:52:44
fraternity trip. After he was asked to leave this downtown
1:52:47
bar. He was seen stumbling and falling before appearing to
1:52:51
recover. Then briefly chatting with a police officer to assert
1:52:57
good, he found his credit card. Riley's debit card found on the
1:53:01
riverbank a 15 minute walk away from that bar. Instead of
1:53:05
heading to his hotel. His family thinks he got disoriented.
1:53:09
Thanks
1:53:09
he got turned around when he came out. Why? I mean, I can't
1:53:14
answer I don't know. I don't know why.
1:53:17
And David police a witnesses in the unhoused community reported
1:53:20
seeing rally by the river but they do stress that at this time
1:53:23
there's no evidence of foul play.
1:53:25
Adam Curry: I love the unhoused community down by the river in a
1:53:29
van by the river. So what do you want to ask me?
1:53:36
John C Dvorak: Why is this the story on national news at all?
1:53:40
There are you how many people are that go missing every year
1:53:44
in the United States? Good just give me a ballpark figure.
1:53:47
Adam Curry: Oh of all ages. Yeah. 100,000 600,000
1:53:54
John C Dvorak: People go missing 4000 dead bodies appear out of
1:53:58
the blue from this sort of missing problem. It's the
1:54:03
numbers are staggering in every area of the country. So I'm
1:54:07
asking you as the ask Adam, why does this one story as opposed
1:54:13
to probably 10,000 around the country at this moment of
1:54:17
missing people? Why is this get picked up and run by all the
1:54:22
network because
1:54:22
Adam Curry: this is a non colored person?
1:54:27
John C Dvorak: This is the 600,000 I'd say most of them are
1:54:30
non color but I don't know about that. But one way or the other.
1:54:34
Adam Curry: Maybe he had an extra extra supply of
1:54:37
Adrenochrome that they're making.
1:54:40
John C Dvorak: Trying to find that guy's got the best
1:54:43
Adrenochrome
1:54:44
Adam Curry: we got to find that kid. That's
1:54:46
John C Dvorak: I just like to know as to what what is the
1:54:49
editor's desk Why did they buy this store? How
1:54:52
Adam Curry: about this to distract you from all the other
1:54:54
stuff. It's a human interest story that you can relate to. Oh
1:54:57
my child. Oh my child me While it's another kid who sadly as
1:55:03
God is just plastered. Our nation is plastered for plaster
1:55:09
John C Dvorak: this kid was plastered they show video did
1:55:11
the thing that it was a presentation you can make
1:55:14
because they a lot of videos of him walking down the street
1:55:17
drunk, plastered, plastered literally, I was and I suppose
1:55:22
that makes it a better story. But I am just done by the fact
1:55:26
that they can pick one story out of $600. And actually they may
1:55:30
pick five five a year. And the others go they breast languish
1:55:35
I'm what I would assume that somebody in someplace else. Just
1:55:39
you know, their daughter's been missing for a month and they
1:55:42
can't get any attempt. They're probably just find it weird.
1:55:45
Adam Curry: They're probably hoping that they find this kid
1:55:48
within just a couple of weeks. And then there'll be a good new
1:55:51
segment on the no agenda show. They're like, wow, we can make
1:55:53
the podcast. I don't know. I do know that we're a plastered
1:55:57
nation. I was at I was at Java ranch on Main Street. Here's a
1:56:02
coffee shop. It's just an old school coffee shop.
1:56:05
John C Dvorak: I'm in the morning. Where
1:56:06
Adam Curry: are you? 11am I play chess with a guy on Tuesday.
1:56:11
John C Dvorak: Mornings. Right? I see you at the park. Oh, no,
1:56:13
it's not the park. It's no that should be at the park. No, but
1:56:16
do you have the timer? Do
1:56:18
Adam Curry: we don't have the time? Oh, yeah, we don't use it.
1:56:21
But we have two hours and we'll play two games in two hours. And
1:56:25
so I'm always talking to the kids behind the bar. They're
1:56:28
like, you know, their mid 20s guy and a girl that the baristas
1:56:32
but it's really it's just the you know, you get Yeah, you can
1:56:35
get fancy coffee but it's just a it's a coffee is a coffee joint.
1:56:39
And, and I was how's it gone? Ah, she says Ah. Oh man, spring
1:56:45
break. It was the worst. I said what do you mean? says people
1:56:49
were in here at 11am completely plastered. Their kids are
1:56:54
crawling on the floor getting waterboarded by cappuccinos he
1:56:58
said was
1:56:59
John C Dvorak: the way way Yes. And Fredericksburg for spring
1:57:02
break. We
1:57:03
Adam Curry: are one of only six cities in America that allows
1:57:07
open container on the street. And we have 300 wineries which
1:57:14
of which five have grapes and the rest are drinking barns.
1:57:19
We've become a plastered destination funny. It's not
1:57:23
funny. It's Brooks bubble bust is a problem. The worst The
1:57:29
worst is the bridesmaid. See everyone comes out here because
1:57:32
they're great, great wedding venues. So you got to get
1:57:35
married, but then they stay in the What are you drinking?
1:57:38
John C Dvorak: That sounds good. Well, you made me thirsty.
1:57:41
Adam Curry: What are you drinking?
1:57:43
John C Dvorak: I'm drinking DRAM DRAM
1:57:46
Adam Curry: DRAM DRAM DRAM
1:57:48
John C Dvorak: DRAM D right. Yes. Excess what it is dynamic
1:57:52
RAM, citrus and blossom flavor. Herbal sparkling water. Oh,
1:57:57
Adam Curry: I am drinking another Waterloo. I was tipped
1:58:02
off by a producer to try the BlackBerry lemonade. Which is a
1:58:08
bit intense to me. It doesn't taste at all like anything. But
1:58:11
remember it has its naturally flavored, which means contains
1:58:15
chemicals.
1:58:17
John C Dvorak: natural flavor, electrolytes.
1:58:20
Adam Curry: natural flavors is a group of chemicals, but it
1:58:23
sounds good. Yeah, so they come out here for their wedding. They
1:58:29
said we have 25% of the homes here are short term rentals, ie
1:58:35
Airbnb, which is a problem, which is a real problem. And
1:58:39
then we have these big pink limos and a big pink school bus
1:58:44
and they pick up the bridesmaids and they drive them off to some
1:58:48
winery. They all get plastered and they walk around the street
1:58:51
with inflatable dildos. It's a mess. What? Yes, yes. Yes, it's
1:58:58
a mess. It's a mess.
1:59:00
John C Dvorak: Well, I think you should take action. Yes, sir.
1:59:03
Adam Curry: Well, I'm I go to council meetings and, and zoning
1:59:07
board meetings. You bet. You bet. I do. You bet I do. By the
1:59:12
way,
1:59:13
John C Dvorak: this is all news to me.
1:59:14
Adam Curry: Yeah. Well, that's, that's what Fredericksburg is
1:59:17
slowly becoming. And a lot of people are unhappy. So we'll
1:59:20
see. We'll see where that goes. You sent an article to me about
1:59:26
Mike Johnson, which was fascinating inside Mike
1:59:30
Johnson's ties to a far right movement to gut the
1:59:33
Constitution. Yeah, they
1:59:34
John C Dvorak: want to get the Constitution. Now. Did
1:59:36
Adam Curry: you read that whole article? Yeah, of course. I did.
1:59:39
Did you see that? My buddy, Rick Green is in that article.
1:59:41
John C Dvorak: That's why I said it to you. I
1:59:43
Adam Curry: didn't realize that. I'm really like, hold on a
1:59:44
second. The guy I just met Rick Green is all over this thing.
1:59:49
Yeah, so this constitution of states is this kind of a cool
1:59:53
idea.
1:59:54
John C Dvorak: I don't think so. Why not? Yeah. Well, for one
1:59:58
thing, it seems like a pipe dream. No, never We're gonna get
2:00:00
it together and it's not much, not much different than Xikar
2:00:04
and some of these others, crackpots that want to do this
2:00:07
becomes a constitutional convention, they can test the
2:00:10
Constitution and that's what they'll do.
2:00:12
Adam Curry: Ever. That's the whole point.
2:00:15
John C Dvorak: This descriptor constitution I don't need that
2:00:17
aggravation, change
2:00:18
Adam Curry: it to get rid of stuff like that, like, pass an
2:00:22
amendment real quick. There shall be no FDA.
2:00:26
John C Dvorak: Amendments through Yeah, yeah, I like that.
2:00:29
By most of the things they'll try to get through they ever got
2:00:32
this
2:00:32
Adam Curry: thing going to divorce California. We're going
2:00:34
to divorce California that I'm going I'm all in on this
2:00:37
constitution states everybody. Convention of States sorry,
2:00:40
convention.
2:00:41
John C Dvorak: Is the they're gonna do the constitutionally
2:00:44
demanded balanced budget. Oh, there goes the economy. Yeah,
2:00:49
that's dumb. No, that's not as dumb as somebody should have
2:00:53
done. It will never, that'll
2:00:55
Adam Curry: never work. We could No, that'll never happen. It's
2:00:59
happened
2:00:59
John C Dvorak: before the ballot, that budget was
2:01:03
balanced. The administration when the Republicans were
2:01:06
running Congress, and Clinton was all in it. The Republicans,
2:01:08
the ones who did it, they couldn't get credit for it. But
2:01:11
they balanced the budget. They went through whoop. We didn't
2:01:14
have to borrow a bunch of money. We didn't screw up, but it was
2:01:17
fine. And that wasn't that long ago. And it could have been done
2:01:20
time after time, but there's always something bullcrap war,
2:01:24
usually it's a bull crap war, and then when Trump got in when
2:01:27
they stopped the bull crap wars that came with the bull crap
2:01:30
COVID So you can't win. Speaking
2:01:32
Adam Curry: of speaking of Trump, though, I'm gonna take us
2:01:35
back to August of 2019. Do we all remember this
2:01:39
Unknown: on Sunday, Trump confirmed to reporters his
2:01:41
interest in purchasing the autonomous Danish territory and
2:01:44
did not rule out trading a US territory for the island, Trump
2:01:48
said essentially, it's a large real estate deal. Danish
2:01:52
politicians across the political spectrum expressed disbelief.
2:01:57
over Trump's sudden cancellation of the state visit. The Danish
2:02:01
Prime Minister met the Fredrickson cold his idea to
2:02:04
purchase Greenland absurd. She also told reporters thankfully,
2:02:09
the time where you buy and sell other countries and populations
2:02:14
is over. Remember, that
2:02:17
John C Dvorak: was a great idea.
2:02:18
Adam Curry: It turns out you're right and he was right.
2:02:21
Unknown: Located between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans,
2:02:25
Greenland is the world's largest island. Despite its name, the
2:02:30
country is not entirely green. In fact, much of it is covered
2:02:34
in ice and snow. And beneath lies a hidden treasure trove of
2:02:38
rare earth minerals, which are key to production of a range of
2:02:42
clean technology from electric cars to wind turbines. As the
2:02:47
climate crisis accelerates, eyeshadows are melting faster
2:02:51
than a popsicle on a summer's day. And the island has found
2:02:56
itself in the spotlight like never before. In 2019 than
2:03:01
President Donald Trump said he will be interested in buying the
2:03:04
Danish autonomous territory or the United States to tap one of
2:03:09
the world's largest reserves of rare earth minerals. And last
2:03:14
week, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen
2:03:17
integrated any office in Greenland's Capitol news.
