1810 - "NA Era"

3h 58m
No Agenda Episode 1811 - "NA Era"



"NA Era"


Executive Producers:


Brandon Mango


Bowman McMahon


Strike


Sir Earhopper


Kevin & Torrey Primeau


David Koenen


Duke SirDrShakey


Matthew Burns


Associate Executive Producers:


Sir Castic


Pierre Maas


Eli the coffee guy


Baron Victor


Sir layron


Dame Zelda


Sir knight DC


SDG


Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning resumes


Rheanne Kosinski


Peace Prize:


Brandon Mango


Bowman McMahon


Sir Earhopper


Become a member of the 1812 Club, support the show here


Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend Breez Sphinx Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain


Title Changes


Sir John of South London > Earl Kumar of South London


Knights & Dames


Brandon Mango > Sir Mr Mango the knight of the sweet tooth


David Koenen > Sir David of West-Brabant


Matthew Burns > Sir Burns of the Good Future.


Art By: Tante Neel


 


End of Show Mixes:


 Bri EOS They Show The Monsters.mp3


 EOSM - SNAP Rant Remix - Sir Michaelanthony.mp3


 Mark van Patten EOS Al Gore Rhythm.mp3


 Nykko Syme EOS Can't Read a Clock.wav


 


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


Sign Up for the newsletter


No Agenda Peerage


ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1811.noagendanotes.com


Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com


RSS Podcast Feed


Full Summaries in PDF


No Agenda Lite in opus format


Last Modified 10/26/2025 17:26:43
This page created with the FreedomController





Last Modified 10/26/2025 17:26:43 by Freedom Controller  

Press play and read along

Runtime: 3h 58m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Well now, unfortunately, it's gone so long that we're in gun smoke territory. Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak.

Speaker 3 It's Sunday, October 26, 2025.

Speaker 4 This is your award-winning Gilmore Nation Media Assassination episode 1811.

Speaker 1 This is no agenda.

Speaker 2 Turns out she's a dude.

Speaker 5 As we broadcast live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six.

Speaker 7 In the morning, everybody.

Speaker 8 I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 1 From Northern Silicon Valley, where I've determined that if you you wear jeans when you're over 50, you look like a homeless person. I'm John C.
Dvorex. It's Craig Martin Buzzkill in the morning.

Speaker 11 I don't know if that's true.

Speaker 12 I wear jeans.

Speaker 13 I don't look like a homeless person.

Speaker 15 I'm over 50.

Speaker 16 I don't agree.

Speaker 1 I go to the Monterey Foods where all these old farts go.

Speaker 17 Well, you mean the baggy sacks?

Speaker 19 Berkeley.

Speaker 1 These old men are wearing jeans and they all look like they're homeless. There's no reason for wear slacks.
You're old. you're not a kid anymore

Speaker 1 you're not you're not running around in the park well what do you wear corduroys

Speaker 1 dockers what do you wear what do you wear dockers would be similar yeah just just some sort of slack okay hey everybody

Speaker 27 today is our 18th anniversary

Speaker 28 Congratulations to all the producers of the No Agenda Show who have been with us.

Speaker 30 Yes, join us. Thank you to the Stream Wizardry, Avoid Zero, Bemrose, Cotton Gin, the trolls in the troll room.

Speaker 37 All of you are just fantastic.

Speaker 39 And congratulations to you.

Speaker 5 To you, my partner, for 18 years.

Speaker 8 Stop. Stop.

Speaker 43 Hey, it won't stop. Why won't it stop?

Speaker 25 Oh, there. Stop.
Stop. Stop.

Speaker 44 I can't make it stop.

Speaker 2 What is this?

Speaker 45 Make it stop.

Speaker 43 It's not stopping.

Speaker 47 I think my button's broken.

Speaker 1 I have the real one around here somewhere.

Speaker 48 Oh, it looks like this controller is busted.

Speaker 49 Oh, that's interesting.

Speaker 15 18 years.

Speaker 1 Here's the real one.

Speaker 51 Oh, wait.

Speaker 52 There's something very wrong here.

Speaker 53 Oh, no.

Speaker 54 What is happening?

Speaker 47 Oh, no.

Speaker 55 It's out of control.

Speaker 8 Hold on.

Speaker 57 I got to reboot a whole system here.

Speaker 59 This is bad.

Speaker 60 That's weird.

Speaker 51 Why?

Speaker 1 Buttons go bad?

Speaker 14 Well, I don't think it was the button.

Speaker 62 I think it it might be my entire MIDI controller finally gave up the ghost.

Speaker 59 Let me see. Let me see if it's okay.

Speaker 1 Well, it should run forever.

Speaker 35 Well, it's mechanical.

Speaker 1 Oh, it's mechanical. What?

Speaker 65 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Sound comes in. There's a little midget in there going

Speaker 10 to know.

Speaker 1 What do you mean, mechanical?

Speaker 29 Well, the MIDI controller controls

Speaker 66 the playout system.

Speaker 17 And the MIDI controller controls the I have one, two, three, four, five, six.

Speaker 71 I have eight players because, you know, we do a lot of clips on this show, in case you hadn't noticed.

Speaker 72 No.

Speaker 63 We do a lot of clips on this show.

Speaker 73 And so, you know, from time to time, I got to load up a whole bunch of cliche, particularly if

Speaker 25 either of us has a gear.

Speaker 1 Are they carts? Are they mechanical? You say it's mechanical.

Speaker 1 Did you move them all to eight tracks?

Speaker 7 So, you know, not far from it, it is, in fact, a digital cart rack.

Speaker 46 Yes, that's correct.

Speaker 1 But I used to use the term digital.

Speaker 1 That to me doesn't mean mechanical.

Speaker 11 No, but the controller has faders and physical buttons for me to.

Speaker 1 Oh, you have actual pots.

Speaker 77 Yes. Well, I call them faders.

Speaker 79 You still probably consider I have round, huge knobs on my board.

Speaker 9 That's what you want.

Speaker 1 Have you ever played with

Speaker 1 those old systems with the giant round knobs?

Speaker 36 I hate those systems. They're the ones.
Why?

Speaker 1 You got a big, you can fine-tune it.

Speaker 1 I wish I could. Those old, big giant round knobs and a big VU meter that's the size of a house.

Speaker 17 And then when you wanted to,

Speaker 11 that's just too funny.

Speaker 80 And then

Speaker 81 when you were ready to do, you know, to

Speaker 83 cue up a record,

Speaker 46 you turned the pot all the way to the left and there was a little switch, a little click.

Speaker 79 And then it would be in audition mode.

Speaker 85 You remember that?

Speaker 15 Oh, yeah, I forgot about that.

Speaker 1 But I do recall it now.

Speaker 86 That was important.

Speaker 87 Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 1 In audition mode. So you could hear it as you queued it up

Speaker 1 without it going over the air.

Speaker 60 Yes, exactly. Correct.

Speaker 9 Correct.

Speaker 1 That's the kind of gear that we should have today.

Speaker 88 You know,

Speaker 15 if I could get a board that was still good, I'd probably

Speaker 90 have it here.

Speaker 83 I don't know if I'd actually use it, but I'd probably have it.

Speaker 91 That would be fun.

Speaker 22 That would be fun.

Speaker 92 So

Speaker 92 let's take a little trip back, shall we, just for a moment?

Speaker 62 For a moment.

Speaker 94 Let us go back to

Speaker 78 well, what was it?

Speaker 74 So it was October 26,

Speaker 95 Friday, October 26, 2007.

Speaker 2 Let's go back in time.

Speaker 7 And this is for you children who don't know what 78 records sounds like.

Speaker 53 This is what the no agenda show sounded like 18 years ago.

Speaker 99 Welcome, everybody, to a brand new program on the Pod Show Network,

Speaker 99 which could be titled A Number of Things. We chose No Agenda, but it could be the show with no imaging, no

Speaker 99 content yet.

Speaker 97 The only thing it is is some things don't change.

Speaker 99 Guys, with an idea of putting together a what should we call it, John?

Speaker 101 Agenda-less show.

Speaker 102 Agenda-less show.

Speaker 103 Exactly.

Speaker 75 So your window still makes a lot of noise.

Speaker 67 We didn't have the noise gate back then, but I think that's your sound is

Speaker 90 all that noise, that white noise in the background.

Speaker 105 John C.

Speaker 99 Dvorak in California, Adam Curry here in London, something we cooked up,

Speaker 99 was it in like a four-minute phone call? Hey, we should do a show together. Okay.

Speaker 99 Let's call it no agenda. Okay, and here we are.

Speaker 101 Well, of course, the basis for a show like this, and I think everybody out there who's ever had a con or who has conversations with friends,

Speaker 101 they occasionally, especially when the conversations go on and on, say, you know, that would have been an interesting thing for other people to listen to.

Speaker 73 This is when you still pretended to be my friend.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, you know,

Speaker 1 that was the era when a comic strip blogger had his yo agenda show, and he kept claiming that as soon as one of us quit or something happened to the podcast network or whatever, pod shows.

Speaker 15 Pod Show Network, yes.

Speaker 1 The show would dissolve because

Speaker 1 because we hated each other because or no because you were a jerk according to him and some things never change exactly exactly

Speaker 1 he still feels the same way but you know because you won't pick his art hey well we picked his art just two shows ago

Speaker 15 we did yeah but that was me oh okay

Speaker 8 hey breaking news breaking news unbelievable

Speaker 110 French President Emmanuel Macron's wife, Brigitte Macron,

Speaker 75 discovered that her tax account on France's official government website listed her as male under the name Jean-Michel.

Speaker 15 Breaking news.

Speaker 1 Is this actually a news story or a hoax?

Speaker 17 This is no, this is all over the French media.

Speaker 13 Not France 24 yet, trust me.

Speaker 94 I've been looking for it.

Speaker 51 Yeah.

Speaker 115 He's great.

Speaker 9 Well, it's possible.

Speaker 107 Well, I mean, they have the

Speaker 11 BFM TV, whatever that is.

Speaker 58 Milk Bar TV.

Speaker 50 That sounds reputable.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah. Milk Bar.
I always go to them as my go-to.

Speaker 114 Milk Bar is the best.

Speaker 51 Oh, man.

Speaker 65 Anyway, 18 years, John.

Speaker 119 It's the longest gig I've ever had.

Speaker 118 How about you?

Speaker 1 Well, now, unfortunately, it's gone so long that we're in gun smoke territory.

Speaker 120 Hey, Haas.

Speaker 1 And there's like maybe one or two other podcasts that have lasted this long.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 so now it's a historic.

Speaker 1 People are actually listening to what will eventually be considered an historic podcast.

Speaker 34 You know what?

Speaker 62 I heard someone the other day on a podcast.

Speaker 90 saying that we are creating the future library of Alexandria in real time because the future, of course, will only be AI search results.

Speaker 17 We don't know if even if Google's going to be around in the future because they're killing their own business model.

Speaker 59 And there will be spread throughout the digital universe, but luckily also the physical universe, because we have so many people who made CDs of the show.

Speaker 79 Thanks to

Speaker 71 Ramsey,

Speaker 84 you know, that people will pick it up and go, like, hey, what's this?

Speaker 14 Or what is this thing I'm listening to?

Speaker 1 Yeah, they're artifacts.

Speaker 90 Yeah.

Speaker 73 And I'm sure not everything will be preserved, but there's so much.

Speaker 118 I mean, that's the beauty of the internet, particularly with podcasts, MP3s.

Speaker 96 They're just everywhere.

Speaker 95 And they're decentralized, downloaded onto millions of phones.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and they're archived by all kinds of people.

Speaker 75 Yeah, and all kinds of devices and everywhere.

Speaker 100 And people go like, oh, that's interesting.

Speaker 126 So these guys knew 50 years ago that we never landed on the moon.

Speaker 15 Wow,

Speaker 58 those guys were good.

Speaker 124 How can we not have guys like that anymore?

Speaker 53 Yeah, that's what it's going to be.

Speaker 36 So, one of the early staples, I'm not going to do a retrospective show, but this just came to mind.

Speaker 15 Why not?

Speaker 39 Because I didn't prepare one.

Speaker 50 That's why I'm going to say that. Oh, okay.

Speaker 1 Well, that's the reason. Not because you don't want to.
No, I do have some historical clips myself, but it has to do with measles.

Speaker 133 Oh, no, we'll do that.

Speaker 67 And we kind of should do that in just a minute.

Speaker 104 So, one of the early things that we were discussing, because we started just the end of 2007, 2008, you know, we saw Obama coming.

Speaker 80 And

Speaker 17 I think

Speaker 65 one of the early memes of the show was mac and cheese.

Speaker 136 Everyone's going to be eating mac and cheese.

Speaker 95 And we've gone through, well, actually, this is one of our oldest jingles.

Speaker 1 You slaves can get used to mac and cheese, mac and cheese,

Speaker 138 macaroni and cheap cheddar melted together. Mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac and cheese.

Speaker 138 Mac and cheese.

Speaker 20 Everybody.

Speaker 110 And we went through an interesting history with mac and cheese where it became an actual luxury item.

Speaker 67 I think people were lined up for

Speaker 124 $18 mac and cheese.

Speaker 37 Of course, we had the grilled cheese sandwiches that people stood in line for.

Speaker 1 Before we continue, across from Mevio Pod Show operation, across the street

Speaker 1 from that, from the studio

Speaker 1 or whatever, offices, there was a grilled cheese sandwich shop.

Speaker 91 Yes.

Speaker 1 And all they sold was grilled cheese sandwiches.

Speaker 34 And for $15.

Speaker 1 Yeah, or something. It was outrageous.

Speaker 116 And we've come full circle.

Speaker 141 Last but not least, one trend in TrueBrand is making a big comeback as consumers tighten their wallets. And here it is, hamburger helper.

Speaker 141 The mix of mac and cheese and ground beef is seeing a surge in sales. Harris, I grew up on the cheeseburger hamburger helper and it was very good with the extra cheese sprinkled on top.

Speaker 107 Yum, hamburger helper mac and cheese.

Speaker 1 Cheely macini. Yeah.

Speaker 53 You know, we went to the Fredericksburg Food and Wine Festival Friday.

Speaker 1 Oh, there was a festival.

Speaker 105 Yes, it happens every year, and we were invited to attend this year.

Speaker 1 You can't get in unless you're invited.

Speaker 66 What kind of a festival is that?

Speaker 77 It costs $250 for this dinner.

Speaker 17 That's why we've never been there.

Speaker 1 Oh, it's a dinner. Yeah,

Speaker 94 it's on Marksplatz, and it's outside under the big tent.

Speaker 112 And what's interesting, I'm not quite sure who.

Speaker 1 There's a big tent in Fredericksburg.

Speaker 15 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 143 We have the Marksplatz in the center.

Speaker 35 Listen, we are an important little town.

Speaker 29 People come here.

Speaker 1 It's a famous town. I don't know.

Speaker 50 It's important. Oh, it is.

Speaker 100 It was very important.

Speaker 15 We have Oktoberfest.

Speaker 13 Of course, we have a big Christmas market.

Speaker 79 And we're very famous for our

Speaker 71 our Christmas tree and our displays, and

Speaker 34 all kinds of important.

Speaker 131 We're an important town.

Speaker 67 And now that we are pretty much overshadowing Napa Valley,

Speaker 10 that

Speaker 1 yeah,

Speaker 1 that'll be the death.

Speaker 110 A lot of Napa guys at this food and wine festival all the time.

Speaker 1 Oh, I'll bet they're flocking there. They are.

Speaker 8 They are.

Speaker 17 They're all opening up wineries because they know that they'll get richer.

Speaker 1 They know they can get cheaper land. Yes, that would be good.
And maybe grow something. Oh, no.

Speaker 123 They're not interested in growing anything.

Speaker 11 No.

Speaker 14 They just want to make drinking barns like everybody else.

Speaker 62 They bring in their grapes from California and they, you know, do a little dance.

Speaker 43 Oh, look at this.

Speaker 104 It's Texas wine.

Speaker 42 No.

Speaker 107 And

Speaker 59 what was interesting is that now I had a whole train of thought that

Speaker 92 you've taken me.

Speaker 30 We did the weave and I lost the thread.

Speaker 1 That was something. you did the weave it was something about

Speaker 3 uh

Speaker 53 i can't remember now yeah

Speaker 1 well it was about the 250 ticket you got invited to have dinner

Speaker 55 at the thing for the first time and you learned something yeah i can't remember what i learned low t i can't remember what i learned it'll come back it'll come back it'll come back to me yeah it wasn't about the dinner per se

Speaker 55 well anyway

Speaker 1 well it was a wine and food festival in Fredericksburg. Yeah, I know you're desperately.
And I was mocking you.

Speaker 129 You're desperately trying to help me.

Speaker 1 I am trying to help you by trying. By the way, you do this to trigger the other person to thinking, oh, yeah, that's what I was thinking about.
But unfortunately, I'm not being successful.

Speaker 1 I feel

Speaker 147 low tea.

Speaker 34 It was something about mac and cheese.

Speaker 44 It was related to mac and cheese.

Speaker 131 I can't remember.

Speaker 1 Oh, the cheese, the

Speaker 15 cheese sandwich.

Speaker 67 No, it's a disappointing payoff now, now that I think about it. So the point was that we were invited, and it was pretty much everybody.

Speaker 36 We were invited by the international arms dealer because when he's not selling C-130s to Africa, which, by the way, is a dynamite business because they keep, you know, those Africans.

Speaker 84 They learn how to fly on YouTube.

Speaker 37 So they keep crashing them into hangers and into each other.

Speaker 151 So the guy is a steady supply of C-130s.

Speaker 13 He also does real estate deals for these wineries, and he's busy.

Speaker 7 He had another guy there from Napa Valley, you know, family, fifth generation.

Speaker 151 They want to buy cheap land here.

Speaker 32 But it was odd.

Speaker 62 I'm not quite sure who the wine and food festival is for, other than taking your buddies and showing them off.

Speaker 153 That was probably it.

Speaker 11 Oh, look, my friends are celebrities.

Speaker 137 Yeah,

Speaker 84 now I think about it, it's exactly what it was.

Speaker 146 I was just a piece of meat.

Speaker 1 You were just being used.

Speaker 57 I was being, well, they did have wild boar on the menu.

Speaker 8 So they have all the

Speaker 1 I go for that too. Yeah.

Speaker 1 You get a little wild boar.

Speaker 146 But it was all of the

Speaker 153 entrepreneurs who have businesses who were there.

Speaker 67 So, and everyone's sponsoring the event.

Speaker 63 And, you know, we had Salvation Spirits, who's our bootlegger guy, Trey, who's also a lobbyist in Austin.

Speaker 113 And we had Augusta Vin and the wine heiress.

Speaker 14 And like, who is this really for?

Speaker 95 And everybody had the same story.

Speaker 85 The attendance in our town is up by 25, 30%.

Speaker 79 Revenue down by 20%

Speaker 84 because we're in mac and cheese times.

Speaker 157 People do not, they are not spending money.

Speaker 67 They're coming here, they're just looking around. Yeah, let me look at your winery.

Speaker 105 I don't think I want anything to drink.

Speaker 56 Have you got any water?

Speaker 48 Some peanut?

Speaker 60 So that is a that is a bad indicator, I would say.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I think these are a little down.

Speaker 70 Well, 20% is a lot down.

Speaker 48 Everybody's like, yeah, you know, the traffic is there, but people are JLs, you know, just looking.

Speaker 51 Hey, I'm just looking.

Speaker 1 JLs.

Speaker 132 JLs, yeah, just looking.

Speaker 51 So, anyway.

Speaker 71 There was a number of the Sunday morning shows were Scott Bessend is everywhere now.

Speaker 25 And I'm not quite sure why.

Speaker 109 I think maybe it's because of the TikTok deal.

Speaker 35 That may be part of it.

Speaker 1 No, I don't think so.

Speaker 48 Lady G?

Speaker 1 New agent.

Speaker 82 Lady G was out.

Speaker 1 Is there a new war we're starting? Or is it because of

Speaker 1 some land bombing?

Speaker 36 No, you nailed it.

Speaker 25 You nailed it.

Speaker 35 No, you nailed it.

Speaker 13 Whenever there's killing going on, Lindsey Graham was like, ah,

Speaker 123 yeah, we're killing people.

Speaker 73 I love it so much.

Speaker 12 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 This is great.

Speaker 25 Who are we killing?

Speaker 40 Drug dealers, of course.

Speaker 55 Good morning.

Speaker 158 On Friday, Defense Secretary Hagseth ordered the deployment of the Navy's most advanced aircraft carrier, the Gerald Ford, to Latin America.

Speaker 158 President Trump was asked if he planned to ask Congress for a declaration of war. Take a listen.

Speaker 160 I don't think we're going to necessarily ask for a declaration of war. I think we're just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country.

Speaker 8 I love that.

Speaker 87 Okay, we're we're going to kill people.

Speaker 160 You know, they're going to be like dead.

Speaker 24 This is why Lindy Graham's like, oh, Donald, oh, Donald, oh, Donald, you're talking about killing again.

Speaker 15 Oh, I got to go on the shows.

Speaker 158 You don't need an aircraft carrier to hit drug boats.

Speaker 43 Yeah, you do.

Speaker 29 Of course you do.

Speaker 122 You need to fly all your jets around.

Speaker 57 Of course you need that.

Speaker 158 Our land strikes planned.

Speaker 163 Yeah, I think that's a real possibility. I think President Trump's made a decision that Maduro, the leader of Venezuela, is an indicted drug trafficker, that it's time for him to go

Speaker 163 that Venezuela and Colombia have been

Speaker 163 safe havens for narco-terrorists for too long.

Speaker 163 And President Trump told me yesterday that he plans to brief members of Congress when he gets back from Asia about future potential military operations against Venezuela

Speaker 163 and Colombia. So there will be a congressional briefing about a potential expanding from the sea to the land.
I support that idea, but I think he has all the authority it needs.

Speaker 163 Senator Gallego on another network accused President Trump and our military of committing murder by attacking these drug boats.

Speaker 164 I don't care who's killing who, but I'm there.

Speaker 165 If there's murder, I'm there.

Speaker 44 I'm Lindsey.

Speaker 163 To our men and women in uniform, you're not murdering anybody. You're making America safer by going after an archo-terrorist.

Speaker 51 You're following lawful orders.

Speaker 163 When President Bush 41 took Ortega out in Panama.

Speaker 23 I mean, really,

Speaker 47 this is what blew my mind.

Speaker 15 Like, the whole

Speaker 13 Panamanian fiasco, he's like, well, no, come on.

Speaker 116 President Bush took out Noriega.

Speaker 8 Do whatever we want.

Speaker 35 He killed people here.

Speaker 43 Keep people there.

Speaker 1 How come? I'm going to ask you this, and I'm sure your clips will explain it. Not.

Speaker 1 How come nobody, including Graham here, they talk about Bush,

Speaker 1 talk about how Obama used to have a kill list and would on every Tuesday pick a bunch of targets and on sovereign soil elsewhere in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere, we would have these guys blowed up, blew up a wedding, apparently, according to some reports.

Speaker 1 Double tap. The entire wedding, and then they came with a double tap and killed the Red Cross people.
How come that's not mentioned? He's black.

Speaker 163 Took Ortega out in Panama.

Speaker 163 Reagan went into Grenada to deal with a Cuban influence from Grenada in our backyard. He has all the authority in the world.
This is not murder.

Speaker 163 This is protecting America from being poisoned by narco-terrorists coming from Venezuela and Colombia.

Speaker 112 This is so awesome.

Speaker 34 You can set your watch by it.

Speaker 104 If there's actual, if people are using terms murder and killing and death, Lindsey Graham shows up.

Speaker 15 I mean, really?

Speaker 122 Wherever, hey, yeah, we're going to kill the Russians in you.

Speaker 63 Yeah, Ukraine, we're going to kill them.

Speaker 39 We're going to kill the Russians.

Speaker 43 Kill, kill, kill.

Speaker 14 This guy, and I think there's many people.

Speaker 107 In fact, I think in general,

Speaker 69 there's a large swath of the population who get turned on by killing.

Speaker 43 Don't you think?

Speaker 1 Well, something I don't like to think about.

Speaker 15 Well,

Speaker 71 we ask the hard questions here on the No Agenda Show.

Speaker 158 The examples you're citing also involved ground troops.

Speaker 10 Ground troops.

Speaker 35 You like ground beef?

Speaker 8 Ground troops.

Speaker 16 Is that a prompter misread, or what is that? That's

Speaker 1 a total prompter misread.

Speaker 86 Ground troops.

Speaker 30 Like ground beef?

Speaker 1 Like ground beef, exactly.

Speaker 15 That's crazy.

Speaker 158 The examples you're citing also involved ground troops.

Speaker 55 You said time for Maduro to go.

Speaker 158 That sounds a lot like regime change.

Speaker 19 Are you talking about that troops?

Speaker 1 By the way, stop.

Speaker 1 This is the complaints that we have about ridiculing the way we do.

Speaker 1 There'll be somebody out there that listened to us ridicule, laugh at this woman for not being able to read a prompter correctly and saying ground troops

Speaker 1 and saying, you guys stink.

Speaker 8 But I don't know.

Speaker 97 You have to find humor in things.

Speaker 15 And that was humorous.

Speaker 1 Ground troops.

Speaker 1 Would you like how many troops would you like ground?

Speaker 15 We have troop helper on the ground.

Speaker 1 Do you want a course grind or a

Speaker 1 fine?

Speaker 100 This is bad.

Speaker 15 Sausages?

Speaker 163 I'll let the president speak to that. I'm talking about a briefing that would expand military operations potentially from the sea to the land.
It is time.

Speaker 6 Notice,

Speaker 66 this is interesting.

Speaker 75 And I'm not quite sure why this is yet, but we had from the river to the sea, Palestine shall be free.

Speaker 13 And now we have from the sea to the land.

Speaker 86 There's something, there's some mnemonics going on here that either have not unfolded yet or Lindsey Graham is psychic.

Speaker 94 I don't know. There's something happening here.

Speaker 163 Expand military operations potentially from the sea to the land. It is time for Maduro to go.
It was time for Ortega to go.

Speaker 163 You know, the Monroe Doctrine is being robustly applied by President Trump.

Speaker 163 So these military assets are moving forward to deal with a country that's got blood on its hands when it comes to Americans by flooding our country with drugs from Venezuela and Colombia.

Speaker 163 So I hope Maduro would leave peacefully, but I don't think he's going to stay around much longer. I think President Trump is tired of Venezuela being used as a staging platform to poison America.

Speaker 52 Do you think that President Trump does a booty call at night on Lindsey Graham?

Speaker 71 Like, you know, the phone rings at 11:30.

Speaker 40 Oh, Donald.

Speaker 169 Hey, Lindsay.

Speaker 22 I can't do Trump.

Speaker 13 Lindsey, I need you to go on the shows tomorrow.

Speaker 151 I need you to talk about death and killing.

Speaker 15 Oh, all right, Donald.

Speaker 50 Well, there's a lot.

Speaker 1 I don't think they even talk.

Speaker 71 This is just his normal mode.

Speaker 17 Or does the CBS know? It's like,

Speaker 109 hey, guys, we got

Speaker 9 some killing.

Speaker 34 What sicko can we get to

Speaker 15 really accentuate how horrible the Trump administration is?

Speaker 47 Hey, get Lindsay. He'll do it.

Speaker 39 Hey, Lindsay, get off that kid.

Speaker 158 There's a lot there, sir, but you cited Democrats.

Speaker 84 I'm sorry, that was bad.

Speaker 71 That was bad. That was bad.

Speaker 140 Can I retract that before I get sued?

Speaker 1 You didn't just say anything that

Speaker 76 wasn't the way I see it.

Speaker 15 It wasn't good.

Speaker 43 Well,

Speaker 1 it just was a denied comment that was unnecessary. unnecessary.

Speaker 78 Roughness on the plate.

Speaker 105 Not there, sir.

Speaker 158 But you cited a Democratic senator's criticism. He's not the only one.

Speaker 158 Some of your Republican colleagues have been uncomfortable with what little information has been shared with Congress. Take a listen.

Speaker 172 But if they want an all-out war where we kill anybody and everybody that is in the country of Venezuela or coming out, that has to have a declaration of war.

Speaker 173 It's something that is not pretty,

Speaker 172 very expensive. And I'm not in favor of declaring war on Venezuela, but the Congress should vote.
The president shouldn't do this by himself.

Speaker 174 If this was happening with this level of insight under the Biden administration, I'd be apoplectic.

Speaker 1 Okay, well, first of all, Obama, going back to your earlier comment that CBS has their little list of people to bring in,

Speaker 1 by bringing in Rand Paul, that just proves your point.

Speaker 58 Yeah, yeah, of course.

Speaker 66 So the big question is, is this about drugs or could it be about something else?

Speaker 158 What exactly is the end game? Because you're talking about regime change in Venezuela. The president says this is about drug boats.

Speaker 163 Yeah. Well, I think the end game is...

Speaker 86 Is he getting information on what to say next?

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 No, he's thinking about what to say next.

Speaker 10 I don't think he's being fed anything.

Speaker 15 I don't know about that.

Speaker 158 About regime change in Venezuela.

Speaker 141 The president says this is about drug boats.

Speaker 158 Yeah, yeah, it's about drugs, at least.

Speaker 163 Yeah. Well, I think the end game is to make sure that Venezuela and Colombia cannot be used to poison America, that the narco-terrorist

Speaker 163 dictator Madura

Speaker 163 will no longer be able to threaten our country and to send in drugs

Speaker 163 to kill Americans. As to Rand Paul,

Speaker 163 I just disagree fundamentally with his approach. We didn't have a declaration to go into Panama.

Speaker 163 Bush 41 went into Panama to replace the leadership there because the Panama leadership, Panamanian leadership, were working with drug cartels to threaten our country.

Speaker 146 Oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah, that was it.

Speaker 157 I mean,

Speaker 133 wow, wow.

Speaker 163 Reagan didn't have a declaration of war, a congressional authorization, to deal with Cuban influence. So this idea of

Speaker 163 Rand Paul, I just fundamentally disagree with. To the other senators, you deserve more information and you're going to get more information.

