This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination episode 1657.
This is no agenda.
Enjoying a classic clothesline.
And broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in fever region number 6.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're all saying, don't shoot your dog.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
I almost didn't make it through.
I had no idea.
I've been good all morning.
Yeah, now you're getting histamined up and you're going to be coughing all show.
It was bad yesterday.
Yes, and it's all of a sudden we got... I thought you had hepas all over the place to prevent that problem.
No, that was in the old house.
Gosh, that's a long time.
Looks like you need to move them over to the new house.
Yeah, it's crazy.
You know, this is unheard of, this global warming.
Climate change is great because it's been 70 degrees for most of the week, but wet and raining, which we obviously needed.
So that's all good.
And something happened and just it's like everything popped at once.
And we also have this invasion of caterpillars.
Oh, the biting type?
No.
No, the big, thick black ones.
They're just everywhere.
It's incredible.
And they don't sprout, they don't turn into butterflies, they turn into moths, which is interesting because when you have cedars spraying everywhere, you'd think that that would kill off the moths.
But no.
Yes, yes.
No, it's not.
I have a closet that's cedar lined just for that purpose.
Yeah, and what do you have in that closet?
Let me guess, your tuxedo collection?
I have the tuxedo collection and other rules.
Since you brought it up, I'm amazed by the outrage over Christy Noom.
Killing her dog Cricket.
Well, I think I got a earful from Mimi.
Oh, really?
Who owns a kennel, you might add.
Yeah.
So she's a protector of dogs.
She is.
About how horrible this woman is.
And I said, everybody's missing the point about this.
Everybody.
I think you probably do.
How about this?
How about I play a clip and then you'll tell us what point we're missing.
And then I'll give you my opinion.
Both sides of the aisle do not agree on much right now.
But they have been united in outrage over South Dakota's Governor Kristi Noem's confession that she shot her 14-month-old puppy dog because she couldn't train him.
Give it back, bitch!
Give it back!
Why you gonna kill it?
What?
And she says it killed her neighbor's chickens?
She defended herself though.
She claimed that it was tough decisions like this that happen on farms all the time.
And that she followed the law and was being a responsible parent, dog owner, and neighbor.
Nah.
Which part was the parenting part?
I'm keeping this to myself.
I'm gonna let y'all talk about it.
What is your opinion on such things?
I'll start with you, with the baby dog.
Literally, who's just over 14 months.
This is a puppy.
If your dog is acting wrongly, it's because you were incompetent at training that dog.
And I grew up, we had big dogs, and we had chickens.
And the dog did once get a chicken.
Whose fault was it?
Mine.
For not having the dog somewhere where he couldn't get the chickens.
But then what do you do?
You train them.
And by the way, if you have a really challenging dog, there are countless organizations to re-home them to somebody who loves the dog enough.
I want justice for Cricket.
It's terrible.
It's a terrible thing.
Justice for Cricket.
The dog's name was Cricket.
You know, a sign of a sociopath is someone that kills animals.
I'm not a clinician.
No.
But she killed her animal.
That's for sure.
Alright, alright.
What an idiot.
I'd love to hear your view on this.
This is important news!
Breaking!
Breaking!
My view on this is that I'm not even sure this happened.
I think Kristi Noem has to do something because she does not want to be the vice presidential choice and she's at the top of the list.
This did it.
This took her off the list for good and without having to say no.
Interesting.
Why would she not want to further her career into the Oval?
I think she's got friends who said, look what happens to all these people who get associated with Trump at that level.
It's trouble.
I mean, it may be great, you know, but then again, you're going to be in the middle of this and that.
No, get out of this any way you can.
But she didn't want to get out of it by saying no and then being on Trump's bad side.
She's going to say, I kill dogs, I shoot them!
Oh, okay, well, you can't pick her.
Oh, well, that's a very no-agenda take of you there.
I like that.
Totally.
I like that.
Well, I personally think that she should just say, this is puppy health care.
I mean, that's what she should call it.
Because, you know, I love the outrage over some woman shooting her dog because whatever, but, you know, hey, just suck out those fetuses, no problem, that's health care.
Please.
The hypocrisy is crazy.
It's crazy, the hypocrisy.
Give me a break.
Hey man, my favorite video of this week, I don't know if you saw this, where those... Can I guess?
Oh, you said pro, so it's not going to be what I'd guess.
What were you going to guess?
The liberal filter.
Have you seen that one?
No, I have not seen the liberal... Stop!
That's a video?
How have I not seen this?
The last person to retweet it, which would be the easiest to find, is the libs of TikTok has it somewhere.
Okay, what is it?
It's hilarious.
What is it?
It turns your picture into a, you turn into a liberal.
Oh, I have seen this, yes.
No, that's, that's not what I was going to say.
No, I love that, that protester, the, you know, the kid who has like a bike helmet on and he has a, a shield.
She's hurting me?
Well, yeah, he has a shield made out of half a garbage can, and he runs... Oh, no, that one.
Yeah, that's different.
And he runs towards the cops, and the cop just clotheslines him.
Bam!
Just like... It's like, I feel bad watching it over and over and over again, but it was so funny.
Just so funny.
When I saw the kids with the half garbage can running at the cops.
It's like LARPing.
It's like, what are you doing?
It's not exactly what I was thinking.
I was just going to say that.
It's LARPing at its highest level.
That is amazing.
Oh look, I'm a knight in shining armor.
I mean, what are they thinking?
I mean, the derangement of some of these kids, and of course they're just kids, I mean, what are you going to do?
They're all young people, they're just dumb sometimes.
Dumb times?
Sometimes.
They're dumb sometimes.
The derangement They, you know, they've lost so much respect for law enforcement and police, they don't even think it's, what do they think it is, like a cartoon?
Like this cop is not gonna bust your head?
Like, come on!
They're charging a cop with a garbage can shield.
And a bike helmet!
There were two of them!
And a bike helmet, that was the best.
So then, my second favorite video, who would have ever expected the frat boys, the frat boys To be protecting the flag!
I mean... Yeah, that's a new trend.
I like it.
I think this is interesting to see how we have within these... And these, of course, are privileged boys.
They're all privileged kids.
This is Ole Miss.
Governor Tate Reeves also posted a video showing counter-protesters singing the Star-Spangled Banner in front of Palestinian protesters.
No, no, no, no.
Now listen to Joy.
Woo!
Play ball!
Surprised they weren't singing Dixie instead.
Well, because you know they must be racist.
Governor Reeves praised the counter protest.
What a dick she is.
It's unbelievable.
You can't even have respect for the Star Spangled Banner anymore.
Not from her.
She's gotta go.
Yeah.
No, well she will eventually.
I mean, the Mo prophecy will come true.
It'll happen.
It'll happen.
They're all gonna go.
All the DEI hires.
You're all stuffed up.
I am.
It's funny.
It's not funny.
You can usually plow through the worst case of the flu.
You'll be on the air.
You sound fine.
I'm still on the air.
It's just this, whenever I, whenever I project, then it just, it locks up.
It's funny.
I'm locking up, man.
I don't know what to say.
I'm locking up.
I'm locking up.
I'm glad you think it's funny while I go through this incredible trial.
Because I've never seen, I've never, you've witnessed this before.
Yes, yes, yes.
Let's stay on these protests because they are rather interesting.
Here's something that kind of hit me this morning about the Google protests.
I have a feeling... Well, listen to this.
This is from a while back, isn't it?
There's no new Google protests.
Ma, it's still ongoing.
It's still ongoing.
It's not over, according to... I guess it'll continue until the ceasefire!
We'll get to that, too.
They're rising.
A recent article in the Intercept reveals that Google and Amazon provide cloud computing support to the Israeli military under what is called Project Nimbus, a contract worth $1.2 billion.
The Intercept reviewed a 63-page Israeli government procurement document which showed that Amazon and Google support two of the nation's leading weapon makers that manufacture drones, missiles, and other weapons used in the war against Hamas.
Stop!
Stop!
I want to take a kind of a look at the terminology being used here.
Google's not supporting them.
They're supporting Google.
It's the other way around.
Are they giving the services away for free?
Is that in the documentation?
No.
They're getting paid.
So how is that support?
I don't get it.
Okay, I'll tell you my first thought when I was about this far in the clip as well.
I'm like, this is coming from some other company making Google look bad.
Okay, you can play there.
I'm sorry I interrupted.
No, it's okay.
This terminology that they're supporting this when it's the other way around is annoying.
It's as though because I went to bought some groceries at a local store that the grocery store is supporting me.
They're not supporting me.
I'm buying groceries from them.
It's possible that they have a value for value model at Google.
Oh, that's a real possibility.
Hey, hey Israel, how about we just give you this Project Nimbus?
If you feel like it, donate something to us.
Give us some time, talent, or treasure.
It's possible.
Accept other obligatory cloud customers includes the Blank Bank of Israel, Israel Airport Authority, and a quasi-governmental body tasked with expanding Israel's settlements in the West Bank.
Shocking!
In the last two months, multiple Google employees got fired and arrested after protesting against Project Nimbus.
Google spokesperson Anna Kowalczyk in a statement to The Intercept said, quote, We don't kill people.
workloads relevant to weapons or intelligence services.
We don't kill people.
Across Google, we've also been clear that we will not design or deploy AI applications as weapons or weapons systems or for mass surveillance, unquote.
Earlier, Intercept reported Israel's use of Google Photos to implement a facial recognition dragnet across Gaza's strip to scan ordinary Palestinians as they attempt to flee the ongoing bombardment.
Okay, a couple things about this.
Wow!
First of all, before you go to your couple of things, what do they have, cameras in the middle of the rubble?
Are you kidding me?
No, well, I love the outrage over this while, in America, the TSA has just started scanning everybody with, you know, without any, just like, hey, we're doing this now.
We're just doing facial recognition.
Everyone's like, oh, okay, but, but Israel-Gaza.
Second of all, why, I want to see all these people divest from Google and Amazon.
No more shopping!
No more Gmail, no more Google Docs.
Where's that?
Where's that?
Come on, divest!
Divest!
Back in 2019, there was noticeably a lot less outrage when it was reported that Google and its parent company, Alphabet, were working in ways that were benefiting the Chinese military, specifically for the purposes of them tracking the Uyghur population, as well as It's Uighurs.
No.
But they're yellow people.
who were protesting for their freedom.
They were using...
But they're yellow people.
We don't care about them.
...similar services in order to crack down on protesters there and in order to track people who they wanted to put in concentration camps.
But yet, at the same time, Google said that it was no longer going to buy for a $10 billion U.S. government contract with its military, saying that what the U.S. military was doing was against its values.
And so I'm very confused about what exactly Google's values supposedly are when they seemingly have no problem benefiting foreign governments, whether U.S. allies or not.
But they won't even work with the U.S. government.
Why are they based here?
Are they an American company?
Do they consider themselves?
Yeah, we can stop this.
No, you can keep playing it.
I like it, but I want to know what it is.
I don't recall what... Did you preface it with who is this woman?
The Rising.
This is The Rising.
Oh, The Rising.
Yeah, I prefaced it, but you didn't hear it.
But yeah, it's The Rising.
I was probably zoning.
And this woman, she should be fired because she's about to...
The young black girl?
I don't think so.
So why are they based here?
Are they an American country?
The young black girl doesn't sound black.
She's just a young black girl.
I don't think that's her.
I don't think that's her.
I'm not sure.
I didn't clip this.
Cause I noticed that she can, she's really poor.
She drops, uh, she has some prompter issues that she's reading away and it's a very, and this woman has the same.
Well, I'm done with her.
I don't care.
Black or white.
She's no, she's off the show.
Who should be off the show is Whoopi.
Now let's look at the endowments.
It's all fascinating because it's not really about killing people.
It's not about genocide.
No, it's about money.
Money, money, money, money.
Here's Meet the Press.
You hear a lot of these protesters demanding divestment, but they also will often say disclose first.
And the reason why is because we just don't have a lot of transparency into what is in these school endowments.
So again, part of this is the broader strategy among pro-Palestinian protesters to boycott, divest, and sanction businesses that have ties to Israel.
Now, divest is the big conversation on college campuses, where you have these universities with, in many cases, multi-billion dollar endowments that they use to invest in companies.
So, how much of those invest— I'm so confused.
That we just gloss over this?
Why are they giving away free education?
They got billions of dollars and they're investing it in the stock market.
You're talking to the wrong guy here.
...are going into businesses that have ties to Israel.
Well, let's take a look at some of the... This is why Eisenhower said the military, well he didn't say it, but it was in his original speech.
Yep, you're right.
Here we go.
The military academic industrial complex.
Yeah, he had academic in there originally.
And someone took it out and said, hey, see this picture?
What's in your mouth?
Those investments are going into businesses that have ties to Israel.
Well, let's take a look at some of the requirements for how they have to disclose any sort of holdings.
There's a Form 990 with the IRS that's reported annually.
This gives you the broad mix of stocks versus bonds that a university will be holding in an endowment.
But the detail on specific stocks that are being held comes from a 13-F filed with the SEC.
The problem, though, is that that doesn't really cover the entire scope of the endowment, which in many cases As I mentioned can be in the billions of dollars which means it's largely up to the universities on a voluntary basis to disclose in their annual reports what's actually in there.
Well I think we should crack this open!
We should know what these universities are doing with all this money and how does it benefit the children?
Well, it's not, obviously, because they're retarded.
The stuff they're doing.
Like, oh!
Billions of dollars in endowments.
Trashcan man!
Come on.
This is crazy.
I got one more clip here.
Trashcan man.
And Ryan, I'll give you an example of one university.
Again, Columbia University getting a lot of scrutiny over all this.
When you look at the endowment, we're talking about a university that has $13.6 billion in endowment funds.
What?
What?
I mean, how many children can you educate from that money?
13.6, that's a lot of billions.
13 F that discloses how many securities and how many types of companies they're investing in.
It covers only 68 million with an M, which means that the number of stocks that we know Colombia is invested in through their endowment, it's only about 0.5%.
So 99.5% of the endowment funds we don't know about.
We don't know if they are or aren't in any sort of companies that have attachments to Israel.
So that's what protesters are asking for.
they're asking for more disclosure of Disclosure.
What is this?
They don't even know this?
They then ask them to divest from those funds.
But the status quo, there's not a lot of transparency into these endowments, Ryan.
Okay.
So their protest of this whole BDS, boycott, divest, and sanction, has been based on stuff they don't even know?
We know it.
We know you're hiding secret Jew payments.
We know it.
What is this?
They don't even know this?
No one seems to know.
No.
Well, I find this highly, highly irregular.
Suspicious.
Suspicious.
And then, so now when you think about it...
If it's all about, hey, you're giving money to these Israeli companies, then isn't it interesting... Well, you're not giving... Okay, first let's... Okay, help me out, help me out.
Because I'm irked about terms here.
Alright, help me out.
You're not giving money to Israeli companies, you're investing.
Oh, investing.
Usually open market, stock market stuff.
Investing.
That's a good point.
Investing.
Not giving.
It's not a giveaway.
It's not a gimme.
Okay, you're investing.
Good point.
Because that's what a school should do.
A school should be there to make money for itself.
I am all for, I'm with you on this thesis.
Harvard's numbers are unbelievable.
All these big universities have these large endowments.
Usually they, by soaking the alumni, they call the alumni up constantly.
I used to get called all the time from Cal, except Once I told him one thing, and that was I got put on the blacklist.
I haven't been called for years.
What did you tell him?
I said, you know, I noticed that last year you guys gave Barack Obama campaign a million dollars of this sort of money.
Why am I giving you money so I can go to Barack Obama?
I don't support the guy.
And I never got called again.
Off the list.
Off the list.
Did you get T.P.
during Halloween?
No.
So when you think about, so clearly the protesters want to hurt the companies that are being invested in.
So when you think about, it's about, you know, so clearly there's the protesters want to hurt the companies that are being invested in.
If I just draw the logical conclusion, right?
Yes.
Okay.
So then, now we have to look at who's funding these things.
Because they're clearly short on these stocks or something.
Both sides of this are apparently being funded by quite wealthy people.
You have Jerry Seinfeld's wife apparently helping to organize a pro-Israel protest.
Is he still married to Shoshanna?
Is he still married to her?
Or has he gotten a new wife in the meantime?
I have no idea.
That's got to be promotion for his movie.
Bill Ackman and other celebrities or I guess wealthy people have helped to donate to that party fund for the UNC fraternity that was seen protecting the American flag.
And then on the pro-Palestine side, Students for Justice in Palestine, of course, receives funding from some Soros foundations, from the Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, from a Wall Street banker by the name of Felice Gelman.
The protesters have been led by some people who are with the U.S.
Campaign for Palestinian Rights, which receives stipends from some of those same progressive billionaires to go onto campus and help these students organize their protests.
They have received pro bono legal advice from the Palestine Legal Group.
So, across the board, I mean, we can't just say that all of this is pure grassroots campaigning done by the students for the students.
There's outside influence both on the pro-Palestinian and the pro-Israel side.
Yeah, I think that's what broke all of this because no one's taking it seriously anymore.
Everyone's like, oh, okay, it's these investors on this side fighting those investors on the other side.
That's all I can see now.
Billionaires.
How do you become a billionaire?
Well, you make a lot of money and then you invest it in companies, I guess.
Well, you would take the...
If you were wanted to, you could, if you could get everyone to divest and you were on the short side, you can make money.
Yeah.
And then you could let it all go back to normal.
