This is your award-winning Game of O'Nation Media assassination episode 1471.
This is no agenda.
Trading bugs for bodies and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region No. 6 in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where we're lamenting the loss of Terra Nofuji in the Grand Sumo July Tournament.
I'm John C. Devorak.
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
In the morning.
You're lamenting the loss because he died or because he lost his match?
Lost the match, he lost the last two matches, lost the tournament.
Oh, well that's horrible.
And it's over today.
And is this an upset in the sumo world?
Yeah, kinda.
I was unaware of this issue.
He was the only Yokozuna that was fighting, so he's always gonna be favored.
Yokozuna?
Yes, top of the top of the top.
Oh, okay.
Yokozuna.
Well, good!
Good.
What do you mean, good?
Good, we don't care.
I lost $5,000!
Ah, no!
No!
I don't bet on sports.
I don't bet on sports.
You know what?
Sumo's not a sport, so that makes it easy.
Is it?
What, sumo?
Yeah, if you don't bet.
It's not a proper sport like soccer.
You don't bet?
Yeah, it's like soccer.
It's not the same thing.
Soccer.
Soccer, sumo.
And the score was 1-0.
I mean, that's a browsing game.
Hey, I can't help it that I grew up with that shit.
Alright, the president is still dead.
As far as I'm concerned.
And I'm out to prove it.
Today's show, are you going to prove it?
I don't think I can really prove it, but I can certainly tell you that something is up.
What we have not seen is the White House doctor.
We've seen officials.
We've seen Kareem Abdul Jean-Pierre.
What's his name?
The health director at NIH.
What's his... That guy.
That guy.
Yeah, that guy.
It was pretty funny.
I thought I heard... I thought they heard from the doctor.
I mean, I could be wrong, though I can't... I don't... I haven't... No, it was... I'm not... I'm not able to rebuke your assertion.
I don't believe the doctor himself has been out.
Only that guy, Dr. That Guy, who's the boss of the boss, and I think he's the one that did the... Oh, he showed me his plate.
It was all clean.
It's infantilizing the president, but probably appropriately so.
So the White House doctor's name is O'Connor, and we had a pretty poignant question from the White House press staff, saying, hey, when will this guy come out and talk himself?
When will he say something?
This is not very transparent.
The question is, when will Dr. O'Connor come out?
Because to just put out a statement and shield him from questions would be the least transparency of any White House in 50 years on a presidential illness.
Wow, I wholeheartedly disagree on your last statement.
Wholeheartedly disagree on your last statement.
Um, so... What?
She wholeheartedly... Did she actually say that twice?
She did.
John Kolotna, John Kolotna.
So she wholeheartedly disagrees twice?
Yes, because she immediately takes that as, you're no better than Trump!
Um, so, we are doing this very differently.
Very differently, I would argue, than the last administration.
You see?
Very differently, very... This is her, um...
This is her- We're hiding.
Well, it's her thinking word.
Whenever she doesn't know what to say next, then she'll repeat what she just said.
Which is, I think in general- Oh, that's a good catch.
Good catch.
That's probably a good idea if you're up there at the podium.
Yeah, you repeat yourself so you can kind of maybe catch your breath.
Well, she seems to have a lot of that going on.
And I'm happy to have that conversation with you.
Number one- What is this?
We're a lot more transparent, certainly than the previous administration.
And I'm happy to have that conversation with you.
After class, young man.
When did she drop into this?
I noticed that she's going to do the number one thing.
Well, we're number one in everything.
Foam finger number one for Biden.
No, she's, you know, number one, you know, number one, number two.
You know, the thing Biden does, where he keeps saying number one.
And keeps missing number three.
Yeah, or one of them.
We are doing this very differently, very differently, that I would argue, than the last administration.
And I'm happy to have that conversation with you.
Uh, number one, um, uh, we did not see the president because we are following CDC guidance.
Uh, and the CDC guidance is to make sure that, uh, we have minimal contact with the president and allow him to isolate.
Complete bullshit answer.
It's about the doctor.
So, uh, we don't know.
We just don't know.
Uh, but I... That is a bullshit answer.
It's about the doctor.
What she's talking about, she's not seeing him.
What difference does it make?
But here, I think, is some evidence that it's not going well with Joe or an assassination attempt.
President Biden completed his first full day of Pax Lovid last night.
His symptoms have improved.
He did mount a temperature yesterday evening to 99.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
which responded favorably to Tylenol.
His temperature has remained normal since then.
His symptoms remain characterized as runny nose and fatigue, with an occasional nonproductive now loose cough.
His voice is deeper this morning.
His pulse, blood pressure, respiratory rate, and oxygen saturation remain entirely normal.
On room air, the president is tolerating treatment well.
I like the little addition there of on room air.
It's like everything's good.
Now, notice she gives the temperature 99.9 or something like that, but she doesn't give the actual blood oxygen levels, and then it's added to that on normal air.
Is he...
Assisted with oxygen at the moment, but when they tested it, he was okay, but he's basically still on oxygen.
Because that's what it sounds like.
No, you're asking the wrong guy.
Well, listen, I'm asking exactly the right guy.
Ask Dr. O'Connor, where's he?
That's not transparent!
Respiratory rate and oxygen saturation remain entirely normal on room air.
The president is tolerating treatment well.
We will continue Paxlovid as planned.
His symptoms will be treated supportively with oral hydration, Tylenol, and Albuterol inhaler that he uses as needed.
His Eliquis and Crestor are being held during Paxlovid treatment and for several days after his last dose.
During this time, it is reasonable to add low-dose aspirin as an alternative type of blood thinner.
Now, of course, I'm not a doctor, neither of us are, but when I hear that they're suspending his intake of Eloquist and Crestor, Crestor's for cholesterol, but Eloquist, or Eloquiss, that's a pretty powerful blood thinner, and I didn't know you could just replace it with aspirin until several days after.
I think the Paxlo, I say Paxlovid, but everyone who's in the know seems to say Paxlovid.
Yeah.
Um, you know, that's, I think that's five days minimum.
Uh, so, you know, add another three, eight days without the blood thinner you could get.
I mean, if you look, I looked at the, at the page, Eloquist page, do not stop taking Eloquist unless your doctor tells you to, which he did in this case.
Stopping suddenly can increase your risk of blood clot or stroke.
I'm just saying.
He's had enough of those vaccines.
If he's going to have blood clots, he's got them.
If he had the vaccine.
If.
That's a big if.
One more on the executive branch.
And they're starting to push back.
It's kind of fun.
So this is, again, Corinne.
And now it's Dr. Ja.
That's the guy.
That's that doctor guy, Dr. Ja.
That's the guy that's been talking like he's his doctor.
Yeah, he's the guy.
He's the guy.
But they ask a question about the vice president, and it was just beautiful to hear these two.
She's off to the side, you know, and her body's all tense.
When she gets tense, she starts to hunch over, and only the bottom part of her arms work below the elbow.
She's like... And the guy was... It's like Jerry Lewis.
Yes!
And Dr. Jha, he was just caught with his pants down.
I mean, he didn't know what to say.
The other question I have for you, Dr. Jha, Vice President Harris is a close contact of the President's, and the CDC guidance says that if you're a close contact, you want to wear a well-fitting mask when you're around other people.
She just spoke at a conference in D.C.
and she hugged someone without a mask on.
She was also maskless for most of that conversation.
Would you have recommended that she keep her mask on, given that that is the CDC guidance?
Now, could you hear all that, what she said?
Yeah, yeah.
I think I saw some of this.
This is the one where she started giggling again.
Yeah, she was in this conference in D.C.
and she didn't have the mask on and hugging people and kissing them.
Yeah, and she was in close proximity to the ailing president.
Yeah.
I mean, she might have caught his cooties.
Might have caught his cooties.
You know, I think, I'm not sure what, I'm not tracking the vice president's activities, so I don't have anything specific to say about what she did.
My understanding is that the vice president is following CDC guidelines on close contact.
She's also recently been infected, so within the 90 days of a previous infection, but I don't have anything else to offer on.
Well, I guess she isn't following the CDC guidance bill, right?
If she is hugging someone without a mask on?
Just wanted your clarification on that.
Yeah, I think the CDC guidance is clear, but I, you know, the problem is me commenting on what the vice president did when I wasn't actually, I haven't seen it, or I don't actually know what happened is very, very difficult.
So I'm going to pass on that.
It's not hard.
A hug is a hug, dummy.
No, yeah, well, listen, this, this is... Oh, I can't say anything because I don't know what a hug is.
The journalist does something very, very good here.
Vice president when I wasn't actually, I haven't seen it, or I don't actually know what happened is very, very difficult.
So I'm going to pass on that.
And she embraced someone.
You don't have to see it.
I mean, that's, that's what happens.
Yeah.
So usually when we think about people having contact, it's for an extended period of time.
I don't know.
Again, I didn't see the hug.
I don't know how long the hug lasted.
But it's very hard for me to comment on something I really didn't see.
I didn't see the hug.
I don't know how long the hug lasted.
It could have been a slight hug.
Could have been half a hug.
I don't know.
Was it a bare hug?
Yeah.
Was the person smaller?
Was there a pat involved?
One pat or two?
Come on.
Any butt clenching happening?
I mean, anything could have happened.
Anything could have happened.
Yes, for sure.
And we might as well just do some COVID stuff.
Do you have any COVID stuff?
I do.
I was enjoying what you were doing.
I thought you were going to continue.
I was just laid back, relaxed.
Okay.
You can gather your thoughts while I play this relatively short clip of the criminal, I'm just going to call her a criminal, Dr. Burks.
Oh, unbelievable.
I didn't clip this, but this is pathetic.
It's criminal.
I mean, no one can- And you were her biggest fan.
For about five days until I saw that they were full of shit.
But okay, make me look bad.
Yeah.
Um...
Yeah, I mean, she's a walking psyop, this woman.
So now she's traded the brunette hairdo and the scarves for complete blonde.
Now, if you go blonde as an older woman, there's certain rules.
She breaks all of them.
And she looks like a gypsy.
Yes, she does.
And if you go blonde as an older woman, the rule she breaks makes her look 20 years older.
And which rule is that?
Whatever it is.
No, she looks terrible.
It's the wrong tint.
Certainly not modern blonde.
It's like Marilyn Monroe.
Wrong.
You at least want to have a little bit of silvery.
And it's too long.
In fact, it's too long for it to be a short bob, which every woman always regrets, but that's kind of the way to go.
Do it all at once.
And I'm saying this from experience.
We know where you're saying it from.
We know your perspective.
And it's too short if you're going to do long, which is really hard to pull off with a dog face.
Okay.
Dog face!
I'm so mad at this woman.
She lied.
She lied to the American public.
She went to all the governors and lied.
And she lied that the vaccines were effective.
Even the Washington Post is now pulling apart her book and saying, holy crap, these people were not on the same team with anybody.
And there was coercion and all kinds of bullshit.
And she wrote it herself, which is the most... It's what...
It shows us the times we're living in, where Dr. Deborah Birx, commander, criminal, can actually come out and say what she said on, uh, this is Fox News, because she's brazen.
No, I'll go on Fox.
I'll just tell them what's up.
I want to get your take on a lot of people looking at the president now having this, and all these people who've been fully vaccinated and boosted and all that, and they're getting it.
The 20% or so of Americans who've not been vaccinated might look at that doctor and say, Why bother?
Why bother?
What do you tell them?
Well, if you're across the South and you're in the middle of this wave, what's going to save you right now is Pax Lovid.
But once we get through this wave, during that long, you should get vaccinated and boosted because we do believe it will protect you, particularly if you're over 70.
I knew these vaccines were not going to protect against infection, and I think we overprotected overplayed the vaccines and it made people then worry that it's not going to protect against severe disease and hospitalization.
It will.
But let's be very clear.
50 percent of the people who died from the Omicron surge were older.
So here she is saying we knew I knew I knew.
That these would not prevent infection.
But the fear was that if people knew that, then they certainly wouldn't believe, of course not, that they would stop severe illness and hospitalizations.
So this is not the first, but at least the second time where the coronavirus response team Fauci, Birx, et al.
Yeah, liars.
Liars!
They lied about the masks.
It lied about everything.
What did you get?
Is that the end of that clip?
Because she says a kicker on there.
I don't have the kicker and I knew that.
I looked for it and I could not find it.
What is the kicker?
I'll tell you what it is.
Yeah, please.
She says all the people in the hospital.
She says most of the people in the hospital now are older.
Oh, right.
And vaccinated.
Yes.
Yeah.
And that's a big kicker.
You don't want to leave that out.
I think I cut that off accidentally because it was vaccinate one of those.
But yes, older and vaccinated and they're dying.
And she's a liar and she can just get away with saying this.
And where's the outrage?
I'm so surprised.
You're right.
I'm not really surprised.
You're not surprised?
So here are my COVID clips.
We'll go right to it.
I only have one.
All right.
And this is an update from NPR on the COVID-China situation.
The big boys up there are finally getting their shots from a homemade homebrew COVID vaccine.
Homebrewed shit.
Yeah, yeah.
China, for the first time, is saying its leaders are vaccinated against the coronavirus.
NPR's John Ruich reports a government official says they were given vaccines developed and produced in China.
China was among the first countries to develop a vaccine, and it's been over a year and a half since the authorities first approved one for general use.
But details about the private lives and health of senior Chinese officials are closely guarded secrets.
No footage or photos have ever surfaced of top leaders rolling up their sleeves and getting their shots.
The deputy head of China's National Health Commission did not name specific officials, but said at a news conference, current state and Communist Party leaders all had the jab.
A sign, he said, of trust in the Chinese vaccine.
Vaccination rates in China are generally high, except among the elderly.
Experts say that may be one reason why the government is so wedded to its dynamic zero COVID policy, despite damage to the economy.
Good old China's.
I wonder what it means in their political situation.
It just seems like it's political there, too.
Certain regions.
Well, we'll never know.
So, the FDA, I think they approved an updated booster for the variants?
Yes.
An updated booster for the variants, and the way- That's news to me.
Yeah, and it is the, let me see.
Yeah, I think that's what it is.
What was the most recent approval?
Because there was another approval.
For kids.
For six-month-olds.
That was the most recent approval that I know of.
No, I think there was one after that.
I don't think there was an additional new vaccine that was recently approved.
Wasn't there a booster booster?
Well, they did approve the booster booster.
That was before the kids, though.
Then maybe this is... No, this is the updated booster to support the next variant.
Yes, this was very quiet.
Oh, it's an updated booster booster?
Yes, the updated booster booster.
Wait, maybe I have a clip about it here.
Hold on, this is CBS.
Are we going to pick it up on a question here from a viewer on Twitter?
Is there at some point going to be a specific vaccine for BA5 or kind of the all-purpose flower?
Like we're just going to cover them all with one shot.
Very good question.
We want that.
Oh, very good.
Moderna and Pfizer are both working on these updated combo vaccines that will include the original formulation as well as a BA5 component.
Those will not be available until probably late October, early November.
So if you're eligible for a booster now, don't wait for that one.
You'll still be able to get that one.
In terms of these universal coronavirus vaccines, I think That's the holy grail, right?
That would protect you against all the variants?
We, unfortunately, are several years away from having something like that.
We don't have an Operation Warp Speed to really marshal resources to get that done.
Oh, you mean we need more money?
Wow, that's against... Hey, we don't have the money to do it like we did under Trump.
That was cool.
You had tons of money then.
So it doesn't sound like that's the updated booster.
Maybe it's just the booster booster for under 50.
Now you mentioned vaccines for people over 50.
Federal health officials are reportedly considering opening up a second booster for younger, healthier people under 50.
I think this was it.
You know, this reminds me of the old problem in retailing.
Too many SKUs.
Too many skews.
Too many skews.
Spot on.
That refers to SKUs for you out there who never worked in the world.
They can't figure out the inventory anymore.
They don't know how to market it.
So one of the FDA advisors, the panel I think is 29 or 30 people, and they all unanimously, except for two, voted for the most recent booster-booster authorization.
Except for, well, one is Dr. Offit.
O-F-F-I-T.
And Dr. Offit, he's been around for a while.
He's been on these panels and he's a part of the system.
He's going to be off it pretty soon.
He's going to be very off it.
You get the EUA submission from the company, which is 85 to 100 pages long.
And then you get the FDA's review of all those data.
It really, really is heartening.
I mean, it is a very thorough review.
Not here.
Here it was 22 pages from the FDA, which included a half a page on Pfizer's data and a half a page on Moderna's data.
You could get that from the press release.
In fact, it was no more detailed, frankly, than the press release.
So I just thought the question we're being asked is in the end, always, is do the benefits outweigh the risks?
Even though the risks are generally small and sometimes unknown, that's always the question.
Do the benefits of this vaccine outweigh the risks?
I didn't see the benefits.
I was surprised, actually, frankly, that of the 21 voting members, 19 voted yes, because I just didn't see the evidence for that.
And we'll see how this plays out.
I mean, this was something that I think was desired.
By this administration, I could be wrong, but the way that this the other thing that was odd about this meeting was that.
We're an advisory committee.
We're being asked for our advice.
So, normally what happens is they just present the data.
Here's the data.
What's your advice?
And people can ignore our advice.
I mean, I'm in academic medicine.
People ignore my advice all the time.
But to make the best advice.
So, here on the other hand, they had somebody from the WHO, Contra Subarau, who presented their opinion about this.
And their opinion was they thought this was a good idea.
And then you had the FDA presenting, where they also had an opinion.
That's unusual.
