No Agenda Episode 1825 - "MUK-Ultra"
"MUK-Ultra"
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This is your award-winning give on the media assassination episode 1825.
This is no agenda.
Denouncing everyone and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
From Northern Silicon Valley, where you're wondering how you can have a shooting in Australia when guns are illegal.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
Yeah, I was hoping you wouldn't say that.
Ah, there you go.
Started off at the started off on the right foot with the famous pussy game again.
Gigi, Gigi, Gigi Shy.
Gigi Shai.
Gigi.
Yeah.
Oh, good lord.
Yeah.
Because whenever you say that, I get all the emails that say, that's not true.
We have hunting rifles.
We begin licensing.
Guns are outlawed.
Everybody, Australia has such a bad rap.
Like, well, they took your guns away and now look what happened.
Rhode Island.
Well, they took your guns away.
It's hard to get a gun.
Look what happened.
We live in a broken world, people.
I think that's a good idea.
I think, hey, you know what?
The argument is valid.
What's valid?
They took the guns away and look what happened.
You know what's interesting about certainly about Brown University Thanksgiving Day weekend.
We were doing a show, weren't we?
We did a show on Thanksgiving.
Did we do a show on Thanksgiving?
Of course.
Every Thanksgiving, except in 18 years of doing shows, we have done every Thanksgiving except one ever.
I do not recall the quad screen shouting at me, four dead and 13 wounded in Chicago.
You know, the news is racist.
Everybody's racist.
You know why?
Because of black people.
Black people in Chicago got killed Thanksgiving Day weekend.
Four dead, 13 wounded.
You didn't hear about it.
I wonder why.
Why is that?
No guns in Chicago either.
What's up with that?
Chicago's got very strict gun laws.
So what's up with that?
Hmm?
You already said.
Oh, they're racist.
Yeah, okay.
Good.
At least we understand.
And by the way, I denounce you.
Oh, no.
That's the cool new hip thing.
You got to denounce somebody.
I never heard this.
Oh, yeah.
No, you have to denounce Milo.
Denounce Tucker.
Denounce, what's the kid?
DeFuentes.
Denounce Dave Rubin.
Denounce Megan Kelly.
Denounce.
How did you get this?
I follow this.
Everybody's denouncing everybody.
Denounce.
I denounce you.
Corny.
It is.
I denounce you.
It is.
This MUK Ultra business is out of control.
Because that's what it is.
M-U-K-Ult.
M-U-K-Ultra.
That's what I'm doing.
I like M-U-K.
Oh, that's good.
It's a pun.
Yes.
Well, that, but that's clearly what it is.
MUCRA.
Yes.
Everybody.
Whoa.
Oh, hey, where was it?
Where did I have the?
I thought I clipped that.
This was the one.
Hold on.
Here it is.
All right, everybody.
It's obvious now who is the handler.
We all know who works for Mossad.
It's those little things where, again, he would walk through the door, drop his bags, daddy's home, take his phone Friday night, Shabbat Shalom.
Oh, no!
Oh, no!
I love that Shabbat Shalom.
She said, Shabbat Shalom.
Why did she say it, though, is the question?
She just said it.
Yeah, it's pretty funny.
Well, she got nothing but grief.
I didn't think we were going to bring her up, but she's been getting just boatloads of grief.
Well, you know.
So, first of all, I'm pretty sure, you know, talking about Sabbath is not all that odd in Christian circles.
And, you know, I can see Charlie Kirk saying, Shabbat Shalom, y'all.
I'm home.
I can see it.
The problem here is I don't even think horror was or most Jews say it.
Yes, they do.
It's a Friday night thing you're supposed to say.
Well, maybe that's what she was talking about.
Friday night again.
I know.
He came home Friday night and it's Shabbat Shalom.
Yeah.
But no, I'm not buying that.
Well, here's what's going on.
Here's what's going on with Erica Kirk.
Here's what's going on with Candace.
Here's what's going on with pretty much everybody.
Except us.
Except us.
All we do is deconstruct the news.
We don't get involved.
No, why would we?
No, because it's a sucker's game.
But you and I have unique experiences that we can talk about because we've been around.
We've done luck.
We've done certain things.
We've been certain places.
I can say on a microcosm, I know what it is to be super, super, super famous.
And that microcosm actually would be the Netherlands.
And when you get into any kind of...
You have a list?
I'm going to stop you.
Okay.
Because I don't think everybody realizes this, that you were super, super, super famous in the Netherlands to the point where you used to go even during the era of the show, which is an era, literally an era.
Yeah.
You would go to the Netherlands, and then all these, there'd be all these front page headlines about you and your new girlfriend who looked a lot like your old wife and blah, blah, blah, and all in Dutch.
And they all have pictures of you as you got your, you got your, your trench coat over your face, trying to avoid the cameras.
It was at that level.
And so people don't realize that that was true.
So you, you do speak from a, this is not bullcrap.
No, it's not bull crap.
And that started when I was 19.
All of a sudden, half of the country was watching me because there are only two TV stations.
And I was on with David Bowie and with the Stones and with Tina Turner and Grace Jones and just go all the way down the list.
Madonna.
In fact, the whole country still, whenever I entered the country, hey, Curry, Madonna.
Because at the time, they were saying Madoma, Madoma, Madoma.
I say it's Madonna.
Anyway, so I Mike on a microcosm, super famous.
And it's a very strange thing to experience, particularly when the media gets involved.
And I'll just consider X and YouTube and the podcast OSVIR.
I'll consider that all to be media.
In fact, I think I pioneered some of the back in the day, it was blogs.
And you'd write something on your blog, and then the newspaper would pick it up.
And then there would be a television news item about the blog that you wrote, that you posted that the newspaper wrote.
And you get into this very strange rhythm of responding.
And that's exactly what I'm seeing with all of these micro-famous people like Dave Rubin and Candace Owens.
I mean, we were at a party last night at dinner, and at least half the women are like, oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I can't wait four o'clock in the afternoon.
I'm ready.
I'm sitting there.
I'm hitting refresh.
I can't wait until Candace comes on.
And really?
Well, you also have to understand what is the number one category in podcasting.
Outrage.
No, no.
The number one category by far in podcasting is true crime.
Yeah.
That's been that case ever since.
Ever serial.
Yes.
And so that's essentially what Candace has become, true crime.
You know, who killed Charlie Curry?
Interesting interpretation.
Oh, and that's why women love it so much.
But then you add in this people commenting and then Candace commenting and then Dave Rubin commenting.
And by the way, the bad actor in all this, if there is a bad actor, is Tucker Carlson.
He is platforming.
So we have all these terms now.
I denounce you.
He platformed him.
You know, right on time.
Tucker platforms Nick Fuentes.
Tucker re-platforms Milo Yiannopolopoulos.
Right at the moment that I think Candace is about to flame out.
No, she may not.
You know, another Brit, another British connection is brought in.
To me, it feels a little bit like how we can't really do the Gen Z protests we're doing around the world, but let's mess them up in America anyway.
And we'll do it like this.
And it's just, it's unbelievable.
Every microcosm, every facial expression is analyzed and overanalyzed and no breaking news.
Nobody knows anything.
But the actors involved in this, and I say that with a specific reason, you get so swept up in it.
And at a certain point, you're like, whenever anybody says something, oh, I got to respond to that.
The funny thing in Holland, I don't know if it still works, but up until about 10 years ago, because you get newspapers calling, you get Barry Weiss is, oh, come on a town hall with me.
Let's talk about this.
Let's sit down on Fox and Friends.
It's not like you necessarily are on some tour, but you feel like you have to do it.
Because if you don't, then the other team wins.
And in this case, I had it with my first wife.
I mean, all kinds of stuff, but then with the government, oh, Curry with his helicopters, all kinds of nonsense.
In Holland, you can still, there is a response that you can give through your people.
And you can say, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
Right now we have a media stop.
It's an actual term.
We have a media stop.
And funny enough, when you say that, it kind of stops because you're not going to respond anymore.
And everybody knows it.
I have done so many stupid things in my life with the media.
Like there was, I remember doing an interview for a newspaper after I left wife number one, was with wife number two before she was my wife.
And oh, I'll just give an interview to the newspaper.
And they dragged it out over three days, two full page.
I'm like, of course, it wasn't exactly how I said it.
And it just made matters worse.
And that's what all these people are wrapped up in.
But this phenomenon where, you know, there's certainly a couple million people who are just completely, this is all they're living for.
They don't care about anything else.
This is it.
This is the thing.
It's really an interesting time to be alive to see it for sure.
But man, is it tiring?
I don't know if you, if I guess you don't follow it that much, which just proves that it's possible.
Of course, it proves it.
It's like this phone in the drawer.
Well, but you've got other things in your algo.
You've got crazy women from TikTok.
Actually, I've altered the algo because I've been rejecting.
You want to hear it?
I've not fought.
That started to finally wane because I got sick of it.
Yeah.
Oh, good.
I mean, really sick of it.
Yeah.
There's still TikTok clips.
I got one lined up here today, but there's, but I've, it's moved over to another group of women that are bitching about not being able to find a man.
It's a whole genre.
Oh, yeah.
It's a million of these women and they're going on.
All the good men are taking, oh, I'm this, I'm that.
And they're moaning and groaning.
You can wonder why they can't get a date.
I can't get a date.
Nobody knows how no one will come up to me.
And they go, and it's all whining.
I don't know how I got into this one because I didn't really solicit it, but I, but I know I got into it because I listened to one of them completely and I said, what?
I played it again.
Boom, I'm done.
And so now I'm getting all these videos of these women moaning and groaning about their lives.
So you and I are actually living in two different realities.
That's really what it is.
Which I guess is good.
No, you need the new dimensionality.
But I still have to denounce you.
Okay.
I just have to denounce you.
Well, then I fly denounce you too.
What everyone's missing is all the cool stuff that's happening, such as the absolute psyop to usher in digital ID.
I don't think you've caught this one.
I only caught it kind of by accident yesterday as I was doing prep.
I'm like, whoa, hold on.
If you caught it by accident yesterday, I'm doubtful that I caught it.
Listen to this.
Have you heard of 764?
It does ring a bell.
This is the warning that every parent needs to hear.
And James' mother tells Fox News, the predators who targeted her son will never be held accountable because the federal laws that we have right now are insufficient.
Members of 764 and other online networks target kids and extort them for money, sometimes convincing them to kill or sexually exploit themselves or others or harm animals.
Now, I warn you, the next few images that you're about to see are disturbing.
The violent online networks find vulnerable children on platforms like Discord and gaming sites.
These pictures are from the Vernon, Connecticut Police Department.
Police say a teenage girl was sextorted by 764 after sending sexually explicit and self-harm material.
The FBI tells Fox, quote, the FBI is investigating more than 350 subjects who are tied to violent online networks commonly referred to as 764, but includes many offshoot networks and names.
According to FBI Director Kash Patel, nihilistic violent extremism arrests are up 500% while arrests.
Did you hear that?
Nihilistic extremism arrests?
Hold on a second.
According to FBI.
Wait, and 500%, of course, they give us the real numbers.
Is it one and then now five?
Yeah, no, you're not going to, of course.
That would be 500%.
FBI Director Kash Patel, nihilistic violent extremism arrests are up 500%, while arrests specifically tied to 764 you see are up 20%.
Nihilistic extremism arrests, which is that's new.
Nightline got jumped on the bandwagon.
Welcome to this special edition of Nightline.
With a special edition.
I'm joined by ABC's Chief Justice correspondent Pierre Thomas.
Welcome back to Nightline, Pierre.
Good to be here.
I know you've been working on this story for nearly a year.
Indeed.
Juju, this is truly one of the most terrifying stories I've ever covered in my 30 years as a journalist.
Even worse than 9-11.
We're talking about a network that's both a national security threat and also a direct threat to the nation's families.
It's a story of pure evil, a network that seeks to sow chaos in our society.
This is good, isn't it?
One child at a time.
And we must warn you, there is graphic content and imagery that might disturb some viewers.
The darkest corner.
The music is what disturbed me.
And by the way, it should mention that this is the second report where they have to do something that they tell you, they go, this is almost done purposefully.
No, it is.
There's graphic images that might disturb you.
Which is to get you in a mindset.
But everybody got the same electronic press kit.
And when they say that, they flash a video, or they flash a picture, rather, of somebody holding a pink knife right in front of a little pug dog's face.
It's the weirdest.
And the pug dog, of course, you've seen this more than once.
Oh, yeah.
No, everyone has to do it.
There's a video release.
Okay, totally.
There is graphic content and imagery that might disturb some viewers.
The darkest corners of the internet, terrorizing the most vulnerable in the most unexpected places.
764, a loose network of anonymous people online across the world.
Their goal to unleash chaos.
Chaos.
Their targets are mostly children.
It's chopping time.
Like this girl, coerced to cut her own hair and eat it.
The FBI calling 764 one of the biggest emerging threats.
We're going after the idiot.
So sad.
So sad.
Sad.
No, how dumb are you?
Well, listen.
Listen, if you've somehow been coerced on, I don't know, I'll just name a platform off the top of my head, Roblox.
If you've been coerced somehow into showing something or doing something, you thought it was somebody else.
You thought it was a peer.
You thought it was someone your own age.
And then it turns out, oh, we're going to release this to all of your friends unless you cut off your hair and eat it.
Which.
Their targets, mostly children.
It's chopping time.
Like this girl, coerced to cut her own hair and eat it.
The FBI calling 764 one of the biggest emerging threats.
We're going after the new form of what I refer to as modern day terrorism in America, 764 crimes.
Each and every one of the 55 FBI field offices across the country are investigating 764-related cases.
Charges ranging from animal cruelty to child pornography to murder and even alleged terrorism.
They're calling it the number one digital threat right now against pushed into sexual and violent behavior.
This is about the most disturbing story I've seen.
I mean, everything's in that report.
But it's also in Canada.
A Halifax teen who police say is affiliated with violent online extremist group 764 was scheduled for plea in court on Thursday, but did not appear.
This comes days after the federal government labeled 764 a terrorist organization, making Canada the first country to do so.
The 16-year-old's lawyer appeared on his behalf, requesting a change to the youth's release conditions.
The accused will now be granted access to speak with legal counsel over a cell phone without internet connection under supervision.
He will not have the ability to use any devices other than that moment in time.
When announcing the charges in October, investigators described 764 as a group that glorifies serious violence.
Officials say the network operates on social media and gaming platforms to gain trust with kids before manipulating them into sharing intimate images or filming themselves committing acts of self-harm, violence, or animal cruelty.
And then the final one is we go back to ABC.
The I team continuing our coverage tonight on a sadistic online network targeting children.
We've told you about the group 764.
We've told you about it.
Members manipulate unsuspecting kids online, blackmail and extort them into producing sexually explicit images or harming themselves or others.
764 operates not only in the United States, but all over the world, using threats, blackmail, and perverse manipulation to groom children for violence and pain, according to the FBI, forcing them to perform depraved acts of violence against themselves and others.
The more debased and violent the image or video a member is able to coerce a child to produce, the higher their standing in the 764.
We've got to change the law.
Unfortunately, technology.
There it is.
Yep.
Oh, yeah.
Dig Durbin.
Has to be moving forward.
And as it moves forward, it's more challenges for criminal prosecution.
Now they're using all sorts of means of coercing these young people into doing horrible things, harming themselves and others and animals, and in some cases, taking their own lives.
Notice that they brought the new thing as the animals because kids alone wasn't doing it.
That's why I needed the little pug dog with the knife in front of his face.
They don't, you know, okay, they got the girl cutting her hair and eating it.
But once you bring in animals, now you've got everybody's attention.
Into doing horrible things, harming themselves and others and animals, and in some cases, taking their own lives.
At least 28 people have been charged by the Justice Department in recent years with suspected ties to 764 or affiliated networks.
Many have pleaded not guilty and are awaiting trial.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children tells the I team it's on track to receive nearly 2,000 reports of abuse tied to these networks this year, much of it starting unpopular online platforms.
The imagery, the videos, the chats that we are seeing and reading are the most graphic that I have ever seen in my 20-year history.
Everyone has the same thing.
Is that a robot voice?
No, it was not.
But it's all the same.
Most graphic, most disturbing.
Animals.
Did I mention animals?
Look at this puppy.
Animals.
Well, that's just because we've already been preconditioned to the notion that kids who abuse animals are likely to become sex offenders or whatever, which has been put into public domain.
It's in all the TV shows.
It's been around forever.
So you have to get the animal angle in there.
It's a good idea.
So we have, I think, eight bills all of a sudden popping up.
And the first couple ones are exactly what I said was coming months ago.
As we have the Godcaster app, and we already receive messages from the Apple Store, App Store, and from the Google Play Store.
Here's the API for age verification.
And they're going to want, they're probably going to start with every app where they kind of have started with every app should check the age.
That's what's happening in Australia.
Then we have the App Store Accountability Act, House Resolution 3149, which will require the app stores to verify the age of users and create parental accounts.
And of course, the parents will have to prove, have to prove their child's age with some form of government-approved ID.
Oh, real ID might work.
We have the Screen Act, HR 1623.
Now, this is for any website or app that has any kind of quote-unquote commercial pornography, whatever that means exactly.
What does that mean?
In this era.
Exactly.
We have the POPA, POPA, Parents Over Platforms Act.
And this requires app stores to determine a user's age category.
So not exactly age, but age category.
It'll be kind of like a PG-13RX rating.
Then we have, of course, the- Now, this back, can you stop a second here with this?
Yeah.
Yeah.
What kind of apps are we, are we talking about, if so, I say I have an RSS reader.
Do I have to verify somebody's age because it's an RSS reader?
Not yet, but I- Are we specifically, it had to be, what kind of apps?
So, I mean, it makes no sense to me that I should, or I have a word processor.
And who gives a crap how old a person is, one way or the other?
Well, obviously, all of this is ridiculous because it all points to one thing.
