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Dec. 12, 2021 - No Agenda
03:20:29
1407: Gob of Goo
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I'm surprised they don't make us drink it.
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, December 12th, 2021.
This is your award-winning Gibbonation Media Assassination, episode 1407.
This is No Agenda.
Watching my Rhea and your Rhea, and broadcasting live from the heart of Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region No.
6 in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where now it's water buffalo milk.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
Wow, you threw me off.
I was going to do something completely different, but water buffalo milk.
Nice!
Do tell.
The kind of stuff we get.
So they have this one store where I shopped.
They have all this trendy stuff.
Now, the latest thing, everyone's talking about it.
Is water buffalo milk.
Now, water buffalo milk.
Hold on one second, John.
Just so you know, I have two notes from dairy farmers about A2 milk, so I'm already behind the curve.
Oh yeah, you're way behind.
Okay, hit me with the buffalo milk.
So, the water buffalo milk, which a lot of water buffaloes are grown in Texas, as a matter of fact, for water buffalo milk, mozzarella.
There's a Texas, I think they're still in business, in Dallas, a cheese maker that makes real mozzarella.
Mozzarella is supposed to be made from this milk.
Yeah, water buffalo.
And so, uh...
There were a couple...
Now they sell it.
When we drove the tanks for Sir Mark's birthday, they had water buffaloes there.
We'd just, like, drive right at them, and they were so used to it, they'd just be like, eh, whatever.
They wouldn't even move.
With the tank.
They wouldn't even move.
Who are you kidding, dude?
We're more valuable than that tank.
No kidding.
So, uh...
It's interesting.
It doesn't taste...
It's not like a really delicious milk, but it's not an off-flavored product at all.
It tastes just like kind of a bland or regular cow milk, except it has one remarkable characteristic, and I think maybe it's one of the reasons they use it for the cheese.
It is so white.
It's whiter than white.
It is beyond imaginable how white it is.
It is David Duke's favorite drink.
That's how white it is.
It might be.
And this, of course, has to be not homogenized or pasteurized.
I think it's pasteurized, but it's not homogenized.
I don't know about the pasteurized.
So there's always a gabagoo at the top.
And it's extremely thick gabagoo.
I mean, it's not like normal...
It's nothing like a gob of goo for your breakfast cereal.
A gob of goo.
Hey kids, you can have cornflakes with a gob of goo.
Well, if you get the goat milk, it's always available.
Now they've got the goat milk in the containers, the water buffalo milk.
Raw cow milk is there.
Well, listen to this.
Hey, Adam, Farmer Claire here.
I love our producers.
I want to give you some insight to A2 milk, as that is what I produce here in New Zealand.
How about that?
Now, it's not her, not Farmer Claire.
She has cows.
A2 milk comes from cows that produce the A2 beta casein protein types.
Cows can be either A1A1, A1A2, or A2A2, or LGGBTQIAAPK. This occurs through natural breeding.
No DNA modification.
Only if they are both A2A2 can they produce the particular protein.
We can find...
Yeah, go ahead.
Just to interrupt.
So Alexander's Creamery, another operation out here, they – because they've had this out for a while and it's A2A2.
And I've always wondered why – what's the point?
Why don't you just say A2?
Why don't you just make it A2?
Why A2A2?
I mean I'm thinking of Hamlet.
It's an obvious marketing issue.
I agree.
It's dumb.
Okay, let her finish.
Well, we can find out what the cows produce through milk blood samples or DNA testing.
My herd is DNA profiled, and so that is how I know.
Interestingly enough, the science is not settled on A2 milk, but consumers swear by the milk having less of an impact on your gut.
So it's apparently good for young and old.
At the moment, they're getting about 20 cc's per kilogram, I think.
Bonus on our milk that we produce.
It's 20C slash KG slash MS. I have no idea what that means.
We are lucky to have...
Okay.
I don't know what that means.
Per kilograms for whatever MS is.
Okay, go ahead.
Just read.
Well, no.
And then we have...
But does she explain...
Hold on.
So it's supposed to be better for the gut.
My wife gets nauseous when she drinks it.
She cannot have A2 milk.
Jesse, on the other hand...
Only can drink A2 milk suddenly out of the blue.
Huh.
All of a sudden.
That's interesting.
Yeah, I think, yeah.
Okay.
Well, there's a couple other notes in there from other dairy farmers.
I just thought that was really interesting how many people know about this stuff.
I had no idea the A2 milk.
I'll ask Christina.
She has a pretty severe intolerance towards it.
She can drink it.
I'll ask her.
Yeah, I will.
I'll have her check it out.
Before we go any further, we must congratulate the flying Dutchman, Mux Verstappen, Formula One champion, car number 33, beats out Hamilton.
This is the 26-year-old Dutchman.
Is this the guy touring the world with his family?
I thought that was the Flying Dutchman.
No, that's the something of the delicious family or whatever.
No, this is our pride and joy of the Netherlands.
Notice how I'm Dutch now all of a sudden.
But yeah, he just...
Whatever's convenient.
I think it's a big deal.
It's pretty cool.
Then we had, quite surprising, I didn't really even realize it until I saw the video last night, man, those tornadoes that just ripped through Kentucky.
Holy crap!
Yeah, they were so bad.
I think 80 or 90 people, they think, are dead?
At least.
70, the last I heard, but it could be.
Where's your clip?
Hold on.
Tornadoes report.
NPR report?
Yeah, let's start with that, but then I got a better one.
Go on.
Portions of seven states in the south and midwest are facing devastation after overnight thunderstorms spawned deadly and destructive tornadoes.
Glenn Remick is city commissioner in Kingston Springs, Tennessee, some 20 miles southwest of Nashville.
It just basically went right down Highway 7.
It kind of skipped over areas in Kingston Springs, and it landed.
And of course, like a tornado, it tickles here, it tickles there, and then it just plows.
It plowed down trees, power lines, and homes.
Scores are dead.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear says at least 70 people have been killed in his state alone.
And he's declared a state of emergency, which is NPR's Deepa Shivaram reports.
President Biden has approved.
President Biden and Kentucky Governor Andy Bashir spoke over the phone about ongoing relief efforts and damage assessment from the series of tornadoes that hit the state late Friday night.
The White House said in a statement that the president has directed FEMA and other federal authorities to provide the speediest assistance possible.
In western Kentucky, which was the hardest hit area, the storm toppled a candle factory in Mayfield and left the entire town without any water supply.
Authorities there say the recovery efforts could take days.
Biden also held calls with governors from Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, and Tennessee, which were also struck by tornadoes.
Steve Bishivaram, NPR News.
Do you see the size of that thing?
Yeah, a couple of things.
First of all, there's non-sequiturs throughout this thing.
It's ridiculous.
Listen to that, especially the little girl.
Well, that's because they have no information.
They're just trying to fill air time.
No, but that doesn't mean they have to do a non-sequitur, which means, oh, the candle factory blew up, so there's no more water.
What?
Candle factories use an enormous amount of water.
That's why.
Do they now?
Yes.
That's how you cool them.
They all have to be dipped in water.
Yeah, they cool down in water.
They can't reuse the water?
Look, look, look.
What am I, a candle man?
Anyway.
I know a little bit because...
Since when?
I thought if a state...
This I could be wrong on.
But if a state declares...
If it's a state of emergency, the state declares it.
Does Biden have to approve?
It approves the money.
No, but does he have to approve the state of emergency?
It's what it sounds like.
Again, another poorly executed...
No, that's a good point.
So the governor...
I don't think so.
This governor can do what he wants.
Right.
He can say the state of emergency, but you need it recognized by federal government in order to get the cash.
That's different than Biden approving the state of emergency, which is what they said in that NPR report.
Because, of course, at NPR, they want a national government.
They don't like the idea of states' rights or individual states.
I'm just saying.
No, no.
It's a very valid point, and it's ingrained.
It's endemic there.
Now, I do have one other little clip that's short.
Is Biden on the tornadoes?
I want to provide an update on the deadly and devastating tornadoes that are...
We moved across several states in the center of the United States, including touching down across 227 miles of Kentucky alone.
I'm monitoring the situation very closely since early this morning.
This is likely to be one of the largest tornado outbreaks in our history.
And the debris that you see scattered all over the hurricane's path.
Hurricane?
Did he say hurricane?
Yeah, that's what he said.
It's a tornado.
He said, it's scattered all over the hurricane, not by the way, singular, the hurricane's path.
Geez.
Now, Mr.
High Energy there, it sounds like it's falling asleep at the podium.
Yeah.
He says the hurricanes, the debris is all over the hurricane's path.
Okay, well, nobody, of course, mentions this.
It's pretty important that we know there's a distinction.
The president knows the distinction between hurricanes and tornadoes.
And I'm just going to say it.
These were not natural occurring tornadoes.
Anybody who knows anything about the Midwest knows that there is a natural attraction of trailer homes to tornadoes.
There was not a trailer home in this past, so this has to be HAARP. It's no other way.
It makes no sense.
You know, they could have left.
At this point...
Not to argue this silly point, but at this point, it seems to me that the trailer homes thing is a given and not reported on anymore.
Oh, hmm, maybe.
Yeah, that's the way the media works.
Now, I did get another clip from the president because he was kind of led down the path by some handy reporters.
Because we know what the real cause of tornadoes are.
It's not harp, you silly podcaster.
Well, all that I know is that...
The intensity of the weather across the board.
It has some impact as a consequence of the warming of the planet and the climate change.
The specific impact on these specific storms, I can't say at this point.
I'm going to be asking the EPA and others to take a look at that, but the fact is that we all know everything is more intense when the climate is warming.
Everything.
And obviously it has some impact here, but I can't give you a quantitative read on that.
So the part that I take exception with there is we know that everything is impacted when the climate warms.
Everything is impacted.
And the number of tornadoes in the very hot sub-Saharan deserts in Africa.
Yes.
It's out of control.
It just has to stop.
It has to stop all those tornadoes in the desert.
I love the term explainer.
This seems to be cropping up more and more.
I know it used to be a thing, gosh, maybe in the 70s or 80s.
Do you recall explainers ever kind of coming and going?
I don't.
All I remember is deciders.
George Bush was the decider.
Well, no, explainer is...
This is a news term.
This is what the Associated Press is doing.
Here's an explainer.
Explainer, colon.
Was tornado outbreak related to climate change?
Yeah, and then you go through this whole thing, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But the explainer part, I don't know.
Something about it.
It's news to me.
It's like something's supposed to be, like, official.
It's an explainer.
It's an explainer for you dumb shits.
That's maybe why I don't like it.
That's what it should say.
That's what they're trying to apply.
Hey, dumb shits.
Hey, dumb shits.
We'll explain it to you.
It's climate change.
Stick with climate change for a second because I didn't quite get this outright on the last episode, which is the AdBlue in Australia.
Now, AdBlue, I first heard about this the last time I was visiting Christina in August in the Netherlands.
Taxi Eric has a diesel and we stopped at a gas station and we're just hanging out and I'm like, what the hell is this?
You have two gas tanks.
Yeah, one is for diesel, one is for the AdBlue.
A-D-B-L-U-E. And he said, I have to have that because if I don't, then I can get a fine if they see that I'm not running AdBlue.
So that's where I heard of this and it kind of dropped off my radar.
But then the urea shortage, that's where I messed it up.
Did we talk about this some years ago?
About AdBlue?
Yeah, or some additive you had to have a second tank for diesel in Europe.
Well, maybe that's what this is.
I think we talked about it.
I don't remember anything about it, but I do remember it.
Well, it's made with...
Well, I have an explainer about AdBlue, and this will explain it to you really quickly.
What is AdBlue?
What does it do?
It's biodegradable, completely harmless solution designed to help diesel vehicles meet the latest Euro exhaust emission regulations.
It's made of 32.5% urea and 67.5% deionized water.
You may have seen rumors that it contains pig urine, but that is factually incorrect.
Oh, all right.
How does it work?
This is what will interest you.
Typically, modern diesels utilize a treatment system called Selective Catalytic Reduction, SCR.
The SCR blends the AdBlue with the engine's exhaust gases, which creates a chemical reaction to convert nitrogen oxides into nitrogen, water, and carbon dioxide.
As a result, the gases emitted are less harmful to the environment and our health.
Oh, that explains something.
I've always wondered what they did with all the excess pig urine they have in these giant farms.
Yeah.
So this is what you do.
You put it in and make people burn it in the after gas.
That's interesting.
Well, I've always said that a diesel is a great vehicle to have, a diesel engine, because you can pretty much urinate in the tank and you might get it to start.
I mean, those things will run on anything.
They run on a lot.
Here's the kicker.
They don't run on pee, but they run on a lot.
This is what happened.
This pee is not introduced into the fuel.
This is after the combustion pee.
That's what's interesting.
Yeah, that's because that evaporates the pig urine, sends it into the atmosphere, and this gets rid of it.
What else are you going to do with this stuff?
So here's the question.
What happens when you run out of AdBlue?
Well, SCR-equipped cars typically reduce engine performance, with some not starting at all.
I don't know how that works.
If AdBlue levels are completely depleted, that must be a sensor.
That can't be...
That's a switch.
There's no other way in the world.
Do not worry about it, though, because a low-level warning light will appear on your vehicle's dashboard long before you run out.
But people are going to run out in Australia.
Australia's agriculture, mining and trucking industries could be ground to a halt next year thanks to a global shortage of diesel exhaust fluid.
Joining me now is our business reporter Ed Boyd.
Ed, modern diesel engines need AdBlue to operate and the supply apparently is drying up.
Supply is getting in very, very short supply at the moment, Kieran.
There's a big problem with the chemical...
Let's stop this clip for a second.
First of all, The diesel engine does not need AdBlue to operate.
No, that's what we just heard.
It's bullshit.
So this guy's, this is bogus.
Either these people don't know what they're talking about, or they're lying.
I'll go for don't know what they're talking about for 300, Alex?
Of course they don't know.
The whole thing is a scam.
Of course the trucks will run.
But no, we're running out of AdBlue.
Supply is getting in very, very short supply at the moment, Kieran.
There's a big problem with the chemical that is used to make AdBlue called urea.
And China are one of the largest producers of urea in the world, and that chemical is used in both AdBlue and also food.
Yeah, largest producer of pigs.
They are the number one producer of pigs in China.
Who?
Who?
China.
Oh, well, yes.
Pork, pork, pork.
Okay, so what you're saying is, let me just play this back, because I like it, had not considered this.
What you're saying is the Chinese, in collusion with American corporations and the government because of climate regulations for this stuff, have come up with a novel way to get rid of their pig piss.
And that is by making us put it in our cars and squirt it into the atmosphere.
- I'm surprised they don't make us drink it. - Nice! - China are one of the largest producers of urea in the world, and that chemical is used in both AdBlue and also fertilizers.
And China have stopped exporting urea several months ago due to fertilizer prices in China skyrocketing.
So they want to bring down the price of fertilizer in their own country.
To do that, they've stopped exporting urea.
Australia does produce small amounts of urea as well, But our production is nowhere near enough to keep up with demand.
So all modern diesel engines require AdBlue to operate.
It helps reduce emissions from their diesel motors.
So it's a key ingredient.
Apparently, we've got more than six weeks of supply left at the current stages.
But if we don't boost production by early next year, there's going to be serious problems for the trucking industry, large-scale machinery use in agriculture, and also shortages of fertiliser too.
So this is a big problem heading into the election campaign.
Ah, there it is!
Could there be a political angle to it?
Well, yes, of course.
Blame Trump.
Of course.
Peakyuria is where we're at, y'all.
Peakyuria.
This is like the nonsense.
There's a couple of operations that find...
Waste fluoride from certain manufacturing facilities.
Put it in our drinking water.
They convince the public, some of these small towns, especially if they're run by a bunch of dummies, which is most of them, to use it in their drinking water.
With a bunch of bogus data that's not true.
Austin, Texas.
Austin, Texas fluoridates their water.
Sure.
There's your Alex Jones moment, everybody.
Yes, same thing.
So the Chinese have found a way, because the pig urine and the pig poo...
It's a problem.
Pig urine is a problem.
It's a huge problem.
There's a state of certain areas of Virginia and other places in the United States where they grow a lot of these pigs.
It's just bad.
stinks there's not enough sewage treatment to take care of the problem but this sounds like a really good idea let's come up with some scam to squirt this stuff into the exhaust of a diesel engine vaporize it and then send it going into the send it into the atmosphere where it won't stink up to place what could possibly go wrong Oh my god.
Some of the stuff that goes on is beyond me.
So I'm sure that we have pig farmers.
We got hog farmers amongst our producers.
Let's get the inside dope, yo.
On the pig piss.
You know, the idea that somebody said they're burning pig urine out of the blue, which is what triggered my thinking here.
Yeah.
This stuff doesn't come out of nowhere.
No, the troll room blew up the minute I brought it up.
They're like, oh, pig piss, pig piss.
And I didn't know.
And then I'm reading this article and it says it right there.
It said...
Actually, it said something a little different, didn't it?
It didn't say this is not true.
It said...
What is it?
Pig urine.
This is too funny.
Here it is.
You may have seen rumors, rumors, that's you trolls, that it contains pig urine.
But that is factually incorrect.
No, it's true.
It's factually incorrect because it's not pig urine per se.
Exactly.
Yeah, it's treated to make urea.
It's pasteurized pig piss.
There we go.
It's pasteurized and homogenized for urea.
Now, can we not create this urea with this?
It's two different things.
The urea is not the same as the PPP? PPP? Yeah, the pasteurized pig piss.
PPP. Oh, the P3. The P3. It could become a drink with the water buffalo milk.
Oh my god!
PPP with alcohol.
It's the new White Claw.
Exit strategy!
Hello!
Yeah, I'm sure you'll go over.
If you make a cool can and you put on that can pig piss, it will sell like crazy.
It will sell like crazy.
Especially in the frat houses of Stanford.
Well, it's clear that the elites think of us as farm animals anyway as we stay in Australia.
Listen to this little gem.
I appreciate greatly the work done by all the premiers and chief ministers in seeing those national vaccination rates get to where they are.
We've got one more state to get through that gate.
It's a bit like getting the sheep through the gate into the run.
Yeah, it's a bit like getting the sheep through the gate into the run.
Everyone's got to get vaxxed.
You sheep!
You sheep, sheep, sheep!
That's exactly what he's saying.
They've got nomenclature issues in Australia.
They've got a prime minister.
Just rename him Warden.
Rename all your leaders Wardens.
I like it.
Get used to it.
You remember that?
I do.
Good old days.
They remember it, yeah.
Yeah, the Warden.
Oh my goodness.
We're laughing, but it's really not funny.
It's really not.
