No Agenda - 1771 - "Home Depotation"

Episode Date: June 8, 2025

No Agenda Episode 1771 - "Home Depotation" "Home Depotation" Executive Producers: Baronet Sir Dirty Jersey Whore Anonymous Ross Johnson Jason Soderlund Mike Ruhlin Associate Executive Producers: Si...r Writer of Words Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of resumes PhD's: Sir Dirty Jersey Whore Become a member of the 1772 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Sir Dirty Jersey Whore > Baronet Dame Nancy of the Confused. > Baroness Knights & Dames Trevor Lohman > Sir Writer of Words Art By: End of Show Mixes: Sir Dewcifer - Sir Scovee 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) 1771.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 06/08/2025 17:08:55This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 06/08/2025 17:08:55 by Freedom Controller  

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Alright, this is the time, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where they've called out the National Guards, it's authoritarianism. I'm John C. DeBorak. It's crackpot and buzzkill. In the morning. Oh man, it's on the quad, it's on the quad. Everybody's on the quad. Oh no, Trump calls out the National Guard. Doing what people asked him to do. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.
Starting point is 00:00:47 We can't have it. It's authoritarianism. It is authoritarianism, man. It's like the National Guard is standing there like smoking cigarettes. They don't know what to do. They're all standing around. There's nothing's going on.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Standing around. Everyone else is, they're riding. No, they burned like their old panties and everyone's live streaming it on Instagram and TikTok. I have not seen anything really happen. Well, there was that car on fire. Oh, a car on fire. They do that when we win the ball game.
Starting point is 00:01:23 It's true. Come on. You win a Super Bowl and they put more cars on fire. Yeah, don't park around the Super Bowl Well, I have a couple of clips because the BBC thinks this is a big deal Oh, yes. Well the BBC would because it's gonna happen in their town soon and but but this is interesting this this clip is interesting because you know they want to turn it around and make it about Trump somehow being Hitler. Yes, of course. And so they talk about the event, they have some woman standing there in LA, as in LA
Starting point is 00:01:59 by the way, for people out there who don't know where this is taking place. For people who don't know what the quad is, I have YouTube TV has a four screen multi-view CNN MSNBC Fox and BBC. That's the quad Just like and so they so there's she woman reports. She's gonna let this say so they bring on the course the main BBC guy so he's gonna bring an analyst in to discuss this. And here we go. Well, earlier I spoke to Scott Lucas, professor of US and international politics at University College,
Starting point is 00:02:32 Dublin's Clinton Institute. He's a professor. He's in Ireland. And his specialty is Trump derangement syndrome, I'm presuming. Yeah. Well, National Guard is a long-established institution. It dates back to the 17th century
Starting point is 00:02:46 when the US was a British colony. And that is, it was a local effectively militia. Now, as the US developed as a country, you of course would eventually have the national military, but the National Guard would be overseen at state level. Now, they could be used in two cases. The federal government could request that the states deploy them, provide them, say, for example, at the start of the 21st century in Iraq, I mean, Afghanistan. They can also be used in national emergencies. And I emphasize real national emergencies. For example, in 1992, as you mentioned, in the LA uprising, after the beating of Rodney King, they were called out when the city suffered more than $1 billion in damage. And they can
Starting point is 00:03:33 be deployed when states refused to observe the law. So the federal government in the 1950s under Dwight Eisenhower called out the National Guard to make sure that schools could be desegregated in Arkansas when Governor Falbis refused to do so. So in very specific situations where there is an imminent threat, the federal government can override the states and call out the National Guard. Hold on a second, he says two things here. Let me just get this right and you've probably looked this up. So the president can call out the National Guard in a situation where the state is disregarding the law and that could be a danger. And then
Starting point is 00:04:13 at the end he says, but you know if it's just if it's if it's crazy then he can call the National Guard. And in in this case, I presume legally President Trump has called in the National Guard because the state of California is not cooperating with ICE to hand over criminals. That sounds right. It sounds like the president is in his constitutional right. You're too logical. Oh I'm sorry I don't work for the BBC. That's the problem. So a couple of things he did say I want to point out because he's going to be forced to contradict himself. He says he makes the point of real, he says real national
Starting point is 00:04:55 emergencies and uses the word national, real. That's what he said. Yeah, it's real. Rodney King was not a national emergency. No. It was a local situation in LA. Yeah. But I suppose you could, you know. It was not a good time. It was not a party. No. The other one was Faubus. He wouldn't, there was a black kid. They wouldn't let him into school. So they brought the National Guard and forced him to go in or her. I think it was a woman. That was during Johnson? No, this is where, this is Eisenhower. Oh, Eisenhower. I'm sorry. Yes, way before. And so that was, you know, hardly a national emergency, but whatever the case, he's going, he's kind of wandering here. He, the BB, he's not on the script because he
Starting point is 00:05:37 should have already slammed Trump by now. So the BBC guy interrupts him. Prompts him, prompts him, hey, you're not doing it right. Interrupts him and puts him back on track. And then we get to hear what they're really trying to tell us. Here we go. What do you make of Donald Trump's decision to do it in this instance? It's unprecedented. It's unprecedented for the National Guard to be called out when you do not have that imminent threat.
Starting point is 00:06:02 And I need to emphasize, protesters gathered last night, as you mentioned, outside this detention center, because people are just being swept up. Many of whom have no criminal records, and with a threat, they'll just simply be disappeared, deported without due process of law. There were some people who were arrested when they failed to disperse,
Starting point is 00:06:22 but there were some total of two, two people who were arrested for assaults on police officers, one with a Molotov cocktail. Now, do you think that in the literature this professor has studied that they speak of sweeping people up or is that just hyperbole from our professor? And then he also used the word disappeared, which is a left-wing trope. Disappear, that's good. I'll take it back to that. Deported without due process of law. There were some people who were arrested when they failed to disperse, but there were some total of two, two people who were arrested for assaults on police officers, one with
Starting point is 00:06:58 a Molotov cocktail, allegedly. So there was no imminent threat here. This needs to be called out what it is. It is a political stunt by the Trump administration, both as part of that crackdown on migration and also to try to expand its authority at the expense of the states in what would some see as being effectively authoritarian. Oh, there it is. Oh, very good. Authoritarian. Every single one of my British and European friends, you know what they say? Man, I wish we had a guy like that here.
Starting point is 00:07:32 That's what they all say. That's what they all say. Yeah, there's that element. That's the one that actually cracks me up. Yeah, of course. They won't say it in their own country for fear of retribution. And all the news, all of it is all swept up,
Starting point is 00:07:49 you know, disappeared like disappeared is my favorite. These these this is not this is this is political speech. That's what that is. And it's it's it's kind of baffling. Well, no, not really, I guess. It's not baffling. What am I thinking? It's not really baffling. Do you have more? I have Ice Barbie, who was on the CBS Face the Nation. Well, where I wanna head toward with starting with that is the going toward, bringing back Elbrego Garcia.
Starting point is 00:08:24 Yes, okay. Which I have clips for, but I think Ice Barbie. Well, Ice Barbie is, okay, I always mix her up with Bondage. No, Ice Barbie is the... Is Gnome. Is Gnome, yeah. The dog killer. Gnome, like Gnome Alaska, she's cold.