2:03:21
Tomorrow fear of presence in the territory,
2:03:24
Adam Curry: so they just dropped a couple billion dollars into
2:03:27
Greenland open up an office.
2:03:29
John C Dvorak: Yeah,
2:03:30
Adam Curry: they usurped us.
2:03:33
John C Dvorak: Yeah, nobody helped. Nobody helped. Nobody
2:03:35
got to know Trump's
2:03:37
Adam Curry: crazy Orange Man. Nuts. Yeah. And and of course,
2:03:41
as I say, We're all complaining about all the problems we have.
2:03:46
But meanwhile, the climate change nonsense creeps up
2:03:50
slowly. This is how they're really gonna get us if we don't
2:03:53
stop it. Spring
2:03:54
Unknown: is here, at least officially. And that means an
2:03:56
end to what has been the warmest winter on record. According to
2:03:59
the new data out today. That's not a good thing. It's in fact
2:04:02
why we've been seeing those gigantic storms lately and our
2:04:05
meteorologist Stephanie Abrams over with our partners at the
2:04:08
weather channel is going to join us now to walk us through
2:04:10
everything explain what's going on here. Steph? Good morning.
2:04:13
hottest on
2:04:13
record. Tony. Good morning. No, as report shows the planet
2:04:16
actually just had its warmest December to February on Google.
2:04:21
Yes, so we're nearly two and a half degrees above the 20th
2:04:24
century average is a concerning trend, with nine of the top 10
2:04:28
warmest winters occurring in just the last decade here in the
2:04:31
US. 13 states saw their warmest or second warmest winter on
2:04:36
record, leaving the Great Lakes mostly ice free and allowing for
2:04:40
back to back Lake Effect events in January. Western New York was
2:04:44
buried and four to seven feet of snow. The Buffalo Bills turn to
2:04:47
their fans to help them shovel out Highmark stadium ahead of
2:04:50
the playoffs in mid February when the ice typically maxes out
2:04:54
it dropped to less than 3%. A new record low. The western US
2:04:58
was one of the wettest regions In the world in February, parts
2:05:01
of California got three times their monthly rainfall, the
2:05:05
extreme de luz triggered nearly 600 mudslides in Los Angeles.
2:05:08
And just the first week looking ahead through May above average
2:05:12
warmth is expected for the northern tier with heavier rain
2:05:14
in the southeast. Tony the latest report from the UN World
2:05:17
Meteorological Organization says a climate crisis is a defining
2:05:21
challenge that humanity faces no
2:05:23
Adam Curry: no no it's a lie. And weather's not climate until
2:05:29
it was your lie always
2:05:31
John C Dvorak: say it was not climate now they started to say
2:05:33
it is they're
2:05:34
Adam Curry: lying them and and and finally someone got caught
2:05:39
in this nice that it was KLM the Royal Dutch Airlines got caught
2:05:43
greenwashing. So how this works is when they say net zero, the
2:05:49
it's not zero carbon by the way, it will be carbon dioxide, but
2:05:53
we've just change that to carbon now. And zero carbon would mean
2:05:57
no humans because we are by default made of carbon or
2:06:00
carbon, we're carbon. Net Zero means that you buy credits give
2:06:06
us some credit man who buy credits by buying up pieces of
2:06:11
Africa or some other place and just saying hey, it's a carbon
2:06:15
sink. It's a carbon sink. Well KLM marketed this to their
2:06:20
customers, and they were caught lying about it. It's a
2:06:23
celebration
2:06:24
Unknown: for climate activist group fossil free after a Dutch
2:06:27
court ruled that national airline KLM had misled customers
2:06:31
with its 2019 Fly responsibly campaign. According to the court
2:06:36
15 out of KlM 19 Environmental claims were misleading. It had
2:06:40
inflated the benefits of its sustainable aviation fuel. And
2:06:44
it had given the mistaken impression that flying with KLM
2:06:46
is sustainable. We've been
2:06:48
working on this case for two and a half years and then finally
2:06:51
have this very clear decision of the court saying that it's
2:06:56
illegal for companies to claim they are tackling the climate
2:07:00
crisis while in reality they are fueling the crisis. The court
2:07:05
however,
2:07:05
did not impose any punishment on KLM nor push for it to issue any
2:07:09
statement of rectification aside from being concrete and honest
2:07:13
in future now
2:07:14
Adam Curry: now boys just be honest from now on okay. I don't
2:07:20
even know how to stop this any but people just people make
2:07:23
jokes about new people don't believe in it. Just go away,
2:07:26
whatever. But there's gonna come a day when your credit card
2:07:29
won't work and they're gonna say sorry, no be for you if there's
2:07:33
any available because you drove too much. That's how
2:07:38
John C Dvorak: beef being available. Let's play these
2:07:40
clips. This is China taking over the world's food supply. There
2:07:44
Unknown: it is. Experts say China is trying to take over
2:07:47
America's food supply. At a House hearing today lawmakers
2:07:51
heard testimony on risks to us food security, and today's
2:07:55
Virginia Gibson has more.
2:07:57
I have witnessed this hostile communist country work to
2:08:00
systematically take over our food supply chain. Governor
2:08:03
Kristi Noem told lawmakers Wednesday that China is a threat
2:08:07
to American agriculture.
2:08:08
They have decades ago started buying our fertilizer companies
2:08:11
controlling our ability to access fertilizer, bring it into
2:08:14
the United States. Then I watched them buy up our chemical
2:08:17
companies. Now most of our processing facilities are owned
2:08:20
by the Communist Party or Chinese government. Now they're
2:08:24
coming for our land
2:08:25
now. China will have complete control of the US food supply
2:08:30
after they buy up all the land 70%
2:08:33
of the crop protection products that are produced globally, most
2:08:37
from China. Another 40% of the world's phosphorus supply
2:08:42
originates in China. Imagine if they shut off our supply.
2:08:47
Kip. Tom is a former US ambassador to the UN agencies
2:08:51
for food and agriculture. He said China is strategically
2:08:54
building a dominant world food system at the expense of the US.
2:08:59
No
2:09:00
Adam Curry: the US and the entire global companies like
2:09:03
Cargill, and JBS Nokia. They're the ones who are controlling the
2:09:07
food supply and they're closing processing plants. And they're
2:09:11
selling their capability to China. China's not sneaking in
2:09:15
and taken over.
2:09:16
John C Dvorak: I agree with this and I don't understand where
2:09:18
Christine nomes coming from. She's trying to make a name for
2:09:20
herself because she thinks she can be the vice president under
2:09:23
under Trump. Yeah,
2:09:25
Adam Curry: it's dishonest. We have a problem. Beef
2:09:29
initiative.com Everybody shake your local ranchers hand if you
2:09:32
want to eat during the coming food crisis.
2:09:35
John C Dvorak: This is part two of the clip.
2:09:37
Unknown: The Chinese are aggressive in their approach in
2:09:40
investing in a lot of these developing nations to make sure
2:09:43
they can secure a food source Tom
2:09:45
said China is investing all around the world, largely to
2:09:49
secure food sources. Africa has 4.2 million square miles of
2:09:54
arable land or the US has less than 600,000 Tom says he
2:09:58
believes the US should invest more in research and development
2:10:03
and cybersecurity further
2:10:05
China's massive cyber warfare divisions, notably PLA unit
2:10:09
61398, DOD, have the capability to disrupt key American
2:10:14
infrastructure critical to our agriculture. This includes power
2:10:18
and water utilities as well as communication and transportation
2:10:21
systems
2:10:22
policy expert Nova Daly said this critical infrastructure is
2:10:26
exposed because of gaps in current laws,
2:10:29
Adam Curry: given the advances in farm technologies, our
2:10:33
reliance on supply chains that provide the fairest Chinese
2:10:36
actors kill switches to our machinery. Yeah, eyes are our
2:10:40
production. These all are matters that should be addressed
2:10:44
now. Okay, so this is clearly more anti China rhetoric,
2:10:48
because we're doing that pivot to the Indo Pacific away from
2:10:52
Ukraine and Russia. And again, it's the massive international
2:10:57
global companies owned by the US in the UK, who control the food
2:11:01
supply, and they now control all a large swath of land. It's not
2:11:07
the Chinese who went into Ukraine. No, we, we hijacked it.
2:11:12
We sold off all of that farmland to again, the same companies,
2:11:15
Cargill, Monsanto. And now. Now we're screwing the farmers all
2:11:21
over the EU since
2:11:22
Unknown: June 2022, after Russia's full scale invasion of
2:11:26
Ukraine
2:11:29
Adam Curry: for their invasion full scale, full scale since
2:11:33
Unknown: June 2022. After Russia's full scale invasion of
2:11:37
Ukraine, the EU has suspended import duties and quotas for
2:11:41
imports from Ukraine to support its economy. However, cheap
2:11:45
Ukrainian grain exports have sparked protests by farmers in
2:11:49
neighboring countries such as Poland and Hungary. The
2:11:52
Ukrainian Prime Minister today Dennis Shmi, Howell has welcomed
2:11:56
this deal. But France which is the EU's largest wheat producer
2:12:00
has called for more limits to be introduced and more cereals to
2:12:04
be included, including wheat, it takes place against the run up
2:12:09
to the European elections. And many countries including France,
2:12:13
which of course has a strong farming lobby have to balance
2:12:17
the concerns of their agricultural sector while
2:12:20
maintaining their commitment to supporting Ukraine.
2:12:24
Adam Curry: And it's hurting the Polish farmers who are also
2:12:29
hacked off protests
2:12:30
Unknown: right across Poland. The police in Poland estimate
2:12:33
that as many as 70,000 Polish farmers are taking this
2:12:37
Adam Curry: big but 70,000 This is shown a lot taking place
2:12:41
right now test,
2:12:42
Unknown: essentially mainly blocking major roads and ring
2:12:47
roads around cities with their tractors in almost 600 locations
2:12:51
across the country. It's the fourth time such a protest has
2:12:55
happened so far this year, so causing considerable traffic
2:12:59
disruption and throughout the country. But at the same time,
2:13:03
the public here has considerable sympathy for their demands.
2:13:07
Indeed, I mean, Poland, like a lot of other nations in Europe
2:13:10
have to tread a fine line support Ukraine, whilst not
2:13:13
upsetting your own farmers back home. To what extent will this
2:13:17
move by the European Union protected Polish farmers do you
2:13:21
think
2:13:21
a bit could not enough the Polish government, which
2:13:25
actually backs the farmers key demands will be happy that more
2:13:30
Ukrainian products can be restricted but it wanted caps to
2:13:33
kick in once imports reach levels seen in 2021. Ie before
2:13:38
Ukraine had tariff free access to the EU market when Ukrainian
2:13:41
imports to Poland were much lower. Plus, the farmers
2:13:44
themselves want an immediate suspension of tariff free access
2:13:47
for all Ukrainian agricultural imports because they say family
2:13:52
run farms in Poland simply can't compete against big Ukrainian
2:13:57
agribusiness and they have a second demand. They also want EU
2:14:01
climate proposals that they say will raise Polish farmers costs
2:14:04
thrown out.
2:14:05
Adam Curry: There it is your climate change screwing the
2:14:07
farmers. There's the global international cabal that took
2:14:11
over Ukraine, screwing the farmers giving it all to the big
2:14:17
multinationals. But no it's China boots China. Meanwhile,
2:14:22
there's there's news on the Russia front DMZ would put that
2:14:26
put a time, demilitarized zone looks like it's a possum. Oh
2:14:31
wait before I get there. About Poland. We were wrong. I was
2:14:35
wrong certainly about Donald Tusk, thinking that his twin
2:14:39
brother died in that Smolensk accident in quotes. We have Adam
2:14:45
and Ana boots on the ground in Poland. They said no, no, no.
