1817 - "Stunt Grenade"

3h 15m
No Agenda Episode 1817 - "Stunt Grenade"



"Stunt Grenade"


Executive Producers:


Commodore G


Sir Lawrence of Dystopia


Dame Audra of Legoland and Doctor Don


Sir Chris and Dame Kristen


Ross Johnson


Dame Shelly


Sir Rounded By My Privilege


Leora Coronel


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Eli The Coffee Guy


Scott Johnson


Christine Bonus


Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning résumés


Duke Slambob rolling knight of Guadeloupe


Brian & Susy


Anonymous


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Title Changes


Sir Lawrence of Dystopia > Baron


Art By: Blue Acorn


End of Show Mixes:


 


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 Will Treese EOS Mean to John - The AI Slop Orchestra.mp3


 


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Runtime: 3h 15m

Transcript

Speaker 1 Complain more.

Speaker 1 Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, November 19th, 2025. This is your award-winning Give On Nation Media Assassination episode 1817.
This is no agenda.

Speaker 1 We are smoking hot and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 1 For Northern Silicon Valley, where we've noticed Ukraine is falling apart. I'm John C.
Dvorak. It's Craig bottom buskill in the morning.

Speaker 1 I didn't expect to start there.

Speaker 1 I didn't either.

Speaker 1 I had some other

Speaker 1 schemes as my opener, but then that came to mind. Oh, well.
The France 24 this morning, that's all they were talking about.

Speaker 1 They had these attractive Ukrainian women going on about how bad the government is. Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 And by the way,

Speaker 1 you and I are both shocked.

Speaker 1 Shocked that it's falling apart? No, that Ukraine's corrupt.

Speaker 1 Well, hold on a sec.

Speaker 1 First of all, we have to understand there's nothing to worry about. Queen Ursula is going to take care of Ukraine for at least the next two years.

Speaker 1 We just have to figure out which one of the three options we will use to pay for it. John, this is a quiz.

Speaker 2 We are now working very closely with Belgium and all the Member States on options, how to deliver on this commitment.

Speaker 2 It's clear we will deliver and we will cover the financial needs of Ukraine for the next two years. The discussion is now on the how.
And there are three options.

Speaker 1 Here we go.

Speaker 2 Option one is to use the budget's headroom to raise money on the capital markets.

Speaker 2 Option two is to have an intergovernmental agreement that Member States raise the necessary capital by themselves.

Speaker 2 And option three is to have a reparations loan. This is based on immobilized Russian assets.

Speaker 1 I pick number three. What do you pick? What do you think is the best one there? Steal it from the people or steal it from the Russians.

Speaker 1 Well, they want to steal it from the Russians, but they know that they're treading on thin ice.

Speaker 1 I do know. So they will steal it from the people.
Oh, you think they'll steal it from the people?

Speaker 1 Yeah, because they can get away with that.

Speaker 1 Stealing from the Russians is not going to work out long term, and they know it.

Speaker 1 The other thing is the Ukrainians, why do they get, why would you get they're already stealing the money we're giving them already I have a little update. Are you going to give them more money?

Speaker 1 There's a solution to the problem. I have a little update from my boy, Andrew Rasoulis.

Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah, he's got us the update.

Speaker 1 You want to do that now or at the end of the presentation? Because he's the best. Well,

Speaker 1 these are pretty short, actually. He was on CBC.

Speaker 1 He's dressing in a suit now. He used to be kind of cash.

Speaker 1 I've never seen him. Oh, well, he used to be cash in a sweater, and now he's now.

Speaker 1 included him in. I think so.
Okay, so first of all, it appears Russia is winning.

Speaker 4 The Russians have managed through

Speaker 4 very determined attritional warfare over months now. And they've been working on Pakforsk, this main hub.

Speaker 4 And they have been wearing down the Ukrainians, again, war of attrition.

Speaker 4 And they're now about to achieve what will be an operational level success, which means a significant success, more than tactical, less than strategic but significant on the battlefield whatever

Speaker 1 i love it the momentum of russia's advance westward next time in a meeting you know that's a really good idea bob that is more than strategic less than tactical i'm i'm really digging that i think you're onto something here Well, of course, the big thing now is as winter draws, which means it'll soon be the end of the fighting season.

Speaker 1 We always have to remember we have fighting seasons, and it's about to draw to a close. We all just go, we're not going to fight right now.
The season's over. And that is the energy attacks.

Speaker 4 They're targeting even greater than they did last year,

Speaker 4 not only the electrical grid, which is what they've been working on for the last couple of years, and lights out stuff.

Speaker 4 Now they're going after, in addition, to the energy, the gas, that is the heating source for a lot of the Ukrainian cities like in Kyiv, which are centrally controlled.

Speaker 4 If you take out one of these generators that put the hot air, hot water throughout the heating systems in the town, everything goes down. They all get cold and much harder to fix.

Speaker 4 So, what the Russians are doing is wearing down the morale of the Ukrainian people so that then they try to pressure the Ukrainian government to come to terms with Russia, not just saying a ceasefire, but a ceasefire that also gives the Russians what they want in terms of Ukrainian neutrality, no NATO, and regime change, possibly.

Speaker 1 No!

Speaker 1 This does not sound good for Vladimir. And of course, add to that the corruption, and well, I don't know.

Speaker 4 But politically, it certainly destabilizes the Zelensky government. I don't think it's a strategic defeat for him yet.
He's surviving. He's at war.

Speaker 4 And there are those who say, well, it's the best we've got.

Speaker 4 And the Lithuanian minister of government the other day said this is a terrible event, but this is all we've got. So we've got to keep going.
And there's that kind of attitude.

Speaker 4 But yes, the point is that that's just one attitude.

Speaker 4 There are the people on the ground in Ukraine, those who are supposed to go off and fight, who are a lot of them are trying to not go off and fight.

Speaker 4 And when the energy grid is being hit and they're trying to rebuild it, and yet there's about a 15% scam taking place or was taking place with profiteering from the efforts to rebuild this energy grid, people are saying, what's this all about?

Speaker 4 What are we fighting about? People are just putting money in their pockets.

Speaker 4 So maybe Ukraine as a Western model isn't so great, and therefore we shouldn't really be fighting and putting our lives on the risk. Yeah, really.

Speaker 1 What are we doing?

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 the results, our friend Andrew Rasoulis believes, will be

Speaker 1 more concessions in the peace talks and a, what we've always said, an armistice or a ceasefire, and there never will be actual peace.

Speaker 4 Well, I think Ukraine will give major concessions. It's already going to lose 20% of its territory.
The Ukrainians have recognized that.

Speaker 4 They understand they cannot retake the land that Russia currently occupies through military force. They refer to diplomatic solutions.
That's already a concession.

Speaker 4 The question is additional concessions. And that's why politically there is no room for negotiations at present.
The Russians are prevailing. I prefer that term rather than winning.

Speaker 4 They're prevailing.

Speaker 1 And they see that if

Speaker 4 they take further military action, they will have further gains. And one of their key objectives right now is to take before Oblast, the full administrative boundaries.

Speaker 4 They control large parts, but not everything. And they will continue to push until they get that because Ukrainians are refusing to cede it.
So that will be taken by military force.

Speaker 4 And then the question is, will a ceasefire come into place at that point?

Speaker 4 Because it's unlikely that a political settlement anywhere near what the Russians are demanding of the Ukrainians will come out unless Ukrainians are completely broken.

Speaker 4 I think a ceasefire and a very hard cold peace is more likely to come.

Speaker 1 There it is. There it is.

Speaker 1 And of course, we need to use this war to

Speaker 1 figure out jobs for people.

Speaker 1 And Germany, which has lost everything,

Speaker 1 the economic production motor of the EU is dead. Thanks to no Russian energy, cheap Russian energy.

Speaker 1 So what do we do? I know. Let's build up our military and let's tell the kids they can join voluntarily for now.

Speaker 7 Faced with growing Russian threats and an unreliable U.S. partner under the Trump administration, Germany has agreed to a new military plan to boost its numbers.

Speaker 1 There is no reason for concern or fear because the lesson is clear. Nothing to be concerned about, children.

Speaker 1 The more capable our armed forces are of deterrence and defense through armament, training, and personnel, the less likely we are to become a party of conflict. And that serves everyone.

Speaker 1 That is the lesson we learned from the Cold Wars. Okay, so more

Speaker 1 people in the military, the more peaceful it is. Okay, check.

Speaker 7 The coalition government will focus on voluntary service by making it more attractive to young people. Attractive.

Speaker 7 Starting next year, all 18-year-old men will have to fill in a questionnaire on whether they would want to serve and undergo a medical test.

Speaker 7 There will be other financial incentives as well to encourage people to join the military. But the agreement has not been without its hurdles, particularly over questions regarding mandatory service.

Speaker 7 While there are no plans to reinstate conscription, it's not off the table.

Speaker 1 We want to inspire as many young people as possible to serve their country.

Speaker 1 If voluntary participation ultimately proves insufficient, there will also need to be a mandatory obligation aiming for a conscription system that assists as many individuals as necessary to ensure our defense capabilities.

Speaker 1 You will fight for us and you will be happy.

Speaker 1 You don't have to.

Speaker 1 You jumped to germany and you left ukraine hanging there i i'm not sure why

Speaker 1 well what do you mean that's because it's she literally started with because of ukraine

Speaker 1 i'm not sure why but we still need to talk about ukraine i have a couple clips oh well i don't look at your clips so how could i know well i tried to i mentioned it earlier and you just ignored me ukraine corruption is so this so this is you being a dick to me where i usually no no no i said that no you could have have said when you said that vrsuliscu i said well i can play something first and then you went on to no you didn't say that you said do you want to do that at the end of something that's what you said yeah the end of the clip i wanted to play which was the ukrainian corruption clip oh well but why didn't you just say that

Speaker 1 because you you steamrolled me that's why you are the worst worst partner in 18 years ever

Speaker 1 i didn't steamroll you i want to hear i i want input from the ladies

Speaker 10 corruption probe in Ukraine says associates of President Zelensky plotted to skim millions from the country's energy sector. And Pierre's Joanna Kakissa says more.

Speaker 9 This probe is extensive. It took 15 months, used about 1,000 hours of wiretaps.
There were seven alleged participants, including Timur Mindich. He's a close business associate of Zelensky's.

Speaker 9 Investigators say this group manipulated contracts at Enerho Adam, which is Ukraine's state nuclear energy company, and they got kickbacks, laundering roughly $100 million.

Speaker 9 The scandal has forced the resignation of two ministers in Zelensky's government so far, but Zelensky has not been implicated in this probe, and he is calling for the prosecution of those accused of committing crimes.

Speaker 1 Yeah, we played those clips on Thursday.

Speaker 1 Well, that just played yesterday.

Speaker 1 But we played the

Speaker 1 sorry for your breaking news. And what is the other Ukraine clip you have? You said clips.

Speaker 1 We're just going to stay with that. The point I wanted to make,

Speaker 1 which is kind of lost in the shuffle here, is that if we haven't noticed, Zelensky killed all, you know, besides putting the kibosh on the religion and everything else in the media and then stopping elections, he'd be out scot-free

Speaker 1 if he had allowed elections in the regular election cycle and got voted out. and moved to the 10 houses or whatever the hell he's accumulated and just gotten out of the country.

Speaker 1 It's beyond me why he's still there. He's going to end up dead.
No, I don't think so. I think the EU wants him alive.
He's the perfect little showbiz bunny for them.

Speaker 1 And that they can do all this other stuff, like steal money from people

Speaker 1 to fund him.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 1 the EU does want him alive, but it doesn't mean he...

Speaker 1 Well, who would want him dead? This corruption can

Speaker 1 get out of control so quickly that he'd get caught up in it. There's no way the EU can support it.
Hold on. Corruption in Ukraine? Hello, the last 50 years.
It's always been corrupt. Always.

Speaker 1 But it's always been, it's like the burisma material.

Speaker 1 It's always been corrupt, but it always gets swept under the rug. But if this situation that's occurring now is getting out of control, they won't be able to stop it.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 Because Zelensky's going to get caught up in it. He's done.
No, no.

Speaker 1 Give me a time frame for him being done.

Speaker 1 There's no air apparently.

Speaker 1 You heard it first, podcast enthusiasts.

Speaker 1 I don't think so. I think he's going to stick around.
They love the guy.

Speaker 1 He's not saying that they don't like him. Yeah, but who's going to kill him? It's not going to be killed.
He's going to be arrested. He's going to be kicked out.

Speaker 1 There's going to be a vote, a non-confidence vote in the government. He's going to be ousted one way or the other within two months.
Maybe. I don't think so.
I think they'll drive.

Speaker 1 You heard that first podcast audience. Podcast enthusiast is the term.
Enthusiasts.

Speaker 1 What is it? Podverse.

Speaker 1 Podcast enthusiasts. Yes.

Speaker 1 I'm sorry. I did not realize.
I did not understand what you said.

Speaker 1 Otherwise, I, of course, would have played your clip first. You always have priorities.
No, did my clips always lead to the conclusion clip when you have Versoulis? He should be the last guy we play.

Speaker 1 Well, you shouldn't have asked it as a question then. You sort of said, no, my clip first.
Then it would have been easier for you to understand. I can do that.
Remember, I don't listen to your clips.

Speaker 1 No, but you look at them. But the Ukraine was stuck between Zed Riots Mexico and UK Nexus, which caught my eye, obviously.
I'm like, oh, the UK-Nexus is good, yeah.

Speaker 1 Well, I'm going to leave it up to you where you want to go because I'm afraid now. Well, you were still talking about arming the poor German kids who are going to be without work anyway.
That was it.

Speaker 1 That was all I had. The only other thing I have is

Speaker 1 the Eurovision Song Contest news.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's not coming around again, is it? I thought we just did that like a couple of weeks ago. It's worse.

Speaker 1 Of the many headlines to come out of the federal budget today, one that you may have missed has to do with Canada and Eurovision.

Speaker 1 Mark Carney wants CBC to explore getting the country to participate in the European song contest. Yeah, now Canada is going to participate in Eurovision, in the song contest.

Speaker 1 And this is going to cost them money? If they win, I mean, if they don't win, that doesn't cost a lot just to send some schlub over there with a bad three-minute song.

Speaker 1 But I think with the, well, if you're interested, I'll play that one. Kearney has got to be.
You should. Kearney is like, we have to remember that Kearney was the head of the Bank of England.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he's a Nexus guy.

Speaker 1 He's trying to ruin Canada. He's a Brit.
Yes. Yes, he is.
So he's not even Canadian. Ah, this is a good point.

Speaker 1 Now, the British are famous for losing. They're famous.

Speaker 1 It's a national pastime to laugh about the Eurovision song contest and see if Britain will come in, if England's, UK, I should say, if they will come in last again.

Speaker 1 So maybe this is Carney trying to say, well, you know what?

Speaker 1 It was just you guys. Let's move Canada into that spot of perpetual loser.

Speaker 1 Well, if you listen to this professor who's about to talk about it, we have had some actual Canadians win just not representing Canada. On test, I guess, beyond Europe.

Speaker 1 Joining us now is journalist and Eurovision expert, Karen Fricker. She's also an agile professor at Rocky Spartan.
Yes, and they could have called me for that. First

Speaker 1 professor

Speaker 1 from Toronto.

Speaker 1 So the concept of Canada's participation in Eurovision apparently is nothing new, though new to me.

Speaker 1 What did you think of the Prime Minister pitching this? I was extremely surprised and kind of excited as a Canada-based Eurovision lover.

Speaker 11 Of course, this is a tantalizing proposition. Tantalizing.
But it is a contest based in Europe run by the European Broadcasting Union, but it's not unprecedented for a non-European country to compete.

Speaker 11 Australia has been competing for the past 10 years.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they're in Europe. So there's an angle.
Yeah, so let's back up for a sec. What drew you into this? How are you a Canadian who is so introduced?

Speaker 1 Why am I doing this bit with you? Excited by the Eurovision contest. I lived in Ireland for 20 years.

Speaker 11 I did my PhD in Ireland, and everybody knows Eurovision there. It's an absolute household name thing.

Speaker 11 And as somebody who loves pop music and spectacle, I just couldn't believe I didn't know anything about it. And so I've been researching it for over 25 years.

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, if you see Eurovision to me, the first thing that I would think of is ABBA and Waterloo. So

Speaker 1 music and spectacle certainly are associated in my mind with it.

Speaker 1 I don't know that I can name a lot of other winners, but come on.

Speaker 1 Well, I can help you, Ian. Yep.

Speaker 1 Celine Dionne was

Speaker 1 representing Switzerland, I think, right?

Speaker 1 Exactly. But there's Canadian precedent here.
Yes. You see, if only she...
Celine Dion is from Switzerland? No, she's Canadian, but she represented Switzerland.

Speaker 1 That's a scam. Yes, of course it is.
Well, we put the Beatles up there, you know.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they're representing Berkeley. Are you fine? Are you forgetting what Madonna was in it?

Speaker 1 Didn't Madonna, did she just perform?

Speaker 1 Was it they're putting all kinds, it's kind of like when we send our best basketball guys to the Olympics, like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, this is uh, no, it's just a recent phenomenon, I should admit

Speaker 1 at least 10 years, maybe more, maybe 12 years. Yeah, but traditionally, we did we played fair,

Speaker 1 okay.

Speaker 1 We did, we always sent the college kids, yeah, you know,

Speaker 1 College kids used to be amateurs.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, and the Olympics were supposed to be for amateurs, not people who got paid to do that job.

Speaker 1 And so they've corrupted that.

Speaker 1 First, they corrupted the Olympics with professional athletes, and now they're corrupting college sports by paying the college kids, which they should deserve because they bring in large audiences.

Speaker 1 And I've always advocated for it. But let's don't kid ourselves.
There are some people that make more money playing college football than they they will when they're professionals.

Speaker 1 So the dream team, the NBA professionals competed in the Olympics was 1992. That's not just recent.
It is to me.

Speaker 1 Most of my life, it was amateurs. Right, but the Zeds who listened to our show weren't even born then.
So

Speaker 1 the Zeds. The Zeds, baby.
The Zeds. I love the new Zeds.
This whole Mexico thing is fantastic. This is, Mimi called me about this talking about the Zeds in Mexico, but

Speaker 1 the way that she was given the report, which I think was on the networks, they didn't mention it was a Zed, you know, part of the Zed phenomenon. I had to explain it.

Speaker 1 She knows that because she listens to the show.

Speaker 1 But it's Zeds. It's just that.
And is it the CIA running? I mean, definitely.

Speaker 1 Well, no, okay. I'm not going to argue that for sure because I'm convinced it's the CIA too, because that's why, but they're doing it selectively.

Speaker 1 And so they're going after Mexico because they're not cooperating with us.

Speaker 1 So maybe Trump is, you know,

Speaker 1 yes, keep going. This is part of the North Sea Nexus.
This is cutting off the British

Speaker 1 drug trade into our country through Mexico. So here we go with the Zed riots Mexico won.

Speaker 5 Now we turn to Mexico City, where protests this afternoon turned violent.

Speaker 5 They were organized by young people, Generation Z, Generation Z, Generation Z, who say they're speaking out against a narco-government.

Speaker 5 These are the largest anti-government protests since President Claudia Scheinbaum took office more than a year ago.

Speaker 5 Protesters have broken through a police barricade, and police have thrown tear gas and stun grenades at them. I spoke with NPARE's Ader Peralta, who is in Mexico City near the protest crowds.

Speaker 5 Ader, we can hear you out there on the streets. What is it that we're hearing and that you're seeing?

Speaker 12 I mean, look, this protest started peaceful through the center of downtown, and now it has reached the Socalo, which which is Mexico City's main square and it has turned violent.

Speaker 12 The government had put large metal barricades to try and block protesters from reaching the presidential palace and protesters have now torn through the metal barricades and they are trying to get through riot police.

Speaker 12 Riot police are firing tear gas and they're firing stunt grenades. And this crowd

Speaker 1 stunt grenades? Yeah, when you get when one hits you, you do a backflip. Stunt grenades, everybody.

Speaker 12 They're firing tear gas, and they're firing stunt grenades. And this crowd is not leaving.
They say they're looking for change in this country.

Speaker 12 They say that they want this government to take their suffering seriously. They say they want

Speaker 12 the pact that they say exists between the narcos and the government.

Speaker 12 to end today and that's what they're here for and they say they're not leaving until they get that.

Speaker 1 yes what do we want we want change

Speaker 1 okay

Speaker 1 i want to ask you a question in advance of the rest of these clips there's only two more um

Speaker 1 what are they doing to get what what has somebody discovered in the one of the agencies

Speaker 1 that um

Speaker 1 can get this to happen

Speaker 1 in other words what i'm looking for is is there a psychological trigger or is there something you can do to get the entire generation of Zeds to get worked up, riled up, and out there throwing rocks?

Speaker 1 Why don't you play your clips and then I'll answer that with my clips? You actually, okay, good. I think I can answer it.
Yes.

Speaker 1 Because it's fascinating to me because there has to be something. Because this is too easy.
Yeah, no, it's very simple. It really is.
Okay, here we go. It's clip two.

Speaker 5 Ader, what prompted these protests?

Speaker 12 You know, what happened here is a small town mayor was murdered at the beginning of November.

Speaker 12 And this mayor, he was the mayor of Urwapan Michuakan, and he had taken a full frontal approach to fighting organized crime in his city.

Speaker 12 And what he said is, you know, we're going to shoot first and ask questions later.

Speaker 12 And he would get on helicopters and order his police to shoot at narco-traffickers, or what he said were narco-traffickers.

Speaker 12 And then November 1st, on Day of the Dead, he was shot dead in the middle of his town in front of everyone, in front of a large crowd. And protests erupted almost immediately in his town.

Speaker 12 They were asking for justice. They were asking for those responsible to be held accountable.

