Episode Transcript
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0:00
This is an outrage. Adam
0:02
Curry,
0:02
John C. Dvorak. It's Sunday, June 25, 2023. This
0:06
is your award-winning Gilmore Nation Media Assassination
0:08
Episode 1567. This is
0:11
no agenda. Exposing
0:14
all the ops and broadcasting live
0:16
from the heart of the Texas hill country here in FEMA Region
0:18
No. 6. In the morning, everybody. I'm
0:20
Adam Curry. And from Northern
0:22
Silicon Valley, I'm fogged
0:25
in. I'm John C. Dvorak. It's
0:28
Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the morning.
0:32
It's early. It's supposed to be July 4th
0:34
when you get fogged in. This is too early. It's
0:36
come too early, the fog. The whole month of June
0:38
has been July 4th. In
0:41
more ways than one, I hear, there in California.
0:44
Yeah.
0:46
Wow, man. It's just op
0:49
after op after cover up after
0:51
cover up. It's what a day
0:53
to be alive. What a day to be a podcaster.
0:56
What a day to spot the spook. Oh,
0:59
man. I didn't actually expect
1:01
you to say that one. Oh, by
1:03
the way, did you get the bonus clip? Oh, hold on a second.
1:06
There's a bonus clip? Let me check
1:08
the bonus clip. There was a 2000... That's
1:11
not it.
1:12
This is the... Spot
1:15
the spook. Spot the
1:17
spook. Everybody
1:20
wants to spot the spook. Yeah.
1:24
Can I play my spook clip right off the bat then while
1:26
I download your bonus clip? Yes,
1:28
please. Richard Engel, NBC. Most
1:32
Americans know Pragosin from the disinformation
1:35
on their social media feeds. He founded
1:37
a bot farm, the Internet Research
1:39
Agency, that according to the Justice Department,
1:42
sowed doubts about the legitimacy of the 2016 election,
1:46
highlighted racial tensions in the United States,
1:49
and promoted Donald Trump. In 2022,
1:53
Pragosin reinvented himself
1:55
again into a commander of a
1:57
mercenary
1:58
army, the Wagner Group.
1:59
supplementing Russian troops
2:02
in Ukraine, which were failing on the battlefield.
2:05
He recruited thousands of convicts, promising
2:07
pardons in exchange for frontline
2:10
service. Thousands were sent to
2:12
their deaths, and according to the few who
2:14
managed to escape, they were shot
2:16
if they attempted to retreat. But with
2:18
money, power, and an armed
2:20
force, Progozan has made enemies.
2:23
He accuses Russia's defense minister
2:25
and army chief driven by jealousy
2:28
and treason of denying Wagner
2:29
fighters ammunition.
2:32
And now, he wants revenge. Oh
2:34
yeah. After one of the most dramatic days
2:36
in Russia in decades, Progozan
2:38
reportedly agreed to some sort
2:40
of exile in Belarus. But
2:43
why? Was it his only way to survive
2:45
and keep his lucrative businesses
2:48
in Africa? Or is he
2:50
just biding time? It's
2:52
hard to believe this murky power
2:54
struggle is over. It's hard
2:56
to believe this
2:58
murky story you're throwing up
3:00
is far from over. Wow.
3:03
You know, we didn't hear much about him. We
3:05
didn't hear Wagner group when it was the bot farm.
3:08
They weren't saying Wagner group then at all. At
3:10
all. Never. Never. Not
3:13
once it was. In fact, they had other names for the bot farm. Yeah. But
3:16
now all of a sudden, this guy, he
3:18
looks like a computer genius, by the way,
3:20
when you see him. Total
3:22
nerd. See him sitting around
3:24
in Africa, you know, in the mines going, I
3:26
know what I'm going to do. I'm going to help
3:28
Donald Trump.
3:31
With bots.
3:32
No, I mean, we were driving. We
3:35
went to Austin Friday night, met some friends from Dallas,
3:38
a boy from Jersey and his wife, Vic and
3:40
Chris.
3:41
And we went to Rogan's Club.
3:43
Ari, what's it? Ari,
3:46
Ari, the self-deprecating Jew, comedian.
3:49
Very funny. On the way home, you know,
3:52
like in the morning, Saturday, I just listened
3:54
to the news. Wow, man.
3:57
And who popped up? Jane
3:59
Harmon. haven't heard Jane
4:01
Harmon in years. Do we remember
4:04
Jane Harmon? Yes, she was a
4:08
congresswoman or something from Southern California
4:10
and she was a spook. Well,
4:12
and she worked for the Wilson
4:14
Center.
4:16
That's what she is now, I think. Well, she's president
4:18
emeritus. She was the president of the Wilson
4:20
Center after she left Congress
4:23
and and so you sent me a link
4:25
to, I'll read the headline,
4:28
what does Pergosian's Mutiny Mean for Putin
4:30
written by Lucian Kim
4:32
of the Wilson Center. We
4:35
haven't heard from these guys for years and
4:37
now this is not coincidence. When
4:40
this happens and we get Richard Engel out,
4:42
you know there's something up. First
4:47
of all, let's talk a little bit about Lucian. You
4:49
know, I think our consulting
4:51
group could probably do some work for
4:54
the agency. I mean, we're willing,
4:56
we're open to it. So
4:58
they have this, so the linked in
5:00
accounts
5:06
of 90% of the CIA
5:09
people are trying to kind
5:12
of hide a little bit or not be check
5:14
mark CIA.
5:19
First of all, they should just have
5:21
a check mark that actually has a little CIA emblem
5:24
in there that should just be, you know, part of part
5:26
of your your profile.
5:28
First of all, just a couple of tips.
5:30
If you got over 500 connections, put
5:32
a photograph up. Right. Your
5:35
photograph is gonna be around somewhere anyway. Put
5:37
a simple photograph up, just you wearing a Dodgers
5:40
cap. Anything. Just
5:42
to put a photo of people. Come on. Just some
5:44
photo and then don't have
5:47
ever, don't show off that, oh I've been
5:49
here, I've been there, I've been Berlin, I've been
5:51
in Afghanistan. I mean, first of all,
5:53
when you've been in Berlin, Afghanistan, this,
5:56
that and the other and then you come and then
5:58
in the checkbox killer.
5:59
that particular guy.
6:03
Graduate School of Journalism
6:05
Berkeley. Oh, bing, bing. That's where
6:07
Ling Ling and Ding Dong and the women, the
6:09
people that were caught in Iran and all the rest
6:11
of them are all from that school. Ling
6:14
Ling and Ding Dong. This is a show title. Hold
6:16
on a second. Oh
6:19
my goodness. You know, so there were
6:21
a couple other things that happened. You know, I've been before we
6:24
get deep into this. And by the way, people, we're gonna we're
6:26
gonna help you understand exactly what's going
6:28
on here because it's,
6:30
it's, I mean, it's, it's
6:32
part cover up. It's part up. It's
6:34
part, I mean, it's a lot of different pieces going but
6:37
still or just wrapped up now
6:39
in Europe is that Ukraine recovery
6:42
conference where they're figuring out, you
6:44
know, okay, who's gonna get
6:47
what who's gonna get you know, the good
6:49
land. In fact, there was a Mick
6:52
Wallace, member of European
6:55
Parliament. I think he's from an Irish party. He's
6:58
he was speaking in in the European
7:00
Parliament. They cut him off. He was making
7:02
so much sense. Listen to this. The damage to
7:04
Ukraine is devastating. towns
7:07
and cities that endured for hundreds of years don't
7:09
exist anymore. We must
7:11
recognize that these towns, cities and surrounding
7:13
lands were long been stolen
7:15
by local oligarchs colluding with global financial
7:18
capital. This have quickened
7:20
with the onset of the war in 2014. The
7:23
pro western government opened the doors wide
7:25
for massive structural adjustment and privatization
7:27
programs spearheaded by
7:30
the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the
7:32
IMF and the World Bank. Zelensky
7:35
used the current war to concentrate power and
7:37
accelerate the corporate fire
7:39
sale. He banned opposition parties
7:42
that were resisting deeply unpopular reforms
7:44
to the laws restricting the sale of land to
7:46
foreign investors. Over 3 million
7:49
hectares of agricultural land are
7:51
now owned by companies based in western
7:54
tax havens. Ukraine's
7:56
middle deposits alone are worth over $12 trillion.
7:59
Western companies are licking their
8:02
lips. What are the working-class
8:04
people up? Oh, shut up! Shut
8:06
up! Shut up! Cut his mic!
8:09
Hey, make sure you have a Ukrainian flag in your
8:11
profile, because that's what you're supporting.
8:14
The Western corporations licking their lips.
8:16
So this lick-lipping is happening
8:19
or it just... I might as well have a Cargill logo.
8:21
Yeah, right. So this lick-lipping
8:24
was taking place in London. And
8:28
now...
8:29
This was just a coincidence. That's why I
8:31
kept this clip very short.
8:34
Remember what the Pentagon just announced this past
8:36
week? Well,
8:40
remind me. That they... Another
8:42
accounting error. Oh, yes, the
8:44
sick... The additional... These
8:47
are not small errors. Six plus
8:49
billion dollars, somehow
8:52
off the books. I think it was 6.5
8:54
billion, if I'm not mistaken. Could
8:57
be. Well, imagine my surprise when I hear this report
8:59
from Deutsche Béla. Ukraine's Prime Minister says
9:01
that he's confident his country will receive the 6.5
9:04
billion dollars that it needs this year for
9:07
its rapid reconstruction program.
9:10
What?
9:12
What?
9:13
That can't be coincidence.
9:16
6.5 billion. 6.5 billion.
9:18
Yeah, he's confident
9:20
he'll receive that. Comes after
9:22
a conference in London where international donors
9:25
pledged billions more in non-military
9:27
aid to help rebuild Ukraine into weed-out
9:30
corruption. Keith says that recovering
9:32
from Russia's invasion will be the largest
9:35
reconstruction project in Europe since
9:37
the Second World War. And that Russia
9:40
should pay for. Okay, so this is my
9:42
favorite. I should say, by the way, is
9:44
Mexico going to pay for the wall? Hey,
9:46
hey, don't... Stop, stop...
9:48
Colluding, convoluted things. Just
9:51
because I called this and I've been hounding
9:53
it, doesn't mean you can weaken me.
9:55
Speaking of weakening, let's just
9:57
review... powerhouse
10:01
of Europe since World War II,
10:03
as they keep discussing here. This will be the 400
10:06
billion. It's what it took to rebuild Berlin
10:08
after the Second World War.
10:11
Huh. So Germany was this industrial
10:13
powerhouse. The French hate the Germans.
10:15
The Germans hate the French. This is why they always go to
10:17
war together.
10:18
And this time the French kept
10:20
most of their nuclear plants and
10:23
sigh up the Germans. Shut them down.
10:25
And you're giving. Shut them down.
10:28
It'll be good. We'll get you some solar panels
10:30
and some windmills. Now Germany is
10:32
completely obliterated as an
10:34
industrial force. Screwed over. Screwed
10:36
over. Now I think they're going to rebuild
10:39
Ukraine into obviously an agrarian
10:42
superpower, but also probably
10:44
industrial. It's gonna be a great tax haven
10:46
for everybody and they have definitely
10:49
agreed who's gonna pay for it. Remember they need 400
10:52
billion dollars.
10:53
That won't be enough of course, but that's what they're talking
10:55
about. And I had to go to Turkish radio
10:57
television to get the real wrap-up
11:00
of the Ukraine recovery conference in London.
11:02
The World Bank says rebuilding Ukraine
11:04
will cost more than 400 billion
11:06
dollars. In London
11:09
a thousand delegates from over 60 countries
11:11
gathered to discuss how best to raise and
11:13
invest the money. Private sector
11:16
involvement is seen as crucial. Ukrainian
11:20
president Volodymyr Zelensky joined by
11:22
video link. His Prime
11:23
Minister Denis Shmeil spoke in person.
11:27
One of the key questions we are constantly
11:29
facing is who will pay
11:32
hundreds of billions for the
11:34
recovery. First and
11:36
foremost, Russia must
11:39
pay for what it has destroyed.
11:41
It
11:44
was a message repeated by many including
11:47
co-host UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
11:50
An estimated 300 billion
11:52
dollars worth of Russian assets have been
11:54
frozen worldwide. It's clear Russia
11:56
must pay for the destruction
11:59
that they've inflicted.
11:59
So we're working with allies
12:02
to explore lawful routes to
12:04
use Russian assets. And
12:06
on Monday we publish new legislation
12:08
to allow us to keep sanctions in place until
12:11
Russia pays up. The
12:14
EU will provide 55 billion dollars
12:16
for the next four years and promise
12:18
the recovery process will lead to EU
12:21
membership.
12:21
Republicans tell us that when
12:24
they imagine their future,
12:27
they see Europe's flag flying
12:30
over their cities. And I
12:32
have no doubt that Ukraine
12:34
will be part of our union.
12:37
Whenever a politician says I have
12:39
no doubt this is going to happen, it's not going to happen.
12:41
You know, it's not
12:44
going to happen.
12:45
So they're going to take 350
12:47
billion from Russia and 55 billion
12:49
from the EU equals 405 billion.
12:53
Done.
12:54
And that goes to all these companies setting up
12:56
shop because you know, recovery. Well, we need some assurances.
12:59
We need some money. Oh yeah, you need money.
13:01
It's a great heist. The number and six
13:03
and a half billion. Heist is the right word. And
13:06
six and a half billion that we just found by
13:08
some accounting error. That goes to Zelensky.
13:10
Oh, I
13:11
need six and a half billion. All right, here you go.
13:14
I mean, this this is so obvious.
13:16
And now, of course, we have to accelerate
13:19
it. So I'm going to play one
13:21
more short clip. I think you have some things to take us through
13:23
the back. Yeah, I mean, I was still
13:25
working on the Putin
13:27
fall of Putin stories, but you jumped
13:30
into the news news line of thinking
13:32
here. No, no, no. Now we're going to go into the
13:34
fall of Putin and I'll set you up. Russia
13:36
and turmoil, the Russian paramilitary
13:39
Wagner group turning his forces in
13:41
Ukraine around and then marching towards
13:44
Russia, calling for an armed rebellion
13:46
against the Kremlin's defense minister.
13:48
Yeah, a video posted online overnight
13:50
showing Russian armored vehicles on
13:52
the move in the key city of Rostovand on
13:54
this follows months of public feuding with
13:57
the U.S. Pragotian and Russia's military
13:59
leaders.
13:59
accusing them of failing to provide his troops
14:02
with enough ammunition during the battle for Bachmuth,
14:05
the Kremlin now accusing Progotion of
14:07
fomenting an armed rebellion.
14:09
It was fantastic this weekend.
14:11
They had Wolf Blitzer working on Saturday.
14:14
They had Christiana Annampur
14:17
with Obama. Everybody
14:19
was like, this was a bananas time. We're
14:22
going to do something. We're on the move. We're
14:25
on the move. Did you see the Obama thing?
14:27
It was kind of boring, but... No,
14:31
I didn't. Oh. You
14:33
have a good clip from it? Yeah, I do. It's
14:35
boring. It's boring. No, he's
14:37
boring. Go ahead. He's boring.
14:40
Let's hear what you got. Well, I picked
14:42
up... Well, I've got a series here, but
14:44
I picked up this morning. I couldn't resist.
14:47
I turned on the TV. I was eating breakfast.
14:50
Wait, stop. Stop. What did you
14:52
have for breakfast? I had
14:54
a pancake. Again? With
14:57
an egg? This was made with no
14:59
wheat, because weenies have been
15:02
wheatless. And it was actually quite
15:04
good. Well, the wheat is where everyone gets the
15:08
Crohn's disease from
15:10
because of the chemicals, because of Roundup.
15:12
There's a lot of stuff that you get from wheat.
15:15
I don't have any trouble with wheat. Me neither. But
15:18
Mimi can't even get close
15:21
to it.
15:22
She goes into...
15:24
She has... What is it called? She doesn't
15:27
have anything. It's just a wheat allergy. She doesn't
15:29
have celeriac
15:31
or any of these other things. Celiac disease.
15:34
She doesn't have that. Oh, okay.
15:37
But she gets sick
15:39
as a dog if she has any... Well, that's celiac.
15:42
That's what they call celiac when you get sick as a dog
15:44
from wheat.
15:45
Yeah, but celiac is a specific
15:47
function. It does a certain thing to your body.
15:50
This is not that. Okay. All
15:53
right. She will
15:55
have... This is all from COVID. She
15:59
thinks it brought it all. on. Thank
16:01
you for the weaponization of common
16:04
cold people.
16:05
Let's get back to this Russia.
16:07
You guys, let's go with before we put the,
16:09
so I got a clip of Shannon Bream had this
16:12
morning, Sunday mornings, Sunday morning with Shannon
16:14
Bream. And so she's there
16:16
with this guy who is another guy with
16:18
a kind of a fake last name
16:21
and looks perfect
16:23
for the job.
16:24
Drops a series
16:27
of serious bombs,
16:29
little bombs, little subtle, very
16:31
well done. Uh, propagandistic
16:34
notions that are in that. So this is the report.
16:37
I'm going to play this first. This is the, the bonus clip.
16:41
Sorry. I'm sorry. This is from
16:43
this, this morning,
16:45
just a few minutes ago. But first
16:47
we turned to Greg Palcott who's live in Kiv
16:49
with more on what happened and what it means
16:51
for Ukraine's plans to beat back Russian
16:53
forces. Hello, Greg.
16:54
I've never heard of this guy, Greg Alcott.
16:57
Palcott. You look him up,
16:59
you won't find anything. They, they make the mistake
17:01
of not giving him a Wiki page. And so he didn't
17:03
have that. And then he's got,
17:04
you know, again, here we go. Berlin,
17:07
Afghanistan, Iran,
17:09
uh, foreign service. He looks
17:12
the part. Did he go, did he go
17:14
to school with Ling Ling? I couldn't find a Wiki
17:16
page of his, of all. He went to Wesleyan,
17:18
which is a school. Oh yeah. Oh
17:20
yeah. That's a Washington DC elitist
17:23
child school. I know it well, Wesleyan,
17:25
of course, of course. So he's got
17:27
all the earmarks. So he's the guy on Fox
17:30
that is the, the journalist.
17:33
So first we turned to Greg Palcott who's live
17:35
in Kiv with more on what happened and what
17:37
I mean. Wait, stop, stop. We're going
17:39
to stop a lot. Okay. You
17:42
might as well be in Sacramento. He's
17:45
reporting on, he's in Kiv,
17:48
but it was so what, what, what, what
17:50
is it can be reporting from London? I don't
17:53
get it, but okay. So in Kiv reporting
17:55
on what's going on in Russia because of this maniac
17:58
with his, with his one tank.
17:59
that he's floating around with.
18:02
Ukraine's plans to beat back Russian forces.
18:05
Hello, Greg. Hi, Shannon. Yeah, it's
18:07
the morning of the day after, and it looks
18:09
like we're back from the brink in Russia,
18:11
but it also looks like there's a lot of damage
18:13
and a lot more questions. It was
18:15
the biggest challenge to Russian President Vladimir Putin
18:18
in more than two decades of rule
18:20
and attempted armed uprising.
18:22
The man responsible, the Wagner Group
18:24
mercenary chief, Yevgeny Progosion. He
18:26
had complained about the war Russian military leadership
18:29
in conduct then pulled his fighters
18:31
out of Ukraine and into the Russian city of Rostov-Ondon
18:34
where, with little trouble, he took charge.
18:37
Then he sent his forces towards Moscow.
18:39
The Kremlin braced for an attack of Vladimir
18:41
Putin branding the actions treason as Washington
18:44
watched. As now reported, U.S. intelligence
18:46
had earlier suspected something
18:49
at least was afoot. Hold on a second, I just
18:51
want to point out he is a three-time
18:53
Emmy award winner
18:56
for reporting for the Associated
18:59
Press, United Press International.
19:01
First programs airing on PBS and
19:04
CBS. Yeah, he's
19:06
a real one. It reportedly took Belarus
19:09
President Lukashenko on authority of Putin,
19:11
speaking with Progosion, to cool things
19:13
down. The Wagner chief pulled his forces
19:15
back to their candidates. Let's analyze what he said so
19:17
far.
19:18
For one thing, they make a big fuss about
19:20
him rolling into Rostov-Ondon. Don. Yeah.
19:24
And taking over the place. Never heard of
19:26
this before. And you know what I missed in
19:28
all this? It was like, his 25,000 troops.
19:32
I kept seeing the same footage like 12 guys
19:34
on
19:35
a street. About 12 guys and three vehicles
19:38
and one tank. And a couple of people smoking cigarettes looking
19:40
at him. One tank with
19:42
a Z painted on it. Wagner the
19:44
dog, everybody. Whoa. Wow.
19:49
Nailed it. Somebody gave me that. Oh, totally.
19:51
That was Flip Custodian. Neil, way to go,
19:53
man. Way to go. Yeah,
19:56
you need writers. Yeah,
19:59
you don't.
19:59
So we got this guy in this one tank,
20:02
and he keeps shooting pictures of the tank.
20:04
If a group of guys with a tank
20:06
came into Albany,
20:09
the little town of Albany,
20:11
which is next to Berkeley,
20:13
or even Berkeley, let's say,
20:15
with a tank,
20:16
and walked into the city council, get
20:18
out, put guns on everybody. They'd
20:21
all leave. They'd take over the place for a couple
20:23
days. It doesn't make any difference. The Russians were fighting
20:25
him. Like, get out of the street. You douche.
20:27
They were swinging at him. The public was not happy.
20:30
I thought they were swinging at him. I loved it.
20:32
So this is bull crap. Yeah. And
20:36
in fact, the whole thing is such bull crap
20:38
with this guy in his one tank and
20:40
a couple of other, I
20:42
don't know, car carriers, I don't know what they were.
20:45
And then they'd say, pull the tank off.
20:47
And the guy rushed off to Belarus. He's
20:51
either part of a scheme, or
20:54
he's dead, one of the two.
20:56
And let's
20:58
continue with this bogus report.
21:01
It reportedly took Belarus President Lukashenko
21:03
on authority of Putin, speaking with Progosion,
21:05
to cool things down. The
21:07
Wagner chief pulling his forces back to their camps in Ukraine
21:10
in exchange for guarantee of security. We
21:12
still don't have confirmation of the Wagner
21:14
movements. Progosion was supposedly
21:17
to be sent to Belarus. His demands
21:19
for Russian defense reform unaddressed.
21:22
Some of his mercenary army to be absorbed
21:24
by the Russian military. During
21:26
all of this here in Ukraine, officials
21:28
and a lot of others watching as well.
21:31
President Zelensky said it was a sign of
21:33
chaos and instability in Russia, taking
21:36
advantage of the confusion across the
21:38
border. He launched new inroads
21:40
into Russian front lines all in the past 24
21:43
hours. Shannon,
21:45
the big loser, according to most
21:48
today, is really Vladimir Putin.
21:50
Hired fighters running rampant, a mercenary
21:53
boss criticizing your war
21:55
plans. Not a good look for a man supposedly
21:58
in control. Maybe that is- This is
22:00
why state TV is running reportedly a
22:02
pre-taped interview with Putin today
22:05
in which he says he's confident
22:07
in the special military operation.
22:10
That's what he calls the war here. Confidence
22:12
no doubt shaken by this weekend's
22:15
events. Yes, this is
22:17
so there's. I was
22:18
gonna say, you notice when he says,
22:21
as though it's horrible
22:24
and this proves that he's under. Yes.
22:27
That is pre-taped.
22:28
He's gonna show up pre-taped. He's in his
22:31
bunker. He's in his bunker. He's
22:33
hiding. He's hiding. He's
22:35
hiding. Everything on Fox is pre-taped.
22:39
So there's multiple operations going
22:41
on here. And of course, for a long
22:43
time, it's, you know, there's no hatred against
22:46
the Russian people. Half of us
22:48
right here have been watching Russian YouTubers,
22:51
Russian dash cam crashes,
22:53
Russian media rights, Russian people
22:55
in supermarkets, just Russians.
22:57
Like, you know, first thing I did is I called my Russian.
23:00
The gene, Sergene, not
23:02
a Russian spy. So what are you hearing?