Well, yeah, so we can laugh because we're not there.
Yeah.
That's why I'm...
I mean, but I get all the emails.
I see you.
They had a meetup in Brisbane.
They sent a written meetup report because they're afraid.
I'm sure there's people who really will be in trouble with their vocations, etc.
Yeah, you can't put your voice on anything because they'll track you down like a dog.
Yes, exactly.
Very concerning.
I heard...
This is a great quick clip.
You know, everyone's looking for ways out, although, you know, personally, I'm like, I'm standing, I'm saying no, and here's why.
But people have to make different choices.
So there's, you know, possible exemptions.
Medical exemptions seem very rare.
The whole religious exemption is just out of control.
The questions that are being asked.
Well, before you play that, then, I want you to play this, just to emphasize your point.
Play this COVID Navy fires officer.
An unvaccinated U.S. Navy commander has been let go for refusing to get tested for COVID-19.
NPR's Amy Held reports it's the first time the Navy has fired an officer for defying a mandate that took effect last month.
Commander Lucian Kins was second in command of the USS Winston Churchill.
Now, he's been relieved of those duties.
A Navy spokesman tells NPR Kins' religious waiver for the vaccine was denied.
An appeal is underway.
The Navy has so far not granted a single religious waiver, though thousands have been requested across the military branches.
Vaccines are mandated for all service members.
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby says Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has a goal.
The Secretary's expectation is 100% vaccination.
That's what he wants.
Now, the Pentagon is considering requiring booster shots as well.
Yeah, no religious exemptions.
In the Navy.
In the U.S. Navy.
That guy was...
In the U.S. Navy.
Well, that's that guy, that Austin guy.
That guy's a creep.
Hey, this guy...
Big tall doofus.
This guy was second in command of a ship?
That's not just an officer.
That's...
What is that?
What are you then...
Assistant backup commander?
There's got to be a term for it.
I don't know what it is.
We don't know.
Here's an example.
This is a call-in to a podcast.
He runs the place where the captain's not running it.
Here's a call-in to a podcast.
It's a very short clip.
Of someone who successfully got a religious exemption with almost no hassle.
I'm not advocating for any of this, but I thought it was interesting.
And given the current climate of the 30% who are in mass formation...
It might actually be something worth thinking about.
I called in, I asked about the vaccine exemption, and I got it.
Nice.
I just wanted to at least pass along a little bit of good news before I go.
How did you get it?
So I filed a religious exemption as a Satanist, because one of the Satanist tenets is that one's own body is inviolable and subject to one's own will alone.
There you go.
File as a Satanist.
Oh my God.
Are you kidding me?
So a Satanist can try it in the Navy.
I'd like to see if that works.
That would turn some heads.
Yeah, I believe this.
I believe this.
This is how crazy we've gotten.
Yeah, Satanists are good to go.
Christian, get out of here.
Get out.
Screw off.
Because no one wants to ask the hard questions of the Satanists.
Like, just give it to them.
And it's easy to say, oh, you believe in Jesus?
Prove it.
Show me that you're so cool.
Walk across my swimming pool.
So, no.
Yeah, someone should give it a shot.
What do you got to lose?
We've got to get these people out of office.
What do you got to lose?
We've got some gaffes.
The gaffes are back.
The vaccine virus gaffes.
And they're pretty interesting.
Oh, really?
There seemed to be a lull.
There was a lull there for a bit.
And luckily, the gaffing has picked up.
And I'm not sure what's triggering it.
But it is the virus vaccine gaffe.
We know it all.
We love it.
Here's the anti-constitutionalist Fareed Zakaria on CNN. Fatima, welcome.
Let me begin by asking you, I know that the president of South Africa, and I think you have been critical of the travel bans that have been put in place by many countries, including the United States, toward people coming out of South Africa.
Is it not fair...
As a way of trying to prevent the vaccine spread, even though it is obviously not going to work perfectly.
The vaccine spread.
We have to prevent the vaccine spread.
That's a good one.
How does that guy even have work?
I wish Malone would buy up that place and fire him first.
He has so much work.
Do you remember that he was in Ukraine speaking at some huge symposium?
This guy makes bank on being an elite.
All he needs is that one hour a week on television.
I know how this works.
When I was doing my syndicated radio show, and I was pretty much done with MTV, but I still had a contract, there was always this pressure like, hey man, just keep at least one hour a week or something so you're still on there.
Because then you can use it to market everything else.
So that's what he does, his books, his appearances, going to symposia.
But this next clip was interesting in a whole different context.
As it turns out, the CEO of BioNTech, who really developed the technology that they licensed to Pfizer for the manufacturing, who has the unfortunate, the real Mengele voice, that's a very good German, he has now come out saying, no, no, he's not vaccinated.
And there's a legal reason for it, which he fails to kind of explain in this clip, but he says a heck of a lot more.
The gaffe, the gaffe comes from the question.
Personal questions.
I know that you don't particularly, that you're not particularly fond of answering personal questions, but you and your wife, Dr.
Truet, you play such a central role in the development of the virus.
I have heard that you yourself...
You gotta love that.
That's a gem.
That's a beauty.
The guy should have said something about it.
But I want to play his answer about not being vaccinated.
Hey, he couldn't say anything about it because it's true.
Oh, yeah.
You and your wife, Dr.
Tuerci, you play such a central role in the development of the virus.
I have heard that you yourself have not taken the vaccine yet.
Why not?
So I am legally not allowed to take the vaccine at the moment, we of course consider.
I'm so sorry that your voice is like this because it will sound very strange in the Nuremberg 2.0 trials.
To make that possible.
It is more important for us that our co-workers and partners get vaccinated.
So our goal is to produce more than 1.3 billion doses in 2021.
And that can only be done if we can really continue to work 24-7 without any interruption.
And we need to ensure...
So at this point, what I'm hearing him say is...
We can't legally get it.
And then he goes into this whole thing like, we've got to produce a lot.
We can't have any interruption.
To me, it kind of sounds like he's saying, you know, when people take the shot, they get sick, they die off, their productivity goes down.
We can't have that.
We're producing money.
We're making money.
We're printing this shit here.
You know, besides the fact that this is...
Let's stop right now and give you a clip of the day for that discovery.
Holy crap.
Well, thank you very much.
Clip of the day.
This clip makes me wonder whether the Pfizer guy ever got the vaccine.
Yeah.
Using the same logic.
Of course.
Of course.
They know what this stuff is.
They know how dangerous this vaccine is.
They know the risks.
So they wouldn't be...
Yeah, sure I got the vaccine.
Here, let me take a glass of it.
I mean, no, no.
They stay away from it.
DDT. Yeah.
But what's interesting here is that he's just not answering the question.
And...
The U.S. media would have stopped with this and said, oh yeah.
The German actually tries to push a little bit.
So our goal is to produce more than 1.3 billion doses in 2021.
And that can only be done if we can really continue to work 24-7 without any interruption.
And we need to ensure that we protect the co-workers and our team members from COVID-19 infection because that would mean interruption and delay and waste of vaccine doses.
And therefore, we consider to make an extra batch independent from the vaccine.
Wait a minute.
What is this extra batch you are making?
What is this?
Interruption and delay and waste of vaccine doses and therefore we consider to make an extra batch.
A small batch.
Independent from the European contingent available to collaboration partners who are supporting us and to our team members.
So he still didn't really answer the question, but he said we're making an extra batch for all the people who are working so hard on making the batches.
I think that's what he's saying.
And that will be for them.
He's dancing.
But I understand.
Why are you not legally allowed to take the vaccine?
Because you know that there is a priority.
Harmony, Harmony, Harmony, what is it?
Harmony, Harmony, Harmony.
As you know, there is a rule, there is a priority.
Why are you not legally allowed to take the vaccine?
Because you know that there is a priority.
The vaccine is not allowed to be taken outside of this priority list.
And what is also important, we were even not allowed to participate in clinical trials because the law...
Because, because, because...
Even not allowed to participate in clinical trials.
Because, per law, it is not possible to include company people into such trials.
Who gives a shit about the trial?
Have you been vaxxed, mofo?
Fine.
But now we have to deal with the more important challenge.
That we need to ensure functionality of our whole company, of our teams, and therefore this is needed, and I think we will find a legal and fair solution for that.
The guy is saying that it's dangerous to take this vaccine, and that's why they don't want to, because they could lose productivity.
That's all he's really saying.
He could lose productivity.
Yes, yes, his company.
The vaccine companies could plow ahead.
They don't need him.
Well, he's making an extra batch.
We must make more than 1.6 billion vaccines.
This is a very indicting clip.
I mean, it really tells you.
I mean, again, it makes me wonder whether the Pfizer guy actually got the vaccine or just the saline shot.
Oh, please.
Because this guy is just like, whoa, I'm not touching this stuff.
Forget it.
That's what he was really saying.
He's saying, well, no, I'm not touching this stuff.
Forget it.
It's crazy that anyone would take this shot.
And for that very reason is why your wish is coming true.
You know, you hate soccer.
You don't think it's proper football.
And all those numb nuts, they all took the vaccine.
They're dropping like flies.
And our professional football players got whatever.
Well, we had a guy die.
Yeah, but he was X player.
It doesn't count in my book.
Yeah, but he's only 33, the magic number.
I know.
He could have still been a player.
I mean, he was that good.
Hey, I'm all on board with this, but I think because he was not a player, he got the vaccine.
That's my point, is the players didn't get it.
But wait, let's just stay with the Germans for a second.
This guy, German, and I got no problem with Germans.
These Germans I got a problem with.
Listen to what they're doing now in der Schule.
Well, I mean, yeah, there's some pretty scary stories.
I mean, I just have to go north of Austria, which is obviously Germany.
And there are three stories, I think, that tell a really good story.
The first one was reported in Die Welt, which is the equivalent of The Guardian.
In Germany.
And it's essentially about the ritual humiliation of children who are asked to go to the front of the class and state their vaccination status daily.
Those who are vaccinated are applauded.
Those who are not have to explain why they're not.
That's the one story I think that really kind of should raise an alarm bell for people who are for the mandate.
The other one...
How about that?
They make kids come to the front of the class, state your vaccine status.
If you're not vaxxed, you have to say, why not?
Now, a lot of kids...
I was a former kid.
Yes, you were a former kid.
A lot of kids would go to the front of the class and vaxxed and say, and lie!
So this would be encouraging lying, which, you know, in this case probably is a good thing.
And you get applauded for lying.
Wow.
I would, if I were chairman and I had Hans, I said, Hans, you go to school without your fox.
And when the teacher puts you in the front, you say, I'm not fox because I'm a Satanist.
Telling you.
Telling you.
That would shut the teacher up.
The other one is the discussion of wristbands for people to go shopping.
Oh, come on.
Come on.
Move it up a little bit.
Wrist, elbow, arm.
Come on.
Star on the chest.
You can do it, Germany.
Those people who don't have the wristbands won't be able to go shopping.
Yeah!
...across a multitude of stores.
The third one, which I think is possibly more reminiscent of 1930s Germany, was an attack on coffee shops who were giving out coffees for free for people who were either vaxxed or unvaxxed.
And that was in Berlin, and it was reported in the Tagespiegel.
And in fact, the campaign against these various coffee shops was launched by the Tagespiegel itself.
Oh, there's new media.
Same everywhere.
Same everywhere.
Yeah, the media's behind it all.
Same everywhere.
It's unreal.
Now, rumors.
Well, you know, the thing about the Germans, and to a lesser extent in this country, too, the Germans during the war and during the 30s and during the inflationary periods, they developed a very elaborate black market.
So the idea of getting these wristbands on people that are unvaxxed, it seems trivial.
No problem.
For them.
For them, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, here we have, well, there is a popular culture of wristband privilege.
I mean, this is in the club, this is backstage at the concert.
Disneyland and Universal Studios, you get the wristband to go to the front of the line.
Yep.
You ever have one of those?
Yeah.
A winner.
I once had Eli Roth.
Remember him?
No.
He's the bear Jew in Pulp Fiction, but he also has done a lot of kind of mid-low to mid-budget horror movies.
I hung out with him a bit in Los Angeles, and on Fright Night at Universal Studios, I was his guest.
And so you get a person who just walks you right past, and everyone's like, Hey, Eli, Eli, Eli!
Walks you right past the line and right into wherever you want to go.
Yeah.
Yeah, sexy.
Damn sexy.
Need more of that.
Yeah.
So we too can be the elites.
I need more of that in my life.
More free stuff.
Jerusalem Post reports three shots of Pfizer COVID vaccine are four times less effective against Omicron.
That's right.
We need our fourth.
You need your fourth.
I think we have a fourth clip here, too.
A fourth booster.
Yes, here we go.
This is the CBS Roundup, the weekend.
Oh, it didn't load.
Load up.
There we go.
New cases of COVID-19 are up nearly 20% over the past week.
This is the CDC recommends Pfizer booster shots for 16 and 17 year olds.
Pfizer says those who have gotten only two vaccines are more at risk from the Omicron variant and company executives say the mutation could mean people would need a fourth coronavirus vaccine earlier than first expected.
Oh!
Get one for Christmas.
We should have gift cards.
Your fourth booster.
Gift card.
Less than one year out and we need four of these shots.
They're so ineffective.
Here I got my COVID surge surge report from NPR. COVID surge surge.
The number of new coronavirus infections in the United States continues to rise.
NPR's Willstone reports cases have increased nearly 40 percent over the last week and many hospitals are under stress.
The U.S. is now averaging about 120,000 new infections every day.
There are more people in the hospital for COVID-19 than there have been in months.
It's especially bad in the Midwest and Northeast.
Some states have called in the military to help.
Sam Scarpino with the Raca.
This is a variant that is likely to cause outbreaks and Why is NPR calling the Rockefeller Foundation?
If you want to know anything about COVID, is that your first thought?
The Rockefeller Foundation?
Is it not the CDC, Fauci, Collins, Walensky, any of these jabronis?
No.
That's a set-up piece by the Rockefeller Foundation.
But as you said maybe two months ago, looking at the 1918 pandemic, the timeline, this should pretty much be done by April, I believe you said, of 2022, which I think is becoming very reasonable.
It's coming into view.
Also, since this was a man-made add-on to a coronavirus, it's falling apart.
The Omicron variant is showing us that.
It's not killing people.
It's transmitting as quickly as a cold.
Most people are pretty much okay.
And so the vaccine companies are pushing ahead.
We need to jab you one more time.
And the final solution is on the horizon.
His song idea, Jab Me Baby One More Time.
Jab me baby.
Oh, jab me baby one more time.
I like Jab Me Baby too, by the way.
I just came up with that.
That would change.
That would be good too.
Jab me baby.
I love.
Jab me baby.
This bone is sticking to my right arm.
I'm magnetic.
We can write this material, but we can't sing.
Here we go.
I could always play the theremin just to get us into the right melody.
With this third shot, we just don't know how long immunity will last.
It's too early to confirm we're going to need other shots in the future, but likely is we will need boosters at a regular cadence, just like we do with the flu shot, in order to keep immunity up to prevent us from getting sick.
And that's what they want.
They finally are going to get the flu shot that's mandated.
That's what they always wanted.
It wasn't enough.
It wasn't enough to have the flu shots.
People were taking them.
You know, that's kind of an interesting backdoor idea.
But they're going to have to do something else.
Because the flu shot is made by slouches in India.
It's cranked out as junk.
Mm-hmm.
They're going to have to do an mRNA, since the technology is now proven, over 3 billion shots have been administered, an mRNA flu shot, special flu shot that really knocks it for a loop.
Unfortunately, it only lasts a year.
Yeah.
But it does the trick.
Yeah.
I want to play, I got this COVID in Michigan thing, because this is a follow-on to the last clip where the NPRs are all freaked out about this.
Michigan now reports more COVID-19 patients in its hospitals than at any time during the pandemic.
Really?
I think it's a lie.
I think it's really a lie.
They don't have the staff.
That's the problem.
They're lying.
I'm during the pandemic.
Well, by the way, since you stopped the clip, for probably good reason, I'm going to throw in a little factoid.
I looked up this hospital they're talking about, and they went to a 100% mandate for all the nurses.
They all quit.
A bunch of them quit.
And now, in fact, you're going to hear that the guy who's the administrator wears the guy.
He's like an MBA. And he's wearing scrubs and going around as if he's a doctor.
That's how hard up they are to get these nurses back.
Michigan now reports more COVID-19 patients in its hospitals than at any time during the pandemic.
All across the state, emergency departments are backed up, patients wait hours for beds.
The crush of new, mostly unvaccinated COVID patients is affecting all kinds of care.
Dustin Dwyer of Michigan Radio toured Mercy Health St.
Mary's in Grand Rapids to see that impact firsthand.
St.
Mary's is one of the two main hospitals in the city, and that makes it one of the bigger hospitals in this part of the state.
Under different circumstances, it's the kind of hospital that would be accepting transfer patients from smaller hospitals in smaller towns.
Lately, though, it's too full for that.
Dr.
Matt Bierczak is president of the hospital.
That's an administrative job, a suit-and-tie job, but he's dressed in black scrubs because he, like everyone else around here, has been pitching in to take care of COVID patients.
Wow.
What a twisting of the truth.
Unbelievable.
Well, the same in New York.
Here's the freshly minted governor, Huckle.
You can draw a direct correlation between vaccination rates in an area and the number of hospitalizations.
And we know it's the indoors, the colder temperatures, but also the areas where people are more likely to be vaccinated.
And certainly with the booster shot, those are not as high as the areas where people are unvaccinated.
You know, it's just not true.
They're just making it up now.
Unless, of course, they're still using the, oh, you only have two shots, you're not boosted, therefore you're unvaccinated.
That, of course, that's what they do.
That's what they like doing.
That's what they're doing.
Let's listen to, here's a clip on Omicron in the UK, another NPR gem.
British health officials warn tougher restrictions may soon be needed to slow the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant.
They say it's likely to become the dominant strain in Britain within days.
Yeah, so the rumor is that Plan C is going into effect January 4th.
They were initially going to impose another lockdown December 15th.
What stopped that is the unfortunate tape that shows that they were partying.
It was just wine and cheese while the whole country was locked down last year, so that's probably not going to happen.
But I'm hearing January 4th, possibly.
New York?
Of course, they're back on some mandate trains.
New York is joining six other states in requiring masks indoors.
Governor Kathy Hochul's order for businesses starts Monday.
Everyone inside masks up or shows proof of full vaccination.
If we can't get more people vaccinated or boosted, I have to protect people but also the economy.
Ah, the economy.
So basically everyone wears a mask again in New York.
That's what's going on.
People are cracking, though, everywhere.
They're like, I'm done.
I'm not going to do it again.
I'm not going to do another booster.
