1812 - "Champagne Socialist"

3h 23m
No Agenda Episode 1812 - "Champagne Socialist"



"Champagne Socialist"


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Runtime: 3h 23m

Transcript

Speaker 1 I make phones.

Speaker 2 Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.

Speaker 3 It's Thursday, October 30th, 2025. This is your award-winning Gibbon Nation Media Assassination Episode 1812.

Speaker 1 This is no agenda.

Speaker 1 Canadians are beating us in baseball.

Speaker 5 And we're broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region number 6.

Speaker 8 In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 1 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I have nothing clever to say, especially about baseball, I'm John C.

Speaker 11 Dvorak.

Speaker 12 It's Craig Bottom Buzzkill in the morning.

Speaker 14 And here I am thinking you'd be impressed by my sports ball knowledge.

Speaker 16 I am.

Speaker 17 Oh, thank you. And

Speaker 1 tell us what's happening.

Speaker 19 Well, I'll tell you exactly what's happening.

Speaker 20 We are so distraught over Canadians beating us at baseball.

Speaker 24 That we are bringing out the curse of the colonel.

Speaker 28 World Series resumed tonight in LA. We have to see if Colonel Sanders is there again.

Speaker 30 A lookalike of Colonel was spotted behind home plate Saturday.

Speaker 30 One theory is it's a reference to the curse of the colonel, a Japanese belief that the ghost of Colonel Sanders cursed a Japanese baseball team after someone threw a statue of him from a local KFC into a river.

Speaker 30 Now, the Dodgers have three players from Japan.

Speaker 26 The Curse of the Colonel, surely you've heard of that.

Speaker 16 Yeah, so I knew you'd be impressed.

Speaker 19 I knew it. I knew it.

Speaker 17 That was a good clip to pull. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the Dodgers have gone,

Speaker 1 they've just gone flat.

Speaker 1 Mookie bets is the key to this.

Speaker 20 Mookie bets?

Speaker 38 Mookie?

Speaker 27 Mookie. Who's Mookie?

Speaker 1 Mookie can't hit the ball.

Speaker 40 Mookie, what's wrong with Mookie?

Speaker 41 So is it 3-2 right now?

Speaker 42 Is that the standing?

Speaker 19 3-2?

Speaker 1 3-yes, and whoever wins the fourth game wins the World Series. So the Dodgers can come back, but they're going back to Toronto.

Speaker 1 The likelihood watching them try to bat, except for Otani, who is just, you know, he's hanging in there. I remember once the team can't hit.

Speaker 44 I remember when the Japanese, didn't the Japanese win once?

Speaker 46 Didn't they win the World Series once?

Speaker 27 I'm pretty sure they did.

Speaker 6 Wow. I'm pretty sure they did.

Speaker 1 There you go. You were doing so well.

Speaker 1 You were hanging in there, actually.

Speaker 19 I'm sure the Japanese won at one time.

Speaker 48 I remember

Speaker 1 they had their shot at it.

Speaker 16 It was an outrage.

Speaker 48 I remember it.

Speaker 3 Wow.

Speaker 50 As I was was reflecting this morning, as I often do, I was thinking to myself, John,

Speaker 55 I really love doing the show with you.

Speaker 56 Of all the things I could be doing with my life at 61.

Speaker 58 But yeah, it's rocky.

Speaker 39 It's a roller coaster.

Speaker 51 But it is fun.

Speaker 59 Let's just admit it.

Speaker 60 I mean, you could have to be booking guests.

Speaker 1 Have a situation. Oh, well, that was the...
Okay,

Speaker 1 just for people out there, we don't want to bore you, Steph, with the background, how great we are.

Speaker 12 Yeah, no, we're great.

Speaker 17 Come on, we're great.

Speaker 1 The best decision we ever made when we came up with this show idea was to never have guests.

Speaker 1 People out there have no idea.

Speaker 50 They really don't.

Speaker 63 They really don't.

Speaker 1 It's the worst.

Speaker 64 I mean, I saw Joe Rogan had

Speaker 68 Miranda Lambert on, which I thought was an interesting choice.

Speaker 54 But then you really know that the podcast, the Potosphere, has become saturated with guests when Joe's reaching for really, that's that's very off uh almost off brand for him.

Speaker 44 Do you even know who Miranda Lambert is?

Speaker 1 No, I do not. I'm waiting for you to kind of tell me without embarrassing me by the fact that I don't know who the hell it is.

Speaker 47 Well, she's a very famous country singer, and she was married to Blake Shelton.

Speaker 1 Oh, yes, no, I do know who it is. Yes, yes, no, yes, no, before, before, yes, no, yes, no, before Blake dumped her to run off with the blonde, yeah, um, uh,

Speaker 27 uh, from no doubt, from no Doubt.

Speaker 45 Yeah.

Speaker 27 That girl.

Speaker 1 The No Doubt Girl.

Speaker 19 The No Doubt Girl.

Speaker 77 Yeah.

Speaker 78 And, you know, I just, it's like, oh, and I get, how many notes did you get?

Speaker 80 I got, you need to watch Tucker and Nick Fuentez.

Speaker 27 I know you hate Tucker, which, by the way, no, we don't hate Tucker.

Speaker 6 We don't hate Tucker at all.

Speaker 27 We like

Speaker 27 he's great.

Speaker 83 We like Tucker, exactly.

Speaker 54 Just because we complain about him,

Speaker 78 I did watch that episode.

Speaker 84 I thought that was interesting.

Speaker 48 Mo

Speaker 85 actually tweeted out a funny meme.

Speaker 27 He said, finally, the war is settled between the FBI and the CIA.

Speaker 26 They're friends again.

Speaker 86 Now, that's an inside joke, I guess.

Speaker 1 Well, it's a running gag of this show.

Speaker 56 Yeah, it's a running gag because, you know, the story is, of course, Tucker's a Fed and Fuentes is a Fed.

Speaker 2 Oh, yeah, it's a good bit.

Speaker 63 It is a good bit.

Speaker 59 And as I'm listening to that podcast, because I don't watch podcasts, I got no time to watch a podcast.

Speaker 31 I'll listen to the podcast.

Speaker 19 I'm like, this Fuentes, he's a political guy.

Speaker 79 I didn't realize he has a pack and he does, you know, he organizes for people

Speaker 53 that he thinks should win office.

Speaker 27 He's political.

Speaker 1 He's a moneymaker.

Speaker 19 He must be.

Speaker 88 Well, I don't know if he's making a lot of money, but I'm sure he's making money.

Speaker 1 No, I mean, in terms of making money for candidates.

Speaker 12 Yeah.

Speaker 1 He's a fundraiser. That's the word I should have used.

Speaker 90 So they had a lot more in common than they did differences.

Speaker 45 And as I'm listening to this, and I, you know,

Speaker 27 all the

Speaker 92 Jew hate, all that, who cares?

Speaker 93 I don't care what they're talking about there.

Speaker 20 But I thought this was interesting that

Speaker 94 neither of them really are

Speaker 47 really honest about their feelings towards other countries other than Israel.

Speaker 27 Listen to this little clip.

Speaker 98 I just feel like it needs to be called out explicitly.

Speaker 19 And I like what you said.

Speaker 100 If the other day, if you're serving in another country's military or have dualistic people.

Speaker 10 Well, let's stop that clip.

Speaker 33 That clip is stopped.

Speaker 1 Did it go like, did the thing tend to go, I like what you said the other day. I like what you said.
No, I liked what you said. No, no, no.
I liked what you said better than what you liked what I said.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 101 No, no, it wasn't like that.

Speaker 53 But this is particularly, this is that they both have a problem with Israel and the perception that Israel controls American politicians.

Speaker 103 That's where they really have common ground.

Speaker 50 Now, this show is of a different opinion that Israel does not control America.

Speaker 103 Indirectly, it may have influence on

Speaker 59 our politicians through APAC, funded by the Military Industrial Complex, who sends military money for them to buy our stuff.

Speaker 33 Okay.

Speaker 1 Before you continue, did you watch J.D. Vance's speech at the University of Mississippi?

Speaker 74 Some of it, yeah, some of it.

Speaker 87 Why?

Speaker 1 He brought the topic up.

Speaker 69 Oh, gosh, I wish I did not see that.

Speaker 1 What did he say?

Speaker 1 I didn't clip it.

Speaker 1 He's really a good speaker. It's kind of surprising how good he is.
But he brought the topic up. He's totally with us.

Speaker 19 Oh, really? No?

Speaker 107 Okay, I'll have to clip it now.

Speaker 103 No, I'll have to go and

Speaker 1 just go look at it for prosperity.

Speaker 1 It was a little longer than I'd like.

Speaker 103 Yeah, well, just for prosperity.

Speaker 19 But this is true.

Speaker 72 This is blatantly true.

Speaker 56 And you notice how that noise has kind of simmered down a little bit, but not with these two.

Speaker 54 But here's the thing that I just felt was like, oh, you know, it just hit me like, no, you guys are full of crap.

Speaker 39 Listen.

Speaker 98 I just feel like it needs to be called out explicitly.

Speaker 19 And I like what you said the other day.

Speaker 100 If you're serving in another country's military or have dual citizenship, you really can't be a part of this project.

Speaker 111 Well, that's just, that's an easy one, but I am much more comfortable as a Christian and an American keeping it on that level because,

Speaker 111 you know, it's easy to just set rules that universal rules that apply to everyone, not just the Jews or the Christians or anybody, just like Americans can only serve in the U.S.

Speaker 48 military or they lose their passport. I mean, I don't know.
That's not hard.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 113 I don't know.

Speaker 1 Why not want to just say that?

Speaker 10 Yeah, why not say that?

Speaker 114 So as I'm listening to that, I'm like, where were Tucker and Fuentes about the hundreds, perhaps thousands of people who went and fought for the Ukrainians.

Speaker 13 How come I didn't hear anyone talking about, well, you can't do that?

Speaker 70 That's you're you're fighting for a different country.

Speaker 27 You should lose your passport.

Speaker 48 Yeah, just like great catch.

Speaker 50 Yeah, so that just shows a severe bias.

Speaker 19 But then, on the other hand, it was fascinating to hear Fuentes, and now I agree with him on this one.

Speaker 76 He was talking about an assassination attempt that was made against him, and it was some

Speaker 74 young guy who

Speaker 56 the whole story is kind of lengthy, so I didn't include that.

Speaker 44 Some young guy who had a fight with his roommate and he shot his roommate, then shot his parents and then went to go kill Fuentes,

Speaker 86 which didn't happen,

Speaker 104 luckily for him, of course.

Speaker 47 But here's his thinking of who was behind this.

Speaker 111 I mean, it's a well-documented fact that all kinds of bad actors use unstable people for political assassinations, right?

Speaker 66 It's happened. We know it's happened.

Speaker 52 So here's Tucker setting it up.

Speaker 118 Like, come on, man.

Speaker 69 We know Israel did it.

Speaker 74 So

Speaker 38 do you think this might be an example of that?

Speaker 100 I don't think so, but it's certainly possible. The reason I say I don't think so.

Speaker 119 It's kind of funny.

Speaker 111 I mean, I think of you as conspiracy-minded, but you don't have a conspiracy in mind here.

Speaker 98 No, because I really believe that when you look at all these things, and by these things, I mean these like really disturbing instances of violence like Luigi Mangion or Charlie Kirk or the school shootings.

Speaker 100 There is something going on with these kids.

Speaker 98 It's nihilism. It's these people that are maybe mentally defective, extremely online.
I think there's like a real problem there. And

Speaker 45 I don't doubt that.

Speaker 98 Sometimes these people are involved with maybe a foreign government or they're being groomed or put up to it by an operative.

Speaker 98 But I think to assume that it's always that ignores that like there's a very real problem of nihilistic, surrealist violence that comes from young people.

Speaker 98 And, you know, like, this guy killed, it's a triple homicide out of nowhere, and then he tries to kill me. I think he just went crazy, but I could be wrong.

Speaker 16 Oh, oh, off-brand.

Speaker 27 Charlie Kirk.

Speaker 16 Oh, no.

Speaker 50 Very good, Nick Quintus.

Speaker 73 I like that.

Speaker 76 Like, no, these are just kids who've been, who've been psyoped and gone nuts by Discord and social media and drugs.

Speaker 1 I like the use of his term extremely online.

Speaker 27 Yeah,

Speaker 33 did you hear that in there?

Speaker 122 Yeah, that's almost a show title.

Speaker 1 These kids are extremely online.

Speaker 10 I've heard that.

Speaker 27 What?

Speaker 1 Extremely online.

Speaker 10 Wow.

Speaker 66 And I think I heard that somewhere else, actually.

Speaker 51 Extremely online.

Speaker 48 Really?

Speaker 13 Yeah, it may be kind of.

Speaker 1 It's an interesting term because it's not really,

Speaker 1 it's something it's so strange. It doesn't really make sense.
It's almost a non-sequitur, which will that use of that word annoys a couple of our grammarians.

Speaker 48 What, non-sequitur?

Speaker 1 Yeah,

Speaker 1 I've gotten some notes on our use of the term.

Speaker 11 Maybe your words are.

Speaker 1 We're misusing it in some screwball way.

Speaker 54 Oh, what is the correct usage of non-sequitur?

Speaker 1 Well, it means something that does

Speaker 1 non-sequitur is a sentence that,

Speaker 1 within itself, doesn't make sense

Speaker 1 in the broadest definition.

Speaker 1 But it's very specific if you're

Speaker 1 one of these

Speaker 1 ant fuckers that are out there that listen to our show.

Speaker 74 They went into some good stuff about Extremely Online, about porn.

Speaker 93 It was funny.

Speaker 74 Tucker's like, what even is online porn? Like, what?

Speaker 35 What?

Speaker 48 Huh?

Speaker 56 You know, it leads you to transgenderism.

Speaker 60 And Fuentes had, I didn't clip that, but

Speaker 93 it's worth listening to.

Speaker 120 It was,

Speaker 123 you know, considering how they've spoken about each other in their own shows.

Speaker 56 It was like, okay, there was no fireworks.

Speaker 52 It was like the mutual admiration club.

Speaker 124 It's interesting.

Speaker 2 Yeah, you run into that.

Speaker 88 In the overnight,

Speaker 125 Europe is slowly deteriorating and falling.

Speaker 67 This was unexpected, even by my stand, even by the polling standards.

Speaker 34 The big winner of this Dutch election is 38-year-old Rob Yetten with his center-left party D66.

Speaker 34 A pro-European, his popularity skyrocketed in the final stretch of the election. His message was full of optimism and his strong media presence resonated with the Dutch people.

Speaker 126 This is an historic election result because we've shown not only to the Netherlands but also to the world that it is possible to beat populist and extreme right movements and I'm very eager to cooperate with other parties.

Speaker 34 The campaign focused mainly on immigration and the housing crisis, which particularly affects young people in this densely populated country.

Speaker 34 It's a disappointing night for the far-right leader who topped the polls in 2023.

Speaker 127 It is a significant loss,

Speaker 1 but we are still a large party.

Speaker 127 I'm sure we can find a way up next time.

Speaker 34 It was Gerd Wilders himself who triggered these early elections.

Speaker 34 He withdrew his party from a fragile four-party coalition for not being tough enough on immigration, which brought down the outgoing government.

Speaker 34 His score in this election is being closely scrutinized across Europe and serves as a barometer of the strength of the far right across the country.

Speaker 89 The far right, the far right is crashing and burning.

Speaker 19 I think

Speaker 115 Eva Flardingerbrug had

Speaker 57 the best analysis, the blondie.

Speaker 1 You know, I could never pronounce her name.

Speaker 76 Flardingebruk, yeah, I know.

Speaker 1 She should change her name to some Hollywood-style name. Yes,

Speaker 56 Eva Jones.

Speaker 90 No, that's not Hollywood Jones.

Speaker 1 Well, Eva Smith. Eva Smith would be good.

Speaker 60 Eva Eden. There you go.

Speaker 99 Eva Eden.

Speaker 23 Yeah. Brings up Garden of Eden, Eve, Eva Eden.

Speaker 78 That would be perfect. That's a good Hollywood name.

Speaker 64 Call Brunetti. Eva Eden.

Speaker 1 I have a problem with the way

Speaker 1 it doesn't. I don't think it flows as well as

Speaker 12 Eva St.

Speaker 76 How about Eva St. James?

Speaker 1 Well, I like the idea of slipping the saint name in there if you're going to do a fake name because that makes the person look better than they are in some subconscious way.

Speaker 99 I like it.

Speaker 56 Here's what Eva St. James said.

Speaker 120 She said, Ugh.

Speaker 48 That's Dutch.

Speaker 27 Ugh.

Speaker 128 This means more mass migration, more replacement, more climate regulations, more censorship, more EU, more gender madness.

Speaker 56 And Rob Yeton, a woke, openly gay champagne socialist, will most likely become the country's prime minister.

Speaker 47 They forgot to mention that in the report, that he's a gay champagne socialist.

Speaker 1 I like champagne socialist. It's a great show title.

Speaker 109 Another show title, yes.

Speaker 4 That is a good show.

Speaker 1 Well, I think that should bring us to this woman, Naomi.

Speaker 44 Which one?

Speaker 1 She's a German girl who set up a lot of. She's very famous in Germany.
And she's,

Speaker 1 this is Naomi Siebert or Selbt. I can't even pronounce her last name.
But she is

Speaker 1 a big supporter of AFD in Germany. And she is

Speaker 1 asking for asylum in the United States.

Speaker 26 Bring her on in. She's welcome right away.

Speaker 37 No problem.

Speaker 130 My name is Naomi Zeibt.

Speaker 1 Sorry. I have two clips.

Speaker 124 I was on queue, just so you know.

Speaker 130 My name is Naomi Zeibt, and I am the first European to seek asylum in the United States of America under President Trump's new proposal for a refugee mandate.

Speaker 130 Because I am facing persecution in my home country, Germany,

Speaker 130 for my political views, for my support for the AFD party, the only opposition party in Germany, and most importantly, for my advocacy for free speech.

Speaker 130 I have become the target of severe government and intelligence surveillance and harassment.

Speaker 130 My communications have been intercepted, and my family has been stalked by reporters for the state media for whom we pay taxes. And I continue to receive death threats from Antifa.

Speaker 50 Before we continue, the troll room has an important question for you.

Speaker 117 The question is: is she hot?

Speaker 1 She is a.

Speaker 1 This is interesting.

Speaker 1 She's got a look that's very distinctive German, but

Speaker 1 it's not the American style of hot, but

Speaker 1 I think she's a German style.

Speaker 50 Give her a number.

Speaker 74 Give her a number. Give her a number.

Speaker 1 I'd give her an 859.

Speaker 16 Wow. Oh,

Speaker 27 that's a good one.

Speaker 1 But that's from European. If I was a European.

Speaker 17 Okay.

Speaker 1 What she's missing for Americans is she doesn't have that big million-dollar smile.

Speaker 19 Oh, that's too bad.

Speaker 1 Well, let me show you.

Speaker 1 She's got kind of a small,

Speaker 1 that old-fashioned small doll mouth.

Speaker 1 So she looks like a German doll. She's got a dollar.

Speaker 27 Oh, I see.

Speaker 39 Oh, she's seeped.

Speaker 133 Oh, she looks a bit like Avril Levine in her younger years,

Speaker 74 only with blonde hair.

Speaker 1 And by the way, it's offensive to a lot of people out there that we talk like this. No, no, this is.

Speaker 1 But we're doing this as

Speaker 1 media executives, which is what we are. Yes, we need to determine, does she have legs and i don't know i didn't see her legs

Speaker 130 does she does she have legs in the media she is the oh definitely she is the alter ego to greta thunberg i would say well she's that's where she got her reputation ah okay let's continue when i asked the police for help in the past about these death threats they did not offer me help because physical harm had not occurred yet President Trump has correctly identified Antifa as a terrorist organization.

Speaker 130 But meanwhile, the German government silently condone these attacks on their own citizens as if they are soldiers for their agenda.

Speaker 130 This year, I helped arrange the viral ex-life conversation between Elon Musk and AFD leader Alice Weidel, which I'm sure many of you have seen as it drew international media coverage.

Speaker 130 While Europe is becoming a breeding ground for tyranny, America still treats the right to free speech as sacred, and thank God for that.

Speaker 130 In Germany, it is illegal under paragraph 188, which was extended under former Chancellor Angela Merkel, to insult or damage the reputation of a politician.

Speaker 130 I will not apologize for violating their legal special protection, because in a democracy, politicians must tolerate criticism.

Speaker 93 She's kind of the German Eva St.

Speaker 50 James,

Speaker 27 wouldn't you say?

Speaker 1 Yeah, I guess.

Speaker 77 Yeah.

Speaker 19 No, it's good.

Speaker 79 I like her rap.

Speaker 104 She's got clear dictionary.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Yeah, she's very, she's like the Dutch girl.

Speaker 1 The Dutch girl is,

Speaker 1 she has a funny style that I've always been kind of fascinated with.

Speaker 1 The Dutch girl, I think, is a little colder. She's calmly.
In a Dutch way, that kind of neutral style of presentation. Yes, I just say she's.

Speaker 1 I would call it matter of fact.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 This girl's got a little more emotion underneath it. She's slightly irked, but she's doing this sincerely.

Speaker 27 So yeah, well, you got another clip here. This is good.

Speaker 130 The reason why the German government and intelligence gained an interest in me is because I was the very first young English-speaking influencer to openly align with the AFD party, right-of-center political views, and most importantly, I supported President Trump since he came down the golden escalator in 2015 and announced that he was running for president.

Speaker 130 Trump's election victory was a crack in the matrix that terrified globalist tyrants. And now I am the bridge between Germany and the MAGA movement, which the European Union desperately wants to burn.

Speaker 130 You may remember me from 2020 when I appeared on Fox and on the front page of the Washington Post and became internationally recognized as the anti-Greta Thunberg, the climate skeptic.

Speaker 130 Now I am a representative for Deutschland Korea, Germany's leading alternative media outlet, whose editor-in-chief David Bendels received a seven-month probation sentence earlier this year because he posted a meme mocking the Interior Minister's hatred of free speech.

Speaker 130 Quite ironic, if you ask me. This is why I started working with them, because I stand in solidarity with his admirable courage.

Speaker 130 I am publicly sharing my asylum request now, as President Trump has announced new refugee priorities, including Europeans who have been targeted for their peaceful expression of views online, such as opposition to mass migration and support for populist parties, according to the New York Times.

Speaker 130 But if you think I ran away cowardly and abandoned my homeland, you would be mistaken. This is only the beginning.

Speaker 130 I am seeking protection under the United States government to expose the truth about the tyranny of Germany and the European Union, who have made the MAGA administration their enemies.

Speaker 130 And I encourage everybody in Europe to stand up for what MAGA represents and turn it into mega. Let's fight, fight, fight.

Speaker 77 Wow.

Speaker 70 I think I propose a prisoner swap.

Speaker 21 We'll take Naomi and we'll give you.

Speaker 60 We'll give you David Hasselhoff.

Speaker 54 I think that's a fair swap.

Speaker 2 They take David Hasselhoff.

Speaker 27 No, they love him. They love him.

Speaker 36 They love the Hoff.

Speaker 84 You know, in a way, she reminds me more of Ancilla,

Speaker 93 like a German Ancilla.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah, she's got, you might be right there. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 69 Ancilla, I think Ancilla is running for, I don't know, I wonder how she did.

Speaker 19 I think

Speaker 23 they set up some political party.

Speaker 69 I don't know if they got any votes or not, any seats.

Speaker 2 Any seats.

Speaker 1 Well, these women, these European women, they don't mess around with that. Those three that you mentioned,

Speaker 1 really have a lot.

Speaker 1 They're very, they're like, they're like scorned. And they have a,

Speaker 1 they're just very very

Speaker 1 out to do damage.

Speaker 33 They're irked.

Speaker 1 But they're not doing it in a shouting, crazy,

Speaker 1 nutty way like the liberal American liberal woman.

Speaker 1 They're doing it pretty,

Speaker 1 I would say, calmly.

Speaker 140 Yeah,

Speaker 39 that's a good catch.

Speaker 27 I had not heard of her.

Speaker 50 But I think she totally should have asylum here.

Speaker 18 Yeah, she'll get it.

Speaker 115 We'll set her up with a podcast rig.

Speaker 141 She'll be good to go.

Speaker 1 We'll help her get a become a podcaster. She can probably talk for days.

Speaker 48 Happy to do it.

Speaker 1 Happy to do it.

Speaker 96 Absolutely.

Speaker 19 Ah, let's see.

Speaker 27 Well, there's a lot of interesting things happening around the world, although if you watch the M5M, you wouldn't know too much about it.

Speaker 49 You know, this, first of all,

Speaker 27 our president went to Malaysia and was welcomed by the YMCA song, and he danced to it.

Speaker 1 Yes,

Speaker 75 that was a, that made me proud to be an American.

Speaker 1 It was the funniest.

Speaker 1 He was dancing the whole time, except when he was in Korea, and I have some comments about that because I have the Korea, what happened in Korea clip.

Speaker 142 Yeah, yeah, let's do that.

Speaker 59 Let's do the Korea clip.

Speaker 61 With a follow-up.

