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0:00
Send him to the Hague. Adam
0:02
Curry, John C. Dvorak.
0:05
This is your award winning Gable Nation Media Assassination
0:08
Episode This
0:11
is no agenda. We
0:13
are the best meat glue and we're broadcasting
0:15
live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country
0:18
here in FEMA Region number six in the morning,
0:20
everybody. I'm Adam Curry and from
0:22
Northern Silicon Valley where we actually
0:24
have turkeys in the neighborhood. I'm John C. Dvorak.
0:27
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In
0:29
the morning. Kind
0:32
of distracted me for a moment there, but I kept in the
0:35
groove. I did not let you. Distract
0:38
me too much. I've never been able to do
0:40
that. But now that you mention
0:43
it. You have been you. Yes, you have.
0:45
No. Yeah, I think you have once or twice.
0:49
Once or twice. Yeah. But now that you mention it. I'll
0:53
try more. You'll try more often.
0:55
You'll do your best. But
0:57
the only the best one is this still.
1:03
Because it makes you think of some song I
1:05
never heard. Yeah, I love that.
1:07
That's madness. Never
1:09
heard of this song. Get
1:12
a clip. Play it. We've played
1:14
this song a million times now. OK, we've
1:16
got plenty of clips to play. That's true.
1:18
That's true. All right. Where do you want to start? I mean,
1:20
we have Africa. Africa is I got Africa,
1:23
but we cannot start with Africa
1:25
because people go Africa.
1:28
Yeah. That's why the real
1:30
pros, the real
1:32
pros, would ever talk about it at all. No,
1:34
there's nothing. There is nothing we have to on
1:37
America. Introduce me to something that,
1:39
hey, these guys aren't talking about. Here's some information
1:41
you should know. People.
1:44
I mean, there's nothing. There's zero
1:46
on American media about Africa.
1:48
They're trying. Trying.
1:51
We'll get to that. We'll get to the United States.
1:53
And I think most of the northern
1:56
hemisphere hates Africa.
2:00
Yeah, I think you're right. And
2:03
really the problem is they just don't
2:05
know enough about it. You know, they they they're
2:07
confused and then to the to the M5M is
2:10
almost brown and black people. What are we gonna do?
2:13
Don't we don't we can't tell them give us good
2:15
Mexican news Well,
2:19
maybe I can start with with
2:21
a request a request from
2:24
for our producers to do some work for us Like
2:26
what well I'm
2:29
going to miss one show during our upcoming European
2:32
holiday
2:34
Every other show every show I will be doing Thursdays
2:37
and we do have one in the can we
2:39
have one in the can but but I
2:42
Tina and I were were goofing around
2:44
last night and you listen to the one in
2:46
the cannon is bad Yeah, well, there's that
2:49
but then we we went to Bing it
2:51
we went to Bing it dot IO
2:53
And I said hey Bing it big as
2:56
being it being it dot IO
2:58
Which is our fantastic search engine,
3:00
which includes clips stories
3:03
and transcripts and
3:06
I said, hey, why don't I look
3:08
up the term red book and There's
3:12
a lot of Lot
3:15
of shows where the term red book appears
3:17
because we have because we talk
3:19
about it all the time Yeah, we have the red book
3:21
and we don't have one red book. We have multiple
3:23
red books
3:25
I thought wouldn't it be an interesting idea
3:27
if we ask our producers to
3:29
go to being it dot IO and to
3:32
search for red book and find the best
3:34
red book segments we have and Then
3:37
I can put those together as a as a special
3:43
Well, that's definitely a creative idea I
3:45
like it well, here's what it could sound
3:47
like an example I just pulled something random
3:49
from the stock
3:53
Because I have all these red books here I can't
3:55
read a word of them Here's
3:58
I got one right here And then I'll read what I have.
4:00
I have red book entries. Okay,
4:03
let me see what we got. Okay, I have March
4:05
29th, dollar
4:07
to gold standard of the oil
4:09
glut destroys the petrodollar. I
4:11
have no idea what that means.
4:13
I do, I know what it means. Okay. It
4:16
means you were wrong. June
4:19
7th,
4:21
Kaepernick to play in the NFL. I'll
4:23
be right on that one. That's gonna- No, you
4:25
won't. June
4:29
18th, JK Rowling will repent.
4:33
Nope, no, I don't think
4:35
so. This is you, JCD. No
4:38
debarfs?
4:40
No debates? Oh no, no, no debates. Ah,
4:43
ah, ah, you lose. Lose,
4:46
lose. I'm not gonna- Chuck,
4:48
lose, lose. You read it again, there's
4:50
an S.
4:51
Yes, there is an S. So- So
4:54
I'm still good if they cancel the rest of it. Okay,
4:58
I have a little notation. Trump
5:00
will win including popular vote. This was
5:02
a month of mine, we don't know that obviously. That's
5:05
all I have. Okay, well that's good. I
5:07
have no problem maintaining the
5:11
red book from here on out.
5:13
Well there you go. You
5:15
suck. I had
5:16
a scare ball. I had a score of 10, 10, 10%. Wow.
5:22
Some of them are really funny though. We
5:24
have a lot of them that are right. Actually to be honest about it,
5:26
most of the red book predictions came
5:28
true. Yeah, no, no, that's what I'm saying. If
5:30
you look for red book- But you can find those like though
5:32
JK Rowling ones. Yeah, that
5:35
was a big mistake. But that was crazy, that was
5:37
crazy talk. She was never gonna repent.
5:39
Why should she? She's a billionaire. I thought,
5:42
you know,
5:44
with my knowledge of sports ball, I thought the Kaepernick
5:47
red book and she would definitely come true.
5:49
What was that again?
5:52
That he would be playing in the NFL. Oh
5:55
yeah, no, he's the problem
5:57
with, that's always overlooked with Kaepernick. Besides
5:59
the fact that-
5:59
that the players, we've talked about this on the show,
6:02
that a lot of players just won't play with him because
6:05
according to rumors, allegedly,
6:09
when he was at the 49ers, he ended up
6:11
having an affair with one of the linemen's
6:13
wives. Oh yeah, I remember
6:16
that. Remember that? Yeah, I do, yeah, that's a non-starter.
6:18
And this is not good because the linemen
6:20
are the guys that keep people from rushing in and
6:22
tackling you and so they stop
6:25
guarding and all the linemen stick together,
6:27
they even have a thing called the lineman's club
6:30
at the NFL. Oh really? And so
6:32
they all just said, yeah, you know, you wanna play
6:35
that game, try protecting yourself and
6:37
they kept getting sacked. And so
6:39
then when other teams thought about taking
6:41
him over, the word got out and
6:44
no one was gonna block for him.
6:46
Well, if anyone wants to
6:48
do a little bit of fun banging
6:50
around on bingit.io, you
6:53
can share the segment, there's a
6:55
little share button when you find something and
6:58
then email it to me. And if I get enough,
7:00
then I will put together a Red Book
7:02
Best Of. I need to have it pretty quick
7:05
because I gotta do it this week, leaving on Friday.
7:07
And if not- And a backup scheme.
7:09
If not, we have a backup, exactly.
7:12
So I've got
7:14
a couple of clips from Scott Ritter that I dug
7:16
off that podcast. He's like one
7:19
of those guys that goes to one podcast.
7:22
Yeah, what podcast is he on? Some
7:25
guy's pocket gardener, I think is his name.
7:28
I think some guy's podcast is a great name for
7:30
a podcast.
7:33
Some guy's podcast. I would be stunned
7:35
if there was no podcast on the 4
7:37
million, not named some guy's
7:40
podcast. Okay, well,
7:42
since I happen to be one of the co-founders.
7:44
You happen to be the curator, let's
7:47
look it up. Podcast, here we go.
7:49
Well, we had just some guy's podcast,
7:52
close. Close. Oh,
7:54
there's two, the just some guy's podcast,
7:57
just some average guy's podcast.
8:00
Huh. Oh,
8:03
that's not too bad.
8:04
Some black guy's podcast. Wow. Okay.
8:06
Well, there's stuff out there. Good. All right.
8:08
So this is some other guy's podcast. Yeah.
8:11
So he's got two tidbits
8:14
in here that I thought were quite good. He
8:16
was brought on and they started talking about,
8:19
you know, the, we, we talked about this on the show when
8:21
William Burns said, well, now that
8:24
the, you know, Putin's fault operations falling
8:26
apart, we're going to get, go grab some Russian
8:28
spies. We're going to solicit for Russian spies
8:31
and build a spying network. And
8:34
Ritter was just
8:35
beside himself with laughter
8:38
thinking this is the stupidest thing imaginable.
8:41
And so he talks about us spies in
8:43
Russia.
8:44
Um, didn't the CIA,
8:46
you say Burns as the CIA director, didn't he say
8:48
that they had 50,000 people who had already
8:51
contacted them?
8:52
Something like that. Yeah. Yeah.
8:55
Well, here's what Scott Ritter's take
8:57
on it is. And I tend to fall
8:59
into line with what he's thinking. Now
9:01
the CIA saying, Hey, we, we're
9:03
having great luck, great success. And people
9:06
are going to
9:07
say, man, maybe the CIA did get some people in there.
9:09
And that's why for Goshen saying there's
9:11
incompetence and all this stuff. This is a mind
9:13
game being played by the CIA
9:15
director. They,
9:18
I can, I'll tell you the following. They're having
9:20
no luck
9:21
with the Russians, none whatsoever,
9:24
because Russia is a denied area.
9:27
The Russian target is harder today than it has
9:29
been at any time since the cold
9:31
war. Um, you know, when,
9:33
when we had, again, you just
9:36
got to think like an intelligence officer. How
9:38
do you get into Russia? There's
9:41
two ways. Normally. One is through diplomatic
9:43
cover. You work through the embassy or through consulates.
9:46
You go into the Russians usually have that figured
9:48
out pretty good. There are, there
9:50
are rest record of covered diplomats
9:53
working for the CIA is quite high.
9:55
They've rolled up a lot of our station
9:58
operatives.
9:59
too much look at it. The other way is through
10:02
non-official cover, the knocks.
10:04
But to have a knock operating
10:07
inside Russia means you have to have social
10:10
connectivity with Russia. People
10:12
have to be traveling in and out of Russia
10:15
because you're operating under cover
10:17
and that cover has to be believable and deniable.
10:20
A knock is what they call the gray
10:22
person.
10:23
They go around and nobody notices them
10:25
going around. They're not high profile. You
10:27
know what an American traveling in Russia is today.
10:30
Any American high profile.
10:32
Why? Nobody's traveling in Russia.
10:34
So William Burns
10:37
knows that the Russians know,
10:40
the Russian professionals know, but he's not doing it. How
10:42
do they know? Because they've rolled everything
10:44
up.
10:44
In 2002 years ago, the
10:47
CIA put out an unprecedented memo.
10:49
A lot of people forgot about this. There's
10:51
a memo in and out to all stations warning
10:53
them about specific communications
10:55
methodologies that had been used to communicate
10:58
with human assets, spies,
11:00
people we recruited because we lost
11:02
everybody.
11:04
I got to call the some guy's podcast
11:06
and tell him to up his game on the audio. So,
11:09
you know, the thing was
11:12
about that audio, I agree. I
11:14
wanted to run it through Adobe, but Adobe
11:17
failed. Yeah. I've had some failings
11:19
with Adobe too. I tried to think it's under,
11:21
I think it's under duress.
11:23
I tried to make
11:26
some audio sound better from the eco
11:28
was conference.
11:30
Man, it just turned into like a share
11:33
song. But I say, Phil,
11:35
I mean, I didn't get a file back. Oh,
11:37
you didn't get a file. Okay. It ate your file.
11:40
Oh, that's not good. I just sat there and
11:42
spun. Oh, that's not good. That's not good.
11:44
All right. So Ritter says bull
11:46
crap. They have no spies bull
11:48
crap. Could have shortened that clip. He
11:50
said bull crap. All right. I liked the clip,
11:53
so I didn't shorten it, but let's go to the shorter
11:55
version. Next one is shorter. We lost
11:57
him in China. We lost him in Iran. We lost.
11:59
them in Russia. Why? Because
12:02
it was compromised. They said, don't do
12:04
this anymore.
12:06
If we lost all our assets
12:08
two years ago, and Burns
12:11
wants us to believe that we've suddenly rebuilt
12:14
agent networks that take decades
12:16
to build at a time when
12:19
Russia is more close to us than ever
12:21
before, that's some significant
12:24
hallucinated drugs that he's asking us to
12:26
consume because it isn't happening. The Russians
12:29
know it. This is being done for
12:31
domestic political consumption. CIA
12:34
is going to be called to task
12:36
very soon for what
12:39
will be yet another gross intelligence
12:41
failure, the failure of Ukraine.
12:44
Ukraine is losing the war. The CIA played
12:46
an important part in this conflict in helping
12:48
generate this conflict through its support, a
12:50
multi-decade support of the Van Der Ses
12:53
ultra-nationalists who were in control,
12:55
and its covert support
12:57
through
12:57
the Ukrainian military, helping facilitate
13:00
the flow of munitions and its
13:02
intelligence support through the Ukrainian
13:04
government, Ukrainian military. All of this is
13:06
failing. The Russians are winning. The CIA
13:09
is losing. And at some point in time, they
13:11
will be called before the United States Congress
13:14
and held to account. Oh, interesting.
13:17
This is
13:18
kind of the Bobby the K narrative.
13:20
Like I'm going to reorganize that that thing.
13:23
Reorganize the CIA. I think they're under, I think using
13:26
the word duress again. I
13:28
think something's up and I think he's onto it. And
13:32
that could happen. It would happen after 9-11 because
13:34
they dropped the ball on that. And
13:37
you know, what are they there for if they can't stop
13:40
or do these things right? They're
13:44
there to start and maintain wars. That's what
13:46
they do.
13:48
And they're not maintaining this one is what you're doing
13:50
a crappy job of this one. Yeah.
13:53
Okay. All right. Because I
13:55
think there's a third clip.
13:56
And so what Burns is doing right now is trying
13:58
to put
13:59
on a pick, trying to positively
14:02
spin something that can't be positively
14:05
spun. I will guarantee
14:07
you right now, I'll put my reputation on the line. The
14:09
CIA hasn't had a major recruitment
14:12
success in Russia at all, because if they did,
14:14
Stephen, it wouldn't be talking about
14:16
it. I can guarantee you that.
14:19
You don't talk about it. You don't hint
14:22
it. You don't do anything. Who
14:24
does William Burns think we are? The dumbest
14:26
people on the planet? I don't want to answer that question.
14:29
We're podcasters, damn it.
14:31
So I thought that was kind
14:33
of enlightening and kind of depressing
14:35
at the same time. But then he brought up another
14:37
whole different topic. And I don't
14:40
know. I didn't know this.
14:42
This is about Seymour Hirsch
14:44
and his latest revelation,
14:47
which somehow eluded the
14:49
mainstream media. And this is the
14:51
last look. This is Scott Ritter on a new
14:53
Hirsch story. You're familiar with
14:56
journalist Seymour Hirsch. He's
14:59
the one that broke the story that
15:01
Biden and the
15:04
U.S. Navy dive team were
15:06
behind the explosion
15:10
of the Russian pipeline into
15:12
Germany. He has now come
15:14
out and said that he has intel
15:17
sources that he's not willing to reveal
15:19
that are saying that the United
15:22
States played a much
15:24
larger role in blowing
15:26
up the Crimean bridge than
15:29
they want to be known. They're
15:32
trying to let Ukraine take all the credit
15:34
for that.
15:35
Do you think there's any truth to that? Was
15:37
this American technology? He's saying
15:40
it was like
15:42
a shallow, basically like
15:44
a shallow torpedo that
15:46
Ukraine would not have this technology. Only
15:49
the United States would have that. Well, let me
15:51
put it this way. I've known Seymour Hirsch
15:53
personally for 25 years. I
15:55
consider him to be a very close friend.
15:58
And I'd like to believe that he received.
16:00
that percates that feelings towards me. But
16:02
as close friends, I can tell
16:04
you that the one thing we don't do
16:06
is talk about his stories, and
16:09
he doesn't talk about his sources.
16:11
One of the reasons why Seymour
16:13
Hirsch is the successes that he is,
16:16
is that he has a reputation that
16:18
if you talk to him, you don't get arrested.
16:21
If you talk to him, nobody knows your
16:23
name because he protects his sources.
16:25
His reputation also is
16:27
that the stories he writes
16:31
more often than not, far more often
16:33
than not, turn out to be exactly right, that his
16:35
sources are good. Well, perfect.
16:37
You lead me right into my clips. Because-
16:42
I do have some thoughts about this boat. Go
16:45
ahead, go ahead, go ahead.
16:46
I mean, we were watching the news in the last
16:48
couple of days and we keep seeing these videos
16:51
that have been leaked by someone somehow.
16:53
I have no idea how that happened.
16:55
Of the similar type product,
16:58
which is a drone. That's
17:00
my clip. Well, go
17:02
take it. The C-drone, and of course
17:04
it wouldn't be complete if this report wasn't
17:06
brought to us by our resident
17:09
spook, Richard Engel. The C-drone
17:11
slips through the water silently. Ooh,
17:14
nice alliteration, beautiful.
17:16
The C-drone slips through the water silently
17:19
under the cover of darkness. Its
17:22
target is a Russian landing ship in the
17:24
Black Sea.
17:25
The pilotless, remotely operated
17:27
Kamikaze boat packed with explosives
17:30
is closing in until the video released
17:32
by Ukrainian security services breaks
17:35
up. Afterwards, a
17:37
Russian ship can be seen listing, being
17:40
guided into a Russian harbor. The
17:43
Russian military claimed it stopped the C-drone
17:45
attack and made no mention of damage.
17:48
NBC News geolocated
17:50
the video and analyzed ship logs. The
17:53
damaged ship looks very much like
17:55
the one attacked by the drone. Fire, snip!
17:58
With Ukraine's counter-offensive...
17:59
making little progress so far in
18:02
the east, it seems Ukraine is finding
18:04
alternative ways to fight back and
18:07
take the war to Russia, using
18:11
small drones to attack downtown Moscow,
18:14
and now,
18:15
exploding boats. President
18:18
Zelensky, as with other drone attacks, didn't
18:21
directly claim responsibility for the C-drone,
18:23
but he did congratulate Ukraine's security
18:26
services for, quote, returning
18:28
the war to the aggressor state. Police.
18:32
Who makes these things?
18:35
Who makes these things? Just looking into it, I mean, we've
18:37
had two examples of these C-drones.
18:39
Yeah. One hit the Russian,
18:42
whatever that thing was, a destroyer,
18:44
I guess. No, but it was an oil. And then one hit an oil freighter.
18:47
Oh, yeah, freighter, yes. The freighter, the
18:49
oil freighter's the other one. But the best part
18:51
is the video.
18:53
The CNN had the video, everyone had the video.
18:57
Oh, yeah. But supposedly, they always preface
18:59
it with those leaked social media.
19:01
Who leaked it? Why would you be
19:03
leaking this stuff? Yeah, this
19:06
is, yeah. And for Engel
19:08
to be the guy on the beat
19:10
that just screams agency.
19:13
Well, if we go back to what Scott Ritter
19:15
had to say, this all sounds like desperation.
19:18
If you've got some super good weapon
19:21
that is doing damage, why would
19:23
you start to publicize it so now everyone
19:25
can look for it? This just doesn't
19:27
make any sense. This is a disaster. Let's
19:29
listen to ABC's report. Another strike
19:31
against a Russian vessel in the Black Sea. Video
19:34
circulating online, appearing to show
19:36
a C-drone allegedly packed with
19:38
a half ton of explosives approaching
19:40
a Russian oil tanker. Moscow blaming
19:43
Ukraine, threatening retaliation, saying
19:46
the tanker had been supplying oil
19:48
to Russian troops in Syria. Ukraine
19:50
not admitting it conducted the operation,
19:53
but security sources telling ABC News
19:55
they did indeed carry out the strike.
19:58
It follows a similar attack Friday. against
20:00
a Russian warship, more videos circulating
20:03
online showing the moment it was struck.
20:05
After sunup, the ship scene being towed
20:08
back into base, listing seriously
20:10
to one side. And tonight, a collection
20:12
of videos verified by ABC News now
20:15
indicating that Ukraine has started using
20:17
US-provided cluster munitions on
20:19
the battlefield on the eastern front lines,
20:22
the controversial weapons banned by
20:24
many countries. And as the war grinds on,
20:26
up to 40 nations are meeting in Saudi Arabia
20:29
to discuss
20:29
a possible peace plan for Ukraine, but
20:32
Russia not invited. With
20:34
China attending these peace talks for the first
20:37
time, with increased attacks in Moscow
20:39
and now the Black Sea, and remember that mutiny
20:41
six weeks ago, the war is now threatening
20:44
instability in Russia, which of course is
20:46
China's western neighbour and ally.
20:49
Yeah, so this kind of, there's a couple
20:51
of things that are surrounding this we
20:53
have, and I'll get to Africa, because you
20:56
can't leave Africa out of the story. But
20:58
right now, as we speak, we have
21:00
the big powwow going on
21:03
in Saudi Arabia. Everybody,
21:05
all the BRICS, 30, 40 nations
21:08
now except Russia discussing
21:10
the peace plan. We go to NPR. Saudi
21:14
Arabia chose to conference this weekend
21:16
to talk about peace in Ukraine, but
21:19
Russia actually, the country wasn't
21:21
even invited. Instead, this is a chance
21:24
for Ukraine to garner more international
21:26
support for its ideas on how the
21:28
war should end. And we are diplomatic
21:30
correspondent Michelle Kellerman joins us. Michelle,
21:32
thanks
21:33
for being with us. Nice to be here, Scott. Yeah,
21:35
nice to have you here, Scott. How
21:37
do you have a peace conference without the country that's
21:40
waging the war? Yeah, I mean, you can't quite call this
21:42
a peace conference. The two sides are
21:44
really far apart from
21:45
any talks. But what the Ukrainians want is
21:47
more support from countries that have been
21:49
on the fence up to now. They have
21:52
this 10-point peace plan that would ensure that
21:54
Russian forces get out of their country. It
21:57
calls for the restoration of Ukraine's territorial
21:59
integrity. and it calls for accountability
22:01
for Russia's aggression. And
22:03
a former US ambassador, William Taylor,
22:06
puts it this way.
22:06
So the Ukrainians want to make the case that
22:09
they are in the right,
22:11
but they're on the right side of the
22:13
principles. They don't ask the principles. Why
22:15
is he laughing? Why
22:17
is he laughing? He's laughing. He puts it this way.
22:20
So the Ukrainians want to make the case that they
22:22
are in the right,
22:24
but they're on the right side of the principle.
22:27
Is this guy the... That's why he's laughing. He's
22:30
like, those guys are wrong. They're not in the right.
22:32
And so who is this guy again?
22:34
It's ambassador, William. Ambassador, the
22:36
ambassador. Yeah, Ukraine wants to
22:40
tell the world that they're right. Taylor puts
22:42
it this way. So the Ukrainians want to make the case
22:44
that they are in the
22:46
right,
22:47
they're on the right side of the... Wow,
22:50
what a tell this guy has. Why would he even...
22:53
Don't they train these ambassadors with some NLP
22:56
or something?
22:57
You know, no, probably
23:00
not. And I would say the tell
23:02
was just this tell. It's just everyone has one. That
23:05
they are in the right,
23:08
they're on the right side of the principles,
23:11
the international principles. He makes me laughing so funny.
23:13
The moral principles and
23:16
that they, the Ukrainians deserve
23:18
the support of the Indians and the Brazil's
23:20
and the South Africa. The Indians and the Brazil's.
23:22
How many Indians and Brazil's are there at Mr.
23:25
Ambassador? And the Chinese, by the
23:27
way. China announced that its special representative
23:29
on Eurasian affairs is gonna
23:31
attend this meeting in Jeddah, Saudi
23:33
Arabia. And Taylor says that's really
23:35
a big deal because China is an ally
23:38
of the Russians. And this meeting is about Ukraine's
23:40
proposals for peace and not Russia's
23:43
perspective. Okay, so here
23:45
are, I have a couple more clips here, but here are the 10 points.