It all points to, why don't we just make it easy, everybody, and give everybody a digital ID?
And then when the app pops up or you want to use it, or a website, or whatever it is, you have to scan the QR code and then your phone with your digital ID will determine if you can, or, you know, the app side or the website side.
This is going to happen.
It's a foregone conclusion.
And it's happening worldwide.
And it won't all be one system.
So you have the Kids Online Safety Act.
That's the big one.
But there they're putting the responsibility on the quote-unquote platforms.
We have the Safer Gaming Act, which is similar, but it allows the FTC to sue video game companies.
See, this is where it gets kind of interesting.
When you put the liability and responsibility on the platforms.
Oh, you mean like they should do with vaccines?
Yeah.
Just wondering, why don't they do think in those terms?
You're preaching to the choir here, obviously.
But this is what's happening.
And the PSYOP is so obvious.
It's completely bullcrap.
And Kash Patel.
It's good, though.
You have to give them, come on.
So they got the number.
Those are magic numbers.
The angel number, I think, is in there.
Is 764 an angel number?
I think it is.
Yeah, I think it is.
But the whole thing is just like, it's just scambola written all over it in terms of it's they get some poor girl chewing her hair.
Okay, well, you know, fabulous.
That's the best we can get here.
Seeing angel number 764 frequently means that your guardian angels are trying to communicate with you.
They're reminding you to stay.
They're trying to protect you by getting digital ID.
What is 764 divided by 33?
23151.
No, that's nothing.
That's no good.
That's no good.
But Kash Patel, he's right there leading it.
He's the one.
Oh, 764.
It's not even, it's just a meme as far as I'm concerned.
There's no network.
And then they show these like artwork, obvious AI generated 764 with dripping blood.
Yeah.
Now, the question is, will we have to have an age verification for our podcasts?
Eventually, I think it will happen.
Well, it's going to be hard.
Eventually.
Eventually.
Now, the other piece of information.
Since our podcast actually, in many ways, can be traced to Europe.
Yeah.
The likelihood of it happening because of the European servers is higher, I think.
Possibly.
Who's American-based?
Possibly.
But I mean, it's still a ways off.
I just don't see it.
Oh, no, it's a ways off, but it's kind of past the four-year limit.
It's all coming.
But then while all this is going on, did you hear of Core 5?
I couldn't find a single report, by the way, from America, from Britain, from anybody, only Indian news and WION, which is just, it was so bad.
Core 5.
I have two clips.
Have you heard about that?
No, I have two clips.
I've decided to start doing this again, which is getting the rundowns from the beginning.
They're less than two minutes.
They're both short.
But it's the rundown, it's, there's a point to be made by them, but the two clips will also, I'm just, I don't want to play them now, but I'm just going to say when you play them, it will also not bring any of this.
Any of the kind of news that we uncover from Times of India, which is about us, is just the mainstream media just refuses to cover it.
But the thing about this is it went to a couple of different websites, Defense One.
I think we both read Defense One.
Let me just tell you what the story is, because I believe this to be true.
There was a longer version of the National Security Strategy document, the one that I read.
Right.
And the longer version, which was obtained by Defense One and a couple other people got it, goes into more detail and reaffirms the withdrawal from Europe's defense, realignment with culturally aligned allies, and the creation of a new power block to replace Western-dominated forums such as the G7, which Trump has complained about.
And this will be Core 5 or C5, and it will include America, Russia, China, India, and Japan.
And each of those countries has its own region of the world that you'd kind of be responsible for.
And at the same time, the document apparently calls for Austria, Hungary, Italy, and Poland to exit the European Union.
That part, I'm not so sure.
I'm not so sure if that really was in there.
But the idea of C5, Core 5, I think that's totally real.
It could be.
That would make sense.
That's a good idea.
That would be a great trading block.
And I'm sure it's high quality products.
Best price.
Yeah, cheap goods.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's, and I'm sure the.
Correct supply chains.
I mean, it's like that, you know, I keep remarking on you bought one of these too, which is that ridiculous knife from Japan.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, that thing's amazing.
With this 67-fold bucks.
49 bucks.
49 bucks.
Of course, it was on sale, but even when at the full price, because I've seen these things years ago when the ratio, the yen wasn't devalued to such an extreme.
And that knife was typically $250.
Wow, really?
That much.
Yeah, I never, they used to have them in some of the Japanese stores around here.
I never bought one.
I always admired them, but I never bought one because of the ridiculous price.
It's like, I can't afford this $250 knife.
But $49, I can afford that.
Although it's better if people donated in the show, I had to mention that.
So this longer version of the National Security Strategy document incorporates themes of cultural revival, traditional values, and religious identity alongside a reassessment of U.S. global obligations.
And I think this was leaked on purpose.
What?
Of course.
It was leaked on purpose.
And it's shaken everybody in their boots.
I want to do the rundowns, but first, I have to, I have to play a couple of clips from my boy because he just went off.
And I'm now thinking that Mark Grutte may have been cut out or something.
He went off the rails at the Munich Security Conference.
He's been going a little more off the rails every time we've listened to him.
Here we go.
I'm here today to tell you where NATO stands and what we must do to stop a war.
This is literally his keynote at the beginning.
And what we must do to stop a war before it starts.
And to do that, we need to be crystal clear about the threat.
We are Russia's next target.
And we are already in harm's way.
Yeah, we're already in harm's way.
Everybody, step, get under your bed.
When I became NATO Secretary General last year, I warned that what is happening in Ukraine could happen to allied countries too.
And now it's happening.
That we have to shift to a wartime mindset.
This year we took the big decisions to make NATO stronger.
At the summit in The Hague, allies agreed to invest 5% of GDP annually in defense by 2035.
We agreed to increase defense production across the alliance.
And we agreed to continue our support to Ukraine.
But this is not the time for self-congratulation.
This is not the time for self-congratulation.
For what?
Hey, we did it.
We got the 5%.
This is not the time for self-congratulation.
Which is a very, it's a total Dutchism, by the way.
But this is not the time for self-congratulation.
I fear that too many are quietly complacent.
Go!
Too many don't feel the urgency.
Urgency.
And too many believe the time is on our side.
It is not.
It is not.
No.
The time for action is now.
The time for action is now.
Allied defense spending and production must rise rapidly.
Our armed forces must have what they need to keep us safe.
And Ukraine must have what it needs to defend itself.
Now.
Now.
So he has a new sales pitch.
He's not.
Now, I don't, I'm not even sure he's working for Trump.
I think he's just straight up working for the military industrial complex.
And I have some boots on the ground to back up.
Yeah, and here's uh so now his new pitch is: hey, Russia is spending a lot.
If you don't spend, you get behind.
Ambassador, I understand the question.
Uh, of course, I am aware of fair stages of all the discussions, I cannot go into all the details.
Um, but uh, what I was talking about was primarily focusing, primarily focusing on making sure that whatever the military power of the Russians, and at this moment that's considerable given their extreme investments now in defense, uh, total defense budget 200 billion dollars, and with their purchasing power, that's about the same as the whole of European NATO are spending on defense in terms of purchasing power.
So, it's really a lot of money, and but there's your purchasing power and they don't have all the bureaucracy we have, so uh, they can take the decisions quickly, easily move to this wartime economy as they have done wartime economy, and that's why they are posing a threat immediately.
What we need to do with the security guarantees, first of all, is to make sure that they will never try again by knowing that our reaction will be, as I said, devastating.
That's another prime focus.
Say what it sounds coked up.
Yeah, so here's his final pitch.
It comes at the end, but it's worth it.
We are all now intimately aware of the geography of Ukraine.
We all know what Porkovsk is in Donbas, in Donetsk, and that small city of 60,000 people.
They started to onslaught on that city in the summer of 2024.
It is now the end of 2025.
They still have not captured it.
And in the meantime, on this front line, they are losing.
Last month, 25,000 people getting killed.
If you have a dictator willing to do this, he's a dictator willing to do this because you have this crazy idea of some historical whatever he has.
It's some historical whatever he has.
It's just some like what he's trying to say is he wants the old USSR back, you know?
Then you have to be very careful.
Very careful.
And we have to stand ready.
And that's why.
Stand ready.
Are you standing ready, John?
Sean, are you standing ready?
You know the founding city for modern Russia?
St. Petersburg?
Kiev.
It is crucial that the biggest economy in Europe, and that is Germany, with its enormous power, has decided already under Scholzvisitz and then with Chancellor when this government was formed in March, even before the government was formed, under leadership of now Chancellor Mertz, to make this extraordinary crucial.
Please, I know also in Germany some people are questioning, do we do that?
They really need to do this.
Yes.
I'm going to tell you something right now.
I'm going to threaten you if you don't put the money into the weapons of war in this war economy.
You'll see what will happen.
If you love the German language and you do not want to speak Russian, it is crucial.
It is a sine qua nom, because otherwise this guy will not stop with Ukraine.
That's, I think, what we have to be very watchful of.
So if you don't pay up, do you like speaking German?
Because otherwise you'll be speaking Russian.
What is going on here?
You know, I think that Trump and the whoever's running the country is referring back to C5.
Yeah.
It has a sense that Europe is so screwed that we really have to get out of there.
Well, especially with the most recent development.
After months of political wrangling and a flurry of criticisms issued by US President Donald Trump last week, European leaders have come out with a strong response.
In an audacious move, the European Union have decided to indefinitely immobilize Russian assets held in EU countries worth a whopping 210 billion euros.
An emergency clause in the treaties was triggered.
No, no.
The total is 210 billion.
90 is at Euroclear.
Worth a whopping 210 billion euros.
An emergency clause in the treaties was triggered this week to freeze the overseas holdings owned by the Russian Central Bank.
The measure comes just days after Trump labeled Europe a, quote, decaying continent and called its leaders weak.
With one bold move, the bloc was able to push back against external interference and insulate the large sum of money from the Kremlin's war machine.
The bulk of the assets, some 185 billion euros, are held at Euroclear, a central securities depository in Brussels.
The remaining 25 billion are spread in banks across five other EU member states.
Until now, the funds have been paralyzed under the traditional sanctions scheme, which requires renewal by unanimous vote among the member states biannually.
So that's about the dumbest thing they could have done.
Of course, Russia is now suing Euroclear and probably the European Union because by saying, hey, it's indefinitely frozen.
There was away.
No, but it had to be renewed every six months.
Yeah, but it was still frozen.
But if you listen to that report carefully, he made it sound as though that was money being used by the Russians in their war effort.
Yeah, which I don't think is true.
Well, it can't be true.
No.
No.
No, it's just a bunch of money that's over that's frozen that was trusted.
It went to a trusted source.
Yeah, and that source is no longer trusted.
No, the source is no longer trusted.
And what kind of idea is that?
How does that improve things?
Well, I think, remember, so Ukraine is out of money.
They're out of money.
They need 60 or 70 billion euros like right now.
So that's why Queen Ursula put the two-week deadline in place with the two options.
Either we go raise this money in the public markets or we take the Russian, the Russians' money.
And they could not get the 27 state member bloc to all agree on taking the money.
So somewhere in the treaties, which would be the Lisbon Treaty, I guess, somewhere, somewhere in the fine print, it says, well, you know, if we declare an emergency, just like we do over here, you know, terrorism, whatever, international, you know, we can do tariffs because of terrorism, whatever.
So the fine print said, you can then evoke this emergency and then you can do whatever you want.
And now that's exactly what the European Commission has done.
And no, Euroclear hates it.
Belgium hates it, particularly because Belgium has not gotten a full protection.
It's like, yeah, most of the things we'll protect you in most cases, but if you get Russian boots, we're not going to do anything for you.
So that's a mess.
At the same, last night at this dinner, I spoke again to my buddy from my new friend from the Department of War.
Now, he's a younger guy, so he's in his 40s.
I've talked about him before.
Yeah, no, he's becoming a regular on the show.
Well, the problem with him is because he's younger, he's really careful.
You can see him painfully just with his head down when I ask a question thinking, he says, I got to think about how I can answer that.
I said, I know the type.
I've got clearance.
It's okay.
You can tell me.
He wasn't buying that at all.
So I started off.
said, Hey, how's that?
How's that gen AI.mil doing?
Thinking I would break the ice.
He says, that thing is just complete, utter bull crap.
He says, what we're really dealing with.
Now, remember, he's in the modern, like the next generation warfare testing department.
I think that's what it is.
Yeah, something like that.
Something good.
Advanced.
Something good.
He says, you know, we have this new procurement process, which is what Hag Seth announced.
You know, no longer are we, you know, going to spend billions of dollars and overrun by 100 billion and have something take 10 years before we can finally put it into the battlefield.
No, we start testing, going into the battlefield right away.
And he says, I see the inputs.
I see the output.
So I know that what we, the commands we give this stuff, he was a little unclear, but I'll get to that.
We give the commands and then the stuff does it.
He says, but I am unable to see what's in the middle.
I said, what do you mean?
What's in the middle?
Gen AI.mil.
He says, no, Palantir.
I said, oh, oh, he says, yeah, we can't look inside to see it, how it actually works.
And I said, I said, so this is about drones.
He said, and I think I followed up by saying, man, Ukraine must be great for you guys.
And I think he kind of he went beyond what he should have said.
He said, there's never been a better place to test new stuff.
And I said, this must be a great sales job.
And he starts laughing.
And so then we get back to the drones, and he says, you know, the big thing now is that all these drones are tethered because of the- Yeah, the little wire.
He says, in Ukraine alone.
Half of Ukraine is strewn with these wires.
Thousands of miles of fiber optic cable.
Yeah, there's one false, yeah, fiber.
Yeah, I know.
You know, so they're on these long pictures of it.
It's like it's just piles and piles of glass.
And so, and then he said, and this is for our, this is, here's a tip, early tip of the day for you entrepreneurial producers out there.
He says, now everywhere we test this stuff, unless it's Ukraine, so we have to figure out how to clean it all up.
And he actually said, this is a great business opportunity for anybody who starts a company cleaning up these thousands of miles of fiber optic cables from testing all this new stuff.
So there's a tip.
There's strands, not cables.
Yeah, strands.
They're strands.
And I said, well, shouldn't we have drones with big scissors on them or something?
You can fly in and snip them.
End of conversation.
Yeah, you got silly.
Yeah, I know.
I ruined it.
I got silly.
What was I thinking about?
so i think that this this is all being remember the people you know the counter the problem the reason they started doing that uh with the fiber optic uh strands and running it for miles They're just literally miles and miles long.
Yeah.
It's because they haven't come up with the drone technology that will defeat the Russian jamming.
That was the whole reason to do it.
Yes.
Because the jammers would send those things over into a building or they'd just make a mess.
And so they had, well, what are we going to do about it?
Well, let's have a hard wire the damn things.
Okay.
This is like an idiotic answer to the problem.
Yes.
I mean, they could also make him autonomous.
But think about what's happening.
But think about what's really happening.
This is all the military industrial complex who are the biggest lobbyers in any government around the world.
I'm sure half the European Union is in their pocket.
And we know that half of our own Congress is in their pocket through APAC.
And so if you look at others, but indirectly through APAC.
If you look at the new National Defense Authorization Act, which I have been reading, and it hasn't passed, so the Senate has it, and who knows what's going to happen.
There are multiple provisions for directed energy capabilities, in particular, high-power microwave systems to neutralize drone swarms.
So they're creating the problem.
Oh, look, we got drones.
And like, oh, now we need to have anti-drone technology.
It's a game.
It's what you do.
It's a big game.
It really is.
That NDAA is pretty funny, though.
We got lots of alien stuff coming up.
We, let's see, we have non-human intelligence needs to be recognized as sentient, intelligent, non-human life forms, maybe presumed responsible for unidentified anomalous phenomena, and we need to have a steering committee on that.
It's so good.
Mandatory disclosure.
Yes, we have to have like how many times have we had a disclosure?
I've seen it so many times now.
And Space Force special ops now.
Space Force Special Ops.
Because, you know, I have a point to make here with a couple of clips.
And it does kind of it applies to your C5.
Okay.
Which sounds more like an explosive.
Well, it's one better than C4.
Yes.
Yeah.
It goes to 11.
So, and these are the NBC.
This is the two.
I'm going to ask you a question.
So I decided to do the rundowns.
So just pick up the rundowns from this news broadcast from NBC.
Since they now have Tommy Yamas as the new guy running.
Tom Yamas, is that the guy?
No, no.
Where did that guy go?
What was his name?
I think he lost his voice.
I don't know.
What was his name?
I thought that was Tom.
That isn't Tom Yamis.
Who was that?
No, no, no Tom Yamis is a young looking guy.
He looks like a gasey.
Big C. Big.
Bigze.
Piges.
Bigze.
Pages.
Yeah, Jeff.
Jeff Pages.
Jeff Piges.
Yeah, okay.
So he's gone.
He's been fine.
I don't know why he's.
I think he, I don't know what happened to him.
He got my attention.
He got my attention.
I always liked the guy, and he seemed to be a good reporter.
Yeah.
So let's go with the NBC.
Now, here's the Friday rundown.
Tonight, the new photos from Jeffrey Epstein's estate just released, rocking the rich and powerful.
The big names who appear with him in those images.
The pictures show Epstein with Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Woody Allen, and more.
The photos released by Democrats as part of a congressional investigation.
What the images could reveal and what those captured on camera with the convicted sex offender say about them now.
The shocking downfall of Michigan's football coach in court today via Zoom, charged with home invasion, stalking, breaking and entering.
What we're learning about the threats he made to the staffer he was having an affair with.
Dramatic rescues in Washington State.
People trapped on rooftops.
Thousands forced to evacuate.
And the threat is far from over.
King Charles opening up for the first time about his cancer battle.
What he's revealing about his diagnosis.
A terrifying attack in Georgia.
A man throwing acid on this woman, seemingly at random.
Police asking for help in finding the person of interest.