Speaker 12 And now the protests have spread to Mexico City. And this is remarkable, Sasha, because, and what's remarkable about it is that we just haven't seen in recent memory an anti-organized crime protest.

Speaker 12 And right now, I mean, I'm in the middle of this square and they're calling for the president's resignation.

Speaker 12 And they're saying, you know, that this is a narco government just colluded with the narcos. And they say they're done with that.
And they want the government to take a much stronger stance

Speaker 12 against organized crime in this country.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 What outfit is this, by the way? Is this NPR? Yeah. Okay.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 Once in a while,

Speaker 1 they do good work.

Speaker 1 Although, you know,

Speaker 1 there's still no analysis, which is my complaint, which you will address as this is the last clip.

Speaker 5 And Ader, how is the government of Mexico reacting to all that?

Speaker 12 Well, they're saying that this was a march organized by the opposition. I mean, to be honest, I've covered many marches in this country where they do tend to bust people in.

Speaker 12 This is not that. This is a cross-section of Mexican society from the upper class to the lower class, from old to young.

Speaker 12 And so this seems like Claudio Scheinbaum's, President Claudia Scheinbaum's first real test as a president. And she's extremely popular.
Her popularity, her approval rating is at 70%.

Speaker 12 So this is an odd thing that we're seeing here in Mexico.

Speaker 5 That is NPARE's Ader Peraza reporting from Mexico City.

Speaker 9 Ader, thank you for covering this and please be safe.

Speaker 1 Thank you, Sasha.

Speaker 1 Please be safe. I like the odd thing.
That was good. That was good.
Yes, no, this was the noteworthy part, which is in the third clip where he goes, you know, I've seen these things before.

Speaker 1 This is nothing like that. This is totally different.
It's alien. I don't, the woman Shine Bomb is really popular, but now everyone hates her.
I mean,

Speaker 1 he was befuddled with, and I would guess clueless as to the fact that this is manufactured somehow. Yeah.

Speaker 1 And he's not even noticing that, which is the problem that we have with the media. Yes.
Well, that's why you have to go to Al Jazeera, which is

Speaker 1 Al Jazeera had a pretty good report.

Speaker 1 How do you motivate Gen Z to do anything? Well, first of all, you use Discord.

Speaker 1 I could only find Spanish reports with the Discord in it, so I can't play any of that. But there were several Spanish news reports mentioning that these were organized on Discord.
So there's that.

Speaker 1 The second thing, you got to hand out cool flags.

Speaker 1 Because they were manufactured, brand new, beautifully made pirate flags, like skull and crossbone flags oh is it that pirate flag that i discussed before yes the pirate it's the skull and crossbone the one with the with the sombrero no there was no there's no sombrero on it no

Speaker 1 that's interesting but they are but they are you know your beautiful made-in-china flags and

Speaker 1 as a part of the meme for this mayor you hand out hats so when you've got discord you got hats you've got you've got flags this is ridiculously it's probably completely accurate but ridiculously simplistic approach to getting people riled up.

Speaker 1 Here's the report.

Speaker 13 since she took office one year ago.

Speaker 13 Protesters are demanding that the police focus on protecting them from criminal networks rather than cracking down on demonstrations that call for meaningful change.

Speaker 13 Some carried the Generation Z pirate emblem flag used by young protesters in Nepal, Morocco, and Peru.

Speaker 13 Others wore straw hats, a symbol of Carlos Manso, the mayor of the western city of Uruapan, gunned down two weeks ago. Yet another victim of drug cartels.

Speaker 13 Ahead of the march, President Shinbaum said the protests are a strategy paid by foreigners linked to right-wing groups.

Speaker 14 There may be young people who disagree with us, and that's part of democracy. But it's very important to know how this mobilization was orchestrated.

Speaker 14 There is evidence that many of the promoters have nothing to do with Generation Z, but rather that this is a political operation, even financed from abroad.

Speaker 1 Hello!

Speaker 1 They're just saying it now.

Speaker 1 Now, the way I view this under the lens of the North Sea Nexus is this is where all of the fentanyl is coming from. It's a huge narco-state, obviously.

Speaker 1 Sheinbaum doesn't want to cooperate. And

Speaker 1 this is, and we have to remember, $800 million was laundered through HSBC, a British bank, even though it's the Hong Kong Shanghai.

Speaker 1 What is it? What's the B and the N? It'd be C.

Speaker 1 Well, but that is, you know, it's basically a British bank, which was laundered through them during the Obama years, and that was a big scandal, which pay a fine.

Speaker 1 It's okay, we're fine, we'll just keep on moving. So, this is part of shutting down the British drug trade money,

Speaker 1 and this is the big money through Mexico, completely

Speaker 1 explained by Mexican senator Lily Talez, Tele, Tele, Tales, Tele,

Speaker 1 who went on Fox, much to her peril, and explained exactly what's going on? This is the intro.

Speaker 15 President of Mexico is furious. She's calling Mexican Senator Lily Teyes a traitor for coming on Fox Noticias with me a few days ago and saying this.

Speaker 17 The help from the United States to fight the cartels in Mexico is absolutely welcome. And that is how the majority of Mexicans feel.

Speaker 17 The only ones who don't like that President Trump is sending help in trying to support Mexicans against the cartels are the narco-politicians. That includes President Scheinbaum.

Speaker 15 Mexican President Claudia Scheinbaum responding, saying,

Speaker 15 It's not a minor issue that a senator gave an interview to a foreign media outlet calling for intervention. Here to discuss is that Mexican senator, Lily Tayes.
Senator Tayz, welcome to Fox Note GCF.

Speaker 15 I'm just going to get right to it. Is Mexico a narco-state?

Speaker 18 Yes, it is.

Speaker 16 And we all Mexicans know about it. And Mexicans are afraid of the alliance between the Mexican government and the cartels that have infested our nation.

Speaker 1 So very brave.

Speaker 1 Is this new to the Mexicans, this idea? No, not to the Mexicans, but it's but you hear she's saying, we welcome the support. I think this is the support coming from us, stirring all of this up.

Speaker 1 And here's the rest of the industry.

Speaker 1 Go ahead. Just quickly,

Speaker 1 I went to do a search on the Mexican riots and they're using the flag with the little straw hat on it. Oh, they are.

Speaker 1 I haven't seen it. The only one I saw in that report was the skull and crossbones.
Well, it's skull and crossbones, but it's got a little straw hat on the top. It's a manga character.
Okay.

Speaker 2 Can you explain this alliance?

Speaker 1 I didn't see it. That was not what I saw in the.

Speaker 1 I'm just looking at the photos. Okay.

Speaker 15 Can you explain this alliance between the president, her party, the Modena Party, and the cartels?

Speaker 16 Yes, the party has financed, has given, the cartels have given so much money to

Speaker 16 these politicians, narco-politicians of Morena, to get into office, to get the power. So they protect,

Speaker 16 the Mexican government protects the cartels. That is why President Scheinbaum doesn't want

Speaker 16 the strong American leadership to help Mexico defeat the cartels. And also, Scheinbaum doesn't want the rest of the world to know what is happening here in Mexico.

Speaker 16 We are on the steps to be the next Venezuela. She is aligned with Venezuela as dictator with Cuba.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 16 we are losing our country.

Speaker 16 They have destroyed our republican institutions, the democratic state. And we must...

Speaker 16 I think we all Mexicans want and welcome the support of the United States to assist Mexican people against the cartels that have us all in this crisis with the traffic on fentanyl and migrants.

Speaker 1 Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1 Yeah, we're not messing around now.

Speaker 1 I guess we got fed up. And remember, it was Rubio who said, no, it was

Speaker 1 Witkoff who said, oh, yeah, no, we're taking care of stuff. Look, we're doing stuff in Morocco.
And Morocco, what do we have? Gen Z.

Speaker 1 Gen Z Discord

Speaker 6 flags

Speaker 1 march.

Speaker 1 By the way, just as an aside,

Speaker 1 we have Gen Zers out there, and I guess there's, you know, I don't know where you can get one of these, but I need one of the pirate flags with the little straw hat for my collection. I need one, too.

Speaker 1 I will fly it. I have a flagpole.
I will fly it. I don't know about it.
I will fly it. Oh, of course.
It'll be fun. Yeah, I'll fly it.
No problem.

Speaker 1 See, what you've done is you upped the ante to to make it so somebody's going to send you the flag instead of me, and I'm the one that always solicits free stuff.

Speaker 1 You're getting the clue. You did it, that was good.

Speaker 1 I give you 10 points. Before I forget the trick, before I forget it.
I'll fly it. Okay.
Oh, my God. I kind of can't tell you.
Well, don't you? You don't have a flagpole?

Speaker 1 No, I don't have a flagpole.

Speaker 1 Why is that so funny?

Speaker 1 I'm in the little town. I'm in the suburbs, and I'm going to have a flagpole.

Speaker 1 Like a total douchebag. Are you kidding me? I'm in California.
You don't have a ham antenna you can use as a flagpole? Flagpole. Since we're on free stuff, thank you to Trevor Lohman, Ph.D.

Speaker 1 He's the real deal, Trevor Lohman.

Speaker 1 And he has published two books.

Speaker 1 He's published two books. One is God's Eye View.
And right there on the cover

Speaker 1 is a perfect star that says, read this book. John C.
Dvorak, host of No Agenda Show, host of DH Unplugged. And then he sends me his new book, Shroud Pilled.

Speaker 1 And right there at the top, not even on the back cover, on the front cover. Yeah, right in the front.
That's where you want it. A must-read book.
It's not one of those blurbs in the back, which is

Speaker 1 meanies. A must-read book.

Speaker 1 Adam Curry, host of the No Agenda Show, inventor of podcasting. I mean, you will run and read this book when you see that endorsement.
It's like, oh, that guy.

Speaker 1 You're getting a clue. Yeah.

Speaker 1 It's taking me me a little bit, but I'm, yeah, I'm not sure.

Speaker 1 I've said this before. I don't want to reiterate this anecdote, but I will.

Speaker 1 With my

Speaker 1 former book agent, John Brockman,

Speaker 1 I worked for him too, but he's a good friend of mine. He still is.
And he told me that Alan Watts, the very famous Zen Buddhist writer, Alan Watts, everyone who's into Buddhism knows this guy.

Speaker 1 He told him, he told Brockman once, he says,

Speaker 1 anyone who asks me for a blurb, I'll just do it. He says, because what it never does you any harm, it just does you nothing but good, it's good vibes, it's a great thing to do.

Speaker 1 And so I blurb everything I can. I'll do forwards too.
And

Speaker 1 I run into people every so often and they say, can you give me a blurb for this? And no, no, I don't have time to read it. You know, just do it.

Speaker 1 No, no, what you do now, these days, you say, yeah, could you send me the manuscript? Well, you can get the PDF for most books nowadays, yeah. Right.
Send me the manuscript. What do you do?

Speaker 1 Flop it into Chat GPT. Give me a little synopsis.
Write me a blurb.

Speaker 1 Bob's your uncle. Blurb's always going to be the read this book.
I mean, what kind of Chat GPT is going to write too much? It'll be too long. Well, if you're doing a forward, you said you did forward.

Speaker 1 Oh, a forward. Oh, God.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 You don't want to have to read the book for a forward. Just put it in a Chat GPT.

Speaker 1 I'm with you. That's not a bad idea.
Then you can edit it back. No, I'm with you on this.
I think it's. Yeah, no, from the rest of your life, you'll be doing these blurbs.

Speaker 1 What you're supposed to say is, you have snatched the pebbles from my hand, Grasshopper.

Speaker 1 It is time for you to leave. Go on your own journey.

Speaker 1 Yeah, you can go. Go do your thing.
You finally got a clue. So it's like, it's beyond me why people just don't, you know, anyone with any notoriety doesn't adopt this philosophy.

Speaker 1 It just makes nothing but sense.

Speaker 1 But these are good books. They're obviously good books, or they wouldn't have our names on them.
I think, you know, it is. Well, I've read the one that your name is on.
That's the funny thing.

Speaker 1 I actually read that book, and you're the one endorsing it. I haven't read the new one, but I did endorse it.
I think he said, can I just put something on the cover? See you, go for it.

Speaker 1 So that's a little, you know, you should have to know. Oh,

Speaker 1 as a last tip, the last tip. This is

Speaker 1 the tip.

Speaker 1 You do have to write the blurb somehow. So just say something.
And most of them are stock, and they can be very generalized. This is one of the most important books I think I've read in my life.

Speaker 1 Look, if it wasn't for this book, I wouldn't blah, blah, blah. I wouldn't have married my wife.
You know, stuff like that. A page turner from beginning to end.

Speaker 1 I couldn't. Excellent.
You're already on your road. How about this? I couldn't put it down.

Speaker 1 Perfect.

Speaker 1 Send me your books, people.

Speaker 1 I am now the blurb man.

Speaker 1 I went from pod father to blurb man. Exactly.

Speaker 1 It's not a bad policy. So now, just sticking with the North Sea Nexus, because things are popping up left and right.
George Galloway, now

Speaker 1 he was a politician, wasn't he, at one point? In England. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he was a politician.

Speaker 1 No, I thought he was a writer for the Guardian or something.

Speaker 1 He's a left-wing nut job. I don't know if he ever got into parliament.
I thought that.

Speaker 1 Well, we're going to find out, aren't we? Hold on a second. We are going to find out.

Speaker 1 Can I be of assistance? Yes. No, is this your new girl? No.

Speaker 1 Leader of the Workers' Party of Britain. He was a member of the Labour Party from 87 to 2010.
He served as Member of Parliament. Hello.
Okay.

Speaker 1 Politician. Now,

Speaker 1 now, podcaster. He's not even a podcast.
He's a YouTuber. It's even a little bit lower than podcaster.
I think so. Here's what he said on his recent show.

Speaker 21 Indeed, this has a long and inglorious history. The British invented it, as in so much else.

Speaker 21 We helped found and nourished, nurtured the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in the early 1950s so that we could use them against the Arab nationalist leader, Gamal Abdel Nasser, President Nasser.

Speaker 21 We invented the Muslim Brotherhood. It was invented in London.
And it was its first outing, though not its last, was to undermine the pan-Arabic message of the Nasserists.

Speaker 21 And,

Speaker 21 well,

Speaker 21 we've fallen out with the Muslim Brotherhood from time to time, but

Speaker 1 occasionally they can still be useful to each other, if you get my drift.

Speaker 1 Exactly. Yeah, well, we found the United States founded Al-Qaeda

Speaker 1 during the Afghanistan thing just to harass the Russians. Yes.
It was purposefully to.

Speaker 1 Because Russia was turning Afghanistan into

Speaker 1 a modern Western country. They had the women wore dresses.

Speaker 1 No, can't have that. They made the women

Speaker 1 pretty. They made the women pretty.
The Russians, of all people, the Russians. Have you seen the Russian women? They're gorgeous.
They made the Afghani women pretty.

Speaker 1 So you end up with a you know that going in that direction no we can't have that

Speaker 1 but

Speaker 1 you remember this bin laden character who's a cia asset of some sort probably still alive for all i know

Speaker 1 claimed that he had by the way they always claimed that he had the dialysis machine with him there's no evidence of this how come when they shot him in the uh in that compound, supposedly shot him and then burned him.

Speaker 1 But there was no dialysis. No dialysis machine.
Where's the dialysis machine? Well, speaking of that time, which was Obama, I mean, he was also the big friend of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Speaker 1 Don't you remember?

Speaker 1 Obama? Yes. Yeah.
He was like, oh, didn't he go to Egypt and apologize, basically, to the Muslim Brother? Well, sorry, we suck. We're Americans.
Maybe.

Speaker 1 I remember him going to Egypt and he went on an apology tour of the world, and he's bowed down to everybody like a

Speaker 1 basic.

Speaker 1 Now I'm rethinking my CIA stance on him and thinking he was much more of a British agent, which would make sense because they want to wreck our country.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they want to wreck our country. And a pretty good job, I'd say,

Speaker 1 during the Obama years. Now, another attack vector is, of course, this ongoing BBC

Speaker 1 gambit.

Speaker 1 And Trump did an interview with GBN, which is the most fawning interview I've ever seen.

Speaker 1 Sycophantic, actually. Who's GBN, GBN? Yeah, that's the right-wing cable news outfit now in the UK.

Speaker 1 Oh, it's not

Speaker 1 GB News. GB News.
Okay. Yeah.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 they're like our Fox News. It's GBN over there.

Speaker 1 And so the women interviews, and she's like, I love what you've done to DC.

Speaker 1 I wish you could be king of England.

Speaker 1 You could fix our country.

Speaker 1 But then. Oh, okay, I get it.
Yeah. Trump said something interesting about this.
So

Speaker 1 he's mounting a lawsuit, we think we don't know, but here's what he said about it.

Speaker 19 Well, when you push it, because they haven't offered, or on Sunny is they've offered no money whatsoever. They've apologized in a letter, but they haven't offered you a penny in compensation.

Speaker 19 There was this figure of a billion dollars that you may be pursuing.

Speaker 23 I think I have an obligation to do it.

Speaker 23 Look, I'm not looking to get into losses, but I think I have an obligation to do it. This was so egregious.
If you don't do it, you don't stop it from happening again with other people.

Speaker 23 I think you probably have an obligation. I'd like to find out why they did it, you know, so bad.

Speaker 23 Who thinks like this? And I wonder if they've done it. We'll find this out.
You know, the nice part about litigation is we'll find out how many times have they done it to other people.

Speaker 23 Maybe they did it to me quite a bit.

Speaker 1 What he's talking about here is discovery.

Speaker 1 That's what he's talking about. The funny thing about litigation.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's why it's never and it'll never get there no but he can sue bbc america they're they're in they're a u.s uh no he can sue no he can sue bbc uk too i mean we can do that because and their laws in the uk are the the libel laws in the uk are

Speaker 1 really onerous yeah compared to ours ours are the standard is very difficult compared to the uk the uk you can sue left and right I think they're trying to get to discovery.

Speaker 1 I agree with that, but I think they'll just settle and

Speaker 1 buss around with it. I mean, I don't know how they're going to get it.
If they're smart, if they're smart, they'll settle, but they keep saying, oh, no, we're not going to pay a dime to that guy.

Speaker 1 And this comes where the,

Speaker 1 I don't, I can't find any clips of it except, you know, they did an internal BBC video interview with Davies after he resigned. You know, where he said, well, he wasn't the bad actor, though.

Speaker 1 It's that woman who was running the whole thing. And she came from NBC.
Yes, she was not in the internal video.

Speaker 1 And what's happening right now, they're in the middle of what they call the charter process.

Speaker 1 And this happens periodically where they have to go back and say, okay,

Speaker 1 British people, we need this much money and your license fee. And here's the, so they have this big process and documents.

Speaker 1 And this comes right, which is probably the timing of it, besides the fact that the telegraph was just bought by a Trump buddy, his money at least, through Qatar, which I'm sorry, Abu Dhabi,

Speaker 1 you know, to hit them right as they're going through this charter. Now everyone's, oh, whoa, because BBC is corrupt, is there this bias?

Speaker 1 Really?

Speaker 1 I have to give you

Speaker 1 an admission here, which may be affecting my analysis and my personality today.

Speaker 1 So I recorded the BBC World Service. I record about two hours of it, and then I go and get clips.

Speaker 1 But the clips are very different. The BBC World Service and the BBC presentations generally on audio are extremely dull and they're hard to clip.
I do have some clips today.

Speaker 1 So I'm going through it about one half hour into it. I don't know.
Once in a while, I do fall asleep at the computer.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 But these guys, they drone on and on and on. Oh, and Trump, rub, rub, raw, and Trump, Trump, Trump.
And I conked out.

Speaker 1 And it just kept on recording.

Speaker 1 No, it wasn't recording. They were just playing back.
I was looking for clips. I pre-recorded the clip.
Oh, there you go. Oh, you conked.

Speaker 1 I had about an hour and a half recorded, and I'm going through the recording. It's easier to do it that way

Speaker 1 for me. And so I conked out and I woke up.
It's still going, yak, yak, yak. And then Trump, blah, blah, blah.
And then I look up,

Speaker 1 hour.

Speaker 1 I was out for an hour. And this was this morning? No, it was last night.
The BBC had knocked me out,

Speaker 1 literally put me to sleep because it's so boring

Speaker 1 and it drones. I want people to hear it.
There's no modulation in the voices. It's just

Speaker 1 and I was out for a complete. I looked up the clock.
I said, oh, it's only like 10:15. Wait a minute.
That's not 10.15. That's 11.15.

Speaker 1 And I said, oh, my God, I've been out for an hour. I don't know what they told me.

Speaker 1 But I have to tell you, I didn't go back to check, but I don't know what I but subconsciously, now I'm in, I've got a bunch of bad information in my head.

Speaker 1 Oh,

Speaker 1 you've been corrupted. Oh, I understand.
Yes, they've mind-controlled you. MK Ultra's.
Oh, that was. Yeah.
Okay. Well, then that is.

Speaker 1 So, all right. So then I.
Hour of hypnosis, basically. I didn't realize, but the show is hypnotic.
So you're forgiven then for your attitude. Okay, no problem.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it'll probably take a couple weeks to get over it.

Speaker 1 We have to deprogram John, everybody. Well, how about I lead you into your BBC? I'm looking at your list here.

Speaker 1 Just a factual overview, because I'm thinking this could be...

Speaker 1 massive theater

Speaker 1 between Trump and Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Speaker 1 We do have the Marjorie Taylor Greene stuff, but I'm going to play the UK Nexus, I think, first, because we were still talking about that. Okay.
All right. And then we'll get the Marjorie Taylor.

Speaker 1 And I, by the way, I'm in agreement that by the way, and I got the Marjorie Taylor Greene from the BBC stuff, I must have fallen asleep shortly after that.

Speaker 1 You have no idea how upsetting that is.

Speaker 1 I'm hearing it. I'm feeling it in your voice.