23:48
This is the, Reuters
23:50
bills it as Zelensky's 10 point
23:53
peace plan.
23:55
One. Radiation
23:58
and nuclear safety focus. on restoring
24:00
safety around Europe's largest nuclear
24:03
power plant
24:04
Zafarizia in Ukraine, which is
24:06
now Russian occupied. Well,
24:08
that seems like a gimme. That's
24:11
an easy one. That's our, that's that
24:13
whole
24:14
gambit by Lindsay
24:17
and Blumenthal that failed.
24:19
So nothing blew up. The
24:21
Russians are actually far. Well, no, I
24:24
think they're really protecting it. Two, food
24:27
security, including protecting
24:29
and ensuring Ukraine's grain exports
24:32
to the world's poorest nations. Well, there's
24:34
an important one. Yeah. Hey man. Hey
24:36
man, let us export grain. Not to Africa,
24:38
by the way. No, we
24:40
just, we just need the money because those
24:43
are American assets, international
24:44
assets. That's owned by Cargill
24:46
now.
24:48
They divvied that up. Three,
24:50
energy security with focus on
24:52
price restrictions on Russian energy
24:54
sources, as well as aiding Ukraine
24:57
with restoring its power infrastructure, half
25:00
of which has been damaged by Russian attacks.
25:03
Well, gas is still flowing through
25:05
Ukraine. That did not stop. Well, the
25:07
funny thing is if you read that whole thing again, that
25:09
one
25:10
point, it makes
25:12
it, where's the sanctions on the Russian
25:14
energy? Oh, there's none. There's only
25:17
sanctions on Russian oil, not on gas.
25:20
Oh yeah, this is the big joke. It's dumb.
25:22
And, you know, Russian
25:24
gas has always flowed through Ukraine.
25:27
So that hasn't stopped.
25:28
Four, release of
25:31
all prisoners and deportees, including
25:33
war prisoners and children deported
25:35
to Russia. Well,
25:36
that seems like a relatively easy one. I
25:39
don't think it's a problem, but here we go. Here's where
25:41
it gets a little iffy and icky. Number five,
25:44
restoring Ukraine's territorial integrity
25:47
and
25:47
Russia reaffirming it, according
25:50
to the UN Charter,
25:51
which Zelensky says is not up
25:54
to negotiations.
25:56
So I think this means the original 1991
25:58
border.
26:01
which will not, and Crimea, that
26:03
will not happen. So this
26:05
is the main point that it'll come down to. That's
26:07
not gonna happen ever. Yeah, it's gonna come to, as
26:10
usual, it comes down to, it's
26:12
always
26:13
natural resources, turf, or
26:16
some chick. So, and
26:19
by the way, have you seen the Zelensky as gay
26:21
memes floating around? Well,
26:25
we've already gone through the Zelensky's
26:28
on cocaine memes. That's
26:31
old. I have not seen
26:33
the Zelensky as gay, but there's a lot of interesting
26:36
kind of gay memes showing up, and
26:38
I have some clips. But can I finish
26:40
this before we go to gay? No, I want you to finish this, but
26:42
I'm just saying, I'm just mentioning that there's
26:45
gay in the air. What
26:49
do you smell, John?
26:51
Gay in the air. Number
26:55
six, withdrawal of Russian troops
26:57
and cessation of hostilities, restoration
27:00
of Ukraine's state borders with Russia.
27:03
So that's kind of when you have a peace
27:05
agreement, then you do that. But I
27:08
think the way they solve this is Crimea is
27:10
not up for debate. That'll have to be the
27:12
gimme, and they'll have the demilitarized
27:15
zone, and we'll say, well, this is just no man's
27:17
land,
27:18
which is about the width of Florida.
27:21
Seven, justice,
27:24
justice, including the establishment
27:26
of a special tribunal to prosecute
27:29
Russian war crimes. This
27:31
is what the International
27:33
Criminal Court and the JIT
27:36
team have been working on. This is what
27:38
suspiciously quiet Queen Ursula
27:40
has been promising.
27:43
And I think this number
27:45
seven here is only to get some money
27:47
out of them. They're not gonna throw Putin
27:50
in jail or anything like that, but this'll just be, we
27:52
need some money. We need money. So
27:54
the money we already have, we wanna take it.
27:56
Eight, prevention
27:59
of. Echoside or eco
28:02
side need for protection of
28:05
environment with focus on demining
28:07
and restoring water treatment facilities.
28:11
Yeah, so that would be all demilitarized
28:13
zone work so I think that's
28:15
a setup number nine prevention
28:17
of escalation of conflict and building
28:19
security architecture in
28:22
the euro Atlantic space.
28:24
Including guarantees for Ukraine
28:27
what do you think that means. Bill
28:31
you're gonna have to read it again prevention
28:33
of escalation of conflict comma and
28:36
stopping shooting yes and building
28:39
security architecture
28:41
in the euro Atlantic space. I
28:43
think police police state military.
28:47
I think it's more like NATO we need
28:50
euro Atlantic space. Blue hats maybe
28:52
blue hat blue helmets blue helmets and number 10
28:55
number 10 confirmation of
28:57
the wars and including a document signed.
29:00
By the involved party so they don't want an
29:02
armistice
29:03
we don't want a North Korea situation we
29:05
wanted to end okay. So this is
29:07
what they are just papers can be signing
29:09
it would be an armistice.
29:11
Yeah, but but it wars end
29:13
confirmation of the wars and so they
29:15
wanted to end all right back to NPR Ukraine
29:18
has been talking about this idea since last year
29:20
is there any sign that any of the nations
29:22
you mentioned or any closer to signing
29:24
onto it.
29:25
It's hard to know but Taylor thinks
29:27
there are a couple of factors that are kind of
29:29
new here and might make other countries
29:31
rethink their approach. Russia
29:33
recently pulled out of that grain deal
29:36
that allowed Ukraine to ship
29:38
its food through the Black Sea and that's
29:40
having ripple effects around the world. And
29:43
then there was this attempted mutiny in Russia
29:46
you know that short lived
29:47
uprising by Yevgeny Prigozhin
29:49
and his Wagner mercenaries Taylor thinks
29:51
that kind of damage the image
29:54
of Russian President Vladimir Putin take a
29:56
listen. He's not the big strong.
30:00
impeachable leader that he...
30:03
There he goes again. There he
30:05
goes again with a laugh tell. Listen
30:07
again, let's listen again. See, the email should
30:09
be mentioned. Yeah. The
30:12
quick adoption, and it was dubious.
30:15
The quick adoption of the term mutiny
30:18
by everybody. Yeah, yeah, mutiny.
30:21
What kind of a mutiny is? It's some bunch
30:23
of yahoos. Is Russia a ship?
30:26
Yeah, Russia's not a ship.
30:29
It could be a coup, but
30:31
not a mutiny. A coup attempt would be something
30:34
I'd say. Yeah. There's a lot of
30:36
things you can call it. Well,
30:38
again, it was a media term. Mutiny
30:40
on Moscow. Yeah, mutiny was
30:43
a media term, and everyone's adopted it,
30:45
and it's a misuse of the word.
30:47
Of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
30:50
Take a listen. He's not the big, strong,
30:54
impeachable leader. Why
30:56
is he laughing about that?
30:59
Because he is indeed not impeachable?
31:04
Or is he laughing about Putin now? I don't know.
31:06
That he would like to make the case that
31:08
he is. And so there
31:11
is scope for nations
31:13
as they evaluate where they come
31:15
down on the Russia invasion
31:18
against Ukraine, too, to think about this
31:20
in a new way. Taylor
31:21
was actually in Ukraine
31:23
last week, and that's kind of what he was hearing.
31:25
That's the hope of the Ukrainians.
31:28
He was also saying that the mood
31:30
was pretty grim on the military
31:33
side because the counteroffensive
31:35
is really bogged down. But they're more hopeful
31:37
on the diplomatic
31:38
side. OK. One
31:40
more clip to go. But I have a
31:42
retaliation here from, and this is
31:45
not a clip, Ivan Timofiev,
31:47
Program Director of the Voldy
31:49
Club Director General
31:52
of the Russian Internal Affairs Council.
31:54
I don't know what that is, but it's on RT, so I'll
31:56
read it. Or the highlights from this.
31:59
What should Russia expect from this Saudi
32:01
Arabia peace summit? Number
32:04
of problems in Ukraine itself are perceived critically
32:07
in Russia in particular. One of these now
32:09
is the rights of Christians and the attempt
32:11
to split the Orthodox Church, which
32:13
is gaining momentum and is accompanied by the seizure
32:16
of church property and the persecution of
32:19
believers. So that seems
32:21
to be an issue that Moscow has a problem
32:23
with. Moscow's main position
32:25
is essentially an arrangement that can be called a ceasefire
32:29
based on Russia's retention of the Ukrainian
32:31
territories now organized as
32:33
four Russian regions. Difficult
32:36
to imagine Moscow being prepared to abandon
32:38
this,
32:39
as we just discussed. And
32:41
no peace plan for Ukraine can become
32:43
a reality without China's participation.
32:46
The meeting in Saudi Arabia could be a precursor
32:49
to a financial and economic assistance
32:51
plan to build Ukraine.
32:54
That is interesting.
32:57
And of course, if any peace
33:01
process is going to be official, you've
33:03
got to have the right people there.
33:04
Victoria Kagan, Noodleman. Yeah, is she there, ladies and gentlemen? Is
33:07
the Noodleheimer on deck? Is she going to be a part of this? What do
33:09
you as officials tell you about this meeting?
33:17
Well they're sending National Security Advisor
33:19
Jake Sullivan and he's going to be joined
33:21
by Victoria Nuland, who's now the acting
33:24
deputy secretary of state. So it's a high level
33:26
U.S. delegation, but they're not really raising any
33:29
big expectations of a breakthrough here.
33:31
They're just hoping that countries will
33:34
kind of inch closer to Ukraine's
33:36
perspective on the war. And by
33:38
the way, that includes Saudi Arabia, which is hosting
33:40
the meeting.
33:40
And why? Well,
33:42
you know, the Saudis have maintained ties
33:45
with Russia throughout the war and they seem
33:47
to be kind of positioning themselves to play
33:49
a larger diplomatic role. They're
33:51
also kind of trying to show the U.S. that they can
33:54
be responsible players on the world stage.
33:57
Relations are just kind of slowly emerging.
33:59
from a pretty rough patch between
34:02
the US and Saudi Arabia. All
34:04
right, so going based on- So thanks to Biden. No.
34:07
Can I throw a little extra little items in here? Yeah, please.
34:10
The Christian church thing, this
34:13
is
34:14
an attempt by the Ukrainians
34:16
to separate from the Russian Orthodox.
34:19
Yeah.
34:20
And the Russian Orthodox and
34:23
create the Ukrainian Orthodox Church
34:25
is still Orthodox style
34:27
of a version, it's kind of a version
34:29
of Catholicism, only it's a little
34:31
more- They got funky hats, man. They
34:33
got big hats and large beards.
34:36
They got big hats and beards. And the churches
34:38
are filled with gold. We have a Russian
34:40
Orthodox Church on Gury Street out in San
34:42
Francisco and it's just a treat to go into.
34:45
And
34:46
the Ukrainians claim that the Russian Orthodox
34:49
churches are getting their orders from Moscow and
34:51
it's just a bunch of spies that are
34:53
in there and they gotta be stopped, so they're
34:56
roasting them. So that story
34:58
is hard to really
35:00
break down properly.
35:02
Whether they're spies or not? Yeah,
35:05
I mean, they probably are spies, but it's like,
35:08
why are they starting a new church? I mean, the whole
35:10
thing is, and they're also, it's
35:12
just, it's a mess.
35:15
So right on cue, if we go
35:17
on the presumption here for a moment that CIA
35:19
is failing, let's
35:22
roll out the boat drone, which was with
35:24
the footage, which we can leak
35:26
on social media.
35:28
Why don't they tell us what social media was leaked? What
35:30
account leaked it? I mean, they're able
35:32
to suppress anything they want. They've got back doors
35:34
into everybody, but they can't tell
35:36
us where it came from. It was leaked.
35:39
It just dripped on. Social media. Just dripped
35:41
onto the feed, I guess.
35:42
So right on cue, looks like we gotta start
35:44
some more somewhere else and we are
35:47
rocking. The large crowd gathered
35:49
at Independence Square. This
35:51
was a rally really called by a coalition
35:54
of civil society groups that
35:56
have for quite some months now been
35:59
calling for. against the
36:01
presence of French troops in the country
36:03
and against the fact that Niger has become
36:06
this pretty close ally of Western
36:08
nations who are trying to fight the
36:11
jihadist insurgency across the region.
36:13
But a large crowd and amongst the crowd
36:16
quite a lot of chance against
36:18
France but also against the sanctions
36:21
that have been imposed by the regional bloc,
36:23
ECOWAS, and some chance
36:26
and flags supporting Russia.
36:28
But I ought to stress,
36:29
you know, in Niger the country's
36:32
pretty split on whether they're
36:34
in support of this coup or not.
36:36
There are many people who believe that
36:38
the coup leaders themselves were really
36:40
in danger of being replaced and losing their
36:43
jobs and so they move for their own
36:45
protection really and that's what this is all about.
36:47
I
36:47
was going to ask you about that because it's very difficult
36:50
to assess how much popular support there really is for
36:52
the coup but also this waving
36:54
of the Russian flags that started right from the beginning
36:57
didn't
36:57
it? Yes, it did and it's exactly
36:59
the same script as we've seen in Mali and Burkina
37:02
Faso when the military took over there. When
37:04
we say script what do we mean? Russian
37:06
playbook baby. It's for the coup
37:08
but also this waving of the Russian
37:10
flags that started right from the beginning didn't it? It
37:13
did and it's exactly
37:15
the same script as we've seen in Mali and Burkina
37:17
Faso when the military took over there.
37:20
A sort of rather suspicious presence of Russian
37:22
flags just at the moment when
37:24
the military men have taken power and
37:27
of course the military leaders are looking
37:29
to try and justify their actions
37:31
so as soon as they'd seized
37:34
power the anti-French sentiment
37:36
was whipped up and then the presence of these
37:38
Russian flags I mean not many of them but
37:40
I mean in Niger there
37:43
are you mentioned the poverty there are huge challenges
37:45
in terms of the insecurity and the poverty
37:47
and many people do say look France
37:49
and other countries including the UN in the
37:52
Sahel region have been trying to fight the jihadists
37:54
but have failed to make any real inroads. We
37:57
funded them of course that's what we do.
37:59
As an aside, my friend here,
38:02
the international arms dealer, I was very proud
38:04
to send me a picture of the 727 he
38:06
sold to Burkino Faso.
38:07
It's a hot region. There's
38:10
a lot of sales going on. Yeah,
38:13
it's a hot region, baby. It's the only
38:16
airplane that takes off on crutches. Yeah,
38:18
it still works. But we need
38:20
to ratchet it up a little bit. We need
38:23
one Russian name in there that completes
38:25
it all. Nijer's
38:28
new military junta has asked for help from the
38:30
Russian mercenary group Wagner as a
38:32
deadline approaches for it to release the
38:34
country's ousted president. One
38:36
of the coup leaders, General Salif
38:37
Umodiy, made the request while visiting
38:40
neighboring Mali. He comes as the West
38:42
African regional bloc, Ekoasas,
38:44
threatened possible military intervention if
38:47
the democratically elected leader is not
38:49
returned to power. Demonstrations
38:51
have taken place, some in support and
38:54
some against the coup as international pressure
38:56
on the junta increases. Nijer
38:59
has been seen as the West's last reliable
39:01
counterterrorism partner in a region
39:03
where coups have become common in recent
39:06
years. Foreign nationals have been
39:07
leaving the country mainly on French
39:10
military aircraft. Juntas
39:12
have rejected former colonizer
39:14
France and turned towards Russia. Wagner
39:17
already operates in a handful of African
39:19
countries, including Mali. It remains
39:21
unclear what the international community's response
39:24
would be to Wagner's involvement in Nijer.
40:00
And he's saying, hey, Sunday today,
40:03
if these,
40:06
if the coup
40:09
people, the cougars, if
40:11
they don't stop this, you know, we're
40:13
gonna kick some ass, we're not gonna tell you our plans
40:15
exactly. But for all
40:17
the, you know, half the country, this
40:20
half the country that it seems like most
40:22
of the country likes the coup.
40:24
It's a show of unity for the cameras, but a
40:27
clear divide has emerged. See, there always
40:29
is divide. Niger is the fourth
40:31
equalized country to come under military
40:33
rule in the last two years after
40:36
Guinea, Mali and Burkina Faso.
40:39
Unlike those three nations, it has now
40:41
been suspended from the group. The
40:44
juntas in Mali and Burkina Faso gave
40:46
their support
40:46
to the Niger coup leaders. We
40:51
hereby warn that any military intervention
40:53
against Niger is tantamount to a declaration
40:56
of war against Burkina Faso and
40:58
Mali.
41:00
In Niger's capital, Niame,
41:02
the pro-junta demonstrations continue,
41:04
and it's not only Niger. He
41:06
ends in attendance. The
41:09
citizens of other EcoVase countries living
41:11
in Niger support the new authorities.
41:14
We live very well here. Fatherland or
41:16
death, we will win. As
41:20
the deadline looms, it seems EcoVase
41:22
has a long way to go to win the hearts
41:25
and minds of the people of Niger.
41:27
There are so many countries.
41:30
It's really, as we've discussed, it's Africa
41:33
and China.
41:34
But military contracts with
41:37
Russia,
41:38
Mali, Algeria, Libya,
41:41
Niger, Chad,
41:44
Sudan, I mean, it's
41:46
really, except for the
41:48
Democratic Republic of Congo, you know,
41:51
really the most,
41:54
the Ivory Coast, that's probably
41:56
all China. South Africa
41:58
is... Who has South
42:00
Africa?
42:03
That's China, I think, isn't it?
42:05
I think so.
42:08
I mean, it's unbelievable how
42:10
much Russia is already in Africa.
42:13
So I don't know, but why is Newland going
42:16
to, why is she wasting
42:18
her time in Saudi Arabia? She
42:21
should be in this ECOWASA outfit.
42:25
Something's, there's a piece of this puzzle
42:27
we're missing and it may be what I think, which is a
42:29
collusion with the United States and Russia. Yeah,
42:32
to get rid of China. To
42:34
deal with China or something.
42:37
This is stories are just like,
42:40
it's like a jigsaw puzzle that's a mess.
42:42
And it's,
42:44
we play these clips, we try to
42:46
keep up with it, but it doesn't make any,
42:50
at the end of our
42:51
analysis, it doesn't make any sense.
42:54
Because there's some
42:57
major pieces of the puzzle missing.
42:59
Here's, I'll just play a little bit of this
43:01
clip just so you get the latest country that's
43:03
messed up in Africa. Ethiopia's cabinet
43:06
has agreed to declare a state of emergency following
43:08
days of clashes between the military and local
43:10
militia in the Amara region. So
43:13
now Ethiopia is a mess.
43:16
Everything's a mess. Sudan is still, I
43:19
think I have, yeah, Sudan is still a mess.
43:21
Right group Amnesty International says
43:23
extensive war crimes are being committed
43:26
by both sides in the conflict. That
43:28
has been raging in Sudan since April.
43:31
The Britain-based human rights group said this
43:34
in the reports that the crimes committed
43:36
by the warring parties led
43:38
by two feuding generals included
43:40
sexual violence against girls as
43:43
young as 12. There you go. There's
43:46
the old
43:46
rape allegations.
43:49
We'll find out next who's handing
43:51
out the Viagra to their troops.
43:54
Yeah, that's always a good headline grabber. This
43:57
is what they do. Anyway,
43:59
we do. have a drone base in Niger
44:01
which we can't use currently because the
44:04
Niger has closed the sky we're not
44:06
allowed to fly and
44:08
we were apparently using this drone
44:10
base to keep tabs on the Al-Qaeda
44:13
in Africa or whatever
44:15
they call it and I think
44:18
Niger is isn't it predominantly a Muslim
44:20
country? Well
44:23
we can look it up. I have a
44:25
feeling it is. Consul people of knowledge!
44:29
I mean it's quite likely but...
44:32
I think it is. I care. Because
44:35
whenever I see a video I'm always seeing
44:38
the local population bowing in
44:40
prayer. Well that's
44:42
just the video they're showing us.
44:44
Well that's why I ask.
44:46
They don't really say anything over words. Man
44:49
there's too much on Wikipedia. The
44:51
spooks have been filling it up. Religion.
44:54
Islam 99.3% that would be your answer. That
44:58
would be the answer. So the terrorists.
45:02
The
45:04
terrorists man I gotta keep an eye on the terrorists.
45:07
I like it where they got 99.3% Islam, 0.3% Christianity. Yay!
45:14
And then 2% animism.
45:16
Animism? What is that? Well
45:18
and there's also 1.2% animism. Animism
45:23
is a belief that objects, places and
45:26
creatures all possess distinct. It's like
45:28
pantheism. It
45:30
perceives all things animals, plaques,
45:32
rocks and it's kind of like everything is... Everything's...
45:35
Spiritual. Just
45:39
one last clip. See if we get anything out of this from Al
45:41
Jazeera and then we've had our Africa update.
45:43
Which is... it's a mess. You can
45:45
add Niger to the growing list of African countries
45:48
to see their government fall in a military
45:50
coup. There you go. This is the key.
45:53
This is the key. It's falling. Something's
45:55
gotta happen. From coast to coast a whole
45:57
swathe of sub-Saharan states is now run...
45:59
by military juntas. Niger
46:02
has been a key Western ally, a strategic
46:05
partner and supplier of important
46:07
minerals. But citizens there have soured
46:09
on the US and French troops based on their
46:11
soil, saying they have failed to
46:14
improve security. Watching all of this
46:16
unfold and pulling some of the strings is
46:18
Russia. The Kremlin is looking to up
46:21
its influence in the region and has infiltrated
46:23
the African media space with pro-Kremlin
46:26
content on television, radio
46:28
and online. President Vladimir
46:31
Putin sees an opening. He has
46:33
offered to ally Russia with African nations
46:35
fed up with Western neocolonialism.
46:38
But would Russia be any less exploitative
46:40
than Africa's old colonial masters?
46:44
Probably
46:47
yet.
46:48
A military takeover in Niger,
46:51
straight out of the coup d'etat playbook.
46:54
Men in uniform commandeering the state-owned
46:57
TV channel, announcing a changing
46:59
of the guard. The story is local,
47:02
the context regional. Niger
47:05
is just the latest Central African
47:07
country on a growing list, including
47:09
Mali, Burkina Faso and Chad,
47:12
to overthrow a government that was seen as
47:14
close to the West. Russia
47:17
is in a part of Africa known as the
47:18
Sahel that are now the targets
47:21
of a charm offensive coming from the East,
47:24
Russia. Russia has
47:26
exploited a rise in anti-Western
47:28
sentiment in the Sahel linked in part
47:31
to worsening security there. The
47:33
US and France have flooded Niger with
47:35
hundreds of millions of dollars in
47:37
military equipment to contain
47:40
jihadist militants. America
47:42
operates one of its biggest drone bases
47:45
there. Yet the jihadist attacks
47:47
continue, and citizens
47:48
have concluded, with some
47:50
help from Russia, that the Americans and
47:53
the French have failed to protect
47:55
them.
48:01
Probably, not.
48:04
Well, it doesn't scream that, but where's
48:06
China even mentioned in these
48:08
reports when China is dominating down
48:10
there? This is all
48:12
being so well done. That's why it doesn't scream
48:14
get rid of China because that's what it's doing. But
48:17
it's all anti-Russia.
48:19
This was a very anti-Russia thing. Well, the reporting is all anti-Russia.
48:22
We have to do that.