Starting point is 00:08:44 Yes, the dog killer. No, like no Alaska. She's cold. Yes, the dog killer. So the dog killer, she has no she has no heart man. She's a dog killer. So she so thank you to the Jones Brothers Syndicate. Neil always does throughout the week and Steve has everything rolling in the morning. And that's why I was a little behind. I was I was late getting even the clean feed up for you because I was listening to the clips that were coming in. It's pretty cool to have it just before the show starts. So this is Margaret, your favorite, your gal, Margaret Brennan with the Ice Barbie, Christina Ome. Well, we are seeing from the president's proclamation that he can federalize, he says,
Starting point is 00:09:24 2,000 California National Guard forces for 60 days under Title 10 authorities. Which units are being deployed? Are they military, police, and exactly what are their orders? Yes, President Trump is putting the safety of the communities that are being impacted by these riots and by these protests that have turned violent. And he's putting the safety of our law enforcement officers first. So these 2000 National Guard soldiers that are being engaged today are ones that are
Starting point is 00:09:51 specifically trained for this type of crowd situation where they'll be with the public and be able to provide safety around buildings and to those that are engaged in peaceful protests and also to our law enforcement officers so they can continue their daily work. Okay, that sounds ominous. This is not good, but we gotta bring in the term federalizing. Federalizing, it's like the federal government's taking over the states. So our CBS team is reporting
Starting point is 00:10:19 that the California National Guard officers are at that Edward Roybal Center in LA. This is a plaza with a federal building. Federal buildings. Courtrooms are there, a processing center, a detention center, a veterans clinic. Are the soldiers going to remain around the federal building? Are you planning to have them go throughout the city of Los Angeles? I won't speak specifically to all the locations where the National Guard soldiers will be
Starting point is 00:10:45 deployed to or where they will be conducting different operations as far as security concerns. They're there at the direction of the president in order to keep peace and allow people to be able to protest, but also to keep law in order. That is incredibly important to the president. By the way, from what I can can see that's exactly what's happening. They're standing around Then they're not eating. They're not in the line, you know with their weapons drawn. They're just standing around and everybody else is protesting reasonably peacefully Okay, they're all live-streaming. That's it. This is a this is an influencer event
Starting point is 00:11:22 He recognizes he was elected to make sure that every single person in this country was treated exactly the same and that we would enforce the laws. And that is what ICE is doing every day as they're out on our streets and working to go after bad criminals and people that have perpetuated violence on these communities. The gang members we have picked up in LA because of their hard work are horrible people, assault, drug trafficking, human trafficking. They are now off of those streets and they are safer because these ICE operations are ongoing.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Unfortunately, we've seen some violent protests happen and that's why these National Guard soldiers are being utilized to help with some security in some areas. All right. So now we're just going to get down to it is because the Los Angeles authorities will not cooperate with ICE. Well, the US attorney in LA told CBS that LAPD did help. LAPD does not. That's what is happening to me, Margaret, is hours later.
Starting point is 00:12:20 They waited until we had officers in dangerous situations, then they responded. Now, if that was my city and I was the mayor, I would be sending law enforcement in there to back up other law enforcement officers. That's what America is about, is that we have rules and we have laws. If you don't like the laws, go to Congress and change them. Someone should go to Congress and say, change the laws if we don't like what's happening in this country.
Starting point is 00:12:41 Do that instead of throwing rocks and throwing Molotov cocktails and instead of attacking law enforcement officers. We're just not going to do that anymore. This president cares deeply about family members that want to live in their communities and be safe. Back to the question though of active duty troops, different from the National Guard. What is your personal counsel here to the president? Because it's you, the Attorney General, and the secretary of defense, who are gonna have a lot of responsibility here in implementing some of this call to do this.
Starting point is 00:13:13 Well, let me be clear about something. ICE and Homeland Security are running these operations right now. And the advice and counsel of the attorney general, the Department of Defense, are extremely important to the president of the United States and we never discuss our personal conversations and advice to the President of the United States. He makes the decisions. He is the President that sits in that seat
Starting point is 00:13:35 and we are all very proud to work for him. So I'm grateful for the leadership of Pete Hegseth and APM Bondi and I get the chance to work with them and as Osama does their job today, we're thankful to have the partnership and the leadership of Pete Hegseth and Pam Bondi, and I get the chance to work with them. And as Tom does their job today, we're thankful to have the partnership and the leadership of President Trump. Ice Barbie, you're so boring. The only thing that really, I think,
Starting point is 00:13:53 is interesting about this is the masks. And this is the last clip of that. But wait, before you play the next clip, what is Brennan trying to do here? Did you notice that she tried to pull in the active duty military? Oh yeah. Because they keep trying to stick Trump in. He's going to make the military, which is not the National Guard.
Starting point is 00:14:11 I mean the National Guard is the military, but it's a different branch altogether even though it's associated. Well they're trying to make it scary. Like he's turning the military on his own people like we said he would. Yeah, exactly. But it's interesting how she slipped it in and Noam slipped past it. She should have addressed it and chewed her out for it, which is I think Bance would have done.
Starting point is 00:14:34 Yeah. Well, Ice Barbie is cute, but she's not the best. I mean, she has kind of a stock way of talking. And then to say, oh, I'm excited to work with AG Barbie. Yeah, she's not as good as the other ones in terms of being aggressive. I mean, Rubio would have done it. Oh yeah, no, they're better. They're just better. It's okay. Ice Barbie is awesome in that role as Ice Barbie.
Starting point is 00:15:02 You know, just put a flag dog killer. All right, the masks. This is the part that I thought was interesting for a certain reason. President Trump said masks will not be allowed to be worn at protests. Who's going to enforce that and how? And how can you justify it when law enforcement officials have their faces covered? Go up to them and pull their masks down. You know what I would say is that the law is going to be enforced and that I what the
Starting point is 00:15:29 laws are in this country is what we're doing and our ICE officers and our law officers out there that are in these situations where people have questioned why they have their faces covered. It's for the safety of those individuals or the work that they're doing as far as protecting their identity so they can continue to do investigative work. So are you tasking the National Guard soldiers with removing masks from protesters? I mean, are you trying to use them in that way? This is such an upside down world for four years. The left was saying, wear a mask, wear a mask, wear a mask. And I was like, stop wearing your mask. National Guard soldiers are there to provide security
Starting point is 00:16:07 for operations and to make sure that we have peaceful protests. So that's what their work is. And I won't get more specific on that just because we never do when it comes to law enforcement operations. We're doing the same standard procedures we always do and have for years in this country with our National Guard and with our law enforcement folks that with our National Guard and with our You know law enforcement folks that are on the ground working with these communities now
Starting point is 00:16:29 This is interesting this mask issue because Hakeem Jeffries who is the what is his actual title? He's the the He's the leader of the Democrat Party in the house, but it has a name. Yeah, he would be the next speaker Yeah, the guys the guy I know said this on the show, but it has a name. Yeah, he would be the next speaker. Yeah. The guy's a, the guy, I, I, I haven't said this on the show, but he just seems, looks like, he has, he looks slow witted, sounds dumb. He's a dummy. Well, here he is talking about the ICE agents and the whole mask issue. Every single ICE agent who's engaged in this aggressive overreach and are trying to hide their identities from the American people will be unsuccessful in doing that.