And what her family revealed to us about her burns.
Alarming new video of a DoorDash driver caught on camera, appearing to pepper spray a food order.
How police are responding tonight?
The comeback for the ages.
Skiing great Lindsay Vaughan blowing away the competition.
The oldest skier ever to win a World Cup race.
What she told me about her quest for gold in the Olympics.
And there's good news tonight.
The Rockettes celebrating 100 years.
We'll introduce you to one former dancer still kicking at age 93.
Nightly news starts right now.
Wow.
This is NBC Nightly News with Tom Yamas.
Good job, Tom.
Good read.
Good read, brother.
That was really great.
Good intro.
All right, everybody.
Get set after the commercial.
So they, of course, just start off in that order of the stories.
It's interesting enough.
But can I just say that?
There's a million things there's not in there.
And the thing, domestically, at least, you'd think there'd be at least a mention of the multi-billion dollar scandal of the Somalis stealing money from the people of Minnesota.
Dreaming of the United States government.
You see, if you listen to these reports, and I'm curious for your Saturday rundown, all that it is is things that could happen to you.
That's what they're going for.
What will get your nervous system?
You could be, you know, your DoorDash guy could pepper spray you.
I mean, what with all the other things?
Fast it in your face.
Of course, you know, your kid could get killed at Brown University.
It's all about what could happen to you personally.
And then we'll whip you up at the end there to keep you going because you don't want to go, oh, I can't listen to this.
Hey, I could actually be 41 and win a ski medal.
I could become an Olympic athlete.
It's so obvious.
They've studied this.
They know.
They know what keeps retention.
They've got the smart team.
Enter the news.
Well, no, it's entertaining.
The woman spraying the food order.
They have a video of it from a ring door cam.
And it's like, it's not this.
Okay.
Well, that's that network level national news.
Grambling.
Gambling anybody?
I mean, it's like stupid.
Meanwhile, there's a billion dollars in fraud by a bunch of some Somalis.
Yeah, but what about Israel, man?
And in fact, they don't even mention that either.
And they, I mean, of course, the shooting in Australia.
Oh, that's more wall-to-wall.
It could happen to you, Jew.
That's what it is.
Actually, the wall-to-wall, which was annoying, was the Brown shooting because they showed on Fox, they bumped everything and they just kept having the same report, which went like this.
So, Bill, what do you know?
Well, we don't know anything yet, but we do have a couple of people here that can theorize on it.
Let me ask them.
Oh, what do you know, Bill?
Nothing.
We got nothing.
Hour later.
What do you know?
Well, no, nothing.
We got nothing.
It's going to be a press conference.
Then they're going to tell them they know nothing.
It's bull crap.
And so let's go to Saturday.
Yes.
And here's the Saturday.
This is yesterday's rundown.
Breaking news.
The active shooter incident at Brown University.
School officials alerting students to lock their doors, silence their phones, and take cover.
The late developments just in.
Also, breaking a deadly attack on American troops in the Middle East.
Two Army soldiers and a civilian interpreter killed in an attack in Syria, according to the Pentagon.
In what officials say was likely an ISIS ambush.
Tonight, President Trump's warning, the U.S. will retaliate.
Tens of millions on alert for snow and Arctic cold.
White conditions in some areas causing massive pilots, jackknife trucks, and traffic backed up for miles.
Where this is headed next and the sub-zero temperatures tonight.
Newly released 911 calls from that deadly UPS plane crash in Kentucky.
The sky's black.
The plane just crashed.
Hear from the witnesses who called in just moments after the flight went down.
Inside the secret mission to get Venezuela's opposition leader out of the country.
And after accepting a Nobel Peace Prize, what is Maria Corina Machado's vision for the future?
Skiing superstar Lindsay Vaughn keeping up her comeback for the ages.
How she finished in her second day at the World Cup.
Plus a comeback of another kind.
As online shopping sets records this holiday season, why those big catalogs we all used to get in the mail are making a return.
And there's good news tonight about hundreds of people stepping up and lighting up the night to spread holiday cheer.
And there's good news.
This is NBC Media News with Jose D. You nailed the formula.
Yeah, of course.
What can happen?
What bad things can happen to you starts us off.
It could be anywhere in the world, but it's generally what bad things can happen, followed by somebody succeeding the Lindsey Vaughn.
Why are they doing Lindsey Vaughn twice and they still haven't mentioned the scandal in Minnesota?
They haven't mentioned this.
Not on the news.
It's not covered, but they have Lindsey Vaughn twice in a row, two days in a row.
But you see, you have to understand this is our opportunity right now.
So mainstream is doing that.
The alternative media, all the alternative media is doing is denouncing each other, denouncing Israel, denouncing Turning Point USA.
Meanwhile, people tune into the No Agenda Show to get a little bit deeper information.
You know, like how Russia is going to attack Europe, how the Core 5 is being set up.
And you know what?
You're not going to hear that ever.
I mean, until it's officially announced, they're not going to do it.
It's not interesting.
And by the way, that is why we just get by on this show, because we know how to do it.
You were the master of trolling audience.
You were the master.
You did it for years.
Mac sucks.
Oh, actually, quite interesting what they've done over there at Apple.
Mac is horrible.
I mean, you were the master of it.
But it doesn't fit the format.
Even what you used to do is no longer any good.
So we just kind of get into stuff.
We tell people what's happening in the world.
We deconstruct the news.
And what is today?
Today is the 14th.
Yes.
So there is one more day, but I tend to keep track of things when, you know, how people say, well, that didn't age well.
I always love that.
I always love it.
Because I've done a lot of those.
You know, like, well, Kiri, that didn't age well.
But let me go back to just two weeks ago on this very show.
Urgent intelligence alerts.
With flashing lights emojis.
NCTC National Counterterrorism Center confirms al-Qaeda presence on U.S. soil.
Imminent multi-city Islamic terror attacks.
So now we have Laura Loomer.
We have Laura Logan.
We have Alex Jones.
We have General Flynn.
It all kind of comes down to the same sleeper cells.
And she says this.
Sources tell me tonight that the National Counterterrorism Center has officially determined that Islamic terrorists affiliated with al-Qaeda have infiltrated U.S. soil and are actively planning a series of coordinated Islamic terror attacks.
This marks the first time federal counterterrorism officials have openly acknowledged the immediacy of such threats, signaling a potential escalation in domestic jihadist activity not seen since the height of ISIS-inspired plots in the mid-2010s.
She goes on and on and on.
My sources tell me the attack strategy by al-Qaeda is designed to sow confusion and cripple emergency response.
These terrorists have been purchasing large quantities of police and first responder uniforms from surplus outlets and online vendors in at least five states.
These acquisitions, traced through bulk credit card anomalies and CCTV footage, suggests a plan to impersonate law enforcement during the assaults, allowing attackers to blend in, direct panic crowds, or even execute secondary strikes on fleeing victims.
And we're back.
And I should add to that that Candace Owens also said this.
She actually said this tweet will age well.
And here on your No Agenda show, when we hear this kind of thing, we just play a jingle.
ISIS.
I feel good.
Because we've been here before.
We've heard it all.
We've seen it all.
It's all a hoax.
All of it.
All of it.
It's all a big hoax.
Hoax.
It's amazing.
The Epstein thing, of course, was very weak, weak, weak attempt.
Well, let me play the Epstein.
I actually have the Epstein NBC report that came right after Tom Yamis got it pushed to the top.
Okay.
And good evening.
We begin tonight with those stunning new images from Jeffrey State.
The photos are stunning.
A desk.
Glimpse into his high-flying world featuring presidents, billionaires, and celebrities.
Oh, stop the clip for a second.
People have to realize that they're showing all these, you know, the pictures that were released by Congress or by the Democrats.
There is nothing in these pictures.
No, zero.
They're boring, actually.
They're just like a bunch of, it's like anybody's roll from their digital camera.
It's just stuff.
The pictures were released by congressional Democrats, and President Trump just responded to them moments ago from the Oval Office.
I did like the insinuation of the sex toy pictures.
Did you see those?
No, they didn't show them on this report, and I haven't seen it.
No, now there are a couple of reports that a picture of some sex toys in boxes, you know, like anal intruder and, you know, with a glove, a glove with all kinds of ribbed fingers and stuff.
And I'm thinking to myself, I would say 350 million Americans, whatever.
It's got to be 100 million Americans who are going, oh, crap, I got that one too.
You know, it's like, what are you trying to do?
What is this trying to tell us?
One photo shows the president from years ago, pictured with six women whose faces have been redacted.
Other photos show several high-profile men.
You see them here, including Bill Gates, Richard Branson, and Woody Allen, along with this photo of former President Bill Clinton that was designed by him.
What?
Did you see the pictures at all?
One, there's a guy that looks exactly like Ron Bloom.
No, I missed that.
Who says it wasn't?
Next to Branson.
Who says it wasn't him?
Michael Barron.
Branson and Woody Allen, along with this photo of former President Bill Clinton, that appears to be signed by him, showing him with Epstein and Ghelane Maxwell.
The White House blasting the release tonight.
House Democrats are trying to create a false narrative.
And we should note these images do not appear to show anything illegal.
But it all comes while the clock is ticking ahead of next week's deadline for the Justice Department to release their Epstein files.
Ryan Noble starts us off tonight from Capitol Hill.
Wow, he's going to start us off.
Well, I'm very excited about this report now.
What can we expect?
I can tell you what to expect.
What you just heard.
Exactly the same stuff.
Here we go.
Tonight, a new trove of photos from Trove is a trove.
Trove.
It is a trove.
Trove.
Yeah.
Jeffrey Epstein, revealing more proof of the convicted sex offender's relationship with several powerful men.
These pictures, some of these photos.
Hold on a second.
Do we need more proof?
I guess.
We already know that this is not what's new here in this report.
Nothing.
Nothing, but we're still going to listen to two minutes of it.
So let's go.
With several powerful men.
Powerful.
These pictures, some of these photos are really disturbing.
These images, part of a tranche of more than 90% of the people.
It's very disturbing that there's nothing implicating anybody in any of them.
5,000 undated photos handed over to the House Oversight Committee and released by Democrats.
They do not appear to show any illegal activity.
Appear.
One shows Epstein with a younger president, Donald Trump, and an unidentified woman.
Trump also appears in other pictures without Epstein, but with women whose identities are protected by the committee.
Trump has denied that.
I hate to interrupt.
Actually, I don't, obviously.
No, it's what we do.
It's what we do.
Why?
Would you call it younger President Trump?
Was he president then 25, 30 years ago?
They always call him Trump or Mr. Trump, but in this case, a younger President Trump.
Yeah, they always, right?
They always call him Mr. Trump or they even when he's currently they're discussing it.
But now that he's he's with a picture of Epstein and some blonde who's got a big smile on her face, who they never identify, they say the younger President Trump.
It's like, no, he's not younger President Trump.
He wasn't president 30 years ago.
No.
We continue.
Trump has denied knowing anything about Epstein's criminal activities.
See, then they don't call him President Trump.
He's just Trump.
He has photos with everybody.
I mean, almost there are hundreds and hundreds of people that have photos with him.
So that's no big deal.
I know nothing about it.
The committee also releasing this photo of Epstein in a bathtub.
And this one, a signed photo of Bill Clinton with Epstein.
By the way, the bathtub photo, I'm like, that's a pretty normal-looking bathtub.
You know, from the bathtub.
So what?
From like a two-bedroom.
Oh, my God.
He's taking a bath.
That's right.
A signed photo of Bill Clinton with Epstein and his partner Ghelaine Maxwell.
Clinton has said in the past that he'd wished he'd never met Epstein.
There are also new photos Epstein with one-time Trump ally Steve Bannon.
The two posing for a mirror selfie.
Yeah, we're taking Bannon down.
In another event, there was a picture on a desk of a woman who appears to be passed out in a bathtub.
Other powerful people like billionaires Bill Gates and Richard Branson are in the photos, as is film director Woody Allen.
In one picture, Allen and Epstein are on a movie set.
Bannon, Gates, Branson, and Allen did not respond to NBC News' requests for comment.
These photos are separate from the evidence held by the Department of Justice.
Congress voted to force the DOJ to release that material a week from today, and congressional leaders are warning the administration better comply.
This is a new law with criminal implications if they don't follow it.
And Ryan, walk our viewers through the timeline now.
Walk usually expect more releases like this in the near future.
Walk us through the timeline.
Yes, Tom, we should expect a steady stream of releases just like this one.
The committee, of course, in possession of more than 95,000 photos.
And they also have access to the trove of bank documents.
The trove!
Which they expect to release in the very near future.
All right.
I can top this.
Now, by the way, don't you agree that the second report was identical to Tom Yama's rundown?
Yeah, because why Phil anything?
This is what they do.
All these news networks do the same thing.
They give you what they're going to talk about.
And then they talk about it.
And then they talk about it in the same manner that they told you that they're going to, it's just like, what is this?
The third grade?
They could have spent some time on the billions of dollars filched from the American taxpayer by the Somalis.
I'm telling you.
They won't touch it.
It's so much more interesting.
Instead, I think your representative, Dave Min from California.
Dave Min, are you familiar with Min?
I think he's Asian.
Mean Mean.
Mean.
Dave Mean?
Mean?
Yeah, I don't know who he is.
He's from L.A., probably.
Yeah.
So he comes on, what show was this?
I can't remember what show this was.
I think it was CNN.
And he's talking about the photo of the Trump condom, which, you know, if you look at it, it was obviously from the long period where Epstein hated Trump.
It was a, you know, it was like, it was like a novelty gift because it has Trump's face on it and underneath the letters, it's huge.
Okay.
So that's all we're seeing.
And listen to how this numbskull positions it.
It's great.
I do want to get your thoughts on one photo in particular and hope that you can give us some more detail.
This image shows a bowl of novelty condoms with a caricature of Donald Trump's face on it.
Can you tell us who took this picture, when it was taken?
If there's any context that you can provide about this.
I think we're still working through the details.
So we're trying to learn that information as well as the identities and ages of that information, learning the identities and ages of the young women he was standing around.
Six women whose faces were covered up.
We may not necessarily release all that information.
We're trying to get those answers.
But again, I think that photo, which was clearly like a gag, saying it's huge with Donald Trump's photo on these condom packages, just illustrated the very buddy-buddy nature of the relationship between Trump and Epstein.
The very buddy-buddy nature.
Did you say buddy-buddy?
Buddy Buddy.
Buddy Buddy.
The very buddy-buddy nature.
We've seen lots of other indicators of how close they are.
The question that I think a lot of Americans want to know, and a lot of the survivors want to know, is was Donald Trump someone who actually broke the law?
Did he rape children?
And we know, of course, one girl, now a woman, did Donald Trump rape children?
Filed a lawsuit accusing Donald Trump of raping her when she was 13 or 14 years old.
I believe that that was since taken back, that that was the lawsuit under threat.
She claimed that she was being threatened.
Her family was being threatened.
But he raped her.
And I'm not saying that everyone in this country has the presumption of innocence until proven guilty.
But we all know he raped her.
I am pointing out, however, that someone did file a claim in a court of law saying that Donald Trump had raped her when she was 13.
I think the question that a lot of us want to know, who else is involved, how many people are involved in this network, and we know that the cover-up goes all the way to the top.
It's been a high-level cover-up for decades and decades under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
Oh, brother.
That's California for you.
Yeah, that's what makes the state so charming.
Yes.
It's extremely charming.
Yes.
Particularly Southern California, if he's from Los Angeles.
It's a beautiful thing.
It's just beautiful.
So, yeah.
I never lived in Southern California, but you did.
I did, yes.
I barely lasted a full year.
It was so bad.
Really, it was just horrible.
I did not like it at all.
Everybody, especially Los Angeles.
Everybody's just, who are you?
What can I get out of you?
Who are you connected to?
Can you get me an audition?
That's basically it.
I'd love to hear.
So I have this morning's interview with Maria Carina Machado.
But before we do that, I'd love to get some of your Venezuela clips played.
Yeah, this is kind of a rundown on.
Well, it starts off with the WTF clip, which is WTF, clearly.
Right, we're going to be focusing on Venezuela.
The latest news is that last night on Wednesday, the U.S. government released a video of U.S. forces basically seizing a Venezuelan oil tanker.
And the pictures are remarkable.
I mean, it's amazing that you can see this much of a military operation happening in the ocean.
But there's video of U.S. forces rappelling out of a helicopter on ropes to land on the top of this massive oil tanker.
And then guns drawn, they're marching towards the cabin where the crew are.
And you can see them basically taking the ship.
There's about 10 of them land on it.
It's really, really remarkable to be able to watch.
Are you kidding me?
The Houthis was 10 times better.
No, it was better produced, but that brought to mind something I didn't consider.
Who was taking this video?
It's like the moon landing videos where the thing takes off and the camera follows it up.
Who's running the camera?
I think it was from another helicopter, I think.
No, it was stationary.
Because I saw these videos over and over.
And no, it wasn't from another helicopter.
It was a stationary camera on the boat taking pictures of these guys jumping off their chopper onto the boat.
Repelling, John.
They were repelling.
Repelling.
They were jumping.
They were repelling.
And so they're repelling onto the boat.
And I was thinking about it when I, it was when this guy was going on and on and on about it on the BBC.
I'm thinking, wait a minute, it is kind of fishy.
Well, it wasn't as well produced, overproduced as the one you're talking about.
The Houthis video was great.
They had them both.
But beside the point is still who took the movie?
Somebody on the boat, some guy with his cam.
He's, oh, let me, oh, look what's happening here.
Instead of running for cover, he's standing there taking a movie.
What kind of a moron is that?
No, this is, there's something fishy about this takeover.
So that's all I, so that got my attention.
That's why I became a WTF.
You're not doing it right.
You're supposed to take a take a page from Candace Owen.
You're supposed to say, I don't know, just kind of weird vibes about who took this video footage.
Isn't that interesting?