48:23
That way you never suspect that we're involved.
48:27
I'm just
48:28
overdoing the misdirection
48:31
analysis, but what else could it
48:33
be? We don't get pushed around like
48:35
this. Never happens. I
48:37
don't know. All of a sudden we're just, okay,
48:40
whatever. The Russians do it. It doesn't
48:42
make any sense.
48:46
It doesn't. I mean, we do
48:48
have China news. This all of a sudden
48:50
crops up. This morning, federal investigators
48:52
are charging two US Navy sailors
48:55
with stealing defense secrets and
48:57
selling them to China. When a soldier
48:59
or sailor chooses cash over country
49:03
and hands over national defense information
49:05
in an ultimate act of betrayal, we
49:07
have to be ready to act. In both
49:09
cases, the sailors were allegedly approached
49:12
by Chinese spies and offered
49:14
thousands of dollars in exchange
49:16
for delivering classified details about
49:18
naval operations. It's unclear
49:20
if the two cases are connected. 22-year-old
49:23
Jin Chao Wei, also known as Patrick
49:25
Wei, faces the most serious charge
49:27
of espionage. Prosecutors
49:29
say Wei, a sailor on the USS
49:32
Essex, sent a Chinese spy details
49:34
about the defense and weapons capabilities
49:37
of Navy ships and information
49:39
on ship movement. Authorities
49:41
say Wei was paid at least $5,000 for
49:44
selling technical manuals, blueprints,
49:46
photos, and videos of the
49:48
Essex. This is part of a brazen campaign
49:50
by the People's Republic of China. It's target
49:52
US military officials. And 26-year-old sailor
49:55
Wenheng Zhao, stationed at a naval
49:57
base in Ventura County, is charged with
49:59
conspiracy.
49:59
and taking bribes. Authorities say
50:02
over the course of nearly two years, he
50:04
sold photographs of diagrams of
50:06
a US military radar system in Japan,
50:09
as well as precise operational details
50:11
about an upcoming naval exercise. Zhao
50:14
allegedly got paid nearly $15,000. Officials warn these
50:18
two cases could just be the tip of
50:20
the iceberg as China expands
50:23
its efforts to infiltrate the US military.
50:26
Now these clearly
50:28
Asian names, were they Chinese immigrants
50:31
who were being here? Are they sleeper cells?
50:34
I think there were,
50:36
my understanding at least I'm one of the guys
50:38
that he was born in China.
50:40
Yeah, and they chose cash over
50:42
country. I
50:45
think that the Chinese, well we do the same thing
50:47
here. Although it's hard, we
50:49
do it with the Chinese that come over to the University of California.
50:52
What do we do with them? The training ground, creating
50:55
Chinese spies. I
50:57
don't know how well it's working.
50:59
Yeah, I don't know.
51:02
Well, these are the moves. These
51:05
are the moves taking place.
51:07
And it's always possible
51:09
that these same guys or counter,
51:12
they may be
51:14
double agents for all, and the information
51:16
being provided is false. It's
51:19
phony, phony body. I
51:21
mean, we don't know anything. I
51:23
have another clip from NBC. You want to hear it?
51:25
We just know that the news media cannot
51:28
deliver any sort of real content. Well,
51:30
no, of course not. Do you want
51:32
to hear some more non-content on this from NBC?
51:35
I love it. This morning, two American
51:37
sailors charged with passing sensitive
51:40
intelligence to China. Interesting
51:42
that they could have said Chinese American,
51:44
but
51:46
American, just American. In
51:49
exchange for money. The Department
51:51
of Justice and FBI announcing
51:54
their arrests. Arrests? Actually,
51:57
actually, it's kind of telling that they didn't
51:59
say.
51:59
in East America, which indicates
52:02
it could be some sort of a spooky
52:04
operation either way. And
52:06
a massive drop of the T in
52:08
this report. Arrests. Arrests.
52:11
For money, the Department of Justice and
52:13
FBI announcing their arrests.
52:17
There's no T? Their
52:20
arrests. What? Yeah.
52:23
Arrests. Arrests. Arrests.
52:26
They're arrests. They're arrests. When a soldier
52:29
or sailor chooses cash over country.
52:31
Oh, there it is again. Cash over country. And
52:34
hands over national defense. Now I'm getting very suspicious
52:36
because of the talking point when they start using the same
52:39
phrasing. Cash over country. Although we know
52:41
that they do this anyway, but. Cash over country. This will
52:43
come back somewhere. This cash over country is going
52:45
to be used for many
52:47
things is my feeling.
52:49
Cash over country. When a soldier or
52:51
sailor chooses cash over country
52:54
and hands over national defense information
52:57
in an ultimate act of betrayal is horrible.
52:59
We have to be ready to act. 22 year
53:03
old Jin Xiao Wei, a naturalized
53:05
US citizen, was a sailor on the
53:07
amphibious assault ship the USS
53:10
Essex. Wei sent national
53:12
defense information to China,
53:14
including documents, photos, videos,
53:17
and technical manuals in exchange.
53:19
His intelligence officer paid way thousands
53:21
of dollars. Wei has been charged
53:24
under the espionage act, which carries
53:26
a life sentence. His attorney entering
53:28
a not guilty plea on his behalf.
53:32
Also arrested in a separate case of espionage, 26
53:35
year old Wenheng Zhao, the petty
53:38
officer working at a Naval base. What?
53:42
Oh, we too long. You
53:44
are so racist. Inage, 26 year
53:47
old Wenheng Zhao, the petty
53:49
officer
53:49
working at a Naval base in
53:51
Ventura County, California, pleading
53:54
not guilty in federal court.
53:56
Officials say Zhao gave non
53:58
public intel to a
53:59
a Chinese intelligence officer for
54:02
almost two years, passing
54:04
along operational plans for military
54:07
exercises, photographs
54:09
and blueprints of a radar system
54:11
on a US military base in Okinawa,
54:14
Japan, and details about
54:16
the Navy's operations at his home
54:18
base and on San Clemente Island.
54:21
In exchange, they allege a Chinese
54:24
operative paid Zhao about $15,000. Mr.
54:28
Zhao chose a path
54:29
of corruption. Officials
54:32
say the charges were part of a broader strategy
54:34
by the US to counter China's
54:37
criminal efforts to steal its
54:39
sensitive information. The
54:41
scheme alleged here is just one more example
54:44
of the People Republic of China's ongoing
54:46
and brazen campaign to target US
54:49
officials with access to sensitive military
54:51
secrets. All right.
54:54
All right. Don't they already have access
54:56
by hacking all our computer systems? You
55:00
got to wonder, are they the ones hacking our hospitals,
55:02
though? That's the question. Tonight, the
55:05
FBI is investigating a cyber attack
55:07
targeting hospitals and clinics in
55:09
at least four states Thursday, forcing
55:12
several emergency rooms to shut down. Prospect
55:15
Medical Holdings says it took its
55:17
computer systems offline after
55:20
learning it had been breached by hackers.
55:22
The problem also caused urgent care
55:24
and elective surgery centers to close and
55:27
ambulances to be diverted.
55:29
The systems are not expected to be online
55:32
until next week. Man, you're diverting ambulances?
55:35
That's a pretty good hack. What does that even mean? I
55:37
don't know. That's 28 seconds
55:39
is all we get from CBS.
55:42
Ambulances diverted. They
55:44
could have given us some detail
55:47
on that. It's a cyber pandemic. It's
55:49
just a start.
55:51
No. This
55:53
is the problem. You're right. We're
55:56
not getting any good news products from the M5M.
56:00
And what did people spend the most
56:02
time on this weekend talking about? What was
56:04
the number one story?
56:07
Trump no, well, yeah,
56:09
there's that is that or
56:11
this Hit
56:20
with three charges felony riot
56:22
causing public injury or damage Inciting
56:25
a riot and unlawful assembly thousands
56:27
rushing to Manhattan's Union Square creating
56:30
chaos
56:31
After
56:36
Sunat told his millions of followers on
56:38
live streaming platform Twitch Friday
56:41
that he would give away video game consoles
56:43
and gift cards
56:44
children cannot get their
56:47
values their beliefs
56:50
from social media
56:51
today, New York City mayor Eric Adam saying
56:53
he believes outside agitators inflamed
56:56
the situation. You don't come to
56:58
get free Game boys
57:01
and bring smoke bombs
57:04
People
57:07
also hurling bottles climbing onto
57:09
subway entrances and statues Jumping
57:12
on cars and setting off fireworks Some
57:15
even hanging on to this SUV several
57:17
falling off this uber driver's
57:19
window completely smashed
57:21
pulled him out
57:23
of the car
57:28
The NYPD says some officers were
57:30
crushed pushed and hit with objects
57:33
Dressed in riot gear as they struggled to
57:35
control the massive crowd authorities
57:37
arresting more than 60 people
57:41
Yes, fantastic. This is
57:43
our society now What
57:45
a game console I heard
57:48
it on Twitch Let's go
57:50
there's something very fishy about
57:52
this story. I didn't get any clips
57:54
about this I was hoping we wouldn't talk about it. But
57:56
as we are
57:58
What is who is this guy?
58:01
Do we have who is Nate? Because I watch one
58:03
or two of these things and go, they never tell
58:06
us who the guy is. Can we go look at his feed? Have
58:08
you looked at his feed? No,
58:11
he's known who that is. Who?
58:14
This is a Twitch streamer.
58:21
Yeah, see what I mean? Now they mentioned
58:23
his name in the report. Yeah,
58:27
some mumbling name. I said
58:30
that, Cai Senat, C-E-N-A-T,
58:33
Cai Senat. And he's like super
58:35
popular. Yeah, these Twitch,
58:38
I mean, do you ever look at Twitch? No, I
58:40
know. Never. No, neither do I,
58:42
but... It's social media. It's
58:44
different. It's where the drones
58:47
were. Well, that's... No,
58:50
this is... Yeah, you're right. The drones are
58:52
watching Twitch, correct?
58:55
That's what it is. Gene,
58:58
Sir Gene does this. He just sits there and
59:00
watches, if he's not streaming on Twitch himself,
59:03
playing a game. Everybody watches you play the
59:05
game. It's a whole
59:08
thing. I mean, you have no idea what's going
59:10
on with people. No, the
59:12
people are... Thank you
59:14
for that. You don't. I
59:16
don't either. I don't know what the hell's going on. I'll
59:19
have another beer. I
59:21
mean, I don't either really, because I'm not involved
59:24
in that. But people don't care about
59:27
what's going on in the world, what's going on
59:29
in politics, what's going on in Africa
59:31
or China or Ukraine. No,
59:33
I can get a free game console from
59:36
Kai Senat from Twitch.
59:38
I'm game. I'm in.
59:41
No, no, Jake Paul
59:43
is gonna box. Whoa! He's
59:45
gonna box again. He's gonna box again. This
59:48
is what people are doing. They've checked out completely.
59:51
Completely. We are just really
59:53
mumbling and grumbling for small. We
59:55
might as well be pissing in the wind, is
59:58
the old term. There you go.
59:59
Which is mumbling and grumbling
1:00:02
away on a podcast from the people who are
1:00:04
left to care some guys some
1:00:07
guys podcast
1:00:10
Yeah,
1:00:13
no Twitch
1:00:15
is it's really a phenomenon because
1:00:18
you know what happens? This is the Silicon
1:00:20
Valley model. It's like you get a
1:00:22
couple of people who are really popular You help
1:00:24
them with popularity through the algo
1:00:27
Which is you know, that's just how you do it you and
1:00:29
I would do it too if we were running these things And
1:00:32
they make sure that they get paid lots of money
1:00:36
Like millions
1:00:38
And they get paid millions to stay on the on
1:00:41
the platform whether it's
1:00:43
through Direct
1:00:45
payments from the platform. I mean they control
1:00:47
everything they control the view count. You
1:00:49
may have a hundred thousand It's like Kony 2012 like
1:00:52
oh, yeah that got a hundred million views overnight Kony 2012
1:00:55
is the greatest example. Yeah, so you always
1:00:58
will be so people think these views are real
1:01:00
I mean, what do you think Tucker Carlson? 120 million
1:01:04
views, okay
1:01:06
Sure, Elon. I agree
1:01:08
sure sure so it's
1:01:10
a scam. I don't even watch it I mean
1:01:13
and and popularity is still unlike
1:01:15
us with the value for value model We know that you
1:01:18
know, we'll never make any money by having the
1:01:20
biggest podcast.
1:01:21
We're just some guys podcast
1:01:25
You know, so we've we've gone
1:01:27
a different route But there's still this you know
1:01:29
You've got to have the Rihanna or the or
1:01:32
the Drake of the platform and that's what this
1:01:34
guy is one of them
1:01:35
And then people go nuts and they love
1:01:37
no, of course you haven't heard I haven't heard of them either before
1:01:40
And so there
1:01:42
you have this ride going on Mayor
1:01:45
the guy's feet a clown. It's probably
1:01:47
a promotion for what is it Xbox
1:01:50
five? Is that the new one? Is
1:01:52
that it would be PlayStation he was he
1:01:54
was giving away PlayStation 5 place.
1:01:56
Is that is that the new one? I think
1:01:58
again We're trading in mud here. But
1:02:05
is it? Yeah, okay. So it's pre-ordered.
1:02:07
Okay. So this guy got paid by PlayStation,
1:02:10
Sony.
1:02:11
Yeah. They're going to have to pick up his legal tab
1:02:13
too.
1:02:14
Oh yeah, for sure. Cause they're going to charge
1:02:17
him cause they'll do that. Yeah. For
1:02:19
the cost of the overtime and everything in between,
1:02:22
he's going to get a stiff bill for
1:02:24
probably half a million bucks or more.
1:02:27
Let me see what the release date is on this PlayStation
1:02:30
five. There's gotta be a promotion.
1:02:32
PlayStation five release
1:02:35
date, November 12th. Is
1:02:37
it already out? Come on. Troll
1:02:39
room. There's gotta be one of you people
1:02:41
as now. It's, this is, when is this thing
1:02:44
out? Baby's
1:02:46
already out and they're just trying to sell some
1:02:48
copies cause nobody's buying it. Well,
1:02:52
no one seems to know our people are, our,
1:02:54
our trolls. Well, that's kind of good news. I
1:02:56
guess
1:02:58
the trolls don't know. It's been out for
1:03:00
years. Okay. Well, I don't know then. Been
1:03:02
out for years. People are just
1:03:04
so sad. What
1:03:08
do you know? It was giving some
1:03:10
away. All right.
1:03:11
So that's, I mean, they can't sell them.
1:03:15
You can literally walk into an electronic
1:03:17
store in Manhattan or in Los
1:03:19
Angeles or San Francisco, rip
1:03:21
one, just take the box and walk out.
1:03:24
Now there's a good point
1:03:28
in Los Angeles or San Francisco, you
1:03:30
could literally
1:03:32
walk in, steal the damn thing
1:03:34
and walk out and nobody cares.
1:03:36
It's not even stealing. No,
1:03:37
it's not. It's because it's under $900.
1:03:40
It's not even stealing. Just do whatever you want.
1:03:44
So why would you go to Manhattan and make a fuss?
1:03:47
No, this is the sad state of
1:03:49
the world. It's
1:03:50
like, Oh man, we got
1:03:53
something to do. Something cool is happening.
1:03:55
Well, here's my sad state of the world clip.
1:04:00
Ludacris queer news. You
1:04:04
know, there's no more gay movement, it's all queer
1:04:06
movement. Now you have to note that. Correct, yes, correct.
1:04:09
And here's the Ludacris, this is a
1:04:11
San Francisco story. Listen
1:04:13
to the
1:04:14
absolute stupidity of
1:04:16
this story. Members of the San Francisco
1:04:18
Bay Area's queer and trans community are calling
1:04:20
for justice after the fatal stabbing
1:04:23
of a gay man in New York a week ago from
1:04:25
member station KQED, Sebastian
1:04:27
Minho Bushelli has more. Sibley,
1:04:30
a black choreographer was stabbed to death
1:04:32
at a Brooklyn gas station after being confronted
1:04:34
by a suspect for voguing to a Beyonce
1:04:37
song. Gericold Della Rose is a San
1:04:39
Francisco community organizer and she
1:04:41
says voguing is an art form to express
1:04:43
joy and
1:04:44
process trauma. We were voguing
1:04:46
in an act of resistance to
1:04:49
not only like the
1:04:52
homophobia, racism and transphobia that's
1:04:55
currently happening in the country. Organizers
1:04:58
of a San Francisco protest are planning to
1:05:00
include a dedication to O'Shea for next
1:05:02
month's edition of an annual queer
1:05:05
ballroom dance show.
1:05:06
Wait a minute, so he was stabbed for voguing?
1:05:09
Yes, and a woman,
1:05:11
I guess a woman was either there or something, she
1:05:13
says we are voguing as
1:05:16
an act of resistance. Whoa,
1:05:19
voguing for peace. This
1:05:21
is unbelievable, this story. No,
1:05:24
it's not unbelievable. Now it's time
1:05:26
for our trans-males gender update. Self-destruct
1:05:29
initiated. Well, since you dragged
1:05:31
me right into it, I might as well give a little update what's
1:05:33
going on in the world. We go down
1:05:35
to New Zealand, first of all.
1:05:38
New Zealand had
1:05:40
an interesting vote come up in their
1:05:43
parliament and they have a short
1:05:45
report. Now, my next guest along
1:05:47
with the majority of his coalition colleagues
1:05:50
voted in favor of one nation leader,
1:05:52
Pauline Hanson's gender dysphoria
1:05:54
bill yesterday. She
1:05:56
was seeking an investigation by the Community Affairs
1:05:58
Reference Committee
1:05:59
into whether confused or unhappy children
1:06:02
were being pushed into gender reassignment
1:06:04
surgery with an over-diagnosis
1:06:07
of gender dysphoria. It didn't
1:06:09
pass and there were several coalition
1:06:12
MPs, including Simon Birmingham and
1:06:14
Jane Hume, who voted with the
1:06:16
Greens and Labor to defeat the
1:06:18
motion. Alex Antic, welcome
1:06:21
to the program. Explain to me how
1:06:23
the coalition has sitting
1:06:26
MPs who are against an inquiry
1:06:28
into this most
1:06:29
important area, contentious
1:06:32
area. Well, Rita, thanks for having me. And first
1:06:34
thing I'd say is we need to be
1:06:36
clear. This was a motion of Pauline
1:06:38
Hanson's, which was simply seeking to have
1:06:40
a whole lot of important questions about gender dysphoria
1:06:43
referred to a Senate committee, looking
1:06:45
into things like whether or not gender
1:06:48
reassignment surgeries should be having, whether we should be giving
1:06:50
kids puberty blockers, pretty reasonable
1:06:52
questions, if you ask me. And
1:06:55
it was taken as a conscience vote on
1:06:57
our side of the chamber. And that's the
1:06:59
prerogative of the leader, Simon Birmingham. He's,
1:07:02
and the leadership team, they have their
1:07:05
choice to do that. But I
1:07:07
would have thought that it wasn't an unreasonable
1:07:10
request, and I voted for it. And
1:07:13
you would have to ask those who voted against it why
1:07:16
they did. I don't know.
1:07:17
I think I do know. This is the
1:07:19
trans-Maoist movement. It is a pharmaceutical
1:07:23
and political movement. It is a movement of control,
1:07:25
a movement of mind control.
1:07:28
We're taking the entire
1:07:30
world that has been MK altered by
1:07:33
severe PTSD of
1:07:36
COVID, lockdowns, lots
1:07:38
of medical issues.
1:07:42
And now we're just abusing
1:07:44
it for political means. Why else would you
1:07:46
not want to have an inquiry? Hey,
1:07:49
is this OK? Is this doing
1:07:52
this to young children? Should we just have a little
1:07:56
research done about that? No! I vote
1:07:58
no!
1:07:59
What kind of person? person are you? That makes
1:08:01
no sense. Usually
1:08:04
we run for office. I think you've got the no voice
1:08:07
down. No!
1:08:11
And you see now the medical community
1:08:14
is benefiting tremendously
1:08:16
in New Zealand. People headline
1:08:18
people flocking for gender
1:08:20
surgery after funding boost.
1:08:23
That's right. The government introduced
1:08:25
a public funding service. And
1:08:27
so affirming genital
1:08:29
surgery has leaped
1:08:31
more than 100 percent. And we have
1:08:33
a report now as well.
1:08:35
The U.S. sex assignment
1:08:38
surgery market
1:08:40
size by
1:08:43
gender transition,
1:08:45
which is predominantly,
1:08:48
what do you think it is? Is it male
1:08:50
to female or female to male? I
1:08:54
would say male to female technically.
1:08:57
I mean, that would be traditionally what you'd get
1:08:59
mostly. Yeah. That's what you'd think
1:09:01
from the news reports, but it is in fact
1:09:04
female to male that is growing faster,
1:09:06
much faster than male
1:09:08
to female. I
1:09:10
think we've noticed this on the show. We've discussed
1:09:13
this. Yeah. Well, it's the least, but it's the least
1:09:15
discussed.
1:09:17
Yeah, because it's kind of gross.
1:09:20
Why
1:09:22
is the news only really reporting
1:09:25
the male to female?
1:09:27
And of course, this is
1:09:30
what I know it's two different things.
1:09:33
Male, the
1:09:34
female to male
1:09:35
is in general, when
1:09:37
it comes to young people, young
1:09:41
girls who are confused at a certain age,
1:09:43
it's middle school, and there's therapists
1:09:46
who are being forced into putting
1:09:48
them on drugs. First
1:09:51
of all, SSRIs, antidepressants,
1:09:54
et cetera. And then, well, you
1:09:57
confused, you're probably a boy.
1:09:59
you know, then there's this big focus on top surgery.
1:10:02
And I think about 15 years of age
1:10:04
is when, you know, this is when it really comes into play.
1:10:07
But if you look at the size of the market,
1:10:09
the total size for 2021
1:10:12
in the United States for
1:10:16
sex reassignment surgery,
1:10:20
which let me just see what that includes.
1:10:23
That is no, it is surgery. So it's not
1:10:26
puberty blockers or anything like that, but actual
1:10:29
transition surgery.
1:10:31
What do you think the value of that market was
1:10:33
in 2021?
1:10:36
I would have no idea. $1.9 billion. That's
1:10:43
a start. Yes,
1:10:46
yes, John, it's a start. Now
1:10:49
we're seeing in the UK,
1:10:52
now we were pretty sure that, you know, the closing
1:10:54
of the Tavistock Transgender
1:10:56
Clinic was the end of it, but no,
1:10:59
no, no, no. The
1:11:01
National Health Service has
1:11:03
now not only announced
1:11:06
a set of regional centers that
1:11:08
will be opening, which will be led by medical doctors
1:11:11
instead of therapists, which is maybe a start.
1:11:15
This will be for children.
1:11:17
And of course it'll be part of
1:11:19
the NHS. So all it costs you is five pounds,
1:11:23
five pounds for whatever you need, whatever
1:11:25
you need done. But it will
1:11:27
not be for children under seven. So this
1:11:29
is a good start. We went from three to seven.
1:11:32
So, that's good news. No kids
1:11:35
under seven. That's right. Children
1:11:37
under seven years of age may not be- Okay, can
1:11:39
I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,
1:11:41
The reason? Children under seven
1:11:43
years of age may not be expected to have
1:11:45
sufficiently developed their intellectual
1:11:48
understanding of and comprehension
1:11:50
of sex and gender to
1:11:52
be able to understand the reasons for
1:11:55
and potential consequences of a
1:11:57
referral to a specialist gender income.
1:11:59
congruence service. But
1:12:02
a seven year old would. By seven
1:12:04
children will be more established
1:12:07
within school and education professionals
1:12:09
and school nurses will be able
1:12:11
to contribute to a general observational
1:12:13
view as to the appropriateness
1:12:16
of a referral.
1:12:18
Homeschooling people,
1:12:20
homeschooling right away. Right
1:12:22
away. Right away. This
1:12:25
is capture of the educational system.