2:14:50
Donald Tusk? Yes, he is since for Arab he is the President now
2:14:54
of course of the Communist Party. Not really well, Paul.
2:15:00
And not that he had a twin brother. He was thought to be an
2:15:04
accomplice though to the accident of the plane crashed in
2:15:08
Smolensk in Russia where half the Polish government perished,
2:15:10
including the den President left Kaczynski who did have the twin
2:15:14
brother, your soul, Jaroslaw and he is still alive and kicking in
2:15:19
to us main opponent opponents up until today. And they have some
2:15:24
other fun little details in there about what's going on in
2:15:27
Poland with a boots on the ground report in the show notes
2:15:30
if you want to read it now, back to the demilitarized zone looks
2:15:33
like it's a possibility.
2:15:35
Unknown: Speaking in the wake of his electoral victory, Russian
2:15:37
President Vladimir Putin threatened that the only way to
2:15:40
protect his country was to create a security zone.
2:15:43
A newsgroup show, where we will be forced at some point when we
2:15:47
deem it appropriate to create a certain sanitary zone in the
2:15:51
current territories, the fish under caves regimes control to
2:15:55
create a security zone that will be quite difficult to cross with
2:15:59
the means of destruction that the enemy is using. Primarily,
2:16:02
of course, we did this for in manufacturing in
2:16:05
the frontline stretch for 1000 kilometers across eastern and
2:16:08
southern Ukraine. The President did not provide further details
2:16:11
on how such a zone would be implemented by Ukrainian
2:16:15
presidential aides that this statement was evidence that the
2:16:17
war will only escalate that
2:16:20
Adam Curry: I don't understand I heard quite clearly in the
2:16:23
report that Putin said a sanitary zone which I kind of
2:16:27
like that would be under control of the key Kyiv regime
2:16:33
John C Dvorak: I didn't hear that
2:16:34
Adam Curry: Yeah, yeah let's again
2:16:38
Unknown: curity zone
2:16:39
a nice Guccio we will be forced at some point when we deem it
2:16:43
appropriate to create a certain sanitary zone in the current
2:16:47
territories the fish under thieves regimes control
2:16:50
Adam Curry: under keeps regimes control.
2:16:53
John C Dvorak: I can hear keep I don't know what that word was
2:16:55
his cave.
2:16:57
Adam Curry: cave he saying keep under caves. Why don't we try to
2:17:00
create
2:17:00
Unknown: a certain sanitary zone in the current territories the
2:17:04
fish under thieves regimes control their caves regime
2:17:07
control?
2:17:08
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I can I can hear where you hear that. But
2:17:11
I'm not sure that's what he said.
2:17:13
Adam Curry: I like sanitary zone. I just like sanitary so we
2:17:17
should all have a sanitary so I think I think I have one
2:17:19
somewhere around here. It's stuck starts at the door. My
2:17:23
sanitary zone. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. See, you got
2:17:30
anything else that is burning? Oh, I got going on about three
2:17:35
by three. Yeah, baby experiment by Jason. Everybody happy when
2:17:39
you can compare and say, ABC. That's right, Jason. Read the
2:17:48
big story from the three main news networks. Are they all
2:17:51
digging in the same? Well, he's an all coordinated propaganda.
2:17:55
They always are. That's right. Here's your three by three.
2:17:59
John C Dvorak: Now, this is where Trump comes out and says,
2:18:02
Hey, if you're if you're not voting for me, you're not
2:18:06
Jewish.
2:18:08
Adam Curry: You ain't Jew. You ain't you
2:18:12
John C Dvorak: may meet some guy again. You know, he's talks and
2:18:16
talks and talks. Yeah, I mean, he's had like over 200 of these
2:18:20
rallies. I mean, yeah, he's gonna say dumb shit. And because
2:18:24
he talks for an hour and a half, at least minimum. So you know,
2:18:27
he's and he's just talking. Yeah, let's go to ABC. Tonight,
2:18:31
Unknown: Donald Trump under fire from some of the nation's top
2:18:34
Jewish leaders after saying that any Jewish person who votes for
2:18:37
Democrats hates their religion. Any
2:18:40
Jewish person that voted for Democrats hates their religion.
2:18:46
They hate everything about Israel, and they should be
2:18:49
ashamed of themselves because Israel will be destroyed.
2:18:52
Today's
2:18:52
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the nation's top Jewish
2:18:55
elected official, denouncing Trump's comments as
2:18:57
reprehensible and dangerous
2:18:59
to say you hate Israel or your religion because you have one
2:19:02
political view over the other is sick. It's hateful. It is
2:19:08
unadulterated anti semitism.
2:19:11
The second gentleman Doug emhoff, was also Jewish
2:19:14
outraged.
2:19:15
This is a disgusting, toxic, anti semitic thing to say, by
2:19:22
anyone, let alone a former president United
2:19:25
States, the anti Defamation League calling Trump's comments
2:19:28
defamatory and patently false. And White House spokesperson
2:19:32
saying there is no justification for spreading toxic false
2:19:35
stereotypes that threaten fellow citizens. None. Late today Trump
2:19:40
doubling down
2:19:41
I think that the Democrats have been very very opposed to Jewish
2:19:44
people.
2:19:45
Adam Curry: So so he's these going all in on the I mean, it's
2:19:50
literally become a Jew fight because we have it remember we
2:19:56
had the Biden ad about the the The bloodbath and they came
2:20:02
right at right after his bloodbath quote with Jews will
2:20:05
not replace us. So now the Jews are upon in the presidential
2:20:10
race because we've got genocide Joe
2:20:15
John C Dvorak: is too funny it's like the way they handle this
2:20:18
with letting you know Schumer always this is despicable he was
2:20:22
no different than Biden saying you're Ain't you you're a black
2:20:25
if you don't vote
2:20:26
Adam Curry: for me or whatever he said, if you don't vote for
2:20:28
me, you ain't black. That's what he's Yeah,
2:20:30
John C Dvorak: I mean, that to me is more racist or despicable
2:20:34
than anything Trump Trump is just going on about the
2:20:36
possibilities for let's hear this is not going to change.
2:20:40
Let's go to NBC. Tonight,
2:20:42
Unknown: former President Trump casting his primary ballot in
2:20:45
Florida, doubling down on remarks, Democrats are slamming
2:20:48
as anti semitic.
2:20:49
The Democrats have been very, very opposed to Jewish people.
2:20:52
That's true and to Israel. All you have to do is look at
2:20:55
Senator Schumer, what he did with Israel is a disgrace.
2:20:58
After top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer blasted Mr. Trump
2:21:01
earlier today.
2:21:02
The former President's comments were really disgusting. And a
2:21:06
textbook example of the kind of anti semitism facing Jews same
2:21:11
quote, pushing the dangerous anti semitism trope. What's a
2:21:14
dual loyalty?
2:21:16
The Firestorm began overnight. Oh,
2:21:17
Adam Curry: hold on a second. The
2:21:19
Unknown: dangerous American pushing the dangerous anti
2:21:23
semitism trope of dual loyalty,
2:21:26
Adam Curry: pushing the dangerous anti semitism trope of
2:21:29
dual loyalty. What does he mean by that?
2:21:33
John C Dvorak: It means are they more are Jews more Jewish than
2:21:38
American? Are they? It's, you know, I don't know quite what he
2:21:42
means by think something along those lines is that they're more
2:21:46
of their, toward their they have more loyalty toward their
2:21:50
religion than they do the country?
2:21:52
Adam Curry: No, I what I thought that this was about although it
2:21:54
doesn't make sense. You know, the the way I understand that
2:21:58
the dangerous trope is that the Jews in Congress have dual
2:22:03
nationality. And they're really there for Israel. That's, oh,
2:22:09
Unknown: I didn't get that. Okay. And a textbook example of
2:22:13
the kind of anti semitism facing Jews pushing the dangerous anti
2:22:17
semitism trope of dual loyalty.
2:22:20
Adam Curry: I'm sure we'll have some Jews to weigh in the
2:22:22
Unknown: Firestorm. Overnight when Mr. Trump was asked about
2:22:25
Schumer's recent review of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
2:22:28
Netanyahu, who Schumer said should be replaced in new
2:22:31
elections.
2:22:32
Why do the Democrats hate Bibi Netanyahu?
2:22:36
I actually think they hate Israel,
2:22:39
Mr. Trump saying Democrats are being swayed by protests over
2:22:42
President Biden's policy on Gaza. Even
2:22:45
I am amazed at how many people are in those marches. And guys,
2:22:49
like Schumer see that, and to Him is votes. I think it's votes
2:22:52
more than anything else. Any Jewish person that votes for
2:22:56
Democrats hates their religion. They hate everything about
2:23:01
Israel, and they should be ashamed of themselves because
2:23:04
Israel will be destroyed.
2:23:05
The remarks quickly condemned by the anti Defamation League, who
2:23:09
co called them defamatory and patently false. The Biden
2:23:13
campaign saying quote, the only person who should be ashamed
2:23:16
here is Donald Trump. Yeah, yes. Key. Hey, hey,
2:23:22
Adam Curry: let me guess it's CBS do the same thing.
2:23:25
John C Dvorak: Do you think
2:23:26
Unknown: President Trump is getting bashed again for
2:23:29
repeating a comment about Jewish Americans he told White House
2:23:32
reporters yesterday that any Jewish person who votes
2:23:36
democratic is being quote, disloyal?
2:23:39
In my opinion, you vote for a Democrat, you're being very
2:23:42
disloyal to Jewish people, and you're being very disloyal to
2:23:47
Israel. And it
2:23:49
was the second day in a row Mr. Trump questioned the loyalty of
2:23:52
Jews a type of attack that anti Semites often used the President
2:23:55
mentioned it the first time in slamming to congressional demo
2:24:00
Adam Curry: ended there did yeah just ended Ah Oh, that's too
2:24:06
bad.
2:24:07
John C Dvorak: They sent him sent me happened in in the
2:24:08
movie. Oh, yeah. Sure.
2:24:11
Adam Curry: I have some
2:24:13
John C Dvorak: believe me it was the same I have
2:24:15
Adam Curry: some Israel Hamas news. Apparently, according to
2:24:22
Turkish radio and television, and obviously I need to someone
2:24:26
pointed this out to me that I guess I need to point out that
2:24:29
Turkish Radio Television is not going to be on the side of
2:24:32
Israel. Which is which is why I play it. You got to hear
2:24:37
everything from around the world. Yeah, not just the three
2:24:40
by threes. You know, we got to this is what we do. We expose
2:24:43
Chinese anti Chinese all kinds of stuff. But they
2:24:47
John C Dvorak: snooze from the Chinese outlets.