I'm just saying, I'm just saying, we're just asking questions.
I'm not going to be able to get to that type of presentation.
I would be making her money.
So let's go with that.
So this was all part of a BBC report that was on one of their, it was on the service, World Service, and it was also on one of their podcasts.
But here we go with the whole thing, part two.
And that was released shortly after Donald Trump told us that they had seized this ship and said that the U.S. was probably going to keep the oil.
As you probably know, we've just seized a tanker on the coast of Venezuela.
It's a large tanker, very large.
Largest one ever seized, actually.
And other things are happening, so you'll be seeing that later, and you'll be talking about that later with some other people.
What happens to the oil on this ship?
Well, we keep it, I guess.
What does it go?
Of course it's going to be.
When you have to follow the tanker, you know, you're a good news, but just follow the tanker.
Do you know what follows?
Follow it.
Get a helicopter.
Follow the tanker.
But we're going to, I guess, we're going to keep the oil.
The biggest, it had to be the biggest ever, didn't it?
The seizure.
But if you thought that was a kind of slightly peculiar, Trump-esque reaction to what had happened, listen to the Venezuelan president, who was every bit as strange.
Here's Nicolas Maduro.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
La Don't worry.
Be happy.
Wait a minute.
This is Maduro.
Yeah, you didn't see that?
No.
In fact.
Yeah, he got it.
He had his sombrero on and he had this long wine-like shirt and he started singing.
That reminds us of a classic.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
But Putin did a great job.
The Maduro really needs to work on his diction.
Let's go back.
That was good.
The biggest, it had to be the biggest ever, didn't it?
The seizure.
But if you thought that was a kind of slightly peculiar, Trump-esque reaction to what had happened, listen to the Venezuelan president, who was every bit as strange.
Here's Nicolas Maduro.
Don't worry.
Be happy.
La Don't worry.
Be happy.
La Just peace.
Not war.
Peace.
Just peace, not war, he was saying there.
And in Spanish, immediately before he broke into song, he was saying to American citizens who are against the war, I respond with a very famous song.
Now, the U.S. has not actually declared war on Venezuela at this point and said that they had seized that oil tanker because it was transporting sanctioned oil from Venezuela and Iran as part of an illicit oil shipping network that the U.S. says is supporting foreign terrorist organizations because there are American sanctions on oil from Venezuela.
So they say the ship was breaking them and that's why it's been seized.
Yeah, I mean, it's fair to say most Venezuelan oil goes to China, doesn't it, in this day and age?
It's not going elsewhere in the world.
Listen to these agents, these North Sea Nexus agents trying to make up the story here.
This is very clear.
It's cut dry what this is about, the sanctions, been going on for years with multiple presidents.
And now all of a sudden, well, you know, by the way, I'm looking at that footage.
That was from a U.S. helicopter.
It's not stationary.
It's taken from a helicopter.
Well, maybe.
No, no, whatever the case.
For sure.
Well, it still seems okay.
Well, good for them taking pictures of themselves.
Back to this thing.
It was the ship that was sanctioned.
Yes, not the oil.
No, the oil's just abandoned.
We had it on our show.
900 ships are in this category to be seized.
And I think there's, if I, from what I've read, there's about six more that are in imminent threat of being seized immediately.
Well, you know, it's a lot of free oil.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like talking between $50 and $50 million a boatload.
That's good.
More or less.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's crappy.
Is it crappy?
Is it real?
It's a crumb.
It's a crummy oil, we should mention.
Don't you have to mix that oil?
No, it's not that bad.
It's pretty bad, though.
It's a sour, heavy sour oil, a typical Brent type oil that comes from under the water as opposed to land-based oils like West Texas, which is some of the finest oil.
Yes, yes.
Black gold.
Texas tea.
I was looking into this, by the way, and the best oil in the world in terms of like pure, like you pump it out, it's basically diesel fuel.
You can put it in a truck.
Where's that?
Algerian Saharan crude.
It's got almost no sulfur, almost no sulfur.
And the API, which is the measure of the viscosity, basically, and the higher the number, the better, is the highest.
And it sounds like it's very similar to me.
It reminds me when I was an air pollution inspector in refineries or my thing.
We had a little refinery that was shuttered some years ago called the Pacific Refinery that got some sort of Bolivian crude oil that was similar.
And they didn't even need a desulfurization facility at the refinery, which is unbelievable.
Little tidbit there for you oil and gas guy out there.
Yes, yes.
This is dynamite insight.
It's not insight.
It's a fact.
All right.
We go to BBC3.
But it appears to be a ship that at least in theory was at one stage coming from Iran, which obviously is also subject to sanctions.
And it may well be that all of that is true and that it is sanctioned, but it's still a very big deal, isn't it?
Not just because of stealing the oil and putting it somewhere, but much more importantly...
Stealing the oil?
What?
Did he say not just stealing the oil?
We're not stealing the oil.
He said stealing the oil and putting it somewhere.
Where are you putting it?
Very big deal, isn't it?
Not just because of stealing the oil and putting it somewhere.
Well, considering it's Brits, yeah, they probably deem that their oil, their money.
You're stealing our money.
Yes, I'm sure that these people are in on it.
Much more importantly, what it says about the ability of Venezuela to continue to do business in the modern world without Donald Trump putting more pressure on it.
I think that's the question, isn't it, Sarah?
Are we talking about a gradual ratcheting up towards something or not?
Yes, I think we are.
A little bit of background.
Our Americas will be very well aware that there have been over 20 U.S. strikes now on boats that America says is smuggling cocaine to America from Venezuela.
There has been CIA covert actions sanctioned inside the country, according to Donald Trump, and a huge buildup of military forces in the region as well, both land and sea forces.
And Donald Trump muses every so often about the possibility of a land invasion.
So I think we don't know exactly what he's going to do, but I think we do know what his aim is, and that is regime change.
He wants Nicolas Maduro out in Venezuela.
He doesn't like him.
He's a far-left ruler who is no friend of the United States, no friend of Donald Trump, does most of his business with China, and Trump has decided he wants to get rid of him.
I don't know if he has decided whether he's prepared to go to war to do it, but I think he's prepared to use a fair amount of American muscle to see how much pressure it will take to topple Maduro.
Who was that speaking with such authority?
One of the BBC women.
I think it's a woman.
You can't tell.
It could be a guy if you think about it.
But some sort of, you know, I think they cited her.
She's a Middle East or not a Middle East Latin America expert.
Was that clip three or four?
That was three.
Okay, because clip five is an interesting one, but let's go to four.
And to those who think they've spotted a bit of a flaw in Donald Trump's logic, so on the one hand, he's telling the world, we don't care what you do.
We're not interested in regime change anymore.
We're not even interested in whether you pursue human rights.
You don't pursue human rights.
You just do what you want to do.
He made that famous speech, didn't he?
I think you were there, Sarah, in Saudi Arabia.
A really cogent speech, I thought, actually, that set out Trumpism.
And of course, more recently, we've had the national security document that they put out that caused so much upset in Europe, basically saying, you know, the world should get on with its business.
Except he's not doing that with Nicolas Maduro.
And as you suggest, there are kind of various reasons why Maduro could be a target.
He's not a Democrat.
In fact, he almost definitely stole an election and he runs his country incredibly badly.
And lots of people have to leave that country.
Lots of Venezuelans have left the country.
We'll perhaps talk a bit more about Venezuela in a second.
But there is another reason, isn't there, why he would say this fits with his overall view of the world.
A view of the world that was made very clear in that national security strategy that was released last week.
Donald Trump believes that the United States has a sphere of influence in the Western Hemisphere and that basically Central and South America ought to be, if not controlled by the United States, that he has the right to make sure that there are regimes friendly there doing business with the United States and where he perceives there to be any kind of enemy or opposition, that he has the right to interfere and to intervene and that nobody else does.
He's making it very clear that this is America's backyard.
European or other foreign influence is not welcome in any way whatsoever, but that he ought to be allowed to cast it in his own image, practically.
So we have this pressure campaign against Maduro in Venezuela.
Wow.
These people are flipping out.
They know.
He cast it in his own image.
What does that even mean?
How does he do?
How does he cast Latin America in his own image?
What is that?
It doesn't even make any sense.
I'm looking at it through the North Sea Nexus lens and right away.
I mean, they know that this is hurting them.
They know it.
These people would admit it.
Oh, no, of course not.
But they know, they just know through the milieu that they're in.
You know, the people they talk to, you know, they talk to sources.
No, I think you're dead right.
You can stay with that lens as far as I'm concerned.
Let's go to the kicker, which is the second to the last clip.
We've seen him interfere in Honduras, where they are still in the process of counting the results of a very recent election.
Donald Trump intervened in that by saying he was backing the conservative candidate and making threats that the U.S. would stop funding Honduras if his preferred candidate didn't win.
And then, of course, he released the former president as well, who had been serving a 45-year jail sentence in America for drug smuggling.
He was pardoned by Donald Trump.
And then if you look at Argentina, where his friend Mele is in charge, you see very, very friendly relations where a $20 billion loan has just been issued to Argentina in a form of a currency swap to help prop them up.
And he says very simple.
How about three months ago?
Supportive things about Argentina.
What is making obvious is if you are America's friend, then you will do very well out of this.
And if you are in opposition to Donald Trump, watch out.
Yes.
Did you hear the little switcherooshi pulled there?
If you're America's friend, things are great.
But if you're in opposition to Donald Trump, wait a minute.
Oh, yeah, good catch.
Let's hear it again.
Help prop them up.
And he says very supportive things about Argentina.
So what is making obvious is if you are America's friend, then you will do very well out of this.
And if you are in opposition to Donald Trump, watch out.
Oh, yeah.
Good catch.
I thought that was a little slow, low, that was a little bit sleazy.
Oh, okay.
Well, gambling.
Okay, I get it.
Right, right.
So now, this, by the way, so this is the last clip, but this is a this is taken a little later in the thing.
This was an hour of the same discussion.
So you can be thankful that you've only got about 10 minutes max, probably about eight.
But this little history thing I thought was good because it adds a this is the last clip I have.
It adds a little dimensionality to what's really going on.
The Roosevelt corollary, which would have been, I can't remember when it was, the beginning of the last century when Teddy Roosevelt was around, that basically said, not only must the Europeans not interfere in the Western Hemisphere, which is what the Monroe Doctrine said, but also America, exactly as you were saying, Sarah, America takes to itself the responsibility to interfere where it needs to.
And that's, I mean, it's fair to say, this isn't new with Trump.
I mean, it's been the Munro Doctrine and the Roosevelt Corollary have been much acted on.
You mentioned Honduras.
Honduras was the original banana republic.
And a lot of those bananas, almost all of them, owned ultimately by American firms.
And of course, this whole business of America's influence in Central America, but also leaching down into South America, is nothing new.
But there's also just this sense now, I suppose, that with Trump, the thing that people thought might be different was that he wouldn't actually involve himself.
There might be all sorts of rhetorical flourishes about those rulers.
Okay, this is interesting.
I'm just going to stop it here for a second.
So as part of what I see as an op with the Padosphere, is that this is continuously being positioned as Trump, foreign wars.
He's a neocon.
You know, why are we doing this?
Why are we in Venezuela?
Why are we in Israel?
Why are we in the Middle East?
Why are we here?
So they keep positioning this away from what I wish the president could just come out and say.
He says, look, the Brits suck, and we're going to cut them off at the knees and all of the EU until they get rid of all this dumb stuff they've been doing to us for 250 years.
And so they just keep countering with, oh, yeah, oh, it's neocons.
And people like Tucker fall for it because he instigates it.
I don't think he falls for it.
You give him more credit than I do.
I don't think he's that smart.
I think he just talks to people that he admires.
He has dinners.
Mr. Tucker.
Yeah, I do think you're right.
I have a different opinion of him than you do.
Okay.
We continue.
I think he's a little more proactive and sneaky than you do.
You think it's just a function of his idiotic surroundings.
Well, we saw him on Fox and we were always miles ahead of him.
And then all of a sudden, you know, oh, the Fox was holding the Fox shows completely written by staff.
And it was like he was just happy to be there.
Yeah.
Anyway, let's keep going.
Mike and Maduro would come into that category.
Oh, by the way, the guy says, he says that Theodore Roosevelt, I think the word is corollary, but he has this weird.
Color, he says colliery.
Colliery or something crazy.
I never know that the British pronounce it that way.
I think he may be miserable.
But he also says Roosevelt.
Roosevelt.
The thing that people thought might be different was that he wouldn't actually involve himself.
There might be all sorts of rhetorical flourishes about those rulers he didn't like, and Maduro would come into that category.
But nobody thought he'd actually, well, I think a lot of his supporters didn't think they'd actually act on it.
There it is.
Because he said that he wasn't interested in getting involved in any more foreign wars.
And even if he does think that South America is America's backyard, you know, it's very definitely foreign.
And we've yet to see if he does have any interest in putting boots on the ground to support these policies, even though there has been this huge buildup of forces, most of whom are stationed in Puerto Rico at the moment.
They could be there as a threat rather than an imminent invasion force.
But this is not just because Donald Trump thinks that he ought to control the policies of other countries.
This is absolutely rooted in American self-interest.
So he would argue that this is about America first.
Yes.
Okay.
So they understood, they do understand it.
They do.
At that level.
Yes.
Okay.
So I want to bring in Maria Carina Machado.
And this whole thing is just so interestingly intertwined and it's not coincidence.
So we actually had ex-special forces smuggle her out of Venezuela with, you know, with zodiacs in the ocean.
And apparently, you know, everybody was aware.
It was quite the mission.
It's almost the movie.
Yes.
It will be a movie.
And Ben Affleck will produce it because he's a go-to guy.
He's a go-to guy for the pickle farm.
But it'll only stream on Netflix.
There's no more awards for you, Matt.
I'm sorry, Ben.
Ben, Ben, who knows?
So Maria wins the peace prize.
She says Trump should have gotten the peace prize.
Trump's like, ah, she's a nice lady.
Then all of a sudden, in the midst of all of this, she's smuggled out by ex-special forces with understanding or perhaps we should say collusion.
Any collusion?
Well, if you listen to that last report from the BBC and the ones before it, they said that the CIA is already embedded in Venezuela.
Oh, yeah.
Sorry, loves to be in South America.
They're everywhere.
And so they're probably part of the op that got her out.
So they got her out.
They only went there for that reason, for all we know.
Yeah, got her to Oslo.
Then, you know, she's like, hey, hello, my Venezuelan people.
She's on the balcony.
None of this is by coincidence.
By the way, symbolically on the balcony.
Like Julian Assange.
Well, or also on the balcony like Evida Peron.
Perone, good point.
Peron.
I'm sorry.
Yes.
Don't cry for me, Argentina.
And so now Margaret Brennan has Maria on the show this morning.
And I think, I mean, I have a number of clips, but the first one may be enough.
Help us understand what is going on because we are seeing here in the U.S. an increase in the pressure campaign, more sanctions on Venezuelan individuals and vessels.
We saw an armed seizure of a vessel carrying oil out of Venezuela.
Selling oil on the black market is really important money for the Maduro regime.
Do you endorse this idea of more seizures and possibly even a blockade?
I absolutely support President Trump's strategy and we, the Venezuelan people, are very grateful to him and to his administration because I believe he is a champion of freedom in this hemisphere.
And that's why, and I say this from Oslo right now, I had dedicated this award to him because I think that he finally has put Venezuela in where it should be in terms of a priority for the United States national security.
And we do support these actions because, Margaret, we are facing not a conventional dictatorship.
This is a very complex criminal structure that has turned Venezuela into a safe haven of international crime and terrorist activities, starting with Russia, Iran, Cuba, Hezbollah, Hamas, the Colombian guerrilla, the drug cartels operating freely and directed in partnership with Maduro and his regime.
And as every criminal structure suffers, is when the inflows from their criminal activities are cut.
And this, in the case of the Maduro regime, comes from the oil black market, the drug trafficking, gold smuggling, arms smuggling, even human smuggling and trafficking.
There it is.
It's all about the money.
That's what we're doing.
We're cutting off the money.
And you're going to see this in Wall Street.
Liquidity is drying up because it literally is being blown up in the ocean or stolen.
It's so clear to me.
But Trump just wants foreign wars.
He's a neocon, neocon.
So she's in on the game and she is the chosen one.
She's no slouch for knowing what side of the fence to be on and how to do it.
It sounds like you support more sanctions and possibly more seizures of oil.
How could you be for Trump?
This is wrong.
But isn't there a risk that cutting off money will further hurt the already impoverished people of Venezuela?
Isn't that a risk?
Of course, what we're doing is for the well-being of the Venezuelans.
What we want to do is to save lives.
But Maduro was the one who declared a war on the Venezuelan people.
We didn't want a war.
We are suffering with hundreds of thousands of killings and forced executions in the last years.
And right now, I want to be very clear with the international community.
The resources Maduro gets are not going to schools or hospitals.
In Venezuela, a teacher earns $1 a day.
Pensions are less than $1 a month.
Our children go twice a week to school.
The sources, the cash the regime gets from these illegal activities goes to buy arms, to pay gang members, to spy and infiltrate, and to even further increase their illegal narcotics activities and so on.
So these resources are not going towards the people.
They're going for corruption and crime.
Yes.
Exactly.
That's giving it to her.
By the way, somebody mentioned one of these reports that in the 60s and 70s, Venezuela had the highest per capita income of any people in the world.
Oh, really?
Yeah, because that's when they just got their oil going.
They had sit-go gas stations all throughout the United States.
And they had their own refineries and they were making just tons of money.
And they were redistributing it the way the Arabs do to the people.
It's like Kuwait.
You know, it gets a you don't have to work there if you're a citizen.
Now he's sending it back to his masters in England, in the city of London.
I'll just play two more.
Yes.
I love this one just because of a famous phrase here.
The regime itself has done a number of things.