You can make money that way.
It is what Soros does.
Exactly.
Soros is the king of shorting.
Shorting currencies.
He's a shorter and he also plays currencies.
He's really made more money off currencies than anyone could possibly do.
Especially the pound.
And if you read his books, he's got a lot of tips on how to do this.
And a lot of it has to, It has to do with being completely manipulative.
Yeah.
He's short on a country.
It's like, America?
I'm going to short America now.
It's time to take that down.
And of course, he's really not doing this anymore.
It's his boy.
It's Huma Abedin's boyfriend.
He's the new face.
Well, since I've got you on financial stuff.
Jonathan or something, whatever his name is.
No, that's not his name.
Jonathan Soros.
No, it's not Jonathan.
It's Alex.
Alex.
Alex.
Alex Soros.
Alex Soros.
So, you probably saw this hilarious video of Jared Bernstein, the chairman or the CEO of the Council of Economic Advisors for the President.
You saw this video?
I've passed through it a couple of times.
I haven't really sat down and looked at it.
If you haven't played it, I'd be interested.
Of course I haven't.
Of course.
Because everyone's... You're talking about me?
You should get a HEPA filter.
Stick your head in that cedar closet.
We'll clean it right up.
Stick my head in what?
In the cedar closet.
I don't know.
Maybe that'll help.
So everyone's laughing at this video, and it is laughable, because the guy cannot explain how we print money, and we borrow money, but then why do we even, huh?
Taxes?
And he gets so confused, and I'm trying to track down- What's his name again?
Jared Bernstein.
He really is the guy, and he talks a big game about inflation, he's on the White House lawn, he's always brought in to give his commentary.
And this is like the season of reveal pinnacle when he can't explain how our financial system works, how we finance the government, but very few people have explained what's really going on.
And I have great hope, great hope, that we can, you, can explain this so we understand, so we can put you up for Chairman of the Economic Council of Advisors for the President, because this guy is a numbnut.
The U.S.
government can't go bankrupt because we can print our own money.
It obviously begs the question, why exactly are we borrowing in a currency that we print ourselves?
I'm waiting for someone to stand up and say, why do we borrow our own currency in the first place?
Like you said, they print the dollar, so why does the government even borrow?
Well, um... The, uh...
So the, I mean, again, some of the stuff gets, some of the language that the MN, some of the language and concepts are just confusing.
I mean, the government definitely prints money, and it definitely lends that money, which is why, the government definitely prints money, and then it lends that money by selling bonds.
Is that what they do?
They sell bonds.
Yeah, they sell bonds, right?
Since they sell bonds and people buy the bonds and lend them the money.
Yeah, so a lot of times, at least to my ear with MMT, the language and the concepts can be kind of unnecessarily confusing.
But there is no question that the government prints money and then it uses that money to...
So, yeah, I guess I'm just...
I can't really talk...
I don't get it.
I don't know what they're talking about.
Because it's like...
The government clearly prints money, it does it all the time, and it clearly borrows, otherwise we wouldn't be having this debt and deficit conversation, so I don't think there's anything confusing there.
So this is hilarity for all, and I'm going to take a little guess here.
I'm going to guess that this guy doesn't understand, which is amazing if you're the Chairman and CEO of the Economic Council of Advisors to the President, that he doesn't understand that the Federal Reserve, who creates money with the banking system, is not a government institution.
No.
So can you explain simply to us all?
Just the simplest way is that you have credits and debits to balance the budget to have the same amount of money out there that you have credits, debits for.
And so you create a billion dollars worth of bonds and sell them and that money goes into circulation.
That's the only simplest way of looking at the way I see it.
So we sell a bond and then that bond, the Fed then prints that bond in dollars.
But people owe that money back.
Oh yeah, well, yeah, the people.
The people owe that money back.
Well, it's mostly the people that buy the bonds.
I mean, people, everyone likes to say, well, China, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, a lot of foreigners buy the bonds too because they're good.
It's a good bond, and it has an interest, it pays interest.
Oh yeah.
Which is supposed to be the inflation rate at the most, but it never is, it's always higher.
Yeah, of course.
Which means you get inflation, so the system builds inflation in.
So why do we pay taxes?
To help, because there is missing money.
Because somewhere along the line, they didn't make this debit credit thing balance out.
It's never balanced.
They were supposed to be balanced.
If they put a constitutional amendment to balance it, then you wouldn't have this issue.
You probably wouldn't need to pay taxes.
But then we'd all be broke.
There wouldn't be any potholes fixed.
And they're not potholes anyway.
They send the money to Ukraine.
Okay, I got the answer to why do we pay taxes.
This is not a good system.
No, it's a great system.
We pay taxes to support the military-industrial complex.
There it is.
That's literally where our money goes, and to pay off the rent, the interest, the interest of the money we printed.
And the interest for the bond money mismatch.
Is this a sustainable system?
Long term.
It's been going for a long time.
It's been going since, I'd say since 1913.
Yes, that would be the correct date, yes.
It's been sustainable with a couple of hiccups.
Yeah, like that little hiccup where we had to confiscate everybody's gold.
That was one hiccup.
That's one hiccup.
The other hiccup is dropping gold altogether from the calculation.
That was Nixon's hiccup.
But the real hiccups were 1930 depression, 1970s depression, the crash of 2008-2009, and that comes and goes.
It's the business cycle.
And COVID!
It's the business cycle.
And what is the best way to keep this going?
War.
War is good.
Isn't that what they always do?
That is Marxist economy.
A Marxist economist, that's their basis for making these calculations.
Yes.
Oh, so you, oh, hold on a second.
So, so the Marxists like war because it helps them with their system?
No, I don't know if they like war or not, but it seems that they might.
When they see capitalism, they like to interpret it as needing wars to exist.
It's like a slam on capitalism, but it's a Marxist economic theory that wars benefit capitalism.
I'm just getting this from other Marxists.
I mean, you know, I'm not one.
At the meeting?
Did you have the meeting?
When I had the cell meeting the other day, they were bringing this up yet again.
I loved watching some of the Berkshire Hathaway big meeting in Omaha.
They have their annual meeting.
Of course, this is a sad meeting.
Is Munger still alive?
No, he's dead.
Oh, he died finally, okay.
Yeah, at 99.
And so here's Warren Buffett without... I think he even referenced someone as Charlie for a moment.
He forgot that he was dead.
And they have like $188 billion in cash.
And Warren Buffett's saying, this is great.
We just leave it in money markets.
We just leave it in treasuries for three months, six months.
We're not going to invest in any dumb companies.
But Warren, but Warren, but Warren, what about AI, Warren?
What about AI?
When you think of the potential for scamming people, you can reproduce Images that I can't even tell to say I need money.
You know, I'm, you know, it's your daughter.
I've just had a had a car crash.
I need $50,000 wired.
I mean scamming has always been part of the American scene.
This would make me If I was interested in investing in scamming, it's going to be the growth industry of all time, and it's enabled in a way.
Obviously, AI has potential for good things, too.
But I don't know how you, based on the one I saw recently, I practically would send money to myself over in some crazy country.
So, I don't have any advice on that.
You know, I think he nails it.
Rambling.
Oh, it went on for hours.
But I think he nails it though.
All of this is good for, but he didn't quite nail it.
He said for scamming and for comedy.
So far we have seen no other actual use.
Yes.
For AI.
Spot art.
Yes, art.
Um, you know, 60 Minutes did a huge thing.
Oh, Randy Travis.
Thanks to AI, he can sing again.
Oh, boy.
I didn't know he could.
No, he had some horrible illness.
Oh, he had one of those throat issues.
Yeah.
Well, I think you may be summarizing.
I think you might be on to something.
I like that clip.
It's almost like a clip.
Borderline.
Borderline, but not... because he's hard to hear him.
I know.
Well, I can't help that.
idea that AI is good for humor definitely yeah did you see the but oh god there's one thing the Biden oh the Biden pooping best use of AI this year we we need to do the no agenda AI awards there you go best uh best uh category for fake video goes to cat turd I'm I'm in!
Cat Turn!
Since I've been pushing for some sort of awards from our show.
There's our awards.
The AI Podcast Awards.
We'll just throw podcast in there to give it some validity.
But it's not about podcasts at all.
So the A.I.
Podcast Awards, because we do the awards on podcasts and we hand out the best.
Well, A.I.
and here's here's fake voice.
Yeah.
Best fake voice.
Best.
And of course, we have to have an R-rated category.
Best R-rated picture of Taylor Swift.
Oh, Taylor Swift.
It's his own category altogether.
Yeah.
And we should say best AI spokeshole.
Dear members of the media and the public, I welcome you.
My name is Victoria Shi.
I have been created by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, using artificial intelligence to provide you with timely and high-quality information on consular affairs.
I am a digital person.
That means that the text you hear was not read by a real person.
It was generated by artificial intelligence.
I will carry out a number of tasks.
First and foremost, I will inform the public, providing timely and verified information from Ukraine's consular service.
Oh, wow!
It's... yeah, have you seen her?
Big catch!
Have you seen her?
Have you seen the video?
No, I have not seen her.
I know, but you know, you have to remember that the Japanese had an AI girl who's extremely famous in Japan.
Somebody, one of our Japanese producers can remember the name of this woman.
Oh, I know who you're talking about, yeah.
Yeah, and it was a face, and she was a celebrity, but she was completely...
A computer generated.
But it was called back then when she came around.
This is five, six, seven, eight years ago when she showed up.
This was called computer generated.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Like Max Headroom.
Like Max Headroom.
Yes, like Max Headroom, exactly.
He can be one of our celebrity judges, Max Headroom.
Yeah, he'd have to have his head jerking around a lot.
Yeah, one of those guys.
Hey, I think we're on to something here.
It's begging.
The AI world is begging for an award show.
Oh yes, they need it.
They do, and we can tell everyone, hey listen, just in case you win, wink wink, nudge nudge, I think it's possible you might have won.
Could you please do an acceptance speech for us, really funny?
So the show creates itself.
A couple of things about, if you want to take it to the limit, a couple of things that should be noted.
One, yes, you do that, you bribe people with awards to get them to speak.
Lifetime Achievement Award.
But the other thing is, not right away, but I'd say within a couple of years, probably within three, To get nominated, you have to pay a fee.
Oh, of course!
No, this is how it works.
There's an entrance fee.
That's how we make our money.
It's a reasonable fee.
Yeah, it's $2,000.
That's how we make money.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then we make money on the catering for the gala.
Yeah, there has to be catering, there has to be a gala.
Red carpet.
Well, I don't know about that.
Well, maybe.
But some of the guys who do this stuff, you don't want to see them on the red carpet.
There are so many companies.
No, we're just doing it virtual.
We'll save money.
There are so many companies who have, you know, it'll be best.
We're not going to do a virtual.
We're going to have a real event.
Best prompt jockey.
Think about it.
That's going to be hard.
Here's the problem with that.
I would say not.
We're going to sell merch.
Yeah, merch.
Lots of somebody else could do the merch.
We don't have to do it.
We just job it out.
But I would say I don't like the prompt jockey thing is going to be tough because what you're doing is you're exposing somebody's employee to poaching.
Yeah.
OK.
They're not going to go for that.
But we can definitely get a whole bunch of comedians to judge the funniest memes, you know, the funniest video memes, the funniest... You have a panel.
And then, you know, best faked leaked audio.
Oh yeah, we can sit down and do the categories.
Okay, good.
Alright, so we'll do that.
It's a done deal.
Alright, exit strategy!
Beautiful.
Well no, I think we can still do the show.
How disappointing now.
Now let's go talk to somebody, let's listen to somebody who knows all about AI, who is all in and actually calls it the AIs, which I think we need to start adopting.
It's not AI, it's the AIs.
And that's Bill Gates.
And he's back on the scene with Hannah Ritchie.
This is his Unconfuse Me podcast.
And something's really weird with Bill.
I mean, okay, something's always weird with Bill.
He has a neurological disorder.
Is something with his right arm?
His left shoulder was up, his right arm was... He never moved, really, his right arm?
Yeah, he's got some issue.
And he also has Vax.
I think Vax.
A Parkinson's problem.
Oh.
I feel sorry about that.
But anyway, we're still going to make fun of him.
My guest is Dr. Hannah Ritchie, a data scientist and researcher at the University of Oxford, also head of research for Our World in Data.
She's just coming out with a fantastic new book called Not the End of the World.
Welcome, Hannah.
It's a pleasure to be here.
It's a pleasure to be here.
Okay, so now we're going to get into it about the power of AI.
Is there something that you've changed your mind about recently?
I spent a lot of time in the technology world and I have to say I was very stunned how the A.I.s went from basically not being able to read or write at all to doing that in a very facile way.
Still very imperfect, but it kind of blew my mind.
I had challenged people to pass a test and thought they might never, at least it would take them years, but within a few months They were able to do it.
So now, you know, I'm thinking about, wow, how do we use this in education and health and various environmental challenges?
So the power of these AIs, I mispredicted that and I'm reformed.
He's reformed!
He believes in the power of the AIs.
This is very weird to say the A.I.s.
It's like he's like talking about the gods.
The power of the A.I.s.
The A.I.s.
I'm reformed.
I believe in the power of the A.I.s.
Our new god.
So what do you think Bill is thinking about really?
If we're using the power of the A.I.s.
Any ideas?
What could this?
Yeah.
mRNA vaccines.
Now creepier.
Think creepier.
Creepier.
Yeah, creepier.
He wants to clone himself.
I have no idea.
Close.
Do you think AI will play a role in climate action?
Well, absolutely, because our ability to model complex phenomena... Wait, hold on a second.
Stop the podcast.
He just pulled the emergency brake!
Didn't Bill introduce her and isn't this his podcast?
I know, that's what's so interesting.
I'm glad you picked up on that.
So how did it turn around where he's being interviewed now?
What kind of a podcast host is that?
This is the new format.
I think it's revolutionary.
I give him two thumbs up for this concept.
I like it.
I like it a lot.
Let's go back.
Do you think AI will play a role in climate action?
Well, absolutely, because our ability to model complex phenomena, the AIs are helping a lot with that.
So, for example, looking at the genetics of cows and saying, hey, some cows ...emit a lot of methane and some emit very, very little.
And some cows survive in hot weather very well and some do not.
And then along with our ability to edit genes, one of the most dramatic source of emissions that at one time I...
I wasn't sure the path forward.
Now we can see either making the cows better or various techniques where they create meat without the cow.
There it is!
We create meat without the cow!
There's even a new, in the Netherlands, they're promoting farmerless meats.
This is my favorite.
Meat without the farmer.
That's the way to go.
So Bill is all in on the climate change, making meat without the cow, and probably some more here.
Let's see what else he has.
Even the weather modeling piece, now AI is being applied to that, both the long term, which is kind of those climate models, but say telling a farmer in Africa, based on the weather, should they go ahead and plant?
Now, or is it going to be so dry?
You know, they used to always plant at the first rain, but if you know that's anomalous, you know, then you shouldn't plant.
And so the AIs are really starting to help us with very practical problems.
This is bullcrap!
Did he say AIs?
You keep saying it, the AI.
I'm telling you, the guy is looking at the AIs as the gods.
He's reformed, remember?
The A.I.s.
So the A.I.s... I wish I had the MRNA clip that he just did, too, on USA Today, where he's, like, going off the deep end.
No, don't worry.
He's lost it.
There's more, because he has... There's more?
Oh, yeah.
Wait, there's more!
So, remember...
You're making cow mooing noises.
It's very inappropriate.
It's AI.
And remember that we just had this bird flu scare, which is not over, but oh, it wasn't in the ground beef.
Oh, thank God.
It might be in the milk, but it's in the ground beef.
But when people, you know, people listen very poorly to the news and they hear breaking, breaking, breaking, ground beef, bird flu.
I guarantee you that people are like, well, maybe we should just have some chicken tonight.
Yeah, man, I'm not so sure I want to have some.
I heard something about ground beef.
I don't like it.
And they're all jumping in on it.
I would have to say if it wasn't planned, man, they really picked up quick because the fake meat people are back.
They're not going to give up.
They're all in, including Bill.
For you, what's an area where new data kind of changed your view of things?
So my general framework for change on many of these technologies is that if you generate alternative technology, which is as good as the original and is cheaper than the original, then people will just adopt it.
And I mean, that's true for energy sources.
I think people are not that bothered about what actually goes into the plug.
They just want reliable power.
I think one area where I'm a bit more skeptical of that framework now is in food.
Now, I'm a big fan of meat substitutes.
I love Impossible Burger, Beyond Meat Burger.
Like, I'm a vegan, so I eat this stuff all the time.
I think I had this framework in my head that if they just got cheap enough and tasted good, that people would just Make that switch.
I'm now becoming much more skeptical that it will be as easy as that.
I think there will just be this inherent resistance from many people that it's not me, so I'm not going to make the switch.
So to me, I'm leaning more towards I think if we're going to see this large-scale change in dietary habits, you basically need to generate meat, which would be lab-grown meat, for example, when it's not just a plant-based substitute for that, but it's the actual thing, just without the cow or the chicken.
I'm telling you that this is not a coincidence.
Bill Gates, and he's clearly interested in anything modifying cows.
He's like, no, we just need to go to lab-grown meat.
And it's on the radar all over the place.
Well, good luck.
Top sto- ah!
Hey, I think there's a path for these nut jobs.
Here's Tom Lamas with the top story!
Top story on NBC!
I'm joined tonight by Tom Rosmeisel.
