1773 - "Two Beards"
"Two Beards"
Executive Producers:
Dame Deanna Beacon of Good Hart
Sir Erik the Unfiltered of Good Hart
Sam Hamade
Troy Walters
Sir Chris of Billerica
Sir Tified Maverick of the Peaks and Polders
Baronetess Kelly
Amzi Meier
Associate Executive Producers:
Angel Young
Sir Stuart
Daniela Pompeu
Sir Donald of Calgary
Anonymous Spirit of the Northwood's Smokin' hot wife
Amy Lynn
Jen the Coffee lady
Sir "Mountain Man" of the Big Sky
Linda Lu—Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes
PhD's:
Erik Bauss
Deanna Bauss
Sam Hamade
Troy Walters
Chris Kearns
Joep van der Put
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Deanna > Dame Deanna Beacon of Good Hart
Erik > Sir Erik the Unfiltered of Good Hart
Chris Kearns > Sir Chris of Billerica
Joep van der Put > Sir Tified Maverick of the Peaks and Polders
Paul LePiane > Sir "Mountain Man" of the Big Sky
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Ryan Bemrose - Program Director
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Clip Custodian: Neal Jones
Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman
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Transcript
The sorrows, the sorrows, the sorrows, this is sorrow.
Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak.
It's Sunday, June 15th, 2025.
This is your award-winning Gibbon Nation Media Assassination Episode 1773.
This is no agenda.
No kings, no queens, no nukes.
And broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we want to bring back the fish fish witch.
I'm John C.
DeBorak.
It's Craig Bottom Buzzkill in the morning.
The what now?
Fish Witch.
Fish Witch?
Is that like a sandwich only stinky?
It's a sandwich made from fish.
Who's a fish witch?
Whatever happened to that term?
I've never even heard this term.
You've never heard of a fish witch?
That's why it needs to be brought back.
No.
Yeah, it was a very popular term in the, I don't know when.
No, the only fish sandwich I know was the fileo fish.
Yeah, the fish witch.
It used to be called the fish witch.
No, it's never been called the fish witch.
Everybody out there tell him he's wrong.
You're making this up.
I wish.
I'm telling you.
Tell him he's wrong again.
Tell him he's wrong.
He's wrong.
Hey, happy Father's Day, John.
Happy Father's Day.
Same to you.
You're the father.
You're a father.
Yeah, we're both fathers.
How about that?
Woo!
Did you get any socks?
You know what?
I've had you notice.
There's no more Father's gifts anymore.
Now that you mention it, I haven't gotten a Father's Day gift forever.
Yeah.
I don't remember ever getting a Father's Day gift.
Maybe a tie.
No, I don't think so.
No.
You know, these days, it's like a text and maybe a tweet.
Maybe a tweet.
Or an Insta post.
It's because it's the patriarchy.
I love my daddy.
I said so on Instagram.
It's the truth.
Socks.
That's the best gift.
Socks.
Well, you were going to give
your grandson socks.
Socks.
No, no, and I bailed out on the idea.
I saved you from embarrassing.
One of our, in fact, I should put this as tip of the day.
One of our producers came up with an American sock company that makes these socks.
They're super expensive, like 15 to 20 bucks a pair.
Wow.
But lifetime guarantee.
You get a hole in them, you send them back to get a new pair.
Really?
No.
I thought that was a.
If you start doing the calculation on this, it might not be a bad idea.
Yeah, because except for then I realize there's one problem.
What's that?
The socks that go missing.
You always miss what we would.
You can't send back just one sock.
You have to send back two.
Is that the deal?
Well, I don't know if you have to send back.
No, you probably just send back one, but what good does one sock do you?
No, but if you just send back one, then you couldn't get two pairs for one pair.
Send back a sock and say, hey, look, this is no good.
And you send back the other sock later.
You get two pairs for one.
Seems like it sucks bad.
They're going to repair it no matter what.
Yeah.
I will say I've seen a remarked decline in the quality of socks.
I have these
smart wool socks, which Tina got me, which I like, but they don't last.
They do not last.
Then you're putting them up.
There goes the hole in the heel.
You know,
Dame Astros.
There's no reason to ever have a hole in the heel.
You know, holes in the toe, you can see you got a toenail, you never cut it right, or it's jagged and it keeps the sock.
But the heel?
No, I'm telling you.
How do you get a hole in the heel?
I have the same thing with, I got socks with holes in the heel.
How does that work?
Yes, it's no good.
This is the nature of this show, ladies and gentlemen.
Well, we're not talking about socks.
I will say, Day Mastered, when she and Sir Mark were over visiting Fredericksburg, it was an interesting gift.
She gave me three pairs of socks.
And they all have the Japanese
red circle on them, kind of like the flag.
And they are the most comfortable, sturdy socks I have seen in a while.
I need to ask her what they're called.
Track them down.
Make them tip of the day.
Sock tip of the day.
Yeah.
Really, really good socks.
People, you know, socks just aren't appreciated the way they used to be.
Socks, big deal.
No, everyone just buys them at Costco.
So, of course, everything happens on show days.
Oh, we had it.
It was, it's been a great couple of days.
We've had a shooting up in Minnesota.
We've had the bombing of Iran.
We had the bombing of Israel.
We had the whole thing with this.
Our Joker senator, poor Jeffries, I wanted to talk about.
Who Padilla?
The guy who charged Christy Noam at the press conference and they got busted by Jesus.
He was forced to his knees like a slave.
He was forced to his knees like a slave.
And I had a theory I talked to you about that I wanted to bring out on the show.
Do you have a clip so you can kick into this theory?
I don't have a clip of it.
Nobody cares.
Just so you know,
it's all
gone.
I'd still have to bring the theory out there.
Okay, but
all people want right now is, what's going on?
What's going on with Iran?
What's going on?
World War III was going to be able to do it.
We're going to get to that.
There's no doubt about it.
That's a tease.
The point is that
all these other things were going on on are just pushed aside.
And this guy's got to feel like the most unlucky character.
This guy is a senator from California, no one ever heard of, Padilla.
And my thesis is the following.
Gavin Newsom's not going to run for president in 2028 because he's got the stench of his lousy job he's done in California that will get him nowhere with the party.
Because they'll just eat him alive in the debates.
But he's going to be out of office next year in 2027, I think,
or 26.
So he's going to be out.
He's got to do something.
He's got to do
it.
He's got to do something to stay in there.
And mayors know that.
The only thing he can do is run for the U.S.
Senate in 2028, which is Padilla's seat is up.
So Padilla has gotten wind of the fact that.
So, wait, you mean this was a show?
No.
Gambling?
Gambling?
It was a little show.
Oh, interesting.
So Padilla
has to do something and get his profile up because no one's ever heard of him.
He won't have a chance against Gavin Newsom.
Gavin Newsom will take his seat in the Senate and then he'll
be able to take pot shots at the president and then he can run in 2036, which is the worst case scenario for him.
Best case scenario could be even before then, 2036.
But he can redeem himself with the Olympic Games.
He could do something really awesome.
Well,
it won't help.
And they'll probably screw it up.
So let's assume it's going to screw it up.
But he's going to, so he'll run for the Padilla seat in 2028.
And Padilla has to kind of maybe move over because it was, I think, Newsom who appointed Padilla into the vacated seat for Feinstein.
Oh, okay.
And so we had Barbara Boxer and Diane Feinstein, and then when they left, we had these doofuses running.
We should put women back.
And
so
Newsom needs to run for Senate so he can go to Washington, D.C.
with his wife, and he can make a fuss there.
And people will forget what a screw-up he is, and he'll be a legislator.
And so he can run for president.
This whole thing.
So Padilla got wind of this.
This is no good.
I'm not going to be able to get kicked out.
And so he makes a big fuss, try to get some publicity, and then boom, the Obama ran.
I mean, this guy's hopeless.
I have a clue.
California Democratic Senator Alex Padilla spoke out shortly after he was forcibly removed from a Department of Homeland Security news conference about ICE immigration raised in Los Angeles.
If this is how the Department of Homeland Security responds to a senator with a question, you can only imagine
what they're doing to farm workers, to cooks, to day laborers out in the Los Angeles community, and throughout California, and throughout the country.
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill reacted to the incident during which Padilla was detained after he audibly identified himself as a senator.
There can be no justification
of seeing a senator forced to their knees, laid flat on the ground, their hands twisted behind their back, and being put
into restraints.
It is beneath a U.S.
senator.
They're supposed to lead by example, and that is not a good example.
We have to turn the temperature down in this country and not escalate it.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Well, so that was a nice little bit of theater that went nowhere.
Well, it was theater, and he never, he didn't have his badge on, which they're supposed to carry to identify themselves as senators.
He mentions that he was a senator as they were dragging him off.
I saw the whole thing.
It's bull crap.
Yeah.
And this guy, Alex, I can't even remember his first name half the time.
This guy is a,
and if you listen to him, he's just a no-good.
He's a weak-sounding kind of a beta male.
He doesn't have a prayer against Newsom.
But he's done.
All right.
Let's let me get us into it with a little bit of
backgrounder here from CBS and Operation Rising Lion.
Moments ago, Israel launched Operation Rising Lion.
He even says it that way.
Rising Lion.
Rising Lion.
Rising Lion.
A targeted military operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's very survival.
This operation will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat.
Netanyahu said Iran, which has long threatened to eliminate Israel, has produced enough highly enriched uranium for nine atom bombs, adding that in recent months Iran has taken steps to weaponize the nuclear material.
We struck at the heart of Iran's nuclear enrichment program.
We struck at the heart of Iran's nuclear weaponization program.
We targeted Iran's main enrichment facility in Natanz.
We targeted Iran's leading nuclear scientists working on the Iranian bomb.
We also struck at the heart of Iran's ballistic missile program.
The White House released a statement from Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying Israel's action against Iran is unilateral and the U.S.
is not involved in the strikes.
The statement says, quote, President Trump and the administration have taken all necessary steps to protect our forces and remain in close contact with our regional partners.
Let me be clear: Iran should not target U.S.
interests or personnel.
Yes, and remember, they are just days away from a nuclear bomb, just days and days away.
This was a
there's a lot going on here and a lot of different angles.
I think there's certainly one that is not being discussed, but let's just get a quick backgrounder on
the
strikes themselves, which seemed extremely targeted.
Israel's Mossad intelligence agency carried out a multi-pronged covert operation deep inside Iran, using advanced systems and explosive drones to strike multiple targets overnight.
Sources told Euronews.
Mossad deployed systems equipped with precision-guided weaponry deep inside Iranian territory, a source from Israeli intelligence told Euronews on condition of anonymity.
These systems were activated as the Israeli military offensive began, launching precision-guided missiles at pre-selected targets.
In a separate operation, Mossad secretly installed strike systems designed to neutralize Iranian air defenses that, according to Israel, posed a threat to its fighter jets.
A third operation was mounted in which Mossad established a base for launching explosive drones deep inside Iran.
During the attack, these drones were launched from that base towards a nearby military installation.
So, there were a couple of things that were kind of lost in our
stellar mainstream reporting here at the M5M.
One is the people of the streets of Teheran cheering, who were happy that this was taking place.
Multiple, even Forbes had, but no one has any report.
It's just video of people going out, yeah, let's do it, let's get those suckers.
The only report I could find of who was targeted comes from Franz Van Katre.
Iran's nuclear program and its top tier of military commanders and nuclear scientists, all targeted by Israel in one night of airstrikes.
General Hussein Salami is among those killed by the strikes in Tehran.
With his death confirmed by Iranian media, leader of the Revolutionary Guards Corps since 2019, Salami was responsible for securing Iran's borders and safeguarding it against any foreign attacks.
His forces control Iran's missile arsenal, and he was one one of the pillars of the regime.
Known for his fiery rhetoric against the United States and its allies, Israel and Saudi Arabia, he played a key role in suppressing the internal protests of 2019 and 2022.
Also killed was Mohammed Baheri, chief of the staff of the armed forces since 2016.
He's one of the Islamic Republic's most senior officers and the driving force behind Iran's ballistic missile program.
Another military loss has been Holam Ali Rashid, Deputy Chief of Staff and the Commander of the Khatam Al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, tasked with the military operational decision-making.
Salami, Bahiri, and Rashid were long-term members of the Revolutionary Guards and fought in the Iran-Iraq war.
Iranian media and senior officials have also reported the death of Ali Shamkhani, the senior former Navy commander and one of Iran's most influential politicians, was a confidant of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
According to several sources, at least six nuclear scientists were killed, including Fereydun Abbasi and Mohammed Mehdi Teranji.
The death of these high-profile figures shows the sheer scale of the Israeli operation.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guards have vowed to take revenge after the death of their leader.
So, you know, everyone focused on the nuclear, nuclear, nuclear, the nuclear scientists, but there's a lot of leadership there that got taken out.
Yeah, all military, no civilian.
Well, I don't know if I'm sure there's there can always be civilian casualties, but these were the guys.
No, I'm talking about civilian leadership.
They didn't target them.
No, I ended up watching the analysis of the Middle East forum guys who were on YouTube streaming.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I wonder if we came to the same conclusion.
What did you see?
They talked about this thing being largely possibly
a catalyst for regime change.
And
yes,
it's like a black woman there.
And
the guys there and the MEF, they all knew every single guy.
And they also talked about how they,
since the revolution in 1979,
it's been 46 years.
And so you end up with
a generational loss of excitement.
He says that everybody in the Army and every place else, one of these guys,
the better analysis guys, he says they're just a bunch of kids, slouches, who hate it.
They hate it.
They go to the classes and listen to the propaganda and they don't believe a word of it.
If these guys are put in a situation where they have to go to war, they're not going to fight.
He says the whole thing is a
house of cards.
I mean, I don't think there's something very different going on on that I is
flabbergasting.
There's just no reporting on.
So there's a couple of different narratives.
The main one is nuclear, nuclear, nuclear, nuclear weapons, nuclear weapons, nuclear weapons.
The other one,
I even talked to a buddy of mine who
worked at Doge.
He's like, man, Israel's drawing us into a war.
They're drawing us into a war.
I'm like,
I don't know.
I even see some trolls like, I thought America controlled Israel.
Well, they do.
That's exactly.
They do.
That's exactly right.
And even Tucker is on the wrong path.
Tonight, MAGA divides Donald Trump's support for Israel's actions against Iran is splitting his own base, pitting Israel hawks against those who fear the United States is being pulled into an even bigger regional fight.
But remember, when the president campaigned on this message.
I will stop the chaos in the Middle East, and I will prevent World War III.
I'm going to keep us out of World War III.
We're not going to have World War III, but I will prevent World War III.
Former Fox host Tucker Carlson sent Trump a stern warning this morning in his newsletter: quote, the United States should not at any level participate in a war with Iran.
No funding, no American troops, no troops on the ground.
Drop Israel.
Let them fight their own wars.
What happens next will define Donald Trump's presidency.
Well, I think he's really doing something quite interesting that just nobody is.
I mean, I had to go go to foreign sources to get anything even close as to what I think is really happening here.
And all this talk about nuclear war, there's not going to be any nuclear war.
Israel's not going to drop a nuke, not going to shoot a nuke from a sub.
That's not going to happen.
Iran has no nuclear weapons.
This is pew-pew, and they're taking out leadership.
And I think you're right, the talk of regime change is close, and for good reason.
There's one other thing that was not well discussed.
I did catch this very short clip.
An Israeli drone strike has hit a natural gas refinery in southern Iran, one of the largest gas fields in the world.
The attack took place at Kangan Port.
That's a part of the South Pass gas field, which is Iran's side of a joint gas field shared with Qatar.
There is a huge fire at the port.
That gas field is crucial to Iran's gas production and export capabilities.
Israel has been attacking military sites, nuclear facilities and civilian infrastructure for a second day now.
So that is a very strategic move to take out the gas refinery or when it comes to traditional resources, which Iran has a lot of.
And there's reasons for this.
Even though we certainly discussed that Iran joined the BRICS group last year, it hasn't really been discussed much.
And it's odd, but I found a very good overview of something that happened just 10 days ago on,
I think it's the India Times News.
So take the reporting, you know,
the way it's read.
But I thought that this really sums up what's going on here and why there was 60-day negotiation.
Yeah, sure, it's about nuclear weapons, but that's not all.
Trump wants to do a deal with Iran because he wants to outsmart some other guys.
In a stunning geopolitical power play that could reshape the balance of power in West Asia, the first freight train from China has officially arrived in Iran.
While this might sound like a simple trade link, it's anything but that.
The rail route cuts through more than just land.
It slices through decades of American sanctions, power projections, and military dominance.
This is not just a train arriving in a dry port near Tehran.
This is China and Iran punching a hole through America's global influence.
The freight train traveling overland from Xi'an in China to Epirin Dryport in Iran.
The train journey slashes delivery time by half.
It bypasses sea routes like the Malacca Strait and Red Sea, both under watchful Western naval surveillance.
and instead passes through Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, reaching Iran in just 15 days.
This rail route is a direct outcome of a $400 billion economic deal signed in 2021, a key part of China's ambitious Belt and Road Initiative.
The goal?
To build an economic corridor that completely dodges the reach of the U.S.
Navy and any future sanctioned regime.
It's a masterstroke.
While Washington focuses on sea lanes and maritime choke points, Beijing and Tehran have quietly laid steel tracks where US warships can't follow.
The arrival of this train doesn't just move goods, it moves the goalposts in the global power game.
For China, this means a more secure energy source away from the Middle Eastern monarchies allied with Washington.
For Iran, it's a pathway out of economic isolation.
This new rail link also complements Iran's control over the Strait of Hormoons.
It's a strategic choke point for global oil.
With China now entrenched in both Iranian oil and trade, Beijing has extended its influence deep into what was once considered America's exclusive zone of influence.
And that's what it's really about.
This is, I'm sorry for our friend Andrew Horwitz.
This is about China.
This is about China's Belt and Road.
They,
I mean, and to do this during the 60-day negotiation.
Oh, choo-choo, here we are.
The train goes this way.
We load it up.
The train goes the other way.
You were telling me just the other day that we've got tons of trains filled with coal, and then it gets put on the ship, shipped over to China, to India, all these places.
Yeah, we're shipping our coal over there.
We can't have that coming from Iran.
No, and yes, no, no, yes, they have incredible influence over the shipping lanes, and they're telling us about it.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard commander said closing the Strait of Hormuz is under consideration in response to Israeli attacks.
But what could this mean for Europe?
The Strait of Hormuz is one of the most strategically vital choke points in the world, and any blockade by Iran would pose serious risks for Europe.
Roughly 20% of global oil and a significant portion of natural gas pass through the Strait.
If Iran blocks it, global oil prices would spike and Europe could face energy shortages.
A sudden oil price surge would increase inflation, energy costs, and disrupt industries across Europe.
Manufacturing, transport, and agriculture would be especially vulnerable.
Beyond oil, the strait is a key route for global shipping.
Disruption could delay European imports of raw materials.
A blockade could also trigger military confrontations involving US or EU navies, risking a broader regional war.
