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June 3, 2021 - No Agenda
03:02:12
1352: Race Norming
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The pretty girls are inside.
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Thursday, June 3rd, 2021.
This is your award-winning Kimbo Nation Media Assassination Episode 1352.
This is No Agenda.
Spiking the protein and broadcasting live from Opportunity Zone 33 here in 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 I sit here waiting for the Zephyr, I'm John C. Dvorak.
As we await the Zephyr, perhaps you can give us a 3x3 report.
Did you watch anything this morning?
Yes, I did.
And now it's time for 3x3.
Oh, sorry, I was doing your jingle.
No, no, just do the jingle as I get the envelope from my backpack.
Ah, the envelope.
And now it's time for 3x3.
Experiment by JCD. Comparing stories from ABC, CBS and NBC. The never-ending 3x3.
That's right, everybody, it's the never-ending 3x3.
What is important today in the news?
John C. Dvorak does it so you don't have to.
Well, ABC had a, starting with them, they had a huge promotion for the movie Thor Love and Thunder.
Is it a Disney movie by any chance?
Marvel.
Yes, ladies and gentlemen.
That's why it's news on ABC. And they went through all these tweets about how good the movie's going to be.
Nobody's seen it.
That was their promotion?
Everyone's saying, oh, it's going to be great.
Can't wait.
It's going to rock.
And then they kind of went to a thing about Obama showing up at a peewee football thing in Chicago and lecturing the kids.
I'm not quite sure what that was about.
They had to get their race thing in because everybody else did a little race.
Was he telling the kids to get their shot?
Hey, kids.
You know, I had to switch channels.
It's not who we are!
Get your shot!
Get your shots, kids.
A little eight-year-olds.
Yeah, get your shot.
So then...
NBC. I cut the NBC and they had something about first some children in a shootout with those evil police.
Oh yeah.
The evil cops.
Yes.
Some phony baloney promotion for a summer camp where all the girls at the summer camp was a girl's summer camp all dancing and prancing.
And then the big story which was about Princess Diane's iconic gown going into some new museum somewhere.
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah, really riveting.
Was there...
Sorry?
Well, you had a question.
Oh, no, I was just going to ask if anyone was talking about actual news today on the morning shows.
I mean, anything about life or death situations or, you know, I don't know, pandemic, scandemic, cyber pandemic, any of this?
Any news?
No.
Okay.
So we're keeping people happy.
I don't know why you even asked that question.
We're keeping people happy.
CBS. Meanwhile, I had Clint Smith doing a reading, as you would like, in some sort of a bookstore where the author's up there reading from his book.
So he's up there reading from his book, word for word from his book.
And it's a new book about racism.
Yeah, there you go.
It's different.
I'd never heard of the topic before this guy.
This racism must be a riveting book.
Yeah, it was just something to listen to.
And so then they interviewed him, and I have to assume that CBS had some connection to the publishing company.
Eh, what can I say?
Yeah.
Wow.
So that was it.
That was the extraordinary morning rundown.
Yeah, the morning roundup.
So no one mentioned anything about, I don't know, some emails that were recently discovered?
No.
No.
Hmm, that's strange.
Maybe you should mention them.
Whenever BuzzFeed publishes something, usually the mainstream media jumps all over it.
Last time they did that was, what was that?
Oh yes, the Steele Report.
The, uh, yeah.
So, the dossier.
The P report, is that what you said?
Yes, the Steele, the dossier.
The dossier, yeah.
The PP report.
Well, this doesn't have anything to do with Trump, necessarily, so, man.
True, but it is kind of fun to see what, I mean, first of all, again, congratulations to all the producers of this show.
All the things that are being talked about now in the Fauci emails, we pretty much knew.
We knew it a year ago.
We didn't know the extent of some of the communications.
And to celebrate that, one of our producers has done us a solid and has registered fauciemail.com, pointed out to No Agenda Show, just in case you forgot.
So as far as I can tell, it's only Fox News who is picking this up of the three main cable outlets.
It's going to hurt.
It's going to cause hesitation.
You know, that's something they actually have.
I haven't heard them say that about it causing hesitation.
They don't say anything about it.
That's just my theory.
Oh, you mean on CNN and MSNBC? It's pretty much all Trump, Trump.
Trump says he's going to be reinstated as president in August.
What?
Yeah, that's their news.
This is news to me.
Maggie Haberman from the New York Times tweeted...
Is it Haberman or Halberman?
I don't know.
I think it's Haberman.
She tweeted that she was hearing from many right-wing journalists that Trump was telling them to play it up, that he was going to be reinstated as president in August.
And that became news.
Her tweet, based upon some unnamed people telling her something, was news of the day.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's how pathetic it's become with these people.
So I'm sure most of you have seen or read or seen some things about the Fauci emails.
And it's becoming very...
By the way, these are redacted, so all the good stuff is really not in them.
But it's very...
And, you know, people say, well, I can't wait for the unredacted versions to get into the...
It's not going to happen.
Good luck.
This whole thing is something...
There's something scammish about this.
Oh, well, of course.
This is a...
Part of the backing off.
It's all part of the backing off.
Pff.
Yeah, I have some thoughts about it, but first I have one clip.
Actually, I have two from mainstream news from ABC. John Carl does his best to explain why, now that we know that there's some serious information about this being a lab leak versus a bat, pangolin, human jump, We have to explain why that wasn't reported when President Trump was saying it.
And yes, I think a lot of people have egg on their face.
This was an idea that was first put forward by Mike Pompeo, Secretary of State, Donald Trump.
No, it wasn't.
That's a lie.
It wasn't Pompeo first?
The first person to put it forward is that French guy, the French Nobel Prize winner.
Months and months before Pompeo says Jack.
Of course.
But this is a story about Trump, not about your health.
Mike Pompeo, Secretary of State, Donald Trump.
And look, some things may be true even if Donald Trump said them.
And there was, because Trump was saying so much else that was just out of control and because he was, you know, making a frankly racist appeal talking about Kung Flu and the China virus, his notion that put forward that this may have, or that he said flatly that this came from that lab, was widely dismissed.
But actually...
There's some real reason.
We don't know.
By the way, we still don't know.
We absolutely don't know.
But now serious people are saying it needs a serious inquiry.
Serious people.
Unnamed serious people.
I love those.
Unserious people.
So let's ask some other douchebags, shall we?
CBS face the nation.
Dr.
Scott Gottlieb, former FDA commissioner, administrator, and board member of Pfizer.
This is a good question.
Is it your view that the Chinese know the answer to this question?
They would know the answer to the question because they would have blood samples from the workers in that lab.
And that's the evidence that they haven't made public.
If, in fact, the blood samples show that a high prevalence of people in that lab have been exposed to this virus, that's pretty definitive proof that this coursed through that lab.
And they would also have the samples from the time that they were first drawn, which was the time when they had those illnesses.
There's no question that when they had an outbreak of an illness in that lab, that they would have done routine blood sampling in that lab.
That's just normal controls in a lab of that quality.
So they would have that information.
A couple of problems there.
The lab of that quality is notorious for being one of the worst labs that do this sort of research in the world.
It's quality, man.
That type of lab is quality over there in Wuhan.
So let's go to our buddy, Dr.
Peter Hotez, Mr.
Bowtie-Wearing Man.
He looks like a carnival guy, doesn't he?
Like a carnival barker, kind of?
Heya, heya, heya.
Step right up, kids.
The pretty girls are inside.
Exactly!
So, let's talk to him about this.
And the way this guy is talking, you know that this is the whole point, is to spend months and months or years on finding this out.
Of course, we have the intelligence community now directed to go and investigate that.
If you're looking for the intelligence community, it's right next to the black and brown community and just above the LGBT community.
Hi!
How important is it to know the origin of COVID? This is a great question.
How important is it to know the origin?
What do you think?
It's absolutely essential, Chuck, and here's the reason why.
This is now our third major coronavirus epidemic slash pandemic of the 21st century.
We had The original SARS in 2002, 2003 that arose out of southern China affected Toronto, Ontario.
Then we had Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome come out in 2012 and caused a terrible epidemic in South Korea in 2015.
This is the third one.
And Mother Nature is telling us what's going to happen.
There's going to be COVID-26 and COVID-32 unless we fully understand the origin of COVID-19.
And this is absolutely critical and what's needed.
And what I'm concerned about is I think the intelligence community has been all over this for the last year and a half.
It's not like they've not made efforts.
I think we've – I'm personally of the opinion that we've pushed intelligence about as far as we can.
What we need to do is we need to do an outbreak investigation.
We need a team of scientists, of epidemiologists, biologists, bat ecologists in Hubei province.
For a six-month to year-long period and fully unravel the origins of COVID-19.
That includes collecting virus samples and blood samples from domestic livestock, from bats, from laboratory animals.
It means doing the same for people living in the endemic area.
Remember, there are some indications that this may have actually started in Hubei province as early as the summer of 2019.
And the South China Morning Post reported that the first known case was in November.
So there's a lot going for natural origins, but it also means interviewing the scientists too and looking at lab notebooks.
We have to do this.
It's not only in the national interest of China and the United States, it's in our global interest.
So when I hear Dr.
Peter Hotez jump through these hoops, It's obvious.
That is the whole point.
Please focus over there.
Look at that lab.
Six months, a year.
We need outbreak.
Dustin Hoffman has to come.
Everyone make a movie about it.
We've got to check everything.
Oh, sure.
You remember when this started, there were a couple things in sequence.
We got the Bill and Melinda Gates divorce.
Then all of a sudden the mask flipped, just one day to the next, done.
And then we started to hear about the lab versus the bat, and the entire reason, according to the M5M, was, well, it seems like three scientists went to the, they were sick, and they went to the hospital.
And that was it.
There was no reporting on their names, where they were from, what happened to them, where are they now, what was, I mean, it was so flimsy.
That this had a reason, and that was, of course, the tee-up for the Fauci emails, which have been redacted and it was set and good to go.
But all of this is obfuscating the report by Nicholas Wade.
That's where this came from.
Are you familiar with Wade?
I'm about to be.
Yeah.
Well, he's 79.
He's a British author and journalist, and he has quite a stellar record.
Science writer and editor for the journal's Nature, Science.
He joined the New York Times in 82.
He retired in 2012, but he still freelances for them.
At the Times, he served as editorial writer covering science, environment, and defense, and then he was the editor of the science section.
Uh...
He's written books.
Just that alone, the New York Times, those credentials, I think, makes him a serious reporter.
And he wrote a medium, well, it was published in Science, a science magazine, which is, you know, that's a serious magazine, and he goes through this whole thing, every single bit.
It is so incredibly dense.
And somewhere at the bottom, it's, oh, by the way, three people got sick and went to the hospital.
So they picked that piece out and blew it up to make that look like, oh, this is the evidence, this is China, we have to go figure this out.
But what he's really talking about in that article is not the virus.
It's about the gain-of-function research and specifically the spike protein, which surrounds the virus.
Which Dr.
Peter McCullough is now calling the bioweapon.
Most of your listeners can imagine the virus.
It looks like a ball with all these spiky things on it.
The spike protein has two segments and it has a hinge.
That hinge normally is cleaved or cut by a naturally occurring enzyme in the human body called furin.
That cleaves it.
What the gain-of-function research was, and it looks like it was partially funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was to make the furin cleavage site unbreakable.
So now it's unbreakable.
That made the virus far more contagious and far more dangerous.
So these coronaviruses cause the common cold.
They don't cause blood clotting.
They don't cause all these horrendous things that we see with COVID-19 and what we see with the vaccine.
It's the spike protein.
So this spike protein that has an unbreakable bond goes ripping through the body for about two weeks after the vaccination.
And so that's the scary thing.
In pregnancy, as an example, we have never let a biologically active agent Circulate in a pregnant woman's body for two weeks.
We never do.
We only allow inactivated vaccines where they have a long safety track record like inactivated flu, inactivated tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis.
We would never allow injection of an investigational, biologically active, dangerous protein in a pregnant woman's body.
Spike protein.
Furin cleavage.
That's your weapon right there.
The furin cleavage.
And when you look at it, you know, you should see it on a video, it's obvious.
And there's emails that went to Fauci talking about the 12 nucleotides and then, you know, that that is impossible.
And it's all part of the spike protein.
I think we're arguing about the wrong thing.
Everyone says, yeah, go look at that virus.
Go look at the virus, everybody.
Meanwhile, we're injecting people with spike protein or with messenger RNA that creates this.
Yeah.
What is the point of doing this?
I don't think there's a point.
I'm going to take Occam's razor.
I think it's just dumb.
It's just a stupid technology that they hadn't thought out.
They haven't tested it well enough.
The pharma is so out of their mind.
They're just jitty with greed.
I mean, the Sackler family just heard the other day, no problem, you're never going to go to jail, even though you're responsible for this huge influx of opioids.
There's no downside for them at all, and they're raking in the money.
I wish I had clips.
I have clips about that situation.
Yeah, I know, and I'm going to lead you right into it.
Well, before we do, I do have some COVID stuff.
I'd rather do that first.
Can I just finish the theory?
Yeah.
Please.
Right.
So, this was done on purpose.
It's not a horrible flu.
It's a bad flu, but it's not COVID as we know it.
And everything kicked into gear.
I think there was a conspiracy, and it was mainly because Trump was going to win the election.
They had to stop him at all costs.
They already had four years of delay for the Great Reset bullcrap.
They need to do a lot of stuff, take a lot of stuff down, so we're going to launch this.
We're going to make sure the entire medical community, which we have under control, does not treat anybody.
We roll out faulty bullcrap PCR testing, which is not even intended for that.
So then we get to do all of our voting shenanigans and make sure that we can have whatever happened there.
There's a lot wrong with the vote tally.
Too many people voted.
That's obvious.
And, you know, Trump screwed him by speaking right to the greed of Big Pharma.
And they thought, you know what?
This was not meant for a couple of years, but screw it.
We'll take the money now.
We'll do it now.
And, you know, now things are starting to backfire.
I think it's as simple as that.
In the meantime, the agenda continues to roll on, but the vaccines were never even supposed to be here.
Well, it's not backfiring in the sense that That it's caught up to anybody yet.
I think they'll weasel their way out of this because as you just pointed out, the Fauci emails are only being discussed on Fox.
Nobody watches Fox anymore.
Right.
Well, I mean, backfiring is no one's going to...
I think the vaccine hesitancy is spiking to an all-time high.
People are figuring that out.
If anybody gets the vaccine, if they are paying any attention at all and they get the vaccine, I mean, I think in one month, by July 4th, I think it will be completely blown over.
Yeah.
But if they're paying any attention at all...
If they're not paying attention, I can see people going and get the shot, you know, for whatever reason.
Now, I still think there was a wild card in here.
Why did all of this suddenly start to happen?
Part of it was the article, although...
So what?
But the other part was, don't look at Bill Gates.
And Bill Gates, I'm now, in my heart, feel this man is truly evil.
He is at the root of a lot of our problems.
Just go back to Common Core.
That's where this critical race theory bullcrap started.
They started slipping in anti-Trump stuff, into school books, all Common Core.
He was a part of that.
Mofo is even in the emails for Fauci.
And then all of a sudden, boom, he's gone.
He may not even be alive anymore, for all we know.
No one's heard from him.
No one questions it.
No one's curious.
So something happened, and I think that, you know, looking at your clip list, maybe some of your Whitney Webb...
Is that Whitney Bess or Whitney Webb?
Whitney Webb.
Your Whitney Webb clips.
And I found some information which ties a lot more of this in.
And I have to say, it's Silicon Valley, it's Epstein, it's a whole bunch of characters, and something is going down.
But let's keep it at COVID, and let's hear what you have.
Well, first of all, my Whitney Webb clips are kind of going in the opposite direction of what you're talking about.
That's okay.
I think, I put it in the newsletter, I believe that this all started, the thing became, it started becoming unraveled when they went after the kids.
And when people were told if you had the disease, you should get the vaccine.
I think the doctors have finally fed up with it.
Yeah, I agree with you on that.
You know, your antibodies need a shot.
I totally agree.
That made doctors go, hold on a second.
I think they've gone nuts.
And in fact, all of them, they're coming out of the woodwork.
Here's a guy.
I have two clips.
One of them is a little lengthy, but it's worth listening to.
This clip's been going around.
It's in the show notes because I sent it to you.
I think we've played him...
Yeah, I think we played him.
We may have played clips from this thing, but it came to the fore with an edited version, which I didn't clip, which showed his points being made one by one.
But his points are all well done, and they're concise.
Well, they're not that concise, because I couldn't keep it under two minutes.
It's the former Pfizer guy, right?
This is the Pfizer executive who's very famous, and he spends the first five or ten minutes bragging about himself.
I've seen the video.
Yes, he does.
I'm going to just play his intro, which is 145, and that's only the beginning of him bragging about himself.