2:24:49
Adam Curry: They say the reason for Hamas attacking on October 7
2:24:56
was the red heifers are you familiar with The Red heifers
2:25:01
Unknown: Okay, I'm gonna be in a minute. Could a Texas cow start
2:25:04
Armageddon in the Middle East in April 2024. And what does this
2:25:08
have to do with Israel's war on Palestine scars? On the 100 day
2:25:12
anniversary of Israel's brutal assault on Gaza, Hamas spokesman
2:25:16
Abu Zubaydah, released a video explaining the motivations
2:25:20
behind the group's incursion into Israel on October 7,
2:25:23
alongside Israel's continued occupation of Palestine. He also
2:25:27
mentioned the bringing of red cows into the occupied
2:25:30
Palestinian territories, or Bader was referring to the plans
2:25:33
of numerous right wing Israeli groups who believe that red cow
2:25:36
must be sacrificed in order for the Jews to progress plans to
2:25:40
demolish the Al Aqsa Mosque and build the fabled the temple in
2:25:44
its place. It might sound like a conspiracy theory but hardliner
2:25:48
Israeli group the Temple Institute have already purchased
2:25:51
and imported five Red Angus heifers from Texas at a cost of
2:25:55
$500,000. They have been grazing in a kibbutz in the occupied
2:25:59
West Bank since 2022. With reports that the sacrifice is
2:26:02
planned to take place as early as April 2020. For the sacrifice
2:26:07
of the red heifer has its roots in the Torah and the Talmud, and
2:26:10
it is believed that the ritual is necessary to purify the Jews
2:26:14
so that they can pray at the Al Aqsa compound. The sacrifice
2:26:17
will reportedly take place on a plot of land on Mount of Olives
2:26:21
facing the Al Aqsa Mosque, the cow must be completely red,
2:26:24
including its hooves and must be around three years old at the
2:26:27
time of sacrifice. Following the sacrifice, the ashes of the cow
2:26:31
are due to be mixed with water and used to purify selected
2:26:34
Jewish priests and their adherence.
2:26:36
Adam Curry: It's about to get exciting. I thought that was
2:26:41
exciting. You
2:26:42
John C Dvorak: gotta get a clip of the day for dredging that up
2:26:48
Adam Curry: it literally popped into the algo did Gish I was
2:26:51
looking at a different YouTube video and this YouTube short
2:26:54
popped up like wow, this is
2:26:58
Unknown: great. Got lucky.
2:27:00
Adam Curry: This is great.
2:27:01
John C Dvorak: You got lucky.
2:27:03
Adam Curry: Meanwhile, Queen Ursula is throwing money around
2:27:06
left and right like they don't need to print anymore. Oh, I'm
2:27:09
sorry. That's all they're doing. You know, once once, it gets
2:27:16
really bad there, once it gets really bad in Gaza, the
2:27:21
Palestinians have only one way to go. Egypt. Now, what are we
2:27:27
gonna do about that Queen Ursula said to herself
2:27:31
Unknown: a controversial deal to inject cash into Egypt mired in
2:27:35
its worst economic crisis in nearly 100 years. The European
2:27:39
Union 7.4 billion euro package includes 5 billion in
2:27:44
concessional loans 1.8 billion for investment and hundreds of
2:27:48
million for bilateral projects like managing migration. Oh, the
2:27:52
Egyptian President hailed what he called a paradigm shift in
2:27:56
his country's partnership with Brussels.
2:28:00
To discussion addressed the importance of continuing to
2:28:02
confront common challenges, most notably illegal immigration. As
2:28:07
we affirmed our commitment to combating this phenomenon.
2:28:11
Several European leaders attended the signing in Cairo,
2:28:14
including from Austria, Cyprus and Greece, Italian Prime
2:28:18
Minister Giorgio Maloney, whose country is one of the worst
2:28:21
affected by surging migration in the Mediterranean wants to
2:28:25
convince migrants not to make the crossing. The
2:28:28
best way is to reaffirm the rights of the citizens in the
2:28:34
African continent, not to immigrate towards Europe. And
2:28:39
there is something that we can do all only with development,
2:28:43
and it is exactly what we are doing today.
2:28:46
The agreement follows the templates of those Brussels has
2:28:49
signed with Tunisia and Mauritania, which pledged funds
2:28:52
in return for fortifying their borders. rights groups see the
2:28:56
deals like any specific human rights guarantees for migrants
2:29:00
and asylum seekers. More generally, activists have
2:29:03
criticized Western backing for Abdel Fattah El Sisi, who's
2:29:07
overseen a crackdown on dissidents from across the
2:29:10
political spectrum.
2:29:11
Adam Curry: So this is the model now just send billions of euros
2:29:14
to every country you don't want migrants to come in from. And if
2:29:18
you want to get some euros threatened to go into Europe.
2:29:23
This is great. Yeah, yeah. Hey, his el Sisi here in Egypt Do you
2:29:32
want me to send the boats out? No, give me some money and they
2:29:37
all like okay
2:29:39
John C Dvorak: they're just paying for what a turkey
2:29:41
perfected that goat circumcised right that
2:29:44
Adam Curry: by the way, you someone's banging your mic real
2:29:46
bad.
2:29:47
John C Dvorak: It was me. Oh, moving stuff around. I bang the
2:29:50
mic. I hit it right like this. Yeah, it's not it's hyper named
2:29:53
it was a bang I get the NikeSkin gets banged I'm dying to can't
2:29:57
sit here still has happened to move us I've ran. I'm trying to
2:30:00
get stuff done trying to sort things out. And I bang the mic.
2:30:06
Adam Curry: Okay, all right, you're forgiven. Oh, my
2:30:12
goodness. Oh, there it is.
2:30:15
John C Dvorak: All right. Well, I got a couple of just do an
2:30:17
update us get the Haiti thing out of the way so we can get
2:30:19
people apprised. No. Yes.
2:30:21
Adam Curry: Yeah. The latest on Haiti. Okay.
2:30:24
Unknown: The other developing story we're following at this
2:30:25
hour, the images coming in late today from Haiti, at least 30
2:30:29
Americans choppered out of Puerto Prince nearly 1600
2:30:32
Americans in Haiti, reaching out to the US Embassy many one out
2:30:36
amid the growing danger there. ABCs map rivers in Haiti again
2:30:39
went out.
2:30:41
Tonight, this State Department helicopter airlifting Americans
2:30:45
out of Haiti, our team capturing the daring mission to choppers
2:30:49
flying at least 30 Americans out of Puerto Prince today after
2:30:52
weeks of chaos. And as tensions rise, the government planning to
2:30:58
send two helicopters into Haiti every day, hoping to get about
2:31:02
30 citizens out on those flights. And this is what
2:31:06
they're fleeing gangs overrunning entire
2:31:09
neighborhoods, fighting the police, but it's not hyperbole
2:31:12
to say that the only thing that standing in between gangs
2:31:16
completely taking over this country are a couple of 1000
2:31:19
police officers who are risking their lives every single day
2:31:23
fighting back against these gangs. Here in Port au Prince,
2:31:26
we go meet one of those officers on the front lines part of a
2:31:30
specialized unit fighting the gangs terrorizing this city or
2:31:34
this officer meeting us indoors covering his face for his own
2:31:37
safety. He tells me the police are outgunned and outmanned. We
2:31:44
can't retreat. He says we can't give up the country to the
2:31:47
gangs. I've got no choice. And David back to those evacuations,
2:31:51
the US State Department saying that nearly 1600 Americans on
2:31:54
the ground right now in Haiti are in touch with the US Embassy
2:31:57
as the State Department tries to find more ways to get more
2:32:00
Americans out.
2:32:01
Adam Curry: I'm disappointed they didn't mention barbecue.
2:32:05
Yeah, because he's the new Kony 2012 Yeah, he's
2:32:09
John C Dvorak: the guy. He's the go to guy.
2:32:11
Adam Curry: You know that that cannibal thing? That's from 2020
2:32:14
one's awesome, old video. And gaslighting us. Oh, yeah,
2:32:18
barbecues. Men are eating people that they kill. No, no, that's
2:32:23
Kony 2012. So when do we get the blue helmets? And what's the
2:32:26
next move? Because as
2:32:28
John C Dvorak: you tell me, why don't you predict something? I
2:32:30
have no idea. I think this thing is completely off the rails.
2:32:33
They we didn't we're not controlling it very well. And
2:32:36
now we're trying to fly people out 30 people at a time, day
2:32:39
after day is with 1600 in line this dumb. Well,
2:32:43
Adam Curry: the point is there's so much gold. For one Allah I
2:32:49
mean, you know, I had a four. If I'm only play one clip, I had a
2:32:55
four, four piece special from CBS on the history of Haiti.
2:33:01
It's worth playing just at least one of these clips, so people
2:33:04
kind of get some context, which goes back to 1492,
2:33:09
Unknown: the island Haiti shares with the Dominican Republic.
2:33:13
Columbus landed here in 1492, and called it Hispaniola,
2:33:18
claiming it for Spain. But Haiti eventually became a fabulously
2:33:23
rich French colony, its plantations producing much of
2:33:27
the world's coffee and sugar. In 1791, the enslaved Africans who
2:33:34
work those plantations revolted. What followed was a 13 year
2:33:40
bloodbath. Then, by January 1 1804, Haiti traded the French
2:33:47
flag for its own. It became the first black Republic and
2:33:52
abolished slavery. But in 1825, the French came back with
2:33:59
gunboats and an outrageous demand, reparations. Haiti had
2:34:04
to borrow the money with interest. Yes. From France,
2:34:10
instead of building roads and schools and hospitals. Haiti was
2:34:15
paying off that debt until 1947.
2:34:20
Adam Curry: All right, I'll make a prediction. Okay. It just hit
2:34:22
me. I'll make a prediction. There will be a TPS No, that's
2:34:28
not a TPS report. It's a temporary protected status for
2:34:31
all Haitians to enter the United States for more cheap labor for
2:34:36
the bankers. I predict navy boats going to pick them up.
2:34:42
There's my put it in the book
2:34:44
John C Dvorak: is a good one. Put it in the bud. You should
2:34:46
play the Red Book jingle. Do we have a red book jingle I put one
2:34:51
in the show the other day they rent Red Bull Red Book jingles
2:34:55
called jingle Red Book.
2:34:57
Unknown: The cover of it
2:34:58
Adam Curry: was red. They call Get the Red Book really? Jingle?
2:35:04
It's not really a
2:35:05
John C Dvorak: good yeah. Better no jingle. But I think you might
2:35:09
be right because the Haitians are notorious as for being hard
2:35:14
workers
2:35:15
Adam Curry: are very hard workers. They they kick the
2:35:17
French or the
2:35:18
John C Dvorak: maids of New York City. Patients. Hey, the
2:35:21
Adam Curry: Democrats, they want more people to good with
2:35:24
children. They can cook. Yeah,
2:35:27
John C Dvorak: food is good. Food is good. French background
2:35:30
doesn't hurt. That's rice, who's good, hard workers and they like
2:35:34
they don't like American blacks. Because we gotta get rid of
2:35:37
these American blacks are no good.
2:35:39
Adam Curry: No, no, no, they're, they're no. Oh, man. I did a
2:35:43
show with Moe yesterday. He's it's one to listen to, is
2:35:47
particularly based on that statement. You just made it most
2:35:52
what? Well, you know, it's a whole continuation but he
2:35:55
actually says something really interesting. So the way you
2:35:59
know, he believes there's an im board and there's white
2:36:02
supremacy, the operating system of America and of the West.
2:36:05
There's white people and then non white people. And I it's too
2:36:09
much to go into depth with it buddy says. What you see is the
2:36:13
system puts black people out front for when it goes wrong.
2:36:20
Letitia James, Fanny Fani Willis? Boyd, Austin Diddy. I
2:36:28
mean they put all these black people out front of the scandal
2:36:32
and when it all comes to beating Mike ever mayor, Mayor, Mayor
2:36:36
Adams, the mayor, the mayor, they take the beating and it
2:36:40
goes any look at us like wow, you're right and it'll be joy
2:36:44
read trust me, sonny. Halston. They're all going to take
2:36:47
John C Dvorak: the beach cities ditched it she's she's moved
2:36:50
over. She's
2:36:50
Adam Curry: actually Spanish now. She's a slave owner. Yeah,
2:36:53
that's right.