Speaker 163 But there is no requirement for Congress to declare war before the Commander-in-Chief can use force.

Speaker 163 Panama and Brenea are two examples in our backyard where Republican presidents chose to go after countries and leaders that were threatening our people.

Speaker 10 So,

Speaker 17 well, and there's a couple more clips here, but what do you think is really going on here?

Speaker 69 Is this about regime change or is this about drugs?

Speaker 139 It's about oil.

Speaker 100 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Yeah. It is about regime change because we got to get that oil.

Speaker 30 Did you know that Lady G

Speaker 132 was a jag?

Speaker 1 I did not know that.

Speaker 158 But there seem to be a number of issues wound up in here. I know you personally used to serve as a judge advocate in the Air Force.

Speaker 158 Yeah.

Speaker 10 We looked at the judge's manual.

Speaker 158 Preventative self-defense employed to counter non-imminent threats is illegal under international law.

Speaker 47 So if we are not at work.

Speaker 35 International law, when did this come about?

Speaker 158 And these suspected criminals pose no threat of imminent violence, isn't this potentially a war crime to be killing the people on these boats and then to be taking out a leader?

Speaker 1 Go ahead, Lady Jag.

Speaker 117 You know what to say.

Speaker 163 No, not at all. I don't know what manual you're referring to, but I know what President Bush 41 did.

Speaker 163 He took down Ortega, the leader of Panama, because he was involved in drug trafficking, threatening our country. Venezuela is now partnering with Hezbollah.

Speaker 163 Hezbollah is running out of money because Iran is weak. That's not new.
Partnering with drug cartels in Venezuela. No, it should have stopped.

Speaker 163 Here's what's new. You've got a commander-in-chief that's not going to put up with this crap.
We're not going to sit on the sidelines and watch boats full of drugs come to our country.

Speaker 163 We're going to blow them up and kill the people that want to poison America. And we're now going to expand operations, I think, to the land.
So please be clear about what I'm saying today.

Speaker 163 President Donald Trump sees Venezuela and Colombia as direct threats to our country because they house narco-terrorist

Speaker 163 organizations. The leader of Venezuela is an indicted drug dealer in American courts.
So yeah, the game is changing when it comes to drug traffickers and drug cartels.

Speaker 163 We're going to use military force like we have in the past to protect our country. That's the new game we're playing, and I'm glad we're playing that game.

Speaker 163 And if I were Maduro, I'd find a way to leave before he goes down. See,

Speaker 67 I still have to look at this through the lens of the North Sea Nexus.

Speaker 157 I don't think we're going to do any land operations.

Speaker 128 I think this is really about destroying the drug trade and cutting off the City of London's main financial income because that's that I mean this is a lot of money that's blowing up in the sea I don't know much about drugs but it looks like that's a big haul every single time

Speaker 147 maybe

Speaker 1 anyway let's get back to killing what but again again I bring back they talk about the woman the reporter goes on about international war crimes and that's the opportunity right there to throw in the Obama material.

Speaker 176 But I don't know why Lindsay's not doing that.

Speaker 1 He's obviously been briefed not to do that for some reason. I don't know what it is.

Speaker 15 Something's up with Obama.

Speaker 157 He doesn't have an analog to Obama's drone kill list and drugs.

Speaker 76 Although, because, you know, the poppies over there, that was, that was, yeah, that was up.

Speaker 1 But they weren't blowing up the guy. They were just blowing them up just arbitrarily.

Speaker 12 No, I know.

Speaker 1 But so this is which makes it worse. I mean, at least there's a rationale on this end of the deal.
How about this?

Speaker 71 Lindsey Graham's an idiot.

Speaker 43 How about that?

Speaker 154 Just as an idea.

Speaker 1 I don't believe that for a minute.

Speaker 177 Well, let's get back to killing.

Speaker 158 Is trafficking cocaine an armed attack on the United States? That's what you're acquainting it to?

Speaker 163 I am saying that there's plenty of law under

Speaker 163 Article 2 powers of the president are designed to protect our countries from threats foreign and domestic. Was it illegal for Bush to take Ortega out in Panama?

Speaker 90 Was it illegal for

Speaker 163 Reagan to go under Grenada to stop Cuban influence building this big long runway? There's plenty of precedent here to do what he's doing, but the game has changed.

Speaker 163 The game has changed when it comes to narco-trafficking drug organizations. We're going to take you out.

Speaker 51 We're going to kill you.

Speaker 177 Yes. We're back to killing.

Speaker 65 And guess what?

Speaker 155 He's going to deal with you drug users, too.

Speaker 158 You referenced something earlier.

Speaker 147 Hold on a second.

Speaker 1 Is this Margaret? Yes.

Speaker 93 Margaret. Okay.

Speaker 93 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Why? So she,

Speaker 1 when she's, when she brings up this armed,

Speaker 1 when she brought up the armed threat thing, he should have retorted with,

Speaker 1 does killing Americans have to be with a bullet? That's the only thing that counts?

Speaker 7 You know,

Speaker 117 I'm giving you the IFP. You can talk to Lindsey.
I think you're much better at it.

Speaker 1 I'm just saying.

Speaker 178 Lindsay, I'm passing it on to John.

Speaker 42 He's going to give you some tips.

Speaker 179 Talk about Obama, you idiot.

Speaker 158 You referenced something earlier, sir, I want to come back to. You said to the men and women of the military that they are carrying out lawful orders.

Speaker 158 Secretary Hagseth removed the top uniformed lawyers in the Air Force. You know this, the Navy and the Army, because he called them roadblocks to orders that are given by a commander-in-chief.

Speaker 158 There have been other departures as well.

Speaker 42 Come on, you're a jag.

Speaker 158 This raises concern that commanders are not being given adequate legal counsel. That is why

Speaker 158 you just said that sentence to assure them.

Speaker 42 Give her some law.

Speaker 163 That's garbage.

Speaker 40 That's absolute garbage.

Speaker 40 Trump doesn't have the...

Speaker 163 Go for the law.

Speaker 163 No, no, I'm saying that the theory that President Trump's doing something here illegally dealing with a country that's run by an indicted drug dealer is the same as Panama there's a better case to go into Venezuela than there was Panama what I mean okay we have to analyze why he keeps bringing it back to Panama

Speaker 57 let's just review Panama

Speaker 1 well I don't know how much we can review but Noriega was put in place by as a as a puppet to the United States, and he didn't perform right.

Speaker 181 Exactly.

Speaker 1 And so we took him out. We said, no, hey, this is not what you're supposed to be doing, becoming a drug lord.

Speaker 66 You're out of here. Yes, exactly.

Speaker 47 So that's what's going on.

Speaker 182 I mean, it can't be any more obvious that

Speaker 75 Madura is not doing his job the way we explained it to him.

Speaker 1 Yeah, but that's the problem. We never explained.

Speaker 1 He got in through Chavez,

Speaker 1 who was running the show, and he was a

Speaker 1 joker, kind of a clownish.

Speaker 34 But who says the CIA wasn't involved in his installation?

Speaker 15 They love drugs.

Speaker 1 I can't say you, but I'm not going to argue against the possibility.

Speaker 128 Okay, let's continue.

Speaker 1 There's the possible that maybe, yeah, you're right. He's the

Speaker 1 CIA asset.

Speaker 94 Yeah, that seems obvious to me.

Speaker 12 I mean, keep going back to Bush, Bush.

Speaker 35 Most of the people are winning.

Speaker 1 Actually,

Speaker 1 by that thesis, because he keeps doing that,

Speaker 1 that might be it.

Speaker 106 Yeah, that the guy

Speaker 163 continues to play Venezuela than there was Panama. There's a better case to deal with Colombia than there was Grenada.
Yeah, I've been doing this all of my life.

Speaker 116 What was Grenada?

Speaker 110 What was Grenada?

Speaker 113 Same deal?

Speaker 1 No, Grenada was

Speaker 1 turning into a Marxist

Speaker 1 out of the blue.

Speaker 1 They decided to have a kind of a Marxist regime. It began it with, I forgot who got into power, and they just decided to become a Marxist country, and we weren't going to have it.
That's all.

Speaker 1 It was very simple. Okay.

Speaker 163 Colombia, then there was Grenada. Yeah, I've been doing this all of my adult life.

Speaker 47 I have what were you doing as a kid?

Speaker 163 All the confidence in the world that President Trump has the legal authority.

Speaker 43 Wow, what a statement.

Speaker 34 I've been doing this all my adult life.

Speaker 116 What? Planning murder?

Speaker 36 Killing people?

Speaker 7 Was he around during Bush 41?

Speaker 1 When he says I've been doing this,

Speaker 1 unless she clarify, asks him, what do you mean by this?

Speaker 51 We won't know.

Speaker 51 Yeah,

Speaker 1 he's just blathering now.

Speaker 163 There's a better case to deal with Colombia than there was Grenada. Yeah, I've been doing this all of my adult life.

Speaker 147 Columbia. Columbia.

Speaker 1 What's Columbia got to do with the price of bread?

Speaker 60 He's been doing Coke all his adult life.

Speaker 163 I have all the confidence in the world that President Trump has the legal authority, but more importantly. Fist bump means something different he's doing the right thing.

Speaker 163 More Americans have died from cocaine and fentanyl than any terrorist group in the world.

Speaker 163 I am very pleased that we now have a president who's going to use the full force of the American people, the might of America, to protect us from narco-terrorist states and drug organizations.

Speaker 163 Keep it up, Mr. President.
We're not committing murder. We're protecting our nation from people who want to poison us.

Speaker 158 Well, there's obviously buyers on the other end of it, which is why the cartels are selling, right? But I want to

Speaker 163 do a vote.

Speaker 47 Yeah, Lindsay's going to come and kill you, too.

Speaker 93 That's what I'm hearing.

Speaker 100 Yeah, we'll deal with both. Yeah.

Speaker 15 All right, let's wrap it up.

Speaker 158 When we talk about lawful orders here, I myself spoke to a former senior commander who said he'd want that in writing

Speaker 158 because of concern that

Speaker 158 this is going to be down the line questionable. You've already heard heard the orders to carry out operations.

Speaker 158 You've already heard Democratic lawmakers, including on this program, say that they have concerns about future prosecutions.

Speaker 158 Well, act on your concerns.

Speaker 183 Why don't you do it?

Speaker 163 Okay, if you've got concerns, here's what we can do as members of Congress. We can cut off funding for military operations we don't like.

Speaker 163 So if you're concerned as a Democrat or Republican, why don't you introduce legislation to cut off all funding to the military when it comes to attacking drug votes and going after narco-terrorist states through the military.

Speaker 163 You can do that. Go ahead and do it.
I'll vote no.

Speaker 163 I think he has all the authority in the world in Article II and international law to make sure that countries like Venezuela can't be staging areas to infiltrate drugs into our country.

Speaker 40 Infiltrate.

Speaker 163 I think he has all the legal authority in the world. I'm just really glad he's doing this.
And, Mr.

Speaker 90 President, keep it up.

Speaker 158 Well, we look forward to hearing those justifications when they are shared with Congress. You made some news there, Senator.
Thank you for your time today.

Speaker 165 What news did he make?

Speaker 15 What news did he make there, Senator?

Speaker 17 I don't know what kind of news he made.

Speaker 8 And

Speaker 35 so Graham's everywhere. Scott.

Speaker 1 I'm glad you're watching the morning. Actually, I didn't watch him this week.
I watch him probably

Speaker 1 every few weeks. I don't watch him every Sunday.

Speaker 31 No, this is the work of

Speaker 104 Steve Jones.

Speaker 1 Oh, he's watching and sending you this.

Speaker 13 Yeah, if he's going to do it, he'll let me know early on, like, I'm up and running, I'm recording, and then I know I can count on it so I don't have to look at it myself, and I can do other things.

Speaker 132 So let's give credit where credit is due.

Speaker 27 And then Scott Besant, he's everywhere.

Speaker 14 It's like all the gay guys are out today.

Speaker 186 The military has now launched 10 attacks, killing more than 40 people against these suspected drug-smuggling boats, as you just referenced. Is the United States at war with Venezuela, Mr.
Secretary?

Speaker 1 Wait, what is Scott Besson Secretary of?

Speaker 188 Treasury.

Speaker 1 I thought is he Treasury or Connor?

Speaker 25 Treasury.

Speaker 67 No, he's no.

Speaker 185 Okay, he's Treasury.

Speaker 15 He's the money guy.

Speaker 36 He's the money.

Speaker 46 He's the bank. So

Speaker 1 what's he got to do with the military?

Speaker 1 in other words what i'm asking here is why is this pointed question being asked of the secretary of the treasury who is responsible for printing hundred dollar bills well because they just want to get to the bottom of this these are journalists john This is Manhand's Welker.

Speaker 84 She wants to get to the bottom of it.

Speaker 186 Is the United States at war with Venezuela, Mr.

Speaker 187 Secretary? Oh, don't answer that.

Speaker 187 Chris and I have a big portfolio.

Speaker 187 Defense is not one of them. I think you'd have to ask our great Secretary of War, Pete Hexeth, or Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, on that.

Speaker 187 But what I can tell you is the president's committed to protecting U.S. citizens from the ravages of these drugs.

Speaker 187 And also, you were asking earlier about the China trade deal, and part of that is going to include substantial, very substantial cooperation to stop the precursor drugs on fentanyl, which make their way to Mexico, to Canada, and kill hundreds of thousands of Americans a year and ruin families.

Speaker 186 Well, and it's worth noting that the vast majority of fentanyl.

Speaker 109 That's what he just said.

Speaker 9 That's just what he says.

Speaker 1 She's not even listening to what he says. So, but first, you know, I've noticed, by the way, I have noticed this about her.

Speaker 1 And I've noticed this about a lot of these other guys. They have their little script in front of them

Speaker 1 and the guy will say something that they I don't know if they don't listen at all

Speaker 1 and they'll ask that like almost ask the same question twice because the guy will answer the question and

Speaker 1 you know a here's the answer to the question you're about to ask if they happen to do that by accident they'll still ask the question It's very, very amateurish.

Speaker 164 Because that's what they're told to do.

Speaker 26 We're on a tight time.

Speaker 6 Listen, we got to get the pharma ads in.

Speaker 154 Could you just ask the question?

Speaker 190 And then, and and so Besant was everywhere this morning.

Speaker 70 Here he is with Margaret.

Speaker 153 And what is the pressing question we need to ask here?

Speaker 158 The Paris Prosecutor's Office announced today that French police have made arrests, although we don't know how many, in last Sunday's robbery at the Louvre.

Speaker 158 One suspect was detained at the Charles de Gaulle airport as he tried to flee the country.

Speaker 158 Thieves stole an estimated $100 million worth of jewels and gems during a brazen daytime robbery that took less than eight minutes.

Speaker 67 So that was the intro getting to Scott Besant and then straight into questions about,

Speaker 58 well, I guess this is his wheelhouse about

Speaker 59 Russia

Speaker 79 and

Speaker 79 sanctions.

Speaker 157 And do we want to go there?

Speaker 22 I don't know if we want to go there yet.

Speaker 1 Well, if it.

Speaker 1 Well, I don't know why you brought it in, but.

Speaker 94 Well, because it was Scott Besant.

Speaker 93 You know, I don't know if we.

Speaker 1 Yeah, okay. Well, Scott Besant was all over the place for some unknown reason.

Speaker 191 Well, it's about Russia.

Speaker 60 Russia.

Speaker 49 Russia, Russia, Russia.

Speaker 104 Russia. And the sanctions.

Speaker 158 Mr. Secretary, before I let you go, I want to ask you: the U.S.
sanctioned Russia's top oil and gas companies this past week.

Speaker 158 But Vladimir Putin's envoy, who is here in the United States, Karol Dmitriev, I know you know him.

Speaker 54 Yeah, I'm sorry.

Speaker 53 It was actually, yeah, I played him out of order. She had Besant on about

Speaker 113 China and Russia.

Speaker 59 China and Russia.

Speaker 59 Let's do that later.

Speaker 48 It's boring. China and Russia.

Speaker 42 It's boring.

Speaker 15 Let's do the.

Speaker 48 This was the real question: the TikTok deal.

Speaker 70 That's what really matters.

Speaker 125 This is what Margaret was doing all morning.

Speaker 158 I saw that you mentioned TikTok was discussed. Are the details of the president's executive order released in September? Are those finalized?

Speaker 158 Has China agreed to give up control of the algorithm that determines what users see?

Speaker 71 You're going to hear some really strange stuff here,

Speaker 69 particularly when we get to

Speaker 53 Molinar,

Speaker 81 the

Speaker 192 Democrat, I think.

Speaker 15 They're so hung up on this algo.

Speaker 17 Like, oh, you know, it's like censoring what people see.

Speaker 154 That's exactly what algorithms do.

Speaker 78 You can call it censoring.

Speaker 79 You can call it recommendations.

Speaker 67 But everyone's so hyper-focused on the algo.

Speaker 116 And all the algo does on TikTok is give you what you want.

Speaker 68 Do you want to see more cooking videos?

Speaker 1 You got cooking videos.

Speaker 17 Though you're John C.

Speaker 193 Dvorak, you want to see some lunatics with blue hair?

Speaker 40 Here you go.

Speaker 104 The algo is not that impressive.

Speaker 194 Margaret, we reached a final deal on TikTok.

Speaker 64 We've reached one in Madrid.

Speaker 194 And I believe that as of today, all the details are ironed out. And that will be for the two leaders to

Speaker 194 consummate that transaction on Thursday in Korea.

Speaker 158 Can you tell us any details of that transaction? Oh, don't tell her anything.

Speaker 194 Margaret, I'm not part of the commercial side of the transaction.

Speaker 194 My remit was to get the Chinese to agree

Speaker 194 to approve the transaction, and I believe we successfully accomplished that over the past two days.

Speaker 1 Did he say it was my remit? Remit.

Speaker 77 Yeah, I caught that too.

Speaker 195 I'm going to use that with Tina.

Speaker 13 It was my remit.

Speaker 40 Let's look it up.

Speaker 50 Okay, let's look it up.

Speaker 53 Remit.

Speaker 79 Do you want to use

Speaker 8 the robot?

Speaker 60 Yeah, ask the robot for the definition.

Speaker 15 Okay.

Speaker 17 Error, give me the definition of remit.

Speaker 196 Remit means to send money, forgive a debt, or reduce a penalty. It can also refer to a task or area of responsibility, like someone's remit in a job.

Speaker 1 Interesting. Could have been his responsibility.
It was my so instead of saying it was my responsibility,

Speaker 1 he said it was my remit.

Speaker 83 So that's how they talk at the club.

Speaker 1 So nobody, by the way, so let's stop right here for one just second for everybody out there.

Speaker 147 Nobody ever uses the remit

Speaker 1 to reme responsibility. In my lifetime, I've never heard this before.

Speaker 72 Well,

Speaker 1 so it's got to be code.

Speaker 67 Well, it can also mean money.

Speaker 78 So it could be milieu.

Speaker 93 Milieu. Well, there's a lot of milieu going on, that's for sure.

Speaker 1 There's a lot of milieu going on. It was my remit.
Well,

Speaker 22 let's go.

Speaker 1 Let's keep an eye out for being used to it.

Speaker 67 Remit is on the radar.

Speaker 60 So let's talk about this TikTok deal with a guy who hates it.

Speaker 158 On the committee work that you've been doing, I'm sure you're heard from Treasury Secretary Besson at the top of the program that he says China has agreed to the TikTok deal.

Speaker 158 170 million Americans use this social media app.

Speaker 158 Congress had passed a law to force.

Speaker 77 Why is she laugh-telling?

Speaker 134 Congress had passed.

Speaker 149 She's like a goat.

Speaker 158 What is that? Congress had passed a law.

Speaker 1 Yeah, now she mentioned goat.

Speaker 1 It's not like a goat. That is

Speaker 146 very strange.

Speaker 35 I don't know why she did that.

Speaker 8 Let's listen to that again.

Speaker 158 Congress had passed a law

Speaker 158 to force the sale and cited it as a national security threat if it continued to operate the way it has.

Speaker 158 Have your national security concerns about the app and about this transaction

Speaker 158 been addressed?

Speaker 102 Well, I think it's important that we note that the law requires a divestment and getting the Chinese Communist Party control away from the app as well as the algorithm.

Speaker 102 And it allows ownership only up to 20% for a Chinese entity ByteDance.

Speaker 102 And to me, it's very important that that's carried out.

Speaker 102 We don't know all the specifics of this, but we know that American companies are very interested in participating. There's the proposal for a lease agreement.

Speaker 102 But how you get that algorithm completely out of the Chinese control is going to be up to the experts.

Speaker 102 You know, there's six million pieces of code in this algorithm, and we need to make sure that it's protected for the American people.

Speaker 176 There's six million pieces of code to the algorithm.

Speaker 25 What does that even mean, bro?

Speaker 79 Does he mean six million lines of code?

Speaker 129 I mean, has someone counted them?

Speaker 67 Did they do a

Speaker 113 line count?

Speaker 114 WC-L?

Speaker 7 I mean, what exactly happened here?

Speaker 59 This whole thing is odd.

Speaker 62 And I think whoever is buying this, mainly Ellison and Murdoch, I think it's coming up.

Speaker 116 They're buying a dog.

Speaker 197 They are buying. They're buying eyeballs.

Speaker 67 Yeah, but I think it's limited.

Speaker 38 I think the eyeballs would go down.

Speaker 90 It's a dog.

Speaker 158 So that algorithm is the data tracking system that's pulled from a user's.

Speaker 158 And so the accusation was also that this is basically

Speaker 84 the algorithm is not the data tracking system.

Speaker 31 That's what Facebook does with a little SDK in every single app.

Speaker 158 Manipulating consumers.

Speaker 25 Manipulating consumers, unlike any other algorithm out there today from Silicon Valley.

Speaker 158 In terms of what they were able to see.

Speaker 158 So will that algorithm be maintained?

Speaker 158 And will upgrades only be conducted by, for example, American engineers?

Speaker 23 Upgrades?

Speaker 104 I mean, this is really pathetic.

Speaker 50 It is pathetic.

Speaker 76 This is really, really bad.

Speaker 102 That would be my recommendation because ultimately we don't want a Chinese propaganda effort affecting 170 million Americans. We also want to make sure that data from Americans is kept secure.

Speaker 102 And as long as the Chinese are involved, I think there's reasons for distrust.

Speaker 158 One with the 20% stake.

Speaker 102 I'm still concerned about it.

Speaker 102 Quite frankly, you know, the Chinese report to the Chinese Communist Party, and they will leverage every advantage they get.

Speaker 102 But the President has set a goal of making this available to the American people, following the law that was passed in a bipartisan way, and I trust that they are doing that.

Speaker 158 The President has not been following the letter of the law that you voted for. Well, I think you know that.

Speaker 102 I think the goal has been to come to an agreement, to come to a deal, and they've been working very hard to do that.

Speaker 102 But when you have the the chinese communist party xi xinping with direct leverage on this in terms of what they will do what they won't do it's very difficult to continue to make that available but i trust the people who are negotiating that recognize we've got to get the control of the algorithm away from the chinese communist party the app and make sure that the ownership is controlled by america not china okay so first of all apologies he's a republican uh representative from michigan he's a chemist, and that's why he serves on the House Committee on the Chinese Communist Party.

Speaker 95 So that's why he has no idea what he's talking about.

Speaker 66 Who is this?

Speaker 137 Molinar.

Speaker 93 Moulinaire.

Speaker 1 I thought it was Scott Besant.

Speaker 70 No, no, no.

Speaker 62 We changed from Besant.

Speaker 1 Oh, I didn't realize you'd done that.

Speaker 1 He sounds a lot, lot, lot like Besant.

Speaker 135 I think he's married.

Speaker 50 Oh, that makes a difference.

Speaker 50 Yeah.

Speaker 37 He's not in the Besant Club.

Speaker 116 There's all the A gays.

Speaker 67 Come on. We know this is a club.

Speaker 95 That's where you talk about remit.

Speaker 1 Hey, did you. Was this the guy that said remit?

Speaker 78 No, it was Besant who said remit.

Speaker 50 Okay. Yeah.

Speaker 93 I remit you. Oh, yeah, baby.

Speaker 158 So let's talk about that ownership. The president said the investors would include Michael Dell, Lachlan Murdoch, whose family owns Fox News, and Larry Ellison, whose son owns Paramount Paramount.

Speaker 12 What kind of deal is that?

Speaker 1 A bunch of Nepos.

Speaker 181 Yes.

Speaker 14 Nepos.

Speaker 36 But then to what end?

Speaker 190 Are they going to make money off of it?

Speaker 148 How does

Speaker 129 I don't know?

Speaker 1 They're just fronts. This is, come on, let's face it.

Speaker 127 This is bull crap.

Speaker 1 The whole thing is nonsense. Okay.

Speaker 158 Company of CBS News. Do you have concerns that people who are boosters of the president will have ownership of social media in this way? You know, I think since it's so powerful.

Speaker 102 Well, there are some, I'm sure investors, not everybody is simply a supporter of the president, but I believe that in this case, Congress has a role for oversight, and we will be meeting with the parties of transaction.

Speaker 102 We also will have hearings on this because at the end, okay, you're right.

Speaker 53 I'm done with it too.

Speaker 17 So, speaking of the Nepos and CBS, I came across an article that

Speaker 80 indeed

Speaker 53 shows, I'm looking for it here now, that Barry Weiss,

Speaker 62 that she is running,

Speaker 178 for all intents and purposes, CBS

Speaker 63 60 Minutes, and her big get, her big get out of the gate was the 60 Minutes interview with Witcoff and Kushner,

Speaker 14 which was one of the lowest rated 60 Minutes in history, interestingly enough.

Speaker 167 It was boring.

Speaker 125 It was super boring.

Speaker 129 I just thought it was interesting.

Speaker 1 But here's the way this works. Come on.

Speaker 1 Well, what's she going to have us do, Bill?

Speaker 1 Oh, she wants us to interview these two guys.

Speaker 1 All right. Well, make it as boring as you can.
We got to get some low numbers on this thing. So just make sure they edit it so they're long-winded.

Speaker 15 Don't take anything out.

Speaker 1 Make it boring as hell. You can do it.
You know how to do it.

Speaker 43 Bring in Leslie Stahl.

Speaker 15 She'll make it super boring. Bring in Leslie.

Speaker 1 Yeah, bring Leslie in. She doesn't know what she's doing.
She's old.

Speaker 47 Wow.

Speaker 111 Agest much?

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, I'm old. I can say that.

Speaker 185 Well, here's what's interesting.

Speaker 15 I got flack.

Speaker 43 I got flack. Afflack.

Speaker 68 I got flack from people because I pulled a clip from the very end, which I thought was interesting to us because it was.

Speaker 36 Witkoff saying, oh, yeah, no,

Speaker 156 we're cleaning up Morocco as we speak, which, of course, related to our

Speaker 116 investigation.

Speaker 112 Yes.

Speaker 95 Our thesis on the Gen Z Discord system, which seems to be right on track.

Speaker 58 So we are the ones destabilizing Morocco on Discord and Gen Z with professional signs, I might add.

Speaker 137 And the

Speaker 176 pushback that I got, which is like, are you kidding me? That's all you got from that interview?

Speaker 176 You didn't hear about the master plan?

Speaker 107 Like, the master plan?

Speaker 195 I mean, mean, I watched the whole thing.

Speaker 49 It was boring.

Speaker 176 The master plan.

Speaker 176 They planned this to do this to Gaza.

Speaker 176 My Gaza, the Riviera.

Speaker 57 I'm like, okay, where did you get it from?

Speaker 195 So, what did you watch the whole thing?

Speaker 116 And so, they send me a clip

Speaker 15 of Breaking Points with Sagar and Crystal Ball.

Speaker 97 And you were talking about milieu.

Speaker 109 These guys, so they're completely independent now.

Speaker 15 Milieu.

Speaker 108 They are completely independent.

Speaker 137 They're no longer with.

Speaker 66 Who are they with?

Speaker 49 Who are they with?

Speaker 9 They were with

Speaker 9 the Hill.

Speaker 15 The Hill, right?

Speaker 11 So they broke off from The Hill.

Speaker 79 They're independent.

Speaker 79 And I think that they are in the same audience capture mode as many of the other podcasters who we don't want to aim our weapon at because we don't want to shoot into the

Speaker 1 inside the tent because i i think even though they're hardly podcasters by any means

Speaker 1 they are now they're considered podcasters yeah well they had yeah they're typical people that were in the mainstream doing mainstream stuff mainstream work for a mainstream publication for an m5m operation they were they were and they had a video segment just like everybody that's like pbs no difference and then they got they decided they could make more money doing a podcast and then found out that they probably couldn't.

Speaker 146 Well, I think they're actually doing okay.

Speaker 1 I'm sure they are. I'm sure they're doing better now, but at the beginning, I don't think they were.

Speaker 155 But I believe that they are a very prime example of people who are afraid to, and this is, you know, like Scott Adams would say, one movie, two screens.

Speaker 37 They view everything as

Speaker 195 Crystal Ball specifically.

Speaker 109 Israel, they're genociding people.

Speaker 118 They're genociding.

Speaker 17 They're just slaughtering.

Speaker 97 They just want to kill the Gazans.

Speaker 88 Kill, kill the slaughtering.

Speaker 17 They can't get out of that mode.

Speaker 109 And so this is the clip that I was sent.

Speaker 141 You know, interestingly, people just caught this. I didn't note this from the 60 Minutes interview with Kushner and Witkoff originally.

Speaker 200 But in that interview, and it's going to be D0, guys,

Speaker 199 Witkoff talks.

Speaker 38 It's going to be D0, guys.

Speaker 182 Can you imagine you telling me?

Speaker 1 I don't even know what that means.

Speaker 148 That's their internal code for which clip to play.

Speaker 190 Where you just say, look for the misspelling of,

Speaker 7 you know, look for NPS and that would be NPS.

Speaker 78 This is too professional.

Speaker 200 And it's going to be D0 guys.