Speaker 1 I'm feeling it.

Speaker 1 I feel you, bro.

Speaker 1 UK Nexus Report 1.

Speaker 1 It's long been said that one man's freedom fighter is another's terrorist, and perhaps the most striking example of someone who illustrated that problem was Nelson Mandela, who refused to renounce the use of non-state sanctioned violence for political ends, but ended up widely admired around the world.

Speaker 1 Two current issues are sparking more debate on this.

Speaker 1 Here in the UK, there are many people being arrested for holding pieces of paper saying I support Palestine Action, a group that's campaigned on Gaza and which spray-painted some planes on a UK airbase.

Speaker 1 And then there are the ongoing military strikes by the United States on Venezuelan and Colombian boats accused of smuggling drugs, which the US justifies as strikes on a terrorist organization with which it is at war.

Speaker 1 Ben Saul is the UN Special Rapporteur on Counterterrorism.

Speaker 1 He's been thinking about these issues for many, many years. So

Speaker 1 how would he define terrorism?

Speaker 1 I want to call myself the podcast repertoire.

Speaker 1 Oh, in the UN Special Rapporteur.

Speaker 1 Wait, the funny thing is about the Venezuelan things, when did they start? They started like a month or two ago, right?

Speaker 1 But this guy's been thinking about it for many, many years. Many years.
Why he's a rapporteur, after all.

Speaker 24 So as UN Special Rapporteur, we've got a working definition since about 2006, and we say it's certain kinds of criminal violence intended to intimidate a population or compel or coerce coerce a government to do something, and the action must cause death or serious injury to persons.

Speaker 1 Okay, so did he just say that what this is about is we're just intimidating the Venezuelans by blowing up their drug boats.

Speaker 1 He's not saying that.

Speaker 1 What he's doing is

Speaker 1 saying

Speaker 1 we are not going after terrorists because by his definition, they're not terrorists.

Speaker 1 But what you just interpreted, I believe, might be the subtext.

Speaker 1 So they might be actually, he doesn't say that, but I think.

Speaker 1 Can I do something for you for a minute? Just because

Speaker 1 you feel so bad about this BBC brainwashing? Yeah. Okay.
Now, I know you don't wear headphones, so just get close to the speakers. Get close to the speakers.
You ready? Are you ready?

Speaker 1 I'm going to fix you. You ready? Yeah.
Okay.

Speaker 1 You've been befragmented.

Speaker 1 Okay. You're good now.
You're good to go.

Speaker 1 What? Hello. It's fixed.

Speaker 1 When are we starting the podcast?

Speaker 1 Onward. Yeah.

Speaker 1 So, on that basis, Nelson Mandela was a terrorist or not?

Speaker 24 Well, Nelson Mandela was part of a freedom fighter movement.

Speaker 24 And of course, this is one of the long-standing debates going back many, many decades whether freedom fighters or indeed armed conflict against an occupying power should be regarded as terrorism.

Speaker 24 Some of the international best practice standards suggest

Speaker 1 I like the use of the occupying power. Now,

Speaker 1 if you know the history of South Africa, the Afrikaners went down, there was abandoned. There was nothing down there except some Hutus.

Speaker 1 It was like

Speaker 1 there wasn't anything to occupy except vacant land.

Speaker 1 South Africa was, there was nothing there.

Speaker 1 It was occupied by the Dutch. It was colonized by the Dutch.
Yeah, but they moved there, but it wasn't like they took over from someone else. It wasn't like the Belgian Congo.

Speaker 1 Another fine North Sea Nexus outfit.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the Belgian Congo.

Speaker 1 A million people? They killed so many people. Yeah, well, at least.

Speaker 1 They're just killing people left and right. And it was different.

Speaker 1 And so, you know, it's just because somebody's there doesn't mean they're occupiers.

Speaker 1 I mean, they'd like to make, that's the point I'm trying to make is they try to say the same thing. We're occupying a Native American land.
That's what they would like to say there.

Speaker 1 Well, this idea.

Speaker 1 But if long we pray over it, it's okay, isn't it? As long as we just thank the people. Acknowledgement.
Acknowledgement. Acknowledgement.

Speaker 24 Freedom fighters or indeed armed conflict against an occupying power should be regarded as terrorism.

Speaker 24 Some of the international best practice standards suggest that armed conflict should instead be regulated by international humanitarian law, the area of law that's built to regulate war, and terrorism instead should be peacetime violence subject to domestic criminal law.

Speaker 24 Wait a minute.

Speaker 1 Everyone is bringing up this international law in context of these boats. What international law

Speaker 1 are they pointing to here?

Speaker 1 I don't know. They never say.
There is, I don't think there really really is. There's no World Court yet.
Is there? No, there is the World Criminal Justice thing and the World Criminal Court.

Speaker 1 There's these two operations. They talk about it in these clips that we're not part of.
It's the Hague. So what does it make?

Speaker 1 It's in the seat of the enemy in The Hague. I gotta listen to that.

Speaker 24 The U.S. drug war in Venezuela.
That's not a real war, according to international law, but President Trump, of course, is suggesting that it is.

Speaker 1 Yeah, so let's just deal with these two other sort of current issues. And you mentioned the Venezuelan one, so that first of all.
Venezuelan one, so that first of all.

Speaker 1 How much legal opinion is there supporting the characterization of suspected, suspected, suspected, suspected drug smugglers, maybe organized crime, being terrorists?

Speaker 1 Man, that would have programmed my mind if that clip comic came across. I'd be like, what?

Speaker 24 The mainstream, overwhelming international legal opinion is that this is not a war or an armed conflict, that there is no right to use military force to simply essentially murder narco-traffickers on the high seas.

Speaker 24 Of course, the U.S. government.

Speaker 1 Oh, that's interesting. This is the first guy who was just saying it correctly.
We're murdering narco dudes on the high seas. Yes.

Speaker 1 Everyone else has been like, well, they're fishermen.

Speaker 1 Well, he says that too, by the way.

Speaker 1 Let him let him

Speaker 1 ran. Let him ran.

Speaker 24 There is no right to use military force to simply, essentially murder narco-traffickers on the high seas. Of course, the U.S.

Speaker 24 government has put its legal view that it is covered by international humanitarian law and that somehow drug deaths in the United States are somehow equivalent to an armed attack on the United States, allowing it to exercise self-defense.

Speaker 24 But of course, that's nonsense in legal terms, and no serious international lawyer worth their salt believes that.

Speaker 1 Well, no. And by the way, I think this show needs an international lawyer.
I would like to have it. It does

Speaker 1 Rob Cardi, do you have an international law degree? I want to make sure that we're covered. No, because that's not what it's about.

Speaker 1 It's about stopping your money through the Caribbean nations where you've been benefiting from this for centuries.

Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 It's not about that. By explaining their own people.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 We must continue. Where would that get tested in a legal body? Which court would hear that if it went to court?

Speaker 24 Well, unfortunately, unfortunately, the United States has not accepted the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice. Of course not.

Speaker 24 It also hasn't accepted the International Criminal Court's jurisdiction either. And that's very deliberate because it doesn't want to be held accountable by international institutions.

Speaker 24 That's not just a Trump position, by the way. That's a long-standing position of U.S.
administrations of all kinds.

Speaker 24 It's why it makes it so much more important that individual governments diplomatically protest these kinds of killings. I mean, we now think that

Speaker 1 this is so amazing. There's countries doing all kinds of killings, including us,

Speaker 1 including all kinds of African nations.

Speaker 1 But this one is all of a sudden a big deal. Yeah, and we know the reason why.

Speaker 24 The Trump administration has murdered at least 80 people in dozens of strikes. And this is...

Speaker 1 I never heard the BBC or this guy complain about Obama droning people and their kids. Never heard him about that.

Speaker 24 It's just incredible lawlessness, which is also sending a signal to other states that they can act that way and also get away with it.

Speaker 1 Very strong language for a UN Special Rapporteur to Batson.

Speaker 1 What is your take on whether a suspected drug trafficker or an organized crime cartel or something like that can be correctly described as terrorists?

Speaker 24 So certainly terrorist groups have long been engaged in some forms of organized crime to raise money for their cause. Think of the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Speaker 24 On the other hand, it's a really new phenomenon for drug cartels to be labeled legally as terrorists. So, the U.S.

Speaker 24 has done it, but not only the U.S., I mean, it's also in the last year or two years, Canada, Honduras, Argentina, Ecuador.

Speaker 24 Of course, in some circumstances, organized crime drug cartels in places like Mexico or Colombia can absolutely use violence to intimidate populations or even to coerce or compel governments if you're targeting judges or prosecutors or law enforcement officials.

Speaker 24 Quite a few governments have an extra element in their definition of terrorism, which I think is quite a good one.

Speaker 24 That's the case in the UK, that the violence also has to be done for a political or ideological or religious cause.

Speaker 24 And if you look at it that way, then I don't think you can say organized crime is terrorism.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 1 the Dutch diplomats are also open arms about this. Oh, America should stop this.

Speaker 1 They should stop doing this.

Speaker 1 You know, why? It's like Rotterdam, man. Hey,

Speaker 1 sales are down, people.

Speaker 1 Well, your point about the not bitching about Obama doing this, the other thing about Obama, he did it within sovereign borders of other countries. Yes.
Yeah, it was good.

Speaker 1 We're doing it in the open sea. Yeah.

Speaker 1 All right. Was that the last one? No, no, you have a short fourth here.

Speaker 24 The terrorism label, as we've seen in the United States, is often a pathway for abuses, whether it's summary deportations of the alleged drug cartel members, or now in the latest development, the military targeting of civilians on civilian boats carrying allegedly drugs, but some of them, who knows, might be fishermen, according to the family.

Speaker 24 Yeah, there it is.

Speaker 1 It's fishermen. They always have four outboard engines.
Of course.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and they always go like bats out of hell and they have a bunch of barrels. I got some fish.
I got some fish. I got to get home.

Speaker 1 I mean, I got to get to the other side of the sea real quick with my fish. Yeah, there's protests erupting everywhere over this.

Speaker 26 The U.S.

Speaker 1 military released photos of the firepower operating in the Caribbean Sea.

Speaker 26 The Gerald R.

Speaker 26 Ford Aircraft Carrier Strike Group joins another eight warships, F-35 aircraft, and a nuclear submarine already in the region, escalating President Donald Trump's pressure campaign against Venezuela.

Speaker 26 In an online post, the administration calls it Operation Southern Spear.

Speaker 26 Trump says he's basically decided whether or not to take military action against Venezuela and the government of Nicolas Maduro.

Speaker 1 We'll see what happens. I mean,

Speaker 1 I can't tell you what it is, but we made a lot of progress with Venezuela in terms of stopping drugs in Oregon.

Speaker 1 By the way, Trump has really got to stop doing these things on Air Force One. This sucks.
I mean,

Speaker 1 everything.

Speaker 1 He's always in the

Speaker 1 doorway.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the audio sucks. This is not good.
It's hurting the show. No problem.
We have a Columbia problem.

Speaker 26 Hold on. Trump alleges.

Speaker 1 Can you run that through Adobe and see if it cleans up? I can, actually, but I didn't have time. This came in late.
But yes, now that's the other thing. You know, we don't have time.

Speaker 1 Yeah, you're right. Trump should stop doing that because we don't have time to have to fix his clips.
No, we don't have time to fix your clips, Mr. President.

Speaker 26 President Trump alleges illegal drugs are coming from both Colombia and Venezuela to the U.S.

Speaker 26 U.S. military has carried out roughly 20 airstrikes on alleged drug vessels in international waters and has yet to offer proof of narcotics trafficking.

Speaker 26 Outside the White House, protesters voiced their opposition to the military aggression and the killings of at least 80 people in boats off the coast of Venezuela.

Speaker 26 In Caracas, the Venezuelan president was engulfed by a sea of supporters and addressed the crowd, partly in English.

Speaker 1 I love this. Somebody make this into a techno song.
The love and peace, the peace and love.

Speaker 1 American fighter jets are once again operating in Puerto Rico at the former military base, fueling more speculation of the next U.S.

Speaker 26 moves.

Speaker 1 I just can't see it any other way as that we're blowing every single drug carrier out of the water. Colombia, no.

Speaker 1 Venezuela, we're not going to go after Venezuela.

Speaker 1 If all of a sudden Gen Z rises up in Venezuela, then we're going after Venezuela.

Speaker 1 But we don't have to do anything. The Gen Zs will make it happen.

Speaker 1 They're actually effective. If we want them to.

Speaker 1 Yeah, no, no, we have to initiate it, obviously, at least by our thesis. We have to start with the same thing.
And I'm in total agreement. It's us.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 Us as in U.S.,

Speaker 1 us,

Speaker 1 our people, our agencies, whoever is behind it. You have to guess it's one of their favorite.
Well, this is a new era. It's a new CIA.
They've kicked out. Yeah, they've vouched a lot of the.

Speaker 1 They got the Brandon's on the run. Yeah, got him.

Speaker 1 They got him out. They've sorted out most of the DEI people, and I'm not sure they completely cleaned.
But they still have a lot of young, energetic,

Speaker 1 patriotic agents. And they're like, no, no, no, no, no.
We just got to get on the Discord, buddy. Come on, hold on a second.
Let me show you how it's done. You want Charlie Kirk that?

Speaker 1 Let me get on the Discord with this kid. The Discord is where it's at.

Speaker 1 There must be some great back doors into that thing.

Speaker 1 We don't need a backdoor. You just

Speaker 1 I've never been on it, so I don't know.

Speaker 1 Are you recommending that I get an account so at least I know what I'm talking about when it comes to Discord?

Speaker 1 Do you have an account? I have an account on the light phone discord. See, these discords, they're kind of like separate little entities.
They're islands. And imagine it's like an old school BBS.

Speaker 1 You got a forum, you got your file upload. See, this is why I'm probably not attracted to it.
I've already gone through that phase.

Speaker 1 No, it's not attractive, but it's what you can upload your files and you can have

Speaker 1 like FTP. Can I upload my files and give them so I can send somebody a hundred megabyte file? It's drag and drop, baby.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 So this, so this took the place of

Speaker 1 lock box or whatever the hell that thing was called? Well, no. I mean, this is what this is what.

Speaker 1 Look, who's on X?

Speaker 1 millennials who's on first yeah who millennials and boomers are on X that's who's there the kids are not on X they're all on discord then you know it's all it started with the gamers I'm just giving my abbreviated version the gamers would be in these discords it's you should know all this to it to it you don't need to know it you just sit there and sleep during the BBC and I'll fill you in it's okay I'm going to have to go do something.

Speaker 1 We could set up a no-agenda Discord. I mean,

Speaker 1 I'm sure there already has it. There already is one, I'm sure.

Speaker 1 And if anyone sets it up, we give it about one year and three months before it expands. Before they turn on us.

Speaker 1 Like everything else.

Speaker 1 All of a sudden, No Agenda sucks.

Speaker 1 Man, you need to come in. If you're not posting on our Discord enough, you're no good.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and then they start the Jew hate. Oh, no, no, that's that.

Speaker 1 I need to check in with no authority, see how they're doing over there. Oh,

Speaker 1 it's out of control. You've looked recently? I haven't looked for months, but last time I looked, it was out of control.

Speaker 1 You might as well go to Blue Sky. Same thing.
No, I haven't. No, I don't think anyone looks at Blue.
Blue Sky seems to have fallen out of favor. Again, for the Discord.
But this is it.

Speaker 1 You set up a Discord. There's all kinds of things.

Speaker 1 Who runs Discord? Is it a publicly traded company?

Speaker 1 I don't think it's. Is there some publicly traded angle here?

Speaker 1 I don't think they're public.

Speaker 1 Let me see.

Speaker 1 Let me see. Aboot.
Let me look at Aboot.

Speaker 1 So anybody, I mean, they're clearly, they have, their financing is very

Speaker 1 unclear. Yes, because this is a spooked operation.
I believe it to be mainly a spook operation. Here we go.
Aboot. Let me see.
Discord. We can deconstruct this right on the fly.

Speaker 1 By the way, people were doing this on the fly. We're going to deconstruct how

Speaker 1 to involve the CIA.

Speaker 1 To mention one of the agencies. A boot page.
Discord was built to solve one problem. How do we mind control kids to do our bidding?

Speaker 1 It doesn't say that.

Speaker 1 How to talk with friends while gaming together. But much like the protagonists of our favorite game stories, all journeys have their humble beginnings.
That's spook language, if I ever saw it.

Speaker 1 Totally. I agree.
Jason Citroen established, this is, they have a timeline. 2012 is when this started.

Speaker 1 2012. 2012.

Speaker 1 That's important.

Speaker 1 April 13th. President Obama got re-elected.
Yes, 2013. Stanislav Vizhevanitsky joins Jason as they continue working together on their upcoming mobile game.
So a lot of this is game, game, game, game.

Speaker 1 Spring 2016. Let me see if we go beyond game.

Speaker 1 Summer 2016, Discord brings the power to voice call friends directly in DMs and group DMs and unleashes one of its most popular features of all time, the ability to upload and use custom emojis in servers.

Speaker 1 Oh, yeah. Once you get to the point.
Oh, there's nothing more important than a custom emoji. That would account for the custom emoji.
Going crossbones with a little straw hat.

Speaker 1 Let me see. So this is all gaming, gaming, gaming.

Speaker 1 Oh, spring 2025. Jason announces his transition from CEO to board member and advisor.
Humam Saknini becomes Discord's new CEO. I think we already deconstructed this: that this Human Sannini guy,

Speaker 1 he's a Brit, pretty sure. Let me see.
His name's Human

Speaker 1 Humam. Humam.
Yeah, this is the guy from McKinsey, King Digital,

Speaker 1 all British, all British.

Speaker 1 He was. Well, how is it our op?

Speaker 1 Well, we can still be working with him.

Speaker 1 Maybe it isn't. Who knows?

Speaker 1 But the British aren't that creative to do these kinds of things. No.

Speaker 1 But this guy came from Activision, Activision Blizzard.

Speaker 1 That wasn't the right sounding bad. Anyway, anybody can set up a Discord.
That's basically the whole idea. You set up a Discord.
It's free.

Speaker 1 If you want certain functionality, you have to pay for it, I believe. There's a missing piece to this puzzle, it seems to me.
Right.

Speaker 1 Well, anyway, that's where the kids are. The kids are on the Discord.

Speaker 1 If you're hip with it, you're not on X. You're on Discord.

Speaker 1 You have your own Discord server. And I think we should have one.

Speaker 1 For as long as you're in the middle of it. I think we have plenty of people that can set one up.
Yeah, we'll join. We'll get an account.

Speaker 1 Maybe Sev Koble do it.

Speaker 1 Oh, Patrick Koble?

Speaker 1 Because

Speaker 1 he could mean

Speaker 1 of the sort that he could he would be brutal. Yeah, yeah, no, he would, he would slice and dice.
He wouldn't put up with anything. Yeah, he wouldn't put up with anything.

Speaker 1 I don't know if he has time in his life for it, but I could ask him.

Speaker 1 He has time.

Speaker 1 He's a busy man.

Speaker 1 He makes you think he doesn't, but guys like that always do.

Speaker 1 All right, now we're going to move to what I really,

Speaker 1 I'm just thinking, like, we've seen this with Tucker, we've seen it with Elon, like, oh, big fight. And then they go off and they do their thing and there's reconciliation.

Speaker 1 And Tucker is somehow involved in this, you know, rooting out of entities.

Speaker 1 unwanted in the Republican Party and probably unwanted in the Republican Party.

Speaker 1 And this one here, I can't disagree with you on any of this because because I felt the same way when I first started. Now, my clips, I got an NPR and two BBCs.

Speaker 1 Why don't I play the because what I have is straight-up reads of what Trump posted and what

Speaker 1 Marjorie Taylor Greene replied. So it's just a significant thing.

Speaker 1 That should go first. Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
So it's straight read of, instead of me reading it, we got some other nut job reading it.

Speaker 20 I want to read you again what President Trump said on Truth Social. He said, I am withdrawing my support and endorsement of Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene of the great state of Georgia.

Speaker 20 Over the past few weeks, despite my creating record achievements for our country, including a total and complete victory on the shutdown, closed borders, low taxes, no men in women's sports or transgender for everyone, ending DEI, stopping Biden's record-setting inflation, the biggest regulation cuts.

Speaker 20 in history, stopping eight wards, rebuilding our military, being respected by every country in the world, as opposed to being the laughing stock that we were just 12 months ago, having trillions of dollars record setting invested in the USA, and having created the hottest country anywhere in the world for being a dead country just 12 months ago and so much more.

Speaker 20 He says, all I see wacky Marjorie do is complain, complain, complain.

Speaker 20 He went on to say, it seemed to all begin when I sent her a poll stating that she should not run run for senator or governor.

Speaker 20 She was at 12% and didn't have a chance, unless, of course, she had my endorsement, which she wasn't about to get.

Speaker 20 He said, she has told many people that she's upset that I don't return her phone calls anymore. But with 219 congressmen and women, 53 U.S.

Speaker 20 senators, 24 cabinet members, and almost 200 countries, and an otherwise normal life to lead, I can't take ranting lunatics calls every day, he says.

Speaker 20 I understand that wonderful conservative people are thinking about primaring Marjorie in her district of Georgia, that they are too

Speaker 20 fed up with her and her antics. And if the right person runs, they will have my complete and unyielding support.
She has gone far left, even doing the view with their low IQ Republican hating anchors.

Speaker 20 Trump says, thank you for your attention to this matter. Make America great again.

Speaker 1 So when I hear this, I'm like,

Speaker 1 really?

Speaker 1 And here's her reply.

Speaker 20 She posted this. She said, President Trump just attacked me and lied about me.
I haven't called him at all, but I did send these text messages today. We will show you those in a moment.

Speaker 20 She said, Apparently, this is what sent him over the edge, the Epstein files. And of course, he's coming.

