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Nov. 7, 2021 - No Agenda
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Time Text
Well, all he has to do is take the shot.
Why didn't he take the shot?
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, November 7th, 2021.
This is your award-winning Gibbo Nation Media Assassination Episode 1397.
This is no agenda.
998 to go and counting and broadcasting live from the heart of Texas Hill Country, FEMA Region No.
6.
Good morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where the time seems to be wrong, I'm John C. Dvorak.
It's crazy.
Yeah, I guess we could do our biannual review of why they do this to us.
Why they try to mess with our clock.
Why they try to make us, you know, off kilter.
It just makes no sense.
It's so globe model worshipper of everybody.
Well, it had a beginning, which was very controversial, and I believe it was, at least in this country, it was in the 30s during the Roosevelt administration, I'm not mistaken.
That should probably tell everybody that the United States switched our time to...
Daylight saving time.
Is it standard time now?
Yeah.
Yeah, we went back to standard time.
We went back to standard, right.
Yeah, daylight saving time.
Which is different from Europe because Europe went back, I think, 10 days ago or two weeks ago?
Well, we used to go back.
I think we used to be coordinated and somebody came up with a bright idea of stretching it.
I don't know.
Because, you know, it's like they're not confused enough.
Let's really mess with them and make it all different for everybody.
Well, let's move to Arizona where they have their own time ideas.
And good on them.
Good on them.
And there's some countries, I think, some part of Australia where everything's off by a half hour.
Yeah.
So instead of 2 o'clock, it's 2.30.
Doesn't Russia have one of those time zones as well?
No, I think the thing about Russia is that the whole giant country, which encompasses half of the Eastern Hemisphere, is one time zone.
In Russia?
I'm pretty sure, yeah.
Oh, no.
I'm sure they have, like, some...
I think that's 13.
Siberian Standard Time?
I don't think so.
Yeah.
Yeah, we've discussed this probably 30 times.
I know, every year it's the same thing.
I have my bigoted ideas, my whatever, I've been drummed into me when I was a kid.
Here it is.
No, no, Moscow has 11, Russia has 11 time zones.
Oh.
Well, what's the country that has only the one?
Well, I think Australia has only one.
It could have two.
I could be wrong.
It doesn't matter.
This whole thing is a scam.
Yes.
Oh, I have important news.
I have found it.
I have priced it.
I know where to get it.
The elusive Texas Oryx.
Ah, yes.
We talked a little bit about this after the show recently.
Yeah, last show, in fact.
Because somewhere along the lines, I was on the web listening to Adam, and boom, Oryx burgers.
So I knew that, and then I looked it up, and there's a lot of people that have Oryx burgers, and...
Adam said he was going to be, oh yeah, I'm going to, I'll find it.
Don't worry, I'll find them and I'll get some.
I said, yes, true.
And then I said, well, I think if you, since you're there where they grow the damn things, see if you can get some orange, orange, oryx flank steaks or a T-bone.
Better.
I can get you the whole oryx.
Yes.
Check this out.
I had no idea.
Horns and all?
Oh yeah.
No.
So...
Yesterday.
I had a really long day yesterday.
Let's back up and tell some of the laggers what we're talking about.
So the oryx is kind of like an antelope type of animal.
And it turns out to be a bunch of different ones.
There's about 10 of them.
And I think two or three of them are extinct, except in captivity.
And Texas has one of them, one of these extinct ones, and they grow them.
Yeah, this is the African Oryx, and they're supposedly quite tasty, and John and I have been talking about this almost ever since I lived in Texas.
Yes, for years.
I wonder what that Oryx tastes like.
And the last time I was in Texas, I drove past a whore, a horde, a herd.
It could have been a horde.
It could have been, who knows, yeah.
But it was a herd of Oryx, and I didn't realize that they're small and cute.
So...
Yesterday, Sir Mark Hall celebrated his birthday at the Ox Ranch.
And that's in Uvalde, Texas.
That's real hill country.
That's hilly, hilly, hilly, hilly, billy hill country.
It's actually about a two and a half hour drive from our house.
Wow!
This place was founded by...
You're in New Mexico, aren't you by then?
Yes, actually very close.
Very close.
This was actually purchased and repurposed by Brent Oxley.
Do you remember him?
He's the founder of HostGator.com.
Oh, vaguely.
Yeah.
So he sold to Yahoo in 2012 and he bought this ranch and completely revamped it into a high-end luxury hunting camp with lodge and everything.
And you can hunt almost, except the giraffes, you can hunt almost anything you want.
But the reason we were there is because the guy also has a working museum of machine guns, flamethrowers, and tanks.
So Mark had invited us out to just spray bullets all over the place with the most fantastic, I mean, Sten guns, Tommy guns, Uzis, I mean, all this stuff that you only see in movies, in Alex Baldwin movies.
Then we rode in the leper tank, and I think it was a Sherman tank, all over this place.
It was 45 miles an hour.
It was crazy.
And so then I'm kind of looking...
You've got to go to this website, John, so you can see the oryx.
It's oxhuntingranch.com.
And you can hunt your own oryx for the low, low price of $10,000!
That's too high.
Well, it's not the highest.
If you want to hunt, let's see, what would you like?
Now, that's the Besa Oryx, B-E-I-S-A. That's $10,000.
They also have, let me see, ah, yes, the Markor.
I guess Ted Nugent likes going to this place.
Are you familiar with that?
This is crazy.
The stuff they have, you can, an ostrich, $4,000.
Do I. Of course it's high!
So I was talking to the guy there.
He said during COVID it was insane because all the trophy hunters couldn't fly to Africa so they all came to their ranch to kill a bunch of poor helpless animals roaming around.
So, here's my plan.
Wow.
Since you don't know the host gator guy, which I was kind of hoping that you might have run into him somewhere in your travels.
No, I don't think so.
That's too bad.
Maybe.
So now I'm going to have to take Joe Rogan down there.
Okay, take him down.
Yeah, and then Joe will pay the ten grand to get the Oryx.
We just want some flank and some burgers, right?
Well, flank would be interesting.
That's going to be a real challenge to cook.
It's going to be very small.
The burgers you can get, they're commercially available all over the place.
I've run into at least five places that sell the Oryx burgers and there's a price, I can't remember, it's like 10, 20 bucks a pound or something.
But I was thinking some steaks or a loin.
We'll take care of it.
We'll make this happen.
Anyway, flamethrowers are interesting, by the way.
You shot a flamethrower.
I did.
A Vietnam-era flamethrower.
You could have cooked an oryx with it right on the spot.
Yes.
In fact, they have a little aiming spot that is like a campground with a barbecue.
It's kind of a joke, a little hibachi-type thing, and then you just blast that.
Oh, you're supposed to burn it to the...
Burn it to the...
That's cute, yeah.
Yeah, it was a lot of fun.
So, on the last show, you had a 3x3 and something caught...
Sorry?
Did you bring the dog?
No, you can't bring the dog to the shooting range like that.
They were shooting these tanks.
That's $900 if you want to blow up, if you want to shoot the tank.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's what a shell costs?
Yeah.
Can you imagine what the...
I'm sure the shells are a little cheaper than that for the army, but can you imagine the amount of money that the U.S. government spends, wastes on just target practice?
Yeah, not just that, but have you ever been in a moving tank?
No, never.
This is anything but comfortable.
This is, in fact, dangerous to your...
I wouldn't think it does sound comfortable, especially with the shells bouncing off of it.
And the shells are right there next to you if you're down below.
Yeah, so that's the idea.
That's why you throw the hand grenade in there and close the latch.
Yes, I learned that the flamethrower was actually...
I said, what was this used for?
Just to burn down some sucker's huts in Vietnam?
Is that what this was for?
No, no, no.
The cave system.
So what they would actually do is they'd spray without igniting and then...
So you only get 35 seconds.
They'd spray it, then ignite it, and then smoke them out.
Because, of course, it sucks all the oxygen out of the cave the minute that happens.
Kind of gruesome.
Kind of gruesome.
Anyway, on the last episode, you had a three- Ten-car Zephyr.
Oh, ladies and gentlemen, something is up.
Something is going on.
Alert everybody over at CNBC's Squawk Box.
We have a ten-car Zephyr.
Something is happening.
Economy on the rise.
Who knows?
Oh my God!
Woo!
Listen to that horn!
Bitcoin, $61,464.
They had two extra cars at the back.
It was normally eight cars.
It wasn't eight cars ever with two extra cars.
And instead of the fancy mancy cars that you see, you know, from the 20s and 30s...
This was a worker, a workhorse.
These two look like two prison cars.
Ha ha!
So there's your report.
Okay.
Well, we might have to revise.
Sell, sell, sell, sell.
Sounds like a sell moment to me.
Remember, buy on the rumor, sell on the news.
So...
You had a 3x3 where you highlighted briefly an interview with Magic Johnson and that just wasn't sitting right with me.
Why is Magic Johnson all of a sudden talking about his...
Yes, you were upset by this report, I remember.
Yes, talking about AIDS and all this.
I'm like, why now?
What is going on?
Well, I think the timing is super coincidental.
And also, I looked in a little bit more to Magic Johnson.
He basically runs, if I'm not mistaken, an investment firm, a vehicle.
So while he provides lots of jobs, he doesn't build companies.
He buys them or he invests in them.
And I think, in fact, looking at some of the partnerships the Magic Johnson Enterprises has, he's like a pitch man.
He's the sales guy for the investment firm.
Yeah, exactly.
And he does quite a good job.
It's not to sell to the people he's buying, it's to sell to investors that put into his funds.
Yes, exactly.
And he does a good job at that, but I think he's highly susceptible to, you know...
He might be convinced to get in on it.
He has a lot of health partnerships with, I think, Cigna.
Oh, yeah.
I believe you're probably right.
Potentially a sucker.
Or, as they call it in the business, dumb money.
He could be dumb money, too.
It could be dumb money.
And I want to be real respectful because, yeah, I mean, come on, man.
I grew up watching this guy, too.
And you don't just want to burn him like he's some kind of shill, but holy crap, when you see what timing this was, along with this.
Following Pfizer's worldwide rollout of its COVID vaccine, this morning another potential breakthrough in the fight against the pandemic.
Pfizer saying early trial results of its antiviral COVID pill show it reduced the risk of hospitalization or death by 89%.
More than 1,200 people included in the study were considered high-risk, So this is only half the report because if you look a little bit deeper and CNBC has the report, no audio.
In fact, They had a video which almost looked like a native ad with, you know, rinky-dinky music and then sound bites, like five minutes to explain what Pfizer is doing.
But here's their report.
Pfizer said Friday, it's easy to administer COVID-19 pill used in combination with a widely used HIV drug cut the risk of hospitalization or death by 89% in high-risk adults who've been exposed to the virus.
So, that 89%, that's when in combination with a widely used HIV drug.
Magic Johnson, in separate written interviews...
Quote, until we come up with some drugs that can prolong life and help people beat the virus, we're going to continue to have people passing away.
That's unfortunate.
Here we are, the biggest and strongest country in the world, and we should be having drugs that can help people through this virus.
And then he talks about his protocol.
He is not taking PrEP, which surprised me because I thought, well, that's surely the pharmaceutical angle.
No, he has been on the quote-unquote cocktail.
Yeah, he talked about that in this interview.
I didn't have a clip, but I'll tell you what he said.
He said when he started off with AIDS, he had HIV. No, he never had AIDS. He only had HIV. He says he started off three times a day with a cocktail, and then he wound down where he's taking it once a day now, and he has no signs of HIV. It's a once-a-day thing for him now.
So he did discuss it.
Yes, a cocktail.
So if you read what the Jerusalem Post wrote about an antiviral drug cocktail for COVID, the three-drug cocktail consists of the HIV medication lopinavir, ritonavir, the hepatitis therapy drug ribavirin, and the multiple sclerosis treatment interferon beta, which I believe is also sometimes used for a cancer treatment.
So is it possible that they're looking at people who have, let's just call it breakthrough infections, or just adverse events to the vaccine,
There's evidence that a lot of these people are developing AIDS and you have to separate AIDS from HIV. It's purely an autoimmune deficiency disease, which can be caused by many different things.
And if so, then it would make sense that we get people used to the fact that, hey, even magic takes the cocktail to stay alive, and we may need to have people taking this just to not have their viral load increase and get sick throughout, who knows, the rest of their lives maybe, like magic.
Well, that's a stretch, I think.
But maybe if they were going to do what you described, he's the best guy to be pushing this because this guy never showed any signs of being sick.
Nope.
From HIV at all.
Yeah, which you got to query as well because at that time, people were dying left and right.
Dropping left and right.
They were getting Slim's disease.
They're having all these issues.
And they never stayed healthy and kind of chubby, which he's never been a thin athlete.
And so he'd be the spokesperson for the whole thing because he's like, this guy's the picture of health.
Yeah.
And...
I mean, it's an interesting idea.
This messy product that Pfizer is...
I might as well play my clip, which is the NPR version of the announcement.
And they don't have any more details.
You actually have more details from the Jerusalem Post than our media is going to get.
Because Merck comes out with this, and so Pfizer decides they're going to come.
The clip is Pfizer-Meched in Fast Track.
Pfizer Incorporated said Friday its pill to treat COVID-19 is nearly 90% effective in cutting the rates of hospitalization and death in high-risk adults.
Right now, most COVID-19 treatments require an IV or an injection.
Pfizer says it will ask U.S. and international regulators to approve the drug for use as soon as possible.
Yeah, they better do something because...
It's not going well with the vaccine and, well, here's New South Wales with an update.
I'm going down under.
141 people are in hospital with COVID at present and 43 are in intensive care, 18 of whom require ventilation.
So this is a very serious disease.
Of those 141, 60 are under the age of 55, and 28 under the age of 35.
And of the 43 people in intensive care, one is in their teens, seven are in their 20s, three are in their 30s, 14 are in their 50s, and 12 are in their 60s, and six are in their 70s.
So this is affecting people of all ages with very serious disease.
All but one are vaccinated.
141 people.
140 were vaccinated.
The way they leave that, you'd think if it was a news story, you'd start with that.
Well, it wasn't a news story.
I would.
I said, put it in the lead.
That's where it should be in the first paragraph.
But no, they'd leave it at, you'd be bored stiff by the time you find that little data point out.
Play that end of that clip once more.
All but one are vaccinated.
All but one were vaccinated.
Okay.
So this is the breakthrough.
This is not good.
Well, check this out.
The breakthrough infection.
Now, this word just popped up, breakthrough, that's what they were calling it.
Now it's a thing because everyone recognizes there are breakthrough.
And according to the most M5M, it's incredibly rare, breakthrough and function.
Well, no, we just heard it.
I was watching the next episode of Dope Sick on Hulu.
I think it's Hulu.
That's the...
The Sackler Family, Opioid Crisis in America, produced by Michael Keaton, who stars in it.
And it's a historical drama.
And they talk about how the original Sackler...
Does Keaton play a heavy?
He plays a doctor.
He plays a doctor who gets suckered in.
He gets suckered in.
It's dynamite.
He gets suckered in as a doctor who's going to prescribe this stuff to the mining...
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Keaton is a really outstanding actor that should have won an Academy Award by now.
But he plays...
Didn't he win for the Birdman?
I thought he won for that.
No, he was nominated and he didn't win, which was really a disappointment.
That was a very good performance, great movie.
It was a great performance by him, but he's done other things.
If anyone wants to see him play a heavy, which he really, I think that's his best character, where he plays just a badass, a bad person.
Try to check out the movie Pacific Heights.
Oh, yeah.
Great, great movie.
Just an amazing creep.
He's a really good actor that's really been overlooked a lot.
Anyway, I'm sorry.
So he produced this as well, and I think he's dropping breadcrumbs or something for us because they go through the history of the Sackler family.
The original Grandpa Sackler, Andrew, whatever, he brought Valium to the market.