They have revoked TV licenses for journalists to broadcast truthfully.
He has jailed journalists.
The United Nations says the National Guard targeted political opponents, committed sexual violence, tortured people, and committed other crimes against humanity.
So from where you sit, is Maduro stepping down enough, or do you need the entire regime dismantled?
In which case, that sounds like a country in collapse.
That's a very good question because certainly Maduro is ahead of the structure, but it's like any other mafia system.
You have families or groups that operate and sometimes even compete among each other.
There are different degrees in the crimes they have committed.
Certainly those that have committed crimes against humanity that have been reported by the fact-finding missions of the United Nations should face justice.
Local justice and international justice.
There are other members of the regime or the armed forces that have committed lesser crimes.
And certainly we will search for justice, not revenge.
But this, I'm going to insist, what we're living right now is chaos.
Paduro represents chaos.
We're going to put order.
Order out of chaos, anybody?
Isn't that something that we have somewhere?
Or is that New World Order, Order Out of Chaos?
I can't remember.
Where is that?
Order out of chaos.
All right.
Last one.
Would that include U.S. peacekeeping troops or other troops on the ground?
I cannot answer that question right now.
I don't think that's the case.
Trump told me not to talk about it.
She knows that she's at the cliff edge and she doesn't have the information to say one way or the other.
I don't think they didn't tell her not to talk about it.
They don't know.
I cannot answer that question right now.
I don't think that's the case.
There are other countries that have offered support as well in order to strengthen democratic institutions.
What?
Yeah.
The government elect is in place, but we will have to address that once we have the government elect in place and putting order, bringing order back to our country.
And one thing that you mentioned before about the refugee crisis, it's going to be exactly the contrary.
Here we go.
The day Maduro goes, you will see tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants coming back home from the United States and all over the world.
I mean, our diaspora is desperate to go back to Venezuela.
So even from that perspective, it is a win-win situation to have democracy in Venezuela.
Win-win!
It's a win-win.
It's a twofer.
It's good.
It's good.
It's probably true because Venezuela, I haven't been there, but my understanding is it's an absolutely beautiful country.
I don't know.
I've never been.
I've never been.
We should go.
You can barely get to a meetup in your hometown and go to Venezuela.
But kind of on the tip of bleeding the North Sea Nexus dry, this didn't get, of course, any real play in the news, but this is our Secretary of State, Rubio, talking about NGOs.
The United States has spent billions of dollars over the years in helping with health strategies all across the world.
What we learned over time, and especially after coming here, is that oftentimes, and I'm oversimplifying it, but this is an accurate description.
What would happen is we would go to a country and say, we're going to help you with our health care needs.
Then we would drive over to Western Northern Virginia somewhere, find an NGO, one of these organizations, give them all the money, tell them go to this country and do their health care program for them.
That NGO would then take about some percentage of that money for their overhead and administrative costs.
And by the time it got down to it, the host country had very little influence.
It was sort of imposed on them.
And only a percentage of the overall money ever actually reached the patients and the people on the ground that we were trying to help because of these costs.
This makes no sense.
No.
So why are we hiring American and international NGOs to go into other countries and run health care systems that are parallel and sometimes in conflict with the health care systems of the host country?
If we're trying to help countries, help the country.
Don't help the NGO to go in and find a new line of business.
And so that's the model that we're breaking.
We're not doing this anymore.
We are not going to spend billions of dollars funding the NGO industrial complex while close and important partners like Kenya either have no role to play or have very little influence over how healthcare money is being spent.
Bottom line is, if you want to help a country, work with that country.
There goes a big network.
Well, that's long overdue, and it's going to take forever to really break it up.
We have a problem in the Bay Area.
We had a thing, this was in yesterday's news.
I was going to clip it, I didn't, which was a news story about this little park over there by one of the San Francisco docks.
It's supposed to be a kids' park, and the city put $3 million together to build the, they had the park all outlined, they put the playground up, $3 million, gave it to an NGO.
The NGO paid itself a bunch of salaries, didn't do anything.
The money's all gone.
Yeah.
Of course.
Of course, we're investigating it.
They're not going to do anything about it.
These guys, these NGOs are just siphons for just stealing money.
Good at it.
We're so dumb.
We should have had an NGO a long time ago.
I agree.
I agree.
It's probably still not too late.
We're helping educate.
We are here to educate people on news disinformation.
Oh, yeah, that's great.
Yeah, we should probably give some money to these guys.
We're dumb.
Yeah, we're dumb.
That's too bad.
I mean, we're truthful.
We do our job of it.
We're kind of dumb.
And unfortunately, people don't appreciate it as much as they could.
Let me ask you a question.
That's because we're not pushing it hard enough.
So there's still some, but I think it's mainly Europe and probably British NGOs, et cetera, active.
A little update on Bulgaria with the Gen Z, or as we like to say, Gen Z protests.
We've had some success.
Tens of thousands mass in the streets of Sofia, as they have done for the last few weeks, and in several other Bulgarian cities.
It's been a gradually growing movement driven by dissatisfaction with the government, accusations of corruption, economic grievances, and a demand for new leadership.
In common with similar protests in other countries, it's younger people, Gen Z, who are at the forefront with the demand for change.
United under the slogan aimed at those in power, you angered the wrong generation.
We truly hope our actions will lead to real change.
What I can say with certainty is that we will not stop.
We are prepared to continue with active protests.
Uniting students from across Bulgaria and abroad believe that corruption, the way we keep on living and the money that's actually being stolen, that's the huge problem for us.
And I truly hope that there will be some youthful energy boiling over.
The growing anger and sheer strength of numbers appears to have brought about the resignation of the minority center-right government, a move unanimously agreed by MPs.
Therefore, I inform you that before the vote of no confidence, today the government resigns.
The government's fall follows the scrapping of a controversial budget plan.
It would have been the sixth vote of confidence since January and comes just 20 days before Bulgaria joins the Euro in the new year.
Uh-huh.
Right on time.
And the new thing.
That was a good one.
Yeah, just before they're going to get in the Euro.
Yeah.
And the new thing is pig noses.
That's the new Gen Z thing.
You know, like a carnival pignose.
Yeah, you put a little pig nose on.
Yeah, that's the new thing.
If we see that here, we'll know what's up.
And I just can't help but think that, you know, we're not doing it to ourselves yet.
Well, we are not doing it to ourselves, but it's obvious that the Brits are still trying to.
It may be this whole podosphere denouncement scenario led by clearly British operatives, although I think Candace just doesn't even know.
Man, we both saw that interview with her husband, George Farmer, and I didn't clip any of it.
But what a bunch of horse manure that is.
Oh, yes.
Asked her to marry me after 17 days because she was just awesome.
Yeah, the whole thing, it's a very, that should be linked in the show notes.
I actually put it in the show notes for that very reason.
Yeah.
And should be watched by everybody, but it's part of a five-hour interview, which I watched, only could watch a little bit at the beginning.
And the five-hour interview is actually more interesting if people can get to it.
It's on YouTube.
Five hours on, oh man, they let you do anything.
So five hours of yak, yak, yak, and it's just nothing but hate.
Hate for America.
Hate for America.
These two guys are mocking the way we pronounce words and they and they, especially the word water.
They have laughing at Americanisms and laughing at what a dumb country we are and blah, blah, blah.
This guy is at the center of British elites at the Bullingdon Club at Oxford, which is an all-male dining society with only I mean, this is so alums are David Cameron, Boris Johnson.
Yeah, these are really, these are good guys.
He was politically active.
You know, he started Turning Point UK with his own money.
And then he winds up marrying Candace.
And then she becomes an unwitting dupe operative.
Yes.
And right on queue, there's our buddy Tucker.
He platforms Milo.
Do you remember?
You remember how Milo got in?
Because, you know, Milo came, exploded, and then went.
Yeah, I can't remember how he did it.
I looked it up.
I looked up.
It was during the era of the show.
I think he was.
So, yes, 2014, Gamergate, that's when he came in.
That's when he came in.
Yeah, that's when he came.
He was doing some stuff with Breitbart, I think, but he came in with Gamergate, branded himself.
He was really by, by the way, he came in.
He was extremely talented.
Yes.
I thought his presentations were stunning.
He was a good debater.
He was a master debater.
He is a major master debater.
And he did the dangerous campus tour to get everyone all riled up.
Remember whatever, wherever you went, there were riots.
Right.
That's before he called.
Other people would change my mind.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
No, he was early on that.
And he started with the whole, I'm the dangerous faggot.
That was his brand.
But then he went rogue and he started talking about, he started defending sexual relationships between men and boys as young as 13.
And then he got pulled.
I mean, they CPAC canceled him.
He went off the rails and they pulled the plug on.
Simon and Schuster cancel his book deal.
Breitbart kicked him out.
But then, you know, he started to come back when, you know, this is classic.
You know, he's like, oh, I'm ex-gay now.
That's what he was on Tucker for.
No, I'm ex-gay.
By the way, did you know that he interned for Marjorie Taylor Greene?
No.
Yeah.
And he was the one.
I didn't see the, I did not see the Tucker.
I should, I guess I should watch the Tucker interview.
Yes.
He, but he was the one that orchestrated the dinner with Kanye and Nick Fuentes with Trump.
That's not the way I understand it.
That's what he says.
That's what he says.
But, you know, to me, he's just, you know, they just sent him in on a missile as a heat-seeking missile.
Go in there.
You know, if they're, if their goal is to the British.
Okay.
The City of London, the Crown, everybody who hates America.
Everybody writing spooked out by MI6.
Yes.
What you do is you'd go after the biggest Gen Z organization in the world and blame it all on Israel.
And we know that the Brits hate the Jews.
I mean, I'm generalizing, but they're the ones that said, hey, go live there.
We drew this circle.
That's your spot now.
In 1948.
And before that, it was, was it Rothschild?
Was it Rothschild?
Who sent the letter?
The Balfour Declaration.
The Balfour Declaration.
They're mucking around.
Give us more background on what else he talked about on Tucker and what you think the point of it was.
To reintroduce him so that he could get on Tim Pool, then he can yell about everybody and just cause more confusion and keep the fire going.
Candace is going to go the rounds, the rounds, which we can almost identify Tim Poole's prouder, perhaps.
He already was on Tim Pool.
He already did the whole Tim Pool thing.
Oh, yeah.
He'll be on Megan Kelly if he hasn't already.
Let me see.
Let's see.
We can probably find out.
Yes, he's been saying.
Get his touring schedule.
It's on Milos.com.
No, I'm sure.
I'm sure he's got a touring schedule.
It'll be the same old, same old podcast that everyone defends when we ever mention anything about him on our show.
Oh, you're throwing bricks at the glass in the glass house.
Oh, yeah, you're shooting inside the tent, man.
That's the phrase.
No, this, I truly believe this is meant to destabilize Gen Z in our country.
It's a different approach.
But if you just look, okay, he's been on Candace in September.
Legion of Skanks.
Oh, we got to be on that show.
Legion of Skanks?
Skank Fest in Las Vegas.
Skank Fest?
Yes, with Tim Poole and Stephen Crowder.
I guess it's some kind of live.
Oh, Pierce Morgan.
Hello.
Another MI6 Stooge, Pierce Morgan.
And then Tucker Carlson.
And now he's been at this is what I have so far.
And then Tim Poole.
It's also obvious.
Get these Limes out of our country.
Yeah.
And these pilgrims.
Get them all out.
Pilgrim Society, look it up, everybody.
Yeah.
Tucker's a big, big shot in that thing.
We don't know that for sure, but it could be.
We're pretty sure.
I've really researched.
I can't find it.
I can't find it.
But I do think we should be at Skank Fest next year.
I mean, there's no reason why we can't be at Skank Fest.
Skank Fest 2.
Skank Fest.
What is the point of it?
I have to look it up now.
What, you're a skank, which is a deplorable woman who's just kind of worse than a slut.
Let's find out.
And you're going to have a convention of your own types?
What is that supposed to mean?
Skank Fest New Orleans is a three-day comedy festival described as a blend of Mardi Gras, punk rock shows, and comedy heaven.
It features stand-up comedy, live podcasts, surprise guest appearances, tattoo artists, a vendor village, and late-night events.
So they're only using, it's not really for skanks.
No.
It's just they've co-opted the word to make it into some sort of a dubious festival.
It's kind of like the Edinburgh Festival in America.
Skank Fest.
Sounds good.
Skank Fest.
Well, maybe we just missed the invitation in the email.
I don't think we'd missed anything.
Nobody cares about us.
They don't like us.
No, because we should shoot inside the tent, man.
Let's talk about the Congo.
Oh, Africa news.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
Now, the only reason I want to play this, I'm going to play.
I have a series of Congo clips, but I want to play this clip from the last I didn't play on the last show, plus another clip.
I want to play first the Congo Humiliation Clip is 23 seconds.
Okay, here we go.
The resumption of fighting in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo has been described as a humiliation for President Trump by the foreign minister of neighboring Burundi.
Rwandan-backed M23 rebels have marched into the Congolese government's last bastion in South Kivu province.
The advance came less than a week after the U.S. brokered a peace deal.
BBC News.
Yeah, this is a humiliation for Trump, according to the BBC.
Let's go to this other clip.
This is Southeast SE Asia War.
U.S. President Donald Trump says he will telephone the leaders of Thailand and Cambodia to try to convince them to end the military clashes along their shared border that have continued for a third day.
Mr. Trump helped broker a ceasefire between the two countries in July, but on Monday, Thailand carried out airstrikes with Cambodia responding with rocket fire.
Our Southeast Asia correspondent, Jonathan Head, is on the border.
The sound of Cambodian rocket launchers firing salvo after salvo into Thailand.
The war President Trump said he'd ended has fled up again.
On the Thai side of the border, the rockets can be heard exploding, killing and injuring soldiers, and ripping apart houses, which, thanks to a swift evacuation, are empty.
Thai artillery can be heard constantly firing back in temporary evacuation centers all along the border in both countries.
Hundreds of thousands of people have sought safety for the second time in five months.
The U.S. has urged the two governments to return to the ceasefire brokered by President Trump.
Speaking to supporters, he sounded confident he could do it again.
Who else could say I'm going to make a phone call and stop a war of two very powerful countries, Thailand and Cambodia?
Are they going at it again?
He's no good.
He's no good.
So the BBC is going after Trump for being a, and if you listen to that right in the middle of there, they said the way they phrased it was the war president Trump.
Yeah, it's new.
The war president Trump tried to stop.
When you hear it just as a single standalone line, the war president Trump.
Yes.
Which I thought was genius in terms of propagandistic usage.
Very good, but good job.
But it was like the BBC has done this.
And that was from like last, you know, a couple of days ago.
Today, or not today, but yesterday, they're still hounding Trump for being a phony baloney.
Can't really stop wars, and let's go play this clip, Congo War I.
It's been barely a week since Rwanda and the Democratic Republic Of Congo signed a peace accord with President Trump in Washington to end the fighting in eastern areas of the DRC, but it hasn't stopped the fighting.
The United States has blamed the M23 militant group, backed by Rwanda, for the violence.
Now Rwanda has accused the Congolese army of ignoring the ceasefire.
I spoke to our global affairs reporter, Richard Kagoy, in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, and I began by asking him where this latest bout of fighting has broken out.
The fighting is taking place in eastern Congo, specifically in a region called South Kivu province, and so this is the area that does border Tanzania and Burunis, separated by Lake Tanganyika, and so what has happened is that the M23 rebel group has been advancing farther into South Kivu province, after taking over the biggest city, which was called Bukavu, and now they have seized a second largest town where the Congolese government had its base,
called Ovira Richard.
The two sides signed a peace accord a week ago, and now we have Rwanda and the DRC blaming each other for this new bout of fighting.
Yes yeah, it's just typical of situations as they do evolve in this part in terms of this conflict.
The DRC is arguing that it's protecting its territorial integrity.
It wants to retake, you know, territory that it lost to the rebels.
It says that it wants to protect its civilian population and stop the advance of the Rwandan Bak.
This is really boring.
But it's war.
And it's Trump's fault.
The war president.
We all know it.
He's the war president.
Yeah.
We're under attack, man.
Well, from the sounds of it, that's why I'm really listening to the BBC a lot more because I pick up these subtle little needling that they keep doing.
They play it so straight.
Oh, yeah.
No, we're great.
Well, let me stop you right there since we're at two hours and one minute.
I'm glad you stopped yourself because I need to.
Thank you for your courage and say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in Coloria.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only Mr. John C. DeMoi.
Hi, everyone.
I'm John C. DeMari.
In the morning to you, Ms. Adam Greene, our ship sea boost of the graphic near sounds of the water.
All the names are nice out there.
in the morning to the trolls in the troll room I can't get an accurate troll count This is the same thing you say every time.
No, not every time.
Oh, 1786.
Thank you, Cotton Jin.
That sucks.
Well, you know what?
I'm about to stop counting the trolls.
They just rob me of my joy.
Yeah, he's been bitching about this since before the show.
Yeah, well, you know, and it's all about you.
I mean, they're saying horrible things about you, and I just don't like it.
I'm glad you defend me.
The real thing that happened here today, for people who don't listen to the pre-show live, is that Darren O'Neal for the end of the show mix, you're going to hear it on today's show, did a song called No Agenda Christmas, which is a fabulous AI-produced tune with lyrics probably by Darren.
Yes.
But the song itself is just a hit.
It's a toe-tapper, too.
And it's a toe-tapper, which is important.
And I guess a couple of people in the chat room.
No, no, no.
A hundred.
A hundred people in the chat room who hate Adam and they hate Darren and they hate the show, to be honest.
They hate the show.
They're just haters.
They don't donate.
They hate the show.
They're haters.
And they bitched and moaned all at once, I guess.
And Adam caught it and he got irked about it.
And he's been irked ever since.
He's been irked.
I have been irked because it's so annoying.
I mean, why do you show up?