1:12:28
Big Pharma, it's
1:12:31
it's horrible. Now,
1:12:33
the one last piece of my update for today's
1:12:35
program. And now we go to
1:12:37
the male to female transitioning.
1:12:41
I've come into possession of the Trans
1:12:43
Maxing Manifesto,
1:12:45
which is apparently used
1:12:49
and distributed widely amongst
1:12:51
the male to female trans
1:12:54
transitioning
1:12:56
people
1:12:57
who publish this thing.
1:13:00
Well, that's a good question. Let
1:13:02
me see if I can answer that for you. It's
1:13:08
rather large. Hold on. Let me see.
1:13:10
But the book is large. Yeah, it's
1:13:12
a PDF. It's a big PDF. Oh, PDF.
1:13:14
This came from. Hold
1:13:17
on a second.
1:13:19
I don't know if it has a. I
1:13:21
mean, it's Trans Maxing. Hold
1:13:23
on, let me see. I mean, it's
1:13:26
called Trans Maxing. Who wrote it? There's
1:13:29
there's I don't think there's an author listed.
1:13:32
It's like one of these. I mean, it's a huge PDF
1:13:34
document that explains why
1:13:37
why you're like this, why you need to
1:13:39
do this. Let me see if I could.
1:13:40
But I mean, it's it's got a lot of medical
1:13:42
information, but I don't see there's no authors.
1:13:46
Yeah, but sounds like a piece of
1:13:48
propaganda. Well, yes, it is. And
1:13:50
I would like but I would like to read
1:13:52
to you the opening of this document,
1:13:56
which has at the top. There
1:13:58
are many potential benefits from. transitioning
1:14:00
from male to female. Are
1:14:04
you interested in hearing these benefits? You
1:14:07
can read them until I get sick of it. Okay.
1:14:09
Sexual excitement from having a feminine
1:14:12
body, the superiority
1:14:14
of female aesthetics, access
1:14:17
to the trans being. Wait, wait, some
1:14:20
ugly fat dude in a dress
1:14:23
is the female aesthetics
1:14:25
we're talking about. Yeah.
1:14:27
Okay. Continue. Access to the trans
1:14:30
being dating pool, full
1:14:32
body, full body orgasms,
1:14:35
multiple orgasms from penile
1:14:37
stimulation.
1:14:38
You, this of course, estrogen, you will
1:14:41
feel emotion stronger and be happier
1:14:43
on estrogen. Your breasts will become
1:14:45
sensitive. So far I'm in being
1:14:48
able to attract cis lesbians.
1:14:50
If you become attractive enough,
1:14:52
being able to attract high quality
1:14:55
males for sex. But
1:14:57
a croc this thing is softer
1:14:59
skin and less or no acne,
1:15:01
being able to extract resources
1:15:03
from males. That's a good one. Hey,
1:15:08
give me a money. Hey buddy,
1:15:10
can you put me up in an apartment?
1:15:15
Stop and reverse hair loss. By the
1:15:17
way, some of the things on this
1:15:20
list are the most sexist things that are
1:15:22
imaginable. Of course. What they're talking
1:15:24
about. Of course.
1:15:26
Where was I? We
1:15:29
are about extracting
1:15:31
goods and services from stupid males.
1:15:33
Being able to extract resources from males.
1:15:35
You'll no longer be driven to do dangerous
1:15:38
and idiotic things due to testosterone.
1:15:42
It will stop and reverse hair loss.
1:15:44
People will treat you better if they think you
1:15:46
are female.
1:15:48
Females are less likely to become victims
1:15:50
of crime. Oh,
1:15:51
that's interesting.
1:15:53
Access to females. Yeah. That's
1:15:55
not true. No, I'm just breeding
1:15:57
the trans maxing manifesto.
1:16:00
females, less
1:16:03
likely victims of crime, access to female
1:16:05
spaces? And by
1:16:07
the way, if that's true, that last thing about the crime
1:16:09
thing, why are there everyone moaning
1:16:11
and groaning about trans women, all
1:16:14
these trans women that do all the crimes and
1:16:16
murders,
1:16:18
if you're less likely to have a, be, be, be, be,
1:16:20
be, be, be, be primitive, something criminal that happened to you,
1:16:22
why is there so much moaning and groaning about it happening
1:16:25
all the time? I, I, you
1:16:27
know, consider the source who's saying that.
1:16:30
Pharmaceutical industry, the medical industry.
1:16:33
So we had access to female spaces.
1:16:37
And finally, number 16, cheaper
1:16:39
car insurance.
1:16:41
Now there's a reason to do it.
1:16:47
I mean, you just identify
1:16:49
as a woman on your car insurance policy.
1:16:52
Well, that's an option. That's
1:16:54
an option. This thing is very
1:16:57
disturbing, but interesting, an interesting read.
1:16:59
I mean, it's like 600 pages. It sounds like something
1:17:01
from the Babylon B. No, no,
1:17:04
no, no, no, no, no.
1:17:06
No, this is real.
1:17:09
This is real. Yeah,
1:17:12
this is, this is, I'll track down
1:17:14
the publisher and author. Well,
1:17:17
I don't think there is an author listed. This
1:17:19
is, this is, this is like,
1:17:21
like back in the day when I was a kid, we had faces
1:17:23
of death, the video,
1:17:27
it'd be a copy to VHS. Everyone
1:17:29
would watch. It all stemmed from Mondo
1:17:32
Connie.
1:17:33
Mondo Connie. What's this?
1:17:35
Wow. You don't remember that.
1:17:37
That's good. Mondo Connie. I have
1:17:39
for our audience knows what I'm talking about. Mondo
1:17:42
Connie. No, you want. M-O-N-M-O-C-A-N-E.
1:17:44
Mondo Connie. Look it
1:17:46
up.
1:17:47
Okay. Huge, huge success
1:17:50
movie. Okay. I'm
1:17:53
not familiar with Mondo Connie. Neither.
1:17:55
Oh, you'd want to see it. Yeah. Sounds,
1:17:57
sounds like I don't. No, no,
1:17:59
you do. No, I do. It's highly
1:18:01
entertaining. It's very entertaining. If
1:18:04
you like midgets. Anyway,
1:18:06
this is all taking advantage of the
1:18:09
autism spectrum
1:18:12
disorder, which has just exploded.
1:18:18
We got a
1:18:19
boots on the ground report from a teacher,
1:18:23
special ed teacher, eight years in the city of Rochester,
1:18:26
the past 10 years director of a special
1:18:28
education for a rural district in
1:18:30
upstate New York.
1:18:32
Says when I started 10 years ago, we would have had
1:18:34
one or no students at all enter kindergarten
1:18:37
with a diagnosis of autism spectrum
1:18:39
disorder.
1:18:43
Jumping forward through the years, it slowly crept
1:18:45
up to where now most years we have two to three
1:18:48
students who already have or are in the process
1:18:50
of getting this diagnosis by age five.
1:18:55
Um,
1:18:57
as you mentioned on the last show, which I considered for
1:19:00
many years, this may be, it's just being recognized
1:19:02
and diagnosed more often. However, that doesn't
1:19:04
hold up when you're living a day today. The
1:19:06
behaviors are very unique when comparing and
1:19:08
contrasting against other disabilities. By
1:19:11
the way, I think a lot of this autistic behavior,
1:19:13
as we've heard, is being diagnosed as
1:19:16
all your trends
1:19:17
because that's just where the money is right now.
1:19:19
Sensory sensitivity, very specific food
1:19:22
preferences, difficulty communicating,
1:19:24
splintered cognitive scores,
1:19:27
extreme gravitation. Wait a minute. Let me get
1:19:29
this straight. Uh, five
1:19:31
year old with food preferences.
1:19:33
Yeah. Well, I never heard
1:19:35
of such a thing. I thought they just were omnivores
1:19:40
splintered cognitive scores, extreme
1:19:43
gravitation to screen time behaviors
1:19:47
that are very repetitive and rigid.
1:19:49
When you look at intellectual disabilities, chromosomal
1:19:52
fetal alcohol syndrome, trauma, and others,
1:19:54
they may have one or two traits, but there's other distinguishing
1:19:57
factors that make it pretty easy most times
1:19:59
to identify.
1:19:59
it's not autism.
1:20:02
And for the few kids that may get an incoherent
1:20:04
diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder,
1:20:06
they're offset by the parents who were adverse
1:20:09
to accepting ASD as diagnosis.
1:20:11
No, they want
1:20:12
ADHD or sensory
1:20:15
processing disorder. What are we doing
1:20:17
to our children? What?
1:20:20
What? What? What? A
1:20:23
bunch of neurotic parents. Well, somebody's thinking of
1:20:25
children. The parents fault. Yeah. Well,
1:20:27
they're the ones that have PTSD.
1:20:29
That's your problem right there. The
1:20:31
parents have PTSD. All
1:20:34
right. So we do Trump because I think we have to.
1:20:36
I'm sure you have Trump. I got some Biden. I got
1:20:39
my thinking, of course, is that they're out to get both
1:20:41
these guys. And I have some good
1:20:44
evidence of anti-Biden
1:20:46
bias.
1:20:47
Ooh. Okay. This is a clip
1:20:50
from news. These
1:20:52
are new takes. And this is MSNBC
1:20:54
and CNN, and including
1:20:57
your friends from that morning show
1:20:59
with. Morning Joe, my friends from Morning Joe. Morning
1:21:02
Joe guy. Listen to this. This
1:21:04
is what they're saying on these shows about
1:21:07
Biden. I wish I could find it. Oh, I'm
1:21:09
sorry.
1:21:10
The new takes and MSNBC. Oh,
1:21:12
that's what I was missing. Got it. The question
1:21:15
is how solid a candidate is Joe Biden.
1:21:17
That's the problem. That's exactly the problem. And
1:21:20
what is exactly the problem? We don't know how
1:21:22
solid a candidate Joe Biden is. We
1:21:24
know he's not a solid kid. Exactly. He is
1:21:26
struggling. But then his own party.
1:21:29
It is hard to watch. Donald Trump's approval
1:21:31
rating was actually slightly larger
1:21:33
than Joe Biden's was at this point. Trump
1:21:35
was at 43% Biden. Is it just 41%? So he's doing worse than Trump, who
1:21:40
he was always saying was doing so poorly. Look at
1:21:42
the numbers. Joe Biden's
1:21:45
support has dropped significantly among
1:21:48
people of color, especially
1:21:50
among Latino voters, but also
1:21:53
among black Americans.
1:21:57
Yeah, he's being deplatformed, baby.
1:21:59
They're out to get him. Especially
1:22:02
this is coming from MSNBC where he could
1:22:05
he could do no wrong. I
1:22:07
know I find it very shocking Okay,
1:22:10
we still have Jens sake
1:22:12
of course, they're just trying to get rid of her. She hasn't been
1:22:14
read in
1:22:15
So she said there's an incredible hunter
1:22:18
analysis. This includes her commentary,
1:22:20
which is just like eye-rolling Okay,
1:22:23
and they're also trying to tie in hunter by
1:22:25
with president by not just
1:22:28
by
1:22:29
There's no evidence of that but
1:22:31
they're gonna keep trying Because
1:22:33
that is the argument that they they
1:22:35
want to fuzzy the waters out there muddy
1:22:38
the waters not fuzzy them Muddy the waters
1:22:40
out there that by the way is a tactic that Vladimir
1:22:42
Putin and other authoritarian dictators use But
1:22:45
that's their strategic objectives to make it
1:22:47
all seem the same.
1:22:48
There you have it There you have
1:22:50
it. Shut up Jen go get your briefing
1:22:53
Wow You're right she and she's
1:22:56
man they're really leaving hanging her out to dry Yes,
1:23:00
that's a good example. Well, I watched that
1:23:02
my jaw dropped. Yeah. Oh,
1:23:05
yeah, it's Putin Okay, so
1:23:07
they're all out to get Biden to bring him down
1:23:09
and
1:23:10
she's she's defending him with
1:23:12
it's a it's the Russian playbook
1:23:14
Yeah, she's out of there. She's so
1:23:17
toast. When do you think her contract is up? I Think
1:23:20
she's on a probably still on a probationary
1:23:23
contract. Oh, you think they can get rid of her at any
1:23:25
time They should get
1:23:27
rid of her sooner than later. She's really not
1:23:29
very good. I Picked up a
1:23:31
couple classic clips Okay,
1:23:34
because you know this whole thing with Trump and then
1:23:36
you know That's the latest thing and now his
1:23:38
new protective order have a clip on Trump's protective
1:23:41
order do that first I play it The
1:23:43
Justice Department has asked the federal judge
1:23:45
overseeing the criminal case in Washington DC
1:23:48
against former president Donald Trump to protect
1:23:50
evidence in the case Prosecutors
1:23:52
are concerned following a social media post by
1:23:54
Trump on Friday that appeared by some
1:23:56
to offer a potential threat of revenge Hemperes
1:23:59
Ron Elving
1:23:59
sorts of all out for us. The former president posted
1:24:02
on social media quote if you go after
1:24:04
me I'm coming after you in all caps
1:24:07
and the Justice Department wasted no time asking
1:24:09
the federal judge overseeing the case to issue
1:24:12
a protective order against Trump.
1:24:14
Now this is not the same as a gag order or
1:24:16
he couldn't discuss the case at all but the prosecution
1:24:19
is about to share a great deal of
1:24:21
information with the defense, confidential
1:24:24
information, grand jury testimony and the like
1:24:26
and the judge does not want to see that splashed out
1:24:29
on social media.
1:24:29
The judge has given Trump's lawyers until 5 p.m.
1:24:32
Monday to offer a response to the prosecution's
1:24:34
request. I really liked
1:24:37
what Norm
1:24:38
McDonald did
1:24:42
on McDonald, Nora O'Donnell,
1:24:44
she be sure she
1:24:46
be sure she I
1:24:48
mean she did well
1:24:51
I'm gonna play it for she did this thing on Jack Smith
1:24:53
the special prosecutor Mr. Smith that
1:24:55
was just phenomenal. And
1:24:57
I want to spend a moment on Jack Smith
1:24:59
because he
1:25:02
is essentially who Donald Trump is up against
1:25:03
and not the law
1:25:06
not the Constitution Jack Smith multiple
1:25:09
of these indictments the two of course the
1:25:11
classified documents and the
1:25:13
January 6 one and they are sitting across from
1:25:16
each other inside this courtroom.
1:25:18
Jack Smith is someone who has run over and
1:25:21
competed in over a hundred triathlons
1:25:23
he was reportedly at one point hit when
1:25:26
he was on his bike by a truck and
1:25:28
ten weeks later he ran another triathlon.
1:25:31
This is a man
1:25:33
of a lot of grit and
1:25:35
a lot of determination. He's a man of steel
1:25:38
and even what we have seen in these indictments
1:25:41
is just a sliver of what they know
1:25:43
and his prosecutorial team knows right?
1:25:46
His personal
1:25:48
health and exercise correlates
1:25:51
to how he approaches his prosecution
1:25:53
and his strategy. We've talked a lot about how
1:25:55
the former president is under pressure but Jack Smith
1:25:57
is also under pressure today.
1:25:59
I get these flashbacks of Robert
1:26:02
Mueller. This guy, he's a serious
1:26:04
dude not to be messed with. And
1:26:07
they don't have any prosecutorial
1:26:09
kudos
1:26:10
for Jack Smith, but
1:26:12
he got hit by a truck and he got
1:26:15
up and walked away and competed 10 weeks
1:26:17
later in a competition. He's got great
1:26:19
workout ethics. He eats healthy.
1:26:22
Jack Smith, special prosecutor.
1:26:25
And this is great. The guy's
1:26:27
a huge flop when it comes to being a prosecutor.
1:26:30
Yeah, that's why. He ended up at
1:26:32
the Hague as kind of a clerk. Send
1:26:37
him to the Hague. Oh no, that's not
1:26:39
good.
1:26:40
That's not a good thing when you're sent to the Hague. Wow,
1:26:42
that was the worst thing I've ever heard her do.
1:26:44
They
1:26:46
got a Chuck Todd real quick.
1:26:49
Let me play these classics
1:26:52
because it does have some relationship. Cause
1:26:55
we've been listening. There was one that came
1:26:57
out actually Foley sent me a clip of
1:26:59
all these Democrats bitching about Trump
1:27:01
in 2016 not being the real president.
1:27:04
The election was fixed. It was raw. Oh yeah,
1:27:06
Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia. And then, yeah, Russia.
1:27:08
And then I sent
1:27:11
back to Foley a half
1:27:13
hour of these clips. There's one floating
1:27:15
around of just a half an hour of
1:27:17
every Democrat in the world talking about Trump's the
1:27:19
illegitimate president, blah, blah, blah, blah.
1:27:22
But you could make
1:27:24
it a million times longer. There are
1:27:26
people that were completely left out of these clips
1:27:28
and I have two of them.
1:27:30
One was Keith Olbermann
1:27:32
in 2016. And
1:27:35
you want to hear a lunatic
1:27:38
and this is all representing all
1:27:40
the Democrats. This is Keith Olbermann
1:27:42
going off. The nation and all
1:27:45
of our freedoms hang by a thread and
1:27:47
the military apparatus of this country is about to
1:27:49
be handed over to scum who are beholden
1:27:51
to scum, Russian scum.
1:27:55
Oh yeah. The things are today, January 20th
1:27:57
will not be an inauguration but
1:27:59
rather.
1:27:59
the end of the United States as an independent
1:28:02
country. It will not be a peaceful change
1:28:04
of power. It will be a usurpation
1:28:07
and the usurper has no validity,
1:28:10
no credibility, and no authority
1:28:12
under the Constitution. This
1:28:15
is a reality that will become the only
1:28:17
reality until this country rids
1:28:20
itself of Donald John Trump.
1:28:22
He is not a president. He is
1:28:24
a puppet put in power by Vladimir
1:28:27
Putin and those who ignore
1:28:29
these elemental
1:28:29
existential facts, Democrats
1:28:32
or Republicans, are traitors
1:28:35
to this country and will immediately
1:28:37
and forever after be held accountable,
1:28:41
resist. We much. Peace.
1:28:45
We much. That will be forgotten.
1:28:47
Wow. Obermann's great.
1:28:49
I miss him. I miss him.
1:28:52
Little lunatic and this is by the way this thinking
1:28:54
was all over the San Francisco Bay area.
1:28:56
My next door neighbor believed this. But
1:28:59
here's the only difference between 2016
1:29:01
when the
1:29:02
left and the left media
1:29:05
believe that and
1:29:07
Hillary Clinton too, she said it was stolen. The
1:29:09
election was stolen. Same
1:29:12
words. And Trump in 2020,
1:29:14
the election was stolen and the right wing media
1:29:17
saying that. The only difference is
1:29:19
that and I don't think people understand
1:29:22
the mechanism of the United States elections,
1:29:24
our system. You can
1:29:26
from a state send multi
1:29:29
you can send two slates of electors because
1:29:31
the electoral college that
1:29:33
ultimately decides who's president. It's
1:29:36
not actually the voters. And
1:29:39
throughout our history, alternative
1:29:42
slates, alternative panels
1:29:45
of electors have been sent to
1:29:47
Washington. And if
1:29:49
there is a dispute, there is a process
1:29:52
where then the full Senate and House
1:29:54
get together and vote on who
1:29:57
whose slate is going to be
1:29:59
the one that is the that cast the final
1:30:01
vote for that state. I'm simplifying
1:30:04
it, but I think that's correct. You would know. That's
1:30:06
close enough. Okay. So- I
1:30:08
have one more 26- Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
1:30:10
Let me finish this.
1:30:11
The difference is we
1:30:13
were about three minutes away from that
1:30:15
process taking place
1:30:17
in the United States Congress
1:30:19
when all of a sudden the gates were lowered
1:30:22
on the Senate and everyone was invited
1:30:24
to rush in and it was called a riot
1:30:26
and then everyone- And they- Koo.
1:30:29
Koo, I'm sorry, worse than 9-11 and worse
1:30:31
than anything that we've ever seen. Worse than 9- Worse
1:30:33
than Pearl Harbor. And they immediately
1:30:36
ushered out all of Congress,
1:30:39
go into the safe rooms, you're out. That was
1:30:42
the difference. That that was
1:30:44
going to happen.
1:30:46
And from what I understand, there were
1:30:48
at least 18 federal agents in
1:30:50
the crowd who
1:30:54
were egging people on to
1:30:56
go in. So that's
1:30:58
the only difference.
1:31:00
Well, tell that to the judge. 2016 classic,
1:31:03
this is a real shorty with the same
1:31:06
thing that Obermann said, only this is
1:31:08
another one that should be incorporated into
1:31:11
this huge clips
1:31:12
collections is Joy
1:31:15
Behar. I mean, do we
1:31:16
have to wait till the hammering sickle is on the American
1:31:18
flag before we stand up to this guy?
1:31:21
The hammering sickle,
1:31:24
good one. One
1:31:27
of my favorites. Do we have
1:31:29
to wait until the hammering sickle
1:31:31
is on the American flag? And
1:31:33
she's still on the air. I think
1:31:35
the winner for this year though
1:31:37
has got to be Reverend Al.
1:31:40
Everyone has seen it, but it's
1:31:42
worth playing again. This happened this week
1:31:44
and we love the Rev for this. One
1:31:47
day our children's children will
1:31:49
read American history. And can
1:31:51
you imagine our reading to James
1:31:54
Madison or Thomas Jefferson
1:31:56
tried to overthrow the government
1:31:59
so they can stay in.
1:31:59
power. That's what we're looking at. We're looking at American
1:32:02
history. Yeah,
1:32:05
I didn't, I had that one
1:32:07
in abeyance. That's a great clip.
1:32:09
Please explain. What is he talking
1:32:11
about? Well, please explain to
1:32:14
our, so he's talking about Trump, that
1:32:16
Trump, you know, as a president,
1:32:18
tried to overthrow the government and he's comparing
1:32:21
this to what he feels is the
1:32:23
famous American presidents, Madison
1:32:26
and Jefferson,
1:32:27
who literally did that.
1:32:32
You might want to explain to our foreign
1:32:34
listeners. They had some, this
1:32:36
was another example. This,
1:32:38
you know, whether they, how much they
1:32:40
literally did that is up for debate.
1:32:42
There
1:32:45
was some shenanigans that were going
1:32:47
on, generally speaking until about 1880
1:32:49
with our
1:32:50
government and how who got
1:32:52
president and who didn't. And it used to be the vice
1:32:55
president was the guy who came in second.
1:32:57
And
1:32:58
it's just, it's just a, it's just the way
1:33:00
the system works. It's not a big deal.
1:33:06
It's just, it's a, it's beautiful. It's beautifully
1:33:09
ignorant from Reverend Al. They
1:33:12
were part of the, but
1:33:14
they were, they wrote the, the
1:33:16
Declaration of Independence. I mean, they
1:33:18
were part
1:33:21
of leaving England. Correct.
1:33:26
I mean, that's, that's
1:33:28
what he's referring to though. No, he, he doesn't
1:33:30
know anything. He thinks that he only knows
1:33:33
these two names. And he's like, Hey, I can't
1:33:35
believe those American heroes would overthrow
1:33:37
a government. Well, that's kind of what they did. Al.
1:33:41
He, you think he was talking about the American revolution.
1:33:44
No, no. Though he was saying he could
1:33:46
not imagine.
1:33:48
You have to think much dumber.
1:33:51
I can't get that dumb. Dumb down, dumb
1:33:54
down, dumb down.
1:33:56
He is just pulling two names
1:33:58
out of the hat. to say,
1:34:01
can you imagine these American presidents, these
1:34:03
heroes, trying to overthrow
1:34:05
a government? He doesn't know
1:34:07
what they did. He has zero
1:34:10
knowledge of where they're coming from. It's
1:34:12
that stupid.
1:34:14
Well, that's the reason I didn't use that clip. Which
1:34:17
is also what makes Reverend Al so beautiful
1:34:19
and so precious. This
1:34:21
is why we love him so much.