When he starts bragging about himself, he makes these comments, which I didn't want to clip, but I will say, I know what he's talking about because I know engineers, I know people in the world that are like this, that kind of see things before they happen.
They just visualize things.
They can see from small pieces of evidence.
They can extrapolate accurately.
And this guy is one of those guys.
But let's listen.
And he's also worth a lot of money because he started a company after he quit Pfizer and made out.
But let's listen to...
This is this guy, Yeeden, one.
Yes, hi.
My name is Dr.
Mike Yeadon.
I'm a qualified life science researcher, really.
I have a first degree in biochemistry and toxicology.
I have a research-based PhD in respiratory pharmacology and then I've worked for 32 years mostly in big pharmaceutical companies and 10 years in the biotechnology sector.
So my last job in big pharma I was the Vice President and Chief Scientist of Allergy and Respiratory Research.
I left Pfizer in 2011 And then after that, I founded, grew and sold a biotech company called Ziarko to Novartis.
That was 2017.
And so before that and afterwards, an independent advisor to over 30 startup biotechnology companies.
So you would expect from that that I am pro- New medicines of all kinds.
Our goals always were to address unmet medical need and to do so with acceptable safety given the medical context.
And I'm in favour of all modes of new medical treatments, whether they're biologicals or vaccines, small molecules, creams, sprays, ointments, whatever.
But I'm fervently against unsafe medicines or medicines used in an inappropriate context.
And so Some of the things I'm going to say are not favourable to the current crop of gene-based vaccines, and it's for that reason that they're being inappropriately used, and I don't think they have a sufficient safety profile to be used as a sort of wide-spectrum public health prophylactic.
Boy.
Okay, so now this guy, and I will say this, this clip, which kind of summarizes everything, and it's actually kind of a good part of his longer, one hour long rant about the situation as it exists, and he goes after everything.
And I will say this, there's not one thing he says on here that we haven't discussed on this show up to a year ago.
That's right.
Starting with the PCR tests.
We were on the PCR test with the various...
Day one.
Day one, the PCR tests were bogus.
And all it took was a little bit of searching.
It's like, oh, okay, PCR. And of course, we have lab technicians.
We have all kinds of professionals in our producing audience.
And we were on to this very quickly, particularly with the cycle counts.
It's not even meant to be a diagnostic test.
It's not supposed to be used for diagnostics.
So he mentions that.
He also mentions in, not in this particular clip, but he hints at it, that the idea of asymptomatic transmission, he claims, was invented in 2020.
This has never shown up before.
What other disease has gone around?
I mean, it's like somebody read the story about typhoid Mary, which was an asymptomatic transmitter of typhoid.
This woman named Typhoid Mary and they've extrapolated it to this disease because it was in the public consciousness.
Well haven't they already tried this with AIDS? Well, they weren't very good.
The AIDS thing was more problematic.
And I use that word advisedly.
Yes, it failed.
I mean, it didn't get everyone quite...
But this caught on, this idea of AIDS. And if you remember during this era of the asymptomatic transmission, they were talking about don't sing.
Yes.
Don't sing.
Don't sing.
Don't clap.
Talk softly.
Talk softly.
Don't sing.
Don't breathe.
Yeah.
And people just lapped it up.
I mean, I have to assume at this point that the people that were behind all these sales pitches have got to be shaking their heads saying, how dumb is the American public?
No, no, no, no.
They know what's going on.
First, there's an incredible amygdala problem, amygdala-sized problem.
That's preset, by the way.
That was established during the Obama presidencies.
And the other one is just the amount of SSRIs.
I think people are ready to be mind-controlled.
So many people on medication, you know?
I don't think you can always think straight.
Well, that element is definitely in play, without a doubt.
So let's listen to his little spiel here.
And as it gets to the end, he does have a punchline, so don't walk on it.
It allowed me quite quickly to work out that what we were being told about this virus and what we needed to do in order to stay safe was simply not true.
For example, early on in the UK there were enormous changes made in Attribution of causes of death.
So we've never had anything as absurd as the rule that is now used.
So if you should die within 28 days of having a positive result in an inappropriate test using molecular biology, then you would be declared to have died of COVID-19.
That's just wrong.
It's not just a matter of disagreeing professionally.
It's just complete nonsense.
And we can certainly talk about the unreliability, untrustworthy nature of PCR testing, but also things like lockdown.
I mean, just the whole phrase of it, the fact that it was completely unprecedented and that we basically were to minimise contact one with another.
and that that was going to save us.
I knew quite early on that that was rubbish and the reason is simple that only people who are ill and have symptoms are really strong infectious risks to other people and those people are not people who are walking around in the community because if you're full of virus and symptomatic you are also ill and ill people tend to stay at home or in bed and or if they're very serious they end up in hospital or die And so the idea that if you cut normal contacts at work and,
you know, just civic society and your normal economy, that that would slow epidemic spreading, I was fairly sure, fairly on, that that was bunk.
Unfortunately, it took several months before that was clear, by which time the idea that lockdown...
Is what you need to do had been pretty much cemented in most of the world.
So basically, everything your government has told you about this virus, everything you need to do to stay safe, is a lie.
Every part of it, and I'll be challenged on that.
Literally, there are none of the key themes that you hear talked about, from asymptomatic transmission to top-up vaccines.
Not one of those things is supported by the science.
Every piece is a cleverly chosen adjacency to something that probably is true, but is itself a lie, and has led people to where I believe we are right now.
And I don't normally use phrases like this, but I think we are standing at the very gates of hell.
Ah!
Yeah!
That's right.
And I think there's a wordplay in there.
Yeah.
The very Bill Gates of hell.
Oh!
Yeah.
My bell.
My bell.
Yeah, I'll ring your bell.
There it is.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Now, a couple of things he did mention there, which we, again, this is not something that we haven't, we weren't on to from day one, which is the death count, being very dubious.
Yeah.
And people are getting, you know, some guy getting in a car crash and...
And people being tested after they died, they fall off a cliff, they test them, they had COVID, they counted it as a COVID death.
In addition to that, there were all kinds of incentives for hospitals to label people as COVID positive, as we now witness where the big chains are buying up all the smaller chains since they got all the money.
Yeah.
And so there's that element, which is taking advantage of a situation, which you'd do if you had the chance.
And my favorite part about that aspect of it, which is the death count, is the constant government, not the government, these health department folk, saying, well, it's probably an undercount.
Yeah, an undercount.
There's no evidence at all that it's an undercount.
And the media would say, as we know, that's probably an undercount.
Without any evidence whatsoever, there's no examples of how this could be an undercount when there's tons.
In fact, we played a bunch of clips from these guys in Canada that were going and looking at the various records and finding out that half of them are wrong.
Yeah.
As many of them were bullcrap.
They were just categorized as code for no reason.
The evidence is that it's a huge undercount.
I'm sorry.
It's a huge overcount.
And it's proven to be an overcount time after time.
But they kept saying it's an undercount.
Why?
What rationale is there to say that just to keep people more panicky?
Yes.
Yes.
Part of the program.
Absolutely.
I have a Dr.
Mike Yadin clip.
Here he's talking about the variants.
In the United Kingdom, people are locked down again because of variants.
In Australia, I think it's Victoria.
Locked down.
Six people.
Six people.
Oh, with the deadly variants.
Oh, it's from India.
I don't know how it got there, but okay.
This virus mutates, and the products of mutation, we call them variants.
And that's true.
So it's one of these things that's adjacent to reality.
Yeah, when this virus replicates, it makes typographical errors.
But it's a huge virus genetically, and it makes just literally a handful of errors.
And so I went back to the databases and tried to work out what percentage of the virus had changed over 18 months.
It is 0.3%.
The most different variant is 99.7% identical to the Wuhan sequence.
And if you're thinking, well, that doesn't sound very likely to escape my immune system, you are absolutely right.
Not only is it not likely to theoretically, for reasons I don't have time to explain, but it's actually proven not to escape people's immunity.
There's been people who've done Wet immunology, they take blood cells from people who've been exposed to the virus, and they throw all the different variants at these people's cells in test tubes.
All of them recognize all the variants because they're really the same.
And yet, in my country, I cannot leave my country, Britain.
I can't leave Britain at the moment because the borders are closed to prevent these variants moving around.
Don't you find that terrifying?
What I've just told you is...
The literature evidence and really good immunologists have shown there is nothing to fear from these variants and yet the governments everywhere are telling you you might even need additional vaccines.
And it's my belief at this point that The United States, we're done.
We're okay.
Screw you.
We're not going to deal with any of your crap.
We're done.
We're out.
We're over.
I was at Whole Foods again for my Whole Foods mask test, where I was one of two people on my previous visit.
Now, I would say about 40%, particularly young women, noticeable, who are not wearing masks.
So it's about 40, 60.
The keeper and I went to have lunch on South Congress, and the greeter was there without a mask.
Some kitchen personnel had masks on.
People come in with masks.
No one cares.
No one cares.
No one gives a crap.
Bitcoin 2021 Miami, where I'm going right after the show.
Yes, the rule in Florida and Miami is you need to have a mask if you're not vaccinated.
And they've stated this and they said that they will be very sure they will not be checking anybody's vaccination status because no one cares.
But in some of these other countries, I think the United Kingdom for sure, and Germany and I think the Netherlands is getting a little better, but...
People are compliant.
They're still very compliant.
And the governments are just taking advantage of it.
They're still on the program.
But luckily here in the United States, we've got lots of doctors speaking up.
And now we have Brett Weinstein, the Dark Horse podcast.
Unfortunately, his wife is not in this one.
Sorry about that.
I was going to clip this.
This is short.
It may not be the same thing.
It's the one with the doctor that's been doing this business for 30 years.
He knows what he's talking about.
Yes.
So the two of them are sitting at this little table with a couple of mics that are too close to each other to be technically correct.
And it goes like the doctor says, well, you know, the way it goes is that A, B, and C. And then Weinstein stops him and says, let me explain to the stupid audience what you meant.
And then he talks for a half hour.
What he means by A, B, and C are three letters of the alphabet.
One is A, which is the first letter of the alphabet.
And then there's B, which is the second letter of the alphabet.
And C is the third letter of the alphabet.
Go on, doctor.
And it is the worst podcast experience I've ever seen in my life.
And it's two hours and 32 or 36 minutes.
I can't exactly remember the exact number.
Two hours and over 30 minutes of Weinstein explaining.
It's just the worst thing.
I couldn't watch it.
It's unwatchable, unlistenable.
So I'm glad you watched it for me.
It was very tedious.
Luckily, our producers watched it as well.
Ah, yo, some producer got started.
Hell yeah!
Hell yeah!
I actually, I looked around in COVID and I started to see like all the institutions coming up with their treatment protocols.
You weren't allowed to stray from the protocol.
Even like if you're an expert and you're like, I want to like, literally the leaders of the hospitals were saying, don't use, and you couldn't do anything else.
You couldn't actually doctor.
And suddenly I felt like I was being handcuffed.
It is bizarre.
I've never seen that in my life before.
I have the sense that doctors have been demoted, forcibly demoted, from the position of scientific clinician to technician.
And the point is you're really delivering a prepackaged good more than you are coming to understand your patient and what they're sick with and what they therefore need.
And it's a travesty.
I've never been asked to do that before.
I've always been asked to use the best extent of my experience and judgment and insight to best help the patient.
That's the oath I took.
The oath wasn't do what the gods of science – Paul calls the healthcare leaders the gods of science and knowledge, right?
Yeah.
of, you know, we're just little mortals and we have to listen to the gods.
And I've never been asked that before to get advice from.
Oftentimes, I'm sorry, but I don't want to sound so dismissive, but many of them are really desk jockeys.
I mean, they're not on the front lines.
I mean, they're reading some papers.
They think they know what the disease is.
They don't know what this disease is.
They're not sweating it out, seeing day-to-day the manifestations, the responses to therapy, the lack of responses.
They don't understand this disease, and yet they're telling everyone how to treat it.
We want a seat at the table, expert clinicians.
Where's the expert clinician committee?
And the reason I like this clip is because it just confirms that that's exactly how it goes.
He talks about the gods.
The gods tell you what to do.
And most obedient, compliant human resources go, okay, because that's how they've been trained.
No, that's not...
I think you're...
Simplifying it.
And he discusses this.
You're up in Canada.
You push back and they say you just lost your license.
You're out.
You're out of a job.
That's the second part of it.
That's hardly the same as just saying, okay, boss.
I think, okay.
Agreed.
In his case.
But I think there's a lot of people who have been trained.
We had a clip about a month ago, maybe three shows ago, of the guy up in BC that had the 900 patients.
Two of them got the vaccine and ended up with sepsis.
Whoops!
And anaphylactic shock, I meant.
And he talked about how they threatened to take his license away because he was trying to treat people.
And McCullough himself said that in Canada, you try to treat people and you get your license pulled.
You go to jail.
No, I think now it's go to jail.
Go to jail.
That's even worse.
Now, this guy in this character, he says that...
What he noticed was...
He said there's an old rule, I guess, in medicine.
If it's viral, you just can't do anything about it.
Take some Tylenol and just wait it out.
But he said that this wasn't the virus that was...
He said once the body itself started going into this...
You know, messing with itself, and you needed to give the guy steroids and other things to knock back this thing from killing you.
The cytokine storm.
It was different.
You were treating other things.
It wasn't going to do anything about the virus, but it wasn't going to keep you from being dead.
The logic to me about don't treat anything, don't do anything if you've got a virus, well, then why would you put them on a ventilator?
That's doing something, isn't it?
Well, the ventilator was $15,000.
Pop, one shot.
Boom.
Get them on.
Oh, there you go.
I'm sorry.
What am I thinking?
What are you thinking?
But the push against specifically ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine and others is the juiciness of lawsuits.
Let me see.
The Indian Bar Association has served WHO's chief scientist Swaminthian for suppressing data on the effectiveness of the drug ivermectin.
You know, there's going to be lawsuits.
I mean, already we have, at a smaller level, parents suing over what's happened to their children.
CDC data says children infected with COVID are usually asymptomatic, meaning they usually don't have symptoms.
And their survival rate is above 99% in the U.S. Because of this, an organization of doctors says they believe the current emergency use COVID vaccines unnecessarily put kids at risk.
So they're suing the Department of Health and Human Services to stop their use in children under 16.
Their argument?
There's no emergency to justify using this investigational category of vaccines in younger children.
Dr.
Taryn Clark is a neurologist and spokeswoman for America's Frontline Doctors.
The self-described nonpartisan, not-for-profit organization says they're not against vaccines generally.
But since Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are still being studied, Dr.
Clark says their potential long-term effects on the human body should be studied before considering their use in children.
Why does it matter if the FDA gives these vaccines a pass for emergency use when parents can ultimately choose whether to vaccinate them or not?
That's a great question.
A lot of parents certainly are looking forward to having their children vaccinated.
We have an additional concern that there isn't proper informed consent being given in terms of these investigational agents.
That is required.
In fact, I have...
Friends and neighbors who have been vaccinated and actually asked the person giving them the vaccine if it was FDA approved.
And the response was, oh yes, our clinic only gives fully FDA approved vaccines.
Oh yeah, need to get that on tape a couple times.
The lawsuits are going to, as you wrote in the newsletter...
Oh, you get that on tape, you get a lawsuit.
Now this, by the way, there's some bullshit in there because North Carolina, as we...
And other states have already said it's okay for the 12-year-old to give her self-consent.
It's called emancipated minors.
I think it's another term, majority major minors or something.
It's completely crazy is what it is.
And the hero worship of our health professionals continues with our new CDC director, Dr.
Rochelle Walensky.
And I play this clip because it will fit in the future pandemic movie that will be made about this moment.
It could even fit in a video game about a deadly pandemic.
It's one of those kind of AM radio sounding things that just makes it so real.
As she throws out the first pitch for the Boston Red Sox.
Won't you please welcome the 19th director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr.
Rochelle Walensky.
Oh, big cheers.
Catching Dr.
Walensky's pitch is Christian Vasquez.
Okay, let's see a strike.
Thank you, Dr. Riffin.
Rochelle Walensky, for all that you and everyone at the CDC does to protect our safety, health, and security at home and abroad.
Oh my God, this is unbelievable.
I knew you'd like it.
I don't know who the hell got you that clip, but it goes for Clip of the Day.
Well, thank you.
I got that one myself as I saw the news story.
How did you get that clip?
Clip of the Day.
Are you a Red Sox fan?
No, no, no.
I mean, I saw, okay, since you asked, I saw an article about her throwing out the first pitch, and I wanted to see if she threw okay.
And all they had was close-up of her.
She throws like a girl.
Yeah, okay, she threw like a girl.
I don't think it made it to the plate, but that was the audio, and I clipped it.