2:36:53
John C Dvorak: She was so she she dodged a bullet
2:36:56
Adam Curry: Martin move smart move. Anyway, um, we did
2:37:01
something on the last show, which was a good call that you
2:37:04
made. And we knighted. Probably the last living aviator who
2:37:16
survived the Pearl Harbor, attack and theater. And we got
2:37:22
several notes, but certainly from his family. They were very,
2:37:26
very, very pleased because sir Higgins, as he was knighted,
2:37:30
passed away just a few days later. So he passed away a night
2:37:35
of the no agenda roundtable. The family is actually very happy
2:37:38
about that. There was a lot of news about this guy have a quick
2:37:40
clip. Yeah, he's been one
2:37:41
Unknown: of the few remaining survivors of the attack on Pearl
2:37:44
Harbor dies at 100 into the family of Richard C. Higgins
2:37:49
says he passed away Tuesday at his home in Bend, Oregon. He was
2:37:52
a radio man assigned to a squadron of sea planes when
2:37:56
Japan attacked December seventh 1941. I'm Carmen Robertson. This
2:38:01
is Fox News.
2:38:01
Adam Curry: And isn't isn't fitting that he was a radio man.
2:38:04
I mean, this whole thing is just beautiful. I'm glad that you
2:38:06
call that I'm glad we did that. I'm glad that that we weren't
2:38:10
able to get him to to be a little part and I'm glad that he
2:38:12
passed at home and not in the hospice, right? Yes, it's
2:38:16
better. I would like to thank you for your courage in the
2:38:18
morning to you the man who put the sea in the Secada Apocalypse
2:38:22
ladies and gentlemen say hello to my friend on the other end,
2:38:24
the One Only Mr. John Cena tomorrow.
2:38:30
John C Dvorak: Morning you Misha and Kareem gave me boots on the
2:38:34
ground feeding yourself to the world days and nights out there.
2:38:37
Failing baling hay, they're
2:38:38
Adam Curry: trolls. 1552 Down 20 Down 20. We're down 20 trolls
2:38:49
from last Thursday. Down well, they're probably still hung
2:38:53
over. I think everyone's hung over from St. Patrick's St.
2:38:58
Patrick's Day. Yeah, they're all plastered plaster trolls
2:39:01
everybody. The trolls are in the troll room troll room.io They
2:39:05
listened live and they provide lively conversation and lively
2:39:10
comments sometimes helpful. Usually not but that trolls what
2:39:13
to expect them entertain themselves. That's what they're
2:39:15
doing. It's like Soma. For ugly people. They are trolls. They
2:39:20
listen live at troll room.io It's the no agenda streams 24
2:39:23
hours a day Darren O'Neil. He's on before us for two hours. It's
2:39:27
like a radio station. It actually is. You can tune in
2:39:31
there's no commercials. It's all value for value and everyone
2:39:35
kind of brings their built in audiences a beautiful thing that
2:39:37
also works with the modern podcast apps. And the modern
2:39:42
podcasts apps are kind of cool because they will alert you when
2:39:48
a show goes live your favorite show. Also, they will alert you
2:39:53
within 90 seconds when when we publish a brand new podcast.
2:39:59
This is Something that's the legacy apps can't do all they're
2:40:03
starting to take some of our features, but they'll never get
2:40:06
there. It's all part of the podcast is remarkable. Yes, it's
2:40:10
it's through a decentralized network called pod ping, all
2:40:13
developed within this group is really quite cool. And today, I
2:40:16
will promote, curio caster Creo caster is a web app. It's an app
2:40:21
that you can use on your desktop on your phone. It's actually
2:40:23
very fast, very snappy. And it has all of those features built
2:40:27
by all the latex, it has every single feature almost that
2:40:30
podcasting. 2.0 has to offer. Find out more at podcasting.
2:40:33
two.org It's all open source. There's a lot of men and women
2:40:38
who are doing this to keep podcasting, a true Avenue, the
2:40:41
last bastion of free speech, which it is. And we appreciate
2:40:46
all the work that they do. We value for value. And that means
2:40:50
that we just everything you just got in the last two hours and 40
2:40:53
minutes. There was no charge. We didn't interrupt Oh, man. Joe's
2:40:58
podcast, the Rogan experience they've started doing ads now
2:41:02
Oh, man, he just chops in every every 15 minutes. It's kind of
2:41:08
harsh. Boom. Now, I mean, I mean, it's one way to do it. But
2:41:14
John C Dvorak: it's just it's a little hard and pleasant.
2:41:16
Unpleasant.
2:41:17
Adam Curry: That's the word. Yeah. I mean, the content is
2:41:20
good. I don't know I we prefer our talk uninterrupted. And
2:41:27
that, of course means that we don't make $250 million new
2:41:30
John C Dvorak: new No, we don't we don't even come close. Not
2:41:34
even
2:41:34
Adam Curry: a fraction of that. So instead, we just asked you to
2:41:39
return value to us. In a number of ways. We have time, talent
2:41:43
and treasure, which means you can help us out by Watson the
2:41:47
boots on the ground, those are incredibly appreciated. You can
2:41:51
help out with them or we have helped with servers we have
2:41:53
helped with artwork, artwork. That's that's a big one. Very
2:41:56
controversial. The art that was done by one of our hundreds of
2:42:00
artists for the last episode. There was Sir Joe. And he
2:42:04
created what I thought was quite funny. Of course, St. Patrick's
2:42:09
Day. So we always like to stay in themes when it comes to the
2:42:12
title of the episode, by the way is net buoy. And we were both
2:42:17
amazed that net buoy is spelled ne te capital bui we'd forgotten
2:42:22
that. What does it stand for? Again, network broadcasts
2:42:26
Ethernet Universal Interface or something. I can't remember what
2:42:30
it was named Michelle. And she was yo ho for St. Patrick's Day
2:42:36
made us a St. Patrick's Day image with a black Irish. And it
2:42:41
said Happy St. Patrick's Day from Google Gemini which I
2:42:44
thought was pretty funny because of Google Geminis.
2:42:47
John C Dvorak: Thanks everybody.
2:42:48
Adam Curry: Everybody black. There were people mad. You never
2:42:52
heard of black Irish. You don't know the history. Ireland is is
2:42:56
the origin nation of the world. We built for black Irish. This
2:43:00
John C Dvorak: doesn't make the joke any less funny.
2:43:02
Adam Curry: Oh, there were some people. It's just going off. And
2:43:05
I never heard it. Oh, no, it was on the annex. No. Oh, yeah. I
2:43:11
know. I was still like, oh, man, chill out. It's okay. It's just
2:43:15
a joke, bro. Poo. Oh, it was hard was hard for these people.
2:43:21
We thought it was quite funny. We select these pieces of art
2:43:25
from no agenda, art generator.com. Another
2:43:27
outstanding example of value for value. We've we don't run it,
2:43:32
Sir Paul couture runs it and he's upgraded multiple times
2:43:35
throughout the ages. And it's now very
2:43:38
John C Dvorak: swift out to show numbers. Reflecting the numbers
2:43:42
look
2:43:42
Adam Curry: good. What do you what do you have in your mouth?
2:43:45
John C Dvorak: I have a lozenge but it's very slippery elm
2:43:50
lozenges. very
2:43:51
Adam Curry: unprofessional sounding.
2:43:53
Unknown: Well, I'm sorry. Okay.
2:43:55
Adam Curry: There was a lot of but you're right. There was a
2:43:58
lot of St. Patrick's Day art. John, of course, immediately
2:44:03
wanted the but
2:44:05
John C Dvorak: didn't want to but you said Oh, no, it's just
2:44:09
well done. It was Khaled pigeon.
2:44:11
Adam Curry: You said. I already know which one I like. That's
2:44:16
because
2:44:16
John C Dvorak: it was well done. It wasn't because it was also
2:44:19
like the girls. The other two women that were cheese keiki.
2:44:23
Adam Curry: Do you like do you know? I'm getting complaints?
2:44:27
Some of them? I'll
2:44:28
John C Dvorak: bet you are. I'll
2:44:29
Adam Curry: know. I'll tell you what the complaint is is
2:44:31
universal from women. Jon's turning in because it's a
2:44:34
combination of the cheesecake images and the cussing. Which
2:44:38
seems to have increased.
2:44:40
John C Dvorak: I have not cussed. Oh, how many times you
2:44:42
like us on today's show today?
2:44:44
Adam Curry: I don't think a single time so that's good. But
2:44:46
you have increased your cussing. And they think you're turning
2:44:50
into a dirty old man.
2:44:52
John C Dvorak: I am a dirty old man. Give me a break. I'm old.
2:44:55
I'm a man and I'm dirty. Dirty I know that Jan's turning into a
2:45:02
dirty Oh, man. Okay, that's what you that's what men look forward
2:45:08
to.
2:45:09
Adam Curry: Oh, man, I don't know which one to choose for the
2:45:11
opening clip. There's three of them, right? Look
2:45:13
John C Dvorak: forward to becoming dirty old men because
2:45:14
you can't be called out. You know, it's like, hey, too bad.
2:45:17
I'm gonna you know, I can go on much longer than this and just
2:45:20
put up.
2:45:22
Adam Curry: I love you, man. That was great. It's true. It's
2:45:25
true. True. It's true. Don't Don't fight it people is what
2:45:29
happens. I
2:45:30
John C Dvorak: can't do that. And the good side of it is I
2:45:33
ended up with a with a kind of privileged taste that allows
2:45:39
that calla pigeon art to be moved forward. Otherwise it
2:45:43
would be oh, do I might I might offend some woman? I don't think
2:45:48
so.
2:45:51
Adam Curry: It makes me cry. This is why people need to stick
2:45:53
around for the donation segment. This is the best. Oh man. Well,
2:45:59
we had a lot of art. The calla pitches art obviously was
2:46:04
discussed. I kind of like to I like I like comics or bloggers.
2:46:10
Ai generated no agenda kind of shamrock coin. That was nice.
2:46:16
Then he had a dog peeing No, that was not nice.
2:46:20
John C Dvorak: I like to time treasure by networks with the
2:46:22
girl holding the green beer. I thought that was pretty nice.
2:46:25
See less, you know offensive than the one I liked.
2:46:29
Adam Curry: Let me see. Where was that one? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
2:46:33
John C Dvorak: I push for that piece. But we couldn't resist. I
2:46:36
mean, at the at the end I'll say it at the end of the day with
2:46:40
the funny piece humorous over even great art usually which
2:46:46
would take that humor unless it's really schlocky, yeah. Now,
2:46:50
the borderline dime, but it wasn't quite lucky enough.
2:46:53
Adam Curry: But I thought this was a funny, it was a funny
2:46:55
joke. It was a funny joke, Google Gemini. We liked it a
2:46:59
lot. Thank you very much to Sergio, for doing that for us
2:47:03
and to all the artists who participate and are always
2:47:05
trying to score when we love you very much and no agenda art
2:47:09
generator.com You can find all of these all of the submissions
2:47:14
there. They also wind up on good merch merch over at the store
2:47:19
that no agenda shop.com And you can always participate yourself
2:47:24
you can open up account and get to it and start rocking away.