I won't go for it.
You're about to find out.
I hope we still have enough force to push back.
Well, because Omicron's such a weak sister, and this whole thing's going to fall apart, I still think that April-May is still a good target.
It's months and months away, and they can't keep pulling this stunt forever.
Yeah.
In Georgia, there was a local report about young teens dying from myocarditis.
And since the local report, they actually did a heck of a lot more than you typically would.
But the conclusion, you can already guess.
Are teenagers dying from adverse reactions to the COVID-19 vaccine?
Our sources are the CDC, the New England Journal of Medicine, and the Georgia Department of Health.
Okay, we can't wait.
The CDC's Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System received 1,226 reports of myocarditis or inflammation of the heart muscle after receiving an MNRA vaccine between December 2020 and June 2021.
A CDC safety panel found a likely association between rare heart inflammation in adolescents and young adults after their second dose of an MNRA COVID-19 vaccine, finding 323 cases fit criteria for myocarditis.
The average age was 19.
96 of those patients were hospitalized, and at the time of review, 95% had been released with no deaths.
A recent study published by the New England Journal of Medicine showed the risk of heart problems in boys...
Wow, man.
They just glossed over that, didn't they?
Hold on a second.
Stop the clip.
That's a very interesting chicken shit way of reporting.
Because you could go either way.
5% died is a big number.
Yeah.
And you could say 5% died.
It's a big number.
But this is the opposite.
But to say 95% didn't die, it's just a way of putting things to make it sound better than it should.
I mean, this is the same thing they do on the other side of the fence.
This is what you put in the newsletter.
Yeah, I'd probably point this out.
Scare the public instead of give the good news.
Now they're giving the good news to cover up the bad news that 5% of these kids died.
Yeah, and myocarditis is not a, yeah, yeah, you can survive it, sure, but you're not going to live that long.
The heart muscle is like the thing that keeps you going.
You get just a screwball inflammation out of the blue like this.
This is not good for your long-term, it's not a long-term benefit, let's put it that way.
Criteria for myocarditis.
The average age was 19.
96 of those patients were hospitalized, and at the time of review, 95% had been released with no deaths.
A recent study published by the New England Journal of Medicine showed the risk of heart problems in boys 16 to 19 was about nine times higher than unvaccinated boys the same age.
The Israel study looked at data from 2.5 million vaccinated people 16 and above and identified...
Did she say my NRA? What did she say?
MNRA. She said...
16 to 19 was about nine times higher than unvaccinated boys the same age.
The Israel study looked at data from 2.5 million vaccinated people 16 and above and identified 54 cases of myocarditis.
70% of the cases showed up after the second vaccine dose.
The majority of the cases were mild.
One patient with a history of heart disease died of an unknown cause after release from the hospital.
The Georgia Department of Health reports zero deaths of people 12 to 17 after receiving the vaccine and one for those 18 to 34.
So, we can verify that while some teenagers developed heart problems from receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, there's not enough evidence to say teens are dying because they received the vaccine.
Ah, the old there's no evidence.
They're very good.
Not enough evidence.
What do you think enough evidence would be?
5% dead?
Not enough.
I have no idea.
There's no such thing.
The story is clear as mud.
The fact is, when they say it's nine times more likely you get the shot, you have a heart issue.
It gives you a heart issue.
You don't want to have a heart issue under any circumstances.
No, they've completely normalized that.
Luckily, though, according to a new study published in The Lancet, The world population will decline for the first time in the next century.
That's right.
It's working.
It's working.
According to the study, the global population will peak around 9.7 billion in 2064.
It's a long wait, but it's working.
Then it will fall to 8.79 billion in 2100.
I think they could do a little better these dates in the future because we'll never be able to check the Red Book, but I do appreciate that they're all happy about it.
Now, AIDS, or HIV I should, HIV and acquired immune deficiency syndrome is all over this vaccine, in reporting, in different things that have happened, in tests.
I have two clips and two quick paragraphs to read.
One, and this is a study in PLOS, Repeated vaccinations with the same antigen at short intervals, i.e.
booster shots, destabilize the immune system so that autoimmune processes occur.
Among other things, antibodies against one's own DNA can be formed, as this work showed.
The second one is an article from October from Science Magazine.
Certain COVID-19 vaccine candidates could increase susceptibility to HIV. So one of our producers found an ad and a clip that pertains to this that just blew me away.
First of all, this is an ad for an at-home test called IntelliSwap.
Our scientists have designed a rapid COVID-19 test.
So remarkably simple, it puts the power of a lab in your hands.
It's IntelliSwab, the anywhere, anytime COVID-19 home test.
That's so easy to use, you'll know you did it right.
Just swab your nostrils with a gentle swab, swirl it in the tube, and see results in minutes.
That's the power of putting you in control.
That's IntelliSwab.
Smart science made simple.
Learn more at IntelliSwab.com.
IntelliSwab by the makers, Orashure makes IntelliSwab.
Orashure also manufactures AuraQuick.
And we heard about this for the first time in national news with Gail in the morning in 2013.
I think that the West will give the heat a lot of problems, but I'm picking the heat to win it again.
All right, Magic, we all remember when you were first diagnosed with the HIV virus back in 1991.
You found out through a blood test.
How has it changed today how people are getting diagnosed and why you're excited about this?
Well, now you think about, Gail, there's over a million people who are living with HIV and then...
One out of five of those million, too, don't know they really have HIV. They're walking around not knowing it.
So Orquik has come up with a Know Your Thing campaign today.
Campaign.
And it's urging people to get out and get tested.
And the great thing about it is they provide it now and come up with a home test now, Orquik has.
And so it's an amazing thing where now, in the privacy of your own home, you can take an HIV and AIDS test.
And the good thing, too, if you come up positive, you can call and they have a support system right there.
And this test is already being used, you know, by doctors and health care providers across the country.
So it's a safe test and a good test.
So what we're trying to do is just urge people to get out and get tested.
All right.
Magic Johnson, thank you for joining us today.
You look great.
Thanks a lot.
You look great for a guy with AIDS. That's what she meant.
That's exactly what she meant.
He should have given her a look.
So I think this is just coincidentally interesting.
Magic Johnson has been back in the news talking about AIDS, about just stigmas, all these things.
This is an old clip, but let's see if...
And that was a campaign.
It was a launch of a campaign.
He said it.
They're starting a campaign today, and here I am, Magic Johnson, talking about it.
These people, I think they really know what's going on and they're trying to prepare us for it and they're going to pull the wool over our eyes.
It's normal for kids to have heart attacks.
Yeah.
It's just AIDS. What's your problem?
Take the test.
Okay.
What else you got?
You got anything else on the COVIDs?
I got COVID. I did COVID in Michigan.
I don't think so.
Oh, crap.
I have two things left.
This is pretty good.
I don't have to play this whole clip.
It's a buck and a half.
Do you remember the lawyer Robert Fulme, the German guy?
That's how I first heard about Professor DeSmet with the mass formation.
He was putting together a whole legal team.
Vaguely.
Yeah, they were collecting evidence to present because they're doing the Nuremberg 2.0 project.
Well, Fulmik is now testifying in front of different governments, and this was the Polish House of Representatives where he lays in about testing.
And Dr.
Mike Yeadon, formerly of Pfizer, has stated, in agreement with Fauci, by the way, that more than 35 cycles results in at least 97% false positives.
So I'll just stop it here, and we don't have to go any further, because we know about the bullcrap PCR so-called test.
But this is how behind everybody is.
The Polish government is hearing this for the first time, really, from someone they may or may not trust, and they're still at the cycle count for the test, which we had a year and a half ago.
Yeah, it's a year and a half old, that information.
But this is just new to them.
Well, they probably rely on their media as much as we do.
So where to from here?
Can we go to climate change and, you know, use the line that this is a victim of climate change, died with climate change?
You know, that may be a possibility.
Can we...
I have a clip where it connects to June 6th.
Investigation in global warming.
Wait, wait.
No, I have it connected to the virus before we leave that.
Yeah.
No, I've got nothing connecting global warming to the virus.
No, no.
I'm not saying...
I'm connecting the virus to something else.
So could the virus be connected to global warming?
Possibly.
But...
Something that aired on the History Channel tells us that maybe the blockbuster Christmas movie, Don't Look Up, which is about the asteroid.
Something bad coming from outer space.
Maybe, just maybe, maybe this coronavirus came from out there.
Ironically, with half the population gone, those who survived the plague enjoyed twice the wealth and natural resources of the previous generation.
They also had much stronger immune systems.
So could this have been part of some deliberate extraterrestrial plan?
Ancient astronaut theorists believe that such an audacious notion is possible.
If you're an alien culture and you're seeing Earth overpopulating to the point where the planet can't sustain the population, what do we do with animals in the wild?
We cull them.
What if these plagues were alien cultures culling us?
These could actually be designer viruses, designer bacteria that are sent here to kill people with specific genetic weaknesses and make the rest of the gene pool that much stronger.
But if extraterrestrials are trying to cull our population or strengthen our genetic makeup through the introduction of microbes, why?
Some ancient astronaut theorists suspect that the ultimate objective is to make us more like them.
I love it.
Ancient aliens on the History Channel.
It was an ancient astronaut theorist.
Is that what it was?
I got through ancient aliens.
No, back it up.
There's a phrase.
They use it all the time on the History Channel.
I watch all these stupid shows.
They're idiotic.
But ancient astronaut theorist.
I think I could be that.
No, I think we should both have business cards that say this.
Ancient...
Hold on.
Play the end of it.
You'll hear the phrase exactly.
Was it the end?
It was at the very end.
Why?
Some ancient astronaut theorists suspect.
Ancient astronaut theorists.
Yes, I agree.
And when people ask me, what do you do?
I used to say inventor because it sounds sexy.
Ancient astronaut theorists.
Oh.
Yeah, ancient astronaut theorist.
I think there's two things.
I used to have on my card at Meveo, I used to have cryptozoologist, which is another good one.
That's true!
Hi, I'm Adam Curry.
I'm an ancient astronaut theorist, and I specialize in space COOF. Space poop.
No, space coof.
Space poop is what comes to mind.
Hey, hey!
Pigs in space!
This is an ABC News special report.
Right now.
Two, one.
Six civilians.
Including an NFL great, our own Michael Strahan.
I'm excited.
I'm excited!
And the daughter of a space pioneer.
Launching to space.
Returning as astronauts.
Experiencing the ride of a lifetime.
I've been doing so much for everybody.
Get over there.
And a flip.
We're going to die!
Yeah, baby.
How about that?
He made it.
You made it.
My clip is Strahan in space.
It actually talks about, I think, after he came back.
Yes?
Okay, good.
Six humans are back on Earth after traveling to the edge of space on Blue Origin's space tourism capsule today.
Brendan Byrne of member station WMFE reports.
Two VIP guests on the flight include former NFL player and Good Morning America host Michael Strahan and Laura Shepard Churchley, the daughter of the first American to make it into space, Alan Shepard.
The space tourism flight also carried four paying passengers on a suborbital jaunt that lasted a little over 10 minutes.
They traveled above the U.S.-recognized boundary of space, about 50 miles up, and experienced a few moments of weightlessness.
The U.S. recognized boundary of space?
Yeah.
We've made a determination.
It's official.
Yeah, so if you reach this altitude, then you're quote-unquote in space.
Yeah, I agree.
...boundary of space, about 50 miles up, and experienced a few moments of weightlessness.
It's now the third mission by Blue Origin to carry humans.
Other notable VIPs to fly in the capsule include founder Jeff Bezos, famed aviator Wally Funk, and Star Trek's William Shatner.
Blue Origin's capsule is named after Alan Shepard.
His 1961 launch that took the first American to space was also a suborbital flight.
Can I just do Occam's Razor?
These guys are the richest guys in the world.
The richest guys in the world.
And they cannot get past 50-year-old technology when they landed on the moon.
Why not?
What is wrong?
You're getting there.
You know what's interesting with NPR? They're getting there.
Thanks.
You're getting there.
So what's interesting about NPR is that they use these interesting kind of communist type of phrases.
Right.
Because when they go to a report, they go to a member station.
Oh yes, a comrade station is the next level.
The comrade station, the normal networks call affiliates.
We're going to go to our affiliate in Pittsburgh.
We're going to go to our affiliates.
Oh, but wait, but wait.
We're a member station.
Don't they have to pay a membership fee?
I guess that is, yeah.
The member of the National Party Radio.
It makes so much sense.
Nationalist Party Radio.
There you go.
It's the...
Yes.
The Nazi public radio.
It's a member station.
Member station.
This is one of these little things that irks me.
I would be remiss.
I would be complacent if I did not play three quick clips that I have here from the president on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.
I did not know he was appearing.
Did you know?
I did not know.
I would have recorded it.
Yes.
Well, luckily the clip custodian was on the ball and he brought us these three clips.
There's a lot of anxiety.
Oh, I guess he was on Zoom.
He wasn't in studio because, you know, you can't really control him if he's in studio.
There's a lot of anxiety.
And my job is to be straightforward, shoot from the shoulder, let people know exactly what the truth is, and lay out how I'm going to try to make life better for them.
I've always, you know, shoot from the hip, I've heard, but shoot from the shoulder?
He explained it once.
He keeps saying it because he thinks it's really cute.
And he has said it at least a dozen times that I've heard.
He explained it once on one of his long-winded speeches about his dad and his dignity.
Joey, Joey, honey.
As my uncle once said...
You gotta shoot from the shoulder.
And then he explained why he uses that phrase.
So it's not like he's...
Yeah, shoot from the...
It's what I said the same thing until I heard his explanation.
And he sticks with it.
I wonder if it's some kind of NLP. You know, shoot for the shoulder, shoot in the shoulder.
The bottom line is that the way to avoid this virus...
and then get the booster shot.
It's available.
We have the medicines available.
It will make a gigantic difference.
And even if you don't care so much about yourself, think about your kid, your brother, your sister, your co-worker.
And this stuff about, you know, Biden's mandating these things happening and is un-American.
Look at it this way.
It's patriotic to get this done.
Not a joke.
It's patriotic to get it done.
Big mistake.
Big mistake.
Patriotic.
That's the other side's word.
Big mistake.
Well, I think he gets by with it because nobody pays attention to him.
Here's another one of these clips.
This is the last one I have.
He actually had a pretty funny answer at the beginning.
How much do you pay attention to approval ratings?
Well, not anymore.
That's funny.
Good line.
Good line.
I always pay attention in the mid-60s.
Not in the mid-20s, I don't pay attention anymore.
I appreciate the honesty, yeah.
Joe is a comedy comrade now.
You came in, you came in hot, and then you got to medium, and now you're at a low.
But you just gotta keep your head down, right?
And just keep doing the right thing.
Well, look, here's the deal.
I think that it's less than a year.
A lot has happened.
Well, look, here's the deal.
People are worried.
And people are getting so much inaccurate information.
Yeah, because they read the New York Times.
And so they're, you know, they're being told that, you know, Armageddon's on the way.
The truth is, the economy has grown more than it has.
Did Fallon just say, yeah, Armageddon's on the way, yeah.
...time in close to 60 years, the unemployment rate's down to 4.2, but about their situation.
And so they're, you know, they're being told that, you know, Armageddon's on the way.
The truth is...
The economy has grown more than it has any time in close to 60 years.
Is that the truth?
John, I have to ask you.
You're on that DH Unplugged show.
Has the economy grown more than it ever has in 60 years?
I don't know.
Seems unlikely.
Oh, I thought you were done.
Seems unlikely.
Yeah.
I am done.
Is he talking about maybe just this is a...
I can understand where recovery...
We don't know what he's talking about.
No, he doesn't either.
He's grown more than he has any time in close to 60 years.
The unemployment rates down to 4.2% is going to go lower in my view.
We do have inflation on things that, in fact, matter to people's lives.
You know, when you show up at a gas station and it's $3.50 at your pump, although now because I took 50 million barrels out of what they call the oil patrolling reserve, the gasoline is down below $3 in any place.
It's going to come down.
It's going to move.
So he's taking credit.
Yeah, that's because I blew out our reserves.
That's gone.
Hey, but look.
Did that, didn't I? Did that.
Wait, wait.
On the consumer prices.
This just out from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Starting in January 2022, weights for the Consumer Price Index will be calculated based on consumer expenditure data from 2019 to 2020.
The BLS considered interventions but decided to maintain normal procedures.
They're going to omit 2021.
They're just not going to put it into the Price Index next year.
Oh, yeah.
Nobody's going to notice.
I mean, that's a scam.
It's a scam.
The whole thing's a scam.
They're scamming us.
People go to the store, they know what's going on.
Yeah, they have.
Especially the gas pump's the most obvious, though, because there's big signs out in front of every gas station at the price.
It's like, how can you miss it?
Can't miss that.
And that is a very, I just need to say, it's a very American thing.
People, you understand, when you live in Europe, you know, there's like three or four big chains on the Autobahn and the Schnellweg, the highway, and you, you know, you use them, and people don't really compare prices in the U.S. This is a thing.
Yeah, well, I get my gas over there.
It's 50 cents cheaper.
I get it over here.
We have a huge diversity in pricing, and that's very, might even be unique to America.
I never thought about that, but I've noticed there's a standard station up on the San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley, and then if you go down three blocks, there's another standard station, and the prices are always 20 or 30 cents cheaper in the second station.
It's not as well located.
Do you go there?
Do you hunt for cheaper prices?
Of course I do.
I try to go to Costco.
There's a Sinclair station in Richmond.
I go to that because it's really cheap.
I don't know why that's so inexpensive.
Do you ever worry about the blend being wrong or crap or your engine knocking?
Because that's what I'm worried about.
Well, I can tell by...
I know this sounds silly, but it's a fact.
You were a kid once.
I was a kid once, and I used to work at an oil refinery.
I can tell by the smell of the gasoline whether it's any good.
Holy crap!
Can you teach that?
Yeah, it's not that hard.
What do you need to be on the lookout for?
How do you smell if it's good gas?
You want to be on the lookout for aromatics.
The more aromatics, the better the blend.
And also any sense of alcohol.
The gas is no good.
It's like wine tasting!
You just smell the aroma.
It comes off the nozzle.
The gas that's no good, which is the gas with sulfur in it, it has this kind of a funny off smell.
It's no good.
And when I smell that gas coming into the tank, I just stop pumping.
I go to another place.
If it has the wrong bouquet, you mean?
It's pretty much the same thing, yeah.
So here's a typical gas...
I'm sniffing and the bouquet is nice.
Is this diesel?
I smell some pig piss.
Mmm, lovely.
I believe you.
The pig piss is not in the diesel.
I believe you.
I believe that you can smell if it's good gas or not.