23:05
No, no, no, it's all been Putin. Putin,
23:07
we need regime change. And I think there is a certain
23:10
element that a narrative
23:12
can be effective. This is
23:14
what, you know, the United States
23:17
intelligence apparatus has been trying
23:19
for, you know, since the beginning of the
23:22
tension in before there was even any
23:24
so-called war in Ukraine
23:27
is all weakened from the inside. You
23:29
know, people are going to start turning against him. And
23:31
so that's why they labeled this a coup and and
23:34
tension. And that's right. And that's why
23:36
Putin kicked the NGOs out. Yeah.
23:39
Putin saw this coming. He's out of Fox
23:42
them. Here's CBS 30 seconds.
23:45
We begin this morning with our top story spiraling
23:47
tension in Russia. Spiraling
23:50
tension. Oh, spiraling
23:53
tension. This is what is
23:55
the evidence
23:56
of this? What is it even? What
23:58
is spiraling spiraling? Spiring
24:00
control. Breaking overnight,
24:03
President Vladimir Putin vows to punish
24:05
mercenary troops mounting an armed
24:08
uprising in Russia. Putin
24:10
made an emergency televised address
24:12
hours after the Wagner mercenary
24:14
group crossed into Russia and
24:17
seized a key military headquarters in
24:19
the south. The Wagner chief has
24:21
said his 25,000 strong force
24:24
is ready to die to take down
24:26
Russia's military leadership. That didn't
24:28
last long. They're willing to
24:29
die. Uh-huh.
24:33
I have a series of reports from PBS
24:35
on this, kind of. It's kind
24:37
of a mixed bag of reports. Okay.
24:39
But these are the Ukraine updates. It's
24:42
a three-parter. The
24:44
Russian mercenary leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin,
24:47
is said to be under investigation by
24:49
Russian intelligence tonight after
24:51
claiming that Russia's war with Ukraine
24:53
was started under false pretenses by
24:55
top military officials. Prigozhin
24:57
has thousands of personnel aiding Russia's
25:00
onslaught in Ukraine, and he now says
25:02
Russian troops have fired on his forces.
25:05
There are also reports riot police and
25:07
the National Guard are tightening security
25:09
at government buildings in Moscow tonight.
25:12
Meantime, as Lindsay Hillsome of
25:14
Independent Television News tells us,
25:16
Ukraine's capital, O'Keeve, has sprung
25:18
back to life under the watchful eyes
25:21
of air defense crews that guard the city.
25:24
Every night over Keeve and other
25:27
cities, air defenses protect
25:29
Ukrainian civilians.
25:31
Every
25:33
morning in an undisclosed location
25:36
just outside the capital, the
25:38
radar guns and controls of a German
25:41
Gephardt system are prepared for action.
25:43
Oh, interesting to add that. Each
25:46
gun fires 550 rounds per minute. In
25:50
the last six months, this crew
25:52
has shot down four Iranian-made
25:55
Shaheed drones and two cruise
25:57
missiles, preventing death and
25:59
destruction.
25:59
The main advantage of this
26:02
self-propelled anti-aircraft gun is that it's simple to use because
26:07
of the computer system and ease of control.
26:10
Another important thing is that relatively cheap shells can be used to
26:12
shoot down the very
26:15
expensive, significant targets that our enemy
26:17
has. What
26:19
is PBS doing? They're not even on the headline.
26:22
They're doing stuff no one cares about. They're
26:25
doing weird stuff, but this is the...
26:27
What's interesting is the visuals. You can't
26:29
see it. This little divide, this thing that they've
26:31
got, it looks like a tank with two anti-aircraft
26:34
guns in front instead
26:36
of a big... instead of a cannon. Yeah,
26:39
it's 50 caliber. Yeah, it's 50 caliber that just shoots
26:41
like crazy. And it's
26:43
cool looking.
26:46
But it's like they got one, I think
26:48
they got one. Yeah, this is shooting down these things.
26:52
They're coming in from who
26:53
knows where and... This is nonsense. These drones, if they
26:55
get through at all, they've got
26:57
to
26:57
be junkers to begin with.
27:00
I'm going to have to do a little report on these
27:02
drones because I have pictures of
27:04
most of
27:04
them. And I don't know. Yeah, no, they're off doing this.
27:09
I don't know why they're doing this, but
27:11
they're doing a completely different kind of reporting. Let's
27:13
go to part two. The Ukrainian
27:15
military celebrated the arrival of two
27:17
Patriot batteries from the
27:18
US and Germany. In
27:21
April, these missiles, by contrast, cost four million
27:23
dollars to fire, but
27:26
they can shoot down ballistic
27:28
and hypersonic missiles at long... What
27:31
is this rock music I hear in the
27:33
background
27:35
of this PBS report? I don't know.
27:37
It's planned. These
27:40
missiles, by contrast...
27:43
Well, I think we're going to stop for just
27:45
a second. We know that Patriots don't work.
27:48
When did the price go up to four million dollars a
27:51
shot? Well,
27:53
that's...
27:55
You ever heard this before? Um... trying
28:00
to think if we shoot one patriot
28:02
missiles four million bucks down the drain they
28:06
can't hit the side of a barn i
28:10
don't know about that
28:12
well you know that what that's inflation
28:14
i'm sorry it's a it's adjusted for inflation that's
28:16
what it is come on who are you for
28:19
are you for america and the military industrial
28:21
complex or against it this is america
28:23
baby
28:23
these missiles by contrast cost
28:26
four million dollars to fire but
28:28
they can shoot down ballistic and hypersonic
28:31
missiles at long
28:32
range last
28:35
march we saw the impact of a rocket
28:37
strike on an apartment blocking kiev
28:41
the mayor of the capital vitale klitschko
28:43
was there and olya timoshuk
28:45
from a neighboring block now the block has
28:47
been rebuilt better than before complete
28:49
with phoenix mural and olya
28:52
no no
28:52
do they have uh pterodactyl
28:54
flying around now this is a very
28:56
weird report listen to it timoshuk from
28:58
a neighboring block now the block has been
29:01
rebuilt better than before complete
29:03
with phoenix mural i
29:04
don't know what that is tillery
29:07
clinton she's flying around they play a lot of
29:09
sound effects nowadays on pbs
29:11
olya
29:11
no longer thinks she might have to leave the city
29:14
i sleep better at night to
29:16
be honest whoa whoa who was this i
29:20
sleep better at night to be honest and olya
29:22
no longer thinks she might have to leave this this
29:24
is good wallace and grommet character
29:27
they brought in the city i
29:29
sleep better at night to be honest sometimes
29:32
i don't even hear the sirens so
29:35
like i go to sleep and i know that
29:38
i will wake up in the morning
29:39
actually oh we're doing good things
29:41
that she can sleep and she know she's
29:43
gonna live i believe in that more
29:46
than i did last year to
29:48
be honest and now it's
29:51
it's like easier we
29:54
need this girl is a superstar i don't know
29:56
what she looks like but i can this is like she's cute
29:58
so the greta of ukraine
29:59
We can use her get her
30:02
a contract work. You're right. Call her
30:04
agent. We need this one
30:06
And what do you
30:08
feel about the guys who are manning the air defenses?
30:11
Oh
30:14
Man she
30:15
is this like Syrian girl who can actually speak
30:17
English. She's great. She's
30:19
a little cute little British accent Is she with
30:21
William Morris who she with? Yes,
30:25
get someone on the line this is she's fantastic
30:27
good find good fine. We you watch
30:30
someone's Here's what we would do Hello
30:33
pickle factory. Yeah, we think we got a winner
30:35
here. We
30:36
got this we got this girl in
30:39
in keep and She's perfect.
30:41
She is perfect if you want to have some sigh
30:44
up going on. She's the one she's cute. She's
30:47
She's just charming. She's a charmer.
30:50
I'll bet you some cry She can cry to think she can
30:52
cry think she can oh yeah, absolutely
30:54
cry. She seems like she's in the borderline
30:57
anyway
31:00
All right last last clip yeah,
31:03
but last month saw an onslaught
31:05
and while 154 missiles were
31:07
shot down 18 got through
31:10
killing five people
31:11
The
31:14
mayor of Kiev is therefore more
31:16
circumspect yes, of course Blue
31:20
sky great weather summer
31:23
its peaceful atmosphere in
31:25
and dude they are now I understand
31:28
what they're doing
31:29
they're positioning it as over it's
31:31
done. Putin is spiraling
31:33
It's spiraling in Russia. They've got
31:35
problems internally, you know You
31:38
always love to readjust all the input
31:41
to your basic thesis. Yes,
31:43
of course, but this is what I nice
31:46
try This is what's happening blue
31:48
sky great weather summer
31:51
its peaceful atmosphere the beaches
31:53
are open Wait
31:57
until he goes to
31:59
a little kicker so it
32:01
turns it back on you. Blue
32:04
sky, red weather, summer,
32:07
it's peaceful atmosphere. Yes,
32:09
the beaches are
32:10
back open!
32:12
Woohoo! Yeah! But
32:14
it's illusion. It's an illusion. It's illusion.
32:17
Oh. It's any moment
32:19
we can listen, air alarm,
32:22
bombing alarm. It means the
32:25
every moment, an every
32:27
building can be destroyed from Russian missiles.
32:30
Kyiv is full of outdoor cafes
32:32
and bars. After the Russians
32:34
were pushed back from the outskirts last
32:37
spring, many people reverted to their
32:39
old life, deciding that the odds
32:41
of being hit by a missile or drone
32:44
were acceptably small. No,
32:46
I don't. It was a
32:47
semi-reverser. It wasn't a full 180.
32:50
But I'm going to land the plane
32:52
for us here. I'm going to tell you what's going on, what really
32:54
happened. Something
32:56
took place, two boobs,
33:00
not the kind of boobs you're thinking of, two boobs
33:02
messed stuff up and
33:04
it had to be covered up because
33:07
there is an operation underway
33:11
that kind of became
33:13
apparent and so we
33:15
had to call Wagner the dog group
33:18
and do something about it. So here's the
33:20
official narrative, the
33:23
most recent narrative of why this took
33:25
place. It's from France 24. The head
33:27
of the Russian mercenary group Wagner has
33:29
issued what sounds like a declaration of war
33:32
against his country's top military officials.
33:35
Evgeny Prigozhin posted an audio message
33:37
today accusing the army of launching strikes
33:39
on his own troops. In a separate
33:41
video clip, he said that Moscow's invasion
33:44
of Ukraine was based on lies
33:46
by the military's leadership. His
33:48
Wagner group spearheaded Russia's capture of
33:51
the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut last month, a
33:53
battlefield success that has allowed him
33:55
to criticize Moscow with impunity.
33:59
The target of Przegorzyn's tirade is
34:02
the Russian Defense Minister. The
34:05
Defense Ministry is trying to deceive the public
34:07
and the president and tell a story that
34:10
there was some crazy aggression by Ukraine
34:12
and that together with the entire NATO
34:14
alliance they were planning to attack us.
34:17
There it is.
34:20
So Przegorzyn is sent in
34:23
to dispel this crazy,
34:25
crazy Defense Minister saying,
34:27
hey, there's an attack coming and all of
34:30
NATO is gonna come in and go after
34:32
us.
34:33
I'm gonna tell you that's true.
34:36
We have to go first. Now again, none
34:38
of this is in the United States. Why would it be?
34:42
Deutsche Vela.
34:43
This is part of what is going
34:45
to go down. Tonight Ukraine is warning of a possible
34:48
Russian terror plot. Ukrainian President
34:50
Zelensky says that Russian forces
34:52
at the occupied Zaporitsyn nuclear power
34:55
plant are planning to cause a radiation
34:57
disaster. The Zaporitsyn
34:59
nuclear power station is the largest
35:02
in Europe. It has been under Russian occupation
35:04
since Russia invaded parts of Ukraine
35:06
last year. The International Atomic
35:09
Energy Agency tried to negotiate a safety
35:11
perimeter around the site but
35:14
to no success. The
35:16
IAEA says that the risks
35:18
to and from the nuclear plant have
35:21
only risen with the start of the Ukrainian counter-refence
35:23
of this month. One being a possible
35:25
release of radiation as a weapon
35:28
to stop any Ukrainian troop advance.
35:30
Okay, so this- Wait, wait. Do
35:34
we have any geographical evidence
35:36
that those reactors are nowhere
35:39
near where the troops are advancing? No,
35:41
this is not the point. The point is
35:43
Russia, who of course blew up the
35:45
Nord Stream pipeline, Russia, who of course
35:48
blew up the dam they were in control of. Of
35:50
course, they're first going to release radiation
35:53
from the nuclear power plant to waft
35:55
over, to
35:56
waft over, to waft, yes,
35:58
to waft. Probably
36:01
will destroy it. The BBC
36:04
is on the same track a little more
36:06
honest. The threat of nuclear escalation
36:09
is once more at the center of the war of
36:11
words between Russia and Ukraine. Two
36:14
weeks after the destruction of the Kolkovka
36:16
Dam, which raised fears for the safety
36:18
of the Zaporijin nuclear plant, President Zelensky
36:21
says there's a new cause for concern. Now
36:24
our intelligence has received information
36:26
that Russia is considering a scenario
36:28
of a terrorist attack at the Zaporijin
36:31
nuclear power plant. A terrorist attack
36:33
with radiation leakage. They
36:35
have prepared everything. They're running the plant.
36:38
Yes, they are running the plant. Yes, they
36:40
are. Let's get some logic
36:43
here.
36:43
So the Russians took over
36:45
these plants to prevent the Ukrainians
36:48
from screwing with them.
36:50
And now terrorists who did these
36:52
rush there was the Russian terrorists or
36:55
the wait, they were there right there running and guarding
36:57
the plant.
36:58
Yes, and there's Russian terrorists
37:00
involved in their Russians guarding. I'm
37:03
not getting this again. I'm not getting
37:05
a clear picture of what's going on. You're
37:07
going to get the picture in a moment. You know, you'll you'll understand
37:10
that exactly.
37:11
So this is their reporting.
37:13
This is propaganda. Obviously.
37:16
No. That's
37:18
my point. It's so flimsy.
37:20
But even this report ends with
37:22
flims. A terrorist attack with radiation
37:25
leakage. They have prepared everything
37:27
for this. Mr Zelensky
37:29
didn't specify what evidence he had
37:32
nor what the attack would entail. Russia's
37:34
denied the allegation pointing to a recent
37:36
visit to the site by the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog,
37:39
which concluded that the station could
37:41
operate safely for some time. Oh,
37:44
that's a little bit of information we
37:45
didn't get from Deutsche Vela.
37:47
No, it's operating safely. Everything's OK.
37:50
All right. So now let's take into consideration
37:53
that those are U.N. inspectors that came in. Yes.
37:57
Which in the Deutsche Vela report was all
37:59
the. radiation. Well
38:02
Deutsche Vela we know is CIA.
38:04
CIA exactly. So
38:06
let's just just for argument's
38:08
sake say that it probably was
38:11
what as Seymour Hearst
38:13
described it probably was the United
38:15
States as promised by President Joe Biden
38:17
who who sabotaged North
38:19
Street. He said they're gonna do it. Instead they're
38:22
gonna do it. Let's just presume that
38:24
the Russians didn't have in fact
38:26
by draining the lake for
38:28
their dam they they gave Ukrainian
38:31
army forces a huge advantage
38:33
as a huge dry lake they can now walk across
38:35
instead of swimming.
38:37
So let's just presume that
38:39
what they're talking about here is
38:42
a most likely US slash
38:44
NATO led sabotage
38:46
of the nuclear
38:49
plant. I've got information man.
38:51
New shit has come to light. When
38:53
you're on C-SPAN and you see
38:56
Lindsey Graham and Douchebag
38:58
Blumenfall of opposing parties
39:01
come together for a press announcement
39:04
you know something is wrong. Thank
39:07
you for coming. There's
39:09
a lot of news to cover in Washington and
39:11
I appreciate it. Y'all
39:14
attending this news conference. We're
39:17
gonna do something different. We're not mad at each
39:20
other. We're not trying
39:22
to sanction each other. No
39:24
you're laughing telling already
39:26
because you're in cahoots. You're up to no
39:28
good. Lady G. We're
39:31
trying to work together on one
39:33
of the most important issues affecting
39:36
America's national security. America's
39:39
national security. World
39:42
stability. Wow. World
39:44
stability. Hold on world stability.
39:47
And as the grievance campaign
39:50
up here in Washington seems to be unending,
39:53
Senator Blumenfall and myself have not taken
39:55
our eyes
39:56
off a defining moment. And
39:59
that's the war in the United States. Ukraine. So
40:01
we're introducing a resolution today, since
40:05
the Senate resolution that says that
40:08
if Russia or Belarus or proxy
40:10
of Russia explodes a nuclear
40:13
device inside of Ukraine to
40:16
stop the counter offensive or
40:19
to try to break the will of the Ukrainian
40:21
people, such an attack
40:23
should be considered an attack on NATO
40:26
itself. Okay, so he is in
40:28
essence evoking a pseudo
40:29
article 5. He's saying
40:32
should Russia explode
40:34
some kind of nuclear device?
40:37
Now Lindyhop is not that stupid. Blumenfall
40:40
is a turd because he lays it out
40:42
exactly. Poland is
40:44
at immediate risk if the
40:47
use of tactical nuclear weapons
40:49
or destruction of a nuclear
40:52
power plant causes radiation
40:55
to spread, as almost certainly
40:57
it would causing
40:59
significant human
41:02
harm. This is not a
41:05
kind of reckless
41:08
or panicky resolution.
41:11
It's based on science
41:14
and it is meant to send a message
41:16
to Vladimir Putin. And even
41:19
more directly to
41:22
his military, they
41:24
will be destroyed. They
41:26
will be eviscerated
41:30
if they use tactical nuclear
41:32
weapons or if they destroy
41:36
a nuclear plant in a way
41:38
that threatens surrounding
41:40
NATO nations. Article 5 is there
41:43
for a reason.
42:00
Defense Minister was right. He says
42:02
dude, they're setting up this huge op They're
42:05
gonna blow up the power plant then they're
42:07
gonna invoke article 5 because the
42:09
radiation would float would waft
42:11
over Poland Waft waft over
42:14
Poland.
42:15
This is which is an attack on Poland,
42:17
which is attack on NATO, which is an attack on
42:19
all of us This
42:22
is an outrage these these Maniacs
42:25
need to be stopped. They're maniacs
42:28
call your your congressman and senator
42:31
go out and protest now this and
42:34
I'm amazed at the at the
42:37
Audacity is the word you're looking audacity. Thank
42:39
you and also at the restraint
42:43
Restraint that Putin no wonder he looks worried.
42:46
He looks worried because now he knows what
42:48
they're up to and that's what
42:50
Hot dog boy had to go in and
42:52
and distract from no, no, no, don't look
42:54
at those two old jackoffs Trying
42:57
to start war with NATO
42:59
and Russia Don't
43:00
look at that. No, no, no, don't look at me. I'm
43:03
hot dog boy I'm
43:05
hot dog boy That's
43:09
a real issue I Think
43:12
so now the Russians of course
43:14
have those plants under control at the
43:16
moment I
43:19
Think and they should shut them down. They
43:21
should shut those suckers as fast as they
43:23
can Yeah, and we had all the power
43:25
off leave and leave and leave. Yes Shutter
43:28
the plants and leave as fast
43:30
as they can and they would tell how long
43:32
it takes to shut down a nuke
43:34
like that Get
43:39
out get out let them give them back to the Ukrainians
43:41
and leave
43:44
Now
43:45
Yeah, this that I mean
43:50
That's maybe the first time I've been a little bit concerned
43:52
But I think it's out and and enough people
43:55
know it and we'll see what happens because that's
43:57
high stakes and I
44:00
I don't know how well respected Lindsey
44:02
Graham or Bob
44:05
Blumenthal are. They're highly respected.
44:08
Well, really? By their by
44:11
their by each party. Blumenthal
44:14
is a big hero amongst the Democrats
44:16
because he's a stooge and
44:18
Lindsey Graham's a stooge. They're both stooges,
44:21
you know. Well, this this needs
44:23
to be stopped. And
44:26
and that it's true. And Putin
44:28
should just come out and say someone should come out and just
44:30
say it.
44:31
Hey, man, they're going to
44:33
do some something really nasty here. And you
44:35
don't even need nuclear radiation wafting
44:38
over. I know
44:40
you can just say it. You can just
44:42
say it and show up a guy or kind of show a graph.
44:45
Look at this. It's like remember when the Fukushima
44:48
went out. Next thing you know, we're being
44:50
inundated here on the West Coast with
44:52
radiation. If you listen to
44:55
Alex Jones. Here
44:57
it is. Look, I'm hearing
45:00
I'm hearing polling, John and
45:02
the guy. It's going on. It's going
45:05
off. The charts. Oh, no. Oh, no. We're
45:07
all going to die. I'm on the beach.
45:11
Exactly.
45:13
Yeah, it's
45:16
an outrage. You don't have to do it. You actually have to
45:18
do, Jack. You just have to say it.
45:20
Yeah.
45:23
Now, I don't I think
45:25
it would still be. I don't think it would be an immediate
45:27
knee jerk reaction.
45:29
I'm in fact, I'm pretty sure
45:31
it wouldn't be, but that's all they need. And
45:33
so, you know, we're wrapping everything up over here
45:36
in London. We've
45:39
you know, we we split up the trillions
45:41
of dollars of goods. We've set all the
45:43
tax laws. Let's move this stuff
45:45
along, man. Look, we got the money. We
45:48
got the four hundred billion plus
45:50
an extra five bill for Vlad. We've
45:52
got another six and a half bill from
45:55
from our military. Or it's just a coincidence.
45:57
It's the same number. I don't know.
45:59
Is everyone set?
46:00
Let's move this along hot dog boy
46:03
You know cover that up because these two boobs
46:05
went out they did a press conference now
46:07
They still it still has to be passed the resolution
46:10
So there is opportunity to stop that but
46:12
what do you think the chances are that the Senate
46:15
is a bunch of Democrats? more Mongering
46:19
senators of the United States government.
46:21
There's Pat They're passing this thing in a
46:23
breeze if it doesn't go unanimous. I'll
46:25
be surprised if it hasn't even Already
46:28
Paul would be the only the only one the only one. No,
46:31
no, no, this is not a good
46:33
idea. Oh man
46:37
Now if we follow the fractals
46:39
of history
46:42
We may be in good shape
46:44
Someone sent this to me. I thought was very interesting
46:47
1918 to 1920 Spanish flu 1917 to 1923
46:52
Russian Civil War But
46:56
In 1922 Ukraine loses its bid for
46:58
independence and is annexed by Russia and
47:00
the Soviet Union Then we get
47:03
the war in G a president Harding
47:05
dies in 2023. Hello, Joe Amid
47:11
scandals a lot of people think he was murdered. Yeah
47:13
the teapot don't a lot of scandals and
47:16
then then we get Calvin Coolidge I
47:19
like al and then we get the roaring
47:21
20s And we're back
47:24
to normal with cool-looking skirts Yeah
47:27
flappers and hats and hats Yeah,
47:30
silent Cal he was not a shiz luscious
47:33
Closhes that's the hat. Yeah
47:36
those bead hats those kind of
47:37
Cloc he said that's
47:40
funny
47:40
funny shaped hat never heard of it interesting
47:43
close. Yeah, look at that close I'm not going to
47:45
but I trust you Why
47:48
bother now
47:50
Kamala Harris, I'm gonna
47:52
have to I'm gonna have to give it to you here
47:54
Just like Coolidge
47:57
who was former lawyer governor,
48:01
so Kamala Harris, former district attorney,
48:03
senator, close enough to his background.
48:06
He was known as Silent Cal, as you pointed out. Hands
48:09
off at running the government, just let everything go, letting
48:11
other people like the future president Herbert Hoover
48:14
make decisions. I think Kamala would be
48:16
a good choice then
48:17
to have to bring in the roaring 20s. Yeah,
48:20
she was a little dope and laugh. And
48:24
it's perfect for the roaring 20s. Yeah,
48:28
yeah. So, and that
48:30
would just be the fractal, God willing, that
48:33
would be nice. So
48:35
we'll see, but at least we know what to look at. Now
48:37
we know what the scam is, what they're up against,
48:40
and of course they've hedged their bets, you know.
48:43
We have a revolt against Putin, the Beyonce's
48:45
government, you know, maybe. I mean, narratives
48:47
work,
48:48
you know, to a certain point. They work if they're
48:51
getting through, but Russia's locked down.
