1768 - "Queer The Deal"
"Queer The Deal"
Executive Producers:
Sir Onymous of Dogpatch and Lower Slobbovia
Rosie Linkens
Anonymous Blacksheep
Matthew Vandermar
Sir Real & Dame Elizabeth
Cody
Sir Tigger Max
James
Dame Girl Kyle & Sir Jackie Greene
Brian McIver
Associate Executive Producers:
Bonnie Blankshain
Sean Homan
Rich Fontaine
Eli The Coffee Guy
Linda Lu—Duchess of Jobs & Writer of Resumes
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Title Changes
Sir Kevin Smith > Baron Kevin Smith
Knights & Dames
Paul Linkens > Sir Paul Linkens
End of Show Mixes: Bill Mountney - Nautilus K - Sound Guy Steve
Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry
Mark van Dijk - Systems Master
Ryan Bemrose - Program Director
Back Office Jae Dvorak
Chapters: Dreb Scott
Clip Custodian: Neal Jones
Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman
NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda
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Transcript
Oh my god, this is terrific.
Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak.
Next Thursday, May 29th, 2025.
This is your award-winning Kid One Nation Media Assassination episode 1768.
This is no agenda.
And we have a winner.
And we're broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA, region number 16.
Good morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're wishing John F.
Kennedy a happy birthday.
He'd be a Spry 108.
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
It's Crackbot and Buzzkill in the morning.
A Spry 108, really.
Hey, we have a winner.
We have a new champion.
And for the first time in a long time, he's Japanese.
Hold on.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
A new champion.
Yes.
Come on, man.
This is your.
This is beat.
Sumo?
Yes.
He's not, he's won.
This, I think, is his fifth tournament.
He's won so many times Ono Sato.
Yeah.
That they're going to boost him to Yakazuna the fastest in history.
But it was always Mongolians who won.
No, no.
There's been a couple of Mongolians recently, but Japanese are more traditionally the winners because there's more of them.
Well,
I'm just looking at the AP reports.
You're telling me AP is wrong?
Yeah.
According to AP,
the big news is Japanese because for years, it says, doesn't say how many years, for years, the winner has been Mongolians.
Yeah, for years, four years
to be exact.
Well, there you go.
Four years.
I nailed it.
There's been a number of there's been because Terra Nafuji and now this other guy, Hoshroror, whose name I can't pronounce,
have been Yakozuna's, and they're both Mongolians.
There's a bunch of Mongolis.
Now there's two Ukrainian guys, and one of them is really good.
Keep them
out of the sport.
Keep them out.
Fat white guys.
It's about time.
Get those big fat white guys out of the sport, man.
That's no good.
So,
wow.
We had forgotten how powerful the rainsticks really are.
We got a rainstick ricochet here in Texas after we shook it for the Dutch.
Yeah, Mimi was telling me about it.
She's following the news on following her favorite weather guy.
Max.
Max Velocity.
Max Velocity.
So she was like, plug him again, plug him again.
She begs me.
Really?
He's a dweeb.
He's a whole dweeb.
He's a dweeb.
So we come home from Nashville.
What was it?
Monday, Monday afternoon.
And we knew there were some storms brewing, you know, so it's okay.
And so we come home and we
open the suitcases, unpack, and then we we said, let's go get some dinner.
So now it's about 5.30.
We go to the Chinese place, which I discovered only a couple months ago.
Been here for 14 years.
We independent business.
Okay.
And then we're in the restaurant.
Everybody's, except mine.
Everybody's phone goes off with an emergency warning.
It's kind of interesting to see it all happen or to hear it all happen in the restaurant.
So you're in a restaurant and a bunch of phones went off.
Everybody's phone.
Beep, beep, bree, breep, bree, bree.
And Antina's like, should we get it to go?
I'm like, no,
it's, I look out the window.
It's not even raining yet.
So we finish our food, take our time.
I have my Sapporo beer.
We go home.
And Phoebe is already looking a little like, hmm.
So we put the thunder shirt on her, and she just sits there, but she's looking out the back and she's just staring.
And there's this big, ominous ominous cloud.
Oh, yeah.
At this point, Mimi texts me.
Mimi never texts me for anything.
In fact, I think if something happened to you, she wouldn't text me.
She sent me an email.
Something wrong with John.
And she's like, storm coming your way.
Max Velocity.
He's always right.
She's got to get to work on another book.
Too muchvelocity.com.
So I turn on the YouTubes and I see max velocity.
And wow,
this is pretty big.
And then it starts.
Golf ball-sized hail just pelting the house.
I mean, we have a small, like, I call it a cocktail pool.
You can basically stand everywhere and drink.
It's like meteorites coming down to this thing.
And they're all, and we have a lot of glass in the back.
So they're all bouncing off the, off the tiles and against the windows.
Phoebe was just sitting there like, I got my thundershirt on.
I'm good.
Tina was nervous.
It was, it was
nervous about the windows breaking.
Oh, yeah, it could happen.
Did you see that one,
that one hailstone that was the size of a soccer ball
way up north in Texas?
Mm-hmm.
It was the size of a soccer ball.
So then,
what,
you know, after the hailstorm, we have these,
you know, lounges, the shaze lounges outside by the pool.
The fabric is completely penetrated with like winkle hook tears, just holes in it.
Just bam, bam.
All these hailstones just rip right through the fabric.
That's that's some max velocity right there.
That's some violence.
Yes.
Now,
the next thing.
Did you go outside to experience it?
Put a hard hat on and
head out.
Hell no.
I would have.
No, I don't have a hard hat.
It would, John.
It was like, no.
He was like, yeah.
And, of course, we have a metal roof, which changes.
You don't have a hard hat?
I do not.
You know, I need a hard hat.
I think this should be part of my.
We should have two in the go bag, just in case.
You should have a couple of hard hats that have the no-agenda sticker right in the front.
Yes, yes.
I'm looking for those.
So the next morning, it starts at 6 a.m.
Text messages, phone calls, guys at the door.
You know what they were?
A Bible salesman.
No.
Roof damage.
I'm sure, yeah, I see.
You have a dent in your gutter.
Well, roof because
this is
insurance stuff.
So they all know that, they all know the insurance will pay for it.
Now, never mind that if I say, go, oh, I'm going to get a $30,000 roof job, I'll probably get kicked off my insurance.
Then we did not have any damage.
Yeah, one gutter had a little dent in it.
I'm okay.
But it was amazing.
They were rolling up one after another.
You know, just right up there.
Hey, you know, I'm here.
You know, you could have damaged it.
That's interesting.
Yeah, there'd be an infrastructure for that because you do have that type of weather does happen in Texas a lot.
Yep.
And so you would develop an infrastructure for just that, just that purpose.
And that's pretty cool.
And they must have voter rolls or something because how do they get my, and they're all texting from 830, which is our local area code.
Now, I have a 650 number, so it's not like they were just spamming 630 numbers.
They had me.
They know I live here.
They have my number, and they just.
You should have done some research and found out how they had your number.
I was so annoyed, to be honest, by everybody.
Oh, you missed me out because this is valuable information.
Yeah.
It may be something we could use to market the show.
Oh, yeah.
I'm sure you can buy a list.
Conspiracy is a very important thing.
Well,
I can buy a list, but it sounds to me as though there's some pretty good lists out there.
Well, this was a pretty good list.
So anyway, I learned my lesson once.
It did rain in Holland, by the way.
So the rainstick did work, but man, the ricochet effect was just too crazy.
Yeah, I was against it.
We literally had storm chasers.
going up and down Main Street of Fredericksburg.
I've never seen that before.
We're here in Fredericksburg and we're on Main street and it's coming down pretty bad.
And max velocity is there.
Max Velocity is checking everything out.
Whoa, meep, meet, meep.
We have another touchdown.
I've got a tornado warning.
Meep, meep, meep.
Oh.
I don't think anything actually touched down, but that it does freak people out.
Yeah, sure it does.
It freaks people out.
I mean, the hailstorm is one thing, but having your roof ripped off is another thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so last night,
we we got
an email from Steve and Stephanie.
He said, hey,
we're coming through Texas.
I'm doing a show with Lyle
and would love to take you guys out to dinner.
Who's Steve and Stephanie?
Exactly.
We met them.
Wow, well, I walked right into that one.
Yeah.
So he said, hey, Jack Steakhouse.
He wanted to go to Steakhouse?
Jack Steakhouse.
Steve and Stephanie, we met them at the Vegas Super Spreader event back in, I think it was 2021.
Oh.
During, remember it was, you know, everything was locked down.
We were all, yeah, I remember that.
We were all outside.
No one had a mask on.
No one got sick.
And at this particular meetup is where we learned from the ventilation trainers, the vent machine trainers.
who have a facility in Vegas.
We learned from them that, oh man, you know, we're killing people.
This protocol they're doing on people is wrong.
So this is how valuable the No Agenda producers are
and
going to meetups.
But there were a lot of interesting people at that meetup.
Steve is a sound mixer, front of house for bands, and he's currently touring with Lyle Lovett.
And Stephanie, for 27 years, I think, or 23 years, has been the head chief technical director for Cirque de Soleil.
And these people have interesting jobs.
And so this.
That's a pretty cool gig.
Oh, yeah.
And she does all the
you call it Cirque.
You don't say Cirque.
Cirque.
Cirque.
Yes.
It's gotten pretty lewd, by the way, recently.
I don't ask her about that.
I don't think she cares.
She loves her job.
She loves her.
Why?
Is the audience demanding more lewd?
Without asking, without asking her, I'd say probably.
And with the knowledge that Vegas shows are down at least 25% in attendance.
She says shows are closing, so you have to have more of a draw to bring people in.
Vegas is down.
Vegas is not doing well.
She says it's all sports now.
All the entertainment is sports, and Formula One ruins it for everybody.
Of course, it's great for hotels, but
it's a street race.
So there are restaurants that have been in business for 40 years, and
so people can't get to their restaurant.
The street's all torn torn up, it takes, you know, two weeks for them to clean everything up, they're going out of business.
So, thanks, Europeans,
for ruining everything.
But that's not why I bring them up.
Um,
uh, so uh, Steve says, you know, I'm so, I'm still so mad at myself
because
I needed to go to work and I got the vax.
He said, I got the J and J.
I say, whew.
Well, that's if you're going to have one, that's the one you want, because at least it's not an mRNA product.
And, and, and Stephanie didn't get one, but she had to fill out a million forms and wear 15 masks and a hijib and God knows what else.
Get tested every week.
Get tested every exactly.
And he says, but I can tell you, seven people,
not just someone I know, but people I know personally
have died from this vax.
Seven.
I found that to be a disturbing number.
We get a lot of notes
from people that have nothing.
Their whole family has got something or other going on that's not good.
No.
And this rolls right into what I would say is probably the main topic of the day on the M5M because they live and die by pharmaceutical advertising.
And
I know you have a couple clips.
I'll just shard us.
Shard us.
Yes, short us.
I'd like to be shardy.
Let me short us off with a little announcement.
Hi, everybody.
I'm Robert F.
Putty Jr., your HHS Secretary, and I'm here today with NIH Director Dr.
Jay Bhattacharya and FDA Commissioner Dr.
Marty McCary.
I couldn't be more pleased to announce that as of today, the COVID vaccine for healthy children and healthy pregnant women has been removed from the CDC recommended immunization schedule.
Last year, the Biden administration urged healthy children to get yet another COVID shot despite the lack of any clinical data to support the repeat booster strategy in children.
That ends today.
It's common sense.
That's good science.
There's no evidence healthy kids need it.
No evidence.
And most countries have stopped recommending it for children.
We're now one step closer to realizing President Trump's promise to make America healthy again.
Well, you would have thought someone dropped a nuclear bomb.
Oh, no, anti-vaxxer.
Wait a minute.
He said we don't recommend it
for healthy young children and pregnant women,
sometimes in the mainstream media referred to as pregnant people for some reason.
And just every single show had all of their doctors on.
well.
We have a couple of, I have a few things here.
I have the PBS, the shameful PBS presentation.
Do you want to do the 3x3 or do you want to go straight to the story?
I think it's now it's time for 3x3.
It is an experiment.
Experiment by JCD.
A long time experiment.
Comparing stories from ABC, CBS, and number 6.
Never-ending 3x3.
Three stories.
three news networks, all the same stories.
All the same stories.
Just to prove a point, I want to thank Steve Jones for, of course, putting these together for me.
Yes, and congratulations.
Steve, congratulations on two years today.
He's celebrating two years, John.
It's good.
We're very pleased and proud of him.
So we're going to start with the,
I'm trying to
go reverse order.
and end with NBC.
Oh, well, boom.
So we're going to start with CBS's
CIA broadcasting system, and this will be
their version of the announcement.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
made the announcement on X.
A COVID vaccine for healthy children and a healthy brethren.
That right there is just them being mad.
On X.
Doesn't even come to
the case anymore.
On X.
It's also, it also
implies Elon nut jobs.
Well,
you got all these
guilt by associations.
You got Trump, you got Elon,
and you have X.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
made the announcement on X.
The COVID vaccine for healthy children and healthy pregnant women has been removed from the CDC recommended immunization schedule.
Typically, the CDC's Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices votes on changes to vaccine schedules and guidelines before the director of the CDC makes a final recommendation to the HHS secretary.
In this case, the committee did not weigh in, instead, flanking Kennedy Today, the heads of the FDA and the NIH.
Last year, the Biden administration urged healthy children to get yet another COVID shot despite the lack of any clinical data to support the repeat booster strategy in children.
That ends today.
It's common sense and it's good science.
There's no evidence healthy kids need it today, and most most countries have stopped recommending it for children.
Until now, the government recommended COVID vaccinations for everyone's.
Isn't that kind of interesting that it's beyond them to just play the whole 47-second statement?
They can't do that.
Wouldn't that be more of a service like we just did to play the 47-second announcement?
Instead, they've got to chop it up and do all of that.
They don't believe it's necessary.
Okay.
There's no evidence healthy kids need it today, and most countries have stopped recommending it for children.
Until now, the government recommended COVID vaccinations for everyone six months and older.
The CDC maintained the vaccine is safe for children and it prevented them from getting seriously sick.
The agency also stressed vaccination is especially important for people at highest risk of severe COVID-19, including pregnant women.
During his confirmation hearing, Kennedy promised not to change vaccine review standards from historical norms.
We're now one step closer to realizing President Trump's promise to make America healthy again.
Oh, good one.
Yes.
That CDC advisory committee was considering removing the COVID-19 vaccine recommendation for children, but one of the members said he was worried what message that would send because there are still thousands of COVID-related hospitalizations and deaths every year.
So I want to point out one thing on that report, and I want want people to look for it in the other reports.
First of all, was the Ron Johnson document that came out from the government.
Yep.
A long report showing that it was causing miscarriages in pregnant women and hurting the fetus.
It was just a dangerous thing to give to pregnant women.
That was not brought up.
Myocarditis in young people was never brought up in any of these reports that I know that I can tell.
It is interesting that I.
I leave it out.
Well, because you played CBS, if you don't mind, I'll just interject your three by three.
CBS Austin,
strangely enough, filed a report about just this.
A groundbreaking news study sounding alarms about the safety of COVID mRNA vaccines, directly challenging claims from public health officials and raising urgent questions about transparency and trust.
So using hard data from disease trends, from patient outcomes, and immune system analysis, multiple research reports show that heart inflammation risks tied to the vaccines may be far greater and maybe even more dangerous than previously reported, particularly among young men.
Joining us now to discuss this as Independent Medical Alliance Senior Fellow of Pediatric Cardiology, Dr.
Kurt Kurt Milholm.
Good morning to you, Doctor.
Welcome to the National News Test.
Great to have you.
Good morning.
Thanks for having me on.
This new study about the safety of COVID mRNA vaccines was published in the International Journal of Cardiovascular Research and Innovation, as I understand it.
Tell us about the scope of this research and really your top findings from it.
So it's a compilation of studies that really have been out there since 2021.
We saw a signal in the vaccine product causing problems, especially in the young adults, especially young males, that was causing cardio inflammation.
And so what we have done is compiled all those different peer-reviewed journals, articles, and data and put them in one place, easily accessible, with 42 pages and 341 references of our concerns that this is a real issue, and these vaccines do little good for healthy children and young adults.
I think everything that the networks did was to obfuscate this news.
This was the groundbreaking news.
Yeah.
Obviously.
And someone's getting to know.
I'm surprised that it was reported anyway.
What you just played was not local.
Yes, local.
Yeah.
It was local at Texas, but I don't think very few markets had it.
At Austin, though.
At the national desk, mind you.
The national news desk.
It is pretty screwy to be in Austin.
So let's go to the next one, which is the old original spin-off of NBC, ABC,
Rachel Scott.
Beautiful.
Tonight, in a significant change to CDC guidelines, Health Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
announcing the department will no longer recommend routine COVID shots for healthy children and pregnant women.
I couldn't be more more pleased to announce that as of today, the COVID vaccine for healthy children and healthy pregnant women has been removed from the CDC recommended immunization schedule.
Kennedy, a noted vaccine skeptic, has questioned whether the COVID-19 vaccine was successful in saving millions.
Noted.
I like that.
Noted vaccine skeptic.
Noted.
Today he was joined by other top health officials.
There's no evidence healthy kids need it today, and most countries have stopped recommending it for children.
But the move was quickly questioned by public health officials, accusing the Trump administration of bypassing the traditional independent review process, including recommendations from medical experts.
We were kind of blindsided by this announcement.
Wait a minute.
Wasn't that guy literally from the Independent Review who was on CBS Austin?
No, he was an independent guy.
He wasn't
talking about this little group that's within CDC.
Yeah, yeah.
He's supposed to run everything past them, and they've been trying to get rid of most of them are you know big pharma guys.
Yes.
Shills.
Bypassing the traditional independent review process, including recommendations from medical experts.
We were kind of blindsided by this announcement.
We were not consulted about this.
Dr.
Sean O'Leary with the American Academy of Pediatrics said and the leading OBGYN association with this dire warning.
It's very clear that COVID-19 infection during pregnancy can be catastrophic.
Tonight, the CDC's website still lists the COVID vaccine as recommended recommended for everyone six months and older including pregnant women doctors saying the new recommendations are unclear and remove a health care choice for families this comes after the deadly measles outbreak across the country most of the cases involving children not
stop it stop the clip back it up How does it remove a healthcare choice?
I was going to wait until the clip was done.
This is the big thing.
They're making it sound, and I can tell you why, but I will do that with clips later.
But it is just saying it's not recommended doesn't remove it from anybody's healthcare choice at all.
No, it's a lie.
Well,
there's an issue behind it.
I think my, by the way, we have dueling clips then because my PBS material coming up
might
address it.
And I'm going to let you go first.
Well, I don't know.
Maybe you should go first.
Well, let's finish the clips.
Women.
Doctors saying the new recommendations are unclear and remove a healthcare choice for families.
This comes after the deadly measles outbreak across the country.
Deadly, most of the time involving children not vaccinated.
Stay in Nebraska, now the 32nd state to report a measles case, a rare breakthrough case in a child who was vaccinated.
So far, more than 1,000 people have been infected with the virus since the start of this year.
Three unvaccinated people, including two children, have died.
That is amazing.
They twist it.
It goes straight from the COVID no longer COVID vaccine no longer recommended to, well, but measles.
Does anything change with the MMR?
I don't believe so.
It's unbelievable.
It's front-running.
They're front-running because they know it's coming.
Ooh, you're using a stock market term.
I like it.
Yeah, it's front-running.
Well, in fact, it is relevant to the stock market because if you're front-running it, you know that pharma stock's going to go down.
So here we go with
the
King Viper at the moment, at least, NBC.
Tonight, Health Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
says the CDC is ending its COVID vaccine recommendation for healthy children and healthy pregnant women.
And Thompson joins us now because how the decision was made is raising some questions.
Lester, there's a lot of confusion tonight.
In a 54-second video, Secretary Kennedy says the vaccine has been removed because of a lack of clinical data to support the booster strategy in healthy children.
But apparently, the decision did not go through the typical CDC review process by outside advisors, which would then make a recommendation to the CDC director.
Right now, there is no director.
So, what does all this mean?
The Affordable Care Act says insurance has to cover CDC-recommended vaccines.
It is unclear tonight if people will have to pay out of their own pockets for their kids' COVID shots.
The CDC's own website does not match what Secretary Kennedy said today, and we've reached out to HHS but have yet to hear back, Lester.
Okay, and thank you.
And there it is.
Because everybody knows that the insurance companies, they don't want to cover anything they don't have to cover.
And
by law, they have to cover anything that is
in the recommended vaccine schedule for children.
And that's what it is.
The pharma companies are seeing their bottom line declining because the insurance companies will likely, no one has come out and said it yet, but they will likely no longer cover it.
And that was the bottom line for every single report.
Exhibit A, CBS, Dr.
John Bapuk.
What could this decision do when it comes to access or even insurance coverage?
Access!
Access!
I don't have access.
Yes, you do.
You have access.
You have access.
Maybe not access being for free, but you have access.
Yeah, well, so that's the big thing.
If the CDC is now recommending it, then insurance coverage could go away.
Right now it's
covered in most cases.
We looked to see what the price difference would be.
For kids, it would be about $57 maybe according to the CDC schedule and maybe about $137 for adults.
So that's not nothing.
That's not nothing if you're trying to get a vaccine and you don't have a ton of money.
Say what?
So if you reverse engineer that,
that number sounds interesting until you reverse engineer it.
It means that the insurance companies are paying over $100 a shot
for every man, child, and woman on their policy plan, which is costing everybody money
for a useless shot.
Let's be honest about it.
But
it's the pharma guys and gals who advertise on these programs.
And so that's where we have to.
And it's going to be even more apparent when you hear the
great clips from PBS.
Hold on.
That's not nothing.
That's not nothing.
Is that proper grammar?
That's not nothing.
It doesn't sound right somehow.
It sounds like a double negative sound.
Something people say.
If you're trying to get a vaccine and you don't have a ton of money.
And
COVID's not nothing.
You're trying to get a vaccine and you have a ton of money.
57 bucks.
Okay.
If you're trying to get a vaccine and you don't have a ton of money,
COVID's not nothing either.
COVID is still something.