And so as they're talking in this meeting, they say, well, you know, my grandfather, when it started to wear off the effects of the Valium, and it wasn't within the prescribed time period, he had to come up with a reason to prescribe people more, and he had to come up with some kind of name.
And so the Sackler organization is sitting around trying to figure out What they can do about the fact that their promised opioid did not last through the night, did not last 12 hours.
Well, Valium was not an opioid.
No, no, no.
So now we're at OxyContin.
I'm sorry, I should have said.
Now they're at Oxy.
So they're looking back historically at what Grandpa Andrew did to up the dosage of Valium.
And now, the promise was time release, it'll last 12 hours, and it wasn't.
People are waking up in the middle of the night screaming in pain.
Time release stuff never lasts 12 hours.
Of course, and that was the whole scam with the FDA. You have to watch the series.
But the point is, So then, that's not working, and in the boardroom, say, okay, we're just going to do what Grandpa Andrew did, and we're just going to create a new condition that can allow the doctors to prescribe, basically double the dose.
And so they came up with a bullcrap name, and the name was Breakthrough Pain.
So when I saw that, my head went, this may just be a thing they do in medicine.
If it's not working, call it a breakthrough.
Well, it's not in medicine, it's in the pharmaceutical business.
Yes, pharmaceutical business.
And, of course, the doctor said, oh, yeah, well, that condition is well known.
It's called breakthrough pain.
You need to double your dose.
And here we are with breakthrough cases.
I just found that one of those coincidences where I go, hmm.
I think not.
And there's also a lot of evidence, which is real evidence.
You can look at it in the show notes.
People have looked at all the lot numbers.
And compared those against the known adverse events in the VAERS database, as it turns out, most of the adverse events are coming from approximately 5% of the lots.
And it's actual lots, it turns out, or that's what is being presented, that actual lots seem to have higher instances of breakthrough cases and adverse events.
So just something to keep an eye on.
What can you do about it?
What can you do about it?
If you're like somebody...
No, I think as the story develops, my idea would be, were these contaminated?
Where were they contaminated?
Was it sabotage?
What states were they sent to?
Why were they sent to red states?
Because that's what it looks like is going to happen.
And why weren't they pulled?
Exactly.
And I can tell you why they weren't pulled.
Yeah, kill Republicans.
Come on, it's easy.
It's a good possibility, but no, it's because they're not liable.
Who cares?
Exactly.
Just sticking on this just for a second, here is...
I don't want to do too much of this fear porn, because first of all, a lot of people, a lot of producers have accepted the vaccine into their life, and all I hope is that everyone's fine and healthy and going to be great.
Accepted the vaccine into their life?
You make it sound like Christ.
I've been saying this for a while.
I'm glad you finally caught on.
That's what I'm saying.
So I don't like doing the fear porn of all these horrible things that happen to people, but this one is important because we all take a flight from time to time.
Good morning, and thank you, Senator Johnson, for this opportunity.
My name is Cody Flint.
I'm a 33-year-old husband and a father of two young boys.
I'm an agricultural pilot by profession with over 10,000 total flight hours.
I have been very healthy my whole life with no underlying conditions.
I received my first dose of the Pfizer COVID vaccine on February 1st.
Within 30 minutes, I developed a severe, stabbing headache that later became a burning sensation in the back of my neck.
Two days after vaccination, I got in my airplane to do a job that would take only a few hours.
Immediately after taking off, I knew something was not right with me.
I was starting to develop tunnel vision, and my headache was getting worse.
Approximately two hours into my flying, I pulled my airplane up to turn around and felt an extreme burst of pressure in my ears.
Instantly, I was nearly blacked out, dizzy, disoriented, nauseous, and shaking uncontrollably.
By the grace of God, I was able to land my plane without incident, although I do not remember doing this.
My initial diagnosis of vertigo and a severe panic attack, although I've never had a history of either of these, was later replaced with left and right paralympatic fistulas, eustachian tube dysfunction, and elevated intracranial pressure due to brain swelling.
My condition continued to decline and my doctors told me only an adverse reaction to the vaccine or a major head trauma could have caused this much spontaneous damage.
I've had six spinal taps over eight months to monitor my intracranial pressure and two surgeries eight weeks apart to repair the fistulas.
I have missed nearly an entire year of my life and part of my children's lives.
Days of baseball games, playing in the backyard, and just picking up my kids to hug them.
That's too porny.
Please, you give us a big warning about the porn.
That's why I stopped it.
I said I don't like doing it, but this one's important.
That's why I played it.
Wow, this guy, this poor bastard.
Jeez.
And I bet you they didn't even report it into the VAERS database.
Yeah, there you go.
The CEO of VAERS... Was on a panel recently, and so he doesn't really have a dog in the hunt, so to speak, in the vaccine acceptance.
But what he did say gives you some food for thought.
Ultimately, the mRNA vaccines are an example for that cell and gene therapy.
I always like to say...
If we had surveyed two years ago in the public, would you be willing to take gene or cell therapy and inject it into your body, we would have probably had a 95% refusal rate.
I think this pandemic has also opened many people's eyes to innovation in a way that was maybe not possible before.
These guys are just spiking the ball now, man.
But the other thing is, this is nonsense.
It sounds like they're spiking the ball, but 90% of the general public doesn't hear any of this information.
That's what I'm saying.
They're spiking the ball that they got this into people's arms without them knowing.
I misunderstood.
Yes, he said.
If we had said you wanted experimental gene therapy or cell therapy.
You're right.
He's not even a player.
No, he's just spiking it for the industry.
For the industry.
Wow, this is so good.
Go us, yes.
Well, I don't really play on the football team, but I root for them.
Exactly.
Yeah, these guys.
So I have one other COVID clip, which is just the one about the lawsuit, which luckily, as we all know by now, at least most of the people that listen to this show and the producers, there's been a stay from the Fifth Court of Appeals and the mandate that Joe Biden mandates no good.
That's pretty much it, yeah.
So they pull the plug on it, at least for now, until it goes to the Supreme Court.
And thank God there's conservatives on the Supreme Court.
And I'm guessing that they're going to, in fact, I'm going to be surprised if all of them don't vote in the favor of not having the mandate, but some of them still might.
The Sotomayor's, you know, it's best for the public.
But here's the, I guess, Georgia and Florida and COVID, they're all doing this.
There's two or three different kinds of lawsuits going on, and most states are involved, but let's listen.
One Georgia-Florida COVID suit.
Georgia has joined Alabama and Florida to sue the Occupational Safety and Health Administration over its recently issued rule mandating COVID-19 vaccines at larger companies.
The plaintiffs want a federal appeals court to review the rule, which they argue is overly broad.
from member station WABE.
Sam Whitehead reports.
In the suit filed in a federal appeals court in Atlanta, the states are joined by schools, businesses and trade associations.
They argue OSHA doesn't have the authority to issue a rule mandating COVID-19 vaccination or testing at companies with 100 employees or more.
They also say the rule conflicts with the First Amendment and violates the right to religious expression.
The Biden administration says employers must comply with the vaccine rule by January 4th of next year or face possible fines.
The rule is facing other legal challenges, as is the White House's mandate for COVID-19 vaccination for federal contractors.
Yeah, and I found out that Sir Pants...
He himself also filed a lawsuit in Wisconsin, suing the Biden administration over the mandate.
And good on him.
I put the news article and the press release in the show notes.
It's fantastic.
Yeah, he's a good guy.
So they all knew this was coming because the Biden administration did a little quick step here, a little one-two.
We want to begin with that new federal rule for all Americans who work for companies with 100 or more employees.
It says get vaccinated against COVID by January 4th, perhaps two months from today, or face weekly COVID testing.
It was an idea from President Biden, first raised in September, and today OSHA at the Labor Department made it official.
So now it's January 4th because, you know, it's so dire we mandate this that we can easily wait a couple months.
Who cares?
It's fine.
We can wait.
I know this is a good example.
Lies.
Lies.
This is so insulting.
Yeah, if it's so important.
This is like the global warming thing.
Greta's the only one pointing this out, but she's sincere.
And she's getting pushed out for it.
She's getting squeezed out.
But the point is, is that if the global warming is such a disaster waiting to happen, it could happen, we're at the tipping point, we're all going to die.
We'll wait a while.
I mean, there's no rush because everyone knows better.
That's the same thing with this nonsense.
I do have I don't know how much of this you have, but...
I don't know what you're talking about yet.
More COVID stuff.
Oh, I have some COVID stuff, yeah.
On mandates, I got more...
You got mandates?
Because I'm out of COVID stuff.
I do have one kicker I want to play, which is not about COVID. It's about Zika.
Oh, our old friend Zika.
It's a 2017.
I was cleaning out my inbox and I ran into some clips.
A lot of good ones too.
Oh, now I know.
Now I know why you sent me a note and said, hey man, I need a new backup of the files.
You're cleaning up.
You're archiving.
I am.
And so I found this clip, and this was from 2017.
I realized, I think it was in 2015.
It's just like a two-year, every two years, it seems as if this is almost like the FBI thing we identified, the six-week cycle.
Mm-hmm.
This is like a two-year disaster cycle that is being promoted.
And if you remember back, the Zika thing was a big deal.
There was Ebola.
There was swine flu.
There was Zika.
One thing, then this one is the one that really caught fire.
This is the best they've done.
There's no doubt about it.
Do you remember the Ebola guy and it was live on every single network and he landed in Texas and they had the ambulance and that contained the one American Ebola sufferer.
And then the guy made a big fuss about, oh no, they're introducing Ebola to the United States.
We're all going to die.
And then the door opens and the guy just hops out.
It was live on every channel.
There it is.
There is the first American Ebola ground zero.
Remember the girl who came back from Africa?
The nurse was exposed to Ebola and she refused anybody to touch her and she just got on her bicycle and it took off and disappeared in the New Hampshire woods.
And then you had the doctor from ABC and she broke her quarantine.
Yeah.
The Ebola thing was one of the worst.
But the Zika thing, when you listen to the clips from the era, you can see what they're doing.
And this is the mainstream media again.
I mean, these people are shameless.
Let's listen to Zika, Zika, Zika.
From 2017.
Spring is here, the temperature is rising, and with it, the threat of Zika virus spread by mosquitoes.
There is an outbreak already in Brownsville and McAllen, Texas, in the Rio Grande Valley.
So far this year, 18 women have been infected with the virus linked to birth defects.
Here's Dr.
John LaPook.
When we first met 23-year-old Rocio Morado of Brownsville, Texas last month, she was 36 weeks pregnant and doctors were seeing problems with her baby on ultrasound.
We do see some what we call calcifications in the brain.
Morado tested positive for Zika infection.
The virus is carried by mosquitoes both in Brownsville and across the border in Mexico, where she visited family early in her pregnancy.
I'm kind of sad, but I know everything is going to be okay.
This is her baby, Hugo.
How are you feeling right now as a new mother?
I feel so happy.
I'm so in love with him.
Yeah, there it is.
Shameless, shameless.
It was so shameless, we had a jingle.
Oh, Zika.
Oh, Zika.
Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika.
A little baby with a little bitty head.
With a baby with a small head.
We're going to have to make a little head.
You watch.
Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika.
Yeah.
Where's the money?
1.9 billion dollars.
Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika.
Yeah.
Where's the money?
Let's have it now.
Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika, Zika.
Yeah.
Where's the money?
Small heads are coming.
We're going to do it.
You watch.
We're going to have them.
And right there, that's probably why I initially said, oh, this is going to be over in April of 2020, because that was the pattern.
It was a billion dollars, $1.9 billion, there's the money, rinse, repeat.
Except this time, they took a left turn.
I think the thing made itself.
It just caught on.
It's just one of those things that became the thing.
And then you had the mass hysteria and the mass hypnosis and everything.
All the elements came together.
This is a whopper.
This is the best they've ever done.
And now we're kind of like they don't know how to get out of it completely.
I think the Pfizer pill is one way.
They can't admit to ivermectin.
That's like swallowing their pride.
Forget that.
That's never going to happen.
No.
So, since we're doing flashbacks, in 2009, we've talked about this many times in the past 24 months, we were looking at the financial meeting of all the pharmaceuticals, and they were all jitty and jacked about, you know, vaccines.
It's going to be the future, and guess what?
We have no liability.
Ha ha ha ha!
So everyone loved it.
Everybody loved it.
Now, I was in London at the time.
You were, of course, in San Francisco.
And in fact, around that time, when did I get swine flu?
Before then, around that time.
Anyway, doesn't matter.
We were talking about it.
And in 2009, Jesse Ventura, remember his TV show, his conspiracy TV show?
Yeah, yeah.
I forget the name of it.
Conspiracy theory or something like that.
Something like that, yeah.
Let's just go back in time and listen to 2009, same time we were looking at this.
Alex Jones.
There's an entire agenda afoot to force the population to undergo different type of medical treatments, namely vaccines.
We're seeing a medical tyranny being set up, not just in the United States, but worldwide under the UN and the World Health Organization.
Right.
Who's behind all this?
The Bilderberg Group.
They want a planetary dictatorship so they can carry out their forced depopulation agenda.
And they want to do it through the medical system.
And that's why vaccines are so important.
We know that many of these vaccines turn out to have serious adverse reactions.
This is being done by design.
They kill you slowly over time.
And I've got an insider I think you should really talk to.
Dr.
Rima Labo.
As soon as you and I finish...
I'm leaving the country again.
Why?
Because in a very short time, not today, not tomorrow, but very soon, we'll be facing compulsory vaccination under the mistaken term of voluntary vaccination.
Now, what is it about these vaccinations?
You think that they're bad?
Well, first of all, let's start with the fact that the World Health Organization has decided that we have 90% too many people.
The World Health Organization has been working since 1974 on vaccines to create permanent sterility.
Doctor, the response is going to be, and you're crazy.
How can you say this stuff?
In the event of civil disorder or pandemic.
Doctor, what you're saying is that if people refuse these vaccinations, that FEMA's going to put them into almost like concentration camps around the country?
I think you have to leave out the word almost.
Yeah, and you need to add the word Australia.
But otherwise, spot on.
Spot on.
Nailed it.
Spot on.
I mean, that, whoa.
Just saying.
Go laugh at your conspiracy theorist.
Now, luckily...
Ventura left the country.
I think he moved up.
He probably went left with that doctor lady.
Left the country.
He's like being smart.
I'm getting out of here.
A big push.
We've seen this before.
We saw CNN teaming up with Sesame Street, if you recall, for some woke stuff about black and brown and yellow and red and all children except the white children.
So they've been doing this consistently whenever they want to indoctrinate the children.
I think there was actually a whole special, if I recall, On CNN that included all these characters from Sesame Street.
So the big push, of course, this past week was to get children vaccinated.
And in New York City, we had, what's Hochul?
The governor, but she was, was she in New York City?
I think she was in New York City.
The governor.
Frau Hochul.
Frau Hochul, thank you.
Talking to the kids.
Talking to the kids who are here.
It's your teachers.
And we have to get the word out right now that when this vaccine is available, that every kid says to their mom or dad and their guardian, I want to get the shot.
I want to take my shot so I can be safe.
Just listen to what she's saying.
I don't want to have to worry about this.
So kids, it's coming.
You've been hearing about all the adults getting their vaccinations, and maybe some of your older siblings, like age 15 to 17 is okay.
But right now, we're just about to hear the news that it's going to be okay for 5 to 11 year olds.
Anybody 5 to 11 here?
Anybody here?
Well, how about that?
How about that?
Well, that's very cool.
That's right.
Stick this in your arm, child!
No, no.
Instead, she's going to motivate them.
More people are going indoors.
We want to make sure that all of our children are safe.
Do you kids want to be safe?
Yes, you do.
Yes, you do.
So how are we going to keep you safe?
You're going to take your shot, right?
We're going to take your shot.
You're all going to get your vaccine.
It's going to be very cool.
Anybody who gets a vaccine is really a superhero to me.
Ah, yes.
I know you're going to do that as soon as it's allowed.
