No Agenda - 1767 - "Best Clips of The Day"
Episode Date: May 24, 2025No Agenda Episode 1767 - "Best Clips of The Day" "Best Clips of The Day" Executive Producers: Gus Raya Adam Curry John C Dvorak Become a member of the 1768 Club, support the show here Boost us... with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Art By: Nessworks 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) 1767.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 05/24/2025 12:35:14This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 05/24/2025 12:35:14 by Freedom Controller
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak.
It's Sunday, May 25th, 2025.
This is your award-winning Give-Our-Nation media assassination episode 1767.
This is No Agenda.
Nothing but the best of the best and broadcasting kind of live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country,
FEMA Region Number 6.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, we want to wish everybody a happy Memorial Day
I'm John C Devorak
A rare rare moment where we celebrate a holiday
Yeah, I don't think that has that no, I don't think that has ever had we ever celebrated
I mean not that we're celebrating. Yes, Thanksgiving 2017.
Oh, you know exactly what it was, don't you?
Really?
We took off Thanksgiving that year?
Yeah, that's when I was in England.
Oh, so we had an...
Oh, that's right.
And you haven't left the house since, I don't think.
I have been here, boarded up.
That's the last time.
Well, I am technically, although you hear the sound of my voice, I'm in Nashville right
now visiting for the weekend, which was long planned.
And we are very fortunate that we have some of the best producers in the universe, including
Gus Raya.
In fact, I'll just read his note.
He says, Hey, I heard your call for a best of show. This is like a year ago.
A year ago, I started working on a clip of the day compilation. It kind of worked out.
Great idea, by the way.
This is a full show and it's only clip of the days from 2023 and the first half of 2024.
And I didn't know we did that many clips of the day back then.
Did you?
I think we did more clips of the day before in the, like in the year, two
years, just earlier.
I mean, it's incredible how many clips, of course, they're all my clips.
We only do one.
From my experiences that we do,
we've sometimes done two a day, two a show,
but generally speaking, it's about every third show.
So probably since we do, what, a hundred shows or so,
we probably do 30, 30 a year.
But sometimes maybe 35.
Well, of course, the great thing about a show
with the best of the, well, the clip
of the day compilation is because they're the best clips. That's the beauty of it. Nothing
will suck. Most of the clips of the day are dynamite clips.
Which one? I don't think we've ever given each, I mean, borderliners, but even the borderliners
are good. So it's- Yes, the borderliners are good too.
You just, you can't lose with this combination. So it's yes, the borderline errs are good too. You just you can't lose with this combination.
So no, this is the best, most spectacular of all the compilation shows.
It is. It is. And we're going to be enjoying it during this Memorial Day
weekend. We hope you enjoy it as well. We come back about halfway through.
Thanks again to our executive producer, Gus Raya.
And let's go with the no Agenda compilation best of clip of
the day. I have this very short ditty from Jane Fonda who doesn't know her who
has not loved her in the past although you know Hanoi Jane was not very popular
but you know we all saw Barbarella and at least I did. I've always wanted to
really like Jane Fonda.
It's becoming increasingly difficult.
You can take anything, sexism, racism, misogyny, homophobia, whatever, the war,
and if you really get into it and study it and learn about it and the history of it and everything's connected,
there'd be no climate crisis if it wasn't for racism.
Come on.
Wow.
Okay.
No.
You know.
No, no.
Really?
Oh, come on, man.
Yeah, you might as well take it.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
Woo!
Yeah.
You knew it was a good clip.
Only when I heard it just now did I know it was worthy.
But I would have accepted a borderline.
Honestly, I would have taken a borderline from you.
It was too funny.
Because it's so...
I think what I'm trying to...
Now you have to think, just take a moment and deconstruct what Clip of the Day amounts to.
Okay.
For one thing, it's always a surprise
to the other person who's anointing the clip of the day,
either you or me.
Yes, an anointing.
And it's always idiotic and stupid at some level
that's incomprehensible.
Yeah, it's true.
I really don't, I mean, she also said war,
I mean, the war, everything, everything is racism. I really don't. I mean, she also said war. I mean, the war. Everything,
everything is racism. Everything is racism. But back when MSNBC started, I think this was 2005,
RFK Jr. came out with this whole thing talking and he was connecting autism to the vaccine,
to thimerosal.
And here's, I got to play, this was on No Agenda Social.
I love that someone dug this clip up.
This is Chuck Scarborough, who I'm sure is calling RFK Jr. a nut job anti-vaxxer today.
In fact, I could probably just drop a needle in any YouTube clip and find him saying that.
Back then, no, oh, it's Bobby.
How you doing?
The kids are dying.
What's going on?
It's as heart wrenching as it gets.
Autism and children, six out of every thousand kids get it and nobody knows exactly why.
But my next guest says he's got part of the blame that he thinks needs to fall on government
and it has to do with a drug called Fomirisol.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a senior attorney for the...
What?
He called it a drug.
Oh yeah.
It's so incredible what you had, the difference between then and now.
...National Resources, defense counsel, and he's the author of Deadly Immunity in the
current issue of Rolling Stone.
It's an investigation of the possible connection between thimerosal and autism in young kids.
Hey Bobby, thanks a lot.
And of course, you also have a great new book.
Tell us briefly about that.
Bobby Fertig, Ph.D.
First of all, let me say that the Deadly Immunity piece on thimerosal is also running on salon.com
simultaneously.
The two magazines…
By the way, this piece ran on salon, Rolling Stone, et cetera.
They pulled it.
They pulled it within a day from all of those publications.
You cannot find, you can't even find it on archive.org.
It's so bad they pulled this.
There are a lot of people out there.
When I was practicing law and fact, I need to say this, we actually practice in the same
law firm, no lawsuits regarding-
Who even knew that? Chuck Scarborough and RFK Jr. in the same law firm, no lawsuits regarding... Who even knew that?
Chuck Scarborough and R.F.K. Jr. in the same law firm.
This is an incredible piece of history.
The Mirasol, so we can get that off the record.
But still, there are a lot of people, a lot of Americans, very concerned about the impact of this drug,
which is found in vaccines and how it causes autism.
It's mercury. It's not a drug. It's mercury.
Wait, it's a preservative that contains mercury. Correct.
In vaccines and how it causes autism.
Talk about that.
It's a,
thimerosal is a preservative that was put in vaccines back in the 1930s.
Almost immediately after it was put in, autism cases began to appear.
Autism had never been known before.
It was unknown to science.
Then the vaccines were increased in 1989 by the CDC
and by a couple of other government agencies.
Okay, let me stop you there.
That's an important date and I'll tell you why.
My son, born in 1991,
has a slight form of autism called Asperger's but it seems and again when I was faxing law
And also when I was in Congress parents would constantly come to me and they bring me
Videotapes of their children and they were all around the age of my son or younger
The generation happened in 1989 exactly the generation what happened was the vaccine schedule was increased.
We went up from receiving about 10 vaccines in our generation to these kids receive 24 vaccines.
And they all had this dimerisone and this mercury.
And nobody bothered to do an analysis of what the cumulative impact of all that mercury was doing to kids.
As it turns out, we are injecting our children with 400
times the amount of mercury that FDA or EPA considers safe. A child on his first day that
he's born is injected with a hepatitis B shot. Under EPA guidelines, he would have to be
275 pounds to safely absorb that shot.
And yet we're just constantly pumping our kids with these vaccines.
Right, and what happened was that in 1988,
one in every 2,500 American children had autism.
Today, one in every 166 children have autism.
And plus one in six children have other kinds
of learning disorders, other kinds of neurological
disorders, speech delay of neurological disorders,
speech delay, language disorders, ADD, hyperactivity that all seem to be connected,
that are all connected. Yeah. So that goes on and on and on. It's like a 10 minute piece is
unbelievable, particularly for Chuck Scarborough's own kid was injured by these things. But oh no,
now Bobby, oh, he's an anti-vaxxer. He's a crazy man. He's nuts. He's Looney Tunes.
Looney Tunes.
Looney Tunes.
That's how powerful Big Pharma is.
And part of that piece that got-
By the way, we should give you a borderline clip on that
even though it's-
It's from the troll road.
The No Agenda Social.
It's a collage.
Yeah, now that's for the producer who posted it
in No Agenda Social.
That was a very good find.
He posted it on Twitter and he got put in Twitter jail for a little bit for posting
that.
For posting that clip.
That clip, yeah.
All they did, that's just a clip that exists in real, that's a real clip.
Real clip, yeah.
Yeah, we can't have that.
Can you get put in Twitter jail because you posted a real clip?
According to our producer, yes.
And so that article contained a transcript of a hidden recording of the Samson Wood Conference
where a whole bunch of doctors and pharmaceutical executives and doctors and researchers along
with HMOs, they all got together and they all said,
yeah crap, this stuff is crossing the blood brain barrier and it's causing autism. It's in the
transcript. You can read it. And so I was able to get that. I put that in the show notes.
So this is not like, it's not an unknown thing, but over time,
Big Pharma just took over, just advertise you to death with it.
Big Pharma just took over, just advertise you to death with it. One step closer to China, one step away from Europe.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Chinese Premier Li Qiong on Tuesday agreed to support free trade after intergovernmental talks in Berlin.
Scholz has come under fire for the talks which critics say are not appropriate anymore given growing
geopolitical tensions between the West and China.
A German intelligence agency published a warning in a report on Tuesday.
The report says China is aiming to obtain German technology to bolster its military.
It also highlights the risk of cyber-spying operations.
Despite that, the German Chancellor defended his position on the two countries' relationship.
Author and historian Philippe Fabry says Germany's tough spot comes from the country's economic choices.
A large part of China's industrialization has been achieved through the purchase of German machine tools,
which is the biggest export sector for the German economy.
So naturally, exporting those is vital for Germany.
This conditions Germany's relationship with China and puts it at odds with the interests
of many other Western countries, notably the United States.
The German Chancellor's position doesn't come as a surprise, though.
When visiting China in November 2022, Schultz promoted partnership with the country.
And in May, he confirmed a deal to allow a Chinese shipping company to take a minority stake in a
container terminal at Hamburg port. Fabrice says these moves from Germany make it more and more
isolated from other EU countries. Since the start of the war in Ukraine, there has been a loss of German influence in Europe.
That's because of a whole host of German strategies, and in particular, Germany's dependence on
Russian gas, which has brought some form of discredit.
Okay, I love this.
Good clip.
Here's what I think is happening.
I know you have a second one.
So I'll just give you my unsolicited feedback. Germany got screwed.
They've been screwed over by being hypnotized into believing it was a good idea to get rid of their
nuclear, get rid of all of their… I mean, they were the powerhouse of Europe. When they say,
if Germany sneezes, the rest of Europe gets the flu.
And that's no longer the case.
So they got completely psyoped and getting rid of all of that.
They have no industry.
Then we blew up the pipeline so they have no gas.
They have nothing to do.
And now they're gonna become part of the Belt and Road
scenario for China and they will become the adversary
in Europe.
How does that sound?
I'm right on.
Right on, man.
Right on.
Nailed it.
Right on.
F***ing groovy, baby.
Here's part two.
Case in point.
On the same day as Germany's announcement, the EU published an economic security plan.
It seeks to convince the bloc's
27 states to agree stronger control on exports. It's particularly focused on technologies
that could be put to military use by rivals like China.
I think we're seeing a power struggle as the EU pledges to harden its relationship with
China, which is also hoped for by the US camp,
who are determined to have the Europeans on their side
in the strategic confrontation against China.
Wow!
That's... You know what?
Even though it's late in the day,
I think that deserves it.
Out of left field!
Yep.
Totally big deal. Beltton Road with China and they're going to have the shipping come right up onto the,
oh man.
Wow.
That's a crack in the EU dam right there.
No, but they won't know what to do.
They won't know what to do. They won't know what to do.
I wonder if they even see it, stupid morons.
Well let's just listen to the first clip and then I'll explain who this guy is.
This is Ukraine analysis Shahid 1.
Let me talk for a moment about Poland in relation to the US proxy war against Europe, popularly
known as the Ukraine war.
As I've stated since the outbreak of the war, in my opinion, the Ukraine
war is a US proxy war not against Russia, but against Europe. It is the launch pad for
a continent wide destabilization project that will create conflict zone conditions across
Europe. It will divide the EU against itself. It will de-industrialize the continent
and turn it into another laboratory
for the imposition of severe neoliberal austerity policies
that will wipe out all except the largest
private sector players and basically refutilize Europe.
Now Poland appears to have been selected
by the United States to act as their hub
of operations for implementing this program. But before I get into that, let's
go back to one of the earliest examples of this type of project, the Dirty Wars
in Central and South America in the 1980s. When I was growing up, I was always
interested in the news and current affairs and world events and so on. And the evening news every night was dominated by stories of savagery in
places like Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Argentina, civil wars,
death squads, abductions, torture, and all forms of brutality proliferated
the entire region.
Now, all of this was orchestrated out of the American embassy in Honduras under
the management of then US ambassador John Negroponte, whom locals referred to as Mr.
Death Squad. Honduras had the largest US embassy. They had the biggest CIA station and the country
became the staging ground for a regional destabilization project that continued throughout the 1980s.
Wow. Okay. All right. Hold on. Hold on. I'm just going to give it to you upfront because
I know what's going to happen here. I can just give it to you right up front. This is
dynamite. This of course is so obvious now. This is a complete destabilization of Europe
and we're going to squash them like a bug,
like a bug under a bomb.
Well, FDEU, as our friend Newland said.
Oh, goodness.
If we go back to that and we listen to this clip
and we listen to FDEU,
we start to understand what might actually be going on.
FDEU.
So it goes on and on. Ann Arbor, there's a bunch of connections. This is a very interesting article.
If anyone can find it, it's in the weekly blitz.net, a background around this guy.
And the guy is extremely suspicious and he's, he's really good at analysis.
So let's go to part two of his clip.
When John Negroponte was appointed the U S ambassador to Iraq shortly after the
invasion and occupation,
I fully anticipated that he would pursue the same sort of destabilization project
throughout the Middle East. Now,
Negroponte had a protege named Robert Steven Ford,
who was appointed the U S ambassador to Syria at that time. And he immediately began trying to foment rebellion and opposition and resistance and
recruiting militia groups until he was eventually kicked out of the country.
Now, I think we're all aware of what happened a few short years later in the Arab world
with the Arab Spring.
And we're all aware also, I think, of the role played by CIA backed organizations in that disruptive movement.
And I think we're also all aware of the role played by the CIA in backing armed groups
in the civil war in Syria.
In fact during the Arab Spring the United States tried to appoint Robert Stephen Ford
after he'd been kicked out of Syria.
They tried to appoint him as the US ambassador to Egypt but fortunately his reputation and
the reputation of John Negroponte preceded them and popular opposition to
that appointment forced the US to scrap the idea. So the point here is that there
is a pattern and once you are familiar with the pattern you can recognize it
and you can sort of abstractly predict the way it's going to play out, if not specifically.
Well, in the current scenario, in my opinion, Poland is Honduras.
Near the beginning of the war in Ukraine, I noticed the role being played by Poland
as a destination for refugees and as a source for mercenaries to go and fight in Ukraine.
So I decided to check, who is the U. the US ambassador to Poland right now. Well, the US ambassador to Poland right now is not Robert Stephen Ford and it's not John
Negroponte or any of their known proteges.
The current US ambassador to Poland is the son of one of the most notorious policy advisors
in recent US history, Zbigniew Brzezinski.
And I'm not going to make any effort to say his name correctly. Brzezinski, who was Polish, was the architect of US support for the Mujahideen in Afghanistan
against the Soviet Union and he was a staunch and paranoid anti-Russian zealot.
