No Agenda - 1694 - "Gorgeous"

Episode Date: September 12, 2024

No Agenda Episode 1694 - "Gorgeous" "Gorgeous" Executive Producers: Arch-Duke of Central Florida Sir Douglas of The Bahamas Sir Mista Bob Dobalina Bowman McMahon - In loving memory of James Patrick... McMahon Sir Luca Minister Kat Duchess Kim Keeper of the nutty fluffers Nathan Rottier Associate Executive Producers: Mark The Harper Team Sir Eternus Quievi Dame Beth Bailey Davies Eli the Coffee Guy beach view farm Linda Lu Duchess of jobs and writer resumes Anonymous Become a member of the 1695 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Duke of Central Florida > Arch-Duke of Central Florida Knights & Dames Douglas Ellis > Sir Douglas of The Bahamas Art By: Data End of Show Mixes: David Keckta - Oystein Berge - Tom Starkweather Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1694.noagendanotes.com Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Full Summaries in PDF No Agenda Lite in opus format Last Modified 09/12/2024 17:06:22This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 09/12/2024 17:06:22 by Freedom Controller  

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Starting point is 00:00:00 No, just load up. Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, September 12, 2024. This is your award-winning Kidman Nation Media Assassination, episode 1694. This is No Agenda. We are hyperscalers
Starting point is 00:00:15 and we're broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country right here in team of region number six. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're all asking the question as to why did MTV become a staging ground for Satanists. I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
Starting point is 00:00:33 In the morning. Oh man, you actually watched? I caught it by accident. First of all, who's doing the scheduling over there? What a dumb timing to do the MTV awards. Well, like I said, I didn't watch it. I was just going through channels and I actually ran into the Spanish channel. So it was all subtitled. I tried to learn a little more Spanish. I just caught the end of it. It was terrible. Here's a good idea. Let's do a big award show with Satanists on 9-11.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Yeah, I know. It's pretty funny. I could not. This is the first time in, oh man, 30 something years. I just, I could not watch. But I have no desire. Well you missed the best part. What did I, well. The trans Maoist stuff at the end. Oh goodness, see this is why I'm happy I didn't watch. You know what to expect, it's the same every single year. Actually I think I decided not to watch
Starting point is 00:01:38 when I read this article from CNBC. When viewers tune into the 2024 MTV VMAs, which by the way, that's just a little craw here for me. It's like a craw. Why? Well, because back in my day, we would say VMAs and then the producer would come on and go, yeah, that's a burn. You have to say Video Music Awards. You can't say VMAs. Oh, interesting. They wouldn't let us say that. Actually, I should stop. Just mentioned before I forget that when I tuned it in by accident, I thought it was the adult video movie awards because of it. I did. The outfits.
Starting point is 00:02:20 The outfits. Now that was a show. I was scantily glad. That was a show back in the day. The AVN. The AVNs. AVNs, yeah. At the same time, was it the same? Or just the AVAs. They've dealt video-wrapping.
Starting point is 00:02:31 No, I think it was AVN. Wasn't it, wasn't that same time as Comdex, I want to say? Yeah, well, it was a few day crossover. Yeah. Yeah. Honey, I really have to go to Comdex this year. It's really important. I'll just go the last few days. That's always better. Don't need to see the beginning. Don't need the keynotes. As part of a new partnership between Paramount Global, the parent company of
Starting point is 00:02:56 cable and TV network, MTV, and shoppable advertising company, Shop Sense AI, viewers will be able to shop the outfits they're seeing on screen using the startup's new AI-powered lens, which will launch at the start of the awards show. I was done. I'm like, no, I don't think so. I don't think so. You used to watch these religiously. Yes, and then I'd report and it's a grumbling the whole while
Starting point is 00:03:27 Satanism again, guess what everybody Satanism so I got tired of that, you know, we're in this I Did have a for the first time in many many years. I had a moment of weakness the other day I said the tns. I really love my job, but I'm tired of the loop You know, the media has just become so predictable, so dumb, you know, most people are starting to figure it out. You know, it's like how much longer before I, you know, before I do something drastic,
Starting point is 00:04:01 don't you ever have that feeling that we're just in this perpetual loop? Don't you ever have that feeling that we're just in this perpetual loop? It always has enough, it's like stamp collecting. Podcasting, just like stamp collecting. Yeah, another thing chicks think is really hot. Yeah, sure. Oh yeah, the chicks would all go for the podcasters. And the stamp collectors.
Starting point is 00:04:22 The stamp collectors and figurines, action figures. Star Trek action figures. Star Trek and specifically Star Trek action figures. Chick magnet. I interrupted you about the poop loop. You were going to say? I don't know what I was going to say now. Well, you were saying that the news has enough, and then you said stamp collecting.
Starting point is 00:04:52 I said, don't you get tired of the cycle, of this continuous- No, I find it, it's interesting because they're not standing still, they're always doing new stuff. I have a number of debate clips here. And to dig into the deconstruction, to find these little idiosyncratic things. Let's talk about the debate. Well, let me start for one second and then I'll let you get your clips.
Starting point is 00:05:17 I have clips. You've got clips, yes. Here's how the meeting went. Mr. President, you were so effective on the previous debate. You were calm and collected. More of that, please. They're eating the dogs. Mr. President, that's not exactly what we meant. That's great stuff.
Starting point is 00:05:47 First of all, what did you think? Who won? Well, I have a different thoughts than who won, if you want to hear them. I'll tell you what I thought. First of all, I never underestimate President Trump's ability to effectively communicate to the American people. He's a UFC, he's a showbiz guy, he understands the American psyche, but this was not his arena. This was not a debate, this was not a UFC smackdown, this was a courtroom. Now, if you've ever been in court, and I recognize this, it's a very uneasy experience And I recognize this, it's a very uneasy experience
Starting point is 00:06:30 when the other side, whether it's a civil case or if a prosecutor is up there, is making their case against you. Even if they're not lying, it can make you question yourself. And I remember this so well from my MTV domain name case, people should look it up if you don't know, because it was very clear to me how that went down. They said, oh, you know, you can use it.
Starting point is 00:06:50 Don't worry, we've got the AOL keyword. We're not interested in the internet. Oh, yes, exactly. We're not interested. And then the Viacom lawyers stood up and they explained the version of the truth from their side. And it was the same feeling I had watching this courtroom drama. It was not a debate by any stretch of the imagination.
Starting point is 00:07:13 And I was like, oh, I recognize this feeling. This is what happens when you're in a courtroom. So when the truth is being bent or told from a different perspective, or if it's a lie, you can't help but respond. So this trolling that Vice President Harris did, she's an expert at this because she's a prosecutor. And I think that he was unprepared for that and it made him protest too much.
Starting point is 00:07:39 And we were the jury. We were the jury watching this knowing our version of the truth and had to shut up and sit silently as you do in the jury box. So her gestures, her glances, looking straight at the defendant, all courtroom drama, but this of course isn't Judge Judy, it wasn't a debate. This is a representation actually of the US legal system as it is today. And in this case, we had two judges instead of moderators. And we the neuter jury were sitting on the sidelines. So afterwards, and this is maybe where my fatigue came from all the
Starting point is 00:08:17 discussion that ensued was just part of the culture war economy, you know, cable news, big podcast names like code Bon Gino and Megan Kelly and Beck and everyone's always, but they felt jipped. Now on the other hand, I have trust in the real American people, not the culture war economy who are struggling, who heard his repeated messages about the economy, repetition works about immigration. Yes, they're eating the dogs, I think was genius because in America today, but around the world,
Starting point is 00:08:52 but in America certainly, we got fur babies, we got dog turds. Oh, someone's kid got raped and killed, tough luck. What, they're coming for the dogs? I think that actually worked and war. So, I can't say that there was a win for the talkers. Kamala Harris did a phenomenal job as a prosecutor. She didn't really say much or explain much about her plans. She mugged the camera a lot. She did a great
Starting point is 00:09:22 job of that. But would you agree that this was a she's a prosecutor and this is what she has done her entire life and Trump was not prepared and quite honestly I don't think you can prepare to be in the witness box or be on trial in a courtroom. Just look at how Trump is in the courtroom. It's very difficult. And really as a witness, your lawyer can do stuff for you, i.e. your surrogates, but you really, you're defenseless in that case. And so for that matter, if there's a win,
Starting point is 00:09:56 I think it's on Trump's side because he got his message out consistently. He showed that he was angry. If there's a win for the What I call Mo and I just came up with this the culture war economy It was Harris so, you know not really and also I'm not so sure this so-called debate changes anyone's opinion Well that I think you're right and that analysis which I've not heard I have a couple gotchas in my stuff too, but that is excellent. I think you probably nailed it. I think the public saw it as a Harris win. I think everyone saw it as a Harris win.
Starting point is 00:10:37 I watched it with a group. I had Jay and her husband. With your church group? With a church group of Democrats. Oh, so you were watching the room. And so they were all, you know, just pleased this punch about the whole thing. But the funny thing was we had it on tape delay so we could stop it. And J.C. actually in the middle of, he was here, in the middle of the, uh, the dog, just before the, as the dog thing came out, he had looked into the dog thing and the Haitians and gave us about a seven
Starting point is 00:11:14 minute lecture as during pause on how the Haitians eat stray animals in Haiti and it's not uncommon for them to do that. And they don't think it's a big deal. And he had a lot of background information on this. And I thought that was interesting. And that's true. That is absolutely true. Absolutely true.
Starting point is 00:11:33 And so it's not without outside the realm of crazy talk to think that this could be going on in Springfield. There's a lot of evidence for it. of evidence for it. Now my clips are about the lying on one side or the other, mostly on the, on the Kemalite side. She was a big liar. But I would say that the summary, that right after the event, Rachel Maddow, and I have the clip, did a, because this is interesting, I recorded this thing on, on YouTube video, I click, and it showed the check mark, I recorded it on ABC, NBC, Fox, and MSNBC. You were going for Bear. Only MSNBC recorded. Oh, isn't that interesting? I thought so.
Starting point is 00:12:26 But okay, I can, because I wanted the Fox one, but the MSNBC one was fine. That gave me the Rachel thing at the end. So Rachel Maddott comes out and does a summary, and I think this was the summary that most Democrats, as the way Democrats thought, I think she did a wonderful job of summarizing from the Democrat perspective. You could... Sorry. Wait, wait.
Starting point is 00:12:47 Exactly what was being thought. Now I want to mention before you play this, I don't know why. First of all, we noticed a couple of things. One, when they first showed her she had huge bags under her eyes that were like, what happened to this woman? And then they fit somebody, I guess, saw it on the monitor and they went out with the makeup person and sprayed him. She looked terrible.
Starting point is 00:13:13 And she was almost in tears as she's giving this little spiel here. She's like crying, almost crying for some reason. This is emotional. The way she gets this kind of model and style of presentation. She's like in borderline in tears. I have no idea why. But here we go. You could not have two more different candidates with two more different approaches to the task at hand here. I had a television executive once tell me that everything you need to know about a live event on television, you can tell with the sound off. And if you had the sound off for this debate, which I'm sure nobody did.
Starting point is 00:13:53 That's funny. That's how I watch Rachel Maddow all the time. She's absolutely right. Yes, very good. And if you had the sound off for this debate, which I'm sure nobody did, what you would have seen was Trump looking physically hunched, angry, squinting. I never saw the whites of his eyes the entire debate, shouting, constantly interrupting himself, not just going down tangents, but being unable to finish a thought, seeming very frustrated, very angry, very negative, and very tired. In contrast, Kamala Harris appeared to be sort of light on her feet, quite puzzled by him. The two shot of him squinting and hunching and having, seeming to be having physical trouble squeezing the words out, certainly squeezing the sentences out. While she just looked at him absolutely puzzled by where it was he was going, I think that visual may be as much of a takeaway as anything that was said.
Starting point is 00:14:53 That said, boy, what was said? Trump repeatedly coming back to the same lines over and over again about world crime rates being low, and that being the explanation for America having high crime rates. He said strange things like all Democrats wanted Roe versus Wade overturned. He said that it is legal to kill children in the United States. He insisted that he saw something on television about eating dogs. That was one of the weirdest moments of the debate, saying he saw it on television about eating dogs. That was one of the weirdest moments of the debate saying he saw it on television, so
Starting point is 00:15:27 therefore he knows it's true and so therefore what the police said about it can't be true. Kamala Harris kept going back to her plan, her campaign, but also kept going directly at him. Yeah, that sounds about right. Yeah, there was a big lie in there, a massive lie. And my theme here is going to be... Lie! You are what I...
Starting point is 00:15:50 I am what I say you are. Which is the... Which was evident in the lie that she had in there in the last 10 seconds. She told a whopper that you didn't catch. Well it to me it was all what what did she say? She said that the police had denied that there were dog eating dogs. Yeah the police I have body cam footage of police in Springfield it's 24 seconds. Exactly we all seen that. Well not everybody, not everybody, let me just 24 seconds let me play it so people have heard it. Please. It's 24 seconds. Exactly. We've all seen that. Well, not everybody. Just 24 seconds. Let me play it so people have heard it. Please. It's worth it.
Starting point is 00:16:29 What did you do? Why'd you kill the cat? Did you eat that cat? Did you eat it? No? Why'd you kill it? Did you guys see all this? No. We pulled it up and she was just laying there with it. Did you see her eating it? She was eating it.
Starting point is 00:16:48 She was eating it? Yes, she was. You can call the Humane Society and see if they'll come pick those cats up. It's deceased. Did J.C. and his cat analysis of Haitians, did he bring up the voodoo and religious sacrifices? No, no, we didn't talk about that. Because there's that too in Haiti. There's a lot of sacrifice of animals.
Starting point is 00:17:05 So she said, and she was referring to David Muir interrupting Trump during the dog speech, and David Muir specifically, and did it more than once, I think twice at least, said it was the city manager. The city manager is not the police. It's not the head of police, it's not the chief of police, it's not anything that would have anything. The city manager is basically a glorified bookkeeper who makes sure that the city runs, oversees this and hiring and things like that. He wouldn't know the crime in the town to this extent that they were talking about, but they brought
Starting point is 00:17:42 up, I guess somebody at ABC called the city manager, but Rachel twisted that to say the police. Yeah. That is a lie. Oh, surprise. So let's listen to the dog thing, cause it is funny. I have two, I have the clip in the follow-up clip about Trump and his dog. Now I have to say this. clip about Trump and his dog. Now I have to say this, I thought that Rachel, not Rachel,
Starting point is 00:18:14 that Kamala had done an excellent job of mugging and I thought if there was going to be a winner, she won. But then as I started getting, doing the clips and taking chunks and not looking at the visuals, it was like, it reminded me a little bit of the Kennedy-Nixon debates, and I'll go back in history, because it was talked about a lot. If you watched it on TV, they did two polls. People who watched it on TV thought Kennedy won, and people who listened on the radio thought Nixon won. Ah, yes, I remember this.
Starting point is 00:18:42 This is a big deal. And when you start listening to it and just listening to the clips or even seeing just clips, even though you can't see some visuals, Trump won. That's what, that's what I mean by all of his little nuggets that he kept repeating. Those are the ones that are getting chopped up. The dog thing,
Starting point is 00:19:02 which is the most interesting because it was the most outrageous and got the most attention was actually quite good. And the way he did it, I can imagine his handlers going nuts about it. But at the same time, if you listen to these clips just by themselves, like we're going to do now, I got the front end of it and the end of it where she goes thinks it's nuts. I think it's genius. And then to David Muir and his associate there to interrupt him with the city manager said, no, that makes it worse.
Starting point is 00:19:35 But let's play these. And I'm going to actually do something really unusual. And I'm going to invite you to attend one of Donald Trump's rallies, because it's a really interesting thing to watch. You will see during the course of his rallies, he talks about fictional characters like Hannibal Lecter. He will talk about windmills cause cancer. And what you will also notice is that people start leaving his rallies early, out of exhaustion
Starting point is 00:19:58 and boredom. And I will tell you, the one thing you will not hear him talk about is you. You will not hear him talk about your needs, your dreams, and your desires. And I'll tell you, I believe you deserve a president who actually puts you first. And I pledge to you that I will. First, let me respond to the rallies. She said people start leaving. People don't go to her rallies.
Starting point is 00:20:20 There's no reason to go. This, by the way, that was an excellent troll by her, and she got him to defend it. That was a mistake. Well, actually, I should mention this. Chris Hayes had an analysis of all her, and I thought it was pretty good. I didn't clip it.
Starting point is 00:20:36 But he did say that she was doing binary responses where she'd say one thing and then troll Trump as a one-two punch. And he claims it worked. I think it kind of worked. It worked with crowd size. Yeah. They like, they love to give him crap about that. It didn't work with, you disrespect the military.
Starting point is 00:20:58 He never took that bait and she tried it maybe five times. She kept trying, trying to... Well, it did work once when he went on about how he had fired these people and then they turned on him. Yeah, but she was, you know what she was calling, she was talking about McCain. Oh, yeah, she was trying to... She was talking about the veterans. John Kelly is the bad actor here. The guy was a creep anyway, if you look at his background.
Starting point is 00:21:18 Let's continue. She said people start leaving, people don't go to her rallies, there's no reason to go. And the people that do go, she's busing them in and paying them to be there. And then showing them in a different light. So she can't talk about that. People don't leave my rallies. We have the biggest rallies, the most incredible rallies in the history. This is where Tina threw up her hands.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Stop doing that! This is where the jury in the jury box is like, what are you doing? Politics. That's because people want to take their country back. Our country is being lost. We're a failing nation. And it happened three and a half years ago. And what's going on here, you're going to end up in World War III, just to go into another subject.
Starting point is 00:21:59 What they have done to our country by allowing these millions and millions of people to come into our country and look at what's happening to the towns all over the United States. And a lot of towns don't want to talk, it's not going to be Aurora or Springfield. A lot of towns don't want to talk about it because they're so embarrassed by it. In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats, they're eating the pets of the people that came in. They're eating the cats. They're eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what's happening in our country. And it's a shame. I just want to clarify here. You rig up Springfield, Ohio, and ABC News did reach out to the city
Starting point is 00:22:36 manager there. He told us there had been no credible reports of specific claims of pets being harmed, injured, or abused by individuals within the immigrant community. Well, I've seen people on television. Let me just say here, this is the- The people on television say my dog was taken and used for food. So, maybe he said that, and maybe that's a good thing to say for a city manager. I'm not taking this from television.
Starting point is 00:22:56 But the people on television are saying their dog was eaten by the people that went there. Now, the question is, why is he getting into a debate with Muir? Because that's... And this happened throughout the whole of the whole event. Because Muir is the judge. The judge is... I'm just seeing it from a courtroom perspective. He's like, hey judge, you're wrong and shut up judge. That's not your job. Let Kamala, let the prosecutor make her case. Yes, well that's definitely going on. So it's kind of like, just have a comeback here, which I guess is memorable. Regardless, Trump has continued to strike a positive-
Starting point is 00:23:32 Oh, I'm sorry. Is that part two? No, no, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. My mistake. Hold on. You have it on all caps. It's a little hard to read sometimes.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Interesting. Wait, where is it? Yes, I got it here. Again, the Springfield City manager says there's no evidence of that. Vice President Harris, I'll let you respond to the rest of what you've heard. You talk about extreme. You know, this is, I think, one of the reasons why in this election, I actually have the endorsement of 200 Republicans who have formally worked with President Bush, Mitt Romney, and John McCain, including the endorsement of former Vice President Dick Cheney and Congress member Liz Cheney.
Starting point is 00:24:14 She's no longer in Congress. But okay. That's a lie then. Yes. But you know, by the standards they put on Trump, that would be a lie. Just to intersperse this debate analysis, so it's not all just debate clips, I want to just focus for a moment on Springfield. First of all, one of our producers went there, Texas Junta, he said, I went to see what was
Starting point is 00:24:41 going on with the Haitians. He said he went to Springfield for a day. He just went there to see what was going on with the Haitians. He said he went to Springfield for a day. He just went there to see what was going on. He said, holy cow, Haitians are everywhere. He said he went to the auto parts store, a line of Haitians getting things for their cars. One guy in line actually had to activate the card he was using before he made the purchase.