Speaker 199 Okay, guys. Witcoff talks about how they've been

Speaker 1 block D zero.

Speaker 1 They're just not like the

Speaker 1 D1 block or

Speaker 1 the B C D A E F G block. I mean, okay.

Speaker 95 Let's not focus too much on that. Let's

Speaker 1 you brought it up and it's irksome.

Speaker 17 Let's just focus on the milieu.

Speaker 200 And it's going to be D zero guys.

Speaker 199 Witcoff

Speaker 201 Part of the plan is the reconstruction, the building, rebuilding of Gaza.

Speaker 201 And

Speaker 202 you're builders, you've been in real estate.

Speaker 201 As you said, it's extremely complex.

Speaker 201 Tell us more about the plan and how much it's going to cost, where's the money going to come from, and who's going to award the contracts? Three questions.

Speaker 204 I think it's going to cost a lot of money.

Speaker 201 What's a lot of money?

Speaker 204 You know, the estimates are in the $50 billion range. It might be a little bit less.
It might be a little bit more. I happen to think that that's not a lot of money in that region.

Speaker 204 You have governments that are going to jump on in.

Speaker 201 So the Middle East countries are going to provide the money.

Speaker 204 You'll see European participation and so forth.

Speaker 114 Which

Speaker 116 that is actually interesting because we heard Ursula, Queen Ursula, say, the Middle East, they're our brothers and sisters.

Speaker 13 So, yes, so they already know that money's coming from the EU.

Speaker 204 I think the beginning of this plan is how to get it going.

Speaker 173 And that's

Speaker 204 what me and Jared work on all the time. The money raising, we think, is the easy part.

Speaker 189 We think that happens relatively quickly.

Speaker 204 But it's the master plan. And we're working with a group of people who have

Speaker 204 been working on master plans for the last two years.

Speaker 201 So there are plans already.

Speaker 204 We have plans already. We have a master plan already.
And by the way, and Jared's been pushing this, and we're working together on it.

Speaker 189 And I think if the world saw the progress so far, they'd be pretty impressed.

Speaker 29 So Witkoff says they've been working on a master plan for two years now.

Speaker 17 So they got really hung up on the master plan.

Speaker 79 And here's their deconstruction of the master plan.

Speaker 207 Yeah, and this is the master plan. And this is basically the yeah, West Bankification.
They still have control.

Speaker 207 All of this falls apart. It's it's really hard to take it seriously because it's just fake.
I mean look at the comments from the finance minister about Saudi Arabia.

Speaker 207 Who do you think the people would be responsible for quote-unquote disarming Hamas would be?

Speaker 54 It would be the UAE, Saudi Arabia, the U.S.

Speaker 207 Vijay and Trump both say no U.S. troops will ever set foot on the ground in Gaza.
Great. I mean, honestly, I support that.

Speaker 207 But eventually somebody's troops have got to set foot on the ground to have political administration. Their plan is like some phased rollout where they'll just encroach space by space.

Speaker 207 Hamas will be allowed, and then they'll slowly de-Hamasify it. How?

Speaker 40 How do you do that?

Speaker 43 Like, what does that look like?

Speaker 207 At a certain point, it's all just recreating the same dynamic as Iraq, Afghanistan. These people have no actual plan.
In the absence, chaos will reign. Israel will continue to shoot and to kill.

Speaker 207 And eventually, some sort of mass attack or whatever, either Hamas will do, it maybe Israel will do, we'll see, and then we'll be right back to where things were.

Speaker 207 That seems like the modal outcome at this point. I don't really see another way that it could go.

Speaker 47 Now, I was, I'm like, wow, that's all you can take from that is they're gonna demon Hamasify, they're gonna get back to killing, they're gonna be killing because the Jews like to kill people, they kill, kill, kill, kill.

Speaker 129 And it's so disingenuous because they actually didn't play

Speaker 17 what came right after that in the interview.

Speaker 32 As you notice, there were three questions.

Speaker 31 The third question is,

Speaker 116 who's going to be paying for it?

Speaker 114 And it was Witkoff who brought that in.

Speaker 11 And as I'm listening to it, I had a different takeaway from this.

Speaker 189 I think if the world saw the progress so far, they'd be pretty impressed.

Speaker 209 So basically over the last couple of years, there's been a lot of organizations that have have been trying to determine what happens after the war.

Speaker 209 What's clear right now is we're very much focused on the humanitarian and the deconfliction to make sure that the aid can get to the people.

Speaker 202 Deconfliction, because there's still shooting over there.

Speaker 209 Yeah, so you have to make sure that we're dealing with both sides and sending messages so that you don't let embers become little fires that become forest fires.

Speaker 209 So we're working on deconfliction, humanitarian aid.

Speaker 201 Right now, you have Gazans

Speaker 15 trying to go home.

Speaker 201 They're trying to go back to where they lived before. They're going back to where the rubble is and putting a tent down in the middle of the house.

Speaker 210 Correct, correct.

Speaker 204 And by the way, and and it's rough there because it's not just rubble it's a lot of unexploded munitions all over the field and as to your question Leslie who's going to award contracts

Speaker 204 the answer is there's a board of peace and we're going to be very very focused and fastidious about having the best talent there we're already talking to contractors from all of the Middle Eastern countries because we think there has to be support from them and they know the market in the best and in the best way.

Speaker 201 Will it be transparent?

Speaker 204 Everything's transparent that we do, yes.

Speaker 209 You can't replace a corrupt government with another corrupt government.

Speaker 96 Okay, so they didn't play that piece, and the people who sent me this didn't see that piece.

Speaker 1 Of course not. I'm glad you got all worked up about some nasty note.

Speaker 20 But wait for it.

Speaker 1 And by the way, did you notice that Leslie said Gazans instead of Palestinians?

Speaker 50 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 191 Oh, that's in the style guide news.

Speaker 48 They've changed that. They've changed it.

Speaker 50 Obviously.

Speaker 115 They've changed it to Gazans.

Speaker 85 But my point is

Speaker 17 that the European Union is going to be involved?

Speaker 76 Blair is the chairman of the Board of Peace.

Speaker 58 So this seems like a gigantic setup to screw those guys if it goes wrong.

Speaker 20 Like, well, Blair, Queen Ursula, you guys were,

Speaker 25 you're a big part of this.

Speaker 116 But when, as I reflected upon it, I'm very happy that these people got mad at me and sent me this because the thing that I kept thinking is they had this master plan two years ago.

Speaker 108 So today is October 26th.

Speaker 69 That means that 19 days after October 7th, two years ago, they started on the master plan.

Speaker 14 That seems a little tight to me.

Speaker 1 And when you just say two years, it could be longer. It could have been before

Speaker 50 October 7th.

Speaker 1 It could have been the whole thing could be part of a giant scheme.

Speaker 85 That's what I'm thinking.

Speaker 49 I'm thinking the Arabs set this up with, probably with Israel.

Speaker 161 Like, you know what?

Speaker 1 Well, that thesis about the Israelis being so cavalier on that day. Yeah.
They didn't have anybody around. And the fact that it has never gone away.

Speaker 6 And the fact that they filmed everything, because that was kind of new.

Speaker 154 All the GoPros, the flying GoPros.

Speaker 104 I don't think that they...

Speaker 37 intended for so many people to get killed.

Speaker 57 Maybe they did. I don't know.

Speaker 67 I think, as we've heard from our boots on the ground, death is a very different concept in the Middle East.

Speaker 168 It's not quite the same as we have for some reason.

Speaker 36 That whole thing sounds like a scam that was set up with Israel and the Arab nations to change this.

Speaker 67 And the Arab nations are going to, they're the ones that are going to be putting the money in. They're the ones with Indonesia who are going to be protecting it.

Speaker 122 Bring the Europeans in.

Speaker 47 This is boop, you know, tag, you're it.

Speaker 25 I don't think we're going to have any involvement.

Speaker 19 Well, let's hope so.

Speaker 90 Yeah, no, I'm with you on that.

Speaker 15 But all the

Speaker 15 oh, another war, American boots on the ground.

Speaker 116 I don't think so.

Speaker 93 I really don't think so.

Speaker 15 We'll see.

Speaker 62 So, anyway, keep sending me that stuff.

Speaker 128 I like it.

Speaker 126 Keep sending me that stuff.

Speaker 1 What's that same one guy?

Speaker 36 No, no, it was a couple, actually.

Speaker 128 It was a couple.

Speaker 119 I'll pause for a moment if you want to do something here.

Speaker 1 Well, since we're doing our famous anniversary show, we played some measles stuff recently. I ran into because I wanted to play these on the show when we talked about measles and the fear-mongering.

Speaker 1 And so I got a couple of clips. These are the clips we ran in 20, this is 2015.

Speaker 1 These These are from the Law and Order show.

Speaker 1 In 2015, it's 10 years ago when they were having

Speaker 1 you know, measles does have a

Speaker 1 I was looking up at the death rates because

Speaker 1 worldwide death rates is hovers around it could be as hovers around maybe a hundred thousand

Speaker 1 under five

Speaker 1 children

Speaker 1 a year worldwide.

Speaker 1 But that number is based on a computer model.

Speaker 50 Computer.

Speaker 1 And so we don't really know what it is because we make light of the disease with

Speaker 50 the Brady bunch.

Speaker 9 The Brady Bunch. The Brady Bunch.

Speaker 1 But

Speaker 1 they decided to do counter-programming. And here's two clips from Law and Order on measles.
This is history clip number one.

Speaker 213 What? Did my neighbors call you?

Speaker 206 Why would they do that?

Speaker 213 Because they're upset at the choices I've made for my family.

Speaker 214 Choices? Like not vaccinating your son?

Speaker 213 I won't put my son at risk because big pharma and their lackeys in the media try and jam vaccination down our throats.

Speaker 214 Even if that puts him at risk.

Speaker 61 What risk?

Speaker 213 He had measles two weeks ago, and the immune system he was born with kicked in, and now he's fine.

Speaker 43 Well, Sierra Walker isn't fine.

Speaker 206 She's dead after being infected by your son.

Speaker 67 By the way, 10 years ago, when we spoke about these things, said this is nonsense or, you know, a tad overdone, there was a lot.

Speaker 83 Before COVID, there was a lot more pushback about vaccines.

Speaker 1 People were like, you guys are anti-vaxxers.

Speaker 1 Yes, that's interesting. You're right.
When the

Speaker 1 during the era where you had to argue about being a vaccine skeptic versus an anti-vaxxer, you're right. The pushback was enormous.
It was the COVID bull crab shot, which isn't even a vaccine,

Speaker 1 the mRNA shot, that changed everything in terms of attitudes. Yes.
And so, but did we have, but the drama was good. This is another example from,

Speaker 1 I believe this is from this, there's just two shows they did on measles. One was in 2009 and was in 2015, and this, I believe, is from the second show.

Speaker 209 Sierra Walker's death wasn't a homicide.

Speaker 206 She was just dug out of a shallow grave.

Speaker 175 She didn't fall in there playing hopscotch.

Speaker 216 Well, whoever put her in there didn't kill her.

Speaker 206 Encephalitis did.

Speaker 43 Swelling of the brain?

Speaker 206 Brought on by measles.

Speaker 10 Are you sure it's measles?

Speaker 209 No signs of abuse abuse or neglect, no bruises or abrasions either.

Speaker 206 Her teeth weren't in great shape, but mostly from a diet high in sugars. That's it.

Speaker 8 But measles.

Speaker 203 How does that happen this day and age?

Speaker 215 She wasn't vaccinated. She wasn't vaccinated.

Speaker 139 Wow.

Speaker 30 You know, two people

Speaker 97 came to an interesting conclusion because I played

Speaker 114 clips from ER and from the pit.

Speaker 71 So now we've spawned the whole, the whole, you know, a generation of this kind of propaganda.

Speaker 109 The doctor in both of those clips

Speaker 84 in the pit was Dr. Robbie.

Speaker 143 In ER, it was Dr.

Speaker 31 Carter, both played by the same actor, Noah Weil.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's well known.

Speaker 75 But I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 The pit was a takeoff of the ER. It was designed on it.

Speaker 154 So

Speaker 105 is this how the casting went?

Speaker 58 Like, that guy was so good with the propaganda.

Speaker 48 Let's bring him in again.

Speaker 53 He really brought the message home.

Speaker 1 he was part i think made part of the production team that that brought it to light hmm

Speaker 1 so uh it's a very famous show yes i have not watched a whole episode of it i don't find it interesting i didn't i wasn't a big er fan either oh clooney it's over dramatized okay so here we go with this is 2018 now we move way up and this is what was going on in washington state in washington state as the number of measles cases grows worries are growing too.

Speaker 183 At one hospital, security guards are staking out each entrance, screening visitors for symptoms of the virus, which can be deadly.

Speaker 215 We're taking a lot of precautions to prevent anyone from entering with any signs and symptoms of measles.

Speaker 183 The state now has 50 confirmed cases, 49 of them in Clark County, the outbreak epicenter. Health officials say only one of those patients had been vaccinated for measles.

Speaker 54 Is the worst of it over yet?

Speaker 220 I don't know if the worst of it is over because we still have cases coming in.

Speaker 183 Beyond Washington, measles has surfaced in at least eight other states this year, including New York, with more than 200 cases reported.

Speaker 183 The virus is highly contagious, spreads through coughing and sneezing, and can linger in a room for up to two hours.

Speaker 183 Health officials say Clark County has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the state. Nearly a quarter of all public school students there are not fully vaccinated.

Speaker 220 We don't have to be going through this. We have an incredibly safe, cheap, and effective vaccine.
Two doses of vaccine are 97% effective.

Speaker 183 Those who think they might have measles are urged to call their doctor first. Don't just show up unannounced.
Health officials worry that could expose others who are in the waiting room. Lester?

Speaker 1 Now, wait, wait. Did you notice the meme in there has changed?

Speaker 1 This is the early days of Obamacare,

Speaker 1 or even before it was passed, I think it was 2018.

Speaker 1 Obamacare, which has managed to, the Affordable Care Act has managed to make things so unaffordable that the Democrats are freaked out about not getting some subsidies in so we can help pay for it.

Speaker 1 It's gotten outrageously expensive. The safe and effective meme was in there, but it wasn't safe and effective.

Speaker 15 What was it?

Speaker 1 Safe, cheap, and effective.

Speaker 12 Oh, my husband.

Speaker 15 You can't say that anymore.

Speaker 22 You can't.

Speaker 95 You can't. I wonder what it costs these days.

Speaker 1 Well, they jacked the prices up. This reminds me of

Speaker 1 prices of just general drugs have gone up 10x just because they can get the money. Because the insurance companies can, you know, they're in part in the business.

Speaker 1 They're in the business of selling the stuff. They're middlemen.
The whole thing is falling apart.

Speaker 53 I'm looking for the price, MMR.

Speaker 1 Okay. Yeah, the retail price of the

Speaker 1 mRNA vaccine.

Speaker 78 90.

Speaker 93 No, the MMR, not

Speaker 1 oh, the MMR, yeah, okay.

Speaker 71 Yeah, $97.

Speaker 1 Yeah, but

Speaker 71 it used to be $26.

Speaker 15 Yeah.

Speaker 1 What changed?

Speaker 46 Yeah, insurance.

Speaker 75 What changed? So-called insurance.

Speaker 15 Yeah.

Speaker 155 Obamacare, which is the worst.

Speaker 38 The health marketplace.

Speaker 1 It's the worst. Yeah,

Speaker 1 it's anything but affordable. It should be the anything but affordable health care.

Speaker 38 Actually, I will again shill for our producers.

Speaker 222 You can join many different programs.

Speaker 71 Tina is on CrowdHealth

Speaker 80 and

Speaker 222 she pays, I think, $200 a month.

Speaker 48 And then when something happens, and this is from someone getting pregnant to someone with cancer, then the whole system chips in and it gets paid for.

Speaker 132 They negotiate the prices down for you.

Speaker 17 Everything's all done.

Speaker 58 It's beautiful.

Speaker 86 Tina at Curry.com. She'll help you out.

Speaker 71 She'll give you a discount code, Bongino.

Speaker 1 Yeah, a discount/slash Tina.

Speaker 95 Bongino.

Speaker 62 Just while we're on Big Pharma, I got a, you know, as I kind of expected, wow, we got a lot of people about that,

Speaker 74 about,

Speaker 78 what was the name of it?

Speaker 29 Sublocade.

Speaker 110 Remember we were talking about on the last show?

Speaker 153 Sublocade?

Speaker 1 Yeah, I remember vaguely.

Speaker 15 Wow.

Speaker 75 So we have a lot of people who have experience with that.

Speaker 17 And you know, I put like three or four boots on the ground reports in there, and it has helped many people.

Speaker 37 But every single one of them says, oh, dude, this is 80 to 100 times stronger than morphine.

Speaker 17 And in essence, it's if you, if you, if you don't add

Speaker 17 therapy in there to figure out what's wrong, why, why you, you know, the actual addiction,

Speaker 17 they will just keep on shooting this into you forever.

Speaker 168 And it's really, it's changing you out for opioid addiction to this stuff.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's very addictive and

Speaker 1 you can get high on it.

Speaker 13 No one, it's funny. No one really.

Speaker 1 I got a note from a guy whose sister is an addict.

Speaker 1 I can find the note and read it, but I can just summarize. And she went on,

Speaker 1 if you're already addicted, it doesn't get you high. But if you're not addicted, it gets you high.
So when it gets you off your addiction, it gets you high.

Speaker 1 And so, she got on this stuff and just started getting extra prescriptions for it and was using it as her way of getting high. I love our producers.
It's a bad product.

Speaker 58 Yeah, I love our producers, though.

Speaker 15 Like, oh, yeah, yeah, I was a druggie.

Speaker 166 Let me tell you what, give my experience.

Speaker 116 And every single one of them, though, is clean.

Speaker 128 I love that.

Speaker 184 Congratulations to all of you.

Speaker 58 But not necessarily from Sublocade.

Speaker 126 You know, they had other influences.

Speaker 1 She's a listener, and she's not clean, and he wanted to call her out as a douchebag.

Speaker 15 Well, I'm not going to listen to the show.

Speaker 182 Hey, you know what? Get off the drugs.

Speaker 15 Yo, that's horrible.

Speaker 77 But we do have the best podcast producers in the universe.

Speaker 51 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 15 We definitely do.

Speaker 107 Definitely do.

Speaker 128 Another thing, another amazing thing has happened is peanut allergies have dropped off a cliff.

Speaker 67 This was something else that we were noticing throughout the early days of the show.

Speaker 67 And I think it didn't kind of start around the same time when, oh, peanut allergies.

Speaker 17 And we were, I know, I was complaining, no peanuts on the flight because someone was allergic to peanuts.

Speaker 116 You remember this?

Speaker 16 Yeah, oh, yeah.

Speaker 191 So that all of a sudden is dropped off a cliff by some amazing advice.

Speaker 203 Eight-year-old Jack Ravener used to be allergic to peanuts.

Speaker 215 It's a little stressful.

Speaker 203 Mom says his allergy is gone now after being slowly exposed. New research says there are fewer children like Jake.
Since 2017, peanut allergies in young children have dropped 43%.

Speaker 223 We looked at medical records from 50 different pediatric practices in multiple states.

Speaker 29 Dr.

Speaker 203 David Hill led the study at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia that looked at allergies to things like milk, eggs, and nuts.

Speaker 203 For decades, those were the foods parents were told to avoid giving babies, but that changed in 2015. The updated recommendation said the opposite.
Babies should be exposed to tiny amounts.

Speaker 223 What our research showed is that, in fact, providing these foods earlier is a way to train the immune system that the foods themselves are safe.

Speaker 175 A total game changer.

Speaker 203 Jake's mom, Dr. Lisa Ravner, is a pediatrician who's seeing a decline in kids with peanut allergies because of the revised recommendation.
And as a pediatrician, your advice to parents has changed.

Speaker 142 Oh, yeah, completely.

Speaker 215 There's a lot of education that goes into it around around that this is safe to do.

Speaker 203 Since the updated recommendation, about 60,000 children have avoided developing peanut allergies according to the new research.

Speaker 223 We've been able to implement what I think is one of the most important public health interventions in allergy.

Speaker 203 Now there are a growing number of children like Jake who can enjoy foods without the worry of allergic reactions.

Speaker 62 I just thought that was phenomenal.

Speaker 1 Well, do you remember the clip we played about Kennedy and aluminum?

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 65 Oh, you're right.

Speaker 1 And you don't notice that the same drop-off in peanut allergies ended when a lot of parents won't give their

Speaker 1 hepatitis B vaccine, which is the one that's got the aluminum in it. If you're on.

Speaker 38 Let's play that clip again.

Speaker 188 Yes, I have it here.

Speaker 226 Here's something that people should know.

Speaker 13 So what you're saying is they are now pumping this story and saying, well, it's because of the changes that we had, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 131 But really, it was because of the removal of aluminum.

Speaker 1 Well, they didn't take aluminum out of anything, but aluminum is an adjuvant. It's used in the hepatitis B vaccine.
And because of COVID, as you mentioned earlier, people are more

Speaker 1 vaccine-hesitant.

Speaker 1 And they're not giving their kids a stupid hepatitis B vaccine when they're a little baby, when they can get an when peanuts can be involved, or they have some milk at the same time, and they pick up these crazy allergies.

Speaker 1 The allergies are dropping off naturally.

Speaker 226 Is that

Speaker 226 aluminum provokes an allergic response and that's why it was valuable.

Speaker 226 So if you put the aluminum in with the viral antigen, your body now mounts an allergic response to that viral antigen, whether it's polio or

Speaker 226 hepatitis B or the, you know, HPB or whatever.

Speaker 226 So, but what we now know, the science suggests

Speaker 226 is that the aluminum also creates allergic responses to anything that's in the ambient environment? So if you have a peanut oil excipient in that vaccine and you put aluminum in it,

Speaker 226 you could have a lifetime allergy to peanuts.

Speaker 226 If there is a Timothy weed outbreak,

Speaker 226 the week that you get that aluminum vaccine,

Speaker 226 you now may have a lifetime allergy to Timothy Weed. And that's why probably, you know, there's two studies by Mawson and Cowlings.

Speaker 26 Wow.

Speaker 139 Wow.

Speaker 170 So, so, really, COVID.

Speaker 177 So, President Trump is really right.

Speaker 67 He saved all these people from all these nonsense by making them afraid of vaccines.

Speaker 129 He's done a great job with his warp speed.

Speaker 1 Although he doesn't really, I don't believe he knows that.

Speaker 9 I don't think so either.

Speaker 197 He's natural.

Speaker 51 Wow.

Speaker 104 Yeah.

Speaker 95 Interesting how that works.

Speaker 15 Yeah.

Speaker 1 And that's hepatitis B vaccine for a baby is stupid.

Speaker 100 It is stupid.

Speaker 1 Of course, Abrego Garcia is back in the news.

Speaker 109 Oh, wow.

Speaker 17 Where's he going to this time?

Speaker 1 Well, they still don't know. Let's find out.

Speaker 227 The Justice Department says it now wants to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to the African nation of Liberia, but it's NPRs. Martin Costi reports his lawyers say it's an unacceptable option.

Speaker 54 A judge ruled in 2019 that although Abrego Garcia was in the U.S. illegally, he shouldn't be sent back to El Salvador because of dangers he'd faced there.

Speaker 54 The Trump administration deported him there anyway, it says by mistake, and he was returned to the U.S.

Speaker 1 in June.

Speaker 54 Now, his lawyer, Simon Sandoval-Moschenberg, says Costa Rica could take Obrego Garcia, but the administration keeps insisting on sending him farther away.

Speaker 71 They are using the selection of the country of removal as a means of punishing him.

Speaker 54 In its court filing, the Justice Department calls Liberia a thriving democracy, which provides, quote, robust protections for human rights.

Speaker 54 But it doesn't say whether Liberia has promised not to send a brego garcia on to el salvador

Speaker 79 el salvador is pretty good these days i mean not the jail but

Speaker 48 yeah i don't know i've been there no a lot of people all the bitcoiners are going to el salvador

Speaker 1 the bitcoiners man they love because they use it as a currency yes el zondo beach they're building houses and all kinds it's only a two-hour flight from texas it's not that far let's talk a little bit about arctic frost

Speaker 67 yeah I heard there were more documents that came out.

Speaker 1 There's a lot of stuff coming out, nothing's being done about it. Here's Kennedy.

Speaker 15 Well, hold on a second.

Speaker 75 I'm going to disagree with you because you, yes, we know that the Republicans are not going to do anything about nothing, but this is right.

Speaker 182 But this is a Department of Justice case, and Pam Bondi, you know, I don't think she has any affiliations other than with

Speaker 104 emptiness.

Speaker 116 And

Speaker 116 I think something may come out of this.

Speaker 66 I really do.

Speaker 1 You're an optimist at some. It's funny.
You're generally

Speaker 1 not an optimist. And there's a word for that.
And for some reason, it's eluding that.

Speaker 15 A pessimist.

Speaker 9 A pessimist. That's it.

Speaker 1 You're a pessimist normally, but you become optimistic about stuff that will always disappoint. This is why.
Because you'll always be disappointed because it never happens.

Speaker 39 We'll see.

Speaker 1 I mean, hey, this is the Benny Johnson show. You know Benny Johnson.

Speaker 79 Yes, we know Benny Johnson.

Speaker 60 Big friend of Charlie Kirk, I hear.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's what he says. So here's Kennedy was on the Benny Johnson show talking about Arctic Frost.

Speaker 228 I watched Attorney General Merritt Garland make the decision to prosecute a former president of the United States on legal grounds that were iffy at best, who also happened to be the Attorney General's boss's chief opponent

Speaker 228 in an election. The press calls it a lawfare.
It's just weaponization by your justice system. That's not supposed to happen in America.

Speaker 228 That happens in countries whose powerball jackpot is 287 chickens and a goat.

Speaker 10 It doesn't happen in America.

Speaker 228 And that wasn't the only instance of lawfare. Ms.
James in New York, the district attorney in Georgia, Jack Smith. And it wasn't just directed at President Trump.

Speaker 228 It was directed at anybody who supported supported him. It was directed at many, many, many Republicans.

Speaker 228 Today,

Speaker 228 we found out from Senator Grassley that Judge

Speaker 228 Attorney General Garland and FBI Director Chris Wrized

Speaker 228 the subpoenas to get the phone records of the United States senators.

Speaker 228 I've got to tell you, I was shocked at that.

Speaker 228 I just assumed this was Jack Smith going disco without telling anybody.

Speaker 228 But it was signed off by people at the very top. Now, I don't know what's going to happen criminally.
I know the Attorney General and the FBI is looking at it.

Speaker 228 I can tell you what's going to happen civilly.

Speaker 228 The Justice Department is going to get sued by these senators and by everybody

Speaker 228 who was wronged.

Speaker 228 Merrick Darlin's going to get sued. Chris Ray is going to get sued.

Speaker 228 The telecommunication companies, the telephone companies that turned over these records are going to get sued.

Speaker 228 There's something called a rule of law in America.

Speaker 26 Well, Kennedy's involved, man.

Speaker 14 Now you know something's going to happen.

Speaker 1 Well, yeah, there are going to be a lot of civil lawsuits. It's going to have nothing to do with the Republicans.

Speaker 1 You got to do it. You're on your own.
Here's part two.

Speaker 99 How are you supposed to conduct business? How is any senator supposed to do their job if the wrong Justice Department can just illegally spy on everything that you're doing?

Speaker 99 Isn't this worse than Watergate?

Speaker 228 Well, it's sure getting there if it's not there yet.

Speaker 228 And it's not just Ben, it's not just the U.S. senators.
They did this to 92 organizations. They did it to Turning Point.

Speaker 228 They did it to apparently everybody they thought was a political enemy of President Biden or that they just didn't agree with politically.

Speaker 228 And And what has surprised me today, it's really disappointed me,

Speaker 228 is that

Speaker 228 the Attorney General of the United States, Judge Garland, Justice Garland, Judge Garland, almost a justice, signed off on this.

Speaker 228 And apparently, at least according to Senator Grassley, and this whistle blows, so did the director of the FBI, Chris Wray.

Speaker 228 I never wanted to believe that. I really thought this was all Jack Smith just being a cowboy.

Speaker 228 But apparently

Speaker 228 everybody signed off on it.

Speaker 228 And I can tell you if the attorney general signed off on it and the FBI director signed off on it, President Biden signed off on it, you think an attorney general is going to do something like this?

Speaker 228 You think an attorney general is going to prosecute a former president of the United States who also

Speaker 228 happens to be his boss's political opponent without telling the president of the United States who appointed him? Dream weaver.

Speaker 30 If you believe that, you believe in the tooth fairy.

Speaker 228 You believe in the Easter bunny.

Speaker 30 Dream we, hello, 1971 reference.

Speaker 43 Nice.

Speaker 43 Hello, Dreamweaver.

Speaker 1 The media is not having any fun with this at all.

Speaker 137 No, it's made for us, I think.

Speaker 1 He has one.

Speaker 1 Well, definitely, because it's wide open. You can just, you know, it's like

Speaker 1 low-hanging fruit, basically, that the mainstream media won't touch. They're just such in the pockets of the Democrats.

Speaker 1 It's an embarrassing.

Speaker 70 Well, not just Democrats, the criminals, just criminals, North Sea.

Speaker 153 North Sea Nexus, baby.

Speaker 35 I'm telling you.

Speaker 86 Okay. Well, can I take a climate change angle on Arctic Frost?

Speaker 9 Ooh. Yeah.

Speaker 1 It's a stretch, but go.

Speaker 56 Here we go.

Speaker 109 The blob is back.

Speaker 213 Do you remember the brutal winter of 2013 to 2014?

Speaker 227 23 nights with temperatures below zero and snow falling every other day for months.

Speaker 229 Well, we're sorry to tell you there is a reason this winter could be similar.

Speaker 231 First Alert meteorologist David Yeomans tracks how something happening thousands of miles away could impact our winter weather.

Speaker 40 It's called the blob, or sometimes the warm blob.

Speaker 221 And basically, it's just an ocean heat wave up in the North Pacific.