Oh, I know why.
Because I respond to it, obviously.
You know, we're boomers.
We're boring.
You know, I think I just need to close.
Well, that could be true, but it's beside the point.
Good point there.
Yeah, it's a very good point.
Oh, boy.
Well, not everybody thinks we're boring.
Some people see value in us.
But I understand.
I understand.
You know, that change is hard.
It's hard to hear that, you know, that we disagree with your favorite podcasters who you're all addicted to.
The man, yes, yes, okay.
Fuentes is right, man.
Yeah, he's awesome.
I like Fuentes' show.
Oh, yeah.
You watch a bit of it here and there, don't you?
I don't consistently do it, but when I do it, I've always enjoyed it.
He is a he is a if it was a different media landscape, he would be on TV or locally, at least doing the locally.
Well, locally, I mean, but he could be network.
He had the, he has the chops.
He never flubs.
He, for a guy who's an amateur, supposedly, he doesn't flub.
He doesn't stammer.
He's, he's slick.
He's got a good voice and you know, and his, and his modulates well, and he's funny.
He's extremely funny.
And I don't understand what the big complaining is.
Well, because he says Hitler was great, Stalin was great.
But he explains what he's meant by that.
Stalin thing in particular, I'm not going to sit here and defend Fuentes because he's doing it himself, but I'm going to do this.
Yeah, doing a good job.
He goes on, he thinks Stalin is great as a heroic figure that needs to be studied.
He thinks then he'll follow that by saying he was a horrible person, a sick, mentally, deranged creep, but that doesn't mean he should be ignored in the scheme of things.
How does a guy like that manage a large country?
How did he do it?
And how did he stay in power so long?
That sort of thing is why he thinks he's great.
You are defending him.
That's correct.
It's reasonable.
Yes.
No, I'm not against him.
I'm not against anybody, but he's part of the system.
Well, he is definitely locked in that.
And he's got a crush on Candace.
And there's something going on between those two.
And I don't get that at all.
So it's part of that.
Our local podcast nexus.
And you got to call him a fed.
You got to call every, I denounce you.
You're a fed, John C. Dvorak.
That's the new thing.
You got to call each other a fed.
Yeah.
Oh, you just ooze fed slop.
I watch too much of this, obviously.
Yeah, you're obvious.
Yeah, you're on the off the deep end.
No, I mean, but I'm telling you, people are watching this stuff.
They're into it.
Well, the people that are doing the presentations are good at it.
Candace is no slouch.
Definitely not.
She is a really good presenter, and she does her, she does her act beautifully.
Fuente is the same thing.
Okay.
And Tucker is a pro.
Yes.
And I mean, so you have all these professional, basically professional broadcasters and you wonder when they have a big audience.
Well, except for that amateurish laugh.
I think it's abhorrent, really.
I mean, it's just, I don't like war.
I don't like deaf.
I just don't like it.
I don't like it.
And I don't like our president sending money to other country people.
If you could get his voice down, his register is higher than yours.
You have a natural baritone voice.
He's close to a tenor.
Yeah.
No, I can't do it.
And to do a tenor voice with a natural baritone voice, which you have, is not easy.
In case you hadn't noticed, the show doesn't end after two hours.
People look into, oh, there's another hour left.
What's going on?
What are they doing there?
Well, we do a couple of things.
First, we thank people who support us value for value after we tell you that the best way to listen to this show is on a modern podcast app.
That's how you get into this crazy troll room in the first place.
Or by going to noagendastream.com.
And apologies for noagendashow.net.
I messed it up.
It was the right show, but it was the wrong show notes.
And after three and a half hours, sometimes I make mistakes.
So sorry that it was confusing to people, which is probably why almost no one donated.
It wasn't the newsletter's fault.
It was my fault.
I think if people, you know, there's a lot of people that will just listen on the website, which I always find interesting.
It's like 18 or 19% of people who listen to the show go to noagendashow.net and listen there.
How do you listen to the show?
You don't listen to the show.
When I listen to the show, I do it off the website.
You do?
It's all you.
It's you and the Dvorak clan.
Maybe.
So we have a number of ways you can support us.
Value for value is the methodology that we have employed now in our 19th year.
By the way, I have to mention something here.
It's going to disappoint a lot of people, but I don't feel too bad about it actually today.
For the first time, maybe the second time in our history, we will not be doing a broadcast on Christmas Day.
What?
Yep.
We're going to be sending something out, so we are doing a broadcast.
We are doing a broadcast, but I don't have any thematic show.
So I'm reaching out to the producers who get incredible value from this program and get actual news and fun deconstruction of dumb media to come up with an idea.
And it's very easy to find stuff these days on bingit.io.
You can find all kinds of stuff.
Do we have nothing in the can?
We got nothing in the can.
No.
We probably produced a couple of things.
Well, I mean, we've done so many themes.
But I'll just say the reason why is my daughter is coming for Christmas, and I would just like to spend this Christmas with my daughter.
She's coming over from Rotterdam.
She's going to be with us for a week.
And she wanted an old-fashioned, old-school American Christmas, which, let's face it, doesn't get much better than that in Fredericksburg, Texas.
So I want to honor her.
And therefore, I will not be in the show.
Be doing the show.
You can do the show if you want with your buddy Nick Fuentes, if you want to bring him in.
That would be a good show.
It would be a good show.
That would be a great show.
I would resign just to hear that.
So ideas are welcome.
AdamMcCurry.com.
Don't email.
You know, whenever people don't get a response from you on email, they just say, he's blocked me.
Even though it's not true.
Have you noticed this?
Yeah, I noticed it.
Yeah.
They don't get a response and they email me, John blocked me.
So I'm going to email you with my complaint about John.
Stop it.
Stop it.
That's the idea.
Hello.
It's a bad idea.
It's a great idea.
You can support us with your time, your talent, your treasure, which we appreciate all versions of it.
Thank you to Steve, our clip collector, who's been just fantastic these last few Sundays.
He starts rolling his recordings the minute all the Sunday shows come on.
It's very much appreciated.
We have people like Dave Ackerman, who gets me all the Euro news.
I mean, it's really helpful.
Very, very helpful what everybody does.
People organizing meetups.
And of course, we have people making artwork.
And they upload that at noagendaartgenerator.com so we can choose something fun for art.
And even though we explained what we're looking for, it's still very difficult.
I guess the LLMs just haven't figured out exactly what we need art-wise.
However, Blue Acorn did a pretty good job with his ITM, which was kind of a takeoff.
I don't know if anyone else caught it, but the font wars in a way.
I think that's what it was.
Isn't that how we took it?
This is what he called it, I think.
Oh, he actually called it the Font Wars?
Yeah.
Let me take a look.
But this is what we need.
The piece popped.
It just popped out of the page.
And when it pops like that, that makes you want to look closer if there are any fun details in there.
And he did a good job.
And let's see what else there was.
Let's see.
Wow, there's a lot of art today already.
Was there anything else we liked?
No, but I'm liking Jeffrey Ray's Santa Claus Merry Christmas 2 coming up with instead of reindeer, it's a bunch of babes.
Yeah, no, I don't like that.
We're not going to do that.
Yeah, I'm sure you do.
Go put it on your sub stack on the Oasis.
On The Oasis, a lot of people tried to do font wars.
Um, then there was some now available on Pornhub, which I was all for you, you were against that.
Um, there was some people tried some dogs, some robot dogs um, but in general, if you don't have a good idea, your art's not gonna just, it's not gonna work.
No matter how smart you think the, the AI is, it just it doesn't really translate.
You need good ideas, but give, give someone a good idea.
We already have like a whole page full of stuff for today.
Yeah well, most of which we're not going to choose.
Well obviously, you can't only choose one piece, so that that's always.
No, but it's going to be hard.
We're like oh, there's really nothing here.
No there's, I think, at least 10 pieces.
That are you.
There's, there's 10 pieces.
Hmm, I think well okay three, maybe one, maybe two no, three for sure.
Uh four, if you let the girls pulling the sled.
I'm not, i'm not allowing that.
The girls pulling the sled it's it's, it's unfriendly to women.
Anyway, we always thank all of our financial supporters uh, the Treasure OF THE Three TEES, and we thank everybody who comes in with fifty dollars or above and we appreciate any amount anytime.
Whenever you feel you've received value from the show, send it to us.
That's the only way the show survives and we start off today on a happy note, bringing my joy back from the archduke of Central Florida in Winter Park Florida.
Rubber Lizer donation India.
Hang out Mike, Stand By.
33 33 33 30, 333.33.
Take that trolls.
And the archduke of Central Florida says, dear John and Adam, Rubberlyzer donation from the archduke of Central Florida.
I have been enjoying the North Sea Nexus analysis over the past month and hope you keep us surprised of new happenings.
Well, I think we've done that today.
It is way more interesting than Africa news, john.
We did that too.
Including Coo Belt stories also help us understand all the elements of the Minnesota fraud issues.
It is fascinating how little traction this has had in the media.
Looking forward, as pointed out on this show numerous times today, looking forward to seeing the challenge coin, no jingles, no karma, five more years.
Well, if you keep supporting us this way, we might make it.
Thank you, archduke of Central Florida.
We greatly appreciate your enormous support of the show.
Yeah, that was a nice surprise, fantastic.
Moving on to Christopher Kessler in Marshfield Wisconsin, who came in with a nice 543 dollars and 21 cents uh, but he's got no note that we could find anywhere, and so we give him a double upcoming karma.
But if you have a note, send it.
Elizabeth Lambert is in Crown Point uh, Indiana 500 switcheroo for John Lambert.
Oh hold, Hold on a second.
Let me switcheroo that and make sure we get that in.
There we go.
Switcheroo for John Lambert in honor of his traveling around the sun for half a century on December 15th.
We may not get to celebrate tomorrow if we get the 9-11 style attack, but hopefully we'll be okay.
Oh, is it tomorrow?
It's the first two weeks of December, so tomorrow is the last day.
Oh, so it's got to happen by tomorrow.
It's got to happen by close of business tomorrow.
And she goes on to say, John, we love you very much, and this might finally get you to knighthood.
Love always, Elizabeth, and she has a pronunciation guide, Maran and Amelia.
Elizabeth Mehran and Amelia.
Elizabeth Meiran and Amelia.
And here comes.
Yeah.
So that's the end of our executive producers.
We go right to associates.
We got a lot of these today for some reason.
Duke of San Francisco leads us off in San Francisco, obviously.
He's in $277.33 territory.
And he says, the Duke of San Francisco loves font geekery, which is the discussion we had in the last show about fonts.
Yes.
And he says, this is a Georgia.
He's a big fan of Georgia font, obviously.
Georgia donation.
And then he wants a chemtrails and a fluoride in your cup, Jingle.
Miss Marta waking up.
Is fluoride in my cup?
And there was another note I wanted to read that came in because we talked, because, you know, we take the font war seriously.
Yeah.
Yes.
Potash.
We received this from Matt from Florida Lawn Solutions.
We have the best producers in the universe.
And he knows a lot about potash because we didn't really know everything except a lot comes from Canada.
He says there's a couple of different forms of potash you can buy.
There's a muriate of potash, which is a potassium chloride and sulfate of potash, which is potassium sulfate.
We use sulfate and the price went up over 35% from this year.
Canada does produce some, but I think China and India produce more.
I checked and the muriate was about the same price.
It's already a cheaper product.
Anyway, this mostly comes from Canada.
Because of the chlorine content, the muriate isn't good for fruit or vegetable plants, but it's okay for grasses, which includes rice.
Aha!
I think the rice likes the chloride anyway.
Oh, yeah, my rice loves chloride.
Some states can produce potassium.
I know Utah is able.
Might not be enough to do IC anyway.
I see.
I'm not sure what that means.
But like with a lot of things, regulations have pushed it offshore.
Anyway, if they add a tariff on the muriate, it will hurt the grain farmers.
Fruit and vegetables probably already have been paying extra on the sulfate because most of it's coming from tariff places.
And he says, thanks for all you do.
Please, more fertilizer talk.
Well, I have a bonus clip and a double bonus clip right now because of that note.
Okay.
First of all, let's listen to just a basic story about the Belarus prisoners, the BBC clip.
Okay.
Belarus has released more than 120 prisoners, including the Nobel Peace Prize winner, Alyas Biayatsky, and the prominent opposition activist Maria Kolyesnikova.
It comes after the United States agreed to lift sanctions on the country.
Oh.
There's not much to that, but let's listen to the PBS clip.
We're lifting sanctions on the country adds a dimension.
Belarus freed more than 100 prisoners after the United States said it would lift sanctions on the close ally of Russia.
Among those pardoned by Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko were two opposition leaders and Alice Bialiatsky, who shared the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize.
Earlier, U.S. Special Envoy John Cole said the United States would lift sanctions on potash fertilizer, one of the nation's most important extras.
Hey, now Cole said improving U.S.-Belarusian relations could lead to more prisoner releases.
President Lukashaka, who should get a tremendous amount of credit for this, I think that he is moving.
He wants a more normalized relationship with the United States and the world.
We're moving in that direction.
Lukashaka is an authoritarian leader known for dealing harshly with dissidents.
Western nations have sanctioned Belarus for cracking down on human rights and for letting right.
It's like they beat her.
They just missed the point.
Of the potash.
Of the potash.
So screw Canada.
We can get our potash from Belarus by just making a phone call and say, hey, release a few people.
You know, show sign of support here.
Give us a break and now give us your potash.
Yes, exactly.
Screw you.
We do.
Canada, they are so dumb up there.
They really should become our 51st state.
We'd be so great together.
It's not going to happen.
John Siebert is up next.
Is this a Bitcoin donation?
Yeah, I guess so.
Okay, $255.18.
And it's a switcheroo for Stephanie Siebert.
Okay.
Seems like they would be related.
Let's see what he says.
Thank you, Adam John, for your unique perspective on the media.
Is that like saying she has a nice personality?
I'm not sure.
No agenda listeners.
Please, visit arcanaresin.com for handmade earrings, necklaces, and sun catchers.
That's arcana, A-R-C-A-N-A, resin, R-E-S-I-N.com.
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Visit arcanaresin.com today and ensure delivery by Christmas.
Thank you for your courage.
John Siebert from Auburn, California.
He says, aka he is Scott Adams from the Albany meetup.
So have you met Scott Adams?
Oh, Scott, yeah.
There's a guy.
He looks like Scott Adams.
Dead ringer, only taller.
Wow.
And every time I see him, I always say, hey, Scott Adams is here.
Yeah.
How is Scott Adams anyways?
He's hanging in there a little bit.
He seems to be, he had to go to the hospital the other day.
You should give him another call, man.
He won't answer me anymore.
He's mad at me for something I said about vaxes or something.
I'm not sure what.
Are you sure he won't answer?
I mean, he may have forgiven you.
You'll regret it.
Just give him another call.
Well, I tried a couple of times.
I'll give him another call.
I have his phone.
I actually have his cell number.
Very few people do.
The problem with when you're sick is people think, oh, he probably doesn't want to be bothered.
And then no one calls him.
No, that doesn't.
No, I've never been that way.
Okay.
Well, good.
If you're sick, I'm going to bother you.
Christopher Graves in Mount Alcomaire is our buddy.
Little John's Candies.
Little John's Candies, $242.
The holidays are about giving.
And donate to the No Agenda Show.
Donate to the No Agenda Show, he writes.
And shop at littlejohnscandies.com.
Use code ITM10 plus 10 and save 10% for yourself and donate.
The other 10% goes to the No Agenda Show, which seems to be every show now.
Little John's world famous toffee is made fresh and it says chipped, but he meant shipped to your house to your door.
It could be chipped.
Short guess.
It's chipped.
It's a short guess.
That's littlejohnscandies.com.
No jingles, just Christmas cheer.
And thank you, Little John's Candies, for sending us another box of your toffee and classic fudge.
We've been feeding it to our friends and neighbors and spiritual family here in Fredericksburg, and everybody loves it.
So I'm hoping they order from you.
DJ Sphinx in New York City.
I don't recall ever having a DJ Sphinx donate to you.
Does that sound familiar to you?
No, it does not sound familiar at all.
236, John and Adam, Friday, December 12th was my 36th birthday.
So sending over my annual birthday.
Oh, I guess he does it once a year.
So sending over my annual birthday donation.
Appreciate everything that you do, particularly when I'm struggling through a hangover or feeling lonely.
We're your friends when you're lonely.
When you're lonely, we're your buddies.
Given all the support that you guys provide, I was thinking maybe John can expand on his tip of the day to not just push products, emphasis mine, but also provide general life advice that Gen Wise, like me, actually do value from the boomers.
I'm thinking anything from hangover cures, ways to develop thicker skin.
I'm looking at you, Adam, and your ability to disregard all the hate you get on the socials, dealing with rejection, tax tips, etc.
Hmm.
Well, that should be, that's just, we do that commonly during the show, almost every show, we have some sort of life tip.
I don't think it's life tip.
Pushing product.
I admire that he's noticing that this.
But I've always liked pushing product.
You push product like nobody else.
Even though it doesn't benefit the show in any way.
We don't have a code for it.
We don't make any money from it.
No, otherwise.
You're moving product for the sake of moving product.
Requesting a 36th birthday call out.
You are on the list.
Love karma and a mac and cheese jingle.
You slaves can get used to mac and cheese.
The mac and cheese.
Macaroni and shelt together.
Mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac and cheese.
You've got karma.
Barbara Koons is up next, K-U-H-N-S, in Eastlake, Ohio at 217.69.
She writes, a friend hit me in the mouth last year, and you've been entertaining me on my commute ever since.
I appreciate the insight and laughs.
I have a Switcheroo, another Switcheroo, the Switcheroo Switcheroo.
Yes.
I have a Switcheroo.
Please accept this donation on behalf of Tony Pachiro's 56th birthday on December 17th and dedouche us.
You've been dedouched.