Starting point is 00:17:14 This is America. America. This is not the Soviet Union. We're not behind the Iron Curtain. This is not the 1930s and every single one of them, no matter what it takes, no matter how long it takes, will of course be identified. That in fact is the law. And we're going to make sure that the American people have the transparency necessary to hold people accountable when they're folks
Starting point is 00:17:49 who cross the line here in America. That's what's going to happen. So he is basically threatening to dox the ICE agents to out them and let everyone know who they are so they can be... And where they live and what their family looks like. Let's go back to January 26 of 2021, Hakeem Jeffries. Congressman Hakeem Jeffries of New York, chair of the House Democratic caucus. Great to have you on, Congressman. Just tell me what you know and what you're willing to say. Obviously, there's some security concerns here about the threats this individual directed at family members, yours, on January 6th. This is something that unfolded on January 6th, directed at a family member of mine. This individual apparently had secured a phone number, secured an address, made it appear as though they were prepared to proceed violently
Starting point is 00:18:48 either at the address of my family member and or my own home address. He didn't like it when it happened to him. So no Hakeem Jeffreys don't't do that. Just don't do that. So then we have the, there's a number of good gambits going on. You identified it in the newsletter and that is the return of the Maryland husband, the father from Maryland, the poor guy who got shipped off to El Salvador. Oh, well, you got to get the correct, uh, the correct usage. Oh, well, I'm sorry. Did I get it wrong?
Starting point is 00:19:31 Yeah. He was, uh, he was, uh, accidentally shipped off or he was mistakenly shipped off. Swept up, swept up, swept up. Well, I have a couple of clips that kind of developed this, but I want you to play what you're playing. No, no, no. I'm tossing to you. Back to you, Bob. Oh, okay. Let's start with the right... We used to do this on the show. I stopped doing it, but I'm going to do it again, at least for this show. This is the rundown. This is the complete... It's a two-minute clip, and you don't have to watch the news. I've said this before. You just watch the rundown, and they give you everything you don't have to watch the news. I've said this before.
Starting point is 00:20:05 You just watch the rundown and they give you everything you need to know about today's news. And this is from yesterday's ABC news. Tonight, several developing stories as we come on the air, violent protest as ICE agents take migrants into custody. More than 40 million Americans on alert for severe storms and Coco Goff makes history at the French Open. First, the new clashes over ICE arrests, protests erupting from California to New York. As the Trump administration ramps up its immigration crackdown, and Kilmar of Braco Garcia now back in the US, two months after he was mistakenly, mistakenly, mistakenly deported to El Salvador. The charges he's now facing stemming from this 2022 traffic stop, according to DHS, and why a top prosecutor abruptly resigned over the case.
Starting point is 00:20:53 Dangerous weather impacting millions from the heartland to the East Coast. Severe storms firing up with damaging winds and potential flash floods. Texas and parts of Arkansas already hit hard. Our weather team timing it out. Coco's comeback. Coco Goff becomes the first American woman in a decade to win the French Open. Just 21 years old, how she came roaring back to beat the top seed in three grueling sets. Grueling! They've captured the alleged ring leader in a series of high-end
Starting point is 00:21:22 burglaries that targets pro athletes. Authorities say hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of items stolen. How police say the suspect's car led to his arrest. Our ABC News exclusive, Martha Raditz in Ukraine with President Zelensky. The Ukrainian leader telling Martha that Russia does not want to stop the war. The search for a former army soldier wanted in the deaths of his three little girls. Killers! Considered dangerous and possibly armed. Armed! In Washington state telling people to lock their doors. Lock your doors! Urgent recall impacting more than a million eggs in multiple states. Eggs! Potentially linked to salmonella. Salmonella! Travelers why the FAA is cutting the number of daily
Starting point is 00:22:02 flights. You're gonna crash! One of of America's busiest airports Busy! And the wildly popular Eagle Cam revealing a major development Is Gizmo the Eaglet ready to take flight? We're all gonna die! Yeah! I'm tired, I'm tired from just hearing that Yeah, I know, it's pretty fatiguing
Starting point is 00:22:20 But mistakenly, this mistakenly thing Everybody's using it Yeah, mistakenly It this mistakenly, everybody's using it. Yeah, mistakenly. It was a mistake. Wow, they are so dumb. Nobody ever said it was a mistake. One guy in the administration, he was one of the lawyers and one of the federal lawyers. I think we had a clip of that where he went, he said it and it was like, oh no, oh no, oh I didn't mean to say that, oops. And now everyone's picked it up. So to go from there to the NPR report on these. Yeah, NPR, yeah. These ICE raids.
Starting point is 00:22:53 This must be just full of gems. Well, it's pretty short, so it's not full of too many gems. But it's got the right kind of attitude. It's when we get to the NPR analysis, which are the Dems' view. But this play, ICE RAID, is ICE RAID SoCal. ICE RAID SoCal NPR. In Southern California, for a second straight day, there are major actions by federal law enforcement going after people in the country illegally. Steve Funderman has more.
Starting point is 00:23:22 country illegally. Steve Funderman has more. This is, you know, just clipping today. All of the terms that the news media is using. I mean, people who are, how about illegal immigrants, anything but what you just said, NPR. ...law enforcement going after people in the country illegally. Steve Funderman has more. Agents moved in at another Home Depot. Some of their focus was on day laborers. Wow, that's like shooting fish in a barrel. Let's go to Home Depot, see if we can find any illegals. Oh, please. Wow, okay.
Starting point is 00:23:59 That's exactly the right analogy. How much work are you going to put in today? I don't know. Let's just go to the Home Depot and pick up a few guys. Pick some guys up. Exactly. You know what it is, the Californians are pissed because these are the people who are rebuilding their homes and they have to get cheap labor because the permits cost 50 grand. That's what's going on. If you can get a permit, do you know as of the... Yes, I do. I do. The total, thousands and thousands of homes burned to the ground, the total number of permits, what is it, you know? Yeah, I think it's like 70 or something.
Starting point is 00:24:32 No, 55. Yeah, yeah. No, I actually have a clip somewhere of it, but yeah, no, exactly. It's a joke. And those 55 cost tens of thousands of dollars. So yeah, you wanna to go get your your labor at Home Depot. Steve Futterman has more. Agents moved in at another Home Depot.
Starting point is 00:24:49 Some of their focus was on day laborers who often gather outside the store looking for work. As word spread on social media of the raid, protesters showed up. There were some confrontations. Objects were thrown at a US Marshals bus carrying some of those detained. Agents responded with flashbangs and tear gas. One of the protesters, Maya Malika, blames President Trump. What we're facing right now is Trump's armed Gestapo. Because this is the future.
Starting point is 00:25:18 We're just seeing a glimpse of the future that Trump wants to implement. The acting director of ICE, Todd Lyons, is defending the actions here, claiming that some of the people arrested included dangerous criminals. That lady, she was on all the European reports. She is the, I think, director of the, a nonprofit for immigrants rights. So she was everywhere. And so I'm surprised that NPR didn't pick up someone else for that. But I guess she was the only one talking.