It's unbelievable that this would, and the way that, with that echoing all the rest about the CDC protecting us, like some sort of, it's so dystopian.
It's beyond belief that you have this clip.
Okay?
Wait.
I rarely do this.
You have to play the clip again.
Oh my, oh my goodness.
Okay, I'd be happy to.
Won't you please welcome the 19th director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr.
Rochelle Walensky.
Walensky's pitch is Christian Vasquez.
Okay, let's see a strike.
Thank you, Dr. Ruffin.
Rochelle Walensky, for all that you and everyone at the CDC does to protect our safety, health, and security at home and abroad.
Now let's just remember what Canada's doing.
To curb the spread of COVID-19, gatherings with family and friends in private homes and yards are prohibited.
Travel between regions should be avoided, and traveling to yellow zones is forbidden.
It's forbidden to leave your home between 9.30 p.m. and 5 a.m.
Visit quebec.ca slash coronavirus to learn more about the other measures in place.
Follow all the rules, all the time, no exceptions.
A message from the gouvernement du Québec.
I mean, these are great.
These are fantastic.
Every time I hear that clip, follow all the rules, I'm skeptical that that's a real clip.
I actually have the video of our producer filming the car radio while he's recording it.
It's a real clip.
It's unbelievable to me.
I mean, does anybody ever read 1984 or some of these old science fiction books and realize that they're stuck in a bad story?
No, that's their instruction manual.
What are you talking about?
Stay home after 9.30 till 5 a.m.
It's nocturnal.
Follow all the rules or else.
Now, to offset that, because I'm collecting these now, so far I have two really good ones.
The more dystopian type of radio and announcements we can get, the better.
I have added quite a few to my other collection today, which is just, I don't know why, but everyone's losing their mind.
The things that we're waiting for, but the point I'd make, the only way, the only way out of this pandemic is the successful rollout of the vaccine.
You know, the vaccine is our enemy.
That's the acting premier of Victoria.
One of the best ones.
The vaccine is our enemy, yes.
Here's the...
Now, this is a funny one.
The Southern Australia Chief Health Officer.
We cannot have any interaction at all.
We're looking at the seating at the moment.
And, of course, we're looking at the ball.
Because sometimes the ball, not that I've been to many football games, I have noticed occasionally it does get kicked into the crowd.
And we are working through the details of what that will mean.
If you are at Adelaide Oval and the ball comes towards you, my advice to you is to duck and just do not touch that ball.
Don't touch the ball!
You can kick their balls, but you can't touch them.
A throwback to the tennis lady.
You can kick their balls, but not touch them.
Don't touch that ball.
Judge Jeanine, she's also confused, more than usual.
And the issue is, how long is your vaccine good for?
And number two, you know, what about this vaccine?
Was it created intentionally to infect humans?
Yeah, yeah.
Is it a gaffe?
Is she speaking truth?
I don't know.
Let us go to Matt Hancock, Secretary of State and Social Welfare in the UK. Responsibility for the fight back against this disease rests on all of us.
This is equally true when it comes to maintaining the rules and social distancing.
Social distancing works by denying the vaccine the social contact that it needs to spread.
Yeah.
So that's those self-spreading vaccines again.
It's unbelievable.
No, no, no.
It's hard to believe.
Well, I mean...
I have another one.
Before you get to the last one, I have to say, we probably have 50 of these.
No, no, no.
It's not that many.
20, 25.
It's a lot.
Yeah, it's a lot.
Sky News.
And you have to assume it's like rats.
If you see one, there's probably 50 you don't see.
There's probably a lot more.
I mean, anyone can make this mistake, but it's just interesting how so much of it is happening now.
Anyway, here's Sky News.
With expectations from evolutionary theory.
In other words, it looks like this vaccine could have been tampered with in the lab.
Now, that scientist apparently later on decided that that was not the case.
I'm pretty sure this vaccine was tampered with in the lab.
Absolutely.
Although not a gaffe, Justin Trudeau's jittiness over getting the vaccine was, you know, clearly the magnetic substances that are obviously hidden inside this evil vaccine have gone to his head.
He feels great!
It's amazing because we were talking about how important it was for everyone to get vaccinated and what a big deal it was to get vaccinated.
So I thought that was all built in already.
But getting that shot really was an amazing feeling.
It hits you.
Did you cry?
I cry at movies.
I didn't cry at the shot.
But it was a moment where you realize, okay, this is it.
And it wasn't so much because I felt that I'm at high risk because we're being careful and I'm healthy and I'm young and all that.
But at the same time, it's knowing that each of us doing our part is getting through this.
Because we don't get through this unless the vast majority of the population gets that first shot and then a few months later gets that second shot.
That's how we get through it.
And it's something that everyone can do.
And we're just seeing...
Canadians come out in such strong numbers all across the country to say, yeah, I want this COVID thing to end.
I want to get back to normal.
And the way to do that is to make sure everyone, even that crusty old uncle who resists or that friend who's skeptical, encourage them, convince them, tell them that they need to get vaccinated because this is how we get through it.
Man!
When did he get this shot?
Just yesterday, I guess.
Hours before this interview.
Wouldn't he have gotten this shot months and months ago?
I don't know.
I mean, this is a promotion, so it's hard to tell what's true and what's bullcrap.
My favorite that is happening now is, and I've seen at least two of these, old-time movie predicted all of this back in 1932.
And you get like a Steamboat Willie type cartoon and they've put new titles on it.
Or there's someone doing a voiceover that sounds kind of original but not really.
But my favorite has got to be Dr.
Pierre Gilbert Gilbert.
Gilbert.
At the Le Gouvernement Mondial Conference of 1995.
Now, in context, he's a philosopher.
He's not a doctor.
Well, he's a doctor, but a doctor in philosophy, not a doctor in medicine.
And so this short clip, you may have been sent it, because it's been sent to me a hundred times.
He's speaking in French, and the English translation of what he's saying is correct, and I'll read it to you.
In the biological destruction, there are organized tempests on the magnetic fields.
What will follow is the contamination of the bloodstream of mankind creating intentional infections.
This will be enforced by laws that will make vaccination mandatory, and these vaccines will make it possible to control people.
The vaccines will have liquid crystals that will become hosted in the brain cells, which will become micro-receivers of electromagnetic fields where waves of very low frequencies will be sent.
And through these low frequency waves, people will be unable to think.
They'll be turned into a zombie.
Don't think of this as a hypothesis.
This has been done.
Think of Rwanda.
Which I really like as a conspiracy theory.
Because I spent hours looking for any kind of zombie reference to Rwanda, which was a horrible massacre.
And it was with machetes.
And you can immediately think...
Oh, yeah, man.
People just chopping each other up like crazy.
Chopping up the zombies.
And that brings to mind the CDC's zombie apocalypse warning or survival kit.
Remember that joke during Obama's presidency?
Yeah, it was meant as maybe not meant as a joke.
Yeah, I'm kind of...
And why would you do that if you're the CDC? Exactly.
I'm looking at that.
I mean, why does the CDC think they're humorists?
Is the whole thing a big joke to them?
This job of theirs?
Well, I've put it in the show notes, a link to it, because there's some pretty handy information that could come in handy.
Well, tell us a couple of the items on there.
Okay, I shall open it up for you.
Zombie preparedness.
So they have, well, it depends on where you want to go.
I mean, if you want to go into the preparedness, the preparedness for educators, where they have lesson plans and activities for you to use or adapt with your students.
I mean, this was quite extensive.
Although it's good for other types of...
Yeah, extensive.
By the way, it's our government taxpayers' money that paid for this nonsense.
Yeah.
Just saying.
This is zombie preparedness.
It's interesting.
Preparedness 101 zombie pandemic.
I hadn't even seen that before.
After the successful zombie preparedness campaign in 2011, an overwhelming number of educators requested zombie-themed preparedness activities for school-aged children.
Do you want to know what's wrong with education?
It's that right there.
Okay, here's a lesson that can be done individually in pairs.
Give students two to three minutes to create a list of items they think they would need in an emergency situation.
If zombies or real emergencies are headed your way, it's important to be prepared.
So in general, that's pretty good.
What they don't add in the matches, first aid kits, cell phone, batteries, there's no garlic, wooden steak, so that was kind of phony to start with.
Well, Garth, you're mixing vampires up with zombies.
Oh, that's right.
What do you need?
You need a shotgun.
You have to chop their head off.
You've got to chop their head off, which is what happened in Rwanda, where you've got to double tap.
I don't know if that double tap works.
If you blow their head off, I think it's pretty good.
Oh yeah, if you blow their head off with a shotgun, yeah, that should work.
Because they can't eat.
Meanwhile, the CDC is covertly removing some entries from the VAERS database.
What?
Mm-hmm.
Oh yeah.
You mean the entries like got shot, took two steps, dropped dead?
No.
Let me see.
I have it here.
There's got to be a rhyme or reason to what they dropped or what they're trying to pull out.
It's a clue to something.
There was a two-year-old who died after receiving the vaccine from Pfizer.
The case was reported to the VAERS system, only to be removed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
Wait, a two-year-old?
Two-year-old.
That's what they're trying to get rid of, the fact that they gave these shots to anybody like that.
Good catch.
Yeah, the two-year-old girl in question passed almost immediately after receiving her second dose of Pfizer's mRNA injection.
She shouldn't have gotten a shot.
That's a wrongful death right there.
Yeah.
And from what I understand, none of the trials included children.
None of the trials included pregnant women or even women who wanted to get pregnant.
Which has, I think, been verified, yes.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, I'm not going to claim a Red Book victory for this because it's not, but there is something very interesting about this latest vaccine.
And why bring it up?
Because it's...
You were interrupting me saying I'm going to play it because there is something very interesting about this latest vaccination hesitancy incentive.
I saw the announcement for the concert and then when you go to purchase the tickets it says that you have to show proof of vaccination which I do not have.
Tickets cost $18 in advance or $20 at the door if you have a vaccination certificate.
If I wanted to go to the concert without a vaccination, I would have to pay $999.99.
Promoter Paul Williams came up with the idea.
We're just trying to do a show safely, and they should go out and get vaccinated to protect themselves and their family and their communities.
So, the Red Book entry was, of course, you'll need a passport, which is not required here.
But what this guy is saying is, it's bullshit.
He's saying, we just want it to be safe.
So, let's crowdfund $1,000 for this young woman.
Let's send her that money so she can take her oozing, infected self into the concert.
That's not going to keep anybody safe, according to your idea.
Yeah.
It makes no logical sense.
And that got huge coverage.
No one even brings that up.
No one.
Well, I think that anybody that tries to pull the stunt like this guy, nobody should buy.
You know, creating barriers to entry to your product or any sales thing that you're doing is dumb.
It shows that you're a fool.
Yeah.
Yes.
The way to do it is not charge anything.
Just let anyone do anything they want, copy it, listen to it for free, and then say, hey, send us something.
That's the way you do it.
Pharmaceutical industry.
There's an element to that.
In some situations, that's the only way it works.
I was going to say, okay, well, I don't know where you want to go, because I'm going to shift.
I was going to go to my Whitney website.
Okay, well, let me lead you into Whitney.
This will be easy.
Another Red Book entry.
The one that I wanted was never reported.
But ransomware, it's the next step as we move from the pandemic to the cyber pandemic.
Klaus said it.
I'm just going to play it one more time.
We all know that still pay insufficient attention.
To the frightening scenario of a comprehensive cyber attack, which would bring to a complete halt to the power supply, transportation, hospital services, our society as a whole.
The COVID-19 crisis would be seen in this respect as a small disturbance in comparison to a major cyber attack.
To use the COVID-19 crisis as a timely opportunity to reflect on the lessons the cybersecurity community And that is the entire mission for the World Economic Forum, the Davos set, is going from...
And I think this is going to come really fast.
We're all relieved about walking outside.
I think it's coming, and we saw the most recent one.
One of the largest meat producers in the world is the latest victim.
Hey, you're going off topic.
No, I'm not.
...attack that could drive up prices for consumers, this time during peak barbecue season.
Uh-uh.
I'm not.
I'm not.
You are.
No, there's no way.
You're going to take you right back to Whitney Webb.
All I'm saying here is that this is the plan.
And this JBS ransomware, zero details.
Nothing at all like the colonial hack.
They are a World Economic Forum proud partner.
So now go to Whitney Webb.
Well, I have meatpacking stuff to discuss.
Well, we can do meatpacking and then come back to Whitney.
There are some details of this, and this is like a dubious hack, and I don't buy what you just said, any of it.
I don't see that.
They've got to make the...
They can't do this.
They have to make the transition to where they're really headed, which is global climate change, climate crisis, climate emergency.
Oh, excuse me, excuse me.
No, excuse me.
You have...
You have evil Bitcoin for ransomware that takes up a lot of energy.
You have meat, the war on meat, which is climate change.
Come on, it's all in there.
It's all leading towards the next step.
No, no.
I believe the meatpacking thing is part of the war on Bitcoin.
There's no doubt about that.
In fact, it's almost revealed in this NPR reporting.
Which you didn't even say was real.
You said it was just some a-holes trying to get some money.
I told you it was the war on Bitcoin.
No, I think they made...
It's just a bunch of evil bastards trying to get some money.
And wherever they're from, probably Ukraine.
I'm just saying, the last time I brought this up, you dismissed even the Bitcoin portion of my...
No, I didn't.
Oh, okay, I'll get the clip for you.
Don't worry.
I would say that it looks like it could be, but I think these guys are just taking shots at anyone.
In fact, they just took a shot at the same group, a shot at some ferry service, which is a minor, didn't get a lot of news publicity.
It came in after the meatpacking story.
Some ferry that runs off of Cape Cod or something like that.
That's got no ink, and this has got no connection to any of these theories.
I just think they're taking advantage of the meatpacking, the system is taking advantage of the meatpacking hack because they're trying to do something about Bitcoin.
And we can listen to the NPR clips and I think it's kind of in there.
Let's start with NPR, a meatpacking hack NPR.
The world's largest meat processing company, JBS, says its meatpacking operations are being restored after a ransomware attack.
The FBI is blaming a group with links to Russia.
This is the latest example of a major company being shut down by criminal hackers, apparently based in Russia.
NPR national security correspondent Greg Myrie is here with Elaine.
Hi, Ari.
First, bring us up to speed on the status of the JBS meat processing plants in the U.S. Well, after shutdowns the past couple days here in the US, as well as Canada and Australia, the company expects to resume most operations as soon as today.
Now, the company hasn't actually confirmed this, and it's being closely watched to see if there might be any impact on meat supplies or meat prices.
But it again shows the risk to this critical infrastructure.
A month ago, I think many people didn't know who Colonial Pipeline was and had no idea that's how gasoline was reaching local gas stations on the East Coast.
Until this week, I think many people hadn't heard of JBS and had no idea this is where the ground beef at their local supermarket was coming from.
But now we're seeing how these large, though largely invisible, companies are so critical to everyday life.
And is that why the Biden administration is so eager to jump into the fray here?
Yes, Ari.
I mean, absolutely.
President Biden came into office promising a robust response to cyber threats and presented a very detailed executive order last month.
But there are very real limitations of what the government can do.
These hacks we're talking about are on private companies.
In this case, it looks like Russian criminals hit a global meat supplier, JBS, that's based in Brazil.
The White House may be calling on the Russian government and publicly scolding President Putin for tolerating cyber criminals, but it's very unlikely this will make it stop.
Biden will have a chance to raise this face-to-face with Putin two weeks from today at a summit in Geneva, Switzerland.
All right.
What is not in there is any of the information.
I'm in touch with all these dudes named Ben.
There's nothing, nothing at all, no details.
No one has any information about what this particular ransomware was, what it got.
It's very different from everything we've heard.
I fail to see how you can not listen to that pseudo-Nazi Klaus Schwab saying the cyber pandemic and seeing this happening and not thinking that they're going to pull a bigger one next time.
Because Klaus Schwab's an idiot.
Klaus Schwab is a PR guy.
He's just the mouthpiece.
He thinks he's more than that.
He doesn't think of himself as that.
Let's play part two.
Yeah.
I don't think it's a very good defense to say he's just an idiot.
Well, he is an idiot.
He really looks like the hackers.
And by the way, this idea of blaming the Russians with reporting, like, apparently Russia?
No, that's the bonus part.
The other one was, what was this other one, apparently?
It looks like Russia?
No, of course not.
It's a bonus.
It's a bonus to throw that in.
That's what's beautiful about it.
It's a trifecta.
It really looks like the hackers have the upper hand here.
How have they moved so far ahead of governments and companies trying to defend against these hacks?
The hackers have really built a very lucrative and largely risk free system.
One group develops the malware, then they supply it to other groups to carry out the actual attacks.
It's often a very simple phishing operation.
Attackers just need one company employee Could those cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin be an avenue to limiting or preventing these hacks?