48:54
They've cut off the press
48:56
for good reason. I mean, I don't like the
48:58
idea, but they've cut off the press because it's
49:01
subversive.
49:03
They got the NGOs out of town,
49:06
and that's the big deal.
49:08
And they on the lookout, and
49:10
they're taking that out there, right, you know,
49:12
what they perceive as enemies. That's the way they're
49:14
doing it. China's doing it
49:16
is pretty much the same way. They're
49:19
not putting up with letting us
49:21
develop the narrative, because that's what we're doing.
49:23
We're developing the narrative for these
49:26
other countries, and you know,
49:28
it works on our public and the EU.
49:30
It doesn't seem to affect South America
49:32
or Africa. Nobody's paying attention to us
49:34
there,
49:35
and which is irksome to everyone.
49:38
Oh, I don't understand why Africa's not on board
49:40
with condemning Russia.
49:43
Well, while we're at it,
49:46
just as a quick aside,
49:49
we can't play this clip
49:51
often enough, the West Clark Seven. So
49:54
I came back to see him a few weeks later, and
49:57
by that time we were bombing in Afghanistan.
49:59
I said, are we still going to war with Iraq? And he said, oh,
50:02
it's worse than that. He said, he
50:04
reached over on his desk, he picked up a piece of paper. He
50:07
said, I just got this down from upstairs, meaning
50:09
the Secretary of Defense office today. And he said, this
50:12
is a memo that describes how we're going to take out
50:14
seven countries in five
50:17
years, starting with Iraq and
50:19
then Syria, Lebanon, Libya,
50:21
Somalia, Sudan, and finishing off Iran.
50:24
So we're not quite at Iran yet, but there
50:26
is an update on Sudan. There are two wars
50:28
going on in Sudan.
50:29
One, between the army and the rapid support forces,
50:32
is destroying the capital Khartoum, where heavy
50:34
shelling and aerial bombardment are presumed
50:36
over the last few hours. In the region of
50:39
Darfur, there's a war against the non-Arab
50:41
population. There are now reports that RSF
50:43
fighters and Arab militias are encircling
50:45
the capital of North Darfur, El Fasha,
50:48
cutting off the roads leading out of the city. The
50:50
same tactic was deployed before El Gennena
50:52
was recently overrun, forcing hundreds
50:55
of thousands to flee. There is growing
50:57
evidence of ethnic cleansing. Human Rights
50:59
Watch says international
50:59
bodies need to act fast to halt
51:02
the spiraling violence and horrific abuses.
51:04
I'm shocked, shocked to find out that rebelization
51:07
is going on here. There you go. Yeah, we're rebelizing
51:10
Sudan, Khartoum. Of course. Where's
51:12
Clooney?
51:15
Uh, where's
51:18
Clooney? Do we do it? I don't remember.
51:20
Is there something going on and you
51:22
need a distraction?
51:24
Yeah, this is it. This is it? Oh.
51:26
Where's Clooney? What happened to Clooney?
51:29
We had a big shot. He was a Darfur
51:31
guy. Yeah, something froze.
51:33
My computer just froze, which is usually not a good
51:35
thing. Bwoop. Yeah.
51:39
Uh.
51:40
Not a good thing. Usually
51:43
not a good thing. Oh, here it is. This is
51:45
the jingle we wanted. You've
51:47
got something going on and
51:49
you need a distraction. Come
51:52
Clooney. Come Clooney. In
51:55
fact, we could use it now more than ever. George
51:57
Clooney. George Clooney.
52:05
him
52:08
for some reason. I don't know why they don't like him. He
52:10
might've, he might've gone to MI five
52:13
or MI six.
52:15
I don't think he'd do that.
52:17
Maybe he's just retired. Just tired of it all. Well,
52:21
they, I think he's more effective. He's doing a lot
52:23
of more indie movies and that's where he's
52:25
really good. Indie movies. He's
52:28
really good. I mean, he's got something
52:30
out recently that just dynamite. He does.
52:33
He's got such a knack
52:36
for developing popular movies
52:38
that are indie, small productions.
52:40
He does have a knack.
52:42
And he's got, you know, Tilda's, what's
52:44
her name is on the, in his entourage
52:47
with the two or three, he's got these same old, same old
52:49
actors. Probably all of them are spooks. And,
52:52
uh, and they put together a product that is
52:54
so good that what, why,
52:56
what, what is he going to accomplish in Darfur?
52:59
What's interesting is CNN is not read
53:01
in on this office. CNN, there's something
53:03
going on there and they're not ready. This is,
53:05
uh, this is the new guys. Yeah. The new guys. And they're
53:08
not alone knowing anything. No, but I've got
53:10
to tell you, Wolf, it feels like we're missing some
53:12
key facts. It feels like we're missing
53:14
something. Understate.
53:18
I've got to tell you, Wolf, it feels like we're missing some
53:20
key facts. It feels like we're missing something
53:23
in the negotiations with Progosion or
53:26
something
53:26
in his calculations. Did this
53:28
just a long planned effort? It seems
53:30
go too frighteningly well. Did he find himself
53:33
too close to Moscow and decide to pull
53:35
back? Has something else gone on that we're
53:37
not aware of? It doesn't really make
53:39
sense at this particular stage. What it
53:41
does do though is embarrass the Kremlin
53:44
and certainly show that Vladimir Putin is not
53:47
the all powerful man in Russia
53:49
that he appeared to be more of 24 hours
53:51
ago, Wolf. It's also, as you say,
53:54
utterly bizarre. And clearly
53:56
Putin is vulnerable right now. See,
53:58
they're still working the old. op, it's like, yeah,
54:01
regime change. Yeah, we'll do regime change. Yeah.
54:03
We'll change it from the inside. Meanwhile, Washington,
54:05
DC, douche haven, they
54:07
are that, yeah, let's blow up that plant.
54:10
Let's invoke article five NATO.
54:13
That's, that's the op
54:15
and they can't even figure it out. They're so dense.
54:19
You want to hear the Obama? Yes.
54:21
Yeah. Mine as well. So obviously
54:24
hindsight is a great thing. 2020 vision
54:26
is a great thing, but you experienced while
54:28
you were in office Putin's
54:29
first invasion, the annexation of Crimea.
54:32
And many people said, what about the, what about
54:34
the my Don thing? Did we miss that?
54:36
You know, the Western allies
54:39
stood up and put enough red lines around
54:41
him, around that.
54:42
So what's your reaction to that? And I want
54:44
to just add also your friend, your good friend
54:46
and colleague, Angela Merkel is under very
54:49
serious criticism right now. I know you've just met with
54:51
her recently. Why is she under
54:53
criticism? What did she do? Is
54:55
this
54:55
thing new or is this an old report?
54:57
No, I think this isn't.
55:00
I think this is new. Yes. Sure.
55:02
Because Angela Merkel is not in the
55:04
news in any way. And she's not under any criticism.
55:07
Let me check. Should she have leveraged,
55:09
you know, Germany's economy,
55:12
its energy on the addiction to cheap
55:14
energy in Russia? Was that a mistake?
55:17
Well, you know, I think
55:19
the Ukraine of that
55:21
time is not the Ukraine that we're. Okay, I'm
55:23
sorry. Yes. I
55:29
think Angela Merkel is
55:31
now being blamed for,
55:35
for the Energi vendor.
55:39
And you know, and so of course, when Russia blew up
55:41
their own pipeline, that's what really just
55:43
that's what that's a really destroyed German
55:46
industry. It's all, it's all her fault. Blame
55:49
the old lady who keeps falling asleep. Economy,
55:52
its energy on the addiction. Wasn't
55:55
she like, she was teetering.
55:57
That's what she was teetering. Remember that when
55:59
she would. start teetering and she'd like it would have to catch
56:01
herself from falling?
56:04
I don't remember any of that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
56:06
This was, she had, yeah, I'm gonna look at it. Cheap
56:08
energy in Russia, was that a mistake?
56:11
Well, you know, I think
56:12
the Ukraine of that
56:15
time is not the Ukraine that we're talking about today.
56:18
There's a reason why there was not
56:20
an armed invasion of Crimea, because
56:23
Crimea was full
56:26
of a lot of
56:28
Russian speakers and there was some sympathy
56:30
to the view that Russia
56:34
was representing its interests. The Rada
56:36
at the time, the Ukrainian
56:38
parliament itself, still had a number
56:41
of Russian sympathizers and the politics
56:44
inside Ukraine were more complicated. And
56:47
part of what happened was
56:50
both myself, but also Merkel,
56:52
who I give enormous credit for, had
56:54
to pull in a lot
56:57
of other Europeans kicking and screaming to
57:00
impose the sanctions that we did and to
57:03
prevent
57:04
Putin from continuing through the Donbass
57:06
into the rest of Ukraine. So
57:09
I actually think that given both
57:12
where Ukraine was at the time and where the
57:14
European mindset was at the time, we
57:17
held the line. And part
57:19
of what happened was,
57:21
over time, a
57:23
sense of Ukrainian identity separate from
57:27
Russia and a determination to
57:29
push back against Russia and an ability
57:31
to prepare both
57:33
militarily and civically
57:37
to resist. Yeah, but we much, okay.
57:40
She was shaking, that's what I was, Merkel was
57:42
shaking. Do
57:44
you remember this? I do remember
57:46
the shaking, it was like there was some
57:48
Parkinson's rumor.
57:50
Angela Merkel's spokesman has insisted
57:53
that the chancellor is fine, she's gone off as planned
57:56
to the G20 summit of world
57:58
leaders in Japan. behind
58:00
her though at home real concerns about
58:02
her health. Mrs. Merkel always appears
58:05
to be in robust health. She has a punishing
58:08
schedule she's seen as a strong leader.
58:09
Anyway yeah she was shaking she kept shaking
58:12
at events like what's
58:14
wrong with the angler? Yeah so she's
58:16
getting blamed. She's getting blamed.
58:19
It's like blaming Trump. Yeah.
58:22
Always blamed a guy before a guy. And
58:24
of course Christiana Unpoor failed to remind
58:27
President Obama that his administration
58:30
spied on Merkel.
58:32
Literally. I don't know
58:34
how that would fit into the conversation that she's
58:37
having. Literally tapped her phone. Man
58:39
oh man oh man. It'd be something
58:42
to be worth seeing what he said about well
58:44
you know it wasn't my idea.
58:47
Hmm yeah.
58:51
All right so I think I think all we can do now
58:53
is just wait. We just
58:55
have to wait to see I think it's Putin's
58:58
move to make.
58:59
He needs to to get to do
59:01
something to some
59:03
counter move. Yeah he's
59:06
gonna have he's they've got him in a good an
59:08
interesting position of kind
59:11
of like he's either gonna have to bail
59:14
out of everything just get
59:16
the hell out of there because
59:18
he's being set up. Yeah that
59:21
would be one way. He's gonna have
59:23
to realize he's been set up.
59:25
Which is gonna be and he seems like a guy
59:28
with a personality that wouldn't go for that
59:30
and it'd be you know it lost face.
59:33
Yeah. And it would say well maybe
59:36
the way to play it it seems that
59:38
you know okay so you've been set up. You've got
59:41
to do some sort of a countermeasure to
59:43
the setup
59:44
that gives you the excuse to leave with face.
59:47
Because what's because the worry
59:49
is that he's gonna
59:51
have to admit he was wrong which he
59:53
can't do because he's the great leader
59:55
the czar and
59:58
they wanted to have to do that. because they want
1:00:00
to do they do want regime
1:00:03
change yeah but
1:00:05
they're not gonna get it because he's too like
1:00:07
I think he's too coy and cagey but
1:00:10
do you think that they so all right
1:00:13
let's look at his options obvious options
1:00:16
just nuke all of Ukraine everyone
1:00:18
dies seems like he's
1:00:20
a little too level-headed for that because
1:00:23
the world goes up it's
1:00:25
all over he's not he's not he's not insane
1:00:27
he's in he's in good health too
1:00:30
and he's got those
1:00:32
pretty nurses oh
1:00:33
that was Brezhnev
1:00:35
never mind he's one these Russians I don't
1:00:37
know what they're all the same maybe
1:00:41
the answer is hot dog boy in
1:00:44
in Belarus I'm not sure hot
1:00:46
dog boy you know it's possible
1:00:48
that the Belarusian guys got to go
1:00:50
that would distract everybody
1:00:55
if you had a civil war in Belarus
1:00:57
that was triggered by the hot dog boy who's
1:00:59
been put in there as a Trojan horse
1:01:01
interesting that's a possibility
1:01:04
that would go in distraction
1:01:07
of the month mm-hmm and that
1:01:09
would help him get out and then
1:01:12
he's got a sneak out
1:01:15
yeah so he could be look I got some problems here
1:01:17
I got Belarus I
1:01:19
got all my got my tactical nukes there I'm gonna save
1:01:21
the world I got to take care of that I'm leaving Ukraine
1:01:24
oh there you go he put the supposedly
1:01:27
put some tactical nukes there and now
1:01:29
he's worried yes and he doesn't want
1:01:31
anything bad to happen he's
1:01:33
got some he could strategize
1:01:35
his way out of this yeah it's not gonna
1:01:38
be easy but he has to he has to withdraw
1:01:40
and I and what he has to get out of it he has to get out of
1:01:42
Ukraine there's no other way he has to and
1:01:45
he has to say we're out you hit the plants
1:01:47
yours
1:01:48
yeah gonna give it without
1:01:50
giving up Crimea no we don't give
1:01:53
up Crimea but no and so he keeps that
1:01:55
and then it gets out of those nuclear plants
1:01:57
yeah and let's put the Ukrainian
1:01:59
in
1:01:59
engineers back in there, it's their fault after that.
1:02:02
Yeah, and everyone's
1:02:04
kind of ready for it. They got the money,
1:02:07
plus the vig, the exercise
1:02:10
bill. He could also do a behind the scenes
1:02:12
thing saying he's gonna do this,
1:02:15
and they can just divvy
1:02:17
up Ukraine all they want, which is what they're gonna do.
1:02:20
Yes. You guys can divvy it
1:02:22
up. I helped you here if you think about it.
1:02:24
And just stay off my back. Yeah.
1:02:27
And kill these sanctions. Pick up the red phone.
1:02:31
Oh, the sanctions don't even matter. Not
1:02:33
a sanctions. Sanctions don't matter. Yeah, you're right. They're
1:02:36
meaningless. Don't matter. But he's gotta find some, he's gotta
1:02:38
do this. He's gotta be fast.
1:02:40
Yeah, I agree. He's gotta be, I'm
1:02:42
now gonna switch to your side a
1:02:44
little bit. This war's gotta get over with. Whoa, whoa,
1:02:47
whoa, whoa. Yeah, by Wednesday. I
1:02:49
say by Wednesday. Yes. He's
1:02:52
gotta be done within a month. Wow,
1:02:56
I'm glad we solved that. He
1:02:58
can give us a call if he needs some help.
1:03:00
Yeah, we can help. Now,
1:03:04
I would like to play two, let me see. Actually,
1:03:08
just one clip. We can do more. You're getting climate
1:03:11
change because there's something going on with climate change
1:03:13
too. Obviously not with the climate.
1:03:16
Because you know. I do have, did I get the, let
1:03:18
me see if I got the heat clip because there's
1:03:21
some action. Yes, yes. Is
1:03:23
it in China? China's got some,
1:03:26
yeah, I got record heat in China, Ask
1:03:28
Adam. Oh, hold on a second. Ask
1:03:32
Adam.
1:03:34
Yeah, after the clip, I have a question. Okay,
1:03:37
do I play the clip? Yeah. China
1:03:39
broke a different kind of record today for
1:03:41
heat. Temperatures in Beijing topped 104 degrees
1:03:44
for a second day for the first time
1:03:47
in more than 70 years.
1:03:48
All
1:03:51
right, Ask Adam. The question is.
1:03:53
So there was the same thing 70
1:03:55
years ago. Where, how's, is there
1:03:57
a trend? I don't see it. That's
1:04:01
not a question. That's rhetorical. That's
1:04:03
a goof, man. There's no question for me to answer.
1:04:07
Okay. No, that's just all window dressing.
1:04:09
Do we have global warming 70 years ago? Yeah,
1:04:11
man. That's when it all started. Don't you
1:04:13
remember?
1:04:15
It turns out the
1:04:18
19-inch rack just turned 100
1:04:20
years old. The
1:04:25
19-inch rack. Yeah. There's
1:04:27
humor there somewhere. I know there's humor,
1:04:29
but I'm also puzzled. What were we
1:04:31
putting in 19-inch racks 100 years ago? No,
1:04:34
which for people, most people don't know what you're talking
1:04:36
about. Right. Right. You're talking about
1:04:39
audio gear rack that they
1:04:41
have in radio stations. Could be computer gear. Computer
1:04:43
rack. Yeah. There's all these racks. I
1:04:46
have a wooden one, by the way, made for me,
1:04:48
custom made. That's what she said.
1:04:52
So that 100
1:04:52
years ago, which is not... Yeah, that's when
1:04:55
radio first evolved. Radio racks. We're
1:04:57
talking in 1923. Radio is just
1:04:59
getting going like crazy. Fielding.
1:05:01
Because radio hobbyists were all in the
1:05:03
early 1900s. Right. Right. Right. And
1:05:06
everyone's, oh, I'm just going to change the world. It's
1:05:08
just exactly the same. I wrote an essay on
1:05:10
this a long time ago. In 1923, in fact, I think you wrote that
1:05:12
too. Yeah, I did. It was 1923. You
1:05:16
wrote an essay. Substack. It was the... But
1:05:23
it was 100 years ago. Not 50 years ago.
1:05:27
It's not 70 years ago. It was 100 years ago.
1:05:30
100 years ago is when radio was getting just
1:05:32
really starting to rock. Yeah. Yeah.
1:05:34
And
1:05:38
yesterday all the hams came out and did field day.
1:05:41
And I was... Oh, did you go to that? Well,
1:05:43
I was going to, but then I had this... I was stuck
1:05:45
making clips of C-SPAN of these two numbnuts
1:05:48
trying to blow up the world.
1:05:49
Well, it's probably better this year.
1:05:52
Probably better use of the time. Okay.
1:05:54
So there's another scam going on. Wait until you
1:05:56
hear the numbers of this one. Of course, this is
1:05:58
an ongoing scam. This
1:06:00
is climate change. So
1:06:02
tiring. But now they've
1:06:05
put numbers to it and this is Macron is
1:06:07
leading all this. They don't even call it the climate
1:06:09
change conference. They just call it the
1:06:12
new global financial
1:06:14
Compact or something like that. They're just
1:06:16
going straight to calling it money. Hey, are you
1:06:18
going to climate change conference? What's that? Oh the money
1:06:20
conference. Yeah, I'm going there Build
1:06:23
as a summit with substance as
1:06:26
countries on the front line of climate change
1:06:28
scramble for a life long The
1:06:31
new global financing pact in Paris
1:06:34
hosted by President Emmanuel Macron brings
1:06:37
together heads of state and government
1:06:39
from over 80 countries the
1:06:42
aim to financially back climate
1:06:44
action
1:06:44
now wait until you hand at the end
1:06:46
of this report you'll hear us the dummies
1:06:49
Coming in to add our little bit to it It
1:06:55
is a summit of all of those who are on the
1:06:58
front lines in the face of population
1:07:00
and planet Degradation and what we would like
1:07:02
to build here where the risks of divisions
1:07:04
are great is in effect a new consensus
1:07:07
Not dictated from one place but rather
1:07:10
carried by those who are living through the consequences
1:07:12
of climate change and deregulation And
1:07:15
we are fighting for a first plan to tackle
1:07:17
poverty and its consequences
1:07:19
Every day the
1:07:21
cost of climate change and inaction
1:07:24
becomes dearer mostly for developing
1:07:26
countries facing the brunt of it But
1:07:29
now a new international monetary system
1:07:31
is in the making Restructuring
1:07:33
debt reducing poverty and crucially
1:07:36
offering support and now
1:07:39
targeting not only governments, but
1:07:41
big banks to rebalance the World's
1:07:44
neediest nations most at risk of
1:07:46
global warming have been left out of the
1:07:49
climate conversation
1:07:50
With colossal costs estimated
1:07:53
at four trillion dollars a year to respond
1:07:55
to the crisis Advocates are desperate
1:07:58
to see meaningful commitments
1:07:59
Yeah, hey, we all want a part
1:08:02
of four trillion dollars a year. Yeah.
1:08:04
Yeah, you know where it's gonna come from Janet
1:08:07
Yellen
1:08:07
including building sustainable
1:08:10
infrastructure New infrastructure
1:08:13
will be built to withstand
1:08:15
extreme weather events so
1:08:17
then when it's high for hurricane
1:08:20
strikes Roads will still be
1:08:22
open to emergency vehicles and
1:08:25
hospitals will still have electricity electricity
1:08:28
as the globe weathers the storm of climate
1:08:30
change all eyes are on Paris
1:08:32
for answers Hey
1:08:33
Janet Yellen, why don't you fix the potholes
1:08:35
there on John's highway? Why don't you do
1:08:38
that? I wait here still got potholes. Yeah
1:08:40
before you start fixing everyone else's
1:08:42
hospitals and roads What is up with these
1:08:44
people and what is Janet Yellen doing
1:08:47
there?
1:08:49
But we're being we're being ripped off
1:08:52
Yeah, there you go ripped
1:08:55
off ripped off ripped off Meanwhile
1:09:00
Siemens energy shares plunge more
1:09:02
than 37% as wind turbine
1:09:04
worries deep and turns out they suck
1:09:07
They break well you did this one
1:09:10
report. I you know we should have marked
1:09:12
that show as a special
1:09:14
where you went through the
1:09:16
Economics of the wind turbine industry
1:09:18
and how it's a scam
1:09:21
Because you don't even remember doing no no
1:09:23
It was a long report you did and you showed
1:09:25
that the numbers were only matched if there was
1:09:28
a certain amount of government interference You
1:09:31
have to have the the Subsidies
1:09:34
you can't make money with those
1:09:36
big giant expensive turbos. They don't last
1:09:38
they don't work that well They don't and
1:09:41
yeah, they don't work that well and those big props
1:09:43
aren't cheap
1:09:45
So now let's talk about Dumb
1:09:48
food because that's part of the scam.
1:09:51
It's like how can we make more money off
1:09:53
these idiots? I don't know Let's give them fake food
1:09:55
We're talking about Jose. I'm always
1:09:58
can imagine somebody to boardroom say Yeah.
1:10:00
Yeah. Remember, we're talking about Jose André,
1:10:03
the chef. Yeah. That he's all
1:10:05
in on, uh, chicken, on,
1:10:08
on the lab meat on the, the, the brew
1:10:10
chicken. And before we leave
1:10:12
this topic, I want to read it. Wait,
1:10:15
wait. I'm setting you up for the reading that parts of that
1:10:17
email.
1:10:18
I'm setting it up. I gotta go find the email. You remember
1:10:20
who it was from? Yeah. I have the email here, but
1:10:22
I thought, you know, you, you actually put in the newsletter.
1:10:24
We're going to read the email.
1:10:26
I didn't, I said we. Uh,
1:10:30
Jose André was one of the recipients
1:10:33
of a hundred million dollar donation from Jeff,
1:10:36
Jeff Bezos to spend however
1:10:38
he wanted to.
1:10:40
Just like, uh,
1:10:42
who was the guy from CNN?
1:10:45
The black guy.
1:10:48
You know, I'm talking about the black guy.
1:10:50
Yeah. The, the, the. Don Lemon? No, the
1:10:52
nothing burger guy. The
1:10:54
nothing burger guy. Who
1:10:57
was crying. Oh, come
1:10:59
on. Come on. What's his name? The black
1:11:01
guy on CNN always says to me,
1:11:04
Don Lemon. Van Jones.
1:11:06
Van Jones. He got a bunch of money.
1:11:08
He got a hundred million from Bezos as well. You don't
1:11:10
remember that? No. Yes.
1:11:13
Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. He got a hundred. Bezos
1:11:16
was given. Yep. Here we go. So
1:11:18
after returning from his quick
1:11:20
trip to space, Jeff Bezos had two
1:11:23
other big surprises in store for,
1:11:25
uh, for people today. Uh,
1:11:27
he made charitable donations in the amount of a hundred
1:11:30
million dollars each to two people,
1:11:32
two friends of this program, uh, that, uh,
1:11:34
that are the money's friends of this
1:11:36
program to be used as they see fit. They're
1:11:38
CNN political commentator and former special advisor, president
1:11:40
Obama, Van Jones and chef Jose Andrés,
1:11:43
founder and driving force behind world central kitchen.
