This is your award-winning GiveOnNation media assassination episode 1487.
This is no agenda.
Listening for banjos and broadcasting live from the deep south in Bluffton, Georgia.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where it's raining.
Can you believe it?
I'm John C. Dvorak.
It's a crackpot and buzzkill.
In the morning.
I'm so inspired.
It's raining.
You say?
Well, it's a big deal for here.
Oh, you needed rain.
That's right.
I forgot about that.
Are you kidding?
Who needed rain hasn't rained here for five years.
Oh, man.
Okay, well, that's good then.
Yeah, when you're driving down the freeway, you gotta worry about hitting one of those skulls of a dead cow.
You know, I've been hearing accents similar to that, although not quite as phony.
Hey man, I can talk any way I want.
I can talk phony or not phony.
Uh, no, I don't think so.
Yeah, your accent, uh, Georgia accent, well, Georgia accent is very distinctive.
It's very, uh, genteel compared to some of the screeching accents from the further parts of the South.
Yes.
Including the Texas accent!
Which is a really bad one.
You're really nailing it today.
One after another.
Where's the Italian?
You're killing it.
I'll be here all the week.
No, I'm actually in Bluffton, Georgia.
Bluffton!
Have you ever heard of it?
That's got barbecue!
Okay, so you definitely have not heard of Bluffton.
Bluffton is maybe like 200 people live here, which 180 work and live on the White Oaks pastures.
Yeah, the other ones do the barbecue.
The other ones do the barbecue, exactly.
Little travel report, since I did have to fly to Atlanta and then drive down for three hours.
Oh, fun.
Yeah, actually, I hadn't flown out of San Antonio in a while.
Man, those guys are so badass.
They are so tired of everything TSA, just like move through, move through.
They're not even screening half the people.
I'm not kidding.
They're sick of it.
Yeah, they are.
Show me your driver's license, move through, move through.
And so that's all good.
Flight on time, perfect, landed on time.
Well, that would be a little different than Austin.
Oh, please stop off in Austin.
It's also San Antonio is a very small airport.
You know, I think that's maybe eight gates total.
Like the old Austin airport, which was a better one.
Yeah.
Good times.
Uh, so, uh, I hadn't rented a car in a long time.
Like, years and years that I haven't rented a car to drive in, and it was just completely... You've been traveling now and again, you must rent a car then.
No!
No, there's no need to.
Wait, when I go to the Netherlands, or... No.
Absolutely not.
In the Netherlands, not so much.
But I realized, it's like, oh, I haven't rented a car in a long time.
And of course, you know, we all know the, oh, you need a million dollars liability if you kill someone.
I've been through all that.
And what would you recommend if they try to push that on you, John?
I have insurance.
Yes.
No, but if you kill somebody, they're going to sue you.
They're really relentless.
You know, I've gotten into two, I hate to say it, but I've gotten into two wrecks.
Good, so we have boots on the ground.
Did you, were you screwed because you didn't take the extra insurance?
I'll give you the, let's see, maybe three, actually it was three.
I've had three wrecks and I've never, I don't wreck my cars and I dare, I haven't been in an accident for 30 years.
But when I wrecked cars, I think, well, because it's a new vehicle and I'm more careless and I don't know what it is.
It's not yours.
How about it's not yours?
It's not mine.
So I wrecked a...
So I wrecked one in Hawaii, and I'll give you the circumstance if you want to know the story.
Yeah, no, are you kidding me?
I've heard almost all your stories.
This is completely new to me.
So I'm in a minivan with the kids and family.
We're all in this minivan.
And there's this line, I'm in the left turn lane, and there's some idiot at the top, and there's like six cars.
Backed up and the lights on and this guy just won't move.
He just won't move.
And I'm not talking about for a minute or two or everyone honking, honking, honking.
Nothing's happening.
So I say, hell with it.
I'm pulling out.
I go into the opposite lane and go screaming up the side to get to make the left.
And then the idiot comes out and hits me in the side.
Classic.
Classic.
It was a total classic.
So I turned the car in.
How did that happen?
I didn't notice that.
His whole side of the car is just smashed.
And that's the last I ever heard of it.
Ha!
Last I ever heard of it.
Well, that was 35 years ago.
Insurance scams have changed a bit.
Yeah, it wasn't that long ago, but whatever the case was... So here's another one, my favorite one.
So I'm in Arizona.
This one I probably could have done differently, but I'm in Arizona.
And so I'm driving down at some speed or other.
And I don't know, I reach for my phone or something.
This is another reason I carry a phone around.
And I look up and there's some idiot chick.
Stop dead.
Ignore the guy looking fumbling for his phone when not looking at the road.
Yeah, I gotcha.
It was my fault, there's no doubt about that.
But what is she doing?
Stop dead.
Just stop dead in the middle of the road.
I can't believe those people.
Horrible.
So she stopped dead.
And so I, and so I'm in this Nissan and which has always made me wonder about whether these things are any good.
Cause if I know for a fact, if I was in any of my, if Lexus, any Lexus, any Toyota, for a matter of fact, if I'd have hit the brakes, I would have stopped.
Now I hit the brakes.
I had time to stop.
Because I've seen these men in situations.
What was this vehicle?
The car did not stop.
It just slid right into it at high speeds and banged into it and took and lifted up the hood of the car and shoved it toward the window.
What kind of car was this?
It was a Nissan.
It was a Nissan... So Lexus, Toyota, yes.
Nissan, no.
That's the way I see it.
Because this thing, you couldn't stop it at all.
It just wouldn't stop.
Boom!
And so then the thing slides up and the front end is ruined and the...
The airbag never went off.
It should have, since it wrecked the car.
Oh, man.
No, no, the airbag didn't go off.
All right.
So I go up, we change information.
Wait a minute, so you drop the car off and you say, man, I didn't notice that, right?
So, okay, when we changed the information, I pushed down the hood so it was still, it was fine, I could drive around the hood.
A little bit of strain.
So I, yes, and I had to drop the car off.
So I dropped the car off like that.
And, uh, Uh, that's the last I heard of it.
Ah, man, that's unbelievable.
Well, I wasn't going to... Well, I did hear from the police because I got it for hitting this woman.
And that had to be resolved by insurance, but that was just to fix her car.
No, nothing happened.
Wow.
I doubt that.
I think it is a complete scam.
And I've never signed those little extras.
This seems like a joke.
Well, so now they add... I was just looking at the... Because I know what I booked it for.
I know that you're going to have 10 or 12% sales tax.
I got that.
But listen to this stuff they put in now, which is baked in, which is not negotiable.
Concession recovery fee?
Which is, check it out, is the rental car company, they charge you to recoup the amount the airport charges to offer these services there.
11%, 11%, so now I'm already well over 20.
Vehicle license recovery fee.
So I'm paying for temporarily renting the license to this car.
Um, tire and battery recovery.
Oh my!
The tack on a percent for the disposal of tires and batteries.
I mean, come on!
This is such a scam.
It's unbelievable.
Yes, and it takes a car that's maybe $35 a day and jacks up to $60.
Oh, easily.
Easily.
Anyway, so almost three hours down to Bluffton, Georgia, this is a ranch, third generation, run by Will Harris and the Harris family, and again, the 180 people who live and work here.
And I really didn't know much about this.
In fact, you know, I said to Tina, you want to come along and go to this beef initiative thing?
She's like, you know, like me, I guess.
She thought, yeah, Adam and Slim is going to be, you know, people sleep in tents or log cabins.
Like, no, I'm going to skip this one.
This place is outrageous.
It's white oak pastures.
And you can come here and visit.
I think they have 10 homes.
But this is, as I said, third generation for the past 20 years has been complete regenerative.
And I wouldn't have known much about Will Harris.
He's very famous in the ranching world.
But he was just recently invited to go on Joe Rogan, which is coming up after Russell Brand.
Did this complete takedown of Fox Business News and Stuart Varney, who were trying to interview Will about Bill Gates, you know, Bill Gates.
So the idea was Bill Gates, the largest farm owner.
Let's get this.
Let's get this guy from the South kind of talking like you were.
Let's get him on and say, yeah, Bill Gates is the devil.
And that went completely.
What was that?
Go on.
And that went completely... You want to hear a little bit of that?
I mean, it's just... It's like a long piece, but you can hear Russell Brand and you can see exactly why this guy is so interesting.
And why Joe Rogan invited him.
Want to hear it?
Uh, sure.
You have objections to Gates owning this land.
One of your objections is, you say, they don't know how to use it.
How do you know this?
Good question, and thank you for having me on, by the way, Mr Varney.
Firstly, courteous and acknowledging my question.
Hold on a minute, Will Harris, why won't you conform to my stereotypes?
Yeah, I mean, every word I said about Bill Gates' acquisition of farmland, and I stand by it today, I'm wholly unapologetic.
But at the same time, I do regret that my comments were construed as criticism of Gates personally.
Well, he's the world's best diplomat.
Brilliant, innit, that we have to continually challenge our preconceptions.
Immediately I hear, oh, there's a farmer from the Deep South going to be on the news.
All my prejudices come a-rolling in, but it turns out he's some sort of chompskian, linguist, culturally critically adept genius.
My criticism is his brand of misapplied technology.
It reminds you.
You get the idea.
The guy's, of course, very smart.
Works with PhDs here on the farm.
They really know what they're doing and, you know, but that's not the message that Varney wanted to hear.
So that went viral and people really loved it.
It was a great takedown.
So now I know who the guy is.
And there was this beef initiative conference, you know, Texas Slim, the guy who sent you the Flintstone ribeye, the tomahawk?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so the idea is to, you know, for ranchers to learn about how they... Ranchers don't sell directly to consumers.
It's all, you know, it's all through the main four processors.
You know, this is completely, they don't understand how to sell online, and so that's kind of the bringing it together.
So, long story short, about a hundred, a little over a hundred people, ranchers, bitcoiners, anarchists, but a lot of doctors, lawyers, insurance experts, homeschoolers, of course, podcasters.
More than 60% listens to No Agenda.
I was kind of blown away by that, because this was not a No Agenda meetup.
Um, and just a couple of quick things I learned from the insurance expert.
So he started talking about the, the, the processing plants catching fire.
And that, you know, it was an extraordinary amount.
We've discussed it, you know, planes crashing into, into plants, et cetera.
And so he said, you heard about that?
Yes, I heard about it.
But from what I understand, you know, there's a reasonable amount of fires that started processing plants.
Is it really outrageous?
And he's in this business.
He says, Oh, let me tell you.
A processing plant does not burn to the ground.
That fire is out within 20 or 30 minutes.
It's part of the insurance requirement to have suppressants, you know, regular training, fire within, you know, fire squad safety within X amount of response time.
He says what's happening here is they're letting it burn to the ground.
They're taking a big check.
And they're rebuilding, but their processing plants are rebuilding for soy, bugs, and other plant-based stuff.
That's interesting.
I thought it was very interesting.
He had one other thing not related to, uh, to food.
Uh, he gave me the number that every child who goes through the transgender process, do you know what that is?
Uh, that amount is worth to the medical and pharmaceutical, um, community in insurance.
So it's gotta be huge.
Wanna take a guess?
A hundred grand?
Seven million.
Seven million a person?
Per person.
Well, that needs to be documented.
Well, this is what I love about it.
It's insurance.
You know, we know about excess deaths from insurance.
You can't, you kind of can't fight those numbers.
Well, I'd like to see the seven million documented.
Oh, yeah.
Saying it is one thing.
Oh, okay.
Well, I will ask for documentation.
I'd like documentation so that I can write it up.
I know, I know.
Anyway, other reports for you.
Oh, what I did hear is... People are just being used.
Oh, of course.
Of course.
What?
What?
Are you kidding me?
While mentioning that topic, we do have to mention that guy up in Canada, who my wife and I have both concluded is a professional comedian at some level and is pulling the biggest stunt you could possibly do.
And I'm talking about the guy who's the shop teacher who's decided to wear the huge fake prosthetic boobs.
To transition and wear these phony baloney boobs that are the size of trucks.
While he's showing kids how to use the circular saw.
This has got to be a hoax or whatever.
This is crazy.
No, it's not because the guy's a genuine teacher.
He's at the school.
They can't do anything about it.
He's making a mockery of the Canadian school system because he's taking it to the end.
This is our theory.
We don't know.
I mean, he can't be serious.
And he's got these huge phony boobs that are the size of trucks.
With protruding nipples.
With the phony baloney nipples which would make it even more outrageous looking.
And they can't do anything about it and the guy is just doing this as a massive gag.
Gag or Psyop?
It's fantastic.
I have to accomplish what?
To normalize it.
It's a fabulous bit.
That's the way we see it.
It's a good bit.
And the Canadians are very funny as a culture.
They produce a lot of comedians and comics and guys like this.
It would be no surprise that some Canadian would pull this off before an American did.
That's pretty funny.
We got that note from one of our producers.
It's a very long donation note, which we won't read in its entirety, but he and his family escaped from Canada.
He left the country?
On two Cessna 182 flights.
I don't know if there was a caravan.
They're living in a bus and they've been traveling through the States.
But he's an actual escapee.
If you read what they had to go through to get out.
Yes, and they only had a small window to do it.
It's like 12 hours and bad weather and flying in small Cessnas.
Man.
Yeah, it had to do with the vaccine mandates back and forth to get across the border and he and his family, five kids, they got out and they're now traveling around and going to No Agenda meetup, surprisingly, and having a great time.
So speaking of, just to wrap this up, um, a lot of people who listened to the show came up to me and said, and I just want to share it with you.
They said, you know, thank you because during COVID, uh, the show just let me know that I wasn't the only crazy one.
I said, yeah, you're absolutely crazy, but you know, at least there's a whole bunch of us.
And a number of people, you know, you and me talking about beef and they heard about Slim and they've gone from 20 years of IBS and all kinds of problems and they stopped eating shit and now they're eating, you know, good animal protein and all their problems are almost gone.
I mean, people who couldn't even hold down a job.
I think that was also mentioned in this guy's letter from Canada.
His wife was having these health issues and then she went to eating quality meat.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah, that's right.
Now, you've never eaten shit.
I mean, I don't, you, have you always cooked?
I mean, you just don't eat shit ever except for your, your once a month McDonald's.
That's your third time.
That's your third, that's your max shit for today.
Okay.
All right.
Okay.
Pay attention now.
Yeah, I am.
You have this ability to do this and I've always been stunned by it.
I have reached my quota.
I gotcha.
I have been cooking at, I consider, a high-quality level since college, so it's a long time.
Well, I have a gift for you.
I have a Jack-in-the-Box burger once in a while.
A Jack-in-the-Box?
I thought it was McDonald's.
Or was it Burger King?
McDonald's.
I do the McDonald's test about once every six.
I can't eat at home.
I said this on the show again and again.
I can't eat And I can't eat a Big Mac anymore.
Of course not.
They are such crap that you can take maybe a biter to the dog.
The dog won't eat it.
Oh, go to McDonald's and try again.
Try again.
No, the dogs will eat it.
Believe me.
Not for long.
Don't feed them to them too much.
But I do have a gift that I'm going to be sending to you.
It's Banner Butter.
It is butter made from raw milk.
And there's one with herbs and another one with chocolate.
With cocoa.
I mean, you could put some French writing on the herb butter and just call it fromage.
You'll love it.
You'll love it.
Okay, well make sure it stays cold.
Of course.
You like raw milk.
I know you do.
I do like raw milk.
I know you like raw milk.
Anyway.
I like the raw milk, you know, it's better.
When it comes out of the cow, it doesn't, it's not going to kill you.
Now I'm boiling the damn stuff.
Boil it to death.
Terrible.
There you go.
Keep it up.
Your accent is doing it.
All right, so I have been following a little bit.
Well, you guys got a good time.
Yeah, well, I'm still here.
I can't leave.
I leave tomorrow.
Let's get me documentation for the $7 million for... You got it.
That is disgusting if true, but I actually can believe it, but I need it in writing.
Okay, I'll see what I can do.
All right, I got a lot of different things here.
I think this...
I think it's significant what we're hearing about Russia and Putin losing.
But wait, before we go there, let's get the Queen out of the way because I'm getting more interested in this as time goes by.
Again?
Get the Queen out of the way again?
There's going to be 500.
We have to step back and consider that the Queen supposedly, and we talked about this on the show, that she presents herself and that monarchy in England presents itself as a symbolic piece of nonsense that is useless.
But if that's the case, and we of course believe that that's not the case, we believe, or I do, and I think you're the one that convinced me of it, that it's more than symbolic, there's actual power there that is not brought to the fore.
Sure, we agree.
And it has to be the case, that has to be true, if 500 dignitaries Biden, the Emperor of Japan, the Japanese Prime Minister, everybody in the world is going to this funeral, which sounds like a nightmare if you ask me.
Yeah.
Although it's a good place to meet your, you know, fellow elites.
To mingle, catch up on the latest rituals.
To mingle.
Swap adrenochrome.
Uh, I wish I'm just done by that, but I do have two clips that kind of doesn't discuss the, like the security concerns and all the rest of it.
But I do have a couple of clips that are, I think on here.
I do have Queen Queen tribute NPR.