Well, I asked Dmitry Alparovic.
He's a cybersecurity expert who runs the Silverado Policy Accelerator.
He says the U.S. government needs to regulate cryptocurrencies just like other large banking transactions with all the parties fully identified.
By requiring any player that is performing transfers from currency like U.S. dollars into Bitcoin to provide their identification, provide their passport information, their driver's license, etc., will allow them to start tracking these payments and determine who they are ultimately reaching.
Yeah, no, that's totally hit on Bitcoin.
Beautiful one.
Just following Occam's razor, they could also, and again, they're back up and running.
The executive order has already been placed.
You have to report it, which they did, but we should know, did they pay for it?
Did they not pay for it?
None of that information, just Russia, Russia, Bitcoin.
It could also be just to have a nice excuse for what's really happening.
This morning, as restaurants nationwide ramp up to pre-pandemic levels, some customers may notice something new on the menu.
Higher prices.
One reason?
The cost of food, especially beef, pork, and chicken, is surging.
We are seeing our chicken prices probably, well, they're more than double what they normally are.
The warehouse grill and drinkery near Omaha says it had no choice but to add $2 to all chicken and beef dishes on the menu and an extra $3 for steak.
It's not even getting as close to where we need to be, but it'll be helpful.
The other reason for the price hikes?
Restaurants and their suppliers are facing a major shortage of workers, which is forcing them to pay higher wages to keep and attract staff.
A lot of people don't want to come to work because of a lot of the stimulus packages, and so a lot of my farmers are saying they're only at about two-thirds of the people they need.
So it's, you know, we've got prices doubling.
What?
It stems from this report, California.
Play the California clip.
Oops, oops, oops, oops.
Okay.
Prices here in the Bay Area are now just a few cents shy of hitting a nearly decade high.
At the same time, the cost of taking a rideshare service is skyrocketing amid a driver shortage.
KTV's Emma Goss is live now with details on when we can start to see prices flatten out and ways to save.
Emma.
Heather, here in Palo Alto and across the Bay Area, good luck finding gas prices for below $4 a gallon.
Experts expect prices to peak next month, and then by late August, come back down.
Bay Area gas prices have jumped $1.27 from a year ago, now averaging $4.34 a gallon.
Now that things are going back to normal, demand is ramping up.
And oil production is not rebounding as quickly, and that has brought oil prices up very quickly, and thus gas prices.
I pay for gas a day, $50 per day on gasoline.
Hector Castellanos drives 300 miles a day, picking up riders for Uber and Lyft.
He's busier than he's been in quite a while with more people needing rides to work in airports and fewer rideshare drivers available to pick them up.
Over the weekend, one man tweeted, an eight-minute drive from SFO running $100 on Lyft and Uber.
He ended up taking a taxi for just $30.
Uber and Lyft both say they are temporarily boosting pay for drivers to incentivize more people to drive for them.
Uber says drivers averaging 20 hours a week are making close to $25 an hour.
Lyft says drivers in their top markets last month averaged $30 to $35 an hour.
Is that what you're experiencing?
No, it's less than that.
Castellanos says he's making close to $12 to $15 an hour driving full-time and sometimes goes long distances to reach people where no one else is available to pick them up.
That's why a lot of drivers, they don't want to keep driving.
That's why we are short of drivers.
While prices could climb a few cents higher next month, it's unlikely they'll ever reach $5 a gallon.
To save off ride share services, you could comparison shop through the apps and also look for coupon codes online.
I don't know why that clip would...
But, create an artificial shortage.
Yeah.
Jack up the prices.
Yes.
See what happens.
I mean, if you want to make the theory that this whole meat thing was bullcrap and it never happened, it was just a good excuse to jack up prices, I'm not going to argue it.
It's possible.
A couple other things.
The World Economic Forum now has the Cyber Polygon, simulation of a coming cyber pandemic, very similar to Event 201.
I mean, nothing to see here.
We haven't learned, so I'm sure it's not happening.
I'm crazy.
Did the World Economic Forum do that event, 21 or whatever it was?
Yeah, 201, yeah.
No, they didn't.
They were a big part of it, absolutely.
No.
Yes, it was with Harvard.
It was with the World Health Organization.
It was Johns Hopkins, I believe.
Yeah, Johns Hopkins, not Harvard.
Yeah.
Well, okay.
I mean, I'll send it to you.
It's in the show notes.
I'm just saying that when you get...
So I'll take it to your global warming, and it fits in with this.
You have a drought right now in the western part of the United States.
Corn has doubled in...
All feed stocks...
I mean, it's just as possible that JBS went, let's fake something so we can stop because we're dying out here.
We can't afford the prices of feed.
That may be possible.
But where this is going towards, and it comes back in the Bitcoin talk...
It comes back in the war on meat talk.
It comes back in the energy talk.
It's ESG. And that's the environmental sustainable goals, which is this new buzzword for investment and where money from governments is going to be exclusively allowed to go.
And corporate investors are already saying, well, you have to have your ESG has to be in order.
And Klaus said something very shortly here about ESG. And I think that's where it's headed.
Yeah.
Finalized, maybe, what we need is also a new mindset.
It has been mentioned, in the business world, we see now that companies who are not committed to ESG metrics, to stakeholder capitalism, Just to stakeholder capitalism is that those companies are on the wrong side of history.
But it's not only companies.
I think we also have to ask the question how we can apply the ESG metrics even to governments because it's not just GDP. It's well-being.
It's prosperity.
ESG metrics.
That's your carbon tax right there.
ESG metrics.
And they're going to come up with some unit of exchange and the ESG metrics, and you'll be taxed on it.
And I think what he's saying, oh, we have to go further than commercial companies, governments, and eventually human beings.
You will be taxed on your ESG behavior, if you sing too much, all that stuff.
These people are crazy.
Well, I'm not arguing that.
ABC did take a deep look into this Russian stuff, these hackers, they even did something really unique.
ABC News has been closely tracking the growing threat of cyber attacks, recently attending a conference full of hackers in Moscow.
The organizer of the conference, a company called Positive Technologies, claims the gathering is a chance for businesses to learn how to prevent cyber attacks.
It's like boxing, right?
So you start boxing with somebody, And you may fail, but then you get more experience every time you have opponent which is stronger, more stronger and more stronger, and probably at the end of the day you fight with a champion, world champion.
But the Biden administration recently slapped sanctions on positive technologies, calling the conference a recruiting ground for Russian cyber spies.
There you go.
Sure.
Yeah.
They're setting the stage.
For the big powwow.
I wonder how that's going to go.
I mean, Putin is already saying, hey, we're monitoring you for human rights violations, all those people who got locked up still four months after the so-called insurrection.
He's just messing with Biden.
He doesn't care.
He knows Biden is weak.
Let's do your Whitney stuff.
Okay, so Whitney Webb, you know, I remember, we've talked about her a couple of times in the show.
So I have a bunch of clips.
She was with RFJ, RF Kennedy Jr.
And so I have him introducing her.
This is the RFJ, RFKJ Whitney Bess.
I have a question about that.
Yeah?
I mean, I have dyslexia.
I do stuff backwards.
Well, it's my touch typing is shot.
But what's interesting is, because you got the B, you did the...
Instead of the W, you did the B. Instead of the B, you did the S. It's just weird.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, I understand that, but it's the...
I don't know what the B got there.
I like it.
It makes no sense.
And it's just copy and paste, right?
You didn't actually do it wrong six times?
No, I did actually, to be honest about it, it is copy and paste, because there's too much trouble to do this individually.
Yes.
Hilarious.
With these titles.
And so, especially when there's this many of them.
But I also had RKKJ, and I did correct that, and then I had to go back and fix those.
It's kind of, actually, these misspellings become a real way for me to find stuff.
It's like, wait a minute, I think it was best.
All right, let's find that.
Anyway, this is the way that editors, that's the way you misspell stuff as an editor.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Yeah, because you can find it, so you don't make the mistake of leaving it in this way.
That's why the first paragraph is called a lead, and it's not spelled in any normal way.
It's spelled L-E-E-D-E. Oh, that's why it's called that.
And there's a bunch of different misspellings that are done purposely.
That way you can track them down easily, because you can't, you know.
Yeah, you can't read it without freaking out.
So let's start with listening to Doug.
This is Kennedy's intro.
I don't know how you do it, Whitney, how you do your research, but you are more dialed in than anybody that I know and understand kind of the gravity of what's happening and who all the characters are and the role not only of the pharmaceutical industry but the banks, the financial industry, the intelligence agencies, and others in, I guess, what people would now call the Great Reset.
In possession, this use, this leveraging that we're seeing of the pandemic to impose these totalitarian controls and these huge cultural and value shifts and structural shifts in American democracy.
Whitney writes for her own website, which is called Unlimited Hangouts, and she also writes often for The Defender.
Thank you for doing that.
And also for The Last American Vagabond.
But her stories are the kind of stories that I just wait, you know, to come out.
And I'm very excited when I see anything new that you've written.
Let's talk about Bill Gates and his friend Jeffrey Epstein.
And was that really a friendship?
What was going on there?
Yeah, yeah.
I love Whitney for this work.
Okay, well, I'm going to tell you what I think.
I think Whitney Webb is full of shit.
Really?
You haven't even played her kids?
She's an untrained journalist.
She makes connections that don't exist.
She makes stuff up.
And if you listen to her long enough, if you actually have any...
If you're in that business, you can see.
I mean, I can see where somebody, Kennedy and McCullough, they both think she's wonderful, but all she's doing is confirming their hopes and beliefs.
That's the way I see, the way she operates.
But I think she's full of shit.
I listen to her and I listen to her.
None of this makes any sense.
She'll dig up some obscure fact that you can't prove or disprove, and then she extrapolates.
She's the great extrapolator.
She can extrapolate all kinds of stuff.
And the reason I can say that is because I pretty much, in the next few clips, I know everybody in all these stories that she's talking about.
And she's operating out of Chile.
She's not even in the United States pounding the pavement.
I mean, she's, I mean, yeah, you can say the same thing about Glenn Greenwald because he's in Brazil.
But Greenwald, you know, has a track record of, you know, finding Snowden and going to Hong Kong and traveling around the world.
As far as I'm concerned, this woman just stays in Chile, as far as I can tell, and does all her work from there.
And she does it through public sources.
She does that, but her extrapolations bother me.
Let's start with the first clip from her.
Jeffrey, I've seen it.
And was that really a friendship?
What was going on there?
Well, you know, it's hard to describe exactly the nature of the relationship in that sense, because a lot of the way the people around Epstein were, it's hard to really call them friends, because a lot of the way that network operates is through blackmail, even on people that are technically on their side.
So it's a very dog-eat-dog world, I guess you could say.
So friends may sort of be a loose term in the way that, you know, regular people understand it.
When you're talking about this type of, you know, ruling elite, they have a very different mentality and a very different approach to friendship maybe than the average person would.
What's not particularly notable about the Bill Gates-Jeffrey Epstein relationship is that even now that it's being talked about in mainstream circles in connection with the Gates' divorce, the mainstream media continues to assert that they did not meet until 2011.
There is a mountain of evidence, in my opinion.
A mountain of evidence in her opinion is not the same as a mountain of evidence.
I think she has one article that she refers to that is from 2008 or 2009.
Well, no.
Her documentation is a little better than that.
But when she says something, for one thing, she does these laughs in the middle of stuff.
And she'll say something and she'll chuckle in there, much like Gates does.
And then she says things like a mountain of evidence, and then she has to back it off with, in my opinion...
It's just a mountain of evidence.
If you have a mountain of evidence, it's a mountain of evidence.
There's no opinion about it.
So I'm always skeptical when people start using that kind of weasel.
They do weasely stuff like that.
But let's go on with the next one, clip three.
That suggests that this is categorically false and that they actually knew each other back in the 1990s.
I first stumbled upon this in 2019 when I was doing an investigative series on the Epstein scandal.
There was a scrubbed article from January 22, 2001 that had originally been published in the Evening Standard, a well-respected UK newspaper.
Talking about Prince Andrew and his relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein.
And the part on Jeffrey Epstein and the reason it was scrubbed, it appears to have been scrubbed during the period of his first arrest between 2006 and 2007, is because it mentions the fact that Jeffrey Epstein, at some point before the publication of that article, had openly claimed to have been working in collaboration with the Central Intelligence Agency,
the CIA, So, of course, the revelations that later came to light about Epstein, obviously the powers that be, the national security state, didn't want to have any obvious ties hanging around there.
So that article ended up disappearing.
But what was also notable about that article and what stuck out to me is that since this was published in 2001, there's a line in there talking about Epstein, saying that Epstein was a billionaire hedge fund manager, which was sort of the...
Or property developer, which is sort of the theme at the time in articles about Epstein, but it says that Epstein made his millions through his business links with three individuals, Leslie Wexner, Donald Trump, and Bill Gates being the third.
Which is pretty significant when you consider the closeness of someone like Donald Trump and Leslie Wexner to Jeffrey Epstein to have Bill Gates in a list of those.
Alongside those two individuals suggest the ties were rather close.
At least one Epstein victim that I've spoken to personally, who was sort of embroiled in Epstein's network from 1995 to 1996, said that she heard Epstein and Maxwell talk about Bill Gates like they knew him really well.
I have two questions.
One, I'm kind of unsure why you're doing this other than to tell everyone you think Whitney Webb is full of shit.
Is there any other reason?
Because there's not really any information in this.
I thought there was good information.
I thought the thing about the newspaper article being scrubbed was interesting.
Yeah.
We've talked about Whitney Webb as being referred to on the show constantly.
No, no.
Yeah, we did it when we had it with McCullough, and then you talked about Whitney Webb a little bit in the last show.
Yeah, but I talked about it.
I didn't play endless clips of her really not saying much.
Well, these aren't endless clips.
I can stop playing these clips immediately.
If that's what you want.
There's a lot of exposition in here that I think needs revealing because people think Whitney Webb is some sort of a superstar.
A Glenn Greenwald kind of an investigator.
A great investigative reporter.
She's got a big book coming out.
And we've talked about the fact that there's these books coming out and one of them is a Whitney Webb book.
Okay, so the answer is yes.
You're doing this to show that she's full.
This is fine.
That she's full of shit.
That's what you said.
I mean, I can stop.
No, I want you to complete it.
Absolutely.
I'm completely open to what you're saying.
I'm just surprised.
Well, the clips from now on, they're not as long.
Except for one.
Well, let's go with clip four.
And Maxwell talk about Bill Gates like they knew him really well.
And of course, we know that Nathan Mervold, who was chief technology officer of Microsoft throughout the 1990s, one of Bill Gates' closest confidants who co-wrote his book, The Road Ahead in the late 90s, very, very much involved in Microsoft's business and Bill Gates' life as well, was very close to Jeffrey Epstein during the 1990s.
He traveled with him actually to Russia as part of a Microsoft Russia conference.
There's photographs of Epstein being.
A part of that trip along with a journalist, sort of a digital media journalist named Esther Dyson.
Esther Dyson, Bill Gates, Nathan Mervel, and a lot of the Silicon Valley elite are part of something called the Edge Foundation, which is basically how Epstein was able to connect so intimately with a lot of the individuals that would later become the Silicon Valley elite.
This includes people like Jeff Bezos, Kim Ball, and Elon Musk.
Bill Gates, Nathan Mirvold, and some other names as well.
Also, and responsible for how he ended up having dinners with people like Google co-founder Sergey Brin.
All of these people were connected to the Edge Foundation, which was founded by this literary agent who also has ties to the national security state named John Brockman.
This is just guilt by association.
We're talking about the billionaire's dinners, which is where he met the Google guy if he was because he was invited to these things.
This is all she does.
It's just a lot of guilt by.
So I know Nathan Mierwald.
I know John Brockman.
Brockman is not part of the national security state.
It's not he's not even close to it.
And Miravol is just the ex-professor from Princeton who got involved with Gates.
She goes on in the later clips, which I'm going to stop playing these clips.
In later clips, she goes on and shows how there's some other one or two characters that were brought in that worked for the Gates Foundation and they were somehow associated with...
Epstein, who now, according to her, was an investor in high-tech companies, and I don't know any evidence of that.
He was a phony hedge fund manager.
It goes on and on.
I'm not going to play anymore.
Why not?
This is very helpful, because you're helping me form a new opinion.
I don't want you to stop.
All right.
But actually, I could just easily skip to the little kicker I have here.
It's only 11 seconds.
Okay.
And we'll skip the other two.
You sure?
Because I really don't mind.
No, I think you convinced me to stop.
So let's go with...
This is the kicker, and this is just a very...
Just listen carefully.
And this, to me, is her, in essence...
The question is, why is mainstream media so reluctant to look into the actual origins of that relationship?
What's the reason for the laugh?
She does this constantly.