He's the head of global marketing at GoodMeat, one of just two cultivated meat companies.
Let's just bring in the guy who's the head of global marketing.
Don't you think that's kind of suspicious?
Well...
It depends on what the story's about.
Is it about global marketing, or... Well, it's about, uh... Or is it about this meat thing stuff, or how is this even news?
This is a native ad is what you're about to play here.
Yes, correct.
Well, it's because of a debate going on in Florida.
We meet companies in the U.S.
that have been approved by the FDA to sell their products, and Representative Dean Black, who is a Republican member of Florida's state legislature, but, and an important but here, he's also a cattle rancher.
We thank you both for joining Top Story tonight.
I'm looking forward to a spirited debate.
Tom, I'm going to play a video for our viewers now that our great directors are going to watch.
Spirited debate.
I mean, come on.
We're looking forward to a spirited debate here on the TV show.
Walk our viewers through what we're looking here.
So the meat's built or assembled, I guess, in these...
He said assembled.
First he says built and then assembled.
Both equally bad.
Built or assembled, I guess, in these metal containers.
And then it comes out and it looks just like a filet, right?
I mean, if I were to buy that at the grocery store, I would know the difference.
Oh yeah, if you're an idiot.
It looks like a chicken filet.
My question to you is, what does it taste like?
It tastes like chicken.
People are going to fall for this, John.
People are going to... I can predict it right now.
This global warming nonsense has been going on for... In fact, I have a call out for our producers.
We have a Best Of show coming up for the, I think, Sunday the 26th.
And Sir Deanonymous has upgraded bingit.io.
I mean, he has done a phenomenal job.
You can search every single episode of the No Agenda Show.
And you can also now sort those results in reverse chronological order.
I'm going to put together a global warming slash climate change special.
I did one already.
Yeah, you just did clips.
But now you can get us talking and there's a lot of stuff that's not clips.
It's just conversations.
That would be a nice show.
I think it would be a great show and I'd like producers to go to bingit.io and search because it goes back to episode 3.
We were talking about this nonsense.
And it's been the same for almost 17 years.
Can I interrupt your pace and flow for a second?
Please.
We have to do two donation segments today.
Oh, I know.
I was already thinking about that.
I just wanted to confirm.
I think we're just back to two.
I mean, I love it.
I thought everyone felt very comfortable.
Yeah.
Here's what we need is we need the art generator to come back online.
Oh, is it dead?
Let me check if it's back online by now.
Nope, it's dead.
It's dead, Jim.
NoahJendaArtGenerator.com is dead as a doornail.
Yeah, getting that cloud flare thing.
Okay, so let's just continue for a little bit, because I think I can tell you... Well, how about, let me see...
So the theme of your little presentation here is fake meat.
Fake meat, yes.
Fake meat, which was precipitated by the fake scare about the fake bird flu.
And so now the fake meat people are out all over the place.
Tom, what do you say to that?
What's your response?
So you're equating the bird flu bull crap that came and went with fake meat.
The impetus for fake meat as part of a long arc.
A setup.
A big setup.
Wow.
Bill Gates has an investment in the fake meat company.
Well, good for him.
He's bought time he lost on some of his investments.
Yeah, I'm just going to take the other side of that.
I think they're going to make it happen, and I'm going to tell you how.
I'm going to tell you how.
First, let's get another one.
I'm going to skip around these clips.
I don't want to bore you too much before I get to it.
What culture and politics would be at play here?
I mean, you should ask Representative Black.
There are no credible safety concerns coming from the legislature about this.
So, you know, if politicians want to say, hey, we don't like this meat, that may play well with some consumers.
But, you know, ultimately, consumers should decide what meat they want to buy or not buy.
OK, so here's...
Now we're going to get some of the reasons why we need lab-grown meat.
Tom, does the country need this right now?
And would your meat be more affordable?
I mean, give me the top three reasons why America needs this right now.
That's a good question.
Yeah, so the number one reason is environmental.
So we're growing just the meat that is consumed by a consumer.
We're not growing a beak or an intestine or fur or tendons or anything like that.
So we have the ability to grow meat much more efficiently than the conventional way?
Yes.
We grow meat better than cows, okay?
And that's going to be really important.
I mean, the protein requirements of the planet are going to double between now and 2050.
Redefining protein as we suggested would happen.
So adding another tool to be able to sustainably make protein is going to be really important.
It's not going to replace conventional meat.
We're not advocating for that.
Certainly that's not being expected from the Florida legislature.
But consumers should decide.
They should be able to go to a grocery store and determine what type of safe and approved meat they want.
Okay, so it comes down to one thing.
Sorry?
Not to interrupt you, but I want to say that is the mistake they're making.
Consumers will not decide in favor of lab-grown meat.
Consumers are not so stupid that they think that lab-grown meat's better, and all they need is just a kind of a kickoff, hey, you know, there's amino acids, there's all kinds of who knows what mystery elements and vitamins in real meat that the body needs over it because of evolutionary factors.
That is not going to be in lab-grown anything.
You are correct about the quality of the products, that it will be very bad for humans.
I believe you're incorrect about consumers being stupid.
A, a lot of consumers took a gene therapy that it had no business injecting into their body.
Stupid?
I don't know.
It depends on how it's positioned by the authorities and the science.
Millions of people have been psyoped into buying an electric vehicle because, oh, it's going to save the climate, it's going to save the world, it's going to change everything, and these are the saps that are standing by the side of the road when it's too hot, when it's too cold, their car is worth 30% less the minute they drive it off the lot, 50% within six months.
Yes, consumers are stupid when lied to.
Particularly by people of authority like, I don't know, Elon Musk.
So what is the ticket?
Why did they, what is the ticket into getting people to buy the cheap meat?
Listen to this last clip.
Right now is it cheaper or more expensive than regular meat?
Yeah, right now it's more expensive.
We've got a lot of steps in order to scale our technology.
It's going to take a lot of time to get there.
But that's true of all new industries.
You know, when cars came out, they were very expensive.
Cell phones, electric vehicles, you name it.
There's always a process when you're scaling up a new technology.
And what was the solution for the electric vehicles?
$5,000 subsidy from the government.
It's coming for fake meat.
Guaranteed.
If you buy the fake meat, it's going to be cheaper because of these subsidies to the supermarket, to the producers, however they do it.
Yes, I think that that is going to happen.
I know you don't, you disagree.
You disagree clearly.
Well, I'm gonna give you a little... I'll give you that.
I'll give you the possibilities that they're gonna chicken shit their way into this by giving away money, American taxpayer money, to make it so it looks more appealing.
We print it!
Who cares?
We print it!
But... but...
Even cheaper.
It's going to if it's cheap, it's actually going to be a mistake because of the way the mind works.
It's going to be a cheap lab grown substitute for real chicken, which is cheap anyway.
But OK, let's just say it's a cheap lab grown chicken meat and it's going to look this is cheaper as we can save a little money.
Oh, I don't know.
It looks cheap.
It's cheap.
It's going to be seen as cheap junk.
I think there's a huge hurdle to get over if you're going to pull this stunt where you think you're going to sell the public lab-grown, you know, some slush.
It's not, they're never going to get this right.
Have you walked through a regular old supermarket recently?
I walk through regular old supermarkets all the time.
It looks like Disneyland.
It's nothing but colored packages with sugar and chemicals.
People are eating chemicals and sugar all day long.
Here we go again.
Yeah, and you think, oh, I want some good quality chicken.
Do you buy meat and chicken at the supermarket?
I've bought meat and chicken at the supermarket.
I don't normally.
I usually just buy giant slabs of stuff.
Yeah, where do you buy it?
Costco?
I buy Costco junk.
Yeah, I buy me a Costco.
You are a discerning consumer who's smart.
You're also from the silent generation.
You know good food.
I am not from the silent generation.
I'm a baby boomer.
Don't associate me with them.
I'm sorry.
Mistake, mistake.
I meant the boomer.
Of course, you're smart.
But the people who are eating junk, they're sugar addicts.
They're going to be like, hey, have you tried this new chicken?
It tastes great.
Texture is fantastic.
Tell that to the stock market and Beyond Meats.
It's coming.
Beyond Meats.
Oh, here it is.
This is our fake hamburger.
They had electric vehicles in 1912.
They just needed a reboot.
They needed Elon.
They didn't have Elon at the time.
You cannot tell me that the electric vehicle has been a great idea.
Can you?
I don't think so.
No.
I mean, it would be if they had the one, if they used the technology, which I think they're using in some parts of China, where you go, you take your electric vehicle, you drive into the recharging station, they swap out your entire battery pack and put a new one in, and you drive off in 15 seconds.
All right, fine.
Fine, fine.
All of it sucks.
It sucks.
It's no good.
All right.
I just hope people... Go to beefinitiative.com, everybody.
Make sure you find a rancher near you.
There we go again.
Because it's coming.
It's coming.
And you know, this is my favorite.
So they had on Dean Black, some House representative.
He's probably from Florida.
And on the off chance that I'm right, About what?
About lab meat.
About people going all in on lab meat.
Oh, that people are going to be lapping it up.
Yes.
On the off chance, he brings up a really good point.
There is a lot of research and development still to be done.
And I'll agree that in order for it to be competitive, it would have to be scaled up.
And if you scale this up, that brings up my second objection, which pertains to China.
Look, communist China and communist countries have a history of collectivizing agriculture and food production.
And they use that to control their populations.
And for this to make sense, it will have to be concentrated in large factories.
And look, we are in a very tense geopolitical time with China, North Korea, Iran.
And if you concentrate your protein production in a few major factories, you're a few missile strikes from an instant famine.
Yeah.
I like that.
I like it a lot.
I like it a lot.
And then I'll just play this final clip because anything that comes from the Netherlands is dynamite.
Again, we're redefining protein.
Of course, I'm all in with you that no lab-grown meat, anything, can have any of the goodness that's inside actual animal protein.
I don't eat much chicken at all.
I don't trust any chicken from anywhere.
I don't trust any chicken.
I don't trust any salmon.
You trust salmon?
You trust salmon from anywhere?
I don't think so.
What happened to Dame Elyse from, uh... She must have gone overboard.
Remember she was in Alaska?
She would send us salmon from time to time?
Elyse Garling?
The Garland girl?
Garling, yeah.
Elyse Garling.
Garland, Garland.
I thought it was Garling.
Elyse Garling.
Well, whatever the case is, they are still up in Port Angeles.
I think they've bailed out.
They're overboard.
We haven't got, and more importantly, we haven't received any limoncello for the last five years.
More, more than that.
Her limoncello was off the hook.
It was so good.
Anyway, leave it to the, the, the farmerless meat country known as the Netherlands.
This is really, this is a marketing campaign.
Farmerless meat.
Can you believe it?
Instead of saying, it's not actual meat, no, it's farmerless meat.
Don't, just forget about the cow.
We don't need this stupid farmer, his wooden shoes.
No, and you want protein?
Introducing the Dutch Bugs Burgers.
At first glance, it looks like a normal hamburger.
But it's not just any old burger.
Because half of the meat patty consists of ground up insect larvae.
The Bugs Burger.
A bit dry, but it has nice flavor.
And I would definitely recommend it to my friends.
Yeah, listen.
The Dutch, it has nice meat flavor.
So I'm going to eat it.
It's very good.
I would recommend it to all my friends.
Dry, but it has nice flavor.
And I would definitely recommend it to my friends.
The main ingredient in Vera's Bucks Burger is ground lesser mealworms, the larvae of the darkling beetle.
The production of the insect burgers begins here, in the Dutch town of Ermelo.
The manufacturers have been breeding insects here for about 40 years, mainly as animal feed.
Give them cow feed!
What do you think the difference is between larvae for animal consumption and larvae for human consumption?
Is there a different process?
Suddenly?
You're making me sick!
What do you think the difference is between larvae for animal consumption and larvae for human consumption?
Is there a different process suddenly?
You're making me sick.
Or larvae for human consumption.
He performs regular checks on the quality of his worms.
Around 2 billion people around the world eat insects daily.
But it's still a big taboo in Europe.
Within five years I think we all eat a couple of times a year insects.
Worms are a sustainable source of energy containing 50% protein.
They only need a fraction of the space, water and feed that breeding higher orders of animals require.
Their CO2 emissions are minimal.
The larvae live for three months in these boxes where they consume grain.
When they're large enough to be harvested, they're flash frozen and shipped to customers.
Max Kramer and Baris Özil are the founders of Buxberger.
The founders first encountered edible insects during a world trip seven years ago.
That's how they got the idea to start their business.
When we first told friends, family, and acquaintances about our idea, most of them said we were crazy, that there's no way it would work.
In the meantime, everybody thinks what we're doing is cool.
And the next thing they say is, hey, when can we finally try it out?
The ground mealworms are mixed with peas, water, and a secret spice mixture.
The burger will lead to less meat being eaten.
That will be good for the environment because less grain will be used for cattle feed.
And the insects are also climate friendly.
A few restaurants in Belgium and the Netherlands already have Bucks burgers on their menu.
The exotic hamburgers cost between 12 and 17 euros.
God, they cost a fortune!
They're going to be subsidized!
Your subsidized theory, I have to say, is probably the only thing that's going to save this industry.
But it's disgusting.
I'll give you a clip of the day for that one.
Oh, thank you.
I find it by accident.
It's the most disgusting clip of the day.
Probably for a long time.
It's in our future.
It's in our future.
Yes.
They've been promising.
They've been threatening us with this forever.
All we do is laugh.
Old Carson shows I've been watching and they talk about it in the late 70s.
All we do is laugh.
All we do is laugh.
And then one day you're gonna wake up... One day you're gonna wake up and you're still not gonna eat a burger.
And it's gonna be, Mr. Dvorak, I'm sorry you can't buy any beef on your credit card because you drive a Lexus!
An old one!
A dirty... It has a motor in it.
A dirty, a dirty motorized Lexus, Mr. Dvorak.
Do you know how much improvement we've made on the Lexus in the 25 years since you bought that vehicle, Mr. Dvorak?
You are a dirty polluter.
Carbon criminal.
You're a carbon criminal.
That's another good show title.
I'm just rocking it today.
You're a carbon criminal.
You are.
You're kicking ass.
Carbon criminal.
And then, I'm sorry, it won't work.
Well, I have the cars built before they put in the devices that could be remotely shut you down.
I know.
They're coming for you.
Anyway, it's just a little... All I'm saying is, get to know a rancher somewhere because when it comes down to it... Yeah, yeah, here we go again.
Look, there's no money in this for me.
No, we know this.
You get free meat.
No, I do not!
Well, you should!
What kind of deal is this?
Because I'm not like that.
Ranchers can't give away... Because I'm not like that.
No, I'm not.
Well, that's how you and I differ.
Okay, point made.
I just want you to know, there's no benefit to me and there's no benefit to Texas Slim or anybody else.
The ranchers are running at capacity, so you better get in while stocks last.
Otherwise, it's just going to be over.
It's okay.
I mean, I'm just here to help people.
Didn't you hear that?
First law of no agenda here to help people.
Yeah, I think that is the first law of no agenda.
Here to help people.
Alright.
Well, I got a bunch of different things.
I got Russia versus the Fallen Gong, which I thought was funny.
I got bank laundering, another bank caught being a money laundering operation.
Oh, that's good.
You like that?
Yeah, of course.
Is that your exit strategy?
Why do these guys launder it when you can just print it?
Just make some for yourself and take it home.
There's TD Bank of all places.
Is that from TD America?
I don't know if it's from TD America or not.
Play it.
TD Bank helping China launder fentanyl money according to the Justice Department.
The Wall Street Journal reports an operation was uncovered in New York and New Jersey which laundered hundreds of millions of dollars in illegal drug money via TD Bank and other banks.
This is TD.
I knew I recognized it from my day trading days.
TD is from TD.
T.D.
Ameritrade and I believe they've been purchased by Wells Fargo and they had their headquarters in New Jersey.
These guys.
Let me see if they are owned by Wells Fargo.
I think so.
They're still in business.
They're in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.
Not Wells Fargo.
They're owned by Toronto Dominion.
That's where TD comes from.
I thought that someone bought them.
Okay, I could be wrong.
This is according to court files and people in the know.
Charles Schwab.
Charles Schwab.
I know that Charles Schwab bought their trading operation.
I don't know if they bought the bank.
According to court files and people in the know, Chinese money laundering organizations have gotten very good at shielding ill-gotten gains.
These organizations launder cartel cash quicker and cheaper than competitors, often with a money-back guarantee.
During a hearing on Chinese money laundering Tuesday, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said that Chinese money laundering organizations work with Mexican cartels to move fentanyl profits.
The Journal reports, according to court files in 2021, federal agents followed suspects through New York City streets as they carried giant bags of cash bank to bank.
On one occasion, They even caught suspects bribing TD employees.
They can make them look the other way when opening bank accounts using fictitious high-quality Chinese passports.
Federal investigator Ricardo Mayoral told lawmakers he's often seen these organizations engaging in bribery, which bypasses traditional detection systems.
So these guys also, they own the Nordstrom credit card?
They own the Target credit card?
This is quite the operation.
I'm digging this.
They have $450 billion in assets.
And was this anywhere on the quote-unquote mainstream news?
I've not heard of this at all.
In the Justice Department probe, the Chinese laundering organization offered $57,000 in bribes to TD employees.
This included gift cards.
The organization moved at least $653 million to thousands of entities in the U.S.
and Hong Kong, according to court documents.