1:34:24
We much. Okay. And then there's some other shenanigans
1:34:27
going on with the
1:34:29
upcoming election, which of course we
1:34:31
have to just talk about it all
1:34:34
day long. Bobby the K
1:34:36
is getting squeezed. And then the Democratic
1:34:38
Party is doing a bunch of things
1:34:41
to make sure that I can't, that even
1:34:43
if I win more votes than Joe
1:34:45
Biden, that they won't count. Oh, the
1:34:47
Democratic Party thinks that I may
1:34:49
win New Hampshire. So they've removed
1:34:51
Joe Biden from New Hampshire.
1:34:54
And they say that if any candidate,
1:34:56
they've passed a rule that says any candidate
1:34:58
who actively campaigns New Hampshire
1:35:00
at the delegates they win will
1:35:02
not be allowed to into the convention.
1:35:05
And that now what they're saying is
1:35:07
they're going to extend that so that if
1:35:09
you campaign in
1:35:13
New Hampshire, which I've already done, that
1:35:15
any votes that you get in Georgia won't count
1:35:18
for you either.
1:35:21
That sounds fair.
1:35:25
Well, he hasn't been in the news as much
1:35:27
in this last week or so. And there's, I think
1:35:29
they're really, they're going through the
1:35:32
analysis process before we
1:35:34
either, he's either
1:35:36
rejected or, or we go to stage
1:35:38
two of the op. Well,
1:35:41
I think stage two is underway. Stage two
1:35:43
is, is rid us of Biden.
1:35:46
I mean,
1:35:48
Biden is on the takedown. Kamala
1:35:50
is warming up in the bullpen. That's
1:35:54
what it feels like. And I'm not talking impeachment.
1:35:56
I can't believe that they would allow Kamala
1:35:58
to run.
1:35:59
No, no, no, no, no, not to run, not to run,
1:36:02
just to take over for a bit.
1:36:04
She can keep the seat warm for a bit. They
1:36:06
could do 25th Amendment real easy.
1:36:08
They're not gonna do that. I
1:36:11
would like them to do it, because it would
1:36:13
be great material. First
1:36:15
for the show, they promised that
1:36:17
they were gonna do it to Trump. We never see, yeah, they've been talking about
1:36:19
25th Amendment since 2015, before
1:36:22
Trump even got elected. Has anyone been 25th
1:36:24
Amendment-ed?
1:36:25
No. Never? No.
1:36:28
And just so everyone knows, when the cabinet, is
1:36:31
the cabinet and the vice president, when
1:36:33
they- I think the vice president has to initiate
1:36:36
it.
1:36:37
I thought anyone could initiate it.
1:36:39
Well, maybe. We'd have to look it over.
1:36:41
Well, they can just tell- But they have to decide
1:36:43
that he's got to go, because he's
1:36:46
incompetent. Yeah. Or not functional.
1:36:49
This was part of the 25th Amendment. It
1:36:52
was written specifically for Woodrow Wilson,
1:36:55
who in the last couple of years of his presidency,
1:36:58
was actually run by his wife, because
1:37:00
Wilson had some sort of a stroke, and he couldn't
1:37:02
even talk. Right.
1:37:06
And so they dreamed up this idea, well, you
1:37:08
know, this can happen to anybody.
1:37:10
And they got by, and the best case scenario,
1:37:12
I mean, the best possibility is
1:37:15
Joe Biden himself, because he's
1:37:17
so decrepit
1:37:18
that
1:37:20
this would be the time to do it if it's ever gonna happen.
1:37:23
Even though they were talking about during Trump. Now,
1:37:26
the president himself, which Biden
1:37:29
has always promised he do, he say, you
1:37:31
know what, I'll just resign. I'll say I have
1:37:33
some ailment.
1:37:35
He himself can transmit
1:37:37
to the president pro tempore
1:37:40
of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, like,
1:37:43
I'm no good.
1:37:46
I've gone insane. Biden would never, A,
1:37:48
would never do that. And Biden can
1:37:50
protest the 25th, initiation
1:37:53
of this 25th Amendment. Yes, he can. He
1:37:55
can. I write the vice president and
1:37:57
a majority of either the principal officers
1:37:59
of the Senate.
1:37:59
the executive departments, which now
1:38:02
also includes the CIA boss.
1:38:04
Yeah. Williams burns. No,
1:38:07
no fanfare over this.
1:38:09
William Burns, the CIA guy has
1:38:11
now all of a sudden suddenly, which is very
1:38:14
suspicious. There's no reason for this. Cause you have
1:38:16
the head of national intelligence
1:38:18
there. What do you need him for? The head of national
1:38:20
intelligence is supposedly the boss
1:38:22
of William Burns. I guess not, but
1:38:24
William Burns has been moved into a cabinet
1:38:27
position.
1:38:28
Yeah. So he would be perfect to lead the
1:38:30
charge. Hey, listen, people, you
1:38:33
cabinet members, I'm
1:38:35
here. I'm going to, you know what's good for you. And
1:38:37
you know what's good. And you heard Chuck
1:38:39
Schumer say, I got a six ways till Sunday
1:38:42
to get back at you. Then you're right.
1:38:44
The president can say, Hey, I'm
1:38:46
not insane. I'm fine.
1:38:49
Then they have four days,
1:38:51
I think for this before some process
1:38:54
to happen
1:38:56
within, and then I think Congress decides.
1:39:00
We'll get some clips on this. Yeah.
1:39:03
It was, I mean, we really need it for
1:39:05
the show. Honestly. I mean, we need some kind
1:39:07
of resolution. If I was, if I was writing our show,
1:39:09
we need something like this. Yeah,
1:39:12
it would be great. Yeah. We need, we need
1:39:14
something to change. By the way, I
1:39:16
do have a clip of him talking about the Trump
1:39:18
case.
1:39:19
Dershowitz. Dershowitz. Dershowitz. Dershowitz,
1:39:22
Dershowitz, as we call it. The Dershowitz.
1:39:24
He comes on and he has a very interesting comment
1:39:27
because something I didn't know,
1:39:29
but he,
1:39:31
he says that the problem with the Jack Smith case,
1:39:33
if it's done the way it's,
1:39:35
the way it's going currently, I saw this,
1:39:37
unless they can read Trump's mind, there's no
1:39:40
way they can prove him guilty because they have to
1:39:42
prove that he was insincere about
1:39:44
his belief that the election was stolen
1:39:47
and nobody believes that. But they think they
1:39:49
can get maybe one or two people to say that Trump
1:39:51
said that, but I personally doubt
1:39:53
it. I think there's just a,
1:39:55
a scam, but Dershowitz has
1:39:57
a funny
1:39:59
take on it because
1:39:59
He's kind of hoping that
1:40:02
they can read his mind. Listen to this. The
1:40:04
same standard applies. Remember that this
1:40:06
standard is now being challenged, including by
1:40:08
me. You may remember that I'm suing
1:40:10
CNN because they had a
1:40:13
doctor to take. They had me say exactly
1:40:15
the opposite of what I said. And the judge found that
1:40:17
I had been to fame. The judge found that they knew
1:40:20
that I hadn't said that. I had said nothing
1:40:23
of the sort. But the judge said, well,
1:40:25
Malice, you have to prove that by clear
1:40:27
and convincing evidence. And he found
1:40:30
that I hadn't proved it by clear and convincing
1:40:32
evidence. That case is now on appeal, and
1:40:34
we are also challenging the
1:40:36
notion
1:40:37
that the plaintiff, the man to
1:40:39
fame, the woman to fame, has to prove
1:40:41
by clear and convincing evidence that
1:40:44
the people knew it. The judge in my case
1:40:46
found that they were stupid. They were ridiculous.
1:40:49
They should have known. They were irresponsible.
1:40:52
But he couldn't get over that line.
1:40:55
I love the Dersch.
1:40:58
He really ruined his social life for
1:41:00
our show. Yeah, yeah. For our show.
1:41:03
I don't think he cares. Just back
1:41:05
to Bobby the K for a moment. He's,
1:41:07
now he's getting burned for being a Zionist.
1:41:11
He went on the Jimmy Dore show. Did you see
1:41:13
any of that? It was pretty interesting, the whole. I
1:41:15
did not. Because they showed him at the
1:41:17
border. Like, you know, he wants
1:41:19
to control the border. He's all
1:41:22
the right moves. And I didn't clip
1:41:24
the Israel stuff. But
1:41:27
he was saying, you know, that he's against
1:41:29
changing the judiciary,
1:41:32
that the judiciary of, so this is
1:41:34
about the Supreme Court change,
1:41:37
the Supreme Court of Israel. The thing
1:41:39
that reason that all these Israelis are protesting
1:41:41
is because they don't want to change either. Right.
1:41:44
So all of a sudden now,
1:41:47
Max Blumenthal goes
1:41:50
on the Jimmy Dore show and is saying, you know,
1:41:53
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a piece of crap. For
1:41:58
his stance on Israel. And,
1:42:02
you know, there's a lot of, because
1:42:06
I think the left is still pretty much on the Palestinian
1:42:09
tip.
1:42:10
You know, like the left, generally speaking,
1:42:12
does not like Israel and they're
1:42:14
like
1:42:14
the plight. Yes. They
1:42:17
like the plight. Yes. The suffering
1:42:19
and the plight of the Palestinians. So I think it may not be a coincidence
1:42:21
considering DeSantis is out.
1:42:24
I mean, there's just no reason for him. He
1:42:26
could, might as well just go home if
1:42:29
he thinks he's going to win
1:42:31
the nomination. I'm pretty sure all, even
1:42:35
now they're saying Robert
1:42:38
F. Kennedy Jr.'s campaign is being bankrolled
1:42:40
by Republican mega donors. So now
1:42:42
they're really pushing him towards, okay,
1:42:45
he should be running against Trump for the
1:42:48
primary. But DeSantis
1:42:50
did a thing in this town hall that I
1:42:52
don't think anyone heard of or watched,
1:42:54
which makes me think that maybe he
1:42:56
just said all this to
1:42:58
make him look like
1:43:00
Kennedy or for Kennedy to be
1:43:02
on the wrong side of all of this stuff
1:43:04
for a Democratic nomination. Listen to this. I
1:43:07
signed another piece of legislation to
1:43:09
go after people that are commandeering
1:43:11
property of others, including synagogues,
1:43:14
to do things like show swastika. So
1:43:16
we're going to hold them accountable. I said
1:43:18
when I was running, we'd be the most pro-Israel
1:43:21
state in America. I delivered on
1:43:23
that. And we are the number one
1:43:25
state for Jewish in-migration
1:43:28
of any state in this country. So we've
1:43:30
gotten all those policies right. And
1:43:32
what I would say is there are people that are doing things
1:43:34
like that. They are trying to divide
1:43:37
by using that as a weapon against me. Those
1:43:39
were not my supporters, because if they
1:43:42
were my supporters, they would be
1:43:44
on the side of every step I've taken. There's
1:43:46
been nobody that's been stronger on these issues
1:43:49
in any part of the country than me. And
1:43:51
as president, we're going to fight organizations
1:43:54
like the United Nations when they target Israel.
1:43:57
We're going to fight against the BDS movement when they try to fight
1:43:59
against the BDS movement.
1:43:59
to single out Israel as the world's only
1:44:02
Jewish state. We're going to go after these third
1:44:04
world countries that have become hotbeds
1:44:06
of anti-Semitism. We've always stood
1:44:09
strong. We'll continue to stand
1:44:11
strong. And that's just the way it's going
1:44:13
to be.
1:44:15
Against the BDS movement,
1:44:17
that's the boycott, divest and
1:44:20
what's the S4?
1:44:22
I don't know. Yeah, that's
1:44:24
basically the boy. That's what
1:44:27
the squad is all about, BDS. Boycott,
1:44:29
divest. Yeah, they're all BDSers. Boycott,
1:44:31
divest, divest and I
1:44:34
don't remember. What does the S stand? Sanctions. Sanctions. Well,
1:44:36
now we got a little BDS. Boycott,
1:44:38
divest and sanction. There you go. Sanction,
1:44:40
yeah. And then he says, I'm going to go after the
1:44:42
third world countries that are anti-Semitic.
1:44:46
That must be South Africa.
1:44:49
There could be anybody. I could be Ukraine.
1:44:53
Well, yeah, I guess they are third world country. Yeah.
1:44:57
So he seems like he's just being
1:44:59
used now for
1:45:01
whatever purpose. But he's got to appeal to
1:45:03
his own, no matter what happens, he's still has to
1:45:05
appeal to his Florida base, which is a lot of
1:45:08
retired. That's true. That's true.
1:45:10
Do you want to do the gay stuff you had or you want to take
1:45:12
a break here? Well, if we take
1:45:14
a break, I do have one clip.
1:45:16
Well, so you'd want to take a break?
1:45:18
Yeah, I think so. And this is the
1:45:21
Trump in Alabama. I want everybody
1:45:23
to know gay stuff coming up.
1:45:25
Yes, the gay stuff's coming up. This
1:45:28
is Trump in Alabama and there's
1:45:31
a point to be made.
1:45:32
Trump in Alabama.
1:45:35
I don't see your Trump in Alabama
1:45:37
clip. Oh, yeah, I get it. Former President
1:45:40
Donald Trump was in Montgomery, Alabama for
1:45:42
the annual Republican Party summer
1:45:44
dinner last night. The event was
1:45:46
held, of course, just days after Mr.
1:45:48
Trump was indicted on four counts, stemming
1:45:51
from efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Trump
1:45:54
pleaded not guilty on Thursday in
1:45:56
Washington, D.C. Kyle
1:45:58
Gassett with Troy Public.
1:45:59
radio is at the dinner. Joins us now
1:46:02
from Montgomery. Kyle, thanks so much for being with us.
1:46:04
Hi, Scott. More fun than being in
1:46:06
court, I would imagine, for the former president.
1:46:09
Well, Scott, if Trump was looking for a softer
1:46:12
landing after Thursday, this dinner in Alabama
1:46:14
was probably a good choice. He was
1:46:16
clearly happy to be back. Eight years
1:46:18
ago this month, we held one of the very
1:46:20
first rallies of the 2016 campaign right
1:46:23
here in Alabama. Together,
1:46:26
we launched the greatest political movement in
1:46:28
the history of our country and now with the help
1:46:29
of Alabama Patriots.
1:46:32
Oh, we love Alabama. He easily
1:46:34
won the state in the past two elections. And if
1:46:36
last night was any indication, Scott, of his popularity,
1:46:39
some donors paid $50,000 just to sit at
1:46:42
a table near Trump and have their
1:46:44
picture taken with him. And at the end of the night,
1:46:46
the Alabama GOP had raised $1.2 million
1:46:49
in contributions. Wow.
1:46:51
And we asked for five bucks.
1:46:56
And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage to say
1:46:58
in the morning to you, the man who put the Cs in
1:47:00
the cash over country, ladies and gentlemen, say hello
1:47:03
to my friend down the other end, the one and only Mr. John C. Daboury.
1:47:08
Well, in
1:47:09
the morning, US, we had a crane in the morning, our ship C
1:47:11
boosted the graphene, the air subs in the water, and all the
1:47:13
names and nights out there. And we've got
1:47:16
the trolls in the troll room. In the morning, two trolls.
1:47:18
How you doing? Hands up. Get up from one
1:47:21
of that old couch. 22 33.
1:47:30
Low. Low is
1:47:32
just low. What can we tell you? That's
1:47:35
what we had on Thursday.
1:47:37
But I thought
1:47:39
Thursdays are 1800, right?
1:47:43
Normally we had 22 on Thursday, this
1:47:45
last Thursday. So at least we're consistent. No,
1:47:48
it's no good. You're
1:47:50
no good trolls. You're not enough. You need
1:47:52
to go collect more trolls. It's a troll
1:47:54
collection. We need to have more of you.
1:47:56
We're happy to see whoever is here, though.
1:48:00
Good to have in the troll room. You could become a troll.
1:48:02
It's very easy go to troll room dot IO
1:48:04
and
1:48:07
The minute you hit that you turn into a troll
1:48:09
you can listen to the stream live it is our 24 7
1:48:12
No agenda stream along with a troll
1:48:15
room you log in there You can troll along with everybody
1:48:17
or you might want to check out one of those fancy
1:48:20
new modern podcast apps at podcast
1:48:22
apps WP.com
1:48:25
Suggest pod verse because it'll
1:48:27
give you an alert
1:48:29
When we go live the bat signal
1:48:31
hits You
1:48:34
can actually you can import all of your
1:48:36
legacy podcasts everything works fine if
1:48:38
you're if you're by the way
1:48:40
this thing this pod verse thing is
1:48:43
great for people who are
1:48:46
blind or less sight
1:48:48
abled it has a lot
1:48:51
of a Lot of accessibility
1:48:53
features. They poured a lot of a lot of effort
1:48:56
is they?
1:48:57
Mitch and his brother
1:49:01
It's one dude and his brother
1:49:03
Mitch and his brother that well, that's the best
1:49:06
kind of best Yeah, software development. Yes,
1:49:08
exactly. So that is a guy and his brother
1:49:10
in particular What did you think I was gonna say of some huge
1:49:13
organization? What's the way you always
1:49:15
pump it up every show because it's a great
1:49:17
app. That's why I mean All of
1:49:19
these apps are one or two guys. That's
1:49:22
what's so beautiful about it.
1:49:23
No, man Check it out But
1:49:28
you can also follow us on the
1:49:30
excellently managed by
1:49:32
our buddy Aaron er
1:49:34
No agenda social comm
1:49:37
Which I mean we had he's
1:49:39
on working on a cleanup by the way I'm gonna
1:49:41
do another purge everybody was not checked in
1:49:43
and this is your last warning if you haven't used your account
1:49:46
in the Last year you will be purged
1:49:49
Purge and we'll make room because we have a 10,000 user
1:49:51
cap limit But
1:49:54
that does not preclude you from being able to follow
1:49:56
Adam and their old gen and social calm or John C Dvorak
1:49:58
and no agenda social calm
1:49:59
from any Mastodon account that
1:50:02
doesn't block us, which is, of course,
1:50:04
you've gotta hunt around for that. Most
1:50:06
of them do because we are free's Peach
1:50:08
Zone.
1:50:11
Yeah, we have some offensive
1:50:13
toots that
1:50:16
come and go. Yeah, I mean, yeah. And
1:50:18
you can look in there, it's kind of entertaining. It's like, oh my
1:50:20
God, did people still think that way? There
1:50:23
was an interesting thread I saw of
1:50:25
some Mastodon instance
1:50:27
admins,
1:50:29
and one of them said, you know, really, the kind
1:50:31
of the best instance is no agenda
1:50:33
social,
1:50:35
because that
1:50:37
whole instance, as it's known,
1:50:40
has a show that they
1:50:42
kind of congeal around, and so they have a common
1:50:45
top. Congeal around, yeah. I think they use that
1:50:47
term. It's
1:50:51
no agenda nation, is what he's trying to describe. But
1:50:53
he said, you know, there's all kinds of
1:50:55
discussions on
1:50:57
all sides of the argument, but this
1:51:00
one admin thought it was really, really good, and then
1:51:02
other admin goes off, take a look, oh
1:51:05
no, that's those two loser
1:51:07
right-wing crazy nut jobs of work
1:51:09
and carry. How can you say that
1:51:12
instance is any good?
1:51:15
So that's kind of the- Sounds right, sounds
1:51:18
like they were said. That's the guy's voice, you've
1:51:20
nailed it. Kind of the fed reverse in a nutshell
1:51:23
for you. Yeah, I think so. But
1:51:25
you can even set up your own Mastodon server
1:51:27
for your family for five bucks a month at Masto.host.
1:51:31
Now just don't call it no agenda because that
1:51:33
guy will not, it's like,
1:51:36
if you have, if you want to create a Mastodon
1:51:38
server for five bucks a month and I call
1:51:40
it, you know, my no agenda
1:51:43
immediate block, you won't be able
1:51:45
to do it. Because that guy also
1:51:47
hates us because, you know, we're horrible,
1:51:49
we're
1:51:49
just horrible people,
1:51:51
sending businesses away.
1:51:53
And I think this past hour and
1:51:55
a half is just par for the course, we're horrible. I
1:51:57
heard it. We're racist, misogynist.
1:52:00
or anti-trans, we're
1:52:02
just bad dudes. And
1:52:04
sis to boot, which is horrible. Got hairy legs.
1:52:07
We should. Value for value
1:52:09
is the only way that we could be doing this program
1:52:12
for you. As you well know, not
1:52:14
a single sponsor would ever, ever
1:52:18
stick with us.
1:52:20
I mean, I don't, can't see Squarespace hanging
1:52:22
out with us for too long. I can't see them
1:52:24
paying much money anyway.
1:52:26
It just
1:52:28
doesn't work that way. So we decided very early
1:52:30
on, value for value was the way to go. If you want
1:52:32
to learn more about that, value number four, value.info
1:52:35
explains it perfectly, how
1:52:38
it works, why we did it. And
1:52:40
it's been successful for us. We mean, we're
1:52:42
still here, but we basically
1:52:44
depend on the time, talent
1:52:47
and treasure. Based on today's numbers. Well,
1:52:49
that's why we're doing one segment today. We're
1:52:51
doing it all in one.
1:52:53
It's based on the time, talent and treasure
1:52:55
of the beautiful producers and all of
1:52:57
you are producers. None of you are just listeners.
1:53:00
You're expected to produce in one way
1:53:02
or the other just by hitting people in the mouth or
1:53:04
by sending a boots on the ground report or
1:53:07
as an example of talent. We have artists
1:53:09
who always create a new piece of artwork
1:53:11
for us, multiple to choose from
1:53:14
for every single episode. It is one
1:53:16
of the hidden gems, not even hidden really,
1:53:19
one of the gems of the No Agenda show. And
1:53:21
so we would like to thank the artists for episode 1578
1:53:23
that
1:53:25
was correct to record. No stranger
1:53:27
to the winning spot, which
1:53:30
gets you featured in the MP3, gets you featured
1:53:32
in the artwork. We even changed the whole logo
1:53:34
of the show to it. It
1:53:36
was beautiful. We
1:53:39
gravitated towards it right away. It
1:53:42
was the meat glue,
1:53:43
transglutaminase, 33 experts say, it's
1:53:46
possibly safe to eat.
1:53:48
And it was a beautiful takeoff
1:53:50
on Elmer's glue,
1:53:52
but it had the little bull there
1:53:56
and it had some meat in the background, clearly being
1:53:58
glued. Actually. got a got
1:54:00
a note from chef Matt.
1:54:03
What did Matt have to say?
1:54:06
Chef Matt says, Adam,
1:54:09
I appreciate your responses you've given me and the hours of
1:54:11
content you've provided for me. I will donate as
1:54:13
soon as I get my raise. I will no longer be a podcast
1:54:15
stealer. Remind me enough to talk about that guy
1:54:18
too. I heard about your meat glue report
1:54:20
and the correlation of celiac disease to me.
1:54:22
That is the least shocking part of meat
1:54:25
of meat glue. Okay.
1:54:27
I've had over five plus years
1:54:29
in the culinary industry and I've used meat glue
1:54:32
for certain applications in food. For
1:54:34
example, we used to make Chinese chicken
1:54:37
seltimboca.
1:54:39
What is that? Chicken seltimboca. Yeah.
1:54:41
Seltimboca. What is that? It's a
1:54:43
chicken dish. Okay. It's
1:54:46
a sauce. It's a chicken
1:54:48
breast that is butterflied in fillet
1:54:51
with prosciutto, sage, and Swiss cheese.
1:54:53
Yeah, it's Italian. We use meat glue
1:54:56
to seal the two ends of the chicken
1:54:58
to make a chicken log. Afterwards,
1:55:02
we suvieded it to 155 and
1:55:05
seared it to order.
1:55:08
Well, I myself have no problem using
1:55:11
it in small quantities. If used on mass
1:55:13
scale, it is
1:55:14
in an improperly ventilated area.