King Charles and his son Prince William made a surprise visit this morning to the miles-long line of mourners waiting to pay respects to Queen Elizabeth in Britain's Parliament building.
Here's Frank Langford has more.
The crowd cheered the king as he arrived to shake hands and exchange pleasantries with mourners, some of whom had begun lining up in the cold just after midnight.
Prince William asked people in heavy coats if they'd been able to stay warm overnight and apologized for the long wait.
While this is officially a time of national mourning for the Queen, it's also been an opportunity for the new King to travel around the country and shore up support for his reign.
The Queen was enormously popular, even more so than the monarchy itself.
A YouGov poll earlier this year found that 75% of Britons had a positive view of her, while only 42% viewed her son similarly.
I love these polls.
How much do you love him?
Do you love him?
Please tell me you love me.
By the way, I got some feedback from Tom about Sarah from the UK.
Her note, he says, your note from Sarah about the UK is complete rubbish!
No, so you know he's a Brit.
The first people to go and see the Queen were POC, which I think stands for people of colour.
Also known as coloured people.
POC.
Look at the video stream, every fifth person is a minority.
Okay.
I don't know which is true.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
Well, that's a good little clarification.
We love them.
Of course.
Okay, part two of this clip.
Oh, sorry.
Hold on a second.
Part two.
I just lost.
Oh, yeah.
Queen tribute.
And President Biden is heading to London to attend the funeral on Monday.
Oh, he is.
But before he left, he spoke yesterday with the families of two high-profile Americans who were detained in Moscow.
And Pierce, Amy Held has more.
In separate meetings, President Biden told the family— Now, hold on.
Stop.
Stop this clip.
Stop.
That was— Okay, I want you to start the clip over.
That was crazy.
Uh-huh.
This is—NPR's been doing this a lot.
And I don't know what the point of it is or if it's like part of a psychological weapon.
It's a format change.
It's a format change.
I had not heard this either.
Explain.
Well, I've heard it before and I've discussed it on the show before because I've mentioned it.
I've seen it used by others.
One of the networks does it a lot.
I think it's NBC.
They start talking about topic one.
And then they segue, normally the way these stories are presented is story, stop, story, stop, story, stop, story.
And then one after another.
But of late, they take specific stories, not every story, but specific stories that get you into a frame of mind.
This is like sales, you know, or the idea of you get somebody kind of, A lot of salespeople try to get you, they ask you stupid questions to get you to say yes all the time.
Don't you think there's such a yes?
Don't you think yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
Buy this, yes.
It's a trick.
And so I'm listening to this thinking it's some sort of trick they're trying to pull.
And they start talking about the queen and this and that.
And then they switch over completely to Biden and to Biden and then and then to the the hostages, hostages.
Hostages.
The arrestees that the Russians arrested for probably pretty good reason.
And then, uh, it's just beyond me.
And then a lot of, you'll see a lot of these are done the same way and it's just to somehow blame Trump.
It's just baffling.
But then let's start this over and hear how this is done.
Let me just give you my opinion.
I think this is what we would call an urgency arc.
So it's, it's a, it's a new, new, I don't know how long it's been used, but it's a variation of, you know, Fox News does this.
Hi everybody, welcome to Sean Handy.
Oh, what?
Breaking news!
Breaking news!
Yeah, Sean Handy is breaking news at the beginning of each show.
Yeah, so I think it's similar to this, only they're actually breaking into one story.
And you're right, it may, it would have to be somehow, the stories have to be I agree with you on the psychological effect.
But it's meant to jar you into listening to something else.
And keeping listening, I presume.
Ugh, yes.
Some radio guy came up with it, trust me.
And President Biden is heading to London to attend the funeral on Monday.
No, no, start in the beginning so you can see the transition.
That is the beginning.
Oh, no, I'm sorry.
I got mixed up.
Yeah, you're right.
I thought he was going to talk about Biden or she.
Who's a racist, by the way.
He's going to talk about Biden and the Russians.
Go on.
And President Biden is heading to London to attend the funeral on Monday.
But before he left, he spoke yesterday with the families of two high-profile Americans who were detained in Moscow.
And Pierce, Amy Held has more.
In separate meetings, President Biden told the families of Paul Whelan and Brittany Greiner he's working through, quote, all available avenues to bring them back home.
The administration maintains both are wrongfully detained.
It won't comment on reports of a prisoner swap, but White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby says negotiations are ongoing.
We have made a serious offer to get Sounds so weak when Kirby says, well, we offered it to them, but you know, they haven't responded.
to that offer.
Whelan, a former Marine, has been imprisoned for nearly four years on espionage charges.
Greiner, a basketball superstar, was taken in February on drug charges.
Her wife, Sherelle Greiner, released a statement after meeting with Biden calling the past seven months grueling and asking for unity.
Sounds so weak when Kirby says, well, we offered it to them, but, you know, they haven't responded.
Sounds kind of needy.
Kirby is, uh...
Kirby was called out.
You know, I... My theory is that Kirby's the one who's setting himself up to take over the job of, um... Karina... Karina of D'or.
Mhm.
Well, it's not gonna take much longer.
She's so on the ropes.
They're hanging her out to dry.
She's so nervous.
She's saying... She's messing everything up.
She's the meme du jour.
He's letting her suffer.
He was, uh, I don't think I have clips of this, which I thought I did.
I do have a quick 16-second clip about the Queen.
Because there is... You know, I was thinking about the... I had... I put them aside too, I didn't have... But let me just say that Kirby came out and did a briefing at the White House briefing room about security things and somebody called him out.
Some black guy, African voice, called him out for trying to take over her job.
Oh, there you go!
Really?
And so...
I can explain it without having to clip it, but the guy goes and he says, you know, you've been up here and you're here and, you know, it seems as though that she's doing a lousy job and you want to take her job.
And he said, no, this is not anything but the truth.
All I do is talk about security, national security issues.
That's all I talk about when I'm up here.
I don't talk about anything else.
And she invites me to come up here and she's doing a great job.
And then she came out later and she botched some stupid thing.
She was terrible.
She's terrible.
They're going to get rid of her, I'm sure.
But it's terrible that the press corps itself is propagating this.
I mean, everybody knows why she was hired.
The job was advertised as such.
All the jobs in the Biden administration are advertised as such, and so then, you know, okay, sometimes that backfires, but let's get it away from race, you dipshits.
All right, here's the Queen, a little update.
And President Biden is expected to attend, as are the leaders of China, France, and Canada.
World leaders are being asked not to use their own state cars to attend the funeral and instead ride government buses, but a government official tells ABC News that will not apply to President Biden.
Guys.
Oh, man.
I wanted to see him and Jill on the bus.
Bouncing around.
I don't think it's going to apply to a lot of them.
I think they're going to reverse that.
Are they going to have 500 dignitaries in buses?
I hope so.
It's going to look like Comdex.
They all need lanyards, too.
Lanyards and a tote bag.
Yeah.
It's humiliating.
I mean, any foreign dignitary, especially now that Biden's broken the ice, and he says, no, no, I'm not going to do that.
I'm going to be in the beast.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going to spend, you know, $100,000 in taxpayers' money to ship over the beast.
So they have a lanyard, a tote bag, and a fanny pack over your uniform.
It looked great.
So this, in my opinion, is all part of the Great Reset.
We have the Pope on deck.
And did you hear that Khamenei is apparently ill?
Gravely ill from Iran.
I think that would be good to have a switch in Iran.
You guys live pretty long.
Yeah, and Don Lemon has kicked off a prime time.
If that doesn't signal a great reset, nothing does.
He's going to do a morning show.
Yeah, with two women.
Oh, man.
Which makes it even funnier.
He must hate that because he takes himself so seriously.
Because he's a gay guy who hates women.
I don't know about that.
He takes himself so seriously.
Yeah, so now he has to do kind of like a... I wonder if he's going to try and be the serious news guy amongst the bubbly women.
Is that what the idea is?
No, there's morning shows that can't do that.
I mean, the last show that I think it was kind of modeled that way and they've changed the modeling of all the morning shows and the networks was the Today Show that had the regular group of people yucking it up and then they had the newsreader and they'd always throw it to her and she'd go, she'd read serious news and segments.
I have not seen that for a long time, not in the old format that they used to have.
I think they've given up on that and everyone's got to be jocular.
Jocular?
Serious?
You know, because, uh, orange man bad?
We were both right about the president and the train strike, although you were more right than I was.
And right on cue, the CIA broadcasting systems with Scott Pelley did an interview with the president to spike the ball.
President, you have just averted a nationwide railroad strike that would have been crippling to the economy.
How did you do that?
And what were those last hours like in the negotiations?
Oh, how did you do that?
You are, you are truly the best president.
You know, what's funny about this report is that if you listen to NPR, I don't know if I have any, I don't probably have any clips of this either, but if you listen to NPR, it was definitely the labor secretary or one of the other White House people that had That was primary to the negotiations and Biden didn't even step foot in the thing.
So this is bullcrap right from the get-go.
Of course!
He even gives it away that he wasn't... Pelley kind of sets it up and the illusion with all the previous reporting is that Biden was up until 5 a.m.
working on the negotiation.
But the reality is they came in that morning and said, hey, we're done.
Okay, cool.
I'll announce it.
That's basically it.
But here's his response.
Bullock!
Bullock!
We brought business and labor together.
One of the things that happens in negotiations, particularly if they've been elongated like these have, is people say and do things where their pride gets engaged as well.
And it's awful hard to back off of some of these things.
So what we did was just say, look, let's take a look.
Let's take a look at what's happening.
You have a good deal being made for labor.
Their income is going to go up 24% over the next five years.
They've worked out the health care piece.
They worked out days off.
They both sat down, in my view, and they were in the office today saying, well, we finally figured out This is fair on both sides.
And it took that time to focus.
Focus.
And the alternative was just not thinkable.
What do you mean?
If, in fact, they had gone on strike, the supply chains in this country would have come to a screeching halt.
We would have seen a real economic crisis.
So the problem I have with this is this didn't get any legs.
They didn't position it properly.
This is about all I saw.
Oh, yeah.
Great, Mr. President.
Where was the big headlines?
Biden saves America.
Well, you're right.
They didn't position it right at all, and I think Biden was caught flat-footed, and so was his entire staff of, you know, people that don't know what they're doing.
And I think that it should have gone right to the edge, because that's what makes it more dramatic.
I think that the unions caved.
I don't think just 24% over five years is a good deal.
You have a 10% inflation rate over 10 years compounded.
That's at least 50%, if not way too much.
They didn't have as much money as they used to get.
And then all these deals about going to the doctor and all the rest of it.
You still get fired.
That didn't change.
Are you sure?
Because Biden said, we also fix the health care problem, is what he said.
I don't know if that implied that.
I think that means they got better health care, but that doesn't mean you can take time off to go to the doctor.
I wonder.
I heard that on NPR they had the guy who was the head of the Railroad Engineers Union, whichever one that is.
There's two of these unions that were involved in this, and I think maybe a third.
And he said, yeah, we didn't get this, we didn't get that, but it was a good thing we got, you know, we had to get this, we had to do something.
I think they did a shitty job, personally.
As an ex-union organizer, I can say that.
But that's why we kind of said, like, this is probably just some bullcrap.
This is just marketing.
And that's exactly what it was, but I don't understand how they could take something, because where was the pre-analysis?
We're the only ones that said, hey man, this could be really bad.
You didn't really hear that.
They just didn't play it up.
I don't know.
Maybe this is an inside group trying to make... Biden and the union's trying to make something look good.
I think it's... Well, maybe it's that.
The newspapers don't want to deal with it.
It didn't have the typical... The whole union movement has been pushed to the side anyway, and you don't want to emphasize that these guys can get their way unless they're sports athletes making millions and millions of dollars.
Well, there's that.
Those guys, yeah, let's just play that up.
Well, this didn't have the typical Obama-Valerie Jarrett flair, you know?
They're better than this.
Yeah, which is a surprise since Valerie Jarrett's in the White House.
Yeah.
She's in all kinds of committees again and stuff.
They're uncloaking.
You got more Biden stuff?
I'm sure you do.
I have a bunch of Biden stuff because he gave a... they jacked him up for a speech.
Yeah, I didn't see this so I'm excited.
I want to hear about it.
Oh my God, this speech.
They jacked him up.
Where was he?
No, I'm talking about jacked him up.
He was, like, jacked.
And he was yacking away like a madman.
He was fumbling and bumbling, but it wasn't the kind of slow, dull-witted bumbling and fumbling.
It was fast-talking bumbling and fumbling.
And he was yacking and yacking.
They gave him exactly 16 minutes for this stuff or whatever.
They gave him more off.
You timed it.
You timed it.
Excellent.
Yeah, it was 16 minutes of talking.
And so he just went nuts.
I call it jacked up.
Here's a good example.
This is Biden jacked up speech one.
Please have a seat if you have one.
Hello, hello, hello.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
About a year and a half ago, where there was a large crowd, a large crowd, a large crowd like this where they're outside.
I thought they had chairs.
I said, have a seat.
And the press said Biden was so stupid he didn't even know they didn't have any chairs.
But I'm glad you have some chairs.
Albio, a Cuban-born, came to the United States at age 11, served 16 years in Congress.
And, you know, the idea is that, you know, Lucila House, icon of three decades, grandmother of the DREAM Act, you know, Congress is going to miss you both.
So here's the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Javier Becerra, in the honorary of tonight's American DREAM medallion.
All of you here tonight embody the same theme, rooting the strength of achieving our dreams.
Oh, man.
Yeah, he is kind of jacked.
That's interesting.
He's flying high.
I have three of these clips.
Then I have the thing where he started.
Well, actually, we can skip to the beginning.
At the very beginning, when they brought him out on stage, he decides in his kind of drugged up stupor to sing Happy Birthday to Nanette, this Hispanic woman who's going on and on about how great Biden is and how Democrats all suck.
And so this is Biden's happy birthday to her.
This happens to be Annette's birthday.
It's hell when you turn 25, but you know.
We have a tradition in the Biden family.
We sing happy birthday.
So let's go.
Ready?
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday, Nanette.
Happy birthday to you.
God love you, kiddo.
Man, that's cool.
Where was this again?
He calls her Danette, by the way, when he's singing.
He doesn't know what he's doing.
Where was this?
What was the, what was the occasion?
It was a Latin, it was like the congressional Latin America or Hispanic caucus mixed with some other group, some other group.
It was in Washington, D.C.
It was in Virginia, it was someplace near the White House.
And it was a meeting of all these Latin X people.
Latinx.
Latinks.
Latinks.
So, and they were all, you know, yeah.
Anyway, let's go back to Biden jacked up speech.
This is good.
He's in a role here.
This is jacked up speech too.
That law of funding close to the racial gap.
Oh yeah.
So Tucker Cardona, he'll tell you how it helped to safely reopen our schools an absolute necessity, including 28% of public school students who are Latino.
28%.
You're all going to own the country, man.
We better darn well make sure they have every opportunity they have.
Not a joke.
So he's just like, this is a different kind of stumbling.
This is his jacked up stumbling.
He's going too fast for his mouth at times here.
He's going way too fast for himself and he's just, he starts to say one word and then stops and says another, but he doesn't back up.
That's the thing that's interesting.
He doesn't ponder anything.
He just keeps plowing ahead.
Here's part three of this.
Get Detroit back on track during the Great Recession.
And while I was Vice President, he helped lead our efforts in Puerto Rico as well.
We are committed.
We're committed.
Together, we passed once-in-a-generation infrastructure law to mobilize Americans' roads, bridges, ports, airports.
It's going to replace poisonous lead pipes so every child in America, specifically those in Hispanic communities, which are most often affected, can turn on a faucet at home or school and drink clean water, for God's sake.
Impressive speed for that age.
Very impressive.
He's blowing through it.
I mean, this sounds Adderall.
This sounds meth-y, coke-y, really.
Would you say it sounds coke-y?
Yeah, kind of.
And they at least know to get him off in 16 minutes.
Even though he's still flubbing away, but at least he's got spirit.
Yeah.
So I had these short little snippets, which I picked up and, uh, to ask you what he's trying to say here.
These are all like five, six seconds.
I mean, there's one, let's start with the two second one.
This is the, where Biden says biggest, liggest.
The liggest, biggest job when dropping unemployment.
Ooh, yeah.
Those nasty L's.
Liggest, biggest.
Yeah, that's hard.
Here's something about the deficit.
We're going to be able to do all this while reducing the deficit by... Reducing the deficit.
Restooping.
Restooping the deficit.
Oh, man.
That's worth playing at Yeti because I got a kick out of it.
Yeah.
Do you have more?
No, I was just going to tell you to play that one again.
Oh, the deficit deficit?
I'm sorry.
We're going to be able to do all this while reducing the deficit.
Reducing the deficit.
Okay, here's another one.
I only have a couple more.
This one's drugs gugs.
Their costs are, no matter what, no matter whether they have drugs for I didn't hear the Guggs, hold on.
Their costs are, no matter what, no matter whether they have drugs for Guggs.
Nah, not as funny, not as funny.
Poorly clipped.
Alright, here's the last one, this is uh, I wish I got, I gotta have one second one too, but let's do this one, this is jacked about drugs, he's all jacked.