The Justice Department is also investigating TD Bank for three other instances of money laundering.
A Canadian regulator fined it nearly $7 million on Wednesday.
TD Bank said Thursday it's cooperating with law enforcement and strengthening its anti-money laundering program.
Yeah, but people buying $3 of Bitcoin, go arrest them.
Please.
Because, you know, that's how criminals operate.
Ignore the guys with the fake passports carrying bags of money down the street.
The American dollar is still the best for corruption.
It's still the best.
Yeah, you know, criminal activity.
We're the best.
It's the best.
Well, you've always had this thesis, and I kind of agree with it, and it's very much proven true in the first Cocaine Cowboys movie, which people should see, which discussed the fact that half the banks in Florida were more or less supported as money laundering operations for the cocaine trade back in the 70s and 80s.
Great, great, great movie.
Yes, it's a great, great, great movie.
It's a recommender.
It's a recommender, for sure.
The second version, not so much.
I never even watch that.
Just the original.
Yeah, good old days.
Money Laundering.
Yes.
We're back!
Major bang, not a slouch.
But old school, with bags of cash.
I mean, you've got to hand it to them.
That is old school.
That's the best part.
That's very good.
I like it.
Good work, boys.
What else you got?
Well, we have another congressman.
Did you talk about corruption?
I think this is the congressman that was caught.
T.C.
It's under T.C.
Yeah, it's one of ours.
One of our Texas homeboys.
Democratic Congressman Henry Cuellar of Texas and his wife have been indicted on conspiracy and bribery charges.
The Justice Department says the case involves the couple's ties to Mexico and Azerbaijan.
The indictment says Cuellar and his wife accepted nearly $600,000 in bribes from an Azerbaijan-controlled energy company and a bank in Mexico from 2014 to 2021.
In exchange, Cuellar allegedly agreed to help Azerbaijan and the Mexican bank by advancing their interests in Congress.
Cuellar was at one time the co-chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus.
The indictment says Cuellar agreed to influence bills favorable to Azerbaijan and deliver a pro-Azerbaijan speech on the House floor.
Federal disclosures show that the congressman traveled to Azerbaijan... Wait, hold on a second.
This is excellent.
This is excellent.
So there's a guy, Cuellar, who is Mexican-American... Yeah.
Or just American, but he's closer to Mexico than... He's in Texas, and he somehow is representing Azerbaijan, and nobody's a little bit... What's going on with this guy?
Because everyone in Congress is on the take somewhere.
That's what it looks like.
And what I would hope is that people who just meme about this, and of course there's a lot of people who are not fans of the Democrat Party going, look at that, another one of them!
Yeah, why don't you go and vote?
Go and vote!
The Republicans who voted for the big bill and all the rest of it.
I want to talk about that too.
Disclosures show that the congressman traveled to Azerbaijan in 2013.
Two years later, Cuellar's office announced an agreement between a Texas university and an organization called the Assembly of Friends of Azerbaijan.
The Justice Department and the couple surrendered to authorities today and were taken into custody.
But see, this is, actually I have a follow-up.
This is the whole thing.
It's like, when someone is hanging out with the representatives from Azerbaijan, I mean, how is this the people's business, the people of Texas?
How is it helping the people of Texas?
Well, they made a relationship between the University of Texas and a school in Azerbaijan.
I mean, there's something there.
Oh, please.
So, you remember Gallagher, Representative Mike Gallagher?
He's the one that introduced the original Let's Steal TikTok bill.
Yes, we all remember him.
And he had a lot of lobbying money from Google, and so I've been waiting to see where he shows up, because he said he was going to resign.
Actually, he rescinded that, and he says, no, no, no, I'm going to resign.
He was going to resign on April 19th, but he moved his resignation to April 20th.
So that he could vote.
Like that when some stock options expire?
No, that was when we had the TikTok bill included in the military industrial complex defense industrial base bill, the hundred billion dollars, 95, 96, give or take, for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan.
So it was so important for him to vote.
And guess where he shows up?
He just got a job at Palantir.
A fine military industrial complex company.
And that's how it works.
I read into something the other day, it was sponsored by Palantir, and I'm thinking, oh brother, I'm spooked.
And here we are trying to make some money with an award show.
Yeah, but it's going to be a winner.
It's going to be a winner, Jerry.
We're doing it all the wrong way.
I have a CBS... Of course, we wanted to be a couple of corrupt jerk-offs.
Yeah, we could go do anything we wanted, but no.
Let's talk about the... This is more fun and people appreciate it.
It is.
I have a lot more fun.
Can you imagine having to be a crook?
Having to be a criminal, having to like hide money and shell companies and be worried.
And then having you, you're like this Cuellar guy, he got his wife arrested!
Well, that's what you do.
That's what, uh, I mean.
Take your wife with you.
I'm taking everybody with me.
All my relatives are going down.
Ultimately that, uh, what's the Congressman Bob, what's his name?
The other corrupt Democrat.
Mendez?
Yeah.
He threw his wife out there.
Hey, hey, she set it up.
Which she did!
His wife under the bus.
Which she did!
Yeah.
Alright, let's talk about, because, you know, obviously Mike Johnson got, he got the blame for, he gets the blame for everything, but then, you know, besides bringing this bill to the floor,
For for the aid to Israel which is the big was the big problem Then they said and you're not done son go out there and talk about anti-semitism being un-american and And we and we need a we need a bill.
We need a big virtue signal bill.
We need I got some clips I got I got a couple too.
I'd like to hear yours because No matter what side of the debate you stand on Congress shall make no law on Uh, what is the actual term to... Look at it, it's real short and sweet.
Yeah, there's an actual term.
It's not in, it's not in fringe.
Is it in fringe?
It's uh, I think it's in fringe.
Congress shall make no law... let's see if I can get the first... Congress shall make... respecting... prohibiting the free exercise... or abridging... I'm sorry, of course, I should have known... or abridging... abridging the freedom of speech or the right of the press or the right of the people to peaceably assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievance.
You know what?
While we're on this, before we go anywhere, since we're on the First Amendment, Again, Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.
This is the Establishment Clause which has been misconstrued into a separation of church and state.
And would you know it, there's an ad out there, there's some group that is trying to promote this.
This podcast is brought to you by Americans United for Separation of Church and State.
For more than 75 years, Americans United has defended your freedom to live as yourself and believe as you choose, so long as you don't harm others.
Core freedoms like abortion rights, marriage equality, public education, and even democracy itself Rest upon the wall of separation between church and state.
White Christian nationalists are attacking these freedoms, seeking to force us all to live by their narrow beliefs.
Americans United is fighting back.
Freedom without favor, and equality without exception.
Learn more about AU's work at au.org slash NBC.
Code Boncino.
Slash NBC?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's NBC.
What do you mean slash NBC?
Yeah.
Because this runs on NBC podcasts.
It's an NBC podcast?
Yeah.
This is an atheist podcast, by the way.
Yeah, of course.
I'm not, you know, a Christian nationalist by any means.
Not me.
You are.
I'm not.
And I tell you this, I spot atheists a mile away.
Code Bongino.
So anyway, so the abridging of, so what this, the way I understand it, and I have a couple clips too, but I want to hear yours first.
This resolution, which really only resulted in, boy do we need Chevron deference to come to the Supreme Court soon.
...resulted in a proposal for the Department of Education to adapt Title VI, very similar to what they did with Title IX, where they said, hey, you know what, it's gender, whatever you identify as, you can't be discriminated against, so yeah, dudes, you can go into the women's locker room and toilets and all that.
And Title VI has now defined what anti-Semitism is, and then they bundle that all up, including the illegal chants, which we discussed, because somehow saying, from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free, is dangerous, very dangerous.
And it could spark something horrible and it's like yelling fire in a crowded theater, or it's fighting words, or somehow they've determined that they can write regulations, it's not even a law, but regulations against this type of speech.
And I don't think either one of us feel that that is a good idea or constitutional.
I would agree.
So, where did you get some clips from and what do we have?
So, I got these clips.
This is one of those discussions that take place on NTD where they bring a guy in and they yak, yak, yak about this particular thing with some ideas.
I only clipped these because there's points of interest in here.
Here we go.
This is MTD.
Joining me now to discuss the act is Jonathan Houlihan, General Counsel and Director of Legal Operations at Citizens Defending Freedom.
Jonathan, thanks for joining us to see you again.
Now, the House passed the Antisemitism Awareness Act in a bipartisan vote.
It's now waiting in the Senate.
Now, Congressman Mike Lawler, who introduced the bill, said on the House floor, quote, It is absurd to oppose this, that it somehow limits free speech, adding that calling for death to Jews isn't protected speech, it's anti-Semitic.
What is your analysis of this bill?
Well, this is an interesting bill.
I mean, you have conservatives and progressives that really band together in a lot of circumstances under the banner of free speech, which I agree in some circumstances, and here's why.
I mean, if you look at the Constitution, First Amendment Congress shall make up no law bridging the freedom of the press or freedom of speech.
So that's the First Amendment.
Some of the critics of this bill have said it's too broad, free speech will be chilled, and it really is outside the boundaries of the First Amendment.
That being said, this is really Content-based restriction, and that's okay sometimes, right?
What?
Whether it's obscenity, advocacy for breaking laws, convincing people to break laws, commit mayhem, all of those things are exceptions to the First Amendment.
I'm sorry?
Who is this?
You have to back it up again, I didn't write it down.
How is this an exception to the First Amendment?
He said that the exceptions to the First Amendment are things like threatening somebody, advocating riots.
Those are all exceptions to the First Amendment.
Yeah, but then he went into a whole bunch of other things.
I thought they were all part of the... I think they're all exceptions to the First Amendment, which is an extension of yelling fire in a theater, but you can't, you know, threaten somebody's life.
You can't threaten the president.
These are all First Amendment issues.
Right, but listen here, what he says... Content-based restriction?
And that's okay sometimes, right?
Whether it's obscenity... Obscenities?
Obscenities.
Obscenity used to be against the law and it's not, well, you know, that's a first... Obscenities.
Obscenities.
Obscenities?
You're the biggest violator?
What?
Advocacy for breaking laws, convincing people to break laws, commit mayhem, all of those things are exceptions to the First Amendment.
Fighting words, so it kind of falls in that bucket.
Now the issue is, is this content-based restriction with this bill narrowly tailored to a compelling government interest?
That's kind of the case law where it falls.
And I would say, I would agree that it is a little broad using this definition, and they should tailor it down a little more narrow to be very specific that these fighting words are calling for criminal activity.
What we've seen on these campuses is adherent.
It's not free speech.
It's violence.
It's not letting Jewish students pass.
All of those things are not protected speech.
So I get the aim of the bill, but we've got to be very careful when the government is trying to compel some type of content-based restriction.
All right, so let's just break this one down for one second.
From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.
Do you feel that that is a fighting word, that that is a call to violence?
Do I feel that way?
No.
Okay.
But I'm not Jewish.
Yeah, that doesn't matter.
And I can assume that some Jewish people might feel that way.
Okay, they can feel bad about it, but I mean, that's... It would hurt their feelings.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I misunderstood.
It's about hurt feelings.
I got it.
On the critics' side, Congressman Jerry Nadler called the bill misguided, adding that by effectively codifying those examples into Title VI, the measure threatens to chill constitutionally protected speech.
Speech that is critical of Israel alone does not constitute wrongful discrimination.
Help us understand the Title VI that's referenced here.
Well, yeah, I never thought I'd agree with Congressman Nadler on much.
But under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, that ensures university or college programs or activities that receive federal funding do not discriminate based on national origin, ancestry, characteristics, those type things.
Under Title VI, those schools are already supposed to be doing that.
So, for example, if they have these groups that are calling for violence, they're calling for death to Israel, all of these really horrible things, then those groups shouldn't be allowed to exist on campus.
They should be investigated and expelled because they're trying to further a criminal act of getting these intimidating students, those type of things.
So that shouldn't be tolerated in the first place because it goes beyond First Amendment rights.
So I do agree that Title VI is a mechanism already that already has mechanisms that can be enforced without adding to it.
And I would be very concerned about giving the Department of Education more authority.
Look, we've already seen what the Department of Education has done with gender.
I mean, they've redefined gender.
So we're going to give the Department of Education more authority to investigate students when they clearly can't even get biological sex correct?
Okay.
Alright, well good.
He redeems himself a little bit here.
Yeah, so we have Abbott with his, um, Paxton's Attorney General, but not Paxton, Paxton the Attorney General?
Yeah.
So he's suing over Title IX and saying, no, we're not going to adhere to that.
We're just not going to do that.
No, no, no.
And then in the same breath, he's like, um, May is Israel Awareness Month!
Like, ah.
It's like, okay, okay.
All right, let me see what this guy winds up with.
On that note, Congresswoman Harriet Hageman says the bill provides no actual relief for terrorized Jewish students and infringes on the First Amendment.
The Washington Post is saying the bill would create a clear definition of anti-Semitism in U.S.
law and then enable the Education Department to cut off funding to academic institutions that are found to tolerate such behavior.
Based on that definition, do you think the bill will effectively address anti-Semitism on campuses?
Not particularly.
I think what will address anti-Semitism is having chancellors and university presidents enforce the law and not allow these things to get out of hand.
By enabling the Department of Education to give them more authority, Again, Congress delegating their authority to unelected and unaccountable bureaucrats to conduct investigations is not the answer.
I mean, the answer is the rule of law and using the tools that are already in the toolkit.
It is not lawful to prevent students of Jewish ancestry to go to class.
It is not lawful to threaten or intimidate.
So there are laws on the books, and these chancellors and presidents of these universities need to show leadership and show courage.
And doing the right thing is not always easy, but they need to do the right thing here.
I'm just very skeptical of giving the Department of Education more authority, more deference, especially when it comes to our constitutional rights.
Ah, he says the word, deference.
Yeah.
I like that.
Okay, he's backing your good graces.
We totally need to.
I was talking, you know who came through town the other day?
We had dinner, some drinks for his birthday.
Was the oil baron?
And I'm saying so, you know, we're talking about what's going on, and he says, you know, should by any weird... First of all, he said all the Democrats he knows, and he travels in Austin, so lots of Democrats, he says, all my friends are like, they're on the outside, like, yeah, go Joe, but they tell me they're all voting for Trump.
Because they don't want to be ousted from the group from their other Democrat friends, who are probably also lying and are going to vote for Trump.
But he says it's actually bad for us because if Trump gets in, then the oil prices will kind of stay where they are and they're going to start going down.
He said that if Biden gets to go for another another go around, he says the oil prices will skyrocket.
He says it's been held down artificially by a whole bunch of means.
Well, I would have asked him.
I can still ask him.
So, yeah.
Well, the production of oil in this country is at the highest it's ever been, despite what Biden says.
But it's a fact.
Yeah.
And so I think he's just saying it's, you know, they're making a big fuss about petroleum because of the base of idiots.
And because of the high production going on here and I guess cutting off the Russian stuff maybe affected the whole scene.
The price of oil is too high now.
It's not too low.
It's not artificially low by any means.
No, no, but he says it could double.
He says it's crazy.
Well, I can see it going up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm just telling what my boy in the oil business says.
You know, I have no other... He probably has a feeling for it.
He's in the business after all.
He told about the EPA, you know, remember they had those, oh, you've got to shut off these things.
You've got leakage everywhere.
Leakage in the refineries.
Yeah, product is just going out the window.
He says that we have so much basically just free gas that is just out there that no one is building any plants for.
He says we can't even give it away.
Gas.
Natural gas.
We could power the country for a thousand years with all this gas that we're not allowed to do anything with.
It's just there.
I can believe that.
It's just there.
We also have 350 years that known reserves of coal that we could power the country with for 350 years, plus another thousand years of gas.
We could just be going like crazy for the next, you know, 1,500 years, it seems, and no one would blink an eye, but no, no, no.
Peak oil.
Peak oil, buy your electric vehicle, people.
Bring the grid down.
I'm driving around yesterday, the local driver, and I'm seeing all of the cars that are parked on the street and everywhere else, where are they going to charge?
You have to charge an electric car every night.
Yep.
How about Los Angeles?
Can you imagine being on the 10 with like 30% battery?
Yeah, I can imagine.
Or the 405.
It's no big deal because you're not moving.
And the electric car only uses energy when it's moving.
So you could sit there for hours on end.
How about your air conditioner?
Well, that would be chewing up some gas, some juice.
I got a couple of clips here from the Napster, Judge Nap.
Now when it comes to freedom, you want to be listening to Judge Napataliano.
Before you do that, you know, you brought up this idea of this group of people, you had a name for them, the counter-podcasters or something.
Oh, the controlled opportunists.
Yeah, those guys.
There's another, there's a third group.
Oh no.
And Napolitano is part of this third group, and he keeps bringing these ex-spooks.
Ritter, Ritter.
He's bringing Ritter on.
Scott Ritter, I think McGregor.
Yep, McGregor.
McGregor's in this third group, and there's another, there's Larry White, I think's his name.
He's another ex-spook.
I don't know.
Larry something.
And there's a bunch of these guys, and it's like, to me, because that group that you defined, I think there's another group, and I think that's this group, and Napolitano is right in the middle of it.
Well, I like him.
I don't like it when he has those guys on, because people will say, this is great, it explains everything.
Two hours of them.
Doesn't explain anything.
But he nails this one down the way I see this.