1:55:17
You could possibly breathe this stuff
1:55:19
and literally seal your throat and lungs
1:55:21
together. Whoa.
1:55:28
Give that to Hunter Biden. Hey,
1:55:30
snort this. On
1:55:34
the package, there's
1:55:37
usually a warning of if you breathe it, you
1:55:39
may experience allergic reactions
1:55:41
or you may experience sensitivity
1:55:43
in your lungs.
1:55:45
The brand Moo Glue is
1:55:47
an example. Wow. Moo
1:55:51
Glue. I've known about this like I said
1:55:53
before, but I've never actually tried using
1:55:55
it for anything. Well, don't. It's dangerous
1:55:57
stuff.
1:55:58
I think it is absolutely horrible.
1:55:59
they are changing the wording of
1:56:02
your lungs will freakin shut if you breathe
1:56:04
this crap into you may feel
1:56:06
slight tingling or allergic reactions
1:56:09
thank you chef Matt thank you thank you chef
1:56:12
it's appreciated chef good
1:56:14
work good work a
1:56:19
lot of people
1:56:21
I got two emails that's a lot
1:56:23
suggested that Peter the shoplifter
1:56:26
who was
1:56:28
who was so who kept
1:56:30
saying about all do respect
1:56:32
with all do respect yeah
1:56:35
he sent another note in with all do respect
1:56:37
even amped up more yeah people said they
1:56:39
thought that this was an AI generated note
1:56:41
and I think I'm going to agree it
1:56:44
wasn't just an
1:56:45
AI by itself I
1:56:47
don't think so personally you don't think
1:56:49
so I heard this too you don't think it was a I'd
1:56:51
like to read his second
1:56:54
well before I do that we're still on the art so let's
1:56:57
just discuss what other art there was yeah
1:56:59
you're right good point and first of all
1:57:02
the one piece of art which
1:57:05
I kind of liked thank you for bringing me back
1:57:07
it's helpful it's helpful if
1:57:10
you spell my name correctly if
1:57:12
you ever want your your art picked and
1:57:15
which piece was this the
1:57:16
papa's blue ribbon piece oh
1:57:19
yeah devarac yeah that was a problem
1:57:22
that's a dirty Jersey whore he's a dirty
1:57:24
Jersey whore I
1:57:25
don't know what he's thinking I mean I mean
1:57:27
maybe this is a joke I'm not
1:57:30
sure I don't I get used to dog head
1:57:32
for the newsletter yeah the old
1:57:34
Yellen yeah that was good
1:57:37
who did old Yellen correct it I was also
1:57:39
a corrector record there
1:57:41
was let me see Parker
1:57:44
Paulie we looked at the tikki-taki
1:57:48
but it was so small man everything was
1:57:50
so small but it was
1:57:53
well done with the Trump styled hair on
1:57:55
the tik-tak box that was pretty cool comics
1:57:59
Trump styled hair on
1:57:59
the tic tac box. Nice. Very cool. That was
1:58:02
very nice. Yeah. The commenship
1:58:04
blogger had USA hand groping
1:58:07
Africa, but at least
1:58:09
he's consistent. Uh,
1:58:12
a lot of, a lot of tranq stuff,
1:58:14
which wasn't really brilliant
1:58:17
or funny.
1:58:19
A lot of, a lot of Trump stuff. There's too much.
1:58:21
We're not going to put Trump on our art. I just can't
1:58:23
see it. It's got to be, even though
1:58:25
Darren O'Neill's Trump was AI
1:58:28
generated. Well done. But no, no, I
1:58:30
just don't, I don't, I can't see us doing
1:58:32
it.
1:58:34
What else was that? Trump behind bars? No.
1:58:39
Yeah.
1:58:39
No, forget Trump. Yeah. We're
1:58:42
not putting Trump on the, on the, on the art.
1:58:44
You know, we've,
1:58:45
we've done Trump in the past.
1:58:47
It's like us.
1:58:49
We took ourselves off the art.
1:58:51
We, Trump's now off. Yeah.
1:58:53
And I think Biden's off too.
1:58:56
And Kamala. Yeah.
1:58:57
Almost
1:58:59
no political figures. It's just not interesting. That's
1:59:02
what we, we, we were close to
1:59:04
old Yellen. We liked it.
1:59:06
It was well done.
1:59:09
It was kind of cute. It's kind of much
1:59:11
cuter than Janet Yellen herself, obviously.
1:59:15
Please. Yeah.
1:59:20
Lizzo. No. Oh,
1:59:23
can I tell you the Lizzo thing? I figured out
1:59:25
what this, what she was about this lawsuit,
1:59:27
this harassment suit, this lawsuit.
1:59:29
Okay.
1:59:30
So I, This is our bonus, bonus
1:59:33
stuff for the donation. This is the bonus
1:59:35
content.
1:59:36
So what happened was she,
1:59:38
the, this, I don't know if
1:59:41
the dancer was male or female. I'm going to
1:59:43
think that it was a male dancer, but it might've
1:59:45
been. They're all female, three of them.
1:59:47
So this is, this was
1:59:49
an Amsterdam and I know a little bit about the Amsterdam
1:59:51
scene. And so what,
1:59:54
what happened was she was forced to eat a banana
1:59:57
out of a performer's
1:59:59
crotch. But that's
2:00:02
not, I know this is from
2:00:05
a show and now
2:00:08
I know they were at a show, it's
2:00:10
the Casa Rosso show because
2:00:13
you've heard this story for me, I want to remind people. This
2:00:16
is how the show goes and I've been to this show
2:00:18
when we were in Amsterdam to take Think
2:00:21
New Ideas public. We did a road show and
2:00:23
we were doing it and so you know road shows mean you go
2:00:25
out and you try and get every banker to
2:00:28
commit to buying 10% of the share.
2:00:31
So they have deep bananas?
2:00:33
Well wait for it.
2:00:34
So that's what it is. And so you have to take
2:00:36
these slimy bankers out like, hey, yeah,
2:00:39
come on. Hey man, are you good? Are you in for 10%? You
2:00:41
know, you got the
2:00:44
banker that's taking your company public. It's a whole
2:00:46
slimy thing. It's about a two, three
2:00:48
week process. You go all over the world, Switzerland
2:00:51
because I was known in the Netherlands, we go to the
2:00:54
Netherlands and we take out the ABN Amro
2:00:56
guys, the IBN, ING guys.
2:00:59
And so, oh yeah, no, we'll go to
2:01:01
Casa Rosso. That'd be great. Okay.
2:01:04
And so there's a show and there's,
2:01:07
it's a stage and you're sitting in the audience, you're like,
2:01:10
and it's typically men and the Hooten
2:01:12
and Holler and it's like a theater.
2:01:14
And then a certain point they say, Oh, I need,
2:01:17
I need a volunteer from the audience. Now it's
2:01:20
Adam Curry in Amsterdam. Of course.
2:01:22
Yes, you sir, come on up.
2:01:25
And so the performer is laying on her back
2:01:27
and they put a banana between her
2:01:29
legs and then you're supposed to bend
2:01:32
down on your knees and eat the
2:01:34
banana. And the minute you get close
2:01:36
to the banana
2:01:37
from behind the stage, a guy dressed
2:01:40
in the gorilla suit with a big strap on comes
2:01:42
up behind you and starts trying to poke you in the
2:01:44
butt. It's a hilarious show.
2:01:46
That's what this was. It's very embarrassing,
2:01:49
but it's not,
2:01:51
I mean, I think there's limits to what you can
2:01:53
do in a lawsuit if you agree to go
2:01:56
in this establishment at all.
2:02:00
You ever been to the donkey show in Tijuana?
2:02:02
No,
2:02:05
have you? No. Okay.
2:02:08
So there you go. The boys ask it though. I've never run
2:02:10
into anyone who actually has. So there's
2:02:13
your special no agenda content for
2:02:15
you. Yeah, that was great. Hey!
2:02:18
I don't know. I mean she's supposed to be
2:02:20
just It sounds like there's more
2:02:22
to it than that because these three dancers are quite
2:02:24
upset with her
2:02:25
being a dick. Nah, they just want money. Come
2:02:28
on, man. This money is money. It's money.
2:02:30
Get a hit. Expect a writ. That's how it goes. Let's
2:02:34
thank our executive and associate executive producer
2:02:37
for episode 1579. We
2:02:40
kick it off with our top
2:02:42
executive producer, Michael Rogan from Evansville,
2:02:45
Indiana. Boom! Oh,
2:02:47
you know what? He comes. It's a Barnhart donation.
2:02:50
I should have, I should have had that. I remember
2:02:52
we have a jingle for that. Here we go.
2:02:54
Barnhart donations. That's right. A hit
2:02:56
in the mouth by Super Nerd with Barnhart
2:02:58
Podcasts and they've got a lot of us Trattie
2:03:01
types praying for you both. No
2:03:03
jingles or karma. $1,000. Who's
2:03:05
Barnhart? The Barnhart Podcast.
2:03:06
Barnhart donation. I'm
2:03:09
not gonna ask again. There
2:03:11
you go. $1,000. Instant night.
2:03:14
No jingles or karma. May I be called
2:03:16
Sir Mikey Boss, the Irish Catholic
2:03:18
sinner.
2:03:19
Standard fare will do. Well, of course. And
2:03:22
thank you so much. And thank you to the Trattie
2:03:25
types over there at the Barnhart
2:03:27
Podcast.
2:03:28
You should listen to it. They're pretty good.
2:03:32
Okay, I will. I will make a point of listening
2:03:34
to the Barnhart Podcast,
2:03:37
especially if they get somebody to come
2:03:40
in with the dollars. Yeah, exactly. Great
2:03:42
guys.
2:03:44
Next is Jan in Dicklerven,
2:03:49
Belgium. Which
2:03:51
is nice. We don't have too many Belgians people
2:03:53
here. Very few, in fact.
2:03:56
Six-six. We have more Swiss. It's
2:03:58
the Swiss who like the show. Yeah. Because
2:04:01
they're neutral. And that's, and we're neutral.
2:04:03
We're not a bunch of right wing nuts. Like that guy said.
2:04:05
No, we're not. Six, six, in fact,
2:04:07
he's a prick for saying that. Six, six, six,
2:04:10
dot six, six. The
2:04:12
admin. Yeah. Okay.
2:04:16
In the morning, John and Adam, only a vacuous cypher
2:04:18
can listen to about 2,500 donation
2:04:21
segments at one X speed in three years
2:04:23
to still not donate.
2:04:25
Good for you. Please kindly accept my first humble
2:04:27
value return of value.
2:04:30
The welding tips alone are
2:04:32
worth more. The
2:04:35
welding tips. Have we ever,
2:04:37
I guess we have given welding tips.
2:04:40
Yeah, but we don't, they're not, yeah.
2:04:42
We've talked about welding, but I don't
2:04:44
know if it's tips. So does he want to deducing
2:04:47
or are we doing this? He's not
2:04:49
asking for one. I've stumbled, we're
2:04:51
gonna give him one anyway. You've been
2:04:53
deduced.
2:04:53
You've been deduced. Paul,
2:04:55
we play. Yeah, I did. You
2:04:58
did. You did.
2:05:00
I've stumbled on your wonderful podcast
2:05:03
after searching for the term NA
2:05:05
boys, which I found hidden
2:05:07
in a comment somewhere on John Rappaport's
2:05:10
blog in 2020. Wow.
2:05:13
Rappaport donation.
2:05:16
I cherish this treasure trove
2:05:18
of fun, true friendship, and of course the
2:05:20
continuous amygdala shrinking.
2:05:22
He's been listening long enough to know about that. Yeah.
2:05:27
Thanks Obama. I
2:05:29
don't even remember that
2:05:31
one where he says ACK. ACK, he does. ACK,
2:05:34
no jingles, no karma, Jan from Dickard
2:05:37
Venn, Belgium.
2:05:39
He is a little confused though. True friendship?
2:05:43
Is he talking about us? I
2:05:45
don't know, no. No, I don't know. Probably
2:05:47
not. Raymond Grill is in Dover, Florida, 33333.
2:05:51
He says, haven't donated in a while. Time to
2:05:53
give some value back, love the show. I just
2:05:55
like some moving karma. I'm headed to Flugerbeg.
2:05:58
I'm headed to Flugerbeg.
2:05:59
Oh, Flugerville, home
2:06:02
of the Flugerbuh Schlitterbahn.
2:06:04
Schlitterbahn, that's where it is. Of course, we got some karma
2:06:07
for you. You've got karma.
2:06:10
And welcome to Texas. Texas.
2:06:13
Why'd anybody move to Texas from
2:06:15
Florida's beyond me? Sir
2:06:18
Sagacious, script-torian.
2:06:22
Script-torian, script-torian
2:06:24
in South Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
2:06:29
333.33 in the morning, crackpot and buzzkill. Please
2:06:32
accept my donation and gratitude to your tireless
2:06:34
effort to deconstruct media and other organizational
2:06:36
narratives. The art of inquiring, questioning,
2:06:38
and confirming the line between reality and fiction
2:06:41
requires agency, integrity, and
2:06:43
courage. Would you be so kind as to share
2:06:45
some sage wisdom with the audience and me? I
2:06:48
recently applied at 4N1, a
2:06:50
management position that involves master
2:06:52
salesmanship and a high volume of air
2:06:54
travel across the Americas. Our
2:06:56
goal is to develop a certified
2:06:58
mining equipment dealer network for
2:07:01
our aftermarket. What advice do you have
2:07:03
for someone who enters this stage of their career
2:07:05
in regard to master salesmanship and
2:07:07
frequent domestic and international air travel?
2:07:10
To close, please add me to the birthday
2:07:12
list for August 7th. In addition, please send
2:07:14
some jobs, karma, relationship, karma. My
2:07:17
way. It would be great to add some
2:07:19
living embrace into the quantity
2:07:22
of handshakes coming my way. I
2:07:24
can't shake a tendonitis, by
2:07:26
the way, sincerely or a sort
2:07:28
of sagacious scripturiant
2:07:30
night of the seven bridges, et cetera,
2:07:33
Jacob Doolman.
2:07:36
So what he doesn't say here is this, um,
2:07:38
is he mining like
2:07:41
mining for minerals or mining
2:07:43
Bitcoin mining? What do you think he means here?
2:07:46
Well, he's not talking about Bitcoin mining. Okay.
2:07:48
He's talking about setting up a network. He's a say it. They
2:07:50
set him up as a set. This is a bad,
2:07:52
bad.
2:07:53
This is not what you throw somebody
2:07:55
into. First of all,
2:07:57
you take a, you need a master salesman
2:07:59
that means some guy.
2:07:59
I can sell anyone anything to go
2:08:03
out and create a network of dealers or a network of
2:08:06
some sort of network. That's
2:08:08
tough. It's a rough go. That's not going to be easy. I
2:08:10
have a tip for him.
2:08:13
I have sage wisdom.
2:08:15
Do you, you don't have any tips for
2:08:17
him?
2:08:20
Uh, I'd have to think about it. There
2:08:23
are travel tips, I sales
2:08:25
tips. I'm not, if I knew more about
2:08:27
the details, I could probably give him some. Here's my
2:08:29
tip.
2:08:30
Brown shoes. Jobs,
2:08:33
jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:08:40
All the best sales guys have wear brown
2:08:42
shoes.
2:08:46
It's a myth, but go on, but
2:08:48
go on as our friend would say,
2:08:51
Trenton Scoville
2:08:52
in Charlotte, North Carolina, 33333, and
2:08:55
says, thank you for the value. I'm pleased to give
2:08:57
that to you. And I'll hit the next one. John says you already,
2:09:00
you're already annoyed, annoyed that you'd have
2:09:02
to read two long notes. VC
2:09:04
in Tallahassee, Florida.
2:09:06
This is a really long note. It's so long.
2:09:09
How long is it? It's so long. It
2:09:13
clears my whole screen. Yeah, it doesn't fit.
2:09:15
It's been two years since my last donation. Associate
2:09:17
executive producer show 1385 flu zone. So
2:09:21
I thought it best to give you some treasure so I'm not labeled
2:09:23
a shoplifter. As always, you bring the
2:09:25
goods and keep me sane in this crazy propagandized
2:09:28
world. Couple of things to share. I hosted
2:09:30
a meetup and three people showed up and it was fun.
2:09:33
After the meetup, I got a text message, no name
2:09:35
given, asking me how the meetup went
2:09:38
and whether I wanted to join
2:09:39
Adams, no agenda activist
2:09:42
club. What? I
2:09:46
responded, are you a spook?
2:09:49
I'm no activist. Never heard from
2:09:51
them again. Isn't that strange? Well,
2:09:54
that is kind of strange. There is no
2:09:56
such thing as Adams activist group
2:09:58
or club. says you. As
2:10:01
a former resident of Kanakistan, the
2:10:04
reporting of our Prime Minister Trudeau's split
2:10:06
from his wife is only telling half the story.
2:10:08
It is, oh this is, there's some inside
2:10:11
dirt.
2:10:11
It has been openly speculated for years
2:10:14
they were already separated, mostly based
2:10:16
on body language of them, Sophie
2:10:18
looking disgusted, when they would film
2:10:20
their happy couple propaganda messages
2:10:23
to the nation. Many think Trudeau has
2:10:25
had one or more extramarital
2:10:27
affairs and Sophie stayed for the perks,
2:10:30
such as $5,000 a month grocery bill.
2:10:34
Whoa,
2:10:35
I'd sleep with Trudeau for that. The
2:10:39
interesting thing about this separation though is
2:10:42
that a year ago Sophie registered a communications
2:10:44
business in Toronto, a city she doesn't
2:10:46
live in, but as a member of a politician's family,
2:10:49
she must declare all of her income to Parliament
2:10:51
to make sure there's no conflict of interest. Now
2:10:53
they are legally and ethically separated,
2:10:55
as their statement said, ah good point, she doesn't
2:10:58
have to report where her money comes from and
2:11:00
can provide comm services, probably to the
2:11:02
government, yeah that would make sense, enriching
2:11:04
herself and family
2:11:05
without any parliamentary scrutiny.
2:11:08
Yes, how unethical of her. Our
2:11:11
current leaders are grifters just like some
2:11:13
in the US. Hello, thank you
2:11:15
guys so much because I credit your show for giving me the
2:11:17
gumption to always look further than the M5M
2:11:20
messaging in any news.
2:11:22
All right, thank you very much. And
2:11:25
he uses the word gumption correctly.
2:11:28
Extra points, oops, extra points for
2:11:30
gumption. Gumption. Gumption.
2:11:33
So we have, oh here we go, our buddy
2:11:36
Sir Cal of Lavender Blossoms
2:11:39
is here with the $272. Hey
2:11:41
Cal. It's in Northville,
2:11:43
Michigan, $272.72, keep it up. Yes.
2:11:47
Lavenderblossoms.org for all
2:11:49
of your CBD products.
2:11:52
Give us a Lavenderblossoms.org properly.
2:11:55
Lavenderblossoms.org.
2:11:57
Thank you. Thank you. Thank
2:11:59
you. Bob Maple in Golden, Colorado is up
2:12:02
with 222 a row of Bud ducks.
2:12:05
Hello, Janski. Good
2:12:08
work and thank you for your courage. I attached a failed jingle
2:12:10
submission from Sir Vincenzo's human
2:12:12
resource, Aliana submitted
2:12:15
for show 1386. I
2:12:17
always thought it was funny and perfectly understandable,
2:12:19
but just needed a little audio mastering help. I
2:12:21
think it deserves a second chance at success, especially
2:12:24
since the M5M is currently doing their best
2:12:26
to keep COVID alive and pimping the Vax
2:12:28
again. Boost. Anyways,
2:12:31
if you could play it followed by the visual,
2:12:34
usual no, and we'll get the
2:12:36
chip, let the chips fall where they may. P.S.
2:12:38
Adam, can you please add a couple
2:12:40
of milliseconds, please? Can
2:12:43
you please add a couple of milliseconds to the
2:12:45
noise gate?
2:12:46
For Jans' mic,
2:12:48
the popping is driving me nuts. Well,
2:12:52
what's popping?
2:12:54
No, when you move a little
2:12:56
bit away from the mic, then it pops in a little bit. It's
2:12:58
once in a... It's a
2:13:01
Murinoka is what it is.
2:13:03
Okay. Ant-fucking. But
2:13:06
I did actually change it
2:13:08
a little bit just
2:13:10
because you said so. So
2:13:13
I appreciate a
2:13:15
fellow audio file
2:13:17
who cares. Who cares
2:13:19
that much? You care? We care. Well, I think
2:13:21
he'd be more classified as an audio engineering
2:13:24
type as opposed to audio file,
2:13:26
which is a guy who collects overpriced stereo
2:13:28
gear.
2:13:29
Boost! No, no, no, no, no, no, no,
2:13:31
no, no, no, no.
2:13:32
I don't know why that one crept in, but that's what you got. Now
2:13:36
we have Andy Scott in Gunter, Texas.
2:13:39
To 1961, my donation is $3,333,333 Indonesia Rupiah.
2:13:49
I've lived in Indonesia since George
2:13:51
Soros shorted the Thai bot. One
2:13:53
bot, please. One bot. And created the
2:13:56
Asian financial crisis of 1998, having lived through
2:13:58
a slow.
2:13:59
moving currency crisis I would like to add
2:14:02
some extra hyperinflating emphasis to
2:14:04
the best jingle of the best podcast in the universe
2:14:07
all hell's gonna break loose all you're gonna need is a Bitcoin
2:14:10
thanks for all you do best podcast in the universe
2:14:12
Cheers sabatikop from Andy
2:14:16
They're saying that all hell
2:14:17
is gonna break loose and you're gonna need a Bitcoin
2:14:25
Linda Lou Patkin in Lakewood Colorado
2:14:33
I'm not blinking for a competitive edge
2:14:35
go to image makers Inc.
2:14:39
com for your executive resume and search
2:14:42
job search needs that's image makers
2:14:44
Inc with a K you
2:14:46
heard me or go
2:14:48
to Linda Lou Patkin on the producers list and
2:14:50
just look her up you'll find her I like that
2:14:52
she because we didn't read it but she asked
2:14:54
for a chicken sound effect and we both had
2:14:57
one
2:14:58
we really we really service the client
2:15:00
on this one didn't we John we
2:15:03
did a good job on this one thank you
2:15:05
very much to these executive and associate executive
2:15:07
producers of episode 1579 of the
2:15:11
best podcast in the universe
2:15:14
all of these titles all
2:15:16
of these titles are forever
2:15:19
you can always use it you can always say
2:15:21
you are an exec or an associate exec of this particular
2:15:24
episode put it on your LinkedIn put
2:15:26
it on your resume put it on I open up
2:15:28
an IMDB you can use this almost 800
2:15:30
of them already on IMDB
2:15:33
and that's just the start of the many credits that you
2:15:35
will soon see as value for value
2:15:38
sweeps the universe and all streaming
2:15:40
and recorded media becomes value for value
2:15:43
sweeps the universe
2:15:44
I tell you and if you'd like to
2:15:46
learn how to become a producer and go here
2:15:48
vorac.org slash
2:15:51
and a we'll be reading all the other ones
2:15:53
up to 50 but just want to thank you one
2:15:56
more time our formula is this
2:15:59
we go out We hit people
2:16:01
in the mouth And
2:16:15
John's gonna take it through to the 50s and we'll get
2:16:17
our nights and games on stage and give you the meetups
2:16:19
Before we continue with our show with the promised
2:16:21
gay stuff Yes Anonymous
2:16:26
starts with it out of at the beginning
2:16:28
there He's in San Jose, California 150
2:16:30
bucks and he's gonna be you might as well read
2:16:32
this or he she's going to be Dame
2:16:34
You you can read this for me. I shall
2:16:37
I just realized I am past due to receive
2:16:39
my Dame status She I'd
2:16:42
like to claim the title of Dame Zelda of Silicon
2:16:44
Valley patron of the wandering Jews
2:16:47
Would love to hear the oh, I didn't have
2:16:49
this one prepared Would love to hear the shape-shifting
2:16:53
Jews jingle and get an extra potent dose
2:16:55
of relationship karma. We
2:16:57
can do that Thank you so much for the
2:16:59
rookie do please. Let me know how to get my ring.