I just got my booster.
We'll wait for this.
I got my booster.
I got my booster last week.
Yeah.
Oh, Gail.
Gail.
Extra points for Gail.
She gets a little something in her check today covet's not nothing either covet is still something i just got my booster last week yeah because i am over the age of 65 and i i i don't see the downside to getting the booster right and i and i think that's that's what you want to see wow there's the clip of the day
i don't see the downside
one more time one more time because i am over the age of 65 and i i i don't see the downside to getting the booster right and i and i think that's that's what you want to discuss in an open forum.
And, you know, it's not just getting COVID.
And you can say, well, kids generally do pretty well, but there are issues of long COVID, other issues, complications.
Kids are not immune from having bad outcomes.
So I think I'd like to see the open, transparent discussion.
Yes.
Well, let's go to your PBS clips and remind me I have some NPR buttes as well.
Okay.
So PBS, you know, which is all, turns out that they're getting a lot of money too.
And they have to do a disclaimer by bringing some guy on.
And while we're running these clips, maybe you can run the 1099.
This guy's Rich Besser.
And he's the head of the Robert Woods
Foundation.
It's a private foundation.
You have to look at
the 990PF, which is the private foundation 999.
What's the name of the outfit?
Robert Woods
Something Foundation.
It's very named in the clip.
Oh, okay.
I'm at the ready with my 990 knife Good to go.
Because
this operation,
it's unbelievable.
So let's play the clip one.
The World Health Organization said today that a new COVID variant is causing an uptick in cases around the world.
It says COVID vaccs one.
What am I doing?
Am I doing something?
No, no, no.
I'm just saying this kicker is the real, and the other reports left it out.
There's a new COVID out there.
That's the reason you need the shot.
You scared me.
You scared me.
I thought I was playing the clips out of order.
No, no, I know you're paranoid about it.
No, we're good to go.
All right.
By the way, this report of the new COVID variant, India, Africa, China, it's everywhere.
The reports were just so poorly voiced, I didn't clip them.
Every country that has crappy news voiceovers
is talking about the new COVID.
The World Health Organization said today that a new COVID variant is causing an uptick in cases around the world, and it's been detected in some states here in the U.S.
The COVID vaccine is expected to provide good protection against the variant, but the news comes after Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
announced yesterday that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would drop the COVID vaccines from its list of recommended shots for pregnant women and children.
That decision and other recent changes under Kennedy are leading to major worries and unease among medical and public health groups.
Allie Rogan has more.
Oh, unease.
I'm uneasy about it.
So we have this set up, and they, I think, PBS, of course, this goes on forever because it's a PBS thing.
Yep.
But they got a better setup because first they scare you with the new COVID.
That's right.
Yeah, new COVID.
New COVID.
And
unlike the old COVID.
And somehow, for some unknown reason, the
booster will...
Yeah, it doesn't do anything?
I don't know.
Does the booster?
It's going to kick asses.
No, it's gonna do something.
Oh, oh,
it's gonna be something.
It's gonna kick ass.
It's just it's gonna be yours.
That's the problem.
So here comes
Allie with her report.
Omna, many experts are calling the move unprecedented.
Typically, the CDC makes recommendations about who should be vaccinated and when based on advice from an advisory committee of experts.
But it's unclear if they were consulted before the announcement.
Joining us to discuss the potential impact of this announcement and wider concerns from public health experts is Dr.
Richard Besser, former acting director of the CDC and now CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
And we should note the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is a funder of the NewsHour.
Dr.
Besser, okay, stop.
I have my 990s.
Now,
this is how it's often done.
You have the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
and they get money from the, I'm looking at it right now, from the Robert Wood Johnson Health Network.
Yeah.
So the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which of course is, you know, it's only $3 million in
annual monies,
but they get their money from the Robert Wood Johnson Health Network.
How much do you think they do annually?
Well, I looked up the 990 PF, which is the foundation's 990,
which is 1,400 pages.
Let's just go straight to the bottom line.
They get their money from the Robert Wood Johnson Health Network, whose 2023,
they haven't filed yet, their 2023 gross receipts, $106 million.
So
there's your pharma money.
It's nothing.
If you look at the 990 PF of the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, the 990 PF, the 1400 page thing, this operation has $13 billion in the bank.
Wait a minute.
Let me see.
Oh, yeah, I see it.
Yeah, it's right there.
$13,832,302,736.
No, if you're on that 1,400-page,
if you're on that.
Wait a minute, stop.
$13 billion.
Yeah.
Of which $2.3 billion is invested in the stock market.
This is crazy.
No, they have all their investments listed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's all that's invested in the stock market.
The other $10 billion plus
Sequoia Capital.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Pretty much holding up Sequoia Capital.
Every fund that Sequoia has ever done.
By the way, Richard Bessert, his annual salary for this small, little non-profit,
$1.1 million.
There are five employees that have over a million dollars in salaries.
Yes, it's great.
And the total salary outlay,
take a guess on that one.
Well, I have it.
You had to scrounge around, but that document's too big.
$44 million, I think, something like that.
$90.
Okay, I'm only looking at half of it.
$90 million in salaries.
Well, he's the only guy.
And there is a guy.
Yeah, but he's the guy.
He's the guy you can trust.
He is in your mind.
This is.
Other numbers I have here.
Oh, yeah.
Acting CDC.
Oh, former acting CDC director.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Less than one year.
He was bumped in there and then kicked out.
In and out.
No, kicked out.
It's like, okay, I got my creds.
I know everybody.
I know where the bodies were buried.
If you look at him on LinkedIn,
he's a he-him.
Bunch of posts about how poor George Floyd was murdered.
Ukrainian flag.
Well, they don't let you put flags on LinkedIn.
And where's his origin story from?
What spooky operation hospital is very famous?
Let me guess.
That would be the.
Oh, now I'm blanking on the name.
The guys from the COVID numbers.
Come on.
You're getting there.
Yeah.
The ones who are.
Johns Hopkins.
Johns Hopkins.
There you go.
So he's a Johns Hopkins guy, which is
was he at Event 201 by any chance?
I don't know.
I didn't get that deep into it, but I got a bunch of stuff.
Their grants for 2023 were $543 million
from this $13 billion.
That's beautiful.
The administrative cost is $97.
Yeah.
$97 million.
It goes on and on.
This is a nightmare.
And of course, then they help fund PBS.
And so
PBS is beholding.
Without mentioning any of what I just told you and what you just dug up, without mentioning any of that, PBS is so with -
they're beholden to this guy and his organization.
So they put him on and let him say what he wants.
This is the kind of stuff we're getting from the public radio and public broadcasting system.
But wait.
The troll room.
Immediately.
He's a Jew.
There you go.
There's proof.
I don't think he is.
I don't think so either.
But it's hilarious.
He's got everything he needs there.
Yeah, this is horrible.
And they disclaim, oh, we get money from him.
Right up front.
They had to put that in there, but that's, and they glossed it over and they ran right through it without mentioning any of these other details.
This is one of the 10 biggest.
The Gates Foundation
is around 60
billion.
These guys are big.
These guys are big.
These guys are big.
These guys are, well, they're not as big as them, but they're big.
And they sit on that money.
It all started in the 30s, and some guy,
the guy,
the guy's name, Young, whatever his name is,
he started the organization and he got it really going by donating his 16 million shares of Johnson and Johnson stock.
And I started looking into this and these other.
These are all
this is all tax
sheltered.
They give away, sure, they give away $500 billion.
Or $500 million, I'm sorry, $500 million of the $13 billion that is sitting there tax-free, growing and growing and growing.
And this guy dumped his 16
million shares into the company without having to pay any tech capital gains.
This whole thing is ridiculous.
The government should be taxing these operations.
And you get to ride on the jet, and you've got a corporate credit card.
It's a beautiful lifestyle.
You get a housing allowance.
You get a million dollars a year in salary.
You're right, the jets and
all the expenses, God knows what you spend.
It's ridiculous.
This is largesse.
Yes.
Well, but PBS is going to play because, oh, you know, well, you know, they're a sponsor.
Public health
money.
Okay, here we go.
It's Dr.
Richard Besser, former acting director of the CDC and now CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
And we should note, that the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is a funder of the NewsHour.
Dr.
Besser, thank you so much for being here.
I want to take these two categories in turn.
First, pregnant women.
There are many public health experts who are expressing concern that they should absolutely still be getting the vaccine to protect not just themselves, but also their infants.
What are the concerns there?
Yeah, well, thanks for having me on, Ali.
It's very concerning.
You know, I'm a general pediatrician.
I practiced for more than 30 years.
And one of the wonderful things about vaccinations in pregnant women is it not only protects them, but it provides protective factors to their babies,
who often can't get vaccinated against many infectious diseases during that first year of life.
And so those factors will not be coming across to the babies of moms who are now going to be denied access to this vaccine.
Okay, facts.
He's full of crap.
He's full of crap.
And what is this denied access?
Well, that's just, that's just
a lie.
It's a lie.
It's a blatant lie.
Hyperbole at best.
But the kids were on the schedule for six months.
So don't give me this first year they can't have anything.
That's not true because it was on the schedule for six months.
Forget his mom.
Yeah.
Unless it's poison.
Vaccinate pregnant women is like a bad idea.
Yes.
You can't even have sushi when you're pregnant.
So I'm told.
So we have the situation where the guy says now they're denied,
nobody's denying anybody anything.
No.
This guy is a liar
for saying that.
Yes.
And he's on PBS and does she call him out?
Does she, in her whole report,
I don't play the whole damn thing, but I got a lot of it.
I'll tell you this.
She never once brings up
the Johnson report from the Congress.
She doesn't bring up the stuff that you played from
the Texas Austin report where the documents have come out showing this is bad for kids and bad for pregnant women.
None of this is ever discussed.
So this is the most disingenuous reporting you can imagine.
And this, again, I'll mention it, say it again.
This is PBS.
PBS, everybody.
PBS.
Yeah, the American College of OEGYN.
This is the body of experts who are in, who are obstetricians and gynecologists, raised concerns about this recommendation.
And a big concern for me is that the announcement didn't provide the thought behind it.
It didn't provide the data.
And that's what we're losing, is that ability to really understand the decision.
Now I want to talk specifically about children over the age of six months.
FDA Commissioner McCary said there's no evidence healthy kids need it.
And there are some countries that have stopped administering it routinely, including Australia, the UK, as well as the World Health Organization.
So what are the specific risks among that group?
Yeah, you know, thankfully,
the impact of COVID has been going down over the years.
The talking about deaths
in the thousands per week, that's no longer the conversation.
But it doesn't mean that COVID isn't still causing problems.
And it does cause problems for children.
One of the things that I like to see each year is the advisory committee, that expert body you were talking about to the CDC, they wrestle with these questions.
They look and see, well, how many children are getting infected?
Is the vaccine effective at preventing long COVID that we know so many people are suffering from?
No.
What about a child who lives in a family where there's someone who has an immune problem who's at greater risk.
Would vaccinating that child help protect the others in that family?
This is so insane.
People have long COVID are typically people who were vaccinated to start with.
This guy
is
an easy evil.
He's evil.
You still there?
Yeah.
I'm waiting for you to get us into clip four.
I'm flabbergasted by this guy and the fact that PBS doesn't say anything about the myocarditis issues at all.
They say nothing about the Johnson report at all.
They don't question anything this guy has to say, especially when he said they're going to be denied access,
which is a blatant lie.
A lie.
Yep.
And they say nothing at all.
This is PBS reading from a script.
But that's pharma talking points.
You're right.
That's why does anybody support PBS?
I'm going to tell you in a minute after we play your next clip.
Okay, I think it's the last clip, right?
It is.
Yes, here we go.
Yeah, okay.
Well, it has a nice wrap.
We didn't get to hear any of those conversations because this was the decision that just came down from the secretary, a secretary who told Congress just within the past couple of weeks that we should not take health advice from him and told Congress during his confirmation hearing that he would not be messing with the childhood vaccination schedule.
It's very concerning.
Insurance plans have to cover recommended vaccines.
So if these vaccines are no longer recommended for these groups, how do you anticipate health insurance companies are going to respond?
Yeah,
it goes even beyond that.
The Affordable Care Act says that if it's a recommended vaccine, it has to be provided at no cost to people with health insurance.
But one of the things that's wonderful about our childhood vaccination system in the United States is if there is a recommended vaccination, There's a program called the Vaccines for Children program, and that requires Congress to pay for vaccinations for all children, regardless of whether they have insurance.
So a child who is from a lower-income family is going to get vaccinated just as easily as someone whose family has more income.
Without that recommendation, there will not be those vaccines provided for free for lower-income children.
So there won't be that choice.
Oh,
won't somebody please think of the children?
Exactly.
Exactly.
And now, no one in these reports, because it's the conclusion of every single doctor on every network,
you won't have access because your insurance won't cover it.
Well, isn't that an insurance company problem?
Isn't that an issue we should take up with the insurance companies?
No, instead it's RFK Jr.'s fault.
We get it.
We understand who's paying the bills around here.
Now let me play the jingle.
Elitest voices of America.
This is NPR
or PBS.
So you ask, why do people support them?
Why do people listen to them?
I went to see my hair girl in Austin Tuesday.
I am still loyal to her over 15 years.
I'm loyal to her.
And not just because I like how she cuts my hair, because although she is definitely liberal,
she's not someone who goes nuts and
she has a very clear head about it.
And it's very difficult for her sometimes to
not enter into conversation with her clients because they will not be her clients anymore.
So she can always vent with me.
I think she enjoys me coming as much as I enjoy going to see her.
She said,
first of all, all of her clients still believe, honest to God, that Elon Musk is a Nazi.
The Nazi salute is still real.
He has secret meetings.
He's in Nazi groups.
Secret meetings.
He is a Nazi.
Two, despite the recent rhetoric from the president about Putin, total, total puppet for Putin.
RussiaGate was real.
He works for Putin, not for the American people.
And here came, here comes the next one.
She said, All my clients are NPR junkies.
And I'll probably add PBS to that.
They
believe everything NPR says.
They listen religiously, non-stop, continuously to NPR,
and they are certain that the defunding Trump is doing
is part of suppressing the truth.
You understand?
Yeah, I understand.
And I believe they're sincere in their beliefs.
So even though we play these clips clips and people go,
I think it's important that we continue to play these because
I don't think there's an issue there.
No, I just want to say to be understood, you must first understand.
And if you don't understand, if people don't, you can't just say these people are nut jobs and crazy.
They may be.
But you have to understand, but you have to understand the brainwashing that is taking place on them.
And it's so easy to do this.
I think
these are just probably good people, but the brainwashing is intense.
So it's important that we continue to listen to the brainwashing so we can at least understand where they're coming from, if not just write them off as dead.
That's all I'm saying.
So here's NPR, new COVID-19.
Kennedy says that there was no evidence that repeated boosters help healthy kids, kids with no risk factors.
And FDA Commissioner McCary agreed.
Here's what he said.
There's no evidence healthy kids need it today.
and most countries have stopped recommending it for children.
And you know, while that might be true, in this country, this change still is raising a lot of concerns among independent experts.
Okay, well, say more about that if you would.
What are those concerns?
Well, one big one is that the decision appears to have been made without going through the normal process of getting input from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's independent advisors.
They've been mauling over this very question and are scheduled to meet next month to review all the evidence and make recommendations about this.
And beyond that, outside experts are worried what this means for the health and safety of pregnant people, kids, and their families.
Pregnant people, remember, they're not women, they're pregnant people.
Okay, so let me ask you.
Pregnant people, that is disgusting.
That's NPR for you.
Pregnant, this guy, pregnant people.
Okay, so let me ask you about that.
Do healthy pregnant women and kids still need regular COVID boosters?
And what if they want them?
They need them.
Well, one big question is, will insurance companies still pay for the shots?
shots and will people be able to afford it if they don't?
Because if the vaccines aren't recommended, insurance companies may very well not pay for them.
You know, most healthy older kids are at low risk for serious complications from COVID, and most parents haven't been getting their kids vaccinated.
But some parents still want to immunize their kids, you know, to protect them against even mild disease and long COVID and from bringing the virus home to vulnerable family members like grandma and grandpa.
Grandma and Grandpa.
Pregnant women are at very high risk of serious complications from the virus.
And that's not all.
Their newborn babies are in great danger of getting really sick from COVID, and they're too young to get the shots themselves.
The only way to protect them is to vaccinate their moms while they're pregnant so the babies can get antibodies in the womb.
Thus said,
well, brother.
Mengela.
Come on, man.
There is no evidence.
This shot works at all.
There's no evidence.
The other thing.
The shot doesn't doesn't work.
There's no evidence that it does anything positive other than the actual evidence as compiled in this meta study, compiled of peer-reviewed reports, which CBS Austin miraculously reported on.
That is the evidence that it doesn't do much for you.
In fact, it can do harm.
And we were lied to.
And these people, I'm sorry.
And they're continuing to lie.
Shave their heads and walk them down the street naked.
No, you should tar and feather them and walk them down the street naked.
It'd be better.
So
before I go to the podcast portion of our deconstruction,
I just
have to play a couple clips here from Brolf because he brought in Leno Wen, who's back on the scene, who was a liar during COVID.
Trump administration officials, led by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr., claim to have figured out why so many American children are overweight, sick, and don't behave.
They make their case in what's called the the
Maha report, Make Our Children Healthy Again, close quote.
And it points to things like ultra-processed foods, environmental chemicals, and warns that kids are over-medicated while calling for a new look at vaccines.
On CNN last night, Secretary Kennedy explained it like this in an interview with Caitlin Collins.
Yeah, here we go.
This exercise was really a
diagnostic exercise.
And it's important because this has never happened in the federal government where you have all the agencies recognizing we have a chronic disease crisis.
This was just the diagnostics.
60 days from now, we put out the prescription.
I'm not quite sure what he meant by that.
I have no idea.
I quite understand that.
But now let's bring in Lena Wen.
Joining us now, Dr.
Lena Wen.
She's the author of Lifelines, A Doctor's Journey in the Fight for Public Health.
Dr.
Wen, as always, thank you so much for joining us.
What do you think the key takeaways are from this report?
And what do you expect to see in some 60 days?
Well, I think that right now, this report is a bit of a mixed bag.
Because on the one hand, the public health establishment, the medical community is in agreement with Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
about the dangers of ultra-processed food.
It's a real problem that 60 to 70% of the calories that Americans consume are these chemicals, these additives and substances that are not good for health, that are linked with obesity, diabetes, heart disease, premature mortality, and so forth.
So I think it would be a good thing if there are policy prescriptions that aim to make healthy food.
Hold on.
I have to back it up.
Did she say 60% of the calories?
Oh,
good catch.
Let's listen again.
Are these chemicals, these additives and substances that are not good for health?
No, I think it's gone.
Okay, I'll back it up further.
No, she says, she says 60% of the calories are chemicals.
Public health establishment, the medical community is in agreement with Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
about the dangers of ultra-processed food.
It's a real problem that 60 to 70% of the calories that Americans consume are these chemicals, these additives and substances.
Wow.
Wow.
I hadn't even caught that.
Holy moly.
Chemicals are not calories to be.
60% of the calories are these chemicals.
Can that even be?
No.
Can chemicals be calories?
Yeah, some chemicals could, but it would be.
I mean, I don't know how much you'd, it's ridiculous what that on his face,
if you got 1% of the, you know, because calories is what
your power is.
You're what will burn.
How they determine calories is they have this little caloric bomb, it's called, and you put something in it in an oxygen atmosphere, and then you burn it,
and as the temperature goes up or down by so much is the caloric value.
It's a process that it's kind of fake.
But
to have 60% of your calories from chemicals means you'd have to have a, you know, like a potload of, I mean, it has to be all chemicals you're eating.
Well, that may also be true, regardless.
You're worried about the COVID shot affordability and this is your knowledge?
That we're that we're just eating chemicals.
Where's your priorities, lady?
That 60 to 70% of the calories that Americans consume are these chemicals, these additives and substances that are not good for health, that are linked with obesity, diabetes, heart disease, premature mortality, and so forth.
So I think it would be a good thing if there are policy prescriptions that aim to make healthy foods the easy choice, like whole grains or fruits and vegetables and seed oils.
But on the other hand, there are also parts of the report that once again sow doubt on the safety and effectiveness of childhood immunizations.
I think it's good for Kennedy to be talking about pesticides and toxins and eliminating those things from
being in air and the water.
But he seems to also imply that childhood immunizations, which are life-saving and prevent kids from getting ill and dying, that somehow they're part of these toxins too.
And I think it's for that reason that many of us in medical and public health are very skeptical of what those policy prescriptions are and whether some of them are going to be rehashing of what Kennedy has already expressed as his anti-vaccine beliefs.
Anti-vaccine beliefs?
Are you going to hem and haul through the whole clips?
Because that'll just stop them then.
That's all you're going to do.
You do it all the time to me.
Not like you do.
You have a special way of doing it.
Nip, nip, nip, nip, nip, yamp.
Yeah,
the problem is, I'll tell you what the problem is.
What's the problem?
The problem is I'm looking her up on Wiki and reading her background and I'm right on the mic.
And you're just going, oh, she's horrible.
Okay.
All right.
Apology, except that I get it.
I also, Dr.
Wynn, want to get your reaction to something else that Secretary Kennedy told CNS Caitlin Collins last night about his approach to trusting scientific experts.
Wong should listen to this.
Trusting the experts is not a feature of science.
It's not a feature of democracy.
It's a feature of religion and totalitarianism.
What we should do is trust the science.
And we are going to do the science.
And the science is going to be
replicable.
And it's going to be gold standard.
People should not be taking medical advice from somebody who is not a physician.
And they should also be skeptical about any medical advice.
They need to do their own research.
Ah,
there's your talking point.
Do your own research.
You can't do your own research.
That's no good.
What he's saying.
Now I understand what he's saying.
What he's saying is, we're going to get a real study out there.
I'm going to give you the truth in about six months.
I think that's what he's saying.
Dr.
Wen, what do you think of that message?
Well, I'm confused by that message.
And I bet that many people are confused about this too.
Look, I'm a clinician.
I talk to my colleagues who are physicians and nurses all the time.
And yes, we do our own research.
And
it's not about you doing your research, lady.