2:47:27
And also all of these images rotate in the chapters that Dred
2:47:31
Scott put together for us in the modern podcast apps now to go to
2:47:34
the Treasurer to thank our executive and Associate
2:47:37
Executive Producers these are real credits. They are lifetime
2:47:40
credits. You can use them anywhere credits recognize,
2:47:42
which is typically show business circles. We're proud to give
2:47:45
these out. You can even open up an IMDB account. If anyone
2:47:48
questions your motives is real. And if anyone wants to know how
2:47:52
real they are, we'll be happy to vouch for you. We kick it off
2:47:55
with a switcheroo from Juwanna Cousteau, she's in Helena
2:48:02
Montana. $1,000 She's got a blue box here which means there is a
2:48:08
ceremony in place. Hello Adam and John switcheroo greetings
2:48:12
from Montana. Please use this donation tonight my brother
2:48:15
Brian and her brother Brian needs a deducing you've been de
2:48:21
deuced Alright, so I'm just going to presume it is Brian
2:48:26
coaster, coaster, coaster coaster. So I'm making that
2:48:30
change now. I hit him in the mouth about a year ago and he
2:48:33
has enjoyed listening it's Kester well in Dutch will be
2:48:37
Cousteau. So yeah, cast her sounds more more Americanized. I
2:48:42
hate him the mouth about a year ago and he has enjoyed listening
2:48:44
to your show while working nights in Brownwood Texas.
2:48:47
around New Year's Brian was diagnosed with a terminal tumor
2:48:50
on his spinal cord and given four months to live. This is not
2:48:54
a dynamite note this is depressing now what do you what
2:48:57
do you this is not good. Even though he isn't able to do many
2:49:00
of the things he wants enjoyed. He still listens to his podcast
2:49:03
and we get a kick out of your show. Especially throwing down
2:49:06
the lingo around unsuspecting Normie relatives. I bet you do.
2:49:11
You're adding incredible value to his time thank you for your
2:49:14
show and the work you put into it asking for prayers from all
2:49:18
the non pagans JK in the get Monet's for Brian he's on my
2:49:21
list. Please Knight him sir turbo Brian have the infamous
2:49:25
compliments and give him steak so rare. It only has a chance to
2:49:29
look at the oven in terror before being served. And
2:49:33
Mountain Dew Of course. I love that and Mountain Dew of course
2:49:37
at the roundtable can we get an F cancer and an R two d two
2:49:40
karma you bet you've got
2:49:54
John C Dvorak: sir anonymous. I'm sorry sir anonymous, the
2:49:58
Vikon of the ad FC And Arapahoe County comes in with 36999 he
2:50:03
actually sent in a check and I have no proof that I have a
2:50:08
note. So
2:50:09
Adam Curry: no, we have a note.
2:50:11
John C Dvorak: So, he also says at the beginning, thank you for
2:50:15
your courage and your continued deconstruction. It's been far
2:50:17
too long since my last tithing, please de douche me. You've been
2:50:23
de deuced. He doesn't want any jingles recurrent. But he says
2:50:28
about this donation that 36999 is something I like to call the
2:50:31
triple Intel threat No. Or treat the triple Intel treat. That's
2:50:37
treat, not threat. Got it? As I've donated this amount before
2:50:42
a brief explanation may suffice. It's a relation to e o 12.
2:50:47
Triple three e o which is Executive Order 12333. Yes, yes,
2:50:53
I've heard examiner no agenda. spooks may know what it is. But
2:50:57
it's It comes in many forms and it has special meaning to the
2:51:00
numerologist among us. Here you have the power of three and many
2:51:05
forms one, two 3.33 times 3369399. Perhaps you notice that
2:51:10
three six 9.99 Equals Three followed by six which is three
2:51:14
and three followed by nine which is three and three and three or
2:51:18
three times three ending with 99.
2:51:20
Adam Curry: Three times three. Yes. And at the end it's it's
2:51:23
George Soros. As
2:51:25
John C Dvorak: always, I shall remain a faithful proponent,
2:51:28
proponent and promoter of the no agenda show. surreptitiously
2:51:31
hitting people in the mouth. I have to be very careful within
2:51:34
the walls of my government facility. where everyone is
2:51:38
literally a you know what?
2:51:47
We need spoke notes jingles no karma?
2:51:51
Adam Curry: I don't think we have a spooky yo.
2:51:54
John C Dvorak: We don't have a spook gal. We should get one.
2:51:55
You need one. Yes. And so they
2:51:58
Adam Curry: all right. Thank you very much. Cody Osbourne is an
2:52:02
Elgin, Illinois $350.93 In the morning, gentlemen, I've been
2:52:07
listening for about two months since my cousin II and hit me in
2:52:10
the mouth. And I've been backtracking checked and I'm
2:52:12
exactly 333 episodes back that's got to be a sign will kick in
2:52:17
what I can for now. Thanks for your courage. Well, thank you.
2:52:20
We appreciate it.
2:52:23
John C Dvorak: I'm sorry. I was looking at the back of our, our
2:52:26
spooks note. James Morin in Jackson, California. Jackson, up
2:52:32
in the hill country there are Hill Country this foothills.
2:52:36
33333 No, no, it's just karma. Got it. You've
2:52:41
Adam Curry: got karma. Sir Jeff Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 333 dot
2:52:48
33. In the morning, he says with this donation, I moved from a
2:52:51
tiny Baron to a full Baron. In addition to the new title sir
2:52:55
Jeff Baron of PA route 33. I'd like to request from the peerage
2:52:59
committee a small parcel of surrounding Pennsylvania route
2:53:02
33. This parcel is bordered on the west by interstate 476 On
2:53:07
the east by the Delaware River on the north by interstate 80
2:53:11
and the south by interstate 78. Do we have a plat that we
2:53:17
checked
2:53:17
John C Dvorak: I think that's fine. like to know why. Some
2:53:21
Adam Curry: well known building and he's laughing his butt off.
2:53:26
I also appreciate the rubber lizer and 33 is the magic number
2:53:29
jingles thank you for your courage Sure. Jeff of PA route
2:53:32
33
2:53:35
Unknown: In the back 3333 33 Rob allies are out
2:53:50
John C Dvorak: the magic number will race salmon comes in from
2:53:57
Madison, New Jersey with 33 333 that three three so he's writing
2:54:01
this same click and he sent a note and with a check and
2:54:05
approve it. I can shake that piece of paper. Yes. It's been a
2:54:09
while since I've donated so please deduce me.
2:54:13
Unknown: You You've been deep deuced
2:54:15
John C Dvorak: I'm sharing some of the year in treasure provided
2:54:19
to me by my employer. I appreciate all the hard work
2:54:22
that goes into each show. Please provide some dog karma for all
2:54:29
All right.
2:54:39
Adam Curry: We move on do chap Williams. Also in the 333 dot 33
2:54:43
club. No note that I've seen so we'll give him a double up
2:54:46
karma. You've got karma
2:54:53
John C Dvorak: it's your farmer Todd from Wellsboro Pennsylvania
2:54:56
333. Not to 33 the other day While I was playing he writes
2:55:01
the other day while I was playing royal match, I won 33
2:55:05
golden coins. I knew it was time to donate again. Also starting
2:55:09
today the NC double a wrestling tourney begins 10 brackets with
2:55:14
33 men per bracket.
2:55:16
Adam Curry: Oh no.
2:55:17
John C Dvorak: Penn State will win again. By the way. Cheers
2:55:20
sir farmer Todd.
2:55:21
Adam Curry: Thank you, Farmer Todd. You've been around for a
2:55:23
long time sir. Farmer Todd Todd has Geoffrey Weber or WebVR Oh
2:55:27
Saj in Iowa 263 dot 22 And he doesn't have a note so we give
2:55:34
him a double up karma. You've got karma and next on the list
2:55:42
from the country of the Netherlands vi Finnegan to be
2:55:47
exact yup a Franca $210.60 Also no notes so I double up karma
2:55:52
for you. Yep. You've got karma
2:55:59
John C Dvorak: we're gonna jump one and go to Linda Lou patcon
2:56:01
and Lakewood Colorado 200 bucks jobs karma she wants her resume
2:56:05
she mentions that gets results she must be doing well with this
2:56:10
Go to Image makers inc.com with a k for all your executive and
2:56:14
resume job search needs. That's image makers Inc with the K K.
2:56:19
Or find Linda IUPAC and Duchess of jobs and writer of resumes on
2:56:22
the producer list jobs,
2:56:24
Unknown: jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs.
2:56:32
Adam Curry: Also coming in well, this is 201 dot 33 to 30 threes
2:56:36
are everywhere today. Gigawatt Coffee Roasters from Bensenville
2:56:40
Illinois and gigawatt says Spring is here. And for that,
2:56:44
can I get a little girl yay and a Boom shakalaka. For producers
2:56:51
looking to enjoy a crisp spring morning with a fine cup of
2:56:54
coffee visit gigawatt coffee roasters.com and use code ITM 20
2:56:59
at checkout for 20% discount on your first order. Stay
2:57:01
caffeinated says Eli the coffee guy. Thank you brother.
2:57:05
John C Dvorak: Sir Chauncey in New York City. $200 ITM Jensen
2:57:09
sir Chauncey of the nether world and ITM to the folks of the New
2:57:13
York City meetup. Can we get our fears freedom and some jobs
2:57:16
karma Thank you much. Freedom
2:57:27
Unknown: this world
2:57:34
Adam Curry: jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Man, I haven't heard the
2:57:43
marching pigs fierce freedom in a long time. glad someone
2:57:46
requested that again. And our final Associate Executive
2:57:50
Producers Ethan rangka rancor I'm gonna say Overland Park,
2:57:53
Kansas. 200 Thank you for all the work ranky No, that's what
2:57:59
you think. So I'm thinking ranky thank you for all the work you
2:58:03
both do. I'm long past due to start my journey to knighthood.
2:58:06
I've been listening to no agenda since 2020. And the value
2:58:09
received far exceeds what has been donated now if this what
2:58:13
you can donate then it is right on the money. I came for Adam. I
2:58:18
stayed for John. No jingle He's a dirty yo man doo doo doo doo
2:58:26
doo, no jingles but could use some marriage and house buying
2:58:29
karma? Well, we'll hand that to you. Thank you for your karma.
2:58:34
And that does wrap up our executive and Associate
2:58:37
Executive Producer for episode 16 144. We are just rocking
2:58:42
along with the numbers. We want to thank everybody in advance
2:58:45
who comes in under $50. We we noticed by the way, John, you
2:58:50
had some the like the 5133. Somehow if someone does 4999 and
2:58:57
pays for the fees, then it hits up above the fifth. Oh, that's
2:59:01
interesting. Yeah, that may not be what they want. So people
2:59:05
well, they shouldn't do it. That's what I'm thinking to. We
2:59:08
appreciate all those people, of course, and everyone who's on
2:59:11
sustaining donations, which you can find that no agenda
2:59:14
donations.com Divorce act.org/and A for your old
2:59:17
schoolers. And take a look and you can see exactly how you can
2:59:21
support the show. Ongoing and John's going to take us through
2:59:25
to the 50s
2:59:27
John C Dvorak: starting with Nathan Cochran in Franklin,
2:59:29
Tennessee. 12345
2:59:31
Adam Curry: He's a knight. He's nickname you mentioned your
2:59:34
night name next time Nathan.
2:59:36
John C Dvorak: Put it in the notes. Yes, please do. Yeah, we
2:59:38
had somebody complaining bitterly. But they didn't put it
2:59:42
in the notes. Belinda could we don't remember these things off
2:59:45
the top of our head. There's 1000 nights that we just can't.