Starting point is 00:25:47 Yeah, why bother? Why, you know, is there's the easy way or the hard way? It's the easy way. Yeah. Did they talk to anyone at Home Depot? Any of the, like a manager? They can't speak English. So I just, no, they didn't talk to anyone.
Starting point is 00:26:00 No, no, no. You know, Lowe's doesn't allow that. You know, Lowe's shoes them off. No. Shoes them off. Go, go get out. Go away. No, Home Depot, we have one around here.
Starting point is 00:26:14 It's during the, in the hay day era. I think it was like a few number of years back. Yeah. That place was, there was a thousand guys out there. But you had to find one guy. You had to, you could find, if you wanted to get some work. You had to find one guy. You had to, you could find, if you wanted to get some work done, you'd find one guy who spoke really good English and he could organize a crew for you.
Starting point is 00:26:33 Yeah. You sound like you speak from experience. I'm just saying, this is possible. It's something you can always do if you need a clean up or something. Cheap. None of the cheap. There are plenty of people here in Fredericksburg who are born here who are happy to do a cheap clean up.
Starting point is 00:26:53 They won't come to California is my understanding. No, no, of course not. They don't want to live there. So NPR decides they're going to bring that bonehead from Connecticut, the guy who went to have a Margarita with Abrego Garcia, back on the show. That guy. That guy.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Oh, he's perfect. He's the perfect guy. Fantastic. So he can come in and play his, oh, well, you know, all we care about is process and all we, you know, which the Democrats are always accused of. They're more into process than anything. And you know, they got to, you got to follow the rules and this is all we, you know, this is what the Democrats are always accused of. They're more into process than anything. And you know, they got to, you got to follow the rules and this is all we cared about. We don't know if he's guilty or not, doesn't matter and blah, blah, blah.
Starting point is 00:27:32 But here we go. This is a four parter is quite entertaining. Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who has been at the center of an intense political and legal fight since he was mistakenly, mistakenly, mistakenly, mistakenly deported to El Salvador in March is back in the United States. For months, the Trump administration resisted a Supreme Court order to, quote, facilitate his return. Now, Abrego Garcia is back, but in a Tennessee prison. He's been charged with conspiracy to transport migrants in the US without legal status from Texas across the country. That's according to the federal indictment unsealed Friday.
Starting point is 00:28:07 Senator Chris Van Hollen played a leading role in the push to return Abrego Garcia to the US. The Democrat represents Maryland, where Abrego Garcia was living with his family before he was deported. Senator Van Hollen joins us now. Scott, good to be with you. What is your reaction to this news? He's been returned to the US, but is in federal prison.
Starting point is 00:28:27 This is a- Wow, did you hear that that was an interview that was done a whole different time, a whole different sound, a whole different timbre of voice? That was interesting. Where Arbrego Garcia was living with his family before he was deported. Senator Van Hollen joins us now. Scott, good to be with you. What is your reaction to this news? He's been returned to the US, but is in federal prison.
Starting point is 00:28:48 This is a victory for the rule of law and due process. As you just said, the Trump administration for months said he would never set foot on US soil again. They thumbed their nose at a nine to zero Supreme Court decision. I have repeatedly said that this is not about the man, Abrego Garcia. It's about his constitutional rights to due process and that if you trample over his rights, you threaten the rights of everybody who lives in the United States. So finally, his case is back in court where it should have been all along and he will have an opportunity with his lawyers who he's not had any communication with to defend himself against these new charges. I have a question So far this is the other way have you chewing gum everyone has to have gum if you chew and gum
Starting point is 00:29:45 You're chewing gum Billy give everybody a piece of the gum or get the gum out of your mouth. That's the Democrats. Is there anyone else that that this guy from Connecticut or any other representative or senator has gone to bat for that they were swept up and disappeared illegally? Is there any other example that we've heard of or is it just the news media telling us that? I don't know of any other examples. They have talked about the gay hairdresser but that kind of got pushed aside. No, because I don't think the gay hairdresser was true. If there truly was a gay hairdresser who got shipped off, the people would lose their ever-loving minds over it if it was really true, it would be perfect.
Starting point is 00:30:30 Trump hates gays. So I'm just going to say it was never true. So it just, you know, that would be saying- Well, you might, you're probably right. They're taking away our rights. That's- Well, the reason, what you just, the question you're asking, the open-ended question you're asking, is
Starting point is 00:30:47 not answerable because people are disappearing. Oh, yeah, but they have family members here. They've disappeared too. Oh, okay. Okay, I got it. Now here's the one, this one I did a little, I had to look into this because I got sick of this. ABC said the same thing as you're about to hear in clip two.
Starting point is 00:31:05 Okay. Have you been able to talk to him or his legal team? I have not spoken to him directly. I have spoken to his wife, Jennifer. What was her response to all of this? Well, she's relieved to have him back on US soil. Wait a minute. The wife who he beat is relieved to have him back on US soil?
Starting point is 00:31:22 This is bull crap. No, that's interesting. She's finally had a chance to talk to him briefly, which she was unable to do since he was first taken off the streets in Maryland and shipped to El Salvador. Of course, she's working with the lawyers as to the next steps. You said before, this isn't about him, it's about the rule of law, it's about the process. What is your response to this indictment and the details in the indictment, the allegations that he transported undocumented immigrants across the country illegally?
Starting point is 00:31:54 Well, my response is what it's been all along, which is that the Trump administration needs to put up or shut up in court. So for months, they made allegations over social media, which they had not made before the federal district court judge in Maryland, Judge Zinnis, they'd made these claims with respect to MS-13. She said that they had put forward no evidence. My point all along is this needs to be dealt with in a court of law. That's where we convict the guilty. It's also where people who are charged have their due process rights respected. So what's interesting in all this is many, if not the most targeted, are people who have already been through that process and have just been let go.
Starting point is 00:32:45 Yeah. So the court of law thing has already happened. Exactly what you said. You think the NPR guy is going to ask that? Well, no, because otherwise all my hairdresser's clients will go crazy. Okay, this is the clip that's got the WTF moment, which I have to discuss. I mean, there has been... Well, am I playing 3NPR or 3WTF?
Starting point is 00:33:10 Oh, what? Well, I have two clips here, two different lengths. I have Dem's view on Albrego. Oh no, it's got to be 3WTF. That 3NPR has got to be clip four. I like the guy's new name, Darcia, as a great. I mean, there has been criticism from some camps about the amount of detail in the 10-page indictment about the fact that most of this material comes from unnamed sources.
Starting point is 00:33:36 Do you share that concern or again is to you the top line, this is now the formal process that should have happened from the beginning? The top line is that this is the formal process and it should have been in court from the beginning. I think the issues you just mentioned will of course be a subject of debate and litigation in the court. We also know that one of the members of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tennessee resigned, reportedly in protest about how these charges are being brought now. He resigned.