Starting point is 00:25:01 You see where he's coming from? So it's very obvious what is happening in Springfield. But then I found from two days ago, coincidentally, a PBS frontline piece on what's happening in Springfield. It took two relatively short clips from it. This is exactly, and when Trump says people around the country are seeing it, I think that hits home because whether it's eating the dogs or driving like crazy or gumming up the public works, this
Starting point is 00:25:31 is happening everywhere. I've seen it for the past 25 years in the Netherlands where they bring in immigrants, they throw them into these small towns. In this case, this is exactly what the bankers wanted. We've talked about it, Suppress wages, bring in cheap workers. And this is what PBS discovered boots on the ground in Springfield, Ohio. The reason they left is their home country is disintegrating. Protests and increasing violence in the Caribbean nation culminated in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise in 2021.
Starting point is 00:26:05 Since then, the country's spiraled. Armed gangs currently control 80% of the capital, Port-au-Prince. Meir Souss is one of the estimated 731,000 Haitian immigrants now living in the United States. I got my brothers and sisters, my mother is still living there. I'm always thinking about my family in Haiti. Because of that violence, the U.S. granted what's called temporary protected status to Haitians in the U.S., giving them limited time permission to live and work here. PPS was then expanded by the Biden administration.
Starting point is 00:26:40 Mirceau says he came to Springfield for the same reason most Haitians did. He heard that housing was cheap and jobs were plentiful. What started slowly, we had an application pool that was a little bit different. People coming to work here. People looking for jobs. What he's welding here again are welded axle components. Jamie McGregor is the CEO of McGregor Metal, which makes welded parts for the auto and farm industries.
Starting point is 00:27:07 Right now, about 10% of his workforce is Haitian, over 30 employees. I wish I had 30 more. Our Haitian associates come to work every day. They don't have a drug problem. They'll stay at their machine. They'll achieve their numbers. They are here to work. And so in general, that's a stark difference from what we're used to in our community.
Starting point is 00:27:27 So this is exactly what the real story in America is, particularly in the Midwest. You look at Ohio. First we spread fentanyl everywhere and opioids. Everyone got drugged out. No one could work properly. No one wanted to work. Then the Biden administration expands the TBS. I was just going to say that wasn't, that couldn't have been from frontline. wanted to work, then the Biden administration expands the TBS.
Starting point is 00:27:45 I was just going to say that wasn't, that couldn't have been from Frontline. Yeah, it's PBS Frontline. You sure it wasn't NewsHour? Because that was William Brangham. And he only is on NewsHour. I may be wrong. I thought it was Frontline, it could be NewsHour. Minor points. It is a difference in the way they present. Okay. And Brangham at NewsHour is more likely to be biased.
Starting point is 00:28:09 So if they brought that out there, I think it's even more important. Good point. So we drugged middle America, the industrial base was shipped off to China. Now the bankers want to bring it back, but not for American workers. No, no, we can't have those idiots working and creating. We need cheap labor. And there's a war going on, a civil war going on in Haiti. Notice we didn't go in to fix it like the last time.
Starting point is 00:28:36 No, let the Jamaicans go in. Let the Nigerians go in. No, no, no. We'll just take 731,000 and give them work permits. That's what TPS is. We expanded it under Biden-Harris and then you get this. McGregor acknowledges the sudden arrival of so many new immigrants is a challenge on multiple fronts, but he believes this is partly how the industrial Midwest can regrow.
Starting point is 00:29:03 We want more jobs in our community. And in order to fill those jobs, some jobs need to be people who are not originally from here. There's things in the last five years that have really changed and has been a forward improvement for Springfield. But this is taxing the resources of the city. The Springfield's mayor, Rob Rue, says he was cautiously optimistic when the first Haitians settled in town. But then their numbers quickly rose. The city estimates 12,000 to 15,000 Haitians are here now.
Starting point is 00:29:33 The infrastructure of the city, our safety forces, our hospitals, our schools. Springfield is a close community and has a big heart. But at the same point, we've had this influx that has taxed all these services. Now, the way I see it, this mayor's an idiot because you know that this is going to happen. And now he's like, oh, we need money. Okay. So this whole thing is a setup from the beginning.
Starting point is 00:30:00 And I think that's why it resonates with Americans who are probably a are already Trump voters, but maybe people who are agnostic and just struggling and saying, you know, this is this really something here. Because it is this is this is the problem. This is exactly what what what has been going on and it's structural and it's the central bankers really in collusion with the Biden administration who expanded TPS.
Starting point is 00:30:29 Why don't we go in there and fix the Civil War? No, no, we'll just take everybody here. We need them anyway. There you go. Okay, well, I want to get back to my theme. Yes, of course. I'm just saying this for... for effect. Let's go to bonus clip one.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Bonus clip one, ladies and gentlemen. This came in late. So hold on a second. You mean debate bonus, I think, right? Wait, how come it doesn't say bonus here? Oh, it's because it's under debate. Oh, but it came in as a Is a right but it it doesn't say bonus. What's the name of it? No, it doesn't I'm just telling you where it came. Oh, okay. I Can't play it if I don't know what it is Look it up because I I thought that if you if you saw it when you saw, when it came in, you know what it was. No, because it would say bonus clip and it doesn't say bonus clip.
Starting point is 00:31:29 Okay, well let me tell you what the problem is with this. I can get it for you. But when I send the bonus clips in, they're not on my main list. Oh, okay. Well, hold on. So all I know is I sent you the bonus clips in order of the ones that I wanted to play. We're falling down. And I thought you'd make a note. We're falling down here.
Starting point is 00:31:47 We're falling down. So I have to go back and see what the clip is called that I sent you even though you had received it. Bonus clip is called Debate Blatant Lie Clip from TikTok. Ah, okay. As of today, there is not one member of the United States military who is in active duty in a combat zone in any war zone around the world the first time this century. That's a blatant lie. The U.S. has 2,400 troops deployed to Iraq right now to assist and advise
Starting point is 00:32:16 Iraqi forces engaging in combat against ISIS. U.S. forces regularly participate in raids on ISIS, and they have since 2014. Just 11 days ago, seven US personnel were injured in a raid. We just had three soldiers die back in January, killed by Iran-backed militias while deployed in Jordan, which borders Israel. Until July, the Dwight D. Eisenhower Aircraft Strike Group was deployed to the Red Sea, regularly fighting toothy rebels, and was attacked on numerous occasions. Just last month, we deployed even more ballistic missile ballistic missile capable cruisers and destroyers to the Middle East in Europe. We also happened to have 10,000 troops deployed to Poland
Starting point is 00:32:53 on Ukraine's border and CNN was apparently only able to count one lie that Kamala told during the debate. I counted 29 at least. So follow me here because I'm gonna be talking about all of them. Now the reason I'm playing this clip after the other ones to emphasize this lying situation is that they went to the ABC went to the trouble of calling the city manager of Springfield out of the blue just on the hopes that Trump would bring up the dogs. Yes. But they don't care about any of this other stuff. Do you think this would be a little more important when she says,
Starting point is 00:33:28 makes this lie that we have no troops in a combat zone? So what is interesting is that you're surprised. I'm not surprised. You know I'm not surprised. But this is what the culture war economy does. Oh, there was biased. Yes, it was biased. It was a setup. It was a complete setup. And now Trump was unprepared for it. To make the setup even more obvious to me is something that nobody picked up on. Fox, all the Fox shows didn't see it. Nobody saw it. You're going to see it here, I'm going to bring it out. You might catch it knowing that there's a gotcha in here.
Starting point is 00:34:08 Play the debate IVF killer. They know that and everybody else knows it. I have been a leader on fertilization IVF. And the other thing, they, you should ask, will she allow abortion in the eighth month, ninth month, seventh month? Come on. OK, would you do that? Why don't you ask me that question?
Starting point is 00:34:30 Why don't you answer the question? Would you veto? Because under Roe v. Wade, you could do abortions in the seventh month, the eighth month, the ninth month, and probably after birth. Yes, I'm glad you brought that up. What did you want to say about it? Well, you know, I thought her mic was supposed to be off.
Starting point is 00:34:50 She said right in the middle of his commentary, oh, come on. And then her mic was open the whole time. Throughout the debates, they're supposed to be cut mics. And you knew that Trump's was cut because he tried because when he tried to come in on something, it was a dead mic and they brought it up. You could see him do it. Her mic was open the whole time. She could keep it all she wanted.
Starting point is 00:35:13 Nobody noticed this. You know what else I noticed, which was very minor, but it was just minor. Trump's box was a little bit smaller than her box in the two shots. Width? Yes, width was a little bit smaller. You know hers was lower. No, no, I'm not talking the box that she's standing on.
Starting point is 00:35:35 I'm talking the TV screen, the two shot. Oh, that's interesting. I didn't notice that. Yes. His box was a little... Now, I understand for framing purposes, because she needed to have a little more room because she kept looking to the right, but that could be just a shot. And it would have actually given Trump a more, just from a television production standpoint,
Starting point is 00:35:58 it would have given a more dominant appearance by having to zoom out, make her head smaller in order to fit her, her sideways glances. So they made his box a little bit smaller, which is just, it's a minor thing, but I think they matter. Now on the killing babies, I had to go into the archives just to make sure people know, because he said West Virginia, which now that should have been fact-checked because that was wrong. Another, yes, well, they fact-checked him, I think, up to five times. They never stopped her from saying anything. She used fine people hoax, she used the blood bath, they didn't stop her.
Starting point is 00:36:39 This was worse than your description. We'll get to that. But they didn't fact-check him because it was the former governor of Virginia, which he later said correctly, but he started with West Virginia. And we have that clip from 2019. Virginia's late term abortion bill is gaining international attention. It would allow terminations at any point during pregnancy, including up until the point of childbirth.
Starting point is 00:37:04 The controversy first started from this video. Delegate Tran defending her bill that would loosen abortion requirements in the Commonwealth. Through the third trimester. The third trimester goes all the way up to 40 weeks. Yay! But to the end of the third trimester? Yep. I don't think we have a limit in the bill. Right now, late-term abortions are allowed under Virginia law if three physicians certify the pregnancy substantially and irremediably threatens the woman's life and health. Trans Bill
Starting point is 00:37:31 would only require one physician to certify the abortion and removes the substantially and irremediably requirement. Facing harsh backlash, Governor Northam went on a radio show stating that trans comments were blown out of proportion. He added that politicians shouldn't interfere with a woman's right to choose. The infant would be delivered. The infant would be kept comfortable. The infant would be resuscitated if that's what the mother and the family desired. And then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother. Governor Northam faced backlash of his own, accused of supporting infanticide by conservative leaders. Words have meaning. You saw the tape.
Starting point is 00:38:11 I think he was very clear in what he said. And I think that was very disturbing. So, and you know, this is rarely brought up by the big talking heads in podcast land because they don't have the archive or the producers that we do who dig this up and the systems that we have. And so it's true. And these people are demonic in that way. And it's important because it just gets glossed over. She says, that's not true, that's not true,
Starting point is 00:38:39 that's not true. Just this week, this chick, I'm saying chick, called a DC District of Columbia clinic and she recorded it. Right, calling the care clinic in Bethesda, Maryland. Bethesda. Can I help you? I am looking to have an abortion. How far along are you?
Starting point is 00:38:58 I'm 34 right now. I am in a pretty desperate situation. That's eight months, just so if you can't calculate. Eight months pregnant. My boyfriend is kind of out of the picture now, so I don't really have any support. An abortion at any stage is actually much safer than delivering a term pregnancy.
Starting point is 00:39:16 It's a four to five day procedure. We do some basic lab work on you and start to dilate your cervix. After that, we do what we call the fetal injection. A needle is inserted through the abdomen and into the fetal heart where lidocaine is injected and that will completely numb the fetus so there's no pain. And then after that, we inject a medication called digoxin
Starting point is 00:39:36 and another medication called KCL into the fetal heart, which will slow and then stop the fetal heartbeat. And on that fourth day, depending on how your cervix is dilated, we'll break your water and then we'll give you a medication called misoprostol. Misoprostol will sort of induce contraction and increase the dilation of your cervix.
Starting point is 00:39:55 You're gonna have contractions and cramping and then we'll assist you in sort of pushing in the induction and then remove all of the products of conception. The product of conception. You're definitely gonna focus comfort in cramping then remove all of the products of conception. The product of conception. You're definitely going to focus comfort in cramping and a lot of pressure, but we do give you Fentanyl and Versed during the procedure. We specialize in later trimester care.
Starting point is 00:40:14 Our doctor is very well versed in what he's doing and he's very good. So I'm not like a rare situation. Y'all help women this late in pregnancy all the time? All the time. So it is true. It is true So, of course, it's true, but people need to hear that. It's not sickening But this is how you know, we played that Virginia clip when it came out Mm-hmm, and maybe played it a second time. Glad you found it by the way
Starting point is 00:40:41 Yeah, I know Trump didn't lie at all on any of this stuff, but she, and she never says that's not true. She says, no, you're lying. You have to, you know, that's different because they have to, they have to promote this lie. Oh, you're a liar. I mean, at one point there was two things that I thought were funny about the debate. At one point he actually shushed her for interrupting him. Does it sound familiar? With the open mic. Yes. Which I thought was funny because she was known for doing that, depends. And the other one was, she wouldn't answer the question directly of whether she ever met Putin. She's never
Starting point is 00:41:20 met Putin. And that came up later. This thing was your idea that this is just a kangaroo, not a courtroom, but a kangaroo court is, uh, is right on the money because the, and these two people, uh, there's this dower woman. I don't see her that much on ABC that whoever she is, was it just me or did she overfill her upper lip? There was something wrong with her lips, yes. And her upper lip just... It wasn't you.
Starting point is 00:41:49 Okay. And by the way, please stop sending me the... She had speaker earrings. Actually, Mamie looked into those speaker earrings and found that they were actually $30,000 Tiffany earrings, which really irked her. Yes. That is exactly what I was going to say. I happen to be a fan of Tiffany's.
Starting point is 00:42:13 That doesn't surprise anybody. My sister's name is Tiffany. My mom was a big fan of Tiffany's. So I've always followed Tiffany Jewelry and Tina and I, when we got married, we got these silver Tiffany wedding bands and so on. And I like the shop. It's a nice shop. I can't afford much in the shop, but it's a nice shop. And I looked it up and they no longer sold online. And I'm not sure. I got a price quote of $22,000. And I'm not sure, I got a price quote of $22,000. Yeah, Mimi found him at $30,000 and she said,
Starting point is 00:42:47 this is the most let them eat cake moment. She said she should be wearing some simple studs or something. She shouldn't be wearing $30,000 earrings. Exactly. Now there was one thing which, this is a clip from Jen Psaki and Steeeele who was supposed to be a Republican. In fact, he ran the Republican Party. Now he's a Democrat and he's...
Starting point is 00:43:13 He was the head of the RNC. Yeah, the head of the RNC and he's on the panel. And so he first he's going to throw out some jive talk and then he's going to say something which I believe to be true. Okay, Michael Steele, you were quite animated when I saw you in the hallway earlier about that debate. I'm trying to be good. I'm going to see what you're going to tell me.
Starting point is 00:43:32 You think of the debate that you told me in the hallway. What was your take on the debate Michael? Still go ahead. What was the key moment? She spanked that ass. I'm sorry. That's what she did. She came and she walked on that stage.
Starting point is 00:43:46 Look, for me, this is one of those things that you didn't realize happened until about 20 to 30 minutes into the debate. And it's what everyone's talked about. And for me, it was the pivotal, most important moment of the debate was when they were introduced. And Donald Trump came out. And if you watch, go back, I tell everybody to go back and watch this. He comes out, he goes direct to the podium. He is not usually go to the middle of the floor to greet your opponent.
Starting point is 00:44:16 He went to the opponent. He had no intention of shaking her hand. She walked across the stage right into his space, stuck her hand out and said, Kamala Harris. It was a power move and he wasn't expecting it. I saw that. Let me give you my take on this. This is a corrupt situation.
Starting point is 00:44:38 And they said don't shake hands and they let her do it anyway? No, no. I got the prop bets from an operation called sports. Here we go. And there was a prop bet on will they shake hands? And if I was Camelot, cause you know, cause you already saw that he wasn't going to shake hands. So the bet was they weren't going to shake hands. I think it was two to one. So I don't know the numbers that have to go look them up
Starting point is 00:45:06 But all you do your Kamale say hey, hey boys I'm gonna make a point I going over there and shaking Trump's hand your bet The bet is it as a surefire winner you can win as much money as you bet We've got a little song a little change on the side. So you walk over there, she made a huge point of walking over there, oh she's so power, blah, blah, blah, bullshit. This was a betting moment and she knew this was the one opportunity she had
Starting point is 00:45:35 to make a surefire win at online betting. This was the corruption that we're looking at. This is corruption. I love it. The prop bet. All right. Now I have a question. Since you didn't get recordings, even though of course you set your YouTube TV, CNN is
Starting point is 00:45:55 taking a very different track with all of this. Listen to Jake Tapper. Vice President Harris began the debate by punting the first question on the economy. Do you believe Americans are better off than they were four years ago? So I was raised as a middle class kid and I am actually the only person on this stage who has a plan that is about lifting up the middle class and working people of America. It went on from there. Despite the economy being the number one issue
Starting point is 00:46:26 facing the country the sitting vice president generally reverted to talking points about a few of her policy proposals even harris allies today are saying that she needs to talk more about what she will do for americans if elected senator bernie sanders will be here in a second to talk about the more about the need for her to fill in some of those blanks. On the border, another vulnerable issue for Harris, she also dodged. Would you have done anything differently from President Biden on this?
Starting point is 00:46:54 So I'm the only person on this stage who has prosecuted transnational criminal organizations for the trafficking of guns, drugs, and human beings. Okay, that wasn't the question. When asked how she would break through the Israel Hamas war stalemate, Harris said this. We need a ceasefire deal and we need the hostages out. And so we will continue to work around the clock on that. Okay, but again, how? So Tapper we know is a CIA asset. He gladly attends the birthday parties of the agency, Big Wings.
Starting point is 00:47:28 And I want to stop you from the generalization you earlier made that at CNN, I think it's just Tapper. Well, that's what I thought. But then enter Erin Burnett, formerly of CNBC. Now also counsel on foreign relations. now on the OZempic train. She looks good but she's on the O train, there's no doubt about it. Yeah, it's too bad. And she did this this week. Tonight Kamala Harris released in details of her policy positions for the first time on her campaign website. A
Starting point is 00:47:58 K-file investigation has uncovered meantime a 2019 questionnaire and in this questionnaire Harris laid out some much more liberal stances. K-Files Andrew Kaczynski joins me now. Yeah, and this was a questionnaire that she filled out for the ACLU. And this questionnaire is really an interesting snapshot in time of that 2019 Democratic primary. Kamala Harris was trying to get to the left of Bernie Sanders. She was trying to get to the left of Elizabeth Warren. she was trying to get to the left of Elizabeth Warren and you really see that in a lot of these answers and I want to walk our viewers through a little bit of what she said.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Let's just take immigration and look at what she said here. She said on immigration, she made this open-ended pledge to end immigrant detention. She said she supported taxpayer-funded gender transition surgeries for detained migrants. She also said she supported... Taxpayer-funded gender transition surgeries for detained migrants. She also said she supported. She actually said she supported them. She wrote both wrote and answered in the affirmative when she was asked this. And she said she also supported it for federal prisoners.
Starting point is 00:48:57 Now she also pledged to slash immigration detention by 50%, close all family and private facilities and decrease funding for ICE and then the end and end ICE detainers with local law enforcement. So it's not just Tapper. There's something in CNN and and you know, there's I don't know Seems like they're trying to lean more towards Trump Maybe they want to even out the score for the ad advertising rates make it more of a horse race in their mind. I'm not sure.