1:11:45
There you go.
1:11:47
So no wonder Jose Andrés
1:11:49
like, yeah, yeah, brew my chicken,
1:11:51
baby. I got two Michelin stars. I'm going
1:11:53
to get a third for this chicken.
1:11:57
He's not getting any Michelin stars.
1:11:59
If he starts to use this. chicken. You
1:12:01
don't know how corrupt the Michelin star system
1:12:03
is. I watched the bear. You
1:12:06
know, the new season's on, chef. Yeah,
1:12:09
Mimi told me that. I love that show. I love that show.
1:12:11
I love that show.
1:12:14
Hi, hi guys.
1:12:17
I'm a former pre-vaccination refusal
1:12:19
molecular biologists nationally accredited through
1:12:22
the American Society of Clinical Pathologists.
1:12:24
In addition, I have grown billions of cells
1:12:26
in culture in both Petri dishes and
1:12:29
bioreactors in my life. I've
1:12:31
been listening to these lab grown meat reports on the show
1:12:33
for years now. And I can't believe
1:12:35
nobody has brought up the elephant in
1:12:37
the room. In any
1:12:39
cell. Yeah, actually, when
1:12:41
he said that, you figured it out. It was
1:12:43
one of those four-hand slaps.
1:12:46
I said, I could have brought this up. I
1:12:48
knew this. In any cell culture,
1:12:51
whether HeLa cells for research, bone
1:12:53
marrow biopsies for diagnosis of cancer
1:12:55
or more apropos cells being
1:12:58
grown for meat production. The
1:13:00
cells are cultured in quote media.
1:13:03
This media is extremely important for cell
1:13:05
growth. At risk of becoming a short Russian
1:13:07
novel. Please allow me to elaborate.
1:13:10
Do you want to elaborate?
1:13:13
Well, I'll just I can I
1:13:15
elaborating.
1:13:16
I can just shorten it to the following.
1:13:18
Yes. To make
1:13:20
the meat grow, you had
1:13:23
it has
1:13:24
it doesn't just form out of thin
1:13:26
air. In other words, a piece of chicken doesn't
1:13:28
just crop up out of nothing. You need
1:13:31
to have nutrients. FBS like
1:13:34
FBS. You got to name it FBS fetal
1:13:37
bovine serum.
1:13:38
In this case is fetal
1:13:41
bovine. It's taken from
1:13:43
it's taken from animals.
1:13:45
It's from embryos, my friend. They're
1:13:47
killing little embryos. They're killing little
1:13:50
embryos to make the meat that turns
1:13:52
into chicken. Wow.
1:13:55
That's it. Just
1:13:57
repeat that, please. They're killing little little
1:13:59
Beef embryos to make the
1:14:02
chicken. Yeah animal-friendly
1:14:05
no kill me So
1:14:07
this is when you think about
1:14:09
it is such it's like convoluted
1:14:13
way of you know It's just ridiculous.
1:14:15
It's like when you can pump oil out of the ground Why
1:14:18
would you make it synthetically unless
1:14:20
it had some special qualities like a synthetic
1:14:22
oil does for your car? But that's
1:14:24
beside the point
1:14:25
the point is this bull crap the whole
1:14:27
idea is bad And
1:14:29
in addition to that now we know why they've
1:14:31
downplaying the oh you don't have to
1:14:33
have cow farts Because this to
1:14:36
produce this is about 25 times
1:14:39
the amount of so-called
1:14:41
carbon Dioxide pollution
1:14:43
climate change gas
1:14:45
as it would be in just eating a beef
1:14:49
Because of all these processes he actually
1:14:51
went through some of that news. I put it I put the email Yeah,
1:14:54
the email is dynamite and it's long He's
1:14:57
borderline war in peace. Yeah, but I
1:15:00
went oh god obviously Of
1:15:04
note of note a zero
1:15:06
point five bottle of FBS costs
1:15:08
around $250 last time
1:15:10
I checked this is in addition to the defined
1:15:12
part of the media which comes with its own costs financial
1:15:15
and environmental Imagine the
1:15:17
energy required to put defined quantities
1:15:19
of salts amino acids and vitamins
1:15:21
in a plastic bottle Ship it to its
1:15:23
destination then the labor required to
1:15:25
find you the work of producing the cells I guarantee
1:15:28
This is more effort than it takes to hatch a chicken
1:15:31
feed it some combination of commodity grains
1:15:33
and legumes Yeah
1:15:36
chickens eat bugs it that oh man.
1:15:38
Did you see the latest bug thing?
1:15:40
also Also food
1:15:43
food as they call it.
1:15:46
This is happening out West It
1:15:49
is happening right now a small town
1:15:51
under invasion. Oh,
1:15:53
it's disgusting. It's it's
1:15:55
so gross L.co, Nevada
1:15:58
besieged by Mormon It
1:16:01
is disgusting. They're literally
1:16:03
everywhere. Ground zero, the once
1:16:05
quiet home of Colette Reynolds. It was
1:16:07
very apocalyptic feeling. I
1:16:10
couldn't sleep. I couldn't eat. Everything
1:16:13
you eat looks like a Mormon cricket. Colette
1:16:16
says it felt like living in the Old Testament. Oh, my
1:16:18
God. And did it feel that way to you?
1:16:20
Did it feel biblical? I prayed a lot about it. The critters
1:16:23
are a migratory menace. They've
1:16:26
plagued farmers here since the 1800s. Oh,
1:16:29
who's a baker, darling? An outbreak
1:16:31
like this can last up to six summers. The
1:16:33
paths normally stick to the desert and away from
1:16:35
people. But this time, they found
1:16:37
their way into town. And this
1:16:39
is what Elko, Nevada looks like right now. A town
1:16:42
covered in millions of these
1:16:44
crickets. They're not aggressive.
1:16:46
They don't sting. They don't bite. But
1:16:48
that doesn't mean they aren't causing problems.
1:16:51
Killing them only attracts more because, well,
1:16:53
they eat their own dead. Both
1:16:56
gross and a hazard. I feel
1:16:58
like I hear a crunchy. Roads
1:17:00
can easily become slick with
1:17:03
bug juice and the smell. It
1:17:05
just
1:17:06
smells like dead rotten
1:17:08
bugs everywhere. All
1:17:10
the time. The hospital, a scene
1:17:13
out of a horror movie. We had people out
1:17:15
there with leaf blowers, with brooms, trying to keep
1:17:17
the sidewalks clear. This swarm
1:17:19
has mostly moved on, but there are a lot of bugs
1:17:21
left hopping around and a lot of mental
1:17:24
anguish lingers. A reminder
1:17:27
of the futility of man facing
1:17:30
mother nature. So they called
1:17:32
the Mormon crickets were also, and
1:17:34
I love this, manna from heaven.
1:17:37
That's that was the actual title of the report
1:17:39
from NBC, manna from heaven, which is biblical
1:17:42
from Exodus, where God fed his people with
1:17:45
a nice little bread kind of honey product
1:17:47
that fell from heaven.
1:17:49
So they're just saying, hey, you know, it's a. You
1:17:51
can eat these things. Sure. Yes, exactly.
1:17:54
And they're Mormon. The
1:17:56
thing is that this this cricket. I
1:18:00
think, when did they begin? I don't remember,
1:18:02
and I'm old, that they've
1:18:04
ever been called Mormon crickets.
1:18:07
No, of course not. This is a whole, this is a whole
1:18:09
breeze. This is a new, a new op.
1:18:12
Yes, it's an op. Of course it is. Some
1:18:14
anti-Mormon op. Yeah.
1:18:17
To associate these crickets with
1:18:19
those horrible Mormons, which
1:18:21
are not even, they don't even want to be called Mormons.
1:18:23
They're sick of being called Mormons. They eat themselves.
1:18:27
They're latter-day saints, and they've
1:18:29
finally gotten around to saying, look, hey, stop
1:18:31
calling us Mormons, will you? Call us
1:18:34
latter-day saints, because Mormon's now
1:18:36
considered derogatory. So, oh, you
1:18:38
don't want to be called Mormons anymore? What's
1:18:41
this? Let's name a swarm of crickets,
1:18:43
the Mormon crickets. How do you like that?
1:18:46
Take that, Mormons. But
1:18:48
this is more anti-Mormon op. Yeah,
1:18:51
well, it's- It's got something to do with
1:18:53
what's going on, because the Mormon,
1:18:56
except
1:18:57
with the exception of George Romney,
1:19:00
or Mitt Romney, sorry. George Romney. What
1:19:02
am I thinking? George Romney. Hey, it's his
1:19:04
fault. I agree. George
1:19:06
Romney. So, Mitt Romney, the
1:19:08
rest of these guys, Mike Lee, whose
1:19:11
office is, by the way, I try to get in tight. You
1:19:14
tried to call Mike Lee's office, really?
1:19:16
Other jerks. Oh, goodness. I
1:19:19
call these different senators and
1:19:21
congressmen's offices every so often to
1:19:23
get a press release, to get on
1:19:25
their, whatever. Mike Lee's office,
1:19:28
absolute jerks. Wow.
1:19:31
Is he a Mormon? They're
1:19:34
all, what do you think? I guess
1:19:36
so. Of course, he's in Utah. Oh, yeah. So,
1:19:41
they're doing, there's something, they're
1:19:43
pushing back, and I have to say, this has to
1:19:46
be some sort of intelligence thing. It has
1:19:48
to do with the NSA, or the CIA, or somebody.
1:19:50
Yeah, they got all the big
1:19:53
liquid-cooled data centers out there.
1:19:56
Something's up, and so they've decided
1:19:58
to humiliate the more. by calling these
1:20:01
crickets Mormon crickets. Yeah, and you
1:20:03
know. I'm sure of it, because there's never been called that
1:20:05
before. And the Mormons are irked about being called Mormons.
1:20:07
So there you have it. And we have a lot of Latter-day Saints
1:20:09
who listen to the show and donate.
1:20:12
And they're all gonna say, besides
1:20:14
they're gonna say, you know, we should donate more to
1:20:16
the show. That's exactly right. Besides saying, besides
1:20:19
saying that, they're
1:20:21
gonna say these boys are right. That's
1:20:23
right. And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage in
1:20:25
the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the Mormon
1:20:28
crickets. Ladies and gentlemen, please say hello
1:20:30
to my friend on the other end, the one and only Mr. John
1:20:32
C. DeBorett. Well,
1:20:37
having it, sorry I stepped on you.
1:20:40
In the morning to you, Adam
1:20:43
Curry, also in the morning, all the ships that see boots and the graffiti
1:20:45
in the air subs in the water and all the names of the nights out there.
1:20:47
In the morning to
1:20:48
the trolls that were hanging out of the troll room. Let's
1:20:50
count them hands, our trolls' hands up. Choke
1:20:52
out the pony. I'm gonna put
1:20:53
it on the crickets.
1:20:56
Crickets, they go, 2505. Now
1:21:01
that's a number I can respect. That's
1:21:03
the number that it should be. That's, and
1:21:06
everything reflects it. We've got, oh, by the way,
1:21:08
for those of you who are thinking of fast forwarding or
1:21:10
leaving if you're listening live, we have our special
1:21:13
guest interview coming up along with our
1:21:15
clip of the segment and of course
1:21:17
the secret number
1:21:18
that you can only get if you listen
1:21:21
to the entire donation segment. And
1:21:23
if I may just, before we launch
1:21:25
into this, remind everybody that now moving
1:21:27
on 16 years in October,
1:21:30
we have been doing this program, Value for
1:21:32
Value. At the moment where advertising
1:21:34
is collapsing, the whole, you
1:21:36
know, subscribe to all the shows
1:21:38
you like, no one can afford it. You
1:21:40
can't afford subscribing to all the streaming
1:21:42
things that you like. No, you can't,
1:21:44
it's too expensive. We always knew that
1:21:47
if we just said, hey, here it is, take
1:21:49
the show, listen, that you're will.
1:21:51
We didn't always know this, always
1:21:54
knew. We always knew we were never gonna make money
1:21:57
on it. That's the way I was. How well is that, we always
1:21:59
knew that.
1:21:59
We knew that. We said,
1:22:02
you know, instead of us
1:22:04
trying to fight the man to be brand safe
1:22:06
and suitable, just listen to the show, take
1:22:08
the show. Is it worth something to you? Look
1:22:12
inside your soul and send it back
1:22:14
to us as value. And over time, value
1:22:16
has come in many different forms. Of
1:22:19
course, you know, servers,
1:22:22
websites, information,
1:22:24
boots on the ground, clips, all of that. But
1:22:27
also, the majority of people really
1:22:29
can't contribute any other way than what we all
1:22:31
have and that's finance, treasure.
1:22:34
And we just want you to value that. We're
1:22:36
not looking, you know, we're not like some nonprofit
1:22:38
here like, oh, help the poor boys, they could go
1:22:41
fund me. I got to note the, yes, I
1:22:43
didn't afford it to you.
1:22:44
People are mad about you about something. It's
1:22:46
like, we're never going to support anything John C. Dvorak
1:22:49
does.
1:22:50
I'm like, what is that? I mean, so you're
1:22:52
going to listen, you're going to take the value. Well,
1:22:54
we feel it's valuable. Of course it's valuable
1:22:56
what you give us. What did I do? No,
1:22:59
it's a whole, I don't even want to get into it.
1:23:02
Oh, I defended you. I defended
1:23:04
you. Well, thank you for that. But I'd like to know
1:23:06
what the, what the, what these
1:23:09
idiots had to say. Well, they're not idiots,
1:23:11
but I'll tell you, they were upset because
1:23:14
when the PayPal apocalypse happened, which
1:23:16
hurt us severely
1:23:17
because we had a lot of people, a lot, we had
1:23:19
people who were abusing PayPal
1:23:22
on monthly. So that was kind of our base. You know,
1:23:24
like we have a base and then
1:23:26
people gave it up and you were very mad and you
1:23:28
wrote a scathing email newsletter
1:23:31
that said two years ago that said
1:23:34
that you, that people who did that, they were
1:23:36
hurting the show
1:23:37
and people took that as you're just a scammer.
1:23:41
I'm telling you, that's what the email said in like a thousand
1:23:44
words.
1:23:45
And I defended you. Two years later.
1:23:47
Yeah. Yeah.
1:23:50
Yeah.
1:23:51
Anyway, I mean, look,
1:23:54
we all say stuff that doesn't land
1:23:56
right with people and that did hurt us. It
1:23:58
did hurt us.
1:23:59
but people felt that you were blaming them
1:24:03
for standing up against the evil finance
1:24:06
empire.
1:24:09
You understand?
1:24:12
I'm a bad person. Yeah.
1:24:17
Repent. Repent. There you go. He
1:24:19
just repented. We're good to go.
1:24:21
Anyway, time, talent, and treasure. We really
1:24:23
do need the treasure because this is what we do.
1:24:26
This is how we pay the bills. This is how we eat.
1:24:28
And we don't want to be eating no brew chicken if you
1:24:30
don't mind. It's going to be expensive anyway.
1:24:33
Uh, so we just asked you to, whatever
1:24:35
it's worth to you and we can't put a, you know, Silicon
1:24:38
Valley tries to value everything. Oh, this is going
1:24:40
to be 99 cents this song. It
1:24:42
might be worth nine, 900 cents to you. You
1:24:44
know, I'm like, Oh, you have to subscribe for $20 a
1:24:47
month. You may, you know, you may want to
1:24:49
do $200. We don't know how much you have.
1:24:51
That's up to you,
1:24:52
but we do appreciate if you reciprocate. There
1:24:55
are a lot of people that do a direct deposits.
1:24:58
Some people have managed to get, uh, uh,
1:25:01
Zell to work.
1:25:04
Yeah. It's basically a
1:25:06
CH done with an email identifier. It's pretty
1:25:08
interesting how that works. But it's not the way you can't
1:25:11
get it to work with mechanics bank. You have to
1:25:13
actually set it up. I know. I know. I know. You
1:25:15
can make it work with any amount, but
1:25:17
you have to set the whole thing up on your
1:25:20
end. We do. We don't recommend doing it. It's
1:25:22
a reconvoluted. There's only two or three people.
1:25:24
I know that do it.
1:25:26
And I asked them about it. We're going
1:25:28
to get that fed now coming up in July. That's
1:25:30
going to work great for us. I think it'll be a vast.
1:25:32
Yeah. Okay. I've asked about
1:25:35
how, you know, how they did it. And they said, yeah.
1:25:37
And I said, is there, you know, it's
1:25:39
not duplicable. They, they had, you
1:25:41
have to do it at your bank. It works. Some of the
1:25:44
credit unions to have a method and they can
1:25:46
do it and they can send it right into the bank. They've,
1:25:48
they get the bank account number. Uh,
1:25:50
there's other people that use, uh,
1:25:52
have used the, uh,
1:25:55
swift. They've used the burglar thing. It could,
1:25:57
that costs us 10 bucks to transfer. So
1:26:00
don't poo poo fed now, dude, because
1:26:02
it's only going to cost four cents. You're not
1:26:05
going to see it. If we see it, I'll
1:26:07
say, OK, great, we can use it.
1:26:09
But it'll be four cents a transaction
1:26:11
and we will see it. You'll see it. It's
1:26:14
bull crap. There's
1:26:16
no way that this is going to happen.
1:26:18
All these big boys. What do you mean four
1:26:20
cents? It's happening in next month. Yes,
1:26:23
it's happening. Yeah, OK.
1:26:25
Wow. I'll take I'll take
1:26:27
all the four cent transactions you want to send.
1:26:30
Yes. And then, you know, the government will be able
1:26:32
to say, hey, let's cut these guys off.
1:26:35
They can say that now. Yeah, but it's
1:26:37
much easier, more fun when you can do it to something called
1:26:39
Fed now. I mean, come on.
1:26:42
We'll give them a crackpot theory. You
1:26:47
can also send checks to Box 339
1:26:49
El Cerrito, California, 94530. Box 339
1:26:53
El Cerrito.
1:26:55
That will the
1:26:57
absolute best way you can find all the information
1:27:00
here.
1:27:00
Vorac dot org slash
1:27:03
and a made it easy. Just have to look up
1:27:05
how to spell the Vorac. OK,
1:27:09
now there's another
1:27:11
way that a lot of value comes to us is the
1:27:13
no agenda artists. And I think I have
1:27:16
mentioned that we have changed our artwork
1:27:19
almost.
1:27:20
I mean, every single episode for I don't know
1:27:22
how many episodes, but it goes way back, at
1:27:25
least since episode 100. Yeah. From.
1:27:28
Yeah.
1:27:28
Right. Or
1:27:31
more. It's part of the spec. episode
1:27:34
available. OK, Apple.
1:27:37
Now, the second time you've
1:27:39
made that noise. Yeah, I know.
1:27:42
I love this. I love the
1:27:44
artwork because, you know, if you look at a podcast
1:27:47
app, it's always kind of the same stuff. And then
1:27:49
all of a sudden, like, what is this? Did I subscribe to that? What
1:27:52
is this? Oh, it's the no agenda guys. Of course. Look
1:27:55
at those artists.
1:27:56
They're crazy. And the artists do this while we're doing
1:27:58
the live stream. They're whipping stuff up. and
1:28:00
getting it ready and uploading it. Anyone can do that. NoahGenArtGenerator.com.
1:28:04
And of course all the images that are
1:28:07
uploaded there, well not all, but a lot of them get
1:28:09
used in our chapters,
1:28:10
which is Dreb Scott does.
1:28:13
And these are in the new podcast apps. You can find it
1:28:15
at PodcastApps.com, which also has
1:28:17
the troll room all built in. I mean you
1:28:19
don't need anything
1:28:20
other than that and it's compatible with all your
1:28:22
old podcast subscriptions, so no worries.
1:28:25
And we thank Brad1X who has
1:28:28
had a couple of wins over the past few
1:28:30
years. He nailed it
1:28:32
with the Noah Gender Tumors Labraise
1:28:35
Chicken and Nuggets with Sweet and Sour
1:28:38
Agar Sauce. It
1:28:40
was, we laughed. We laughed
1:28:42
out loud several times about this piece
1:28:44
of art. Even though there were others,
1:28:47
this was the one that really nailed it.
1:28:49
Yeah, and that's the one, and he also corrected
1:28:52
me, because it's in a Petri dish, it's
1:28:54
usually agar, agar, whatever they call that stuff,
1:28:56
as opposed to what I said, which is guar. That's
1:28:59
a rock band, that heavy metal band
1:29:01
that has weird outfits.
1:29:04
I think guar makes the McDonald's shakes
1:29:07
thick. Let's
1:29:10
see, there were some submarine things.
1:29:12
There were some, there
1:29:14
were lots of, obviously lots of,
1:29:17
what was a close one? There
1:29:20
were a couple of ones that we liked. One
1:29:22
was the
1:29:24
brewed chicken, I think. What was that? Homebrew
1:29:28
chicken, that's a nice piece. Yeah, the
1:29:30
homebrew chicken was a nice piece. Yeah,
1:29:32
which was, who did that? That was Tantanil. You
1:29:35
like the 33 tumors
1:29:37
kill free meat from Dame Kenny Ben. It
1:29:40
was so disgusting to see
1:29:43
the chicken in there.
1:29:44
The chicken with thumbs up, 33 tumors. Yeah,
1:29:49
I liked that. Yeah, it was funny, but
1:29:51
it wasn't going to get picked. Yeah,
1:29:53
there were some people who tried data
1:29:55
gloves and controllers. Oh yeah,
1:29:57
data gloves, and also that.
1:29:59
Sub submarine immerseable.
1:30:03
Yeah fly
1:30:05
Especially when it was on the with the dead on
1:30:08
the dead watch thing with the Queen
1:30:10
Elizabeth that was um, yeah What
1:30:13
this correct the records he's been
1:30:16
doing this species done one we picked one
1:30:18
some time ago No, what's that sub?
1:30:20
What's the Queen Elizabeth death watch thing?
1:30:22
What are you talking about? You
1:30:24
just make a test a piece that has the dead
1:30:26
people on the
1:30:28
in in the clouds Oh,
1:30:31
I okay. Oh, I'm sorry. Yes. I know
1:30:33
what you say. Yeah, it didn't work
1:30:36
No, no, it didn't work didn't
1:30:38
work Sick sick
1:30:41
a lot of tastes like chickens and build
1:30:43
back better. No, this was the one I mean it was clear
1:30:45
and then we're like Brad 1x who's
1:30:47
this and then we look at him He's had at least three wins
1:30:50
Yeah,
1:30:50
he's had a number of wins and they're all very
1:30:52
creative. He's good artist
1:30:55
A very good artist. We thank you Brad 1x We
1:30:58
thank the work of all of our artists who diligently
1:31:01
work on this and they congratulate each other
1:31:03
on Noah gender social calm Which is great
1:31:05
guys. Oh all kinds of people put in pushback on me.
1:31:08
Hey, man, don't be so harsh about memes
1:31:11
They're good for turning people on to the show
1:31:13
and talking to family about stuff and explaining
1:31:16
things in an easy manner
1:31:17
Go say this to you. It was on
1:31:20
the agenda social. Oh
1:31:22
You poor baby got criticized for no,
1:31:24
I don't down to memers. No, I don't mind that I don't
1:31:26
mind the criticism I'm surprised that people
1:31:28
took my criticism of meme so
1:31:31
seriously It's
1:31:32
like I don't care you do whatever you want. I'm
1:31:34
just saying whenever I look at no
1:31:37
I'd use them. I get to look at those memes
1:31:39
for the newsletter. I always pick one or two out that
1:31:42
are pretty good
1:31:43
Lot of them are really lame. Have you noticed that most
1:31:45
memes really stink? Yeah, and people you
1:31:47
know, they're proud of having One
1:31:55
or two good ones they have like one after
1:31:58
another after any meme they owe there's a meme
1:31:59
Let me post it. Listen to this from Sir
1:32:02
Snide. With
1:32:04
respect, I find your comments about memes
1:32:06
harsh. With respect is always a bad sign.
1:32:09
That's never good. I find your comments
1:32:11
about memes harsh.
1:32:13
Here talk about the community and memes seems
1:32:15
to me to be in conflict.
1:32:18
I find the memes useful. I can stay
1:32:20
off Reddit and iFunny. There's
1:32:22
a site called iFunny?
