1813 - "Lunchbox"

3h 19m
No Agenda Episode 1813 - "Lunchbox"



"Lunchbox"


Executive Producers:


Daniela Pompeu


Duke of San Francisco


Nancy


Robert


Kasondra


Associate Executive Producers:


Sir Scovee


Sir Dixbert


Brad Granier


the Highland Craigs


Sean Homan


Eli the coffee guy


Michael Shovan


Matthew Martell


Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning resumes


Marina Stroouin


Peace Prize:


Daniela Pompeu


Secretary General:


Secretary General Nancy's Son


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Title Changes


Sir Dixbert > Baronet


Knights & Dames


Daniela Pompeu > Dame Pompeu


Art By: Capitalist Agenda


End of Show Mixes:


 


 Bonald Crabtree EOS obama.mp3


 In-Q-Tel EOS 1984drh-2.mp3


 MVP EOS Ground Troops!.mp3


Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry


Back Office Jae Dvorak


Chapters: Dreb Scott


Clip Custodian: Neal Jones


Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman


NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda


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ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1813.noagendanotes.com


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


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Last Modified 11/02/2025 16:46:04
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Last Modified 11/02/2025 16:46:04 by Freedom Controller  

Press play and read along

Runtime: 3h 19m

Transcript

Speaker 1 None.

Speaker 1 Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, November 2nd, 2025. This is your award-winning Gibbon Nation Media Assassination episode 1813.

Speaker 2 This is no agenda.

Speaker 1 Nuking the North Sea Nexus and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 3 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we've determined that the Democrats are lunatics, I'm John C. Dvorak.

Speaker 1 bought and buskills. In the morning.
Oh, have we now?

Speaker 1 You mean

Speaker 1 everyone who's a Democrat or just the representatives who are Democrats? I mean, people who, there can be people who are misguided and vote Democrat, but they may not be total lunatics.

Speaker 3 Then your point?

Speaker 1 Yeah. How was that extra hour of sleep for you?

Speaker 3 I didn't take it.

Speaker 1 What do you mean you didn't take it?

Speaker 3 I didn't take it. I got up at the rate.
I got up

Speaker 3 with the same cycle, left the clock. I do going this way, I leave everything the same and I get up at the time allotted that was original.

Speaker 3 And then I turn the clocks back and say, oh, my God, I'm up an hour early.

Speaker 1 It's interesting how you were still grumpy, though.

Speaker 3 That's

Speaker 1 be happy. I know.

Speaker 1 Okay. I know why you're grumpy.
I'm going to make the show a lot better. I know why you're grumpy.

Speaker 3 So, in the other way, when it goes the other way, I set the clocks the night before

Speaker 3 so I can kind of gear myself up for the fact I'm going to lose an hour.

Speaker 1 Well, as always, there's a report on what the elites are doing to kill us this time.

Speaker 4 Most Americans are not in favor of daylight saving time. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine is among groups urging lawmakers to eliminate seasonal time changes and enact permanent standard time.

Speaker 5 On permanent standard time, we have more light in the morning. And we know that morning light is best for our mood and for our health.

Speaker 5 The second reason is that darkness in the morning actually has some safety risks.

Speaker 5 The third reason is because the alignment of the rising and setting of the sun is more consistent with our internal clock, people sleep better.

Speaker 4 Poor sleep contributes to chronic health issues, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity,

Speaker 4 and depression. While some experts say the autumn change can be easier to manage, there are still some tips to make falling back feel a bit better.

Speaker 4 That starts with getting at least seven hours of sleep at night before and after the time change and maintaining a consistent sleep schedule.

Speaker 5 Adjust the timing of your daily routines and time cues right away starting on Sunday.

Speaker 5 Set your clock back one hour the evening before the time change so that when you wake up, it's easy to get on that new schedule and then spend some time outdoors, get that morning light.

Speaker 1 Bright light will help set your internal clock to the time change, which will help with sleep and being alert i was actually quite i was actually quite happy that we um we had a party last night that we went to woohoo yeah a murder mystery party oh no bro hello

Speaker 1 hello 1990s yeah it was good this was um maverick you know my periodontis

Speaker 1 He had it at his house. This is the house that's on the airport that has the hangar with the plane in it that I think I paid for the door at minimum.
It was kind of cool, though.

Speaker 1 It was

Speaker 1 old Wild West.

Speaker 1 And I was Billy the bartender. Tina was Poker Alice.

Speaker 1 And you know that you're dealing. So first of all, these are all people are younger.
They're in their 30s.

Speaker 1 Some maybe, maybe early 40s. So we were just happy we were invited to anything.

Speaker 1 And you know that you know that you're dealing with no agenda listeners because everyone's in character. And

Speaker 1 so this one character comes up to me and says, you know, that poker Alice, she's no good. I said, what do you mean? She says, she's an op.
I'm like, okay, in the morning? Yeah, in the morning.

Speaker 1 It was good. I love it.
It was so fun. And she actually wrote a really naughty note to you that she gave me.

Speaker 1 You want to hear it?

Speaker 3 I guess.

Speaker 1 So here's the deal, cowboy. You tell that naughty little Dvorak that even though he ain't used to the dusty, sweaty women you find around these parts, she wrote it in character.

Speaker 1 I promise he'll hear the way we bite harder than a rattler.

Speaker 1 And if he buys me a drink and whispers words in my ear like it's an op or she's a spook, I'll offer him something far warmer and wetter than whiskey. Hmm? You should have been there.

Speaker 3 That's disgusting.

Speaker 1 I'm just happy there's young people listening to our show. That's all I'm happy about.
Oh, we get a lot of, yeah. Well, they're here because,

Speaker 1 because

Speaker 1 they want to learn something that's real, not all this nonsense that they're getting everywhere. Oh, by the way, one of the people there, the guy's

Speaker 1 deep into Argentina with his work, he says, this deal was so great, this swap and having Mele win.

Speaker 1 So, first of all, the $20 billion that we swapped for Argentine pesos, which we made a bundle on, by the way, because the minute Mele wins...

Speaker 3 Yeah, one minute you do that, it goes up immediately.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and he won, and it went up even more. It basically was a swap out for 18 billion of Chinese dollars, whatever.

Speaker 1 So, so President Trump basically kicked out, I don't know if it might have been a, I don't know if it was a one swap or a Chinese dollar swap. That's possible.

Speaker 3 There is no Chinese, it's a one, but they don't they have dollars?

Speaker 3 No, they use the one and the remimi, they're also called the remimmium.

Speaker 1 No, I understand, but they they own dollars. Yeah, yeah.
So I think it was an $18 billion.

Speaker 3 $15 American dollars the Chinese did. I would do it with the wand personally.

Speaker 1 It would be a better idea. Either way,

Speaker 1 the big deal is that now there's an Argentinian oil bonanza rivaling the Permian basin.

Speaker 3 Where did they find this?

Speaker 1 I don't know.

Speaker 1 We were too busy in the game. I didn't get the details, but I have his number.
I'll get the details from him.

Speaker 1 And his company is there.

Speaker 1 He's like, this is going to be great.

Speaker 3 It could be off the coast, I guess.

Speaker 1 Maybe.

Speaker 3 We had a lot of oil off of Arc Coast in California. If you recall those old pictures from the 20s with all those oil rigs that are off the Senate

Speaker 3 Long Beach area coast.

Speaker 1 Yeah, replaced by windmills now, right?

Speaker 3 There's nothing there.

Speaker 3 The windmills are all in Palm Springs.

Speaker 1 Oh, okay.

Speaker 1 Anyway, it was good. It was a lot of fun.

Speaker 3 And all falling over.

Speaker 1 And I also set up the stream. I set up our AI slop stream.

Speaker 3 Well, from the sounds of today's songs, there's going to be plenty of slop to put on there.

Speaker 1 Well, yeah, but you know, when you hear them kind of in context and interspersed with other end of shows and our jingles, it's kind of interesting.

Speaker 3 I'll bet.

Speaker 1 You know, I got a whole format. So right now we have two slops an hour.

Speaker 1 We're doing two slops an hour, two slops an hour.

Speaker 1 Yeah, oh, yeah, I have a rotation clock. Sure, we got two slops an hour and rotation clock.

Speaker 3 We have a clock that has promotions for the various shows on the No Agenda stream.

Speaker 1 Well, of course, if they send me promos, I'll promote them. I'll put them in.

Speaker 3 You heard it, boys.

Speaker 1 And I just put the stream URL because I figured, you know, we have all these names like Gitmo Jams,

Speaker 1 pre-produced pop, lots of slop, the emo algo, the human input, the touring test tunes. There's too much.
So why don't y'all just take that stream?

Speaker 3 It's out of control.

Speaker 1 Yes, take that. It's in the show notes as well and just do something with it.

Speaker 1 Build your own website, whatever you want. Send me your promo, send me your slop, minute 30 max, or they get deleted right away.
You're sending me anything over a minute 30, it's out. Not interested.

Speaker 1 And we'll turn this into a dynamite exit strategy. The whole world will be bopping to our stream, baby.
It's going to be fantastic. I'm telling you, it's going to be great.

Speaker 3 If we can sell the stream off to some sucker.

Speaker 1 Well, yeah, you know, it was possible.

Speaker 3 it's possible paramont

Speaker 1 oh well that brings me right away to the self-hating jew green glenn greenwald

Speaker 1 which will actually lead into your i think will lead into your i was surprised i see that you watched the tucker fuentes uh oh you know i watched the whole thing and i have to say

Speaker 3 uh and and and i'm not uh pre uh I'm not,

Speaker 3 how would I say it? I'm not pre-programmed to like or dislike Fuentes because I've never seen or heard of him.

Speaker 1 Well, so you don't know how he's somewhat different on his own shows.

Speaker 3 So I have no, I have no clue. I'm just going by what he did on Tucker

Speaker 3 and his discussion with Tucker. And Tucker and him, I guess, had a beef.
I told you. And they were going back.

Speaker 1 Yeah, FBI versus the CIA.

Speaker 3 Yeah, they had a beef of some sort.

Speaker 3 And so Tucker invited him on the show, and they became, I'm surprised they weren't kissing at the end, to be honest about it.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Well, I think, honestly, I think we're looking at North Sea Nexus with the Pilgrim. I mean, there's something going on here.

Speaker 3 There's a couple of clips I have. You want to do them?

Speaker 1 You want to do the collection.

Speaker 3 Well, first you had some intro clip of some sort.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 1 it's a series of four, if you can handle it.

Speaker 1 About what? It's Glenn Greenwald on the show. Oh, yes.
I definitely want to hear.

Speaker 3 Yes.

Speaker 3 I think setting us up with Glenn Greenwald is always good.

Speaker 3 I hope you've cut him back a bit because

Speaker 3 he's a chatterbox chase.

Speaker 1 Well, even worse, he was on value tainment. This is this is why.

Speaker 3 Oh my god, he'd just be on forever.

Speaker 1 The value tamement guy, by the way, he has the exit strategy of all exit strategies. I got to give this guy props.
PDB, that's name, PDB.

Speaker 3 He's not a dummy.

Speaker 1 He has high-end shoes.

Speaker 1 Yes, made in Italy, $5.99 a pair.

Speaker 1 And yeah, and they're handmade with

Speaker 1 it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know, I know, exactly.

Speaker 3 Are you telling me that PDB or PBD, I can't remember the

Speaker 3 value attainment guy.

Speaker 1 Yeah, value attainment guy.

Speaker 3 Bett Davis or whatever.

Speaker 1 Yeah, Patrick Bett Davis.

Speaker 3 Patrick Bett.

Speaker 3 Yeah. He's selling shoes for $5.99.

Speaker 1 And I have to say, they're handsome.

Speaker 3 Well, I'm sure they are. It's nothing like a good Italian shoe.

Speaker 1 They look great. And he has a whole factory video of them putting the shoes together.
He owns a factory there or is he? No, no, no, no.

Speaker 3 He is jobbing out.

Speaker 1 He's an OEM. Oh, yeah.
He's an OEM for shoes. Yes, but so I was thinking, we've got a guy doing shoes in America with American workers in Northwestern Carolina.
They got wiped out. He's doing boots.

Speaker 1 I think we could do a no-agenda boot. Boot guy.
Yes, we can do a no-agenda boot.

Speaker 3 We could. Yeah.

Speaker 1 High end, baby. High end.

Speaker 3 All right, let's play these clips.

Speaker 1 I knew I got your attention attention with that. Okay, so Glenn Greenwald is on to talk about Barry Weiss,

Speaker 1 CBS, the Jews, the Jews controlling the media, the whole thing. And it was just like,

Speaker 1 I mean, it seemed a bit, I under, because this is one of the big online kind of talking points about TikTok and about CBS and Barry and Israel and the Jews. And it was just fascinating.

Speaker 1 So I wanted to bring it in. And then I saw that you have

Speaker 1 Tucker and Nick Fuentes. Oh, this might actually work together.
So

Speaker 3 I'm not thinking it will because

Speaker 3 this is the segment about porn.

Speaker 1 Listen, porn is always good in any mix.

Speaker 3 Well, yeah, that might be true, but I don't see the segue is lacking.

Speaker 1 Well, do you want to start? Or you still want to go to the market? No, no, no. I want to hear these clips.

Speaker 3 We'll get to the

Speaker 3 eventually.

Speaker 1 So, first of all, it's not like he's mad or anything that Barry Weiss got this huge buyout for $150 million.

Speaker 1 He doesn't care. I mean, he doesn't.

Speaker 3 And he believes that to be true.

Speaker 1 Oh, it's a done deal. Oh, yeah.
Oh, he 100% is done. But he doesn't care if she made $800 million.

Speaker 7 So, first of all, I know Barry. Anyone who knows Barry will say what I'm about to say, which is she's an extremely charming, nice person.
Like, interpersonally, impossible not to like Barry Weiss.

Speaker 7 Same with her wife, Nellie, like, just great people.

Speaker 1 However,

Speaker 7 I'm also a huge proponent of independent media. I like when independent media succeeds.
I like when it grows and thrives. I think more competition, the better.
No issue at all.

Speaker 7 Barry Weiss can get, you know, $800 million if she can find somebody to give it to her for the free press. Don't care about that at all.

Speaker 1 Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
Sure.

Speaker 3 That's why he's talking so fast. I mean, he talks fast, but he's out of control there.

Speaker 1 But when he goes, I don't care about that at all. I don't care about that at all.
I don't care about the $150 million. I do not care.
I don't care. Look at my face.
I don't care.

Speaker 7 What I care about is the following: this is all, we're talking about David Olson. It's really Larry Ellison.

Speaker 1 Ah,

Speaker 1 ah,

Speaker 1 now the monkey comes out of the sleeve. It's really about Larry Ellison, not David Ellison, his kid, but Larry Ellison.

Speaker 7 This is all, we're talking about David Olson. It's really Larry Ellison who's behind all this.

Speaker 7 Larry Ellison is either the richest or second richest person in the world, depending on his and Elon's fluctuations and net worth.

Speaker 1 Really, rattle.

Speaker 7 Larry Ellison, he has one main political cause, and that's Israel. He's an American citizen.
He's the single largest donor, private donor, to the IDF.

Speaker 7 I don't know why it's legal for an American citizen to donate money to a foreign army. I don't even know why it's legal for an American citizen to go fight in a foreign army.

Speaker 7 A lot of Americans go fight in the IDF.

Speaker 1 He donates it. Again, again, another one of these guys that forgets that there's a lot of other armies that people and Americans have been fighting in, including Ukraine.

Speaker 1 Never heard Glenn about that, but okay, Israel.

Speaker 7 It's legal for an American citizen to go fight in a foreign army. A lot of Americans go fight in the IDF.
He donates to the IDF.

Speaker 1 How much does he give to the IDF?

Speaker 7 He gave, you know, on one night, he gave $20 million. It's, you know, over the years.
You know, in the scheme of his wealth, of like...

Speaker 1 Direct to IDF.

Speaker 7 It's called Friends of the IDF. It's for people to donate money.
They provide services to the IDF, you know, like new this for the IDF, new housing, new benefits for the soldiers, whatever.

Speaker 7 But yeah, it's supplementing

Speaker 7 and funding the IDF. Like, why not do that? He's an American citizen.
Why not do that for American soldiers? But he's choosing to do it for Israeli soldiers. Whatever.

Speaker 7 That's not my issue.

Speaker 1 That's not my issue. Yeah, it sounds like he's like, so this is already not America first.

Speaker 1 You're Jew first. This is no good.
No good, Larry Ellison. Why are you giving money to the IDF? And she was, I don't understand.
You live in America.

Speaker 1 And of course,

Speaker 1 this is great because this is the Jew Gren Gleenwalt. Gren Gleenwald.
Glenn Greenwald.

Speaker 1 He'll get it.

Speaker 1 Who is now saying, well, now the Jews want to control the media. What?

Speaker 7 Okay, so he's the single largest owner of the IDF.

Speaker 7 But beyond that, you know, he's a major, major, major fanatical supporter of Israel, even though he's an American citizen and the country that gave him his wealth is not Israel, but the United States.

Speaker 7 Whatever.

Speaker 1 Yeah, whatever. Don't whatever.
He keeps it.

Speaker 3 Making whatever. You know, I don't know Ellison to the point where I'm a friend of his because I haven't been to his house, although I know where his house is.

Speaker 1 You could TP it if you wanted to.

Speaker 3 But I have worked with him on one occasion. I've run into him a number of times, and

Speaker 3 I've seen him talk a lot,

Speaker 3 including the new version of him. He looks like he had some work done.

Speaker 1 Yeah, some.

Speaker 3 Some.

Speaker 3 And I have never heard this.

Speaker 3 You know, most of these guys, they make a big fuss. I mean, like the Adelsons did.
They would talk about it.

Speaker 3 But Ellison doesn't talk about it.

Speaker 3 Where does Greenwald get this?

Speaker 1 So Larry Ellison was my client at Think New Ideas when Ray Lane was running it.

Speaker 1 So this is before Ray Lane later was my main VC partner at Kleiner.

Speaker 1 And I found him to be nothing but an incredibly nice,

Speaker 3 actually very,

Speaker 1 because, you know, he was at that point the chairman. And he was really letting his people run the show.
He just came in to sit and watch the commercial we made for the Super Bowl.

Speaker 1 But yeah, it was respectful. He was a nice guy.
I can't.

Speaker 3 I've always thought him to be a nice guy. I caught him at the airport once and had a chat with him.
And he is a really nice guy.

Speaker 3 And his main passion always seemed to me not to be Israel, but sailboats.

Speaker 1 Exactly. He was upside down in sailboats.
He had sailboats here, sailboats there. Yes.
Sailboats, racing, Formula One. Racing.
Big sparks.

Speaker 3 Racing and more racing. Yeah.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 Which I think was a lot more money than the 20 million to to the friends of the IDF. But okay, Gren Gren, guys, I'm never going to get it.
Gren Greenwald.

Speaker 3 Glad you're stuck. You're going to always screw up Glenn Greenwald.

Speaker 1 Glenn Greenwald. He keeps saying, I don't care, whatever.
Then why bring it up?

Speaker 1 I don't like that part.

Speaker 3 It's like, well, he's obviously obsessed with.

Speaker 1 Yes, this is the point. I'll start this one over.
That's why he's talking so fast.

Speaker 3 I mean, he talks fast normally, but this is really

Speaker 1 a little unpeeter.

Speaker 7 Okay, so he's the single largest donor of the IDF.

Speaker 7 But beyond that, you know, he's a major, major, major fanatical supporter of Israel, even though he's an American citizen and the country that gave him his wealth is not Israel, but the United States, whatever.

Speaker 7 But that is his cause.

Speaker 7 Right at the moment, the public opinion polls are showing an unraveling of support for Israel and the United States, unlike anything I certainly ever anticipated or expected to see in my lifetime, especially with the younger generation.

Speaker 7 I know you had Nick Funtes on your show. I think I interviewed him like a week before or after he was on your show.

Speaker 7 He He was just on Tucker Carlson's, kind of representative of not everybody, but, you know, like kind of under 30 conservatives who for the first time are, you know, questioning Israel.

Speaker 7 It's a big threat, as we talked about. Israel needs the U.S.
And they looked at public opinion polls where.

Speaker 1 So when I heard this, I'm like, this is some kind of massive hopium that

Speaker 1 Nick Fuentes and

Speaker 1 Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens and maybe Megan Kelly, they're going to create a new America first right or something with

Speaker 1 Marjorie Taylor Greene. You know what I mean? That's what it sounds like.
Oh, yeah. Nick Fuentes, you know, he's under 30.
Young people don't vote. Bernie Sanders would be our president if they did.

Speaker 1 No. So, okay.
So, and what are you trying to say here, Glenn?

Speaker 7 There's an unraveling of support for Israel and major conservative influencers, not just people on the left, which has been a case for a while, but major conservative influencers and politicians are now saying, why are we giving all this money back?

Speaker 7 This is a, they're panicking over this. Larry Ellison, at exactly.

Speaker 1 I tell you, Larry Ellison panics over nothing. I can tell you that for sure.

Speaker 1 Larry Ellison does not panic over Israel, over America, or anything. I just don't see it.

Speaker 7 Panicking over this. Larry Ellison, at exactly that point, goes and buys CBS News, one of the most storied news outlets and brands in the United States history.

Speaker 7 Not a lot of people watching these days, but still has that imprimatur, but also Paramount.

Speaker 1 Imprimatur?

Speaker 1 What did he say? What is imprimatur?

Speaker 3 It means it has a

Speaker 3 significance,

Speaker 3 a symbolic significance.

Speaker 1 So what I hear Glenn saying here is because of amazing new people on the scene like Nick Fuentes,

Speaker 1 Larry Ellison freaked out and went, I better buy Paramount, which has been, how long has that deal been in process?

Speaker 3 Like five years.

Speaker 1 It was ever

Speaker 1 ever since what's her name with the red star sherry took over yeah

Speaker 3 once she took over she put it up for sale she wanted to get everything out from under sumner i mean sumner

Speaker 3 you know lost the company to her

Speaker 1 and immediately she hated the guy so hated the the old man so much that she's gonna she's gonna sell it all yeah so yeah but now for but now what glenn has in his mind is this scenario where everyone's panicking because of nick fuentes and the pilgrim and now, uh,

Speaker 1 you know, we better, we better buy the station that nobody watches. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
Yeah, let's buy CBS News so we can like, who are you propagandizing with that?

Speaker 1 75, 78, 79, 80-year-olds? Who's watching that?

Speaker 1 Except for us to maybe grab one clip.

Speaker 7 Not a lot of people watching these days, but still has that imprimatur, but also Paramount, which is a major entertainment.

Speaker 1 Massive purchase, $8 billion, massive.

Speaker 7 Take somebody who has never run a newsroom, never even been a reporter. Barry Weiss is an opinion colonist.

Speaker 7 She's worked on the opinion page of the Washington Post, New York Times, which I love opinion journalism. I do opinion journalism.

Speaker 7 I have a lot of respect for it, but it's not really, I wouldn't expect anyone to make me the editor-in-chief of CBS.

Speaker 7 And I think I have a lot more accomplishments in just hardcore journalism than Barry. I think she would say that too.

Speaker 1 But still, I would consider myself unqualified.