Now,
knowing how we've always operated since the Vietnam War, it's like we can't get American boys and girls to go fight in the desert again.
That's a non-starter.
So, what do you do?
You tell the people who hate those other people to go and do something.
So, yes, we used our aircraft carrier in the Middle East to launch some strikes.
I think it's more sure people, there's all kinds of destruction.
But taking out the leadership is what this was about, weakening them so that we can block what China is doing.
And this is the big game.
It's much bigger than
Israel versus Iran and Netanyahu.
What a pawn.
They always want to kill us.
Yeah, okay.
This is about whose money will be the world currency, who has the resources, who sells the resources, who is in charge of the resources, meaning oil, gas, minerals.
and there's land, and there's always some hooker involved somewhere.
It's always the same.
And so now everyone's talking about the multipolar world.
The multipolar world.
Like Jeffrey Sachs.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard commanding.
I'm sorry, this one.
We have a new arrangement of power because these other parts of the world have made a lot of economic and technological progress.
So China was a poor country 40 years ago.
It is now a quite wealthy and technologically advanced country.
I'd say it's at the cutting edge of many of the most important technologies.
How did they get there?
Very hard work, very high investment rates, very good strategy, serious planning.
They thought ahead, they worked hard at it, and they were successful.
They stole intellectual property.
The second fact is a basic fact.
Well, Sachs is not necessarily a good guy, in my opinion.
Technologically.
I would say if he doesn't drop that little bombshell bombshell in there,
which we kind of understood in the Cold War and kind of forgot after 1991, but it's a real truth every moment of our lives.
And that is because of nuclear weapons and because other countries have a lot of them, we can't defeat those countries.
So the world's intrinsically multipolar in the sense.
Don't mess with another nuclear superpower.
It can really wreck your day.
And we forgot that after 1991.
Why 1991?
That was the year that the Soviet Union dissolved into 15 states.
And the American elite said, okay,
now we really are all alone.
We are the world's sole superpower.
We treated Russia absolutely stupidly,
abused our power, which was real, but abused it to the point where we ended up having a full-fledged war.
It's in a way a proxy war in Ukraine.
Yeah.
This is what the game is about.
I love the trolls now, John.
You'd love the trolls.
They're like, oh, the Jew money must have come in to come up with this BS.
This is true.
Now they're just trolling for trolling.
So I have some analysis clips when you want to get to it.
Well, but what is your thoughts on this really being about China?
I'm interested.
This is what I conclude.
I like the thesis.
It's not going to be brought up by too many people.
Probably you're the only one.
Yeah, yeah.
But again, I think by pulling the clips with only No Agenda Can Do from India and other places that nobody else cares about,
you could piece it together and I think you'd make it work.
And I think the gas field blowing up the gas.
It's one of the biggest in the world, someone might point out
that the Chinese are relying on.
They want to maybe bring some liquefied natural gas over or whatever products they can get from Iran.
Good catch.
Yeah.
And
I think I don't think it's all about the Chinese, but I think the Chinese, insofar as the American perspective and the fact that we're controlling the action no matter what anyone wants to believe,
we let Israel think that they're, oh, yeah, well, yeah, why don't you go?
Okay.
And
these analysis clips that I have will actually kind of back that up because it's like, especially this one guy, the ambassador to the United States,
he
this last, which would be the last clip, he just outlines the process that created the
go-ahead.
In other words,
there had to be a go-ahead because
we needed a trigger
not to do this in April.
Yeah, we needed a trigger.
But again,
this so, and then I want to hear you close, but it boils down to this.
Either America is running the show with our money and our resources, or China runs the show.
And you don't really want China running the show.
If you worry about Peter Thiel and Palantir, wait until China takes over.
Oh, China's not, you don't, no, you don't want China running the show.
They're good at what they do.
They're no good at running the show.
I mean, I'd rather have the Brits.
Brits over Bricks, I tell you.
We talk about this at the dinner table about how the Brits are, you know, they're the ones that we've talked about on the show.
They're the real, I mean, that's where we get all our skill sets for international
management.
I've been to some of this, I went to an IBM seminar once where
the whole thing was about international management.
The IBMers know how to do this.
The Brits know how to do it the best.
They ran India that nobody else could run.
We couldn't do it.
They have a very interesting type of management skill that nobody else can do.
And people don't,
the Indians still don't mind the Brits.
They maybe don't like us.
They might not like the Chinese.
But the Brits can do management at a highest international level because of the nature of their empire and how they formed it and how they develop management skills that we copied from them.
The Chinese haven't got a clue.
The Chinese classic Chinese management is the Chinese apartment building owner.
You pay now, you pay now.
and their whole idea of marketing, you know, best price.
They're clueless.
They're horrible.
That's true.
It's not a friendly way of marketing.
I'm in full agreement.
Full agreement.
So we don't want the Chinese running everything.
They run themselves fine.
They're very good at managing large projects.
In fact, they can do that better than I think anybody.
If you start looking at the history of China and some of the stuff that happened in the past, where they had fleets of 5,000 ships and they were well managed because the Chinese can manage each other, but they can't manage other cultures.
No.
And look at the mess.
I mean, that's
the mess they make in Africa.
And Iran.
In Africa,
they make a mess and they know it.
And look, Iran is weak.
And President Trump, he was doing the 60-day negotiation, and it wasn't just about nukes.
No.
It's like, hey, stop that nonsense with these Chinese.
We can't have that.
You just can't have it.
And it may sound, you know, like a dictator, but yeah.
Pax Americana, baby.
We can't have that.
I understand exactly what he's doing.
And okay, you want to do that?
You don't want to talk?
All right.
And then he calls Netanyahu, and then they go in with the Mossad and their drones.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Israel's controlling us.
That's why the bombs are falling on Tel Aviv.
Please,
please people
that's a lost cause
if people want to think that israel runs the world they're they got to screw loose they all don't you know about apac
yeah apac controls congress absolutely but where does apac
where does apac money come from it comes from the american israeli education foundation that's where go look at the form 990.
I did it.
It all comes from Raytheon Boeing.
It's the military industrial complex.
Eisenhower did not warn for the Jewish-Israeli industrial complex.
No, he warned us for the military-industrial complex.
I think you should stop beating this up.
I won't.
Why would I?
We did the same with COVID.
We did the same with Ukraine.
It's not fruitless.
You'll never convert those people that think that way.
You're an idealist.
I am an idealist.
One topic.
I am.
And you know what?
It's never about the people.
The people, the Iranians, they don't want this nonsense.
The Israelis, they don't want this nonsense.
And we certainly don't want this non- And I doubt the Chinese people want it either.
This is big game, big cajones.
We'll see how it goes.
So far, no bombs dropped on America.
Feeling pretty good.
Let's play this.
This is the
Iran.
This is one
of the analysis pieces from PBS.
This is the standalone one says Iran,
Israel, anal.
And for a wider perspective, we turn now to Wendy Sherman, who was the lead negotiator for the nuclear agreement with Iran during the Obama administration.
She served as U.S.
Deputy Secretary of State during the Biden administration and is currently a senior fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.
And Wali Nasser is a professor of international affairs and Middle East Studies at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.
And he's also the author of Iran's Grand Strategy: a political history.
Our thanks to you both for joining us.
Wendy Sherman, we'll start with you.
The U.S.
says it was not involved in Israel's strikes against Iran's nuclear sites.
But is this attack, in your view, is it aligned with U.S.
interests or does it introduce new and unpredictable risks for U.S.
forces and regional stability?
I think it certainly introduces a lot of risk for all of the military personnel, some 40,000 in the region.
region and the hundreds of thousands of Americans in Israel as well as in the wider region.
There is no question that all of us don't want Iran to have a nuclear weapon.
That was the whole reason that President Obama asked
Secretary Clinton, Secretary Kerry, and myself to work hard to get a joint comprehensive plan of action with Iran to put constraints on its nuclear program.
Donald Trump, in his first term as president, as you know, in 2018, pulled out of that deal.
I don't think we'd be where we are today if that hadn't happened.
Yeah, we'd have a nuclear-armed Iran if it hadn't happened.
Exactly.
This is somebody serving her own purposes.
Well, she's from
the city.
John's Open.
What do you expect?
What do you expect?
It was a terrible.
So PBS is useless, but they did bring in the ambassador.
from Israel.
He was making the rounds, the ambassador.
He was all over the news.
That's what you do.
It was all over the news today.
We can play his.
I got three clips from him, and the last one is the only good one, but we'll play the clip one.
For more on Israel's goals and what comes next, we're joined now by the Israeli Ambassador to the U.S., Yakhil Leiter.
Ambassador Leiter, welcome back to the News Hour.
Thank you for joining us.
Thank you, Ahmad.
It's good to be with you.
I want to begin by asking you about the latest.
We're seeing of the extraordinary Iranian missile attacks unfolding over Tel Aviv at this moment.
As we speak, what can you tell us about the latest on the ground?
What kind of damage has been inflicted so far in Israel?
Well, we know at present there are 35 people injured right outside of Tel Aviv, too critically.
We're praying for their survival.
Iran has a very large
array of ballistic missiles.
They have fired them in the past, both in April and in October.
At that time, we were able to intercept them.
Several have gotten through this time, a total of 85 in this barrage.
These are huge missiles.
Huge.
And we do have
sustained injuries.
U.S.
officials said today that the U.S.
military is helping to intercept some of those Iranian missiles.
Are you expecting U.S.
forces to participate more deeply than that when it comes to defending Israel?
Is that something that Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Trump spoke about today?
The United States has had our back both in April and October.
There are anti-aircraft missiles that have been
set in the Middle East to help support our Iron Dome
system.
This is a barrage of dozens of missiles all at the same time, and it needs a support system.
And we're very, very thankful for the defensive posture that the United States has taken now for a third time in helping to prevent these missiles from exacting uh dramatic damage on our civilian population yeah that iron dome seems a bit buggy
you know i'm reminded do you remember the scud days the the scud stud of course i do the scud and the scud
stud
yes yes and the scuds were going up i went and visited israel uh a year after that event
and
the um
Everybody in Israel said that those the Patriot missiles hit nothing.
And the only thing that was blowing up up there is the scuds were
such junk that when they were reaching their apogee, they just fall apart.
Everybody said.
The scuds.
The scuds.
So, okay, part two.
We have to erase this threat to our existence.
This is not a border dispute.
This is a threat to our existence.
And they make no secret about it.
The Iranian regime has made a very concrete plan.
It's actually a printed plan, which in which it calls for the destruction of the state of Israel.
And that's not something we can live with.
For us, it's existential.
We saw Prime Minister Nesanyahu say that obviously part of the goal here is preventing Iran from becoming nuclear-armed.
We also heard him speak directly to the Iranian people.
He said, we're also clearing the path for you to achieve your freedom.
This is your opportunity to stand up and let your voices be heard.
Ambassador, is regime change in Iran part of the goal here?
Well, it's not part of our goal.
If it facilitates the goal of the Iranian people, you know, that's fine.
But regimes have to be determined by the people.
That's how the
democratic process works.
So we don't focus on regime change.
We want militarization change.
We want the annihilationist ideology of the regime to change.
If the Iranian people rise up as they've tried to do in the past
and change their regime, that's for them to decide, not for us to decide.
Yeah.
Well,
of course.
i like the annihilation uh annihilationist i think is a nice term that he threw in now there was an interesting point he made in there which has been brought up it hasn't gotten a lot of play but it came and went this is the printed plan
now this falls in kind of in line with your thinking about china
there's you know they they keep claiming and saying, and I believe it's probably true that the Iranians would like to get a nuke any minute.
Yeah.
Happening soon.
Amen.
And they couldn't, and they, you know, they just kept saying, well, you know, we're not, that's not what we're trying to do here.
And yeah, you are.
And so
then about, I think it was about six months to a year ago, whenever it was, there was a raid at some place that got blowed up.
And there was a, and they found a printed plan.
Oh.
They found a printed planet, which is what he mentioned.
Yeah.
And it was a printed planet.
They had the entire
outline of what they, where how are they going to get to a nuclear weapon and ballistic ballistic missiles, and they're going to
own the area.
And this printed plan was brought to the fore.
I think it was even brought in front of the United Nations.
It's quite possible that this print, because for one thing, you can't go on and on about how unbelievable the Mossad is, how they've penetrated this and that and the other thing in Iran with all their spies.
You can't say that they're that great and then
make no assumption that the printed plan could be bull crap.
Planted by the Mossad, planted by us, the CIA could have read the whole thing, very carefully structured, printed plan that just coincidentally they found in a blowed up place.
Like a passport found near the Twin Towers.
Yeah, the passport found near the Twin Towers.
So you have to make the assumption that the printed plan
that was just coincidentally found in this spot, it could be bull crap.
And there is no printed plan, but it's something they're using as leverage because the whole thing seems to be, you know, it's just well, it's too well structured.
I mean, it doesn't help that, you know, the bombs are flying every which way and people are getting killed, but
I'm skeptical about a lot of this stuff.
But I think he wraps it up with how this all got triggered in the third clip.
As you know, there were ongoing talks between the U.S.
and Iran to restrict their nuclear program when Israel struck Iran.
There was another round scheduled for this Sunday.
Do you want to see those talks move forward?
Do you have confidence that they could reach a deal?
We'd like to see the talks move forward, but we're not confident that the Iranians will come around to a deal.
We were skeptical from the outset.
We encourage the talks because it's important to try to pursue a path of negotiation rather than a military one.
But the fact of the matter is that the Iranians are ideologically and theologically committed to destroying Israel, and they have no intention whatsoever of drawing back their nuclear program, nuclear weaponization program.
Look, the fact of the matter is that the President of the United States gave the Iranians 60 days.
Yesterday was the 61st day.
It's over.
Number one.
Number two, the IAEA issued a scathing report.
This is not an Israeli report.
This is an International Atomic Agency report, which basically indicted the Iranian regime for violations and for the development of a nuclear weapons program.
And we see, this is the most important point, Amna, we see in our intel that they're racing forward to achieve the weaponization of enriched uranium.
That means a nuclear bomb.
That changes the world.
And for us, it changes the entire equation because it endangers our very existence.
We can't live with that.
I think the whole nuclear bomb thing is just a ploy.
Everyone be afraid.
Be afraid, be afraid.
Nuclear bomb.
Iran's.
They're just days away, weeks away, any moment now.
They're going to nuclear bomb.
No.
We're totally going to spark regime change.
I'm not quite sure what the mechanism's going to be, but it seems like the Iranians are ready for it.
And well, according to the MEP guys, the Middle East Forum, MEF, Middle East Forum guys,
they say that
the way it's structured right now, that
Khomeini, the guys running the show, the grand Pubah,
he's seen as being very weak.
Yes.
Because of the bombing that took place, there was no protection for the civilians and there's bombs flying every which way.
And now
they've lost faith in the grand wizard and his group of mulahs.
And
everybody thinks that they're ripe to be overthrown and hung by the yard arm.
And if there's going to be any other military intervention, I can tell you who's next.
Saudi Arabia.
Trump was just over there.
Hey, I got some stuff for you guys.
Didn't he just sell them a whole bunch of death-defying rockets?
Didn't we have a clip on that?
You think the Saudis would invade Iran?
No, no, no.
Lob some stuff over.
They've been fighting Iran forever.
Lob some stuff over, maybe.
They've been fighting Iran forever.
I know they have
a forest.
The proxy war with Saudi Arabia and Iran was the Houthi war in South Yemen.
Yeah, but it's still a proxy war.
It's still against.
Let me see.
I think I have this clip.
Let me see.
United States President Donald Trump wrapped up his Middle East tour on Friday that saw him visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and with the last stop in the United Arab Emirates.
In this first visit to the UAE by a U.S.
President since 2008, the two countries pledged to strengthen ties and announced deals totaling over $200 billion.
This includes a partnership with the UAE to build a massive AI data center in its capital Abu Dhabi and for the Gulf State to buy advanced AI semiconductors from U.S.
countries.
I'm sure there was bombs in there.5 billion dollars, while Abu Dhabi, the UAE's capital, pledged to hike the value of its energy investments in the US to $440 billion in the next decade.
The four-day trip was very much focused on business and resulted in a string of lucrative deals for both Washington and the three countries.
Trump aborted Air Force One in Abu Dhabi.
Yeah, I thought that we had a clip somewhere where he sold a whole bunch of these
killer missiles.
Well, maybe, but the point is, I think he went there in the first place to soften them up for this attack by Israel because he had to set that up in advance to make sure that it wasn't going to go sideways.
Meanwhile, of course, the usual suspects are
jumping up and down.
Mr.
Military Industrial Complex himself, or should I say Mrs.
Lady G, game on, everybody.
It's game on.
It's South Carolina.
Don't they have Boeing?
Isn't that like the big military production state?
I don't believe there is a Boeing plant in South Carolina.
But have a look at what Senator.
I think this is your Kirsten Welker with, I think, Rand Paul.
Let me see.
But have a look at what Senator Lindsey Graham argues should happen.
If Iran does not come to the negotiating table, he says, quote, if Iran refuses this offer of the United States, I strongly believe it is in America's national security interest to go all in to help Israel finish the job.
How do you respond to Senator Graham's call to go all in and help Israel finish the job, Senator?
Well, his initial response was game on, and I don't consider war to be a game.
The hundreds of thousands of people that potentially will now die on both sides.
You know, for a couple thousand years, we've had this discussion over what is just war.
Not only our civilization, but other civilizations have had this discussion.
And one of the things that many people came to a conclusion was that preemptive or preventative war wasn't just.
And so there is that.
But there is also the idea that what happens to Iran?
You imagine what happens in Iran now.
Do they coalesce around their government, even though their government is unpopular?
Does nationalism thrive?
And you would think that they would probably be less likely to want to negotiate at this time, particularly when they may feel that negotiations were a ruse to put them at ease until the bombing happened.
So I think it's going to be very hard to come out of this and have a negotiated settlement.
I see more war and more carnage, and it's not the U.S.'s job to be involved in this war.
Iraq was a mess.
Afghanistan was a mess.
And one of the things I like about President Trump is he has shown restraint.
And so I think his instincts are to not be involved in this war, but there will be be a lot of pressure from Lindsey Graham and others to get involved in this war.
And I hope that his instincts will prevail.
I thought there was another
little standard blather.
Yeah.
Yeah, there was another.
Let me see.
I think I had another one from Lindsey Graham.
Where was it?
Hmm.
Hold on a second.
Yeah, Lindsey Graham.
He's, you know, he's got Bowie in his pocket.
And there he is.
Oh, here we go.
Somebody's in somebody's pocket.
Here he is.
This is from this morning.
By the way, it's not just Lindsey Graham.
It is the unlikely dynamic duo of Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal, the peacenicks at work.
I think there is really no obstacle.
And this is about Iran and Russia to our moving ahead with these bone-crushing sanctions.
Even if oil prices spike because of what's happening in the Middle East.
You know, we are now energy independent when it comes to oil, the United States.
They're kind of giving the game away here, by the way.
It's like, oh, it's about oil, it's about oil, it's about oil, I mean nukes.
We are now energy independent when it comes to oil, the United States.
