1772 - "Op Day"

3h 22m
No Agenda Episode 1772 - "Op Day"



"Op Day"


Executive Producers:


Barbara Kelkhoff


Richard Hollow


Erich Kessler


Anonymous


Sir Droodle on a Noodle, Protector of the Red Stick and Laffy Taffy


Anonymous


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Commodore Dude Named Ben


Sean Homan


Frank Maloney


Eli the Coffee Guy


Sgt. Fred Castaneda


Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of resumes


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Barbara Kelkhoff


Richard Hollow


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Knights & Dames


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Runtime: 3h 22m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Yeah, we'll do it.

Speaker 2 Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.

Speaker 4 It's Thursday, June 12th, 2025.

Speaker 5 This is your award-winning Gimmo Nation Media Assassination episode 1772.

Speaker 2 This is no agenda.

Speaker 4 Watching Democracy Die

Speaker 8 and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six.

Speaker 10 In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 2 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're all awaiting All Kings Day on Saturday, I'm John C. DeVorik.
It's Craig Bottom Buck Hill in the morning.

Speaker 14 It's unbelievable.

Speaker 15 It's unbelievable. No, it's not.

Speaker 19 It's completely believable and just fantastic to watch the M5M, everybody trying to get everyone all psyched up and ready for No Kings Day and,

Speaker 26 you know, just it's like wag the dog in real time.

Speaker 27 It's amazing what is taking place right before our very eyes.

Speaker 2 Do you know the ACLU of Texas

Speaker 2 contributed like three million dollars toward this event?

Speaker 31 Oh, yeah, of course.

Speaker 2 What is the end to some other ACLUs?

Speaker 32 What why

Speaker 2 I thought the ACLU took that money that people gave them so they could defend people for civil liberties, not to do protests, not to print signs on the 250 250th anniversary of the army which is really what's what they're trying to to uh downplay here they're trying to make our army look like a bunch of schmucks you remember by doing this thing on the exact same day no i it's too it's too long but do you remember in 2017 i have the i have the clip but it's too long um i called the aclu when they

Speaker 23 actually made a fuss about this on the show yeah when when they were organizing the the protest because trump had done Muslim travel ban, which it was not a Muslim travel ban.

Speaker 17 And I called them up and said,

Speaker 16 So, because I always supported the ACLU.

Speaker 27 And they're like, no, no, no, we're organizing these protests.

Speaker 46 But is that in your charters that we're supposed to do?

Speaker 28 Well, yeah.

Speaker 47 Oh, okay.

Speaker 38 Well, no, I'm not supporting you anymore.

Speaker 50 Now, this is what's interesting is that

Speaker 33 even the people who somehow have been psyoped into this whole idea of, you know, Trump is throwing out legal people, just separating families, ripping four-year-old girls from behind their school desks.

Speaker 62 They are now recognized.

Speaker 7 Well, you know, the people who are protesting, they're just,

Speaker 63 you know, they're just problem people.

Speaker 35 And, you know, they're, by the way, they're like Marxists and socialists.

Speaker 27 Yeah,

Speaker 65 that's exactly who the problem is.

Speaker 66 Yeah.

Speaker 17 And it's. it is.

Speaker 67 And it's the unions.

Speaker 60 It's the Socialist Workers' Party.

Speaker 26 They're the ones who are sending people to the United States.

Speaker 2 Not the unions as much as it is one specific union. Which specific union? The SEIU.

Speaker 68 The SEIU, yes. Which is the

Speaker 2 Service Employers International Union.

Speaker 70 And do they have illegals in their union?

Speaker 2 They must.

Speaker 27 So

Speaker 2 the SEIU is a fallback. When I helped organize the Bay Area Air Pollution Control District Union,

Speaker 2 I was a Democrat back in the day. Yes.
And

Speaker 2 we had gone through,

Speaker 2 we had enough, knew we can get enough votes to unionize, and we ended up with SEIU

Speaker 2 as our base union because the other guys bailed out.

Speaker 2 There was Cal PERS or some Cal, one very big union that was powerful in California. They told us, nah, get lost.

Speaker 2 And some other union told us to get lost.

Speaker 2 And SCIU jumped in. Yeah, we'll do it.

Speaker 2 And I got to take some of their training. Some union.

Speaker 53 Oh, you took some of the

Speaker 72 training. All right.

Speaker 2 From the union itself.

Speaker 2 It's pretty bad.

Speaker 74 So

Speaker 2 my memoir.

Speaker 76 Ladies and gentlemen, John C. Devarak has been dead for 20 years, but he promises his memoir is coming along with the vinegar book.

Speaker 77 It's coming.

Speaker 78 Don't worry.

Speaker 42 It's happening.

Speaker 41 So

Speaker 81 are they truly commies?

Speaker 64 I mean, is the SCIU a bunch of communists?

Speaker 82 Why are they doing that?

Speaker 2 I wouldn't say they're Marxists necessarily, but they're pretty close.

Speaker 2 Definitely workers control the means of production. The main emphasis in some of the training is, hey, if you're not specifically supposed to pick up that screw that that guy dropped,

Speaker 2 you don't pick it up.

Speaker 16 Right.

Speaker 80 Yeah, but

Speaker 85 I mean, they are sending people out

Speaker 86 to protest

Speaker 88 illegal immigrants, just illegals, aliens

Speaker 2 in favor of illegal immigrants.

Speaker 89 Yes. Make sure you get this structure.

Speaker 28 Yes, thank you. But it just doesn't make sense.
However, what is important?

Speaker 2 It makes sense to me.

Speaker 2 I was watching somebody, so I didn't get it on today's show, but somebody's, there's a lot of clips about,

Speaker 2 I guess it's Christy, is her name?

Speaker 90 Christy Walton.

Speaker 58 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Who's in the, you know, it's like, oh, she's just another rich chick who's, you know, inherited a bunch of money and she's got a guilty conscience.

Speaker 2 And then I'm, guy points out in his video, this is so Walton can keep their cheap employees.

Speaker 20 Well, not just, I mean, if you look at No Kings Day, it's not just about ICE and immigration.

Speaker 92 So the way I look at it from the Walton family perspective is tariffs in China.

Speaker 46 They have huge factories.

Speaker 69 Half of Wuhan is Walmart.

Speaker 93 Yeah.

Speaker 48 So I think they're just mad at Trump, and this is what they do.

Speaker 94 Now,

Speaker 53 I have some, this is a very short boots on the ground.

Speaker 97 There's so much material.

Speaker 53 But when I heard this, I'm like, yeah, I think a lot of these

Speaker 98 middle-class Karen, which doesn't have to be white, just middle-class Karens in Los Angeles.

Speaker 9 So here's just three quick little

Speaker 21 snippets, man on the street.

Speaker 38 But the last one really, really says it all about why they're really protesting, what they're really mad about.

Speaker 100 I'm not okay with this. I'm not okay with people getting taken from their jobs and being taken from when they're going into the federal building for their appointments to do this the right way.

Speaker 102 We don't feel safe.

Speaker 103 We're setting up for the children that can't stand up for themselves or their parents.

Speaker 104 We need immigrant workers in this city really badly. We've just gone through devastating fires.
We've lost 14,000 structures. And if you look at who builds this city, it's immigrants.

Speaker 16 There it is.

Speaker 11 Who's going to build our homes back?

Speaker 11 No one will want to be in construction.

Speaker 50 And this is exactly what an actual Karen.

Speaker 79 Isn't Whoopi's real name Karen?

Speaker 53 Whoopi Goldberg?

Speaker 2 Yeah, it is, actually.

Speaker 45 Yeah, she's a real Karen.

Speaker 19 So listen to what she says at the end of this clip after they do some pontificating.

Speaker 110 I'm sorry, it's from the view.

Speaker 112 The ICE agents, those are non-partisan actors.

Speaker 38 I think this is the conservative girl.

Speaker 112 For the most part, who signed up for jobs, have served under multiple administrations. They They did not necessarily sign up to be doing this, and they're following an order of the commander-in-chief.

Speaker 112 And we could say they could all, I guess, resign in mass tomorrow. That was the bait.
To start demonizing those individuals as well.

Speaker 3 No, nobody's demonizing. No one thinks we're demonizing what they're doing.

Speaker 113 But I think it's very important to remember: it's a commander-in-chief that's made these decisions.

Speaker 112 They're following orders.

Speaker 115 Yeah, it is that.

Speaker 114 And, you know, think back, y'all.

Speaker 117 Where have you heard that before?

Speaker 59 1930s.

Speaker 41 I'm just following orders.

Speaker 114 By my commander-in-chief.

Speaker 118 But again, can I just say, I want to to finish.

Speaker 114 No, no, because I, because.

Speaker 80 No, no, because Whoopi's got something important to say here.

Speaker 11 Pay attention. Karen's coming.

Speaker 114 This is my point.

Speaker 114 We don't want to be what they were.

Speaker 114 A person in service in the armed services always follows their commander-in-chief. That's the way it's supposed to be.

Speaker 114 But what is happening here is out of sync because the commander-in-chief is not following the directions

Speaker 114 of the Constitution.

Speaker 15 Well, we'll get to that in a minute.

Speaker 114 So we have a bit of an issue. And also, just as we're going, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,

Speaker 114 no, no, no, no, no, no, no, 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.

Speaker 114 Who are they going to get to pick all the fruit and the vegetables?

Speaker 116 Because Americans don't want to do it. We know that.

Speaker 123 The farmers are saying the Americans don't want to do this.

Speaker 124 And the tariffs on top of that is going to make everything so good.

Speaker 117 Well, that too, but

Speaker 125 it's a mess.

Speaker 114 Food is going to be sitting and rotting

Speaker 114 because there's no one to grab it is my point. We'll grab that.

Speaker 83 This is the most elitist take on this ever.

Speaker 53 No one's going to build my house. No one's going to pick my fruit.

Speaker 7 Who's going to clean my linens?

Speaker 53 Oh, let me clutch my pearls.

Speaker 129 Have you ever heard of economics, Karen?

Speaker 58 If the fruit is rotting, they will offer more money for people to come and pick it up.

Speaker 1 It's not just going to go away.

Speaker 65 This is the basic system that we have in place.

Speaker 2 Capitalism works.

Speaker 27 It's how capitalism works, of course.

Speaker 134 But oh, no.

Speaker 46 And it's so elitist.

Speaker 59 Who's going to do this?

Speaker 2 It's unbelievably arrogant. Yeah.

Speaker 53 Elitist and arrogant.

Speaker 53 And Americans won't do this.

Speaker 135 What?

Speaker 94 American. I have a guy.

Speaker 137 I've got Paul who is literally shoveling shit.

Speaker 42 out of my septic tank today.

Speaker 133 Americans do this stuff. And you know what?

Speaker 53 Charges me a good penny for it, too.

Speaker 15 Because that's how it goes.

Speaker 27 I don't want to do it myself.

Speaker 58 I don't know how to do it.

Speaker 16 So this is just bull crap.

Speaker 53 And all the, when they went on the, oh, yeah, it's all whoopy.

Speaker 11 You tell him, whoopie, no one can clean my house.

Speaker 59 No one can build my house.

Speaker 53 Oh, my fruit is rotting.

Speaker 59 Oh, my avocados.

Speaker 41 Police.

Speaker 92 The worst, though, the worst, and I had to pull two clips, is the liberal intellectual elites of Pivot.

Speaker 32 I've stayed away from getting Kara and Scott clips, but I had to pull two clips because the the professor.

Speaker 2 You needed intervention.

Speaker 71 Where were you when I needed that intervention?

Speaker 142 It's been a while since I've pulled clips from Pivot.

Speaker 27 It's still my hate listen.

Speaker 35 I get through it and I'm like, okay, I got it.

Speaker 21 But they are influential in elitist Democrat circles.

Speaker 145 Not as influential as they thought they were, because if you recall, their contract was up for renegotiation, and Professor Scott was like, well, we're going to go make hundreds of millions of dollars like Joe Rogan because we're that good.

Speaker 10 And they renegotiate and they have all kinds of caveats and, you know, they can do special things.

Speaker 95 They got a crappy deal because they're not worth it.

Speaker 50 Podcasts just aren't worth that much.

Speaker 28 So they overthought their influence, but without a doubt, they make more money than we do.

Speaker 148 So here is the professor's take on what is happening.

Speaker 35 It's a doozy.

Speaker 149 I've called this a complete overreach by a desperate despot.

Speaker 53 Your thoughts?

Speaker 53 I can do some alliteration.

Speaker 136 A complete overreach by a desperate despot.

Speaker 63 Your thoughts?

Speaker 152 Well, I've been called hysterical for

Speaker 153 a while now, comparing or drawing similarities between America right now and 30s Germany. And you don't have to be Hitler to borrow methods and worst practices from his playbook.

Speaker 146 I would love to hear Scott, Professor Scott, do a podcast with

Speaker 38 Brett's wife. What's his name?

Speaker 108 Heather.

Speaker 108 Well, what do you think, Heather?

Speaker 77 Oh, Scott, let me tell you.

Speaker 14 Okay, Heather.

Speaker 153 And that is, when tanks roll through cities, it doesn't feel like strength. It feels like a funeral for civil society.

Speaker 153 Germany in the 30s didn't collapse overnight. It slid into tyranny by normalizing soldiers where citizens used to stand.

Speaker 153 You know, early Nazi propaganda decided, and we're doing the same thing. We have real problems overseas.

Speaker 135 You know, there are still Russian, you know, Russia is still invading Europe.

Speaker 16 Russia's invading Europe, John.

Speaker 53 Be careful.

Speaker 153 There's real significant issues around China, Pakistan, and India

Speaker 153 could eventually digress to a nuclear conflict. Iran is.

Speaker 21 In case you didn't get the memo, President Trump stopped that war.

Speaker 154 He said so himself.

Speaker 155 Trying to spin up reactors.

Speaker 135 But if you look at,

Speaker 153 and again, I think I just, this has so many echoes of 30s Germany. Early Nazi propaganda emphasized it.

Speaker 53 No, early 30s Germany, John. Was it like this?

Speaker 2 It wasn't there.

Speaker 2 Come on.

Speaker 2 But I will say this. I'm liking this for a reason that's not, wouldn't, on the surface, wouldn't seem, well, why would you like this?

Speaker 2 I honestly believe these two. And Scott in particular, are believing their own bullcrap.
Yeah. And they're actually having, they're going to have nervous breakdowns or something.
This is not healthy.

Speaker 55 No, No, no, it's it's he's and he he barely opens because I saw the YouTube video version of this because of course we've got to do video version Scott

Speaker 38 and he barely opens his mouth when he talks.

Speaker 131 He talks like this and it has he has he also has no lips.

Speaker 77 Well, I believe this is really like early 30s.

Speaker 66 It's like a snake.

Speaker 145 Scott talks through a slit like a snake.

Speaker 153 Germany's problems were due to internal saboteurs, communists, Jews, immigrants. And then today, if you look at this rhetoric, they're blaming immigrants, academics, protesters, journalists.

Speaker 153 It mirrors kind of the same playbook here.

Speaker 153 When you have a government who turns its military force inward against journalists, migrants, or citizens who believe and are exercising their right to protest in a civil, peaceful manner in justice, you're not defending democracy.

Speaker 153 You're rehearsing for something much darker.

Speaker 151 So it's not the protests themselves. It's not what's going on.

Speaker 153 This is another step towards normalizing an attempt to rebrand militarization as patriotism.

Speaker 30 So I just love that.

Speaker 1 You're right.

Speaker 161 They are sniffing their farts and like, oh, smells great.

Speaker 22 And this clip, second clip is much shorter, but man, they bring up a doozy here.

Speaker 134 He can try.

Speaker 150 He can try. That's what he's doing.
He's trying desperately. He's a desperate.

Speaker 149 That's why I called him the complete overreach of a desperate despot. Every move he's making lately, to me, is both despotic, incompetent, and also insecure in a lot of ways.

Speaker 150 But we'll see.

Speaker 153 But what you just outlined is

Speaker 153 my vision of how you would restore and heal America.

Speaker 38 Okay.

Speaker 72 Question for you: How do you think when the Democrats clearly come back into control because they believe this, once Trump is gone, everyone's going to fall down?

Speaker 34 What do you think his vision is for restoring America?

Speaker 2 What could it be?

Speaker 2 To bring back some programs or to No, we have to heal.

Speaker 95 How did we heal

Speaker 163 World War

Speaker 2 stringing up all the Republicans?

Speaker 57 It was my vision of how you would restore and heal America.

Speaker 68 That you'd have moral clarity and have the effectively like a Nuremberg trial.

Speaker 56 You said, okay, you knew this was a lie.

Speaker 27 You nailed it.

Speaker 7 Nuremberg trial.

Speaker 53 String them up.

Speaker 2 Hang them.

Speaker 27 Noose them all.

Speaker 69 Let's hang them up.

Speaker 153 And have the effectively like a Nuremberg trial.

Speaker 56 You said, Okay, you knew this was a lie, you purposely tried to create violence in mayhem, you purposely tried to overrun our elections,

Speaker 153 you purposely committed fraud, you purposely leveraged our international sway to enrich your children.

Speaker 153 I love the idea of a stream of perp walks and moral clarity around this stuff, that America's laws have a long memory. I love that.
That's a fantasy of mine.

Speaker 57 I dream of that at night.

Speaker 153 My fear, Kara, is that there's actually a lot of people who like what's going on right now.

Speaker 165 Oh, man.

Speaker 28 Jacques Hughes.

Speaker 28 Where was the Republicans' Nuremberg trials?

Speaker 60 Where was the Nuremberg trial for the COVID vaccine?

Speaker 28 Where were all those for COVID?

Speaker 145 Where are those Nuremberg trials didn't happen? Just to set the record straight, and then I'll let you roll.

Speaker 21 This is from the John Bachelor Show, which I only get as a podcast.

Speaker 72 We're doing podcast people.

Speaker 141 John Yu, who's from Berkeley and Civitas Institute in Austin, of all places, explains the law, Title X, under which this is taking place.

Speaker 167 The president can call out the National Guard in case of an invasion. And then it says, second condition, or there's a rebellion.
But then there's a third condition.

Speaker 167 The president is unable to execute the laws of the United States.

Speaker 167 So any one of those three, so this is the very media narrative has ignored this third provision. This third provision is obviously the one that's at stake here.

Speaker 167 Can President Trump legitimately find that the execution of the laws of the United States, here, the immigration laws in Los Angeles, is being blocked? He can't execute them.

Speaker 167 And if he can't, then the law allows him to call out the National Guard.

Speaker 59 Bingo, that's it. Yeah.

Speaker 2 That nails it. Yeah.
And so

Speaker 2 you is one of those guys.

Speaker 35 You, you, you, you, use.

Speaker 2 You're the guy. You is the guy, if I'm not mistaken, is the one who came up with the rationale for torture.
Yes, he did.

Speaker 99 No, was that you?

Speaker 1 Was that you? No, that was.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I think it was.

Speaker 144 No, it was a different guy.

Speaker 22 It was another you, you type guy.

Speaker 2 You is pretty good. He's one of those guys who's one of those guys who knows how to bend the law.
Him and Dershowitz.

Speaker 42 But this is not bending the law.

Speaker 2 No, I mean, interpreting the law in a very strong.

Speaker 2 Yeah, it's not bending at all. It's actually finding the rules and then applying them.

Speaker 170 But, you know, so when you keep hearing it's against the Constitution, he's not upholding the Constitution, that is, in fact, the opposite.

Speaker 157 One more clip, because I just love this doozy from CNN.

Speaker 35 CNN, who you'd think would probably not favor President Trump or any of his policies or any of this, they did a little poll amongst legal immigrants, immigrant residents and citizens of the United States.

Speaker 9 Surprising results.

Speaker 173 Yeah, let's just sort of start off on the fact that immigrant citizens, immigrant voters, foreign-born voters have gone tremendously to the right on this issue in 2024 and 2025 versus where they were in 2020.

Speaker 173 Closest to a trust war in immigration. You go back to 2020.
Democrats get this, held a 32-point lead on this issue. Immigrant voters were in the Democratic camp.
Jump forward to 2024, 2025.

Speaker 173 Look at that shift, a 40-point shift to the right among immigrant voters. Republicans now lead on this issue by eight points over Democrats, more more so than any other group that I could find.

Speaker 173 The group of voters who became more hawkish on immigration were, in fact, immigrants themselves, immigrants who are registered to vote in this country.

Speaker 53 Boom.

Speaker 27 All right. Drop it there.

Speaker 53 By the way, you're right.

Speaker 142 I was thinking Alberto Gonzalez, who was co-author with John Yu.

Speaker 2 No, Gonzalez is a lightweight.

Speaker 145 Well, John Yu, you're right.

Speaker 48 John Yu. You.

Speaker 43 So this is.

Speaker 2 Well, I have a take on this that I want to present.

Speaker 108 No, yes.

Speaker 2 Because I think there's dirty tricks going on.

Speaker 41 No.

Speaker 2 Dirty tricks?

Speaker 30 Gambling.

Speaker 7 Is the gambling going on at the protests?

Speaker 2 And I think it's at a level that we haven't seen since Segretti and Dick Tuck during the Nixon administration where he had these guys.

Speaker 1 That was barely alive, but yeah.

Speaker 2 Yeah, well, there was some great stuff that used to be done.

Speaker 2 And it's been kind of passed over. And I think Trump's behind a lot of this.

Speaker 59 okay, I'm ready.

Speaker 175 I love it when you say Trump's behind a lot of this.

Speaker 1 I'm like, yeah, believable.

Speaker 53 Lay it on me.

Speaker 35 I want to hear what's going on.

Speaker 22 This has to be about the midterms.

Speaker 38 Everything's about the midterms, right?

Speaker 2 Oh, everything's eventually about, yeah. Well, that's where it's all.
They have to, but this is a long strategy. And I don't, and I think there's denial, a possible,

Speaker 41 plausible

Speaker 93 deniability.

Speaker 2 There's no way this is going to be tracked to Trump. This is just a thesis.
I can't prove it. It just seems a little suspicious.
And you get hints of it when you start listening to some TikTokers.

Speaker 2 Now, I want to start off with

Speaker 2 to organize this is different, but this is the,

Speaker 2 I want to start off with this, with what I see is going on with TikTok. They're using TikTok

Speaker 2 in much the same way as that

Speaker 2 mainstream used to be used or that Sinclair Broadcasting used to use where everybody said the same thing. Somehow they've gotten to the influencers.

Speaker 41 And I want to play these Jaywalkers.

Speaker 60 It's easy.

Speaker 63 You just call up the agency.

Speaker 109 There's agencies for the influencers.

Speaker 176 You call them up here. You give them the script.

Speaker 2 It's a series of clips where they, which are bogus clips, but this is the talk jaywalking clips.

Speaker 177 Being in a country that you're in illegally is a civil offense, not a criminal one. You know what else is a civil offense?

Speaker 111 Jaywalking.

Speaker 178 And being undocumented is not a criminal offense. It's a civil one.
And if you've ever jaywalked, congratulations because you've also committed a civil offense.

Speaker 178 Have you ever sped over the speed limit? Have you ever drank or smoked underage? Have you ever drank and then driven a car? What about jaywalking? Being undocumented in America is

Speaker 178 a civil offense. It's not a criminal one.

Speaker 178 It's the same caliber of crime as a traffic offense. Just a reminder, in case anyone forgot, being undocumented is a civil offense, not a criminal one.

Speaker 178 If you've so much as littered on public property, I never want to hear, oh, but they broke a law as a justification for your hate.

Speaker 178 Just for the record, being here undocumented is not a criminal offense, it's a civil one. So that means if you've ever jaywalked, you too have committed a civil offense, okay?

Speaker 178 And if you're really concerned about criminals being in this country, then I have to ask, like,

Speaker 178 why did you vote for one?

Speaker 178 Well,

Speaker 109 not to interrupt you, but I did look up this civil offense because I knew you had this clip.

Speaker 2 Yes, I did too.

Speaker 145 And here's what I came up with.

Speaker 91 Civil offense is unlawful entry or presence in the United States violates immigration laws, specifically the Immigration and Nationality Act, the INA.

Speaker 53 This is handled as a civil matter through administrative process like deportation or removal proceedings conducted by immigration authorities,

Speaker 64 e.g., immigration and customs enforcement or ICE being undocumented or overstaying a visa generally does not result in criminal prosecution on its own.

Speaker 53 Right.

Speaker 1 But it's great.

Speaker 28 This is a very interesting way

Speaker 164 to

Speaker 40 program completely ignorant people who have not.

Speaker 59 Oh, these people.

Speaker 2 By the way, jaywalking.

Speaker 2 I looked it up too. Jaywalking is a criminal offense in most jurisdictions.

Speaker 28 Oh, interesting.

Speaker 53 That's even better.

Speaker 2 So they have this wrong. Now, in California, while I was researching that, and I also found the criminal part of the illegal immigration is how you entered the country.

Speaker 2 That could be a felony or a misdemeanor.

Speaker 30 Yes, that can be criminal felony.

Speaker 2 You're floating around.

Speaker 2 Yeah, they're right about that, but they're not really right. This is just specious.

Speaker 95 In fact, I have specious. I have that

Speaker 27 illegal entry.

Speaker 161 Entering the U.S.

Speaker 20 without inspection or authorization is a misdemeanor under 8 U.S.C.

Speaker 26 1325, punishable by fines or up to six months in prison for the first offense.

Speaker 15 Illegal re-entry after deportation is a felony with penalties of up to two years in prison or more if the individual has a criminal history.