Speaker 7 A major reason, obviously, why is because she's fanatically pro-Israel, and that aligns perfectly with the Ellison agenda.

Speaker 1 Okay, right. So, Ellison agenda.
Agenda.

Speaker 1 So,

Speaker 1 okay, let me just get this straight. So, it's been for sale for five years, but now everyone's panicking over Nick Fuentes and Marjorie Taylor Green and whatever.

Speaker 1 And so, now we're going to get Barry Weiss

Speaker 1 because she's a Jew and

Speaker 1 she's a propagandist for Israel. This makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 1 Is Barry fanatically pro-Israel?

Speaker 1 Is she Jewish

Speaker 1 Barry's totally Jewish, and her main cause is Israel. I didn't know that.
No, Barry is.

Speaker 7 You wind Barry up, and she spouts pro-Israel propaganda.

Speaker 1 So first she was a great journalist. Now she just spouts propaganda.
Okay.

Speaker 7 She grew up in an Orthodox Jewish household. She, you know, is she's not Orthodox now.
She's married to a woman, obviously, but she's still very Jewish, very pro-Israel.

Speaker 1 Wait, wait, stop.

Speaker 3 She's married to a woman, and then he throws in the word obviously.

Speaker 3 He says she's married to a woman, obviously. Well, it's not obvious to me.

Speaker 1 Well, I think, I think, let me listen again.

Speaker 7 She grew up in an Orthodox Jewish household. She, you know, is she's not Orthodox now.
She's married to a woman, obviously.

Speaker 1 But she's. I think it obviously points back to not being Orthodox.

Speaker 3 Oh, so if you're not an Orthodox Jew, you're a gay woman? Is that what he's saying?

Speaker 1 What is he implying? Well, I think he's implying that you can't be Orthodox if you're gay.

Speaker 3 No, I don't know.

Speaker 1 It just seemed too odd but you can pass it off well it's the pot calling the kettle black here i mean come on is this what's this well there's that yes that's true this is the gays and the lesbians at war she grew up in an orthodox gay battle yeah he was household she

Speaker 1 all i can keep hearing is why did it have to be a gay woman this could have been a gay man i could have done this you know is yeah i think that he definitely is thinking that he should be the if anybody yes because because he's a straight shooter you see not orthodox now she's married to a woman obviously but she's still very Jewish, very pro-Israel.

Speaker 7 The free press, pro-Israel, too. That's part of what David Ellison likes about her.
By the way, it wasn't like Israel was owned previously by Palestinians or Muslims.

Speaker 7 It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also was Jewish.

Speaker 1 Israel was owned by Sherry Redstone. That's interesting.

Speaker 1 Did you hear that?

Speaker 3 I think he's talking. His brain is going so fast and he's talking so fast that he's running things together oddly.

Speaker 1 Kind of funny, though. Play it again.
Play it again.

Speaker 7 That's part of what David Ellison likes about her. By the way, it wasn't like Israel was owned previously by Palestinians or Muslims.
It was owned by Sherry Redstone.

Speaker 1 Just so you know, people, Israel was owned by Sherry Redstone. And now

Speaker 1 Larry Ellison wants to own Israel because he loves Israel. I mean,

Speaker 1 that's just what he said.

Speaker 7 By the way, it wasn't like Israel was owned previously by Palestinians or Muslims. It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also was Jewish the heir to the doctor.

Speaker 1 How could PBD not catch that and say, you mean Paramount, right? Not Israel?

Speaker 3 Because he's talking such a rapid clip.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he's doing a Ben Shapiro on us now.

Speaker 3 He's doing a Ben Shapiro.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 he's delusional poor PBD with

Speaker 3 so much stuff that is his head spinning.

Speaker 1 All PBD wants to do is sell shoes, man. Just get to it, Glenn.
I want to sell my shoes, baby.

Speaker 7 Evi Palestinians are Muslims. It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also was Jewish, the heir to the daughter of Summer Redstone, who was also very pro-Israel.

Speaker 3 In fact, did he say summer?

Speaker 1 Let's listen again.

Speaker 7 By Palestinians or Muslims. It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also was Jewish, the heir to the daughter of Summer Redstone, who was summer.

Speaker 1 Summer. Summer's Eve.
Summer. Summer.
Summer Redstone. Summer Redstone, a transsexual woman.

Speaker 3 Summer. His name was Sumner.

Speaker 3 Sumner.

Speaker 1 All right, let's keep going.

Speaker 7 He was also very pro-Israel. In fact,

Speaker 7 Sherry Redstone, the previous owner of Paramount CBS, said the reason she decided to sell Paramount CBS is because after October 7th, she lost interest in journalism and she only wants to devote herself to Israel.

Speaker 1 Bull crap. She was selling it for years before October 7th.
That's just not true.

Speaker 1 I mean, did we not establish this already?

Speaker 3 He's just making it up now.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 1 That's the point of the clips. We'll finish this.

Speaker 3 And this is where you have the problem with the Valutaine Boys:

Speaker 3 it's a team of people. It's not just, you know, patrick yeah so

Speaker 3 this should have been called out

Speaker 1 somebody should have called it out but it's it's going so fast you know it's like hitting you in the face with a wet salmon

Speaker 1 it's possible that even if he was right now with us doing this bid of his we couldn't catch it it was just too much well i heard the the sherry owns israel right away the first time but and while i was watching so it was up anyway let's go and she only wants to devote herself to israel so it's not exactly like it was a hotbed of palestinian activism before, but now they're taking over that.

Speaker 7 He also wants to buy Warner Brothers, which owns Discovery and CNN. So CNN could also be under the control of David Ellison.

Speaker 1 Oh, wow. Another ratings bonanza.

Speaker 1 The Jews are so smart. They're going to buy up all the media nobody's watching.
We'll control it all. And maybe we should get to something on the internet.

Speaker 7 And in this deal that Trump engineered, Larry Ellison is one of the major players in the consortium that just took over TikTok.

Speaker 7 Even though nobody watches CBS, obviously, huge numbers of people get their news from TikTok.

Speaker 1 Oh, okay. So now here we are.

Speaker 3 Dude, he's all over the map.

Speaker 3 He's like a drunk driver.

Speaker 1 He's all over the road.

Speaker 3 He's lost it.

Speaker 1 So now

Speaker 1 we go to the TikTok bit. This is the last clip.
The TikTok bit, which I am still convinced,

Speaker 1 based upon the money that was flowing that we saw, based upon the Republican who introduced the bill that TikTok, the problem with TikTok was not because of China.

Speaker 1 The problem with TikTok is they were eating Google and Meta's lunch. They were gobbling up billions and billions of dollars a quarter in advertising.

Speaker 1 And I think you agree with me.

Speaker 1 We know it had nothing to do with spying. That's bull crap.

Speaker 3 Yeah, what would be the point? You can spy a million different ways.

Speaker 1 So, no, no, no. Now you have to understand it wasn't China either.
Uh-uh. It was the Jews.
The ADL was a major.

Speaker 1 Wait, you missed it.

Speaker 1 Yes, listen.

Speaker 3 You said you gave me the

Speaker 3 punchline before the joke, but

Speaker 3 I already see how the joke would develop.

Speaker 7 The ADL was a major advocating shutting down TikTok. But you know, this is the whole important about TikTok.
Trump was the one who originally proposed shutting TikTok.

Speaker 7 The argument was because of the influence of China. It went nowhere.
It didn't get anywhere near the votes. No one wanted to close TikTok.

Speaker 7 The only reason why the TikTok ban ended up succeeding, Biden and White House got on board with it, was after October 7th, Democrats became convinced that a major reason why American young people were turning against Israel was because there was too much pro-Palestinian content permitted on TikTok.

Speaker 7 Wait a minute.

Speaker 1 So now

Speaker 1 the Democrat Party who promoted all of the pro-Palestine stuff, now they were the ones that didn't want TikTok that wanted TikTok shut down because

Speaker 1 of the Jews? Really?

Speaker 3 Hey, especially since we know that Biden was no friend of Israel and actually kind of him and Netanyahu, if Biden was a younger man, he would have taken him behind the barn and beaten him up.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 3 So this is bullcrap.

Speaker 7 Israel was because there was too much pro-Palestinian content permitted on TikTok. The sponsors of the TikTok ban will say that's the reason it finally passed.
Biden got behind it.

Speaker 7 The ADL demanded TikTok be closed or forced to sale to it.

Speaker 7 So they forced a sale to it and it ended up in the hands of Larry Ellison, who now controls CBS, now controls, is about to control CNN and also TikTok along with others.

Speaker 1 The Jews control the media that no one cares about. This is amazing.
And the only thing I can think of,

Speaker 1 because why is Glenn doing this? Because he wants to get on this hot train, baby. He wants to get on the hot Nick train or something.

Speaker 1 It's just ridiculous. This is very disappointing.
I like Glenn Greenwald in general.

Speaker 3 It might just be simple.

Speaker 3 It might be a jealousy because

Speaker 3 I think you're from the very beginning. I think you're right about his

Speaker 3 just being galled by the $150 million deal for Barry's operation, which I still believe is bullshit.

Speaker 1 I know you do. I know you do.

Speaker 3 Because I've seen these deals happen where you see these guys that go. And

Speaker 3 I've never been in the room, but I can just imagine I'm going to sell. Adam, I'm going to sell you my Dvorak website.

Speaker 1 Only if you have the password and you're

Speaker 3 and you're going to say okay I it's what do you what's it worth I said it's worth it I don't know it's not really I'll take a hundred grand for it okay awesome and then you'll say okay that sounds reasonable and then I say but but but but but we're gonna have to make an announcement that you paid me 50 million

Speaker 1 yes and then when you give me the password I'll actually give you the hundred thousand that

Speaker 3 or if you you might even renegue on that probably but but the point is is that what's these announced prices? And with the giant corporation,

Speaker 3 which you're not and I'm not, but with the giant corporation, let's say Disney, you can hide that phony baloney number anywhere in the books. Good bookkeepers can take care of that.

Speaker 3 And nobody could ever track it down. Say, hey, wait a minute, you guys didn't really pay that.
I can't find it.

Speaker 1 I didn't clip it, but in the beginning, they're talking about the 150 million. And Glenn is going, oh, yeah, no, it closed.
It closed. It's done.
It's a done deal. It's done.
Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 No, she got 100.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I'm always surprised by the number of people, and I know a few of them that supposedly did these,

Speaker 3 you know, $100 million deals, and they're driving around an old Volvo, and they got no money. How does that happen?

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, you're still driving Alexis from 1970.

Speaker 3 I have a 20-year-old car that I drive because

Speaker 3 I just, that's all I can afford.

Speaker 1 Exactly.

Speaker 1 Exactly.

Speaker 3 Yeah, so people should donate to the show. Come and get a new car.

Speaker 1 Now, I like my car. You love your car.

Speaker 1 The dashboard don't crack, baby. You love that car.

Speaker 3 In fact, I have the older version of the car that

Speaker 3 it's almost, I don't know, it's from 93.

Speaker 3 So it is, although it's kind of not being used,

Speaker 3 but there's not one bulb in the entire car in all those years that it's ever burned out. No headlight, no tail light.
I know. No interior lamp.

Speaker 1 I know. It's amazing.

Speaker 3 It just tells you something. It tells you that everything's a scam.

Speaker 1 But in 20 years, you probably had 50 computers.

Speaker 3 And let me tell you another thing, since I'm on it. I have, when the LED lights first came out, there was some company producing it, and you heard, well, they're going to last forever.

Speaker 1 So bullcrap.

Speaker 3 At least 20 years. Yeah, bullcrap you say.

Speaker 3 20 years ago I bought a light bulb for the porch the front porch and it does get turned on and off that light bulb which was an American-made LED light bulb that cost me like 25 bucks for this they're very expensive That light bulb is still working every single Chinese LED lamp I've bought has burned out blowed up or started to flash or flicker.

Speaker 3 Yeah, this is bull crap. These last

Speaker 3 LED light should last forever.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, when we bought this house, there was a pool light, LED, and it went out, and it's been impossible to replace.

Speaker 1 Do I just have a dark hole at night? Dark hole.

Speaker 1 You can't replace it. It's horrible.

Speaker 3 The point is that there's a scam going on.

Speaker 1 Well, it's called planned obsolescence. Those things are time to go out, so you buy more stuff from China.
Of course. The same thing with your light bulbs, actually.

Speaker 1 OS RAM and Philips and

Speaker 1 who's the American GE?

Speaker 3 Well, actually, that brings me to another complaint, if you don't mind me moaning and grunting on the show. I am here for you.

Speaker 3 So there used to be a bulb that Philips came out with, and then there was also these little devices you could buy. This was 30 years ago.

Speaker 3 The bulb had a computer in it, a little chip, that if it was left on for more than 10 minutes, it would just automatically turn itself off.

Speaker 3 And it also had a way of turning itself on that was gentle to the filament.

Speaker 3 I still have one of those bulbs. They were called turtle bulbs or something.
They had some name, and they had a funny shape. And nobody even knows about them anymore.
But I had one of those bulbs.

Speaker 3 I have it in a downstairs closet.

Speaker 3 It's been there for 20 years and it still works.

Speaker 3 They had to take those off the market because you buy one, it lasts forever. They can't, oh, no, no, we can't have a business like that.

Speaker 1 Yes, well, you know, the light bulb conspiracy is real.

Speaker 1 That was a real consortium where they all determined how many hours a light bulb should last, and they were all in collusion with it.

Speaker 3 Yeah, they got the exact right type of tungsten filament that had just the right number of flaws.

Speaker 1 So it turned on and offered it.

Speaker 1 I'm looking up the turtle bulb, you said.

Speaker 3 I think it was, I don't remember the actual name, it just comes to mind now.

Speaker 1 Because every search engine,

Speaker 1 every AI is talking about a special bulb for turtles.

Speaker 3 No.

Speaker 3 The AI won't find it either.

Speaker 1 Turtle-safe bulbs for wildlife.

Speaker 3 Yeah, it's just AI is useless in some of these. Pretty much.

Speaker 3 Yeah, pretty much. I had, for example, Brunetti and I got into a discussion about this because he's a big AI nut.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 he's wired this guy. He's got everything's hooked to his phone.
He's got robots all over the place.

Speaker 1 It's unbelievable. Oh, So, goodness.
He's

Speaker 1 prime Optimus buyer. Yeah.

Speaker 3 I told him, hey, yeah,

Speaker 3 find a recipe. The AI is so good, it can't cook boss money.
It can't find a recipe for Mamma's.

Speaker 3 And he went and went and he found truth. He went to Jet Grock.
He went and made a,

Speaker 3 he's obsessive, so he did this.

Speaker 1 And so he came up with all these all wrong.

Speaker 1 Yes. Of course.

Speaker 1 It's not in the corpus. John C.
Dvorak

Speaker 1 is corpus free.

Speaker 1 If you want John C. Dvorak, you got to come here for the real deal.
You can't get it in the corpus.

Speaker 1 That's why anyway, I got it. We love you.
We love you. All right.

Speaker 1 So, yes, where do you want to go now?

Speaker 3 Well, we could go to the Fuentes material if you want.

Speaker 3 It's very entertaining, but it's something we use. We've tried to broach on this show a number of times, which is the Zeds, the young people, and porn and their inability to have

Speaker 1 normal relationships with each other. Yes.

Speaker 3 So I have a bunch of clips because Fuentes discussed this with Tucker, and I thought it was quite revealing. It also revealed some stuff about Tucker.

Speaker 3 Tucker had, I noticed this, I don't watch him that much, but I mean, I like, we both, I think, agree that he's a great guy in terms of a professional interviewer, and he's really talented.

Speaker 1 Absolutely.

Speaker 3 And he's just slick in his own way.

Speaker 3 But he has a bunch of,

Speaker 3 I think he has these little subtle grudges against people and things, and he just brings things in

Speaker 3 that he shouldn't. And just to give people the needle,

Speaker 3 he might be a mean guy.

Speaker 1 Oh, interesting.

Speaker 3 I just think he just might be.

Speaker 3 First, let's start off. This is not part of the porn thing.
This is something I caught earlier in his interview that I thought was interesting because it was, it was,

Speaker 3 this is the Fuentes Charlie Kirk info. This is the one where they bring in Charlie Kirk and

Speaker 3 I never I never knew this little de factoid. Tucker didn't either.
And I don't know if you did. Let's play.

Speaker 1 Patient, decent man.

Speaker 8 Yes. And yeah.
So whatever their perception of him was, to see him get his

Speaker 8 face blown up in front of everybody like that. And

Speaker 8 the first reaction of someone in the crowd who is present, some guy with the beard jumps up and celebrates. And did you see this? No.
Some liberal kid in the audience jumps up and says, all right.

Speaker 1 I literally can't handle it. I'm so upset by it.
I haven't looked at anything.

Speaker 8 It's disgusting. And I saw that and said, yeah, like

Speaker 8 there's no putting the genie back in the lamp here.

Speaker 3 Okay, so I saw the clip of the shooting because some people insisted that they look at it.

Speaker 3 I never saw this part of it.

Speaker 3 It was cut. I didn't know this.

Speaker 3 Did you see the clip and it had to see some maniac jump up and cheer?

Speaker 1 No. I have not seen that.
I'm sure Candace Owens has it.

Speaker 3 Yeah, well, that's probably true.

Speaker 1 I just, it was just a known fact to me. Yeah, but I mean, there's so much.
It's like, and this guy was calm and this guy was filming and that guy was not talking about all that

Speaker 3 conspiracy stuff.

Speaker 1 I just thought that was Well, like some guy jumping up and celebrating isn't conspiratorial?

Speaker 1 No, I'm just saying.

Speaker 3 There's a guy who jumps up and I just didn't know that happened. It's just sick.

Speaker 1 It's sick. Yeah, well, someone's put the link in the troll room.
I want to see it.

Speaker 3 If it's true. I don't want to see it.

Speaker 1 So here we are in the troll room. It's not for you.
It's for me.

Speaker 3 So if they have it, I mean,

Speaker 3 it may be obscure. So they go on a tangent.

Speaker 3 There's a second tangent I didn't record or put in here, which I might do, where you talk about marriage and the failure of the society to put men and women together.

Speaker 3 And Fuentes has a great rant about liberal women, why nobody wants them, and they're all fat.

Speaker 1 It's quite amusing. It's quite funny.
They're all fat.

Speaker 3 They're all fat.

Speaker 3 And so here he is on porn. Now they started talking about porn, and I thought this would be worth exploring.

Speaker 1 What is porn exactly? Like, describe.

Speaker 1 I remember listening to this going, what?

Speaker 1 What is your porn? I never heard of it. What is your question here? What is porn? What is porn exactly? Like, describe how available is porn.
What is it? Oh, please.

Speaker 1 Porn is, but, like.

Speaker 3 Oh, please.

Speaker 1 So Tucker's now telling us that he, how do I get it? How do I ask you?

Speaker 3 This is the kind of question. This is what I...
I don't like doing this, by the way.

Speaker 3 People do interviews like this, and I know guys who do interviews like this where you play the dummy when you know,

Speaker 1 well, that's all of Tucker's questions are asked this way with the answer clearly in it. And then when he gets the answer he wants, he goes, Oh, wow, wow, wow.
Yes,

Speaker 3 this bothers me.

Speaker 1 I just didn't know this.

Speaker 1 This bothers me. Yeah.
You said it's a huge factor in the lives of young men and a bad factor. Why?

Speaker 8 Well, this is another thing where

Speaker 8 it's reality distortion.

Speaker 8 That's kind of the theme.

Speaker 8 Just like psychedelics distort reality, just like a kind of internet society is a form of delusion, so is porn in the sense that, you know, a lot of people maybe don't realize, and we talked about this a little bit, people are getting turned on to porn when they're like 10 years old.

Speaker 8 When you are going through puberty, when you're developing your sexual faculties,

Speaker 8 how could you stay away from that? Every kid has a phone, every kid has an iPad, and every iPad and phone is, if you, you know, if you know what it is, loaded up with porn.

Speaker 8 And it's infinite, and it's ubiquitous, and it's, you can get every kind of it you want, whenever you want. It's in your pocket.

Speaker 8 And so something that is almost never talked about is that this is a generation that's totally sexually dysfunctional, I think, because of pornography. And some people are able to cope with it.

Speaker 8 Some people don't have a problem. But I think a lot of people, and maybe even a small minority, have a serious problem with it.

Speaker 1 And the problem is people sexually dysfunctional.

Speaker 8 I think that it's impossible for a real woman to compete with the availability and the novelty of pornography. A real woman,

Speaker 8 you know, like without getting graphic, is she's only one person

Speaker 8 and,

Speaker 8 you know, she's... Maybe she wants to do something sexual.
Maybe she doesn't. Porn is, you could have a hundred different women in one sitting.

Speaker 1 Okay, I agree with Fuentes here.

Speaker 3 Yes, I do. I agree with him generally in the whole thing, and it's something that

Speaker 3 needs discussion. And even Tucker felt that he should have done a show on this.

Speaker 1 If I can just interject, we had a men's breakfast at church

Speaker 1 yesterday.

Speaker 1 And I've been to a lot of these. And it's, you know, men get together, we talk, we talk about stuff.

Speaker 1 Probably the number one addiction men talk about that

Speaker 1 they've kicked or are trying to kick is pornography. And these are grown men

Speaker 1 of all different ages, but it's the number one thing that's always like, I had a real porn addiction.

Speaker 1 It's rampant.

Speaker 3 It doesn't surprise me. And

Speaker 3 people keep talking about when did this begin? Because it used to be illegal.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 I'm going to tell you when it began. Clinton.

Speaker 1 Yes,

Speaker 1 with

Speaker 1 Lewinsky, and he made it over. No, no, no.

Speaker 3 Lewinsky, that was just going on. Clinton,

Speaker 3 Clinton, during his, and the reason I remember this is because this is the era when Clinton was in office was the roaring 90s. This was the best time you'd had in your life.
It was fantastic.

Speaker 3 Connie was cooking. Money was flying all over the place.

Speaker 1 We had limos. We had money in brown paper bags.
It was great.

Speaker 3 Hey, you want to go for a ride in my jet?

Speaker 1 Yeah, exactly. Good times.

Speaker 3 So, so this was the period that I had just in the late 80s. I had finished this telecom book.

Speaker 1 Ah, big fat book.

Speaker 1 Bestseller, that's right.

Speaker 3 And it sold a quarter of a million books. It was pretty successful.
And

Speaker 3 I remember that era of the BBSs, and there was a guy who was very famous

Speaker 3 in the mid, it was probably maybe early to mid 80s, this is probably around 84 maybe,

Speaker 3 with some of the early

Speaker 3 software that you could get that was running on DOS. You could download stuff and you could go through these BBSs.
That's when people had all these lines.

Speaker 3 And there was this very famous guy who had porn, had a porn site. There were these porn sites, and they were all

Speaker 3 a mixture of mediocre and sometimes interesting porn, if you wanted to look at him. But I knew this one guy in particular who I was one of a customer of mine.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 3 just

Speaker 3 in the end of the Bush administration, I think it was the Bush administration.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 3 He got at the H.W. Bush administration.
He got arrested, thrown in jail, the slammer for porn because he had online porn. He was arrested and jailed.

Speaker 3 And I remember this. Clinton came into office, and this is why I remember that was Clinton.