That's something you can do.
I can.
I can smell it.
When they load it up with aromatics, it's pretty big.
And you can also tell it's more expensive.
It costs more to make.
What was that game show that used to be on?
It was really big in Europe.
I think they tried it here.
They had people who can do extraordinary things, like a big Saturday night game show.
Something like Howie Mandel would host it.
And you would be the guy, and celebrities would wager whether you could sniff if it was good gas or not.
That would be a dynamite segment.
Yeah, and I'd probably have the passing out from these fumes.
There was a guy, I saw one guy on some TV show that had a super palate, so he had this super sensitive flavor.
He could taste things that nobody else could taste.
My wife has one of these.
And...
He could taste, and they gave him a blind tasting.
It could be bullcrap, but I saw it.
He could taste the difference between the water from Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Lake Michigan, and the other big Hudson Bay.
They put these different waters up there, and he sniffed each one, drank a little, spit it out, and he could tell exactly which bay it was from based on the composition of the waters of that area.
I believed it.
Now, who was this?
Some guy with a super palette that was showing off.
It was a wine sommelier that had a super palette, which is not necessarily what you want.
Sommeliers have groupies, I'll bet, don't they?
Not that I know of.
I thought maybe.
I can see those guys that got away, you know.
Let me tell you about these wines.
Now, I have some Biden clips before we break.
Sure.
Since we're playing Biden.
First, he went and gave a speech before some democracy meet-up.
And he's tired.
He's tired because he went to the Bob Dole event.
Oh, the Bob Dole Memorial.
And before we play the buying clips, let's play this.
I want to ask you a question.
This is the only clip I got from the Bob Dole Memorial.
This is Bob Dole, of all people.
Listen.
Several speakers, including actor Tom Hanks, commemorating the man lawmakers say bridged partisan divides.
The memory and conscience of the man himself will always be here.
Right here.
For as long as there is in America.
And that is a good thing.
Because here, we will always remember Bob Dole.
Shut up, Forrest Gump.
What is Tom Hanks doing here?
Yeah, that's very odd.
He's a progressive Democrat.
Bob Dole is a Republican.
Mean-spirited one at that.
Yeah.
Even though they made him sound like the greatest guy ever.
Well, I hope they do that for us, too.
Well, maybe if Tom Hanks is...
Why is Tom Hanks there?
I'm asking you.
I don't know.
Are they grooming him to be a politician?
He sure sounded like one.
He sure did.
Interesting.
So they're grooming Tom Hanks to be governor of California or senator or running for president.
I don't think they can pull that one off.
That's a very good question.
But they're going to run him for something here in California.
Huh.
But it's got to be something big.
He just won't go for something.
No, it'd be senator or governor.
It'd be the two.
But he's got no chops for it.
I mean, Ronald Reagan, who came up, he was like the head of the Actors Union.
He was a progressive.
He was a communist for all practical purposes.
Came up through the ranks.
Did a lot of public speaking for about five years with the so-called The Speech, what it was called.
And he floated around the country, got the pulse of the nation, very slowly became a conservative.
Then he became governor of California, got re-elected.
And then he went to president.
It wasn't like an easy path.
Trump is the only one.
And even Trump was running for president more or less in 1980.
Right, right, right.
There were posters of him.
He was always kind of fooling around with the idea.
He always was ready for it.
Yeah, always ready for it.
So Hanks is coming out of the blue.
They're grooming him.
And this...
Ah, okay.
Well, if it's for this cycle...
Then it's very possible that Matthew McConaughey, that he got the phone call like, bro, we can only have one big-time celebrity running in this particular race, so we can't have you distracting, so you're not running in Texas.
I don't know what the reason for cutting him out was.
Because he has no chance.
I thought he was going to win.
Oh, please.
That's what I heard.
No, because he immediately was like, yeah, no, yeah, guns problem.
Yeah.
Well, that's not going to work.
Like Bet-O. Bet-O. Bet-O. So let's go back to Biden.
Biden goes to this democracy thing.
And so he's tired.
He's pooped.
And so he just rambles.
He's tired and he's pooped.
He's totally burnt.
So let's go with Biden democracy.
This is just kind of a ramble typical of the whole speech.
Working with parties around the world, around the globe, to prove that democracies can deliver for people on issues that matter most to them.
Here at home, that means working to make real the full promise of America, including by enacting both the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.
Because what's true around the world is also true in the United States.
He's always, hey, she's slurring.
He's slurring.
So I picked up this little thing from the same speech, and I have the original clip, and then there's a little clip out where I pumped up the little mumble he does.
He's right in the middle of this.
You'll hear it.
He's saying blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
He's just giving up.
He mumbles something.
He's giving up.
And I want to play the long clip, which is, you can look at the times.
Biden plus mumble without the two.
Portion of the world.
Autocracy can never extinguish the ember of liberty that burns in the hearts of people around the world and every portion of the world.
It knows no borders.
It speaks every language.
It lives in anti-corruption activists, human rights defenders, journalists, peaceful protesters, and the front lines of this struggle all around the world.
And all the ways civil society empowers individuals to have a direct say in the issues that impact on their lives, that impact on them personally.
So I presume you've done an enhanced rotate zoom on that little thing that he said there, which to me sounded like princess or priceless or something.
Wow!
Very close.
Well, I have my headphones at 12.00.
Well, that would probably help.
Okay, here it is.
This is a cutout.
This is an eight-second cutout with it boosted.
And the front lines of this struggle all around the world.
Princess.
And what is he saying?
Princess?
It sounds like princes or gooses.
He says something.
Struggle all around the world.
Princess.
No.
Gooses.
Gooses.
It could be, yeah, when I hear you say, how about for instance?
Gooses.
For instance.
And in all the ways...
No, no, it's not for instance.
Gooses.
And in all the ways civil society empowers individuals to have a direct say...
Pisses.
I don't know what he's saying.
I don't know either, but he said something.
Yeah.
Anyway, he was fascinated by it and tried to push it out there.
It's too bad he's still around and we lost the monkey Michael Nesmith.
Oh well.
That's how life goes.
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 comedy comrades.
Ladies and gentlemen, put your hands together for Mr.
John C. Dvorak.
Well, in the morning to you, Mr.
Adam Curry.
Also in the morning to all ships at sea.
Boots on the ground, feet in the air, subs in the water, and all the names of knights out there.
Hey-o to the trolls.
The trolls are in the troll room at trollroom.io.
Doing good work this morning, trolls.
I mean, we would not have received the pig piss comment.
I mean, you're good.
When it comes to pigs, you guys are great.
Pigs in space, pig piss in your tank.
Trolls are good.
I wonder if there's a correlation.
Trolls and urine.
Well...
Turns out, you can find out for yourself by going to trollroom.io.
We do the live show.
This show is recorded live to tape before a live troll audience on Thursdays and Sundays.
But there's many more, and you can listen simultaneously while trolling at noagendastream.com, trollroom.io.
Let's see how many trolls we have with us this morning.
Okay, hands up, trolls.
Not too shabby.
2,397.
That's a decent number for a Sunday, I'd say.
Is that correct?
It's a good number?
What's the number again?
Almost 2,400.
2,397.
You can always follow us if the troll room goes too fast for you.
You can always follow us at...
NoagendaSocial.com.
Now you need a Mastodon account.
Don't worry.
Trump's Truth.Social will soon provide you with one, I'm sure.
And then you'll just be able to follow us, I think.
We'll see if they flip on Federation.
If not, you can find an account anywhere.
I suggest you stay away from the wokesters who also have Mastodon instances.
You'll probably have your account for a minute.
But that's the beauty of it.
They can sit over there.
They don't want to know what we're saying.
We're happy to hear from them.
They don't want to know.
Fine.
That's their prerogative.
So follow John C. Dvorak at NoAgendaSocial.com, Adam at NoAgendaSocial.com.
These are not email addresses.
Do not email us at those.
These are Mastodon addresses.
I've seen some people say, your email doesn't work.
Hey, NoAgendaSocial is down!
Are you aware?
These are not helpful reports.
I love reading the No Agenda Social when people report on each other.
Now, I ignore anything someone's reporting from another server.
I don't care.
You can block them, whatever.
The other one came in the other day.
Personal attack on other and no agenda social member reported.
Like, what is that about?
What do you want me to do?
If someone makes a personal attack on another no agenda social member, what is the appropriate response for me to do?
Nothing, of course.
Nothing.
Of course I'm not going to do anything.
Just showing me I need to not follow you.
Yeah.
Just saying.
Snitches get stitches.
Let's thank the artist for episode 1406.
A lot of comrades in our life.
This was the Birthing Comrade titled episode.
And a very nice, very funny piece of work from Kenny Ben.
It was the 11-foot, 8-inch bridge with the booster truck crashing into it.
Boosters and then just the cherry on top with the sheep on the back of the truck.
It was a beautiful, beautiful piece.
We laughed.
We laughed.
Yes, it was very good.
Now, there were some other things we looked at.
Yeah, there was a lot.
Actually, I thought there was a lot of good pieces.
I liked...
You liked Facts to the Future, which unfortunately has been done by everybody a million times.
Yes, it was trite.
That's right.
There was something else I liked.
I did like the Mewit.
I thought, of course, Darren goes, he takes the low-flying, the low-hanging fruit, and boom, there's a cow.
Yeah, with the A33 milk.
Yeah, which is cute.
There was one, wait, let me go to the second page.
There's one piece I want to definitely mention.
Yeah.
Because I don't know that I caught it the first time.
There were some cool pieces from Parker Pauly who had a variation.
One is like a yoga chakras.
And the other one was just a cool circle-like logo thing, if I recall.
Maybe.
Oh, yes, an arm for every boost.
Yeah, that was because he thought we were going to do the fake arm vaccine story, so he jumped the gun.
Prep stuff.
We actually did that story.
You did mention it.
I did mention it?
Yep.
Really?
Yeah.
Gosh, I thought I stayed away from that.
It was a quickie.
It's like the woman breastfeeding her cat on the plane.
It's like, no.
That's a great story.
You should have done it.
You're kidding me.
I thought the Maxwell Ghislaine coffee thing was cute by Sir Net Ned.
Yeah.
Uh...
I think I liked that one too.
Yeah, we both liked it for some reason, but it was just, it was a little too, it didn't have enough gimmicks on it.
It just had 33% coffee or something on there.
Okay, please, take heed, people.
Don't go all gimmick crazy.
I'm getting tweets now.
Well, what, you chose this?
Well, I don't understand what the criteria are.
We have a fact coming out.
Yeah, it'll be right underneath our mission statement.
Oh, no, you like the...
No, wait, was it the reward?
No, it wasn't...
I don't know if there was anything else that we particularly enjoyed.
There was something else, and I can't find it for some reason.
I don't know what it is.
Maybe it was moved to evergreens.
That sometimes happens.
People don't usually do that.
Oh, yes, the Omicron...
It's the best we can do for today's analysis, sorry.
I think it was the Omicron...
Movie?
Variant release?
A Who Company?
Was that one?
I don't know.
For sure, there's a lot of good art.
And a lot of it is inappropriate.
All of it is, or most of it is a good chuckle.
And if you're using a modern...
Wait, there's a piece I wanted to mention.
Now, I don't know if he moved there, what he did with it, but this piece by Nathan Mellett.
I love being vaccinated.
He had a black and white.
He has a reversed version of it in the Evergreens.
It's just a drawing.
It's like a sketchy looking thing.
It's like doodling.
And I thought it was very attractive as art, but it was not going to ever happen.
On the first page of the...
I can't find it anymore.
It just disappeared because when I was doing the newsletter, I saw it.
Ah, no, I don't see it.
Sometimes people take stuff off, I guess.
I don't know that you can do that, but okay.
Where was I? Yes, all of these different pieces of artwork.
If you have a modern podcast app, then you will see them flying by in synchronicity with our discussion about them.
You can get a new podcast app at newpodcastapps.com, a modern one.
Lots of new features in there.
Give it a shot.
And if you'd like to participate and be an artist, look, all you need is to submit art, then you're an artist.
You can go to noagendaartgenerator.com.
That's all it takes.
And we appreciate the work that all of the artists do, and we always look forward to picking the piece that works the best for us at the end of the show.
And if you lose out, don't worry.
There's another show coming up next.
Noagendaartgenerator.com.
Yeah, and it might get picked by the shop.
Noagenda shop picks up stuff all the time.
Real money.
Bing, bing.
Ching, ching.
When I should mention, I have to mention, you may have been in the second segment, but one of our policemen has come up with a nice little Velcro patch.
Oh, yeah.
It's called a...
It has a word.
Yeah, it's a word for it.
Cops have words.
It's like you stick it on your Velcro.
The police use this as identification, so when they're cracking heads, they can just pull it right off.
You can't see their name.
Exactly.
That's pretty much what it's for.
Yeah.
Let's thank our executive producers and associate executive producers who supported us for this episode, 1407.
I will kick it off with our first executive producer, Dimitro Bernevec, who is from Scandinavia.
$700.
And I'm not sure...
Well, let's see.
Adam?
No, it came in at 8.88, so it's 700.
Yeah, that's what I was going to read here.
Yes.
Adam, deworm.me is available.
I'm sure Seed Man will gladly take it from you to promote ivermectin.
Okay.
My value for value donation is equivalent to five eights.
888.88 Canadian dollaretts.
It's not all value I have received.
The rest is coming in the following year.
We appreciate it, man.
That is completely up to you.
The pricing is done by you.
Not by us or Silicon Valley.
And I'd like to say hello to two people who I've heard here on the show in the donation segment.
Number one, Aradadarian.
I love his HDTV podcast.
And two, Paul from Hamilton, Ontario.
He's a good man and provided excellent dude named Ben Service to your organization for many years.
Our organization?
Good.
I'm glad he did.
I was shocked, shocked that no one asked for the Dr.
Kiki jingle.
It was worth it.
There's no better jingle that describes 2021 Vax Wave than that we had.
No karma for me.
Save it for those who need it.
Please play It Was Worth It if you can find it.
Of course I can find that.
It's actually labeled It Was Worth It.
Here we go.
I got my flu shot a couple of weeks ago.
Nice little sore arm for a couple of days, but...
It was worth it.
It was worth it.
Damn, I'd forgotten that it was about her flu shot.
I don't remember that either.
I only remember playing this bit.
It was worth it.
We've played that a lot, but the whole thing was about a flu shot.
Dynamite, Dimitro.
Why is it worth it?
Now you're asking me things.
I cannot speak on behalf of the good doctor.
I'm sorry.
I'm not authorized.
She's got a shot, so why is it worth it?
People familiar with her thinking believe she thinks it's worth it because now if she gets the flu, she won't fall down sick.
She won't get the flu.
It was worth it.
It's about her sore arm.
When was the last time you had the flu?
A good eight or nine years ago.
I don't remember you having the flu.
That would be during the show period of the show.
Yes, it was.
The swine flu?
You talking about that?
No, no, no, no, no.
When I lived in Austin in 04, not a year 04, but zip code 04, And that was, yeah, it must have been seven or eight years ago.
Is this before or after you began the vitamin D3 therapy?
Oh, before.
Okay, that makes sense.
No, this was before, and I think it was like a Sunday to a Wednesday, so it would not have affected the show very much.
And by the way, even when I'm deathly ill, it doesn't affect the show.
No, I will say this.
A couple of things I want to just stall this segment.
Adam can be sick as a dog.
You don't get to hear him when he's...
Okay, let's get ready to do the show.
I don't feel good.
By the way, he doesn't get sick that much, but when he does, it's like that.
And then, he just sounds like a normal guy when he does the show.
It's like one of these showbiz things.
It's hilarious.
Wait, now all of a sudden it's a showbiz thing instead of just a professional who can just use his tool even if the rest of his body is not working?
Yeah, that's the showbiz thing.
It's not a showbiz, it's a pro thing.
It's pro.
It's a little offensive.
Now the second thing is, Eric Dadarian, I didn't know he had an HDTV podcast.
I wonder if he's discussing 4K. Now 4K, for various reasons that are partly due to this show, I subscribe to YouTube TV because it has infinite recording capabilities.
So you just record everything.
And they have these 4K moments that you have to pay for.
Oh, they have one month free and it's nine bucks for a year.
I mean, per month for a year.
Something, eh.
You know, what do I need?
But live sports on 4K... It's just phenomenal.
It's so worth it.
Yeah, because the refresh rate, everything is much better.
You can actually see stuff.
It's just dynamite.
Yeah, you can actually see stuff.
And also, by the way, you have to have the right set for this, but most of the modern sets, especially the OLED sets, We're all equipped to go HDR, high dynamic range.
And the 4K, they don't mention this, but it throws in HDR. So you get 4K and HDR and the thing just blows, you know, just blows and blows the room out.
Now, I will say this.
People should know this.
Nobody mentions this.
HDR shortens the life of your television.
Really?
Yeah.
Why?
Why?
Because it's blowing out the pixels.
I mean, the pixels are designed to do it, but especially the OLED, it's supposed to take off a certain amount of time before the set just doesn't work anymore.
So people should note that HDR should not be abused.
This is yet another great tip from your No Agenda show.
Do not abuse your HDR, people.
It's one of these weird things I picked up somewhere along the line.
Okay.
Onward.
Did you get the...
Yes, I did.
I did.
That was the whole Kiki thing.
Remember that an hour ago?
Yeah.
Christine Hines in Manchester, New Hampshire.
667.
667 is what it is.
Okay.
ITM, lovely lads.
This donation qualifies me for Damehood.
Please crown me Dame Salty Ketchup of Manchagistan, New Hampshire.
No, Manchganistan.
Manchganistan, New Hampshire.
I'll take lemon seltzer and triscuits.
That's really catchy.
You guys saying that up there?
Manchganistan.
Okay.
Yeah, we're in Manchganistan.
I'll take lemon seltzer and triscuits at the round table.
Keep shrinking amygdalas and stay safe.
Please play Dumps, Wheeze, and the Dean Scream.
They did Dumps.
They call them Dumps.
Big, massive Dumps.
Okay.
Whatever, Christine.
Sir DH Slammer.
Yeah, well known to the show, 40733.
One of those interesting numbers, but there is a magic number, so it's going to be good.
He just says, Jingles, Biden, get vaccinated.
Arnold, screw your freedoms.
Sophia, no.
It's been too long, he says.
Get vaccinated.
But I think people should know.
Ah, shoot.
I'm sorry.
It's the wrong one.
Screw your freedoms.
That was pretty good, actually.
But this is also, what happened to it?
Ah, screw.
Ah, here, I see the problem.
Get vaccinated.
Screw your freedom.
No.
There we go.
Got it.
Okay, Sir Andrew of the Wet Drains, 333.33 from New York.