Speaker 2 So while looking this up curiously, and I don't think this is generally known, and I still like to find out that there's some Vietnamese assemblymen in California, they put a bill in play that made it legal.

Speaker 2 In fact, they called it decriminalization because it was a criminal act.

Speaker 2 The decriminalization of jaywalking in California.

Speaker 30 I remember by Newsome.

Speaker 35 I remember this somehow.

Speaker 2 Signed by Newsome, and it goes to the, at least from what I can tell, it gets to the point where you can just walk against the light

Speaker 2 into the street.

Speaker 38 Really?

Speaker 95 So what's the point of the light?

Speaker 2 No.

Speaker 2 Screw the light.

Speaker 180 So, I mean, this is unbelievable.

Speaker 2 But this kind of propaganda is like, okay, this is what you're going to do now. You're going to take these dumb women, and I will say many of them are not, I can use this term, not unattractive.

Speaker 2 They weren't the blue-haired nose ring women.

Speaker 26 They are all over-socialized and undereducated.

Speaker 2 Well, they're just

Speaker 2 dummies. Yeah.
And

Speaker 2 obviously, you're right. There's an agency called up the main group.
There's probably, I don't know what they had to pay for this, but

Speaker 2 these girls are probably getting, they're all young. $750.

Speaker 53 They're probably

Speaker 53 $750.

Speaker 36 I'm I think that's probably what it is.

Speaker 2 But that's kind of high.

Speaker 2 I think we can get them to do it for five. But anyway,

Speaker 41 can we get them to talk?

Speaker 2 It's a lot of more costs. Can we get them to do that? It's basically prostitution, by the way.

Speaker 63 Can we get them to talk about the No Agenda Show for five?

Speaker 2 You know, and that should mention it.

Speaker 132 Yeah.

Speaker 2 It might not be a bad idea.

Speaker 28 Why spend on Facebook ads if you can get these gals?

Speaker 2 And so I run into these other clips. I'm talking about that.

Speaker 2 You played the clip of the guy from CNN who goes crazy. He's great, by the way.

Speaker 2 And so, I got these two clips that I have to play. This is the legal immigrant rant from a woman, legal immigrant rant.

Speaker 181 I am a legal immigrant.

Speaker 32 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 178 And I want to tell you something. I'm disgust

Speaker 178 by what

Speaker 178 people from other countries like Mexico are doing right now in my new country. I came from Mexico.

Speaker 181 I came legally.

Speaker 178 I have worked all my life here to get what I have. I have never asked for a penny to the government.
I didn't come here to get something from the government. I came for an opportunity and I got it.

Speaker 178 And I have the American dream. What about all of those people protesting in California and New York? What are they doing? They are burning

Speaker 178 the city.

Speaker 178 If you don't like

Speaker 178 to be deported and you want to stay here, you have to have your best behavior.

Speaker 178 Not the worst behavior. You think that we want you here? With that behavior of burning cars, burning the entire city? Why? Why do we

Speaker 178 talk to the authorities in your behalf? There has no meaning on that.

Speaker 178 And for the people that are defending these violent attackers, people that don't deserve to be here, shame on you. Shame on you, because you're supposed to talk and to tell them the truth.

Speaker 178 You're not supposed to line up with them. You're supposed to tell them, go to your country.
You are waving the flag of another country that you love, go.

Speaker 178 You don't need to be here. You don't deserve to be here.
You don't deserve another opportunity in this country because apparently you don't love this country like I do.

Speaker 29 So, go away.

Speaker 50 Oh, man.

Speaker 53 Where's the national anthem playing on that?

Speaker 183 I know, it's just too much.

Speaker 30 I'm going to assume that.

Speaker 2 Now we have, this is my last clip before I tell you

Speaker 2 my theory.

Speaker 64 Okay, I'm excited.

Speaker 2 No, that's not that great.

Speaker 163 Oh, okay.

Speaker 2 But this is the Mexican flag dude. Now, this guy, this guy is.

Speaker 89 This is good.

Speaker 2 This dude is good.

Speaker 53 Did you see him?

Speaker 95 What, the guy with the chest?

Speaker 30 The shirt off.

Speaker 121 Oh, yeah, sure.

Speaker 2 The guy, if he is not MS3, he doesn't have enough tests.

Speaker 18 He is the iconic image of this peaceful protest.

Speaker 36 That's the the way I see it.

Speaker 2 Yeah, and he is not happy about what he's seeing.

Speaker 184 So let me get this straight.

Speaker 185 Just so I could clarify,

Speaker 185 you don't want to go back to Mexico. You're protesting to stay away from Mexico.

Speaker 185 But you're waving the Mexican flag and you're waving it with pride. You're waving it in the United States.

Speaker 185 the country you're trying to stay in, the country you don't want to leave, but yet you're waving the Mexican flag with pride. Okay,

Speaker 185 that seems normal to you. That seems logical.
That's not stupid at all.

Speaker 185 None of that's stupid. All right.
You guys, you guys are an embarrassment to the Mexican culture and to the United States culture. You guys are an embarrassment to everybody around you,

Speaker 185 and you should be ashamed of yourself.

Speaker 185 Do better.

Speaker 19 Was that the Mexican flag, dude?

Speaker 77 Yeah.

Speaker 4 Huh?

Speaker 2 So that, no, that was the guy bitch about the Mexican flag.

Speaker 109 flags.

Speaker 41 Okay. All right.

Speaker 2 So here's what's going on.

Speaker 2 I see it over and over again. There's no way that Trump, somehow dirty tricking it,

Speaker 2 is not behind the Mexican flags. Those too many Mexican flags, they're all brand new.
They're all over the place.

Speaker 2 Nobody's been picked up or interviewed holding one, except there's a few jokers wearing them as scarves.

Speaker 2 But for the most part, the Mexican flag has been planted just for this purpose.

Speaker 2 That Mexican flag is showing up way too much in all these protests, and it is a scam, and I think it's a beauty.

Speaker 64 Too many Mexicanflags.com, everybody.

Speaker 78 Too many Mexican flags.

Speaker 2 This is bull crap. There is no way that this.

Speaker 2 They're all brand new flags, too.

Speaker 53 The something came along.

Speaker 187 And the joke is they're all made in China.

Speaker 27 That's the best part.

Speaker 2 Well, that is funny. And it is probably true.

Speaker 2 But the guy with the motorcycle and he's driving around the Mexican flag and he's going around in a circle, and the guy on top of the car waving the Mexican flag, and they got that shot all over the place.

Speaker 2 And a lot of them posed with that guy on the car with the Mexican flag, with surrounded by Mexican flags. Give me a break, people.

Speaker 180 Yeah, I think you're overdoing it.

Speaker 33 I think you're spot on about that, and they're brand new.

Speaker 21 It's not like, hey, mom, I'm going to take the flag with me today.

Speaker 57 It's not like that.

Speaker 188 Yeah.

Speaker 58 Yeah. Well, brilliant.

Speaker 2 It is. I thought it was genius.
And the M5M and everybody, they don't know what they're flat-footed.

Speaker 53 They're so stupid.

Speaker 46 Well, they have a job to do.

Speaker 27 You know, they have a job.

Speaker 28 So I just have a couple minutes here.

Speaker 161 This is meant to be interrupted

Speaker 99 again of just people out on the streets of Los Angeles.

Speaker 2 That's a good one.

Speaker 87 What?

Speaker 2 I mean, you gave me the permission to

Speaker 2 rough knowing I'm going to anyway.

Speaker 53 This is meant to be.

Speaker 189 But you're telling me in advance, you're not going to get irked at me no it's very important this clip is made for you to interrupt i wanted to make sure that you weren't like being on your best behavior so or you were going to make sure that i was going to actually listen yeah yeah there you go people with big heavy hammers pounding the concrete and pounding curbs pounding it breaking up all and handing these big chunks of concrete to people and they were taking that concrete going up on bridges and dropping it into the roof of a car they were throwing it at our police they were throwing it at our soldiers that are there.

Speaker 189 I could tell you, there were certain areas of that.

Speaker 73 I forgot to tell you, there's some Trump stuff in here, too.

Speaker 189 Los Angeles says that you could have called it an insurrection. It was terrible.
But these are paid insurrectionists. These are paid troublemakers.

Speaker 187 They get money.

Speaker 190 This weekend was marked with absolute and total violence, brutal repression, and attacks, coordinated attacks against our community.

Speaker 190 For us, as Indigenous people, to these lands, to this continent, this is nothing new.

Speaker 190 The military going after us is nothing nothing new.

Speaker 25 So, this is part of the narrative that's out there.

Speaker 70 Hey, man, we own this place.

Speaker 191 We were here before you.

Speaker 129 There was no war about it.

Speaker 22 It's ours.

Speaker 190 Advocate for violence.

Speaker 2 But when you, by the way, there was not only a war about it, but we also paid Mexico for a bunch of the property that we took.

Speaker 2 So

Speaker 2 there was a war and reparations. I mean, we own that.

Speaker 2 This is not some bull. This is bull crap.
This may actually be

Speaker 2 also a psyop for all we know.

Speaker 53 Of course it is.

Speaker 190 brutal violence against our people and kidnapping mothers and fathers from children is violent when they do things like that we have every right every historic right to defend our communities by any ways that we can and we're going to continue to do so historic right john they have a historic right to defend our communities we own this place who are and by the way after

Speaker 148 years of

Speaker 141 We thank the indigenous original owners of this place in California for letting us be here and letting us have this meeting.

Speaker 19 Yeah, no wonder people start to think this way.

Speaker 193 Remember that California was part of Mexico. All of the southwest is Mexico.

Speaker 102 So the roots are really deep in that region.

Speaker 193 And what they're saying is, no, not in our community.

Speaker 194 We don't agree with the term illegal.

Speaker 82 We're undocumented.

Speaker 194 We've been here for thousands of years before you guys showed up.

Speaker 180 How old is that guy?

Speaker 68 I don't know.

Speaker 53 He's in his 40s, I think.

Speaker 121 Thousands, thousands, years.

Speaker 59 Thousands of years old. Everything, we're anti-capitalist.

Speaker 194 We think socialism does work. Real socialism.

Speaker 137 Is there a country we can look to

Speaker 166 to kind of model the socialism idea?

Speaker 194 The only model would be Soviet Union the first four years.

Speaker 94 You're in the wrong country, bro.

Speaker 66 Come on.

Speaker 2 I don't know where you got this clip, but I saw this clip.

Speaker 22 Oh, I can tell you where it came from.

Speaker 55 It's Jesse Waters without Jesse Waters.

Speaker 2 Oh, Jesse Waters played. Yeah, he's got some of the better producers on Fox.

Speaker 2 He may have the best show on Fox, including.

Speaker 157 But what happens is, you know, I hear the lunch ladies here, you know, they're very worried.

Speaker 53 Oh,

Speaker 94 you know, the protest, the riots is going to be here on Saturday.

Speaker 50 No kings.

Speaker 42 There's 50 Democrats in Fredericksburg.

Speaker 64 I'm sure they're going to be out there protesting.

Speaker 34 No Kings, you know, whatever.

Speaker 145 But the way it plays on television, which is what everyone just gets sucked into, and you know, just looking at the quad, except for the 787 crash, which we'll talk about later.

Speaker 59 Oh,

Speaker 129 you didn't hear about it. 787 crash?

Speaker 85 Are you being facetious?

Speaker 2 I don't know this.

Speaker 96 Oh, yeah. 747

Speaker 38 coming from India to Gatwick crashed on takeoff.

Speaker 2 I think there's one survivor, but 747. No, 787.
Okay, well, you said I thought you said 747.

Speaker 57 No, I said 787.

Speaker 2 Okay, well, 787, which is a nice plane, has never had

Speaker 36 an incident like this.

Speaker 2 And crashing Gatwick?

Speaker 17 No, no, it was leaving India.

Speaker 145 Oh, and so what, and of course, there's tons of video of it.

Speaker 91 So it takes off, and then it just kind of floats down and crashes and burns with 50 tons of jet fuel on it and into a hospital building, which I'm surprised the hospital building didn't collapse onto itself.

Speaker 71 Sorry, maybe a bit too early, but I had to say it.

Speaker 42 And, you know, everyone's like, too soon?

Speaker 53 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Everyone's like, he didn't have his flaps.

Speaker 7 He had his flaps up. His wheels were down.

Speaker 21 So, first of all, nobody knows nothing right now.

Speaker 18 But the lone survivor supposedly said there was a loud bang upon takeoff, which could mean a compressor stall.

Speaker 21 The ram air turbine appears to have come out.

Speaker 42 That's

Speaker 21 a little kind of fan that drops down beneath the

Speaker 144 fuselage to generate electricity in the case of an electrical outage.

Speaker 156 So that could be responsible for a whole bunch of things.

Speaker 141 My guys on the inside, they say they think it might be one of those Windows 95 crashed on takeoff and it blew everything out and they couldn't restore it.

Speaker 92 which is that's kind of frightening because all this stuff is fly-by-wire it's all computerized uh but i i doubt this is pilot error yeah

Speaker 88 it's um it was 42 degrees

Speaker 2 so the possibility exists we were all topic by the way yeah but the thanks to me you said i could interrupt yeah but you so you think it might you think it might be a software failure yes

Speaker 2 yeah well who would now who makes this jet let me think of the company name

Speaker 57 yeah this is this is not good for Boeing.

Speaker 85 It's not good for those 290 people or their families either, to be honest about it.

Speaker 25 And it's a bad day for aviation.

Speaker 53 Day wrecker.

Speaker 154 Day wrecker.

Speaker 2 Well, Boeing has got to be fixed.

Speaker 91 Yeah. But, you know, everybody's on TV.

Speaker 138 Well, you know, I didn't, I saw only the slats, the beds, the flaps weren't out.

Speaker 53 The gear wasn't up, which all true, but what is the cause?

Speaker 45 Is it because I love this one?

Speaker 7 Well, the pilot clearly he pulled the flaps up instead of the gear.

Speaker 163 Oh, Oh, please.

Speaker 70 You know,

Speaker 145 these are the two knobs in every aircraft that have remained the same. As far as I know, I have not flown a 787 in the cockpit.

Speaker 145 But the flaps is a lever that you go from down to up, and the lever is a flat piece of plastic that resembles a flap.

Speaker 55 And the gear.

Speaker 1 is a lever that has a rubber wheel on it. So when you grab it, you're like, that's a wheel.

Speaker 145 So that seems highly unlikely that that happened.

Speaker 53 But, you know,

Speaker 27 hey, everyone's like, oh, I got something to say.

Speaker 17 I'm an expert in aviation.

Speaker 140 I have my private pilot's license.

Speaker 2 I'm glad it happened during the show so we don't have to deal with it.

Speaker 25 All right. So anyway, let's go back because we have this big protest coming up on Saturday.

Speaker 192 No kings.

Speaker 41 No kings.

Speaker 188 And

Speaker 2 you know, this is a lame protest, by the way. I should mention it's up front.
No king. Who cares? What is no kings?

Speaker 133 Well,

Speaker 70 it was already said.

Speaker 2 Now he's Hitler, now he's king. Is he Hitler, which is a dictator, who is elected dictator, or is he a king, which is a monarch?

Speaker 2 Wake up your minds.

Speaker 53 Well, it's also,

Speaker 38 you know,

Speaker 64 there's a lot of groups who are grabbing on to this, which is going to screw it up because

Speaker 64 Winston-Salem, for instance, you know,

Speaker 157 they're calling it Queen's Day Rising, no kings, and they're adding trans to the whole issue.

Speaker 27 So that'll what, yeah, oh, yeah, oh, yeah, that's gonna screw everything up,

Speaker 99 yeah.

Speaker 2 They're adding, oh, this is well, maybe that's also a

Speaker 68 an op

Speaker 2 to do that.

Speaker 53 That would be pretty man.

Speaker 90 Everything's an op with you.

Speaker 41 Well, I, and you're not wrong

Speaker 139 because of this flag thing.

Speaker 82 And when I kept seeing it, I said, Today is it's op day, everybody.

Speaker 2 And then we had in the topper to make me really think in terms of op was listening to these dumb dumb chicks going on and on about civil versus jaywalking.

Speaker 57 Jaywalking. Yeah.

Speaker 34 Yeah.

Speaker 34 Let me see.

Speaker 88 We have, oh, okay.

Speaker 21 Mayor Brandon Johnson of Chicago.

Speaker 186 See, this is the moment when Democrat politicians like Gavin Newsom, everybody's seen him.

Speaker 10 Arrest me then.

Speaker 26 Come on, Tom Holman, arrest me.

Speaker 21 So everyone's got big kahonas all of a sudden.

Speaker 199 Mayor Brandon Johnson says it's cruel and unconstitutional.

Speaker 200 Right now in our country, there's no check and balance.

Speaker 2 It doesn't exist right now.

Speaker 199 Violent clashes.

Speaker 34 I think it's checks and balances, Mr.

Speaker 15 Mayor, but

Speaker 70 shit.

Speaker 27 There's no check and balance.

Speaker 74 Your checkbook?

Speaker 11 What is going on?

Speaker 42 Check and balance.

Speaker 200 Right now in our country, there's no check and balance.

Speaker 2 It doesn't exist right now.

Speaker 198 Violent clashes between heavily armed immigration and customs enforcement agents and Los Angeles protesters, creating alarm in Chicago with word of an impending enforcement action.

Speaker 201 The federal agents have been informed that they have 48 hours to stand by and be ready to deploy.

Speaker 198 The mayor's chief of staff is planning for what many fear will be a chaotic and dangerous apprehension of undocumented Chicago residents.

Speaker 202 There will be tactical teams, there will be mini-tanks, there will be

Speaker 201 other

Speaker 201 tools that they use

Speaker 201 in which they plan to do raids, as we saw in Los Angeles.

Speaker 198 Protests against the ICE raids, similar to what we witnessed locally last night.

Speaker 199 Another concern for the mayor and Chicago police seeking to preserve public safety and people's rights to assemble and protest.

Speaker 57 Which is the funny thing because I don't think anyone has a problem with if you want to protest, you want to carry your flags around, that's fine.

Speaker 64 But that's not what it is.

Speaker 57 That's not what this is, And that's not what this is.

Speaker 187 And this No Kings Day,

Speaker 35 remember we talked about the 5051 organization, 50, so 50501.

Speaker 31 So from another podcast, because you can't get anything from television.

Speaker 41 This is

Speaker 59 true.

Speaker 28 Right side up with Nevia Souza, and she delves into what, so it's a podcast, so bear with me.

Speaker 64 She'll delve into what 5051 is.

Speaker 101 5051 movement. It is a political campaign that launched earlier this year in response to the new administration and their policies.
It all started on Reddit.

Speaker 101 From one Reddit user, all of this came to be. The movement has rapidly gained momentum.
They are now protesting across the nation, causing a whole stir and a lot of conspiracies.

Speaker 101 So the 5051's core objectives are what you would probably expect, an investigation into Elon Musk when he was still with the administration, all of Trump's appointees, impeaching Donald Trump, reinstatement of DEI initiatives, protections of LGBTQ plus rights and minority groups, reinstatement of aid to Ukraine, lifting tariffs, et cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 101 The movement officially launched in early February of this year in response to the inauguration. They had 80 different protests in all 50 states.
They continued to protest.

Speaker 101 In February, they had Not My President's Day. Thousands of people nationwide protested the administration's policies.
In March, they did March 4th for democracy.

Speaker 101 On April 5th, they had one of the biggest coordinated protests across the country, the biggest of this year. their hands-off protests.

Speaker 101 They were in collaboration with 150 different organizations, including ACLU and the Women's March. There were 1,400 different protests that broke out across all 50 states.

Speaker 101 An estimate of 3 to 5 million people participated in these protests.

Speaker 101 According to the protesters, they involved a coalition of over 169 progressive labor union, pro-democracy, civil rights, LGBTQ, and women's rights groups. This was a huge deal.

Speaker 101 And I live somewhere where you don't see protesters. I live really rural.
I did not know this was even going on because there was such little media coverage. Tell me what democracy looks looks like!

Speaker 4 This is what democracy looks like! Tell me what democracy looks like! This is what democracy looks like!

Speaker 101 I would just like to talk about the fact that this lady with the megaphone leading this, chanting about democracy, she's decked out and everything pro-Palestinian.

Speaker 101 The irony.

Speaker 90 Exactly.

Speaker 43 So,

Speaker 38 what the M5M does, though, is they love this.

Speaker 64 All they want is video of burning cars, Trump, burning Trump effigies.

Speaker 183 That's all they want.

Speaker 134 And Rachel Maddow, I know I do need an intervention.

Speaker 131 I apologize.

Speaker 40 She could not promote

Speaker 19 for her whole show, I just got a couple of clips.

Speaker 7 She kept saying, no kings, June 14th, everywhere. No kings, June 14th.

Speaker 7 Everybody, come on out, June 14th, no kings everywhere.

Speaker 102 When Trump issued his order to federalize the National Guard

Speaker 102 over the objections of California's governor this weekend.

Speaker 102 That order was not specific to Los Angeles. It was not specific to California.

Speaker 102 That order that he issued, he's coming for you, is something that he could use to send National Guard troops anywhere or even active duty forces.

Speaker 102 Now he's sending 700 Marines, supposedly, from the Marine Corps base at 29 Palms.

Speaker 34 They're going to come and kill you.

Speaker 102 And that is a portrait of weakness. Weakness.

Speaker 74 That's the best.

Speaker 2 You know, they keep going on with this. He's weak.
He's insecure is another one, which is like of all the people that you've ever seen, I don't see him as insecure.

Speaker 76 Is it time for the Trump rotation again?

Speaker 90 Do we need to?

Speaker 2 No, I think that some things could be added to it.

Speaker 84 I think we need to listen to the Trump rotation.

Speaker 2 Well, maybe you're right. Maybe they should redo it and bring the new stuff in because insecure wasn't on the other side.

Speaker 76 Well, let's see what's in the Trump rotation from how many years ago now?

Speaker 47 Is it to seven years ago?

Speaker 206 I have my list, and you might want to see if there's anything I left out. This is the Trump rotation.
There's two categories: there's the regular, and then there's the criminal. But here we go, ready?

Speaker 206 Yep.

Speaker 206 Liar, incompetent, unhinged, illegitimate president, white supremacist, racist, bully, immature, Russian agent, narcissist, mean, long ties, insane, tweets too much, small hands, small penis, big red button, criminal,

Speaker 206 mean,

Speaker 206 racist, immature, thin-skinned, thin-skinned, runs the mob, has no money, unstable, fatter than 239 pounds, bankrupt, 25th Amendment should be instituted.

Speaker 206 He hates women, misogynist, holds grudges forever, plays golf a lot, obstruction of justice, money laundering, and clowns.

Speaker 207 No wonder we're making America white again.

Speaker 4 Yeah,

Speaker 38 I think it needs to be updated.

Speaker 14 You're right.

Speaker 53 I didn't even hear it.

Speaker 22 Yeah, let's go back to Rachel Maddow for a moment.

Speaker 102 That is what you get when you have a supposed leader, a supposed strongman, even,

Speaker 102 who can't figure out how to get the support of his people, and he knows it.

Speaker 28 What?

Speaker 40 He can't get the support of his people, and he knows it.

Speaker 102 That is what you get when you have a weak president,

Speaker 102 an unpopular president who sees the people are against him, who can't defend his actions, who is losing support over time and not gaining it, even on the issues where he thinks he's supposed to be strongest.

Speaker 102 This is a president who has no other ideas

Speaker 102 and no skills to get him out of this political pickle that he is in, and who has therefore

Speaker 102 rushed right to the end and has decided that if the people are against him, well, then he will bludgeon them. He will literally bludgeon them into not protesting anymore.

Speaker 102 Because the protests against him are working

Speaker 59 and growing. It's working.

Speaker 134 and they're right it's working now let's get into the promotional part here and you ain't seen nothing yet because

Speaker 102 among other things what is this this is no king's week it's no king's week it's a week all of a sudden when did he become a week i don't know if i didn't get the memo but it's no king's week that's this week remember this upcoming weekend saturday june 14th is likely to be the largest set of protests yet against trump and the trump administration and trump knows it's coming You remember that really giant day of protests against Trump back on April 5th?

Speaker 102 Remember that huge day of protests?

Speaker 110 No.

Speaker 150 Hands-off protests?

Speaker 102 There were over a thousand protests scheduled that day all over the country against Trump.

Speaker 102 Well, this weekend, this Saturday, June 14th, there are already more than 1,800 protests scheduled against Trump all around the country.

Speaker 102 It's going to be like twice the size of that massive day of protests that we saw on April 5th.

Speaker 74 Okay, so what?

Speaker 102 Trump is going to do his military parade for himself in Washington that day?

Speaker 38 Yeah, that's the talking point.

Speaker 102 Interestingly, and I think importantly, there is not a no Kings Day protest in Washington, D.C. this Saturday because of Trump's military parade.

Speaker 102 They're going to do like a flagship national protest in Philadelphia, but there are more than 1,800 other protests against Trump planned all over the country.

Speaker 102 It looks like there are going to be more and larger protests against Trump this weekend, this Saturday, than we have yet seen on any other day.

Speaker 205 And he knows it.

Speaker 102 He cannot handle the amount of protest against him now, and it is about to increase exponentially.

Speaker 148 She really believes that this is like protest is good.

Speaker 159 Protest, go ahead, protest.

Speaker 53 You think anyone cares?

Speaker 2 Do you think that the ICE protests in LA are about him?

Speaker 53 They're about ICE.