And then the next day, you know, you read a public health announcement from a press release from HHS, Health and Human Services, that says that the government has decided to purchase at least 105 million doses from Pfizer with up to 300 million doses.
It was a little unclear from that press release, but they mentioned that we had just made this decision the day before.
So you just sort of felt like the fix was in a little bit here.
Maybe that's not the right phrase, but it was something that they wanted.
And I felt like we were being led here with a critical lack of information.
You're right.
The fix was in.
All right.
Dr. Offit.
He's got the right words.
Yep.
So truth!
But of course that's on... So this is unbelievable.
That, by the way, I don't know where that came from.
I didn't know that was happening.
I never heard that this guy was out there bitching.
I'm giving you Clip of the Day for that.
I'm going to accept.
The fix was in.
The fix was in.
A lack of a better term.
Well, there is no better term.
When the fix is in.
Yeah, they ordered the hundreds of millions of doses the next day.
Oh, money's in the pocket.
Pocketing.
This is a scandal.
A scandal.
And what's the media doing about it?
Well, there's three parts... Where did that clip come from, do you know?
It was... I think it was on Rumble.
It was him being interviewed.
You know, that's why the audio was shit.
But the guy's on the advisory board.
Yeah, that's real.
And his interview ends up on Rumble?
That's probably the only interview he could do about this or that he felt comfortable doing it.
Yeah.
That's pathetic.
This is such a disservice to the public, it's unbelievable.
It used to be only the military-industrial complex was rotten and corrupt to the core.
I mean, all the leadership of every single division of the United States military, and it goes into NATO and all the other military shit all around the world, as corrupt as F.A.F.
Look at Ukraine.
It's just all going into people's pockets.
People are becoming billionaires.
So the pharma industry finally got their go.
Now, they're not getting the same type of $870 billion a year, but it's a start.
And media is no different.
They literally got hundreds of millions of dollars distributed to promote vaccine awareness and COVID crap.
So, then what else do we want to add?
Education?
I mean, we can go on and on.
Our entire country, I can't speak for every country, has been captured at every institution.
Yeah, it's pretty good.
I have to give him credit.
It's every man for himself!
No slouch at the helm, that's for sure.
No!
I mean, you have to hand it to him.
But despite the fact that it's a disservice, and the media is the worst of the group, I condemn them the most because they're the ones that are supposed to protect us from this.
Yeah, okay.
Well, we've been putting our own shields up for 15 years.
Well, this show started us just talking about the bullshit that was going on and then we turned it into a podcast and we were saying the same thing.
We were already in our rocking chairs yelling at the moon.
We just weren't as slick.
We weren't as slick.
We weren't as long-winded.
No, that's true.
The best thing that happened this past week Is a little upsetting to me because it was such an obvious out for us.
It was the exit strategy of all exit strategies.
And it goes like this.
It's a reality show.
We know how to produce these.
It's a reality show.
You put seven anti-vaxxers, or people who refuse to accept the vaccine, into their life, into a mansion, and then you send in doctors to convince them to get vaxxed anyway, and you film it.
I mean, did we miss an opportunity there, or what?
Yeah, that's a good one.
Well, the BBC did it.
They literally took seven people, put them in a mansion for five days, had two, at least two doctors, both of them proven to have had research money and other sponsorship by Pfizer.
It doesn't get any better than this.
Pfizer.
Pfizer's behind it all.
To stick them into this house and try to convince them that they should accept the vaccine into their life.
And they called it a documentary.
It's called Unvaccinated.
And the country is in uproar over this.
Absolute uproar.
People can't believe that the BBC would do something like this.
Here's a segment on it from GBN, GB News, about this BBC documentary, Unvaccinated.
The BBC has been hitting the headlines for all the wrong reasons in recent weeks, but it's under fresh fire today after the broadcast of its new documentary on Brits who have chosen not to have the Covid jab.
Unvaccinated saw seven folk put in a house for five days, while a flurry of so-called experts tried to diffuse their concerns about taking the injection.
Presented by Professor Hannah Fry, a data-crunching mathematician who takes credit for bringing us out of the first lockdown in 2020.
The show ultimately tried to get the group to change their minds and get vaccinated.
But participants of the programme, which aired on BBC2 last night, have now hit out at the quote, bias beep for crafty editing and cutting key scenes from their contributions.
Here's a clip of tonight's guests Nazarin Veronica and Vicky Borman in action on the show.
Friend Katrina, she is 28 years old.
She was perfectly healthy before.
She only had one dose of the Pfizer vaccine.
Five days later she was beginning to experience brain fog.
Now she's had a stroke.
She's had three suspected heart attacks.
So this is a video of her having a seizure.
How can you be sure that that was the vaccine and not something that would have happened anyway?
Many viewers have since blasted the BBC for broadcasting, quote, unbalanced propaganda.
And the Daily Telegraph also let rip, calling the programme a painfully patronising documentary that was akin to Big Brother sponsored by Pfizer, before giving it a paltry one star out of five.
It's linked in the show notes, it's on YouTube, it's a must watch.
It is such a shark jump.
It's really unbelievable, and it's proven.
There's documentation everywhere, especially this one kind of main doctor, a woman named Frye, I think.
Kind of cute, you know, gingery, redhead, you know, has the right kind of look for this type of reality show.
But she's sponsored by Pfizer.
She's got, or let's say she has accepted money for Pfizer and has, you know, there was no disclaimer of any of that.
And most of it's pretty visual because it really, you know, reality shows, you need that kind of visual element to see the anger and the passion and the emotion.
I mean, can you imagine, John, we get them sauced up the first night.
That's how you do a reality show.
You get everyone drunk.
So first party, everybody.
Yeah.
And then we start filming right around 11.
And everyone's nice and loose.
That's how we started off.
And then we get them up the next morning, 6 a.m.
Their heads are banging.
That's how you make a reality show.
So, shame on the BBC.
But just a part of it.
That's state-sponsored media, truly.
Although the state, it is paid for by the people.
They're forced to pay if you want to have a television or a radio in your life.
Yeah, it's a license fee.
A lot of countries have that.
So, you know, we have the media is captured, obviously, military-industrial complex, all these different institutions, and climate change, and we'll get to that in a moment.
But I think the big pharma, I think, I'm not quite sure, this monkeypox is now coming into the news, and there's a little bit of interesting information about this new emergency that has been declared about monkeypox.
Let's get a little backgrounder first from ABC.
Tonight, growing concern over the global spread of monkeypox.
The World Health Organization today declaring the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern.
We have an outbreak that has spread around the world rapidly through new modes of transmission about which we understand too little.
More than 16,000 monkeypox cases have been detected across 75 countries.
Five deaths have been reported all in Africa.
In the United States, nearly 2,900 cases have been detected, including two cases in children.
Health officials in Chicago warning of more than 200 reported cases there.
We are seeing person-to-person transmission of this virus.
It's spread through close, often intimate contact.
Monkeypox is typically a mild illness that can cause fever, headache, fatigue, and painful rashes.
The sores are very painful though.
So luckily they're not in a place that I am on my hands or anything.
I can only imagine.
In recent decades, low levels of monkeypox have been reported in some African countries.
The current outbreak is affecting countries across the globe.
The majority of cases so far found in men who have sex with other men.
So this is kind of where they lose me on this reporting.
It's only found in men or is spreading amongst men who have sex with men.
But if trans men are men, you know, it's just... This is so blatant what they're doing.
By just pushing it off on the gays?
It's mind-boggling to hear this time and time again.
And now they've just expanded that to men who have sex with men.
And you heard a little bit of Tedros, a very little bit of Tedros, because there was actually no, or the five points that are needed to declare this emergency of international concern were not met.
At all!
And you just have to listen to Tedros himself tell you that he's declaring this emergency without it being an emergency.
Considering targeted amendments to stop transmission and protect vulnerable groups.
To engage and protect affected communities.
What the hell?
Did I misclip that?
Fuck me.
Dammit.
To intensify... What is he saying and I can't understand it.
Hold on.
No, I think I misclipped this.
Hold on.
I thank the committee for its Oh, man.
What happened?
...to many countries that have not seen it before.
Oh, maybe it's a good one.
Maybe it clips it wrong.
Second.
Okay.
All right.
Yes.
I'm required to consider five elements in deciding whether an outbreak constitutes a public emergency of international concern.
Okay.
So there's five elements he has to consider to declare a public emergency of international concern.
First, the information provided by countries, which in this case shows that this virus has spread rapidly to many countries that have not seen it before.
Second, the three criteria for declaring a public emergency of international concern under the international health regulations which have been met.
Third, the advice of the emergency committee, which has not reached a consensus.
Fourth, scientific principles, evidence and other relevant information, which are currently insufficient and leave us with many unknowns.
And fifth, the risk to human health, international spread, and the potential for interference with international traffic.
So in short, We have an outbreak that has spread around the world rapidly through new modes of transmission about which we understand too little and which meets the criteria in the international health regulations.
For all of these reasons, I have decided that the global monkeypox outbreak represents a public health emergency of international concern.
What?
Did I understand properly that he said it has to meet five criteria?
Yeah.
It meets three and three sub?
I'm not even sure it was three.
I mean there's two definitely he said it didn't meet and then the third one was vague.
Yeah.
And he says, therefore, I'm just going to say it's a public emergency of international concern.
You have the best example of newspeak, pigs in human clothing, good is bad, bad is good, that we'll ever have on this show.
It gets better because this is clearly meant to achieve something which failed about a month and a half ago.
My full recommendations are laid out in my statement.
And he's not a doctor.
Please, everybody realize he's not a medical doctor and he's saying, oh, I'm just determining this.
I thank the emergency committee for its deliberations and advice.
I know this has not been an easy or straightforward process and that there are divergent views among the members.
The international health regulations remains a vital tool for responding to the international spread of disease.
But this process demonstrates once again that this vital tool needs to be sharpened to make it more effective.
Now he's bumbling over that because he knows that when he says that this vital tool must be sharpened, what he's talking about is the long-rumored amendments to the international health regulations which would be shepherded in to the United States because it's an amendment and not a new treaty.
At least that's the legal opinion of the White House.
So he's stumbling.
So I'm pleased that alongside the process of negotiating a new international accord on pandemic preparedness and response, WHO's member states are also considering targeted amendments to the international health regulations, including ways to improve the process for declaring including ways to improve the process for declaring a public health emergency of international concern.
Yeah, so we need to be able to do this easier, with a sharper tool, with less involvement.
Let me just do it.
I'm Tedros the King.
Did he say climate something in there?
No, I didn't hear that.
That wouldn't surprise me.
Just throw it in.
Just say climate every other word.
He's not done.
Because you and I, we got nothing to worry about.
You're gonna have to play.
I'm sorry, but you're gonna have to play that again.
I am sorry, everybody out there.
I know what you mean.
It's so hard to hear what this guy is saying.
He says, instead of disease, he says this.
This isn't this.
This isn't this.
Okay, you want the whole thing?
Or do you want to pick it up near the end?
I want the whole thing because I want to get, I'm going to point out what he says.
Climate accords.
My full recommendations are laid out in my statement.
I thank the emergency committee for its deliberations and advice.
I know this has not been an easy or straightforward process and that there are divergent views among the members.
The international health regulations remains a vital tool for responding to the international spread of disease.
But this process demonstrates once again that this vital tool needs to be sharpened to make it more effective.
So I'm pleased that alongside the process of negotiating a new international accord on pandemic preparedness and response.
Pandemic preparedness?
Pandemic preparedness response.
I can see where you got it.
On pandemic preparedness and response.
He says pandemic, pandemic.
Okay, pandemic.
Okay, you can stop playing it now.
You're just racist.
Um, don't worry though.
It's the gays.
Although I'm declaring a public emergency of international concern.
Publical?
For the moment.
This is the best part.
Although I'm declaring a public emergency of international concern.
Publical.
Publical.
It's just the gays!
Although I'm declaring a public emergency of international concern.
For the moment, this is an outbreak that's concentrated among men who have sex with men.
Especially those with multiple sexual partners.
Oh, oh, evil!
Especially those with multiple... The typical gay... What is it with the... hedonistic... what's the word they use?
Sodom and Gomorrah?
When you're having sex with a lot of different people, you're... there's a word... You're probably good-looking.
No, not that one.
Polyamorous?
No, no, you're... Promiscuous, loose, a hoe, a whore.
A whore, promiscuous whore.
Promiscuous man whore, only for men.
There you go, you finally nailed it.
Okay, it took me a moment.
Promiscuous man whore.
Man whore with men.
This is unbelievable.
With men.
I mean, it's as if they're just this group over here.
This is crazy!
Am I hearing this wrong?
As a straight man, I don't want to jump up and protect my gay brothers!
Or gay men who have sex with men.
I'm sorry, I want to say it right.
This is fucked up!
Well, they can protect themselves the way I see it, but... Many.
I wish I had some eclipse now that went in this direction, because they had a bunch of protests in San Francisco.
Bitching and moaning about, where's our vaccines?
And they were just...
It was a gay protest.
And then they're blaming Biden.
How about this for a small theory?
Because there's multiple theories on the monkeypox.
The theory that I like the most, for obvious reasons, look at the crackpot moniker, is that everybody has pox or some shit.
Everybody has pretty much, well we know this from the PCR and from Cary Mullins who invented that, everybody has everything in them.
We're all part of the universe, you got all kinds of stuff.
Including pox, monkey pox, pox, whatever you want to call it.
Because there are so many people whose immune systems have been destroyed, and I'd say that's probably, in the United States, at least 150,000.
Maybe it's much, much more.
I'm just trying to be conservative.
Really, their immune system is now in trouble.
I studied the AIDS quote-unquote epidemic and if you really look into what was happening with men who have sex with men in the 80s and who have multiple partners, you also have to add in a couple other things.
Like poppers and speed and coke and combine it with alcohol.
Today we have molly and fentanyl for all I know.
Coke is bigger than ever.
So immune systems are already, may already be, even though a lot of these men will be very healthy, but their immune systems Especially if you have sex with a whole bunch of people, it diminishes that and you get other things that didn't happen.
What if they had two shots and two boosts?
What I'm saying is, this may be the broken immune systems that are bringing this up to the top where it may never have happened.
And of course you're going to get the hard partiers to get this first.
Particularly if that partying involves sex all the time, which, hey, I'm not condemning that.
But that's how they, this is exactly the same, dare I say, playbook as HIV in the 80s.
And you can almost call what they're going to say.
Don't worry, you can't get it from touching somebody.
But they'll eventually freak you out about that.
Well, we don't know.
It could go airborne.
I mean, there's something really, really sick about this.
Remember during the AIDS period where they couldn't get the airborne thing to play, but they did get the mosquitoes to work a little bit for a number of months.
Mosquitoes.
Because you get AIDS.
Oh, that's right, yes!
The mosquito bites someone with AIDS and then bites you, you get AIDS.
Now I have my own thoughts about, you know, the HIV itself versus AIDS, which is, you know, they make that connection.
Yeah, we don't need to go into that.
We don't need to go into that.
But I do see something very similar here, where a particular group with a particular lifestyle... So it's unfair to say men who have sex with men.
I mean, just rave gays, okay?
Whatever, it's not... It's just... I can't believe this is happening and people are in outrage.
Let's listen to this whole thing.
Although I'm declaring a public emergency of international concern, For the moment, this is an outbreak that's concentrated among men who have sex with men, especially those with multiple sexual partners.
That means that this is an outbreak that can be stopped with the right strategies in the right groups.
Round up the gays!
It's therefore essential that all countries work closely with communities of men who have sex with men, to design and deliver effective information and services, and to adapt measures that protect the health, human rights, and dignity of affected communities.
Oh my!
And you know, he went into this whole rap after that, stigma is a really bad thing.
You're stigmatizing a group!
In the same week, the World Health Organization gives guidance and says, sex is not limited to male or female.
No wonder people are freaking out and slamming Lexapro.
I find this guy, he really stepped over the line now.
It's okay for a bunch of dumb jamokes in America, doctors and talking heads to do it.
But when you're the World Health Organization, you're already on my watch list and you're doing this?
The gays, they shouldn't be saying, give me my vaccine!
They should be calling for Tedros' head!
And not in the way you think!
Yes, I know.
Oh, did you do the whole bit?
No, no.
No, it came to me.
It came to me from God.
It came to you.
Do it again.
I can't help myself.
Stop before I kill.
No, I'm really serious about this.
That is mess up.
And there should be, there just should be outrage about this.
Where are the older gays?
We talked about this.
Hello, older gay.
They're not texting me or calling me.
Yeah, we should get on this.
They're dead.
I hope not.
I hope not.
Alright.
Yeah, there you go.
There you go.
I think you covered it all.
Yeah, I think so.
You covered all the bases.
Yes, we did.
Let's do a little side trip here and do this, these clips.
Alright, side trip everybody.
How about this, this is, it's spelled Glabal Heat.
Glabal.
Glabal Heat.
Oh.
Global heat, yes.
This is the global, you know, they're making a fuss about the, you know, global warming.
I'm surprised they didn't get global warming on this because you can blame monkeypox.
They're gonna do this.
Well, that was your call.
Make monkeypox an element of global warming.
Well, that's how you fuse the two groups for even more corruption.
Yeah.
This is bullcrap, because we had one of our producers send us, I think we both got this, some old clips from 1911.
Not clips, but old newspaper articles from 1911.
Yes.
When people were dropping by the thousands in New England from the heat wave.
Yeah.
It would get to 114, 120, 140 in Rhode Island.