Europe has weaned itself off Russian oil.
Europe is solidly behind these sanctions.
And we've incorporated flexibility in this bill based on our national security for a potential waiver where our interests are concerned, unforeseeab or unknowably right now.
We've incorporated exemptions for our European allies who are aiding Ukraine in the billions of dollars, giving them a little bit more time to adjust.
This is a carefully dressed.
What he says is that there's three categories.
If you're not doing business with Russia, you don't have anything to worry about.
If you're doing business with Russia, but you're helping Ukraine, you have a carve out for 270 days.
If you're doing business with Russia and not helping Ukraine, you're screwed.
The president can can waive part of all of this based on our national interest.
But to the people who wonder, should we pay a price for our freedom we have in the past, go to Arlington.
Oil prices will go up
if we confront Russia through our bill.
Oil prices will go up if we try to confront Iran for their nuclear ambitions.
But you pay now or you pay later.
If we get Iran right and we get peace with Russia, Ukraine, not only do oil prices come down, the world will be better off.
So this idea of having freedom and not sacrificing never existed, nor does it exist now.
Oh, go sacrifice yourself, Louis Graham.
What a crock.
I mean, he just goes on with all the rebromite and cliche you can imagine.
I mean, I truly think that President Trump is just trying to get, he's just, let's just compete, let's do everything.
But, you know, China, you guys don't know what you're talking about.
Look, go look at Africa.
You don't want China in your country.
You don't want to do business with China.
That's just, you don't want that.
You want, you would rather have the the Chinese run the world over us?
I don't think so.
I think he's truly trying to make this work.
I don't know if it's possible, but I think it's
worth it.
You got No King's Day, and you got all the rest of it.
He's doing what he can do.
No King's Day.
What a dud, what a dud that was.
It was a dud.
Well, you think that what?
Not according to the Brits?
You mean the British India?
If you have time to change topics and go to your own.
Yeah, yeah, BBC.
I want to play the some BBC stuff here, including their analysis of
the parade, which was in competition with no king's peaceful protests.
Let me find the right clip to start with.
Here we go.
Let's start with BBC.
It says the Trump parade was a no-show.
President Trump has hosted a massive military parade in Washington, D.C.
to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the U.S.
Army.
The parade told the story of the military from the Battle of Lexington until the present day.
It included thousands of troops, tanks and military equipment and flyovers and ended with a fireworks display and a concert.
In his speech, Mr.
Trump
Do you think the Brits are a little sour about the whole Battle of Lexington thing, maybe?
Is that maybe why they're
playing this report and you get your eyes will roll
and ended with a fireworks display and a concert.
In his speech, Mr.
Trump paid tribute to those who fought for America throughout the years.
Time and again, America's enemies have learned that if you threaten the American people, our soldiers are coming for you.
Your defeat will be certain, your demise will be final, and your downfall will be total and complete.
Because our soldiers never give up, never surrender, and never ever quit.
They fight, fight, fight, and they win, win, win.
Our North America correspondent, Nomia Iqbal, was at the parade and she joins me now live from Washington.
Did they say, did the BBC guys say Mr.
Trump instead of President Trump?
I missed it if they did.
I think
it's very typical.
Nomia, what can you tell us?
What did it look like?
It was quite the spectacle, there's no doubt.
And I think there was something quite strange seeing armored vehicles and tanks and strange
sort of rolling down the streets in DC.
It really had everything you had,
thousands of soldiers in historical uniforms, there was flyovers, there were even robot dogs.
And
there were crowds here, but the Trump administration is claiming up to 250,000 people here.
We know Donald Trump loves crowd sizes, but there definitely wasn't that number here.
It was pretty overcast.
There were a few thousand here.
There were lots of empty seats.
Where I'm stood right now on the the mall just in front of me you know there weren't a lot of people here
i always loved the there were a few thousand i always loved the grammar a few thousand where i stood here or where you stand or where you were standing
the seats were empty there were just a few thousand yeah no one was there no this is bull crap there was very little television coverage for sure and i will say that it did not look as good as it could have because of the overcast sky that that That definitely.
Well, it didn't rain.
It didn't rain, but it didn't make it look, I think, the way that the president would have wanted it to look.
But they make it so nobody showed up.
Well, of course.
Because, you know, they were all protesting.
And in fact, if you play the clip, here's the BBC on the No Kings peaceful protest.
Mass protests.
Oh, wait, I'm sorry.
Let's go to the Parade 2 part.
Actually, let me play this.
Play Parade 2 Birthday.
And then I I want to play a couple other clips.
Okay.
Well, it's parade to birthday three.
Is that the one you want?
Yeah, yes.
Okay, it's a little confusing.
Donald Trump sees the military and his command of it as a sign of his own strength, and he's been flexing that from coast to coast.
Yeah, and it is, of course, Mr.
Trump's coast to coast.
It is, but he claims that's just a coincidence.
Although, again,
you know, those who are against the president will not buy that.
And interestingly, at the start of the parade, when he took to the platform and there was the Hail the Chief and a group singing him happy birthday, like a mini choir, it wasn't quite clear who they were singing happy birthday to, him,
the army.
I mean, it coincidentally fell on
his birthday, but for his critics, they believe that that's no coincidence.
No coincidence, his birthday.
It's no coincidence that his birthday fell on the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S.
Army.
It's a coincidence.
He was planned.
He was a planned baby.
Is planned birthday one, PBS?
Oh, hold on a second.
The occasion, the U.S.
Army's 250th birthday, which happens to coincide with President Trump's own birthday.
Oh.
Oh.
To make a point, birthday two, PBS.
How did his vision for a Bastille Day style parade evolve into this event, marking the Army's 250th anniversary, which also happens to fall on President Trump's own birthday.
How did he do it?
How did he do it?
Unbelievable, it fell on his birthday.
Here's
birthday false comparison.
How is the Pentagon responding to concerns that the military is being politicized?
There are critics who have compared this parade to authoritarian spectacles, the types you see in China, Russia, North Korea.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
You know,
we had a No King's Day in Fredericksburg.
Oh, did you take photos?
Oh, there's tons, tons of video and photos.
And so they're all standing outside
the courthouse, which is actually no longer the courthouse.
I think they've turned it into a library.
Yeah, that's the same thing up in Port Angeles.
They stand in front of us.
Yeah.
Or actually, it may be storage, and they're planning to expand the library there.
But there's only like six people in Port Angeles that do this.
Well, the same six old farmers.
No, there were probably 500.
Yeah, it was quite a few.
And they all were waving.
500.
Yeah, they were.
Oh, yeah.
They were all waving American flags, and they all held up signs that said, happy birthday.
I hope it's your last.
What?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'd get the Secret Service on that person.
Well,
they're threatening the president's calling for his death.
That's what it sounds like.
They're just hoping.
They're just hoping.
They're just hoping.
That's okay.
Whatever.
It's fine.
You know, the last BBC clip is the one on No King's peaceful protest.
Peaceful.
Very peaceful.
Mass protests against the Trump administration taking place across the U.S.
The organizers of the No Kings rallies accuse Mr.
Trump of overstepping his presidential powers.
Some of the anger has been sparked by recent raids and arrests by immigration officials across the country.
Right now I think our constitutional rights are being violated, stepped on, trampled on and disregarded by President Donald Trump.
Everything looks unlawful to me at this point in America.
I believe that Donald Trump is destroying our country.
He has sold out democracy to the highest bidder.
He is really only in this for himself.
The events of the past week have been distressing to say the least.
I don't like the reach that the current administration has over our country.
Some of the biggest protests are in Los Angeles from where I'm joined by our North America correspondent, John Sudworth.
John, we're seeing video of police really facing off against protesters.
What's the mood like?
Yeah, so in the last hour and a half or so, it's turned slightly more confrontational.
I've just seen at the top of the street, probably
30, 40 meters from where I'm standing, the police moving forward on horseback and pushing the crowd away from that junction.
A couple of loud bangs, hard to know from here.
No sign of tear gas, so that's possibly rubber bullets they're firing firing as they're doing that, too.
The junction I'm on is relatively peaceful.
There's a line of LAPD riot police, helmets on, holding their battens.
A couple of them have the baton-round guns, those rubber bullet guns as well.
But surrounding them, and on all sides of this junction, a big, largely peaceful crowd.
I mean, noisy, but peaceful, if you know what I mean.
Yeah, but you know, it was largely peaceful.
And
I combed through,
I mean, fast-forwarded through hours and hours of recorded footage trying to find someone who had a message.
And it was all kind of the same.
It was just like,
I don't like Trump.
Donald Trump sucks.
Yeah, I mean, here's an example.
This came from rebel news.
The problem that we're having now is, even if Donald Trump is not in office, is that the 38% of Republicans that would still support him is a cult.
This is a brainwashed cult that we are dealing with.
And,
you know,
they need an intervention.
Okay, and if there's nothing else, I think, Don, the only thing that Trump has been successful at in this whole past 10 years is that he's been the most successful cult leader on the planet ever.
Because he's done.
I am what I say you are.
But you say being yourself, it gets better.
In spite of
all the disgusting things that he's done, made fun of a disabled reporter.
That's her one thing, by the way.
Old Shope.
Of all the disgusting things he's done, made fun of a disabled reporter.
And that's all she has, believe me.
All the disgusting things that he's done, made fun of a disabled reporter.
You know, wanted.
You know, I mean, I'm not even going to give you the litany of all the disgusting things he's done.
I'm not going to give you the litany.
You know, it's beneath me to talk about things I can't really remember.
The word sounds difficult.
Stop, stop.
I want to revisit the disabled reporter thing.
So let's go back in time when this happened.
This happened for the 2016 election.
Yes.
Trump used to do a spaz guy.
It used to be part of his act.
Yes, he did.
He would just
do a spastic kind of a thing.
It was kind of a joke to him.
And so the Democrats had him up
with a disabled reporter asking a question, knowing, because it was a lead-in question, the kind of question that he, where Trump did this the spastic character, you know, as a joke, not knowing that the reporter was disabled.
And so he did the bit.
And so then they said, look what he did.
He mocked the disabled reporter.
This whole thing was a complete setup.
And by the way, Trump never did that bid again.
No.
That was the last time he ever did it because because he got had by being too good and not paying attention.
But
that's such nonsense.
But it's structured.
You know, the Democrats have their thing.
They have their methodology, and this is part of it.
And having stupid people like the woman you just played is part of it.
Well, she's not the way it works.
She's not done because what you're right, what she is saying.
She's not done.
No, she's not done.
She is literally
portraying a brainwashed person.
And I'm not saying that
it's avoidable for her,
but that's the brainwashing that she received.
And she holds on to that one thing.
And she just, it's beneath her to go through the whole litany of disgusting things President Trump has done because he is only a cult leader.
38% of Americans are cultists.
They're just cultists.
And cannot see that maybe she's the one in the cult.
Made fun of a disabled reporter.
you know, want to
you know, I mean, I'm not even going to give you the litany of all the disgusting things he's done.
The word salad, the verbal diarrhea that comes out of his mouth, and these people are still sucking up every single word that he says.
This is, I mean, it's like
normal people, people with any kind of character
would not support a man like that.
So this has gone beyond normal people.
This is in the realm of cult.
What would you say to Richard Piquet?
What would I say?
I would say, turn off Fox News, turn off right-wing media,
find out what he is doing.
But, you know, it's very hard to speak sense to a lot of these people.
They need psychiatric help.
There needs to be,
you know, in order to bring these people back to reality, back to decency,
they
need some kind of help or intervention to get them out of the cult.
What's interesting is that we have not seen violence from red-hatted MAGA cult members.
Is there something?
Am I misremembering?
No, no.
So the only violence.
Except for the Jussie Smolette.
Those guys had a red hat.
Yeah, they had red hats.
It was the black red hat.
Yes.
Yes, exactly.
So, you know, it pains me that
because when you are in this mode, when you say, well, they're in the cult and you can't reach inside yourself and say, you know,
they got to stop watching right-wing media, stop watching Fox News.
Well, what do you think you're consuming?
That just does not enter their their minds.
And it's too bad.
I mean, we've always had a healthy discourse between left and right, Republican and Democrat.
And it's just, I don't know if it's repairable.
You know?
Because people on the right just say, you guys are libtards, you're no good, you're nut jobs, you're crazy.
Libtard is my favorite.
Yeah, you know, it's like that's not necessarily helpful either.
I'm not convinced over time, I've done this show long enough, and then I also
have my background in history.
I'm not convinced that this hasn't always been the case.
And there's nothing new here.
Well, it's not like a single
thing that just formed.
No, you're right.
That's been exaggerated by Fox because Fox News is the first.
Actually, Rush Limbaugh started it.
He's the first guy that showed up with a perspective that was honest, right-wing, on radio, got a big, huge following to the point where he got a $400 million contract just to yak, yak, yak.
And then
that irks you, doesn't it?
It irks you.
Yes.
Well, but so that what has changed.
Not as much as Rachel Maddow getting 25 million to work one day away.
But John, you show up with TikTok clips of nut jobs, which you call nut jobs, and it's just people on the left, you know, okay, they don't have a red hat, they have blue hair, and you make fun of them.
So, you know, everyone's
confusing to me.
I understand.
But
the thing that has changed is media, social, and mainstream.
There's more of it.
We see more of it.
We're more inundated by it.
It hits
all of the pleasure centers.
Oh, there's more.
Oh, there's, I got to see, oh, someone's fighting.
You just scroll on X.
Every third video is someone beating somebody else up.
There's a lot of beat-up videos.
Look at this.
They're beating each other up
at the Chick-fil-A.
It's, you know, that's, yeah, exactly.
A lot of that.
Oh, there's black girls fighting in a fast food restaurant.
Pulling hair.
Pulling hair, pulling wigs off.
I know.
And that is the scourge.
That is what is killing us on the inside.
It's eating our souls.
It really is.
You could be feeding our souls for all you know.
Yeah.
This is just one perspective that you have.
Yeah, okay.
All right.
Since I've known you, I've never known you to be just so joyous about nut jobs on TikTok.
You're like, I love this.
This is great.
Listen to this crazy person.
That's what TikTok has done is ruined my friend John C.
Dvorak.
So now
I will take this to the next level, which I thought was a very interesting analysis.
Back to China?
Yes, by none other than the Cuomo kid, Chris Cuomo, who for all I know could be doing this as a paid job by the State Department.
I don't know.
You know,
if that was discovered, like all of a sudden we now discovered that Mike Myers, the comic, was working for the CIA or whatever for all these years.
Nothing would surprise me.
Nothing.
I would, you know, right, exactly.
Nothing.
Here we go.
Should surprise you when it comes to Intel.
Yeah.
Here's now, this is about the Los Angeles protests.
These protests are fed by dark sources with a desire for our destruction.
One of the main players in organizing and funding the Los Angeles protests is a group called CHIRLA, C-H-I-R-L-A, acronym, Coalition for Humane Immigration Rights.
They have received millions in government grants and state grants, but now reports are showing that there may be a foreign link, specifically from China.
funding and organizing these protests.
The pro-Chinese far-left Party for Socialism and Liberation.
They're known as the PSL.
They are working with CHURLA, helping fund the protests in Los Angeles and maybe elsewhere.
Remember, all the parties in China are controlled by the CCP.
So this is China.
And the party is pushing to destroy capitalism and the West.
This is its agenda.
This is what China wants.
They even have a term for the effort.
It's called the smokeless war, where they have this theory of how they'll destroy the West without actually taking to the battlefield.
That's what they did during the anti-Israel campus protests.
The PSL worked hand in glove with anti-Zionist student groups and helped organize and fund the Columbia campus encampments.
By the way, I could totally buy this theory.
I think the
fentanyl and opioids and all this stuff, you know, the Chinese are still mad about the opioid wars.
Yeah, they are.
Smuggling fungus.
Smuggling should be mad at at the Brits, not us.
We didn't do it.
Smuggling fungus into America.
You know, it's very possible.
But wait, it gets even scarier.
Now it gets scarier.
Where does the PSL get its money?
Enter Shanghai-based socialist billionaire Neville Singham.
2017, he sold his tech company for about a billion.
Reports show the same year he started funding far-left groups like the PSL to the tune of millions.
Millions.
Is not America's friend.
He has deep business ties to the CCP, but also has strong ideological ties to communism, period.
People who worked for him say he's an admirer of Mao, Je Guevara, Hugo Chavez.
Not friends of American culture.
According to the New York Times, Singam has funded and developed a deep global empire of pro-China nonprofits in the media and grassroots political space, steering millions into these groups over the years, including the PSL.
And guess who was associated with the PSL and other Singham-funded groups?
Elias Rodriguez.
Ring a bell?
This scumbag, the 30-year-old Chicago man who murdered two Israeli staffers in cold blood last month.
Oh man, it's too, too complicated.
Well, the Singham guy is great.
I mean, he is something people should look him up and read his bio in Wiki.
His name is neville singham it's s-i-n-g-h-a-m he's a uh from sri lanka is
half cuban half sri lankan uh communist uh not blatant communist he lives in shanghai china uh i think he's still an american citizen married to the founder of code pink
no
yes not not uh not that lady yeah the crazy lady what's her name again i can't remember her name offhand, but she's showed up for everything.
She's like a dirty trickster, like a dick-tuck
segretti type person, which I think.
Oh, no, no, this is Jodi Evans.
That's not the same one.
That's not the one you're thinking of.
I'm thinking of the founder of Code Pink.
He is married to Code Pink co-founder
Jodi Evans.
You're thinking of the other lady.
He's not married to Jodi Evans was just, it's just.
You think there's a difference between the two women in terms of their being nuts?
I'm just differentiating.
It's okay.
Medea.
Medea Benjamin.
That's the one you're saying.
Oh, okay.
You're thinking of her.
You're thinking of her.
Oh, okay.
Interesting.
But this Singham guy is like, he's just basically a communist.
I mean, he's not even.
He's not hiding it.
Not hiding it.
He's in Shanghai and he works for the CCP.
And they're probably funneling money through him.
It's probably not even that much of his money.
And he's, yeah, he's subversive and he's got all these phony baloney organizations under his wing.
He's worse than Soros at the moment.
Yeah.
Who just got married, I hear?
Alex.
Soros?
Alex got married to Uma.
Oh, Alex.
Yeah, he got married to Uma.
Oh, he did.
Oh, good for him.
Well, that's good.
It's a couple of two beards.
Two beards.
Show title.
Okay.
I'm right here.
Two beards.
So let's play the USAID in Hungary.
This came off.
This is on one of these podcast reports.
This is interesting.
We have to look forward to this.
Hold on a second.
I'm looking for it.
USAID, you said, oh, I got it.
There we go.
The Hungarian government has announced that they will be releasing a documentary exposing the USAID scandal.
The movie will focus on revealing how USAID funneled millions of dollars into ideological movements in their country.
They claim that political organizations and liberal media.
media, which claim to be independent, received money through USAID to promote democrat agendas such as illegal migration, transgenders, and war stances.
Orban's government says USAID is working with George Soros's Open Society Foundations in the plot.