Starting point is 00:49:26 That could be it. It could be just advertising. But Tapper's definitely pushing back on everything. So it's baffling to me, but okay. Well, remember he is, he's CFR. There is a clip, and so is Burnett, there is a clip going around of her sitting down talking about how the gender affirming care is so important for prisoners and she's made a point of pushing it. So California, it's California law. Yeah, it's the best. And so these clips are out there and they're just starting to show up. My favorite one, which is a useless clip for the show, but I'll explain it, is
Starting point is 00:50:06 I retweeted it for people who are concerned about my tweeting too much. This was from 1996. It was Willie Brown. It was a Willie Brown party and Kamala was there with him. And the reporter who's covering the event goes up to Kamala and says, are you his daughter? Yes, I saw that. It's not, yeah, it's not good for audio for the show. And she says, no, no, I'm not. But then she was there at the end, she was standing right next to him at the podium. Yeah. So she's a, yeah. Um, yes, one of those. That's one of those. That's where you get earrings, man.
Starting point is 00:50:44 Come on. That's where you get earrings, man. Come on. That's where you get those $20,000 earrings. Actually, that was suggested by Mimi that Willy Brown bought those earrings for her. Now regarding the border, Trump had, I thought a pretty good line, although he mistakenly called it a bill when he should have said executive order or order or anything but bill Regarding the shutting down of the border right now. I ask you this you talk about the Capitol Why are we allowing these millions of people to come through on the southern border? How come she's not doing anything and I'll tell you what I would do and I would be very proud to do it
Starting point is 00:51:21 I would say we would both leave this debate right now. I'd like to see her go down to Washington, DC during this debate, because we're wasting a lot of time. Go down to, because she's been so bad, it's so ridiculous. Go down to Washington, DC and let her sign a bill to close up the border, because they have the right to do it. They don't need bills. They have the right to do it.
Starting point is 00:51:43 The President of the United States, you'll get them out of bed, you'll wake them up at four o'clock in the afternoon, you'll say, come on, come on down to the office, let's sign a bill. If he signs a bill that the border is closed, all he has to do is say it to the border patrol, who are phenomenal, if they do that the border is closed. Now as a fact checker, yes, fact check false. I would have. Fact check false. Because you look for everything Trump says that's even a little bit erroneous, that would be two lies on the count.
Starting point is 00:52:13 Because he said bill. Those are two lies. Twice he said sign a bill. Bill, yes. And you're right, it's an executive order. Yes. Now. So that's two lies.
Starting point is 00:52:21 Those are lies. Those are lies. Those are lies. So he referenced TDA, which is the Venezuelan gang in Aurora in Colorado. And Chicago. Well, let's just stick with Aurora for a minute because we've been following this story. We haven't quite known exactly what's going on. It is several apartment buildings have been taken over by these Venezuelan gangs and I know from one of our guys who follows the border he says you know the the TDA they have an entire line all the way from Venezuela all the way up to the United
Starting point is 00:52:56 States and housing is really one of their main things they they took the member the membership is 5,000 yeah they, they take over housing and then new gang members come up, they stay in those houses, they move on to the next one as they move all the way up into American cities. So Denver's local television station, of course, had to look into, is this really true? Is it really true about what's happening in Aurora? And what the mayor says is quite telling. Former President Donald Trump said that Aurora was taken over by migrants
Starting point is 00:53:28 and violently taking over buildings. Is that accurate? No, it's really not. You know, there's no question that there's been some issues in several apartment buildings, but it's been so dramatically exaggerated. So, several apartment buildings, but it's been exaggerated. That it's the entire city that is somehow overrun by gang or criminal
Starting point is 00:53:49 activity that could be further from the truth. You see what's happening here right? It's like well... Yeah, this is ant-fucking. Yes. He also mentioned that a lot of the migrants coming into the United States are criminals and that crime is at an all-time high. Do you believe that crime is at an all-time high in Aurora right now? You know I really don't. You know again I think that there are some issues with several apartment buildings that even those issues have been exaggerated. Mayor Kauffman says he wasn't at all surprised to hear Aurora come up. I kind of expected it to come up during the debate and unfortunately it did.
Starting point is 00:54:25 Many who live in the city say they weren't shocked either. I'm not really surprised about it. Half of it's media and half of it's obviously people are, there's bad people everywhere. In a joint statement Wednesday, Mayor Mike Kaufman, Councilwoman Danielle Jurenski and the city manager said in part, Tren Daragua's presence in Aurora is limited to specific properties, all of which the city has been addressing for months. There is an exaggeration of the issue
Starting point is 00:54:54 that the Royal Police Department is certainly addressing. What issue right now is real, and there are arrests being made, and there are people that are being held in custody. So then the same Denver local television station has this report. Aurora police identifying more members of the Tren de Aragua gang who have been arrested. The ten men you see here face charges stemming from alleged assaults, domestic disputes and
Starting point is 00:55:21 shootings in Aurora, including at the Whispering Pines condominiums and the Fitzsimmons Place apartments on Gnome Street that have been in the national spotlight. Yeah. Actives say racist, homophobic, anti-Semitic comments at an Aurora City Council meeting highlighted a divide that has grown since the Trendy Aragon game came into the spotlight. So here's your typical Democrat stronghold city. This is all, I'm putting this all on the council. By the way, I liked, what's homophobia got to do with it?
Starting point is 00:55:49 I don't know, but you got to stop it and listen. A caller at Monday's Aurora City Council meeting complained of immigrants and used hateful language. Hateful! But his comments were not cut short. November 7th, Jessica Crawford talked to members of the community, now demanding that the council cut off hateful commentary and establish some other safeguards.
Starting point is 00:56:08 Yes, safeguards for those poor immigrants, the 10 who were arrested. This is crazy. So, and that's great. Let me just get back to Aurora because I have two quick clips from one of their council meetings and not Aurora, I'm sorry, Springfield, Ohio. So this is the residence. And let me be clear, this is not about race. This is about people being given the privilege
Starting point is 00:56:32 of coming here from another country and having no respect for our people, our land, or our life's work. People living their life here the way they did in Haiti, angry, stealing, polluting, living in filth and acting like animals. These are not civilized people. Opening containers in our grocery stores, helping themselves to what's inside and throwing the rest onto the shelves and floors.
Starting point is 00:56:56 Pulling off of the highway to publicly clean and gut the roadkill, lying there in front of anyone that passes by. Stealing animals from farmers and leaving their severed heads at the site of an old school where children play, relieving themselves in public, making some barbaric stew out of the birds that live in our park. This is insanity and it has to stop. So nothing to see here. You're really exaggerating lady, but this guy is my favorite. This guy is my favorite. By the way, that, because it's kind of out of the blue and it's a good clip, I'm going to give you a borderline clip of the day for that.
Starting point is 00:57:31 Oh well, you should have waited. I don't know who dug that one. No, you should have waited because this is my favorite. They're in the park, grabbing up ducks by the neck and cutting their head off and walking off with them and eating them like and it's going to get bigger and it's only going to get worse and y'all sitting up there in these chairs y'all all y'all need to get out here and do something y'all making hundreds of thousand dollars y'all need to put on a t-shirt and some crocs and then y'all need
Starting point is 00:57:55 to come out here in these streets and y'all need to go out here and uh i'm out here before the police is i love you got to put on a t-shirt and some crocs and get out here people y'all need to do something y'all really got a stand on minutes I'll get paid all this money just to wear a suit and sit in a chair I don't think I think I think it's crazy bro. That's where they come from and that's what they do That's they country. I don't know what they got going on over there, but they can't do that over here And if y'all just get paid from it and then y'all ain't doing that about I think that's super weird, bro Y'all gotta stand on Venice.
Starting point is 00:58:25 Y'all gotta really like step up. Like it's, it's lame, bro. Yes. You know, what's extremely overlooked in all this is I, I'd like to know the genesis of why Haitians in particular are all in Springfield. Dude, does our Homeland group take, because we ship a lot of these people, we fly them in directly in a lot of instances. But why are they all going to one spot?
Starting point is 00:58:57 Because I don't hear about the Haitians anyplace else but Springfield. Ah, ah, ah, ah. First of all, it's because Dole is there. There's big industry there. There's big industry, there's big factories. Do, it's because Dole is there. There's big industry there. There's big industry. There's big factories. Dole? Yes, Dole.
Starting point is 00:59:10 There's big factories there. You heard the manufacturing. So there's... Yeah, no, I understand. But there's big factories here and there. But hey, because everyone's drugged out, they don't care. These companies are in cahoots. Bring me some cheap workers. You heard the guy. Hey, I want's drugged out, they don't care. These companies are in cahoots. Hey, bring me some cheap workers.
Starting point is 00:59:27 You hurt the guy. Hey, I want more of these. I wish I could get 10 more. I want 30 more. Bring me more. You don't think they're in conversations? Of course they are. No, it was obvious that something like that's going on.
Starting point is 00:59:39 Alabama, Alabama, Salacuaga City filled with Haitians. Alabama, Salacuaga City, filled with Haitians. I think it's Sillaquaga, S-Y-L-A-Q. It's in the north. It's known as Marble City because a lot of marble, there's stone quarries there. Same thing, same thing. Council meeting. And it's Haitians? Haitians. And the council president, Tiffany Nix, stopped the council meeting saying, oh no, this is getting too heated here, you're being aggressive. People are, it's the same story.
Starting point is 01:00:15 And what's up there? Quarries. So, it's all coordinated. Exactly what the former New York banker told us, exactly what they want. Suppress wages, it's good for industry. It used to be the Republicans with these games. Now it's the Democrats. It's so obvious. So yeah, you'll see more.
Starting point is 01:00:36 You'll see more cities. I mean, we've got boots on the ground everywhere. We'll hear about it. Do you have any more? Because I just want to close out this segment with a couple more clips, unless you have something you want to get in there. Well, I did have some, just some summary clips. I thought were good.
Starting point is 01:00:54 Well, before you get to summary, this is this just, yeah, but I, yes, I asked and then you said summary. I'm like, I'm striking summary. I'm pushing it pushing it back We're moving out to the a1 block Uh, this is just just the clip that we have to play Because this shows that they're all in they don't care The democrats I just gotta say it the democrat party are all it. I heard dave whiner
Starting point is 01:01:23 Spouting this nonsense on his podcast. The people who are all in and are hypnotized by these demonic spiritual forces of the Democrat Party believe these lies. Nancy Pelosi was responsible. She didn't do her job. The question was about you as president, not about former speaker Pelosi, but I do want Vice President Harris to respond here. I was at the Capitol on January 6.
Starting point is 01:01:50 I was the vice president-elect. I was also an acting senator. I was there. And on that day, the President of the United States incited a violent mob to attack our nation's Capitol, to desecrate our nation's capital. On that day, 140 law enforcement officers were injured and some died. And understand, the former president has been indicted and impeached for exactly that reason. But this is not an isolated situation.
Starting point is 01:02:27 Let's remember Charlottesville where there was a mob of people carrying tiki torches, spewing anti-semitic hate. And what did the president then at the time say? There were fine people on each side. Let's remember that when it came to the Proud Boys, a militia, the president said, the former president said, stand back and stand by. So for everyone watching who remembers what January 6th was,
Starting point is 01:02:59 I say we don't have to go back. Let's not go back. We're not going back. It's time to turn the page. And if that was a bridge too far for you, well there is a place in our campaign for you to stand for country, to stand for our democracy, to stand for rule of law, and to end the chaos and to end the approach that is about attacking the foundations of our democracy because you don't like the outcome. And be clear on that point, Donald Trump, the candidate, has said in this election there
Starting point is 01:03:38 will be a bloodbath if this and the outcome of this election is not to his liking, let's turn the page on this. Let's not go back. Let's chart a course for the future and not go backwards to the past. These people do not care about the truth at all. Well there were four instances in there that the hosts, moderators could have stopped her for just falsehoods. Or done a summary afterwards.
Starting point is 01:04:09 Or anything. They did nothing. No. They didn't. So it was, it was really. Well, let's tell what they were. The thing is the stand down thing was bull crap. The hoaxes about, uh, fine people has been even snoped.
Starting point is 01:04:26 Has that one done? Here's the original. I have the original. And you had some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. You had people in that group, excuse me, excuse me, I saw the same pictures as you did. You had people in that group that were there to protest the taking down of, to them, a very, very important statue and the renaming of a park from Robert E. Lee to another name.
Starting point is 01:04:56 And you had people, and I'm not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists, because they should be condemned totally. But you had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists because they should be condemned totally. But you had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists, okay? There you go. That's the full quote. And then the bloodbath, we probably still have that somewhere. That was about the Chinese cars, wasn't it? Yeah, about the Chinese electric cars being made in Mexico and being allowed to come into the country through a trickery without tariffs because of the...
Starting point is 01:05:30 Here's the quote. China now is building a couple of massive plans where they're going to build the cars in Mexico and think, they think, that they're going to sell those cars into the United States with no tax at the border. Let me tell you something to China. If you're listening, President Xi, and you and I are friends, but he understands the way I deal, those big monster car manufacturing plants that you're building in Mexico right
Starting point is 01:05:55 now and you think you're going to get that, you're going to not hire Americans and you're going to sell the cars to us now, we're going to be a blood. They're building massive factories. A friend of mine. There you go. There you go. It's going to be a bloodbath for the country. Yeah. So that's futile. It is futile, but it's fun. But that's what a good prosecutor does.
Starting point is 01:06:39 You know, there's certainly in the courtroom, there's nothing against the prosecutor lying. She's used to it. That's what you do. That's what you do. Well, this reminds me of the prosecutor. The other one that's out there is Adam Schiff, who during one of the impeachment trials made up stories on the fly about what he imagined. Remember that he goes on and on about what Trump and Zelinsky were talking
Starting point is 01:07:03 about. And he was just lying. And it was just the same thing exactly. Gosh, what was it? What was that? I wonder what that was called. I don't know if we have that one. Oh, I'm sure we have it. If you find that, I'd be stunned. It was, he was doing a little play. He was, um, shift story.
Starting point is 01:07:21 No, probably not going to find it. Um, I think it might be just worth it just because I think that was the strongest. I think Trump's closer was strong. I haven't really seen it clipped anywhere. I don't know if people are considering clipping it or not. I think they should. What the end of the thing where he goes on as well if you're such a hotshot why have you been doing this all along? No, I'm talking about his his his closing his closing argument
Starting point is 01:07:54 So he just started by saying she's gonna do this. She's gonna do that. She's gonna do all these wonderful things Why hasn't she done it? He's that way just said Why hasn't she done it? Isn't that what I just said? I misunderstood you. Hasn't she done it? She's been there for three and a half years. They've had three and a half years to fix the border. They've had three and a half years to create jobs.
Starting point is 01:08:20 And all the things we talked about. Why hasn't she done it? She should leave right now, go down to that beautiful White House, go to the Capitol, get everyone together and do the things you want to do, but you haven't done it and you won't do it. Because you believe in things that the American people don't believe in. You believe in things like, we're not going to frack, we're not going to take fossil fuel, we're not going to do things that are going to make this country strong, whether you like it or not. Germany tried that, and
Starting point is 01:08:48 within one year they were back to building normal energy plants. We're not ready for it. We can't sacrifice our country for the sake of bad vision. But I just ask one simple question. Why didn't she do it? We're a failing nation. We're a nation that's in serious decline. We're being laughed at all over the world. All over the world they're laughing. I know the leaders very well. They're coming to see me.
Starting point is 01:09:15 They call me. We're laughed at all over the world. They don't understand what happened to us as a nation. We're not a leader. We don't have any idea what's going on. We have wars going on in the Middle East. We have wars going on with Russia and Ukraine. We're going to end up in a third world war and it'll be a war like no other because of nuclear weapons, the power of weaponry. I rebuilt our entire military. She gave a lot of it
Starting point is 01:09:42 away to the Taliban. She gave it to Afghanistan. What these people have done to our country and maybe toughest of all is allowing millions of people to come into our country, many of them are criminals, and they're destroying our country. The worst president, the worst vice president in the history of our country. Yeah, I thought that was good. That was his message. That was the whole debate right there. The criticism of that message was he should have used that thematically throughout the debate. Well, he did.
Starting point is 01:10:16 Because people have tuned on. I don't know how many people listened to the end. There was 67.1 million listeners total. Viewers or listeners? Viewers probably. Viewers, I'm sorry. And I don't know how many people were at the end, because it was getting kind of boring. I'm sure people tuned out like, oh no, can't watch, can't watch. But as you listen to these clips standalone, Trump sounds great. Making the points.
Starting point is 01:10:46 Making the points. Absolutely. And after they're regurgitated and run on TikTok and elsewhere with these guys over to dubbing everything, he wins the debate in hindsight. Now, I don't know if he's going to do more debates. I'll give you, there was an interesting stat that ran on his debating Hillary. Oh, he's already been asking for one, I think. No, he's, he's, yeah, he wants, if they do it on Fox, he'll do it.
Starting point is 01:11:17 Yeah. But, but he, he does, and he said NBC for some unknown reason, he's not going to do a debate there. But someone should have this poll up, or it wasn't a poll, it was a stat, that when Hillary, Hillary beat him all three debates, supposedly. And in debate number one, her point total went up in terms of the election, one point.
Starting point is 01:11:40 After debate number two, she was up by five. And after debate number three, she was up by seven. Right. And then she lost. Trump's aware of this. And then she lost. It's amazing. And then she lost, yes, which is amazing.
Starting point is 01:11:52 You're right. But I don't think those numbers are frightening. Because he'll be beaten by her again, or it appears to be. I don't think he's going to do anymore, unless it's on Fox. Well, I don't think these debates make that much difference. I really just don't. By the way, regarding our previous episode, hey, I live in Latvia, but Russian is my native tongue. Regarding John's comment that Russians wouldn't hear Kamala, they most definitely have heard, especially her laugh, Russia is a country where people are very outward focused. They are and were always interested in what happens in the West and how the West sees them. On federal
Starting point is 01:12:35 channels, they are showing American election news all the time. When someone goes to America to visit or live, the most common question from Russians to them would be, so, what do Americans think about Russia? And when they answer, they mostly don't, they don't believe it. Oh, all right. That's a Vitali. Malaysia checks in. They don't believe it. Malaysia checks in.
Starting point is 01:12:56 In Malaysia, you think about Kamala, we think about the laugh. So I think our media is pretty universal. Yes, I was wrong. Okay. It appears that the Kamala laugh is more universally accepted and known than I thought, because I didn't see any reason why it would be, but I guess it is. So I guess she's... It's coconuts.
Starting point is 01:13:19 Her hyena laugh is worldwide well known. It's TikTok. It's the coconut in Gambit, it's the coconut gambit. So I'm done with the debate. If you are, we can move on. Oh, by the way, did you see Biden put on the Trump hat? Yes, that was so embarrassing. No, although, you know, I have to wonder whether he, he knew what he was doing.
Starting point is 01:13:44 No. I mean, is it possible that Biden put on the Trump act because he could be the old, they're going to give him the slack and flack for it, but he knew what he was doing because he doesn't like Kamala. I think a bunch of stuff's going to start coming out about Kamala more. These old clips are going to get dredged up. There's a lot of them. There's a lot of time. Dredgedged up there's a lot of them there's a lot of time dredged a few up on this show already there's a lot of time for it and we got 50 days for more
Starting point is 01:14:11 of it to come out now the hit the Trump meme squad is out no doubt they're out the memes are out yes and the other size memes are not, yes. And the other side's memes are not good. They have weak memes. They're weak memers. So now, switching gears, but staying on immigration. We just heard that Germany, of course, has the seam that the solar and wind energy, the Energiewende, and blowing up their nuclear plants or closing them down at best I think they actually imploded two of them. Not a good idea. They completely
Starting point is 01:14:52 decommissioned a couple. Yeah not a good idea so they're trying to get back cold. Why they did it? How did they get talked into that stupidity? Well the Germans since World War II they're you know they have guilt and they need to do what they're told and they're very sorry about everything and they're traumatized people. But now with the alternative for Deutschland rising saying, hey, the people are pissed, now the German government is trying to change some things." Controls for those entering Germany, such as this one near Poland, now look set to become widespread across the country's 3,700-kilometer-long land border. After ramping up security measures on several of its frontiers last year amid a surge in first-time asylum requests, Germany has announced temporary internal checks at all of the country's land borders.