Speaker 1 Clinton relaxed all the restrictions on porn.

Speaker 3 He relaxed all these rules and laws.

Speaker 3 And next thing you know, these porn sites were cropping up all over the place, and it evolved into what it is today, which is a ludicrous situation of wall-to-wall porn everywhere you go.

Speaker 3 You can go on any search engine and find anything you want.

Speaker 1 You can find it on X?

Speaker 3 I haven't seen it on X, but it wouldn't surprise me.

Speaker 1 Well, it doesn't show up in the search, but there's tons of direct links on like Reddit.

Speaker 3 I'm not surprised by any of it.

Speaker 3 What I'm surprised with is there's not as many street walkers as you'd expect. But this is ridiculous, and it all stems from Clinton.

Speaker 3 And people never want to trace it to him or blame him, but he's the responsible party.

Speaker 1 So two comments. One,

Speaker 1 early on the internet, we had Usenet. I just need to bring it up from time to time.
And alt.binaries.

Speaker 1 Fill in the blank.fill in the blank. You could get anything.
Of course, it would download 20 parts and it took all night. And then

Speaker 1 you have to have a program to assemble all those bits. And then later we had websites, and it would take one hour to download a one-megabyte picture.

Speaker 1 And you could just see it click line by line, click, click, click, click.

Speaker 1 Now, as a part of that.

Speaker 3 Well, you were on an awfully slow connection.

Speaker 1 No, I had a website.

Speaker 3 The websites came in in 93.

Speaker 1 Well, hold on. Hold on.

Speaker 1 But I'm... No, baby.
I'm talking like

Speaker 1 89. I had a 56K frame relay.

Speaker 3 There were still websites in 89.

Speaker 1 I'm trying to think now. Maybe it was 99.

Speaker 3 Websites were invented in 92. 92.
Okay, 99. And then

Speaker 3 they became, then the Mosaic browser came in in 93, and that's when they became popular.

Speaker 1 I had a 56K frame relay at the house.

Speaker 3 That should kick ass.

Speaker 1 They did not kick ass. I'm telling you, it took a long time.

Speaker 3 Well, in 89, anyway.

Speaker 1 Anyway, the other thing is that once we got so the deregulation that was interesting, which I think was mainly during Clinton, I think, you have to correct me on this.

Speaker 1 One is there was no tax on internet sales. That was to juice the machine, which I think was a really good idea.

Speaker 3 It was all during the 90s. This is all Clinton.

Speaker 1 It was a good idea because that really

Speaker 1 spawned the use of e-commerce. Because at that time, people were like, who would ever put their credit card on the internet?

Speaker 1 Okay, so we knew that was going to change. And then

Speaker 3 pretty soon, pretty soon.

Speaker 3 I have to go back to another story because I wrote a column about this ludicrous history.

Speaker 1 Gen Zetters, Gen Zetters, you're here for this, okay? This is the kind of history you didn't get this in school, okay?

Speaker 3 So in the early 90s, actually, probably

Speaker 3 again around 93,

Speaker 3 when the web was just evolving, there was

Speaker 3 this kind of a meme. It was the way you, no, you do not put your card on, you never put your card on the internet.

Speaker 3 You call, you use the 800 number. So there's all these 800 numbers.
You'd call the number.

Speaker 3 And so I found out from somebody that worked the 800 number bank

Speaker 3 that you call and you give your credit card number, they'd bring up a website

Speaker 3 and they'd put your card number into the website anyway.

Speaker 1 Hold on one second.

Speaker 9 Boomer talk on the eights.

Speaker 1 Just so you know, this boomer talk on the eights, everybody.

Speaker 3 Yes, we have lots of these stories. Yes.

Speaker 1 So, and the other thing, but this came later, was, and that was the

Speaker 1 uh, that was section

Speaker 1 320. Is it 320?

Speaker 3 I don't know. 230.

Speaker 1 I'm sorry. Section 230.
And that was to protect all of the providers of internet services. And that way we got UGC.

Speaker 3 Yeah. The rationale for that was: hey, it's like a bulletin board in the store.

Speaker 1 Yes, yes. UGC.

Speaker 3 It's a bulletin board in the store. So if you pin something up on the bulletin board, the store, the store's not responsible

Speaker 3 for something you pin there.

Speaker 1 And so there was a lot of user-generated

Speaker 1 porn, UGP, actually.

Speaker 1 A lot. And that's what you porn.

Speaker 1 Is it no, porn tube, whatever.

Speaker 1 That's kind of how they played that. And then later, you know, we got exceptions in Section 230.
All kinds of things are happening, all under the guise of, oh, porn. But you're right.

Speaker 1 Porn is everywhere. It's rampant.
And it's on all the websites. I mean, it's on all, it's on Facebook.
It's on

Speaker 1 Instagram,

Speaker 1 thank you, all platforms. It is everywhere.
You can't find it in the search,

Speaker 1 but it's

Speaker 1 no, no, it's yeah, the search specifically they delist all that stuff, and you know, when they find it, there's a lot of there's more than you can imagine on searches.

Speaker 1 I'm not gonna go into it, I'm not gonna die. I don't know what

Speaker 1 I'm watching C-SPAN, all right? I don't know what you're doing with your time, but I come here to the show prepared.

Speaker 3 I'm doing experiments,

Speaker 3 so here we go with Fuentes.

Speaker 3 I think that was clip one. Yes.

Speaker 1 Okay. We're finally at clip two.

Speaker 3 Here we go.

Speaker 8 That whatever niche or idiosyncratic thing a person might be into, it's there.

Speaker 8 And so I think that novelty combined with that availability, it makes it so that, you know, when you think about courting a woman, juice isn't worth the squeeze.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Well, then this is eventually the punchline to this, I'm sure, is going to be sock hops.
I mean, that has to be the punchline.

Speaker 3 Well, I mean, that would be always what I'm going to bring up. But this juice isn't worth the squeeze, he says.
Now, this is a bad attitude by the Zeds. Women aren't

Speaker 3 around.

Speaker 3 They're not floating around the world.

Speaker 3 I wish we had more women listeners, but they're not floating around as sex toys.

Speaker 3 I mean, yeah, maybe there's one or two that like to think of themselves that way, but there's more to it than that.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 3 I mean, they provide,

Speaker 1 they're useful people and they come in handy with a minute with a dumb guys. They're good as partners in life.
It's amazing how that works. It's like they were planned.

Speaker 1 They're a perfect, they're a perfect compliment. Companions.
Yes.

Speaker 1 It's like someone planned it. It's amazing.

Speaker 3 Yeah, it's unbelievable. But he sees it that way.

Speaker 3 He's very dis, which bothers me a little bit because he's he's Zed dissociated. I don't have it in these clips, but he talks about women in a way where they're,

Speaker 3 he doesn't really,

Speaker 3 it's brought up when

Speaker 3 he, when Tucker asks him if he's ever lived with a woman, he says no.

Speaker 3 And that

Speaker 1 is

Speaker 1 at the end,

Speaker 3 I don't want to give the whole thing away, but

Speaker 3 the way I see it is that he is one of those guys. And it's always reminded, and I always tell,

Speaker 3 you know, I've told Mimi, I tell everyone I know the story.

Speaker 3 I was at, when I was at,

Speaker 3 it was after I graduated from Cal, but I was still going to the football games.

Speaker 3 And I'd go into the, I'd get, I had a way of getting, I always like to be in the card section, by the way, for people who know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 1 The card section?

Speaker 3 Oh, yeah, you always want to be in the card section.

Speaker 1 Can you just tell me briefly what the card section is for those who don't know?

Speaker 3 It's a section right in the middle of the field between the 40-yard lines on both sides. And

Speaker 3 you sit there as a student, or if you can get in there, not a student, and you have a deck of cards, these large cards, cards, they're like 15 by 15. I don't know what the size is anymore.
And

Speaker 3 there's an instruction sheet, and there's somebody down at the bottom telling you which cards to hold up.

Speaker 3 And you hold up the card A and you hold it up, and the guy next to you has this, you know, they all have different cards, and it forms the letter C or oh, okay, so it'll spend a message,

Speaker 3 fuck you,

Speaker 3 to the other team. The Stanford games would always have some obscenity.

Speaker 3 And the card section is always fun because you get something to do during the halftime.

Speaker 3 But I'm walking up to go get something to drink up the aisle, and there's this guy, and he's sitting there, and he's kind of an old man.

Speaker 3 He's in a trench coat, he's hunched over, he's got a little TV set

Speaker 3 in his hands, he's got some earphones on, he's disheveled. He looks, and I look at him, and it dawned on me that this was an old fart that never had a woman in his life.

Speaker 3 There's no way you can get to that point

Speaker 3 with any female in the vicinity.

Speaker 1 This is rather interesting because when I was listening to this interview,

Speaker 1 the incel came to mind

Speaker 1 with Fuentes.

Speaker 3 I see a little bit of that. There's no doubt about it.
But

Speaker 3 he's going to be this guy.

Speaker 1 Yeah, one day he'll be that guy.

Speaker 3 He's going to be this guy. And that guy, it was, as soon as I saw him and it dawned on me what this guy was, it scared the crap out of me.
I said, this could happen to anybody.

Speaker 1 Be careful, kids.

Speaker 1 Jen Zed.

Speaker 3 Go find yourself.

Speaker 1 Gen Zed. Yes.
This is very important.

Speaker 3 And it brings to mind, and I don't want to belabor this, but more boomer talk, but it brings to mind the old saying that behind every successful man, there's a woman telling him he's wrong.

Speaker 3 And that old joke, I always thought was kind of a joke. But then over time, it's dawned dawned on me.

Speaker 1 It's absolutely true.

Speaker 3 Even if you're successful, there's a woman telling you you're wrong. She might not be right.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 1 bingo. You nailed it.
You nailed it. Absolutely.
I have one of those. I love her.
For that, that's one of the many reasons. If anyone can give me crap, it's Tina Curry.

Speaker 3 And women are notorious for the following comment.

Speaker 3 You're not going to wear that, are you?

Speaker 1 Oh, that's a daily occurrence. Not another hoodie.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 3 So that's the value. That's more important than juice and squeeze.

Speaker 1 I mean, come on,

Speaker 1 just get over yourself. All right.
Clip three. Yeah.

Speaker 8 And so there's like also a problem of like erectile dysfunction, people that can't enjoy regular sex because it does not compare to the intensity, the novelty, and the availability of porn.

Speaker 8 It's hyper-stimulation.

Speaker 8 And so I think that's sabotaging a lot of normal sexual relationships.

Speaker 1 It seems like it's making a lot of people gay, too. Yeah, and trans.
Do you think that's true?

Speaker 1 100%.

Speaker 1 What is that?

Speaker 8 I think that

Speaker 8 the novelty is a huge part of that. I think that if you are somebody that uses pornography multiple times per day, which many people do.
Actually?

Speaker 1 Oh, absolutely. That's a lot of jerking off.

Speaker 11 It's a huge problem.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 8 And, you know, if you're doing that multiple times a day, every day for years, since you're a kid, well, eventually you get bored and you want to move on to something more extreme.

Speaker 8 And you're kind of, it operates, I think, similar to like a drug. You, you kind of have the same kind of resistance to it that you would to a drug or a tolerance for it.

Speaker 8 And you're always chasing that initial feeling the first time you used it or the first time you saw a certain thing. And I think eventually you just chase more taboo, more transgressive.

Speaker 8 And I think maybe some people are more prone to that than than other people going in his really true direction.

Speaker 1 How Charlie Sheen got AIDS, actually. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Through just being jaded and looking for something more transgressive. That's just a fact.
I took this as a confession from Nick Fuentes.

Speaker 1 I really did.

Speaker 1 And maybe

Speaker 1 he's moved beyond it, but that's pretty detailed. And man, I think it's spot on.
Because I've seen this over and over again with young men who have never been with a woman.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 before you know it,

Speaker 1 they got black lipstick and black nail polish. Yes, yes.

Speaker 3 That clip also ended with the thing, which is another thing I dislike about Tucker's style.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 3 Where he brings in the

Speaker 3 Charlie Sheen having AIDS.

Speaker 1 But that was unnecessary because that really.

Speaker 3 It was totally unnecessary. There's no reason to drop that little tidbit in there because not everybody knows that.
And why should they know? It's none of anybody's business.

Speaker 1 Well, Charlie Sheen. Charlie Sheen is charging.

Speaker 1 yeah but he just did a whole netflix like four-part documentary about himself so that's why it was yeah but it's still again it's just like why do you bring that in it's it had nothing to do with the conversation okay

Speaker 3 and it was bothersome to me all right onward with uh i think we're on four And there's something, too, about what it does when you look at it.

Speaker 8 Because people don't realize that it is a fundamentally different experience being involved in intercourse versus watching other people have intercourse.

Speaker 8 And I think that actually does something to you.

Speaker 1 Tell me, what do you mean?

Speaker 1 I think that, you know,

Speaker 1 hold on. You know what that reminded me of? Hold on.

Speaker 3 Let me see. I know exactly what you're going to do.

Speaker 1 You know what I'm going to use?

Speaker 1 Here it is. Let's see if I can play it back to back.
Here we go.

Speaker 1 People have intercourse.

Speaker 8 And I think that actually does something to you.

Speaker 1 Tell me, what do you mean?

Speaker 12 Tell me about the sexuality. It's in your DNA.

Speaker 1 Yeah. You knew it, right? It was coming.
You knew that was coming. Oh, yeah.
No, no, too much.

Speaker 8 Watching other people have intercourse. And I think that actually does something to you.

Speaker 1 Tell me, what do you mean?

Speaker 8 I think that, you know, for example, I think Steve Saylor has written about this, that there's multiple kinds of transsexuals.

Speaker 8 And he says that one kind of transsexual is somebody that likes the idea of seeing themselves as a woman. It's auto gynophilia.
Yes.

Speaker 8 And I think that, you know, one of the theories for that is you watch a man having sex with a woman that isn't you so much, you kind of achieve an identity with the woman in like a weird sick way.

Speaker 8 You almost identify with the woman.

Speaker 1 Yeah. And this is, he's right about this.
And this is where the hypno-sissy porn comes from and all this grooming of young men. He's spot on about it.

Speaker 8 And so there's weird things that happen when you're

Speaker 8 watching that and having such strong emotional and sexual experiences with it.

Speaker 1 That's fascinating. I have always been, I've sensed for a long time having had a lot of young male employees mention porn as a problem.

Speaker 1 I mean, the big porn companies give visibility to foreign intel services on the back end. So that means people know what you're looking at.
There's likely video and audio of you watching.

Speaker 1 So that, you know, that's like so, so such a deal killer for me.

Speaker 1 What? That's a deal killer for me. Wait, wait.

Speaker 3 Well, a couple of things here. One,

Speaker 3 how does he know this?

Speaker 1 Well, this is well known. There's one big company that owns it.

Speaker 3 Oh, but he's like right on it.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 3 And that's the deal killer because he thinks they're watching him watch porn.

Speaker 1 That's a deal killer. I'm telling you.

Speaker 3 So the deal killer is that they're going to know he's watching porn.

Speaker 1 Well, because you're going to have video advice.

Speaker 1 blackmail blackmail yes yes and it's probably because he got a camera pointed at his hey it's probably Israel baby I'm telling you they're doing it all Mossad

Speaker 1 so not to belabor the point

Speaker 1 not to belabor the point

Speaker 1 but when I see young men and and and young women and I'm talking like teens And they don't have their parents. It's around here.

Speaker 1 This is lovely. They don't have phones, so there's just no access to it.
And it's like, it's so beautiful to see.

Speaker 1 You got these young men, they're playing guitar in the worship team, which is Christian for band.

Speaker 1 And, you know, and the girls like swooning, and then they do have dances and they have interactions together. And that's why you see Gen Zers who are in their mid-20s,

Speaker 1 they got their crap together. And they have a girlfriend, boyfriend, married,

Speaker 1 they're getting their family underway. Saving, saving our country, as far as I'm concerned.
And it starts with the stupid phone, John. It really does.
Put it in the drawer, people.

Speaker 1 Follow Uncle John's advice.

Speaker 3 But yes. It's not as easy as it looks.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 3 I mean, because I talk to people and they all talk a big game about putting it in the drawer and they never do it. No, it's hard.

Speaker 3 And actually, even though I wasn't a big heavy phone user, when I did it, I noticed it took about two months. Wow.
for me to get over it not having the phone with me all the time. So I go, well,

Speaker 3 what if I get a flat tire?

Speaker 3 You know, this sort of thing.

Speaker 1 How many flat tires have you had since you put the phone in the drawer?

Speaker 3 How many flat tires have I had since I've owned a Lexus?

Speaker 1 None.

Speaker 3 Yeah, of course. In 30 years, I mean, when I was a kid, we used to have flat tires all the time.
Yes. It was a known problem.

Speaker 3 They don't even give you a tire

Speaker 3 anymore.

Speaker 1 If you got a donut tire.

Speaker 3 Tires don't go.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 3 And with the current Lexus, they give you run flats. Yeah.
And they run for 50 miles flat.

Speaker 1 Only at 50 miles an hour, though. You can't go over 50 or they start to smoke.

Speaker 3 Well, I

Speaker 3 haven't had the hit problem, so I'm not.

Speaker 1 We got to be careful with the run flat. So around what? Round five? Five.
Here we go.

Speaker 1 I'm not a huge expert on the topic, but I have always sensed this was a huge deal, but I've always been too embarrassed to do a show on it.

Speaker 1 But it sounds like you're describing something that's everywhere that affects everybody. And that is, do you think it's related to the

Speaker 1 huge decline in like actual sex and relationships and marriage screwed up dating?

Speaker 1 He knows the answer to this question. This is what I don't like.
He knows the answer. Oh, Nick Fuentes, you're an expert on porn.
Do you think

Speaker 1 that's a good thing?

Speaker 3 I really don't like that style of interview. No.

Speaker 1 Derives in part from porn, do you think?

Speaker 8 I think it's a huge part of it. It's a huge factor.

Speaker 1 Wait, he's going to go, really? Really? Oh, really? That's so interesting.

Speaker 8 And it's even on the other side, too. It's become so destigmatized for women to actually participate in porn.

Speaker 8 People don't even recognize that OnlyFans is a whole separate category.

Speaker 8 It's an innovation in the realm of pornography because you have what everyone considers, what everyone knows as porn, which is like videos of porn stars, like dedicated career sex workers having sex.

Speaker 8 in a relatively controlled environment or something like that. But then you get OnlyFans, which is like Patreon for nudes or sex.

Speaker 8 And basically, there's now a very large subculture, much larger than people want to admit, of women who, the moment they turn 18, that is what they do is they make an OnlyFans account and they become an amateur porn star.

Speaker 8 And it is completely casual, you know, because you could say that maybe 10 years ago, even at the heyday of internet porn, to be in porn, you got to be a porn star.

Speaker 8 Like that's your life and that's your career and that's who you are.

Speaker 8 And it's very shameful with only fans it's like um it's like having a tick tock it's like here's my link tree here's my instagram account here's my facebook account here's my youtube and here's my only fans oh i give you no agenda um

Speaker 1 um evidence exhibit a bobby eden

Speaker 1 from 15 years ago she was telling us how men would give her their password to their bank account, take whatever you want,

Speaker 1 would just shower her with gifts continuously. And she was just a quote-unquote webcam girl.
Yeah.

Speaker 3 Pre-OnlyFans.

Speaker 3 The amount of money that's going, well, I know for a fact because

Speaker 3 Alex,

Speaker 3 Alexis Brunetti's wife is a

Speaker 3 copyright attorney.

Speaker 1 Oh, I thought she was OnlyFans girl.

Speaker 3 No, she's a copyright attorney, and she has a client who's an OnlyFans a girl.

Speaker 1 Oh, and make him bank.

Speaker 3 10 mil.

Speaker 1 Wow.

Speaker 1 Exit strategy.

Speaker 3 Well, we probably could with the artificial one if we didn't scare a manga to do it. But the,

Speaker 3 and there's other examples. There was some woman on that.
What's that show where the guys there with all the surrounded by women? It's got some exciting. Oh, girl,

Speaker 1 Girls Gone Wild? No. Oh.
Hello, 80s. Oh, I know what you're talking about.
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 1 Yeah, with the podcast and the women are sitting there, and then they say, oh, yeah, no, I do 100 guys a day and all this stuff. All this stuff.

Speaker 3 And there was one girl on there that made $35 million.

Speaker 3 I don't know if it was total or what,

Speaker 3 but that's what she had. Wow.
$35 mil. And she was moaning and groaning about it

Speaker 3 because she felt humiliated. I don't know what her problem was.

Speaker 1 It's the oldest business in the the book, brother.

Speaker 3 But this is, but it's just like, it's not the problem. Yeah, it might be, but this is just a video feed.
I mean, come on, people.

Speaker 1 Well, geez.

Speaker 1 Okay. Again, I'm happy with the Gen Z who are showing up here

Speaker 1 and looking for worldly advice. And the best part of piece of advice we give them today is stay away from it.
This is a new way of going to. Yeah, well.
Stay away from a lot.

Speaker 3 You can stay away from everything.

Speaker 1 Okay, so I think we'll wrap that clip. You have the last one.

Speaker 3 So now this clip, I find this clip to be fascinating because I kind of think this would be pre-Clinton thinking. And I think it's, it's, you know,

Speaker 3 none of this is going to happen. There has to be other solutions, but I think this is a funny solution.

Speaker 1 Why would any of this be legal?

Speaker 8 I think that,

Speaker 8 well, there's, like you indicated, maybe there's an intelligence benefit to that.

Speaker 8 Maybe there's a political benefit to that.

Speaker 1 I think that why wouldn't you arrest the people who run something like that?

Speaker 8 They should be. If you had a Christian government.

Speaker 1 Or how about just a government that cares about its people? I mean, is Iran a bigger threat or is OnlyFans own? Iran's not turning my daughters to prostitution that I'm aware of. Right.
Right.

Speaker 1 I mean, that seems like one of the worst things that could happen to any society. Oh, absolutely.
So how big is the support for that?

Speaker 1 Like, if a candidate were to come out and say, we ought to arrest the guys who own MindGeek, which is the biggest, I think it's the biggest porn supplier in the world, or the guys who run OnlyFans.

Speaker 1 fans. What would yeah,

Speaker 1 mind geek. That's those guys.

Speaker 3 I never, okay, so Tucker's playing dumb this whole time. I've never heard of MindGeek.

Speaker 1 Oh, we've talked about it on the show.

Speaker 3 Well, even then,

Speaker 3 obviously you lost track of it.

Speaker 1 I did.

Speaker 3 But he wasn't top of mind. So when he said it, I said, wait a minute.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 No, those guys.

Speaker 1 Those guys know. Tucker knows this.

Speaker 3 Tucker knows more than he's letting on, that's for sure. And he'd probably showcase.

Speaker 3 Anyway, let's back back it up and go continue.

Speaker 1 Yeah. And you know who runs MindGeek, don't you? No.
Mossad.

Speaker 1 Right? I mean, that seems like one of the worst things that could happen to any society. Oh, absolutely.
So how big is the support for that?

Speaker 1 Like, if a candidate were to come out and say, we ought to arrest the guys who own MindGeek, which is the biggest, I think it's the biggest porn supplier in the world, or the guys who run OnlyFans, what would the reaction be among, I don't know, people under 50?