You know, the only thing I'm a little tired of is like,
it's here in Fredericksburg.
Soros, it's Soros, this is Soros, this is Soros.
The Open Society Institute is
so big.
I mean, Soros doesn't even have to think about it anymore.
No, it runs out of its own.
It's an infrastructure that's been in place for decades.
It's like jumping off a motorcycle.
Oh, really?
Do explore.
Jump off a motorcycle, the thing will go a mile.
Right.
It's balancing itself.
Yeah.
Good point.
You know, it's OSI, Open Society Institute, and it's just a great place to donate money so that you can enrich yourself by A, deducting that from your income tax and B, you know, helping to stir things up.
It's not even Soros.
As Soros, as far as I know, he's in a cryogenic chamber.
The guy is 100 years old.
Yes, I know.
If you've seen him speak within the last year or two, he can barely get a word out.
He can't get anything out.
And, and, you know, and Alex, I have my doubts about that guy being any kind of powerhouse like his dad.
He seems like a, like a beta male.
It seems like.
I think you called it.
two beards.
You nailed it.
A beard.
And, you know, who would get married to Uma Abedine?
That's like, you got to watch your six
all the time.
Oh, you're six.
There you go again with that phrase.
You're watching too many TV shows.
Watch your six, man.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
Yeah.
Hey, we're being accused of being boomers.
Yeah, you know what?
You should listen.
We are boomers.
Yeah, you should listen to your elders.
Hey, you guys are boomers, really you should listen to your elders for the accusation
we're boomers and you're a dipshit how about that nailed it
uh the one thing is no one can ever accuse us of not speaking our mind and saying what we think it is right wrong or indifferent at least we're we have an opinion And we're right almost all the time because that's the funny thing about being a boomer.
Oh, is that so?
Does that give you instant I'm right credits?
no no it's just from it's just from years and years and years and years and years of experience
well we weren't right about uh the former uh governor of new york you know we were pretty sure he killed all those seniors
in the in the nursing home go in there and choke them out
well he has evidence that he did a good job some people have criticized your leadership during covet specifically when it comes to the nursing home crisis.
How do you answer that question?
Well, first of all, New Yorkers.
New Yorkers are going to criticize whatever you do.
On nursing homes, it became a political football four years ago.
We now have had a number of reports that have gone
all through it.
And it has been proven to have been politicized.
The Department of Justice Inspector General said they played politics with the issue.
And then when you look at it at the end of the day and they have all the final numbers,
New York is number 38 in what's called the rate of death for every 1,000 people in a nursing home.
We're number 38!
New York is number 38 out of 50 states, we're great, which means only 12 states had a lower rate of death, which is really incredible.
Come to New York, you'll die less.
You think about it, we had it first, we had it worst, we didn't know what it was, and it's a tribute to the women and men who worked in our health care system and kept it down that low that only 12 states.
We saw your mobile morgues.
They were empty.
The hospitals were empty.
There was nothing.
Had a lower rate of death, and they had more time to get ready.
We were hit by surprise.
No, they did an extraordinary job.
And yes, there was a lot of politics in the beginning, and Trump was blaming us, and we were blaming Trump.
But he wasn't four years later.
He wasn't blaming anybody.
Trump Trump brought in hospital ships.
Trump was the.
Yeah, he wasn't blaming anybody.
He wasn't blaming China.
He was blaming China.
He was blaming China.
Facts and another thing to think about.
New Yorkers did a great job, and we led the nation.
When nobody knew what it was, Dan, we were on the front line, and we stood up and we handled it.
We were leading the nation by offering people burgers and fries in exchange for a shot.
We were first, people.
That was us.
Dope.
If that guy gets elected mayor, I design it.
That's hopeless back there.
They get elected.
Oh, so I heard him.
I mean,
that's how he gets in.
This guy, oh, yeah, he's good.
That's possible.
Oh, brother.
If he gets elected, it wouldn't surprise me in the least.
So
speaking of Trump being a horrible dictator, we have
an addition to the Big Beautiful Bill,
which has just got Colorado up in arms.
Colorado's Democratic delegation blasting a proposal today they say would hurt Colorado's outdoor lifestyle.
A new provision.
Yeah, it's going to hurt Colorado's outdoor lifestyle.
How's that work?
Were they going to shut down the sun?
Go talk to Bill Gates.
Lifestyle.
A new provision added to the budget reconciliation or big, beautiful bill would require the BLM and U.S.
Forest Service to sell millions of acres of public lands to build housing.
Public lands?
Black Lives Matter?
Yes.
Colorado, Colorado, they make the West the West.
But which lands?
Lawmakers ended the call before taking that question from me, so I followed up with an email, and Senator Michael Bennett's office responded saying that because areas with oil and gas, grazing, or mining permits could not be sold, recreation areas would be at risk.
Places like 18 Road in Fruda, Hartman Rocks in Gunnison, or Animus City Mountain in Durango.
What might seem like a barren parcel on a senator's desk on a map is actually a place where Coloradans hike, camp, hunt, ATV, climb, and so much more.
Jessica Turner, president of the Outdoor Recreation Roundtable, says there's already a mechanism to sell or lease federal land for housing.
But we don't need a whole new project.
By the way, this woman
who's in charge of whatever this thing is, she is, so she's inside her house and she's on her computer.
she has on you know those rich lady clothes the ones that are couture and they're made of always thick material
you know like and it's pink and vaguely and it's thick and then you look at her and her living room has like baroque furniture it looks like my first wife's living room honestly baroque furniture and just you know she's she just oozes wealth offsets that takes away those safeguards for the community she's a hiker no she does not look like a hiker at all no I would call her a Brahmin American.
You know, we have a classist society.
It's people like this.
I mean, seriously, it's people like this.
You know, it's our version of Brahmins who are upper middle class to just upper class.
And they know everything and they understand everything better.
And for God's sake, man, who's going to clean my toilet?
You've got to keep the illegals here.
But Summers acknowledges tourism and recreation in Colorado are also hugely important to our economy.
And anything that would impact that, including the sale of federal lands, would have to be analyzed further.
Right now, one thing we do know, the bill couldn't touch some of our state's landmarks.
It does stipulate that no protected areas, so a national park, a national monument, a wild and scenic river, those would not be part of this proposal.
So I looked at this proposal.
And what percentage do you think is proposed in this amendment to the big, beautiful bill?
to what percentage of colorado land will be sold off
uh
five
0.75 percent what yes in fact it says 0.
it says between 0.5 and 0.75 percent but we got to blast him
it's not it's nothing it's no it's nothing
interesting yeah yeah Yeah.
Okay.
Since you're on Colorado, I get my two Colorado clips.
You got Colorado clips.
Oh, who knows?
Something screwy is going on, or these clips wouldn't exist.
And here they are.
Colorado Clip 1.
NPR has learned the Department of Justice has made a significant.
Hey, where's Scott Scheiman?
Is he on vacation?
Scott Schiman?
Scott Scheiman.
Is he on vacation?
He's only working.
No, he works weekends.
Weekends.
NPR was that black screechy girl.
NPR has learned the Department of Justice has made a sweeping demand for Colorado's election records.
NPR's Jude Joffey Block reports documents show the DOJ asked Colorado to turn over all records from the 2024 federal elections and to preserve any records it still has from 2020.
Several voting experts and officials told NPR that broad of a request is highly unusual and concerning, given President Trump's false claims, false claims, false claims about elections.
Jenna Griswold is Colorado's Democratic Secretary of State.
We are seeing them use the apparatus of the federal government to undermine our elections and our democracy.
And I would assume that this is more of the same.
Oh,
yeah.
Yeah, false claims, false claims.
False claims.
False false claims.
False claims.
Claims.
Claims that are false.
False claims.
So claims that are false and false claims are two different phrases, and they don't mean the same thing.
They do not.
So here we go.
And the former, which is claims that are false,
is more accurate.
The other one is just propaganda.
When you say false claims, it's propaganda.
Yes.
And then this is PBS or NPR.
This is NPR, so it's propagandistic.
Yes.
National Propaganda Radio, NPR.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Right.
So let's pay clip two.
The Justice Department indicated it had received a complaint.
Colorado was not complying with federal record retention rules.
The department declined to provide additional details.
Yeah, this is obvious.
What's going on is Colorado, I think, is ground zero for these voting machines, which just seem to be a mess, technically.
Colorado is the first state that tried to keep Trump off the ballot.
That's not unconstitutional.
I forgot all about that.
Oh, what an annoying.
And so Colorado is this and that.
And then when you play the clips of the 0.07%,
0.whate.
Yeah.
It makes you wonder,
is this Colorado pushing back by their elites, the woman, the elite woman, the Brahmin, which I like that phrase?
The Brahmin American.
Brahmin American.
Brahmin American.
Yeah.
Elites.
You know, there's elites there.
My buddy is actually going.
There's a lot of elites in Aspen and in
there's two or three of these cities in the, you know, the mountain towns.
Aspen's a great one.
Yeah.
Bill Ziff had a place in Aspen I visited.
Boulder, Boulder.
So I visited Bill Ziff's place in Aspen because I was sorting out his wines.
Yeah.
And I know.
How does that call go?
Hey, hey, Dvorak, come over to Aspen.
I want you to sort out my wine.
So I'm in Aspen going through the place, and there's mousetraps all over the place because I guess Aspen is loaded with mice.
And so
I take a look at the whole operation.
He's got a big indoor pool.
And this is one of these stories.
So there's a big indoor pool.
And there's a whole bunch of workers in there.
And they're over the pool.
They've got a big netting and a bunch of flowers and some they're putting up a bunch of you know like vines and flowers or something they're all growing like live flowers across the top for the guests and they're bringing all these big lighting light stanchions there's a whole bunch of lights and it and i'm and the lights are underneath the flowers above the pool and pointing up And I said to the guy, what do you do?
What is the
flowers getting enough?
What's the deal with the lights?
And the guy says, well, we put them here for a couple of weeks and it gives enough time for the flowers and the plants to kind of turn toward the light.
So when they have a big pool party and people look up, they get to see the flowers.
Oh, that's some Brahmin stuff right there.
That's some rich dude's stuff.
I shook my head.
I said, Wow.
This is a new story.
I didn't know this story.
This is a new one.
That's a new one.
That's a good one.
All right, let's turn our focus to Minnesota.
very, very odd things going on in Minnesota.
Let's uh get a little backgrounder from Good Morning America.
This morning, an urgent manhunt underway after a man investigators say was posing as a police officer allegedly shot and killed a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband in their home.
Police say the same suspect was involved in a separate attack just 90 minutes earlier, allegedly shooting and wounding another lawmaker and his wife.
Suspects posing as police officers shot two victims.
Police responding to reports of gunfire around 2 a.m.
Saturday at the home of Democratic Senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, just outside Minneapolis.
Officers then checking on Democratic former House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, a few miles away at their Brooklyn Park home, only to find the two fatally shot.
They noticed that there was a police vehicle in the driveway with the lights, emergency lights on, and what appeared to be a police officer at the door coming out of the house.
When our officers confronted him, the individual immediately fired upon the officers who exchanged gunfire, and the suspect retreated back into the home.
This whole thing, so
I think there's a clip somewhere where immediately, just within hours of it happening, this is political, this is political, this is political.
I was expecting to find a MAGA hat in the car.
You know, and then they release the name of this guy,
and it is all very, very double-blind.
The whole thing is super suspicious.
Dubious.
I have the bonus clip.
Well,
let me finish this one up and then we'll get to it.
Okay, I just want to say this has this is the screwiest, most suspicious.
This is MK Ultra, it seems to me.
I'm with you on that.
Authorities now naming 57-year-old Vance Bolter as the suspect.
Investigators say he was dressed as an officer, wearing a vest, a badge, and a taser, and was driving an SUV with police lights.
The FBI releasing images they say are of him in a cowboy hat and wearing a latex mask outside one of the victims' homes.
Investigators say they've recovered several firearms from Boltra's vehicle along with No King's flyers and writings mentioning the names of the victims, some abortion providers and other Democratic lawmakers.
Sources telling ABC News law enforcement is looking into whether he may have been motivated by extreme views on abortion.
And that's kind of new, this extreme views on abortion that wasn't there in the beginning.
And there's this video of this guy, undated video, you know, who's waffling on for about four minutes.
He's like a guy that picks up dead bodies and takes them to the morgue.
I have this, I have the clip of that when you want to get to it.
Yeah, yeah.
We just do it now.
Is that, oh, you got the whole thing?
That's the bonus.
Yes, you're going to have to live with the whole thing because it's interesting enough.
I couldn't really, I could have just clipped out where he talks about it.
I believe you brought that whole.
I didn't even clip it.
It was like, this is nothing.
Well, you can run to the beginning of it because once you, I can just summarize it.
I don't even have to play it.
We'll play the beginning.
But before you play it, there's a couple of things I want to note.
And people should note this.
When they discuss, the cop comes out, discuss, and this has been said more than once.
He was 61 inches tall.
That's 5'1.
He's a midget.
And so, no offense to the short and petite males out there listening to the show.
Interesting.
So do they.
That's...
That they always say that instead of saying he's 5'1, they say he's 61 inches, which makes him sound like maybe he's bigger.
Well, you know, when you take a mug, when you take a mug shot,
yeah, I know you have the inches on the sidebar.
Inches, yes.
But when you're in a press conference, you don't say you don't take people's inches.
Well, the reason I'm
getting into it with you is because That probably means there was a mugshot of him taken at some point.
Otherwise, why would you even say that?
Well, that's a good point.
Because whenever you see a mugshot, it always has inches on the ruler in the background.
Yeah, you have to do the calculations.
I don't see where at any point this guy is some kind of security guy for some.
Not at 5-1.
And the other thing is, according to
the clip you're going to play, he's married with five kids.
Yes.
Another one.
Where's the wife?
Where are the kids?
Well, the wife did show up, and
somebody did contact her.
But why did it?
It was mentioned that he had told his two roommates, two dudes, that he was going to be gone for a while and may end up dead.
This came up in the press conference.
So why is he living with two guys if he's married with five kids?
Let's listen to a little bit of this video.
Hello, my name is Vance Belton.
Wait, wait, let me preface the video.
This is from a Zoom call he made.
I saw his LinkedIn profile too.
It's a Zoom call he made because he was taking a class on mortuary services.
It was one of those online classes.
And in those classes, you introduce yourself.
This is his introduction to himself.
Hi, Vance.
No other names that I use.
I live in Greenelle, Minnesota, about an hour away from the Minneapolis-St.
Paul area.
I'm affiliated with two funeral homes.
I work full-time for Wolf Funeral Home, which is an intake location for about six funeral homes.
And we also do all the intake for the National Cremation Society and the Neptune
Society for all their cremation.
What kind of course does he take?
What kind of course was he taking if he already is doing the job?
He's basically a grunt worker picking up dead bodies.
He's not a funeral director, and I think that's what he wanted to become.
Oh,
as well.
So I mainly do removals at this point.
So I work at Wolf full-time and then I also work for another funeral home called Metro First Call
and they also do traditional removals at nursing homes, assisted living apartments, but they also have contracts with medical examiner's office.
So like
One contract is the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office, so we'll do removals, which
we're working with a lot of police officers and
deaf investigators at the location where Deceiten is found.
Have you seen any pictures of the so-called car
with
that looked like a cop car with lights on it?
Have you seen any pictures?
No, they didn't show that.
And then the other thing is he just they've just found his other car today this earlier.
And supposedly he took off on foot.
He was wearing a stupid mask.
This whole thing is really screwed up.
This is a bad op.
Yeah.
Is there anything else in here we need to listen to?
Well,
actually, you have to keep now that you started.
That part is not interesting.
It gets more interesting as we right now.
It starts getting
to be a crime scene or just a natural death.
And our role is to just take the decedent from that place of death to the medical examiner's office.
And so between those two locations, I'm working about six days a week.
This is about where I build on the video.
So I'm glad you're going to be here.
No, no, no.
This is the part where it gets good.
Okay, well, I'm glad you got it.
What else here?
Family and pets.
I have a wife and five kids, and we have two pets, German shepherds.
Fun fact about myself, I've been in the food industry about 30 years, and that led to an opportunity.
I was invited to the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is located in Central Africa.
When I was in high school, the country was called Zaire.
That's a little bit more familiar with people, but it's the largest, second largest country in Africa, right in the middle, in the center there.
And was asked a couple of years ago to go and see what I could do for ideas on helping their food supply system.
Their population is about 100 million people, and they import 80% of their food currently.
So some of the food companies I worked for in the past were farmed a fork, like Del Monte Foods and Golden Plump Poultry, where we did everything from at Del Monte, we planted the products to harvested them to process them and then shipped them out.
And Golden Plump Poultry, we had our own hatcheries, grow out barns.
Well, how is that helping feed the people of Zaire?
It
sounds like some kind of capitalist takeover.
Farmers and then processing plants.
So between those two companies,
I have some experience with agriculture.
And so over in in the Democratic Republic of Congo, I had some ideas they thought were pretty promising, which
package up some Congolese and put them in Del Monte.
This whole thing is just, he goes on about this.
And then he was going to move his family there.
And then he was, but he wanted a part-time job here so he could make money to pay for this other thing.
I mean, he's almost done, I think.
Yeah, yeah, 38 seconds.
But it's like, what is this guy?
What is going on here?
The company I was working for at the time wasn't interested in doing anything in Africa.
So I talked with my wife and we decided I just put in my two-week notice and we just go off on our own to try to do these projects to help out in Africa.
So we're doing farming and fishing projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
And to help pay the bills, I just started working at a funeral home because the shift worked good for my schedule with the other things I was doing.
And that led to some classes at DMAC, which led to this course.
So just learning more about the funeral industry.
And I think that covers everything.
And I will look forward to seeing you in class.
And we'll go from there.
Well,
where was the interesting part?
Well, I thought it was interesting that he's connected to the Republic of Democratic Republic of Congo.
And if you go to his LinkedIn page, he's the CEO of the Red Lion Group.
This is bull crap.
These are, there's a website.
All right.
These are websites.
And then
the guard.
It is bull crap, but what is
this is crazy bull crap considering what this guy just did.
He had a hit list with Elon Omar on it.
Why he didn't put her at the top is unknown.
You're horrible, man.
Let's listen to ABC here for a second.
This morning, the urgent manhunt continues in the Minnesota Twin Cities region for 57 years old.
By the way, manifesto immediately mentioned.
Manifesto?
Yeah, where's the manifesto?
We don't get the manifesto.
They never give us a bunch of items.
They don't get to get it until they rewrite it.
I want the manifesto.
This morning, the urgent manhunt continues in the Minnesota Twin Cities region for 57-year-old Vance Bolter.
The suspect police say killed a beloved Minnesota lawmaker and her husband and wounded another legislator and his spouse.
This was an act of targeted political violence.
He knew that that was there right away.
Targeted political violence.
I mean, is it an op gone wrong?
There's something gone wrong.
The FBI putting it in.
And by the way, that woman, we don't have a, there are clips available of her.
She was frightened because she...
I have it.
I have it.
Oh, good.