Speaker 221 This August, NOAA says that water temperatures in this area shattered records, reaching 68 degrees for the first time ever observed. And studies show, yes, this is linked to climate change.

Speaker 221 Now since the ocean and the atmosphere work so closely together, record warm ocean temperatures.

Speaker 15 Do they have desks next to each other?

Speaker 57 The ocean?

Speaker 1 In the same office, yes, they

Speaker 1 do have adjoining desks.

Speaker 97 We're going to have unbelievable cold winter in Chicago, but don't worry, it's climate change because of the heat.

Speaker 164 Climate change.

Speaker 221 Now, since the ocean and the atmosphere work so closely together, record-warm ocean temperatures like this have a big impact on weather patterns.

Speaker 221 The blob leads to a big area of high pressure and a bump northward in the jet stream or the storm track.

Speaker 21 This is where it gets important for us.

Speaker 164 The jet stream bump there causes a corresponding dip in the jet stream farther east.

Speaker 221 This dip can cut the U.S.

Speaker 21 in half, keeping the west warm and dry while driving Arctic air and massive snowfall events into the Chicago area. area and Great Lakes.

Speaker 221 It's this that was a driving factor in Chicago's third coldest and third snowiest winter on record, the winter of 2013 to 2014.

Speaker 75 Yeah, coincidentally, it's about 11 years.

Speaker 67 You know, 11 years is the cycle of the sunspots, but let's not look at that.

Speaker 70 Let's not look at that.

Speaker 15 No.

Speaker 15 No.

Speaker 1 In fact, if you haven't noticed, it would be interesting.

Speaker 1 I'm going to do an n-gram search on sunspots because they've not been discussed at all.

Speaker 93 Well, every ham rate is not.

Speaker 1 They've gone out of their way not to discuss sunspots.

Speaker 48 No, No, of course not.

Speaker 62 Ham guys know it.

Speaker 67 We depend on

Speaker 60 the solar activity for skip.

Speaker 1 Yeah, you got to get that bounce.

Speaker 47 When's the last time you bounced off the ionosphere?

Speaker 71 Come on, be honest.

Speaker 95 Your rig is in the desk next to you, in the drawer next to your phone.

Speaker 1 It's in the drawer, yeah.

Speaker 53 There's nothing going on with no bounce, no bouncing for you.

Speaker 67 Well, I'm kind of waiting on you because I have a couple of of North Sea Nexus things to do, but

Speaker 144 I want to make sure that you're going to be able to do that.

Speaker 1 Well, okay, I got some screwball clips. Let's play these.
This is a TikTok clip, and this is explaining why Trump is taken down the East Wing. This is the real reason.

Speaker 218 It's not about the ballroom. He's secretly building a state-of-the-art bunker where the old one is.
He's planning on staying in power for the rest of his life.

Speaker 218 That's why he didn't go through the proper channels. He's trying to create an emergency before the midterms so there will be no voting, and he and his regime will stay in power.

Speaker 218 And where are those people who fought to keep statues up to preserve history? Oh, man.

Speaker 17 This is the same thing we were saying about Obama when he built his $300 million basketball court.

Speaker 1 Oh, I don't remember that.

Speaker 153 Yes, no, the basketball court, I think it was $327 million.

Speaker 147 No, it was $400 million.

Speaker 1 It was $417, I think.

Speaker 13 It was a lot of money.

Speaker 36 It was more than the ballroom, and it was $101 million.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and it was just a basketball court.

Speaker 67 And it was taxpayer money.

Speaker 13 I don't think it was private money.

Speaker 116 And I remember, oh, he's building a bunker.

Speaker 1 Well, there has to be something to explain that expense. Maybe there was a bunker.
So here,

Speaker 1 kind of on the same topic,

Speaker 1 this is Carvelle going off on Bannon.

Speaker 40 Oh, I love Carvelle.

Speaker 1 He's gone off the deep end. He was hanging in there for a while.
Now he's completely nuts.

Speaker 1 And here he goes.

Speaker 1 What clip is this? He's going. This is, let me back to, I don't have this other clip.
I should have had it. I should have put it on here.
But

Speaker 1 Bannon was on the show.

Speaker 15 I have the Bannon clip.

Speaker 1 Play the Bannon clip, and we can play the retort by Carvell about the Bannon clip. This is Bannon talking to the idiot editor of The Economist who ruined the magazine.

Speaker 30 I know.

Speaker 79 So what nationality is she?

Speaker 60 She's British. Uh-huh.

Speaker 1 This is a. Well, the Economist has been a British magazine, so that's not a surprise.

Speaker 17 No, but my point is.

Speaker 1 Well, she is probably, yes, she is and she's a horrible editor.

Speaker 95 And she's horrible looking, too, if we can just be honest about it.

Speaker 115 She's scary.

Speaker 1 But it's scary.

Speaker 76 This is a troll.

Speaker 36 This is Bannon trolling the North Sea Nexus.

Speaker 64 Well, he's going to get a third term. So Trump 28.
Trump is going to be president in 28, and people just ought to get accommodated with that.

Speaker 34 So what about the 22nd Amendment?

Speaker 232 There's many different alternatives.

Speaker 64 At the appropriate time, we'll lay out what the plan is.

Speaker 232 But there's a plan, and President Trump will be

Speaker 232 the president in 28. We had longer odds in 2016 and longer odds in 24 than we got in 28.

Speaker 232 And President Trump will be the president of the United States, and the country needs him to be president of the United States. We have to finish what we started.

Speaker 232 And the way we finish it through Trump, Trump is a vehicle. I know this will drive you guys crazy, but he's a vehicle of divine providence.
He's an instrument. He's very imperfect.

Speaker 232 He's not churchy, not particularly religious,

Speaker 232 but he's an instrument of divine will. And you can tell this of how he's pulled this off.
We need him for at least one more term, right? And he'll get that in 28.

Speaker 202 You're not driving me crazy.

Speaker 202 I'm trying to understand the coherence of the things you've just told me in the last few minutes. On the one hand, you've said the Constitution is fit for purpose.

Speaker 202 Secondly, you've said that President Trump needs another term, even though the 22nd Amendment makes pretty clear that he cannot have a second term.

Speaker 233 Why does it make that clear?

Speaker 202 Because he's on his second term already.

Speaker 232 At some point in time,

Speaker 232 we will make sure we go through Zanni and define all those terms.

Speaker 202 But even if you find a way to undermine the ⁇ you will be undermining the spirit of that amendment, even if you find some way around it. And do those people are ⁇

Speaker 232 can the American people ⁇ if the American people, with the mechanisms that we have, put Trump back in office, are the American people tearing up the Constitution?

Speaker 64 Would that be tearing up?

Speaker 232 Would the American people be going against the spirit of the Constitution, ma'am?

Speaker 83 So I have a second clip if you want, but what I took away from this was Bannon.

Speaker 79 First of all, Bannon really is psyoping your son.

Speaker 96 It's like, Dvorak's got to win this bet.

Speaker 71 I've got to make the kid really think he should double down.

Speaker 67 Has JC come down yet and said, let's do make it $1,000?

Speaker 1 I'm sure I could push him up to that. I'm not going to take advantage of him that much.

Speaker 15 Oh, come on. He's working in AI.

Speaker 16 He can spend a great time.

Speaker 1 Right now, he's between jobs.

Speaker 234 Oh, I think.

Speaker 65 Oh, is he living at the house?

Speaker 43 Is he living at the house?

Speaker 1 No, he's got. No, he's not living at the house.

Speaker 153 He's between opportunities, is what we say.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I'm sorry. What am I thinking? What is my language?

Speaker 197 I'm deteriorating.

Speaker 1 He's between opportunities. You're exactly right.

Speaker 1 But he,

Speaker 66 this is.

Speaker 1 Ben is also doing, he's trying to get back in the good graces of the president. Clearly.
He has not been invited to anything.

Speaker 1 He claims in that same interview, he claims he's on the phone with the president all the time.

Speaker 1 Trump's calling him for advice. You're right.
And all this stuff. And Ben has just lost cause.

Speaker 77 But the point, so there's a couple ways you could take what he said.

Speaker 129 One is

Speaker 54 he was interestingly careful.

Speaker 37 He kept saying Trump will be president.

Speaker 30 It could be that.

Speaker 129 Somehow they believe Don Jr.

Speaker 17 is going to be president.

Speaker 62 I don't think that's a possibility.

Speaker 1 No, nobody thinks that.

Speaker 178 And what he's really saying is, well, the American people, if we want to change the Constitution, then we would have to have a vote on that, which is possible.

Speaker 71 It seems like the remaining three years is not enough time to mount that up.

Speaker 60 But that's what I think he's saying.

Speaker 122 And he's being real cagey about it, which is just trolly.

Speaker 66 He's trolly.

Speaker 1 The whole thing is bullcrap.

Speaker 1 He knows it's not going to happen. I don't think he's even thinking about it.
Do you want to hear

Speaker 166 the second part? One minute?

Speaker 15 Sure.

Speaker 202 I think, yes, actually, because I think

Speaker 202 what you will end up with is

Speaker 202 a populist justification for a quasi-dictatorship.

Speaker 15 That's not true.

Speaker 4 That's what it sounds like.

Speaker 1 Trump is

Speaker 1 a dictatorship.

Speaker 232 Did you just see the compromises he had to make on the big, beautiful bill? You see the compromises he has to do on everything, on accommodating Zelensky, on what President Trump.

Speaker 232 President Trump is nothing but a series of negotiations to kind of keep this thing rolling forward where he's having trade-offs all the time happening.

Speaker 202 You've just spent the last 20 minutes telling me we have to smash the other side. There's no room for debate.
There's no room for compromise. We must smash them.

Speaker 202 And now you're telling me this is a negotiation.

Speaker 215 I mean, that's

Speaker 4 on his policy.

Speaker 232 First off, the only way President Trump wins in 2028 and continues to stay in office is by the will of the American people. Okay? And the will of the American people is what the Constitution embodies.

Speaker 232 And so I think

Speaker 232 we're going to be in good hands there. We need to finish what we started.
And President Trump is the instrument, a providential instrument to finish that, to finish this job.

Speaker 71 Providential instrument.

Speaker 70 I love it.

Speaker 70 Release your Epstein tapes, bro.

Speaker 93 That's what we want from Bannon.

Speaker 1 Well, I'm surprised that she didn't bring that into the conversation.

Speaker 79 Well, she might have, but I only got the best.

Speaker 93 I don't think so.

Speaker 1 Yeah. That would have been a clip.

Speaker 25 But I love the outrage.

Speaker 35 And and yeah you're absolutely right bannon is so on the outs he's like

Speaker 1 we we have to get we we no he's always always we the royal we

Speaker 1 as if he's part of the situation is he's part as if he's part of the administration and he's not now is your carville is this the one where he's on with the with circle back so

Speaker 1 I don't know. Now that you mention it, I know he was on with her.

Speaker 1 I don't, no, I don't think so. I think this is when he's on with that guy, his buddy.

Speaker 69 Oh, because I have a circle back sake.

Speaker 1 Well, let's play this one. And then if the circle back sake

Speaker 1 tops it, or unless this is it.

Speaker 124 I'm looking at the windows.

Speaker 1 But if he tops it, play that second.

Speaker 14 I'm looking at the waveform.

Speaker 59 It looks the same. Let me see.

Speaker 210 He hates the United States.

Speaker 9 He hates the Republicans.

Speaker 210 He hates any kind of system that we have.

Speaker 1 He's talking about Bannon.

Speaker 15 Oh, I thought I was talking about Trump.

Speaker 1 No, he's talking about Bannon. Oh,

Speaker 12 interesting.

Speaker 210 He hates the United States. He hates the Republican Party.

Speaker 210 He hates any kind of system that we have here, any kind of rules. And they're going to,

Speaker 210 I hate to be like this,

Speaker 210 being an old man, but I'm telling you, we had a really dangerous point in the United States. And I believe that from the bottom of my heart.

Speaker 210 And a lot of other people I know that are really smart historians, people I know this

Speaker 210 totally agree with me. It's bad, it's dangerous.

Speaker 216 I think there's no question about it, and it's this very difficult line between not wanting people to feel scared and wanting to be direct about what the hell is happening, which is what

Speaker 210 we would try to do.

Speaker 210 You have no option, I'm sure.

Speaker 122 This is actually a very important clip

Speaker 79 because what he's doing here, I believe, is part of the no kings

Speaker 17 gambit, which is very weak, but the whole no kings thing, as I think I identified, it's really about the Democrat Party trying to hijack patriotism.

Speaker 15 That's why we saw all the flags out there.

Speaker 148 Everybody's waving flags.

Speaker 129 It's only about Trump, no kings, which is kind of rich for the North Sea Nexus.

Speaker 80 No kings.

Speaker 110 You know, this is it.

Speaker 235 This is a dictatorship taking over everything.

Speaker 216 Very difficult line.

Speaker 1 Be afraid. Stop.
Stop.

Speaker 1 I think that Bannon is on here with this particular spiel about you must be afraid and scared because he's looking for a gig on MSNBC.

Speaker 10 Oh, Carville?

Speaker 56 Yeah.

Speaker 1 So I meant Carville, not Bannon. Carville is looking for a gig on MSNBC.
And so

Speaker 1 he is playing

Speaker 1 because he's never been this, he's not this much of a weenie.

Speaker 170 Oh, I'm scared. I'm scared.

Speaker 46 Bull crap.

Speaker 1 This is, he's looking to get a gig on MS Now, the new operation.

Speaker 25 Oh, well, he'll work cheap.

Speaker 146 Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 79 Well, he's going to get paid cheap because it's going to be MS Now.

Speaker 216 Between not wanting people to feel scared and wanting to be direct about what the hell is happening, which is what

Speaker 210 we would try to do.

Speaker 210 You have no option. I'm sorry.
I like hope and I'm the man from hope and

Speaker 210 the Obama Hope poster and the hope and hope. Hope is gone.

Speaker 210 Hope is gone anywhere around here. We're up against the, as a country, we're up against the law.
And right now, there is no hope.

Speaker 210 There is fear and people are justified to be afraid and they need to do everything that they possibly can in their own simple way to profess their love for this country, their love for the traditions and the laws and the customs and the history that we have and the progress we made because it's all at it.

Speaker 210 It's as likely as not that we blow a gasket. And

Speaker 210 again, I know I'm getting somewhat hysterical here, but I can't. I'm an old man.
There's nothing else. I get to say what I want.
I'm just telling you,

Speaker 1 I'm one scared dude, really scared.

Speaker 123 Hey, Bill, listen,

Speaker 134 we got to fill out the roster for MS.

Speaker 1 This is an audition tape, by the way. That was his audition tape.

Speaker 38 I'm an old dude.

Speaker 104 This is an old, he's got nothing left.

Speaker 62 He'll work for cheap because he's old and he already admitted he's got nothing to do.

Speaker 123 We can probably give him eight bucks an hour and have him rant and rave.

Speaker 190 I guarantee here's, I'm going to make a prediction.

Speaker 95 When does MS Now start?

Speaker 78 When is the switch over?

Speaker 1 I thought it was supposed to start already, so I have no idea when you're going to pull the plug on the old logo.

Speaker 78 Well, hold on a second. Let's ask.
Let's ask

Speaker 15 the robot.

Speaker 140 Hey, Error, when does MSNBC officially switch over to MS Now?

Speaker 226 Nah, not yet.

Speaker 196 Nah, announced in August, but the full switch isn't till later this year. Still MSNBC for now.

Speaker 99 Kind of wild, right?

Speaker 20 So wild.

Speaker 40 These idiots. Oh, wow.

Speaker 1 I can't do that. That's the wildest thing I've heard for months.
That's just wild.

Speaker 146 Here,

Speaker 97 I'm going to make a prediction.

Speaker 7 When MS Now launches, they are going to have more American flag things waving on screen than Fox News.

Speaker 67 This is the gambit.

Speaker 15 This is the program.

Speaker 1 Carville, with his patriotism, a little bit at the end,

Speaker 1 you may have caught something there.

Speaker 111 I watched No Kings.

Speaker 77 What they're trying to say is that they're not going to be able to do

Speaker 1 the No Kings people and their flags, it was so insincere.

Speaker 5 No, but who you pointed out?

Speaker 6 Who are the people from No Kings?

Speaker 133 Old people.

Speaker 26 What is Carville?

Speaker 51 Old people.

Speaker 15 Old people vote.

Speaker 50 Oh, yes, oh, yes.

Speaker 25 Old people vote.

Speaker 1 That's Carville. That's in his bio when he presented it to MSNBC.

Speaker 15 Hey, listen. Old people vote.

Speaker 1 Old people vote. I'm old.
Put me on the shows.

Speaker 9 Let's go.

Speaker 1 I'll be just a contributor, MSNBC contributor.

Speaker 147 MS Now contributor.

Speaker 60 Let's rock and roll.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he's going to be a contributor on ms now constantly yeah and he's going to be doing the same bit he's been working on and he's he stinks he's no good but i'm just saying if i was if i was in charge of ms now if you and i were in charge i would say let's go all the way let's out fox fox news let's put flags everywhere statue of liberty you know no kings

Speaker 1 I as in the same meeting, I would say, well, okay, I like the idea because it's a good idea, except for the fact that our staffers

Speaker 1 hate the country so much

Speaker 1 that they're going to be, we're going to lose people.

Speaker 62 Well, seeing as in the cities these days, I was reading a report, the median age for people just doing regular old jobs,

Speaker 182 excluding banking and all that kind of stuff, is $34,000.

Speaker 76 I don't, how do you survive in a city?

Speaker 1 And I'm talking talking about. In a city, you can't.
You can't in the suburbs.

Speaker 168 I'm talking of Houston.

Speaker 128 I'm talking Chicago.

Speaker 106 Well,

Speaker 1 you know how you survive?

Speaker 1 You vote in Mom Donnie.

Speaker 162 Wow.

Speaker 38 What a bridge.

Speaker 80 Let me bring in Mom Donnie.

Speaker 86 I've got three Mom Donnie clips.

Speaker 1 And I will say this, by the way, I do have some pushback from my New York friends. Oh.
More than one.

Speaker 1 They say, oh, you're wrong because I sent him the y'all say, Oh, no, no, I didn't. We're not that stupid here in New York.
And I'm thinking, oh,

Speaker 51 okay.

Speaker 16 I think you're listening to this.

Speaker 236 As early voting gets underway in New York's mayoral race, Democratic candidate Zoran Mamdani has vowed to further embrace his Muslim identity in the face of what he's called racist and baseless attacks from his opponents.

Speaker 236 Mamdani made the comments while speaking outside a mosque on Friday.

Speaker 45 To be Muslim in New York is to expect indignity, but indignity does not make us distinct. There are many New Yorkers who face.

Speaker 208 It is the tolerance of that indignity.

Speaker 236 Mamdani has faced backlash for his criticism of Israel.

Speaker 236 Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and Mamdani's other rival, Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa, have both stepped up their attacks on the Democratic Socialist as the election draws closer.

Speaker 236 Cuomo laughed along to a joke that Mamdani would likely cheer another 9-11 attack on New York, or Sliwa falsely claimed that he's a supporter of global jihad.

Speaker 71 So those two weak brothers are trying to do something.

Speaker 161 Here's the important endorsement, big, very important endorsement from Mamdani.

Speaker 104 From Hakeem Jeffries.

Speaker 49 Hakeem who?

Speaker 15 Hakeem Jeffries.

Speaker 158 In New York City, city of more than 8 million people, there's about to be an election of a new mayor.

Speaker 158 You waited until this Friday, the day before early voting began, to endorse the Democratic Socialist candidate, Zoran Mamdani, why did you wait so long?

Speaker 180 Well, as I indicated, the last several weeks we've been immersed in the intensity around the government shutdown and the run-up to that in advance of September 30th and the expiration of the fiscal year.

Speaker 180 But I support the Democratic nominee, as I indicated, and we're in alignment in terms of the issue related to affordability and the need to address it decisively for the city of New York.

Speaker 180 And of course, affordability is an issue for people all across the country.

Speaker 180 From a public safety standpoint, I supported the notion that he would retain Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch to continue to lead the NYPD forward.

Speaker 180 That's incredibly important from a public safety standpoint for every community, including as a high priority the safety and security of the Jewish community.

Speaker 180 And in terms of the moment that we find ourselves in, Donald Trump represents an existential threat

Speaker 180 to the city city of New York and beyond because of the extreme assault that has taken place throughout this year on the economy, on health care, on farmers, on veterans, on law-abiding immigrant communities, on due process, on the rule of law, and of course on the American way of life itself.

Speaker 180 And we all as Americans are going to have to be aligned and pushing back so we can end this national nightmare that Donald Trump has visited upon the American people.

Speaker 40 Wow.

Speaker 67 I almost want to vote for Mondani now.

Speaker 8 I mean, that's what an endorsement.

Speaker 35 Can you keep going, Hakeem?

Speaker 158 I want to ask you about something you said. You said, Democrats, there are no election deniers on our side of the aisle.
You said that back in January.

Speaker 158 But recently, you've been using the term rigged elections in reference to the upcoming midterms. Democrats were appalled when President Trump used language like that.

Speaker 158 How do you justify using that now? Doesn't that undermine faith for voters you need to show up?

Speaker 180 No, I've been using that term in the context of Donald Trump's unprecedented effort to gerrymander congressional maps in a partisan fashion all across the country in order to rig the midterm elections and deny the ability of the American people to actually decide who should be in the majority as it relates to the House of Committee on the United States.

Speaker 158 You know, Democrats are also going through

Speaker 158 gerrymandering

Speaker 55 and redistricting.

Speaker 104 What? No, no, no. No, no, no.

Speaker 180 Well, Democrats are going to push back aggressively to make sure that we have fair maps across the country, not partisan gerrymandering, which Republicans have initiated in state after state after state.

Speaker 158 Leader Jeffries, thank you for your time. Best friends.

Speaker 141 We'll be right back.

Speaker 17 So, your New York friends, are these publishing friends?

Speaker 105 What kind of friends are these?

Speaker 1 No, they're just show fans.

Speaker 164 Oh, okay. Really?

Speaker 1 Yeah, producers.

Speaker 62 And they're saying we're not that stupid?

Speaker 81 Well, I'm sure they're not that stupid, but do they really think that

Speaker 57 Curtis Sleewa or

Speaker 15 Cuomo is going to win?

Speaker 1 You could put their votes together and they won't win. This guy's got it made.

Speaker 51 Wow.

Speaker 79 I'm surprised.

Speaker 67 Well, I mean, that is.

Speaker 1 That doesn't surprise me.

Speaker 156 No, no, I'm surprised that our producers think that

Speaker 79 that's not going to happen.

Speaker 1 I think it's just, it might be wishful thinking.

Speaker 51 It has to be.

Speaker 89 That's crazy.

Speaker 13 I see no distant, no, in no scenario do I see him not winning unless something bad happens to him.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and I don't see that either.

Speaker 126 No,

Speaker 126 no.

Speaker 162 Wow.

Speaker 1 Here's this

Speaker 1 since we're on the topic of

Speaker 1 the political situation there.

Speaker 1 I'm watching this interview or this part of the debate with Mickey Sher, Mickey Sherrill, the female running for, and looks like she's going to win the governorship of New Jersey,

Speaker 1 Although it's getting tight.

Speaker 1 And until I saw this, watched it and listened to her, I didn't realize she's a lesbian. I don't know if she's married or what, but

Speaker 1 I realized that I'm not that good at spotting lesbians.

Speaker 70 You're good at a lot of things.

Speaker 1 Lesbians are more elusive.

Speaker 67 But can't you just analyze a woman as if she had a vasectomy?

Speaker 1 No, it's not. It's not that what it is when you can, in this situation where she's kind of answering about how important it is for LGBTQ,

Speaker 1 I mean, which triggers you right away. So you say, well, maybe, you know, let's take a closer look.

Speaker 36 Now, are you sure she's a lesbian?

Speaker 15 Is this no?

Speaker 1 The reason I say that is because, besides the fact that she wants this sort of, because she's so pro-LGBTQ is not it. It's the, it's her posture.

Speaker 15 Can we ask?

Speaker 8 error?

Speaker 1 Ooh, let's ask error if Mickey Cheryl is a lesbian.

Speaker 67 Okay, error.

Speaker 25 Is Mickey Cheryl a lesbian?

Speaker 196 Oh, honey, if you want to channel Cheryl, start by owning that confident swagger, rock a sharp haircut, maybe some bold eyeliner, and flirt shamelessly with every cute girl you see.

Speaker 175 What?

Speaker 60 What is going on right now?

Speaker 19 She just told you she's a lesbian.

Speaker 153 She's a lesbian.

Speaker 148 No, is Mickey Cheryl, who's running for governor of New Jersey, is she a lesbian, you idiot?

Speaker 226 Whoa.

Speaker 196 Easy there. Didn't mean to ruffle feathers.
Quick search turns up Zilch on Kathy Sherrow running for NJ governor.

Speaker 175 Kathy Cheryl.

Speaker 59 Okay.

Speaker 153 This is what I'm talking about.

Speaker 127 I want my $20 back.

Speaker 1 Zilch on Kathy Cheryl running for governor is what she said. Yes.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 1 she doesn't know.

Speaker 131 but

Speaker 1 it was the it was her posture the way her hair was flipped over her ear and the way she was hunched forward and the way she was the way she her body language was that's what triggered me thinking she's a lesbian besides what she says here okay I believe that parents have the right to oversee their children's education.

Speaker 159 I would push in LGBTQ education into our schools.

Speaker 159 Parents have a right to opt out of a lot of things, but this is not an area where they should be opting out because this is an area of understanding the background of people throughout our nation.

Speaker 159 And right now we see, for example, at the Naval Academy

Speaker 159 an erasure of history.

Speaker 15 Okay, I think you're wrong.

Speaker 69 And a couple of reasons why.

Speaker 104 One,

Speaker 14 her husband is Jason Hedberg.

Speaker 97 So that's already, I mean, it doesn't mean she's not lesbian.

Speaker 17 What I think you misidentified is what she really is.

Speaker 62 Born in Alexandria, Virginia.

Speaker 26 Spook.

Speaker 17 Yes.

Speaker 11 United States Naval Academy, Indianapolis, London School of Economics, American University, Cairo, Georgetown University Law Center.

Speaker 46 Spook.

Speaker 1 Spook. Lesbian spook.

Speaker 75 So Jason's the beard.

Speaker 88 Okay.

Speaker 89 Well, maybe, but spook is, she's definitely a spook.

Speaker 1 Well, she's, I'm not going to argue the spook part.

Speaker 72 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Although she wasn't allowed to participate in the, in her graduation at the Naval Academy because there's some indication that she took part in a cheating scandal

Speaker 1 or knew about the cheating scandal and wouldn't do anything about it or turn her buddies in

Speaker 1 or something along those lines.

Speaker 1 All I can say is that she was not allowed to walk, and this became the

Speaker 1 she was not allowed to accept a diploma. I mean, she got a diploma, but she wasn't allowed to take it in the ceremony.

Speaker 1 And this became the part that's caused her some votes was as when once it was discovered by her opponent, Chiparelli or whatever the hell his name is.

Speaker 1 But

Speaker 1 this pro-LGBTQ

Speaker 1 you shouldn't opt out. And then

Speaker 1 this body language told me that, or indicated to me, and again, I've already said I'm not an expert at spotting lesbians, although you think I, in the Bay Area, you think I would be, especially Berkeley.

Speaker 1 But maybe that's because there's so many of them.

Speaker 1 I'm convinced of it.

Speaker 2 Hmm.

Speaker 71 Well, her husband is also ensnared in the massive Naval Academy cheating scandal.

Speaker 22 I'm reading here.

Speaker 157 Oh, you know what?

Speaker 125 I'm looking at the picture of the two of them.

Speaker 17 I think we've got a double beard action going on here.

Speaker 147 Aha.

Speaker 39 Why are we even?

Speaker 15 They have like four kids.

Speaker 181 This doesn't mean anything.

Speaker 1 It's probably a good idea.

Speaker 1 Why are we?

Speaker 1 Because it indicates a dishonesty that should not be part of a political profile. That's what it indicates to me.
That's why I don't like it. I don't care.

Speaker 1 And I don't think that kids should be indoctrinated to be LGBTQ ⁇ .

Speaker 93 No, I'm with you. I'm with you.

Speaker 1 In grammar school.

Speaker 14 New Jersey is lost.

Speaker 17 I mean, I lived there for

Speaker 113 nine years.

Speaker 188 I love New Jersey.

Speaker 70 It's lost.

Speaker 31 It's lost, except for South Jersey, the shore.

Speaker 53 You know, it's still kind of okay down there.

Speaker 85 Everything else is lost.

Speaker 60 It's basically

Speaker 13 become Western New York.

Speaker 48 Mom Donnie should run for governor at the same time in New Jersey.

Speaker 155 He could do both states.

Speaker 1 There you go.

Speaker 116 He'd be fine.

Speaker 24 So

Speaker 25 interesting little twist in the ongoing fight as

Speaker 71 the Royal Canadian province of Ontario threw out a

Speaker 59 fantastic ad with I'm surprised that it was $75 million ad buy is what they're saying of the

Speaker 178 Ronald Reagan quote taken out of context about tariffs.

Speaker 1 Yes, this is pretty funny. That was a

Speaker 1 irked of Trump administration.

Speaker 113 Well, it irked Trump, and I ran him.

Speaker 17 I got one of those Air Force One videos.

Speaker 15 Turns out, if you run that through the 11 Labs AI isolator, it's dynamite.

Speaker 13 Listen to this.

Speaker 1 Sir, Flicksner's view on what Canada needs to do to get things back on track.

Speaker 211 Well, Canada lied.

Speaker 238 I mean, what they did was terrible. They made up a fake statement by President Reagan.
Reagan was a big supporter of tariffs when needed.

Speaker 238 We need tariffs for national security. And they totally turned it around because they're getting hurt by tariffs and we're gaining by tariffs.

Speaker 238 They've used tariffs, caught us, but we had different residents very successfully. And they've taken a lot of money out of our country.