Starting point is 01:15:40 Svetlana Zagreb, German Foreign Minister These are the same measures that we are now taking with the Czech Republic, Poland, Austria and Switzerland. We will then do this with France, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Denmark. I have ordered this today and have already informed the EU. Starting next Monday, the controls will initially last for a period of six months. The decision comes after a deadly mass stabbing last month in the western city of Zulingan, claimed by the Islamic State Group, an attack which inflamed fierce debate over asylum rules when it transpired that the main suspect was a Syrian refugee facing
Starting point is 01:16:13 deportation. The government has sought a response to the outrage. In the interior minister's view, stepping up border security will help prevent such incidents in the future. This will serve to further limit irregular migration and protect against the acute dangers posed by Islamist terror and serious crime. We are doing everything we can to better protect the people in our country against this. So I love the term irregular migration instead of illegal irregular migration. As a person who grew up in the Netherlands, having a border and having a checkpoint with Germany is hard to even fathom.
Starting point is 01:16:49 You just drive straight through. And now we had Brexit and well, actually forget Brexit, we had the EU, oh, you won't need passports and anything like that. Now it's like checks on the roadways. Things have got to be pretty bad. And in general, this is something I've been tracking with Amsterdam, but it's happening everywhere. We have the irregular migration destroying all the beautiful cities in the European Union,
Starting point is 01:17:16 totally destroying them, getting the cheap labor in to run the tourism industry as the European Union countries are now being turned into Disneyland. step to preserve a local life. Such moves are steeped in controversy. With frequent protests among locals, as was the case this summer in Mallorca, municipalities are trying to find solutions. One of the latest, a proposal to charge 2 euros at the Trevi Fountain in Rome. For the city's top tourism official, the access fee would help manage the crowds and help them store a better code of conduct among visitors. The monument already has three entrances, so one could imagine an entrance, a normal exit and an emergency exit. Of course, we will experiment with this before making it operational. The proposal comes after Venice tested out a 5 euro fee to visit this spring and summer. Greece announced it plans to levy a 20 euro tax on cruise ship visitors during the peak summer
Starting point is 01:18:30 season. The prime minister said overtourism isn't a problem on the whole in Greece, but it is becoming one in popular destinations like Santorini and Mykonos. Barcelona is also instoring a tax on cruise ship visitors that stay for less than 12 hours. Already, the city's mayor has vowed to end short-term apartment rentals to tourists by 2028. The city of Bruges in Belgium also announced its plans to crack down on short-term rentals. And it has had a cap of two cruise ships a day since 2019 in the nearby port of Zee Bruges. Such moves come as the UN's tourism agency says that tourism is surging and exceeding expectations by 2% with Europe remaining at the world's
Starting point is 01:19:13 top destination. I mean go ahead and go take a look at these European cities. It's all immigrants in the shops, in the restaurants, regular or irregular, and it's just been turned into one big Disneyland. So yeah, we might as well charge them, those Horowitz's with their cruise ship. Coming over here, parking in front of our beautiful beaches, we'll charge you guys some money. This is a whole new world that's happening right before our very eyes. a whole new world is happening right before our very eyes. Well there's a lot of talk about Europe getting nuked by the Russians. Well that would certainly make some room for people, wouldn't it?
Starting point is 01:19:57 And yeah, it would. It seems as though, I think, it's almost as if we are encouraging it. Yeah. Did you see the political article? Which one? Oh, there's a political article talking about, well, you know, we're really starting to think about long range weapons for Ukraine. Yes.
Starting point is 01:20:16 Well, here I got two clips. Oh, good. Goodie! Ukraine mole money clip on NTD. Yeah, one and a half billion. And Lammie said Britain will provide more than 700... I'm sorry, NTD. Yeah, one and a half billion. And Lamy said Britain will provide more than 700... I'm sorry, NTD. Let me do this one. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and British Foreign Secretary David Lamy have arrived in Ukraine. They're on a joint visit to show
Starting point is 01:20:35 support for Kiev. Ukraine is asking for long range missiles to strike deep into Russian territory. But there are concerns in Washington and some European capitals that providing them would provoke Russia into a direct conflict with the West. Officials also recognise that Ukraine needs more support if it is to turn the war in its favour. Here are Blinken and Lammy. The bottom line is this. We want Ukraine to win and we're fully committed to keep marshalling the support that it needs for its brave defenders and citizens to do just that.
Starting point is 01:21:05 As we're meeting here today, we're again seeing Putin dust off his winter playbook, targeting Ukrainian energy and electricity systems to weaponize the cold against the Ukrainian people. We're here to listen, to understand the plan, to understand the strategy and understand the needs across a whole range of fronts. Yes, of course, equipment, but of course, energy that has been sabotaged, the support that's needed on the humanitarian front over these next few months and how we continue to mobilise the international community on Ukraine's behalf. Blinken has said he wants to hear directly what Kiev's goals in the war are and what
Starting point is 01:21:45 Washington can do to help achieve them. Zelensky has repeatedly pushed for permission to use Western missiles to strike targets within Russia. Presidents Joe Biden and UK Prime Minister Kyiv Stalmer are set to discuss the issue in Washington on Friday. Biden previously allowed Ukraine to fire US-prov provided missiles across the border into Russia in self-defense, but has largely limited the distance over concerns about further escalating the conflict. However, Russia suspects the decision to give Ukraine long-range missiles has already been made.
Starting point is 01:22:19 Well, it's law. I mean, the only thing that has to happen is our president, after they wake him up at four in the afternoon, all he has to say is, yeah, it's okay. It's already, it's good to go. You just have to say yes. And the question is, when will they say yes? And this is the military guys. They're the ones running all this.
Starting point is 01:22:42 And they don't care. What city do you think will get hit first in Europe? Kiev? Yes, Kiev. But that would just be a start. No, once you did one, then all hell would break loose. And they'd have, you know, if they wanted to have some fun, they'd flatten Paris. Now why would that be fun? Is the French or the big talkers about sending troops over there?
Starting point is 01:23:10 If you want to have some fun. Blow that Eiffel Tower up. Should I play the second clip, this UK clip? Yes, the second clip is just about the UK. And Lammy said Britain will provide more than $780 million in additional support to Ukraine. It'll include around $350 million for humanitarian needs and over $480 million in loan guarantees before the end of the year. That's in addition to nearly $4 billion a year of military support, Britain has already
Starting point is 01:23:39 committed to Ukraine for as long as needed. Yeah, so just- For $4 billion a year for as long as needed. Yeah, so just- For four billion a year for as long as needed. So just to recap, this goes back to 2014 when Victoria Nuland came in, started the Maidan, John McCain, Brennan, everyone was over there. Brennan. Getting everything all started.
Starting point is 01:24:00 Of course, we had all kinds of corruption with children of our elites who were making money there, Hunter Biden, but also Romney's kid. All kinds of money just being made left and right. And before this all started, there was a peace treaty on the table. The peace treaty was, it looked like everyone was okay with it. Because why was Putin mad? Because Zelensky came out and said well, you know, I think we should probably get some NATO nuclear weapons here Don't you think that's a good idea? Am I recalling that timeline more or less correctly? More or less and Boris Johnson went over and said hey
Starting point is 01:24:41 Yeah, you can't sign this peace deal. That came much later You can't sign this peace deal. That came much later. You can't sign this peace deal much later. Yeah, because they had the peace deal done. Yes. It was the Minsk. I think this was the Minsk one. And as they were going to implement it, that's when Boris Johnson went over there. And this was detailed in a recent interview, an interview with the one, the only Victoria Noodleman, i.e. Nuland.
Starting point is 01:25:09 There was a story first told by former Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett that both sides were really close to the end, to the successful end of the negotiations. and then Prime Minister Boris Johnson interfered and stopped Ukrainians, prevented Ukrainians from signing the deal. And then Ukrainian representative Farahami kind of confirmed it, that yes, he said in an interview that there was some kind of advice from Boris Johnson to stop negotiating and to win this war militarily. Where is the myth? Where is the truth?
Starting point is 01:25:49 Relatively late in the game, the Ukrainians began asking for advice on where this thing was going. And it became clear to us, clear to the Brits, clear to others, that Putin's main condition was buried in an annex to this document that they were working on. Oh, it was secret. He buried it. It was a very secret, secret demand he had. And it included limits on the precise kinds of weapons systems that Ukraine could have. Yeah, NATO nuclear weapons. Oh, well, that was just horrible.
Starting point is 01:26:36 After the deal, such that Ukraine would basically be neutered as a military force and there were no similar constraints on Russia. Oh, so there she is, full admission. So that's why they stopped the deal because the whole thing was about in the first place about the nuclear weapons, which Ukraine never had. Ukraine is not a NATO member, but they wanted to sneak it in encroaching on Russia. And yeah, I mean, remember when Cuba had some nuclear missiles? Well, we, we, we had to deal with that. Didn't we? These people are horrible.
Starting point is 01:27:16 And you know what? She's so horrible. She's become to look like the person she is on the inside. Yeah. She's starting to look, she looks exactly like a horrible person. Jabba the Hut. Yes. Here we go. Yeah. Yeah. Fuck the inside. Yeah, she's starting to look. She looks exactly like a horrible person. Jabba the Hutt. Yes. Here we go.
Starting point is 01:27:27 Yeah. Yeah. Fuck the EU. Yeah, that's what she said. She doesn't care about you, EU. She doesn't care about you. You'll see. I'm actually surprised that that clip didn't have more backlash.
Starting point is 01:27:39 The interview? No, no. The FDU. No. When she said it and everyone in the EU heard it. Don't you remember the reporting? Well, she said an expletive. They only focused on the F word, not on the actual what it was about. Yeah, it was targeting the EU. Which is, of course, I think the EU should be targeted and I think I'm not the only one that thinks that way. And I think pushing a nuclear exchange within Europe and Russia would suit us just fine
Starting point is 01:28:11 as long as they don't shoot one at us. Oh God. Don't you think? I mean, am I wrong? No, but I'm a little more pacifist in this. Can we not? Well, I don't like the idea, but I'm just saying it seems that that's what we're up to. Can we can we like the idea but I'm just saying it seems that that's what we're up to again
Starting point is 01:28:25 They're gonna start well that we haven't provoked one yet So let's just give them some long-range missiles and maybe a couple of shots at Moscow might trigger it Yeah, we got to get this going people. We got to move move move. I Got to switch switch gears. I gotta move to something funny. Well before, oh okay, I have some clips I wanna play. Well what do you have? What do you have? Well I wanna play these, there's some protests going on around the world. Okay, well that's not funny. No, it's not funny.
Starting point is 01:28:58 No. But before I play that, I do wanna play this since it kinda relates to the clips you just played, which is the BBC had a representative of Poland on it. I just want to show it up on TikTok and I just thought it was a good clip because it shows you that in some, Poland and Hungary in particular, they actually, the leaders there care about the people they're representing and I thought this was a good exchange to classic BBC. How many refugees has Poland taken?
Starting point is 01:29:27 Zero. And you're proud of that? If you are asking me, if you're, if you're asking me about Muslim, uh, Muslims, illegal immigration, none, not even one will come to Poland. Not even one, if it's illegal. We, we took over 2 million Ukrainians who are working, who are peaceful in Poland. We will not receive even one Muslim because this is what we promised. But I asked not about illegal immigrants, I asked about refugees. And Junko Ryukka,
Starting point is 01:29:56 the Commission President, says that you're racist. You sound proud of the fact that you haven't taken any refugees. Of course, because this is what our people expecting from our government. That's number one. This is why our government was elected, but this is why Poland is so safe. This is the reason why we had not even one terrorist attack. Look at the streets in Poland and we can be called populists, nationalists, racists. I don't care. I care about my family and about my country. Now, that's no good. You can't have that. Caring about your country. Maybe in Poland
Starting point is 01:30:35 you get a nuke. The interesting angle to that was this is what the people wanted. They wanted to be protected from the bull crap. And well, that, that guy, we're not seeing that here. We see protecting the bankers as you mentioned, keep mentioning that. Yeah. You know, the benefits, the bankers, or some would say the Jews. No, it's not just bankers. Um, do you know what I wanted to pose the anti-arms protests in Philly. It's not just bankers. You know—
Starting point is 01:31:06 So, what I wanted to play was the anti-arms protests in Philly. This was interesting because—I think this is a Democracy Now clip. You might want to put the warning up, but— Oh, boy. This was not reported anywhere. Oh, man. Where's the Amy clip? I can't find Amy.
Starting point is 01:31:22 Good. Don't. You don't have to play it. In Philadelphia, several people were arrested Tuesday evening as hundreds of protesters gathered outside the venue of the presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump to demand an end to U.S. support for Israel's war on Gaza. I'm definitely not going to be voting for Trump or Harris. They're both war criminals. And Kamala wants to act like she's one of the people, and she is not.
Starting point is 01:31:41 She is part of the same administration. She's not. She's not. She's not. She's not. She's, and she is not. She is part of the same administration sending bombs to Gaza. Ahead of Tuesday's debate, Minnesota governor and Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz was heckled by pro-Palestine protesters during a campaign event in Phoenix, Arizona. Meanwhile, in Australia, hundreds of protesters rallied outside a weapons industry convention in Melbourne earlier today. Police fired stun grenades, rubber bullets and pepper spray, arresting dozens of demonstrators.
Starting point is 01:32:15 Hundreds of weapons traders representing at least 30 countries are expected to attend the Land Force's 2024 Military Weapons Expo this week. Oh, the Weapons Expo. Shopping! Let's go shopping! Is Zelensky showing up? The Weapons Expo this week. Oh, the Weapons Expo. Shopping. Let's go shopping. Is Zelensky showing up? Weapons Expo. Is Zelensky showing up? Let's go shopping. I want some long-range missiles. I would love to go to the Weapons Expo. I bet it's a hoot. You know what? I bet there's a lot of partying going on there.
Starting point is 01:32:43 Can you imagine those parties? Speaking of which. It's got to be better than anything the computer industry ever put on. I bet there's a lot of partying going on there. Can you imagine those parties? Speaking of which- It's gotta be better than anything the computer industry ever put on. Well, speaking of such, have you ever partied with Larry Ellison? I have never partied with Larry Ellison, but I do know him. You've met him?
Starting point is 01:33:00 Yeah, I actually introduced him at an event once, and then I've run into him a couple of times. Can you give me a characterization of Larry Ellison? I mean, I've met him once. Oracle was my client and we had Think New Ideas. Actually Ray Lane was the big finance guy there who later was our VC at Kleiner Perkins. And we did a Super Bowl promotion for Oracle. We did the ad for them and we did the sign up website.
Starting point is 01:33:28 It must have been, wow, it's 98, there was a 98 Super Bowl. Does that sound right? I don't know. Yeah. And he seemed like a sharp guy to me. How about you? I've always thought he seems like a very smart guy, not a complete asshole that I could tell. And he's likable, very likable.
Starting point is 01:33:48 I hear he's got great weed. What? I'm just kidding. I hear he's got great weed. I'm just kidding. So he's now that he stepped down from Oracle as the chief executive officer. He's now the chief technology officer, which I think kind of makes sense. I mean, is he really a tech guy?
Starting point is 01:34:07 He always seemed more like a sales guy to me. Yeah, he's kind of a tech guy. Because I remember we also produced the introduction of the network computer. What was that? Was it called the network computer? You remember that debacle? Yeah, that was a little company rolled out and that Gina Smith actually,
Starting point is 01:34:27 he named her CEO of that thing for a while. That was too early. That was a mistime. It didn't work out. It was a disaster. Yeah, so we did, what was the name? Was it Net? I had a name.
Starting point is 01:34:40 I think it was called Network Computer Systems or something like that. Something simple like that. Cause I remember we did the launch of that in New York City. And we didn't do the production of it. The stage production was amazing. It had explosions, and then all kinds of smoke, and like a helicopter flying through the air.
Starting point is 01:34:59 And it was a big production. And then Ellison's opening line was, I come to work that way every day. I mean, it was, it was really, it was a great bit. So Oracle had a great, had a great quarter, everybody. Great queue, great queue guys. Great queue. They based upon AI. And I hadn't really expected that.
Starting point is 01:35:20 I didn't expect Oracle to. Nobody did. No. And, and so I listened to the earnings call. And in the earnings call, they also have their 2025 guidance. Oh, we're gonna tell you how great it's going to be. And so this is where the analysts call in.
Starting point is 01:35:38 Well, first there's a statement from the CFO and the CEO and talk about how great they are. And then they have the analysts and people who are doing coverage on the company call up and ask questions. And most of them start with, hey, great quarter, guys, you really knocked it out of the park. That's really great. Here's a question I have for you. And in these answers, this is where you want to provide guidance, which should make your
Starting point is 01:36:00 stock become very attractive to institutional investors, etc. Am I characterizing that correctly? More or less. If you want to add anything, did I not do that right? Well, typically the people in Silicon Valley try to under promote to get better results. So you say, well, we're going to, we look like we're going to do this much.
Starting point is 01:36:24 And then they do that much plus a penny and the stock goes skyrocketing is what they're trying to do. Well, so Ellison is here to promote the technology that Oracle has and how much money they're going to make from it. So I have a couple of clips here. Larry, how do you envision the market transitioning from the AI training phase to the AI inferencing phase,
Starting point is 01:36:45 there's some debate out there on whether we have an imbalance or a bubble on the front end of the curve because training is so compute intensive and then perhaps it recalibrates differently somehow for the inferencing stage, which might be less intensive. Or do you see the potential for high growth kind of all the way through both of these phases?
Starting point is 01:37:07 Well, a lot of people think that, my God, I send a kid to college and then I'm done. The training's over. I've got four years of training and then I can put the kid to work and they'll be doing inferencing. And that's not true. This race goes on forever to build a better and better neural network. And the cost of that training gets to be astronomical. When I talk about building gigawatt
Starting point is 01:37:37 or multi gigawatt data centers, I mean, these AI models, these frontier models are gonna, the entry price for a real frontier model from someone who wants to compete in that area is around $100 billion. Let me repeat, around $100 billion. That's over the next four or five years for anyone who wants to play in that game. That's a lot of money and it doesn't get easier. So they're not going to be a lot of those. I mean, this is not the place to list who can actually build one of these frontier models.
Starting point is 01:38:10 $100 billion will be the entry price to play in this AI game. Seems high. And I had to look up frontier models, which is just a fancy word for the newest models, is not like anything special. So frontier, oh, it's frontier, like is just a fancy word for the newest models is not like anything special. Frontier, oh, it's Frontier, like we're a Frontier podcast.
Starting point is 01:38:29 So hmm, what can these specialized models do, Larry? But in addition to that, there are going to be a lot of very, very specialized models. I can tell you things that I'm personally involved in, which are using computers to look at biopsies of slides or CAT scans to discover cancer. Also, there are also blood tests we're doing for discovering cancer. Sounds like Theranos anybody? We'll do a blood test and run the AI over it and then we'll discover cancer. Uh huh.
Starting point is 01:39:11 Okay. For you know, for discovering cancer, those tend to be very specialized models. Those tend not necessarily to use the foundational, you know, the, you know, the grocs and the open and the chat GPTs and the llamas and the Chachi PTs and the Lamas and the Geminis, they tend to be highly specialized models. Wow. So all that's bull crap. You want to come to us because we can detect cancer in your blood, which I think is pretty
Starting point is 01:39:35 good test for. But for some reason, we needed to have AI do it. So maybe you can just run into the drug store. This is Theranos. This is literally what Theranos was saying they could do. Oh, you just do a quick little prick on your finger and then we'll see if you have cancer. So then the big question comes, hey, is anyone going to monetize this stuff? Can anyone make any money on this AI stuff?
Starting point is 01:39:56 You already have traditional AI sprinkled throughout all the Oracle products and capabilities, but where do you see the monetizable value of GenAI on the app side? But where do you see the monetize, monetizable value of GenAI on the app side? How long do you think it's going to take for GenAI to be a meaningful revenue? Not just for Oracle, but software in general on the app side, not on the training side. Thank you. Let me start with, with healthcare. From everything from us helping doctors diagnose different diseases. What? Cancer. Yeah, no, this is what's crazy. I'm just joking.