But I thought this was the hottest on record ever.
Yeah, they lie.
They're liars.
A dangerous... Here, I'll read the note from Eric.
A dangerous heat wave is in the news.
I'm sure you can find some videos declaring an emergency.
My 99-year-old mother called to see if I was okay.
Seems like a typical summer day.
Not too dry, not too humid.
To make this, when you hear these clips, you're going to, especially the last one I'm going to play.
I'm sure I'm going to love it.
I can't wait.
By contrast, read about the 1911 New England heat wave below.
He took a clip from it, just a little tidbit.
In Hartford, Connecticut, Crowds gathered around the thermostat near City Hall to watch as the temperature fluctuated between 110 and 112 in the shade.
Wow.
At Colwell's store in Cumberland, Rhode Island, the thermometer hit 130.
A farmer in Woodbury left his field when the temperature reached 140.
And it was only $1.38?
He was still plowing.
$1.39?
He was still plowing.
$1.40?
Okay.
$1.39.
$1.40.
Too much!
Martha, I'm coming in!
140, okay. - Oh, 139.
Yeah, 140, too much.
- Martha, I'm coming in.
That is the American farmer. - So that was in 1911.
So now, all of a sudden, this is a big deal.
So let's listen to global heat old brother clip CHO.
Excruciating heat right now.
Daily temperatures in the high 90s and 100s have led 28 states to issue heat advisories.
Of course comes as extreme heat continues to scald Western Europe and China, causing wildfires, melting roads, and killing hundreds of people.
Oh no!
Marta Segura is the- This, this, What is this?
Is this NPR?
PBS?
What is this?
NPR.
NPR.
Shameful!
Shameful!
What an unbelievably shameful intro.
It's melting roads.
Marta Segura is the Chief Heat Officer of Los Angeles.
Chief Heat Officer!
Thanks so much for being with us.
The Chief Heat Officer.
Another useless government job.
Okay, now, I want to... They're talking to the Chief Heat Officer.
A bullcrap job.
I never heard of this job before.
No, of course not.
But they got a chief heat officer who's full of shit, but okay.
And I guess they're having the chief heat officer... I'm sorry, John, can I just play that intro again?
I just want to hear how they frame this hot weather.
Okay, before you... I want you to play it again, but before I play it again, I want to preface the whole thing with the following information.
The temperature in Los Angeles over the last week.
High, 80, 81, 80, 79, 80, 81, 81, 79, 82.
It never got above 82 highs.
Lows, 60, 59, whatever normal.
79, 80, 81, 81, 79, 82.
It never got above 82 highs.
Lows, 60, 59, whatever normal.
That's Los Angeles.
The heat in Los Angeles, there was nothing going on in Los Angeles.
That's beautiful weather.
Beautiful Hawaiian weather in Los Angeles.
Here, the weather is 62, 62, 65.
It's going to get 69 later in the week.
It's never going to hit 70, not near the bay where I am.
In the inland, it gets some heat out there, but 90, maybe.
So with it in mind that the weather in Los Angeles is 80 degrees, let's play the report again.
And if I may, we've had consistent every single day 100, maybe 101.
Luckily, in the Hill Country, we get a breeze which makes it completely bearable.
It's summer.
We all walk around going, eh, it would be nice if we got some rain.
No one talks about the heat, just about the rain, because that is a problem.
And locally, we have gotten the rain we needed.
Texas heat is very bearable.
Excruciating heat, right?
Excruciating.
Oh, goodness.
Excruciating heat right now.
Daily temperatures in the high 90s and 100s have led 28 states to issue heat advisories.
This, of course, comes as extreme heat continues to scald Western Europe and China, causing wildfires, melting roads, and killing hundreds of people.
Causing wildfires?
No!
Global warming doesn't cause wildfires, melting roads.
The heat mine, or an arson mine, this is just This is propaganda.
Marta Segura is the chief heat officer of Los Angeles and joins us now.
Thanks so much for being with us.
Okay.
All right.
The chief heat officer.
Straight to him?
Yeah.
You were appointed LA's first chief heat officer in June.
Is it telling that so many cities now need a chief heat officer like a police chief or fire chief?
I think that it is.
And we're definitely at a crossroads, Scott, because extreme heat is our primary climate emergency.
We have six times the number of heat waves in Los Angeles.
They're more frequent.
They last through mid-November.
So our bodies don't have time to recover.
And so this plays back to what we need to request from Washington, D.C.
and the federal government.
So cities are prepared for the future and our people are protected.
Huh?
So they want money?
Just send us some money.
It's hot out here.
Joe.
Hey Joe Biden, it's hot here.
Send us some money.
Okay.
Is this a man or a woman?
Yeah, I didn't want to be the bigoted dick and stop the clip.
I didn't want to stop the clip.
Is this a trans woman?
I have no idea.
Oh, okay.
Why do you do this to me?
No payoff.
That's not good.
By the way, I want to go back to this.
You're living in Southern California.
By the way, California is a desert.
It's a desert that has water that comes in, that they ship in.
Ship over the mountains?
It's a desert.
And so Los Angeles Basin is a desert basin, high desert basin.
So it gets a little hot.
It's 80 degrees and now we're worried about, oh, we can't adjust to the temperature changes and our bodies can't handle the change.
It's always the same.
California weather changes like 20 degrees.
Total change is 20 degrees max.
It's not going from sub zero to 90.
Who are we kidding?
Okay, going on with the heat officer.
When you say prepare for the future, your best information is that this is our future, at least for a number of years.
This is our future, and if we don't modernize our infrastructure and create climate-adapted cities and revise our building codes, it's going to get worse, and it's going to get more uninhabitable, so... Wait a minute.
Wait a minute!
How do building codes have anything to do with carbon dioxide?
Aha.
I'm glad you brought that up.
Okay.
I probably would have forgot to mention it.
Do you remember when we started doing this show and this is at least 10 years ago when they had the cap and trade bill, that's where we got to jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, Nancy Pelosi put into our thing.
Yeah.
Uh, they brought, that's when they had, uh, what's his name, the guy who cried all the time?
The, uh, the, the Republican, uh, top Republican was, uh... Oh, oh, the hard-ass guy.
Bowner, Bowner, Boner.
Bainer, Bainer, Bainer.
Bainer Boner.
Yes.
And he's always in tears.
And he started reading from this cap and trade bill.
And there was a whole section that was discussed quite a bit about how the housing code should all change.
So you have to rebuild everything.
Yeah.
It was a scam.
We need money.
Yes.
That's the infrastructure scam she's asking for.
And so they were going to even have the cap and trade bill also incorporated.
People should go back and find that bill and read it.
This is what they want to do.
It wasn't passed by the Senate, luckily.
They want to set up special government inspectors to go from place to place to place.
It's in the bill.
Yes.
Inspect your house.
And if you don't have, if you, if you, if you don't have the right insulation or something, you're going to have to tear out your walls and put it in.
This sort of thing.
It was really nasty.
It was a very nasty bill that the Democrats put together.
That's where they're still in play.
That's the point.
There they are.
This is what they do in Europe.
Or in the UK.
They come to your door.
Ah!
You put wet garbage in the wrong bin?
You got a fine!
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
They do that little bit of that in Berkeley, but not like Britain.
Well, you're back up, Britain.
Just in case we run out of Brits, we'll ship some of the Berkeleyites over.
All right.
Back to this.
And if we don't modernize our infrastructure and create climate adapted cities and revise our building codes, it's going to get worse and it's going to get more uninhabitable.
So it's bad now.
But again, if we don't prepare and if we don't invest, particularly in the most vulnerable communities, because they experience the pollution burden, they experience existing health conditions like kidney disease, diabetes, asthma, When you say infrastructure investment, what does that mean?
Money!
communities.
So when we're thinking about these infrastructure investments, we definitely need to prioritize the most vulnerable areas to ensure that we prevent those preventable hospitalizations and deaths.
When you say infrastructure investment, what does that mean?
Money!
Tax!
Well, we want to modernize our infrastructure to be climate adapted.
And that means to create cool surfaces and cool roofs to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of our buildings and our infrastructure.
So that we... Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Do buildings just emit greenhouse gases when it's hot outside?
Yeah, they cough it up.
Sounds like that when it comes out.
I mean, did the NPR dude at any point ask any of these kind of simple questions?
I know I'm just a VT.
No, the NPR dude.
Dude.
Seemed somewhat, in fact, when he said, I think it was in clip two.
This is not done yet, I cut it off.
He has brought, I don't know, If he even enjoys doing this.
He may be faxing it in because I think he's disgusted.
Because when he said chief heat officer the second time I think when he introduced this woman.
Yeah.
He paused in a way that is like I can't believe I'm saying this and I'm not making fun of it.
No, I think it's different.
He's, like most other people who work in mainstream media, is an intelligence asset and he's looking at what he's getting paid versus this bullshit chief heat officer.
He's thinking, what the hell?
I'm in the wrong racket here.
I'm going to call my agent.
Modernize our infrastructure to be climate adapted and that means to create cool surfaces and cool roofs to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of our buildings and our infrastructure so that we reduce what's called the urban heat island.
When you have too much concrete, not enough trees and vegetation in open space, you stagnate the heat and the pollution and the smoke.
Almost every major city, I would say every major city has this issue.
Rural areas have it much less.
We need more equitable shade trees in Los Angeles.
Oh, equitable shade trees!
They're not equitable, you racist tree!
Yeah, yeah.
America has fallen sometimes, I think.
There's a spark left.
You know, they're doing a very poor job of a very simple mission.
Your mission is to scare people into buying into this.
That's all you have to do.
Scare people into buying into it.
That was not scary.
It was laughable.
You didn't have any real information.
You're just talking some bullcrap.
And you have a bullcrap title.
And you're a bullcrap person.
It's always the NPR dude.
Well, to make it worse, Los Angeles isn't a place where it gets hot, but maybe once or twice a year.
And this barely gets hot.
It's mostly 80 all the time.
And then in the winter, it's like 70.
It's very temperate in Los Angeles compared to Chicago, a lot of Florida where it can get pretty hot, the East Coast.
New York, I've been in New York where it's hot and humid, it's terrible.
Oh, New York is the worst in the summer.
I was going to say my point was, if you want to hear how it's done, if you want to know how to scare people, I mean, you just really got to be a total asshole about it.
Here's an example of an asshole.
You know, the climate deniers are...
Really, in some ways, similar to all of those almost 400 law enforcement officers in Uvalde, Texas, who were waiting outside an unlocked door while the children were being massacred.
They heard the screams, they heard the gunshots, and nobody stepped forward.
Now that's an analogy!
That's a beauty.
Okay.
Is that guy- is that guy incredible?
I'll give Gore ten points for coming up with that gem.
The big phony.
Is that- is that incredible or what?
Yeah, it's- you'll climb it to Manara like this- the- the shithead cops in Uvalde.
Yeah, but then the drawing, like, they could hear the children's screams as they were dying.
They did nothing.
Yeah, you're right.
You're right.
It's very good.
You guys, very good.
Oh, you want to hear the rest?
About 30 seconds.
He has more?
Well, now he goes into his pitch.
And God bless those families who've suffered so much.
And law enforcement officials tell us that's not typical of what Law enforcement usually does.
And confronted with this global emergency, what we're doing with our inaction and failing to walk through the door and stop the killing is not typical of what we are capable of as human beings.
We do have the solutions.
And I think these extreme events that are getting steadily worse and more severe are really beginning to change minds.
We have to have unity as a nation to come together and stop making this a political football.
It shouldn't be a partisan issue.
Thanks, Al.
That guy.
People can take note.
That was well done.
He really did a good job.
You know I've been, you kind of, I'm very happy you did it because I didn't expect, I expected it to be very just annoying is when you kind of jumped in and said hey I'm really sick of this pronoun business and we started kind of understanding what's going on and you know now we're talking to
Like the liberal high school teacher in Austin, and we're learning a lot, you know, about the blankies and teddy bears and the overuse of SSRIs, which is... Oh, by the way, you asked for this.
It's better.
It's Sir Jeff Smith.
Oh, okay, well, it's better.
It's not what you wanted?
I thought you'd like it.
Well, I would say Jeff's stuff is unimpeachable, so I can't criticize it.
It's not like, you know, the... It's grown on me.
Listen again.
It sounds like male minute, that's the problem I have.
Yeah, that's in your mind.
And Tedros.
And so this has brought me into understanding the incredible eugenics movement in the United States in the 1900s and 1920s.
They got fans from the 1920s on.
Tons of presidents and 27 states had eugenics.
And it wasn't against black people.
It was against white people with brown hair.
It was against anyone who was thought of lesser because the master race was kind of where it was at.
And this has been baffling to me that this is not taught in schools.
It's great recent history.
It was taught in schools when I was in school.
Oh, it's still there, but the entire focus is BLM, Black Lives Matter, slaves, you know, nothing.
And I'm going to tell you, I believe it's because the people who are running these programs, who have developed this This trans, and it is an ideology, where really gays, lesbians, get out of here.
People have sex with people of the same sex.
You know, they've changed everything and all that's left over is trans.
Everyone else is bad.
Gays have monkey pox.
Lesbians are TERFs.
All of this stuff.
And so what's left is trans.
And I believe this is a continuation of the United States eugenicist movement.
And it will lead us up to universal basic income.
And I have three clips to show why.
Wow!
Yeah, I know.
Well, because...
If we're talking about, actually the word is dysgenics, if you're looking at the millennials, many millennials, and certainly the zoomers that are coming in now, it's a lost generation.
They have limit, they're over socialized, under educated, and they are now in effect sterilizing themselves.
And it's called transitioning, but it's really sterilizing.
Yes.
And it was Edwin Black, I didn't clip it on the last show, when he was talking about the eugenicist movement, they would ask for permission to sterilize young girls, but it was really like, hey, come over here, play with these dolls, and you know, they're 11, 12, so maybe it was something else.
And then, hey, do you mind if we do this little thing to you?
Yeah, that's fine.
Boom.
Done.
Sterilized.
So what better than to bring down either the entire population of the world to the 500 million as projected by the Georgia Guidestones, as Jane Goodall, the gorilla lady, agrees with because she said we need to go back to the population of 1,500.
That was, in fact, 500 million.
Thank you, whoever blew up the Guidestones.
That showed that we're not completely without a fight.
And that could be a general thing, or do we want to go the way that the American eugenicists from 1920 on to in the 40s, it got real quiet here because their biggest fan was Adolf Hitler, literally sent them fan mail according to Edwin Black.
Oh, you guys are doing a great job.
I'm going to just take this little piece and I'm going to focus a lot on the Jews, but I'll do the blacks and the gypsies and whatever else is wrong.
And he took it to the next level and everyone in America got kind of quiet.
Well, you know, we kind of thought about the gas chambers.
We decided it wasn't a good idea.
Sterilization was better.
Now think about the technology industry.
We have Bill Gates.
Without a doubt, what he's doing, in my mind, no, he has done actual experiments that have sterilized children in the Philippines.
Lawsuit's still ongoing.
Lord knows what has happened with a lot of these, the AIDS vaccines, which is part of You know, Bill Clinton's global initiative and how many women in Africa they sterilized.
In fact, Africans across the continent don't really want vaccines because they're like, you know, last time you guys showed up, everyone couldn't have babies anymore.
I want to mention something which is kind of a sidebar to where you're going.
Back to the 1970s book, The Population Bomb.
The Population Bomb, if you read the book, it's still around.
If you read the book, and there was a later book that came out, there was a very anti-African tint in that book.
They kept showing that the population growth in Africa was going so fast that was going to overtake the world, just Africans, that I believe that much of the population, much of the elimination of the world's population was targeting Africa, which is a massive continent.
It's massive.
The United States fits in there twice.
And it's and I believe that was targeted.
I think they were trying to and I think some things that came out that looked genetically engineered, like Ebola, And other which came out during right after this period is 70s.
I think we're targeting Africans and I think AIDS was targeting Africans.
I think they were trying to kill Africans off.
They're trying to kill off the Africans and I think they sense this and that's why they reject people coming in with vaccines.
Yeah, good one to bring it all the way home.
We have to go back a little bit to the 70s, in fact.
And the reason I bring up tech is and I also want to mention Elon Musk.
You know, he seems to be if you look at him in a different light, particularly his twins and triplets and just and his neural link.
It seems like he could be the kind of guy that would be, you know, let's create better humans.
So in eugenics you have the killing of people, you have the dysgenics, where a certain group grows and kills off another.
That would be the situation I think our elites are most afraid of and have been for a hundred years.
And then you have the proactive, where you just create better humans, which is Silicon Valley, Bill Gates, you know, I'm sure all these guys are into it.
Someone who was way into it back in 1974 sat down in an interview with William F. Buckley Jr.
Interesting to me because my cousin Lucy was married to Christopher Buckley, who was also a dick.
Although it's kind of fun to see William F. Buckley in his younger years, you know, he's just young, he's handsome and just as arrogant as later.
But he is talking to William Shockley.
Do you remember William Shockley?
Yes, Shockley is part of the Bell Labs group in 1947 that invented the transistor.
I talk about him on this show.
He started Shockley Labs in Silicon Valley.
He's one of the founders of Silicon Valley.
And he is the one who a lot of people believe the aliens gave the information to because he's never invented jack shit after the first transistor.
Well, he did have another mission in 1974, and that was the Shockley Thesis.
I have three relatively short clips, about a minute and twenty-ish.
Yeah, I will mention that this was the end of him.
Oh, it had to have been the end of him, sure.