Wait a minute. It is, it's Mark Brzezinski. Oh man, how did we miss, did we miss this?
Did we know this?
I think we may have noticed it some time back.
What?
Well since we're talking about bunk.
Bunk.
You got some.
We might as well do the hit job that on the media did
to pour Bobby the K.
Okay, yeah let's do the Bobby the K hit job.
Alrighty.
Now everything about this is slanted
and it's assumed, and I have to assume
that they're sincere, they think Bobby the K,
Robert Kennedy Jr. is nuts.
He's a conspiracy theory.
Adrena Chrome.
He uses techniques to fool you.
He's a liar.
So let's go.
And even his family hates him.
Oh yeah, and we can't forget that his family hates him because he's so off the rails.
And by the way, the conclusion is, I'll get, I'll summarize that, it's only for his legacy
he's doing this so people remember he existed.
He's such a loser.
That's like a Trump thing. He's doing that just for his own ego. Is that what they're saying?
Yeah.
Oh, nice.
Here we go. On the media.
On the media, yeah.
He also has an incredibly combative and often litigious relationship with both mainstream
media and sort of mainstream systems of government. He wants to persuade people who think they're Democrats
that they're not Democrats and people who think
they're Republicans that they're not Republicans
is how he put it to Dr. Drew.
So he's presenting himself as kind of a nonpartisan
every man who is equally dissatisfied with both sides.
So let's talk about how journalists and media outlets
are handling this candidacy.
You wrote that ABC and CNN demonstrated how not to cover RFK Jr.
Yeah.
What did they do wrong?
So this was a very kind of early...
Oh, well, let me just say...
Oh, I know this song.
Oh my God.
We should just rename him Bobby the Q. I don't know why we even talk about this man,
Adrena Croft.
R.F.K. Jr.
Yeah.
What did they do wrong?
So this was a very kind of early example
of media platforms just not really being ready
to cover Kennedy's candidacy.
So what ABC did was they sat down
for a fairly conventional candidate interview
with Kennedy,
but during it he did what he does, which is he started spouting COVID and vaccine misinformation.
And so ABC made the decision to just cut that portion from the interview and then tell their
audience that that's what they were doing. It was just like vomit just spouting from his mouth,
from his orifice about vaccine disinformation. We should note that during our conversation, Kennedy made false claims about the COVID-19
vaccines. Data shows that the COVID-19 vaccines prevented millions of hospitalizations and
deaths from the disease. He also made misleading claims about the relationship between vaccination
and autism research.
I think that it was a well-intentioned decision, but what it did was it gave Kennedy an incredibly powerful talking point to say, you see, my
views on COVID and vaccines are so powerful and so threatening to the establishment that
they cannot see the light of day.
This is what happens when you censor somebody for 18 years.
They shouldn't have shut me up that long.
Because now I'm going to really let loose on them for the next 18 months, they're going to hear a lot from me.
Oh, let me guess. Next question.
So, Becky, so what do we do with a candidate like Bobby Deque?
What do we do, Becky?
Yeah, actually, she's got the second example first and then it falls apart.
You're right. That is kind of coming up.
CNN was a little bit more unusual. Essentially what happened is that a CNN political journalist named Michael Smirkonish had Kennedy
on and managed to use the word vaccines exactly once in his introduction and then proceeded
to have a very friendly, jocular interview with Mr. Kennedy about his campaign that managed
to not ask about his anti-vaccine activism
at all.
They spent more time talking about Mr. Smokonish's fandom
of Cheryl Hines, Mr. Kennedy's wife.
I had not convinced her that I can win this race.
I would not be in it because she's the ultimate boss.
Okay, listen, I do love your wife.
I'm team Cheryl.
Having said that. So it was really really striking
Okay, that's what journalists do wrong. How can we do things? What's this with it with wrong? What's that with the G?
Goddard all G wrong. I heard it before this is new. I didn't notice this what that's what journalists do wrong
It was really really striking. So okay, that's what journalists do wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. It was really, really striking. So, okay. That's what journalists do wrong.
Wrong. Yeah.
Wrong. Wrong.
I heard it in the first place.
Yes.
Wrong. Wrong.
What are you doing?
I'm doing it wrong.
I said that.
Wrong.
So it was really, really striking.
So, okay. That's what journalists do wrong.
How can we do things right?
Right. I mean-
Oh, man.
This is NPR. I mean, oh, man, this is this is NPR.
I mean, if this was a podcast, I'd throw it out of the index.
That's so bad.
Said that.
So it was really, really striking.
So okay, that's what journalists do wrong.
How can we do things right?
Right.
I mean, the first of course is we absolutely cannot, arguably, any interview unprepared,
but especially with someone who has spent.
I'm just stopping this right now.
I'm just stopping it right now.
This is so dynamical.
Clip of the day.
This is the truth.
You got two clips of the day.
Oh, I'm on a roll.
I mean, the fact that this is being broadcast
on something called-
Broadcast on NPR, and you're proud of it.
Public radio.
You know what this is?
This is ronk.
It's ronk.
Arguably any interview unprepared,
but especially with someone who has spent
the better portion of the later part of their adult life
promoting and advancing false claims
about one thing specifically
and is very, very, very trained in how to do that.
The second is to be prepared
to push back in real time.
Then the third, I think, is sort of a broader existential question,
which is ask yourself what the purpose of interviewing him is,
like at its base, what you are hoping to convey to readers and listeners,
the sort of unanswered questions, an interview might go towards answering.
Well, let's talk about that fact checking in real time.
It's very hard.
Yes, it is.
Mr. Kennedy does something that is a kind of known rhetorical style that other folks
do too, which is called this sort of Gish Gallop is the term for it.
Named after.
Whoa.
Gish Gallop.
Yeah. Gish Gallop is actually in Wikipedia. What is it? What is a Gish Gallop? A Gish Gallop is what I would say if anybody actually does it, I don't
think Kennedy does, but it's Ben Shapiro would do it. Where you just throw so much stuff
at somebody they can't take it, they're ducking you left and right,
and they can't respond in time.
And by the time they wanna respond to something,
you say something else.
Oh, you mean like with facts?
Yeah, if you actually, and Kennedy has a lot of facts,
but they just assume everything he says is disinformation
or there's better facts or, you know, or-
Let me read the exact definition. The GISH gallop or GISH galop
Which I like better is a rhetorical technique in which a person in a debate attempts to overwhelm
Their opponent by providing an excessive number of arguments also known as facts with no regard for the accuracy or strength of those arguments
GISH galloping prioritizes the quantity of the gallopers' arguments
at the expense of their quality.
The term was coined in 1994
by anthropologist Eugene Scott,
who named it after American creationist Duane Gish
and argued that Gish used the technique frequently
when challenging scientific fact of evolution.
So don't throw too many facts at me
because then you're Gishgalloping.
Kind of known rhetorical style
that other folks do too,
which is called this sort of Gishgallop
is the term for it.
Named after Duane Gish, a creationist.
Right, so the idea that...
A creationist!
Gishgallop is that you are making
claim upon claim.
Oh, a heathen!
I'm sorry, a heathen who believes in God. Oh no.
Gish Gallup is the term for it.
Named after Duane Gish, a creationist.
Right. So the idea that Gish Gallup is that you are making claim upon claim upon claim,
sort of bad argument after bad argument, very, very, very quickly. So quickly that it is
hard for the person that you are speaking to, to sort of respond to all of those claims
effectively and in real time. hard for the person that you are speaking to to sort of respond to all of those claims effectively
and in real time. Oh what a horrible, what a horrible trick. I can't believe Bobby the Q is
using the Gish Gallup trick. That's, I mean that's just, I mean even Trump can't do that.
No Trump can't. Wow this is, oh man. So this is to demean him further. You know, I-
And by the way, it's always associative.
You want to associate people with creationism.
Creationism, yeah, yeah.
Because that makes you nuts.
By the way, this whole sequence of clips,
this is like I had a T-bone steak, a tomahawk steak,
and then afterwards you came out and said,
would you like some Tiramisu with that?
I mean, this is so good.
I'm just, I love this. This is the best ever. Ever.
But if we listen to people who guaranteed have been quadruple, if not quintuple boosted, you got to kind of question stuff.
The pandemic officially ended earlier this year, and for most people, life is back to normal.
officially ended earlier this year. And for most people, life is back to normal.
But now for Dr. Michael Osterholm,
the expert at the University of Minnesota
became a household name during every stage of the pandemic.
Investigative reporter Ryan Race went to find out
what he's doing now that the biggest health crisis
of our lifetime is over.
Are you eating in a restaurant now and able to relax?
Well, unfortunately I am.
And I say unfortunately in that I recently had COVID.
Three years into the pandemic
and Minnesota's most famous infectious disease doctor
finally became a statistic.
In March, Dr. Michael Osterholm
not only got COVID for the first time,
but is now suffering from long COVID.
It's been a difficult few months.
So I'm feeling it.
I can't do many of the athletic things I did before.
Osterholm is the longtime director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and
Policy at the University of Minnesota.
He also worked for the State Department of Health and the CDC. But during
the pandemic, his projections and downright scary predictions earned him the nickname Dr. Doom.
So this guy has long COVID. He sounds horrible. He has trouble breathing. He can't do quote
athletic exercises. He's on death's door. And you know that he's the guy that was just vax vax vax vax vax
Did they ever find how many times he got the jab? I don't have that information
But now now I'm by the way this clip of the day
This guy was one of the worst of the of the bad actors out there
We would have a million millions of dead dead millions millions in America
Yes, I want to play I can't I clipped it came off of what sent in by a producer came off of C-SPAN
about
Kamala's visit to Vietnam and a kind of a gaffe
But Kamala's visit to Vietnam and kind of a gaffe. Kamala Vietnam.
Okay, got it.
Flowers at the site where John McCain was shot down in Vietnam.
Or the know nothing millennials who set Kamala's schedule didn't know.
The site that she's laying those flowers at, it's a celebration of those who shot McCain's plane
out of the sky and then captured him,
delivering him to the VC for his long stay
and torture at the Hanoi Hilton.
The stunning ignorance of Kamala Harris and her team
was noted by Yawen Yu, a journalist based in Beijing.
She tweeted,
"'Does Harris know this monument honors the people who shot
down John McCain's plane?
Vietnamese people view him as a war criminal.
So when he says Harris was paying tribute to those who shot down John McCain's plane,
it'd be like Harris laying a wreath at Pearl Harbor honoring the brave Japanese pilots
who sunk the USS Arizona.
Wow, wow, wow. Hold on a second. I had no idea that that's a better gaffe than the stupid
population thing. This is a clip of the day, John. Now we might as well play the one that
everyone's laughing about, which is the population gaffe. And I've got it right here.
Think about the impact on something like public health.
When we invest in clean energy and electric vehicles
and reduce population, more of our children
can breathe clean air and drink clean water.
Clean water, clean water.
MKUltra victim.
You might have noticed that climate change,
climate change created a tornado that blew down a Pfizer factory.
The local news had a caller who begs to differ.
This was not just regular climate change.
We didn't have tornadoes here until we started putting into traffic circles. Cause on the kind of you want to know why?
That when people go round and round in circles, it causes disturbance in the atmosphere and causes tornadoes.
There you go.
Okay, Clip of the Day, right there at the end of the show.
Oh, I didn't even expect to receive it. Hold on a second. Wow.
Clip of the Day.
Woo, baby. Exciting. Exciting. Woo, baby, exciting, exciting.
I always knew it was those damn roundabouts.
Ha, who not?
You know, we're gonna get someone calling in saying,
you know, you know, that's actually kind of true.
Someone will come in and do that.
There's a bunch of these TikTokers that go off
and they're doing something called NPC
and they're just talking and babbling
and doing, you know, remember that whisper trend there was for a while?
They were whispering and whispering.
The whisper trend.
I don't remember the whisper trend.
Yeah, there was a whispering thing.
It was like a whole, it came and went.
This, I think, has more legs and I'm gonna play a clip
of one of the women, I think is one of the best at it have just yakking away saying nothing repeating herself over
and over and over again this is a black woman people have seen her she's got a
fake blonde wig on I'm sure it's a wig and
I'm listening to this because NPC also has a second meaning and it has to do with spying and spookery.
And I think, and I'm gonna say it in advance,
I believe that this is, and I'm playing character a bit,
is this is a number station.
Okay, of all the things, I did not expect this. Let us give a, how about an example
of a number station. This is it. This is the NPC black girl. You want to hear an actual
number? Oh yeah. Play the number station first. This is our number. this is a no agenda number station. You can hear these on short waves. India, hang out, mic, standby.
33, 33, 33.
RoboLizer out.
Okay, so that's an example of a number station
and now we're going to listen to this NPC.
Huh, sleigh huh, ooh ooh ooh, sleigh huh.
Mm, ice cream so good, ooh ooh ooh ooh. Yes, yes, yes, ooh, ooh, sleigh, huh? Mm, ice cream's so good.
Ooh, ooh, ooh, yes, yes, yes.
Ooh, ooh, ooh, oh, thank you, baby, I love you.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes,
oh, thank you, baby, I love you.
Yes, yes, yes, oh, thank you, baby, I love you.
Yes, yes, yes, oh, thank you, baby, I love you.
Ah, ah, yes, yes, yes, do the dance, do the dance.
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, oh, oh baby you know I can't swim yes yes
yes yes yes yes that was good coconut mmm that was good coconut cake cake cake
cake cake oh thank you baby it is so cute gagaagga, gagga, gagga. Mm, ice cream so good.
Yes, yes, yes, meow, meow, meow.
Fire, fire, fire.
Oh, special, oh, special, oh, special.
Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
Ooh, pop, amazing, balloon.
Pop, pop, pop, pop, pop.
Yes, popcorn, yes, popcorn, yes, popcorn.
Fire, fire, balloon.
Pop, pop, pop, pop, pop.
Ice cream so good, balloon.
Pop, pop, pop, pop, pop. Ss, ss, ss, ss, ss, ss, ss. Ice cream so good, balloon. Ice cream so good.
Okay, first of all.
It goes on for 10 minutes.
I do this in the shower, so I'm not quite sure,
but I'm not a number station.
I think it's something else.
There's a donation aspect to this.
Yeah, and I think that's part of it.
I think those numbers that keep flying on the screen showing certain donations is part
of the number station.
This is a high-end encrypted product.
Stop.
It's a high-end encryption product.
So this is actually a public key that she's that she's giving us
Well, it's obviously I have no idea what she's yeah That's my thinking because that's exactly what it reminded me of before you play that you should play this which is
Jen Psaki
Doing an RFK jr. Rap of every reason. He's wrong about everything really makes you wonder
What is it that Kennedy stands for for that has the right so head
over heels for him?
Is it his years of work as an anti-vaccine advocate?
His repeatedly debunked claim that vaccines cause autism?
Is it his trafficking in a variety of COVID vaccine conspiracy theories, including ones
involving microchips being inserted into all of our bodies? Are
they fans of his recent comments that COVID was, quote, ethnically targeted to spare Chinese
and Jewish people? Or is it his assertion that antidepressants like Prozac have caused
the rise of school shootings in America? Obviously completely insane and not true.
Or that Wi Fi causes cancer and something called leaky brain, whatever that may be.
Or is it a claim that chemicals in the water could be turning kids transgender? I couldn't
even cover all of these outlandish crazy claims because we need to continue with our show.
All right. There you go. I know why you did that. Well, that's it. That's it. That is
basically is it because he listens to the no agenda show? I mean, that's it. That's it. That is basically, is it because he listens to the No Agenda
Show? I mean that's basically what she said right there.
Illinois is doing all the same things as New York.
Governor Pritzker recently signed more than 130 bills and among the new laws, one allowing
non-citizens to become police officers in Illinois.