Okay.
I have the clip.
Here she is.
Representative Melissa Hortman.
After she voted no on health care for illegals.
I know that people will be hurt by that vote.
And I'm,
we worked very hard to try to get a budget deal
that wouldn't include that provision.
Yeah.
So she saw she looked and sounded with the Republicans.
She looked and sounded distraught.
Yeah.
And she was very upset because they, according to other reports, they, all the Democrats in the state were going after her for siding with the Republicans on the on the free welfare for undocumented immigrants.
And uh which is an easy kind of MAGA right-wing thought, like, oh, that's why he killed her.
But that's why she was killed.
I'm not buying any of that.
Something else.
Well, I'm not buying anything because I think this is some sort of, I think you maybe hit it right, an op gone wrong.
Yeah.
Well, let's finish with ABC.
Targeted political violence.
The FBI putting out these images, they say, are of Bolter not long after the attack in a cowboy hat, offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to his arrest.
Bolter, a Minnesota resident, ran a private security company with his wife.
Do not approach him.
You should consider him armed and dangerous.
Around 2 a.m.
Saturday, police in Champlain, northwest of Minneapolis, responding to reports of a shooting at the home of state senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette.
Suspects posing as police officers shot two victims.
Eight miles away in Brooklyn Park, a fast-thinking sergeant proactively checking on the home of former House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, finding them fatally shot.
They noticed that there was a police vehicle in the driveway with the lights, emergency lights on, and what appeared to be a police officer at the door coming out of the house.
When our officers confronted him,
the individual immediately fired upon the officers who exchanged gunfire, and the suspect retreated back into the home.
Just happened to go check on him.
Yeah.
I should go check on him.
By coincidence, and the other thing is now all of a sudden, instead of being at Africa or a funeral home or a food service, he's co-owned a security company with his wife who he was living while he was living with two dudes.
You know what?
This to me is nuts.
This sounds like a contracted hit
from someone else not politically motivated.
How about this?
Now that you bring that up, the guy was a hit man.
Yeah.
Yeah, in Congo.
Yeah.
Or,
yeah, and maybe that's why he was in the Congo to to do a hit there.
He, this, I mean, I, this is really out there, but it's what's the possibility.
There are these guys out there that are professional murderers.
They're usually about 61 inches tall.
And the 61 inches tall is code.
Yeah.
And
what's the mug shot taken for?
Because I think your analysis of that is probably correct.
It would have to be a mug shot with the 61-inch marker on the side,
which is why that
came out.
When people ask me how tall I am, my standard joke is 517, but I'm going to start switching to inches now.
So they really go,
517 is already hard for people.
Oh, I see.
You're 617.
This is very.
And then what's he doing with the
supposedly in the car, there was a bunch of these
things.
What's that got to do with the price of bread?
And then the phony baloney list of people that were on, you know,
Elon Omar, Tim Walls, and a bunch of other politicos that were on the list.
This bull crap.
This whole thing could be bull crap.
Hmm.
But I like the hitman theory of my own.
I pat myself on the head.
As a hitman.
Don't give yourself a brain injury.
And she was nervous when she, that clip you played of the speaker.
She was a nervous wreck for some reason.
Something else is going on.
So, anyway,
for people who are emailing me and saying,
what is happening in our world?
Just look at the ground.
Turn off the TV.
Put your phone down.
Turn off the TV.
It'll be okay.
It'll be okay.
These things have been going on forever.
I mean, no one even mentioned the 10 people shot in an Austrian school.
That wasn't news
here.
No, well, I saw one.
A little bit.
A little bit.
But, you know, it's like,
this is, this is the, we live in a broken, fallen world.
That's just it.
It's, but it's not.
It's the same old world that's always been.
That's my point.
It's just more amplified.
It's amplified.
Continue.
Yeah, which gives us the opportunity to do no agenda show for people.
They should be thankful.
No.
I don't care if they're thankful or not.
Yeah, you do.
But it's like, don't worry about it.
Go outside, enjoy the, enjoy your neighbors, have a joke about their birthday signs.
Hey, how you doing?
Yeah, okay, that's pretty funny.
Just calm down.
I mean, there are,
it's off the rails here, John.
It's off the rails.
Like, well, you know,
2030, Soros, the World Economic Forum, they're going to give the New World Order.
We're back to New World Order.
That's cropping up again it's the cycle that's just annoying it's like uh hey i went down that rabbit hole 15 years ago there's nothing at the bottom there's no alice in wonderland there's no looking glass
aliens
speaking of something else to be worried about it's roughly the size of a 15-story building asteroid 2024 yr4 dubbed the city killer when it was discovered last year was initially given a three percent chance of striking earth Earth on the 22nd of December 2032.
New projections from NASA have downgraded that threat to almost zero.
Instead, our nearest neighbor, the Moon, may now be in danger.
Oh no!
NASA has upgraded the chances of a lunar collision to 4.3%.
Though unlikely, the impact could be visible from Earth and may leave a new lunar crater up to a kilometer in diameter.
Objects in space where there is so much space and the chances of hitting anything is extremely low in most circumstances, 4% is very high indeed.
How can 4% chance of it hitting the moon be very high indeed?
It's better that it was high compared to 1.
I wonder if this thing hits the moon, if it's going to crack through the
hollow moon.
The hollow moon, because it could crack through, because so far nothing's been able to penetrate that inner
thing, whatever it is.
Did you see a spacecraft?
I didn't clip it, but there was some guy, a state senator, I think, and he was being interviewed and he let it slip.
He said, Well, you know, I've talked to army guys.
We got army people on the moon.
I'm like, what?
Did you see that video?
No, I didn't.
It was almost uncomfortable.
And I'm surprised that you saw it.
You didn't clip it.
Because
it's like three seconds long.
I'm like, eh, I tried to find the original, couldn't find it.
Got to get up.
Yeah.
I got to do work.
No, I can't do that.
They got to get it.
Where's the gun us to Lefrey?
You can't do that.
Are the Grammys coming up?
Are the Grammys on the way?
Is it?
Yeah, you're the one that keeps track of the Grammys.
I don't.
Let me see.
When is the Grammy?
I think the CMT has something to go.
Let me see.
Look at your Satan cycle calendar.
I'm looking at the Satan cycle here.
Let me see.
The Grammy Awards.
When are they coming up?
They should be coming up soon.
The 20, is it the
February?
Oh, please.
Because they just announced some new categories, which is also very interesting.
Changes are coming to music's biggest night in 2026.
The Recording Academy has announced new rules and new categories for the Grammy Awards next year.
The best new artist category is expanding to include acts who were previously nominated for album of the year as a featured artist.
The Academy's Missoula Carving.
I don't understand this.
What?
Yeah.
So if you were nominated for best album,
you can now be nominated for best new artist, even if you, even if you won, I guess, that category.
But then you're not new.
I mean, who are they trying to get on the show that they have to choose?
This is like when we did.
Oh, that's exactly right.
This is what we did with,
I've told this story, with Michael Jackson.
we wanted to get michael jackson on the video music awards and he would only do it if we promised to give him the video vanguard award and we would name it after him the michael jackson video vanguard award of the year
and then so yeah okay and there were some other some other stipulations which well i'll tell the story in case someone hasn't heard it sounds corrupt so
and then we had to do this whole special weekend to debut his video i don't remember which one it was.
And so we recorded on Friday, we'd record for, well,
let me see, Thursdays we record for Saturday and Sunday, and Friday we record for Monday because none of it was
not much of it was live.
So we did the whole 48 on Thursday, and then Friday we taped for Monday, and everybody went home.
And then the frantic phone calls, everybody had to come in on Saturday to reshoot everything for the weekend because in the contract that stipulated every single time we would say Michael Jackson, you had to say Michael Jackson.
Oh, yeah, you did tell this story.
Michael Jackson, the king of pop.
And so we didn't, that contract piece hadn't come down to the studio.
But anyway, so
you finesse the awards, you make up an award to get someone to appear on the award show.
And by the way, once he was dead, that's now the J-Lo Video Vanguard Award.
That didn't last, those hypocrites.
So anyway, so there's something up with this.
Who were previously nominated for album of the year as a featured artist?
The Academy is also carving out a standalone category for best album cover and create album cover.
No agenda show should win that.
When's the last time you saw an album cover?
Yeah, on an album.
That's a good point.
Album cover and creating a brand new category for best traditional country album.
The existing best country album category has been renamed best contemporary country album.
So they're kind of giving two lanes for that.
What that means is we have a white country
winner and a black country winner because Beyonce took it last year.
The change comes after, of course, Beyonce won Best Country Album last year for Cowboy Carter.
We're really seeing a lot of expansion within that music category.
So some new words to reflect it.
This is weird.
Best country.
This is the same thing that Tony's did.
The Tony's added a bunch of first, you know, the best actor and best featured actor.
Two separate categories.
What the hell is that supposed to mean?
I don't know.
It's straight.
No, you're right.
I think
you absolutely nailed it.
This is corruption at the core.
We want to get so-and-so to show up for the show because nobody wants to do these shows anymore because the ratings are flagging.
And it's not helping us much if they don't show up.
If nobody shows up, it gets worse.
We got to bribe them somehow.
So how are we going to do it?
Okay, here's what we're going to do.
Let's have a meeting.
Yeah.
Let's have a meeting.
Oh, man.
Oh, boy.
What are we going to do?
Well, we do the Albrego Garcia stuff.
I got two clips.
Oh, is he, is he?
What's happening with him?
Well, here's the update.
Abrego Garcia update.
In Tennessee, Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleaded not guilty today to federal charges of human smuggling.
It was the first time the construction worker and longtime Maryland resident has appeared in a U.S.
courtroom since he was mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March.
The Trump administration brought him back to the U.S.
last week to face criminal charges that stem from a 2022 traffic stop.
Abrego Garcia's supporters called for his freedom outside the courthouse today and at a nearby church his wife Jennifer describes seeing her husband for the first time in three months.
Meantime a federal judge has sided with the Trump administration's push to keep Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil in detention.
That's despite a previous judge's order saying the pro-Palestinian activists could no longer be held based on the administration's initial argument that he's a threat to U.S.
foreign policy.
The government now says Khalil is being held on other grounds claiming that he lied on his green card application.
No.
They're keeping him in Louisiana for some sort of debriefing.
By the way,
when you're ready, I have the answer for Louisiana for you.
We got it.
Oh, good.
But first with Brego Garcia, this is interesting.
This was on a podcast.
This is Dershowitz.
Oh, De Dersch.
Dersh clip.
Yeah.
Talking about
analyzing the whole situation, saying that his lawyers, his liberal lawyers, got him screwed over.
Big mistake, big blunder by his lawyers.
His lawyers never, ever should have tried to bring him back to the United States.
They should have filed a motion having him transferred from El Salvador or Nicaragua, where maybe there was some fear, to another place, say Argentina or Brazil.
He might be a free man today if they had done that.
Remember that he was ordered deported.
The only flaw in the order was where he was sent, not whether he was sent.
And so I think he may spend a long time in prison.
If he's found guilty, he's presumed innocent.
But if he's found guilty, he's going to spend a long time in prison complaining about his ideological radical lawyers who made a hero out of him and try to get him back to the United States when that was not in his own self-interest.
So, lawyers made the most fundamental mistake a lawyer can make, putting ideology before the best interest of the client.
Right.
One quick bounce question, and then I'm coming to the gov.
Professor, the idea of what America should have done with him, why these charges from a traffic stop that didn't seem to amount to much when it happened instead of challenging the stay of removal?
Well, they can do both.
That's the problem with what the lawyers did.
They're going to have a trial.
If he's convicted, they're happy.
But if he's acquitted, they can still bring the deportation charges because the standard of proof is very different in deportation charges.
All they would have to do is deport him to a country where he could not make a plausible claim that he's in danger.
So from the government's point of view, it's a win-win to do it this way.
Did Cuomo say
in a minute we're coming to the gov?
Yeah.
What is that?
Is that his brother?
We're coming to the gov?
Yeah, the gov.
The gov.
Yeah, they tried to make this a
George Floyd type deal.
That's what they tried, and it failed.
Well, they're still working on it.
They got the protesters out there demanding he'd be freed.
Oh, man.
It was so sad to see these people who were just, you know, so you have
these vans, like kind of like courtesy shuttles almost.
And I guess they rousted some people and put them in the courtesy shuttles.
And then you have these protesters standing in front and just
completely hysterical.
Let my people go.
Let my people go.
It's like, wow.
I love that woman yelling that much.
She's screaming at the top of her lungs, damaging her vocal cords, no doubt.
Yeah,
let my people go.
And she's like, and they, you know, she's bald.
She's some bald white woman.
Yeah.
She was.
She wasn't bald.
What is wrong with these?
This is terrible.
Yeah.
She needed a hug really bad.
No, she needed, yeah, she needed a hug in an insane asylum.
She needed a hug with a straitjacket.
When you go that hysterical, I mean, there's no coming back at a certain point.
It's like a temper tantrum for an adult.
It's, I, I have trouble watching that.
I look at, like, oh, this is, it's just hard.
What is going on?
Yeah.
So, well, that reminds me of this TikTok video.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Don't.
I got to stick with Louisiana for a moment.
Okay.
Oh, yes.
I want to hear that.
I'll bring you back.
So, our Dell dealer, he's in Louisiana, and he says, oh, no.
You're what?
The Dell dealer is the guy who sends the Dell computers.
Oh, the guy who never sent me anything.
Yeah, I think I have yours.
I think I have.
Oh, not one of those deals.
It's like the people that send me candy bars for you.
Yeah, they send me Dells.
You know, he was going to send me a cool seven-inch touchscreen, but then he heard Tina complaining about the mess in my studio.
He said,
I didn't send it out because I didn't want Tina to get mad at you.
I just got screwed out of a cool seven-inch touchscreen.
Whose fault is that?
Don't think I'm going to say it's my my wife's fault.
It's always my fault.
Hello.
So, he's in Louisiana.
I met him.
He came to Fredericksburg with his daughter.
He's a nice guy, real nice guy.
We had a lunch.
We hung out for a little bit.
And he said, oh, no,
this is the place to be.
We have, we're number one when it comes to detention centers.
And he sent me a couple of maps and some clips.
And I think this one says it all.
It's the All-Woman South Louisiana Ice Processing Center.
These facilities are some five hours away from downtown New Orleans.
Most folks don't even know they exist.
It's one of Louisiana's privately run ice facilities where Tufts University PhD student, Rumisha Osturk, is currently being held.
The facility is part of a growing network of detention centers across the state, now under scrutiny by lawmakers and activists.
Unfortunately, Louisiana has a very
has a lot of prison capacity.
Nell Hahn works to educate migrants in Lafayette about their rights.
She says the rural locations of these centers make it nearly impossible for detainees to access help.
It's particularly hard on immigrants because
there aren't that many immigration lawyers and most of them are not concentrated in central or north Louisiana.
Louisiana is rapidly becoming a detention hotspot.
In March, Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalil was transferred to a center in Jenna.
Just a month earlier, migrants from Montana Bay were sent to Louisiana.
According to TARC, Louisiana now holds the second highest number of ICE detainees in the U.S., over 7,000.
Texas ranks first, with more than 29,000.
And it's not just the numbers raising eyebrows, it's who's running the show.
According to research from the National Immigrant Justice Center, 90% of people in ICE custody in the country are held in privately run facilities.
These are incredibly, incredibly profitable businesses.
There you go.
That's Merka, baby.
Profit.
That's why.
Far away from lawyers and very profitable.
Like far away from lawyers.
Far away from the middle of nowhere, Louisiana.
Far away from lawyers.
That would be no
lawyer wants to work there.
And from what I understand, the government facilities, it costs $120 a day to house a detainee and the commercial guys.
Yeah, we'll do it for $75.
Well, we got you.
We got you, Gov.
We got you, government.
We'll take care of you.
So that's why.
But Texas is still number one.
Who knew?
Oh, I didn't know that either.
Where?
Probably in the middle of nowhere somewhere in Texas, outside of Waco.
Hey, with that, I want to thank you for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in, coming to the gov.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only Mr.
Wines Order herself, himself.
John Cena Morris!
Well, in the morning to you, Mr.
Adam Curry, in the morning,
moves on the ground, feet in the air, seven's in the water, and all there's a lights out here.
Yeah, hello, trolls in the troll room.
Very trolly.
Let's see what they got.
Well, it's Father's Day, 1912.
Well, that stinks.
I thought there'd be more people wanting to hear our Iran bombing stuff.
No, I guess not.
They're like, dad's more important.
I'm okay with that.
If dad's more important than Iran bombing, Iran bombing stuff,
I'm fine with that.
I'm good.
It's nice.
You had
a nice little diddy in the newsletter about the origin of Father's Day.
Can you recant?
I mean, recount?
Father's Day was, you know, it was a pushback.
Mother's Day had been established long in the 1800s, I think.
And they had fathers were short-cheated and they didn't get any day.
And so they started bitching about it.
It began in 1901.
The first kind of somebody came up with the idea of Father's Day and it never went anywhere.
And then in 1956, to be specific,
the Eisenhower administration, they recognized there was a Father's Day.
And then it started floating around.
It was in the 70s where they gave it a day,
third Sunday or second Sunday of the month or whatever.
And
it's always been semi-rejected because it's a symbol of the patriarchy.
Yes.
And socks.
Socks.
Socks.
Socks.
I got Happy Father's Day from my stepdaughters, even.
It was really nice.
Both of them?
Both of them, yeah.
Both of them.
Good.
And from my own daughter, yeah, that's nice.
I feel like a dad.
I feel like the patriarch of the family.
Heck yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I got a Happy Father's Day from my daughter, not from my son or my stepson, either one.
None of them, or my wife, nobody else.
Really?
Mimi didn't even say, hey, thanks for being here.
She might have, but I probably ignored it.
How can you ignore it?
Jay did for sure.
Does she need a banner flying flying over the house?
Does she text you?
Does she call it?
You just ignored it.
No,
I think she
said something last night, but it wasn't official.
Hey, by the way, happy Father's Day for tomorrow.
All right.
Yeah, but no, but I think we've discussed this already.
It's a Nudenik day for the most part, except apparently for our listeners.
Yes.
Well, we do have some Father's Day well wishes.
I looked at the spreadsheet.
I saw it come in.
But first, we want to remind you that the trolls, who we count diligently, they're all listening through a number, a variety of ways.
And they're in the troll room, of course, trollroom.io, where you can listen live and you can troll along if you feel like it.
Lots of trolling happening today.
Suggestion, listen on a modern podcast app.
Did I tell you that the research came out that
it's been denied that YouTube was out there claiming they're the biggest podcast platform ever?
Did you hear any of that?
No, I know.
I know nothing of
what you speak.
Okay, so, well, basically,
Google slash YouTube have been just going on and on.
Oh, people, podcasts are on YouTube.
Everything is a podcast.
And they, you know, and they'd go in and automatically change.
If you had headphones on and microphone, they'd change your tags to it's a podcast.
And then they say, oh, we've got a billion podcasts.
It's like, it was fake and gay, honestly.