Hold on a second, jacked about drugs, hmm.
For too long, we've paid a higher price for restriction of drugs than any nation in the world.
Restriction drugs.
It's a new thing.
Restriction drugs.
And I guess the last one is Secretary who?
And with Secretary Malarkey's leadership... I think he says Richard Marx.
Secretary Richard Marx.
This is a challenge for you.
Who is he talking about?
And with Secretary Malarkey's leadership...
Secretary Richard Marx, hold on.
I'm just kidding, let me listen.
I was Secretary of America's leadership.
Hummer Marx.
Hummer, uh, Mayorkas.
Is he trying to say Mayorkas?
I was Secretary of America's leadership.
Yes, yes he is.
Yes, yes.
I was Secretary of America's leadership.
Wow.
You know what the sad thing is?
That's our president.
This is our vice president.
I do believe that we...
Should have rightly believed, but we certainly believe that certain issues are just settled.
Certain issues are just settled.
Clearly we're not.
No, that's right.
And that's why I do believe that we are living, sadly, in real unsettled times.
Oh, baby.
We are so screwed.
Wow!
She's out of control.
I do believe!
I do believe!
Yeah, that's pretty insane.
My goodness.
Yeah, you gotta love it.
Welcome to the United States of America.
Indeed.
So the other thing that just will not go away is this... Wow, this is going to...
This shipping of migrants to Democrat-run cities, Martha's Vineyard to Washington, D.C.
But the way this is being played...
Is the media is at all in, except for, you know, a couple of the obvious ones.
They're really pushing this, you know, the Republicans are horrible, horrible, horrible people for abusing these migrants.
And they keep saying migrants instead of illegal immigrants, because, you know, let's be honest what this is.
And, and, and, and, and they're just, um, here, this is a good example.
And I was really shocked by this.
Ken Burns?
Famous doctor.
Did you know that he's a massive libtard?
Hello?
Hello?
I didn't know that!
I mean, what did you think he was?
He's been working for nobody but public broadcasting all his life.
He's never done anything commercially.
Right, but you know, typically he's doing, you know, documentaries and it's about, you know, like Vietnam and stuff.
You know, any of his documentaries, like his thing on jazz and some of the other things he's done have always had a slant to them.
You could spot it.
He's maybe baseball or the national parks or things like that.
You can not find it, but mostly it's always been in there.
Well, he was.
Yes.
Listen to him.
I know what you're going to do because I did listen to him more recently where he's felt the need to be more outspoken.
He's comes off as a ridiculous progressive.
All of your documentaries are about history.
Yeah.
But all of them also make you think about where we are now.
And we woke up to the news this morning that Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida sent two plane loads of migrants to Martha's Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts, including kids and whatnot.
And I'm not saying, this is not a one for one, this is not a parallel here in any way, but it does address some of the same themes.
Better part of this documentary.
It's the abstraction of human life.
It's basically saying that you can use a human life that is as valuable as yours or mine or Lynn's and to put it in a position of becoming a political pawn in somebody's authoritarian game.
This is the coming straight out of the authoritarian playbook.
This is what's so disturbing about it.
So I listen to this and there's more to it.
And I feel like, do you not see that these people Are already being used as political pawns?
Continuously?
That's what baffles me.
I mean, these people have no idea what's going on.
None.
They don't understand.
There are border towns that are doubling in size regularly, tripling in size because of migrants.
It's really interesting that this block, this mental block is in the elite's way.
I love this.
This mental block is fascinating.
I mean, how do you get it?
How do you keep it?
How do you maintain it?
You have to maintain it if you read Jacques Elluel's book, Propaganda, which I recommend to everybody.
Not only for what it has to say, but also a structure.
He maintains that propaganda cannot work except in an enclosed environment.
In other words, you have to be cut off from input that would maybe disturb the propaganda.
And I think the separation of what we have, you know, with the progressive only listening to MSNBC and the other guys only listening to Fox, they create their own within a society.
This is what's really pathetic.
And I blame the mainstream media for this because they've taken sides instead of doing what they've always claimed to do.
We're going to be neutral observers and we're going to present the news.
They stopped doing that.
Before Trump, actually, they stopped doing it.
That's what actually brought around Trump.
Trump wouldn't have existed as president.
Yes, correct.
Without this situation already occurring.
That's what Fox stumbled onto and they figured, hey, there's a whole group that's not being served.
And they created a little bubble for them.
And that's what's going on.
And guys like this who don't listen to anything but within their own circle.
And it reminds me, I think it was during the George Bush administration, where somebody on one of these stations, they were observing this already in play.
And this was years ago.
I think maybe it started during Reagan.
But they said they were at a cocktail party.
And one of them says, this election must be rigged.
George Bush can't be president.
Well, why not?
He says, I don't know one person.
I don't know a single person that voted for him.
Exactly.
So just add to that, besides the abundance of leftist mainstream media, whatever is left and still watched, it's dwindling.
But online, of course, you know, we know that it's obviously skewed and we know what gets taken down and what gets deplatformed.
So yeah, it's the same with the vaccines.
That's why these people are still like, get a booster.
You gotta get your bivalent booster.
You know, it's insane.
But anyway, we continue with this because, you know, we have to really take it as far as we can.
What's disturbing about DeSantis is to use human beings, to weaponize human beings for a political purpose.
It's like when somebody disagrees with him in Florida, like the Walt Disney Company, he punishes them.
This is not the actions of a person participating in a democratic process in which there's an exchange of ideas.
This is about punishing political enemies, putting on shows, political shows, political theater.
And in this case, this is with the lives of human beings.
And what's so ironic is these are Venezuelan refugees, which DeSantis should be supporting because they're trying to flee.
The corruption of a left-wing government and all of the pain there.
And so the level of cynicism is beyond that.
And what we find in all our films is that the themes that we engage in the past are present today.
And so when you look at the story that we're telling of the US and the Holocaust, you understand that the time to save a democracy is before it's lost.
We promise you.
I cannot wait to see his take on America's involvement in the Holocaust.
Are they going to paper over the eugenics program?
Are they going to?
Well, probably not.
I think he's probably going to.
But will they paper over the New York Times' involvement in squashing stories about it?
That's the thing I want to see.
Right.
The New York Times, the big liberal institution that it is, was largely responsible for not letting anyone know about what was going on.
And about the immigrants, refusing immigrants to come in.
And then that, I think they're gonna, that's, I'm pretty sure it's industry, but they're gonna blame the Republicans somehow.
No, but listen, that's the angle.
Like, we didn't let immigrants in during World War II, and that was the Holocaust.
By not letting people in through our southern border, it will create a Holocaust.
How about that?
Yes, I like it.
That seems like on point.
I will say if I could give some advice to Governor Newsom.
I think he's just, from a Curry Dvorak Consulting Group perspective, just looking at his overall image, I think he needs to, let me just say it, pump the brakes on stuff like this.
So the governor of California sent a letter to the Department of Justice saying, you need to prosecute Texas and Florida governors, and all I can say is, I think his hair gel is interfering with his brain function.
You know, what he's gonna get is gonna be, oh, he's just like Trump.
Which I think is exactly the appeal for people is that he isn't just like Trump in that regard, and he's slipping a little bit.
Who?
Newsom?
No, no, um, DeSantis.
You said Newsom.
I'm sorry, I meant DeSantis.
DeSantis should... He keeps making these jokes.
Yeah, yeah.
The hair gel joke is- Yeah.
Also because- Well, you know, the problem is if you keep- Making jokes is gotta be part of your personality, and I don't know that he seems like a joker to me.
Correct.
I mean, I always thought, to be honest about it, that- Who's the other- Who's the senator from Florida, the guy that was the stripper?
Who?
Who?
Who is the Florida... Why I'm not coming up with his name instantly is irksome.
Rubio!
Rubio.
Rubio is naturally funny.
And when Rubio... Most strippers are funny.
When Rubio started doing material about Trump... Yeah, it was good for a while.
Actually running against him.
You know, actually, when he had a shot at it, his days are over.
And he did the joke about the hands, small hands, which stuck to this day.
And...
And he was doing some other material.
I thought it was well done.
It was very funny.
And he could go toe to toe if he wanted to.
But he got pushback.
And so in other words, he was naturally funny, but he wasn't used to doing that in the public eye.
And so his handlers and his keepers and all the rest pushed back on him.
And since he backed off like a wimp, like a weenie, it killed him.
That was the end of it.
DeSantis really isn't naturally funny, that I can tell.
He's got a nice smirk.
It's a little out of character and I will say I'm personally triggered because how many times have I heard someone make a comment about me, about my hair and hairspray and how it's affecting my brain.
So maybe that's it.
That was just me.
I should have put a trigger warning for myself.
No, that's possible, too.
I have the NPR take stuff on the DeSantis, and they take a very dim view of it, too, of course.
This is called the DeSantis stunt.
I have a three-part series of clips.
They're a little longer than usual, but they're very revealing.
Right now we want to focus on a group that was flown to Martha's Vineyard, an island off Cape Cod in Massachusetts, known as a popular vacation spot.
As authorities in Massachusetts move the migrants to Joint Base Cape Cod, where 125 National Guard members will be stationed, many have expressed outrage at what they call a cruel stunt.
But we're wondering if there is a legal basis for this, so we called Denise Gilman, co-director of the Immigration Clinic at the University of Texas School of Law.
Denise Gilman, welcome.
Thank you for joining us.
Thank you for having me.
Okay, stop for a second.
Now, I want everyone to listen for the weasel words that are in this report.
There's a lot of supposedly, we heard that, could have been, we think that, maybe they did.
You know, there's all this.
They never really come around it.
They don't know.
In other words, this entire, even though they're long, I'm sorry, it's bullshit.
They don't know what is going on and they're just trying to build a case against DeSantis and they really, these, the left really thinks they can do something legal about this.
Ugh, it's human trafficking, you know, this kind of thing.
You have two bullshits left in your quota.
That sounds good for the show.
I'm good with that.
Just letting you know.
We call Denise Gilman, co-director of the Immigration Clinic at the University of Texas School of Law.
Denise Gilman, welcome.
Thank you for joining us.
Thank you for having me.
Simply put, are states allowed to do this?
Congressman Joaquin Castro, whose district includes over half of San Antonio, where the migrants were flown from, tweeted that the Department of Justice needs to investigate Governor DeSantis for using fraud and deception to lure people out of state only to abandon them without fulfilling his false promise.
Same for Greg Abbott.
He went on to suggest that this could be considered trafficking.
Is there any merit to this?
I think there are very valid concerns about what exactly the legal construct here is.
I think raising trafficking is valid.
Trafficking is moving somebody without their authority, without their consent, for gain.
And here I think you're basically talking about political gain.
In some ways I'm not even sure that's the very best way to think about this because that could be private individuals that are engaging in trafficking and here you're really talking about government action.
Both governors have been very clear that they're doing this under state authority using public funding and so when that happens I really think it's almost better to think about it as a question of the government taking somebody into custody without their authority and without any proper justification Oh, my.
For a criminal offense or the like, and then moving them.
What if, upon further review, people did consent, even if the terms were somewhat vague, even if they did consent, saying, you know what, wherever I'm going is better than where I am now?
Does that change the calculus?
Calculus.
I think if there is true informed consent, the calculus is different.
I still think we have some significant due process concerns about what is happening.
Some sort of misrepresentations that are problematic as to what exactly the situation would be for migrants that cause problems.
But I don't think you have the same level of concern Regarding deprivation of liberty by the government without proper authorization as you do if there is not consent.
Well, I'm winding it up with a vocal fry.
Up talk all the way.
Beautiful.
Again, what mental block do you have to not see that these, I truly think, I do believe, that people like this, they think that these people are in the country and they're here to seek their fortune.
It's all grooving, it's all cool.
You know, it's just, it's the border or whatever.
They think migrants, oh, these are just immigrants.
You know, they're not seeing how they're getting in.
It's baffling, it's baffling.
And you know what's even more baffling?
You know where this woman's from?
You missed it.
No, I didn't.
University of Texas in Austin.
Yeah, that's not Texas, though.
Yeah, well, there's still some irony there.
Let's go to part two.
Very ironic, trust me.
That law funding close to racial... I'm sorry.
Joe crept in!
I don't know what's going on!
I didn't mean to.
Here we go.
So the flights originated in Texas and it's a bit unclear of whether the folks we're talking about here... This is, this is, I'm sorry to interrupt this but, so DeSantis sent these migrants from Texas.
I don't, that makes no sense.
Well, here's the way it was explained in some other reports, and they don't really get to it well here at NPR, but DeSantis made a deal with Abbott, because Abbott's shipping people out on buses, and he says, you know, I want to identify, they got together, they had a drink, obviously.
And I want to there's a bunch of these guys are starting to show up in Florida and we don't mind our Cubans because you know they're but it would be kind of interesting don't you think it'd be kind of a fun to identify some people that
When they come through and you ask them where they're going and they say Florida, we can intercept them at Florida and then we'll take them aside and ask them if they want to continue what they're doing or we can fly them to get a job in Boston where there's a lot of work and it's a sanctuary city and on the way to Boston we'll drop them off.
We'll drop them off in a beautiful place that's filled with liberals that love migrants.
And they can meet the vice president.
president and martia meet the obamas and they could go there yeah the obamas got plenty of property they might even put them up you never know and the worst that could happen by the way and a lot of the reports that have come from these migrants that have been kicked out by the army from martha's vineyard uh said they were happy to go there at least that's what you know some reports but it could be slanted oh no
Oh no, I have reports where that of course is disputed with migrant boots on the ground.
Yeah man, you're over here, you might as well have some fun, and now you're further north where it seems safer.
By the way, I personally believe it was a total stunt.
There's no denying it was a political stunt and it was a good one.
I personally believe it was a total stunt.
It was, there's no denying it was a political stunt and it was a good one.
Of course.
Okay.
Of course.
But the, yes, no, of course it.
The question is, have they put themselves in the bind?
You know, the mainstream is powerful.
They're bringing out Ken Burns to call them Jew haters.
I mean, you've got to be careful with this stuff.
Yeah, well Ken Burns has got, you know, he's such a weenie.
For the elitist, man.
They love him.
Ken Burns, I love your effect, man.
I'm not changing anyone's mind.
No, no, no one's changing anyone's mind.
So the flights originated in Texas, and it's a bit unclear Folks!
of whether the folks we're talking about here who went to Martha's Vineyard, it's unclear whether they even set foot in Florida.
Folks!
So it suggests a coordinated effort.
In that case, who would be responsible or accountable for this, depending on your point of view?
And part of the reason I ask is, does that not sort of suggest some federal issue here?
Because you're talking about people crossing state lines.
So there are a couple of considerations as well, given the multi-state nature of this particular action.
The There are provisions, constitutional provisions, that have to do with transiting across state lines and that would suggest that it could be problematic for states to force people out of their states and to other states and that could be implicated as well.
But in terms of sort of who is on the hook, in terms of possible constitutional violations of the civil rights of migrants.
Hold on.
I'm sorry.
Constitutional rights and civil rights of migrants?
Of the illegal aliens?
I guess that they have civil rights.
Yeah, well, you just can't go shoot one in the head.
Well, no!
Well, it depends where they are if they're on your land.
You could.
It's disputable.
But this is just horse or horse manure.
Be implicated as well.
Crap.
Who is on the hook in terms of possible constitutional violations of the civil rights of migrants?
In this instance, in the Martha's Vineyard instance, it's really the state of Florida that took people into custody and transported them, quite likely without their authorization, without meaningful consent, and therefore I would put the state of Florida on the hook.
Quite likely.
In NPR's reporting, migrants were told they were going to Boston where they would be able to get a job and other necessities.
California's Governor Gavin Newsom says these migrants were transported under false pretense.
Absolutely, and I think it's a key issue.
This is a point that we've been making.
In those cases where there is true consent, there are a number of other moral and political issues, but the legal issues are less significant.
But here, where it does appear that There are moral issues, but the legal issues are less significant, so it's all about morality?
Is that what she just said?
Well, let's back it up.
Pretense.
Absolutely, and I think it's a key issue.
This is a point that we've been making.
In those cases where there is true consent, there are a number of other moral and political issues, but the legal issues are less significant, but... Okay!
Guess what she said.
So what are you doing on the show, lady?
It's moral and political.
Oh, okay.
Bring on a priest.
Here, where it does appear that there is a lack of consent, in other words, government authorities essentially coerced people into taking a shot, taking these buses, and therefore government authorities essentially Oh no!
Lockdown!
into government custody without any consent and also without any authorization, you do get into serious issues of whether this is essentially a false arrest or even kidnapping that would be problematic under the law, certainly under civil rights provisions.
Anyone who still says problematic really needs some media training.
Even the Gen Zers don't use it anymore.
Problematic.
Problematic.
They're making a lot of assumptions here.
My understanding is they've always, whoever got on the buses and whoever got on the planes was asked.
They didn't force anybody and put a gun to their head.
Get on the bus!
I'll bet you they have a signature too.
That's what I was thinking.
I was thinking they may have a sheet with signatures on it or individual sheets.
A clipboard.
A clipboard.
I'm thinking clipboard.