Starting point is 01:40:33 No, you're laughing. You're joking, but that's it. Helping doctors diagnose different diseases. When someone goes in to get a sonogram and I've seen the nurses and the technicians and the doctors actually measure the baby's skull and measure the baby's spinal cord to see how the baby… It's utterly ridiculous. Let AI do that. You don't need to look at a sonogram doctor. No, no, we need a hundred billion dollars to have AI tell us that the umbilical cord is wrapped around the baby's neck. The computer should do all of that and if there's an umbilical wrapped around the fetus's neck, the computer should discover all of that and
Starting point is 01:41:20 that should all be recorded. The doctor could get assistance from a computer doing all of this stuff. Let the doctor know that whether there's... It's called a medical student, Larry. There's stability or disease progression or whatever the doctor needs to know prior to the consultation with the patient. That summary is created by AI, a human readable summary. Oh, it prints out a report. Oh, okay. The umbilical cords wrapped around the baby's neck. Oh, that's good. I'm glad I know that going into this consultation.
Starting point is 01:41:51 Then AI listens to the consultation between the doctor and the patient. This is already delivered. This is already out there. It does a transcript just like we have for the podcast. Delivered, the listen to the consultation with the doctor and the patient. If the doctor orders a prescription, the AI checks to make sure the prescription is accurate and enters the prescription. The AI updates the electronic health.
Starting point is 01:42:12 Does this sound a lot like your fridge will know when your milk is out and will automatically order it for you? This is a Rube Goldberg machine that costs a hundred billion dollars. The AI transcribes and distributes the doctors' orders all from listening to the conversation. The doctor then gets a draft at the end of the conversation that the doctor can quickly review and approve. And then the prescriptions are filled and the orders are executed and the electronic health records are updated.
Starting point is 01:42:43 We're already doing all of that. Oh, it's amazing. Oh, this is just phenomenal. If they're already doing all of that, why do they need the $100 billion investment? Ah, well, he has a kicker here. This is the final clip. And at the end, you'll hear him fall apart and do something you should never do. By the way, he's channeling Ron Bloom here. That whole sequence of, well, you know, then automatically the podcast will be delivered and we'll insert an ad and it will be able to track that and know if the person went into the store online and the future is just limitless for a hundred
Starting point is 01:43:15 billion dollars. And now Larry's going to screw it up. But first he's going to explain what this really is. A spoiler alert. It's a chat bot. Just the user interface. Our user interface, you say, Oracle, please show me Larry Ellison's latest x-rays. It's a voice interface.
Starting point is 01:43:34 You just ask for them. Oh, it's Siri. How do you log on? Well, you look at the computer and it recognizes your face and it recognizes your voice. It knows you're the doctor and you're authorized to look at that. My Microsoft laptop does that. All the authorization is done with AI. When are we going to start monetizing it? AI is just, I don't know. Now, this is where he, this is the biggest mistake he could have made. When, because he doesn't understand about apps. He's talking about Oracle and he's making a big mistake here.
Starting point is 01:44:04 When are we going to start monetizing it? AI is just, I don't know how to describe it. Let me see the best way to describe it. It's not something you sell separately. What? It is, it is the diagnostic system. It's the electronic health record system. It is the pharmacy system, this prescription system, the user authentication, the login system, it's all AI.
Starting point is 01:44:29 And I know people think it's a separate thing, that oh my God, and I hear a bunch of applications come in and say, oh, we've now got AI agents we'll charge for separately. I mean, our applications are going to be primarily AI applications, everything. How do you charge separately for everything? I really don't.
Starting point is 01:44:50 I find it bewildering when I listen to them talk. I don't understand what they're saying. I'll stop there. Yeah, you'll stop there. He just said we have no way of making extra money on it. This was a bad, bad mistake he made here and it's vapor. There's nothing. Oh yeah, you're going to need a hundred billion dollars. Somebody's got to come up with a jingle for the Adam Curry, I hate AI segment of the show.
Starting point is 01:45:21 It's a bubble. Well, did you by any chance watch the Apple event, the special Apple event? I saw some of it. I can give you, would you like my summary? I'm sure your summary is as good as any. Well I'd like to hear your version first. Hey, we got some stuff that's going to come out. We're going to make a special phone and this is going to be the greatest thing in slice bread. You have to buy this very
Starting point is 01:45:46 expensive phone it's gonna be overpriced but don't worry about it because we're gonna have software someday that might take advantage of this overpriced phone very close to mine except I have some keywords everything we make is gorgeous our new chips will help you find, fix, and fake pictures and videos of your otherwise boring life and make you feel like you're awesome and gorgeous. Our AI will help you get things done
Starting point is 01:46:15 as soon as we release it, which is soon. Everything's the same price, but 20% bigger and 20% more gorgeous. Yes, all of our men here at Apple are still disturbingly bow-legged, but at least% more gorgeous. Yes, all of our men here at Apple are still disturbingly bow-legged, but at least they're gorgeous. That was my version of the Apple event. Yeah, you need to say gorgeous with more of a lisp. Gorgeous.
Starting point is 01:46:38 There you go. I'm working on it. It's just gorgeous. I'm working on it. It's just gorgeous. It's kind of a combination Lisp, Sylvester the cat, which is even funnier. Gorgeous. Gorgeous. Just gorgeous. I was surprised though about the Cox Media story, which I finally got a clip had to come from France 24. Before you go to there, let's stay with the Apple thing for one second because the big other story was this $4,000 stupid phone that Huawei supposedly sold 4 million copies of,
Starting point is 01:47:17 sight unseen, that has a threefold aspect to it. That's vertical. It's a, It's a horrible looking product. I didn't see this. Have you seen this thing? I'm looking at it now. What is up with it? It says $2,800. You said $4,000? Okay, $2,800. Well, it's expensive. Yeah. Yeah, well maybe it's $2,800. Whatever it is. I'm looking at it. You can buy a used car for that, but okay. Really? You can't buy a used car?
Starting point is 01:47:47 Yeah, you can. No, I don't think you can buy a good, a solid used car for 2,800 bucks anymore. Well, whatever you can buy or not buy, that's dumb. Yeah, I like those flip phones from Samsung, but this is- No, the Samsung one's got the right idea because it makes it a nice little compact unit in your pocket and it's got a screen on the outside. It's dynamite. JC has one.
Starting point is 01:48:10 Yeah, but this is... So, I'm impressed with that phone. Can I ask you about that phone? What about it? Is it gorgeous? It's gorgeous. Got it. I don't have it quite right either.
Starting point is 01:48:22 No, you're getting there. It's gorgeous. It's gorgeous. Every color is gorgeous. It's just gorgeous. But that thing is just hideous. I was reading in the Wall Street Journal, dumb phones and fax machines are the new boss flex. Finally, finally, finally. It's going to be cool again.
Starting point is 01:48:44 It's going to be cool again to have a dumb phone. I don't know about the fax machine. The fax machine? What's the point of a fax machine? It's idiotic. Yeah. Anyway, Cox Media, this is the accusation. This is a brief summary from France 24, from the technology chick.
Starting point is 01:49:05 What happened is that a couple of months ago, the American Conglomerate Cox Media Group admitted on their website that they had the possibility of listening in to private conversations and then helping advertisers target people specifically, but we didn't really have proof. Then just a couple of days ago, they were able to obtain a pitch deck, if you will, for investors in which they advocate the power of voice data. Here's what they say in one of their sections. Don't just know what they're looking for.
Starting point is 01:49:31 They're talking about us here, users, consumers. Know what they are actually talking about. To really convince their consumers of the power of voice data, here's what they add. I'm going to read it to you because I think it's quite chilling. Think about it. Smartphones have become appendages of our persons. We're attached to them during the workday. We bring them to date soccer games and even to the bathroom. In most moments of the day, there's a smart device within a two-inch radius of us. That means a smart device is likely within earshot when we talk about our plans for the weekend,
Starting point is 01:50:03 for instance. How badly we need our kitchen remodeled or debate which SUV model is best for the family with our spouse and so much more. In the end, by saying creepy, sure. Great for marketing, definitely. So I mean, this is eerie. I mean, this is evil. When you read this, it's one thing to actually know that it exists, but to actually see how they're talking about users as mere consumers, it's really something else. Oh no! I'm shocked they just
Starting point is 01:50:32 look at us as dumb buyers. Oh no! It was gambling? I never thought that this was happening to this degree and sold like this. And in fact, I'd probably push back on it because I know that proximity is used and, you know, but they actually have been deploying this in apps. I might add it's not probably not in the, in the O S itself, but there's an SDK you can get, you drop it in and your app can then, you know, they'll say, Hey, give that, give your, give this app your microphone permission. Sure. Got permission.
Starting point is 01:51:04 You look in place. Any app you install, it gives them permission to go for your contact list, turns your camera on when it wants to, turns your microphone on when it wants to. Yeah. It's a spying device that you've agreed to. Well, this is the disturbing mini clip here that our technology chick in France 24, who was always wearing sneakers. They do a shot of the back from her, she's got like a fancy outfit on, but she's always wearing sneakers.
Starting point is 01:51:36 It's like, I'm going to work, but you know, I just wear my sneakers. Maybe that's to be tech cool. This is something that is very disturbing. I didn't know this was going on. We've all experienced this situation, I think, where you're talking about something next to a phone and then minutes later, even seconds later, you scroll on an app or you navigate online and you find this advertising that's specifically linked to what you were just talking about.
Starting point is 01:52:00 So we all know that it actually happens, right? And it's even become a joke online, you know, with women who like purposely talk about certain things next to their husband's phone to try to suggest maybe a gift ideas. So that's just one way to do it. If you have something to tell to your husband. What?
Starting point is 01:52:19 I didn't know this was going on. You've been suckered. No wonder I'm seeing ads for Tiffany earrings. Hmm. Hmm. Yeah, this is interesting. Well, this is all no good. This is quite funny.
Starting point is 01:52:36 This is all no good. It really is no good. No, none of it's good. And it's, it's weak marketing too. You know, they think, well, it's great. Cause you really target people cause you, cause they talked about something or another for five seconds and then let's weak marketing too. You know, they think, well, it's great because you really target people because they talked about something or another for five seconds and then let's go for it and we can sell an ad spot.
Starting point is 01:52:51 Yeah. There's better ways. There's all kinds of ways of doing it. Yeah. Without having to spy on an individual. Yeah, but they're drunk on it, man. It's like, oh, look at all this data. Look at all we can do.
Starting point is 01:53:05 That's beautiful. That was what interactive TV was all about when it first showed up. Oh man. Remember IPTV? Remember all that? IPTV, it's the future. Yeah. Oh, I talked to-
Starting point is 01:53:16 It always will be. Did I talk, did I tell you about our, our, our guy, our Hollywood, executive about the, the cable channel. No. So remember he was going to talk to- Oh right, right, our cable channel. Yeah, yeah, yeah, our V for VTV. So he talked to the guy who got, I think, HBO started
Starting point is 01:53:38 and a couple other, he has these contacts. Yeah, he's not a slouch. No, no, he's the real deal. He says, well, he's the real deal. He says, well bad news, my guy felt it was not possible in this environment that it would be incredibly unlikely to get a carriage deal. He did promise to give further thought, but I'm currently not optimistic. It's the state of, and I went back and I said, well, but if we bring in Joe Rogan and we can bring all these other big names, you know, it's not about Joe.
Starting point is 01:54:06 He says, it's the state of the cable business and the continually tightening budgets and cutting, not adding channels. It's also the demo. It continues to be an aging demo. That sounds like a death knell. When a cable is, yeah, for the cable business. Yes. When the cable business won't even take a channel that has Rogan and Megyn Kelly and
Starting point is 01:54:27 Code Bon Gino and anybody else we could get and sucker into it. The Jimmy Dore. Shoot, man, we'll get, we'll get a chunk. Chunk. Chunk's already on cable. Hello. He doesn't need us. In fact, why is already on cable. Hello. He doesn't need us.
Starting point is 01:54:47 In fact, why is Chunk on cable? Yeah, well, aging demographic. There you go. That's what it is. And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage. Say in the morning to you, the man who put two C's into fact checks, three C's. Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, mr. John C. DeForett. Well in the morning you were Sam Curry with the ship to keep on the graphene the air subs to the water the dames and knights out there. Alright cotton gin is on the ball let me count you trolls. Joke out. 2223 at the peak trolls trolls in the troll room.
Starting point is 01:55:25 People wanted to hear something. Yeah, it's because of the debate. Yeah, well, no, it's because we're the hyperscalers. That's my new word of the day, hyperscalers. Whatever that means. Well, you don't hear it all day on CNBC. What is it? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:55:40 I think it's the, it's like- Well, then why would we be it? Well, we're just as vapid as chat AI, open AI. That's what they're talking about. Oh, the hypers... We're not vapid at all. We're deep thinkers. The hyperscalers.
Starting point is 01:55:54 I think they mean people who need to use a lot of compute. If you use a lot of compute, you're a hyperscaler. I don't know. We should get a definition. I just wrote it down. It's never come up on Dvorak Horowitz. Well, you should talk to Horowitz about the hyperscaler. I don't know. We should get a definition. I just wrote it down. It's never come up on Dvorak Horowitz. Well, you should talk to Horowitz about the hyperscaler. By the way, I liked your ETF episode. That was good.
Starting point is 01:56:13 Ah, we're going to do a short seller one next. Yes. Dvorak, DH Unplugged, dhonplugged.com. Come live on Tuesdays. I rarely listen to it it live, but listen to it on Wednesdays. It's a very entertaining overview of the markets and it's an unrehearsed conversation, which we join already in progress. Pretty much. Yeah, it's a good show. It's a good show.
Starting point is 01:56:36 Those trolls- Well, we thank you for that plug because we plug No Agenda constantly. I know. I know. It's a deserved plug while we're at it. It's called log rolling. Yeah. We call it a pod roll. Sorry.
Starting point is 01:56:50 Pod roll, log roll. Pod roll. Hey, those trolls. Which is, by the way, surprises me to this day that Joe Rogan's not more into that. Into pod rolling? Or log rolling, pod rolling, yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:04 What do you mean? He doesn't like That guys plug stuff enough. Well, he plugged me again just the other day He mentioned your name He said no, I said my he said my friend Adam Curry, you know who that is You know the guy who started podcasting. He always says that yeah What good does that do to a no agenda show? People go looking. Adam Curry, guy who started podcasting. No agenda show.
Starting point is 01:57:33 Jamie, look that up. All right. The trolls are at trollroom.io. You can join there for free. Listen to the 24 hour a day stream with tons of good content on there. No ads, all talk, all fun, all no agenda. No agenda stream trollroom.io. Use a modern podcast app. That's what you really want because you're going to get the platform.
Starting point is 01:57:55 You see some of your shows going away because they're not joyous enough. Oh, someone sent me this. We've been talking about joy and the joy brigade. No, the what was it? What's the Nazi slogan that everyone was memeing about? Yes, it's like strength through joy. Strength through joy. Yes.
Starting point is 01:58:19 Witness Hogan's heroes. That's something to go on. Arrange a little party. That is exactly what I was thinking, Herr General. Good food and enough wine to make him talkative. And perhaps even some charming feminine company. That is an excellent idea. By the way, I have this young lady friend, Gretchen.
Starting point is 01:58:37 I met her at a strength through joy picnic. Please spare me the details. Just arrange the party. How about that? Hogan's heroes. Good reference. I was surprised by that. Strength through joy party. That's right. Yeah. The strength through joy party. Democrats. Sorry. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:58:59 Sorry, Democrat party, but you guys are evil. You guys are evil. Right now, you guys are evil. Yeah, that's where it goes. Yeah, it happens. Modern Podcasts app will alert you when this show goes live and many other shows go live. It'll give you an actual in-app alert. It doesn't turn on a microphone to listen to you. No, it's helpful. It's AI. AI does this and it tells you it's time to listen to the show. Yeah, I thought you sent out an alert. Are you AI? Atom Intelligence, hello. Thank you. Thank you. And of course, it's the same app you can use to listen to all of your podcasts. It has many other features, including the chapters, which are very handy.
Starting point is 01:59:41 Dreb Scott does this for us. Every single show, we appreciate him so much. We're value for value, which means we're not really hyperscalers when it comes down to it. We just ask people to send back value of any type, just equal to what you receive from the show. And that varies from person to person, how much that is from person to person, how much time, talent or treasure you want to give back. It's all up to you. And we've left that completely open. We've done that for almost 17 years coming up in October. And we have our 1700th episode,
Starting point is 02:00:12 which is just six episodes away, which should be an exciting celebration, I guess. Are we celebrating? Yep. Do you have a celebration in mind? Yep. Do you want to talk about it yet? Nope.
Starting point is 02:00:26 Okay. A celebration is coming. One of the ways people participate in helping us out produce here is, well, one of the many ways. Boots on the ground reports, people send ideas, insights, their own personal knowledge. We have more producers and more skilled producers than anyone, any program of any kind in the entire universe, which is why we're called the best podcast in the universe. And we have artists who create brand new artwork for us for every single show.
Starting point is 02:00:56 They are, in fact, many of them, I think most of them are Dutch masters, so there's quite the lineage. And as was proven once again by a Dutch master, comic strip blogger for episode 1693, produced that one for you in Mexico while I was vacationing. And we titled the show Freedom Force. And even we could not resist this piece of art, which was... But we could resist it, but we didn't. It was hard. It was hard. It was just so funny. It violated a rule.
Starting point is 02:01:31 It violated a whole bunch of rules. Two rules, actually. Three, maybe. AI being one, it being a person, that was two, and comic strip blogger. Was that the third one? And the same person we used in the previous show. Oh, oh, oh. We violated many, many, many rules. And comic strip blogger, was that the third one? And the same person we used in the previous show. Oh, we violated many, many, many. Well, no, we've done the same person.
Starting point is 02:01:50 Oh, you mean the same person subject in the artwork? Yeah, two shows in a row. Very, this never happened before. And the fact that it was just AI, which is just kind of mind boggling. But we had complained that comic strip blogger had not done a good job with his prompt jockeying of putting lettering onto clothing, etc. Because he tried it a couple of times.
Starting point is 02:02:14 He wasn't surface mapping properly. No good surface mapping. So now he did a version of Tim Pool, the pool man, with his beanie, only the beanie was worn by Vladimir Putin who had his headset on and he had his microphone and a putt casting on the front. We laugh too much. I think that's why we chose this. What else can we do?
Starting point is 02:02:39 It's just that funny. And people loved it. They really did. People just went, this is so good. It was nothing really to compete with. No, well, let me take a look and see what we had. I did like Fred the mouse. The rat. I like roundabouts a lot.
Starting point is 02:03:02 Yeah, I got some feedback on the round. Did you get any pushback on the roundabouts? No. Oh, a lot of people weighed in. What did they say? Here's an example. Idaho. I moved to Nampa, Idaho in 2015. Traffic was horrible on the back roads. I had to sit in traffic every day. Over the past few years, they've been pulling four-way stops and replacing them with roundabouts, and they're amazing. Traffic is so much better. I hate government. I'm an anarchist. I think governments are organized criminal gangs. But that said, Idaho has been very good at maintaining our roads and they got rid of smog.