So literally...
Yeah.
Superhero to me.
Of course.
So then they talked to some of these kids afterwards.
After they were...
Because, of course, this was a staged event.
Frau Hochul is there.
Oh, kids, I'm motivating them, and they all get a jab, and then they go back through, I think, ABC, maybe local news, and they talk to the kids, and it's just so scary.
Ramona Johnson is one of the brave souls who got vaccinated at the ITC. Johnson is looking forward to returning to the activities she loves and thinks her friends who have not gotten the vaccine yet will be jealous.
When you get the vaccine, you can do things that kids can't really do if they don't have the vaccine.
For Ava Emery, the best part of being vaccinated is lowering the chance of getting the virus.
It'll be safer when we go to school and other places.
Like, we will have a better...
By the way, these poor kids are doing this with their masks on.
Chance of not getting COVID. Ava's mother, Melanie, says that for all three of her daughters who got vaccinated today, the experience was not too painful or scary.
They were very comfortable real quick, which I think is helpful, and they got a lollipop at the end, so...
Who doesn't want a lollipop?
Yeah, yeah.
There you go.
Where'd you get this report?
Um...
I clipped it myself.
I think.
I don't know where I got it from.
I can look.
Do you mean where the actual...
The source.
The source?
Because I saw the same report, and I'm wondering whether or not this was something that was distributed.
Oh.
Okay, I'll have to look at it.
I don't have it listed in my clip list.
That's okay.
It's not important.
But I hear you.
I saw the same report.
I also saw a local report.
I think it was added to a local report.
And the local report always had the kids saying, well, they had two little girls.
So now we can do things that we couldn't do otherwise.
And our friends will like us more.
Some bull crap.
And it went on and on.
It was really pathetic.
But this is all staged.
Oh, yeah.
No, it's...
Yes, it's very staged.
I don't mean that like it's a big surprise, I'm just saying it's just obviously staged.
It was the central New York kids, so if it got around to other places, it was just the same script, probably.
Yeah, I'm reminded of, because I use a lot of VPNs, just because of I like using VPNs.
I don't like having my machine wide open.
So I have a VPN. I changed where I am.
I'll be in Mexico.
I'll be in Costa Rica.
I'll be in...
You're an international man of travel.
And so, yes, I look like I get around.
And so, and then every...
Certain webpaces, hey, this girl here in Melbourne is looking for love.
And it's a picture of some woman.
This woman in Berkeley...
Same exact woman.
No.
She's looking for love there too.
No.
She gets around.
Did you talk to her?
The point is that these reports are getting more and more like this in the media because they have these packages that go around.
Send them around.
We can put it on our local news.
Yep.
It's the same type of package as going to the hospital.
Now, what is your number one wish?
I wish I'd taken the vaccine.
Yeah, same package exactly.
I don't understand why he's still allowed to speak.
After his fantastic appearance on the Rogan show, Sanjay Gupta, going back to what I said originally, appeared on TV with the cast of Sesame Street.
But I have to say it's wonderful to actually see all of you.
It also sounds and looks like you and your families have been staying healthy.
Oh, I have a way.
I've been staying healthy, Dr.
Sanjay.
Look.
Oh, does Rosita have a poo-poo?
Oh, honey, this is from my COVID vaccine.
My mommy and my papi took me to get it this morning.
Rosita, that's great.
Getting the COVID vaccine is a great way to stay healthy.
See, my mommy and my papi said that it will help keep me, my friends, my neighbors, my abuela all healthy.
Your parents are absolutely right.
You know, COVID vaccines are now available for children five years and older.
And the more people who get them, the better we're going to be able to help stop the spread of COVID. Ugh.
So, so annoying.
Let's look at some marketing.
China is marketing heavy for whatever their internal reasons.
I have corroborated reports from Shanghai that they're really talking about zero COVID strategy.
This is one of the reasons they're telling people to buy food, stay home.
And I have a report which...
We have this...
Okay.
No, go ahead.
I was going to ask.
This is not bullcrap.
You have somebody from China that's contacted you?
Oh yeah, Professor JJ. And we have a couple people who sent it.
But this is from NTD, I think.
This is your station.
And they introduce a new term for their system as they attempt the zero COVID strategy.
China is bringing science fiction to life in its attempts to contain the virus.
Officials recently created a new term, Space Time Accompanyer.
Beginning Wednesday this week, citizens receive text messages with a term, followed by a virus test request.
The new phrase refers to someone who has spent at least 10 minutes with a confirmed patient within an area equal to about six blocks of New York City.
When either of them have been in the area for a total of 30 hours or less than two days in the previous two weeks, the unconfirmed person will officially become a space-time accompanier.
In China's three-color health code system, people with a yellow code are forbidden to access on public places.
That's until the code turns green again following two weeks of quarantine and several negative virus test results.
But officials don't track the person physically.
They're traced by their cell phone signals.
Officials reported Thursday a total of nearly 100,000 people in just one city are at risk of becoming space-time accompaniers.
And according to official data, there are only a handful of new confirmed cases in one day.
China really needs to work on the marketing and the branding.
I like space-time, but then accompanier?
That's lame.
We need to help them out.
It's probably not lame in Chinese.
No, exactly, but we need to help them out because we know what they mean.
It's someone who was in your space at your time and they were there to hear you.
I understand what you mean, too, but I'm just saying I don't think they care what we think.
Oh, I care.
I like the term.
I like space-time accompanier.
I just want a better word for accompanier.
Oh, okay.
Look, if we don't translate it, someone else is going to do it when they bring this green and yellow system in.
It's just going to be the same.
What?
You know, I'm working on this mobile identity thing.
I was doing a column on it.
So I look at it, and everybody's in on this thing, and it's not being discussed by the tech press, that's for sure.
Mobile?
I'm still on COVID? What is mobile?
Well, this is the same thing you're talking about.
This is exactly what you're talking about.
Okay, all right.
It's like no difference at all.
Okay.
And they're working on promoting this idea that your mobile phone will be the do-all, end-all.
It'll be just like this.
It'll have all these codes on it.
Yes.
So whatever you do, wherever you go, whatever, in your whole life, you're going to have this stupid phone that's going to get you into places.
It's going to prove that you had the COVID vaccine.
And on the list of things they want to make sure to accomplish is social scores.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
So to bring it here somehow, exactly why the American public is putting up with any of this is beyond me.
Can I remind you that there are bills in Congress, who knows, it might get jammed into the social infrastructure, the human infrastructure bill.
There are bills that want the credit ratings to be taken away from commercial companies, run by the government, and not necessarily on your financial health, but also on other things.
Yeah, like whether or not you have spiked hair.
Or if you watch Squid Game on Netflix.
It should be on there.
Yeah.
And the thing is, we've been joking about this stuff for a long time.
And we're joking half seriously.
Yeah, but we are in the pot and we look a little green right now.
It's starting to boil.
And that all came to a head for me.
And this is the last we need to do for me of COVID. With the most recent interview that Bill Gates gave, this was astounding.
First of all, he's Teflon.
No one cares about Epstein anymore.
It's all good.
No one cares about all the stuff he's been talking about.
Remember, the only thing that might happen is it might hurt really bad.
That could be the only adverse event.
Now...
Really, really bad.
Really, really bad.
He said really, really.
Let me see.
Gates.
He said, really, really?
Really, really?
I know he says really, really a lot, so I could be wrong.
It was painful, I think, was the term.
Super.
No, no, it was super.
Here we go.
Oh, super.
The data showed that everybody with a high dose had a side effect.
Yeah, but some of that is not dramatic, where it's just super painful.
But yes, we need to make sure there's not severe side effects.
The FDA, I think, will do a good job of that, despite the pressure.
Yeah, well they didn't because there's lots of side effects and it goes beyond super painful.
But now when you listen to this clip, and I considered cutting it in two, but there's no reason to.
We can just stop it when we hear the insanity.
First he's going to make all the excuses for shit that's not working, so forget what you just heard.
And then he's going to tell us about what we really need to be doing for what is coming.
And I think considering Event 201 and wargaming stuff, you've got to take it seriously.
And are we doing things now, or rather are we not doing things now, that we really need to be doing in preparation for the next pandemic?
Yeah, so it was 2015 that I gave the TED Talk and wrote a number of papers.
Titles were not ready.
Right, and he has people right for him.
Oh, yeah, it's a total foolish year.
And that 2015 TED Talk, that's the one where he said, you know, once we get vaccines in and better health, you know, we'll have less people.
And it was always kind of a questioning thing, like, what?
How does that work?
2015, that I gave the TED Talk and wrote a number of papers titled, We're Not Ready for the Next Pandemic.
And sadly, that was...
A better forecast of what would happen than anyone would have wished for.
You know, the economic damage.
What did he just...
I'm only hearing this...
Let me just hear what he said.
...for the next pandemic.
And sadly, that was a better forecast of what would happen than anyone would have wished for.
Okay, a better forecast than anyone would have wished for.
Okay, I understand.
It just sounds to me like he was happy that this happened, but I guess I'm hearing it wrong.
You know, the economic damage, the deaths, it's been completely horrific.
And I would expect that will lead the R&D... Again, with a little laugh.
Why do you think the little snickering laugh there?
No.
The deaths, it's been completely horrific, and I would expect that will lead the R&D. What do you think that was for?
He says it right after the word lead, the R&D, right after lead, then he snickers, it's very small, very slight.
Which could mean that the R&D is already done, or it's already set up.
Possibly.
It's been completely horrific, and I would expect that will lead the R&D budgets to be focused on things we didn't have today.
You know, we didn't have vaccines that block transmission.
You said we did!
We got vaccines that help you with your health, but they only slightly reduced the transmissions.
We need a new...
I mean, you can't just gloss over that shit.
Well, we got vaccines that help you feel a little better.
It's not a vaccine!
Or it's a failed one.
We got vaccines to help you with your health, but they only slightly reduce the transmissions.
We need a new way of doing the vaccines.
We didn't get much in the way of therapeutics.
You know, dexamethasone and now molnopiravir could help, but way less than should have been the case.
We didn't get the diagnostics.
Remember, he and Soros just bought a testing firm, so we didn't get the diagnostics as a setup.
Up and running in order to achieve what at least Australia and New Zealand showed, that competent management can keep the death rate down.
Locking him up in FEMA cams can keep the death rate down.
Pretty dramatically.
And so I'm hoping in five years I can write a book called, you know, we are ready for the next pandemic.
But it'll take tens of billions in R&D. The U.S. and U.K. will be part of that.
U.S. and U.K. will be part of that.
Okay.
Are they investing in you, Bill Gates?
It'll take probably about a billion a year for a pandemic task force at the WHO level.
Shit, John, we need to start a task force.
We're definitely on the wrong side of this.
We're not doing this right.
We're just doing the surveillance and actually doing what I call germ games, where you practice.
Germ games!
You say, okay, what if a bioterrorist brought smallpox to 10 airports?
How would the world respond to that?
There's naturally caused epidemics, and bioterrorism caused epidemics.
Could even be way worse than what we experience today, and yet the advances in medical science should give us tools that we could do dramatically better.
So you'd think this would be a priority.
The next year will be where those allocations have to get made, including this global pandemic task force.
The nice thing is a lot of the R&D we need to do To be ready for the next pandemic are things like making vaccines cheap, having big factories, eradicating the flu, getting rid of the common cold, making vaccines just a little patch you put on your arm.
Things that will be incredibly beneficial even in the years when we don't have pandemics.
The patch is probably the long-rumored one with little microneedles.
He says it's a vaccine, a patch.
You know, along with the climate message and the ongoing fight against disease of the poor, the pandemic preparedness is something I'll be talking about a lot.
And I think it'll find fertile ground because, you know, we lost trillions of dollars and millions of lives.
And, you know, citizens expect their governments not to let that happen again.
I mean, wow.
So I think the Global Pandemic Task Force, which the U.S. and U.K. and WHO, and it'll cost a billion dollars a year, we should probably be on the lookout for whatever that's going to be.
We should be in on it.
We should be on the board of directors, damn it!
I totally agree.
Well, he does.
I do have two clips.
Okay.
From 2014, just because they prime in the pump, prime in the pump, because he does mention smallpox.
Yes, he does.
Hold on.
And of course, we have a situation that occurred in 2014 that had everybody all been...
I think it was 2014.
It could have been 2013.
Approximately 2014, this happened.
It was reported on NPR, and it was very...
It had people a little bit upset.
Federal health officials revealed today that they had made a disturbing discovery.
Scientists found vials of the deadly smallpox virus in an old storage room in an unsecured government lab outside Washington, D.C. The smallpox virus was declared eradicated from the world in 1980.
It's supposed to be kept in only two places in the world, a high-security lab in Atlanta and another such lab in Russia.
And Pierre's Jeff Brumfield joins us now to tell us more.
And Jeff, what happened?
How did they find these vials of smallpox virus?
Well, on July 1st, scientists on the campus of the National Institutes of Health were clearing out an old lab that belonged to the Food and Drug Administration.
They found vials that were labeled varilavirus.
That's the official name of smallpox, which is arguably the most deadly disease ever to affect mankind.
It covers the body in horrible boils, and it kills about 30% of its victims.
The last known case was in 1977, and we thought there were only two labs in the world that still had samples, So this comes as a big shock.
So they found these vials, and what happened to them then?
Fortunately, the workers recognized immediately what they had.
They put the vials back in the boxes and moved it to the NIH's Biosafety Level 3 laboratory.
Then they notified officials at the Centers for Disease Control.
They called in FBI and they brought in local law enforcement to guard the samples.
Yesterday evening, they were moved to CDC headquarters in Atlanta and put into an even higher security biosafety level 4 lab.
That's the kind of lab where people are wearing moon suits.
You see them on the movies.
Preliminary DNA tests show that the six vials contained smallpox virus.
The CDC can't yet confirm if it was still infectious.
And have they been able to trace back where these vials of smallpox virus came from in the first place?
The vials appear to date from the 1950s, and I spoke to the CDC and they weren't willing to speculate much beyond that.
I also talked to DA Henderson, the researcher who led the effort to eradicate smallpox, and he says they're probably just samples somebody lost track of.
Oh, oops.
Like a laptop on the train.
Yeah, Joe Biden's kid, Hunter Biden.
Yeah, I left it at the repair shop.
What happened?
I don't know.
Part two.
I have to say that probably the explanation for losing him is almost believable, but play part two.
Virologists and microbiologists often put away certain specimens and kind of forget that they have them.
Jeff, that's not very reassuring.
I mean, this isn't just any sample.
This is smallpox virus, a deadly, deadly disease.
Well, Henderson told me, you have to remember, this is back in the 1950s, and smallpox was still a disease out in the world.
So back then, you know, the researchers would have been vaccinated against smallpox, and so would much of the U.S. population.
And actually, they were just handling it out in the open.
It wasn't particularly dangerous to them.
Henderson says he can remember a government laboratory roughly in that area called the Division of Biologic Standards, and that may have been the government entity that had this virus, though obviously that's just speculation there will be a much more thorough investigation.
What happens to these vials of smallpox virus now?
Well, the CDC is going to conduct some further tests on them.
They're going to do a more detailed DNA sequence.
They want to find out if this really could have still been infectious, and they believe that it probably could have.
It appears to be stored in a form that is viable for long periods of time.
It also may provide some clues as to where the virus came from, although at that time people were swapping viruses a lot between labs, so it's hard to say for sure whether they'll be able to pinpoint its origin.
Ultimately, though, this virus will be destroyed.
You know, that's the one thing that is lost in all this gain-of-function research blather that continues to go between mainly Rand Paul and Fauci and others.
They're missing all of this.
Like, it's so careless.
People are just flying all over the world with vials of stuff.
This stuff's been in Canada, in the Netherlands.
It's been all over the place.
Yeah, and then Wu hands a lousy laugh and he leaked out.
It's obvious that's what happened.
Yeah, no, the carelessness is outrageous.