Why is she laughing right there in the middle of that commentary?
You kind of talked over.
Let me listen again.
The question is, why is mainstream media so reluctant to look into the actual origins of that relationship?
You know, I think there is cause for concern there, for sure.
She's not a great talker, that's for sure.
She doesn't really do much that way.
Her cause for concern is that the mainstream media is not looking into the origins of the Gates-Epstein relationship.
Who cares?
There's a relationship.
We know it's a fact.
The guys are...
Who knows the depths of it?
I think it'd be more interesting to get the logs, how many times she's been to the island.
But she's got this preoccupation with the date that they first met.
So what?
Why is that cause for concern?
I think that you're right.
I like reading her stuff.
And this is really an extension.
And maybe that's where she went wrong.
Because I was very impressed with her multi-part series over Megacorp.
And this was all Epstein stuff.
And it was Lansky and the guy from L Brands.
All of that, how that all fit together.
And I thought she did a really good job of laying out all these different connections.
What for me makes it interesting, again, with Gates dropping out of sight all of a sudden, is something else that happened.
It's funny because I was looking for resignations when I saw the...
You remember just before this all happened, there was a whole slew of CEOs that resigned before COVID? Yeah.
Just one after the other, including Bob Iger.
CEOs were resigning.
And I think we kind of thought, shoot, these guys might have known something.
They wanted to get out.
They didn't want to have any part with it.
And so as I'm searching around, I see that the CEO, only eight months, he was the CEO of Tyson Foods.
He resigned five days ago.
I'm like, well, if you know that there's some bullcrap coming with the meat industry, you might resign.
But the one that then struck my eye, Hey, Will.
Leon Black is stepping down from his role as CEO of Apollo, the big private equity firm that he founded.
He will be replaced by his fellow co-founder, Mark Rowan, as CEO, although Black will continue as Apollo's chairman.
Also, the board of Apollo will be expanded and will include four We're good to go.
And Jeffrey Epstein, they retained a law firm, Deckard, in order to observe and better understand their relationship and how it impacted Apollo.
So they released the findings of that report as well, where they say that the key findings include that Apollo never retained Epstein for any services.
That was reiterated from statements made earlier by Apollo.
They also found that there was no evidence that Black was involved in any way in Mr.
Epstein's criminal activities.
So, this is a very...
Leon Black is the CEO and one of the three co-founders of Apollo Capital Management who have, I think, half a trillion dollars.
They're one of the biggest hedge funds in the world.
And he was accused of raping a Russian model and using her pretty much as a sex slave for, I think, a number of years.
And so now there's all kinds of allegations coming out against him.
They did an investigation, which was very funny.
The company's own law firm, which had two members of the investigation, were also implicated in other types of things.
Including Josh Harris, who was supposed to take over from Leon Black.
He's the other co-founder.
He stepped down.
He's no longer with the company.
Leaving it with a third guy.
And he's now going to take over.
But what's interesting about Leon Black is he does have a lot of connections to Silicon Valley.
I think it was Drexel.
Who helped Microsoft go public?
I can't remember.
But he was part of that.
His dad, Eli Black, he was the CEO and president of United Fruit.
You remember that?
United Fruit, which later became Chiquita Banana?
Sorry?
No, I mean, yeah, but it's obvious that this guy would be stepping down because of the Epstein connection, but how does that relate to other people stepping down like Iger?
Oh no, that's how I bumped into the story.
That's all.
I was just searching around and then I bumped into this.
I'm like, that's interesting that this guy stepped down.
You're not really hearing much about it.
But then I found, of all places, on truehoop.com, which is a basketball website, and they have a sub-stack.
The link's in the show notes.
They have a 12-part series...
Which I think is, it's like Whitney Webb stuff, only holy crap, this is nothing you've ever heard before.
In particular, the relationship between the money, between the sex, and NBA. And that's where it gets interesting if you look at all the people who have billionaires who fund NBA or own NBA teams.
So Harris, one of the co-founders of Apollo, he's the governor of the Philadelphia 76ers, the wrestler, also he's going to be the new CEO of Apollo, Atlanta Hawks.
Let's see.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver.
He's a co-board member of Apollo.
Paul Allen, of course, the Blazers, Balmer, the Clippers.
Everyone's being implicated in this 12-part series as really a bunch of horrible, horrible a-holes.
And they have Gates all over this thing.
Gates has no teams.
No, he doesn't.
But he has the relationship because of Microsoft.
And he and Leon Black go way back.
So there's something brewing.
And remember that also Boris Nikolik was named, and he's a Bill Gates financial advisor, was named the executor of Epstein Estate.
There's all this shit that I think...
I believe it's the backup executor.
Backup, okay.
So there's something going on, I think, that what Whitney is not doing a good job of, which she does a better job of in her Megacorp overview, this may be a bit of a stretch, is link that all together.
Now, simultaneously, this is where I brought it up, I think, two shows ago.
Jenny Jardin is posting very similar stories to this.
And she's now posting about Leon Black and how he was a part of this.
And she's going back.
I don't know about Brockman or any kind of implication.
I don't know about all of that.
But there is for sure something very big and vast is happening with bankers, underage women, and creepy shit.
And I think that it's all going to come out.
And I am now thinking, crazy as it may seem, that Melinda Gates may be the one that's going to trip it.
Someone of that ilk is going to trip it.
Or has.
Because this stinks.
It stinks.
All these stories, all this information, Bill Gates, gone!
Gone!
Dr.
Bill!
You can't just dismiss that he's no longer in the picture.
Well, a couple of things.
One, Bill is run by his public relations team.
And if they tell him, no, you're going to screw yourself if you go out there and start becoming a high-profile person at this moment.
Because all they're going to do, everyone's going to just ask you about the divorce and it's no good.
Just stay out of the public light.
Just stay home.
It's no big deal.
And that's what I believe is going on with him.
I don't believe he's disappeared or dead.
I didn't say that.
I didn't say that.
You did earlier.
You suggested it.
That he's dead?
No, you suggested that he could be gone because maybe he's dead.
It was casual.
It was no big deal.
I just think a lot of this is guilt by association, a lot of hand-wringing, and I think Whitney Webb's behind a lot of it.
I think she's full of shit.
That's all I can tell you.
I can play the other clips, but it's not just beside the point.
My point's been made.
And you can read her stuff and think all these crazy things are going to happen.
I don't see it.
All right.
Well, that's fine.
I have one final question.
Are there silk sheets on Epstein Island, or is it just regular cotton?
I'm sure there's still one.
They've torn the place down, you know.
With that, I'd like to thank you for your courage to say in the morning to you, the man who may put the sea in cyber pandemic.
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr.
John C. Dvorak!
In the morning to you, Mr.
Adam Kerr.
Also, in the morning, ships and sea boots on ground, feet in the air, subs of the water.
Dames and knights out there.
In the morning to our trolls in the troll room.
You know what I haven't done yet?
I need to get a troll count.
Hold on a second.
Trolls, can you please put your hands up if you don't mind?
There we go.
Troll count.
And they scurry away.
Woohoo!
1828.
Not bad.
1828 for Thursday.
That's kind of par for the course.
They are listening at noagendastream.com.
That's where you can listen to all of the live streams that happen across Gitmo Nation.
We've had this for a long time.
It's a chat at the same time.
So that's why you control.
And if this person doing the live show is watching, then it gets even better.
Or you can just drop by.
We have podcasts running on the stream.
All talk, no commercials.
All value for value.
It's a great place to be.
Or if you want, follow us on our un-algo-wise, non-algo social network known as NoAgendaSocial.com, which is a Mastodon instance.
So anywhere you can get a Mastodon account, you can follow us.
Follow at John C. Dvorak at NoAgendaSocial.com or at Adam at NoAgendaSocial.com.
And once the federation kicks in, then you will eventually see pretty much everything that is posted there and comes through on the timeline.
And please consider setting up your own instance, your own Mastodon server.
Federate, that's the only way we can make it move forward.
And in the morning, to our artist for episode 1351.
This was the Memorial Day episode.
We are suckers for symbolism.
Now, that's why Sir NetNed got it.
Hands down, he had the beautiful stars and stripes with the eagle.
Look at the kick-ass eagle eye, looking like, hey, I'm going to mess you up.
And there was some other stuff, I think, wasn't there?
There was some other things that we talked about.
There's actually a bunch of stuff, and you were promoting a couple of things that...
I kind of pushed back on it.
I can't remember which one.
Here's what we were going to talk about.
Um, that, uh, uh, Mountain Jay tries to get this kind of evolution, the evolution thing to, to stick, but it's just not working.
He, she keeps, uh, it's a guy.
I think Tantanel is, I don't know.
I don't think it's, uh, Tantanel's a woman.
She's in Holland.
I don't know.
We can't tell.
These are pseudonyms.
Who knows what they, what, what's what.
But that piece, it keeps getting resubmitted in various forms.
It's never going to be used.
No, it's not going to work.
That's what we're going to talk about.
It's a mention to Mountain Jay.
I thought you said that the Mountain Jay piece.
Mountain Jay.
Yeah, not Tonton Hill.
Mountain Jay.
Mountain Jay.
No.
Stop it.
Yeah, there was nothing that I was pushing.
That was the only thing we wanted to talk about.
There wasn't anything else we liked.
Let me see.
Kenny Benn also did a flag in Eagle, which was nice, but that was just a choice, just a preference by us.
Yeah.
Poppies, although appropriate, no.
It's also a callback that's dated.
Yeah.
Bug Appetit, couldn't use that.
That was the title.
That's kind of an unwritten rule.
And then it looks like a couple of things came in later.
Yeah, I saw that.
After we posted the show.
Yeah, Nestworks put some stuff in there and a couple other people.
So that was too bad.
Well, I like the bug that was drawn.
I used his stuff on two newsletters in a row.
I'm going to get to go to this.
Nessworks?
Nessworks.
Yeah, Nessworks.
Mountain Jay is a lady, by the way.
It's official.
Mountain Jay is a lady.
Okay, I think we knew that.
I don't know anything anymore.
Yes, Ness works, who did the Bug Appetit with a cricket with breasts and holding a glass of wine.
If you go to the page of art, there's a lot of good stuff there, and much of it is quite good.
I used the cow with the herd mentality, which you liked before.
That was a good one, yeah.
I used that in a newsletter, and I used another one on the newsletter.
The one down, Vaxability, Eligibility, I use that.
It's just that, for some reason, this stuff has not been picked, I don't think, by us for the main show.
Art.
Not sure why.
Well, people are already, we're seeing people already step up for this show, which is good.
There's already stuff on there that's interesting.
So fast.
These are professionals sometimes, but also amateurs who just love the challenge.
And we are one of the only podcasts, very, very few, that change their album art, their cover art, every single show, which we feel is a huge advantage.
Not only is it creative, it just makes it for a better, complete product.
It stands out and someone sees it in a what's new listing or if you're just searching for stuff, it's not the same image over and over and over again.
And I think the artists also like this professional challenge.
And it's true value for value.
It's kind of a competition.
So yes, someone quote-unquote wins.
But I think there's also appreciation for our feedback and just the challenge of doing it and the other artists.
And they talk about it a lot.
So it's a community of artists.
It is.
It's noagendaartgenerator.com, and if you're using a Podcasting 2.0 compatible app, then you've probably seen a whole bunch of these pictures fly by as we were talking about them, and Dreb Scott uses them in all of our chapters.
Many No Agenda Nation shows are now starting to use the features of Podcasting 2.0, so when you do, make sure you go ahead.
Also, most of the pieces are promoted on the No Agenda social.
Oh yeah, there's a bot.
There's a bot that takes them, picks them up, and throws them in there.
So help save podcasting from douchebags, all related to Bill Gates and Epstein, and go and get a new app.
Try a new app.
It's simple.
Newpodcastapps.com.
Just look at them.
Some of them are web apps.
You don't have to download anything.
Support that.
And, of course, we thank, again, our artist for episode 1351.
Now, I've completely forgotten who it was.
1352.
SirNetNet.
No, 1351.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, the art.
SirNetNet.
Part of our value-for-value model.
Put back into it what you get out of it.
That's really what we want.
And we have a number of people who come in for our executive producer or associate executive producer credits every single show because they found the previous show or this upcoming one to be so valuable.
And we're going to thank them right now.
Yeah, starting with...
Sir Macanudo de la Paz in New Brownfells, Texas, who came in with $1,333.33.
And he says, thank you for your courage.
Let me get the keyboard, sorry.
Thank you for your courage.
He would like to hear jingles, listen to what the lizard people say, and R2D2 karma.
And that's it?
No explanation of the numbers other than, holy crap, beautiful.
A lot of threes.
We love that.
Sir Macanudo, thank you very much.
Listen to what the lizard people say.
You've got karma.
I definitely do not remember that.
That's what came up when I searched for it.
Huh.
Charlie Henry came in with $650, and he's in parts unknown, it looks like.
He is in the USA. This donation for my wife, Christina Henry's birthday, which is Friday, June 4th, and we'll bring her to dames.
By the way, do you have the birthday list in front of you?
Yeah, I can check that out.
Not this one, but see if Henry Mackey is on the list.
No!
Really?
Henry Mackey.
And how old does young Henry become today?
Ten.
Ten years old.
Beautiful age.
All right.
I find that hard to believe, actually, but that's what I'm told.
That he's ten?
Yeah.
Seems just like yesterday.
Yeah.
Yesterday was four.
Yeah.
Back to Christina Henry's birthday, which is Friday.
And, oh, by the way, Henry was...
His birthday was on the 1st.
Oh, okay.
And it will bring her into dame status.
She'd like to be known as Dame Christina Pearl of the Clear Blue Skies and would like birthday cake and Bordeaux at the round table.
Which is a great combo.
Well, if it's a sweet Bordeaux, perhaps.
I'd like an F cancer from my stepmom who passed away last week.
And could we please request some business buying karma for an upcoming venture slash adventure?
Love is lit.
Thank you for your courage, Charlie Henry.
You bet, Charlie.
You bet.
Oh, hey.
Oh, I said that, you bet, but what happened?
Uh-oh.
Huh.
Did this just break all of a sudden?
Uh.
You've got karma.
Ella Copastecchi in Bristol, Rhode Island, 500.
You can get the next one with our friends from Japan.
Ella Kopestecki, Bristol, Rhode Island.
Hi, Adam and John.
I was punched in the mouth over a year ago and have been suckling from the value teat ever since.
I repent.
Please dedouche me.
You've been dedouched.
No jingles, no karma.
Then we have 333 from Japan.
Sir Mark, Duke of Japan and all the disputed islands in the Japan Sea.
Good to hear from Sir Mark.
And we also have a note from Dame Astrid coming up.
Dear John Adam, thanks for keeping us all sane over the last year.
Looks like there's love and light at the end of the tunnel.
You were spot on with your analysis of the Tokyo Games.
Will they?
Won't they?
It's a game of chicken.
Tokyo government would cancel given half a chance, but they would have to foot the enormous cancellation charges for the TV rights, global sponsorship deals, temporary facilities, you name it.
Shit, that's even more than I thought it was.
If they have to cancel, they have to pay for it.
Only if the IOC cancel will Tokyo be off the hook.
That's the International Olympic Committee.
They famously said last week they have no intention of calling off the Games, even if Tokyo is in a state of emergency.
With over 100,000 participants and officials visiting, Tokyo has no capacity to cope.
If an outbreak occurs in any of the venues or worse still, the Olympic Village, it's going to be fun.
We'll keep you updated as this unfurls over the next two months.
Looking forward to seeing you and the Keeper here as soon as all of this is over.
If you could send some GCSE exam karma to my daughter Mila at the British School here in Tokyo, it would help on the four exams she's taking out of 12.
The other eight were cancelled due to the pandemic.
The virus is obviously selective of which exam boards it hits.
Yes, indeed.
That is Sir Mark, Duke of Japan, and all the disputed islands in the Japan Sea.
Good to hear from you, good sir.
And he's a real sir.
You've got karma.
Sir Christopher Kessler, a baron from Marshfield, Wisconsin, 33333.
And he just says, no jingles, no karma.
That is the best note today.
There's others.
Candy Walker.
Miranda City, Texas.
3333.
This is the best note.
I have nothing from her.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
No note.
She's just, hey, we're happy.
Let me help you out.
Thank you, Candy.
If you did have a note, send it to us.
Notes at noagendashow.net.
Use the subject line.
Donation.
Madison McClure in Park City, Utah.
3333.
Park City.
This is my first donation, but I'm a new listener and no need for dedouching.
My parents have been listeners for two years.
I hope this will boost my Hillsdale College application.
I'll need some karma.
Also, John sounds like John Wayne Madison.
I'm not sure if that's a compliment.
I'm not sure where it is.
I think it's a conspiracy theory guy.
Oh, great.
From way back.
From way back.