Starting point is 02:03:32 And I don't think they're doing it for climate change here. Roundabouts rule. But we, I did get a note from one of our guys who once lived in Berkeley and he brought up, I sent this to you, you have it too. Yeah. Where he said, we're we'd use the wrong definition for roundabouts, the ones in Berkeley and he brought up, and I sent this to you, have it too. Where he said we'd use the wrong definition for roundabouts, the ones in Berkeley. Because it was supposed to save climate change stuff. And it's true what he said, in Berkeley there's a roundabout
Starting point is 02:03:57 but there's a four way stop and a roundabout. This is Berkeley for you. So you have to stop and then you go into the roundabout to make and it was to prevent people from getting into wrecks on left turns which on a four-way stop is I've never seen one. Well, I've been driving for 50 years and I've never seen a wreck at a four-way stop because somebody made a left turn. So, but okay, they put the roundabouts in anyway. But it's not a true roundabout. As far as he's concerned, no,
Starting point is 02:04:27 a true roundabouts like the ones you run into in England or France where it's like you're, you come up on the thing, you got a yield is angled. So you go onto the roundabout. And if you're in France, I should mention, uh, the rule is very strict. They have a right of way rule. So if somebody's coming onto the roundabout on the right, they have the right of way. Yeah, which is not typical for most roundabouts. No, it's not typical. Typically the roundabout,
Starting point is 02:04:52 if you're on the roundabout, you have the right of way. Yeah. And in France, no. I always enjoyed the roundabouts in Europe. I thought they were convenient. I liked them. We have a true roundabout at the top of the foot of, at the top of Marin Avenue, there's a roundabout that goes off to one, two, three, four, I think it's four or five exits.
Starting point is 02:05:17 So you can go in all kinds of different directions. And that one, two, three, four, five, it's probably five. And you, and it's a real roundabout. You go, there's no stopping. And I find them to be annoying because, and I'll tell you why. Maybe in Europe, you're okay. Cause people are used to, nobody knows what they're doing in the United States on a roundabout. Um, I remember.
Starting point is 02:05:41 Stop while they're in the roundabout. Yeah, that's no good. That's wrong. That's wrong. That's wrong. They're doing it wrong. I do remember moving to the UK in the roundabouts and it happened probably three times that I would enter the roundabout going the wrong way. Oh, that's terrible.
Starting point is 02:06:01 And they'd always have the Brits like, and like, and they'd hold up their hands like, foreigner, like, yeah, I'm sorry. And try doing a three point turn on a roundabout. It's a bad situation. But otherwise, I think roundabouts are pretty good. And I'm sure you'd rather have the potholes fixed than roundabouts. I'd rather have potholes fixed and more lanes on the freeway than roundabouts. So we had Fred the Rat. Let's see, there was, what else was there?
Starting point is 02:06:36 There was some Mexico stuff, 47 with a sledgehammer, the Camel lipstick coffee cup. Yeah, there really wasn't much else, was there? Well, today there's quite a bit. I see a lot has come in, yeah. A lot of it is hilarious, so it's going to be tough. Okay. Oh, we'll be publishing late. That's the thing that holds us up the most, is arguing about. But it it's worth it though because it's the talent of the producers and we love our artists
Starting point is 02:07:09 Thank you all so much for competing every single show twice a week. No agenda art generated our calm anybody can participate That's the beauty of it And consider doing that send us some time talent and treasure in the treasure department This is where we thank our executive and associate executive producers for the episode. $200 and above. You're an associate executive producer. We read your note.
Starting point is 02:07:31 $300 and above. You're an executive producer. We read your note. Those are credits that you can use anywhere. Credits are recognized. They're real show business credits. Want to test it? Go ahead.
Starting point is 02:07:42 Go to imdb.com. You can open up an account and put it right in there. You'll see over a thousand of your fellow producers. And you'll be right up there with people like Dana Brunetti and other Hollywood bigwigs who love being producers. And it's good forever. And it looks good on business cards. It's a great pickup line.
Starting point is 02:07:58 You can use it wherever you want. It's a pickup line. And of course, we appreciate any value sent to us. There are many people who send us sustaining donations, $5 a month, sometimes every episode. You can make it up yourself, the amount, the frequency, noagendadonations.com. And we read, well, we thank everybody, $50 and over. We start now with our top executive producer, which was a mindblower from the Duke of Central Florida, Winter Park, Florida, and he sends us a Rubberlizer donation, he says, from the Duke of Florida.
Starting point is 02:08:32 I think this gets me an upgrade to Archduke of Central Florida, $3,344.33. He says, I threw in an $11 kicker to catch up the seronomous of dogpatch and slow or Lebovia's donations as he brings great insights to us all. And he says, thanks for sticking around for another four years. This was very kind and highly appreciated. And of course you get the rubble. Lizer donation jingle. Of course, you get the Rub-A-Lizer donation jingle. India, Tang-O, Mike, standby, 33, 33, 33, Rub-A-Lizer out.
Starting point is 02:09:14 Awesome, awesome brother, thank you. Yes, of course, you'll be the Archduke of Central Florida. Title change coming up. Douglas Ellis is no slouch from New York city. And he comes in with 1789, which I think is a $1,700 donation. They charge a lot of money here. Wow. Send checks people.
Starting point is 02:09:36 Uh, 38 cents. And he, um, which we'll put him in there. We have, we're going to, we're putting people in the 1700 club in advance. So this is the second one. I'll put him in there. The last show too. I'll put him in there. We're putting people in the 1700 club in advance, so this is the second one. I'll put him in there. Because we had one in the last show too. I'll put him in there. He says, a longish note, it is long, but I had some recent good karma, so I'm passing it along.
Starting point is 02:09:55 I'm sending $1700 to celebrate, 17 years and 1700 shows. Fine work, gentlemen. My donation along with, yeah, $17 1700, this extra big you get when you don't send a check. My donation along with the, will be, my donation along with the thousand dollars I gave at fifty dollars a month a few years ago made me a knight or maybe more. I'd like to be, he hasn't been knighted yet. It's actually baronet at this point.
Starting point is 02:10:25 I'd like to be knighted, maybe, yeah, actually maybe baron. I'd like to be knighted Sir Douglas of the Bahamas at the round table. I'd love to see some prayer, Pirate Republic beer. No, I got a request. Perhaps it's something you can read to the listeners to activate your No Agenda Intelligence Network. Adam, you and I have discussed this a little over email. In the olden days, I used to listen to Adam's daily source code. That is olden days. I think I may have gotten to that. I think I may have gotten to that my a guest appearance.
Starting point is 02:10:59 I can't read what he said on Adams on the Gilmore gang. I think of this as the original Joe Rogan appearance. That was a wonky gang, but a fun listen. I don't know what. Well, you remember the Gilmore gang, don't you? Steve Gilmore. Yeah, vaguely. Yeah, and those guys. During one episode, maybe 10, four, 2006,
Starting point is 02:11:22 but no later than three 22, 2007, the must poked and prodded Jason Calacanis was the guest. J Cal. J Cal. He ended the show. Yeah. He ended the show with a fantastically funny riff where he pretended to be at him. Yeah. He does voices. Be Adam. Yeah, he does voices. He does. Stoned in the audio, a sick studio parked on the streets of Amsterdam. It was really good and not mean spirited. No,
Starting point is 02:12:00 it was mean spirited. Jason's voices are all mean spirited. Don't kid yourself. The golden clip is not easy to find, I guess not. I know there were interpersonal issues among some of you early podcasts, but that may have made some of this material vanish. I'm not sure what he's talking about. Well, I guess that's a real clip around. Let me just say something. Jason Calacanis and I have known each other for a long time. You've known
Starting point is 02:12:25 him for a long time. We poke fun at each other. He's great. He just moved to Texas. I'm going to go shooting on his property pretty soon. Oh, are you now? Of course. He's invited. Okay, and you can have this gun. Would you like to shoot? I also got a Max 10. He also listens to the show, by the way. Yeah, okay. Sure he does. He does. He sends me notes all the time. And he especially loves the impersonations that you do.
Starting point is 02:12:53 Sure he does. He does. He does. He's a listener. All right, Jason, send in a donation just to prove that you're listening. There you go. That will be the day. That will be the day Anyway he goes on and says This golden clip is not easy to find I know there were interpersonal issues among some of you early podcasters that may have made some of this material vanish
Starting point is 02:13:20 No, but if someone smarter than me could dig it up, I would be great. Listen for the no agenda audience Thanks, Jen. Yeah, I'd love to hear that too. Those are good days with two because it was true I was smoking weed in my Audi which I use that a studio and doing podcasts good times Thank You, Doug Sir, mr. Bob Dabalina checks in from Franklin, Tennessee $500 sir. Mr. Bob Dabalina here only seven donors Bob. $500. So Mr. Bob Dabalina here, only seven donors? Bob Dob is here for you. Your show is too good.
Starting point is 02:13:49 We've got a support to keep y'all going. Please put some voodoo on Kamala's tax plan. Hashtag save cap gains. Take me out with a Dabalina hook if you got it. First of all, don't be confused about this. I guess what he's talking about is Kamala saying, I'm going to tax unrealized gains. That's not going to happen. No, it'll break everyone in Congress. Yes, exactly. That's not going to happen. All right. I'll take it out with Mr. Bob Molina,
Starting point is 02:14:20 Mr. Bob Dobolina, because I couldn't find a jingle. Thank you very much. Mr. Bob-a-lena, Mr. Bob-dob-a-lena, because I couldn't find a jingle. Thank you very much. Bowman McMahan in San Antonio, right down the street. $500 in loving memory of James Patrick McMahan. Moving on to Minister Kat from Austin, Texas. Also right down the road. What happened to Sir Luca? I'm sorry. Moving on to Sir Luca from Austin, Texas, also right down the road. What happened to Sir Luca? I'm sorry, moving on to Sir Luca from Savosa.
Starting point is 02:14:48 Oh, from another one of those Swiss guys. Yeah, the Swiss are listening. Yes, well, Sir Luca does. I think he also organizes meetups. Happy birthday to me. Greetings to Linda Lu and F the EU, Sir Luca. While I'm driving off laughing, this is what I'll say. F the EU.
Starting point is 02:15:17 Alright, you're on the list. And now we go to Mr. Cat in Austin, 333.33. You guys are my sanity in Austin, 333.33. You guys are my sanity in this rapidly declining world. Put it in the red book that hydrogen fuel cells are coming, they've already come, and Taylor Swift will have a late term abortion. Well, that's a good prediction. That's pretty funny. Yours in ridicule and hopeful, Peach.
Starting point is 02:15:48 Peach. I said Peach. Peach. Peace. Minister Kat of Austin, Texas. All right. Minister Kat, thank you very much. We move on to Duchess Kim, 333.33, and Duchess Kim has a birthday, turns 41 on the 22nd and sent in a note.
Starting point is 02:16:09 This is Duchess Kim, keeper of the Nutty Fluffers. Wants jingles, screw your freedom, little gurrier and a double goat karma. Well, we can do, let me just make sure I got two goats. We have two goats. Thank you. Round them up. Calling all of Gibbon Nation, I'm in need of any prayers, karma, rain dances, and shoot, even voodoo dolls at this point, if it will help.
Starting point is 02:16:30 I'm going in for my third and hopefully final retinal detachment surgery on the same eye. Now this is Dame Kim who has been through this, right? We've been through this with her. Yes. And- By a thing to do. Oh man. It's a her yes and and ending to do oh man this is not mistaken you have to keep your head upside down you got to keep it down looking to the ground each they put you in a special bed you have to stick
Starting point is 02:16:54 this has got to be the most it's bad this gotta be one of the most uncomfortable things you can do no pressure boys but with being blind in my good eye due to a macular hole I will be counting on you guys to make me laugh and I'll be looking forward to your shows more so than usual over the next few weeks we guarantee you we're gonna make you laugh. I don't know if making you laugh when you're after this operation is necessarily a good thing. Well it helped the last time she said. Well it didn't help that much. She had to go in for a second round.
Starting point is 02:17:27 Also, since I will not be able to see well enough, can I please get a biscuit on my 41st trip around the sun on September 22nd? They always give me a biscuit on my birthday. I have a feeling Jay will add you to the list for then. She's very good at that. Happy birthday, Adam. Thank you. Don't worry. We're not getting older. We're just getting finer and more expensive like wine.
Starting point is 02:17:46 Man, I really wish I had my rub-a-lizer tote bag or challenge coin for my birthday. You two are the bee's knees and I would be wearing a tinfoil hat on my head and living under my bed if it was not for you two. Keep up the great work and four more years says Duchess Kim, keeper of the nutty fluffers. Screw your freedom. Yay! You've got... Harma. A double as requested.
Starting point is 02:18:12 You've got... Harma. There we go. Got you covered. Onward with Get Well Soon. Yes. Kim. Nathan Rottier in Westlock, Alberta, Canada, 333.33.
Starting point is 02:18:30 And he has a small, very small, you can tell by the pitch there, little bitty note. Dear Adam and John, after seeing the sad puppy, that was the last show. So many shows in a row. I decided to move my annual donation up a month. And my 33rd birthday is coming up, so I'd like a fresh biscuit, please. They always give me a biscuit on my birthday. Fresh biscuit? And as a side note, Adam, your pronunciation of my last name is excellent, as it is French but unfortunately during the 1700s it migrated to Holland then to Canada in the 50s so it's changed to Rotea, Rotea, Rotea, Rotea, I don't know. We're just gonna stick with Rotea.
Starting point is 02:19:22 We're gonna stick with Rotea. Rotié is, I still like Rotié. That's what it is, man. You're Rotié to us. Thank you. I guess Roto-tier, Roto-tier? Roto-ter, Roto-ter, I don't know. Roto-ter. Roto-ter.
Starting point is 02:19:37 Yeah. Okay. On to our first Associate Executive Producer, $250 Mark from Graham Washington also sent us a note, and I have the note here John Adam, thank you for the years of entertainment Just to say I can't just to say No to an exit strategy, please. Give me relationship karma because although I will be always Although I will always love my ex. Oh, I must find a way to move on. Oh, sorry about that.
Starting point is 02:20:10 And you will move on. You will. It'll be okay. Also, please give her a jobs karma. Lastly, please give a F cancer and prayer for sweet little four-year-old Oakley. She's a fighter, but we can use all the help she can get. Adam, I love that you found your way to Christ and hope to follow in your footsteps. Follow in his footsteps, absolutely. So we will give you relationship, F-cancer, karma, and you'll be fine. I really think so. Stopping cancer! Stopping cancer!
Starting point is 02:20:41 Stopping cancer! Stopping cancer! Stopping cancer! You've got karma. The Harper team is back with Temecula. Oh. Uh, 250 bucks. Temecula. Temecula.
Starting point is 02:20:55 The Harper team would like to shorten last week's message to the following. Ha ha ha. Uh. If you're ready to get the hell out of California and move to the great state of Tennessee, we can help with that. However, if you're committed to going down with the ship in Southern California because you refuse to leave the perfect weather, we totally get it. We can help with that too.
Starting point is 02:21:22 Call Texas at 760-450-4165. Have a great week. Oh, thank you, Harper team. Sir Eternus Quivi, I think it is, Laredo, Texas, he wants to wish me a happy birthday with $250 for the show. Thank you. Appreciate that. Dane Beth in Tucson, Arizona.
Starting point is 02:21:50 222. The 805 rooftop meetup was the spookiest ever. Probably a lot of spooks in Arizona. We determined that everyone was a spook or spook adjacent. Except me. I'm just the chief of staff to an elected official. Oh wait. Jingle, Fletcher, four more years. Thank you for your courage. Dame Beth, the Baroness of Baja, Arizona. Four more years! Daniel Peruzzo, Courtney, British Columbia, 222, Short Row of Ducks. Hello, John Adam, it's The Switcheroo. Just want to say, wow, what a great show you guys put together. I see a lot of crap out there. You guys really rise above it all.
Starting point is 02:22:26 My smoking hot wife hit me in the mouth with no agenda about six months ago. We both look forward to listening to your show together while working on our awesome little farm on beautiful Vancouver Island in Courtenay, British Columbia. Oh, how nice. And you know, people who know Agenda together, stay together. So I would like to dedicate this Associate Executive Producership to my wife, Bailey Davies. It's our 15th anniversary today, September 12th, and I can't thank her enough for being by my side through all these crazy times, and I look forward to the next 15 years and
Starting point is 02:22:58 beyond. Could you give her a deduction? You've been deduced. Of course. And some baby-making karma. Yeah, we're good for that too. You've been deduced. Of course. And some baby making karma. Yeah, we're good for that too.
Starting point is 02:23:09 Also toss in a yak karma unless you have elk karma. Not only yak, but I think it doubles. I think yak. Can yak double as elk? She is off to Cranbrook tomorrow on her first hunting trip with her new gun. She's such a badass. Happy anniversary baby. Cheers from Dee. You bet.
Starting point is 02:23:30 You've got... Parma. You've got... Parma. Remember, you gotta name your baby after Adam and John. Eli the coffee guy in Bensonville, Illinois, 20912. While researching water filtration to improve the quality of my coffee brewing, I ended up going down a rabbit hole regarding atrazine and the water supply.
Starting point is 02:24:03 Turns out Alex Jones is right. Well we we played actually, he says, see, seed man jingle. He'd like to hear that, but we played a clip years ago that was on democracy. Now from a professor at Cal who had done all the research on this. Yes. I remember that. And yes, Alex Jones is right. Turns the frogs gay. And yes, Alex Jones is right. Turns the frogs gay! Remember, folks, always use filtered water for drinking or brewing coffee, and I do.
Starting point is 02:24:31 I use the clearly filtered water, which takes out fluorine too. And visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com. Use code ITM for 20% off your order. Stay caffeinated Eli the coffee guy and they do make a good Good blend of they make good. They do a good job of roasting beans. Did you say fluorine? Said fluoride. No, I thought you said fluorine which was kind of weird. Well, I thought I said floor. I said weird I don't like them putting chemicals Weird yes, be quiet. I don't like them putting chemicals in the water that turn the frigging frogs gay.
Starting point is 02:25:09 Beachview Farm, Oak Harbor, Washington, 202.02. Nice, nice number there. Thank you both for what you do. Adam, keep reminding people to eat real food grown by proper farmers. Find your regenerative agriculture operation near you. Any producers in the Pacific Northwest that want the best wagyu beef in the universe please support Beachview Farm on Whidbey Island. Visit Beachview
Starting point is 02:25:31 Farm.com for all your excellent meat and food search needs. Well how about that? This is new? Yes I have meat needs. So this is a wagyu American wagyu is that what we're dealing with here? I think so sounds like a good deal and It's up near a new you or near Mimi. I wonder if this is the group that sells the wagyu to Costco. Oh That's a good question Somebody told me that they know the guys who sell that wagyu to Costco and I said woohoo and I never heard back Yeah, must be fake news I know the guys who sell their Wagyu to Costco. And I said, woohoo, and I never heard back. Ah, must be fake news. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:26:08 That's fake news. Somebody sells it to them. Oh, there's no winning. We don't like to foster a competitive atmosphere, but we laugh a lot. Now everyone hug and share a secret. You've got karma. Each of you farm in Oak Harbor.
Starting point is 02:26:23 Yeah. Or actually, Whid Oak Harbor. Yeah. Or actually, Whidbey Island. Interesting. I didn't know there was a...interesting. Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado. She comes in with 200 bucks as usual and asks for Job's Karma and says, I think you have allure. And for a resume that's alluring...
Starting point is 02:26:44 Oh, I see what she did yeah she's switching up her copy or ad copy yeah visit image makers inc.com for all your executive and resume executive resume and job search needs that's image makers inc with a k.com with linda lu duchess of jobs and writer of resumes jobs jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. Yeah!
Starting point is 02:27:08 You've got karma. Wonderful, Linda Lou. Thank you for being here every single episode. And we wrap up our associate executive producers with Anonymous with $200, no note. So that means a double up karma for you, Anonymous. You've got double up
Starting point is 02:27:25 karma. And thank you to all of these executive and associate executive producers of episode 1694 we are well on our way to 1700 thank you for producing this episode of the show our formula is this We go out we hit people in the mouth Yeah, shut up shut up slave shut up shut up shut up shut up shut up All right I have some things but maybe you have some things, but maybe you have some things that you want to get out there. I want to get this out of the way.
Starting point is 02:28:10 This is the... It always sounds like it's no good when you say I want to get this out of the way. No, I know, it's got to be out of the way. Maybe it is no good. That's what I mean. It's no good. I got no good clips here that I'm going to get out of the way. But first, I do have a humorous clip.
Starting point is 02:28:26 Okay. Dead in cubicle. Oh, okay. This is, I've seen this, we know this story. A Tempe Wells Fargo employee died at her desk and 12 News is now confirming that it may have taken as many as four days for anyone in the office to notice. Good evening and thanks so much for joining us for 12 News at 10.