No, it was, and I will mention this.
This was an example, along with, people can look this guy up, Jimmy the Greek, who was a television personality.
Wasn't he in wrestling, Jimmy the Greek?
No, no, he was a gambler.
Oh, right, right, right.
Jimmy the Greek was an odds maker out of Vegas and he'd get all these television shows and he was captured on tape at a bar one day talking about how blacks were being Bread to be football players kind of it doesn't that's not what he said, but he it kind of indicated look it was indications along those lines he was outed and Cancelled he was cancelled and Shockley was cancelled and cancel culture began with these guys
Doesn't surprise me, and William F. Buckley is really adversarial in this, and rightly so.
But it's more to me the complete conviction that this... He won a Nobel Prize, I think, for inventing the transistor, or his participation in the transistor effect, or whatever it was.
So he was well respected in the, as you said.
I think there's three scientists at Bell Labs.
I think they got to know Bell.
They got something.
And it's not in my clip, but he learned a lot of what he is going to talk about here from people at Bell Labs.
And he found out that Alexander Graham Bell was in fact also a eugenicist.
Not crazy for the time, but his thesis is, Now, there's one core and they argue about that, which I didn't clip, is, is intelligence created by genetics or is it created by environment?
And he cites all these studies with twins, hello Mengele, and it turns out that really it's still so much genetics that we have to, at very least, stop these dumb people, IQs under 80, from reproducing.
And he has a chart and it says, look, this is from the U.S., I think it's in the clip, this is U.S.
census data, The dumb, uneducated people are replicating at two or three times the rate of the smart, and he wasn't talking black or white, although he does later.
And he says, you know, this is dysgenics.
We're going to die off if we let these people continue to propagate.
Well, let's get back to the Shockley thesis.
You did say restrictions should be placed.
Let me just do the final touch on this.
Excuse me, I can't resist.
This is the final touch.
I want to put transistors into it somehow, you see.
So this is the final stage in which you make a... He's showing literally rows of computers and robots is what he thinks the way it should work with brains in the future.
...computerized duplication of the human brain, and then you see you can probably do it even more compactly and get a higher achievement.
But I just do that as a finishing touch on some of these large-scale objectives.
And so, to come back to the thing that I think we really want to deal with is this word Dysgenics, which, you see, is best defined, I think, as retrogressive evolution.
You can't have anti-evolution.
I tried to do that, but I was set straight by one of my strongest backers in the National Academy of Sciences, Ralph Cheney, the man who was for many years president of the Savior of the Redwoods League, and who brought the Don Redwood to this country.
But he said it can't be anti-evolutionary, it's got to evolve, but it can be retrogressive evolution.
So, dysgenics is retrogressive evolution through the disproportionate reproduction, the excessive reproduction, of the genetically disadvantaged.
And that's what our nobly intended welfare programs may be doing, what some of our modern medicine is doing.
They're just not facing the quality problems of mankind, and this may produce large amounts of human agony.
And what my emphasis is upon anti-dysgenics.
So, he wants to stop the dysgenics with anti-dysgenics.
He has a solution for it, but first he'll say, he'll explain what actually will happen if we don't do anything!
My chief focus, the one thing I'm drawing out is that it's irresponsible to fail to look at the types of lies that some of those whom are do-gooders are wishful thinkers.
I call them berserk humanisms.
I think their humanism has gone so far that in effect it has gone berserk.
And this is the illustration of it.
This is the chart I tried so hard to get on CBS program.
And at a disruption to the University of Georgia, I held the chart up.
Many people saw the chart, but neither on that news nor on the 60-minute hour later did a single word I said about that chart get put on the program.
What this shows is, this is Census Bureau data.
The highest birth rate I found tabulated in the Census Bureau data, children ever born per woman, They take a certain standardized age range to look at.
She's essentially through her childbearing period.
The highest number I found was for rural farm, black women.
And this was 5.4 children.
On the other hand, black college graduates average 1.9 women college graduates.
That is, then, if these abilities to learn and so on do have a significant hereditary aspect, this implies a pronounced dysgenic effect.
This segment of the population would double in about a generation.
Okay, so coming from where they were in the 20s, 30s, 40s, up to the 70s, I can completely understand in their mindset how elites thought, holy crap, we can't have this because they're going to eat us alive.
They're just replicating too fast.
And I think this is where you get the American eugenics programs.
Modern day, I would still say it's kind of handy to have abortion clinics in poor neighborhoods.
Then all you need is just the quote-unquote education.
So maybe this thinking has continued over.
And when I hear his solution, it's not, by today's standards, it's not even a crazy idea.
Remember...
Yes.
I was just going to say, by the way, this is the thesis for the movie Idiocracy.
Yes!
That if you let dysgenics take place, you get a bunch of bluthering morons.
Blithering.
Blathering?
Blithering.
But at the very beginning he shows the one couple that never has kids and then a bunch of morons having a lot of kids.
Yeah.
Race is not brought into it, it's all whites.
Right.
And it's not about race and that's why I think... But well, once Shockley starts talking about a... What got him busted out was his talking about gene pools.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
And blacks.
And this was the end of him.
Well, and the real problem is, you know, you really have to buy into genetics.
A genetically dumb person mating with a dumb person, mating with dumb will genetically create another dumb person.
And I think that thinking has changed since then.
Prince Charles, useless eaters.
The public in general, let them eat bugs.
No one cares about us.
And that's from the mid-level political system administrators on up or anywhere.
They don't care.
They just let them eat bugs, tell them to shut up, turn off your air conditioner.
The trans movement seems to me like it would really fulfill the dream of the eugenicist mindset amongst American elite.
Hey, you know, we're not killing kids.
This is good, because that's kind of icky and messy.
But we're convincing them to sterilize themselves.
Or maybe it's different.
Maybe it's, hey, let's put these programs in place.
Any parents dumb enough to subject their children to this deserve to be eugenicized.
You deserve it!
So here's his solution which I think could make a comeback.
That I have this voluntary sterilization bonus plan.
And the way it goes is a bonus would be offered to everyone to be sterilized.
The amount of the bonus would be dependent on various factors.
For example, income taxpayers would be offered no bonus.
For all others, regardless of sex, race, or welfare status, those are the criteria I put in, regardless of sex, race, or welfare status, the bonus would depend upon best scientific estimates, and that's a very important qualifying phrase, best scientific estimates.
...of any genetically-carried disabilities, such as arthritis, hemophilia, Huntington's chorea, and if there is a genetic predisposal to heroin addiction, this should get a big bonus.
Then I go on to say, furthermore, at $1,000 for every point you score below 100 on an IQ test, $30,000 put into a trust fund for a 70 IQ moron, capable of producing 20 children, might very well be economically advantageous to taxpayers in terms of about $300,000 in reduced costs of mental retardation care.
That's a very simple calculation.
I'll tell you something, even more economically advantageous would be to kill them.
Well, that disagrees with my fundamental principles on this, Mr. Buckner.
I wish I had a try at improving...
Are these scientific principles or moral principles?
These are moral principles, and I do have some elements in this which are matters of faith, you see.
Faith in what?
Faith in man.
I love this.
Wait, let's take one other factor into account.
His notion of every IQ point getting $30,000 into a trust fund, that's $1970.
That's $300,000 per point.
Oh, yeah.
I could be retired.
Rich.
It's like winning the lottery.
What a great way to shepherd in universal basic income.
Yeah, and get everyone sterilized.
And all the kids would cheat on the test.
Well, if they're that dumb to do that just for the money, yeah, they probably deserve to be sterilized.
1974 though, at the basis of Silicon Valley.
Now think about the arrogance of the people who run these companies.
Think about their arrogance and look at what they're into.
All kinds of medical stuff.
They want to be your doctor.
Thank you, Amazon.
23andMe connected to Google.
We want to have your DNA.
Let's take it to the real extreme of what the Silicon Valley, especially the billionaire class, is into, which is longevity.
Yeah, well, that's the other side of... They have a huge... They're all longevity freaks.
Yeah.
To an extreme.
They're looking for... They're even making... I mean, you see billboards around here every so often about how...
The average age should be 150.
These guys.
To me, I just think that was in my lifetime, this guy was saying that.
1974.
And how weirdly nicely it fits into everything we're kind of setting ourselves up for.
Now you can say the vaccines are, a lot of people would say that, this is a eugenics program.
Yeah, maybe.
No, but I think the vaccines, here's the deal.
Here's the deal, Joe.
The vaccines led the way insofar as this bribery is concerned.
Get a free lottery ticket, take a shot.
Get a free hamburger, take a shot.
And UBI, they already set up the STEMI checks.
That's a form of universal basic income.
So they had these bribes.
So you could be bribed.
I think he's right.
You could be bribed.
I think a lot of people could be bribed to be sterilized.
It's just a vasectomy.
Didn't we have a jingle?
We're not cutting your nuts off.
We're just, you know, it's a vasectomy.
It's reversible.
It's reversible.
Man, I thought we had a jingle like Snip for Humanity or Save the World.
Snip for Humanity.
That was Nap for Humanity.
I can't remember what it was called.
I know we had one somewhere.
Snip for Humanity.
Alright everybody, you can ditch your next job.
Snip for Humanity.
Snip!
Wait, are you going to accompany me?
I get the wrong key, Monik.
I don't have the right key.
Snip!
No, humanity, I did it wrong.
So, um, yeah, it's doable.
The problem is what country does it first, they just put themselves into a defensive position.
You better be a nuclear power, that's for sure.
They wouldn't be coming after your stuff.
What do you mean?
Well, you start your population growth, you start going into reverse.
I mean, that's what we're doing here.
I mean, Italy's at the point of no return.
They can't repopulate.
They have to bring the Muslims in to take over and do the work.
How about Japan?
Japan's been in a downhill slide for decades.
Yeah.
Well, they're in the debt trap.
We're at risk of sliding into it.
The worst part of Japan is their mentality is such that they don't like the idea of immigrants coming in to take over the place.
So they don't accept immigrants.
They're very racist.
It's just so weird.
They don't even have members of their own nation that they reject letting take over the place.
I would hire Harry Ainu, for example, and the people that are leather workers.
Well, this is the thing.
And I was laying this theory out to Tina.
She says, well, who's going to do the work?
I said, hello, enter illegals.
Why do you want people who are, quote unquote, undocumented or illegal?
Because you control them.
You literally get a smartphone, an app, QR codes.
Okay, the Republicans and the right, we don't even know where they are, they're murderers.
No.
The majority of them, of course that's happening.
Are working for Republicans.
That's your risk-benefit award, ratio.
It's like, well, OK, we're going to get some murderers and shit.
By the way, it's not the drugs, the fentanyl.
That's the US military bringing that in.
Get real.
Get real.
The whole military and CIA.
I've always brought the drugs in, so OK, boo-hoo.
No.
The real reason is they're being brought in to be controlled, obedient workers.
Shut up or I'll report you to INS.
Shut up!
That's what, that's what this, it's, it's more cynical than you could even believe.
And it just started, it just kind of opened up for me.
I'm like, oh, okay.
Now I see it.
We used to have a program in California called Braceros.
And Braceros, they banned it and they've come up with some other thing.
There was a real push against immigrants, especially when the United Farm Workers came around as a labor movement and really improved the conditions for the farm workers in the state of California.
Of course, those guys were against the illegal aliens and no one wants to talk to them.
But before them, predating them, were the braceros.
And these were these busloads of Mexican farm workers, agricultural workers, that would come and be bussed up in and out of Mexico from California.
It was a system that worked pretty well, even though if you think about it, it's pretty slave-like.
And so they banned it.
I don't remember when it was in the 50s or 60s, I think 70s even.
And then they made a big fuss in California and other states about Cause then the illegal started coming in.
If you were a employer and you hired an illegal, you were, it was a felony.
They made a big stink about this and it really cut the problem down to next to nothing.
Oh yeah.
Well, that used to be when I was in New York, you know, someone in the kitchen, you know, they screwed up.
You would sometimes, and this is, this is, it was a bad time in New York.
Not proud of hearing this, but say, Hey, listen, you, you, you fix my food or I'll report you.
That was just a common threat.
And now it's been institutionalized.
I've seen it.
I know many people who are undocumented.
I've helped a couple get legal.
And this is constantly the problem.
They are forced into a situation.
It's no, it's, it's human trafficking, whether it's sex work or not.
It's human trafficking.
Good point.
It's human trafficking.
Yeah.
It's legal.
And they're literally trafficking these humans to Different cities all over the country and literally they're actually the Biden administration puts them in buses and Airplanes and jets and flies them here and there and of course, it's like it's like a it's like it's sick It's human trafficking at governmental institutional level.
It's completely wrong for the citizens of the America and for the and for these quote-unquote immigrants and But, you know, Texas has started rounding them up and shipping them off to Washington, D.C.
But even without that, New York is in trouble.
Tonight we have a gripping look at the migrant crisis at the border, now touching the tri-state.
Shelters in New York City are filling up with thousands of migrants from Central and South America seeking asylum.
Mayor Adams says they're being shipped from border states like Texas and Arizona.
The Republican governors in those states pushed back hard against that today.
A lot of people from Venezuela, now that everything failed there, That's all right.
We'll screw Venezuela.
They can come here and just replace.
This is your replacement theory, I guess.
Not yours, but that's replacement theory.
So just to top it off, just to top it off, we might as well do this.
To distract you from the obvious thinking of many elites, and again, I can understand.
George Soros wants everything broken because he wants confusion so no one will come for his shit.
Most rich people want to live in harmony and everything be good.
I'm not looking over there, but if there's too many of them, it's going to be a problem.
So, you know, that's Nazi thinking.
Oh, no, no, no.
Nazis do... He's a Nazi!
Nazis do different things.
Boston police arrested a leader of a New England-based neo-Nazi group after they held a rally in Jamaica Plain this morning.
The white supremacist group is being investigated for targeting LGBTQ community members by protesting outside of a Drag Queen Story Hour event.
There's a lot in that.
I don't know.
Since when did the neo-Nazis become interested in a trans story time event?
And you see, and how many neo-Nazis do you know that are black?
Because a lot of them in this shot.
Black Nazis.
Before we leave the immigrant story though, I want to play this.
No, no, wait, wait.
Here's my kicker.
This is my kicker.
Kicker.
So we've gone through the dysgenics.
We understand the mechanism.
We understand what may or may not be done about it.
But for sure, if you want to prime the kids, if you want to prime them for death, you go to children programming, NPR.
This is NPR's Life Kit.
I'm Elsa Chang.
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last month, it declared the- Lie!
I'm sorry.
They didn't overturn Roe v. Wade.
Did it declare the right to a constitutional abortion no longer exists?
Roe v. Wade last month.
It declared the constitutional right to an abortion no longer exists.
Did it declare the right to a constitutional abortion no longer exists?
Is that what happened?
No, they kicked it back to the states.
Right, so another lie.
It declared the constitutional right to an abortion no longer exists.
And for a lot of parents, the wall-to-wall news coverage about abortion rights meant that their kids were asking them new questions about the procedure and the politics.
Megan Workman, in Indiana, who has a six-year-old daughter, was wondering where to even begin.
She has a six-year-old daughter.
She has a six-year-old daughter.
Where do I begin talking to her about this?
Well, first of all, the question is, how come you didn't start sooner?
She could understand you at four, couldn't she?
...who has a six-year-old daughter, was wondering where to even begin.
I want it to be age-appropriate.
I don't want to get into too much detail of what it actually is, but just knowing that she can choose if she wants to have a baby or not.
I'm just gonna stop it there.
This is not appropriate for a six-year-old.
And NPR gives the excuse, well, because of the wall-to-wall coverage, you know, of course the kids are gonna hear it.
Sorry, not our fault.
It's just wall-to-wall coverage.
Do you think this is part of the problem?
Or do you think this is part of the... What?
These idiots?
These liberals?
This is part of the elite solution.
This is all contributing to their mission.
No, everything contributes to it.
Let old people euthanize themselves.
Teach young girls about abortion early.
Can't get that... You know, you can decide whether to have a baby or not.
To have a baby or to remove the baby.
I mean... Six!
Six years old!
It's sick.
It is!
You know, you're mixing these topics up, unfortunately, so it kind of takes the oomph out of my clips here.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I was all based on the same thing.
Well, no, it's because you went from the kids, to the abortion, to the dysgenics, to the immigrants, and then you were on the immigrant topic.
It's all related!
Yeah, it was kind of related, but I think it was getting a head of steam because you're talking about how the immigrants are going to be the ones to do the work.
They're actually, you know, they're here for a reason.
If I'd known, I would have insured your clips.
And it was... No, my clips were...
We're going to end the immigrant part because you were talking about it being institutionalized.
Well, everyone's going, Oh my God, we shouldn't have this.
We can't have that.
You know, this, these guys keep getting in, then we keep shipping them around.
Well, listen to these two clips.
The immigrants are flying around.
What do they use for ID?
You just jumped in.
Illegal immigrants get someone to get on an airplane.
They use their citation, I think.
If you've been arrested.
That's right.
Here we go.
Look at illog immigrants flying docks.
Illegal immigrants are using arrest warrants to board flights in the U.S.
The TSA chief confirmed that it is happening and that it's been going on for quite some time.
Here are the details.
The head of the Transportation Security Administration, or TSA, says that under 1,000 illegal immigrants were allowed to present civil immigration enforcement documents, like arrest warrants, to board commercial U.S.
flights this calendar year.
TSA Administrator David Pikusky was re-nominated by President Joe Biden for a second five-year term.