Starting point is 00:34:12 In protest? Reportedly in protest. Where did that reporting come from that they resigned in protest? He has never said he resigned in protest. His resignation is on LinkedIn. I've read it. He quit the day that they indicted, uh, a Brego Garcia, uh, ABC. It traces back to ABC claims that he re he,
Starting point is 00:34:37 he resigned in protest. So I looked up and we have it in the show notes cause I sent you a, uh, a link to an article in Tennessee from a local newspaper where it's suspected because this Abrego Garcia situation took place in 2022, three years ago with the smuggling of all his nine people in the car. Uh, it's, it's believed that the prosecutor knows about some hanky panky that was going on that allowed this illegality to continue He quit to get out of the way so he doesn't get caught up in what appears to be an upcoming mess That's interesting quit in any protest and they can't no one has gotten a quote from him saying he quit in protest
Starting point is 00:35:23 Nobody ABC made it up. Hmm. Oh, I'm not surprised. And of course, this Joker from Connecticut, dude, so he or Maryland, where he's from, Connecticut, the congressman. He, of course, goes with it. He says it right there on the report as if the guy quit in protest because this does match the... there were people if you recall like I don't know, six to nine, just right after Trump got in, a bunch of federal prosecutors that quit in protest because they were all short timers and they were part-time. One of them was only there for a month and she quit if you recall.
Starting point is 00:36:06 And so now you can always use the quit in protest, trope, meme, to make it sound like something actually happened when it didn't because somebody made it up. Okay, so I had to get that off my chest. But it's in the show notes. You know, it's interesting. Last night, CNN broadcast,
Starting point is 00:36:22 worldwide first time ever exclusive, never been done before with 20 cameras live from Broadway right yeah there was some outrageous number of cameras 20 cameras George can you imagine being the director I have to say production wise dynamite I watched the whole thing because I'm a big fan of the history of news. Wide way. Yeah, no, I'm a big fan of the great wide way. Yeah, and there's no coincidence that the Chonies are coming up.
Starting point is 00:36:53 The Chonies. Yes, the Chonies. Yes, of course. And I think Clooney is nominated. So it's George Clooney, actually a bunch of Dynamite actors. And they did a, they really did a good, lighting was good. It had a, it's about Edward E. Morrow. It's basically the movie. It's basically the movie, yeah. But it was very well done and I'm looking at it, I'm like, wow, this is pretty good. A lot of smoking on stage, which of course,
Starting point is 00:37:20 was back in the day, was true. What was the name of this product? Good Night and Good Luck. Right, which is the name of was true. What was the name of this product? Good Night and Good Luck. Right, which is the name of the movie. It was a good movie. Well, the play was good. But at the very end, Edward E. Murrow did this famous speech at some, I don't know what it was at, basically a democracy, a republic, if you can keep it type speech.
Starting point is 00:37:46 a democracy, a republic if you can keep it type speech. So Clooney's up there at the very end and it's setting this scene of him speaking to this large congregation of people about how he can use this medium for good or for bad. And then it goes into this montage going all the way, so it starts off like first man on the moon and the Kennedy assassination. And then as it speeds up, it moves all the way up through, you know, Fox News about COVID, election deniers, January 6th rigged election. It was what? Oh, yeah. None of it was, none of it was. So that wasn't in the movie? No, of course not. And then the crowd went wild at the end.
Starting point is 00:38:26 Of course, you have a bunch of elitist lefties in the audience. Yeah, they can spend $90 to $100 for a ticket. Oh, more than that, I'm sure, for this televised version. And I was so happy. I'm like, this is really good. I'm kind of like Clooney in general as an actor for some of the roles he plays. But then that came up, I'm like, you just basically left me with a taste of vomit in my mouth.
Starting point is 00:38:54 That's all you could pick from all the nonsense, all of the garbage that we've been dealing with since we've been doing the show, all of the, like right up until now, what you just said, is making stuff up and i was like oh man that's just too bad it's too bad i tell you so listen to some of the terms the foreign media is using about president trump sweeping sweeping up people before you do that you might as well wrap this my clips up i'm sorry i didn't know you might as well wrap my clips up with it. Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't know you had any more. Well, the three, the one I said was four. Oh, it's four. I got it.
Starting point is 00:39:29 Finally, you know, we're able to, he's able to, and his family's able to litigate these in a court of law rather than unable to communicate from essentially what is a terrible prison, a notorious prison in El Salvador that he was first taken to. Aaron Ross Powell Senator, I want to ask you this. If all of this ends several steps down the line with Abrego Garcia guilty in federal court and eventually deported, to you, is that still a win for the rule of law and the Constitution? Senator John S. B. Cotter The answer is yes. I will be satisfied so
Starting point is 00:40:01 long as the rule of law applies, so long as there's no abuse of process. And again, the overriding issue here is adherence to the Constitution of the United States. This is not the only case where President Trump and his administration are flouting the Constitution and due process. But my bottom line has been and remains adherence to the constitution of the United States because if you put it at risk for one person, you do jeopardize those rights for everybody.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Well, he's not wrong about that, but I don't know if- He's not, but he's wrong. I don't know if this is the right case because it's going to look, there's going to be a lot of egg on people's faces when it turns out that this guy was. I think that's what he's been doing. And I think this entire clip that I played is damage control.
Starting point is 00:40:52 Oh, you think it's damage control. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Good point. So it's preemptive damage control. And I think he did a pretty good job of that. If you don't realize that he lied about the you know the guy who quit and protest and all the rest of it and he soft-pedaled the whole thing and now he's promoting it's not about any he prefaced the whole thing saying it's not about the man yeah oh yeah okay it's about the process got it yeah good catch. Well, so instead of playing you the European clips and the verbiage they
Starting point is 00:41:28 use about the immigration, it's not Pride Month, it's World Pride Month. I hope you've noticed this. When did that happen, by the way? Well, they did a rebranding. When did that happen? I'm asking. This year. This year is the first year of World Pride Month? I believe so.
Starting point is 00:41:49 Yes, I believe so. Well, they slipped that one by us. And of course, just by calling it pride by itself, it's a sin to be prideful. But that's just me. So here's France 24 and listen to what they're saying. President Trump is doing to the LGBTQ plus community, which really is only about the T's because it's very, very small. And I've noticed that most of the world Pride Month stuff is, they do have some of the crazy
Starting point is 00:42:28 flags but they have mostly trans flags. Yes. Kamala is for they, them. President Trump is for you. From campaign ads targeting the transgender community to executive orders banning them for military service. So targeting, no, that campaign ad was targeting the Republican base of Donald Trump. It wasn't targeting.
Starting point is 00:42:49 Do you mean like they were shooting at them? It wasn't targeting them. It was actually targeting the base he wanted to vote for them. So no, that's incorrect. From campaign ads targeting the transgender community to executive orders banning them for military service, Trump has ramped up his attacks against... Attacks. It's attacks. Attacks. No, it's not an attack. He had one proclamation about men or men and women or women. Where's the rest of these attacks?
Starting point is 00:43:15 It's plural. That was plural. I didn't hear it. Oh, there's many more. Attacks. Trump has ramped up his attacks against the LGBTQ community, going as far as erasing any mention of them on the White House and several government agency websites. Erasing. This is another important term, erasing, because somehow the narrative has become, Trump wants to erase, I can hear your wind chimes going crazy by the way. Oh that's my dog, I'm sorry. Not me.