Starting point is 02:28:46 I'm Kadiva Devine. I'm Mark Curtis. It's a story we first reported yesterday. Tonight Tempe police are confirming the timeline of when the woman clocked in to when her colleagues found the body. 12 News journalist Gabriella Becerra is in the studio with new details tonight. Gabby, four days. I mean, this poor woman went four days undiscovered.
Starting point is 02:29:07 It's hard to believe. And that's a question many employees are asking themselves tonight. I spoke with an employee who said that she shared her perspective on the workplace environment and they say it's a big building but most people don't work there on a daily basis. A Wells Fargo employee went to work the morning of Friday, August 16th and never went home. Tempe police tell 12News 60-year-old Denise Prudhom scanned into work at 7 o'clock in the morning. Four days later, police responded to the office building near Washington Street and Priest Drive for reports of a subject down.
Starting point is 02:29:40 Prudhom was declared dead. The Tempe Police Criminal Investigation Bureau is investigating, but do not suspect foul play. A Wells Fargo employee exclusively spoke with 12 News, but asked not to be recorded or identified out of fear for their job. They say a colleague found Prudhom dead at her desk in a cubicle while walking around the building on Tuesday, August 20th. If I can just make a programming note, this is a really old story. No, it's not that old. Yeah, it's weeks old.
Starting point is 02:30:12 Yeah, it's been sitting around. You won't let me play these things. What do you mean? I have never forbidden you from, in fact, I had the clip myself for a couple shows, but it's like, I just feel it's an old story. I just think it's a sad, sad story that needs to be repeated. It's this poor woman, she goes to work four days, nobody calls in and says, hey, where's the Aunt Becky or anything, I mean, typical, I don't know, Wells Fargo is involved. I have this recurring nightmare where it's a Thursday
Starting point is 02:30:44 and I'm waiting for you to come on. And I'm dead in my cubicle. For days. Since Sunday, no one has checked on you. Yeah, well that doesn't happen, believe me. They're always checking on me. You sound rather irked about it. Yeah, no way. Okay, let's go to this. This is something we can both talk about.
Starting point is 02:31:04 All right. FBI thwarts we can both talk about. All right. FBI thwarts a one-man riot. Breaking news. The Justice Department says a planned terror attack in New York City has been thwarted. The suspect allegedly wanted to target Jewish people on October 7th, one year after the attack in Israel. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 02:31:22 The suspect was quoted by the FBI as saying, if we succeed with our plan, this would be the largest attack on US soil since 9-11. CBS' Nancy Cordes is at the White House with new reporting. Good evening, Nancy. It is chilling to read what the suspect was planning. It really is, Nora, and it took the FBI working with Canadian law enforcement to identify and apprehend this suspect, who is now accused of plotting to carry out a mass shooting at a Jewish center in Brooklyn, which authorities say he wanted to do just over a month from today. The suspect's name is Mohammed Shahzeb Khan. He is a 20-year-old Pakistani citizen who lived in Canada. He allegedly began posting on social media in support of ISIS last November and eventually,
Starting point is 02:32:10 without his knowledge, began communicating with two undercover law enforcement officers. That's what led them to him. According to Attorney General Merrick Garland, the defendant is alleged to have planned a terrorist attack in New York City around October 7th of this year with the stated goal of slaughtering in the name of ISIS as many Jews as possible. October 7th, of course, will mark one year since the brutal surprise attack by Hamas on Israeli citizens that left nearly 1,200 people dead. Now, Khan was apprehended just a
Starting point is 02:32:46 couple of days ago in Quebec. It's believed he was headed towards the US border. A resident in the area said she saw police officers outside her home put a man in handcuffs on her front lawn. He was headed south toward the US border. He was he was in Quebec going to the Hortons that was in south of the city. He's heading toward the US border. This is the biggest six-week bogus story of the month. But it does have the international aspect, which is an extra payment, as we learned. If it's international, then you get more money for thwarting this attack. They threw in some ISIS, that was good,
Starting point is 02:33:28 big ISIS, so it's terrorism. This is a moneymaker. This was a moneymaking operation in the six-week cycle. Now, there was a separate terrorism story which came out this week, which has to do with Telegram. And as you know, I think Pavel is still under house arrest, the CEO of the Telegram app. And he has already said, oh, all right, we'll do more moderation. We'll do some moderation. So that app is now compromised. But wait, we have a little more. This department says it's uncovered a plot to incite a race war, arresting suspects allegedly
Starting point is 02:34:08 part of a white supremacist group plotting attacks. 34-year-old Dallas Humor and 37-year-old Matthew Allison are facing more than a dozen federal charges. According to the indictment, the group, which refers to itself as Terragram, allegedly directed its members to commit hate crimes against black people, as well as Jewish people, immigrants and members of the LGBTQ plus community. The indictment also claims that the group plotted to quote kill high-value targets including a US senator and incited followers to carry out terror attacks around the world. The threat of domestic terrorism is on the rise inside the United States and acts of
Starting point is 02:34:46 violence carried out by white supremacists is the single most lethal type of domestic violent extremism that we see in the country right now. What? I'm sorry. What domestic white supremacist terrorist attacks have we seen recently in the country? That being the most severe form of terrorism we see right now? Can you recall any? No. Well, they did. The indictment claims that he were posted pictures of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Florida as an
Starting point is 02:35:15 example of what members could carry out. The two suspects are in custody awaiting a court date. Was it done by a white supremacist? No, it was done by a jilted gay guy, if I recall. Or something along those lines, but it wasn't a white supremacist. But if you listen to the, to parse it again, you have to back it up and parse it because she never said it was done by a white supremacist. Play it, there's a little word that she uses in there
Starting point is 02:35:39 which is very, very tricky. At the end? No, at the beginning, what she's just said it. Just back it up 10 seconds before you interrupt. The indictment claims that Huber posted pictures of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Florida as an example of what members could carry out. Could carry out. This is an example of what they could carry out, not what they did carry out.
Starting point is 02:36:00 No, of course not. They're just two schlubs on telegram. They have no examples. You're right. This is bull crap. I'd be very careful on Mastodon if I were some people because if they're going after this on Telegram, they're going to go after all kinds of stuff. All kinds of- Absolutely. Sure they will.
Starting point is 02:36:16 Hate crimes, pre-crime. Oh, you said something bad. You used words. It's no good. What are we coming to? Since LGBT was brought up, I have a TransMao segment for us. My Favorite Hate Listen Although this wasn't my favorite hate listen per se, it was one of the subjects of My favorite hate-listen, although this wasn't my favorite hate-listen per se, it was one of the subjects of my favorite hate-listen. In this case, Kara Swisher, your protege, was being interviewed on the Jillian Michaels podcast.
Starting point is 02:36:56 Jillian Michaels, the lesbian bodybuilder? That's the one who also has an African-American adopted child. And you know, it was a perfect, it was a match made in heaven. These two on the podcast, but it sounds like an opportunity to flirt. Well the opposite happened and I am liking what Jillian Michaels did to Kara Swisher. So we started off, they're talking about, of course with Kara, everything's political. And when it's political, it's about those horrible Republicans. They're horrible.
Starting point is 02:37:31 Yes, and Trump. And Trump is like horrible. They're no good. They hate gay people. They hate trans children. And they're talking about the laws being put in place by states to not allow underage children to undergo transgender surgery and therapies, medical procedures, which I think you and I agree is kind of a good idea not to allow that because it is pretty much the definition of child abuse when you put kids on puberty blockers and all kinds of stuff that is it's not good it's not healthy and it's quite frankly it's demonic so we start off with Kara explaining what this not really the Republicans don't care about trans kids what happens is whether you realize it or not, you're becoming a weapon by, they're
Starting point is 02:38:30 trying, they didn't, they weren't able to turn the bathroom issue. Remember a couple years ago, they were all worried about transgender people going in and bothering little girls. I never said a word. Exactly. It didn't work. I've always completely dismissed that argument. It didn't work.
Starting point is 02:38:44 And so they moved on to sports, which is a much more complex and difficult issue, especially if you're a parent of a female athlete. It's a big deal. If these girls have worked so hard to get to where they are, they shouldn't compete unfairly with other people. So do you have a problem with that argument? Because I don't, first of all, I think it's much more complex and we should all have a discussion about it.
Starting point is 02:39:06 Agreed, I agree with you. Because the problem I have is it's being used by the right, who's pretending they're concerned with girl athletes, when what they're really trying to do is go after trans people in general. And honestly, the reason they're going after trans people is because they're still angry about what gay people have gotten, which is marriage, adoption, full rights as citizens. You're all over here. I'm curious.
Starting point is 02:39:29 And they're aiming, they're the most cynical people on earth. They have never gotten over the loss of gay marriage. This is what they're actually going for, and you're over here arguing this. To me, the whole issue that's happened is this is a group of people that want the government to, they accuse the left of doing things they're doing. You're right but I think vice versa. Perhaps but but here's it should be a decision that should be a decision between parents their doctors and parents the children well mostly parents and the doctors. Parents don't understand it all
Starting point is 02:40:03 of this. Oh so now they're stupid, so let's let the government decide? So, has this got my attention? I'm like, oh, someone schooling Kara Swisher, who then turns this around and says, it's really because they hate gay people. This really because they're still so mad that gay people can get married in America. So, which is by the way, a state's issue. It's not an American issue, it's federal issue. States can determine that. And they're mad about that. So they don't really care about kids.
Starting point is 02:40:34 They just hate gay people. And then Jillian Michaels comes in. Kind of a weird projection. Oh, thank you. Even she even said it. They're projecting, she even said it. They do what they accuse others. No, this Kara Swisher is a horrible person. She really is. I just have to say it. She's a stuck-up, arrogant, horrible Democrat, which puts her in the demon camp. And then Jillian Michaels
Starting point is 02:41:02 which puts her in the demon camp. And then Jillian Michaels very intelligently comes out with information she has read about WPATH and the CAS review, which you first introduced here to the show. And we know what the, you want to just give us a brief rundown on the CAS review? Well, a brief, the CAS review came out in England and it went through all the documents they could find, lots of them, and a lot of studies, and said the idea of transitioning kids is a bad idea and let them grow up and then they can transition when they're older. So Jillian Michaels brings this to the table and listen what Kara Swisher does.
Starting point is 02:41:41 Have you reviewed the WPATH files? Which one? The one from England? No, no, that's the CAS review. Okay. So the WPATH files was Michael Schellenberger and me. I don't want to talk about Michael Schellenberger. You don't like Michael? Okay. Oh, I don't want to talk about Michael Schellenberger. I don't care. I just don't want to talk about him. This is interesting. He's a journalist? A journalist. It's just, is Michael Schellenberger? I just can't talk about him because he did the Twitter files. And journalist. It's just, is Michael, I just can't talk about him. Cause you know, he did the Twitter files. I'm just.
Starting point is 02:42:06 And nevertheless. It's actually inaccurate. So. Okay, but a lot. Oh, it's inaccurate though. It's inaccurate. She doesn't even know what the cast review is, but it's actually inaccurate though.
Starting point is 02:42:15 It's actually inaccurate. So. Okay, but a lot. But he did a data dump. Okay. So take his opinion out of it and look at the data. Oh, thank you.
Starting point is 02:42:25 Jillian Michaels is doing some amazing work here. Take your opinion out of it and look at the data. And the parents within this organization, right, so they've leaked emails, text messages, video, right. They're acknowledging, the experts within the WPATH are acknowledging that the parents don't understand and the kids don't understand. The kids don't understand, they are sterilized.
Starting point is 02:42:51 I think this is, I do not, I think people know what they're doing. There's, you know, it's really interesting because I was just looking at- Elon Musk is not dumb and he just said I didn't understand it. That's ridiculous, he's lying. Julian, he's lying.
Starting point is 02:43:02 Okay. Uh, wow. Is this good, right? It continues. He's lying. Julian, he's lying. Okay. Wow. This is good, right? It continues. He's lying. He's actually lying to you. Did you look at the classroom? This is the most powerful, richest man on earth, and he's dumb. Give me a break. In other words, Elon Musk didn't understand that this transition would be pubertor blockers,
Starting point is 02:43:22 which change all kinds of things in your child's body and brain but he's just dumb. Oh really? Elon knew what he was doing and it's okay. So you think he was foreign and then changed his mind? I don't know. I think he's a terrible parent who wasn't available to his kids and his daughter is speaking out because he's trying to claim her name. He's making up ridiculous gay tropes about her saying oh I knew he was gay because he said fabulous lot. The daughter, who is now daughter, is saying, this is not true.
Starting point is 02:43:51 He's using it for his whatever demented reason this man is doing it, but everything he says is untrue. Family members have said it's untrue. And for him to pretend he didn't know what was going on is here's a person who tells you how smart he is every day of the week and twice on Sunday, and here he's fair. And for him to pretend he didn't know what was going on is here's a person who tells you how smart he is every day of the week and twice on Sunday and here he's dumb. So then Jillian Michaels comes with the receipts, explains what the CAS review actually contains from the data they have collected and schools Kara Swisher to a very satisfying degree.
Starting point is 02:44:26 Within the CAS review and within the WPATH files, the parents have been told, if you don't support your child in this, they'll become suicidal. That is the narrative. So the parents are like, oh my God, like I don't want my child to become suicidal. I want them to think I don't love them.
Starting point is 02:44:42 And then the transitioning begins, the medicalization piece begins, and that's the part that I personally find based on the CAS review and the WFAS files, alarming. And it has- Or some kids, other kids very much should move down these roads. Do you understand that when you block puberty,
Starting point is 02:45:04 you're impacting the development of purely? Yes, I do. You're impacting the development of their brain? I do understand. So how is that okay? They should be older. That means you and I are here. That's correct. But then you and I just landed on the same-
Starting point is 02:45:14 You know why they're weaponizing- But Clara, then we're here together. Yes, but they're weaponizing it for something else. Because they hate gay people. Go away, Kara Swish. I can't believe that Vox Media allows her to still take a check from them. She's really a horrible person. And then to say, well, they should be older.
Starting point is 02:45:37 That was the whole point of the conversation. That was a depressing series of clips. I didn't think it was depressing at all. I thought it was a big win. Well, it was because you pointed out there's a person that should have been canceled. Yeah, canceled. I'm not for canceling anybody. But yet there she is. Ah, it was just crazy. By the way, I did want to play this at the beginning of the show, I was just, it was just crazy.
Starting point is 02:46:05 By the way, I did want to play this at the beginning of the show. I'm going to play it now because this is, it was 9-11. Yes. Today's 9-11. No, today's 9-12. But the show was 9-11, but we were celebrating it. Yeah. Oh yeah.
Starting point is 02:46:19 We celebrate. And I had a clip that I wanted to remind people that on 9-10, the day before 9-11, we have to mention that this is what Rumsfeld said. This shows up every year. We should play it. We don't play it much, but this is Rumsfeld before the day before. And he was Secretary of Defense, I believe. He was Secretary of Defense.
Starting point is 02:46:41 And the day before all hell broke loose. This is what he said. We are, as they say, tangled in our anchor chain. Our financial systems are decades old. According to some estimates, we cannot track 2.3 trillion dollars in transactions. We cannot share information from floor to floor in this building, because it's stored on dozens of different technological systems that are inaccessible or incompatible. We maintain 20 to 25 percent more base infrastructure than we need to support our forces.
Starting point is 02:47:16 And annual waste to taxpayer's of some three to four billion dollars. Yes, and you know since they couldn't communicate from floor to floor and they had that information in building seven they decided to move the floors closer together so that they could communicate better. Yeah, 2.7 trillion dollars in 2001.. And we still, it's worse now. Oh yeah, it's a trillion just to Ukraine. Oh, since you brought that up, here's a reminder of Kevin McPadden, first responder in New York on 9-11.
Starting point is 02:47:57 The Red Cross rep was like, he goes over and he says, well, you got to stay behind this line because they're thinking about bringing the building down. They didn't say what building. They just said, bringing a building down. So we're like, OK, we'll take that word before it. We'll stay behind the line. And he went over and he talked to one of the, through all the commotion.
Starting point is 02:48:21 He goes over and he asks one of the Red Cross, or one of the firefighters, what was going on. I I guess I don't know if he got an answer or not he came back over with his hand over the radio and what sounded like a countdown and At the last few seconds he took his hand off and you heard three two one And he was just saying just run for your life just run for your life And then it was like another two, three seconds you heard explosions. Like it's like a distinct sound. It's not like when compression like boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
Starting point is 02:48:55 like floors that were dropping and collapsing. This was like, you felt a rumble in the ground, like almost like you wanted to grab onto something. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Then do you remember Trump on 9-11? By the way, that was specifically WTC 7. Yes, that was WTC 7. But Trump was recorded on 9-11 talking about towers 1 and 2. The World Trade Center was always known as a very, very strong building. Don't forget, that took a big bomb in the basement. Now the is the most vulnerable can you even hear that is it inaudible yeah no it's no I can hear it's your foundation and it withstood
Starting point is 02:49:31 that and I got to see that area about three or four days after it took place because one of my structural engineers actually took me for a tour because he did the building and I said I can't believe it the building was standing solid and half of the columns were blown out. I mean, so this was an unbelievably powerful building. If you know anything about structure, it was one of the first buildings that was built from the outside.
Starting point is 02:49:54 The steel, the reason the World Trade Center had such narrow windows is that in between all the windows, you had the steel on the outside. So you had the steel on the outside of the building. That's why when I first looked, and you had big, heavy I-beams, when I first looked at it I couldn't believe it because there was a hole in the steel. And this is steel that was, you remember the width of the windows of the World Trade
Starting point is 02:50:15 Center folks, I think you, you know, if you remember up there they were quite narrow and in between was this heavy steel. I said how could a plane, even a plane, even a 767 or 747 or whatever it might have been, how could it possibly go through the steel? I happen to think that they had not only a plane, but they had bombs that exploded almost simultaneously, because I just can't imagine anything being able to go through that wall. Most buildings are built with the steelers on the inside around the elevator shaft. This one was built from the outside, which is the strongest structure you can have. And it was almost just like a, like a can of soup. And for those Zoomers who are, that clip I forgot about.
Starting point is 02:50:55 For the Zoomers out there who are investigating this maybe for the first time, the whole thing was a giant scam. There's a lot of different things to look at. The main thing is the Patriot Act, which was signed into law, I think two weeks after 9-11, which is what you're living with today. It's still in play, yes. The entire security state that is spying on you is because of this event. And we have to give props to two people. On July 25th, 2001, so well before September 11th, Alex Jones went on the air from Austin,
Starting point is 02:51:34 Texas, and had this report. Tyranny is enveloping the globe, and the United States is a shining jewel the globalists want to bring down. And they will use terrorism as the pretext to get it done. We know the government's planning terrorism. We know Oklahoma City and World Trade Center was terrorism. We know the Joint Chiefs of Staff wanted to blow up airliners. If you do it, we're going to blame you because we know who's up to it.
Starting point is 02:51:54 Or if you let some terrorist group do it, like the World Trade Center, we know who to blame. If any terrorism comes, it's from this government. And if there was an outside threat like a Bin Laden who was a known CIA asset in 80s, running the Mujahideen war and whose family builds all the military bases over in Saudi Arabia right now, as this is the board of Iridium satellite, he's the boogeyman they need. And this Orwellian phony system. But we also have to give props in this case to Bill Cooper, who on his radio show a month earlier June 28th who was very inconveniently shot to death by an undercover cop in November he went on
Starting point is 02:52:32 his radio show and reported about CNN finding bin Laden well before 9-11 but kind of just in time. Can you believe what you have been seeing on CNN today ladies and kind of just in time. went into Osama Bin Laden's hideout, interviewed him and his top leadership, his top lieutenants, internals, and generals in their hideout. This is a CNN reporter with a camera crew. And he came out and told everybody, within three weeks Osama Bin Laden is gonna attack
Starting point is 02:53:22 the United States and Israel. Now don't you think that's kind of strange, folks? You see, because the largest intelligence apparatus in the world, with the biggest budget in the history of the world, has been looking for Osama Bin Laden for years and years and years, and can't find him. You see the CIA created Osama bin Laden. They recruited him, they trained him, they found his leadership, they brought them all together, they showed him them how to fight the Soviet Union in Afghanistan and when that was over they still
Starting point is 02:54:04 continued to fund him and train him and they're now using him to help bring about world government by making him the big boogeyman because they can't use Saddam Hussein anymore because they needed a new boogeyman. And whatever is going to happen that they're going to blame on Osama Bin Laden, don't you even believe it. Yeah. The early podcasters. Yes. Yes. The early podcasters. So your government is no good people and Kamala Harris and all those people who you think maybe is all, she's so funny with the coconut tree. She's no good. She's part of that system. coconut tree. She's no good. She's part of that system. And I can't leave 9-11 alone without at least playing part of this clip.
