This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation media assassination episode 1236.
This is no agenda.
Enhancing hot mics and broadcasting live from Opportunity Zone 33 here at the frontier of Austin, Texas.
Capital of the Drone Star State.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where the Zephyr just went by, that's good news.
I'm John C. DeVore.
It's Crack Vaughn and Buzzkill.
In the morning.
Well, we know we do have a Zephyr economic indicators chart, and we need to know how many cars were hanging off the Zephyr today.
Only seven.
Ooh.
And what is our benchmark?
Nine is our benchmark, is it not?
Yeah.
Nine is spot on.
Ten is above.
Ten and above is above.
Nine is the baseline.
The baseline.
So we're at a seven.
Which is better than no train at all because they were gone.
Yes.
I don't remember them saying it was coming back, but there it went.
We call that green chutes.
Green shoots of optimism.
We're coming back.
Green shoots of optimism.
It's like the end of the movie Idiocracy.
Oh man, how many times someone has mentioned that movie to me in the past month or two?
Well, we're living it.
We're living the dream.
The Keeper and I were just talking about the Gen...
I would say Millennials.
Maybe Gen Zers is more fair.
They don't want to go back to work.
Well, mentioning that, let's go to the Alexander Castro Cortez clip.
So, in other words, we're fishing from the same pond again, Dvorak.
I think when we talk about this idea of reopening society, you know, only in America does the president, when the president tweets about liberation, does he mean go back to work?
When we have this discussion about going back or reopening, I think a lot of people should just say, no, we're not going back to that.
We're not going back to working 70-hour weeks just so that we could put food on the table and not even feel any sort of semblance of security in our lives.
I guess the checks have come through, huh?
So who's working 70 hours a week?
Even Silicon Valley guys that are working their asses off 60.
Who's working 70?
What's she talking about?
We work 70 hours a week.
Well, if you count watching television, they get clips.
Yes, that's a big part of the job.
It's not the same as what she's describing.
Okay, but still...
But she didn't quite describe what is really going on or what is being used as a reason for not wanting to go back to work as more fear, absolute fear over getting sick and what's going to happen and we're not ready and oh my god.
It depends on what part of the country you're in.
Yeah.
We had that website.
We cited a few shows back.
Oh, yes.
Well, yeah.
If you live in New York, yeah, you're going to be scared to death.
I don't think so.
I'm sorry.
I don't think so.
And by the way, that was not necessarily this age group.
I'm talking 25.
The age group was variable on there.
I'm talking anecdotally from what I'm hearing around me.
It's surprising is what I'm saying.
So it's not so much about what I read in that.
It was a good piece of research where you could see that white women, the Karens in the burbs in the metro areas were more afraid than the rest.
But now I'm talking about kids who don't want to go back to work because they think the adults are stupid and are trying to kill themselves and everybody else.
This is what's happening.
Well, this is our education system at work.
It's also the information that we're being given is so...
I mean, it's not even there.
This is why I spend the entire day watching C-SPAN, and it's not just waiting for the corona briefing.
There's a lot going on in Washington, D.C. in general.
There always is.
But you cannot get the information that is discussed there on the news.
No.
So we have to do it.
It's pretty sad when you need a VJ to do that for you.
And the most interesting thing that happened since our last show on Sunday was the Hot Mike episode with John Roberts of Fox News in the briefing room.
Which was interesting for a number of reasons.
I don't know if you saw this, but I think it's either before or after the press briefing.
John Roberts comes in.
He's the reporter from Fox, the White House correspondent.
And you'll hear him very clearly.
I tried to clean it up a little bit, this audio, so we could listen all the way through.
And he's talking to, I think, either an audio engineer or a camera tech, a technician.
And there's a couple of things that are said after what happened.
We'll just go through it.
I'll step through it.
It's easier.
Here's John Roberts on the hot mic!
And this is how this works.
You know, the pool video is open, they leave the mics open, and anything goes.
What's up, baby?
All right, man.
Where do you go, baby?
You can take out the mask.
The peace mortality rate's at 0.1 to 0.3, according to...
Yeah, really?
So what he just heard coming in is he says to this tech, hey man, you can take off the mask, no worry, it's about a.1 to a.3 according to the new data from this study in Los Angeles.
That's reassuring.
Everybody here has been vaccinated anyway.
Now this was the weird part where this camera tech out of the blue says, everybody here has got a vaccine anyway.
What do you think that was about?
Yeah, that was the part that was the weirdest.
And maybe he misspoke, or...
Maybe he's thinking of mistaking the flu vaccine for a corona vaccine, perhaps.
I think that might be it.
Well, there are several vaccines that are done, and I already have a code.
Then I'm going to start giving them the cameraman, let's face it.
That would be the first guy you want to give it to.
Yeah.
What are you talking about?
I think the first guy you want to give me.
Well, yeah, if you just want to experiment.
Yes!
Hello!
It's called a trial, John.
We don't call that experiments anymore.
It's called a trial.
All right, so that was weird, and no one has come back to that.
No one has found this guy.
No one's tracked him down, asked him what he meant, of course.
And John Roberts also doesn't really respond.
Like, what do you mean?
So that is very odd.
We'll continue.
USC and LA County Public Health come out with a study.
They found that there are 7,000 cases in California, but they really believe that there are anywhere from 221,000 to 442,000 people who are in fact.
Really?
So that makes it 0.1, 2, 0.3.
There's a study to get out there.
Yeah, just get with it.
So it's suggestification.
What else?
What's your right line with the tape?
Yeah, exactly that.
That was a hoax.
I don't think it was a hoax.
So what he's basically saying is that the actual infection rate can be 40 to 80 times higher in the L.A. County area than previously expected, which means your death rate is incredibly low or much lower than discussed and much lower, I guess, as codified in the models.
Which would make sense, because we've reduced those models tenfold, multiple tenfold, just to get to something that we're not even looking at anymore.
Now we're just pretending we're looking at a chart and it's influenza-like illnesses.
And so the camera guy eventually says, oh, this is just all a hoax there.
He says, no, no, not a hoax, but this kind of looks like it was the flu season, 2017-2018, which you and I had already identified here.
So this is the most tweeted video.
It's all over the place.
I'm getting it on emails.
There's nothing, there's only one moment when this is brought up in the coronavirus briefing, which was baffling to me.
So here's John Roberts.
He had the information firsthand.
It's his hot mic.
He's going to ask Dr.
Birx, what is going on?
And do you think she'll answer?
The University of Southern California and the L.A. County Public Health put out a report today that suggests that the penetrance of the virus is as much as almost 40 times what it was believed to be that as many as 442,000 people in L.A. County may have been infected, which suggests two things.
It suggests that you have a lot more people out there who could be spreading the virus.
But it also suggests that the case fatality rate is more in line with the 2017-2018 flu than what we've seen in some other areas of the world.
But I'm wondering if you've seen that and what your thoughts were.
So he actually expands quite nicely and says, So we're looking at all those studies very carefully and I think you will remember over the last three weeks I've been talking about the level of asymptomatic spread and my concern about asymptomatic spread because with flu and other diseases when people are sick
it's easy to contact trace.
When people are not sick and shedding virus, you have to have a very different approach, a very different sentinel surveillance approach, a sentinel monitoring approach, which we outlined in the guidelines.
And it's why the guidelines took that very seriously.
I think the way you categorize this, John, is the love is over, Birx.
So not only does she not answer the question, she immediately pulls a pence, moves right over to immediately to another topic, goes on, and then wait for the kicker at the end.
What we don't want to do, and I'm just going to do another 30 seconds on testing.
These tests are not 100% sensitive or specific.
And I'm going to go over this over and over again.
Very important what she says here.
Not 100% sensitive or 100% specific.
It took me half an hour and five plays of this to understand what she means when we get to the end.
I'm going to go over this over and over again.
So if you have 1% of your population infected...
And you have a test that's only 99% specific.
That means that when you find a positive, 50% of the time it will be a real positive, and 50% of the time it won't be.
What?
Okay.
So she throws some math out here, which makes zero sense.
It makes zero sense.
And I'm going to play that bit again and then play it the last 20 seconds and see if we can figure it out.
But she's trying to...
Beside not answering the question, which was simply...
Because of this test, it appears so many more people are infected.
Your death rate is much, much lower.
What's going on with that?
Can you address that?
She doesn't do that.
She says, there's asymptomatic, and then comes this stuff about the testing.
Mind the words.
That means that when you find a positive, 50% of the time it will be a real positive, and 50% of the time it won't be.
And that's why we're really asking people to start testing in among the first responders and the healthcare workers, and it may have had the greatest exposure, because that's where the test will be most reliable.
So it took me a while to figure this out.
It took me a while to figure it out.
What she is telling us...
Why don't you explain it to everybody?
Because I didn't figure out what she just said.
What she said was malarkey.
Okay, so the math equation is bullcrap.
I think what she's trying to say is even if you have 99%, so let's just say 100%, test...
She says 50% would be positive and the other 50% would be a real positive.
I know what she's saying.
It finally hit me.
This test does not discern between influenza and coronavirus.
That's why she's saying we have to test the first responders because they're the ones that will get the coronavirus.
So all this testing in L.A., it could be influenza 50%.
And 50% coronavirus, which even destroys this whole bullcrap argument even further that we were shut down over this.
Well, I'm going to disagree with your interpretation.
Why?
Because there's no evidence that this test would detect influenza.
How about just detecting other coronaviruses like the common cold?
I'm sorry.
We specifically looked at the test.
From producers who are involved in the assays.
And none of them actually does the coronavirus.
COVID, you know, the SARS... Yeah, COVID-19, SARS 2.2.
Version 3.
Beta.
Yeah, version 3 is a good one, by the way.
Beta.
So I think what she's saying is, it just detects...
Okay, maybe it's not...
I think it has to be influenza, because that's why she doesn't want to address it, because the test is showing people positive.
Whether it's corona, a different coronavirus, or influenza...
What she's saying is there's two.
It can be either A or B, and half of them will not be the right one you're looking for.
So whether it's a different coronavirus or influenza B or whatever this test does, I think the tests are bullshit.
That sounds like it to me.
So that's why she wouldn't address it.
She can't say the death rate, because the death rate is likely even lower than that, if half of this is something else.
Or it could be higher.
This thing's a joke.
It's just...
Bullshit!
That's what it is, man.
There's something amiss.
Well, none of the data, none of the models, they don't even show the chart anymore.
There's no charts.
It's just scarves, no charts.
That's all we get.
Very, very disappointing.
But again, no wonder young people, they're not even getting this information.
They don't know what's happening.
They don't get anything.
Whatever Cutie Pie says, or PewDiePie, whatever his name is.
What does PewDiePie say?
What is the latest advice we've received from Sweden?
He got sued again.
He's off the radar.
The videos, the briefings have been pretty funny.
Yes, I have some briefings.
I pull a few of them that I thought were funny.
I'm sure you have different ones because it goes on forever.
Yeah, it sure does.
Let's see what I have here.
I got a couple that are pretty funny.
Oh yeah, this is one where the Surgeon General goes up.
Yes.
And then he starts asking, you know, the guy, first he asks us a question about, why did you say it was, you know, it was, you know, you don't have to wear a mask, now you have to wear a mask, you don't have to wear a mask.
So the guy, the reporter calls him back out, and then kind of berates him, and the Surgeon General takes offense, and then Trump comes in and has a punchline at the end.
The recommendation changed, the information changed, and that's what you want from your public health leaders.
Isn't the argument made that you knew about asymptomatic transmission at the time that you said that and that you were essentially misleading the public?
The honest answer to you is no, we did not.
That was the recommendation of the World Health Organization and the CDC, and we gave you the best information we could at the time.
So I actually a little bit resent that implication because I work hard to try to protect the American people.
And we are always going to give the American people the best information we have available at the time.
And we're humble enough to say, look, if we don't know, we're going to change.
We're going to change those recommendations.
So the president, besides handing out in the beginning of the briefings actual information, is spending a lot of his time defending the timeline and defending the facts.
He's doing fake news call-outs consistently.
Oh, constantly.
Consistently.
Now, there was a couple things that happened.
I think it was maybe Monday...
He wanted to show that all was well with Cuomo, and everyone's in a love fest, and he...
I don't know who is in charge of running the video for him during these shows, but someone really messed up royally.
I think that he got Biden's old guy.
Because Biden's been...
Well, hold on.
Maybe there's a pool rotation.
I don't know.
But somehow, he got the Biden guys in the room.
The idea was to show a video of Cuomo during Cuomo's press conference saying something very flattering about either Trump or the White House or the federal government.
And I don't know.
It's one of those things.
If you don't do it yourself, it will never happen right.
And the kicker...
The punchline, the payoff, whatever it was, was just not there.
But it started off pretty bad.
It'll take two minutes, and I think you'll find it interesting, but we appreciate it.
And let's see if we can do that.
You'll turn out the lights, and we'll see if we can do that.
Thank you.
The first no sound.
It's a big mess.
Anyway, so I cut all that part out.
We'll go to the end here.
See, there's no sound.
Heroic efforts on behalf of people as facilitated by government, federal and state.
And it's over.
He's waiting for the payoff.
They left out the good part.
Great job, fellas.
They did a better job on ventilators.
Andrew had something else to say that was really nice, but we won't go through that.
But he really, I mean, it was really a good statement.
Do you want to put the rest of it up or do you not have it?
I just think it's so good because it's bipartisan.
Massive fail.
It was like three minutes, everyone's just going, what the hell is going on?
What the hell is that all about?
Thank you, AV. If you're going to DJ with clips, man, you got to know what you're doing.
You got to have somebody around who can do it.
Now, he went on to the Wall Street Journal article.
And this Wall Street Journal article praised the entire effort.
And the president brought in the paper version of the Wall Street Journal, held it up, and said, here's what you should be doing.
The Wall Street Journal wrote a fantastic piece, a highly respected gentleman, Christopher DeMuth.
And this piece was just...
Is Christopher DeMuth at all known and or a highly respected gentleman?
I don't know him.
...in the Wall Street Journal...
Weekend edition.
And Trump rewrites the book on emergencies.
That's what's happened, too.
And we just read one paragraph.
He's given pride of place to federalism and private enterprise, lauding the patriotism and proficiency of our fantastic governors and mayors, meaning I do call them fantastic when it's appropriate.
And our incredible business leaders and genius companies, I guess I probably use those terms too, when they're doing a good job.
When they're not doing a good job, I don't use those terms.
Thanks for the memo.
Our heroic doctors and nurses and orderlies and our tremendous truckers, they have all done good jobs.