At his confirmation hearing on Thursday, Republican Senator Josh Hawley asked how the TSA policy complies with U.S.
laws that criminalize improper entry into the country.
Yeah, that's great!
I have no problem with that.
Is this some sort of like an entire wink-wink, nudge-nudge government scam?
Yeah.
And then you got some Republicans like Josh Hawley, who I really like.
He's entertaining, he asks good questions, and he's always adamant about, what, what?
And he does follow up the way journalists should.
And here he is grilling the guy who's the head of, I think, TSA or the head of Homeland Security.
The senator also wanted to know why federal security directors aren't called in such a case.
They will bring in the federal security director if needed.
Well, why would that person not be needed if you have someone who's an illegal immigrant?
Right, so we aren't looking at whether a person is legal or illegal in the country.
Our function is to make sure that... Why not?
Because our role is to make sure that people that might pose a risk to transportation that's significant enough to either require enhanced screening or to not allow them to fly.
Do you position someone who is known to have violated the laws of the United States does not thereby need enhanced screening?
You're not concerned about this person as a security threat?
Sir, there are people every day that violate the laws of the United States that fly.
We look for things that are related to transportation security.
Senator Hawley also said he had not received a response from Pikusky to a letter he sent the TSA chief in January.
In the letter, Hawley said that the TSA policy subverts the rule of law and should be rescinded immediately.
In his words, the point of an arrest warrant is for the police to actively seek out and apprehend criminals.
This dystopian inversion exceeds the point of absurdity where radical open border policies attempt to accomplish the very opposite of DHS's core mission, apprehending those who cross our borders illegally.
Yeah, you know what's sad is that, you know, in order to play a clip with even this type of information, you have to go to NTD.
I know!
Isn't that pathetic?
I mean, even though he's a little off base, Noam Chomsky was bitching about this on Russell Brand.
Unless you want to do more on immigration.
I'm sorry.
No, I'm done with immigration.
That was it.
And Noam Chomsky is... Is he 100 yet?
He's probably pushing 200.
Now, just so we understand... He can't talk.
He's lost his voice.
He only talks with vocal fry.
It's even slower and lower than that.
He was on with... I can't get that low.
He was on with Russell Brand.
Can you remind everybody who Noam Chomsky is?
Can we just call him Norm?
It's so hard to say no.
Noam Chomsky is a notorious left-wing complainer who's been in the business of bitching and moaning about everything America does ever since he became famous.
Was he a consumer advocate?
He's a professor of linguistics or was, he's retired, at MIT and he's famous for it.
He's developed a number of linguistic rules and regulations and concepts that everyone accepts.
But he's a lefty of the old-fashioned style, the old internationalist type communist.
And he's a real jerk.
But he's such a good linguist that he can trick you into believing his stuff.
And people who get sucked into Noam Chomsky, you have to feel sorry for him.
But recently he's been complaining a lot because he hasn't been getting his airtime.
Well, he got airtime with Russell Brand.
And I'm just going to call him Norm from now on.
Just seems... Norm.
Norm Chomsky, in case everyone's wondering.
He was bitching all right.
Take the United States today.
It is living under a kind of totalitarian culture, which has never existed in my lifetime.
So there's, there's the, he's 200 years old.
The United States has a totalitarian culture which I've never seen in my entire lifetime.
And he's seen a lot, particularly on the socialist lefty side.
Yeah, he's seen it all, pretty much.
So this is even too much for him.
Which is really funny.
Worse in many ways than the Soviet Union before Gorbachev.
Go back to the 1970s, people in Soviet Russia could access BBC, Voice of America, German television, if they wanted to find out the news.
If today, in the United States, you want to find out what Prime Minister Lavrov of Russia is saying, you can't do it.
It's barred.
Americans are not permitted to hear what Russians are saying.
Can't get Russian television, can't access Russian sources.
That means also that fine American journalists like Chris Hedges, one of the best, is cut out, barred from Americans because he happens to have a program running on RT, Russian television.
You want to find out what the adversary is saying, which is of utmost importance.
You can maybe tune in to Indian state television and find it out.
You can read it on Al Jazeera.
But the United States has imposed constraints on freedom of access to information, which are astonishing, and which, in fact, go beyond what was the case in post-Stalinist Soviet Russia.
There you go.
From Norm himself.
Well, he's probably more or less right.
I mean, RT.com you can get to if you want to.
I mean, I can watch it.
But even beyond that, I mean, you and I watch television, news media, are trolling everything all day.
There's really nothing.
I mean, there's so much that they could talk about, but no, we're not getting access to the information.
No one is, by the way.
Except on Brighteon.
You're right.
And when you say no one, you mean England, Netherlands, France?
No.
Everywhere?
No.
No one.
No one?
No one.
No, we get better news from NTD and from WION.
Well, NTD and WION.
N.T.D.
is like, I watch this stuff, I mean, I have to say, Amy Goodman occasionally has some good stuff, but N.T.D.
really has good stuff, and then they have reporters, and they actually do work.
They're all kind of amateurish is the problem, and it makes you great.
Well, the presentation is just horrible.
Hire some people.
Hire some people.
I'm sorry.
That's what RT did well, they hired Brits.
All those people have probably been shot now.
Where do you work, Archie?
Oh, sorry about the bullet in the head.
Well, they had that one guy who was, I forgot, he was on MSNBC.
He was like, I can't remember his name.
Somebody in the troll room would remember his name.
Kind of a square blocky guy.
And he used to be, first he was actually a right winger and yelled at left wingers.
Then he became a left winger on MSNBC and he yelled at the right wingers.
The older guy?
The older guy?
He was an older guy.
He died.
Ed Schultz.
Ed Schultz.
Ed Schultz, yeah, and then he went to... somehow he screwed up there and they sent him off to R.T.
He was at R.T.
for a number of years.
And then he killed him.
Yeah, they killed him.
But he was, and to watch his different iterations, it's like this guy's just a chameleon.
He can do whatever he wants.
He was really good on MSNBC as a shithead.
As a stooge.
Well, he lost his security clearance and that was the end of him.
And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in Norm Chomsky.
Ladies and gentlemen, please say hello to my friend on the other end, Mr. John C. Dvorak!
In the morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry.
Also in the morning to all ships at sea and boots on the ground, feet in the air, subs in the water, and all the dames and knights out there.
Did you clean up the tin cans and everything?
What happened to the racket?
It was a total letdown.
I was talking into the bell.
In the morning to the trolls in the troll room, you can find them and join them at trollroom.io where we have hundreds, thousands sometimes people hanging out listening to the shows live.
We have a 24 hour live stream, noagendastream.com or just go over to trollroom.io and you can pop into the chat there and you can troll as much as you want.
Let's see how many we got in there today.
Ooh, they scurry away.
2,182.
So we're still kind of on track.
That's low.
That's low!
That's low?
Bad trolls.
I'm still amazed anyone shows up to listen to this.
They're the studio audience, as far as I'm concerned.
And a great studio audience they are because they know Ed Schultz and stuff like that.
You can join there, or you can follow Adam at noagendasocial.com, John C. Dvorak at noagendasocial.com.
These are federated addresses, which means it's not for email.
You could do it.
If it happens, it would work.
You can follow us from any other Mastodon type of server, and just do a search.
You'll find one, get an account, type in exactly what I said, you'll be able to follow us, and then the whole stream from noagendasocial.com will eventually start to flow into your timeline, and it's the future.
If you actually want to have a nice conversation, check in now and then, not have algos, fry your brain by bringing back angry topics, it's just simple.
You come in, you read down the list, oh, I already read this one, you're done.
You can return again in next tomorrow.
I want to thank the artists for episode 1470, including this one, 29 left to go until the big 1500.
Now, we titled that Clubbing Center, very proud of it.
Tried to get the domain name for our new business, our exit strategy, but no, no, already taken, so we scrapped that one.
Nestworks has just been on fire.
We've seen this in our almost 15-year history.
Artists come in, and you know, I hate to say it, John, but I'm a little worried about Nestworks.
You know what usually happens?
You get three in a row, you get bam, you get another one, and then there's burnout.
Do you think there's a risk?
Well, Nestworks has been producing product for years.
A long time, a long time, yeah.
And he's pretty consistent.
He's always in the game, you know?
He just happens to hit a few winners here and there.
He's like a utility player in a good baseball team.
I have a feeling that the time change might have played into his game changing.
Is that possible, do you think?
Maybe.
He may be able to listen more often.
What was the piece he did first?
Oh, this was the bug dogs?
Oh yeah, the hot dogs.
The bug dogs.
It was cute.
The new mac and cheese is the bug dog.
A nice little bug there.
There's a hot dog with some mustard in his bun.
There was a lot of good pieces for today's show, last week's show, last show.
Yes.
Yeah, that was one of them.
And there was one.
Capitalist Agenda had, I liked his brain frog sticks.
You liked Correct the Record.
Yes.
The death one.
Which one?
Which one?
With the queen right next to the bug dogs.
The queen and Biden in heaven.
Yeah, I thought that was kind of funny.
I mean, gruesome, but funny.
It was gruesome, but it was funny.
It was amusing.
It wasn't the funny one.
And by the way, the reason I didn't get it, because the contrast elements he was using for his title... Yeah, made the letters all fade out.
...was not up to par.
It was white and blue against a white and blue background, and it just didn't cut it.
He had to change something to make that work.
Now, we both really liked Crushed, no, Cesium-137's I Love My Old Dyke Teacher, but it was clearly, clearly, clearly not going to get used.
I love my old dyke teacher.
And then the one we cracked up at was, which is at the top here, is the clubbing center With a doctor in scrubs in front of a, like a Planned Parenthood place with a baseball bat with blood all over it and all over him.
Thank you for the laughs, but no.
That was the funniest one.
There was no way we were going to pick it.
It just wasn't going to happen.
I also liked Hello Comrades from Tantaniel.
Yeah, but I didn't like the use of that, of the prosperity cat, personally.
And I mentioned John Doar has one, and he's the one who popularized him in Silicon Valley, and that was the end of that.
What is prosperity cat?
I'm not familiar with this concept.
It's that cat, he's got his hand up.
It's a real cat.
Oh, it's porcelain.
other hands down they come mostly they're gold-plated so what does john doord one of the top venture capitalists in silicon valley wear t-shirts with it or does he wear no no he has one of them you but you buy them you can buy these cats it's a real cat porcelain oh it's porcelain okay it's a porcelain cat looks just like this and And they have the hand in the air.
Are they expensive?
They're for good luck and prosperity and you put them in your office.
Are they expensive?
It's a Japanese thing.
Are they expensive?
They come in a bunch of styles.
The gold plated ones are the best.
And if you go to an Asian part of town where they have a lot of Asian stores.
They'll be selling these things by the boatload.
So you just didn't want the Asian community of San Francisco to come... No, I just don't like the... I'm not a fan of this image.
Yeah, okay.
I mean, I like the comrades gag.
It's funny.
Yeah, we should make Prosperity Cats with Hello Comrades that you can buy.
Yeah, it was just kind of, yeah, well, the Japanese, there's a Japanese, I believe it's a Japanese cat.
Looks like it.
And comrades is a Chinese idea, so I don't know if that would, if that really does the trick.
Anyway, anyways.
Anyways, uh, what else did we have?
We had, uh.
The baseball bat.
Baseball bat.
The bloody baseball bat was the best.
A couple of bats.
A couple of bats.
Well, thank you all very much.
Now I want to mention this.
Oh no, the liquefied beetle.
That was a contender for me.
Yeah, but it's hard to read.
Hard to small.
Now I want to mention to uh...
People who don't remember, because we never come up with our fact.
That's my fault.
Uh, gruesome images.
So images of the pox or monkey with pox all over him is not going to get it.
Unlikely.
Or any gruesome image, anything that is like that.
So the thing is an associated problem where you have a, uh, You have the show and then you associate with something gruesome or disgusting.
It's never going to happen because we know, for just a marketing perspective, you don't do that.
It hurts the show.
Against the rules.
It hurts the show.
That's why you use a cheesecake when you can, even though that irks some people that are sensitive.
But for the most part, no.
You can play along if you're listening live at NoahArtGenerator.com.
You can just refresh and see.
I mean, there's already, there's like a whole page that's up today.
I don't know.
Someone just spewed a whole page of art.
It's crazy.
What's up?
Somebody put some old stuff up.
Is that what it is?
Oh, okay.
There's a lot of old stuff here.
Like the famous Jeb Bush, Nick the rat picture has been repurposed.
Well, um, Then another way to follow is on any Podcasting 2.0 compatible app.
There are now 58 apps and services that use Podcast Index and Podcasting 2.0.
And you can see these images rotate in real time in our cloud chapters.
Newpodcastapps.com.
Now let us thank the executive producers and associate executive producers who brought us today's episode, episode 1471.
We kick it off with Ryan Storey and he's in Brisbane City in Queensland in Australia.
Dear John and Adam, the show is a must listen for me twice a week.
I've just donated $1,500 Australian dollary dues, which he says comes out to $1,037.43.
He says that makes me a baron.
Now, first of all, we accept the $1,500 for as long as stocks last, even though you're now getting to like, what is it, $0.60 on the US dollar?
It's getting down there.
My goodness.
This deal's gonna end soon.
This deal might have to end.
We still love you, Canada, Australia, New Zealand.
We're gonna keep you on parity for a little bit longer.
It will make you a Baron, he says, that you, John, JCD, has approved me the title of Baron of South Australia.
A great honor, indeed.
Please de-douche me.
You've been de-douched.
And he says, some karma is always in order.
Many thanks from Ryan.
And we shall make that title change for you, Ryan.
Thank you very much.
You've got karma.
Chris Johnson's up and he is in Port Orange, Florida at $433.99 and his note is too long.
I'll just say that right up front.
Let me just do that.
Nothing like a Heineken.
I'm going to need a stiff drink to get through this note.
I've taken six trips around the sun with Crackpot and Buzzkill.
Uh, which I guess he's been listening for six years.
Okay.
In my ear and for my 42nd birthday tomorrow, I figured it was high time I completed my knighthood.
I would say.
There you go.
This donation plus a penny from you should grant me access to the coveted round table accounting below.
There it is.
Because I like my scotch to taste like a 100 years of oppression, I request a bottle of Ardberg 25, which isn't cheap, to pair with 16 ounces of A5 Japanese Wagyu steak at the round table, please.
No price is too high for our knights and dames.
If he wants Arden 25, Ardberg, Ardbig, what is it?
Ardbig?
Ardbig.
Ardbig 25.
I always thought it was Ardberg, but it's Ardbig.
Um, you know, Wagyu, which is a very, uh, high fat product.
When you cook it, you always... Stop, stop.
I see Wagyu advertised everywhere.
Wagyu burger.
Is that bullshit?
I mean, is that now at this point just marketing?
It's American Wagyu.
What is Wagyu?
What is Wagyu?
Wagyu is a different breed of cattle that specializes, comes out of Japan, but they also have a similar animal in Korea that produces a fat that is actually more like a duck fat than a cow fat.
It has a different, it's got different olefins.
Everything about this fat is different.
It's a healthy fat, it's like olive oil compared to coconut oil, let's say.
And so the fat in this meat is better and you can breed them with Herefords and you get the same kind of meat.
American Wagyu I think is slightly tough.
I think it's hard to cook.
Japanese Wagyu which is almost all fat.
It's like a piece of fat.
You can't eat 16 ounces of it.
I'd like to see somebody try.
But okay, if you want to try, you can have it at the round table.
Now I understand why Arby's is advertising Wagyu sandwiches.
It's bullshit.
It's marketing.
Well, it may have the right fat.
I'm not sure.
- Sure. - This is the thing that is not-- - But when you hear wagyu, oh wagyu, oh, and what I just heard is this piece of shit.
An American wagyu.
American Wagyu.
It's expensive, but it's not a complete piece of shit.
But it's not A5, which is the top of the top of the top Japanese product.
If anyone wants to try cooking Wagyu, it's going to take you a few rounds before you figure out how to do it right.
I've played with it.
The only way, I find the way I did it best, even though I tried all kinds of techniques, is you take the American Wagyu, it's still hard to cook and it's still kind of tough and you don't eat, you eat about half as much as you would normally.
You take a flaming griddle, a grill that is in flames, just two, three foot high flames.
This is your favorite way of cooking.
I have so many recipes of yours that go like, and you make that pan hot, like smoke's coming off, like the building's gonna burn down hot!
Okay, so how hot does it have to be, John?
I'd say 800 degrees.
Ah, heard, chef.
So then you put the meat on there, and you leave it on there for about a minute, flip it over, and you're good to go.
OK, I must admit, he continues, the value I've returned by reaching knighthood could never touch the value I've received over the past six years.
OK.
All right.
But I'm hoping that all is about to change with our exit strategy.
That's right.
It's all over.
He says our exit strategy.
Well, what is the exit strategy you speak of, Chris?
Well, that's a great question, gentlemen.
I'm glad you asked.
With no agenda show in mind, me and my douchebag friend Nate, who hit me in the mouth at those all those years ago, have spent the last two years developing a new kind of mobile weather app That is entering into beta test flight in the next few weeks.
If you're interested in participating in our beta trials, we invite you and all the producers to register on the site at weatherchamps.app.
Okay.
I'm always interested in a new weather app.
Go check it out now.
So henceforth and throughout the lands of the Gitmo Nation, I shall now be known as Sir Tanley, the Weather Camp.
Okay.
Alright.
In closing, a douchebag call out to all those partying with me today on my birthday, and to my wife, Stormy.