2:17:01
Well once I have Damed
2:17:04
you I'll tell you all about it
2:17:05
You've got karma
2:17:20
You've got
2:17:22
Karma Wonder
2:17:25
why are Jewish listeners find that so entertaining?
2:17:28
No, they Bruce Schwalm in
2:17:30
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania comes in with a
2:17:32
hundred thirty three dollars and eighty eight cents Mike
2:17:35
Michaela
2:17:36
E King in Temecula, California
2:17:44
Stefan
2:17:45
Kunkel or Steven in
2:17:47
Atlanta, Georgia 100
2:17:50
Sir Brian Tobias in in Gardner,
2:17:52
Kansas 8008 with
2:17:54
a happy anniversary to John and Mimi that's coming up 888 yeah, 88
2:17:58
nice
2:17:59
Yeah. Wait a minute, wait a minute. That's
2:18:02
just two days away.
2:18:05
Yeah. Did you put that in the newsletter? I didn't
2:18:07
see that. No, I'll put it in the next newsletter. Oh,
2:18:09
mm-hmm. That's
2:18:12
Monday, Tuesday, Tuesday, Wednesday, yeah. Come
2:18:14
out Wednesday will be a day off. All right.
2:18:16
Sir Dean Bertram in Bibra Lake,
2:18:19
Washington, 8008.
2:18:21
Oh, by the way, sorry, Brian Tobiason
2:18:23
was 880898. Ooh,
2:18:26
this is nice. And then Kevin McLaughlin's
2:18:28
back
2:18:29
with 8008. This time he's celebrating
2:18:32
Korean melons. I love
2:18:36
his melon assortment. He
2:18:40
likes the Korean melons. He likes melons.
2:18:43
He's also the Archduke of Luna and Lover of America
2:18:46
and Boobs.
2:18:48
Ray Jacobson in Ashland, Virginia 80.
2:18:51
Tim Carolla in Manassas, Virginia 7777.
2:18:55
Way
2:18:58
and way and way and Cartini in Torrington,
2:19:00
Connecticut 7421. Rita Harrington
2:19:02
in Sparks, Nevada 65. There she is again.
2:19:06
Chad Hewitt in Folsom,
2:19:08
California needs a de-deutsched. You've
2:19:12
been de-deutsched. And
2:19:14
he came in with 6006, which is small
2:19:16
boobs along with Kevin McLaughlin who doubled
2:19:18
up again today from Concord.
2:19:21
And he came in with 6006. And
2:19:24
this is celebrating the skyrocket
2:19:26
melon. Mm, yummy.
2:19:30
You ever had one?
2:19:33
No. Ben Stride in Nashville,
2:19:35
Tennessee 5993. Sam Menerer,
2:19:37
which I haven't heard from a YEZ in China,
2:19:40
Australia, wherever that is. 5510, Mark
2:19:43
Empson in Plainville, Connecticut 5510. Sir
2:19:46
Tom Darry in DeForest, Wisconsin 5510.
2:19:49
Troy Funderburg in
2:19:51
Spokane, Washington 55.
2:19:54
Michael Gays 5280. Carl
2:19:56
Schneider in Lake Bay, Washington 53.
2:19:59
He hasn't donated in a while.
2:20:04
Lynn Malinowski in Stafford,
2:20:06
Virginia, 50. And she starts
2:20:08
off the 50s. We have a short
2:20:10
list today overall. Brian
2:20:13
P. Bellen in Ashbury, New Jersey.
2:20:16
Michael LeBar, or Barre
2:20:19
maybe, in Williamstown, Michigan. Alex
2:20:21
Zavala in Kyle, Texas. Douglas
2:20:24
Engstrom in Sandy Lake, Pennsylvania.
2:20:29
He's got some note there. Just give him a decipher
2:20:31
that. Ernest Holloway in North Richland
2:20:34
Hills, Texas. Samuel,
2:20:36
Samuel Corporation in Schenectady,
2:20:39
New York.
2:20:40
Philip Kuzmanowski
2:20:43
in Austin, Texas. Matthew
2:20:46
Smith in Colchester, Suffolk, UK. Jim
2:20:49
Farrell. Needs a de-douching.
2:20:53
You've been de-douched. Birthday
2:20:55
donation is on the list. Brian
2:20:58
Tierman in North Providence, Rhode Island.
2:21:01
Jonathan Ferris
2:21:03
in Liberal, Kansas. Kelly
2:21:05
Johnson in Durango, Colorado.
2:21:08
Matt,
2:21:08
Mad Matt, Mad Matt in Minnetonka,
2:21:11
Minnesota. Brett
2:21:15
Farrell, I think, is in Kansas City.
2:21:18
Brian Wilson in Raleigh, North Carolina. And last
2:21:20
on our list is out of San Rafael,
2:21:22
California, Walker Phillips. I want
2:21:24
to thank all these people for helping us
2:21:26
get show 1579 done. Yeah,
2:21:30
thank you all so much. And we also want to thank our
2:21:32
producers who came in under $50. I
2:21:34
see a lot of 49.99 today. That
2:21:36
is because they want to be anonymous. And we
2:21:38
will never mention their name, anything below 50, which
2:21:41
is kind of sad because we also have people who
2:21:43
are on our sustaining donations list. And
2:21:45
these are programs you can
2:21:47
make up your own. But if you go to Dvorak.org
2:21:49
slash NA, you can see
2:21:51
weeklies of 3333, 1111, 1212.
2:21:55
I mean, there's even I think we still have
2:21:57
the $3, whatever you want, really.
2:21:59
but it's sustaining so it's recurring and
2:22:02
that's important for these slower days. We
2:22:04
really appreciate it when in
2:22:06
addition to whatever you might have done for an executive
2:22:08
or associate executive producership, you don't have
2:22:10
to do that. Just do $5 a month.
2:22:13
People have become knights and dames on $5 a month. That's
2:22:15
how long we've been doing this and
2:22:17
when people do that it's a big celebration. We
2:22:20
really love those people as well. And
2:22:22
again, thank you to our executive and associate executive
2:22:24
producers. A little bit of goat karma for everybody in case
2:22:26
you needed it. Scott
2:22:29
Karma. It's your birthday
2:22:31
birthday. I'll
2:22:37
show what you've got. And
2:22:39
here is our list for today. Short, just
2:22:41
like the donations. Norman Lear. Now
2:22:44
who put this on the list? I did.
2:22:46
You put Norman Lear on the list that
2:22:49
propagandizing old
2:22:50
troops. You know what's interesting? The reason it's on the
2:22:52
list is because he's 101. This
2:22:55
is reptilian years.
2:22:58
And he celebrated on July 27th. So
2:23:00
it's a belated birthday, my goodness.
2:23:03
Sir Sagacious Squipturiant
2:23:07
celebrated yesterday and Jim Farrell
2:23:09
celebrates his birthday. We say happy birthday
2:23:11
to everybody here on behalf of
2:23:13
the whole staff and management of the
2:23:16
No Agenda Show.
2:23:18
We got two. We got one day and one night
2:23:21
up on the podium. There is the double bladed
2:23:23
one. And I have yours. Oh, here
2:23:25
you go. That's the right one. Perfect.
2:23:27
Anonymous, anonymous, anonymous. Pop on up here
2:23:30
along with Michael Rogan. Both
2:23:33
of you support the No Agenda Show on
2:23:35
the amount of $1,000 or more. I'm very
2:23:37
proud to pronounce the KV as James
2:23:40
Elduff, Silicon Valley patron of the wandering
2:23:42
Jew and Sir Mikey
2:23:45
Boss, the Irish Catholic sinner. Welcome
2:23:48
to the No Agenda Roundtable of the Dames and the
2:23:50
Nights for you. We've got Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and
2:23:52
Chardonnay. We've got Harlots and Haldaw.
2:23:54
We've got some Brazilian Hotties and Kshasha.
2:23:57
If you want cowgirls and coffin varnish, we've got
2:23:59
that bar. hits in bourbon, sparkling
2:24:02
cider escorts, ginger ale and gerbils. We
2:24:04
got breast milk and pavlon, vodka, vanilla,
2:24:06
geisses and sake. And of course,
2:24:10
mutton and mead. It's always there. It's always
2:24:12
there and that standard fare is there for you. And
2:24:15
welcome to the round table. Go to noagendarings.com.
2:24:18
You can see the handsome knight and dame ring,
2:24:21
which you will acquire as soon as you size.
2:24:24
There's a little sizing guide there shows you how to do
2:24:26
it. Send that to us with an address and we'll
2:24:28
get out to you post haste so you can tweet
2:24:30
that out, toot it out or exit out, whatever
2:24:32
it's called these days. And thank you again for
2:24:34
becoming knight and dame of the No
2:24:37
Agenda
2:24:37
Roundtable. In
2:24:46
these weird days of the apocalypse,
2:24:49
as the rapture comes closer, we
2:24:52
need protection. And you get that
2:24:54
by connection. And where do you find that? Through
2:24:56
No Agenda Nation, of course. And
2:24:59
we've seen you on No Agenda Social. We see you
2:25:01
on the multiple telegram groups. But once
2:25:03
in a while, it's good to get together,
2:25:06
hang out together, at a meet up. You
2:25:09
really need to try this out. It's, it's,
2:25:12
what are you drinking? Oh,
2:25:14
this today's beverage
2:25:17
of choice is Pellegrino
2:25:19
Essenza. Essenza. With
2:25:21
pink grapefruit and citrus
2:25:23
blend flavored mineral water. You
2:25:25
should, all you need to do is snort some meat glue
2:25:27
and you're good to go with that stuff. Lovely.
2:25:31
So a No Agenda meetup
2:25:33
is, is easily found at noagendameetups.com.
2:25:36
It's also easily created there.
2:25:38
This is what's so cool. You can create one.
2:25:40
You know, you go to a bar, you say, Hey, I'm gonna have a couple
2:25:43
of people hang out. You print out some heads,
2:25:46
Adam and John heads. You put them on sticks. You
2:25:48
put them on some cardboard. I think there's
2:25:50
a handy kit on noagendameetups.com
2:25:52
as well, where you can acquire the, I
2:25:55
think so. If not, it should be. We
2:25:56
can print it. Yes. A meetup
2:25:59
kit. Ooh, that's a good idea. Isn't
2:26:03
there one already? Don't they have a... I don't
2:26:05
know. I don't go to that site. No
2:26:07
agenda. Meetups. Meetups.com.
2:26:09
One of the great websites
2:26:12
that we've developed through our associates. Yes.
2:26:15
Let me see. Find a meetup. Submit
2:26:17
a meetup. Support the site. Support
2:26:19
the
2:26:20
show. Maybe not. Well,
2:26:22
it's... Bill, we'll have to discuss this. No resources.
2:26:25
Here we go. How do I edit them? Mm-hmm.
2:26:28
Heads on sticks. Heads on sticks. Oh,
2:26:30
heads on sticks. Heads on sticks. With
2:26:33
multiple choices and multiple sizes
2:26:35
in PNG, JPEG, and PDF. Nice.
2:26:40
I knew it was there. Sir Daniel,
2:26:42
he's fantastic. No meetups
2:26:45
coming up before the next show, which doesn't
2:26:47
happen very often. We do have
2:26:49
a number of meetups
2:26:50
happening around the world
2:26:52
in the next month. We've got Cordelene,
2:26:56
Idaho, on the 12th. Let me see. We've
2:26:58
got Lowland Crooked Rhine on the 12th. We've
2:27:01
got Rippin,
2:27:04
California, San Marcos, Wauwatosa,
2:27:07
Wisconsin. We've got Rhode Island,
2:27:10
Huntsville, Alabama. I'm just reading the... Kaiser's,
2:27:12
Laotian, Germany. What happened to Mr. Rhino the Bearded?
2:27:14
Well,
2:27:16
he still does the Double O Show, as far as I
2:27:18
know. Is he still around? I
2:27:20
hope. Yeah. Medford
2:27:23
Lake, New Jersey. I see Konya Turkey,
2:27:25
August 27th. Konya Turkey.
2:27:28
What ever happened to the Garland family
2:27:30
up there in Port Angeles that used to send us the
2:27:32
Lemonada or whatever is a lemon... Oh,
2:27:35
Elise Garland? Yeah,
2:27:36
Elise. The Limoncello. In particular.
2:27:38
The Limoncello. Yeah, Limoncello. The
2:27:41
whole family was big supporters of the show. They hate us. They
2:27:43
got so tired of your grousing, they just
2:27:45
left the show.
2:27:48
They're probably listening. They're probably still listening.
2:27:51
They've just forgotten. I'm doubting it. No,
2:27:53
they have other things to do, but they listen. People
2:27:55
always check in. Once you've
2:27:57
had a taste of No Agenda, you can't really...
2:27:59
get rid of it. Isn't it? You
2:28:02
can't. No, you can't. It's just lingers.
2:28:04
It's like an out of
2:28:06
here. It's stuck to you like meat glue.
2:28:09
Oh, I do have a meetup report
2:28:11
actually from Kansas City. Hey, Noah
2:28:13
Ginanation, Sir Spencer Wolfe of Kansas City here
2:28:16
at the Olathe meetup where the whole crew is back
2:28:18
together again. Olathe. Olathe. Olathe.
2:28:20
I don't know. Kansas. Hey, John Adam, this
2:28:23
is Sir Baron John Helmer from the Olathe
2:28:26
meetup in Kansas City. Olathe.
2:28:28
Wishing you all the best in the
2:28:30
morning. This
2:28:31
is Kevin from Omaha at the Olathe
2:28:34
potato chip meetup in La Manana. Olathe,
2:28:36
Kansas. In the morning, this is Dame
2:28:39
Lizardi and Matt the Metal Bender from Southeast
2:28:41
Kansas where we enjoy the chicken
2:28:43
tumors. Hey, it is Andrew, Amanda, Caden
2:28:45
and Benji in the morning.
2:28:47
Sir C-Mike and Dame Blackhammer here
2:28:49
hitting people in the mouth while they're eating. It's
2:28:52
kind of messy. In the morning. In
2:28:54
the morning. Dame DeLorean here.
2:28:56
Hey, Hap, tell them where we really are.
2:28:58
Right here in Olathe.
2:29:02
People love it when we mispronounce everything. I saw
2:29:04
a picture of this meetup. I think Dame Blackhammer
2:29:08
had her had her boob out and was breastfeeding
2:29:10
one of her nine human resources.
2:29:12
It was just like she probably
2:29:15
has her boobs out a lot. It
2:29:18
was just so beautiful because everyone's just
2:29:20
hanging out, having a good time. It's like no big
2:29:22
deal. I love that. It
2:29:24
was so no agenda. I think
2:29:27
it was her. I'm not sure. C-Mike is
2:29:29
in the
2:29:30
in the troll room. He'll let me know if that
2:29:32
was her or was it Dame DeLorean. Who knows? You
2:29:35
know what? You go to no agenda meetup,
2:29:38
you never know who's going to hang out a boob.
2:29:42
For good reason. For very good reason.
2:29:44
Exactly. Oh, that was DeLorean.
2:29:46
It was DeLorean. DeLorean. All right,
2:29:48
DeLorean. Good on you. Excellent.
2:29:52
So do you want some of that? Find
2:29:54
a no agenda meetup. Noagendameetups.com.
2:29:57
If you can't
2:29:57
find one near you, start one. It's easy. and
2:30:00
always a party. Sometimes you want
2:30:02
to go hang out with all the
2:30:05
nights and days. You
2:30:08
want to be where you want me. Triggered
2:30:11
or held to blame. You
2:30:13
want to be where everybody feels
2:30:16
the same.
2:30:25
I have too many ISOs and I don't
2:30:27
think they're all great.
2:30:31
I'm going to start playing them. Okay, here we go.
2:30:33
This cannot go on indefinitely.
2:30:37
What? But you couldn't hear
2:30:39
it? This cannot go
2:30:41
on indefinitely. On
2:30:46
indefinitely, yeah. Yeah, okay. That's
2:30:48
actually pretty decent. Yeah, well, she's
2:30:50
had... Claire Daly has such clarity.
2:30:54
It's always amazing. Here's my next one.
2:30:57
It's fascinating. No, it's no good. I don't like
2:30:59
that one. Here's a contender. I
2:31:01
wish I could have been to Epstein's Island.
2:31:05
Yeah. This one I kind
2:31:07
of like. Bye. Bye. Bye.
2:31:10
Bye. I
2:31:12
like it. It's a stereo. Yeah, it's a good stereo
2:31:15
effect. And then
2:31:18
this is more a tribute than anything. Well,
2:31:21
goodbye. Aw. Yeah.
2:31:26
All right, I got three. Oh. Boy,
2:31:29
you came loaded for bear. Well, the first one
2:31:31
is... This categorizes
2:31:34
under Alex Jones. This is where he
2:31:36
says high fives. High five, high five, high
2:31:38
five.
2:31:39
Okay.
2:31:42
And then we have... Now, this is an interesting
2:31:44
one. This is an ISO. This
2:31:48
is from a movie. Jean Harlow
2:31:51
from a movie. And here's what she says. In
2:31:53
the morning? In
2:31:56
the morning? Okay.
2:31:59
Yeah. Well, I just, I
2:32:01
don't know how to fit into anything. And here we
2:32:03
have, last one is having us. Thank you for having us.
2:32:05
Hi, thank you for having us. Ooh,
2:32:08
close one with my bye-bye-bye stereo.
2:32:12
Which I thought the problem is this, I'm always
2:32:14
gonna cave to the stereo. Yeah,
2:32:17
that's not a problem. Bye.
2:32:18
Bye. Bye. Yeah,
2:32:20
no, that's just dynamite. Yeah, no, okay, done.
2:32:23
Consider that. Yeah, no. Yeah, no, everybody, yeah, no. And
2:32:25
now, ladies and gentlemen,
2:32:27
the moment you've all been waiting for, the
2:32:29
gay stuff. So
2:32:34
there was on a rundown
2:32:37
on... We promise we deliver.
2:32:40
This is a discussion of the biography,
2:32:43
I think it came out in 2017 of Obama, that
2:32:46
nobody paid any attention to, which pretty
2:32:49
much, and I think this was planted,
2:32:51
this whole situation that you're gonna listen
2:32:54
to. Because I think they're trying to push
2:32:56
Obama out, because Obama's so knee
2:32:58
deep with Biden, he still lives in Washington,
2:33:00
D.C., which no president
2:33:02
ever does.
2:33:04
They always move out of the town. Can
2:33:07
I make an observation why someone
2:33:09
would want to take down Obama right now?
2:33:12
I'm sure it's gonna be the same observation
2:33:14
I have, yes. So that he doesn't get
2:33:16
any ideas about Michelle running?
2:33:18
Ah, I guess that wasn't my idea,
2:33:21
I think. That's my idea. Funny.
2:33:25
So this guy wrote a book, this David
2:33:28
Garo, who is his biographer,
2:33:31
and his book is 1,472
2:33:34
pages,
2:33:34
which
2:33:37
came out in 2017, nobody read
2:33:39
it. Right.
2:33:40
It's too big. Also, but
2:33:43
so they're starting to go over it now, and I'm thinking,
2:33:45
this looks like part of the anti-Biden
2:33:48
op. And there's some good
2:33:50
stuff in here, and here's a couple of clips I picked
2:33:53
up off of the
2:33:54
trial
2:33:58
show on Oh, Frau Fox. Frau
2:34:01
Abraham, but she wasn't on. It was another guy
2:34:04
substituting.
2:34:05
And this was written for him. This
2:34:07
is
2:34:08
the Obama biographer tidbits.
2:34:11
Oh, tidbits. Examine
2:34:13
the truly unbelievable contents inside
2:34:16
this biography. The details
2:34:18
range from first salacious.
2:34:21
This is the biographer saying in this interview, quote,
2:34:24
he's not normal, meaning Obama's not normal, as
2:34:26
in not a normal politician or not
2:34:28
a normal human being. Here's
2:34:31
another one. Obama reportedly wrote a
2:34:33
letter to a girlfriend, quote,
2:34:35
about he repeatedly fantasizes
2:34:37
about making love to men. And
2:34:40
Geralt recounts that
2:34:42
Barack once said to him that the only
2:34:44
two things he wanted were a valet
2:34:47
and an airplane.
2:34:49
Oh, I believe that last part. Well,
2:34:52
I believe all of it. Oh,
2:34:57
how interesting. Okay, this is the
2:34:59
Obama. This is the gay stuff. That
2:35:02
was the gay stuff. Now we're going to get into the just
2:35:04
kind of the general stuff. And they brought in our
2:35:07
everybody's friend. And I can't watch
2:35:09
him much as Victor David Hanson, the
2:35:11
guy at the Hoover Institute. Yeah. Why
2:35:14
is it? Why is it? I'll tell
2:35:16
you why. Nerves. What is
2:35:19
it? Mostly like Tommy Smothers. Oh,
2:35:22
yeah, that's why he bothers me. Of course, I should have
2:35:24
known. So I look at
2:35:26
him, I go, that's Tommy Smothers. And so he's doing
2:35:28
this very deep analysis. He's always
2:35:31
deadpan, just like Tommy Smothers. Without
2:35:33
stick.
2:35:34
With no humor. With no stick. Humorless
2:35:36
Tommy Smothers.
2:35:38
So but in this case,
2:35:40
it's pretty good material.
2:35:42
Victor Davis Hanson, senior fellow at the Hoover
2:35:44
Institution, joins me now. Victor, help me connect
2:35:47
some of these dots. Amazing
2:35:49
revelations by this biographer who
2:35:52
knows Obama probably better than the
2:35:54
vast majority of people. But
2:35:56
it ultimately does come. It's still relevant today
2:35:59
that Obama.
2:35:59
Obama's behind the scenes affecting a
2:36:02
lot of this. Yeah, I think the biographer David
2:36:04
Garrell knows more about Obama's pre-presidential
2:36:07
life than anybody alive. And the
2:36:09
one common theme is that these
2:36:12
astounding revelations that the
2:36:14
dreams from my father quote unquote memoir
2:36:16
was completely fabricated. Almost
2:36:19
nothing in it is accurate. It
2:36:21
could only happen in America with this media
2:36:23
that never investigated, never even interviewed
2:36:26
some of the key people in Obama's
2:36:28
life until Garrell did. And then
2:36:30
he's trying to look back at the
2:36:32
Obama presidency, which he didn't really write about.
2:36:34
He wrote about the early
2:36:36
years or the maturing years of Obama.
2:36:39
And he comes to the conclusion that everything
2:36:41
he was worried about in the biography was reified
2:36:44
in the presidency. And he says it was a complete failure.
2:36:47
That he looks at the red line in Syria
2:36:49
that he didn't honor, that destroyed deterrence. The
2:36:52
Iran deal that was designed to weaken
2:36:54
Israel and our Middle East friends in the
2:36:56
Gulf at the benefit of
2:36:58
the Shia crescent. And
2:37:01
again, when you look at the Ukraine
2:37:03
matter, he suggests that the problem we're having with
2:37:06
Ukraine right now started. And he was absolutely
2:37:08
right. In 2014, when
2:37:10
they gobbled up, they, the Russians and Putin
2:37:12
gobbled up the borderlands in Crimea. And
2:37:15
Obama not only had not done anything, but
2:37:17
he had an earlier and a hot mic in Seoul and
2:37:20
said, if Vladimir will give me space,
2:37:22
i.e. behave during my reelection,
2:37:25
I'll be flexible on missile defense, which he did
2:37:27
do and cancel. So the
2:37:29
theme of it
2:37:29
is that there were character flaws
2:37:32
in Obama that he had written about that nobody
2:37:34
else had written about. And he paid a price. He's
2:37:37
ostracized now by his friends
2:37:39
on the left, but they all explain
2:37:41
these sort of bizarre things that happened during
2:37:43
the Obama presidency. And you're quite
2:37:45
right. And he charged the beginning of
2:37:47
the entire security state,
2:37:49
the weaponization of the DOJ, indeed
2:37:52
the creation of the whole
2:37:55
Russian collusion hoax right in
2:37:57
the West Wing when Brennan
2:37:59
and people like
2:37:59
Clapper were briefing Obama as well
2:38:02
as people in the DOJ and he
2:38:04
approved what they were doing.