1:32:24
I never heard of it. I like the dad
1:32:26
memes the best. I like others as it helps me
1:32:28
talk about current events in a non-argumentative
1:32:31
way with my friends outside of no agenda.
1:32:33
That may be true. I also see the show
1:32:36
art as specialized memes so it seems
1:32:38
wrong to talk up the show art but
1:32:40
talk down other memes. Please reconsider.
1:32:43
Signed, Baronet Sir Snide.
1:32:46
PLL. PLL.
1:32:49
And I'm like, that's okay. Is
1:32:52
this fine? What
1:32:55
did I say? What did I actually say? Please.
1:32:58
He didn't say
1:32:58
much of anything. He just used the bandwidth. No, no, no.
1:33:01
I said, you bitch about using the bandwidth. I think that's what I was talking about. Yeah,
1:33:03
that's what it was about the bandwidth and the storage. No,
1:33:05
I replied to this guy. Oh Lordy. I
1:33:08
said, please. Oh, there you go. Everybody
1:33:11
post your top meme to me in this thread. Apparently
1:33:14
they have healing power. So I'm waiting.
1:33:17
And no one has posted one yet. Yeah, you're
1:33:19
a wise ass. Yeah, my
1:33:21
wise ass. Exactly. Exactly.
1:33:25
Let's thank our executive and associate executive
1:33:27
producers for episode 1,567.
1:33:28
One five six
1:33:30
seven. Kicking it off with Sir David
1:33:33
from Bel Air, Texas, who comes
1:33:35
in with 666.67.
1:33:39
And
1:33:41
let me open up my jingles folder because
1:33:43
people have asked me to do jingles
1:33:45
today and I pre-produced them and
1:33:49
says, Robilizer and Climate Gate, please. Okay.
1:33:53
No problem. I'm sorry about that. I.T.M.
1:33:56
Gents.
1:33:58
I turn 67 for show. 1567 on
1:34:01
Sunday. Coincidence? I think not.
1:34:03
Please accept this donation
1:34:06
that brings me to barren status. I request the
1:34:08
Brazos Bottomlands as my protectorate.
1:34:11
Is that okay? The Brazos Bottomlands as his
1:34:14
protectorate? Oh yeah. You think that's okay? I didn't
1:34:16
think it would be a problem. I'm looking it up. This is fine. Sir David,
1:34:18
Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.
1:34:19
India, hang
1:34:22
out, Mike. Standby. 33, 33, 33.
1:34:29
Robilizer out.
1:34:32
To the gate, to the gate, to the climate gates.
1:34:43
Next on the list is Sir David of Ross.
1:34:45
And he's from no city provided,
1:34:48
USA. Whatever.
1:34:50
There's a little humor there. Dear
1:34:54
John and
1:34:56
Adam, It's
1:34:58
always been an honor to be an executive producer
1:35:00
of the best podcast in the universe. Some of my most
1:35:03
treasured moments
1:35:04
are when the No Agenda newsletter arrives
1:35:07
cheerfully and thoughtfully into my
1:35:09
inbox two times each week.
1:35:12
He actually wrote that.
1:35:14
You can imagine my disappointment when,
1:35:16
as we now know,
1:35:18
evil mail chip decides to censor
1:35:21
and cancel John's voice and truth regarding
1:35:23
trans-Maoism or CBDCs
1:35:26
this summer or
1:35:28
Michelle Obama's presidential campaign.
1:35:31
I hate it when that happens.
1:35:34
I wish John used Federated
1:35:36
Computer for the newsletter. For only $39 a month,
1:35:39
John can get a great mail
1:35:42
chip replacement. Get off Google
1:35:44
for email. No more Zoom spying
1:35:47
on his calls. Be completely happy and free.
1:35:50
That's federated.com computer or
1:35:52
dot
1:35:53
computer. Okay.
1:35:55
Use this coupon code. Use
1:35:58
the coupon code NO AGENDA NATION.
1:35:59
for 30% off your order. I
1:36:02
love you guys forever, Sir David of Ross. He
1:36:04
actually sent us a free setup.
1:36:07
It's pretty interesting.
1:36:09
I didn't get the setup. No, he sent,
1:36:12
trust me, he's smart. He sent it to me, so
1:36:14
I will set up an account for you. And
1:36:17
it literally has all these things in it.
1:36:20
It's like,
1:36:21
you don't know what an Umbral is or a Start 9. It's
1:36:23
like one of these self-hosted computers,
1:36:25
except it's in the cloud. So it kind of negates
1:36:28
the whole idea, but it's replacements. You'll
1:36:30
like it, you'll like it.
1:36:31
It's got- Okay, if you say so, I probably will. Yeah, it's
1:36:34
got NextCloud in there, and it's noagenda.computer.
1:36:36
I haven't set up a page there yet, but
1:36:39
yeah.
1:36:40
It's a new service. Clearly,
1:36:43
they are providing value here. Thank
1:36:46
you, Sir David of Ross. Well, we'll find out, won't we? We will.
1:36:48
Frank Duvenoort,
1:36:51
or Duvenoort, no, Duvenvoorden.
1:36:54
Duvenvoorden, Frank Duvenvoorden.
1:36:57
Frank Duvenvoorden. North Vancouver,
1:36:59
British Columbia,
1:37:00
Canada, 550 from Canada. Used
1:37:03
to donate in US. This is 757 Canadian. This
1:37:06
makes me knight. Note to John's email.
1:37:09
Yeah. Did you get it? There's
1:37:12
no note from anyone named Frank. His
1:37:14
last name, I can't pronounce. And
1:37:17
I went through the trouble of going to PayPal
1:37:19
and digging through the donations
1:37:22
to find his so I could get
1:37:24
his email address. Yes.
1:37:27
Nothing.
1:37:28
What do you
1:37:29
mean, nothing? There's nothing from his email address. Did
1:37:31
you email his email address and say, hey, we got nothing?
1:37:34
It was this morning I did this. I only get this
1:37:36
spreadsheet when you do. So what do we do?
1:37:38
Do we do a... We're knighting him
1:37:40
as Frank whatever and then he can change
1:37:42
it later. Okay.
1:37:44
All right, Frank, welcome. Thank you.
1:37:47
We'll give him a double up karma since we didn't get a real
1:37:49
note from him. You've got...
1:37:51
Double up. Double up. Karma. You
1:37:55
wanna do this one? Gino Argyro. I'm
1:38:00
guessing,
1:38:01
in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
1:38:03
And he says,
1:38:05
whoops, sorry. He
1:38:07
says, please name me Sir V, he's
1:38:10
also an upcoming knight. Yes. 34567, 34567, great
1:38:13
donation number. I
1:38:17
humbly request a Tomahawk Rib
1:38:19
Eye and Langavulin 16
1:38:22
at the round table.
1:38:24
Head over to
1:38:25
castellano.com for all your beard
1:38:28
grooming. Oh,
1:38:30
this is the beard guy. Castellano,
1:38:32
I think it is. Castellano,
1:38:34
yeah, it's C-A-S-T-E-L-S-I-L-A-N-O.com.
1:38:39
You can rewind that if you want to write it down, if
1:38:41
you have a
1:38:42
beard. He says all this beard stuff. I actually
1:38:45
use his stuff. I don't have a beard, but I
1:38:47
use the beard stuff. He's done your hair?
1:38:49
No, after shaving, I use
1:38:52
it after shaving. It's really nice.
1:38:54
Thanks for all you two do. Jingles a drone
1:38:57
again and Putin on the wrist.
1:38:59
A drone again, naturally. Don't
1:39:05
worry, be happy. I
1:39:14
don't think that's Putin on the wrist. Don't
1:39:17
worry, be happy. I'm sorry, I did
1:39:19
the wrong one. He wanted Putin on the wrist. Oh,
1:39:21
good.
1:39:22
Then we get to do two good jingles,
1:39:25
Putin on the wrist.
1:39:27
I don't know why I messed that one up, I'm sorry.
1:39:30
Woo! If you're blue and you don't know
1:39:32
where there's fake news, why don't you get your
1:39:35
Gitmo fix? Putin
1:39:37
on the wrist. Dressed
1:39:40
up like a million dollar trooper.
1:39:45
Trying not to look like Anderson
1:39:47
Cooper. Super pooper.
1:39:50
Come, let's mix where John Podesta walks
1:39:52
with kids. Oh, I mean pizzas in
1:39:54
his mitts. Jesus. Putin
1:39:56
on the wrist. There you go. Fixed.
1:40:01
Sir Gonzo is in El Paso, Texas
1:40:03
and he comes in with our standard
1:40:06
stock but oh so love 333.33 switcheroo. I'm submitting
1:40:08
the 333.33 for my son Thomas
1:40:12
Gold. All credits are for
1:40:14
him. Switcheroo has hereby been initiated.
1:40:18
This show has provided a lot of great information and perspectives
1:40:21
of current and important events and I've enjoyed every
1:40:23
minute. It is also filled with very supportive producers
1:40:25
for anyone in need.
1:40:27
We ask in the Noah Genovation to promote and support
1:40:29
his first book titled Hey Dad
1:40:31
I Don't Like You.
1:40:33
Just in time for Father's Day.
1:40:36
Hey Dad I Don't Like You, an illustrated book about
1:40:38
the raw emotions and complex feelings of
1:40:40
a challenging father-son relationship. Kickstarter
1:40:43
dropped on Father's Day. Check it out, share
1:40:45
it and give some support. You can search Kickstarter
1:40:48
with the book title which is Hey
1:40:50
Dad I Don't Like You. Thank you for your courage from
1:40:52
Sir Gonzo. P.S. if you have
1:40:54
any other questions about the book you can
1:40:56
reach out to him at support at heartsofgoldcreative.com.
1:41:01
Nice. I'll look for it.
1:41:03
This
1:41:03
is a winner. Yeah. Bowman
1:41:06
McMahon in Utopia,
1:41:08
Texas. Where is that? It's
1:41:10
not far from here. Thank you. That's
1:41:15
the right answer. Uh-huh. 333.33 John
1:41:20
Adam. Pardon the mix-up when you said
1:41:22
my first donation is being from Greg
1:41:24
Carlwood. What
1:41:26
I meant to say was I found y'all's show
1:41:29
via Greg Carlwood's podcast
1:41:31
after Adam's appearance on the Higher Side
1:41:33
Chats. Hence the Greg Carlwood
1:41:36
donation. Higher Side Chats donation.
1:41:40
Got it. Alright. Okay. Well
1:41:42
thank you for the donation to clear up
1:41:44
the other donation. We have Sir Scotland
1:41:47
the Brave, a knight here, from
1:41:50
Burntisland in Fife,
1:41:53
Great Britain. 333. Sir Scotland
1:41:55
the Brave here from the Kingdom of Fife. There we
1:41:57
go.
1:41:59
Abadour to be exact. I'm in a dilemma.
1:42:02
Do I go onward from sir to baronet or
1:42:04
do I do dice? Do de douche my righteous
1:42:07
hot wife to enable her dame hood?
1:42:09
Alas, I cannot rule
1:42:12
the kingdom of Scotland without her. So this is a switcheroo.
1:42:14
Oh man can
1:42:18
I ask for a de douching of my
1:42:20
Queenie Queenie Scottish
1:42:22
slang for wife. Yes You've
1:42:26
been de douched That
1:42:29
you hold the tape the title Dame
1:42:31
should be doing this with a Scottish accent I
1:42:33
don't think so and that you hold the title
1:42:36
Dame Scotland the brave for when she lets
1:42:38
go of her grip and donate to Dame hood. Also,
1:42:40
she just officially retired this week lastly
1:42:43
calling out. So what do I put in there? I guess
1:42:47
for today we put
1:42:49
Future Dame Scotland,
1:42:51
I guess to make it easy Because
1:42:53
it's not easy because you know, you didn't give me anything
1:42:56
to put in there for the switcheroo. Okay, there we go
1:42:58
done Lastly calling all
1:43:00
loons and Queenie's we are wanting a meetup
1:43:03
in Scotland. So you can so all so can all
1:43:05
you sirs what?
1:43:07
That'd be great sirs dames producers
1:43:09
laddies and lassies in this great land of
1:43:11
Caledonia email me It's sir. Scotland
1:43:13
the brave at gmail.com to arrange a meetup and
1:43:16
let's have a wee dram and a knees up Thank
1:43:18
you again John and Adam for the brawlest
1:43:21
brawlest podcasting universe sir
1:43:23
Scotland the brave is Adam Can you amend the call
1:43:25
out for Elizabeth for her birthday and retirement
1:43:28
and change that to future Dame Scotland the brave?
1:43:30
I did it blessings and thanks you
1:43:32
both because it's also a birthday in there done done
1:43:34
done done. Thank you, sir
1:43:36
So sir Scotland the brave
1:43:38
at gmail.com. Yes
1:43:41
so Sam Lame
1:43:44
in Bedford, Kentucky 333 thanks
1:43:47
for all you do the no agenda show continues
1:43:49
to help me through all the propaganda
1:43:52
signed Sam 333 from
1:43:55
sir Richard of Burbank north of the 533
1:43:57
that's all no
1:43:59
So a double up karma for him. Thank you very
1:44:02
much to Richard. You've got
1:44:08
Steve Rock in Springfield, Missouri comes
1:44:10
in with the 233 so he becomes associate
1:44:13
executive producer and he wants to deduce
1:44:16
You've been deduced And
1:44:19
he wants to call out Bob Bob
1:44:24
from Springfield as a
1:44:26
douchebag. Yeah, John got it
1:44:29
Serkow of lavender blossoms who doesn't know
1:44:31
it lavender blossoms org in Northville, Michigan
1:44:36
227.72 thanks for all you do hey rhymes Serkow
1:44:38
of lavender blossoms org Thank you very much Serkow
1:44:41
great products lavender blossoms org
1:44:43
if you're looking for some CBD with lavender
1:44:46
This is the product for you. Yeah, it doesn't
1:44:48
stink
1:44:48
doesn't you know it smells great actually
1:44:51
smells great Well here she is Linda
1:44:53
Lupatkin. She's back from Lakewood
1:44:55
Colorado 205 6 7
1:44:59
jobs karma for all the jobs hunters
1:45:01
out there and And for
1:45:03
a competitive edge go to image makers
1:45:06
Inc com for all your executive
1:45:08
resume and job search needs Or
1:45:11
just find Linda blue Patkin under
1:45:13
the shows executive producer list
1:45:16
and run a search jobs jobs
1:45:18
jobs and jobs
1:45:27
All right, then we have Christopher Warren
1:45:29
from La Crescent, Minnesota 202.02 nice
1:45:33
In the morning John Adam first time donating and
1:45:36
so we well, I guess we'll do a deducing since you
1:45:38
didn't ask for it I'm giving it to you
1:45:42
You've been deduced First
1:45:44
time donating and it's to wish my parents
1:45:46
Todd and Bonnie a happy 40th wedding
1:45:49
anniversary 40 years and they never had
1:45:51
a fight That's June 25th
1:45:54
1983 please call out mark Schmidt in Minneapolis
1:45:56
as a douchebag Mark
1:45:59
hit me in the mouth
1:45:59
last August and your media deconstruction has
1:46:02
been an invaluable addition to my life.
1:46:04
It's easily the best podcast in the universe.
1:46:07
Lastly, I humbly request law
1:46:09
school karma as I begin at the University
1:46:11
of Florida in August and I'm 100% going
1:46:13
to need it. Jingles, mac and cheese
1:46:15
and some vocal fry. I'm
1:46:19
gonna
1:46:20
presume that's the iPad? I guess
1:46:22
so. Thanks again for all you do wishing
1:46:25
you and your loved ones all the best. May you never
1:46:27
find an exit strategy. Pax Christie, happy
1:46:29
anniversary mom and dad Chris Warren in La Crescent,
1:46:32
Minnesota.
1:46:34
You slaves can get used to mac
1:46:36
and cheese, mac and cheese, macaroni
1:46:38
and cheap cheddar melted together.
1:46:41
Mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac
1:46:43
and cheese.
1:46:44
You know obviously I read
1:46:47
the New York Times like all day
1:46:49
long mainly
1:46:52
on my iPad app. Never
1:46:55
grows old, never grows old, never grows
1:46:58
old. I got a text from
1:47:01
from one of the
1:47:03
the devs over there at podcasting 2.0. He
1:47:05
says I'm in a meeting right now and this lady literally
1:47:08
is talking like the iPad lady.
1:47:10
I said record her, record her. Yeah.
1:47:13
I don't think he did.
1:47:15
Probably not.
1:47:16
Bandsids up $200.33. Simple.
1:47:18
ITM gents. Please de-douche me.
1:47:20
You've
1:47:26
been de-douched. Yikes. No
1:47:29
jingles, no karma. That's right. Hey John and
1:47:31
Adams is David Belanger, Walnut Creek, California. $200
1:47:34
and I
1:47:36
think he's our final, yes our final associate
1:47:39
executive producer. Hey John and Adam on Father's Day I
1:47:41
was blessed with the gift of a son. We named him Frederick
1:47:43
Hoy Belanger. What do you think? How do you pronounce it?
1:47:45
H-O-A-I. Hoy. I don't
1:47:47
know. I have no idea. In
1:47:50
honor of my hero the late great Freddie
1:47:52
Mercury. My beautiful wife Nancy
1:47:54
is a trooper and I just want to say I
1:47:56
love you bae.
1:47:58
B-A-E. Also, please de-douche
1:48:01
my daughter, Margot.
1:48:02
You're not too silly, are you? You've been
1:48:04
de-douched. Oh, they're pre-de-douched, beautiful.
1:48:07
Last time I donated a few years ago, I requested
1:48:09
cancer karma from my mom, but she passed away September
1:48:12
29th, 2021. My mom
1:48:14
never got to meet her grandson, but I did expose
1:48:17
her to your show a few times, and she loved your
1:48:19
takes on a variety of different topics. Thanks for
1:48:21
making her laugh along with me. I miss you every day, ma.
1:48:23
Thanks for the posthumous Father's Day gift. Shout-outs
1:48:26
to Sir Jeffrey B. Marcy. We met at a Noagenda
1:48:29
meetup in Oakland a few years back. Over the years, we've
1:48:31
become good friends through a meetup in Walnut
1:48:33
Creek where John signed our ham radios.
1:48:36
I remember that one. And
1:48:38
he helped me move a couch. What?
1:48:41
Well, did you help move the couch or this other guy? I guess.
1:48:44
No, it must have been his friend. He's
1:48:46
a Canadian, but we won't hold it again. Some jingles.
1:48:49
Stop laughing. Shut up. Oh
1:48:51
yes, Rebelizer and chemtrails. Don't
1:48:54
laugh. Why are you laughing?
1:48:57
Shut up. Shut
1:49:01
up.
1:49:01
India, Tango,
1:49:04
Mike, stand by. 33, 33, 33.
1:49:11
Rebelizer
1:49:11
out. Chemtrails. And
1:49:16
that wraps up our executive... Well, I
1:49:18
also want to say 73 to David
1:49:20
Belanger, the KM6TMZ. Yes, 73
1:49:23
is Keto 5 Alpha Charlie Charlie.
1:49:25
And thank you to these executive and
1:49:27
associate executive producers. These titles are
1:49:30
real. Go ahead, look them up on IMDB.
1:49:32
No agenda. You'll see over 700 people
1:49:35
have registered there and it's
1:49:37
accepted, of course, because they are real titles. You
1:49:39
did exactly what executive and associate executive
1:49:42
producers do. And you
1:49:44
can use them anywhere. And these are forever. These
1:49:46
never expire. And of course, if
1:49:49
anyone questions you, what are you
1:49:51
drinking today?
1:49:52
My last can of polar. Any
1:49:56
particular flavor or just straight up? Just
1:49:58
plain seltzer.
1:49:59
If anyone questions you about
1:50:02
the validity of these, the
1:50:05
validity of these titles, we'll
1:50:08
vouch for you. Go ahead, just email us and
1:50:10
once again thank you for supporting the No Agenda Show episode
1:50:12
5, 1-5-6-7. Our formula is this. We go
1:50:14
out, we hit people in the mouth. I'm feeling
1:50:17
good today, man.
1:50:37
I'm good. We've
1:50:39
done some good stuff already.
1:50:41
I'm liking it.
1:50:42
Yeah, it's all downhill from there. No,
1:50:44
no, no, no. There was one other...
1:50:48
Actually, I don't want to do that. I would like to... I'd
1:50:51
like to... I have a motion. And
1:50:54
I'd like to move somewhere
1:50:57
else. Let me see. Yes, I'd
1:50:59
like to move because I saw that you have clips
1:51:01
on it. I'm just going to presume the Trans
1:51:03
Law Report is about trans-mal-ism.
1:51:07
It's about...
1:51:10
Yeah, I think it is. Well,
1:51:12
why don't you go check your clip list? An awful long
1:51:14
bunch of clips. Well, you set
1:51:16
it up. I'm going to start us... This
1:51:18
is about...
1:51:19
It's about trans-mal-ism, but what's interesting
1:51:22
to me is the way... PBS
1:51:24
is the liberal outlet. It's gone
1:51:27
worse than ever.
1:51:29
They're all in
1:51:31
on the memes, gender-affirming
1:51:34
care. You mean the... We
1:51:39
keep forgetting the word for it.
1:51:41
Not the extractions. The euphemisms.
1:51:44
Yeah. The phoney euphemisms. And
1:51:47
they've got a new... They've done a switcheroo
1:51:49
here, though. And we'll get
1:51:51
to it as we play these clips. This is about
1:51:53
the new... About the laws. The
1:51:56
anti-trans laws, which are not
1:51:58
anti-trans. They're anti...
1:52:00
mutilating children mutilate and
1:52:02
I mutilation laws and if
1:52:04
they would if the Republicans would
1:52:07
promote them as anti mutilation
1:52:09
laws
1:52:11
they don't do the Republicans are no good
1:52:14
I think they they do
1:52:16
or they say I don't know this no
1:52:19
well hello the media is the one that just
1:52:21
says anti trans anti trans they had genocidal
1:52:24
laws
1:52:25
genocide well if you give
1:52:27
me a clip of some Republicans saying anti
1:52:29
mutilation laws okay
1:52:32
okay I'll look for one then I will give you
1:52:34
a clip of the day okay I'll find
1:52:37
it no problem
1:52:39
here we go a raft of anti
1:52:42
LGBTQ legislation and mostly
1:52:44
Republican led this right here just
1:52:46
just to stop for a second
1:52:48
sorry a raft
1:52:51
of anti LGBTQ
1:52:53
legislation is is this against lesbians
1:52:56
or gays or bisexuals
1:52:58
this needs to stop
1:53:01
you're not stopping it because these people are shameless
1:53:04
it's it's unbelievable I knew
1:53:07
that would get you right away and that's the tone
1:53:09
of the whole report but the switcharoo
1:53:12
wait the switcharoo is
1:53:14
the one that really gets me a
1:53:16
raft of anti LGBTQ
1:53:19
legislation and mostly Republican
1:53:21
led states now faces mounting
1:53:23
legal challenges Laura Barone Lopez
1:53:26
is back with a look at those cases and
1:53:28
their
1:53:28
broader implications the
1:53:30
Lopez the Lopez ladies
1:53:33
girl care for minors but measures
1:53:35
and it hold while we're stepping on it this
1:53:37
is too good to step on or a Barone Lopez
1:53:40
is back with a look at those cases and
1:53:42
their broader implications transition
1:53:44
related medical care for minors but
1:53:46
measures in at least five of those states have
1:53:49
now been permanently or temporarily blocked
1:53:51
from taking effect to discuss the
1:53:53
legal challenges around these laws and where
1:53:56
they go next we're joined by Danielle Weatherby
1:53:58
a law professor at the University
1:53:59
University of Arkansas, who focuses on
1:54:02
LGBTQ legal issues. Professor
1:54:04
Weatherby, thank you so much for joining. Arkansas
1:54:07
was the first state to ban gender-affirming
1:54:09
medical care for minors, but this week
1:54:12
a federal judge ruled that
1:54:14
ban unconstitutional, making it
1:54:16
the first ever ruling to overturn
1:54:18
such a prohibition. Can you explain
1:54:21
the judge's determination in this case? His
1:54:23
determination was that Act 626
1:54:27
was unconstitutional for three reasons.
1:54:29
First he said that the act violated the
1:54:32
equal protection clause to the extent
1:54:34
that it discriminated on the basis of facts.