Starting point is 00:43:48 It's the dog. Hey Bubba, it's okay, what are you doing? She's itchy. The dog has wind chimes? Yes, the dog would. What do you do? You're torturing the animal. Phoebe, come on. Can you imagine what it sounds like to a dog? It's her collar.
Starting point is 00:44:02 The narrative is Trump wants to erase us. Erase and that with us that means trans. It's not about lesbians and gays, it's about trans. For the organizers of World Pride, the campaign has only increased the celebration's importance. Through World Pride and all the prides that are going to take place not just here in the United States but around the world, this is the year that we need to ensure that we remain visible and seen so folks know. I think so. Is there an invisibility problem that we're not recognizing when they've got flags everywhere
Starting point is 00:44:39 you go? I'm telling you, this is the whole we're being erased which is just not true. I'm seeing zero evidence of this. No there's no evidence of it. They're being emphasized. Yes exactly there is no evidence of them being erased it's just the narrative. This is the year that we need to ensure that we remain visible and seen so folks know that there's a place for them that there are people fighting for them.
Starting point is 00:45:04 For the LGBTQ community resistance to Trump's policies is key. Within the U.S., a group of transgender soldiers are challenging the executive order banning them in the military in court. Abroad, some are making the difficult decision to skip the celebration altogether to avoid problems at the border. So they somehow, they think they're going to have problems at the border. So they somehow they think they're going to have problems at the border coming into the United States because they're trans? Yes, I've seen a bunch of TikTok clips on this and they're holding up their passport and it's an M and they identify as a girl and they look like a girl, they got the except for the voice and they feel that this is going to get them thrown in jail or shot I don't know
Starting point is 00:45:51 what what they're but think meanwhile others privilege showing up visibility is resistance when you say that we no longer exist and then we show up in hundreds of thousands of numbers, then it defies this narrative that you have that we don't exist. This is it. We don't exist. Yes, you do. Everyone recognizes it. You know, the funny thing is there's this trans woman, Lynn Alden. Lynn Alden is an economist
Starting point is 00:46:27 and talks a lot about Bitcoin and Bitcoin conferences. And I had actually asked someone, hey, is Lynn Alden trans? Yeah, she's trans. Nobody cares because Lynn Alden just acts like a human being. Just no one cares. But when you just talk about him being erased and no one wants... Lynn Alden's not erased.
Starting point is 00:46:49 Lynn Alden is one of the most visible faces in all of Bitcoin. It's like, why don't you just act like a human being and a member of society and then there's no problem. Anyway, now we have the orchestra. This is great. ["Priest's Choir of the United States"] At a patriotic concert before World Pride festivities in Washington, D.C., legendary drag queen,
Starting point is 00:47:12 Peaches Christ, paraphrased famous American writer, Mark Twain. Patriotism means, I'll get this right, loving your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it. That's right. That's right. That's right. The International Pride Orchestra your country all the time and your government deserves it. The International Pride Orchestra had originally been in talks to play the Kennedy Center, the most prestigious venue in the United States, but those plans were dashed after President Donald Trump dashed. They were dashed. So June 14th is No Kings Day.
Starting point is 00:47:46 I thought it was Juneteenth. No. Isn't that 18th? Isn't that June 18th? Oh, okay. It's on Thursday. It's a show day. Oh, good.
Starting point is 00:47:56 Well, it's No Kings Day. No Kings Day? By the way, I do have a World Pride Day clip I just noticed, so don't let me forget. Okay. No Kings Day is a nationwide day of defiance from city blocks to small towns, from courthouse steps to community parks. No Kings is referring to Trump. Yes. We're taking action to reject authoritarianism and show the world what democracy really looks
Starting point is 00:48:23 like. This is what democracy looks like. NoKings.org is the website. And of course, can't really find who's behind all of this. Zoros. Possibly it's organized by an outfit called a 50-51. 50, so 50- Which refers to a nutball.
Starting point is 00:48:47 No, that's 51-50. Oh, right. 50-50-1. I haven't quite figured that one out yet. It's an upside down. It's first and foremost, the movement of, by, and for the people. We are not nationally incorporated and have no plans to change that. But they do have a lot of groups that work with them.
Starting point is 00:49:09 No voice unheard, build the resistance. It's all socialist, by the way, build the resistance with a socialist fist. I can't really find out, it seems like there's a bigger organization behind this. But we can look... I'm sure there is. There has to be. Somebody's paying the bills.
Starting point is 00:49:33 So if you look at the, see, Abbout, we already got the Abbout page, they have the partners, partners, partners. If you can find one person, you can find associations. So 350.org, Education, Healthcare, Public Services, American Humanist Association. 350 isn't 350, that parts per million group, climate change people? Yes, ACLU, the ACLU, there they are. Bend the Arc, Jewish Action, Black Voters Matter, Climate Hawks, Climate Defenders, Communications Workers of America, Common Defense.
Starting point is 00:50:20 I mean, there's a huge page here. Families Over Billionaires, Federal Unionist network, federal workers against Doge, human rights campaign. I mean, it's just, but there's a lot of organizations, big and small. So anyway, just- Yeah, you have to wonder if they're all there on purpose, if there's some of them aren't never agreed to this, there's always that possibility because there's so many of these things. Very possible. You don't know.
Starting point is 00:50:47 You'd have to go try to track down someone at one of these operations and say, you guys subscribe to this thing? How much money did you give them? This guy has to be on the mailing list. All right. What's your world pride clip? Well, it's a little pride, little thing. It's got a little punch line.
Starting point is 00:51:04 I thought it was funny. EC is hosting World Pride celebrations, a high profile series of events highlighting LGBTQ rights. This year's World Pride comes at a time when the Trump administration has targeted LGBTQ groups and people in a wide range of- Targeted, they're targeted, targeted. Yeah, this is NPR, NPR.
Starting point is 00:51:22 Targeted, targeted, it's targeting, it's just are these words this year's World Pride comes at a time when the Trump administration has targeted LGBTQ groups and people in a wide range of ways from barring trim by the way I I don't think it's been outlawed for gays or lesbians to be in the military has it No, I don't think so. No, I think it's that's okay to be in the military, has it? No, I don't think so. No, I think that's okay. Costly trans, you gotta have drugs to keep you trans, it costs a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:51:50 What's a taxpayer's money? Screw it. Costly trans, oh man. In a wide range of ways, from barring transgender service members from the armed forces, to stripping gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk's name from a Navy ship. So, listen to the targeting. What are the grievances, the targeting? Is he
Starting point is 00:52:08 killing them? Is he disappearing them? Is he erasing them from the from the voter rolls? Is he erasing them from the face of the earth? No, the issues are... In a wide range of ways. A wide range of ways. This is it. Pay attention. Here are the issues. Barring transgender service members from the armed forces to stripping gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk's name from a Navy ship. We took a name off a ship. This is an outrage. NPR's Alana Wise was on the scene ahead of today's big Pride Parade and joins us. And heads up, you'll hear sirens in this piece. Oh, heads up, we don't want you to be triggered
Starting point is 00:52:42 by sirens. Hey, Alana. Hi there. Hiana. Hi there. Hi there. Hi there. What was the energy like on the streets right now? Yeah, as you mentioned, this is the first year that DC is actually hosting World Pride, but it's also DC's 50th anniversary hosting its own Pride celebrations. People seemed really ready to celebrate that.