Speaker 160 And now we're taking it all back. And

Speaker 238 so they went out and they made a fake commercial. The Reagan Foundation went crazy when they saw it because it was, you know, the opposite, was the opposite of Ronald Reagan.

Speaker 238 Ronald Reagan liked tariffs, and when necessary, he would use tariffs.

Speaker 99 You know, we're in very good shape with that.

Speaker 160 But they took a commercial saying the exact opposite, Canada.

Speaker 238 And so I'm very disappointed at Canada. And they lied.
I mean,

Speaker 238 it was a fraud what they did.

Speaker 60 Really, I don't think there's much they can do.

Speaker 238 I just assume leave it the way it is.

Speaker 160 Will you meet with?

Speaker 238 You know, if you leave it the way it is, it's very good for us.

Speaker 79 Will you meet with Prime Minister Cardi during a tune?

Speaker 238 I don't have any intention of it.

Speaker 29 So cut off all negotiations.

Speaker 178 we're gonna tariff the the crap out of them and this all comes of course on the eve of the big supreme court decision which uh or hearing i don't know how quick they'll come with a decision where president trump will be attending he says he's gonna go look there and stare him down i guess i don't know what's gonna happen can the president actually

Speaker 205 determine tariffs For the justices, it's yet another test of how far a president can go as they hear arguments over whether Donald Trump Trump has the authority to unilaterally impose tariffs, a case that could ultimately see his tariffs struck down.

Speaker 160 If we are not allowed to use what other people use against us, there's no defense. It'll be a disaster for America.
That's why I think I'm going to go to the Supreme Court to watch it.

Speaker 205 To justify his signature economic policy, Trump has used a law known as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, claiming trade imbalances and fentanyl constitute national emergencies.

Speaker 160 For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped, and plundered.

Speaker 205 The issue is that Trump bypassed Congress, which has authority over tariffs, leading lower courts to repeatedly rule the import duties illegal and unconstitutional.

Speaker 205 Now, facing the Supreme Court, Trump claims repealing tariffs would trigger another Great Depression.

Speaker 160 This country will have no financial security, will not have national security.

Speaker 214 I think that that kind of claims of economic devastation, which themselves are very questionable, I don't think really going to weigh heavily on whether or not this is legal.

Speaker 37 Bring in the British expert.

Speaker 205 The bad news for Canada is that even if the tariffs are struck down, Trump will likely find other ways to re-impose them.

Speaker 205 While duties on Canadian steel and aluminum would not be impacted by any Supreme Court decision, they're here until a deal is negotiated.

Speaker 239 We have made ourselves a 51st state over many, many years, right? From an economic dependency perspective, more than 75% of Guthrov trade is dependent on the U.S.

Speaker 205 As Canada works to realign its trading relationships with other countries, the Trump administration has made it clear it will find a way to keep tariffs in place, especially with Trump counting on them to provide trillions of dollars in revenue for the U.S.

Speaker 205 budget.

Speaker 15 So,

Speaker 95 what's at play here is this International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

Speaker 16 Have you ever looked at this?

Speaker 2 No.

Speaker 15 This thing is like the Swiss Army knife for any president president to do whatever he wants.

Speaker 119 This thing is, I mean, it's so, it has amendments.

Speaker 113 Every year, there's amendments.

Speaker 25 So the actual Swiss Army knife.

Speaker 15 Oh, listen to it.

Speaker 73 So this is

Speaker 81 50 U.S.C.

Speaker 140 Chapter 35.

Speaker 17 And unusual and extraordinary threat, declaration of national emergency, exercise of presidential authorities.

Speaker 154 Any authority granted to the president by Section 1702 of this title may be exercised to deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat which has its source in whole or substantial part outside the United States to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States.

Speaker 78 If the President declares a national emergency with respect to such threat, well, clearly this applies.

Speaker 17 The authorities granted to the President by Section 1702 of this title may only be exercised to deal with an unusual and extraordinary threat with respect to which a national emergency has been declared for purposes of this chapter and may not be exercised for any of the purpose.

Speaker 17 Any exercise of such authorities to deal with any new threat shall be based on a new declaration of national emergency. So, if you just look at it, going back to

Speaker 105 2001 amendment, this act

Speaker 95 and provisions set out notes.

Speaker 58 So, I was for the ILSA extension act.

Speaker 79 I don't know what the heck that was.

Speaker 105 2005.

Speaker 15 That was for

Speaker 71 foreign relations and intercourse, maybe cited as Iran Non-Proliferation Amendments Act.

Speaker 95 2006, North Korean Non-Proliferation Act, Money and Finance, enacting provisions set out to title of foreign relations and they do a lot of intercourse in these documents.

Speaker 17 2007, that was for the International

Speaker 17 That was the International Emergency Economic Powers Enhancement Act that came right before the Great Depression.

Speaker 168 2016, the Iran Sanctions Extension Acts.

Speaker 14 2016, the Venezuela Defense of Human Rights and Civil Society Extension Act.

Speaker 154 This is all added into this thing.

Speaker 85 2018, the Hezbollah International Financing Prevention Amendments.

Speaker 113 2021,

Speaker 17 this was the reinforcing Nicaragua's Inherence to Conditions for Electoral Reform Act.

Speaker 97 So it's every country that we don't like, we put you into this act.

Speaker 71 Ending with 2024, strengthening tools to counter the use of Human Shields Act, there's obviously Gaza.

Speaker 78 There's very little about tariffs specifically, but this is, as I said, it's a Swiss Army knife.

Speaker 43 You can do anything you want with this thing.

Speaker 110 As long as you say, hey, I declare an emergency, it's economic, boom, you're good to go.

Speaker 14 I see there is no reason whatsoever that the Supreme Court should say the president doesn't have authority under this act.

Speaker 116 It's insane.

Speaker 1 Well, what they should try to do is make the act unconstitutional, but they don't have the guts to do that. No,

Speaker 139 no.

Speaker 76 This thing, this is a beauty.

Speaker 15 And it is.

Speaker 110 And

Speaker 96 it must be, you know, I don't know how many pages it is, but it must be 30,000 words.

Speaker 146 It is so, and there's a lot.

Speaker 152 It's all legalese,

Speaker 17 Captagon trafficking,

Speaker 96 ineligibility for visas, admissions, or parole.

Speaker 109 Everything is in here.

Speaker 89 Everything.

Speaker 25 You farted.

Speaker 86 Oh, sorry, International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

Speaker 178 I'm going to arrest you. This thing actually should be unconstitutional and illegal, this whole thing.

Speaker 15 But guess who passed it? Congress.

Speaker 132 They gave away all the powers to the president.

Speaker 15 All of it in this act.

Speaker 1 It's crazy.

Speaker 140 We should frame it.

Speaker 1 That's what happens.

Speaker 120 Yeah.

Speaker 59 But I mean, it's what happens.

Speaker 84 We should probably take a break, man.

Speaker 1 Well, let's play one more

Speaker 1 TikTok clip in advance. It's short.

Speaker 1 Yes, okay.

Speaker 1 This is part of our Gen Z takedown.

Speaker 1 This is a woman who's gone nuts

Speaker 22 because.

Speaker 40 What?

Speaker 166 Someone went nuts on TikTok?

Speaker 147 I got a woman going nuts No,

Speaker 1 because

Speaker 1 she's figured out,

Speaker 1 because I guess she never got taught this in school, that when you rent something,

Speaker 1 you have to keep paying rent and it never goes away. But she thinks it should, but it doesn't.
And so she's completely lost it.

Speaker 10 When does it end?

Speaker 10 Bro, I'm so

Speaker 10 tired.

Speaker 10 I'm so exhausted. Like, it has to stop.
It has to stop soon. Like, I'm not even kidding.
Like,

Speaker 10 get me out of here.

Speaker 10 Oh, my freaking God.

Speaker 4 Oh my God.

Speaker 15 No,

Speaker 92 no,

Speaker 67 this is someone having a breakdown. That's the.

Speaker 1 Rent doesn't end is how she starts.

Speaker 1 And then she just goes nuts.

Speaker 9 And with that, I want to thank you for your courage.

Speaker 5 Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea and the crazy people on TikTok clips. Say hello to my friend on the other end for 18 years, the one, the only, Mr.

Speaker 10 John C.

Speaker 10 DeMori.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, anymore, you give a shout out to Crane and Morris. Should have seen boots in the ground, feet in the air, steps in the water, and all the dames and nights out there.

Speaker 3 Say in the morning to the trolls in the troll room.

Speaker 58 Well, that's the opposite of Fredericksburg.

Speaker 136 They're only 1768.

Speaker 68 We're dying over here.

Speaker 113 We're dying. We're dying, I tell you.

Speaker 15 That is the number of people listening live, which is kind of cool when you think about it.

Speaker 95 You know, it's a bigger studio audience than Jimmy Kimmel.

Speaker 116 Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 177 And maybe bigger than his audience in general in the demo.

Speaker 15 In the demo.

Speaker 126 In the demo. You never know.
Yeah,

Speaker 25 we got the Zeds, baby.

Speaker 36 We got the Zeds on board.

Speaker 95 You do have the Zeds.

Speaker 1 They love us.

Speaker 197 Yeah, the Zeds.

Speaker 1 Because we play women like the one they just played.

Speaker 104 You know, I got to note that the Zeds in Finland also cannot read clock.

Speaker 26 It's a global thing.

Speaker 67 It's not just American Zeds.

Speaker 1 But this is part of the international conspiracy. Once the Zeds realize that they're being used, they're being victimized by the educational system on a worldwide basis,

Speaker 1 they're going to take action. You watch.

Speaker 105 What do you mean they're going to take action?

Speaker 1 They're going to start their own schools or something. I don't know what they're going to do.
How are they going to deal with it? I did. Are they going to start listening to our show?

Speaker 16 Well, not sure.

Speaker 140 Well, we have Jacob who's listening to our show, and he's a Zedder.

Speaker 179 He just turned 20.

Speaker 104 And he says, I heard you talking about younger people wanting lab-grown diamonds over real ones.

Speaker 67 I agree with you.

Speaker 17 I'm always from Alberta, Canada.

Speaker 67 Wow, we've got a Canadian Zed.

Speaker 1 Canadian Z, a CZ.

Speaker 1 A CZ is a CZ, isn't it?

Speaker 8 A CZ.

Speaker 1 Two big zirconium, and he likes phony diamonds.

Speaker 15 That makes sense.

Speaker 78 Oh, wow, a CZ.

Speaker 29 He says, but listen to this.

Speaker 177 He says, yes, I just turned 20, and that's what I'm looking into for my engagement.

Speaker 129 I'm waiting until I'm a journeyman electrician to propose.

Speaker 30 Only a year left.

Speaker 112 This is a real man right here.

Speaker 40 I love that.

Speaker 30 He's getting a real gig.

Speaker 140 He doesn't want to live on $34,000 a year in a big city.

Speaker 168 No, he wants to get a real job that pays real money.

Speaker 25 He's going to propose to his real, real woman, an actual woman,

Speaker 15 and he's going to do it with.

Speaker 1 We know that for a fact.

Speaker 107 Oh, please.

Speaker 61 Come on. Come on.

Speaker 92 He's listening to the show, of course.

Speaker 17 These things make me want to go for another four years.

Speaker 84 But I think we'll only make three. We've got to call it quits at 21.

Speaker 1 Don't you think

Speaker 1 21 years of show?

Speaker 67 21.

Speaker 68 That'll be longer than any of my marriages.

Speaker 1 You're going to freak out my wife.

Speaker 40 Why? What do you mean? Oh, she has a lot of money.

Speaker 147 What are we going to do for money?

Speaker 15 Oh, the cash flow.

Speaker 34 Hey,

Speaker 28 she's going to be a big politician.

Speaker 113 She'll get in on that gravy train.

Speaker 68 She's going to be funny.

Speaker 1 Well, she gets to Congress. That'd be great.
Yeah.

Speaker 148 $174,000 a year.

Speaker 17 By the time she gets in, it'll be $300,000.

Speaker 1 Well, not only that, but it's the millions and millions you make on the side. Yeah, and

Speaker 79 you'll continue to do DH Unplugged with a wink, wink, nudge, nudge.

Speaker 190 I got to, you know, I've been looking at the insider trading on this stock.

Speaker 17 Everyone will be hanging on your lip like Dvorak's got the inside track.

Speaker 30 You will, in fact, be the new Nancy Pelosi.

Speaker 167 It could be.

Speaker 1 Fantastic.

Speaker 100 Fantastic.

Speaker 20 We love our producers.

Speaker 140 We've called you producers from early on.

Speaker 154 I don't think we ever called

Speaker 140 our audience anything but producers.

Speaker 105 I'd have to listen to the first few episodes, but we decided very early back in 2000.

Speaker 1 So this was your idea. I'll give you credit.

Speaker 26 Thank you.

Speaker 17 That,

Speaker 63 well, it was part of the value for value concept.

Speaker 82 I think it predated it.

Speaker 107 I think it was a part of it.

Speaker 1 The value for value came much later. I mean, the term value for value, the idea of asking for donations was around, but the term value for value came much after the producer's commentary.

Speaker 15 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 151 What do you say by much?

Speaker 95 What do you think that is?

Speaker 1 Years, at least two.

Speaker 90 Really? Let me see.

Speaker 70 Value.

Speaker 1 In fact, the value for value came up very late in the game.

Speaker 49 Really?

Speaker 75 Well, but we did the concept very early in the game.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the concept was always there. And it's began, the concept, if you recall, began with realization based on the fact that we let people donate what they wanted to.
That's how it evolved. Yes.

Speaker 1 And we started getting these crazy numerological donations. Yes.
People would donate their birthday. They donate some

Speaker 1 double nickels on the dime. And they said, this is double nickels on the dime, 55, 10.

Speaker 1 And then they would,

Speaker 1 you know,

Speaker 1 and that evolved because we realized that people like to pick their own numbers as opposed to $4 a month.

Speaker 72 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Click here, you know, no, forget it. Donate what you want.
And then that evolved to Valley for Value, but that took a couple of years for the term.

Speaker 94 Hmm. I'm going to have to look it up and find out when.

Speaker 1 You can look it up and you won't be able to beat me on this one.

Speaker 137 I do found.

Speaker 137 I do find.

Speaker 1 I do found.

Speaker 161 I do found.

Speaker 190 Hey, i do found something i do found that in episode number 23 was the first time we talked about vasectomies

Speaker 190 yeah

Speaker 49 well no look at this

Speaker 177 episode number 23

Speaker 76 we were talking about value what's the value

Speaker 3 uh

Speaker 15 well i'm gonna i'm i shall make a a research project yeah yeah waste your time on this okay oh oh oh call it a waste i call it um historical research bingit.io people

Speaker 9 every every good podcast should have a bing it.io i agree with that because it is so easy otherwise you couldn't do this at all no it is so and thank you very much sirdinonymous for doing that clipgenie.com everybody

Speaker 67 uh so yes uh we call our uh our listeners we don't call them fans fans i love when people say how many fans do you have

Speaker 169 Fans, fans.

Speaker 96 We have producers.

Speaker 125 We have thousands of producers.

Speaker 25 And they're so good.

Speaker 125 I was arguing with one of our producers on email.

Speaker 25 Dana Brunetti is.

Speaker 1 That's all you do.

Speaker 188 Dana Brunetti is a great producer to argue with.

Speaker 188 I really appreciate his insights, which, of course, are.

Speaker 15 Oh, he's dynamite.

Speaker 50 They're all wrong.

Speaker 15 I mean, everything is wrong.

Speaker 1 Well, he's a Hollywood guy, so he's going to have the suit perspective. I'm trying to get him.

Speaker 15 He has a suit.

Speaker 1 I know, as much as he hates that, he knows he is.

Speaker 71 I'm trying to get him to produce

Speaker 105 a movie of the, what was the

Speaker 67 Milkmaids book you were talking about?

Speaker 1 Yeah, he finally got grossed out by the back and forth. I noticed that.

Speaker 177 Which is kind of ridiculous because what's the name of that book?

Speaker 26 Was it a book or what was it?

Speaker 1 It's a Minotaur and the Misses or something.

Speaker 169 I don't know what it was called.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Shoe on Head did a whole special on it.

Speaker 85 I actually have a clip from Shoe on Head.

Speaker 78 Is that where you got it from?

Speaker 1 That's when I first was aware of it because I saw the little Shoe on Head talking about it. Yeah.

Speaker 15 And I said, oh, I like her.

Speaker 43 I think Shoe on Head is great.

Speaker 46 She's fantastic.

Speaker 1 No, she is great. I don't watch all her stuff, but

Speaker 1 she's really good. She's a great podcaster, video podcaster.

Speaker 84 Especially her eye makeup is phenomenal.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah, she wears and she's got big eyes anyway. Yeah.
And she likes to and she's good at

Speaker 130 takes.

Speaker 1 And she likes to mug mug, and she likes to do takes, and she's quizzical looks. And let's be

Speaker 1 very talented.

Speaker 71 Calling your podcast Shoe on Head is just a great, great name.

Speaker 1 And she calls herself Shoe.

Speaker 17 Her name is Shoe. Do you want to hear the clip about the

Speaker 29 Gooners?

Speaker 168 Gooners is the term we're looking at here.

Speaker 175 I forgot to inform you that there is a new epidemic. An epidemic that many have yet to discuss.
And that epidemic is female gooners.

Speaker 175 Now, for those of you unaware, gooner is internet slang for someone addicted to porn. And smut is slang for dark romance novels, otherwise known as porn.

Speaker 175 Many correct about the dangers of porn addiction with men, how it can destroy their lives and their relationships. And most men know the material they consume is weird.

Speaker 175 That is why they are ashamed of it. That is why they delete their browser history.
That is why they go incognito mode. But these bitches freaks out here.
They display their smut openly in bookstores.

Speaker 175 They proudly pose in front of their smut collections. They discuss their smut openly on TikTok.
They go to smut conventions and get choked out by nine-foot-tall shirtless wendigos.

Speaker 175 Now, I know what you are thinking. Shu, isn't this the pot calling the kettle degenerate?

Speaker 131 Yes.

Speaker 175 Yes, it is. But have you considered it takes one to truly know one? You see, women are strange, fascinating creatures.
For centuries, men have tried to figure us out.

Speaker 175 Our mood is affected by the tides and the moon. We bleed for five days and don't die.
By painting my face, I can instantly shapeshift from a four to a six. We are truly mysterious, magical creatures.

Speaker 175 But one of the most mysterious aspects of women to men is our sexuality. You see, us women are not like those disgusting moids.
No, no, we are sophisticated. We are evolved.

Speaker 175 We don't watch videos of strangers slapping their sweaty bodies together. No, no, we read about strangers slapping their sweaty bodies together.
It's different, okay? You don't understand.

Speaker 175 It's okay when we do it.

Speaker 1 So, first of all, Dana Brunetti was way ahead of the curve with 50 Shades of Gray because he understood this inherently, that this is what women want.

Speaker 48 The gooners, the female gooners.

Speaker 75 In fact, he should be called hat on foot or something because

Speaker 65 he completely understood this.

Speaker 57 But he's missing the boat.

Speaker 177 I mean, he pioneered the category.

Speaker 38 And, okay, so the needle has moved a little bit more towards the extreme with milking goats or whatever that was.

Speaker 16 But he needs to get back in the game.

Speaker 19 This is what I was killing him.

Speaker 1 Okay, a couple of things.

Speaker 13 That's what bought him that ranch.

Speaker 1 Yes, it is, and he knows it. And he still gets massive checks.

Speaker 50 Yeah, that's the suit.

Speaker 1 Which we'll discuss on the show. Checks.

Speaker 26 Checks.

Speaker 1 He gets

Speaker 1 rando checks, I write out.

Speaker 9 Rando checks.

Speaker 1 That's the best part of it. And so he gets a rando check every so often.
And

Speaker 1 he's got this.

Speaker 1 He is not happy about the fact that he is

Speaker 1 that insightful.

Speaker 181 Wow.

Speaker 39 But you, of all people, should whip him, just slap him upside the head.

Speaker 36 Are you nuts?

Speaker 1 It's almost like. Well, he's done good product otherwise, too.
I mean, it's not like that's the only thing he's ever done.

Speaker 1 That's the thing that's made him the most money because he got the best deals on it and he knew how to put the deals together.

Speaker 1 But he's kind of, and i'm not going to he's elitist he's he'd become elitist oh that's beneath no he's always been somewhat of an elitist you don't want to do smut anymore

Speaker 67 yes although it was pretty cool at the food and wine festival dinner

Speaker 125 the house of cards came up said yeah you know the guy who produces that produced that he produces our show

Speaker 78 people go what see yeah danny brunetti You want me to call him?

Speaker 166 I can call him right now.

Speaker 51 I can call him. No, no, no.

Speaker 116 Don't bother him.

Speaker 1 He's probably busy.

Speaker 15 Yeah, yeah a real busy

Speaker 15 busy

Speaker 1 he's he's plowing a field actually

Speaker 13 that's that's the line what's he doing he's plowing a field

Speaker 47 anyway uh the point being i don't know what the point is we have the best producers that's the point and

Speaker 149 these producers are around the world they it you want you want to know something about being addicted to opioids bam you don't have to go out and and call through can we find somebody no you just we just put out the call to our producers you want to know if that grip grippin' plane is any good?

Speaker 39 Boom.

Speaker 39 I got a Swedish aircraft engineer.

Speaker 71 He says, yeah, the E version is good.

Speaker 1 He says. They're not getting given the E version.
I got two notes on the Griffin.

Speaker 25 Grippin.

Speaker 75 Grippin, yeah.

Speaker 1 I always thought it was Griffin.

Speaker 67 Well,

Speaker 79 in America, they say Griffin, but it's Grippen in Sweden, Grippen.

Speaker 1 And two experts sent us notes saying it's a pretty good product.

Speaker 156 Well, the C and the D version is meh.

Speaker 168 That's the one they use between Thailand and who was Thailand fighting with Malay.

Speaker 153 No, who was Cambodia?

Speaker 1 Cambodia.

Speaker 54 So that was the C and the D version.

Speaker 156 The E version is supposed to be pretty good, but I've owned a Saab.

Speaker 66 And let me tell you, that was the crap car.

Speaker 65 Have you ever had a Saab?

Speaker 1 I've never had a Saab, but I knew someone who had one, and I used to drive it.

Speaker 25 I had a Saab that ran on.

Speaker 1 And I thought it was, there was two things about it. I always thought it was weird.
One, the key to start the Saab was.

Speaker 36 It is next to the key.

Speaker 50 It's on the council and it merges like a vertical.

Speaker 15 Yeah.

Speaker 1 So if you spill a drink, it'd go right into the ignition thing and short it out. Yeah, and and um and we spill drinks in this country, yeah, we do because yeah, and another problem: no cup holders.

Speaker 134 That was the second.

Speaker 57 So, problem one: the key is right next to the handbrake.

Speaker 84 Number two, no cup holders.

Speaker 95 I had one, it was a Saab 90 that ran on LPG

Speaker 93 in Europe, and

Speaker 14 it had a choke.

Speaker 197 Wow, It had a choke.

Speaker 1 Was this in the 20s?

Speaker 126 No, no, this was in the 80s.

Speaker 30 And if you were riding along and you pulled it.

Speaker 1 By the way, stop. Not one Zed in the audience knows what you mean when it says that you said it has a choke.
Not one.

Speaker 84 Okay, Zedders, don't look it up.

Speaker 37 If you actually know what a choke is and know it's not something that Daniel Brunetti would produce, then just let us know.

Speaker 155 So if you were driving along and you let up on the gas and you pulled the choke and then you pushed the choke down, hit the gas, you would get a big, boom, big explosion, a big backfire.

Speaker 128 It was cool.

Speaker 1 Well, that's funny. I used to take the air pollution car

Speaker 1 that I had, and it was, we have a big hill over here in Richmond called Mosier.

Speaker 1 And you go to the top of the hill, and then you would come down the hill, and you turn the ignition off and floor it so as just pour gasoline into the system

Speaker 1 and then turn the ignition back on, and it would sound like an atom bomb just went off.

Speaker 34 Yeah, it was fun.

Speaker 1 Very funny. Yeah.

Speaker 1 But the sobs I liked always were the old two-stroke sobs.

Speaker 94 Oh, I didn't have that.

Speaker 128 No, I had a four-stroke sob.

Speaker 1 The oldest sobs, and they were in the area for a long time, were two-stroke sobs. So they just made a racket and they smoked.

Speaker 56 And

Speaker 1 it was a fabulous car. I never thought they were a bad car, except

Speaker 1 where the ignition was.

Speaker 71 Scaramanga in the troll room.

Speaker 129 Last time when someone choked something of mine in the back of a sob, I ended up with my second child.

Speaker 14 Okay, Scaramanga.

Speaker 118 Go make some AI videos.

Speaker 107 Come on.

Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah, get to work.

Speaker 50 These laggards.

Speaker 123 Really, I'm telling you.

Speaker 235 I mean, Sora 2 is already out.

Speaker 114 Where is our video?

Speaker 110 I mean, come on.

Speaker 95 How hard can it be?

Speaker 31 Anyway, back to our producers.

Speaker 148 They support us with time, talent, and treasure.

Speaker 47 Boots on the ground is fantastic.

Speaker 67 Organizing meetups, hitting people in the mouth.

Speaker 75 The most valuable thing you can do is hit someone in the mouth.

Speaker 68 Your wife, your brother, your sister, your mother, your child, your neighbor.

Speaker 110 Okay, sometimes you lose a friend or family member over it, but many times you actually draw very close and it builds friendships and keeps families together.

Speaker 79 The family that no agendas together stays together.

Speaker 58 This is a fact.

Speaker 131 We've proven it.

Speaker 86 97% of all scientists know that this is true.

Speaker 108 And that's because because there's no discovery in podcasting.

Speaker 15 Everybody thinks, well, if you do video get on YouTube, then you get lots of eyeballs and people come. No.

Speaker 15 No.

Speaker 67 The only way it works is with a recommendation.

Speaker 148 And I'd say there's a large portion of the no agenda producer

Speaker 12 pool that is embarrassed.

Speaker 70 They're embarrassed because they're like, oh, I don't want

Speaker 79 somebody to think I'm a kook.

Speaker 132 But you'd be surprised.

Speaker 71 You'd be surprised how many people are primed and ready to become no agenda producers.

Speaker 86 So that's time, it's talent, and it's treasure.

Speaker 85 And over the years, we have had many forms of talent and time put in.

Speaker 17 The time is now pretty much shrunk down to seven seconds of prompting for an image for the album art.

Speaker 140 It's still appreciated,

Speaker 71 but the pool is getting

Speaker 82 pretty polluted.

Speaker 86 So we do want to thank,

Speaker 60 was this,

Speaker 195 see what this was, Capitalist Agenda?

Speaker 21 Yeah, he's an actual artist still.

Speaker 17 Did the artwork for episode 810.

Speaker 84 We titled it Golf Ball,

Speaker 17 all lowercase.

Speaker 15 And it was the No Agenda Records featuring the Al Gore rhythms live at the Golden Ballroom.

Speaker 12 And it inspired an end of show mix, even.

Speaker 109 So it was perfect.

Speaker 105 And it was Al Gore on the cover of the record.

Speaker 62 Little 33 pin there.

Speaker 95 Hadn't even noticed it.

Speaker 178 Nice touch.

Speaker 86 Doing some kind of twist.

Speaker 74 What do you think that was?

Speaker 60 A twist? A salsa?

Speaker 71 What kind of dance is Al Gore doing there for us? Do you know?

Speaker 127 You muted yourself.

Speaker 38 This always happens.

Speaker 127 You've muted yourself.

Speaker 178 Come back to me. Come back to me.

Speaker 1 Sorry. Sorry.
It looks like it's some sort of shuffle.

Speaker 212 Shuffle. That's it.
The shuffle.

Speaker 69 The shuffle. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Could be the twist. I mean, you know, you could make that move.

Speaker 96 So let's see. What else did people submit?

Speaker 60 There was a lot of me.

Speaker 1 By the way, that Trump dance is basically a toned-down twist.

Speaker 129 Did you see Trump dancing in Malaysia?

Speaker 15 No. Oh, dude.

Speaker 16 It's hilarious.

Speaker 37 So he comes off the plane.

Speaker 157 There's a whole traditional Malaysian dance thing.

Speaker 17 And he goes up and he does this

Speaker 15 YMCA dance in front of them.

Speaker 154 I'm like, yeah, that's our president.

Speaker 15 It was phenomenal.

Speaker 47 Tina ran in this morning.

Speaker 15 You won't believe it.

Speaker 24 Take a look at this.

Speaker 1 It was great.

Speaker 38 We had a lot of milking stuff,

Speaker 71 which was marginal.

Speaker 178 The images are getting too complicated.

Speaker 113 You know,

Speaker 37 where it's like photorealistic and there's a lot going on.

Speaker 59 Simple is better,

Speaker 48 I find.

Speaker 1 Well, it depends on how funny it is.

Speaker 202 Yeah.

Speaker 1 It has to be some note of humor.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 I mean, it doesn't 100% have to be humorous. If it's poignant,

Speaker 1 it would work. But generally speaking, if something gets us a laugh and it's well done,

Speaker 1 we will pick that over anything else. Yes.

Speaker 146 Oh, absolutely.

Speaker 61 But there really wasn't much.

Speaker 79 I mean, a lot of like buddy movie, no agenda, Curry Dvorak.

Speaker 31 Typically, we're not big on choosing art of our faces.

Speaker 1 No, that's because the first two years, at least of the art was all us, all of it.

Speaker 57 Yeah, we got tired of that.

Speaker 1 And now we banned it.

Speaker 82 And now if you look at the progression of our faces over the years, we look like two old coot idiots, which makes it

Speaker 1 bearded and

Speaker 1 bereased.

Speaker 1 Balding.

Speaker 81 The last thing I want is to be faced with the reality of my aging.

Speaker 36 I was like, no, hard no.

Speaker 17 I'm not interested in that.

Speaker 15 Pass.

Speaker 107 Pass on that.

Speaker 1 No, it's been, but besides that, it's been banned. Yes.