The House of Representatives voted by overwhelming numbers to define anti-Semitism in such a way that if you repeat certain phrases from the New Testament, you can be declared an anti-Semite.
Okay, let them say what they want about me.
But if you're a college professor or college administrator or you're a student and the college lets you say this, the college can actually lose federal funds.
Now, this is not the law yet.
The Senate hasn't hasn't voted on its version of this yet.
Joe Biden would probably sign up because he likes to curry favor with Prime Minister Netanyahu and his government.
But I would think that the first person harmed by this law would challenge it in a federal court and the first federal judge that sees this thing will invalidate it.
Because Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech basically means that you decide what to say and what to listen to.
And the government has no say in making those decisions.
Because the whole purpose of the First Amendment, this is right out of about two dozen Supreme Court opinions now, is to keep the government out of the business of speech.
He's a constitutional lawyer!
He would know!
Regarding the House of Representatives anti-Semitism bill, did all the members of Congress who voted for passage of the bill violate their oaths of office?
Yes, they did.
Oh yeah, this is where he's taking questions.
He's taking questions.
Okay, I want to mention something here.
You called this a resolution.
It appears to be an act.
No, it's HR.
It's a House resolution.
It's a resolution that resolves... There's no extra law being written here.
They're adapting Title VI.
That's just saying, hey, we think you should change Title VI, and the Department of Education goes... Yeah, the Department of Education is involved, yeah.
Chevron deference, get these people out.
Chevron deference has got to get into play sooner than later to knock this crap off.
Let me just say...
Congress would impress me if they said, we're writing a law, a bill, a law that says you cannot say this.
Then you would impress me with your big mouth.
But no, what they're doing is, you should change that regulation.
Because they don't have the balls, because they know it's completely unconstitutional.
So it's a resolution that says, Department of Education, you should change that.
Great question.
They violated their oaths of office because every one of them took the same oath I did when I became a state judge in New Jersey.
The president did when he became president.
A school board janitor takes, and that is fidelity to the Constitution, which includes the First Amendment.
Not the Constitution as they want it to be, but the Constitution as the courts have interpreted it.
Great question.
Okay, we'll do one more and then we're done with him.
Under H.R.
6090, the New Testament is anti-Semitic hate speech.
How can you swear on the Bible in court now?
How can they swear on the Bible when they take their oaths of office?
Great question and great observation.
Great question.
Statements made in the New Testament, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, the Acts of the Apostles and St.
Paul's letters, To the Hebrews, to the Romans, to the Colossians, to the Thessalonians.
All of that is hate speech under this despicable legislation that the House of Representatives passed yesterday.
I don't think the Senate's going to pass it, and it is inconceivable to me that a judge would allow it to last.
The first judge before whom it's challenged will enjoin its enforcement immediately.
So, just help me here, John.
I'm reading H.R.
6090, House Resolution.
It says at the top, an act, but there's an act, there's an acting.
That doesn't mean it's law.
Just help me understand, make sure I'm saying this right.
And it says, to provide for the consideration of a definition, so consideration, not this is what we define it as, consideration of a definition of anti-Semitism set forth by the International House of Pancakes, a Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, for the enforcement of federal anti-discrimination laws concerning education programs or activities, and for other purposes.
So they're asking for consideration of a definition.
They're designing something to throw at the Department.
I think what he said was right.
They're designing something to throw at the Department of Education to make them do a bunch of deferences, you know, a bunch of.
You're right.
Yes, correct.
Rules, a bunch of rules, and the rules are designed to apply to the colleges that get federal funding so they can hold the sword of Damocles over their heads.
Exactly.
And let them do their own thing.
I mean, I think everybody's right.
You're right.
He's right.
This is just a chicken kind of approach.
Do not want to do anything but, you know, pass it here.
You guys go do this for us.
Yeah, do this for us.
So we don't have to do it.
Exactly.
So we can look good in the process by voting yes.
And I would just remind everybody Chevron deference.
Chevron.
Chevron deference.
Chevron deference.
It is under review, will come up at the Supreme Court, and what that will force is a complete redo of how laws are written.
By agencies.
Yeah, so the agencies will no longer be able to interpret the laws.
The laws will be sent back to Congress and they will have to define exactly what the law is and not leave it up to the agencies, which would save our country.
If, if, if, if, if.
And of course the irony, I'll remind you because I think I wrote this up in a sub stack, the irony is that it all began during the Reagan administration.
Yes.
During a case where the EPA was, because Reagan told the EPA to back off!
And so they started changing their rules.
They backed off and they got sued by a climate change, you know, some climate people.
Climate critters.
It was a lawsuit and it was against Chevron for not having to follow the older rules because the EPA backed off.
And the courts decided, hey, the EPA, it's up to them.
They can do whatever they want.
And if they back off on the rules and make things easier on Chevron, that's just too bad.
That's just the way it is.
It became known as the Chevron deference.
But then it became an issue once it went the other way.
This is the problem with Republicans and Democrats.
Democrats get in and they crank the rules up in the other direction.
And now everyone says, oh, this is bad.
Well, it was fine during the Reagan administration, but now it's bad.
Exactly.
That's kind of a basic rundown.
It's a short path to healing.
It would be healing for our country.
But in reality, before that case, which was in the 80s, Congress had a little more responsibility in handing everything off to these quasi kangaroo court agencies.
I was part of that system.
Bloated.
You were part of it?
Yeah, when I was in the air pollution district.
It was a kangaroo court.
They had their own hearings and their hearing board and you had to stand up when the guys came into the hearing, you know.
For the agency?
For the guys in the agency?
No, they had their own court system.
Oh, wow.
All these agencies do.
They have their own little kangaroo court, and they'd bring people in, and the next thing you know, there's so-and-so, the head of the, whatever it was called, the board.
And everyone's standing, they all stand like it's a real judge.
All hail, all hail.
And they all sit down, and then they, you know, you guys are fined a million dollars for doing this and that and the other thing.
Okay, well, what are we going to do about it?
Nothing.
And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man who put the C's in the Carmen.
Criminals, ladies and gentlemen, say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr. John C. DeVore!
In the morning to you, Mr. Ambassador.
In the morning to you, Mr. Ambassador 1986.
Sunday sucks.
Well, I like all 1986 trolls who are listening in.
Some of them are in the troll room trolling away.
They got lots of stuff to say, especially the last couple of topics.
It's amazing.
And I want to remind everybody that we have, I know we don't, no one really knows how many people listen and downloads and what, and no one really knows.
We've never played that game, but it seems like there's a, You know, probably hundreds of thousands of people, more close to like 900,000 people on a monthly basis who listen to this podcast.
And we love celebrating our executive and associate executive producers.
That balances out because it's really only a couple percentage points of people who support the show.
If everybody, I'm not pitching for this because that's what NPR does and they're about to fold.
If everybody just supported us once a month with $5, I mean, can you imagine?
Can you imagine?
That's the myth.
Yeah, it's a myth.
It's the myth of podcasting.
But I want everyone to know that under the value for value system, when you do that, And people say, I'm broke.
Is there not one single thing?
If you find value in the show, if you're listening to the show, isn't that one moment in the month where you can say, I'm going to contribute some value back?
One less cappuccino?
I mean, it's just priorities.
I'm only asking.
Yeah, one less cappuccino.
If everybody, okay, let's say a cappuccino is four bucks at Starbucks.
It's probably more.
It's more.
Okay, let's say it's four bucks though.
We'll go easy.
If everybody gave us four, everybody, let's say close to a million people gave us four bucks a month, that would be $4 million a month we'd be making.
I can see where you think this is possible.
Oh no, it's not possible.
And wow, we made $50 million.
Yeah.
It's not going to happen.
We do exactly one month of a show and retire.
So it's not going to happen.
It's not.
But that's okay.
So just from time to time, when you hear us asking for support, consider us.
Do that.
I mean, I live by the same standard all the time.
People say, oh, You got some money for this?
You got some GoFundMe over here?
I live by the same rule.
And honestly, it's the giving that makes me feel good.
I do.
You probably don't.
Do you ever give money to anything online?
I haven't gotten... The cash flow is so lousy.
It's just horrible, man.
Uh, so to balance that out, people who clearly have more value to give, and that's just because of their situation, we give their titles, executive and associate executive producerships.
This stems from our, from our roots from Hollywood, because the producers, you think that they're like producing the movie, like, you know, calling the shots.
No, you're funding the operation.
So we have producers who produce in many different ways, a lot of ways.
And, and yeah, I mean, We probably can't thank our artists, we can't do a review of, let me see, but I mean we're also not going to have any art.
1656 Johnson Pivot, a very funny name, our artist Correct the record hadn't had a win for a couple of months.
Correct the record has been lagging, yeah.
And correct the record came back in with a very confusing piece of art, because yes, we actually used a piece of art that had kind of President Biden's face on it, and so Scaramanga, you know, the Dutch guy, he's like, what, is it okay now to use famous celebrities, or is it not okay?
Thinking something that's an exception is okay and it's going to happen over and over again is faulty thinking.
Well, Kenny Benn, in the same conversation, she had it right.
She says, another fine Dutch artist, Kenny Benn says, the only rule is, is it funny?
Does it hit a nerve?
And I would say we're always looking for something that makes us laugh.
Would you agree?
Absolutely.
The stuff that makes us, unless it's lewd.
Yes.
Because sometimes some lewd art will make us laugh, but then we go, you know, it's probably in bad taste.
Congress is going to outlaw lewd art soon enough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We also believe in more or less good taste.
Okay.
So.
It's true.
It's a fact.
We had Menthol Joe.
Of course, we know that President Biden is pandering to the black community, as he calls it, because it's all just in one zip code.
And, you know, they were banning menthol cigarettes.
And, you know, so now it's the most racist thing I've ever heard.
Hey, hey, blacks, don't worry.
We're going to let you smoke them up, your menthols.
It's unbelievable.
Don't lose the black vote.
No, no.
And then we even had a little thought, a little cartoon balloon there.
You ain't black!
Pointing out.
So, the hypocrisy of Menthol Joe made us chuckle.
It was a good piece.
You know, correct a record is one of those pros.
And just a great job.
There were some other ones I know that we considered, but noagendaartgenerator.com is currently down.
So hopefully Sir Paul Couture is okay and he's working on it and hopefully it's not too bad that we can have it up by the next show.
And we appreciate the work that all of our artists do.
We're sorry if it comes across as confusing.
But that's the art world, man.
It's how it rolls.
Hey man, it's how the art world rolls.
But typically we're able to critique all the pieces, but we can't do that today.
So thank you, Correct the Record.
A perfect example of time and talent given by our artists, and you can always check those out.
All of the art is used one way or the other in our chapters, which Dreb Scott puts together for us on the Modern Podcast Apps, podcastapps.com.
Now, to thank our executive and associate executive producers for episode 1,657, we kick it off with Sir Tommy Hawk from Iowa City, Iowa, 50424.
I have a feeling that may be $500 in the ad of the PayPal fees.
Uh, it's more than $4.24.
Okay, so, uh, is there a reason why $5.04?
Because, well, it was Cinco de Mayo, but that would have been $5.05, so... I don't know!
But it does say ITM, AC, JCD, Star Wars... Oh!
I see.
That's why it's $4.
50424, Star Wars Day donation.
Yes, may the fourth be with you.
From a future dementia patient listening at 1.5 speed.
Sorry to hear that.
Thankfully that won't happen within the next four years, so I'll just keep enjoying the best podcast in the universe.
Thanks for all you do.
Did you see that Mark Hamill, they rolled him out again?
Oh my god, Mark Hamill, you see the picture of him hugging Jean-Claude Pierre?
And he's also at the podium.
This is a violation of the Hatch Act.
Yes, and I can accentuate that.
With, uh, let me see, I had him here.
Using the White House podium to promote Joe Biden for president is illegal.
Yes, and then he was backstage in the press office and he recorded and posted this with a picture of Laser Eye Joe.
Hey, I'm Mark Hamill, and I'm voting for Joby Wankanobi.
And apparently they're handing out aviators now as swag in the White House.
Did you catch that?
No, I did not.
Yeah, you came out with aviators on.
It's all a violation of the Hatch Act.
Yeah, well, gee, okay.
Well, Mark Hamill, though, is just like, why would you lend yourself to that?
Because you like Joe.
You think Joe's sharp.
He's sharp as a tack.
And he's in the back room, so he gets to see Joe when he's sharp as a tack.
He's just throwing the zingers out there.
Hashtag show art, everybody, if you're planning on posting something that we can use as show art.
Hashtag show art.
Appreciate it.
Thank you, Sir Tommy Hawk.
Scott Graham's up.
He's in Portland, Oregon.
He had no note.
I couldn't find a note anyway, and he came in with 453.
So until he sends us a note, which we'll read later, we'll give him a double up karma.
Yes, we will.
Double ups.
You've got...
Moving on with 333.33.
We love that, sir.
EA of the tax domain from Clarkston, Michigan.
And he says, after wrapping up the bulk of tax season in April, I thought about the attached explanation of the U.S.
tax system.
Producers may find it of interest.
This donation takes me past barren level.
And he, I will put this in the show notes.
Let me see.
He sent us Let's see what he called this.
He called this, The Parable of Ten Men in a Bar.
Yeah.
It's a very long, I'll post it as a PDF, but it's, he says, it's one of the best analogies I've seen to explain the downfall of socialist taxation policies.
This is how income taxes are paid in the US.
And I'll post that so everyone can take a look at it.
It's kind of a brain twister, but when you look at it, you go, huh?
Huh.
Okay.
Huh.
Huh.
Why don't we just print it?
Just print it.
Sir Thinking Dad's up.
He's in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma at 333.33.
And he says the first season of the Thinking Dad podcast launches tomorrow with an exclusive interview with Alex Newman, founder of Liberty Sentinel Media, uncovering the dangerous global strategy to standardize education.
Yeah.
The Thinking Dad podcast Equips men to think biblically about family, faith, business, and culture.
Find it at ThinkingDad.net.
Adam, you have an open invitation to come on and talk about your faith, family, career.
Season one guests include Rick Green, Dr. George Barna, Kevin Sorbo, and many more heavy hitters.
And you'd fit right in perfectly.
Yeah!
Well, we know Rick Green.
ITM.
Yeah, Rick Ebnesorbo.
It's kind of a native ad, looks like to me.
I'm with it.
Yeah, but native ad with a promotional opportunity, John.
You can actually drive up to Broken Arrow and hang out.
I might do that.
Email me.
Sir Hold My Beer is in Austin, Texas, right down the road, 333-33-ITM, y'all.
Four more years!
Shout out to Linda Lou Patkin.
No jingles, no karma, sir.
Hold my beer.
You know Ashlyn Speed?
Our F4 Formula racer?
Yeah.
So she's out at Eagle Canyon, I think, racing today.
Yeah, I saw that picture.
It's a nice one.
Yeah, you see the picture of her?
She's next to the car, which has the No Agenda logo on it.
She's holding a can of Gigawatt Coffee Roaster's coffee, and she's holding up a Linda Lou Patkins sign.
She got all the sponsors!
Gigawatt coffee.
I'm running out, by the way, boys.
Light roasts, please.
I love it.
I love it.
Outstanding product.
I love it.
That was Sir Hurl My Beard, then I got Paul Heaney.
He's in Kremling, Kremling, Colorado. 333.33.
Working in Alabama.
That's where he is now.
Yeah.
Wondering where are the cicadas and I think there's another week or so to go.
And where is Mike Johnson's mouth?
Also, I need a de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
Yeah, that had a lot of people cracking up.
That was pretty good.
We move on to Dame Nancy from San Bruno, California, and she sent in a typed note.
Dear John, but I'll read it.
333.33.
I bought three doughnuts at Lunardi's yesterday for $8.77.
Stopped at the Arco to fill the tank gas was $5.69.
at Lunardi's yesterday for $8.77.
Stopped at the Arco to fill the tank gas with $5.69.
Inflation is killing us.
Producers should realize inflation also hurts John and Adam.
They buy groceries, too.
Yes, we do.
So donate.
Thanks for all the deconstruction.
It's appreciated sincerely.
Dame Nancy of the Confused.
And we appreciate you, Dame Nancy.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
And we have gasoline cars.
Yeah, we do.
Well, you do.
Bill in Charlotte, North Carolina, 333.
He says, ITM, and thank you for all your amygdala-shrinking media analysis.
ITM to all the No Agenda community in the greater Charlotte metro.
I'm going to make one of those thirsty Thursdays soon.
Okay, yeah, those are the big ones.
Those are the big meetups in Charlotte.
PJ is in New York City, our first Associate Executive Producer, 222.22, and PJ says, get John's newsletter and check out Adam's Boostagram Ball.
That's right, BoostagramBall.com.
Love is lit, karma for all.
Thank you very much, PJ.
Short and sweet.
You've got karma.
Felix Cornici in Farmington, Connecticut.
220.
And he wants relationship karma.
Yeah, another short and sweet note.
You've got karma.
Jason Christian is in Seattle, Washington.
Comes in with 210.60.
Thank you for your logic.
That's a new one.
Thank you for your logic.
I did not accept the jab into my life and have adopted Adam's phrase, we know it's not effective.
Is that my phrase?
No, but it's a good phrase.
It's a good phrase.
We're safe.
Sir Friday of the Hot Shop turned me on to your show, and currently we have our Art Glass Show at Montauk Gallery in San Fran.
Montague.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Montague.
Thank you.
Montague.
Where's the Montague Gallery in San Francisco?
I don't know.