And he says, ITM, the entire semiconductor industry is starting to mandate vaccines and employees really need exposure to help fight back.
Tim Pool told us to just start our own semiconductor company, unquote.
You know, there's actually a...
It's funny you say that.
I think maybe the same person sent this to me.
There's like a whole movement here of...
Where is it?
Crap!
All right.
Well, there is...
Yeah, here it is.
Mandates and boosters.
Semiconductor worker petition.
I'll continue with his note.
Yeah, please.
We know the No Agenda show and producers actually understand how big the semiconductor industry is and that there is a chip and labor shortage already.
The Department of Labor says one semiconductor job supports 4.8 other jobs in the U.S. economy.
That's interesting.
Many of us are highly specialized employees with families to feed and we just can't start our own company.
Please share our petition, change.org slash save semiconductors.
That's change.org slash save semiconductors before these idiots in charge foobar the entire business.
I would like to request Jobs Karma and get the vaccine followed by no and a de-douching for those who made this contribution possible.
Thank you, Sir Andrew of the Wet Drains.
I know some people who work at semiconductors and have been mandated out.
Although I think beginning of January is when the final decisions happen.
But, I mean, you obviously can't start up your own semiconductor company.
How long would that take?
Ten years?
To get to hire everybody?
If you had some IP in the first place, which seems highly unlikely.
Right.
You could do something, but you could start an IP-only or so-called Fabless.
Fabless.
That's Fabless.
It's Fabless!
Samus Semiconductor Company.
Yeah, the fab is the problem.
The fab is the problem.
You could start Fabless and give a TM, you know, one of those, that operation in Taiwan, or you could give it to a couple of these foundries in the United States.
Nobody's doing that.
Alright, here's the required clippage.
You've been de-douched.
Get vaccinated.
No.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs!
You've got...
Oh no.
Tiffany Mickelson sent 33333, and she's from Oklahoma, said this note was sent to Adam in an email.
And I looked, I searched, it did not come in.
And I would have noticed a Tiffany coming in, because my sister's name is Tiffany, so I also did not overlook it.
So Tiffany, let us know.
And remember, it's adamatkurry.com.
So I'll take Sir Anthony Seven, Vicon of Hamilton.
We heard from him on the last episode.
Here he is again, 33333.
Greetings to you gentlemen from Hamilton County, Indiana.
This is the third of my six promised December contributions.
I'll keep it short today, but please give some karma for any listeners who might be affected by Saturday's tornadoes in the Midwest and some goat karma for the emergency responders.
Absolutely.
Thank you, Sir Anthony Seven.
You've got...
Yeah, we have not received any boots-on-the-ground reports or anything from any of our producers.
Yeah, they're busy.
Everyone's okay.
AC in El Cajon, California, 333.33.
And there's a note, and I have it.
Please refer to me as AC. Okay, we did that.
John and Adam, getting called a douchebag by the man you love really hurts.
It was especially hurtful that it was done in such a public way on the best podcast in the universe.
My heart sank.
Wow, what happened here?
Someone called him on as a douchebag?
Her.
Her, I'm sorry.
Then I set up a nice place for Sir Michael Douglas Carlin to sleep in the closet so he could think about what he had done.
Oh, so this is her husband?
She locked him in the closet?
She kicked him out of the bed?
Yeah.
Wow.
But I miss him, so I donated to be de-douched in order that he can be restored.
You've been de-douched.
Or it says so order can be restored.
Yeah.
Since I last wrote you...
Since he last wrote...
Oh, since he last wrote, sorry.
His film, Minnesota, the modern-day Selma, has officially been accepted by the Academy in the documentary category and is now one of 138 films in the running for an Oscar.
Oh, all right.
You get a lot of documentarians that listen to this show.
I find that interesting.
Everybody should just watch that.
Just get them some juice by just watching it.
It might affect the algos wherever it's streaming.
Is it streaming?
I don't know.
Maybe it's mentioned.
Fallon.
Fallon Love, Thousand Love, called the show the most important film of our era.
I would like to see Minnesota get on the shortlist of 15 films, which is the next step.
To get there, no agenda producers can help by getting the film on the radar screen of the Academy.
Members in the documentary branch of the Academy, that might be more likely if they actually watch the film.
So I'm asking no agenda producers to help by making noise on social media, telling friends, family, and neighbors about the film.
Certainly no agenda producers know somebody that can know somebody that knows somebody that votes in the Academy.
I bet.
We have a number of people.
We know there are producers who listen.
There are producers who listen and vote, for sure.
Though the votes are the goal, I am only asking that they watch the film that is available in the Academy screening room.
Oh, okay.
Voting begins on the 10th through the 15th of December.
Perhaps some short list of 15 Oscar documentary karma can help Minnesota the modern day Selma get selected.
Thank you for her courage.
So she's asking for some karma for the film.
Yeah, happy to do that.
I don't know if there's a trailer or a hashtag, but that might be something you want to include or get started or give something so people can retweet and boost.
You've got karma.
Well, I'm interested in checking it out.
Well, do you have access to the Academy portal?
I'll bet you I can get access.
I'll bet you you can too.
John Zentvelt, 333 from Suffolk Park, New South Wales, Australia.
I have not found a note from John, so John sent it to us.
Boris Tsipinyuk, 333.
Greetings.
Please de-douche.
No problem.
You've been de-douched.
I've been listening since the start of COVID, one of the only podcasts I've set to auto-download new episodes from.
Shout out to producer Ivan Fergus.
I love all things crypto and couldn't figure out what to do with the current NFT mania, so in the spirit of Value for Value, I've created NoAgendaNFT.net as an experiment, currently using cover art as an experiment of the tokens.
As of now, I am committed to donate 100% of all proceeds after fees, no idea what they are, I'm learning, to the No Agenda show.
I have no idea what those might be.
Hopefully, there will be some way to rope in the artists themselves in the future.
That would be awesome if this becomes a thing.
All the best.
Boris, oh, silent T, Boris Sipinyuk.
Okay, I need to say something about this.
Please, stop suggesting NFTs for No Agenda.
We're not going to do it for the same reason we don't do baseball cards, bubblegum cards, Beanie Babies, and My Little Pony stuff.
It's not what we do.
We provide value And you give the value back.
If we're just going to be...
I mean, might as well sell merch.
You know?
It just...
It feels icky and wrong.
Well, it's...
For us to do it.
For us to be raising an NFT. For us, you and I. It's not our business.
Correct.
It's not our...
No.
It's not our business.
We don't know what we're doing.
And it's a money loser.
I think, you know, the people have tried it.
A lot of people, except for No Agenda Shop, everybody else who tries it, they lose their ass.
And it just doesn't work.
On what?
Doing t-shirts.
People who do t-shirts and the problem, the overhead is shipping their shirts and doing all the maintenance and everything.
But in this case, he's talking purely about NFTs just having album art.
That's even weirder.
I don't care what you want to donate and where you get it from.
I really don't.
But please, everyone's like, hey, this needs to be a DAO. You guys are a DAO. Have you heard this one?
No.
A DAO? No.
So DAOs, we are a DAO by definition, but a DAO stands for Distributed Autonomous Organization.
And you might have heard about the most recent DAO, which raised $30 million to try and bid for that copy of the Constitution that came up for auction.
They were short by $30 million.
So, people are trying to do this.
Like, hey, man, let's do a Dow and you'll raise a million dollars exit strategy.
Like, that's not...
That's wrong.
It's not what we do.
We're doing a show.
I show up for the show, not for the money.
Seriously.
Yeah, you want us to show...
You want us to spend our time on that or digging up these crazy clips?
It's up to you.
But, I mean, I don't know why people suggest this stuff either.
So, not trying to be a dick about it, but just...
You are a dick.
Yeah.
It's important because, in a way, it also disrespects what we do.
Ah, there you go.
I think you're right.
I know it's not meant that way, but to me it's like, oh, okay, so you don't want to, we should just do some thing and some collectible and try and get on the hype band.
Get off the air, sell some t-shirts, chumps.
We might, yeah, hoverboards, you could have sold those.
Hoverboards.
Yo-yos.
Oh, okay, a little interruption here.
Yo-yos.
So I don't know what this thing is.
It reminds me of one of the early patents that was done by the Segway company.
It's a lone wheel, one wheel.
Oh, I've seen this.
It's a fat little wheel.
Yeah, you stick it between your legs.
And it's got a blue light in the middle.
It's got no handle or anything.
Yeah, it's gyroscopic and people are zipping around town on it.
Some guy shot through an intersection in Albany yesterday, about 40 miles an hour.
And I'm thinking, how do you even stop this thing?
You've got no, it's hands-free.
It's like a Segway gets you lean around this way.
You have to be, if you think driving a unicycle is difficult, this thing's got to be a nightmare.
No, it's actually much easier than a unicycle.
It has a gyroscope.
It's exactly like the Segway.
How do you stop it?
By leaning back.
At 40 miles an hour.
Look, I'm not going to argue with you.
The stopping mechanism is by leaning backwards.
My point to you would be, we've all seen one of these people on one of these wheels.
What you don't see is the same person twice.
Yes, this is a fact.
I mean, the guy went by so fast, I have a camera I usually keep with me.
You couldn't even get the camera out?
No, I couldn't get the camera in my hands.
The guy was down the street heading up the hill.
Yeah.
But he was so fast.
This guy was...
Really smoking.
Yeah.
And there's a blue light or something in front of me, a little blue light.
Yeah, that's to alert you.
Stay safe.
It's a stay safe light.
You can always break with your face.
I hear that works really well on this wheel thing.
I guess you just jump off the thing.
You lean back and it stops pretty quick.
But if you're doing 40 miles an hour, you're going to need some range to stop.
But leaning back, it's just like, oh, man, you really have to have...
Well, that's how the Segway works.
Even though it's the gyroscope, the sense of balance of the person on this thing has got to be pretty well-tuned.
I have ridden one.
No, it's not that hard.
At 40 miles?
Did you go up to 40?
No, I didn't go 40 miles, nor did you clock the person at 40 miles.
Hey, I saw him shoot through the intersection.
He was doing 40 if he was doing 20.
Okay, you're just talking out of your ass because it's not hard to ride.
I have not driven it at 40.
I don't get the mic there.
I have not...
Sounds like it.
I have not driven at 40 miles an hour, but you're saying it's hard.
You've got to have a sense of balance.
No, it's not that hard.
It's gyroscopic.
It balances itself.
You've got to have balls of steel.
Well, I used to have one of these little ones that was like a skateboard thing.
It has the...
No, that was the hoverboard with two wheels.
Same concept.
Same concept.
Yeah.
That's actually harder, the two wheels, because it tends to, like, you know, if you have imbalanced pressure.
But I remember you used to use it all the time.
Yeah, I threw it out.
It's a danger to my health.
Did you fall off it?
I've never really horribly, yeah, I have fallen off it once in the beginning, but the problem is you get the thing in the house, everyone who comes in, oh, let me stand on it.
You know, so you got to, like, walk them around.
It's dumb.
It's dumb.
Alright, here we go.
Back to Ronald Crump.
He's in Sioux City, Iowa.
He's the first associate executive producer at $245.45.
Probably the longest segment we'll ever do.
John and Adam, a lot of people are saying you two have an absolutely big league podcast.
Very high energy.
Everybody's talking about it.
Quite frankly, there are a lot of podcast phonies out there.
Real dummies.
A lot of people are telling me to start a podcast.
It would be big and beautiful.
So beautiful.
Believe me when I tell you I've been working on podcasting 3.0.
And to be perfectly honest, it's going to be unbelievably tremendous.
The likes of which have never been seen before.
I was going to do a fumble rooski and give the donation to my son Ron Jr., but in all fairness, it's not going to happen.
That I can tell you.
I have many, many friends that I would like to mention.
Upper and Lower Decker, Floyd Mayweather, Clem, and Big Phil.
Very, very fine people.
I'd like to request most truly amazing, outstanding jingles.
Okay, that was the note.
I think I read it the way it was written.
Yeah, that sounded right.
I have no idea what he said.
He's Trump.
He's Trump, the president.
He's Trump.
He's Trump.
I looked for this this morning during PrEP.
I can't find it.
I know it's there.
He's Trump.
He's Trump.
The president.
But I don't know what it was called.
What song is that by?
What is the original?
It was called Gump or something like that originally.
Dump?
It was about...
It was a nickname from some girl that the lyrics were about.
Anyway...
Okay, then Trump, Big Daddy, and F. Joe Biden march.
We banned F. Joe Biden, if I'm not mistaken.
We don't have an F. Joe Biden march.
Oh, that?
No, we're not going to play.
There was no march.
No.
He's Trump.
It was Trump.
He's Trump.
God, we played the crap out of that, too.
And now, of course, in my search, try putting in Trump.
That's pretty funny.
Good luck.
Let me just...
Well, if you tried earlier today to find it and you couldn't find it, I think you've done your job.
I do have this one.
Last night, the United States brought the world's number one terrorist leader to justice.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Oh, I do miss this one.
Abu Bakr, Abu Abu Bakr, Baghdadi.
Abu Abu Bakr, Abu Abu Bakr, the United States.
The United States has been searching for Baghdadi for many years.
Baghdadi, he died after running into a dead-end tunnel.
Baghdadi is dead.
And he died in a vicious and violent way.
He died like a dog.
You've got karma.
Sorry, Ronald.
it's the best we could do Sir Arthur Brewer.
He's next on the list from Madisonville, Tennessee.
Two, three, four, five, six.
One of my favorite donations is Jens.
He writes, Sir Arthur, you're once and future king here.
I'm needing some of that sweet no agenda nation karma from my good friend Shane Luthie from Berlin, Wisconsin.
Please play him the F cancer jingle as he's going for a pretty major cancer surgery tomorrow in Madison.
He's a dear friend and we need this whole ordeal to work out in his favor.
Sir Arthur, your once and future king in Madisonville, Tennessee.
Ah!
You've got karma.
Michael Sislow from Rotonda West in Florida.
23456, our favorite number.
It's been over a year since I donated and feel guilty that I'm not pulling my weight, Michael says.
So I want to thank you guys and all the producers for the work that is done to make these shows happen.
It is the highlight of my week to get a chance to listen to quality entertainment and an informative breakdown of the news.
Can you please give me a Jobs Karma and a Sleepy Joe for my smoking hot keeper, Renee, as she is looking for greener pastures and please throw in a little dedouching for me.
It's just throw in a ghost.
You've been dedouched.
Okay.
As it always brings a smile on my face.
Thanks again.
Wishing you two much happiness in the new year.
Mike Sislow, Night in the Making.
Yeah, we can do that.
Here we go.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You've got karma.
Rhett Gardner in San Diego, 233.33.
This donation is in honor of my dad, Sir Ron Gardner of the Insane Diego.
Insane Diego.
Insane Diego!
In celebration of his 67th birthday on December 11th.
I hope he's glad I hit him in the mouth.
A little girl yay and goat karma, please.
Thank you for your courage.
Yes, indeed.
Yay!
You've got...
Karma...
And we have Rhett Gardner.
No, is that the one we just did?
I'm sorry.
We have Steve Banstra.
Yes, I have Steve Banstra's email.
Steve was executive producer on the last episode.
Note did not come through.
Here it is.
I was hit in the mouth in 2020, but...
No, this is not from Steve.
Hmm.
It's interesting.
Oh, this is from...
No, that's...
I'm sorry, that's Amy.
That's the wrong one.
Yeah, Amy's note is interesting.
Well, it's not time to read Amy's note yet, though.
Well, no, but Amy's note is a make good for the...
It was an executive producer, I think.
Right, but I thought we had a Steve Bonstra as well.
Am I... Well, I'll look at my email and see if I can find one.
Let's read the next one.
I'll do this.
That's interesting because I thought I... So sure I'd seen it.
Okay.
We move on to Sir Upper Decker.
$200.
Associate Executive Producership from California.
Sir Upper Decker and family finally bailing out of Cali.
Need major house building karma as we begin...
Breaking ground in Tennessee at the worst time ever to build a house, but we gotta go.
This place is nuts.
43 cents per mile?
Really?
John knows.
Dot, dot, dot.
What does that mean?
What do you know?
I was looking at Banster, so I have to look this over.
What did he say?
I know what?
At 43 cents per mile.
Really?
I think he's talking about the price of gas.
Yeah, okay.
Any luck on Steve Banster?
You know, Banster's written before.
Steve Banster's name's in there.
And there's no email from him with the appropriate date.
The last one is September.
So we have to pass on that, but I think we should read the make good notes from Amy.
Okay.
And it says it requires me to put something out.
She's going to record, I think.
I don't know what she's doing.
Okay.
Hold on a second.
That was her last one.
Yes, here we go.
I was hitting the mouth.
You're doing it.
I'm sorry.
Are you doing it?
It's fine.
I'm going to do it because she requires me to do something.
I got you.
You've read ahead.
You've worked ahead.
Good.
I was hit in the mouth in 2020 by my husband Matt.
We were on a road trip from Waterloo, Iowa to Pierre, South Dakota, and you guys turned the most hellishly boring drive into a pretty fun road trip.
Before being introduced to you, I had turned off the news completely.
I found myself obsessing and feeling hopeless about what has been being reported, despite the fact that everything in my life screamed the opposite of what they were telling me.
Now that I have accepted no agenda into my life, you have helped me see through the bullshit and I thank you for that.
Before COVID happened, I was always considering myself more of a liberal.
Now that liberals have torpedoed off the deep end with COVID and the wokeness, I sat back shaking my head realizing I should have seen the crazy sooner.
I am reminded of the movie Hot Fuzz, quote unquote, for the greater good.
I work for a community college.
We have no mask or mandates, vaccine mandates, though both are encouraged.
I am confident that the college will keep that decision up to the individual, which I am grateful for.
It has been interesting to hear the loudest people shout to mask and vaccine everybody, not realizing how much that would impact enrollment.
Finally, this donation and producer credit is a switcheroo.
Uh-oh.
Thank you.
John, will you help me out and say the following?
Happy belated birthday, Matt, from that woman you're married to.
I think you can do a better read.
Try it again.
This would be really good.
Take two.
Hold on a second.
Happy belated birthday, Matt.
Stop, stop.
You flubbed.
Happy belated birthday, Matt, from that woman you're married to.
Now let it flow a little better.
Happy belated birthday, Matt, from that woman you're married to.
That's perfect.
That's perfect.
Well done.
Adam, please get out your de-douche and fire away.
We're both douchebags, although this one is just for Matt.
I expect a good de-douching in January when my birthday comes around.
Some baby-making karma would be appreciated, and if not too much trouble, I just love that shape-shifting jujing.
You've been de-douched.
You've got karma.