Hello.
We're going to report to Scott Schneider, live in the studio with details on this. Scott.
Anthony and Ellie, this law requires that immigrants be legally authorized to work under in Illinois. Hello. Reporter Scott Schneider live in the studio with details on this. Scott.
Anthony and Ellie, this law requires that immigrants be legally authorized to work under
federal law.
The bill's sponsor called it a natural progression now that some undocumented immigrants can
become health care workers and military members.
However, it's been highly criticized by Republicans and the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police.
The FOP issued a statement earlier this month ahead of Friday's bill
signing. It reads in part, what message does this legislation send when it allows people
who do not have legal status to become the officers of our laws? This is a potential
crisis of confidence in law enforcement at a time when our officers need all the public
confidence they can get. Yeah, that's, I'll give you a clip of the day for that's fine.
Okay, thank you.
Clip of the day.
What is wrong with these, the people that are running these governments, especially
Illinois is the worst.
These elections have been rigged to keep these people in office.
There's no doubt in my mind about it, because
no citizen in their right mind would put up with this.
So now a wonderful clip.
This is former CIA operative, I spook, Dan Hoffman.
Dan Hoffman is now a contributor to Fox News.
And he mentions something here that kind of solves another mystery.
This was Vladimir Putin first and foremost messaging his own security services and the
military that if anybody dares betray Vladimir Putin, then their days on this earth will
be numbered.
So that's the message. That the right message Dan. I have no doubt that Putin created a false
sense of security for Pidogian so that his intelligence service the FSB
internal security service could track Pidogian's movements and then like a
good sniper pick the time and place to end Pidogian's life. When they least
expected. Some people are speculating it was a bomb
in the airplane then.
Yeah, I've heard both of those versions
and I wouldn't be surprised if it was a bomb
in the airplane.
There's an awful lot that could go wrong
if you're trying to shoot an airplane out of the sky,
not the least of which is that you might shoot
another aircraft like they did with the Malaysian airliner
over Ukraine back a few years ago.
So.
What? What? What did he just tell us? Wow. What did he just tell us?
Oh my God. Like they did in clip of the day for pulling that one out of a hat.
Now I have to tell you this clip comes from Stec.
Yeah, I know Stec used to send me those sorts of clips.
Yeah.
But I think one day I didn't play one and so that was the end of me.
But this clip is phenomenal. So he said, oh, you know, I've heard both of those theories,
but you know, it's got to be a bomb. Yeah, it's got to be a bomb because, you know,
he's trying to shoot something out of the sky.
You know, it's very difficult.
You might shoot the wrong plane out of the sky like, like we did over there with MH17
in Ukraine.
Wow.
And then there's this one.
So just to be clear when you're talking-
This is CBS, interview with Governor Josh Green.
Global warming.
Are you saying that climate change amplified the cost of human error?
Amplified the cost of climate change.
Wait a minute.
Is that the exact same wording that they used on the debate?
Exact same wording.
You're telling, wow, that's a catch.
Yeah.
Let me play the, let me play that question again.
Here, Martha.
More than a thousand people are still unaccounted for in Maui after the deadliest US wildfire
in more than a century.
Hawaii's governor and White House officials said that climate change amplified the cost
of human error.
So just to be clear, when you're talking about global warming, are you saying that climate change amplified the cost of human error. So just to be clear when you're talking about global warming are you saying that climate change amplified the cost of human error?
This is CBS and Fox both parroting White House talking points word for
word? Correct. Unbelievable. Second clip of the day.
Oh man. Woohoo!
I'm back baby!
Clip of the day.
This clip, this clip, this is a laughing matter.
Actually, it's no laughing matter because it's the truth.
And the truth, as we know, always comes from right here or right nearby in Austin, Texas.
Seedman headquarters.
So then also on the Ukraine-Russia war front, I don't know if you saw the rumors from Chechnyan soldiers
who said at night there are large drones coming with claws and scooping up their wounded
and taking them for organ harvesting. I thought that was in your wheelhouse.
Well, I don't know about drones doing it, but they've caught the Ukrainians harvesting
both Ukrainian and Russian troops and selling their organs. That's confirmed.
It's confirmed.
Yeah, it was happening in the Balkan Wars. They were doing live organ harvesting. And
I also think that organ harvesting tied in with Bluebeam. The alien stuff is a good alien abduction
stuff is a good cover for the organ harvesting and adrenochrome.
I don't even need to do it with some claw at night with a drone. I mean, it came out
in the news even on 16 minutes, a lot of hospitals will kill you, but they've got bad managers
for your organs.
Yeah, you think we got problems, John?
Really? You're going to give that to me at the very end?
At the very end.
Why not?
I think you're, I think you're actually being too kind, but I will take it.
Of course.
Wow. Wow. Wow. Wow. Wow. All right.
That'll have to do it.
Are you familiar with what's going on in New York with the quarantine camps?
Oh, goodness.
Do you have a clip of this?
Tell me you have a clip.
I have two.
Oh, thank you.
Masks don't work, by the way.
Quarantine camps. New York state is still fighting for the right to set up quarantine camps.
Today, the battle entered the next phase when the court heard oral arguments in the case.
Quarantine camps in the state of New York.
Governor Kathy Hokel and Attorney General Letitia James want to implement rule 2.13.
It would give the state's Department of Health the power to forcibly isolate individuals
suspected of carrying a transmittable disease. This is truly about being able to control citizens
for any reason. New York State Senator George Borrello and lead attorney Bobby Ann Cox sued
the state over the rule and won the case last year. However, the state appealed and on Wednesday
attorneys made their case before an appeals court.
The rule says the commissioner of health can pick any place that the commissioner of health
wants to put you. You have no say. As you can see in this clip, hundreds of people showed up at the
court protesting the idea of quarantine camps set up to stop the spread of communicable diseases.
Senator, the COVID pandemic is over. Why does the state of New York still want to stop the spread of communicable diseases. Senator, the COVID pandemic is over.
Why does the state of New York still want to have the right to set up these camps?
Well, first and foremost, we have to remember, even though the governor and the attorney
general tried to make this about COVID.
The senator says the state's rule would apply to a long list of diseases, not just COVID.
It goes everything from toxic shock syndrome to food poisoning. And while food
poisoning might be a serious condition, it is not communicable. Wait, is toxic shock syndrome
communicable? No. Who is this guy? He's telling you what this, what this, what Coco wants to do
is take people off the streets, grab them
and throw them into a quarantine camp for any good reason.
That's right.
New York Uber Alice.
The Senator says New York's executive branch is overreaching by trying to implement this
rule.
According to him, the state's proposed rule is basically a copy of a previous proposal,
which didn't get any support from state lawmakers and thus didn't become law. What they have essentially said is if
the legislature isn't going to make this law we will. So it's a very clear
violation of separation of powers. The lead attorney in the case points out a
few things in the state's rule which she says are against the law. According to
the rule you would not get an attorney until after you're locked up or after you're locked down, but you also wouldn't get notice, which means that the Department of Health could show up at your door or they could send the police with an order that you need to isolate or quarantine.
And it could be not just for you, it could be for your child.
Meanwhile, the state argues that its proposed rule only clarifies existing law. Supporters of the rule say quarantine measures are being used in states around the US
and have been in a camp.
And this is Trudeau's Nazi revised apology.
In this case, what he did was he took in everybody who felt aggrieved,
and even people who didn't feel aggrieved,
he put them on this list of I'm sorry to you and you and you and you and you.
In a few moments, I will address the House in front of all Canadians, in front of Jewish
people here and around the world, and Ukrainians, to offer Parliament's unreserved apologies
for what happened on Friday.
The Speaker was solely responsible for the invitation and recognition of this man, and
has wholly accepted that responsibility and stepped down.
This was a mistake that has deeply embarrassed Parliament and Canada.
All of us who were in this House on Friday regret deeply having stood and clapped, even
though we did so unaware of the context.
It was a horrendous violation of the memory of the millions of people who died in the
Holocaust and it was deeply, deeply painful for Jewish people. It was a horrendous violation of the memory of the millions of people who died in the Holocaust.
And it was deeply, deeply painful for Jewish people.
It also hurt Polish people, Roma people, 2SLGBTQI plus people, disabled people, racialized people,
and the many millions who were cursed.
No, no, no, stop. No, no, this is edited. This is edited.
He did not say two-spirit people, disabled people. Did he?
Yes. No, it's not edited. Believe me. This is crazy. Let me hear this again.
And it was deeply, deeply painful for Jewish people. It also hurt Polish people, Roma people,
two SLGBTQI plus people, disabled people, racialized people, and the many millions who
were targeted by the Nazi genocide.
Nicholas, you're off my list.
I can't believe you gave that clip to John.
No, he didn't give me any clips.
Oh, okay.
I'm sorry.
All right.
He's back on the list.
This is dynamite.
In fact, I got to give this to you right away.
I mean, if you had told me that In fact, I got to give this to you right away. I mean,
if you had told me that was AI, I would have believed it too. That's crazy. The Nazis were
going after two-spirited people. Really? We had two spirits back in the day.
Oh yeah. Everything in between.
Here's an example of a human being lying. This is a great example. This is again
rear Admiral Kirby and he is asked a question about the president's thinking but he's very
clear in his obvious lie. I want to play this soundbite for you that is just last month in Vietnam and ask you if this still holds
for the President Watch.
The only existential threat humanity faces, even more frightening than a nuclear war,
is global warming going above 1.5 degrees in the next 20 to 10 years.
Given all the nuclear players in these two areas
where we are now engaged on,
does the president stand by that comment?
Absolutely he does.
Climate change is an existential threat.
It actually threatens and is capable
of wiping out all human life on earth over time.
I mean, that's, I don't-
Wait a minute, wait a minute.
Global warming climate change is in competition with AI.
Who's gonna kill us faster?
Human life on earth over time.
I mean, that's I don't know how more existential you can get to that.
But that doesn't mean that we walk away from our obligations,
our national security interests in very dangerous parts of the world.
You mentioned that it was more frightening than a nuclear war.
Is that it's more frightening than a nuclear war in this moment the president believes
wholeheartedly that climate change is an existential threat to the all of human life on the planet
that's just science that's a fact Martha but it doesn't mean that we can't go back on the
other challenges facing this country and our allies and partners around the world that's
just science and fact okay you get a clip of the day for that piece of shit it's just science and fact. Okay, you get a clip of the day for that piece of shit. It's just science and fact, Martha. That's all that it is.
I don't like that you disparaged my clip that way, but I'll take the award. Thank you.
And the fact that her name is Martha makes it better. That's just science and fact, Martha.
So now three weeks ago, 60 Minutes does an interview with three Israeli IDF soldiers.
They're in uniform.
One is a helicopter pilot.
One is, and that's a she, she's always sexy.
Female combat chopper pilot, lesbian.
Does it get any better than that?
The other one is special forces and I forget what
the third was. And they're just talking about how horrible Netanyahu is. It's the same topic three
weeks ago. Listen to this. The head of national security has had multiple convictions, including
supporting terrorism against Arabs. The finance minister is a self-described fascist homophobe. As for Netanyahu, he's in
the midst of three separate trials on charges of corruption. The protesters say that laws
his government has introduced, over 200 of them, would not only weaken the courts, but
control the press and diminish individual rights.
And that this is how democracies like Hungary became autocratic.
What happened in Hungary and Poland will not happen here.
There is a trend and it's going against you.
Yeah.
Around the world.
Will we be the first to stop it?
You're all determined.
We are not joking.
We are really trying to stop it and we will succeed.
One of their big worries is that without a strong Supreme Court, the ultra-Orthodox block
in the government could turn Israel into a theocracy where biblical laws prevail.
Our Supreme Court is our last line of defense. This is our last
safeguard. We need them empowered. We need them independent. That's what we fight
for. What is at stake for women, Shira? That we will be sitting in the back of
the bus. Literally. Literally. Are you married? I'm married to a woman, a doctor.
We have a daughter. She's one year and eight months.
Her fear of an assault on women's and gay rights is well founded.
A government member said the gay community is more dangerous than ISIS and Hezbollah.
Oh crap, for some reason I must have cut out the bit where they talk about Poland, Hungary.
No, I heard it. Oh, it was in there? I completely missed it.
Hello.
Sorry. I thought it came in the end.
No, they mentioned both countries as autocratic countries.
Yes, Poland.
I'm giving you a clip of the day for digging that baby out of the woods.
Or whoever dug it up.
No, no, no, no, no, no, this is truly, well it's not coincidence, I know who gave it to me,
I know who does this.
It's supernatural.
So I get this clip and I'm like, whoa, this is the same talking point, Poland, Poland,
oh.
The same talking points, exactly.
And it's interesting because it kind of parallels the Queers for Palestine movement, which I
highlighted in the newsletter.
And people should go read the newsletter and click on the link or just go to Google or
Duck Duck Go, which is what I use, Queers for Palestine and start reading what's going on in Israel with the gay movement there
and the the the symbiosis with Palestine and the fact that they're all you know they
It's just very strange and I think it's part of that. I think the clip you just played
Is part of Queers for Palestine all of a sudden
This pops up An infomercial which is one of those phony talk shows where they get
some host who was probably on the e-chain or something.
I love the phony talk show infomercials.
And so we've got all brown and black people and they're in the studio.
It has a whole intro to it and you know, a whole positioning piece.
And it's brought to you by Advil.
Advil, big, big logo right there.
But listen to this and then we'll dissect what's going on here.
Welcome to Believe My Pain, a discussion about systemic pain bias in healthcare.
I want to thank all of you and all of you for joining me today as we talk about this
very important issue.
I also want to thank the Pain Equity Project developed by Advil in partnership
with the Morehouse School of Medicine and Black Health
for inviting us to be a part of their commitment
to addressing pain bias in black communities.
Pain equity is my favorite.
Okay, so Dr. Uchi, you have written this book, Legacy,
A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine.
You are a legacy black.
This is just filled with good stuff. I've heard lots of terms.
This is already disgusting.
A legacy black. I mean, this is great. Not ADOS, not American descendants of slavery.
No, you're a legacy black doctor.
And reckons with racism in medicine. You are a legacy black female physician and you are armed with expertise that frames this
issue around black pain in such a clear way.
And so I'm so glad that you're here today.
Thank you for being here.
Hold on a second, you have to stop.
Where did this come from?
This is from an Advil infomercial.
Yeah, I know, but what channel?
Was it a black channel?
Was it VTC?
No, YouTube.
Not on television that I know of.
Oh, it wasn't on television.
But it's being promoted.
Oh, okay, got it.
It's being promoted.
Today, thank you for being here.
Thank you. Thank you for having me.
I'm so excited to be here to talk to you about this issue
that means so much to me
and impacts so many members of our community
and we'll hear those stories today.
All right, so Dr. Uche, could you just outline
what are some of the myths about black people and pain?
Now, this is stuff, I mean, I have my thoughts about it
and speaking, talking to Mo, but I've never heard of this.
This is really, it was an eye-opener
about some of the myths of black people and pain.
Remember, this is the Advil Pain Equity Project.
So I think the main thing is that
health professionals think that black people
are biologically different than other people,
that our skin is thicker.
Doctors are racists.
That we have less sensitive skin
and higher pain tolerance,
and that is all absolutely false.
There is no difference between black patients
than patients of other races.
Wow.
So what do you think has perpetuated these myths?
The legacy of slavery in this country,
slavery, interpersonal and systemic racism
that still exists in this country.
And that is embedded into the institution of medicine.
Now embedded, this was really,
and when I heard embedded,
it's like that's where my hackles went up,
and I'll tell you why in 15 seconds.
It's embedded into the institution
of medicine and health care.