1:54:38
What?
1:54:40
That's why I stopped it there.
1:54:42
Because
1:54:42
that's what I said. It discriminates
1:54:45
on the basis of sex.
1:54:48
So you're not allowed to have mutilating
1:54:50
care if you're
1:54:53
trans, I guess. No, you're allowed to
1:54:56
have it. You must
1:54:58
have it. The law was
1:55:00
prohibiting it. Right, that's what I'm saying. The law
1:55:02
was prohibiting that because everyone else can
1:55:04
have mutilating care?
1:55:07
Believe me, I have
1:55:09
no idea. It just sounds idiotic. All
1:55:11
right. There we go. Let's continue.
1:55:14
Second, he said that it usurped the
1:55:16
parental right to make well-informed
1:55:19
medical determinations on behalf of their
1:55:22
minor
1:55:22
children. No, no, I'm all
1:55:24
in for this. I'm all in. Stop
1:55:26
this for a second. They're
1:55:29
using parental rights as
1:55:32
a reason to ban these laws.
1:55:35
Yes, to mutilate. Yeah, you have the right
1:55:37
to mutilate your kid.
1:55:39
You do, but the fact that they're tricking
1:55:41
the kids or they're not talking to the parents
1:55:43
in the first place or they're doing
1:55:46
it behind the parents' back, all that,
1:55:48
nah, that doesn't make any difference because
1:55:51
this whole thing, these
1:55:53
laws are about parents' rights.
1:55:56
Yes. That is what they're trying to prove
1:55:58
here. I would say
1:56:00
that
1:56:01
as long as it's not being done behind
1:56:03
the parents back.
1:56:05
Yeah. Yes. Absolutely. You
1:56:07
should, you should, as a parent, you have total
1:56:10
control over your child. And if that's what you want to do. It is
1:56:12
being done behind the parents back and that's not
1:56:14
being addressed. No, I know, but that's
1:56:16
not that may, is that even in the law?
1:56:19
Because
1:56:20
most of these laws- Well, it doesn't matter because the whole thing
1:56:22
got thrown out anyway. Okay, let's continue.
1:56:24
Okay. And this is a right that
1:56:27
is implicated by the substantive
1:56:30
due process clause. And then finally,
1:56:32
he said that this act violated
1:56:35
physicians, treating physicians first
1:56:37
amendment rights insofar as
1:56:39
it prohibited them from consulting with
1:56:42
their patients about the gender
1:56:44
affirming care.
1:56:46
Wow. Okay,
1:56:48
so the three things were- That's a stretch.
1:56:50
I like that one. Sexual, it
1:56:52
was a- Discriminatory. Discriminatory
1:56:56
sexually,
1:56:57
parents rights, and freedom
1:56:59
of speech were the three items that
1:57:01
she cited as the reason this thing was kicked
1:57:03
out. Now, if you remember, we played a clip
1:57:06
last show
1:57:07
that said the whole thing was thrown out because of all
1:57:10
these experts that came in and says, you know,
1:57:12
it keeps kids from committing suicide.
1:57:15
Yeah, that was, would you rather
1:57:17
have a dead daughter or a living
1:57:20
son?
1:57:21
That was the main one. So none of
1:57:23
those things are even addressed by this woman
1:57:25
who's the ex- who is a legal
1:57:27
expert in analyzing this thing. Well,
1:57:29
they're trying to get this to the Supreme
1:57:31
Court, I guess. That's why they're bringing- Well, that
1:57:34
is brought up in the conversation. But the whole
1:57:36
thing is like, we're being buffaloed about
1:57:38
what this is all about, how it's being kicked
1:57:40
out. And NPR, this
1:57:43
PBS, is promoting this, oh
1:57:45
yeah, bad, bad, bad, bad. Okay,
1:57:47
let's continue, sorry. The
1:57:48
Arkansas Attorney General has already
1:57:51
said that he is going to
1:57:53
appeal the ruling and rejected
1:57:55
the scientific consensus that transgender
1:57:58
youth benefit from such-
1:57:59
care, what do you make of that appeal?
1:58:02
And is it a matter of inevitability that this
1:58:04
is ultimately going to reach the Supreme Court? Well,
1:58:07
that will take some time. Certainly,
1:58:09
the Arkansas Attorney General has said
1:58:11
that
1:58:12
he intends to appeal to the Eighth Circuit
1:58:14
Court of Appeals. And I believe that
1:58:17
that is just inevitable. In
1:58:19
terms of the medical science, however,
1:58:22
the vast majority of experts,
1:58:25
including the American Medical Association, the
1:58:27
American Pediatrics Association,
1:58:29
and all of the experts that have weighed
1:58:31
in on this subject unanimously
1:58:34
agree that this type of gender affirming
1:58:37
care is in a minor's
1:58:39
best interest when the minor has been
1:58:41
diagnosed with gender dysphoria. Dysphoria.
1:58:43
Wow. Oh,
1:58:47
man, this is your medical community.
1:58:50
This is your big pharma. When the minor
1:58:52
has been diagnosed with gender
1:58:55
dysphoria, which is- Yeah, all they left out
1:58:57
was over the phone
1:58:59
by a quack. Yeah, through the
1:59:01
app. Through the app. Or through the app.
1:59:04
Yeah. Wow. All
1:59:06
right. Continue. This is a very depressing report, John.
1:59:09
Thanks. And I think that's important to note
1:59:11
that Judge Moody's decision was
1:59:13
based on a weighing of the
1:59:15
credibility of all that medical science.
1:59:18
Science! In Florida, a judge struck
1:59:20
down the state's prohibition on Medicaid
1:59:23
coverage for gender affirming care.
1:59:25
And in Indiana recently, another
1:59:28
judge temporarily blocked most
1:59:30
of their ban for minors.
1:59:32
This is what it's about. This
1:59:34
is really what it's about. We got to make sure we
1:59:36
get that out of Medicare so we can get that paid for.
1:59:39
No more GoFundMe's kids. It's paid
1:59:41
for. It's Medicare!
1:59:42
Only allowing the prohibition. Yeah, I
1:59:44
think it's in Medicaid. Okay,
1:59:47
Medicaid. But the point is, that's what
1:59:49
they want. That's the Holy Grail. Well, we got to get the kids in the
1:59:51
schedule. Yeah, in fact, they had what's his name, that creepy
1:59:54
health and human services guy in the government
1:59:56
who was demanding that you had to do
1:59:58
it and then they cut-
1:59:59
was pushed back on that. Yeah, they want
2:00:02
the government,
2:00:03
the $7.2 million that we heard
2:00:06
about, which is gonna cause his lifetime care
2:00:08
for one of these poor kids that get butchered,
2:00:11
the $7.2 million, they want that coming
2:00:14
out of the taxpayers, that coming from you
2:00:16
and me. That's right. For gender-affirming
2:00:18
care. And in Indiana recently,
2:00:20
another judge temporarily blocked
2:00:23
most of their ban for
2:00:25
minors, only allowing the prohibition
2:00:28
on surgeries to take effect. What
2:00:30
has been the legal strategy behind these
2:00:32
challenges?
2:00:34
Well, it's the strategy that you're seeing
2:00:36
from the ACLU of Arkansas, the
2:00:38
allegations that these
2:00:40
bans on medical
2:00:42
determinations, which implicate personal
2:00:45
autonomy and human dignity,
2:00:48
violate the First Amendment of treating
2:00:50
physicians and the due process
2:00:52
rights of parents and the equal protection
2:00:55
rights
2:00:56
of these minor patients.
2:00:58
This kind of three-pronged
2:01:00
approach seems to be effective. And
2:01:03
that's exactly what we're seeing in the decision
2:01:06
out of the Florida court, which was based
2:01:08
in equal protection and the one out of Arkansas
2:01:10
that came out from Judge Moody.
2:01:12
Wow, man. It's really,
2:01:14
the
2:01:15
thing
2:01:17
is, you and I know parents, we
2:01:20
know them, who are all in,
2:01:22
are doing this to their children. Yeah,
2:01:24
we don't hang out with them, but we know who they are.
2:01:27
They're doing this to their children. And they're
2:01:29
severely underinformed about
2:01:32
the long, well, no one really knows the long-term
2:01:34
effects.
2:01:35
They're underinformed about the actual,
2:01:37
the truth of the gender
2:01:40
dysphoria. They're lied to
2:01:42
about, there is no evidence that
2:01:45
people who long-term, there's no evidence, because
2:01:48
they don't have long-term evidence, that people
2:01:50
who have been transgendered
2:01:53
at a young age, that they have less
2:01:55
suicidal tendencies. In fact, there's actually
2:01:57
some evidence to the contrary. And
2:02:00
because of the medical community and
2:02:02
people in lab coats, they're all in on it. They
2:02:04
believe it. And then there's a, I guess, kind
2:02:07
of a fashion trend to it. You
2:02:09
know, a control issue that they didn't have
2:02:11
during COVID.
2:02:12
And we've heard all these things all that put it all together.
2:02:15
And it's, it is, it's unbelievable
2:02:18
that this is happening right before. I don't
2:02:20
know if this will get through, but that
2:02:22
this is even being suggested. They're
2:02:24
getting pushback on all these laws. And
2:02:27
you have to note that was mentioned
2:02:29
in there is the ACLU. Of
2:02:31
course.
2:02:32
The screwed up ACLU
2:02:35
that used to be a kind of for civil
2:02:38
liberties, not mutilation.
2:02:42
And you know what's the funny thing? I remember like just
2:02:44
a few years ago, we used to moan and
2:02:46
groan about the Somalians and the
2:02:48
ones that are up in Minnesota and the, oh,
2:02:51
they're having a female, female
2:02:54
genital mutilation, female
2:02:56
genital mutilation has now become
2:02:59
cool.
2:02:59
Trendy. And
2:03:03
it's gone beyond just, I mean, female genital
2:03:05
mutilation was just a click cliterectomy.
2:03:09
This is like removal of the breasts,
2:03:12
the removal of the uterus. Yeah.
2:03:14
Yeah.
2:03:16
It's a little more extreme than what we
2:03:18
used to complain about. And it's just beyond me
2:03:20
that people like the ACLU are all
2:03:22
in on it, but then again, a $7.2
2:03:24
million per person and longterm
2:03:27
benefits. The money. It's always
2:03:29
the money. Then it's always the money.
2:03:34
Is that the last one? No, no, no. This
2:03:36
five and six left. Okay.
2:03:39
It gets worse. Some of these rights are
2:03:41
well established, including the right
2:03:43
of parents to direct and control
2:03:45
the upbringing of their children. And
2:03:48
that's what these challenges to
2:03:50
these bans implicate.
2:03:54
I mean, I can't argue with that. If you
2:03:57
really think that this is the best thing for your child.
2:04:00
Have at it. I mean, people do lots of horrible
2:04:02
things with their children, but it
2:04:04
needs to keep your name on it. We need to know that
2:04:07
you did that needs
2:04:09
to be some kind of record and
2:04:11
they need to be not lied to, you know,
2:04:13
hormone, puberty blockers
2:04:16
is not so reversible, reversible.
2:04:18
You're, you're being fed lies.
2:04:21
Yeah. And most of the, and many of
2:04:23
the chemicals are the same chemicals they
2:04:25
use for chemical castration. Yeah. So
2:04:29
last one here. Yeah. They're being lied to by
2:04:31
the medical community that they trust.
2:04:34
So you're taking a trusting person,
2:04:37
which is probably nobody in this in
2:04:39
our community. No, I know in
2:04:41
our producers of the NOAA agenda show, don't are
2:04:44
pretty untrusting nowadays after
2:04:46
going through this, some of the stuff that we've been discussing
2:04:48
for the last 10 years.
2:04:50
Uh, but if you, but
2:04:52
to take a trusting person and then
2:04:54
exploit them like this is really shameful.
2:04:58
Last one. That's rapid. Finally, I just
2:05:00
wanted to ask you, do you think
2:05:02
that these legal challenges, um, and
2:05:05
the ultimate rulings that we've seen so far
2:05:07
are going to be impacting the politics
2:05:10
of this issue? You've seen some of this play out in Arkansas
2:05:12
yourself. Well, these are deeply charged
2:05:15
issues and people feel very strongly about
2:05:17
them one way or the other. Um, I
2:05:19
would note that governor Aisa Hutchinson
2:05:22
who has put his name in the, in the
2:05:24
hat for presidential candidate actually
2:05:27
initially vetoed this bill when
2:05:29
it came out of the Arkansas legislature
2:05:31
and it was only passed after
2:05:33
the legislature overrode his veto.
2:05:36
So I think that candidates on both
2:05:39
sides of the aisle recognize
2:05:41
that these,
2:05:42
um, issues affecting personal
2:05:44
healthcare decisions are,
2:05:47
are personal and, um, involve
2:05:49
some government overreach when it comes to
2:05:51
these transgender, uh, healthcare
2:05:53
bans.
2:05:54
So there was an article in
2:05:57
the, uh, city journal,
2:05:59
which I liked.
2:05:59
Christopher Rufo, he's kind of like, he's
2:06:02
a real like city journal type, a real journalist.
2:06:04
So, you know, pound the pavement
2:06:07
type guy. And I put it in the
2:06:09
show notes called Transgender Ideology
2:06:11
and the Corruption of Medicine. And
2:06:13
he spoke with a physician who's inside
2:06:16
a hospital system and he's talking
2:06:18
about, you know, how did this
2:06:20
happen? How did this come to be?
2:06:22
And he says that this was a cultural
2:06:25
shift that happened in 2020.
2:06:27
He says because transgender ideology
2:06:30
and COVID are inextricably linked.
2:06:33
And this is the key because it really did start
2:06:35
during COVID.
2:06:37
Normally doctors operate by the authority
2:06:39
of the professional societies that govern our
2:06:42
specific practice. That worked
2:06:44
because the individuals in those institutions were
2:06:46
reliable, intelligent and thoughtful. But
2:06:48
with COVID in 2020, we started
2:06:51
getting medical decrees without
2:06:53
peer review or evidence. You saw
2:06:55
this with masks, social distancing, emergency
2:06:58
use authorizations. These decrees were expressed
2:07:01
as something that everybody had to do without
2:07:03
justification based on sound science.
2:07:06
And the other thing was censorship.
2:07:07
If you were to ask questions
2:07:09
or express doubt about these medical
2:07:11
decrees, you would be ostracized
2:07:13
within your department and you stood a good chance
2:07:16
of being publicly humiliated, severely
2:07:18
reprimanded or fired.
2:07:20
And that's when transgender ideology
2:07:23
really took off, captured. Within
2:07:25
these academic institutions, so-called
2:07:27
experts in the field of transgender medicine
2:07:30
would simply declare that puberty blockers
2:07:32
and other interventions were the gold
2:07:34
standard of care.
2:07:36
The evidence to support this is completely fraudulent,
2:07:39
but no dissent was permitted. Everyone
2:07:41
within the medical community knew that if he questioned
2:07:43
transgender ideology who would suffer
2:07:46
the same repercussions that happened during
2:07:48
COVID. This is exactly what we've been saying. The
2:07:50
best way to describe the environment would be authoritarian,
2:07:53
censorious culture that discourages
2:07:56
any meaningful debate and encourages the
2:07:58
demonization of anyone who-
2:07:59
questions. So
2:08:03
these are ghouls, these are sick
2:08:05
people who do not care
2:08:07
about your child. And the only
2:08:09
person, and so if we're gonna be
2:08:12
deplatformed by the signs during COVID,
2:08:14
then we might as well bring back someone
2:08:16
from the signs during COVID, and that would be Peter
2:08:18
McCullough.
2:08:20
You can look up Peter McCullough's
2:08:22
credentials,
2:08:24
infallible.
2:08:25
Of course, if you ask anybody,
2:08:28
particularly in the media, not job,
2:08:30
crazy anti-vaxxer, loser,
2:08:33
no good, you know, should be on
2:08:35
Rogan's show every day, but
2:08:37
go look at his credentials, they're real,
2:08:39
and he's never been really fired
2:08:42
from anything because they can't.
2:08:44
And he is a beautiful
2:08:46
minute and a half
2:08:48
on really what's going on here.
2:08:51
What is one of the number one things
2:08:53
that has increased among children over
2:08:56
the past 20 years?
2:08:59
Wait, don't answer it. I'll tell you what it is.
2:09:01
It's autism.
2:09:03
That's a known fact, it's been
2:09:06
published, we've gone from when I was
2:09:08
a kid,
2:09:09
no autism that I can remember
2:09:11
except me, kind of. Same here. No
2:09:13
autism to now three out of every
2:09:15
ten boys
2:09:17
being diagnosed with autism.
2:09:19
Now, what causes that autism?
2:09:22
We'll get to that in a moment
2:09:24
because that's, you know, up for debate. But I think what's
2:09:26
not up for debate is that there's autism.
2:09:28
And if you aren't autistic,
2:09:30
then you're stuck to a screen all day because
2:09:32
your kids gave you, your parents gave you
2:09:35
the screen in the in the stroller. Go
2:09:37
to the mall, take a look.
2:09:38
You can have screen induced
2:09:41
autism. It's a real diagnosis. It's
2:09:43
a real thing. School teachers all over
2:09:45
the country see this, recognize it.
2:09:47
The good news is you take away the screen, the screen
2:09:50
after the the screaming and ranting in
2:09:52
the tantrums, the screen induced autism
2:09:54
does go away.
2:09:56
But this, what has changed here,
2:09:58
and which I'm sure have when all the kids
2:10:01
were on screens,
2:10:03
at home, with homeschooling,
2:10:05
thank you for locking us down.
2:10:08
Everyone was easy to diagnose every
2:10:10
child with autism.
2:10:12
Enter Dr. Peter McCullough. What
2:10:14
we know is research from the Netherlands, they've
2:10:16
been way ahead of the United States on gender
2:10:18
change and gender fluidity. What
2:10:20
they've uncovered is that a
2:10:23
large number of young people coming forward
2:10:25
for gender change, particularly
2:10:28
pre-puberty, have autism. Van
2:10:30
Der Meesen and colleagues reported this at the time,
2:10:32
this is a long time ago, and recognition
2:10:35
and diagnosis has improved. But 20%, you
2:10:38
know, 15 years ago, of the
2:10:41
transgender population was clinically
2:10:43
autistic. That means the autistic
2:10:45
spectrum could have been two or three times greater.
2:10:48
Then moving forward,
2:10:49
there was a large study
2:10:52
by Warrior and colleagues, 600,000
2:10:56
LGBT people.
2:10:59
And they were assessed after the fact
2:11:01
for autistic traits and characteristics, you
2:11:04
know, multiple different psychometric instruments.
2:11:07
They were off the Richter scale for autism,
2:11:10
off the Richter scale. Now there's been
2:11:12
paper after paper published, the
2:11:15
rise of autism. When I was a child, autism
2:11:18
was one in 10,000. Now it's one
2:11:20
in 36. The CDC on
2:11:22
its website indicates it is a pediatric
2:11:25
emergency. It's like the epidemic
2:11:28
of parenting right now is to have an autistic
2:11:30
child because it's forever. That
2:11:35
we now understand that
2:11:37
it is autism indeed as
2:11:40
a
2:11:40
seed that's driving
2:11:42
the proclivity for gender change.
2:11:45
That's right. They're saying to these kids, oh,
2:11:48
yeah, you're autistic.
2:11:50
Don't you sometimes feel like you'd rather be a girl
2:11:53
or a boy? Yeah. Okay.
2:11:55
Boom. There it is. The experts say,
2:11:58
go and get your change.
2:12:00
This is a this is a huge travesty
2:12:03
and they'll be trying to transgender
2:12:05
every single child I guess because
2:12:07
they get a switcheroo everyone boy
2:12:10
girl boy girl girl boy switcheroo
2:12:15
switcheroo everyone and and they do
2:12:17
not care about your child they didn't care about
2:12:19
your child during COVID they didn't care about keeping
2:12:21
your kid at home from school they did not care
2:12:23
about masking it they do not care they
2:12:25
do not care I hate to say
2:12:28
of course the medical community the people in
2:12:31
it care but they're captured everyone's captured
2:12:33
and people are afraid
2:12:34
they're afraid to come out because you know
2:12:36
you'll be living on the street before you know it
2:12:39
now what this does unfortunately is
2:12:41
this creates a vacuum
2:12:43
that political douchebags come into
2:12:46
and it's being abused everywhere
2:12:48
for political gain and now we see Starbucks
2:12:51
the Starbucks Union is going to go on strike
2:12:54
because throughout Pride month they
2:12:56
weren't allowed to put any pride flags up in
2:12:58
Starbucks and Starbucks has Starbucks is a very clear
2:13:01
during BLM same thing no no Black
2:13:03
Lives Matter stuff no no
2:13:05
pride stuff no transgender stuff
2:13:07
just no
2:13:08
so this is starting to start to heat up you get people on the
2:13:10
street you get people angry
2:13:12
and then we get and and by and far
2:13:15
as I'm concerned a company can do what it wants
2:13:17
and if it doesn't want to change his branding
2:13:19
to anything different or to make
2:13:21
a mess
2:13:23
with flags and things hanging in their
2:13:25
store that you don't want
2:13:28
it's their business why would you go
2:13:30
on strike about that you go on strike about things
2:13:32
that are personal you're not getting enough money
2:13:35
you're getting screwed by HR that's where you
2:13:37
go on strike away you go about a strike on for
2:13:39
political reasons well I'm sure that
2:13:41
the you might as well go on strike and say because Schultz is
2:13:43
in voting Democrat or he's not voting
2:13:45
Republican that would be part of it
2:13:48
and I would say that unions are also abusing
2:13:50
this to get more money like well we didn't
2:13:52
get you the pride flags but we got you more money
2:13:55
okay so now the cultural revolution either
2:13:59
the cultural
2:13:59
revolution part is what is worrisome.
2:14:02
And you just heard that in the city journal
2:14:05
from this insider in the hospital, the cultural,
2:14:08
the cultural shift, it's cultural, it's
2:14:10
taking hold of people's minds. And
2:14:12
this can get dangerous. This
2:14:14
is why we compare it to the to Mao
2:14:17
and the Cultural Revolution of 1967
2:14:20
1968. I was
2:14:22
alive. I was on this planet when this took
2:14:24
place. And they
2:14:27
got kids,
2:14:30
a lot of girls,
2:14:31
the everyone was doing a switcheroo, everyone was looking
2:14:33
masculine, actually, but mainly girls
2:14:35
to boys. And that's what 80% of these switcheroos
2:14:38
are. And they were riling them up
2:14:40
and making them crazy and getting
2:14:42
them against their employers against
2:14:45
their parents against their teachers. And
2:14:47
it got so bad that
2:14:49
they speak of the Guangji
2:14:51
massacre. I'll just read a
2:14:53
little piece from the book of knowledge. Throughout 1967,
2:14:56
but also 1968, there
2:14:58
are factions in the countryside that
2:15:00
weren't just eliminating each other physically.
2:15:03
But literally in a couple of small towns, they
2:15:05
were ritualistically eating each other. This
2:15:08
is this is this was in my lifetime,
2:15:10
people got so crazy over the over
2:15:13
stuff like this,
2:15:14
that they would kill people and then eat
2:15:16
the victims arms and thighs.
2:15:21
That's that's how crazy you can make people
2:15:23
and it's not something in like the the
2:15:25
Stone Age. So we have to be
2:15:27
very careful with this, I think.
2:15:34
I think so too. But it's
2:15:36
not us, you and me that have to be careful.
2:15:39
We're careful.
2:15:41
Yes, we are these guys, these douchebag
2:15:43
politicians,
2:15:45
the ACLU and other
2:15:47
groups that are they're fomenting
2:15:49
this, they want this. Exactly
2:15:51
what the end result will be. I mean, maybe
2:15:53
it's who knows who's behind it.
2:15:56
China? Well, I'm
2:15:57
not sure what it is, but I...