And the guy that you heard at the beginning of that second clip was the guy who had been partly responsible for eradicating smallpox.
And he chuckled in the middle of it and said, well, you know, I guess they just lost track of it.
It's just like, yeah, that's the way it works.
You know, we can't remember everything.
What do you think?
Now, should there be a germ warfare smallpox attack, there's vaccines for that, only probably not enough, correct?
No, there's no way there's enough.
The original smallpox vaccine, which I have had, so has Mimi, and then they stopped giving it some time in the...
70s.
60s or 70s, they just stopped giving it.
So everyone, like half the population, old farts are all immune, but nobody else is.
Yeah.
It's an attenuated virus.
So I don't know how you can even manufacture it without smallpox itself in those vials.
So I don't know.
Well, you can find them on the train somewhere.
They're going to have to do an mRNA smallpox thing.
Oh yeah, there you go.
And that's going to be worse than the disease, I'm sure.
Now you're talking.
And of course, dogs are people too, and I'm paying attention to all the news stories.
Headline, NPR, new coronavirus, likely from dogs, infects people in Malaysia and Haiti.
Yes, that's right.
I told you they're coming for your pets, people.
And there's a couple of interesting stories regarding vaccines.
Just when you get a dog.
I know, they waited.
They waited for me, those bastards.
Um...
Dame Jamie has been all over a couple of stories about...
I think she used to work with animals in testing scenarios or in clinics.
She needs to remind me.
But she's been sending me clips.
Now, this is...
Just a local kind of story about zoo animals that are being vaccinated.
There's some outfit that's producing this vaccine for animals and for zoo animals.
I'm not sure if it's mRNA-based or what it is, but here's a little story and then I have a follow-up to it.
A place for primates, big cats, and people.
KSBY's Erin Faye spoke with a local sanctuary about how they're keeping their animals and staff safe from coronavirus.
She joins us live now.
Erin, you spent the day with a variety of furry friends.
Good morning, Janelle.
That is right.
Conservation Ambassadors is teaching animals, like you mentioned, how to take shots, and it's hard enough for humans.
And so she puts her paw outside of the cage like this.
I can give her an injection right there into her arm if I wanted to.
Or we can just as easily dart them.
We have a blowgun and I can just go poomp and get them right in the butt.
Animals can get COVID-19 from humans and each other.
Don't worry, I sewed it.
Staff at Conservation Ambassadors are vaccinated and many of the animals are too on top of their yearly shots.
They're all, you know, very handleable.
And we do medical husbandry behaviors where we can give these guys injections and take blood.
Alright, so blah, blah, blah, they're vaccinating all the animals.
The point of what Dame Jamie came to me with is, look at these news reports.
The giraffes in the Dallas Zoo are dying of abnormal liver issues.
Liver.
All of a sudden.
After the shot?
Uh-huh.
Three giraffes have died.
They're killing the giraffes, man.
So three giraffes have died after whatever shot this is.
Yeah.
And that's no concern, but the shots are to protect them and they're killing...
I know.
And the problem is, it's really not reported.
I couldn't find an audio report of the giraffes dying.
Tons of local reports.
But, yeah.
I'm sorry, go ahead.
Well, as you continue on this, I don't remember what clips you have, but I do have the transition clips as we go to flu season.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Now, one of our producers sent us a note because we talked about the...
Or we had a clip or something that flu has like a six times more likely to die of cardiac arrest if you get flu.
I think that's what it was.
Yes, I saw this note.
And our producer said, you know, they were talking about this, and I think the first time they talked about it was 2018 or 2019.
I'd never heard this before, that the flu can give you cardiac arrest.
I hadn't heard that one.
So it could be bullcrap, could be predictive programming.
Well, it's like there's a good meme floating around with the signage on the side of a bus somewhere saying, kids can have strokes too.
Yeah.
Did you see this meme?
No!
No, I love it.
There's a sign on the side of a bus.
It's advertising about how kids can have strokes, too.
All of a sudden, these are cropping up.
Just setting up for that.
And the joke of the meme was somebody tweeting, oh, yeah, it's just like I remember when I was a kid, all my classmates having myocarditis, strokes, and they went on and on.
He says, yeah, remember that?
No, I don't either.
No.
So sick.
So something's up.
Yeah, these vaxes are duds, and a percentage of people, it's not good for them.
Well, at least we have another athlete, the famous Aaron Rodgers.
I have a report.
I have a report.
I was hoping I shouldn't have even brought it up.
Okay, then we don't have to listen.
That's fine.
Aaron Rodgers, we've done enough, I think because of the basketball players.
It's more interesting, it's still more interesting to me, that Kyrie Irving, who's one of the greatest basketball ball handlers in history, they don't let him play even a game.
I mean, Rodgers is going to be out for 10 days.
It just seemed like a minor injury, but they're making a big fuss over it.
And if I was going to play clips, I'd have to get some of these from these pundits on ESPN. It...
Condemning him.
All he has to do is take the shot.
Why didn't you take the shot?
I was very disgusted by that.
Why don't you play that report and see what it says.
Oh, okay.
It's from, this is ABC Good Morning America.
Rain Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers breaking his silence this morning after testing positive for COVID-19.
I realize I'm in the crosshairs of the woke mob right now.
The NFL superstar appearing on the Pat McAfee show Friday, addressing the growing backlash over being unvaccinated after leading many to believe he'd received a shot.
Are you vaccinated and what's your stance on vaccinations?
Yeah, I've been immunized.
I didn't lie in the initial press conference.
During that time, it was a very, you know, witch hunt that was going on across the league.
Roger saying he wasn't able to get the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine.
I have an allergy to an ingredient that's an mRNA vaccine.
So he was kind of sly there, and I do like it, where his answer was, yeah, I've been immunized.
Yeah, I thought it was kind of wimpy, but his point about I'm allergic to one of the ingredients is what they tell you in all the advertisements.
Do not take if you're allergic to one or more of the ingredients.
Do not take if you're allergic to one or more of the ingredients.
And so he says he's allergic to one of the ingredients, so he shouldn't be taking the shot.
Well, let's continue with ABC with Dr.
Brownstein who will discuss said allergy.
So another thing that's getting a lot of attention here, he said that he was allergic to an ingredient in the mRNA vaccine.
Do you have an idea of what that ingredient could be?
And what do people need to know in general about allergies and vaccinations?
Right.
So allergies are a common concern for vaccinations.
That's broadly true.
But for mRNA vaccines, it's really, really rare.
It's a rare circumstance and applicable to only very few numbers of people.
We actually don't know the ingredient that he's referring to.
But of course, if anybody has concerns, these ingredients are listed on the FDA and CDC websites.
He also mentioned issues around J&J. There was a pause, but that only lasted about 10 days to review clotting concerns.
FDA resumed J&J, and that is an available option for many people, including Aaron Rodgers.
Yeah, I'm also allergic to one of the things in the vaccine, the evil part.
I'm very allergic to that part.
The 666 element.
Yes.
Yes.
So let's switch to the flu season because they're still worried to sick because now they don't know what to do.
Because if you get the flu, you might think it's COVID and you're going to treat it differently.
The cold and flu season is coming up on top of the still ongoing COVID pandemic.
The number of cases of flu in the U.S. last year was low because people were still at home and masking up.
But this year, cases could go up, and many are asking, how do they avoid getting sick?
Here to help us answer that question is NPR's Mark Silver, who edits the weekly Coronavirus FAQ column for the Goats and Soda blog.
Mark, thanks for being with us.
Is this guy wearing a green visor when he's hosting this show?
Because he sounds like one of those guys.
He's got a bow tie on.
A bow tie, naked bulb.
My pleasure, Scott.
How are you feeling?
I'm feeling okay.
I got my flu shot, so I'm not too worried.
I got mine too with my COVID booster.
Are we hearing that a lot of people are reluctant to get their flu shots?
I think it's more people are just worried because they didn't get the flu or cold.
Last year, the numbers were so low that there's really no historic precedent to look back at to see what happens.
Wait, wait, wait, stop.
People were worried.
Are people getting their flu shot?
Well, people are worried.
Let's listen to that again.
Because they didn't get the flu.
I think it's more people are just worried because they didn't get the flu or cold.
Last year, the numbers were so low that there's really no historic precedent to look back at to see what happens when numbers...
Wow, so the programming worked.
Like, well, you know, it wasn't here last year.
You know what's going to happen now.
Numbers drop as low as they did last winter.
So some people are worried, does it mean my immune system is weaker than it would have been if I had been exposed last year?
And what does that mean for this year's flu and colds as well?
Really?
People are actually saying, will my immune system be weaker this year?
What?!
I'm telling you, this is insanity listening to NPR, the nation's treasure.
Let's listen again.
So some people are worried, does it mean my immune system is weaker than it would have been if I had been exposed last year?
It's two strains.
Don't they alternate and come back?
No, there's three strains.
There's two elements that they have.
I don't know, N1, N2, N3, N4. There's a variety of flus.
I mean, my immune system is weaker than it would have been if I had been exposed last year.
And what does that mean for this year's flu and colds as well?
What does that mean for this year's cold and flu season?
That's the question, the very good question.
We talked to some public health experts for this week's column, and I think we're okay.
Even if you haven't had the flu in a year or two, your body still has some antibodies left over from the last time you had a flu or the colds.
And if you got the flu vaccine, that gives you even more antibodies.
Well, I'll stop.
I hate to keep interrupting my own clip.
Because normally I have pre-built interruptions.
But the more I listen to this, Are these poor bastards who listen to national public radio so sick that they get the flu every year?
That's possible.
It sounds like they're, oh, they didn't have the flu.
Like, oh, I got the flu good.
I mean, it makes it sound as though, well...
That they're getting the flu every year for a shot.
I'm thinking that considering the host and considering what they're talking about, the NPR audience must be 65 plus.
If they're catering to it, who else worries about shit like that?
Oh, that's an interesting point.
You're probably right.
It's probably over 45 at least.
Yeah.
Okay.
Can you back it up and keep going so we can hear that insanity once more?
What does that mean for this year's cold and flu season?
That's the question, the very good question.
We talked to some public health experts for this week's column, and I think we're okay.
Even if you haven't had the flu in a year or two, your body still has some antibodies left over from the last time you had a flu or the colds.
And if you got the flu vaccine, that gives you even more antibodies.
Why are they not using the T word?
What?
Twindemic.
They never use it in this report.
That's what I'm saying.
Why aren't they using it?
This is interesting.
There's some other message here.
I think they're just trying to sell the flu shot, which has been documented as a scam.
In other words, the sales pitch done by the media.
But let's listen to part two of this.
Mark, I have to ask you because I gather this thinking is going around.
Is it possible that after a year of very little flu, our immune systems don't have enough antibodies?
You know, they probably do because the antibodies don't just vanish after a year or so.
We probably have some left over.
I like the scientific talk here.
This is high-end science.
We have some leftovers.
I mean, are you kidding me?
I kept that clip short.
Obviously, because that clip needs to be stopped.
Yeah.
All right, let's go to the final, and I have an OMG moment in this one.
The flu vaccine this year has three strains in it, which is a good number of strains, and it should keep you from catching the flu.
Any other steps people can take?
Yeah, I mean, some of the things that we've all gotten used to and maybe gotten a little tired of because of COVID are very helpful when it comes to cold and flu.
For example, masks.
I mean, I've got, oh, I don't know, several hundred masks, I think, sitting in my hallway.
And they protect you from breathing in airborne pathogens.
That's how COVID-19 spreads.
That's how the flu spreads.
Please, please, don't insult me now.
He has several hundred masks, and it's in his hall.
Yeah, you know what?
It's probably...
He's one of these freaks and he collects all the masks with all the different logos on it.
Like we used to collect backstage passes.
I mean, I certainly did.
Remember in your closet?
Oh, I got a cool backstage pass.
Whitesnake, Bon Jovi, Madonna.
Boom, boom.
You hang him up.
And then you lose him in a divorce.
They're just gone.
But anyway, that's probably what's going on with him.
That could be.
I mean, I know people that collected mouse pads.
Oh, yeah.
I know someone.
Someone in northern Silicon Valley who collects stuff like that.
I collect stuff like that, but I don't collect mouse pads.
Anyway, is that the end of it?
I think there's a little bit more.
No, that was the end of it.
Oh, yeah, I ended it with that.
Okay.
Yeah, he's got a hallway full of masks, and that's the way to go.
This is mask thing.
We're screwed.
I have a question.
Do you think, and I don't think this is what happened, but enough people have brought it up that I want to bring it up, and I know you have clips, so we've got to do it.
Do you think it's possible that the large number of heart attacks at the Dallas Travis Scott concert, that some of those could have been indeed people who had been vaccinated, had elevated levels of something, and then the excitement of the concert, they just start to spaz out?
Or do you believe that people were poked with heroin or fentanyl?
I've seen video of this event, and there was no mosh pit, man.
There were people spazzing on the ground, and there was plenty of space.
And then I think panic ensued, because people were dropping like flies.
What do you think?
What happened here?
Well, I don't know.
I mean, the first thing that came to mind when they talked about the security guard who said he felt a prick.
And by that I mean a needle.
It wasn't that kind of concert, yes.
It was whatever else was going on.
And I immediately thought of the pricker.
Yeah, the Russian pricker on the umbrella.
Well, no, there's also a thing called, there used to be a website that talked about this thing.
It's a little device, you can carry it around, you have it on a ring, and you just bump somebody with it.
You inject them with Karari or something, you kill them pretty quickly.
And I thought it might have been somebody floating around, some joker.
Floating around the prick, or you're just pricking people.
It was just so weird.
Well, I want to hear your reports, but it's just so weird that...
Okay, so it's a mosh pit stampede.
It's horrible.
We've reported on these things many times in the past.
What's the name of this rapper, by the way?
Travis Scott.
You know him?
Not personally.
I know of him, of course.
He's more like DJ slash rapper.
I think he is or was dating one of the Kardashians.
He's like half a million dollar a night DJ. And then he does rapping.
Whatever.
Okay, so he's okay.
But we've seen people get crushed, Black Friday, mall openings, you know, this even goes back to the Who concert, if you remember, the kids all got trampled.
Yeah, it happens all the time.
But what you don't hear in those reports is cardiac arrest.
You hear people suffocation, but you never hear cardiac.
I've just never heard it.
And so then when there's cardiac arrest, and then we hear, well, the guard felt a prick, and quote-unquote several people had to be revived with Narcan.
I mean, is this really true?
It's just reports people say.
I haven't really determined if...
One thing we have to find out is, if you're, say you collapse from an adverse event, from the, we'll just suppose it's the virus.
The vaccine, not the virus.
Oh, I did that.
You did it.
Boner.
Well, something's in the air.
So you collapse from an after effect, or whatever you want to call it, and you're injected with Narcan.
What does that do to a person that doesn't have a bunch of drugs in them?
In other words, what does someone who's not overdosed, what does Narcan do to you?
I have no idea.
I did look up if Narcan can be used for anything else other than reviving someone from opioid.
From what I read, no.
From what I read, no.
It doesn't do anything unless there's opioid in the system.
But who knows?
So it would just be a neutral element so you can just get a...
Yeah.
Yeah, because if you got a shot from an EpiPen, you would get, whoa, you'd get woken up.
Yeah, right.
Would Lenarcan do anything to someone who doesn't have any opioids in their system?
I don't think so, but, you know, they could have, who knows?
But I just saw a video and I saw someone who was just having, he was going into seizure.
Well, we have to assume, it may be a wrong assumption, that everybody in that event was vaccinated.
You would expect it, yeah.
I mean, because it wasn't an Eric Clapton concert where he would not put up with it.
You know, Rolling Stone is calling for the banning of all Eric Clapton records.
Because...
Rolling Stone magazine.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
Yep.
Rolling Stone magazine, who was in the 60s and 70s, was kind of the mouthpiece of rock and roll.
Rock and roll...
That kind of operation.