I'm thinking exactly the same.
Guy with a clipboard.
He said, Joe, where's Cortez?
Cortez!
He's in your... Cortez, you're up.
You're up.
Get in.
Check the box, Cortez.
So, I think there's one more clip left.
Yes.
Oh, yes.
It just gets worse.
I'm so excited.
Rachel Self, a Boston attorney who specializes in immigration law, said in remarks that were posted on social media that the migrants were instructed to change their addresses with immigration authorities when they relocated.
Can you tell us why does this matter?
Well, it's a very significant issue because all of these migrants, these families, children, parents who are seeking protection in the United States have already been processed by immigration authorities at the border.
Most of them are asylum seekers.
They're seeking that protection under the law.
So they have ongoing immigration proceedings in their cases.
Okay, we just need to reiterate that the way and the place where these people are entering is not the asylum process.
And she's making it sound like, well, they've got pretty good procedures.
It's processed.
They're just here.
You're huddled.
You're poor.
You're meek.
Don't turn them back like the Jews.
Under the law.
So they have ongoing immigration proceedings in their cases.
But all of the paperwork that would have been filled out by the immigration authorities would have an address that is nothing like the one that they now have, now that they've been transported to an area that is not at all where they intended to go.
And unfortunately, it's not so easy to make an address change either.
Why the laugh?
Why the laugh?
It's not so easy to make an address change.
Why?
What does this tell?
We will rewind and review.
The one that they now have, now that they've been transported to an area that is not at all where they intended to go.
And unfortunately, it's not so easy to make an address change either.
I don't understand.
Why is she laughing?
It's not so easy to make an address change either.
Okay.
She knows something about the system being screwed up.
Yeah, yeah.
Easy to make an address change either.
And so it is quite likely that they will not receive notice of their hearings or any updates in relation to their immigration cases.
And if they do want to pursue their immigration cases in a new location, very different from where they intended to go, they'll have to file motions with the immigration courts.
This is not something that is automatic or that is easy to do, especially without a lawyer.
And so we fear that there will be very significant due process violations for many of these asylum seekers.
So I'm convinced these people believe that the system is actually working, people show up, they come in, they go to their hearings, they become upstanding residents, they have a path, you know, they're helping the country, we are the world, we are the children.
That's how she's talking and that this is such a diversion from their critical path towards citizenship and success in America.
That's kind of crazy.
It's nuts the whole thing and it's just what DeSantis has done is proven that the system besides being broken anyway because of the numbers that are coming in even though the my favorite thing was John Paul Kareem Abdul-Jabbar talking about how we've deported more than any ever Oh yeah, of course.
And you got into a big debate with the reporters saying, yeah, but there's been millions and millions coming in, more than, we've sent more out of the country than Trump did.
Yeah, but there's 20 times more coming in and she wouldn't buy it.
No, no, it doesn't, besides the point.
Here's ABC with some numbers.
The U.S.
is now on track to surpass 2 million crossings at the Mexico border this year.
That's up from last year's new record 1.6 million.
The White House saying it's working to fix a broken system and the legal process will take time.
Fix a broken system?
What kind of analysis is this, ABC?
It's just choices.
It's not a broken system.
It's choices made.
Yes.
That's a good point.
Well, I have one clip, and then I have another one, which is kind of a counter clip.
I think this has something interesting that hasn't been covered yet.
Less than two days after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis flew them to Martha's Vineyard to make a political point, 50 migrants from Venezuela put on buses.
Okay, here's the tell.
She clearly is a biased reporter when she says, 50 migrants from Venezuela.
So she has bias.
I don't know where she's from.
Oh, good point.
But she's Venezuela.
Less than two days after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis flew them to Martha's Vineyard to make a political point, 50 migrants from Venezuela put on buses and transferred to a military base on Cape Cod.
Immigration attorneys telling reporters the migrants were lied to.
They were told there was a surprise present for them.
Yes, the Obamas!
That there would be jobs and housing awaiting for them when they arrived.
This was obviously a sadistic lie.
ABC News confirming the DeSantis administration chartered the planes and the migrants didn't even board in Florida.
They came from Texas.
Today DeSantis defending his move and promising it's just the beginning.
I mean, these are voluntary transportation that they're signing up for, but they're given a good ride, they're given everything, and that's just, you know, it's a humane thing to do.
The president calling out DeSantis for using human beings as political props.
It's un-American, it's reckless, and we have a process in place to manage migrants at the border.
Republican officials should not interfere with that process by waging these political stunts.
But in El Paso, Texas, it's clear that process isn't working.
Border Patrol agents apprehending nearly 1,300 people a day in this area.
El Paso is now chartering their own buses to help migrants head north.
Most of this bus, the people on it, are from Venezuela.
They're all going to New York City.
It'll take like 30 hours to get there.
Volunteers make sure these families know where they're going.
The act of busing is a necessity for you guys.
That's exactly it.
We do not have the shelter capacity.
As you've seen, on top of the people we're bringing in, there's over a thousand releases to our community a day.
And when the shelters in town fill up, some families have no other choice but to sleep on a city sidewalk near the bus station.
So of course that doesn't make anybody think about, I don't know, a thousand in this small town.
And there is some, I feel kind of bad because I knew a girl who grew up in Martha's Vineyard and has family there.
Sorry?
Just to back up to what you just said, how many people were, did they ship to Martha's Vineyard?
Fifty.
Five, zero, fifty.
There's thousands piling up in El Paso daily and they ship a mere 50.
This is the thing that these reporters that cover this, a mere 50, 50.
They reported it.
This is ABC.
Oh, what are we going to do?
They reported it.
This is ABC reporting it, but it's at the end of the report.
Oh, yeah.
A thousand bucks.
No, it's a thousand a day.
They have, you know, plausible deniability with that.
But I was going to say that there is a real... Outside of the elites who like to vacation there, Martha's Vineyard is a real community, and it's a very odd one.
My alma mater, when I went to college for all of her three months... Actually, it was the only girl I ever slept with in college, and she became a lesbian the next day, which was also kind of fun.
It was great for my ego.
My daughter loves that story.
Tell me the one about when she became a lesbian, Dad!
Ha ha!
And it's, you know, you can only imagine how, and there's a lot of drugs going on there.
People are just hammered.
The townies, the people who live there and work there.
I bet it's gotten so bad since I, you know, the 80s when I was in college.
It must be nuts with all those idiots running around.
Something's going to happen out there.
How about this?
I predict someone, someone's going to pop off and go nuts on Martha's Vineyard.
It'll be DeSantis' fault.
No, Trump.
Trump, I'm sorry.
What am I thinking?
So, my neighbor, Laura Logan, is out on the warpath.
She has some information.
New stuff has come to light.
I'm sorry, my quota is already full.
Uh, and she's, she has the same basic story.
She's going around, uh, making the rounds, I should say, uh, talking to people.
I first saw her do this rap on war room, but this is a different interview, a little less hypey.
And she does have a clue about some of the stuff that she's doing.
Well, we'll get to it, but just listen to what she has from insider information.
We have in place an administration filled with open border ideologues who are implementing a globalist policy that no one was given the option in this country to vote on that bypasses the legislature and is completely in violation of the Constitution.
And what they're edging towards, and I know this from a source who was in meetings at the UN behind closed doors, these are classified meetings, and listened to these discussions of infiltrating 100 million people into the United States as the basis for forming a regional government instead of a national government.
So a government of Canada, Mexico, and the U.S.
This is the strategy that's in place.
And so things like the cartels were created as part of a push-pull strategy where they would push people out of those countries because life would become unbearable and pull them into the United States.
It's about the destruction of this country.
And it's put in place step by step so that you don't really know what's happening.
And so what some people have done now, a group of private citizens, has funded a threat assessment of the national security threat on the southern border because the government is failing to do its job.
And the basic premise is that you cannot begin to solve a problem that hasn't even been defined.
So I'm not a big fan of the, my source in UN behind closed doors classified meetings characterization, but she is a real journalist.
You can't deny that she is a great investigative journalist.
And so if she says that that's the plan, I'm thinking bring on the Amaro.
Time once again.
Back to the Amaro.
You know, the funny thing is, if you're any, we don't have a clip of it, I don't think, but it's well known that Hillary used to always run on the idea and she would say, because she was a globalist, She would say, I imagine that someday in the future where there'd be no borders from the tip of South America to the top of Canada.
There'd be no borders anywhere.
The borders would be done.
Hold on.
We have from episode 872, Huma Abedin on hidden camera.
Let's see what this was.
You were in Dallas yesterday.
I met this young man.
Ah, this is going to suck.
Admit Hillary Clinton will open US borders.
No, I don't have the clip you're talking about.
But yes, she dreamt of the day when there's no borders.
No borders anywhere.
No borders between Argentina and Brazil.
That's a good one.
And if I may remind you of the Antifa chant.
No borders, no walls, no USA at all!
No borders, no Not, you know, a bunch of people that were protesting January 6th.
And here's what I found kind of interesting.
At the end there, she says there's a group of private citizens who are, who have gotten together to, what she says, like, create a threat assessment.
So if you want to know why Mike Lindell, the pillow, my pillow guy, is being harassed, it's because he's financing that.
He's financing a documentary that she's producing, which is, it's not, I don't think it's a huge secret, and I think it's, it's kind of a cool idea that, you know, people put their money where their mouth is on this.
And so, you know, it could be very true.
The hundred million, it's still a number of years at this pace, but crap.
I mean, that's pretty sick.
Well, they're doing them.
What was it?
2 million last month?
Was it?
No, no.
Last year.
No, it's 2 million this year.
1.6 last year.
So it's 2 million a year.
It take 10 to take a while.
A little long.
We won't be around.
I want to see the final destruction.
I want to be around for that.
Yeah.
Well, that's a, that's a pretty ambitious stunt.
Well, it would be total, and there's already, I'm sure, 20 million.
I'm sure there's a lot of people who'd be all for it, you know.
Canadians would probably be glad to get rid of Trudeau and be part of a bigger system.
Sure.
Mexicans would benefit from it.
I mean, we would have no more borders.
We'd have to assume that somehow we'd run it, but with it being mostly Latins, I don't think so.
Latinx.
Well, there's also a lot of presumption that the Latinx come in here and that all of a sudden they're all in on Democrat values.
I don't think so.
Most of them, Latinx tend to go Republican over time.
Yeah.
Well, at least a third of them do, but they can easily go all in.
And they're all religious, a lot of them.
They're Catholics.
Don't you think that Trudeau might actually be vying for the president of the... What were they going to call it back?
We've heard this story before.
The North American Union?
What was it?
Was something... No, the American Union?
I don't remember the name of it.
Well, I remember the Amero.
Yes, the Amero, where is that thing?
Well, you can just wait for it.
You know it's going to come back if they're talking about doing this.
The North American Monetary Union, NAU, that's what it was.
It has a wiki page entry.
North American Monetary Union is a theoretical economic and monetary union of three North American countries, Canada, United States of America and Mexico.
Implementation.
Oh, so that's giving up their currency units and then all going to one, which in Wikipedia says Amiro.
We're not making this up.
But I wonder what they would have called it.
They had some artist renderings of the thing.
Yes.
Yes.
Many.
Cute looking thing.
Now it'll just be a central bank digital coin.
Perfect.
What a way to do it.
Not a joke, man.
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 sea, senor!
Ladies and gentlemen, please say hello to my friend on the other end, Mr. John C. Dvorak!
You, my friend, and, um, in the morning to you.
Also, in the morning, all ships and sea boats on the ground, feed into your subs in the water.
And all names and nights out there.
I had several people come up to me here during the conference and ask if I could describe how you make that sound.
The question is, is it a box full of aluminum and tin cans?
Is it a waste paper basket?
Is it just a pile on the floor?
Could you give us a little bit of a...
Yeah.
Okay, well, first of all, I have two of these devices.
One's thinner than the other, but they're lightning devices.
They're big.
It's like a bucket with a handle on it that you hold, and when you talk into it, into the back of it, it's meant for this.
Yeah, sounds just like lightning.
It's a sound effect, well, it's a sound effects device.
Thunder, maybe.
Sounds like thunder.
And I decide that if you turn it on, you get this kind of echo-y sound.
And then I do have a pile, literally a pile, of cans.
Which I usually have one of them in... Here's the... I'm just a little more inside baseball.
If I take one of the cans and put it inside the... Inside the... Ah, a bonus effect by combining the two.
So it's inside the Thunder device.
So if I shake it around... Makes an extra noise.
And if I talk into it with the can in it...
And then the can comes out and makes a sound.
And then there's a pile of cans, and I throw the device into the pile.
Yeah.
There it is.
That's pretty beautiful.
I'd say thunder device is a bit of a stretch, but thank you.
Now at least we understand.
In the morning to the trolls who are there in the troll room laughing their asses off over this.
They tune in every Thursday and Sunday to listen live and... Elaborate!
Yes, and literally to troll.
Troll me, troll us, troll each other, and lots of times they got good stuff, of course.
And they are our real-time fact-checkers.
Not the best, but they're there.
And we do love them.
And we have a troll room song, which we'll play end of show.
Played that this morning.
Everyone liked it.
Let's see how many there are in this...
In this troll room, let's see.
Hands up there, trolls.
Let me see.
What do we have?
$21.91.
That's kind of on par, isn't it, for something?
That's down, uh, well... About $100?
Down at least a hundred.
Down a hundred.
All right.
Well, it's okay.
We're happy to have everybody here.
Thank you.
Of course, these people can also, many of them can be found on noagendasocial.com.
You can get a membership.
It's open, signup.noagendasocial.com.
You have to answer three questions.
They're getting hard.
People keep asking me, what is the answer to this, man?
I can't believe that they're asking me for cheats.
Shouldn't that just be, you know, not dignified?
If you want to join in?
What's the latest hard question?
Is there one?
I think it was the one... Well, there was two.
There was one, we go out, we hit them in the... And a lot of people didn't know what that was.
And the other one was, you broadcast from Northern...
Yeah.
Didn't know that one.
Blank Silicon Valley.
Blank.
Thank you.
You just gave it away, man!
All right, go sign up for that.
And you will be automatically, I think, automatically subscribed to follow John C. Dvorak at NoahJenTheSocial.com or Adam at NoahJenTheSocial.com.
And you'll find all the artists there.
You'll find all the whole cast of characters.
Everybody's hanging out.
You don't need to do that through Knowage into Social.
It's a Mastodon, so you can also follow us from any other Mastodon account you might have.
And in our Value for Value model, we love the time, talent, and treasure that people bring to the party.
We had a piece of art from Nico... Would you say Syme?
S-Y-M-E?
Syme?
Syme?
I'm not sure how to pronounce it.
Let me look at it again.
I'll tell you what it was.
This was the Kamala tour.
The bus, the very happy bus driver, driving away from the wall.
And it was, without a doubt, the winner, the best one.
Let me see, what else has he done?
Oh, he's done more today.
Oh, okay.
He has done more.
I think Nico Seim.
Seim?
He's actually done quite a bit.
Has he ever received a nomination before?
Well, he did a couple of those AI things.
Yeah.
No, that's not going to work.
Bug and cheese.
He got close on a number of pieces.
He's got... Would you say it's because of lack of competition?
I mean, I hate to say that.
Oh, there was no competition.
There was nothing.
His was shoulders above everybody.
Yeah.
Let's see, there really wasn't that much?
I mean, it's like people, have they given up?
No, it was one of those shows, you know, it's funny because sometimes you finish the show and then we look at the art, it's over a page full, which is a lot.
A page full of art, you know, 20, 30 pieces come in and then sometimes 14, 15 come in maybe.
This, this time it was like 12 or very few pieces.
We didn't get, I, they didn't have anything to grab onto as a theme.
I, the only one I liked also besides this one was it's the real thing.
COVID classic with the Coke can.
Yeah, we did discuss that.
Yep.
And that was done by, uh, Mark Dand.
And, uh, that was a nice piece.
I liked it.
He did the, uh, The queen on the toilet.
We didn't feel that was very appropriate.
No, that wasn't going to happen.
And he's done a lot of... This is actually one of his slicker pieces.
Although I did do like some of his Biden stuff.
Yeah, he's done a lot of pieces.
He had three pages full, so he's been working for a while.
Well, we appreciate the work that he did, and Nico and all of the artists, of course.
We love the competition.
You can always follow along if you're listening live by going to noagendaartgenerator.com, and there is always a spot for you to sign up and submit your own.
There's nothing ever wrong, really.
It's just whatever mood we're in.
And our rules sometimes go out the window, but having new artwork for album art for the show is unique.
Very few podcasts do this.
I don't think anyone has done it to this length of time and the diversity and the talent that we have.
It would be unaffordable, not possible in any other model, but value for value.
So we really appreciate it.
I appreciate it, Nico.
And of course, you can also see these if you get off of that legacy podcast app you're using.
Go to newpodcastapps.com.
We have chapters with images.
There's a ton of extra features.
You can also get a notification when the show goes live, pop into the chat room.
It's the future.
And the show won't go away from your app if it gets deplatformed.
Any show won't go away if you use one of those.
For the treasure part, we have a couple of executive and associate executive producers to thank for today.
We start off with Radu.
This is a fun one.