Hold on.
Like, one more.
I think we need one more.
And to Nate Fincher.
Yeah.
And to Catherine Neal.
Holy moly, a bunch of douchebags you hang out with, bro.
No kidding.
Thanks for all you do.
No jingles, no karma.
Remember everyone, keep your head in the clouds.
All right.
Thank you very much.
Jonathan Daniel is in DeMorris, Georgia.
350, executive producer of episode 1471.
In the morning.
I'm ashamed to say this is my first donation after not missing a show for two years.
So a de-douching is in order.
You've been de-douched.
Thank you very much for all the great work you do.
Truly the best podcast in the multiverse.
And that's it.
Done.
Done.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Now you have a letter from Anonymous who wrote in.
And it looks like Eric scanned it.
Oh, that's nice.
OCR.
So let's see how the OCR... I'll read from the OCR.
Yeah.
Please keep me in, uh, dear Crackpot Buzzkill.
Anonymous, until I have a night name, as you're all clearly subversive.
I've been to... What does that mean?
What does that even mean?
I think it kind of hints at what it might be if you read it between the line and this note's come up.
Okay.
I've been too busy to contribute my talent without writing a novel, so here's some treasure in the amount of my cable bill.
Wow.
$333.94.
You gotta unsubscribe for some porn, brother.
That's too much.
He's in Downers Grove, Illinois.
$333.94 is his cable bill.
Damn.
As to talent, I work in the capital markets.
As a producer, I'd like to adjust Adam's ire at the power markets.
Power companies are using lots of debt.
Debt comes with covenants, such as company must hedge, pre-sell, a percentage of production, electricity prices only explode higher, not downer, and the banks that provide the debt with covenants take the long side of the hedges and the majority of the windfall profits.
So the banks are making out.
They also get paid for the debt financing.
Hello, VampireSquid and friends.
Well, stop, stop.
How is that any different from me saying the way power is run here in Texas at ERCOT specifically is like Wall Street?
Get a room.
The power companies are mostly run by decent people, but Hill... but H-L-L... what is this?
Hill Street or Hill Street?
I don't know.
It's running circles around them.
This is one area where government might actually run things better and banks shouldn't have power trading desks.
I have lived in several of the same cities as Adam at similar times, although without the helicopters and castles.
I love the Dutch people.
They were always very warm and welcoming, so I enjoy it when Adam uses the Dutch accent.
The Rijksmuseum is one of my favorites.
He's got it spelled wrong.
Keep up the great work.
I just have to tell you.
So he wrote, instead of Rijksmuseum, R-I-J-K-S museum.
He wrote Rooksmuseum.
R-U-K-S.
And just so you know why I'm laughing, that would be Wanker Museum.
Maybe he did it on purpose.
He wants Obama, no, no, no.
Sharpton, respect.
R2-D2, karma for all.
We're all gonna need it, he says.
Here you go.
Okay, you know what?
Na-na-na-no.
You know what?
Listen.
You're in my house, drinking the booze.
Na-na-na-no.
Shame on you.
...of ESPICT.
You've got... ...karma.
Take the next four notes.
Oh, okay.
We have André Haarselhorst van den Goorberg.
Hairball.
In Downers... I'm sorry, in Alphen.
In the Netherlands, 333.33.
No note from him.
A double up karma is what you get with no note.
You've got...
Sam Onan, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, 333.33, our favorite executive producer amount, says thanks!
Bro, thank you!
And Quentin Wells is in Cisco, Texas.
3-2-1 for him.
Hello from Cisco, Texas, home of the first Hilton Hotel.
This is a direct bribe for the rain stick.
All my ponds are dry and the cattle sale has increased from 1,200 a week to over 3,000 cows put up for sale.
Keep on keeping on, gents.
I'm conflicted about this, though I think it's too late because all the farmers, they can't afford the hay, they've taken all their animals, and there's lines that have never been seen.
So they're selling them at fire sale prices?
Pretty much.
So you're going to have a glut on the market in the Texas area and then in and around.
They're not even going to process them, John.
They're not even going to process them, no.
What are they going to do, just?
Kill them.
Shit, why don't they process them?
The processing plants, you know, you get a date for an animal and, you know, it's like you can't just show up with 10 more or 10 times.
That's not how it works.
There's only, you know, a few processing plants.
This is exactly what I've been being taught about what's going on.
Well, we've been told that.
Washington State's got the same kind of thing.
These processors are getting put out of business by the scams by big processors that don't want little processors around.
It's the big processors that are running it.
Yeah, they're assholes.
They're ruining it for everybody and the government's going along with it.
And they're going to give us bugs to eat.
Yeah, eat bugs.
That's what it's going to be.
All right, well you got one more to read.
Yes, we have John Mutchink in Austin, Texas.
Not quite right down the road, about 70 miles east.
280.08, so that's two boob, maybe.
No note.
Well, how about that?
No note gets a double up karma as usual.
Thank you, John.
You've got All right, let's go to Casey Williams in San Antonio, Texas, 25605.
It's not too far from you.
And this is a switcheroo.
Okay.
Sending an email to Notes at No Agenda with the deets.
Have a good time.
I don't have access to that account, so I don't know what it says.
Well, Notes at No Agenda, it's not even that.
It's noagendashow.net.
You could have copied it.
Oh, so we got no note.
Let me just double-check.
Let me just check.
While you're double-checking, I'm going to read Philip Lyons Smith in Oakville, Ontario, Canada.
23456, favorite donation number.
ITM gents, the banter between you two in the last show had me in stitches!
Toodlepip, Sir Jeremy, Oakville, Candanavia.
Now I don't understand.
I have a Casey Williams note here.
It was sent to notes at noagendashow.net.
So I don't know how it could not have arrived.
In the morning, John and Adam, this donation as a switcheroo should be credited to my husband, Lonesome Jim of the Lone Star State, for his journey toward knighthood.
He hit me in the mouth about two years ago, and like so many others, your show has provided us not only with entertainment, but also a reminder of the importance of discernment at a time we need it most.
Lonesome, which is what I call him in real life, I wonder how that started.
Lonesome wrote to the show several months ago and asked for Jobs Karma.
I was excited to hear his letter read and surprised when he asked the donation be applied for me, so I'm now returning the favor.
Please de-douche him.
You've been de-douched.
I'm happy to report that after he requested Jobs Karma, he landed a position the very next week with a company he loves.
He's able to work from home, which was important to us because he previously had to spend a lot of time away from the family.
It seemed the good karma also extended to me as I was sought out to apply for a more exciting, better-paying job that I also landed and love.
Thank you!
Well, I don't know if we can take credit for it, but karma works in very strange ways, that's for sure.
Uh, keeping this short so John doesn't get cranky.
Good luck.
I'd like Yak Karma and Lonesome's favorite, the Al Sharpton respect jingle.
Stay safe, says Casey.
R-E-S-P-I-C-T.
You've got...
And I have applied the switcheroo for you there.
Dame Beth, Baroness of Baja, Arizona in Tucson.
222 RoaDux.22 Heil, comrades!
Yeah, heil!
Well, I'm about 22 months late on this one, hence the 2-2-2-dot-2-2, but hey, I'm living on COVID time.
Join us this Thursday for a monsoon madness meetup of libation, snacks, and conversation at Canyon's Crown as we watch the monsoon rains roll across the Tucson Valley from 4 to 7 p.m.
Bring your own rain stick!
Dame Beth Baroness of...
Baja, Arizona.
Grab the next one, and I'll do the last one.
Yeah, the next one's a birthday call-out, and it's for $202.02 from San Diego, from Rhett Gardner.
And it just says, birthday donation from Margo Gardner.
Okay, we got that covered.
Wow, perfect.
Very nice, thank you.
Last one, Associate Executive Producer 200 from Anonymous, from Fookave Arena.
At the meetup I organized several months back, I had a sign-up sheet to network with like-minded No Agenda folks.
I sort of felt a little sleazy, I'm self-employed, but thought these folks are who I would want to work with if I had a choice.
I shared that contact list with everyone who attended that meetup.
Last night my wife, a medical professional, received a distressing email from another woman who attended that meetup.
Her email stated that she had started a new job and she was also pregnant.
The woman had the original vaccine but no boosters since.
Her new employer is forcing her to get a booster.
Can you believe this shit?
Gotta be up to date.
She's trying to find a way out of getting jabbed without losing her job.
Her current OBGYN is a jab advocate and won't write her a medical exemption.
She and her husband are frustrated and scared and looking for help wherever they can find it.
My wife works around a lot of doctors.
She started to let her mouth run a bit as the vaccine failures became more obvious.
Careful!
However, all of the physicians she deals with seem to still be on the vaccine train or too gutless to stand up and do the right thing.
Yes, afraid of losing their loved ones.
Or both.
Or both.
My wife got a religious exemption last year.
We have directed this family to the folks who helped with her religious exemption.
However, it would be nice if we can find an OB who would go to bat for this family.
If anyone in Raleigh-Durham, anywhere in North Carolina, for that matter, knows of an OB you could help, please email me, humaneobneeded at yahoo.com.
Humane OB needed.
Humane OB needed.
I mean, that's better than a GoFundMe.
Well, if this works out, all the credit goes to the meetup.
There you go.
We're determined to help this woman and her husband, and we'll do whatever we can so that she can stay employed and job-free.
That's very kind of you.
Good Samaritans.
You know, I get a booster while pregnant?
And why would the OBG... Do these doctors even read their own material?
No.
No.
It's like a lot of doctors seem to just get their degree and then they coast the rest of their lives.
Well, the many doctors... Or whatever the hospital tells them to do.
Correct.
Whatever the protocol is.
Follow orders.
Yeah, why am I supposed to do this?
Why would you just get a robot to do this work?
Thank you very much to The Anonymous, also known as... How about I put that in as a switcheroo?
I'll put humane at obneeded at yahoo.com that way.
That way there's more chance.
Humane OB.
Okay, humane.
Yeah, well, hey, you know.
Yes, I think you should.
It's The Anonymous.
Who cares?
And that's it.
Those are Executive and Associate Executive Producers for episode 1471 of the best podcast in the universe.
Value for value.
Go look it up.
Uh, it's very simple.
You enjoy the show if you get value out of it.
Unlike Silicon Valley, by the way.
Sorry?
Unlike Silicon Valley, which says, okay, you stupid slaves pay us and we'll take all the money and give the creator nothing.
Enjoy the show.
So we don't have anyone pay up front.
Yeah, it's like if you got value out of the show for whatever reason, Turn that into a number, send it back to us.
Doesn't matter how much it is, as long as it's meaningful to you.
If you'd like to learn more about how to become an executive or associate executive producer of The No Agenda Show, which are official titles and credits you can use anywhere, check out this website.
Thank you once again for bringing your time, talent, and treasure to The No Agenda Show.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
World Order.
Shut up, slave!
Shut up, slave!
Well, let me get my sheet.
Let's talk a little bit about the, uh, about my theory that was outlined in the newsletter.
Outstanding theory!
Chapeau bas et applause!
So let's listen to some J6 hearing.
J6, Chan 6, Insurrection.
It's real.
Wait!
17.7 million viewers, John!
Across 18,000 channels!
Did you see the numbers?
No, I didn't see the numbers.
17 million!
Oh yeah?
It's only a little less than the season opener.
So let's go with the NPR coverage.
This is J6 hearing WTF, which means it means the clip is a WTF moment.
It was yet another disturbing and illuminating week of hearings by the House Committee investigating the attempted coup on January 6th, as the committee detailed what former president did, or more accurately, did not do to stop the mob he had summoned to the U.S.
Capitol.
Here's Vice Chair Liz Cheney questioning former White House Counsel Pat Cipollone about the President's response to the violence at the Capitol.
So, are you aware of any phone call by the President of the United States to the Secretary of Defense that day?
Not that I'm aware of, no.
Are you aware of any phone call by the President of the United States to the Attorney General of the United States that day?
No.
Are you aware of any phone call by the President of the United States to the Secretary of Homeland Security that day?
I'm not aware of it at all.
Now wait, who was being questioned here?
It doesn't matter.
That's the nature of the hearings.
It's just these boring, repetitive questions.
Who was tuning in to listen to this bullcrap?
That's his lawyer.
Someone is.
Some random lawyer.
Did you know?
And it goes on and on and it takes forever.
So this is exciting.
Meanwhile, the woman who's an NPR woman that's going on about this, oh, the coup, it's a coup!
So let's listen to part two of this series.
For many of those watching the hearings, the evidence of the former president's culpability seems obvious.
Obvious!
The culpability seems obvious.
Seems obvious.
I don't know what she's talking about.
I've watched these hearings.
There's good culpability.
He didn't do anything.
He didn't make calls.
He told them to write and then he didn't do anything.
Okay, now just before I have my thesis, let's play the NTD version of the wrap-up.
January 6th committee yesterday argued that former President Trump deliberately ignored calls from staff to denounce violence.
The panel attempted to lay out a minute-by-minute account of Trump's actions during the Capitol breach.
And today's Jessica Beatty has more.
The January 6th panel Thursday detailed what members said was Trump's failure to act between the end of his speech at a rally urging supporters to go to the Capitol and the release of a video telling people to go home.
But you have to go home now.
We have to have peace.
President Trump did not fail to act during the 187 minutes between leaving the Ellipse and telling the mob to go home.
He chose not to act.
Okay.
So this is bullcrap.
Culpability!
So my theory is the following.
This was a deep state, uh, set up a frame up and Trump did.
We're going to go along with, they're all in on this.
Trump apparently tried to go to the Capitol right after the, uh, he gave a speech.
He was, he, my thinking is okay.
Why was he going to go to the Capitol?
I never asked that question.
They just said he wanted to go to the Capitol.
Got into a beef with the secret service guy.
Secret service guy says, Hey, Hey, No, you can't go to the Capitol.
We've got to take you to the White House.
And he takes him to the White House.
Well, maybe he wanted to go to the Capitol for a reason, to tell him not to break into the Capitol.
He may have been wanting to do that, but this whole thing was set up.
He was shoved back into his car, taken to the White House and then put in a separate room.
He wasn't even in the Oval Office.
They keep talking about he's in some other room where he didn't do anything and he never called anybody.
He was locked up.
This was like this whole thing.
Seems to be something of a like a deep state trick.
Well, what you put in the newsletter was the real clincher for me, is the missing Secret Service text messages.
And then you have the missing Secret Service text messages, and if you listen to anybody, including Snowden who just posted this, I'll put it in maybe the next newsletter, Snowden says it's not possible.
No, the text messages are not gone.
He says it's not possible to lose these messages because he's set up these systems for the government.
And he says it's not possible to lose those messages.
So why would you lose the messages?
They make a big fuss saying it has something to do with Trump.
But no, not if this whole thing was a setup.
Because in the setup, there's, I'm guessing, some messaging about we got to keep them from the thing because we've got it planned, we're going to do this, we're going to do that.
Now, I thought this was going to be... No, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
How about... Go on.
Why would it be like that?
Why wouldn't it be, POTUS wants to go to tell everyone to stop, command says come back, come back.
I mean, these types of messages is what I'd expect.
Yeah, that kind of thing.
Yeah.
Okay, I'm good.
But there's a smoking gun there.
You're right.
There's a smoking gun there and it's not in their favor.
It's not.
It's not in their favor, but nobody, I don't, I've never heard this thesis.
It's a logical thesis.
I'm not, this is not a crazy nut ball thesis.
This, if you look at the evidence, it's logical what I said could be the truth as opposed to the stuff they're making up.
Now, the kicker to me just came out, and this is the last clip, which is the J6 hearing about Melania.
Former First Lady Melania Trump says she was not aware of the events taking place during the U.S.
Capitol breach on January 6th, and she says the reason is that her chief of staff abandoned her post.
She said that she was recording the contents of the White House's historic rooms, which includes taking archival photographs of the renovations.
She told Fox News she organized a team to do it several months in advance, and January 6th was the deadline.
Mrs. Trump said her Chief of Staff, Stephanie Grisham, was not in the White House on January 6th and that her behavior amounted to dereliction of duty.
She said normally the First Lady's Chief of Staff provides detailed briefings surrounding the nation's important issues, but that Grisham abandoned her post.
Grisham has often criticized former President Donald Trump and the former First Lady since they left office.
Melania Trump said that if she was informed of all the details, she would have immediately denounced the violence that occurred at the Capitol building.
This is great.
Hello!
So this makes nothing but sense to me that this is a scam of the highest order.
And that's one of the reasons that it's a one-sided hearing.
Well, of course.
Then you have the media all in and out, like this woman from NPR, ooh, the coup, and the whole rest of it.
And we still have those guys that were the agent provocateurs.
We know about them.
They're all video, the feds.
Epps.
And all the rest of it.
It's an obvious scam, and I think that at some level the Republicans at least see through it.
Oh, I mean, they do, but I think most of the Republicans I think a lot of them are just ignoring it.
Well, here's another little thing.
The New York Post just today turned on Trump.
Oh, goodness.
What happened?
And said, no, we don't want this guy.
He's no good.
I have to say, man, someone sent me some clips of his most recent appearance.
Like six clips, and I was listening to them, and the producer who sent this to me said, you can hear that Trump is really kind of losing it.
And it was so bad, it's like you can't even sit through them.
It's the same shit.
He has no new material.
I think his energy level is on autopilot, and now maybe he's trying to conserve.
I'm sorry, it's not firing on all cylinders yet.
If that's what his intent is.
Well, whatever the case, this whole thing is designed... I mean, it seems to be working.