Our health professionals most wanna do a good job
and care for their patients,
but unfortunately we're seeing implicit bias
that they are not listening to their patients,
they're not responding to their patients' concerns and sometimes even ignoring their
patients.
So this went on for 20 minutes.
But obviously as a no agenda media deconstructionist, I'm like, well, what is Advil?
So I mean, doctors aren't prescribing Advil.
Seriously, you can just go and buy Advil
But you have to see who is the manufacturer of Advil
I'll give you one guess Pfizer yes, Pfizer and what is there they have one opioid. It's called embedda
So when I'm hearing embed and I'm hearing this is all subliminal. Oh, so they're using the words to get you.
And they do have an oxycodone. Yeah, they're using it embedded in a very odd way. Very weird way.
And I know that particularly black men, I'm sorry, legacy black men. Legacy black men, not black men.
No, legacy black men. They don't like going black men. No, legacy black men.
They don't like going to the doctor at all
because they know the two choices are a pill or a knife.
They don't like either one.
And I am parroting mofax right now.
It's either the pill or the knife
and they don't like either one of those.
So I think this is to get more black people on opioids
It's killing a lot of white people. We have a whole market. No killing enough blacks though. That's right legacy blacks
It was really it was really disturbing I'm giving you clip of the day for
No one sent this to me. You just stumbled upon?
No, someone else sent me a YouTube clip
and I was watching it and I saw
what is this Advil Blackpaint equity?
Oh, you did, yeah I did that too.
And I just clicked on it.
I forgot all about the other clip.
It was a gold mine. You clicked on it,
you tripped and stumbled and you hit your head on a rock
and you said, head on a rock,
and you said, what's this rock?
Oh my God, it's a gold nugget.
This is how we connect Sam Bankman Fried and AI
with the term effective altruism.
Joining me on the set is our technology editor,
Peter O'Brien. Hello to you, Peter.
What can you tell us about the surprising links
between these two events, SBF and the
UK's AI Summit?
What do they have in common?
Yeah, I was wondering how we could link these two together.
And actually, there's a simple way to do it.
You may not have heard of it, but it's the social movement called effective altruism.
It's boffin filled and it's increasingly powerful.
Now that power took a hit when Sam Bankman freed the most high profile
effective altruist and one of the movement's biggest donors fell from grace. But as we've seen
from the AI summit in Bletchley Park this week, we can see that effective altruist talking points
are still making their way up the policy agenda. One in particular, the potential for artificial
intelligence to cause catastrophic harm,
a risk that would not be on the policy table at all, were it not for the work of effective altruists.
Now I should add a disclaimer here that I've been briefly involved in the movement in France
and to some charities that are popular among effective altruists.
Now he's never going to mention them, but what he's saying is effective altruism,
people donate a lot
of money for the good of humanity, for the good cause, because we care about the world.
That's what Sam Bankman Fried really should be accused of doing, thanks to the egging
on of his parents. He was literally giving it to his mother for effective altruism, which
does a lot of really good things, including this whole AI
scam.
How did we get to the point where effective altruism is producing one of the biggest frauds
in history?
It's also becoming a major policy debate.
So policy is code for politics.
The only way to really explain this is to take you back through the intellectual history
of the movement.
So the founding idea of vector altruism is simple
and it's persuasive. In order to do the most good with your time and money, you shouldn't
just think about your close circle of friends and family. You shouldn't just think about
your community, your country. You should really be taking into consideration all humans in
the world because we all suffer in a similar way.
If Trump's president, we all suffer in a similar way. If Trump's president, we all suffer in a similar way.
A classic example of putting this into practice would be rather than donating money to a local
fire station.
No, don't do that.
Don't donate local.
No, don't do that.
No, don't donate local.
No, come on, Franz Douche.
Well, it would be using the same amount to buy much more mosquito nets to protect people
from malaria.
Oh, there you go.
Mosquito net.
But rather than just caring about humans, effective altruists quickly realized that
the same principle should be applied to anything that can suffer, right?
So that could be an animal, that could be a wild animal, that could even be a human
not alive today.
A future human.
But in the future.
So that's where we get to this situation where there are lots of effective altruists today
who are also long-termists
That means people who are concerned long
Animals that don't yet exist but could exist in the future
So this is this is the oh my god this I'm getting Clip of the Day for this thank you
So long-termists that's exactly the whole idea is we're concerned about the human of the
future who isn't born today. Therefore, we need to support policy that behooves the human of the
future, which happens to also kind of be beneficial to our companies. And thatidentally, that's exactly what's going on with this AI stuff.
Pfizer is arguably in trouble for this and they need to refocus.
The UK is a good place to start, you know, the different laws, it works a little differently
and the media is good over there.
So this is a, right, because they're not getting,
and let's point it out once again,
because they're not getting drug Big Pharma money
for advertising.
Well, so they slipped this one in.
And the way they did it, this is a long game.
They have a couple, they both happen to be actors.
So these are actual actors. And this is the guy,
his wife, actress, was harmed by the AstraZeneca vaccine.
Tanner Iskra Okay. That's a blood clot issue with that.
Dr. Michael Leeson Yes, blood clot issue. This is well known,
you know, AstraZeneca was halted. So now they're going after AstraZeneca. And this is a two
part of it. Very interesting as a setup and, and, and really a grand slam.
So this is a need of that for who?
I'm sorry. Well, you listen, just because I'm going to surprise you.
The big pharma vaccine maker is being sued for tens of millions of pounds in a test case
or mass tort action
depending on your continent
brought by the British family of
one person allegedly killed by
the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine
and another who was brain injured
allegedly as a result of the same
vaccine. 80 others are co-joined
in the case including Australian
born West End actor Mel Stewart. The 42-year-old suffered a
devastating brain bleed and has a titanium plate to protect her skull from emergency surgery after
receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine in southwest London in April 2021. I'm joined now by her
husband Ben Lewis. Ben is also an actor
But has given up his career to be by his wife's side in what must be the greatest challenge of their lives
Yeah Mel had no had a significant stroke
caused by by two clots in her you know brain and
Mel had a bleed on the right on the sorry on the
brain. Mel had a bleed on the right hand side of her brain, the left hand side of her brain, and that's resulted in her having speech difficulties. She suffers from what is known as aphasia
and apraxia of speech, which is basically a breakdown in the communication between the
brain and your speech. Mel also has significant right-sided deficits, as is common with lots of strokes.
Mel has limited use of her right leg.
She can walk with the assistance of an orthotic device and her right arm has very little functional
movement at all.
So that's the setup.
And you heard it's a proper case.
It got a lot of people.
They even said, hey, this is something that could work in America, depending on your continent.
We call that a mass tort case.
Now to complete the script, you've always got to say, but you know what?
We're not anti-vaxxers.
We are pro-vaccination.
Mel and I both are.
But we completely respect everyone's right to choose.
That is not the issue at play here. Tens of
thousands of particularly older people were dying in care homes throughout the
UK. When we came to get our vaccines, the way it was in the UK is that you did not
have a choice as to which one you were given. It was dictated by age. Mel was six
months over 40 at the time, so she was offered the AstraZeneca vaccine,
which was, we could have got it.
Mel could have got an alternative vaccine
if she'd been under 40 years old,
but she wasn't given a choice.
And we just feel like, yes, the vaccine saved
and helped lots of people,
but we feel like it is incumbent on the government
to take care of the few people
who fell through the cracks and whose lives have been devastated for, as you said Chris,
for doing the right thing. Have you kept up to date with COVID-19 vaccination boosters?
We have, we have Chris. My wife, my wife received a Pfizer vaccine. People may be gobsmacked.
My wife received a Pfizer vaccine. People may be gobsmacked at that.
Oh, gobsmacked.
And she, as I say, we've always had to put our faith
in the experts and by the time we got the Pfizer vaccine,
it's very clear that that's a highly effective vaccine.
With none of the risks that the AstraZeneca had.
So she got that one in hospital, which was necessary
because the hospitals
were full of COVID and when she was in there,
and we're actually going for a booster next week,
and I'd encourage anyone to do so.
Oh no!
And the Oscar goes to...
Okay, you get, I had to do this because I'm sitting there
with the clip of the day already,
but I'm gonna give you clip of the day for that.
Thank you very much. Clip of the day. I forget I'm gonna give you clip of the day for that. Thank you very much.
Clip of the day.
I forget which producer sent that to me, but of course, honors go to you.
Well, that producer should give clip of the day. You should send it to him when you get it in the mail tomorrow.
When it shows up, it's a very small trophy for people who don't know.
We have a bunch of them lined up around the house. When you get there, ship it to him.
Will do. University students have been brainwashed.
There is an entire, and when I say brainwashed, it's not about Israel Hamas, it's about colonialism.
The West is bad, white is bad, men are bad, straight white old men, very, very bad.
Very bad. Especially if they live in the West. And this is an ongoing program.
And it's very understandable when you look at the history, oh, history lesson incoming.
When you look at the history, what was the last thing they were protesting for?
I mean, besides the ongoing LGBTQ+, which usurped Black Lives Matter. And there has been a long-standing, long-standing operation going on between black Americans
and the Palestinian region.
I'm saying that purposefully.
Palestine.
This has been going on since almost before I was born.
In 1964, Malcolm X published an article in the Egyptian Gazette called Zionist Logic,
in which he drew parallels between the oppression of Palestinians and Africans.
Instead of seeing it as a religious conflict, Malcolm saw Israel as a colonial project,
serving a wider imperialist agenda, saying,
European imperialists wisely placed Israel where she could geographically
divide the Arab world.
In the same year, Malcolm was one of the first African leaders to publicly meet with the
Palestine Liberation Organization as anti-colonial struggles gained traction through the world.
Freedom for Palestinians became a touchstone for the international fight against imperialism.
As black freedom movements expanded their worldview to situate their struggle as part of a global anti-colonial movement, Palestine also
became an important focal point of their solidarity. On August 15th 1967, the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee released a position paper
entitled the Middle East Crisis, expressing support for Palestine and
criticizing US support for Israel. Organizations such as the Black
Panthers argued that freedom would never come for black people in America unless all oppressed
people were free. The Panthers frequently spoke of black communities and their relationship
with police as living under occupation as internally colonized people. They were vocal
in their support for Palestine and met with the PLO in Algiers in 1969.
So that's Black Panthers and Malcolm X.
Wait, hold on a second. Whoever got you that clip, I'm going to give you a clip of the day. That's a beauty.
Oh, thank you. I got that myself from TRT.
Well, you give yourself a pat on the back.
Well, so a couple, I just want to...
Yeah, another one. I have a second, but follow up. Go ahead, go ahead. But go ahead, Garrett.
Israel's not in a position, it's not put in,
it's not in a spot that's dividing the Arab nations.
It's in between Egyptians and Arabs.
There's no other, it's not like in the middle
between Saudi Arabia and the UAE or anything like that.
That's nonsense, but yeah, I understand.
I remember some of this from my days at Cal Berkeley.
These thoughts.
Same thing, it's the same thing.
Back at the ranch,
Judge Andrew Napolitano has Max Blumenthal on,
who I presume is Jewish.
Blumenthal.
I presume he is too.
This is what his, Napolitano's podcast?
Yeah, yeah, of course. It's a podcast, which I think will be nominated for most amazing
Jew hate in a single podcast episode. This was really interesting.
One event we covered was the return of something like 80 to 100 corpses to
The Gaza Strip to a cemetery in the southern city of Rafa
These were corpses of people whose bodies had been stolen by the Israeli military
From many of them have been stolen from the Shifa Hospital in the Gaza in Gaza City from other cemeteries
Ostensibly because the Israelis were looking
for their own hostages.
But we have this history of Israeli organ theft, of the theft of body parts, which is
well documented and admitted by, for example, Dr. Yehuda His, a state pathologist at the
Abu Khabir Institute in Israel. There are reports even by CNN about this dating back decades.
Israel is an international center of the illegal organ trade.
Israelis have been prosecuted in Israeli courts for this.
And the Gaza Ministry of Health
and EuroMed Human Rights Monitor have alleged
that these corpses when they were returned to Israel
to be buried in a mass grave,
because there's no room left in the cemeteries,
had body parts missing.
How do they do this?
I mean, do they bring the body to a-
Cut them off.
To an Israeli morgue and an Israeli mortician
opens up the body and removes the organs
and then they bury the body in a mass grave?
Well, that's what the Gaza Ministry of Health is alleging.
Dr. Yehuda His said was that we removed corneas
and took organs and other body parts
without the permission of the people
who had been killed or their families.
And this included Palestinians
who had been killed by Israeli security forces,
people who were
killed in road accidents, and even Israeli soldiers.
This is great.
I gave you a clip of the day for digging that one up.
Oh, there's a part two, but I'll take the clip of the day first.
Clip of the day.
That's a good one.
I know, yeah, that was a good find.
Check out part two, part two.
Israel also has the largest skin bank in the world.
Yeah.
And it uses that skin bank to graft the skin of,
for example, burn wounds that Israeli soldiers
are enduring in the Gaza Strip
as thousands are being wounded
in this sort of faltering military assault on Gaza.
The Israeli skin bank is accused
of stealing
body parts as well.
So this is a crime against humanity that goes to
the essence of Israel's assault on personal,
the personal freedom of Palestinians.
Our families don't even have the right to bury their own,
their own family members who are killed.
And that's also part of the psychological war on Palestine that Israel seeks to as traditionally
sought to prevent the burials of Palestinians, especially those who they consider to be quote
unquote terrorists.
It is great.
I have my two Gaza clips.
I'm just thinking, there's donor bone in my jaw.
I thought maybe it was from the Uighurs, but now I'm thinking it's probably some Hamas.
You could be part Jewish.
No, Hamas.
Oh yeah, you could be a terrorist at any minute.
If I start yelling Allah Akbar, then you know what's going on.
All right.
Now let's go to the longer predictions here.
This is, this is going to wrap it all up.
This segment here on Face the Nation, we've covered a lot of tough stories this year.
Tough stories.
We asked, it was a hard year.
It was so hard for us, but let's pat each other on the back because we did a good job.
Everybody.
It was hard. It was tough stories, because we did a good job everybody. It was hard,
it was tough stories, but we did it. We're CBS. Mark Strassman to go back and recap some of the
good news. Oh, good news. The good news. Do you think this will be puppies and pancakes and pajamas?
I think they're stealing our material. Yeah, I know, not entirely.
I don't know, not entirely. Ladies first. Women headlined all over in 2023.
Taylor and her jubilant Swifties.
Oh no!
Everybody comes together and we're all dressed up and we all participate.
Beyonce and the Beehive.
Beyonce!
Both tours generated billions for local economies, mostly from women cheering their heroes.
No, this is good news.
Women.
Women cheering their heroes.
Yep, this is very good.
I have never been more confident
and proud to be in my own skin because of her.
And Barbie.
Not just a Hollywood hit, a cultural conversation.
Barbie is like such a strong and empowered woman.
She has like 90 jobs.
Good.
She has like 90 jobs.
Wow, that's the clip of the year right there.
Cultural conversation.
Barbie is like such a strong and empowered woman.
She has like 90 jobs.
Barbie is empowering. Yes. Yes.
With the legs that are five times too long
from any normal woman with the boobs that are bigger
and firmer than any woman. And look at that hair, Barbie.
I know a lot of people want to send blankets or water.
Just send your cash.
We just need cash.
Blankets or water.
What difference does it make?
We just need cash. We just need cash. I'm going to show my support by donating to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, on No Agenda in the morning.
Well now I remember.
I remember all of a sudden.
Why would they call us the best podcast in the universe?
I mean, come on.
Yeah, those clips are dynamite.
Of course, some of them are from producers.
They're not all our own.