Madison, let's try this.
A little bit of goat karma might help with the app.
You've got karma.
You never know.
There she is, Dame Astrid from Japan.
As you know, she is the Dutch...
I'm sorry, we missed one.
I missed one.
Adam Proventure, do you think?
Proventure?
Proventure?
Provenciar, 276.39.
Now, he's from Canada, so I'm thinking that this is probably an executive producer donation sent to us in Scandinavian dollaretts.
What do you think?
We can bump him up.
I think he's a total bumper.
We'll do that.
Then we have Dame Astor, Duchess of Japan and all the disputed islands in the Japan Sea.
See a theme here with Sir Mark?
Dear John Adam, through our fourth wave here in Tokyo, it was a continually extended state of emergency.
This is boots on the ground.
I asked for it.
And she also sent us a donation, which is really nice.
So did Mark.
What are the three C's?
Coughing, cussing, and cuckolding.
Yes.
The worst hit were bars and restaurants which are not allowed to serve alcohol and had to shut at 8 p.m.
Well, of course, it's nocturnal.
We all know this.
But somehow, being on a crowded train commuting to and from work seemed to be okay.
Generally, though, people are not too keen to get vaccinated.
Also, Japan has to undergo their own vaccine safety trials before approval.
Historically, the Japanese have been put off by the troublesome adverse side effects of the MMR vaccine and the HPV vaccine.
And vaccination is no longer recommended.
Ha!
Gee!
There you go.
And she has an extract from the Japan Times from May 29, 2021.
Japan has the lowest rates of confidence in vaccines in the world, with just 30% of Japanese saying they, quote, strongly agreed that vaccines are safe and effective, according to an NHK survey from last year.
And more than one-third of Japanese said they did not want to get the COVID-19 jab.
Worse, a growing number of people in Japan don't believe vaccines are effective.
And then DeMastered continues.
Also, the Japanese health insurance system is quite good, which makes the gamble of not taking the vaccine worth it.
But you also might want to look at it as an incentive getting your shot in the Ryogoku sumo area as you get to wait at the box seats for potential adverse side effects to kick in.
And she sent us a picture of the sumo arena with newly vaccinated people.
Did you see that picture?
Have you seen this email?
Yeah.
Some of them look kind of slumped over.
And these people didn't look too great in those boxes.
It would be nice if there was a sumo match or something.
I don't know.
That wasn't a great picture.
I'm concerned for those people in those boxes.
Love and Light, Daymaster, Duchess of Japan, and all the disputed islands in the Japan Sea.
Thank you very much, Daymaster.
We miss you.
She does mention that it seems as if the Japanese have the absolute lowest...
I would call it an approval rating for vaccines in the world.
Yeah.
It's like 33% of the population thinks they're efficacious or useful.
Yeah, that's right.
Very low number.
Brad Fisher in Hot Springs, South Dakota.
Shouldn't we boycott the Olympic Games since these people are clearly Republicans, these Japanese?
They must be.
Brad Fisher in Hot Springs, South Dakota, 250-33.
We're in the free state of South Dakota, which is never mentioned, by the way, as one of the, I guess, areas of the world that never locked down.
She never locked down.
She brags about it.
Yeah.
And nobody studies it to show that it's just bogus.
Lockdown, no lockdown doesn't make any difference.
My first donation caused confusion with the mention of Queen Jordan, the roper.
The current Miss Rodeo America.
Yeah, rodeo.
We're in the free state of South Dakota and have a cold beverage waiting when you visit.
Keep up the excellence in broadcasting and God bless.
Thank you.
I don't know exactly what the confusion was.
I don't remember that Queen Jordan.
I don't remember anything about it.
Casey Gray.
Thank you, Brad.
Casey Gray, Grand Prairie, Texas.
Not too far from here.
$250.
Hey guys, I'm a Roganite here.
Well, that's good.
Thanks for being the best podcast in the universe.
I made this donation from my biz account to get a write-off.
So here's a shameless business plug.
I'm the owner of 360 Jiu-Jitsu in Grand Prairie, Texas, where I'll teach you how to choke them out instead of hit them in the mouth.
Any listeners in the Metroplex get a 20% discount for mentioning they heard this on the show.
Also, I recently launched a CRM software for Martial Arts School to manage their schools, and I'd like some R2D2 karma for that.
Thanks for always keeping it real.
Casey in Grand Prairie, Texas.
360jjb.com, I think it is.
360.
360jujutsu.
All right.
Well, thank you very much.
Here we go.
You needed R2D2. We got that for you.
You've got...
Karma.
Yeah, she needs to get some promotion for the software.
Philip Lyons-Smith in Oakville, Ontario, Canada.
23456.
And another great note.
Gentlemen, thank you for your courage.
Boom.
Done.
We love that.
Perfect.
Thank you.
Scott Tillema.
Uh, 233.
Another associate executive producership credit for you.
Celebrating lifting the mask mandate in our area.
Thanks for keeping my amygdala normal this year.
I would appreciate, uh, jingle, science is in, bullshit, Fauci wheeze, calling out my girlfriend as a douchebag.
Douchebag!
Now that she's hooked on the show.
Well, she's hooked on the show, so, you know, she can't be a douchebag.
The science is in!
Bullshit!
I get it.
I like it.
Not bad.
Why don't you read this one as long?
This is Andrew Panabianco from Peoria, Arizona, 20601.
Interesting number.
Gentlemen, please accept the above donation.
This brings me to knighthood.
Computations below.
I am celebrating this knighthood on the one-year anniversary of my dad saying, adios mofos to this world at 88 years of age.
He came a long way.
Jimmy, as his friends knew him, knew nothing about getting hit in the mouth because if you did, he would respond in kind.
With that, I would like to be dubbed Sir Andrew, the knight who says no.
No jingles, no karma, definitely no Rogan, roundtable, no requests, no GMO, no soy products, no high-fructose corn syrup, please.
This knighthood is dedicated to Jimmy.
This knighthood, dedicated to Jimmy, also coincides with me paying off my house 12 years early.
No debt.
There is something to be said for that, and it's called freedom.
As the forthcoming knight who says no, I say no to the following.
I say no to social media as they deplatform, ostracize, and limit free speech for those whose ideas do not conform to the currently accepted idea of correctness.
I say no to downloading apps for so-called smartphones.
We all know these apps are notorious for monetizing the personal data of the user and spying on them.
In fact, I say no to being tethered to a cell phone in total.
Do as JCD does and put the phone in the draw.
I say no to the fast food conglomerates.
Their patrons sacrifice good health in return for convenience.
Not exactly value for value.
Do as I do and just learn to cook.
I could go on.
But two of my favorite no's are take no shit and, of course, no agenda.
A big thanks to John and Adam.
It's all mockery, but one can smirk or whisper.
I chose the former.
I always forget how that works.
Cheers, God bless all producers, dames and knights, and you both.
And then he has a couple of calculations there.
Well, thank you very much.
So now, is this...
Let me see what's on the list.
Is this dedicated to his dad?
So who gets the...
I guess he'll become Sir Andrew?
That's what I was thinking.
Is he on the list at all?
Sir Andrew.
Yeah, yes.
Yes, he'll be Sir Andrew.
But he said, Jimmy, this is dedicated to Jimmy.
Do we want to put Jimmy for the associate executive producership?
Oh, he says, with that, I'd like to be dubbed...
Oh, the knighthood dedicated to Jimmy.
I am celebrating this knighthood on the one-year anniversary of my dad saying...
We'll just leave it for what it is.
We'll leave it for what it is.
Yeah.
This is good.
I think we're good.
I think we're good.
All right.
Thank you, man.
If dad listens, he's heard the thing.
Oh, yeah.
Summer's case.
Would you think that's what you'd say?
20210?
Sounds right.
The bar business in San Diego is starting to turn for the better.
And I had to donate this week after reading through the Fauci emails.
You guys were right.
And nailed the Fauci fraud months ago.
Over a year ago.
Yeah, like 14 months ago.
Easily, because we identified Fauci as the guy with the AZT guy.
Way to go, No Agenda Nation.
Okay.
And I'm going to get to the last one, which is Colin Preston in Oregon City.
Oregon, which I believe would be in Oregon if you think about it.
John's latest Substack article about the lost friendship was on point.
How about some relationship karma for the country as a whole?
Thank you, gentlemen.
Yeah, that was a very...
What's the term I'm looking for?
Not emotional, not sensitive.
It was...
Emotionally, yeah, there was something emotional about it.
It was...
Oh, there's a word.
Yeah, that's the word I'm looking for.
One guy wrote me, he says, hey, you're supposed to be funny.
This is depressing.
Sentimental.
How about sentimental?
Sentimental.
It's very sentimental.
Because people lost a lot of friends.
Everybody...
with Horowitz and he says you know you know she's lost.
You lost you know you had a lot of dinner buddies.
One of them moved to Stanford and they never talked to you again ever.
And other you know whack-a-mole Democrats that have been obviously brainwashed.
I get the Lib Joes.
I don't talk to them much.
Yeah.
And after you wrote that sub stack I'm sure you lost a lot of readers.
Ha ha ha!
I actually looked at the numbers.
I didn't really lose that many.
But it's a good joke.
Thank you all for supporting us today with our value-for-value proposition, your time, your talent, your treasure.
You hear us thanking multiple people throughout the podcast because you're all producers.
We don't have listeners.
If anyone asks you how many listeners, they have zero listeners.
They only have tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, Maybe over a million producers.
And we have a small percentage of that who support us with finance as the treasure part.
If you'd like to participate in that and get one of these nifty titles for yourself, or if you just want to get on a sustaining producership, which can help us through the slower times, go to this website.
Oh, I forgot.
I can't hit it with my finger today.
Dvorak.org slash N-A And thank you again for supporting and producing episode 1352.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Water!
Water!
Shut up, slay!
Shut up, slay!
Just because you mentioned it, I have a quick promo here, because you brought up Fauci and AZT. You know that these vaccine guys, they're so crazy.
So we're going to do everything now.
We're going to do a flu mRNA vaccine.
We knew this was coming.
We knew this was, and it's all going to be individualized eventually.
But this is...
What's this guy's name?
Billy...
Billy.
Billy Porter.
You know Billy Porter?
Yeah, I've heard of him.
Yeah, so he is now promoting...
I don't know why they brought him in, but they're promoting...
He's promoting the Johnson& Johnson Corporation, which really has nothing to do with COVID in this particular commercial.
Please note the music.
So listen, I first started working with Johnson& Johnson because of their work in HIV. They've been at it for over 30 years, developing medicine that allows people to live normal lives with HIV. Educating people about how to protect themselves from HIV, training doctors and nurses, raising public awareness.
And now, they are working to develop an exploratory vaccine that could one day prevent HIV altogether.
After successful trials in Africa, clinical trials are about to start in the US and Europe.
How awesome is that?
You go, Johnson& Johnson.
And you thought they were just a baby company.
I love that line.
Hey, after we tested it on Africans, it's good to go!
Shameless, these people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And again.
It's pathetic.
Okay.
Yeah, we've been waiting for the HIV vaccine for a long time.
Well, I remember when the HIV first broke in the first newspaper articles in the early 1980s.
And they all said, seven years, seven years you'll have it.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And then, well, I can't quite make it work.
I got a couple of, there's a kind of a depressing piece of crap story.
And this relates to our, the kind of action you get from the banks.
And the worst bank to me has always been Bank of America, ever since they got bought out by that operation.
I had an account once and hated them.
They charge you for everything, too.
This is the kind of thing they do in California.
You know, there was a scandal because the EDD, which is the Economic Development, da-da-da, they're the guys who give little cards to people to get benefits from the state, even if you're on welfare or if you get some health benefits.
Oh, so they manage the debit card?
Yeah, they manage the card.
Here's the story.
Listen to this story.
Laura, this makes you feel real good about this bank.
A major court victory this week for thousands of unemployed Californians who were victims of fraud through their EDD debit cards.
Maybe you were someone you know.
As we first reported, a federal judge has ordered Bank of America to reopen all fraud claims that it automatically rejected and to reimburse legitimate victims.
And now we're learning that the judge found in his urgent ruling more to talk about.
And 7 On Your Side's Michael Finney is here with that story.
Dan, you've reported on and we all know all of the problems at the EDD, but now a judge is targeting Bank of America saying there's a strong likelihood the bank has been violating federal law by automatically freezing benefits for unemployed workers, many of whom came to me desperate for help.
And to have $7,000 taken out of my account, it hurts.
I've told you about Diane Davis of San Leandro.
She went to use her EDD debit card and found all her money had disappeared.
I have nothing.
I think I have 12 cents at the bank right now.
Diane checked the statement and found dozens of mysterious charges from someplace in Africa.
What is this?
Who go host West Africa, South Africa?
I haven't purchased anything from South Africa.
To Diane, it was an obvious fraud.
But when she filed a claim for reimbursement from Bank of America, all she got was a form letter saying, the claim is closed.
On top of that, the bank froze her EDD debit account so she couldn't access her benefits at all.
I was angry, cried a lot.
She wasn't alone.
You guys took $16,000 from the account.
Where did it go?
The money you got to.
Bank of America started summarily denying claims of unauthorized transactions and basically treating the victims as the criminals by freezing their accounts.
Class action attorney Brian Dannett says the bank failed to protect accounts from hackers, never put security chips on the debit cards, and then ignored claims when scammers stole workers' EDD benefits.
Wow, this is a very interesting report.
It's very common.
The Bank of America was also responsible during the housing crisis.
Oh, yeah.
And this goes back to the guy who paid off his house.
Well, how about this?
Foreclosing on paid-off houses that they had nothing to do with.
No mortgage, nothing.
They would just put the paperwork in.
Right.
But this is something...
Here's how I would use this.
Gee, that digital dollar from the Federal Reserve is going to be so much better than these douchebag banks because they just cheat you out of your money and it gets stolen.
That won't happen with your central bank digital coin.
That's how I would use it.
Not saying they will.
Yeah, well, that won't happen.
The banks are going to always have access to your pocket.
And they'll be screwing with you.
Like this Bank of America, just out of the Bank of America.
There's plenty of small banks around the country that are honest.
They're all going away, in my opinion.
They're all going to go away.
I'm not going to...
It's possible.
But there'd have to be a shortage.
There'd have to be some sort of a cyber attack.
Well, I think one good failure.
There's still room...
Remember, it didn't take much in 2007, 2008.
It was fantastic.
It was really just one...
There wasn't one chair too short.
Yeah.
Sorry guys, you gotta go.
It wouldn't take much.
At this point.
Everyone's so over-leveraged.
And I love that GameStop...
Do you see that still going on?
The what?
GameStop and the AMC, the meme stocks?
Yeah, AMC skyrocketed.
So did GameStop.
And this has got to be other hedge fund guys screwing with the hedge fund guys.
Well, somebody's screwing with somebody.
I love it.
I'm going to get these two clips out of the way.
This is because there's a voice in this presentation that I think you'll appreciate.
This is the lawsuit against Shell, the big boys in Holland, over climate change.
This is an unbelievable story to me.
This is the climate Shell lawsuit, ha, NPR.
Corporate lawsuits don't typically end with people pumping their fists in the air or openly cheering in the hallways.
But that's what happened recently at the Hague District Court in the Netherlands.
The defendant?
The largest company in the country.
In fact, one of the largest in the world.
Royal Dutch Shell.
Yeah, that Shell.
The oil and gas company.
It had been sued by a group of environmental activists who argued Shell was violating human rights by investing in fossil fuels.
And last week, in The Hague, Judge Larissa Alwyn more or less agreed.
The court said Shell must reduce its CO2 emissions by 45% by the year 2030, which was a way bigger reduction on a much faster timeline than Shell had been planning.
Here's what the CEO of the company told CNBC about Shell's role when it comes to addressing climate change.
There will always be concern and challenge.
I think a lot of people would agree with me that we're not moving fast enough as a society to address the challenge of climate change.
So it's a human rights lawsuit.
It's a human rights violation to be a company.
That's what it boils down to.
Well, to be a CO... I heard the Dutch, to be a CO2 spewing company.
That's...
I heard the Dutch prosecutor or whatever.
That's fine, but it's still a human rights violation.
Well, they're violating humans' rights.
Not that they're human, but this company, they say, is violating other humans' rights because of carbon emissions.
Yeah.
Do you feel your rights are being violated by an oil company?
Every single day.
If I can get some money out of it, hell yeah.
This is part two.
For the first time in history, a judge has ordered a large polluter to reduce its CO2 and reduce its contribution to dangerous climate change.
It's phenomenal.
This is Donald Poles, director of Friends of the Earth Netherlands.
For the first time, I have hoped that we will manage to address climate change.
I'm happy for myself, for my three kids, for all of the children in the world, for the planet.
Well, this is a great tactic.
It's a great way to get the great reset kicked into high gear.