Because none of this is even... what I even suggest here is not even part of the discussion.
And we have an arrest!
Going to jail!
Finally, another one of those insurrectionists is going to jail in connection with the Jan 6th insurrection.
We begin here this morning with... What?
It was perfectly... Let me guess who it was.
It was perfectly timed.
It was somebody who was at the... he was at the... he was there and he was yelling and screaming at the crowd to go bust into the place.
He went in himself and started tearing up the place.
That's exactly right.
Except it isn't.
We begin here this morning with a win of sorts for the House Committee investigating... A win of sorts!
A win!
We have a win!
It's a win of sorts.
It's a win of sorts.
It's a win!
We begin here this morning with a win of sorts for the House Committee investigating the January 6th assault on the U.S.
Capitol.
Former Trump White House advisor Steve Bannon was found guilty on Friday on two counts of contempt of Congress.
He wasn't at the Rathod Jan 6th thing.
He wasn't even anywhere near the place.
No, he was in his war room.
But wait, listen to how CBS categorizes this.
...accounts of contempt of Congress.
Bannon defied a subpoena for months to testify before the committee.
He is the closest person to former President Trump to be charged with a crime in connection with the insurrection.
Charged with a crime in connection with the insurrection.
What's the connection to the insurrection?
Well, except that he disobeyed a subpoena from the committee investigating the insurrection.
But the way CBS puts it, oh, this is the first one.
Oh, here we go.
This is good.
Former President Trump to be charged with a crime in connection with the insurrection.
Oh, brother.
You know, I hate to say it.
They do it well.
No, Noam Chomsky's right.
Norm.
Norm.
And it's like, it hurts me.
It pains me.
Why?
Because Noam Chomsky's the guy who promoted Pol Pot.
It pains you to tell he's right.
Yeah, I understand.
That's painful.
Well, you can, you know, talk straight to us.
What do you mean he invented Pol Pot?
What did you just say?
No, he's the one who promoted Pol Pot during, and he denies it to this day.
Although I heard him do it.
Really?
He was a big fan.
You know, he's a communist.
So he was a big fan of Khmer Rouge, which was going on.
It was a revolution, a communist revolution was going on in Cambodia.
The Khmer Rouge showed up, which is Pol Pot's boys, and they were taking over the place.
And he just thought it was the greatest thing ever because the Khmer Rouge is going to fix everything in Southeast Asia.
And he was a big fan of the whole Pol Pot-Khmer Rouge thing for about a few months until it turned out that this guy was a butcher.
And then he backed off as fast as he can.
He's been denying it ever since.
Did he had anything to do?
I don't know.
I didn't like those guys.
Liar.
Norm.
Um, so let's talk about guns for a moment because that's yet another little subtext that, and the whole world talks about how evil America is.
Yeah.
Oh man.
We just shooting kids up everywhere.
Left and right more than ever.
Um, but did you know, did you notice by the way, I should have, I'm sure there's a super cut of this.
We need one.
Uh, so there was a, what was the most recent mall shooting?
Two people were shot, killed, but the gunman, was stopped by a Good Samaritan.
Yes.
This is a very interesting narrative that's created here.
Because you could say a hero, a good guy with a gun, you could say, tell me a little bit more about him, but no, it's Good Samaritan, which has a lot of historical context.
You were going to say something?
Yes, I have an actual clip that's funny, but I want you to finish talking because I've got to look up there.
I found the clip.
Well, to me, it sounds a bit like, well, when you throw... because, you know, Samaritans and the good Samaritans, it has a historical, biblical context, but I think it's being used to say, well, he's a religious asshole with a gun, but he's a good one.
Maybe.
I think they've downplayed it so much.
I think you're caught on to that part of it.
I want to play a clip of the announcement of this on CNN where they downplay it so much.
This is not reporting.
This is supposed to be the news report.
They're editorializing.
This is two of the jerk-offs on CNN.
And this is a clip from a show... I don't have it.
You have to look it up.
Just give me the name of the clip.
What's the name of the clip?
The name of the clip is Indiana Shooter Report, CNN.
And your wish is my command.
A police said that the gunman had a high-capacity magazine, and had this bystander not intervened when he did so quickly, more people could have been killed.
I mean, but are we all supposed to rely on an armed 22-year-old?
Shouldn't have to.
We shouldn't have to.
Oh, he was 22?
Yeah.
How about that?
But should we have to rely on that?
No.
We need to rely on gun laws.
Can you believe that this is the report?
They don't praise the kid?
Do we have to rely on a 22-year-old?
Hey, 22-year-olds are over there.
We have to rely on a 22.
Hey, 22 year olds are over there.
You have no problem sending 22 year olds to Iraq, wherever else, some damn sandy area.
You should be ashamed of yourselves, you idiots.
Here's a quickie on the California gun law.
To fight gun violence, a first-in-the-nation law in California allows citizens to sue individuals and manufacturers responsible for illegal assault weapons and ghost guns used in the state.
Governor Gavin Newsom signed the legislation into law on Friday.
Under the law, Californians can file suit for at least $10,000 per weapon.
The law models itself after a Texas law allowing Texans to sue doctors and others who provide access to abortions.
Hey, Gavin!
Sick burn on Texas, bro!
Sick one, man.
So Gavin did a bunch of press conferences.
I didn't record any of them, but he's bragging about this.
He's got that gravelly voice I can't quite get, but he's going, you know, Texas can do this.
We can do it.
And I'm going to go see some other governors and we're going to tell them all to do this.
Same trick.
It's sad.
It's sad.
But more impressive was the soundbite clip moment in the House hearing about the new gun law that the Democrats pushed to introduce.
And I believe if it didn't already pass, it will.
And then it will go to the Senate and probably won't go anywhere.
This is a virtue signaling bill.
This is really what most of the work That the United States government does is to get clips off of C-SPAN, make sure, oh, now I can go on CNN, on Anderson Cooper, or Tucker Carlson.
It's all part of the same system.
So Massey, Representative Massey is a Republican from Kentucky, and the bill here is about banning the sale of AR-15s.
Now, if you have one, you can still keep it, but no longer will be able to buy one if this passes, and also no magazines over 15 rounds.
So that's what the bill is about.
And Massey does his moment, I think, brilliantly.
I just cut out a little bit of it because it went on for five, six minutes.
Uh, and he said, hey, you know, I've got an amendment.
Amendments are very important, uh, in the, in the bill writing and legislation writing process.
He said, I've got an amendment.
Um, I see some exceptions here.
So, you know, to this, uh, this rule about who can have these guns.
And they were indeed clipworthy.
I am at a loss to understand why the Department of Education or the Department of Agriculture would need the so-called weapons of war to complete their missions.
I should have said in my intro there.
That the bill specifically, as it always does, discusses the AR-15 as a weapon of war not needed on our streets.
No one needs a weapon of war for hunting.
And so now he's saying, hey, this is interesting.
Why do these people need a weapon of war?
And I would, if I may, I would yield to any of the Democrats who want to tell me why the Department of Education needs weapons of war.
Mr. Swalwell, I'll yield to you.
I would just ask, if they don't need them, why do you need them?
Brilliant, brilliant reply, Swalwell.
Can you believe this?
Uh, yeah, I know you are, but, uh, I know I am, but so are you.
Swalwell, why does this guy keep getting re-elected here in Fremont?
He's probably- By the idiots that live in the Silicon Valley, uh, East Bay.
You know what I think?
I think that he's passed around as a hot piece of ass amongst, uh, amongst the men.
That could be.
Uh, Mr. Maxwell- Mr. Swalwell, I'll yield to you.
I would just ask, if they don't need him, why do you need him?
I would say that they are not weapons of war, but I am taking the intent of Mr. Cicilline on good faith, that he's banning weapons of war here.
And so I would ask him, why would he ban something that he calls weapons of war?
But why would he allow the U.S.
Department of Agriculture or the Department of Education to have what he considers to be weapons of war?
He said these weapons that he seeks to design have characteristics specifically for killing people.
If it's, you know, if it's at the USDA, I would wonder maybe you need to dispatch an unruly animal.
But if that's the case, why would he seek to allow them to have weapons that in his, by his definition, and I will yield to him here in a second, are designed for killing people?
Yeah, I think that exclusion is included because they both have law enforcement agencies.
Which kills people.
The gentleman yield?
I will yield to the chairman if he would try to answer the question.
Nadler, by the way.
The Department of Education, Department of Agriculture would need weapons, so-called weapons of war.
Every such department, including the Department of Education and the Department, every department listed.
Including the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Education have their own security forces who might need strong weapons.
I would like to ask why do they need more than 15 rounds and why would they need what the Democrats have mostly characterized as weapons of war if they're not going to war?
Yeah, so of course they got no answer to that, but it's a very good point.
And how frightening is it?
I didn't know the Department of Education was getting AR-15s.
I thought it was bad enough the IRS showed up to my office with their guns.
Oh no, they have security units.
Security, yeah.
Does the Department of Education have to do with... What security are we talking about here?
This is, I mean, that is the overarching point.
I mean, I'd like to know specifically what they need them for.
That was not answered.
Unruly students?
It was not answered.
Riots?
It was not answered.
Department of Education.
They're just a bunch of nuts.
These guys are insane.
I remember when the IRS showed up looking for me.
Yeah, you and your IRS.
They had their guns, hands on guns.
Yeah, well, with you, I don't blame them.
You know, that attitude hurts America, John.
You're hurting America.
All right, I need to talk about Ukraine and Russia.
Do you have anything on Ukraine and Russia?
I have quite a bit about Ukraine and Russia.
Let's play my clips.
Let's do it.
Let's go with the up-to-date stuff.
This is the Ukraine-Odessa attack with missing information.
Ukraine says Russia's missile attack on the port city of Odessa today, which the U.S.
has strongly condemned, threatens the resumption of shipments of Ukrainian grain.
This less than 24 hours after Moscow agreed to it.
Ukraine's military says Russia fired at least four missiles toward Odessa today.
Two missiles were shot down by Ukraine's air defense system.
The other two hit an area around the port.
Ukraine's foreign ministry spokesman compared the attack to, quote, spitting in the face of the United Nations, which brokered the grain deal with Turkey.
Deputy Agriculture Minister Taras Vysotsky says the UN needs to clearly spell out what it means to violate this agreement.
We stated before the deal that without fixed, reliable guarantees of security, it's not going to work.
Friday's deal included Russian assurances that it would not attack port facilities.
Joanna Kakissis, NPR News, Kyiv.
Now she leaves out his NPR, and this is yesterday, when he did this report, even though the thing took place, I think, on Friday.
They leave out that the Russians immediately denied doing this.
Yeah.
They immediately denied doing this, but NPR assiduously left it out.
So I'm listening to some more stuff on NPR.
And here it is again.
This is the part two of these clips.
And this is just a short clip.
I just titled it Lies.
Yesterday, international leaders were praising a deal that would ensure Ukrainian grain gets exported from the port of Odessa.
Less than 20 hours after the deal was signed, though, Ukraine reported missile strikes on the harbor, already violating one of the central terms of the agreement.
Russian officials have yet to say anything about the explosions.
That's not true.
They did say almost immediately stuff about the end.
This was yesterday I recorded that.
But NPR couldn't hear that denial because Norm Chomsky just pointed out that you can't receive that denial.
Seems to be the case.
You want more?
I have a quick series of Jake Sullivan when you're ready.
Okay, well let's try this though first.
This is another NPR clip.
You have to look this one up.
The clip is called Ukrainian to Russia.
Oh, this is the older one?
Yeah, okay.
I got it.
Nearly two million Ukrainian refugees have now gone to Russia, not necessarily being forcibly moved, but making the choice to go in order to avoid possibly being killed as Russia continues to batter Ukraine.
And some of those who are making the trip are being subjected to interrogation, strip searches, or worse, Ukraine portrays the transfers as forced transfers to enemy ground, something considered to be a war crime.
Russia, for its part, has described them as humanitarian evacuations.
There's guns going, weapons going all over the world.
It's a huge shit show which is just painted with this nice little brush by the media.
None of it's true.
Uh, and, and it's just, it's a money pit.
And it's not intended to, I, I listened to a, well I started listening to this very long interview, seven hours of Craig, I think her name is Kay Grigger?
I want to say.
She was married to an admiral, a marine, like a high-ranking marine, and she just talks about all this corruption, how everyone's in on it, they're all partying all the time, you know, they're always going away on junkets and just getting, you know, hookers, blow, whatever.
A lot of insinuation about a lot of gay sex going on in the upper right.
The whole thing is And you just look at the leadership of our military.
Look at them.
Who's left who's a real leader?
Can we know anybody?
I don't see one.
No, it seems like a bunch of creeps.
And so this is just a part of it.
And the Biden family involvement, this is a never-ending money pit of misery.
Misery.
And of course, this is all Obama's doing.
Because this is, obviously, he's behind everything that's happening right now.
There's no denying it.
His people are running it, so he's probably in the background.
Oh, maybe I can prove that to you.
Jake Sullivan went to the aspirin... aspirin.
Yes, it should be called the aspirin security.
Yes.
From now on, Norm Chomsky is at the aspirin security conference.
I'm just flubbing away today.
I'm a regular Joey B. Aspirin.
And, you know, the moderator is the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic magazine.
So it's a tard fest.
And here's Jake with the truth coming out.
President Biden.
Oh, wait.
And Jake is the assistant to the president for national security.
He's not the national security advisor.
I thought he was a national security advisor.
The title I've seen is advisor to the president on national security.
I think that's the same thing.
Assistant.
I'm sorry.
Well, hold on a second.
I don't think he's the assistant.
He's the guy.
Well, that's what I always thought.
But then I saw his title.
Let's just see if he is.
No.
No, no, no, no, no.
He is not.
I don't think he's the National Security Advisor.
He is... No, you're right.
No.
He was National... Well, make up your mind!
I'm trying to.
He was the National Security Advisor to Obama.
But now... Now it's Jake Sullivan.
Here he is, an American political advisor who currently serves as United States Fuck Wikipedia.
Anyway, as far as we're concerned, he's the guy, and he's being run by Obama.
Here's why.
President Biden called him a pariah earlier, and then went to meet him.
Was it a mistake to call him a pariah?
Well, I think what's interesting about the way that this has been covered is that time seemed to stop between his debate comment in October of 2019 and him traveling to Saudi Arabia in July of 2022.
A lot happened in between.
In fact, when President Obama came in, President Biden came into office in the first 60 days in office.
OK, that was that was not just a flub.
But that's maybe just my opinion.
Also, to understand his mindset and these jamoks who are running this horrible war, who are just pouring money into pockets of the military, really the military-industrial complex, but also everyone's benefiting off of this.
It's so disgusting.
This is his mindset as you hear what he's talking about the state of weapons, naval weapons in the world.
So on the first question, one of the things I've learned a lot about in the last 18 months is every form of artillery, munition, coastal defense system, naval mine, you know, that is produced on Mother Earth, not just American systems, but European systems, Soviet systems and so forth.
And... Did you hear it?
Not Russian systems, Soviet systems.
The guys living in the Cold War era.
Wow, that is a fabulous catch.
Thank you.
Listen to it again.
That's better than the Obama thing you could say is a flop, because he worked for Obama.
Yeah.
But that's really bad.
On Mother Earth, not just American systems, but European systems, Soviet systems, and so forth.
So Soviet systems, all right.
Now the final click, click, the final clip is disturbing if you happen to be in the middle of this complete stew of gangs and gangsters and those are just the Americans that are operating in Ukraine.
How worried are you about the physical safety of President Zelensky now?
I thought I'd coach you with the previous question, not to start with, how worried are you?
Because... My answer is... Worried.
Worried.
As you know, I'm uncoachable, but go on.
Could he say he's worried one more time?
If I were Zielinski, right now, I'd be worried.
The guy is saying, oh, his safety?
No, I'm worried.
I'm really worried.
Really, really, really.
Listen to it again, and you'll complete his thoughts.
To start with, how worried are you?
Because... My answer is... Worried.
Worried.
As you know, I'm unculturable, but go on.
I mean, this is...
Compared to where you guys were in February.
It's obviously, and it's not something to make light of, because President Zelensky's personal safety is something that concerns us.
This is a leader in wartime dealing with an opponent, an adversary, an enemy in Russia that is ruthless, brutal, and capable of just about anything.
So it is a concern.
President Zelensky takes Uh, the precautions you would expect to protect himself, to protect continuity of government in Ukraine, and we are trying to help and facilitate that in any way that we can.
I think he's a dead man.
I think they're gonna take him out, and you know who's gonna replace him as the spokeshole?
His wife.
What, Zelensky?
Yep.
Oh, his wife spoke in front of Congress.
It wasn't worth clipping.
Well, Zelensky is obviously a showpiece.
He's got those fitted t-shirts.
It's all he ever wears.
But he's going too far.
He's pushing for things that no one wants to give him, and he's overacting.
He's complaining.
He's starting to complain a bit too much.
And so they bring in his wife, Nancy Pelosi, brought her in, big speech, you know, blah blah, whatever.
It's empowering women.
Yes, and she'll be the new face of the war.
You can write it in the book.
The new face of war is Mrs. Zelensky.
Poor Volodymyr.
He may be playing, yeah.
He may be...
I thought about this, I didn't think about killing him, but I thought about the fact that he seems to be pushing his luck a little bit with how much he keeps demanding stuff.
Exactly.
And he's doing it in a kind of a way that's like, you know, he's the boss.
Yes.
When he's not.