Speaker 8 I think there would be broad support for that.

Speaker 1 Really? I do, actually, yes. I hope someone will say that.

Speaker 1 Someone needs to. I hope someone arrests them right away.

Speaker 8 Yeah. That was actually.

Speaker 1 Seizes their assets and puts them in prison.

Speaker 8 Well, seizes

Speaker 8 their bodies and puts them in jail. Yeah.
I mean.

Speaker 1 The owners of that, people who are, I mean, talk about human trafficking.

Speaker 8 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah. I thought we were against human trafficking.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 So you, but you think that young people, because you always think of young people as so liberal, but like, no, they wouldn't think that was crazy?

Speaker 8 No, I think especially among young men, they know it's a problem. It's ruining their lives, and they know it.
So what are the other factors that prevent?

Speaker 1 I'm sorry I called you gay, by the way.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 I think that,

Speaker 1 okay, so first of all, Larry Flint fought his entire life

Speaker 1 to make porn legal. And I believe under the First Amendment, he has a valid point there.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 so that is what everybody is probably just hiding behind. By the way, MindGeek, I think is a Canadian, is owned by Canadians.

Speaker 1 Here it is, ethical capital partners.

Speaker 1 That's a great name. That's funny.

Speaker 3 Ethical capital partners.

Speaker 1 Porn. Yeah, I'm pretty sure that if you want to talk about Epstein-level blackmail, that there's more people

Speaker 1 who are being blackmailed currently in positions of power over porn that someone has entrapped them with than in any other Mossad operation. I really, truly believe that.

Speaker 3 It doesn't sound like it would be that difficult, especially with the only fans.

Speaker 1 In fact, you'll remember.

Speaker 3 Who should be called lonely fans, by the way?

Speaker 1 Well, you remember a former employee of mine who was a friend, Brigham, for a while, until I talked on the show about how he had this fabulous beach house in Malibu and a brand new Ferrari.

Speaker 1 And his whole whole business, he had, you know, what was that, like a real high-end porn,

Speaker 1 like, you know, beautiful models and

Speaker 1 great,

Speaker 1 great cinematography.

Speaker 1 And what they would do is they would wait until someone downloaded it, get their IP address, and then send them a legal notice saying, okay, we're going to sue you, but if you give us $5,000, we won't tell anybody about the lawsuit.

Speaker 1 And he did quite well off of that.

Speaker 1 So imagine what you what kind of power you could you could garner for yourself if you have a similar operation and

Speaker 1 the exact same system, actually. And then you say, well, you know, I'd like you to vote this way.

Speaker 1 And, you know, I'm sure I'm sure there's some a lot of people in

Speaker 1 government.

Speaker 3 Small potatoes comparing to what the guy OnlyFans, the guys who own that operation.

Speaker 1 Yeah, who owns that?

Speaker 3 Small potatoes. Who owns that? I don't know.
Some character.

Speaker 3 They're worth so much money.

Speaker 3 They have to be beyond billionaires by now.

Speaker 1 Oh, I would hope so.

Speaker 1 Let's see. Let's see.

Speaker 1 Anyway,

Speaker 1 it's taken a long time to get the answer to that.

Speaker 3 Well, this is a...

Speaker 3 We could have always just asked.

Speaker 1 I am, but I'm asking her in text. And when you ask her in text, she goes off and scours the entire internet.
Ukrainian American, hello, Ukrainian-American billionaire Leonid Rodvinsky

Speaker 1 acquired a majority stake in the company from its founders in 2018. He is the sole shareholder of its parent company, Phoenix, with an F, Phoenix International Limited,

Speaker 1 which is offshore, I'm sure, and has been described as the site's elusive owner amid reports of substantial dividends going, ongoing

Speaker 1 sale discussions, blah, blah, blah. Oh, originally, the platform was originally founded in 2016 by British entrepreneur Timothy Stokely and his family.

Speaker 1 The Brits again, huh?

Speaker 3 Yeah, there you go. There's your

Speaker 3 North. The Nexus E-Nex is cropping up.

Speaker 3 Yes, interesting.

Speaker 3 Huh.

Speaker 3 Well, it's a problem that needs to be addressed.

Speaker 3 And I don't think, you know,

Speaker 3 arresting these guys or

Speaker 3 is going to work because it's already

Speaker 1 the

Speaker 1 horses out of the barn no keep your kids you've got to come up with something keep your kids the public's not going to stop buying in this no and these girls aren't going to stop doing this well there is one why would they there is one way which gives the government a lot of power uh and that is to go straight to the money and control the money that is being used.

Speaker 1 And I would say the EU is well on track because hello, good news!

Speaker 13 Hello.

Speaker 1 I have good news for you on the digital euro front.

Speaker 13 Today, the Governing Council has decided to move ahead on the next and final phase of the preparatory work for the digital euro.

Speaker 13 The other good news is that on October 23rd, the European Council has asked us and all those involved to accelerate the process so that we can roll out the digital euro as early as possible.

Speaker 1 Okay, so the digital euro is coming.

Speaker 3 Wait, don't forget, this is good news.

Speaker 1 Hello, good news.

Speaker 1 And I have a second clip to add to this good news. So this is a pure central bank digital currency, a true CBDC.
She is the president of the European Central Bank.

Speaker 1 They are doing a central bank digital currency. And she had a little forum going on.
And in the forum was Fabio Panetta, who is the

Speaker 1 president of the Bank of Italy. And so this just, it's under a minute, and you kind of have to focus because it's Italian-speaking English in a European forum.

Speaker 1 But listen to what he says about how great this is going to be and what it actually will do for the owners of the money.

Speaker 12 European Bank

Speaker 12 did not agree until now on ways to provide their services to the entire euro area. They don't have what is called in technical terms a rail.

Speaker 1 A rail. You need a rail.
It's called a payment rail.

Speaker 12 The infrastructure to provide, to offer their digital payment services to all European citizens.

Speaker 12 One of the main benefits, advantages for banks, there are many benefits for consumers, there are benefits for the stability of the financial system.

Speaker 12 One of the main benefits for the banks in the euro area is that once the digital euro infrastructure will be built, they will be able by using this so-called open standard infrastructure infrastructure to use that rail and compete at European level thus generating additional business additional revenues and there will be many implications in terms of sovereignty for the euro area in terms of control of the information that travels with

Speaker 1 your payments control of the information that travels with your payment

Speaker 1 i.e.

Speaker 1 what are you sending money to only fans for friend

Speaker 1 what are you sending money to this person for? Man, they are going to lock that down. It's going to be great to watch.
And my daughter has exactly three years to get out.

Speaker 1 They think it'll be 2029. Oh, yeah.
Oh, they're insane. That is, and they're nefarious about it.
Oh, it's going to be great.

Speaker 1 Less paperwork.

Speaker 1 It's less paperwork.

Speaker 3 It's a good one.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 It's happening. It's going to be phenomenal to watch.

Speaker 1 Phenomenal.

Speaker 1 Just to.

Speaker 3 Since we're talking about Europe. Oh, okay.
I have a couple of clips from St. James.

Speaker 1 St. James.
Oh. Girl.
Oh,

Speaker 1 Eva St. James.

Speaker 1 Now available on OnlyFans.

Speaker 12 Eva St. James.

Speaker 3 You do well in OnlyFans with that hair.

Speaker 1 Holy man. Ava Flaerdingbruch, who we have given a new name, Ava St.

Speaker 1 three minutes is that your first clip three minutes uh what's the how long is the second clip 125

Speaker 17 ah the first clip has got both clips damn it oh okay well you tell me when to stop it oh i can actually probably see it in the waveform i wouldn't even worry about it just stop it when you feel like it you can stop it two or three times hey everyone this is about this is about the dutch elections yeah okay hey everyone as you guys can see i'm in washington right now i was here for a panel on the importance of independent media organized by General Mike Flynn.

Speaker 1 I just got to say.

Speaker 1 You stopped it already? Yeah, I'm very, I'm very worried about this because

Speaker 1 I know that my neighbor was there, too.

Speaker 3 Oh, who is Laura?

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 1 Yes, they're doing forums.

Speaker 3 Let's stop for a second and ask the question because I felt the same way.

Speaker 3 What does Mike Flynn have to do with independent media?

Speaker 1 Mike,

Speaker 1 I really wish I understood. I mean, he has this America,

Speaker 1 what's the name of it now?

Speaker 1 Saving America. Hold on a second.

Speaker 3 You know, I get the sense that he's, you know, he was so, he was like head of

Speaker 3 the Defense Intelligence Agency. Head.
He wasn't like some slouch.

Speaker 1 And America's got a future. Here it is.
America's Future.

Speaker 3 I think he's been brought back in.

Speaker 1 So it's, yes,

Speaker 1 for sure. America's Future.
Now, this is what's interesting. They claim the nonprofit was founded in 1946,

Speaker 1 which is really when he was born.

Speaker 1 And if you look at it, and I've looked at it extensively, like, what exactly are they doing? And it's really run by his sister, Mary O'Neill. She's the executive director.

Speaker 1 And they provide, you know, information, education. That's the main, that's seen.
Now, they provide information and education about child trafficking, trafficking of women. Okay.

Speaker 1 But I've seen him speak. I've been to speeches.
I'm like, well, what are you really doing? And it just seems to be funding things.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 1 funding things.

Speaker 3 Funding.

Speaker 1 It's not a lot of money. It's a couple million dollars a year.

Speaker 3 Well, you know, here and there.

Speaker 1 You know, it was like your feet wet.

Speaker 1 But it's really,

Speaker 1 you know, and he takes some of it, obviously. I mean, but that's okay.
I mean, that's how you run a nonprofit. But I just, I don't understand.

Speaker 1 All I know is that a lot of nonsense that circles around the hill country eventually comes from him one way or the other.

Speaker 1 So I'm concerned when he's bringing in people from all over the world, including Eva St. James.

Speaker 1 And travel is their biggest expense on their form 990. It's like, it's like big.
It's like number one is travel.

Speaker 1 And, you know, and I'm pretty sure, I'm just going to say, and I, and I love my neighbor, I love all my neighbors, even the crazy one.

Speaker 1 But, you know, when Laura goes to Moscow to interview Kirill Dmitriev, who's paying for that? I'm pretty sure it's America's future. You know, and

Speaker 1 they do these amazing fundraisers at Mar-a-Lago. We talked about this.

Speaker 1 And they bring in Mike Tyson. You're getting an American Freedom Award.
And, you know, they do an awards gala. And people pay $5,000 a ticket,

Speaker 1 maybe $2,500, $5,000 per couple to go to Mar-a-Lago. And, you know, maybe Trump will be there.
Maybe, maybe the president will be there. I don't know.
Let's say Mar-a-Lago. And people buy into this.

Speaker 1 You know, like, oh, yeah, I'm going to Mar-a-Lago. Oh, you're going to Mar-La Lago.
Yeah,

Speaker 1 and you know, and O'Keeffe is there. And it's all these independent journalists who always surround this.
And it just hasn't, I don't know.

Speaker 1 I can't, I don't want to accuse anybody of anything, but it has an icky feel to it. I know that you and I would say, no, no, I'm not interested.

Speaker 1 I'm not going to come to DC for your panel on independent journalism.

Speaker 1 Or would you?

Speaker 3 No, I wouldn't go unless if I had, okay, here's what would happen. I do have some people to meet in DC.

Speaker 3 If I had a first-class round trip ticket and it was a convenient time of the week and I didn't have to worry about missing the show or missing my prep,

Speaker 3 I would shoot over there and do the thing real quick and then go hang out with different people that I know in the area and then then go back.

Speaker 3 But I wouldn't probably go because they're not going to, no one's offering me that.

Speaker 1 I just, I don't know what it is, and I really, I'm a little afraid to touch it, but it feels like there's information being funneled through people, influencers, podcasters, etc.,

Speaker 1 to get certain messages out there.

Speaker 3 That's what it sounds like.

Speaker 1 And what eventually winds up happening is everyone's talking about the grid going down, no election. So I don't like it.
I don't like it.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I like it. Yeah, that's exactly right.

Speaker 1 I'm not pointing any fingers. I just, it feels off.

Speaker 3 Okay, so she. You're pointing fingers, but continue.
No, wait a minute.

Speaker 1 Isn't Eva? But go ahead. Go ahead.
Hold on. But go ahead, Laura.

Speaker 3 By the way, I saw her do that.

Speaker 3 She was with, it was with Camela or something, and she was doing it over and over again.

Speaker 3 But go ahead. You were talking about

Speaker 1 Paris Wisher. But go ahead.
It's unbelievable

Speaker 3 when you notice it.

Speaker 1 So she's married to Eva I'm talking about now.

Speaker 1 She's married to,

Speaker 1 is she married to some Spanish guy or something? Hold on a second. It's worth looking into this for a second.

Speaker 3 Yeah, you're the only one that could look into it because you're the only one who could actually spell her name to look into it. I couldn't, if I had the Google thing up, I would never get it right.

Speaker 1 The guy from there's like some

Speaker 1 maybe it's Italian, Sicilian family.

Speaker 1 Yeah, here it is.

Speaker 1 Francesco Gargallo di Castell Lentini.

Speaker 1 Right?

Speaker 3 She should change her name to Latini.

Speaker 1 So, and her dad is Kesflardingebrug. Let me see.
What does he do?

Speaker 1 Well, anyway.

Speaker 1 Musicologist and former concert director. Okay.
Well, elitist circles for sure.

Speaker 17 And in light of that, I wanted to talk to you guys a little bit about the Dutch election results because the final results are in now, and the PPV lost the elections.

Speaker 17 The worst of the worst, the most liberal globalist party that we have, these

Speaker 17 won the elections. And now we are looking at a government that is more left-wing than the government under Mark Grote ever was.
Because also the far left and the centrist party did a good job.

Speaker 17 They won quite a lot of seats. So it's not looking great for us, let's say.

Speaker 17 And the reason I wanted wanted to tie that to the importance of independent media is because I think that the result that we see now in the Netherlands is the result of media manipulation the party leader of these exits he's a very openly very woke gay man and he was on TV I kid you not every single day before the elections he had a budget their party had a budget of 2 million euros to spend on their media campaign whereas most other parties had an average of 200,000 euros they didn't get the same type of airtime like not even close to the type of airtime that they got.

Speaker 17 And he was on all these feel-good shows, you know, talking about how we can make the Netherlands great again, which is like so funny because they are pro-EU, they are pro-mass immigration, they are pro-the climate regulations.

Speaker 17 They are going to destroy this country, or my country, even more than Margarita has. And we don't have that much left to lose.

Speaker 17 So it just goes to show that the people can still be manipulated very, very successfully through the legacy media.

Speaker 1 Okay, I'm going to stop it there for a second. She's

Speaker 1 yes, first of all, you have to understand that the big talk shows, etc., in the Netherlands are funded by the government, public media.

Speaker 1 They're all leftists, very leftist

Speaker 1 throughout the public media sphere.

Speaker 1 But there's something else that Robot Rob did. They call him Robot Rob.

Speaker 3 The guy who won? Yes. He's very...
He's He's a gay guy. Yeah, he's very stiff.
He's very stiff.

Speaker 1 And I want to play this from, I think this is

Speaker 1 F24.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Most of it's explained here, but there's something very interesting, and it also is what has to do with what's happening here in the United States.

Speaker 14 With a smile and a sunny attitude, Rob Yetten charmed his way into the hearts of Dutch voters. His belief, as per his campaign slogan, was, it is possible.

Speaker 18 My message to everyone is that if we run on positive platforms and positive campaigns, it's possible to

Speaker 1 make things very good.

Speaker 18 Defeat the populists and to work together with the broad middle and the centrist parties to show people that we can deliver real results.

Speaker 14 The 38-year-old representing the socially liberal D66 party is tipped to become the youngest Prime Minister for the Netherlands. He grew up in a small Dutch town as a self-confessed politics nerd.

Speaker 14 At the age of just 29 in 2017, he was first elected as an MP and served as climate minister under Mark Rutte's government.

Speaker 14 But all has not gone smoothly.

Speaker 14 During the 2023 election campaign, he earned the nickname Robot Yeten for his stumbling media personality, and his party suffered a catastrophic defeat under his leadership,

Speaker 14 winning just nine seats.

Speaker 14 This time, he turned things around.

Speaker 14 He made big promises, such as tackling the housing shortage, building cities, and boosting green energy.

Speaker 14 He also took on the far-right Geert Wilders head-on.

Speaker 11 Most Dutch people understand that the economy needs talent from abroad.

Speaker 11 They want to properly accommodate people fleeing war and violence while also being strict with those who abuse the system.

Speaker 11 We can choose to listen to your grumbling and hatred for another 20 years, or we can choose with the positive forces to simply get to work and tackle this problem and solve it.

Speaker 14 In another first, Yeten would become the country's first openly gay prime minister.

Speaker 14 Critics say it was his positive can-do attitude that appealed to voters, in contrast with builders that sowed division.

Speaker 1 Okay, so first of all, it's funny that she says, first openly gay prime minister, because of course, everyone was like, Rutte is a closeted gay when he was prime minister for gosh, how many eight years.

Speaker 1 What he did, and this is it's very much like No King's Day. Lots of Dutch flags, lots of nationalism, a lot of no, no, we just hate that guy.

Speaker 1 You're grumpy, you're a grumpy old mean guy, you're just talking about negativity. We want positivity, we're gonna, we, we love Holland, we love America, we just don't like kings.

Speaker 1 Well, of course, that doesn't work in Holland, but it's it's some kind of globalist, it's some kind of globalist movement that is being coordinated in, let's attack

Speaker 1 the right, the far right. Let's attack them with flags and nationalism and positivity.
And because it's the same when we had the No Kings Day here in Fredericksburg,

Speaker 1 even if you said,

Speaker 1 I think if I recall, Tina was in her car and she did a thumbs down

Speaker 1 towards some of the protesters, you know, the 40 people in front of City Hall in Fredericksburg who had flags flags and everything and they went god bless you have a great day you know it's something that is is it's some kind of coordinated effort as a new way to unseat populist right politicians and i think that

Speaker 1 eva is partially correct uh well maybe completely correct that the media You just can't, you can't,

Speaker 1 the Dutch listen to radio. I mean, even young people listen to the radio.
They watch their television.

Speaker 1 You know, the big talk shows.

Speaker 1 It's all very scripted, coordinated, very

Speaker 1 USSR kind of vibe to it. If you look at it as an outsider, so I'm not surprised at all that this worked on the Dutch.

Speaker 1 Remember, it's like, oh, here's my bike. All right.
Here's fine. Here's my bike.

Speaker 1 I'm being mean. All right.

Speaker 3 You are being mean to the Dutch.

Speaker 1 I love the Dutch. Here's the

Speaker 1 hey, believe me, the Dutch have

Speaker 1 a lot of spirit, but

Speaker 1 you got to wonder how many young people voted. So here's your second clip.

Speaker 17 The people can still be manipulated very, very successfully through the legacy media because the average Dutch voter doesn't want mass immigration.

Speaker 17 You know, they actually had that on top of their list for these elections. And yet, all these other parties, left-wing parties, they won.
Like, this is the result of legacy media manipulation.

Speaker 17 And as much as we are gaining ground, of course, thanks to X, of course, thanks to Elon,

Speaker 17 and with the independent media on these platforms, this shows you that the legacy media's power is not gone. You know, it's far from over.

Speaker 17 And we can already tell now that the institutions that were still, even during Bilders' government, ridden with Marxists, that they now have this renewed confidence.

Speaker 17 They have regained their arrogance and they're already talking, like, okay, you know, we're gonna, we got our country back.

Speaker 17 In the rest of Europe, in Italy, the liberals are talking about how they can do the same with the Maloney government.

Speaker 17 They, you know, they are going to be able to let her government fall as well, and that they're going to regain power. So, I really foresee nothing but bad things coming from this.
this.

Speaker 17 I hope it's going to strengthen the right wing, but it's again, it's bad. It's bad.
And don't underestimate the power that the legacy media still has because this is the proof of it.

Speaker 1 Yeah,

Speaker 1 I don't think it's the legacy media, and I don't think Mike Flynn is going to fix all of this with his little gatherings.

Speaker 1 You need a guy like Trump. You need a MAGA movement.

Speaker 1 That's the only way to do it. And Vielders wasn't like that at all.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I'm playing this clip largely because of this attitude that you're expressing.

Speaker 3 Because I have more confidence that the legacy media here,

Speaker 3 I don't know about Holland, which is controlled by the government, it seems,

Speaker 3 still having a massive influence because all the people I know, including some big shots

Speaker 1 that are

Speaker 3 Trump derangement syndrome prone,

Speaker 3 they all read the New York Times.

Speaker 1 Well, they all read the New York Times. But they also go out and vote.
Young people don't go out.

Speaker 1 This is why you've, as I said, this hopium about Nick Fuentes. Oh, oh, we finally have someone new on the scene.

Speaker 1 No, Bernie Sanders would be your president if young people, young people really got unvoted. It's a joke.
Oh, you can vote at 16. Fine.
They don't.

Speaker 1 They just don't.

Speaker 1 Surely we can agree on this, that the average age voter has got to be at least 50 plus.

Speaker 3 I'm not sure what the average age voter is or what the median age voter is. Would it be worth somebody telling us because it's got to be in the literature? You could ask the robot she should know.

Speaker 1 For American elections,

Speaker 3 what's the median and average?

Speaker 1 Ask for both. Okay.

Speaker 1 Error. In the United States elections of 2024, what was the median age and average age of the voting public?

Speaker 3 I would think that's a quick lookup.

Speaker 3 Wow.

Speaker 1 I don't know what her problem is.

Speaker 3 Are you online? I am.

Speaker 1 She's not talking to me.

Speaker 1 No response, it says. Well, that's nice.
Hold on, let me try that. Oh, you know what? Let me go to fast.
Hold on a second.

Speaker 1 Error. In the United States elections of 2024, what was the median age and average age of the voting public?

Speaker 20 Hey, so for the 2024 U.S. election, the voting public skewed older thanks to higher turnout from folks over 45.

Speaker 20 Based on census data, the average age of actual voters was around 51, while the median clocked in at about 48. Younger crowds just didn't show up as much.

Speaker 20 Turnout for 18 to 24 was only 48% versus 75% for those 65 and up. Kind of wild how that pulls the numbers.

Speaker 1 Kind of wild. No, it's not wild.
Just I don't need your wild

Speaker 1 academic.

Speaker 1 So there you go.

Speaker 3 51. Okay, the average is 51.

Speaker 3 The median is 48, which is interesting, but that means that tells me, because the average was 51 and the median is 48, that tells me that there was a lot of pull toward the 48 number and less down further down, or the average would have been lower than 48.

Speaker 3 So it's, yes, I would say the average, most voters are over 40 is

Speaker 3 more or less what that means. Yes.
Which is, yeah, you're right. And the public, if you look at the cross-section of the public, there should be more younger voters.

Speaker 3 And Bernie Sanders would be president.

Speaker 1 Yes, definitely, because he was the lovable grandpa. All right, so now let's move.

Speaker 3 So thank God for this skew.

Speaker 3 Who the hell needs Bernie Sanders as president?

Speaker 1 I want to hit the shutdown for a second.