Bye.
you you you you Good read.
Good read, man.
Yes, I know.
It was your direction, my man.
Well, you know, hey, it's how we roll here at the No Agenda Show.
We just want the best product.
It doesn't matter what we have to do to get there.
So this concludes our list of associate executive producers and executive producers for show.
And we'll make sure to add Matt on the end of this.
For show, what is it?
1409?
1407.
I'll take 1407.
1407.
Yes.
Thank you to these executive producers.
These credits are real.
Every single one of you now has an executive producer or an associate executive producer credit, which you can list anywhere.
We'll vouch for you if anyone ever questions.
And, you know, just tell them to go look around.
Go look at IMDB. See if it's a real credit.
Okay?
And before you continue...
I just was closing the email and there was a note from Steve Banstra.
What does Steve Banstra say?
Well, Steve Banstra says, please switcheroo another one.
And this associate executive producer credit to my wife, Jessica, a.k.a.
Dame Smokin' Hot Stew, for her 45th birthday yesterday, December 11th.
We are currently displaced from our home to our driveway during a whole house remodel.
And she's the only person I could ever live with for six months in a camper.
One down, five to go.
Oh, brother.
Happy birthday, baby.
I love you, sir.
That's nice.
Now, we also have to put Jessica.
Where does she fit?
Associate?
She's an associate and also she has to be on the 45th birthday list.
And she's not on there either, or is she on there?
No, there's no way she's on there.
Okay.
Wait, Jessica...
Dame Smokin' Hot Stew.
Oh, I got...
Yeah, Dame Smokin' Hot Stew.
And the birthday...
Oh, my goodness.
December 11th.
Yeah, yeah.
Hold on a second.
Wrap it up for me while I do this, will you?
Okay.
Well, anyway, the point is that these people are genuine executive and associate executive producers.
You can put it on IMDb.
You can put it on Twitter.
It looks neat.
It's also very popular on LinkedIn.
LinkedIn.
Which, every time I go to LinkedIn, I see it.
And then people put, like, executive producer for a show.
Bang, bang, bang, bang.
They put a list of them on there.
And when you're older, just think about your grandkids.
Somebody's going to say, what happened?
What did granddad used to do?
He was an executive producer of the most famous podcast ever produced by the guy who invented podcasting, as a matter of fact, a no-agenda show.
I can keep stalling if you want.
No, it was beautiful.
I think...
Award-winning.
Award-winning stall.
Award-winning.
Thank you very much for your support.
If you'd like to be an executive producer or associate executive producer or just solidify your relationship, go to this website.
So popular, all the kids can sing the jingle.
Thank you very much for producing episode 1407.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Order!
Order!
Shut up!
Before we continue, I have a quick update.
I have no clip on this, but it is something I've been tracking.
On Thursday, it was the last show day, which is why we're going to talk about it on Thursday.
Israel led a 10-country simulation.
We love these, kind of like an Event 201 situation, which was a simulation.
They called it, it's a war game, of course.
What did they call this thing?
Collective Strength.
Operation Collective Strength simulated a major cyber attack on the global financial system.
In an attempt to increase cooperation that could help to minimize any potential damage to financial markets and banks.
Love that!
That always means that something could be on the way.
Let's see.
There was a bit about this on the last...
Blue Bloods, the show with Tom Selleck.
And it was about the entire police department was hit by a cyber attack and took out everything and they couldn't do anything.
The radios didn't work.
Nothing was any good.
And meanwhile, some woman was there.
I didn't see this whole episode, so I don't know how it ended.
But she came there from London, and she coincidentally worked.
She was a friend of the commissioner.
But now she's in the private sector working for Aegis, a computer security operation.
And she says, well, you don't know this, because you guys don't know what you're doing, she basically said.
But this attack may not have been an attack.
Yeah, you stopped it, but it may not have been an attack at all.
It may have been just probing for a future attack, and there may be some, you know, the real attack is yet to come kind of thing.
So, you know, when I see this and I hear this story, I'm thinking, what are they up to here?
Yes, exactly.
If it wasn't for...
Prepping us for a...
And then we had just the downing of AWS the other day.
That was pretty good.
And that's non-trivial.
That was certainly non-trivial.
Also, the Apache struts...
Vulnerability, which is freaking all the script.
Everyone's freaking out.
There's some vulnerability in Apache.
Oh yes, actually JC was talking about it at dinner the other night.
This is some code.
It's a very little piece of code.
Log4J is what it's called.
Log4J.
And you just put it into a system and it goes nuts.
Pretty much.
And again, it turns everything over to you, or it could do all kinds...
And a lot of damage has been done with this.
The hard disks have gone away.
There's all kinds of problems.
Oh, yeah.
Yet something is going on.
Well, if you want to change the financial system, nothing better than saying, oh, well, it got locked up with ransomware.
Might as well flip on the CBDC. I'm just waiting.
This is what happened.
For 15 years.
Almost.
Almost.
The theory is there will be a bank holiday.
It will be a long three-day weekend.
And when we wake up after that three-day weekend, nothing will work.
And we've always thought it would be just shutting it down or the dollar collapsing.
Well, we thought this was going to happen with Y2K, as you recall.
But that's why I'm saying this has always been the same thing.
It's like thousands of sealed indictments.
However, now...
In light of Event 201, other things we've seen, over a decade of the six-week cycle from the FBI, it's not unthinkable that they're setting something up.
And there's enough talk about the financial system, and Lord knows we've put enough new, fresh money.
Is it true that 40% of all the money...
That the United States has ever created was done in the last 24 months?
Saved or created?
Saved or created?
I don't know this.
It's my understanding that 40% of all the money ever printed, created, saved, was created in the last 24 months.
I haven't heard this.
That's why I asked.
I mean, I can imagine it being a possibility because they're just jacking up everything.
And gee, there's inflation.
Finally.
Well, but that's what you've always called for.
You have always been a proponent of print more, print more, print more, print more.
You can't deny it.
No, I haven't.
You've always been saying they need to print a lot more.
You've always said that.
Oh, no.
I said it during the quantitative easing when they were buying bonds, which is the same thing as printing more.
Right.
That's why they've been printing it, of course.
Yeah, because they're going to go into a deflationary spiral, but you can't just...
It's not for infinity.
Once you see the thing tapering off, you stop.
There's no...
No, you're using tapering wrong.
I'm using tapering correctly.
You don't want to use tapering.
The term tapering is...
Is toxic.
There's two words we want to abolish.
Tapering, what's your transitory?
It's got to go.
Tapering, transitory, all toxic.
Totally.
Yeah.
So, you know, I think people are starting to wonder, like, hey, wait a minute, they said that take the vaccine, won't have to wear a mask, you're all cool, you know, the inflation is transitory.
This is all losing faith, all losing faith.
Thought I had a clip about inflation, but I think I just passed on it.
So, no.
Did I have something?
Yeah, I do have some Build Back Better stuff.
Hold on a second.
Since we're talking about it, this is from CNN. With prices at their highest point in nearly 40 years, President Biden is predicting it's, quote, the peak of the crisis.
Inflation is affecting people's lives.
Inflation reached its highest point in November since 1982, when Ronald Reagan was in office and Joe Biden was a senator from Delaware.
Tonight, President Biden is pointing to other signs the economy is recovering.
Every other aspect of the economy is racing ahead.
It's doing incredibly well.
We've never had this kind of growth in 60 years.
That message complicated after the Consumer Price Index, which measures what you're paying for services and goods, climbed 6.8% in November compared to a year ago.
It's a real bump in the road.
It does affect families.
Rising costs are also challenging the path ahead for Biden's legislative agenda.
The president sounding uncertain when asked if he can get Senator Joe Manchin to vote yes on his expansive economic bill with inflation numbers this high.
I don't know the answer to that.
I'm going to be talking to him at the beginning of the week.
Manchin says he's concerned that more federal spending now will make inflation worse.
But the president is pushing back.
Economists think it's going to, in fact, diminish the impact on inflation is because it's reducing costs for ordinary people.
Reducing costs for ordinary people.
This is my favorite part.
We need to spend more to reduce inflation.
But he doesn't say that.
He says it's reducing people's costs because they'll have money in their pocket, but ignores what it does.
It's only for a number of people.
He's really pushing the idea, are you going to get more money to save on child care?
No.
That's only a very small portion of the public.
Nope.
You know what they're going after, though?
They really want to come up with something for the 1.7 trillion student loans.
They really want to try something.
They so badly want to do that.
Well, you know, what they're doing with the student loan gambit, Schumer's pushing it harder than anybody, and I think Biden will go for it, is you figure you pay off the student loans for these kids and they're all going to vote Democrat.
I mean, this is all political.
Yes, of course.
But they're already voting Democrat.
I don't know if you've ever met any of these kids that are up to their eyeballs in student loans.
There was a number of them that worked at Mevio, living with adult males in their late 20s living with 10 roommates because of their student loan burden.
They were all a bunch of Trump-hating Democrats already.
So maybe this is a thank you for being a Trump-hating Democrat?
You get your money back free?
No, I think it's a balance sheet problem.
The federal government is liable for this.
The federal government backs these loans.
That's why they're so out of control.
That's why it grew from a billion under Obama to 1.7 billion now.
I remember the trillion.
I'm sorry.
I remember the trillion.
And now it's 1.7 trillion.
I think that it's a balance sheet problem.
They need to get it off.
They've already...
Siphoned off all the social security money, I'm just presuming.
I think it's sitting somewhere?
Illegally, I should add.
Well, yeah.
So, anyway, we'll see what happens.
God, it'd be so cool if we had a complete meltdown and all that worked was Bitcoin.
Oh, it would be cool, yeah.
I don't think so.
They have something.
Especially gun-toting Texas.
It'd be very cool here.
I'm not worried at all.
Let's shoot up the place.
Who's gonna give a shit?
Let's get some guns and shoot it up.
You clearly, clearly have a very poor impression of what Texas is all about.
I've been there.
You California commie, you.
Oh, Texas loves to be ridiculed.
Here, wait.
Here, California, okay?
Ridicule us.
Let me tell you what's going on in California.
Okay, it's in Southern California, but it might as well be where you live.
This is the head of police.
The head of police, I'm sorry, the head of police union.
My message to anybody considering coming to Los Angeles, especially during the holiday season, is don't.
A sobering and somewhat terrifying statement from the LA Police Protective League.
He says, my message to people coming to California, Los Angeles for Christmas holiday, don't.
My message to anybody considering coming to Los Angeles, especially during the holiday season, is don't.
A sobering and somewhat terrifying statement from the L.A. Police Protective League, the union representing LAPD officers.
The message coming as a crime wave continues to slam the city and surrounding areas.
We can't guarantee your safety.
It is really, really out of control.
I said it to people before, it's like that movie Purge.
You know, instead of 24 hours to commit your crime, these bad people have 365 days to commit whatever they want.
The warnings seem to resonate with residents.
It's pretty scary walking at night.
Sarah Veenstra moved to L.A. from Wisconsin about six months ago.
She didn't realize crime and safety would be such major issues.
I genuinely thought it'd be a safe area.
It turned out not to be as safe as I thought.
I don't think so.
I'm definitely, like, carrying something on me every single time I walk out of the house when it's dark out.
Pack and heat!
Rampant crime continues.
Pack and heat.
Some of the latest victims were hit at the Downtown Intercontinental Hotel.
Three victims were robbed of $100,000 in jewelry...
Early Tuesday morning, just the latest in a wave of smash and grab.
Follow home and home invasion robberies.
LAPD Chief Michael Moore on Tuesday trying to reassure the public.
It's not out of control.
It's not a spiral that we've lost control over.
Okay, uh-huh.
Yeah, that's California.
That's California.
Yeah, I'm not going to argue against this.
So, I wouldn't say too much.
I think it's an accurate portrayal.
Yeah.
Until they get these guys, these district attorneys and these prosecutors, they've just got to get them out of there.
If California is so, you know, so rigged, it's a rigged state, the votes don't count, just all the Democrats just win everything, and you end up with a situation like this, it's a case study.
I'm following all of the developments in...
Gosh, we got another...
Remember we were talking about the consumer data platform?
We had that high-level executive in advertising who worked on the consumer data platform team, which used to be...
What did it used to be called?
Whatever it was.
Back in the marketing days.
Well, you told us.
Back in the marketing database.
Oh, yes.
There is called, yeah, direct marketing databases.
They're called database systems.
The consumer data platform is really everybody's all in.
military, government, Facebook, Google, they're all contributing to this under the guise of, you know, let's do this for advertising.
Here's one of our producers, Anonymous, wanted to give a little info follow-up on the recent episode 1405, the conversation that began with the consumer data platform from one of the advertising big four producers, which turned onto the topic of mobile ID.
I can't share any proof of the extent I was involved, nor did my pay stubs really prove anything, but I want to give you some more info on the subject.
Idemia.
I-D-E-M-I-A. These are the very uncool dudes behind TSA PreCheck.
They have been incredibly interested in mobile ID for a very long time.
They've had numerous product launches around the world, including in the States.
Actually, they've done product launches for mobile ID in Mississippi, Arizona, Oklahoma, and Delaware.
The depressing part, I personally witnessed that as soon as COVID-19 hit the mainstream news, Idemia executives, their marketing team, and members of TSA leadership were all jitty at the same with email threads about incorporating their mobile ID product into the health pass.
There you go.
And here is it, the health travel pass, starting in the Netherlands.
It's Idemia.
Idemia.
It's the company we need to be looking at.
Or, or, should we be looking to a more popular brand, say, Amazon?
This is Zoe.
Just like you, she uses lots of different cards and IDs to get through her day.
What if all Zoe needed was herself?
Introducing Amazon One, a free service that lets you use your palm to quickly pay for things, gain access, earn rewards, and more.
Let's say you're grabbing your favorite coffee beverage or heading into the office or checking out.
Just hover your palm and you're on your way.
It's as easy as that.
Sign up is free and takes less than a minute.
All you need is a credit card, your phone number and your palm.
Oh, yeah.
Indoor skydiving.
Enter, identify, and pay with Amazon One.
Enter, identify, and pay.
And now Zoe has so much more time because it's so much easier than pulling a card out of her wallet.
She can just flash her palm.
How is this secure?
If someone grabs you, how is this secure?
Well, they can also grab you and grab your card.
Right, but it seems a little easier to just grab someone's...
Just, hey, you're paying for it.
You're identifying.
Chop their hand off.
I mean, with a retinal scan, at least you have to either gouge the eye or, you know, do something.
Had to hold...
I remember one of these movies where the eyeballs at the end of a sharp knife is held up into the scanner.
There's a movie, The Rock and Ryan Reynolds, which we watched last night, called Red Notice.
It's a jewel heist movie, but at a certain point they break into a vault and With the equivalent of a TikTok filter that Ryan Reynolds talks into one side of the iPad and the other side it looks like the guy and sounds like him in order to do the biometrics and open up the vault.
Yeah.
Yeah, cute.
So, anyway, this is a...
Far-fetched.
Oh, enter, identify, and pay.
Somehow, I think these...
Pay is wrong.
It's fucked up the marketing.
It's enter, identify, and borrow, I think would be funnier.
Because that's what it's about.
Enter, identify, and exit.
No, you don't get to exit.
It's seamless.
You don't get to exit with the Amazon Palm.
Nope.
Nope.
Well, Amazon's got these systems that, you know, these stores, they've been working on this kind of stuff.
So you don't have to have any cashiers as a way to get rid of employees.
And they'll be hacked in some funny way.
Well, all of this goes into the customer data platform, and this is where your social credit score will come from.
It'll be mixed with a government credit score.
They've already announced they want to take that over.
And these are the kinds of stories you'll see.
It'll be good.
It'll be good for you.
A mortgage advisor has, let's see, Glenn Russell.
I've seen rising number of customers turned down for mortgages because they subscribed to or made multiple payments to OnlyFans.
What?
Who cares?
Yeah, well, I'll tell you why they care.
If you look at the behavior of some people on OnlyFans, they're going broke.
You have no idea.
Do you remember who was our porn?
Yeah, but that's the people on OnlyFans.
Are you talking about the people that give money to the OnlyFans?
Yes, yes.
Because they're in love with some bullcrap girl?
Do you remember our official porn star of the No Agenda show?
Her name eludes me for a moment.
I know who it is.
The Dutch woman.
Gosh, why can't I remember her name?
Someone in the troll room will know.
She would tell stories about how guys would call in and they'd say, look, here's the password to my bank account.
Just go and take whenever you need some, just take it.
Crazy shit like that.
Tens of thousands of dollars per customer.
These are, you know, obviously these guys got some issues.
Do you think?
Yeah.
And I think that...
I think that they're seeing it as a risk.
You know, well, this guy, you know, he's got a lot of OnlyFans, and if they're irregular payments, like, oh.
Yeah, but they can't, because they know.
It's like saying you're a drug addict, I guess.
No, it's probably pretty much like tearing up the credit card.
Bobby Eden.
Bobby Eden.
Thank you, trolls.
Yeah, Bobby Eden.
I did it myself.
It's probably like the, you know, the bit where American Express, this is a tip we've talked about on the show a million times, but people don't know it.
Because we have new listeners and producers.
And this is where you, if you have your, if you go, if you take your American Express card, and this actually works with the other cards too, and you buy two tanks of gas.
Yeah.
And some sneakers.
And then you buy sneakers.
The card is rejected immediately.
You really have to go through a lot of trouble to get your card back.
I accidentally did some crazy thing once, and this happened to my card.
I don't know how it happened.
I didn't buy two tanks of gas, but the CEO of American Express discussed this in public once.
I remember that.
If you buy two tanks of gas, and the rationale is, if you steal the card, the first thing you're going to do is get a tank full of gas, and then give a tank full of gas to your buddy.
Yep, and then you're going to go buy some sneakers.
And then you and your buddy are going to go buy sneakers.
Yep.
Now, this seems a little racist to me, because it seems to me that, you know, this is like a certain kind of subculture that we're dealing with, that buys sneakers on the stolen card.
I wouldn't say sneakers is necessarily a racist thing.
I mean, these...
They're selling to more than just black and brown people, John.
There's a lot of money in the sneaker business.
I got a report from our professor, Professor JJ, responding to the concept of cameras in the classroom surveilling the teacher.
He has some experience with this.
I thought it would be interesting to share because it didn't turn out too well for him.
And so this is something you suggested.
Correct?
I would like to see cameras in the classroom.
Here's his experience.
He's a traveling teacher in North Carolina, a two-party consent state.
Kids recorded me and posted it on social media.
The administrator said that I, and you have to know he's ADOS, he's black, black American, African American, Was raising the idea of racism, hence making me racist.