That was that.
It was the rock and roll, drugs, sex, rock and roll.
They prudes that they've become are now so in with the messaging that they have a lot of pharma ads in the magazine nowadays.
I haven't seen it.
Oh, I haven't read it.
I have no idea.
That's disgusting.
Yeah, here it is.
Where was it?
No, I don't have it all planned.
The guy's almost taken out of his ability to make a living from the side effects of the vaccine.
Yeah.
And then he tries, snaps out of it.
He's irked about being almost sidelined for the rest of his life.
And so now they want to take his income away.
That's just great.
What a wonderful person that runs that thing.
Jan Wenner.
Oh, does Jan still actually run anything?
He's got to be behind it.
There's no way.
He's always been a super liberal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, it's disappointing, you know?
It's disappointing.
Disappointing is not the word.
It's like, really, guys?
Really?
All right, so we play this Houston concert clip?
Yes.
We're going to Houston now, where eight people were killed last night and at least two dozen injured at the Astroworld Music Festival, apparently crushed by...
Interesting phraseology.
Um...
Eight people were killed.
Typically, you would say died.
Eight people died from trampling asphyxiation.
Killed?
Doesn't that kind of sound more like someone killed men?
Murder!
We're going to Houston now, where eight people were killed last night and at least two dozen injured at the Astroworld Music Festival, apparently crushed by members of the some 50,000 strong crowd surging toward performers.
Authorities say it's still too early to say exactly how it all happened.
Houston Public Media's Sarah Ernst was at a press conference that just wrapped up and is with us now from Houston.
Sarah, thanks so much for joining us.
Thank you for having me.
So the news broke late last night about people apparently being crushed by the crowd.
What new information did authorities give us today?
They say it's still very early into the investigation.
There are a lot of unanswered questions at this point, and they're coming out and asking for the public's help to find some information about what really happened last night.
There's a lot of videos that they're going to review today, and they're looking at the festival, how it was planned, and whether those plans were really followed through with.
I wanted to ask you about something that the Houston Police Chief Troy Finner said.
Let's listen and then I'll ask you about it.
This is now a criminal investigation that's going to involve our homicide division as well as narcotics.
And we're going to get down to the bottom of it.
Do we know what's behind that?
Why is he saying that?
So at first, the police chief and other officials, they really cautioned against rumors.
They did report that one of the security officers, while helping someone, reported feeling a prick in his neck and then went unconscious.
And, you know, later medical professionals, they end up giving him Narcan.
It's a drug that reverses opioid overdoses.
But again, there are still really not that many details right now.
And the authorities have emphasized that there are a lot of unknowns.
So what can you tell us about the people who were killed and injured at the concert?
Hmm.
Ahem.
you Well, we'll see.
I mean, it could be that I'm just shooting from the hip here.
And I don't think it typically would be that interesting if there wasn't a possible COVID element to it.
But maybe, you know, people are micro-dose heroin.
People can be on heroin.
Maybe the guard was on heroin and then it got kind of crazy and he passed out.
They're reviving like, oh man, someone pricked me.
Yeah.
That's what I'd say.
Yeah, man, I was stoned.
I can't believe it.
I can't believe I was high while that happened.
Part two?
Yeah.
Yeah, so a colleague of mine spoke with Sofia Gonzalez.
She was at the show last night.
And she said even before events really escalated, she saw some people pushing each other, people calling each other out, and some fights almost breaking out.
And then when Travis went on stage, it was overwhelming.
It was insane.
The first songs, I felt like I was not even on the ground.
My feet weren't even on the ground.
I was being pushed everywhere.
I was having to hold on to my friends.
For dear life, literally, we are so lucky to be alive right now.
And what about the headliner, Travis Scott?
Like, what is he saying about this?
Yeah, so he tweeted today just saying that he's devastated over last night's events and that he's sending his prayers to the victims' families.
He's in support of the Houston Police Department and their efforts to investigate and find out what really happened.
And he said he's committed to working with the community to help with the healing process, especially for those families that are experiencing loss.
And before we let you go, how is this news hitting Houston?
I think a lot of people feel shaken by this.
And I think a lot of people...
I mean, an event like this where there were these types of deaths haven't happened in decades, at least according to some of the top officials.
And so I think people are really trying to heal right now.
Robin1943 in the Troll Room says this has happened at other Travis Scott events.
So...
We were talking about this on the Good Morning America weekend show this morning.
I'd gotten up a little earlier than I wanted to.
Because of your analog alarm clock that you didn't change.
No, I had everything set correctly, but I ended up waking up anyway.
Oh, okay.
And the dog, you know.
Oh, yeah.
The dog's still on daylight savings time, which doesn't...
The dog was very confused with me.
I'm like, it's not 7 o'clock, stay in your room.
And the dog's like...
So, I watched this and they were talking about liability issues and they said the producers, there's lawsuits that are coming.
And they wonder whether Travis was part of the, if he was part of the production as opposed to just being a guy they hired.
If he was, he could be in a heap of trouble.
Well, the only element is what happened.
Did people get pricked?
Was there something else going on?
Were people just falling down?
I think your analysis is far superior to the prick thing.
And I think your explanation for the security guy, sure, it's possible that he was strung out on something and they just say that.
Someone's doing fentanyl.
Someone's doing fentanyl.
Yeah, someone's doing fentanyl.
Someone's doing it.
It explains a little bit of it, but I think the idea that we're having, and I think this could be happening, we'll start to track it.
If we start to see more and more of these mysterious collapses, just somebody just collapses out of the blue, fully vaccinated.
This is not a common occurrence.
I think it's something to think about.
And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage and say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the common cold and flu.
Ladies and gentlemen, please say hello to Mr.
John C. Dvorak.
Well, in the morning to you, Mr.
Amcoury.
Also, in the morning, all ships and sea boots and graffiti are something that's nice out there.
Hello there, trolls.
They're all lined up neatly and nicely.
Well, actually, they're not.
They're in disarray.
The trolls are the trolls.
They're scattering.
Well, yes, they are.
Let's count them real quick.
Oh, wait.
Where's my troll counting machine?
I don't know what that was.
There we go.
Troll counting.
Here we go.
Let's see.
Oh, they're scurrying.
Yes, they are indeed.
Let's see.
The count.
Did I get a count?
Sounds like you didn't get a count.
That's weird.
Let me try that again.
Oh, here we go.
Oh, wow.
2394.
That's almost 2400.
That's up there.
That is up there.
You have the post-it note.
What does it say?
2369.
Oh, wow.
There's a bigger number than that, but this is the number I have.
Well, this is 2394.
I think it's a record.
Yes.
Congratulations, everybody.
Thanks for being here.
Okay, simmer down now.
That's the Troll Room.
A lot of people hanging out there today listening live to the show.
You can go to trollroom.io and join up and listen and chat away, troll away, do whatever you want.
It's kind of a free-for-all in general, and people seem to like it that way.
Or you can take the more structured approach, which is noagendasocial.com, possibly soon being federated with Twitter, according to Jack Dorsey, but we'll see.
But certainly compatible with any other Mastodon instance that allows federating with us because that's how it works.
It's decentralized.
So if your little community doesn't want to hear from another one, you can just block them out, block them out, and it doesn't hurt anything.
It doesn't hurt anybody.
And you can follow Adam at NoAgendaSocial.com or John C. Dvorak at NoAgendaSocial.com, as I said, from any Mastodon.
And you will be in the stream of a toots and boos coming from NoAgendaSocial.com.
And a big in the morning to the artist for episode 1396.
We titled that Flu Tsunami.
In hindsight, I was actually thinking we could have called it Flu-Nami.
Which would have been cool too.
Yeah.
I looked for the domain name that's already taken.
But the art was Kenny Ben, Kendra, back from the dead.
And brought us a classic no agenda meme type illustration with a graveyard with woke on the tombstone.
And the woke is seemingly digging its own grave.
Which I think we found kind of humorous.
Yeah.
Yeah, you had some objection to the tombstone, because we have used tombstones twice within the last year.
Yeah, and then I thought, you know, it is kind of our staple.
It was a good piece.
Now, I liked, the one I liked better, and I used it for the newsletter, but it was a little too, I don't know if it was, it wasn't as, the woke tombstone thing I liked.
As a piece for that show, I thought it was better than the piece I liked the best, which was the Roaring Elephant, which was near it.
And it's the elephant which says Virginia, and it was referring to Republicans, the Republican elephant.
That was Nessworks.
I just think that it was a beautiful elephant.
Ha ha ha!
Hey, I think you can hunt them at the ranch, at the ox ranch.
I think you can go shoot you an elephant.
You could have shot one.
Yeah, you could do it.
So I figured, you know, that was a great...
She had another piece.
Oh, that was Ken.
That was Kenny Ben, yeah.
But Nestor also did an elephant.
She did both of them.
And so she also did another, a third piece.
And so she was going for the fences with the...
Flooding the Zone methodology.
I think she definitely, after being sick, she definitely hit the home run.
So yeah, she won.
It's a nice piece.
It just sticks out.
Typical for us.
Great.
No other podcast can do it.
I mean, yeah, some changed the image.
I think there's about three or four really good pieces that came in that could have all been used.
Let's see.
What else was there that we liked?
Somehow I don't remember the Vaxxers from Darren O'Deal with Magic Johnson.
I remember.
It's down the first page down to the bottom right above the right-hand side, the airplane wing.
Oh yes, I do remember that.
I wasn't going to put somebody's picture.
I don't like that.
Yeah, no, that would have been a no-go.
Queen's dead meat got a chuckle out of us.
Thank you.
Correct the record.
Yes, that was funny.
But no.
No, I don't think that.
We didn't want to.
And I actually like Delgado's human resources.
It's got totally unusual looking.
Living here listens to no agenda.
It's an evergreen that's quite good.
Probably use it for something eventually.
Which we do, and these are also used for artwork at noagendashop.com, where it shows up on t-shirts, mugs, hoodies, you name it, and they compensate the artist for that, and they support the show.
Otherwise, they're all on their own, which is great.
And you can also see all of these different images that we've just discussed in your brand new and appropriate Podcasting 2.0 app.
Try one today, newpodcastapps.com.
There's a lot more than just the images you can see flip around.
A lot of cool stuff and great apps and quite a selection.
So thank you.
Kenny, Ben, congratulations.
Noagendaartgenerator.com.
Everyone's welcome to participate.
You go ahead and, of course, we choose the art right after the show, so you'd have to listen live.
Very few people can do that.
And we do have, in the works, one of the artists, in fact, got a hold of me six months ago, so I immediately figured out which one it was, but I think it was one of the women.
I was going to do a FAQ with limitations on what we can and cannot do with the art where you don't want stolen images but you can repurpose things a certain way and we don't want to have our faces on there anymore because we did too much of that at the beginning and on and on with all these ideas.
I'll help you do this!
And I said, sure, this is great.
We'll get this fact done.
And how far are we?
How's it going?
Right at that same spot.
Okay, excellent.
This is also...
On point for no agenda.
Another typical yes.
It's alright.
Eventually we'll have it all done.
Let's thank our executive producers and associate executive producers who supported us with their treasure.
Part of the trifecta of value for value where we don't take ads, no commercials, no creepy Chinese money or anything like that.
We live and die by what the producers do for us and that depends on if we're doing our job and if everybody feels that we're going in the right direction.
And we like to give special thanks and official credits to those who come in at higher levels.
So we'll kick it off with our first executive producer from Leiden, the Netherlands.
$500 from Dr.
Lemmes.
Who says, I've been listening to the show since the start of the pandemic of certain doom after being hit in the mouth by Bert and Roderick from the TPO podcast.
But I failed to donate until now.
Please, please, please, please, could you de-douche me?
Well, that's exactly what we'll do for you.
You've been de-douched.
Thank you for the jabs of sanity in these crazy times.
Please keep on boosting us.
No karma but these little jingles, please.
We're all going to die.
The kids cheering with yay.
And then you've got pharma.
You've got pharma.
Alrighty then.
That's unusual.
Amish Anonymous 420 comes in with a cryptic note.
Hey Bobby, you asshole.
Please put this stack on Robert Tyler Lowe's from PA Pile.
No jangles.
Get on with it, whelp.
Long exhale.
We'll see ya.
Dammit, character's limit.
Alright, well, it is a 420 donation, so we can excuse him.
We can excuse him for whatever was going on with the writing.
Alexis Robles from Chula Vista, California, 333.
The only executive producer donation that is the spot-on number, one that everyone should have at least once in their life for a media property.
I see no notes.
Do we have anything from Alexis?
No, I don't get anything.
There's nothing under the subject line, donation.
All right.
James Ud comes in from Kent, Washington at 333, in desperate need of de-douching.
Ten years of listening to the greatest podcast in the world, and this donation marks my first.
You've been de-douched.
More to come.
Thanks to my smoking hot wife, Jessica, for finally hitting me in the mouth.
Yeah, you should talk to your wife more often, bro.
Yeah.
She might learn something.
She's a good woman.
You guys are truly the best.
Yes, we are.
Hello.
Thank you very much.
James Parker, Palmer, Alaska, 333.
In the morning, this is producer Jim from Alaska.
You may remember that I named two of my pigs, Crackpot and Buzzkill.
Yes.
I regret to say that Crackpot and Buzzkill have been sold, along with my other pigs.
My business model was based upon raising high-quality, free-range, pasture-raised pigs and then selling this premium product to local restaurants.
Without a USDA-certified processing facility in the area, I can...
As discussed on the show...
Yeah, after this, I have a little update on that.
Without USDA certified processing facility in the area, I can no longer sell to restaurants.
I would be reduced to butchering the animals in my garage and selling the meat out of my trunk.
Not the lifestyle I'm looking for.
My pigs were already under a fair amount of COVID-related pressure.
Aw, poor piggies.
Which has made it almost impossible to buy fencing products.
I've had an entire truckload of fence on order since last February.
It has yet to be delivered.
Now, as you may remember, I also have a campground, which does quite well since I'm located in a beautiful area along a river in the shadow of the 6,400-foot mountain peak, and we keep the campground cleaned.
Unfortunately, my property is adjacent to a state public use area in which they allow camping but lack trash and toilet facilities.
The state area on a San Francisco filth scale is about an eight in terms of free-range pooping and piles of garbage.
Having the state area for a neighbor puts tremendous pressure on my fences as the pigs were always looking for an exit strategy and a way to go around, to root around in the debris on the state public use area.
Well, that's what pigs do.
All is not lost.
Come spring, I'll be raising pheasants and ducks.
My bird dogs will be happy and poultry production has an exemption to most of the USDA rules.
I didn't know that.
I'll miss the pigs and may get back into it once my personal supply of pork is exhausted and I'm forced to gnaw on factory farm Chinese pork like the rest of the Alaskans.
All I want is a pigs in human clothing jingle.
Fear is freedom.
Subjugation is liberation.
Contradiction is truth.
Those are the facts of this world.
And you will all surrender to them.
Use pigs in human clothing.
There you go. .
That's clear.
You had some update on the USDA issue?
Oh no, I have clips and stuff we'll talk about after the break later.
Leroy Elias next in line.
He's in the UK, 333.
In the morning, please find attached 333 of my finest Scottish money pounds.
And my first installment towards knighthood.
Thank you for your courage.
I think it's the only Scotsman that listens to this show.
I believe so.
Thank you for your courage.
I only have three simple requests.
One...
Please de-douche me.
You've been de-douched.
It's been 10 months since I was hit in the mouth by Apple.
Is he dating or is he hanging out with Apple?
Apple?
No, keep reading.
Oh, Apple, you might also like algorithm.
And I never looked back.
So, Apple recommended it in their algo.
That's interesting.
That's the first I've ever heard anyone say that that's how they found the show.
From a you might like algo on Apple.
Interesting.
We have to assume that he's not the only one.
Nobody's mentioned it to us.
So Apple's got a clue.
Well, at least with him.