Speaker 6 As the government shut down in the United States barrels toward becoming the longest in history, potentially surpassing the 35-day mark reached during President Trump's first term.

Speaker 6 Everyday Americans are paying the price, like those depending on critical food assistance programs.

Speaker 23 There's only so much we can do for the charity sector. Like, I'm incredibly concerned with each and every customer that we're fortunate to serve.

Speaker 6 Friday, two federal judges ruled the Trump administration must pay for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP, which helps over 40 million Americans feed their families.

Speaker 6 The rulings come after the U.S.

Speaker 6 Department of Agriculture announced it would halt food assistance set to go out November 1st because Congress hadn't allocated funds for the program for the current fiscal year.

Speaker 24 If you are in a position where you can't feed your family and you're relying on that $187 a month for an average family in the SNAP program, that we have failed you.

Speaker 6 But one of the judges says there's no reason to halt the payments as contingency funds are set aside to fund SNAP years in advance just in case of a government shutdown.

Speaker 6 In a Truth Social post, Trump challenged whether he could legally fund SNAP with available money, blaming Democrats for the delay in food assistance.

Speaker 25 The Democrats just don't know what they're doing. All they have to do is say, let's go, let's open up our country, and everything snaps back into shape.

Speaker 6 So far, Democrats have refused to budge over price hikes in health care that could leave millions uninsured because of exorbitant premiums.

Speaker 6 Travelers are also feeling the effects as some 2,200 flight delays have been reported so far due to staffing shortages of air traffic controllers who have been working without pay.

Speaker 6 Trump is now calling on Senate Republicans to get rid of a rule to allow the budget to pass with a simple majority, causing further strain on fragile negotiations between Democrats and Republicans to reopen the government.

Speaker 1 So I want to start with the boots on the ground from the anonymous controller and his anonymous controller wife. These are ATC professionals.
I know them.

Speaker 1 We have a lot of them in our listening, producing public.

Speaker 1 General feelings around the ATC is dependent on your political affiliation, unfortunately. Trump voters are not surprised by what's happening and are financially sound decision makers.

Speaker 1 Some of us saved three months of bills just for this instance once Trump got elected. How about that?

Speaker 1 Others of the more lib-tarted affiliation are up in arms. Oh, geez.

Speaker 3 No bias there.

Speaker 1 Yeah, let them go. Are up in arms and very complainy about them not being able to make their car payment for their

Speaker 1 $80,000 Lexus or Tesla trucks. The general consensus of the lip-tarded group is: why can't we just give everyone free health care?

Speaker 1 We're the richest country in the world, a fascinating and heard-of message from left-leaning communist federal workers.

Speaker 1 Trump voters, such as myself, are simply laughing through this while working, occasionally doing a Trump impression calling other co-workers gay.

Speaker 1 In the area of airspace my wife and I work in, morale is generally up, even while staffing is still terrible and working six days a week unpaid isn't necessarily ideal.

Speaker 1 I think we realize as a group that when it comes down to helping the guy sitting next to you, embrace the suck if you will.

Speaker 1 However, and this is important: news flash to Gitmo Nation. Without us, you don't get your Amazon packages or go on vacation.

Speaker 1 It may be wise to cancel your vacation or drive the deeper or drive the deeper into this it goes, the more mile in trail increases,

Speaker 1 the angrier and more sick controllers get, causing cancellations and delays. My prediction is this will go until after the holidays.
If you have holiday flying plans, I suggest you drive.

Speaker 1 It's only going to get worse. I thought that was a stark but a necessary warning for Gitmo Nation.
Now, regarding the snap benefits.

Speaker 3 That was a good note. That's just for

Speaker 3 that advice.

Speaker 1 Exactly.

Speaker 1 Now, just so we understand how SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, works, it's authorized and funded through the Federal Farm Bill, which gets reauthorized periodically by Congress, and annual appropriations.

Speaker 1 So, this is the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Nutrition Service, USDA, FNS.
They oversee it. So, they make funds available as an open-ended entitlement, meaning

Speaker 1 spending adjusts automatically based on participation levels. In fiscal year 2024, this totaled $100 billion for benefits.

Speaker 3 Nearly all had the number low when I was talking about this.

Speaker 1 It's $100 billion.

Speaker 3 But I noticed that because

Speaker 3 I have some clips coming. Yeah, hold on, I'm going to get into it.
I was going to say,

Speaker 3 in one of the clips, it says they're not going to have it for November because it's going to cost them $9 billion. And I'm thinking, wait a minute, I thought it was $70 total.

Speaker 1 Not quite right.

Speaker 3 $100 billion. Yes.

Speaker 1 It's ridiculous.

Speaker 3 And they're talking about, oh, we said we sent some aid to Israel.

Speaker 1 But it's

Speaker 3 $3 billion.

Speaker 1 But it really comes down to the states.

Speaker 1 Now, the USDA provides state agencies electronic letters of credit.

Speaker 1 So it's really the states that have this money and could have saved up this money and they can move money around. They can do a lot of different things to make these benefits still go through.

Speaker 1 So it really is a huge political theater.

Speaker 1 But here's the interesting part that I didn't realize. The retailers,

Speaker 1 they get the EBT cards, they get processed in real time to the EBT system. It's not the regular credit card system.

Speaker 1 So the retailer submits the transaction to the EBT processor,

Speaker 1 and then the processor credits the retailer's bank account within 24 to 48 hours, and then they draw the equivalent amount from the state's letter of credit. This is a huge quagmire.

Speaker 1 So wouldn't you know it that I have producers sending me pictures of chicken in Walmart, and the price has dropped by 30 to 40 cents a pound the minute this EBT was

Speaker 1 off the table. Exactly what we talked about.
That once you get government money in this, the price goes up for everybody.

Speaker 3 This is the point you made about tuitions.

Speaker 1 Yes, tuitions, any, yeah, insurance. And let me just say again,

Speaker 1 get out of that system.

Speaker 1 Get out. This insurance,

Speaker 1 the

Speaker 1 Obamacare subsidies only goes to bankers. And they are jacking up the rates because they don't want to look bad on Wall Street.
That's all that this is about.

Speaker 1 And by the way, it's not for health care because you don't get any health care for it. You've got huge deductibles and

Speaker 1 you're paying $12, $1,300, $1,400 a month for a family. It's insane.
Americans have banded together.

Speaker 1 And I finally figured out, you know, so Tina at Curry.com, if you want to know about her system, and what I found out about those guys, the crowd health guys, what they actually did is when, and I heard about them five years ago, they have, um,

Speaker 1 so they take, I think it's like $99 for the per month for the first three months, and you pay the first $500 yourself, and then they go out and take care of the rest of it for you through this crowdfunding.

Speaker 1 And they have a treasury, some of which they smartly put into Bitcoin five years ago. So that's why these guys are doing well.
Now, you can't smoke. And so I'm not on her plan.
I go through

Speaker 1 CHM, Christian Health Ministries, which is the same type of system.

Speaker 1 There, of course, you have to profess that Jesus is your Lord and Savior. You don't want to lie about that because you know what happens then.

Speaker 1 You're going to hell.

Speaker 1 You can't lie about that.

Speaker 1 But there's many of these systems.

Speaker 3 Wouldn't you be going to hell anyway?

Speaker 1 Why?

Speaker 3 If you don't,

Speaker 3 according to the theory, if you lie about, if you're lying about that,

Speaker 3 you're going to go to hell.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 3 No. But if you don't believe that, you're going to go to hell.

Speaker 1 No, no. That's the Catholic system.
No. Yeah.
No. Yeah.

Speaker 3 Catholics like to send people to hell at the drop of a hat.

Speaker 1 Exactly. Exactly.
Sorry, Catholics out there. That's just my, that's just, no.
We're just joking around nanu nanu.

Speaker 1 But get out of that system. Seriously, it's ridiculous.

Speaker 1 And it's like a psychological, it's an op. The whole thing is an op.
And that's why they keep calling it healthcare. It's not healthcare.

Speaker 3 Well, the best part is they call it the affordable health care.

Speaker 1 Even funnier.

Speaker 1 Like the Patriot Acts. No.

Speaker 3 Yeah, but not for Patriots. Obamacare are killing us NPR.
This is from NPR. This is a

Speaker 1 little

Speaker 1 offshoot clip.

Speaker 26 Open enrollment started today for health insurance on healthcare.gov, the ACA marketplace. And Pierre Selena Simmons-Duffin has more on what people enrolling this year need to know.

Speaker 27 Their premiums might be significantly higher. And that is because something called enhanced subsidies that Congress first passed in 2021 are expiring.

Speaker 27 And that extra help to buy health insurance is something that millions of people have relied on in the last few years.

Speaker 27 In fact, 24 million people have these plans. They're small business owners, farmers, ranchers.

Speaker 27 And as open enrollment begins this year, the federal government is shut down, and these subsidies are a central issue.

Speaker 1 And again,

Speaker 1 you get one of these programs and they go directly to the hospital, to the doctor. They say, hey, doc, guess what?

Speaker 1 You have

Speaker 1 this bill. We're going to pay you cash, no paperwork.
We're going to give you 20 cents on the dollar. And they negotiate a little bit on your behalf.

Speaker 1 And the doctor in the hospital will go, yeah, actually, that's great. Let's do it.

Speaker 1 You can do it yourself, but it's a hassle. And you pay into this system.
And then once once in a while, they say, hey, do you want to give, have you got any extra cash? You want to help everybody?

Speaker 1 And then when you're in a real bind, people help you. It's a very

Speaker 1 interesting,

Speaker 1 fun way to not go broke for nothing, for not getting any benefits. Young people, listen to me.

Speaker 1 Did you tell your kids? Did you tell the kids to do this, to look into this? They have something.

Speaker 3 Something going on.

Speaker 3 Well, one of them had Chevron.

Speaker 1 Oh, well, so he's good to go. He's got some, but that'll end eventually.

Speaker 3 No, the whole thing's a scam.

Speaker 3 This affordable health care, and then when you hear about, well, it's always been, it's being subsidized by the taxpayers.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 3 I thought the whole idea of affordable health care

Speaker 3 was that it was going to be affordable. Yeah, it's not.
And now they're going on and on. They're all freaked out.
That's why the Democrats won't open the government again because they're going to.

Speaker 3 make sure there's more money in there to

Speaker 3 continue this scam that makes it

Speaker 3 And somebody analyzed it to say, look, they were trying to keep this phony baloney Obamacare system going long enough to put all the independents out of business.

Speaker 1 Oh, interesting. Anyway.

Speaker 3 Which makes some sense. I got some snap clips.

Speaker 1 Snap!

Speaker 1 All right.

Speaker 3 First of all, there's

Speaker 3 just a standard clip of the SNAP and food banks, which everyone should know about.

Speaker 26 Food banks say they're seeing an immediate uptake in demand, despite two judges' orders yesterday that the Trump administration provide funding for the SNAP food assistance program.

Speaker 26 From member station KQED in San Francisco, Dana Cronin has more.

Speaker 28 Food banks here in the Bay Area are ramping up efforts in response to the hundreds of calls they say they've received so far from people seeking relief.

Speaker 28 Caitlin Sly is the CEO of the food bank of Contra Costa and Solano. She says it's unclear what happens next after the Trump administration was ordered to fund SNAP.

Speaker 29 Either way, we're looking at at least a week, probably

Speaker 29 more, that

Speaker 29 the hungry in our community are going to go without food.

Speaker 28 Sly says her organization is opening additional distribution sites and deploying more food and personnel to meet the increased demand.

Speaker 1 Yeah, this is another great American institution, your local food bank. If you got some extra food, drop it off.

Speaker 3 Now, there's a NPR generally reports

Speaker 3 this thing about the judge who said, you got to pay this

Speaker 1 bill.

Speaker 3 And Trump administration, Trump has actually said, we'd love to. Yes, show me how.

Speaker 3 And the thing is, the reporting is going to be,

Speaker 3 it's unknown whether the Trump administration is going to

Speaker 3 take this to a higher court or they're going to

Speaker 3 push against it.

Speaker 1 It's the same type of federal judge that tells Trump you can't do this with ICE, you can't do that, you can't do this.

Speaker 3 Yeah, but the thing is, Trump's, what Trump's actually going to do, he sent his people back saying, we'll be glad to do it, but you have to tell us how we can do it legally.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 3 That's the kicker.

Speaker 1 Yes, of course.

Speaker 3 And so this reporting stinks on this stuff. But let's listen to our best friend.

Speaker 1 Oh, no. Oh, no.
Suffering succotash. I'm Scott.

Speaker 30 Simon, there are no snap food benefits for millions of Americans today for the first time since the country's largest anti-hunger program began six decades ago.

Speaker 30 On Friday, two federal judges said the pause was likely to be unlawful.

Speaker 30 President Trump says he's open to keeping SNAP going despite the government shutdown, but it is not clear how or when that might happen. MPS Jennifer Ludden joins us.

Speaker 30 Jennifer, thanks for being with us.

Speaker 15 Hi there. Hi there.

Speaker 30 The Trump administration says there's just no money available to fund SNAP. What did both of the federal judges say about that?

Speaker 15 Well, they said Congress has provided more than $5 billion in emergency funds, and it's for exactly this kind of situation. They rejected the administration's argument that it cannot legally use that.

Speaker 15 They said it not only can, but must. In Rhode Island, Judge John McConnell Jr.
called for this to happen as soon as possible.

Speaker 15 The other judge, Indira Talwani in Boston, said officials could also tap more money from customs revenue, but she left that decision up to them.

Speaker 15 Both judges gave the administration until Monday to come back with a plan for how it will proceed.

Speaker 30 But does this mean that people who count on this assistance might see it sometime soon?

Speaker 15 That is a good question. And the only answer right now is we really don't know.
I mean, first, will the administration appeal?

Speaker 15 Second, if they agree to only tap the contingency funds, that falls well short of SNAP's November budget, which is $9 billion.

Speaker 15 So people would not get the full amount they qualify for.

Speaker 15 And in that case, the administration has said, you know, calculating partial payments is a logistical nightmare that could take time, especially in the middle of a shutdown.

Speaker 15 And then, as for President Trump, a few hours after these rulings, he addressed them in a social media post.

Speaker 15 He said he's instructed his lawyers to clarify with the court how they can legally fund SNAP.

Speaker 15 And if they do, he said it will be my honor to provide funding just like I did with the military and law enforcement pay.

Speaker 1 This is very interesting.

Speaker 1 First of all, Trump has to pay the military and customs border patrol, otherwise his whole ICE gambit falls apart.

Speaker 1 But if we get to a point where the government, the federal government can pay certain things, entitlement programs, the ones that they want to fund, well, why don't we just keep the government shut?

Speaker 1 I know. I mean, now

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 1 I'm getting reports from producers who are saying, you know, something really odd is happening. Like, we're processing payroll, and it seems like you know,

Speaker 1 like it's back to normal, even though it isn't. There's something going on, and at a certain point, you're going to have to now are social security checks still going out.

Speaker 1 I don't know.

Speaker 3 Well, you get one, I don't get one, no, and I don't get a social security check, they're all direct deposit. In fact, I'm surprised you're getting one gets one

Speaker 3 because they told us at least 10 years ago, whenever I

Speaker 3 turned 60, I was one of the lucky ones, I get to be 65.

Speaker 3 They said,

Speaker 3 no, we're not sending checks out anymore.

Speaker 1 Okay, but you know what my question is?

Speaker 3 Yeah, I don't know. I don't look at that account.

Speaker 1 Okay. Well, it would be interesting to know.
I think Tina got hers.

Speaker 3 What did she get it for? How old is she?

Speaker 1 63, too. Oops.
Sorry, babe. No, she is 63.
What am I talking about? She took early.

Speaker 3 She took early? Yes.

Speaker 1 You know why?

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 No, why?

Speaker 1 She takes it early and puts it into Bitcoin.

Speaker 3 Oh, that's probably a good idea.

Speaker 1 Yes, I think it's a great idea.

Speaker 3 As long as things hold up.

Speaker 1 There's always that, but, you know, hey, I can be spitting in this mic till I keel over, baby. Just keep on going.
No exit.

Speaker 3 It's going to happen anyway. Yeah, probably.

Speaker 1 But I'm just saying, it's an interesting thought that if the judge says, well, you can do it this way.

Speaker 1 Well, then can we just selectively open parts?

Speaker 3 I think that's what you're soliciting it for. Maybe that's why it's up to.

Speaker 1 It feels like it.

Speaker 3 Yeah, let's say, okay, well, you know, I don't like that decision, but if you could tell us how to do it your way

Speaker 3 because that's what he's asking for.

Speaker 1 It's like, okay.

Speaker 3 Yeah, we'll do it, but you have to tell us how to do it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and then once we know how to do it, then we can select outside of Congress who is supposed to hold the purse strings, then we can select what we want to fund and what we don't want to fund.

Speaker 1 Very easy.

Speaker 3 Yet another trap.

Speaker 30 If the administration decides to pay people at least some part of their regular SNAP food benefits, how would that break down?

Speaker 1 How would it work?

Speaker 15 We really don't know. Again, this has not happened before.
I've not seen a public plan for how to do it.

Speaker 15 I did speak, though, with an agriculture department employee who works on SNAP, and they agreed it would be challenging and even beyond logistics.

Speaker 15 This person asked me not to use their name for fear of retribution, and also they're not authorized to speak with media.

Speaker 15 But they said, for one thing, if you have partial funding, do you give it only to the most needy? Or do you give people, you know, half their regular amount, maybe three-quarters?

Speaker 15 And states would want to say in that. But also, how do you divide partial funding among states?

Speaker 15 I know the employee wondered if this administration might decide to give some states more SNAP money than others.

Speaker 30 And, Jennifer, where does this leave the millions of people who aren't getting federal food aid beginning today?

Speaker 15 Scott, it leaves them in need. You know, it is a lot of money that is disappearing from people's food budgets.
We don't know for how long.

Speaker 15 Food policy experts say no amount of amping up food banks can come anywhere close to making up this difference, but of course it does help, and we see more states and cities shifting money for it.

Speaker 15 Soon after yesterday's rulings, Oklahoma's governor announced a vote to send a million dollars a week to food banks for SNAP recipients for up to seven weeks if needed.

Speaker 30 And Pierce Jennifer Ludden, thanks so much.

Speaker 1 Hmm. Up to seven weeks.
Well, I just thought it was fascinating to see the prices drop at Walmart.

Speaker 3 Yeah, that is interesting. Of course, I knew you shopped there, but I want to play just an just off a little off script here.
There's Scott Simon.

Speaker 3 He played, he's been on the air for 40 years or something, and he was bragging about it.

Speaker 3 And he played an old clip of himself.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 3 Before he, you know, this voice he has is new.

Speaker 1 Oh, really?

Speaker 3 Yeah, listen. I don't know if these are both the same clip.
I got old.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Yeah, they're the same.

Speaker 3 Are they the same timing?

Speaker 1 Yeah, same timing. It's the same clip.
Yeah.

Speaker 3 Here is Scott Simon in the 80s.

Speaker 30 40 years ago this weekend.

Speaker 19 I'm Scott Simon, and we're glad you're with us for this, our first program, on Saturday, November 2nd, 1985.

Speaker 1 Wow. How did that happen?

Speaker 3 He sounds like, in fact, if you play it again, he sounds like somebody else. He sounds like a modern.

Speaker 1 I can't think of somebody. No, you know what he sounds? He sounds like one of those guys on the pirate ships in the North Sea in the 70s.
No.

Speaker 3 He starts with his regular voice, and then he plays the clip. But

Speaker 3 that voice he has in that clip sounds like somebody else that's current. And I can't.

Speaker 1 Well, let me listen.

Speaker 30 Let's listen again.

Speaker 19 40 years ago this weekend, I'm Scott Simon, and we're glad you're with us for this, our first program.

Speaker 1 It sounds like he's hosting a game show.

Speaker 3 It sounds like John Dickerson

Speaker 19 on Saturday, November 2nd, 1985.

Speaker 1 Let me see if I have a Dickerson comparison clip.

Speaker 1 Dickerson. Let's see.
Okay. Oh, well, here we go.

Speaker 11 Nearly 2,000 guard members will be on the the streets, many from six Republican-led states.

Speaker 1 I'm Scottish, and I'm so glad you're wired for this.

Speaker 1 Maybe.

Speaker 1 Yeah, a little bit. Maybe.
A little bit.

Speaker 3 Hey. But he doesn't sound like Scott Siren.
No, he does not.

Speaker 1 But hold on a second. Yep.

Speaker 28 The show is too long.

Speaker 1 It's time to take a break, Josh.

Speaker 1 And with that, I want to thank you for your courage. Say the morning to you, the man who put the C in the Affordable Care Act.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr. Josh.

Speaker 1 Say

Speaker 1 yeah one to morning you see adam curry the morning our ship seedless at the graph feet and the air subs in the water and all the names and nights out there yeah in the morning is the trolls in the troll room let me count you there okay we got it one

Speaker 1 1949

Speaker 1 there you go trolls in the troll room listening live to our show everybody it's our live studio audience we love you trolls good to have you here you can listen live at noagendastream.com.

Speaker 1 Join in there. You can hop right into the troll room if you want, or you can grab one of those modern podcast apps.
These are the ones that will alert you when we go live.

Speaker 1 And you can listen to a live program in your app. How amazing is that? Many other features, transcripts, chapters,

Speaker 1 locations, just a million, like 27 new features that you don't get from your legacy app. What are you waiting for? Podcastapps.com.
Our 19th year on the air.

Speaker 1 This is what, well, to be fair, when we play clips of what we sounded like 10, 15 years ago, it sounds very different. You sound kind of the same.
You have a.

Speaker 3 Call a Berkeley nasal accent. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Oh, there it is. Yes.
It's like a humm. You're a hummer.

Speaker 3 Berkeley Hummer. Well, not a hummer.

Speaker 1 Hummers talk with long

Speaker 1 noise.

Speaker 3 Never goes away.

Speaker 1 Where is our hummer? We haven't heard from the hummer in a long time. Let's see.
Berkeley Hummer. Here she is.
Chief among many. No, that's not it.
Hummer.

Speaker 1 No. What is Hummer? How come it's so? Oh, yeah.

Speaker 10 You know, obviously,

Speaker 1 I read the New York Times like all day long,

Speaker 10 mainly on my iPad app.

Speaker 1 Not AI, people. That is actually real.

Speaker 1 Now, who was she again? Who was that woman?

Speaker 3 That was the editor-in-chief of the New York Times for a while. His name, for some reason, since we haven't talked to her for years and years,

Speaker 1 eludes me.

Speaker 3 I can come up with it better.

Speaker 1 It's okay. It's okay.

Speaker 1 We run our show as independent journalists, value for value. So there's no audience capture here.
It's impossible. It's impossible.
It just doesn't work that way. Nope.

Speaker 1 And we're happy about it because we sleep well at night and we don't have to travel to Mar-a-Lago and D.C. It makes life

Speaker 3 a lot easier.

Speaker 1 It makes life a lot easier.

Speaker 3 You got to pay to park.

Speaker 1 Wait, in D.C. or at the White House? Everywhere.
Mar-a-Lago. You probably got to pay to park at Mar-a-Lago.
Wouldn't surprise me.