It turns out the millennials tune out when other students are asking questions in class, and as soon as they do not hear the teacher talking, millennials will repeat the exact same question.
This got me really annoyed.
So after such happened in my class, I asked certain children, who just happened to identify as white, if they had ignored the dialogue between me and a black student, simply because the white student felt that such questions and replies were irrelevant.
Then I said, I hope the lack of attention and concern was not due to racism.
Those comments got me fired.
They were recorded on a cell phone.
The admins told me that I was instilling racism in students by raising the idea that some students might be racist.
In Mexico, my school in Durango, over a thousand kilometers south of El Paso, installed cameras after a teacher in Mexico City raped a handicapped student, so 900 kilometers away.
So they installed it in a different Durango.
I had a girl, age 14, who failed We're good to go.
She ran out of the class crying, called her parents.
The principal reviewed the video and audio and said that I had done nothing wrong, but the parents said they did not like my tone of voice.
The parents never asked for the recordings and the principal never presented them in my defense.
I was fired.
Here in China...
I was teaching grade 8 biology.
I had an American boy who insisted that CO2 is killing the planet.
After he read the textbook chapter about plants and he saw that plants need carbon dioxide to live, I suggested that he review the science about AGW, climate change, climate crisis.
The boy recorded me and his father said that I am anti-science.
I was threatened with termination for failing to believe in global warming.
So, I guess the bottom line is...
You're screwed either way.
It doesn't matter what you do.
If you let the crazies go rampant, they go rampant.
And if you start to record them, then a lot of the good people, supposedly, will get kicked out.
Let me think.
Now, that guy taught in the United States.
I think he was in Mexico.
Then he was in China.
This guy's a spook.
No, he's Professor JJ. He's in Beijing.
He's been reporting for years on the show.
He may be a spook.
Think about it.
He's a traveling North Carolina, Mexico, what was the other one?
Beijing.
But regardless of if he's a spook or not, what does that have to do with anything?
Spooks don't want cameras in classrooms.
Yeah.
I have a weakness for teachers.
Okay, that is noted and accepted as a fact, everything he said, and I still want cameras in classrooms.
I don't care.
It's not going to change anything from the sounds of it.
No, exactly.
It really won't.
And I think it's better to have everything in context than having some kid with his little cell phone recording you out of the blue, out of context.
That's more dangerous.
True.
To change the pace, let's listen to some call-in on C-SPAN on the Democrat line.
Okay?
This is drunk Jasmine.
Finally, finally the C-SPAN clips are being pulled out of the closet.
It's about time.
This is Jasmine in New York City.
Good morning.
You're next.
Yes, good morning.
Well, according to the exterior, it's not by default with the problem with the gas.
You remember a couple years ago, all they need is the oil.
That's all he needed is the oil.
It's Trump's fault.
Because Trump took away everything that Obama had done.
The gas was low, but Trump took away everything, turned over everything, and Trump talked about All you need is the oil.
That's the oil.
That's Jasmine in New York City.
I don't know.
This sounded like an elderly West Indian woman to me.
Not necessarily drunk.
That's racist, Dvorak.
It's just racist.
Let's do more.
Isn't that racist to be drunk?
No, I mean, you called because the elderly West Indian woman sounded drunk to you.
That's your bias.
Now, okay, we got one more clip then.
These are more recent than the ones that have been floating around that are long lost.
Okay.
This is from last week.
There's another drunk, and this guy's a...
Now, just to balance things, a drunk, white Republican, and he's trying to tell everybody what the world's like, and it's just annoying.
Brian, out of Michigan, Republican.
Good morning.
Yeah.
Hi, could you hear me?
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
Okay.
You seem like a pretty intelligent guy, a lot younger than me now.
Okay, right.
Right off the bat, I'm like, you're an asshole.
I hang up right if...
You seem like a really intelligent guy.
Why haven't we done a full study on the whole Russian matter, Robert Mueller?
I mean, it's beyond obvious now that that was all illegal, what they did against Trump.
It's beyond obvious.
Why don't you bring on Tony Bobulinski?
Was this the morning show?
It just has guests on?
It wasn't a particular hearing or anything?
No, this was just a Washington weekly show that had the call-ins.
I'll tell you why, and I'm very excited about listening to this, because this is...
I receive comments like this that are very similar.
It's like, why don't you bring on this person who was on Tim Pool?
Why don't you talk about this person who Joe Rogan...
They always tell me about, why don't you do what all the others do?
Do you get those emails sometimes?
Yeah, and every once in a while I get one of them, and it's obvious they never listen to the show.
Well, there's that.
One of the things I always like to do is suggest putting somebody on the show as a guest.
Yeah, that's my favorite.
First, tell me what guests that we've had, do you think that maybe we should focus...
Like, what guests that we've had did you like?
It was a good example of our prowess.
Yeah, give me an example of a guest that you like, and we'll structure it that way.
Because I need a structure here.
Yeah.
They never hear back.
No, of course not.
Well, it's beyond obvious.
Why don't you bring on Tony Bobolinski?
Now, when you look at CNN reporting, the Gallup poll, I'd like you to bring up that poll sometime.
They did a survey when Trump was the first year of his presidency, prior to when he was elected.
Do you know that on CNN, MSNBC, even PBS, all your major networks, they had over 90% negative coverage of the man?
Gee, boy, man, do you watch a lot of Tucker Carlson?
Because you're sounding like you're just talking about his show.
Whereas on Fox, you're at 49 and 51.
Fair and balanced.
So how are those things not brought out?
Furthermore, on CNN... Jake Capper, Scudo, both worked for Democratic parties.
Now, how is that not brought out?
All of these things.
So, you know, how many people on CNN in particular do not even have a...
It's sad because I know people like this.
And they do this all the time.
It's like, yes, I know.
And if he was black, it would have been different if he was white.
It's like, eh.
It's all cliched.
It's all tropes.
It's all just the same old, same old.
And to be drunk on top of it, because I'm pretty sure this guy's got some...
He sounds a little sauced.
Morning beer.
Morning buzz.
Degree in journalism.
Yeah, you've got to get started early.
Not even a degree, yet they call themselves journalists.
Cuomo is not a journalist.
Tapper's not a journalist.
Scudo's not a journalist.
No way.
It's an interesting question.
Should you have to get a degree in journalism to practice?
Oh, was this the topic?
Was this the topic?
No, I don't believe it was, but...
That's interesting.
He presents it as though it was.
I don't believe it was, but what's interesting is that the Republicans, who are the libertarian-bending types of people...
Listen to the answer, this fascist answer that he gives.
Hold on, let me back up to the...
It's an interesting question.
Should you have to get a degree in journalism to practice journalism?
You have to have a degree in journalism.
That should be a requirement.
And I'm talking written journalism, not broadcast journalism.
You bet.
Do you think everybody should start in print media?
The theory of journalism is what, John?
You tell me, Brian.
Gather facts in search of the truth.
Very simple.
They could use a million words.
They brought it down to very simple.
That way.
That's how it has to be.
So what is it about print journalism that you think would help shape broadcasts?
The standards are higher.
And then we're not worried about all the fluff and stuff and how someone's style is.
You see?
It's Hollywood.
You got Hollywood going on here.
This is not journalism.
You're also, you know, he gives a definition of journalism which I don't think is correct.
He says it's the finding of, it's the collecting of facts to report the truth?
Eh, something like that.
I don't know what he's talking about.
But this is the guy that's sitting there stewing in his own juices.
There's Republicans and Democrats of this ilk.
And when he gets a chance to blow off some steam, he usually gets his nerve up by having a few extra scotches in the morning.
And then he blows off steam on his show, and this poor guy has to listen to it.
So maybe then...
Based on what Brian said, if I were Brian, it would have been a much stronger case if instead of talking about people who are completely irrelevant in the world, who he by himself is propagating these idiots on cable news.
He himself is doing that.
Instead, he should have said...
It's an outrage what is happening to Julian Assange.
Now to breaking news from London, where a court has ruled WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange can be extradited to the United States to face espionage and other charges.
Rameon Asensio is outside the court that announced that decision a short time ago.
Rameon, good morning.
Nate, good morning to you.
That's right.
And it has been pretty crowded all morning here outside the British High Court.
And that's because whatever Washington thinks of Julian Assange, he still has many supporters who say he exposed American wrongdoing in Afghanistan and Iraq.
But today, British judges did rule in favor of the United States, opening the door to Assange's extradition.
In total, he's facing 18 charges.
That includes espionage, charges of conspiring to hack government computers, and releasing confidential documents.
And this really has been a chapter, a full year in the making.
Today's decision actually runs counter to an earlier lower district court ruling that blocked Assange's extradition because of fears he would be sent to a supermax penitentiary in Florence, Colorado, and then potentially take his own life.
You might remember Assange had also spent seven years seeking asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy here in London before being hauled out in 2019 and subsequently arrested.
All this to say is that this saga continues to go on and it's not over yet.
And actually, Assange may not end up in the United States at all.
That's because there are still several legal hurdles to come, including a further final appeal at the British Supreme Court.
Poor guy.
He also had a stroke.
I heard this, yeah.
Well, of course, he probably was forced vaccinated in prison.
How messed up is it that that's your first thought?
It was my first thought when he had a stroke.
I know.
That's what's messed up.
It's like, that's what we're living in now.
Oh, vaxxed.
I can't do anything about it.
No, I know.
I know.
It's horrible.
Journalism.
The profession or practice of reporting about, photographing, or editing news stories for one of the mass media.
This has nothing to do with reporting the truth.
It's bullshit.
That definition sucks, too, because it doesn't have to be mass media.
Yeah, that's true.
The activity or profession of writing for newspapers, magazines, or news websites.
Wow.
Or preparing news to be broadcast.
Notice podcasts not included there?
Mm-hmm.
Podcasts can't be journalistic.
Speaking of, have you followed any of the...
Well, I want to go back to Assange thing.
Hold on a second.
Okay.
I think they should get...
I hope that they can extradite him because it's going to be a nightmare for the Biden administration.
The people who support Assange are Democrats.
It's not a bunch of Republicans.
No, I hope he can hang in there, but it sounds like there's years ahead.
No, they should get him over here and then release him.
What are they going to do, put him in a Supermax?
Why?
Because he embarrassed the establishment.
It's not Guzman.
Yeah, he did embarrass somebody, but those guys that were embarrassed are almost all, you know, they're all military.
Yeah?
And most of them aren't there anymore.
They're gone.
I'm with you, but I'm afraid that's not going to happen.
And where are the journalists?
Where are the actual journalists?
Where's Bernstein?
Where's Woodward?
Where are all these guys?
Where are they supporting Julian Assange?
No.
What does he get?
The ex-guy from Pink Floyd.
They should also be working on getting Snowden.
Another one.
Another one.
There's the backdrop here of the moderation debate.
With the Silicon Valley companies, you followed any of that?
Jamie Raskin, these kinds of dipshits.
It's so obvious what is happening here between the big tech, in particular Instagram or Meta, so that's Facebook, but also Google, and they're all playing a sad, pathetic little game.
It's a little act that they're all putting on and pretending like, oh, don't give us too much regulation!
We love a barrier to entry.
Yes, yes, yes.
We love this.
And there was an interview with the CEO of YouTube, Susan Wojcicki, who is...
Is she the...
I think she's the sister of one of the Google guys.
No, I think she's married.
Married to her page, isn't she?
Maybe she's ex.
I don't know.
No, no, maybe she's still married.
I don't know.
It's nepotism, whatever the case is.
She's a lightweight person.
She has so many beautiful tells in these two clips that it really shows you that all they care about is making moderation a very expensive process so that they can do whatever they need to do to be the only game in town.
That's what this is about.
Remember we had the whistleblower, what's her name?
Hogan.
Who all of a sudden now is doing interviews, speaking everywhere, telling everybody what she thinks Congress should do.
This was a setup from the beginning, setup from the beginning, and listen to the lightweight with tells.
Content moderation, obviously.
This is the interviewer.
Content moderation, obviously a challenge.
You're working on it.
You have a strategy.
What is the next big kind of scary thing that you're worried about on YouTube?
I mean, this is a question, right?
Every CEO should be asked, what is the next?
Yeah, what's the big scary thing you're worried about?
Now, she just said content moderation.
Obviously, you got that working.
So, what's the next big scary thing?
I mean, right now, I mean, the content moderation has been a huge area for us.
That's it.
I think it's something we're always going to have to continue to be on top of.
I think we're in a good place in the last couple of years.
We've put so much work from people, technology, process, experts in place to really make sure that we're on top of it.
But I'm always going to tell you that's going to be one of my...
That's going to be my top responsibility, and we can never take our eye off the ball.
We're always going to be focused on that.
But in terms of other things to worry about, we're certainly, regulation, we're certainly very focused on working.
Hello!
What was that?
When it comes to regulation, sounds like she's having little pleasure giggles there.
But in terms of other things to worry about, we're certainly, regulation, we're certainly very focused on working.
John, deconstruct.
She's jitty.
Benoit balls.
But in terms of other things to worry about, we're certainly, regulation, we're certainly very focused on working because, you know, I look across the globe and there are literally hundreds of bills that are in discussion right now that all have a variety of different ways of impacting YouTube and we want to make sure that we're able to, you know, that our creators are able to continue to publish and do the great work that they do.
Sure.
I'd also say, you know, there's a lot of competition.
Right.
Right now, everyone is talking about video.
We see a lot of growth.
It's not just U.S. companies.
There are global companies that we're competing with.
In a nutshell, I'd say Benoit Balls, by the way.
I don't know if anyone gets that reference anymore.
They were a thing.
I don't think they're a thing anymore.
Yeah, you can continue.
You don't need to belabor the point.
You can get it or you don't.
So she's...
What's the scariest thing?
Moderation.
Oh, but we've got regulation.
And creators and...
And what did she say at the end there?
At the end she says...
Right now everyone is talking about...
Oh yeah, and we've got lots of competitors.
So it's right there in a nutshell.
She's saying it.
It's about moderation, and it's going to be a human process, lots of humans, and the regulation is going to make sure that we stay where we want, and we'll do things like take down different accounts when the government asks us to.
And I, for one, am all for it.
She didn't quite say that, but that's what she said.
You're right.
I'm all for it.
I'm completely for it.
I want this.
Please.
There are plenty of alternatives.
Make it the government-controlled thing.
Now, there's a second piece to this, a little shorter.
The interviewer asked her about podcasting, and so there's been an announcement that YouTube is going to get into podcasting.
Did you realize?
Yes.
Well, there's a lot of podcasts on YouTube already.
What are they going to do?
Are they going to condone some podcasts?
This is what we don't know, but the question came up.
And y'all are getting into podcasting.
Well, we're excited about podcasting.
Okay.
Do you think she's excited about podcasting?
I doubt it.
Well, we're excited about podcasting.
Why?
For sure.
That's a place where there's also many different companies, but we do think it's a good opportunity for people who are producing podcasting to generate revenue, have more distribution.
You know, whenever someone opt-talks like that when they're talking about something, especially in Silicon Valley, that means they're completely insincere.
It's bullshit.
bullshit.
They don't mean it.
Odd here.
People who are producing podcasting to generate revenue, have more distribution, generate revenue, distribution.
You know that that's a lie.
Um, we cross 50 million subscribers for our YouTube music and premium service.
And so we know that users are, are paying for this service and the more we can offer more podcasts there, we think that will be a really valuable service for our users.
So we have a number of...
I have many things that could keep me up at night.
But I'm also excited about innovation.
Yeah, fine.
Innovation.
Is that related?
Did I play this clip last show, which is the new Twitter rules and boss NTD? I don't know, but let's listen.
Semi-related to this?
Yeah, of course, listen.
Twitter has made a major update to its private information policy just one day after Jack Dorsey stepped down as CEO. The new policy targets the sharing of photos and videos of private citizens without their consent.
NTD's Grace Coulter has the details.
Twitter announced Tuesday that it will now remove private photos and videos if they're posted without the person's consent.
This is an expansion of an existing policy that prohibits personal information, such as cell phone numbers, from being posted on the platform without the individual's permission.
In a blog post, Twitter explains that the update is part of their ongoing work to align their safety policies with human rights standards.
As for how the policy will be enforced, Twitter says they will review and remove the content upon being notified by those depicted in the images.
The new policy does have several exceptions.
It doesn't apply to public figures or in public.
Uh-huh.
Twitter said there may be other cases in which they allow private media to be shared, such as to help with a crisis situation or as part of a newsworthy event due to public interest value.
The company says it will take into consideration whether the content is being covered by the news media when deciding whether to remove it.
The new policy comes just one day after Jack Dorsey resigned as CEO of Twitter.
Chief Technology Officer Parag Agrawal has been appointed to take over as head of the company.
Oh my god, they are polishing this pig up so bad.
They got the temporary guy in, they're making all the moves.
Who's going to buy him?
Only AT&T or some bonus like that.
Some idiots are going to buy Twitter.
Now, it's interesting because...
Now, maybe they consider me to be a public figure.
I didn't think so since I'm not verified.
But I still...
There's at least two, maybe more accounts out there using variations of Adam Curry, A-D-A-M-C-U-R-Y, C-U-R-N-Y, that is copying my exact content, including my private images, I guess.
And is pretending to be me, is DMing people about, you know, Dogecoin.
Sounds like me, doesn't it?
I love that, by the way.
And you're like, send me some Bitcoin, I'll make you rich in Doge.
And I reported to Twitter and they say, no, no, no, I'm sorry, this does not qualify as impersonating you.
And everyone who encounters this, I'm going to be, hey, is this you?
Is this you DMing me?
No.
Well, I would start talking about that.
We have lawyers that listen to this show.
Are there any of the personal injury lawyers or people that can use this as a jumping off point to just sue Twitter for a defamation?
This is a defamation case.
Well, and while you're at it...
You're being defamed.
Yes, and while you're at it...
There's a scammer.
I'm suing Twitter, and I'm suing Sylvester Stallone.
Sylvester Stallone.
I'm suing you for defamation as well.
Here he is in a podcast with his daughters.
Back to a very special episode of the Unwax podcast.
With the iconic pink shark!
I like to be known as the podfather from here on in.
I'm suing you, Stallone.
Like to be known as the Podfather.
I don't think so.
Well, be that as it may, you may have a case against Twitter.
I don't have a case against Twitter.
How can you even think that?
I think you do.
Really?
Well, how about this?
With the right lawyers.
Well, yeah.
With the right lawyers, with $100,000, we could win a $50,000 settlement.
Thomas J. Henry will do it for us, I'm sure.
Yeah, that's the drawback is the cause to do the lawsuit.
Well, I have one other idea, just coincidence, happenstance.
Have you heard about the comedy guys?