Starting point is 00:53:01 More than a big party, Pride is also a call to action for the LGBTQ community to fight for their rights. I happen to speak with someone named Kylan Mahaney from Virginia about why Pride is so important. We got to be able to celebrate and be and be seen because otherwise we will be disappeared. There you go. You'll be disappeared. No. No.
Starting point is 00:53:25 This is, this is, and you know. Yeah. You're going to be disappeared, Adam. Get with it. People are going to, she said so. You heard her. Yeah. Now, I just as a kicker, if you want an extra little clip here, I have it.
Starting point is 00:53:40 The Yawk clip, which should say talk. I'm sorry is a bull dyke Oh, yes, this is the one with the with the kid in the in the in the mall. Yeah. Yeah, it's a good I was misgendered yesterday. Well, explain what she looks like just so just so she's well If you don't know what a bull dyke looks like, she's got a really short haircut. She's mean-looking, but she's pleasant at the same time She is I mean I can know the way to describe it, but she's pleasant at the same time. She is, I mean I can no other way of describing it, but she's a lesbian, a harsh looking, it's like... Butch, butch, butch I think is the term. She's basically very butch and if you saw her you'd say there's a lesbian. By the way, if she didn't cut her hair, crop so short, she'd actually be quite attractive as a woman.
Starting point is 00:54:26 Wouldn't you say? I mean, I saw this clip, so... Oh, wait. Sorry. This is two times. We only get two of these a show. Okay, sorry. But you do.
Starting point is 00:54:40 No, the interface just crapped out again. Oh. Yeah. Did you hear what I said? Yeah, I heard everything. Okay, well, response. I said if she didn't have her hair all chopped up, she would be quite attractive. Oh, you didn't hear what I said, apparently. No, no, no, I didn't hear what you said. Oh, I said if you saw her on the street, you'd say, there's a lesbian.
Starting point is 00:54:59 Right, but then I said if she didn't crop her hair all choppy, she would be quite attractive as a woman. And I said, if she didn't crop her hair all choppy, she would be quite attractive as a woman. I think she could. I think you, it's hard to argue against it. She's got nice features. I was misgendered yesterday. A little girl at the mall, she was maybe five years old, sitting in a wagon, kept staring at me.
Starting point is 00:55:20 So I made eye contact and she said, are you a girl or a boy? Her mom started to go, Oh my god, oh my god, we accept everyone. That's so rude. You can't say that. And I laughed and I bent down on her level. And I said, That's okay. It's confusing sometimes. I'm a girl. I just really like boys clothes. They're pretty comfy. She got all excited and she said, I a girl too and I gave her a high five I said isn't it so great being a girl. I love being a girl. She said yeah, that's my brother He's a brother because he's a boy so I said you're right brothers are boys and sisters are girls There's only boys and girls if you're born a girl. You're a girl. I was born a girl I can almost see
Starting point is 00:56:05 the release of error coming from her mother's body and just the ultimate sigh of relief that I wasn't gonna be indoctrinating her child or teaching her child something that maybe she didn't want her to know. I continued to talk to the little girl about her brother and her very cute dog who was also a girl. I said I hope you have a great day. And I went about my business. That is how you address gender to children. You don't. That is how you empower little girls and let them know that it's okay to be a girl who
Starting point is 00:56:35 dresses however you want without having to change your gender. That is how you avoid confusing children, especially children that aren't your own, and projecting your bullshit on them because you might be offended that they use the wrong pronoun. Merica! Exactly! That's an American lesbian, whatever she is. I don't care. That's an American woman. Who gets it? Don't push the crap on the children. So along those lines, yes, I have a TikTok clip. Yes, I do. Now this is a very calm, very normal looking young woman and she explains something that I hadn't really thought about
Starting point is 00:57:21 but when she said, I'm like, oh yeah, it's so true what she is going to explain here is how Liberal people I don't want to say Democrats, but just people who were liberal Democrats I wouldn't say not exactly when you hear what she has to say, how, um, how Democrats in your words are, have been Psy-Opped into staying away from healthy and wholesome things in life. Because it's all right wing, crazy, nut jobs, mega. I used to do CrossFit literally every day of the week at 5 a.m. and that might feel weird to you
Starting point is 00:58:11 because when you think CrossFit, you probably think alt-right, or not at least alt-right, but people who are conservative, because over the last, I'd say, seven years, there's been this shift where we are aligning fitness, and especially things like weightlifting and CrossFit in particular with the right. It slipped into that pipeline. Years ago, if you used essential oils or you made your own bread, if you had chickens, people didn't make assumptions
Starting point is 00:58:39 about you wanting to be like a trad wife who doesn't vaccinate. Like that used to just be its own thing. Similarly to how like in the 80s or 90s, homeschooling wasn't owned really by like one predominant religious group and one predominant type of person. And now homeschooling itself has shifted to where if you're not homeschooling in that way, you have to actually differentiate that. And so you have to say we're part of XYZ homeschooling. Like there's different brandings now of homeschooling. But now there's this association of like CrossFit is MAGA. Homeschooling is MAGA. Wanting to have chickens and my own eggs should not be a red flag of a political alignment. Like just let me, let me want my own chickens please.
Starting point is 00:59:32 Yeah, just killing people with this nonsense. Yeah it is. It really, true and I could not believe... If you're a Democrat you can't have a chicken. Yeah, you're MAGA. By the way, not to change the subject and you can get right back to it, but this egg thing that just took place, the ridiculous, and people should go to the FDA, I guess it's the FDA website and look at the number of brands that this one egg provider with salmonella
Starting point is 01:00:00 laced eggs, it's everybody. Oh, really? The old brand 365, they have all the packages. And we're all gonna die? Rallies. Not necessarily, no, but the, what got me. They all come from one supplier? One supplier is supplying at least 20 brands of
Starting point is 01:00:22 eggs, which seems to me, why are you brand, why don't they just have their own damn brand? And there's none of their brand. So you're ruining the reputation of all these companies, including, oh, the Organic Operation that runs out of Whole Foods. Oh, really? Oh, 365, whatever it is, that's one of them.
Starting point is 01:00:39 Yes, 365, yeah. New Laid, which I always thought was just a big egg producer, I didn't know. Wait a minute, wait a minute. So even the so-called organic eggs all come from the same chicken poop farm. Yeah, yeah You know how I got my eggs this morning Mike Mike, that's a word. That's what you're supposed to do. You're supposed to get it. I get eggs from Jay Well, Mike came up to me in church. He says hey, I Put two carton of eggs under your car, don't drive over them.