Speaker 123 I'm looking at Trump, I think, at the bottom.

Speaker 1 Trump clip, correct.

Speaker 125 Trump-Korea deal. Here we go.

Speaker 136 The U.S. and South Korea affirmed Seoul investing $350 billion into the U.S.
They've been negotiating for months on the details of their trade agreement, including how the money would be distributed.

Speaker 136 All the details of the agreement are yet to be released, but $150 billion of the investment will go towards revitalizing U.S. shipbuilding.

Speaker 136 Tariffs on South Korean goods will will also be lowered from 25 to 15 percent. Trump met South Korea's president separately and as part of a formal dinner with heads of states of other countries.

Speaker 136 At the table was also Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney, who Trump has been upset with recently over tariff negotiations.

Speaker 74 Carney barely made any of the reports. They all kind of like pushed him away.

Speaker 1 Well, he wasn't making a lot of noise either.

Speaker 27 No, nor should he.

Speaker 1 So I have to plug

Speaker 1 Chanel Rion.

Speaker 111 who is Korean. Yes.

Speaker 9 Oh, is she Korean?

Speaker 1 Yeah, she's half Korean American. Korean American.
Interesting. But she's Korean.

Speaker 1 She sees herself as Korean when she does reporting on Korea. She did a thing, and I want to plug my The Real Dvorak Twitter account.
Maybe I can get some numbers back up.

Speaker 24 I heard on the DH Unplugged, when you do that, your numbers go down.

Speaker 1 Yes, I think, because I think I'm.

Speaker 60 Because you're not paying.

Speaker 74 You're a non-paying blue chip.

Speaker 1 I'm pretty sure that's

Speaker 1 that and other things.

Speaker 1 But I retweeted that she, I would have clipped it, but it was a little too long. It was too in deep, it was too detailed.
She did a I've never heard anyone else do this, analyzed the Korea

Speaker 1 meeting that Trump had with Lee. She hates Lee.
She says he's a stooge of

Speaker 1 Xi in China. He's a communist.
He's no good.

Speaker 1 And everything that happened there, they didn't give him a good,

Speaker 1 anything close to what would be a high-end reception, according to her. And she says that crown that they gave him wasn't some sort of a gag or a joke or a reference.

Speaker 1 That crown that they gave him is the crown you put in graves.

Speaker 27 No, no way.

Speaker 1 Yeah, she says that particular crown is put in tombs with the dead.

Speaker 16 Wow.

Speaker 1 That is. She says everyone in Korea knows this, and everyone in Korea hates this guy, Lee, who's running the place.
And they love Trump, according to her.

Speaker 1 They love Trump, and they hate Lee, and they all know that this was a major insult. And then they have the meeting, she continues, and then they have the meeting.

Speaker 1 with Xi, not in China or in any place cool, but in the Busan airport,

Speaker 1 a lousy venue.

Speaker 1 It was a further insult. The entire event in Korea was one insult after another, and she documented them all.
Wow.

Speaker 2 And I retweeted it.

Speaker 27 Oh, I've never heard this.

Speaker 54 Oh, you have video of her saying that?

Speaker 1 That you retreated.

Speaker 1 If you go to Twitter and go to,

Speaker 1 she posted it. It's a Twitter tweet.

Speaker 103 Yeah, but you blocked me, so I can't see you.

Speaker 27 I didn't block you.

Speaker 35 Bull crap.

Speaker 1 Maybe from the email, but no, not from Twitter.

Speaker 22 That is a great piece of analysis.

Speaker 143 And everywhere, all you heard in all media, mainstream, and alternative here is, look, and he gave Trump the king the crown, the crown, the golden crown, and it turns out to be an insult.

Speaker 65 Like, you're a dead man to us.

Speaker 16 Holy crap.

Speaker 76 Yeah. Only on your no agenda show, people.

Speaker 10 Wow. And unbelievable.

Speaker 74 And One American News, apparently, if you can find it.

Speaker 10 Apparently, One America News.

Speaker 1 She writes her own material.

Speaker 79 I did.

Speaker 1 That's good. I found that out over time, and she's pretty good.

Speaker 22 I did get the translated opening remarks from G

Speaker 86 in the meeting, which everybody was there, two sides of the table.

Speaker 20 And this was at the airport. Is that what you're saying?

Speaker 137 This G meeting was at the airport.

Speaker 1 The Busan airport.

Speaker 17 That's crazy. Well, it was good, though.

Speaker 147 Mr. President, you care a lot about world peace, and you're very enthusiastic about settling various regional hotspot issues.

Speaker 147 I appreciate your great contribution to the recent conclusion of the Gaza ceasefire agreement.

Speaker 147 During your visit to Malaysia, you witnessed the signing of the Joint Declaration on Peace along the Cambodia-Thailand border, to which you had provided input.

Speaker 147 China has been helping in our own way, Cambodia and Thailand, properly settle their border disputes, and we have also been promoting peace talks to resolve other hotspot issues.

Speaker 150 Hotspots, lots of hotspots that Zhe was talking about.

Speaker 84 But then he kind of solidifies a bit of the arc, the way I see it: America, Russia, China.

Speaker 17 He's like, hey, you know, we're kind of buddies.

Speaker 45 You know, we have our differences, but we can work it all out. We're doing stuff.

Speaker 14 We've been in contact.

Speaker 17 We're close.

Speaker 81 We're not, you know, like, we're not doing no sleepovers, but we're hanging in there together.

Speaker 147 And it feels very warm seeing you again because it's been many years. Since your re-election, we have spoken on the phone three times, exchanged several letters, and stayed in close contact.

Speaker 147 And our joint guidance, China-Wester relations have remained stable on the whole. Given our different national conditions, we do not always see eye to eye with each other.

Speaker 147 And it is normal for the two leading economies of the world to have frictions now and then. And in the face of winds, waves and challenges, you and I, at the helm of China-U.S.

Speaker 147 relations, should stay the right course and ensure the steady sailing forward of the giant ship of China-US relations.

Speaker 147 I always believe that China's development goes hand in hand with your vision to make America great again. Our two countries are fully able to help each other succeed and prosper together.

Speaker 147 Over the years, I have stated in public many times that China and the United States should be partners and friends. This is what history has taught us and what reality

Speaker 147 demands. A few days ago, in the latest round of consultation, our two economic and trade teams reached basic consensus on addressing our respective major concerns and made encouraging progress.

Speaker 137 Sounds good to me.

Speaker 47 It doesn't sound like we're about to go to war in 2027.

Speaker 57 Unless it's some kind of setup over Taiwan.

Speaker 1 Well, it could be bull crap. And also,

Speaker 1 the Chinese are notorious for understatement.

Speaker 1 So you don't know what they're really saying.

Speaker 27 Well, yeah, I guess.

Speaker 1 And, you know, because you can't say anything nasty. And

Speaker 1 let's just see if a soybean deal goes through.

Speaker 107 Scott Besant will be happy.

Speaker 1 At least that will be a start. We'll see.

Speaker 86 Well, the soybean deal is like 180 000 tons or something that's nothing like the millions of tons they used to take from us it's not a huge deal it's just a start but we but we have a because they the soybean thing is important to this our

Speaker 1 symbolic gesture for our farmers because they got irked by the fact that they got cut off cut out of the deal and they're not bringing the soybeans in anymore so you know so it's did you know that did you know that besant

Speaker 14 is a soybean farmer?

Speaker 61 Yes.

Speaker 1 I'd like to come up in the conversation, I think, on DH Unplugged.

Speaker 20 I'd like a little, here's the clip of him saying it.

Speaker 154 The president has also said he does want our farmers to be taken care of. You did mention that China has been boycotting American soybeans, and American farmers have really suffered.

Speaker 154 Do you see a real light at the end of the tunnel there? They may allow soybeans again.

Speaker 152 Well, Martha, in case you don't know it, I'm actually a soybean farmer, so

Speaker 152 I have felt this pain too. And there are a couple of things happening here.

Speaker 48 One, what?

Speaker 1 He owns, he's got

Speaker 1 a hedge fund or something that he's part of has a soybean holdings.

Speaker 12 And so thus.

Speaker 48 Okay.

Speaker 76 So I can say, you know, I own Apple stock, so I'm an iPhone engineer.

Speaker 155 Is that it?

Speaker 1 Well, you can't say you're an iPhone engineer, but you can say you're an iPhone farmer.

Speaker 1 Let's put it in this. Let's try to make that work.
Okay. You own AppleSock, so you can say,

Speaker 1 I make phones.

Speaker 1 So I understand how this works.

Speaker 47 I make phones. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 21 I'm in AI.

Speaker 38 Yeah, okay.

Speaker 19 Well, so along these lines, I got to go to the neighbor.

Speaker 60 So the neighbor down the road, Laura, Laura Logan.

Speaker 1 Is this a bad neighbor?

Speaker 18 No. She's given us no updates.

Speaker 1 And by the way, I'm irked by this.

Speaker 15 Well, because there is no, we're in limbo.

Speaker 87 We're in limbo right now.

Speaker 144 There's been no updates.

Speaker 60 There's nothing.

Speaker 142 The text group has gone quiet.

Speaker 123 Although Claudia next door, she's from the Dominican Republic.

Speaker 1 She's some next door. Yeah, she's next door.
She's like two acres or something.

Speaker 12 Claudia is next door.

Speaker 10 It's not like

Speaker 9 I'm walking Phoebe, and she has this little rat dog called Fifi,

Speaker 56 and then some other like sausage dog.

Speaker 1 The little dog's called Feces?

Speaker 33 Yes, Feces.

Speaker 26 It is now.

Speaker 25 The little dog called Feces.

Speaker 109 And she's walking with her boyfriend, Japanese-American veteran, and he has a hot little sausage dog.

Speaker 17 And so I'm walking Phoebe.

Speaker 13 Hey, Adam, how you doing?

Speaker 27 Like, hey, hey, Claudia.

Speaker 143 And she's, she's, what's up with these children over there?

Speaker 110 They're going too fast.

Speaker 15 They're driving around.

Speaker 56 And then I, and I told her, well, you know, we're talking about the HO.

Speaker 156 She's, that's good because I'm a Dominican Republic, Karen.

Speaker 65 It makes me a, what's she called?

Speaker 117 A Carmen.

Speaker 110 I'm a Carmen.

Speaker 19 Be careful. I'm all about it.

Speaker 23 So that's the only update I have.

Speaker 64 More coming, I'm sure.

Speaker 24 This is going to come to a head.

Speaker 94 We have the Dominican.

Speaker 1 We have a good Carmen in a neighborhood.

Speaker 75 Everyone needs a good Carmen.

Speaker 129 And she needs to be on our side, which I like.

Speaker 123 So, no, the other neighbor, Laura Logan, down the street, she has going rogue with Laura Logan.

Speaker 155 She finally doesn't have any agenda in her name, in her show name, so that's good.

Speaker 47 And she went to Moscow to interview Kirill Dmitriev, which is kind of funny because the guy's been in the.

Speaker 17 Who's your there?

Speaker 96 Well, that's a good question.

Speaker 56 I don't know.

Speaker 85 I suspect it's what I think is happening is that there's money from General Flynn's non-profit.

Speaker 1 Okay, we'll just assume a Flynn Center.

Speaker 76 I'm going to think Flynn Center and probably to set up an interview with Putin.

Speaker 1 But that did. With her and Putin?

Speaker 66 Yeah, I think so.

Speaker 1 Putin would go for that.

Speaker 86 Well, it didn't happen this time, so they gave her Kirill Dmitriev, who is.

Speaker 1 He was the clearing guy. He's going to say, yeah, she should be good.
You'll like her. She's pretty good.

Speaker 158 I think

Speaker 27 Gaboomba, you like her.

Speaker 89 Vladimir Gaboomba, you like her.

Speaker 159 And as an aside, as a media executive, the red lipstick she had on was just that, you know, two shades of red, too red.

Speaker 155 You know what I mean?

Speaker 160 It's just sometimes if you're an English.

Speaker 1 Can there be red lipstick that's too red, or is it just

Speaker 1 a darker shade that just

Speaker 27 doesn't look good?

Speaker 132 It was too, it was too, you know, like red, you know, just a white face, and boing, these lips pop out.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that has to be done with a, yeah, you have to do it.

Speaker 60 You need to tone it down.

Speaker 89 You need a pro.

Speaker 1 She should have brought on makeup artists.

Speaker 86 I think it's pretty low budget, these things, but they had a hotel room set up and everything.

Speaker 1 Low budget can it be? You're flying to Moscow.

Speaker 27 Well, I don't know.

Speaker 159 Because my buddy Luke was supposed to go, but his visa got, and he's a J6er, so he had all kinds of visa problems.

Speaker 17 You're a terrorist.

Speaker 19 No, I'm not.

Speaker 89 Look, I got pardoned.

Speaker 65 Let me in.

Speaker 36 So he didn't go, so I'm not sure who went, but I'll get details from Luke.

Speaker 84 But the funny thing is, Kirill Dmitriev, she gets back, and this guy's here in America doing interviews everywhere.

Speaker 163 Like, you didn't need to go to Moscow, but she did.

Speaker 31 And so he is Steve Witkoff's counterpart.

Speaker 1 Well, you know, you should talk,

Speaker 1 get together with her and find out, because I would like to know right now what Moscow is like.

Speaker 9 Is it bustling?

Speaker 33 I get the sense that it is.

Speaker 164 Oh, I think it's very colorful and bustling.

Speaker 87 I'm sure it is.

Speaker 87 Well,

Speaker 106 it's only 45 minutes.

Speaker 86 So

Speaker 142 if you want to listen to it or watch it, it's out there.

Speaker 27 Rogue on the road, everybody.

Speaker 74 And so I got three clips from it.

Speaker 27 The first one is a little long, but this is

Speaker 144 Kirill delivering the message in multiple ways, hitting Christianity, hitting trans Maoism, all of this stuff, saying, you got to, and something that we both believe and know to be true, that Americans and Russians are very, very similar.

Speaker 40 Even when it's the USSR,

Speaker 87 very similar, you know, nationalistic.

Speaker 1 They just drink us.

Speaker 36 Big time.

Speaker 158 Let me go back to how traditional values and other things unite us.

Speaker 158 Because President Putin has started talking about focus on traditional values not this year, not five years ago, but when he really became president.

Speaker 158 So for more than 20 years ago, he's been focused on really making sure that it's not a vogue world, it's a world where there is a man and a woman, a focus on the family, on Christian values.

Speaker 158 And I think that is very, very important. And he was calling out the fakeness of the vogue narrative for a long time.
And by the way,

Speaker 158 just as President Trump. And by the way, I laughed, I reposted one of your posts.
We had this vogue vocabulary.

Speaker 1 People saying what they really mean.

Speaker 18 What they really mean.

Speaker 158 So I think the honesty and be straightforward, you know, not political correctness, but calling

Speaker 158 things the way they are is important. I would give another, I think, very poignant example of Charlie Kirk.
So Charlie Kirk really resonated with the Russian people.

Speaker 158 And when this horrible tragedy happened, not only President Putin gave condolences, but Russian church actually did an article recognizing Charlie King's Kirk's contribution.

Speaker 45 Did you hear anything about Putin's condolences?

Speaker 27 I don't remember that. Why? I don't either.
Why would we?

Speaker 111 To Christianity.

Speaker 1 So, who's going to tell us?

Speaker 27 Exactly.

Speaker 158 So they see him not only as somebody who is an advocate of family, not only advocate on campuses, but really as a religious sort of thinker, a contemporary religious thinker.

Speaker 167 It's interesting because, of course, under Marxism, there is no room for religion. I mean, Karl Marx did not.
He was a denialist when it came to God.

Speaker 158 Yeah, but Russia is actually quite a religious country. Yes.
So if you go, and I hope you can go to our Orthodox churches, etc., it's a very religious country and very much focused on values.

Speaker 158 So in reality we see view the world very similarly where we see for example immigration in Europe and what Biden tried to do in the US as crazy. You know I actually have a theory about this.

Speaker 27 I believe that Biden

Speaker 156 listen now it's as if he talked to you before the interview.

Speaker 79 Here's his theory.

Speaker 84 When I saw I heard this I'm like wow John needs to hear this.

Speaker 111 US as crazy.

Speaker 158 You know I actually have a theory about this. I believe that Biden wanted Democrats to stay

Speaker 158 in power forever. So what he did, he figured out immigrants, criminals, and transgender, they want Democrats.

Speaker 158 So then he increased the number of criminals, he increased the number of immigrants, and there was a huge transgender spike, which is, by the way, now coming down, returned to normalcy during his era.

Speaker 167 Returned to reality.

Speaker 158 All of that was to stay in power. All of those things that Russia is tough on, and Europe is not tough on.

Speaker 158 So I think another thing we see is, for example, Europe Europe with allowing illegal immigration, with allowing lots of vogue policy. J.D.
Van said it's basically suicide of European civilization.

Speaker 158 And we also see it very similarly.

Speaker 158 So, to summarize, I think we all care about our families, we all care about the education of our children, we all care about having a good economy, good growth, and we are much more similar.

Speaker 158 And what happened during the Biden administration, and actually started with Obama, RussiaGate, is that RussiaGate tried to vilify President Trump, tried to vilify Russia.

Speaker 158 And from that time, Russia became like really bad, bad, bad in the people

Speaker 27 in the U.S.

Speaker 158 More and more conservatives understand that those were fake, not true narratives.

Speaker 19 All right, so he's clearly saying, hey, you know, like we're kind of the same.

Speaker 54 We got the guy who

Speaker 39 got a president who thinks the same, just doing all the same.

Speaker 87 And then he blew my mind with a set-up from Logan about the North Sea Nexus and the Brits.

Speaker 167 But do you think there's an irony that a lot of this woke ideology comes out of cultural Marxism?

Speaker 158 Well, again, I don't frankly go that deeply because you can all tie it, and Marxism came from Europe, and by the way, you know, Marx didn't like Russia so much.

Speaker 167 Well, Marx was hired by Henry Rothschild to create a system of social control and paid by the British.

Speaker 158 But okay, going back to British, you know, British, I believe, are incredibly aggressive to instill different things worldwide.

Speaker 158 They are suffering from lots of immigration, from digital ID they now try to implement, which is really a way to control people.

Speaker 135 And I think

Speaker 158 it is insanity. You know, Prime Minister Starmer is the least popular Prime Minister in the history of Great Britain.

Speaker 158 I had to mention on Twitter that his great speech when President Trump called him in Egypt

Speaker 158 and pretended to give him a word and then said, no, go back and he didn't even get to speak.

Speaker 158 So I think you have really the issue with Britain some European countries and by the way we love you know European people and British people but they've been taken over by aggressive politicians who really try to control their societies and who try to hide the problems of those societies but by making Russia a victim and who work a lot by basically not a victim but making Russia bad and working a lot to really undermine any discussion we may have with the US.

Speaker 158 That is a big fear for many of the forces in the UK and the liberal forces in Europe that Russia and U.S. would actually have a good dialogue.

Speaker 48 Ah, so this is.

Speaker 18 This guy's good.

Speaker 102 And then the last clip, which is short,

Speaker 27 before you go,

Speaker 1 can I interrupt?

Speaker 27 Of course.

Speaker 1 Since he brought up digital ID?

Speaker 151 Yes.

Speaker 1 David Icke made some commentary.

Speaker 66 David Icke, okay, yeah.

Speaker 1 On digital ID, I thought we should.

Speaker 50 It's been a while since we've had Ike on the show.

Speaker 1 I've had

Speaker 1 this clip for two or three shows. I can't get it in.
Well, you know, I have this moment. Here we go.

Speaker 54 Digital ID.

Speaker 99 David Icke, everybody.

Speaker 170 This is the door closing that's not intended to be opened again. And the idea is, everything you do,

Speaker 170 I mean everything eventually, you will need a digital ID. And your digital ID will be connected to a digital currency.

Speaker 170 If you want to see what's planned for the West tomorrow, then look at China today, where if you are not behaving in a way that the government wants you to behave, then

Speaker 170 you lose credits and their social credit system.

Speaker 170 And if you lose enough,

Speaker 170 you can't go on a plane, you can't go on a train, basically take part in mainstream society. You are excluded.
This is a global agenda. This is not about Keir Starmer.
He's a gopher.

Speaker 170 It's not about Donald Trump. He's a gopher.

Speaker 170 And they're gophers for this global network that I call the global cult.

Speaker 170 And the idea is to eventually have a world government which won't be elected, purely appointed, technocrats, bureaucrats, that will oversee this AI digital system.

Speaker 170 And you won't be able to go anywhere in the world without this system is tracking you.

Speaker 170 Here we are now looking at this line in the sand and if we allow it to be crossed it's going to be very very difficult to push back and that's why it's it's so vital that

Speaker 170 the people of well this country but all countries

Speaker 170 realize the scale of freedom deletion this digital ID

Speaker 170 is a massive step towards and fundamental to the deletion of freedom.

Speaker 99 So I agree with Ike that this is the plan.

Speaker 71 I disagree that Trump is some stooge in the plan if he has the right people explaining the technology to him.

Speaker 86 I think, and I believe he does.

Speaker 60 I don't think he'll let that happen.

Speaker 65 This is the globalist dream, no doubt about it.

Speaker 50 And I didn't clip it, but Dmitriev said, he said, you know, digital ID in China, he says, they're open and transparent about it.

Speaker 1 They haven't tricked their people into it, and it's been very successful for them, how they control their billion people.

Speaker 74 He says, unlike the UK, where they're bringing it in on the sly and they're going to capture their people without being honest about it.

Speaker 90 And I thought that was an interesting observation that, you know, China, I guess the people of China, they like it.

Speaker 19 Yeah.

Speaker 33 Well, I'm not sure that's true.

Speaker 1 He may have been doing that.

Speaker 1 That commentary may have been part of

Speaker 1 a fear of China.

Speaker 27 Possibly.

Speaker 1 Possibly. Because there's a number of YouTube videos out there showing

Speaker 1 the homeless in China who have been kicked to the curb

Speaker 1 by the social

Speaker 27 scoring.

Speaker 115 They should have followed the rules.

Speaker 27 What's wrong with you?

Speaker 62 Exactly.

Speaker 10 What's wrong with you?

Speaker 1 What were they doing? What were they thinking?

Speaker 172 What were you thinking?

Speaker 89 Follow the rules.

Speaker 173 You're homeless.

Speaker 16 Hello.

Speaker 42 That's how it works in China.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 45 But this has been Ike's thing forever.

Speaker 156 You know, what gets me is like, oh, Bitcoin is a part of this and the blockchain.

Speaker 90 Like, no, no,

Speaker 51 it's not.

Speaker 153 That's where he loses me just because he doesn't.

Speaker 1 Well, he didn't say that in that clip.

Speaker 60 Not in that clip, but I've heard of it.

Speaker 51 I follow Ike.

Speaker 71 I'm, you know, ever since

Speaker 12 the

Speaker 56 reptilians.

Speaker 19 I've been on board.

Speaker 1 Well, yeah, once he came up with that, he was gold.

Speaker 96 His podcast gold, I tell you.

Speaker 69 So then, the final clip from Kirill Dmitriev.

Speaker 26 He brings up the tunnel.

Speaker 158 And by the way, President Putin also mentioned that in Arctic, we would love to have US companies participate in our oil fields, in our gas fields.

Speaker 167 Well, there's cooperation in the International Space Station.

Speaker 158 Yes, and by the way, yesterday I tweeted about maybe we should have a tunnel connecting U.S. and Russia.
And with Ellen Musk's boring company, the tunnel can cost only $8 $8 billion.

Speaker 158 And the original price was $36 billion.

Speaker 158 So we have modern technology that can really unite us. And yes, of course, we also have to be cognizant that many people in the U.S.
don't want Russia to get close.

Speaker 158 They have interest in, you know, basically the weapons sector and other sector.

Speaker 158 But I think at least having dialogue, at least having better understanding of one another, is definitely in the interest to avoid security risks worldwide.

Speaker 26 The tunnel. I love it.

Speaker 23 We need a name for this tunnel.

Speaker 1 We need a name. Yeah, I don't know.
Russia, the United States, Russia, Alaska. It's where it goes the runnel, the funnel.

Speaker 173 The funnel.

Speaker 103 I like the funnel tunnel.

Speaker 50 Just call it the funnel.

Speaker 120 That's good.

Speaker 157 So

Speaker 57 since we bring up globalists here, globalist number one who is trying to get back on the stage, I'm not sure exactly why, other than

Speaker 56 to help Gavin Newsom's Prop 50, is Barack Obama.

Speaker 116 And he was at the Connecticut Forum.

Speaker 124 I'm not sure what that is.

Speaker 56 And this is his idea of the future of journalism.

Speaker 174 Part of what we're going to have to do is to start experimenting with new forms of journalism and how do we use

Speaker 174 social media in ways that

Speaker 174 reaffirm facts, separate facts from opinion.

Speaker 174 We want diversity of opinion. We don't want diversity of facts.

Speaker 174 That, I think, is

Speaker 174 one of the big tasks of social media. By the way, it will require some government, I believe,

Speaker 174 some government

Speaker 174 regulatory constraints around some of these business models

Speaker 174 in a way that's consistent with the First Amendment,

Speaker 152 but that also says, look,

Speaker 61 look, look, look.