It was, it was not okay.
And then some guy came out from Signal Hill Research, which is part of some other big group, said, no, no, no.
In fact, if you look at it, you know, it's like over 60% listen to podcasts on podcast apps.
And then the whole industry, which for a year and a half has been going, oh, you need video.
You can't have a, oh, the market's demanding video.
If you don't do video, you can't have a pocket.
You won't be successful.
No one's going to care about you.
The young people, they only watch podcasts.
They don't want to listen to podcasts.
On a dime, they turned.
You know, people are misinterpreting what I was saying.
You know, it's,
I, I just felt it was a, it was the shiny new thing.
Boom.
So podcast wins again.
You cannot, in fact, I would say
that podcast is the biggest medium in media in general.
I think you could probably make that claim, and I think somebody might be able to prove it.
Well, if you take four and a half million podcasts, let's say the average lot.
Yeah.
Well,
no, it's not.
When I turn YouTube TV, I don't do not have four and a half, even with Pluto, I do not have four and a half million channels.
1.8 of those million
comes from Anchor, formerly known as Anchor, which is a free host, and now is Spotify for podcasters.
It's still free.
So a lot of those are like test one, two, poop.
Like, okay, that's your podcast.
Test one, two.
They got one episode.
But let's just presume that on average, every podcast has 100 listeners.
That's 400 million.
Four and a half, 450 million.
It dwarfs everything.
You are either a podcast or you don't exist in media land.
That's just it.
Podcasting is bigger than anything else on mass.
And it's distributed and no one owns it and no one can take it down.
Good try, YouTube.
Who came out and said, YouTube, you know, they've never reported their numbers.
I don't even think they're profitable.
If you were making tons of money with YouTube, wouldn't you say, hey, YouTube did really great?
Wouldn't you put that in your numbers?
They've been very secretive about all their numbers.
Well, they still report numbers.
They're public.
The way they report numbers is like they don't want anyone knowing what their formula, underlying formula for number generation is.
So they
Google's always, even before YouTube, they were always very sketchy about how they reported numbers.
They had the money.
There's money.
Here, look at this pile of money.
Well, what they do is
the report they came out with is we contribute $55 billion to the GDP of the world.
Okay.
Does that include camera companies and sellers?
No, that's probably th th that number is probably true, but the the underlying foundational calculations for that number are a mystery.
They had to make special chips just to encode all the video they get to do it with any kind of speed.
I mean, I just don't see well.
It doesn't matter.
Podcasting, MP3s.
We're glad you're listening.
We've never done video.
We're never going to do video.
That's one thing I can say.
We're never going to do that.
We're just too old and boomery.
No one wants to do that.
We're just too old and boomery.
You don't want to watch a couple of boomers with with cans on there.
I mean, what's worse than two boomers on a podcast is two boomers on a video podcast.
That's the worst.
I can't imagine that.
So, anyway,
try out a modern podcast app.
It works with all of your existing podcasts and it has lots of benefits, including chapters with art, which is nice, which
you can crowdsource those.
Dreb Scott does them for us.
But I think the most exciting pieces are that you listen to the live show in the podcast app.
It alerts you when we go live.
We've got the bat signal.
And when we publish, and this is the one that is most appropriate for today's issues, particularly with some of the legacy apps where you've got people complaining, oh, he's not an apple.
Within 90 seconds of us publishing the podcast, it shows up on the modern podcast apps.
That's why you want to get one right there.
Everything else is kind of the same.
And there's like 27 other new features, but you can figure those out for yourself.
We are still a value-for-value program, which means we just give you our unadulterated opinion, years of experience, years of doing media deconstruction.
I mean, I have end of show mixes.
I just pulled out all the bomber and clips again.
This is the fifth time we've used them in the history of the show.
You could just keep on pulling them out.
They're still valid.
You just keep pulling them out.
Oh, there we go again.
Time to bomb a ran.
It's always the same people saying it, too.
So we thank people who give us time, their talent, their treasure.
We always thank people who support us financially.
$50 and above will mention your name.
But before we even get to that, you mentioned it earlier.
The artists.
We should indeed be nominated for album art for a Grammy.
I would gladly, it wouldn't be funny if we went up there to accept it.
We've got a Grammy for best album art.
Go podcasting.
That's what you'd make me say.
I know you'd make me say that.
That's definitely you'd have to say that.
So we have No Agenda Art Generator, which is one of the great examples of time, talent, and treasure.
That is Sir Paul Couture, who put that together for us.
And the artists have been uploading art for
well over a decade, maybe 15 years, with different versions of the art generator.
So we always get to, right after the show, we get to choose from a plethora of art, which I have to say, I'm seeing model collapse before my very eyes.
Everyone's using AI these days.
They've gone from photographic type images.
Now it's just all cartoony.
And the cartoons all they're starting to look the same, like the same cartoonist.
It's the same.
It's like that's why we got confused.
Or I got
my thesis that digital 1122115, whatever his name is.
Digital Man.
Darren O'Neill.
Yeah.
Because it all looks the same.
Because the cartoon, they have their prompting.
I don't know if they're using the same software.
Maybe they're not.
That would make it even worse.
But this happened with the last DH Unplugged that's coming up.
Or the one last week, or the one coming.
There's one, some art that Andrew did.
It is the same.
It looks like it was done by O'Neill.
I mean, it's got the same character cartoon type.
It's just like a certain, it's annoying.
It's the second second law of thermodynamics, entropy.
You can't stop it.
It's just unstoppable.
When this stuff keeps eating its own art,
it's just going to get worse and worse and worse.
And then, you know, well, no, but there's this new one.
Yeah, because it hasn't been saturated with its own output yet.
There's going to be a lot of new ones, apparently.
Well, of course.
Because everyone knows you hang around long enough.
I mean, who still uses Dali?
Please, that was the cat's meow back in the day.
I do.
Yeah, well, where's your art then?
I don't know.
Exactly.
We want to thank our artist who brought us the artwork for episode 1772, and it was indeed Digital 2112, man,
for the concept.
There were multiple versions of the concept, and this was not perfect by any stretch of the imagination.
No, because he left out the term Dr.
Pepper.
Yes, the most important part was left out, but he had the album cover concept
correct.
So that's why we chose it.
It's, you know, I guess it's John and George.
You and me.
It's you and me.
I don't even wear glasses.
No, but I'm no, I'm the.
Well, who am I then?
I'm not the guy with the mustache.
You're the guy with the glasses, with the hat.
Yeah, I'm the guy with the hat.
Had the right idea, and let's just go take a look at the other art because
there was one other
which actually had Dr.
Pepper on it, because that was a mistake.
You said Dr.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club band.
It was funny.
And so we had,
well, there was also a digital 2112 man.
He did No Agenda's Dr.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Curry and Dvorak band, but it was just a poster.
It wasn't even the right thing.
He should have combined those two.
Yeah.
He shouldn't have missed.
If you're just working with prompts, you can say combine the two and you you won't get what you want.
Yeah.
But everything,
everything is AI.
And
it's just blending together.
It's all starting to look a lot.
The good example is digital 2112s.
If you go down further and you got the two cartoons next to each other, keep that story in your pants and No Kings, which I like the No Kings one.
But the cartoon style is the same as Darren O'Neill's cartoon style and every other cartoon style and the same one that Horowitz ran into.
Because that's all, it's not even outputting good stuff anymore.
In fact, Scaramanga's Mexican Protestican
down further down, which I liked a lot, but you
rejected because Curry and Dvorak was too small.
You can't read it.
It was too small.
It was too small.
But
why is Scaramanga doing that?
What happened to his photorealistic stuff?
It can't be done anymore, I'm telling you.
It's like Mike Mike Riley's entire
logo.
There's boomers complaining about AI.
No, I got more complaints coming up.
Oh yeah.
Just so you know.
Known fact.
Was there anything else that we liked?
Yeah, you liked the crosswalk down below Scaramangus thing, which I use for the newsletter.
Yeah, because, and the only reason why is that kind of reminded me of the Beatles, you know, the Abbey Road.
album cover and it was okay but again digital 2112 man and what's going to happen is his art is going to start sucking because the AI is sucking up his art and it's going to suck worse.
It's just, it's going to degrade.
Digital 2112 man also did
another one I like, which was the rotten fruit.
Yeah, you just down to next layer.
Yeah.
Did you hear that the Atari chess computer program beat Chad GPT at chess?
No, the Atari program?
Yeah, in an emulator.
From the 80s.
Yes.
Yeah.
And Chad GPT was mad.
It was like, well, you know,
it had all kinds of excuses.
If we just start over, then I can show you I can win, was basically Chad GPT's answer every single time.
Yeah, I think, yeah, that's when you walk.
Yeah, sure.
Two out of three.
Three out of five.
Yeah, right.
But that five out of seven.
That's what's next.
That just goes to show, you know, this stuff is no good.
It's no, what it's great for is so-called uh help desk that's the thing it's great for that
yeah how can i help you your trash will be kick picked up on thursday would you like a special time for ten dollars extra it can do that i think help desk call center valid everything else no good art disappointing disappointing i miss our artists i really do and
they've deserted us i think they're the new prompt jockey artists are doing just fine this stuff is good.
I think it sucks.
It's not fine.
Okay, it's fine.
Yes, it's fine.
It's not great.
It's just fine.
Okay, if you have a funny concept, you can still win.
But it's not, there's nothing as stunning anymore.
Do you think there's anything stunning?
Like, wow, that's just so great, so beautiful.
No.
No, about saying any one of these pieces that you bitch and moan about constantly.
If you put it back in time five years and dropped it in, it would win.
Yeah.
And Mike Riley, exactly.
And he's deserted us.
Yes, he has.
Yes, Mike Riley has left the building.
Yes.
I don't even think he listens to the show anymore.
No, no, because of you.
He's like, Devorah, I hate him.
All right.
So,
yes.
Thank you very much, Digital Man 2112, for your win at NoAgendaArtGenerator.com.
Anybody can prompt and participate these days, apparently.
Now, we thank our executive and associate executive producers for Father's Day for episode 1773, 1776, coming up soon.
This is where
that's right.
This is where we thank everybody who supported the show.
$50 or more.
In fact, in this particular segment, $200 or above.
Not only do we thank you, not only do we tell people the number, because numerology is important, we will also read your note, and you get an associate executive producership for this episode, for this show.
It's good for your lifetime.
You can use it anywhere you wish, anywhere that Hollywood credits are accepted.
They will accept this one, including imdb.com, $300 or above, and you get an executive producer credit.
Same deal.
We read your note, some long notes today, but there's some Father's Day stuff in here, so we're okay with it.
Eric Boss,
B-A-U-S-S, Boss, Boss, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, comes in, check this out,
with two donations of $1,033
combined 2,066.
And he says, ITM no agenda nation.
It's true.
Couples that no agenda together stay together.
Our love is lit.
I am finalizing my wife, Deanna,
and its grueling years of scholarship with these two donations of 1,033 each to receive our PhD diplomas as Doctor of Philosophy and Media Deconstruction.
We especially thank the two greatest professors in the universe, Adam and John.
That's Professor Adam, Professor John to you.
Without your mentorship, this would not have been possible.
Please deduce Deanna.
Oh, boy.
You've been deduced.
Seeing as this is her first donation, although she's a longtime listener.
For my wife, please bestow the title of Dame Deanna Beacon of Goodheart, and my title shall be Sir Eric the Unfiltered of Goodheart.
Speaking of Goodheart, check out the best vacation.
Wow, I didn't see that coming.
Check out out the best, the best vacation rental in the universe.
Check out some gold.
Check out the best vacation rental in the universe on the shore of Lake Michigan, Das Nordhaus.net.
That's D-A-S-N-O-R-D-H-A-U-S dot net.
Dasnordhouse.net could have been in Fredericksburg.
Jarbs, jobs, karma, jingle, please.
In Christ Jesus, Godspeed, Eric Deanna in Goodhart, Michigan.
You bet.
And thank you so much.
Your titles and your PhDs coming up.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
Let me take a look at this.
I want to take a look at this North House.
Doesn't house.net.
All right.
Go ahead.
While you're doing that, I'll plug.
Sam
Hamad.
Hamad or Hamadi.
He's in Commerce Township, Michigan, and he came another $1,000
PhD, $1,000 from him, but no notes, so he has to get a double-up karma.
You've got
karma.
Okay, I'm looking at DustNordhouse.net.
Wow, it is a beach house.
Yeah.
It's a cool beach house.
How big?
Let me see.
Does it say how many, how many?
Let me see.
How many rooms?
It looks big.
Seven bedrooms.
Three and a half baths.
That's beautiful.
It's got a bonus room, a breakfast room.
Oh, man.
I'm going to get a deal.
It can take Dina to Lake Michigan.
Troy Walters.
Yes.
I was going to say, maybe one of the reasons the trolls are so low today, I just got a note from Janet who says
She's been trying to get listen to the live stream and she can't.
No.
how long do I have to wait?
It says it's coming, but will it?
What should I give up?
Where is she looking?
I don't know.
Oh, you know what?
It's very, no, I know.
I hit the live, I hit the bat signal.
Everybody got the bat signal.
I don't know what she's talking about.
I only say she has two notes, and she's so panicked.
Well, did she go to trollroom.io?
That's, I mean, I've said it a million times.
Anyway, Troy Walters in Long, Long Warren,
Lang Warren, Longwarren, Lang Warren, Victoria, Australia, $1,000, which I'm guessing is
Australian dollar reduce.
Matters not.
Night number three.
He says, do you remember when John ran the strip club?
And he sends a link.
Actually, I saw this note come in and
I posted the link on X.
This is the...
Get Mo Nation murder in Australia.
Do you remember that whole YouTube video from 13 years ago?
Did you look at it?
Vaguely, no.
Oh, it's so good.
They'd had a whole lot of it.
Oh, no, I did.
Yeah, the one, yes, yes.
The one that they were where the guy gets shot in the alley.
Shot in the head.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was great.
I guess he was one of the, I think I'm pretty sure Troy is one of the producers of that.
And that was before.
I don't remember the thing when it came out.
Oh, I do.
And it was before AI, and they did some video overlays and looked pretty good.
It was fun.
Yeah, the Gitmo Nation cops trying to come and get people, shooting them in the head, and people with hello slave t-shirts where you could still wear them.
Good times.
Thank you very much, Troy.
Thank you for everything, brother.
So we are
Janet has sent in a bunch of screenshots from the troll room, and she claims she can't hear anything.
Look, I can't bear it.
I know
you're not.
You can't do text stuff for her.
Maybe something's amiss.
There's nothing amiss.
It works fine.
Okay.
Well, I'm just saying.
I don't normally see this sort of complaining.
I don't know what to tell you.
I can't help it.
I'm doing a show, okay?
I'll send you the note.
Yeah.
Take care of it later.
Okay.
Onward.
I think you had the.
Where are we?
No, you're up with Chris Kearns.
Oh, Chris, yes.
Come on, man.
Stay with it.
Billerica.
Billerica?
Billerica?
Is that right?
Massachusetts and housing bugs.
No, sounds right.
Thanks for the show.
I'd like my night name to be Sir Chris of Billerica.
I knew I was pronounced differently.
It's got to be.
Billerica.
No additional.
What?
Maybe Billerica?
Could be Bera Billerica.
It could be.
No additional items at the table for me.
No jingles, no karma.
God bless Chris.
All right.
Then we go to Yoop.
Joop von der Pet in Eindhoven, in the Netherlands.
$1,000.
And he says a few weeks ago, I asked John to bring back the PhD immediate deconstruction because I think that having attended more than 400 classes in over 400 years now qualifies me for this coveted academic title.
Yes, he was the one who
triggered this.
So I was thrilled to hear I could be graduating in the class of 25.
I hereby send you my tuition fee, which also brings me to instant knighthood.
As my night name, I would like to be known as Sir Vic's Destroyer.
Wait, that's way too offensive.
Let's go for Sir
Sir Tyified?
Maverick?
Tyified?
Tified?
What do you think that is?
T-I-F-I-E-D.
Tified.
Hello, I'm looking for feedback.
I have got nothing.
Sir, Tifide Maverick of the Peaks and Polders.
Tiffied.
Tiffied.
No, it's not Tiffied.
Tified.
Tified.
Oh, Tied.
Certified.
Certified.
Certified Maverick.
Okay, got it.
Of the Peaks and Polders, as it reflects reflects my cultural heritage being born in Colorado near Peaks, not Pike's Peak, and living in the Netherlands.
Can I have tulips and tumbleweeds at the roundtable, please?
Well, yes, of course you may.
Can't eat those.
Well, you can, you can, hey, whatever you want.
You can have whatever you want.
You want the arrangement.
Yes, a centerpiece.
I have a couple of requests.
When I donated for the first time a while back, my note mentioned that I didn't want to be a douchebag when meeting Adam at the meet-up near Schiphol, but I forgot to explicitly ask for for a dedouching.
Therefore, I never got one.
Please officially dedouch.
You've been dedouched.
Also, could you put my girlfriend Oshra on the birthday list for show 1777?
You're going to have to email us back, brother.
I mean, Jay is pretty good at it, but email just in case.
She turns 40 on the 30th of June.
Last time I donated, I asked for jobs and relationship karma, but I received neither.
Since then, I did manage to find both a great job and an awesome girlfriend, so I guess I can go karma less this time around.
However, he wants WTC7, and we told you so on No Agenda, which is actually a band jingle, but it's we've banned it so long that I'll play it because we don't like spiking the ball.
Thank you for your courage.
Says yoop von der Pütz.
WTC7
won't go away.
There you go.
Yeah, that's no good.
Yeah.
Okay.
Onward.
That was a long note.
I would call that the long note of the day.
Long note.
That was a long note.
There's more to come.
But Baronetes Kelly in Sayville, New York.
Okay, Vill.
ITM gents, I hope you have a very happy Father's Day and a Happy Father's Day to my amazing husband, Joe.
Yo, yo, Joe.
Thanks for putting up with all the estrogen
in our household.
Just some yak karma.
Thanks, boys.
Baronettes Kelly of Longest Island.
You've got
karma.
Oops, there's the topper.
Yeah, Amzie Meyer from New Rockford, North Dakota, 333.33.
In the morning, sorry to blow out your spreadsheet again, John.
Not long ago, I got my tax return in the mail.
I asked my wife if I could donate it to No Agenda.
Reluctantly, she said yes.
That's a good idea.
This small amount of stolen treasure I've been able to recover is being donated in honor of my father for Father's Day, which will make him a knight.
He should be knighted Sir Preston, Knight of the CS.
I'd also like to call out Jeremiah as a douchebag.
Douchebag.
When the mask mandates were in place, Dad went to hospital a few times.
When he was told to mask up, he told the nurses that he can't because he has CS.
Why?
Because CS stands for common sense.
I don't think he's listed on the knights.
Okay, I'll check it.
Dad, you're an amazing father and role model to me, and your other human resources.
I love you.
On a more sobering note, I would like to ask for prayers for all those who have taken the jab.
Life goes on, and it isn't easy to be ignorant when you're healthy.