Two, dating karma, love karma for me, if you will, my failure to accept the vaccine into my life.
See?
Now you get it.
Now you get it.
I always got, well, I mean, yeah, you're right.
Has me currently on a social status, which is somewhat above serial rapist, but still below flat earther.
Oh, wow.
Please can you draw attention to the No Agenda meetup I've posted to meetups.com at the Wallace Monument on the 14th of November.
I believe it will be the first meetup taking place in Scotland.
Yes.
And I wish to make a great success of it.
Love is lit, Leroy.
Ah, thank you, Roy.
Leroy?
And thank you Carl from London for your 333 donating on behalf of my father.
Did you give him dating karma?
Oh, I'm so sorry.
That includes a goat.
You've got...
Good catch.
Carl from London, 333, donating on behalf of my father, Jeff from Pennsylvania.
Now that I've hit you in the mouth, an executive producer credit was the perfect way to celebrate your 70th trip around the sun.
Happy birthday, Dad.
Carl from London.
So, I think the executive producer credit goes to switcheroo, goes to Jeff from Pennsylvania.
Sure.
Right?
Oh, yeah.
On behalf.
It has to.
Yep.
Okay.
Done.
And he's on the list.
He's on the list, too.
Make a note.
Brian Riley, 250.
And he is somewhere in the United States.
In the morning, John and Adam, this donation is for my birthday.
It actually says Adam and John, so let's get that straight.
This donation is for my birthday, 11-6, and is funded and sponsored by my smoking hot fiance, Allison, another woman.
Yep.
Please add me to the birthday list.
This donation will bring me halfway to my knighthood and I look forward to my final installment and first executive producership with my next donation.
He's an associate executive producer for this show.
Thank you for creating the best podcast in the universe and keeping everyone's amygdala shrunken and shapely.
I would be remiss if I did not call out two wonderful women in my life as douchebags.
Douchebags!
Oh, let's get their names first.
I was just ahead of the game.
I'm like, hey, let's douche him.
Went out to hit somebody.
Sorry, I'm sorry.
Starting with my anonymous mother.
Oh, anonymous mother.
Douchebag.
I don't know how many mothers he has, but one of them is anonymous.
And ending with my future mother-in-law.
Douchebag.
That's the way to get off on a good start.
That's right.
You will also remain unnamed.
I will be on the lookout for your new line of boxed wine at a liquor store near me.
Jingle request.
John Brennan innocent until alleged.
Number two to the head.
Or no.
And then we have no.
And then two to the head and R2D2 karma.
Alright, thank you, Brian Rodley, Future Night of the Roundtable.
People are innocent until, you know, alleged to be involved in some type of criminal activity.
No.
You've got...
Fun story.
Yeah, nice story.
Karma.
I like that.
That was cool.
Sir Howitzer in Livermore, Colorado, 23456, one of our favorite numbers.
Jingles, deduce, deduce.
I think it's this.
You've been deduced.
I think that's what it was.
He's also wants a biscuit for his birthday and a cow karma or R2 if you can't find it.
Please remember to say happy late birthday to Dame Sexy.
Please ensure she is on the list.
She is.
Okay, I guess it's a birthday for her.
Mm-hmm.
11.5, lit in love, Sir Howardster P.S., the moving karma worked.
Yes, we have no cow karma, so R2-D2 it is.
They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.
You've got...
Karma.
Onward with our next associate executive producer, James Cornell, Wichita, Kansas, 234.
My brother, Sir Daddio of the Seven Wonders, donated last episode for my birthday and threw money toward my eventual knighthood as Sir Bouge.
I'm eternally grateful.
Ah, Bouge.
Sorry?
Yeah.
Bouge, yeah.
Yeah, no, I remember that.
So do I. I'm eternally grateful, but I had to donate and rectify an error.
I was knighted too early.
I was listening to the show and the words stolen valor kept floating around in my head as I heard myself being knighted.
I am getting closer and plan to reach the milestone sometime next year, and to those standing their ground on the mandates, keep standing tall.
My company granted me a religious exemption just last week.
I have to start wearing a mask starting December 8th.
Apparently I'm not a risk to others until then.
Yeah.
Thank you for your courage.
Keep up the great work.
James Cornell.
So he is future Sir Bouge of the Golden Plains.
He got lucky.
Thank you.
He's honest.
He said he didn't want stolen valor.
Here he is.
He's making it work.
He gets knighted twice.
Oh, of course.
Shit does happen like that.
And I'll give him a little karma.
He didn't ask for it.
You've got karma.
By the way, I do love the line, my company granted me a religious exemption, I have to start wearing a mask starting December 8th.
I mean, give me a break.
It's so lame.
It's stupid.
Yeah.
Sir David Pugh, the Baron of the Pew Pews, $220 comes in as another executive, associate executive.
Please de-douche Jeremy and Heather.
Okay, we'll do Jeremy first.
You've been de-douched.
And this one's for Heather.
You've been de-douched.
I shame them into donating, he writes, and Jeremy slipped me $20.
The $200 is for me.
Good times at the Northeast Ohio meetup last week.
Lots of new faces.
And always great to hang out with Sir Walkman, Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake, Sir Real Estate, and the dude named Jay.
Dude named Jay.
Huh.
Can I get an F cancer?
My mother was diagnosed with leukemia this past May.
Also, if possible, some old jingle requests.
Quote, it's what we do so you don't have to cease.
Classic.
Classic.
That's very old.
Yeah, that's a good one.
The best part of waking up is fluoride in my cup.
Good luck finding that.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you for doing such a great job, he continues.
Sir Dave Pugh, the baron of the Pugh Pugh's.
It's what we do, so you don't have to.
The sea's been.
That's for waking up.
It's fluoride in my cup.
You've got karma.
Oh, ye of little faith.
Ah.
Pabst.
What is it?
What is it today?
What are you drinking?
I'm drinking polar, 100% natural seltzer.
Mmm.
Yummy.
Anonymous pickles.
Wait, wait.
Since it's just filtered, I don't think they had to put calorie-free on it.
Marketing, baby.
They could put COVID free on it.
Well, as long as they don't say, you know, small batch.
Oh, yeah.
Anonymous Pickles.
20202.
Nice one.
Anonymous Pickles here.
I need relationship karma for my twin flame and I. Sometimes the fire of love burns so hot and fast that only embers remain.
Please give 1111 of this donation to my shrimp-eyed Mike so he can be deduced.
You've been deduced.
Okay, here's your relationship karma.
I'm sure it will rekindle.
You've got karma.
Mm-hmm.
I think that's the end.
Oh, that's the end of it, yeah.
So that's our group of associate executive producers and the great executive producers for show.
$13.97, three to go and we're at $1,400.
Somebody did send me a note saying, what do you got all these crazy pictures in the newsletter of trains and motorcycles and all these things.
You've got to explain this!
Well, everything that's in the newsletter that comes after the main, the little pitch that's at the beginning, has the number 1400 associated with it.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
I didn't even see the draft, and now you know why, because I was out scouting Oryx.
Yeah, you're out shooting things.
Blowing shit up.
Hey, thank you so much, execs and associate execs.
I probably don't need to say it, but I will.
These are real credits, just like anything in Hollywood.
Probably a little better than anything in Hollywood.
So you can put them on IMDB, your CV, your resume, your LinkedIn, lots of places.
People seem to get work from it.
People get lots of comments.
And you find other fellow travelers often.
So you can proudly display your executive or associate executive producer credit.
And if anyone questions that, we will vouch for you, no problem.
And if you'd like to become an exec or an associate exec, go to this website and learn all about it.
And thank you all once again for bringing your time, talent, and treasure for episode 1397.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Order!
Order!
Shut up, slave!
Shut up, slave!
So, as teased, I just wanted to talk briefly about what we discussed, and we played the clip from Texas Slim on the last show, and he said, oh, what's happening at COP26? And our deduction was, well, that's why no one's there, because it's all set up and ready to go, is they really want to bring in food shortages by doing it with fake meat and bug burgers, etc.
And it's the processors, Which, I guess, is JB's, it's Cargill, is Louis Dreyfus.
Isn't Louis Dreyfus also a processor?
I don't know.
I don't think so.
I know there's a wine importing operation that used to be a Dreyfus operation of some sort.
I haven't seen it for a while.
Well, so there's really, I think, four big ones.
And they control, they really control the...
What happens?
And so if they say, you know what, we're just not going to process for you.
We heard our producer from Alaska.
Hey, I can't get anyone to process, so now I can't sell unless I'm selling out of the trunk of my car.
Which, by the way, I would probably buy from you.
And I recommend people find people who have meat in the back of their car because they may be rolling out a shortages event.
Through Marty Bent, who just recently moved to Austin, he knows Texas Slim, and I had a chat with Texas Slim yesterday.
And this guy is very, very interesting.
And what I'm going to do is kind of like I did with Maurice the dog.
I'm going to do an interview with him and I'll bring a couple clips for the show.
Because he really sees a lot of this and also where it's going with the new asset class that I'm still trying to understand.
Which is, in essence, a way to commoditize air and soil, etc., without owning it, but being able to create financial products.
Hey, you're breathing my air.
Get out of the way.
Get out of here.
You're breathing my air.
I own this air.
One of our producers went looking.
As you remember, I played a little bit of their...
What's it called?
Food chain game event from 2015, where they were doing the same as event 201 for COVID. And lo and behold, our producer found one of those phony news reports that they use in the game, in the war games, in the food chain reaction game.
And it's super creepy, in particular because we're only a year late.
Good evening.
It's November 8th, 2020, and this is Dan Cronkite with your nightly news.
This was recorded in 2015.
With food prices rising around the world, tonight, I'll look at our increasingly vulnerable food system.
It's a total shit production as well.
Food is getting more expensive.
Forecasts indicate that prices will soon exceed one and a half times long-term averages.
In parts of Asia in particular, the costs of rice and soybeans are rising at a concerning rate.
This trend is raising alarms among some experts about the well-being of millions of people and the stability of entire nations.
Warning signs about the fragility of our global food supply have been mounting.
Back in 2010, the United Nations predicted that in order to feed a population of more than 9 billion people by mid-century, agricultural production will need to increase as much as 70%.
Developing nations in particular will feel pressure to double their output.
There have been some successes.
Since the early 1990s, the world has seen a decrease in undernourished people.
Today, the world's hungry are mostly clustered in fast-growing developing countries in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.
But the rising costs of food and the deepening impact of climate change and extreme weather events is creating a growing concern about worldwide availability.
But this is not just a concern for the world's poor.
The changing climate is also impacting food production in traditional bread baskets such as the United States, Canada, Brazil and Australia.
And monsoons that enable farm production from India to Indonesia are becoming less reliable.
By 2030, 60% of the world's population is projected to live in cities There is a risk that population growth will outpace agricultural production in some areas.
In the past decade, we've seen mounting challenges to governments, international organizations, and the private sector in providing access to affordable food.
Pressure from a shrinking rural labor force, limited availability of new farmland, increased urbanization, social and political unrest, and climate change induced risks have led to global food supply disruptions.
The stakes are clear.
How will our leaders in government, business, and international aid react to this growing food security challenge?
The world is looking to them for answers.
So, again, this is just a fake news report they used to project what would happen if there were global food shortages coming.
And I think it's set up beautifully.
We've got the prices high.
We've got all kinds of products that are weird.
Every news program is talking about how this will be the most expensive Thanksgiving dinner ever.
And Texas Slim thinks that there will be a bit of testing during this winter season.
There's going to definitely be some shortages of food.
But he says technologically, they're not ready at all.
They can't do all what they want, which is ultimately to track every single piece of food or whatever they call food going into your body either from cattle Or from 3D printer to stomach.
So they can tax you and give you a carbon allotment.
How much carbon you're able to consume.
And I think that what we heard here, we might hear some news reports.
As I said, November 11th or 12th.
Well, that's what he said.
That's when they'll probably start the marketing.
Because he says the marketing is ready.
They're going to run with the marketing.
They'll run it for about a year.
They don't have it set up yet.
But it is planned.
I kind of agree with his analysis, I think, because they can't do as much as they'd like to.
No.
He says 5G. They really need the 5G, funny enough.
Well, 5G will help, I think.
For the tracking.
Yeah, tracking of the products and everything.
They're not going to manage this.
I will say that it's interesting that they would...
They would...
That would do this at all, because I'm wondering about repurposing, and people always bitch about the...
And now that we find out there's nine or ten of these distillation operations in Iowa or South Dakota or someplace where we had a clip some shows ago about taking edible corn and making it into fuel, that puts a kind of crimp on the food supply, it seems to me.
But nothing is as weird as this clip.
And this is the soybean tires clip.
Play this.
Okay, soybean tires.
Law enforcement is important to our communities, so we're excited to announce that the South Dakota Soybean Checkoff is partnering with Goodyear to donate sets of tires to 50 county sheriff's departments across South Dakota.
The South Dakota Highway Patrol City of Sioux Falls and South Dakota Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources will also receive sets of tires.
Governor Kristi Noem applauded Goodyear for making a tire that the company says is better quality and lower priced.
Sometimes people talk about when you use a renewable product that you're settling on quality, and we are not with these tires.
Noem is excited to have another outlet for soybeans from South Dakota while reducing the nation's dependence on petroleum products.
While we rely heavily on petroleum products and coal products, we also recognize we're growing crops here that can be a part of that solution as well.
South Dakota will continue to find ways to innovate, according to Noem.
Here in South Dakota, what we do is we find solutions.
We recognize those challenges, but we've been far ahead of the game on this because we believe in what our farmers can produce and how innovative we can be in making new products, and I think we're in there to compete.
Goodyear expects to have its entire line of tires become soybean-based by the year 2040.
Wow.
Based on this clip, Kristi Noem gets a smudge mark.
It sounds like she's all in.
I mean, you know what?
If in a year or so, someone says, damn, man, I'm hungry because we don't have no more soybeans.
Yeah, that's why I was thinking the same thing.
Yeah, it's like, oh, yes.
Let's just take that guy's tires and eat them.
It's just...
I took some notes, actually, because I was doing that off the top of my head.
I wrote down a few one-liners that I got from Texas Slim.
So the new asset class, he says, is basically Soylent Green.
It's people.
So you are the asset class.
He says this is nothing new with food being used to make people work harder for less money.
He says it's been going on since the pharaohs.
And when I interview him, I'll get exactly what he means by that.
And he says, remember, let them eat cake.
And what else did he say?
Oh yeah, two more things.
One, he says Gates, Bill Gates, now the largest farm owner in the country.
We've talked about this on the show.
He says it's not about the farmland.
It's about Gates owns all the water rights.
And that's pretty significant.
Yeah, well, see, when this goes off the deep end, when they start bringing stuff like...
I still believe that all the farmland investments were for the water rights or not.
It was an investment per se.
I just don't see it as part of some scheme.
But he said what the ultimate scheme is, aside from pricing carbon, he says these are people who just want to usher in transhumanism.
They believe that technology...
You heard it in that fake report.
You hear it everywhere.
Technology can improve you, human.
Technology will improve you.
So, you know, it's not so much like, oh, we're going to meld the computer with your brain.
Yeah, it's part of that, but your phone is already doing this.
Your life is already controlled by your phone, certainly if you're in a QR code situation with COVID. Or like China, where your phone is tracking you and you get a yellow sign.
It's going to be here with the mobile ID. Yes.
Yes.
So this transhumanism, which we've talked about throughout the years, is a lot more subtle than I always thought it would be.
But it's definitely...
Look at mRNA vaccines, again.
Oh no, technology.
So we've got to be on alert here.
It's a threat to humanity.
If the Queen...
Actually, the Queen of England should probably die soon.
I hate to say it.
You've already predicted the date, November 11th or 12th.
Yes.
And I think that not long after that, they will change the name of the Royal Guards.
From what to who?
From Beef Eater.
They're the beef eaters.
Oh, what a great prediction this is.
From beef eaters to...
I'm already going, wow, I should have had this one.