Yes, we look at scientific articles and we parse through them.
We look at recommendations.
But the thing is, there are lots of different clinical topics.
It's not reasonable to expect that even clinicians and scientists look at the medical literature all the time.
What?
Oh, hedging, hedging, backpedaling a little.
I didn't see those reports.
And parse through the literature ourselves on every single topic.
We need the news media to do that for it.
Wolf, you're the one that tells us what's in those reports.
This is the reason why we look to guidelines.
There are medical organizations that...
Oh,
this is fantastic.
We can't read all the research.
We just read the summary, the guidelines from the approved organizations.
All the time.
Like Robert Woods Johnson Foundation.
And parse through the literature ourselves on every single topic.
This is the reason why we look to guidelines.
There are medical organizations that synthesize these data.
By the way, we look up to the CDC, or at least throughout history, we have looked up to the CDC, to the FDA, to compile these studies for us and to make recommendations.
And we have always, throughout history, depended on our federal agencies as the gold standard for expertise, for information, for unbiased expertise.
Yeah, as long as you're run by the right people.
Exactly.
Kennedy literally said the gold standard.
So when it's gold standard from a different person in charge of the CDC, you're not going to believe it.
Yeah.
And so it's very confusing.
And you're quite distressing, actually, to hear the person who heads up these agencies, to whom these agencies report, now say that expertise cannot be trusted.
I'm confused because it leaves people wondering, well, what sources of information can I trust?
Good point.
Robert Woods.
Robert Woods.
He woke up.
Good point.
Good point.
Last clip, short.
Secretary Kennedy also plans to commission a study to find the cause of autism, and he says
we should do that by March.
Do you think that's a realistic time?
No.
No, because we have already had decades of studies looking at autism that have so far found that there is a complex interplay between genetics and environmental factors.
And if anything, these studies point to the fact that autism is determined before a child is born.
What?
This is new.
It's determined before a child is born?
Who proved that?
Well, it's probably...
Probably just making it up as she goes along, or somebody said that, or
that logical conclusion.
So it happens before the child is born when you're sticking needles into the mother.
Just a thought.
The fact that autism is determined before a child is born.
And so if you're looking at environmental exposure, you would be looking at in utero exposure.
And so
there were any studies to be done.
We would require tracking pregnant women through their pregnancy to the early years of a child's life.
I mean, so we're talking years of study.
And if Kennedy is now saying that we're going to have results within months, then one wonders if there are already predetermined conclusions and these so-called studies are just window dressing.
Thank you very much.
Beautiful.
So now we go to the podcast, because this is what you will not hear on the mainstream.
This is Gary Breca's podcast.
Gary Brecca, very famous dietician, I believe.
He's the one that I think advised Alex Jones on his latest health journey with some astounding results.
And this is all about pharmaceutical advertising.
Won't hear that on the mainstream media?
Of course.
That's the difficult part for an agency like yours to get into the private sector and effectuate the private sector that way.
Unless, of course, there was some kind of executive order that disallowed from advertising directly to specific people.
Yeah.
And we'll be able to do that.
Which do you see a day where that could be a possibility?
There's a bad Supreme Court case recently that equated pharmaceutical advertising with freedom of speech and gave it endowed
with a limited First Amendment protection.
There's still things that we can do, and we're working on that.
So we think we're going going to be able to do something, but I'm not going to talk more about that.
And the issue here that people
understand, because a lot of the people who support us are for freedom of speech.
Absolutely.
But this is a very different issue because,
first of all, the pharmaceutical companies are advertising products.
that are being paid for by the taxpayer.
And they advertise all these drugs on television.
The person who's going to get the bill for that drug is my agency.
And the taxpayer is going to end up paying for it.
Hey, hey, wait a minute.
That doesn't make any sense.
The other thing about pharmaceutical ads is the company gets a tax deduction on them.
But we're paying for the ads and we're paying for the product.
Right.
And so, you know.
I mean, when you think about that, it's just, it's mind number.
We're paying for the ads and we're paying for the product.
You pay my agency.
And we're paying for all the diseases that that product is causing.
Yeah.
And so it's different than any other kind of product, and it's regulated differently.
And those, you know,
those regulations, you know, a drug company does not have carte blash from
FAA to advertise any product it wants.
There are conditions that we can place on it.
And, you know, those are some of the things that we're looking at.
Yeah, there it is.
Oh, yeah, you can advertise.
You just can't advertise that.
Well, here's the one of the ads.
I'm going to start doing this again, adding it back to the show.
Ah, you got ads?
The side effect.
No, not the ads.
Oh, the side effects.
The disclaimers, yes.
Now, this is the side effect.
Wait, this is the side effects for Aventi, I think is the name of it.
It's a bone product that you're supposed to take to make your bones stronger.
A boner product?
She said the Avenity she's taking builds new bone.
Builds new bone!
So, yeah, we still bike, babysit, and brunch with the ladies.
Avenity can increase risk of heart attack, stroke, or death from a heart problem.
Tell your doctor if you have had a heart attack or stroke.
Do not take Avenity if you have low blood calcium or are allergic to it, as serious events have occurred with Avenity.
Signs include rash, hive, swelling of the face or throat, which may cause difficulty in swallowing or breathing, muscle spasms or cramps, numbness, or tingling.
Tell your doctor about severe jawbone problems, as they have been reported with avenity.
Report hip, groin, or thigh pain.
Unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred with avenity.
Beautiful.
I missed the anal leakage in that.
Too bad.
No anal leakage, but your brain.
Weird thigh bone fractures.
How does that
get that?
It just snaps.
What?
Meanwhile, also not reported.
I have no clips.
The Cleveland Clinic
has just reported.
Do we take any, do we think they're any good, Cleveland Clinic?
Are they any good?
I don't know anything about them offhand.
Well,
they probably do a lot of gender reassignments.
A study from the world-renowned Cleveland Clinic has confirmed that flu vaccines slash overall life expectancy.
Slash.
Oh, that's no good.
You can't say that.
Study who found that people who receive the seasonal shots have a 26.9% higher chance of getting the flu compared to the unvaccinated.
Yeah, that's the best part.
I know that.
That's a fact.
So, yeah, yeah, we're not going to see that.
I think
you're not going to see that in CBS.
No, no, no.
But man, oh man, oh man, oh man, oh man.
And this is what Steve and Stephanie were saying.
This was kind of interesting because you remember I went on Rogan the first time two weeks before the lockdown.
In fact,
what's his face?
Who was that Gucci?
You went on before Rogan got the
COVID?
Oh, this.
No, it was two weeks.
Remember, there were some people on the plane when I flew out to L.A.
with Gucci masks on?
I don't remember much.
Yeah, but
Osterholm, he was on the show after me.
I saw him in the hallway, and he went on Rogan to make everybody afraid of how we're all going to die from this COVID thing.
So they had seen me on Rogan.
They found no agenda because they were freaking out.
He said that we were freaking out for two weeks.
And then we started listening to you guys.
And we're like, huh, all right.
Makes a little bit more sense now.
So that's that's that's
what happens when you listen to MS.
I I'm actually writing an essay for my Substat column on on the origins of our our attitude.
And I have to go back because I still remember when the thing first broke out.
We do we followed it very carefully.
And you actually asked me, you think the whole thing's a hoax at the very beginning.
Yeah.
And
we started with the Washington state person, but what happened immediately was when they started doing the report what got my my attention right off the bat was they started doing the reports on the network news of all the ambulances and all, and they had a hospital in New York, and there's all these ambulances backed up, and they were coming in up and down the street, and they were bringing in huge truck trailers so they could keep the dead corpses in there.
If you remember that, yep.
And a guy on YouTube, it wasn't up for long.
I remember the guy on YouTube,
the guy on YouTube, a few hours later, is in the front of the same hospital.
There's nothing going on.
And he talks about it.
And he's got, he says, you know, he's a YouTuber.
And he's saying, look, where's everybody?
Where are all these ambulances?
There's nothing going on here.
And that was like, whoa, this is pretty dubious.
And it was obvious that he had seen the reports on NBC and ABC and CBS.
And then he went to the same hospital.
There was nothing going on.
Nobody paying much attention to anything.
There weren't ambulances lined up.
It was all a fake.
And then, if you remember shortly thereafter,
Trump sent a Liberty ship or what your hospital ship to New York.
Not one person used it.
Ever.
Ever.
Javit Center converted to a field hospital.
I don't think that was used either.
Yeah, not used.
So right there is what that's when Sketch, if you know those, like those two things that happened right away.
Well, also there was the anonymous nurse.
And she was saying, you know, people are coming in and they just have a flu, but they're so freaked out.
They've got elevated heart rate.
They're just freaking out because of what they've been told.
And then they're putting them on vents.
That was the thing.
You put them on a vent and that was it.
I think there's maybe two cases where someone de-intubated themselves by ripping the tube out and leaving the hospital and living a happy life.
So it's, I mean, we...
We kind of come across this cavalier talking about it, but that is the fact.
It's horrible.
Yeah, and one thing led to another.
There should be pitchforks in the street over this.
Well, no,
not everybody came to the same conclusion because they weren't paying attention.
They were going along with your people that go to that hair.
But I saw the pain in Steve's eyes last night.
He says, it was the J and J, so that's my only saving grade.
He was like, I was afraid I was going to die.
And there's lots of people, people listening right now who think
I'm hopeful that
the dosages were also different.
There was probably a lot of saline being injected.
We're hopeful of that.
That if nothing has happened to you now, you're probably going to be okay.
But man,
and the turbo cancers, all of this stuff.
And it's just ignored.
It's ignored.
It's still ignored.
The PBS and NPR as the reports that we're talking about.
Everybody, everybody.
And the mainstream media and the New York Times and the Washington Post.
Nobody has really wanted to address this.
No.
Because they'd have to admit that they were part of a scam.
So on that note, just a reminder about how untruthful,
dishonest M5M is.
This is Joe Scarborough of the Joe and Mika Morning Joe show on MSNBC during the
crisis of confidence over President Biden.
And he told us, he told us to record it, so I did.
Start your tape right now because I'm about to tell you the truth.
And F you, if you can't handle the truth.
This
version of Biden,
intellectually, analytically, is the best Biden ever.
Not a close second.
And I've known him for years.
The Brzezinskis have known him for 50 years.
If it weren't the truth, I wouldn't say it.
Okay, so if it wasn't the truth, I wouldn't say it.
And now when he gets called out on it, he deploys defend, deny, and deflect.
Looking back at that, do you say, well, it was misleading to say best Biden ever without caveating it and say, except on the days when he's not the best Biden ever.
But I never saw him.
Oh, you did.
You did because you saw him address a dead congresswoman and you saw him in South Carolina.
A dead congresswoman, yeah.
Yeah.
Well,
I mean,
I can show you the RNC clip reels.
There were plenty of days in public when he was not the best Biden ever.
And of course,
he stumbled and bumbled around, Mark.
I mean, yeah, he certainly did.
Donald Trump did.
Other politicians did.
There it is.
But
it's actually the same case as a lot of times when I've gone in and talked to Donald Trump.
We've gone to Donald Trump, and I've heard the media narrative around Donald Trump.
And certainly, I've been very critical of Donald Trump.
And when I leave, I have a better understanding, just like Jeffrey Goldberg did a couple of weeks ago.
I have a better understanding of where Donald Trump is mentally, if Donald Trump is losing it, like people have said
through the years or not.
And so, again,
am I going to look at a clip that's gone viral and
pay more attention to that than two and a half, three hours I had with a guy one-on-one going around the world?
No, I'm just not going to.
Are some of the clips bad?
Yeah,
they certainly are bad.
I can understand why people would see that without the context
can't even admit it
at least jake tapper says i'm humbled i'm humbled by it liar liar pants on fire it's just a lie it's all lies and then so here's another one
uh this was my favorite i'm sure
I thought I had the
that last clip you played I believe that was Halperin
in his podcast I think so, yes.
Yeah, it was Helperin, and because he's got his podcast that he's bringing out, he is doing a about face.
He's trying to get back, you know.
Helperin was with
John Heilman, the bald guy.
Yeah, your buddy.
Yeah, well, I know him, let's put it that way.
Oh, yeah, yeah, now you're coming over for dinner, so he's not a friend.
Okay,
uh, now uh, Helper, but I know him, and he's uh
I don't, I know the guy, he's going crazy.
He stayed stayed with the with the left and and helper and who was who was uh marginalized because he was a uh me too me tooed by the group because he slapped some woman on the ass or something who knows what he did and he's been trying to get back in the good graces but he can't with the democrats so he's very slowly becoming going totally moderate trying to
make amends in some odd way that was part of it but it's on a podcast and this is this is the beauty of
the construction media smart money is
smart money, smart money.
What money?
No, the smart no money.
Uh, so here's another thing: we all saw it, we all saw exactly what happened, but nah,
don't believe you're lion-eyed.
And the buzz over what French President Emmanuel Macron called joking with my wife.
Video shows Macron taking hands to the face as he's about to get off a plane in Vietnam yesterday.
Moments later, we see those hands belong to his wife, Brigitte.
The scene prompted one French newspaper to ask, slap or squabble.
Macrone says the couple was play fighting.
Play fighting.
When's the last time you were play fighting with your wife and you play slapped her in the face?
Or she, or she play-slapped you?
Never.
Never, of course not.
What is this?
That is literally how abused people speak.
Or abusers even.
Abusers.
My second wife choked me the first time.
She came and said, oh, no, no, but I was talking to my girlfriend.
She said, oh, it happens all the time.
What?
What?
While you're sleeping?
So we had.
No.
My wife and I have a mutual friend who's a comedian whose mom was like that, like your previous wife.
She had this personality disorder.
Borderline personality disorder, yeah.
Probably.
And she would go after people.
She'd grab it.
She's she's out of the blue, she'd snap and grab a knife out of the kitchen and try to stab you.
It's just fun, it's just playing around, man.
Yeah, just playing around.
Whoa,
whoa,
uh, okay,
I think of a number of women that I actually know who are not in the carnal sense, but I just know them.
Yeah, and do they have dinner at your house?
Uh,
some of them,
none recently, but just beside the point, point, is that I wouldn't trust going to bed with them because I always get the feeling they stab you in your sleep.
Yes.
You just get this sense, I don't know, this girl is going to stab me in my sleep.
So all of them.
She'll be sleeping and she's going to have a, something's going to get on her mind.
She's going to go in the kitchen, grab a knife, and stab me.
This is, I believe there are people out there that would do that.
Yes.
Well,
these days it's a trend.
We discussed it a couple of shows ago.
Hey, would you please shoot me in the head while I'm sleeping?
Sure.
Sure, no problem.
Sure.
I'll be glad to shoot you in the head.
What?
So here we have
all the networks, all the public broadcasters, all obfuscating, all lying, literal lies about accessibility and denying access.
By the way, not a single one of these outfits interviewed anyone from the insurance company.
Hey,
here's a journalistic question.
Are you going to not pay for people who want the COVID shot when it's off the schedule?
It's a simple question.
I'm sure you can get an insurance company executive to talk about it.
Yeah, and not one report that we played, well, I don't know, we played, what, how many, 10 clips from different sources, and not one journalist, quote-unquote, journalist had done that simple footwork, which just requires a phone call.
So you have that example, multiple examples.
You have Chuck Scarborough denying, defending, deflecting.
You have Jake Tapper can't admit that he excoriated people for even suggesting that Biden was in cognitive decline, now writing a book about it, oh, yeah, oh, it was covered up, we're annoying, oh, he didn't tell us anything.
And we have
certainly the French media,
just playing around, man.
She didn't slap him.
It was just playing around.
And so what does this all lead up to?
Scott Pelly's commencement speech.
But in this moment, this moment, this morning,
our sacred rule of law is under attack.
Journalism is under attack.
Universities are under attack.
Freedom of speech is under attack.
And insidious fear
is reaching
through our schools, our businesses, our homes, and into our private thoughts.
Provided by you.
The fear to speak.
In America.
In England.
Power can rewrite history with grotesque, false narratives.
They can make criminals heroes
and heroes criminals.
Power can change the definition of the words
used to describe reality.
Or vaccines.
Diversity is now described as illegal.
Equity
is to be shunned.
Inclusion is a dirty word.
Get off the stage, white man.
This is an old playbook, my friends.
Oh, Hitler.
There's nothing new in this.
Nah, my friends, thank you.
Pollute Pollute those kids' minds on their way out of school.
Good job, Scott Pelley.
You know, I'm surprised this guy's still working there, working for CBS.
He has come out with two editorials on 60 Minutes.
First, when the guy quits, one of the producers quits, and he
excoriates the company.
Then he recently excoriated the company again, and he's doing what he can, the way I see it, to queer the deal,
to sell Paramount CBS, the whole thing that sherry redstone wants to get you know she wants to move the company away from her take get rid of it and he is queering the deal he's screwing it up for her for sherry redstone and she lets him work there she hasn't just come in and said hey you're out
is the queering you reference anything related to lgbtq
queer
I don't think the term queering the deal is understood anymore.
I agree with you, and I think it's a perfect use.
But everybody must know what queering the deal means.
No, no, no, it's boomers.
You don't think so?
No, only boomers like us get it.
Okay, well, queering the deal means you go out of your way to screw up a merger and acquisition or you do something.
You know, you like you create a poison pill or you go out and you bring out some facts that
screw up the possibility of
something going through.
You try, you submarine, you screw up, you do whatever you can, and the easy term for it is queering.
Well, he wants to be very careful.
He could wake up with a horsehead in his bed.
I think Sherry Redstone is no joke.
Well, Sherry Redstone is a kick-ass person.
Yeah, he could be dead.
Well, I mean, if the guy shows up dead.
So, over to the media.
Of course, NPR is now taking President Trump to court.
When NPR is in the news, we report on ourselves as we would any other organization.
So, we invited NPR president and CEO.
With bias, lies, and deceit.
When NPR is in the news, we report on ourselves as we would any other organization.
So, we invited NPR president and CEO Catherine Maher to walk downstairs from her office.
Did you already play this clip?
No, I don't think so.
These are my clips.
No, I mean, didn't I already play this clip like a month ago?
Is this new?
I think it's new.
I don't think so.
I think so.
From NPR, consider this?
I think it's new.
No, I don't think so.
Well, let's play it.
Let's play it.
Play it.
You can look it up on being.io and you'll see that boot played.
Catherine, welcome.
Lovely to be here.
The lawsuit cites NPR's First Amendment right, quote, to be free from government attempts to control private speech, as well as retaliation aimed at punishing and chilling protected speech, end quote.
Can you explain in plain English what that means, means, what the thrust of this lawsuit is?
You played a PBS interview.
I think.
I think it was the NPR interview.
This is where she brings up the 1%.
Well, let's listen.
NPR is a private organization, and we have the right as a media organization to make our own editorial choices about what it is that we cover and how we cover it.
And what we found in the executive order was that the order
discusses the need to end federal federal funding based on the accusation that we are not presenting fair, unbiased news.
So, from our perspective, what that means is that the order implies that an NPR needs to change its editorial posture if we are to receive federal funding.
It's very clear from the Public Broadcasting Act that public media is meant to be an independent source of information, and in fact, it is protected in the statute that established the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
We believe that this is an infringement on NPR's First Amendment rights, but it is also an infringement on those rights of our station, both their editorial First Amendment rights and their rights to associate with NPR if they are unable to use their funds to choose to air our programming.
Yeah, this is different.
I don't think that you had these clips.
No, it's the same clip.
Really?
This one too, then?
So the argument, as I understand what you're saying, is that NPR, like any other news organization in the United States, is free to choose what it covers, how it covers it, what language we use to do so.
That's correct.
And even though we receive federal funding, we are still protected by those same rights.
Aaron Powell, there's a line that jumped out at me that I marked in the lawsuit, and I'll quote it.
It is not always obvious when the government has acted with a retaliatory purpose in violation of the First Amendment, but this wolf comes as a wolf.
Antonin Scalia.
Yeah.
That's a great line.
The late Conservative Supreme Court justice scalia.
What does it mean here?
In this instance, it is evident from the president's executive order, as well as statements released by the White House and prior statements by the President, that we are being punished for our editorial choices.
I think that's an interesting way of looking at the executive order.
But I can see where that would be their only defense.
What about PBS?
Because the executive order targeted funding to NPR and PBS.
Why is PBS not suing alongside NPR?
Well, PBS is a separate organization.
We know from their statement when the executive order came out that they similarly find this order to be unlawful.
Do you worry about further retaliation?
We're witnessing with Harvard what happens when an institution decides to stand up and fight back.
We definitely thought about what the consequences might be when we move forward to file this suit.
And I should say that we are not choosing to do this out of politics.
We are choosing to do this as a matter of necessity and principle.
All of our rights that we enjoy in this democracy flow from the First Amendment.
Freedom of speech, association, freedom of the press.
When we see those rights infringed upon, we have an obligation to challenge them, and that's what's at stake here.
Retaliation is something we all think about, and yet the principle of what we do and how we do it, we have to defend our editorial integrity and the integrity of those rights.
For people listening, will NPR sound any different as this plays out?
Please.
No, I don't believe so.
No, we've still got the same Neumann mics, the same dead sound, and the same dead voices.
For people listening, will NPR sound any different as this plays out?
No, I don't believe so.
The entire point of going forward with this litigation is to protect our editorial independence.
And as you started this segment by saying, there is a firewall between the newsroom and management, such as myself.
I believe that the way that we do our work and the way that we are successful.
The firewall
in journalism is supposed to be
advertising and editorial.
Not management.
But she is all about the advertising.
It's her job to bring in the advertising underwriting.
She's conflated what she's done is she's she's redefined management as advertising.
That's correct.
Now I'll say this is probably new.
This is the same script, but it's newer because they didn't bring in
this lawsuit from a couple of days ago.
And they didn't bring in the 1% thing, which I think is missing, which still should be emphasized.
The government only provides, according to them, 1% of their finance, so who cares?
Where's your problem, lady?
Exactly.
11 seconds left.
As you started this segment by saying, there is a firewall between the newsroom and management, such as myself.
I believe that the way that we do our work and the way that we are successful is by pursuing journalism that is excellent.
And so I don't think we'll sound different as we
sound exactly as we are: fair, responsible, non-partisan, and seeking the facts.