Starting point is 02:54:50 After the September attacks, there were countless rumors about strange coincidences surrounding the events. One report about a group of Middle Eastern men spotted the morning of September 11th parked just across the river from New York City has not gone away. Investigation of their presence has led to questions about whether Israel was conducting espionage on U.S. soil. We're joined now by ABC's John Miller with an exclusive report this evening. That's right, Elizabeth. This is a case that took the FBI and the CIA more than two months to sort out while five
Starting point is 02:55:22 Israelis waited in jail. The dancing Israelis! It began when this woman was watching the twin towers burning from her apartment in New Jersey. She noticed three men on top of a van posing for pictures with the towers burning in the background. And I could see that they were like happy, you know, they didn't look shocked to me, you know, they didn't look shocked.
Starting point is 02:55:43 I thought it was very strange. Do you remember the dancing Israelis? Oh yeah. Yeah. Well, they were first dancing Arabs. Yeah, but then they became Israelis. They morphed into dancing Israelis. Mossad.
Starting point is 02:55:56 By the way, Mudder, we're not endorsing Trump. We're just telling... Yes, we have gone completely agenda on no agenda. You cannot have these horrible people of the Democrat Party, the new Democrat Party, running our country anymore. That's right. I'm going to say it. It's not an endorsement of Trump.
Starting point is 02:56:16 What is the opposite of endorsement? I don't know what a good opposite word would be. It's a denouncement of Kamala Harris and the entire system that is running our country, which is not President Joe Biden. Hey, I'm 60, you know, it's like I got to if I'm lucky. Oh, now you're going to start pulling the age cards. Yes, that's right. I'm doing a JCD here.
Starting point is 02:56:42 I don't have to watch the Video Music Awards anymore. I know what it is. This is an interesting point. The Video Music Awards is Satanists. Yes. You've been watching them religiously, kind of biting your lip pissed off that you were never invited back. Oh yeah. Remember, I left them. Everyone knows this is true. And now that you've turned 60, you've decided to just eschew the whole thing. I find that fascinating.
Starting point is 02:57:12 Screw them. I'm going to show my soul by donating to Noah's Church. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh yeah, that'd be fab. Yeah, on Noah's Gender. In the morning. It's the Voldemort Music Awards, the VMAs. This is no good, people. Stop watching that.
Starting point is 02:57:32 It's bad for your health. We're going to thank the rest of the people who supported us for episode 1694, $50 and above. John, take us through them. Yes, I will. Starting with Mr. Planner Perfect and Platsmouth, Plats, I'm sure it's pronounced Platsmith.
Starting point is 02:57:49 Platsmith. Yeah, probably. Nebraska 17902. And he says to us, thanks for waking people up. Please call out my sub son, Gabe for being a douchebag. And he also mentions the
Starting point is 02:58:04 turning frogs Gay concept. Well, we played that. It's funny this came up today and it's been repeated over and over. Interesting, isn't it? Leslie Schierenbeck, I believe, in Ashbury, Assbury Park, New Jersey, 150. And it's her husband's birthday. Oh. And he loves you guys. What about you? Yeah, please give him a shot. You got he's on the birthday list. Yeah, Lauren's the
Starting point is 02:58:34 Lawrence the Coister Coister let me see in Belgium at 150 he needs a he needs a D douche You've been D dou. We need more Belgium listeners. Laurens de Koester, I think. Laurens. QQ in Key West, Florida. Ah, QQ. He's a true spook, QQ. He's a real one. Is he?
Starting point is 02:59:00 That makes sense with a name like QQ. He knows what he's doing. It's good to have him on our team. That's a good thing. He's what he's doing. It's good to have him on our team. That's a good thing. He's got 59 for you. 59 for me. Uh, 17 for some, for the 17th anniversary. Okay. Ahmed Ahmed, Ahmed Mian in, I'm sorry, Greg Hoy.
Starting point is 02:59:19 Let's start with him. Greg Hoy. He's Hoy Hoy. He's in Pacifica 133, 33. Ahmed Mian in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, and he needs some jobs karma. Put that at the end for you, came in with 100. Travis Moore in Gibsonville, North Carolina, 100. He needs goat karma for a Buffalo Bills win over Miami. Go Bills. He had good, Well, I'd be actually good.
Starting point is 02:59:45 Good one. Adriana Marshall or Adriana in Shrewsbury UK a hundred. Kevin McLaughlin finally comes in again. Never misses a beat. He has yet to miss a show for up to five years. 8 008. Nice. The Archduke of Luna. He's the lover of American boobs. Kelly Chorky in
Starting point is 03:00:07 Plymouth, Michigan, 7903. Ryan Tierney in Steven City, Virginia, 6767 with a happy birthday to not Jake. Luke Suderman in Calgary, another Calgarian, 60. Been listening to a long time, never donated, give him a deduction. You've been deduced. We have no thoughts on author Nick Bryant. No, none. Sabrina Graham in Moxie, Washington, that's a great Moxie. 5402. Michael Raguse. Raguse, Ragusa, maybe.
Starting point is 03:00:47 And Tustin. 5277. William Wild in Baltimore, Maryland. 5272. David Ingram in Vara Junction, Victoria, Australia. Used to be an artist named Dustin, who is just an unbelievable portraitist, and she's kind of hung up on Marilyn Monroe pictures and I met her some years ago.
Starting point is 03:01:09 And I said, you know, I got to get a hold of you. And she says, just remember that I'm Dustin from Tustin. And that was the last I heard of her. I could never find her sense. If anybody knows Dustin from Tustin, let me know. John wants to go on a date. No, I don't want to go on a date. I want to get some art.
Starting point is 03:01:27 Arno in Amstelveen. Yeah, my and close to my old hometown. Yeah, 51 bucks. What's some health karma for Sir Andre? Andre, Andre. Put that at the end. Sir Fatigue Decoder, which is all coders in Knoxville, Tennessee. 51. Bad idea supply. Now we
Starting point is 03:01:48 usually have their location. I don't remember where it is, but you can look them up on the internet. They make some terrific burning gear. Bad idea supply. Mimi actually has some of their stuff. Williams Spain in Springdale, Arkansas. 50, and these are all 50, just name and locations. Starting with William Spain and Michelle Petty in Grand Forks. Stephen Schumach in Zinnia, Ohio. Tim Del Vecchio in Blandin, Pennsylvania. Mike Moon in Athens, Georgia. John Spade in Edmond, Oklahoma. Andrew Grasso in Mineola, New York, Ross Rebich in Casper, Wyoming, Gary Mao in Woodland Hills, California, and last on our list is Stephen Ng in Box Elder, South Dakota.
Starting point is 03:02:40 I want to thank these people for making the show. 1694, the reality that it is good showing today Thank you all for the sustaining donations These are incredibly important even if you've come in with a 50 or above today Consider signing up for sustaining donation frequency and amount of your choosing go to no agenda donations.com The Karma's as requested jobs jobs jobs and jobs requested. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.
Starting point is 03:03:06 You got it. NoAgendaDonations.com It's a birthday, birthday on NO Agenda And remember we have John's Tip of the Day coming up and some great end of show mixes. But first, Lesley Sheeranbeck, which husband Warren a very happy one he celebrated yesterday Ryan Tierney happy birthday to sir not Jake 13th tomorrow Sir Fatih Coder turns 51 on the 14th Duchess Kim keeper of the nutty fluffers turns 41 on September 22nd
Starting point is 03:03:38 Nathan Rossier turns 33 and finally on our list we say happy birthday to Sir Luca happy birthday from everybody here the best podcast in the universe And we thank once again the former Duke of Central Florida thanks to his massive rubble izer plus $11 donation and he now becomes the Archduke of Central Florida that is a very exclusive club the Archdukes by the way John I have the Archduch, Archduch, Archduke and Archduchess of Japan and the surrounding seas coming to visit us in October here in the hill country Good that sounds like fun. Yeah. Yeah, they're gonna come hang out. They're gonna stay in Airbnb We're gonna have some meals together and very excited to have them out of here staying in Austin No, they know that they're one night in Austin and then they're coming out to to Fredericksburg
Starting point is 03:04:39 They want to they said they're sick of cities and they want to come out and hang out in the hill country Well, we'll wine and dine them Literally, we'll take them to a winery. We'll take them to a restaurant. You can do a bunch of wineries. You can take a trip to a wine country. We can do a whole wine tour. The thing that's interesting also is there's more distilleries, it seems to me, in the wine country than there is wineries. No, there's more wineries, but there are certainly a number of distilleries. But the winery, well, if you want to call it is wineries. No, there's more wineries but there are certainly a number of
Starting point is 03:05:05 distilleries. But the winery, well if you want to call it a winery. I mean when you see the AJ Foit winery you know that we've kind of hit peak winery. They literally have one of AJ Foit's cars, like his helmet, and they sell some Napa wine there. Anyway, Douglas Ellis is standing by. I need a blade for him because he's about to become a night surfer. There you go, Douglas. That's a good one for you. Come on up here, sir.
Starting point is 03:05:32 Well, not yet, Douglas Ellis, because you are about to become a Sir Night of the No. Right Jenner Roundtable. Thanks to your support of the best podcast of the universe, the amount of $1,000 or more. Even people who do it on layaway donations, they make it. So I'm hereby very proud to pronounce the KD as Sir Douglas of the Bahamas.
Starting point is 03:05:50 For you, sir, we have hookers and blow, rent boys and Chardonnay, private pirate republic beer, along with that some beer and some blunts and some nuts if you want, Rubiness, Rubina Rose, Geisha Nsake, Vodka, Manila, Bonghets and Bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and jarbils we've got breast milk and pablum But of course at the top of the list here for you. We've got some mutton and mead chomp away
Starting point is 03:06:12 And while you're munching on it go to no agenda rings comm check out those beautiful rings. It's for nights and for dames It's a signet ring so you can seal your important correspondence with it. Thank you. I went to the PO box I have to mention that on Sunday got a couple of nice things in the P.O. Box and I love it when I get one of those envelopes that are sealed with a night ring. And of course it comes with wax to help you with that and the certificate of authenticity. And welcome again to the round table, Sir Douglas of the day and our end of show mixes, we have a couple of meetups to tell you about. Two reports, one from Keen, New Hampshire.
Starting point is 03:06:55 Hello Adam and John. This is the Keen meetup, the TooManyEggs.com meetup. And we tried to figure out who the Fed is. There's much controversy. It's definitely not me. Adam and John, this is Sir Lone and a Beef enjoying this meetup. I'll pass it to my wife who will not speak.
Starting point is 03:07:16 I may be the spook. Shut up. Slave. And now we go to Denver. This is the Nate is the Spook edition of their meetup. Denver, Colorado, Lincoln's Roadhouse NFL kickoff meetup. This is Colin. No sign of the Venezuelan gangs here tonight, which is always good, but the night is young. Hey, this is Nate. First time meetup. Haven't spotted the Spook yet.
Starting point is 03:07:44 Spoiler alert, he's the spook. Sir Susair here getting ready to get my ass out of Denver because oh my god. And Josh Decemption in the morning just checking in from Northern Aurora. I hate to call out the new guy, but Nate is totally the spook. Cousin Vito, out. Alright, Cousin Vito, thank you very much. Thank you for that report, guys. This is fun.
Starting point is 03:08:08 These meetups are fun. You can tell people are laughing, having a good time, watching some football, talking about Venezuelan gangs in their hoods. And you can join the North Carolina Triad meetup on Saturday at the Little Brothers Brewing, formerly Kernersville Brewing. Oh, they changed the name. But it still is in Kernersville, North Carolina. That's at two o'clock.
Starting point is 03:08:28 Fear is Freedom meetup for 40s and Fowl, also at two o'clock, but that is in Chattanooga, Tennessee, at Champies in Eastridge. The Sonoma-Wino Country meetup. This is the fifth edition, 2.33 p.m. Old Casbeer in Roanard Park, California. The Treasure Valley Boise meetup, 3 o'clock at the Heritage Social Club in Garden City, Idaho. A lot happened on this Saturday. The Fort Wayne two-year anniversary club, 33 meetup, 3.33 p.m. Eastern.
Starting point is 03:08:57 Casa Grill and Bar, Fort Wayne, Indiana. And then on Sunday, our next show day, the seafood and sangria. Now this is going to be at Harry's Seafood Bar and Grill, but you have to RSVP. It starts at two o'clock in St. Augustine, Florida. Many more meetups coming up all the way through December, even into the new year. You need to attend one of these if you want the connection that always brings you protection that is part of being a member and an upstanding citizen and human resource of Gitmo Nation. Go to noagenda meetups.com. If you can't find one near you, start one yourself.
Starting point is 03:09:29 Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days. You want to be where you won't be, triggered or held to blame. You want to be where everybody feels the same. It's like a party. So before we get to John's tip of the day, we like to look at the end of show ISOs, which is always a fun way to end the show because we don't really edit the show, we just do it on the fly. And I have three.
Starting point is 03:10:05 You have one, I see? Yep. Okay, shall I play yours first? No, play yours. Okay. It's all AI. Okay. That's not bad.
Starting point is 03:10:15 Yeah. No one understands this material better than you. It's too long. Too deep. Yeah, well, it's James Earl Jones who passed away, so. Yeah, I understand. He's now dead. Yes.
Starting point is 03:10:27 I find your lack of faith disturbing. No, no good. The first one was okay. Let me hear it again. Mine goes off a different track. Oh, okay. Here we go. Lies, lies, lies, lies.
Starting point is 03:10:39 It's an edited one. Yeah, of course it is. It's all AI. What do you think? It's an edited one! Yeah, of course it is. It's all AI. What do you think? I think all AI, like, actually, that, yeah, let's go with all AI. All AI it is. Now it is time, ladies and gentlemen, for the famous tip of the day from John!
Starting point is 03:11:00 Greetings for you and me, just the tip with sometimes polarizing and very controversial. Whoa. I don't know how they can be polarizing. Well, we got a lot. I got a lot of feedback about your bungee dog leash. Whoo. Like what? Oh, I got people texting me.
Starting point is 03:11:24 No, it's no good. Never use a bungee leash. I know. Well, you should talk to Mimi about this. She owns a kennel. Yes, I know. So has standing in this field. Well, so do some of the people who emailed me.
Starting point is 03:11:39 Unless they own a kennel, I'm not listening to them. It's okay. Hey, it's okay. It's okay. And I got a note from Jay telling me why the extender roller leash is no good. She wrote a whole article about it. You can lose a finger. Yeah. Yeah. She wrote a whole article about it. Yeah. Oh, so it's not bad for the dog. It's bad for me, for my finger. Yeah, it's not good for the dog either. Okay. But sometimes it's just controversial,
Starting point is 03:12:09 doesn't mean they're bad. Well, this is a simple one. This is kind of not a rerun of the old ones, but because it's brand new, it seems as if Costco, and I'm going there right after the show to see if they have it here locally, but it'll be everywhere eventually.
Starting point is 03:12:23 The new four pack of cheap Bordeaux is now in. It's in a little wooden box and it's the 2022 edition. And there'll be four wines in there. A couple of Bordeaux Superiors and a couple of Premier Cote de Bordeaux wines, including a Cadillac, which is an area in Entre du Mer that makes a terrific wine. For some reason, this little area makes a great wine.
Starting point is 03:12:50 And the four bottles of wine in the states that don't add excise tax to their alcohols, which is most states, is $29.95 or 99 cents, which is $7.50 a bottle for better wine than anything California produces. Okay. Now, how can we identify this packaging? Because this is... It's in a small box. It's like a wooden box showing four bottles. It's done in a mini crate.
Starting point is 03:13:22 You can't not identify it because they only do these little crates, this little like a little crate of four bottles at Costco and there's not like a bunch of competing ones. There's usually only one. Wow. This is a big tip people. This is what we always waive. This is really the premier tip you've always given us is the good cheap wines at Costco. This is a very, very, very big deal. Yeah. these are very you know when they first started doing this about I think maybe ten years ago
Starting point is 03:13:49 and they did every vintage and they did different kinds they did gold medal winners and most of these ones are 90 points or above and which is accurate. I didn't think much about the idea until I started trying these wines and then holy mackerel this is a steal and is there a limit per customer no just load up yes everybody that is your tip of the day and it was a big one excellent tip John thank you very much we've got end of show mixes some good ones we have David Kekta he He comes in every single... Thank you, darling. He comes in every single day. Every single show day.
Starting point is 03:14:30 Oistin Berger with his, what I presume is his accordion. And Tom Starkweather, the melodious owl himself, checking in with end of show mix. And coming right up after this show ends, it'll be a seamless transition on NoAgendaStream.com for those
Starting point is 03:14:45 in the troll room. The 100th and final episode of MoFacts with Adam Curry, which we dropped yesterday and it's a doozy. It's a doozy. It's a doozy. It's the hard R is the title of it. You will not want to miss it. Listen to all 100, they're evergreen. And I am coming to you from the lovely heart of the Texas Hill Country, Fredericksburg as it's known. It's in FEMA region number six. In the morning, y'all, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where the elections are rigged and we all know it, I'm
Starting point is 03:15:22 John C. Dvorak. We return on Sunday with more media deconstruction just for you because we love it and we're not tired of the cycle. Until then remember us at NoAgendaDonations.com adios, mo, foes, a hooey, hooey and such. Tonight the high stakes showdown here in Philadelphia between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. I was so proud that she was presidential. She showed her new way forward, new and forward, her plan to take us forward, command of the issues, eloquence in talking about them, again strategic in her thinking. I thought she was just spectacular,
Starting point is 03:16:05 but her excellence did get under the skin. And it was so strange because one of the things I was so proud about, that couple of the vice president last night, was that she prioritized in her answers, any one of them could be a program discussion, but she prioritized the importance, whether it was a woman's right to choose,
Starting point is 03:16:27 whether it's our national security, whether it's issues that relate to our economy and the rest, she prioritized. And that means there's so much more to come as we go from here. So I thought she looked presidential, I thought he looked silly. When a fighter loses, he says, I want a rematch. I want a rematch.
Starting point is 03:16:48 The losing person, the fighter, the debater, they always ask for a rematch. Who's president right now? I don't even know if Joe Biden knows he's alive. Finally, election John is near On the air for at least four more years Clear That the media is mostly insincere Finally, election season is here. Will it be triple camelot this year? There is no state in this country where it is legal to kill a baby after it's born. Execute the baby. Well, I think this is so rich. People can't go out and buy cereal or bacon or eggs or anything else. And understand.
Starting point is 03:18:36 They're eating the pets. This comes at a time. Run spot run. Where the people of our country actually need a leader. I have been a leader on fertilization. He exchanged love letters with Kim Jong Un. The whole place is going to get blown up. You talk about extreme.
Starting point is 03:18:57 When somebody does a bad job, I fire them. Donald Trump was fired by 81 million people. Because of the things that they say about me. Strength is not in beating people down, it's in lifting people up. Now she wants to do transgender operations on illegal aliens that are in prison. Coming from someone who has been prosecuted.
Starting point is 03:19:15 I probably took a bullet to the head and it bounced back and it went to their benefit. And an attempt to take us backward. People don't leave my rallies. The best podcast in the universe. Mopo. Dvorak.org slash NA. It's all AI.

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