2:16:00
I do know that bad things
2:16:02
are happening. This
2:16:05
clip, which is really underplayed,
2:16:09
and at first, I don't see any
2:16:11
news coverage of this, so I didn't
2:16:13
know if it was real. And this is not
2:16:15
representative of the
2:16:17
transgender or LGBT community,
2:16:21
but it is perhaps representative of things
2:16:23
to come if we're not careful. This happened
2:16:25
in Boston. Tonight, four children
2:16:27
less than 10 years old are in DCF
2:16:29
custody after authorities and public
2:16:32
officials say they were found in an apartment
2:16:34
with six cross-dressing men, sex
2:16:36
toys, drugs, and alcohol. Firefighters
2:16:39
discovered them after one of those adults
2:16:42
died at the apartment. Because I was sickening
2:16:45
to hear from those that were there at the scene
2:16:47
describing what they saw and
2:16:50
the actions of the adults that were in
2:16:52
the room. City Councilor-at-Large Michael Flaherty
2:16:55
says he spoke with the firefighters who responded
2:16:57
to the Mary Ellen McCormick Apartments and
2:16:59
filed paperwork to make sure the state intervened
2:17:02
with the children. According to their incident
2:17:04
report, the apartment was in extreme
2:17:06
unsanitary conditions. All adult
2:17:08
parties were being uncooperative and denied
2:17:11
having children in the apartment. Drugs,
2:17:13
alcohol, drug paraphernalia, sex toys, et
2:17:15
cetera. And so they were concerned.
2:17:17
They had reached out to me just to make sure that
2:17:20
it didn't get swept under the rug. The governor says
2:17:22
DCF is now involved in investigating.
2:17:24
Just
2:17:25
heartbreaking. Terrible
2:17:27
situation. DCF has
2:17:29
taken those children into
2:17:31
its care and custody right now.
2:17:33
City leaders doing a walkthrough here, now
2:17:36
wondering how this could have happened. Councilors
2:17:38
planning to hold a hearing with the Boston Housing
2:17:40
Authority. Place is disgusting. And
2:17:43
this is on VHA. They
2:17:45
need to be doing a better job down there. Now,
2:17:49
the Boston Housing Authority sent us a statement saying
2:17:51
that they had received no prior complaints
2:17:54
about the unit, where this all apparently
2:17:56
happened. And they're working with the agencies involved
2:17:59
to take all the action.
2:17:59
appropriate follow-up. So again
2:18:02
this is not representative of the LGBTQ,
2:18:05
whatever community you want to call it, but
2:18:08
when you and you can do whatever you want as an adult
2:18:10
I'm fine with that. You want to be in an apartment
2:18:13
and cross-dress and do whatever and
2:18:15
that was maybe just an underreporting of what was
2:18:17
going on there but when there's children involved we got
2:18:19
to start looking at this stuff. Something's really bad,
2:18:22
something bad is going down. So
2:18:24
we've got to be careful
2:18:26
of this. Now
2:18:28
Big Pharma itself is
2:18:32
out all out in an all-out war, I'll
2:18:34
say it, a war on people.
2:18:37
I was doing, actually
2:18:39
my buddy Dave was doing some research. Do
2:18:41
you know what the number one category
2:18:44
of drug advertisements is
2:18:46
that's DTC direct to consumer?
2:18:49
The top four, three of the top four
2:18:52
are advertising for one specific
2:18:54
condition. And
2:18:57
any ideas? I would think it'd be headaches
2:18:59
but... No, no, no, no, no,
2:19:02
no. When's the last time you saw an
2:19:05
ad for Advil? Are you kidding me? I saw
2:19:07
one yesterday. The
2:19:10
number one is eczema.
2:19:15
Skin issues. That's
2:19:19
surprising. Yes, but
2:19:22
not when you listen to Bobby J. That's
2:19:25
my new name for Robert F. Kennedy
2:19:27
Jr. I can't remember what to say, I'm just
2:19:29
calling him Bobby J now. Bobby,
2:19:32
let's try something else. I like Bobby J.
2:19:34
Bobby J sounds like a stripper.
2:19:37
And now to the stage Bobby
2:19:39
J. He said
2:19:43
that
2:19:43
this comes from vaccines.
2:19:46
He says he says I didn't know anyone with
2:19:48
eczema when I was a kid. I didn't either by the
2:19:50
way, did you? No,
2:19:54
no. He says peanut allergies,
2:19:56
eczema and not from vaccines themselves but
2:19:59
from the composition.
2:19:59
from the adjuvants,
2:20:02
which of course, and then he goes into a whole bunch of other
2:20:04
things. The Marisol's, the Mercury.
2:20:06
We've been talking about that for 15 years.
2:20:09
Doesn't matter, but they are now the top four
2:20:12
advertisers. The one outlier
2:20:14
in there is of course the
2:20:16
new category, which is the
2:20:18
Ozymphics of the world. And
2:20:20
Novo Nordisk is in trouble
2:20:24
because Novo Nordisk is
2:20:27
now being called to
2:20:29
account in Denmark where they are located
2:20:32
as the EU has raised a
2:20:34
safety signal about
2:20:36
GLP-1 meds.
2:20:40
And besides the,
2:20:42
oh, you know, you might get some pancreatic, you
2:20:45
know, thyroid cancer, I think is the one
2:20:47
they, oh, some people get thyroid cancer. Others
2:20:49
get pancreatic cancer.
2:20:52
And they're
2:20:55
out doing damage control.
2:20:57
This was, the Cleveland
2:21:00
Clinic
2:21:01
is putting together packages that are airing on
2:21:03
television for damage
2:21:05
control. And what you'll hear
2:21:07
is I think truthful. They're saying,
2:21:09
hey, you know, some people, you know, you get cancer, you
2:21:11
die. But look at all the benefits and
2:21:14
just be careful.
2:21:15
The prescription weight loss drug Ozymphic had
2:21:17
meant to help people suffering from obesity, now
2:21:19
landing a growing number of patients in the hospital.
2:21:21
And with a lot of the ER visits, and there
2:21:23
are a lot of them, they're typically people who
2:21:25
have gotten some telemedicine video for Ozymphic
2:21:28
and haven't gotten much guidance about how to use
2:21:30
it, what to look out for, et cetera.
2:21:33
California weight loss surgeon, Dr. Terry
2:21:35
Simpson. People get the idea that this is
2:21:37
just sort of a benign drug, but it's not
2:21:39
a benign drug. And it's a drug meant to be used for
2:21:41
a lifetime and a drug that has serious side effects.
2:21:44
According to the manufacturer's website, side
2:21:46
effects impacting one in 10 people include
2:21:49
problems with the digestive system, such
2:21:51
as diarrhea, vomiting, and nausea.
2:21:53
Well, those are mostly emergency visits
2:21:55
that are seen, but the more serious ones, particularly
2:21:58
the pancreatitis, is fortunately...
2:21:59
exceedingly rare, but it does happen.
2:22:01
At the Cleveland Clinic, the emergency
2:22:03
department directors have not seen an increase
2:22:06
in those cases, but a spokesperson
2:22:08
confirms they have seen a few patients
2:22:10
with persistent vomiting while taking Ozempic
2:22:13
and Wagoevi. A small number of these
2:22:15
patients have needed to be admitted for observation.
2:22:17
There obviously are those individuals who
2:22:21
are being treated who may not have indications
2:22:25
for these medications. Dr. Scott Butch,
2:22:27
director of obesity medicine at the Cleveland
2:22:30
Clinic. I think there's a general concept
2:22:32
around using anti-obesity
2:22:34
medications, thinking that their
2:22:36
only purpose is to decrease someone's
2:22:40
hunger and therefore make them eat
2:22:42
less food. But it's far more complex
2:22:44
in how these medications improve
2:22:47
not only weight but other conditions
2:22:50
and obesity complications.
2:22:51
Like 74-year-old Beverly
2:22:53
Haddich, diagnosed with type 2
2:22:55
diabetes. I have found that it really
2:22:58
is working well. I've lost about 50
2:23:00
pounds. Butch says you have
2:23:03
to follow a diet. You can't just eat what you
2:23:05
want and lose weight. A proper plan
2:23:07
under an experienced doctor's care, important
2:23:10
for any medication they say, including
2:23:13
this.
2:23:13
Just like they would in any other disease
2:23:16
condition and also not
2:23:19
think that the higher the dose,
2:23:22
the more weight loss. Understand, this is
2:23:24
a serious drug not to just lose 10 or 20
2:23:26
pounds to get ready for the next class reunion.
2:23:29
But this is a drug used to treat a condition
2:23:32
more but obesity. And I think if it's given with care
2:23:34
and not with the usual quick-fix doctor,
2:23:36
it'll be just fine. Dr. Scott
2:23:39
So what they're saying is the
2:23:41
people who get this, they did it themselves. They
2:23:44
were thinking too much. Like, I'm going to take it more. I was
2:23:46
just doing it for the quick fix. You got to, you
2:23:48
know, it's part of a plan. Got to be
2:23:50
on a diet.
2:23:52
They're setting you up for failure. How
2:23:54
many times did I say I have a bad
2:23:56
feeling about this thing? It's going to start killing
2:23:58
people.
2:24:00
But I think you're gonna lose a lot of weight
2:24:02
if you're just constantly throwing up. I
2:24:05
just say it helps, yes.
2:24:06
So that's a cover up. Now the
2:24:08
next cover up, which I think at
2:24:11
first I wasn't even sure, you know, we
2:24:13
called it a distraction. I thought it was just a distraction
2:24:15
from the elites divvying up Ukraine,
2:24:18
but it now really does seem to be a distraction
2:24:21
from the enormous amount of information
2:24:23
that's coming out about Hunter Biden's corruption
2:24:25
and his father's corruption, the current president
2:24:27
of the United States. And
2:24:29
that was this submarine
2:24:31
and the submarine,
2:24:33
you know, we waited for three
2:24:36
days like, oh, they're running out of air. Oh,
2:24:39
will they all let's have search and rescue
2:24:41
sir? Oh, we have to, we
2:24:43
all will they make it. It's like a, it's like
2:24:45
balloon boy. It's like, oh, where's
2:24:48
James Cameron, a
2:24:50
movie guy.
2:24:52
He said, ah, he was, by the way, he was been
2:24:54
to the depths of the Titanic more
2:24:57
than once in a. How many times?
2:24:59
How many times?
2:25:01
Monday
2:25:04
morning, when I first found out about the incident,
2:25:07
we got on a whole bunch of calls and emails. It's
2:25:10
a small community within an hour and a half.
2:25:12
I had the following information. They
2:25:14
were on descent. They were at 3,500 feet. They
2:25:18
lost columns and tracking
2:25:21
the last one being a critical one because
2:25:24
the, the transponder that's used
2:25:26
to track a sub during
2:25:29
descent on, on the bottom is a
2:25:31
fully autonomous system. It's
2:25:34
in its own pressure housing and
2:25:36
it has its own battery power. So
2:25:39
for them to lose columns and tracking
2:25:41
at the same time, so it was gone.
2:25:44
There was no question in my mind. For days,
2:25:46
I tried to run other scenarios
2:25:48
that could account for it. I could come up with nothing.
2:25:52
So the next thing I did was contacted
2:25:55
a few more people and
2:25:57
managed to track down.
2:25:59
But you know, there are acoustic networks around.
2:26:02
Some are research, some are intelligence.
2:26:07
We got confirmation within an hour that there had
2:26:09
been a loud bang at the
2:26:11
same time that the sub was, that
2:26:13
the comms were lost. A
2:26:16
loud bang on the hydrophones. Loss
2:26:19
of transducer or transponder. Loss
2:26:22
of comms. I knew
2:26:24
what happened. Subimploded.
2:26:26
So this guy, movie guy, who
2:26:28
will be happy to go on
2:26:30
television, he knew
2:26:32
within an hour sub was gone. Within
2:26:35
an hour. Did they have any of these experts
2:26:37
like James Cameron on
2:26:39
the news? No. No, they didn't.
2:26:42
He wasn't the only one. My understanding was the number of
2:26:44
people that knew that their sub was gone in an hour.
2:26:46
Well they do. Now, now
2:26:49
it comes out though. You people
2:26:51
were just watching there with baited breath
2:26:53
pun intended. They
2:26:55
knew it. This just came in moments ago, just
2:26:58
minutes ago. The Navy apparently heard
2:27:00
on Sunday the implosion, what appears
2:27:03
to be the implosion of
2:27:04
the Titan and then immediately shared
2:27:06
that information with the Coast Guard, they
2:27:08
say. Tonight
2:27:11
a heartbreaking end. The Coast Guard announcing
2:27:13
search crews have found the pieces of the
2:27:15
missing sub carrying five passengers, 1600
2:27:19
feet, nearly a third of a mile from the
2:27:21
bow of the Titanic. This is an
2:27:23
incredibly unforgiving environment
2:27:26
down there on the sea floor and
2:27:29
the debris is consistent with a catastrophic
2:27:33
implosion of the vessel.
2:27:36
So this was all known
2:27:38
and now they're saying, oh no, we gave it to this?
2:27:41
We told the Coast Guard right away. What
2:27:43
are you talking about? The only guy who you
2:27:45
can tell is full of crap and lying is
2:27:47
Rear Admiral Kirby. When he was asked,
2:27:50
he goes into his hummina hummina hummina mode.
2:27:52
And then on the adventure tourism vessel that
2:27:54
was headed by the way, I love the term adventure
2:27:57
tourism vessel.
2:27:58
That's a good one. And then on the adventure
2:28:00
tourism vessel that was headed to the Titanic,
2:28:03
if the Navy had audio suggesting
2:28:06
that it had imploded, was that
2:28:08
communicated with all the partners? That
2:28:12
you had that audio or?
2:28:13
The Navy
2:28:16
did pass on to
2:28:19
the incident commander the
2:28:22
acoustic data
2:28:24
that they had received. But
2:28:29
they were also quick to make clear
2:28:32
that they couldn't be definitive
2:28:34
about what that data meant. Really?
2:28:37
James Cameron seems pretty definitive.
2:28:41
And they couldn't be clear that
2:28:43
that data was connected
2:28:45
to the Titan, to the submersible. But
2:28:48
they did pass that information up to the incident
2:28:50
commander, as you would expect they would.
2:28:52
And I'm
2:28:55
sure that that was factored into the search plan
2:28:57
in some way, but I'd refer you to the Coast Guard to speak
2:28:59
to specifics. Were there any concerns that resources were wasted
2:29:01
in searching the area the size of Connecticut?
2:29:04
No. I think the Coast Guard has spoken
2:29:07
definitively about this and quite well
2:29:09
every day here, or at least every day till
2:29:12
we got the tragic news. That there
2:29:14
was an awful lot of effort put into trying
2:29:17
to locate the Titan. Look, when
2:29:19
you're in a search and rescue. But no one
2:29:21
mentioned that they had that audio
2:29:24
for 72 hours. Operation.
2:29:27
I never heard it. No. Particularly
2:29:29
at sea, particularly in deep sea.
2:29:32
I mean, time is not your friend. And
2:29:34
I think you can see from the
2:29:36
way in which this was put together in
2:29:38
pretty quick fashion with a lot of resources from,
2:29:41
as Karine mentioned, from multiple countries. I
2:29:44
love how this was put together. This op,
2:29:46
this I, this psy op, this.
2:29:57
I mean, time is not your friend.
2:29:59
I think you can see from the time is
2:30:02
your friend in which this was put together
2:30:04
and pretty quick fashion with a lot of Resources from
2:30:06
as Korean mentioned from multiple countries
2:30:08
that there was a tremendous
2:30:11
effort put forward To try to to
2:30:13
find the Titan as quickly as possible knowing
2:30:15
that time was not going to be anybody's
2:30:17
friend No time was not your friend time
2:30:20
was the issue That's why I keep saying time because
2:30:22
the word went out and I didn't mention this
2:30:24
on Thursday because I wasn't sure yet It seemed
2:30:26
like a like a real shortcut to say this
2:30:29
is a distraction from the Bidens but now
2:30:31
we know it was a distraction from the Bidens
2:30:33
because During this event. This
2:30:35
is what came out two things a House
2:30:37
committee released testimony today from two
2:30:40
IRS Whistleblowers who say the
2:30:42
DOJ the FBI and
2:30:44
their IRS superiors Improperly
2:30:47
interfered with their investigation of hunter
2:30:49
Biden who agreed to a plea deal
2:30:51
this week Garrett Haig joins us Garrett
2:30:53
What do the whistleblowers have to say? So
2:30:56
these two senior IRS agents alleged that the
2:30:58
president's son received Preparation treatment
2:31:00
throughout the five-year tax investigation
2:31:03
that resulted in two misdemeanor guilty
2:31:05
pleas this week in testimony released
2:31:07
by a Republican led House committee The agents
2:31:09
accused the DOJ and the FBI of
2:31:11
slow
2:31:12
walking portions of the investigation to
2:31:14
Hunter Biden's benefit and that efforts
2:31:16
by the Trump Appointed US Attorney leading the probe
2:31:18
to charge more serious crimes were
2:31:21
blocked a DOJ spokesman tonight
2:31:23
denied any such interference One
2:31:25
whistleblower also provided what he says are
2:31:27
whatsapp messages from hunter Biden to
2:31:29
a Chinese business associate from 2017 which
2:31:33
the younger Biden says he's sitting with his father
2:31:35
waiting on a response to a proposal and
2:31:37
that he and the then Former vice
2:31:40
president will make the business partner regret
2:31:42
not respond No NBC News has not
2:31:44
yet confirmed the authenticity of that message
2:31:47
The White House tonight says president Biden has upheld
2:31:49
his commitment to let this investigation Proceed
2:31:52
free of any political interference hunter
2:31:54
Biden's attorneys have not responded to our requests
2:31:56
for comment
2:31:57
So the White House administration was so
2:32:00
about this and you know I don't
2:32:02
think that they killed these people on purpose of course
2:32:04
in the submarine but they used it and they used
2:32:07
the they used whatever resources
2:32:09
they had in the media to paper
2:32:11
over this and talk about other things
2:32:14
even as the White House press corps the
2:32:16
entire press corps was hounding
2:32:19
Karina Abdul-Jampere Van Damme
2:32:21
about it. Yeah so Curly
2:32:23
wouldn't answer James's question though are you gonna answer
2:32:25
the question? Not a reasonable question to ask
2:32:28
but the United States was involved
2:32:29
as this message seems to just
2:32:32
in some sort of coercive
2:32:35
conversation for business dealing by a Sunday is
2:32:37
that something if he wasn't then maybe you should
2:32:39
tell us.
2:32:39
So here's the thing and I appreciate the question
2:32:41
I believe my colleague at the White House
2:32:44
Council he has answered this question
2:32:46
already has dealt with this has
2:32:48
made it very clear I just don't have anything
2:32:51
to share outside of what my colleagues have
2:32:53
shared and so I would refer you to
2:32:55
him and the DOJ just not
2:32:57
gonna comment from here. What I can
2:33:01
tell you is I know that my colleague has dealt
2:33:03
with this he addressed this
2:33:06
at the White House Council I just don't have anything else to share.
2:33:08
I just answered
2:33:10
the question. I just answered the question. I just
2:33:12
said that yes or no was the president involved in the state's
2:33:14
I just
2:33:15
said Stephen I just
2:33:17
answered the question I just said I just
2:33:19
this is it's not up to you how I answer the question
2:33:22
I just answered the question by telling you my colleagues
2:33:24
at the White House Council has dealt with this
2:33:26
and I would refer you to them. Can
2:33:29
you just remind us what
2:33:31
your colleagues said from the White House Council
2:33:33
so we have it. I would
2:33:36
refer you to them and they will share their statements.
2:33:37
My question is about your statements
2:33:40
from that podium. You stated that
2:33:42
the president stands by his comment from
2:33:44
the 2020 campaign that he never once discussed
2:33:47
his son's overseas business dealings with
2:33:49
his son and you stood at that podium
2:33:51
and you reaffirmed that. Do you stand by your re-affirmation?
2:33:53
What I will say is nothing has
2:33:55
changed nothing has changed. Well
2:33:57
things have changed because at least some
2:34:00
of the media has been sent
2:34:02
out as heat seeking missiles to expose this.
2:34:06
Well, before you go on,
2:34:10
she, I want to mention one
2:34:12
thing that's a little factoid here. She
2:34:15
was given the opportunity. There
2:34:17
was an out created during this
2:34:19
whole episode with Hunter Biden and all this
2:34:21
other stuff.
2:34:22
If you recall, when they, after
2:34:24
they'd already thrown they given the
2:34:26
hands, they said, it's still
2:34:29
under investigation.
2:34:32
She could have, she could have and
2:34:34
should have if she had a clue and she,
2:34:37
we don't, we don't comment on ongoing investigations.
2:34:42
Period. Yeah. You're right. You're right. You're
2:34:44
right. But then, then
2:34:47
the crime family, I'm
2:34:49
just going to read this. I have to read this message so
2:34:52
we have some context about it. Because there's a screenshot
2:34:54
of it. I'll read this. It's pretty good.
2:34:58
Here we go. I am sitting, he says
2:35:00
this is Hunter to his Chinese,
2:35:03
the Chinese, the money guy.
2:35:05
I'm sitting here with my father and we would like
2:35:07
to understand why the commitment made has
2:35:09
not been fulfilled. Tell the director
2:35:12
that I would like to resolve this now before
2:35:14
it gets out of hand. And now means
2:35:16
tonight. And Z, if I get
2:35:18
a call or text from anyone involved in this
2:35:21
other than you, Zang or the chairman,
2:35:23
I will make certain that between the man sitting
2:35:26
next to me and every person he knows of my
2:35:28
ability to forever hold a grudge, that you
2:35:30
will regret not following my direction.
2:35:33
I'm sitting here waiting for the call with my
2:35:35
father.
2:35:35
These are criminals. That's
2:35:38
criminal talk. And then Hunter
2:35:40
Biden is invited
2:35:43
to the state dinner. I guess it was Modi.
2:35:45
And the C-SPAN is
2:35:47
following him and everyone's like, Hey,
2:35:49
Hunter, they're hugging. Hey, brother,
2:35:52
good. How you doing? All these douche bags
2:35:54
are coming up. This guy has pull.
2:35:57
These people fear these.
2:35:59
You You may be right
2:36:01
about Biden being the old crazy
2:36:04
guy, but in the meantime, he's running the mob because
2:36:07
they fear these people. Fear
2:36:09
them.
2:36:10
There was a clip, and this is the reason I sent you
2:36:12
that note that I couldn't use being IO well,
2:36:15
and I want you to show me how to do it after the
2:36:17
show.
2:36:18
There was a clip we
2:36:20
had, it was about 10 years ago,
2:36:24
and it was about, it was a bunch of black guys
2:36:26
that were, there was on some podcast or some
2:36:28
show or other. And they were black radicals
2:36:31
from the 60s,
2:36:32
and they were going on and on about how weird
2:36:34
the Democrats have become because they,
2:36:37
now they're loving the FBI,
2:36:40
they're loving the CIA. We used
2:36:42
to hate the CIA, we used to hate
2:36:44
the FBI. It was always considered
2:36:46
bad form to be anything
2:36:48
about these people. And then one of them
2:36:50
said, and Biden came into the conversation,
2:36:53
one of them said, and
2:36:55
if I can never find
2:36:57
this clip, I'm sure I'm pretty close to this, says,
2:36:59
well, you know, somebody just said something
2:37:02
disparaging about Biden. He says, you shouldn't do
2:37:04
that. He says, no matter what you
2:37:06
think,
2:37:07
Joe Biden is more important than you
2:37:09
think. He's running everything. He
2:37:11
is the guy
2:37:13
who is behind a lot of this. Don't
2:37:15
kid yourself.
2:37:17
Yeah, I do remember that.
2:37:19
I do remember that. Well,
2:37:22
yeah, it was these black guys bitching about
2:37:24
the sudden love of the FBI.
2:37:28
I think that was 10 years ago. I
2:37:30
think it was a while back.
2:37:32
It may have
2:37:34
been at the beginning of the Trump administration.
2:37:37
I think it was pre-Trump. Hmm.
2:37:40
Okay. Well,
2:37:43
it certainly appears that way. And
2:37:46
here's NBC covering this.
2:37:49
So the word is out. We
2:37:52
are going to take down Joe Biden one
2:37:54
way or the other. Well,
2:37:57
I got a counter programming to this. I'll
2:37:59
go through these.
2:37:59
And then you'll do your counterprogramming.
2:38:02
Not to that appearance that turned a lot of heads in
2:38:04
Washington overnight. Hunter Biden
2:38:06
attended the White House state dinner for India's
2:38:08
prime minister just days after
2:38:10
striking a plea deal to settle federal tax
2:38:13
charges. NBC's senior White House correspondent,
2:38:15
Kelly O'Donnell, joins us now with more on this. Kelly,
2:38:18
first of all, good morning to you. This was a very, very
2:38:21
public appearance. First of all, was it expected,
2:38:23
given it's only been a few days since that plea
2:38:25
deal?