Speaker 60 Yeah.

Speaker 17 And you look like the one where we look like

Speaker 17 Jansen Wang,

Speaker 95 like in the leather jackets.

Speaker 1 Yeah, there's something. Yeah, and I've always got glasses on.
I don't like that.

Speaker 60 And we both have glasses on in that one.

Speaker 107 It's like, no, I don't like it.

Speaker 140 Ashlyn Speed, of course, that whole bit went nowhere.

Speaker 79 That's too bad.

Speaker 62 I didn't even hear from Ashlyn.

Speaker 1 She doesn't listen to the show anymore.

Speaker 132 No, she's too busy crashing her Mazda on the street.

Speaker 165 Crash it on the track, girl.

Speaker 1 You can't. Most race car drivers can't drive on the street.
They're getting a lead foot.

Speaker 17 Well, she's also a woman.

Speaker 91 Let's be honest.

Speaker 1 Yes,

Speaker 1 a double whammy.

Speaker 5 She should try driving a Saab.

Speaker 168 Saab 90 with a choke.

Speaker 58 It had that ugly yellow color, too, that Saab was famous for.

Speaker 50 Gosh, I wish I had yellow.

Speaker 58 a lot of cars,

Speaker 96 a lot of interesting cars over the years.

Speaker 105 Never anything really, except for the Rolls was cool.

Speaker 151 That was back in the Rolls-Royce days.

Speaker 60 Well, that was it.

Speaker 14 I think we saw that and we're like, yeah, that's good.

Speaker 65 Let's do that one.

Speaker 195 Was it anything?

Speaker 37 And of course, we'd love something traditional for the 18th anniversary.

Speaker 153 And what am I seeing?

Speaker 109 Tote bags?

Speaker 109 I don't don't know.

Speaker 1 I think the one that's what I call podcasting is fair.

Speaker 140 Dropcoast? Yeah, that's pretty good.

Speaker 56 Dopco.

Speaker 86 Yeah. That's what you want to compete with.

Speaker 1 The one I like the most, I'll tell you what, the one I liked the most so far coming in.

Speaker 135 The mac and cheesecake?

Speaker 1 No, not that one. Where is it?

Speaker 49 Which one?

Speaker 1 Well, now I'm looking. I can't find it.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah. No, I like the TikTok algorithm one by Jeffree Ray, but but it doesn't have nothing to do with the anniversary, so it's probably not going to get picked.

Speaker 1 I just like it.

Speaker 1 I'll use it for the newsletter. Okay.

Speaker 56 Maybe.

Speaker 67 You could be ground troops.

Speaker 95 Thanks, Coach Joe.

Speaker 1 Ground troops is funny.

Speaker 94 That's not sick.

Speaker 1 That is funny, though. What would be better if it had like some shreds of a uniform in there?

Speaker 210 Oh, you're horrible.

Speaker 51 You are horrible. All right.

Speaker 17 Hey, of course, we always want to thank all of our producers who support us with their treasure, with the finances, and it's very simple in our value for value.

Speaker 14 All you got to do is say to yourself, what is this podcast worth to me?

Speaker 62 I need to turn that into some coin.

Speaker 48 Well, this is how much.

Speaker 30 And that value is completely determined by you,

Speaker 62 determined by how much you value things.

Speaker 124 And $5 could be a lot to you.

Speaker 184 For some, $500 is, let me tip those guys.

Speaker 25 Either way, all we ask for is value.

Speaker 66 And that's why we give you the show free of charge, because you're going to send the value back.

Speaker 95 You go to noagendadonations.com, and that's how you do it.

Speaker 69 And we always thank our executive and associate executive producers in this segment up front.

Speaker 97 That's people who are fortunate enough to spend $200 or more, or that

Speaker 69 you get the title of associate executive producer.

Speaker 85 And that can be used right there on imdb.com where the famous Dana Brunetti is as well.

Speaker 60 And I think, what's his face from

Speaker 62 Cameron?

Speaker 132 I think he's also an executive producer, isn't he?

Speaker 169 Who? Cameron, the

Speaker 132 Cameron, the Titanic director.

Speaker 1 James Cameron?

Speaker 43 Yeah, I think he did.

Speaker 15 Isn't he an executive producer?

Speaker 1 Not that I know of.

Speaker 15 Oh, I thought he was. I could be wrong.

Speaker 7 And we'll read your note in both cases.

Speaker 30 And I am never, I'm always...

Speaker 37 amazed and delighted by how much people value the show.

Speaker 153 I'm always blown away.

Speaker 129 And now for 18 years, we've been doing this.

Speaker 14 It is just,

Speaker 78 it is, it's humbling.

Speaker 79 I know you think differently.

Speaker 59 You're like, that's what we deserve.

Speaker 15 But I find it to be humbling.

Speaker 1 I find it to be never said that.

Speaker 110 I find it to be quite humbling.

Speaker 112 As we start with our top producer.

Speaker 1 I don't feel it's, I'm not humbled.

Speaker 51 I am

Speaker 56 happy. I'm humble.

Speaker 139 I'm humbled. I'm humbled.

Speaker 51 I'm happy.

Speaker 1 I think it's great.

Speaker 108 We go to Midland, Pennsylvania, for our top executive producer, Brandon Mango,

Speaker 33 comes in with 1894.63,

Speaker 1 which that's a show that number donation with fees.

Speaker 84 Oh, perfect.

Speaker 17 1894.63.

Speaker 25 Love you. Love the show.

Speaker 136 No math needed.

Speaker 13 Call me Mr.

Speaker 48 Mango, the Knight of the Sweet Tooth.

Speaker 63 I will gladly call you that and look forward to it.

Speaker 62 Thank you very much.

Speaker 1 He also gets a

Speaker 20 International Peace Prize. That's right.
$1,000 while they last.

Speaker 177 While peace is still trending, a no-agenda international peace prize.

Speaker 129 Did I see that it's actually written in Swedish?

Speaker 1 Yeah, no, Norwegian. Norwegian, I'm sorry.

Speaker 116 Norwegian?

Speaker 25 Yeah.

Speaker 85 And it's in this, it looks, I mean, not only does it look, it is an actual No Agenda International Peace Prize.

Speaker 67 This thing is going to be

Speaker 1 on the other side. There's art.

Speaker 36 Yeah, this is dynamite.

Speaker 79 I cannot wait to get mine.

Speaker 149 Do I get a peace prize?

Speaker 25 I got, but you have, you,

Speaker 1 Yeah, I got one, but it didn't put the C, my middle initial C was missing, and I bitched about it.

Speaker 8 Oh, well, you got to go back to the committee, the Nobel committee, and talk to them about that.

Speaker 15 That's no good.

Speaker 14 Yes, Brandon, you can look forward to that.

Speaker 17 Noagendarings.com will be the place where you let us know where to send that.

Speaker 168 Thank you so much.

Speaker 1 I'm going to do the next two. Okay.
Starting with Bowman McMahon and Utopia, Texas. Is this really a Utopia, Texas?

Speaker 66 Absolutely.

Speaker 1 Where is it?

Speaker 17 It's right next to,

Speaker 15 I don't know.

Speaker 1 Right next to hell, Texas.

Speaker 9 Right next to hell. Paris, Texas.

Speaker 50 I don't know.

Speaker 1 1030.26, another big donation that would give him a Nobel, a Nobel,

Speaker 1 not a Nobel. It's a No Agenda Peace Prize, International Peace Prize.
And he's got no noted also, so let's give him a double up Karma.

Speaker 198 You've got

Speaker 224 Karma.

Speaker 1 And then a Rando, and this is the biggest one we've received so far, a Rando strike, which means it is a Bitcoin donation of $1,008.39 came in. We haven't got a note from anybody claiming this yet,

Speaker 1 so we'll give him a double-up karma.

Speaker 26 Or her.

Speaker 83 But that is the second time, because you recall that I got one at the Noah Jenna meetup.

Speaker 48 That was a Bitcoin donation. So it's the second instant.

Speaker 1 Is this it? Maybe is this the same one?

Speaker 155 No, it's not.

Speaker 198 You've got.

Speaker 224 Ask Pharma. No, it's not.

Speaker 140 Because that one already showed up on the spreadsheet.

Speaker 50 Oh, okay. Yeah.

Speaker 107 All right.

Speaker 182 Well, let us know.

Speaker 43 Sir Earhopper, Pacifica, California, $1,000.

Speaker 95 International

Speaker 235 Peace Prize for you.

Speaker 108 And Sir Earhopper says, Gentlemen, I accept my peace prize with an open heart and satisfied mind.

Speaker 28 Please continue to be the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 67 We have decamped from the AI-infected Nor-Cal corridor for Colorado.

Speaker 13 My 5G Tan has never been richer by NORAD, says says Sir Earhopper.

Speaker 59 Thank you very much.

Speaker 1 Kevin and Tori

Speaker 1 Primo in Trinity, Florida, they sent a check-in for $367.67.

Speaker 185 I have this note right now.

Speaker 60 $37, 6, 7, 6, 7.

Speaker 1 Yeah, a lot of 6.7. We got to get the 6'7 thing formalized.

Speaker 106 Yeah.

Speaker 1 But he talks about it in here, and I thought this was interesting. Adam's insightful deconstruction of the 6'7 trend prompted this long overdue transfer of value.

Speaker 1 As parents of teens, we were perplexed by the trend until we embraced the fact that it is simply meaningless. Annoyance quickly gave way to acceptance and now affirmation.

Speaker 1 We relish in dropping a well-placed 6-7 within earshot of our kids and their friends.

Speaker 112 6'7, 6'7.

Speaker 73 Come on, John, do it.

Speaker 31 6'7, 6'7.

Speaker 1 I'm not doing it. At first, we were seen as cool, but now we are cringe cringe or

Speaker 15 Ohio.

Speaker 155 Yeah, Ohio was lame.

Speaker 1 When did this come?

Speaker 1 This eluded me.

Speaker 57 Well, you're not. When did Ohio?

Speaker 1 Hey, man, Ohio.

Speaker 1 How do you use it? Well, how's the usage?

Speaker 135 I think it started January 20th, 2025.

Speaker 73 Why? J.D.

Speaker 36 Vance, Ohio.

Speaker 1 Oh, so Ohio, oh, and it means lame because this is a way of getting into, okay. Yeah,

Speaker 100 I believe believe so.

Speaker 25 I think you're right.

Speaker 1 It makes sense. I believe so.
Thank you for your courage and keep up your great work. Sincerely, Kevin and Tori, Primo in Trinity, Florida.

Speaker 79 I love the notes.

Speaker 222 And notice that the donation segment has been more content than anything.

Speaker 84 That's why people are missing out when they don't.

Speaker 161 I want to see some donation.

Speaker 1 Yeah, this Ohio thing is important.

Speaker 169 The whole world knows what Ohio is.

Speaker 1 I never heard it.

Speaker 30 David Koonan, Sprundell.

Speaker 1 Oh, you know what it is? I'm going to places like Monterey Foods and

Speaker 1 grocery stores where there's a bunch of people in their 60s wearing jeans. That's what it is.

Speaker 26 Sprindel.

Speaker 93 I've never heard of Sprindel in the Netherlands, but it apparently is a place.

Speaker 1 333.33.

Speaker 47 And David says, congratulations on 18 years of the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 235 I raise a glass of Robert Modavi private selection bourbon barrel aged Cabernet Sauvignon to you and to myself as I turned 38 today.

Speaker 1 He got it in the Netherlands?

Speaker 50 I guess so.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I think they make it by the ton. Combined.
I should mention, by the way,

Speaker 1 I was flippant about the guy saying, well, it's just a bunch of really good wine that they re-bottle. No,

Speaker 1 the way you can.

Speaker 1 This is a pre-tip. I'm not going to do that.

Speaker 48 We have people in the Middle East loving these tips, your wine tips.

Speaker 1 I'm going to just give a little heads up on how to spot what would be sourced wine as opposed to wine that's made. And I don't have a bottle of the Bourbon Age in front of me,

Speaker 1 but there's a rule,

Speaker 1 there's a rule regarding how it's presented.

Speaker 1 It'll have the winery name and say, produced and bottled by the winery.

Speaker 1 And when it says produced and bottled by, that means they made it.

Speaker 1 They grow the grapes, they grew the grapes, they made the wine.

Speaker 182 You know, I met a

Speaker 1 let me finish. Sorry.

Speaker 1 And then, when you say vintage

Speaker 1 and bottled by,

Speaker 1 that means that they bought juice.

Speaker 1 Juice.

Speaker 1 And they finished the job of fermenting it. Bottled juice.
So this is from someone, in other words, came from someone else.

Speaker 1 But the stuff that your friend was talking about, which is where you have a really good quality wine, there's an overrun, so you give it to some Schlachmeister and have them bottle it up and sell it cheap, even though it's a good

Speaker 1 product, which is a common practice in California. It says sellared and bottled by.

Speaker 100 Oh, there you go.

Speaker 1 That means they had

Speaker 1 somebody else made a really good wine and couldn't sell it

Speaker 1 in the basement. They loaded on somebody.

Speaker 17 And they put it in the basement and called it.

Speaker 1 So it says sellered by, and all they did was put a label on it.

Speaker 95 Combined with my previous executive producer donation and my $4 weekly donation running since October 2019, this puts me well into roundtable territory.

Speaker 84 Please night me Sir David of Vest Brabant.

Speaker 122 No jingles, but I would like to request some house karma just for your house, or do you want to sell it?

Speaker 147 Thank you.

Speaker 18 You got some karma for that?

Speaker 57 You got ghosts in your house.

Speaker 33 Thank you for all you do, says David Koonen in Sprindl of the Netherlands.

Speaker 198 You've got

Speaker 100 karma.

Speaker 1 Yeah, there's Duke, Sir Dr.

Speaker 1 Shaky. Oh, good.
I was always sharky.

Speaker 1 St. Peter's, Missouri.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 33333. Congratulations on 18 years.
You both have been a blessing and a godsend both during these dark times.

Speaker 1 Is it possible to stream episode 17?

Speaker 107 A one.

Speaker 15 Episode one. Oh, one.

Speaker 18 That's one and a question mark, dude.

Speaker 167 Oh, I'm sorry.

Speaker 128 I thought it was a 17.

Speaker 43 Wow.

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, I'm looking. I'm reading from a distance here.
I got it. It's blurry.
The font's small.

Speaker 1 I got all kinds of problems.

Speaker 1 I'd like to broadcast it across FEMA Region 7 and 4.

Speaker 26 No.

Speaker 25 What do you mean, no?

Speaker 181 It stinks.

Speaker 30 Hey, you know, I'm going on a vacation in November.

Speaker 116 We're going to have to have another vacation show.

Speaker 1 I love Duke Dr.

Speaker 62 Shaky.

Speaker 48 We're going to have another vacation show coming up.

Speaker 1 Well, what? You want to play Dr.

Speaker 1 17? I think we just played. We have never done a rerun, and we're not going to start now.

Speaker 60 It's only 38 minutes.

Speaker 47 We'll have to rerun it four times.

Speaker 1 Over and over and over. Yes.

Speaker 51 All right.

Speaker 16 Thank you, Duke, Sir Dr.

Speaker 1 Shaky.

Speaker 73 Up next, we have Matthew Burns from Coston, British Columbia,

Speaker 62 Canada. British Columbia is beautiful.

Speaker 60 I hope this is $357 and $83

Speaker 71 dues from Candinavia.

Speaker 38 So even though that translates to about $5 in America, you will be an executive producer.

Speaker 26 This donation of $255.56 USD plus fees, 357.83 Canadian, should make this my second executive producer title.

Speaker 79 You've really taken advantage of the system.

Speaker 23 Yeah.

Speaker 67 I can hope, hope you can bump me up from associate.

Speaker 1 Well, yes, we can.

Speaker 108 I've been listening to the show since 2013, and with this donation, I finally reached knighthood.

Speaker 122 Your show and same perspectives on the craziness of our world really helped me keep me steady during all this time.

Speaker 71 In a roundabout way, your show also played an important role in bringing me to Christ, and I was very happy to hear about your faith journey along this time as well, Adam.

Speaker 68 Please knight me Sir Burns of the Good Future.

Speaker 84 I would like to have a hot coffee and Strobewaffel at the round table, please.

Speaker 79 I'm glad I caught that.

Speaker 126 I hadn't seen that.

Speaker 89 But I have strobwaffels.

Speaker 65 It's a little musty, but because I didn't order fresh ones.

Speaker 146 This donation is also a shout out to my wife's birthday on November 6th.

Speaker 68 I'll keep her name anonymous.

Speaker 156 Just call her Sir Burns' Keeper.

Speaker 16 In addition,

Speaker 15 bless you, it turns out our wedding anniversary is the same day as the show's anniversary.

Speaker 146 This was not planned when we got married last year, but we are both very pleased that it works out this way.

Speaker 140 Happy first anniversary to my keeper.

Speaker 63 Please also send some baby-making karma away as we hope to expand our lovely little family.

Speaker 38 God bless you both and thank you for your courage.

Speaker 11 And we will see you at the roundtable soon to be Sir Burns of the Good Future.

Speaker 198 You've got

Speaker 224 karma.

Speaker 1 Sarcastic in Wio missing, Pennsylvania. Why are you missing? 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
John, no agenda has earned the right to win.

Speaker 10 Winning.

Speaker 1 Winning. Here's the 18 years.
No jingles, no karma.

Speaker 1 Honorable sarcastic

Speaker 56 of

Speaker 1 the nomad.

Speaker 11 Another Dutchman comes in, Pierre Maas from Kadir and Kir in the Netherlands, 233.75.

Speaker 15 Dear John and Adam, sorry about the long note, but my sons and I would like to ask for the help of the No Agenda community.

Speaker 31 My wife passed away last December.

Speaker 36 Wait, didn't we already read this note?

Speaker 22 Yes, we read this note.

Speaker 56 Did we?

Speaker 109 Yes, from asbestos-related cancer.

Speaker 177 I have already connected you to.

Speaker 1 Oh, yes, we have read this note already.

Speaker 1 It probably was on the cusp of some of the spreadsheet, or who knows how it got out.

Speaker 36 Yes, well, anyway, he has been connected to Rob the Constitutional Lawyer, and we had another producer come in whose brother-in-law is an asbestos lawyer.

Speaker 95 He's somewhat of a douchebag, apparently, but you've been

Speaker 33 that's the one you want.

Speaker 124 So we've taken care of you for that.

Speaker 84 Sorry to hear about that, Pierre Moss.

Speaker 11 And let me know if the connections work.

Speaker 185 We are a full-service show.

Speaker 50 We are a full-service show.

Speaker 1 Eli the coffee guy is up in Bensonville, Illinois. Happy 18 years, he writes.
You two have covered a lot of events over the years, and your wealth of knowledge is what makes the show great.

Speaker 1 Plus, the jingles, tip of the day, and the rest for old time's sake, you can hail a taxi at the end of the show like back in the day. I always wondered where that inside joke came from.

Speaker 149 Wow, you used to do that.

Speaker 131 Instead of, I love my chicken,

Speaker 78 you used to go, taxi.

Speaker 15 Remember that?

Speaker 1 No, vaguely. But I'm more interested in the way you ridiculed me here for what I do now.

Speaker 90 I have to keep up my meanness.

Speaker 19 Apparently, it's part of the issue.

Speaker 1 I just wanted to point this out to the people out there who are taking making keeping score.

Speaker 177 Keeping score. It's point of the charm of the show.

Speaker 1 To four more years and then some.

Speaker 1 And for the producers who want some amazing fresh roasted coffee, visit did you get your coffee today? Gigawattcoffee roasters.com and use the code ITM20 for 20% off your order.

Speaker 1 Thank you for your courage and stay caffeinated. Eli the coffee gay did send me a picture of

Speaker 1 his

Speaker 87 roaster.

Speaker 72 yeah

Speaker 95 so since you asked for the past two minutes knowing this donation was coming up i've been uh shaking

Speaker 80 my my uh cold brew brew

Speaker 1 just you bang it once and no it's excuse it says to activate nitro shake vigorously which sounds like a very bad thing so but here's the problem when you shake his cold brew coffee does it mean that does it do you shake the can vigorously or do you just shake both actually well see there it it is.

Speaker 115 You hear that?

Speaker 79 Then it has like some minor carbonation type effect.

Speaker 1 Well, it's nitrogen, yeah.

Speaker 129 It's nitrogen, he has nitrogen in the can?

Speaker 1 Yeah, there's a little capsule in there that's got compressed nitrogen, and it puts a

Speaker 1 little kind of a faux foam in there.

Speaker 1 Hey, man, but it's not, I don't think, I don't know how much CO2 is involved.

Speaker 50 Get you really high.

Speaker 184 No, it doesn't.

Speaker 166 Have you been drinking it all morning?

Speaker 1 Well, you drink it all

Speaker 36 Baron Victor, Corvallis, Oregon, 218.

Speaker 17 Happy 18th anniversary from someone who has been here since the daily source code.

Speaker 108 That's right, Baron Victor of the Willamette Valley.

Speaker 110 Thank you so much.

Speaker 34 Yes, you have been

Speaker 75 a big part of my life, including my getting my fixed-wing license in Willamette Valley.

Speaker 1 Sir Leighton in Dothan, Alabama,

Speaker 1 21060.

Speaker 1 Was that the opening of the can? Is that what that was?

Speaker 153 No, that was me just going,

Speaker 15 something you hate.

Speaker 152 You hate that when people go, yeah, I do.

Speaker 1 But it's not me, it's everyone. Happy 18th from

Speaker 1 Southeast Alabama, another Alabama Babamian.

Speaker 1 I thank you for all the great shows, Sir Leighton.

Speaker 65 Lehron.

Speaker 1 The Lehron. I'm sorry.

Speaker 154 LeRon. Dame Zelda is in San Jose, California, $205.

Speaker 79 Yellow, so that means her birthday is involved.

Speaker 132 Dear John Adam, your show really is the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 39 Thank you for staying sane and balance in the sea of chaos and propaganda.

Speaker 12 Also, thank you, John, for solving my recurrent nightmare mystery.

Speaker 79 This is very interesting. I'll get to it in a minute.

Speaker 73 Turns out you really can't dial a phone in a dream, and it's not some psychological issue that my subconscious is trying to communicate to me in my dreams.

Speaker 43 Wow, life-changing information.

Speaker 79 It's my birthday this Tuesday, the 28th, so please add me to the birthday list and play the shape-shifting Jews jingle.

Speaker 17 Much loved Dame Zelda of Silicon Valley, patron of the wandering Jews.

Speaker 75 You know, we got a lot of feedback on you,

Speaker 25 which was at the end of the show.

Speaker 48 A lot of feedback on

Speaker 25 your dream where you were incapable of doing many things.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I had a couple.

Speaker 1 I have a professor of a neurological guide that professor down at USC wrote it in, and he gave me some good information about what these things are called yes they're called dreams right no there's a there's certain names of specific he's this is he's a specific he's into the things no I know he's he's he's written several books I think I I'm supposed to do a I think I was supposed to do a an endorsement and I sent it to you and you never sent it back and so he didn't get the endorsement on the book oh I didn't get it if I had known I'm a blurbmeister I'll endorse anything you blocked me

Speaker 1 so But he has some good information, which I'll read in one of the notes. Maybe.

Speaker 78 No, you should put that in your sub stack.

Speaker 72 Maybe.

Speaker 1 But somebody else came up with one. He says that he knows about these problems with dialing a phone and writing.

Speaker 1 He says what you want to do to try to get into the lucidity of the dream where you can know that you're dreaming is in a dream,

Speaker 1 examine your hands.

Speaker 1 He says, once you start getting to the habit of examining your hands, you'll see for some reason. I don't know, I haven't done this.
I don't know what you see, but you don't see your hands.

Speaker 1 You see, whatever you see is like tells you you're in a dream or you're in the matrix.

Speaker 72 I don't know.

Speaker 39 Wow. Dame Zelda, thank you very much.

Speaker 37 I'm going to play the whole 30 seconds of this one for you.

Speaker 37 juice.

Speaker 37 Roll up

Speaker 37 the magical shape-shifting juice.

Speaker 37 Roll up, it's an illustration.

Speaker 37 The magical shape-shifting juice.

Speaker 37 Roll up, it's such an icon.

Speaker 37 The magical shape-shifting juice.

Speaker 89 Yeah, classic. Secret agent Paul.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 One more dream angle.

Speaker 1 Somebody else wrote in saying if you want to get into lucid dreaming, which is the kind of dreams you're aware of as opposed to vivid dreams, but lucid dream where you're in the dream, you know you're in the dream, and you can do some kind of control.

Speaker 1 He likes to shoot guns. He says, by the way, when you shoot guns, you can't hit anything.
It's terrible.

Speaker 122 But

Speaker 1 he says to get into lucid dreams, I haven't tried this. I don't know if I will.
You take three hours before you go to bed, you have a couple of tablespoons of potato starch.

Speaker 1 Now, this could be bullcrap, but he claims that this will trigger lucid dreaming.

Speaker 156 Oh, so if you have some potato starch, it will trigger lucid dreaming.

Speaker 1 That's what he says. Interesting.
Now, we have a couple of, there's a wine. I don't have the name of it handy.
I'll make it a tip of the day if I ever dig it out. I have a couple bottles left.

Speaker 1 We had this wine a couple of times. There are alcoholic products or fermented products out there.

Speaker 1 If you drink them, you will have, I don't know if they're lucid, vivid, or what, you'll have some of the damnedest dreams you've ever had.

Speaker 47 Oh, yeah, that's called Andres.

Speaker 15 Yeah, well, that's

Speaker 47 I made a wine joke. Woo!

Speaker 1 A wine joke. Who else better than golf ball?

Speaker 1 Sir Knight, D.C. in Oregon.

Speaker 1 No, he's not in Oregon. He's in.

Speaker 61 He's in Oregon.

Speaker 1 Yeah, no, that's OR. That's

Speaker 1 yeah, Oregon. What am I thinking?

Speaker 9 $200 and

Speaker 1 what am I thinking?

Speaker 1 $200.02, Sir Knight, DC, ITM, gentlemen, I appreciate the rousing you guys give each other. It gives the show an edge.

Speaker 40 That's right.

Speaker 25 We're edgy.

Speaker 100 We are edgy.

Speaker 1 Doesn't like it. Yeah.

Speaker 25 SDG, Oakland, California.

Speaker 75 $180 for the show, plus $20 for Associate Executive Producer, $200 total.

Speaker 15 Congrats.

Speaker 170 Throw some Rev Al out to the community.

Speaker 1 R-E-S-P-I-C-T.

Speaker 1 Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado. Jobs Karma.
For a competitive edge, she writes, with a resume that gets results, go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive

Speaker 1 and job search needs.

Speaker 98 Resume and job search needs.

Speaker 1 Job.

Speaker 23 Reread.

Speaker 25 Just reread. Reread.

Speaker 19 Double-click so I can have it.

Speaker 147 Okay.

Speaker 9 Make to read it from scratch.

Speaker 1 She needs to make good.

Speaker 56 Make good. Make good.

Speaker 1 Jobs, Karma, for a competitive edge with a resume that gets results. Go to ImageMakersInc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs.
That's ImageMakers Inc., and that's with a K.

Speaker 1 Work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.

Speaker 15 Happy 18th.

Speaker 36 Yeah, we didn't need the ad lib, but okay.

Speaker 78 We'll take it as a read.

Speaker 186 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.

Speaker 241 Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 198 You've got karma.

Speaker 49 Tireless, tireless, Linda and

Speaker 9 Linda. And she closes this out for show.

Speaker 1 Yes, she does.

Speaker 1 180, what are we? 18010, 1810, 1811.

Speaker 20 1811, 1811.

Speaker 14 That's right. Thank you to the

Speaker 1 War of 1812.

Speaker 69 Thank you to the executive and associate executive producers for our 18th anniversary.

Speaker 188 We appreciate all of you.

Speaker 130 We appreciate all of our producers.

Speaker 140 Of course, course, we will thank the rest of our producers $50 and above.

Speaker 18 It's going to be a long show.

Speaker 95 Alert the affiliates, but that's usually what happens with an anniversary show, so it's good.

Speaker 108 And we've brought you pure content this time, as we always try to do in the donation segment, because it's not just value for value. It's not just the international lifestyle.

Speaker 184 It is, in fact, it is a way of life.

Speaker 79 And we love living it thanks to you.

Speaker 110 You can go to noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 182 Make your support of the show known at any time, any amount, set up a recurring donation, any amount, any frequency.

Speaker 5 Noagendadonations.com. Thank you to these anniversary show producers.

Speaker 60 Our formula is this:

Speaker 187 We go out, we hit people in the mouth.

Speaker 1 Got a little AI here.

Speaker 15 Little AI.

Speaker 46 You may have seen this.

Speaker 66 Yeah, I saw it.

Speaker 170 This was actually quite good.

Speaker 15 I think that RT deserves some form of award for this.

Speaker 1 It's pretty decent. This is a promotion that they ran about themselves because they have an anniversary along with ours.

Speaker 177 20, I think, 20 years?

Speaker 1 Something like that. They do have us beat.

Speaker 48 Man, we've been around almost as long as RT.

Speaker 22 That says something.

Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah. Gun gunsmoke.
Here we go.

Speaker 99 Do you ever catch yourself questioning more? Like, why do I always parrot everything the U.S. State Department says? Or, why I always ask, do you condemn Hamas, but never Israel?

Speaker 99 Why I never said sorry for spreading the debunked Trump-Russia gate hoax. Why I support every illegal war the U.S.
has launched this century.

Speaker 99 Why I can't stop lying that Joe Biden was young and healthy enough for the presidency. Why we ignore our rock bottom ratings and pretend people still want to watch the same old bullshit?

Speaker 99 the only reason we're asking is because rt generated this video and made us do it so you'll never get answers at least not from us happy anniversary to rt

Speaker 163 i may be an ai but there's no way i'm saying that

Speaker 219 that was good that was very cute it's not like scaramanga would make that for us

Speaker 84 Think about the virality of it.

Speaker 51 Yeah, it was, you know, yeah.