I have to go over there because he left a book for me.
I have to go pick it up.
Oh, but take some pictures.
I want to see this Art Glass Show.
That sounds cool.
Yeah, Art Glass is a big deal.
What do you mean?
It's a big deal.
It's especially in the Pacific Northwest where it was really kind of popularized by Galuli, Gahuli, whatever his name, Galuli, who I met on a ferry boat once.
I bet it was a ferry boat.
Yeah.
Hey, now, don't we have Texas hot glass here in Texas?
She makes... I think it's okay.
Is it different?
A lot of people do it and it's just hot stuff.
Anyway, Gigawatt Coffee's up and he's in Bensonville, Illinois, 20505.
And he says, hey, happy Cinco de Mayo, a little observed holiday in Mexico, but ingenious beer companies co-opted in the 1980s to sell Cerveza.
Edward Bernays would be proud, but we do need an excuse for tacos, tecate, and tequila.
I think not.
Can I get a kind of a discombobulated note?
I think not.
Can I get a Spanish in the morning jingle?
By the way, coffee is a great cure for May 6 tequila hangovers, so visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20% off your order.
Stay caffeinated, Eli the Coffee Guy.
Bola manana!
Stephanie, 201, and she also has a note.
Let me see what Stephanie's note is here.
Dear John Adam, this marks my first donation after finding the show in late December.
Apologies for the delay.
I wish I could send more.
No, no, no, thank you.
It's a nice card, by the way.
Her card says, with gratitude, you're amazing.
Very nice.
No agenda has changed my life since December.
I've been dragging my feet to write this letter because I don't have the words to show my appreciation for all that you both do.
Well, you just said it.
Thank you.
As an aside, please see the rest of my note in close.
Apologies for the lengthy note.
Feel free to read as much or as little on the show.
And she also wants to be on the birthday list, which she's on, before she turns 30 on May 6.
Where's the rest of this note?
Oh, it's a separate PDF.
Let me just take a look here.
Oh, very long.
That's where I was put aside.
Well, she said, I think Adam will get a kick out of the fact that his deconstruction of the most recent legislation was the push I needed to get this letter out.
Specifically, the dollars allocated to the Department of Energy for science, along with the emerging and never-ending clips of new science related to climate change.
Thank you.
Very nice note.
I appreciate it.
We both appreciate that you sent that.
And thank you and welcome.
You've been deduced.
She didn't ask for it, but she deserves it.
Thank you.
Welcome to No Agenda Nation, Stephanie.
Linda Lupatkin, there she is in Lakewood, Colorado.
Jobs, karma is what she wants.
And she also has this message for a competitive edge.
Go to ImageMakersInc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs.
That's ImageMakersInc with a K. Or just find Linda Lupatkin, Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes.
Also plugged by other people on this list, but she's on the producer's list.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs!
Karma.
And we finish up the list.
We got two more.
Dennis Price, Pine Grove, California, 200.
He says, I've been donating $200 annually for years and go back to the days with Leo, Cranky Geeks, good times.
Thank you.
This is a beautiful way to support the show.
You both have strong political beliefs, but they seldom, if ever, leak into the show.
We all appreciate that.
Thanks.
Dennis from Pine Grove, California.
Well, really, independence, classical independence, and politically homeless, I would say, in the world?
Non-affiliated.
Non-affiliated.
I like un-affiliated.
Non-affiliated?
Un-affiliated, same thing.
Same thing.
Thank you, Dennis, and thank you for your annual $200.
Your associate executive producership is in the bag.
Tom Beal's last.
He's in Brooklyn, of all places, New York.
200 bucks is my first time donating to the show since being introduced by the smokin' hot Steph Paolillo a few months back.
Please wish her a happy 30th, which is Monday, May 6th.
May 6th.
She is the best, and loves you both dearly.
Well, he gets a de-doosh.
You've been de-dooshed.
A big de-doosh right there.
How about Steph?
Has she donated?
I don't know.
I don't know.
She's a hottie, so this one we'll care about.
She loves us dearly, so that counts.
And that will be our group of Associate and Executive Producers for Show 1657, Heinz 57.
Yes, thank you very much to these Execs and Associate Executive Producers and of course again thank you to everyone who comes in under 50.
We'll talk about Those donors later who don't want to be recognized, and that's also understood and admirable.
And people who are on simple little regular donations, you can go to knowagendadonations.com.
You can set something up once every year, $200.
You can set something up $5 a month, $11, $11, $12, $12, $13.
People have all kinds of numbers.
We appreciate you.
And again, thanks to the Executive and Associate Executive Producers for producing Episode 1657.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Order!
Order!
Shut up, slave!
Shut up, slave!
And a reminder that these are permanent credits.
You can put them anywhere credits are recognized, including imdb.com, which is groovy.
It's groovy.
Uh, African news to scare everybody off?
No, no, please.
Come on, some African news.
Come on, it's a shorty, a real shorty.
39 seconds.
Don't worry, it won't hurt too much.
The Russians are in a separate compound and don't have access to U.S.
forces or access to our equipment.
U.S.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin offering reassurances that U.S.
troops in Niger are safe.
His comments came after Reuters reported that Russian military personnel had entered an airbase in the capital, Niamey, which houses U.S.
troops.
Niger's Junta has told the U.S.
to withdraw the nearly 1,000 military personnel the U.S.
has in the country.
At the same time, Russia is seeking to strengthen relations with Niger and other African countries.
Until a coup last year, Niger had been a key U.S.
partner in the fight against Islamic insurgents.
What do we get out of Niger?
I mean, we have a drone base there.
Probably minerals of some sort.
I'm sure we get something out of it.
Listen to this.
I think it's strategic.
We have a drone base in Niger.
Get out!
a series of raging changes and radical shifts in policy recently.
Out!
French troops were expelled from Niger last year and now they're demanding U.S. troops get out as well.
Get out!
The U.S. has long seen Niger as a regional ally in its fight against terror groups in the region and operates a military base and a $100 million drone base in the sub-Saharan desert.
There you go.
$100 million drone base.
Thank you.
Hmm.
Hmm.
So Russia's moving in.
Where's China in all of this?
Is it just the BRICS taking over everything?
They don't get much publicity for what they do.
They do everything pretty much on the side.
Right.
But I mean, do you think that the Russians and the Chinese are now working together to, you know, to take over Africa and all those minerals?
The minerals?
Well, the Chinese, I think, would... Eh, maybe.
Somebody is.
Yeah.
The Bricks, man.
We gotta be careful.
This Bricks is taking over.
We're gonna be... We haven't seen... Out of luck.
I think so.
I think we're going to be out of luck.
Stuff's going to be bad.
Well, it could happen.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Let's go to, uh... We'll just print some more of that money.
I do have a 3x3, by the way.
Maybe the last one.
Why maybe the last one?
Because, you know, people don't like them.
Now it's time for 3x3.
Because y'all hate it.
Experiment 5JCD.
It's failing.
Comparing stories from ABC.
CBS and NBC.
The never-ending three-by-three.
All right, well, the jury is out.
But, you know, the next three-by-three could be a comparison in a prelude to our award show.
Could be 3x3 of AI jokes made about a certain topic.
Or 3x3 of Joe Biden's voice.
Yes, there you go.
Now you're talking.
This is about Biden condemning the violence.
He finally came out and said something about what's going on on the college campuses.
It took him forever.
And so we know it's got to be the big top of the news now so they get to do three three networks pretty much producing the same story with a variation always from CBS but let's start with ABC.
Tonight the dramatic images of authorities moving in during the overnight hours cracking down on protesters at UCLA and driving them out continuing their effort to oust them as the sun came up.
The university declaring this pro-Palestinian encampment an unlawful gathering, calling in outside help.
Hundreds of officers arriving in riot gear, firing flashbangs and non-lethal ammunition.
As officers cleared a library where anti-war protesters had barricaded themselves inside.
Police releasing photos of ball bearings and DIY armor they say were homemade weapons.
And tonight authorities revealing what they say has become all too common.
Outside agitators.
Of the 12 people arrested in Portland, police say just four were actually students.
And tonight, after days of protests across the country, President Biden now speaking out, saying order must prevail.
Destroying property is not a peaceful protest.
It's against the law.
Vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations.
None of this is a peaceful protest.
The president condemning anti-Semitism and threats of violence against Jewish students.
He also spoke out against discrimination against Arab Americans.
There is no place for hate speech or violence of any kind, whether it's anti-semitism, Islamophobia, or discrimination against Arab-Americans or Palestinian-Americans.
It's simply wrong.
But Whitey is okay.
Just so you know.
Whitey's okay.
Whitey's okay.
No problem there.
Whitey can take it.
Whitey.
Whitey.
Whitey can take it.
Whitey can take it.
So let's go with NBC's Whitey.
With the clashes between college campus demonstrators and police reaching new heights, today President Biden condemning violent, disruptive protests.
I think they, it would be probably appropriate to give, uh, to play him at 1.2 speed.
That's what they're doing here.
They spun his voice up.
Well, we'd have to do a side-by-side, but it could be.
Vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down... I'm sorry, I'm gonna obsess over this if I don't just listen for a second.
Where's, uh, let me get your, your ABC report.
Tonight, they're driving them out, continuing their effort to oust them as the sun came up.
It's against the law.
Order must prevail.
Destroying property is not a peaceful protest.
It's against the law.
Vandalism.
Trespassing.
Breaking windows.
No, it's the same.
Shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations.
None of this is a peaceful protest.
Threatening people, intimidating people, instilling fear in people is not a peaceful protest.
I guess the better question is, which Biden is it?
That's the question.
It's against the law.
Nationwide, more than 2,100 arrests have been made connected with campus protests.
Today, Portland State University campus closed down as police made 12 arrests and cleared the school's library.
Overnight, four arrested at Yale, 90 removed from campus at Dartmouth.
And at the University of Wisconsin's Madison campus, defiant students reestablishing their tents just 24 hours after police disbanded the encampment there.
We're gonna be here indefinitely until they meet our demand.
Back at UCLA, cleanup is underway.
Professor Graham Blair, who was arrested this morning in the encampment, is defending the students' right to protest, despite some of the tactics they've used.
I think anyone who is worried about graffiti on buildings on a college campus needs to come visit a college campus.
It's 18-year-olds who are learning for the first time how to express themselves.
Oh, you put him through the leftist generator, he stays the same.
Yeah, that's for sure.
Now, these two reports are interesting because ABC concentrated solely on UCLA.
Yes.
And ABC is owned by Disney, which is where UCLA is.
Disney, Hollywood, you know, UCLA, Westwood, as opposed to NBC, which had a more kind of eclectic look at a bunch of different colleges.
So that was kind of an interesting comparison.
The big boys do at CBS.
Yeah, the CIA broadcast systems.
White House officials say it was the sheer number of violent encounters on college campuses over the past two days that prompted President Biden to speak out.
There's the right to protest, but not the right to cause chaos.
His comments came in the wake of nearly 2,000 arrests.
More than 30 colleges and universities.
Just today, protesters were ejected from a library at Portland State University that they had occupied for three days.
Inside, police say they found ball bearings, paint balloons, spray bottles of ink, and DIY armor.
Vandalism.
Trespassers.
The DIY armor, that's the trash cans they're talking about?
That's DIY armor?
Actually, there was a girl that was on one of these TikTok videos that had a bunch of, they're armored up now.
Armored up!
Because they're worried about rubber bullets.
What do I smell?
That's my armor.
Spray bottles of ink and DIY armor.
Vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations.
None of this is a peaceful protest.
Like many protesters, President Biden has expressed concern about the plight of Palestinian civilians.
More than 34,000 killed, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
But when asked today if he would change his policies towards Israel, as the protesters have been demanding, Biden said simply, The unrest is now threatening to become an election issue.
Young people are a key Democratic voting bloc.
Biden needs to listen to what the students are calling for, which is an end to a genocide funded by the United States.
So, first things first, stop funding Israel.
In battleground Wisconsin, Donald Trump argued Biden should have spoken out sooner.
There's a big fever in our country and he's not talking.
But Trump also made this unfounded claim about campus demonstrators.
They do come from other countries and they are paid.
Unfounded claim?
Really?
This is what broke this whole thing is everyone sees it now.
Everybody sees that half these people graduated 10 years ago.
We get Code Pink Lady?
Yeah.
Medea, she's running around.
That woman is like she's in her 70s or something.
She's posing as a student.
You can just hire her.
You can hire her and all her cronies to go anywhere.
Yeah, hold up this sign.
Okay.
Donate.
No problem.
Meanwhile... Looks like no deal yet!
No deal!
Hamas says what?
No deal?
No deal?
Bibi says no deal?
I got a no deal clip!
It's no deal!
Israel still has its sights on Rafah and we're no closer to a ceasefire.
Hamas has poured cold water on the optimism surrounding the latest round of talks in Cairo between their delegation and Qatari, Egyptian and American mediators.
The AFP quoted a senior Hamas official as saying there will be no agreement without a complete cessation of the war, and accusing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of personally hindering the deal.
The proposal on the table would halt fighting for 40 days and exchange hostages for Palestinian prisoners, According to details released by the UK, negotiations are set to continue on Sunday, but Israel is yet to send a delegation to the Egyptian capital.
Late on Friday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said accepting a ceasefire deal should be a quote, no-brainer for Hamas.
And the reality in this moment is, the only thing standing between the people of Gaza and a ceasefire is Hamas.
You know what I think?
kept up the pressure on Netanyahu on Saturday, turning out in their thousands again in Tel Aviv to demand the government accept a ceasefire deal and secure the release of the remaining hostages.
Netanyahu has vowed not to stop the war until Hamas is destroyed and faces pressure from nationalists in his coalition to go ahead with the offensive against the southern Gaza city of Rafa.
You know what I think?
I think the problem is Hamas doesn't have 33 hostages anymore.
Oh, I think they're all dead, but where'd you get that clip?
That's France 24.
Because they kind of left it out.
They made it sound as though Blinken's at the negotiations.
He's not.
He wasn't even there, was he?
No, in fact, I have a clip.
This is from Al Jazeera, which kind of brings in a very interesting who's actually at these negotiations.
Wait, let me guess.
CIA?
Tell me the CIA is there.
You nailed it.
What's the clip?
What's the clip?
Ceasefire delegation, AJ.
Got it.
Gaza, where the humanitarian situation across the Strip is getting worse by the day.
There have been more attacks, more displacement, and more suffering.
But diplomatic efforts to reach a ceasefire deal are ramping up.
All eyes are on Cairo on Saturday, where a Hamas delegation is holding talks with mediators from Egypt and Qatar, as well as the CIA director, William Burns.
Now, we should mention, these talks are taking place in Egypt, and what neither of these outfits are saying is Egypt is very key to the resolution of all this, because we know Egypt has received 7 billion euros from the European Union to build camps, which will be, you know, like, I'm sure it's like holiday camps, holiday camps, then they'll open up their border,
Which is closed, shut tight, and then some of them will be migrated into Europe, and I'm pretty sure that pier that we're building there for humanitarian aid, that's where people will be able to hop off and get onto a boat and go to America.
So, Egypt is a big player in this, and it's not really discussed, unless you have something in this next clip.
No, not about Egypt being a big player, but it finishes off the thought about, we have, it's actually, this guy, that guy, the other guy, and this R-C-I-A guy, which is like, okay.
Yeah, yeah, alright.
The group says it's studying the latest Israeli proposal in a positive manner, but sticking points do remain.
Israel wants the return of the captives being held in Gaza, and Hamas is insisting on a Ah!
permanent end to the war those talks come as the u.n warns that northern gaza is now experiencing a full-blown famine and moving towards the south the head of the world food program is urging negotiators to reach a ceasefire as soon as possible to save lives ah do you know who the head of the world food program is i'm gonna find out you You'll be surprised.
You're gonna tell me.
Here it comes.
Here it comes.
I just want to be very clear because what you're saying is significant and I believe it's the first time we've heard it.
You're saying there is full-blown famine?
Yes.
In northern Gaza?
I am.
Yes, I am.
And there has not been an official declaration that there is famine, but you are saying that based on what you've seen.
Yes, it is.
Based on what we've seen and what we've experienced on the ground, yes.
Which is?
It's horror.
It's so hard to look at and it's so hard to hear also.
So, I'm so hoping that we can get a ceasefire and begin to feed these people, especially in the North, in a much faster fashion, but also including, as I said, water, sanitation, medicine.
It's all part of the famine issue.
And it's also something that we need to make sure that the world understands.
We can't let this happen.
In this day and age, when the world has the ability to feed itself ten times over, nobody should starve.
Nobody should starve.
That was Cindy McCain, widow of John McCain.
She is the executive director of the World Food Program.
Interesting, isn't it?
Yeah.
I have a kind of a side clip that's similar that has something to do with this situation.
This is the Houthis' new threat.
Have you heard this?
No.
Okay.
The crowd chanted, the Red Sea is blocked.
The Iran-backed Houthi terrorist group in Yemen has been firing at ships in the Red Sea that it thinks are headed to Israel as a show of support.
port for the Palestinian people.
During the rally, a spokesman for the Houthis said that if Israel proceeds with ground operations in Rafa in the southern Gaza Strip, then the Houthis would expand their operations.
But it remains unclear exactly how the Houthis would carry out the threat.
Despite that, Israel's prime minister says he remains undeterred in achieving Israel's main objectives in the war, which are defeating Hamas, ensuring Gaza will no longer be a threat to Israel and returning all the hostages. - We are making great efforts.