This is how it works in Gitmo Nation.
Well, yeah, but you have to remember the clip of the day is called On The Show by one of
the two of us when it happens.
Correct.
It's not just, yes, exactly.
And that's because we noticed, sometimes we didn't even know it.
Like wow, that was a really good clip.
You know, I don't think I've ever clipped something.
In fact, it happens more often than not.
The people go like, play this guaranteed COTD.
Never, never.
It's never best clip of the day ever.
So even though we are taking a day off here, we do want to implore you to support the best
podcast in the universe.
And of course, we'll be thanking everybody in an extra, probably, hopefully an extra
long donation segment on episode 1768, which will be on Thursday.
So quick turnaround for us.
So you'll be executive producer, associate executive producer, etc. on that show.
Yeah, go to NoAgendaDonations.com and you might find there's a special offer coming
up.
Uh oh.
Is that going to be on the website?
It should be.
By the time we speak of this?
Maybe.
Oh, well.
NoAgendaDonations.com will reveal all.
There it is. NoAgendaDonations.com will be thanking everybody on the next show.
And right now, back to the best of the clips of the day.
And now, back to real news.
I'm a little heartbroken because they remember two intellectuals, they are evolutionary biologists,
smart people who think podcasting is no good, podcasting 2.0, you know, don't go for value
for value.
What breaks my heart is what they're actually doing to make money. Podcasting is no good, podcasting 2.0, don't go for value for value.
What breaks my heart is what they're actually doing to make money.
Okay.
Speaking of things to eat, Sundays is our next sponsor.
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It's one of our favorites too.
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Now of course you really want to make the advertiser feel happy about the read.
This was a very good read Heather.
Dog food.
But we really want the sponsor to know that we really love their business.
Not only that but in some sort of mini scenario, if you ended up having to share
your dog's food, you would be so glad.
It's Sundays.
I speak from experience.
I mean, not from the mini-apocalypse experience, but from having tried it and it's good.
And not also from getting down on the ground and eating from her bowl, which is gross.
Oh, also undignified.
I mean, just really bad.
That doesn't necessarily stop him. You gotta color around his neck and make him eat from the dog's bowl.
That's true. But I mean that was more dignified than you would imagine.
Yeah much better much more dignified. I mean it was a little badass at some level right?
And I mean we're only taking your word for it. I guess that's true. Yeah, I didn't see it. Well, I might have to repeat it.
You might, on camera even.
All right.
All right.
Oh my God.
But here we go.
I have not tasted it, but it looks edible.
It is.
It is edible.
Yeah, all right.
Oh, jeez.
It's delicious.
Okay, I'll give you a clip of the day
for dredging that up.
Clip of the day for dredging that up.
Dredging being the operative word here.
That breaks my heart.
Breaks my heart.
Go value for value people.
Stop right away.
Stop it.
Well, my favorite clip of the day is the pot eating rats.
Okay, thank goodness. Well, my favorite clip of the day is the pot eating rats. Okay.
Thank goodness.
NOPD Chief Anne Kirkpatrick says rats are getting in and eating drugs in the evidence
room at NOPD headquarters.
It's just one of the reasons that she says they need to find a new one.
Eleanor Tabone is joining us live now on what is prompting that move other than the obvious
rats eating evidence.
Eleanor? Katie, rats, roaches, no AC, broken elevators. The NOP headquarters
building here on Broad Street is decaying. That's why the city is looking
for a new space, a space where rats don't eat evidence. The rats eating our
marijuana, they're all high. You heard that right. Rats don't eat evidence. The rats eating our marijuana, they're all high.
You heard that right.
Rats eating marijuana from the evidence room.
NOPD Chief Ann Kirkpatrick says sometimes staff come into work and find rat droppings
on their desk.
When we say we value our employees, you can't say that and at the same time allow people
to work in conditions that are not acceptable.
I was not going to give it to you until I heard the rats are high. So yes,
you will get a clip of the day for that. Now this clip goes on. This is a scam
of some sort to get a new, a completely new police building. Yes, well, it's good for me.
And it's like, you can poison rats, you can trap them.
There's rat traps, you can stop this.
And roaches, you know, you can do the same thing
and bring an exterminator in
and get rid of the roaches and the rats.
But then, no, no, no, no, no, no,
the rats are eating the pot and we're losing evidence
and we gotta move to a new place because this is no good. Where the evidence go, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no is Frank, and he has, maybe not, but it's a quite frankly podcast
and it's on Rumble.
So it's not really a podcast, but okay.
It's a Rumblecast.
Oh, there you go.
It's a Rumblecast.
And he has this guest on from time to time named Rich Barris.
Rich is a pollster and really a GOP Republican, pro-Trump guy, very knowledgeable. And he knows this guy from back in the day when he was, I guess, also working in that
business.
And he's very surprised to hear that this guy has, quote unquote, committed suicide.
And then he rolls out an extra little bit, which I think we just need to take it into
account.
Boeing is an extremely powerful company
There is no doubt that they lied and for almost you know
Nearly 400 souls are dead because they lied and because they cut corners and because they tried to hide it
if it wasn't for Donald Trump more people would be dead and he doesn't talk about this enough, but
FAA and everybody was like
But they wholeheartedly believed Boeing when that second plane went down Trump
He became the just so people know how a historic this is Trump became the first president ever in history
To ground an aircraft by president presidential order without by the way the recommendation of the FAA
He did not the FAA was still in cover- up mode and kiss ass mode Frank, when he signed
that order and said the 737 is grounded.
He did it by presidential order.
The first crash, understandable.
But once that second one came along, the president was like, no, something's wrong here.
It's grounded.
And he did.
And this is like one of the many things that happened during the Trump administration
that you just never hear about,
that is just really incredible bold action
from the former president.
No president has the balls to do that.
Can we be serious right now?
Boeing is powerful.
They had a lot of friends,
including in his own administration.
He let Nikki Haley go
because her family was basically broke. And he let her go to go get a job on the board of Boeing that she had lined up in
order to you know and that's why by the way you know that it's more than just
one promise you hear oh well Nikki Haley said she would never run against a
former president if he ran again. I mean this was something that they actually
had talked about Frank when he let her go.
He said, fine, I understand, you need to go
to the private sector and do some stuff,
but I got your word that you're not gonna come back
as a ball buster, you know?
And so she not only broke her vow to the party,
not, you know, to, you know, that loyalty pledge.
I mean, this was a personal, you know,
my word is my bond kind of situation. I have
to resign. My family needs more money. I'm going to go do this, which he really didn't
like, but she had already had those connections to Boeing from when she was governor of South
Carolina. She literally enticed them to move the construction of that aircraft over to
Charleston. And that's when all...
And that's when all the cost cutting started is when
Nikki Haley begged them to come move their operation to South Carolina.
So there's a stinky element of Nikki Haley in this too.
Wow. Huh?
You know, that clip, I have to give you a clip of the day for digging that one up.
Well, it wasn't me, it was our producer, so I'll give it to them.
I'll give it to whoever.
That was a good catch, whoever found that.
That is fascinating, and it also adds to the intrigue of Trump and all these
people that he trusts and hires, you know, I would say like, you know, it's like one
backstabber after another, no matter who it is. What is the deal?
According to Turkish radio and television, and then obviously I need to someone pointed
this out to me that I guess I need to point out that Turkish radio and television. And then obviously I need to, someone pointed this out to me
that I guess I need to point out
that Turkish radio television
is not going to be on the side of Israel,
which is why I play it.
You got to hear everything from around the world.
Yeah.
Not just the three by threes.
You know, we got to, this is what we do.
We expose Chinese, anti-Chinese, all kinds of stuff.
But they say the reason for Hamas attacking on October 7th was the Red Heifers.
Are you familiar with the Red Heifers?
Well, okay.
I'm going to be in a minute.
Could a Texas cow start Armageddon in the Middle East in April 2024?
And what does this have to do with Israel's war on Palestine's Gaza?
On the 100-day anniversary of Israel's brutal assault on Gaza, Hamas spokesman Abur Habeda
released a video explaining the motivations behind the group's incursion into Israel
on October 7th.
Alongside Israel's continued occupation of Palestine, he
also mentioned the bringing of red cows into the occupied Palestinian territories.
Ubaidah was referring to the plans of numerous right-wing Israeli groups who
believe that a red cow must be sacrificed in order for the Jews to
progress plans to demolish the Al-Aqsa Mosque and build the fabled Third Temple
in its place. It might sound like a conspiracy theory, but hardliner Israeli group the Temple Institute
have already purchased and imported five red Angus heifers from Texas at a cost of $500,000.
They have been grazing in a kibbutz in the occupied West Bank since 2022,
with reports that the sacrifice is planned to take place as early as April 2024.
The sacrifice of the red heifer has its roots in the Torah and the Talmud, reports that the sacrifice is planned to take place as early as April 2024.
The sacrifice of the red heifer has its roots in the Torah and the Talmud, and it is believed
that the ritual is necessary to purify the Jews so that they can pray at the Al-Aqsa
compound.
The sacrifice will reportedly take place on a plot of land on Mount Follibs, facing the
Al-Aqsa Mosque.
The cow must be completely red, including its hooves, and must be around
three years old at the time of sacrifice. Following the sacrifice, the ashes of the
cow are due to be mixed with water and used to purify selected Jewish priests and their
adherents.
It's about to get exciting. I thought the eclipse was exciting.
You got to get a clip of the day for dredging that up.
Clip of the day for dredging that up
Paulie it literally popped into the algo
It just I was looking at a different YouTube video and this YouTube short popped up
Like wow This is great. You got lucky. This is great. I
Don't know if you saw this it was BBC BBC hard hard tuck
tuck Stephen Sackler.
And he- Oh, I have that same clip.
Yeah, but I have the whole, I have the whole thing.
It's a little, it's a little, there's a little more to it.
And I just, I have some commentary about this.
So everyone saw-
By the way, Stephen is a dick.
And the hard talk has been like this forever.
Where they just think it's so cool to be up
with a British accent to just grill somebody unnecessarily
and not let, you know, and have this, it's a terror.
Hard talk, 16 years ago ago we started this show.
I used to watch it because it had a different guy.
But ever since the Stephen Sackler guy,
whatever his name is, came on it,
and the arrogance and condescension of his style,
it shows unwatchable and the BBC should take it off the air.
Well, it was doubly disgusting because the clip that went viral, everyone was like,
yeah, you stick it to the BBC, man, you tell them, yeah, you tell them. But meanwhile,
this was an entire net zero promotion, complete acceptance that CO2 is killing us and the president of Guyana did not push back on the
bogus climate change charges.
No, he's all in on it.
This was a promotion of global warming and everybody fell for it.
Yeah, man, you tell them carbon sink.
We have to be very careful about this climate change stuff. This is this is the stuff.
Well, we're looking at Trump and Biden and and the algos.
It's the climate change.
This is how they're going to lock you down.
Welcome to Hard Talk.
I'm Stephen Sackert.
And today I am in Guyana, South America.
A country of some 800,000 people which right now can claim to have the fastest
growing economy in the world. The reason? Oil. Vast reserves of the stuff located
offshore. My guest today is Guyana's president, Erfan Ali. His country's newfound oil riches
have stoked tensions with neighboring Venezuela. They've also raised questions about this country's
vulnerability to climate change. So is oil really a blessing or a curse?
Alright, so now we get into the thing that most people saw. Let's take a big picture look at what's going on here.
Over the next decade, two decades, it is expected that there will be $150 billion worth of oil
and gas extracted off your coast.
It's an extraordinary figure.
But think of it in practical terms.
That means, according to many experts, more than two billion tons of carbon emissions
will come from your seabed, from those reserves, and be released into the atmosphere.
I don't know if you as a head of state went to the COP in Dubai.
Let me stop you right there.
Do you know that Guyana has a forest forever that is the size of England and Scotland combined,
a forest that stores 19.5 gigatons of carbon, a forest that we have kept alive.
A forest that we have kept alive.
Does that give you the right to release all of this carbon?
Does that give you the right to lecture us on climate change? I am going to lecture you on
climate change because we have kept this forest alive that stores 19.5 gigatons of carbon that you
enjoy, that the world enjoy, that you don't pay us for, that you don't value, that you don't see a
value in, that the people of Guyana has kept alive.
Guess what?
We have the lowest deforestation rate in the world.
And guess what?
Even with our greatest exploration of the oil and gas resource we have now, we will
still be net zero.
Guyana will still be net zero.
So he's right there with net zero, which means carbon credits, because that's how you get
to net zero which means carbon credits because that's how you get to net zero he says carbon but he really means carbon dioxide because that's just
become the thing now it's carbon it's just no it's carbon dioxide and it goes
downhill from there the Center for International Environmental Law has
described the oil and gas production in Guyana as turning your country from as you rightly put it a carbon sink
Into a potential quote carbon bomb now you may say you have every right. I mean come on
This thing is a is a climate change promotion
Climate carbon bomb give me a light break. Yes, and so time carbon bomb. Give me a break. Potential quote carbon bomb. Now you may say you have every
right to exploit that oil and gas. That is ridiculous. We even with our, even with exploring
and production of all our resources, we are going to still be carbon neutral. We are still
going to be carbon neutral. Let me quote you Greenpeace who say quite simply, to avoid
the worst impacts of climate change and you know that your own country is one of the most vulnerable to climate
change because most of your population lives below sea level. And we have paid, guess what?
Now this is interesting, so this guy not only is he all actually really on a net zero,
but now he's reminded that his country, most of his country lives below sea level.
But he's all in on sea levels rise, of course, because, you know, that's what
Obama knows with this house on the coast.
The population lives below sea level.
We have paid, guess what?
Guess what?
We have paid for the mitigation.
We have paid for the adaptation.
We are the ones who have to find revenue.
So to... No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, You can say that, but we need to get resources and the developing world, we need to get resources
to build the sea defenses, we need to get sea defenses to build a drainage and irrigation
system.
You just said that we are six feet below sea level.
Who is going to pay for the infrastructure?
Who is going to pay for the drainage and irrigation?
Who is going to pay for the development and advancement of our country?
Are you going to pay?
It's not coming from anywhere.
It's not coming from Greenpeace or anyone else.
So he's admitting we got to pump the water out, man. When the sea level rises, where
people start to drown, you're not going to pay for that hard talk, man. No, we're going
to pay for it with our carbon.
Isn't there a cynicism here in Georgetown, best expressed by your vice president, who
said recently, because there is this climate change imperative to decarbonize our policy is to get as much oil out of the ground as quickly as
possible. Now he said that's harsh for those who think that you should be
environmentally sound but that is the reality of it. Those were very honest
words from your vice president. And that is what we are honest we are practical.
So you're rushing.
Rushing to get this oil out before any deal is done to quote Dubai Cop to transition away
from oil and gas.
You can say we are rushing, but we are very practical.
We have this natural resource and we are going to aggressively pursue this natural resource
because we have to develop our country.
We are committed to the development of this region.
We have to create the opportunity for our people because no one is bringing
that for us.
You, you, no one is bringing that for us.
No one is paying our agenda.
So while everyone thinks this is a big win, it's not.
The guy's all in his vice president's all in.
Yeah, just they have a different solution.
Let's do a quick.
I like the analysis.
I'm going to give you a clip of the day.
Oh, that is very kind of you.
Clip of the day.
Because you're right.
Everyone just played the funny part.
I had the clips isolated because,
not because of the analysis,
because it was humorous.
Yes.
Cause it was.
Yeah, I've told you.
And, but you were absolutely correct.
The whole thing is, it could have, might as well have been scripted.
Yep.
Yeah.
Why else is the guy there?
Hard talk, man.
Yeah.
And why did he go to Guyana from UK?
That seems like a kind of out of the way trip.