Does he give me a pronunciation guide here?
No.
Achirule?
What do you think?
Achirule.
What do you think?
A-C-H. Atchurilo.
Atchurilo.
Well, he's what I would think.
He's in Garland, Texas, Colorado.
Comes in with a cool 918.89.
I would say that's probably birthday-related.
Let's see.
As show 1487, here we go, falls on the 33rd anniversary of my arrival on these shores.
Oh, okay.
The amount is self-explanatory.
So, 33 on the... That's nice.
Growing up behind the Iron Curtain we knew that all we were force-fed was propaganda so we listened to Radio Free Europe, Voice of America and the like on shortwave radio to get a different perspective on the news.
Not that that was propaganda at all.
Holy crap.
Well, you know, you get one kind of propaganda from one side.
You get balances.
It was fair and balanced.
These days in the formerly free West, we're lucky to have the No Agenda Show.
The sound quality does not compare and the deconstruction is very informative and entertaining.
Keep up the good work.
Thank you for your courage.
No jingles, no karma, but you may upgrade me if you wish.
Accounting below.
Did we upgrade?
Sir George of the Southern Carpathians.
I don't know if he didn't ask for it.
Let's see, do we have any change here?
He's in blue, isn't he?
Oh yeah, so he becomes a knight then.
Alright.
He says you may upgrade.
I thought he was already a knight, but no, now he's a knight.
I have it under knight and dame.
So he's good to go.
For a knighting.
Alright.
No jingles, no karma?
No jingles, no karma.
Gotta love it.
Okay, up next is Sir 1% of the GTFO.
And he's in Dixie.
Dixie.
Dixie, Washington.
$480.08.
It's been four months since my last donation.
Please de-douche me.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Hold on.
I'm on location.
Always takes a second to get set up.
You've been de-douched.
Because we're running out, you know.
It's like I took a very small supply with me.
Well, you can only bring so many.
But people need to understand.
They need to understand that the supplies are running low.
We're running out of de-douchings.
So, uh, check out his jingle requests as I continue to read.
Inspired by Lawrence, neighbor of Peter, the main character of the film Office Space, I'm donating $480.08.
Two chicks from the same time donation.
Oh, two chicks at the same time donation.
4-8-0-0-8.
I gotcha.
Man.
Okay.
Woo-hoo!
Geez.
This week I'm off to Mexico City to attend Nomad Capitalist Live 2022 and be amongst my people.
NCL is essentially an international living and investment conference.
They have a simple but profound motto, go where you're treated best.
It is their answer to cultural strife.
There's no need for violence.
Relocate to where your time, talent, and treasure are respected and appreciated instead.
It's the reason GTFO is part of my night name.
One day I will get the F out.
And go where I am treated best.
NCL is like no agenda to me in that it's incredibly energizing and amygdala-shrinking as an experience, like no agenda and no agenda meetups.
The information they pass on at these events is great.
And being amongst like-minded people is invaluable.
To all listening who have not heard of the Nomad Capitalist, I highly recommend checking them out.
And if it turns out to be your kind of thing, if you attend a future NCL event, I'll likely be there too.
Jingle request.
Biden whispering, get vaccinated.
Obama, no, no, no.
Goat karma because goat is the goat.
But also because it's the sound I'll be making for my seat in first class if the jab takes out the pilots and my plane goes down.
Oh, what a bummer note, man.
Faithfully suppressing your exit strategy one percent at a time.
Sir, one percent of the GTFO.
Hey, listen.
You're in my house.
Hey, come on, guys.
Stay on.
Hey, okay.
I'm up in the house.
Hey, hey.
You're in the booth.
You've got karma.
Nice to hear that one again.
Greg Carlwood, San Diego, California, 420.30.
I wonder what that message is sending in the morning, fellas.
First off, I have to thank Adam for mentioning Texas Slim so often on the show.
He was a recent guest of mine on the Higher Side Chats, along with a string of other recent guests focused on the frankenfood tech, the anti-meat elite, and the importance of a decentralized, sustainable, ag, grass-fed, and organic food supply.
One of the great issues of our times, along with the Saturn-Moon mind of... Along with the Saturn-Moon mind control matrix, of course.
Let it be known that my knighthood achievement is unlocked with this one.
Life's greatest honor.
I think it most appropriate that I go by Sir Carlwood of the Higher Side.
I'd like to request grass-fed beef and grass-filled blunts at the round table.
A random deep-cut jingle from the archives is always appreciated.
Keep killing it.
it.
Okay, random.
Yeah, I'm O.T.G.
You can't find me.
Yes, I'm OTG.
You can't find me.
Yeah, I'm OTG.
No eyes on me.
There you go.
There you go.
OTG. Deep Cut Oldie.
So here we have Nancy Murphy and Sam Bruno.
Hey, San Bruno, 350.
Sent an email with note.
I didn't get it.
Uh, I don't know if you sent it to me, but, uh, I have some Murphys in my pile.
I just looked, but no Nancy.
Thanks.
Name Nancy of the confused, AKA Nancy Murphy.
Why don't you give her a double karma for that?
Okay.
Hold on a second.
Double karma.
You've got karma.
Ah, yes, this is Ken Chapman from New Berlin, Wisconsin.
And And 333.33, one of our favorite amounts.
Let me see.
Is he the one with the escapee from Candanavia?
Yes, it is.
Yeah, the big long note.
Yeah, and I'll just pick a few things out of it.
We kind of talked about it earlier, but ITM fellows, I understand, excuse me, I understand this note isn't read on air due to its length.
Well, if we read it, it would be the show, to be honest.
It would take forever to get through it.
It's a great note, though.
It's a very good note.
And I wonder, you know, it would be cool to publish this so people could read what you went through.
So anyway, they escaped from Canada, they're now traveling around the country in a An RV, which is a 40-foot school bus converted.
Costs him a lot to get the COVID tests and the legal stuff and to bring all the kids over.
It's like nuts.
He does have a website.
Vanguard... VanguardADJ.com.
Am I seeing that right?
What a weird URL.
VanguardADJ?
Vanguard...
Something like Vanguard Dad J. Something like that.
Oh, he's an insurance guy.
That's right.
He's looking for gigs.
That's what he wants.
He can do all kinds of insurance stuff for you.
So go to that website and it'll help you out.
Let me see, is there anything else we need to... Oh, shoot.
I'm sorry.
I just closed this stupidly.
Okay, is there anything else?
He's got pictures of the Cessnas they flew out on.
It's been 10 months of incredible growth opportunities.
We still live in the bus, so 10 months since they escaped Candanavia, thanks to zero American credit.
Of course, they can't get credit.
They've had bus breakdowns, emotional breakdowns, visa trouble, work regulatory trouble, adoption trouble, but also with amazing experiences meeting freedom-loving Americans who welcomed us so warmly.
He says, I do, emphasized, firmly believe that without the generosity of all our new friends across the nation, we wouldn't have made it.
That and the support of my smoking hot wife of 17 years, anniversary last week, never had a fight.
She has been battling horrible, debilitating health conditions the whole trip, which have been dramatically improving thanks to going strict carnivore.
Oops.
Sorry about that.
What was that?
I don't know.
I misfired.
Through the whole trip, I had curry Dvorak in my ear, keeping me grounded in reality and laughing hysterically at the absurdity of the times we live in.
You have our heartfelt thanks, he says.
And he doesn't ask for anything, but I guess we'll just roll out a karma form.
Yeah, travel karma.
He does say no jingles, no karma, but we won't let you get away with that.
Dawn Igler is up from Washington, D.C., 333.33, and she says this is a switcheroo for executive producer for her father, John.
Okay.
So we'll take care of that.
And then she says, please see note to Adam.
I promise it's short.
Dawn Igler, Associate Executive Producer.
She's actually Executive.
Maybe she's been an Associate in the past.
So I don't have that note.
If you have it?
I do.
Here's the note.
It's interesting.
She says, uh... This is a switcheroo for an Executive Producer credit from my father, John Igler.
He's on his 85th trip around the sun and loves the show, especially enjoys listening while sitting by his pool and eating his crudité.
I promise to keep it short, so thank you, guys.
And he would love some good yak karma.
And of course, our family favorite, he wants the noodle gun.
Okay, we will do noodle gun.
Well, if you don't mind, I'll switch around noodle gun first.
And all the best, says Don.
Yes, switcheroo achieved.
I'm gonna shoot you in the face with my noodle gun, you racist piece of shit.
I got my pasta glock locked and loaded.
You've got... karma.
You know, I realized that when you go to a... I realized it because I cooked dinner this, uh, last Friday and... and had crudités.
And, uh...
I learned something just going on crudités.
So you had a great line on the last show when I said, you know, we couldn't get a Topo Chico.
And you asked if that was some kind of crudités.
Turns out the reason why carbonated drinks are a problem, at least it's happening in Germany, and I'm pretty sure that could be possible in Mexico, there's a CO2 shortage.
It's an actual shortage of stuff to pump into bottles.
I'm not sure how that works.
I don't either, but okay.
Seems like we have enough.
So anyway, I realized that when you go to a Korean restaurant and they bring out all those pickles, they'll bring out maybe, depending on the feast, if it's a real good Korean restaurant, they'll bring out your main dish, whatever it is, bulgogi, let's say something you might want to get.
And then they have all these little things of pickles.
Usually three, six, nine, sometimes twelve little servings of different things.
That's crudités!
It's Korean crudités.
It's Korean crudités, even though they're pickles.
It's K-Crew.
We should just call it what it is.
K-Crew.
K-Crew, man!
We could remarket this.
K-Crew.
What is it?
It's Korean crudités.
Swanky.
Richard, you're up next.
Do you have this one?
No, I did Don Igler.
You're up next.
I don't have anything for Richard Bamisberger.
Oh, well, give him a double karma and then read the next one.
Did you get any?
No note from him?
There's nothing?
No, I got nothing.
You've got... karma.
Actually, on my list, I have an insert from KQ4BIB, Kilo Quebec.
For Bravo India, Bravo Sandra, who gave an in-person donation of $333.33 and says, I had a blast this weekend with Adam at the Beef Initiative Conference at White Oak Pastures in South Georgia.
Shout out to the producer who created the Ham Trainer app.
She's a ham.
His app helped me pass the amateur radio technician exam.
No health, no jingles and health karma for everybody.
There you go.
You've got karma.
Very nice meaning.
Congratulations to her.
Yeah.
Jason, Jason, Jason, Jason Schmidl in Morgantown, West Virginia.
Get your old stomping ground, $204.
Motown, yeah, of course.
What was it?
What was the top 40 station there?
AM.
Yeah, Morgantown.
Motown, yeah, big time.
Please de-douche me.
You've been de-douched.
I was hit in the mouth in early 2020 by my friend and former co-worker, Tyler Rice, who I'd like to call out as a douchebag!
And I donated today in a late response to my own douchebaggery, which was proclaimed on this show in the early summer thanks to the donation of another friend and colleague, Chris Brown.
Like Chris, I'm a West Virginia native, so to keep form with the precedent that he set, I shall make my donation in the amount of $3.04, which, as a reminder, is West Virginia's original area code.
I remember it.
I'd like to thank you, gentlemen, for your courage and everything that you do for your show and its listeners.
Your COVID coverage in particular has played an important role in my life and career.
In the spring of last year, my employer announced that all its employees, barring a handful of exceptions, must be vaccinated for COVID or face termination.
I was working for a good company and a good paying job, particularly for the area.
So I hear that I would be fired if I didn't get the jab.
It was devastating.
However, I and many of my colleague co-workers decided we would resist the forthcoming mandate and armed with the knowledge provided on this show, we would express our objections to the company's upper management.
To our surprise and great relief, the company management Not only listen to our feedback, but would go on to eliminate the vaccine mandate altogether!
I don't know how much of a part I played in the company changing their minds, probably very little if I'm being honest, but I am certain that without no agenda, I would have been prepared to respond to the situation the way I did.
I wouldn't have been otherwise, I mean.
Thank you for being, thank you again, gentlemen, and my apologies for not donating sooner.
And then he's got a couple of jingle requests here, which I have to open up, which is karma, noodle gun, Biden, whole load.
I do want to point out that your notes are getting a little long, people.
I know you're excited.
I know you have a lot to say.
I really appreciate the support, but, you know, as you say, late response to my own douchebaggery which was proclaimed on this show in early summer.
Yeah, it's a little wordy.
You could, you could, you could tighten it up just a little bit.
You could leave that out.
I'm gonna give you the whole load today.
I'm gonna shoot you in the face with my noodle gun, you racist piece of shit.
I got my pasta glock, glock.
That actually kind of worked.
Yeah, it did work.
I've never heard that combo before.
I will say this, as compared to our last donor, Scott Farley knows how to do it right.
Yes, and because he did it right, I'll do Travis after that.
Scott Farley, 300, North Tonawanda, New York, where they have meetups from time to time.
No jingles, no karma, go Bills!
Who'd the Bills play?
The Buffalo Bills are probably the favorite team to win the Super Bowl this year.
They're terrific.
Who do you think they'll be against?
In the first game of the season they kicked the crap out of Los Angeles Rams last year's Super Bowl winner.
Huh.
All right, well, I'm super excited.
Travis Phelps, our first Associate Executive Producer, 233.33.
In the morning, please accept my birthday donation of 233.33.
When COVID broke out, my wife tried to get me to wash the groceries before I even brought them inside.
I looked at her and said, you're insane.
I'm not participating in this.
Are they still married?
Let's see if we get to the end of the note.
I quickly began teaching my two-year-old the evils of COVID, and we began to chant, no COVID, no vaccine!
Oh man.
Oh, she attached it.
Uh, yeah, hold on, I have it.
I have it, I have it, I have it.
Uh, he even sent me a loop of it.
Um...
Attaches audio of this chant from her.
It'd be an honor to have it as a jingle forever to honor my late father who once looked at my babbling daughter and said, shut up slave!
Nice.
Nice.
Where does the wife fit into all this?
Is she back?
I'm very concerned.
Please add us both to the birthday list.
Travis for 914, Steve for 917, jingles, mac and cheese, life, shape-shifting, juice, and fluoride in your cup.
And first we have the, here's little Gabby.
No cupid!
No cupid!
All right.
Now we have another blank entry.
Actually, we should have done a double-up Karma for... No, no, I guess not.
Yeah, for Mark Ginty?
Ginty.
Ginty?
Where's he from?
Yeah, it's always been us, Ginty.
RoaDux, but no documentation.
You've got... And Ginty's from... Karma.
Naugatuck, Connecticut.
I'll read the next one, which is the second to the last.
Anonymous, another long note from Fuquay Varina.
And I'm pronouncing that wrong.
Fuquay.
Fuquay.
Hey, bouquet!
Bouquet, man!
Two hundred dollars.
Following up on a donation a few months ago, I asked No Agenda Nation to contact me if they knew of an OBGYN in the Raleigh, North Carolina area who could face it to help a fellow listener who is pregnant and coerced into a booster jab by an employer.
No one contacted us.
I don't believe.
That is a failing of No Agenda Nation.
I believe it's a failing of our gutless medical professionals in the area.
My wife is in the medical profession and we couldn't think of any OGBYNs, OBGYNs who would write an exemption.
Hence the plea.
We did get our pregnant no agenda acquaintance in touch with someone who had helped us with religious exemptions last year.
I don't know how much help we... I've lost the accent.
On purpose.
I don't know how much help, because it doesn't seem right.
Because North Carolina?
No.
I don't know how much help we actually rendered, but we received a great text from her recently and her exemption was accepted.
I think it was more her resilience and dogged efforts to protect her unborn child that persevered in the end.
Well, good!
I feel the hits keep coming from the multiple fronts, but to finally get a small victory.
By the way, North Carolina shouldn't be so bought in.
Right.
From someone we know is uplifting.
It's pathetic.
It is the relentless pursuit of truth and liberty that will win these fights.
MP&T, we're praying for you and your unborn child.
Jingles!
Get vaccinated.
JCD, that's bull.
I'm not going to say it because I only have two left.
Obama, you might die.
And fact check true.
Uh, I don't have a, I don't have a jingle of you saying that, so what are we gonna do?
You're not going to honor this request?
Even though you do have two more left in your inventory?
Okay, I can say it, I'll say it, but then I'm down, I'm down to my last one.
I have the ability in this case to switch to bullcrap.
He asked for, and he even put it in quotes.
No, I'm gonna say it, I'm gonna say it, I'm gonna say it.
I would say that I was gonna say it and say it, but I'm not gonna say it until I have to say it.
Here we go.
Get vaccinated.
That's bullshit.
You might die.
Fact check.
Wow, I'm glad we did all that.
Thank you very much, Anonymous.
Tony Helvst is in Fort Worth, Texas, 200, Associate Executive Producership, and as Tony says, Adam and John, I made my donation this week after hearing Adam on Thursday's show.
He was talking about local businesses and how if you don't support them, they will be forced to go away.
I don't want that to happen to you guys, so my donation was in order.
Thanks for all you do, by the way.
I donated for my son Brian's birthday earlier this month, and didn't de-douche him, so before you run out, could you do that now?
Yeah, we have a couple de-douchings left.
You've been de-douched.