$2 Tony is impossible to shop for.
What a great nickname.
That's a good nickname.
$2 Tony.
Hey, $2 Tony's here.
But the one thing he definitely does not have is an IMDB entry.
Thank you for your courage in making me the best girlfriend ever.
Ah, all right.
He's got it.
He's the best girlfriend ever.
She gave him an IMDB entry.
That's right.
That's something to think about.
Ladies.
There's Eli the Coffee.
It is a great stocking stuffer.
Eli the Coffee Guy from Bensonville, Illinois, 212.14.
And he says, this holiday season, by the way, I think we, didn't we get a note?
I thought I we got a note from the Little John's Candy folks.
Let me see.
Yes, he said, I'm a little late in getting you a note for my donation.
My donations and promotion are tended to work something like this.
Sometimes I'm not always clear.
I'm donating 233.33 plus fees, which equals 242 for each show during the month of December.
The promotion is to save 10% and donate 10% in the purchaser's name.
So on December 28th, after the promotion ends, I will send you a check for the total and a spreadsheet with all the producers' names and the dollars they donated.
Sounds like work.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, I don't think you need to do all that much work.
That's actually, well, you know, they actually, it's reflected in the quality of their products.
It is.
So Eli always sends $200 plus today's date, the show date, 1214.
And he says the holiday season is a good reminder to take stock and express gratitude for the little things in life that fill us with joy and the people who compose the fabric of our lives.
Thank you, Adam and John, and all those in Gitmo Nation.
We're grateful for the support, the kind notes, and the simple fact that people seem to really like Gigawatt.
So give someone in your life the gift of good coffee today, especially with today, December 14th, being the last day of our sampler pack sale.
The sampler is a great way to wow.
I never saw that coming.
The sampler is a great way to experience a wide variety of freshly roasted coffee.
If it ends up under the tree, great.
If it ends up in your mug, also even better.
Plus, I hear our coffee goes great with little John's candies, chocolates.
Visit while you're doing your resume.
That's right.
And ordering some earrings from the arcane can of resin people.
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com before the sale ends.
Get a sampler pack today.
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy.
And while you're doing that, let's exfoliate.
Yes, with La Jolla Salt Corporation, La Jolla, California, $210.60.
You know, at least it's better than having to say, you know, I've always wondered, should I try exfoliating?
And it wasn't until I came across this La Jolla Salt Corporation.
And my skin is just tell me more.
My skin is just so smooth now.
I don't have any scales or anything like that, any dead skin falling off.
I am just a great man.
Thank you, La Jolla Salt Corporation.
So they write in, this holiday season is here, bringing with it fond memories of your chestnuts of fire.
No, they're not.
No, no, they're roasting, not a roast.
They're burning.
Mistletoe, John and Adam on the make on the mic.
On the mic.
On the mic Christmas Day.
Ah, a misleading comment there.
Yule tied by the fireside, curling up with your favorite moisturizing exfoliant from La Jollasalt.com.
Tina, I can't wait to curl up with you with our La Jolla moisturizing exfoliant.
This season, give your skin the gift of it's longing for.
It's desiring people, please support the show and receive some seasonal sans serif sans serif sea salt scrub.
Go podcasting.
Thank you for your courage.
Well, you got more than enough.
You got his money's worth on that one.
Yeah, for sure.
And who always deserves a lot of credit for all of the jobs she has helped people get is Linda Lupatkin from Castle Rock, Colorado.
And just know she moved there because she had to get away from all the nut jobs where she lived before.
And she has a great Christmas idea.
Give the gift of a resume.
Not just any old resume, one that gets results.
You want that?
Go to imagemakersinc.com for all of your executive resume and job search needs.
In case you didn't hear me say it, that's ImageMakers Inc. with a K.
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.
And she ends with best Linda.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You saw karma.
Oh, my goodness.
When is Ford going to get a clue?
Really?
Where's General Motors?
For 200 bucks, we'd be promoting your Bronco.
Come on, people.
Electric Bronco.
Get a clue.
Thank you to these executive and associate executive producers.
We highly appreciate it.
We're actually really entertained by the notes that you send in, certainly, especially when they're not too long and it's so obvious what you're doing.
We love that.
We love everybody who supports the show.
Value for value.
You can do that at any amount, anytime you want to.
We'll be thanking $50 and above in our second segment.
And once again, thank you for supporting us.
Go to noagendadonations.com to support the No Agenda Show.
Our formula is this.
We hit people in the mouth.
I know that these executive and associate executive producers all are eligible to put their names in the hall of credits at imdb.com because you are now officially an executive or an associate executive producer of the No Agenda Show.
Let's see.
Let me start off with a TikTok clip.
This is a woman who is...
They're all women.
When's the last time you played?
Oh, you do.
You have played a guy.
Yeah, I have played a guy.
You do.
You played a guy right there.
But it's mostly women.
And this to me is a reflection of either, I don't know what level of stupidity this is.
This is a woman who is either lack of education or someone who doesn't understand the mechanism of government or the mechanism of society.
It's just baffling to listen to this woman rant about immigration.
Can someone smarter than me help me very genuinely understand why I'm supposed to care if people immigrate to the U.S. illegally?
Like, obviously, some people are just racist and some people are just stupid.
But even like left-leaning people say, you know, well, you got to do something about the border.
Why?
I don't understand why this should bother me in any way if as many people as want to come here.
So if somebody could help me understand that, that would be great.
Because right now, I just don't know why I should give a shit.
I found this to be a very fascinating commentary because it's like, yes, because how does anyone get to that position where you don't understand that the burden on society and the taxpayer on the infrastructure and all the rest of it?
You know, if you're just going to have unfettered immigration from everywhere in the world and police issues and all the rest of it, and you don't see it.
This is bull crap.
She understands it.
She just wants like these people and you have a different.
This is the difference between you and me and in regards to.
The same thing with Tucker, the way we see him.
It's a different look.
You think everyone is cynical and they're all acting.
No, I think that they want to get played on the No Agenda Show or they want to get likes.
That's it.
That's it.
That's what it's all about.
These people thrive on people telling them, you're an idiot.
There are people like that.
Who can thrive on that?
You're an idiot.
You were bummed out when somebody said that they didn't like a Darren O'Neill clip.
Yeah, but I've been doing it for over 18 years, so I must be liking something.
But you got thick skin, according to that one note.
Yeah, there it is.
You need to give some tips.
Hey, we have the AI.
I already gave it away.
We have the Time person of the year, persons of the year.
Is Time magazine still a magazine?
I think it's just only online.
Well, they've chosen their persons.
The six men and two women on the cover of Time magazine are who they have dubbed the architects of artificial intelligence and their person of the year.
Among those on the beam are Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, AMD chief Lisa Su, OpenAI's Sam Altman, and Chipmaker Nvidia's Jensen Huang.
We named the architects of AI as the person of the year this year because we were really looking at the people who had the biggest influence on this year.
According to the magazine, those people have reoriented government policy and altered geopolitical rivalries and become an everyday tool for millions.
Today, OpenAI's ChatGPT counts over 800 million daily users.
Its competitor, Google Gemini, boasts 650 million.
Time also pointed to a darker side of AI in light of looming job displacement for companies looking to replace their workers.
And darker still, lawsuits have been filed in the wake of suicides and mental health crises alleging chat bot psychosis.
Experts are also wary of just how the tool will affect humanity and if it will affect all of us equally.
This technology has a great potential to make things more efficient, more productive, to improve living conditions.
The question is, will it do so on an equal basis?
Will it do so for everybody?
And right now, we see cleavages opening up, be it between superpowers, or be it between family members, or be it between people on the countryside and in big cities.
The magazine has named a person of the year since 1927, but this is not the first time technology took the title.
In 1982, it was the computer.
The computer!
The computer was the person of the year.
There was a great post by this guy named Peter Gernes, G-I-R-N-U-S, on X.
And I saw it the first time it came around, but then it kept coming back.
And so I wanted to read this.
And this may be bullcrap, but it sounds plausible.
And it's about him deploying AI in his corporation.
I'll read it.
Last quarter, I rolled out Microsoft Co-Pilot to 4,000 employees, $30 per seat per month, $1.4 million annually.
Had you seen this?
I called it digital transformation.
The board loved that phrase.
They approved it in 11 minutes.
No one asked what it would actually do, including me.
I told everyone, 10% product, 10 10x productivity.
That's not a real number.
He says, that's not a real number, but it sounds like one.
HR asked how we would measure 10x.
I said we'd leverage analytics dashboards.
They stopped asking.
Three months later, I checked the usage reports.
47 people had opened it.
12 had used it more than once.
One of them was me.
I used it to summarize an email I could have read in 30 seconds.
It took 45 seconds, plus the time it took to fix the hallucinations.
But I called it a pilot success.
Success means the pilot didn't visibly fail.
The CFO asked about ROI.
I showed him a graph.
The graph went up and to the right.
It measured AI enablement.
I made that up.
He nodded approvingly.
We are AI-enabled now.
I don't know what that means, but it's in our investor deck.
A senior developer asked why we didn't use Claude or ChatGPT.
I said we needed enterprise-grade security.
He asked what that meant.
I said compliance.
He asked, which compliance?
I said, all of them.
He looked skeptical.
I asked him for a career development conversation.
He stopped asking questions.
Microsoft sent a case study team.
They wanted to feature us as a success story.
I told them we, quote, saved 40,000 hours.
I calculated that number by multiplying employees by a number I made up.
They didn't verify it.
They never do.
Now we're on Microsoft's website.
Global Enterprise achieves 40,000 hours of productivity gains with Copilot.
The CEO shared it on LinkedIn.
He got 3,000 likes.
He's never used Copilot.
None of the executives have.
We have an exemption.
Strategic focus requires minimal digital distraction.
I wrote that policy.
The license renews next month.
I'm requesting an expansion.
5,000 more seats.
We haven't used the first 4,000.
But this time we will drive adoption.
Adoption means mandatory training.
Training means a 45-minute webinar no one watches, but completion will be tracked.
Completion is a metric.
Metrics go in dashboards.
Dashboards go in board presentations.
Board presentations get me promoted.
I'll be SVP by Q3.
I still don't know what Copilot does, but I know what it's for.
It's for showing we're investing in AI.
Investment means spending.
Spending means commitment.
Commitment means we're serious about the future.
The future is whatever I say it is, as long as the graph goes up and to the right.
Yeah.
That is a wonderful little mini essay.
I thought it was good.
I know that's, that was really funny, and it's classic.
Yeah.
And it's accurate.
Yeah, completely accurate.
Yes.
And so then we get this executive order the other day.
President Trump says the AI industry can't excel under a patchwork of state regulations.
We have the big investment coming, but if they had to get 50 different approvals from 50 different states, you could forget it because it's not possible to do.
He says one uniform federal framework would help the U.S. win the AI arms race.
That's the goal of an executive order signed Thursday.
Nopuling this would be the greatest gift to China and other countries.
The order also creates a litigation task force to challenge state AI laws, excluding those related to child safety protections.
I don't think states should have the ability to regulate an AI.
Indiana Republican Congressman Marlon Stutzman supports the order.
That way we put America at the forefront and leading on that issue rather than being divided amongst ourselves.
But limiting states when it comes to AI hasn't proven popular in Congress.
A measure that would have banned states from regulating AI for 10 years was removed from the Big Beautiful bill over the summer.
And recent efforts to include a provision barring states from regulating AI in the annual defense spending bill failed too.
We took that provision out.
I think it's pandering to AI companies.
Virginia Democratic Congressman Eugene Vinman says Congress does need to regulate AI.
Vinman disagrees with the executive order.
I need to find a balance for appropriate regulation for this industry.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffery says he doesn't think the order is legal.
And ultimately, it's going to get struck down in court.
The order also threatens to restrict certain funding to states with AI laws.
I'm against all this.
Isn't this the whole point of states' rights that we should be able to determine our own destiny?
I'm all for it.
I think having states being allowed to create dipshit laws over technology items, it just becomes all of a sudden now you got to go through California because California has some restriction.
So now everybody has to obey what California wants because of the internet and everything goes through California.
No, I'm all for it.
They've got to stop some of these states from doing this.
I don't care about, I mean, states' rights, yeah, for when it has to do with rights, not when it has to do with something like this.
I'm all for it.
I like the term dipshit laws.
You should be in Congress.
That would have shut them down.
Now, here's the good news.
Good news is that they have not been able to crack AI podcasts.
And this cropped up, or this propped up, popped up in a report here from the semaphore.
The Washington Post's top standards editor on Thursday decried frustrating errors in its new AI-generated personalized podcasts, whose launch had been met with distress by its journalists.
I guess they the Post has been rolling out personalized AI-generated podcasts for use.
I don't even know what that means.
So in the release, the paper says users are able to choose preferred topics and which hosts AI host.
And you can shape your own briefings, select topics, set length, pick their hosts, and soon even ask questions using Ask the Post AI technology.
And it doesn't work?
No, of course not.
What?
Of course not.
It doesn't work.
You know, we have a real, I got to ask you some advice.
So we have deemed we have come up with nomenclature.
There are now so-called TTS podcasts.
What's TTS?
Text to speech.
Oh, okay.
And so there'll be like a podcast of a Reddit thread, which is all read by AI.
And it's, it's, I mean, I don't know if you could even listen to it.
I mean, some people might.
The problem is there are these text to speech outfits who will create a podcast and within one day, it has 2,000 episodes.
And 2,000 episodes, you know, it's a problem for the podcast index.
You know, we're a small operation based on donations, I might add.
And so, you know, it clogs up the system.
It slows everything down.
And there are people just out there just, it's basically spam.
Can't you just do spam elimination and not allow those to get on the index at all?
Well, you can, but that's kind of the question.
Like, is it, is it really spam?
Is it something that people want?
Nobody wants it.
I don't think so either.
But you have to, you can't let this, this is like there's, I'm trying to think of how to analogize it, but there's something that you can, there's, I think you have a rationale that you can develop because it's out there to say, no, you can't do this.
This is not, it doesn't get to be available.
We can say it.
I mean, we're just kind of thinking, what, what should we do?
No, that's what I'm saying.
You have to develop the argument that's solid.
Yeah.
But I would say it's like spam.
It's like if you remember in the early days of Usenet.
Yes, I remember the early days of Usenet.
And every time somebody came in with some advertisement, they tried to slip onto Usenet.
They'd get blasted and thrown off.
I remember the first time I came into Usenet and I don't remember what I posted, but immediately, oh, there's corporations here.
MTV.
Oh, this is the end of the internet.
That's right.
And they weren't wrong.
And that's where that guy's voice came from.
And they weren't wrong.
They weren't wrong.
They weren't wrong.
They were right all along.
They had a point.
They had a point.
By the way, there's been a lot.
You know, we had that clip on the last show about Instacart and grocery prices.
I've been watching a lot of YouTube videos from Consumer Reports and other consumer organizations.
Man, there are big companies of which Instacart is really, yeah, they deliver to you, but that's not really what they do.
They are doing dynamic pricing on everybody based upon what they think you can pay, even in store.
With the, you know, with the, what do you call them, the digital pricing price tags that so you don't really have a price tag on the product, but it says on the shelf, it'll change.
It's like, okay, this is now $4.99.
And then, you know, you take it in and scan the barcode and it's $4.99.
Someone else will be paying $4 or like $4.30.
I know nothing.
I've never seen any evidence of this.
Oh, I'll send you one of these videos.
Is it happening in any store near you?
Oh, it's happening in every single store.
Every single, yes.
And you could, so they put like 20 people in a room and they all order directly from a store, not through Instacart.
And even those people all got different prices.
It's it's it's kind of in a way, it's what Uber has been doing for a while.
You know, we'll just charge you whatever you think you're willing to pay.
Uh, but they're doing with groceries.
Well, that's interesting.
That's not going to fly.
Well, it's been flying apparently for quite a few years.
But when you look at the price of groceries, it's not necessarily based.
The point is you're saying that the whole system is turning into a bait and switch operation.
It's that's what this is.
It's anti-competitive because they are all doing it.
So all the grocery stores are using this system.
So instead of competing with each other based upon price and service and quality of product, they're all kind of using the same systems to just charge whatever they can.
So it's anti-competitive.
We have grocery store executives that listen to this show and they will respond to this and explain it to us what's going on.
Anonymity always assured.
Of course, unless they want credit.
Unless they want to lose their job.
Not necessarily.
And then the latest, here it comes.
You're going to be paying more for your AI.
It's going to happen because when these guys jump in, it's all over.
Well, this is definitely an earthquake in the entertainment industry here in Hollywood.
This is a three-year licensing deal between the Walt Disney Company and OpenAI.
Users will be able to create short clips up to 30 seconds in duration using Sora, which is OpenAI's video generation platform.
And those clips will feature more than 200 characters from the Disney universe, from the Marvel, Pixar, and Star Wars universe.
That obviously covers everything from Mickey Mouse to Elsa from Frozen to Iron Man, Captain America, and Darth Vader.
Disney is also making a $1 billion equity investment into OpenAI.
That will allow them to create more content for Disney Plus, create new services and tools, and also make some changes internally, rolling out ChatGPT for employees of Disney.
Now, what this deal includes is perhaps just as important as what it doesn't include.
The deal actually does end up excluding actor likeness and voices.
So essentially, those users using that platform will not be able to use actual faces and voices of human actors.
If you think back to that historically long actors and writer strike back in 2023, that was a major, major concern for Hollywood at the time.
Oh, no.
These actors will all be licensing their likeness and their voice.
It won't take long.
Yeah, and then they'll get Spotified and think they're making a lot of money.
Next thing you know, they'll be getting pennies on pennies out of the blue.
They're getting a little check, not the kind of checks Brunetti gets, but checks for five bucks.
Oh, you mean Brunetti, the guy who never donates, who takes you out to dinner and calls that a value-for-value donation?
That guy?
I think it's legit.