Speaker 3 No, I'm sure you do.

Speaker 3 Maybe they just wave you through.

Speaker 1 So time, talent, and treasure is how we have been running this show.

Speaker 1 And that means it's value for value. So whatever you get out of it, if you're thinking, you know, I learned something today, then how about this? What you can do is you can

Speaker 1 send some value back. You can do it by organizing things, by hitting hitting people in the mouth.

Speaker 1 Of course, we love the treasure part of the time, talent, and treasure. There's people who do websites for us.
People do an amazing amount of things for it.

Speaker 1 Let me see. No agenda notes.

Speaker 1 Where am I? This is weird. NA Show Notes.
Here we go.

Speaker 1 We have, oh, this is strange. Why is

Speaker 1 this? I've not seen this happen. What, what? Well, I'm trying to get NA Show Notes.
I go to nashonotes.com,

Speaker 1 and for some reason, it takes me to No Agenda Stream now, all of a sudden. Uh-oh.

Speaker 1 That seems like Mark. That seems like a DNS issue we have all of a sudden.

Speaker 1 And yeah, NA Showstream Street. Mark's in bed.
No, he's awake. NASHONOTES.com.

Speaker 1 That's weird.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it takes me to No Agenda Stream. So that's not very handy.
Hmm. Let me see if I go to 1812.noagendanotes.com.
I can probably get that. Okay.
Ah, there we go.

Speaker 1 People make artwork for us, or better, yet, they prompt things. Some make some actual artwork from time to time.
By the way, our No Agenda

Speaker 1 Gitmonation AI slop stream, ooh, slop stream. I like that.

Speaker 1 is available. You can create any kind of website around it.
The actual link is in the show notes. So copy that link and you'll get 24-7 the best AI slop music on a clock.

Speaker 1 And it'll be more, it'll be lots of end of show mixes, but at a certain point, it'll be more and more of these slop songs. And before you know it, we'll have a hit radio station.
So go podcasting.

Speaker 1 We love the artists or the prompters who create art for us.

Speaker 1 And I think, was this

Speaker 1 a new entrant? Rocket Boy all of a sudden shows up. How long? Rocket Boy.
No, no, right.

Speaker 1 No, Rocket Boy's been around for a year. Rocket Boy.

Speaker 1 He was thinking about a name, and he had no agenda beats

Speaker 1 as a great name, except he spelled it B-E-E-T-S and created some artwork with three beats.

Speaker 3 His first artwork was at the end of 2023. Yeah.
On December 28th. He hasn't really submitted much.

Speaker 1 Has he had any wins? Has he had any wins? I'm looking.

Speaker 3 I don't see any other wins.

Speaker 1 He won this time. Yeah.
Yeah. Rocket Boy.
We appreciate that, Rocket Boy. Very good.
We thought that was funny.

Speaker 1 Certainly because there just is so little, because you know, it's easy to prompt, it's hard to prompt something funny. And of course, there was a lot of

Speaker 1 Halloween art. We didn't even talk about Halloween.
We didn't mention it once on the show. I don't think so.
No. Why?

Speaker 3 I don't know. It wasn't anything that came to mind.
And it wasn't Halloween on the show.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 It was the day before. It was a day before Halloween.
We had no one show up.

Speaker 3 And it wasn't a Halloween special. We didn't put it in the newsletter as Halloween.
But everyone took it, assumed.

Speaker 3 They assumed you know what that means.

Speaker 1 Yes, ass on it. You and me.
Yes.

Speaker 3 In fact, there's a lot of butts.

Speaker 1 There's more than one. A construct blogger making Bunkins into butts,

Speaker 3 which is like something about that.

Speaker 3 I think he needs to go and see someone.

Speaker 1 OnlyFans. He is OnlyFans.

Speaker 3 Go to OnlyFans. Get out of your system.

Speaker 1 I kind of like the Freedom Tunnel. That was kind of cute.
Oh, by the way. Oh, you did like that.

Speaker 1 I think that brings brings me i think i have a bonus clip about that i we want a uh a bonus clip yeah we always want a bonus i got a bonus clip so we were talking about

Speaker 1 let me see where is it we were talking about um what's his face

Speaker 1 um

Speaker 3 uh dimitriev

Speaker 1 and he was talking about the tunnel that would go between Russia and

Speaker 1 the United States, and that would be

Speaker 1 part of the ARC, the America, Russia, China project that we are investigating and keep looking out for. And then Scott Besant,

Speaker 1 our Secretary of the Treasury, our money guy, the guy with the wallet, he was on the with the money honey. What do you think? The wallet guy with the money, honey, and he threw out this little diddy.

Speaker 31 In terms of the Japanese buying Russian oil, they buy, I think, a substantial amount of LNG, about 10% of their needs, from Russia. And I believe over time they will be weaning off of that.

Speaker 31 And they will be part of a very large pipeline project that the U.S. is constructing in Alaska.
The Koreans may be part of it.

Speaker 31 And President Xi, unilaterally, in the meeting today, brought up that the Chinese might like to be part of it.

Speaker 1 What?

Speaker 1 What?

Speaker 1 I thought that was excellent.

Speaker 3 Well, that's been not discussed.

Speaker 1 Well, why would it be? We can't have that.

Speaker 3 Now, they run a pipeline from Russia, from Russia, I'm sorry, from Alaska through that another, they obviously wouldn't put it in the same tunnel as the train, but they'd run the pipeline

Speaker 3 probably in the water across the straits and up to

Speaker 1 through Vladivostok down into.

Speaker 3 Yeah, and then into, yeah, it'd be, it's doable.

Speaker 1 Yeah. I just hadn't heard about about it i thought that was raw the interesting

Speaker 1 a little little gem drop cheaper than the train that's for sure but

Speaker 3 i think the trains would really be something

Speaker 1 uh

Speaker 1 so i'm looking um so i did kind of like the tunnel i thought that was okay

Speaker 1 um

Speaker 1 you like the the robot with the digital id which which i use for the newsletter i know jeffrey rhea he's using the same model and it was just it's like it's boring it's boring artwork i like it yeah i you do.

Speaker 1 I didn't like it. We had the champagne socialist from Dan, OBGYN.
Okay, Dan.

Speaker 1 More pumpkins, pumpkins, pumpkins. Nah, it was too much pumpkin art.
And do we have anything even remotely usable for today yet? No.

Speaker 3 Not that I, I mean, the Lonely Fans thing is kind of funny, but it's not usable.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Well, we'll see if anyone comes up with something.

Speaker 1 You got to hurry.

Speaker 1 Dude, it's it's like

Speaker 1 I mean, it's so easy to prompt something, but our people have no imagination, it seems.

Speaker 3 No, AI has no imagination. There you go.
They prompt and prompt. You know, anything that's submitted here, you have to assume, because I've used these systems.

Speaker 3 I use them to create art for my substat column. And you prompt and you prompt and you prompt.
You can be, if you don't, if you get on the wrong track,

Speaker 3 you can be prompting for days on end and you keep getting pieces. You get three or four pieces every time, and ah, this is no good.
This is no good.

Speaker 3 You know, every one of these pieces that have submitted, except for the crappy ones, like there's a one or two I can think of that are on here right now.

Speaker 3 You're picking for maybe 25 pieces. Yeah.
This is like as much work as doing the art if you're fast.

Speaker 1 Yeah. It's like when people are sending me songs, they send me like, here's another version.
Here's another version.

Speaker 1 No, no. Pick one version and send that to me.
I don't need a producer, people. Yeah, I don't need your whole suno history, okay? It's just not necessary.
Okay.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Hey, let's thank our producers who sent us some treasure. We always appreciate that.
And we thank everybody, $50 and above.

Speaker 1 And then we have some special thank yous to people who were fortunate enough to be able to give us $200 or more for this episode, which makes you an automatic associate executive producer of the No Agenda Show for this episode.

Speaker 1 Not only do you get that Hollywood credit, which is usable anywhere, right there. You can be right up with Dana Brunetti and 50 Shades of Gray, Grayer, and Smut

Speaker 1 and on IMDb.com. And we will read your note within reason,

Speaker 1 Robert from Seven Hills.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 if you can send us $300 or more, we will give you an executive producer credit and we will also read your note. And of course, the people who come in big have the shortest notes.

Speaker 1 And so that's why I'm very happy to thank Daniela pompeo from los angeles california she sends one thousand dollars and says happy 18th and many more to come damn what

Speaker 3 well i cleared this i had a bunch of these things crop up on my screen what things and i'm clearing bugs bugs creepy crawlies what things no the little uh the little windows reminders of this and that and i clicked on one of them to get it off the screen and instead it took over my screen you're going to reboot are you rebooting no i'm good i fixed it oh yeah are Are you updating?

Speaker 3 I'm updating.

Speaker 1 I've had the update pop up three times during this episode alone.

Speaker 3 You know, here's a

Speaker 3 snooze. Another boring story.

Speaker 3 So I'm on an old version of Windows 10 on this Nook because it's like a grandfathered out version that was specific to the

Speaker 3 Project. And it doesn't update.

Speaker 3 It says, well, you should be updating. So you say, and it keeps pestering you, so you update and update.

Speaker 3 And then it updates and and says, wait a minute, I can't do anything here because I'm locked out. I forget it.
And it goes back to the original. No.
Which is fine because it's bug-free.

Speaker 3 And so

Speaker 3 I'm getting pestered. You've got to move to Windows 11.
Now, this was after

Speaker 3 I have been told,

Speaker 3 if you remember when Windows 11 first came out, you had to run a check to see if your computer was a Windows 11 compatible.

Speaker 1 Yes. Remember? Yeah, of course.
Member, member. Member, member?

Speaker 3 And so

Speaker 3 this machine is not, but they've changed something because now they say it is.

Speaker 1 How does that work?

Speaker 3 How come it wasn't compatible?

Speaker 1 They lie. They lie.
They lie.

Speaker 3 This is bull crap.

Speaker 1 Dark patterns.

Speaker 1 And please, I would love to run the show on Linux, but please don't tell me that my audio hardware will work on Linux because it will not. You do not need to email me.

Speaker 1 If you do, I'm going to have John block you on his system. Okay.

Speaker 1 Many more to come, says Dame Pompeo, which is spelled P-O-M-P-E-U.

Speaker 1 And she says I'll be Dame

Speaker 1 Pompeo from now on. Isn't it Pompeo? No, she says Pompeo is pronounced like Mike Pompeo.
So she will be Dame Pompeo. $1,000.
Thank you, Danny Ella. We appreciate that.

Speaker 3 And she's also getting herself one of these.

Speaker 1 Yes, she's getting a peace prize. Peace prize.

Speaker 3 Duke of San Francisco's up. He's in San Francisco.
That's right. We see him at the meetups.

Speaker 1 We do.

Speaker 3 You do. 6767.
See, we have a meetup coming up in November 15th at the Mallard Club. I want people that haven't been showing up recently to come.
Oh, boy.

Speaker 3 Commodore dude named Ben, named Ben, Duke of San Francisco. Thanks, Adam, for sanity.
Adam's response to my spiritual turmoil was heartfelt. Oh, you must have been communicating with him.

Speaker 3 Well, he's in San Francisco. He's going to be depressed.
And truly impactful. Adam has truly enabled me to not go down the self-hating

Speaker 3 cath Jew path.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 1 Cath Jew. He's a cath Jew.

Speaker 3 Then he has

Speaker 3 hashtag escape pina colada.

Speaker 1 I know what that means.

Speaker 3 7676, 676766.

Speaker 1 I know what that means.

Speaker 3 I don't.

Speaker 1 If you're white, you're a racist.

Speaker 1 If you're male, you're a pig.

Speaker 1 If you're sis, you are privileged.

Speaker 1 Skinny shining if you're big. Here we go.

Speaker 1 And if you're stretch, you're homophobic.

Speaker 1 Heaven help if you're wrong.

Speaker 1 So don't have an opinion.

Speaker 1 And just do what you're told. There you go, Duke of San Francisco.
67676. That is a very good donation number.
We're loving these 67s. And we move on to Nancy from Newberg, New York.
Oops.

Speaker 1 Oh, go away uh she's in newburg new york and she sent in a uh a printed note

Speaker 1 uh a big hello to our

Speaker 3 i should mention this came in before the uh before we close secretary general right

Speaker 1 500 so there's always going to be a couple laggers yes a big hello to my two favorite podcasters thanks for all the laughs and fantastic media deconstruction I am writing this note in haste.

Speaker 1 I am hoping I'm not too late to bestow the gift of Secretary General to my excellent son. He knows who he is.
I'm listening to your show today, and I'm realizing I am running out of time.

Speaker 1 We live in New York, and he lives in California. Next weekend, he's flying here for a quick visit.
It'll be great if we can read this on November the 2nd show because we will actually be together.

Speaker 1 And we know the family that no agendas together stays together. It will also be a surprise for him.
If that is not possible, that's okay too. No, done.
We did it. It's done.
He's coming here.

Speaker 1 He's coming here.

Speaker 1 He's coming here to help us winterize our yard this year because my husband and his dad have been extremely sick this year with a very serious disease. Prayers up, prayer flare received.

Speaker 1 We'd all appreciate prayers for his recovery. You got it.
As many prayers as possible, please. God willing, he will get better.

Speaker 1 My son and I share the love of your show and have been listening for years. We are also both sustaining donors.

Speaker 1 If I were not in a rush today, I would compose a better letter because you really mean a lot to the both of us. Thank you so much, says Nancy.

Speaker 1 In Newburgh, New York, and she even writes there in handwriting, love you guys. All right, you got it.
And the Secretary Generalship is taken care of.

Speaker 3 Robert in Seven Hills, Ohio.

Speaker 3 I didn't know there were a total of Seven Hills in Ohio,

Speaker 3 let alone a town, but $350.93. Hi, TM, Adam.
John, did someone say hyperlocal podcast network?

Speaker 3 The Crooked River cast is ready.

Speaker 3 Where do we sign up? For example, do you know what the Ashland, Ohio County Democrat Party has kicked out, was was kicked out of the Ashland County Fair for offering buttons with 8647.

Speaker 3 Ah, what a classy operation.

Speaker 3 And buttons that say, is he dead yet? Wow. Ah, those Democrats.
What cards. Along with others, and the Democrats are suing the county fair, of course.
for being removed and for not being referred to

Speaker 3 for being referred to to the Secret Service.

Speaker 3 Or that as well, they should be. This is good.
Or that we have a petition in Ohio to get a constitutional amendment on November 26 ballot to espolish property taxes in the state. Good luck.

Speaker 3 And now the legislators are scrambling to get bills passed in an attempt to virtue signal that they are fixing the problem.

Speaker 3 Yeah, which was fixed in California with Proposition 13, 20, 30, 40 years ago. You can get more info at the group's website, lobbyistforcitizens.com, all you Ohioans.

Speaker 3 These are a few of the things you'll learn listening to a local podcast like the Crooked River Cast every Monday morning.

Speaker 3 Check out crookedrivercast.com for a new blog post, which publishes when the show is a long note. Very long.

Speaker 3 When the show does every Monday morning with the links and notes about the topics we discussed on the show. Thank you for

Speaker 3 our webmaster and our wonderful sister-in-law

Speaker 3 just

Speaker 1 saying Gizela. Gizela.

Speaker 1 Gizela. Yeah, maybe I said Gizela.

Speaker 3 For all the work on the website, she is doing a great job. This Monday, 11.3 will be the special show since it will be our 33rd show.

Speaker 3 And we all know that you only get 33 once. We celebrate this show with a donation of 333.33 to the greatest podcast in the universe for help inspiring Tom and I to start this show after 32 shows.

Speaker 3 I have a new respect for what you guys do, especially when it comes to reading notes and have done show for the last 18 years. Congratulations.

Speaker 3 We knew it would not be easy, but wow, I really had to, I had no idea how easy you guys make it sound. Not reading notes, though, you're not that good at that.
Thank you for everything you do.

Speaker 3 May you never find an exit strategy for more years because it'll take you that long to read the next note. Please extend your best goat, Karma, for the show.

Speaker 3 Thank you for your continued attention to this matter. Robert from Crooked River Cast.

Speaker 22 Boy,

Speaker 22 you've got

Speaker 1 karma.

Speaker 1 Yes, And then we have another note

Speaker 1 from Cassandra.

Speaker 3 Cassandra. Yeah, this is the woman I've talked about before.

Speaker 3 She sends these beautifully designed cards

Speaker 3 that she does by hand.

Speaker 1 She sent a happy Halloween card. And she says, Happy Halloween, John.

Speaker 1 I'm looking for my name on the card.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 Thank you for being the best podcast host in the universe. I guess it's just you.
Please accept my donation. That includes check cashing fees.

Speaker 3 She added 20 or 40 cents or something.

Speaker 12 She did.

Speaker 1 She did.

Speaker 1 Donation calculate. So what is her number here? Her number.

Speaker 3 305.75 total.

Speaker 1 305.75, 10.31 October 31st plus plus 2025 this year is 3,056 divided by 10. 305.60 plus 15 cents is 305.75.
Beautiful. Thank you.

Speaker 1 Despite the fact that you didn't mention me, but I guess it was just for John. So that's okay.
You can have your fave.

Speaker 3 It was. It was meant for me.
You can have your fave. Yeah, you get plenty of fan mail.

Speaker 3 Suscovians, Charlotte, North Carolina, 287. ITM, Adam and John.
Two sources inspired this donation: JCD's reference to the newsletter to the government shutdown as a game of chicken,

Speaker 3 and Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana's reference to 287 chickens and a goat.

Speaker 3 I remember that. In lieu of all those chickens, too manyeggs.com.

Speaker 3 Please accept this donation of $287.

Speaker 3 Adam, a goat scream, if you please. Thank you both for your courage.

Speaker 3 And for 18 years of superior media product, Sir Scovey. Thank you, Sir Scovey.

Speaker 1 Sir Dixburt is here from New Brighton, Minnesota, 23382.

Speaker 1 Dear John and Adam, I hope this donation note finds you well. In an effort to list all my producer credits in IMDb, I was checking my accounting records.
I haven't donated in a while.

Speaker 1 He says he's douchebag, but I won't douchebag you for that. I can't find proof of previous donations totaling enough for the title of baronet.
It doesn't mean I haven't donated enough.

Speaker 1 It just means I can only find receipts for $1,777.94.

Speaker 1 This is a donation of $222 plus

Speaker 1 six cents plus fees that will allow me to sleep at night and use the title baronet without shame. I donated 222.05 222.05 in May of 23, likely asking Adam for a penny.

Speaker 1 Someday, well, I'm going to give it back to you. There you go.
Someday I may find the missing transaction, but I doubt it. This is easier.
No jingles, no karma.

Speaker 1 Love us lit, says Sir Dixpert, and your title upgrade is planned, sir.

Speaker 11 Thank you.

Speaker 1 Brad

Speaker 3 Grannier.

Speaker 3 If it was going to be pronounced that way, it could be Grannier.

Speaker 1 No, I think Granier.

Speaker 3 Hey, Brad Grannier, is there there a Grannier here?

Speaker 1 Brad Gannier. Yeah, I'm Brad Granier.
Brad Granier, Brad Grandier, Texas.

Speaker 3 22336. God bless the both of you.
I could use some jobs, karma.

Speaker 33 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 22 You've got karma.

Speaker 1 Man, we got the blessings today. The Highland Craigs from Colorado Springs, Colorado, come in with $200 and say, God bless you all.
Love from the Highland Craigs. Thank you.
God, all uppercase.

Speaker 3 Eli the Coffee Guy in Bensonville, Illinois, 21102222222222.

Speaker 1 You missed Sean. Oh, I did.

Speaker 3 Oh, I'm sorry. Sean Homan,

Speaker 1 21911.

Speaker 3 ITM Brothers, God be with you. There you go.

Speaker 1 Nice. Eli the Coffee Guy, there he is.
Bensonville, Illinois, 211.02, $200 plus the date, 11.02. It seems key evidence from the January 6th pipe bomber case has mysteriously disappeared.

Speaker 1 Funny how data corruption only seems to happen when the files get interesting. Epstein, anybody?

Speaker 1 You might not be able to trust the narrative, but you can trust that GigaWatt makes amazing fresh roasted coffee. So visit gigawatt coffee roasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20% off your order.

Speaker 1 Stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy.

Speaker 3 Michael Chauvin in Saginaw, Michigan, 21060.

Speaker 3 To my Kathleen, 36 years ago, I met a smoking hot brunette,

Speaker 3 and then

Speaker 3 life got in the way. Two years ago, you sent me a text out of the blue, and I got a second chance at the love of my life.

Speaker 1 Wow. Wow.

Speaker 3 What a story. This time, I am not letting go.

Speaker 1 Nice.

Speaker 3 It's the message to Kathleen from 36 years ago. Yes.
Talk about carrying a torch.

Speaker 1 Message in a bottle. Nice.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Hey, there's Matthew Martell from MartellHardware.com, Brewmore, Pennsylvania, 21060.
Only two things scare me: nuclear war and the threat of being put on JCD's email block list.

Speaker 1 It's equal. Visit MartellHardware.com.
Use coupon code 67 for an additional 10% off your order. Oh, he wants hot pockets.
I'm sorry, I missed that one.

Speaker 1 Let's see,

Speaker 1 JCD Hot Pockets.

Speaker 1 My system.

Speaker 1 That's not my system. It's my.

Speaker 1 Oh, what?

Speaker 1 This is interesting. Hot Pockets.
It's me. It's not the system.
It's me.

Speaker 1 Hot Pockets. There you go.
Got it.

Speaker 3 Linda Lupak in Lakewood, Colorado. There she is.
200 bucks.

Speaker 3 Every show, she should get herself a degree or something.

Speaker 1 Yes, I agree.

Speaker 3 Well, she is the Duchess.

Speaker 1 I degree. I degree.

Speaker 3 Jobs, Karma, for a competitive competitive edge with a resume that gets results. Go to imagemakersinc.com for all of your executive resume and job search needs.

Speaker 3 By the way, she uses a resume. The first use says resume, and the second is actually resume with the accent ago.

Speaker 1 I'm both, though. Resume.

Speaker 3 That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K and work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.

Speaker 33 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 22 Youth jobs.

Speaker 1 And winding it up from Calgary, Alberta,

Speaker 1 Canada, Marina Struin. What do you

Speaker 1 struin? Struin. Struin.
I'll do Struin. It's Calgary.
It's a cool struin.

Speaker 1 Today, November 2nd, is my mom's birthday. Her name is Alina Struin.

Speaker 1 And she listens to your podcasts every week. She especially enjoys listening to the live shows when they come out on Thursdays and Sundays.

Speaker 1 So I know she'll be listening to this announcement live as well. Hello, Alina.
My mom always tells our family how the No Agenda Show is her favorite podcast of all time.

Speaker 1 If you guys could wish her a happy birthday, I know it would make her day. Happy birthday, Alina.

Speaker 3 Happy birthday.

Speaker 1 And love from Calgary, Alberta. It's beautiful.

Speaker 1 Live, man. I love it.
The people listen live. Thank you very much to the executive and associate executive producers.
We will be thanking the rest of our $50 and above producers in our second segment.

Speaker 1 We appreciate you, and we appreciate that you're helping us in this way. It's value for value.
It's the only way that the show continues for at least four more years or until we're the 21st.