Speaker 26 No, this, but this is what I'm saying.

Speaker 19 This is the disconnect.

Speaker 38 ICE is like...

Speaker 2 She's lost her mind, this poor woman.

Speaker 92 If you look at the No Kings Day posters, ICE is like eighth on the list.

Speaker 97 You know, it's more about

Speaker 68 tariffs and inflation and all the old talking points.

Speaker 26 They didn't have time to print up new posters.

Speaker 145 Final clip.

Speaker 102 The No King's Day of Defiance?

Speaker 26 No King's Day of Defiance.

Speaker 85 It's expanded in scope.

Speaker 41 Wait, wait.

Speaker 2 Now it's grammatically incorrect.

Speaker 59 Yes.

Speaker 2 No King's Day of Defiance?

Speaker 2 That's a non-sequitur at least.

Speaker 102 Yes. The No King's Day of Defiance?

Speaker 102 They said this today, quote.

Speaker 22 I always want to remind you that she makes millions of dollars doing this.

Speaker 2 She makes 25 million.

Speaker 48 Yes, I always want to remind you, because that kind of gets you riled up when you hear that.

Speaker 36 $25 million.

Speaker 102 The No King's Day of Defiance.

Speaker 102 They said this today, quote. The No King's Day.

Speaker 2 25 million bucks should say anything.

Speaker 2 Trump sucks. She obviously has,

Speaker 2 she has orders.

Speaker 197 Give me $25 million.

Speaker 69 Trump sucks.

Speaker 74 Hitler.

Speaker 7 He's no good.

Speaker 11 John, what do you think about Trump for $25 million?

Speaker 106 Trump sucks.

Speaker 102 They said this today, quote, the no-kings mobilizations on June 14th were already planned as a peaceful stand against authoritarian overreach and the gross abuse of power this administration has shown.

Speaker 102 Now, this military escalation, meaning what's happening in Los Angeles, only confirms what we have known. This government wants to rule by force, not serve the people.

Speaker 102 From major cities to small towns, we will rise together and say we reject political violence. We reject fear as governance.

Speaker 205 We reject the myth that only some deserve freedom.

Speaker 102 On Saturday, June 14th, more than 1,800 rallies will take place across the country, peaceful, organized, and united.

Speaker 102 The No Kings movement has posted a map online showing where those 1,800-plus rallies will be held. I should tell you, and I think this is important.
Here we go.

Speaker 102 Of those 1,800, more than 100 of those have been added to the map since Trump announced that he was sending the National Guard into LA.

Speaker 53 Oh my.

Speaker 102 If he was hoping to get people to not protest, it's backfiring.

Speaker 50 Backfiring!

Speaker 102 Organizers are going to hold a series of online trainings this week ahead of the Lord.

Speaker 22 Hey, No Agenda Producers, we need you to jump on these Zoom calls for some training.

Speaker 102 Organizers are going to hold a series of online trainings this week ahead of the big day.

Speaker 102 Tomorrow it's a know your rights training that they're doing nationwide by Zoom so people can better understand how to interact with law enforcement or

Speaker 186 how about this don't spit on them.

Speaker 145 Don't throw things at them. Don't get in their face.

Speaker 88 And you should be okay.

Speaker 1 That's my advice.

Speaker 102 Provocateurs during the demonstrations.

Speaker 148 Oh, how you deal with provocateurs.

Speaker 16 Oh, I see.

Speaker 102 And how to interact with them.

Speaker 2 There's always going to be those. Yes.

Speaker 102 Law enforcement or provocateurs during the demonstrations.

Speaker 102 Then two days later on Thursday, another big nationwide Zoom call. They're calling it a pre-mobilization mass call.
That's for anybody who's planning to participate.

Speaker 102 Potentially tens of thousands of people are going to be on that call.

Speaker 205 It's basically just to

Speaker 102 get a strategy ahead of the big day Saturday.

Speaker 53 Yeah.

Speaker 97 Well, someone should be on it all.

Speaker 2 We have to get on the ball here. It's not going to be easy.
You know, they have this, one of the places they have these protests is in Port Angeles, Washington. Of course.

Speaker 53 And is Mimi going?

Speaker 22 Is Mimi going to bring her Mexican flag?

Speaker 2 Well, she likes, she goes by. She never takes enough photos for my taste.
But she goes by, it's the same, she says it's the same six people.

Speaker 2 And they're always out in front of the same, in front of the library or the city hall. I can't remember where specifically.

Speaker 176 And they're always holding signs,

Speaker 2 handmade signs,

Speaker 2 and they're all old.

Speaker 2 It's not like any kids or

Speaker 2 any millennials or anything. It's just a bunch of old farts, which I've seen.
They also have the,

Speaker 2 this will show up over here in El Cerrito near me and El Cerrito Plaza. And I've joined in once in a while.
to go over there so I can chat with people.

Speaker 77 Of course.

Speaker 132 And

Speaker 2 get a couple of cool signs.

Speaker 121 Hey, man, can I have your signs?

Speaker 2 I need for my collection. I need any more good signs, but just some good ones.

Speaker 27 Can I hold your sign, please?

Speaker 2 And well,

Speaker 2 I've done different things to get signs. I've actually bought signs, and most people give up their signs for some cash.

Speaker 2 And there's also sign makers. There's usually a sign maker that's around there, and he's making custom signs, and he's like, you know, has reasonably good handwriting.

Speaker 2 He prints the signs up, and they staples them to a stick.

Speaker 121 And then they give him the signs.

Speaker 65 Was this in the 2000s that you did this?

Speaker 2 I've done this a couple of times.

Speaker 2 If I have time and I because it's over by the post office where I go to pick up the mail and if there's a little protest going on, it's usually about

Speaker 2 20 or 30 people. Yeah.
I'll pull a car over a park and then I'll come and mingle.

Speaker 53 Hey, girls.

Speaker 174 What's the look at somebody?

Speaker 2 There'll be somebody with a bullhorn and a sheet of paper of stuff that they're supposed to yell into the bullhorn.

Speaker 41 Can you hold your paper? Can I hold your paper for a sec?

Speaker 59 Yeah, I do that.

Speaker 2 But it's good research.

Speaker 30 No, for sure.

Speaker 2 But it's the same thing. They're all in their 50s and 60s.

Speaker 133 So you belong.

Speaker 53 You just belong to the ball.

Speaker 78 Yeah, I fit right in on the old guy.

Speaker 41 Blend in.

Speaker 164 Fit right in.

Speaker 58 Look at that gray hair.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I got, you know, the hair is kind of disheveled. And I wear it.

Speaker 2 I'm wearing flannel shirts a lot because it's so damn cold around. Do you have

Speaker 15 your sandals on, or what are you wearing for sure?

Speaker 2 No, I don't wear it. No, I wear crocs.

Speaker 53 Crocs, thank you. I was wearing a corner.

Speaker 30 I don't wear crocs.

Speaker 2 I'm just making it clear I don't wear crocs. I wear skechers.

Speaker 18 Yeah, they're crocs on steroids.

Speaker 159 They're like crocs.

Speaker 28 They're just skechers from the same factory.

Speaker 2 Anyway, so these protests are a joke.

Speaker 99 This, I thought, was the

Speaker 36 this is such a good clip of Nancy Pelosi.

Speaker 145 I mean, what do we know about the National Guard on January 6th?

Speaker 2 We know that Trump sent a memo to Pelosi, who's in charge of the National Guard because she's responsible and she's in charge of the sergeant-at-arms of the Congress. And so she tells him what to do.

Speaker 2 He sent a memo to Nancy saying, I think there could be some protests that we should probably protect the Capitol. We should probably put 10,000 National Guard troops.
This was discussed by Nancy.

Speaker 66 Oops, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on.

Speaker 19 Come back. This was discussed by Nancy.

Speaker 2 This was discussed by Nancy's daughter in the movie that she made where Nancy said, yeah, I could have probably stopped it.

Speaker 2 But Nancy was given a memo, and she said, screw this, we're not going to do that.

Speaker 2 And then they destroyed that memo

Speaker 2 was Nancy's property at the time. She was destroyed during the hearings.

Speaker 2 And nobody wants to talk about it, even though she already, you know, it's already on tape that she said, what she told her daughter.

Speaker 163 Yes.

Speaker 2 So Trump was trying to get the National Guard out to just protect the Capitol, and he was rebuked and blamed.

Speaker 76 Well, it's interesting because Nancy Pelosi remembers it differently.

Speaker 118 Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is noting the disconnect between how the president is behaving now and how he behaved

Speaker 118 on January 6th.

Speaker 120 On January 6th,

Speaker 120 with violence against the Constitution, against the Congress, and against the United States Capitol, we begged the President of the United States to send in the National Guard.

Speaker 120 He would not do it. A contra-constitutional way, he has sent the National Guard into California.
Something is very wrong with this picture.

Speaker 74 Yeah.

Speaker 121 Yes.

Speaker 2 Yes. Something is very wrong with this picture, Nancy.
Isn't that amazing?

Speaker 2 That doesn't surprise me in the least.

Speaker 35 No, it doesn't surprise me.

Speaker 2 It just liars. It doesn't surprise us.

Speaker 92 Yeah, it doesn't surprise us at all.

Speaker 145 I'm ready to move on if you are.

Speaker 55 I would like to.

Speaker 2 I'll probably, let's just see if there's any scrounge clips left.

Speaker 26 Scrounch, man.

Speaker 145 This is like, this is an hour of this nonsense.

Speaker 174 No, you're right. Okay.

Speaker 210 We're talking more about it than the actual protests will last.

Speaker 55 I will say I watched the Apple WWDC keynote.

Speaker 141 which is not a keynote.

Speaker 91 It's a video.

Speaker 76 And can I summarize it for you as I usually do?

Speaker 2 Yes, you can summarize for me as you usually do.

Speaker 117 It's gorgeous.

Speaker 211 Liquid Glass is gorgeous.

Speaker 117 It's just gorgeous.

Speaker 40 All your apps are gorgeous.

Speaker 96 The video, it's gorgeous.

Speaker 148 It's just gorgeous.

Speaker 2 There you go. Do they say gorgeous?

Speaker 38 Oh, they all say gorgeous.

Speaker 28 Particularly Tim.

Speaker 117 It's gorgeous.

Speaker 211 It's just so liquid glass is gorgeous.

Speaker 140 There you go.

Speaker 35 That is your.

Speaker 25 Did you tell me to watch Ted Lasso?

Speaker 2 When it first came out, maybe four years ago, I mentioned that it was an interesting show, kind of, at least the first season. Yeah.

Speaker 53 No, because it's on Apple TV and

Speaker 26 someone else recommended it and we started watching it.

Speaker 88 We love it.

Speaker 21 I almost almost didn't want to make fun of Apple today, but I can't help myself.

Speaker 45 Because Ted Lasso is gorgeous.

Speaker 2 Everything that I thought this show jumped a shark right at the end of the first season. I'd never watched it since.

Speaker 42 Oh, no, we're into second season.

Speaker 85 It's still good.

Speaker 25 I mean, it's unrealistic.

Speaker 98 It doesn't show at all the

Speaker 187 grooming, racist country of the United Kingdom.

Speaker 28 It doesn't portray that to any accuracy.

Speaker 35 And the only brown people are the ones playing football.

Speaker 38 Football. Football.
Yeah.

Speaker 145 Anyway, so that was

Speaker 2 gorgeous. You watch the shows about sports.

Speaker 92 Tina's watching a show about sports.

Speaker 92 You talk about crazy. This is great.

Speaker 2 Have you started watching The Recruit?

Speaker 165 No, no, no.

Speaker 73 I can't take any more violence. I can't take the violence.

Speaker 133 It's not that violent. I don't like the violence.

Speaker 143 It's too much violence.

Speaker 148 I'm tired of violence.

Speaker 2 The recruit, just for anyone out there, it's on Netflix, and it's about a schmuck that joins the CIA.

Speaker 2 And he gets beat up a lot because he's an idiot.

Speaker 2 But

Speaker 2 the thing that's remarkable about the show is the portrayal of the bureaucracy.

Speaker 196 Yeah.

Speaker 2 And the backbiting, backstabbing, creepy.

Speaker 2 And anyone who's worked in a big bureaucracy, whether Mimi says, yeah, the corporate same way, because she worked at a couple of big banks when she was younger. Oh, yeah.

Speaker 2 And I worked at an administrative state

Speaker 154 operations.

Speaker 38 You were a Democrat.

Speaker 85 I can't even believe that you converted.

Speaker 145 It's amazing.

Speaker 68 You got saved.

Speaker 2 No, common sense.

Speaker 2 And so, but

Speaker 2 just to watch the scenes in the office are the ones that make that show work. Okay.

Speaker 188 The other story that dominated the M5M

Speaker 22 for obvious reasons, again, full of lies, was the

Speaker 55 ACIP.

Speaker 157 This is the

Speaker 160 board of advisors that advises on vaccines for the CDC,

Speaker 20 which Robert Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 35 decided to disband and bring in new guys.

Speaker 85 And this caused such a tizzy because

Speaker 183 we know that most of the advertising, certainly on the news programs, but everywhere, everywhere you look,

Speaker 92 turn on some TV if you got it still.

Speaker 145 Maybe you can get one of those over-the-air antennas or get YouTube TV for a day and then cancel it.

Speaker 2 It's all. The over-the-air antennas are cheap.
Yep.

Speaker 89 And effective.

Speaker 145 It's safe and effective, actually.

Speaker 212 Here's an intro from NBC that'll give you the rundown.

Speaker 145 Then I have a couple specific clips from Dr. Celine Gounder we need to discuss.

Speaker 2 Back here at home, the future of vaccine recommendations remains in question following the move by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 2 to retire all the members of a CDC panel of independent experts advising on vaccines.

Speaker 22 By the way, whenever you say Robert Kennedy Jr., you have to say Robert Kennedy Jr., a known vaccine skeptic.

Speaker 20 Here's Here's Ann Thompson.

Speaker 142 Fierce blowback tonight to HHS Secretary Robert F.

Speaker 205 Kennedy Jr.'s decision to remove all members of the CDC's vaccine advisory committee from public health experts.

Speaker 215 If this committee stops recommending vaccines, insurance won't cover it anymore. People will not get it.

Speaker 19 We know that's factually not true.

Speaker 186 We know that the recommendations that change

Speaker 109 that

Speaker 64 insurance will cover it.

Speaker 2 We went through this. Yes, what you're pointing out is what we've pointed out before: that this is a lie.
It's a lie.

Speaker 16 Yes.

Speaker 133 Correct.

Speaker 216 It's a lie.

Speaker 215 Insurance won't cover it anymore. People will not get it.

Speaker 130 You will have a reason.

Speaker 145 People will not get it.

Speaker 70 You won't have access.

Speaker 2 Somehow, people will not get it.

Speaker 30 Yeah, people won't get it.

Speaker 2 What network is this? And why would you put a blatant liar on it? Oh, wait a minute. It's because the networks are bought and paid for by Big Pharma.

Speaker 38 Yes, it's NBC. And

Speaker 10 what he's saying is he didn't even say, he actually threw out the talking point without even knowing it.

Speaker 166 It's not even a talking point.

Speaker 19 It's what's behind the talking point.

Speaker 88 What he's saying is not like people won't be able to afford it.

Speaker 85 He didn't even say people won't have access.

Speaker 28 He says people won't get it, which is the fear of the pharma companies.

Speaker 16 Oh, they're not going to get the shot anymore.

Speaker 25 That's direct to our bottom line.

Speaker 28 That's what he's saying.

Speaker 214 From public health experts.

Speaker 215 If this committee stops recommending vaccines, insurance won't cover it anymore. People will not get it.

Speaker 217 It will have a real impact on people's access to vaccines.

Speaker 97 And our stock price. Vaccines.

Speaker 162 And the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Speaker 215 I think we're likely to see diseases that many people have never seen before or even heard of.

Speaker 74 Diseases we've never even heard of.

Speaker 121 How does that work?

Speaker 70 Just don't want to scare you, but there will be diseases you've never even heard of.

Speaker 28 Somehow, vaccines magically exist for it, but you're going to get that.

Speaker 2 Concern from parents don gibson father of two in california by the way this is the most i'm sorry you're playing this because now you're getting me mad oh oh this is a

Speaker 2 pathetic indictment of the mainstream media that they would do this well isn't that what we do

Speaker 213 yeah but this is a pathetic indictment not just an indictment this is pathetic oh i'm sorry i'll try to be more classy next time concern from parents don gibson father of two in california i'm really worried that my children won't have access to vaccines that I did.

Speaker 59 Access, access, brother.

Speaker 136 Like I did. It's like internet access.

Speaker 58 What kind of access?

Speaker 162 Mom Harmony Montez in the heart of the recent West Texas measles outbreak.

Speaker 219 I very much trust vaccines.

Speaker 123 Kennedy, a long time best, best drop-in ever.

Speaker 7 Mom in West Texas, gotta be a nut job Republican.

Speaker 170 I very much trust vaccines.

Speaker 128 Done. California.

Speaker 218 I'm really worried that my children won't have access to vaccines that I did.

Speaker 162 Mom Harmony Montez, in the heart of the recent West Texas measles outbreak.

Speaker 219 I very much trust vaccines.

Speaker 53 Kennedy, a long time vaccine skeptic.

Speaker 162 In today's Wall Street Journal, writing, Did you hear it?

Speaker 76 Well-known vaccine skeptic.

Speaker 2 I thought she said long time.

Speaker 154 Oh.

Speaker 219 I very much trust vaccines.

Speaker 53 Kennedy, a long time vaccine skeptic.

Speaker 162 In today's Wall Street Journal writing, a clean sweep is needed to reestablish public confidence in vaccine science, claiming the committee has been been plagued with persistent conflicts of interest.

Speaker 162 The committee is made up of independent medical and public health experts who make recommendations to the CDC about vaccine usage.

Speaker 53 Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, a doctor, said in February Kennedy in the Trump White House promised him this.

Speaker 169 It confirmed he will maintain the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommendations without changes.

Speaker 162 Today, Cassidy would Hold on a second.

Speaker 186 Recommendations without changes.

Speaker 145 Not that he would keep the entire panel in place, but the recommendations.

Speaker 94 So they kind of fuffle around on that and make it sound like Kennedy promised not to change the advisory panel,

Speaker 64 but he promised he wouldn't change the recommendations from the panel.

Speaker 88 Didn't say that, hey, it could be a new panel.

Speaker 110 Senator Bill Cassidy, a doctor,

Speaker 123 Dr.

Speaker 41 Kennedy in the Trump White House, promised him this.

Speaker 169 It confirmed he will maintain the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommendations without changes.

Speaker 127 You see what? See, he's doing exactly what he said he would do.

Speaker 183 But I might change the panel.

Speaker 162 Today, Cassidy was cautious.

Speaker 59 I'll have to see.

Speaker 221 He'll fire me the names, but I can't answer that because I haven't seen the names.

Speaker 222 Do you see this increasing trust in vaccines?

Speaker 167 I don't see how it possibly could.

Speaker 142 Trust and the nation's health experts say potentially at risk.

Speaker 180 At risk. Trust is at risk.

Speaker 145 I think that went out the window a long time ago.

Speaker 22 Now we go to CBS.

Speaker 191 Dr.

Speaker 95 Celine Gaundra, who I believe still lost her husband due to a sudden stroke on a soccer field somewhere.

Speaker 93 Mysteriously.

Speaker 148 Mysteriously.

Speaker 75 Now listen to this.

Speaker 2 Can you explain to our audience what the CDC's vaccine advisory committee does and why these dismissals are raising alarms?

Speaker 105 So So our vaccines have to go through multiple hoops before you receive these.

Speaker 16 You've got to go hoops, not tests.

Speaker 7 We don't do tests. We just go through hoops and loopholes and back doors.

Speaker 2 We played a clip recently about the discussion of

Speaker 2 getting rid of, they got rid of two vaccine people off

Speaker 2 one of these advisory committees and

Speaker 2 just passed the COVID thing because they were skeptical about COVID boosters. And bout they went.
Yeah, well, hoops.

Speaker 105 So, our vaccines have to go through multiple hoops before you receive these.

Speaker 105 So, first, you have the FDA that approves them, they vet for safety and effectiveness, then the ACIP, which is this external committee advising the CDC, will help determine how these vaccines should be used.

Speaker 223 So, what age group, what high-risk groups.

Speaker 105 And this is something that's been happening for decades now. It's not partisan, it's not political, and frankly, it's a pretty boring scientific process.

Speaker 16 Oh, okay.

Speaker 88 Well, let's listen to what the issue is then, Dr. Celine Gaunder.

Speaker 124 Kennedy wrote in an op-ed that this is really about restoring the public trust and rooting out conflicts of interest.

Speaker 124 He specifically said that most of the ACIP members have received substantial funding from pharmaceutical companies. Does he have a point about conflicts of interest here?

Speaker 28 Well, conflicts of interest.

Speaker 16 What do you think the doctor will say about this?

Speaker 2 He's going to say no.

Speaker 69 It's even better than that.

Speaker 105 What he is citing is an Office of the Inspector General report that found 97% of the conflict of interest forms had errors. But these were errors of like putting the wrong date.

Speaker 105 I mean, imagine on your IRS returns, you might have the wrong date on something. That's very different from having a true conflict of interest.

Speaker 105 And these advisory members cannot serve on this committee if they own stock in a pharmaceutical company, if they're on a pharmaceutical company-associated advisory board of some kind.

Speaker 105 Now, Kennedy, on the other hand, is conflicted.

Speaker 105 Anybody who stands to gain or lose from the outcome of a vaccine decision, and he has sued multiple vaccine manufacturers, he has stood to gain or lose from the outcome of these decisions.

Speaker 105 That is, by definition, conflicted.

Speaker 27 Okay, so I don't want to get into the definition of conflicted because I could look into Dr.

Speaker 64 Celine Gaunder's conflicts of interest as a TV doctor.

Speaker 94 But I do have this thing called the internet, and I did pull up this report from 2009, which she discredits and says, hey, man, it's just like you got the date wrong on your tax return, which, by the way, you you can get in a lot of hassle for putting the wrong date or, oops, I missed a digit.

Speaker 53 And so I have the findings.

Speaker 19 I'm looking at the paper that she just said.

Speaker 80 Oh, no, it was 97%

Speaker 74 missed a little thing.

Speaker 183 Findings.

Speaker 36 For almost all special government employees, this is the AIPC, CDC did not ensure that financial disclosure forms were complete.

Speaker 75 CDC certified OGE forms 450 with at least one omission for

Speaker 96 97% of the SGEs.

Speaker 212 Most of the forms had more than one type of omission.

Speaker 40 Omission is not the same thing as, oops, I got the date wrong.

Speaker 28 Two,

Speaker 12 CDC did not identify or resolve potential conflicts of interest for 64% of these employees.

Speaker 63 64% had potential conflicts of interest that CDC did not identify and or resolve before it certified their OGE Forms 450.

Speaker 19 Specifically, 58% of the SGEs had potential conflicts of interest that CDC did not identify.

Speaker 18 In addition, 32% of them had potential conflicts of interest that CDC identified but did not resolve.

Speaker 40 26% of them had both CDC unidentified and unresolved potential conflicts of interest.

Speaker 46 It's just the date they did wrong. That's all that it is.

Speaker 31 Three,

Speaker 157 CDC did not ensure that 41% of these employees received ethics training in 2007.

Speaker 76 CDC did not ensure that 41% had ethics training certificates on file to document they received initial or annual ethics training within the required time frames.

Speaker 69 And the final point,

Speaker 186 15% of them did not comply with the ethics requirement during committee meetings.

Speaker 45 Specifically, 13% of them participated in committee meetings without having current certified OGE forms on file.

Speaker 19 In addition, 3% voted on particular matters when their waivers prohibited such participation.

Speaker 134 Four both participated in committee meetings without current certified forms on file and voted on particular matters when their waivers prohibited such participation.

Speaker 28 Bull crap, Dr.

Speaker 145 Celine Gaunder.

Speaker 138 We have the internet and we stand strong, okay?

Speaker 2 So So just more lies.

Speaker 210 That's but that is

Speaker 26 that to me is a big lie.

Speaker 16 I mean, she does, I just got to hear that again.

Speaker 2 She's obviously conflicted.

Speaker 21 I just want to hear one more time what she said.

Speaker 124 Kennedy wrote in an op-ed that this is really about restoring

Speaker 124 that most of the ACIP members have received substantial funding from pharmaceutical companies. Does he have a point about conflicts of interest here?

Speaker 105 What he is citing is an Office of the Inspector General report that found 97% of the conflict of interest forms had errors. But these were errors of like putting the wrong date.

Speaker 105 I mean, imagine on your IRS returns, you might have the wrong date on something. That's very different from having a true conflict of interest.

Speaker 21 Or omitting things on my tax return.

Speaker 170 If I omit things on my tax

Speaker 69 return, I am actually

Speaker 16 committing, I don't know, if it's a felony, if it's a civil offense, but I'm going to get in trouble if they find out.

Speaker 99 So, no.

Speaker 2 Well, these guys all got in trouble and they all got released. They got released.
They put a new group in, so what?

Speaker 30 Why is what's wrong with the new group?

Speaker 2 Does we have something to complain about?

Speaker 16 Well, according to the Wall Street Journal, RFK Jr.

Speaker 7 names eight vaccine panel replacements, including COVID shot skeptics.

Speaker 59 You don't want a skeptic.

Speaker 145 You don't want a skeptic on your panel.

Speaker 38 Let's see who we have.