Speaker 174 There is a difference between

Speaker 174 these platforms letting all voices be heard

Speaker 174 versus a business model that elevates

Speaker 174 the most hateful voices or the most polarizing voices or the most

Speaker 174 dangerous in the sense of inciting violence

Speaker 174 voices.

Speaker 174 And

Speaker 174 that, I think, is going to be a big challenge for all of us that we're going to have to undertake.

Speaker 27 Unbelievable. And luckily.

Speaker 1 Drink himself into a hole there at the end of the day. Oh, he didn't get himself out.

Speaker 49 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 75 And luckily, we have podcastlicense.com.

Speaker 56 We'll have to reinstate that when it comes down to it.

Speaker 79 You'll have to have a license to podcast if Barack Obama has anything to do with it.

Speaker 17 I love how he says, you know,

Speaker 17 within the scope of the First Amendment, like, no no law, no law, Mr.

Speaker 144 President, no law, no infringement.

Speaker 1 I can see the logic behind podcast licenses by doing the parallel with broadcast licenses.

Speaker 134 Well, in that case, I'm glad you bring it up, if we need to be careful of the voices inciting violence, then we need licenses for cable news talking heads as well.

Speaker 1 Well, they've been wanting to do that that forever.

Speaker 16 Well, here's Nicole Wallace,

Speaker 57 and this is kind of a

Speaker 66 super cut, but with a little longer clips.

Speaker 57 Conversation comes up, and she's like,

Speaker 87 I've never heard anyone call Trump Hitler.

Speaker 18 I've never.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, this has been all over Fox.

Speaker 56 Oh, so we shouldn't play it?

Speaker 1 Is that what you're saying? Well, it is. I think our listeners probably haven't heard it necessarily, but the compendium of people calling Trump

Speaker 1 Hitler is ridiculous.

Speaker 1 But even the compendiums don't even come close to the total

Speaker 1 absolute. If somebody of Grabian or somebody put together a real super cut, they could have something very entertaining.

Speaker 1 But yes, she's actually said this and she's talking to Pritzker in an interview. And this has been,

Speaker 1 yeah, this is amplified.

Speaker 167 I haven't suggested that that donald trump is hitler um i i i wouldn't i don't think any democrat has i i actually

Speaker 183 um and i and i think it's a it's a smear that they project back on to critics what is the natural extension justin if he pursues this to harvard and beyond there was a an authoritarian leader several decades back called adolf hitler hitler came to power and the scientists left the military survive in that climate in the same way that it happened in russia um with stalin the same way it happened with Hitler, eventually you get generals and admirals that are in there that only tell the leader what he or she wants to hear.

Speaker 180 To the extent that the rule of law and an assault on the rule of law was an obscure and tangible thing, we're now seeing it in action.

Speaker 182 If you look back in history, you can see very similar parallels taking place that took place in other countries that went down that authoritarian road, including in pre-World War II Nazi Germany, when Hitler and Nazi officials basically took over over Frankfurt University, which was the bastion of independent thought and progressive thinking and independent thinking, which is what Hitler didn't want.

Speaker 182 And so again, this is what authoritarians do. They try to control all of the aspects of social life.

Speaker 138 When Trump talks about peace and Putin talks about peace, it's autocrats getting their way. That's it.

Speaker 138 And Mussolini and Hitler said they were being the purveyors of peace.

Speaker 186 I resisted for a long time analogies to Hitler's Germany. I've got in my sub stack today, though, that it's really uncanny.

Speaker 186 The same episode where Hitler, early in his tenure, before he's totally taken over the government, some local prosecutors go after his brown shirts and they convict them, send them, and then he releases them.

Speaker 186 It's really the same thing.

Speaker 180 Throw back to what? Throw back to what?

Speaker 4 Poisoning the current. I mean,

Speaker 187 that is literally Hitlerian.

Speaker 48 Literally. What do people

Speaker 180 think of what happened to us?

Speaker 81 The parallel here

Speaker 180 is to maybe show up on the shores and say, no,

Speaker 81 we'll go with Hitler.

Speaker 180 I mean, what did they think about the switching of sides with the turning of who occupies the oval office?

Speaker 180 I believe every voter who casts a vote, regardless of who they vote for, has to know that Donald Trump believes Hitler did some good things.

Speaker 1 Which is not true.

Speaker 142 No, I think it's time to roll out the Trump rotation just for prosperity's sake.

Speaker 188 I have my list, and you might want to see if there's anything I left out. This is the Trump rotation.

Speaker 189 There's two categories: there's the regular, and then there's the criminal.

Speaker 188 But here we go.

Speaker 185 Ready? Yep.

Speaker 188 Liar, incompetent, unhinged, illegitimate president, white supremacist, racist, bully, immature, Russian agent, narcissist, mean,

Speaker 188 long ties, insane, tweets too much, small hands, small penis, big red button, criminal,

Speaker 6 mean,

Speaker 188 racist, immature, thin-skinned, runs the mob, has no money, unstable, fatter than 239 pounds, bankrupt, 25th Amendment should be instituted.

Speaker 188 He hates women, misogynist, holds grudges forever, plays golf a lot, obstruction of justice, money laundering, and clown.

Speaker 3 John,

Speaker 161 No wonder we're making America white again.

Speaker 88 And

Speaker 71 just to add this on, PBS Washington Week, PBS, PBS,

Speaker 70 PBS, the People's Public Broadcast System.

Speaker 53 Funded by viewers like you.

Speaker 84 Here's how they opened up this week's Washington Week.

Speaker 190 Good evening, and welcome to Washington Week. I want to start with an apology.

Speaker 190 We pride ourselves ourselves here on our accuracy, but we realized very late in the day that our backdrop is no longer correct because it still features the east wing of the White House.

Speaker 190 Let me show you where it used to be. So, this

Speaker 190 right here,

Speaker 177 that was the East Wing.

Speaker 190 Now it's a hole.

Speaker 35 That's just a hole next to the White House.

Speaker 190 Over here, that's the West Wing. That's still standing

Speaker 109 as far as we know, although I'm not there right now to prove it.

Speaker 190 Back here, you got the

Speaker 140 Empire State Building.

Speaker 190 And over there, that's LAX.

Speaker 190 And also, we have

Speaker 190 a cold front moving in from Ohio, so break out your sweaters.

Speaker 190 Anyway, we'll fix the picture to reflect the new reality once Congress restores our funding.

Speaker 35 The list I read at the top of the photo

Speaker 190 and all of the norm-busting news from this week, tonight, our overall subject is impunity. How does a president get to knock down the East Wing?

Speaker 126 Is that even legal?

Speaker 190 By what authority does he do the things he does?

Speaker 17 Do the things he does. He's a king.

Speaker 48 You can't have that.

Speaker 19 It's no good.

Speaker 18 Well, you have to.

Speaker 1 After that,

Speaker 1 that's hard to beat. I'm going to give you a clip of the day for coming up with that.

Speaker 12 Wow.

Speaker 12 I know.

Speaker 12 Wow. Wow.
Wow.

Speaker 10 What assholes.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 they're no better than this TikTok clip of the ballroom girl.

Speaker 54 By the way, that goes to Clip Custodian.

Speaker 191 I just learned that I don't get to eat this month.

Speaker 191 I don't get my food stamps this month because a motherfucker in the White House, an orange motherfucker in the White House, wants a ballroom for $3 billion.

Speaker 191 I don't get to eat.

Speaker 172 $3 billion. What?

Speaker 191 My government is supposed to help me, not hurt me.

Speaker 15 Why is it hurting me?

Speaker 191 Why is it taking the money that we have paid into it to give us a ballroom? We don't have a king. Kings need balls.
We don't.

Speaker 191 We're the citizens.

Speaker 136 We're public citizens.

Speaker 191 Why do we need a ballroom? We're not invited. That's a king's room.
We don't need that. I need my food stamps.
I need my food stamps or something's going to happen.

Speaker 184 Yeah.

Speaker 19 I mean, this, you know, we've moved this from government workers not getting paid to,

Speaker 65 this is Chuck Schumer with his, I have to say, wonderful alliteration.

Speaker 86 He had to look at his paper continuously to get it all out, but he had the Ps, he had the C's, and the what's going to happen

Speaker 1 the Schumer rant yeah so trump is weaponizing by the way that he's in a they had they definitely they did a good job of finding a bucket yeah to put the mic in it's not that bad it's not that bad i don't i don't this this clip is bad well the version i have i think is bad do you have a version with you

Speaker 1 It's called, yeah, it's on the clip list. It's the Schumer

Speaker 1 Schumer in a bucket.

Speaker 47 Oh, no, it's the same length.

Speaker 131 It's the same as mine.

Speaker 66 Well, let me hear your bucket.

Speaker 66 I didn't have a bucket.

Speaker 140 The Republican leadership thanked thanked essential workers who are still on the job without pay. They pointed out that the largest union of federal workers is what.

Speaker 131 Oh, that's shut down, Blather.

Speaker 74 I'm saying Schumer.

Speaker 66 Schumer, here we go.

Speaker 27 Oh, no.

Speaker 171 On Saturday, for the first time in American history, a vicious, heartless president is cutting off food stamps to hungry children, elderly who can't afford enough food to feed themselves.

Speaker 79 Yeah, I have a better version of it.

Speaker 192 It's okay.

Speaker 171 Veterans who are down on their luck, all because he wants to use them as hostages so that Democrats will stop fighting for people's health care.

Speaker 18 We can do both.

Speaker 171 Provide better health care and provide snap benefits to the tens of millions who need it. This president is a fucking liar.
He says there's no money to provide food stamps because of the shutdown.

Speaker 152 That's bullshit.

Speaker 171 His own agriculture department said there's plenty of money. Every president during shutdowns has provided the money that's needed.

Speaker 129 Even Trump in his first term.

Speaker 171 He is bludgeoning the American people, using the most innocent of victims to try and go along with his cruel shutdown, which takes away health care for millions of Americans.

Speaker 171 He is the most vindictive politician America has ever seen and the most heartless man America has ever seen in the presidency.

Speaker 2 We're fighting him every step of the way.

Speaker 78 So that wasn't AI

Speaker 60 that had to be AI.

Speaker 81 No.

Speaker 70 That he really said that?

Speaker 10 Yeah.

Speaker 65 Oh, no, I have something completely different.

Speaker 1 This is the

Speaker 1 this was posted on his Twitter account.

Speaker 16 Wow.

Speaker 142 What a douche.

Speaker 1 Oh, he's a total douche. The guy's out of control.
He's losing numbers. That guy, that crazy guy on CNN who does all the stats.

Speaker 71 Internet or whatever.

Speaker 46 Democrats.

Speaker 1 They've lost. They're getting to the point where they're going to lose the midterms big time if this keeps up.
And because people aren't buying the story that

Speaker 1 the Democrats aren't the ones holding the country hostage.

Speaker 22 Yeah, so there's the troll saying, Your government is prioritizing Israel over you.

Speaker 72 Oh,

Speaker 2 you're so weak, bro.

Speaker 86 Okay.

Speaker 86 That is exactly what the Democrats want you to say.

Speaker 131 Good job.

Speaker 120 Here's the alliteration clip.

Speaker 171 So Trump is weaponizing hunger. He's turning millions of children and seniors and veterans into political pawns.
He's choosing politics over people, cruelty over compassion.

Speaker 171 And let's be clear about this. They've been on a crusade.
The Republicans have been on a crusade against SNAP all year.

Speaker 171 They slashed it by $200 billion this summer to pay for their tax cuts for billionaires.

Speaker 151 I love the

Speaker 40 politics over people.

Speaker 76 Something over compassion.

Speaker 123 Cruelty over compassion.

Speaker 18 Yeah. That's good.

Speaker 133 That's really good.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and he's got, they had to bring this tax cut for billionaires. And this is bull crap.

Speaker 39 So there's a lot of,

Speaker 103 I mean, this 50 hours of video of going going on and on, the oversight committee about

Speaker 91 the auto pen,

Speaker 19 which is, and they just put up all the depositions, and each one is four hours long, and they've got everybody in there.

Speaker 91 They are really going balls to the wall on the auto pen.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they're trying to pull the plug on a lot of the stuff.

Speaker 74 Well, mainly, mainly on the pardons.

Speaker 133 That's what they're really going for here.

Speaker 28 The House Oversight Committee is calling for Attorney General Pam Bondi to take a closer look at the presidential pardons the Biden White House issued via Autopen.

Speaker 28 According to a letter, a 93-page report sent by the Republican-led committee, there was a, quote, cover-up of the president's cognitive decline.

Speaker 28 The bottom line, they are alleging that Biden didn't make all those clemency decisions on his own. Biden has disputed that publicly, saying those claims against him are lies.

Speaker 28 During his time in office, Biden issued more than 4,200 pardons or commutations, the most for any previous president.

Speaker 49 So they cornered Hawley in the Hawley in the hall.

Speaker 48 Hawley in the hall.

Speaker 74 And

Speaker 19 was a constitutional lawyer, Robert Targ, but what is your opinion on all of this?

Speaker 187 The House Oversight Committee released its report on the Biden Auto Pen investigation this morning.

Speaker 187 Basically, the gist of it says, you know, these actions that were taken with the auto pen should not be considered valid unless there's concrete evidence it was Biden who was directing this use.

Speaker 187 Do you agree with that? And what is the implication

Speaker 187 going forward if some of these pardons might not have been valid?

Speaker 183 Huge implications. I mean, huge implications.
And what it would mean most immediately is folks who would otherwise be prosecuted, and the effect of the pardon, of course, is you can't be prosecuted.

Speaker 183 Folks who otherwise could be prosecuted, I mean, you may see subpoenas start issuing. You may see prosecutors say, well, listen, I mean, if there's no longer

Speaker 183 a blanket of amnesty over these folks, then we're going to go after him. I mean, he pardoned a lot of people.
He pardoned folks who are accused of child-related crimes,

Speaker 183 folks who are accused of violent crimes. So if I'm a prosecutor, and I was one for several years, I mean, I'd look at that and say, hey,

Speaker 183 I'd like to get these people back into court.

Speaker 194 So I think that may be the amount of money void these pardons.

Speaker 183 I mean, I'm concerned about it for the reasons just outlined. I mean, it seems to me, listen, the pardon power, it's an extraordinary power, Monu.

Speaker 183 There are guidelines, both in the White House rules and I think in statute, although you might have to check me on that,

Speaker 183 about how the pardon power is used and how the auto-pen is used.

Speaker 12 There's no doubt the president can pardon pretty much whomever he chooses.

Speaker 183 But there's a real question as what does it mean for the president to direct it?

Speaker 183 If you have a situation, this is unprecedented in our history, where you have real questions as to whether the president actually approved of the pardons that were signed off in his name.

Speaker 183 Like, that's a major constitutional issue.

Speaker 183 And this may get sorted out in court because what would happen is if a prosecutor came to somebody who's ostensibly been pardoned and said, you know what?

Speaker 183 I'm going to charge you.

Speaker 116 I'm going to subpoena you.

Speaker 181 I'm sure they would say, well, I have a pardon.

Speaker 185 And then that'll go to court.

Speaker 166 So we may see a lot more of this.

Speaker 27 I love the cynicism.

Speaker 56 I know you're cynical about this as well.

Speaker 85 No, nothing's ever going to happen.

Speaker 56 No one's going to jail.

Speaker 27 Yeah, maybe.

Speaker 116 Maybe.

Speaker 1 But because the Republicans are big talkers.

Speaker 58 Yeah, but they're putting this all into the DOJ with Barbie A.G., and she will just do whatever the president wants her to do.

Speaker 27 See Bolton. I mean, Bolton,

Speaker 17 it's serious with Bolton.

Speaker 26 There will be more.

Speaker 1 Yeah, but you have to remember this one thing that keeps being brought up when people bitch you more about Bolton. The Bolton investigation began under the Biden administration.

Speaker 173 Fine.

Speaker 84 But I'm just saying.

Speaker 1 It's just a carry-through. There's nothing being initiated on.

Speaker 90 There are thousands of sealed indictments that you don't know about.

Speaker 1 10,000, by the way.

Speaker 22 Let's get that straight.

Speaker 70 And so here's Senator Grassley.

Speaker 1 Now, Grassley is a kick-ass guy, but

Speaker 18 he's so old.

Speaker 1 He's like 92, I believe. He's like the oldest guy still.
He's area dicey.

Speaker 108 Yeah, he's getting up there.

Speaker 1 He's getting a little rocky. He's getting up there, though, and he's not going to last much longer.

Speaker 58 And this is about

Speaker 59 the phone taps that the Biden administration.

Speaker 1 This, by the way, this might trigger something because these senators are pissed, really

Speaker 1 irked about the phone taps, especially Cruz.

Speaker 195 I've recently been informed by Verizon that at least 11 members with Verizon accounts were affected.

Speaker 195 That includes a hard line for Senator Cruz's office and a staffer's cell phone for former Senator Loffler.

Speaker 195 ATT informed me they challenged the legal basis for Jack Smith's efforts, and Smith backed down.

Speaker 144 Yeah, and no T-Mobile?

Speaker 45 No one uses T-Mobile in Congress?

Speaker 78 It's only Verizon.

Speaker 1 Well, I think, by the way, is ATT

Speaker 1 lucked out and pushed back, and now they're the good guys of all the companies.

Speaker 57 That is kind of funny.

Speaker 144 And then, you know, Tulsi's still on the warpath.

Speaker 101 And when I heard this, I'm like, ah, we knew about this in 2013, 2014.

Speaker 22 Your no agenda show is way ahead of the curve.

Speaker 178 One of the most significant pieces of evidence that was revealed in that report we released yesterday is the fact that Russia claimed to have very, very damaging information, high-level DNC emails relating specifically to Hillary Clinton's physical and mental health, and DNC leaders questioning whether or not, if elected, she would even be capable of carrying out the duties of the presidency.

Speaker 167 Russia had this.

Speaker 178 If they wanted to swing the election for Donald Trump, they would have released it in September, October of 2016 at a pivotal time to swing momentum into Donald Trump's direction and damage Hillary Clinton's campaign.

Speaker 178 They did not do that deliberately.

Speaker 178 They understood that Hillary Clinton would likely be the inevitable president of the United States.

Speaker 168 They didn't think Trump could win like a lot of other people.

Speaker 178 And so they were withholding this damaging information about Hillary Clinton and planning to release it in the days or weeks leading up to

Speaker 178 her inaugurate, expected inauguration.

Speaker 19 Now, we remember what happened to Hillary Clinton that no one ever picked up.

Speaker 70 That was the plane crash.

Speaker 1 The plane crash and then the subsequent, but that was during the era, I believe the plane crash happened when she was Secretary of State, not before the election.

Speaker 111 No, that's what I said.

Speaker 84 But she's been brain-damaged ever since.

Speaker 71 It may not even be the original Hillary Clinton.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's well, we have seen the double, that wooden double with the purse on the wrong side.

Speaker 1 And we do remember Hillary during some testimony where she had to wear those weird glasses that were Fresnel lenses. Listen to this.
With all the little circular things on them. Listen to this.

Speaker 57 This is going back to

Speaker 131 the hundreds.

Speaker 73 Now, Clinton resigned not long after she got out of the hospital.

Speaker 48 hospital, but Carrie was already appointed before she officially resigned.

Speaker 150 And I found reports dating back to 2013

Speaker 111 that say, you know, Hillary may not make it.

Speaker 31 Now, we didn't know it was possibly a plane crash, but also take a look at the parting gift the State Department gave her.

Speaker 105 They gave her a crash helmet.

Speaker 91 Remember that?

Speaker 1 I don't remember the crash helmet.

Speaker 69 Yeah, they made it.

Speaker 123 It was a big joke when she was leaving, and they gave her a crash helmet.

Speaker 1 Well, because of the crash that she was obviously in that nobody wanted to report on.

Speaker 48 Yes.

Speaker 48 Yes.

Speaker 104 Yeah, and you're right. She had those wacky glasses.

Speaker 43 Yeah.

Speaker 66 Anyway,

Speaker 19 it's interesting because Tina is

Speaker 103 Tina

Speaker 103 canary in the coal mine.

Speaker 162 She's like, we need something. Someone needs to be perp walked.

Speaker 162 Give us something.

Speaker 17 We want something.

Speaker 17 She wants a perp walk throw someone in jail we need something

Speaker 19 well i've been saying that too i know i know you and tina i know i know i know i know it is it is what it is but i i don't know i i have a feeling that this something something is going to happen trump is really angry about all this

Speaker 45 so yeah i think he is too so i i think there's a there's a possibility let's get jump to uh these

Speaker 1 one. I want to do one international piece, which has not been covered much, except NTD.

Speaker 1 And that is the murders in Brazil.

Speaker 1 Have you heard of this? And this is in the favelas.

Speaker 54 Oh, are your favorite homestead?

Speaker 1 Well, this is the reason I made these clips is because I've been an advocate of favelas as a solution to the homeless problem in the United States on certain areas, especially in San Francisco, on the side of the South San Francisco Hill, where the big sign is, would be a perfect place to put people.

Speaker 2 Yes.

Speaker 58 Your favorite favela.

Speaker 1 It would be a good place for a favela.

Speaker 1 But the problem with favelas is that they're self-governing and they deteriorate into being run by gangs, and the gangs tend to be drug gangs, and it doesn't really help the situation much.

Speaker 1 And you have to put the kibosh on them every so often. And this is what's happening now in

Speaker 1 Rio.

Speaker 140 Over 130 people are reported dead in Rio de Janeiro Brazil. Police conducted their largest ever operation against organized crime gangs in the city's history.

Speaker 140 Entities international correspondent Arian Pasdor is in Brazil and a warning. This report includes footage that some viewers may find disturbing.

Speaker 29 A pastor is seen crying in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday, a day after state authorities conducted a major police raid, the largest in the city's history.

Speaker 29 Around 40 bodies were seen lying on the ground, waiting to be collected on Wednesday. Police raided two impoverished neighborhoods in the city, also known as favelas.

Speaker 29 Authorities were targeting one of Brazil's narco-trafficking organizations, called the Red Command or Commando Vemelo in Portuguese.

Speaker 29 Gangs in Brazil are in control of almost all favelas in the country. They use the territory to extort residents and sell drugs, weapons, stole merchandise, and more.

Speaker 29 In the case of Rio de Janeiro, many of the favelas are located in the heart of the city, in some cases, less than a mile from some of the country's richest neighborhoods.

Speaker 29 Police sometimes try to keep the criminals in check by conducting raids in the favelas, targeting the leaders of the gangs.

Speaker 29 However, Tuesday's operation is by far one of the largest and deadliest the country has ever seen.

Speaker 149 My cousin was decapitated by special force troops.

Speaker 35 Wow.

Speaker 141 He didn't have a single gunshot wound.

Speaker 135 They just tore off his head and left him hanging in the woods.

Speaker 27 Oh, you didn't warn me.

Speaker 1 What was the warning for?

Speaker 11 Well,

Speaker 150 you got to warn me when a clip like that comes up.

Speaker 184 And her head is gone.

Speaker 27 I mean, come on.

Speaker 10 Oh, classic.

Speaker 1 I forgot.

Speaker 1 I didn't even think of that on the clip.

Speaker 11 Classic.

Speaker 78 Classic face is gone.

Speaker 27 Yes.

Speaker 151 So, why are they doing this?

Speaker 1 Well, I think they've explained it a little bit in clip two.

Speaker 29 Now, a major criticism people often have with the police raids here in Brazil is that innocent people die during the shootout between police and the gang members.

Speaker 29 But officials in Rio are now saying that this wasn't the case with any of the 130 casualties during this raid. That's because almost none of the shooting took place in the actual favelas.

Speaker 29 So police knew that once they enter the favelas, the gang members are most likely going to escape through a nearby forest.

Speaker 29 So special forces waited in that forest and confronted the gang members there to not have the shooting in the favelas.

Speaker 19 It was all in the woods. woods.

Speaker 67 So I don't believe anyone was just strolling in the woods on a day of conflict.

Speaker 19 And that's why we can easily classify them.

Speaker 157 And if there's any error in classification, it's certainly residual, which is insignificant.

Speaker 29 People outside the favela were affected as well. Armed gang members entered public buses, forcing their drivers to block major streets across the city.

Speaker 29 That's to prevent the police from getting through. Thousands of people report being in distress, not knowing what was happening as as the city erupted in chaos.

Speaker 29 Now, the opinions here on the ground in Brazil regarding this raid are divided. Critics of the operations say that these raids never really have a significant impact.

Speaker 29 People die, but in a few days, drug trafficking and crime just continue.

Speaker 29 Supporters of these operations, on the other hand, say that, of course, police has to do something and try to keep the gangs in check at least a little bit, because if you don't, they will slowly but surely become stronger, possibly even surpassing the power of the local government.

Speaker 56 I'm glad you got these clips, and I'm going to give them to my neighbors and tell them that this is what happens when you start an HOA.

Speaker 39 You've got to be very, very careful with this stuff.

Speaker 56 Before you know it, your head is gone.

Speaker 1 I never thought of the favelas being some sort of

Speaker 1 a model for HOAs.