I hear Guyana is beautiful this time of year.
Anyway, leave it to the farmerless meat country,
known as the Netherlands.
This is really, this is a marketing campaign.
Farmerless meat.
Can you believe it?
Instead of saying it's not actual meat,
no, it's farmerless meat.
Don't just forget about the cow.
We don't need this stupid farmer. These wooden shoes.
And you want protein?
Introducing the Dutch Bugsburgers.
At first glance it looks like a normal hamburger.
But it's not just any old burger.
Because half of the meat patty consists of ground up insect larvae.
The Bugsburgers.
It's dry but it has nice flavor.
And I would definitely recommend it to my family. Yeah, listen, the Dutch, it has nice meat flavor I would definitely recommend it to my friends.
Yeah, listen, the Dutch, it has nice meat flavor so I'm going to eat it up.
It's very good. I would recommend it to all my friends.
It's dry but it has nice flavor and I would definitely recommend it to my friends.
The main ingredient in Vera's Buxburger is ground lesser mealworms, the larvae of the darkling beetle.
The production of the insect burgers begins here, in the Dutch town of Ermelo.
The manufacturers have been breeding insects here for about 40 years.
Mainly as animal feed.
Give them cow feed!
And for the cosmetics industry.
But recently they've been producing more and more larvae for human consumption.
He performs regular checks on the quality of-
What do you think the difference is between larvae for animal consumption and larvae for human consumption?
Is there a different process?
Suddenly?
You're making me sick!
Or larvae for human consumption.
He performs regular checks on the quality of his worms.
Around 2 billion people around the world eat insects daily.
But it's still a big taboo in Europe.
Within 5 years I think we all eat a couple of times a year insects.
The worms are a sustainable source of energy containing 50% protein.
They only need a fraction of the space, water and feed that breeding higher orders of animals
require.
Their CO2 emissions are minimal.
The larvae live for three months in these boxes where they consume grain.
When they're large enough to be harvested, they're flash frozen and shipped to customers. are minimal. The larvae live for three months in these boxes where they consume grain. When
they're large enough to be harvested, they're flash frozen and shipped to customers. Max
Kramer and Baris Özel are the founders of Buxburger. The founders first encountered
edible insects during a world trip seven years ago. That's how they got the idea to start
their business. When we first told friends, family, and acquaintances about our idea,
most of them said we were
crazy, that there's no way it would work.
In the meantime, everybody thinks what we're doing is cool.
And the next thing they say is, hey, when can we finally try it out?
The ground mealworms are mixed with peas, water and a secret spice mixture.
Their burger will lead to less meat being eaten.
That will be good for the environment because less grain will be used for cattle feed.
And the insects are also climate friendly.
A few restaurants in Belgium and the Netherlands already have Bucks burgers on their menu.
The exotic hamburgers cost between 12 and 17 euros.
They cost some fortune.
They're going to be subsidized.
Well, your subsidized theory, I had to say, is probably the only thing that's going to
save this industry.
Oh, it's going to make it clear.
But it's disgusting.
I'll give you a clip of the day for that one.
Oh, well, thank you.
I found it by accident.
Clip of the day.
I think someone told Arson to me.
It's the most disgusting.
That will be the disgusting clip of the day, probably for a long time.
It's in our future.
It's in our future. It's in our future.
Yes.
No, they've been promising.
They've been threatening us with this forever.
All right, back to a descriptor for raw milk.
I remember Louis Pasteur did not invent this
to pasteurize milk because those people
were drinking raw milk and they loved it.
Bacteria and viruses.
This is why Louis Pasteur back in the 1800s
came up with pasteurization
because back then people would get sick. Raw milk, think of it as raw sewage. It's heavily...
Raw milk, think of it as raw sewage. You're drinking sewage.
So the natural exudation from a mammal, milk, which women deliver too, I might add, is raw.
The sewage.
It's raw sewage to her.
Raw sewage.
Oh, that's a fabulous report.
It's not done.
Raw milk, think of it as raw sewage.
It's heavily fecal contaminated.
Think about where the cows, their feces are.
Well, hold on a second. Now she thinks that the cows poop out of their udders
or does she think the milk comes out of the anus? What is she saying to me here?
That's what she's saying one of the two. Think about where it says it says
contaminated with fecal material. Yes well the udders are nowhere near the fecal material.
The udders are nowhere near the fecal material. Saline, Dr. Saline, is she confused with a...
What is she confused by?
This is very odd.
But a chicken and an egg, an egg has a vent in the poops and the egg comes out of the
same poop hole.
What is that?
The clava, the cola, the...
It's a ventricle.
It's a clava, egg clava, costa clava.
People would get sick.
Raw milk, think of it as raw sewage.
It's heavy.
Cloaca.
Cloaca.
Cloaca.
Yeah, cloaca.
Cloaca.
Cloaca.
Cloaca, thank you.
Trolls are on point today.
All right, let's go.
Heavily fecal contaminated.
Think about where the cows, their feces are.
This is not clean.
You really want to be drinking pasteurized milk.
It's not clean.
The udders are super clean
and um i'm gonna no i'm really not going near any pasteurized un-pasteurized milk so now he's so
grossed out and so ignorant that he's like oh man oh those udders are dirty they're filled with poop
wow this is an understated you're getting clip of the day for this baby.
No, this clip of the day is for the clip custodian.
Clip of the day.
It's not for me.
Oh my God.
It's not for me.
Yeah, well the clip custodian's on it, man.
And this is CBS.
CBS, last one.
How concerned should the regular person watching here
who hasn't been on a farm recently be?
If you haven't been on a farm recently, go out, go to a farm, shake your rancher's hand,
learn about where the udder is.
So if you're not having direct contact with poultry or dairy cattle, those are the two
types of animals that have been infected in the United States.
If you're not drinking unpasteurized milk or raw milk, your risk as a member of the general public
is pretty low right now.
What we're concerned about is if this-
Pretty low.
Wait a minute.
It's not zero?
It's pretty low.
It's just pretty low.
Pretty low.
Pretty low.
No, that's a percentage.
Your favorite.
Your favorite percentage is pretty low.
It's low.
Pretty low right now.
What we're concerned about is if this continues to replicate and mutate and evolve, whether it's in mammals
or humans like dairy farm workers, that's when there's a risk of it evolving and adapting
to humans and person to person spread.
Back to the wet market.
And it jumps.
And that's what we-
But she said devolve, which doesn't make sense.
No, but it devolve, and then he says, oh, it jumps.
This is the wet market story that we were supposed to keep believing, but Fauci
covered it up wrong.
And so we figured it out and like lab.
Okay.
But no wet market, wet market is we're back to wet markets now.
That's when there's a risk of it evolving and adapting to humans and person to person
spread and it jumps.
And that's, and that's what we about. That's what can cause a pandemic.
So it may not be today.
Oh, Pangolin.
But say within the next 10 years,
if we allow this kind of thing to keep going,
that's what we're worried about.
And by then it's too late if you haven't learned how to.
Yep.
Thank you so much for being here.
I learned how to what?
How to, how to, I don't know,
if you haven't learned how to, just learned how to.
If you haven't learned how to and then he stops.
Yes, yes.
How to lie, how to lie for a living.
I'd like to discuss the Miss USA controversy with a couple of NPR clips.
Oh good, because I already brought it up that something was going on, right?
We talked about it a few shows ago.
Yeah, you mentioned it.
Yes.
But this is like a...
Something's going on, something's up.
This is like a classic example of NPR not being able to twist the story.
To Trump.
To make it something Trump did.
I think you may have guessed it, but let's go to the point here.
Now we turn to a scandal that's shaking up the beauty pageant world.
Oh man, it's already starting off great.
The beauty pageant world. Oh man, it's already starting off great. The beauty pageant world.
Oh no.
Miss USA and Miss Teen USA recently stepped down.
The organization that runs both of these competitions is under scrutiny.
Now former Miss USA Noelia Voight cited mental health, while the former Miss Teen USA Uma
Sofia Srivastava pointed to a misalignment of quote, personal values within the organization.
For more insight on this, we are joined here in studio by Amy Argotsinger. She's style editor at
the Washington Post and the author of the book There She Was, The Secret History of Miss America.
Amy, welcome. Thank you for having me. Amy, just for starters, can you briefly walk us through what
we know so far about these resignations? We haven Kirsten Krofman We haven't gotten a lot of details. It seems
as though both the former Miss USA and the former Miss Teen USA are probably bound up
by nondisclosure agreements. They've alluded to being limited in what they can say, but
some details have trickled out just reading between the lines of their messages to the
public on Instagram and by some comments that their mothers have given in interviews. And the general impression you have is that they feel like they were
just shabbily treated by pageant management, that they were subject to criticism and disorganization.
You've seen some phrases tossed about, bullying, sexual harassment that wasn't taken seriously, things
like that, but the precise details have not come out.
The resignation statement that was put out by Noelia Voight, who is Miss USA, went viral
and followers online were pointing out that her statement's first 11 sentences started
with letters that spelled out, quote, I am silenced, unquote. I mean, do you think that's
internet conspiracy theory
or that she's trying to say something significant there?
For once, it does not seem to be internet conspiracy theory. People close to her have
said, yeah, this is how she feels. That was an intentional message. And that's the message
we've gotten is that this was somewhat coordinated. These young women talked to each other. Their resignations had been preceded by that of the social media
manager for the organization.
Wow.
It's about time.
This is, I've never understood why this is still a thing.
I mean, it's, it seems so off in today's politically correct world to have
beauty contests at all,
and to display women like,
this is of course the season of reveal
and we'll find out about the Olympic games,
how the athletes are treated like just marketing meat.
Ooh, marketing meat.
That's all these women are marketing meat
for organizations that are corrupt
and probably filled with creeps.
Yeah, of course I would draw creeps
because you know, you go where the action is.
Hey, there's action over there.
Yeah.
So I am silenced as the first, you know, first,
I actually wrote a column for Mac user magazine years ago where I did that.
You did, I am silenced?
You did one of those?
I didn't say I'm silenced, but I had some message
using the first letter of every sentence.
What was it?
I can't remember, it was happy April Fool's Day
or something, I don't remember.
The whole thing was.
To let down?
I think, I did a bunch of these jokes
and one year I resigned resigned which upset the publisher
But in the but there was a message was in there
But I remember one time I did one that was a mirror image
Which was the I think one of my more creative April Fool's gags
But yeah using the first letter is not it. It's not a conspiracy when it spells that I am silenced
No, it's like what kind of you think it's a coincidence that she wrote this?
So, okay.
Anyway, so now we go to part two because we got to get to the bottom of this.
What's really going on?
Who's responsible?
More quietly though, a couple of longtime executives with Miss USA stepped away in the
past several months since the pageant management changed hands back in August. This is an organization
that's in some upheaval and that goes back a long ways.
Voight hasn't commented further on her resignation statement, but a longer version of that resignation
letter was obtained by some news organizations and in it, she accused the Miss USA organization
of quote, a toxic work environment, that at best is poor management
and at worst is bullying and harassment. Given what you know about this organization, about
its history, did those charges surprise you?
No, they really didn't surprise me. Part of that has to do with the fact that this was
the pageant organization, Miss USA, subsidiary of Miss Universe, that was owned in part by Donald Trump.
I think we all remember hearing in 2015, 2016, some of the accusations, some of the stories
that came out about his behavior around contestants the way he talked about them.
Oh, my word. I mean, you know what?
I thought that, you know, did John forget?
Did he forget about what was going on?
But this also deserves a clip of the day.
So NPR and Washington Post, they can't help themselves.
They just can't do it.
Of course. We had to take it to Trump. It's Trump's fault.
You know what? I know what the problem was. I know what she couldn't say. I know what's going on.
Half of the contestants are dudes. That's what's happening there. Yeah. You know what's really
good? Particularly these new arrivals that come through the South.
Newcomers.
We're so xenophobic.
These newcomers that come enter the southern border, they often have to swim across the
Rio Grande.
Basically they get dropped off on the other side and it's like, okay, because they all
have clean clothes, everything's good to go.
But you got it for the show, please swim across the Rio Grande before you enter the Americas.
And the New York City mayor has some thoughts about this.
That states those jobs that we are in high demand, we could expedite. How do we have a large body
of people that are in our city and country that are excellent swimmers, and at the same
time we need lifeguards?
They're excellent swimmers, John.
You need lifeguards? Is that what he said?
Yes.
And at the same time we need lifeguards. And the only obstacle is that we won't give them the right to work, to become a lifeguard.
Because they're excellent swimmers. We know it. They swam across the Rio Grande.
I mean, come on, make them lifeguards. I mean, that's urgent.
That just doesn't make sense. But if we had a plan that say,
you have a shortage of full service workers, and those who fit the criteria, we're going to that say you have a shortage of food service workers and those who fit
the criteria we're going to expedite you.
Because you know how to cook right?
I mean you're good.
We love that cuisine you all are bringing in newcomers.
If you have the experience that you are a nurse which you have a nursing shortage and
we would expedite you and that's the same with lifeguards.
So we have all these eligible people waiting to work
with the deals.
How many lifeguards do they employ?
There's some lifeguard shortage.
I mean, this-
This is bull crap, by the way.
You get Clip of the Day for the lifeguard clip.
Oh, well that's-
Sometimes these things come so unexpected,
but okay, I'll take it.
I didn't figure that one.
Clip of the Day. Thank you. Life take it. I didn't figure that one out.
Thank you.
Lifeguards.
I actually had that clip from the last show.
I mean, I didn't, I didn't, it didn't make the cut.
You never know.
It's a sleeper.
Didn't even make the cut.
Now, Dr. Brian Hooker, he is from the Children's Defense Network.
I think that's Bobby the Ops medical network.
He was on the Dr. Drew show and he had a slightly different take about this.
Well, I think when you look at it at its core, it is an economic disaster.
It's an economic, for the farmers themselves that have to, are being ordered to call these herds. It's an economic
disaster, but it also promotes sort of alternative technologies. You know, I find it odd that
a lot of this is happening by the USDA, but yet the USDA is the one that has genetically
modified chickens that are genetically modified to be immune to influenza, to bird flu. And so, you know, of course you call the
herds and then you can introduce a genetically modified product. And we're being trained more
and more as a society in the United States to accept more and more different types of GMOs.
And I don't think that this is any accident at this point in time. I'm in agreement. I like that.
I like that.
The GMO chicken.
I give you a borderline clip of the day for digging that one up.
And I actually didn't dig that one up.
Oh, that's a surprise.
Oh, please.
Who was it?
Give him credit.
No, I would if I if it was I think I just stumbled upon it.
I'm not sure if this was not, I think I just stumbled upon it.
I'm not sure if this was not a, not as,
I clipped this myself.
Let's put it that way.
Clipped it myself.
Oh, I'm sorry. Okay.
Clipped it myself.
So GMO Chicken, I like that idea.
Dr. Jen has another agenda,
which was not really surprising
because we've already had the mailing ballot, we
have pharmaceutical overlords ramping up government contracts and there's another one.
Let's talk to America's favorite doctor we can.
This is making medical headlines.
Authorities have detected the presence of bird flu at a farm in Iowa with more than
four million chickens.
Should we be concerned?
Oh, geez.
Okay, here's the latest from the USDA.
And again, we've been in close contact with it.
There must be a memo that said, yes, some's got to be up and saying, should we be concerned?
It's got to be in that memo as a talking point.
It has to be because everybody's saying the exact same thing.
Okay here's the latest from the USDA and again we've been in close contact with the CDC on this.
They are testing more. That's why you're seeing it more. There's no surprise here.