By shouting out many of them by name and documenting their deeds on a fully daily basis, he has vivified the American way in action.
Once it was reluctantly aroused.
It was hard to get it aroused and it is hard to get it aroused, but we got it aroused.
What?
It was hard to get it aroused, and it is hard to get it aroused, but we got it aroused.
I'm thinking that's got to be a contender for end of show.
What is he thinking about?
The truth always wants to come out.
He did a good job, though.
He nailed it, finally.
It was hard to get it aroused, and it is hard to get it aroused, but we got it aroused.
He has Viagra-ized the country.
Thank you very much, Prez.
Then, this was yesterday.
I can't believe...
He's gold, man.
That is just gold.
Thank you.
Gift.
Yesterday, there was...
Actually, it was the past few days.
Big...
Oh, my God.
The CDC director, he says it's going to be worse when this thing comes back!
We're all going to die!
In fact, I have a headline here from...
The Washington Post.
Here's what the Washington Post headlined.
Second wave of coronavirus.
Winter outbreak is likely to be more devastating, CDC director warns.
Even Steve Bannon's podcasts were tripping out.
They're like, oh my god, it's going to be worse.
It's going to be horrible.
We're all going to die.
And within three minutes of yesterday's briefing, the president brings the CD director up on stage to refute this fake news.
I do want to mention a man who's done a very good job for us, Dr.
Robert Redfield, was totally misquoted in the media on a statement about the fall season and the virus.
Totally misquoted.
I spoke to him and he said it was ridiculous.
He was talking about the flu and corona coming together at the same time.
And Corona could be just some little flare-ups that we'll take care of.
We're going to knock it out.
We'll knock it out fast.
But that's what he was referring to, coming together at the same time.
And I think rather than waiting, I'd ask Dr.
Redfield to come up and say a couple of words just to straighten that out, because he didn't say it was a big, big explosion.
The headline in The Washington Post was totally inaccurate.
The statement wasn't bad in The Post, but the headline was ridiculous, which is...
As I say, that's fake news, and CNN is fake news like crazy, and they had just totally the wrong story, which they knew.
They were asked to change it, and they wouldn't do that.
And it was false.
So I'll ask Dr.
Redfield, who is a real professional, to come up and explain.
Please.
Thank you, Dr.
Thank you, Mr.
President.
I really do think it's important to clarify this as we build the confidence of the American people.
When I commented yesterday that there was a possibility of the next fall and winter could be more difficult, more complicated.
When we had two respiratory illnesses circulating at the same time, influenza and the coronavirus-19.
But I think it's really important to emphasize what I didn't say.
I didn't say that this was going to be worse.
I said it was going to be more difficult and potentially complicated because we'll have flu and coronavirus circulating at the same time.
Ah, the press went nuts.
Like, is this your exact quote?
Is this what you said?
Well, here I got the CBS version of what you're talking about.
Ooh, nice.
This is a clip, Odd Rick Bright.
They also bring in the Rick Bright story.
The explosive charge came from Rick Bright, who said he was dismissed yesterday after pushing for a more thorough vetting of hydroxychloroquine, a malaria drug the president has pushed as a possible breakthrough for coronavirus.
Bright said the administration has pressured me and other conscientious scientists To fund companies with political connections, as well as efforts that lack scientific merit.
He added that sidelining me in the middle of this pandemic and placing politics and cronyism ahead of science puts lives at risk.
The president has touted the promise of hydroxychloroquine many times, despite questions raised previously by many other health officials about its effectiveness.
Based on what I see, it could be a game changer.
As the president praised states who are moving to reopen their economies, new modeling used by the White House now predicts nearly 66,000 could die by August, a significant increase from what the president claimed earlier this week.
It looks like we'll be at about a 60,000 mark.
The president's own CDC director, Robert Redfield, warned a second wave of the virus that could coincide with the opening of flu season this fall will actually be even more difficult than the one we just went through.
Mr.
Trump said Redfield had been misquoted.
I didn't say that this was going to be worse.
I said it was going to be more...
Wow, he stumbles on that twice.
He stumbled on it on stage.
Instead of saying difficult, he said complicated.
Difficult, he did it here again.
The guy's no good.
And potentially complicated because we'll have flu and coronavirus circulating at the same time.
But epidemiologists agree that a second wave is possible and that it could overwhelm the healthcare system.
I just want to say, and I don't want to harken back to the testing, but he's saying this for a reason.
He's saying it's not just complicated because we'll have patients with X and patients with Y, but we may not be able to tell them apart.
I have a feeling there's more behind this.
And the press probably rightfully smells it.
That's why you write a headline like that.
But why?
No one asked to follow.
Why?
Why is it more difficult?
Why?
If we have an overlap of COVID patients, a rise in COVID patients at the same time we have a rise in flu season, that could be difficult for hospitals to manage.
Tonight, Dr.
Redfield confirmed that quote he gave to the Washington Post was accurate.
So why more difficult?
Is it more people?
Haven't we just solved that with all this capacity that we can start up at a moment's notice?
Why?
Something's...
I think it's a testing.
And it's also, the way they ended that story, I don't think you heard it, but she said that he reconfirmed what he originally said.
Yes.
She never used the word originally.
Oh.
But if you listen to just that last chunk again, it's a very, you know, it's almost as though the media has decided that, well, we're going to...
Stick with our guns.
They really want to collapse the entire system to get Trump out of office.
That's the only thing I can think of.
Let me try that last bit again.
Let's listen to it.
We have an overlap of COVID patients, a rise in COVID patients at the same time we have a rise in flu season.
That could be difficult for hospitals to manage.
Tonight, Dr.
Redfield confirmed that quote he gave to the Washington Post was accurate.
Yeah, I think some people would like to just see a bad economy for Trump, to see him fail, and there's absolutely people who want that and who don't care.
Bill Maher is still in that camp.
But the assault on the hydroxychloroquine is coordinated.
And the president had a response to it.
Here's one of those coordinated little bits from CNBC. Time now for a coronavirus broader update with Frank Holland.
Frank.
Hey there, Sarah.
Here's the very latest.
In one of the first organized looks at a drug that's been praised by President Trump, hydroxychloroquine, it did not help in the treatment of COVID-19.
In a study of 368 patients in veterans' hospitals, there were more deaths among those who got the malaria drug than for those who received the standard treatment.
The study has not yet been reviewed by other scientists.
It's not peer-reviewed.
The study was taken not with a control group, just with people from different hospitals, different ages, and it's done by a guy who was tweeted and blogged incessantly about how much he hates Trump, and it's not peer-reviewed, so it's not there yet, but it's coordinated.
They'll go with this.
Of course, though, it's coordinated and the media is happy to do that because we all know who really runs the media and the pharmaceuticals are not having this cheap generic drug being any kind of wonder middle for anything.
It must be the official new stuff, which is likely remdesivir from Gilead, and now there's 29 others.
But the president is ready for this.
He continues to promote it.
It has to be, I think, according to him, in a combination with zinc, at least.
I don't know.
That's what everyone says.
Dr.
Drew, even though he's back on the Fauci fear army bandwagon, he had the following to say.
Yeah, there's been many mixed benefits on hydroxychloroquine.
I will tell you that doctors are using it routinely, so it has some benefit in some cases.
I've treated a number of cases now of COVID, and I've only had one where my peers didn't put the patient or I didn't put the patient on hydroxychloroquine.
And in some cases, it really seems to make a difference.
The problem is we don't know for whom that is.
And it's essentially risk-free.
It is risk-free.
There's a rheumatologist here in Los Angeles that has something like a thousand patient years collected, and he said he's never seen a single side effect from it.
Don't confuse chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine.
Chloroquine is a more risky deal with more cardiac stuff.
Hydroxychloroquine, I've used it for 30 years and never even thought about worrying about the cardiac stuff.
It's so rare.
If somebody were on methadone with a prolonged QT interval, then we might think about it.
But it's in a normal heart situation.
No.
And so there you have a small data point that, yes, you can say about chloroquine, but hydroxychloroquine is a whole different deal.
So there's just something to keep your eye on.
But Trump felt the assault coming, and he has an interesting response.
He's putting everybody on notice, because, of course, we know how this works, and I do have a few clips about the business model that we're looking into.
So here's Trump who all of a sudden, out of the blue, just starts talking about PEPFAR. PEPFAR is the presidential AIDS fund that is, I think, mainly administrated by CDC and the Gates Foundation throughout Africa, but around the world, and this has been keeping people alive who have AIDS. That's the story, and they're sticking to it.
And the first thing he does is he calls out the good work that some of the Money that is made available to the NIH in their budget is doing, and I think what he's doing here is isolating Dr.
Birx from what is about to come.
A panel of experts at the NIH is actually now recommending against the use of hydroxychloroquine in combination with Z-Pak, which is something you've been recommending.
I'm always willing to take a left breath.
That was the question.
I'm sorry.
Here we go.
PEPFAR, we're spending...
The United States, with that help to the best of my knowledge, mostly in Africa, $6 billion a year.
And that's on AIDS. What we've done for AIDS in Africa is unbelievable.
We spend $6 billion a year.
That's been going on for a long time.
Nobody knows that.
You've never heard that.
I've never heard that.
$6 billion a year.
Millions of people are living right now and living very comfortably.
Because of the fact that we have found the answer to that horrible, horrible plague.
That was a plague.
But we spent $6 billion a year.
And from what I hear, it's very well spent, done by professionals, including this great professional right here.
That was the thing that you worked hardest on and something that was very close to her heart.
So it's, you know, it's something that I think people should start hearing.
The World Health Organization, we're just finding more and more problems, and we spend this money really well.
There are other ways we can spend the $500 million.
So that's his wind-up.
So he moves from, and it's out of the blue.
There's no question about PEPFAR or NIH. He just says, PEPFAR, really good.
Hey, it's six billion dollars.
We're the ones doing that.
We're keeping people alive.
That's pretty good.
Then he goes into a whole spiel about the World Health Organization.
Ridiculous that we send $500 million a year there.
The money's better spent.
And then it arrives.
But we can find other ways to spend it where people are going to be helped, we think, in a much greater way.
We're doing some research on certain people that take a lot of credit for what they do.
And NIH... Is giving away a lot of money.
A lot of money.
We give away for years.
For many years they give away a lot of money.
And some people complain and some people don't.
Some people are extremely happy.
So we're looking into that also.
They're giving away approximately, as I understand it recently, more than $32 billion a year.
$32 billion.
And so we've been looking at that for a while and we're going to be having some statements to be made about that.
$32 billion a year.
It's a lot of money and we want to make sure it's being spent wisely and we've been doing that, by the way, and we'll have some statements on that.
We're investigating certain people?
Who take a lot of credit, but there's a lot of money, a lot of money.
We're looking into this money.
Where's it going?
Holy crap, he put people on notice with that.
I'd say.
At NIH, which is such a cesspool.
Yeah, well, that's where they moved this guy...
They move this character...
Yeah, the guy who got pushed back.
Taken off of one thing and moved to the other.
But there was a moment in the press conference where they're talking about it where somebody kept bringing this up.
And Trump finally got irked.
And he...
To me, what he does in this clip is he pulls a Joe Pesci.
Ooh.
And he starts saying, what do you know?
And he just goes after this woman...
This is the gifts clip where this woman reporter comes out and she says, well, this man, you think because he has all these gifts and he's gifted and she keeps emphasizing this word gifts.
Until Trump can't take it anymore, he jumps into the fray.
Knowing Dr.
Bright and knowing what his gifts are as one of the country's leading experts on vaccines, are those gifts best suited at NIH rather than BARDA? What's he going to be doing with you?
What is he going to be doing at the NIH? So first of all, are his gifts best suited to work with you rather than...
I don't really think I can comment on somebody's relative gifts.
I mean, he's going to be at the NIH and he's going to be responsible.
From what I hear, again, this is what I've heard, that he's going to be responsible for the development of diagnostics.
which is very, very important.
The NIH is going to be involved in trying to develop new generation diagnostics which we feel is going to be very important for the future of being able to facilitate the kinds of things that now are sometimes problematic.
And why do you say he has great gifts or gifts?
What?
Do you know him?
No, no, but have you reviewed him?
Have you stated him?
Have you reported on him?
You said his gifts.
His gifts.
I mean...
Well, that doesn't mean you have gifts.
I know a lot of people that play baseball, but they can't hit 150 in the major leagues.
No, no, but you talk about his great gifts.
Go ahead, please.
His great gifts.
I hear he's well endowed.
One of his many great gifts.
Yeah, you know, thank you for bringing that up because it shows how they're circling the wagons.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, you got way too far in front of this man.
You're showing the flag too much.
Pull back, pull back, retreat.
Stick him in diagnostics.
I don't know what the hell's going on with that guy.
Well, Fauci pulled him back, or someone in the NIH, because Trump is on to them.
He's on to them.
He's like, okay, I didn't know about the $6 billion for PEPFAR. Okay, reasonable.
How about the other $22 billion?
Well, $32 billion.
Well, that's the total.
So there should be $26 billion left after the $6 billion to PEPFAR. And then the $500 million to the WHO. I look forward to seeing what things he'll be saying about it in the next few days.
The media's just going to keep attacking.
Yeah, but he'll do it in the briefing.
We get to see it.
I don't give a crap about the media.
I don't give a crap.
You gifts.
What is this with this gift?
You know this guy?
Do you know this guy?
He's got gifts.
What are the gifts he's got?
He's got gifts.
That was the same reporter who two days earlier was...
She's an activist reporter.
Although she's been in the briefing room several times.
She's from CBS. And...
That Asian woman.
Well, there's...
Yes, this is not the one who worked for the Phoenix Hong Kong media, but she...
Her name is...
Weijia Zhang?
Yeah.
Weijia Zhang?
Weijia Zhang?
Yeah, she's an activist reporter.
She's trying to...
Oh, listen to this exchange.
This is not asking questions.
She has been sent in to debate the president.
And...
I'll hand it to him.
He debates her.
And I think the whole idea was, let's send in a woman who's Asian.
Anything he says will rip him apart.
Well, you can go look at the headlines.
Tells woman to quiet down.
Not so loud.
Calm down.
Racist.
Asian.
Woo!
Since you shared with us something else that you saw on TV today, I have a question about something you said on Thursday, which is that you were angry because information about the virus should have been told to us earlier and a lot sooner.
People knew it was happening.
So what's interesting here is she is...
So there's really two...
There's three tactics.
One, well, it used to be masks and it was ventilators.
Now it's testing.
So there's the testing.
And then there's the timeline.