2:38:26
Well, good morning, Craig. The White House didn't
2:38:29
make public ahead of time until the guest
2:38:31
list came out that Hunter Biden was coming.
2:38:33
But you saw the president's son on full
2:38:35
display. He's the first child of a
2:38:37
sitting president criminally charged, and he
2:38:39
was invited to be among the high profile
2:38:42
guests at the White House state dinner. We saw
2:38:44
him mixing and mingling in black tie at
2:38:46
this glamorous affair, along with a number
2:38:48
of Biden family members. The White House also
2:38:50
invited Attorney General Merrick Garland
2:38:53
and Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy,
2:38:55
who says the House GOP
2:38:56
should keep investigating the president's
2:38:58
son and his foreign business dealings.
2:39:00
And then
2:39:03
the WhatsApp message. Meanwhile, there's some
2:39:05
new whistleblower testimony that's also making
2:39:07
headlines. What more can you tell us about that?
2:39:09
Yeah, this is far from over. A GOP
2:39:11
led House committee released testimony
2:39:13
from two IRS agents and whistleblowers
2:39:16
on Tuesday, who say the DOJ and
2:39:18
other government officials improperly interfered
2:39:21
in their Hunter Biden investigation, giving
2:39:23
him what they say is preferential treatment.
2:39:26
One of those agents also provided what he says
2:39:28
are WhatsApp messages from Hunter
2:39:30
Biden to a Chinese business associate
2:39:33
in 2017. And in that he says he
2:39:35
is sitting with his father, was then the vice president,
2:39:38
waiting for an answer
2:39:39
to a proposal, and that he would not
2:39:41
regret following, not following
2:39:43
the direction. That's the interaction with a Chinese businessman.
2:39:46
Now, NBC has not confirmed the authenticity
2:39:48
of the message, and the White House says there was no
2:39:51
political interference here. Hunter Biden's
2:39:53
attorneys have not commented.
2:39:55
And to be honest, I mean, he was not vice
2:39:57
president, you know, do whatever.
2:40:00
every once I guess, but it is pretty damning.
2:40:03
And to have a hunter who
2:40:06
was just, you know,
2:40:07
given a slap on the wrist, a sweetheart
2:40:10
deal, as they say,
2:40:11
to have him there in the same room as the attorney
2:40:14
general, the whole thing is weird and people
2:40:16
are seeing it. Everyone's seeing it now.
2:40:19
Counter programming. Go. Nobody's
2:40:22
seeing it except Fox
2:40:24
watchers and you. Okay.
2:40:31
Here is the, here's
2:40:33
what people are seeing. This is hunter, but this
2:40:35
is Cape heart with Brooks and Cape heart. Every
2:40:37
Friday they analyze the news and
2:40:39
Cape heart, the black gay guy, that's the
2:40:42
associate editor of the Washington post,
2:40:44
no slouch in terms of credibility.
2:40:47
Uh,
2:40:47
and of course there's
2:40:49
just a killer Democrat
2:40:51
and he's going to express what he
2:40:53
thinks of this and how I think all
2:40:56
the Democrats see it. Jonathan,
2:40:58
what's your assessment of the plea deal and
2:41:00
the way that Republicans are targeting
2:41:02
hunter Biden as a proxy for
2:41:05
Joe Biden? Um, you know, when we
2:41:07
talked about this, this earlier, I was
2:41:09
asked the question, you know, is, you know, is, you know,
2:41:11
is this justice? So like, how
2:41:13
do you define, what does that mean in this
2:41:16
case of hunter Biden to me? Look, counsel
2:41:20
was, was appointed. That
2:41:22
person is a, is someone who was appointed
2:41:24
by president Trump and
2:41:27
was given
2:41:28
unbelievable power in
2:41:30
terms of investigating and sort of doing all sorts
2:41:32
of stuff. And this is what he came up with
2:41:35
two minor tax charges and then something
2:41:37
involving, um, involving a
2:41:39
gun charge.
2:41:42
Okay.
2:41:44
Two minor tech and
2:41:47
I will read, I will re, uh,
2:41:50
visit my comment about the
2:41:52
a hundred thousand dollar fine for a $1.5 million for
2:41:56
two years. And who knows how much longer
2:41:58
he's
2:41:59
bringing.
2:41:59
in 1.5 million dollars and he is paying a 100,000 dollar
2:42:02
fine.
2:42:02
How
2:42:06
does that work? Where's the rest of this? And I was
2:42:08
thinking about this. Where's
2:42:10
the real tax? He owes 500,000 dollars
2:42:13
minimum on that kind of income plus
2:42:16
penalties for years and years
2:42:19
in not paying this tax. This was not last
2:42:21
week.
2:42:22
Where's all that? And I would say,
2:42:24
well, maybe he did pay that and it wasn't discussed.
2:42:27
That's not the way it works. The IRS,
2:42:30
when they find a big fish and
2:42:32
they nick him for like, I
2:42:34
don't know, a million dollars,
2:42:37
they publicize it to scare the public
2:42:39
at large.
2:42:40
If there was anything more than the 100,000
2:42:43
dollar fine on a tax bill
2:42:45
that had to be at least five or six hundred
2:42:47
thousand dollars, it would have been publicized.
2:42:51
It wasn't. So he didn't
2:42:53
pay. He got away
2:42:55
with murder here in terms of his tax liability.
2:42:59
And oh, it's no big deal. And according
2:43:01
to K part, play part two. And
2:43:04
meanwhile, you've got House Republicans, Chairman
2:43:07
Comer, who keeps talking about
2:43:09
whistleblowers, but he hasn't talked to them in three
2:43:11
years. There seems to be a lot of people
2:43:14
pumping up smoke about Hunter Biden
2:43:16
and not coming up with anything. And in a
2:43:19
lot of ways, I think it's really sort of unseemly
2:43:22
that, you know, fine, you want to go
2:43:24
after the
2:43:24
president and use his son as proxy. OK,
2:43:27
that's the nature of ugly politics these days.
2:43:30
But we're talking about the son of a president who
2:43:34
was an addict, who went through some really
2:43:36
hard times and did some really stupid things.
2:43:39
And I'm having a hard time raising
2:43:42
that to the level of a twice impeached,
2:43:44
now twice criminally indicted
2:43:47
former president who we
2:43:49
really should be talking about and really
2:43:52
asking Republicans, why don't you talk about him and
2:43:54
what's going on with him?
2:43:57
Because there are national security implications, rule of law. implications
2:44:01
that are at stake here, not
2:44:03
with Hunter Biden, not all the stuff that we've
2:44:05
seen over the last few years. Come on. Yeah,
2:44:08
well, they're running interference for him. They're on a different-
2:44:10
Come on. They're on a different team. Come on, man. Come
2:44:13
on,
2:44:13
man. Come on, man. Come on, man.
2:44:15
They're on a different team, man. Imagine
2:44:18
all the people who could do that. Oh yeah, that'd be fab. Yeah,
2:44:20
on No Agenda. In the morning. Luckily,
2:44:22
we do have a few people
2:44:25
to thank for show 15- 1567, starting
2:44:27
with Jamie Corniel,
2:44:38
Corniel, I think,
2:44:40
in Vista, California.
2:44:41
And he came in with 150 bucks. He's
2:44:44
got a birthday call out to his buddy.
2:44:46
My
2:44:48
bandwidth and NDA. Okay, I don't know what
2:44:50
that's all about. And
2:44:52
he's got some requests which we'll maybe
2:44:55
or maybe not do at the end. So 150.
2:44:58
Metal dog machines. Metal dog
2:45:00
machines in Rocky Mountain Hot
2:45:03
Springs, Alberta, Canada. Is that
2:45:06
right?
2:45:06
I think so. Workout Karma for
2:45:08
Dame Andrea. One, two, three, four, five.
2:45:12
All right. Simon Cox.
2:45:16
Youth- Okay, let me try it. Oothorn.
2:45:22
Outhorn. Eighthorn. Eighthorn. And
2:45:25
you would really say outhorn. Outhorn.
2:45:27
There you go. He's
2:45:31
in the Netherlands. Love you guys. Switcheroo
2:45:34
for his- This is Switcheroo for his spoken hot girlfriend.
2:45:37
Sita. Sita.
2:45:40
Daniel Schuler in Caledonia, New
2:45:42
York. Kevin
2:45:47
McLaughlin. There he is. He's up
2:45:49
there. Uh, Wuhan
2:45:51
Batman in Columbus, Ohio. De-du-sing.
2:45:56
De-du-sing. You've
2:45:58
been de-du-shed. Robert
2:46:01
Ludwig in Nevada, Iowa. Huh.
2:46:04
Uh, 8-0-8. It's a boob
2:46:06
donation for his late wife. Mmm.
2:46:09
Oh. Steven Trockles.
2:46:11
Stéphane. Stéphane Trockles
2:46:13
in Süst. Süst. Deutschland.
2:46:16
Süst the Netherlands. Oh, it says Deutschland.
2:46:21
It's Deutschrong. Süst is the Netherlands.
2:46:24
Well, are you sure there's no Süst
2:46:27
in Deutschland? One hundred percent.
2:46:30
There's Nevada, Iowa. Hey,
2:46:33
don't argue. Jason Sheppard
2:46:35
in Superior, Colorado. Anyway, Stéphane
2:46:38
is in for 8-0-8. And so is Jason
2:46:40
Sheppard from Superior, Colorado.
2:46:43
Uh, 8-0-8. And
2:46:46
so is Sir Chaotic
2:46:49
Mass in Dallas, Texas.
2:46:51
8-0-8. Sir Ready Killawatt comes
2:46:53
in at 73-73 from Battlement Mesa.
2:46:55
Field
2:46:57
Day donation. Colorado. Field Day
2:46:59
donation, 73s.
2:47:01
Oh, Field Day, 73-73.
2:47:04
Ah, that looted me. Sir Ramsey
2:47:06
Kane. Hey, Ramsey's in Brookfield,
2:47:08
Wisconsin.
2:47:12
Um, I don't
2:47:13
know. He's all, he
2:47:15
wants Egon Direct plugged. The plugs
2:47:17
are only up at the higher levels, Ramsey. You know that.
2:47:20
Uh, Robert Taylor, or you put it
2:47:22
at the beginning.
2:47:23
Robert Taylor, New Brighton, Minnesota, 5678.
2:47:27
Sir Lucas of the Lost Bits
2:47:29
in Federal Way, Washington, 5110.
2:47:33
Uh, David Wicker in Jacksonville, Florida, 5110.
2:47:36
Hey, David. Oh, I'm sorry, 5510
2:47:38
for both these guys. Double nickels on
2:47:40
the dime. He's on the, he, we saw him
2:47:43
in Fredericksburg. He came by.
2:47:44
He stopped by. We had a nice coffee with
2:47:46
him to keep her eye. David? Yeah,
2:47:49
David Wicker. And he's on his way to, he's served by his grace
2:47:51
and he is on his way to, he made it to Utah. One
2:47:53
more state to go. And he's back in Boise, uh,
2:47:55
in Idaho. Sorry, Idaho.
2:47:59
He's doing a tour. with his three-legged dog
2:48:01
Greta.
2:48:04
Adrian Christiansen in Lincoln, Nebraska 55.
2:48:07
Now these following people are $50 donors name
2:48:10
and location Donald Locke 50 Alexa
2:48:12
Delgado 50 in Aptos
2:48:14
Gaucho, ah, Gaucho
2:48:17
Woodworking see that's how you do it. Put
2:48:21
it at the beginning. Gaucho
2:48:24
Woodworking in Redondo Beach, California.
2:48:27
Kate Haskell in San Rafael, California. Greg
2:48:30
Huff in Austin, Texas.
2:48:32
David Perdue in Snow Hill, North Carolina.
2:48:35
Michael Romano in Sebastopol,
2:48:37
California. Kristin Fontaine
2:48:41
in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey. Happy
2:48:43
Playin' Father's Day. Had related Father's Day to her husband
2:48:45
Rick of 11 years.
2:48:47
Andrew Butterfield in Bettendorf, Iowa.
2:48:50
Diego Lopez Crane in
2:48:52
Ithaca, New York. Charles
2:48:54
Lloyd in San Marcos, Texas. Samuel
2:48:57
Cannarday in North Riverside,
2:48:59
Illinois. Brian Humble in Wimberley,
2:49:02
Texas. Nancy Tindall
2:49:04
in New Brownfels, Texas.
2:49:07
Servo. Did you know that Frank,
2:49:09
you know New Brownsville used to make these great smokers
2:49:12
and cookers and they come and he went out of business.
2:49:15
Franklin, the Franklin guy, he's
2:49:17
making his own now. Franklin barbecue
2:49:19
guy? Yeah. He also makes a
2:49:21
dynamite rub, which I had the other night at a friend's
2:49:23
house. They sell it. Franklin's
2:49:27
barbecue rub is really good.
2:49:30
Well, his burner, his Texas
2:49:32
side cooker looks like a winner.
2:49:35
It's got Franklin carved into it. It's
2:49:37
kind of interesting looking. It's what you do.
2:49:40
Servo in Lake County, British
2:49:42
Columbia.
2:49:44
Todd Sterner in Novato,
2:49:46
California. The Tech
2:49:48
Squad in Columbus, Georgia. Amy
2:49:50
Grohl in Burien, Washington.
2:49:53
John Walter in Renacci, Washington.
2:49:56
Daniel First in
2:49:58
Kacauna, Wisconsin.
2:49:59
which is mispronounced. Andrew Lissy
2:50:02
in, I don't care, Andrew Lissy,
2:50:04
there's a lot of towns in Wisconsin I
2:50:06
can't pronounce. Andrew Lissy
2:50:08
in Aldi, Virginia.
2:50:10
What is he writing
2:50:12
there? He needs something. He says, many shows ago
2:50:15
cheap people were called out for not
2:50:17
donating. That was probably you who said that. In
2:50:19
true cheap fashion, I didn't donate, but
2:50:22
here's my first $50 towards knighthood and the
2:50:24
title, Sir Cheep Cheep. All right, keep it going,
2:50:26
Andrew.
2:50:27
Yeah, you get to Sir Cheep Cheep.
2:50:30
Anonymous in Amstelveen.
2:50:33
Amstelveen. Amstelveen.
2:50:36
You bit my lip doing
2:50:39
that. Sorry. Eric
2:50:42
Kessler in Kansas City, Missouri
2:50:44
wraps it up.
2:50:45
And to go back to Sir
2:50:48
Ramsey, since he's a friend of the show, I will
2:50:50
mention his EGundirect,
2:50:53
whatever they do there, E-G-U-N
2:50:56
direct, I guess it's .com. Stop
2:50:59
by our Butler, Wisconsin location. I don't
2:51:02
know what he's up to. No idea.
2:51:04
They got E-Guns, whatever. Thank
2:51:06
you all to these donors, these
2:51:09
producers who produced episode 1567.
2:51:11
Of course, we always
2:51:13
want to thank people who come in under $50. We
2:51:16
won't mention you, so you're always assured
2:51:18
of anonymity, but at the same time, we
2:51:21
really do appreciate those sustaining donations. They
2:51:23
do provide a base, and if you were there before,
2:51:26
and if you left during the PayPalpocalypse,
2:51:28
we'd appreciate it if you could find another
2:51:30
way to support us. If you want
2:51:32
to know how that can be done, there's many ways. Go
2:51:34
here. Dvorak.org slash
2:51:35
N-A. It's your birthday,
2:51:37
birthday.
2:51:43
I'm so glad you're here. Scotland
2:51:45
the Brave, which is his wife, future name
2:51:47
Scotland the Brave, a belated happy birthday,
2:51:50
and of course, there was some anniversary
2:51:52
we had to call out. Sir David turned 67
2:51:55
on the 20th. Today, Sir
2:51:57
Sweet Lady and Keeper wishes her fiancé
2:52:00
Ben with an NDA, Artie Johnson
2:52:02
a happy birthday turning 60 tomorrow Servo
2:52:05
turns 33 tomorrow and a happy
2:52:07
10th birthday to Seamus Mac Jones
2:52:09
He turns 10 tomorrow, please everybody pray
2:52:11
his appetite returns Happy birthday
2:52:13
from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe
2:52:16
It's birthday time! Title change is
2:52:18
gonna face this place Title
2:52:23
change is... Don't
2:52:25
wanna be douchebags No, no, no, no,
2:52:27
no, douchebags here, none
2:52:30
whatsoever We have a title change,
2:52:32
Sir David, a fresh prince
2:52:34
of Bel-Air, becomes a Baron today and we congratulate
2:52:37
him and thank him very much and we've got two knights
2:52:39
to bestow with that honor today
2:52:41
so here is my... there is my sword
2:52:44
Ah, here it is You know, it's
2:52:47
a little rusty, we haven't used it in a couple of weeks Yeah,
2:52:49
I've done that for a month There we go
2:52:52
Up on the podium Frank
2:52:55
Divenforden or Frank Valentino
2:52:58
Argyro Gentlemen, both
2:53:00
of you has supported the No General Show in the amount of $1,000 or more therefore
2:53:03
I am very proud to pronounce the K to you as the following
2:53:05
knights Sir Frank Divenforden
2:53:08
until you come up with a different name and Sir
2:53:10
V of Castel Silano
2:53:13
dot com For you we've got
2:53:15
Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay but
2:53:17
also by request we have Tomahawk Ribeye
2:53:19
and Lagabulin 16 We got
2:53:21
some Pepperoni Rolls and Pale Ls I
2:53:24
got some Ruben S. Movement and Rosé here They're fresh,
2:53:26
haven't been used in a couple of weeks Bongots and
2:53:28
Bourbon, Sparkling, Siron Escort, Ginger Ale and
2:53:30
Gerbil's Breast Milk Compapement Of course we've got the
2:53:32
Mutton and the Mead
2:53:35
And go to NoGenderRings.com,
2:53:37
let us know where you can send your knight ring,
2:53:39
your sealing wax and your official certificate
2:53:42
of certification of official knighthood I
2:53:45
got a picture from my periodontist
2:53:48
who is now of course a knight and
2:53:50
he is hanging his certificate above
2:53:52
his periodontal certificates
2:53:54
He's making copies and hanging them
2:53:56
in every room of the office Which is
2:53:59
great
2:53:59
Thank you very much for supporting the
2:54:02
best podcast in the universe.
2:54:04
Know what you know, meetups. It's
2:54:13
kind of very
2:54:29
important to go to a meetup, find
2:54:31
that community, you're being called to it. Meetup
2:54:34
report from Chattanooga. The Chattanooga
2:54:36
Fears Freedom Meetup for 40s and Foul at
2:54:39
the Champions in East Ridge. It's
2:54:41
a written one in the Morning Slaves. We
2:54:43
had
2:54:43
a great turnout here in Chattanooga
2:54:45
yesterday afternoon. Good conversation with good people.
2:54:48
Couldn't have asked for a more perfect weather, some
2:54:50
familiar faces and some new ones. They sent me a picture,
2:54:52
everyone looking good. John and Adam brought
2:54:54
us together and we took that and strengthened the
2:54:56
bond between our brothers and sisters in Christ.
2:54:59
So happy for the opportunity for the fellowship, looking
2:55:01
forward to many more. And this is Tim who
2:55:04
brought us the meetup report. Here's one from the
2:55:06
North Georgia June meetup.
2:55:08
A lot of people there. And
2:55:11
they went out loud and produced. Produced
2:55:15
a real meetup report.
2:55:25
With sound effects apparently. Hey
2:55:29
Adam and John, it's Bob from the North Georgia June
2:55:31
meetup. We had our largest meetup so far with 16
2:55:34
nights, dames, douche bags and even one spook.
2:55:37
We dedicated this meetup to Sir Dude named
2:55:39
Daniel Knight of the Infinite Forgotten Wisdom who
2:55:41
runs the No Agenda meetup side out of the goodness of his heart
2:55:43
and of course his wallet. So everybody kicked in a few
2:55:45
bucks and we raised $200 to help him out with the site.
2:55:47
So thank you Sir Daniel for all you do. And remember,
2:55:50
if you're going to go to a meetup, please RSVP.
2:55:53
Now let's hear what everybody had to say.
2:55:56
Mike.
2:56:01
In the morning, it's Eddie, Delisha's husband,
2:56:03
our first human resources will be here in
2:56:05
seven days. This is a great meet up report.
2:56:08
See you later. Hey, Adam and john,
2:56:10
it's Andy, protect
2:56:12
our small horses. And we're
2:56:15
having a great time at the alfredo meetup.
2:56:18
In the morning from alfredo. This
2:56:20
is Jason green and George Clooney
2:56:23
is a spy. Hey, Adam
2:56:26
and john, this is Captain Jeff airline pilot
2:56:28
guys show on the no agenda stream.
2:56:29
My first meetup ever.
2:56:33
And it's awesome. Highly
2:56:35
recommended. Hey,
2:56:36
Adam and john, it's Dame
2:56:38
foreign lady before
2:56:40
Baron Nes. Thanks
2:56:42
for your courage. It
2:56:45
in the morning slaves. This is Matty J from the
2:56:47
heart of femur agent for remember
2:56:49
kids say no to bugs and
2:56:52
precancerous hurt. Hey,
2:56:55
Dr. Sir Mike roch.
2:56:58
I call who I know. Sean
2:57:01
here. God save the queen man.
2:57:03
In the morning. This is Carrie.
2:57:07
Itm. Siri says
2:57:09
go to a meetup. They're wonderful. Hey,
2:57:11
I think the guy next to me is a
2:57:15
spook 100%
2:57:16
100 frickin percent.
2:57:19
I don't know what the machine guns and all the stuff
2:57:21
in the background. But sounds
2:57:23
like a wonderful meetup. Thank you all for sending
2:57:26
that in today. We've got the real Fox Valley
2:57:28
meetup happening in Aurora, Illinois
2:57:30
to brothers roundhouse the morrows would miss
2:57:33
at that'll be at three o'clock your time john
2:57:35
trails and trap house tap house and
2:57:38
so in Snohomish Washington
2:57:40
and the South Mississippi testing the turnout
2:57:43
meetup that'll be at six o'clock at 325th Street
2:57:45
and Laurel
2:57:46
Missouri. We
2:57:48
got a lot more coming up for July
2:57:51
even one on the 4th of July of course in
2:57:53
the UK in London because they don't celebrate 4th
2:57:55
of July over there. But they might just be doing
2:57:57
it in United States is honor.
2:57:59
as a meetup. Many more to find, many
2:58:02
more that you can go to. Go to noagendameatups.com,
2:58:05
find your group. Connection is protection. If you can't
2:58:07
find a meetup there near you, start one yourself.
2:58:10
It's easy and always guaranteed a party.
2:58:12
Sometimes you want to go hang
2:58:15
out with all the nights and days.
2:58:19
You want to be where you want
2:58:22
me. Drink it on hold.
2:58:25
You want to be where everybody feels
2:58:27
the same. Psychoparty.
2:58:34
Dang.
2:58:36
Alright. Thanks
2:58:38
everybody. That was really nice. I
2:58:41
love those meetups. I got to go to another one soon.
2:58:43
Indie meetup after our vacation.
2:58:46
No, when's the vacation? It's going to
2:58:48
be in August. We're going to do shows.
2:58:50
We're going to do shows on the road. Maybe
2:58:53
we'll take one day off for travel,
2:58:55
but I think we're gone almost like two
2:58:57
weeks. And I'll be doing the show from
2:59:00
the road. So semi-vacate.
2:59:02
It's like no vacation. I'm working from a different
2:59:04
country. This one?
2:59:07
Pack your stuff up and go.
2:59:08
And I have actually two which were kind of
2:59:10
cute. Two kids. The
2:59:13
first kid's name is BAM. And
2:59:19
then
2:59:24
there's BOP and BAM. I'm
2:59:29
not sure which one I like better. I thought
2:59:32
it was kind of
2:59:35
cute. It's kind
2:59:38
of thin. It's a little thin. Poor kids. I
2:59:40
got two. I got sick. I
2:59:43
am sick. Okay.
2:59:48
And truth. Nothing could be further
2:59:51
from the truth.
2:59:53
Ooh. Um.
2:59:56
I am sick. I think that's
2:59:58
the truth. I think nothing could be f-
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