You're right.
It was me.
I'm sorry.
That was me.
That was me.
I'll admit it.
That was me.
It was Telegram, and it was still open.
I forgot to close it.
That was me.
And who cares about NPR?
There was a Windows alert sound, and we're sorry.
To wrap up my M5M clips.
Do you use Telegram?
Oh, you have to.
What do you mean you have to?
Oh, that's where...
Dude, you want to
get news?
Go to Telegram.
You got to subscribe.
Listen to the Telegram groups.
First of all,
90% of our producers around the world have No Agenda Telegram groups.
So I don't use it for instant messaging, although Void Zero seems to prefer that.
I've got
no agenda, get my nation lowlands,
no agenda sharing is caring.
But then you've got stuff like NA Texas,
No Agenda Ghetto.
I'm a member of all these groups.
I want to see what's going on.
But then, of course, you have to have some of the crazy things.
What's that Nutjob's name?
I can't even see her.
Nutjob?
Yeah, she's a nutjob.
Tori says.
See, there it goes.
Tori says.
Tori says, oh, she's a nut job.
We've played clips of Tori says.
So you've got a, you know, this is a.
No, I don't have to do anything.
Hollywood in distress.
Hollywood, well, it's more than just the iconic boulevard here in Los Angeles.
It represents a massive industry, $115 billion a year just in California.
And today, Hollywood is under threat.
The movie business is going through a crisis like it hasn't seen since the dawn of television back in the 60s.
First, there was COVID, which shut down production for months, and in 2023 came the actors and writers' strike.
148 days of complete shutdown, the longest in Hollywood history.
In the end, the strikers got some benefits, but after that, well, nothing went the way anyone expected.
Los Angeles is down about 40% over the last two years.
I think we're down 38%.
We were down 20% in 2023, and it fell another 18% in 2024.
So we had to downsize.
People had to do two jobs, three jobs just so that we wouldn't close our doors.
Studios are not just filming less, they're filming somewhere else where it's cheaper.
Take this studio in New Mexico, for example.
They've got cutting-edge tech and local incentives that let productions get up to 30% of their budget back.
The only way for Hollywood to survive well, LA has to get competitive again.
There's talk of new tax credits for local production.
So how will this disaster movie end?
Well, we'll see if Hollywood still knows how to pull off a good plot twist.
No mention of the streamers.
No mention that Amazon bought MGM.
No mention that all of the award-winning shows and movies all come from streaming entities.
This bothers me to.
Well, I mean, I don't care.
I'm not getting any money from these people.
How much does it really bother you?
It doesn't really bother me that much.
But it bothers me just from a marketing sense.
Why would you broadcast the Emmys
on
broadcast TV and give awards to nothing that's on broadcast TV?
Exactly.
I mean,
these guys know to pat themselves on the back and here, you give me an award.
I'll give you an award.
Let's do this and that.
But they can't promote their own business properly.
Well, they can't.
Apple should win nothing ever.
Yeah, but they, first of all, they have great shows.
They pump them out one after another, and everybody works on them.
So they, you know, it's like,
yeah.
It's you're right.
Why do we care?
Why do we care?
We're podcasters.
Well, why would we care?
Let's listen to a clip from
what's her name?
No.
Kyra.
Kyra.
Kyra Sedgwick.
Kiram is actress.
Kira Sedgwick.
Kira.
Kira.
Kyra.
Kira.
Kira Sedgwick.
Kira Sedgwick, who is a Hollywood actress, making tons of money.
They have a house in New York City.
They have a.
Who's she married to?
Kevin Bacon.
Right on.
So you got Kevin Bacon.
You got her.
They got a farm in Connecticut.
They're living the life.
They've got tons of money.
The royalty.
Oh, hold on, hold on.
He lost a lot of money with
that Madoff deal.
Remember, Kevin Bacon lost a lot of money, lost his shirt, had all his money with Madoff.
Well, it indicates some stupidity, I guess.
And I think the real stupidity is listening to this woman, a Hollywood type.
And this is what they think.
And she might as well go to your hairdresser.
How you doing?
I felt like it was important to get on the blower.
The blower.
The blower?
She had to get on the blower.
Wasn't the blower a slang for the telephone?
I get on the blower?
I get on the horn?
Maybe.
I don't know.
It's an old phrase that's lost to me.
And by the way, who cares that you're on the blower, Kira Sedgwick?
Was this on TikTok?
Was this on, where did you pick this up?
I believe this is TikTok.
And talk a little bit about how I'm feeling and wondering how you're feeling about the state of our union.
I'm finding myself pretty scared about a lot of things.
Scared about losing my rights as a woman.
Scared about losing my right to vote as a woman.
Scared about losing autonomy over my body as a woman.
scared of my parents' social security checks,
scared of food banks running out of food and not being able to replenish because they're no longer getting federal funding.
Yes, the federal government can use improvement, and there's a lot of things that they've done right over the decades.
So I think the answer to being freaked out for me is about community.
And I feel excited that we're coming together as a nation on Saturday.
You can look it up in your area.
It's hands-off march.
And
I'm just going to go and hear what I hear and feel less alone in the world because I feel like that's really important.
So if you're worried about anything that's going on in the world, like I would suggest that you might want to get out there and have your body counted and your voice heard.
And we'll probably learn a lot and help each other just by being together.
Oh, my goodness.
Move to Canada.
Move to Canada.
I don't get it.
She is worried about her rights as a woman.
And she's worried about this as a woman and this and that.
Who's attacking anything that's got anything to do with her?
That's code for abortion, your rights as a woman.
That's what that's called.
She's got plenty of rights.
Nah, she doesn't have the same rights.
And California has got wide open abortion.
You can have an abortion to the last second around here.
In your car.
In your car while driving.
I mean, come on.
Hey, speaking of Canada, the King of Canada showed up because we all know he's really the King of Canada.
He really owns it.
He's really in charge.
Had a little speech.
It is with a deep sense of pride and pleasure.
Pleasure.
Did my wife and I join you here today.
It was the main event of a historic visit.
King Charles delivered the first throne speech from a sitting monarch in decades.
His remarks and royal visit crafted to send a message.
All Canadians can give themselves far more than any foreign power on any continent can ever take away.
The King never mentioned Donald Trump by name, but he nodded to the subject on many Canadians' minds, taunting tariffs and annexation threats from the US President.
is indeed strong and free.
But this evening, Trump posted on social media about Canada having to to pay for an air missile defense system if it remains a separate but unequal nation, while offering again to make Canada the 51st state.
The speech from the throne outlines the government's parliamentary priorities, including plans to lower income taxes, trade freely between provinces, and make it easier to build major energy projects, including possibly pipelines.
What we're going to do is fast-track the approval.
Truly fast-track the approval of those projects.
More can be done, done, more should be done, and from our perspective, more will be done.
So, President Trump, of course, jumped on his Truth Social
to post in all caps about this, and the global news.
Global news picked it up because he's back on that 51st state thing again.
The Prime Minister having to respond to more of Trump's 51st state rhetoric after the president once again turned to Truth Social to say it will cost Ottawa zero dollars to join his proposed U.S.
missile defense system, the whole Golden Dome,
if Canada joins the U.S.
He also went on to say Canada is considering the offer.
That prompted the Prime Minister's office to put out a statement saying in part, by the way, rule number one in business, just go out there and say publicly, they're considering my offer.
It's really good.
Wait, he's not lying.
No, they're considering the consideration.
They are considering because once they heard the offer, they have to be considering it.
Of course, the consideration is no, but it's consideration regardless.
Canada joins the U.S.
He also went on to say Canada is considering the offer.
All right.
That prompted the Prime Minister's office to put out a statement saying in part, the Prime Minister has been clear at every opportunity, including in his conversations with President Trump, that Canada is an independent sovereign nation and will remain one.
And for more on all of this, let's bring in Global's Reggie Ciccini, who joins us from Washington once again this morning.
Look, it's possible, Jeff and Carolyn, that there was something in the speech that might have, you know, triggered something in Donald Trump.
But there's also a possibility here that this post to social media were just thoughts from within the executive residence, and that's because Donald Trump often likes to be his own press secretary and put his thoughts out on social media.
Look, dude, dude.
Hello, 2015 reporting.
He's just pulled out old screw.
Trump is his own PR company.
His own dish.
You know, he's doing himself.
He's trolling you.
Social media were just thoughts from within the executive residence, and that's because Donald Trump often likes to be his own press secretary and put his thoughts out on social media.
Look, there were a couple of different moments during the speech yesterday from the king that may have done something to put Donald Trump into a mood.
Number one, saying that Canada can give themselves more than any foreign power or any continent can ever take away.
Obviously, kind of an indirect hit at Trump's target of the 51st state.
But there were also the comments, both from the king and from the prime minister, that Canada is looking to enter a European armament act
that would see the continent and countries involved spending $1.25 trillion on defense over the next five years.
That could be something that also potentially angered Donald Trump.
He has been critical of Canada's spending when it comes to NATO.
He has said that Canada would cease to exist as a country if the American military wasn't there.
But with the Prime Minister saying that more than 50 cents...
cents of every dollar spent on defense is going into the United States and that needs to change, there are a variety variety of different reasons that Donald Trump may have gone to social media, but again, it could simply be because he wanted the narrative changed to focus on him.
To focus on him.
It's about the money.
It's about the military spending.
That's what it started with, and that's what it's about.
It's about spending on the golden dome.
Canada are going to have to pay if you want to be under our golden dome.
I love the whole idea.
A magical
golden dome.
Hey, man, do your 60 Minutes Australia Australia thing because I love that.
I watched that whole thing.
I loved it.
Yes, 60 Minutes Australia, which is actually a good show.
And we have, I think,
in the show notes.
Yes, and it's not 60 Minutes.
It's like 20 minutes.
It's not very long.
It's not 60 minutes.
It was a spin-off originally of the CBS, but they've kept journalistic standards high, and they have all kinds of just really interesting interviews and stuff.
And they've got this woman who's coming coming out with a book and she's being sued and everything, which is always what you want if you want to get the publicity.
Sarah Williams.
She has got a book about Slamming Meta and Facebook.
And Cheryl Sandberg in particular.
And that's the clip that she actually got fired from Facebook.
She was there for a decade or more.
And then she accused some dude of hitting on her constantly, one of her bosses, and they fired her.
Yeah.
Of course, which is what you do.
It's Silicon Valley.
She's the troublemaker.
Get her out of here.
But this one commentary that she had about
a lean in.
Yes.
I just
thought was
worth clipping, and here it is.
It's part of this broader thing at Meta where the people at the top have so much power and they don't really care about the employees or what's normal or boundaries.
It's about giving them what they want.
No one gets to the coroner office by sitting on the side, not at the table.
Cheryl Sandberg was Meta's chief operating officer.
She wrote the book Lean In, which launched a feminist movement to improve corporate culture for women in the workplace.
We're going to lean in, believe in ourselves, and teach our daughters that they can do anything our sons can do.
Sarah worked closely with Cheryl and says her behaviour at times went against many of the things the COO publicly campaigned for.
In private jets there's often a bedroom for the principal at the back of the jet.
She asked me to come to bed with her.
And that wasn't something I felt comfortable doing.
I just think that you should not get into bed with your boss
unless you want to, which in this case I do not.
That's just bizarre.
On the jet.
Correct.
On the jet.
What?
Sarah says she felt uncomfortable but wasn't the only staff member to be treated the same way.
Sandberg had a young female assistant who Sarah says was sent to buy and model thousands of dollars worth of lingerie.
Even more unusual, Sarah also claims the pair would stroke each other's hair.
My first child and it's scary to have a child and have a job because you worry that you're going to go on maternity leave and someone is going to take your job away.
Sarah admits she always put her work first and remembers it was certainly the case when she was nine months pregnant, about to have her first child.
Did you feel so indebted to the company though that you know you're you're in the birthing?
You know, to be fair,
the last time we saw each other six years ago, we we stroked each other's hair.
I mean, you know, it's just the same thing.
In fact, I'll mention this.
I saw somebody try to touch your hair once.
Oh, and they got beaten down.
Got beaten down.
Don't touch my hair.
You're like an old, old black woman.
And so.
Well, I'm saying that's for their protection because they might break their fingers.
And so
at the end of this, by the way, and people should go to the show notes and listen to the whole interview.
It's quite interesting.
It's fantastic.
It's fantastic.
But there's a disclaimer at the end.
Cheryl Sandberg
denies this, and and it's not necessarily true.
It could be lies.
Lies.
But it's too good to pass up as far as I'm concerned.
And so far as a good clip's concerned.
So, you know, the way she said it, though, hearing it now for the second time, you know, maybe she's like, you know, just you should, come on, we'll just go to sleep.
Just sleep in the bed
in the jet, in the back.
It could have been as...
kind of innocent as that, although I don't think I would say that to any person working for me.
I'll be like, get in the jump seat.
This is my jet.
I'm going to spread out.
I don't want anybody in the bed with me.
So
it wasn't like, I want you to come to bed with me and have sex with me.
Sound that you're going to be.
That was the implication.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, it sells books.
It sells books.
It sells books.
It sells the show.
The show is good.
Yeah.
And people should just watch and think for them and decide for themselves.
They also blast, they blast the whole system of taking advantage of people.
I mean, the whole thing that makes Facebook valuable is what they, the nasty things they did.
She points out, for example, they would find,
they would keep track of everybody's actions when they take, like when a teenage girl takes off a kind of not a great flattering picture of herself, when they take off and they erase photos from the service, that they take notice of that and say, oh, this person's,
she might be on it, you know, getting depressed or something, and she doesn't like these old images.
Let's send her advertising to
take advantage of it.
And of course, this woman, she says that's a bad thing.
Send her some likes.
Quick, send her some likes.
She puts it out as, oh, this is horrible that they were exploiting these poor dummies that are on Facebook.
And I'm thinking, what else would you, what else would you do?
And I don't want to be cavalier about it, but I am cavalier about it.
If you got somebody, you figure out somebody is depressed because of their actions on Facebook because you're tracking them like a dog, which I don't have a Facebook account, I might add.
You're tracking them like a dog, and then you figure something out and you send them an ad.
I mean, that's what advertisers want.
You know,
Instagram specifically, I think is a big driver of bad mental health.
And a lot of people can handle it, no problem.
I agree.
But we were at, we saw we were in Nashville, and this is the K-Love Award, just a national radio station.
They play Christian music and this is very popular, you know, big, big names, huge hits.
And so we go because they basically have six concerts and then an award show.
I'm not part of any of the fandom of it.
However, as we arrive Friday afternoon, we got a text message.
You're invited to the special meet and greet.
Now, coming from the music entertainment business, oh, that's cool.
You know, because we got our tickets last year.
And, you know, so we were at first in like, oh, well, maybe we were special.
And so, what does a meet and greet sound like to you?
It sounds like a
backstage
gathering of VIPs getting to meet the performers.
Yeah, exactly.
And there's, you know, some Prosecco or some other cheap artists.
And there should be a buffet.
A buffet.
A buffet.
Some snacks, you know, some
MMs with only red ones.
Just eggs.
So, no.
There was a line of 400 people, but it was moving very fast.
And, like, let's just see what this is.
And so we're moving along in the line, and it goes into one of these ballrooms, and it snakes around the room.
And there's the band for King and Country.
Are you in the line of 400?
Are you walking?
No, no, no.
No, we said, let's see what this is about because we knew it wasn't going to be what I expected.
But, you know, let's just see what let's see what they were cajoling us with, with this secret text message, which is what we're talking about.
Oh, what they were trying to sucker you into is a better term, yeah.
Four or five hundred people in this line.
And so it sneaked, and so there's a backdrop, and there's the band, and you come up to the band.
It's your turn, and it's going very fast.
They take your phone.
I said, no, no, and Ike said, no, I'm just going to take a picture of my wife with the man.
No, no, we take the pictures.
Okay.
So we stand next to the band,
they do six pictures, hand your phone back, you move on.
And what I realized is,
first of all, poor, poor band.
I mean, they are standing next to five, 600 people filled with God knows what kind of germs and goo and germs sitting on you and breathing on you and touching your hands.
It's like you just want a constant Purel dispenser.
And they're really nice about it, but you know, they're trapped in this K-love radio station world.
They've got nowhere else to go.
So they're doing what they're supposed to do.
But what really dawned on me, and especially the same thing at the award show, which isn't the grand old opera, it's a big, big to-do.
It's a big television show.
People only want to post on Instagram, I was here.
Here I am.
Look at me.
Look at me.
I'm with King and Country.
There are people performing live on stage and
half the crowd is holding up their phone, looking at at their phone screen while they're literally 10 feet away from the performer on stage.
This is a sickness of epic proportion.
I agree.
We used to take pictures on vacation.
You get them back.
I know, boomer talk, sure.
You get them back and be like, oh, this is a fun memory of our time.
Remember that?
Oh, yeah, yeah, that was great.
No.
This is all about, look at me, look at me, look at me.
My life, I'm cool.
I'm awesome.
Everything's fantastic.
I'm doing great.
I'm doing great.
Look at me.
I'm doing great.
And they are dying, dying on these news.
They're dying on these.
Yeah, I'm not going to argue that, which brings me to a clip.
Okay.
Wow.
Because I talked about the exploitation on Facebook.
And now you talked about these pictures.
So they're all social media.
Here's the kind of the kickback.
This is the visas that they're going to stop.
And
they're deciding.
This got everybody in an uproar.
They don't know what to think.
I have been saying this for years.
You can find out more from going to somebody's Flickr account.
You can go to their thing and you see them.
Hello, Boomer.
Well, yeah, but I'm saying I said it during the Flickr era.
Yeah, that's true.
You can go to a Flickr account or somebody's, if they have TikTok, it's
less revealing, I think, than something like Flickr was, where you'd see people at a party drunk
and they post pictures of themselves and all their drunk friends, and you'd find out, I don't got to hire this guy.
He's a drunk.
But here's what's going on with the visas.
The United States is pausing all new student and exchange visitor visa interviews, which covers a broad swath of professions from doctors to camp counselors, while it studies how to expand screening of applicants' social media posts, according to a State Department cable obtained by the NewsHour and signed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
This comes as part of a broader crackdown on immigration and higher education by the Trump administration.
Yeah, I'm all in.
I'm all in on this.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Of course.
You got people posting debt to America and then they want a visa.
Yeah.
That's basically what they're looking for.
Yeah, it's
crazy.
So
get off these networks, people.
Everybody's up in arms about President Trump's pardons,
and he just published.
I have a clip for a couple of them.
Oh, okay.
Well, I have the one about the reality show, people.
Oh, I don't think this concludes that.
Why don't we play this?
Then Then you can take the rest of it.
Okay, okay.
What you got?
Trump pardons or pardons?
I don't.
Maybe you misspelled it.
Oh, screwball pardons.
Here we go.
The White House said today that President Trump issued a full pardon for former Congressman Michael Grimm.
The Republican from New York, Staten Island, was convicted in 2014 of tax fraud and related charges.
The former Marine and FBI agent had admitted to under-reporting wages and revenues revenues from a restaurant he owned before joining Congress.
He left office in 2015 and served eight months in prison.
Also, today, Trump commuted the sentence of Chicago gang leader Larry Hoover, who's serving multiple life sentences for crimes, including murder.
But it's unclear how soon he would be released as he still faces the remainder of a 200-year sentence on state charges.
Yeah, so there were 26 pardons.
And
so a friend of mine is actually in jail right now, awaiting a pardon from President Trump.
And
I witnessed this whole process.
This is the guy we've talked about on the show.
We haven't, I don't think we've talked about him on the show.
We've talked about him after the show.
It doesn't matter.
It's a friend of mine.
And he got wrapped up in a Medicare fraud scam.
Yeah.
And he's a doctor.
He's a decent bystander, basically.
Totally.
But the way the Office of Inspector General and the DOJ went after him was just unbelievable.
The way this trial went, you know, you have to prove that someone actually wanted to commit fraud and was in a conspiracy.
And what they said is, well, you're a doctor.
You're smart.
You should have seen the red flags.
I'm not kidding.
That is pretty much how it happened.
I can't see that happening.
In fact,
the constitutional lawyer and I, we've been writing a just in case the pardon doesn't happen,
I am actually going to have an amicus brief
for his appeal.
Oh, yeah.
No,
and it's good because, you know, how about the FTX scandal?
Did anyone go to jail?
All those people who got wrapped up in this huge scan?
How about all those intelligent people who invested in Elizabeth Holmes?
Did they go to jail?
No.
I mean, smart people get duped all the time.
Good point.
But this, in my mind, and there's less direct evidence for this, but this was a Department of Justice out of control going for a pelt.
And
it's it's
he's a huge Trump guy.
You know, Trump flags on the house and Trump ties.
And
he's got to go to jail.
Got to go to, pretty much got it.
That's the way I see it.
You know, there's less evidence of that that, but it's just, you can feel that that played into it, how they railroaded this guy.
So we're all praying that, that, you know, he's number 27 on the list.
So, you know, maybe he'll be next.
But here's an example of the, and the way they make it sound.
This is, um,
who did this report?
This is, um,
oh, this is all global news from Canada.
But you'll get the idea.
They make it sound like he's letting white criminals go free.
Three years after they were convicted of tax evasion and bank fraud, reality TV stars Todd and Julie Christley received a presidential pardon, freeing them from their lengthy prison sentences.
Your parents are going to be free and clean, and I hope we can do it by tomorrow.
The fact that the president called me.
The Christley's daughter got the call after months of lobbying, which included speaking at the Republican National Convention.
Due to our public profile and conservative beliefs, they accused my parents of fraud.
Same story for former Virginia Sheriff Scott Jenkins, pardoned this week despite being convicted by a jury of bribery and fraud for accepting cash in exchange for police badges.
Trump called him the victim of an overzealous Biden Department of Justice.
Trump's use of the pardon power is part and parcel of his effort to assert an executive power over the law.
Under Trump, the pardon process has been turned on its head.
Pardon seekers and their families have spent millions on Trump events, lobbied his inner circle, and tried to pitch themselves to the president.
Trump, although he is using the pardon power in a politicized way, doesn't seem to be facing the same kind of political repercussions for that as prior presidents.