The beef eaters.
Now, what do we do, carbon eaters or the bug...
The crickets.
The bug boys.
Yeah, the crickets.
We'll just call them the crickets.
Like Buddy Holly and the crickets.
Sure.
Quick update from Belgium, from our producer Tom here in Belgium.
They're proposing to ban all non-electric cars by 2027.
That's not far off.
That can't be done.
Well, what they mean by that is the used cars will still be on the road.
Correct, correct.
As with the rest of Europe, gas and oil will not be allowed for heating anymore for new installations.
That's correct.
New homes can't have gas or oil heating.
And, of course, if you look at any graphs or charts...
One of the US congressmen keeps pointing this out, that it's a net loss.
It costs you more money to do that.
Gas is one of the cheapest products you can use for heating your house.
Natural gas coming right through a pipe.
And just to give you an idea of the people who are organizing and managing this, certainly for us, the American citizens, when it comes to gas prices, as you were just saying, this is a fundamental thing.
Gas prices are $1 to $2 higher than they were a year ago.
And it's still half the price of heating your house by electricity.
And part of the reason for this, for our analysis, is the Biden administration was so frightening with their climate regulations that most of the gas industry, certainly as in natural gas, But all kinds of projects are just on hold and people aren't investing the money because they don't know what idiocy might come out of one of these bills with a whole bunch of climate change stuff.
So there's no starting new wells and these projects are just dormant waiting for something.
Who knows what's in the new bill, which is the bill that they didn't pass.
Yeah, we don't know.
Well, play the clip for the bill that they didn't pass so at least we're caught up with that.
What's it called?
The bill they didn't pass?
The bill they didn't pass.
Oh, bullcrap.
House Democrats have passed a key component of President Biden's agenda, approving a $1 trillion package to overhaul the nation's infrastructure.
As NPR's Dave Mistage reports, the measure...
I'm sorry, I've got to stop.
What happened to 1.5 originally, and then how did it go from 1.2 to 1?
As far as I know, it's 1.2.
Yeah, they said one to just soften the blow.
House Democrats have passed a key component of President Biden's agenda, approving a $1 trillion package to overhaul the nation's infrastructure.
As NPR's Dave Mistage reports, the measure passed late Friday after clearing the Senate in August.
House members voted to send the $1 trillion infrastructure package to the president for a signature.
On this vote, the yeas are 228 and the nays are 206.
The motion is adopted.
The vote followed a pledge from five House moderates to support a separate $1.75 trillion social spending package during the week of November 15th.
Once there's a total financial estimate from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
The group of moderates say if the financial score is inconsistent with the White House estimates, they remain committed to working to resolve any discrepancies.
The social spending bill has remained in limbo over lingering disagreements between moderate and progressive Democrats.
Okay, so remind me, I have to get back to what I was talking about.
I've followed this very closely, this bill that passed.
I've followed extremely closely because it has a cryptocurrency taxation and legality and permissions.
The bill that passed.
The bill that passed, yes.
I'm very pleased with that because that means we'll finally be able to get some answers.
And it seems like everyone has a Bitcoin strategy, including the mayor of New York, who's going to take his first three paychecks in Bitcoin as the mayor for Miami, etc.
So I know it's all marketing, but people are looking at strategies.
I'd like us to once eventually as well, if we can get some answers.
They may try to kill it all.
We don't know.
The second bill, again, now that's gone from 3.5 to 1.7, although I keep hearing two.
I mean, it's just, all of this is bullshit.
All of it.
It's just money they need printed for the bank or something.
I don't know what's going on, but it's incredibly non-transparent.
So, back to the reason why our gas is high.
There you have it.
We were quote-unquote...
Self-reliance, that was, you know, energy independence.
Every president since I've been alive was talking about it, up to and including Obama, and then Trump came in and claimed he did it, and I think he did, and we had historic low, well, he had low prices, not historically low, we had low prices, much lower.
So the appropriate person to ask about this would perhaps be the Secretary of Energy.
That's Jennifer Graham.
Who should be fired?
Fired right now.
In Sturgis, Michigan, it is $2.89 a gallon.
I guess that's better than in California.
What is the Granholm plan to increase oil production in America?
That is hilarious.
Would that I had the magic wand on this.
As you know, of course, oil is a global market.
It is controlled by a cartel.
That cartel is called OPEC. And they made a decision yesterday that they were not going to increase beyond what they were already planning.
I mean, the laughing?
Like, as you know, the global markets...
Hey, the global market runs on the petrodollar, lady.
That's just insulting.
Yeah, so she's always been a dipshit, this grand home.
How did she get the gig?
What's her background?
Should she even be doing this?
She was out of work, and so Biden felt that...
Or the women in the Biden cabinet, Suzanne Rice or Valerie Jarrett.
Is she working there?
She could be.
No, she's actually friends with Gina.
What's her name?
The...
No, the other Gina.
Let me tell you what her function is.
She's been around.
She used to be maybe in Homeland Security, I want to say.
Gina McCarthy.
Oh, that horrible woman.
Yeah, Gina McCarthy.
She has been...
Yeah, they've been out on the road with...
They're doing all these promotions with EVs and driving in...
Oh, we're in this truck that drives in electricity.
So they're just doing promotion all the time.
They don't know what they're talking about.
I was watching a YouTube guy driving around, testing electric cars when they go dead.
And it brought up some thoughts.
And I have a short clip.
It's called Letting an Electric Car Go Dead.
Here's the...
This is in a Renault, and it's one of the cars that last the longest.
It went a couple hundred miles, and it goes dead.
He's in it.
And here's what he's...
Sorry.
Yacking about.
Yeah, sorry.
Dying.
The car is dying.
It's dying.
Why did I do that?
I was so close to the blubbing chargers.
That was very interesting.
The car was actually doing okay.
It was limited power, but it still went fine.
And then all of a sudden, it just lost all power and started to coast.
And then when I tried to turn round and I stopped for a second, the car took that opportunity to just shut down.
So it gave me power steering and it was coasting, but once I'd stopped, it's like, right, that's your lot.
You've stopped now.
You're safe.
We're not going any further.
But it did it safely.
I'm just going to try turning it off and on again.
Checking the electric system.
It's not even letting me turn it off.
I'm in neutral.
Press, brake and start.
Limited performance.
Come on.
No, it won't go to drive.
Right, let's try locking it.
Factory now in standby mode.
Have I just locked myself in the bloody car?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you're in a...
These cars, they're so high-tech that they don't have a mechanical door.
Did you see the Tesla that blew apart?
No.
Yeah.
I mean, they didn't have a picture or video of the blowing apart, but a Tesla, I think it was a Model X, its battery exploded, the rear half of the car blew off and destroyed other cars.
It was quite the spectacle.
Yeah.
Well, I'm thinking you're in one of these things that catches on fire and it shorts out and you can't get out.
Yeah.
Yeah, you better carry one of those little hammers with the little diamond tip that breaks windows.
Yes.
If you're driving any electric car.
It must have.
So at least you can just crawl out.
So out of this gas and energy and cost question, you know, we kind of rounded back to supply chains.
And President Biden was asked, he had a brilliant question and answer session because he was, you know, his typical senile self.
And he was asked about the supply chain.
And his answer was, of course, flabbergasting.
People are also worried about, you know, coming up and they don't understand the way.
Why is the price of agricultural products, when I go to the store, why is it higher?
For example, if we were all going out and having lunch together and I said, let's ask whoever's in the next table, no matter what restaurant we're in, have them explain the supply chain to us.
Do you think they understand what we're talking about?
They're smart people.
Okay, so now the president basically just said, everyone's too stupid to understand the supply chain.
No one could explain.
That's what he said.
Doesn't matter what restaurant, which means, you know, it could be McDonald's, it could be a Michelin star restaurant.
You lean over and you say, hey, can you explain to me the supply chain problem that Americans just don't know that?
And then subsequently, this, sorry to say it, this idiot president goes on to explain it by not being able to explain it.
Think they understand what we're talking about?
They're smart people.
The supply chain.
Why is everything backed up?
Well, it's backed up because the people who supply the materials that end up being on our kitchen table or in our life, guess what?
They're closing those plants because they have COVID. Guess what?
Guess what?
What?
Yeah, COVID. They got COVID, that's why.
It's a complicated world that people are facing.
We've never faced anything like this before.
I mean, I'm not saying it's the worst of every time in American history, but we never faced anything this sort of defined...
How about the Great Depression?
Is this a crazy...
How was...
I mean, did we have issues with food then, President?
We're facing it.
We've never faced anything like this before.
I mean, I'm not saying it's the worst of every time in American history, but we've never faced anything this sort of defiant of understanding of what's going on.
And you can understand why people are upset.
And whether you have a PhD or you're working in a restaurant, it's confusing.
And so people are understandably worried.
So here's the kicker.
Here's the joke of it all.
The more the mainstream is talking about supply chains and stuff we don't have, which is news.
Oh, there's no heritage birds.
You probably won't be able to get the size turkey.
Mac and cheese may be hard to get.
I don't know how that's possible.
That's the easiest product in the world to make.
Pottered cheese.
But what's happening now, Wall Street Journal reported, with inventory low and demand high, firms like Hershey and Kimberly Clark are cutting back on ad spending.
Supply chain crisis has company asking, should we still advertise at all?
This is going to be fun.
Oh my God, that little tidbit.
It's good, isn't it?
People don't realize how huge it is.
Yeah.
And these are not small companies.
No, and their spend is huge.
And we're not just talking Hershey's Kisses, okay?
And what they call FMCG, fast-moving consumer goods, that's always your base.
You know, that's what you count on every year.
You know Gillette's going to do so much because people need to shave.
Yeah, no, it's pre-budgeted.
It's totally the pre-budget.
Yeah.
Yeah, you screw up with the pre-budget and stuff like that.
Oh, people are going to be jumping out of the windows.
It's unbelievable.
So, as almost predictable, Troll Room is saying, So what?
They're not going to advertise Hershey bars?
Yeah.
Do you know what Hershey makes?
Do we have any idea what these guys make?
What brands they have?
They've got popcorn.
They've got cheddar cheese.
They have protein bars.
It's a big, giant food company.
They're huge.
They're huge.
It's like Nestle's.
Nestle's doesn't just make the crunch bar.
Yeah.
It's like one of the largest corporations in the world.
They own everything.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's because the people in the trail room that say stuff like that are idiots.
I don't know why you pay attention to it.
No, because sometimes they're not idiots.
Yeah, the one or two guys in there that have some brains and have the Wikipedia open right there.
No, it's the girls.
It's not the guys.
It's the girls.
The women.
Oh, you're probably right.
No, no, I am right.
I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, on no agenda.
And we do have a few people to thank for show 1397, baby.
1397.
Viscount JDM Mack of the Digital Prairie in Decatur, Illinois, starts us off at $185.53, followed by Jessica Burke for the $140 results as a birthday.
Wait, wait.
Switcheroo donation to her smoking hot husband, Nathan Burke.
So we'll just have to mention that.
He's on the list.
He should be mentioned.
Nathan Burke gets the 140.
Michael Dougherty, 140.
Theodore Perry in Slate Run, Pennsylvania, 131.53.
Kim.
Hold on.
Needs a dedouching.
You've been dedouched.
Yeah, Tim, he sent this note.
He said, you don't have to read it, and we wouldn't typically anyway because it's under the reading level, the cutoff for execs and associates.
But I do want to say, he said, any thoughts and prayers for my mom's health from the No Agenda producers will be greatly appreciated.
She's struggling a bit.
So, yes, of course.
That's good.
Love is lit.
John Knowles in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, 11521.
Sir, he's got LGB on this funny.
Sir NBS, 115.23.
Sir Don Barron of New Hampshire, $100.
Kevin Riggan, $99.99.
He's got some comment about no-till architecture.
Ashlyn Davis, $85.
Sir Kevin McLaughlin, Duke of Luna, lover of America.
And boobs once again!
Yay!
8008.
Andre Piju in Ryswick.
Ryswick.
Rrrr.
And he wants a dedouching?
You've been dedouched.
He's also in the boob wagon at 8008.
Mike, as is Miguel Lopez in Flanders, New Jersey, 8008.
Sir Craig of Northeast Georgia, 6969.
Sir Bebop, Knight of the Frozen Tundra, 5678.
Nice.
Angela Kumbara in Prescott, Arizona, 5678.
For the birthday for her brother, Joe.
John Monaco, 5511.
David Weicker, 5510.
Scott Roising, 5510.
Sir Lucas of the Lost Bits in Federal Way, Washington, 5510.
Peter Chong, 5510 in Lakewood, Washington.
You guys should have a meetup.
Michael Gates, 5280.
Barron Serfenam in Appleton, Wisconsin, 5212.
Bob Lowe, 5150.
And the following people are $50 donors, name and location.
Starting with...
Bart Beekwilder in Wegel, North Brabant, Netherlands.
Joel Deruen in Bakersfield, California.
Matthias Milchinski in Stevenson Beach, California.
Edwin Mazurik in Memphis, Tennessee.
Jonathan Meyer in Xenia, Ohio.
Chisholm Cook in Bolvardy, Texas.
Michael...
Burf Fiend in Talmadge, Ohio.
Villarreal, Villarreal.
Sir Villarreal, I'm sure.
Troy Watson, Nathan Gray in Sebring, Florida.
The Polish Indian in Loveland, Colorado.
William Dolge in Bristolville, Ohio.
And last on the list is Jason Deluzio, who used to be in Chatsford, Pennsylvania, but appears to be in Miami Beach, living it up.
Yeah, Sir Jason, I might add.
These people are producers for show 13...
97, yeah.
And we'll be getting close to 1,400.
It's a short day today.
We didn't have as many donors as usual, but they're all appreciated.
You know, at the pace we're going, I think show 1,500 may coincide with...
Episode 1500.
Does that make sense?
You said show 1500 will coincide with episode 1500?
With our 15th anniversary.
I'm sorry.
With our 15th anniversary.
Maybe.
It's pretty close.
Yeah, it's damn close.
I think it's going to be maybe higher than that, but we'll see.
Okay.
Well, thank you very much to these producers who have brought it once again.
We really appreciate that.
Also, people who came in under $50 for the sustaining donations.
These are mainly PayPal subscriptions.
You can just keep it going, and it supports the show.
Very important because it gives us kind of a base to live on, and we appreciate that also very, very much.
If you'd like to learn how to become a producer...
Associate Executive Producer or Executive Producer of the No Agenda Show.
There's a website for it.
Your kids know the jingle.
Dvorak.org slash NA. Kyle, the Rain Man Rainey, says happy birthday to his smoking hot girlfriend, Brooklyn Rose, who turned 28 on November 4th.
Sir Howard, sir, happy birthday to Dame Sexy, November 5th was her birthday.
Brian Riley celebrated yesterday.
Angela Cumberra, her brother Joe, happy birthday to the Independence Day night, 56 today.
Bob Lowe turned 33 today.
Sir Craig of Northeast Georgia celebrates on the 9th of November.
Carl from London.
Happy birthday to his father, Jeff, from Pennsylvania, turning 70.
And Jessica Burke says happy birthday to her smoking hot husband, Nathan Burke, 31, on December 15th.
Ah, well, we are well on time.
Happy birthday for everybody here.
The best podcast in the universe.
It's your birthday, yeah!
Only one...
Only one.
Yes, we have one night.
And we're happy we have one.
If you are set, we'll do our one-night blade.
There you go.
Mr.
Stebby.
Uh, okay, I'm just gonna leave that there.
Boo-Berry, come on up on stage.
Thanks to your support of the Noah Jones Show and the amount of $1,000 or more, I am very proud to bring you up here on the podium with the Knights and the Dames at the round table and pronounce-icate thee as Sir Boo-Berry, Black Knight of the Mothman.
For you, we've got Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys, and Chardonnay.
Maybe you want to go a little bit more exquisite.
Well, in that case...
What do we have?