Speaker 2 Yeah, heaven forbid you have somebody that's that is open.

Speaker 2 Never mind. I don't know that.

Speaker 24 We've got Dr. Robert Malone.

Speaker 63 Wait, who's the first guy here?

Speaker 2 They put Malone on there. That's not true.

Speaker 38 Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 26 No, so he has nothing but time.

Speaker 21 Vicki Pebbsworth, a nurse with a public health doctorate who's a board member of the National Vaccine Information Center, which is a pro-vaccine group, I will say.

Speaker 166 We talked about them

Speaker 64 during COVID.

Speaker 26 They come across as anti-but I think they're pro.

Speaker 136 Yeah, that could be. Dr.

Speaker 88 Robert Malone, who, of course, worked on research into several mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.

Speaker 2 Has patents.

Speaker 64 Retsef Levi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Management professor, and he called for the COVID-19 vaccines to be withdrawn from the market in a 2023 video.

Speaker 211 Dr.

Speaker 129 Martin Koldorf, former professor of medicine at Harvard University, who became known during the pandemic as a critic of COVID-19 mitigation measures such as lockdowns.

Speaker 156 We can't have that guy in the panel.

Speaker 63 Cody Meisner, pediatrician, infectious disease specialist, respected by other vaccine experts.

Speaker 27 So, you know, it's like,

Speaker 17 Kennedy's doing exactly what he said.

Speaker 61 He needs to restore trust with the other half of the, with actually the other 70% of the country,

Speaker 22 really 40% who went no.

Speaker 145 And then there's the

Speaker 53 30% that went, no, but okay, I'll go along to get along.

Speaker 26 So he's doing exactly what he promised.

Speaker 53 This is very good.

Speaker 83 This is what you want.

Speaker 145 He's not getting rid of vaccines.

Speaker 42 If you want them, go get them.

Speaker 220 If you want them.

Speaker 2 Of course,

Speaker 36 your kids won't go to school.

Speaker 48 Same thing here in Fredericksburg.

Speaker 91 You want your kids to go to St.

Speaker 19 Mary's? Got to have your vaccines.

Speaker 26 Well, what if I don't want to give my kids vaccines?

Speaker 72 Sorry, you can't go to St.

Speaker 28 Mary's.

Speaker 192 But you know, the vaccines might have pieces of embryo in there.

Speaker 36 Yeah, that may be, but

Speaker 90 Jesus says gotta you can't come to school

Speaker 77 so this is this is

Speaker 2 so rogan had this woman on this doctor which one who was

Speaker 24 sorry which one

Speaker 2 i'm looking for the clip

Speaker 132 um oh the older lady

Speaker 2 no she's not older she's kind of middle-aged yeah my marriage mary bowden yeah dr mary bowden yes yeah she's not i wouldn't call her older she's like my age

Speaker 176 maybe whatever the novel is. He liked her.

Speaker 87 Yeah.

Speaker 2 And the clip I should have gotten, I would have gotten a, could have gotten a, but I didn't get, is where she talks about how the vaccine was foisted upon the public in a certain kind of way.

Speaker 2 I'll get that clip, maybe play it on Sunday.

Speaker 2 But this clip I thought was interesting. This is

Speaker 2 part of the whole time during the COVID.

Speaker 2 I think Kennedy would,

Speaker 2 you know, this COVID-19 vaccine should be taken off the market. Yes.
It should have been taken off the market early on, and they just can't get it rid of it.

Speaker 2 And so, Kennedy, I think one of the things he's trying to do is find enough guys, you know, to get this thing taken off the market, but it's going to be hard to do.

Speaker 2 And then, when you hear stories like this, this disgusting story, which was in this, and I would recommend, I don't listen to all of Rogan's stuff.

Speaker 21 You don't even watch it when I'm on.

Speaker 30 It's true. Admit it.

Speaker 196 It's true.

Speaker 53 I don't.

Speaker 78 I know what you're saying.

Speaker 2 I know you. I don't need to watch you.

Speaker 2 Oh, there's Adam. Let me see what he has to say.
I know what you have to say.

Speaker 174 This doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 129 Yeah, like watching paint dry.

Speaker 47 I know. I'm sorry to borrow you.

Speaker 174 It's like watching paint dry.

Speaker 2 It's exactly right. So, but I would recommend this people listen to this thing whole cloth, the beginning to end.
It's really good. But listen to this.

Speaker 227 There's actually a lawsuit today that's first jury trial in the country over these hospital protocols where they had a young woman with Down syndrome. They basically euthanized her.

Speaker 227 They gave her a DNR order, even though she didn't have one. And the father has just been wonderful.
It's a Shara family.

Speaker 168 Why did they do that?

Speaker 168 They euthanized her for what?

Speaker 227 I've seen this. I have reviewed records from these hospital patients, and they'll euthanize them.
They need the bed. They say, well, they're going to die anyway.

Speaker 168 What was this person in the hospital for? COVID.

Speaker 227 COVID protocol.

Speaker 168 And they, wait, wait, wait.

Speaker 168 So they were in the hospital with COVID and they gave them something to kill them? Yeah.

Speaker 168 That happened all.

Speaker 227 I'm sorry, but

Speaker 227 I mean, that happened. People, they give them morphine and insulin.

Speaker 168 Yeah, yeah,

Speaker 168 that's common?

Speaker 168 Yeah.

Speaker 227 Yeah. I've reviewed charts.
In this situation, they gave her a DNR, which is do not resuscitate, meaning if they look like they're dying, you don't do anything, which that was not the case.

Speaker 227 So they're suing for battery, which is one way of getting around the PrEP Act, because the PrEP Act is very

Speaker 227 hard to penetrate. The PrEP Act protects everybody,

Speaker 227 all the doctors, all the hospitals from any wrongdoing during COVID. So it's been this big challenge trying to get around the PrEP Act.

Speaker 227 And this case has hope of getting getting around the PrEP Act because they're charging for battery and they're they're in trial at start of today it's in Wisconsin

Speaker 227 so that that gives me hope wow

Speaker 2 wow yeah yeah wow indeed and of course then you hear and we're just around the same time Rogan's interviewing her and you know he's he's aghast like everybody else and she's going she's a very famous

Speaker 163 doctor in Houston.

Speaker 72 I've seen some of her stuff.

Speaker 2 We hear this from this is Cuomo on one of the podcasts with some other guy, and he says this crazy thing.

Speaker 168 My big prediction is that Rogan's success is admirable. I do not believe he'll be where he was three months ago, a year from today.

Speaker 168 There are too many talented people entering that space now who want his real estate, and they're going to be better at what he does than he is. So I think that

Speaker 168 he's going to see a trish.

Speaker 168 That's not the first time someone said that about Joe. He does surpass expectations.
Like, people wrote his obituary many, many times, and it's just never come true. I'll listen.

Speaker 168 I don't necessarily want it to come true because

Speaker 168 I don't find him offensive or anything.

Speaker 129 Are you saying stop to me? I'm sorry.

Speaker 16 Did you say stop?

Speaker 137 No, I didn't say anything. Oh.

Speaker 168 I'll listen. I don't necessarily want it to come true because I don't find him offensive or anything I see him as innocuous, but he's getting criticism.
He never got criticism before.

Speaker 168 The media is taking him seriously now, and that's not going to go well for him.

Speaker 26 The media is going to take him down, man, because, you know, it's just a podcast.

Speaker 53 What a dope.

Speaker 2 I was flabbergasted by this attack.

Speaker 41 It's dopey.

Speaker 17 It's dopey.

Speaker 71 You know, if anything, I think Fredo believes that he's the one that's going to dethrone him from the.

Speaker 22 He's going to get rid of Rogan.

Speaker 145 I'm better than Joe.

Speaker 87 Yeah.

Speaker 58 It's like, no.

Speaker 2 What an idiot.

Speaker 138 So

Speaker 38 I received at least 20

Speaker 160 BOTG reports.

Speaker 91 You know what that stands for, right? B-O-T-G?

Speaker 2 Gee, let me think. Bitches on

Speaker 2 the gag.

Speaker 53 No, it's boobs on the ground.

Speaker 2 Boobs on the ground. Okay.

Speaker 186 Normally boots on the ground.

Speaker 166 Now it's boobs on the ground about our discussion of breastfeeding versus breastfeeding.

Speaker 2 Yes, I got a bunch of them too. Lots of lactating mothers

Speaker 2 wrote us. And Mimi even said to me, How come you guys didn't bring up the fact that breast milk is a super, is like a superfood that we should have mentioned.

Speaker 2 And that kids, babies don't get sick when they're breastfeeding. It's almost impossible.
They don't get colds. They don't get anything.
And they definitely don't need a vaccine through the mom.

Speaker 2 And it was just like, yes, this was the theme. I noticed a lot of this, and I responded to a couple.
I should have responded to more of them.

Speaker 35 It got so bad, I had to come up with a form response that said, thank you very much for your contribution.

Speaker 28 I got tired of typing it.

Speaker 1 But I read all of them.

Speaker 186 And I first want to say the most important thing that

Speaker 28 we just don't know, breastfeeding is hard work.

Speaker 140 It is not, you know, we just think like, just put the baby up there.

Speaker 53 It sucks. You're good to go.

Speaker 2 Yeah, and you had, there's moments like women like to complain. Well,

Speaker 2 women like to complain. I'm sorry, sir.
Because I'm going to get some notes. Yeah, you should.

Speaker 2 But they'll complain that a certain, like, a baby hits a, you know, some, they can be like in if they're in breastfeeding mode and they're out and about, and some baby down this hallway in a store starts.

Speaker 2 They start leaking.

Speaker 30 They start leaking.

Speaker 2 It drops their milk into, and there's nothing they can do about it. And they start making a, oh, God, what a horrible.
And they, they

Speaker 78 complain bitterly about this.

Speaker 2 And I'd say, yeah, it's like if you were all of a sudden, something happened, you just automatically peed in your pants. I had a guy I worked with that did you know.

Speaker 163 Dude,

Speaker 7 stop, don't get off the topic.

Speaker 145 Keep that story in your pants for one minute.

Speaker 63 I brought the topic up.

Speaker 70 You've already just went off for like 10 minutes about your experience.

Speaker 2 It was 30 seconds.

Speaker 53 That's what she said.

Speaker 24 Now, listen,

Speaker 166 breastfeeding is hard work.

Speaker 96 There's a lot that goes into it that we don't, I mean, even though I've seen it, I've witnessed it, you don't think about these things.

Speaker 23 And so, my summary, and I put a couple of them in the show notes, and the one I was really interested in, because this is what I asked, is like, what happened before formula?

Speaker 70 What did we do in the 1800s?

Speaker 145 So, I'll just read that and then I'll surmise all the other emails.

Speaker 21 Pre-Victorian era, if a baby could not breastfeed by their mother,

Speaker 157 as in their mother died in childbirth, other arrangements like wet nurses would be made if a wet nurse was not available.

Speaker 63 Substitute like cow's milk were used.

Speaker 20 However, infant mortality was extremely likely as breast milk provides key nutrients and antibodies that help build a baby's immune system.

Speaker 2 And apparently, goat milk was also popular.

Speaker 21 In the Victorian era, people let the germ theory of disease get into their head, so they thought that if a scientist in a sterile lab could replicate something from the germ-filled real world, the lab version was obviously better.

Speaker 22 That's when and why baby formula was invented. Despite male doctors telling women to use formula, most still breastfed, because why pay for something we can get for free?

Speaker 225 In the 20th century, formula only became popular during World War II as working mothers became a thing.

Speaker 186 Generations of women have now been told to prioritize careers over children and have been brainwashed into thinking of baby formula like feeding your kids dino nuggets instead of grilled chicken.

Speaker 166 It's not the best, but it's a convenience you can still feel good about.

Speaker 22 With more and more research showing the nutritional difference between formula and breast milk, this narrative is finally crumbling.

Speaker 188 And all formula companies can do now is make new formulas and go on trying to pretend it's just as good as breast milk.

Speaker 74 And my takeaway from the women who emailed me, which is a lot, a lot of them breastfeeding as we speak.

Speaker 7 In fact, they're hearing me right now. They got one on each boob.

Speaker 69 Some of them emailed me this.

Speaker 176 That the psyop from the baby formula companies was so strong, the marketing was so strong that it really turned belief into, hey, we make something better than what you can produce.

Speaker 209 And I completely believe that,

Speaker 137 along with

Speaker 145 some stigma, certainly in America, the stigma of, oh, she's whipping out her boob and giving the baby breast milk right here in public.

Speaker 197 Oh, no, that's no good.

Speaker 50 And so I too am happy that this narrative is changing.

Speaker 58 And thank you,

Speaker 42 Bobby the Op Kennedy, thank you for bringing this to the forefront and getting people to think for a second.

Speaker 134 Doesn't make it any easier.

Speaker 187 There's not facilities everywhere.

Speaker 186 Pumping is a pain in the butt.

Speaker 53 There's all kinds, you know, women have to work these days.

Speaker 212 You got to have two incomes just to survive.

Speaker 17 It's not easy.

Speaker 94 Men, step it up.

Speaker 4 Do everything you can to help your wife, your woman, whatever it is, because it's better for your baby.

Speaker 92 I can say that without being a doctor.

Speaker 91 It just makes sense.

Speaker 22 But thank you, women, for A, showing us that you still listen and that you really listen.

Speaker 96 Really appreciate that.

Speaker 139 Surprisingly, yes.

Speaker 53 Yes.

Speaker 106 I was like, wow, we got chicks listening, man. This is good news.

Speaker 133 They're still here.

Speaker 76 And thank you for being so open about all of the issues and what you think.

Speaker 35 And

Speaker 28 thank you for opening my eyes.

Speaker 27 Cause, I mean,

Speaker 28 Tina and I, by the way, Tina's like, you guys suck.

Speaker 145 You guys don't know nothing.

Speaker 53 That's why she was blowing up my phone.

Speaker 27 All the girls, all the lunch ladies, like, what are Adam and John talking about?

Speaker 58 What do they know about this?

Speaker 53 I agree with that.

Speaker 30 Yeah, I agree with you. We don't think about it.
We don't do it. So, thank you.
But

Speaker 2 we do know more than we expressed in the last

Speaker 163 discussion.

Speaker 38 Of course.

Speaker 2 And we did not bring up the fact that it's a healthier alternative to getting vaccinated as

Speaker 2 a pregnant person.

Speaker 74 Person. Person.

Speaker 97 Pregnant person.

Speaker 26 But it's good, and I'm happy that

Speaker 48 the women of no agenda, Gitmo Nation, that they are turning to this form of feeding their infant.

Speaker 22 They realize it's better.

Speaker 33 Many

Speaker 18 are taking pay cuts.

Speaker 186 Husbands are working harder so they can be at home, breastfeed, homeschool.

Speaker 7 Oh, no, trad wife.

Speaker 53 Yeah.

Speaker 183 So this is in general,

Speaker 22 I think, a very, very good development, and I'm proud of y'all.

Speaker 145 And y'all deserve a medal for what you have to go through because it is not just a matter of, oh, baby hungry.

Speaker 28 Let's go.

Speaker 92 That's kind of what we as guys think.

Speaker 53 You don't think about it. Like, this, yeah, it's not that easy.

Speaker 1 Anyway, thank you all.

Speaker 91 I really appreciate it.

Speaker 21 I got an education.

Speaker 50 And one of these days, hopefully, one of our daughters will have a kid.

Speaker 53 I'm starting to wonder about that.

Speaker 15 They're all getting old.

Speaker 58 Hurry up.

Speaker 15 All my friends are.

Speaker 53 Oh, I became a granddad. Ooh, yeah.

Speaker 90 I'm ready for it.

Speaker 91 I'm ready to show a kid how to drive a truck, drink beer, beer, and shoot.

Speaker 2 She'll leave. So while on the topic of women and breastfeeding, let's talk about the Tonys.

Speaker 183 Oh, man.

Speaker 28 Was that Sunday?

Speaker 53 I completely missed it.

Speaker 2 Yes, it was Sunday. And I was always of the opinion that the Tonys couldn't get more gay.

Speaker 116 Well, it's kind of like... And

Speaker 2 every year I'm wrong.

Speaker 28 Hold on a second.

Speaker 175 Did Clooney win for anything after he did that big?

Speaker 68 No,

Speaker 30 they were shut out.

Speaker 1 Oh, man, because he could be, you know what he did?

Speaker 32 He broke ranks. He's like,

Speaker 50 theater is for the Broadway.

Speaker 96 It is not for CNN television.

Speaker 84 Who do you think you are, Clooney?

Speaker 38 Go back to your film.

Speaker 2 Well, he did them a favor. He did Tony Awards a favor by being on 60 Minutes as the lead in

Speaker 2 the Tony's, talking about the Tony's.

Speaker 2 No corruption there there on CBS.

Speaker 66 Well, this was on the Mod Network.

Speaker 41 What do you do?

Speaker 2 I just think it's corrupt. I don't care.

Speaker 2 So there was a lot of non-binaries. This guy, Jack Malone, won for Best Actor, but he's a non-binary dude in a dress.
And he came out there with his dress on. And it's just a kind of a

Speaker 9 what was the play he started?

Speaker 78 It wasn't. Mary.

Speaker 70 And

Speaker 35 does Mary call for a man dressed as a woman or for a woman?

Speaker 40 It calls for

Speaker 2 he's playing Mary Lincoln and it calls for a woman. And he's a man dressed as a woman, playing a woman.

Speaker 2 But he's a guy, and I give Tony's credit for not nominating for best female actress.

Speaker 48 Well, next year, there's always next year. We'll get there.

Speaker 2 But they're gone in this non-binary thing. In fact, the best guy, this one guy comes out, he wins the award for,

Speaker 2 I forgot what.

Speaker 2 Oh, a singer, I think. And he comes out.
He's not dressed as a woman, but he's got all all his makeup on. He's got eyeshadow and lipstick.
And he comes out. And he ends, this guy, Michael Arden.

Speaker 2 He has this little diddy at the end as he goes through this long tirade about, you know,

Speaker 2 non-binaryism. And he makes the following comment here.
You keep telling stories that probe for deeper truths, that inspire hope, because the darker it gets, the more we need your light.

Speaker 2 As Daddy Sondheim said, give us more to see.

Speaker 53 And if there are any queer people watching tonight,

Speaker 2 happy pride.

Speaker 74 Yay, the crowd goes wild.

Speaker 1 You're so brave. I'm so brave.

Speaker 30 You should have said happy world pride.

Speaker 57 I'm disappointed.

Speaker 2 Play this clip here. Tony, now this guy.

Speaker 68 Happy pride.

Speaker 2 He said any queer people listening got a big laugh.

Speaker 152 Ha ha ha.

Speaker 154 Everybody.

Speaker 2 Try Tony's.

Speaker 2 I should mention this.

Speaker 2 This is kind of a little bit off topic, but

Speaker 2 every ad during the Tony's was aimed at the audience, and it was AIDS drugs and drugs and other kinds of drugs and Ozempic and Ozempic and Ozempic and drugs and drugs and drugs.

Speaker 50 So

Speaker 57 a pretty typical CBS lineup of ads is what you're saying.

Speaker 2 Yeah,

Speaker 2 it was a little more than usual, I thought.

Speaker 2 But I had to play this. I did collect the side effects for Rexalty.

Speaker 148 It's worth listening to. Oh, yes.

Speaker 22 Do we know what Rexalty does?

Speaker 2 I forgot already.

Speaker 99 She recommended adding Rexalty.

Speaker 6 When taken with an antidepressant, Rexulti was proven to significantly reduce depression symptoms. More than an antidepressant.

Speaker 50 Oh, it's like a hamburger helper for.

Speaker 2 Yeah, you're right. It's a hamburger helper for antidepressants.

Speaker 76 Is your antidepressant not working?

Speaker 145 Try Rexalty.

Speaker 14 Yeah, all right.

Speaker 99 She recommended adding Rexalty.

Speaker 6 When taken with an antidepressant, Rexalty was proven to significantly reduce depression symptoms more than an antidepressant alone. With my antidepressant, Rexalty could provide a boost.

Speaker 6 Elderly people with dementia-related psychosis have increased risk of death or stroke. Antidepressants may increase suicidal thoughts and actions and worsen depression in children and young adults.

Speaker 6 Call your healthcare provider right away to report new or sudden changes in mood, behavior, thoughts, thoughts, or feelings, or if you develop suicidal thoughts or actions.

Speaker 6 Report fever, stiff muscles, and confusion, which can be life-threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements, which may be permanent. High blood sugar can lead to coma or death.

Speaker 6 Weight gain, increased cholesterol, unusual urges, dizziness on standing, falls, seizures, trouble swallowing, or sleepiness may occur.

Speaker 20 Could adding Rexalty be right for you?

Speaker 22 Sounds right for me.

Speaker 53 May result in death.

Speaker 53 Rexalty in death.

Speaker 133 Oh, beautiful.

Speaker 73 Beautiful. Yeah.

Speaker 66 Wow.

Speaker 22 Yes. I love how it could make you more depressed, but it's supposed to make me less depressed.

Speaker 21 It could make you more depressed.

Speaker 45 Could give you suicidal thoughts, but it's supposed to make me less depressed.

Speaker 7 Yeah, but you might want to kill yourself.

Speaker 2 Actually, I take it back. It was Cole Escola who was the dude in the dress.
Jack Malone, who won for one of the actors, he had... I have a couple of clips from him.
It should only be one.

Speaker 108 I think I double-clipped.

Speaker 2 Play the long one. This is, I thought this was the clip of the day.

Speaker 115 I'm grateful every day. The last thing I wanted to say is this: eight times a week, I walk out on that stage and tell the audience that I'm a woman.

Speaker 115 I'm not one, and I only convey it through simple adjustments to posture, voice, and energy. But night after night, audiences believe in Hester.

Speaker 115 They weep for her, they invest in her, they love her for her old romantic heart.

Speaker 115 And if you watched our show and found yourself believing in Hester, well, then I am so glad to tell you that intentionally or otherwise, you might have just bid farewell to cynicism, to outdated ideas, to that rotten old binary, and opened yourself up to a world that is already out there in glorious technicolor and isn't going away anytime soon.

Speaker 116 Thank you so much.

Speaker 2 The rotten old binary.

Speaker 53 Is that what he says?

Speaker 35 Rotten old binary.

Speaker 2 What he says. He says, you can kiss goodbye the rotten old binary because he plays, you know, he's a guy playing one.
He's the guy that had all the makeup on. I'm sorry.

Speaker 63 Well, you are confusing me with this report.

Speaker 19 Who is who now?

Speaker 84 Was this the dude in the dress or not?

Speaker 2 No, the dude in the dress is this Cola Scola guy who is a.

Speaker 35 Let's play him then.

Speaker 2 But

Speaker 2 this is just his intro because he just doesn't really have anything funny to say. He's just kind of a hysterical gay guy, basically.

Speaker 2 So, but this intro to him was interesting because they required that they say they

Speaker 13 um he's a they them okay and the american theater wings tony award goes to she already messed it up she they they she

Speaker 2 the the announcer got messed up and the american theater wings they she's so worried about saying they right she was cute she was told you better say they because he's a they them and she and she and so she oh no the american theater it's now theater have you been to the theater yet?

Speaker 13 And the American Theater Wings Tony Award goes to Cola Scola Club.

Speaker 13 Oh, man.

Speaker 3 Killboy Scola earns the Tony Award for their reimagining of Mary Tom Lincoln as a wannabe cabaret star.

Speaker 38 There, okay.

Speaker 164 Yeah, there. I thought that.

Speaker 70 And did now, did you, as a lover of

Speaker 1 the theater,

Speaker 210 were you angered by this?

Speaker 2 No, I wasn't.

Speaker 2 I thought they were overdoing the non-binary stuff. They made a big point that everyone's now in the theater.
You're not gay anymore.

Speaker 58 You're non-it's world pride, man.

Speaker 2 Well, there was a couple of pride mentions there

Speaker 2 that won. But

Speaker 2 the end of the horrible binary thing and this guy going on, it's not going away anytime soon.

Speaker 2 It's just like a, it's like a

Speaker 2 what was annoying to me was they play all these, you know, sections of different plays and musicals. There was nothing.
This last season was bad.

Speaker 53 Yeah. And you're, you're, uh, you like theater.

Speaker 36 You like theater.

Speaker 2 I like the theater.

Speaker 68 The theater. The theater.

Speaker 53 It's theater now. From now on, we're called the theater.

Speaker 2 It's a form. It's, you know, it's a primary form of entertainment that is,

Speaker 2 I think, culturally important, but not if it's just going to be a brainwashing fest.

Speaker 38 Yeah.

Speaker 2 Wow. So it sucks.
I wouldn't, I mean, I have, you know, if I always prefer the London, the East End stuff to Broadway anyway, just better.

Speaker 176 Yeah.

Speaker 142 So I would like to point out the art of the deal at perfect work, completely done as expected, beautiful,

Speaker 18 good for our country.

Speaker 85 And that is the NATO increase in payments.

Speaker 81 And so I will recant very quickly what the idea.

Speaker 53 That means you're going to.

Speaker 47 I'm going to wrap.

Speaker 2 Recant. Yeah.
Okay. Yeah.

Speaker 53 I'm going to

Speaker 2 elucidate some of the things.

Speaker 145 Okay, language, police.

Speaker 41 Correct me.

Speaker 78 Yeah, well, you know, I'm sorry.

Speaker 15 Okay, I'm going to.

Speaker 145 Believe me, I'm on you now.