Speaker 1 Although RT RT stuff has been banned in a lot of places, including the United States.

Speaker 182 Oh, it was for a while that you couldn't even get it on your computer.

Speaker 25 No, they really.

Speaker 63 There were internet service providers who were blocking it so crazy.

Speaker 107 A little sports ball, sports ball for you, everybody.

Speaker 157 You know me.

Speaker 74 I'm the sports ball guy of the show, so I'm going to bring you some sports ball.

Speaker 49 This is

Speaker 109 Nikola Vicevik.

Speaker 90 You know him, right?

Speaker 25 Probably.

Speaker 29 Yeah, he's the Center for the Bulls.

Speaker 15 Hello.

Speaker 61 From Chicago. You know him.

Speaker 1 I never met him.

Speaker 60 Well, I mean. He's tall.

Speaker 197 He's tall.

Speaker 78 Centers aren't always that tall.

Speaker 1 There's not a center in the league that's not at least 6'11.

Speaker 60 6'11?

Speaker 26 Yeah. Well, I'm gonna look that up.

Speaker 111 He is very concerned about sports betting on sports ball.

Speaker 233 Gambling is a big problem, not only here, but worldwide. But I think now that it's gotten to sports here, a lot of people are involved in it.

Speaker 233 A lot of people gambled, and it's, you know fortunately a lot of people get stuck in it and it's hard to get out

Speaker 233 it's available on your phone all you gotta do is download the app and you can just play

Speaker 233 we as players feel it a lot when we step on the court nowadays you hear more often like instead before you used to hear like hey vooch you know get a win or hey do this and that now it's like hey my parlay is 10 rebounds i need 10 bores or hey my parlay is 15 points or you come out of timeout you hear people say that and a lot of times return is like 14 15 year old kids.

Speaker 233 And honestly, it pisses me off because it's disrespectful to the game. You know, we put so much work in to try to do the right thing,

Speaker 233 to put good product on the court and play the right way, and try to win for our team. And people focus on if I'm going to get 10 rebounds or not, or for anybody else.

Speaker 233 I think it's very unfortunate, but you know, even back home, we have big issues with that. There's a lot of areas, a lot of places you can go and gamble in sports.

Speaker 131 So, yeah, I mean, you know, it's a big problem for the world.

Speaker 233 It's a big, big, I always know it's a big addiction for people. So, it's something that the NBA is going to have to, you know, look at and try to find a way to

Speaker 233 fix it as much as possible. But, yeah, it's unfortunate we're dealing with it.
But, you know, we'll see what comes out of it.

Speaker 98 6'9.

Speaker 98 He's 6'9.

Speaker 1 That guy's 6'9. No wonder they can't win.
Most of the centers in the league are seven foot plus.

Speaker 59 Well, he's 6'9.

Speaker 77 Yeah, but this is a problem. It's the problem.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and he's very erudite. I'm glad they put him on to explain the situation.
I couldn't understand a word he said.

Speaker 139 Wow.

Speaker 32 He was saying

Speaker 64 he was, get some headphones.

Speaker 15 He was saying, John, wear headphones.

Speaker 36 You can understand things better with headphones.

Speaker 73 Well, you don't wear glasses, huh?

Speaker 108 He's saying that these are 14-year-old kids doing these prop bets.

Speaker 57 Like, hey, man,

Speaker 182 they're yelling at him during the game.

Speaker 36 I need 10 rebounds, man. 10 rebounds.

Speaker 7 It's ruining the game. It's ruining everything.

Speaker 10 All sports.

Speaker 19 And gee, guess what?

Speaker 1 Sports leagues all not only encourage it, but they're all partnering with a very big gambling operation. The NBA is one of them.

Speaker 1 Of course.

Speaker 96 And he's against it, is what he's saying.

Speaker 1 They should all be against it. The game is

Speaker 40 rigged.

Speaker 25 Yeah. Well, we've already.

Speaker 1 But this show has,

Speaker 1 what's the word I want to use? I can't try to think of a bad, lousy word. Posited.
There's one.

Speaker 21 We have posited.

Speaker 6 We remit. We remit.

Speaker 67 We have

Speaker 1 been dead forever because we've been predicting the winners of the, especially the international games, right on the money based on geopolitical action going on. And

Speaker 1 you predict the winner.

Speaker 1 So it filters down.

Speaker 1 These games have always been rigged. Yeah.

Speaker 60 It's rigged, man. It's bad for the the kids.

Speaker 100 It's bad for it.

Speaker 79 By the way, man, when Rogan's podcast is filled with gambling ads.

Speaker 1 Oh, is it all of a sudden?

Speaker 70 No, it's been that way for a while.

Speaker 97 I mean, and it's not, it's not even, I don't even think it's him.

Speaker 156 I don't think he does the reads himself on those.

Speaker 95 Those are just inserted dynamically.

Speaker 71 Who knows where it comes from?

Speaker 17 Maybe Spotify is just jamming it in.

Speaker 14 No, I don't listen on Spotify. So who knows where it comes from?

Speaker 79 Megaphone does it.

Speaker 20 Yeah, and it always like, you know, if you got a problem, call this number.

Speaker 176 And now you got five free dollars. Sign up now, kids.
It'll be great.

Speaker 60 Your first bet is good for 24 hours.

Speaker 72 Yeah, but gamble, gamble, gamble. What could possibly go wrong?

Speaker 131 Yeah, it's a good business.

Speaker 109 I'd like to hear from any of our producers who have had a gambling addiction.

Speaker 219 We know we got them.

Speaker 56 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 Well, we have a with a with approximately a million listeners just under,

Speaker 19 we have,

Speaker 1 which is the size of San Francisco, the entire town.

Speaker 36 We have only not as retarded. How about about that?

Speaker 1 Yeah, isn't that interesting?

Speaker 50 It's actually better.

Speaker 192 We're much better than San Francisco.

Speaker 1 We have people from all walks of life that listen to this show.

Speaker 66 Yes, we do.

Speaker 78 That's what makes it so cool.

Speaker 15 And you know what?

Speaker 122 They should have prop bets on our show.

Speaker 36 Now you're talking.

Speaker 15 Will Adam be mean to me?

Speaker 147 There's an over and under. Yeah.

Speaker 15 What's the over-under on?

Speaker 38 What are we doing over and under?

Speaker 1 315. I'd say 315 would be the over and under for the length.

Speaker 36 The length.

Speaker 108 How about how many times will Adam be mean to John?

Speaker 1 Well, I'd say the over and under, and that would be 10.

Speaker 109 Let's move on and let's listen to Israel controlling America, shall we?

Speaker 45 Just a few hours after arriving on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubdio met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Speaker 2 Secretary Rubdio, Marco, welcome again to Jerusalem.

Speaker 45 But the president is the latest of a flurry of high-profile U.S. figures to arrive in the region following the ceasefire agreements that were signed two weeks ago.

Speaker 45 After the special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, Trump's senior advisor, Jad Kushner, and Prime Minister J.D. Vance, the head of the CIA, John Ratcliffe, is expected to arrive next.

Speaker 208 The vice president just left. We crossed on the way.
And then I'm here now today because this is a priority.

Speaker 208 It's a very important achievement, but there's more work to be done and bigger achievements that lie ahead. And so we're here to work on that.

Speaker 208 And we feel very positive and confident that we're going to get there despite substantial obstacles. We're going to get there.

Speaker 45 The latest obstacle was a vote in the Israeli parliament on whether the country should annex the West Bank.

Speaker 45 Speaking before boarding the aeroplane, the Vice President was not impressed.

Speaker 242 Look, if it was a political stunt, it was a very stupid political stunt. And I personally take some insult to it.
The West Bank is not going to be annexed by Israel.

Speaker 242 The policy of the Trump administration is that the West Bank will not be annexed by Israel. That will continue to be our policy.

Speaker 45 Netanyahu said that the vote was organized by the opposition, but many in his camp have been pressuring the Prime Minister to annex the West Bank for years.

Speaker 160 I will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank. No, I will not allow it.

Speaker 203 It's not going to happen.

Speaker 45 The text would need to be approved four times in Parliament to go through. But on Thursday, Foreign Minister Gideon Tsar said that the process would be suspended.

Speaker 78 All right, so we'll see.

Speaker 133 We'll see.

Speaker 182 If they annex it, then they're in charge.

Speaker 12 If it doesn't happen, then Trump's in charge. That's very.

Speaker 1 I think Vance was right.

Speaker 66 Oh, of course it's a political stunt.

Speaker 1 Of course it is. Yeah, and it insulted him personally.
Yes. They're trying to put him in his place.

Speaker 133 Yeah, well, we'll see.

Speaker 15 We'll see.

Speaker 116 Bad news for

Speaker 98 the subprime

Speaker 50 loan market.

Speaker 90 I don't know.

Speaker 151 I have not listened to the most recent

Speaker 79 DH Unplugged,

Speaker 36 But this is about subprime auto loans.

Speaker 104 Have you been following this?

Speaker 1 Not at all.

Speaker 243 Hey, Scott, yeah, it's the private credit side of the business that has seen a real sentiment shift.

Speaker 243 Apollo, Aries, Blue Owl, and KKR seeing significant declines week to date, while those more exposed to private equity think TPG and Carlisle, they've held up okay.

Speaker 243 Two high-profile bankruptcies in the auto finance space leading to a broad-based sell-off in the publicly traded alternatives firms, Tricolor and First Brands bankruptcies each within the last few weeks have shed a new light on the risks of over-leverage and subprime borrowers.

Speaker 243 Hedge fund manager Jim Chaino slamming private credit in an interview with the Financial Times saying, quote, I suspect we're going to see more of these things like First Brands and others when the cycle ultimately reverses.

Speaker 243 He said the $2 trillion private credit sector is akin to the packaging of subprime mortgages during the 2008 crisis because of the quote layers of people in between the source of money and the use of money.

Speaker 243 Typical direct lenders sit toward the top of the capital stack, meaning they would get paid back before equity and other layers of debt in a bankruptcy.

Speaker 219 So I didn't know this was how intricate this was, but so the banks don't really want to do auto loans anymore.

Speaker 11 So all these, this private equity is doing kind of, they're doing loans, lending money to these companies that have the buy here, pay here, borrow here outfits.

Speaker 155 And probably a lot of the

Speaker 94 immigrants who were here illegally, they just got in their cars and drove back to Mexico.

Speaker 140 And no one's paying back these car loans, and that's putting these private equity guys in somewhat of a bind.

Speaker 1 There's a lot of problems in the banking sector right now. The main thing is a lot of it has to do

Speaker 1 with these same guys

Speaker 1 doing double dealing and creating kind of virtual Ponzi schemes by selling off off the same asset to more than one buyer. It's almost like everyone's trying to

Speaker 1 do the duplicate of what the producer's movie, if you remember that, with Zaro Mostel

Speaker 50 tried to accomplish by making a flop.

Speaker 1 Springtime for Hitler, the musical.

Speaker 15 Ha.

Speaker 11 But then it wasn't a flop, and now they're in trouble?

Speaker 56 Yeah. Whoa.

Speaker 192 Well, the car sector in general is very interesting.

Speaker 79 Those numb nuts at Porsche, who thought they would jump on the bandwagon, screwed it up.

Speaker 244 Profits at German car maker Porsche plunged by nearly 96% in the first nine months of this year.

Speaker 244 Porsche said the drop in profits was due to a change in strategy as the company shifted its focus back to combustion engines after weak demand for its electric vehicles.

Speaker 20 No kidding.

Speaker 231 After years of roaring down the Autobahn, a speed bump for Porsche, the iconic sports car maker notched up a spectacular third quarter loss of almost 1 billion euros as it grappled with the costs of returning to petrol and delaying its electric vehicle rollout.

Speaker 230 Operating profit, which strips out some costs such as tax, fell to 40 million euros for the first nine months of the year.

Speaker 231 Porsche revved up its electric vehicle strategy with the launch of its electric car project, Mission R.

Speaker 173 This concept embodies everything that Porsche

Speaker 211 is.

Speaker 173 Performance, design, and sustainability. All electric, high-performance, and efficient.

Speaker 4 This is a new Mission R.

Speaker 167 Then in September, Porsche went into into reverse.

Speaker 231 The sports car maker said it would delay the introduction of some fully electric cars and extend the life of some combustion engine and hybrid models.

Speaker 231 The reason was lack of growth in demand for high-performance electric vehicles, and there were significant costs associated with the original aggressive EV strategy.

Speaker 231 Porsche's parent company, Volkswagen, said it had taken a punishing 5 billion Euro profit hit to cover the costs of Porsche's product rejig.

Speaker 165 Yeah, like we could have told them this was a dumb idea.

Speaker 1 The same thing kind of happened to Ferrari.

Speaker 25 Yes.

Speaker 1 They took a beating because they tried to do some electric stuff.

Speaker 1 And then we actually talked about this on the DHM Plug Show, which is every

Speaker 78 Tuesday, every Tuesday.

Speaker 43 8 o'clock Central Time.

Speaker 66 And with a live chat room. That's right.

Speaker 25 Live stream.

Speaker 26 Live.

Speaker 1 Is that General Motors is doing better than Ford because General Motors backed off on the electric stuff a lot faster than Ford did.

Speaker 15 Yes. Of course.

Speaker 1 You know, the only guys you can do electric is Tesla. They cornered the market.

Speaker 192 Even BYD is falling apart now, I hear.

Speaker 50 Well, I didn't hear that.

Speaker 21 They're pretty big.

Speaker 75 Well, let's see because Germany, of course, is very big on

Speaker 79 the green energy.

Speaker 14 You know, they're so smart there, those Germans.

Speaker 57 Do you think they learned anything?

Speaker 36 Let's listen.

Speaker 237 Two huge cooling towers of the former nuclear power plant in Gundremingen in Germany, Bavaria, were destroyed in a controlled demolition at noon on Saturday.

Speaker 237 The plant had served as an important landmark in the town for nearly six decades, bringing numerous new jobs and boosting the town's economy.

Speaker 2 Nap pops.

Speaker 237 However, the removal of the cooling towers comes as part of the country's nuclear phase-out. Both nuclear reactors had already been closed for several years.

Speaker 237 Following Saturday's demolition, the dismantling of the plant will further continue, with completion expected by 2040.

Speaker 112 Ready to go, guys.

Speaker 66 Great idea.

Speaker 145 Yeah.

Speaker 1 That's the dumbest thing the Germans have ever done.

Speaker 93 Oh my word.

Speaker 170 It's crazy.

Speaker 78 It is just crazy.

Speaker 116 Have you heard about the Inter-Bering?

Speaker 15 No. This is.

Speaker 60 I filed under the ARC category, America, Russia, China.

Speaker 17 The International Bering Strait Tunnel and Railroad.

Speaker 1 Yeah, we had somebody sending us a bunch of it. This is not a new idea.
This has been going around since, they say, even as far back as 1900.

Speaker 170 But Trump is crazy.

Speaker 128 He could do something like this.

Speaker 25 Because the idea is that you connect the U.S., Canada, of course, you know, Alaska, the Bering Strait, which is, what, 60 miles or something?

Speaker 61 It's not even that.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's not that.

Speaker 29 It's doable.

Speaker 46 You connect it to Russia, Siberia, then to China.

Speaker 15 With a tunnel.

Speaker 93 With a tunnel.

Speaker 43 And then you've got a beautiful, you know, then we circumvent everybody.

Speaker 1 And you have a training system that can run product from Japan and China

Speaker 1 and Russia right straight to the United States via the West Coast. It'd be fantastic.
Without shipping. Because,

Speaker 1 you know, you've got to go a long ways across it.

Speaker 15 Zero shipping.

Speaker 128 Zero shipping.

Speaker 73 So this has been around for a long time.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's been around.

Speaker 1 You might be right about Trump being nuts about it and doing it, but I think think he's going to take Greenland first.

Speaker 110 Greenland doesn't seem to be important in this idea.

Speaker 1 No, no, I know it's not got nothing to do with Greenland, but I'm just saying it's on his list of things to do.

Speaker 136 Big news in the Anglican church.

Speaker 1 Church news.

Speaker 66 Church news?

Speaker 235 I got church news.

Speaker 35 Well, for the first time in 500 years,

Speaker 240 nearly 900 years after

Speaker 240 England's split from Rome, a symbolic moment of unity, as Pope Leo and King Charles III prayed together for the very first time.

Speaker 102 Teach us to see your hand in all your works and your likeness in all your children through Christ our Lord.

Speaker 240 Beneath the Sistine Chapel's vaulted ceiling, the head of the Catholic Church and the head of the Church of England shared a joint religious service, their choir's voices blending in harmony as they brought their two faiths together.

Speaker 240 It's a symbolic gesture that consolidates years of growing mutual respect between the Vatican and the British monarchy.

Speaker 240 During the service, UK Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper also read a Bible verse from a letter to the Romans written by St. Paul.

Speaker 199 And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the will of God.

Speaker 240 After the service, Charles and Camilla travel to Rome's Basilica of St.

Speaker 240 Paul outside the walls, where Charles was given a special chair decorated with his coat of arms that'll be kept there for the king and his heirs.

Speaker 240 The visit comes as questions remain over the king's brother, Prince Andrew, and his links to convicted sex offender Geoffrey Epstein.

Speaker 240 Buckingham Palace hoping this historic moment will shift some of the focus away from events back home.

Speaker 193 Yeah, so it was interesting.

Speaker 14 That's not at all what this is about

Speaker 104 because there has been a massive split in the Anglican church because

Speaker 140 they chose a female bishop of Canterbury and of course they're all in with the Rainbow Coalition and LGBTQ.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the church is gay.

Speaker 116 The Anglican church is super gay and the Africans are having none of it.

Speaker 97 You cannot find a mainstream news report about this.

Speaker 11 So I got 40 seconds from a YouTuber.

Speaker 46 This is why the Anglican church just split in two.

Speaker 70 Here's the story.

Speaker 245 GAFCON is a group of conservative Anglicans, mostly in Africa and Asia, who say that the Global Anglican Communion has been drifting away from the Bible.

Speaker 205 On October 16th, 2025, they made a bold move.

Speaker 245 They no longer recognize the Archbishop of Canterbury or the traditional councils that once united Anglicans.

Speaker 43 The trigger?

Speaker 31 The appointment of Sarah Malally, the first female Archbishop of Canterbury.

Speaker 245 GAFCON says this goes against historic Anglican teaching and against scripture. In response, they announce a new structure, the Global Anglican Communion.

Speaker 118 Essentially, what they're saying is, we're not leaving, we are the true Anglican Communion.

Speaker 245 This isn't just a disagreement, it's a realignment, splitting Anglicanism into two branches: one that stays faithful to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the other that stays faithful to Scripture.

Speaker 93 And one is gay, and the other one isn't.

Speaker 70 It's crazy.

Speaker 28 And what I love about this is that it combines church news with African news.

Speaker 39 It couldn't be any better for the show.

Speaker 1 You have to go to a YouTuber to get this.

Speaker 104 Yes, there is nothing available on mainstream about this, I think, historic split.

Speaker 66 Nothing.

Speaker 1 It is pretty much of a big deal, but it surprises me that they don't cover, they don't cover anything.

Speaker 1 No, it's just borderline pathetic.

Speaker 55 Yes.

Speaker 131 Yes. So we have

Speaker 1 a couple more things I want to cover. You know, this guy that's running for, he's a governor of, or senator.
He's running for senator of Maine.

Speaker 60 Oh, yeah. This is like a.

Speaker 1 The platiner guy who's got a, he has a SS tattoo on his chest.

Speaker 75 This is the guy who was, who Bernie Sanders was worried about, and then it turns out

Speaker 11 he's been writing stuff on Reddit.

Speaker 60 Is that the guy?

Speaker 1 Well, I don't know if he's been. I know he has a high profile online, and he had a Nazi SS tattoo on his chest.
Excellent. Skull and crossbones, the one that was on the the logo that's on the SS hat.

Speaker 8 What could possibly go wrong?

Speaker 1 And so he had it tattooed over, but the pictures of it exist, and he's like trying to get away from this because he's running as a, obviously, as a Democrat, but he's running as a left-wing Democrat against the ex-governor of Maine, who is very popular, but they're going to try to get rid of her because they're trying to push the entire Democratic Party into the progressive camp.

Speaker 1 And so, Scott Jennings actually got worked up about it on CNN, and I thought the exchange was worth recording, and I have copies of it here.

Speaker 142 At this point, if he moves forward, Democrats aren't winning the scene.

Speaker 217 I hate to break the news to you, but he's winning the primary by 30 points.

Speaker 217 Getting a Nazi tattoo made him more popular.

Speaker 8 I don't know what he's doing.

Speaker 217 More popular among Democrats.

Speaker 217 You've got a guy running for Attorney General in Virginia who wants to murder Republicans, and he raised $500,000 on people have also got Nazi tattoo guy in Maine.

Speaker 217 I sat out here for a year, two years, listening to every Democrat at this table say, Donald Trump's a Nazi, Elon's a Nazi, and your party is now in love with a guy with a Nazi tattoo who trained a left-wing paramilitary group and called himself an Antifa super soldier on the internet, and he's going up every day.

Speaker 247 Good luck getting

Speaker 15 nice.

Speaker 184 That's right.

Speaker 93 Exactly right.

Speaker 1 they keep arguing with him, saying, oh, he's not going to win. And his numbers keep going up.
He's up. When I checked, he wasn't 30%,

Speaker 1 30 points ahead. He was 34 points ahead.
And he's getting a lot of traction because

Speaker 1 they may end up losing the Republican because the Democrats are primary. They're doing what the Republicans are.
Remember years ago, in the early part of our era, the No Agenda era,

Speaker 1 there used to be these, they'd primary the Republican because they weren't conservative enough and they kept trying to get these people out of office.

Speaker 1 And so they bring out, and they'd bring extremists to run against them, and then the person would win, and then they'd lose against the Democrat. And this is what's going on with the Democrats now.

Speaker 1 They've picked up the same idea. Here's part two.

Speaker 217 I am but a humble political analyst, and I will just tell you that when you're winning a race by 30 points, if a pundit on television tells you, well, you need to think about dropping out, you laugh in their face.

Speaker 217 I don't know.

Speaker 4 This is a year out.

Speaker 15 I feel like Democrats are in a race.

Speaker 217 I want Democrats to be who they are. This is who they are.

Speaker 4 This is not a bad thing. No, that is

Speaker 2 who they are. No, it isn't.

Speaker 4 Hold on. You're saying the Democrats are Nazis?

Speaker 15 It's not.

Speaker 165 It's very on-brand, right?

Speaker 10 Hold on one second. Hold on.

Speaker 181 He's doing it wrong.

Speaker 108 I don't know if he gets here, but he should say, it doesn't surprise me, but it's not just a Nazi, it's Jew haters.

Speaker 188 You got a Jew hater in New York. You got a Jew hater in Maine.

Speaker 122 That's the angle he should take.

Speaker 131 Don't you think?

Speaker 1 Yeah, I think, yeah, you're right.

Speaker 56 You're right. It would be better.

Speaker 9 He could improve his

Speaker 128 shtick.

Speaker 60 Give us a car.

Speaker 50 If he brought that in, give us a car.

Speaker 15 We'll help you.

Speaker 225 Really, like, are you suggesting that

Speaker 225 a person who wears a Nazi tattoo because he was in the military or whatever is representative of the entire Democratic Party?

Speaker 44 Well, hold on.

Speaker 60 You said that about Hexeth.

Speaker 217 I'm only reading the polling, Abby. When all this story broke and he started talking about it, he literally got more popular.
He's beating the incumbent younger.

Speaker 225 realize that he's running in one state in Maine, and you're also saying that because of that, he's representative of the Democratic Party. You said, this is who they are.

Speaker 76 Who's they?

Speaker 131 Look at the polling.

Speaker 217 Look at the energy. This is not about polling.

Speaker 4 This is not about the polling. This is what Bernie Sanders wants him to do.
It doesn't.

Speaker 217 The beating heart of the Democratic Party, where their energy is, wants the Nazi tattoo guy.

Speaker 39 That's what it is.

Speaker 15 I think that this country is about anything.

Speaker 234 It's about understanding that every person, me, you, everybody else, has gotten

Speaker 234 dark moments in our history and we go on.

Speaker 142 Hold on, Bernie Sanders isn't the head of the Democratic Party, I think.

Speaker 4 He's not.

Speaker 4 Absolutely not.

Speaker 142 Don't even have to do that.

Speaker 15 Where's the energy?

Speaker 19 Where's the energy of the party?

Speaker 213 Here is what I will tell you.

Speaker 217 Schumer wants Mills.

Speaker 217 Sanders wants this guy and he's winning by 30.

Speaker 165 Let me tell you, this, when polling happens,

Speaker 19 he is totally unknown to the entire party.

Speaker 217 Listen, I understand you don't want to have this guy, and I wouldn't either. He is a totally unknown guy, comes out of nowhere.

Speaker 217 He's got the full support of the left-wing, progressive Sanders wing of the Democratic Party.

Speaker 225 And like everybody in this meeting is who supports Barney Sanders?

Speaker 217 Yes, look at the polling. And here's the most important thing: he's beating the incumbent governor of the state by 30 points.
This isn't happening in a vacuum.

Speaker 217 People are comparing an establishment figure like Mills and this insurgent left-wing radical like Platiner. And they're like, you know what? We'll take the Nazi tattoos.
It's fine.

Speaker 217 And I just, I think you look, maybe early reporting, but people are following this race, and the polling is pretty clear. It's not that close.

Speaker 90 I don't know what's happening, man.

Speaker 11 I mean, we've got the church turning gay.

Speaker 192 We've got the Democrats turning in the Nazis.

Speaker 76 I mean,

Speaker 1 you have to remember that Maine has somehow, and over the, used to be this very conservative state, but somehow, especially around the city of Portland, it's become kind of a libtard.

Speaker 1 I hate to use that word, lib job is better probably.

Speaker 132 It's pretty bad.

Speaker 1 It's airy because of the influx of

Speaker 1 people that couldn't afford staying in New York City and they're all, you know, the

Speaker 1 office workers of New York City couldn't afford it there. And so they moved up to Portland because Portland is this great place and it is pretty.

Speaker 50 Been there.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 I think a lot of California's Washington state people are comfortable up there. The weather's pretty much the same.
It's just, the state has been ruined by liberals.

Speaker 9 Yeah.

Speaker 82 Yeah, there's a lot happening now with the get back to the office

Speaker 131 vibe that's happening.

Speaker 82 I was reading an article that all of these

Speaker 71 people who came from, I think mainly California, New York, et cetera, moved to Phoenix, to Arizona, moved to Austin.

Speaker 1 No, Austin is plagued by these people.

Speaker 73 Yeah, but you know what's happening?

Speaker 155 Now they all have to go back to the office.

Speaker 108 And at the time, they bought homes, median price, $450,000.

Speaker 27 You know what they get for it now?

Speaker 7 Because

Speaker 105 everyone wants to leave now, $220,000 for the same house.

Speaker 1 I thought they had gone up to houses in Austin. No,

Speaker 20 it's been falling like a rock.

Speaker 1 Wow, you're the luckiest guy in the world.

Speaker 112 I would say so.

Speaker 21 Yep.

Speaker 155 Yep.

Speaker 105 We were just talking about last night.

Speaker 53 I said, you know what?

Speaker 79 We're the luckiest guy and gal in the world.

Speaker 104 Thank you, darling.

Speaker 61 White wine.

Speaker 76 What is this?

Speaker 1 No, you don't start drinking during the show.

Speaker 30 The show is normally over.

Speaker 179 That's why she's coming in with my wine.

Speaker 211 Hello. Hello, Darling.

Speaker 56 Are you done?

Speaker 1 Take it out. Take the wine out.

Speaker 47 She says, take the wine out. Take the wine out.
It's no good.

Speaker 222 We should probably play one more clip and then go.

Speaker 15 Because we have.

Speaker 1 Let's play the conspiracy. Oh, I can do the conspiracies rundown.
This clip is floating around a lot.

Speaker 1 There's a bunch of people coming online, and this is the talk clip on general strikes.

Speaker 1 They're promoting the idea that we're going to, in this country, because everyone's so fed up, even though nobody's fed up. Even in California, we're not that fed up.

Speaker 1 They're going to a general strike. That'll fix everything.

Speaker 248 Do you realize this could all be over in two weeks? We could have Donald Trump and his entire administration out of office. And it's so simple.

Speaker 248 All we have to do is do a general strike and basically just take vacation the same week and shut this whole system down. It's called a general vacation strike.
There will be no workers.

Speaker 248 We'll all be in Margaritaville partying. It's a great idea.
All the labor and everything will be shut down. There will be the economy will go.

Speaker 139 This is bull crap.

Speaker 15 That one's ludicrous.

Speaker 1 This is like blackout. Remember how successful that was?

Speaker 148 Blackout, no kings, general strike.

Speaker 14 It's weak.

Speaker 34 You know what this is? You know what this is?

Speaker 60 This is

Speaker 15 Ohio.

Speaker 15 Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.

Speaker 15 Yeah,

Speaker 15 on no agenda

Speaker 15 in the morning.

Speaker 1 Waiting for the whole show to drop the Ohio bomb. Yeah, there it is.

Speaker 108 And, of course, we have some people to thank who support us.

Speaker 17 $50 and above, John's tip of the day, a birthday tip of the day, on the way.

Speaker 60 We have some really good end-of-show mixes.

Speaker 95 The No Agenda Music Publishing Group is going to be a super hit.

Speaker 68 We're going to start our live stream.

Speaker 79 24-hour a day No Agenda show mixes is going to be fantastic.

Speaker 67 I'll have that up and running by Thursday.

Speaker 31 As John thanks our 50 and above supporters for our 18th anniversary episode.

Speaker 1 Yeah, starting with James A. A.
G. A.
A. G.
A. G.
A. G.
A. G.

Speaker 1 in

Speaker 1 Umatilla, Florida, 189.55. Also, sir, dude Ching

Speaker 167 in Bastrup, Texas, 189.55.

Speaker 20 Bastrup, baby. Bastrup.