2:59:48
We're not that bright. The Linda? Sure writers.
2:59:53
Adam Curry: I think Shriners destroyers that's
2:59:55
John C Dvorak: a good way to pronounce it. In Devon meadows,
2:59:58
Australia. One 12345 Dan melee melee melee in Fremont,
3:00:05
California 113 And now we have a long note from Greg speed who is
3:00:12
Ashlynn speeds dad and Mansfield Texas 106 41
3:00:16
Adam Curry: I don't mind reading this real quick because she is
3:00:18
probably read it the no agenda racing team no agenda logo
3:00:21
displayed proudly on her car this weekend as Ashlynn speeds
3:00:24
first race in the F 1600 with team race dog I think she did a
3:00:31
track record with that car which is she doesn't own the car but
3:00:35
she's driver for it and
3:00:36
John C Dvorak: she did fast she's very fast as the name
3:00:39
speed the official no
3:00:41
Adam Curry: agenda racer has been signed for the year. Yeah,
3:00:43
there's a good news I hit the team owner in the mouth and he's
3:00:46
letting us put the no agenda logo on the new car. This is
3:00:49
awesome. I said it awesome. Any no agenda producers in the
3:00:53
Dallas Fort Worth area should come out to the gorgeous Eagles
3:00:56
Canyon Raceway in Decatur to see a race and visit us in the upper
3:01:00
pits. If you announced yourself with an in the morning. We'll
3:01:03
know you're not some weirdo Hey, this is like an invitation to
3:01:06
the pits man or just the opposite. Check our socials for
3:01:10
the full schedule at Ashland with a why Ashlynn speed. She
3:01:14
races at 330 on Saturday and three o'clock on Sunday but come
3:01:17
out early to hang out admission is free bar and grill on site
3:01:21
we'll even let your kiddos oops your kid sit in the car and take
3:01:24
a picture Oh and please let Linda do Pat can know that an
3:01:27
image makers Inc logo would look really good on the side of the
3:01:30
race car. Love you guys and he says Could I just have a just
3:01:35
send your cash from George Bush I know a
3:01:36
Unknown: lot of people want to send blankets or water just send
3:01:40
your cash very
3:01:41
Adam Curry: expensive to be in the racing business we're very
3:01:44
proud to
3:01:45
John C Dvorak: be a part of Ashley's storage costs money and
3:01:47
they fall apart and
3:01:49
Adam Curry: we're proud to be a part of her story so beautiful.
3:01:51
You know, I can see her one day on the podium Indy if not Indy
3:01:58
f1 And
3:02:00
John C Dvorak: then mentioning no agenda because these racers
3:02:02
are trained to dimension every sponsor their car name before
3:02:06
they even say hello exactly if you ever listened to one of them
3:02:10
I don't know yeah all the document bla bla bla bla I can't
3:02:12
even do it. How would they do it? Oh, we got to know how well
3:02:15
they do it. I'm
3:02:16
Adam Curry: sorry. I just got a message Fletcher on the fly.
3:02:23
Nice one. Fletch can do it.
3:02:26
John C Dvorak: Brian Lillard and prosper Texas eight eight a
3:02:29
Kevin McLaughlin Arias 808 1644 Boob donation nice boy. Okay.
3:02:37
Brandel Myers in Gainesville, Virginia. 808. He donate because
3:02:43
of the sad puppy which continues. Cat Morton in
3:02:46
Charlotte, North Carolina. 7450. has got a birthday. We got it.
3:02:52
We got it. Alexander McMahan and Castlegar cast cast Castlegar
3:02:59
busisiwe Not sure. Which is $7.26
3:03:05
Adam Curry: Which is? Yeah, it's $85 $5
3:03:08
John C Dvorak: but it's from them Canadian.
3:03:10
Adam Curry: It's from the mountains and rivers meet up to
3:03:12
support the show and save Alan Lawton from being a douchebag
3:03:17
you've been de deuced
3:03:20
John C Dvorak: sir Rick in Arlington, Washington 6996
3:03:24
Brynn. Bucky MA in Seattle. 6969 Dudes, Sir Chris Abraham in
3:03:33
Arlington, Virginia 6363 Not a spooks
3:03:41
Adam Curry: comes in handy today
3:03:43
John C Dvorak: is Sir Kevin O'Brien in Chicago, Illinois.
3:03:47
606. Less a tar kowski in Kingman Arizona. 58. Preston
3:03:54
Isaacson 5623 Dean Roker 55 fan, Greg O'Neill, who's got a
3:04:01
birthday for somebody. He's a D douching 510 You've been D
3:04:07
deuced. He's 510. So he's in moss at 5326. Andrew bends in
3:04:15
Imperial Missouri 5005 And now we get to the 50s and there's a
3:04:18
bunch of them, including our we mentioned earlier. Our our
3:04:24
knighting. Of of Gramps. Yes. And we talked we discussed that
3:04:29
so that is a donation from unfortunate blows up my
3:04:32
spreadsheets. Ryan Ryan
3:04:35
Adam Curry: Norton, and he just wanted us to mention his hit sir
3:04:39
Hagen's Instagram page which is still up quarantine underscore
3:04:43
chats underscore with underscore gramps or search for Richard
3:04:47
Higgins Pearl Harbor survivor on YouTube as a lot of stories
3:04:51
there. Apparently Yeah, good.
3:04:53
John C Dvorak: Nicholas rudder which in Harpers Ferry, West
3:04:56
Virginia, Christopher Hodges in Union In Mississippi,
3:05:02
Adam Curry: here's oh you skipped a whole bunch at the
3:05:04
top.
3:05:06
John C Dvorak: I don't have any bugs. This spreadsheet is nuts
3:05:08
Andrew periodo
3:05:10
Adam Curry: Missouri Scott lavender Montgomery, Texas Cory
3:05:12
Bennett, Denver, Colorado gadget free 10 Western Springs
3:05:16
Illinois. Luke Olsen, Alexandria, Virginia Chris
3:05:19
Cowan, austin texas Andrew gusik. Think that sir
3:05:23
Greensboro, North Carolina, Matt Illingworth in Montclair, New
3:05:27
Jersey, my childhood Cynthia Kirk, from places Ville
3:05:31
California and she wants a dee doo dee doo deuced
3:05:38
John C Dvorak: did you get gadget freak I did. Okay Nicolas
3:05:44
are ready which Christopher Hodges and union Mississippi and
3:05:49
we got it back to Ethan Ryan Nikki a Ranchi Ranchi Ranchi in
3:05:54
Overland Park Kansas. This is another this is another Matt
3:05:59
Hagen pickin bottom for the D douching. and executive producer
3:06:05
ship and show 1628 wants to thank him.
3:06:08
Unknown: You've been deep deuced because
3:06:12
John C Dvorak: everybody gets deep, everyone gets a D
3:06:14
douching. Today you get a D douchey. Yo get a D douching.
3:06:18
And Alan being in Beaverton, Oregon is back. 50 Dan and Tracy
3:06:24
Sullivan in Tinley Park, Illinois and Leanne Shipley in
3:06:28
Covington, Washington and last on our list. Not a really big
3:06:32
list actually. But it's good. Oh, sorry, Jerry wing and Roth
3:06:37
in Saugus California want to thank these people for helping
3:06:41
get show 1644 off the ground and produced
3:06:45
Adam Curry: and thank you again to everyone who came in under
3:06:48
the $50 Thank you again to our executive and Associate
3:06:51
Executive producers for episode 1644 You really brought it home
3:06:54
we appreciate you thank you for support that no agenda show our
3:06:58
formula is this we go out but yet people in the mouth
3:07:14
become a producer and no agenda donations.com
3:07:24
don't want to be induced by we have one title change today
3:07:27
which we'd like to hit right off the bat sir Jeff has donated an
3:07:31
additional amount of $1,000 all put together and so today he
3:07:36
becomes sir Jeff Baron of Pennsylvania route 33 And he has
3:07:40
that new parcel of land under his projected we thank you very
3:07:43
much sir.
3:07:51
Here is our birthday list. Remember we don't actually have
3:07:53
a calendar or list you got to email us evening before the show
3:07:56
so you can get on the list or Andy says Happy Birthday Dame
3:07:59
Kylie have the double D cups as he turned 50 Yesterday. Michel
3:08:04
Reeves Happy Birthday to Winnie Reaves, his daughter she turns
3:08:07
to today, Greg O'Neill turned 46 Today Dave bass or wishes his
3:08:12
daughter Sarah a very happy one. She turned 16 Sweet 16 tomorrow
3:08:17
Good luck with that Dave got Morton turns 50 on March 23
3:08:21
Thank you very much and Dave bass or wishes his son Joshua
3:08:24
Happy birthday he turns 25 on March 24 They go Happy Birthday
3:08:28
if everybody here the best podcast in the universe. And we
3:08:33
do have one kind of one knighting so I have my one night
3:08:36
blade out there you go. Wow. Oh sorry. I cut myself Brian, here
3:08:43
we go Brian. Where would you brother prayers are up you're on
3:08:46
the list. Thanks to the support you receive from your family we
3:08:51
are very proud to pronounce the cake to you and welcome to the
3:08:54
roundtable sir turbo Brian have the infamous compliments Welcome
3:08:58
to the roundtable the no agenda nights and days for you sir we
3:09:02
have hookers and blow Ren boys and Chardonnay but also by
3:09:05
requesting so rare it only has a chance to look at the evidence
3:09:08
here before being served and a Mountain Dew. Along with that
3:09:12
you may enjoy some bong hits and bourbon sparkling cider escort
3:09:15
ginger ale and Jerboas breast milk and pablum Gates's and Saki
3:09:18
vaca Manila Rubenesque women and Rosie and of course the mutton
3:09:22
and Mead and we'll get a ring to you if you head over to no
3:09:26
agenda rings.com Give us your ring size and a n address to
3:09:30
send that to we're happy to do that. And we will get that out
3:09:34
to you along with the wax to seal your important
3:09:36
correspondence and of course our certificate of Athens of
3:09:39
authenticity. And welcome to the roundtable and thank you very
3:09:42
much for supporting the no agenda Show Time now for our
3:09:45
meetups.
3:09:53
We got a big party going on the Rosie the Riveter day Denver
3:09:57
meetup starts at 630 Mountain Time at Lincoln Is Roadhouse in
3:10:00
Denver, Colorado that's today. Also this is the third
3:10:03
anniversary of the Charlotte's thirsty third through third
3:10:06
Thursday of the month. One day I'll get it right was funnier
3:10:10
when my teeth fell out doing that seven o'clock and Ed's
3:10:12
Tavern in Charlotte, North Carolina is a bunch of good
3:10:15
people over there. Tomorrow the gateway to the MO gateway to the
3:10:20
MO St. Louis finest meetup. So there's the Missouri St. Louis
3:10:23
meetup, Venice Cafe St. Louis, Missouri. On Saturday, the OKC
3:10:28
UI Hui Southside meet up two o'clock at the garage on i 240.