Speaker 1 Now, just I just gotta stop here for a second.

Speaker 1 Three weeks ago, Marjorie Taylor Greene was all about Israel, Israel, Israel, Israel, Israel, APAC, Israel, APAC, Israel.

Speaker 1 And now it's Epstein, Epstein, Epstein.

Speaker 1 I feel a setup in this. This is the setup.
Epstein files.

Speaker 20 And of course, he's coming after me hard to make an example to scare all the other Republicans before next week's vote to release the Epstein files.

Speaker 20 She says, it's astonishing, really, how hard he's fighting to stop the Epstein files from coming out and that he actually goes to this level, she says.

Speaker 20 She went on to say, but really, most Americans wish he would fight this hard to help the forgotten men and women of America who are fed up with foreign wars and foreign causes, are going broke trying to feed their families, and are losing hope of ever achieving the American dream.

Speaker 20 That's what I voted for.

Speaker 20 I have supported President Trump with too much of my precious time, too much of my own money, and fought harder for him, even when almost all other Republicans turned their back and denounced him.

Speaker 20 And she also said, but I don't worship or serve President Trump. I worship God.
Jesus is my savior, and I serve my district, GA14, and the American people.

Speaker 20 I remain the same today as I've always been, and I will continue to...

Speaker 20 pray that this administration will be successful because the American people desperately deserve what they voted for. She said, for me, I remain America first and America only.

Speaker 1 And then she's bringing in the MAGA versus America first.

Speaker 1 Yes, that's a classic

Speaker 1 split.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 can you spell posturing?

Speaker 1 P-O-S. That's what the two of them are doing.
Well, this is

Speaker 1 a whole crowd. Yeah, WWF is what I'm feeling here.
This is a classic.

Speaker 1 Oh, yes.

Speaker 1 Exactly. This is what Trump does.
I mean,

Speaker 1 he understands this kind of show business. His pencil neck geek.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 All right. So what did you get? So did she go on the BBC? Is that what these clips are from?

Speaker 1 No, these are just analysis clips, pretty much. Not the classic.

Speaker 1 What is the BBC doing analysis on Marjorie Taylor Greene? Well, that's a, isn't that interesting? Mm-hmm. Well, let's start with the NPR clip because that's a short summary.
Okay, here we go.

Speaker 10 President Trump is cutting ties with Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene. The president posting on social media, announcing he's withdrawn support from the Georgia Republican.

Speaker 10 NPR's Ava Pukach reports that Greene suspects the rift came from her support for the release of the Epstein files.

Speaker 27 In his post, Trump called for conservatives to primary Greene, saying, quote, if the right person runs, they will have my complete and unyielding support.

Speaker 27 Green said in a post of her own that she had sent the president a text regarding the Epstein files, which she said, quote, sent him over the edge.

Speaker 27 She said Trump is trying to make an example of her to scare other Republicans ahead of the House's vote to force the release of the Epstein files.

Speaker 27 Green has been a longtime Trump ally and prominent MAGA figure, but she's been at odds with the president, notably in calling for the Justice Department to release the files about the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Now, a couple of things there. One is that this is drawing attention to the Epstein file vote.
To the votes. It's drawing the vote.
Yes. And Trump is against it.

Speaker 1 So that means that people, you know, will have to show you. Hold on, hold on.
He hasn't actually said he's against it. No, he doesn't have to.

Speaker 1 But this

Speaker 1 rift, this points it out. I think the rift between him and MTG, which is...

Speaker 1 You and I agree, is scripted bullcrap

Speaker 1 to get attention to, well, he doesn't want this to happen. And so he's going to bring out the independent Republicans to make sure they vote for it.
That would be Massey.

Speaker 1 That would be her, probably a couple others. And then they got the new woman in from the Democrat side.
The Democrats, of course, because Trump doesn't want this, are going to vote.

Speaker 1 Oh, yes, they're all going to vote for it. And at the end of the day, at least by both, and we both agree on this,

Speaker 1 the Epstein files get released and it embarrasses a bunch of Democrats and a bunch of big shots. And Trump says, hey, I never wanted this release.
And now you know why.

Speaker 1 You can blame these bastards for doing it. Marjorie Taylor Greene is like in the middle because it doesn't matter what side she takes.
She said, Well, I didn't know. I wasn't ready.
Oh, poor thing.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 that's what makes sense to me. And by the,

Speaker 1 I mean, just as a very, very short one, and I have more of this later, because it's from Valutainment and it's 14 seconds.

Speaker 1 I think there's always time for a 14 minute value tamement clip 14 second yeah yeah uh this is uh michael wolf

Speaker 18 uh on value tainment got his titan a ringer well but here's what he says epstein believed that it was trump who first informed the police about what was going on at epstein's house um

Speaker 1 and from that point on they were they were nothing but bitter enemies yeah this is like this is not unknown i mean mike Johnson said it a long time ago.

Speaker 1 He said, I think Trump was an informant for the FBI against Epstein.

Speaker 1 But, you know, that doesn't matter because

Speaker 1 my ex-timeline is filled with hate

Speaker 1 about, you know, you and me, you know, we're protecting pedophiles now. And we're, we helped get Trump elected.
You know,

Speaker 1 you don't even know. You're so wrong.

Speaker 1 There's that guy again. I don't know why we can't get rid of him.
Yeah, I so

Speaker 1 Okay, so let's go to

Speaker 1 your point that you made, and

Speaker 1 this is the point.

Speaker 1 Why does the BBC care? Yeah, let's find out. So here we go with the BBC talking about American, what amounts to gossip,

Speaker 1 talking about MTG versus Trump. President Trump has hit out at one of his hitherto most reliable allies, Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.
She has been speaking out, criticizing the U.S.

Speaker 1 close relationship with Israel, for example, calling for the release of the Justice Department files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as well.

Speaker 1 And the President has now described her as a disgrace and wacky. The BBC's Nomir Iqbal joins us live from Washington.
So, look, this is a row between

Speaker 1 two big media figures, one the President, obviously, but also Marjorie Taylor Greene, very prominent on the TV screens.

Speaker 1 Is it just that, a sort of spat between two people, or does it represent something bigger?

Speaker 22 I think it's quite easy. Certainly, I had a moment there where you feel a bit cynical and think, well, is it just, yeah, two very close people who have fallen out?

Speaker 22 But I think it's much more than that. Marjorie Taylor Green is this real firebrand, a loyal foot soldier to Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 She's

Speaker 22 known for fueling unsubstantiated conspiracy theories, but her devotion to Mr. Trump has been unquestionable.
She stood by his 2020 claims of election fraud.

Speaker 22 She supported him in the wake of the Epstein controversy, actually. She said she believed that President Trump had no involvement in the sex scandal.

Speaker 22 But in the recent months, she's really started breaking ranks with him. As you mentioned, there, she has distanced herself from the U.S.
and Trump's very close relationship with Israel.

Speaker 22 She is the only Republican to refer to what's happening in Gaza as a genocide. She has criticized his tariff policy.

Speaker 1 How about this? How about this is exactly the intended result? Because, and this is just a dream scenario.

Speaker 1 In my scenario, we force the vote and everything gets released. And the biggest pedophiles are all British,

Speaker 1 many of them from the BBC itself, which is not completely unthinkable. How many pedophiles have had to leave the BBC in the past 10 years? Quite a lot.

Speaker 1 Bring in

Speaker 1 some more royalty. I'm sure we can bring in someone.
I mean, look who's gone down.

Speaker 1 That's an extreme interpretation of what might happen. Andrew Mandelson.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 Andrew has had to leave the lodge. You know,

Speaker 1 I mean, at this point, who gives a rat's ass about Clinton? Like, the Clinton and young girls. Okay, I'm shocked.

Speaker 1 Bill Gates and young girls. Shocks.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 Shocked. Okay.

Speaker 1 But I think that there possibly could be. This is where people get on my ex-timeline.

Speaker 1 5D chess again, eh?

Speaker 1 Maybe.

Speaker 1 No, what was that?

Speaker 1 5D chess. Tremble.
Oh, 5D. Yes, now it's 5D.

Speaker 1 You know, I get blamed for things you say.

Speaker 1 It's incredible. Well, that's just because it's the way I do it.

Speaker 1 I do it in such a way that you will get blamed. I mean, it's a

Speaker 1 technique. Believe me.
No. If you had any idea of what the technique was, you'd employ it yourself.
Teach me, Master. Teach me.
No,

Speaker 1 that one I keep to myself. Teach me how to do it.

Speaker 1 All right, let's play clip two.

Speaker 22 She's just increasingly going against him and doing more media with a lot of outlets that maybe in the past she wouldn't have.

Speaker 22 And I think the Epstein scandal is something that has really come between them both. And just looking at her social media, her view is very much that

Speaker 22 the Epstein files should be released, all of them. And she's very upset that he's not doing that.

Speaker 22 And I think why it's significant is because we're talking about the MAGA base, the Make America Great Again. This is a very loyal base of Donald Trump.

Speaker 22 And splitting away from that, I think is significant, especially when it comes to Marjorie Taylor Green. And I think what we're seeing is a split between those establishment MAGA and the

Speaker 22 America First Right. These are the people like Miss Green who believe they are adhering to the principles that Donald Trump campaigned on.

Speaker 1 Don't want to be too journalistically cynical, but I mean I guess this is a fair question.

Speaker 1 Is she driven by these issues or is she driven by presidential ambitions and creating a bit of clear water between them with a view to what might be happening in Georgia?

Speaker 22 Well this is certainly what the cynics amongst in Donald Trump circles are saying that this is all about because he didn't let her run for the governor race in Georgia, for the Senate ambitions as well.

Speaker 22 I actually know someone pretty close to Marjorie Taylor Green and some of her friends who have said that that's not true and that she basically doesn't agree with a lot of what he stands for and that they're constantly fighting.

Speaker 22 And she had been fearing for her safety in terms of how other people in that world may view her, her stance. And actually on her social media, she's now saying that she is facing a lot of threats.

Speaker 1 Yeah, everyone's facing threats. Megan Kelly, everyone's facing threats.

Speaker 1 But

Speaker 1 these 20,000-plus emails didn't even come from the FBI or the State Department. They came from Epstein's estate.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 you might not have heard this, but during the 2019 House hearing of Michael Cohen, Trump's fixer,

Speaker 1 Epstein was texting with the Democrat from

Speaker 1 Stacey Plaskett.

Speaker 1 the Democrat from the U.S. Virgin Islands, non-voting member, actually.

Speaker 1 But he's texting with her. Oh, no,

Speaker 1 you got to talk about Rona, referring to his personal secretary, Rona. I forget what her last name was.
Everybody has Rona's, Rona Graf. Everybody has her number.

Speaker 1 You know, so it was, it's so obvious that Trump has

Speaker 1 nothing anywhere that is bad for him, but only for Democrats, Brits,

Speaker 1 elites. I mean, it just,

Speaker 1 this seems like you're so right. Like, yeah, I told you you didn't want to do it.

Speaker 1 It's just a little too early. It should be closer to the midterm.
Yeah, no, they have to push it off as long as they can. So then this morning, Massey comes on ABC.

Speaker 1 And by the way, can I just stop for a second? I am sick of this guy.

Speaker 1 I mean, he's entertaining. He's affable.
He's got, he's,

Speaker 1 everything's a joke to him. He's like a classic old-fashioned right-winger from the 70s.

Speaker 1 And he thinks that he knows better than everyone else, and he doesn't like to play ball. He's not that old.
He can't be from the 70s. No, no, he's got, no, he said he's the style

Speaker 1 of a 70s right-winger. Well, if you used to listen to 70s talk shows,

Speaker 1 70s and 80s talk shows

Speaker 1 with the right-wingers, they all had a certain kind of a glib style. I know more than you do.
It was a very obnoxious

Speaker 1 presentation, and I can't explain it any better than that. In the 70s, I was watching Speed Racer and Romper Rooms.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, yeah, I can't explain it. I'm sure you were.

Speaker 1 You didn't have to, when you were also not here, you weren't listening to American Talk Radio.

Speaker 1 Let me ask you a question. If your wife died suddenly, how long do you feel it appropriate before you remarry?

Speaker 1 Depends.

Speaker 1 I'm just asking you on a personal level. What do you think?

Speaker 1 I think you could do it within a year. Yeah, that's exactly what he did.

Speaker 1 It depends on your personal, it depends on your type, what kind of person you are.

Speaker 1 If you're like a couple or somebody just, you know, just gloms on, you know, women and gets married or just couples up real fast, it could be pretty quick.

Speaker 1 But if it was something that's pre-if you're already having an affair with somebody. Well, he knew her along

Speaker 1 before. No, that's always suspicious to me.
I don't, I've, I mean, I have no standing in this area personally.

Speaker 1 But here he is.

Speaker 1 Let's listen to what he has to say. He also has changed his look.
He looks a lot younger with the

Speaker 1 new lady. The beard.

Speaker 1 Well, she's got a business. He's got a beard now? What? Yeah, he's got a beard, mustache.
Oh, I got to look this up.

Speaker 1 He looks much better. I have to say, he looks younger in this as a TV producer.
I'm just saying, I think he's reinvented his character.

Speaker 28 I'm joined now by Republican Congressman Congressman Thomas Massey of Kentucky, who led the effort to release the Epstein files. Congressman Massey, thank you for being here.

Speaker 28 President Trump fought long and hard to prevent your discharge petition from going through. You won that battle.
Now, what happens?

Speaker 28 How many Republicans in the House follow your lead and defy the president on this?

Speaker 1 A lot of them.

Speaker 6 I think we could have a deluge of Republicans. There could be 100 or more.
I'm hoping to get a veto-proof majority on this legislation when it comes up for a vote.

Speaker 6 And, you know, the president's been saying this is a hoax. He's been saying that for months.
Well, he's just now decided to investigate a hoax if it's a hoax.

Speaker 6 And I have another concern about these investigations that he's announced. If they have ongoing investigations in certain areas, those documents can't be released.

Speaker 6 So this might be a big smokescreen, these investigations. to open a bunch of them to as a last-ditch effort to prevent the release of the Epstein files.

Speaker 28 I mean, it is extraordinary to hear him demand an investigation and only mention Democrats, only mention his political opponents.

Speaker 1 But you're saying he doesn't really, he may not really even want any investigation.

Speaker 28 He wants to prevent the release.

Speaker 1 Why does he want to prevent this?

Speaker 1 What is he afraid of?

Speaker 1 What is he afraid of? What could it be?

Speaker 6 You know, I've never said that these files will implicate Donald Trump. And I really don't think that they will.

Speaker 6 I think he's trying to protect a bunch of rich and powerful friends, billionaires, donors to his campaign, friends in his social circles. And

Speaker 6 that's my operating theory on why he's trying so hard to keep these files closed.

Speaker 1 That doesn't seem at all plausible. I don't think he cares.
First of all, he doesn't need money to get re-elected. So why are you protecting your donors? Perfect.
Is this right there? You're loyalty.

Speaker 1 He'll throw anybody under the bus for anything. He does it all the time.
Do it.

Speaker 1 Yes. Yeah.

Speaker 1 All the time.

Speaker 1 Yeah,

Speaker 1 this has to do with the 2016.

Speaker 1 2016, geez. 2026 election.

Speaker 1 So if our thesis, because it's just a thesis, it's not that we go to bed at night hoping for this. Although it would be kind of cool if there was a whole bunch of pedophiles in the BBC.

Speaker 1 No, that would be, that part is new. That would be ideal.
That would be ideal.

Speaker 1 It would be pretty funny. It's possible.
I mean, we kind of papered papered over that Jim will fix it business.

Speaker 1 Don't talk about it.

Speaker 1 Forget about the kids and the TV show with the kids and the corpses.

Speaker 1 It's just talk about that.

Speaker 1 Maybe Massey is a part of it. Maybe Massey is because he seems like...
No.

Speaker 1 You think he's

Speaker 1 a willing idiot in this particular game? He has to be.

Speaker 1 This guy, if you just listen to him enough, you couldn't trust him to be part. You couldn't trust to read him in.
You just get the sense that, yeah, you could read him in and he would blow it up.

Speaker 1 You just don't, he's just one of those guys, I believe. I could be wrong, but I mean, he may be a player.

Speaker 1 I just do not think he, I think he's an independent guy that doesn't, and you read him in on something, he'd be aghast, think it's disgusting. I mean, the scheme would be try.

Speaker 1 Why would you try to scheme against the American public? The files would have to be, would have to have something so awesome that you could drag it out for,

Speaker 1 well, essentially, 10 more months in media.

Speaker 1 You know, because let's say this comes out, let's say maybe January. I think it probably won't happen until then.
There'll be some other, you know, Trump will probably do some more like, oh,

Speaker 1 and then you say, oh, whatever.

Speaker 1 Okay. Let's say the vote goes, they have to release the files.
Yeah, she can slow walk it.

Speaker 1 She can slow walk it probably to February, March. Okay.
At some point, at some point. Still, it has to be so egregious that you can drag everyone down into it for six months.
That's a long time.

Speaker 1 I know. This is a real problem.
I see it the same way. All right, let's check out clearly.

Speaker 1 Because of the quick, the cycle of, you know, people just forget.

Speaker 1 You know, this is what Schumer's banking on, you know, that the thing's going to blow over and he's going to be. Oh, people already forgot about the shot.
Yes, it's true.

Speaker 1 They've already forgotten Schumer's good to go. He's back on track.
We're already done.

Speaker 28 What do you think is actually in these files? I mean, we've seen so much Epstein material from the criminal cases, the stuff that just came out this week, you know, from the estate.

Speaker 1 What do you stop it against? Yeah.

Speaker 1 You know, they talk and talk and talk about these files.

Speaker 1 Have you noticed that not one person, including us, have mentioned

Speaker 1 the real deal on

Speaker 1 the videotapes? That's what we want. Well, maybe files, they imply.
No, they can imply all they want. They're not talking about the tapes.

Speaker 1 Tapes?

Speaker 1 The CDs. The tapes.
The CDs, the CD-ROMs. I think it's all.
Well, whatever they are, it doesn't matter. But there's recordings, the recordings of people in the bedrooms.

Speaker 1 I don't even think there's that much of that.

Speaker 1 They said

Speaker 1 there was clauses full.

Speaker 1 Let's find out.

Speaker 1 You know, we're all going to be on edge. We're just waiting for this.

Speaker 28 What do you think is left?

Speaker 1 Yeah, I don't have to guess at what's in the files.

Speaker 6 I've talked to the survivors through their lawyer, and we know there are at least 20 people in those files.

Speaker 6 There are politicians, billionaires, movie producers who are implicated criminally, who haven't been investigated.

Speaker 6 And it's up to the FBI, not the survivors, and the DOJ, to release those names or at least to investigate them.

Speaker 6 And when I see Donald Trump announce a bunch of investigations, I don't see him going after these rich elites that are implicated in these files, according to the survivors.

Speaker 1 So the BBC, again, BBC wrote an article about who else was mentioned in, it says Epstein files, but I think that's just these emails. So Michael Wolfe, we know that.

Speaker 1 The Larry Summers is interesting. Yeah.
I think that's

Speaker 1 now he was.

Speaker 1 He was. What was his job previously? He was in the Treasury.
He was.

Speaker 1 Right. Right.

Speaker 1 Catherine Rumler.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 I saw a picture of her in the list of the.

Speaker 1 She looks worried.

Speaker 1 She's at Goldman Sachs, but this happened pre-Goldman Sachs. Peter Thiel.

Speaker 1 Nah, probably nothing there. Noam Chomsky.
I can't imagine what that could be. He's gay.
So, yeah. he doesn't need young girls.

Speaker 1 Noam Chomsky.

Speaker 1 That's funny. Yeah, probably nothing.
But that was probably just, you know, he did this thing.

Speaker 1 You have to remember, Epstein did this thing because, you know, different people got involved in it where he would socialize with scientists so he could find out things that he needed to know for some leverage of some sort or other.

Speaker 1 Yeah. So he would probably hang out with Chomsky, but I just cannot see that guy going to the island or even taking getting on a plane.
Going to the island. It's not going to happen.

Speaker 1 Let's continue with this riveting ABC interview.

Speaker 28 The president has gone after you in some deeply personal ways. I mean, attacking you over and over again,

Speaker 1 even attacking you

Speaker 28 regarding your wedding, your recent wedding, which, by the way, congratulations.

Speaker 28 What do you make of all that? And he's obviously supporting your... primary opponents.
I mean,

Speaker 28 what kind of retribution are you facing?

Speaker 6 You know, my wife told me, she said, I told you so. We should have invited Donald Trump.
He's mad that he didn't get an invitation.

Speaker 6 So, you know, we're taking it with a grain of salt. He's being a bully or trying to be a bully.

Speaker 6 And they're trying to beat me here in Kentucky. But here's what's interesting.
The people financing this campaign consist completely of three billionaires, and they're all in the Epstein class.

Speaker 6 In fact, one of them is named in Epstein's phone book, not the secret files that the FBI is keeping, but in Epstein's phone book. So

Speaker 1 everybody's in Epstein's phone book. I don't know who.
Yeah, that's true. But who? Why isn't he? I don't know.
Does he tell us who it is? No. It's a small world.

Speaker 6 Dogs don't bark at parked cars, and we are winning. I'm not tired of winning yet, but we are winning.
And not only the speaker, but the

Speaker 6 attorney general, the FBI director, and the president himself and the vice president, they're taking a big loss this week because after months of fighting, I am winning this week with Rokana.

Speaker 6 We're forcing this vote and it's going to happen.

Speaker 6 I would remind my Republican colleagues who are deciding how to vote, Donald Trump can protect you in red districts right now by giving you an endorsement, but in 2030, he's not going to be the president and you will have voted to protect pedophiles if you don't vote to release these files and the president can't protect you then.