We still want to establish through the CIA Broadcasting Corporation this time That you dragged your feet, Mr.
President, you have blood on your hands.
That's what they're getting set up with the committees for to do another impeachment.
People knew it was happening, and people did not want to talk about it.
Many Americans are saying the exact same thing about you, that you should have warned them the virus was spreading like wildfire.
Through the month of February, instead of holding rallies with thousands of people, why did you wait so long to warn that?
Who are you with?
And why did you not have social distancing until March 16th?
Who are you with?
I'm Leija Jang with CBS News.
So, if you look at what I did in terms of cutting off...
We're banning China from coming in.
Chinese nationals.
She's got it all.
Chinese nationals!
She's yelling everything at her.
We're banning China from coming in.
Chinese nationals.
But by the way, not Americans who are also...
Nice and easy.
Nice and easy.
I have to admit, I wouldn't say that to anyone, let alone a woman.
Nice and easy.
Just relax while you're interrupting me.
I've got to try it.
We should all try this.
Men is a good idea.
If your wife is talking, just say, hey, nice and easy.
Relax.
Do you want to hear the rest of this or not?
Oh, no.
I didn't know it was...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, it's just...
I've got to stop.
It's too funny.
But by the way, not Americans who are also...
Nice and easy.
Nice and easy.
Just relax.
We cut it off.
People were amazed.
These gentlemen, everybody was amazed that I did it.
We had 21 people in our room.
Everybody was against it but me.
Dr.
Fauci said, had I not done that, perhaps tens of thousands and maybe much more than that, people would have died.
I was very early.
Very, very early.
And we just saw, you saw Brett Baer making a statement.
They had a debate well into February.
And not even mentioned, it wasn't even mentioned, the Democrats.
We were very early.
Oh, I'm the president.
And you know what I just did?
And you know what I just...
Now, is this normal behavior when you're in the press briefing room with the president to just interrupt him and say, and by the way...
Is that normal?
No.
They ban you from getting credentials for being an actor.
Oh, no, they're not going to do that.
You mentioned, it wasn't even mentioned, the Democrats.
We were very early.
Oh, I'm the president, and you know what I just did?
Just talking right through it.
And you know what I just...
And by the way, when you issued the ban, the virus was already here.
Okay, and you know how many people, when I issued the ban, how many cases of virus were in the United States when I issued the ban?
Do you know the number?
No, no.
How many cases?
Remember I said one person.
How many cases were here when I issued the ban?
No, no, no.
You have to do your research.
I did my research.
On the 23rd of March, you said you knew this was going to be a pandemic.
Can I tell you what?
I did know it.
I did know it.
All I have to do is look.
Anybody knew it.
Are you ready?
How many cases were in the United States when I did my ban?
How many people had died in the United States?
Did Keep your voice down, please.
Keep your voice down.
Keep your voice down, he said loudly.
We're in the United States.
I did a ban where I'm closing up the entire country.
How many people died?
How many people died in the United States, and yet I closed up the country, and I believe there were no deaths, zero deaths, at the time I closed up the country.
Nobody was there.
And you should say thank you very much for good judgment.
Go ahead, please.
She'll be back, I predict.
This is not the end of this one.
It's almost as though he likes once this, but CBS takes it to another level.
I've got to play some clips.
Yeah, please.
This is CBS. This is a short clip, nine seconds.
This is the kind of slant we're getting off of CBS. This is a CBS slant.
As protesters in Richmond, Virginia, some linked to conservative groups, descended on the state capitol, they demanded Virginia be reopened for business.
What do you mean some linked to conservative?
Who were the other ones linked to?
Oh man, it goes so much further than this.
Well, let's play another one here.
Let's go with Nora with the misleading opening.
Good evening and thank you for joining us.
There are two major headlines as we come on the air tonight, putting scientists at odds with the Trump administration.
Researchers behind one of the leading coronavirus models, one that the White House has repeatedly cited, now says most of the country should not consider lifting stay-at-home orders until the end of May.
The new model comes as protests to reopen are growing and just as some southern governors are already loosening their restrictions.
Meantime tonight, the scientist in charge of coordinating the government's search for a coronavirus vaccine says he has been abruptly ousted from his job because of what he calls politics and cronyism.
Dr.
Rick Bright, the head of a little-known agency called BARDA, says he was sidelined after refusing to push for what he calls, quote, On-demand access to hydroxychloroquine.
That is the drug that President Trump has repeatedly mentioned as a treatment for COVID-19, even though it hasn't been approved for that use.
Now, all of this, as the death toll in the U.S. has now passed 46,000.
Wow.
You know, this is...
I can't believe this.
You want to hear something worse?
Listen to this one.
This is the famine coming clip.
Oh, yeah.
I've heard this.
Tonight, the U.N. is warning that the pandemic is putting the world at risk of widespread famines of biblical proportions.
There are growing concerns about food supplies in this country, especially in America's meat industry.
An explosion of coronavirus cases is forcing some meat packing plants to shut down.
We've got more now from CBS's Janet Chamlin.
A major pork processing plant is the latest to close, Tyson Foods in Waterloo, Iowa, where 2,800 workers process nearly 20,000 hogs a day.
It comes after an outbreak of at least 180 COVID-19 cases there, and after Iowa lawmakers filed an OSHA complaint, even though the state's governor resisted.
We can work with different processing facilities across the state to keep the processing plants up and going.
A USA Today investigation found 150 of the nation's largest plants are in counties where the infection rate is spiking, threatening not only workers, but potentially the food supply.
Any plant or factory across the country could become the number one hotspot next week if they do not take this issue seriously.
Processing plants can be a breeding ground for the virus because many workers spend their day side by side.
This man, who recovered from COVID-19 and as we not use his name, works at Smithfield Foods in South Dakota.
We are very close.
We can use a social distance at that place.
I have a thought about this.
Because again, it's pork.
It's only pork.
It's closing.
We're being now told, be afraid.
We did have a producer on the last episode who said, hey, we got nothing in the freezers, so this could be true.
But I've received a couple other emails.
One of them, Brian, the beef producer.
And it is also possible this is a complete price-gouging scam by the Packers.
Because the Packers have a lot of control, I guess contractually or maybe, I don't know exactly how it works, with size of animals.
You know much more about this than I do, John.
So I'll tell you what I think I've understood and you can correct me.
So, for instance, with beef, I think it's 1,400 pounds is the max.
The animal has to be slaughtered.
If you take that animal to market and it's over 1,400 pounds, you get dinged in the price because it doesn't fit in the right amount of boxes or something like that.
And what apparently is happening is the meatpackers, because of the slowdown, they're taking advantage of some animals growing above size, pressuring the ranchers, the cattle producers, to move faster to either slaughter or get things into the system.
They're creating this...
And I'm just jumping around here.
They're creating an artificial...
Lack of supply.
Because they're getting this stuff for 92 cents a pound, turn around and say $6 a pound limit to per customer.
And now, oh, but why not close a couple of plants to jack up the price?
I don't think there's any reason for this other than good old-fashioned American price gouging.
Well, I... I'm not saying that's not a possibility.
Yeah.
In fact, it makes sense from the perspective of Americans.
It's what we do.
It's what we do.
But I don't think the media is involved in that.
I think the media would like to shut down the food supply to start starving the public to get Trump out of office.
It's a copacetic relationship.
So the media doesn't need to be tipped off.
They're all in.
Yes, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, and the meat packers wouldn't mind getting some more money for their product.
And at the same time, it is the product.
By the way, note they're only going after they mention in that report it goes on to Indiana.
They're hounding the woman, the Republican governor of Iowa.
They're just making her life miserable because she's a Republican.
I'm telling you, this is so political, this whole COVID-19 thing.
To get, to just screw the country, they don't care about the country, they just care about their power base and they're worried sick that Trump's going to get re-elected.
Um...
Just to finish up the pork thing, what better item to jack the price up on than the one product that China desperately needs, has promised to buy tens of billions of dollars worth as per the trade agreement.
That's exactly the one you want to jack up.
Well, there also is a report that chicken apparently is going to...
Actually, the Chinese don't eat that much chicken.
They eat duck and pork.
They're bats.
Bats are much tastier.
And bats.
Why mess around with a chicken when you got some bats hanging around?
You got a little wing in this one.
So, I don't know.
Well, it's very...
It's just depressing to listen to this stuff.
You're...
Yeah.
I don't think it's depressing.
I find it highly entertaining.
I find it to be depressing because it's like, who are these guys kidding?
And they just keep it up.
Hmm.
Well, yeah, I know where to go.
I got Jimmy Kimmel's monologue.
And I want to play that because you triggered it by saying, you know, the stay at home, it was the conservatives.
Kimmel took this to a whole new level in his monologue the other day.
I cut it down because...
I left some, and it's important enough to see you.
The spokesperson for Disney.
In the Chinese.
ABC, absolutely.
People are getting restless, especially people who aren't too bright.
In Florida on Saturday, I saw the hashtag Florida Morons was trending, and I thought, well, that could mean a lot of things.
But what it meant was this.
The governor of Florida reopened the beach in Jacksonville, and of course no one followed the rules.
Fortunately, there are no old people living in Florida who might be at risk.
So the governor of Georgia is planning to reopen tattoo parlors and bowling alleys this week, which I think that's on their state flag, right?
And thousands of Americans in more than a dozen states have gathered to protest, stay at home.
Not too far from us in Huntington Beach, this brave woman fought passionately for her right to all 31 flavors.
Now he's going through a couple of pictures, most of which are jokes or not true.
So, yeah, a woman says she wanted her right to 31 Flavors.
The creative signs that illustrated this plight, many are experiencing so powerfully, like, I need a haircut.
Massage is essential.
Jesus is my vaccine.
And Buddha is my personal trainer, I think.
In Denver, Colorado, there was a standoff between protesters and an angry healthcare worker.
Now, this was my favorite.
I saw this go down.
This is total astroturf.
Actually, it's worse.
It's a photographer who licenses their photos and their photos.
This was a healthcare worker.
No, it was someone dressed in scrubs, unbranded, completely plain scrubs, very atypical for any hospital environment, just standing there, all kinds of buddies, high-fiving at him, looking from across the street.
In fact, the woman in the car, who's yelling at him, She might have been in on it, too.
This was total setup, and the guy, I'm sure, made several thousand dollars sending this video, people buying this video and pictures of this so-called healthcare worker.
Total bullcrap, but okay.
Jimmy Kimmel's all in.
Well, you know what they say.
It ain't over till the fat lady screams crazy right-wing talking points at a medical professional who's trying to save her family's lives.
I'm starting to think these characters who support Trump might be suicidal.
And now it's the characters who support Trump.
You see how you do that?
You go through, you go from right wing and then, hey, it's these characters who support Trump.
I'm starting to think these characters who support Trump might be suicidal.
They seem to fight hardest for the things that will kill them.
They want freedom to gather in large groups during an epidemic.
They want guns.
They want pollution.
I figured it out.
They want to die and they're taking us down with them.
It's like if the Titanic was headed towards the iceberg and half of the passengers were like, can you please speed this thing up?
And I have news for Jimmy Kimmel.
What you and your colleagues will call supporters or Trump supporters, you might want to try the actual term, which is voters.
You stay away from that part, but I think it's the voters you're afraid of, maybe not the supporters.
Since you brought it up, Disney, ABC, Jimmy Kimmel completely towing the CCP party line as he should, let's have a brief little look into the Disney Imagineering special, which is airing now on Disney+.
Bob Iger, who right around the time when this whole thing came down, abruptly resigned as CEO of Disney Corporation.
I'm thinking more and more now he knew what was really coming down the pike with this coronavirus and was just way ahead of it, smartly so, because he really has quite a bond, not just with China, but But with President Xi.
Before a rare public meeting with China's president, Bob Iger learned that Xi Jinping's father, a revolutionary leader, had visited Disneyland in 1980.
Bob pressed his staff to find a photograph and presented it to Xi as an optimistic symbol of their future partnership.
I could tell he got very emotional about it.
He didn't cry, but tears welled up in his eyes.
And he said to me at the time, my interest in Disney is not rhetoric.
It's from the bottom of my heart.
I had never heard a Chinese official echo anything like that, injecting their emotion into a discussion.
It was a big deal.
Such a big deal.
Oh, yeah.
I don't buy a word of it.
And I don't buy the photo.
How do you dig up a photo from 1980 that coincidentally, because it was the only Chinese guy in the park?
I do facial recognition!
But there's more!
Let's find out what Bob Iger really did with China for the Disney Corporation.
Above all the acquisitions of content, and above all the advancements in technology, Bob Iger staked his personal legacy on opening an ambitious new Magic Kingdom in Shanghai, China.
In his eyes, the company's future depended on it.
No wonder he had to get out.
Yeah, the company's future depended on it.
Oh, really?
So in other words, if it wasn't for Shanghai, China, they'd be out of business?
Is that what he's trying to convey here as an idea?
That's what the...
Well, if I was a shareholder, I'd bail out immediately.
That is indeed what the Disney Plus streaming documentary suggests.
I'd be out of there.
If Disney cannot survive without the Shanghai Disneyland, they've got issues.
Again, Iger did resign.
Maybe for a reason.
But Disney is still all in on it.
Let's keep the little ones, little human resources, let's keep them fully engaged over there on Disney Junior.
Hiya, pals!
Pluto and I have to stay home.
Everyone's playing together to help each other get through the storm.
That's what we do.
We help each other.
We're in this together, and we'll figure it out together, too.
I miss my friends and family, but I can call them, or imagine we're playing.
It's playtime all the time.
Anything is possible when we do it!
Together!
We all have upset feelings sometimes.
And if I get scared?
I've got your way.
Did you know talking to a grown-up can make you feel better?
Your family.
I won't let you down.
Don't worry, gang!
We'll fix this by working together!
Teamwork forever!
I'm feeling better already!
Even when we're apart, we're still in each other's hearts.
I'm going to need you guys as part of my team.
We'll be okay, as long as we stick together.
Stay brave, patient, and kind, and remember, we're all in this...
Together!
That's right!
Together!
Yeah!
Yeah, kids!
Fireworks!
We're all in this together!
That's pathetic.
Yeah, that's what it is.
It's what we're pumping the kids full with now.
And it's pretty much all you can get.
Everything else has been siphoned off, is marginalized, censored.
Reminder, when this started, when was this clip?
We first played this clip on the beginning of March.
Some of the tech world's biggest names announced they are joining together to combat the spread of misinformation about the coronavirus on their platforms.
That's right.
So they're all working together.
How's it working out?
Let's find out from YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki.