Speaker 1 Mickey Keck. Mickey Keck in Lost Wages, Nevada, 189.55.
These are all happy well-wishers telling us happy anniversary. Nancy

Speaker 1 Chardavoin, Chardivoin, Chardivoin in Centennial, Colorado, $189.55.

Speaker 50 Sir

Speaker 4 Kwo.

Speaker 1 What is this, you think?

Speaker 56 Boya? Bola?

Speaker 51 Bola?

Speaker 2 Koya?

Speaker 51 Homa, homa. Koya.

Speaker 234 Koya?

Speaker 60 Koya. Sirquoya.

Speaker 9 Sirquoya.

Speaker 1 Sir Koya, I get it. It's a joke.

Speaker 1 Sir Koya. Sheesh.
It's spelled funny just as a pun. it's a pun santa monica one sheesh 180 181 uh amy harmon asheville north carolina 181.80

Speaker 1 uh david fugazzotto and gladstone there he is there's our buddy

Speaker 1 and saudi arabia peninsula

Speaker 1 180.67.

Speaker 1 So the 180s all referred to 18, 18 years.

Speaker 1 Sir John in London,

Speaker 1 London, UK, 180.33.

Speaker 1 He has a he's getting knighted or something, so he's got a longer note that we read these days.

Speaker 60 Yeah, I'll read this.

Speaker 73 Dear John Adam, please find and close my donation of 180.33 towards the show's 18th anniversary.

Speaker 129 Keep it going as long as you're enjoying it.

Speaker 37 This donation also takes me over the 7K mark.

Speaker 15 So please, could you give me the additional title of Earl Kumar of South London?

Speaker 109 No jingles, just karma, please.

Speaker 219 Regard Sir John of South London, Viscount Kumar of South London, Commodore Kumar of the Seven Seas, and now Earl Kumar of South London.

Speaker 192 That deserves an in-donation segment, Karma.

Speaker 224 You've got Karma.

Speaker 1 Wow. He's definitely got the right idea with the titles.

Speaker 115 He sure does.

Speaker 1 John Foley, Chicago Heights, 180.33.

Speaker 1 Earl Hugger of Kitties in Zondam,

Speaker 1 Netherlands, Holland, 180.18.

Speaker 1 Hug More Kitties, he writes.

Speaker 59 Yes.

Speaker 1 Charles George in Evergreen, Colorado, 180.18.

Speaker 147 There's some

Speaker 1 symbols there. I can't see.

Speaker 76 I don't know what that is.

Speaker 1 Dame Rita in Sparks, Nevada, our regular. She came in with 180.
Sure, to 18 years, she says. Anonymous, 180.

Speaker 1 Rianne Kosinski in

Speaker 1 Carsland, Alberto, Canada, 157.34. That might be enough to get does.
This pushes her to associate executive producer. So we have to read it.

Speaker 36 You will get to that.

Speaker 1 Yeah. 21842.
So we have to read her note. When I realized your anniversary of my birthday landed on the same show day, I knew it was time to be dedouched.
Needs a dedouching.

Speaker 96 You've been dedouched.

Speaker 1 I had hit people in the mouth whenever I could, but it was time for me to finally send some treasure. You make my daily,

Speaker 1 I don't know why this cell is so big. I have to scroll over to it.
You make my daily commute bearable. We're great for commuters.
I can't have you finding your exit strategy just yet.

Speaker 1 I was hit in the mouth by my smoking hot husband. Zach, during COVID, and the last donation was the switcheroo.
However, the $200 Canadian, Canadia,

Speaker 1 whatever, dollars wasn't recognized and his producership, oh, that's not good. And his note wasn't recognized or acknowledged.
I

Speaker 1 hope my donation at 21842 plus Fees Canadian will be honored as an associate executive. Yes, you will be.

Speaker 1 It's legal to drink in Alberta at 18. Did you know that? I'm turning 42, so I should finally be able to know the answer to everything, right? 42.
It's a good callback.

Speaker 1 Please add me to the birthday list. For jingles, I'd like a special edit if you can.
No, we don't do that.

Speaker 1 Of Bush's just send your cash,

Speaker 1 only followed by due to climate change. Little girl, yay, and it's free.

Speaker 15 You can give them.

Speaker 95 No, what we will do is we will give you the F Karma Cancer in honor of your dear friend battling her second battle of that terrible disease, of course.

Speaker 198 You've got karma.

Speaker 78 The problem with the Canadians,

Speaker 122 us honoring the Canadian and Australian dollar, is that it's so low on the list now that we don't even think about it being enough for Associate Cancer.

Speaker 1 That's why I got bumps.

Speaker 58 Yeah, that's what.

Speaker 17 But we got you, Rianne. We got you.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and it was good you put it in a note to remind us. Anonymous in Columbus, Ohio, 131.66.

Speaker 1 Gerald Small in Gilbert, Arizona, 12345.

Speaker 1 Donation we don't see, see enough of. Richard Lindquist, 10641.

Speaker 1 And there he is. Oh, that's not him.

Speaker 12 No, that's. This is Kate.

Speaker 40 What happened to Kevin?

Speaker 66 Where's Kevin?

Speaker 15 He's gone.

Speaker 1 He's down. Oh, no, he's down at the bottom.
He's down lower.

Speaker 50 He's down lower.

Speaker 40 That's Kate McLaughlin, man.

Speaker 1 She's not in

Speaker 1 the Carolinas. She's in Boise, Idaho, 100.

Speaker 15 And she says, quit complaining.

Speaker 1 Quit complaining, John.

Speaker 1 I can't hear through the news. I can hear it through the newsletter, she says.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 And then she gives me loves and kisses. Thank you so much for your show.

Speaker 15 Don't ever stop. I will cry.

Speaker 147 Yeah, we won't.

Speaker 15 Yeah, we will.

Speaker 50 Well,

Speaker 50 obviously.

Speaker 1 We're already in gun smoke territory.

Speaker 60 That's right.

Speaker 1 Van E. Newman in Bernatello.

Speaker 192 You forgot James Morin in Jackson.

Speaker 1 James Morin in Jackson, Jackson, which is a nice little town, by the way, in California. Moved there.
Van E. Newman in Bernalito, Lillo.

Speaker 15 Bernal Lillo.

Speaker 36 You're falling apart, old man.

Speaker 15 Yeah.

Speaker 8 And Adam Hurst.

Speaker 1 He's in Heathcote. Yeah, Australia.
100. Toby in New Orleans.

Speaker 155 And

Speaker 156 he has a birthday for his happy day.

Speaker 1 Hello.

Speaker 1 Yeah, Toby's $100. He's in New Orleans.

Speaker 1 John Bolter in Trebucco Canyon, California, 80, 86.

Speaker 1 Davidi in Cumming, Georgia, 8008. And there's Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina.
He's the Archduke of Luna, Lover of America, Lover of Boobs, and Lover, Everything in Between.

Speaker 1 Please save the sweater puppies.

Speaker 1 Catherine Morton in Charlotte, North Carolina, 7903. That's a birthday.

Speaker 1 William S. Merrill in Calabasas, California, 75.

Speaker 1 And it says here: this donation makes me in this blank.

Speaker 155 Well, congratulations.

Speaker 156 You are.

Speaker 1 Yeah, you're a me.

Speaker 1 Sir Commodore J Stroke in Norton, Ohio, 7080.

Speaker 108 Oh, he wants to credit the donation to Chupacabra Canoe, LLC.

Speaker 1 Okay,

Speaker 1 Chupacabra Canoe,

Speaker 1 you get this donation. Joel Cox in

Speaker 1 Indianola, Pennsylvania. Wow, 7061.

Speaker 1 67, he says. Baronet Michael Robinson in Salem, Oregon, 67, 18.

Speaker 1 He talks about lucid dreaming. Here's the one.
He's the guy who says, tablespoon or two of raw potato starch or

Speaker 26 flour.

Speaker 51 SB raw. Yum.

Speaker 1 Yum. I don't know about the flour.
It's not good raw. No.

Speaker 1 Anyway, he says it gives you lucid dreams. Give it a shot.
Unless he's putting us on. Meanwhile, we got Franklin Monterosa in Dodge City, Kansas, 67.6'7.

Speaker 1 And Sean Wright in Farmington, Connecticut, 67. 6'7.

Speaker 1 Frederick Voarder Hockey.

Speaker 1 Varderhaka.

Speaker 60 Frederick Vorderhauke.

Speaker 40 Vorderhaka.

Speaker 1 In Amsterdam, $59.61.

Speaker 1 Sir, Becoming Heroic in Sherrville, Indiana, $59.40.

Speaker 1 $0.33 an episode. Servisa, or Servasa, it'd be Servasa, it's a joke, in Dallas, Texas, 5683.

Speaker 1 He's looking for some jobs, Karma. We'll give you some jobs karma at the end.
Adam will remember to do that. Sir Glenn, 5510.
Sir Mark

Speaker 1 Megpio, 5510.

Speaker 1 Surprise, Night of Astonishment in Yukon, Oklahoma, 5444. We're getting there.
Rick LeBlanca, 5432.

Speaker 1 Paolo Moore in Fort Washington, Maryland, 54.

Speaker 1 Not scared of pagans.

Speaker 1 Ah, I talked about the.

Speaker 72 Okay.

Speaker 1 Sir Chris of Saxe. Saxey, Texas.
Is that right? I get it. 5333.

Speaker 1 Scott Kowalski in Lynchburg, Virginia, 5299.

Speaker 97 He's been married for 29 years and they never had a fight.

Speaker 166 He and Amy.

Speaker 1 Garbage man Dave in Lombard, Illinois.

Speaker 100 Yay, Dave.

Speaker 1 5272.

Speaker 1 Patrick Ekstrom in Brick Township, New Jersey, 5272. Paul Roog in Fort Thomas, Kentucky, 5272.
Nicholas St. Amour

Speaker 1 in Rowden, Quebec, 5272, hence the French name. Robert Cox in Delphi,

Speaker 1 Indiana, 5150. Foster Birch, New York City, 5115.

Speaker 1 Gina, playing Gina in BC, somewhere in BC, Canada. I got a birthday call out.
She came in with 51.

Speaker 147 Or hubby Eddie, yes.

Speaker 63 Kate Hubbard. Kelly.
Kate Hubbard.

Speaker 88 Kelly Hubbard. Hubbard.

Speaker 1 Kelly Hubbard in Plymouth, Minnesota, 5018.

Speaker 1 Carl Vogler in Dillon Beach, California, 5018. And now we get to our 50s.
And curiously, with this on a day like this, we have very we don't have that many. No.

Speaker 1 But I'm going to give name and location starting with

Speaker 1 Brett Denton in Boise.

Speaker 1 Melissa Alvarez in Pontavedra Beach, Florida, George Wushett in La Vernia, Sir George, La Vernia, Texas.

Speaker 1 Kennel Patellia in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Upbeats Music Podcast.

Speaker 1 Caprice Cove.

Speaker 98 Salty Crayon.

Speaker 1 Michael Golob in Glen Bernie, Maryland.

Speaker 1 And last on the list is Arthur.

Speaker 1 Sitgira, Sitgira, Sitgira in Monroe, Georgia. Yes.
$50. These people all helped and made the show 1811 and the 18th anniversary show a rousing success.

Speaker 70 I would like to make an offer to you.

Speaker 1 What?

Speaker 111 Would you like me to do the 50s and above from now on?

Speaker 50 Oh, really? Okay.

Speaker 124 I mean, just so people, I mean, it's just, I mean, if I had some kind of issue, you'd probably offer the same to me.

Speaker 1 I made two mistakes.

Speaker 15 Okay.

Speaker 1 But I want you to read them from now on. It'd be great.

Speaker 161 I say it only out of love.

Speaker 1 I mean, it's actually pretty good for the show when you read them.

Speaker 124 Because, you know, people love hearing it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, okay. I want you to read them.

Speaker 35 No, but I'm being sincere.

Speaker 1 No, I think it'd be great to listen to you read them. you might be faster

Speaker 186 well it doesn't matter or not end of the show hey jobs karma jobs jobs and jobs let's vote for jobs

Speaker 23 i remember that bit all right everybody thank you so much for supporting us on our 18th anniversary go to noagendadonations.com because on thursday will be uh 18 years and one episode and we do not have a plan on stopping until the value dries up it's very simple value for value it works both ways.

Speaker 25 We give you the show.

Speaker 109 If you think it's valuable, you send some value back.

Speaker 192 And it's been going well so far.

Speaker 182 So we will try and do 21.

Speaker 14 Some people want four more years.

Speaker 235 We'll see how that works out.

Speaker 13 Just remember us at noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 11 You can set up a recurring donation, any amount, any frequency.

Speaker 75 It's all up to you.

Speaker 5 Noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 88 It's a birthday. It's a birthday.

Speaker 5 Yeah, we got a list.

Speaker 41 David Trunin turns 38

Speaker 54 today, actually.

Speaker 5 Dame Slavey and Sir

Speaker 5 Duda Chink wish Black Dame Loca from Hot Texas Hot Glass a very happy one.

Speaker 37 It's her birthday today

Speaker 54 as well.

Speaker 5 Gina B, her smoking hot hubby, Eddie, celebrates tomorrow.

Speaker 37 Dame Zelda of Silicon Valley will have her birthday on the 28th.

Speaker 5 Adam Hirsch, happy birthday

Speaker 149 to his old deer, D-E-A-R, on the 31st.

Speaker 5 Sir Burns, his wife, Sir Burns' keeper, celebrates on the 6th. Rianne

Speaker 5 Kaczynski turns 42. And Catherine Morton wished her smoking hot husband Jeff Morton a very happy birthday.

Speaker 5 He turns 50 years old and we say happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 5 Wow, he really did his accounting. 7k in total to the show.

Speaker 219 So a well-deserved title upgrade for Sir John of South London.

Speaker 139 He now becomes Earl Kumar of South London, and we congratulate him with that, of course.

Speaker 107 And then,

Speaker 46 no more pesky jingles for the Secretaries General.

Speaker 5 Instead, ladies and gentlemen, we are proud to present some peace prizes, not just any prize, but the No Agenda International Peace Prize, as sent to the President of the United States, the Vice President of the United States, and the Speaker of the House, Brandon Mango.

Speaker 88 No, I'm sorry.

Speaker 7 Yes, Brandon Mango, Bowman McMahon, and Sir Ear Hopper.

Speaker 40 All of you

Speaker 5 deserve the No Agenda Peace Prize.

Speaker 6 Go to noagendarings.com so that we can make sure we send it to the right address.

Speaker 46 And welcome you, Principles of Peace.

Speaker 1 We appreciate it. Can you make a correction?

Speaker 36 What did I do wrong?

Speaker 106 Well,

Speaker 1 it's not the Speaker of the House. He didn't do anything.
Well, okay.

Speaker 50 It was going to be Rick Witkoff.

Speaker 75 Oh, Witkoff and Buddhist.

Speaker 1 But the other thing is we may be playing that jingle again because not everybody has checked in.

Speaker 26 Oh,

Speaker 1 oh, oh, you know, the laggards. We have laggards.

Speaker 15 Laggards, yeah.

Speaker 30 They're like, I'm going to give those guys some cash.

Speaker 34 I don't care. I'm just going to do it.

Speaker 1 And then, like, six months later, we end up with here's our why didn't I get my document?

Speaker 36 Get your blade out, man.

Speaker 15 Careful.

Speaker 93 No, I got yourself on that one. There you go.

Speaker 39 We have three knights to join us today.

Speaker 47 Coincidentally, they're very similar to the Peace Prize winners: Brandon Mango, David Coonan, and Matthew Burns.

Speaker 28 Jump up on the podium here, gentlemen.

Speaker 5 I'm very proud to pronounce the as Sir Mango, the Knight of the Sweet Tooth, Sir David of Vesprabante, and Sir Burns of the Good Future.

Speaker 5 For you, gentlemen, we have Hookers and Blow, Ren Boys, and Chardonnay. We've got hot coffee and a stroke waffle.
Along with that, here at the round table, beer and blunts, Ruben S.

Speaker 5 Lumen and Rose, gates and sake, vodka and vanilla, bongues and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and and gerbils, breast milk, and padlam.

Speaker 5 And as always, at the round table, the mutton and the mead.

Speaker 39 Enjoy.

Speaker 73 Everybody, head over to noagendarings.com.

Speaker 168 That's where you can see your handsome night ring, which will be yours once you send us the address to send it off to you.

Speaker 25 And with that, of course, we include some wax.

Speaker 122 With that, you can seal your important correspondence.

Speaker 105 And as always, everything comes with a certificate of authenticity because it's real.

Speaker 79 You are a real knight of the No Agenda Roundtable.

Speaker 59 Congratulations.

Speaker 3 No Agenda beyond

Speaker 219 Always a party at these No Agenda meetups, and they are happening around the world as you are here in a moment.

Speaker 60 After we give you two reports, the first from Fort Wayne, which I think was, this was, was this

Speaker 15 on the smaller side.

Speaker 249 Adam and John, Shannon reporting in from Fort Wayne. And we had a small meetup.
We had a few that took advantage of the weather and weren't here.

Speaker 249 And another one that wasn't here was Pam Bondi, Adam Clark Curry, John C. Dvorak, and she talks in syllables.
We love you, Pam. And we're going to get the Epstein list by Christmas.

Speaker 250 Hey guys, this is Jason. New guy in the room, but definitely having a good time.
In the morning. In the morning.

Speaker 249 See you next time. Adios and bonvoyage.

Speaker 170 Hey, what do you call two dudes in a bar in Fort Wayne?

Speaker 29 A meetup.

Speaker 122 That's right.

Speaker 15 More people in Los Altos, but still, here's your meetup report.

Speaker 154 In the morning here in downtown Los Altos, giving you a report for the meetup.

Speaker 89 This is Sir Rieschmeiser.

Speaker 246 This is Commodore Dude Nebene Ben, Duke of San Francisco, having a wonderful time, meeting new people, and connection is protection.

Speaker 247 Sir Julian here in Los Altos. We're all at the edge of our seats waiting for John's book review of Minotaur Milking Farm.

Speaker 211 Sir Montauk, learning all about glycine.

Speaker 210 Hello, this is Abraham.

Speaker 233 I'm recently divorced, and I need a classy broad in my life.

Speaker 206 This is an anonymous lady in San Francisco in the morning.

Speaker 211 This is Sir Tyndeth.

Speaker 211 Resist we much.

Speaker 229 This is Sir Recalcitrant Crazy See the Second. I just want to wish you two dudes a happy 18th anniversary and please free Candace Owens.

Speaker 219 Thank you very much.

Speaker 96 Remember to include your servers in these reports, people.

Speaker 67 That's a way of hitting people in the mouth.

Speaker 177 We have a couple meetups taking place.

Speaker 27 One today actually underway.

Speaker 18 It is the TMI Three Mile Island Evac Zone.

Speaker 48 It started at 3.33 Eastern Time at Evergrain Brewing in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 79 Tomorrow, Berlin gets together, the Berlin ITM Slave, 7.33 p.m.

Speaker 23 at Volksbar at Rosa Luxemburg Platz in Berlin, Germany.

Speaker 140 I'm looking forward to a report from you.

Speaker 219 And the final one for the month will be on the 30th.

Speaker 143 That is the North Georgia Now quarterly meetup, 6 o'clock Cherry Street Brewing in Alpharetta, Georgia.

Speaker 36 Coming up, actually, the 31st, Leiden-Seidholland, the Netherlands on the 31st.

Speaker 192 Then we have Durango, Colorado on the second, Indianapolis on the second, Raleigh, North Carolina on the sixth, Fort Wayne, Indiana on the 15th, Albany, California.

Speaker 73 John will be there on the 15th of November. Zurich, Switzerland, need your meetup report, 15th of November, Burlington, Kentucky on the 22nd.

Speaker 79 And many more to be found at Noagendameetups.com.

Speaker 129 This is something you must witness at least once.

Speaker 1 What's the one in November that I'm going to be at?

Speaker 124 November 15th, Albany, California.

Speaker 78 It's right next to you.

Speaker 43 You're right there.

Speaker 15 Pop out of the house. Go say hi.

Speaker 36 I'm sure we'll be at that pizza place.

Speaker 18 No doubt about it.

Speaker 100 Go to No Agenda Meetup.

Speaker 1 I'll be at the Mallard Club, as usual.

Speaker 38 I guess so.

Speaker 73 Noagendameetups.com.

Speaker 48 These are the people that will give you the connection.

Speaker 95 It gives you pure protection.

Speaker 127 The first responders in any emergency, you will never regret going to your first No Agenda Meetup.

Speaker 73 Go to NoandgendaMeetups.com to find out where all of them are.

Speaker 75 If you can't find one near you, start one yourself.

Speaker 5 It's easy and guaranteed a party. Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.

Speaker 134 Always like a party.

Speaker 57 And we've got our end of show mixes, which are not all AI, but man, they are getting good.

Speaker 178 One minute 30 max, please, if you're going to send it in.

Speaker 95 And of course, you will be on our new radio station.

Speaker 192 We need to have a name for this station.

Speaker 22 I'm going to call it

Speaker 73 No Agenda, what?

Speaker 127 For our end of show mix radio station.

Speaker 1 Well, let's dream up a title right now.

Speaker 73 That's why I'm throwing it out there.

Speaker 1 No

Speaker 1 agenda.

Speaker 139 Oh, wow. Wow.

Speaker 21 It's coming up.

Speaker 1 If you're just going to condemn every suggestion, it's not going to get any suggestions out.

Speaker 15 That's right.

Speaker 71 There's never a wrong suggestion in brainstorming.

Speaker 1 How about Neo?

Speaker 1 How about Neo Radio?

Speaker 93 Neo Radio.

Speaker 50 I think that's available.

Speaker 1 That's actually a good URL.

Speaker 90 No agenda reels.

Speaker 95 Finally, the troll room is waking up.

Speaker 1 No agenda reels. Yeah, but the problem is that it indicates videos.

Speaker 115 It does, yeah.

Speaker 15 It's no good. We'll work on it.

Speaker 61 We'll find something.

Speaker 51 We'll find something.

Speaker 84 ISOFIN ISO time before we

Speaker 95 leave you.

Speaker 105 Of course, we have John's tip of the day, so don't go anywhere.

Speaker 26 I have three today, and you seem to have two.

Speaker 1 Yeah, go with your three.

Speaker 60 Wow, thanks a lot, guys.

Speaker 42 Okay, that's one.

Speaker 1 You know what? 100%.

Speaker 51 Well, please.

Speaker 87 White supremacy.

Speaker 16 Right.

Speaker 90 Hold on, that's my last one.

Speaker 40 Forever, forever, forever.

Speaker 59 Kind of like that. That's Maduro, by the way.

Speaker 184 Oh, was it? Yes.

Speaker 40 Forever, forever, forever.

Speaker 1 Okay, I got a couple here.

Speaker 72 Yeah.

Speaker 1 I'm trying to think which one to play first.

Speaker 40 Let's do

Speaker 50 Walter Cronkite.

Speaker 60 How do they do it?

Speaker 90 Nobody knows.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Okay, Kennedy.

Speaker 161 That was a homedinger of a show.

Speaker 28 Okay,

Speaker 60 there's just nothing.

Speaker 92 You can't compete with Kennedy.

Speaker 151 AI Kennedy, I'm sure.

Speaker 5 Hey, everybody, it's time again for John's tip of the day.

Speaker 10 Great advice for you and me.

Speaker 2 Just the tip with JCD,

Speaker 2 and sometimes Adam. all.

Speaker 2 All right.

Speaker 1 So we're back through the rotation, back to cleaning products.

Speaker 1 But this is not a cleaning

Speaker 1 liquid or detergent or anything. This is

Speaker 1 a multi-purpose portable carpet and upholstery cleaner for car, auto-detailer, blah, blah, blah. It's good for everything, especially if you have dogs.

Speaker 181 This is dogs.

Speaker 36 I have a dog.

Speaker 25 I need this product. I have

Speaker 1 this product. This is a very dirty car.
This is another Bissell product. This is specifically called, you have to look this up.
They haven't, but Mimi claims she got one at Costco for $70.

Speaker 50 Whoa.

Speaker 1 They're $90

Speaker 1 or more. $99

Speaker 1 on Amazon.

Speaker 128 This is not a cheap product.

Speaker 70 What is it called?

Speaker 1 It's called the Little Green Multi-Purpose Portable Carpet and Upholstery Cleaner. It's a small device.

Speaker 50 It's the little green

Speaker 1 with a lot of suction, and

Speaker 1 she swears by it, claims she uses it every day.

Speaker 73 The little green carpet cleaner by Bissell.

Speaker 26 I'm looking at it now.

Speaker 1 Wow, this isn't pronounced Bissell, but okay.

Speaker 15 Okay, well, look, just because I said I would read this, the donation

Speaker 116 you're getting all pissy at me about it.

Speaker 129 I'm trying to be nice.

Speaker 78 The little green Bissell is it called Bissell?

Speaker 15 Yeah, Bissell.

Speaker 100 Bissell.

Speaker 51 Huh.

Speaker 145 Hmm.

Speaker 69 So it really sucks.

Speaker 1 It sucks.

Speaker 75 And they have actually little green oxy liquid that you put in it.

Speaker 1 Yes, there's a special liquid. It takes off everything.
It's great for upholstery.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's a winner.

Speaker 51 Hmm.

Speaker 59 Interesting.

Speaker 110 And

Speaker 140 of course, Mimi would know because she's got the dogs, right?

Speaker 1 She's got tons of dogs.

Speaker 5 There it is, everybody.

Speaker 154 Find all of the tips at tipoftheday.net.

Speaker 3 Great master, you and me. Just the tip

Speaker 79 That's right, created by Dana Brunetti, so you know it's quality.

Speaker 188 It's a quality product right here, everybody. Quality stuff.

Speaker 5 That's it for our 18th anniversary show.

Speaker 124 Thank you all for being here.

Speaker 1 We appreciate you.

Speaker 77 Every single one of you.

Speaker 47 Let's see. Coming up next.

Speaker 15 Oh, how about that?

Speaker 165 We have the Podcasting 2.0 show.

Speaker 97 I did that one just the other day.

Speaker 36 It's titled Fuzzing.

Speaker 165 If you want to know what's going on, I didn't even promote it.

Speaker 181 Titled what?

Speaker 193 Fuzzing.

Speaker 153 Fuzzing.

Speaker 10 Fuzzing. What is fuzzing?

Speaker 1 Is that like Ohio?

Speaker 47 No, fuzzing is...

Speaker 1 Another term I'm unaware of?

Speaker 88 It's a technical term.

Speaker 69 Developers use this. Fuzzing.

Speaker 184 Fuzzing.

Speaker 1 Explain before we go.

Speaker 88 No, we don't have enough time.

Speaker 50 Oh, brother.

Speaker 73 Just hang around and listen to it on the No Agenda Stream of Your Modern Podcast app.

Speaker 165 End of show mix is Nico Syme.

Speaker 5 We got Sir Michael Anthony with a non-AI mix, Mark Van Patten and Bree or Bry, I guess.

Speaker 5 Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country for the 18th year going into 19 in the morning, everybody.

Speaker 79 I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 1 And from Northern Silicon Valley, I'm John C. Devorak.

Speaker 5 We return on Thursday for our 18th year plus one. Please join us and remember us at NoAgendadonations.com.

Speaker 176 Until then, adios, faufos, a hooe-hooey, and such.

Speaker 176 Well, I asked my nephew, hey, what time you got?

Speaker 176 He pulled out his phone, said it's a lot.

Speaker 176 I pointed at the wall, said read that son.

Speaker 176 He stared like that clock had a loaded gun.

Speaker 176 Oh, tick tock, what a shock. Kids these days can't read a clock.
Round face, two hands, they don't know why.

Speaker 176 Just ask Siri and let time fly.

Speaker 176 Back in my day,

Speaker 176 we learned it fine.

Speaker 176 Quarter past eight, thirty-street past nine.

Speaker 176 And now they're squinting at the numbers, start to sweat.

Speaker 176 They don't know when it's time for bed.

Speaker 176 Oh,

Speaker 176 tock. What a shock.
Kids these days can't read a clock. Give them twelve to six, they'll still get lost.

Speaker 176 Twelve o'clock, they feel double-crossed.

Speaker 176 I'ma get my fish.

Speaker 176 I don't know about the rest of you, but I'm getting my fish. I'm gonna tell you just like this, old shit.

Speaker 176 I will be at the hook of the wall art with my steel toes on. And my and boy, hit me up with them.
And I care about you. Try to stop me from walking that fast.
I'm stole a micro tree.

Speaker 176 Baby, I'm 250 pounds.

Speaker 176 Baby, you wanna see a human with a fucking woollen nose or baby? Cause this is the home I'm returning to. And you think you wanna stop me from leaving that thing that race they go on myself.

Speaker 176 Monster.

Speaker 176 What Whatever

Speaker 176 you not

Speaker 176 let it

Speaker 176 see

Speaker 176 I want the core algorithm

Speaker 176 Algorithm

Speaker 176 Algorithm

Speaker 176 There you go

Speaker 176 rhythm

Speaker 176 our golden rhythm.

Speaker 176 There is only one podcast I like to hear.

Speaker 176 It's hosted by our Adam and our John C. Deer.

Speaker 176 They masticate and and separate them

Speaker 176 five them

Speaker 176 and show us all the ghoulish things that live within.

Speaker 176 They

Speaker 176 show

Speaker 176 the

Speaker 176 monsters.

Speaker 176 They're worse than the politicians and psychopathic news anchors.

Speaker 176 Who lie with devilish grins when Adam and Ivor Agmander back and forth

Speaker 176 committed double action aimed at mainstreams worse.

Speaker 176 The funny and the serious intersect as they warn us about the industrial complex.

Speaker 176 They

Speaker 176 show

Speaker 176 the

Speaker 176 monsters.

Speaker 176 They're worse than the politicians, psychopathic news anchors.

Speaker 213 And the social media gets you if you don't watch it

Speaker 213 The best podcast in the universe

Speaker 50 Mofo javorak dot org slash n

Speaker 161 That was a homedinger of a show.