Speaker 1 That'd be three more years. We're working on it.
We're working on it. Keep us going.
Go to noagendadonations.com. Any amount, whenever you get value, you determine what that is to you.

Speaker 1 Only you know how much money in your pocket is value. You send that to us.
Of course, you can always set up a recurring donation, any amount, any frequency, noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 1 Thank you to these associates and executive producers. Our formula is this:

Speaker 16 we go out, we hit people in the mouth.

Speaker 16 I have

Speaker 1 a rather disturbing report from KTLA.

Speaker 1 KTLA in Los Angeles.

Speaker 1 This is the guy who's the smug guy. You know, he's always making little quips and little jokes before he gets into his report.
So I cut all that out.

Speaker 3 I watch KTLA, so I don't know.

Speaker 1 I watch it all the time.

Speaker 1 This is an unfortunate DTCC,

Speaker 1 which we all know stands for due to climate change.

Speaker 16 We've already talked about how cocoa prices are rising worldwide because of climate change. And that doesn't seem to be changing anytime soon.

Speaker 16 But that, in turn, has the candy industry rejiggering its recipes to try to minimize the use of cocoa and cocoa butter and use alternative ingredients without messing too much with the taste.

Speaker 16 And that's something that is now prompting them to quietly change the labeling of their candies as well. For example, you

Speaker 16 may not have noticed, but the labels of Amon Joy, Mr. Goodbar, Rolo candies, and others have been subtly changed in recent years.

Speaker 16 Gone were the milk chocolate replaced with the largely meaningless phrase chocolate candy. Okay, what's up with that?

Speaker 16 The Food and Drug Administration has very clear criteria for what constitutes milk chocolate.

Speaker 16 And the chocolate industry ran afoul of that when, to grapple with their high cocoa costs, they started replacing expensive cocoa butter with other fats.

Speaker 16 Now, that reformulation, as the industry calls it, means that you can no longer claim that a product has milk chocolate, chocolate because if it doesn't meet the criteria, it's not milk chocolate.

Speaker 16 And hence we get the largely ambiguous phrase chocolate candy replacing that.

Speaker 16 Some are already using the phrase chocolatey, which suggests that it is in the vicinity of chocolate, I suppose, but it's not the same thing.

Speaker 16 Now, we can see why this is happening and it's not going to be changing anytime soon, but make no mistake, this is not your father's almond joy. This is something else entirely.

Speaker 16 And what this means, ultimately, considering that climate change isn't going to end anytime soon, is that milk chocolate for the masses might be a thing of the past.

Speaker 1 Now, amazingly, the one question I had about this report was actually asked by one of the co-hosts on the KTLA morning show.

Speaker 1 Sadly, the answer was not satisfactory.

Speaker 4 So what is it?

Speaker 16 What are these other

Speaker 16 things? It's not milk chocolate. What is it? Well, if you're using other fats, then I'm not sure where those fats are, but they are clearly not not cocoa butter fats.

Speaker 16 And cocoa butter is what gives milk chocolate. It's very chocolatey taste.
Fat is something that delivers

Speaker 16 flavor.

Speaker 1 Hold on, chemist.

Speaker 16 Mouth appeal, which is something that the food industry focuses on.

Speaker 7 Mouth appeal.

Speaker 16 If it doesn't feel good in the mouth, you're not going to want to come back for more.

Speaker 16 So as they shift away from milk chocolate to these other forms of more chocolatey ingredients, you have to change the labels. And that's something where we as consumers just keep an eye out.

Speaker 16 If you don't see milk chocolate, it ain't.

Speaker 1 So, thank goodness, we have a podcast with the two of us. We both have our strengths and weaknesses.
We do SWOT analyses all the time. And this is right up your alley.
So, first of all,

Speaker 1 I agree. It doesn't sound like cocoa butter or cocoa fat is used in

Speaker 1 milk chocolate. So, I would like to know first.

Speaker 1 I would like to know first,

Speaker 1 what is in milk chocolate and what other fats could they be using instead?

Speaker 3 Well, I'm okay. I don't, you don't know what fats they're using.
I mean, cocoa butter is a fat,

Speaker 3 but milk chocolate specifically has milk in it to make it that taste the way it tastes.

Speaker 3 It's actually they use dried milk solids normally,

Speaker 3 and that's what makes milk. It's got nothing to do with the fat.

Speaker 1 What do you think they're using?

Speaker 1 Like, like butt fat, pig fat,

Speaker 3 other

Speaker 1 nut fat?

Speaker 1 Nut sauce.

Speaker 3 I'm guessing it would be palm oil or.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's not good.

Speaker 3 Well, palm oil isn't bad if it's fresh, which we know it's not.

Speaker 1 It's not going to be fresh. It's not going to be fresh.

Speaker 3 To make it on the spot.

Speaker 1 It's not going to be fresh.

Speaker 3 So that would be my guess. It would say on the label.
Well, no, no.

Speaker 3 It would say on the label.

Speaker 3 If they have... added palm oil to the mix, it would say it.
It has to say it.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 1 everybody, get out your almond joys. Whip out your almond joys.

Speaker 1 I don't eat that crap. I only eat

Speaker 1 lint chocolate if I eat chocolate. And I do eat a couple squares after dinner of lint, L-I-N-D-T chocolate.
And mainly because I like the guy on the back with the chef's hat making the chocolate.

Speaker 1 It makes me feel good. Like that guy made my chocolate.

Speaker 3 Well, there's a lot of good chocolates out there besides lint. I know.

Speaker 1 I like the one with orange, orange.

Speaker 3 Yeah, orange chocolate is good. In fact, it's one of my favorite ice creams historically has always been bittersweet chocolate orange.

Speaker 1 Now, I have another climate change update, and I'm very happy that a producer sent me this clip. It is a clip from TikToks or something.

Speaker 1 Because I had no idea about this. The Bovar scandal.
Have you heard of the Bovar scandal in Denmark? I have heard of it.

Speaker 3 I don't have the knowledge of it off the top of my head.

Speaker 1 I have the knowledge.

Speaker 3 I'll be reminding you.

Speaker 1 Once you tell me, me i'll say yep i know i have the knowledge but first we have the breakthrough that this is now in the m5m

Speaker 2 hello this is ken dilsen from denmark this is an update on the bova scandal in denmark three three days ago the first farmer went uh out with his face and his name in a video explaining how his

Speaker 2 cattle was sick and some of them dead because of this bova chemistry poison you might call it Now, three days later, our mainstream media is reporting what's going on.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 2 we made it in some way. Now we broke the media wall.
Now people in Denmark is talking about the Bovair scandal in some manner.

Speaker 2 So it's only this poisoning of the cows, how they get sick and some of them die. That's in the mainstream media.
We still need some other things.

Speaker 2 There's nothing about poisoning our food supply, milk and beef.

Speaker 2 There's nothing about how the politicians knew about this scandal and what would happen to our animals and our food supply from December 24, December last year, almost a year ago.

Speaker 2 The politicians and ALA and the media knew about this. But in some way, we succeeded.

Speaker 2 We broke the media wall, and now everybody who is watching the mainstream media and everybody else who is informed now know about how dangerous Providence is.

Speaker 2 And we're still working to get it totally banned here in Denmark. But this is just some good news from here.
We're really excited this morning.

Speaker 1 So, Bovar, B-O-V-A-E-R, is a feed additive which was developed by the Swiss-Dutch company DSM Ferminisch. DSM, of course, is the former chemical company which turned into a food company.

Speaker 1 They make food now, not real food, but fake food with good mouthfeel.

Speaker 1 And this was developed to reduce climate change from cow farts.

Speaker 3 Oh, I remember this.

Speaker 1 Yep. It's supposed to work by suppressing a specific enzyme in the cow's rumen,

Speaker 1 which produces methane during ingestion. This reduces methane emissions from dairy cows by 27 to 30 percent, in beef cattle by 45 percent.

Speaker 3 And just as a technical point,

Speaker 3 most of the cow farts

Speaker 3 and methane gas gas actually come from the cow burping.

Speaker 1 Right. Well,

Speaker 1 it was promoted as a tool for climate mitigation. I believe this was forced on the Danish farmers who witnessed sudden collapses, high fevers, diarrhea,

Speaker 1 mastitis, utter inflammation, reduced milk production and refusal. to eat deaths with some unverified claims of thousands of cows dying or being euthanized.

Speaker 1 And this seems to have finally broken through to the mainstream. And of course, people have been eating this beef and drinking this milk,

Speaker 1 which is probably not good for you.

Speaker 1 And so it appears now that the scandal is out.

Speaker 1 And I wonder if any bovar was used in any other countries. And I, of course, am particularly interested if it was used in the United States for this crazy climate mitigation.

Speaker 3 Pease was promoting this. What? So he switched around to be not so much on the climate side.

Speaker 1 Maybe he switched around right in time for this scandal to break.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 3 good timing. Yeah.

Speaker 1 It's ridiculous. Can't believe that.

Speaker 3 Yeah, that's what happens when you fool around. With nature.
Exactly.

Speaker 1 So be on the lookout for this stuff.

Speaker 1 That sounds terrible. It does sound terrible.

Speaker 3 I have a couple of. I have

Speaker 3 the camela, camala, camela, camala Harris clip

Speaker 3 that she did, which is, I think, a classic.

Speaker 3 She did it on Jon Stewart's little podcast.

Speaker 3 And this is where she's going on about how great the Democrats are and what a fabulous

Speaker 3 party it is and all the stars. And I think she sounds drunk here.

Speaker 35 We have so many stars in our party. There are so many stars.

Speaker 35 And let's not be afraid of them.

Speaker 35 You know, you talk about Mamdani.

Speaker 36 I mean, he's exciting this group of people who otherwise don't think of themselves as being aligned or apart or even seen by the system.

Speaker 35 You just look at the range of what we have so many. Jasmine Crockett,

Speaker 35 who I just talked to recently, I mean, we have so many stars.

Speaker 1 That is sad. Whether she's drunk or not, just the whole fact that she's talking about how many stars they have.

Speaker 3 That's I don't know what she's getting at here, but I re

Speaker 3 changed the tempo of this a little bit.

Speaker 1 No kidding. Oh, you changed it in your own.

Speaker 3 Not in that one. No, here's the alt version.

Speaker 35 There are so many stars,

Speaker 36 and

Speaker 35 let's not be afraid of them.

Speaker 35 You know, you talk about Mamdani. I mean, he's exciting this group of people

Speaker 35 who otherwise don't think of themselves as being aligned or part or even seen by the system.

Speaker 35 You just look at the range of what we have so many.

Speaker 36 Jasmine Crockett,

Speaker 35 who I just talked to recently, I mean, we have so many

Speaker 1 stars. I don't think you needed to slow it down to make the point.

Speaker 3 No, but I think she sounds more like the drunk at the bar with the old version.

Speaker 1 What was the artifacts that I didn't like?

Speaker 3 I know, you know, that was funny because those artifacts normally don't show up when I do what I did.

Speaker 3 And I kept wondering, you know, it makes me wonder about the original recording.

Speaker 1 Well, because it has, there's some podcast embedded. Yeah, it's a podcast.

Speaker 1 Experts.

Speaker 3 It has people that know what they're doing.

Speaker 1 So a couple of people sent me this.

Speaker 1 Kind of fits in a little bit with that. I mean, that was obviously not an AI.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 I was surprised because the people who sent me this, I don't know if they understood that this is actually an ad.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I like people who don't notice it.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 3 They think something's real and it's an ad.

Speaker 1 They're like, this is a great supercut

Speaker 1 of college professors getting super angry with their students about them using chat GPT for their papers and other schoolwork. See if you can spot the ad.

Speaker 1 I am done with the shortcuts!

Speaker 1 You think the robot can do your thinking for you? You think you can just paste a question into ChatGPT and call it learning? This isn't like a kid.

Speaker 1 I am sick of grading essays that sound like they were written by a polite robot with a thesaurus.

Speaker 3 Stop using ChatGPT.

Speaker 1 It is lazy, it is dishonest, and it is a guaranteed way to fail this class. I can tell which of you use ChatGPT.
I'm going to pass your resume to McDonald's. Oh, my God.

Speaker 1 I told you the only AI allowed on this campus is StudyFetch. I caught half of you using ChatGPT.
I told you you want to use AI. Use StudyFetch only!

Speaker 1 You're all going to work at McDonald's. Or worse, Deloitte.

Speaker 1 I told you to use one spreak AI, not just ChatGPT, but nobody listens! No ChatGPT, no bots, no tricks. It's plagiarism, and it will ruin your career.

Speaker 3 For everyone who uses Chat GPT, you all automatically fail the class.

Speaker 1 It's unbelievable.

Speaker 34 I caught half of you using Chat GPT as if I wouldn't know. Guys, I told you many times to use Lunch Break AI if you're going to use Chat GPT.

Speaker 1 All right,

Speaker 1 that's where everyone kind of should be figuring it out. Lunch Break AI.

Speaker 3 I heard it the first time. Yes.

Speaker 3 I heard it the second time, and it was so

Speaker 3 it's like lunch break. AI, I never heard of this product.
It's you wouldn't, this is bull, it's obviously bull crap because you wouldn't throw it. Why would this guy say use anything?

Speaker 1 Exactly.

Speaker 1 So, lunch break.

Speaker 3 Maybe he's against ChatGPT. Why would he be all for lunch break? Or I wish this is a product I never heard of.

Speaker 1 Well, here's the product: lunchbreak.ai

Speaker 1 right there on the on the homepage. Think ChatGPT is safe.
Think again, paste your AI text and get humanized, undetectable versions instantly.

Speaker 3 Oh, so they want, so this product wants you to take a chat GPT ramble, which is what I would call it,

Speaker 3 and drop it into lunchbox or whatever the hell it is.

Speaker 1 Lunch break.

Speaker 3 Oh, lunch break, and drop it in there, and out comes something that's a little more realistic.

Speaker 1 Is that what they're trying to consider?

Speaker 3 In fact, they have a oh, I'd like to try that out. That's not going to work.

Speaker 1 Well, you can scan your text for AI for free right there on the homepage.

Speaker 1 Well, I'll do that later. And by the way,

Speaker 1 Lunchbox is trusted by 300,000 world-class teams, professionals, and writers to scan people.

Speaker 3 300,000? I've never heard of it.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Well, there's a lot more.
Oh,

Speaker 1 you got to continue with Google to sign up. Yeah, I don't think so.
Oh, please. What are the features? Let me see what the pricing is.
Does it give me pricing? It should.

Speaker 1 No, you got to sign up to get the pricing. Well, just sign up.

Speaker 3 You got a Google account you don't care about.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Okay. I'm doing it.
Here we go. Oh, we can read your name in your profile.
Okay.

Speaker 3 Lunch break.

Speaker 1 Here we go.

Speaker 1 Detect and humanize. What's the pricing? Come on.
You were going to show me pricing.

Speaker 1 Hey, Stephanie says, hey, let us know if you have any questions.

Speaker 3 Ask him the question. What's the price?

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 What's the price?

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Stephanie, let's see. Stephanie has a picture.
Let's see. Can I click? I can't click on Stephanie's picture.
Chat with support, Stephanie. Well, no, she's not, she's not answering me.

Speaker 3 Oh, no, that's unbelievable.

Speaker 1 We can do an audio message.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Hey, Stephanie, it's John and Adam here. We're really interested in your lunchbox product.
Could you please tell us how much it costs?

Speaker 1 Okay, I've sent it up. It's being uploaded.

Speaker 1 Let's listen to it.

Speaker 3 It's already a dog.

Speaker 1 Hey, Stephanie.

Speaker 1 It's John and Adam. That's how our message starts.
It's already a dog. I'm here.
We're really interested in your lunchbox product.

Speaker 1 Could you please tell us how much it costs? It's still no answer. This lunchbox thing is no good.

Speaker 1 I want an immediate answer. She said, hey, let us know if you have any questions.

Speaker 3 Oh, well, you asked the question. They should have asked.

Speaker 1 Answer it. She's not.
This is very bad. This stinks.
This stinks.

Speaker 3 Who comes up with these ideas?

Speaker 1 Well, Chat GPT-funded nonsense is what it is.

Speaker 1 Chat GPT, Open AI.

Speaker 3 Oh, this is what I would do.

Speaker 1 If I was OpenAI, I'd create a bunch of bull crap products that suck. This is a good idea.
Hold on a second.

Speaker 3 It's a great idea.

Speaker 1 Hold on. Let's see.
Hold on a second.

Speaker 1 Who are the

Speaker 1 investors

Speaker 1 in lunchbreak.ai?

Speaker 1 Let's see. That'd be funny.
It'd be very funny if it was OpenAI.

Speaker 1 Let's see.

Speaker 1 Well, Grok is not familiar and is now looking to find it.

Speaker 3 So I guess I'm not the only one who never heard of the product.

Speaker 1 No, no.

Speaker 3 Grok amongst the 300,000

Speaker 3 users.

Speaker 1 Yes, yes. Oh, here it comes.

Speaker 1 Okay, we're reviewing.

Speaker 1 Oh, it seems likely to be bootstrapped or self-funded at this stage. Hmm.

Speaker 1 That seems.

Speaker 3 In other words, we were not going to find out. It's good work of hiding it.

Speaker 1 That seems kind of unlikely. Hmm.

Speaker 1 All right. There you go.
That's all I got there. Oh, yeah, I talked about this

Speaker 1 on Thursday, and now it's a news report.

Speaker 9 YouTube TV has removed channels owned by Disney from its lineup. The removal comes after the two media giants failed to reach a new carriage agreement before yesterday's midnight deadline.

Speaker 9 The blackout leaves subscribers unable to watch content from Disney networks, including ESPN, ABC, Disney Channel, FX, National Geographic, and Freeform.

Speaker 9 The two companies remain in talks, although neither indicated when customers can expect programming to resume.

Speaker 1 So where's the outrage? No outrage whatsoever. Nobody seems to care.

Speaker 1 I have, I care. And

Speaker 1 how about Jimmy Kimmel? Did he lose his audience now?

Speaker 3 The networks are still, the local channels are still there. Right, but as far as I know, ABC is still on the air.

Speaker 3 It's the cable stuff that's been taken off. Because I was looking at the thing the other day because it's football day.
I'm thinking, oh, let's see what the games are. And then I say, wait a minute.

Speaker 3 Well, actually, I noticed it on Friday when I went to watch Pardon the Interruption, which is one of the shows I watch just to keep up with sports news.

Speaker 3 And so I said, what happened? And I kind of figured it out because I knew from some months ago that they were bitching about this. And so what did I do to get my fix?

Speaker 1 What did you do?

Speaker 3 I went to YouTube.

Speaker 3 Yeah. Disney posts almost everything on YouTube.

Speaker 1 Really now?

Speaker 3 Plain YouTube. And they take the commercials out.

Speaker 1 That's even better. It's even better.
What a weird.

Speaker 3 So I found it on YouTube and the current show. Boom, I watched it.
It was like 16 minutes. It was a lot shorter.
And I got that out of the way, and I don't care.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's excellent.

Speaker 1 That's a good life hack.

Speaker 3 It's a life hack, ladies and gentlemen. A life hack.

Speaker 1 NBC News has a new campaign for their news products.

Speaker 1 and the payoff is Facts, Clarity,

Speaker 1 Calm.

Speaker 1 Since they're on screen only, I shall read those at the end of the spot.

Speaker 16 They're bantering back and forth.

Speaker 2 I hate to say it, but I don't trust much of anything.

Speaker 1 It's all books.

Speaker 1 I want to be able to form my own opinions.

Speaker 1 I've seen people cut their families off.

Speaker 16 Just tell the the truth.

Speaker 1 They make everything seem extreme, seem scary.

Speaker 1 I wish we didn't cite so much.

Speaker 21 I'm looking for some facts first.

Speaker 15 Tell me the facts.

Speaker 1 The truth.

Speaker 1 Report games from both eyes.

Speaker 1 If we got clear facts, maybe we could calm down a little.

Speaker 15 Just talk to each other more.

Speaker 3 That's what the news is supposed to do.

Speaker 1 Facts,

Speaker 1 clarity,

Speaker 1 calm,

Speaker 1 NBC news.

Speaker 1 That's terrible. They're going to lose their asses on this.
That's not what people want from news. They want yelling, break hangs, important things.
You're going to miss this. Get spun up.

Speaker 1 This is really good. You should see this.

Speaker 1 Watch it 11.

Speaker 3 That's very bad. Pretty much.

Speaker 1 Yeah, very bad idea.

Speaker 1 Oh, by the way, lunchbox, right there on their website, it says backed by Balaji

Speaker 1 S,

Speaker 1 ex-Coinbase CTO, Slow Ventures, M13,

Speaker 1 Road Capital, and more. I mean, how could AI not find that? It's right there on their website.

Speaker 1 Yeah, this is a problem.

Speaker 3 It's kind of wrong. It's like the Basmati rice recipe.

Speaker 1 I'd say that's right. I mean, come on.

Speaker 3 How hard can that be?

Speaker 1 No, wait, did she get back to me? No. But she still hasn't gotten back to me.

Speaker 3 No, she sucks. She's no good.

Speaker 1 What'd you say?

Speaker 3 I said she's no good.

Speaker 1 Okay. I uploaded that to her.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 3 She sucks. She's no good.

Speaker 3 Talking about sucky and no good.

Speaker 3 So I have a clip from Jennifer Witch. That woman of putty face.
I'm sorry, Jennifer Welch.

Speaker 3 That putty-faced woman who's on

Speaker 3 I've had it podcast.

Speaker 1 Oh, oh, oh, the taco tits lady,

Speaker 3 yeah, I guess that's what it is. Yeah, her and her doctor buddy that come to from Oklahoma, and they're big experts.

Speaker 3 This is the, I got two clips from her, she's just going on some hateful rant.

Speaker 1 So good.

Speaker 3 It's a hateful, well, of course,

Speaker 3 you know me. Yes, okay.
So it's a hateful rant, and it's like delusional, and it and it just confirms my substack column about Mom Donnie and how he's going to fool the Democrats into thinking that

Speaker 3 going full tilt radical socialist. And this was really funny considering she's from Oklahoma,

Speaker 3 going full tilt. I guess she's from Oklahoma.
She spent some time in Hollywood, I guess, for a while, just enough time to ruin her.

Speaker 3 And it's also, it looks like she's, according to, I was talking to Marty, our joke writer.

Speaker 3 Your joke writer.

Speaker 3 He says

Speaker 3 she may have had

Speaker 3 these fat pockets called

Speaker 3 buccal fat or something underneath the chin or near the chin bone.

Speaker 3 Everyone has them on their face. And it's become a trendy thing to take them out, surgically remove them, and it gives you more of a gaunt look.

Speaker 3 And then it just makes your face collapse. And you see these,

Speaker 3 people should look this up.

Speaker 1 When somebody gets older after these,

Speaker 3 and that Taylor Taylor Joy Taylor, whatever that actress's name, that did the Queen's Gambit, whatever her name is, she had it done to her and she looks like hell. She's so pretty.

Speaker 3 But anyway, here we go.

Speaker 21 If you think the Zoran thing is happening just in New York, and you think people are waking up only in New York City, you're mistaken. Look at this clip of a wine mom at the No Kings March.

Speaker 21 Play the clip.