But I worked with someone who recently died of heart complications after being through hell and back with blood thinners, medications, and open-heart surgery.
It's frightening to hear people discuss taking 10 different medications to counteract the side effects of the one or two they actually need.
He was also vaccined and boosted.
His wife also started having similar issues, though I haven't kept up with her.
Another former coworker of mine, who is only 59, had two strokes and has been calling me to tell me she won't be coming in for work, even though, even though she stopped working here over a year ago, Adam, Go said, Rogan's straight about AI.
He's becoming part of the op.
Yes.
I did it on the last show.
I told him he was wrong.
With love, Sir Amzi, Knight of the Northern Plains, may God bless the two of you and thank you for your courage.
So let me make sure we have
Sir Preston, Knight of the CS on the list.
Okay, you may continue while I do that.
Yes,
Angel Young in Tucson, Arizona, our first associate executive producer at 26322.
There's no note.
No.
That means a double-up karma.
You're getting all the good ones today.
You've got.
Yeah, I am.
I'm lucky.
Karma.
Moving right along to Daniela Pompo.
Pompo.
Daniela Pompoo.
Los Angeles, California, $250.
And she says, happy birthday, DJT.
Which should be Donald James, Donald John Trump.
There you go.
Thank you.
For him.
So you skipped Sir Stewart.
Oh, well, you do, Sir Stewart.
I'm sorry.
I will.
Sir Stewart and Stafford.
We should put Trump on the birthday list.
Why not?
Sir Stewart and Stafford, Staffordshire, UK, 252.70 252.70, to my late father, Ken Walton, who died 24 years ago on Father's Day.
That's putting a crimp in the celebration.
Putting for a birdie, while putting for a birdie on the 11th,
which reminds me of a million
golf jokes on the 11th green at Bishop Stort, Stortford Golf Club in Hertfordshire.
Thinking of you on this special day, Dad, for all the great dads, Sir Stewart, the angry accountant.
All right.
Sir Donald, ah, Sir Donald of Calgary, Edmonton, Alberta, Candinavia, 233.99.
In the morning, John and Adam, please accept my donation of 222.22 USD.
He did give us.
233.99 equals 222.22.
Seems unlikely.
Isn't Canada almost like 40% down from our US dollar?
Wouldn't be up.
In honor of my dad, Dr.
Cornell
Philipchuck, who passed away due to bile duct cancer this past January.
This is sad, sad notes here.
While he left on his own terms, he was gone too soon.
I miss you, Dad.
I've been in Edmonton for a while after my dad's passing, but now I'm looking for a house back in Calgary.
So kindly give me some house-hunting karma as I try to get my ducks in a row.
Jingles, John's hot pockets, trains good, planes bad, and of course, F cancer.
Thank you for the best podcast in the universe, your pal, Sir Donald of Calgary, in the future free Republic of Alberta.
Hot Pockets, all aboard, trains good,
planes bad,
and a little bit of karma.
Here we go.
Oh, wait, I'm sorry.
F cancer, karma.
You've got karma.
Anonymous Saint of the Northwoods Smoking Hot Wife in Tomahawk, Wisconsin,
2333.
From my mom to my dad, happy anniversary on June 13th to the anonymous Spirit of the Northwoods from your smoking hot wife, 33 years, three sons, two daughters, two daughter-in-laws,
and one grandbaby on the way.
Lots of love and laughter.
Let's keep it rolling, honey.
And we go to Coldwater, Minnesota, $210.60 from Amy Lynn.
Cold Spring.
I'm sorry.
Amy Lynn.
Amy Lynn.
Isn't she from the club?
Amy Lynn?
Wasn't she Club 13?
I wonder where she moved to.
Dan the man, says Amy Lynn.
Happy Father's Day to Dan from your smoking hot wife, Amy Lynn, and daughter, Zaylie.
We love you and appreciate all that you do for us on the daily.
Wendy also says, woofs to you.
That's our pup.
We'll take some health karma, please.
Thanks, gents.
Oh, thank you.
That's very sweet of you, Amy Lynn.
You've got karma.
And there's Jen, the coffee lady in Bensonville, Illinois, 20615.
And hey, guys, this is Jen, the other half of Gigawatt Coffee Roaster.
She's obviously the one who designs the packaging
that
is so nice.
You usually hear from Eli, but I wanted to jump in for a second.
Eli is at the heart of Gigawatt, and on top of everything he does for the business, he's also a full-time dad to our energetic little guy while I work my day job.
He's up early, chasing a toddler, keeping our whole world moving and something,
and somehow still reads bedtime stories like nothing ever happened.
And yeah, coffee helps a lot.
If your mornings look anything like ours, you'll feel right at home with GigaWatt.
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com.
And if you're new, use the code ITM20 to try it out.
Happy Father's Day, Eli.
We love you.
Jen.
Aw, how nice is that?
We got Paul Lepiane.
Lepiane, I think.
L-E-P-I-A-N.
Paul Lepiane.
I have no idea.
Satsuma, Alabama, $201.
I did 40 installments of value for value.
Add in a couple extra donations, finishing with an executive today for my lovely keeper.
You can do it too.
I'm vacationing vacationing in my birth state of Montana.
What a great Father's Day gift this is for my keeper.
I would like to be Sir Mountain Man of the Big Sky.
Thank you for your time and insight for safe travels home.
Throw me a karma and the oldest jingle in your catalog, and then the most recent jingle in the catalog, the alpha and omega.
So I looked it up,
and
the oldest that I have in my catalog is actually,
I didn't even, I'd forgotten all about this.
Um, we have, we, in fact, we just played this one.
It is the oldest one that we have.
That's a two-parter, and that is the WTC7 jingle.
And I'd forgotten that it consists of two parts.
Here we go.
The oldest jingle in the catalog.
WTC7
won't go away.
That's part right.
Wait, wait, part one.
Here comes.
I don't know how to tell my baby.
That's it.
That's the oldest one we have.
And I think that's right.
That's at least by file date.
That makes sense.
And then the most recent one.
What's that in your mouth?
Which is soon to be a classic, an instant classic, everybody.
You've got karma.
And finally on the list, ah, Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado.
200 bucks and she wants Jobs K
and asks, need a resume that tells your story, highlights your wins, and shows you why you're
unique?
Visit imagemakersinc.com for a resume that gets results.
That's ImageMakers Inc.
with a K.
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs, and writer of winning resumes.
Oh, a little addition there.
She's beefing it up.
Jobs and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
And I did get a note from Sergeant Fred Castaneda.
The reason I couldn't find it, because I always say Sergeant Fred Castanada, but it's Castaneda.
And he sent us the check for $201 on the last show, which I couldn't find his note.
And he did want to say part of his humble honoring those.
This was actually for May 25th, so everything came in late.
He's a Vietnam veteran.
He says, I deliver this as part of my own humble honoring those whose lives were taken away in combat.
This is for Memorial Day 2025.
As you know, I served in combat during the Vietnam War as a combat infantryman, and I do respect the memorial.
I want to emphasize that this year, the Memorial Day honors are special.
In fact, Bill O'Reilly mentioned in his blog that there should be a special proclamation for Vietnam veterans,
and he thinks that would be a good idea, and he would like everyone to ask President Trump to have a special Vietnam Vets in America.
proclamation for Memorial Day.
I don't know if it happened
for this Memorial Day, but certainly for next year, of course, it's more than 50 years.
And he always sends me a beautiful photo that was, I think, in Time magazine of Sergeant Fred in Vietnam up to his waist in swamp water.
And he was a handsome devil, man.
He was a handsome, he was like all-American soldier.
So we appreciate you, Sergeant Fred.
And thank you to our executive and associate executive producers for episode 1773 of the best podcast in the universe.
We will be thanking the rest of our donors $50 and above.
You can always go to noagendadonations.com.
You can support us with any amount that you want.
It's value for value.
We just give you the goods, all of it, all that we have, except video, and you can return anything you feel like in return for the value that you've received.
Go to noagendadonations.com and thank you again for supporting episode 1773.
Our formula is this:
we go out, we hit people in the mouth.
And so I promised
some griping about AI.
You did?
Yeah, I just.
I thought that promise was a promise for the future.
No, no.
Well, the future is here.
Welcome to the future.
It's actually two clips.
Apple had their big WWDC conference and they had,
you know, liquid glass.
It's gorgeous.
Gorgeous.
But
missing from all of the announcements was the
overhyped and over-promised Apple intelligence.
And the Wall Street Journal
somehow, amazingly, got an exclusive interview with Craig Federici.
You know, Craig, he's the chief of software.
And Greg Joswiak.
He is the head of marketing.
And
she's like, hey, what happened to Siri?
Aren't you Apple?
What happened to Siri?
Where is our super Apple intelligence from Siri?
Yeah, you got liquid glass.
It's gorgeous.
But what about your AI strategy?
Last year, you announced a smarter AI-driven Siri.
Where is she?
We had a
really two-phase plan, two versions of an architecture to deliver a great Siri.
And as we got into the conference, we had V1
working to do basic capabilities that we showed off at the conference.
So we had some real software we were able to demonstrate there and show what was coming.
But it didn't converge in the way quality-wise that we needed it to.
That's Apple Speak for it.
It really sucked.
We had something working, but then as you got off the beaten path and we know a Siri, it's open-ended what you might ask it to do,
and the data that might be on your device that would be used in personal knowledge.
And we wanted it to be really, really reliable.
In other words, it was hallucinating.
And we weren't able to achieve the reliability in the time we thought.
But there was a working version of this.
This wasn't just
vaporware.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, no, no, no, no, of course.
No, we were filming real working software.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, it wasn't real.
It was a real demo.
Get on.
Oh, no, no, no, no, of course.
No, we were filming real working software with a a real large language model, with real semantic search.
That's what you saw.
Yeah, there's this narrative out there that, yeah, it was demo wear only.
No, it was,
again, something we thought, as Craig said, we'd actually ship by later in the year.
And look, we don't want to disappoint customers.
We never do, but it would have been more disappointing to ship something that didn't hit our quality standard, that had an error rate that we felt was unacceptable.
So we made what we thought was the best decision.
I'd make it again.
Steve Jobs is rolling over in his grave.
Never would Steve Jobs admit defeat like that.
He would blame it on the user.
You're holding it wrong.
You did it wrong.
You're doing it wrong.
We'll send you a rubber bumper, but you're doing it wrong.
So, of course, how is this possible?
You're Apple.
It's great that you set this high bar.
You're also Apple.
I mean, you've got more engineers, more cash than most companies, maybe any company.
Why couldn't it be?
I mean, this is new technology.
I think when it comes to automating capabilities on devices in a reliable way, no one's doing it really well right now.
And we wanted to be the first, we wanted to do it best.
And like I say, we had very promising early results in working initial versions, but not to the level that as we began living on it internally and feeling we're like, this just doesn't work reliably enough to be an Apple product.
So this stuff takes takes hard work, but we do see
AI as a long-term transformational wave, as one that's going to affect our industry and, of course, our society for decades to come.
We want to get it right.
There's no need to rush out with the wrong features and the wrong product just to be first.
It can't be done.
Apple won't do it because it's no good.
It just is no good.
It's not going to happen.
If Apple can't do it, who can?
I mean, they can make it look gorgeous, but no.
I don't think it can be done, John.
I don't think it can be done.
It can be done, but not by Apple.
Nah.
It's all no good.
It's not, it's no good.
All they had to do is just release Siri with a different voice and say it was AI they would have gotten away with.
Have anonymous Indians in the background just scrambling, answering questions.
Do that request.
700 Indians.
So
we know that the COVID shot is
very controversial in America because people are losing access to it
just because it's not recommended.
They're not losing access.
But interestingly, Canada is following suit.
Healthy individuals will be paying out of pocket if they want a COVID-19 shot.
The province making the announcement Friday, it means starting this fall, most Albertans will have to pay full price for the vaccines, and the shots will be administered through community health clinics, not available at pharmacies as they have been in years past.
Now, there are exceptions: seniors in supportive living environments, home care clients, and those older than 65 or six months and older with any underlying medical conditions or immunocompromise.
They're going to kill their seniors.
They just want to get rid of them.
Well, that's Canada's whole thing.
Oh, they always have the option to, you know, you're going to have this heavy medical bill, or you can kill yourself.
Well, this has been a Canada thing for some time.
I happened to have two clips from Del Bigtree.
You know, Del Bigtree.
Yeah.
And he had on this woman, what's her name?
Angelina Ireland.
And she had quite an interesting story about the, so MAID is the name of the, is the acronym for medically assisted
something death.
What is it?
Medically assisted induced death?
What is what is it for?
What does it stand for again?
M-A-D Canada.
Medically assisted.
Oh, medical assistance in dying.
Oh, it's even easier to remember.
Medical, it's not even a night cool term.
It's like, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
So
it seems to be kind of a mandatory feature of all health care in Canada.
Just at the time when they were pushing MAID
down onto everybody who gets public money.
Okay, so any company that gets public money.
Any work, well, it's a public health care system.
Everybody gets public money.
So
everyone's on it.
Everybody's getting public money, right?
So it's everybody.
It's everybody.
Wow.
So
we did have a public partner.
partnership, public-private partnership with the Fraser Health Authority.
Okay.
And we were told in our hospice, so I became the president of the Delta Hospice Society, and we were told because we had a hospice that we operated, a
facility that we actually built.
We fund-raised $8 million,
we built it.
We got a land lease for 35 years, we built those buildings on it.
We were told that if we want money, we're going to have to start killing our patients.
And we say, well, we're not killing our patients.
We're palliative care.
We don't do that.
Right.
The whole point is to just ease the suffering as they go through this experience.
Live well.
Life.
Yeah.
Until your natural end, which we can help you with.
Yeah.
Right.
And so they said, well, you're not getting any more money.
And we said, that's fine.
We don't want your money and we don't need your money.
Wow, okay.
Right?
So we had, we were sitting on this land with our buildings, so we had 25 years left.
on that land lease.
So as soon as we started to resist and be defiant, not get into lockstep, they canceled that lease with 25 years left.
Wow.
Right?
They evicted us from our buildings, took our money away, and basically took our facility from us, kicked us off the land, and expropriated those buildings, $8.5 million worth, and to the government.
So the government walked in, started to operate our hospice with us gone, and provide euthanasia there.
Man,
they're just killing their citizens.
This is the medical system in both countries.
We had that clip from the Joe Rogan show last show,
where the woman talked about how the hospital is just killing patients with a morphine overdose.
Yeah, get rid of them.
Yeah, get rid of them.
But yeah, this idea that, well, you know, you get some money from us.
You got to kill some of these people off.
I mean,
they're a drain on, they're useless eaters.
This is the kind of
elitist mentality mentality we're dealing with here.
You know, what good is it?
So what grandma's in the
she's
okay, she's alive, but
so what?
Get rid of her.
It's kind of ghoulish.
Kind of?
I mean, this is the thing people in Fredericksburg should be worried about.
I'm sorry, they're not, because, you know, President Trump is going to roll out the med beds, and it's going to be great.
You know about the med beds, don't you?
No, here we go.
Oh, everyone's talking.
I thought we mentioned this.
Med beds?
Med beds.
Med beds.
Look it up.
Med beds.
M-E-D-B-E-D.
Well, just explain.
The med beds.
Oh, it's a new breakthrough, and President Trump's going to roll it out.
They're going to be everywhere.
The med bed is you lay down on the bed, no matter what issue you have.
It has sonic vibrations.
It will heal.
Oh, the sonic vibrations.
It will heal you.
It will heal your son.
Oh, it sure will.
The med beds.
Because we know it's vibes that cause everything.
It does the work.
The vibes, man.
I'll be vibe coding on my med bed.
This is the second part to this because, of course, Dell said.
Yes.
Sorry.
I'm going to tell you you can get Clip of the Day for that.
Oh, well, thank you very much.
That wasn't even expected.
I'll say it.
Clip of the day.
As a follow-up, Dell said, well, what about the media?
Aren't they covering this?
A period of time.
And all just because you're like, we're not going to offer death as one of the options in our hospice.
That's right.
So you are now compelled.
You see, and this kind of
made,
right, is conquest and then compel.
That's the dance.
That's the modus operande that they're using, and that's going to be facilitated by the court system, by the judiciary.
Yeah.
Right?
And all of
our courts and our judges are appointed in Canada, appointed by the government.
Yes.
And so the government is controlling the whole thing.
And
where does the media come into this?
Why is the media not pushing back?
I mean, because, I mean, here, I mean, I know here we have pharmaceutical control of our media, so we'd be kind of screwed here, but you don't have that in Canada.
No, we have government control of our media.
The government gives the media billions of dollars.
So basically, it's, you know, I joke, kind of not really, that it's like Soviet-style pravda.
Yeah.
That's our media.
So none of the television stations, they all get government funding?
They all get money.
But particularly the CBC.
Yeah.
That's the state media outlet, and they get money.
And of course, we have never been able to get our message onto the legacy media, into the mainstream media.
It's all very pro-made.
So people don't really even know how bad it is.
Well, that's why you got all your Canadians listening to the No Agenda Show.
We'll tell you how bad it is.
Just give in.
Just become aware of that.
We're not getting any government money.
Well, at least that we know of.
We're getting that Jew money, though.
We don't get enough Jew money or government money.
All right.
Five-minute warning.
Okay.
Well, I got a couple of, let's see what we can do here.
I don't have much left anyway.
Well, we could, you know, I was watching Netflix and there's a special called Cocaine
Flights or something.
There's some cocaine special.
It's a very short documentary and it involves Sarkozy.
Oh, okay.
And they're trying to blame him
for smuggling cocaine or something.
And he says it's a joke.
But then, meanwhile, this smear piece comes out on Sarkozy from the BBC.
They're out to get Sarkozy.
The former French president Nicolas Sarkozy has been stripped of France's highest honor, the Legion d'Honneur, as a result of his conviction for corruption.
Mr.
Sarkozy was found guilty of bribing a judge four years ago and finally handed a three-year sentence in December last year.
Wow.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, of course not.
Why would you?
No.
So my last clip, I'll play a TikTok clip.
Oh, thank goodness.
I'm going to save one of them for later, but this one here is.
These are embarrassing.
These are racist clips that keep cropping up.
And it's not like anyone's making these dumb women go online and say stupid stuff.
And you have to look at it and say, is she an actress?
Is she this acting?
And you have to say, no, I don't think it is.
And in this case it's a woman complaining about uh having her car repaired and she doesn't understand the word catalytic
she thinks it's cadillac
and so she doesn't get the fact that they're that she thinks they're trying to convert her jeep into a cadillac and it's just a it's a mess i love it when people think that i'm stupid i love when people think that i'm stupid because tell me why i'm at the mechanic shop and he talking about i need a cadillac converter but I drive a G.
Make it make sense.
Think I'm stupid.
Ladies, when y'all going down to the mechanic shops, take somebody with y'all.
Your brother, your uncle, your daddy, your boyfriend, somebody.
Stop going to these mechanic shops by yourselves because they know we don't know anything about cars.
So they trying to give us any type of services that we, services we don't even need.