We have already returned half, and I can tell you that we are determined to return everyone, the ones who are alive as well as the ones who are dead.
Yeah, I got a bad feeling about this.
They don't have the hostages.
They don't have them.
And I think Benjamin Netanyahu is going to get blamed for dragging his heels.
You took too long.
If he ever comes to a deal.
I'm sticking with my thesis.
They're going to do a ceasefire, and then they're going to wait, getting closer to the election, the August conventions, and then it'll be broken by the Hamas terrorists.
Something will happen, and it'll go back into full-blown war, and then the protesters can take down the Democrats at the convention.
So we've got on the table, we have 40 days of cessation.
Which is not long enough for 33 hostages, which is a magic number.
Bringing out Sidney McCain, that bugs me.
Yeah, I guess so.
What credit does she have to become the Executive Director of the World Food Program?
Well, let's take a look at her bio and maybe we can determine which agency she's associated with.
Nice.
You take a look at that and I'm gonna play.
This was encouraging to me because I thought when Turkey A...
Formerly known as Turkey.
And they do this?
I'm thinking they're close to a deal.
The complete suspension of trade with Israel is a significant escalation of Turkey's diplomatic efforts to pressure Israel.
Ankara is demanding an immediate ceasefire and the free flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
We have taken some commercial measures to force Israel to increase the amount of humanitarian aid to pass through and into Gaza.
First, we imposed export restrictions on 54 product groups.
And as of Thursday, we have stopped export and import transactions with Israel, covering all products.
We will manage the consequences of these steps together with our business world.
We are not looking for enmity and fighting with any country in our region.
They tell me this may cause some troubles.
I say that we believe that God is the only power that can eliminate all troubles, and we are doing the right thing.
When a ceasefire is declared and enough aid is allowed into Gaza, the goal will be achieved.
I'm thinking, you know, Turkey wouldn't... They got enough problems already.
So now they're stopping all trade?
They have a lot of problems.
Yeah, I have a little bit of an analysis of what you just played.
Okay.
This is the turkey cutting off Israel.
This guy, this is only part of a long, again from Al Jazeera, a long discussion.
And this guy makes the claim that Turkey has taken it in the shorts for doing this.
That's why I'm thinking they've got to be close to a deal.
Why else would Turkey do this?
The talk he made there, he made it absolutely clear, and it's not against the people's state of Israel, certainly, but he singled out, especially the administration, and named Mr Netanyahu, calling him an impossible person to deal with.
So until drastic measures taken, the ban will continue.
So now I'm sure the loss of revenues in tourism is obviously very important, but what would be quite upsetting is that, you know, like a Muslim country against a Jewish state type of thing, that would be very wrong because Israeli tourists were always welcomed in Turkey and They're kind of causing no danger to them.
So they loved coming.
600,000 people, as mentioned, coming and going.
So I think behind, you know, I assume especially now the tourism season is approaching the summer, There will be efforts to probably single out this particular point, but I'm sure it's going to be a major line of discussion or important part of this ban.
But again, Turkey seems to bear all costs.
The decision is there and officially announced.
They bear all costs.
He also mentioned that Turkish Airways, which by the way is a great carrier, Turkish Airways had 15 flights a day going in and out of Israel to various points, and those have all been cut off since the beginning of this thing, and it's costing them an arm and a leg.
That's a big deal.
Yeah, so they're losing out, the Turks are losing out.
Of course, it's not as though Erdogan's done much for the economy.
Hmm, well, maybe, maybe we can solve some of this in the way that Europe likes to operate.
Maybe we can solve this by taking the vote to the people.
With the Eurovision Song Contest!
United by music.
This year's Eurovision slogan couldn't be further from the truth.
The annual feel-good celebration is shrouded by controversy over Israel's participation amid the war in Gaza.
Direct threats have been made against the singer representing Israel and thousands are expected to gather in protest when the event starts.
We count on 20,000 to 40,000 demonstrators coming to Malmö, coming from all over Europe.
It will be a very big protest.
100,000 visitors are expected in Sweden's southwest coast city of Malmö for the event, where the police authorized a Koran-burning demonstration on Friday.
In this tense context, security is a top priority.
There are a lot of police on the grounds throughout Malmö.
We've received reinforcements from all over Sweden, but also from Denmark and Norway.
but also from Denmark and Norway.
We also use drones so that we have a good overview of the event.
Another major world conflict is expected to be at the heart of the event.
Ukrainian group Alyona Alyona and Jerry Hale will be defending the blue and yellow flag.
If you talk a lot about your situation, people hear you.
So now I feel that people heard us.
Still now and... We're here to talk.
Yeah.
If they win, the duo say they plan to sell their trophy and donate the proceeds to the war effort.
Like their predecessors who raised 900,000 euros in an auction on Facebook.
I'm telling you, this is going to be an interesting show this year because Malmo is filled with immigrants and they're burning... Malmo is the ground zero for the Muslims in Sweden.
Yes.
And they just authorized a Quran burning.
Smart move.
What?
Why?
That's what they just said.
They just had it in the beginning of the report.
I know, I heard that and I'm thinking, what are they thinking?
This is like not necessarily a good idea.
For ratings.
Are you nuts?
Oh, ratings.
Everyone's gonna tune in.
At least they got that idea down.
Everybody's gonna tune in this year.
I can't wait.
Who's airing it this year?
Nobody here asked for a shirt.
No, no, no, no, we do.
We aired here.
I'm somewhat Paramount Plus or something.
Something that's going out of business.
Did you find out about Cindy?
Did you get any details on Cindy?
Yeah, she is rich.
Her dad owned the biggest Budweiser distributor down there, so when he died she inherited all that money.
And she's been one of those rich, liberal, even though she's a conservative technically, philanthropist for years.
And I guess she's been involved in a number of operations that gave her the chops to go do this, what she's doing.
Money laundering.
Just guessing, just guessing, just a guess.
The funny thing is, she was the Junior Rodeo Queen in 1968.
Barrel, barrel, uh, Barrel Rider?
Doesn't say.
Hey, I got a boots on the ground report from inside Lockheed Martin.
That's Barrel Racer, by the way.
Yeah, Barrel Racer, thank you.
Boots on the ground from inside Lockheed Martin.
This is the Defense Industrial Base.
Lots of money flowing in and always good to hear from our producers.
Boots on the ground.
They are truly the courageous in Gitmo Nation.
We from time to time get walkthroughs by Military Brass.
Yesterday was what I thought would be the same as usual.
The major talk started as usual.
Quote, we are safe because of what you build!
Blackhawks.
Yada yada yada!
End quote.
It then took a serious turn.
He went on to say that not only do they expect on-time deliveries, to asking for them to be delivered early.
He said that for the first time in his career, Upper Command was not saying the usual, quote, threat of global conflict existed.
Now they're saying it's going to happen soon.
Wha-wha-wha-what?
He went on to say that for the first time, the USA is not the guaranteed victor.
Hence the need for faster deliveries.
This is a concerning report.
After he was done with his talk, management asked if anyone had any questions.
I could not let him down, or the show.
I kind of have a reputation for asking uncomfortable questions.
I raised my hand and asked why our victory was being questioned.
He rambled about rising powers, destabilized Middle East and all that, so I looked him in the eye and I simply said, who?
He returned my gaze.
Not looking for an Emmy here, but it was quite intense.
He simply said, China.
Yeah.
I thanked him for saying it out loud.
After this was over, he approached me and thanked me for the question.
He said he isn't allowed to say China, but he could answer that question.
He thought that this information would be of interest to us.
Oh, that's cute.
Yes.
That's cute.
He says, I think this ties in with the latest Ukraine cash dump.
We have billions to spend now.
So, yep.
I think that's a very interesting boots on the ground.
We'll see what happens.
Well, it's the pivot towards Indo-Pacific.
Well, there's definitely that, and that's no doubt about it.
We'll be building a lot of boats.
Quick little update on the big pharma industry.
We've had a lot of, you know, heart issues ever since COVID.
It's very baffling.
Baffling!
It's baffling to the medical industry.
What could have changed during COVID?
What could it be?
It's so hard to understand.
What could it be that is causing heart attacks, particularly in young people?
Left and right.
We just don't understand, but luckily, NBC has some answers for us.
There is more evidence that actual anger is, in fact, really bad for your health.
All right, previous studies have shown there's a link between frequent anger and an increased risk of heart attack, but now there's a new study out in the Journal of the American Heart Association that is helping explain why that is.
Yeah, so NBC News medical contributor Dr. John Torres is here to walk through it.
He's very gonna calmly walk us through this.
Very calmly.
Well, actually, if you have an outburst of anger, it shows up in your heart?
It does, and what we've known is that anger over time, these strong emotions, can really have an effect on your heart.
Increased risk of heart attack, increased risk of stroke, cardiovascular issues.
But what this study showed is even one episode, and these episodes, as they multiply over your life, can cause an impact.
Even that one episode can cause similar type situations and can increase your risk of these type of things.
What kind of episode?
Is that like ragey or mild irritation?
Yeah.
In the study they had the students looking in the study just reviewing something that happened in their past that made them angry.
So they were just reliving an angry episode.
So it doesn't necessarily have to be that heavy of an episode.
So if you're in traffic one day and you're ragey and you yell at your kids later that week and you're ragey and all these things, is this cumulative?
It is cumulative.
It is cumulative, and what happens is, when this is happening, on the blood level stage here, think of it like a straw.
Your blood vessels are like a straw.
You want them to be wide so it's easy to get that fluid through the blood to get to the organs.
When you have an anger episode, those blood vessels constrict, so it's like a skinnier straw.
I will say that in October it will be 17 years we've done this podcast.
is not getting to the organs, the heart and the brain as well.
Plus, if you have atherosclerotic plaques, if you have plaques inside there, they'll break off and that can cause a heart attack or stroke.
So that's what's happening on that level when you have that episode and those can build up over time.
I will say that in October, it'll be 17 years we've done this podcast.
I do not think I can remember a single time that you were mad or ragey, as they say here at NBC.
I'm hopping mad now.
I don't think I've ever heard, and this is why you're still with us.
It's clear.
Yeah, yeah.
I think maybe not getting the vax is probably more responsible for this phenomenon.
No, no, no, no, no.
What are you saying?
Let's talk about how to handle your anger.
Well, and could you rage yourself in one episode into a heart attack?
Take a pill!
You potentially could.
You know, if you're young, if you're healthy, and you have these raging anger episodes, it's probably not a big deal at that time.
If you're older and you have one, that could cause an issue.
We've all seen the movies where somebody's angry and all of a sudden they're like, ah, I'm having a heart attack.
Over time these could accumulate and these could cause problems, and that's what the researchers are saying.
I'm sorry, that's how to handle your anger.
This is a short clip.
This is how you how do you how do you handle your anger?
How do we do it?
How do you get anger out?
What's the best way?
So how do you get anger out?
How do we get it out?
Get it out of my heart!
The best thing is just to use these calming techniques, and they sound cliche.
The biggest one, my wife taught me this, you know, breathing exercises.
Yeah.
Into the nose, out through the mouth.
I can't stand this.
Breathing exercise.
How about the heavy bag?
It's so unbelievable.
No, it is believable.
And then I'll just wind up with this.
It is believable.
It's totally believable.
I'll wind up with this.
Now, as far as we know, the only countries where you can advertise direct-to-consumer for pharmaceutical products is the United States and New Zealand.
I do not think Canada allows this.
But the CBC, I mean, everything is so corrupt.
They had, someone sent me three different pieces, all the same imagery, you know, injecting into your leg, the same girl, the same story, because fear not Canadians, even though this is not a commercial, you now as well can get the weight loss shot!
Canadians struggling with obesity will have a new treatment option next week.
The makers of Ozempic say their weight loss drug, Wigovi, will be available in Canada starting Monday.
CTV's Alison Bamford has more on the risks and the rewards.
What happened to benefits?
It's not just a risk, it's a reward now.
Risk and rewards.
Hey, I got a reward for taking this medication.
And the rewards.
A different name with different packaging, but experts say Wigovi is essentially a drug Canadians already had access to.
Wigovi is Ozempic, and Ozempic is Wigovi.
I love this!
So just so you know, it's the same product as the one you've been hearing about from the Kardashians.
So you can take this, it's Ozempic.
Don't worry, it says Wigovi, but it's Ozempic.
So what you're saying ...is that this is a native ad which should be illegal in Canada.
Completely.
...already had access to.
Wogovi is ozempic and ozempic is Wogovi.
Wogovi is classified as an anti-obesity medication.
Ozempic is a type 2 diabetes drug.
Both contain the molecule semaglutide.
It helps us with feeling fuller longer.
It helps our brain understand that we're good.
Health Canada approved Wigovi for weight loss back in 2021, but ongoing supply shortages made it unavailable to Canadians, which is why doctors commonly prescribed Ozempic as an off-label drug for obesity management.
Now with a drug labeled for obesity, many hope it improves access for patients who really need it.
Hopefully the bias around prescribing a medication for weight management changes.
That's the marketing lady!
She's literally saying, hey, hopefully the bias against prescribing this... So I'm going to stop you again.
Yeah.
What you're doing is playing what appears to be a native ad for drugs in Canada, which should be illegal.
On the CBC?
Doctors warn against using these types of drugs for cosmetic purposes, but experts say the class of medication has been around for 20 years and shown to be safe for those taking it as a long-term obesity medication.
Nordisk, the maker of the drugs, plans to ramp up production as Wagovi makes its way to Canada Monday.
While there are other anti-obesity drugs out there, some doctors say this one opens the door for cheaper, more effective treatments down the line.
Alison Bamford, CTV News, Regina.
I always had to leave the Regina in, it just makes me laugh.
Yeah, rhymes with.
Always makes me laugh.
So yeah, so it's good.
It's been approved in Canada for three years, but it's coming.
It's coming.
We got a new shipment.
It's in.
It's coming in.
It's good.
We're all good to go.
Well, that was depressing.
I'm gonna show my support by donating to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah!
On No Agenda!
And we want to thank a bunch of people who supported us between the associate executive producer level and the $50 level and John will go through this list and mention some of the people and maybe some of their short notes if applicable.
Yeah, Parker starts us off from Billings, Montana, 133.
Ray Aaron follows up from Artesia, New Mexico, 105.35.
And talking about notes, I will mention this.
This is a thank you to Adam for reading legislation.
I appreciate you taking one for the team.
You're welcome.
He also challenges all No Agenda producers to join me as sustaining donors.
There you go.
Yeah, good man.
Good man.
Thank you.
Ray.
John Robinette.
Robinette.
A hundred dollars.
Rick Mansfield and Nguyen.
A hundred dollars.
Sir Boffacy.
Boffacy.
Brofacy.
Sir Brofacy.
Easy for you to say.
Greenfield Park, New York.
He wants some house selling karma.
We'll put that at the end for him.
Make a note?
Yep.
Hey!
Sir Arthur Gobitz in Zondam.
Holland.
8008.
Loves boobs.
Loves cats.
And there's Sir Matthew from Tinley Park, Illinois.
8008.
Birthday list.
You got it.
Kevin McLaughlin.
Concord, North Carolina.
8008.
These are all boob donations.
Thank you.
Good.
Steven.
Cole Glaser, I'm sure it's pronounced, in Fernanda Beach, Florida.
75 bucks.
Third donation.
Buzzkill's been on a roll.
Yeah, there's wheels on this chair.
Ed Werner in Bow, Washington, $6,666.
Sir Mainframe in Ventura, California, $64.
Dave Terrian in Livonia, Michigan, $61.50.
Dame Jen in Athens, Georgia, $58.
She's Dame Jen of bead, brush, and cloth.
Yes, she's got some, uh, she's an artist.
Artiste.
Yes, she is.
Joshua Nunn and St.
John New Brunswick.
To Canada, it's $57.27.
He wants the spooky Dvorak jingle.
Donate.
Oh, please.
Baron, Net, Sir Victor.
Now, these are $57.27 and the rest of these are all the $55 donation with added fees.
And I'm just going to read name and the locations on half of them for some reason.
It's weird.
But this is the Sanko de Mayo donation in celebration of Adam's pre-show screaming Sanko de Mayo during the Valkyrie song.
Yes.
Baronet Sir Victor's at the top of the list.
Prince by A.G.
Christopher Weiberg.
Hermanus Nijrolder.
Matthew Adams, Thomas Flynn, Hermanus Nyrolder.
Nyrolder?
There you go.
Matthew Adams, Thomas Flynn, Kevin McLean, Augustine Silva.
He's in Abilene, Texas.
That one did come through.
Good ol' same Rita Harrington.
Augustine needs a de-douche.
You've been de-douched.
I caught it.
I caught it.
Indeed.
Rita Harrington?
Bryant Keefe?
That Priscilla O'Leary?
Jeroen Snelders.
Jeron.
Jeroen.
Jeroen.
Jeroen!
Snelders.
John G. in Deerfield Beach.
And he needs to call out Brian Lee as a mega douchebag.
Douchebag!
Mega douchebag, bro.
I don't do a douchebag.
Mega douchebag.
Sir Jules Reed in Salem, Oregon, who's got a birthday.
Ben Maple Valley, Washington.
Uh, Brian Furley, 55, oh, okay, that dropped.
Okay, we're still kind of in this, but we're now at 55.10.
But I'm going to keep reading these as though they're all donations for the $55 promotion.