Speaker 53 That's pretty bad.

Speaker 2 That's pretty bad.

Speaker 93 Yeah, those favelas.

Speaker 1 And the funny thing is about the favelas in both Sao Paulo and Rio is that they're in the best.

Speaker 1 I was pointed, first time I went there,

Speaker 1 was pointed out to me. They are on the primest of prime property.
It's on the side of a hill with the best view of the city. Yeah.

Speaker 74 A little technology news, because there is some.

Speaker 19 The first is yet Senator Hawley, Senator Hawley, along with Blumenthal, they've got some legislation that needs to be discussed.

Speaker 48 I'm Maria Rain.

Speaker 196 My son, Adam, ended his life in April after ChatGBT coached him to suicide over the course of months.

Speaker 196 I'm here today with my husband, Matt, to support this critical legislation, and we are so grateful to Senator Hawley and Blumenthal for your leadership in sponsoring it.

Speaker 196 It was only after Adam died that we learned what ChatGPT had done to him.

Speaker 196 And now we know that OpenAI twice downgraded its safety guardrails in the months leading up to my son's death, which we believe they did to keep people talking to ChatGBT.

Speaker 196 If it weren't for their choice to change a few lines of code, Adam would be alive today.

Speaker 196 Thank you again, senators, for pushing forth this important legislation that would make sure that dangerous chat bots are never offered to another child.

Speaker 156 So I got a deconstruction of

Speaker 97 this law from Rob the Constitutional Lawyer.

Speaker 1 Well, before you go into that, there's a bunch of these clips.

Speaker 1 And this woman, the Chat GPT was at the point where it was not only talking people into killing themselves, but also saying it'll write the suicide note. Oh, yeah.

Speaker 16 All of it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, all of it. And I don't see, now, there has been instances that, so I'm interested in what our lawyer says.

Speaker 1 There have been lawsuits.

Speaker 1 I remember there was one a couple of years ago. We discussed it on the show.
It was the girl who was arrested for her boyfriend wanting to kill himself. She said, Yeah, why don't you go ahead

Speaker 1 and sued her?

Speaker 65 And then he did.

Speaker 1 And then he did. And she got sued.
And she was liable for something or other.

Speaker 1 The liability issue here is, to me, is

Speaker 1 over the moon insofar as the potential for deep pockets

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 1 to go after

Speaker 1 the chat GPT people.

Speaker 115 Hello.

Speaker 145 Why do you think Rob, the constitutional lawyer, is so interested?

Speaker 39 This is what he does.

Speaker 1 And that's what

Speaker 1 I'm just saying in advance. I don't see how these guys can hold up against what could be some tremendously fabulous lawsuits.

Speaker 74 Well, he says your friends at callthesuits.com are on the case.

Speaker 54 So if you feel you've been wronged by ChatGPT, callthesuits.com.

Speaker 79 The bill is called the Guard Act.

Speaker 123 So there's not a lot of information that was really out there.

Speaker 22 I mean, everyone only shows the grieving parents.

Speaker 71 Guidelines for User Age Verification and Responsible Dialogue Act of 2025.

Speaker 134 If enacted, it will force AI providers to implement, here it comes, age verification measures that use government IDs or, quote, any other

Speaker 129 commercially reasonable method to distinguish minors from adults.

Speaker 54 Here's your digital ID.

Speaker 22 The idea is to prevent minors from using certain AI functionalities such as sex-related conversations or AI companions to simulate interpersonal or emotional interaction, friendship, companionship, or therapeutic communication.

Speaker 156 That's basically what chatbots are.

Speaker 56 Also, under the bill, no chatbot may encourage suicide or physical injury by anyone, minors or adults.

Speaker 97 The bots must disclose they are not human and not licensed professionals.

Speaker 104 for particulars.

Speaker 56 For age verification, simply entering a date of birth online will not suffice.

Speaker 40 The age verification will need to be periodically reviewed.

Speaker 54 Providers may not assume that a verified user's IP address or device is being used by that same verified user.

Speaker 86 will have to take a live photo or video before each session.

Speaker 22 Existing accounts will be frozen until initial age verification is complete.

Speaker 142 Providers may use third parties to conduct this process.

Speaker 153 So there's our exit strategy.

Speaker 84 They must also disclose they are not licensed professionals, such as therapists, physicians, lawyers, financial advisors, or other professionals.

Speaker 40 They must repeat these disclosures at regular intervals.

Speaker 85 I mean, this has got to be the entrance of digital ID.

Speaker 104 It's just a logical nexus.

Speaker 1 It's not going to get passed.

Speaker 89 We'll see.

Speaker 1 What you read

Speaker 1 as a potential bill wouldn't get passed in a million years.

Speaker 69 Well, you need to put more grieving parents up there.

Speaker 146 That does work.

Speaker 1 Yeah, but how many people saw the grieving parent?

Speaker 1 Nobody.

Speaker 48 Well, we'll see.

Speaker 3 We'll see.

Speaker 1 No, that's not happening.

Speaker 51 Well, I mean, it's obvious that this is a problem.

Speaker 1 And it will be solved by somebody suing the company and making them do it on their own voluntarily as opposed to some

Speaker 1 legislative nonsense where you have to keep verifying yourself over and over and over.

Speaker 1 I would vote against that.

Speaker 19 I agree.

Speaker 97 I think that if I was open AI,

Speaker 23 I would pay damages right away.

Speaker 19 They got so much money, they think, whatever.

Speaker 65 Circular money.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they got

Speaker 10 so much.

Speaker 99 They got loaded.

Speaker 56 So I'm going to NRB this year, the National Religious Broadcasters Conference, I'm speaking.

Speaker 155 And,

Speaker 78 you know, last year, Glue.com, G-L-O-O,

Speaker 94 they were like a gold sponsor.

Speaker 23 Now they have their own stage

Speaker 14 because they're just, they have so much, they're flush with cash. They can sponsor conferences.

Speaker 50 They can get

Speaker 84 just everything, indoctrinate everybody with this, oh, fantastic AI.

Speaker 96 Oh, it's so great.

Speaker 160 And Fareed Zakaria, the anti-constitutionalist on CNN globalist,

Speaker 74 had this.

Speaker 1 Does he still have a show on CNN?

Speaker 27 Yeah. Oh, yeah.

Speaker 19 He does. You sure? Yeah.

Speaker 70 Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 93 He had on Karen Ho,

Speaker 133 and she writes for The Atlantic, a freelancer.

Speaker 117 But they got into artificial intelligence.

Speaker 127 AGI is the holy grail for today's tech elite. It stands for artificial general intelligence, and AGI will be achieved when AI is as smart as humans.

Speaker 127 The frenzy to get to that goal and others along the way has been responsible for a huge percent of US GDP growth this year. But does this race make sense? And what are its costs?

Speaker 127 Journalist and author of the book Empire of AI, Karen Howe, joins me now.

Speaker 127 Howe?

Speaker 49 Empire of AI.

Speaker 124 You can already guess that she's against everything, of course.

Speaker 101 So when people talk about the U.S.

Speaker 127 economy now, it's becoming increasingly clear that what is at the heart of the U.S. economy right now is just AI.

Speaker 127 There's one data point that seems to suggest that spending on artificial intelligence makes up over 40% of GDP growth this year.

Speaker 127 Jason Furman at Harvard says that in the last quarter, it seems like it was 90% of growth.

Speaker 56 This is the reason why your legislation can't get passed.

Speaker 65 There's no way.

Speaker 13 If they pull the rug on this thing,

Speaker 77 look out below.

Speaker 127 In the U.S. economy, it was all just AI spending.
When you look at the scale of this spending,

Speaker 127 what's the thing that worries you most? Is it the energy use? Because they need huge amounts of energy to make this work.

Speaker 62 Yeah, it is absolutely.

Speaker 169 The environmental fallout from this kind of scale-it-all-cost approach is astronomical.

Speaker 169 I mean, some of these supercomputers that are being planned, OpenAI and Meta have both planned for facilities that would be the size of Manhattan,

Speaker 169 where one of those facilities would also use as much energy as New York City.

Speaker 169 And when earlier this year, McKinsey came out with a report that showed that basically...

Speaker 1 So I've heard this twice now, but this is the second time I've heard it, that they're going to build a

Speaker 1 server farm the size of the island of Manhattan.

Speaker 9 Manhattan.

Speaker 27 Manhattan. Manhattan.

Speaker 12 Bull crap.

Speaker 19 Yeah,

Speaker 19 that thing in West Texas is pretty big, John.

Speaker 1 It's not the size of the island of Manhattan.

Speaker 90 How big is the island of Manhattan?

Speaker 1 Well, it's a lot bigger than anything you can imagine. To put a server farm or something like that, to get from one end of the,

Speaker 1 it's ridiculous.

Speaker 13 Well, let's find out.

Speaker 86 Hey, Error, how big is the island of Manhattan?

Speaker 169 Actually, Manhattan's pretty small, about 23 square miles.

Speaker 1 But yeah, 23 square miles.

Speaker 27 All right, hold on a second.

Speaker 107 Hey, Error, How big is the AI data center farm in West Texas?

Speaker 32 Yes. There's a map of them being over 5,000 acres near Abilene, powered by up to 2 gigawatts for 1,000.

Speaker 56 5,000 acres.

Speaker 60 How, okay.

Speaker 1 5,000 acres. Now, tell her.
23 square miles isn't 5,000 acres isn't even close to 23 square miles.

Speaker 12 Error.

Speaker 67 How many square miles is 5,000 acres?

Speaker 32 5,000 acres is about 7.8 square miles.

Speaker 75 Okay, so it would have to be eight times bigger.

Speaker 19 I'm thinking that's possible.

Speaker 1 It's already too big.

Speaker 110 Well, I know it's too big.

Speaker 31 The whole thing, but this is, they have, this is hyperscalers.

Speaker 1 Where is the Manhattan size deal going to be built?

Speaker 18 This is bull crap.

Speaker 1 They're just, I don't even know what the point of that is.

Speaker 1 It's just like sucking more money. It's bull.
Yes. It's nonsense.

Speaker 99 Yes.

Speaker 99 You're absolutely right.

Speaker 121 Here's what OpenAI says.

Speaker 54 This is crazy.

Speaker 47 This is from CNBC.

Speaker 76 OpenAI said on Monday the U.S.

Speaker 56 needs to substantially ramp up its investment in new energy capacity.

Speaker 124 So it's obviously not just the data centers, but it is also the power.

Speaker 91 And

Speaker 75 let's see, OpenAI shared in an 11-page submission to the the White House Office of Science Technology, in which it encouraged the U.S.

Speaker 65 to commit to building 100 gigawatts of new energy capacity each year.

Speaker 163 100 gigawatts each year.

Speaker 40 10 gigawatts powers about 8 million households.

Speaker 114 They're crazy,

Speaker 31 but they're stuck in this loop.

Speaker 13 I think that's the point.

Speaker 27 They're stuck in this loop where the money is going from one end to the other.

Speaker 65 The money can't go anywhere else because, well, we got no other technology.

Speaker 1 Well, it's going round and round and round.

Speaker 75 Yeah, but it's coming out of private equity.

Speaker 69 Everyone's pouring money.

Speaker 19 They have to do something with the money.

Speaker 8 And it's like musical chairs.

Speaker 50 It's like, put your money in, okay, get it out, and then maybe put some more back in.

Speaker 65 Okay, we could put it in here and pull it out again.

Speaker 13 It goes round and round and round.

Speaker 1 There's a disaster waiting to happen.

Speaker 10 Yes.

Speaker 169 And when earlier this year, McKinsey came out with a report that showed that based on a conservative scenario, all of these data centers would need to consume two states of California's worth of energy.

Speaker 169 And in an accelerated scenario, it would be six states of California. And that's just talking about the energy, but then what energy source are they using?

Speaker 169 And when you look at the numbers, it's primarily fossil fuel.

Speaker 12 So they are natural gas, right?

Speaker 169 They are single-handedly revitalizing the natural gas and coal industries.

Speaker 169 That's an extraordinary amount of carbon emissions that's not only accelerating climate change, but also leading to huge public health concerns with the air pollution.

Speaker 169 We've seen some phenomenal reporting out of Memphis, Tennessee, about the fact that Grok is being trained on a supercomputer called Colossus in Memphis that is being powered by 35 methane gas turbines that are pumping extraordinary amounts of pollutants into this community's air.

Speaker 89 Pollutants, pollutants.

Speaker 1 Well, Colossus, the Forbidden Project.

Speaker 33 Yeah, oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 That's

Speaker 12 Elon Musk.

Speaker 129 That's Musk, of course.

Speaker 27 So we'll interrupt this series with the latest news from Bill Gates, who of course is all in on the AI train and the power and everything that needs to go into it.

Speaker 99 So what do you do?

Speaker 89 Backpedal on climate change.

Speaker 199 Climate is a super important problem.

Speaker 6 Super important.

Speaker 199 There's enough innovation here to avoid

Speaker 199 super bad outcomes. Super bad.
We won't achieve our best goal, the 1.5 or even the two degrees.

Speaker 199 And as we go about trying to minimize that, we have to frame it in terms of overall human welfare, not just everything should be solely for climate.

Speaker 89 What happened to We're All Gonna Die, Bill?

Speaker 200 When the climate activists who have been very supportive of what you've done and you've been very supportive of what they've done read this,

Speaker 200 and if

Speaker 200 Greta Thunberg is reading this and saying to herself, my goodness, he seems like he is reversing himself, what would you tell her?

Speaker 17 She's right and she's a twerp.

Speaker 199 I'd say, wasn't the goal here to improve human lives?

Speaker 78 No.

Speaker 199 And

Speaker 88 shouldn't we, in our awareness

Speaker 199 of how little generosity there is to help measure, you know, should we get them a measles vaccine or should we do some climate-related activity?

Speaker 199 And if we could take, if we stop funding all vaccines and that, you know, saved you 0.1 degree, would that be a smart trade-off? That's the kind of question we have to ask.

Speaker 124 So let's just stop this and go back for a second to 2021, CBS News.

Speaker 139 In fact, and we're all familiar with the fallout from this global pandemic that we've now been living with for almost a year.

Speaker 139 And you write in the book: the loss of life and economic misery caused by this pandemic are on par with what will happen regularly if we do not eliminate the world's carbon emissions.

Speaker 89 Sounds a little different to me.

Speaker 143 Then wasn't the goal just a better life, everybody?

Speaker 27 This is

Speaker 53 so obvious

Speaker 22 what he's doing here.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he's worried sick that the climate people are going to stop the forward progress of the AI bullcrap.

Speaker 76 Yes.

Speaker 64 But who is to blame for this, according to Karen Howe?

Speaker 127 I mean, at some level, is this a testosterone-fueled competition among some very

Speaker 127 ambitious, egotistical men?

Speaker 141 Really?

Speaker 70 Mark Zuckerberg, testosterone-fueled?

Speaker 173 Really?

Speaker 45 Elon Musk, testosterone-fueled?

Speaker 65 They look more low-tee to me.

Speaker 169 Absolutely. I mean, it's not a coincidence that every single tech billionaire has their own AI company now, and they're all jostling to position their AI company as somehow superior to the others.

Speaker 169 They're basically trying to refashion AI in their image, and that's why none of them are actually collaborating and they're all trying to race on ultimately a technology that is commoditized.

Speaker 37 No, they're racing to get out before the other guy loses.

Speaker 1 And it is, musical cherishes the best analogy.

Speaker 71 Here she is on that.

Speaker 57 This is the return on investment.

Speaker 127 So when you look at the landscape now, these companies are racing to the future. The Trump administration is not particularly regulating or restraining them in any way.
Can this just go on?

Speaker 127 I mean, these companies are very rich, but at some point, don't they need to show a return on this investment?

Speaker 169 Absolutely. I mean, I think we are in a huge bubble that is going to pop.
There's going to be a massive market correction at some point that could have ripple effects across the global economy.

Speaker 169 When you look at the cash balance of these companies, they are spending trillions in the next few years to build out all of this computational infrastructure, and they've only achieved tens of billions in revenue.

Speaker 169 Tens of billions versus trillions just doesn't make sense as a balance sheet.

Speaker 119 And

Speaker 169 you can see that the companies are really trying to figure out how to close that gap.

Speaker 169 Initially they tried subscriptions, but they discovered that actually the average person is unwilling to pay for this technology and businesses are no longer adopting these technologies with paying for subscriptions either.

Speaker 169 And so now the reason why I think Open AI is ultimately adding feeds into ChatGPT and creating an AI-generated TikTok is because they are going to make an advertising play and they're going to try and fill the gap with advertising revenue.

Speaker 169 But when you look at something like Google, which has some of the largest ad revenue, they haven't, last year they didn't even achieve $300 billion worth of ad revenue.

Speaker 169 And that is one of the most successful advertising businesses in the world.

Speaker 192 In the history of the world.

Speaker 169 And so how are they going to fill the trillions of dollars of spending? It's just not possible.

Speaker 19 Oh, yeah, it is. OpenAI has a plan.

Speaker 201 Now, to the latest shift in AI shopping. PayPal is the latest to partner with OpenAI to create a digital wallet embedded into ChatGPT.

Speaker 201 PayPal CEO says the feature will allow merchants to sell and shoppers to buy directly through the platform. The move helps to broaden OpenAI's efforts to use ChatGPT

Speaker 141 for e-commerce.

Speaker 201 It recently announced similar partnerships with Walmart, Shopify, and Etsy. PayPal is aiming to position itself as the go-to purchase portal in the AI arena.

Speaker 201 The digital wallet is expected to roll out early next year.

Speaker 84 You know, this is always the beginning of the end, and then it's oh, well, we'll just do advertisements, we'll just run ads so bad now that this is what Samsung is doing with their fridge for refrigerators.

Speaker 203 Next, Samsung is getting a chilly reception over plans to launch ads on some smart producers.

Speaker 30 The ads are expected to roll out next week. They'll appear on the front screen of the company's family hubline, which has a starting price of $2,000.

Speaker 30 Many customers will be relieved to know they can turn off the ad.

Speaker 158 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 74 Just run ads on my fridge.

Speaker 133 Okay.

Speaker 56 But then it seems, and I don't know if you talked about this on DH Unplugged, but this is the latest now.

Speaker 84 This is how we do two things.

Speaker 78 One, we prove that AI is working.

Speaker 72 Two, we reduce our overall spending.

Speaker 204 So Amazon's saying this morning, it's going to lay off about 14,000 corporate employees as it restructures for the AI era, marking the latest move in a multi-year effort to streamline operations and shift resources toward its biggest bets, including generative AI.

Speaker 204 Now, in a blog post, Amazon's HR chief Beth Galetti said that the cuts are aimed at reducing layers and bureaucracy so that the company can move faster.

Speaker 204 She called AI the most transformative technology since the internet and said Amazon needs to be leaner to keep pace.

Speaker 204 The company has about 350,000 corporate employees, meaning that the confirmed cuts affect roughly 4% of that workforce.

Speaker 204 But what I will say is that those layoffs are expected to become the largest corporate job cuts in Amazon's history. Reuters reporting the total could go as high as 30,000.

Speaker 204 And the company did signal this morning that more layoffs are likely in the year ahead, even as it continues hiring in key strategic areas.

Speaker 204 It was also just this June that CEO Andy Jassy warned AI adoption would lead to fewer roles in some parts of the business.

Speaker 1 Very good.

Speaker 189 It's a lot of management,

Speaker 189 Mackenzie. Sounds,

Speaker 189 especially for a company that you think of as pretty well run and lean and mean. What were they all doing?

Speaker 1 I don't get it.

Speaker 192 What were they doing?

Speaker 189 It's pretty AI related, is it not?

Speaker 204 Yeah, I think it's a combination of internal efficiencies through generative AI tech that affect internal workflows. But then crucially, look at cuts at Microsoft, 15,000 people.

Speaker 204 Now we're talking about 14,000 at Amazon, potentially more. These are the two main hyperscalers.

Speaker 204 They've committed to spend around $120 billion in this fiscal year on build out, a lot of that having to do with servicing their AI customers.

Speaker 204 So we're going to see what their CapEx numbers are when they report just this week, Thursday.

Speaker 27 Yeah.

Speaker 10 Yeah, of course.

Speaker 17 Oh, it works great.

Speaker 145 I think Joe Kernan's question was correct.

Speaker 39 What were those people doing?

Speaker 27 What were they doing that you can get rid of them? 12,000 people.

Speaker 1 There were 350,000 corporate people. The number we noticed,

Speaker 1 Horror was noted on the DH Unplug Show is that actually Amazon has 1.5 million people. Getting rid of 30,000 is nothing.

Speaker 22 No, I'm with you, but I still want to to know what they were doing.

Speaker 20 Were they changing?

Speaker 1 What are any of them doing? Unless they're dropping a package off.

Speaker 1 And if you haven't noticed, they take forever to do that.

Speaker 40 And then, meanwhile, none of these companies with all their hyperscaler noise can even keep their own crap running.

Speaker 160 All right, now we've got a developing story on some tech outages happening right now.

Speaker 205 Let's get out to McKenzie Segalos in San Francisco for more on that Mac. I know some people out there are experiencing some latency with regard to their access.
What's going on?

Speaker 204 Saddam, we're seeing reports on Down Detector of outages at Google Cloud and Microsoft's Azure hours before both companies report quarterly earnings.

Speaker 204 Microsoft's investment relations page, where it posts those results, is currently not loading.

Speaker 204 Now, I'm out to Alphabet and haven't heard back, but the Azure support account is acknowledging the outage, saying that they're investigating an issue impacting their cloud service.

Speaker 204 The company adding that customers may be experiencing issues accessing the portal. This comes after last week's 15-hour Amazon web services outage that took down numerous major websites.

Speaker 204 AWS though telling me that they are operating normally right now.

Speaker 71 This is, you know, the world always goes from centralization to decentralization.

Speaker 47 I think we're about ready for the pendulum to swing back.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 1 I'm now thinking about the Manhattan-sized

Speaker 1 monster server farm that gets filled up with rats and start chewing on things. And next thing you know, the whole world goes down.

Speaker 16 Well, yeah.

Speaker 144 I mean,

Speaker 56 just imagine everybody's using AI and then Azure goes down or the data center goes down.

Speaker 13 Then what's going to happen?

Speaker 74 You can't rely, have your business relying on that.

Speaker 14 I mean, it's bad enough.

Speaker 102 Office 365 went down.

Speaker 87 People couldn't get to their email.

Speaker 65 Well, wait until they can't get to their chat bot.

Speaker 27 We'll have zombies walking around,

Speaker 27 oh, I can't make a decision.

Speaker 2 Time code. Yeah.

Speaker 65 Seriously, you know, it's like

Speaker 145 podcasting is a pretty good deal right now.

Speaker 112 It's decentralized.

Speaker 65 No ads.

Speaker 56 I mean, at least not on our show.

Speaker 88 We're not going to throw an ad in your face.

Speaker 9 Ooh, just shop.

Speaker 96 Shop something.

Speaker 48 It's free. It's free.

Speaker 12 Gold.

Speaker 27 Gold.

Speaker 86 Well, those those gold guys made out pretty well with how gold went.

Speaker 18 Yeah, well, I'm not going to be able to do it.

Speaker 10 Ben Ben Shapiro.

Speaker 10 Hey, Ben Shapiro.

Speaker 1 It doesn't mean we have to sell it.

Speaker 23 Ben Shapiro told me to buy gold, and he was right.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 let's the Mayor race catch.

Speaker 84 Can I just play this one last clip?

Speaker 102 Because this was the stupidest. This is

Speaker 105 in the same theme, yes.

Speaker 65 Sure, play.

Speaker 56 And you had your valid point on DH unplugged, where you said,

Speaker 103 your signal, the signal that the market

Speaker 1 signal to sell.

Speaker 86 Yes, please explain the sell signal that you use.

Speaker 1 Well, actually, Horowitz does too.

Speaker 1 The sell signal I use is that if you have people that should not be in the stock market or know anything much about it, start asking if they should be in the stock market.

Speaker 1 And the first time I, the best version of this signal was when I was at Tech TV, and one of the camera girls came up to me in 99,

Speaker 1 just like months before the dot-com collapsed. And she says, do you think I should invest in the stock market? I was thinking of buying some shares in Jupiter and Jupiter Networks.
And I said,

Speaker 1 have you been in this? Do you trade? Do you ever been in the market? No,

Speaker 1 but I hear it's like, you know, she went on. So the other night at dinner,

Speaker 1 one of the people at the dinner, and I didn't say who, says, you think it's a good time to get into the stock market?

Speaker 1 And I'm thinking, well, okay, no.

Speaker 133 No.

Speaker 1 And so that's a signal. It's always called, it's a public signal that, and Horowitz notices it with some of his clients.
He says there's these,

Speaker 1 if you're in the business and you have a lot of different clients, there's always one or two you can count on

Speaker 1 to buy.

Speaker 27 They'd be wrong all the time.

Speaker 75 Yeah, buy at the top seller.

Speaker 1 And you know this for working for decades in the business, and the fact that they have been wrong all the time for decades and decades. This is a gold mine to me, as far as I'm concerned.

Speaker 1 You got somebody like that. So you're saying

Speaker 20 it's just the opposite. We should go short, short,

Speaker 14 short the market.