And she is very clear about what they will and will not tolerate on the YouTubes.
Talk about that as raising authoritative information.
Raising authoritative information!
But then we also talk about removing information that is problematic.
Of course, anything that is medically unsubstantiated to people saying, like, take vitamin C, you know, take turmeric, like, those are all...
Take turmeric.
Those will cure you.
Those are the examples of things that would be a violation of our policy.
Anything that would go against World Health Organization recommendations would be a violation of our policy.
And so remove is another really important part of our policy.
It's a very important part.
It's another tool we have in our tool chest.
This is kind of bothersome.
There's a couple of things that are irksome about it.
One is, you know, there was a little tweet going around naming the three best news podcasts, and only ours was the news podcast.
The other two were more philosophical, including, quite frankly, who I really like.
This guy, Frank, and he's got, and if nothing else, just to watch him work a sure 7B. I mean, it's like, holy mackerel, I gotta get, just to watch this guy work a mic.
He's so good.
Anyway.
What do you mean?
Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.
What do you mean, work a mic?
It's like he, he's just, the way he just worked the mic.
He's like, You just have to work the mic.
What is he doing?
Is he holding on to it?
Is he stroking it?
Is he swinging it around?
What is he doing?
He may be stroking something, but it's not the mic.
He goes off access, but if you watch him and listen, it's like he never really loses the volume.
It's unbelievable.
I'm sorry.
I just want to hear a little more about this, what he's doing.
It was hard to get it aroused, and it is hard to get it aroused, but we got it aroused.
Okay, I figured it out.
But anyway, his podcast, the Red Pill podcast, is the other one that was listed.
Yes.
And I have a clip from these guys, and they're doing something called Quarantine.
And it's kind of a millennial podcast.
The guys are hipsters.
But the way they start off, this is part of their podcast.
And this is because they're on YouTube, and I have to ask the question of some of these podcasters, is that, do you really...
Are you just going to be beholding to this YouTube operation because...
They're not going to let you do anything that's really interesting if you have to do your presentation like what we're going to do here.
Yes, and before we start that I would say, for many, maybe the majority, half of the whole objective is to bitch and moan about YouTube's policies and be able to raise your own awareness by being demonetized.
It's a badge of honor at a certain point.
And I also don't consider these people necessarily podcasters.
Yeah, they think of themselves as such.
So, the story of the day.
The most important story that we have to discuss.
It's a story that we can't directly talk about.
You guys remember what happened to HRC and the DNC? Remember when their personal communications were intercepted by probably Seth and then they were handed over to a journalistic organization?
Well, something similar to that has happened.
Think about the situation we find ourselves in now.
There's this large international organization devoted to your health and well-being.
It's a three-letter word.
Who could that be?
I don't know.
You guys can figure it out.
Wait a minute.
He's not allowed to say Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation got hacked?
That's what he's not allowed to say on YouTube?
Is that what I'm hearing?
That's what he thinks is the case.
So they're beating around the bush, and they beat around the bush because they're on the YouTube platform.
I mean, it seems to me that these guys should either find their own platform or they should find some other way of doing this, but I find it kind of...
I don't know, it just bothers me that they're...
Subjected to this, but continue and you'll see what they're talking about.
This clip is too long.
They go on for six minutes without really saying anything.
I stand corrected.
It is a podcast.
I've got to let the dog in.
Right.
And also, while he's explaining this, think about what the Susan Woj whatever that runs YouTube, think about what she came out and said yesterday about what she's not going to allow to be on this platform, any information about this company.
So that's why we're doing verbal judo around this stuff to make sure it's okay.
But go ahead, bud.
Yes.
So the CEO of this platform came out and said that if we talk about anything on this platform that is in direct conflict with anything that this global organization has to say, then we'll get our videos deleted.
So we can't come out and say something that contradicts anything this global organization has said.
So we need to be very careful.
Well, they have a patron, somebody who was the CEO of a large tech company.
We'll just call him Bill, okay?
So the foundation that Bill runs and this global health organization, who you might know, They're in contact with another, and then there's another person who's an artist.
Her name, we'll call her M.A. Okay, those are her initials, M.A. Now, she's famous for a type of performance ritual.
She's got a lot of spirit to her, and she also really enjoys cooking.
God!
You can stop it there.
I mean, so they can't say Maria Abramovich and...
They can't say, apparently, from their perspective, they can't say anything.
So the poor viewer, or listener, depending, is tortured by this, and it just seems to me that this is not the way to go.
It's kind of counterintuitive.
Well, the problem is the...
They have no model.
They've got no model.
That's too bad.
I will help them out a little bit, since they have trouble saying the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Do you know that that is not the original name of the foundation?
I do know that it's not the original name.
The original name was something dumb.
I can't remember what it is.
There's a YouTube video from 2008, and in this, Dr.
Lori Zabin is receiving an award, and the person inducting her or ramping up for this award Is talking about her credentials and all the different places she worked.
And in 1989 or 98, it's on the clip, she worked at a very interesting place.
In 1997, Dr.
Zabin got a call from a friend in Seattle about a potential funding source for an organization that would focus on international population and reproductive health.
Bill and Melinda Gates, with just a little money to spend, but a lot of skepticism about the academic approach, Agreed to meet with Lori Zabin and her colleagues at Johns Hopkins, and they came away impressed.
In 1998, Dr.
Zabin became the founding director of the Bill and Melinda Gates Institute for Population Control.
Well, that's not good.
And by the way, he knows Johns Hopkins again.
And if you're looking for that name, it's been successfully scrubbed away from everything.
Do we know that that's a legit clip?
Yeah, oh yes, it's a very legit clip.
Absolutely.
You know, it's not like this is out of the ordinary, seeing as Bill Sr.
was one of the founders or the early participants of Planned Parenthood.
This is not unexpected from these guys.
It's just always a little jarring when you hear it.
Population control!
Because that's ultimately where it's all going.
You want to do vaccines or you want to take a break?
Because it can take us right there now if you want.
Let's take a break.
With that, I'd like to thank you for your courage to say in the morning to you, the man who put two C's in vaccines, John C. Good morning to you, Mr.
Adam Curry, all those ships and sea boots on the ground, feeding the air subs in the water, and all the dames and knights out there.
In the morning to our trolls in the troll room, all on lockdown, I presume.
Let's do a troll count, and we'll see trolls we have today.
Oops, here we go.
Troll count is 1673.
And all of you, hairy and ugly, good to see you here.
Noagendastream.com.
They come from under the bridge into our troll room.
And this is a live chat room where you can listen to the live stream, noagendastream.com, during any of the shows that are live on our ad hoc network of nut jobs, no commercials, no corporate interest.
You can find some great podcasts as well.
Noagendastream.com.
And you can get your invite for noagendasocial.com there.
Which I think is growing in popularity just looking at the numbers as people are looking for alternatives where they can say things like, wow, those guys like to control the population!
You can say that anywhere you want within the Federation.
You don't have to be a member of NoAgendaSocial.com to be able to connect with us.
I'm Adam at NoAgendaSocial.com.
You can get it right through the Federation through any Mastodon instance that supports freedom of speech.
And then a big in the morning, too.
Nick the Rat for the artwork for episode 1235, our Fibonacci sequence episode.
The title of that was Corona Fest.
Now an annual occurrence.
We're very excited about Corona Fest.
And Nick did, well, he had a combo of pretty much everything that we thought was interesting for either a title or artwork.
This is the sign.
Sorry we are closed due to the plandemic.
Please, narc the finks.
Yes, narc the finks.
Makes no sense.
It doesn't matter.
It worked perfectly.
Oh, there are some websites cropping up that are demanding that people get busted for calling, you know, the cops about their neighbors being in the yard.
My neighbor's in the yard!
You know, so we have social distancing, and that is social.
Not so much in California.
Well, that's social snitching.
Yes, it's schnitzing.
And there's, I'm looking at this news story here.
In St.
Louis, someone used the sunshine law to request the actual emails of people.
So in New York, Cuomo did it, and all he got was dick pics and Nazi memes, which I think is very appropriate.
These guys don't think about this stuff.
Hey, everyone will do this.
That's right.
Just send me a picture and tell me where the infraction is occurring.
Boom, dick pic, dick pic, dick pic.
I got your infraction right here.
Exactly.
You read through these emails that people are sending to the NARC line.
People are saying, oh, there's a car dealership is open.
There's an auto body shop.
They're too close to each other.
It should be shut down.
I don't want to die.
It's just, it's crazy.
Yeah, the media has caused this hysteria.
Absolutely.
And this is what I was talking about earlier.
I think this is what the kids have got.
Because they're only getting snippets of it.
They're just seeing clips pass by here and there.
No one's watching news at all.
Anyway.
That's true.
Actually, the kids in particular.
Yeah.
They're getting almost no information.
Or, you know, unless they listen to us.
You know, I tried to get meme-y.
Who still has her Facebook account, and no matter what she says, she goes on it.
But I tried to get her to give me some of these rants that you used to read.
Oh, the Facebook rants?
Yeah.
She says she can't get through one of them.
She just can't do it.
It's like...
They're not funny anymore.
This is material I miss.
Really?
I do.
Yeah.
So if anybody out there has run into a Facebook rant about some psycho, some hysteric just going nuts, send it in.
We read it.
Well, how about this one?
Hi, I live on Rivas.
The pawn shop on LeMay Ferry Road next to the old Dairy Queen plant is still open.
Yesterday it was packed with people coming in and out non-stop.
There's no reason a pawn shop is essential.
In fact, the amount of people and lack of sanitation is going to spread fast.
Also, the Harley-Davidson store has been having constant crowds during the day and evening, now with the nice weather.
Joan Fabrics isn't sanitizing, according to the employees.
No one needs to be spreading the virus on the fabric, constantly touching it.
What will it take for the government to shut the state down?
I fear for all of us!
Something like that?
Yeah, something exactly like that.
That was Amanda.
I was thinking of doing competitive readings, but it's going to be hard to top your kind of...
Thank you.
I thank God for giving me this gift.
As you know, I have many gifts.
You know what gift?
I have many gifts.
Many, many gifts.
All right.
Well, let's thank a few people, starting for show 1137, starting with Ben Sterling.
And he...
Came in with 408.
Well, first of all, I'll tell you what.
Okay.
Let me read a note that we didn't get to, even though we did the knighting.
Ah, this is our black knight, yeah.
Our black knight, but we never read his note, and so we're going to start with his note.
It's from two shows ago.
It's the...
One, two, three, four show.
In the morning from Charlotte, where I was on March 31st, Charlotte PD has received 300 calls from narc citizens reporting supposed stay-at-home order violations.
Narc!
I've been a listener for a couple of years, and this is my first donation.
It's a nice first donation, by the way.
One, two, three, four, five.
May I have a de-douching?
You've been de-douched.
I like to dedicate this to my dad, Phil, K-O-N-X 73, I assume, to who died last July of dementia.
I discovered the show at a time when the disease caused him to lose interest in a lot of things.
But I know if he had heard the show, absent the disease, he would have appreciated your views on globalism and the mainstream media.
A lot of people do.
I'm fortunate to have employment security and reliable income right now, but may I please have a jobs karma for the dames, knights, and listeners out there who need it?
Yes, absolutely.
That's it?
We're done?
No?
Oh, I'm sorry.
I don't know why I was expecting it in line.
For my knighting, he's got a Sir Scobie.
We gave him the knighting on the last show.
Thank you for the level-headed perspective.
It helps a lot when I speak with friends and family who follow only M5M. It happens.
He said...
And then he's also sent a song in, which I'll send to you.
Okay.
And that should do it.
All right, here's your jobs karma.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs!
You've got karma.
Yeah, people who have got nothing better to do than call in, because they take everything, you know, it's...
I don't know what to make of it.
Anyway, let's go on with Ben Sterling, $480 in Grapevine, Texas.
And if I find my keyboard, which is here on the floor, he writes, Howdy, John and Adam.
I've been a listener from early on in 2013.
I started a sustained donation that removed my douchebag status.
This donation brings me to a very belated knighthood.
I am the dude named Ben named Ben that hit Sir B. Joe in the mouth.
Or B-Low, B-Low.
B-Low, I think, yeah.
Yeah, B-Low, B-Joe.
B-Low.
When I heard his donation on show 1234, I was ashamed that I didn't make the trip to the round table first.
I can no longer wait.
Please knight me.
Sir Dude named Ben, defender of megawatts.
I'm sorry, megawatts, protector of the electric grid.
Please add a hookah and hummus to the round table.
Also, please wish Sir...
B-Lo, happy belated birthday, 422, jingle request, WT7, AOC, 1984, two they had, shut up, slave.
Do we have him on the birthday list?
I've put him on the birthday list.
B-Lo, yeah, I put him on the birthday list.
He wasn't on yet.
Okay.
And Jobs Karma as well, at the end here?
Is that what you want?
Yeah.
Yep, okay, here we go!
WTC! Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs!
Dale Davis is up next from Lake Stevens, Washington, 33333.
I'm coming to you with my second donation, bringing my total up to a devilish 666.66 across the board on my way to knighthood and celebrating the fact that I'm finally returning to work building airplanes that don't currently fly, but hey, I'm essential, they say.
A few months ago, I was punched in the mouth by a co-worker who has listed for some time and not donated.
So please call Jeffrey Adams out as a douchebag.
Douchebag.
Keep up the good work and please play this jingle in order, if you don't mind.
Biden, whole load.
Get out of my vagina.
You might die.
And that sounds pretty good.
Thanks.
and And is there a karma associated with all that?
I'm going to do it even better.
I'm going to add to your sequence.
It was hard to get it aroused, and it is hard to get it aroused, but we got it aroused.
I'm going to give you the whole load today.
Get out of my vagina.
Get out of my vagina.
You might not.
I think that sounds pretty good.
You've got karma.
I'm with the Associate Executive Producer, Sir Charles Knight of the coin-operated laundromat in Broomfield, Colorado, 23456.
Dear Crackpot and Busco T, I thank you for your courage to make this donation from my smoking hot wife, Courtney, in hopes she can reach damehood before our firstborn child comes in November.
Sir Ominous, Onimus, I'm sorry.
Sir Onimus, if you're listening and still assisting dame drives, please consider helping make Courtney a dame.
I will even try to get Slobovia or Dogpatch as the middle name for our firstborn.
What's your name?
Amanda Dogpatch Laundromat?
Adam, please call out these douchebags.
Ready?
Yep.
Anthony.
Douchebag.
And Adam.
Douchebag.
Also, please douchebag check on Kyle and Aaron, who both tell me they are subscribed under $50 a month, but I'm skeptical.