And she says, can I get a travel karma for my hubby as he drives to see his family across country?
No jingles for otherwise.
Tony Hills, Fort Worth, Texas.
Of course.
No problem, Tony.
You've got karma.
Shwetty, Shwetty with a D in Plano, Texas.
$200.
We got the Texas, North Texas.
That's right.
Coming in.
Gents, long time listener, first time caller.
Going through 24.5 year divorce and it's no fun.
De-douche?
You've been de-douched.
Jingle request, consult the book of knowledge, theremin, and I've got info, man, karma.
Consult the book of knowledge.
I've got information, man.
New shit has come to light!
You've got karma.
And that concludes our group of executive and associate executive producers for show 1480-what-7, I believe.
13 left to go until 1500.
We've got a few to go and we're going to be at 1500, which is unbelievable.
And I want to thank these people for helping to keep this going.
Why is it so unbelievable, John?
You didn't think we would last as a team?
No, it's not unbelievable that we can't do it.
You are going to quit at show 100, I will remind you.
You always bring this up, man.
You're always trying to shame me about that just because I was having an emotional breakdown.
But it's because nobody does this.
Very few people get these kinds of numbers.
Yeah, well it's because no one tries.
There's about a handful, there's about 10 podcasters who have done this many shows, maybe 10.
I've actually started writing, rewriting the concept of Value for Value, it's not the book or anything, but valueforvalue.info, doing that with Gigi, a buddy of mine, and so we're trying to kind of explain more about what it is so other podcasters can take note.
Yeah, with a guide and examples.
But besides that, we want to thank these executive and associate executive producers very much for helping us with this episode.
And of course, you get the, what did you call them?
The forever credit I saw in the newsletter, which I thought was a good, good way of describing it.
It's a forever credit in perpetuity.
It never goes away.
You will always be an executive or associate executive producer of episode 1487 of The Knowage in the Show, the best podcast in the universe.
Yes.
Yes, it's a forever credit.
Forever credit.
If you'd like to learn how to get this, go here.
Once again, thank you all for providing your time, talent, and treasure for the No Agenda Show!
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Order! Order!
Shut up, slay!
Shut up, slay!
Ah, a little bit...
It's getting hard to hide the dead bodies.
I would say.
It's getting a little difficult to do that, so they're coming up with all kinds of ideas.
This is an advertisement from the New York Presbyterian Hospital.
I've been into fashion since I can remember.
But one day, I had a stomach ache so bad, I didn't want to do anything.
The team at New York Presbyterian said it was actually my heart.
It was severely swollen.
Something called myocarditis.
But doctors gave me medicines and used machines to control my heartbeat.
They saved me.
So now I can become the next great fashion designer.
Fifty-eight years, fifteen of them doing this show, I had never really heard of myocarditis until now, and now it seems like it's very normal for children to get myocarditis.
Everybody's got it.
It's the new thing.
Now this, and this is from a local news report, I think it may be from, what's W-I-O-D-W-I-S-H?
I wonder if that's Florida.
This is a very weird side effect of the COVID vaccine.
Well, tonight's Health Spotlight emerging new research shows a growing number of transplant recipients are suddenly rejecting their new organ.
Scientists say the COVID vaccine could be to blame.
Joining us now to explain is Swish TV's medical reporter, Dr. Mary Gillis.
Mary.
Alexis, Phil, according to a new study published in the Journal of Clinical Medicine, acute corneal allografts are being rejected by immunized patients who've undergone the procedure.
These are, um...
Is that what you had?
Indianapolis, by the way.
Indianapolis.
Is that what you had?
Did you have a corneal transplant when you had your eye done?
No, God no.
That's a dead thing.
Nobody wants that.
Okay, well apparently they're being rejected.
Being rejected by immunized patients who've undergone the procedure.
Researchers say the underlying cause could be tied to a systematic inflammatory response elicited by the shot.
The cornea is the outermost layer of your eye.
Corneal grafts are used to restore vision, reduce eye pain, and improve the appearance of a damaged cornea.
The surgery is known to be one of the most successful transplant procedures with low rejection rates.
Japanese researchers compiled data from 23 studies.
A total of 23 eyes from 21 patients who had undergone corneal graft procedures were assessed.
Graft rejection occurred anywhere from one day to six weeks after vaccination in all patients, some who underwent the procedure as far back as 20 years ago.
In the paper, study authors write, as the virus continues to spread, additional booster COVID-19 vaccines are expected.
Therefore, proper follow-up of corneal allograft recipients and interventions to prevent corneal allograft rejection after they receive the COVID-19 vaccine may be crucial.
Among the list of emerging complications linked to the vaccine are blood clots, heart inflammation, and Guillain-Barré syndrome.
Woo-hoo!
And now your cornea pops off.
After 20 years... That's your eyeball.
It's pretty much your eyeball.
After 20 years... Oops.
Wait, your whole eyeball?
That's your eyeball.
Your cornea is the outside layer of the eyeball itself.
Ah, so the whole thing.
Yeah, you're gonna go blind.
Oh, yeah, then you just got raw ball.
Just a gob of fluid.
Oh, God, that's so nasty.
Bill Gates, you know, he has his notes from Bill Gates.
Bill Gates notes.
Yeah, I still wonder who the hell writes those things, because Bill can't write.
Well, it's the same people who wrote this script for this video for him, which was released, I believe, four or five days ago.
The death of a child is a tragedy for the family.
That's all you need to know.
The death of a child is a family.
Bill Gates is now going to explain to you.
The death of a child is a tragedy for the family, for the world.
And I was in my 40s before I understood about childhood death.
I was stunned to learn that back in 1950, over 20 million children under the age of 5 would die.
By the year 2000, it had been cut in half.
This, by the way, is edited this way with this music.
That's coming directly from, you know, Gate Central.
And I find this very creepy.
Now, okay, well, I'll let you know what I think.
It's about 9.7 million, about 10% of the children who are born.
Since the year 2000, there's been unbelievable progress.
We're now down to under 5 million.
Of course, we'd like to get that down to be even lower.
So what are those deaths?
What's going on there?
Overwhelmingly, it's infectious diseases.
Diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria.
We can see here that non-communicable, that'd be things like cancer, 14%.
Injuries, like a car crash, 4%.
But infectious disease, 82%.
And of course, almost all of this is preventable disease.
It's in poor countries where you simply don't have the same health, nutrition that the rich world takes for granted.
You might ask, how have we brought childhood death down and how can we bring it down in the future?
Creating new vaccines and making sure that vaccines get out to all the children in the world.
We can make sure that you actually have good sanitation, toilets, ability to wash your hands.
We need much better tools, much better systems to help kids in that very first week.
A birth attendant, even monitoring the baby's temperature, having the mother hold the baby to make sure it stays warm.
That kind of training and early diagnosis is very important.
So the world has made incredible progress in saving children's lives.
And I'm confident That will see far more children celebrate their fifth birthday in the years ahead.
I mean, it's not an inconsistent message for him, but this guy's just gotta stop.
Vaccine's the only way to go.
And meanwhile, so that's the public side of Bill Gates, Robert Kennedy Jr., who I think that, I mean, is he completely deplatformative off of everything now?
Is he gone?
I know their main communication team was Instagram.
Yeah, wherever it says that Fauci book came out, that was the end of him.
Listen to what he says about Gates.
I think this is a historical Jeopardy to humanity that we've never seen before.
I mean, you know, the Black Plague and, you know, World War II.
He's talking about how horrible this COVID vaccine is.
That's the lead up to Bill Gates.
Are, you know, are arguably rivals for it.
But I would argue this is the worst thing that's ever happened to humanity because The essential ambition of the totalitarian state is to control not just conduct, self-expression and thought.
And for the first time in history, because of the technological revolution, the capacity for totalitarian forces Bill Gates brags that he's going to be able to watch, with his 60,000 satellites, every square inch of the Earth 24 hours a day.
Bill Gates brags that he's going to be able to watch with his 60,000 satellites every square inch of the earth, 24 hours a day.
You know, at least in other parts of history, you could run and you could hide and you could, you know, collect forces and begin an opposition.
And we can't do that anymore.
Do you think that he is he confused with Elon maybe that he says Bill Gates will have 60,000 satellites?
Yeah.
Thank you.
Well, I don't know that Bill Gates has got 60,000 satellites.
Maybe he is confused.
I'm not sure.
Or maybe they've confused him on purpose so he sounds like a maniac.
30 seconds left.
And the Chinese have already deployed this vast array of facial recognition that claims to be capable of reading guilty.
on people, of looking at facial expressions from a distance and deciding whether somebody is guilty.
I love this.
More.
So, you know, I would say this is Armageddon.
This is the apocalyptic forces of ignorance and greed and totalitarianism.
And this is the final battle.
You know, we need to win this.
It's kind of a dark...
Well, I haven't heard of this technology.
Well, the Chinese...
He did say there's claims.
He didn't say it's a fact, but...
I like it.
I like the whole idea.
I do have a technology report that would kind of... I record this specifically for this sort of discussion.
Okay.
But it's not about people.
But why isn't it about people?
Play the future of tech fences.
Some ranchers say a new tool called virtual fencing is revolutionizing the way they manage their livestock.
It gives them new control over how to graze on grassland.
ICPB's Joshua Heyer reports.
The virtual fencing runs off of GPS towers that can be hauled around on a trailer.
Computer software draws boundaries and moves the GPS collared livestock around to graze.
Nick Jorgensen uses the technology on his team's 10,000 acre ranch near Ideal.
He explained the system during a panel discussion at this year's Dakota Fest in Mitchell.
It talks to a radio base station up on a hill, and it sends signal back and forth, and it gives the caller its direction, says, hey, this is as far as you can go.
As they get close, it beeps at them.
And then when they step into the fence zone, they get a light electrical pulse that encourages them to turn back around.
Oh, man.
I wish I'd had this clip.
I could have asked some people about this here.
Sure.
Treat the people like the cattle.
Why not?
Yeah, I like the way they say light electrical impulse.
It gives them a shock.
Yeah, well, that's what electric fence does, so it's the same idea.
But I think cows will respond... I don't know enough about cows, but that seems wrong.
Here's what they're doing to humanoid cows.
Nearly every baby born in the U.S.
gets a heel prick shortly after birth.
Their newborn blood fills six spots on a special card used to test the baby for dozens of genetic disorders that, if treated early enough, could prevent severe disabilities, even death.
The test itself is crucial and potentially life-saving, but it's what happens after that has some concern.
The leftover blood spots become property of the state and may be purchased for approved outside research without your knowledge or consent.
Now the state stresses that research could lead to future life-saving tests and treatment, and they insist the blood spots are de-identified before they're given to researchers.
Bullcrap!
I have heard this.
This was a conspiracy theory back in the day.
Oh man, you know, they do the heel prick, so they got your DNA and they track you.
And I'm like, nah, that doesn't sound right.
But here it is.
It sounds kind of spot on the money.
A public records lawsuit alleges New Jersey police recently subpoenaed a nine-year-old's blood spot to link his father to a cold case rape.
And an increasing number of lawsuits are threatening state stockpiles.
Both Texas and Minnesota had to destroy millions of blood spots following past privacy-related lawsuits there.
And Michigan health officials reportedly recently agreed to destroy more than 3 million blood spots following lawsuits by parents there.
And while parents here can request the state destroy blood spots after they've been stored, the state says it may not be able to comply.
Why not?
I'll tell you why not.
Okay.
Because I don't want to.
It's like work.
What do we got to do?
Forget it.
Yeah, yeah, okay, we'll do it.
Uh-huh.
Then they go back to reading the newspaper at the desk.
Well, Dr. Jha is not reading the newspaper at his desk.
He's out there promoting the new ill-advised bivalent booster.
Tonight, news on the new COVID boosters, which are now available.
White House COVID coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha telling ABC News to get maximum protection.
Americans 12 and older should get these boosters before Halloween.
The sooner the better, he said.
They're designed to fight against Omicron and its sub-variants.
Dr. Jha receiving his booster today with second gentleman, Doug Emhoff.
B5 is super contagious.
It's out there.
Getting a vaccine that specifically targets it is going to make a big difference.
Makes me feel better about protecting myself, protecting my family.
Health officials warning there's always a chance of a possible COVID surge this fall or winter with Americans coming back indoors.
Meanwhile, Sweden reporting they have the lowest excess mortality rate in Europe.
Of course, Sweden didn't do lockdowns.
According to a properly peer-reviewed study, I think, Most New York COVID patients on ventilators died, 90%.
Surprise, surprise.
One day that'll come out, man.
That protocol.
You remember I was in Vegas and we had the people who teach operators how to operate the ventilator and they're saying this is the wrong protocol, we're killing people and they're telling us to do it?
And you weren't the only one that was noticing or that found this out.
This was reported here and there too.
Yeah.
Um, now I have that we've played super cuts like this before, but this is the most lengthy and detailed and has all the players in it.
This is the all Democrat players before the election who were saying they would not take this vaccine because of Trump.
Yeah, I think we should play this because it's a, we have to remind ourselves of a lot of things.
So much has happened.
This is one of the things this show does best.
I think it's going to be a very skeptical American public about taking the vaccine, and they should be.
We can't trust the president and take his word and take a vaccine that might cause harm to us.
If and when the vaccine comes.
And it's not likely to go through all the tests and trials that are needed to be done.
Let's just say there's a vaccine that is approved and even distributed before the election.
Would you get it?
Well, I think that's going to be an issue for all of us.
When we finally do, God willing, get a vaccine, who's going to take the shot?
Who's going to take the shot?
We will need to have access to the vaccine results so we can make our independent assessment to make sure that Donald Trump's fingerprints are not on it.
You will be the first one to say, put me, sign me up, and now say it's okay.
Is the vaccine safe?
Frankly, I'm not going to trust the federal government's opinion.
And I wouldn't recommend to New Yorkers based on the federal government's opinion.
And the question of whether it's real when it's there, that requires enormous transparency.
Would you trust that vaccine?
There's very little that we can trust that comes out of Donald Trump's mouth.
We cannot take for granted this process will be free of political influence.
I don't trust the president and I don't trust the FDA.
If Donald Trump can't give answers and the administration can't give answers to these three questions, the American people should not have confidence.
You're going to say to the American people now, here's a vaccine, it was new, it was done quickly, but trust This federal administration and their health administration... Right now.
How confident am I?
I'm not that confident.
Yes, I would be hesitant, but I'm gonna ask a lot of questions.
You're going to need someone other than this FDA and this CDC saying it's safe.
You've got to make all of it available to other experts across the nation so they can look and see.
So there's consensus this is a safe vaccine.
What I'm worried about is that there's some sort of October surprise and that there's pressure put on the decision makers here to announce the vaccine in October of 2020.
We're going to put together our own group of doctors and medical experts to review the vaccine and the efficacy and the protocol.
Quite a contrast with what's happening now.
Yeah.
Yep, all a bunch of loud-mouthed Democrats.
Do you have any TikTok clips?
For today's show.
The only one I have is, well, I have one from the last show, but it's, I don't think it's going to fit into anything we're doing.
I have one though that's for today, and it's about some guy who claims that there's this organization that's been buying up, well, we know for a fact that TikTok and Instagram and other people that get a lot of followers.
Well, we had the, we had the Halo group who the United Nations prompted and paid to promote the COVID vaccine.
Yeah, I got one here where a guy's being paid or told to do something anti-Trump specifically, and he's going to get paid to do it.
And this is my TikTok for today.
Bush just offered $400 to make an anti-Donald Trump propaganda post related to the January 6th investigation.
That is completely not true.
I should start out this video by saying I'm not a Donald Trump supporter, so that should give a little bit of context to where I'm coming from.
I'm an attorney.
I post legal news and analysis on related topics.
Okay, here we go with the story.
So first thing first, I get an email from somebody with the Good Info Foundation.
We'll talk about them a little more in a minute.
I'm going to refer to this person as Jane.
Jane sent me a message letting me know she represented the Good Info Foundation and that she was willing to offer a paid collaboration to discuss some topics related to January 6th.
I said sure, why not?
I'll learn some more.
Jane says the Good Info Foundation will give me $400 to make a post on my page and then share it to Instagram.
So you see that blue link?
Alright, here, we're gonna follow it.
I would just like to say, I find it very interesting how media production has gone from the jump cut to a fucking machete.
What is this?
Can these people not get a full paragraph out in one go?
They have to chop it up in all these bits?
Everybody's doing this, and I don't know why.
I mean, it would work if there was a sense of rhythm.
That's what you're bitching about.
Yes, thank you.
A sense of rhythm and not the... I mean, it's horrible.
It's really bad.
And I agree with you.
It's become a format, but it's bad.
And no one seems to mind.
Well, I think people that do it right with a sense of rhythm and beats You don't, you wouldn't complain, but nobody does because they're not professionals.
And so, you know, you're bitching about amateurs.
I'm sorry.
The specific requirements in order to obtain that $400 of how I should refer to the January 6th capital raid.
Number one, I must call this a criminal conspiracy.
Number two, I must say Trump Republicans were responsible.
Number three, I must frame it as an attack on my country, an attack on America or Americans, a criminal conspiracy and a committed crime.