At the Justice Department, the Trump-appointed pardon attorney posted no MAGA left behind and is now urging Trump to consider pardons for others, including the two men who plotted to kidnap the governor of Michigan,
something Trump says he's now considering.
So when you look at this reality show people who, of course, were
super MAGA Trumpers and
they had cars and homes.
It's what you do in a reality show.
They were actually never convicted of tax evasion.
The IRS admitted under oath they didn't actually owe anything.
The federal agent lied on the stand, admitted it later, which was recorded.
The prosecutors called them the Trumps of the South, put the dad's face on a dartboard in their office.
I mean, you know, this,
there was a weaponization for sure.
And I'd say,
how about Hunter Biden?
I mean, talk about tax evasion, illegal gun purchase while lying about being a drug addict.
Smoke and crack on a video.
Hanging out with underage girls and screwing them on video.
And, you know, honestly, we just like our doctor back.
He's a good doctor.
That's all really, really we want.
So anyway, I'm all.
Andrew, you know,
this reporting at this point is out of control.
Big sound.
This is not reporting.
What you just told me about the reality story, because I didn't pay any attention to any of this.
No.
I said that one clip I got because I thought it was kind of funny.
But I did see the, oh, Trump's going to let the Whitmer kidnappers get off.
And then they have this thing about the reality show.
I saw it.
It go through the news.
I didn't look into it.
I didn't get a clip.
I didn't care.
But now that you bring it up and you actually deconstructed it and showed that the reporting on it is crap,
it just disgusts me.
And just I'm feeling like Tim Poole.
And just as a side note, so my friend
made a couple hundred thousand dollars in a four-year period signing off on things that he was told had, you know, it's telemedicine, telehealth.
All right.
So, oh, yeah, we've seen this person.
Here's their chart.
And he signed off on it.
The entire fraud was $70 million.
Those people are in Singapore or God knows where.
He gets dinged for $70 million.
You got to pay that back, by the way, and sit in federal pen for 10 years.
So, come on.
How does he get dinged for $70 million when he made $100,000?
Exactly.
Over four years.
That would be another part of the amicus brief.
Unfair, unusual, unfair punishment.
Not in line with the crime, quote-unquote, crime.
So, anyway, so yes, there was a true weaponization.
And these people were like,
you know, because I was going to be a character witness, and they did not want me.
I mean, they had sidebars in the courtroom.
No, no, we don't want Curry.
Don't want Curry.
Like, I have the persuasive power of God here.
Oh, that guy, he's going to ruin our case.
And so they came to my house to intimidate me.
This is news to me.
You didn't tell this story to me.
No.
The OIG came to the door.
And I was.
OIG stands for
Office of Inspector General.
So it's the special.
Is it
state or
federal?
Federal.
Federal.
So you got some feds that came over to the house.
And I wasn't here.
And Tina was here.
And she said, well, we want to talk to him.
She's like, well, he's not here, but I don't think he wants to talk to you anyway.
And then, you know, they were driving around the neighborhood, driving up the back road.
Eh, come on.
All intimidation.
Of course, I immediately called the constitutional lawyer.
He says, if they come back, you put them on the phone with me.
I love that guy.
So, yeah, so it really is true.
The intimidation, the weaponization, and it was all, in my opinion, all, what, you live in a red town, you're with Trump.
We're going to get you.
The guy had Trump signs around
the flag.
No, he's like Trump.
He's safer in California.
Yeah.
You know what it's like.
One of those guys.
Everything.
His kids are dressed like Trump.
You know, these kids are doing.
We're going to run you in.
Anyway,
last couple of clips I have here.
This is,
you know, they just have
Bitcoin 2025 in, I think it's Vegas.
And everybody turned out.
for Bitcoin 2025.
Everybody showed up.
All the important people were there.
I will first play a clip of J.D.
Vance, our Vice President.
But I actually think that where Bitcoin is going is as a strategically important asset for the United States over the next decade.
It's one of the reasons why President Trump, with the help of our great AI guy, David Sachs, it's one of the reasons why we started the Bitcoin Reserve.
Because we want to start to put in motion the strategic importance of Bitcoin for the United States government.
We know that the PRC doesn't like Bitcoin.
The People's Republic of China doesn't like Bitcoin.
Well, we should be asking ourselves: why is that?
Why is our biggest adversary such an opponent of Bitcoin?
And if the Communist Republic of China is leaning away from Bitcoin, then maybe the United States ought to be leaning into Bitcoin.
And that's one of the things that we're going to be doing.
Yeah, leaning in.
Leaning in like Sheryl Samberg, leaning in.
Not the only luminary luminary to appear at Bitcoin 2025.
Oh no,
there was everybody's favorite mayor, Maya Adams from New York.
We have financial instruments for all other bonds.
You can have tax-exempt bonds and other bonds.
It is time for the first time in the history of this city to have a financial instrument that is made for those who are holders of Bitcoin.
I believe we need to have a Bit Bond and I am going to push and fight to get a Bit Bond in New York so you can do those same bond investments in New York City.
Thinking big and being unafraid of the future is what we want to do.
So I say to all of you who are here, summonsing, come out of the shadows, come back to the city.
You no longer have to be afraid to be part of this major industry that has been attacked.
It has been criticized and it has been denied the opportunity to move forward and grow.
We must lead the way.
We must be a city and country of innovators and creators, not haters.
And even those haters that laughed at us in the beginning.
We have to ask in a uniform manner, who's laughing now?
Look at how Bitcoin has grown.
And we must match what is happening on the national level with what we're doing on the local level.
If it grows in New York, it would cascade throughout the entire country.
And we would normalize and allow young people to know the evolution and power of the Bitcoin universe.
You'd think he was at a human rights rally.
It's amazing.
Yeah.
And now I have a super cut of the entire rest of the conference.
The Bitcoin Bitcoin 2025 conference, here is the summary in super cut fashion.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coin.
Stable coins.
Stable coin.
Stable coin for Bitcoin.
Stable coins.
Stable coin.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
Stable coins.
stable coin unstable coins stable coin stable coin stable coins stable coin stable coins stable coins i could go on for another 30 seconds it's all about stable coins stable coin it's all about the stable coin and now according to the wall street journal the big banks are exploring venturing into the crypto world together with a joint stable coin stable coins stable coins stable coins stable coins stable coin stable coins i'm telling you mar-a-lago accords incoming soon this stable coin thing man they got plans they just haven't explained it yet but they got plans.
Yeah,
they haven't explained it.
They got, they got, they got, they have not explained it, but they're coming.
And with that, I'd like to say, I'm sorry?
Oh, I was going to play two Memorial Day clips before we went to the break.
All right, let's do that.
First of all, I have two Memorial Day clips because we had Memorial Day, and I have to say, we produced a show, or we didn't, but our producer did.
Guy Raya.
He produced a terrific show.
Everybody who listened to it raved about it.
No, no.
There was one guy on X who said, I don't want to be critical,
but
I hated it.
After 15 minutes, I went to listen to something else.
Well, okay, one guy didn't like it.
I think that's true with all of our show.
Yeah.
I loved it.
I thought he did such a good job with melding.
Because it's easy.
You can just throw clip of the day together, but he had little interstitials and he mixed it cool he just i think it was just a very good yeah he had a taste taste he had taste yes and good demeanor
memorial day missteps oh i saw a survey that i thought was interesting recently it's from talker research and it said that only 48 of americans can correctly identify what memorial day commemorates and those numbers were 27 with gen z so why do you think those numbers are so low and and what should we do about it as a society Well, there are a couple of things.
I think, sadly, a lot of our holidays have become about the commercialization.
So, for today, there are a lot of people, although I don't begrudge them to have barbecues and hot dogs and hamburgers and lemonade and maybe a beer.
It really is about not just our heroes in the military, but specifically our fallen heroes in the military.
And I was told that by the military.
I said, thank you for your service to a vet who was on my radio show the other day.
And he said, actually, Memorial Day is more about those who didn't come home, as opposed to somebody like myself who did come home.
Today, after the show, I'm taking a train to go see my mom, and we will go to my father's grave where there is a flag and there is a medal.
And the cemetery has cleaned the gravestones, especially of those who served like my father served in the Korean War.
I come from a long line of veterans.
My uncle Harry, a Jewish man who fought the Nazis in World War II, and that was pride for him.
My cousin Keith, my cousin Keith, who's watching today.
Okay.
She goes on and on.
This is a
conflagration.
Yes.
Of
multiple celebrations.
Of Memorial Day, which is about the dead,
the fallen, and Veterans Day, which is a different holiday.
I know.
I see.
So she, yeah.
Well,
she got it mixed up, as everyone did, but nobody did as good a job as one.
We haven't haven't had her on much, but this is the black, the girl who teaches black history.
Oh, wait, is this the one that white people eat people?
Yeah, the cannibals.
That white people are cannibals.
Yes, yes.
Well, she has a rundown of Memorial Day.
She's got one thing right, which originally was called Decoration Day, but I didn't realize.
that we've got it completely wrong because she's got it right as usual.
Of course.
And here's the explanation of Memorial Day.
Real quick, we also created Memorial Day.
It's pretty safe to say black people created all things good.
We made things better.
I mean, take something simple as ice cream.
The shit had mayonnaise in it before we touched it.
Mayonnaise.
So I'm not trying to hear shells.
The holiday was created by formerly enslaved people that wanted to just honor and commemorate their veterans who fought in the Civil War.
And for a hundred years, it wasn't recognized federally.
So it was mostly black people that celebrated this holiday.
It was also known as Decoration Day.
Before it was called Memorial Day, it's actually called Decoration Day.
It's just the colonized word for it is now Memorial Day.
Are we surprised?
Now you might ask, why do we have a Veterans Day and then also a Memorial Day?
Because Memorial Day was created to solely memorialize Union soldiers.
The Union soldiers are the people that fought against slavery.
Please do not confuse them fighting against slavery for them being pro-black.
A lot of these white Union soldiers were not pro-black.
They were just against slavery because slavery was making the South a lot of money and the North was broke as shit.
We can just look at the North as some haters to the South, which is ironic because the South is literally using slave labor, but they're haters nonetheless.
I mean, they was pocket watching.
Before I end this video, it was actually celebrated in April for the first hundred years until America got its hands on it.
And here we are today in fucking May.
I don't know, but happy Memorial Day.
Well,
this is a history I'm unaware of.
Yeah, I didn't know about the mayonnaise either.
She says until black people came around, ice cream was made with mayonnaise.
This is also new to me.
Yeah.
I guess.
Her course must be fascinating.
Wait, you can subscribe to a course?
She's a teacher of black history.
Oh, well, I'd like to take her course.
I'd like to take her class.
Can I do it via Zoom?
I have no idea.
Anything about it.
Hey, with that, I want to thank you for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man who put the C in the crypto case known as stablecoin.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr.
John C.
DeMore.
Yeah, well, in the morning, you missed Adam Curry in the little ships, sea boots on the ground, feet in the air, subs in the water, and all the dames and nights out there.
In the morning to the trolls in the troll room, stand still, stop moving.
I want to catch you.
Hold on a second.
They were about on par.
1814, 1814.
It's about right for Thursday.
I believe.
I believe.
Hello there, trolls.
Welcome.
Good to have you here.
And just so you know, the troll room is open season.
I mean, you can do whatever you want in the troll room.
People are like, don't say that.
Adam will close the troll room.
But I don't think I've ever threatened or certainly ever done that.
You troll people off.
Once in a while, but that's more just for myself, just to make me feel better and powerful.
But it's not very often that I do that.
It's only when I'm in a mood.
But no, the troll room is there.
It's there for that very point, to troll, to troll me, to troll each other, to troll around, to say whatever you want.
It's ephemeral.
Scrolls away.
After one screen, no one sees it anymore.
You are literally yelling into the void.
But
yes, power tripping.
That's right.
When I'm on a power trip, I'll kick someone out of the room.
That's true.
I admit it fully.
Power trip.
I just want to have some power.
Now, of course, the trolls, they get to listen live to the show, which is very fun.
And
you can do that at trollroom.io.
I don't know if you saw Megan Kelly.
She was hopping mad the other day.
Hopping mad.
She's always hopping mad.
She was hopping.
She's like, Apple, my show hasn't updated on your podcast app for six hours.
What's wrong with you?
No one answers my questions.
She was hopping mad.
Of course, your iPhone could be on fire and no one's going to answer your question from Apple.
Go to the forum.
That's where you can get your answers.
Now, that was on Apple.
On the modern modern podcast apps, it had been there for six hours.
Because the modern podcast apps use the podcast index.
It's a much better system.
And if she used PodPing, a podcasting 2.0, which literally you can do with on a web page, you can just say, oh, I'm published.
You click a button and it would update within 90 seconds on all the modern podcast apps.
I'll send her an email, maybe.
I don't know if she cares.
She doesn't care.
She doesn't care.
She likes to get worked out.
She knows her numbers numbers go up when she gets worked out.
There's nothing more entertaining than a mad blonde.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And according to Tina, she's tiny.
You think she's tiny?
I thought she was tall.
Tina says she's tiny, tiny.
Does Tina run into her?
No, women have this intuition.
She says, no, she's tiny.
She's real tiny.
So
maybe just big head.
Says tiny body, big head.
Merv Griffin's dream.
That's how you get successful on video, which is why she should be doing video.
That's great.
So get one of those modern podcast apps and don't mess around.
There's many of them at podcastapps.com.
That's APPS plural apps.
And you'll get this show and you'll be alerted when we go live for the live pod.
There's many live shows now, and they also work on those podcast apps, not on the legacy app.
So give it a try.
Maybe Kelly's 5'6, according to the internet.
Really?
Hmm.
That's not tiny, tiny.
No, that's pretty average.
That's like the
height of women.
Yeah.
Hmm.
Okay.
And there's a couple of references to it.
Yeah.
Oh, then she's not that tiny.
She's skinny.
She's skinny.
She's very skinny.
Value for value is the motto for this show, and it's been serving us pretty well for over 17 years.
We provide the whole show to you from beginning to end.
If you're listening live, you get a little pre-show banter.
You get all kinds of fun stuff to listen to.
If you're really listening live, you hear Darren O'Neal do the rock and and roll pre-show, and he had the handover.
It's very professional.
It's like a real network we've got going on here.
And then after the show, there's always a show that comes on.
It's all live-streamed.
It's all fantastic.
And you'll get notified if you subscribe to those shows.
You'll get notified when they go live.
And if you can't listen live at the time, then you'll get the show when it's published.
And within 90 seconds, you know about it.
Podcastapps.com.
But value for value is
what we do.
Here's the whole show.
If you get any value out of it, send it back to us.
So, what did Steve and Stephanie do?
They took us out to dinner.
They also donate Steve's night, but they took us out to dinner.
Oh, they took you out to that thing.
You just got invited.
No, yeah, but then when the check came, no, no, no, no, that's for me.
He said, I said, You sure?
I'm happy to grab for it, or you had the alligator on?
Slowly, slowly.
I want to, are you, are you sure I'm going to go?
Are you sure?
Oh, here's the way.
I got more on Megan Kelly.
She's 130, 5'6, so she's not that skinny.
She's 32 C?
C?
I don't believe that.
Yeah, she has a foot 9.
Got a big foot.
She got size 9?
That's what it says.
Wow.
And her figure is 35, 25, 36.
Well, thank you for these details.
It also says, wait, Megan Kelly, interesting facts.
This is kind of weird to put in here this way, but this is obviously generated, right?
She was groomed by bill o'reilly groomed
groomed groomed by bill o'reilly yeah yeah that that's one way of putting it i still listen bill o'reilly i still listen to his podcast from time to time his voice has become so weak that's it's kind of sad um bill or
he's got to be 70 in his far in his 70s you should well he doesn't sound um he doesn't you're right his His voice doesn't say.
I don't like his voice.
No.
The current voice, his old voice, what he probably yelling, I'll do it live too many times.
He's 75,
which is not that old to have a.
But he's interesting because he's 6'4 ⁇ .
But he doesn't sound like this anymore.
Do it live.
I'll write it and we'll do it live.
He doesn't sound like that.
No, he doesn't sound like that anymore at all.
No, it doesn't sound like that.
He sounds like he's been weakened.
Yes, weakened.
Weakened.
He's a beaten man.
So you can do that by supporting us, and we thank all of our supporters, $50 and above.
And at this portion of the show, we thank people who have donated more for this particular episode.
We just want people to donate.
It's not like you have to become an executive or associate executive producer.
That's just something that people wanted because they wanted to make sure their note is read and they want to bless us with more value.
And we understand that.
So the deal is.
It's also
a good attribution to be an executive producer to the No Agenda show because it's a lifetime achievement.
It is.
It is.
And many people feel that way because they proudly post that on imdb.com where these Hollywood-style credits are recognized.
So $200 and above, we will read your note and you become an associate executive producer.
$300 and above, you become an executive producer and we read your note as well.
And of course, these are thank yous from the past two shows since people continue to.
You're not going to do the art?
Oh, I'm sorry.
I completely forgot the art.
How bad of me.
I'm sorry about that.
Thank you for reminding me.
Yes, time, talent, or treasure.
You can support us in any of those manners.
So, you know, I clearly got some treasure the other day and some free food.
But time and talent.
How was the meat there, yeah?
It's Jack's chop house.
It's very good.
It's very expensive.
We do not go there typically.
But Steve took us.
Maybe somebody takes you.
You'd be glad to go.
Yeah.
Steve took us.
It was very nice.
So we want to thank the artist who brought us the artwork for the
best clips of the day episode, which we did not confer over.
No, we usually do.
Yeah.
But we both picked the same one.
I know.
Usually you send me a couple and you say, use this one.
I knew that, yes.
And I think you used this in the newsletter, I believe.
Yeah, I did.
Yeah.
This was the Nessworks clip of the day.
Now, to be honest, I didn't choose it.
I was in the hotel room because we came back, you know, because I, of course, wanted to hit the bat signal and then upload the show so that people who were listening live had like a five-minute advantage and they were ahead of everything.
And then people who just wait for, you know, if you get on the podcast regular, not listening live, you had a little bit of a delay.
And I showed Tina, I said, which one of these do you like?
And she said, this one.
And that's how it was chosen.
So please send your gripes and complaints to her.
The ones that were in
were in consideration were Blue Acorns, best of mixed tape.
You know what she said?
Too small.
Can't read it.
The Nessworks clipping through the ribbon.
She says, nah.
And the megaphone, Darren O'Neal.
She said, that's cute.
I kind of like Darren's reel to reel.
I would, of course.
And I think Tina said, no one knows what that is anymore.
Good point.
Well, that, you know, Yeah, boomer.
It's okay.
Everyone else calls it.
There's two or three of these machines.
Yeah, you got Revox, right?
I don't have a Revox.
I got some old, I got some classic, like the Sony 776.
You want a Revox, man.
You want a Revox.
What you want is what you really want for collecting.
You want the Task Cam for?
No, no, for collecting, you want the Ampex.
Yeah, that is a classic, the Ampex.
And does yours have the...
You Ampex full track?
Well, what I liked is the Reevox had a built-in tape splicer
right on top.
Yeah, I threaded right there and snap it.
I never owned one, but I used it.
I owned one.
You had to build it into a table.
It was heavy.
Those things were heavy.
Well, yeah, the only good ones were.
And you run it on 38 centimeters per second.
You get high fidelity.
I have one in the collection that is a TAC
with
a
cartridge at the bottom.
So it's got the reel-to-reel at the top, and it's got one of those eight tracks.
So I can record and play eight tracks on it.
That is a collector's item.
That's a total collector's item.
Playing or recording, I can still, in other words, I can still record eight tracks for someone who has a 58 Chevy.
I had a 72,
what was that Buick called?
Skylark that had a game.
Hey, when I was a kid.
All right.
I did have a Task Cam Studio 8, which was a four-track Task Cam with Mixer all built in.
That was another cool machine.
But that didn't win.
The honors go to Nesswork, and we appreciate your work.
And we appreciate the work of all of our No Agenda artists who diligently upload at NoAgendaArtGenerator.com.
It's open for everybody.
Everybody can participate.
And we're big fans of your work, ma'am.
We love it.
Well, yeah, we also have to credit the show before that because we didn't do a show.
Good point.
Good point.
And the winner of that was
there was Cinematic Ambush, was the title of the show.
And the art went to Darren O'Neal.
That was his Oval Office Ambush,
which was contentious because I was like, I'm tired of
this template that Darren uses.
And then I realized
we've never chosen it.
We've never chosen one of these.
Yeah, well, you complained.
I said, we've never chosen it.
I know.
I'm getting out of here.
You looked and looked.
Yeah, we have, you said, in that exact voice.
And then you looked and looked and looked and couldn't find it.
So we used it.
And I used the, in the newsletter, the upcoming newsletter, I used the Texas versus California one, although we had discussed the bull crap one.
Yes, but it was all off-center.
Nothing made sense.
Everything was wrong.
I thought it was associating the 100% bull crap with no agenda, even though he's crapping on Amphibia.
I had to decide against it.
So now we thank our executive and associate executive producers, and we start off.
He comes in monthly when we're lucky, and we're and when I say lucky, it's because that means he's still alive.
It always comes in cash, he sends it from me.
There's like a brown stain on the paper I can see here on the scan, or is that a blood stain?
That was, uh, I was having ribs for lunch,
okay,
and that's the barbecue sauce:
$2,743.
Now,
this is not typical.
There's an extra.
It's an odd number.
So does he have a single in there?
No.
Well, how can you get $43 without a single?
He had
a $5 bill and
three $2 bills.
Or four $2 bills.
Oh, Matt.
Or it was some combination that was a $5 bill, which gives you the odd number plus a bunch of twos.
Okay.
You sure that's the number?
Because these numbers are.
No, believe me, I do the number and then Jay does the number.
We both do the number.
This is the number.
If you have the wrong number, someone could die.
Yeah, I know.
That's why we do it twice.
I do one, and then Jay double checks, and she gets the same number, and then we compare notes, and boom, it's the number.
And he has a note.
And they're always long, but we love reading them.
From Seronymas of Dog Patch and Lower Slobovia, thank you to all the producers that make this an important but underfunded source of information.
Yes.
I didn't see Gitmo Nation on Trump's list of tariff nations, yet somehow trade, aka donations collapsed.