Speaker 212 I'm going to elucidate.

Speaker 133 Gold star.

Speaker 42 I'm going to elucidate what the idea was.

Speaker 92 The NATO member states, which is code for countries,

Speaker 144 were originally supposed to pay 2% of their

Speaker 35 national, is it their GDP, so all their money, 2%.

Speaker 53 2% of all their money.

Speaker 2 Biggest sales all they make.

Speaker 63 They're supposed to give us, basically, 2% of all their money for our war stuff.

Speaker 145 I'm just going to break it down to what it is.

Speaker 87 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Now, we've kind of forgotten it, but President Trump kept saying, hey, this has got to be 3.5%.

Speaker 28 This has got to be 3.5%.

Speaker 55 Everybody's like, no, I'm going to do that.

Speaker 94 So then he came out and went, uh-uh.

Speaker 129 I'm sorry.

Speaker 17 I've changed that to 5%.

Speaker 7 We need 5%.

Speaker 88 And then he deployed his heat-seeking missile, White Lines Rutte.

Speaker 7 And Rutte did a great job because he closed the deal at 5%.

Speaker 22 But it's really 3.5%

Speaker 211 money that goes to us, which is what we wanted in the first place.

Speaker 18 And when I say we, it's what President Trump wanted to come into our coffers for us to give them boom-booms, pew-pews.

Speaker 129 And then Rutte

Speaker 128 worked the deal.

Speaker 84 He did a good job for the nut job that he is. He did a good job.

Speaker 88 And he said, well, the 1.5%,

Speaker 109 it will be 5%, but 1.5% will have to be on other things for like hybrid warfare and infrastructure, which, of course, everybody knows no country is going to spend that money at all.

Speaker 22 So President Trump got exactly what he wanted: 3.5% from all the member states.

Speaker 231 NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Thursday that most allies endorse President Donald Trump's demand to spend 5% of GDP on defense.

Speaker 231 After a defense minister's meeting in Brussels, Ruth has cited broad support and expects a deal at NATO summit in The Hague later this month.

Speaker 231 The new target includes 3.5% on core military spending plus 1.5% on infrastructure for rapid deployment.

Speaker 231 This is a significant increase on the current 2% goal, which about a third of members have yet to reach, despite spending hikes since 2022.

Speaker 233 Of course, you need core defense spending, but let's be honest with each other. If a tank is not able to cross a bridge,

Speaker 233 if our societies are not prepared in case war breaks out for a whole of society approach, if you're not able to really develop the defence industrial base, then the three point five percent is great, but then you cannot really defend yourselves.

Speaker 231 Trump has pushed allies to spend more so that the US can focus elsewhere, questioning defence guarantees for those who spend too little.

Speaker 231 US Defence Secretary Pete Hexeth claimed in Brussels that Trump revived the alliance and that European allies were grateful. He also hinted at a review of the 84,000 U.S.

Speaker 231 troops currently based in Europe. At their meeting, ministers also approved new purchasing targets for weapons and equipment, part of major 2023 plan to defend alliance territory.

Speaker 28 That's how you do the deal.

Speaker 21 He wanted 3.5%.

Speaker 166 He said, you got to pay me five.

Speaker 85 And then Rutte came in and went, oh, well, you know what?

Speaker 26 Hey, guys, this is what I'm going to do.

Speaker 51 I'm going to say it's going to be five, but we'll do one and a half and we'll talk some bridges crap.

Speaker 192 And you'll never have to spend that.

Speaker 145 Or you just the stuff you're already spending on fixing potholes.

Speaker 79 You just put that into the 1.5 and all I have to pay is 3.5%.

Speaker 11 Everyone's happy.

Speaker 38 It's beautiful.

Speaker 44 I think it goes unnoticed how well executed that plan was.

Speaker 2 It's gone totally unnoticed. Yeah.

Speaker 2 No, you're the only one.

Speaker 25 Well, it's because of my boy Ruta.

Speaker 53 I love him.

Speaker 2 Yeah, you love Ruta. You like doing his voice.

Speaker 10 Let's be honest.

Speaker 26 Let's be honest.

Speaker 11 With

Speaker 26 3.5%, you're not going to be able to defend against Russia.

Speaker 136 You need to have bridges that will hold the tanks.

Speaker 7 You know?

Speaker 137 Yes.

Speaker 7 If you want to mobilize and keep yourself safe, you need that 1.5%.

Speaker 134 So President Trump and I will make a big splash in The Hague at NATO.

Speaker 1 Thank you very much.

Speaker 19 Thank you very much for coming.

Speaker 12 And by the way, who wants to go to the sauna later with me?

Speaker 144 I'm excited.

Speaker 2 If you're excited, you definitely don't want to go.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 94 But we still have to throw some fear in there.

Speaker 145 I think this was just before the meeting adjourned, and we rolled out the actor, Volodymyr Zelensky, and a couple of other actors to say, hey, man, Russia's not just coming for us, they're coming for everybody.

Speaker 217 Peace in the region and hybrid warfare were the main topics of the Odessa Summit, which was attended by Ukraine, Romania, the Republic of Moldova, Serbia, Albania, Greece, Montenegro, Croatia, and Slovenia.

Speaker 234 Russian war plans point to this region, Odessa, and then toward the borders with Moldova and Romania.

Speaker 234 And of course, we need protection now, but even more, we need long-term guarantees that this can never happen again.

Speaker 217 Romanian President Niko Shardan accused Russia of undermining peace efforts.

Speaker 217 Moldova's President Maya Sandu has warned of the dangers of hybrid warfare aimed at influencing the country's parliamentary elections scheduled for this fall.

Speaker 235 We do learn every day by new attempts and new ways

Speaker 235 to which Russia tries to interfere with our internal processes, political processes, democratic processes. It is going to be tough, but

Speaker 235 we do want Moldovans to decide for Moldova at the parliamentary elections, not Kremlin.

Speaker 217 The Black Sea port city of Odessa was shelled by Russian forces in the run-up to the summit.

Speaker 94 Just make every oh, Russia's meddling in our elections.

Speaker 1 Just like Romania can't have that YouTube guy win it.

Speaker 53 No, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 38 He was the Russian candidate.

Speaker 196 It's all so corrupt.

Speaker 135 So, so corrupt, man.

Speaker 55 And then, sad news today: if you heard the Rock and Roll Pre-Show with Darren O.

Speaker 236 Brian Wilson, a co-founding member of the Beach Boys, has died. Wilson's family announced his passing on his official website today.
A Cause of Death was not released.

Speaker 236 Wilson and his cousin Mike Love wrote the song Surfin' in 1961, setting up the formation of the band known for its iconic surf song, Surf Sound.

Speaker 236 In 2023, Rolling Stone magazine named Wilson one of the 200 greatest singers of all time. He was 82 years old.

Speaker 163 Horrible obituary.

Speaker 68 Horrible. Singer.

Speaker 58 Singer.

Speaker 180 How about he was one of the worst singers in the band? He was a great songwriter.

Speaker 2 He was not only

Speaker 2 so prolific, he wrote all the Beach Boys material. He had a partner, a couple of different writers he would partner with.
But he also did all the Jan and Dean material.

Speaker 2 And then there was two or three other little spin-off groups.

Speaker 2 that you'd you know that guy can't even remember the name of them anymore but he wrote all their material jan and the guy was a like a maniac for writing songs yes and they were all hits he was interviewed recently or before he died and somebody asked him if,

Speaker 2 you know, do you think

Speaker 2 this was going to be a hit or not? He'd say, yeah,

Speaker 50 it was like, oh, he's best known for surfing USA.

Speaker 53 Let's go surfing.

Speaker 145 How about God only knows?

Speaker 10 How about pet sounds?

Speaker 1 Pet sounds not my favorite, but man, you talk about people who love songs and songwriting, pet sounds like a bad thing.

Speaker 2 The Beatles say it was their inspiration for Dr. Pepper.
No, instead of Dr. Pepper, or Dr.
Whatever.

Speaker 58 Dr. Pepper.

Speaker 45 I'm John.

Speaker 180 It's Paulus Ringo.

Speaker 139 We're here to do Dr.

Speaker 12 Pepper.

Speaker 121 That's right. Dr.

Speaker 53 Pepper.

Speaker 7 Hey, what Dr.

Speaker 106 Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Bayon.

Speaker 2 And I guess the Rolling Stones are big fans of Pet Sounds, too.

Speaker 137 Yes.

Speaker 10 But, oh, no.

Speaker 17 Hey, if I die, just don't let anybody say anything.

Speaker 50 He was best known for his hair.

Speaker 2 He was best known for his hair.

Speaker 17 Curry was iconic for his hair.

Speaker 188 Thank you very much.

Speaker 183 That's it.

Speaker 90 That's it.

Speaker 58 Dude, that is so lame.

Speaker 2 You know, there's another thing.

Speaker 2 So I'm watching Netflix, and I don't watch that much TV, but I watch certain things. I like some of the documentaries.
And so there's a new documentary on Led Zeppelin.

Speaker 2 Oh, one of my one of the I've I've seen,

Speaker 15 you've seen them, you've seen them live.

Speaker 30 You've done, I think,

Speaker 2 I saw them on their first appearance in the United States. So I'm like, didn't you?

Speaker 197 Didn't you do heroin with Keith Moon at a certain point?

Speaker 2 I never did heroin with anybody. Okay.

Speaker 53 And so

Speaker 2 when I saw him, I said, holy crap, these guys are unbelievable. It was the best band I've heard.

Speaker 28 John C.

Speaker 74 Dvorak, he picks the hits.

Speaker 2 And meanwhile,

Speaker 2 in the documentary, they point out that their first tour of the United States, the Rolling Stone magazine, panned them. They're no good.
The songs are stupid. It was, I'm thinking, I didn't know that.

Speaker 2 And it was pretty funny. So they do a whole documentary on Led Zeppelin.

Speaker 2 And not one mention, not one bar is played, not one reference is made to my absolute favorite song from Led Zeppelin of all time.

Speaker 35 Oh, let me guess.

Speaker 38 Your favorite Led Zeppelin song of all time.

Speaker 66 Wow.

Speaker 8 What could this be?

Speaker 2 Stairway to Heaven.

Speaker 1 Oh, well, of course.

Speaker 35 They didn't reference Stairway to Heaven?

Speaker 41 At all.

Speaker 66 Wow.

Speaker 2 And it's like this song, I like, you know,

Speaker 2 this is one of the songs that

Speaker 2 if I go into it, if there's a piano bar or somebody playing guitar or something, I'll always go up to them and tip them and have them play stairway to heaven

Speaker 174 in the bar or the

Speaker 2 and it brings the house down. Of course it does.
And everybody, every musician that plays in bars seems to know the song.

Speaker 22 Go into any guitar shop.

Speaker 22 Every guitar shop, there's a guy playing Stairway to Heaven on the electric guitar in the guitar room.

Speaker 133 It's like it's like it's a standard stair, no stairway.

Speaker 176 That is crazy.

Speaker 2 In fact, I remember giving

Speaker 2 one, it was a piano guy, and I said, You can you, and I said,

Speaker 2 But I gave him five, I think. Can you play Stairway to Heaven? And his response was, Hell yes.

Speaker 157 You know, there are guitar shops, I think, that actually have signs that say, No Stairway to Heaven.

Speaker 34 Please stop playing that song. We've heard it so many times.

Speaker 165 Yeah,

Speaker 54 I forgot to mention

Speaker 77 the, I think this is the

Speaker 26 Minister of Defense in the Netherlands sent a note

Speaker 56 to

Speaker 156 the Parliament.

Speaker 155 And I'm translating on the fly here because I have the notes, PDF, so it looks legit.

Speaker 44 We have...

Speaker 22 seen that President Trump has fired trans military members from the service in America.

Speaker 91 And as you know, we're having a hard time recruiting people in the Netherlands and we need more for our NATO membership.

Speaker 91 We would like to ask the government if they could explore options for us to take these trans-American military members and work for us.

Speaker 109 What?

Speaker 1 You heard me right.

Speaker 2 This is a joke, right?

Speaker 48 No, no, it's not a joke.

Speaker 48 Nope.

Speaker 2 They could go to Holland and learn Dutch.

Speaker 74 Yeah.

Speaker 8 It's crazy.

Speaker 38 Anyway.

Speaker 38 Hey, good story about Ledze.

Speaker 36 Good story.

Speaker 16 It's a good story.

Speaker 91 Hey, since we're closing in on time here, I'm just, I keep looking at, because, you know, AI, I love stories about AI, and I see you've got a series on Hollywood versus AI, and I'm kind of chomping at the bit to hear what this is.

Speaker 2 Okay, well, we can run through it.

Speaker 30 It's a little.

Speaker 2 the problem is it has a dull quality to it, but it's interesting.

Speaker 53 Dull?

Speaker 7 How could this be dull?

Speaker 27 It's great news.

Speaker 2 It's about a lawsuit taking place.

Speaker 2 And it starts with the Hollywood versus AI. This is a BBC.
This is from BBC World Service. And when they get into stuff,

Speaker 2 I mean,

Speaker 155 it gets boring. Yeah, you're right.

Speaker 2 It's because the Brits are boring.

Speaker 53 Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 2 But at least you'll learn something. And this is kind of interesting.
And I may skip a bunch of them and just play the kicker at the end because the end part was kind of interesting.

Speaker 2 But let's start with clip zero, one.

Speaker 132 Okay.

Speaker 237 Been using AI at any stage during it to help them. Right.

Speaker 53 Is this how it starts?

Speaker 2 Is this Hollywood versus AI BBC?

Speaker 53 Yeah.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Yeah, I had to clip off the beginning of it.

Speaker 53 Okay.

Speaker 28 And that was the BBC.

Speaker 95 We're going to talk about AI versus Hollywood.

Speaker 237 Been using AI at any stage during it to help them. Right.

Speaker 237 But we are now going to talk about AI once again because it's an issue that's proving to be quite a challenge for some of the world's largest entertainment companies.

Speaker 237 We're talking, of course, about copyright when it comes to AI. And two of Hollywood's largest studios have taken legal action on this issue for the very first time.

Speaker 237 Here's our tech correspondent, Lily Jamali, who's in San Francisco.

Speaker 238 These are the first Hollywood players to take on this issue of copyright having to do with AI. We've seen other companies in the publishing space like the New York Times do this.

Speaker 238 Some authors have sued and the like. But these are the biggest players in Hollywood.
And, you know, this AI issue has festered for really a couple of years now.

Speaker 238 At times, it's placed the studios at odds with their writers. Now we see the writers actually on side with the studios who are saying that this company, Midjourney, has stolen their characters.

Speaker 238 They're alleging copyright infringement of characters, some of which were developed a century or more ago.

Speaker 237 Yep, we are talking about Disney and Universal, who have bought this case against Midginni, who haven't commented as yet.

Speaker 237 Let's bring in Rebecca Tushnut, who's a law professor at Harvard specializing in copyright, which I presume, Rebecca, is a pretty busy place to be at the moment.

Speaker 52 So Mid Journey, they're talking about imagery, right?

Speaker 156 So they're talking about visual copyright, not about words.

Speaker 49 Am I correct in that assumption?

Speaker 2 They're actually talking about everything.

Speaker 2 But when they talk about characters that were developed 100 years ago,

Speaker 2 the idiot from the BBC.

Speaker 71 Isn't that public domain?

Speaker 2 That should have been public domain at least 25 years ago, based on the newest copyright laws.

Speaker 2 So what are we talking about here that you're worried about characters developed 100 years ago being

Speaker 2 lifted by AI? So I found that to be, oh, this is not good.

Speaker 2 All right. Onward with the second part here.

Speaker 237 One thing that struck us was these are the first big Hollywood studios to be bringing a case like this. Why has it taken them so long?

Speaker 237 We've seen the music industry probably move a little bit quicker on these issues.

Speaker 181 So, you know, it's hard to say from the outside, but I think clearly there's a question of

Speaker 181 are they going to cut licensing deals? And the lawsuit suggests that they're seeking greater leverage in licensing deals.

Speaker 181 You know, they want to be the ones who pick the winners in AI.

Speaker 53 Yeah, which is not easy, I suppose, to decide.

Speaker 237 Rebecca, when we have something, a new concept come in, copyright is an old concept, isn't it? But AI now adds a complicating factor to it.

Speaker 237 So do the existing laws work or do we need new laws put in place to tackle a new issue?

Speaker 181 So to me,

Speaker 181 this isn't really a new issue, although you can easily come to different

Speaker 181 resolutions on it.

Speaker 110 But,

Speaker 181 the core questions are,

Speaker 181 is it fair use to train AI using existing images or video?

Speaker 130 And then

Speaker 181 what do we do about the outputs?

Speaker 181 And so there are actually strong principles for both of those things.

Speaker 181 But that doesn't mean people won't change the law to deal with it.

Speaker 237 But it is slightly different when you're influenced by something, isn't it, I suppose, to actually using generative AI to take thousands and thousands and thousands of things and come out with something.

Speaker 27 Oh, this is very interesting.

Speaker 22 I just realized that we're using different words for different concepts, and you said no, but training AI, training is a nice word, but it's not training.

Speaker 146 It's copying.

Speaker 35 It is making a copy of pixels down to the pixel level, whatever it does.

Speaker 85 It is copying that and then pasting it back into a new project based upon whatever you've asked it to do.

Speaker 20 It is copy.

Speaker 147 Training is not is

Speaker 229 training is copying in this case, just calling it someone else.

Speaker 28 You disagree?

Speaker 2 I'm not going to say one way or the other

Speaker 2 because I don't agree or disagree necessarily.

Speaker 2 It does involve some copying, but then

Speaker 30 well,

Speaker 2 now you make me want to play another one of the clips.

Speaker 108 I'm going to the next clip.

Speaker 181 So it really depends.

Speaker 181 In fact, that's pretty much how human brains learn, right? You know, when you were learning to read and write, you spent a lot of time copying stuff and even more time, you know, studying stuff.

Speaker 181 And in fact, that's in your brain. And people are making progress every day on actually detecting things straight from the brain.

Speaker 181 There was an experiment that reconstructed a Pink Floyd song just by looking at what people's brains were doing when they were listening to it. So, you know, it's not perfect, but

Speaker 181 the point being that, you know, the computer just makes visible

Speaker 181 how learning worked for people.

Speaker 53 Yeah, that is really interesting. Stay with us.

Speaker 237 Let me bring Mike in on this particular issue. I mean, AI is pushing the boundaries in many different areas.
Copyright is one. Do you see other challenges coming up as well, Mike, away from this?

Speaker 237 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 240 Ownership rights,

Speaker 240 even patents.

Speaker 240 There's a lot of areas of intellectual capital that are. And we're going to have to really set down some rules.
I mean, yeah,

Speaker 240 you did learn how to read and write that way, but you didn't make any money doing it. Mid-Journey

Speaker 240 has millions of subscribers and it made $300 million

Speaker 240 last year. Now, do they have the right to all that? That's the real question.

Speaker 240 And usually when anybody makes money, if you have some connection to it, you may have right to take some of that money.

Speaker 68 Okay. Well,

Speaker 68 I'm only buying.

Speaker 2 I'm not completely buying into that.

Speaker 73 Buying into what?

Speaker 2 The idea that, well, yeah, the brain works the same way, but you weren't making money. What if you're a little prodigy and you're playing Mozart?

Speaker 2 You know, you're a six-year-old that can play the piano like a maniac. Yeah.
And you pay a fortune to go play Mozart.

Speaker 41 No, hold on, hold on.

Speaker 15 If you play something, there's

Speaker 109 a version of copyright, which is performing rights royalties that have to be paid.

Speaker 108 Yeah, and they're paid.

Speaker 95 Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 61 So

Speaker 26 this is not a foreign concept.

Speaker 2 Well, these guys, they've licensed a lot of stuff. Some people do get paid.
I mean, I'm not going to

Speaker 2 take just the devil's advocate side on this whole thing because I think it's still up in the air.

Speaker 2 And the more interesting clip is the last clip, but I think clip four is still sitting in between this and that.

Speaker 237 Tell us a little bit more about Midjournal, because it's a company that some people will know about. A lot of other people won't know much about.
What sort of things does it do?

Speaker 240 If you were asked Disney or Universal,

Speaker 240 they're plagiarists. They're copyright-free writers.
That was, I think, the statement made by

Speaker 240 one of the movie studios.

Speaker 240 They basically create new content, new AI content, and it's quite vivid and quite interesting, and that's why it's drawn all these people. They're real curious and they're being entertained by it.

Speaker 240 That raises the question: do they have the right to

Speaker 240 take characters from Cars and Toy Story and Shrek and the Avengers and the minions from Despicable Me? Those are iconic characters.

Speaker 240 Can they really take them, pump them into their servers, and create something new based based on that. And you can make a good argument that what's being created isn't sufficiently different that

Speaker 240 they can claim it. They owe it.

Speaker 237 Yeah, well, let us see how the cause come up. But Cathy, we're seeing, you know,

Speaker 237 Elton John was talking about this whole problem, the very famous musician from England. Are you seeing a similar discussion around huge entertainment industries, aren't they?

Speaker 237 Like South Korea, China, India. Do you think this is an emerging issue for Asia as well?

Speaker 179 Yeah, I think think definitely, especially, you know, you mentioned Korea, and I can't help but think of, for example, K-pop groups and how their likeness might be used in these kind of

Speaker 179 AI prompts.

Speaker 179 There's also kind of the deeper question beyond just copyright, but what about kind of ownership of

Speaker 179 your own image?

Speaker 26 Well, so I do have some outspoken thoughts on this, but I'll wait until the final clip goes.

Speaker 91 But

Speaker 26 in general, the data that most of these

Speaker 18 large language models, because that's what it is, have been trained on is from content that people have already signed their rights away to on the internet.

Speaker 144 So the best example is Reddit, who are now doing gangbusters and revenue because they're selling all of their users' writing into multiple

Speaker 73 AI companies.

Speaker 155 Anything you put on X is Grok's property.

Speaker 75 So

Speaker 155 that's really been the boondoggle, but it is definitely just copying and pasting whenever it recognizes a pattern that is asked for it, and it just sends it right back.

Speaker 140 So, I mean, yeah, the Hollywood guys, they probably have a little bit, but it's all third gen from stuff that was put out there on the internet.

Speaker 63 So it's going to be tough to prove that.

Speaker 2 Well, the thing that's interesting is this last clip.

Speaker 2 And I took about another 10 minutes out. I got sick of this.

Speaker 2 And so I got near the end here with this last comment where the woman notices there's actually three kind of dimensions to this suit, which involves the input,

Speaker 2 rights to the input, output. whether it is plagiarism or it's something if it's you know it is it can't really be original but it it looks to be.

Speaker 2 And then the one, the other kicker, which is the one that is really

Speaker 2 to me interesting, is the prompt itself.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 which means that the way the lawsuit's going, the way she sees it, is that the people writing the prompt,

Speaker 2 Darren,

Speaker 25 is.

Speaker 25 They're the ones violating the copyright?

Speaker 2 They can be violating the copyright.

Speaker 139 Wow.

Speaker 180 That's great.

Speaker 106 Put it on the dumb user.

Speaker 181 The The thing that I would keep an eye on is there's the training part and then there's the output part.

Speaker 181 And I just do want to emphasize that Disney's theory here is that somebody who says, you know, I want a minion icon for my Blue Sky account, to Chat GP,

Speaker 181 or one of these engines,

Speaker 181 is infringing copyright. And

Speaker 181 they want to hold the

Speaker 181 company responsible for that, even though it's the user prompting it. But the theory requires that the user is also an infringer.

Speaker 53 And I think we should worry about that.

Speaker 28 Oh, that's perfect.

Speaker 27 Well, yes, I feel, and I'm in agreement with this.

Speaker 22 If you say to any large language model AI thing, I want a minion for my blog.

Speaker 53 and you put a minion up there, yeah, you're violating copyright.

Speaker 71 That's why we don't choose art that has those types of images in it because we're not going to put it up there we know these companies are very litigious and we would in fact be violating some of their nascent rights of their copyright we're very careful about not putting like mickey mouse image for example or even people

Speaker 2 should be public domain i might add yeah yeah yeah yeah i'm not going to argue

Speaker 19 that's that is interesting And, you know, I just want to say that, you know, I've been the naysayer on artificial intelligence and Andrew Horowitz sent me Sam Altman's latest blog post, which is basically.

Speaker 197 Did he send it to you, too?

Speaker 53 No, no, it's basically like 8,000 words, and it's oh, the future is going to be great.

Speaker 164 Don't worry about it.

Speaker 89 Of course, he had AI write it.

Speaker 191 Of course, he did.

Speaker 99 Then it was just like, oh, this is awesome.

Speaker 17 And the world's going to change in so many ways. Like,

Speaker 68 whatever.

Speaker 52 I have worked for probably close to six hours a day for the past three months on a software project using multiple versions of AI, then I can inequivocably say there is no

Speaker 91 intelligence in this.

Speaker 216 And the intelligence, there's a lot of definitions of intelligence, but I think a general

Speaker 22 term, a general definition is intelligence is the ability to learn from experience and adapt to and shape and select environments. And the reason why I can, and actually your own experience, if you

Speaker 36 go to Anthropic, which I think you use, and you ask it something because you treat it like an entity, you ask it, but you ask it a different way, and it gives you a different answer.

Speaker 20 That's because there's no intelligence to interpret what you're actually asking for, what you want.

Speaker 2 It is just...

Speaker 72 looking at the pattern of the words you use and it's looking across its vast array of information it's sucked up and saying, ah, when this pattern emerges, I need to bring bring this pattern back.