Exactly. The more you spin up your your bogus PCR cycles and you're testing more, the more you're
going to see. You could test for HIV and get it from from cows
Come on people. We know this is bunk
But the latest is infected poultry entering the food chain in this country
The risk is sought to be extremely low that entering the food chain
According to the USDA all poultry products are inspected rigorously and they were before this outbreak for signs of disease.
Bird flu, avian influenza is not, I repeat, is not transmissible by eating foods, including poultry,
that have been properly prepared, properly cooked. So you want to make sure you're not cross-contaminating.
You want to cook according to regular appropriate temperatures. And eggs, because we've been tracking this as well,
have to be thoroughly cooked until the yolks are firm.
No over easy.
No over easy.
And when you're done with the dairy stock.
What do you mean, oh please.
TooManyEggs.com.
TooManyEggs.com.
TooManyEggs.com is what Mimi says,
you know I do all this work, you guys never plug the book.
You can't do them over easy.
Rip those pages out of your book.
TooManyEggs.com.
Rip the pages out of that book.
You could die if you have eggs that are over easy.
Or not to mention sunny side up.
No.
Until the yolks are firm.
No over easy.
No over easy.
And when you're talking about the dairy supply.
Wait, wait, wait for it, it gets better.
No raw or unpasteurized milk.
No raw milk.
Oh yeah.
No milk, no raw milk.
That should have been the case before avian.
So bottom line, if people want to avoid this altogether.
Did you hear that?
What?
She said that should have been the case before.
Oh yeah.
The avian food thing.
Yeah, because raw milk.
In other words, hey, we don't like the idea
of anyone having raw milk, so that should always
be the case, even if there's no avian flu,
it's drinking sewage.
Wait, there's more.
And when you're talking about the dairy supply,
no raw or unpasteurized milk.
That should have been the case before avian import.
So bottom line, if people want to avoid this altogether,
what's the choice?
Well, look, again, we have to emphasize
what the science and the facts say right now.
There is no evidence that this is a virus
that can be transmitted via eating properly cooked food
or drinking properly pasteurized milk.
But obviously the options always need to be stated for people who are concerned.
Plant-based, better for the environment and probably will save you some money as well.
You can do it temporarily. It's a good way to try out that diet at the very least.
It's just an option.
Yes, but she comes in with the vegan angle.
Holy mackerel, that's clip of the day.
Thank you. I figured it. And it goes to clip custod, that's clip of the day. Thank you.
I figured it.
And that goes to Clip custodian.
Clip of the day.
Yeah.
It was amazing.
She brings in the vegan angle at the end.
You don't want to make sure when you...
Can you imagine having a fried egg with the hardest hell yolk?
What's the point?
My mom used to, she had a problem with running egg yolks.
She'd always, we'd go to her diner.
I remember it so well.
She'd be like, can you kill my eggs?
I want them killed hard, burned, burned all the way.
You have no yolk.
And then she'd put ketchup on it.
Make scrambled eggs then, it's fine.
Oh, but you can't have them too fluffy.
Gotta have them hard.
Overcooked and dry.
And don't you dare put any raw milk in there. Now here's the
crazy thing. By the way, if there was some evidence that somebody got bird flu from raw
milk or over easy egg, where is it? There is no evidence. Although there's not a lot
of reporting in the US per se about the Saudi Arabia de-dollarizing, I'm just going to use that term, by apparently not renewing
the deal to only sell their oil in US dollars, making the US dollar the reserve currency.
Well, I think that we're starting to nudge them a little bit as CBS out of the blue,
the CIA broadcasting system, starts to bring up an old story, which
includes the 28 pages that were not included in the 9-11 Commission report.
Oh yeah.
CBS News exclusive, the unnerving video outside the US Capitol filmed two years before the
9-11 attacks.
Good evening, I'm Nora O'Donnell, and thank you for being with us. Two decades ago, the 9-11 Commission found
that al-Qaeda acted alone.
But victims' families say that is not true.
Pointing to this video and other evidence is proof.
They are suing Saudi Arabia, claiming its government
provided crucial assistance to the hijackers
and planners behind the September 11th attacks
that killed nearly
3,000 people 60 minutes correspondent Cecilia Vega reports
The voice on the video says in Arabic I am transmitting these scenes to you from the heart of the American capital Washington
This video unsealed in federal court this week and obtained by 60 Minutes, was recorded in the summer of 1999. Man behind the camera is Omar al-Bayoumi, who the FBI says was an operative of the Saudi
intelligence service with close ties to two of the 9-11 hijackers.
The video was filmed over several days.
Bayoumi recorded entrances and exits of the Capitol, security posts, a model of
the building, and nearby landmarks. In this portion of the video, Bayoumi points out the
Washington Monument and says, I will get over there and report to you in detail what is
there. He also notes the airport is not far away.
So then they bring in a whole bunch of former spooks to confirm this and this was
probably related to Flight 93. Richard Lambert is a retired FBI agent who led the initial 9-11
investigation in San Diego where Bayoumi and the two hijackers lived temporarily before the attacks.
He's now a consultant on the case filed by the 9-11 families. If you've ever flown into Washington,
D.C., one of the first things you see on the horizon is the Washington Monument. So if you know where
your other targets are in terms of the Washington Monument, it helps guide you
to your intended target. Federal investigators believe the hijackers on
flight 93, which crashed near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, had the U.S. Capitol as
their likely target.
The lawyers for the 9-11 families
and former intelligence analysts we spoke to
believe portions of the video show Bayoumi
surveilling the Capitol as part of that plan.
And in the video, he references a quote, plan.
You said that in the plan.
What plan?
Who is he talking to?
What do you think he's talking about?
I think he's talking to the Al Qaeda planners who tasked him to take the pre-operational
surveillance video of the intended target.
So this video is taken in late June and early July of 1999.
What does that timing tell you?
Well, that means it was taken within 90 days of the time
when senior Al Qaeda planners reached the decision
that the capital would be a target of the 9-11 attacks.
That's when Osama bin Laden decided
to approve Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's
so-called planes operation.
In the days after 9-11, British police
discovered the video
during a raid on Bayoumi's UK apartment. They also seized Bayoumi's handwritten address
book that the lawyers for the 9-11 families say was filled with phone numbers of numerous
senior Saudi officials who were in the government at the time.
I don't believe any of this story, of course, but that's not the point. The point is, okay Saudi Arabia, we got your number.
We go back to the 9-11 situation at the time.
There was a lot of discussion about suing Saudi Arabia.
And our government blocked it.
Yes, because we had no, no, no, you can't sue them because they're our friends.
And so it got like never happened.
And then this but we all knew that there was some some information
that was left out of the report.
And so this which could be anything that could create
and you had a number of years to create this whole thing could be like you think
is maybe a fake.
But yes, this is exactly right.
This is a little pressure point. Because if Saudi Arabia got blamed and sued by all these, by the 3000 families that were harmed,
it would be a nightmare. That was the idea, to prevent the nightmare. Now, okay, you guys
are going to screw us out of our petrodollar deal that you agreed to.
Either re-sign up or the nightmare begins.
That's what this is.
WCC7 won't go away.
There's a little annoying fact about it.
That was a good find.
I'll give you a clip of the day.
Wow.
Well, thank you.
Appreciate it.
Clip of the day. Unexpected you. I just came across it. I'm like, Hey, yeah, let me clip that.
So we have an election coming up in the UK on the 4th of July. Interesting date for them to choose
that. And already there's lots of, well, first of all, people are so, I guess they're apathetic about it.
They were like, oh, well, labor's going to win.
They're going to give the government back to the labor party.
Yes. Nigel Farage is out there with his, what is it, the Freedom Party? What is he called?
I think it's a reform party or the new, he created a new party and he's got lots of traction. That guy,
I want to just make it off the, just kind of a side comment here.
Reform party is what it is.
Yeah. The reform party. So we had spotted Nigel Farage,
probably 12 years ago, 13 years ago on this show,
as a character that was worth following.
Cause he had these great speeches at the EU Parliament.
And we got note after note from our Brits saying,
this guy's gonna go nowhere.
You guys are idiots.
You shouldn't be paying any attention to him at all.
Well, let's see, almost 15 years later,
this guy's still very important.
We happened to be on top of it.
Remember when they tried to kill him in the plane crash?
Do remember that?
Yeah, it didn't work.
You've been around.
So anyway, channel four did this, this massive hit piece on them.
They went undercover and they discovered there's all kinds of racists in his party.
We've gone undercover inside Nigel Farage's Reform UK campaign in Clapton and we recorded
extremely offensive language including this canvasser saying people seeking asylum should
be shot.
Get me on the coast there, yeah, with guns on the f***ing beach, target practice, f***ing
racist.
Racist language was repeatedly used, here directed at the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
F***ing illegal, what's good is it?
And homophobia from Farage's inner circle.
You see that f***ing general flag on the front corner?
What the old Bill doing from right next to that?
My object is for us to become the voice of opposition.
He's promised a political revolution.
Nigel Farage claims to speak for the forgotten many, the self-styled leader of the People's
Army.
They've opened up the borders to mass immigration like we've never seen before.
This is the image Reform UK wants to portray.
And yet some of the party's candidates
have been accused of racism and extremism.
So the guy that you-
Wow.
Yeah.
I'm gonna give you a borderline clip of the day
for digging that one up.
Wow.
That is so unexpected.
So unexpected that I didn't even have it ready.
To say the least.
Wow.
But the fact that they'd run a hit piece on him. I know you didn't expect it, but... Say the least. Wow.
But the fact that they run a hit piece on him...
I mean, you can go to the Democrat party and...
I mean, O'Keefe does this all the time.
I mean, you can go to any group.
And it's like the man on the street interviews.
You can make everyone sound like idiots.
You can make everyone sound like geniuses.
You can do whatever you want. This is all manipulation.
Well, sure.
I'm sure there's more than a few racists who hate Sunak,
and there's plenty of racism in the Democrat party here
and the Republican party here,
and in the Black Lives Matter people.
I mean, you can't get away from it.
But to create a phony baloney hit piece based on this, this gambling going on surprises, bull crap.
The M five M are our mainstream media was really just totally understanding
of, uh, of the lack of interviews because elections aren't about policy.
In fact, stating your policy is a very dumb move.
No one wants to hear that.
That can tank you.
What people in America want,
the way we elect our presidents is the same way
we choose our breakfast cereal.
Vibes, man, vibes.
Candidates don't need us as journalists to get their message out.
They don't anymore in this ecosystem. In the media we're preoccupied with like how much access, how many conversations is she
going to have?
I don't know how much that matters.
There's risk in talking to us.
There's no doubt about that.
When you hear the criticism, oh, she has to do more interviews.
She has to talk about policy.
Insiders you're speaking to, they're sort of like, no, absolutely not.
There's a campaign.
No, no, I love you all, but I don't want to talk to you all right now.
Remember what Elizabeth Warren did when she ran back in 2020?
She had a white paper for every policy position under the sun.
And what happened?
She collapsed in the primary.
So it's a belief that perhaps you put more ideas on paper.
That's a bad idea.
The more details you share, the more your policies
are going to get picked apart.
Harris has changed this from being a policy election and more of like a
movement, a cultural movement.
It's a vibes election.
That's right.
Policy vibes.
Vibes election?
It's a vibes election.
This vibes election that we're all feeling right now.
It already felt like a vibes election before.
Most elections are vibes elections.
I think every election, frankly frankly is a vibes election.
And I think there are really only two vibes
that matter in American politics.
One is hope and joy and the other is fear and anger.
Wow, that is the best.
I'm actually gonna give you a borderline clip
because that's one of the better super cuts
I've heard in a while.
For the life of the day. cuts I've heard in a while.
Thank you.
That is so funny.
Yeah, I love that.
There's only two types of vibes, man.
Hope and joy or fear.
What was the last thing that said?
Fear and anger.
Hope and joy and the other is fear and anger.
Fear and anger.
This is crazy.
That's great. Let me just get back to Aurora because I have
two quick clips from one of their council meetings, 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 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 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 I 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. Oh well you should have waited.
No you should. You should have waited because this is my favorite.
They're in the park
grabbing up ducks by
their 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.
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 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 gotta put on a t-shirt and some crocs and get out here people. Y'all need to do something bro y'all really gotta stand on minutes y'all getting paid all this money just to wear a suit and sit in a chair. I don't think I think it's I think it's crazy bro that's where they come from and that's what they do that 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 getting paid for me and then y'all ain't doing nothing about it.
I think that's super weird, bro.
Y'all got to stand on Venice.
Y'all gotta really like step up.
It's lame, bro.
Yes.
I'm surprised that you're-
That I'm not all over it?
Yeah.
You're the AI hater of the two of us. I am. I am the AI hater. I'm surprised that you're... That I'm not all over it? Yeah.
You're the AI hater of the two of us.
I am.
I am the AI hater.
Have you seen the latest that they're doing with AI?
Maybe.
It's Notebook LM is what it's called.
No, don't know it.
So Notebook LM, I guess is some kind of,
it's like a closed loop AI system.
So you can put in documents that only you care about
and then you can do AI stuff with it,
whatever that means.
You query it, probably.
Yeah, you can query it.
But now they have an extra, I'm looking for it,
I thought I had a link, I think I do.
Now you can put in an extra thing
and you can say, make a podcast out of these documents,
which by the way, if it was any
good, I would be all for it.
But it makes these, let me see.
Oh man, I hope I have this here.
It makes a podcast.
Yes.
Yes.
It makes a podcast.
Okay.
So this, in this case, this guy put in a hundred thousand word document of random text titled Patent.Text,
gave it to the notebook and listened.
So this thing then makes a podcast.
By the way-
You know, I want to stop you here and say I really admire the fact that you are the pod father.
You keep track of everything that has anything to do
with podcasting at the most minute level.
I never heard of this.
Somebody has to protect the medium.
Yeah, and that's actually the way you see it.
Yes, yes I do.
Here, let's listen.
Okay, so we've got another head scratcher this week.
These, these patent files you sent in. Yay! Had me a little bit stumped, I gotta say.
Yeah. It's, we've got a bunch of text files. Okay. All named patent, but with these little
numbers tacked on. Right, right. Like patent two, patent four, that kind of thing. Interesting.
And I open these things up. Why is that interesting? This is what the AI thinks a podcast should sound like between two people.
Oh, this is the podcast we're listening to?
Yes, you're listening to the podcast.
This is an AI podcast.
Oh, so we have a dipshit, these are fake voices?
Yes.
And so we have a guy and this is like a typical, this is like fashioned after NPR.
You have some guy and a dipshit woman who's going,
oh, some moron.
Yes.
Okay, now I'm interested.
Basically pivot, the pivot podcast.
Please start it over.
Oh, okay, I'll start it over.
Another head scratcher this week.
These patent files you sent in,
had me a little bit stumped. I gotta say
yeah it's uh we've got a bunch of text files okay all named patent but with
these little numbers tacked on right right patent to patent for that kind of
thing interesting and I open these things up and it's just line after line
of binary oh wow ones and zeros as far as the eye can see. Okay. So that's our challenge today.
We are diving headfirst into the world of, uh, well, binary code.
Now, I think that what I like about this particular AI is it adds the
uhs and the ums to it, but for some reason, the podcast format has to be
someone taking the lead
on talking and the other someone going,
mm-hmm, oh yeah, yay, right, mm, yeah, shoot,
let's do it.
Let's do it.
To see if we can crack this code
and figure out what in the world is going on.
Absolutely.
So before we get too far,
I think it might be helpful for some of our listeners
to do a little bit of a binary one-on-one.
Hold on, she's a little too, this is a, they got to tone,
they got to turn her down a little bit.
She's, she's it.
Every phrase she's throwing a bit in there.
It's like, uh, oh, ah, mm, yeah, ooh.
There's too much of that.
They got to fix that.