Oh, we had the douchebag check, didn't we?
Douchebag check.
No, douchebag check.
Jingles, old-time rock and roll Wuhan flu.
Baby-grown goat karma, F cancer for my cousin Heidi, and jobs karma for all producers and listeners who need it.
Peace.
All right, sir.
Charles, Knight of the Coin Operated Laundromat.
I had myself a game for the Wuhan flu I don't know what I am supposed to do Didn't know I had it when I gave it to you Now we all got the Wuhan flu.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs!
You fought.
Karma.
John Kresick, Parts Unknown, 222-222.
And he writes, for show 1236, which should be Thursday, April 23rd, which is...
Yes, 1236.
This is the one.
I keep thinking.
You know why I say seven?
Because I put it on the clip list.
Adam and John, our son, Andrew Kresick, is celebrating his 19th birthday this week.
You're on the list.
Kindly accept 222.22 for his next installment payment on the road to knighthood.
Andrew is a first-year engineering student.
He has met some new friends on campus and has already hit people in the mouth.
The show is a fantastic product.
Can you please play two to the head, goat scream, and can you see that juice?
Oh my gosh!
Can you see that juice?
Something about that one.
A little gruesome.
Nelson Mullins in Eastlake, Ohio, 20202.
Forgive me, Potfather, I have douched.
Although my smoking hot wife...
Yes.
Though my smoking hot wife donated last year, I've not donated since I did so in person during the 2008 Hot Pockets Tour.
That's when you stopped in Cleveland, which is actually held in Akron in 2009, if memory serves.
Correct.
I formerly maintained the No Agenda Words webpage over a decade ago, but became disenchanted when I saw the page was drawing less than 100 views a week.
Consider yourself lucky.
Please give a shout-out to my old shipmate, Grand Duke Thomas Nussbaum.
Oh, we should do a proper shout-out for him.
Nussbaum!
Nussbaum!
By the way, John, how do you manage to suffer through listening to Amy Goodman?
She's the most annoying voice on radio.
She sounds like a munchkin who inhaled helium and is speaking while someone is standing on her chest.
Please de-douche me.
You've been de-douched.
And provide karma for all producers.
Now, I have to mention that this is a jingle request.
This is, again, an absolute example of the random number theory.
Jingle request, can you see that juice?
Hot pockets and get out of my vagina.
I mean, really?
Really?
Excelsior!
Oh, my gosh!
Can you see that juice?
Hot Pockets.
Get out of my vagina.
You've got karma.
That's it.
We only have five today.
We're back to lower numbers after the enthusiasm that people found for our corona coverage, but now they're taking it for granted.
I want to thank these folks for producing, executive producing and associate executive producing show 1236.
Yes, and these are credits that are just as good as the ones in Hollywood.
In fact, they're a little better because they work right now.
Hollywood is dead.
There's nothing going on in Hollywood.
Your title gets you nowhere.
Your title's here.
Your credits, they're for real.
Executive producer or associate executive producer of The No Agenda Show, episode 1236.
Display it loud and proud.
And again, thank you for keeping everything afloat during this.
this pandemic 2020 lockdown and we'll be thanking more people 50 and above in our second segment but a lot more show to go uh please consider supporting us and the work we're doing on sunday's show by going to devorac.org slash n a i'm ready to talk more vaccines you should love it too our formula is this we go out We hit people in the mouth.
We hit people in the mouth.
Shut up, slave!
I wanted to bring some...
You gave an idea for a shout-out.
I'm sorry?
A shout-out.
Ready?
Yeah.
Lockdown 2020!
Wow, John, this is spectacular.
Yeah, it's something.
A little OTG for a moment.
Not enough to do the whole spiel, the whole song, but I've always been against this let's encrypt and encrypt anywhere that Google solely was responsible for pushing, that every single webpage, everything has to have encryption and otherwise...
Why?
Well, I'll tell you why.
Control.
And they're all in on it, Silicon Valley, and I have a real-world example that I wanted to discuss.
This is specifically regarding the certificates.
And what Google does as kind of the 800-pound gorilla is they put out statements from time to time, and they say, all right, we're now supporting, and I'm not going to use all the technical terms, but we're now using this version of encryption.
And it's the same stuff, it's just a new version.
And your certificate, which you've probably heard of, if you have any type of web server, you have a certificate, that has to adhere to this new version.
If not, then the website using that version, which can be one version older than what Google is demanding, will be downgraded in their search algorithm.
And they're very clear about this.
Trying to do us all a favor.
So, Void Zero, who is, of course, does our entire back end.
He's really the head honcho, the knight who manages the racks.
He says, okay, I'm going to do a full system upgrade.
And this happened a couple weeks ago.
And, you know, it's just periodic maintenance.
He's got another kid coming.
He's got another kid here.
He's working on getting a bigger house.
But he does all that in the meantime.
Fine.
Everything works.
And I get a couple emails from people.
Saying, I can't...
I mean, it shows up in the app, on my phone, or on my computer.
I have two examples.
In this case, actually, Apple examples.
But it won't download.
I get an exclamation mark.
And there's one or two other podcasts that also have this, but all the other ones work.
This is always what it is.
Your podcast is broken!
It's not downloading!
So we go through, and I always do this with people myself, I'll go through the multiple steps, okay, unsubscribe, delete everything, resubscribe, okay, try it with our direct URL, you know, all these different ways that I try and help people could not get it to work.
And so the best example is one of our producers has an iPhone 5C, which he uses only for podcasts.
And guess what?
The internal workings of that system are not compatible with the new version of the certificate upgrade.
And this is how everyone is pushed into the upgrade chain.
Because we had to make a choice.
Either we let ourselves be degraded in Google's algorithm, which does result in all kinds of unnecessary bullcrap for us, or we deprecate so that people with older systems can still use this functionally.
And sadly, I have to say, we downgraded one step to make sure that people with older machines will be able to get this.
We were running without any encryption.
It's just an MP3 file you're downloading.
That was no good.
We got deranked.
We got all kinds of issues, all kinds of warnings everywhere.
And so now we upgrade and then we start breaking older devices.
This is the trap that we're stuck in.
And I'm looking squarely at Google, clearly with some kind of collaboration with Apple and other device makers.
Oh yeah, let's just not do that.
Let's break it in those older systems.
Buy a new one, slave!
So that's what's happening.
I think there should be a lawsuit.
Yeah, I'll get right on that suing Google.
Restraint of trade.
There's all kinds of...
It's antitrust.
It's antitrust.
I'm sure there's some class action somewhere, but that's not how I prefer to spend my time.
Well, then let's talk to the FTC about this.
Good luck.
Not with the lawsuit.
You can't do a suit because you can't beat Google anyway.
They just stall you.
Good luck.
Google.
I find it very disturbing that they do this.
It's just for your own good.
Yeah.
You know, you're better off with a newer device anyway.
I don't know what your problem is.
Yeah, man.
What's wrong with you?
Yeah.
Let's talk vaccines for a second, I promise.
It won't take too long to get through this.
Vaccine Report.
Let's listen to two clips.
The first one is a recent one with Bill Gates.
He's the guy driving all of this.
Who I think has also been put unnoticed by the President with his looking into NIH. That's where all the money is in.
Bill's money.
It's fungible.
Who the hell knows where it's all going?
But people are claiming a lot of things.
We're looking into that.
So we'll have statements later on this week.
So for opening up, there's a couple of ways to go.
The one that scares all the children, and I think the vaccine is a big part of that, is you can't actually fully go back to work without a vaccine.
This has been Bill Gates' we can't really have concerts ever again until we have a vaccine.
And a card.
He doesn't bring up the passport in this one, I don't think, but...
Just a broad overview of where he knows that we have to go.
It may not be where we wind up, but it's good to hear him out.
And what about that trade-off?
You just mentioned, obviously, the economic pain.
What do you think the right balance is between the trade-off of protecting people's lives and the economic hit?
I mean, do you see a situation where the global economy could be virtually at a standstill for a year or even more?
Well, it won't go to zero, but it will shrink.
Global GDP is going to take...
What's a little laugh for?
That's his tilt, because he thinks it's fucking funny.
That's why.
He's always laughing.
Here, or even more.
Well, it won't go to zero, but it will shrink.
Global GDP is going to take...
Global GDP is going to take...
Probably the biggest hit ever.
Maybe the Depression was worse or 1873.
I don't know.
Maybe.
In my lifetime...
I'm sorry, what was 1873?
Why did he say 1873?
Well, I don't know what happened.
I mean, I know the cycles, and the big one was 1854, and the next big hit was in 1893, so 1873.
I don't know what happened in 1873.
I'm going to look it up while you're doing that.
I have it here.
The depression of 1873.
1873.
Was that cholera?
Yes.
I thought he was talking about the economic situation.
Well, he says he outbreaks in North America, killed some 50,000 Americans.
I don't know what 1873.
Oh, the panic.
Wait, the panic of 1873.
You look up the panic of 1873.
Panics come and go.
You know, probably the biggest hit ever.
You know, maybe the Depression was worse or 1873.
I don't know, but...
In my lifetime, this will be the greatest economic hit.
But you don't have a choice.
People act like you have a choice.
People don't feel like going to the stadium when they might get infected.
It's not the government who's saying, okay, just ignore this disease.
People are deeply affected by By seeing these deaths, by knowing they could be part of the transmission chain and old people, their parents, their grandparents could be affected by this.
And so you don't Again, the laugh...
He laughs when he talks about money or vaccines.
When we've largely vaccinated...
No, I'm sorry.
He laughs when he talks about destruction of people's lives and vaccines.
Only returns when we've largely vaccinated the entire global population.
And so...
You know, although there's a lot of work on testing, a lot of work on drugs that we're involved with, you know, trying to achieve that ambitious goal, which has never been done, for the vaccine, that rises to the top of the list.
I think he's laughing when he does that, because he feels so superior that he's like, you dumb fuck, that's what he's doing.
It's just the vaccine.
You know the vaccine.
Vaccine is the only way out.
Well, it's not going to go to zero.
It's going to be bad for you, little peon.
I hate this guy now.
I don't hate many people.
I'm really starting to hate him.
I think you're not the only one.
A lot of people are really showing a lot of ill will toward Bill.
And I don't think he knows because he's kind of isolated.
Kind of.
I don't think he knows how bad it's getting.
You see it online.
I mean, it's almost like...
Yeah, the hate.
Yeah, the good...
He's completely obliterated his goodwill.
And one of the reasons he's done it...
Hold on.
I'm sorry.
What goodwill?
Windows is a piece of shit.
No, he's not even at Microsoft.
He hasn't been at Microsoft for years.
No, he just resigned from the board.
But the point is, is that no, his goodwill as a philanthropist, I mean, John D. Rockefeller did the same thing.
Everyone hated him when he was running Standard Oil, but then because he started giving money away, they loved him.
And so Bill's kind of picked up the slack.
He's kind of modeled himself after John D. Rockefeller.
And he was, I thought he had accumulated a lot of goodwill.
And now it's turned sour because he has this tendency to want to be on...
He's too visible.
He's coming on everything.
He's telling people they want to get chipped.
They want you to get a card so you've been vaccinated and he pushes this.
I mean, he just seems evil to too many people.
This is ruining it.
He's going to be sorry he did this.
To accentuate your point, I want to listen or play again that intro to Dr.
Lori Schwab.
Listen to what the introduction says about Bill and Melinda Gates because it's exactly what you just said.
In 1997, Dr.
Zabin got a call from a friend in Seattle about a potential funding source for an organization that would focus on international population and reproductive health.
Bill and Melinda Gates, with just a little money to spend, but a lot of skepticism about the academic approach.
They had just a little bit of money to spend.
I'm all moist because I can get some of that money for my research.
That's why.
That's why he had all that standing as a philanthropist.
They're jizzing over his cash.
Right there in the intro.
Not only that, but now he's got everybody else's cash.
It does.
I did pull an ISO from that clip, by the way.
You don't have a choice.
People act like you have a choice.
It's pretty authoritarian what he's saying there, you know?
Yeah, you think?
Yeah.
This is really going to, he's going to, I don't know.
I mean, he had this, last time he was promoting himself to an extreme, when he was a little more approachable, you could find him, you know, wandering around town and you can't see that anymore.
He got pied.
Yeah, three times in a row.
And that was the end of his being a public guy.
Now he's showing up too much, and that little laugh he's got when he's talking about certain things has really got to be annoying.
Yeah, death and destruction.
That's when he laughs.
And so, this is just not a good thing for him to be doing.
I just don't understand what he's...
You know, if you want to be a philanthropist, first of all, Get out of the way and start giving money away.
Work on that.
You're not a big public, you're not supposed to be like a big braggart of big public figure, you know, pushing your weight around.
I mean, he's largely responsible for the misery called Common Core.
Yes, we've forgotten about that.
Don't forget that.
Another winner, the Vista of Education, ladies and gentlemen.
Yeah.
Well, that's just fine and dandy.
I'll have none of his vaccine, thank you very much.
I do want to play two minutes of a much longer interview that I will have more for y'all on Sunday of Robert Kennedy Jr., Robert Kennedy Jr.
is really opening up in these days of the Bill Gates vaccine and is really pushing back hard.
He's calling from the car.
I think it's a podcast.
This guy knows.
He keeps calling him Bobby.
Bobby.
Hey, Bobby.
Bobby.
Let me ask you a question, Bobby.
The piece I chose for you today, and there will be more from this interview, is the vaccine patents.
How that works, how the money works, as you start to understand that NIH, remember the $32 billion, that there's a lot going on in there and a lot of people are making out like bandits and there's a lot of power and control and certainly overlapping and conflicting agendas.
So here he explains the vaccine patent rule as it pertains to the health and human services all in general, NIH in particular, and certainly the Dr.
Death himself, Fauci.
All these agencies are part of HHS. NIH, CDC, and FDA are all part of HHS. And under HHS rules, if you are a scientist or an official...
Who works for one of those agencies, and you do work on a vaccine, you are entitled to own part of the patent.
The vaccines are all developed by the federal government, and they are given out.
The technology is then distributed to these four companies, which are, by the way, Pfizer, Merck, Glaxo, and Sanofi.
But you are allowed to retain a royalty.
And so when that vaccine makes it to market, you are collecting money on every vial's oath.
Now, a couple of years ago, they changed the rules.
So limit the amount of money that you can make, and it's now limited to $150,000 per year per vaccine.
Tony Fauci has many, many vaccine patents, and there's one vaccine patent that he has, which is a way of packaging coronavirus for some other vaccine, some other, you know, the guts of the microbe, or the guts of the virus, rather.