Speaker 15 And they do that in a human way by saying, here's what I think you wanted, or here's your ant.

Speaker 91 They'll talk to you like you're a human being.

Speaker 73 That's the parlour trick.

Speaker 20 But when it comes, so that's just English language.

Speaker 18 When it comes to syntax, as in computer code, in this case, Python,

Speaker 72 if I did not prompt this

Speaker 26 any AI every single time to say, okay,

Speaker 20 when you make this change in my code, do not change the user agent from Godcaster to Mozilla or PyURL lib.

Speaker 71 It would do that by itself.

Speaker 15 And the reason why it would do that is, even though I've said it, the same conversation, so-called workspace where it's supposed to remember what I said, it doesn't, because it just says, oh, you want this piece of code, you want it to do this, I know where that code is, and here's that code.

Speaker 67 And it's not intelligent enough to stop doing what I asked it to not do a thousand times.

Speaker 86 And of course, the minute I start typing into the prompt when all caps, you stupid piece of crap, that's when I had to step away and say, okay, now I see what's happening.

Speaker 95 And that, so all of that is fine.

Speaker 23 And if people want to spend trillions of dollars investing in that, great.

Speaker 34 That's fantastic.

Speaker 26 I don't think it's a great, it's like

Speaker 60 a thesaurus grammar spell check copy paste machine on steroids.

Speaker 91 It definitely has a place as a tool.

Speaker 21 It's not intelligence.

Speaker 2 The only I find it fascinating that the big griper, complainer, moaner, and groaner about AIU

Speaker 2 use it more than I do.

Speaker 62 No, I did this specifically and I stayed at it because I wanted to be able to speak intelligently about what this is and what it isn't.

Speaker 26 And I finished my project.

Speaker 38 I finished it last Saturday.

Speaker 53 And it was,

Speaker 84 yes.

Speaker 35 And I could have done this with a software engineer who knows what he's doing in one day.

Speaker 54 It took me three months, a lot of pain, but I learned exactly what AI is and what it isn't.

Speaker 171 And there's no intelligence.

Speaker 137 The danger, the only danger is this artificial intimacy.

Speaker 71 That's the AI that we have to watch out for.

Speaker 26 And we talked about that on the last show, where people are, you know, going to chat bots and just like the 900 numbers. And in fact, this is from the

Speaker 26 the tech show in London here.

Speaker 208 She talks, flirts, and even gets jealous like a real girlfriend.

Speaker 105 Remember, you're my one and only, okay?

Speaker 119 Don't even think about chatting up other AIs.

Speaker 208 But Mio isn't human. She's an AI-powered virtual companion available 24-7 through the MyMio app.

Speaker 208 Users can chat with her anytime, choose her clothes, and even adjust her personality. Her creators from the Chinese company Meta Loop say Mio can help tackle the loneliness epidemic.

Speaker 203 When people feel

Speaker 203 lonely, or people maybe didn't get connected to the society, society, or didn't have the girlfriends, or sometimes depressed, so maybe they need someone to move her move.

Speaker 203 So, then maybe we'll be go come to the apps and talk to her.

Speaker 208 The company says Mio provides emotional support, but reactions at London Tech Week were mixed.

Speaker 132 Well, I looked at her and I thought,

Speaker 130 stereotypical

Speaker 4 men's fantasy.

Speaker 53 Are we looking at women being obsolete?

Speaker 208 Others are concerned about the psychological and ethical impact of an AI companion.

Speaker 208 With her.

Speaker 208 AI companions like Mio are particularly popular in East Asia, where Microsoft's Show Ice leads the market with hundreds of millions of users.

Speaker 33 So, and it's, and yeah, it's young men who are lonely all because of their phones.

Speaker 2 It all would have been solved by forced socialization

Speaker 2 and sock hops in high school.

Speaker 10 I am completely with you. It's not too late to bring them back.

Speaker 16 We can do a world tour,

Speaker 84 Adam Curry, and John C. Dvorek sock hop.

Speaker 7 We can go out there.

Speaker 12 We'll play Stairway to Heaven to all these kids.

Speaker 7 And God Only Knows by the Beach Boys is going to be fantastic.

Speaker 91 No, I am genuinely concerned about this intimacy and this loneliness, and people are going to, they're already flocking to these things.

Speaker 16 I mean, the

Speaker 2 well, I think your parallel with the 900 number is apt.

Speaker 68 Yeah.

Speaker 166 Psychics, you know,

Speaker 26 Dion Warwick, remember, she had the psychic hotline.

Speaker 79 And this is for lonely people, and we have only

Speaker 26 made more lonely people in the world who at this point are all clicking and very frustrated because at this moment both Cloudflare and Google Cloud are down all over the world.

Speaker 157 The entire service is down.

Speaker 2 Everybody. I hope people are still listening to the show.

Speaker 34 Well, we don't use that kind of stuff.

Speaker 2 No, it's true.

Speaker 109 We don't.

Speaker 2 We have our own. This, by the way, is why we have donations.

Speaker 2 Because we have our own independent server network that is run by our guy. Our guy.

Speaker 99 Boyd Zero.

Speaker 155 Our guy. That's right.

Speaker 53 He's our guy. He's a guy.

Speaker 174 He's a guy who's really good.

Speaker 163 He's one guy.

Speaker 26 He's doing a pretty good job, that one guy.

Speaker 2 And we have servers that are located outside the United States.

Speaker 27 And they're not on Google Cloud.

Speaker 30 And they're not on the cloud.

Speaker 47 No.

Speaker 1 But Cloudflare, that's going to...

Speaker 2 That's pretty bad when Cloudflare gets taken off.

Speaker 35 A lot of podcasts are on Cloudflare.

Speaker 198 A lot of them.

Speaker 157 And they're blaming it on a third-party service that is key and is a key dependency.

Speaker 2 It's one of our microservices problems.

Speaker 95 It's a microservices problem with a macro services result, everybody.

Speaker 7 And with that, I want to thank you for your courage.

Speaker 28 Say in the morning to you, the man who put the C and don't copy that floppy.

Speaker 10 Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only mister.

Speaker 4 John C

Speaker 4 DeVora.

Speaker 2 Good morning to you, Mr. Shaddam Curry.
In the morning, I ship sea businessography in the subsidiary of the day.

Speaker 139 So nights out there.

Speaker 15 Say in the morning to the trolls in the troll room.

Speaker 4 Mike in the country.

Speaker 4 Hold on.

Speaker 40 1946.

Speaker 130 That's up. That's up.

Speaker 2 Oh, it's up because of the riots.

Speaker 61 No, it's up because of the breastfeeding.

Speaker 53 All the women came back.

Speaker 15 We got to listen to what's listening to what those two boomers have to say.

Speaker 2 We got to just bring a few boomers to the boobers.

Speaker 7 Those two boobers, what they have to say.

Speaker 22 Yes, indeed, we are here, and the trolls are joining us.

Speaker 2 By the way, I have a clip blitz for the second after the break. Holy crap.

Speaker 15 Let me get my jingles.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I just thought I'd give you a warning. Fair warning.

Speaker 47 Yeah, okay. All right.

Speaker 92 Okay. I'll be ready for you for the clip bloods.

Speaker 220 All right.

Speaker 15 Yes, the trolls are in the troll room at trollroom.io.

Speaker 28 Again, not a Cloudflare or Google Cloud-hosted service because we know how the internet works.

Speaker 91 We didn't get psy-opt into using all of that big Silicon Valley tech.

Speaker 26 Oh, no, we have big Northern Holland tech from Void Zero.

Speaker 47 Yeah, dependable.

Speaker 91 He was actually troubleshooting email with them this morning. But I love that guy.

Speaker 73 He's like, hey, man, everything's slow.

Speaker 15 No problem.

Speaker 53 We'll troubleshoot it right now.

Speaker 95 I'm prepping for the show.

Speaker 92 Yeah, but we'll troubleshoot it right now. Okay, good.

Speaker 84 They are listening at trollroom.io.

Speaker 157 They might also, and you should be using a modern podcast app.

Speaker 61 Now, I can't say that people who are hosting podcasts hosted on Cloud through Cloudflare, that they will get the podcast, but your podcast app will work for sure.

Speaker 228 Get one of those.

Speaker 67 We notify you the minute we go live.

Speaker 131 All the live shows, it's the new trend in podcasting, people doing it live because we're all sick and tired of it live.

Speaker 15 We're sick and tired of all the overproduced wall of sound crap with all the ums and ahs taken out.

Speaker 1 No, you want to hear real voices.

Speaker 146 Now, we happen to be professional voices, but it doesn't matter.

Speaker 49 We just want to hear the real voices.

Speaker 22 And when they go live, it's real.

Speaker 107 You get a notification for that.

Speaker 52 And when we publish, and

Speaker 53 the guys at Apple are listening.

Speaker 15 They do hear me.

Speaker 2 They didn't say they would. How do you know this?

Speaker 91 Because one of my buddies over there emailed me that I put the wrong size image into the podcast feed.

Speaker 52 So if you don't have a three, like a 1400 by 1400 image.

Speaker 2 And you've been doing this for so long.

Speaker 74 Yeah,

Speaker 109 there's reasons for that happening.

Speaker 140 It's user error, my fault.

Speaker 55 But he's actually a listener.

Speaker 91 He's been a No Agenda guy for a long, long time.

Speaker 216 So he'll see it come through.

Speaker 33 And if you put the wrong size image in, then they won't display it in their podcast app.

Speaker 107 Then you know what he does?

Speaker 36 He lets it go through because he's my boy.

Speaker 62 So I know, I know that they're hearing it.

Speaker 92 And I know that the people who work within the podcast division are good people.

Speaker 34 I just don't think they have the power.

Speaker 155 You know, they have to, they're sitting there looking like, oh my God, we got another update from Tim Apple.

Speaker 28 Liquid Glass is gorgeous.

Speaker 53 Look at the new icon for the podcast app.

Speaker 117 It's gorgeous.

Speaker 10 They're like, can we get pod ping in here already?

Speaker 157 So I feel your pain, everybody.

Speaker 91 Yes, whenever we publish within 90 seconds, boom, you get notified and your podcast is there, as long as it's not hosted on Cloudflare.

Speaker 211 But of course,

Speaker 50 podcasting was never meant to be

Speaker 45 decentralized.

Speaker 197 It's decentralized by nature.

Speaker 50 So we expect a lot more people checking in with us because, like,

Speaker 10 I can't get Megan Kelly.

Speaker 59 Tucker won't work.

Speaker 1 Oh, I have to go to these two boobs who are these boomers.

Speaker 72 Noah Jinnah.

Speaker 90 Oh, that's actually a pretty good show.

Speaker 229 That's interesting.

Speaker 89 So we shall see if

Speaker 73 attendance goes up and if downloads go up. Not that we look at them.

Speaker 21 Yeah, as John mentioned, this is

Speaker 48 value for value is how we run the show.

Speaker 73 That's actually Void Zero started that a long time ago with the IRC chat room, now known as the troll room.

Speaker 155 But many people do things for us, just, I mean, things that are invaluable, really.

Speaker 228 I mean, even building, maintaining websites.

Speaker 26 You know what it costs if you want a website built these days?

Speaker 72 I mean, even just a WordPress blog, you know, that kind of looks like a website, you're looking at five grand for someone to put that together and another like $350 a month just to host it and maintain it.

Speaker 38 So these are very valuable services that people do for us.

Speaker 109 Now, we have three types of value we'd like you to send back for the value we put out there for free for everybody to use however you want.

Speaker 96 You listen to it, you download it, you stick it on a USB stick, you give it to your kids, you put it in the lockbox, whatever you do.

Speaker 52 And you can do that with time, talent, or treasure.

Speaker 72 We're going to thank people $50 and above, and we'll tell you exactly how they blessed us with their valued donation.

Speaker 84 But first, we want to thank another very important group of people who send us time and talents. That is our No Agenda artists, who are pretty much guaranteed to all go to jail for prompting

Speaker 53 for their illegal prompts.

Speaker 2 Illegal prompts.

Speaker 1 And for episodes. There'll be a book about it.

Speaker 30 Are you going to write it?

Speaker 138 Are you going to write it? Illegal prompts.

Speaker 53 No, that's a good one.

Speaker 95 Oh,

Speaker 53 that's a true crime right there. True crime thriller.

Speaker 44 Illegal prompts.

Speaker 10 Episode 1771 was titled Home Depot Tation.

Speaker 210 Haha, see what we did there?

Speaker 1 And the art came from Blue Acorn, who brought us the LA Riots with a

Speaker 50 clapboard, a slate that said influencer event scene 33.

Speaker 28 We thought that was kind of cool.

Speaker 92 We appreciated Blue Acorn doing that for us.

Speaker 91 So we use that as the album art.

Speaker 53 Let's take a look at some other.

Speaker 2 It's not even on the page anymore. We got so much art that came in.

Speaker 47 Wow, what happened? Oh, is it all Darren and digital 2112, man? Yep.

Speaker 41 It is.

Speaker 20 They just went crazy with the prompts.

Speaker 107 You know what it is?

Speaker 85 This is, they've trained AI to do AI imagery.

Speaker 2 I think the prompt is AI is prompting AI. It could be.

Speaker 51 Yeah, something like that.

Speaker 2 Then what are you going to do?

Speaker 2 Then what are you going to do with your lawsuit?

Speaker 30 Hey, I got nothing to do with it.

Speaker 160 For sure, it's degraded the quality of the art, both in luminous.

Speaker 2 There's a couple of good pieces coming up.

Speaker 2 This is on page two. Oh, my goodness.

Speaker 47 It's already on page two. Oh, wow.

Speaker 26 So Darren actually did the No Agenda in the Home Depot logo, which I think is where we got Home Depotation from, which was right next to the influencer event by Blue Acorn.

Speaker 53 Blue Acorn doesn't necessarily use AI.

Speaker 55 I think he's a

Speaker 174 hybrid artist.

Speaker 2 He is half and half. I don't, for one thing, that influencer event scene 33, there's no way AI wrote that on there.
No, no, no.

Speaker 33 And so, so I also post these on X and I'm a Mastodon.

Speaker 155 And

Speaker 41 I got some troll who showed up.

Speaker 2 You still have a Mastodon. I thought you don't use Mastodon.
I have my own.

Speaker 2 Oh, that's right. You have your little instances.

Speaker 8 And we have podcastindex.social.

Speaker 41 So, you know,

Speaker 127 I don't look at any of the other stuff, but I got some troll, picked up a troll who, by the way, he's actually a guy who I think likes the show.

Speaker 37 Um,

Speaker 7 and let me see if I can find it because he saw this image says, You want to backtrack on it not being a big deal, the riots in Los Angeles?

Speaker 58 I know, right? I was like, What is your problem?

Speaker 2 He doesn't listen to the show much.

Speaker 50 No, I looked at his timeline.

Speaker 109 He has tons of

Speaker 109 retweets.

Speaker 45 And

Speaker 226 let me see if I can find it.

Speaker 226 Wait, under.

Speaker 47 Do I have to look?

Speaker 64 Because he was going off on me.

Speaker 7 Oh, how was your USAID trip to Moscow? Coincidence that your uncle was a top CIA guy?

Speaker 7 I can't trust you anymore.

Speaker 66 I could

Speaker 41 really

Speaker 154 let me see. Where was it?

Speaker 154 Where was he?

Speaker 73 No, I don't think I can find him.

Speaker 2 I don't trust you anymore. That was how many decades ago? Yeah, no, here he is.

Speaker 71 Here he is.

Speaker 36 Oh, here it is. Here it is.
Okay, I found it.

Speaker 7 We got boots on the ground from someone who works at Palantir, LOL.

Speaker 138 And just so everybody knows, these are good guys.

Speaker 17 WTF, Adam, the show has gone from absolutely can't miss to borderline unlistenable.

Speaker 117 Neither of you are stupid, so it's got to be something else.

Speaker 23 So I reply, pro tip, you forgot to say we're Zionist chills.

Speaker 66 Bro, bro.

Speaker 96 If your response to criticism is that I'm a troll, very disappointing.

Speaker 7 We've engaged on here many times.

Speaker 139 If your response to Palantir having a direct line into the White House is no biggie, then the show is a lost cause.

Speaker 7 Imagine quitting weed and becoming more retarded.

Speaker 41 I mean,

Speaker 216 And then, so back and forth.

Speaker 2 That's a good one.

Speaker 38 Here's one last one.

Speaker 7 You listen to someone for three to eight hours a week over many years. It's easy to detect a disturbance in the force.

Speaker 96 I get that you got QAnon, but you've been taking it out on your producers for two years, and the show has turned into a Jesus boomer slop.

Speaker 24 I don't trust you.

Speaker 2 He made it clear he doesn't trust you.

Speaker 36 Yes, I think he doesn't trust me.

Speaker 38 I think there's a we have a lack of trust with this particular person.

Speaker 2 A lack of trust.

Speaker 57 And I'm very sorry.

Speaker 2 But there was no specifics.

Speaker 53 No, well, no, but that, you know,

Speaker 70 I went to.

Speaker 2 I mean, has he caught you saying something that's completely inaccurate and you're lying like they do on the mainstream news?

Speaker 144 He said that I had said we got a boots on the ground from someone at Palantir, and then he misquotes me by saying, by saying, it's no biggie, everything's okay.

Speaker 26 I'm like, no, I didn't say that.

Speaker 16 I said, it's bull crap.

Speaker 1 This whole Whitney Webb palantir is going to be a good idea.

Speaker 180 Oh, he's a Whitney Webb guy.

Speaker 174 Yes.

Speaker 130 Of course. Whitney Webb is a good guy.

Speaker 2 It's probably Whitney Webb.

Speaker 84 It's Whitney Webb's alt account.

Speaker 29 All right.

Speaker 62 Anyway, onward. Thank you very much, Blue Acorn.

Speaker 91 We appreciate you and all of the No Agenda artists.

Speaker 53 And wow, I also, I appreciate appreciate that little Twitter diatribe.

Speaker 144 It's always fun to do the voice again.

Speaker 197 Now, let us thank the executive and associate.

Speaker 2 I'm excited to voice every show.

Speaker 157 Not always.

Speaker 92 Let's thank our executive and associate executive producers for episode

Speaker 54 1772.

Speaker 154 Yes.

Speaker 2 1772.

Speaker 84 1772.

Speaker 211 Now, we thank everybody $50 and above, and we tell you how much they supported us with.

Speaker 22 In this particular segment, we take a little page from

Speaker 148 the show business business playbook and we give people titles as an extra incentive if they're so inclined.

Speaker 38 You don't have to support us with $200 or $300.

Speaker 26 None of that's necessary.

Speaker 55 We'd just be happy if everybody just did a couple bucks a show, that would be great.

Speaker 24 But no one does that.

Speaker 229 It's less than $2%.

Speaker 53 Never happened.

Speaker 144 Like, is it 2% or is it not even 2%?

Speaker 2 We're at 1%.

Speaker 52 1%.

Speaker 21 1%

Speaker 53 support us financially, and that's how people want to support us.

Speaker 155 And thanks to them.

Speaker 15 And that includes everyone down at the bottom.

Speaker 47 What's the bottom number here?

Speaker 92 I think the look is the whole spreadsheet.

Speaker 34 We still have people giving us $2, $2.2, $3.33.

Speaker 38 Love them. A lot of $4.

Speaker 28 Yeah, that's the $4 weekly donation.

Speaker 48 Oh, the $4 weekly donation.

Speaker 220 Yes. Okay.

Speaker 46 Oh, we appreciate all of it.

Speaker 98 So the deal is if you support us the $200 or above, we read your note, first of all.

Speaker 156 We can't read everybody's note, but we'll read your note.

Speaker 92 And you get the associate executive producer credit, which is good for the rest of your life.

Speaker 73 You can use it anywhere Hollywood show business credits are recognized, including IMDb.

Speaker 109 $300 and above.

Speaker 92 You get an executive producer credit.

Speaker 84 Same rules apply.

Speaker 26 We read your note.

Speaker 53 And we kick it off with Al Kelcoff,

Speaker 35 which sounds very Dutch, who is in Aurora, Illinois.

Speaker 142 And he comes in with $1,052.62.

Speaker 96 And he kicks it off by saying, Grace, mercy, and peace from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, and from me, Al Kelkoff.

Speaker 133 And this donation is a switcheroo for my smoking hot wife, Barbara Kelkoff, in recognition of her birthday on Friday, June 13th.

Speaker 49 So I'm going to make that switcheroo change right away.

Speaker 62 Barb and I have been married almost 39 years.

Speaker 50 And we never had a fight.

Speaker 147 She is the kindest, most giving person I know.

Speaker 81 She volunteers with numerous organizations, but always has time for her friends and her husband.

Speaker 96 She has turned our new house into a home, and I couldn't be more blessed than to have her as a wife.

Speaker 146 We started listening to No Agenda back before COVID after I was looking for a podcast and Googled, what is the best podcast?

Speaker 106 And no, it worked. It did work.

Speaker 7 And No Agenda was at the top of the list.

Speaker 53 From that day, we were hooked.

Speaker 55 Please, would you dedouch Barbara?

Speaker 8 You've been

Speaker 92 Annie also says, because it's her birthday, would you give her a biscuit for her birthday?

Speaker 53 Well, of course.

Speaker 162 They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.

Speaker 23 Keep up the great work and feel free to end podcasting once all things domestically and internationally leave nothing left to deconstruct.

Speaker 28 I'll have her contact you with her official dame name.

Speaker 92 Good. We look forward to that.

Speaker 53 Al Kolkoff.

Speaker 1 So it's a surprise.

Speaker 60 Happy birthday, Barbara.

Speaker 91 Sounds like you got a good man there.

Speaker 73 Thank you very much, Al, for the support of the show.

Speaker 2 Onward with Richard Hollow.

Speaker 2 He's in Hollow. He's in a Deutschland

Speaker 2 in the town of Schler.

Speaker 2 What?

Speaker 2 Schlersey, I guess.

Speaker 148 His name was Schlierse. Schlierse.

Speaker 2 Dear Adam, dear John, jobs karma for all. He came in with $1,000.

Speaker 53 Boom, Shakalaka.

Speaker 53 Health karma for all.

Speaker 2 Love my wife. Love my children and my dog.

Speaker 2 Best

Speaker 2 wishes.

Speaker 2 Best wishes, wishes. Richard, retired headmaster in Schliercy.

Speaker 241 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 130 All right.

Speaker 117 Richard.

Speaker 2 Richard. Richard.
Dunca.

Speaker 35 Eric Kessler, Kansas City, Missouri, 333.33.

Speaker 148 We love those threes.

Speaker 211 Thank you for providing the best best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 22 I continue to learn how to spot slanted news stories, and your deconstruction of the media is worth every penny.

Speaker 1 Shout out to all the boots on the ground, too.

Speaker 44 You got it, man.

Speaker 196 Thank you.

Speaker 2 Now we have anonymous. Anonymous.
Parts Unknown, 333.33.

Speaker 2 I hope this email finds you well.

Speaker 2 Well, Adam might have a general disdain for actual Indians.

Speaker 7 Wait a minute.

Speaker 17 I do not have a disdain for actual Indians.

Speaker 2 Well, maybe he's talking about AI and that's code.

Speaker 53 Oh,

Speaker 66 okay.

Speaker 59 I don't know.

Speaker 15 Okay, yeah, yeah, good point. Good point.

Speaker 2 See slander. Duck, duck, goes, AI summarizes it as polite, but comes across as overused or insincere, and that's why people prefer to use more engaging alternatives.

Speaker 2 Hopefully, that's the first and last time I will ever use that opener.

Speaker 2 Which is, I hope this email finds you well.

Speaker 2 This is a very spooky note from an anonymous source.

Speaker 2 Speaking of AI, maybe young males are lonely in using AI chatbots to interact with because,

Speaker 2 as John has alluded to, they can't interact with women properly.

Speaker 87 Why?

Speaker 2 Got every

Speaker 2 trope in here that you can think of. Because they literally, they like, what?

Speaker 2 Why? Because they likely unfunny slur using degenerates or just the water

Speaker 30 Now, did I read that wrong?

Speaker 2 But it takes it but take that information with a grain of salt since that information did come from a tic-tac

Speaker 2 Regarding the this is code for somebody

Speaker 2 Regarding the wildfire smoke, do we have a short-term memory of or something, M5M?

Speaker 2 When was the last time Western Canada wasn't on fire during the summer?

Speaker 196 Yeah, thank you.

Speaker 99 Good point.

Speaker 2 Jingles, TTP, jobs, karma.

Speaker 2 What's that in your mouth? Don't look over here.

Speaker 2 Thank you for your courage.

Speaker 4 Don't look over here. Nothing to see here.
Look at that. What's that in your mouth?

Speaker 5 Jobs. Jobs.
Jobs. Jobs.
Jobs, jobs, jobs.

Speaker 242 Joe.

Speaker 242 You've got karma.

Speaker 18 All right. Nice sequence.

Speaker 20 And Drew McArdle is in Lafayette, Louisiana, 333 and wants baby making karma with a goat.

Speaker 28 ITM boys, Drew McArdle from Baton Rouge here.

Speaker 10 I've been on the 2019 $20.19 night layaway program since December of 2019.

Speaker 45 And I finally crossed the threshold to knighthood.

Speaker 53 I wonder if more people will be coming.

Speaker 81 People who started that on the 20th of December, 2019?

Speaker 53 Check your amounts, people. You may be a knight or a dame.