2:38:06
When was this interview? When was this piece
2:38:08
with Victor David Hanson? Friday?
2:38:14
That was what day is Friday? Friday
2:38:16
was the fourth? Yes,
2:38:19
no, the third. I'm going
2:38:21
to go out on a limb. I'm
2:38:23
going to call plagiarism on the professor.
2:38:26
I'm going to call plagiarism. Oh,
2:38:29
okay. Well, I'll just read it. I didn't put
2:38:32
that into the, I should have put that in, but no,
2:38:53
there's no plagiarism here because they're doing pretty
2:38:55
much what we do. The interview took place
2:38:58
on the second with Garo and
2:39:00
then these two guys are yakking about it. Okay.
2:39:03
So I will read a pertinent piece from this
2:39:05
interview, which I have prepared
2:39:07
because my buddy Dave Jones sent it to me.
2:39:09
Obama didn't invent any of this stuff.
2:39:11
He was just a wounded kid trying to figure out
2:39:13
his own place in the world and get ahead. Still
2:39:16
looking back, it's hard to avoid the sense that Obama
2:39:18
himself was exceptional. He was the guy
2:39:20
chosen by history to put something in the American
2:39:23
goldfish bowl that made all the fish
2:39:25
go crazy and eat each other. America's
2:39:27
emerging oligarchy, cementing its grip
2:39:29
instead of going bust. The rise of
2:39:32
monopoly internet platforms, the
2:39:34
normalization of government spying on Americans,
2:39:37
race relations going south, skyrocketing
2:39:40
inequality, the rise of Donald Trump,
2:39:42
the birth of Russia gate. It all happened
2:39:45
with Obama in the White House.
2:39:48
So that's what you get if you
2:39:50
deconstruct. Now the no agenda show always
2:39:53
goes one step further.
2:39:55
You won't get this anywhere.
2:39:59
Then Victor. David Hanson was correct, that
2:40:03
David Garo knows more about Obama
2:40:06
pre-presidency
2:40:08
than anyone alive. Because
2:40:11
the guy who knows the most about Obama
2:40:14
is Larry Sinclair.
2:40:16
And Larry Sinclair testified,
2:40:18
wrote a book,
2:40:20
was very public
2:40:22
about his gay encounters with Obama,
2:40:25
and I pulled the clip. On November 6, 1999, after
2:40:28
picking me up at the hotel in Gurney, and this
2:40:30
is significant, Mr. Mootonny
2:40:33
used his cell phone to make a call. That
2:40:35
call was made to then Illinois State Senator
2:40:37
Barack Obama to set up an
2:40:39
introduction between myself and Senator Obama.
2:40:43
Upon arriving at the bar and exiting the limo,
2:40:45
Senator Obama was standing next to Mr.
2:40:47
Mootonny and I was introduced to Senator
2:40:50
Obama by name. After
2:40:52
that evening in a bar which I believe
2:40:55
was called Alibi's, and
2:40:57
my state believed because I have failed
2:40:59
so far to get Citigroup to provide the
2:41:02
credit card receipts that has the actual name. I
2:41:07
mentioned I could use a line or two to wake up. Senator
2:41:10
Obama asked me if I was referring to Coke and I stated
2:41:13
I was. After stating
2:41:15
I was, Obama stated he could purchase cocaine
2:41:17
from me and then made a telephone call. This
2:41:20
tool is significant from a cell phone to
2:41:23
a presently unknown individual during which Senator
2:41:25
Obama arranged the cocaine purchase. Senator
2:41:30
Obama and I then departed the bar in my limousine and
2:41:32
proceeded to an unknown location where
2:41:34
Senator Obama exited the limousine with $250 which was
2:41:36
provided to him by me. Returned
2:41:41
a short while later with an eight ball of cocaine
2:41:43
which he gave to me. I did
2:41:46
ingest a couple of lines of cocaine and shortly
2:41:48
thereafter Senator Obama produced a glass cylinder
2:41:50
pipe and packet of crack cocaine from his pocket.
2:41:54
Obama then smoked the crack cocaine. I
2:41:56
performed fellatio on Senator Obama and the limousine
2:41:59
during the time Senator Obama Senator Obama was smoking crack
2:42:01
cocaine, after which I had
2:42:03
the driver take me to my hotel, the Comfort
2:42:05
Suites, Gurney, Illinois. The
2:42:08
following day, November 7th, 1999, Senator
2:42:11
Obama appeared at my hotel room, unannounced,
2:42:14
uninvited, where we again ingested
2:42:17
cocaine and I again performed filletion, Senator
2:42:19
Obama.
2:42:21
And so there's a couple of things
2:42:23
to associate with Joe Biden. Blow
2:42:26
would be one, with
2:42:28
the hunter,
2:42:30
if we're talking about a takedown. And I still
2:42:32
think that, you know, just to make sure no
2:42:34
one gets any crazy ideas about Michelle,
2:42:37
let's just throw that in there.
2:42:40
And now we need the Rahm Emanuel
2:42:43
rumors to come back and this
2:42:45
is a very salacious moment in media history.
2:42:48
Well, it's not as salacious as it
2:42:51
could be. Oh?
2:42:55
Well, I mean, this is our show bringing
2:42:57
up some old clips and the
2:43:00
moment on the Frau Ingraham
2:43:02
show that they discuss it a little
2:43:05
bit and they talk about Garo and Garo's
2:43:07
interview, which is on a tablet
2:43:09
magazine site, I guess. Yeah, I have
2:43:11
it in the show notes, actually,
2:43:13
for handy access. So people should go to that. Yeah,
2:43:15
yeah, for sure.
2:43:18
All right. Yes, I have a couple
2:43:20
of things that I wanted to
2:43:23
discuss. I've been on the Alpha Gal beat.
2:43:26
Yes, I've been on the Alpha
2:43:29
Gal beat and as have many of our producers,
2:43:31
thank you, producers.
2:43:33
This is the, all of a sudden, out
2:43:35
of nowhere, we get ticks, ticks. The
2:43:38
Lone Star Tick, hello, Texas. The Lone
2:43:41
Star Tick is making you allergic to meat.
2:43:44
All kinds of meat except for chicken, so mammalian
2:43:47
meat. And the
2:43:49
most interesting of all the stories I've
2:43:51
received have been multiple
2:43:53
stories from House
2:43:57
of Representatives orders Pentagon to... review
2:44:00
if it exposed Americans to weaponized
2:44:03
ticks. Counterpunch.org.
2:44:07
Lyme disease and bio warfare.
2:44:13
Then we have
2:44:17
AlphaGal. Now, AlphaGal
2:44:19
has
2:44:20
been reported in 17 countries, all
2:44:24
six continents, where humans have been
2:44:26
bitten by ticks,
2:44:28
particularly the United States and Australia.
2:44:31
And lo and behold, we're
2:44:33
blanketing Australia with this news
2:44:35
as well. Here's ABC Sydney
2:44:38
radio.
2:44:38
Thanks, Wendy. There's Wendy Harmer. You know that
2:44:40
voice. And yeah, she was alerting me to this story
2:44:42
of just how many ticks there are. Sharon says,
2:44:45
please get your animal protected.
2:44:47
Jen has never had a tick bite. Is it like
2:44:50
a mozzie bite? How do you know? Well, as Wendy said,
2:44:52
it's very itchy. And
2:44:54
we need to take them seriously. Joanne
2:44:56
Manley says her daughter got five earlier this
2:44:58
year on the northern beaches and is now
2:45:00
anaphylactic and allergic to
2:45:03
red meat. Real and serious long-term
2:45:05
consequences. Terry and Avalon,
2:45:07
you've got the same problem,
2:45:08
a meat allergy from ticks.
2:45:10
Yeah, that's right. So when
2:45:13
did you get tick attacked and when did
2:45:15
the allergy come on? So
2:45:18
the ticks were March
2:45:20
this year. The allergy came on
2:45:22
about six weeks later.
2:45:24
Yeah, and I know there's an expert in
2:45:26
this who really discovered this in terms
2:45:28
of them being in Sydney, that it can make you
2:45:30
allergic to meat.
2:45:32
Absolutely, and I can attest
2:45:34
to that. Yeah. About
2:45:36
six weeks later, I
2:45:38
was having a meal as
2:45:41
normal. Two hours later, found
2:45:43
myself lying on the bathroom floor with massive
2:45:46
stomach pains and nausea. Lasted
2:45:48
for about four hours and
2:45:51
just thought it was something to do with the meal. That
2:45:54
meal was lamb. The next
2:45:56
night, I had a chicken meal, no problems
2:45:58
at all. The following night... tacos with
2:46:01
beef and had
2:46:03
exactly the same problem as I had with the land. So it's red
2:46:05
meat. Thought that there might be a bit of a problem coming on
2:46:07
here. So I ate chicken again
2:46:09
the night after and no problems. Went
2:46:11
to the doctor. He sent me off for
2:46:13
a blood test. The blood test looks
2:46:16
for a chemical,
2:46:20
something that happens with the proteins called alpha gall
2:46:23
and it determined that I
2:46:25
had an allergy to mammalian
2:46:27
meat.
2:46:28
Yeah. Well, you
2:46:30
are one of many. Thank you so much,
2:46:32
Terry. You
2:46:35
have chicken and veg from now on. These
2:46:38
are the consequences for some of being
2:46:40
attacked by ticks.
2:46:41
Chickens and veg. So
2:46:45
this article in 2019 is in The Guardian
2:46:48
and it was a representative
2:46:51
from New Jersey,
2:46:53
Chris Smith, who actually
2:46:56
put an amendment into the National Defense Authorization
2:46:58
Act, which I don't think made it through, to
2:47:01
have the Inspector General
2:47:03
conduct a review of whether the US experimented
2:47:05
with ticks as biological weapons.
2:47:09
The amendment
2:47:11
was inspired by a number of books and articles
2:47:13
suggesting significant research had been done
2:47:15
at US facilities, including our
2:47:17
favorites, John Ford Dietrich, Maryland
2:47:19
and Plum Island, New York, to turn ticks into
2:47:22
bio weapons.
2:47:24
A book published in May
2:47:26
of 2019 by Stanford University science
2:47:28
writer and former Lyme sufferer, Chris
2:47:31
Newby,
2:47:32
raised questions about the origin of disease.
2:47:34
And of course, there's the book, The Secret History
2:47:36
of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons,
2:47:39
that cites the Swiss-born discoverer of
2:47:41
the Lyme pathogen, Willy Bergdorfer,
2:47:43
saying the Lyme epidemic
2:47:46
was a military experiment that had gone wrong.
2:47:50
And as we've mentioned on this show,
2:47:52
we have people living there. And
2:47:55
one of our producers said that everyone
2:47:58
near Plum Island knows.
2:47:59
knows this to be true. Now
2:48:02
listen to this doctor who's on the same ABC
2:48:04
Sydney radio show talk about all the
2:48:06
issues, not just the meat allergy,
2:48:09
but all the issues from this tick
2:48:11
bite. A malee in meat allergies are becoming
2:48:14
incredibly common. And Cheryl Van Noone
2:48:16
in Sydney discovered the alpha-gal test. And
2:48:19
I'm picking it up at least two or
2:48:21
three a month at the moment.
2:48:22
Two or three a month, like our last caller. Two or
2:48:24
three a month, yes. And apart
2:48:27
from that, you've got infections such as
2:48:29
spotted fever, rickettsias, which is an
2:48:32
acute illness. And then you've got a whole range
2:48:34
of chronic illnesses following
2:48:36
tick bites, including chronic fatigue
2:48:38
syndrome, neurological disorders, autoimmune
2:48:41
disease. And some people even seem
2:48:43
to have a chronic stealth infection. A
2:48:46
stealth infection? Stealth infection
2:48:48
where the infection is in your body and
2:48:50
it's disrupting function, causing inflammation,
2:48:52
but you can't find exactly what it
2:48:54
is. How about a binary
2:48:57
weapon, John? Binary in
2:49:00
that the alpha-gal is injected
2:49:02
into you as an adjuvant for
2:49:04
a vaccine,
2:49:06
and then they release the ticks.
2:49:12
Well, a couple of things here. One,
2:49:14
what are the ticks? What are these weaponized
2:49:18
ticks? And by the way, one of these days,
2:49:20
they've got to track down some
2:49:22
of these scientists and literally
2:49:24
string them up. Yeah,
2:49:28
that would be a good start, it seems.
2:49:30
They need to find these
2:49:33
people and kill them,
2:49:35
and kill them again. How
2:49:38
did these ticks get to Australia in the
2:49:40
first place unless somebody brought them there?
2:49:44
And why aren't the Australians a little irked
2:49:46
about it? It's not a tick cannot
2:49:48
get from Connecticut to
2:49:51
Australia.
2:49:54
By wind or storms. Or,
2:49:57
I mean, I suppose they could, if somebody...
2:49:59
lets their pets go to
2:50:02
from Connecticut they have a bunch they visit it
2:50:04
would still take years to develop enough of a
2:50:06
tick population to have
2:50:08
any effect like this did they
2:50:11
brought a bunch of weaponized ticks over there
2:50:13
somebody did must be
2:50:15
must be
2:50:18
well while we're on weaponization
2:50:21
did you see any of the any of the
2:50:24
Australian Senate I
2:50:26
did not growing the Pfizer
2:50:28
guys yeah it was pretty no but that's got
2:50:30
to be rich yeah I have a couple clips here
2:50:32
let me see
2:50:35
so this is the Australian Australian
2:50:37
senator he's grilling the first the TGA
2:50:39
the therapeutic
2:50:42
goods administration so that's
2:50:44
like the FDA in Australia about
2:50:46
that about the numbers you know about the
2:50:49
about how many people
2:50:51
have had a vaccine adverse
2:50:54
event event based
2:50:58
upon the Pfizer mRNA
2:51:01
vaccine thank you for appearing today a recent
2:51:04
peer reviewed paper in the establishment scientific
2:51:06
journal vaccine examined Pfizer's covert
2:51:09
vaccine randomized phase three
2:51:11
clinical trials data it
2:51:14
used the Pfizer's own data and
2:51:16
trial it used the World Health Organization
2:51:19
framework made for this purpose the Brighton collaboration
2:51:21
on adverse events of special interest
2:51:24
so this is all about the numbers authors
2:51:26
include using Pfizer's own data that's
2:51:28
that's important here Brighton collaboration
2:51:30
on adverse events of special interest
2:51:33
authors included virology and pharmacology
2:51:35
experts from UCLA Stanford University
2:51:37
of Baltimore Queensland's Bond University the
2:51:40
paper concluded that Pfizer's
2:51:42
vaccine its injection was associated
2:51:45
with 36% increase
2:51:47
in serious adverse events the most
2:51:49
common were coagulation disorders including
2:51:52
thrombosis and acute cardiac injury
2:51:54
in every 10,000 people injected 18 that's
2:51:58
two in a thousand
2:51:59
will experience a life-threatening or altering
2:52:02
medical complication. Serious
2:52:04
adverse events from Pfizer's COVID vaccine
2:52:06
are four times higher than any benefit from the vaccine
2:52:09
and reduced hospitalisation. The paper
2:52:11
said the product should never have been approved.
2:52:14
These world-leading virologists spent 18 months
2:52:17
reviewing the Pfizer patient-level
2:52:19
data and peer-reviewing their paper. The
2:52:21
department reviewed the data in a matter of weeks and
2:52:23
made a finding that is the reverse of this paper's
2:52:25
findings. Who got it wrong? These
2:52:28
world-leading virologists or
2:52:29
the advisory panel? The politically compromised
2:52:32
advisory panel. Who got it wrong? So
2:52:36
of course the TGA who approved
2:52:39
this vaccine for Australia
2:52:41
went, no man, no
2:52:43
man, you got your numbers wrong man, you said the wrong
2:52:46
time man, no man, it's not right man.
2:52:48
It's what? What you say, one in two thousand? No man.
2:52:51
The TGA undertakes a number
2:52:54
of actions to
2:52:56
ensure the safety, efficacy and quality
2:52:59
of the medications
2:52:59
that are entered on the Australian Register of
2:53:02
Therapeutic Goods. These include obviously
2:53:04
pre-market assessment and
2:53:06
you would be fully aware I'm sure Senator of the provisional
2:53:09
approval pathway that was undertaken for these
2:53:11
vaccines but also we undertake significant
2:53:13
pharmacovigilance activities in the post-market
2:53:15
surveillance. This includes being
2:53:18
fully aware of and apprised of literature,
2:53:20
of varying levels
2:53:23
of scientific rigour and
2:53:25
incorporating those into our post-market surveillance
2:53:28
as we search for signals but it also includes
2:53:30
our significantly well-developed and well-subscribed
2:53:33
reporting of adverse event process in Australia.
2:53:37
To the 23rd of July 2023 there have been 139,270 adverse event
2:53:39
reports for COVID-19 vaccines which
2:53:46
gives us a rate of 2 per 100,000.
2:53:59
These leading scientists are no good.
2:54:02
And then the guy throws
2:54:04
this in their face. You're talking about the TGA. Professor
2:54:07
Scarrett, as I understand it, admitted in answering
2:54:10
a question of mine in the last Senate estimate sessions
2:54:12
that the TGA did no testing and relied on
2:54:15
the FDA. The FDA in turn,
2:54:17
I'm advised, did no testing
2:54:19
and relied on Pfizer's trials, the
2:54:22
same trials that I
2:54:24
just discussed. And what scientific basis
2:54:28
did you mandate the untested injections? And Professor
2:54:30
Scarrett said they didn't do it because
2:54:33
the FDA has $8 billion
2:54:36
in budget and annual budget
2:54:39
and 15,000 employees. So you relied on the FDA. The FDA relied
2:54:42
on Pfizer. So then no
2:54:45
one in the TGA as I understand it
2:54:47
reviewed the patient level data. So
2:54:51
I'll start, Senator, just by saying that I'm not in a
2:54:53
position to answer for Professor Scarrett.
2:54:57
There was a question in the middle that I understood
2:54:59
to be on what basis did we mandate the
2:55:01
vaccinations. Is that correct?
2:55:02
No, I didn't say that. Sorry, I misheard then. I'm
2:55:05
sorry if I said that. What basis
2:55:07
did you provisionally approve? Okay, thank
2:55:10
you and apologies for misunderstanding,
2:55:12
Senator. So as
2:55:16
you be aware, the Therapeutic Goods Administration
2:55:18
does have the responsibility for assessing
2:55:21
and approving medications to
2:55:23
go on to the Australian Thera- register of therapeutic
2:55:26
goods. You get the idea. No
2:55:28
answer. So what he says is, hey, you
2:55:30
guys just approved it because the FDA approved
2:55:32
and the FDA approved it because Pfizer said
2:55:35
it was good.
2:55:37
Pathetic.
2:55:40
Now this is one clip which is circulating. I
2:55:42
haven't had time because they also questioned
2:55:44
some of the Pfizer people themselves through
2:55:46
a zoom call.
2:55:48
It's only 17 seconds. So very
2:55:51
suspicious. Every copy of it is cut
2:55:53
off at the same moment. But
2:55:55
I like the general premise. Your vaccine
2:55:58
mandate was using your own bad. of
2:56:00
vaccine especially imported for Pfizer
2:56:02
which was not tested by the TGA, is that
2:56:04
correct? Senator,
2:56:07
so Pfizer undertook to import
2:56:09
Pfizer vaccine specifically for the employee
2:56:12
vaccination program.
2:56:15
Yeah, so Pfizer got their own version
2:56:17
of the vaccine for their own employees.
2:56:20
That's the implication, but I'm suspicious
2:56:22
because this clip is circulating it's
2:56:24
all- Yeah, I understand. Now something
2:56:26
back home here for us
2:56:29
in the United States. Fauci
2:56:31
as we know is out. We have a new shill
2:56:34
coming in. New shill, new shill.
2:56:36
A new Fauci- Is this COVID, Karen?
2:56:38
Yeah. As Fauci
2:56:39
steps aside, a new top dog is entering
2:56:42
the fray. Director of the Division of Infectious
2:56:44
Diseases at the University of Alabama at
2:56:46
Birmingham, Jean Murazzo
2:56:49
will become the new head of the National Institute of Allergy
2:56:51
and Infectious Diseases beginning this fall,
2:56:53
replacing Dr. Anthony Fauci who held
2:56:56
the position for the last 40 years.
2:56:57
Murazzo has been described by critics
2:56:59
as fanatical and an outspoken supporter of
2:57:01
the COVID lockdown policy and mandates.
2:57:04
Check out this super cut from Tech
2:57:06
Judge. Please
2:57:06
consider wearing a mask when
2:57:09
you go out. You don't need to wear one
2:57:11
when you're at home. Masks in
2:57:13
young people going to school
2:57:15
over the age of six. All the things we've
2:57:18
been talking about, mask wearing,
2:57:20
hand hygiene and social distancing.
2:57:22
Masks have contributed to the control
2:57:25
of this pandemic in other communities.
2:57:28
Even mask wearing, except when you're eating,
2:57:30
you can prevent it with very good
2:57:32
masks. Three basic rules.
2:57:36
Wear a mask,
2:57:36
make sure you wash your hands frequently
2:57:39
or use hand sanitizer and
2:57:41
keep your distance. There
2:57:43
you go. She said COVID Karen.
2:57:46
That's pretty funny. Matt
2:57:48
was calling her COVID Karen. Really, mask up Maggie
2:57:50
is what I'd call her. And she also
2:57:52
was really big in the
2:57:55
HIV
2:57:57
days in Africa and stuff. Even
2:58:00
though Foushee says, oh, I don't know her. I don't
2:58:02
know her. I don't know her. I don't know her at all I have no idea
2:58:04
what she is
2:58:06
So she should be a dude She
2:58:08
should be a joy a joy to have
2:58:11
running our health health system
2:58:13
our infectious disease system You
2:58:16
know, I put the spotlight back on the public
2:58:18
health officials who yeah, but got
2:58:20
it got away without too much injury But
2:58:23
now this could be worse
2:58:25
Yeah You know rat
2:58:27
poop inspectors All
2:58:31
right, you got it. I mean I've I've got
2:58:33
just one thing I want to read but I can do
2:58:35
that on the next show If it was see we're about what is
2:58:37
it? It's you know, David Grush
2:58:39
the whistleblower
2:58:41
From the UFO hearing
2:58:43
the UAP hearing
2:58:46
in You know that he's talking about
2:58:49
the biologics non-human
2:58:51
biologics that guy this that the
2:58:53
the spook
2:58:55
Yeah, that guy his closing statement
2:58:57
was not aired It
2:58:59
was submitted in writing only I
2:59:03
mean, I kind of wanted to read it Because
2:59:05
I want you read that and we'll close the show with it. Okay
2:59:08
fair enough Closing
2:59:10
statement. Here we go. It is with a heavy
2:59:12
heart. I Need some music
2:59:14
really for this don't I don't need some since
2:59:17
it's a
2:59:20
We see music I don't
2:59:22
know if that's gonna work for me I
2:59:26
can play sad this is sad as I can get Now
2:59:33
I got something better
2:59:36
It is with a heavy heart and a determined
2:59:39
spirit That I stand
2:59:41
under oath before you today having made
2:59:43
the decision based on the data I collected
2:59:48
And reported
2:59:49
no, no, I like it it makes it sound like he's an
2:59:51
alien
2:59:52
I have to loop it though because it's only a
2:59:54
few it's only a couple seconds.
2:59:57
Can I loop it? I don't think I can
2:59:59
loop it
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