You can package it in a protein sheet in order to deliver it, taking the protein sheet from the HIV virus, packing it with a virus, another virus, and then delivering it through a vaccine, and it very efficiently reaches all the organs that it needs to reach in order to give you immunity, supposedly.
Well, Tony Fauci ended up owning that package.
That patent is now being used by some of these companies.
We don't know how many, but we know of at least one that is using it to make vaccines for the coronavirus.
If you look up Anthony Fauci patents and you get a Google page, a lot of patents his name is on.
150k a year if it's used per vaccine.
That's a nice...
It's like vaccine publishing business.
It's almost like the music business, but better.
Yeah, especially if you're working for the government.
It's government funds paying for the development of the patent.
Give me a break.
What kind of a deal is this should be owned by the public?
We're all the justice democrats on this one.
Yeah, well, they're not going to...
Don't hold your breath waiting for those douchebags.
Yeah, um...
It's interesting because the way...
Fauci got his name on that particular patent.
There's a whole other story into itself, which I'm digging into.
Apparently, there was some other researcher who was working there, and she figured something out, and then Fauci heard about it, and she wound up getting fired, and his name's on the patent.
It happens in the music business, too.
That's why I kind of make that comparison.
It's like, I played on the record, and now it's this guy now.
Don't you see that?
He says it right there.
His name is on the publishing.
So it's a big scam going on at NIH. Well, maybe that's what Trump's after.
Maybe he's after the woman.
We'll see what happens.
That's just going to make more people want to get rid of him.
Yeah.
There's a...
I mean, this thing with the bright guy who quit or got moved...
It has an obvious Democrat plant.
I mean, please.
Yeah, but it's all related.
These are no coincidences what's taking place.
That guy moves, Fauci protects him, hydroxychloroquine is being shut down, is being confused with chloroquine purposely.
Meanwhile, Moderna is making the vaccine, which is completely funded by NIH. I think they gave Moderna $680 million to make it.
Which was the first thing that Fauci said, Gilead and Moderna.
Gee, what a surprise two months later they're the ones that have been chosen to make it all.
Anyway, let's talk about something else stupid, the Green New Deal, in which I can't wait for everyone to come back and start telling us the models are telling us we're going to die by 2030.
Can't wait!
For Earth Day, which was...
Was that yesterday?
The day before?
Was that Monday?
It was yesterday.
Yesterday was Earth Day.
Earth Day.
We missed it.
Did you get any clips from Earth Day?
I should have put...
No.
No.
There's no clips to get.
Well, Michael Moore...
Oh, the Earth Day promoter.
As executive producer dropped, as we say in the biz, dropped a doc.
Dropped a doc called Planet of the Humans.
And Planet of the Humans, it's directed by a different guy, Bill, whatever his name is, who has always worked with...
Actually, I think he did sound and music score for several of Michael Moore's documentaries.
So the way I see this, since it is...
What is his company?
Rebel Media, whatever it's called.
No, not Rebel Media.
Media Rebel...
It's produced by Michael Moore.
It might as well be him.
I think he's very smart that he did this documentary without making it about him.
This is a must-watch tip.
For everyone listening to the podcast.
And I'm going to give you the good and the bad right off the top.
Because what this thing does completely debunks Al Gore, his bullcrap Sierra Club, 350.org.
And does it by really...
It's beautifully done.
And it undresses Al Gore and his generation partners and David Blood and all these assholes who have been pushing this...
Planet of the Humans.
Okay.
And what the documentary does is shows that the entire green agenda of renewable energy is based upon the backup energy known as biomass.
And there's over, I think it's between 1,500 and 2,000 biomass power plants in the United States.
Okay.
And it sounds really great, because you need something to fill up when there's no wind or when there's no sun, when there's no light.
So that's when the biomass plant kicks in.
What is a biomass plant?
It literally is a turbine, so it generates electricity based upon burning wood, burning wood chips, burning trees.
So what the documentary points out is that we are cutting down trees at a great pace, which also, of course, doesn't help the CO2 problem.
And we're trying to use that to save the earth from dying of CO2.
And it does such a good job of that.
And everyone's Van Jones, the guy from 350.org, Al Gore, biomass, they're all waffling around because they know what's going on.
So it really destroys Al Gore.
That's great.
It does not for a second address nuclear.
There's one shot of a nuclear plant for two seconds.
Not even addressed as anything of an alternative.
In fact, it has no answer to what needs to be done, but it is saying, hey, here's the problem.
And we have two general groups, specifically talking about the United States in this case.
And you have a group on the right who say, we believe in God and we'll take it the way God intended.
And the group on the left who are like, science!
And what the documentary shows is we're all afraid of the same thing.
We're all afraid of dying.
And that's why this is such a contentious point.
Some people say, hey, I know I'm going to die.
I want to go to heaven.
I believe in the Lord, Jesus Christ.
And they're probably much more at peace than the other half who are just afraid of dying.
And this has been rammed into their heads with science.
No wonder kids are afraid to come out of their houses during this pandemic reopening.
But here it comes.
There is one overarching message.
It comes around 45 minutes into the documentary.
It's the only clip I will play from it, and you especially, John, will understand the thinking behind this and who Michael Moore is teaming up with now.
Though each of them takes climate change seriously, every expert I talk to wanted to bring my attention to the same underlying problem.
There are too many human beings using too much too fast.
As a global community, we really have got to start dealing with the issue of population.
Population growth continues to be the, not the elephant, the herd of elephants in the room.
Can a single species that's come to dominate an entire planet be smart enough to voluntarily limit its own presence?
Is there any precedence for that in nature?
Wow.
We have to have our abilities to consume reined in.
Because we're not good at reining them in if there are seemingly unrestrained resources.
Species hit the population wall a lot, and then they crash.
I mean, that's a common story in biology.
If that happens to us, in a way, it's the natural order of things.
And I don't think we're going to find a way out of this one.
I don't.
As a scientist, what leads you to that conclusion?
Well, because right now, a large percentage of that number is supported by industrial agriculture, which is heavily subsidized by oil, and it's not sustainable.
And there's no going back.
Without seeing some sort of major die-off in population, there's no turning back.
What's the thing that nobody ever asks you that you want to...
Nobody's ever asked me if I'm scared.
And I am.
I actually am scared.
I lose sleep over all of this.
And we're back with the population bomb.
Those guys never let up.
They made a whole, I mean...
Started in the 70s, remember?
Yeah, these were the original global warming dudes who started with the...
Well, they started with cooling, but it was always about population underneath it all.
Right.
And that's the takeaway.
The whole thing is Al Gore is a charlatan.
Love that, because he is.
Expertly undressed and exposed for the fraud that he is.
Very well done.
Sadly, it's like, well...
Talk about Al Gore being undressed.
Sadly, the documentary leads you to, well, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for Population Control.
Now, doesn't it?
How could we do that?
I think if we had a vaccine, maybe.
It's just a thought.
Okay, so you asked if I had any Earth Day clips.
I do.
Oh, goody.
Because I listened to the Earth Day clips.
A town hall meeting between Biden and Gore.
No way!
Perfect!
What a fest!
What a celebration of Earth!
Yeah, let me just give you a classic example of what the kind of clips I have here.
This is the Biden-Gore favorite gem right here, is what he says.
I think we have an opportunity to turn the...
The changing the climate, the generating a fundamentally green infrastructure.
He's on point.
Yes, well then let's go to the longer rambles.
Okay.
Let's go to long ramble look.
By the way, Donald Trump is really the stable genius indicated that windmills cause cancer.
That was news to me and everybody in Iowa and everywhere else around the country is doing this, but, you know, I mean, come on.
You know, I visited a solar, and you've done this all around the world, in Tetchin's solar plant outside Las Vegas.
The IBW workers at Techen are making $60,000 a year.
Clean energy was the engine of recovery from the Great Recession.
When the president asked me to get engaged in dealing with the Recovery Act, you know, it's good.
We're going to be even bigger now, a bigger engine in terms of recovery from this economic storm that we're going through right now.
And it's logical and it's rational.
And so one of the things that I think is happening now, you pointed out that American business is realizing they've got a price in the carbon.
They have to price in the price of carbon in the way they're doing it.
They are looking at their bottom line and reduce carbon.
Well, you got the major unions in the country have endorsed me.
They now realize this transition is going to happen.
It's going to happen anyway, and they should own it.
They should be the people who, in fact, have the access to these new, good-paying union jobs.
And so, look, I'm getting too excited about this.
That's appropriate, man.
Look.
Look, look, look.
Okay, let's go on with another one.
I just want to review.
What did he just say there?
I have no idea.
This is so bad.
Well, here's the sewer ramble.
Ask me that same question after this one.
People now are looking and saying, my lord, you mean that same person who kept my sewer open and my basement not flooding, the same person that made sure that I got pulled out of that car crash?
You mean the same person who, when I have trouble, comes to take care of my home, is burning down?
Although, I mean, those people, they're the ones who, in fact, are getting screwed.
Well, I think here's the question.
Look, I think this resonates with an awful lot of people now, many of whom it didn't resonate before, not because they didn't care, but they didn't focus on it.
They didn't realize the consequence.
My question is, and often as it relates to climate change, you hear politicians talk about this.
This is one of the questions addressing climate change and that they can create real jobs.
And we can turn this from a very big negative into a potential positive.
There are guys, not now, not now, but in downtown Austin, on the corner, who talk like this to themselves.
And I'm not...
I'm doing a Bill Gates.
I've heard these guys.
I'm doing a Bill Gates.
This is so bad.
And I am led to believe that upper echelons...
It's apparent from the mainstream media, but I think in the Democrat Party as well, they really think that as long as it's someone to run against Trump, that it'll be okay because everyone hates Trump and he has blood on his hands and screwed it all up and didn't get ventilators and masks.
As long as it's someone with a pulse, which we hope he'll have in November, he can win.
Yes, that's what their belief is.
Is that really the belief?
That's crazy.
And they don't care about any of this stuff.
I got a couple more.
I got about three more of these.
Take your time.
Try this one.
Try this one.
Try to follow the logic of the Biden, of this one, who wants to talk about Navajos.
Fix the other inequities that are also contributing to this injustice.
Well, by the way, I don't want to get off on it now, but one of the things that the Navajo Nation is being devastated right now.
I've met with the president, we know him, and they're getting virtually no help.
But that's another issue.
Maybe a gigantic issue, but it goes to this whole...
One of the things I'm hoping now is I'm hoping that it's kind of like the way this administration has dealt with the COVID pandemic.
Pandemic, as well as the environment, has sort of taken the blinders off of people.
Okay.
Goodness, goodness gracious.
This one's a little better.
This is Outsourcing Coal, short one.
Okay.
One thing that you would have done if you had been president a long time ago.
But look what's happening now.
We have a circumstance...
I've got to hear that opening again.
I think it was a compliment somehow towards Al Gore.
One thing that you would have done if you had been president a long time ago.
But you didn't, you know, it didn't happen that way.
You know, you're a VP, no P, no P, I'm a VP, I'll be a P. But look what's happening now.
We have a circumstance where the Chinese have their Belt and Road Initiative.
But they're outsourcing pollution all over the world.
Coal.
More coal.
And they're saying, we're not doing it at home.
That doesn't work.
But flip it another way.
Which way, Joe?
Flip it which way?
Geez.
Now, the shortest ones are the next ones.
This one.
One is a Gore...
A gore clip.
This is the Biden gore.
This is a very four-second clip.
I want to ask you, what do you think?
He's flubbing or not?
Okay.
Flub or not?
Here we go.
Secretary General of the U.S., Antonio Gutierrez.
Truth wants to come out.
He's the Secretary General of the U.S. Yeah, instead of the U.N. I know.
Yeah.
But that's what it is.
It's our outfit.
All right, let's go to this one.
This is the 9 million dead per year.
This one here is another, this one here is, this is Gore talking.
And this brings to, this makes it a question.
Let's play it.
Even before this, 9 million people being killed every year by fossil fuel burning air pollution.
So we have got to fix that.
9 million people a year die from fossil fuel air pollution?
Yeah, from burning coal.
Coal.
So if that's true, why do we even care about this COVID thing?
Sounds like population control is doing just fine.
9 million a year?
Is it 9 million a year?
Let's listen again.
Even before this, 9 million people being killed every year by fossil fuel burning air pollution.
So we have got to fix that.
Did he say by burning air pollution?
By burning fossil fuel air pollution.
Yeah, whatever.
They're both senile.
Let's take a look at this 9 million number.
Where'd this come from?
I don't know.
Oh, here we go.
Bingida-boom-gida-boom.
Let's see one.
This is, well, from 2017...
According to a new, a major new study published in The Lancet, so you know it stands for quality, there were an estimated 9 million deaths worldwide in a single year, 2015, resulting from air and water pollution.
Roughly 6.5 million of the deaths were due to airborne pollution, including emissions and toxins linked to respiratory and heart disease.
The rest were primarily due to water pollution, resulting from both waterborne disease and poor sanitation.
Why are we worried about COVID-19?
We should clean up our act.
It's dirty.
So this is the last one.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Let me just add this.
Interesting.
Interesting.
From the same article.
According to the NAACP's research, that's the National Association of America's Colored Peoples.
No, advancement.
Oh, okay.
Advancement.
The percentage of African Americans in the fence line zones near chemical plants is 75% greater than for the country overall.
Well, maybe that doesn't help if they're dying more from Corona.
Alright, well it's another Al Gore stat.
Yeah, Al Gore uses these.
So here's the last one, and this is actually from Biden's podcast.
And I want you to listen to this and then explain to me what, you know, to explain to me Biden's little comment at the end.
And this is pretty much the entire clip.
That he comments on.
He's talking to Inslee, the Washington governor, who he just thinks is the greatest guy ever.
I love to ride the bike, although now I have Presidential Secret Service with me, and there's a lot of them, so it's kind of hard.
You're going to be a little constrained, but that's a price worth paying to save America.
I agree, and they're wonderful.
I didn't mean that.
What?
He says at the end, you have to listen to it again, it's short.
He says, and they're wonderful.
I didn't mean that.
He didn't mean what?
Let's listen again.
I love to ride the bike, although now I have Presidential Secret Service with me, and there's a lot of them, so it's kind of hard.
You're going to be a little constrained, but that's a price worth paying to save America.
I agree, and they're wonderful.
I didn't mean that.
Okay.
It's just dumb.
It's just two dumb guys talking.
So what Joe says is, well, yeah, I love riding the bike, but now Secret Service basically saying they won't let me.