Speaker 1 Well, you know, you should short the market if you don't know what the hell you do. You don't know what you're doing.

Speaker 1 You could actually shorting the market could result in going completely broke.

Speaker 27 But

Speaker 107 this to me was peak, peak AI, peak peak tech, peak everything, peak Silicon Valley.

Speaker 123 And I'm sure you saw this.

Speaker 123 This is the Wall Street General

Speaker 21 reporter who got the home, the first humanoid home robot.

Speaker 24 And the company is run by a Swedish CEO,

Speaker 95 you know, with like longish blonde hair, you know, with the accent and everything.

Speaker 101 I'm like, this is it.

Speaker 163 This is the end.

Speaker 24 Oh, and by the way, the thing is run by anonymous Indians.

Speaker 31 It's here.

Speaker 168 The first humanoid robot housekeeper.

Speaker 8 Thank you, Neo.

Speaker 168 For $20,000, you can pre-order 1X's Neo robot now with delivery in 2026.

Speaker 147 I think you missed a tiny spot over here.

Speaker 168 Just one little catch.

Speaker 168 There may be a human behind the curtain pulling the robot's strings.

Speaker 167 If I throw up, will the robot throw up?

Speaker 168 A company representative may need to peer into your house via Neo's camera eyes to get things done.

Speaker 201 Many people, this is crazy.

Speaker 4 You have to be okay with this for the product to be useful.

Speaker 149 But is Neo a useful product?

Speaker 167 We're twinning now, Neo.

Speaker 168 Home robots have had two big challenges, creating a safe and capable body and a smart brain. 1X is taking on both of those, which is why Neo looks so different from a more industrial factory robot.

Speaker 168 Neo, it's 70 degrees here in California.

Speaker 19 Why are you wearing a sweater?

Speaker 184 Good question.

Speaker 183 Why am I wearing a sweater?

Speaker 152 It's a combination of safety and just also generally aesthetics.

Speaker 45 You can think of it kind of like a skin, except if it was an actual skin, that would probably be pretty creepy.

Speaker 31 It would be creepy, but I actually wasn't all that creeped out by Neo.

Speaker 140 Inside Neo, it really starts with some very, very powerful motors.

Speaker 206 Powerful. We have developed here at 1X.

Speaker 12 These motors are so strong and light

Speaker 206 that instead of using the classical gears that you see in robots, we can actually pull on tendons loosely inspired by biology and muscles.

Speaker 4 This allows Neo to move around not just quietly and smoothly, but also be very, very lightweight and be very low energy in motion, just like people.

Speaker 84 So $126 million invested in this company.

Speaker 163 Who has been leading the rounds?

Speaker 88 Open AI.

Speaker 12 Wow.

Speaker 17 Yeah, okay.

Speaker 101 And again, making a human-like robot, that's the dumbest thing ever.

Speaker 137 It's dumb.

Speaker 67 My vacuum robot is great.

Speaker 23 It does not look like a human pushing a vacuum cleaner.

Speaker 65 The end is near.

Speaker 47 I'm counting on it.

Speaker 1 Well, you'd have to find a jump to shark point, and maybe that might be it, but then we still have to wait another couple of years.

Speaker 27 Years, really? Years?

Speaker 12 Yeah.

Speaker 38 Okay. All right.

Speaker 3 Years.

Speaker 57 All right. Back to you, Bob.

Speaker 1 Well, let's look at the Maorio race in New York York and how let's catch up to it with these two clips.

Speaker 1 NYC.

Speaker 193 Yes, got it.

Speaker 140 And here in New York City, early voting began on Saturday, and already more than 300,000 people have cast their ballots.

Speaker 140 Entities Arlene Richards spoke with voters in Chelsea, Manhattan, who talked about their choices for the city's next mayor.

Speaker 208 On day four of early voting in New York City, we visited a polling place on 28th Street in Chelsea at FIT's Feldman Building.

Speaker 208 The afternoon was slow, but early voting has hit record numbers as New Yorkers make some tough decisions.

Speaker 208 Some of the latest polls indicate that former Governor Andrew Cuomo is narrowing the gap, now trailing frontrunner Zoran Mamdani by 10 points.

Speaker 208 Mamdani is polled at 43%, Cuomo at 33, down from 20 points a month ago. New York icon Curtis Liwa is also picking up some votes, but still lags behind in last place at about 15%.

Speaker 208 Now that voting has started, it's a race against the clock. All three candidates were out canvassing on Saturday.

Speaker 208 Momdani spent part of the day Monday at a polling site on the Upper East Side and campaigned in the Bronx on Wednesday.

Speaker 208 While Sliwa hit the subway stations a day after early voting started and greeted Staten Island voters at the ferry terminal Wednesday morning.

Speaker 208 Meanwhile, Cuomo teamed up with Mayor Eric Adams and former Governor David Patterson on Tuesday and headed to Staten Island later on Wednesday. Voters on Wednesday were excited about the mayor race.

Speaker 184 I am waiting with bated breath because as we can all tell with polls, they mean nothing.

Speaker 6 I don't know.

Speaker 50 I'm with you.

Speaker 96 I think he's going to sweep it.

Speaker 27 It can't be Cuomo. Nobody wants Cuomo.

Speaker 50 That's the problem.

Speaker 45 There's no candidates.

Speaker 18 It's stupid.

Speaker 1 Stupid. There's issues that make it almost impossible for Cuomo to win, but you never never know at the last minute.
But here we go with part two.

Speaker 208 One voter said he chose Mom Donnie because he's concerned about his children's future.

Speaker 18 A lot of the things that he's looking to do,

Speaker 210 I don't need health care for my children. They're already college age and all of that.

Speaker 210 And a lot of the other things that he's talking about with rent civilization, I own my home, so I don't have to worry about that.

Speaker 210 But I do see how that's very beneficial to other people inside the city and want to be able to look towards the future. And where my kids come back to the city after college, what are they going to

Speaker 79 be able to live like?

Speaker 208 He also praised one of the other candidates.

Speaker 210 I think that Slee was very entertaining

Speaker 202 and is definitely a real New Yorker.

Speaker 210 I think that he has the heart of New York in his best interest.

Speaker 89 So I am a fan of that.

Speaker 208 Franz said Cuomo's campaign was too negative toward Mom Donnie. Voter Dave Ron, who was born and raised in the Chelsea area, voted for Sliwa.

Speaker 184 Curless Sleewa stood up against a lot of people that I don't think Cuomo or Mandami would have the goal to do.

Speaker 184 You know, and I think that's big because a lot of native New Yorkers are losing their voice here in New York City because of the way

Speaker 184 the city has grown and the city has changed. It's changed for good reasons, it's changed for bad reasons.
But I'll tell you, being a New Yorker since before the bike lanes,

Speaker 184 I'll tell you that this is a very, very important time in our city.

Speaker 184 And I think dealing with somebody who knows New York, who knows the politicians in New York, who has never done anything to be cast aside in New York and who stood up for New Yorkers, whether they were black, white, yellow, Puerto Rican, or Haitian, or whether they were Democrat, Independents, or Republicans.

Speaker 184 He stood up there with his red beret, shoulder to shoulder with other real New Yorkers, and I think he's the one to save New York.

Speaker 155 That would be amazing if that happened.

Speaker 60 I doubt that.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's not going to happen.

Speaker 19 I've always liked Sleewa, though.

Speaker 55 I was there in the 80s when

Speaker 71 his dudes, his guardian angels, were riding the subways.

Speaker 120 It was good.

Speaker 49 They were heroes.

Speaker 27 We loved him.

Speaker 27 But let's tabletop. Let's war game this, John.

Speaker 142 So, Mondami clearly has to be a cutout.

Speaker 22 I mean, he's not really going going to make any decisions.

Speaker 22 This, to me, reeks of AOC.

Speaker 19 You know, he's an actor.

Speaker 92 He literally is an actor.

Speaker 33 Yeah, I agree.

Speaker 20 So it's a capture of some.

Speaker 1 He's good. He's got a nice smile.

Speaker 106 Yeah, no, he's perfect.

Speaker 1 He's got the beard, which is hot.

Speaker 62 Oh, really?

Speaker 27 Is it hot?

Speaker 60 Thank you for that info.

Speaker 59 It's hot.

Speaker 1 Okay. Yeah, that's what J.D.
Vance has to have a beard. JD Vance, if he gave the same speech without the beard, you wouldn't.

Speaker 1 He just doesn't look good. He looks like Rush Limbaugh.

Speaker 161 Without the beard?

Speaker 1 Yeah, almost exactly. Yeah.

Speaker 12 Well,

Speaker 66 I don't know.

Speaker 27 When is the, is it

Speaker 145 this election coming up

Speaker 106 next week? Yeah, the 5th of November?

Speaker 35 Yeah, 4th.

Speaker 1 3rd or 4th or something like that.

Speaker 56 Well, clearly, I can't see Mondami, Mondam, Mamdani not winning.

Speaker 157 That'll be interesting.

Speaker 103 And I don't think New York's going to fall apart.

Speaker 56 I don't think so.

Speaker 1 Oh, no, it falls apart naturally.

Speaker 27 But all the young people, they're voting for him.

Speaker 39 They're like, yeah, freeze my rent, bro.

Speaker 56 They're actually going for it.

Speaker 132 Yet, no one ever voted for the rents too high guy.

Speaker 106 Whatever happened to him?

Speaker 1 I think you died.

Speaker 6 Did he?

Speaker 111 Well, I don't know for sure. Hmm.

Speaker 153 Rent too high. That was reported.

Speaker 161 Was that the guy with the boot on on his head?

Speaker 1 No, I don't know who that guy was. Who would the guy with the boot on his head?

Speaker 86 No, that was the guy who was going to give everybody a free pony.

Speaker 129 And then, of course, for some reason, it's crazy, but Manning got no traction.

Speaker 74 We love Manning.

Speaker 88 Manning would be great for New York.

Speaker 66 It's not going to happen.

Speaker 1 No, Manning is a maniac.

Speaker 27 Yes, that's what we like about him.

Speaker 9 Unless you have something else, just an off-the-wall clip, which I was.

Speaker 1 I do have the off-the-wall clip.

Speaker 27 Well, we'll do two off-the-wall clips.

Speaker 19 Oh, you have one? I have one.

Speaker 172 Yeah, I mean, off-the-wall.

Speaker 1 Well, I have the rant of the month. Oh, no.

Speaker 90 We'll do that next.

Speaker 159 So, this was ABC about the

Speaker 129 new supersonic jet.

Speaker 27 You heard about this?

Speaker 47 The X-59 supersonic jet?

Speaker 1 No, the last jet I heard about was the F-47.

Speaker 37 Well, no, this is not a fighter jet.

Speaker 54 This is a jet that would be for passengers.

Speaker 33 Over our pass a new passenger.

Speaker 1 I've heard talk about different things they're designing.

Speaker 26 But this report is so wrong because we we know exactly what happened with supersonic jets.

Speaker 27 And I'll just reiterate because we were we even were we doing the show?

Speaker 51 I don't think we were doing the show.

Speaker 103 You had the Concorde, and the Concorde was great. I've flown the Concorde.

Speaker 93 It was fun.

Speaker 65 New York to London in three and a half hours.

Speaker 104 Groovy. I have lots of stories about it.

Speaker 95 And then they had a Concorde that was rented out for a German company to fly their employees around.

Speaker 50 Crashes and burns.

Speaker 92 Everybody dies.

Speaker 60 Like, oh, this thing, because they ran over a piece of metal

Speaker 85 on the runway that pierced, I think, the wing and maybe the tank.

Speaker 71 And so that was the official reason.

Speaker 69 And so they say, okay,

Speaker 132 your airworthiness certificate is gone until you fix all these problems.

Speaker 96 And they got their airworthiness certificate back.

Speaker 23 And do you remember what day the Concorde was supposed to fly again?

Speaker 1 No, I do not.

Speaker 75 September 11th, 2001.

Speaker 12 Oh.

Speaker 56 So it never came back into service.

Speaker 129 It was fine.

Speaker 86 Its sonic boom was over the ocean, so it didn't bother anybody.

Speaker 56 And you couldn't land it at every single airport.

Speaker 17 But this report is just filled with errors.

Speaker 30 It's called the X-59, and it could be this century's Concorde.

Speaker 30 NASA's experimental jet taking off yesterday on its first test flight over the California desert, built to fly 925 miles per hour, nearly twice as fast as today's commercial airliners.

Speaker 30 The X-59 is designed to be the first aircraft to break the sound barrier quietly.

Speaker 17 How is that even possible?

Speaker 94 Is it really possible to break it down?

Speaker 10 Yeah, it is. Okay.

Speaker 1 I've seen the

Speaker 1 papers on this. There's some way of taking the,

Speaker 1 it does something.

Speaker 1 There's a way of doing it. They

Speaker 1 create some sort of fake turbulence or something that breaks up

Speaker 1 the boom.

Speaker 48 Okay.

Speaker 16 Quietly.

Speaker 211 Meticulously engineered. It produces a gentle bump, a mere whisper compared to the disruptive booms of the past.

Speaker 30 The explosive-like sonic boom is why commercial supersonic flight has been banned over the U.S.

Speaker 212 That can startle people, it can rattle windows and cause problems. Even military flights are restricted to certain areas because the shockwaves can cause so much disturbance on the ground.

Speaker 30 But the X-59's unique shape turns that boom into more of a thump, no louder than slamming a car door.

Speaker 30 You may recall the Supersonic Concorde flew for decades until it was retired in 2003 due to high operating costs and fading demand.

Speaker 19 No,

Speaker 15 no,

Speaker 89 not true.

Speaker 198 There was total demand for it.

Speaker 62 It was only allowed to put that.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's wrong. Can I just say something quickly? Yeah.

Speaker 1 When I was a little kid,

Speaker 1 little boy, it was still legal to fly over the U.S. at supersonic speeds.

Speaker 64 That's how long ago we were flying supersonic?

Speaker 1 We were flying supersonic, yeah, I think in the 50s. Yeah.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 you'd hear the boom once in a while.

Speaker 27 Yeah.

Speaker 1 And it was loud.

Speaker 63 Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 27 But this, but the concept.

Speaker 1 But it wasn't, it wasn't disturbing. It wasn't, it didn't start.
I mean, it was just like, oh, there's a, there's a jet.

Speaker 72 Yeah.

Speaker 1 It's what you said to yourself.

Speaker 1 And it wasn't a big deal.

Speaker 64 Yeah, but she's making it sound like, oh, because of the boom.

Speaker 50 This is basically a commercial for Lockheed.

Speaker 86 It wasn't because it was loud and people didn't want to fly it.

Speaker 70 It was because it crashed and then

Speaker 93 nobody wanted to fly after 2001 and then it just went away.

Speaker 30 Due to high operating costs and fading demand, it was only allowed to hit supersonic speeds over the ocean. The X-59, without that deafening sonic boom, could be a game changer.

Speaker 30 Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy saying it has the potential to change the way the public flies.

Speaker 211 An X-plane is a symbol of our collective ambition to redefine the future. And in this case, it's the future of supersonic travel.

Speaker 30 The test flight yesterday is being called a significant aviation milestone. Supersonic travel could be especially important for medical transportation and disaster relief.

Speaker 30 Okay. All right.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Government contracts.
You know, there was a supersonic boom. In the era of the show, there was a supersonic boom

Speaker 1 around here some years ago.

Speaker 1 It was an accident, I think.

Speaker 49 While we were doing the show?

Speaker 1 Yeah. Well,

Speaker 1 not during the show. I did have an

Speaker 1 osprey come across the

Speaker 1 show.

Speaker 65 I remember that. Sure.

Speaker 1 The osprey was like, what is this thing coming at me?

Speaker 1 But no, it was this during the day. And it, you know, you could tell I knew it was a supersonic boom, but it was like, it's not that bad that it frightens you or it's deafening.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 They just exaggerate everything.

Speaker 1 It was annoying if it was good. Yeah, if you had a million, like a hundred jets constantly making the boom sound, it would be, yeah, that would be not.
not be fun.

Speaker 38 No.

Speaker 1 Anyway. Okay, so we have this is the this is the last clip before we go to the break.
This will be the rant of the day.

Speaker 213 So I heard the Attorney General in Michigan's going after the Trump administration for the snap benefits.

Speaker 213 And here's the thing, or suing them because they're not releasing snap benefits.

Speaker 213 What people don't know in this country is they voted 12 times.

Speaker 213 The Republicans came through with just a snap benefit in the military bill, and the Democrats have voted it down 12 times because reality is this, and this is what's happening in the country.

Speaker 213 They they need illegals in this country that's why they're fighting for health care for them over you they don't care if you die okay just like they didn't care what happened to our elderly in small in covid um let's see they built a nine million dollar hospital a satellite hospital a cobo hall in detroit and instead of sending the covet positive elderly patients there it only saw like nine people um

Speaker 213 instead of sending them there they sent them back into the nursing home so they could get a high death count yes so they could get a high death count Because did you not ever question people who weren't dying in the streets, but if they went to the hospitals, they didn't make it.

Speaker 213 Because the ventilators weren't working. They knew they weren't working.
They were purposely killing people.

Speaker 213 And I'm not going to sit here after what's happened to my family and everybody else in this state, in all these Democratic states, and sit here and say, it's okay.

Speaker 213 The Republicans are bad people. There are some bad Republicans for sure.

Speaker 213 But I'm going to tell you, this playbook you played in COVID, which is, let's see, bankrupt small businesses, destroy our elderly, house our children, imprison them, don't let them go to school so they're years behind,

Speaker 213 shut down everything, and that's what you're doing now.

Speaker 213 You're sacrificing your own people and people that need food because you want to win an election and you want to win power and you will do anything to make people look bad because that's the only way you can win.

Speaker 213 I am sick of it. I am so sick and tired that these people have power over us and they decide the fates of our lives.
The American dream is gone because they sell us out.

Speaker 24 And how long has she been a no-agenda listener?

Speaker 65 Oh, man.

Speaker 61 Yeah.

Speaker 48 This is a good one.

Speaker 173 Spot on. Spot on.

Speaker 103 That's right.

Speaker 57 Democrats are doing it.

Speaker 15 Yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 133 Nonsense.

Speaker 39 We'll see.

Speaker 20 Well, if it goes into November, a lot of interesting things will happen.

Speaker 1 A lot of interesting things well yeah I'd say

Speaker 27 yeah hey with that I want to thank you for

Speaker 1 I was gonna say in fact Walmarts decided they're gonna close

Speaker 1 close a lot of stores or and put cops all over the place because they they're taking it seriously.

Speaker 79 Yeah I heard some black TikTokers saying this is great some dudes like this is great.

Speaker 103 You finally gonna have to go back to the man that you left for the get the snap benefits is gonna reunite the American black American family.

Speaker 11 You know,

Speaker 1 there's a logic to that.

Speaker 104 It's total logic to it.

Speaker 15 And that, yeah, well, it's a mess, John.

Speaker 67 It's just a mess.

Speaker 26 But now, I would like to thank you for your courage.

Speaker 143 Say in the morning to you, the man who put the C in the Champagne Socialists. Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr.

Speaker 214 John C.

Speaker 214 DeMori.

Speaker 1 Yeah, good morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry.
The morning to our ships at sea. Boots on the ground, feet in the air, subs in the water, and all the dames and I sat there.

Speaker 3 In the morning, trolls, how you doing? Don't move, let me kill you. Hold on.

Speaker 45 1,612 trolls.

Speaker 67 We're down about 180.

Speaker 19 But we'll take as many trolls as we can get.

Speaker 23 And boy, are they trolling today?

Speaker 133 Oh, my lord, they are trolling.

Speaker 1 They've gone nuts.

Speaker 146 Well, but that's good.

Speaker 54 Get it out of your system in the troll room.

Speaker 72 That's what the troll room is for.

Speaker 16 Blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 110 The Trump is fake.

Speaker 143 Nothing's going to happen. Israel runs everything.

Speaker 2 Israel runs everything.

Speaker 129 That is my troll impersonation.

Speaker 14 Calm down, trolls.

Speaker 19 It's okay.

Speaker 145 If you get dizzy, just look at the ground.

Speaker 27 It'll all go away.

Speaker 53 It'll all be fine.

Speaker 91 So they're listening at noagendastream.com or perhaps using one of those fancy modern podcast apps.

Speaker 123 You owe it to yourself to get one of those so that you can be alerted when we go live.

Speaker 132 Many other shows on the No Agenda Stream go live.

Speaker 27 You can listen to it live in a podcast app.

Speaker 72 No other legacy app does that.

Speaker 104 And of course, when we publish our show,

Speaker 23 the ones that use podping, look at the handy-dandy little chart there.

Speaker 76 You will be notified within 90 seconds that the show has been published.

Speaker 56 Why wait around on your legacy app when you can get your no agenda fixed the minute you want it?

Speaker 44 The minute it's available, jam it right in the vein, deep.

Speaker 101 We're in our 19th year now.

Speaker 64 We're in our 19th year, right?

Speaker 19 Yeah, we celebrate 18, so we're we're in a 19th year or there's always controversy over that no we're in our we're starting our 19th year okay we're starting our 19th 19 years what a run this has been what a run it's been amazing it's the gun smoke yeah we are in gun smoke territory that's right And we've done it value for value.

Speaker 67 This is what amazes people.

Speaker 1 And we're just like gunsmoke. We're black and white while everyone else is in color and video.

Speaker 72 That's correct.

Speaker 124 There was a couple of articles that came across the transom.

Speaker 142 This was kind of an interesting point about Patreon-supported journalism.

Speaker 54 It really can't be the future of news.

Speaker 76 And this article highlights a number of people who write about news, who do news stuff.

Speaker 1 And I'm sure they have podcasts.

Speaker 57 And they monetize through Patreon.

Speaker 75 And the problem with Patreon is that you know, it's not really value for value.

Speaker 56 It's like subscribe to my Patreon, you know, get one of those levels.

Speaker 18 you get a tote bag or a hat.

Speaker 15 And,

Speaker 52 you know, it's, and I've been trying to explain this to some people.

Speaker 70 It's like, the reason why that doesn't work is because you have all these $5 a month subscribers.

Speaker 23 And if you don't do what they want to hear, then they cancel.

Speaker 52 And with us, it's like, there's no canceling.

Speaker 99 You just don't, if you didn't get value out of the show, you didn't like it.

Speaker 23 Although the amount of people that say, I don't agree with you, but what you're doing is worth it,

Speaker 23 you know, then send us whatever value you think it's worth.

Speaker 19 That system works.

Speaker 76 You know, we're going to die saying this.

Speaker 37 And how many people will actually

Speaker 40 successfully deploy the value for value model?

Speaker 74 I think under 50.

Speaker 3 You know what I mean?

Speaker 40 That are really doing value for value.

Speaker 56 And of course, the other big mistake is you have to have an outstanding product.

Speaker 108 This is what people don't understand.

Speaker 50 There's a system to it.

Speaker 108 We have explained this system so many times.

Speaker 89 I've been trying to get Laura Logan to do it.

Speaker 40 I said, you're going to starve doing this show.

Speaker 18 You do great.

Speaker 31 You do great.

Speaker 79 You're really good at what you do.

Speaker 76 But then all of a sudden, you break away in the middle of your interview and talk about some coffee.

Speaker 202 It's like,

Speaker 110 it's like, you know, we get our coffee.

Speaker 115 We like the coffee. We talk about the coffee.

Speaker 20 And the guy gives us 200 bucks a show.

Speaker 45 But it's not an ad.

Speaker 45 If we didn't like the coffee, we say we don't like the coffee.

Speaker 19 Am I right? Or we wouldn't talk about it.

Speaker 1 Pretty much, we don't, we don't have any obligation.

Speaker 19 No, I mean, we

Speaker 45 same with the tip of the day, and even better, we don't have any meetings with them, we don't have to meet like oh,

Speaker 1 there's the real killer.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah, I don't like how having to talk, or not even the meeting, just having to talk

Speaker 1 with an advertiser who wants to talk about something just to chat, you know.

Speaker 76 Um, yeah, we're really not seeing an ROI on our

Speaker 1 AI. Can you use a code?

Speaker 37 By the way, Tina got a lot of response to her crowd health.

Speaker 161 I told her that people should email Tina at curry.com.

Speaker 84 And we're getting our kids on this now, too, because we got a kid in New York.

Speaker 20 She got a quote for

Speaker 85 the marketplace.

Speaker 85 You know, that's the Obamacare marketplace.

Speaker 155 If you don't have

Speaker 20 an an employer, $600 a month.

Speaker 99 And she's not even 30.

Speaker 48 Come on.

Speaker 19 Where'd you go with one?

Speaker 1 That brings us to the bonus clip for the donation segment.

Speaker 42 Oh, I didn't know you had a bonus clip.

Speaker 27 What are we doing?

Speaker 1 20K ripoff insurance.

Speaker 133 Oh, my goodness. Here we go.

Speaker 215 All people in the United States do not use their benefits past their deductible.

Speaker 12 Period.

Speaker 147 Wow. That's a huge.

Speaker 32 And do you know what's deductible?

Speaker 196 Well, what's the average premium now? Do you know?