It's fixable.
I'm looking, looking forward to the day
when we just throw a bunch of clips and show note stories
into a bin and then I stay in bed on Thursday and Sunday and the show is just the show.
Just the very basics.
What are we even talking about when we say binary code?
Right.
So at its simplest, binary is really just a way of representing information. Now wait, now they're gonna switch roles, she's talking and he's gonna do the, oh yeah,
really, oh yeah.
Using only two options.
Okay.
So instead of our ten digits like we use in our everyday lives, you know, zero through
nine.
Right, right.
Binary uses just zero and one.
Got it.
And those two digits, that's all we need to build even the most complex
information. So it's kind of like a light switch. Exactly. It's either on or off.
That's it. One or zero. Yeah. Oh my God. I want to kill myself now.
Okay, stop. Yes. Clip of the day. Well, thank you. I wasn't even intended to put it on the list today, but I'll take it.
Un-be-lie-va-ble.
But I like the kibitzing, the constant never-ending, not like we do, I interrupt each other in a different way to stop things, but this is always encouraging.
Alright. Oh yes, okay.
Oh yeah, good. I like it. Interesting. All right. Oh yes. Okay.
Oh yeah.
I like it.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Very good.
Keep going.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is why I have no fear of AI.
I have this short clip where this is just one of those unbelievable things that she says
is great.
Earlier in the day, Harris made her first trip to the border in Arizona in years.
Harris expressed a tougher stance on illegal immigration.
She spoke with local border patrol leaders as they walked along the wall.
There are consequential issues at stake in this election.
And one is the security of our border.
The United States is a sovereign nation
and I believe we have a duty to set rules at our border
and to enforce them.
It's just like, wow, okay.
You know, the funny thing about that,
I didn't get that, I saw that clip, I should have grabbed it.
I'm glad you did,
because I'm giving you a clip of the day,
because that is unbelievable.
Oh, thank you very much.
Clip of the day. Well, unbelievable. Oh, thank you very much.
Well, I have clips I think can outdo it.
I don't think so.
Well, I mean this morning. Not to the height of hypocrisy.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, not.
And by the way, for people who tune in like,
Hey, I listened to that No Agenda show.
Sounds like they got an agenda.
Yes, we're against idiots.
We're against liars.
Liars and idiots.
Going back to the initial prediction
that we said this was theater
and it would be fireworks in the sky
and calm down everybody, we're not in World War III.
I would like to show you the difference
between your No Agenda Show and the culture war economy.
And I hate to say it, but Scott Ritter is the one who said this.
The entire Israeli package was based upon Iranian defenses defined by S-300 type capabilities.
S-300 is a Russian service to air missile.
The Russians just provided the Iranians with a significant number of S-400s.
Together with the sophisticated Electronic Warfare Package,
we're going to jam the Israelis as they come in.
Backed up by SU-35 fighters.
Now, here's the thing.
How many Iranians have been trained on the operation of the S-400?
I'll give you a quick hint.
None.
Who's operating the S-400 on Iranian soil?
I'll give you another hint.
The Russians.
Who's flying the S-35s?
Not Iranian pilots.
Russians.
So now Israel, to attack Iran, is gonna have to go head to head with Russia.
You think Israel wants to do that?
You think Israel's ready to do that?
Do you think the United States is willing to let them do that?
Now what is Israel going to bomb?
Are they gonna bomb the nuclear site?
That's the end of Israel.
Israel disappears that quick.
You understand the first Israeli bomb that drops on Iran,
over 500 missiles will immediately be fired.
These are solid rocket fuel missiles.
You can immediately reload, fire 500 or more within 15 minutes.
That's a thousand missiles impacting every strategic site in Israel within 30 minutes
of the first Israeli bomb dropping.
The Israeli airplane won't even be halfway home before his entire country is destroyed.
That's going through the mind of Benjamin Netanyahu.
You want to know why he didn't order the attack?
Because he can't order the attack.
He's got nothing to attack with.
Iran holds all the cards.
Okay.
Wow. Wow. Okay. Okay. Iran holds all the cards. Okay. Wow.
Wow, okay, okay.
Clip of the day.
Oh.
Wow.
Even despite the crappy audio.
Oh, thank you.
I appreciate that.
Clip of the day.
This is a classic.
This Scott Ritter is one of those guys.
He's a plant.
I mean, he's entertaining to listen to
and he does make some interesting points
on certain specific shows he keeps showing up on.
But that's the example right there
of what we think is going on,
which is backed up by what's going on.
And what other people think is going on,
which is some sort of op.
There's a sigh up to what he just said.
But I just want to tell you, because I've been wondering, I've been watching and looking for some sort of up. They're giving this a sigh up that what he just said. Yep.
But I just want to take, cause I've been wondering, I've been watching and looking for what are they going to do?
How are they going to explain this whole thing?
This, this event, and this is the kind of the kicker to the analysis, which is
they finally came to the conclusion that they're going to blame Biden.
Yes.
Today explained Sean Roms from here with Andrew Prokop, senior political correspondent at
Vox.com who's here to tell us what happened last night and this morning.
Andrew, what happened last night and this morning?
Well, four years after Donald Trump tried to steal the 2020 presidential election and
left office in disgrace, the American people chose to
return him to power and gave him another term in office.
And why did the American people choose that?
That is a debate that is going to be very heated over the coming days and weeks and
months and years, but my viewpoint is that this election was not
so much about either of the candidates on the ticket and more about President
Joe Biden.
Come on man!
Biden is...
Wait, wait, did you put that in or is that in this report?
That was actually in the report.
This is NPR?
Yes!
Oh, then yes.
Well, they're listening to our show.
Or about President Joe Biden.
Come on, man.
Biden is simply put, one of the most unpopular presidents in history.
And he has been for some time.
His approval rating, last I I checked was somewhere around 38%. And again,
it's been there for some time. And you know, I think there was a hope among Democrats this
year that Biden's bad approval was just because he was old or just because of his vibes and that if they put in a younger newer face
Then they wouldn't have
Problems with the electorate with the public that they would win. Oh, I'm glad you delayed the break for this. This is good
This is good stuff
They're just gonna pile on poor Joe
Because they know that did go back to the basic thesis, Joe sabotaged the party by putting
in Kamala.
Yep.
Because they didn't want her, they were going to do a mini convention or something and get
a bunch of something going on and get somebody else in there.
Gavin.
Well, or Shapiro or Whitmer, there's a bunch of them.
Probably Whitmer would be more likely.
Yeah, tell me about it.
But they got sabotaged by Biden,
and then Biden further sabotaged them
with the garbage comments and all,
everything he can do to make sure that,
so now this is the, okay, you pulled that,
you want your legacy, here we go.
This is gonna be your legacy.
You, you, you, they're gonna just, this is just pathetic. This is going to be your legacy. You, you, you, they're going to just,
this is just pathetic. This is all.
I'm going to relent to the troll room. They want to give you a clip of the day for this.
I think they're right. I think they're right. This is something that happened earlier in
the week, which went completely under reported.
Russia has closed one of the biggest gas pipelines to Europe, Nord Stream 1. It begins in Northwest which went completely under-reported. especially Germany. So this shutdown has spooked the German government. They fear the lights
could go off. So Europe is going all out in preparation. Their first order of business
is violating their own sanctions. This is very interesting. Let me explain. Russia needs
a specific turbine to repair the North Stream pipeline. But that turbine is not in Russia.
It was sent to Canada for repairs. Now, if Canada returns it, it would violate
Western sanctions. If not, Russia could drag out the shutdown. The Western plan is to achieve
energy security and their chosen method, violating their own sanctions on Russia.
Now, I don't know about you. Wait, clip of the day. Oh, well, gee, thank you. I know.
Clip of the day.
I never heard this either.
Why are we being, why is this information on, you know, we have CBS, it's in NBC and
ABC doing all this news reporting.
What are they talking about that they don't talk about this?
They're talking about trans and race.
That's all they do.
They're just gaslighting everybody. Oh,
trans rights. Oh, race. Oh, misogyny. Meanwhile, that cannot be a coincidence that, and this
happened just before the election, Russia like, or maybe it was right after the election,
Russia click, I'm sorry. We're just cutting off your gas because we don't have that turbine.
And we know about this turbine story because it popped up
months and months ago that the turbine has to be repaired
and it has to happen in Canada.
And Canada is like, no, we can't do that.
But all of this has thrown the German parliament
into disarray.
Well, this is about the new meetup.
Yes, the COP-29.
I thought we just ended a COP,
and now another one started right away.
Yeah, well, we had the biodiversity, diversité.
Oh, that's what it was.
Okay, I keep getting confused.
I'm having too many of these meetings.
Yeah, now we have, so that was COP16, biodiversity COP.
Oh, different COP.
This is COP29 in Baku.
Yes, here we go.
An annual global climate conference is underway in Azerbaijan.
The priority this year is money, money, money, money to help the places hit hardest by climate change.
NPR's Michael Copley reports.
Due to climate change,
people all over the world face catastrophic threats
from climate change.
But the president of this year's United Nations meeting,
Mukhtar Babayev, put the spotlight on developing countries.
Whether you see them or not,
people are suffering in the shadows.
They are dying in the dark.
They're dying in the dark.
And they need more than compassion.
Woohoo!
Hold on a second.
Just for that alone, I'm giving you Clip of the Day.
That is, yeah, that's great.
Clip of the Day.
The guy is a poet. He's a poet.
They're dying in the dark.
Suffering in the dark. Dying in the dark. They're eating the dogs.
No, they're suffering in the shadows. They're dying in the dark in the dark dying in the dark. They're eating the dog. No, they're suffering in the shadows
They're dying in the dark
Nations meeting Mukhtar Babayev, but the spotlight is great developing countries whether you see them or not
People are suffering in the shadows. They're dying in the dark and they need more than compassion
Suffered this guy's an alliteration nutjob, suffering in the shadows, dying in the dark.
Developing nations don't bear much responsibility for the climate pollution that's raising
global temperatures.
Climate pollution?
But they're getting hit with some of the worst impacts, like more extreme heat waves and
flooding from torrential rain.
Oh, brother.
Some wealthy countries that built their economies using fossil fuels promised more than a decade
ago to help their poorer neighbors pay to cut climate pollution and prepare for weather risks. Leaders at this year's
climate talks are under pressure to come up with a new funding target that's a
lot more ambitious than the last one, which was set at a hundred billion
dollars a year. These numbers may sound big but they are nothing compared to cost of
inaction. It's not clear where the money will come from.
Did he say coastal erection?
What is going on here?
Coastal erections cost a lot.
They sound big, but there are nothing compared to cost of inaction.
It's not clear where the money will come from.
The UN said recently that developing countries need around $215 billion every year in this
decade alone to adapt to climate impacts. That doesn't count the cost of cutting climate pollution or compensating
developing countries for losses and damage they're already suffering.
No, brother.
And then the third reason R.F.K. Jr. is the most dangerous man in the universe.
And you know, I'll also bring all the medical journals, the New England Journal of Medicine, the Lancet,
JAMA into the Justice Department as soon as I appoint an AG.
And I'll say to them, you guys are part of a racketeering syndicate.
You're collaborating with these pharmaceutical industry to lie to the American public about
the efficacy and safety of these products,
and you're causing enormous harms,
and we are gonna sue you both civilly for damages,
and we're gonna sue you criminally,
unless you come up with a plan right now
as to how you're gonna stop doing that.
So I have a hundred things that I'm gonna do immediately.
Hey!
Okay, yes, clip of the day, by the way.
Yes, Thank you.
You are absolutely correct. This guy is going to get shot. Well, that's why I'm
glad he's eating burgers with Trump on the plane. Keep him very close. And you
know what, whenever RFK juniors walk around, just have Elon walk in front of him.
That would make me feel better.
The first buddy, have the first buddy walk in front of him.
I mean, and go Bobby.
This is fantastic.
And you think the media would be,
because you know, traditionally journalists
are all for this sort of thing because it's fun. But no, no, they're, they're poo pooing it. This is what he, that last clip in particular,
where he's going to go after these bogus journals, which we've noticed these things have pulled
some stunts recently. They can't do that. No, they have to be called to task. This is ridiculous.
Kennedy, yeah, Kennedy's got to get in.
Not more than ever.
Those three clips are fundamental.
When you need to kickstart the economy, what do you do?
It's what we always do.
Every nation throughout history, we need to kickstart the economy.
Let's turn to war.
The way you can manufacture stuff that gets blowed up.
It cuts the population down.
Who better to sell it than our friend, our friend from the lowlands,
Remarque Ritte is here to tell you what we must do Europe, because it is not safe.
It is not safe. We not safe we must be very
careful our deterrence is good it's good for now for now but it's tomorrow I'm
worried about I'm very worried about tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow the Sun
will not come out tomorrow we are not ready for what is coming our way in four
to five years what could be coming in four to five years? I don't know.
Danger is moving towards us at full speed.
Danger, danger is moving towards us.
If full speed what takes a long then?
Full speed five years is coming from a very far place away.
We must not look the other way.
No!
We must face it.
Face it.
What is happening in Ukraine could happen here too.
It could happen here too, don't you understand?
And regardless of the outcome of this war, we will not be safe in the future unless we
are prepared to deal with danger.
You must be prepared for danger, we will not be safe, what can we do about it, how must
we be thinking? What can we do about it? How must we be sinking?
We can do that
We can prevent the next big war on NATO territory. Okay and preserve our way of life. How do we do it?
This requires us all to be faster and fiercer. Yes. It is time to shift to a wartime mindset. And TurboChart, our defense production.
Wait, wait, wait, the payoff is...
What a fanatic.
You, by the way, give yourself clip of the day for pulling this one out.
Oh man.
Our defense...
Oops, hold on, what happened there?
Oh, a million things went wrong at the same time.
I'm sorry.
Clip of the day, I'll take that.
Yeah, no, I'm taking it, I'm taking it.
Clip of the day. All right, listen. Yeah, no, I'm taking it. I'm taking it. Clip of the day. All right.
Listen to the kicker.
Listen to the kicker.
This time to shift to a wartime mindset and turbocharge our defense production and defense
spending.
Remember when they said we won't even have a European army.
Now we have a defense production, a defense military industrial complex,
and collectively we have a war mindset. I want everybody to have a war mindset. I have
people in the Netherlands sending me article after article after article about how to prepare
preppers, literal prepper articles in mainstream magazines and newspapers in
the Netherlands.
How you need to have water, what kind of canned goods you need, because you know with the
war mindset it could happen.
It is coming our way.
They are siopping Europe.
Wow.
Big time.
It's it's it's it's pathetic
Anyone gonna eat this meatloaf?
Good times good memories dynamite. I mean, I don't want to pat ourselves on the back but
Because it is after all a gitmo nation community production everybody helps out so much But I mean,'s just it's good man these and these clips of the day
It's when when do we actually do you remember when we started with clip of the day? I?
Think it's when someone sent a jingle in the clips of the day jingle
You probably said that's the clip of the day and then someone sent in a jingle should probably look that maybe yeah
I always like to say stuff like that. Thank you again to our executive producer, Gus Raya, for putting that together for us.
We highly appreciate that.
And I think we can probably do another 15 years worth of these things.
Being at.io, Sir Deenonymous, thank you for your wonderful system that you've put up for
us.
And of course, we're looking forward to being back with you on Thursday.
In the meantime, coming to you, well really from Nashville, Tennessee and looking forward to be back in
FEMA Region Number 6. In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, I want to remind everybody to go to NoAgendaDonations.com
and help us out. I'm John C. Dvorak. We'll be back on Thursday. Please join us then for the best podcasts in the universe. Until then,
adios, mofos, a-hoo-ee-hoo-ee and such.