And then Inslee says, well, but small price to pay, Mr.
Future President, for saving America!
Yeah, that's right.
I should thank them.
I should be grateful that they're helping me save America.
That's what I heard.
Yeah, brother.
Well, listen.
Inslee is the one you've got to listen to.
Price worth paying to save America.
It's the price worth paying to save America.
You're right, they're all in.
They think Joe's going to do it.
No, they seriously think Joe's going to do it.
Wow.
You know, they must think that the public doesn't see any of this.
And a lot of the public doesn't.
I mean, the Lib Joes don't see it.
The media definitely doesn't see it.
I mean, I was listening to an NPR presentation with some New York Times columnist who said that, you know, Joe's going to win.
He says he's just a better guy because everyone hates Trump.
And that was the reason.
No one knows anyone who voted for Reagan.
It's crazy.
Was it Reagan or Bush?
It was Reagan, wasn't it?
Well, it actually was both, but the only time I remember somebody actually saying it was on one of the late night talk shows.
They said that, I don't know how Bush won, because I don't know, he's a New Yorker, I don't know anybody, not one person who voted for him, so how could he have possibly won?
It makes no sense.
The Netherlands, just sticking with the climate change for a moment, Is starting something new, which I think is, what a great idea.
What a great idea this is.
Because I think it's a magic trick.
So now there's two, in a small country, 17 million people, the density is like Japan, people are really packed.
The Netherlands now has 200,000 electric vehicles, which collectively has 2 gigawatt of electricity in the batteries.
Now, the Netherlands is very, very climate conscious, of course, for the European Green Deal, and they're going to give $250 billion every year to Frans Timmermans and to save the earth and start the new green economy, etc.
But with everyone buying electric cars, they have a grid issue.
And the grid providers, a couple of the big ones, have said, oh, and whenever you see this, you know it's a scam.
We have a new platform called Equigy.
Equigy, E-Q-U-I-G-Y. Which is a platform based on blockchain technology.
So you know it's good.
So you know it's good.
We'll make...
The power you have available in your vehicle, available to the network.
So here's what they're trying to convince people of, and it's great.
They're trying to convince people that you sign up for this service, you have an app, and apparently some gadget, which is what makes it very sketchy to me.
Some gadget.
And if you participate, then you can earn up to 15,000 free kilometers In the Netherlands if you participate.
And what this means is you determine, well, my commute is 100 miles round trip.
Now my car can do 150.
So I'm going to sell back or make available 40 of those miles on one charge to the network and they'll give me more money.
They will pay me for making that available.
And I have to look into the technology of it.
Did you take it off the network to begin with?
Well, I think it's a lie.
I think what they're doing here is saying, we will limit your car to 70% charge and we'll give you some kind of financial benefit on the back end.
Oh, you think it's some sort of bookkeeping scam to keep people from using all the juice.
There's no charger that reverses the system into the grid, okay?
This is not going to be some little box you plug in at home, okay?
This is not how it works.
If you want to feed back into the grid, you can't just plug in a thing and say, oh, now I'm feeding it the other direction.
No!
Do they have a USB port on it?
Probably.
C, USB-C. This is...
And people are like, oh, this is great!
And the way you'll do it is you say, okay, I only need 70% of my battery.
Until you need 100%.
So, look for this to be rolled out.
Equigee.
Equigee.
I cannot wait to see this.
See a lot of cars on the side of the road.
Ha ha ha!
And people are like, oh, this is great.
I can make money with my car now.
Until you need to go see Granny and you're out of juice because you sold it back to the net, which you didn't sell.
You just didn't fill it up in the first place.
It's fantastic.
What a great idea.
The price of oil has been pretty interesting since we talked about negative oil a couple of shows back, actually.
Yeah, it's really negative oil.
It really happened.
And the question came up again in the briefing.
And it was the same guy who screwed it up, the guy who didn't know the price of oil.
And he had a pretty intelligent question, but first the president did remember who this guy was.
For that one to follow on oil, when you were talking earlier, you were talking about the PPP deal and then mentioned the SPR. And the first stimulus package, even though you had announced it.
You know the price of oil right then, don't you?
I do.
Do you know the price of oil right then?
He doubles down, though, and he goes, I do.
Do you know the price of oil?
That's a good rapport the guy has with the president, to be making this joke back and forth.
I think this is the way it should be.
Hey, I slapped you down.
You came back.
You get to stick it in me for a second.
But also, Trump shows a lot of knowledge of the markets here in this clip.
You know the price of oil right now, don't you?
I do.
Do you know the price of oil?
I actually do.
It's negative $37.
Of course, nobody's ever heard of negative oil before, but it's for a short term.
In your opening remarks, you were talking about the PPP deal, and then you mentioned the 75 million barrels of oil that you previously said you wanted to purchase.
You weren't able to get funding for that in the first deal.
So I'm wondering, are you...
Well, with the price you're talking about, you don't need funding.
They pay you, see?
Yeah.
If you can get it, that's true, if you can get it.
So my question, my first question is, are you asking for that funding?
Well, at a minimum, we'll let people store.
So we'll store it.
We'll use it as storage.
And charge for it.
But people need storage desperately, and we have massive storage under the petroleum.
I'm going to make it a requirement of the PPP interim funding deal.
It's not a question of requirement.
If we could buy it for nothing, we're going to take everything we can get.
The only thing I like better than that is where they pay you to take the oil.
Which is exactly what's happening.
Here, just store it for me!
Take it!
Yep, that's what you have to do, because it's just coming out their ears.
Yeah.
Let's listen to it.
Now we're going to get back a little bit to the issue at hand.
A couple of funny stories.
The cats are now getting corona, at least in New York.
Small cats or big cats?
Little boys.
Little cats are getting corona?
Kitties.
No.
Here's under cats.
There have been some reports of animals testing positive for the coronavirus.
Now it appears health officials in the U.S. have finally confirmed cases.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says they found two pet cats in New York State that have tested positive for coronavirus.
Officials say it appears the animals can get the virus from humans.
However, there's no indication animals can transmit it.
This is weird.
Because there was a question about this yesterday, about pets, and I didn't clip it because I didn't know where it was coming from, and I think it was, I don't know if it was the CDC director or if it was Fauci.
Someone said, well, big cats maybe, big cats, you know, like...
So that was Fauci.
Joe Exotic.
Joe Exotic-sized cats.
Yeah, it was Fauci.
I remember that.
So, cats can catch it from humans, but not the other way around.
That's what they say.
Okay.
I do have...
I want to run these two ISOs out.
You played one of them earlier, which is the testing one from Pelosi.
Testing, testing, testing.
I like it.
And then there's one, is that true?
Okay.
Is that true, you think?
Who says that?
Is that true, you think?
Is that Biden?
Oh, I don't know.
You know, that's embarrassing that I forgot who I clipped that from.
It might have been Biden.
I don't think either one of them holds up to...
This one may be a bit long.
It was hard to get it aroused, and it is hard to get it aroused, but we got it aroused.
That's long?
Yeah, you got lucky.
But I have this.
I'll give you that one.
I also have this one.
They could have been looking into China.
No.
You like the aroused?
The aroused one is funnier.
It's just lewd.
It has all kinds of benefits.
It has no agenda written all over it.
Yeah, totally.
Totally.
Now, here's the story for you.
All right.
This is a short 10-second clip.
Okay.
I saw this one.
They could take drones on CBS. Police in Westport, Connecticut, are taking to the skies to test the use of drones fitted with cameras to provide data, including social distancing, heart rate, and fever detection.
Sadly, I know about this.
It's disgusting.
I'm glad you got a clip.
Temperature from the sky.
I will shoot this thing.
You're in Texas.
Everyone in Texas will shoot this thing.
A drone again.
That's right.
I'm going to show myself old by donating to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, on No Agenda.
In the morning.
And we do have a few people to thank for show 1236.
1236.
Beginning with...
Well, let me find my keyboard.
What?
What?
How many people do you know that say, crap, can't find my keyboard?
Well, it's on the floor.
It's kind of an object.
Ashley was leaning against the table leg.
Ashley Schmidt in Excelsior Springs, Missouri, 12360.
She says, thanks.
She's a long-time listener, your essential expendable grocery gal.
She's not expendable.
No, she's not expendable at all.
Ivo Welton isn't either, and he's in Arnheim, Netherlands.
Arnheim, Evo.
Arnheim, Evo.
Thank you.
1, 2, 3, 5, 8.
Interesting.
Claude Drury in Guthrie, Oklahoma, 100.
Ian Field in Eastleigh, Hampshire, Great Britain, 100.
Oscar Karoga II in Hoffman, Texas, 699.99.
He's got a birthday.
Call it to himself.
Douglas Ratcliffe in Madison, Wisconsin, 7777.
Jesse Smith in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, 6969.
Rhode Island.
Biolife Donor, 5510.
He's a de-douching, by the way, this next guy.
Yeah, I just wanted to say something.
De-douching?
You've been de-douched.
I'm trying to think if I mention this, because when you hear Woon Socket, you know, my mom...
He did in the last show, actually.
Yes, but did I tell you that my great-grandfather played for the Pawtucket AA team?
Nope.
And he threw a no-hit, no-run.
The whole game.
A no-hit shutout.
He pitched.
Yeah, he pitched.
Shutout.
Yep.
Was it a perfect game?
It was perfect.
Was it a perfect game?
You know what that means?
No.
That means he didn't walk one person.
No, he did not walk one person.
He didn't walk anybody and he didn't...
Perfect.
No one got a hit or a walk?
You can look him up.
Hawks, H-W-K-E-S. That's a perfect game.
That's very rare.
The very last pitch...
So it was, you know, it was two and three, I guess, whatever.
Three and two.
Three and two.
Hey!
Your granddad, whoever it is, is rolling over in his grave.
Yes.
He threw such an egg, but the guy just sat there left about on his shoulder.
He let him have it.
That's America!
That's sportsmanship.
What, he threw one right down the gut that the guy could have hit out of the park?
Yes, he could have homered it easily.
It was a total egg.
An egg.
Yeah, that's another baseball term.
I like the way you use the sports talk that you hear on the radio all the time.
Yeah, well, you know, that's why I'm a VJ. Yeah, wound socket.
Sir Laugh-A-Lot, Metairie, Louisiana.
We have a lot of people there for some reason.
Stas Gomberg, and that's 5510, 5510 for Stas.
Also in Tim Kiesel in Hanford, California, 5510, double nickels on the dime.
Sir John Knight of St. Peter's.
Patrick, patron saint of engineers in Heber Springs, Arkansas?
Yes, he becomes a baronet today, and he also has a birthday call-out.
It's his birthday today as well.
Beautiful.
We'll do both in a moment.
Sir fed up with all that.
St.
Louis, Missouri.
Or, no, Sir fed up with it all in St.
Louis, 51.
Sir Adrian...
Vernoy.
Yeah, very good!
Nailed it.
And Hasselt.
Hasselt.
Hasselt.
He's got a birthday.
Are you okay?
Are you okay?
I swallowed some spit.
Courtney Batzold, 50-01, with a happy birthday to her dad.
She says, Happy 45th birthday, Dad.
We love you as much as we love no agenda.
There you go, Courtney.
Nice.
Brian Mosier in Duncan, Oklahoma, 50-01, is heading toward knighthood.
Following people are $50 notice.
If you haven't noticed, there's a very short list all around today.
Rather.
Adrian Muller in Atascadero, California.
Thomas Tullet in Shawnee, Oklahoma.
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And he needs a dedouching.
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Thank all these folks for supporting the No Agenda Show and supporting specifically this episode, 1236.
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Wow, the year is just blasting ahead tremendously.
23rd of April, here's your birthday list.
First of all, a happy belated birthday to Sir B. Lowe, who celebrated yesterday.
John Crescich says happy birthday to his son, Andrew, turning 19 this week.
Oscar Quiroga celebrates.
Sir John, Knight of St.
Patrick, turned 63 today.
Congratulations.
We'll see him in a moment for a title change.
Adrian Frenoy says happy birthday to his brother, Benjamin Frenoy.
He turns 33 on April 28th.
And Courtney Batzold says happy birthday to her dad.
He turns 46.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
No douchebag status for Sir John, Knight of St. Patrick.
Patrick, patron saint of engineers, as today he ups his peerage level to become a baronet for an additional $1,000 that he supported the No Agenda show with, and we sincerely appreciate that.
And now we have the Black Knight, Sir Trent, so we already inaugurated him.
I think that it's well known that he is a Knight du Noir.
But we do have one for today, Ben Serling, so let me see if we can...
Hello?
Here you go.
I mean, you can't find your keyboard, but you can find a sword?
The sword is easy to come by because it's right next to the rain stick.
Yes, I understand. - Ah!
Ben Sterling, come on up, sir!
We need you here on the podium.
You're about to join the illustrious roundtable of the No Agenda Knights and Dames.
I'm very, very proud to pronounce the case.
The, sir, dude named Ben, defender of megawatts, protector of the electric grid, now officially knight of the No Agenda roundtable for you, we have hookers and blow, red boys and chardonnay, hookah and hummus, We've got bourbon and bong rips.
We've got fish pie and fellatio.
We've got harlots and haldol, redheads and ryes, pepperoni rolls and pale ales, caches and sake, vodka, manila, bong hits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and gerbils, breast milk and pablum, or I guess what everybody...
He always likes mutton and mead, so if you don't mind, sir dude named Ben, head over to noagendanation.com slash rings, fill out some simple info, and Eric the Shield will get that to you as soon as possible.
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We do have the Jitsi meetups that people like to participate in.
That's also organized through NoAgendaSocial.com.
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There are a few stragglers out there who are doing meetups regardless of any ordinances.
And you can again find that at NoAgendaMeetups.com.
Thank you, everybody.
Look out for your finks.
Yeah, look out for the finks.
Thanks for supporting us, everybody.
It's appreciated.
So I've got a clip here that I want you to try to decode.
Okay.
Do I need a Furrier algorithm, or how am I going to decode?
I don't know, but you have to listen to this one.
This is Pelosi.
She goes on Morning Joe and immediately goes off the rails talking about Putin.
And I have to decipher what she's about?
No, tell me what she said.
So much of what the President of the United States said about our intel community, calling them again scum earlier this week, which is just shocking.
It's something that you would expect from Vladimir Putin instead of the President of the United States calling members of the FBI scum.
But a Republican-led intel community unanimously said that they got it right in this investigation.
What's your reaction?
Well, I'm not surprised.
As my brother gang of eight, I watched this whole investigation proceed and the rest.