Speaker 6 This vote, the record of this vote, will last longer than Donald Trump's president.

Speaker 1 Yeah, there's something, there's something there. That's a good threat.
threat. I like that threat.
Yeah, it's a good threat. Yeah.
And

Speaker 1 that would kind of make it sound as though he's in on it, but I still can't. I just think he's just a useful idiot.
Here's the last clip.

Speaker 28 Now, I've talked to Senate leadership who tell me that this Jonathan Carnegie is the one and only even going to be brought up for a vote in the Senate.

Speaker 28 What's your sense on that?

Speaker 1 Wait a minute. Now, what vote in the Senate do we need all of a sudden?

Speaker 1 Why do we thought this was a House vote? Do we need the Senate now, too?

Speaker 1 Not that I know of.

Speaker 1 Let me listen again.

Speaker 28 Leadership

Speaker 28 would tell me that this is almost certainly not even going to be brought up for a vote in the Senate.

Speaker 28 What's your sense on that? I mean, I guess if there's an overwhelming vote, like you said, 100 Republicans join all the Democrats, the pressure will be immense.

Speaker 28 But do you have any sense the Senate's even going to vote on this?

Speaker 6 Well, they don't have the procedural maneuver that Rocana and I used in the House. They don't have that in the Senate.
It's called a discharge petition.

Speaker 6 But the senators do have other ways to force votes, as amendments, for instance, on larger bills in order to let bills move quicker through the chamber.

Speaker 6 So they could force the vote in spite of the leadership's efforts. I just hope Jon Thune will do the right thing.

Speaker 6 Look, our own Speaker tried to push this bill by unanimous consent last week within 15 minutes of me getting the 218th vote because he was trying to save people from a vote.

Speaker 6 If he's ready to pass it by unanimous consent, then the Senate leader should be as well. Just bring it up, but the pressure is going to be there if we get a big vote in the House.

Speaker 1 Oh, so it sounds like you do need the Senate to vote on this. That's what it sounds like.
But I like the trickery of Johnson to do a non-vote, just pass it by unanimous consent,

Speaker 1 so nobody can have it

Speaker 1 marked against them as all pro-pedophile. You let the Senate hang.

Speaker 1 You let the senators go for it.

Speaker 1 And they'd have to do the same thing because you can't be on the record voting against this because it looks like you're protecting pedophiles. And so this is very tricky, and it's definitely

Speaker 1 going to have to happen.

Speaker 1 But if you're trying to keep it from happen

Speaker 1 by our thesis, if you're trying to keep it from happening until the midterms, as close to them as you can, to submarine the Democrats,

Speaker 1 it's going to be rough.

Speaker 1 Here's Senator Chris Murphy is brought into the conversation by Jonathan Carl.

Speaker 28 On Epstein, the president is now demanding or has demanded that the Attorney General, the Justice Department, investigate his political opponents.

Speaker 28 And Pam Bondi responded by basically saying, yes, sir, and moving in that direction. What do you make of that?

Speaker 29 Well, it's both heartbreaking and totally unsurprising. The Department of Justice has just become a protection racket for Donald Trump and a witch hunt operation against his political opponents.

Speaker 29 This is why our democracy...

Speaker 1 Which political opponents? Bill Clinton? Is he a political opponent? I have not heard a name who is a political opponent. Opponent of what? The 2028 election?

Speaker 1 This Murphy guy's the worst.

Speaker 29 Is in such peril right now is that for the first time in our history, the Department of Justice operates in order to try to punish and lock up anybody that criticizes Donald Trump.

Speaker 29 I'm really proud of the work that Representative Massey has done in the House of Representatives along with Rocana.

Speaker 29 And yes, John Thune should bring that vote to the Senate floor as soon as it passes the House of Representatives.

Speaker 29 It's true that Donald Trump is trying to cover up for, I think, a host of really powerful and rich people, but he's frankly not that selfless.

Speaker 29 He wouldn't be going through all of this effort to try to stop the release of these files if he wasn't seriously implicated in those files.

Speaker 29 This is most likely the biggest corruption scandal in the history of the country. We know that because Donald Trump is going to these extraordinary lengths to stop these files from coming out.

Speaker 29 The Senate should take this vote. I think it'll be likely another big bipartisan vote.
And I'm grateful to our House colleagues for sending it our way.

Speaker 1 I mean,

Speaker 1 the only thing that

Speaker 1 really could be

Speaker 1 Before you make that, I think this guy's insincere. He knows exactly what's going on.
The Democrats know that they're trying to push this off to the primary.

Speaker 1 I keep saying primaries, but the midterms. They keep trying to push off.
And these guys know that that's what they're trying to do. So they keep saying, it's Trump.
It's Trump. He's in there.

Speaker 1 He's in the thing. We got to get it out quick because they want it out quick.
They don't want to. But this is insincerity at the highest order from this guy, Murphy.
This Murphy guy is a bad guy.

Speaker 1 He's a bad dude. He's a bad dude.
He is terrible, but he knows exactly what's going on. I'm not fooled by this nonsense.
He's up there with corn pop, another bad dude.

Speaker 1 How about this, though? How about, I mean, everyone's talking pedophile, pedophile, pedophile. Meh.

Speaker 1 I would be less surprised if what came out is MI6,

Speaker 1 possibly Mossad, but I think MI6 is more likely.

Speaker 1 That's what Epstein was involved in. That's what Maxwell was involved in.
That's what Maxwell was involved in. Yeah, blackmail operations.
Yeah, but from MI6,

Speaker 1 not from the Mossad.

Speaker 1 Yeah, you know,

Speaker 1 yeah, maybe.

Speaker 1 Well, I mean, that's our thinking right now. We're kind of floating in that direction.
Yes. With this anti-MI6, all of a sudden we've established that I may have been hypnotized in my hour and

Speaker 1 been

Speaker 1 pre-programmed to blame the MI6 for something that Mossad's doing because

Speaker 1 the Jews, the Mossads actually run the BBC.

Speaker 1 And that's what we don't understand because we know that the Jews run the media, so why don't they run the BBC? And the whole thing is a misdirection and we've been duped, both of us. Possibly.

Speaker 1 Here's the president. I know nothing.
This, by the way, is sweetened by

Speaker 1 News Nation.

Speaker 1 This is run through Adobe. This is the president on the plane, and this is what it sounds like when you run it through Adobe, which is well done.
I mean,

Speaker 1 it gets choppy here and there.

Speaker 30 I know nothing about that. They would have announced that a long time ago.
It's really what did he mean when he spent all the time with Bill Clinton? Clint?

Speaker 30 With the president of Harvard, who you know who that is, Summers?

Speaker 1 Oh, Larry Summers, the president of Harvard. Oh, that's right.
No, he was with the Treasury Department. He became the president of Harvard.
Later, yeah,

Speaker 1 before or later. I can't remember.
I meant to look it up. He's either before or later.
Now, if you want an MI6

Speaker 1 connection, Larry Summers, when he was at the Treasury Department,

Speaker 1 banking, City of London, I don't know.

Speaker 30 Larry Summers, whatever his name is,

Speaker 31 all of the other people that he spent time with.

Speaker 30 Jeffrey Epson and I had a very bad relationship for many years.

Speaker 30 But he also saw strength because I was president. So he dictated a couple of memos to himself.
Give me a break.

Speaker 30 You're going to find out what did he know with respect to Bill Clinton, with respect to the head of Harvard, with respect to all of those people that he knew, including J.P.

Speaker 31 Morgan Chase.

Speaker 1 Now, the J.P. Morgan Chase thing is very interesting because all those docs, no one's talking about it, but all of the documents came out, I think, a week or two ago.

Speaker 1 And JPMorgan Chase, he was like, yeah, I need $800,000. Okay, here it is, cash.
I need $50,000. Give it to that person.
There was all kinds of suspicious transaction reports being filed.

Speaker 1 Anybody would have been kicked out of the bank except for Epstein.

Speaker 1 And so, if you listen very carefully to what the president says here, he tells us what we're going to see.

Speaker 30 But he also saw strength because I was president. So he dictated a couple of memos to himself.
Give me a break.

Speaker 30 You're going to find out what did he know with respect to Bill Clinton, with respect to the head of Harvard, with respect to all of those people that he knew, including J.P.

Speaker 31 Morgan Chase.

Speaker 1 What did he know? What did he know?

Speaker 1 Yeah, maybe. You know, Trump does this.
It's possible. I'm going to read you Larry Summers' little bio here,

Speaker 1 or the chronology. He was a Harvard president from 2001 to 2006.
Then he became the United States Secretary of the Treasury under Clinton in 99. Well, he's there from 99 to 2001.

Speaker 1 Then he became Harvard. He's a Clinton Rhodes Scholar.
Yeah, and he's a Democrat. Yeah, Rhodes Scholar.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Then he became

Speaker 1 the undersecretary,

Speaker 1 95 to 95. Okay, so he went from the Treasury to Harvard, and then he became the director of the National Economics Council in 2009 after he left Harvard.
He was there from 2001 to 2006.

Speaker 1 So he's a Clintonista. And he

Speaker 1 right, yeah. Which brings us back to this makes it more English.

Speaker 1 Maybe it's much less about sex stuff and a lot more about

Speaker 1 espionage, control,

Speaker 1 finance,

Speaker 1 finance.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, hopefully we'll know. Four more years.
The one thing that I did learn, and this is possibly the reason why Bannon was kind of kicked out of Trump's circle.

Speaker 1 And Bannon, by the way, is listed in the group that

Speaker 1 Massey was talking about, the 10 people. Santa was one of them.
So on the value tayments,

Speaker 1 I'm big on the... By the way, I've been talking to Justin from the boots and the sneakers.
No agenda boots, no agenda sneakers. Yeah.
He's all in.

Speaker 1 He says, you're going to have cool stitching on the sneakers with no agenda on it. We'll do something cool on the boots.
Yeah. No, we're going to rival the value tainment boys.
With our

Speaker 1 probably beat them. Oh, easily.
We're going to be cheaper for starters. Like $599

Speaker 1 for shoes. We have to consider the cost of these things.
I mean, you can't be. Well, and these are made in America, not made in Europe.
Italy. Italy.
No, it's made in America, baby, by Americans.

Speaker 1 Anyway. Yeah, we know how to make shoes.
Sneakers. We invented the sneaker.
We invented the sneaker.

Speaker 1 You don't need to have your sneakers because the PDB is the value tainment are sneakers just with leather-looking tops. Anyway, onward.
We'll get to that when we get to it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, you were making a point before you got to strike.

Speaker 1 About the value tamement guy.

Speaker 1 And I have to say, I love

Speaker 1 the PDB value tainment guy because he has Michael Wolf on.

Speaker 1 He's talking about PBD himself. Yeah, PBD himself is talking to Michael Wolf.
And PBD is like, he's basically, I mean, if you listen to a whole interview,

Speaker 1 he really wanted to buy the tapes.

Speaker 1 He wants to buy the tapes, the hundred hours or whatever that Michael Wolf has. And Michael Wolf is not selling.

Speaker 1 and but he he keeps until he finally he actually at the end he says, Oh, I thought you wanted to sell the tape.

Speaker 1 No, no, I'm never going to sell the tapes because you know, I'm sure he's being optioned. Hey, Brunetti, Brunetti, this is you got to option this guy.
Think about that

Speaker 1 House of Epstein, just a thought, House of Epstein. Oh, yeah, that's a winner.
Yeah, I mean, 50 Shades of Epstein. Come on, man, keep the fray, keep the franchise going.

Speaker 1 Um,

Speaker 1 so

Speaker 1 in this conversation,

Speaker 1 it comes up and

Speaker 1 PBD thinks that Bannon has tapes too.

Speaker 1 And Michael Wolf sets him straight on this. And I think this is probably the reason why Bannon was kicked out.
With the 100 hours that you have,

Speaker 1 is there anything in there? Like, let's just say I'm an interested buyer. I would be interested in buying the 100 hours that you have.

Speaker 1 PBD is a businessman. I want to buy that, man.

Speaker 1 I don't need Brunetti. I can produce it myself in Italy.
Be interested in buying Bannon's 15, 16 hours that he has, right? I would be interested in both of them.

Speaker 18 How about that? Let me just add about Bannon's. Bannon, I wouldn't buy them from Bannon if I were you because Bannon does not own them.

Speaker 1 Oh, who owns them? I didn't know that.

Speaker 18 Yeah, Jeffrey Epstein paid for those, the estate owns.

Speaker 1 The estate owns it. So, wow.
Okay. So that's a new fact.
He would never be able to use those hours in a documentary.

Speaker 18 Yes, and again, and again,

Speaker 18 let me stress that

Speaker 18 although Steve, who I am personally fond of,

Speaker 1 when someone says that, I'm personally fond of you, that means I hate you.

Speaker 18 Although Steve, who I am personally fond of,

Speaker 18 but Steve's cover here that he was making a documentary about Epstein is 100%

Speaker 18 not true. I know this because I was there and

Speaker 18 I'm fully aware, and actually have it on tape of what transpired here. And that was Bannon's effort to help Epstein with his legal problems.

Speaker 18 And this would be in 2019 when the law was closing in on Epstein. And Bannon's suggestion was that Epstein go on national TV to try to perform a mea culpa or explain or humanize himself in some way.

Speaker 18 And then Bannon offered to help prepare him. So essentially what Bannon was doing was media training.

Speaker 18 He was tutoring Epstein in how to face a hostile interview on a you know on a hypothetical 60 minutes.

Speaker 1 Huh.

Speaker 1 So Bannon was

Speaker 1 clip of the day.

Speaker 1 Geez, thank you very much. Highly unexpected.

Speaker 1 Clip of the day.

Speaker 1 Yes, indeed. So what would a former naval intelligence guy want to do to be helping Epstein with his image in a hypothetical 60 Minutes interview? This reeks of intelligence issues.

Speaker 1 It reeks of something. For one thing, Bannon as

Speaker 1 an image consultant media advisor. Look at his own.
Look at his hair. No,

Speaker 1 that's not the guy. Thank Bannon, shave.
That's not the guy. That's not the guy you want for that.

Speaker 1 So,

Speaker 1 you know, and perhaps that is the biggest problem is that

Speaker 1 because we know that Epstein, you know, oh, he's intelligence. You know, that's what

Speaker 1 was said during his early prosecution. Oh, he's intelligence.
He belongs to intelligence.

Speaker 1 Everyone thinks CIA. No, I think British intelligence.

Speaker 1 Then how close is British intelligence to naval intelligence? I don't know. This just smells of something different.

Speaker 1 Sources and methods. I don't know.

Speaker 1 I think the whole smoke screen.

Speaker 1 I'm just thinking offhand that Bannon and meeting up with Epsy supposedly as a media consultant is really a debriefing.

Speaker 1 Ooh. Yeah.
There you go. Debriefing.
Yes.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 Wow. I don't know.
You know, it makes things exciting, though. That's for sure.
We're the only ones doing this.

Speaker 1 Everyone else is mad, just mad.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 1 it's fine that we don't have better support.

Speaker 1 No, this is this is we had a look

Speaker 1 at this as we get into it. I do have a report about the Albany meetup.

Speaker 1 Why don't we do that now, man? I mean,

Speaker 1 it's a good time for it. But yes, when it comes to support, I mean, not just financially, but just

Speaker 1 philosophically, people are just, they're people who just hate us, hate us for not, you know, being on the same firing line as the other podcasts. You know,

Speaker 1 we have always just spoken our own mind, and people can't believe it when they disagree with us or our opinion. And then, you know, we're captured, we're on the take, or

Speaker 1 nobody can identify who captured us. Well, the Jews, hello, that's obvious.

Speaker 1 Hey, with that, I want to thank you for your courage. Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea and Chomsky on an airplane.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the only, only Mr. John C.

Speaker 1 Newark.

Speaker 1 Yeah, in the morning, you're saying I'm crazy. You morning our ship's sequence of the rough in the air.
Sheps in the water in the dames and nights out there.

Speaker 1 In the morning to the trolls in the troll room. We show down to the big water.

Speaker 1 We have zero, zero listeners.

Speaker 1 Zero. It's unlikely since they've been cuing you in more than once here today.

Speaker 1 No one has cued me at all today. No.
Everything is.

Speaker 1 I'm honest about that. No, there's exactly zero.
It literally said troll count zero. Listener count zero.

Speaker 1 Oh, wait. Darreno has 1889.
Thank you, Darren. Okay, Darren somehow got the numbers.

Speaker 1 I trust Darren.

Speaker 1 1889. Okay.
Yeah, it's too low. Well, it is what it is.
There was, there's, again, there's been some problems with the

Speaker 1 troll room. Let me see, Void Zero sent me some message during the show that

Speaker 1 there's something, something broke. I don't know.
It's what it is. It's amazing any of this stuff works at all.
Yeah, I have to agree.

Speaker 1 To be honest. Anyway, those trolls are listening live.
They're listening to us through

Speaker 1 noagendastream.com.

Speaker 1 And they may even be, if they're smart, they may be listening on one of those modern podcast apps, podcastapps.com, where you get alerted when we go live or any of the no agenda streams.

Speaker 1 And in fact, any podcast can do this. Any podcast can go live.

Speaker 1 And these modern podcast apps, if you're listening right now in Podverse or Fountain or Podcast Guru or TrueFans, you'll see a little donate button.

Speaker 1 So you can literally, while you're listening, hit that button and it'll go straight to our donation page. Bob's your uncle.
Boom, done.

Speaker 1 You can even boost us if you have enough sats in your wallet. And it shows up in our strike account.
So we're a very, very modern show here. We're really doing some cool things.

Speaker 1 Value for value.

Speaker 1 It's kept us straight and honest and on the right path for 18 years. It's always a roller coaster, particularly when big issues come around.
I don't think I've ever quite seen it like this, though,

Speaker 1 where there's just so much vitriol out. There's a lot more podcasts, you know, and

Speaker 1 we don't go on enough other podcasts. We We need to go on everyone else's podcast.

Speaker 1 Well, I find that disgusting.

Speaker 1 What do you find disgusting? I mean, I'll do it, but I don't because I see these podcasters and they're Tucker's on this guy's podcast, and he's on Tucker's podcast.

Speaker 1 This is the log-rolling kind of thing, and they're all of the same. The America First people are the worst, yeah.
This is, and by the way, Fuentes has, you know, he has this, they even have a hat.

Speaker 1 Oh, he has America First hat? Yeah, and they're blue. Merch.
Merch. The merch.
It's a blue hat instead of red, and it says America First. It's to counter the MAGA hat.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 So this phony baloney schism, which, by the way, was mentioned in those BBC reports we played, the schism between America First and MAGA is bogus.

Speaker 1 It's only on podcasts. It's probably

Speaker 1 on podcasts. Yeah.
It's probably about the BBC brought it up. I'd say it's about a million people who who are aware of it and probably 300,000 who really care.

Speaker 1 That's what I'm thinking. That's pretty generous.
Maybe. But, you know, maybe it's Megan Kelly's doing her.

Speaker 1 We need to do an arena.

Speaker 1 Megan Kelly, Candice, Tucker, Fuentes, and

Speaker 1 maybe two or three others, Dave Smith, perhaps, and a couple others, are all on this America first bandwagon. Yeah.
And they're all blowing each other.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 We need to get in on that game. And so they're going from their podcast to this podcast, and then they're talking about, they're not only doing that, they're talking about each other.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I know, I know. On one side of the fence, and then they're talking about the other side of the fence, which has got

Speaker 1 Trump. But see, this is what happens.

Speaker 1 That's why, and I think that's...

Speaker 1 Part of what we're seeing before, unfolding before us is they have to keep moving to new topics because at a certain point, people burn out on the israel thing and it has moved this move from the israel thing to the back to the epstein thing um

Speaker 1 and then it'll move to foreign wars and it's kind of a it's a circular thing it goes around and around and around and around and it is one of the oldest um

Speaker 1 tricks in the in the british playbook is divide and conquer it kind of happened to the tea the tea party you remember the tea party ron paul oh yeah they got co-opted by a bunch of republican uh old hacks yeah and then ron paul was out They kicked him out.

Speaker 1 Yeah, Ron Paul is the first thing. He was the first thing.

Speaker 1 He was to the curb immediately.

Speaker 1 And I loved Ron Paul.

Speaker 1 Do you remember that? This is during the era of the show.

Speaker 1 Do you remember when they had one of the first CPAC meetings, and that's when the Tea Party was getting very prominent before they kicked Ron Paul out?

Speaker 1 And they did a straw poll on who should be president, and Ron Paul beat them all by a large margin. Yeah, and all of a sudden, Tea Party was taken over by somebody else.
Who took over the Tea Party?

Speaker 1 It was one of these Texas congressmen.

Speaker 1 Texas is loaded with these two-faced Republicans who

Speaker 1 like the kidding. Yeah, you're there.

Speaker 1 You can see more of them than I know of.

Speaker 1 Let me see. Who took over? Oh, I can't remember that one guy's name, but he, and then some people from the Northeast also grabbed part of it, and the whole thing was destroyed

Speaker 1 from the inside out from co-option.

Speaker 1 Very standard way of doing it. Ron Paul pretty much says the Republican Party took over, but

Speaker 1 it was certain people. It was just a group, the old line, the rhinos.
I wouldn't call it. They're not really rhinos.

Speaker 1 Wait, wait, wait. Didn't they get taken over by Sarah Palin, Michelle Bachman, and people? No, no, they came later.
There was

Speaker 1 a male in particular who started to dominate the Tea Party thing. We'd have to, we can do it.
We'll look into it later. It's kind of boring.