Because this will work eventually.
I mean, I'm sure they're going to fight it.
But it's...
Especially in the Netherlands.
And even now here.
Natural gas to homes.
It's no longer allowed in the Netherlands.
You cannot build a new home with natural gas.
It's becoming real handy when you have a power outage in the middle of winter.
It kind of worked for us here in Texas.
But this is not just...
This is everywhere.
It's everywhere in the United States.
San Francisco, Seattle, Denver, New York.
They have all of these laws now.
It started in Berkeley, I might add.
Berkeley was the first two years ago.
We have the Key XL pipeline.
I don't know if it's really shut down or not.
That seems to be unclear.
Now the oil leases in the Elastic Arctic Refuge have been suspended.
You'd think that this was on purpose.
You know, we have this electricity thing up in Washington.
It stinks.
And if you think about it logically, no one wants to do.
You're doing one of two things.
One, you're sending the gas directly into a house where it's used to heat the furnace and heat the water and do these things directly so the gas is burned in the house or to The same exact gas is sent to a power plant where it generates electricity.
The electricity is then sent on these myriad of wires that go, these transmission wires that go all the way to your house and then it lights an element, an inefficient element in your heater to heat the house and heat the water.
Yeah.
Yes.
One is, see, if you do the logic on this, which one seems more efficient insofar as using power, saving the environment, which, which, it's not...
Well, hold on.
Hold on a second.
What does the science say?
All right.
Tell us, what does the science say?
What does the science say?
Well, the science says that this is total bullcrap, that it makes no sense.
Oops, sorry.
Science!
Okay, well, that's what the science says.
Now, here's the other big legal thing, which is a little more...
Hold on, hold on.
Before you leave that, do you remember, years and years and years ago, It was during the Obama years.
There were gas explosions, houses blowing up, and even...
What are those guys called who debunk stuff?
No one could really replicate this houses blowing up stuff because the house would have to be almost hermetically sealed.
It made no sense.
And it was happening everywhere.
Do you remember that?
Oh yeah.
It was happening probably one in every couple of weeks when the house would blow up.
And they even had movies or videos of the house as it was blowing up by coincidence.
Hey, what's this one?
We knew there was a buildup of gas pressure in the pipes here that caused the explosions and fires.
The NTSB now saying that problem was detected beforehand at a monitoring station.
Yeah, so we just have clip after clip.
Gas explosions all over Massachusetts.
There's no way to predict which house is going to go up or where the next fire is.
And that stopped.
That stopped all of a sudden.
You think maybe they were trying to push it then?
I think they've been trying to push it forever.
But that definitely...
Centralized everything.
I'm just like wanting to centralize the grid so it all goes through one system.
Yes, that makes sense.
It makes nothing but sense.
It makes it easier to shut down.
Just as a little extra piece of info, a huge container ship carrying auto parts sank off the coast of Japan.
So Hyundai, Toyota, no more parts, no chips, no nothing.
This is part of the same thing we've been identifying throughout the show.
Artificial shortages.
That's right.
That's right.
So how do you make money?
Don't buy a Toyota.
Okay, have you heard about the Sackler family, this lawsuit, what's happened out of it, what came of it?
Yes, I mentioned it earlier.
Yeah, you mentioned it, you're right.
It's disgusting.
This is the medical tyranny of the biosecurity state, Big Pharma.
They win.
They win, they win, they win, every single time.
Well, here it is.
The bankruptcy plan for the maker of OxyContin, Purdue Pharma, cleared a major hurdle today.
If it wins final approval from the company's creditors, the settlement could mean billions of dollars in aid for communities devastated by the opioid crisis.
It also would bring members of the Sackler family a big step closer to their goal of winning immunity from future opioid lawsuits for themselves and their financial empire.
NPR addiction correspondent Brian Mann is here.
Hey Brian.
I want to be an NPR addiction correspondent.
That sounds like a great job.
Hey, Mayor Louise.
Alright, so what are the contours of this?
What exactly happened this afternoon?
Yeah, so there have been these incredibly high-stakes negotiations, and as you mentioned, there are billions of dollars at stake.
So late today, federal bankruptcy judge Robert Drain here in New York approved the deal's broad terms, allowing it to move forward a big milestone.
Under this plan, the Sacklers will give up control of Purdue Pharma, though members of the family maintain they did nothing wrong.
They have agreed to pay more than $4 billion from their private fortunes.
Now, this isn't the final finish line, but it's very close, and now it will go to a vote by hundreds of thousands of creditors who say they were harmed by OxyContin.
We really could see a final resolution of this landmark case by this summer.
Now, what does this mean for the hundreds of civil lawsuits that some members of the family have faced, alleging they played a personal role in the crisis, I guess?
I will note the Sacklers deny those allegations, but what happens?
If this deal is finalized, what happens to those cases?
Yeah, this is controversial.
Those lawsuits would be stopped dead in their tracks.
Under the deal, the Sacklers would walk away from the opioid crisis with a clean slate legally.
And we've also learned from these court documents that this immunity would extend to literally hundreds of other companies, trusts, and consultants.
None of those entities have declared bankruptcy, but using a rare and, again, controversial provision of bankruptcy law, this deal would allow all of those folks to gain protections from lawsuits without actually filing for bankruptcy.
Wow!
How does that work?
So you can get the protection of your supplier...
Without actually filing for bankruptcy yourself.
Yeah.
Ah, this is beautiful.
It's a scam of scams.
And the Sacklers are off the hook.
They should be in jail?
Yeah.
They paid $4 billion in fines, and so they have, what, $10 billion left?
So that's no big deal.
I'm going to give you a clip of the day for that.
If only I could hit my machine with my finger.
That seems to be broken.
That was really good.
There's still part two.
Now, you can't get a double.
You can't get it on part two.
I don't need two clips of the day.
Just play the second half, because it just piles on.
It's just...
It's unbelievable that this can go on.
Well, let's look at this from a couple of angles.
This lady is annoying me.
Well, let's look at this from a couple of angles.
First, the arguments in favor of this deal.
Why do supporters support it?
Yeah, Purdue Pharma's legal team made a simple argument that this deal would prevent a firestorm, a chaos of litigation, preventing hundreds of thousands of individual lawsuits.
And instead, they say financial help will now go to communities and people harmed by opioids relatively quickly, possibly as soon as next year.
A lot of states as well as local governments have signaled they will vote for this.
You know, with more than 90,000 drug overdose deaths again last year, officials say they need financial help desperately right now.
But a couple of dozen state attorneys general opposed this plan.
How come?
Yeah, this is interesting.
This deal would force them, they say, to give up their authority to sue members of the Sackler family, even though the Sacklers again have not filed for bankruptcy.
And these states argue that allows the Sacklers to avoid accountability.
They will remain one of the wealthiest families in the country, admit no wrongdoing.
And that makes a lot of people angry.
A lot of these attorneys general also say it would set a dangerous precedent allowing other wealthy people to use bankruptcy court like this, protecting themselves from liability again without actually ever filing for bankruptcy.
And to weave in a little bit of context, we've been talking Purdue Pharma, but there is a big legal reckoning ahead for a lot of companies involved in the opioid business.
Yeah, this is a fascinating moment.
Purdue Pharma and the Sacklers get talked about a lot in this drug epidemic, but there are much bigger corporations that got into the opioid trade, Amerisource Bergen, Johnson& Johnson, and Walmart.
There are other lawsuits underway all over the country.
Tens of billions of dollars are at stake if they're found liable.
So this is a big moment for a reckoning, as you say, with the opioid crisis.
I like the way they say opioid trade.
Opium wars in China.
And Walmart.
I didn't know Walmart.
How are they involved in it?
Why were they named in this story?
Did they brand their own product or what?
Did they have a generic Walmart brand?
Cocaine?
I'm sorry, Walmart?
Heroin?
I don't get it.
I would think that Walmart is, for their pharmacy, that they distribute the pills on prescription.
And they may have been pill mill.
They may have been easy outlet.
Who knows?
This story needs a lot more attention.
Because they're going to get away with it.
And if you really look at this incredible scam, there's more.
What's that?
The chemical company that our new assistant attorney general family runs that you need to make the heroin.
It's all over Mexico.
And this actually, in a way, comes back to Bitcoin.
By the way, I did look up that product.
I don't have it in front of me, and I don't remember the name of it, but it turns out to be a basic, necessary chemical for lots of things.
But it's highly regulated.
I think it may be disingenuous to make that connection.
Well, there's a documentary that shows that chemical at a cocaine-making plant in the woods in Mexico.
I think it's for fentanyl.
No, I thought it was for heroin.
It could be for fentanyl.
I don't know.
No, I'm sure there's a bunch of illicit...
I mean, chemicals are out there.
You can go to chemical supply, you can buy stuff, but...
That's highly regulated, though, is my understanding.
It doesn't matter.
The biggest issue here is as long as we can still pay for all of this crap with dollars.
That's what everybody wants.
Get the Bitcoin out of the way.
We need legal drugs with American dollars filling up the veins of Americans.
Isn't that kind of the system?
Isn't that kind of what's going on here?
Well, today's show indicates that.
Feels like it to me.
I did start off the show with a little bit.
There was a little bit of racism that was exhibited on the morning shows.
And I've got this clip and I want to play it just to ask you if you and Mo have discussed this.
This is the NFL race norming clip.
And listen to this disgusting story.
The National Football League is promising to stop using so-called race norming in the settlement of brain injury claims.
Race norming assumed that black players started out with lower cognitive abilities, making it harder for them to qualify or share.
In the award, the NFL is vowing a review of any potential racial bias and disbursements, which on average tops $500,000 per claim.
A federal judge in Philadelphia recently tossed out a civil rights lawsuit filed by two retired black players, prompting NFL families to drop off 50,000 petitions at the courthouse.
I'm not quite sure I understand what's happening here.
What exactly is this race norming?
How does it work?
This, I'd never heard of this either, but what it amounts to is that what they're claiming, because there's all these, you know, you have brain damage.
In essence, they're saying, well, the black players are so stupid, they kind of had brain damage to begin with.
So why should they get the same settlement as the smart white guy?
Oh, they were going to give less money, less money for the concussion?
Can you believe this?
Yes, yes, of course I can.
Nothing surprises me.
These a-holes.
Of course.
And everybody puts up with this nonsense.
Yeah, well, that may be coming to an end.
Yeah, we'll see.
Well, at least you ended the show with a bit of humor.
Not quite done yet.
We still have a second donation segment.
But also, I want to stay with sports and a little bit of Noodle Gun.
That's an interesting...
Discussion with the keeper over this yesterday.
I'll play this short clip.
It's a story we all know about and I'll give you my observation.
This morning, the world's number two seed is out.
After being threatened with expulsion and suspension if she continued to skip press conferences, Naomi Osaka has withdrawn from the French Open.
In a candid statement on social media, the 23-year-old shared she had suffered long bouts of depression since the U.S. Open in 2018.
She said she often wears headphones, which help dull my social anxiety.
headphones which help dull my social anxiety i'm not a natural public speaker she wrote and get huge waves of anxiety before i speak to the world's media i get really nervous and find it stressful so this story to me is oh it's really child abuse but that's secondary the first the first part is this is a noodle boy story
I'm not a natural public speaker, she wrote, and get huge waves of anxiety before I speak to the world's media.
I get really nervous and find it stressful.
um when you are in a profession and it doesn't matter what profession you have to play by the rules of the profession and whenever it's advertising based you really have to play by a lot of rules um and i and although i'm not a sports person i worked on my craft from the age of 13 and I got on commercial television and radio by 19, and all of a sudden I had to do stuff like, you got to drink this glass of milk because they're sponsoring.
And if I said no, then I could probably find a different job.
So, going into this, it is well known that she needs to stand in front of the sign with all the damn logos of the sponsors, and that's part of it.
The sports journalists, the sports trades, they need stories.
It's how the whole circus works.
I do follow.
But my point here is that this is an entire industry that is taking children who are ill-equipped for this.
She may be a great tennis player, but maybe she's not great for being a professional tennis player.
Someone's managing her $50 million career.
To me, this is borderline sad.
Sad.
It's just sad for this child.
I see it differently.
Surprising.
And I followed it a bit.
I listened to the sports talk.
Everyone's very sympathetic toward her.
I'm not.
Well, you're a cruel bastard.
The one thing I... This is a classic example of somebody with beyond stage fright, but the fear of public speaking, which is the number one fear amongst the general public and always has been before the drugs and all the rest of it.
Fear of public speaking is a big deal.
And her main problem is not standing silently in front of a sign that says, you know, some...
Coca-Cola or whatever it is.
It's the press conferences.
That's what she was required to do.
And she took a fine for not doing the last one because she can't do it.
She goes in front of a group of people that is not even a big crowd and she freaks out.
And I have sympathy for that because I know people that are that way because I've never been that way in front of an audience.
But people tell me they are and I feel bad about it.
I think she just needs to take a course in public speaking.
It's my understanding that she had already told the organizers before she went in that she didn't want to do this.
Maybe I got incorrect information.
She didn't want to do what?
At press conferences.
Before the tournament, she said, I don't want to do it.
This was the last tournament, not the current one.
Yeah.
She quit the current one.
Yes.
Completely.
And she said that in the last tournament.
She said she doesn't want to do it.
And then she didn't do it and she got fined.
Yeah.
And then why did she leave?
Because she didn't want to be forced to do it again.
And she now says she got very depressed about getting fined.
Everyone hates her.
Yeah, there's a child abuse element because she's only, I don't know how old she is.
24.
24?
She's 24.
She's not child abuse at 24.
How old is she?
Yes, you're not a...
Okay.
I think the whole system is abusive.
We have entire industries of scouts and coaches and money and sponsors.
It's just like the Olympics.
The whole thing is disgusting.
That's my point.
It's not about her.
It's about this whole system that takes these children and runs them through this and she can't handle it.
So fuck her?
I didn't say that.
You said you have no sympathy for her.
No, not in that regard, no.
Okay, fine.
I think you understand my point.
This is not a matter of she needs some training.
She's not equipped to do this job.
She's equipped to play tennis, but maybe not equipped for the circus that's around it.
I think she can be trained to put up with the whole thing, maybe become a great public speaker for all you know.
Right.
I mean, if Greta Thunberg can do it, she can do it.
Sure, but then why didn't they do that with her?
They knew at least one competition ago that she'd have this problem.
This is like nobody wants to teach anybody anything.
Well, you're a tennis player.
You're pretty good.
All you're doing is answering a couple of questions in front of the media.
What difference does it make?
You don't need any help on that.
Exactly.
These guys are cruel.
Exactly.
The whole thing is cruel.
All right.
I don't know why you went there.
Poor woman.
She's a really good tennis player.
Why I went there?
Because...
Okay.
Yeah, I got one.
No, I got one.
This is Oklahoma State.
This will just put you in the right mood for what's going on in the universities today.
This is a number of educators sitting on a Zoom call denouncing their whiteness.
Racism originates with and is perpetuated by white people learning Spanish from a white woman.
I wish I could go back and tell my students not to learn power or correctness from this white woman.
I would tell them to stand in their own power.
White isn't right.
We're deconstructing our emotions around acknowledging our whiteness and white privilege through the lens of grief and the process of grief.
We talked about mourning our white morality.
I'm holding myself accountable to this journey.
Part of my accountability is to continue to struggle and grapple with my internalized white supremacy.
Dismantling white supremacy in society looks like dismantling in my heart first.
It means I'm not going to teach Spanish.
Accountability is ongoing because there is no end to the process.
I love this.
She's quitting?
Yeah.
She feels she, as a white woman, yes, her whiteness, she cannot teach Spanish.
Her white superiority?
She's white inferior.
Yes.
Correct!
She's quitting teaching Spanish.
Yeah, but just listen to all those buzzwords, all those catchphrases.
It's frightening.
So we need to revamp our educational system.
It looks like the pharmaceutical system is broken.
The banks are no good.
What else have we not touched on today?
Sports is no good.
Sports is no good.
The poor girl can't do a press conference.
She's no good.
This woman can't teach Spanish because she's an idiot.
Klaus Schwab's a moron and he's trying to screw everybody.
What other positive messages do we have today?
And Whitney Webb is full of shit!
Oh, Whitney Webb is full of shit.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, on no agenda in the morning.
Yeah, well, in the process of race-norming, we'll continue this show.
Race-norming.
I love it.
That's a potential show title, I think.
I like the race-norming.
I was just like, who comes up with this crap?
Well, I'm telling you somebody who does it.
It's Wesley Olson.
$123.09 he gives it to the show.
Along with John Robinet, which I believe is a knight.
Sir John's $100.
Sir Fusion.
Lord of the Passwords, I believe, in Westminster, Colorado.
Keep up the good work, he tells us.
He says it to me, I guess.
$100.