And it leads you to the question, what does Vladimir Putin have on President Trump personally, politically, financially, in any way that he would choose Putin's word, what Putin said, over the intelligence community and that he would give Any currency to a charge that it was the people in Ukraine who had conducted this to divert any culpability away from the Russians.
Something is very wrong there.
But this was, again, gives you hope and faith that with the facts and respect for the intelligence that was gathered on it, it cannot be denied.
Well, this is out of context to some degree because there's been all kinds of declassification of information that shows that the FBI really lied on the FISA applications and, as the president says, they're dirty cops.
And so the answer to that is, from Morning Joe, is, oh, he called the FBI agents scum!
And then Nancy says, well, of course, that's what Putin wants, and what does he have on Trump?
So we're back to that now?
Yeah.
They run out of material.
No, no, no.
Not true.
She was also on Fox with Chris Wallace.
No, no.
She still has material.
You went on a walking tour of Chinatown to try to promote tourism there, and here's some of what you had to say.
That's what we're trying to do today is to say everything is fine here at home because precautions have been taken.
We think it's very safe to be in Chinatown and hope that others will come.
If the president underplayed the threat in the early days, Speaker Pelosi, didn't you as well?
No.
What we're trying to do is to end the discrimination, the stigma that was going out against the Asian American community.
And in fact, if you will look, the record will show that our Chinatown has been a model.
No, it was to combat racism!
Jeez.
Wow.
Yeah, if you just say it was a stone-cold lie, just don't care.
That's the way you do it.
It works.
Yeah, yeah.
Sad.
Yes.
I'd like to take a look at Europe.
There's a couple things going on.
The United States of Europe has problems.
Today, it may be taking place as we speak.
All the finance ministers, everyone's going to hop on a Zoom call.
Literally a Zoom call.
The big European Union uses Zoom, if you can believe it.
Most of the countries...
They use Skype.
They use Zoom.
It's what all the kids are doing.
What is the deal?
Let me stop here.
Okay.
Why is it all Zoom, Zoom, Zoom?
Nobody talks about Skype anymore.
A lot of these calls are Skype calls.
But no one mentions it.
What does it say?
Is it a Microsoft, anti-Microsoft thing?
Or is the Zoom people got more money to spend on marketing?
I have no idea.
What is it?
What's the deal with the Zoom?
I will explain it to you.
Zoom started, I was first introduced to Zoom a couple of years back when I was interviewed by the Computer Museum, and I was very impressed by two things.
The quality, including latency, which is not bad, and that was just audio, and it was an early version of what they had at the time.
This is frictionless, and that is also their demise.
The reason why Zoom is successful is there's no friction.
You get a link, Boom.
You're in.
You're done.
You don't have to register.
You don't have to say anything.
Someone sends you a link.
You click on it.
You don't have to download unless you're on a phone or a tablet.
Then you may have to use an app.
It's frictionless, which is also the reason why it was so easy to break into because all you're doing is sending someone a URL with a...
With a string of numbers at the end, and that's your ID, and that's where you all connect.
Of course, since there is no password, no registration, all you have to do is just guess a couple of those meeting ID numbers, and eventually one hits and you pop up in someone else's Zoom conference.
It's all about friction.
That's why.
On Skype, you've got to download.
How many times have we looked to figure one thing out on Skype?
The changes every five minutes.
Upgrading your experience.
Yeah, okay.
Alright.
That's all there is to it.
Which does invite people to hack.
We're a hack.
It's not even hacking.
Totally.
Totally.
Just having fun.
So they're doing a Zoom call today.
So hopefully you can break in.
Zoom bomb them.
Remember, they have a new head of Starfleet Command, Ursula.
Ursula von der Leyen.
Um...
And there's a lot of anger.
And just to briefly explain what the idea is, unlike the United States, they don't really have the capability to just print money.
If you want to print money, everybody has to buy in.
And all these individual states are looking at Italy and Spain and Greece and saying, We don't want to bail these guys out.
It's their own problem, which of course breaks the whole idea of the European Union.
So there's strife and they can't figure out if they're going to do a bond where they raise all this money to bail out, in particular, Italy.
That's the one.
Italy's been on the brink for several years now.
Do we do that or what are we going to do?
And the first thing that needed to happen is supplies needed to go to Italy.
They needed help.
Germany immediately blocked supplies, wouldn't send anything like PPE and stuff, wouldn't send anything.
Every country locked down, wouldn't help out Italy.
So that warranted some version of an apology.
Unexpected and a little late for some, but Ursula von der Leyen has apologized to Italy for Europe's initially poo response to this crisis.
It is also true that too many...
We're not there on time when Italy needed a helping hand at the very beginning.
The speech came at the start of the debate on whether the EU was doing enough.
MEPs, mostly confined to their homes, called for massive investments to help deal with the mighty economic fallout.
That included the next EU budget, something the Consul President says he wants to deal on at another extraordinary EU summit next Thursday.
But many feel that shared debt, or so-called recovery bonds, are still the best answer.
So, right after this, after von der Leyen said, oh, sorry, Italy.
Sorry we weren't there when you needed us.
People are dying.
They wouldn't even send masks.
Germans.
Good one.
She left immediately, and that perturbed and angered Guy Verhofstadt.
And Guy Verhofstadt, you remember, is the Belgian lawmaker in the European Union.
He's the tall, kind of oafy-looking guy.
He's the guy.
He was the man bitching about Brexit and power, and he wants more globalism and more centralized power in the European Union.
And he is pissed off that nothing's happening.
A reminder...
The way the European Parliament works, the European Parliament does not introduce legislation.
That comes from Starfleet Command.
That comes from often unelected officials.
And then it gets sent down to the European Parliament, and they look at it, and it goes back to the Euro Commission.
It's a quagmire, and nothing's happening.
And Guy Verhofstadt doesn't like it.
Thank you, President.
I want, in fact, to give a message to the President of the Commission, Mrs.
van der Leyen.
Fuck you is my message.
She's no longer there.
And why?
Because I think that rightly she has spoken about the duties that are fulfilling our nurses or medical people.
But are we, are we politicians fulfilling our duties?
I'm not so sure about that, because it's now already weeks in a row that we are discussing about this European Marshall Plan.
My question is, what is the European Commission waiting for?
Why she cannot come forward with this trillion-sized European reconstruction and recovery plan?
What she's waiting for?
Is she waiting for the European Council?
Well, then can wait maybe eight years, like it is the case in the banking union, because we have still not the banking union of the financial crisis.
The European Council is paying ping-pong.
In February, in Eurogroup, they could not agree on that plan.
They sent it to the European Council.
Then in March there was the European Council, they sent it back to the Eurogroup.
Then the Eurogroup, in April, a few days ago, was not in agreement on that part of the plan and sent it back to the European Council.
Well, my message to the European Commission is this has to stop.
You have the right of initiative.
Take your responsibility and come forward with what is asked by the whole plenary here, that is a trillion-sized European recovering and reconstruction plan, not based on mutualization of debt, not guaranteed by the Member States, you have no money anymore, they will be all in deficit, but based, in fact, on new own resources.
It's a historical moment for the European Commission.
We need a Delors type of initiative.
You remember Delors.
There was a big crisis.
An economic stagflation crisis.
And he, he launched a single market.
And it lifted us out of the crisis.
Well, the same is needed now.
And the European Commission has to act and not to wait for the outcome of a Council who will not decide.
Fear is freedom!
Subjugation is liberation!
Contradiction is truth!
Those are the facts of this world!
And you will all surrender to them!
You pigs in human clothing!
Who here is ready for the revolution?
You pigs in human clothing!
That's pretty much the EU right there.
Summed up for you.
Well, what were you expecting?
But they're not doing anything.
It's zero.
I was actually going to take a look and see if I found anything on Euronews, because I think they would be close to some kind of deal or something.
Let's just look at the headlines.
No.
Government plans to test, track, and trace...
Economic fallout could heap more misery on Greece.
It's great over there.
This is the good example of what happens when you have centralized government to such an extreme that they become just a bunch of bureaucrats arguing with each other.
No one wants to take responsibility.
And mind you, I believe a lot of people in the United States really feel and are convinced that the federal government is supposed to take care of us here as well.
There's such a lack of knowledge of civics and the workings of the system and such an illusion of a literal safety net.
People are so safe compared to any time in history.
I have a right to this.
Why is this not happening?
I shouldn't have to work.
Why would I have to go back to work?
I don't want to do this.
There's no grit.
No spunk.
It's gone.
I have my last clip I'll play.
Only because it's kind of a complaint.
It's about the media.
So, Iran ships off a missile.
Yeah.
And it's reported on the BBC, it's reported on mainstream media, I've seen over and over and over and over again, that it's a military satellite.
And we're now, they're gonna, any minute they're gonna send a missile over and blow us up.
Okay, yeah.
But when you heard the press conference with Trump, which is one of the reasons you brought up early in the show, about how it's nice to hear what might actually be going on, because you get to, instead of listening to the news cover something, you can just watch it.
And this is what they're talking about.
But Trump was skeptical about this missile and didn't like it.
And he's already was grilled earlier in the press conference about the about the blowing those little boats out of the water near Iran when they're coming around our ships.
And I didn't get that clip.
I probably should have.
But but I got this clip and it was like this is not what's been reported.
They kept and Trump is skeptical and probably would agree with what was actually reported.
But this is what was what the Iranians told him.
And none of this information made it to the mainstream media.
Please go ahead.
Mr.
President, I wanted to ask you about the launch of the military satellite by Iran.
I wanted to get your response to that.
Do you see this as an advancement of the missile program?
You mean the shot they took?
Well, they say no.
Okay?
They say all sorts.
It was for television.
Does anybody really believe that?
They want to have better television in Iran.
So they say no.
We're watching Iran very closely.
Very closely.
We know more about Iran than they do right now.
We know more than they do.
So we know all about it.
We watched it.
We knew it was going up.
We followed it very closely.
They say it was for television.
Yes, please.
Very quickly.
Are you concerned that they see this as a potential vulnerability on the part of the United States?
What is it going on?
Military readiness, the outbreak on the Roosevelt, the fact that you're consumed with dealing with coronavirus here in the United States.
Various navies have had outbreaks of COVID. Look, we're in 184 different nations right now.
184, the COVID. No, we have a problem on that just shows you how rapidly it spreads.
It started off with two sailors and then 10 sailors and 20, and now I hear it's 540.
Yeah.
You know, I'm not buying this.
Let me just mention this one thing.
This woman asked this kind of annoying question, is there a problem with military vulnerability?
What, do they think somebody's going to come marching over here?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Who knows?
It just baffles me.
Yeah.
I have a couple thoughts on this.
First of all, any satellite being shot up for television is just bullcrap.
It's just bullcrap.
It's the most expensive kind of transmission you can get these days.
When you have the internet...
You have networks to transport.
Nobody sends up TV satellites anymore.
No!
They don't want the internet.
I believe we also had this Kim Jong-un is in a coma.
I think this is, in particular, the Iran stories.
We've got some ships now, and we've got the dudes off the bow of our ship, and the president said, I'll shoot them, I'll deep-six them.
Blow them out of the water.
This is all to get the oil price up.
What else could it be?
There's no other reason for this.
It's all fear.
It's not working.
I didn't say it would work, but these guys will try anything.
They're so desperate.
Desperate, desperate, desperate.
Kim Jong Un thing with the Katie Turb actually posted that he's in a coma and he's brain dead.
Then she pulls the clip and says, well, maybe I shouldn't have posted it.
We have come to the end of the deconstruction for today.
Nick the Rat is going to be next on noagendastream.com.
From the sewer, we have end-of-show mixes from Rulfi, Rolanda Gonzalez, Leola Puke with another great sing-along, and Fletcher and Blaney.
Of course, big heroes here at the No Agenda show.
And I am coming to you from Opportunity Zone 33 here in the frontier of Austin, Texas, capital of the drone star state, FEMA region number 6 on the governmental maps if you're looking for it.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where it's like living in a small town, at least insofar as the traffic's concerned, I'm John C. DeVore.
We return on Sunday with more deconstruction, more COVID-19, whatever you want.
The elites are not safe with us.
Until then, remember us at Dvorak.org slash NA. Adios, mofos!
and such.
I've always been a cool dude in a loose mood.
You know that.
Choosing Joe to be my vice president was one of the best decisions I ever made.
You know that.
I believe Joe has all the qualities we need in a president right now.
You know that.
Joe has often been characterized by corruption, carelessness, self-dealing, disinformation, ignorance, and just plain meanness.
You know that.
Principles that are the bedrock of our democracy.
All for the greater good.
You know that.
Giving polluters unlimited power to poison our air and our water.
I like fresh air.
Bernie understands that.
It's also time to go further.
Right now, we need Americans of goodwill to unite in a great awakening against JoeBiden.com.
Make a plan for how you are going to get involved.
You know that.
The energy and enthusiasm, especially in young people, and give them crushing student loan debt.
You know that.
One of our darkest times to join us.
Scientists, experts, military officials, they're interested in power.
We both know that nothing is more powerful than millions of voices calling for Bernie Sanders.
I have all the power.
I've always been a cool dude in a loose mood.
You know that.
People should be more concerned right now with the flu in this country.
A lot of people are concerned about the coronavirus because they're hearing a lot of news about it right now.
But the reality is comparing it to the flu, for example, it's not even close to being at that stage.
How worried should Americans be about coronavirus?
Coronavirus is not going to cause a major issue in the United States.
The press is bashing Trump about this China flu.
Do you think there is blood on the president's hands?
He should have acted quicker on this little China flu.
We got started too late in the U.S. You know Trump's on the television with his hair orange.
The press says he just wants to rule the world.
He's claiming that he has authorities that he doesn't have.
You know you're a fake.
Your whole network, the way you cover it, is fake.
He called me xenophobic.
He called me a racist.
I have to tell you, that is the biggest meltdown I have ever seen from a president of the United States.
He is out of control.
He was ranting and raving.
If you keep China talking, I'll leave and you can have it out with the rest of these people.
I know China very well. China. China. China. China. China. China. China. China. China.
Just a loud mouth.
Thank you.
We need you to understand, especially in communities of color, we need you to step up and help stop the spread so that we can protect those who are most vulnerable.
We need to do our part at the federal level, we need people to do their parts at the state level, and we need everyone, black, brown, white, whatever color you are, to follow the president's guidelines.
I use the language that is used in my family.
It's not just about what you do, but you also are not helpless.
Avoid alcohol, tobacco, and drugs.
Wash your hands more often than you ever dreamed possible.
And wear a mask if you're going to be within six feet of others.