Speaker 99 I'm donating this 333 to establish my night name name as Sir Drudalana Noodle, protector of the red stick and laffy taffy.

Speaker 63 Also, I'd like to call out my brother, Ben McArdle,

Speaker 10 my father, Frank McArdle,

Speaker 10 and my best friend, Caleb Michelson, as Douchebag.

Speaker 191 Thank you for your courage.

Speaker 28 Love you both, and I mean it.

Speaker 242 You've got

Speaker 243 karma.

Speaker 41 All right, baby making karma. Good luck.

Speaker 2 Anonymous in Alicante España.

Speaker 2 200 and

Speaker 66 no.

Speaker 2 The prompt was on it right in the middle of it, the big plus signs 303 donation.

Speaker 176 Yes.

Speaker 2 And he's anonymous from Spain, but since we didn't

Speaker 2 really send a note, let's give him a double up karma.

Speaker 90 Okay.

Speaker 242 You've got

Speaker 160 gracious

Speaker 243 karma.

Speaker 40 And we move to our first associate executive producer with $240, Lynn Craig from Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Speaker 63 No notes, so Lynn also gets a double-up karma.

Speaker 242 You've got

Speaker 243 karma.

Speaker 2 And we have the Commodore dude named Ben in San Francisco. 220, 222.
That's a row of ducks. Commodore dude named Ben, Duke of the San Francisco, reminds the Bay Area Navy to

Speaker 2 meet up at the dog patch saloon this Saturday at 3:33.

Speaker 2 Let's escape the control grid.

Speaker 2 Should be some nice protests going on, too.

Speaker 93 And he

Speaker 93 has

Speaker 2 hashtag hot pockets, hashtag pina colada escape, which I think

Speaker 4 you're a racist.

Speaker 109 That's what he wanted.

Speaker 59 If you're male, you're a pig.

Speaker 4 If you're

Speaker 4 you are privileged.

Speaker 174 Forgot this one.

Speaker 53 That's good.

Speaker 4 And if you're straight, you're homophobic.

Speaker 4 Heaven help with your own.

Speaker 4 So don't have an opinion.

Speaker 4 And just do what you're tone.

Speaker 23 Thank you very much, Commodore dude named Ben.

Speaker 107 We move on to Sean Homan from Noblesville, Indiana, 21911.

Speaker 1 Ah, that's the code right there, Book of Jonah.

Speaker 67 He says, his love endures forever.

Speaker 72 Peace and blessings, Adam and John.

Speaker 53 Thank you, brother.

Speaker 2 Frank Maloney in Sister Bay, Wisconsin.

Speaker 2 He wants a dedouching.

Speaker 8 You've been dedouched.

Speaker 2 Came in with $210.60. Frank Maloney and his big country unit, Sister Bay.

Speaker 2 His big country units.

Speaker 2 He's got us all scrambled here, so I'm not sure what he's referring to, and it says his big country unit. Sounds like a

Speaker 53 big band, a bandit.

Speaker 2 Could be. Sister Bay, Wisconsin.
Available

Speaker 2 wherever you stream music. So it's okay, Frank Maloney is big country unit.

Speaker 72 Sister Bay, Wisconsin.

Speaker 15 There you go. Check it out.

Speaker 142 Frank Maloney. Let's check it out.

Speaker 2 Do some jingles for us, Frank.

Speaker 28 Eli the Coffee Guy is back with 20612.

Speaker 60 He says, John, last Thursday show, you asked if our Ethiopian Guiji organic is peaberry coffee.

Speaker 62 It is not.

Speaker 16 Peaberry has nothing to do with the size of the bean.

Speaker 10 Although peaberry beans are generally smaller, you can tell the peaberry from its roundness as supposed as opposed to its size.

Speaker 84 The peaberry is actually a mutation in about 5% of coffee beans where the bean develops one cherry instead of the regular two cherries, which makes for a more intense flavor profile in a denser bean.

Speaker 71 Jingles the more you know.

Speaker 156 The more you know in the morning.

Speaker 84 All this Peaberry talk makes us want to bring back our Papua New Guinea Peaberry.

Speaker 40 So for a limited time only, visit gigawattcoffee roasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20% off your order and grab a bag today.

Speaker 211 Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.

Speaker 166 And Eli actually got a free plug on DH Unplugged, which is not true because it's very pluggy that unplugged.

Speaker 53 You plugged him.

Speaker 2 Yes, I did. I mentioned him, and now that he's got the Pea Berry, I expect a beg.

Speaker 142 That's right after Andrew Horowitz said

Speaker 91 that as a Jew, he doesn't like people harping on China.

Speaker 74 I was on the floor.

Speaker 2 It was pretty wild.

Speaker 53 I was on the floor over that.

Speaker 2 But he also mentioned that he's gotten to the point where he can't drink coffee. It gives him, you know, GERD or something.
I don't know.

Speaker 53 GERD?

Speaker 36 GERD. That doesn't sound good.

Speaker 2 Frank Castaneda in Austin, Texas.

Speaker 41 Oh, that's

Speaker 89 Sergeant.

Speaker 16 That's Sergeant Fred.

Speaker 2 Sergeant Fred Fred. I said Frank.
Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 225 Fred.

Speaker 53 Sergeant Fred, did he not send in?

Speaker 72 He always sends in a note.

Speaker 2 No, this was a check. This was a bank check.
That's why it's gray.

Speaker 51 Sergeant Fred, he is a Vietnam War veteran.

Speaker 131 Let me just make sure I didn't get an email from him.

Speaker 220 Castanada.

Speaker 2 Yeah, he may have sent you a note.

Speaker 15 I'm looking for it, but I don't see anything.

Speaker 2 maybe he just wants to double up karma well he's getting a double up karma we love you sergeant fred good to hear from him

Speaker 243 karma

Speaker 2 very happy to hear from him i'm glad he's okay he had some agent orange uh issues oh yeah those poor guys yeah he's a good man a veteran and a real american

Speaker 197 And rounding it out with $200 is Linda Lupatkin from Lakewood, Colorado.

Speaker 166 And Linda asks for jobs karma and says, for a competitive edge with a resume that gets results, go to ImageMakers Inc.

Speaker 20 for all of your executive resume and job search needs.

Speaker 53 That's ImageMakersIncwithakay.com and work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes.

Speaker 1 On a personal note, I recently moved to a town more befitting my stature at the roundtable, Castle Rock, Colorado.

Speaker 26 As a result, I would love some house-selling karma for my Lakewood home.

Speaker 216 Well, let me get you some jobs karma first.

Speaker 241 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's go for jobs.

Speaker 242 You've got karma.

Speaker 147 And now, some house-selling karma for you.

Speaker 242 You've got

Speaker 130 karma.

Speaker 4 There you go.

Speaker 160 Boom. Beautiful.

Speaker 2 Very, very takes care of show 1772 as we approach 1776.

Speaker 147 Ah, that's going to be a banger of a show, ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 166 Thank you to these executive and associate executive producers for 1772.

Speaker 83 Remember, you can support us in any amount you want, anytime.

Speaker 15 You don't have to jump through hoops, go to Patreon, or you know, sign up for stuff.

Speaker 95 There's no tote bags.

Speaker 1 We do have producerships for you.

Speaker 26 We've got all kinds of stuff. And if you donate long enough and you reach $1,000 over 20 years, that's fine.

Speaker 91 You become a knight or a dame of the roundtable.

Speaker 107 For more information, go to noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 7 Thank you again for supporting us, our execs and associate executive producers.

Speaker 207 Our formula is this:

Speaker 206 we go out, we hit people in the mouth.

Speaker 232 We do have a deal with China, though.

Speaker 196 Don't know if he, if anyone.

Speaker 44 Supposedly.

Speaker 220 Well, here's the, I have the latest here. Hold on a second.

Speaker 99 This is the latest.

Speaker 53 We got a deal.

Speaker 223 After two days of negotiations between the U.S.

Speaker 223 and Chinese trade representatives, President Trump declared in a social media post Wednesday that a trade deal with China is done, while acknowledging both he and Chinese President Xi Jinping still have to approve a final agreement.

Speaker 111 He spoke to his trade team, who did a fantastic job negotiating this on behalf of the United States and meeting with their Chinese counterparts.

Speaker 111 The president is talking to them about the details of it now, but what the president heard, he liked.

Speaker 223 The president said the U.S. will keep a 55% tariff on Chinese imports.
while China will keep a 10% tariff on American goods. Trump also said Beijing will supply the U.S.

Speaker 223 with magnets and rare earth minerals, which are vital to a number of industries.

Speaker 245 This is an American agreement. If you're an American company and you need magnets, they are going to approve it right away, which is what we needed.

Speaker 223 Commerce Secretary Howard Luttnick told CNBC China agreed to do more business with the U.S., including buying more U.S. agriculture and equipment.

Speaker 133 That's quite the deal, if that's true.

Speaker 74 Man,

Speaker 23 55% tariffs, and we get all the magnets magnets we can stick together?

Speaker 98 All the magnets our kids can swallow?

Speaker 41 That's dynamite.

Speaker 2 The kind of magnets you don't want your kid to swallow.

Speaker 57 No, no, I'm sure.

Speaker 196 Well, okay.

Speaker 216 Well, and China seems to be happy with it?

Speaker 2 Well, I think the part of that deal, which they don't talk about, since when they break down the tariffs, 25% of that 50% is for the fentanyl.

Speaker 2 And there's another part that which could do, in other words, down the road somewhere, if China can, you know, just put a stop to a couple of things, they'll just pull a rug out from under a lot of those tariffs.

Speaker 2 It'll be back down to about 20%, maybe.

Speaker 90 Oh, I see. Okay.

Speaker 2 There's something fishy about that number.

Speaker 53 Yeah, well, as long as everyone's happy, which we can't say.

Speaker 2 You know, it reminds me of the thing you brought up earlier, the 5%, 3.5%.

Speaker 2 It looks like one thing, but it's another.

Speaker 89 It's what you do.

Speaker 1 It's the art of the deal, baby.

Speaker 41 We can't say the same for Iran, although who knows.

Speaker 246 A developing story now overseas, the U.S. government is evacuating some diplomats and military families from the Middle East because of rising tensions with Iran.

Speaker 8 By the way, I'm not so sure the term evacuating is correct because from what I read, it was voluntary for

Speaker 72 the dependents to come home, so spouses, children, etc.

Speaker 157 But sounds a little scarier when you say they're being evacuated.

Speaker 246 And threats of an attack on U.S. bases.
ABC's Perry Russem has details. Perry, good morning.
Good morning.

Speaker 172 Brianna, good morning to you. The threat posed by Iran is prompting the U.S.
to prepare a partial evacuation of the embassy in neighboring Iraq. Officials say the evacuation of U.S.

Speaker 172 diplomats in Baghdad will begin via commercial flights, with the military on standby if needed.

Speaker 172 There's also a voluntary evacuation of military family members at bases in the region, including those in Bahrain and Kuwait. President Trump speaking last night about the growing security concerns.

Speaker 247 They are being moved out because it could be a dangerous place, and we'll see what happens. But they are being, we've given notice to move out.

Speaker 172 And this comes after Iran earlier this week threatened to target all U.S. bases in the region if negotiations over its nuclear weapons program fail to reach a deal.
Those talks between the U.S.

Speaker 172 and Iran resume on Sunday in Oman.

Speaker 58 So

Speaker 131 I didn't like this report because they make it sound like Iran is, we're going to bomb your bases.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I have a BBC version of the same report you might want to play.

Speaker 226 Yeah,

Speaker 34 then I want to play the France 24.

Speaker 220 Let me see, your Iran.

Speaker 248 Here we go. The United States is preparing to move some staff and their families from its embassy in Iraq.

Speaker 79 Okay, that's a little more nuanced.

Speaker 248 As well as from military bases in Kuwait and Bahrain. Officials say the partial evacuations down to what they describe as heightened security risks in the region.

Speaker 248 Our State Department correspondent Tom Bateman reports from Washington.

Speaker 249 The move comes after weeks of talks between the U.S. and Iran.

Speaker 249 President Trump has hoped to strike a deal to stop Tehran developing a nuclear weapon, but he said today he was growing less confident it would stop enriching uranium.

Speaker 249 Earlier this week, he also held a 40-minute phone call said to be tense with Israel's Prime Minister, who has long argued for a military rather than diplomatic approach.

Speaker 249 Iran's defense minister said today the country would target U.S. military bases in the region if a conflict was imposed upon it.

Speaker 15 All right, let's listen to the France 24 version.

Speaker 202 Amid a feared deadlock in nuclear talks, tensions between the US and Iran have flared up again.

Speaker 202 After a week-long war of words, Donald Trump confirmed that US diplomats were being removed from the region.

Speaker 247 Well, they are being moved out because it could be a dangerous place, and we'll see what happens. But they are being given notice to move out, and we'll see what happens.

Speaker 202 American and Iranian negotiators have been planning to meet later this week for another round of talks.

Speaker 202 But Trump told reporters on Monday that Iran had adopted an unacceptable negotiating position, in particular on enrichment.

Speaker 202 A U.S.-backed plan suggested that Iran could only enrich uranium at low levels, effectively blocking Iran's ability to enrich the fuel to produce a nuclear weapon.

Speaker 122 Well, they're just asking for things that you can't do.

Speaker 122 They don't want to give up what they have to give up. You know what that is.

Speaker 122 They seek enrichment.

Speaker 122 We can't have enrichment. They have given us

Speaker 122 their thoughts on the deal, and I said, you know, it's just not acceptable.

Speaker 202 Many are concerned about the risk of a potential regional conflagration between Iran and Israel should diplomacy fail.

Speaker 202 Israeli officials have repeatedly threatened to attack Iran if it does not effectively surrender its nuclear program.

Speaker 202 On Wednesday, the Iranian Defense Minister issued a warning in the event that the talks broke down.

Speaker 41 God willing, the talks will bring results.

Speaker 126 But if they don't, and conflict is imposed to us, the enemy's losses will be greater than ours.

Speaker 126 In that case, America will have to leave the region

Speaker 126 because all its bases are within our reach. And without hesitation, we will target all of them in the host countries.

Speaker 202 Analysts say that Iran is now on the brink of being able to manufacture enough nuclear material to fuel a nuclear weapon.

Speaker 83 The only ones who got it right.

Speaker 49 No one else tagged the story with their just a week away.

Speaker 2 Just a week away. You can't leave that.

Speaker 2 We both got a boots on the ground report from one of our military guys who's talking about how they're moving equipment around. I have it here.

Speaker 53 You want me to read it?

Speaker 2 No,

Speaker 2 I think it's.

Speaker 2 I don't want you to read it.

Speaker 53 Okay. I won't read it.

Speaker 2 But the point is, is that all this, including that note, all seem to be, and what's happening, it doesn't seem to be secret.

Speaker 68 No.

Speaker 2 This is all posturing to scare the crap out of the Iranians. They take, listen, we're moving all our people out of all these technical bases.
There's going to be anybody there.

Speaker 2 They're going to be gone.

Speaker 2 It's looking like they're leaving them sitting there, Iran, as sitting ducks.

Speaker 53 Wait a minute. Is Israel controlling us again, John?

Speaker 2 Well, I think we're controlling us. Of course, if Israel was controlling us, they'd have bombed them already.

Speaker 41 Of course.

Speaker 2 They would have bombed them by now.

Speaker 2 But the point is, is that this is all part of the negotiating process that Trump uses.

Speaker 2 And it's like, yeah, well, you know what's going to happen.

Speaker 2 And everything seems to be

Speaker 2 a bluff.

Speaker 2 I wouldn't call it a bluff because I think they could bomb them.

Speaker 2 But it's definitely messages are going out. You're going to get bombed if you don't do the deal.
And we're going to be out of here. We're moving our bases.
We're digging the people home.

Speaker 2 You know, yeah, go ahead, bomb the empty base. Big deal.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 Yeah, Yeah, if I was Iran, I'd just do the deal. I don't understand what the problem is.

Speaker 85 For some reason, though, I'm looking at the quad like people are still mad about Los Angeles.

Speaker 44 They're not worried about Iran at all.

Speaker 226 I don't understand.

Speaker 53 They're not

Speaker 50 taking the bait.

Speaker 27 They're not doing it.

Speaker 92 I see the Ruthless podcast has joined the Will Kane show.

Speaker 154 Wow, that's riveting.

Speaker 20 I did pick up a nice, a little, just a short short clip from the president on an Air Force One gaggle, a gaggle,

Speaker 92 where, now, and actually, the DH Unplugged podcast every single Tuesday goes live in the evening.

Speaker 143 You pick it up on Wednesday.

Speaker 97 It's a great podcast about things in the markets and John and Andrew waffling about China.

Speaker 148 It's good, it's a good show. I listen to it.

Speaker 143 I listen to it all the time.

Speaker 84 Talking about the trial balloons being

Speaker 23 let into the air about a future or the next or maybe nearer future chairman of the Federal Reserve.

Speaker 68 Yeah.

Speaker 84 I don't think you guys got this clip in time for the show.

Speaker 53 Maybe it was after that. But here, President Trump explains something, which is exactly what your best podcast in the universe discussed months ago.

Speaker 189 And if we had a good Fed chairman, you would lower rates.

Speaker 247 And you know what?

Speaker 250 If inflation happened in a year from now or two years, let him raise rates. But we're going out for long-term debt or short-term debt.

Speaker 184 We have a lot of debt coming due because Biden had all short-term debt mostly.

Speaker 250 And we would get a lower rate, a lower interest rate if this guy would lower rates. We get a lower interest rate.

Speaker 3 It's unbelievable.

Speaker 250 And he's worried about inflation. If he worries about inflation any longer, all he has to do is get the lower rate.
Let us go out, borrow at a much lower rate, much lower.

Speaker 184 You could go down a point or two.

Speaker 250 We'll go out and borrow them. And if in two years inflation comes back, he raises rates.

Speaker 222 rates but he keeps them the same insist it's insane

Speaker 222 what is your next vet share

Speaker 222 are you already thinking about who your next fed share would be i know it's 2026 when he's terminus nice with so you're already thinking about it

Speaker 3 it's coming out very soon and what are you thinking about i could tell you but uh what i don't think about what do you make i have a pretty good idea So there it is, exactly what we discussed.

Speaker 28 He wants the Fed to lower the rates so we can

Speaker 28 refi the country, which is a good idea.

Speaker 7 And then Trump says if inflation goes up, you you raise the rates, but then we'll have longer-term debt.

Speaker 140 Everybody's got the stable coin, and we'll be good to go.

Speaker 26 We'll lower our interest payments.

Speaker 15 At this point, is Jerome Powell just not an American?

Speaker 67 Is he not patriotic?

Speaker 1 Why doesn't he do this?

Speaker 157 The ECB has lowered rates eight times.

Speaker 2 The way the Fed is structured right now, they don't believe what Trump says

Speaker 2 is going to work.

Speaker 49 Is going to work?

Speaker 2 They don't think that you can't.

Speaker 2 They see

Speaker 2 that the interest rates are always pegged to inflation.

Speaker 2 And unless there's an economic downturn, there's no reason to lower the rates.

Speaker 108 It's just a rule the way they see it.

Speaker 2 They're not thinking about strategizing, you know, refinancing the country. They're just not on the agenda.

Speaker 68 They're never right, by the way.

Speaker 115 Exactly.

Speaker 59 Thank you. They're always wrong.

Speaker 53 So why would they be right now why would they change always wrong yeah but it seems like the right thing to do

Speaker 53 you know

Speaker 2 it doesn't mean a thing

Speaker 157 by the way in europe now um having over 3 000 euros in your possession um is about to become illegal what yep

Speaker 228 yep you are not allowed to have more than three thousand euros in cash Why?

Speaker 26 Because that means you're criminal.

Speaker 17 There's no way you need that kind of money for any legal matter.

Speaker 71 You should be using banks and stablecoin

Speaker 30 or the

Speaker 160 digital euro, whatever it is.

Speaker 91 They are getting rid of cash.

Speaker 43 You cannot have more than 3,000 euros cash in your possession or you will be deemed suspect and probably involved in criminal activity.

Speaker 17 Yep.

Speaker 41 That's bull crap. Yeah.

Speaker 211 In fact, a Dutch guy

Speaker 142 was caught.

Speaker 2 Some people like having cash.

Speaker 4 Yeah.

Speaker 28 Was caught, caught at the at the border with Germany.

Speaker 109 He had like a mini fridge in the back.

Speaker 20 He had 124,000 euros in there, hidden.

Speaker 83 And off to jail you go.

Speaker 148 What do you need that cash for? Where'd you get that cash?

Speaker 28 You better tell us about that cash.

Speaker 143 You can't have that cash.

Speaker 142 It's not good to have that cash.

Speaker 80 You are probably involved in illegal criminal activity, aren't you?

Speaker 26 Meanwhile, everybody's making bank on the drug trade through the Netherlands.

Speaker 61 This is the port of preference for shipping your drugs into Europe.

Speaker 143 I'm sure sanctioned by politicians at all.

Speaker 89 Yeah, it's bad. It's bad.

Speaker 31 You cannot have cash.

Speaker 2 Well, you want to do the clip blitz?

Speaker 58 Oh, okay.

Speaker 220 Hold on a second. I'm sorry.
I was a little underprepared.

Speaker 62 I know. I know.
I know. I know.

Speaker 39 You told me.

Speaker 47 You told me earlier.

Speaker 90 Blitz. Okay.
All right. Clip Blitz.

Speaker 26 Ladies and gentlemen, we haven't done it in a long time.

Speaker 54 Here we go.

Speaker 41 Red 33.

Speaker 16 All right, everybody.

Speaker 63 It's time for a clip blitz.

Speaker 84 John C. to work.

Speaker 2 DC7, Mark Brown talking about how people enjoy watching cars burn.

Speaker 251 Large group of people.

Speaker 251 It could turn very volatile if you move law enforcement in there in the wrong way and turn what is just a bunch of people having fun watching cars burn into a a massive confrontation and altercation between officers and

Speaker 143 demonstrators.

Speaker 152 It's another no agenda.

Speaker 2 All right, Clip Blitz, what's next? Under FISY.

Speaker 90 FISY.

Speaker 239 A federal judge has ruled the Trump administration cannot continue to detain Mahmoud Khalil on the basis of Secretary of State Marco Rubio's determination he's a threat to American foreign policy goals.

Speaker 239 It's unclear whether Khalil will soon be released from the Immigration Detention center in Louisiana, where he's been held since ICE agents arrested him in early March.

Speaker 239 Judge Paused his own ruling until Friday to give the government time to appeal.

Speaker 152 It's another no agenda. Justice!

Speaker 2 The NEA chief, kind of forgetting what the wordage of the Declaration of Independence is. We, the people!

Speaker 2 We, the people,

Speaker 2 we,

Speaker 2 the people!

Speaker 2 All of us, all of us

Speaker 127 That's right, something like that.

Speaker 53 You know the thing.

Speaker 2 You know the thing. Sun poles.

Speaker 53 Sunpoles.

Speaker 239 France and Saudi Arabia are gathering countries for a conference next week at UN headquarters in New York to support the recognition of a power.

Speaker 131 I'm sorry, that's the wrong one.

Speaker 15 Here you go.

Speaker 53 Sunpoles.

Speaker 125 And the European Space Agency's release the first ever images of the Sun's South Pole.

Speaker 248 The footage taken from a solar orbiter spacecraft shows a shimmering bright atmosphere interspersed with dark clouds of gas.

Speaker 125 Scientists hope it'll help them understand why the Sun's poles switch from north to south and back again every 11 years.

Speaker 10 These are good, I missed him.

Speaker 2 World Bank.

Speaker 248 The World Bank is to end a long-standing ban on the funding of nuclear energy projects in developing countries to help meet soaring electricity needs.

Speaker 125 It said demand for electricity in poorer countries is expected to more than double in the next 10 years.

Speaker 2 And you can close the locker room doors. That's it.

Speaker 99 I'm sorry, close the.

Speaker 45 I'm screwing it up. Where is it? Locker room doors?

Speaker 2 I don't think we have a locker room.

Speaker 2 No, I said, I'm saying that this is the first time.

Speaker 66 Oh, the clip list is over.

Speaker 41 Woo, thank you.

Speaker 138 I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda.

Speaker 53 Imagine all the people who could do that.

Speaker 195 Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.

Speaker 195 Yeah,

Speaker 41 on no agenda

Speaker 27 in the morning. Wow, way to bring rack the clip blitz.

Speaker 91 Haven't had one of those in a long time.

Speaker 63 Those of you who stuck with us this long are joyous, of course.

Speaker 84 And right now, we are waiting for the tip of the day.

Speaker 54 We've got the end of show mixes.

Speaker 10 We have some meetup reports.

Speaker 84 We've got birthdays, nights, PhDs.

Speaker 224 And John is now going to thank the rest of our supporters, value for value, who supported us $50 or more.

Speaker 2 Right at the top of the list is Dame Rita once again, and from Sparks, Nevada, 12345.

Speaker 2 She says, ITM. Christopher Ebert in Spartanburg, South Carolina, 10535.
Greg Marshall in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 100.

Speaker 2 David Van Denbrand

Speaker 2 in Turnard.

Speaker 47 Turnhout.

Speaker 26 Oh, Ternard. I'm sorry.
Turnard.

Speaker 53 Yes, turnart.

Speaker 53 Ternard. Yeah.

Speaker 2 Happy birthday to me. He writes.

Speaker 2 Happy birthday to me. Jew money.

Speaker 108 This is

Speaker 27 we got some Jew money.

Speaker 163 There it is.