Brian Furley, Nicholas Ellenbecker in Wawatosa, Wisconsin.
I'll never get that name straight.
He mentions Gallagher taking the job.
I think he may have sent me that, that Gallagher resigned, took a job with Poundsteer, and he says he can't stop thinking about human meat in his ground beef.
And he thanks me for that.
Weird thought.
Sir Tom Darry in DeForest, Wisconsin.
Sir Jeff.
Anonymous.
Sarah Gardner.
Dame Sarah.
Sir Furr in Shasta Lake.
Uh, Carl.
Shoo.
Shoo.
Shlooter.
Shlooter.
Shlouter.
Troy Funderburk in Missoula, Montana.
And that ends our promotion.
I want to thank all those people for doing that.
Daphne Lee comes in with $53.02.
Michael Gates with $52.80.
The Mexican Hobbit in Chula Vista, California, $52.72.
These baby-making karma will give you that at the end.
Ernest Parton in Westchester, Ohio, $52.71.
Kurt Patrick in Ninamo, Ninamo, Ninamo, Ninamo.
You'll never get it right.
You call it what you want.
It's in B.C.
up there in the middle of nowhere.
They have a nice garden up there at that little town.
Do they now?
Kurt Patrick, and that's $50.
That gives me the $50 donors.
I'm going to go through them one at a time.
Jacob Martinez in El Monte, James Scharametta in Nappanock.
Lynn Malinowski in Stafford, Virginia.
Michael LeBar in Williamston, Michigan.
Alex Zavala in Kyle, Texas.
David Asari in West Hollywood.
Good list here today, by the way.
Steve Marchesani in Glasgow, New Jersey.
How do you join the newsletter?
Go to noagendashow.net.
There's a link there you can just click on it.
Sure is, sure is.
Peter Mark Harrison in Oakland, New Zealand.
Sir Johnny Bananas and Tracy Sullivan in Tinley Park, Illinois.
Carrie Jackson in Watertown, Tennessee.
Brett Farrell, Sir Brett.
Brian Watson in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Walker Phillips in San Rafael, California.
And last, On this pretty good list, uh, Aichi Kitagawa in San Francisco.
I want to thank these folks for helping us out and getting show 1657 produced.
Yes, thank you all so much.
Again, thanks everyone under 50, not mentioned for reasons of anonymity, and the sustaining donations are a big help.
NoAgenda, donations.com, or if you're old school, Dvorak.org.
And as requested, Karma, for everybody who needs it.
You've got the donate donate donate karma It's a perfect birthday I don't know what you can And we say happy birthday to Sir Matthew, who celebrates today, along with Sir Jules Reed.
Theodore!
The adorable Dvorak!
You didn't mention him at all today.
Hello, Theodore.
Happy birthday!
From Grandpa John and Uncle Adam.
Stephanie turns 30 tomorrow, and Tom Beals says happy birthday to Steph.
Paolio turns 30 tomorrow, so maybe it's... I wonder if it's the same one or a different one.
Anyway, happy birthday from everybody here.
The best podcast in the universe.
It's your birthday.
Title changes.
Turning faces late.
Title changes.
Don't want to be too special.
And we've got some peer exchanges going on here.
We have Sir EA of the tax domain upgrades his status to that of Baron.
We heard him earlier on as an executive producer, and thank you very much, sir.
EA of the tax domain, you are now a baron of the No Agenda Show, the No Agenda Roundtable, and of course of Gitmo Nation, and we appreciate that very much.
We do have a knight note to read.
This is from Waldo from Lower Alabama.
He says he reached knighthood after a double donation for show 1500, but he never got around to claiming his knighthood as he didn't know his ring size.
Now we do have a handy ring sizing guide at NoahJennerRings.com.
So I guess he's figured it all out and he wants his knight name to be Sir Waldo of the Lake of Lower Alabama.
And he wants Ardberg Oogedal and West Indy Salad at the round table for his meal.
Are you familiar with the Ardberg Oogedal product, John?
No, I'd have to look it up.
Well, it's over here at the round table.
Guys, could you just slice it up for him and whatever he wants?
What's it taste like?
Like chicken.
Give me your blade, man.
Let's bring this guy up.
Let's get him in.
Here you go.
Nice.
There we go.
All right, Waldo.
Come on in.
I got it here for you, that Ardberg Uggdahl.
Regardless of your weird choice of round table accoutrements, I am very proud to pronuncicate thee as Sir Waldo of the Lake of Lower Alabama.
For you, my friend, we have Ardberg and Oogdahl and West Indy Salad.
Also, Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay, if you want.
We have some cookies and vodka.
Maybe you're interested in some Redheads and Rye's, or perhaps Brazilian Hotties and Chachacha.
Cowgirls and coffee barners, sparkling cider escorts, ginger ale and gerbils?
No!
There's always mutton and meat.
If all else fails, the mutton and meat is there.
Head over to NoAgendaRings.com.
You already figured out that you can get your ring size there.
Also, we will send it along with some wax to seal your important correspondence with this knight ring, which is a signet ring and a certificate of authenticity.
And welcome to the roundtable, the No Agenda Knights and Dames.
Yeah, we got a couple of meetups taking place.
It's always amazing when I'm talking to people about No Agenda and they say, what are these meetups?
Have you ever been to one?
What happens there?
He said, you have to go to one.
It's an amazing experience, something that cannot be explained.
You just have to hang out at one.
It's the lowest key gathering you'll ever imagine.
And it's weird because you walk into a space with no agenda people and you kind of see it.
You know, it's like you look around like that's them.
And then you'll always hear, hey, in the morning, in the morning, in the morning, in the morning, here we go.
And then you're part of the gang.
It gives you connection, which always results in protection, as is witnessed by, I believe, the 52nd, 51st or 52nd meetup that Leo Bravo has organized in Los Angeles.
Hi everybody, it's Leo Bravo at meetup number 51.
I'm going to pass the phone around.
Everybody has greetings to share with us.
Hey John and Adam, ITN.
This is Sir Lia Kim, full pop, just saying we're in the communist lands and say that's true.
Hey guys, this is Slick Rick and in the morning.
This is Dave, this is my first outing with the group here, my first meetup.
Nice to meet everyone.
In the morning, this is Sam Hambone, having a great time in Torrance.
Hi, this is Ryan, first meetup.
Thanks to my ex-wife Greta for slapping me in the mouth.
Hi, this is Greta, here at our second official meetup and first LA meetup, and we're really grateful to Leo for hosting these.
In the morning.
In the morning, this is Brian.
Thanks for all you do, Adam and John.
Hi, in the morning, I'm Tommy, and... You're chickening out.
Hi, my name is Devwan Douglas Angel.
May the 4th be with you.
Hi, this is Tommy.
In the morning.
This is my second meet-up and I've had an amazing time and I really hope to continue doing these with you.
May the 4th be with you.
In the morning!
I love hearing that.
When people say it's my second or my first, it's really an amazing time.
That's because that's the truth.
They love it.
Memphis had the No Agenda Bad Beer Protest meet-up yesterday.
No Agenda Nights and Dames, this is Tech Guy Ty from the Memphis No Agenda Bad Beer Protest, and I just wanted to say that we're here celebrating good beer at High Cotton, and I'm joined by... Fred C. Fatuto.
I put the C in Cranky, Crackbot, and CIA.
And this is Sir No Please, where beer good planes bad.
And this is Luke Cumberland.
We're from Oxford, Mississippi in FEMA Region 420.
Giving a cold shout out to Lamal Spellswell, Bulldozer, and TransZelda.
Calling you out!
And none of us are douchebags.
In the morning!
That's what we like to see, a meet-up with zero douchebaggery.
Congratulations.
Great meet-up report.
And our final one comes from Arlington, Virginia.
Home of many spooks.
The Sir William Bachelor Party edition.
This is the Sir William of Pennsylvania Bachelor Party.
This is Roundy wishing Sir William and his three nipples a happy marriage.
Outstanding.
I won this.
I'm not sure what it is, but I'm so happy to hear that Sir William is going to be an honest man.
Hey!
Congratulations, Sir William.
Jeff from Springfield.
Know what they say about the wedding night?
Bingo!
Boomshakalaka!
Dan from Texas.
Hi, Tim.
Hey, this is DC girl.
Can't wait for the nuptials!
Sir Chris.
Aloha from the Aloha State of Arlington.
Jason, the new guy from Arlington.
I just wandered in.
Hey, this is Steggy.
Congratulations, Bill and Marie.
Hey, this is Sir William of West Pennsylvania.
Don't forget to wax your ceiling.
It ain't no wedding!
Ah yes, nuptials.
We've married many couples here on the No Agenda Show, and the couples that No Agenda together stay together, it's a fact.
Look it up, follow the science.
We've got a couple meetups taking place, actually one today, the Northwestist Meetup, which is well underway at the Vault Bistro and Wine Bar in Blaine, Washington.
On Thursday, our next show day, that's the 9th, the Not That Thursday, the Other Thursday Meetup, 6.30 in City Park, Denver Museum of Nature and Science in Denver, Colorado.
The third Leiden amygdala check, 7.30 Amsterdam time.
Stadsbrauhaus Leiden in Leiden, the Netherlands.
That's where all the smart people are.
That's where all the university people are.
And coming up in the next month, we got Edmonds, Oklahoma, Indianapolis, Indiana, Charleston, South Carolina, Charlotte, North Carolina, Richmond, Virginia, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Big Austin, Texas barbecue on the 18th at Baron Scott's home.
Make sure you check that one out.
Higginam, Connecticut on the 18th.
Norwood, Massachusetts.
I guess they're going to be shooting in Massachusetts on the 18th.
San Diego, California.
Keene, New Hampshire.
Athens, Greece on the 22nd.
Would love to receive a report from you guys.
Reno, Nevada.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
And Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Many more on the calendar at noagendameetups.com.
You definitely want to try one of these out.
It's free to be a part of it.
You can hang out.
You make friends.
You will probably make friends that you will have for a long time, if not for life.
And you might even find your mate there.
NoAgendaMeetups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start one yourself.
It's easy.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you want to be.
I appear to have a cornucopia of ISOs here.
So you want to start with yours?
Yeah, after you dropped the ball last time, sure.
Which one do I start with?
Well, let's see what we got.
Hold on.
I think... Cherry.
Cherry?
Chimney.
Oh my.
Oh my goodness.
A little hard to hear.
Alright.
What else you got?
WTF?
Okay... Let me try a couple on ya.
Ooh!
Smooth!
Hmm?
Hmm?
Like that one?
Yeah.
It's okay.
And it's so juicy!
Come on!
Unconstitutionally gagged!
Uh-huh.
And we have, uh... Wow.
Uh-huh.
I think this is the one.
This has got to be the one.
It tastes like chicken.
Come on.
At least one of those was good.
Well, actually, two of them were good.
Mm-hmm.
The one you liked at the beginning I thought actually was good, even though I poo-pooed it, but Wow was always a winner.
But how about Wow It Tastes Like Chicken?
Ah, let me try.
Let me see.
Let me see if we can make this happen.
Wow.
It tastes like chicken.
I don't know if it's necessary.
I can do that if you want.
Okay, okay.
Okay, let's try this other one.
What was the first one again?
Uh, smooth here.
Ooh, smooth.
Go with that.
Okay, all right.
We'll go with that.
I'll go with that and you go with this.
I'll show you some good news.
It's good, good, good news.
Yeah, that's right, John's got some good news.
We're going to wrap with two good newses today.
What?
Do I need to split it up with a good news jingle in between?
No.
No, we'll stop after the first one.
Now, the reason I, this one, this is one of the ones that was for last week's show.
I like the story so much, but it was botched by the producers in the room there when they got into their little editing suite and they cut the kid off and they cut the end off and just a mess.
But I liked it so much as a basic story.
It's the short and it's super short.
Yeah.
And I want to play this is about a little kid who was buying the school lunches for everybody else in the school that couldn't afford them because they didn't have the money or whatever.
Just a great story.
Sweet.
A fifth grader in Missouri is raising money to pay off fellow students' lunch debts.
It's important for kids to eat.
Like, I don't think they can make it through the day without eating school lunch.
11-year-old Dakin Kramer has raised close to $1,000 so far.
The school doesn't deny any children lunch, but that has led to a lot of unpaid bills.
Kramer has made it his mission to raise as much as he can before he heads off to middle school in less than two weeks.
Where was this?
Where did this good news take place?
That's a good question.
It was in the Midwest somewhere.
Of course, not in a city.
Of course it wasn't.
Not in California.
Here's the highlight good news.
This is a dog, a poor abandoned dog that somehow was just abandoned in the mountains and they found him and brought him back to health.
And shot him.
A dog is lucky to be alive after being found stranded on Lookout Mountain in Phoenix.
The Arizona Humane Society says that back on April 24th they got a call about a two-year-old Sharpay Mix who was hiding in a small cutout on the side of the mountain.
When rescue crews got there, they say that the pup was dangerously dehydrated and may not have survived much longer if she wasn't found.
Officials say that she was scared but was open to receiving help from rescue crews.
Honestly, she was too weak.
She just did not want to walk at all.
So we did kind of a funky, crazy, hold her like a baby sort of situation and she actually really just relaxed and seemed to enjoy being carried down the mountain.
But it was a very teeny tiny rocky trail that was pretty slick and so Tracy and I took turns carrying her down the mountain and she was just an absolute angel.
She knew we were getting her to safety and then we got her into our trauma hospital at the Arizona Humane Society.
She does look so sweet and calm.
Well, the pup was treated by staff at the Humane Society and we're told that she is doing really well now.
She earned the name Bright Eyes since the person who found her only happened to see her due to those amber eyes that were reflecting behind her hiding spot.
Aw, she's a gorgeous dog.
Aw, gorgeous.
Yeah, this is an abandoned COVID dog the way I see it.
Yeah, yeah.
Bright Eyes is not a good name for a dog, though, because that reminds me of Watership Down, where they shoot the mom.
I don't know.
You don't know Watership Down?
You don't remember that?
Disney movie where they shoot the mom?
No.
I don't watch depressing films.
It was a kid movie.
It's what traumatized millions of Gen Xers around the country, around the world.
That's it for No Agenda for today.
Thank you all very much in the Troll Room.
You've been a delight to hang out with.
Thank you for those of you downloading the podcast.
If you're listening live at trollroom.io, you can hear the airline pilot guy coming up next.
I haven't heard him in a while.
Good to have him on the stream.
And of course that also counts on your modern podcast apps.
End of show mix is Professor Jay Jones.
Tech checks in twice, million miles mix on the way as well.
And we'll be back on Thursday to bring you more of your media deconstruction.
Coming to you from FEMA region number six, the heart of the Texas Hill Country.
In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, I'm John C. DuBois.
We return on Thursday.
Please remember us at noagendadonations.com.
Until then, adios mo foes, a hooey hooey, and such.
Be back to the front!
Hold the line!
Hold the line!
This is their last stand.
Let's go.
Wow! - Oh!
Trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations.
None of this is a peaceful protest.
In a movement which is sweeping this country.
For many students, this is about much more than Gaza.
It's about policing, too.
Speech from President Nixon, that he was going to have a Cambodian invasion and expand the war.
Police officers have just let off a flashbang device.
And Alison turns to Barry and she says, why are they doing this to us?
Rubber bullets were deployed too.
Last night saw a violent raid executed against anti-war protesters at UCLA.
During the events of May 4th, 1970, we know the Vietnam War was going on.
It was a very active spring.
What is clear is that many were not students.
They were older than 30, 40.
As well as Hell's Angels.
The violence came from pro-Israel protesters.
And they had helicopters buzzing the campus.
They brought the war home.
Protestors also launched tear gas or film spraying chemical agents like skunk on protestors.
For many students, this is about much more than Gaza.
It's about policing, too.
And so at a certain point, the National Guard came in and cleared them out, forcibly, with bayonets.
And a number of the students were actually stabbed.
Trespassers, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations.
None of this is a peaceful protest.
And they all go up the hill.
And they all turn in unison, and they all shoot in unison.
And they shoot at the students that are like 300 feet away.
Fires are blazing so brightly.
We'll be right back.
Fires are blazing so brightly.
I don't understand it.
Smoke reaching so far.
Your nuts, your nuts.
Your nuts, your nuts.
NASA satellites can see them.
One million miles away in space.
One million miles in space.
That are a million miles away.
Arctic is literally melting.
Parts are actually in fire.
Can we at least agree that directed energy weapons are a thing?
I didn't think that was a new thing.
We'll be right back.
General Michael Flynn calls out Netanyahu and the Israeli military leadership for clearly standing down.
But the point is, and so these governments all need a boogeyman.
I'm your boogeyman.
Somebody had had a bunch of the troops stand down.
I mean, this is 9-11 all over again.
I'm your boogeyman.
Break through, overrun, go in.
Israel supports Hamas.
There's a lot of back-channel wink-wink going on here.
I'm your boogeyman.
cases bullet cats it is true i'm your boogeyman and and so these governments all need a boogeyman no i don't support a mob you are 100 right we don't support a mosque i'm your boogeyman i looked it up israeli intelligence created a mosque general michael glenn calls out Let's be clear.
There's no way.
I'm your boogeyman.
Israel supports Hamas.
It is true.
I looked it up.
No, I don't support Hamas.
I'm your boogeyman.
I mean, this is 9-11 all over again.
But the point is... I'm your boogeyman.
Suitcases full of cash.
There's a lot of back-channel wink-wink going on here.