Speaker 38 Every word's name was?

Speaker 21 Charlie Kirk, ma'am.

Speaker 1 Yeah, him is horrible. Horrible.

Speaker 21 Charlie Kirk is horrible?

Speaker 38 Yes, I'm glad he's not here.

Speaker 27 You're glad he's dead? Yes.

Speaker 17 Why would you say something like that, man?

Speaker 38 Because he was horrible on the campuses, the college campuses.

Speaker 21 Horrible person. You know what?

Speaker 27 I do the exact same thing.

Speaker 27 Would you be glad if I would die?

Speaker 1 Maybe.

Speaker 1 I'd have to think about it. You should be ashamed of yourself.

Speaker 27 Your friend just said she'd be happy if I died.

Speaker 15 So listen up, Democratic Democratic Establishment.

Speaker 21 You can either jump on board with this shit or we're coming after you in the same way that we come after MACA.

Speaker 3 Period.

Speaker 37 Stop taking AIPAC money.

Speaker 21 Go on an, I'm sorry I took APAC money atonement tour if you want to stay in power.

Speaker 37 Stop missing out on these big

Speaker 8 rallies.

Speaker 21 Hakeem and Chuck should have been front and center introducing the next mayor of New York City, but no, they wouldn't show show up because they're pussies.

Speaker 1 They're pussies that are beholden to the same corporations that Donald Trump, that helped Donald Trump get elected.

Speaker 21 And this is just an embarrassment. Kudos to Bernie, to AOC, to Zoron.
And that woman out in somewhere middle America saying,

Speaker 21 fuck Charlie Kirk, he was a racist, he was a piece of shit.

Speaker 21 There are so many more of us than there are of them. And these Democrats that continue to play patty cake with corporations and lobbyists.

Speaker 37 Nobody wants that. Nobody wants you.

Speaker 1 Well, this kind of proves my theory, doesn't it?

Speaker 1 That the AIPAC is the great unifier. You've got these nut jobs over here, and you've got nut jobs over here, and like, oh, everyone's controlled by AIPAC and Israel and Mossad.
Well, there you go.

Speaker 1 You can go have your big AOC

Speaker 1 party with Bernie and

Speaker 1 Tucker and

Speaker 1 Fuentes is great. Yeah.

Speaker 1 You've got to think, if I'm thinking the same as this lady, what is wrong with this picture?

Speaker 3 Yeah, well, there's definitely something wrong. And here's the second half of this clip.

Speaker 3 She is unhinged. This is terrible.

Speaker 3 Sorry about the not safe for work stuff, but that's what these Democrats have fallen. You know, by the way, before you play it, I noticed this, and somebody pointed it out in one of the shows.

Speaker 3 I think it was on Gutfeld. They point out that you've never had to do this before.
When a Democrat comes out and they've given a speech or something, you never had,

Speaker 3 Democrats and Republicans for that matter, you never had to bleep it so much.

Speaker 1 Bleep, bleep, bleep, bleep.

Speaker 3 It's unbelievable how much these people are just cussing gratuitously.

Speaker 37 Nobody wants that. Nobody wants you.

Speaker 21 We want politicians to speak freely and look at what the benefit is. Look at what is happening in New York.
And you dip shits are sitting on the sidelines

Speaker 21 doing, running your social media like complete dorks. It's embarrassing.
Get your shit together. Hakeem and Chuck, seriously, get your shit together because the Democratic Party is moving on.

Speaker 21 We are moving on.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 So is the Republican Party. It's amazing.
And neither will go anywhere. It's not going to happen.
It's a pipe dream. That's not how it works.

Speaker 1 Mondami is an op.

Speaker 1 These women don't know.

Speaker 3 From the letter we played, which is

Speaker 3 the woman who's

Speaker 3 the mom of the restaurant.

Speaker 1 Yes, yes.

Speaker 1 We know that he's an op.

Speaker 3 So we know he's an op for probably there's got to be some it's the same. It's a Bernie Sanders part of the party.
He's a

Speaker 3 it has to be Bernie Sanders behind this all.

Speaker 1 Wow.

Speaker 3 Because he's the one who initially, maybe the guy who took his, I don't know, is it going to assassinate somebody or other at the convention some years ago is a Bernie Sanders guy?

Speaker 3 Bernie Sanders, I think, is a little more

Speaker 3 he instigates more than I think we know.

Speaker 1 So Bernie Sanders is the evil man behind the curtain. Is he stroking his white pussycat?

Speaker 3 You know,

Speaker 3 sometimes you have to wonder.

Speaker 1 Wow. That is kind of blowing my mind now that I think about that.

Speaker 1 Hmm.

Speaker 1 No, there's got to be more. It's got to be someone else.

Speaker 3 No, Bernie Sanders is out front with Mom Donnie.

Speaker 3 This guy up in Maine is Bernie Sanders' country. That's where Bernie would have some influence and have maybe an operative come in there and offer him or get him this job.

Speaker 3 Bernie may have been the guy that was responsible for getting Chunk and these other people out of the liberal Democrat, the Democrat Socialist group.

Speaker 3 They were called Justice Democrats sometimes. Remember that?

Speaker 1 To be fair, to be fair, he had the young kids going for a while there before the Democrat Party screwed him. Remember that?

Speaker 3 Yeah, because

Speaker 3 the insiders of the Democrat Party know what's going on. They know about this because why wouldn't they? They got smart opportunities.

Speaker 1 But who is it? Who is it?

Speaker 1 Who is this group? Is this the DSA?

Speaker 3 Well, the DSA is definitely part of it, but I think Bernie's calling the shots. I think Bernie may be a bigger player than we think.

Speaker 1 I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda. Imagine all the people who could do this.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.

Speaker 1 Yeah,

Speaker 1 on no agenda

Speaker 1 in the morning.

Speaker 1 I did not did not expect to hear that.

Speaker 3 I didn't either. I just came to me.
But now's the time we're going to play,

Speaker 3 thank the people that came in with over 50 bucks. And Adam is going to read the names and thank everyone.

Speaker 1 Baron Latikin in Houston, $100.

Speaker 1 Right away, Clevin McLaughlin with his boob donation from Concord and North Carolina, 8008.

Speaker 1 And he says, boob donation, the Archduke of Luna, lover of America and boobs. Mark Plager in Beaver Creek, Ohio, 7676.

Speaker 1 I have to read this. He says, Adam was unfairly mocked when he claimed that the Japanese won the World Series.

Speaker 1 What he remembered was the World Baseball Classic in 2023, a multinational event that Japan did win by beating the United States. Aha! Lay off, Dvorek, he says.

Speaker 1 Dane Dana, Laughlin, Nevada, 72.27. That's a very nice palindrome.
Scott Clark, Cloudersport, Pennsylvania, 70.96. Tech guy Ty in Somerville, Tennessee.

Speaker 1 He sent $69.50. That is 73s, he says, from NJ8X, Tech Guy Ty, safely outside of Memphis.
Chris Forrestel in Missouri, $69.50.

Speaker 1 These are 67 donations, by the way. Yeah, all of them.
Yes, he says, I hope that you can explain 67.

Speaker 1 No,

Speaker 1 you can Google it. You can chat GPT.

Speaker 1 It's there. It's available for you.
Sir Fat Dad, 67. Sir Fat Dad says, 6'7.

Speaker 1 Dude, Sir Dr. Sharkey, St.
Peter's, Missouri, 67.

Speaker 1 That was all the 67. 6'7.
Yeah. Les Tarkowski.

Speaker 3 Another fabulous promotion.

Speaker 1 Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona. Small boob, 6006.
Michael Saliba in Clinton Township, Michigan. 5533 says promo code ITM for 25% off tariff-free watches at MAGATIMEWatch.com.
What is that?

Speaker 1 MAGATIME WACH.

Speaker 3 I think they're sending us a couple of watches.

Speaker 1 Oh, okay. Well, then it's great.

Speaker 1 Sir, by his grace, David Wicker in Jacksonville, Florida, 5510. Double nickels on the dime.
He says 55 is the new 67. That's for sure about that.
Paige Holland, San Antoni 55.

Speaker 1 Blake Neely in Hendersonville, Tennessee, 54.30. John Bassano in Madison, Alabama, 52.72.
Milton Mize

Speaker 1 in Covington, Louisiana, 50. These are the 50s.
Luke Raynor, 50. Forrester Birch from New York, 50.
Matt Frazzi in St. John's, Florida, 50.
Daniel LeBoy in Bath, Michigan, 50.

Speaker 1 We have Leslie Walker from Rosenberg, Oregon says, thank you for your courage to speak truth. Love the show with $50 donation.
And Michael Kemmerer in Snohomish, Washington, $50.

Speaker 1 These are our supporters, $50 and above. Again, thanks to our executive and associate executive producers who came in nicely for this episode.
We really appreciate that. You can support the show.

Speaker 1 It's all value for value. No levels, no gimmicks, no gitmo, gizmos.

Speaker 1 Of course, it's all on the honor system. So, when you reach knighthood, then we do have something nice for you, which is a ring.

Speaker 1 We actually have a dame coming up and a title change, and we do have lots of cool gimmicks, actually. But it's not obligatory.
You just do whatever you want to do. Noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 1 Set up a recurring donation today, any amount, any frequency. Noadendadonations.com.

Speaker 1 Lucy Christine Goering was born on October 28th. So we say happy birthday to her.
And we also say happy birthday to Theodore James Goering. Ah, yes, this is the twins who were born on October 28th.

Speaker 1 I got a beautiful picture. A little disappointing that their names are Lucy and Theodore and not Adam and John, but there you go.
Congratulations. Good job, Mama.
Marina Struence

Speaker 1 wishes her mama Lena a very happy birthday. Dame Dream Girl Rose wishes her sexy and conversant husband Sir Ralcitrant Crazy Steve a happy birthday.
He celebrates in two days from now on, the 4th.

Speaker 1 And we say happy birthday in advance to Mimi Smith Dvorak.

Speaker 1 She'll be celebrating on November 4th, and my note says she'll be turning 86 years old. Well, there you go.

Speaker 1 That's what it says. Happy birthday, everybody, from the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 1 I have a feeling there's some kind of gag going on that I'm not privy to within the Dvorak family. I've met Mimi and she doesn't seem to be that old to me.

Speaker 1 And otherwise, I'd like to know her skin regiment.

Speaker 1 Congratulations, Sir Dixpert. You become a baronet today as you upped your auntie there with your 222.6, I believe it was.

Speaker 4 We appreciate that very much.

Speaker 1 And congratulations with your addition. Then we have...
Oh,

Speaker 1 that's right. We have a late Secretary General, which means they get to play the jingle again.

Speaker 1 And we get to congratulate Nancy's son. Name withheld.
He becomes a Secretary General today. Just let us know what name you want to

Speaker 1 put on the Secretary General certificate, and we'll keep it anonymous, but we'll send that off to you with the appropriate name. And we do have a peace prize for Daniela Pompeo.

Speaker 1 Thank you very much for your very wonderful donation, Daniela. $1,000 gets you that handsome No Agenda

Speaker 1 International Peace Prize, I might say. We have one dame, and that would be the same one.
That would be Daniela Pompeo. So if you can get your blade out, we'll...

Speaker 3 We'll get the dame blade.

Speaker 1 The dame blade, yes, indeed. Beautiful.
Okay,

Speaker 1 Daniela Pompeo, step right up. Oh, man, what a beautiful day for you.

Speaker 1 You hereby are officially pronounced as Dame Pompeo, Dame of the Noah Gender Roundtable, which means we do have the Red Boys and Chardonnay on deck for you.

Speaker 1 If you prefer, we also have beers and blunts. We got geishes and sake.
I don't know if you want that.

Speaker 1 Vodka and vanilla, bong hits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger oil and gerbils, pressed milk and babylum for you maybe i don't know for sure we always have the mutton and mead on deck for anybody who is a knight or a dame here at the roundtable congratulations welcome dame pompeo

Speaker 1 You can head over to noagendarings.com and take a look at your handsome signet ring. Please let us know what ring size to send off to you.

Speaker 1 And we'll get that into the mail as soon as possible, along with some wax to seal your important correspondence with, along with, of course, a certificate of authenticity.

Speaker 1 The same goes for our secretary generals, secretaries general, and our international peace prize winner, go to knowagenderings.com.

Speaker 1 I don't have any meetup reports, but I do have a couple of meetups that are taking place. One is underway now in Durango, Colorado at the Ska Brewery.
That's the Anyone Out There meetup.

Speaker 1 Also, starting, oh, oh, underway as well, Dame Hoochie of the High Desert Mountains. Oh, I'm sorry.
She's doing the Durango colour.

Speaker 3 Durango.

Speaker 1 I said Durango. Oh.

Speaker 1 You wanted me to say something dumb like Durango. I would never say that.

Speaker 1 The Indy NA Tri-State Short and Long Barrel Safety Meetup. I think they're shooting guns today.

Speaker 1 This is the top right-hand corner of Indiana. That's Dame Maria and Sir Mark of the Greenwood.
I'm looking forward to Dame Manette's report on that one. It'll be forthcoming.

Speaker 1 Next show day, November 8th, the Northern Wake Post-Halloween Recovery Huggathon at 6 o'clock at Hoppy Endings in Raleigh, North Carolina. You guys need to send me a report.

Speaker 1 You have a lot of meetups that I don't think I ever get a report from you. Please send a report.

Speaker 8 Did I miss a report, by the way?

Speaker 1 I have a feeling I missed some reports today. Hold on one second.
That would be quite horrible.

Speaker 3 Maybe there's no meetup at all.

Speaker 1 No, no, there's definitely meetups. I think I

Speaker 3 money laundering operation.

Speaker 1 Yeah, here's the TMI.

Speaker 1 Yeah, see, I knew I missed one. Hold on a second.

Speaker 1 I'm going to play this

Speaker 1 blind, okay? I have no idea how it's going to turn out. Let's see what happens.

Speaker 39 Morning, this is Chris with a TMI Evac Zone meetup. Question for the audience: Would you rather talk like Al Sharpton or RFK Jr.?

Speaker 1 I'm 14 and I agree at 8 o'clock. Hi, this is Circumference, and I have nothing witty to say.
Live from Reseda. Wait, wait, no.
Harrisburg. Yeah.

Speaker 7 In the morning, it's 7:37, and we're just here to tell you this is what democracy looks like.

Speaker 8 In the morning, this is Serpent.

Speaker 7 Stop getting activated on Discord and start getting on the offensive.

Speaker 1 In the morning, Jason, with the great rets.

Speaker 1 Thank you for your courage. And we did not have a server in that report, but there we go.
Hey, we got a couple of cool meetups coming up this month. Eagle Idaho on the 8th, Oklahoma City on the 11th.

Speaker 1 Fort Wayne, Indiana on the 15th. Albany, California.
Get John out of the house on the 15th. Also, Zurich, Switzerland on the 15th.

Speaker 1 Well, definitely looking forward to that meetup report with your server. Wilmington, California, the 22nd, and Burlington, Kentucky, also on the 22nd.
Go to NoAgendameetups.com.

Speaker 1 This is where you get connection that gives you protection. These will be your first responders in any emergency at the No Agenda Meetups.
Go to Noagendameetups.com.

Speaker 1 If you can't find one near you, start one yourself. It's easy sometimes.
You want to go hang out with all the nights and days.

Speaker 1 You want to be where you won't be, triggered all hell. aim.

Speaker 1 You to be where everybody feels the same.

Speaker 1 It's like a party.

Speaker 1 So I'm looking now.

Speaker 1 Man, I'm over-ISO'ed here right now. You only have one, which of course is always going to be some great AI thing you've put together.
So I will give you some choices. I have one, two, three.

Speaker 1 Five ISOs.

Speaker 1 Let me see if I can compete. Ooh.

Speaker 1 Smooth.

Speaker 3 Not too bad. They had a punchline.
That would have been good.

Speaker 7 Okay, how much did we pay for this, bad boy?

Speaker 3 Mm-hmm. No.

Speaker 1 What do you want me to say? It's great.

Speaker 3 I couldn't understand it.

Speaker 1 What do you want me to say? It's great.

Speaker 3 It's great. I still can't understand it.

Speaker 6 That's tremendous.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 6 That's not too bad. That's tremendous.

Speaker 1 And the last one. That's good.

Speaker 32 That's good.

Speaker 21 That's nice.

Speaker 1 Of course. Of course.
And with the AJ. Of course.
Of course.

Speaker 32 That's good. That's good.
That's nice.

Speaker 1 All right. And you have one?

Speaker 3 I have one that the AJ one could beat, but this will be up to you.

Speaker 22 Holy smoke. How many years can this go on?

Speaker 32 That's good. That's good.

Speaker 21 That's nice.

Speaker 22 Holy smoke. How many years can this go on?

Speaker 1 I don't know.

Speaker 1 It's hard for me. It's a toss.

Speaker 3 I think you can go in.

Speaker 3 This is similar to the one that the show is too long. Yeah.

Speaker 3 In fact, you should save it for that purpose to throw it in out of the blue.

Speaker 1 Yes. Okay.
At the break.

Speaker 3 Because how many years can this go on? It's a downer compared to Alex, I have to say. So you win this one.

Speaker 1 All right, everybody. And now it is time, just in the nick of time, for John's tip of the day.

Speaker 1 Great advice for you and me. Just the chip with JCD

Speaker 1 and sometimes Adam.

Speaker 3 Alex is going to start asking for a commission.

Speaker 3 Okay, this is a booze, booze recommendation for people who haven't had it. And I was talking to Mimi about

Speaker 3 recommending Tank 10 as a gin people should buy if they're going to buy gin relating to I

Speaker 3 was actually on the tasting panel, professional tasting panel. Oh.

Speaker 3 Picked Tank 10 as the gin of the year.

Speaker 3 Really? When it came out, the year it came out, this was in the 90s. So it's a while ago.

Speaker 3 But,

Speaker 3 and it may have been talked about before on the show, but the one thing we haven't discussed and the one recommended tip of the day, people should just get this, use it in cocktails, or just drink it.

Speaker 1 It's terrific.

Speaker 1 It is tankery

Speaker 1 rangpoor lime.

Speaker 3 It's a flavored gin, which would be dynamite because it's lime-flavored in a

Speaker 3 martini. But it's tankery rangpoor lime.
You have one taste of this stuff and you'll fall in love with it. It is tremendous.

Speaker 1 So, is it tankeray's gin? No, tankeray is gin, yeah.

Speaker 3 Tanka is gin.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I'm not really a gin fan.

Speaker 1 Oh, you'd like this, really?

Speaker 1 Yep. So, and do you, when do when do you drink this gin?

Speaker 3 All the time

Speaker 1 for breakfast, everybody. There it is.
Find all these great tips at tipoftheday.net

Speaker 1 all the time.

Speaker 1 You and me, just the tip with JCD

Speaker 1 Created by Dana Bernetti. Well, there you go.
I'm not sure what's coming up next on the

Speaker 1 We've had some issues communicating with the back office on what comes up next on the No Agenda stream. It'd be nice to know.

Speaker 3 It'll be the DNS hour.

Speaker 1 DNS hour. It's always DNS.
Don't you know that by now?

Speaker 1 That does conclude our broadcast day. We're always excited to be here with you.
Thank you for joining us. Thank you for your boots on the ground, your contributions, your value for value as always.

Speaker 1 End of show makes us NQTEL, MVP, and Bonnold Crabtree. And remember,

Speaker 1 the link for the No Agenda AI slop song stream, slop stream, is in the show notes. Make your own website.
Let me know. We'll promote it.

Speaker 1 And that's it. Man, that's it.
Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, right here in Fredericksburg, Texas. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 3 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C. Dvorak.

Speaker 1 We've got abs and a six-pack next.

Speaker 3 There you go, a sir seat sitter.

Speaker 1 We'll talk to you again on Thursday. Until then, adios, mofos, a hooey-hoo-eye and such.

Speaker 1 Oh, good lord.

Speaker 1 Crashing computers, escaping review. Back during the apps, watching over you.

Speaker 1 Pounding the loser, started code at 10. Cracking at 13,

Speaker 1 you mess with the best. You die like the rest.
If you step to this,

Speaker 1 your family will miss. Rev and CIA.

Speaker 1 Don't call me a fan. Terror gets us played.
Ladies get us laid. Oh, it sent they said.

Speaker 1 Privacy is dead. We entered doors, wetted up some pores.
Stop, drop a pin. Blow your shit in.

Speaker 1 Mirror got finna win.

Speaker 1 We don't forgive sin. These colors don't bleed.
And neither do you.

Speaker 1 Crispy Picachu, Yankee Doodle Doo. Scarface, hellfire, Drone War, Hummus and a Face Maskey Well, make it hollow.

Speaker 1 Get up and flip the table, speaking now and co-author. Fuck this song,

Speaker 1 Snowden.

Speaker 1 Extractors locked in

Speaker 1 Hear me now in Qto

Speaker 1 Do you hear me now or watch me in

Speaker 1 the examples you're citing also involved ground troops

Speaker 1 laying the groundwork for ground troops

Speaker 1 like ground be ground truth

Speaker 1 ground breaking,

Speaker 1 ground troops.

Speaker 1 Is that a prompter, misread?

Speaker 1 Yes, it's a total prompter, misread

Speaker 1 Ground troops, like ground beef, like ground ground, like ground skeeper, ground beef, like ground skeeper.

Speaker 1 Exactly. The examples you're citing also involve ground troops by ground beef.

Speaker 1 Ground breaking,

Speaker 1 ground troops,

Speaker 1 groundbreaking,

Speaker 1 ground truth.

Speaker 1 Is that a prompter, misread?

Speaker 1 That's crazy.

Speaker 1 Haters gonna play day tricks.

Speaker 1 Here's this position, matrix.

Speaker 1 Haters gonna play they tricks.

Speaker 1 Here's this position, matrix.

Speaker 1 Drum word fit, start the cap. Oh, I hit you with my double tap.
Double tap,

Speaker 1 I'm a mama boom, boom. I'm on a boo-boo, I'm a mama boo-boo.
Homo nana boo boo. Heritage foundation.
Obama kept for cheap. Project 2025.
All the vitals ain't freaks. Heritage foundation.

Speaker 1 Obama kept for cheap. Project 2025, all the vital same freaks.
Trump too lacks on deportation policy. Remember Mitt Romney, he's stricter than Donnie B.
Hoe 2012, crucified the Poles.

Speaker 1 Born outside America, somehow illegible.

Speaker 1 Homo Bomba, gonna creep up on ya. Secretly married to a man, old mama.

Speaker 1 Homo bomba, gonna creep up on ya. Secretly married to a man, oh mama.
Heritage Foundation, Obama care for cheat. Project 2025 off the vital same freaks.
Harry Check Foundation, Obamacare Cheat.

Speaker 1 Project 2025 off the vital same freaks.

Speaker 1 Ain't no cracker better coming to my crib.

Speaker 1 No room for white in the White House crib.

Speaker 1 Ain't no cracker better coming to my crib.

Speaker 1 No room for white in the White House crib.

Speaker 1 No room for white white in the White House cribbed.

Speaker 1 No room for white in the White House cribbed.

Speaker 1 The best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 1 Mofo Devorak.org slash n a

Speaker 1 that's good.

Speaker 21 That's good. That's nice.