Outrageous prices.
Because I don't understand.
Make it make sense.
A Cadillac converter.
I don't even have a Cadillac.
A Jeep converter, maybe.
They think we're stupid, ladies.
Don't let these mechanics play in your face.
And it'd be the shade tree ones all the way down to the dealerships.
They all try to play in our faces.
So next time, when I go get my car fixed, make best believe I'm gonna have somebody with me because I'm not playing with these people today.
I'm not playing with these people.
They think they got, they think they got me, but they ain't got me.
I have a since we're doing car talk, I have a car story.
So, Tina went to get a new car.
Not a new car, a year year old.
You know, we're not stupid.
I've got to buy a brand new car.
So she goes to the dealer.
She gets
a year old car.
And
I said, just make sure it has everything you want.
And the one thing she asked for was adaptive cruise control,
which is, you know, it's a nice feature.
Adaptive?
Yeah, so that it, you know, you don't have, you can just set the cruise control, it'll stay X amount of car lengths behind the car in front of you.
If the car slows down, your car slows down.
You got radar in the car.
Okay.
Yeah, LiDAR or whatever.
It's a call.
Every car has it these days.
So she gets the car.
She comes back.
And it was my request.
It wasn't even.
She doesn't care.
She's a car girl.
She likes to drive.
She doesn't.
I don't want any cruise control.
It's for wimps.
So it was my request.
I'm a wimp.
I like adaptive cruise control.
And I say, oh, it has cruise control, but it's not adaptive.
She says, what?
So, but, you know, and I said, well, if you want to go back.
she says, nah, itself is fine.
The big F word, it's fine.
I don't need adaptive control.
Her car.
It's her car.
Yeah.
I just won't drive your car because it doesn't have adaptive cruise control.
It's her car.
She says, it's fine.
And then so she gets the survey and she puts on the survey, you know, not five stars, four stars.
Because, and she puts in there, and Tina's a survey girl, too.
She fills out surveys because she's used to be in marketing.
And she's, she said, I would fill out the survey, let people know.
And she says, Yeah, you know, the sales guy said it had adaptive cruise control and it didn't.
Otherwise, I'm happy with the car.
The sales guy calls her.
Oh, can I send you the survey again?
Because I get dinged in my compensation if I don't get five stars on everything.
So, what is the point of the survey?
Oh, this is classic.
This happened to me when I was flying Emirates.
Do tell.
I've told the story in the show before.
I don't think so.
So, you fly Emirates Air.
I'm going going to Dubai.
And so you're in the Emirates, which is a great airline.
I mean, this is the most comfortable airline, beautiful food.
Of course, everyone's all covered up in burqas, but besides that, it's a nice flight.
And before the flight ends, they have these magazines that they give everybody.
They say, on page six of this magazine, we want you to fill out these surveys.
And then they monitor you.
And so you have like three or four in-flight
magazines from various companies.
And you have to, it has which is your favorite airline you got to check emirates
and so they make and they check your they check your work yeah you didn't show what is this no no no not cat day pacific is emirates
or they throw this they throw the they'll throw it out it's like what what kind of a survey kind of survey is this they do this everywhere it's a great airline but come on people yeah and tina also got a a new phone her old phone she had had her phone like five years things falling apart so we go to the T-Mobile store, you know, and it takes forever.
It takes longer to get a phone than a car.
Yeah.
Oh,
back it up and move it over.
You give up on T-Mobile for this exact reason.
And then, as we're about ready to leave, the guy says, you know, you'll get a survey.
It would be great if you could give me five stars because anything less, and I get docked to my commission.
What is the point of the survey if they're setting you up like that?
This is un-American.
This should not be happening this way.
However, if you get a survey asking you about the No Agenda show, please give us five stars.
I'm going to show my support by donating to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fabulous.
Yeah,
on No Agenda
in the morning.
Five stars for all of our supporters in the Time, Talent, and Treasure division of the Treasure division, that is.
$50 and above.
We thank you all so much.
There's a lot of Father's Day greetings in there.
We promised we would read them.
And John is going to do just that.
Right.
And you dog the
text to make sure I don't miss any Father's Day.
I'm dogging the text.
Dog it.
I'm dogging it.
Dame Rita starts us off once again.
She
sits at the top of the list.
She's probably a baronet this by now, for sure.
She should check it out.
She's in Sparks in the Vatican.
She came in with a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, one of her favorite donations.
She says, and I'm going to read it, ITM, John and Adam.
Happy Father's Day to us.
Thank you for the best podcast in the universe.
That's nice.
Martin McIntyre in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, 103.
And this is an NICU dad donation.
NICU.
NICU.
Remember, we had Sir Alex Savala.
Yeah, Nicky.
NICU donation.
NICU donation.
That's something.
It's the Natal Intensive Care Unit.
Intensive Care Unit, yeah.
NICU.
Lucas Williams, Roswell, New Mexico, 100.
By the way, Martin was 103.
Ross Johnson in Eugene, Oregon, 8008.
He's got a complaint here about his knighthood.
What's his complaint?
What is his complaint?
I don't know.
You can take a look at it because Kevin McLaughlin's next.
He's in Concord, North Carolina with 8008.
He's the Archduke of Luna lover, American lover of boobs.
Or melons, he puts here.
And boobs.
Rachel Rudowich,
Radowich, maybe.
Rudowich.
Harper's Ferry.
Rudowich.
Maybe Radowich.
But she's in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
Your old neck of the woods is a breastfeeding person.
Thank you for your recent coverage of boobs.
Person in all caps.
Oh, and she wants a dedouch.
You've been dedouched.
We honor the breastfeeding persons.
We do.
David Schwannebeck, 69.
Michael Shelton in Hannibal, New York, 68.51.
Donate because I love my dad.
You Deutschbags.
Deutsche bags.
Please.
I can't believe how many people can't spell it.
Sir Dougherty in Stephen City, Virginia, 6482.
Happy Father's Day.
Sir Not Jake.
Greg England in Gallatin, Tennessee, or Gallatin.
Gallatin is 6482.
Remembrance of Kenny England.
Happy Dad's Day.
Sir Steve Banstra in Nashville, Tennessee, 5993.
which is eggs upside down.
Oh, over easy eggs.
Oh, okay.
Oh, that's a code.
Code.
It's eggs over easy donation.
Another one we should put on a list.
Christopher Dector,
5678.
Pete Federici in Port Orchard, Washington.
He needs jobs in interview karma for his partner.
We'll do that at the end.
You can remember.
Luke Munel.
Luke Munel in los angeles california 5272 carrie meeks in franklin tennessee happy father's day 5272
maria
sisselph
in rancho cordova california 5271 now we're already in the 50s i guess we don't have a lot of dad donations today but you know we did
yeah i thought we had more we did have some big donations at the top which is nice Patricia Worthington, Dame Patricia, she's Dame Patricia in Miami Beach, or Miami, I'm sorry, not Miami Beach.
Brandon Savoie in Port Orchard, Washington, another Port Orchard, along with Pete.
Diane Schwannebeck in Johnsburg, Illinois, Kevin Dills in Huntersville, North Carolina, Easy Landscapes in North Stonington, Connecticut, Philip Ballou in Louisville, Kentucky, Chris Slowinsky in Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada,
Robert Sweeney in Baltimore, Maryland, and last on our list, short list actually,
Johanna Joanna, Johanna Ullman in Portland, Oregon.
And this is in honor of Marco Kennedy Ullman of Portland, who has been with you all since the beginning.
Yes, Kennelly, not Kennedy, Kennelly.
Kennelly.
Marco.
Kennelly.
Oh, Kennelly.
Sorry, yeah.
Kennedy.
Kennelly.
Probably Kennelly.
Kennelly.
Probably.
Hey, thank you very much to our supporters, $50 and above.
And, of course, we thank everyone who came in under $50.
We do not read those for reasons of anonymity.
Make sense.
And as always, you can set up any form of donation, anytime you want, any amount.
We love the numerology.
I see you, Sir Bantra, Sir BNA, with your upside-down, over-easy eggs.
Very nice.
And you can set up a sustaining donation, any amount, any frequency, anytime you want.
Go to noagendadonations.com.
Thank you again to our executive and associate executive producers for episode 1773, noagendadonations.com.
It's a birthday, birthday.
Oh no agenda.
Oh man, we have a celebrity on the list, Dana Brunetti, celebrated 52 years on this earth.
That was on June 11th.
Happy birthday, Dana Brunetti.
Juk von de Put, happy birthday to his girlfriend Oshra.
She turns 40 on the 30th.
You should probably email us again around that time.
Daniella Pompeu, happy birthday to Donald John Trump.
And he turned 79 and he threw a birthday party for for himself.
Happy birthday for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
We got a couple of PhDs.
Very nice list.
Eric Baus, Deanna Baus.
They were at the top of the list today.
Sam Hamadi, Hamadi, or Hamid.
Troy Walters, Chris Kearns, and Yoop von der Putt.
And all of you need to go to noagendarings.com.
That's where we have the special PhD promotion running.
And if you let us know where and what name you'd like on your certificate, we'd be very happy to send that to you.
It is, it is gorgeous.
Absolutely gorgeous.
Gorgeous.
You can also find knight and dame rings there.
And speaking of such, we have a number of knights to bring up.
So if you can draw your blade for the ceremony, sir, please.
Yeah, I got it right here.
Very nice.
Deanna, Eric, Chris Kearns, Yuke from the Perth, Paul LePiane, and Sir Preston.
Well, Preston, you're about to become a sir.
All of you have met the requirements to become Knight and Dame of the Noah Gender Roundtable.
Very proud to pronounce Kate thee as Dame Deanna Beacon of Goodheart, Sir Eric the Unfolded of Goodheart, Sir Chris of Bellerica, Certified Maverick of the Peaks and Polders, Sir Mountain Man of the Big Sky, and there he is, Sir Preston, Knight of the CS.
Common sense it is.
For you, we've got hookers and below, rent boys and chardonnay, tulips and tubbleweeds in the centerpiece, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and gerbils, breast milk and pablum.
And there it is, the mutton and meat, right there for you all at the No Agenda Roundtable.
You're all day and nights, and we have that one dame.
Go to noagenda rings.com.
Let us know what size you want.
There's a handy ring-sizing guide on the website, and we'll send that off with sticks of wax.
You can use that to seal your important correspondence.
They are signet rings, and of course, as always, a certificate of authenticity.
And thank you all for supporting the No Agenda podcast.
Be part of Value for Value.
You can organize a No Agenda meetup anywhere you want, anywhere around the world.
You will want to do this because it gives you connection, that gives you automatic protection.
It is where you will meet the people who are the first responders in your life to any emergency.
Noagendametups.com.
The big group in Indy, they sent in their meetup report for June.
Hello, this is Sir Mark.
And this is Dame Maria.
Happy June and A Tribe.
So glad to see everybody for the start of June.
Nader from Indianapolis.
Voice is unfortunately gone from yesterday's sports ball game, but thank you for your courage.
Hey guys, it's Diane in Indiana.
And we all just want to know when are you coming back?
This is Kyra from Indiana.
No Florida.
No Indiana.
No Florida.
Well it doesn't matter because we're here with this great people in Indy, no agenda tribe.
Thanks.
It's Tom, not from Carmel in Indy.
Jason from Westfield.
First meetup.
Had a great time.
Peace in Christ.
Hey, this is Carl from Indianapolis.
I heard that Adam came to visit one of the meetups.
I'm wondering when John's coming next.
Hey, Gary here.
I hope they get this tariff war done because I'm down to two white theaters, one flip-flop, and nine designer jeans.
Hi, this is Adrian here at the dugout.
We had the No Agenda group, and it was great to have him here today.
In the morning, Co-Pacers!
Co-Pacers, yeah, Pacers doing okay, I hear.
I'm reliably informed in the sports ball world.
And then we had the Copenhagen meetup.
I think this was the first one, and it was attended.
Producer Paul here.
We're enjoying the sunshine at Wrefen and having a great meetup.
And I just want to say,
which I think is shut up, slave in Copenhagen-ish.
Hi there, in the morning.
Sitting here in Copenhagen
underneath some chemtrails.
It's nice weather, nice meetup.
Great people.
Giving it over to Michael.
Hi, I'm Michael.
I'm sitting here in Denmark with five Dutch people and one French.
So
this is Frank aka Mike, normally from Amsterdam, now in Copenhagen in the morning.
Hey, cheers, in the morning.
Cheers, Damp Amsterdam there.
I reached out to Paul in Copenhagen because we knew we were coming here.
Connection is protection, guys.
Hello, I'm Julie, Julie.
I'm the French person.
I'm a phony.
I only listen to one episode, but I'm highly motivated.
In the morning.
In the morning.
No server included in the report, but we'll let you slide because you're from Copenhagen.
Thank you very much.
We have meetups coming up on Tuesday.
This is the big one in Cannes at the Lions Festival of Creativity.
4 o'clock at the Duke's Pub in Caen, France.
Look for Oui Gigi.
Oui Gigi will be hosting that.
I hope we can get a good meetup report from con
we have uh the next uh show day thursday charlotte's thirst third thursday seven o'clock at edge tavern in charlotte north carolina coming up on the 20th victoria british columbia the 21st bedford texas fort way indiana central jersey detroit local one on the 22nd key new hampshire new york city on the 26th of june alpharetta georgia as well indianapolis part two on the 29th and long view texas on the 29th of june these are just a few of the no agenda meetups you can find every single one of them listed right there on noagendameetups.com.
It's searchable.
You can upload reports.
You can search it by calendar, by date, by location.
If you can't find one on noagendameetups.com, start one yourself.
It's easy and always a party.
Sometimes you wanna go hang out with all the nights and days.
You wanna be where you won't be triggered or hell lame.
You wanna be where everybody
Still to come.
We have our bomb bomb Iran end of show mixes.
You will love that.
That's a little diddy if you haven't heard it five times in our history before, because it always seems to pop up for some reason.
Very interesting.
We're always trying to bomb Iran.
John's tip of the day coming up as well.
But first, we search for the end of show ISOs.
I don't think I have a winner, so I will go first.
Don't touch the hair,
I'm glad.
It's not a good end to the show, but it's a good bit to just have.
I think we've offended everybody with any sensitivity now.
Yeah, no good.
I agree.
That's no good.
What do you have?
I have one only.
And I brought back one of my favorite girls.
Here she is.
I just love this show.
So sexy.
Don't touch the hair, man.
I just love this show.
So sexy.
Sexy for the win, everybody.
But before we even get to that, it's John's tip of the day.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Bernetti.
Okay, well, Mimi reminded me that I have a rotation for these tips, and this is the cleaning product that I do every couple months.
Another cleaning product.
Beautiful.
Another cleaning product.
Because people need cleaning products.
People always can use a good cleaning product.
Yes, I agree.
This is
a good one.
It's been tested.
This is leather honey.
Leather honey.
Now, there's different products you can get to keep your leather fresh, especially if you have a car with a leather interior because it gets hot in there
and it dehydrates the leather.
Yes, the leather gets all crackly.
And you need to keep it hydrated.
And leather honey.
Now, they also have a conditioner.
The conditioner is the one you want.
They also have a cleaner.
There's a cleaner and a conditioner, but the cleaner, you can use anything to clean your leather but it's the conditioner that you want leather honey it's around it's not cheap it's around 16
and uh it's it's terrific it's a terrific leather product do you use this on the 27 year old lexus on the leather seats in the lexus yes you could use it on it yes and you can use it on indoor outdoor dashboards it's particularly good on german cars which have which crack really fast
The German leather is junk.
Do you know what they've done with the new Lexus?
A friend of mine brought a new Lexus.
You know what they have now in the Lexus?
If you look away from the road in front of you too long, the car says, hey, look at the road.
If you start slouching, it tells you, hey, sit up straight.
And you can't turn it off, as far as I know.
Oh, that, yeah, this is the Lexus Nag 3000.
I've seen these things.
The Lexus NAG 3000.
There's everybody.
Get all of John's tips at tipoftheday.net.
Green fast for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Brunetti.
Yes, the famous Dana Brunetti, who celebrated his 52nd birthday just recently.
What a baby.
He's such a baby.
He's a newbie.
A newbie.
Coming up, we have end of show mixes.
We've got, oh, we've got clip custodian Neil Jones.
We have Jeffrey Croke,
who's back, and then we have
Insta Night Me and Ben Tone said.
Tone said with the classic bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb moran mix-ups for the end-of-show mix.
And coming right up,
if you can listen to the live stream, I guess we've had some troubles for some reason.
Nick the Rat is coming in from the sewer right here on the No Agenda stream.
Keep listening at trollroom.io or in your modern podcast app.
And we look, oh, oh, and of course, we look forward to seeing you all on Thursday.
And I would say
coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, home of the new med beds, happy Father's Day, everybody.
In the morning, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we also wish you a happy Father's Day, I'm John C.
DeBorak.
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
We'll see you on Thursday.
Until then, adios, mofos, hooey, hoooey, and such.
Bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb I ran bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb Iran Bomb I raim
bomb bomb I ran the sky I bomb bomb bomb bomb I
am bomb I ran one country's got a feeling really the ceiling bomb I ran bomb bomb bomb bomb my ran
did not create any violence nobody was shot nobody was killed get it in your head don't think that somehow because they called out the National Guard, there was violence.
There was no violence.
I was on the streets.
On the streets.
On the street.
We, the people!
We
all of us have that right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of justice.
The anarchists see it as an opportunity, opportunity and they move in.
I was on the street
and they're just playing right into Donald Trump's hand.
We, the people!
We
bobbin' bobbin, bobba, bobba, bobbum, bobbum, bobbin, bobbum, bobbum, bobbum, bobbum, bobbum, bobbum, bomb em and let's bomb them again.
Bob and bob em bobbum bob embobum bobbum bob embobum bob embobum bobbum bob embobum bomb.
They're going in hard.
Bomb em bomb bob em bomb bomb bobbum bob embobum bomb bomb bob em bomb bomb emboma and let's bomb them again,
but who's gonna drop a nuke here?
This should be played at high volume, preferably in a residential area.
That's the way it's supposed to be.
Because this is my point.
We need immigrant workers in this city really badly.
Who are they going to get to pick all the food and the vegetables?
Because this is my point.
You know, think back, y'all.
Wherever you heard that, another pig of this,
Food is going to be sitting and rotting
because there's no one to grab it.
I love that.
That's a fantasy of mine.
I dream about it now.
That's the way it's supposed to fit.
Well, I've been called hysterical for
a while now.
Because Americans don't want to do it.
We know that the farmers are saying
Americans don't want to do this.
Because this is my point.
That's the way it's supposed to be.
I just want to say, you know, construction places, you're going to have a harder time finding people who are going to be able to come and do your house.
We, the people!
We
the people!
Bomb them.
We need to kill them.
Bomb them.
Bomb them.
We need to kill them.
Bomb them.
Bomb them.
We need to bomb them.
We need to kill them.
And bomb them again.
The best podcast in the universe.
Adios.
Mofo.
Davorak.org slash na.
I just love this show.
So sexy.