Don Richards in Franklin, Virginia, $100.
Morgan MacArthur, $100.
Hold on a second.
Hold on a second.
Morgan MacArthur says, this is not for me.
Your fan, Tom Miller, this is what this donation is about, is in the hospital in Phoenix recovering from brain injury.
And as he cannot see at the moment, we would love to be able to play a Get Well shout out from y'all.
Oh, definitely.
So let's do that right now.
It's like, hey, Tom!
Tom Miller!
Hey!
I'm over here!
Can you see me?
I'm over here!
Don't listen to him.
Tom, get well soon.
We'll give him a karma.
You've got karma.
Sir Fac Bass in Houston, Texas, 100.
All these hundreds is odd.
Leo Bravo in Los Angeles, California, 90.
Sir Hay Moose of the Piedmont Province in Mooresville, North Carolina, 6206.
Some symbolism there.
Caroline Dierenberg in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
And she has a celebration of her 58th birthday, and she is on the list, and she gets health karma at the end of this against Crohn's disease and everyone else who needs it.
Love and light.
Oh, it's terrible.
Yes.
It's 58 from her.
Chris Bailey, 55-56.
Mark Lopez in Middleburg, Florida.
Middleburg.
Middleburg.
55-55.
Uh...
Sir Bebop, Knight of the Frozen Tundra, 55-55.
Beboop.
Oh, I'm sorry, you're right.
Beboop.
Daniel Reese, 55-10.
Anonymous G, 55-10.
He's in Raleigh.
Brian Furley in Littleton, Colorado, 55-10.
Kevin.
Kevin.
De Jarlay.
De Jarlis.
De Jarlay.
Something.
One of the two.
He's in Winnipeg.
He's a Winnipegger.
Teresa Stoddheim in Plymouth, Minnesota.
Nuts.
51.
50.
Bryce Hargis in Bakersfield.
51.
Dame foreign lady before.
Hmm.
In Dacula, Georgia, which they're trying to change the name to Dracula.
50-21.
No, they're not.
Yeah.
No.
Andrew Oxenham in Knoxville, Tennessee.
50.
These are all $50 donors.
I'm going to name them with locations.
Andrew Oxenham.
Katie Westerman.
No location.
Marco Castellanos in Guatemala.
Guatemala.
Thanks.
Give us a foot on the ground report.
Yeah, please.
Tony Lang in Castle Pines, Colorado.
Joseph Barnes in Oakland, Oakland, California.
Mark Schumer in Helena, Montana.
And this is a gift donation for Glenn Grover of Helena, Montana.
Corey Bennett in Hercules, California.
That's just up the road.
Davis Beach in San Antonio, Texas.
Loretta Vandenberg in Provencal, Louisiana.
And I'm sure it's pronounced some awkward way.
It's in Louisiana.
Provencal!
Provencal.
Provencal.
I don't know.
James Sheremeta.
Sheremeta in Nappanock, New York.
And last, Dorothy.
Dorothy.
Dorothy.
Close.
Dorothy.
In Corvallis, Oregon.
50.
I want to thank these folks for making this show.
1352.
I'll get there.
Possible.
You're all producers, thanks.
Yes, and Bryce Hargis from Bakersfield with a $51 donation requested a dedouching and he says, since I certified my Cherokee ancestry, does this make me a white indigenous millennial producer?
I think that's the perfect action.
You've been deduced.
Thank you all very much for supporting episode 1352 of the No Agenda Show.
This is truly value for value.
Whatever you get out of it, you put it back into it.
Make the number you choose meaningful to you.
And for many, that's under $50 for anonymity, for secured anonymity.
So it's 49.99s are there.
But also, many of the different programs are sustaining donations, which you can get on for 11 a month, 33, and many different ones.
You can see an entire list at this website.
slash n a and again thank you for producing episode 1 352 well he just snuck on the list Henry Mackey celebrated his 10th birthday on June 1st.
We also have a congratulation from Charlie Henry to his wife, Christina.
She celebrates tomorrow.
And Caroline Deanberg turns 58 on...
I should say Dierenberg.
There we go.
Turns 58 on the 5th, and we say happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe!
It's your birthday, yeah!
And then we do have one daming, one knighting, so I got this blade out for today.
Yeah, here you go.
Ooh, I like that one.
It's got that curve in it.
All right, Christina Henry, Andrew Panabianco, step on up.
Both of you have supported the No Agenda Show in the amount of $1,000 or more.
That gives you a spot here at the round table of the Knights and Danes.
And I'm very proud to pronounce the KB as Dame Christina Pearl of the Clear Blue Skies and Sir Andrew.
For you, we have hookers and blow, rent boys and chardonnay, birthday cake and Bordeaux.
Maybe some cookies and vodka, kebab and Persian wine, pinball and power cords, goat chops, goat milk, Polish potato vodka, diet soda and video games, fish pie and fellatio.
Maybe some bong hits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and gerbils.
Breast milk and pablum or could just be mutton and mead.
We all know how much you love the mutton and mead.
Go to noagendanation.com slash rings.
Eric the Shield will take your size there and your correspondence details and we'll make sure that you get your ring, your sealing wax.
And this is a very attractive ring.
Please, when you receive it, make sure you put it on your Macedon account, boost it, toot it out or tweet it out or put it anywhere.
People might see that because it's official.
You're an official knight or dame of the No Agenda Roundtable.
Looking at the meetups we've got lined up.
No reports, actually.
No promos.
But for today, I guess it may already be over.
There's apparently a meetup during the Bitcoin conference in Miami, which started at 1.30 Eastern Time.
Well, that's well-coordinated.
I'll be there at 8.20 tonight.
Also today in Denver, the Denver Area COVID Survivor Support Group meets at 6.30 at the City Park Denver Museum of Nature and Science.
Tomorrow, the Amygdala Shrinking Boneyard Drinking Meetup in Park City, Utah at the Boneyard.
Also tomorrow, Houston Hackers at 6 o'clock at Ninfa's Mexican Catina.
Green Bay, Wisconsin meetup is on Saturday at Lenny's Tap Takeover, 3.30pm.
And that is Lenny's Tap.
Also on Saturday, Dayton, Ohio, a meetup from the long shadows of the Trash Mountains.
And that will be at Sir Egghead's house.
So you have to go on noagendameetups.com to RSVP. Saturday, Brews in Bernie, Texas.
That'll be at Barrelman Brewing Company at 3.30.
Oregon Local 33, the West Metro Meetup will meet at 5 o'clock at Josh's house on Saturday.
Make sure you RSVP for that.
And on Sunday, the Super Shredding Zombie Apocalypse Prepper NA Meetup in Walnut Creek, California, 3 o'clock at Sauced Barbecue and Spirits.
I might go to that one.
Oh, you should.
And David is Kilo Mike 6 Tango Mike Zulu, who is organizing along with Sir Jeffrey, who is Kilo November 6 Mike Bravo India.
So bring your rig, man.
Yeah, bring my rig.
Bring your rig.
This is the moment where you turn it on so we can hear that the Baofeng still works after 18 years.
Hello?
Hello?
Is this thing on?
Hello!
Monday, South Dakota Red State Maskless Hot Pocket Tour.
Dame Sarah swings by Fall Park at 6 o'clock.
These are the No Agenda Meetups.
There's just a great way for people to come together, hang out, exchange ideas, stories, thoughts, have a beer, just chill.
No triggering.
Everyone's cool.
You're going to love it.
No Agenda Meetups.
Noagendameetups.com.
If there's not one near you, go ahead, start organizing one.
You'll love it.
It's like a potty.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you want me.
Triggered all hell's flame.
You want to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
What are you doing?
You're making a lot of racket.
I'm pounding on a box.
Do you have an end-of-show ISO? I have one.
Okay.
I mean, I have one, which is not good enough.
The vaccine is our enemy.
It's not good enough.
Okay, here's mine.
My pleasure.
What is this?
My pleasure.
It's more legible than mine.
What else do I have here?
No, the only other one I got is...
I don't know.
I kind of like that one.
Which one do you like?
My Pleasure.
That's yours or...
Why don't you do a double?
Yours first and then My Pleasure.
My Pleasure.
Okay.
I buy that.
That works.
That works.
That works, definitely.
Okay, let me see.
I have one clip.
Mm-hmm.
Oh, oh, wait, wait, wait.
I'm sorry.
Nope.
We've got to do one other thing before we get to your final clip.
Okay.
You know what it is.
It's that time once again.
Audition.
Yep.
You're listening to the No Agenda Morning Zoo on Get Mo' Radio.
Get on, get on, get on.
You are correct, sir.
All right, this is for our forthcoming morning zoo exit strategy morning radio show, which will be syndicated around this, on fine top 40 stations everywhere.
In the morning, everybody!
And we have a couple auditions today.
I'm not going to play the whole thing, but I will play.
This is for the role of the gay entertainment reporter who is actually gay.
This is Jacob from Jake and Jacob who were here in Austin not too long ago.
I had dinner with him.
Here's Jacob Kitson.
Hi, guys.
Jake Jacob here with John's favorite segment, The Hollywood Beat.
All right, let's get to it.
Get this.
J-Lo and her oboe, Ben Affleck, are at it again.
They were spotted all over town, and it looks like they've left the friend zone, and it's getting serious.
This week, they went full Brokeback Mountain.
Alex, get away to Montana.
And when they exited their private jet...
They were holding hands!
That's how you know it's not just for publicity.
Okay, guess what?
Friends reunion is finally happening!
Lady Gaga was there!
So, after failing to jumpstart any successful careers independently, every cast member finally agreed.
And now they all look like me.
Overdosed on Botox and fillers, but Sandy Richter clone.
I like it!
I think it's pretty good.
I like it too.
I think, in fact, he could probably back off a little bit.
A little less gay?
He's got a good read.
I don't think he needs to be...
He can back off a little bit on the flamboyance.
I like the jokes, though.
The ad-libs were good.
I like the ad-libs.
No, the jokes are good.
Everything's good.
He doesn't have to go into falsetto, though.
I think he needs to back off.
Here's Ross, oh my gosh, the intern.
intern this is a a different uh audition for a non-existent position but we'll listen hi guys ross mc oh my gosh the intern here with your hollywood plus royal insider update darren darling have you had your hair trimmed i can see your earls they look very tasty nom nom nom nom nom it's looking with j-lo and her old beau ben affleck i like the ad lib towards dame jennifer i like that are starting up again they've been spotted all over town on look as say they've crossed the friend zone and are headed to something more serious first spotted at the Big Sky Resort.
I don't know.
I don't think we want an English guy.
No, I think the English guy's no good.
He has also, I think he's more visual.
I mean, as you listen to him, you just want to see what he looks like.
He has a bow tie.
He looks like some TV character who plays this kind of blase butler.
Yes, exactly.
By the way, this is all for Pride Month, just so you know why we're doing this.
And here is the...
This is our contribution.
This is our contribution towards Pride Month.
Here is Crossdresser Karen.
Hey guys, Crossdresser Karen from HR here.
For your entertainment plus royal scoop update.
My word, Jennifer, could you be any more dead totes adorbs?
Stick it to the man, girlfriend.
It looks as if J-Lo and her old beau, Ben Affleck, are starting up again.
Shock.
They've been spotted all over town.
On Lucas say that...
I just don't think the English accent works.
No, but I have to say, I like the way he starts off.
He's got kind of a haughty, above-it-all style of, like, I'm better than you.
It really works in a lot of different ways.
Let's hear it again.
Hold on.
Hey, guys.
Cross-dresser Karen from HR here.
From HR. With your entertainment plus royal scoop.
Update.
My word, Jennifer.
This is not offensive at all.
Could you be any more dead totes adorbs?
Stick it to the man, girlfriend.
It looks as if J-Lo and Hulk.
Okay.
All right.
Not bad.
He would take a different...
The writing would have to be different for him.
Well, we could always say, hey, cross-dresser Karen, we wrote this role for you.
If you'd have to actually write it, though.
Is it cross-dresser Karen from HR? Yes.
Yes.
HR, to be exact.
HR. Maybe we just have cross-dresser Karen from HR just come in and berate us from time to time about how insensitive we are.
Excellent.
That's how you want to do it.
Oh, crap, man.
There's cross-dressing Karen.
Yeah, with your guest star.
Guest star.
Plenty of room in this tent, people.
A lot of these types of shows will have these guests that come in every so often.
A lot of them do voices of other people and they pretend to be somebody else.
And it's not unusual.
They call in often.
I think Crossdresser Karen could call in with a complaint and we put her on the air.
But Crossdresser Karen is calling from her office.
Yeah.
With a complaint.
On the speakerphone.
On the speakerphone with a complaint about what we said this time.
I like it.
Shit, man, we need a program director now.
We need more characters.
This is going to be massive.
Maybe turn this into a sitcom.
We're going to be so rich.
You know, if we turn it into a sitcom, we have people that can produce this stuff.
Yeah.
All we need to do is a treatment.
And...
Maybe a script.
Sitcoms, a half hour.
How long does it take to write a script?
Well, but this is what's happening these days.
These days, podcasts are being bought up for their character development, for their storyline, and we could make Joe Rogan money with this.
Oh, yeah.
Well, yeah.
If you sell it, I think it's saleable.
Yeah.
And it would actually be a sitcom about a morning zoo team.
Yeah.
That way you have your resident characters.
Right.
You have a group that we put together.
And then at least we write for that group.
And then, of course, they're going to cast somebody else and we're never going to be see the light of day.
Obviously.
I can't get it.
Of course.
You're out.
I'm out.
We're done.
Yeah.
And we'll call it WKRP. It's going to be fantastic.
Yeah.
Let's get your last clip going.
You know, WKRP never really emphasized the radio part of it.
It's mostly all back office.
I know.
All right, let's play your last clip and I can get it.
All right, here's a clip.
Now, I got it.
It says, Ask Adam, and I've got a question for you after.
I have a theory about this clip, why it exists.
NASA has decided to send two missions to Venus, our closest planetary neighbor.
NPR's Nell Greenfield-Boys has details.
Venus is sometimes called Earth's evil twin.
While Earth is largely temperate and teeming with life, Venus is a scorching hot, toxic place.
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson says that's why the space agency will send two probes there as part of its discovery program.
These two sister missions both aim to understand how Venus became an inferno-like world capable of melting lead at the surface.
One mission is called Veritas.
It will map the planet's surface and see if it has active volcanoes.
The other is Da Vinci Plus.
It will send a spherical probe down through the planet's atmosphere to analyze the gases mixed in with its sulfuric acid clouds.
Okay.
Okay.
Thank you.
I believe that this is a prelude to trying to associate what's going on in Venus with the sulfuric acid clouds and the hot...
to global warming.
Of course.
This is how it's going to go.
We're going to try to show that this could happen to Earth.
Well, as you know, men are from Mars, women are from Venus.
So, totally.
I agree with you that going to say Venus was once beautiful like the Earth, and then Republicans ruined it.
Okay.
Republicans!
I guarantee you that's what it's going to be.
I think you're right.
That's the first thing I thought when I heard that.
It's like, oh, okay.
I gotcha.
I gotcha.
And it's still within reach.
I don't know how long it takes to get there, but...
It's too long.
Yeah.
Well, we'll see.
I don't know if Elon will be able to do it once he gets taken down in the Whitney Webb reporting.
It'll be Jeff Bezos.
Oops!
Another problem guy.
Who else can do it?
Maybe Richard Branson.
Nothing wrong there.
No island shenanigans for him.
No, never.
And none for us either.
However...
We do like to bring you some shenanigans twice a week.
We'll return on Sunday for your Sunday morning service.
And coming to you from Austin, Texas, capital of the drone star state, while I still live in Austin, Texas, Opportunity Zone 33...
FEMA region number six on the governmental maps.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C. Dvorak.
And we come back on Sunday.
Coming up on the No Agenda stream, we've got Nick the Rat, probably his live episode from last night, and two end-of-show mixes from the Clip Custodian, who's gotten pretty creative in his old day and age.
Remember us at Dvorak.org slash NA. We'll see you on Sunday.
Until then, adios, mofos!
and such.
This will continue until I break you.
Perhaps even afterwards.
Just tell me what you've learned.
Perfectly applied fluoride doesn't prevent tooth decay.
It does render teeth detectable by spy satellite.
The plastic tips at the ends of shoelaces are called aglets.
Their true purpose is sinister.
There was a magic bullet.
It was forged by Illuminati mystics to prevent us from learning the truth.
According to the chart, he was hallucinating wildly due to a massive fear reaction in the amygdala of his brain.
These people are dangerous.
We'll be right back.
Dangerous.
Correct.
These people are dangerous.
Dangerous.
Correct.
This last year has convinced me that the World Economic Forum people led by that maniac, Klaus...
Klaus, these people are dangerous.
They're dangerous to your health.
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