Speaker 1 But the fact is, is that this sort of thing is what this divide and conquer and this america first thing is part of that

Speaker 1 it's it's yeah it's part of that same same system and that's why you know half these guys they're all bitching about i mean they were all they're all in line with complaining about israel and they're all in line about now complaining about trump they all have issues because trump promised this he promised that the guy's been in office for less than a year

Speaker 1 and he's supposed to have done this and that fuentes hates him right but but this is this is all about the midterms. It's all about the true control, which will be

Speaker 1 the House and the Senate.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 my prediction

Speaker 1 is that the

Speaker 1 Democrats will flip the House. They'll get the House, impeach Trump immediately.

Speaker 1 And what are they going to impeach him on?

Speaker 1 The Venezuelan boats. That's why it crops up as a legal thing.

Speaker 1 Interesting.

Speaker 1 Hmm.

Speaker 1 Well, that would suck.

Speaker 1 Yeah, because it would just screw everything up and you're going to be back on track to nothing.

Speaker 1 Nothing.

Speaker 1 We just play those clips from the previous two impeachments. Same stuff.
Yeah, just a waste of time.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 I'm asking the AIs.

Speaker 1 And it does seem that Sarah Palin is mentioned continuously as no, she got involved. She was no doubt about that.

Speaker 1 All of a sudden, she's a Tea Party person. Yes, that was the 2010 National Tea Party Convention in Nashville, and that's when it all fell apart for Ron Paul.

Speaker 1 Ted Cruz,

Speaker 1 Michelle Bachman.

Speaker 1 Yeah, there's one guy whose name is mentioned. I can

Speaker 1 jump up and down.

Speaker 1 Anyway, hey,

Speaker 1 Time, Talent, and Treasure is how value for value works. And the only way that we have continued on this merry journey for you podcast enthusiasts out there is by your support

Speaker 1 and one of the ways you can support us is by helping us create ai slop for the show we have a great uh addition to our musical uh coming up end of show slop

Speaker 1 and uh darren o'neal did the artwork for us which was all ai of course darren knows what he's doing this was the uh

Speaker 1 Octagon. This was a I mean, you don't have to do use AI for this simple

Speaker 1 joke. He used AI.
Well, actually, you know, and by the way,

Speaker 1 the stop sign is not six-sided. It's A-sided.
We kept saying six-sided. Well, that's because the producer said six-sides.
Yeah, and then we fell in line. Yes.

Speaker 1 I also got another mea culpa for us from the Archduke of Central Florida. He says, a comment for you on show 1816 after the first break, you were talking about the 50-year mortgage.

Speaker 1 During that discussion, you talked about deductibility of interest for income tax purposes. You suggested there was a limitation on the amount of interest that could be deducted.

Speaker 1 In 2017, the 2017 tax bill limited the SALT, state and local income taxes,

Speaker 1 deduction to $10,000, raised it to $40,000, the big, beautiful bill. This limitation only relates to state and local taxes.

Speaker 1 Income and sales property and sales tax property has nothing to do with interest. The only limitation on interest deductibility relates to interest on mortgages that are more than $1 million.

Speaker 1 I looked this up, and I would recommend people go to publication 936. Go 936, everybody.
And it discusses, and the number they have there is not 1 million, but 750,000.

Speaker 1 So I don't know, but publication 936 of 2024, a whole mortgage and interest deduction, explains this. And yes, we're probably wrong.

Speaker 1 And we do not give tax advice on the show. It's all just, we just talk.
He also said, not trying to be critical. No,

Speaker 1 we can tell you. No, we can do it.
These corrections are noted. We can tell

Speaker 1 and researched. Yes.

Speaker 1 So he has to explain publication 936 to me. The things that get my goat is when they say, as a Christian, I don't feel you were really contributing to the kingdom with that conversation.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, that would be you mostly. Mostly.
That gets my goat. Yeah, it should.
Okay,

Speaker 1 everybody out there, you have your marching orders. You know what gets his goat?

Speaker 1 Thanks.

Speaker 1 There it is, John being mean to me.

Speaker 1 Mean.

Speaker 1 So, Darren did the

Speaker 1 no agenda stop sign, which should immediately remind you to donate.

Speaker 1 Oh, I got another note from about the stop sign. One of our producers went on and on with a long exposition, which is so good.

Speaker 1 I'm going to probably put it in a newsletter, or I may put it online somehow. Yeah.
If I get permission. Can you summarize?

Speaker 1 Yes, the original stop signs were yellow. Oh.

Speaker 1 And there's a number of, in fact, most of the stop signs were yellow until like the, you know, at some point they started. In fact, he's got,

Speaker 1 there's some town in Indiana that had yellow ones until like the 80s. And then he pointed this out that the history of the stop sign was not always what it was.

Speaker 1 And he says stop in a German stop sign, too, instead of halt.

Speaker 1 He pointed that, he thought that was weird.

Speaker 1 And there's also a blue stop sign that came and went that was used in some sort of railroad uh crossings or something is different but he's so he's a very interesting lecture it was a long

Speaker 1 two-page lecture about stop signs i recommend that this guy write a book the history of the stop sign and we will in fact give you the little blurbs for your book yeah

Speaker 1 couldn't do the show without this book

Speaker 1 Other artwork that was now, I like the sumo wrestler. You didn't like the Sumo Wrestler.
I don't know why you have something about fat guys,

Speaker 1 which is also a Darren O'Neal.

Speaker 1 The other one we talked about, we thought Jeffrey Rhea's

Speaker 1 Poor African Kids with No Agenity shirts was funny, but even we didn't feel that was appropriate. Yes, we thought it was in bad taste.
Very bad taste.

Speaker 1 There were lots of drone stuff, the lesbian report. I personally like Ness Works as I'm a podcast enthusiast, but like, yeah, the stop sign was just better.

Speaker 1 And people are trying to do little cartoons.

Speaker 1 You're overcomplicating it. The art just has to be simple.

Speaker 1 You know, you've got Trump, the Trump show hitting a red button, you're fired, Kimmel, then a guy gets shot out of a cannon, doesn't even look like Kimmel, looks like Colbert.

Speaker 1 You're making it too complicated. Just try to be simple.

Speaker 1 Right?

Speaker 1 It does look like Colbert. Yeah, it does.
It doesn't look like Kimmel at all.

Speaker 1 And they got the Trump show, and then Dvorak and Curry down at the bottom. Yeah,

Speaker 1 simple. Think simple.
And Jeffrey Rhea is thinking too simple. He's found the new model to use, new LLM, new generative AI.
And it's got this very distinctive look, kind of blockish.

Speaker 1 What do you call that? You're the art major here. What do you call that?

Speaker 1 The blockish look? Yeah, like the two spooks, the Intel sharing. He's got a couple of.

Speaker 1 I had to find one of these pieces you're talking about. Yeah, if you roll down,

Speaker 1 no agenda. It's Intel sharing.
You got two spooks handing each other a classified document. He has a couple.
He's done a couple of these.

Speaker 1 It's a style. It's a style.

Speaker 1 It's a

Speaker 1 school of art. Anyway.

Speaker 1 A lot of slop, tons of slop, which, of course, is good because that'll help the model collapse even quicker. That'll do good.
Hey.

Speaker 1 Actually, the Intel sharing thing is a kind of a variation of SPY versus SPY. Yeah, but what's that art style? Yeah, that art style, there's a couple of different things going on here.

Speaker 1 It's like a combination of cubism

Speaker 1 for the background and in the front is

Speaker 1 something else. Yes.

Speaker 1 A Nabaist or something. There's some other screwy thing going on here.
But it's obviously in the LLM, whatever it is. And why is the guy's arm going through the table?

Speaker 1 It's like his arm is like in through the table, the hard table that's there. It's called bad.
It's just bad. It's just bad.
It's just bad. Just it's not good.
By the way, Rob,

Speaker 1 the constitutional lawyer, says, sorry, nope, U.S. law is hard enough, so we can't count him in for international law advice.
We will thank our executive and associate executive producers.

Speaker 1 Many of them showed up at the Albany meetup. So, John will be giving his little report.

Speaker 1 And,

Speaker 1 of course, including a note someone sent in complaining about me.

Speaker 1 Which will be

Speaker 1 a lovely name.

Speaker 1 I'm excited.

Speaker 1 We thank all of our financial supporters, $50 and above. We'll give their name or whatever you put on your payment details and your location.

Speaker 1 And, of course, we always like to thank people who are able to give us $200 or more. We, in fact, will read any note you send in within reason.

Speaker 1 And we will give you the title of Associate Executive Producer, which is an official Hollywood credit. You can use that anywhere Hollywood credits are recognized, including imdb.com.

Speaker 1 $300 or more, and we will give you an executive producer title. And the same applies.
We'll read your note. And as always, the people who send in 300 or more have very short notes.
Commodore G

Speaker 1 comes in from Cincinnati, Ohio. He is a Commodore, after all.
$343.75. I'm thinking that's $333.33 with some fees added.
He says, thank you for your courage and diligent work, peace, and long life.

Speaker 1 Commodore G. Thank you, Commodore G.

Speaker 1 Okay, we'll start with the meetup money,

Speaker 1 including starting with Sir Lawrence of Dystopia. He's in Oakland.
He actually didn't write a short note.

Speaker 1 I will try to distill it.

Speaker 1 Looks like it was typed.

Speaker 1 And it looks like the ribbon is going. So that's just an advance warning.
This is from Sir Lawrence of Dystopia, Baronet of Maxwell Park. He becomes a baron today, by the way.

Speaker 1 Kilo Osco 6 Echo Juliet Echo. 73s.
So he's

Speaker 1 ham.

Speaker 1 I hope this finds you well.

Speaker 1 I want to convey how much I love the tip of the day, the grandma secret spot remover and the Wego lever nuts come to mind.

Speaker 1 I use the Wego lever nuts on my elevators.

Speaker 1 It makes, I don't know what he's referring to, but he's using them. It makes a huge difference when a previous mechanic has shoved a bunch of wires into a terminal and it's barely holding together.

Speaker 1 Yes, we all have done that. With the Wego lever nuts, I can put however many wires into one Wego with the proper sarah goes on.

Speaker 1 Lastly, after becoming a baronet after John's birthday extravaganza, I realized I am now a baron, accounting below, and I should like to be Sir Lawrence of Dystopia, Baron of Maxwell Park.

Speaker 1 Thank you for your attention to this important matter. Nice.
Adios Mofos, he finishes.

Speaker 1 The next two are notes that you have, so you might as well read those two. Dame Audrey,

Speaker 1 these are from the meetup again. These are all the ones.
It's the reason that we have a slew of them

Speaker 1 jay boot all together. Dame Audre and I.
This is from Dame Audre of Legoland and Dr. Don.
And this is $333.33.

Speaker 1 And this is a nice short note. Dame Audre and I love giving and receiving.

Speaker 1 Dramatic pause. Value for value.

Speaker 1 Oh, I was fooled for a moment. Kindest regards.

Speaker 1 Thank you. Onward with

Speaker 1 Ross Johnson and Eugene. Wait, no, how about Sir Chris and Dame Kristen? I'm sorry, Sir Chris and Dame Kristen.
Yes. 3333.

Speaker 1 This is on a card.

Speaker 1 You can tell by the noise. In the morning, thanks for all the great media deconstruction twice a week.
We never miss a show. This is our first meetup.
Oh, nice. But hopefully not our last.

Speaker 1 All the best to you and only the

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 1 the entire No Agenda back office. Cheers, Sir Chris.

Speaker 1 And Dame Kristen

Speaker 1 there and Carmel. I'll pick pick up with Ross Johnson from Eugene, Oregon, $333.33.

Speaker 1 I really appreciate a criticism with a donation.

Speaker 1 So I thank you because this is very critical of me.

Speaker 1 Adam is editorializing America away from home.

Speaker 1 I'm not quite sure what that means. Here in Texas.

Speaker 1 His newfound Catholicism sucks.

Speaker 1 Wow. Here we have the Geller,

Speaker 1 whatever that thing's called. Gellman amnesia.
Gellman, yeah.

Speaker 1 I am not a Catholic. Not at all.
Believe me. His newfound Catholicism sucks because we never talk about home truths anymore.
I understand hand-picking sides is impossible for Adam.

Speaker 1 Why don't we get U.S. media deconstruction anymore? I'm a knight.

Speaker 1 I'm a little baffled by this.

Speaker 1 I'm not quite sure. I I don't know what he means.
I have no idea. Is that because I play clips from abroad? Is that the reason why? Well, I do too.
Yeah, but we also play U.S. clips and we detailed.

Speaker 1 Well, he makes it sound as though you're in England or Holland. As a Catholic.
He's only listened to one show, and you're a Catholic.

Speaker 1 You're like a Catholic from France, and you're bitching about the Americans. Those Americans.

Speaker 1 That's what it sounds like. Yeah, in a bit.
Yeah. Well, thank you, Ross.

Speaker 1 Again, any any criticism accompanied by a donation is love. We're good for you, good.
Love. That is my favorite type of value for value.
Complain more.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 1 Dame Shelley in Grand Forks, North Dakota, 333.33. You got me with the puppies.

Speaker 1 Dame Shelley, good.

Speaker 1 Then we go to Surrounded by My Privilege, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 333. This is a Jew money donation on behalf of BBM the Cabal.
Here we go. There's our Jew money.
Where's our

Speaker 1 tally for Jew money is pretty low, sub a thousand. Keep up the good work, gents.
Yeah, the Muslims are beating the Jews. Yes.
Just throw that out. Oh, by a long shot.
By a long shot.

Speaker 1 And then he accompanied a clip and he says, please play you choked.

Speaker 1 Oh, and if he wanted followed by two to the head. Okay.
I didn't realize he wanted that.

Speaker 1 Okay. And he sent this in.
You choked.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 That must have been a bet of some kind. I'm not sure.
Pretty extreme. Yes.
Okay. Thank you very much, surrounded by my privilege.

Speaker 1 Now we go to Gus Coronel in Nevada City, California. I have the note.

Speaker 1 Gus came down from Nevada City. Please accept this first-time donation on behalf of my wife.
This is a switcheroo. Oh, okay.
For Leora, L-E-O-R-A Coronel. C-O-R-C-L-O-N-A-L.

Speaker 1 Leora?

Speaker 1 L-E-O-R-A, Leora. Yes, done.
Got it. In the Switcheroo.
She hit me in the mouth during, oh, yeah, I talked to him about this.

Speaker 1 She hit me in the mouth during COVID, and our relationship has never been better. Ooh.

Speaker 1 In fact, he came up to me later, and I'll finish the note. We love the show and have never had a fight.

Speaker 1 Thank you for all you did. No jingles, no karma.
He came up to me, said he said literally that our show saved his marriage. Wow.

Speaker 1 And I, and this was during COVID.

Speaker 1 So I assume there was some beef between the two of them about getting this vax or something or masking up, or there was something that was there was a discrepancy in the way they were thinking. And

Speaker 1 that's when he was introduced to the show by her. And she said,

Speaker 1 listen to this while you sleep on the couch.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 he said it was the best thing that ever happened. Awesome.
And I do mean that. Yeah, I do too.
I agree.

Speaker 1 Another associate executive producership, he racks them up almost every single show for Eli the Coffee Guy from Bensonville, Illinois to 11.16. He always sends us $200 plus the dates, $11.16.

Speaker 1 You get it. He says, a lot of you have been asking when? The answer is now.

Speaker 1 Ah, gigawatt nitro cold brew cans have officially arrived, and producers get the first dibs. This is an outstanding product.

Speaker 1 I blasted through my recent supply. Yeah.
Yeah, remember to

Speaker 1 shake vigorously before you drink it. It releases.
Yeah, I did that finally. The second can, I shook it up and it

Speaker 1 formed. Yeah, you got some nitro.
Yeah, I got nitro.

Speaker 1 From today through Wednesday, 11, 18th, we're doing a limited, early release ahead of our full Black Friday launch. Fresh, smooth, and finally here.
Grab yours now at gigawattcoffee roasters.com.

Speaker 1 Stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy, and a rare request for a jingle, Rev Al all jitty with it.

Speaker 32 Okay, the GOP infighting is escalating. Political says Democrats are outright jitty.
Happy to watch the GOP implode.

Speaker 1 Good old revolution. I got my current batch.
He sent me three bags, four bags of the latest blends. Yes.
I want to thank him for that. Oh, yeah.
Good. Good, good, good.

Speaker 1 Onward to Scott Johnson in Kissime, Florida.

Speaker 1 20477. I think it's Kissimmee.
I think it's Kissimmee. I think it's Kissimmee.
I think it's Kissimmee. It's Kissimmee.

Speaker 1 Well, he wrote Kasimi. He did not.
So we're both wrong. He didn't.
He's

Speaker 1 Kissimmee. Kissimmee.
Yeah, that's why I said. it.
Kasimi. Kasimi.
No, it's Kasimi.

Speaker 1 Yeah, Kissimmee.

Speaker 1 Kasimi. Kasimi.
Kissimi.

Speaker 1 Okay, in the morning, John and Adam. Last time I donated, I was annoyed at how my note was red.

Speaker 1 Okay. Yeah.
Later, I recall that you two are regularly mean to each other, so why should a producer expect better treatment?

Speaker 1 Then I discovered my own brother doubted the capabilities of my Photo Export app. He, too, was a scoffer until the day his wife used Photo Export to select and convert

Speaker 1 140 movies from her iPhone in one job.

Speaker 1 She needed the movies in MP4 format to create a year-in-the-life movie for their granddaughter on her PC.

Speaker 1 My brother was convinced, convinced, I say, that my app would crash or just refuse to handle such a large job.

Speaker 1 To my brother's amazement, Photo Expert converted and copied the selected 140 movies in just a few minutes to a USB drive connected to her iPhone.

Speaker 1 I'd like to continue to support the best podcast in the universe. To make that possible, I need some installs and reviews of my Photo Export to continue.

Speaker 1 So please, if you have an iPhone or iPad, what doesn't he do it for Android?

Speaker 1 Nah, Android. Or if you know somebody who does install Photo Export today, you can find it on the Apple App Store.

Speaker 1 And finally, a big thank you to everybody who has already installed Photo Expert, Scott Johnson and Casimi.

Speaker 1 Doing cross-platform Android and iOS is very hard. Yeah.
I know. We have an app.

Speaker 1 We have an app.

Speaker 1 It's called Work. Yeah, we have an app.
Godcaster app. Very hard to do.
It's difficult.

Speaker 1 Hey, there's Sir Heb of Hogtown. I wonder if this is also Jew money.

Speaker 1 From Alchua, Florida, $200.66. Adam, let's pretend it's 1989 and I have a dial MTV-esque request.
But instead of Guns N' Roses or Def Leopard, in your best Mark Rutter voice, please say

Speaker 1 swapping out Biden is not an option and it's too risky to vote a third party in New York State.

Speaker 1 This is a little ode to my friend. We'll do anything for money.
This is a little ode to my friend Christine, who I punched in the mouth a few months back.

Speaker 1 She married into a family of insufferable elitist libs, and this sort of humor is all that's keeping her from

Speaker 1 climbing a clock tower.

Speaker 1 I'd also like to do the switcheroo for her, so please credit this donation to her, Christine Bonus. Asim alaikum, my brothers, Sir Heib of Hogtown.
Well, I'm very confused now.

Speaker 1 Is this Jew money or Muslim money?

Speaker 1 I have no idea. It's confusing.
So Christine Bonus for the Switcheroo. You got it.
You got it. Linda Lou Patkin, Lakewood, Colorado, 200 bucks jobs coming for a competitive edge.

Speaker 1 She writes: With a resume that gets results, go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs. That's ImageMakers Inc.
with a K. And work with Linda Liu.

Speaker 1 She's the Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes. Jobs, $200.

Speaker 9 Jobs, jobs, and jobs.

Speaker 20 Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 1 You've got karma.

Speaker 1 Duke Slam Bob, rolling knight of Guadalupe, as we say in Texas, $200, associate executive producer. And he says, Sirs, I ask, what is the outro music? It sounds like Coltrain.
Drives me nuts.

Speaker 1 I can't find it, cause I loves me some Adam music. Thanks to JCD for all you do.

Speaker 1 Was lost a bit, but thanks to no agenda. Now

Speaker 1 I am Duke Slam Bomb, Rolling Knight of Guadalupe.

Speaker 1 It is the, I can tell you what it is. It is called,

Speaker 1 where's the file here? The Marriott Jazz Quintet.

Speaker 1 And the title of the music is On the Seventh Day. And we have been using that for, whoa, forever, I think.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I think so, right off the bat, because it's one of the pod-free or whatever you had it called. You had a

Speaker 1 website of pod-free, royalty-free podcast stuff, whatever. Yeah, and now that I just did that, something, oh, hold on a second.
This is it here. That's the one.

Speaker 1 I don't think, I don't know if that was, yeah, that was the Pod Save Music Network. That's what you're talking about.
Yes, that's right. Hey, there's Brian and Susie from Liberty, Maine.

Speaker 1 This is, this is, Brian and I had a back and forth, and I was very hurt by his comments. And so he donated, which I thank you, brother.
I love it.

Speaker 1 What did he say to you that hurt your feelings? It was about

Speaker 1 he was the one that started off with, you know, as a Christian.

Speaker 1 You get one

Speaker 1 Well, no, but it was really more about

Speaker 1 us using

Speaker 1 Heather and Brett to explain Gelman amnesia.

Speaker 1 And then after this back and forth, you know, he was kind of like a don't shoot inside the tent kind of guy.

Speaker 1 And then after some back and forth, it turns out that the thing that really irked him is what you said at the end of that whole segment. And what was it that I said?

Speaker 1 You said, why are you even listening to that crap?

Speaker 1 How can you buy Brett and uh and Heather? Yeah, yeah, because yeah, why are you listening to that crap? You never answered it.

Speaker 1 Well, because I said that I like them and that I lit that I like their show, and then you know, so what happens is people associate me with your horrible takes, yeah.

Speaker 1 Well, it's not a horrible take, I think it's an accurate take, it's on the money, well, but but this is it, and then so I'm like, well, and I was really deflated by it.

Speaker 1 I was, was. You know, see, you don't have my life.