Was the drop from the increased
tolling charge collected by most sources of funding transportation?
I would also like to thank the workers of USPS for their fine service and, importantly, significant service improvements.
After years of a three- or four-show interval from mailing to receipt, delivery has improved to a two- or three-show interval, regardless of where it's mailed.
Important to my peripatic, hmm, periatetic life.
What is peripatetic?
You know, I don't, you know, I peripatetic.
I can't pronounce that word.
Peripatetic.
I got the pronunciation, but what does it mean?
Yeah, look it up.
Well, you look it up while I read.
Small commentary regarding the cynical comment on bias.
Uh-oh.
The mixture of non
probably directed at me the mixture of non-practicing catholic and born-again christian that offer zionist anti-semitic islamophobic pro-Palestine anti-white Christian nationalist homophobic and pro-LGBTQ plus views keep it interesting and peripatetic is meaning you're traveling from place to place to place in particular working or based in various places for relative
relatively short periods.
Well, he definitely has a peripatetic life.
So it it keeps the show interesting with insight from producers, provides great analysis that is both personally and professionally useful.
I concur with your observation after Adams' high school presentation that while M5M viewership has declined and is not viewed by younger generations, it continues to be a primary source of news and information for decision makers, especially legislators and investors.
How about that?
It is also a primary source of news for TikTok, X, and Instaprognosticators.
I've noted that the alternative media's so-called news is often a reaction to M5M reports and rarely offer primary sources, despite former M5Mers becoming podcasters.
That's a good point.
Just another cacophony of opinions offering their version of truth.
No jingles, no karma from
Sir Dog Patch, a pseudonymous of Dog Patch and Lois Lobovia.
And we thank you, as always, for your courage and for your support.
Yeah, thank you.
Now we go to $1,000 donor, Rosie Lincolns.
Wow.
L-A-N-K-E-N-S in Landisville, Pennsylvania.
And
wrote in a hard copy note.
Just to prove that it's a note.
I shake it.
IT, I'm John and Adam.
Thank you for all you do.
I found you in 2020.
And thank you for the sanity and humor, plus the information that can't be found anywhere else.
Or at the minimum, days before other outlets.
Well, sometimes months and sometimes years.
We've had years.
Yeah, we have.
I enjoy No Agenda with my son, and it also saved his sanity in this crazy world.
Well, good for us.
It has been great bonding, a great bonding experience for us.
I have a small recurring donation.
Come on, No Agenda Nation.
It's a cup of coffee each month.
She has that in Perrins as little
note in the side.
And I've been saving for a knighthood for my son for his 22nd birthday on May 22nd.
I don't know if he's on the birthday list.
You should check.
I'm going to check.
And his graduation with an Associates of Science degree in welding.
Yeah, good kid.
He'll be employed forever.
Yes.
Please deduce us.
You've been deduced.
So is that two?
Because it's two of us.
I think just
she says us, but she's been donating, so just him, because she says he can't possibly start his career as a douchebag.
And please read the following quote:
Paul, you're the best kid in the universe.
You have lit up every day of my life since you were born, and now you'll be a knight.
Congratulations on your graduation and enjoy this next chapter in the journey we call life.
Unquote.
Love Mom, Jingles, Noodle Gun, and John's Mac and Cheese, finalized by a goat karma.
Thank you, Rosie Lincolns.
I'm gonna shoot you in the face with my noodle gun.
You racist piece of shit
I got my pasta Glock locked and loaded
You slaves can get used to mac and cheese
macaroni and cheap cheddar melted together Mac and cheese mac and cheese mac and cheese
Mac and cheese everybody
You've got
Arma.
All right.
That's a mom.
that's a mom everybody anonymous black sheep comes in from Maryville Tennessee for 1058 gentlemen thank you for your courage I'm headed to Asia for my military contracting gig won't be as enlightening as the last two sandbox trips but much more comfortable I get a three-bedroom apartment in the not communist sector of Korea Wifey is joining me for a few weeks as well as one of my all-Navy wrestling teammates and his wife.
Sure to be a hoot.
Adam, I love that you affirm your faith during the podcast, reaffirms my own decision, and we feed off each other in the community of Christ.
God bless you both.
Amen, brother.
He says, Jingles, nice Christian jingle, boogity, boogity, boogity.
That's true.
And R2 Deku Karma for the realm.
You've got
karma.
He has a request for the nighting table.
I don't see that.
Tito's and soda with lime and some real empanadas from Texas.
I'm so sorry.
Well, it's
below the cell.
Excel sucks balls.
Yes.
Okay.
Thank you for noticing that.
I did not see that.
No, it was.
I just had to go into the cell and then scroll down.
You know what I mean?
Matthew Vandemar in Bailey, Colorado, 350.95.
Greetings, no jingles, no karma.
Be well.
That's all he says.
He does have a little note for you, though, but it's not to be read.
Okay.
Well, it's to be read, and I read it,
but it's not to be read on air.
Sir Realm and Dame Elizabeth are in Gardner, Kansas.
By the way, just email me, Matthew.
I'll tell you all about it.
Comes in with 350.58 cents.
John Adam, we're celebrating our 25th wedding anniversary today, May 28th.
25 years and they never had a fight.
And they're doing that with an executive producership to the best podcast in the universe.
Thank you for all that you both do to keep us sane.
No jingles, just health karma for our sister-in-law who is fighting ALS.
Surreal and dame Elizabeth, protector and keeper of the hobby farm.
You betcha.
You've got karma.
We have Cody from Houston, Texas, 3333,
and he has a note that he sent in.
And to prove it's a note, I can shake it.
This is one of the things.
This has been, Cody's been working on this note or getting us to do this on the right day.
So ITM John and Adam, I've been a douchebag for too long, been listening since Adam's 2020 appearance on Joe Rogan, and I haven't missed the show.
Please accept my
please accept my.
Okay, we'll accept your de-douching.
Wait a minute.
What note are you reading?
Cody's note, Cody in Houston.
It's note number five on the PD.
Oh, I see it.
Okay, yes.
I'm sorry.
Okay, dedouching.
He wants to dedouch.
You've been dedouched.
I'll keep this short.
Well, it's not that short, but it's short.
But meaningful.
Ah.
I lost my dad when I was five months old, and then my mom to cancer when I was 19.
John is my dad's age, and Adam is my mom's.
Okay.
So listening to you both feels like hearing them in another life,
if that makes sense.
Okay.
We'll go for it.
Thank you for years of media deconstruction, laughs, and jingles that keep me grounded in this crazy world.
You're both like the lanterns in the dark.
Lanterns in the dark.
That's us.
It's my 33rd.
Oh, there you go.
33rd birthday on May 28th.
No better way to celebrate than giving my executive producer donation, or than giving an executive producer donation.
It has a funny way of putting possessives.
Please add me to the birthday list.
Can I get a 33 is a magic number?
Biscuit on my birthday and a quick L sharped in respect.
Much love and may you never find an exit strategy.
Cheers to you both.
Cody in Houston, Texas.
33,
that's a magic number.
They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.
R-E-S-P-I-C-T.
And Sir Tigger Max is in Curdeline, Curdelane, Curdelane, in Idaho, and 333.33.
And he is on note page number four.
I have it here.
ITM hosers,
what better way to celebrate being an executive producer than to applaud your expose of the PBS NPR socialist shills.
Right.
And so I unfortunately I didn't
see
all of this.
Hold on.
Because he has some jingles that he wanted.
And I'm looking for him now because he wanted this.
He says Scott Scheiman.
Okay, I have something there.
Elitist Voices.
Bullshit.
Yeah, I have that one somewhere.
Geez.
Sorry about this.
I was unprepared.
Got that one.
And
Little Kid, We're All Gonna Die.
Oh, my goodness.
Gonna die.
Yeah, many.
It is too many, but now I'm already in it.
And the window chime sound from John just to
rile me up.
And he wants the Elitist Voices.
Okay, I think I got it all.
This is NPR
or PBS.
Suffering succotash.
I'm Scott.
Simon.
Bullshit.
Okay.
W.
Vincent Rowland.
Sir Tigger Max.
There you go, brother.
We did it all for you.
On the floor.
Oh, yeah.
James and Yonkers.
3333.
And this is a challenging note because it's handwritten.
A little lengthy, but not too bad.
He does does want to
start, as it at the end, but we're going to start off with a call out to GC as a douchebag.
Douchebag.
And James here needs a dedouching.
You've been dedouched.
He writes, shout out to my smoking hot wife who hit me in the mouth when we started dating about two years ago.
I've been short on cash ever since.
Yeah.
Coincidence?
Actually, I was dead broke when she met me.
Oh, well.
But not short on scruples, I got h I hit people in the mouth every chance I get, but a few shows back, my very own keeper called me out as a douchebag.
Good for her.
Yes.
Good job.
So I reckon we're skipping date night to add some treasure to the No Agenda coffers.
Excellent idea.
Just kidding, this looks looks like an overdue.
You guys have provided immeasurable value to us.
Big thank you for everyone working behind the scenes.
There's a lot of people.
Also, please don't rage quit or quit.
I ain't quit.
Quit.
We'll do it live.
Or quit it all.
For that matter, because you guys are doing such a huge service to everyone worldwide.
This is a fact.
Spreading truth and cutting through the noise, it really makes the world a better place.
Thank you for your courage.
Yes, thank you.
I appreciate that.
That's nice.
Thank you for your courage and all the time and energy you put into the show.
I know it takes sacrifice, mostly to our pocketbooks, but most of us are struggling too.
It isn't that we take you for granted.
It's only truly only four more years.
Please
train a successor.
Larry and Darren.
Larry and Darren are
on.
F cancer for my aunt.
It's true.
Classic.
It's a true.
He wants F cancer.
It's true.
The classic.
And I love my truck.
James, from West Oregon.
Okay.
That's true.
You've got karma.
I love my truck and I love what I do.
Dame Girl Kyle and Sir Jackie Green from Orange Green.
Jackie Green from Orangeville, California, 333.
And all they say is, T-Y-F-Y-C, thank you for your courage, and we thank you for your courage and your support.
Since that was short, you can read the next one because I can't.
Brian McIver in Portage, Michigan, 32032.
This donation, hold on a second.
Make sure I got this because I can see.
Yes, gents, thanks for all you do.
I'll keep it short.
Famous last words.
You didn't.
But I'd like this donation to cover a few bases.
Two families are out in Colorado Springs this week to celebrate the wedding of my daughter, Hope, to Jake Hoos.
Who's
who some may remember was saved from a full-blown douchebag call-out during his bachelor party thanks to a boobs donation on episode 1739?
You're welcome, Jake.
But today we're taking it to a new level.
An unprecedented quadruple boobs donation in order of four incredible men who graduated today from the United States Air Force Academy.
That's right.
Four roommates from Squadron 40, the Mighty Warhawks, now freshly minted lieutenants.
Jack Who's that's right.
Jack Who's my new son-in-law this Friday.
Nick Langenberg, whose stepdad Jeff will still
cook him on the moguls any day.
Ski Moguls, I guess.
Jacob Lawrence, proudly finished number 60 in the graduating class.
Well done, Jacob.
And Aza Arnold, Aza, just the greatest guy rounding out this remarkable quartet.
These guys, who were once just bachelor party hooligans, have done something truly extraordinary.
What they've chosen to volunteer for and what they've accomplished humbles me.
We should all be proud of the young men and women who take this path.
Congratulations to Jake and Hope on their wedding and to Nick Jacob Asa.
I don't know if it's ASAR, Asa, probably.
That's only just, I'm just guessing.
And the entire graduating class of 2025 from Squadron 40.
Congratulations, Lieutenants.
You've made your families and your country proud, and I concur with Brian McIver from Portage, Michigan.
Good job, boys.
Real American,
sons of America there.
Love that.
Bonnie Blank Shane in Fort Lauderdale, 226.
ITM Adam and John.
Bonnie Ray here.
What started as a deep personal passion has now become a business.
I've officially launched my own company, Bonnie's
Bullet, Bonnie's Bullets
and Barrels.
I got to take a look at this.
Bonnie's Bullets.
Bullets.
So if you're a producer in South Florida, are you looking for learn how to defend and protect yourself?
I've got you covered.
From beginners to those looking to sharpen their skills, I offer personal training on a welcoming, empowering environment.
She'll show you how to shoot right.
Yeah.
One-time discount, ITM 24 for 20% off any personal lessons.
And the website is bonniesbulletsandbarrels.com.
Follow on Instagram at Bonnie's
at Bonnie's Bullets and Barrels.
So this is mainly for women.
Thank you for your support.
It truly means a lot.
Thank you for your courage.
She writes at the end.
Yeah, a women's.
The women out there wants to know how to shoot,
which is a good idea.
This is fantastic.
We need much more of this.
Women
should be trained how to use handguns and defend themselves.
And Bonnie's Barrels and Bullets and Barrels does it.
Good name, too.
Thank you, Bonnie.
Sean Holman, Noblesville, Indiana, 21911, Associate Executive Producership for him.
And he says, Proverbs 3, verses 5 through 6, in all your ways, not most of your ways, in all your ways.
That's right.
And guess what other one you can read?
Grant and Sean in Mendem, New Jersey, 210.
Switcheroo.
There we go.
Switcheroo.
Hi, John Adam.
We've been listening to your show twice a week for almost two years now and love it.
We are turned on to it by our good friend Rich Fontaine, whom we'd like to give this associate executive producership credit to.
Okay, let's
change that right away.
Make sure we get rich in there.
Bada bing, bada boom.
We are News2A, news2a.com, NEWS number 2A, news2a.com, a widely read Second Amendment news and media company with a bullpen full of established authors such as John Petrolino, the pen patriot.
He was the Second Amendment Foundation's 2024 journalist of the year.
He's an excellent writer and was our first supporter and just a solid dude.
And we actually just got our first piece today from Mark Smith of the Four Boxes Diner and member of the Trump transition team.
You guys love to talk about Pam Bondi.
A fun feature we recently added, given her past position on gun rights, is the Pam Bondi Action Ticker.
An easy-to-use near real-time timeline with a simple thumbs up, thumbs down rating on every Second Amendment action the Justice Department has taken to date under Pam Bondage.
That That aside, our meat and potatoes is publishing Second Amendment news about court cases, laws, proposed legislation, etc.
Similar to how you deconstruct the media, we try to demystify Second Amendment news and litigation for the common man with our in layman's terms section that can be found at the top of many of our articles.
We also do
layman's terms for those that simply don't have the time to read the articles.
We sum it up in a sentence or two for those folks.
By the way, we are based out of North Jersey, so we're behind enemy lines.
Just a reminder, we can be found at news2a.com.
We are also very active on X, and everybody should follow us at News2A Team on X.
And thank you very much.
Rich will get the credit.
Eli the coffee guy's up.
He's in Bensonville, Illinois, 20529.
We have some great news to announce, he writes.
Five-pound bags of coffee are now available on our website.
Whether you need good bulk coffee for the office or stocking your underground bunker or you drink coffee by the gallon like me, we got you covered.
So visit gigawattcoffee roasters.com and use code ITM20 to get your bag, big-ass bag of coffee today.
Stay caffeinated.
You know, his bags are actually, I think they're like 11 ounces or 12.
He's got big ass perfect.
They're the perfect fit for the Breville coffee.
They have the grinder.
You can throw the whole thing in there?
The whole bag?
The whole bag fits right to the top, and then you push the lid down, and it's a perfect fit.
I think it's designed for that.
Nice.
And winding it up, the final associate executive producer today is the one, the only, from Lakewood, Colorado with $200, Linda Lou Patkin.
And she says, Jobs Karma, for a resume that showcases your unique value proposition, tells a compelling career story, and highlights your standout accomplishments.
Visit.
Wow.
New copy.
Oh, she's got a new copy.
I got to read that copy again.
It's brand new.
For a resume that showcases your unique value proposition, tells a compelling career story and highlights your standout accomplishments.
Visit imagemakersinc.com and work with Linda Liu.
That's imagemakersinc with a K.com.
Linda Liu, the Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes.
Wow, nice one, Linda Liu.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's go for jobs.
You've got karma.
You left off the kicker.
Oh, did I miss something on the spreadsheet again?
I got to get a different spreadsheet program.
No, no, the kicker.
I see it here.
She makes you shine.
I didn't see that.
I'm sorry, Linda Lou.
Bad read.
We're doing cold reads of Linda Lou's copy.
Yeah.
It literally did not show up in.
I'm going to use a a different product.
Excel is lame.
And now, before we move on, I got a note from Sir Mr.
F.
He says, I've been a $20 a month sustainer since 2017 and a dude named Ben for 15 plus years.
He wanted to know if we really do break for nights.
And I said, Yes.
I've been unemployed long enough that we've cut every necessary expense except for my unbroken monthly sustaining donation to no agenda.
But I'm a month away from having to cancel my sustaining donation because it's unfair of me to ask my wife to sacrifice while I continue the $20 month donation.
Since new jobs can often be about who you know, I'm tapping the greatest network of like-minded slaves between Portland, Oregon, and Longview, Washington, so this dude named Ben can continue his eight-year-long, unbroken monthly donation.
Ping boltcomputer at gmail.com.
That's boltcomputer at gmail.com.
Yeah, B-O-L-T, Bolt, Boltcomputer at gmail.com for resume and further details.
Cheers, sir, Mr.
F.
And I will give you a jobs, karma for that.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You've got coming.
And that really concludes our first slew of supporters.
$50 and above.
We thank everybody.
We'll be thanking more in our second donation segment.
Affiliates, attention, we're going long today with the show, but of course that is because
we, yeah, of course we are.
We're going long.
But look at all the people we had to thank.
Look at all the great news we had.
We were just, it was all bottled up inside us.
We needed to get it out.
It's hard for us to take a day off.
It was, it's ridiculous, really, because we just want to give you the truth, the information, man.
Am I right?
What did you do on your day off?
You did nothing.
You puttered around.
I did.
You did nothing.
Thank you to our executive and associate executive producers of episode 1768.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
That's right, slaves.
Be quiet.
Be quiet.
Be quiet.
So there was...
Oh, I wanted to play this.
Not just because of my faith, but there was something that I think the president screwed up on in this particular clip.
We recently had the National Day of Prayer, and President Trump made a big day of it, a big deal of it at the White House.
But there's something we need to comment on because that he had a perfect opportunity to talk about it, and maybe he doesn't understand it.
So hopefully, someone can talk to him about it.
We could not have asked for a more beautiful day than this, and maybe that means something that brings us a little luck.
But it's a great honor, and I'm delighted to welcome you to this very special place, the White House, to celebrate the annual National Day of Prayer.
And we're doing it up big.
This is the first time they've done it this way, and you deserve it.
We all deserve the White House.
The White House is special.
We're bringing back religion in our country, and we're bringing it back quickly and strongly.
Because for America to be a great nation, we must always be one nation under God, a phrase that they would like to get rid of, the radical left.
But Ben, I don't think we're going to let them get rid of that, right?
We're not letting them get rid of that.
They say separation between church and state, they told me.
I said, all right, let's forget about that for one time.
We said, really?
Separation?
I don't know.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
I'm not sure.
But whether there's separation or not, you guys are in the White House where you should be.
And you're representing our country.
And we're bringing religion back to our country.
And
it's a big deal.
So this is going to be really four years of celebration.
So, get ready.
And we're going to always bring God with us.
We're going to bring God to those celebrations.
We're not going to forget about God.
So,
you were already laughing about it.
I hear this all the time on left-wing podcasts and shows.
I'm like, separation between church and state.
There's no God in government.
But that is a misunderstanding of the founding fathers and writers of the Constitution.
And I'll just revisit the First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press or the right of the people to peaceably assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Now, they put this at the beginning because they felt it was very important because the founding fathers were all about God in the Bible, shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.
Somehow, this has been transmorphed, transmorgified into separation of church and state, which is not in the Constitution.
It means that Congress cannot tell you what to believe or what to believe in.
The government cannot tell you.
It does not mean that people can't bring their beliefs or God into government.
And it's just such a strange thing how people just accept this separation of church and state.
And here's the president who himself believes, I think he believes in God now, since he feels that God saved him to save America.
And who's writing?
They have a whole faith office.
Who is writing these speeches for him?
That was lame.
There you go.
Like he had to live to have them.
Well,
but come on.
Since you brought that in, I might as well bring these clips in, which kind of back you up.
This is about the trans Maoism.
Yay.
Which is a religion.
Yes, it is.
They don't want to admit it,
but it's a religion.
And there's some action taking place up in Washington state.
And we have the trans Maoist eclipse of Washington State.
So the DOJ and the Education Department are joining forces for a first-of-its-kind investigation.
It's digging into Washington state's laws for transgender students.
Dan Springer is in Seattle.
Dan.
Yeah, Lisa, the Trump administration says it's pretty clear that the Washington state laws on transgender issues violate federal laws, a host of federal laws, and this newly formed joint task force is designed to speed up the crackdown.
Today is the NF Work Day.
Students in Le Center, Washington stand out from the rest of the state for what is not part of their education.
Teachers don't ask them for preferred pronouns or alternate names.
And if they do identify as transgender, a meeting is set up with their parents.
School officials say not to out them but to include the most important people in their lives.
If I leave the parents out, out, then I erode that trust.
And I'm expected to call home if they want to use sunscreen.
But if they're going to change their gender identity,
I shouldn't call home.
Okay.
Which is a rule in a lot of states.
California being one of them.
You have to keep it a secret from the parents.
Oh.
By law.
Is that still a thing?
You can't tell the parents?
Yes, it's still a thing.
And by law, huh?
Yeah, well, I mean, I don't know.
No one's been made an example of yet for violating this law, but it's coming
as things progress.
But here we go with the second half of this guy.
La Center calls it a pro-family policy and is fighting to keep state funding because state law says parents must be kept in the dark if that's what students want.
Two sets of school records, one parents can see and one they can't.
And that has triggered an unprecedented federal joint investigation by the Education and Justice Departments.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon writes: Washington state appears to use its position of authority to coerce its districts into hiding gender identity information from students' parents and to adopt policies to covertly smuggle gender ideology into the classroom.
Some female athletes are also speaking out.