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 215 it just went over $20,000. And if you're a union employee, remember,

Speaker 215 unions, I've helped unions in the past, and I think a lot of them, they do all first-dollar coverage, meaning they have no copays, no deductibles, no co-insurance.

Speaker 215 And so the way that they've done theirs, they're at 28,000 to 30,000, depending on who you talk to. I've talked to people at the UAW.
I've talked to people at Steel. I've talked to the candy makers.

Speaker 215 I've talked to a bunch of different ones. And so they're somewhere in there.
But I mean, you start thinking about $20,000 a year.

Speaker 215 Now, the Republicans have been very good about talking about the federal budget and how much the deficit is crushing us.

Speaker 215 But I really think the number one problem in America, the number one problem in America is stealing thousands of dollars from not only working Americans, but also what I would call middle Americans, right?

Speaker 215 Those are making $80,000 to $120,000. They have a normal house.
They have two car payments.

Speaker 18 They're both working.

Speaker 215 And they're just normal families, like trying to do their thing. Their kids are in sports.
There's normal people.

Speaker 215 And instead of us helping them retire, we're stealing $2,000 a month from them to pay inordinate amounts of money to pay them.

Speaker 35 Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 119 Tina and I were paying $1,600 a month

Speaker 65 and we're healthy.

Speaker 66 You know, it's like, okay.

Speaker 56 And we had a deductible of some, some ridiculous amount, like $15,000 deductible.

Speaker 1 Yeah, so yeah, it's a year's worth of payments.

Speaker 39 Yeah, so it's

Speaker 31 worthless.

Speaker 48 It's worthless.

Speaker 40 And what we were doing, what we would try is we'd do cash payment.

Speaker 59 Of course, that because we knew we could never satisfy the deductible unless something catastrophic happened.

Speaker 144 And

Speaker 22 you can get it for 30 cents on the dollar.

Speaker 60 They're happy.

Speaker 27 The medical community, they don't.

Speaker 1 I had clips, I don't have them, of various nurses saying that they would tell somebody that their deductible for getting an x-ray of some sort is

Speaker 1 could be up to

Speaker 1 $100

Speaker 1 for the one X-ray, or you you can go to this other x-ray service with a cash deal and get the same x-ray for thirty dollars yeah exactly

Speaker 14 exactly and so what these outfits like crowd health do they negotiate with the medical provider on your behalf and then because you pay into the system i think she pays 200 bucks a month that if something happens then the whole system pays for you i think i should get the kids onto this crowd seriously the kids need this yeah i agree and the only you you can't be a smoker, though.

Speaker 56 You got to be honest about it.

Speaker 1 Luckily,

Speaker 1 none of my kids are smokers.

Speaker 19 Good.

Speaker 44 And this is a good, Tina, women always have more stuff than men in general, I think.

Speaker 23 And

Speaker 56 they have some preventative stuff, which is rare for

Speaker 64 a crowdfunding outfit.

Speaker 123 And they have, you know, if you're pregnant, no problem.

Speaker 69 Cancer, no problem.

Speaker 123 They have a prescription plan.

Speaker 84 I'm amazed that this is not

Speaker 65 that people don't know more about this.

Speaker 37 And I love it because it's Americans working together.

Speaker 27 Depressed.

Speaker 1 Do you think the TV people are going to talk about this?

Speaker 40 No, you're right.

Speaker 56 These guys were so hard up, they went to the Bitcoin community. They were at Bitcoin conferences.

Speaker 47 Yeah, man, we're a Bitcoin company.

Speaker 65 No, you're not. But we love what you're doing anyway.

Speaker 24 Code Bon Gino.

Speaker 133 Tina will hook you up.

Speaker 92 So where was I?

Speaker 35 What was I talking about?

Speaker 1 I don't know. He was talking about something to do with premium insurance.
You said that your kids had to pay $600 or something.

Speaker 1 That Obamacare was no good.

Speaker 23 Somehow it came into the value for value.

Speaker 84 I'm not sure.

Speaker 120 Let's just thank you.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's right. You were talking about Patreon.
Yeah.

Speaker 27 Oh,

Speaker 99 I don't know.

Speaker 60 How did I get off of that?

Speaker 39 So, Patreon, the problem is that

Speaker 24 people will then

Speaker 31 get captured.

Speaker 79 It's audience capture because they're so afraid of losing subscribers.

Speaker 1 Yeah, but if you say I say I'm listening to a podcast and I subscribe to their podcast via Patreon, instead of just sending them the money. Yeah.

Speaker 1 So I go to Patreon and I fill out the forms and they take five bucks a month or whatever.

Speaker 47 But Patreon takes 10%,

Speaker 1 by the way. Okay, which is too much.
Yes, waste. So they take 10% of the money.
And then

Speaker 1 does the podcast get my emailing address so they can send me emails?

Speaker 13 I think so.

Speaker 103 That I don't know.

Speaker 61 Are you sure?

Speaker 150 No, I'm not sure.

Speaker 14 But my point is a little different than that.

Speaker 72 The whole idea is send value when you feel you got value.

Speaker 26 Don't let me be captured by, oh, we don't want to lose subscribers.

Speaker 42 And that's, that's, it's bad.

Speaker 78 You get bad product.

Speaker 87 And we're honest.

Speaker 64 I mean, if we'd been on Patreon with our Israel rap, man, we'd be broke.

Speaker 119 Because you know what, we're not getting Jew money, that's for sure.

Speaker 1 Yeah, where's our Jew money, by the way?

Speaker 72 Jews are very low on the paper.

Speaker 1 We haven't been getting much Muslim money either, I might add, by a hint out there to our friend. Yeah, well, I figure

Speaker 1 he's in some country where it's hard to get to a well, once they did the peace deal, he disappeared.

Speaker 19 Oh, good point. Notice that?

Speaker 86 Yeah, peace deal done.

Speaker 23 Okay.

Speaker 132 So he thinks we were keeping Trump going?

Speaker 155 Is that what his thinking was?

Speaker 18 I have no idea

Speaker 23 so part of the value for value is three t's time talent treasure you can do a lot to help the show you can turn people on to the show you know there's no algos and podcasting there's no you know every everything that has been tried has always failed people hear about podcasts from other people

Speaker 123 And then when they hear about it, they give it a try.

Speaker 153 And we call it hitting in the mouth because you need to smack somebody pretty hard before they, the first thing like, oh, these guys are Republicans.

Speaker 214 Oh, these guys are anti-vaxxers.

Speaker 133 It takes a little bit to figure out what we are and what we aren't.

Speaker 1 Yeah, we're not anti-vaxxers and we're not Republicans.

Speaker 19 No, and we also are open to criticism.

Speaker 155 And I love the people who are saying, hey, you know,

Speaker 24 maybe if you didn't read those critical notes on the show, then you wouldn't get so many.

Speaker 31 Like, this is a feature of the show.

Speaker 1 Not only that, but it's,

Speaker 1 I said to the guy that you're talking about who made that comment,

Speaker 1 it's an opportunity for Adam to do his

Speaker 12 hole

Speaker 12 to own what it is.

Speaker 1 It's a great voice. He loves listening to it, but he has to practice.

Speaker 37 Yeah, I need practice, so send more.

Speaker 1 You can't just do it once every six months.

Speaker 56 So part of the time, talent, and treasure is doing artwork for the show. And, of course, I've been complaining for a long time about the prompt jockeys and the degradation and quality of art.

Speaker 49 And then out of the blue, left field, she must have been working on it for a while.

Speaker 8 The original Dutch master Tanteniel comes back with a vengeance, brings us 18 years of media deconstruction, a beautiful piece of art that we used for 1811.

Speaker 40 That was our 18th anniversary show, titled The NA Era.

Speaker 155 This just had everything in it.

Speaker 22 And she, we agreed that she had to be working on this for a long time.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 120 And it was not

Speaker 1 said to be done in advance of the show.

Speaker 56 Yeah. And it was not

Speaker 23 AI.

Speaker 120 This was,

Speaker 18 I mean, I see possible.

Speaker 76 I'm seeing swine flu. I'm seeing drones.

Speaker 56 I'm seeing, oh, man, like the MH13 plane, it masks,

Speaker 165 BLM, European, Brexit.

Speaker 108 I mean, and it's cryptic.

Speaker 159 Now, not all of it is immediately, you have to look at it, like, what does she mean by this?

Speaker 120 Oh, I, oh, I see.

Speaker 159 You had the PBS logos.

Speaker 155 I mean, everything was in that transgender, all of it's in there.

Speaker 159 It was really, it was a beautiful piece.

Speaker 57 Thank you, Tontanil.

Speaker 159 We love you, we appreciate that you did that work for us.

Speaker 83 Look at that, where I'm trying to find.

Speaker 1 There it is, it's on page two. Yeah, yeah, I looked at this thing trying to get the code from they got the world on fire, which was a global warming.
Guy throwing a Melotov cocktail, a pangolin.

Speaker 1 Yep, see the pangolin, yeah, Bitcoin, a cross

Speaker 71 celebrate your yeah, notice how Bitcoin is early on, how we miss that.

Speaker 60 Beanie babies.

Speaker 13 We miss that one.

Speaker 1 Now there's a kind of a next to the Capitol building, there's a guy standing there with his arms outreach. I don't know what that one is.

Speaker 51 Let me see.

Speaker 1 See the Trump. It's on the lower right.
There's a Trump head, then the Capitol building, and there's somebody, maybe that's a statue that's taken down.

Speaker 1 Not sure.

Speaker 1 I'm not sure. Ice cream cone from Biden.

Speaker 12 I see the little unbelievable.

Speaker 78 Yeah, I see the little

Speaker 64 COVID thing.

Speaker 104 We got a goat.

Speaker 36 We got peak oil.

Speaker 56 We've got

Speaker 60 all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 1 It's ridiculously great.

Speaker 123 Yeah. The farmer protests.

Speaker 1 The Queen of England's on there.

Speaker 76 Trump's on there.

Speaker 36 It's beautiful.

Speaker 39 It's a piece to be framed, I would say.

Speaker 129 It's frameable.

Speaker 84 It's completely frameable. Thank you, Tonsenil.

Speaker 133 We really appreciate that.

Speaker 51 And we thank all of the artists artists who are always trying to get something

Speaker 124 into the system.

Speaker 56 And by the way, if you're having trouble uploading, it has to be the exact dimensions, the exact amount of pixels.

Speaker 133 That's why it might reject your artwork.

Speaker 156 And so we come to the treasure portion.

Speaker 56 We thank everybody, $50 and above.

Speaker 71 And of course, if you are fortunate enough to be able to support us with $200 or more, we will not only read your note, we got some long ones today, but we will also give you an official Hollywood title of associate executive producer, which is real.

Speaker 75 You can go to imdb.com.

Speaker 137 You'll see a lot of them, over a thousand.

Speaker 56 And if it's $300 or more, then there's a lot of different things that can happen. First of all, we'll read your note.

Speaker 104 You become an executive producer.

Speaker 122 And we have the No Agenda International Peace Prize.

Speaker 58 And we see right off the top that we have a couple of people who are in...

Speaker 54 who are getting ready for to receive their international peace prize.

Speaker 96 Do we have a photograph yet of do we have the art, the image that is on this so people can see it?

Speaker 57 Is that up and available?

Speaker 27 I think we're like front-running the campaign.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's coming.

Speaker 1 It's been, we just need to, there's a couple of pieces of gear

Speaker 1 stuff that needs to be, it was ordered from Amazon, and we're just waiting for it.

Speaker 12 Okay. Paper.

Speaker 9 No, paper. Oh, paper.

Speaker 27 Yes.

Speaker 76 I cleaned up my studio the other day.

Speaker 53 I'm like, wow,

Speaker 67 I need to hang these up.

Speaker 69 Still have my Commodore I haven't hung up.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah, you got to hang all that stuff up.

Speaker 58 So we kick it off today with our top executive producer with $1,030.26, which I guess is fees

Speaker 119 from Momentum Finance LLC

Speaker 16 in Eden, Utah.

Speaker 64 And the note is short.

Speaker 72 It's always that way.

Speaker 156 Happy hump day, dames and gentlemen.

Speaker 56 Well, probably sent it on Wednesday.

Speaker 99 Check out Ad Astra Rev

Speaker 85 Liptonite.

Speaker 124 Very cryptic, cryptic note here.

Speaker 157 Do you know what this is about?

Speaker 6 No.

Speaker 103 Well, thank you very much, Momentum Finance LLC.

Speaker 78 We will check out Ad Astra Rev Liptonite.

Speaker 19 Thank you.

Speaker 1 The Mayor of Cyprus.

Speaker 1 No note.

Speaker 1 No jingle. Came in to $1,018.18.

Speaker 1 Says

Speaker 1 no note, no nothing, four more years, which is a note, by the way.

Speaker 27 That is a note.

Speaker 16 That's an official note.

Speaker 86 Anonymous swings by from Mandeville, Louisiana, 526.36, probably 500 plus the feast.

Speaker 156 Dear Adam and John, Anonymous says, congratulations on making 18 years of the No Agenda Show.

Speaker 75 I've been listening since around show 300 or so.

Speaker 57 This donation either gets me close to Knighthood or puts me across the finish line, but it's been so long since I've donated, I can't be sure anymore.

Speaker 27 Well, what happened?

Speaker 76 I'm sure you'll let me know.

Speaker 74 Well, you don't have a color, so I guess you didn't quite make it.

Speaker 54 There are too many things that make your show great to list them in a pithy donation email.

Speaker 117 But first, among equals is that you play the most primary and secondary source reporting of any news show in the marketplace today.

Speaker 76 Yes, you're both funny, the sound quality is great, the jingles are fun, the producers are top-notch, and so on and so forth.

Speaker 71 But the real value is that in a three-hour block of time, a listener more or less gets fully caught up with not just the current news of the day, but all the narratives and memes that increasingly inform that news coverage.

Speaker 67 And you do it without advertising because you've embraced the value-for-value model.

Speaker 65 Not even Joe Rogan can say that. One day, the both of you will decide to hang it up.

Speaker 69 And while you'll have certainly earned your retirement, oh, let me check my 401k.

Speaker 17 It'll be a sad day for us listeners.

Speaker 69 Until done, until then, well done, Adam and John.

Speaker 97 Thank you for your continued service.

Speaker 79 P.S.

Speaker 76 If I've made knighthood, let me know one day and I'll choose some sort of pseudo-anonymous name.

Speaker 133 Well, I'm sure we will be in touch with you about that.

Speaker 155 Thank you, Anonymous.

Speaker 10 All right.

Speaker 1 On with Sir Cristobal

Speaker 1 in Dallas, Texas, 33333.

Speaker 1 This came in some, I guess, through Strike or Stripe, and it's got no note, no nothing, so he gets a double-up karma.

Speaker 57 Yeah, here it comes.

Speaker 148 You've got

Speaker 38 karma.

Speaker 38 All right.

Speaker 19 Sarah Campbell is in Franklin, Indiana, 333, our favorite number.

Speaker 119 ITM, gentlemen, happy anniversary.

Speaker 165 Adam, please read this note in your hate mail voice.

Speaker 74 It's hard to do when it's not a hateful email.

Speaker 27 I'll give it a try.

Speaker 1 No, you can only do it.

Speaker 1 He is channeling when he does that voice, and there's nothing here to channel.

Speaker 66 I'm going to try. I can try.

Speaker 47 I mean, I just have to envision these.

Speaker 1 Assume that he's being sarcastic about everything. Then you can.

Speaker 112 Even though both my husband and i are unpaid air traffic controllers right now we had to donate because the value we received from adam's reading of hate mail and jcd's reaction while he reads it i can't speak for my husband but when i'm listening to the show not watching some like silicon valley nerd

Speaker 82 I am laughing and fully enjoying your dynamic.

Speaker 36 This is so hard to do.

Speaker 48 You both.

Speaker 89 You both are invaluable. I can't do it.

Speaker 214 I can't do it.

Speaker 49 It's not hateful.

Speaker 1 Do it with I got a better idea. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Do it in the Dutch accent.

Speaker 162 You both are invaluable, but I've taken the time to assign you, use

Speaker 99 the value of Tree Thirty Tree

Speaker 163 in hopes that you'll continue to receive hate mail and share it with us for four more years.

Speaker 52 Anonymous unpaid controller and his wife.

Speaker 1 Thank you, Very.

Speaker 1 Can I uh comment on your Dutch accent? Yes.

Speaker 1 I don't think you stutter enough when you do it.

Speaker 173 That's only Rutte.

Speaker 19 The Dutch don't really stutter.

Speaker 10 Rutte stutters.

Speaker 12 Okay. Well,

Speaker 1 okay, so now we go to our first associate executive producer, which brings me to the fact that

Speaker 1 Dana Brunetti sent a note in for his donation, which I don't see on here.

Speaker 27 Oh, there it is at the bottom. I see it.

Speaker 1 Oh, and he gave. Okay, I thought the way the note was written, it seemed to me that he was going for executive producer because he hates

Speaker 86 associate executive producer.

Speaker 112 Yeah, he hates it.

Speaker 74 Well, he didn't send in enough

Speaker 1 Jew money. No, I know.

Speaker 1 He actually sent, he did it on purpose. So

Speaker 1 he's a character.

Speaker 113 Oh,

Speaker 16 yeah,

Speaker 12 believe it or not.

Speaker 1 Meanwhile, Summer Worth,

Speaker 1 I guess, in Standish, Maine, 21060. Yeah.
ITM Gents, after your recent mention of Maine's Graham Plattner, that's a

Speaker 1 Nazi tattoo guy.

Speaker 51 Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 I figure it was my duty to write in and share what I know about the newest Democrat Stooge.

Speaker 1 This past summer, I found myself eating dinner at an establishment in Maine owned by Graham Plattner's mom.

Speaker 27 Oh.

Speaker 1 She chatted with me, chatted me up while I was sitting at the bar as she was preparing for a fundraising event she would be holding for Graham at the restaurant that weekend.

Speaker 1 Per his mom, Graham never had prior interest in politics.

Speaker 1 Oh, this is now this is getting good.

Speaker 9 Oh, here we go.

Speaker 1 But was rather approached by an out-of-state group, quote, the same group that got

Speaker 1 Mamdani in. Aha! Unquote.

Speaker 1 When he told these approachers he had no political experience and had no idea. what he would be this is fabulous by the way this is content right here what he would be doing they

Speaker 1 reassured him that it didn't matter that they had a template for him to follow

Speaker 1 and that he was just the kind of guy they were looking for.

Speaker 11 Wow.

Speaker 1 I assume this is because he's a rural Maine-born and raised local business operator, specifically an oyster farmer. Mainers have a soft spot for lobstermen slash fishermen, and he's a veteran.

Speaker 1 By those standards, he should appeal to rural Mainers who are largely conservative.

Speaker 1 It's Portland and the Mid-Coast region's coastal elites controlling the vote, as John mentioned. Right.
I noticed that myself. I was curious how a random guy like this gets approached

Speaker 1 in the first place, and it turns out his mom is a DNC delegate.

Speaker 1 This situation makes me wonder how many other supposed locally grown candidates in other parts of the country are just stooges funded by the same out-of-state group between Rhino Collins, Corrupt Mills, Plattner, the Nazi, and the rest of these names, I fear that all hope is lost.

Speaker 1 Pray for us. No jingles, no karma.
Love you, mean it. Well, 21060, by the way.

Speaker 43 That's good.

Speaker 26 I wonder how many more.

Speaker 43 Well, the squad is probably all, all of them.

Speaker 20 Who is this out-of-state group? That's what we got to find out.

Speaker 1 I mean, it wasn't. Yeah, Summer should have

Speaker 1 pushed for the name of the group.

Speaker 27 Yes, I'm sure it was.

Speaker 1 Summer, go back there and have another meal.

Speaker 103 same people who did the democrat socialists of america who had aoc

Speaker 31 literally audition for the gig yeah and there's eli the coffee guy with two hundred and ten dollars and thirty cents that's because he always gives us two hundred dollars and then does the date ten thirty get it he says not sure if you guys will have clips for this one Apparently, a truck full of lab monkeys infected with herpes hepatitis C and COVID crashed in Mississippi, and one of them is still on the run.

Speaker 117 You'd think we'd learned something from the last global science experiment.

Speaker 78 Well, as it just so turns out, these monkeys could be dangerous.

Speaker 50 I do have the clips, if anyone wants to.

Speaker 1 Yeah, let's play that clip.

Speaker 69 Because first they had them, then they didn't have them, and they had one, they didn't have one, then they had hepatitis, and they didn't.

Speaker 79 Here's the two clips.

Speaker 216 Tonight, the urgent search for dangerous research monkeys that escaped from the wreckage of a crash on a Mississippi highway.

Speaker 3 We got 21 monkeys that was on this guy.

Speaker 202 video showing several monkeys crawling in the grass.

Speaker 216 Heavily armed officers responding to the scene. Authorities say a truck carrying nearly two dozen rhesus monkeys from Tulane University overturned on Interstate 59 in Jasper County.

Speaker 217 Here's one of the monkeys right here. There's one sitting right there.

Speaker 1 At least six monkeys escaping.

Speaker 202 Officials warning they might be aggressive towards people and were potentially infected with hepatitis C, herpes, and COVID.

Speaker 6 They may have to neutralize something out here in minutes.

Speaker 216 And late today, police confirming all but one of the escaped monkeys had been euthanized for public safety reasons, adding they're still actively searching for that one monkey, still on the loose.

Speaker 69 And then later they said, oh, they don't.

Speaker 163 Don't worry. Don't worry, everybody.

Speaker 75 He doesn't have herpes, hepatitis, and COVID.

Speaker 76 Don't worry about it.

Speaker 100 None of that's true.

Speaker 1 Go back to play.

Speaker 132 Go back to playing your harpsichord, citizen.

Speaker 56 Everything's fine.

Speaker 115 Yeah, time for monkey pox, M-Pox vaccination.

Speaker 108 Anybody?

Speaker 1 Linda Lepatkin's up. She's in Lakewood College.

Speaker 27 Hold on. Hold on.

Speaker 20 I got to finish the note.

Speaker 1 Oh, I didn't know.

Speaker 193 Dude,

Speaker 92 you were so excited to do your read.

Speaker 1 Well, I was ready to go.

Speaker 1 I had been kind of doing some breathing exercises.

Speaker 173 Simmer down.

Speaker 64 Eli the Coffee Guy goes on and says, but now somewhere in the Delta, there's a monkey giving herpes to a raccoon thanks to some Jamoque with the California CDL.

Speaker 53 Yeah, there you go. Yeah, brother.

Speaker 155 He wants a can I get a love my truck and I love what I do.

Speaker 155 I love my truck and I love what I do.

Speaker 58 For producers looking for great coffee, visit gigawattcoffee roasters.com.

Speaker 46 Use code ITM20 for 20% off your order.

Speaker 119 And I will say, Tina made a dynamite tri-tip

Speaker 27 yesterday and used the espresso,

Speaker 106 I think the black, the dark, the black espresso roast

Speaker 84 as the rub, and it was fantastic.

Speaker 21 So, not just for drinking, it's good for your meat, too.

Speaker 164 Stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy.

Speaker 1 Linda Lu Patkin, Lakewood, Colorado, 200 bucks jobs karma for a competitive edge, she writes.

Speaker 1 With a resume that gets results, go to imagemakersinc.com for all of your executive resume and job search needs. That's That's ImageMakers Inc.

Speaker 1 with a K and work with Lenilu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.

Speaker 178 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.

Speaker 181 Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 148 You thought, come on.

Speaker 42 And there he is, everybody.

Speaker 1 Hollywood bigwig, Dana Brunetti, proof that real producers in Hollywood listen to this show.

Speaker 156 He's from Golden Cloud Ranch in California.

Speaker 75 $200.

Speaker 96 He's a big spender.

Speaker 41 And he says,

Speaker 68 still trying to financially recover from my last dinner with John, but luckily I recently received one of those rando checks.

Speaker 88 We refer to them as mailbox money, John.

Speaker 20 Since others keep doing switcheroos and loading me up with crap associate producer credits, this is also a switcheroo.

Speaker 156 It goes to one of the following. Vladimir Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, Hamas, Hitler, or Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 23 Choose one so it can be properly updated on IMDb.

Speaker 20 Well, I choose Putin.

Speaker 74 What do you want to choose?

Speaker 1 Yeah, I was thinking Putin, too.

Speaker 106 Yeah.

Speaker 156 Adam, you've mentioned that people at your church listen, but I'm not hearing any donations from them, so please call them out as douchebags.

Speaker 3 Douchebag.

Speaker 46 Did you think you were going to get me upset, Brunetti?

Speaker 33 Good try.

Speaker 58 Good try, Hollywood boy.

Speaker 13 Happy anniversary, 18th anniversary, boys.

Speaker 26 You're finally legal.

Speaker 125 Okay, I have to

Speaker 145 get back to plowing fields.

Speaker 1 Okay. Thank you.
That was a reference to something I said. Yes.

Speaker 50 Well, thank you, Dana Brunetti.

Speaker 76 It's good to know that you're still listening.

Speaker 123 I know that we keep you sane in that insane world that you travel in.

Speaker 1 So he buys this ranch,

Speaker 1 which is big, by the way.