Speaker 1 I have to take all the crap, whatever secret sauce you have that everyone complains to me about you, besides the fact that you don't have a phone that operates

Speaker 1 and your email blocks everybody. No, actually, it does operate.

Speaker 1 And even if they could get through your email filters, they can't spell your name. And it goes to john at dvorak.com 10 times.

Speaker 1 There you go. You know, it's like it's dot org, people.

Speaker 1 You know, or it's like, I I couldn't find John's email address.

Speaker 1 You know what? Yeah, I'm not going to be. No, these are all your tricks.
So, you know,

Speaker 1 my tricks, my mind tricks. These are not the drones you're looking for.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 it's very discouraging to me. You know, it brings me down because people are always complaining about things you say to me.
Yeah. And sometimes they'll send it.

Speaker 1 Sometimes I say, you emailed the wrong guy. And then they'll email them.
Yeah, once in a while, you just, yeah, you give them, but you're very curt with the people that do that. Because it's,

Speaker 1 it deflates me.

Speaker 1 From Brian and Susie in Liberty, Maine. Adam, love you, brother.
Love you too, John. Save for the TikTok clips, which are like seeing a dead deer on the road.

Speaker 1 Kind of sad and a definite waste of resources. No jingles, no karma.
Well, see, there you go.

Speaker 1 This guy's no good. I've known this guy.
I've stayed at his house. This guy is very good.
He's a very, very cool dude. Well, if he was, he would the TikTok clips better.

Speaker 1 It seems to me. I could be wrong.
I never stayed in this house. I do not measure people.
I've been shacked up with the guy, so I don't know.

Speaker 1 I don't measure people by whether they like TikTok clips or not. Anonymous is last on the list.

Speaker 1 Turned 79 on November 4th. Gentlemen, I really enjoyed the show.
Continue the great work. That's a $200 donation from Anonymous.
And I do have some meetup stuff.

Speaker 1 If you want to do that now, or you do it at the beginning, if you need to read it. Let's do it.
People came to the meetup. Are you kidding me? Let's honor them.
Okay.

Speaker 1 I'm going to start before I read the notes. I'm not going to read the notes.
I'm going to give some credits here

Speaker 1 for the money that it's like, for example, Tim and Susie Landreth

Speaker 1 from the Landreth,

Speaker 1 Landreth Something and Cattle. It's a cattle ranch up in Nebraska.

Speaker 1 They were out here, so they decided to come into the meetup. They didn't come here for the meetup.
He made that clear. But he did drop off some T-bones from Nebraska and the frozen.
Nice.

Speaker 1 In a container with

Speaker 1 the cold source in there. And so I got some meat.
By the way, that reminds me,

Speaker 1 Texas Slim just signed a big agreement with the El Salvadorian Ministry of Agriculture.

Speaker 1 What does that mean? I don't know, but there's a picture of Texas Slim and the Minister of Agriculture in El Salvador.

Speaker 1 I guess he's promoting beef in El Salvador.

Speaker 1 Anytime Texas Slim gets some positive news, I'm happy for him. He seems like a good guy.
He's a very good dude. Very good.

Speaker 1 Now we have John Lake in Santa Cruz came in with $100, but his real kicker, which everybody who saw it said

Speaker 1 all were aghast,

Speaker 1 he had, and I have it now. He was thinking of giving me a copy, but he decided to give me the original.
This is a letterhead. This is letterhead paper, which I could probably type a note on.

Speaker 1 Letterhead paper

Speaker 1 from, it looks like the 40s or 50s. It's really like an old piece of paper, but with letterhead, official government letterhead.
Oh, okay. And what kind of government, what is on the letterhead?

Speaker 1 Biological Warfare Lab,

Speaker 1 Fort Dietrich, Maryland. Wow.

Speaker 1 That's cool. Yeah.
Yeah. You got to see what you see.
Oh. How about this? You should type in there, you know, make it look a little, do it on your old Corona typewriter.

Speaker 1 Keep under wraps. The deer ticks are bad.

Speaker 1 Yes, we should talk about that in the show sometime. Anyway, I want to thank him for the

Speaker 1 that was a lot of trouble to do that. He came with $100 on top of it.
That's cool. But

Speaker 1 this letterhead is just dynamite. It's a total collectible.
And now I need the pirate flag. That's the way to John's heart with a collectible.

Speaker 1 $150 bucks from Charlotte Worcester.

Speaker 1 She comes in, she's out of San Francisco. And then we have a Gen X donation.

Speaker 1 Says very carefully,

Speaker 1 it's from recalcitant Steve, our buddy. Crazy.

Speaker 1 So recalcitant crazy Steve. Crazy Steve, yeah.
He was there, of course.

Speaker 1 Also, I got a

Speaker 1 toy ounce. I think it's from the Duke of San Francisco.
He never leaves a note or anything. He just drops off a coin.
Silver?

Speaker 1 Yeah. But it's not the no, it's one of the ones that's got the Indian head on.
It's a beautiful piece of work. Another collectible.

Speaker 1 Well, you know, announce. Then I got this from

Speaker 1 Mrs.

Speaker 1 Sufina or Shufina, English, who wrote this very nice note. And she was there, and

Speaker 1 she was a

Speaker 1 great-looking gal, I would say. She's probably, I don't know, you couldn't tell her age.
She could have been between 45 and 55 or so. But she's one of these people.
The note came in. She dropped off,

Speaker 1 it was only 50, but she dropped off a note that is on Queen Mary 2, the boat's letterhead.

Speaker 1 Wow.

Speaker 1 And if you look, and she's one of those people, I mean, I don't like to generalize, but I will because I always do it. You look at her, and

Speaker 1 she looks like one of these people that are travelers

Speaker 1 that have been everywhere because her style and everything is not European, it's international. And you just, she just

Speaker 1 pushed that out as she just obviously been around. This is the world.
Even though,

Speaker 1 you know, it's sometimes a tough go with value for value, and people are yelling at me on X about you. We do have some of the most interesting people in the entire universe who are in Gitmo Nation.

Speaker 1 I never cease to be amazed by

Speaker 1 the talents and the experience that some people have, that many people have. It's just,

Speaker 1 I feel better already. $100

Speaker 1 last is on this list here is from

Speaker 1 Jobs Karma.

Speaker 1 You can do that if you want. This is for Gia Como out of Crockett, California.
Yeah, well,

Speaker 1 yes, there's a note.

Speaker 1 Yeah, the note just says

Speaker 1 from, you know, just $100, Jobs Karma, please. Thank you for four more years.
You show up to a meetup, you get it.

Speaker 9 Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.

Speaker 20 Let's vote for jobs.

Speaker 1 You got it. Not messing around.
Not messing around. And that's the basic over $50 from.
In fact, that was it. There was nothing under $50.
It's kind of screwy. Well, thank you all very much.

Speaker 1 Those of you who went to the meetup and got John out of the house, I haven't seen any pictures. I'd love to see some pictures.
People sent me a picture.

Speaker 1 Yeah, luckily there was no pictures taken, but I do have this note, which I belabor the point. Extra notes, yes.
This is Sir John.

Speaker 1 one of the guys that showed up for the first time he says sir son of jupiter reveals the no agenda meetup in berkeley this guy's from someplace else and he's uh this is it was sent to jay from stephen okay and he goes he was there one and only there uh it was only one and only john c dvorak had the ocean the berkeley meetup hosted by steve was an absolute blast there was about 40 people there it was crowded oh good and so he goes on and on and on and discussing he says but no note would be complete without mentioning the man of the era Dvorak.

Speaker 1 I'd like to say we all had a great time. This is going to be a bone of contention, by the way.
We had a great time meeting John, but from my perspective, he seemed to be a recluse

Speaker 1 sitting in a corner of the table,

Speaker 1 a table.

Speaker 1 It was in the middle of everything, but okay.

Speaker 1 But to my knowledge, he didn't say anything. to the crowd or thank the listeners.
Oh, you have to stand up and do a speech. You don't do that at your meetups? Like, hello, everybody.
I'm John.

Speaker 1 This is a public bar. Hello.

Speaker 1 Because I've seen people do this in public bars. What do you say when you, what do you think to yourself when you see this? You go, who is this asshole?

Speaker 1 What people don't know is that John is actually quite shy.

Speaker 1 Is that okay for me? That's right. It's okay for me to say that.
John is actually quite shy. Shy, I think,

Speaker 1 is the right term. You're not a recluse.
You're not introvert. You're a little shy.
Well, I'm not gregarious as

Speaker 1 I could be. So, really, girls, you got to go, you know,

Speaker 1 cozy up to him.

Speaker 1 He seemed to be a recluse sitting in the corner of the table, safely away from everybody. And he goes on, he says, and talking to his son.

Speaker 1 Now, I will tell you this. I was sitting next to actually,

Speaker 1 Matt the Inventor was there with his,

Speaker 1 I would say, gorgeous, tall fiancé girlfriend, Paige.

Speaker 1 I was talking to her. Now, she doesn't look like my son, I can assure you.
Oh, yeah. But the other thing is, by the way,

Speaker 1 if you want to get John talking,

Speaker 1 bring a hot-looking woman. Then JCD will talk for hours.

Speaker 1 JC, my son, wasn't even at the meetup. Oh, details.
So I have no idea what this guy's talking about. Then why wasn't JC there? This is an outrage.
Oh, he has something to do. Did JC?

Speaker 1 There was no desire to get a meetup report with John or even a group of photos. Oh, no.
Nobody asked.

Speaker 1 I've had my photo taken at these meetups quite a few times. Yeah.
I don't like it.

Speaker 1 Additionally, I noticed that John had a Costco-sized jar of cashews, which one of our blind knight dropped off, saying it might be a good tip of the day.

Speaker 1 And I was going to distribute these to have people describe them, but it was sealed. So I didn't want to open the seal.

Speaker 1 On the table, someone might have gifted them to him, of course, but they weren't being offered out to anyone. Oh, this is an outrage.
You weren't sharing your bounty.

Speaker 1 Then after two hours, that says I was there that long, I overheard while he was leaving that John wasn't feeling well. I don't know where you heard that from.

Speaker 1 If that's the case, please disregard this message of, okay, I was sick. And I hope you feel better.

Speaker 1 So this is a mismatch of reality.

Speaker 1 the only thing wrong with this note is it wasn't sent to me, that it was my fault. Otherwise, perfect note.
No surprise it was sent to me, actually.

Speaker 1 Thank you to these executive and associate executive producers and to the producers who came to the meetup to get John out of the house. That is highly appreciated.
It's good for him, too.

Speaker 1 We'll be thanking the rest of our supporters. $50 and above.

Speaker 1 Remember, you can always support us, and you should, because we do this as a public service, and it's your job to keep the public service going.

Speaker 1 Noagendadonations.com. You can go there.
You can give us any amount anytime you feel like it. That's how value for value works.
You get something out of it that is of value to you. Send it back.

Speaker 1 Value. Noagendadonation.com.
Congratulations to the executive and associate executive producers. Our formula is this:

Speaker 12 We go out, we hit people in the mouth.

Speaker 12 Order, you choke.

Speaker 1 So we were talking about it. We might as well bring in the Alpha Gal syndrome.
This is the lone star tick that has now claimed its first victim. We have a dead person from Alpha Gal syndrome.

Speaker 1 However, the reason for this is not some bio lab in Maryland or maybe even

Speaker 1 what was that? What was the name of that?

Speaker 1 Fort Dietrich. No, no, Fort Dietrich, but then

Speaker 1 Plum Island in New York. No, no.
The reason for this scourge is something you might not expect.

Speaker 8 This morning, a New Jersey man is the first known person to die after a tick bite triggered a severe meat allergy.

Speaker 33 This is really something that, you know, people should be aware of and physicians should be aware of.

Speaker 8 The 47-year-old went camping with his family in 2024 and got violently ill after eating a steak. He recovered, but two weeks later, he ate a hamburger and again got very sick, then died.

Speaker 9 The autopsy said his death was unexplained.

Speaker 8 Then his wife had his blood tested at the University of Virginia, where researchers determined he had an allergy called alpha gal syndrome, caused by the bite of the lone star tick.

Speaker 33 What happens is

Speaker 33 people develop a hypersensitivity or an allergy to this carbohydrate that is found in animal meat.

Speaker 33 And what triggers this hypersensitivity or this allergy, so to speak, is a bite from the lone star tick.

Speaker 8 Lone star ticks are mainly found in the northeast, south, and midwest. They have a white dot or lone star on their back.

Speaker 8 Tick populations in general have been on the rise and are spreading to more of the U.S. One factor: climate change.

Speaker 1 Climate change.

Speaker 1 Finally. Shaggy dog story.
Yeah, finally, we got one. I'm sick of this.
Yo, I would like somebody to explain to me me how this works. Okay.

Speaker 1 I want somebody to explain. There must be some expert out there.

Speaker 1 How does this happen?

Speaker 1 This is the screwiest thing I've ever heard.

Speaker 1 By the way, you get this disease or syndrome or whatever you want to call it, condition, where you're allergic to this carb or some protein

Speaker 1 of all mammalians. If you eat possum, you're going to get sick.
If you eat meef, you're going to get sick. Anything that's a.

Speaker 1 Well,

Speaker 1 because alpha gal is also included. Oh, no, wait a minute.
Wait.

Speaker 1 Possums are marsupials. I'm not sure you would get sick from possum meat.
Oh, well, then that's a bonus. It's only mammalian meat.

Speaker 1 That's a bonus. Alpha gal.
So if you eat a beaver,

Speaker 1 you're fine. And heaven forbid we've all done that.

Speaker 1 I'm sorry. That was bad.
Wow. Very lowbrow.
Very lowbrow. No, that was terrible.

Speaker 1 It wasn't presented. You know what? If it had been presented with a

Speaker 1 Marty level. That was lowbrow.
No, it was. Well,

Speaker 1 yeah, it was. Yeah, it was.
Maybe. It was just not, it was uncalled for.
The point is, is that mammalian meat. What? This makes no sense to me.
A tick bite.

Speaker 1 And the next thing you know, you can't eat, you know,

Speaker 1 we've already been through this. This is alpha gal is included in some vaccines.

Speaker 1 And I'm pretty sure that it's from the vaccines.

Speaker 1 I mean, I'm not a doctor,

Speaker 1 so I'm just guessing ultimately. Well, that brings brings me to this clip

Speaker 1 because this irks me too

Speaker 1 about this is Pakistan diabetes. Okay, here we go.

Speaker 3 This is the BBC World Service with Lubnacare exploring Pakistan's diabetes crisis.

Speaker 1 Was this while you were asleep? This clip got recorded? No, I see it.

Speaker 34 I'm a British Pakistani pharmacist and also an actor, writer, and comedian. In Pakistan, diabetes isn't just a medical condition, it's a national crisis.

Speaker 1 There's a lack of awareness.

Speaker 35 There's low health literacy. Public hospitals are stretched.

Speaker 1 Pakistan's diabetes surge is fueled by urbanization, processed foods, high in refined sugars, and increasingly sedentary lifestyles.

Speaker 35 I had a client eight years old and he used to play cricket on the tab. He doesn't know that he can play that cricket outside in the ground.

Speaker 1 If this is not addressed, then this will be a crisis beyond what we can imagine over the next decade.

Speaker 3 Diabetes in Pakistan, a nation's struggle.

Speaker 1 Another riveting BBC World Report.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 we now know that they're having an epidemic of diabetes in Pakistan. We have diabetes of like two-thirds of the public here.

Speaker 1 Why can't they fix this issue? Is it just refined sugars? Ban them.

Speaker 1 We have a health system that's supposed to, you know, why don't we just make it illegal? Find out what's causing it. You know, it's happening here, it's happening there.

Speaker 1 Why is it happening in Pakistan? Because it's a sedentary lifestyle. All of a sudden, it doesn't make a lot of sense.
But then they blame it on sugars or processed food.

Speaker 1 Make them illegal. Why can't they do that? They don't want to do it.
And the same thing with this alpha gal. Figure out, this makes no sense that this disease exists.

Speaker 1 It's the stupidest disease you can imagine. Or my wife with her wheat thing.
She can't eat anything that's from any grains now.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's a weird one. And it sucks.

Speaker 1 You can't even take her out anymore.

Speaker 1 Well, it saves, it's good for the budget. Yeah, but it's not fun for her.
No, well,

Speaker 1 she has to find places where they're very careful. It's the point.
This is how bad it is. And this is all these things, by the way, not just this wheat deal.
But

Speaker 1 they find that if somebody's cut bread on one of those slicers and they cut meat on it,

Speaker 1 just that at that

Speaker 1 right, at the granular level

Speaker 1 a crumb.

Speaker 1 And so,

Speaker 1 but it's the same thing with these other, these other problems that humans have. And it makes no sense that they can't just do an analysis and say, well, this is what's causing it.

Speaker 1 This is what you can do to correct it. And now we're good to go.
They don't bother.

Speaker 1 Well, because

Speaker 1 diabetes is profitable. I mean, obviously.
Oh, yeah, it's a moneymaker. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Yeah. The reason, of course, is they're eating the dogs.

Speaker 1 that's where it all comes from. Stop eating the dogs.

Speaker 1 Well, then you'll love this little diddy from

Speaker 1 CBS

Speaker 1 F the Nation

Speaker 1 with Senator Bill Cassidy. F the Nation.

Speaker 1 This is another one you'll gripe about.

Speaker 36 Secretary Kennedy has this hand-picked panel of vaccine advisors. You know them at ASIP.

Speaker 36 They're going to meet in a few days and potentially vote on changing the hepatitis B vaccine schedule for infants.

Speaker 36 That same vaccine advisory group is also considering the safety of vaccine ingredients like aluminum, which would impact a number of childhood shots. This should matter for American parents.

Speaker 36 Are you comfortable with what they are about to put to a vote?

Speaker 37 I'm very concerned about this. As it turns out, my medical practice focused on hepatitis B.

Speaker 37 And so we know that because of a recommended dose at birth of hepatitis B vaccine, recommended, not mandated, the number of children born contracting hepatitis B at birth or shortly thereafter has decreased from about 20,000 20 years ago to like 200 now.

Speaker 37 That's

Speaker 37 effectively a clerical error. We have decreased.
Hold on a second.

Speaker 1 He said the number of children born, which is before they get the hepatitis B vaccine. Let me listen that again.

Speaker 37 And so we know that because of a recommended dose at birth of hepatitis B vaccine, recommended, not mandated, the number of children born contracting hepatitis B at birth or shortly thereafter has decreased from about 20,000 20 years ago to like 200 now.

Speaker 37 That's

Speaker 37 effectively a clerical error. We have decreased the incidence of chronic hepatitis B by 20,000 people over the last two decades with this kind of recommendation.

Speaker 37 And by the way, if you're infected at birth,

Speaker 37 you're 95%

Speaker 37 likely to become a chronic carrier. The vaccine is safe.
It has been established. And these ingredients they're speaking of have been shown to be safe.

Speaker 37 This is policy by people who don't understand the epidemiology of hepatitis B or who've grown comfortable with the fact that we've been so successful with our recommendation that now the incidence of hepatitis B is so low, they feel like we can rest on our laurels.

Speaker 37 I'm a doctor. I have seen people die from vaccine-preventable disease.
I want people to be healthy. I want to make America healthy.

Speaker 37 And you don't start by stopping recommendations that have made us substantially healthier.

Speaker 1 All right. How do you feel about that?

Speaker 1 This guy is the stooge for the vax industry.

Speaker 1 He's always, you know, throwing out, I'm a doctor, I'm a doctor, and then he goes on and on and condemns everyone. He's the one who threatened Kennedy.

Speaker 1 He says, you have to promise me that you won't do this and that. And it was always about vaccines.
This guy's a vaccine nut.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 here's Margaret Brennan asking if she regrets endorsing him.

Speaker 36 But that's why clarifying these statements, I think, is important since you interpret them differently.

Speaker 36 I wonder, do you regret your confirmation vote for Secretary Kennedy?

Speaker 37 I smile because every reporter asked me that.

Speaker 36 Well, because these questions run right into a pledge that you extracted from him not to tinker with some of the structures that were set in place to have oversight of these vaccines and this process.

Speaker 37 So, you live life forward.

Speaker 37 Again, you just do.

Speaker 37 Let the day's own troubles be sufficient for the day. And I'll credit the Secretary.

Speaker 37 He's brought attention to things like ultra-processed food that has frankly never received this sort of attention before. And people praise him for that.

Speaker 37 So he and I have publicly disagreed on some matters, but I strongly agree with him on others. And so

Speaker 37 that's how I'll answer your question.

Speaker 36 That sounds like yes.

Speaker 1 No, it doesn't At all. It doesn't sound like yes.
Not at all.

Speaker 1 She's terrible. Yes, she is.
Is she even a journalist of any sort? She's the worst.

Speaker 1 I have a couple of. She used to be on the Today Show or the Morning Show.

Speaker 1 It was CBS or NBC. I can't remember which one, but she was always, it was the CBS show.
And she used to be one of the hosts there. And every time Trump's name would, she's a pretty woman,

Speaker 1 but she has got the world. She really looks, she makes herself look ugly by scowling.
And she would always scowl.

Speaker 1 And when somebody mentioned Trump or the Republicans, we mentioned Republicans, she scowl. Yes, she screwed.
And then when I saw her during the COVID era, I mentioned this on the show.

Speaker 1 She was in her house. Yeah.
And somebody was interviewed. And I didn't realize it.
She's with her, with it. She had a hairband on the hair thing over the top of her head.

Speaker 1 And she was a dead ringer for Hillary, a younger Hillary. She's a Hillary Clinton clone.
Yeah, that's right. Well, she did look kind of cute with a hairband.

Speaker 1 No, she didn't. She did.
So

Speaker 1 I'm going to save my Margaret clips with the Secretary of the Army, which is about drones, which is a fantastic little series because this is exactly what my insider from the Department of War told me, what they were working on.