Annalie Wilson says she's competed against and lost to three biological boys in the last year.
I don't want this to keep happening to other girls.
I don't want other girls to have to experience this.
So if I need to talk about it and stand up for other girls, I will.
But state school superintendent Chris Reichdahl is digging in, calling the federal investigation an alarming attempt to infringe on the rights of our transgender and gender-expansive students.
And of course, millions and millions of dollars are at stake here, not only for the state of Washington, but all of its school districts.
In La Center alone, they get 80% of their operating budget from Olympia.
It's all now at risk.
Alicia?
Did you hear the new term in there?
No, what was it?
Gender expansive.
Wow.
What is gender expansive?
I'm surprised you didn't hear it.
It was right at the near the end.
I have no idea.
I've never heard this.
It's a brand new term.
Gender or something and gender expansive.
Is it the very end?
I want to hear that.
I'd say within 10 seconds of the end.
Talk about it and stand up for other girls.
I will.
But state school superintendent Chris Reichdahl is digging in, calling the federal investigation an alarming attempt to infringe on the rights of our transgender and gender-expansive students.
And of course, millions and millions of dollars are at stake here, not only for the state of Washington, but all of it.
Gender expansive students.
I like it.
What do you like about it?
What does it mean?
Well, I want to use, you know, oh, expansive for all kinds of things.
I'm a podcast expansive student.
A gender-expansive expansive student.
So they expand their genders?
I have no idea.
Maybe, yeah, well, hell, if you look at it.
By pure definition.
Well, let's.
Yeah, you expand your gender.
You were a male, and now you're all kinds of things.
Let's ask Grok.
What does...
Why not?
Does
gender expansive mean?
Okay.
All right, Grok.
Sakat to me, Grok.
The term gender expansive refers to individuals whose gender identity or expression extends beyond the traditional binary categories of male and female.
Oh, cats.
Cats.
Right.
The litter box.
It encompasses a wide range of gender
identities, including non-binary, genderqueer, gender fluid, agender.
I'm a no-a-gender.
And other identities that don't conform to societal norms of gender.
Gender expansive people may express their gender in ways ways that challenge or transcend conventional expectations, embracing a more fluid, flexible, or inclusive understanding of gender.
Okay.
Well, we're up to speed.
That sounds like a crock of shit, if ever there was.
We're up to speed, boomer.
We know what's going on.
Well, on that note,
one of our producers works at Amazon,
I think, in a managerial role.
So this person shall go unnamed, but sent me a screenshot of a policy memo that came out to
management at Amazon.
Understanding
Gen Z interns.
Would you like to understand Gen Z?
Oh, I would love.
This sounds like a gold mine.
Yeah, I think you're right.
Okay, here we go.
The majority of our program's interns, though certainly not all, are Gen Z.
In fact, Gen Z is well on their way to becoming the most influential group in the workplace.
Research shows that Gen Z priorities and work expectations have shifted in order to hire and retain Gen Z talent.
Training and management styles must shift as well.
Outline below is a high-level overview of current trends surrounding Gen Z employees and some best practices that can be leveraged throughout the internship.
Are you ready?
This is going to be good.
Now,
and as a backgrounder, I want to mention that Jamie Diamond came out with some commentary about Gen Z's in the workplace.
Do you have anything?
And there's been a lot of different, I don't have a clip, unfortunately, but there's been a - I'll get one.
There's been a lot of, and we've done on this show, commentary about Gen Z's work habits, coming in late and thinking it's okay, and all these characteristics that make them problematic as employees because they didn't have jobs when they were in school, and they didn't learn much when they were in school, and they don't have recess anymore.
And a lot of them are fat.
Wow.
Okay.
Gen Z employees, dot, dot, dot.
And these are some bullet points.
Bullet point one.
Want to feel valued, included, and empowered at work.
Noodle boy.
Noodle boy.
Point two.
Want to feel they are making an impact.
Appeal to their need to accomplish something beyond themselves with with purpose and contribute to a higher ideal.
This renews motivation and engagement.
Third point,
are less inclined to work with managers that micromanage.
Allow them some level of autonomy to try new things and grow new skills.
Simultaneously, you should be available to guide and provide support when needed.
Point four:
Gen Z's value work-life balance.
And point get to work.
And point five, Gen Z's value sustainability.
From these factors, we see community engagement and support as equally important to interns as understanding their project and how Amazon evaluates their work.
Managers own their interns' experience, making the work you do to meet these needs critical.
Oh, they sound like royalty.
That's an interesting
series of kind of meaningless bullet points.
Yeah, they value their work-life balance.
So who doesn't?
But I mean, it's just like, why are they so special?
Are you afraid of?
I guess they're afraid of losing them because the Gen Zers, if they don't get their way, then
they will not want to work for Amazon.
That's how I read this memo.
It sounds like Jay-Z.
Oh, Jay-Z.
Yeah, the Jay-Z or Gen Z.
Jay-Z.
Gen Z
has put themselves in a position of dominance, if that's true.
Power, power, power, power.
So they pulled it off, if that's true.
But at some point, you've got to say, wait a minute.
Yeah.
We're paying you money to do something.
Yeah.
You don't need, you're getting, it's not like you're doing, well, if you're an unpaid intern, then I think you could.
No, I think interns at Amazon get paid something.
Yeah, I'm sure they do.
And so they get paid.
It's just
a temporary job.
But you still get paid.
But
from now on, Gen Zers to be known as Jay-Zers.
That's it.
Jay-Zers.
It's no agenda vocabulary at this point.
Before it happens.
So it seems that the United States is
pulling away from any support of Israel.
President Trump, I think, is mad at Benjamin Netanyahu.
And probably with good reason, things are taking quite a turn for the worse
in Gaza, or where the Palestinians live, as they're starving.
And
the Israelis are blaming it on the United Nations.
These chaotic scenes in a UN warehouse underscore the desperation of starving Palestinians in Gaza.
For more than two months, Israel stopped humanitarian aid entering the enclave.
Supplies have been slowly trickling in, but the centre became overrun with people taking what they could.
The World Food Programme said there were injuries and death.
It's the same situation across Gaza.
Nearly half a million people are in a catastrophic situation of hunger, starvation, illness, and death, according to the World Health Organization.
The UN condemned a US-backed aid system that has been recently distributing humanitarian support.
supplies.
The head of UNRWA said they used to have 400 distribution centres in Gaza, but now it's three or four maximum under the new model.
Israel says it is doing its part, but accused the UN of worsening the situation.
There are more than 400 tracks already on the Gaza side of the fence, waiting to be distributed.
But the UN has failed to pick them up.
We opened the crossings, we provided safe routes for those tracks, but the UN did not show up.
So let me be clear: the UN must stop spreading panic and start moving aid.
Put your ego aside, aside, pick up the aid, and do your job.
Well, this is interesting.
They say the UN is not doing their job?
That's what they say.
I have a clip here from.
The UN might be not.
It's possible that the UN's not doing their job just to further humiliate Israel.
Yeah, that's possible.
To make it worse on purpose.
That's possible.
It's not a good situation.
Here is Judge Knapp's podcast, as we always, by the way, almost no one sent me any podcast clips or time codes of anything.
What does not count is some dude on Instagram talking about the weather?
Yeah, I think this is going to be the standard.
We're going to have to do our own research.
I don't think people, I think people listen to certain podcasts, but they just don't want to go through the effort of clipping.
There's not that many people.
No, you don't have to clip.
You can just.
I don't think they even want to bother.
Like apps like Podverse and Fountain, you can actually clip in the app.
It helps you make a clip.
Some people send that to me, but usually it's an ISO of someone saying no agenda.
Okay.
Yeah, it is stuff we don't use.
We get a lot of that.
This is Judge Knapp's podcast, Judging Freedom.
This guy's turned out to be
some of the worst material.
I thought this was rather interesting.
Free Palestine.
This is exactly the same chant we heard on October 7th.
On that day, thousands of terrorists stormed into Israel from Gaza.
They beheaded men.
They raped women.
They burned babies alive.
Free Palestine is just today's version of Heil Hitler.
They don't want a Palestinian state.
They want to destroy the Jewish state.
I could never understand how this simple truth evades the leaders of France, Britain, Canada, and others.
They're now proposing to establish a Palestinian state and reward these murderers with the ultimate prize.
You won't be surprised to learn that Hamas thanked President Macron and Prime Ministers Starmer and Kearney for demanding that Israel end its war in Gaza immediately.
Now, these leaders may think that they're advancing peace.
They're not.
So don't give us this talk.
It'll be a peaceful Palestinian state.
It won't be.
Can anybody take seriously this equation of free Palestine with Heil Hitler?
Hasn't 95, 98%, according to Jeff Sachs, of the countries in the United Nations voted to accept Palestine as a member country, as a sovereign state, and it keeps getting vetoed by the United States and the Security Council?
Yeah, that's precisely true.
Something like 140 countries, I believe the number is.
Netanyahu is going a little bit overboard with this is the new Heil Hitler.
Well, I think he's in trouble.
No kidding.
He's gone so far that even Trump doesn't want to deal with him right now.
Or at all.
Yeah, Trump.
Well, because there's this.
That may be a ploy, though.
It's possible that if Trump's
negotiations with Iran don't go the way he wants
Israel can attack Iran and blow up a bunch of nuke sites which they've done before in Syria and elsewhere yeah they could blow it up and Trump can be you know
I tried to stop him
interesting so Trump maybe it's you know like the what is it called uh
when you're
when you don't want to be in a loop so you can have a plausible deniability deniability yes the classic American plausible deniability.
Well,
President Trump is mad at everybody.
He is mad at Putin now.
U.S.
President Donald Trump appears to be changing his tone when speaking of his Russian counterpart.
While he has normally heaped praises on Vladimir Putin, even once calling him genius for invading Ukraine in 2022, on Sunday he said Putin started to go too far.
I'm not happy with what Putin's doing.
He's killing a lot of people and I don't know what the hell happened to Putin.
I've known him a long time.
Always gotten along with him.
But he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all.
Okay?
We're in the middle of talking, and he's shooting rockets into Kiev and other cities.
I don't like it at all.
Trump's criticisms come after a weekend in which Russia and Ukraine traded a thousand prisoners of war each, but that also featured massive Russian drone and missile attacks.
From Saturday to Sunday, Russian forces launched the largest aerial attack of the war so far, hitting cities across Ukraine, killing several people and wounding many others.
So while that's happening,
on that clip.
Yeah.
And
I have a clip, by the way, I don't want to miss.
On that clip, in all the clips, it says the same thing.
The greatest, most massive attack they've ever done and killed three people.
I mean, there's something wrong with the reporting.
I mean, if it's a massive, biggest attack ever, which is what they say in that report.
They do.
And they say it in all the reports.
And it kills like three people and injured a child, they usually throw that in.
No, of course.
So what are these things hitting that they're not really doing?
But
if it's the most massive of all time, shouldn't it cut thousands of people be killed?
No, just big booms.
Big natural.
There's something fishy about this whole thing.
Well, it's part of the negotiation, and they're going to meet in Istanbul for the second time.
Shall I play your PBS clip for the update?
Yeah, this is the update of the updates.
This
was released yesterday.
Ukraine's President Vladimir Zielensky was in Berlin today, appealing to his country's biggest military backer in Europe.
Germany's new chancellor, Friedrich Mertz, offered to help Ukraine build its own long-range missile systems that could strike deep into Russia.
A move Moscow called provocative.
Zelensky said the military muscle is necessary.
You can all see what Putin is doing every night.
Massive drone attacks, hundreds of drones.
In order to protect lives in our cities, we need constant support.
Ukraine said that Russia's latest strikes on the city of Kharkiv overnight killed one person and injured seven others, including a child.
That comes as a United Nations panel today found that Russian attacks on civilians in Ukraine's Kherson province amounted to crimes against humanity.
Its report concluded that, quote, these acts were committed with the primary purpose to spread terror among the civilian population in violation of international humanitarian law.
Meantime, back in Washington, President Trump expressed frustration at the timing of recent attacks.
I'm very disappointed at what happened a couple of nights now, where people were killed in the middle of what you would call a negotiation.
I'm very disappointed by that.
That frustration comes as Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, pushed a new round of talks for next Monday in Istanbul.
Ukraine has not yet committed to taking part.
fighting.
He also stated that it will be clear to him soon whether Putin is sincerely looking for peace or not, as he awarded a potential shift in Washington's approach.
dealing with them very strongly right now.
They seem to want to do something, but until the document is signed, I can't tell you.
The Kremlin's proposal comes at a time of increased Russian bombardment of Ukraine and heightened tensions.
Moscow says it's ready to end the war if Ukraine eliminates what it calls the root causes of the crisis.
So, I was only able to find one report on the details of the proposed talks, and that came from Boots on the Ground at France 24.
I think this woman's in Ukraine.
As it stands, the Russian proposals haven't changed since 2022 and they amount to a capitulation of Ukraine.
And it's not something that Ukrainian troops or the Ukrainian government are ready to do constitutionally.
This is Ukrainian territory.
And on a legal standpoint, Ukraine will also not recognize that those regions are partially occupied by Russia.
There's another bone of contention.
It is the fact that Russia wants a written promise by Ukraine and its allies on the non-expansion of NATO eastwards.
And that's also something that Ukraine is not ready to do because Ukraine has a security guarantee to try and prevent any
future attack of Russia on its own sovereign territory.
Well, Ukraine still is seeking to join NATO, even if Kiev also knows that it's not going to happen in the near future.
As also
to show the position of Ukraine's allies, the Netherlands said earlier this week that Volodymyr Zelensky was a welcome guest at the next NATO summit.
So there are
proposals by Russia that on the Ukrainian side wouldn't be acceptable.
Yeah, so
Zelensky is invited to the big splash
in The Hague, the Big Splash,
the Big NATO summit.
So that, of course, will not help anything.
And it looks like Germany,
Germany doesn't want any peace at all.
Mr.
Peepers.
After days of intense Russian shelling across Ukraine, Germany's newly installed chancellor made an announcement that could reshape the war.
There are no longer any range restrictions on weapons delivered to Ukraine, neither from the British, nor from the French, nor from us, nor from the Americans.
This announcement means Germany could soon join the list of countries already supplying long-range missiles.
Both Paris and London have sent storm shadow and scalp missiles used to target Russian forces inside occupied Ukrainian territory.
And in November, President Joe Biden gave Kiev the green light to strike inside Russia with the Army Tactical Missile System Attackums.
For Germany, Monday's move signals a major shift in defense policy and could finally open the door to delivering Taurus.
With a longer range than the British and French models, it would give Ukraine the ability to hit targets deep behind enemy lines.
Friedrich Schmertz has voiced support for the delivery, but on Monday he didn't confirm whether Germany would go ahead or whether his comments referred to other long-range missiles.
But Ukraine, he said, must be allowed to strike back by hitting military targets inside Russia.
The Kremlin responded swiftly.
saying plans to lift any range limits would be dangerous.
Ukrainian President Vlodymir Zelensky is expected to meet Chancellor Mertz in Berlin on Wednesday, according to media reports.
What could possibly go wrong?
Give them the Taurus missiles.
Of course, it's going to be fine.
They just want war, man.
They want war.
It's a Germans, of course.
And a new player has entered the game.
In the northern regions.
Since Greenland is just a non-starter, nothing's happening.
We haven't bought them yet.
No deal has been done.
A new player enters, the new Prime Minister of Iceland.
Have you seen her?
No, I have not.
Kristrun Frostadotir?
Or something like that?
Yeah, something daughter is always at the end of the day.
Frostadotir?
There's solon or daughter, son, or daughter.
You should look her up.
I'm very happy to be able to come here.
This is my first visit to NATO as Prime Minister of Iceland.
And this is a very important meeting for us, both in the run-up to the big meeting at The Hague, but also just to strengthen and continue to strengthen our relationship with NATO.
We have a new government since the end of December, and it's important that we get the message across that this government is very supportive of our presence
in NATO.
We are very supportive and head-on when it comes to continuing transatlantic relations.
Iceland is obviously geographically both in Europe but also in North America.
We have tight-knit relations with the EU through our EEA agreement and through NATO presence, but also with the U.S.
through a bilateral defense agreement.
So that's why always when I meet with EU leaders, when I meet with global leaders, when I met with Mark today, we talk about the importance of this transatlantic unity.
And this will always be our message.
It's also very important for us to hear, for me to hear,
for the general public and Iceland, and also just NATO members as a whole to hear that there's an understanding of Iceland's position.
Yes, we are a country without a military, but that doesn't mean we don't have a strong defenses and a role to play in NATO.
We came in as a founding member with certain strengths, our strategic position, our facilities.
We do our very best to be a strong ally.
And like you said, we are conducting and creating for the first time a new security and defense policy where we're focusing on our specific strategic position in NATO.
We're willing to spend more when it comes to defense-related investments, to strengthen our facilities when it comes to Kepler-vik airbase, when it comes to ports, when it comes to general host nation support.
And also, very good and constructive talks on Arctic security.
Ah, she's going to be a player.
Looks like it.
Yeah.
She's a player.
She's young.
She looks like she's early 30s.
Yeah, player.
She's got a bunch of.
She She also is a perky minister for foreign affairs.
Oh, really?
Katrin.
What?
I didn't see the minister of foreign affairs.
Yeah, you should look at her.
She looks like your wife.
Well, she must be super hot.
Hold on a second.
Christian.
So,
what's her name?
The
well, some Iceland name.
Dorberger Katrine
Gunnar's daughter.
Let's see if
Katrine Doll Dornberger.
There you go.
Well, Dornberger's not her.
Katrina Boll Dornberger.
Is that what you just said?
That's not.
No, no, no.
Gunnar's daughter.
Okay, it's her last name.
Foreign Minister Iceland.
How about that?
Maybe that'll work better.
Yeah, that will.
You'll get her.
I don't see her.
Oh.
Okay.
Tina's much better looking than that, man.
What an insult.
Well, I have a good picture of her.
You don't.
No.
Did you see the Minister of Social Affairs?
Roof.
Inga?
Inga.
Yeah, she looks like
a Berkeley liberal.
She looks like an Inga.
Wow, it's an interesting group.
A reasonably good-looking group.
Bonaba Inga.
How'd she slip in there?
How'd they let Inga into the cabinet?
Well, you're now you're ugly, shaming.
Well, that's what we do on the show.
Yes, that's true, but that's what we do.
Not so obviously.
Well, she's making a play.
She wants to get there.
You know, she wants to screw Greenland.
The Icelanders never.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that's.
Come on over here, you know, we'll do
a deal.
Yeah, you can have a base right at the north.
I mean, Iceland's got lots of places you could put a base.
Absolutely.
I think so.
And it's better weather.
It's better weather.
On the AI front, I shared this with you.
I got a beautiful email from Billy Samoa at podify.media.
I wanted to share this because he emailed me and I was very flattered.
Subject of the email, have you ever considered a podcast?
Adam.
Yeah, this is a classic.
Have you ever imagined thousands of folks tuning in to hear your thoughts?
That's what a podcast can do for a very busy executive like you.
I'm Billy, CEO at Podify.
We handle every step to launch your show, so just share ideas.
Curious?
Billy Samoa.
I don't believe this was AI generated.
I think it was a canned letter that they wrote.
It's too short to be AI.
It's not flowery and long, lengthy, and boring.
And it sounds like just somebody put together a stock letter.
But how did they know I was a busy executive?
Yes, that's the point.
It's just a stock letter.
They had a mailing list of quote-unquote busy executives, and you got one of the mailings.
How did I get on that list?
The point is that these people are doing no work, probably a Gen Zer,
you know, just bottom feeding.
It's ridiculous.
Now, we do have another, unless you brought it up.
I wish you'd started with, Adam, I hope this email finds you well.
Yeah, I know.
I'm surprised with this.
That would have been perfect.
Now, we have a request from one of our producers.
I was going to send him an email telling him to send you this note, which is a long note.
But he is an author for an epic new series called The Universal Testament.
It's somewhat biblical, I guess.
But he wants to put some Easter eggs in his story,
which includes a reference to Noah Jenda spelled backwards and on a Nega show
and
have us as a couple of characters in as Easter eggs,
both spelled backwards kind of things.
And it wants to know if it's okay with us.
Sounds good to me.
It sounds fine to me.
I don't know.
It sounds fine to me, man.
Sounds good.
Yeah, we can be.
People should incorporate.
We've had this happen before where somebody Easter egged us in some storyline.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, final clip for me, uh, the latest SpaceX launch.
And it's liftoff for SpaceX mega rocket Starship.
The 123-meter spacecraft traveled further than the two previous launches, which both ended in fiery explosions minutes after takeoff.
Boom!
Incredible flip-by.
The two-stage vehicle consisting of the Starship vessel mounted on a SpaceX super heavy rocket booster started off well.
Both parts separated as expected.
Ship engine cutoff.
However, it wasn't a complete success.
There were hopes Starship could complete a test flight and release mock satellites, but that didn't happen.
The spacecraft was uncontrollably spinning in space.
I love how their commentators describe it.
Just to confirm, we did lose contact with the ship officially a couple of minutes ago, so that brings an end to the ninth flight test.
It then re-entered the Earth's atmosphere, likely landing somewhere over the Indian Ocean.
But SpaceX said it was part of the learning process.
With a test like this, success comes from what we learn, and today's test will help us improve Starship's reliability as SpaceX seeks to make life multi-planetary.
It's the biggest and most powerful launch vehicle ever built, and owner Elon Musk wants it to go where no man has gone before: Mars.
His aim is that humans will go to the red planet as early as 2029.
Rapid, unscheduled disassembly.
Always
a good term, my friend.
But that rocket is a monster.
And it's got really an interesting flame.
Well, it has 33 engines.
Just a fabulous product.
This is God.
Well, and I think it's true.
You know, the test is a test.
It's a test.
It's a test.
That's what it's for.
It didn't kill anybody.
Not yet.
Not yet.
Killed some fish on the way down.
I want to tease some clips for the next show.
Okay.
I got some climate clips that are going to be dynamite, but I want to play them today.
I only have one clip left to play for today.
Yes.
Well, as you know, there's always a
these
even though through the period of time that we've done this show, which is almost 18 years, we've seen recycled news stories.
And it's one of the things that crops many times.
Many times.