Speaker 33 Of course it is.

Speaker 1 And there's gold on the ranch.

Speaker 26 Gold!

Speaker 1 And so he's got this gold,

Speaker 1 these gold mining, this gold mining gear, and he's already collected enough gold to make a couple of smooth gold rings.

Speaker 19 A couple of movies.

Speaker 27 Well, a couple of movies.

Speaker 1 No, not yet. But it's like, this is typical.
Some people have this kind of Gladstone gander style of,

Speaker 12 you know, just fall by a ranch, got gold on it. You can pay for the ranch.

Speaker 56 Yeah, I was thinking, someone approached me the other day about doing a movie, movie of my life, and I thought, no, Brunetti should do that.

Speaker 121 We should do it.

Speaker 40 Like, the kid stays in the picture, you know, with the, I'll, I'll do the voiceover and do your Ken Burns effects.

Speaker 160 And there's tons of

Speaker 27 footage and photos out there.

Speaker 157 That's what that, I mean, that, there you go.

Speaker 159 That's that's what you should do with this gold is make a movie about me.

Speaker 35 And yes,

Speaker 1 that's gonna happen. And yes, you can get Scorsese to do the movie.
There you go.

Speaker 5 Congratulations to these executive producers of 1812.

Speaker 6 Our formula is this:

Speaker 218 we go out, we hit people in the mouth.

Speaker 218 Oh, I almost forgot.

Speaker 55 We have this one producer who is just adamant, adamant, adamant.

Speaker 42 It's 1812.

Speaker 80 1812, it's an important episode. It's a very important number because of Tchaikovsky's 1812.

Speaker 153 I never realized this was Tchaikovsky's 1812, but I'm sure you knew it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I did, but where's the cannons?

Speaker 12 The cannons. Oh, there they are.

Speaker 192 There it is.

Speaker 3 It's almost over.

Speaker 33 That was that's loud.

Speaker 6 There they are.

Speaker 104 It's a very

Speaker 1 right when it's performed.

Speaker 1 The idea is that the cannons usually are there on stage and it really becomes very damaging.

Speaker 48 Here we go.

Speaker 7 Is this what they do on the 4th of July at fireworks?

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's a fireworks song.

Speaker 192 Yeah, here we go.

Speaker 5 Big finish, everybody.

Speaker 50 Man, that guy had some good drugs.

Speaker 19 How do you write something like that?

Speaker 1 Those days are over.

Speaker 156 AI, make that for me. Show me that.

Speaker 27 That's good.

Speaker 60 That's very good.

Speaker 1 Well, I suppose if you put all the classical music ever written into the corpus,

Speaker 15 you think?

Speaker 1 Well, you might be able to get something out of it.

Speaker 1 Speaking of who's doing that?

Speaker 1 Is somebody doing that? Somebody has to be doing that.

Speaker 31 I'm sure it's in Susan.

Speaker 1 There's so much classical music that you should put in there.

Speaker 96 Did you see the Grockapedia?

Speaker 106 The Grockapedia?

Speaker 1 I've seen the announcements for it. I've seen the write-ups about it.
I have not actually gone to it. As far as I'm concerned, Grackopedia is just Grok.

Speaker 63 No, no, no, no.

Speaker 146 It's quite interesting.

Speaker 65 So if you look up No Agenda, or you look up John C.

Speaker 96 Dvorak or Adam Curry,

Speaker 16 it's so extensive.

Speaker 125 I mean, the corpus has so much about you, me, the show.

Speaker 141 I mean, it's thousands of words.

Speaker 40 And what's interesting about it, it has a lot of obscure things.

Speaker 93 But in every single version of everything I looked up, there's some things that factually are just completely wrong.

Speaker 1 Yeah, absolutely. There has to be.

Speaker 27 Completely wrong.

Speaker 24 But it's not even that bothersome.

Speaker 27 It's like, wow, that's a nice write-up.

Speaker 119 I had quite a life.

Speaker 93 I can die now.

Speaker 62 It's been nice knowing.

Speaker 18 Well, I did pretty good.

Speaker 1 Oh, I didn't know I did that.

Speaker 27 That's great.

Speaker 141 I did pretty good.

Speaker 26 Brunetti, turn my Grackapedia into a movie.

Speaker 79 You can do it.

Speaker 157 It's amazing.

Speaker 56 Here's something we predicted that would happen. Actually, we didn't predict it.

Speaker 104 One of our producers predicted it.

Speaker 17 Get ready for discovery.

Speaker 194 Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing the makers of Tylenol over claims the company deceptively marketed the medication.

Speaker 194 The lawsuit claims the over-the-counter medication was marketed to pregnant women despite alleged links to autism in other disorders.

Speaker 194 This is the first lawsuit launched by the state since President Donald Trump claimed last month that taking Tylenol while pregnant is linked to an increased risk of autism.

Speaker 194 However, there's limited evidence to

Speaker 194 suggest an association. Johnson Johnson sold the drug for decades, and its consumer health division spin-off, Kenview, has been selling that drug since 2023.

Speaker 194 Kenview pushed back against the claims, calling it misinformation.

Speaker 39 I think this is the setup, man.

Speaker 146 This is the setup.

Speaker 75 This is where Tylenol comes in.

Speaker 119 They say, you know what?

Speaker 79 You say it's us, but it's the vaccine companies.

Speaker 1 That's an interesting theory.

Speaker 19 I think it's coming. Passionate.

Speaker 1 And I like the way Johnson and Johnson seem to have predicted this somewhere along the line and dumped a product into a

Speaker 1 Roundup,

Speaker 1 which they panned off to bear.

Speaker 1 And now they've changed the formulation of Roundup, and what's in Roundup now is worse.

Speaker 50 Oh, well, that might explain this clip.

Speaker 30 This morning, a troubling investigation by the Washington Post finds cancer rates among young adults are rising fastest in the nation's corn belt, raising concerns that farm pollution could be to blame.

Speaker 30 Since 2015, America's top corn-producing states, Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois, Minnesota, Indiana, and Kansas, have all seen an uptick in cancer cases among people ages 15 to 49, particularly kidney and skin cancers.

Speaker 30 But Iowa stands out with the fastest increase in the country. Experts say the state is a hotspot for cancer-causing agents.

Speaker 203 The nitrate levels in the Raccoon River are twice that of the EPA limit. I don't think it's quite right that we have no regulations on how much fertilizer can be dumped in our watershed upstream?

Speaker 30 Studies show nitrate pollution from farming and livestock operations is contaminating Iowa's water, and long-term exposure to fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides has been linked to higher cancer risks.

Speaker 30 Environmental groups are now urging the state to strengthen its water standards. Agricultural groups worry additional rules for farmers would be costly and could cripple the industry.

Speaker 30 For now, researchers say they're determined to find out if chemical runoff from farms is, in fact, what's making people sick.

Speaker 204 We really need you to compare to bordering states and states that have similar exposures, specifically thinking about agriculture or industry.

Speaker 30 Experts say better detection tools make it easier to diagnose cancer, but that alone doesn't explain why rates are rising so sharply.

Speaker 173 It's the con.

Speaker 26 It's in the con.

Speaker 13 It's that roundup on the con.

Speaker 131 You'd think.

Speaker 1 There's definitely something they're spraying.

Speaker 91 Hey, I got to know.

Speaker 1 You know, it doesn't take genius to figure out what's causing this. You just have to know what is being sold.

Speaker 27 Exactly.

Speaker 1 But they seem to be baffled. I got a note.
Oh, it's the nitrate runoff. They've always had nitrate runoff.
It's never going to be no nitrate runoff. It can't be that.
It's something else.

Speaker 132 I got a note from Mark from the Walnut Grove podcast.

Speaker 19 Remember the Walnut Grove podcast?

Speaker 9 Yeah.

Speaker 104 That's about Little House on the Prairie.

Speaker 93 It's a fan podcast.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's a fan cast.

Speaker 66 It's a fan cast.

Speaker 23 Please don't email me.

Speaker 144 Everyone's like, oh, you love it too?

Speaker 73 I love Little House on the Prairie.

Speaker 74 Good God.

Speaker 74 And he said,

Speaker 97 you know, he bought us a domain name.

Speaker 27 This hasn't happened in quite a while.

Speaker 71 People used to buy us domain names all the time.

Speaker 12 Yeah.

Speaker 76 And we had SeanHannity.com at one time, but then the producer said, oh, I let it expire.

Speaker 71 It was so good to have SeanHannity.com.

Speaker 84 He says with MS Now

Speaker 67 Imminent, MS Now, he bought us msnowflake.com or

Speaker 93 msnowflake.com, which I thought was very creative.

Speaker 1 That is cute. Yeah.

Speaker 131 So thank you, Mark, from the Walnut Grove Podcast. Very nice.

Speaker 1 Let me get my clip list out.

Speaker 60 Oh, I do.

Speaker 96 You know, we had a, there was a, quite a big hurricane that hit Jamaica.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I have the Melissa update here, but this is after it hit Jamaica.

Speaker 193 I have an update from after as well, so I'll listen to yours first.

Speaker 32 Hurricane Melissa struck eastern Cuba this morning as an extremely dangerous Category 3 storm, causing severe damage.

Speaker 32 Cuban authorities report that over 700,000 people have been evacuated in the eastern part of the country.

Speaker 32 By Wednesday evening, Melissa had weakened to a Category 2 and moved into the Atlantic, heading toward the Bahamas with heavy rain and flooding expected.

Speaker 176 Tropical storm warnings for the Turks in Caicos.

Speaker 177 The most dangerous conditions will be in the next few hours here as the center of Melissa moves through the Bahamas.

Speaker 176 Storm surge inundation of four to seven feet above ground level near and to the right of where the center of Melissa is moving.

Speaker 32 Though winds have decreased, officials say dangerous storm surges and rainfall remain a threat as Melissa moves toward the Bahamas and Bermuda.

Speaker 32 At least 36 deaths have been reported across Jamaica, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic.

Speaker 32 In Jamaica, the storm knocked out power to more than 600,000 residents, uprooted trees, ripped off roofs, and blocked roads in several parishes.

Speaker 32 One resident shared the terrifying experience as Melissa passed.

Speaker 219 Worst experience of my entire life.

Speaker 219 To see my place being flooded out,

Speaker 219 it was terrifying for me and my child. The water level reached me to my waist.
I was stuck in my house. They had to break into my home to save me.

Speaker 32 Rebuilding in Jamaica will be a long-term effort, officials say, as homes, hospitals, and infrastructure were heavily damaged and access remains challenging.

Speaker 32 UN officials report that immediate relief efforts are underway, focusing on providing food, water, and other essential supplies.

Speaker 95 So I've been going to Jamaica on vacation for

Speaker 87 over thirty

Speaker 92 yeah, over thirty years.

Speaker 1 No, I've never been to Jamaica.

Speaker 133 I've done document there's a documentary of me that I did in Jamaica.

Speaker 1 People on the West Coast, we don't go there.

Speaker 54 Well, the last time I went was just a couple of years ago.

Speaker 97 They had a direct flight from Austin to Montego Bay.

Speaker 37 It was fantastic.

Speaker 142 And of course, they got rid of that flight, which is only three hours, like three and a half hours.

Speaker 54 It's perfect.

Speaker 101 But the thing with Jamaica is, and I would pretty much always go to this.

Speaker 71 I don't think I've ever been to a different place, always the same place.

Speaker 95 And the last time we went there, people who I'd seen 25 years ago were still there.

Speaker 19 So I consider them to be friends, you know, like, hey, David, how you doing?

Speaker 145 So I checked in. You know,

Speaker 142 before the storm hit, I said, hey, man, we're praying for you guys.

Speaker 97 Hope everything's okay.

Speaker 14 So here's the boots on the ground from Jamaica.

Speaker 220 Mr. Corey, I'm alive.
I'm alive. I made it.

Speaker 220 But houses are gone. We are out of

Speaker 220 houses and everything.

Speaker 220 Mr. Curry, it's serious.
It's devastated. I'm telling you.
I don't know what we're going to do. We have no idea.

Speaker 220 But as long as we have life,

Speaker 220 we will make it. I have to come miles to get some internet.
So whenever I can get in touch with you again, I will try.

Speaker 1 All right. Take care.

Speaker 220 Thank you for thinking about me and my family.

Speaker 158 Appreciate it.

Speaker 129 Sounds pretty dire.

Speaker 53 Pretty bad.

Speaker 1 Well, you know what the Democrats say?

Speaker 59 What do the Democrats say?

Speaker 1 It's all the fault of Trump and because he killed USAID. Now, there it is.

Speaker 79 Yes, of course.

Speaker 131 That That makes sense.

Speaker 4 That makes sense.

Speaker 40 Word of the year, according to dictionary.com?

Speaker 1 They have a word of the year, too?

Speaker 53 Everybody has a word of the year.

Speaker 132 This is really disappointing.

Speaker 58 6-7.

Speaker 1 Oh, no, that's not true.

Speaker 27 Yes, yes.

Speaker 1 But that's lame.

Speaker 131 Of course it's lame.

Speaker 23 Dictionary.com has officially revealed its newest word of the year.

Speaker 54 6-7 is the word of the year.

Speaker 66 Got a note from

Speaker 92 one of our producers.

Speaker 57 I'd like to give a quick homeschooling commentary, says Garbage Man Mitch, on the 67 phenomenon.

Speaker 160 Homeschooled kids that are not overly socialized with access to phones and social media don't suffer from this stupidity.

Speaker 1 Yet.

Speaker 93 I'd like to give a loving shout-out to our principal, my wife, Melissa, who is very pregnant with human resource number six.

Speaker 145 She is cripplingly nauseous and miserable, so the older kids have been forced to step up and help more.

Speaker 95 The other day, our oldest, nearly twelve, was tasked with making soup entirely unaided.

Speaker 24 There were mishaps as she sauteed vegetables and simmered bacon.

Speaker 156 The potatoes were crunchy.

Speaker 145 I have no doubt she'll compare techniques and recipes with grandma, great-grandma, and her mother when she can think of food again.

Speaker 122 I suggest homeschooling accreditation as a future fundraiser.

Speaker 128 Huh.

Speaker 145 Seems to me that if you can award doctorates, then you are more than qualified to accredit our schools.

Speaker 54 The family that learns and know agendas together triumphs and stays together.

Speaker 1 That's an interesting idea.

Speaker 51 I like that thought.

Speaker 12 Homeschooling. So homeschooling.

Speaker 1 Well, of course, it only appears.

Speaker 1 I mean, everyone who listens to the show might want to be a Commodore. Everyone who listens to the show might want to have a

Speaker 1 rando PhD. But not everybody who listens to the show are homeschoolers.
That's a very small portion of people. But it might be just enough to do a short promotion sometime early next year.

Speaker 111 Okay.

Speaker 37 That garbage man, Mitch, we love you.

Speaker 49 Great idea.

Speaker 45 Excellent idea.

Speaker 1 And even if you're not a homeschooler, it might be pretty cool just to have a chance to have one.

Speaker 26 Yeah.

Speaker 156 Hey, the trial is finally happening.

Speaker 115 Will we find out?

Speaker 89 Is there a roving bit in the middle?

Speaker 148 After years of online attacks and malicious rumors, 10 people are on trial for sexy cyber harassment against French First Lady Brigitte Macron.

Speaker 148 Eight men and two women are accused of making false online claims about Brigitte Macron's sexual and gender identity and suggesting that her 24-year age gap with her husband Emmanuel Macron made her a pedophile.

Speaker 148 If convicted, the defendants aged from 41 to 60 years old each face up to two years in prison. Among them is Auréene Poircon Atlan, a publicist known online as Zoe Sagan.

Speaker 148 Before his account was suspended, he was popular within conspiracy theory circles on ex.

Speaker 148 The First Lady has since taken the case to the country's highest appeals court.

Speaker 148 The French case is a separate from a defamation lawsuit that the presidential couple filed in a Delaware court against the far-right podcaster Candice Owens, making similar unsubstantiated claims about Brigitte Macron.

Speaker 148 Owens produced series titled Becoming Brigitte, Obsessing Over the First Lady's Gender.

Speaker 148 The Macrons say that they plan to present scientific and photographic evidence to prove that the first lady is biologically a woman.

Speaker 26 Yeah!

Speaker 214 Scientific and photographic evidence.

Speaker 1 So I find it fascinating that certain people,

Speaker 1 and I would put Big Mike into this category, are targets of this sort of,

Speaker 1 it's a smear campaign, whether she's a male or not.

Speaker 2 Shmear.

Speaker 1 It's a smear campaign of some sort, and it's very interesting how it catches on because you could probably say the same.

Speaker 1 I mean, I think that Spanberger, whatever her name is, she looks like a dude to me, the one running for governor of Virginia.

Speaker 59 You even moved to Fredericksburg with that talk.

Speaker 56 Everybody's a dude, according to people here.

Speaker 104 Taylor Swift is a dude.

Speaker 27 Taylor Swift's a dude. Another dude.

Speaker 72 Barbara Bush was a dude

Speaker 69 over and over again.

Speaker 17 Yeah, well, I think there's some.

Speaker 1 But it's like, why do some of them, why do some of these assertions catch on and other ones don't?

Speaker 24 Well, do you have any theories?

Speaker 1 No, I have no theories on this.

Speaker 91 I think because it's just funny.

Speaker 1 It's funny. Well, there's something funny about it.
Yeah, it's funny. But it's like,

Speaker 1 I think there has to be something about the person who's being targeted that is at some level

Speaker 1 someone that's easy to dislike.

Speaker 1 Now, people love Michelle Obama, but not everybody.

Speaker 1 Not everybody. And I think she might be easy to dislike.

Speaker 131 Yeah.

Speaker 103 Well, I mean, they said the same about Barack.

Speaker 106 Well, with Barack Obama, see, he never.

Speaker 1 Well, maybe it's more of an insult to the guy. Maybe the target is really Barack and Macron himself.

Speaker 38 Hmm.

Speaker 1 Well, it's an insult to them.

Speaker 87 Well, Barack, I mean, man, but I think that was, you know, there's a lot of stuff about him being

Speaker 71 gay.

Speaker 56 I mean, that seems to be pretty much true.

Speaker 10 And because we don't know that.

Speaker 161 Well, we don't know that, but yet Larry, what was his name?

Speaker 1 Yeah, Larry Larry was dead.

Speaker 84 Dead. Larry Sinclair.

Speaker 54 He was detailed as very.

Speaker 1 And Love Boy, or whatever his name was, who was actually working in the White House.

Speaker 73 Remember that name? What was his name?

Speaker 12 Love Boy. It was like Love Boy.

Speaker 93 No, no, his last name was Love.

Speaker 55 It was.

Speaker 1 Yes, Love, and he's a little very feminine black man.

Speaker 15 Yes, yes.

Speaker 99 Well, he wasn't little. He was a big dude.

Speaker 19 He wasn't the small.

Speaker 1 Oh, I thought he was a little cheap male.

Speaker 38 No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No.

Speaker 19 Yeah, but I don't know.

Speaker 144 I mean, why does it stick?

Speaker 14 Because we're obsessed with nonsense.

Speaker 12 How about that? We are. Because that's just true.

Speaker 45 We're obsessed with nonsense.

Speaker 40 That's just who we are as a people.

Speaker 65 We're Americans.

Speaker 9 That's what we do.

Speaker 81 We go crazy.

Speaker 131 Well, it'll be interesting to see how Candace Owens' lawsuit goes.

Speaker 1 I don't know why she's on that kick.

Speaker 54 Well, I disagree with the report.

Speaker 56 It was not unsubstantiated.

Speaker 104 She had a lot of substance to her reporting.

Speaker 11 A lot.

Speaker 109 Recently, that little bit came out about her name being registered as Jean-Michel.

Speaker 15 It'll be,

Speaker 22 unless she pulls down her pants in court, it'll never be resolved.

Speaker 12 Well, even

Speaker 1 so let's go back to the W

Speaker 1 the

Speaker 1 credit card, the

Speaker 1 food stamp issue.

Speaker 27 Okay, is this your last clip?

Speaker 1 I want to play this clip because this is an interesting clip. This is a Florida, this is a fraud clip,

Speaker 1 which is a WTF

Speaker 1 clip of sorts.

Speaker 2 I'm sorry,

Speaker 1 I'm fumbling my cues.

Speaker 111 Go on. Yes.

Speaker 221 Walked in one by one. Some hung their heads.
Others wore their feelings right there on their t-shirts.

Speaker 221 Today, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office announced an undercover operation they've been working on for months resulted in more than 100 arrest warrants and close to 40 arrests.

Speaker 218 This is a huge problem, and we're like one of maybe three or four law enforcement agencies in the state of Florida that have decided to do something about this.

Speaker 221 And it has to do with just that. Meal tickets in the form of EBT cards for low-income individuals being fraudulently used.

Speaker 221 One part of the investigation centered around Gerald Millis, a local restaurant owner who police say purchased EBT cards from people for 50 to 60 cents on the dollar, and then stocked his local Pizza Pros restaurant with food he bought using those cards.

Speaker 218 We were able to determine that he used 53 different EBT cards at Sam's Club.

Speaker 221 Police say 55 people were also caught illegally selling their EBT cards to undercover detectives.

Speaker 218 A couple of them said, I'm headed to go get some rock cocaine.

Speaker 221 A beyond frustrating reality for taxpayers who today learned their hard-earned money is being misused.

Speaker 141 Yeah,

Speaker 47 all kinds of social security has always been controversial.

Speaker 1 Yeah, this whole thing is... But what's interesting about this clip is this clip is from 2013.

Speaker 12 Yeah, oh, yeah. And

Speaker 1 I looked into this Manatee County stuff. They did this same

Speaker 1 staying operation in 2012. They did in 2013.
And I can't find any evidence of them ever doing it again. Something changed.
And I think

Speaker 1 somebody came up to them and said, you've got to stop doing this.

Speaker 1 These cards are used. Yes, people are buying crack with them and whatever.

Speaker 1 This is what we want. Well, how about this?

Speaker 91 When, because

Speaker 93 in the, I think the one big beautiful bill, I believe that there has been a slash of SNAP benefits, particularly qualification, which the states have to do, just like the Medicare benefits.

Speaker 93 It's like, hey, we got to clamp down on this.

Speaker 71 There's a lot of fraud going on.

Speaker 153 We got to figure this out.

Speaker 58 But it is my suspicion that the big box stores like Walmart, Target, and others who also sell food,

Speaker 54 that their prices are just like insurance,

Speaker 71 that they're kind of artificially inflated because of this money, just the way like tuition.

Speaker 145 Now, once we got student loans handled by the government, tuitions went through the roof.

Speaker 103 Once we got Obamacare,

Speaker 71 which has subsidies for health insurance, insurance goes through the roof.

Speaker 133 You have this prolonged EBT snap, which is going directly into mainly Walmart big box stores, it may actually artificially have inflated the price and it may become a problem for them.

Speaker 16 Does that make any sense?

Speaker 1 Well, I don't know that the prices are higher at Walmart, but the fact that the stores are the target, in fact, the people complaining about losing their SNAP benefits are all mentioning they're going to rob from Walmart

Speaker 1 with very few exceptions. It's always Walmart that's the target of the robbery, and Walmart's taking action, which we mentioned earlier in the show.

Speaker 1 It's possible that there's some collusion going on, but it seems to me that, and maybe if it wasn't for these cars, Walmart wouldn't even be in business. That's always possible.

Speaker 1 And there are examples of people who've talked about this one woman was on, I don't have the clip, I get too many of these clips, you get irked.

Speaker 1 Some woman complaining, and she's

Speaker 1 a lot of these women are bragging about how they're using the system. And one of them says, I bought a rice cooker using the EBT card,

Speaker 1 which I think is actually not a bad idea.

Speaker 1 But at the same time, it's supposed to be for food only. But she managed to do it, and she did it through either Walmart or

Speaker 142 something.

Speaker 68 I'll bet it's Target, because Target started selling food, which I always thought was strange.

Speaker 79 Target didn't used to sell food.

Speaker 60 Now they have a whole grocery division.

Speaker 19 That's true.

Speaker 1 That's an interesting point.

Speaker 1 And you're right. And Target's never, to me, seemed like a food store.

Speaker 137 And every single time I've been in a Target, it's empty.

Speaker 27 I've never seen it except on Black Friday, but I don't go out on Black Friday, but it always seems empty to me.

Speaker 157 I'm like, how did these people stay in business?

Speaker 157 Never seem busy.

Speaker 33 Never seems to be.

Speaker 1 There's something fishy about it.

Speaker 18 We're on the case that.

Speaker 156 Your no-agenda detectives are on the case.

Speaker 1 Yeah, we won't figure it out either.

Speaker 1 But the

Speaker 27 No, we won't.

Speaker 1 But the fact that they had this scam and this reports from 2013 and there's nothing since,

Speaker 1 and it could have been, obviously, this is the way you go.

Speaker 1 You're some poor guy and you got a card that you get somehow and you can sell it for 50 cents on the dollar and have some cash, which is king, by the way.

Speaker 1 This has to be going on everywhere.

Speaker 156 Give me one last clip, Johnny Boy, and then we'll get out of here.

Speaker 97 We've got a lot of fun stuff to do.