Exactly.
He's overplayed his hand.
Very dangerous.
That's a good catch.
Very dangerous.
Worried, worried, worried, yeah.
Four times!
Four times.
I'm worried.
Obama.
Jesus, Gary.
Get rid of him.
I'm worried.
I'm going to show myself the world 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 1471 as we move ahead, starting with Isaac Contreras in Chula Vista, California.
He's got a birthday coming up, and he needs a de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
He also says, Daddy loves you, Imani Krishna.
And that's, he's in Chula Vista and he donated $143.
Thanks, Isaac.
Wonderful.
Ian Field, $100.
Rita Harrington, $100 in Sparks, Nevada.
Mack, Mack in, oh, I know how to, Coquitlam, Coquitlam.
Ah, you did it.
I know how to pronounce this.
Close enough.
A hundred dollars, BC.
Canada.
Baroness Judy Schwartz in Burney, Texas.
A hundred dollars.
Hey!
Yeah!
Sir Fusion Oth.
In Westminster, Colorado.
Nine nine dot nine nine.
Sir Beeboop.
Night of the Frozen Tundra in New Brighton, Minnesota.
And that's eight eight eight eight.
Tony Hoffer.
Hoffer in Maplewood, Minnesota, nuts, 8-008.
Your show 1470 was great!
He's been killing bugs professionally for 37 years.
I'm not eating them ever.
Nah, never.
Good for you, Tony.
Sir Kevin McLaughlin, Duke of Luna, lover of America, lover of boobs, and lover of North Carolina.
Do you like boobs a lot?
Yes, I like boobs a lot.
Boobs a lot, boobs a lot.
I like boobs a lot.
Really like boobs a lot.
I like boobs a lot.
Boobs a lot, boobs a lot.
I like boobs a lot.
1957.
Locust, North Carolina.
1957?
You gotta like boobs, yeah.
It's really old.
Wow.
You gotta like boobs.
It's a beauty.
It's a good one, isn't it?
Tim Heazel in Hanford, California.
He needs a de-douching.
We got it.
You've been de-douched.
Tim's also in for 8008 boobs.
Jean-Paul Delahaye in Stuttgart.
Wait, it's not, I get it in 78, it's in 7311.
It's Stuydenboeren.
No.
If it was a real place, you'd pronounce it as Stuyndeboeren.
Try it.
Stuyndeboeren.
Which is basically Dutch saying support the farmers.
Oh, good for him.
Yeah.
Zane Peterson in Mantee, Utah, 7242.
Only on the Noah Jenner Show do you find out stuff like that.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah.
Bruce Schwalm in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 6933.
I said Zane Peterson in Manti is 7242.
I said it again.
Nicholas Krell in Stanhope, New Jersey, 6006.
Jeffrey Sewell, 5678 in Wyandotte, Michigan.
Brian McFadden in Hampton, Virginia, 5510.
He's got a birthday.
Surprise Night of Astonishment.
Surprise, get it?
Uh, Yukon, Oklahoma, 54.44.
Shenglaipang in Lancaster, Lancashire, Lancashire.
Uh, UK, 53.54.
ITM, Conrads.
First time donor.
She needs a de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
Shout out to Daryl.
Shout out to Daryl.
John Gaynor, 5280.
Forrest Martin, 5005.
And the following people are $50 donors, name and location.
If I have the location here, otherwise forget it.
Actually, I have locations for everybody.
Andrew Butterfield, Bettendorf, Iowa.
Patrick, Sir Patrick McCombe, New York City.
Maycombe.
Robert Hanna, Poway, California.
Angela Pickering in Sour Lake.
Texas.
She loves us, though.
Trevor Clement in Aloha, Oregon.
Huh.
F-cancer.
Karma will put that at the end for you.
Your grandfather, who is diagnosed with lung cancer, will do that for you.
Christopher Scown in Queensland, Australia.
David Perdue in Snow Hill, North Carolina.
Alexa Delgado in Aptos, California.
John Lawrence in Helots, Texas.
Megan Emery in Austin, Texas.
Jesus Allen in Austin, Texas.
And last but not least, Sir Alan Bean up in Beaverton, Oregon.
Thank you, Alan.
I want to thank all these folks for making 1471 a possibility and a good show that it became.
Also, thanks to everyone under $50.
That's where we have our sustaining donations.
These are subscriptions you can get on and any amount you want, of course.
We have some magic numbers there for you.
These really do help.
We highly appreciate everyone who's a part of that.
And also, if you want to remain anonymous at all costs, under $50 is the place to be.
Thank you.
If you'd like to learn more, go here.
As requested, F cancer and a job.
Fucking cancer!
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs!
It's a birthday party!
Yeah, we have a couple on the list.
Amy Pugh, happy birthday to her husband, David Pugh.
He is the baron of the Pew Pews.
He celebrated on the 22nd.
Brian McFadden turns 55 today.
Chris Johnson, 42 tomorrow.
Isaac Contreras, happy birthday to his daughter, Imani Krishna, who will turn 3 on the 27th.
And Rhett Gardner says happy birthday to Margot Gardner.
And we say happy birthday to everybody here on behalf of the staff, management, and back office of the No Agenda Show.
He came in with a whopping $1,500 reduce.
Well enough for an upgrade to Baron Ryan Story, now officially known as Baron of South Australia, all-star.
All hail to the Baron, and thank you very much for supporting your No Agenda show.
One night today, just one, Chris Johnson, so let me get my We've got the bargain blade.
Come on, man.
Don't give him the bargain blade.
Give him the real deal.
It's a good blade.
That's the problem.
It's a good deal.
Best price.
All right, Chris Johnson, popping up here, man.
Thanks to your support of the Noah Jenner Show and the amount of $1,000 or more, you now become a Knight of the Noah Jenner Round Table.
I'm very proud to pronounce the K-V as...
Certainly the weather cam!
Yes, for you we have, of course, the Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay.
By your request, Ardbeg 25, pairing with 16 ounces of A5 Japanese Wagyu steak.
Along with that, Rubenes, Women and Rose at the round table, Geishas and Sake, Vodka and Vanilla, Bong Hits and Bourbon, Sparkling Cider and Escort, Ginger Ale and Gerbils.
We got breast milk and pablum, but maybe you just came here for the mutton and the mead.
If you did, you're in luck.
We've got heaps, a mound of mutton and just copious amounts of mead ready for you.
And while you're consuming that, make sure you hit your browser.
Go to noagendanation.com slash ring so that we know where to send your official knight ring for your knighthood along with the wax you can use to seal your important correspondence and of course your certificate of authenticity signed by us, which makes it official.
Thank you again.
Again, Dvorak.org slash N.A.
No agenda meetups.
Lots of meetup reports coming in.
Unfortunately, the keeper and I could not make the float meet yesterday, which took place.
Now, they went from New Braun Falls.
There were two meet-ups, two meet-up times, basically.
One, if you're gonna float, and float all the way down to the bar and grill.
Uh, but the keeper was, uh, she was visiting a friend in Utah, and the friend got the coof.
And so the trip was cut short, so everything's a mess, but here's the meetup.
San Antonio, I'm Float One.
This is Andrew, I head of Float.
This is Jess from San Antonio.
Andy Jane, Houston.
Brooke Freeman from Austin.
Meow!
Farmer Chris here.
Hey, Farmer Chris.
And my partner and family from New Braunfels.
This is Gogman from San Antonio.
Enjoying it.
Ann from San Antonio.
This is Osi from the mental asylum.
This is Rachel from Austin.
Brendan from Austin.
Noah Colbeck from Austin, Texas.
This is Casey Wasey from San Antonio.
Losa from San Antonio in the morning.
Grant from Bernie.
Dame Christine, but I'm not really a dame.
Scott's wife.
This is Baron Scott from Austin, Texas.
Baron Scott and his lovely wife always maintaining that group there.
Thank you so much.
St.
Louis, here's their report.
Adam and John, this is Sir Road Dogg partying down in St.
Louis, Missouri.
We're glad to have him.
Hey, Drew Cavern, it's like a party.
I just want to ask JCD and Adam, when did punk rock become so safe?
Hey, I'm Ryan.
I recently donated but haven't been deduced, which leaves me in douchebag limbo.
Awkward place to be.
In the morning.
Hey, this is Gerald.
In the morning.
Hi, I'm Nurse Elise.
You should listen to MMO.
Don't listen to MMO.
It's absolute garbage.
I'm an AMillennial.
I'm a millennial.
And I agree with everything he just said.
And the final report from Kansas City, Sir Spencer.
Sir Spencer here, wrapping up a beautiful meal at Carrabba's Italian Grill in Kansas City.
And we had some Kansas City kiddies show up today, too.
This is Sir Baron John Helmer, Baron of the Redwater River Valley.
This week I've been working on my No Agenda Meetup Meows.
Meow, meow.
Hey, it's Dame Blackhammer.
I'm here with Sea Mike and none of my human resources.
And I think I've spotted the spook.
Oh, crap.
Somebody spotted me.
I gotta take off right now.
Dame DeLorean here.
So, I know you think women with nose rings are crazy, but what about nose studs?
This is Kirk from Mid-Mo, and I'm living that mac and cheese life.
I got my world to go.
I don't know what to say.
No Agenda in the morning.
Aww!
So cute.
If you hurry up, you may still be able to catch the tail end of the Dame Amazeball's No Agenda pool party.
That's at a secret location.
You also could try and run to the River Mill Bar and Grill in Blacksburg, Virginia.
Their meetups start at 3.30 today.
Tomorrow, no agenda taxationist theft meetup.
No spooks allowed.
Hear that, spooks?
5 o'clock at Union Jacks in Knoxville, Tennessee.
And on Thursday, the Tucson Monsoon Madness Meetup, 4 o'clock Tucson time, at Canyons Crown, Tucson, Arizona.
Dame Beth is organizing that for you.
These are the No Agenda Meetups.
You hear there's a community, you heard in an earlier donation segment, where people are really trying to help each other out.
Just do it for your sanity.
There's something about being a member of a community that really has just the show, But there's a lot more that comes along with it, and all the bullshit drops away.
Give it a shot, you won't regret it.
noagendameetups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start one yourself!
Sometimes you wanna go hang out with all the nights and days.
You wanna be where you won't be, triggered or held to blame.
You wanna be where everybody feels the same.
I have to admit, I'm just failing on the ISOs.
It's just, I'm not getting them.
It's just, it's not right.
People say- Well, then you're in deep doo-doo.
Because today, my ISOs are not the best.
Well, here's- I have one.
Every day, more lies!
That's all I got.
Alright, I got two.
I've got an ISO of somebody saying, yeah.
Or a bunch of people screaming, yeah.
Okay, well then we could probably go with this one.
This is taken from a study of baby talk around the world, and this is some Asian guy with one little tidbit.
I think he's saying woo woo or goo goo or something.
Oh goodness, this is all shit.
No, that was a good one, that guy.
Chichikunjatai.
Chichikunjatai.
It's probably, this show sucked in Japanese.
What the hell's going on?
What did you put in here?
Jujugai chachame.
What does he say?
Alright.
It's meh.
I have no idea.
To me it's meh.
But we don't have any alternative.
Alright, well then take an evergreen.
Take an evergreen.
No, we don't.
There's no such thing as evergreen.
You know what?
Let's, I'm gonna put this one in.
Chichikunjatai.
And you know, someone's gonna say, hey man, that was really insulting.
I guarantee you it was something horrible.
I hope so.
Maybe it's like, hey, that sumo guy should have won.
It was rigged.
I'm feeling it's a setup here from you.
I don't think it's right.
I don't think so.
Someone asked the question, when did punk rock ever become safe or something?
Safe?
When did it stop being dangerous?
Here's my question.
What happened in general to just You know, just a good time.
Just have a concert with someone you really like.
You know, take a date.
Maybe take the family if you want to introduce your kids.
And some Bruce Springsteen fans are unhappy with ticket prices for his upcoming tour.
Ticketmaster's so-called dynamic pricing for some has seats going for as much as $5,000.
Most tickets are averaging $200 to $300, but they are much harder to get.
Springsteen hits the road next year.
Hmm.
Dynamic pricing.
Welcome to the future, kids.
It's an algo!
Yep.
It's exactly what it is.
Same thing you do in San Francisco at the parking meters.
What, dynamic pricing?
Yep, the parking meters are dynamically priced, especially around where Mevio is.
It's all those parking spots because when there's a Giants game, it goes from $0.25 an hour to like $2.
Oh, $2 an hour?
They were pricing on 15 minutes when I was there.
No, no, I'm sorry.
What am I thinking?
$2 for like 15 minutes?
I was going to say, yeah, I remember it really well.
Yeah, $2 would be a deal.
It was horrible.
Well, I only have one last clip.
Okay, you're it.
I kind of like your clip for being the last, but I'll play this one anyway.
This is another cancel culture clip.
Somebody, Bill Burr, pointed this out in his latest stand-up, which is good.
He was talking about taking mushrooms.
What's wrong with him?
He didn't like the mushroom segment?
No, it was boring because he was getting laughs like, no tomorrow, and then he goes into this mushroom segment and is modeling stuff about his life.
Oh, I see what you're saying.
He was on a roll and then ruined it with mushroom crap.
Yeah, and that was right in the middle of a set, which made it bad.
I just thought it was poorly.
Was this the one at Red Rocks?
Just came up, yeah.
We saw it.
I enjoyed it.
The first 40 minutes is hilarious.
So, um, so he brought this up about, you know, we're running out of people to cancel.
So let's start canceling people in the, in the past.
Okay.
Here's Audubon getting canceled.
The Seattle chapter of the Audubon Society says it's dropping Audubon from its name because of its association with white supremacy.
Leanna Fowler from member station KNTS reports.
There are hundreds of state and local chapters of the National Audubon Society, the non-profit dedicated to protecting birds.
But Seattle Audubon says it plans to change its name because the man the organization is named after, painter and bird lover John James Audubon, owned enslaved people and opposed abolition.
Claire Catania, Executive Director of Seattle Audubon, says she hopes others will follow suit.
But it's our hope that by making this public declaration now, we can blaze a trail that hopefully will be easier for others to follow.
In the end, Seattle Audubon says it hopes more people will feel welcome in spaces dedicated to conservation.
Oh man, this is crossover!
This is dipshits.
Seattle dipshits.
This is so bad.
Who cares?
Oh, gee, back in the 1800s.
Yeah.
Well, that's it, right?
That's exactly what we're talking about.
Ignore the Nazi background when your parents were alive.
My parents were alive.
Ignore all that.
Yeah, well, Bill Burr goes on about Coco Chanel.
They're making the point.
Exactly.
It's well worth watching.
All right, everybody.
End of show mix is Tom Starkweather, Rolando Gonzalez, and Ozzy Nelson with a great little ditty.
Coming up next, we have... Oh, it's another live show on the live stream at the Troll Room.
Bowls with Buds, Sir Spencer, Dame Laurie, and special guest Kyron Down, who is from Australia, and a very nice guy.
He does a very good show.
Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, here in FEMA Region No.
6 in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C. Dvorak.
Please remember us at dvorak.org.
Everything helps return some value if you've made it all the way to this end.
Surely something's in the cards for us.
We'll see you on Thursday.
Till then, adios mofos!
And such.
The various shots that people are getting now cover that.
You're okay.
You're not going to get COVID if you have these vaccinations.
I want to also just take a minute.
Mark this moment.
The SARS-CoV-2 virus was detected by antigen testing.
Yeah.
The president likely has VA5.
Yeah.
Vaccinated people do not carry the virus, don't get sick.
When people are vaccinated, they can feel safe that they are not going to get infected.
Hey folks, guess you heard.
This morning I tested positive for COVID.
But I've been double vaccinated, double boosted.
Symptoms are mild.
And you can't build a wall high enough to keep out A vaccine.
The vaccine can stop the spread.
What's gonna save you right now is kind of slow a bit.
Yeah.
So it's possible, in fact it's looking likely, that the vaccine might suppress the immune system.
Yeah.
Brett, more people saying it doesn't mean there's more evidence.
Yeah.
It's very dark.
This was entrenched national policy.
We cannot hide away from human population growth.
I'm talking here about corporate philanthropy engaged in ethnic cleansing.
If you watch other TV stations, if you listen to other radio stations, if you go on social media... I am not going to eat bugs.
Pleaded for more weapons and specifically air defense systems from the U.S.
Focus on the road ahead.
But always remember to check the rear view mirror.
We're in the midst of the sixth great extinction.
This was not just a movement of a couple of weird guys.
Mission largely accomplished.
If you watch other TV stations, if you listen to other radio stations, if you go on social media...
We have a window of time which is closing.
So many Americans know how wrong this is.
That's just not enough.
It's not Twitter that counts!
Because this planet has finite natural resources.
The people in this room with me do not exist.
Hasta la vista.
Baby, we've all suffered.
It turns out there can be a happenstance genocide.
Find solutions now.
If you watch other TV stations, if you listen to other radio stations, if you go on social media.
In the morning.
Dr. Fauci, what is wrong with your head?
Oh, Dr. Fauci, trying to make them soft head.
Your functional games seem like magic, though you ignite at all.
The guests of the people were tragic, while you're in the car was full.
Not so charming, but you still act as sure.
Mr. Army I was pushing your cure I'm covering things that were heavy Oh, a natural honor I was seeking a blind little madman And I said, for all it was worth
What do you say?
Resist, we must.
We must and we will much about that be committed.
Dr. Fauci, riding on your bare horse. riding on your bare horse.