3:10:32
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Central Ohio. You're at St. Patty's
3:10:37
rebound. 330 at Dempsey's Columbus, Ohio on Saturday, all
3:10:41
aboard the flight of the no agenda. This is the 50th meetup
3:10:44
that Leo Bravo has done. In California. It's at the Santa Fe
3:10:48
cafe in Fullerton, California. join him that'll be a big
3:10:51
celebration. 3:33pm And finally, on Saturday, the ninth northwest
3:10:56
Houston meet up at 530 at Wakefield crowbar, Houston,
3:10:59
Texas still to come. In the month of March we have vaca
3:11:03
winning in the Netherlands on a 26th Alpharetta, Georgia on the
3:11:06
28th Osaka, Japan on the 30th Reno, Nevada, Nevada on the 30th
3:11:13
see what else? Nevada, Nevada it's Nevada isn't Nevada,
3:11:18
Nevada, Nevada, Nevada. They confused me. Me me me confused
3:11:23
me putting Nevada on the outdoors Nevada, Nevada. I got
3:11:28
it. Those are the meetups you need to be at one this is truly
3:11:33
the only way to get through these times. Then the times that
3:11:37
are to come because you'll all have these different
3:11:40
capabilities and all these different resources and when you
3:11:44
put them all together you have a community that will save itself
3:11:47
no matter what comes down the pike you cannot spell community
3:11:50
without unity it's always a party and if you go to a meet up
3:11:53
guaranteed connection which gives you protection no agenda
3:11:56
meetups.com If you can't find one there start one yourself it
3:12:00
is easy
3:12:01
Unknown: to go hang out with Tyson day. You will be triggered
3:12:10
all you want to say is like
3:12:21
Adam Curry: I have way too many ISOs way too many. So
3:12:26
John C Dvorak: start go get started. Tick tock tick tock
3:12:29
tick tock tick tock tick tock.
3:12:32
Adam Curry: No, that doesn't work does it? How about this
3:12:35
one? Yay. I kinda like that one myself is cute.
3:12:40
Unknown: He has a podcast stone him there. I
3:12:42
Adam Curry: thought that was kind of fun. I
3:12:44
John C Dvorak: liked that one. And is there a podcast or on the
3:12:46
play?
3:12:46
Adam Curry: I mean this I got some good ones there
3:12:51
John C Dvorak: are many more. No, that's
3:12:52
Adam Curry: it. That's that's all I have.
3:12:54
John C Dvorak: You said you had a plenty of that was five. All
3:12:59
right, I got to get much better. Let's try freedom. Freedom.
3:13:05
Unknown: When freedom calls. We're here to answer.
3:13:07
Adam Curry: Not too much noise.
3:13:09
John C Dvorak: Which noise seasonal. Seasonal Depression is
3:13:13
real. Thanks for your time. Thank you so much for your time.
3:13:20
Adam Curry: I think I really liked as a pod. I don't know.
3:13:23
I'd like this one. Yay.
3:13:26
John C Dvorak: I'd like to know I don't like that one. He
3:13:27
Unknown: has a podcast stone him
3:13:29
John C Dvorak: about that when I'll take
3:13:31
Adam Curry: his podcasts, don't him. So that's how low we've
3:13:35
gotten. That's how low it is. Okay, I'm a little behind on the
3:13:40
on the production here. So let's hit this. Good. Good news. Good
3:13:45
news. Good good news. Good news. I saw on the Macedon people
3:13:49
complaining that the good news seven that's not good news to
3:13:52
catch on. Now they're complaining about what about the
3:13:55
good news segment they think is still like the good news. No,
3:13:58
they think that they can do better good news. Send it
3:14:00
ultimately. Yeah.
3:14:01
John C Dvorak: I got one. I got one. Here's an example. I think
3:14:04
we I can do better and they sent me a seven minute clip. They
3:14:09
don't have good news if you want to sit through seven minutes.
3:14:13
Adam Curry: That's not good. That's bad news.
3:14:16
John C Dvorak: I agree.
3:14:17
Adam Curry: What do you have for today?
3:14:18
John C Dvorak: I mean, I can cut them down. I'll cut them from
3:14:20
two minutes to two minute 50 But I can't cut down seven minutes.
3:14:24
Adam Curry: No, no, no, that's not good news. That's bad news.
3:14:27
We like good news. Particularly if it makes you feel good at the
3:14:30
end of the show. You just want you got a warm feeling like you
3:14:33
slid out of the no agenda show into a nice bubble bath. What
3:14:36
Yeah,
3:14:37
John C Dvorak: this is an under two minute clip. I've been
3:14:40
rescued pit bull, pathetic story to found and this is a great
3:14:45
good news story.
3:14:48
Unknown: After 587 days living in a kennel Chester the pit bull
3:14:53
finally walks out of the Euclid Animal Shelter Monday morning to
3:14:57
cheers and tears. It's been a tough road Hold for Chester
3:15:00
before and during his time here, but he now has a new leash on
3:15:05
life. Chester
3:15:07
was completely strong bones. The dog couldn't even lay down. He
3:15:11
had his paws stuck in a prong collar and he was he was nice.
3:15:15
There's a nice he had to be carried out after a little bit
3:15:18
because he could not stand August 2022
3:15:21
Chester who was chained to a window, and three other dogs
3:15:25
were found in a vacant house where they had been for more
3:15:28
than a week.
3:15:29
He absolutely was so relieved to see people. And to be honest, I
3:15:34
don't know how much longer he will have lasted
3:15:36
for about 10 months shelter workers treated him for
3:15:39
heartworm and mange and helped him gain weight. A year and a
3:15:43
half went by, and no one adopted him until a special woman came
3:15:48
along. And now Chester is on his way to his forever home in a
3:15:53
limousine donated by Lake Erie lemme minutes later, Chester
3:15:59
about four or five years old, pulls up to his new home and his
3:16:03
new family in North Royalton like a VIP.
3:16:12
It was love at first sight for Lauren Reisman, when a friend
3:16:15
sent her an online post of justice
3:16:17
here, he has all these people around him and he's just bopping
3:16:20
around to see who he can get love from, you know, so I just,
3:16:24
I think I won the lottery. So I think adoption is so important,
3:16:31
especially when an animal and animals had a really rough
3:16:37
start. Because they deserve it even more
3:16:42
in North Royalton Kevin Freeman, Fox eight news.
3:16:46
Adam Curry: This is what we are good at in America. This is what
3:16:48
this is what we do people. We make good news stories that make
3:16:52
you choke up. We get local commerce involve the limo, and
3:16:58
we adopt pets people were good people. This is good news, John.
3:17:02
Well done. News, everyone. I'm feeling good after that. How
3:17:09
about you? Well, you should I feel I feel like dynamite.
3:17:13
Dynamite Very good. Hey, we've got some cool, very funny end of
3:17:18
show mixes Professor J. Jones checks in from China. We got
3:17:22
Stephen Jacobson and our are our brother. Lee Oh le puke two in a
3:17:29
row. This week's good man Lee hola pupae you are rocking it
3:17:32
man. Coming right up on the stream troll room.io or any of
3:17:40
the modern podcast apps if you're listening there. We have
3:17:45
rare encounter. The family grenade is the title of the
3:17:50
episode. Well, that promise is something we are looking forward
3:17:55
to all the traffic coming into Fredericksburg for the big
3:17:58
Eclipse is just a couple of weeks away. It's getting
3:18:01
exciting. California RVs are showing up as we speak. Coming
3:18:06
to you from the heart of the Texas go crunchy Fredericksburg,
3:18:09
Texas femur region number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam
3:18:13
curry. Nan
3:18:15
John C Dvorak: from rather Silicon Valley where I'm not
3:18:16
going to Fredericksburg. I'm Josie DeVore I know
3:18:20
Adam Curry: we don't let dirty old men and that's a whole
3:18:22
different story. Remember us that no agenda donations.com
3:18:25
until Sunday, adios mofos or Hui Hui, and such
3:18:33
Unknown: a rap you want to start with?
3:18:35
Let's start with the rat as
3:18:36
New York's rat problem gets worse by the day. Oh what is
3:18:41
that amazing.
3:18:43
Adam Curry: Rat grilling in New York City is getting more
3:18:46
popular with migrants your Demolition Man and people are
3:18:49
living underground they were eating rats all right, Gordon
3:18:52
you at the rat burger.
3:18:53
Unknown: Oh, I want to forget to get one as New
3:18:55
Adam Curry: York's rat problem gets worse by the day. Then he
3:18:58
lived on rat meat for a year and a half Demolition Man was the
3:19:01
prophecy. We've got an
3:19:02
John C Dvorak: apple brown rotting, ordered dessert. Come
3:19:05
on during the French Revolution a bunch of rat recipes showed up
3:19:08
in the in the market and people were eating rats in France. You
3:19:11
want to start with
3:19:12
Adam Curry: a wrap around your pot water desert this is kind of
3:19:14
solves a couple of problems. Just don't ask where the meat
3:19:17
comes
3:19:24
Unknown: there's one thing about living is he does not know how
3:19:27
properly to cook racks. This is a rubber.
3:19:30
Adam Curry: I'm not kind of liking this. Now. Let's start
3:19:32
with the rat but I'm not a rat.
3:19:35
Unknown: And they gave their recipes and told what line you
3:19:38
should have with it and everything and it's quite true.
3:19:40
I really don't know wrong your pop
3:19:42
Adam Curry: rat grilling in New York City is getting more
3:19:44
popular with migrants.
3:19:46
Unknown: Just don't ask where the meat comes from. One of the
3:19:48
things that I'm not a rep.
3:19:50
Adam Curry: I'm not kind of liking this now. But then I hear
3:19:53
this. These things take time to build up in my
3:19:56
Unknown: sphere, or memory whatever the memories Seeing the
3:20:00
router. Oh, it went awesome came back on what is this? I got
3:20:06
rebooting the router
3:20:08
John C Dvorak: works fine now. I got bufferbloat rebooting the
3:20:13
router works fine now you've got
3:20:15
Adam Curry: to jiggle the handle every 21 days
3:20:18
John C Dvorak: what what was going on that it wasn't working.
3:20:21
You know the routers going every day and then all of a sudden you
3:20:24
got a reboot. Reboot. You always said that
3:20:27
Unknown: sometimes. reboot the router was recalled and
3:20:36
John C Dvorak: all that. We don't know what it was. Though
3:20:40
it was helping every time. We
3:20:42
Adam Curry: want to find a 787. Okay, the show is important, not
3:20:46
that important.
3:20:56
Unknown: Now if I don't get elected, it's going to be a
3:20:58
bloodbath. It's going to be a bloodbath. So the customer
3:21:05
Yes, it was in the context of an automobile industry speech, but
3:21:09
he knew exactly what he
3:21:12
was talking about the auto industry and this is why it's
3:21:15
just full. He knew what he was doing. He was talking about a
3:21:20
bloodbath. Sometimes a bloodbath means a bloodbath
3:21:24
is clear what he meant. There'll be
3:21:27
three headlines calling it a quote, bloodbath,
3:21:30
bloodbath. Not only is it going to
3:21:32
be a bloodbath, but after they leave New Hampshire, it's a
3:21:34
bloodbath on her home turf, has left
3:21:36
a lot of corpses in his wake. I
3:21:38
mean, we haven't counted the bodies and the headlines refers
3:21:40
to it as an impending bloodbath. 2018
3:21:42
midterms In fact, the word bloodbath and massacre come up
3:21:46
frequently, it's
3:21:47
going to be a bloodbath, there's going to be
3:21:48
a bloodbath. It's been a bloodbath, they're shaping up to
3:21:51
be a bloodbath,
3:21:52
head off a bloodbath and next year crucial midterm
3:21:56
elections are often a bloodbath. The Babylon be had a great
3:22:00
headline media reports Trump threatened nuclear war after he
3:22:03
says this guacamole is the
3:22:09
bloody flood control exactly what people think and that is
3:22:15
that is your job
3:22:24
mofo vo vorak.org/in A Yes a podcast stone him
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