Who says he's listening to the show, but then claims that we didn't talk about the Golden Globes?
That Brunetti, that guy?
Yeah, your buddy.
The guy who single-handedly put Netflix on the map with House of Cards.
Yeah, he's actually probably pretty responsible for Netflix.
You should have given him some bunch of free stock.
Yeah, please.
Brunetti, you just think he's not a fan of Netflix.
He's just using you.
He's just using you.
For what?
For clout.
Wow.
That's the best you could do?
I'm going to show my soul by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.
No agenda.
Yeah, we do have a few people to thank who gave us $50 and above, but less than $200 so they don't get their associate executive producer or executive producer credit.
And Adam will read the list.
Yes, I just need to set everything up here because we start off with, hold on a second.
Where am I?
There's my spreadsheet.
We start off with Sir Mark Bendikowski in Poland.
Oh, that's nice.
Curva.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
He says, great job.
I love you guys.
Oh, well, that's very nice.
Thank you, Sir Mark.
John Widden, 105.35.
Dave at noagendafund.com.
He has an important message with $100 donation.
He says, here's $100 from Dave at NoAgendaFund.com.
We contribute.
They also put the tip of the day on noagendafund.com.
But he says, we noticed we haven't been mentioned and our traffic has fallen.
I mentioned him on the last show.
Well, we're going to, I'm going to, because I usually say tipoftheday.net, but I'll add noagendafund.com.
Of course.
No agenda fund has all of our stuff there.
And NoAgenda Fund has like, they have the tip of the day, but they also have, if you auto the blue, say, I saw this movie, I really liked it.
Yeah.
Put that in there.
Yeah, they have our books.
Do they have Little John's Candies on there?
Because, man, I love that stuff.
I don't know if they do.
They should.
Anyway.
Yeah, No Agenda Fund.
NoAgendaFund.com.
That's a good site.
I use that's the site I use to make sure I'm not double tipping.
Ash in Texas, $100.
Huge fan of Font Talk.
Yeah.
God bless you both.
Thank you, Ash.
Brian Bollinger, Sacramento, California, $100.
Baroness Dame Knight in Edmonds, Washington, $100.
Thank you.
Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina, 8008.
A boob donation.
He says, I love boobs and the U.S. Constitution.
L.E. Hovdaness in Salem, Oregon, 72.22.
Let me see.
What is he saying here?
Thanks for the deducing last time.
This time, the number I donate is the reverse of my book series.
What is your book series?
It doesn't mention it.
Jared Pfaffenbach.
Well, there you go.
Oh, he's a ham, ITM, the Kilo Fox Zero Papa Golf Sierra.
Hey, by the way, I got a notice.
I got to renew my ham license.
Yeah.
Some guy's got a scam going on.
He's like, renew through us.
For $80, we'll do all the work.
It costs like $10 to renew.
I think it's more than that.
I think it's more like, I can't remember.
It's $25 maybe, but it's very easy to do yourself.
Yeah, you just go on the website.
Yeah.
Boom.
Made it sound very complicated.
Paul Webb in Twickenham.
There you go.
$69.69.
Good that we still have a UK listener who's alive and not in jail.
Chad Hewitt, Folsom, California, $66.40.
Stephen Shoemaker, usually it's Schumach.
Well, that came in as a check, so I think that R got put on by accident.
Okay, it's Schumach, as far as I know.
Shoemaker, Shoemak, Schumach.
Xenia, Ohio, $64.80.
Joseph Brendel in Pittsburgh, $64.
David Key, $63.25.
Christopher Decter, 5678.
Thank you.
Jason Babcock, and he will be 55 on the 17th with $55.17.
So we got you on the list.
Cameron Ling, Ling, or Ling or Ling, North Branch, Minnesota, double nickels on the dime.
Luke Minnell, Los Angeles.
Hey, we got a live one.
52.72.
Bob Cox in Delphi, Indiana, 51.50.
Viscount Sir Economic Hitman in Tombaugh, Texas, $50 and one penny.
Gary Mao in Woodland Hills, California, 50.
These are the 50s, in fact.
Brandon Savois in Port Orchard, Washington.
Dame Patricia Worthington.
Is that Dame Patricia Worthington?
Yep.
Yeah, no, it's...
It's Dame Patricia Worthington.
She donates a lot.
Miami, Florida.
Stefan Truckels in Seust.
Stefan, yes, in Deutschland.
Diane Schwannebeck, Johnsburg, Illinois.
Kevin Dills, Huntersville, North Carolina.
Michael Stepnickza in Vienna, Virginia.
He says, Merry Christmas.
Thanks for keeping me informed and amused.
And finally, Sir Alan Bean in Beaverton, Oregon, $50.
Thank you very much to all of our producers.
We do not mention anything under 50 for absolute reasons of anonymity, but we see you 49.99s, you're 33.33s.
Even down the 1111s, people still doing that.
$10, $5.
It is all very much appreciated.
You can support the best podcast in the universe by going to noagendadonations.com.
Any amount is good for us.
We love the numerology.
Whenever you feel like it, if you think, wow, that was a good show.
I got some value out of that.
Noagendadonations.com.
And DJ Sphinx turned 36 on the 12th of December.
Elizabeth Marianne Maran.
I got it.
And Amelia, happy birthday to John Lambert.
He turned 50.
He turns 50 tomorrow, the 15th.
And there's David Kechta, our end of show mixer.
He says, happy birthday to Marilyn Mack.
She turns 21 tomorrow.
Barbara Coons says, happy birthday to Tony Pachiro.
He turns 56 on the 17th.
And Jason Babcock, also celebrating on the 17th, will be 55 years old.
And we say happy birthday to everybody here from the best podcast in the universe.
And we do have, of course, one more peace prize to hand out.
Thanks to his very generous and just surprising Rebelizer donation of $3,333.33.
We congratulate the Archduke of Central Florida with his No Agenda International Peace Prize.
It looks just like those other guys, except this one's better because it's from No Agenda.
I think this promotion is closing.
So if you want to promote peace, go to noagendadonations.com.
And when is it closed?
Is it over?
Is it almost done?
Is it almost done?
It'll be over at Christmas.
Christmas-ish.
There you go.
Ish.
And so we don't have any knights or dames or any title changes.
Takes us straight up to the meetups.
No Agenda meetups.
Yes, the No Agenda Meetups, another way you can support the show, support your community where you can get connection.
It always brings you protection.
Noagendameetups.com is where you can find any of these fabulous gatherings near you.
We didn't get a recorded report from the Great Rochester, Minnesota Big Pharma City meetup, so they sent in a little written report, which I will share here.
Greetings from the Frozen Tundra of Minnesota this past Thursday.
We had 10 producers attending the meetup in Rochester.
The location was the Little Thistle Brewery.
The meetup court consisted of a landman, a plumber, an electrician who was also a ham operator, three keepers, a dame that had to leave early for a PTA school meeting, and myself, a long-standing knight, Sir Knight of the Eastside, a douchebag committed to correcting his status and discussed the value of the show for he and his family, which had five human resources.
A first-timer asked, what is the purpose of the show and its 18-plus years existence?
All in all, a great evening of discussion.
A final topic was a follow-up to JCD's newsletter and prop bets.
It seems that four more years prop bet on the show may be the fixed category he mentioned, the final V4V support for the show.
Yes, that's a good prop bet.
Will we actually quit in four more years?
That is a good prop bet.
That's right.
Unfortunately, they don't like to stretch the bets out that long because the company is doing the betting and the gaming are usually going out of business by then.
Just like the lottery guys.
Hey, there is a meetup taking place today.
It's the IndyNA Tail End of 25 Trumply Terrific Meetup.
It's underway now at the Blind Owl Brewery in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Of course, that is Dame Maria and Sir Mark of the Greenwood.
And let's see, nothing.
Oh, yeah.
Next Thursday, we have Charlotte's Thursday, third Thursday monthly, 7 o'clock Edge Tavern, Charlotte, North Carolina.
And coming up for the rest of this month, Anaheim, California on the 20th.
That sounds like a Leo Bravo deal on the 23rd.
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, Clovis, California, 26th.
Fort Wayne, Indiana on the 27th, and Evansville, Indiana on the 30th of December.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
These are the people who will act as your first responders in any kind of an emergency.
These relationships last a lifetime.
Some even wind up getting married.
Noagendametups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start one yourself.
Sometimes you want to go hang up with all the nights and days.
You to be where you want me, trigger to hell aim.
You to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
And we still have John's tip of the day coming up.
We do have some great end of show mixes, including that coveted toe tapper from Baron Darren O'Neal, who is just on fire with the prompting.
But before we do that, we always have a couple of ISOs.
Did you have no ISOs today?
I have no ISOs.
I dropped the ball.
Wow.
I win.
Let's see what I win.
I only have two.
They know what they're doing.
They know what they're doing.
I like that.
MK Ultra 2.0.
Oh, no.
No.
They know what they're doing.
Yeah.
And you know who that is?
Can you tell who that is?
Well, let's play it again.
I do know who it is.
They're doing.
Hold on.
They know what they're doing.
You can hear at the end, classic voice, movie actor.
They know what they're doing.
Doing.
Yeah, I can see his face, but I can't get his name.
That's too bad.
I'm not going to tell you.
But it is now time for John's tip of the day.
Green master, you and me.
Just the chip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
All right, we're going to go back to Boo's recommendations.
Oh, how about a life tip like our Gen Wire?
I don't have any life tips except that You're stealing from the audience by not telling us who did that clip.
Oh, you want me to tell you?
I can tell you.
Yeah, who?
Burt Reynolds.
Oh, huh.
Yeah.
Okay, so this is a screwball one.
You got to listen carefully because this is a, I consider this to be a secret because the quality of this product is generally terrible.
And unless you are clued in one way or another, you will never drink this stuff.
It's called grappa.
Who hasn't had grappa?
A lot of people have had grappa.
I've had plenty of grappa, and I'll give you the story.
So I've been, you know, I was probably in the late 80s, maybe the early, for the late 80s.
I was in New York and I was going to rest, I think it was the Col City Hall.
It was a famous restaurant at the time.
And we had a sommille, and I always get along with sommillets because they, you know, they size you up if they figure you know what you're doing.
They give you a, they think you're okay.
And so they give you the good wine.
And so at the end of the meal, and the guy was French.
He's a French sommillet.
So that added a little impact to this.
He says, what do you like to do after dinner stuff?
I said, yeah, I'm a cognac guy.
He said, oh, you like cognac?
He says, and he's French.
He says, did you ever have grappa?
And I said, yeah, I've had grappa.
Everyone's had grappa.
It's terrible because most grappa is terrible.
Most grappa tastes like toilet water.
Or kerosene or fusal or turpentine.
Depends.
He says, oh, really?
He says, well, I've got a grappa here that I want you to try.
And if you don't like it, you can just give it back.
You don't have to pay for it.
That's a deal.
It's always a deal.
Of course, then he caught me on the thing anyway.
But so he brings out this grappa.
It was fabulous.
And so then I realized that grappa has a protective layer of lousy grappa that keeps people from getting to the good stuff because they make so little of the good stuff.
They don't need a run on it like scotch and the prices go to $500 a bottle for a 15-year-old product.
It's a protection racket.
It's Italian.
And so it took me a minute.
Yes.
Yeah, of course.
Protection racket.
Gotcha.
And so I have a couple of grappa brands that are universally good.
And one in particular, which always gets 98 or 100 points.
Everybody around the country, you'll be able to find it if you dig around enough.
If you can't, you're not going to get it at Costco.
But we had it last night or the night before on Friday night.
We had it with the fan.
And we all of us, all we could do was just talk about this.
Marvel over the grappa.
It was unbelievable.
It's a grappa when you have a good one.
It is a phenomenal product.
And it's hard to explain it unless you had a good one.
But you have a good one.
It's just so good.
It's made from garbage, basically.
Yeah.
And it takes a super skill to make it.
Jacopo Poli.
J-A-C-O-P-O-P-O-L-I, Poli.
This guy's grappa is always getting 98 or 100 points by all the tasters.
Killer, killer, grappa.
If you go right to that, you'll never drink the junk again.
Now, I have a backup brand, which is good, but it's not up to this.
This is ridiculously good.
But a backup brand is Lorenzo Inga.
You'll find this pretty commonly.
And Lorenzo Inga, they make a line of grappas based on various areas where they get the leftover stuff to make it with.
That is a very good tip.
I have a comment and a request.
Two comments.
First of all, I need to tell you that last night we took our final Bordeaux from the Costco crate to the dinner, and people were just like, wow, this is so good.
You're talking about the Bordeaux 2022.
Yep.
Second, last year when Tina and I were in Florence, because we were visiting Willow for Christmas, there was this little restaurant that we went in the first night or the second night we arrived.
Nobody was in the restaurant, completely empty.
It's one of those small deals in the side street.
So we go in, we sit in the back.
We're all lovey-dovey.
We're in Florence.
It's beautiful, the lights and not a lot of tourists because it was cold.
And the owner, young guy, he had bought the place with just open a couple of weeks, bought the place with four friends.
And so we're having the meal.
It's nice.
And he said, can I give you some grappa for dessert?
And I'm thinking, garbage, just like you said.
But, you know, I did, you know, I wanted the kid to feel good about his purchase and there's no one in there.
It's just like, yeah, bring you the grappa.
Same experience.
Fantastic.
He said, his dad makes it in the bathtub.
I said, with your dad in it?
No.
But it was, there is good grappa.
I completely agree.
I'm going to try some of this.
Well, if you can get this one brand, this poli stuff is so outrageous that it'll stop the meal.
It just stops.
It stops the show.
It's a showstopper.
Now, request, because it is the season.
I don't know if you're going to recommend brands or a recipe.
I would love for you to do eggnog on the next show.
Eggnog.
I can do eggnog.
Problem.
We have an eggnog issue at the family, a family-level eggnog issue.
Do you have too many eggs?
You can't even make eggnog.
Oh, we got plenty of eggs.
Yes, you're right.
We can use one of those recipes.
But my wife has a recipe for eggnuts.
She insists on making it, and it's from her dad.
And so it's family heirloom.
It has to be.
It's an heirloom recipe that is bullcrap.
It's a bull crap.
I say it to her too.
I was nuts.
No, no, this is the way you have to do it.
And so I would say.
Well, we don't want the bull crap.
We want the best.
We're trying to come up with it.
We want the primo stuff, man.
Bring your eggnog recipe.
Everybody's ready for it.
And that is your teas.
And that is your tip of the day.
Noagendafun.com.
Tipoftheday.net.
Christmas for you and me.
Bull crap.
And sometimes at all.
Created by Dana Bernetti.
Yeah, it's an Easter egg to see if Mimi actually listens to the show.
We'll find out.
She does listen, but she sometimes fades by the time of the show.
I think a lot of people fade.
Well, they're missing out because they're going to miss out on one of the greatest end-of-the-show mix songs that's been developed for this show.
It is a stutter.
We have to play it again next show.
We will.
And before we get to Baron Darren O'Neill's No Agenda Christmas, we have MVP followed by Mellow D.
And once we're done with that, the No Agenda stream continues with random thoughts, and they'll be doing suno songs on the show.
So more AI slop than a pig would love.
It's all here for you.
And I am coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country where we're waiting for the multi-city attacks from ISIS.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
Deanna from Northern Silicon Valley, I'm John C. DeVorak.
Be back on Thursday.
Please join us then for the eggnog recipe and probably some other media deconstruction you won't get anywhere else.
Stay informed and support us value for value by going to noagendadonations.com until Thursday.
Adios mofos!
Hooe-hoo-eye and such.
Basically, we've wasted too much time on this.
Yeah, really.
Especially my analysis.
I don't think anybody cares.
Oh, the documents we've seen, the reports we've filed, the sheer audacity of some people's defaults.
Gather round general producer and hear a tale of two typefaces locked in an eternally passive, aggressive office war.
Now, the Department of War, they need their letters bold and fast.
When calculating the ordinance that the enemy amassed, but Pete Hexer took the podium looking firm and grave and tall.
He said, if a troop must read a brief, the serif must stand for all.
We need tradition, structure, class, not this bubbly-rounded thing.
Give me time to roam and boys for the rhythm that it brings.
When efficiency is crucial, when you're planning the attack, Calibri's casual nature gives the mission a feedback act.
The generals cried in protest, sir, this slows the battle down.
We need Sanseriff precision to annihilate entire town.
Oh, it's the times versus Calibri, a battle on the page.
A petty pixelated war across the modern age.
We're wasting precious minutes picking which one is the worst.
While the actual rhythm of the battle is completely curved, it's just the shape of letters, friends.
Yet we will never cease to fight a document formatting war that kills all hope of peace.
People have to realize as you see these demos, they are all fake.
The future of American warfare is here, and it's spelled AI.
As technologies advance, so do our adversaries.
We're here at the War Department.
We are not sitting idly by.
They are all fake.
Under the leadership of President Trump, America will lead the charge on this technological transformation by revolutionizing the way we win.
And it's not Shiner-Man, I'm formatting a document: GenAI.L.
This platform puts the world's most powerful frontier AI models, starting with Google Gemini, the records are
filled with shoppers.
All the stores are having sales.
You can almost smell the Christmas.
Or is that the chemtrail?
It's an O-Hender Christmas.
Question what you see.
An O-Hend to Christmas.
A holiday conspiracy.
An O-Hender Christmas.
Where everyone is gay.
in the traditional sense and not in the man-on-man The lists have all been checked at least 33 times A budget that must be kept.
Double nickels on the dime.
A tinfoil hat for Adam.
New wind chimes for JCD.
New boots for the boots on the ground.
And infotainment for you and me.
It's a no-age and a Christmas.
Question what you see.
A no-age and a Christmas.
A holiday conspiracy.
A no-age and a Christmas.
Where everyone is gay.
But in the traditional sense, and not in the man-on-man way.