And my favorite one is always the flying car.
Well, and I'm waiting for one, yeah.
Well, I've been hearing about the flying car since the 70s, yes, and every and it comes around and goes and comes and goes and comes.
And there's a couple new ones out there that are complete fakes.
Oh, yeah, phony.
And but another story I realized when I heard saw this one is another story that keeps repeating itself, which is the
eminent
discovery of Noah's Ark.
They found it again.
Scientists exploring a boat-shaped site in eastern Turkey have found compelling signs it could be the real Noah's Ark.
With hints of decayed wood and man-made features, researchers are gearing up for a deeper look.
Fascinating, because when you dig in that part of the world, everywhere you look, there is history.
That would be blockbuster history.
That would be amazing.
I'm here for it.
I'm going to continue to watch and wait for updates on that one.
Yes.
Where was it found this time?
In the middle of nowhere in the mountains of Turkey, and it looks like a geological formation.
It kind of looks like a large boat.
It's bullcrap.
I have seen this story crop up every six or seven years.
Yes.
Noah's Ark.
Let's see.
I wonder if we have any previous Noah's Ark discoveries.
Noah's Ark ready to open in Kentucky?
I remember that one.
Yeah, that's a good one.
That's supposed to be pretty funny to go to.
Welcome back.
You have to see it to believe it.
A new full-scale replica of Noah's Ark called the Ark Encounter is set to open in Williamstown, Kentucky this Thursday.
It's believed to be the longest.
That's the Money Honey.
That's the Money Honey from 2016.
I'm going to look it up on Bingit.io.
I think that's a good one.
I want to find the other Noah's Ark stories.
And Flying Car.
Yeah, I'm all about it.
I'm ready for it.
Flying Car.
Here it comes.
I can't wait.
Have you seen the latest one that flies around with these little propellers that couldn't get anything off the ground?
Have you seen this one?
Yeah, it's like a plastic car on top of a drone, and they pretend it's a flying car.
That's the one.
I don't know if that's the one.
I don't know.
All I know is it's got four.
It says it's a quadcopter
with somebody sitting on it.
And it's got the props are about five inches maybe.
And there's four of them.
This thing couldn't lift anything.
It's just not physically possible.
Is this a single-seater?
Yeah,
it's like a motorcycle.
The Jetson?
Oh, the motorcycle one.
Oh, the motorcycle.
No, no, there's two motorcycle ones you have to keep.
You have to be a lookout.
The one that I is the one where he's inside of a hangar.
Yeah.
And the motorcycle takes off, then flies inside the hangar, then shoots outside and comes back in.
Yeah, I've seen that one.
Yeah.
That's like the eagle who picked up the baby.
I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do this.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fabulous.
Yeah, on
Well, trust me when I say the show is not over yet.
We still have our tip of the day coming up.
We have our meetup reports and we have our fabulous end of show mixers.
And we also want to thank the rest of our supporters.
$50 and above, quite the list today because it's for two shows.
John C.
DeVoir, go
cut three.
Go.
Let's go.
Mr.
Producer, Amy Harmon,
Asheville, North Carolina, 133.33, and she wants goat karma for all Canadians.
Elbows up, slaves.
I know what that means.
Brian Dowd in Stockholm.
We'll put some karma, some goat karma at the end.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Brian Dowd in Stockholm, New Jersey, 12345.
Sir Knighted
Dakota, 12321.
He has a very pleasant note.
Timothy Lipton, 120.
Rami, in
it says Roorfolk, Virginia, 111.11, but I bet you that's
check.
Yeah, I bet you.
That's Norfolk.
Norfolk is the way it's supposed to be pronounced, to be honest about it.
Dan the Mead guy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, 106.75.
Oh, the Mead guy.
Send me some.
I can go for some.
Mead guy.
Yeah.
Mead guy.
We need some mead.
Jason Campbell in Center Valley, Pennsylvania, 100.
People have got these notes.
AZ Sunnyside Pro, LLC, in Apache
Junction.
Apache Junction, Arizona.
I wonder what that is.
100.
I have no idea what AZ Sunnyside does.
Brandon Brown in Amelia, Ohio, $81.95.
Then he wants a jobs comer for his dad.
Kevin McLaughlin,
there he is.
He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of American boobs, 8008.
Sir Herb Lamb in Sugar Hill, Georgia, another regular 8008.
Dame Shelley in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Dakota, 8008.
Bruce Johnson in Minneapolis, Minnesota, nuts, 8008.
And Kevin McLaughlin came in because he's got one for each of the two shows, including the Clip Show, another 8008.
Wow.
Good for him.
He's not missing his show.
He's setting some sort of a record here for continuity.
Continuity.
Archduke of Luna, lover of America, and lover of boobs.
He is a lover of boobs.
Porgay Alvarez in Pontavedra Beach, Florida, 7171.
Sir Bad Potato.
Yeah, he's back.
68 bucks.
Loves the newsletter.
Baroness Monica in Drayton Valley, Alberta, Canada, $65.65.
Craig Kohler in Evansville, Indiana, 6502, the processor
of choice for the donations.
Patricia Lombardo, Collegeville, Pennsylvania, 65.
She has a little, I want to read this one.
My mom took me to a Jane Fonda protest in the early 70s when I was a child.
We rocked her limousine and people threw eggs at her.
Ah, the good old days.
Heard a clip of that idiot in the Memorial Day clip show, so that memory hit just right.
So she donated $65.
Nice.
Rocked her limo.
Threw eggs at her.
Sir Edward in Omaha, Nebraska, $64.22.
And he's got a birthday coming up, anniversary, too, for his adoring wife.
Helen.
Helen.
Johann Seeger's in Bree, Belgium, $63.96.
And he says, thanks for the rain, Adam.
Yep, you got it.
Jonas Freitag.
I got a couple notes too from people in Holland saying, well, yeah, you guys have worked.
Yeah, yeah.
And we got golf ball-sized hail.
You're welcome.
Jonas Freitag in Hamburg, Deutschland, 63.25.
From Jonas and Alexandra in Altona.
All right.
Thank you.
We need more Deutschlanders.
Yes.
Matthew Elwart in Weatherford, Texas, 6006.
Kyle Tuhig, Twig, Twig, Twig.
Sir Kyle.
I don't know how to pronounce it.
In Liberty Lake, Washington.
This is a switcheroo for Lacey Maloney.
Oh, nice.
And a dedouching.
You've been dedouching.
I don't want to smell her douche all weekend.
In Walla Walla, where he's doing wine tasting.
Yes, nice.
Which is a good area for it, I might add.
Jamie Buell in Vista, California, 6006.
These are all small boobs.
Sir Latte in Bremerton, Washington, also 6006.
Dame Tracy in Sir Canebreak in St.
George, Louisiana, 55.10.
Double nickels on the dime, which is a lost donation.
Bart Hendrix in Curtin, Holland.
Is it Herrton?
Herton.
Herton.
Herton.
It's the Dutch mountains of Maastricht.
Yeah, 55.
Sir Prize in Yukon, Oklahoma, 54.44.
Sir Chris in
Saxi, Saxi, Texas.
Is that right?
53.33.
Yeah, I guess.
Kevin Adam in Clover, South Carolina, 52.72.
The Mexican Hobbit, Shula Vista, 52.72 from the Mexican Hobbit.
Barnaby Magruder in Mount Washington, Kentucky, 52.72.
House buying karma.
Please would give you some karma at the end.
Dame Rita, there she is in Sparks, Nevada, 52.42.
And she says thanks for the twice weekly dose of sanity.
And laughter.
And we appreciate the fact that she donates almost every show now for sales.
Sounds
good.
New reason.
She likes it.
I don't care.
She likes it.
She likes it.
I'm encouraging it.
Sean Hines in Austin, 5169, ITM.
Baroness Knight in Edmonds, Washington, 5015.
And now we got the $50 donors.
There are a few of those.
And they're just going to do the name and location if I have a location.
Alex Delgado in Aptos, California.
Bruce Baer in New Stanton, Pennsylvania.
Melissa Alvarez in Ponte Vervedra Beach.
We got people there.
Brett Denton in Boise.
Jacqueline Connolly in Green Bay.
George Wushett in Lavernia, Texas.
Aaron Weisgerber in Bend, Oregon.
Steve Grebb in Lansdale, Pennsylvania.
Richard Gardner, I think he's in New York.
Leaf Erickson in Meridian, Idaho.
Bobby Bow
in Bluegrass, Iowa.
R.
Just plain R, parts unknown.
Marcus
says R from parts unknown.
R.
R.
The letter R, caps.
Mark Lay in Houston, Texas.
This actually came in from Jen Tyson and is
switcheroo to Titus.
Titus gets credit.
Titus Tyson in Monument, Colorado.
John Fitzpatrick in Keber Springs, Arkansas.
And last on our list here is Michael Myers.
This is for two shows.
Michael Myers
in Mandeville, Louisiana.
I want to thank all these people for making show 16
1767 a reality that it is.
1768, even.
Yeah.
I thought that was 1767.
No, that was the last show.
We weren't here for that.
Remember?
That was a show.
Oh, okay.
I got my.
Yes, I didn't count it.
Thank you to all of these supporters.
$50 and above.
Again, thank you to our executive and associate executive producers for this episode.
Those credits are real and good for a lifetime.
You can use them anywhere.
Hollywood credits are recognized for as long as Hollywood still exists.
Never anything under under 50 for reasons of anonymity, but we do have those sustaining donors.
We appreciate you very much.
Go to noagendadonations.com to donate any amount, any number you want.
You can do the sustaining donation, any amount, any frequency.
It's all up to you.
It's value for value.
If you get anything out of the show, send it back to us.
Noagendadonations.com, house buying, karma, jobs, karma, goat karma.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You've got
karma.
Once again, noagendadonations.com.
It's her birthday birthday.
Oh, no much.
Rosie Lynx wishes her son, Paul, a happy birthday.
He turned 22 on the 22nd.
Sir Edward the Henpecked wishes his adoring wife, Helen, a very happy birthday on May 23rd.
And of course, I think they also had an anniversary to celebrating.
Cody turned 33 on May 28th.
Sir Recalcitrant Crazy Steve II wishes Lavis from behind the schemes a happy birthday, as do I.
May 29th, that would be today.
And Dame Kylie of the Double D Cups says happy birthday to Sir Andy of Terrago Beach.
He turns 57 tomorrow.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
It's your birthday.
Title changes.
Turn and face the slave.
And we have a title change for Sir Kevin Smith, who supported the show with a total additional of $1,000, for for which we are very grateful and he now becomes a baron and will henceforth be known as Baron Kevin Smith and we appreciate you very much.
We do have one knight today, Paul Lincolns, and he is standing by near the round table of the knights and dames as I grab my blade and you have yours out at the radio.
There you go.
Very good.
Paul Lincoln, step on up right up here in the podium.
Watch your step.
You, sir, have supported the best podcast in the universe with $1,000.
And therefore, you become a knight of of the know agenda roundtable and i'm very proud to pronounce the cake the as sir paul lincoln's knight of the know agenda round table that means you get your requested titos and soda with lime and some real empanadas from texas along with that we've got warm beer and cold women we also have pepperoni rolls and pale ales we got beers and blunts rubeness women and rose geese and the sake vodka vanilla bong hits and bourbon sparkling cider and escorts ginger ale and gerbils breast milk and pablum or the always effervescent always available mutton and mead.
You, sir, can head over to noagendarings.com.
That's where you can see that handsome No Agenda Knight or Dame ring.
It's a signet ring, so we will ship it off with some sticks of wax, which you can use to seal your important correspondence with.
And of course, a certificate of authenticity.
But more importantly, we just want to welcome you to the roundtable of the No Agenda Knights and Dames.
No Agenda
Beetups.
Yeah, baby, the No Agenda Meetups.
That's where you meet people like Steve and Stephanie, who will take you out to lunch, to dinner.
Even better, when they come through
the hill country.
You will meet many people at these meetups.
We brought up a lot of fond memories of the Super Spreader event in Vegas.
It was so good.
And I wish I could go to every single one of them.
It's physically now possible, but they are so much fun.
You can find them all at noagendameetups.com.
You will find people there who you will connect with, and that connection always brings you protection.
They are your first responders in an emergency.
And here's a meetup report from the May 25th meetup at Mickey's Irish Pub in Davenport, Iowa.
Wait, what am I going to say?
I got you.
Hey, Adam and John.
This is Todd McGrivy at the Davenport Meetup, Davenport, Iowa, at Mickey's Irish Pub.
Thanks to Big Nasty, who put together the deal, right, Big Nasty?
That's correct.
It's really happening.
It's really happening.
He tried it.
Thank you for putting out there at meetups.com.
And we have with with us other luminaries: Jesse James Anderson, one of the producers, Mike Bernstein, another producer, and Dawn from Milan.
Don't forget her.
And we love you guys out and get Monation.
Our only message to John and Adam is: please give Katherine Austin Fitz and Scott Hordon another chance.
Thank you for your courage.
In the morning.
Something.
Say something.
Yes.
A very messy meter purport.
You hear hear that, John?
We need to give Scott Horden and Katherine Austin Fitz another chance.
So send us some great podcasts with time codes so we can appreciate them more.
Hey, there's a meetup taking place now.
Probably, no, it's over by now.
The Laser Swaart picnic in Kuhlenborg in the Netherlands.
I think that's done by now.
But coming up in just a little bit, the North Idaho Sandy Brigade may meet up, 5 o'clock at Trails and Brewery
and Brick Oven Pizza in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.
The North Georgia Monthly Meetup starts at six o'clock, Cherry Street Brewing, Alpharetta, Georgia.
On Saturday, the No Agenda Central Ohio May meetup, noon Eastern, Jackie O's in Columbus, Ohio.
The South Jersey meetup for May also on Saturday at Double Nickel Brewing Company in Pensauken Township, New Jersey.
The Tiny Amygdele of Anchorage, they unite.
What are you drinking?
I'm drinking Hop WTR,
which which is hop water, but the brand is H-O-P-W-T-R.
And it's not that good.
Okay.
The tiny amygdala of Anchorage, they will unite at 2 o'clock on Saturday at the Campbell Park Airship Trailhead in Anchorage, Alaska.
That should be a blast.
Please send us a meetup report.
The KC Meetup Based Baseball and BBQ Edition, 3.33 at Maple Hill Park in Overland Park, Kansas.
The Flight of the No Agenda, number 63.
Leo Bravo does it again, 3.33 Pacific time, Steelcraft City of Long Beach in Long Beach, California.
And Sir Mark is organizing the red carpet meetup for Sir Patrick Koble at 7.30 in 10 Cups in Tokyo, Japan.
Koble's going to Japan?
Koble, he just went to Amsterdam.
Now he's going to Japan.
I don't know whose dime he's going on.
It's not his own.
You'd be surprised.
You'd be surprised.
Unless he's got a gig.
I mean, that would be
by the way, the hot water is better than I thought.
Okay.
The Duke of the South gets around.
And on Sunday, the indie June 20th, June 20th, Half-On Summer Startup Part 1.
What a title.
3 o'clock at Dugout Bar in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Of course, Sir Market Day Maria of Greenwood will be hosting that.
Just some of the many meetups that you can find at Noagendametups.com.
Go there and find out where there's one near you.
If there isn't one, start one yourself.
It's easy.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You to be where you won't be.
Triggered on hell blame.
You to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
It's like a party, everybody.
Now we do have a couple of
selections for an end of show ISO.
It's a thing.
We've been doing it for a long time.
It's a thing.
We like doing it.
Although John, of course, is cheating these days.
He uses AI.
And I just try to get the old isolated clips, just stuff that is kind of fun, hanging out there.
Do you even have any ISOs?
Nope.
I decided not to cheat, as you put it.
Oh, well, then you get.
So I'm giving you the winner.
You get to choose from.
I better have something good.
My voice should be heard loud and clear.
So that's my worst.
Yeah, I guess so.
I have no agenda.
Good luck for the weekend.
Hmm?
I hate it when they use
the artificial.
Well, it wasn't artificial.
Yeah, but okay, but okay.
Decent, decent, doable,
excusable as usual.
The whole world is lying.
Oh, it's too corny.
All right, this has been an emergency pod.
Oh, please.
All right, this has been an emergency pod.
You don't like the emergency pod?
Well, I mean, I like it, but I don't like it as the end.
I like that one, the second one.
I have no agenda.
Good luck for the weekend.
Yeah, I think we'll go with that.
We'll go with that one.
And right now we have the always trusty tip of the day.
Great advice for you and me.
Just a tip with JCD
and sometimes at home.
Created by Dana Bernetti.
That's one of my various iterations of this tip of the day.
I have to nerd out once in a while.
Nerding out?
This is a great tip for anyone who has an old computer or...
They have
an old Mac, for example, or
they want to play around, or they had some software that they used to
like, and
the new stuff does no good.
This is, and here's the website.
This is one of those sites where you have to put the, you know, I don't know why they do this, but the www is necessary.
www.oldversion.com.
Oh, let me check this out.
Oldversion.com.
This is old versions of tons and tons and tons of software that won't.
A lot of
stuff that used to run on your Windows 95 machine,
but won't run on Windows 11 and something you liked.
Oh, wow.
What a list.
The list goes on forever.
And this is a great resource for people out there who either want to go back to an old version of a product, which is sometimes better, or they have a machine that won't run a new product, but they like this old product.
this is a fabulous site i'm looking at
windows mac linux they got all this stuff a lot of games they got win wind patrol i haven't seen that in a long time
lime wire bear share
oh donkey donkey 2000
these are all classics that is quite interesting as it's it's an unsecure site i might add yeah it's an unsecure site and you might have you know you might be careful but i think this is i stumbled stumbled onto this and I said oh my god this is terrific I am in complete agreement I think that is terrific I'm gonna get me eDonkey 2000 right after the show can't I can't wait there it is ladies and gentlemen find more at tip of the day.net John C.
Deborah's tip of the day
with JCD
and sometimes Adam
Created by Dana Brunetti.
And we thank Dana Brunetti as always for creating that.
Where would we be without Dana Brunetti?
We'd be nowhere, we'd be nothing, we'd be nobody.
End of show mixes.
We've got classics from Bill Montenay, brand new Nautilus K, and sound guy Steve.
Classics, everybody.
These are good.
You will want to stick around for them.
Also, coming up next on the stream, we have a walkthrough the mind of the one and only Billy Bones.
This is episode 321, Built Not Bought.
Billy Bones is interesting fellow.
So check that out.
And you can just keep listening to the stream if you're listening live at
trollroom.io or noagenda.stream or your modern podcast app.
Thank you, trolls, for being here.
And we will be back on Sunday for more hours of...
Wow, we almost hit four hours today.
More hours of infotainment and media deconstruction.
Well, we had a lot of people to thank, John.
We had a lot of people to thank.
Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Hill Country,
which is Fredericksburg, Texas.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, we're still wishing Kennedy a happy birthday.
I'm John Cedivora.
We return on Sunday.
Please join us then for another episode of No Agenda.
Until then, adios, mofos, a hooey hooey,
and such
Won't you come get the vaccine?
If you postpone,
we're going to coke you, baby.
Ignore your troubles and doubts.
It may have problems, but you won't find out.
Cause
we'll keep that news in the dark.
Tell you instead of places you will be going.
No way, you'll get on a plane
without spike protein in your veins, baby.
Don't you
reject the vaccine?
Don't, don't, don't, don't, don't you
reject the vaccine.
Don't ask questions of me.
Shut up, slave,
lick your shirt, sleeve, fouchy's calling, case is falling down.
I spoke to those high school kids here yesterday morning.
And it was, oh, that's right, you were a big Joey W worthy superstar speaker to the high school.
Yes.
Superstar speaker to the high school.
Yes.
You know what?
I spoke to those high school kids here yesterday morning.
And it was.
Oh, that's right.
You were a big,
you were the superstar speaker to the high school.
Yes.
Superstar speaker to in the high school.
Yes.
Every single thing, even stuff, you and I say.
Hairdo for hats or anything like that.
Propaganda.
Every single thing.
Even stuff you and I say is all product.
Again.
Hairdo for hats or anything like that.
President Donald Trump is a yes.
MAGA.
He's got hats.
He's got a slogan.
Propaganda.
President Donald Trump is a yes.
MAGA.
He's got hats.
He's got a slogan.
Propaganda.
You know what?
I spoke to those high school kids.
Propaganda.
Superstar speaker to the high school.
Propaganda.
You know what?
I spoke to those high school kids.
Propaganda.
Superstar speaker to the high Propaganda.
Super smart speaker to the high school hairdo who's for hats.
Super smart speaker to the high school.
Yes.
Super smart speaker to the high school hairdo who's for hats.
Super smart speaker to the high school.
Super smart speaker to the high school.
Propaganda.
President Donald Trump is yes.
Propaganda.
Super smart speaker to the high school.
Propaganda.
President Donald Trump is yes!
Propaganda.
Hairdo who's wear hats or anything like that.
Hair dude who's wear hats or anything like that.
Put simply, propaganda is the dissemination of ideas intended to convince people to think and act in a particular way and for a particular purpose.
News CNN reporting shows there's been a sharp decline in vaccination ads on television.
Hear me with you, Beth Shot!
The COVID-19 vaccines have been proven safe and effective.
There's a lot of misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine, so it's critical that you get the facts from sources you can trust.
The fact is, the vaccines are safe and effective.
More sickness and death across our nation.
A campaign of shock and awe has begun.
It's all of our responsibility to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
People you know and trust are getting vaccinated.
The most effective are black women.
Black women.
Black women.
Black women.
Everyone has to keep everyone else safe.
The vaccines have all been through and met the necessary safety and quality standards.
Now that every American over the age of 16 is eligible to get the vaccine, I want to talk about you getting yours.
Getting a vaccine can protect not only you, but your loved ones.
The vaccine is safe, safe.
The COVID vaccines are safe and effective.
It's effective.
It's effective.
It's easy.
It's free.
And it cannot change your DNA.
The next step on the journey is yours.
Our health is worth a shot.
I beg the public to take this virus more seriously.
The ultimate end game of all this is vaccination.
The best podcast in the universe.
Audios, Mofo.org/slash NA.
I have no agenda.
Good luck for the weekend.