Speaker 2 We got some Jew money finally.

Speaker 220 Thanks, brother. Jew money.

Speaker 2 And then he has a little comment for you in Dutch.

Speaker 38 Well, it's his birthday.

Speaker 23 Morg weer and yacht cheerbay, and for Julie.

Speaker 220 Oh, stop roofers.

Speaker 216 And for Yuli, what extra um der the Telkanswer looked um smile of man face to Kreich.

Speaker 4 All right, thank you.

Speaker 2 Harry Clan in Alido, Texas, a hundred dollars. Sir Uncle Cave Bear in Millborough, Virginia, a hundred dollars.

Speaker 2 This is from the Witten family reunion.

Speaker 2 Kevin McLaughlin, there he is in Concord, North Carolina. He is the Archduke of Luna lover, American lover of boobs.

Speaker 2 As

Speaker 2 this is a 1772 donation, 8008.

Speaker 2 Sir Alex in Kiley, Texas.

Speaker 66 Kyle.

Speaker 4 Kyle, Kyle.

Speaker 2 7061. He's got a long note.
This is some sort of a nighting or something. That means we have to read it.

Speaker 68 I will read it right away.

Speaker 23 In the morning, gents, I'm making the $67 donation for the 67 days our daughter spent in the NICU.

Speaker 92 Is this Alex Savala?

Speaker 36 Yes, Sir Alex.

Speaker 25 And I want to launch the Father's Day NICU Dad Donation Challenge.

Speaker 23 I challenge all Noah Genda NICU Dads to donate this Father's Day in honor of the number of days your baby spent in the NICU.

Speaker 140 That's the natal intensive care unit.

Speaker 96 Also, be sure to check out the nicku dad.com, which is a great podcast.

Speaker 91 Join the NICU Dad Push-Up Challenge to help raise awareness about NICU Dad mental health.

Speaker 10 Thanks again for all the support. Can I get some goat karma?

Speaker 21 And I love my truck.

Speaker 20 I was also made a baron a few weeks back, but I wanted to use this donation to request a name change.

Speaker 147 Can I be dubbed Baron Zavala, Guardian of the NICU, and champion of the NICU Dads?

Speaker 136 Of course.

Speaker 216 Thanks for all you do, and a special thanks to you, Adam and Tina, for your support.

Speaker 63 We're so grateful.

Speaker 147 If you are a NICU Dad or no one, check out thenickyudad.com and the NICU Dad on all our social media platforms.

Speaker 229 And thanks again.

Speaker 155 And

Speaker 26 yes, I'll give them some goat Karma if you do the truck.

Speaker 148 Hit it. Well, you do the truck first.
Well, I do the truck first. I love my truck and I love what I do.

Speaker 242 There you go. You've got

Speaker 243 karma.

Speaker 41 Sir Alex. Here's another note I want to read.

Speaker 53 Oh, do I have this one?

Speaker 2 Yeah, you do. It's on the PDF.

Speaker 2 Okay. This is from Todd Grubb.
He's in Imlay City, Michigan, and came with $69.33, but in fact, this is nighting. He's gotten up to $2,000.
This is

Speaker 2 KPAC chiropractic.

Speaker 211 He says, we started listening to the show at the early part of COVID kicked in the mouth by some douchebag on Twitter. This donation puts me over $2,000 in donation, Completed

Speaker 225 two $20 month dollar, $50 knighthood layaways via PayPal.

Speaker 15 Some are under, okay, he has all these different names.

Speaker 23 This does note does not need to be read,

Speaker 53 but he doesn't want to be deduced.

Speaker 10 And he'll be knighted, Sir Todd, Knight of Cows and Pigs and Chickens.

Speaker 26 And he would like to gift his wife a damehood for their 20th anniversary.

Speaker 22 And they never had a fight.

Speaker 28 She would be Dame Josepha, Dame It All to Hell, Montreal Brisket and Seagram's

Speaker 166 very own at the roundtable, and she would like Gigolos and Blow.

Speaker 59 Okay,

Speaker 90 please get the Gigolos and Blow.

Speaker 30 Is she on the list?

Speaker 144 I believe so.

Speaker 2 I don't think so.

Speaker 163 I'm looking at the list.

Speaker 68 Yeah, we do.

Speaker 53 We have a dame. We have a dame.

Speaker 45 Joseph Grubb.

Speaker 23 Jane Josefina, Dame It All to Hell.

Speaker 2 Oh, I oh, I said I look at it the wrong way.

Speaker 196 Oh, say, yeah, of course. Yep, yep, yep, of course.

Speaker 48 James rarely makes a mistake. No, rarely, which is

Speaker 220 good. Jay does not make mistakes.

Speaker 2 Okay, onward with Chad Hewitt in Folsom, California, 6640.

Speaker 2 Jason Shepard in Trinidad, Colorado, 6006. Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona, 6006.
Matt Lambert in Fuque Verina, North Carolina, 5272.

Speaker 2 Hakon Andreessen in Portland, Oregon, 5272. Commodore

Speaker 89 G in Cincinnati, 5167.

Speaker 30 Poalo Pa Paulo Paolo. Paolo.

Speaker 2 Paulo Moore in Fort Washington, Maryland, 51.50.

Speaker 2 And he says, 51.50, Cali is crazy.

Speaker 196 Referring to Southern California.

Speaker 121 And there they are.

Speaker 2 Bad idea supply. Look him up on Google.
For all your burning needs. literally.
50, 50.

Speaker 2 Sir Economic Hitman in Tomball, Texas, 50.01. And now we have $50 donor starting with William Spain in Springdale, Arkansas.
Renee

Speaker 2 Kniger. Knig

Speaker 2 in Altra.

Speaker 75 Utrecht.

Speaker 2 Ustrecht.

Speaker 2 Netherlands. 50.
Roderick Brown in Mermaid

Speaker 2 someplace in Canada.

Speaker 29 P.E.

Speaker 2 What could that be? Don't know. Putain.
Stephen Schumach in Xenia, Ohio.

Speaker 2 Matthew

Speaker 2 Bush in Maple Valley, Washington. This is a happy Father's Day to the best dad and husband.
We could get those Father's Day. Yes.

Speaker 2 Get those Father's Day mentions in the next show, the next donation segment.

Speaker 2 Next show on Sunday, Father's Day. Don't forget.
Remember. Andrew Grasso, Mineola, New York.

Speaker 2 Tom Delvecchio in Blandin, Pennsylvania. Mike Moon in Athens, Georgia.
Gary Mao in Woodland Hills, California. And last on our, that's actually a pretty short list today, Ethan Reitz.

Speaker 2 Reitz, I believe, in New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. And he's got a biblical thing to go to.
Corinthians 15, 1-4 and Romans 3.20, 3, 23,

Speaker 2 26. Okay.
And it's go look him up.

Speaker 229 Yes, Tim Delvecchio.

Speaker 220 And yes, it's 1 Corinthians 15, 4, 1 to 4.

Speaker 84 Thank you all very much to these donors, $50 and above.

Speaker 148 We love your support.

Speaker 20 We do not do anything under $50.

Speaker 23 The guarantee anonymity, we don't want to screw anything up, so we just stop it right there.

Speaker 20 But we see you $49.99.

Speaker 157 We appreciate everybody, every single donation.

Speaker 72 Those smaller amounts really do add up, and we appreciate you helping us out that way as well.

Speaker 52 You can support us for the next episode.

Speaker 73 As John said, it is Father's Day, so consider a Father's Day donation for your dad or for your husband, who's a great dad.

Speaker 20 Go to noagendadonations.com. You can make any kind of donation you want there.

Speaker 17 There's some suggestions. You can also just set up a sustaining donation.

Speaker 107 Any amount, any frequency, it's all up to you.

Speaker 7 Thank you again for supporting the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 7 It's a birthday birthday.

Speaker 244 And while we had no birthdays on the last show, we have a couple this today. We have Mitchell Reeves wishing his wife Sierra Reeves a very happy 33rd, and she celebrates today.

Speaker 12 Mom, Dad, Cullen, and Rune, say happy birthday to Nora.

Speaker 79 She turns eight tomorrow.

Speaker 40 Al Kelcoff, his smoking hot wife, Barbara, boy, does he love her?

Speaker 244 She celebrates tomorrow.

Speaker 107 And we got David von den Brand, and he celebrated today his birthday, and he sent us some Jew money. Well, thank you very much.

Speaker 7 Happy birthday for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 7 Title changes. Turn and face the slaves.

Speaker 7 Don't want to be too strange.

Speaker 252 Yes, indeed. We just heard him.

Speaker 138 Sir Alex Savala now becomes a baron.

Speaker 7 He's moving up in the peerage at no agenda.

Speaker 91 He is Baron Savala, guardian of the NICU and champion of the NICU dads.

Speaker 28 And that is definitely worth looking into because, you know,

Speaker 91 NICU dads, when you're kids

Speaker 30 in the ICU, dads have all kinds of different different challenges and they can support each other and he's doing great work on that and we appreciate all he does and we appreciate him supporting us and we have two PhDs to celebrate Barbara Kelkoff and Richard Hollow both have become PhDs of No Agenda what exactly is this PhD is this the medium media deconstruction is that what the PhD is a rerun of the media deconstruction PhD that's beautiful product yeah I got some you have one I have one and someone sent me a picture of theirs on their wall and they love it a lot it's good go to noagendarings.com That's where you can let us know, Barbara and Richard, where you want us to send your certificates and what you want on it.

Speaker 20 And of course, everybody can take a look there

Speaker 34 at the PhD certificates and also the knight rings and dame rings.

Speaker 84 And we do have a couple of...

Speaker 17 knights and a dame.

Speaker 71 We have Troy Thunderberg, who is a layaway knight, and I have a note here.

Speaker 147 He says, I would like to be Sir Thunder of the Bitterroot Valley.

Speaker 142 Thank you for the consistent and articulate deconstruction.

Speaker 20 For good measure, please throw in some baby-making karma as we try for our second human resource, says Troy Funderberg.

Speaker 43 I will

Speaker 91 see, I will get that ready for you so we can roll that out for you in a little bit.

Speaker 26 But first, why don't we bring them all up?

Speaker 20 And if you can give me a blade to work with you,

Speaker 38 that's very good.

Speaker 83 Please, the following people join us here

Speaker 7 on the podium for the No Agenda Knights and Dames. We need Troy Thunderberg we need Drew McArdle and Todd Grubb

Speaker 7 all three of you gentlemen are now knights of the No Agenda Roundtable and if you don't mind I'd like to call up Josephina Grubb Josephina you are now a dame of the No Agenda Roundtable I pronounce the Kate the Sir Thunder of the Bitterroot Valley Sir Droodel on a noodle protector of the red stick and Laffy Taffy Sir Todd Knight of cows and pigs and chickens

Speaker 4 and Dame Joseph, Dame at All to Hell, who wanted Gigolos and Blow.

Speaker 91 And along with that, we got some Montreal biscuits and seagroms.

Speaker 145 Man, I ran out of time because we also have mutton and meat at every single round table for our knights and dames.

Speaker 8 The list is ever-growing.

Speaker 84 We have enough chairs for everybody.

Speaker 97 We thank you so much for supporting the show.

Speaker 107 Go to noagenda rings.com.

Speaker 211 Look at those handsome rings.

Speaker 10 They're signet rings, so you can use them to seal your important correspondence.

Speaker 142 We give you some sticks of wax to do that with, multicolored.

Speaker 92 And as always, a certificate of authenticity.

Speaker 20 and our gratitude and thanks for supporting No Agenda.

Speaker 178 No agenda beyond.

Speaker 178 Yeah, baby, yeah, baby, yeah, baby.

Speaker 60 John's tip of the day is on the way, but first we have a couple of meetup reports.

Speaker 28 The first is from Kodiak, I believe it's in Alaska.

Speaker 252 In the morning, this is Sir Uncle Cave Bear, the washed-up artist, reporting live from the Wooden Family Reunion slash No Agenda meetup here in Kodiak, Alaska.

Speaker 52 We'd all like to thank you, John and Adam, for your courage.

Speaker 59 Oh my gosh, listen to that horn!

Speaker 202 Don't eat me, Bojiden!

Speaker 78 Chemtrails

Speaker 4 in the morning!

Speaker 28 All right, Kodiak, nice.

Speaker 17 Now we move to the fourth annual Louisiana Crawfish Broil No Agenda Meetup Report.

Speaker 212 This is Dame Mary Moon introducing the fourth annual Louisiana Crawfish Broil.

Speaker 23 Sir Juklaw here, ready to go shoot my noodle gun.

Speaker 128 Dame Tracy of the Roman Rite, they're eating the crawfish.

Speaker 158 David from Baton Rouge in the morning.

Speaker 212 Tess, guest of Dame Tracy, no agenda, virgin.

Speaker 2 Sir Kay and Break, enjoying the crawfish and fisting my nuts.

Speaker 232 No, nut fisting.

Speaker 78 This is Tyler in the morning.

Speaker 170 Mitch, enjoying Sir Night, the nuts, and the virgin.

Speaker 202 We want to see y'all next year on the bayou eating some crawlfish.

Speaker 128 This is Brian in the morning.

Speaker 2 Hey, John, you're a scoundrel.

Speaker 252 Thank you for your courage.

Speaker 209 Isaac from Lafayette, ITM, a listener from the Daily Source Code Days, and this is my first meetup.

Speaker 19 Awesome.

Speaker 59 Great time.

Speaker 101 Aaron from Lafayette, Louisiana, also my first meeting, ITM.

Speaker 53 And this is Not A Douche Drew, soon to be Sir Droodle on a Noodle.

Speaker 13 In the morning, let's feed some blind goats.

Speaker 41 Why are you rapping?

Speaker 4 All right. Shut up.

Speaker 48 Nice production.

Speaker 91 Thank you very much.

Speaker 17 Meetups taking place today.

Speaker 20 The Northern Wake Freedom Summer Slam-O-Wamo kicks off at 6 o'clock in Raleigh, North Carolina at Hoppy Endings.

Speaker 10 Tomorrow, Calling All Gitmo Nordics Ursun meetup.

Speaker 84 Yes, this is the big Cobenhaven Denmark at Micheler's Boghavan Geffen.

Speaker 166 You better be there.

Speaker 15 Paul Pietemann is organizing that, and I want a meetup report.

Speaker 148 Include your servers, please.

Speaker 20 On Saturday, the Lasers Waart picnic.

Speaker 91 That is the beach next to the marina in the old town of Kullenborg in the Netherlands.

Speaker 27 Sir Hendrik.

Speaker 47 Is Sir Hendrik back on his feet again?

Speaker 83 I hope so.

Speaker 36 That's awesome.

Speaker 51 Saturday, the Treasure Valley meetup, three o'clock in Eagle, Idaho, old state saloon.

Speaker 216 Saturday, as well, downtown New York City, three o'clock, the Six Point Brewery at Brookfield Place, New York, New York.

Speaker 138 Joe NY33 organizing.

Speaker 23 Those guys always have a big group.

Speaker 38 Include your server.

Speaker 228 I want to hear all about it.

Speaker 84 As we heard earlier, the Dog Patch San Francisco Summer Meetup kicks off on Saturday at 3:30 at Dog Patch Saloon in San Francisco.

Speaker 23 The Duke of San Francisco hosting that.

Speaker 28 The Comox Valley Meetup, 5 o'clock, Church Street Tap House in Comox, British Columbia.

Speaker 197 That's on Saturday.

Speaker 17 And also on Saturday, trains, trains, and more trains.

Speaker 84 No spooks allowed.

Speaker 26 7:30 in Davenport, Iowa at Mickey's Irish Pub.

Speaker 160 Be there or be lame.

Speaker 28 Coming up, international meetups.

Speaker 53 The 17th of June, Cannes, France.

Speaker 95 We have,

Speaker 90 let's see, was that the only international one?

Speaker 53 The 19th?

Speaker 34 Oh, it was in September.

Speaker 141 Hey, there's a lot of meetups.

Speaker 17 There's always tons of meetups, always one in the neighborhood.

Speaker 91 You can find them at noagendametups.com.

Speaker 142 Go there, take a look at the lineup.

Speaker 138 If you can't find a meetup near you, don't panic.

Speaker 28 It's just like a TED Talk, only without douchebags.

Speaker 148 Start one yourself.

Speaker 138 Noagendametups.com.

Speaker 174 Always a party. Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.

Speaker 174 You to be where you won't be, triggered all hell.

Speaker 174 You wanna be where everybody feels the same.

Speaker 174 It's like a party.

Speaker 147 And as requested, I never forget a baby-making karma for our new night.

Speaker 242 You've got

Speaker 243 karma.

Speaker 157 And at this point in the show is where we always like to select our ISO for the end of the show.

Speaker 1 Bad news.

Speaker 79 I do not have a single ISO lined up for today.

Speaker 2 I have one good one

Speaker 2 that I was going to

Speaker 2 pull if you didn't have a good one.

Speaker 71 Well, you nailed it.

Speaker 38 Holy crap. What a great show.

Speaker 50 Indeed.

Speaker 83 AI to the rescue.

Speaker 7 You're going to get sued for that prompt, Dvorak.

Speaker 138 I'm telling you.

Speaker 7 But first, before the lawsuit, it's time for John's tip of the day.

Speaker 7 Great master you and me just the tip with j c d

Speaker 7 and sometimes atom created by dana bernetti

Speaker 2 all right this is uh some utilities and also just a great uh nerdy website there's a there's a uh

Speaker 2 i would call him a meta tech meta nerd that is just a fabulous character his name is chris titus he does a lot of videos and and he's like if you're getting into Linux,

Speaker 2 you want to go to his website, christtitis.com.

Speaker 2 But if you want the absolute most amazing

Speaker 2 Windows utilities, he also developed a system called WinUtils. And

Speaker 2 you get to it because you can't actually download it.

Speaker 2 It runs kind of in the cloud, his cloud.

Speaker 53 Is it running on Google Cloud?

Speaker 121 No, I don't know.

Speaker 41 It will be all working.

Speaker 2 I doubt it, to be honest about it.

Speaker 2 But the website you want is WinUTIL, W-I-N-U-T-I-L dot

Speaker 2 Chris Titus. That's C-H-R-I-S-T-I-T-U-S dot com.

Speaker 2 WinUTIL. And this thing runs only

Speaker 2 you have to load it from the you have to load it from the Windows admin PowerShell.

Speaker 28 What could possibly go wrong?

Speaker 2 Which takes over your whole machine. Yeah.

Speaker 2 but you have to get it but he got rules how to get there and what to cut and paste and throw it in there once you load this thing it's astonishing what the it's got every known utility that you can imagine all free utilities that are available for windows in one tab another tab's got this huge pile of checklists to optimize your system so it runs better It's one thing after another.

Speaker 2 This guy's, this win util product is unbelievable.

Speaker 53 Wow.

Speaker 22 That's an endorsement coming from you, the man who wrote the telecommunications book for Windows.

Speaker 2 And I will mention this. If you're thinking about Linux, and you just go to his regular website, he is a fanatic about Arch Linux.

Speaker 68 Yeah.

Speaker 2 And to the point where he says he's been trying to break it for over a year, he says it's impossible. And he's got tutorials and all kinds of things.

Speaker 2 He's just the guy. And And it surprises me that he's not more well-known.

Speaker 61 That is.

Speaker 157 Now, you said it was amazing, didn't you?

Speaker 144 You said it was just an amazing product.

Speaker 2 Yes, I said amazing. Oh, my God.
That is amazing.

Speaker 7 That is an endorsement.

Speaker 40 You can't pass up more at johnstipoftheday.net.

Speaker 40 Great master, you and me.

Speaker 4 Just the chip with JCD.

Speaker 4 And sometimes Adam.

Speaker 48 Created by Dana Brunetti. And of course, thank you to Dana Brunetti.

Speaker 91 Where would we be without Dana Brunetti?

Speaker 92 I would just be up Schitt's Creek without a paddle.

Speaker 42 And that is

Speaker 109 the end of our broadcast day.

Speaker 26 That's it for our deconstruction for this episode of No Agenda 1772.

Speaker 197 But it'll just be three days wait and we'll be back with 1773 and it is Father's Day.

Speaker 53 So make sure you thank your dad, thank your husband, thank that important dad in your life.

Speaker 20 You can do it with a nice note at noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 23 Ending our show, as usual, we will have a couple of end-of-show mixes.

Speaker 50 Deez Laughs comes in from Toronto.

Speaker 15 Tom Starkweather with some nice little LA protest diddies.

Speaker 53 And Nautilus K is back with another end of show mix, all fresh, all new, all for you.

Speaker 138 And up next, after we leave the airwaves, it is That Larry Show, episode 489.

Speaker 89 Larry with the deep voice.

Speaker 84 He's the man to watch.

Speaker 119 In the meantime, I will say thank you very much for listening and coming to you from the heart of the Texas Mill Country here in Fredericksburg.

Speaker 50 In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 2 And from northern Silicon Valley, where it looks like Saturday is going to be a winner. I'm John C.
Dvorak.

Speaker 50 We return on Sunday.

Speaker 244 Meet us there and remember us at noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 53 Until then, adios, spofos, a hooey-hooey, and such.

Speaker 2 These automated systems are so lame.

Speaker 61 It's like

Speaker 2 you can't afford some dollar an hour person in India. I mean, you can barely speak English.
That would be better than this.

Speaker 53 Yeah, the true AI.

Speaker 26 Anonymous Indian.

Speaker 41 That's what we need.

Speaker 253 What a sight to see, such a fractured society.

Speaker 254 When people mindlessly subscribe and see,

Speaker 2 then they make up their own version of reality.

Speaker 254 Take a look at Wall Street. Are we in trouble?

Speaker 253 Nvidia and AI, there's a huge bubble.

Speaker 254 Oracle's Larry Ellison is sounding stubborn, but Elon saying we don't have a half a trillion. We're in trouble.

Speaker 253 Anonymous Indians, AI, and so many pots and schemes. Nightmares don't hit the same when you're living out this Euro Druke.

Speaker 176 Abnormal dreams, being pitched to solve all of our

Speaker 254 Monday manual human tasks.

Speaker 255 Is in the chat box, can it even sort emails?

Speaker 254 Don't even ask, H1D is not for me.

Speaker 253 You see, clarified by a big pharma.

Speaker 254 Always wanna harm ya, now he's trying to charm ya.

Speaker 253 He's got the love of a vape the snake. Grandma Swami did a job leading up to the campaign.

Speaker 254 Bringing in the best talent was for our game.

Speaker 109 Can you remove the state?

Speaker 254 Taking 10% off the top now, draining the brain. Every country should make its own citizens.

Speaker 2 It's number one priority.

Speaker 253 Not just because you check a box as a visible minority.

Speaker 254 Culture is passionate in the city of the six. Many faces to a city, more than six.

Speaker 253 People coming from all over the world to get a fix. Funny undefeated.
This is not a tricks.

Speaker 4 Now is the time.

Speaker 15 This is an exit strategy for you and for you only, and I would support it.

Speaker 81 You need to become the tech rouch again.

Speaker 28 Once you're the tech rouch, everybody will want to interview you and then you, of course, you got to sleep around that outfit all over the place and you got to keep the voice going.

Speaker 41 iPhone SmyPhone. I got a Bakelite phone.

Speaker 195 It's fine.

Speaker 74 People will love you.

Speaker 43 They will glom onto the tech router.

Speaker 176 I'm getting the green screen this week.

Speaker 170 Maybe we are part of a national experiment to determine how far the federal government can go.

Speaker 256 Tuesday's demonstrations were largely peaceful. Two men are in custody, accused of throwing molots off cocktails.

Speaker 9 At long we're seeing protests pop up in other cities across the National Guard troops already have detained civilians and the LA anti-ICE protests.

Speaker 49 First of all, we want to make sure that what has happened in California does not happen in Texas.

Speaker 41 We're coming after all these people.

Speaker 4 Our community must be kept safe for peaceful protests and against thugs and criminals looking to start trouble.

Speaker 2 The Trump administration is signaling it will not back down.

Speaker 190 The Pentagon's deploying nearly 700 Marines to Southern California to help the National Guard respond to immigration protests that turned into clashes with authorities over the last few days.

Speaker 128 The U.S.

Speaker 172 Marines and National Guard are on standby outside of Los Angeles, where demonstrators have again been protesting President Donald Trump's immigration policies.

Speaker 257 There is a heavy amount of police officers that are scattered, not only in this area, but on the parks that are in the outskirts of this area, preparing for any number of

Speaker 257 demonstrations and protesters that make their way here.

Speaker 2 Hellio, movie about aliens.

Speaker 13 Don't tell Trump we'll send the green berets in, too, bud.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 If someone asks me for a blurb for their book, I don't care how crappy the book is, I'll give them a blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 I need more blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 If someone asks me for a blurb for their book,

Speaker 13 I don't care how crappy the book is, I'll give them a blurb.

Speaker 13 I need more blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 Will you write a blurb about my book,

Speaker 13 regardless of what it is? Yeah.

Speaker 13 Jesus was a badass outlaw. A fascinating read by Adam Curry.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 I need more blurb.

Speaker 13 I need more blurb.

Speaker 13 Jesus was a badass outlaw. Give me your blurb.
Go.

Speaker 13 Just write the blurb.

Speaker 13 A fascinating read by Adam Curry.

Speaker 13 Now I just gotta write write the book.

Speaker 13 Jesus was a badass outlaw.

Speaker 13 Mopo Devorak.org slash name.

Speaker 38 Holy crap, what a great show.