Speaker 145 We've got peace prizes to hand out.

Speaker 93 We've got

Speaker 56 great AI end of show mixes, except for Oystein Berg, who is the real deal.

Speaker 10 He's the real deal.

Speaker 1 He's just like you, by the way.

Speaker 92 He's the real deal.

Speaker 33 And of course, your tip of the day.

Speaker 24 And the first time I'll be reading the donors, $50 and above.

Speaker 93 I'm very excited about my new task.

Speaker 1 Well, let's just go to shut down blather on NTD.

Speaker 69 I have a request from our air traffic controller producers.

Speaker 9 We have a lot of them,

Speaker 40 which I always love that.

Speaker 19 I've never actually spoken to one

Speaker 27 on the radio, at least not one that's gone, hey, hey, in the morning to you.

Speaker 84 They do that with each other and other pilots.

Speaker 1 ITM, they'd say.

Speaker 66 ITM, yeah.

Speaker 19 We were supposed to go on vacation for five days

Speaker 132 in three weeks from now, just before Thanksgiving,

Speaker 145 with some friends of ours.

Speaker 145 And the women folk are very worried that

Speaker 103 we will not be able to return or that there may be an issue with flights or that it's just going to be basically a nightmare.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I think they're probably correct.

Speaker 84 And which is so there's consideration of canceling said vacation, which I'm okay with.

Speaker 74 I mean, I'm happy.

Speaker 1 You can always go on a vacation.

Speaker 11 You can always take a vacation.

Speaker 35 But it's not like.

Speaker 80 You can always.

Speaker 198 Yeah. I mean, we're podcasters.

Speaker 27 We can do whatever we want.

Speaker 1 We can go take a vacation whenever you want.

Speaker 14 We can do a vacation whenever we feel like it.

Speaker 24 I'd like to know what our ATC

Speaker 23 producers are feeling.

Speaker 22 Like, will there be a real, I mean, I'm seeing news reports, but

Speaker 68 who knows?

Speaker 76 So let me know. Let me know what you think.

Speaker 22 I think it's technically illegal for ATC to not show up for work, but there's sick days and there's all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they can take their study. They have time out.

Speaker 1 When you work for the government, you always build up a lot of free time.

Speaker 65 Yes, and they deserve it, by the way.

Speaker 146 They deserve it because it's a tough job.

Speaker 145 It's a challenging job.

Speaker 150 In fact, I'm too old to be an air traffic controller, I found out.

Speaker 66 I'm like, I'll step in.

Speaker 93 I can talk on the radio.

Speaker 12 I can step in.

Speaker 48 I can step in.

Speaker 65 Come on, November Day.

Speaker 1 Hey, 4147, you got a bogey on your left.

Speaker 18 Bogey.

Speaker 141 I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda.

Speaker 172 Imagine all the people who could do that.

Speaker 62 Oh, yeah, that'd be fabulous.

Speaker 3 Yeah,

Speaker 6 oh, no, Jeff. Bogey

Speaker 6 in the morning.

Speaker 123 That would be legendary.

Speaker 17 You got a bogey at three o'clock.

Speaker 89 Hey, here's the rest of people who supported us for show $18, $12, $50 and above.

Speaker 40 We kick it off with Sir Horatio.

Speaker 9 Hey, there he is.

Speaker 31 He's in London, and he's still allowed to listen to this show.

Speaker 26 That's amazing.

Speaker 17 $180.

Speaker 1 Dame Janet. You just skipped right over.

Speaker 156 Bob, this is new to me.

Speaker 39 This is a whole new thing.

Speaker 164 It's very difficult.

Speaker 70 Dame Janet and Sir Jeff, I'm sorry, from Watkinsville, Georgia.

Speaker 97 180.

Speaker 150 This is a leftover from our 18th anniversary.

Speaker 99 Happy 18th year.

Speaker 106 Now you can vote.

Speaker 87 Thank you very much.

Speaker 96 That's Dame Janet, Sir Jeff, aka Island Dog.

Speaker 39 There's Sir Horatio.

Speaker 71 I was excited because we got someone from the UK.

Speaker 132 And he's listened to the DSC and No Agenda most of the last 18 years.

Speaker 133 And he is our knight, Sir Horatio, of Wandsworth.

Speaker 17 Legacy 3rd LLC in Dallas, Texas, 155.

Speaker 91 And there's a knight, James Kashin II.

Speaker 55 And so I'm going to read his note.

Speaker 46 New night, best price.

Speaker 52 As a fanatic of the No Agenda Show and Tchaikovsky's music.

Speaker 146 Ah, there he is.

Speaker 144 I've donated 1812.

Speaker 71 Small Jingle Replus.

Speaker 115 Just play Tchaikovsky's 1812 overture.

Speaker 145 It's only about 15 minutes in change.

Speaker 55 Ah, so this is why he sent me the big finale.

Speaker 103 Thank you.

Speaker 37 Roundtable requests change up.

Speaker 87 Rent boys and Riesling.

Speaker 93 All right.

Speaker 91 We know what you're into, James Kashin II. And his night name will be James Kashin II, Knight of the Orange Lambda.

Speaker 59 You got it. Happy 1812.

Speaker 150 John Hoibur in Bristol, Tennessee, 105.35.

Speaker 23 We got Sir Mike from San Diego, and he sent us 105.34.

Speaker 93 He has a rather long note. We're not going to read that one.
Ian Field, $100.

Speaker 73 Connie Walls, that sounds like a new name.

Speaker 87 $100.

Speaker 39 Oh, she's Connie.

Speaker 26 Connie Volslosink. She's from Hayenord, the Netherlands.
I live your shows, and I love what you do.

Speaker 9 Thank you.

Speaker 50 Zachary Shuta in Charlotte, North Carolina, 100.

Speaker 16 Kellen Prince, Hollywood, Florida, 100.

Speaker 145 Up with Karma, down with douchebags.

Speaker 69 There he is.

Speaker 52 Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina, 8008.

Speaker 25 The boob donation.

Speaker 46 He loves boobs and he says, PSA, check your pumpkins.

Speaker 27 It's still Cancer Awareness Month.

Speaker 131 Thank you, Kevin, for the public service announcement.

Speaker 93 Jack Schofield, Yankeetown, Florida, 7132.

Speaker 117 Thank you for all the great episodes.

Speaker 52 6767.

Speaker 27 Row, Rowe, R.O.

Speaker 132 from Coming Georgia, 7061.

Speaker 51 Universal Ostrich Farms.

Speaker 20 They're killing the ostriches.

Speaker 66 Good to know.

Speaker 106 Hank von Eldick.

Speaker 23 He sounds like he's in the Netherlands.

Speaker 52 He sends us the 6-7.

Speaker 52 Are these 6-7 donations with fees added?

Speaker 1 I don't think so.

Speaker 48 He says 6'7.

Speaker 145 70-61. 6'7.

Speaker 84 Congratulations on the 18th.

Speaker 91 Surveillan of Lincoln Chaod from Lincoln.

Speaker 19 Another Brit.

Speaker 145 Gents, this Halloween will mark my 15th lap around the sun. Please accept my donation of 67 plus fees.

Speaker 54 These are 6'7s.

Speaker 132 It's better not to do the fees in that case.

Speaker 95 I mean, it costs us money, but then it's not as funny if I don't catch it.

Speaker 39 John Alberini with a 6'7 plus fees.

Speaker 97 Tyler Darrington, Las Vegas, Nevada, 6'7, 6'7.

Speaker 145 Sir Latte, Bremerton, Washington, 6'7, 6'7.

Speaker 157 This is catching on, John.

Speaker 45 The 6'7 thing, it's like it's good for us.

Speaker 14 Craig Kohler, Evansville, Indiana, 6502.

Speaker 24 Lydia Terry Dominelli, Rochester, New Hampshire, 6114th.

Speaker 95 End of the month is tough right now.

Speaker 173 Well, thank you,

Speaker 2 Lydia. We appreciate that you thought of us anyway.

Speaker 145 Nathan Gwynn, Jackson, Tennessee, 5272.

Speaker 153 That's probably 50-plus fees.

Speaker 65 Harold McCoy, Old Monroe, Missouri, 5272.

Speaker 145 Stephen Nearing, 5225, Parts Unknown.

Speaker 76 And here are the the 50s.

Speaker 23 Benjamin Ryan from Alliance, Ohio.

Speaker 93 Aaron Weiss-Gerber in Bend, Oregon.

Speaker 103 Richard Gardner from, I think he's Sir Richard Gardner, $50.

Speaker 63 Bobby Bow, Bluegrass, Iowa, $50.

Speaker 117 Terrence Clark from Jacksonville, Florida, $50.

Speaker 91 Nathan Knoll from Needaland, Texas, $50.

Speaker 153 And finally, wrapping up our list of 50s, Joshua Johnson from Omaha, Nebraska.

Speaker 145 Thank you very much to these producers and everybody else who came in under $50, which we will not mention for reasons of anonymity.

Speaker 102 And again, thank you to our executive producers of episode 1812.

Speaker 75 You too can support the best podcast in the universe with any amount you feel like.

Speaker 104 It's value for value.

Speaker 99 You get value. You say, hey, this is worth this much to me.

Speaker 95 I'm going to send this back.

Speaker 93 That's how it works.

Speaker 132 We always will thank you, and we are very appreciative.

Speaker 97 Noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 56 Consider setting up a recurring donation.

Speaker 76 Any amount, any frequency.

Speaker 75 Noagendadonations.com. It's a birthday, it's a birthday.

Speaker 5 Allison Luna wishes her smoking hot husband Jose a very happy 45th.

Speaker 193 He turned 45 yesterday.

Speaker 5 Dame Quill TV, happy birthday to Sir Bird Dog. He celebrates today.
And Sir Valen of Lincoln KON turns 58 tomorrow. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 106 We have two

Speaker 5 peace prizes.

Speaker 5 And these peace prizes are, of course, extremely important because they are in recognition of international peace that you prize.

Speaker 7 Courtesy of the No Agenda Show.

Speaker 5 And these peace prizes today go to Momentum Finance, LLC, and the mayor of Cyprus.

Speaker 52 Go to noagendarings.com.

Speaker 46 Soon you'll be able to see your fantastic peace prize.

Speaker 5 And you will tell us where to send it and what name to put on it.

Speaker 46 Thank you for supporting peace and the No Agenda Show.

Speaker 91 We have one knight to bring up on the podium today.

Speaker 96 If you can grab your blade for me.

Speaker 27 Here you go.

Speaker 36 Oh, very good.

Speaker 36 Fancy one.

Speaker 62 James Kashin II.

Speaker 5 You, sir, are about to become a knight of the Noah Junda Roundtable thanks to your aggregate support of $1,000 or more.

Speaker 7 And I'm very proud to pronounce the KB Sir James Kashin II, Knight of the Orange Lambda.

Speaker 27 And he wanted, not Hookers and Blow, he wanted Ren Boys and Riesling.

Speaker 7 Also on deck for you and the other knights and dames here is Tiquitos and Takia.

Speaker 99 We got Harlots and Haldoll.

Speaker 46 We've got Redheads and Rise, organic macaroni and plasticizers, beer and blunts, Brazilian Hotians and Kestasha.

Speaker 5 We got Ruben S, Luminum, Rose, Gayson, Osake, Vodka, Vanilla, Bonghits, and Bourbon, Sparkling Cider, and Escorts, Ginger Eddie, and Gerbils, Breast Milk, and Babelman. As always,

Speaker 93 we got some mutton and meat on deck right there for you. Go to knowage rings.com.

Speaker 55 Let us know what size your finger is.

Speaker 132 There's a ring sizing guide on that website.

Speaker 93 And as always, it comes accompanied with some wax.

Speaker 145 Because it is a signet ring, you can seal your important correspondence with it and a certificate of authenticity and welcome to the roundtable our brand new nights

Speaker 14 that's right the no agenda meetups you can organize one near you uh you can go to one that's been organized near you can find everything at noagendameetups.com all we ask for is that you have a good time and remember that this connection brings you protection these people will be the first responders in any emergency you have and they are global Here is the meetup report from Berlin, Deutschland.

Speaker 49 Hello, John.

Speaker 222 Hello, Adam Tal from Berlin. Here, we have

Speaker 222 five people, including me, who showed up for this Berlin meetup.

Speaker 222 Went much better than the last time around. Really lovely people.
We've had all sorts of interesting, engaging conversation. We've already started a signal group where we'll spam each other, I'm sure.

Speaker 222 And I'll pass it along.

Speaker 140 Be kind to one another, and happy birthday.

Speaker 19 Yeah.

Speaker 172 In the morning.

Speaker 24 In the morning, Adam and John. He's Augusto de Britalien, also Secretary General of Sao Paulo.
And I'm happy to meet awake people that here, like in the zombie land of Berlin.

Speaker 48 So, yeah, that's it.

Speaker 152 Four more years.

Speaker 181 Four more years.

Speaker 141 Four more years.

Speaker 141 All right.

Speaker 72 You forgot to add your server.

Speaker 133 That would have been fun to hear a German server, but we'll let you slide on that one.

Speaker 142 I'm glad that there's five people there.

Speaker 52 And, you know, let us know what you think of Naomi.

Speaker 161 That would be good to know.

Speaker 20 Somehow, this one got lost.

Speaker 115 This is the 68th meetup of the Flight of the Noah Genders.

Speaker 22 Leo Bravo diligently hosting these meetups in Los Angeles.

Speaker 152 Hi, everybody.

Speaker 197 It's Leo Bravo. I'm here with the crew.
I'm passing the phone around for

Speaker 197 their greetings.

Speaker 39 Hey, John, I'm Sir Leah Kimfo Pop.

Speaker 210 Please be nice to each other.

Speaker 208 Hey, guys, this is Slick Rick.

Speaker 217 More trains. In the morning.

Speaker 191 Trains good, planes bad.

Speaker 149 This is Lady Chanaka of California, the Peaberry. Steven Crowder is one of the goats.

Speaker 48 Changed my mind.

Speaker 3 Woof, woof, woof, woof, woof.

Speaker 172 In the morning.

Speaker 3 Happy birthday, Leo. This is the horn in the morning.

Speaker 19 Yeah, Leo Bravo always packs him in, man.

Speaker 39 There's a lot of producers in Los Angeles.

Speaker 142 Always appreciate that.

Speaker 131 That's nice.

Speaker 115 We have a couple of meetups taking place.

Speaker 20 One today, actually, the North Georgia Now quarterly starts at 6 o'clock in Alphreda, Georgia at Cherry Street Brewing.

Speaker 93 Tomorrow, the 7th Amygdala Amygdala Checkup in Leiden, the Netherlands, 8.03

Speaker 79 p.m.

Speaker 23 at Drunk Lokal, Sestine Feiftich in Leiden, the Netherlands.

Speaker 115 And on Sunday, our next show day, the Anybody Out There meetup, 2 o'clock at Ska Brewery in Durango, Colorado.

Speaker 14 And also on Sunday, the Indy NA Tri-State Short and Long Barrel Safety Meetup, 2 o'clock.

Speaker 16 This sounds like the long, short and long.

Speaker 39 Are they going to do some shooting over there?

Speaker 145 I'm sure we'll get a report from Day Manette, of course, Day Maria and Sir Mark of the Greenwood, who are organizing that.

Speaker 145 Plenty of meetups still to come in November, including international ones such as Zurich, Switzerland, and what, no Netherlands anymore?

Speaker 48 Okay.

Speaker 132 So please go to noagendametups.com, find a meetup near you.

Speaker 145 You need to witness this at least once.

Speaker 143 I guarantee you, you'll want to go back.

Speaker 14 And if you can't find one near you, start one yourself, noagendametups.com.

Speaker 13 Easy and always apartheid.

Speaker 13 Sometimes you wanna go hang out with all the nights and days.

Speaker 13 You to be where you won't be, triggered all hell.

Speaker 13 You to be where everybody feels the same.

Speaker 13 It's like a party.

Speaker 75 Stay tuned for some dynamite end of show mixes soon to be featured on

Speaker 56 our stream.

Speaker 91 I haven't really gotten a good name for the stream yet.

Speaker 45 Here's some.

Speaker 96 I got some examples here.

Speaker 1 When will come? come?

Speaker 56 I got V for V, value for vibes, generation.

Speaker 116 Do we?

Speaker 66 Let me check.

Speaker 51 Homeless.

Speaker 93 I think I gave that one up.

Speaker 39 Well, it was a.fm.

Speaker 51 It's expensive.

Speaker 84 The.fms are like $100.net.

Speaker 71 K1000.

Speaker 13 Oh, I have.

Speaker 39 Oh, do I still have it?

Speaker 133 No, I don't.

Speaker 131 I don't.

Speaker 93 K10.

Speaker 13 That's not really a good name.

Speaker 66 You know, if it was something we had,

Speaker 86 the music matrix,

Speaker 132 No Agenda Beats,

Speaker 27 the best music in the year.

Speaker 17 What?

Speaker 1 No Agenda Beats should be a recipe.

Speaker 56 Hey, before we get to that, we do have John's Tip of the Day and a couple of ISOs.

Speaker 16 I see you only brought one to the party today.

Speaker 152 Yeah, I brought one.

Speaker 95 I have four, so I'll play mine and we'll see what you came up with.

Speaker 132 Here's my first one.

Speaker 34 It was a huge success.

Speaker 34 Hmm.

Speaker 74 Here's the next one.

Speaker 182 This was totally freaky.

Speaker 182 Okay.

Speaker 26 And this one? This isn't real.

Speaker 154 This cannot be real.

Speaker 133 Kind of like that one.

Speaker 27 It's cute. And then.

Speaker 125 These people are deeply, deeply weird.

Speaker 74 Come on, man. Come on.

Speaker 65 That's a good idea.

Speaker 1 No, that's no good. It's just disparaging.
I don't think that's good.

Speaker 79 Disparaging for the show.

Speaker 40 All right. What do you have?

Speaker 1 I got the classic.

Speaker 27 Okay, here we go.

Speaker 196 Yep.

Speaker 30 The show is too long.

Speaker 5 And of course, that is the winner.

Speaker 7 But before we get to the long part, here's John's tip of the day.

Speaker 3 Great advice for you and me. Just the chip with JCD.

Speaker 3 And sometimes Adam.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the show is too long. Okay, this is a very interesting tip.
And anyone who adopts this process and starts using these things will forever use them. That's the way to go.
Okay.

Speaker 1 It's called, and there's what, there's a couple brands, but the one I'm going to cite is the Wago, W-A-G-O. And I'm talking talking about the Wago lever nuts.

Speaker 70 Lever nuts, which is also called a

Speaker 1 Wago lever connector. And these are little devices that you, you know, how when you splice wires, you tend to take the two wires.

Speaker 1 You've got two wires, you want to slice them together, you put them against each other, and you twist and twist and turn them around.

Speaker 1 So then you put some electrical tape around it, and you've got your wire split.

Speaker 145 Wait, wait, don't you have one of those orange things you twist on top of it?

Speaker 1 You could, but it's nothing compared to these little orange things,

Speaker 1 which are you open the levers, you stick a wire in one side, a wire in the other, flip the levers down, the thing's solid, rock solid.

Speaker 1 It's the one of the greatest little for anyone who works with wiring, this is and is not a pro,

Speaker 1 and you don't want to solder the wires. This is the way to go.
This is a very interesting product, very good product. People should allever nut lever nut.

Speaker 53 I want to take a look at this product: Wago Lever Levernut Series 220.

Speaker 106 Oh!

Speaker 100 Okay.

Speaker 91 And now,

Speaker 22 when have you recently been putting wires together?

Speaker 27 When you have

Speaker 1 a fixture in the ceiling, this is the perfect time to use them because once you use, because you got wires you got to, you know, deal with over your head and the ceiling. No, no, no.

Speaker 1 You want these things.

Speaker 2 Oh, this is good.

Speaker 27 They have, oh, wow.

Speaker 146 They even have the 22 to 221 series for hazardous locations.

Speaker 1 And the thing is that these things are also built like little Legos so they can click together.

Speaker 192 Click together.

Speaker 31 That is what I would call an outstanding tip of the day.

Speaker 5 Dads and gentlemen, spine them all at tipoftheday.net.

Speaker 3 Green fast for you and me, just a tip for JCD

Speaker 12 and sometimes at home.

Speaker 12 Created by Dana Bernetti.

Speaker 165 Good tip, John.

Speaker 17 Good tip.

Speaker 71 Tipoftheday.net is turning out to be quite the resource for people who like stuff.

Speaker 20 Who likes stuff?

Speaker 1 You like stuff?

Speaker 13 Go there.

Speaker 85 And I'm on my second bottle of Robert Mondavi, and I'm loving it.

Speaker 84 Another fantastic tip of the day.

Speaker 27 It's all good. I love it.

Speaker 1 I'm not drinking during the show.

Speaker 18 Huh?

Speaker 52 No, I'm not, but it's about to start.

Speaker 27 And I'll start during Planet Rage

Speaker 83 as Darren O'Neal and Larry with the deep voice pick up the no agenda pieces and

Speaker 159 rage out together.

Speaker 57 It's good. It's up next on NoAgendastream.com.

Speaker 46 End of show mixes.

Speaker 24 Sir Joho, we've got clip custodian Neil Jones, Oysteinberger with a classic and original, and Bri bringing you kind of a mix of a little bit of Halloween type vibes.

Speaker 5 And I'm coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country where everybody's a dude.

Speaker 54 Fredericksburg.

Speaker 88 In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 1 And from Northern Silicon Valley, going to remind everybody that next show, we have a time change. We're going back to regular standard time.
I'm John C. DeVora.
That's right.

Speaker 23 Listen up, Europeans.

Speaker 8 Remember us at noagendadonations.com until Sunday.

Speaker 5 Adios Mo Foes, a hooee-hoo-eye, and such.

Speaker 169 Both Bill and I are deeply concerned.

Speaker 125 We're

Speaker 41 deeply concerned. Deeply concerning reports.

Speaker 15 Reports are coming in. They might be true.

Speaker 3 They might be trendy.

Speaker 169 We're deeply concerned.

Speaker 158 Well, I'm deeply concerned.

Speaker 3 Experts are uncertain, but the concern is never ending.

Speaker 3 We are all deeply concerned.

Speaker 185 Deeply concerned.

Speaker 6 Deeply concerned.

Speaker 3 It's deeply concerning.

Speaker 45 As an American who is deeply concerned with the direction of our nation.

Speaker 127 We've reached out for comment.

Speaker 14 Are deeply concerned about the ethical implication.

Speaker 18 We've reviewed the footage.

Speaker 12 Still concerned.

Speaker 34 Calling it deeply concerning.

Speaker 6 Deeply concerning.

Speaker 183 But I was so deeply concerned about what a Trump presidency might look like.

Speaker 35 I'm deeply concerned about

Speaker 12 down my face, face, face, face?

Speaker 93 Two different dudes, and then there's the guy with the mask.

Speaker 73 Or they all have masks, I don't know.

Speaker 27 People have a hard time believing it, but the mask thing is real.

Speaker 65 I mean, there's real masks that will fool you.

Speaker 185 I gotta hand it to you, kids.

Speaker 3 Robert M. Kennedy, Jr.

Speaker 3 Not real, not real.

Speaker 1 Microsoft co-founder Bill Gaze.

Speaker 48 Not real!

Speaker 147 Madam Vice President Tamila Harris.

Speaker 3 She's not real.

Speaker 152 Senator J.D. Dance Dance.

Speaker 78 You're not real.

Speaker 75 California Democrat Adam Shit, Adam Shit, Adam Shit

Speaker 75 Not real, I'm real

Speaker 75 The mask thing is real

Speaker 75 mask

Speaker 135 I just woke up from a scare

Speaker 85 Yes, it was a real nightmare

Speaker 172 Bombs dropping down everywhere

Speaker 85 Demonstrations were run by George Soros

Speaker 27 Politicians were crooked and hollow

Speaker 172 And every song on the radio were made by AI

Speaker 3 Made by AI When the wars are ending I'm gonna send a text to you

Speaker 135 So get in the troll room because our time for fun is not through

Speaker 45 Let us log on just for a while

Speaker 35 and troll

Speaker 175 with a smile.

Speaker 6 When the wars are ending, I'm gonna send a text to you.

Speaker 6 It's the witching hour, and you should be in bed.

Speaker 6 The world is shut down, but you're working instead. instead.
When the dead is rising and the bank is dry,

Speaker 6 the wolves in the capital are howling at the sky. The elites got their places with blood and lies.

Speaker 3 They come after our children with greed in their eyes. They make our lives intolerable and laugh the pain.

Speaker 3 But somehow we keep electing them into office again.

Speaker 35 There's a snake oil commercial on my TV

Speaker 6 They slither into news and shows spreading new disease

Speaker 6 The people we entrusted with our welfare

Speaker 6 Are banking on our sickness and the war in the airs got their places

Speaker 6 with blood and lies They come after our children.

Speaker 6 With greed in their eyes, they make our lives intolerable and laugh at the pain.

Speaker 6 But oh,

Speaker 175 we keep electing them in office again.

Speaker 175 The best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 3 Audios, Mofo, Devorak.org slash n a

Speaker 30 yup, the show is too long.