Speaker 1 And it's all about, but it's like four clips, and I'm looking at the time, and I think that we should probably get ready to go because we still have tip of the day. We've got to end the show mixes.

Speaker 1 But I did want to play one last clip as the AI industry has now gone lower than they could have ever gone.

Speaker 1 The lowest of the low.

Speaker 1 Once we've addicted people to these chat bots and we've got kids, you know, killing themselves over what the chat bot told them to do, here we go.

Speaker 25 These seniors are learning about artificial intelligence and interacting with it in a whole new way.

Speaker 1 AI is the most accessible technology that's really ever been created.

Speaker 25 Jacob Catalano, a former product designer at Snapchat, has created a user-friendly AI service for seniors called Stella Foster.

Speaker 1 She's not going to judge you. She's not going to run out of time or lose patience.

Speaker 38 I'm going to go out today. Do I need a jacket or anything like that? Right now in Santa Monica, it's clear at about 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
A light jacket might be a good idea.

Speaker 25 Unlike chatbots where you have to type in questions, Stella lets you call a phone number and talk to AI directly. It can even remember details about you, making interactions personalized.

Speaker 1 So it opens up a whole new audience that might have been shut out from technology over the last decade.

Speaker 1 Two decades. Humans talk and they text.
And that's what AI is. So if you can do that, you can use AI.

Speaker 7 AI is very knowledgeable,

Speaker 1 and you can use it

Speaker 35 to do better things in life.

Speaker 1 I'm a writer and an artist, and I'll be using it for my writing, I'm sure.

Speaker 35 I think AI sounds great.

Speaker 1 I think it's it's something that seniors could definitely use and benefit from

Speaker 25 Stella Foster lets users chat for free on the phone for an hour each day. If you want more, it's $30 a month.
There are no limits on texting.

Speaker 1 Oh man, this is so like they're so hard up for customers. Let's get the old people.

Speaker 1 30 bucks a month from your pension.

Speaker 1 And you know, these people are going to be on the phone with it the whole day. Oh, yeah.
Until it says, you know what? You should probably just kill yourself.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's the problem with these AI systems. They're sick.
They wind up telling you to kill yourself. I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda.

Speaker 1 Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fabulous.

Speaker 1 Yeah,

Speaker 1 on no agenda

Speaker 1 in the morning.

Speaker 1 And we do have a few people that think they're above $50

Speaker 1 today, and we got a little more than last time, that's for sure, which was the lowest ever.

Speaker 1 And Adam will run through them. Was it really the lowest ever? It was the lowest ever.

Speaker 1 But that was at the very end of the shutdown. So we're hoping that our incredible

Speaker 1 I have to attribute this to the shutdown. I think the shutdown affected the economy more than people like to imagine.
We thank Stamatina Hunter from Irving, Texas for her $105.35.

Speaker 1 Brenda

Speaker 1 Forsade

Speaker 1 or Fouqued.

Speaker 1 Polsbo, Washington, $100. Keep the great work.
Thank you. Lydia Terry Dominelli from Rochester, New Hampshire, $100.
And she is on the birthday list for today. It's her birthday.

Speaker 1 Steve Niles, Santa Cruz, California, $95.87. Birthday donation for Steve himself.
Kevin McLaughlin, there he is from Concord, North Carolina.

Speaker 1 As you know, he is the, well, he doesn't even say that anymore. He just says Laos Deo.
This is his boob donation, 8008. Praise be to God.

Speaker 1 Inscribed to the top of the Washington Monument, facing east towards the rising sun. Sir Richard Hufford in Tempe, Arizona, another boob donation.
Thank you.

Speaker 1 He says, Adam and John, for helping improve our quality of life. James Mellow, Seattle, Washington, 7903.

Speaker 1 Sir Camera Chris, Grafton, Wisconsin. Blessings, John Adams.
Oh, this is 7777.

Speaker 1 He switched teams from Lutheran to being confirmed into the Catholic faith to join my wife and kids. Love and light.

Speaker 1 Wes Stewart, Mesa, Arizona, 69.69, a classic. Stephen Shoemake, Xenia, Ohio.
He's on the list all the time, 64.80. Angela Wang.

Speaker 1 Did you miss Scott Fuller?

Speaker 1 I might have. Scott Fuller, Coming, Georgia, $74.04.
$20.26 Farmers Almanac donation plus $50 plus fees. Wow, he's really

Speaker 1 up in the ante there. Back to Angela Wang.
She says a Bitcoin donation for my daughter Nova.

Speaker 1 Her birthday is today, November 16th. You did Stephen Shoemake.
I did. Zena, Ohio, yes.

Speaker 1 Thank you for keeping me, keeping me. That's what I have to do.
That's what I do.

Speaker 1 Yes, you do. And now I see how annoying I was to you.

Speaker 1 She turns 14 today, so a Bitcoin donation. Les Darkowski, Kingman, Arizona, 606.

Speaker 1 A small boob donation. Scott Van Gelder in Centerville, Massachusetts, $57.98.

Speaker 1 James Edmondson, South Plainfield, New Jersey, $55.10. Double nickels on the dime.
Double nickels on the dime from Danielle Williams in Mount Shasta, California. Birthday shout out to Peter Konowski.

Speaker 1 Happy 40th. John Siebert, Bitcoin donation and meetup donation for Albany, $55,333 Satoshis, which is $5,335, $53.35 Palindrome.
Luke Minnell, Los Angeles, $52.72. That's 50 plus fees.

Speaker 1 Charles Tracy, Hickory, North Carolina, $52.72. Viscount, sir, economic hitman.
There he is. From Tomball, Texas, 50.01.
Kevin Dills, Huntersville, North Carolina, 50. These are all 50s.

Speaker 1 Daniel Delaval.

Speaker 1 He's from Victoria, Australia, 50. Diane Schwannebeck, Johnsburg, Illinois.
Easy Landscapes, North Stonington, Connecticut. Philip Ballou from Louisville, Kentucky.

Speaker 1 John Berryhill in in Loreto, Tennessee, Chris Slavinsky, Sir Chris Slowinski from Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada, Francis King, Castle Rock, Colorado, and the last of our 50s, Terrence Lynch from Savannah, Georgia.

Speaker 1 Thank you to all the supporters of the best podcast in the universe. Of course, we thank everybody who came in under 50.
We don't mention those to ensure anonymity, but I see you 49, 99s, etc.

Speaker 1 You can always set up a recurring donation. It's very simple.
You go to noagendadonations.com. You can support us with

Speaker 1 multiple ways, PayPal, with Stripe. You can also send a Bitcoin donation.
And as always, consider setting up a recurring donation, any amount, any frequency, noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 1 Once again, noagendadonations.com.

Speaker 1 It's a birthday, it's birthday.

Speaker 1 Oh, no agenda.

Speaker 1 Anonymous turned 79 on November 4th, Sir Darus, Darius Unity, which is Princess Aaliyah Nia Wiley Coyote. A happy birthday.

Speaker 1 Born on November 10th. Oh boy, the brand new Gitmo Nation

Speaker 1 president. And Sir Darius Unity also wishes his keeper AJ a happy birthday celebrated yesterday on the 15th.
Lydia Terry Dominelli, happy birthday to you today. Steve Niles turned 61 today.

Speaker 1 Angela Wang, happy birthday to her daughter Nova, turns 14 years old today. Sirloin Medium Rare and Arnie K5ARN wishes Christina a very happy birthday.
She turned 79.

Speaker 1 And Danielle Williams wishes Peter Karnowski, a happy one turning 40 years old. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 1 And we do have that big change of peerage here for Sir Lawrence of Dystopia. He was a baronet.
Today he enters the ranks of Baron.

Speaker 1 Congratulations and thank you for your support of the best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 30 No agenda meetups.

Speaker 1 No agenda meetups. Sometimes you get to meet the stars, like John in Albany, New Albany, New York, in Albany, California.
You can meet all kinds of fun people, though.

Speaker 1 They are all stars in their own right. We're here in Texas, man.
We have Dirty Jersey Whore. We got Sir Brian with an Eye.
We got Baron Scott of the Armory. So many cool people.

Speaker 1 Once you go to a meetup, you'll always want to return because these people bring you connection that is protection. Your first responders in any emergency, go to noagendameetups.com.

Speaker 1 You will see that on Thursday, there's a meetup at Charlotte's Thursday Thursday monthly, 7 o'clock at Ed's Tavern in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Speaker 1 And the rest of this month, Wilmington, California, Burlington, Kentucky on the 22nd, Longview, Texas on the 23rd, Spokane, Washington on the 27th.

Speaker 1 And the final one for this month, November, we are a global show after all. Wageningen in Gelderland, the Netherlands.
Many more to find at noagendameetups.com.

Speaker 1 If you can't find one near you, start one yourself. Put it on noagendametups.com.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.

Speaker 1 You to be where you won't be, triggered all hell.

Speaker 1 You to be where everybody feels the same.

Speaker 1 It's like a party. John's tip of the day is coming up, and we have some bangers of end-of-show mixes for you, including the latest for our No Agenda the Musical.

Speaker 1 But before we do that, we'd like to check out some ISOs that we'll play at the very end of the show. It's just part of how the sausage is made.
You have one here that is seven seconds long.

Speaker 1 That can't be right.

Speaker 1 I'll pick it up where I think it should be. Let me check this out.

Speaker 39 Wow, this show should be in the Smithsonian.

Speaker 1 What was the full thing, actually?

Speaker 14 Wow, this show should be in the Smithsonian.

Speaker 1 Oh, that was your first prompt. You forgot to remove the first prompt and just leave the second one in.

Speaker 39 Wow, this show should be in the Smithsonian.

Speaker 1 That's not bad. I like it.
Here's your second one. Yupper's best podcast in the universe.

Speaker 1 No, no, that's not Yuppers. I'm liking the other one better.
But let me try mine. I'm having so much fun right now.

Speaker 1 You couldn't even understand it, could you?

Speaker 1 No, and it's like, what was the point? No. because we're ending this show.
We're not having fun. Here we go.
That's the craziest thing I've ever heard in my life.

Speaker 1 No, I think yours wins. Let me play it one more time.

Speaker 39 Wow, this show should be in the Smithsonian.

Speaker 1 As should that model from the LLM. Hey, everybody, it's Cyber John's tip of the day.

Speaker 1 Great fast for you and me. Just the chip with JCD,

Speaker 1 and sometimes Adam.

Speaker 1 Which brings me to a complaint. Uh-oh.

Speaker 1 So you said that model, you know, and it's a cute one, that voice, because she does something. I don't know what their voice is, but

Speaker 1 the cheap bastards at 11 labs, you know, they keep, they take my voices away and they give me these, I can't get the voices I want to use back. Oh, you've used them too many times.

Speaker 1 And they had like, I had 10 that I could select from, and now I got three, take it or leave it.

Speaker 1 They keep doing this, and they keep changing stuff. Oh,

Speaker 1 that sucks. They want me to pay.
Well, of course they want you to pay. If you pay, then you get to here.
I got my voice. Oh, no.
If I pay, I know that there's all these things I can do, but

Speaker 1 I don't want to pay. Yeah, I sampled my voice.

Speaker 1 You paid? How much did you pay?

Speaker 1 I don't remember. It's too much.
Yeah, it's too much. Let me see what this is.
Let me see how this works out today. Let me see if it's working.

Speaker 1 John is mean to me. It doesn't even sound like me.
Let me try this one. John is mean to me.
It sounds just like you. Really?

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 1 No, let me see. No.
Yeah. In fact,

Speaker 1 when you segue back to your own voice, it sounded like the same guy. Really? You thought it sounded like me? Yeah, I think it sounds exactly like you.

Speaker 1 It doesn't have quite the intonation, but it's not bad. Let me try this one.
Let me see if this one works better. Hold on.

Speaker 1 Now it's time for the tip of day. Tip of day.
No, tip of day. Tip of day.

Speaker 1 That was my mistake. Tip of day.
But when you do your own voice, you can do other stuff. Now it's time for the tip of the day.
That sounds like me. It even has my echo, my room.

Speaker 1 Now it's time for the tip of the day. But you can also do something like

Speaker 1 you can tell it to be sexy.

Speaker 1 You know, I think there's something fascinating about the fact that instead of sampling like Clinton or the president or something you can use, you sound, this is like the vanity search.

Speaker 1 Let me just clone my own voice. I'm going to tell you something.
You have that voice already. You don't understand.

Speaker 1 I don't want to have to work. I just want to have an AI that talks to you and keeps

Speaker 1 you three and a half hours twice a week. Well, it would be interesting to try, but it's going to be dull.

Speaker 1 Listen to this. Now it's time for the tip of the day.

Speaker 1 You should pay for this stuff, man. I like the way you amuse yourself by sampling yourself.

Speaker 1 This is all all intended for me to just be able to not get up at 5 a.m. on Sundays.
That's all that this is about. Just once a week, have AI Adam do the show with you.
I'm building this whole system.

Speaker 1 Well, good for you. It'll be mean.
It will work because it cannot

Speaker 1 interact. It can be mean to you.

Speaker 1 Well, no, but it can't interact. Yeah, not yet.
This is just the first inning, John. Don't you know that AI is the future?

Speaker 1 Tip of the day?

Speaker 1 So I looked as I gave this tip out in one of the shows before Tip of the Day existed.

Speaker 1 And I want to make it official to put it in the list so when you go to noagendafund.com, you find it. Okay.

Speaker 1 And I looked there. I couldn't find it.
They didn't even pick it up, you know, because they pick up a lot of stuff. Like if you say you like a book, boom, it'll be in there.

Speaker 1 But it's not tip of the day, but it'll just, they have all these things that we've ever everything we've ever suggested in terms of

Speaker 1 gigawatt coffee and the rest of it.

Speaker 1 This is the Bow Shield T9

Speaker 1 from Boeing Aircraft Company.

Speaker 1 This is a substitute for Ranch Hand, which is my all-time favorite substitute for WD-40. It's just better.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 And this is the Boeing version of WD-40 that's better. And it came as a tip from one of our producers who said, you know what, tip of the day, you should do this.

Speaker 1 And he went a long exposition on why he loves this stuff. He's a mechanic.

Speaker 1 And I said, Well, you know, I think we talked about it already, and we did, I'm sure, although I couldn't find any evidence of it. What's it called again?

Speaker 1 Bow Shield, B-O-E Shield, T9.

Speaker 1 Bow Shield T9. Okay.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 it is a cheap-looking can with this is from Boeing, it says at the bottom,

Speaker 1 just

Speaker 1 developed by the Boeing Corporation. So it's used for

Speaker 1 it's a lubricant. It's a degreaser.
It's a

Speaker 1 de ruster.

Speaker 1 It does everything

Speaker 1 WD-40 does, only it does it better.

Speaker 1 And it's also good, like a liquid bearings. It's good for getting

Speaker 1 something that's squeaky that'll eliminate it in no time. Like your chair?

Speaker 1 It would do the chair.

Speaker 1 The problem is you have to be careful with this and ranch hand and all of these things if it gets on the floor. Oh, because

Speaker 1 you can't pick it up. You can't.
Oh, you know what? You did do this

Speaker 1 on August 1st, 2024.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it was pretty tip of the day, though. It wasn't tip of the day.
It wasn't. Everybody.

Speaker 1 This is the one that I wanted to plug some time ago, and I came up with Liquid Bearing, which was the

Speaker 1 second to it.

Speaker 1 This is called Bow Shield T9.

Speaker 1 This is a...

Speaker 1 This was tip of the day.

Speaker 1 I can't find it on the on the website well then I mean I can just play this for you you want to do it again We just you're saying exactly the same thing, which is kind of amazing

Speaker 1 I'm pretty consistent the way I present you're a consistent dude. All right, continue continue with your Bow Shield T9.
Don't get any of these products on the floor.

Speaker 1 No You can't, if you try to rub it off like you take a towel and get it off, it just spreads it. And you end up with a part of the floor that's so slippery that you'll kill yourself.

Speaker 1 You have to get out a bunch of detergent and you've got to get this stuff wiped up. It's just horrible in that regard.

Speaker 1 And so it's hard to just spray on something because if there's a floor, then it drips down there. You're

Speaker 1 to be honest. Now, what kind of disbursement mechanism does it have? Does it have like the straw that WD-40 has?

Speaker 1 I never use the straw. I always use the straw.
I love the straw on the WD-40. The problem is if you

Speaker 1 don't use WD-40, use use ranch handle T9. But here's what I'm worried about because when you spray it into hinges on the door, that's where I typically wind up using it.

Speaker 1 If that gets on the door, it's very hard to get off the door. And I'm sure the same with this

Speaker 1 Bowflex T9 stuff. Bo Flex.

Speaker 1 T9.

Speaker 1 Whatever it's called. I'm sure it's hard to get off.
I mean, you got to be careful with this stuff. You know, we need lessons in how to apply it.
That would be a good tip of the the day.

Speaker 1 Well, that's why I like liquid bearing so much because it's not in a spray can. It's in a little plastic thing with a very fine point

Speaker 1 little dropper. And so you get what you can get.
That's why it's great for hinges. It's just one drop.
You can get one drop right where you want it, and then it'll spread itself throughout.

Speaker 1 It's great for locks.

Speaker 1 But let's be honest. Oh, locks is another one.
Let's be honest. These are great American inventions.

Speaker 1 And they're needed. And you can't go into Europe and buy any of this.
They don't have this in Europe. If you say WD-40, they're like, what?

Speaker 1 You say Ranch Hand, they're like, what? You say Bowflex T9? They're like, what? Bow Shield. Bow Shield T9.
No, this is unknown in Europe. I wonder if you can even ship it to Europe.

Speaker 1 It's probably illegal.

Speaker 1 Well, I have no knowledge of this one way or the other. Okay.

Speaker 1 So once. And I go shopping when I'm in Europe.
I go to this, you know, like that huge,

Speaker 1 that huge.

Speaker 1 When's the last time you were in Europe? 2017.

Speaker 1 Yes, a while ago. Yeah, just a bit.
And I'm not going now.

Speaker 1 And that, ladies and gentlemen, in a reprise, but well worth it, is John C. Dvorak's tip of the day.
Find them all at tipoftheday.net.

Speaker 1 Great masks for you and me, just a tip with JCD

Speaker 1 and sometimes Adam.

Speaker 1 Created by Dana Bernetti. They need a lot of lube in Europe, so I'm just saying.
Could be good for them. Could be a good thing.

Speaker 1 By the way, of all these things, I still think that little bottle of liquid berries is the

Speaker 1 best. Coming up next on your No Agenda Stream, Homegrown Hits.
The ladies will bring you the latest Value for Value music. It's a great show.
It's streaming for you on NoAgendastream.com.

Speaker 1 And before that, we do have some end-of-show mixes: B-dubs and D's laughs with OG non-AI. However, Will Trees comes in with a beautiful AI slop.
In fact, it is the AI Slop Orchestra.

Speaker 1 And you can listen to all of those at getmojams.com.

Speaker 1 24-7, baby. Remember, we do not conform to the ways of this world.
We are here to serve you, your no agenda show.

Speaker 1 And I am coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, Fredericksburg, Texas. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.

Speaker 1 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's overcast and kind of miserable. I'm John C.
DeBorai. We'll be back on Thursday.
Please join us for

Speaker 1 more than three hours of media deconstruction from home and abroad. Until then, remember us at NoAgendadonations.com.
Until then, adiosmo, foes, a hooey-hooey, and such.

Speaker 1 And I like to techno stuff. And I like to techno stuff.
And I like to techno stuff. I like to techno stuff.
Thanks, Obama.

Speaker 1 You love the techno stuff. You love the techno stuff.
I do.

Speaker 1 I do.

Speaker 1 I do.

Speaker 1 You love the techno stuff.

Speaker 1 I do.

Speaker 1 Would you go to a like a

Speaker 1 concert by TSO?

Speaker 1 No, never.

Speaker 1 I could get you.

Speaker 1 I could get you up on

Speaker 1 the DJ.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I don't have any.

Speaker 1 sticks,

Speaker 1 and I like the

Speaker 1 techno to listen to when I'm in an airplane because it puts me out.

Speaker 1 And I like the techno stuff, and I like the techno stuff, and I like the techno stuff.

Speaker 1 I do, I do, I do.

Speaker 1 And I like the techno stuff, and I like the techno stuff, I do, I like the techno stuff, the techno stuff, I do,

Speaker 1 I do.

Speaker 1 I like the techno stuff. I like the techno stuff.
I like the techno stuff. If you're getting attacked on the TTC, somebody punching you in the head, just report it.

Speaker 1 Take your terrophy.

Speaker 1 But we need explaining. 416-905-647-289.
Area codes in the six to me and to you, they just rhyme.

Speaker 1 bikes on sidewalks more than streets oven mitts and newborn beats punjabis and sikhs who did this to us the elites to slgbq plus let's just say they're not like us watching city council meetings on youtube they were sus protest all day and all night citizens put up a fight trucker protest at Queen's Park I was there it just felt right

Speaker 1 the o, the r, the o, the N, place the T.

Speaker 1 You're mean to John.

Speaker 1 Why must you be mean to John?

Speaker 1 Gee, Adam, can't you see?

Speaker 1 You love to see him crying with each show.

Speaker 1 You

Speaker 1 call him boomer and say so

Speaker 1 Afterwards, he's left alone, singing the blues

Speaker 1 and sighs.

Speaker 1 You treat him coldly

Speaker 1 each show of the year.

Speaker 1 You always scold him

Speaker 1 whenever the trolls are near.

Speaker 1 Why, it must be

Speaker 1 great fun to be mean meant to job.

Speaker 1 Gee, Adam,

Speaker 1 can't you see? You just love

Speaker 1 being meos, Mofo, Javorak.org slash na.

Speaker 39 Wow, this show should be in the Smithsonian.