I must attribute the matter to MAGA Republicans.
I must make clear that this was ongoing and unresolved.
And most importantly, that I must channel all of this onto the manipulation of voter agency so that I could turn their anger around this event into defiance that would make people more likely to vote in midterms.
And the thing that struck me the most was this part, where I was told to talk about the aspects of the Trump campaign's plan, and I was supposed to say that the Trump campaign paid literally millions of dollars to make January 6th happen?
So I figured, you know, maybe I missed something.
So I said, hey Jane, what is the basis for the claim that the Trump campaign itself paid millions of dollars to make the January 6th siege of the Capitol happen?
Jane doesn't answer the question.
Hi, Preston.
If you don't want to state that in the video, it's fine.
You don't have to use all the bullet points provided.
So I kept going.
Sure, I'm just wondering if there's support for that client.
Jane doesn't answer again.
Let me know if you are interested and the rate works for you.
Thanks so much.
I'm not interested and the rate doesn't work for me.
This is the Good Info Foundation.
They boast on their homepage that good information is the lifeblood of a democracy.
Did you look at the Good Info Foundation?
Who they're perhaps funded by?
I didn't look at the page.
I didn't look into who's the about.
I didn't look at the about page.
I just passed it off.
I didn't care.
What was interesting though is the talking point they had where you wanted to blame it on Trump.
She had this thing Trump and Trump supporters.
And it specifically said on that line, he didn't read it, but it said, you could see it on the screen.
It said, do not say Trump and Trump allies.
Hmm.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, exactly.
He did say that.
Hmm.
There's something important about not saying allies, but using supporters as some, I don't know what psychological aspect that is.
Hmm.
I'm wondering.
I don't know.
They are a 5013C.
Did I say that right?
501C3, yes.
Founded in 2021.
So they haven't even filed yet.
I don't even have to look.
They're brand new.
Front, obvious front.
Yes, it's a new group with some money.
Regarding the social networks and how they are used, I came across Interestingly, a TikTok video of a college professor who asked his students what social networks they use and why they use them, what they use them for, what their preferences are.
And the results are not completely surprising, but there are some gotchas in there.
I asked my first year college students how they feel about five different social networks.
Here's what they had to say.
Snapchat is mostly for private communication.
Private stories are popular still.
Streaks, which were a big deal for a long time, are really no longer a thing.
And when a student meets someone new, their Snapchat username is still the first thing that they will give to that person before they give a phone number.
Instagram, they feel, is getting too busy with too many features and that's frustrating them.
They don't like the changes in the algorithm, they don't like seeing content from accounts they don't follow, they don't like reels, and they don't like the focus on shopping.
They do like that Instagram is a great way to learn about a person that they meet by going through their Instagram profile when other networks are letting content disappear after 24 hours.
TikTok is where they go for entertainment.
Few of them are creating any sort of content there, mainly a source of entertainment.
Twitter is good for news, but not widely used.
Actually, speaking of TikTok and Twitter, we had class the day after Queen Elizabeth died, and I expected that a lot of them got news on Twitter about it, but I was surprised to hear they got news on TikTok about Queen Elizabeth dying.
And Facebook is a big no.
As one student put it, people who are on Facebook are not happy.
So we can see the problems here.
Snapchat is still popular for very different reasons.
Uh, TikTok is purely entertainment.
And so I don't, when I go on TikTok, I don't have an account, but I only see entertainment stuff.
But all the videos you bring, which of course is from the libs of, uh, uh, the libs of TikTok account.
It's all these teachers and it's something completely different.
So there's multiple TikToks, obviously.
Yeah, TikTok is dimensional.
And of course, Facebook is a no-go.
So we have a couple of strikes against Instagram, except it's cool to stalk somebody to see what they're really all about.
And Facebook is no-no.
You know, I don't think it's that effective, but okay.
What do you mean?
Well, I mean, I've tried to stalk people on Instagram and I got nowhere.
You know what was the best place to stalk people?
LinkedIn.
Used to be Flickr.
Oh, Flickr.
That's still around, isn't it?
I still have a Flickr account.
Yeah, nobody uses these things anymore.
I think probably Facebook's the best way, but you can't stalk everybody.
I don't even have an account, you can't stalk me there.
I don't have an Instagram account either, except a phony one.
So Snapchat is in a category by its own, which is used for introductions.
They like the disappearing messages.
I can understand.
I think younger kids particularly, but I guess the college kids as well.
So we have a problem with TikTok.
You know, Facebook, Instagram, all part of meta.
Enter their heat-seeking missile who was out to get TikTok to bring him down, Senator Hawley.
Here's his intro to a nice little session.
Oh yeah.
Ms.
Pappas, let me start with you.
I have to say it's great to see you here today.
I have repeatedly invited your company to testify before Congress.
I invited them to testify to the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism in November of 2019.
I invited them to testify again in September of the following year.
Both times we were stiffed.
TikTok told me that they would set up a meeting with the CEO.
They didn't want to testify in public, but they set up a meeting with the CEO after November 2019.
They then canceled that meeting.
So it's nice to see TikTok being willing to answer questions in public.
It's a pleasant change.
So from this introduction, I can only conclude that TikTok is a little worried now.
No, I think TikTok should be praised, because there's no reason to go before Congress just to be ridiculed.
Correct!
And that's exactly what happened.
And it does not look good for the TikTokers.
Let's dig into a few things, if we could.
Specifically about TikTok's links to the Chinese Communist Party.
There we go.
OK, are you ready to take on that?
In response to a letter from some of my colleagues, TikTok claimed earlier this year that the company has never shared data, never, with the Chinese government.
Is that correct?
That is correct, yes.
And has never shared data with the Chinese Communist Party, is that correct?
We will never share data, period.
My question was in the past tense.
Has TikTok ever shared data with the Chinese Communist Party?
We have never shared data with the Chinese government, correct.
With the Chinese Communist Party.
They did not send the right person for this.
Hawley, he's good at this.
He's a lawyer, I'm sure, right?
I don't know what Harley's background is.
I'll look into it right now.
But yeah, he is good at this.
Because a bunch of these Republicans are competing for who's the best at doing this sort of thing.
And he's up there with the big three or four or five of them.
Yeah, he's in the top five for sure.
Yes, correct.
Have you ever shared it with members, two members of the Chinese Communist Party?
We have said many times, Senator, that we do have Chinese engineers based in China.
I don't think there's any platform up here that would be able to speak to what you're talking about as it relates to the political affiliation of an individual.
But I'm happy to assure you that we are ensuring the access controls around our data as well as... Here, a crack.
Weakness.
the storage of that data in the United States.
So I think you're telling me that there are TikTok employees or ByteDance employees who are members of the Chinese Communist Party?
Is that what I tell you?
No, I'm saying I wouldn't be able to verify that.
Oh, well, let me just ask you that affirmatively.
Are there TikTok employees or ByteDance employees who are members of the Chinese Communist Party?
Senator, I'm saying nobody that's sitting on this panel could tell you a political affiliation.
I'm not interested in anybody's opinion.
I'm asking you a factual question.
Are there members of the Chinese Communist Party employed by TikTok and ByteDance?
Yes or no?
Now listen to her make a critical mistake.
I wouldn't be able to tell you the political affiliation of any individual.
What I can tell you is how much we're investing.
I know membership in the Communist Chinese Party is not exactly like membership in the Democrat Party, so I'm looking for an answer.
You tell me you don't know?
TikTok doesn't know.
Here's what I can tell you.
I can tell you that our U.S.
and Singapore leadership, there are no CCP members.
I can tell you that.
So you do know that, but you're telling me that you don't know if there are any members who are employed by TikTok or ByteDance, members of the Chinese Communist Party?
Senator, I am happy to share that we are putting access control... That's not my question.
My question is... That's not my question.
My question is, are there any TikTok employees or White Dance members, employees, members of the Chinese Communist Party?
Yes or no?
Senator, I'm saying nobody could sit up here and give you that.
So you don't know?
You're saying you don't know.
You do know your leadership isn't, but you don't know about your employees.
Is that your testimony?
I know that everyone who makes a strategic decision at this platform is not a member of the CCC.
A strategic decision.
Okay.
It's interesting.
It's interesting to me that you're quite confident that anyone who can make a strategic decision, how many people is that?
It's our leadership team.
And again, the leadership team is based in the U.S.
and Singapore.
Our CEO is based in Singapore.
He's not Chinese.
Whoa, you got butt slam!
It just went on from there.
Yeah, Yale.
He graduated, he went to Stanford, got his history degree, went to Yale.
He's a Yale-y law school guy, and he was the head of the, again, he follows the same pattern, the same playbook, where he runs the law journal there, and blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, he's a classic, classic guy.
Yeah, and...
I'm sorry to say it, I mean, I want to like the guy, but this is, he's clearly operating for someone who wants TikTok gone.
He doesn't, this is not because he really, if he really cared about the American people's data, you'd shut down Facebook.
And Twitter, and Instagram.
They're the egregious ones.
They're handing over data to the FBI, willy-nilly, and saying, oh, something might be going on over here.
And the FBI is using that to go on little fishing expeditions.
So this cannot be taken seriously as someone who cares about the American public.
I agree.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, over in the House of Representatives... He's a good showboater, though.
He's a showboater.
Just so is this Higgins cat.
Representative Higgins, I forget where he's from.
And as a climate change lady, I only have this short clip, you may have seen it, a lot of people have been posting this.
And she goes off the rails against him when he asks a very simple question, although he's asked it, of course, in an aggravated manner, meant to set her up and meant to trigger her.
It's like, well, if we do away with all petroleum products, how are we gonna live?
You know, we've pointed out on this show as well, everything.
Petroleum products, oil is in all facets of life.
Oh yeah, everyone's seen this, this is good.
Everything you have, your clothes, your glasses, the car you got here on, your phone, the table you're sitting at, the chair, the carpet under your feet, everything you've got is petrochemical products.
What would you do with that?
Tell the world.
If I had that power in the world, what, actually I don't need that power, because what I would do is ask you, sir, from Louisiana.
I'm giving you the power!
To search, to search, you sir, from Louisiana, to search your heart, and understand why the EPA knows that toxic petrochemical facilities are some of the most Toxic, polluting facilities in the world and are killing black people throughout Louisiana.
So my first thing was to be you to search your heart and ask your God what you are doing.
Crazy.
That was, I mean, there must have been a lot of lead up.
She could.
I mean, she was given a kind of a blank check to say whatever she wanted to about what you could do, and you could have a lot of fun with that question if you had anything on your mind at all, but she obviously didn't.
Well, she started and then she switched right away, as if I had the power.
No, I'd ask you, Senator!
She's like... The training kicked in.
But there was... Did you hear what he said to her?
Unless I misunderstood it.
Listen to this.
He's just coming to the most toxic, polluting facilities in the world and are killing- He said, I'm trying to give you the word boo?
Did he say boo to her, black lady?
Did he say boo?
No, I don't know what he said.
He said some of the most toxic polluting facilities in the world and are killing black people.
He said boo?
I don't know.
Well, whatever he said, AOC went off the rails on this.
Oh yeah, she went nuts.
I wanted to address Ms.
Salter directly.
I just want you to know that In the four years that I've sat on this committee, I have never seen members of Congress, Republican or Democrat, disrespectful.
She's basically violating the rules of the House when she does this.
You're not supposed to go after one of the other people the way she's doing it.
You can say something about, you know, you can apologize to the person that was being grilled, but you can't do what she's doing.
The house rules forbid it.
I didn't realize.
I don't know why she wasn't called out.
Come on, boo.
You know why.
Hello.
Respect a witness in the way that I have seen them disrespect you today.
I do not care what party they are in.
I've never seen anything like that.
And for the gentleman of Louisiana and the comfort that he felt in yelling at you like that, there's more than one way to get a point across.
And frankly, men who treat women like that in public, I fear how they treat them in private.
She is so good, man.
She should be reprimanded.
No, she won't get reprimanded.
She should be reprimanded.
If the Republicans take over the House, nothing like that's going to happen again, I can assure you.
No.
And she had her little.
She doesn't know what he's thinking.
I didn't hear him yelling at her.
She was yelling at him.
He was kind of mocking her, I would say.
But literally, the lady was yelling at him.
Yes, yes.
So.
I don't know.
I guess I should watch the whole climate change.
Oh, man, it's all performability.
It's all about what we can get a clip on.
And there he is!
We were part of the dumb system.
We helped that guy out.
You speak for yourself.
I know, I know.
But I wanted to get to AOC.
That was really why I wanted to play the setup.
And you'd think that people would learn about climate change and that they hadn't figured it out yet.
Maybe they don't watch news, but oh well, it's just the Appalachians.
On the Consumer Watch tonight, Appalachian Power said there's still time to enroll in a program that promises a one-time $50 gift card.
The utility calls it the Take Charge program.
It runs every year from the start of May to the end of September.
By enrolling, you essentially are giving control of your thermostat to Appalachian Power.
The company says it would make small and brief adjustments, especially during the peak electric demand period.
Once you enroll, you get a $50 gift card.
Again, that's a one-time deal.
And you can then get an additional $25 gift card per central unit for every year you're enrolled.
That's $5 per month, May through September.
If you're interested in this, we've got a link on wjhl.com where you can enroll.
I'm sure a lot of people are doing it.
$50 gift card.
Not just taking off the bills, the gift card.
That's a lot of money now.
So sad.
So, uh, I got a clip.
I want to ask you to maybe bring this up with, uh, with Mo.
Okay.
I think that the Little Mermaid, the new, uh, version with the black woman.
Uh-huh.
is an example, and one of the better ones, and I say this based on a couple of articles that were written about it, including how cool it is that the new Little Mermaid, and this is from a headline, won't be defined by needing a man or a man's love.
Bringing me to the point of making it sound as though she would be, if given the choice, a single mom not interested in becoming anything other than a mermaid, actually, also.
This is a classic example of systemic racism.
By redefining the character.
You make the character black, that's fine.
I don't care about that.
But now you've redefined her in a black... Agreed.
...stereotypical mold.
Shut up, Ray!
Sorry.
A black stereotypical mold from... And this is Disney, by the way, the most woke of the woke of the woke.
Which exemplifies to me, I could be wrong, systemic racism.
This is what racism really is.
When we talk about systemic racism, people know we can never define it.
I think this is a good example of it.
And it would be a woke, woke, woke that would do it because they're stupid.
They don't know what systemic anything is and they would just do it because they would go for the stereotype.
Parents started sharing videos of their children reacting to the trailer and seeing a princess that looked like them.
Using hashtags like Black Girl Magic and Representation Matters, the trend has gone viral.
Some of the videos even reaching Bailey herself.
I think she's brown.
A black woman!
Wow!
Finally!
I've been waiting for another black princess.
She's black!
Yes, yes, yes!
She's black!
Mama, she's black!
What?
She's like me!
A few days ago, the White House hosted what it called the United We Stand Summit, a gathering of civic activists, authorities in various fields, and survivors of violent hate crimes.
Although the specific focus of that gathering was to address hate-motivated violence, the event was part of the administration's broader argument that this country's deep political polarization is a threat to the nation's well-being, and that well-meaning citizens have to work together to address it.
That's something Chris Starwalt has been thinking a lot about, too.
Even if you don't know the name, if you follow politics, then you know his work, because as a political editor at the Fox News Channel, his team was the first to call Arizona for Biden on election night 2020, the first sign that the former President Trump would not win re-election.
The announcement infuriated the former president and his allies who raged at Fox and Stierwalt.
One senator even said he should be fired and a couple months later he was, although Fox called it a restructuring.
Stierwalt later testified before the January 6th committee about the attempt to pressure his team to backtrack on its decision.
Something happened in the middle there and all of a sudden we were at Trump.
That was the weirdest thing.
Another one of these switcheroos.
It wasn't just a switcheroo, it was like, you got me all, I don't know what to call it.
There's something else.
It's a, it's a, they just changed the topic.
They changed it in midstream.
It's like, I don't know what to call it.
This has got to be some NLP stuff.
I agree with you.
I just don't know what.
And that's NPR again.
Hmm.
Yeah, NPR does it more than anybody.
That's very, very weird.
Yeah, I'm trying to catch more of these.
But anyway, back to the Little Mermaid, which was that, the report was supposedly about to turn into a Fox, anti-Fox screed.
Trump thing.
Yeah, Trump.
But I just think it's systemic racism at its finest.
Well, they're stereotyping.
They're stereotyping a black woman who would more than likely not have a man about the house.
By design, which is certainly systemic racism, but I'll ask Mo.
I speak with him on Wednesday.
I shall ask him.
I'm sure he'll have some better clips as examples to show us just how messed up it really is.
Well, maybe.
Maybe not.
Okay, what else we got?
I do have a little bit of Russia.
You have or you do have?
I do believe I do have a little bit of Russia.
And in this case, it is CNN.
And we're laying it on thick.
Actually, I should mention, I saw this article.
Okay, two articles.
First, USA Today tries to bring out a fact check ...saying Ukraine's president did not sell farmland to US companies.
So we know that 30% wound up in hands or maybe we should say control of Cargill, JBS, DuPont, Cargill, DuPont, Monsanto.