All the comedy albums that they've gotten together with their own performing rights organization specifically for spoken word performing, but basically it's comedians.
And so they are not, they're saying to anyone who's either streaming music or making it available online, but I think Spotify is actually the first to respond by taking all comedy albums off.
They said, hey, you know, we're not registered as ASCAP BMI. And while you may have the right from the record company to play my comedy album, you have to, by statute, by law, you have to have the right from the person who wrote it as well, and you don't have it.
And the reason why I bring this up is, do you know that since day one, we have published this in the category of comedy?
This podcast?
Yes, you've been a big fan of that idea.
I have said multiple times we're a comedy show.
Do you think we then would have some standing to get some royalties?
Some back pay?
Who?
Well, the big companies are going to have to pay.
Sirius XM, Spotify, Apple.
It could be a billion dollars.
It could be more than a billion dollars in royalties that they owe comedians for their spoken word stylings and art.
But they've never played our stuff.
What do you mean?
We're on Apple.
You know, it's like...
What do you mean?
We're on iHeart's podcast.
Oh, I see what you're saying.
Maybe.
We publish it with a comedy tag saying this is a comedy product.
Yeah, Apple's got plenty of money.
Alright, well, we'll shelve this.
But stick a pin in it, John!
I'm gonna show myself the Lord by donating to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, on No Agenda in the morning.
And we do have a few people to thank for show.
1407, starting with Adrian Christensen in Marmore, Queensland, Australia.
Somehow he got $140.70 out of the country.
Right.
Sarah Hamrow in Seattle, Washington, 129.21.
Kim Glazer in Mission Viejo, California, 111.11.
Anonymous in Dazelk, South Carolina.
Nice.
Oh, there's a, sorry, there's a, uh, uh, from Sarah.
Uh, ITM John and Adam, a late palindrome donation.
Please call out Russ, Russ Hell as a douchebag.
Douchebag!
Let's see, we got a Sleepy Joe in on it earlier for her.
Uh, Rob Van Dyke.
And in Holland, $100.
Anonymous already called out in Dazel, South Carolina.
Justin Price has got a birthday in Blacksburg, Virginia, 99-31.
Jacob Pilak in Klusov, SK. What's SK, you think?
Slovakia.
Slovakia?
Yeah.
Yeah, he's in Slovakia.
Oh, that's great.
Slovakia is, you know, that whole area is great.
All those ex-Yugoslavian countries.
Sir Kevin McLaughlin, Duke of Luna, a lover of America, and what?
Boobs!
Wow, this guy's back.
He never left.
I think he was on the last show, as a matter of fact.
He never left.
He never left.
He loves America.
He just stays there.
This is like a permanent sell on this spreadsheet.
He loved, in fact, we build a spreadsheet around it.
Yeah, because he's the boom man.
And he loves America.
He does.
That guy is a true American.
Brian Taylor, 69-13.
Thomas Hurtado, 68-65.
Micah, Micah or Micah Sherrill in Hudsonville, North Carolina, 6-7-7-7.
Axel Paul, 65, and he's in Deutschland.
Let me do this next one because this is someone who's new and didn't quite understand, but I think it's important.
Jacqueline Rook from Emmaus, Pennsylvania, $64.
This is my first donation.
The amount of $64 represents the age my late father would have turned this coming January.
Floyd Van Allen, in our hearts forever.
This donation is a Christmas gift for my brother, Dylan Van Allen, towards his knighthood.
He hit me in the mouth shortly after the infamous January 6, 2021.
I was present at the event and was witness to what I would call the greatest patriotic moment of my life.
After hearing all the apologies from our side, I was extremely disappointed that they didn't stand up for us and instead turned into a bunch of cowards with no testicles between their legs.
Listening to your show brought me back some sense of not feeling so alone.
Thanks for what you do.
So Jacqueline obviously didn't know that there's a cutoff, but since it's a Christmas gift, I want to make sure we read it.
Good.
Thomas Buchan, Buchan, something in El Dorado, Victoria, Australia, 55-55.
Also has a website there.
What is it, website?
Gary Gibson in Grand Haven, Michigan, 55-10.
Glenn Spangler, 54-32.
Alexander Beattie in Houston, Texas, 50-01.
Now the following people are $50 donors, name and location, if I have it.
Philip Kim in San Francisco.
Kimberly Redmond, Dame Kimberly in Toronto, Ontario.
Ian Wilson in Ann Pryor.
Ann Pryor, Ontario?
Not sure where that is.
There's a Joe Rogan donation.
Niels Denboer in Holland, the birthday boy.
George Wushit, Sir George.
Michael Wendell in Matawan, New Jersey.
David Schwendinger in Woodbridge, Virginia.
Michael Hainer in Paris, California.
Jesse Hall in Friendswood, Texas.
Stephen Schumach in Xenia, Ohio.
John Ford in McKinney, Texas.
Kevin Kalin in Nashville, Tennessee.
Margarita...
E. Den Hood in Orangevale, California.
Orange, Dutch.
Taylor Counter, 50.
Ivan Olenek in Rockport, Texas.
And last but not least, Jonathan Ferris.
And he's in liberal, not conservative, but liberal Kansas.
I want to thank all these folks for producing, helping get the show off the ground in 1407.
Indeed.
Thank you for being such great and some of you complete regular producers.
We see you.
We see you, boobs.
Also, thanks everyone under 50 for anonymity, typically, but also if you're on one of our sustaining donations.
These are very important.
They provide a base when things are going slow, and we really do appreciate that.
Find out more at dvorak.org slash n-a.
And just a quick goat karma for anybody who needed that along the way.
You've got...
Karma.
Karma.
Rhett Gardner, happy birthday to his dad, Sir Ron Gardner of Insane Diego.
He turned 67 yesterday.
Sir Nielsen, Oli Shaik of the great Burgundic state of Brabant, celebrates today.
Taylor Connors, happy birthday to Logan, her boyfriend, Logan H. He celebrates tomorrow.
He'll be 31 on the 13th, Palindrome Birthday.
Mary Dietrich, happy birthday to a brother Jack D in Beacon, New York, 33 on the 14th.
Justin Price will be 31 on the 15th.
Dame Smokin' Hot Stew, happy birthday to hubby Matt, who celebrated on the 10th of December.
And we have a belated, that is the belated birthday.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
We got ourselves one dame to hoist up on the podium here today, so...
Yeah, I got the dame-only blade.
Yes, it's dainty.
It's dainty.
Christine!
Christine Hines!
Pop on up here!
That's right.
Thanks to your support of the No Agenda Show and the amount of $1,000 or more.
You are now welcome here at the round table of the No Agenda Knights and Dames.
Deservedly so, and we are very proud to pronounce the KD as Dame Salty Ketchup of the Manchganistan, New Hampshire.
For you, we've got Rent Boys, we've got some Chardonnay, but also Lemon Seltzer and Triscuits, which you wanted.
How about some zucchini and meatloaf?
Pepperoni rolls and pale ales?
Redheads and ryes, maybe?
Cowgirls and coffin varnish?
Rubenes, women and rosé?
Geishes and sake?
Vodka and vanilla?
Bong hits and bourbon?
Sparkling cider and escorts?
Ginger ale and gerbils?
Nay!
It is the mutton and mead that always scores.
And you are freshly minted dame.
Please go to noagendanation.com slash rings and choose.
Choose wisely.
So that Eric can get that to you as soon as possible.
Yeah, that's good.
Alright.
He sent out like 223 rings.
Wow.
In the last month or two.
Holy crikey.
Yeah.
Yeah, and that's...
Those rings aren't cheap.
They just went up like 17%.
Yeah, I noticed.
I noticed.
No agenda meetups.
Before we get to the reports, producer Mary heard my call about a meetup game, and she actually does this for a living.
I think after she got mandated out of her job, she goes around to parties, private parties, sometimes to bars, and she does sing-along bingo.
Where you get a bingo card and it has, you know, singable song titles.
And she has a 45-minute playlist and plays 30-second clips.
And, of course, it goes on until someone hits a bingo.
And it sounds like a really fun game.
So she was going to come to one of the Texas meetups and give that a shot.
And that might be something fun that we could always do.
You could also do it with jingles.
No agenda end of shows or no agenda jingles.
Could be kind of funny.
And it might be catchy.
You know, the kids around you might start to sing along.
First report is the written one from Brisbane.
In the morning, Adam, it was fantastic.
Unfortunately, actual active spooks in military mean they won't do meet-up reports.
169 police hierarchy got exemptions in Queensland, but boots on the ground, forget it.
All right, and he goes into this thing about the lockdowns.
The meetup was such a big relief being able to have a sensible conversation in a group of a dozen people.
Plus, we got the cutest in the evening when it was time to go home.
Very nice, Grant.
We appreciate that.
We had some other meetups that were reported.
Butler, Pennsylvania comes in.
There, fuck it.
We'll do it live.
Hey, this is Greg from the Butler Meetup.
We had four attendees.
There's no Bastrop Meetup, but good things come in small packages.
And I am deeply concerned.
Watcher of the Rye, Western Pennsylvania, I am also deeply concerned.
In the morning, this is Josh.
I'm deeply concerned as well.
Sir Nathan, the dog pack from the Pittsburgh crew.
Shout out to my homies.
And I am deeply concerned.
Was that deeply concerned?
Was that from Brian Williams' farewell thing?
Is that what they're doing?
I don't know where it comes from.
You hear it all the time on television, deeply concerned.
Now, this is the only other meetup report we have.
There was a monstrous meetup in central Indiana.
I mean, it was the Central Indiana, Noah Jenna Tribal Meetup.
There was so many people there, and they edited, they did a good job.
They kept it as tight as possible, but wow, one of the biggest.
In the morning from Nathan Boyer, long-time listener, long-time douchebag, thank you for your service.
Don't be proud of being a douchebag.
This is Brittany Baxter from Indianapolis.
I was smacking the visage by the baronet of bottom filling.
I'm a John C. fangirl.
Stop the 3x3.
Thank you for keeping ProChoice alive.
Hi, this is Annette from Millville, Indiana.
In the morning.
In the morning.
Dane Swanee and Sir Benny.
Sir Benny here.
Hey, Adam, blow me a kiss.
This is Kevin from Nashville, Tennessee.
In the morning.
This is Corinne from Nashville, Tennessee.
Moved from California and previously from Westfield.
Hello!
In the morning, we're the Greens from Greenwood.
Farm Rising from Kokomo, Indiana.
Stay sane, John.
Bruce here from Indy.
I'm going to do anything as a goat today.
This is Emily from Ohio, but now from Indianapolis.
Still not a spook.
I identify as a tomato, and Stephen might be a douchebag in the morning.
This is Cindy from Carmel.
Thank you for keeping me sane.
Not a joke.
Hi, this is Brittany Shaver from Zinesville, Indiana, and I want to say to John and Adam, I love you both just the way you are, and don't change a thing.
This is Sir Andrew the Polak Warrior.
John and Adam, love you both.
No Cuomo.
In the morning, Drew Williams from Carmel, Indiana.
In the morning, Uncle John and Adam.
This is Mad Steve with the mouths to feed.
In the morning, John and Adam.
This is Sam.
China is asshole.
In the morning, this is Soaring Hawk, the local Cary Barusa at our tribal meetup here.
Donate, everyone.
Donate.
Hi, this is Robert, and I hate to think what life would have been like for the last couple of years without the show.
Thank you so much.
In the morning, John and Adam.
The sky may be falling, but we're all right.
Thanks to you and your insights, our amygdalas are tight.
Hey, Adam and John, I think.
In the morning, this is Doug Newby here in Carmel, Indianapolis.
Thank you.
Hello, this is Sir Warren Carroll, the Baronetta Baldwin filling, coming in from Indianapolis, Indiana.
Thanks for having me.
This is Mark.
And Maria, not Martha.
John.
We're the M&M from Greenwood, and we're so excited to have another meetup.
We hope to do this monthly.
In the morning!
How's it going, y'all?
Mike the Polymath, Easy Peasy Podcast, total douchebag.
It's my first meetup.
Glad to be here.
Only been listening a short time, but I'm glad to be part of the community.
Hey, this is Nick from Indianapolis.
In the morning to you guys.
In the morning!
That was a big meetup!
That's crazy.
I'm still stunned by people who brag about being douchebags.
Being douchebags?
I know.
The show needs help.
I had actually edited some stuff out, a couple things that just tightened it up, and I guess I played the raw one.
But yeah, honestly, it's not really helpful to the show.
And you're proud of not supporting the show?
It's just weird.
You don't have to, but don't say it.
Please.
What is that?
We're proud of not supporting the show.
I have no idea what it stems from.
A lot of good people, though.
That sound is fantastic.
Quick rundown.
Just a couple of meetups coming up.
Let's see.
Starting now...
Oh, starting at 3 o'clock in...
Yeah, it's on its way.
Arlington, Washington at Skookum Brewery.
Might as well call it Spookum Brewery.
Thailand Quality Tourist Meetup Round 2, 2 o'clock Bangkok time.
I think that may be done.
It's in Pattaya or was in Pattaya.
At the Camel Toad Gentleman Club.
Seriously?
It's been a while since I've been to Pattaya, but okay, the Camel Toe Gentleman Club.
On Tuesday, the Bitcoin Essex UK meetup, 7.30 at Cherry Tree Pub.
I don't see how that works with no agenda.
That's interesting that's on the list.
Is that some twofer deal?
Let us know.
And then on next Thursday, a show day, the Cary Courage Local 19 meetup at Raleigh Point Sport Grill in Cary, North Carolina.
The Denver area bi-weekly rule flaunting meetup at 6 o'clock at Hangar 101 in Lakewood, Florida.
And finally, next show day, Thursday, the Charlotte's third thirsty monthly meetup.
There you go.
7 o'clock, Ed's Tavern, and that'll be in Charlotte.
And that is your meetup report.
If you'd like to know more, if you'd like to attend one, one of those big ones, or if you can't find one near you, just start one yourself.
You can find it all at noagendameetups.com.
Always guaranteed a party.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you want me.
Triggered or held the flame.
You want to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
It's like a party.
Alright, I have several ISOs.
How are you doing on the ISO? Well, before that, I want to read this note from Sir Anonymous Cop so people can...
Oh, yes.
Christmas is approaching.
This is for the No Agenda PVC patch.
That's what it's called, the PVC patch.
It's a PVC patch.
Limited quality, he says.
They're cheap.
They're only 15 bucks.
You've got to go to the Etsy store and it's following.
Etsy.com slash shop slash 41patches C-A, California, capital C, capital A. So it's sc.com slash shop slash 41 patches.
C-A, all one word.
So go check it out.
They are cool.
I love the picture of that.
It looks very cool.
Yeah, you're getting one.
Yeah.
It's a Christmas gift from me.
Oh, thank you, John.
Did you order one?
You're getting one.
You're going to get one.
Cheap bastard.
What are your ISOs?
How many do you have?
Oh, I have a whole bunch.
I have one, two, I have five.
One, two, three, four, five.
I got five.
Okay.
You want to do one and one, or you just want to roll through, or what do you want to do?
Why don't you just do yours?
Okay.
Because I've got the winner, I'm pretty sure.
Yeah, okay.
Stay safe!
I thought that was pretty good.
They're doing this because they think they're improving the shark.
No, that's no good.
New agenda, I guess.
Cut that one.
No, the only one I have that's worth it is...
How you doing, Booster?
Alright, here we go.
You don't like my Booster?
Well, listen to these.
Let's start with a like what?
Like what?
But like, what?
Okay, yes.
It's already better than mine.
Yeah.
Let's go to O. Ooh.
Oh my goodness.
Beautiful.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, that should be a keeper.
Mm-hmm.
Uh, terrible.
This is terrible.
Good ending.
And here's a skip.
Just want to go to wow.
All night.
Wow.
All right.
Wow.
All right.
Okay.
And finally, who are?
Who are these people?
I think that one just does that.
That's all around 100% no agenda goodness right there.
All right, you can stay with that one.
I thought who are these people was going to be the winner.
No, no, the who, because that's so authentic.
It's so beautiful.
And attention, member stations.
We ran a little long, so we're going straight to end of show here.
Which means, I can tell you, we have coming up next on noagendastream.com, trollroom.io, The Hog Story, five-minute limit live.
Oh, Fletcher's going to do a call-in show with Blaney right after No Agenda.
Huh.
It's our own version of C-SPAN. Yeah, I guess so.
All right.
End of show mixes.
Here we go.
We've got...
Bill Montanay.
Bill Montanay.
We got Tom Starkweather.
And we got Sir Ned Wood Knight of the Convicted Broadcasts.
And I am Adam Curry, coming to you from the heart of Texas Hill Country, FEMA Region No.
6.
And from northern Silicon Valley, I'm John C. Dvorak.
We return on Thursday.
Please remember to support us at Dvorak.org slash NA. Until then, have yourself a great Sunday or Monday or Tuesday or Thursday.
Adios, mofos!
and such.
The End
Tell me what you think is the blame If we did ourselves Then the COVID would not be there.
Have a job.
Now it's everywhere.
Have a job.
Is it delusion?
That's the blame.
Or is it delusion?
At the FDA. Will they wait until this morning?
Someone in the government must be seen.
There must be sense in there somewhere.
Yeah, there must be sense in there somewhere.
Maybe there must be sense in there somewhere.
Is there some sense in there somewhere?
And you know it just isn't fair.
They said COVID would not be there.
And it's everywhere.
And it can't.
Do they even care?
Waterford's rate of vaccination is 99.7%.
Waterford City District has state's highest rate.
Millions of teenagers would not be eligible to get that extra shot.
They should.
Let's do it before the holidays.
Let's get it done.
I do see the clearing in the distance.
We get more people vaccinated.
We get people back to jobs.
We get people back to a sense of normalcy.
The stresses on everyday human life start to lift.
But this red is an alarm.
This is an alarm going off.
I mentioned boosters briefly, but we've had a big increase in boosters.
I think the Omicron variant got everybody a little nervous.
They started realizing that there are some instances of breakthrough with the original vaccinations.
And so we've had nearly a half million booster doses just this past week.
A 50% increase, which is really quite incredible.
So we're proud of that.
I today am announcing that we are enacting a statewide indoor mask mandate unless a business has a vaccination mandate.
And we're requiring all schools now to issue a vaccination survey to parents so we can find out what's going on.
Happiness is a warm vaccine.
Happiness is a warm vaccine.
When I jab you in my arm And I feel your spikes come into my heart I know COVID can do me no harm Because There's a warm black momma Happiness is a warm vax, yes it is.
Happiness is a warm, yes it is.
Don't you know that happiness Is a warm-vaxed mama The best podcast in the universe Adios, mofo.
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