I can't find it.
Oh, we have...
I can't find my list.
There it is.
Rabbit meat, goat milk, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and gerbils.
Oh, yeah.
Mutton and meat.
That's what it is.
I can't believe I totally spaced on every single thing at the round table without my list.
Yeah, of course.
It's the drinking.
It's the drinking.
That's the problem.
Go to noagendanation.com slash rings, Sir Booberry, and order up what you need.
Eric Schill will take care of that for you.
And thank you again for supporting the No Agenda Show, the best podcast in the universe!
No Agenda Meetup!
It's like a party!
Yes, we have a number of meetup reports, and people are getting creative.
I like that.
This is the Joplin Meetup.
All right, John and Adam, this is Rick from the Itty Bitty Homestead.
We love you guys.
And, John, please turn your speakers down.
Hey, this is Charlene from the Itty Bitty Homestead at the Joplin Meetup.
We have the heads on six.
Unfortunately, Adam, yours got beaten up by my two-year-old.
Yay!
Sorry about that.
In the morning, Sleepy Joe's a douchebag.
Sir Spencer here.
And Dame DeLorean, representing Kansas City at the Joplin Meetup.
This is Justin from the Round Kind of Podcast, here at the Meetup in Joplin.
Wish you guys were here.
Hey, it's Megan with Round Kind of Podcast.
Hello, this is Baron Bonford from Joplin, Missouri.
This is America and all ships at sea.
This is Chris Mike, otherwise known as Baron of the Orange Combs on The Wrong Kind of Podcast.
Shout out to John and Adam.
Let's go Brandon.
And then this next report is novel, and I encourage people doing different things with these reports, so I enjoy this.
You have reached the No Agenda Ocala Meetup Feedback Hotline.
To hear your producer responses, please press 1.
This is Jarrett, and we are at the meetup in Ocala.
In the morning, gents.
This is Grant, attending my first meetup here in Ocala in the morning.
Mr.
Mark Ultra, checking in with my handler, Adam, still eagerly awaiting my sharpened trigger clip.
In the morning, gents.
This is Josh from McEnope Eve.
And I want to tell you right now, screw your freedom.
End of producer responses.
Start to delete.
Here's what's coming up.
No Agenda Meetup.
I like that.
Different.
Different.
That counts.
No Agenda Meetup wise.
This is noagendameetups.com.
You can see the calendar.
You can enter.
You can put your own meetup together.
And here's what's coming up on the calendar.
Deconstructing in the media.
That has already kicked off in Sterling Big Brewery in Media, Pennsylvania.
The Myrtle Beach Faux Carnival meetup starts today at 333.33 at Handley's Pub and Grub.
Tuesday, the Chicago See You Next Tuesday weekly meetup kicks off at 6 o'clock at Delilah's.
And on show day, Flight of the No Agenda 22 on Thursday the 11th.
Thank you for your S service.
I don't know.
4.30 at Copper Steel Grill.
Also on Thursday, Gateway to Sanity Meetup, 6.30 at the Global Brew Tap House in Rock Hill, Maryland.
We have the Veterans Day Farewell Bash, 7 p.m., Pangaea, Missoula, Montana.
Yes, it will be Veterans Day.
Is that November 11th, Veterans Day?
Maybe.
I think so.
So that's Missoula, Montana.
And then, oh man, we have meetups all the way, already listed all the way through the 20th of December.
So there is plenty for you to attend.
It's all around the world.
You cannot find a place where people wouldn't either have a meetup or would love to have one.
And if you can't find one near you, here's a tip.
Go ahead, create your own.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
It's like a party.
Sometimes you wanna go hang out with all the nights and days.
You wanna be where you won't be.
Triggered or held the flame.
You wanna be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
Yowza.
you Um...
ISOs.
Yes.
ISOs.
I think I have some ISOs.
Yes, in fact, I sure I have some ISOs.
I'll play mine.
And then we'll play yours.
Here is the first one.
Stop the spread of COVID. Okay.
This is all completely news to me.
And then this one.
Get him right in the butt.
I think that's a good one.
That has to be my favorite.
Yeah, it would be.
But I think it's all completely new to me.
It's actually better in terms of end of show.
Here's mine.
I've got...
I've got...
Iso Laugh.
Creepy.
Yes, Creepy Joe.
Hey Hey.
Hey Hey.
And Chill Pill.
Take a Chill Pill.
Sadly, I think I agree with you.
I think this is all completely news to me.
This is all completely news to me.
Probably the best one.
I think it is.
Okay.
I'll lock that one in there.
Groovy.
Now, there's a couple other things we need to talk about.
Well, we should talk about COP26 a bit.
Yeah.
Hell yeah.
I have...
What is this?
Oh, I have Janet Yellen.
Short clip.
And that's all I have, really.
Janet Yellen at COP26 just kind of explains what she's doing there.
Oh, she's explaining how it's going to work.
The private sector is ready to supply the financing to set us on a course to avoid the worst effects of climate change.
Now, so what she's saying is that the entire private sector is all in.
All in.
They're set to do it.
They're going to push you towards climate change.
You won't need any government push.
It's all going to be done by Nike and GE. Aren't we part of the private sector?
Yes.
Are we all in?
Are we going to start giving money to Samoa?
Well, I think when she says private sector, it's douchebags.
So we don't count.
She's talking about companies that are multinational monsters.
Yeah, the ones that are all in on environmental, social governance.
And they themselves are kind of forced into this.
Also not by the government.
By BlackRock, okay?
Let's just say it.
BlackRock is the one behind this.
CEOs representing trillions in assets are here to show their commitment.
Financial institutions with collective assets under management of nearly $100 trillion have come together under the Glasgow Financial Alliance.
That's the one we've got to find out more about, the Glasgow Financial Alliance.
For net zero or GFANS.
GFANS.
If these ambitions are realized, those portfolios will be carbon neutral by 2050 and significantly reduce emissions by 2030.
Oh, she was a liar.
She omitted the full title.
It's GFANZ, G-F-A-N-Z, Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero.
There you go.
Let's see who's in it.
Which companies are going to do this for us?
Oh, they don't have a list.
Oh, here we go.
Founding members of this are BDO, Bloomberg, Campbell.
These are all the Deloitte.
Oh, shit.
These are all the consultants.
Holy crap.
Founding members.
BDO, Bloomberg, Campbell, Littians, Deloitte, DeVere, Ernst& Young, Grant Thornton, KPMG, London Stock Exchange Group, Minerva Analytics, Moody's, Morningstar, PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Major corporation in there.
They're just a bunch of consultants and accountants, bookkeepers.
Yep.
But they're the ones that will show that the way to success is taking advantage of all of these, I'm sure, Tax breaks are something they get to finance this dystopian world.
Axa, Alliance, Aviva.
Here's how you can make money on the deal.
That's kind of it.
We can wrap pretty quickly.
I have a bunch of clips left, but I can push these off.
Come on.
I've got the COP26. I've got four clips about COP26. Yeah, I want to hear them.
This is important.
Okay, there's the COP26 NPR update, which is a start.
The United Nations Climate Conference continues in Glasgow, Scotland.
U.S. Envoy John Kerry says the meeting is off to a promising start.
The delegates are showing a greater sense of urgency than at previous meetings.
Kerry says several nations have promised to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions to zero over the next 30 years.
However, many activists are less impressed.
Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg said countries are talking a lot but accomplishing little.
The COP has turned into a PR event where leaders are giving beautiful speeches and announcing fancy commitments and targets.
While behind the curtains, the governments of the Global North countries are still refusing to take any drastic climate action.
Thousands of young people marched through the streets of Glasgow Friday demanding the world leaders take more action.
You know what we need?
We need to see Greta on a date.
Find some girl to set her up with.
No, I'm thinking maybe a young Hollywood star dude, someone up and coming, a young actor, something.
Johnny Depp.
God forbid, I hope not.
He's not the kind of boyfriend I'd like my daughter having.
So then they have, I got the COP26 protests in Glasgow.
We can play that, but let's skip that clip and move to these two.
Now, there was a little protest in Washington, D.C. I think it consisted of four people, but of course NPR had to cover it because it entailed a hunger strike of some millennials and a couple of Zoomers.
Oh, was this the Extinction Rebellion people?
Well, they're going to be extinct if they can't even show up.
If they don't eat, they'll be extinct, yes.
So I'm listening to this, and it's so pathetic for a number of reasons.
One, what is a hunger strike going to accomplish?
And do hunger strikes really work anymore for anybody except a prisoner at Gitmo, maybe?
So it's like, I don't think most people even know what a hunger strike is, let alone what is it supposed to accomplish.
But these...
I don't want to call them dingbats, but let's play Hunger Strike Over Climate Part 1.
A Capitol Police officer drives past 26-year-old Kiedis Guillermo.
He's sitting next to three other people in front of the steps of the U.S. Capitol building.
They're all in wheelchairs because they're exhausted, and you can hear it in Kiedis' voice.
I think as far as group morale, I think physically we definitely feel the effects of being on a hunger strike for 13 days.
A hunger strike.
No food, only water.
Hold on, stop, stop.
13 days.
Cesar Chavez, 36 days when he was the head of the Farm Workers Union.
The guys at Gitmo are going two months.
There's a hunger strike, typical hunger strikes a month.
13 days they cave in and they have to put themselves in wheelchairs.
Yeah.
Okay, Zoomer.
Let's play the rest of that clip.
As far as group morale, I think physically we definitely feel the effects of being on a hunger strike for 13 days.
A hunger strike.
No food, only water.
The point is to shake people awake and to bring the gravity of the moment forward.
The group has been protesting to put pressure on Congress, where key bills are being held up that would drastically cut U.S. carbon emissions.
The activists say they want legislation that matches their urgency of the climate crisis.
24-year-old Julia Padamos sits next to Kitas, who is 26.
The two came down together from Dallas.
I'm definitely scared.
I'm scared for myself and my friends.
I think the fear of what climate change will continue to do to the planet, I think that scares me more.
The organizers start to push the wheelchairs to another location.
We are walking to the Senate side because Joe Manchin is holding a conference.
That's Ed Brown, a volunteer with the group.
He says they want to meet with Senator Manchin.
Last month Manchin said that he would not support the White House's central plan to cut climate emissions.
Basically killing the proposal.
Nikayla Jefferson is 24 and has been an activist for years.
She says that when she heard that Manchin blocked the country's most ambitious climate plan, it was a breaking point.
We were like, we gotta go.
We gotta do something right now.
Nikayla and the other activists had started talking after the news broke.
Some had lived through deadly winter storms earlier this year that shut down the power grid in Texas.
Did they by any chance do man-on-the-street interviews, what they thought of the hunger strikers?
I wish.
Because here would have been my response.
This is a win-win.
Okay, and on NPR, that would have been cut.
So let's play part two of these guys.
For Emma Govea, who was 18, she saw wildfires rage all summer long in California.
She knew that she had to do something big.
Yeah, hunger strike is a really crazy thing, and something that I don't take lightly.
But it did feel like a moment where we needed to do something very drastic and very big.
They started their hunger strike on a Wednesday, full of energy.
They parked themselves on the sidewalk so Capitol lawmakers could see them when they went into work.
And they had some small wins.
Members of Congress and people working in the White House stopped to talk to them.
But their health started to deteriorate a lot quicker than they had expected.
By day three, Kedis goes to the hospital for dizziness and blurred vision.
Ha!
By day 5, 20-year-old Abby Leedy is in pain.
My hips and my knees were in so much pain.
I just was curled on the floor.
I'm crying.
But then comes a moment that they've been waiting for.
The protesters get a tip that Senator Manchin will be in downtown D.C., and they scramble to get there.
Wait, wait, wait.
They can scramble, but yet they're falling down, they're weak, they're in wheelchairs.
They have some helpers, I guess, pushing the wheelchair.
Pushing the wheelchair.
Downtown D.C., and they scramble to get there.
As the senator approaches, Abby looks at him from her wheelchair.
I have dreams.
Young people here have dreams.
And if we don't pass, the United States does not pass.
Massive climate action this fall.
It is too late.
This is one of our last chances.
Please come to my office.
Joe Manchin, I'm talking to you right now.
We can't get in on a meeting.
We've been calling.
We're trying to get a meeting with you.
Manchin leaves as Abby watches a car drive away.
On day 10, Abby's health gets worse and she has to go to the ER. Oh my goodness.
After day 10.
After days of the ER. But also...
Cesar Chavez, 36 days.
The stuff she's spouting.
This is our last chance!
So sad.
Hey, I like what you said there earlier.
Okay, Zoomer.
I hadn't actually heard a boomer say that.
That's cool.
That works.
Well, somebody's got to say it.
I like it.
Thank you for that.
I shall try this in my own life.
Okay, Zoomer.
Because then if I say, okay, boomer, it's like, no, I Zoomed you before you could boom me, so uh-uh.
Deny.
Let's see, coming up next on the No Agenda stream, we have Sir Abel Kirby and Sir Cold Acid with The Rare Encounter.
Episode Swazzelnuff69.
Well, that's promising.
Yes.
Oh, end of show mixes.
We've got some good ones.
Bill Mountainay.
We've got, let's see, the Doomsday device.
We have Tom Starkweather.
And then we also have the, shoot, the Bojo mix.
I've got to find out who did that one.
They all love them all.
Coming to you from the heart of Texas Hill Country, FEMA Region No.
6 in the morning, everybody.
I am Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C. Dvorak.
We will return on Thursday, Veterans Day apparently, for another episode of the No Agenda Podcast.
Until then, adios mofos!
Such. Such.
Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such.
Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such.
Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such. Such.
Good night.
Good night.
Your Royal Highnesses, Your Excellencies, Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen, please welcome the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Boris Johnson.
Boris Johnson.
Boris, Boris, Boris Johnson.
Good afternoon, everybody.
Welcome to Glasgow.
It's serious.
It's one minute to midnight.
Now is the beginning of the end.
We have the ideas, we have the technology, we have a doomsday device.
Say goodbye to whole cities.
Goodbye, goodbye to Miami.
Goodbye, goodbye to Alexandria.
Goodbye, goodbye to Shanghai.
The world's great cities.
All lost.
Goodbye, goodbye, cars.
Goodbye, goodbye, children.
Goodbye.
Goodbye.
Cars.
Power and technology.
Yes.
It's going to be hard.
Locusts.
Swarm.
And you could add more wildfires and cyclones.
Twice as many.
Locusts.
Swarm.
Bankers, corporations and the NGOs jeopardize the food supply.
Locusts swarm.
The red digital clock ticks down remorselessly to a destination that will end human life as we know it.
Thank you very much, and good luck to all of us.
This ought to be good.
You know, people believe what they see with their own eyes.
They believe the truth, and they're not going to be gaslit anymore.
What?
The White House's plan to inoculate workers at American companies hit a snag Saturday.
I have to wear a yellow wristband at all times, basically shouting to the world, I'm uncleaned and I'm vaxxed.
Because American families are upset with the control.
I have no responsibility for the current pandemic.
And what you've done is change the definition on your website to try to cover your ass, basically.
Gain of function is a very nebulous term.
The Delta variant of Trumpism.
In other words, Junkin, same disease, but spreads a lot faster.
The weirdest and most surprising news story of the day.
Uh-oh.
Is this about arousal again?
Critical race theory...
Which isn't real.
Turn the suburbs 15 points.
All across the country, the Democrats, some of these people need to go to a woke detox center or something.
We are framing too many issues in terms of race, and it just continues to divide us.
White parents don't like the idea of teaching about race.
If this were a movie, you would have walked out.
By now, we don't have leaders who actually respect the American people.
I don't have that for you today.
That's not going to happen.
By now, a lot of you have probably heard the chant, let's go, Brandon, all over the place.
If you guys keep sending that garbage out, yeah.
At this point, they're dangerous.
They're dangerous to our national security.
Moving around with just stupid wokeness.
What percent of CDC employees are vaccinated?
History will figure that out.
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