So they fact-checked this, and then at the very end of the article, based on our research, we rate false the claim that Zelensky sold 17 million hectares of farmland to U.S.
corporations.
It is illegal for foreign companies to own land in Ukraine, according to experts.
Although, of course, the laws all changed when Zelensky came into power.
We don't talk about it.
While Cargill, Monsanto, and DuPont do have business interests in Ukraine, and Cargill has a 5% share in a landholding company, none own land directly.
So they say business interests.
I mean, that's USA Today?
Just lying.
No, USA Today has turned into a liberal apologist and they do this sort of thing.
Their fact-checking sucks.
They've really gone off the rails.
USA Today is one of the worst news outlets now that you can't count on.
Yeah, pretty much.
There was an opinion piece of Politico titled Waging Psychological War Against Russia, and it was written by David Shedd, former acting director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, and Ivana Stradner, who is an advisor to the bearish Center for Media Integrity at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
And it just starts off.
Yeah, totally.
The fight for Ukraine will not just be won on the battlefield.
For all the high-tech weaponry the West has delivered, psychological war against Russia remains a key opportunity for the United States.
That's what we talked about.
Let's shake it up there at home for him.
Let's have some people fall off a balcony and let's make it look like there's stuff going on and people trying to unseat him.
Historically, such an approach focused on selling Russians the American dream.
But this strategy is a relic of the Cold War ill-suited to present-day Russia.
Aha!
So that won't work by saying, come to America, instead of pitching the benefits of Levi's and Hollywood.
Really?
U.S.
information operations to use Russian nationalism to turn the tables on the Kremlin.
Highlighting the war's damage to Russia, exposing government corruption and inequities inside Russia.
And exploiting... There it is!
And exploiting resentment amongst Russia's ethnic minorities.
Hey!
We could do that BLM thing in Moscow!
These, dare we say, Russian-style tactics will bear more fruit than tales about the wonders of American democracy.
So they're actually saying that we should use Russian-style tactics against them.
Okay.
It's pretty hard to do it there.
Their ethnic groups are spread out few and far between.
I mean, this is nonsense.
I think they're sincere about it.
Well, I'm sure they're sincere, but it's not going to do any good.
It's laughable.
Russians aren't idiots.
Well, here is David Petraeus.
Wasn't he at one point also CIA director?
Yes, he was a CIA director until he gave state secrets to his girlfriend for a blowjob.
You know, I'm normally fairly guarded and cautious about this, but the tide clearly has turned because the success of this offensive, as important as it is itself on the ground, what really is important is that it reflects A hugely important development, a new reality that Ukraine has been incomparably better than Russia in recruiting, training, equipping, organizing and employing additional forces.
While Russia has been struggling to do just that, literally running out of soldiers, ammunition, tanks, fighting vehicles and so forth.
The Ukraine supported superbly by the U.S.
and NATO, whereas Russia, even if it declared mobilization today, could not reverse this fundamental reality.
So the implications are stark.
They're very, very clear.
Ukraine will, over time, and yes, tough fighting, more casualties, more punishing Russian strikes on civilian infrastructure, but Ukraine will, over time, I think, Retake the territory that Russia has seized since 24 February and it's even conceivable now that they could retake Crimea and the Donbass and oh by the way With what's going on in the front lines there is insurgent activity now picking up in the Russian rear areas Carried out by Ukrainians there as well.
So again, this is going to take time There will be tough fighting all of that, but this is a disastrous situation for Russia now, and I'm not sure sure that everyone recognizes just how does it worse than Afghanistan.
Remember, they left Afghanistan.
The government they left behind stayed in power for two years.
This is going to be a terrible, painful retreat for them.
And again, the outcome just is, I don't think, in doubt anymore.
Ukraine will prevail unless there's some unforeseen development and as long as we continue to provide the weapons, and of course you noted the latest announcement about that, I'm confident we will continue to do everything that they need to help them build on the momentum that they have now achieved and carry this all the way through to victory, frankly.
Man.
Is that wishful thinking or is that real?
I don't know what it is.
I don't think it's either one.
I don't know what... He's giving these talking points.
He blows them out there and... I don't know what... I don't know.
They get us to give him more money.
More money!
I'm gonna show my school 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 could use a little more money.
We do have a few people to thank for show 1487 starting with, and we start low here.
We actually start with the 8008 donation from Christopher Berg.
And he's in Osceola, Wisconsin.
He wants, and he's got a birthday call for his hot wife, Meryl.
Sir Kevin McLaughlin's up.
He's the Duke of Luna, lover of American boobs.
You can always tell how well you did by how high on the list is Sir Kevin McLaughlin.
Yeah, exactly.
He's right at the top.
Yeah, I know.
Locust, North Carolina, 8008.
And our third boob donor is Brian Hendrickson in Tulare, California, 8008.
I'm from California and I can pronounce Tulare.
John Fuller in Colorado Springs, Colorado, 7777.
And I was commenting on how great the newsletter was.
Rick in Arlington, Washington, 6996.
Jennifer Strevig in Athens, Georgia.
Got a happy sweet 16th Sonya birthday, $65 from her.
John Hawley, not Josh, in Blaine, Minnesota.
He's got a $58 donation and a happy belated birthday for John, which is not on the list.
No, he's happy-bladed to me.
I turned 58.
Oh, to you?
Oh, I'll be AC.
AC, your partner of 15 years, you know that guy?
AC, AC.
I always thought that meant alternating current until now.
Dean Roker, no relation to 5510.
Daniel Mariano in Pflugerville, Texas, 5510.
Richard Futter in London, UK, 5510.
Andrew Benz, Sir Andrew, in Imperial, Missouri.
$50.05 and then we have $50 donors right at the end here.
Starting name and location.
We're starting with Nathan Cochran in Franklin, Tennessee.
Stephen Schumach in Xenia, Ohio.
Kellen Prince in Hollywood, Florida.
I wonder if the dog track is still there.
Greg Olskamp in Thunder Bay, Ontario.
Kevin O'Brien in Chicago, Illinois.
Scott Lavender in Montgomery, Texas.
James Edmondson in South Plainfield, New Jersey.
John Camp in Antlers, Oklahoma.
Josh Adair, he's floating around at APO Bucks, $50.
Alexander Verdejo in Gig Harbor, Washington.
Leanne Shipley in Covington, Washington.
And last but not least, Sir Jerry Wingenroth in Sagas, California.
I want to thank these folks for making show 1487 a success.
And everyone, thanks who came in under $50.
That is typically for reasons of anonymity, but actually more typical is there's a lot of people who are on subscriptions.
You can make up your own.
We have a lot of different ones you can select to help on a sustaining basis.
It really is important, particularly on show days like this one.
It's a little lower.
If you'd like to learn how, we have a website.
Please sing it, kids!
And he does it again.
.org slash N a service go karma for those who are in need.
You've got karma.
I wanted, and he does it again.
Yeah, of course, because I wanted to read and I wanted to read a note that from one of the donors from the last week or the week before, uh, who didn't have a note that we wanted.
And it was Paul Helmick.
And he wants to plug, he says, well, you know, I don't need a note that much, even though I can't imagine how much mail I got from him.
He just wanted to plug the November 4th event of seedsofliteracy.org, Seeds of Literacy.
And he wants to promote, he wants to honor Margo, his friend and hero, and her full name is Margo Hudson, will be honored at this event for 25th annual event award.
She'll find her stories, anyway, seedsofliteracy.org, get involved, take a look at that website and you'll get most of it.
I think our obligation is Finish with a plug of Margot.
Okay.
Everything is short today.
Short list for all.
We congratulate Travis Phelps.
He celebrated on September 14th.
Jacob Davis turned 39 on the 16th.
Travis Phelps says happy birthday to Steve, who celebrated on the 17th.
Jennifer Stravig, happy birthday to her daughter Sonia, turned 16 today.
And Joe, he'll be celebrating on the 20th.
And Peggy, our flight attendant, Peggy Lydon.
She is 57.
Happy birthday, Peggy.
And Christopher Berg says happy birthday to his smoking hot wife, Meryl.
She'll be 34 on the 20th.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe!
No titles.
We do have two knights.
We got that instant knight and actually two men here.
So we got a manly, manly blade.
Alright.
Radu!
Man, I'm glad you're becoming a knight so I don't have to remember that.
Achirulalai.
And Greg Carlwood, gentlemen, sitting up here.
You both are about to become knights of the No Agenda Roundtable, thanks to your contribution of $1,000 or more.
And I'm very proud to pronounce the K-V as Sir George of the Southern Carpathians and Sir Greg Carlwood.
For you, gentlemen, we have Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay, Grass-Fed Beef and Grass-Filled Blunts.
They get grass-fed, grass-finished, if you don't mind.
Also, we've got some Ruebeness Women and Rosé, Gaysons and Sake, Vodka and Vanilla, Bong Hits and Bourbon, Sparkling Cider and Esports, Ginger Ale and Gerbils.
We got breast milk and pablum, but no, no, you don't want that.
You want your mutton and mead.
We got it right here.
And while you're enjoying that, please go to noagendanation.com slash rings.
Send us all your info, like, you know, size of your finger.
We have a way to do that on that website.
And the address will get your official No Agenda Night Ring out, which is a signet ring.
So if you hit someone in the mouth, it will leave a mark, or you can just use the included wax to seal your important correspondence, as well as the Certificate of Authenticity.
It's like a party!
A party indeed.
We have reports from two, uh, the D.C.
meet-up.
ITN Gitmo, Fergus 33 here from Washington, D.C.
Pre-show amygdala-shrinking meet-up.
Hey, it's Dame D.C.
girl in the morning.
Hey, John and Adam in the morning.
Bad kitty D.C.
I identify as a cat.
The fact that Roundy is there makes me feel a little bit better about the spooky quality of that meetup, the DC meetup.
Roundy, what a pleasure it is to participate in Bad Kitty DC's very first meetup.
New listener, new meetup maven.
What a pleasure to be here with everybody.
I knew I'd mess this up.
Give us the phone.
The fact that Roundy is there makes me feel a little bit better about the spooky quality of that meetup, the DC meetup.
We got people who are cats.
We keep people who are doing pizza parties while looking through intelligence.
I have no idea what's going on there.
It's not exactly like the pig roast meetup.
What's shaking Gitmo Nation?
We're here at the pig roast with Dame Nguyen and friends and family and we're having a marvelous time with this extremely fun group.
Dang, wind up the legs.
I'm waiting for the fireworks.
Hey, Adam and John, it's Sir Stonks Trader having a great time at the third annual pig roast.
Train's good, plane's bad.
In the morning, this is Sarah Damon Progress.
Thank you for your courage.
In the morning, discussing the facts and having a good time at the pig roast.
Hi, it's Kylie.
I'd like to say hello to everybody.
This is Richard.
In the morning, what would you like to say, sir, about the pig roast?
I'm O.T.O.
I'm O.T.G.
rather.
O.T.
phone.
Hi, in the morning.
This is Nate.
First timer.
Thank you for your courage.
Are you a douchebag?
Oh, definitely a douchebag.
We'll see if we can change that.
Change it real soon.
Okay, tighten it up, people.
Thank you very much.
Yeah, we do have some meetups taking place today.
They may even be close to ending.
Oh, I don't know.
We've got the Crowne Plaza, West Minneapolis in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
That's the Cryptocon behind the Schemes Meltdown.
That started at noon central, so...
They'd be winding down.
Also, the Mighty Niagara River Meetup started at 1.30 Eastern in Raymond Klimek Veterans Park in North Tonawanda, New York.
On Wednesday, the 21st, the Fort Wayne Red Pillars Club 33 Meetup at 6.33 Eastern at the What's Up Pub & Grub, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Look for the tall guy in the red t-shirt.
We dive at dawn, and the 22nd, that'll be the next show day, Thursday, two hot Tucson meet-up, four o'clock Tucson time, Canyon Crown, Tucson, Arizona.
We go all the way through October with what I'm seeing here on the meetup schedule.
Let me see if we have anything from outside the United States.
We got Toronto, soon of course to be part of the Emero Zone.
Northwood, Dublin, Ireland on the 1st of October.
Cancun, Mexico on the 1st of October.
Victoria, BC on the 3rd.
Petersburg, lots of Ontario on the 14th.
And then, as I said, meetups scheduled all the way through the end of October.
But that means there's plenty more room for you to add to it if you don't find something on that calendar at noagendameetups.com.
Start one yourself.
There's always a party guaranteed at No Agenda Meetups.
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.
It's like a party.
I have three ISOs.
They've been collected by producers, so I don't even remember exactly what they are, so why don't I go first?
Yeah.
Because, you know, people trying to help me out when I'm doing some extracurricular activity.
Let's see.
It's not binary.
Okay.
I have this one.
God punched them in the mouth.
Okay, what's this final one?
It says people are evil bastards.
Ooh.
I like that one.
That's kind of okay.
It's not horrible.
What do you have?
I don't have much better.
By the way, if you're gonna get clips for us, just doing us.
I'd say it's between woe, woe, woe, and which I think may be better.
Let me see.
This people are evil bastards.
Woe, woe, woe, woe, woe.
No, I think it's woe, woe, woe.
Yeah, I think so too.
Yeah, I think that's the way to go.
So we have a big, uh, I got, all I got at the end here is a, I want the Japanese weather report out since there's only, I think I did get this clip from NPR, but nobody's covering what's going to happen, which is a nasty, nasty torn, uh, not a tornado, but a cyclone.
A cyclone?
A typhoon.
It's a typhoon.
Authorities in Japan are warning of a powerful typhoon that's approaching the country's main islands.
NPR's Anthony Kuhn reports from Seoul that heavy rains are expected through the weekend.
Japan's Meteorological Agency issued a Level 5 emergency warning Saturday evening local time.
That's the highest level of warning issued only in case of extremely dangerous weather.
The agency says Typhoon Nanmadal is headed for southwest Japan's Kyushu Island and is expected to make landfall Sunday morning local time.
It's packing winds up to 120 miles per hour with gusts topping 170.
Winds at those speeds can cause catastrophic damage.
Meteorologists are expecting heavy rainfall of up to 20 inches and warn of high waves, flooding and landslides.
Some trains and flights in Kyushu have been cancelled and authorities have warned residents to avoid unnecessary travel.
Now!
Those are good numbers, but since it's in Japan, who cares?
We care because we have Dame Astrid and Sir Mark in Japan.
We care.
Of course we do.
But nobody cares in the mainstream media is what I'm saying.
And so we have this report.
Here's this report.
Compare what you just heard to the Puerto Rico hurricane.
Puerto Rico is under a hurricane warning as Tropical Storm Fiona nears the U.S.
territory, threatening to dump up to 20 inches of rain.
People are bracing for mudslides, severe flooding and power outages.
Fiona is located some 90 miles south-southeast of St.
Croix with maximum sustained winds of 60 miles an hour.
Puerto Rico's Governor Pedro Pierre Luisa says the island is already feeling the effects of the storm and that the soil is already saturated.
Fiona is expected to swipe past the Dominican Republic tomorrow as a potential hurricane.
60 miles an hour compared to 120 and 170 miles an hour, which sounds like a tornado speed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So what are you saying?
It's gonna be a mess.
Japan's gonna get slammed.
What you're saying is the mainstream media is racist.
They don't like Japanese people.
Yeah, that's exactly what I'm saying.
Just making sure we got it straight.
Well, for more outing of racists, we'll be back on... That's us.
That's what we do.
We out racists.
Coming up next on NoahJennerStream.com, Hog Story 5-Minute Limit.
Well, this is a new variation on the Hog Story format.
Fletcher, Blainey, and special guest Net Ned will be doing it live, so the switchover should be seamless.
And end of show mixes from the one and only Rolando Gonzalez.
And also a troll room, an ode to the troll room, and that is by Vangeli and his daughter on the vocals.
Coming to you from the deep south, Georgia.
Bluffton, Georgia.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C. Dvorak.
We will see y'all again here on Thursday.
No agenda time, no agenda station.
Please remember us at dvorak.org slash NA.
Until then, adios, mofos!
and such.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
It's caused by a certain circulation pattern.
In Death Valley, the mercury hit 127 degrees Fahrenheit or 53 Celsius.
It's the same disrespect of the natural world that has led to this climate crisis.
What we're seeing is a drastic changing climate, aren't we?
Our hopes and dreams drown in their empty words and promises.
We have to take combustion engine vehicles off the road as rapidly as we can.
We will transition off of fossil fuels.
Natural gas.
Coal.
It's caused by a certain circulation pattern.
Educating everyone on the need to curb population growth seems a reasonable campaign to enact.
So how?
What are these stats?
Vegans eat Oreos.
And they drink Coca-Cola.
I don't.
Stop driving around Moscow.
it won't affect next summer one job hope is not passive hope is not blah blah blah when people aren't able to act together when they're not participants in society then they can't push back They can't even think about the nature of the political reality that they live in.
Mr. Chair, can I respond to that please?
Opportunities now to transfer to clean energy in a way that grows thousands of jobs.
There's no question I'm in favor of banning fracking.
New data shows President Biden's efforts to lower energy prices have reduced the nation's emergency oil reserves.
There will be a transition.
There will be a transition and there will be some pain there.