Starting point is 01:01:07 That's how we, that's how I get my eggs. Well, hopefully you remembered. Yes, I told Tina, otherwise I might have forgotten. But yeah, that's how you get your eggs around here. You know why? Mike's got too many eggs. He does, obviously. He's giving you two whole cartons. Yeah and the only thing he says can you give me the cartons back that's all he wants. Yes all the egg guy this is true of all guys who give eggs away or sell even sell eggs out of their backyard they need those cartons. So above all miracles what took place even for Fox News where this is from, all of a sudden, raw milk is good for you. So after years of being one-upped by plant-based alternatives like oat milk and cashew cream,
Starting point is 01:01:54 real dairy products, especially raw milk, are having a comeback. They're having a moment. So talk to us about raw milk because, Nicole, it's not easy to get raw milk. Me and Charlie talk about it a lot. It's easier to get meth than raw milk. This is a good point. In America, it's easier to get meth than raw milk. That's a great line.
Starting point is 01:02:17 That's a very good line. We talk about it a lot. It's easier to get meth than raw milk. He said that his dealer got arrested, his raw milk dealer. So the reason people started to go away from animal dairy, you know, cow's milk, sheep's milk, goat milk, is because that there were some studies a couple of decades ago saying, you know what, there's high fats and there's high cholesterol potentially in these animal based dairy products. Well,
Starting point is 01:02:40 most of that research has essentially been determined to be obsolete. And in fact, animal-based dairy is the best for you. High in nutrients, those proteins are complete. It's incredibly good for you. Great for your bone, your skin, your entire body. So my children have always had whole milk. Now what you're talking about is raw milk. So when you just go to the grocery store, that's not raw milk.
Starting point is 01:03:04 That's animal dairy, which is great for you. But there are concerns with that in terms of hormones, antibiotics, and some of the other things that come along with it. The reason you have a hard time getting raw milk at Rachel is because it's illegal in like 20 of our states and you can't even sell it across state lines. And the reason that it's become illegal is because the government has stepped in because there are some concerns with raw milk in terms of certain bacteria like E. coli, Campylobacter and some others. But the reality is there are safe ways to have raw milk, raw dairy. It's just a matter of where you get it from, just like everything else.
Starting point is 01:03:39 Nut sap is on the outs. You know, most of the cheese in Europe is made with raw milk. Yes of course. And most of the cheese in the United States is made with pasteurized milk. It's extremely rare to find raw milk cheese made in the United States and the cheese in Europe is better. Now stay with me because now we're going to go from raw milk to Operation Stork Speed. Have you heard of Operation Stork Speed? Stork like in the baby carrier? That's the one.
Starting point is 01:04:11 Wait, let me do it. No, I have not. Operation Stork Speed. Welcome back, Democrats. On Capitol Hill, pushing back on HHS Secretary RFK Jr.'s Operation Stork Speed. The FDA wants to hold on to hold on a second stop stop stop where did you get this clip fox it's funny they said welcome back democrats well she i know i know what she's supposed to say she should have had a two beat pause but she didn't
Starting point is 01:04:39 no she actually she had the pause that's the problem said welcome back democrats and then yeah she had the pause in the wrong spot because you know why? She's a news model reading it from the prompter. Welcome back Democrats. Scroll up. Oh, oh. Welcome back Democrats on Capitol Hill pushing. Welcome back Democrats on Capitol Hill.
Starting point is 01:05:01 Welcome back Democrats on Capitol Hill pushing back on HHS Secretary RFK Jr.'s Literally, she didn't have time to preview the script because I'm sure she was doing her hair or whatever and couldn't... I don't blame her. I blamed the script writer. I hate to say it, I blamed the teleprompter operator. The teleprompter operator should have put a comma or a new line. The teleprompter operator doesn't write the copy, they just move the copy.
Starting point is 01:05:34 Very few, I don't know any teleprompter operators that actually wrote teleprompter copy. They will edit and format all the time. These days, not the old school days because there was just paper on a conveyor belt with the camera above it a good teleprompter operator will see this well somebody fucked up and I don't blame the reader at all she's supposed to read which was okay front of all right and she did welcome back Democrats snow agenda, Democrats, on Capitol Hill, pushing back on HHS Secretary RFK Jr.'s Operation Stork Speed. The FDA is launching the first review of baby formula ingredients in three decades.
Starting point is 01:06:15 They're aiming for more testing for heavy metals and contaminants, clearer labeling on formula. Twenty-plus Democratic lawmakers now are telling RFK Jr. he is essentially killing his own project's chances. They say the decision to lay off 20,000 HHS employees and 3,500 FDA employees, including those who oversaw health and safety research of infant formula, sets this operation up to fail. We're here to respond to that is the FDA Commissioner, Dr. Marty McCary. Dr. thanks for
Starting point is 01:06:46 being with us today. Great to have you. Perfect voice on this issue. What's your response to that criticism from Dems? Well for the last 26 years we've seen really no innovation in baby formulas. The current system is not working. The FDA doubled the number of employees here at the agency since 2007 to today. So doubling the number of employees has not fixed the baby formula problem. The problem is that the government issues a recipe and companies must follow that recipe to get baby formula out on the market. And so for 26 years we've seen essentially very few innovative products, almost no changes. Moms want baby formula without seed oil, without corn syrup, without added sugar, without arsenic
Starting point is 01:07:33 and lead and other heavy metals. And so we convened a group of experts to figure out how we get this right and how we modernize the way we approve baby formula in the United States. All right. So here is, I have two more short clips on this because I didn't know that it contains seed oils and arsenic and fructose corn syrup. The exit strategy out of this is going back to boobs. What happened to that? What was wrong with breast milk? I'm asking you a question. Well, I think they're assuming that,
Starting point is 01:08:13 I mean, I'm assuming that most mothers breastfeed. Oh, I think you're wrong. And then they have breast pumps to get the excessive milk and then they put that in, and that's what they use for the beer in a bottle. Yeah, I don't think so. I'm quite confident that the baby formula lobby
Starting point is 01:08:34 has psyoped everybody into believing you just need baby formula. I'm not so sure, I mean, the last time I saw a woman breastfeeding was at a no agenda meetup. You see a lot of breastfeeding in the San Francisco Bay Area and that would be the place you'd think there would be, you know, I mean, I don't know. There should be a survey done. There's no, if a woman can breastfeed, there's absolutely no reason that you would ever use baby formula It's not gonna be as good ever now
Starting point is 01:09:06 Tina is texting me and I'm just and I was going to say this she says some women can't breastfeed they have issues with Yes, there is that or producing enough milk and now I'm not a woman. They had twins or if you had triplets You're not gonna be able to handle it in agreement But to me it sounds like the majority is using formula. I don't think so. Well, you know what? Neither of us really know.
Starting point is 01:09:32 No, we don't know. Neither one of us actually know. But I do know that… I wouldn't have assumed what you assume. I would have assumed the opposite. Well… So somebody… We have to get some stats.
Starting point is 01:09:42 We need an expert. We need stats. Call the Archduke of Luna.. Call the Archduke of Luna. Yeah, the Archduke of Luna, lover of American, lover of boobs. He would be the clearinghouse. Yes. Darling, do you want to come in and be the expert?
Starting point is 01:09:59 She's blowing up my phone. Look, I'm not right. Okay. There you go. The expert Look, I'm not right. Okay. There you go. The expert speaks. I'm not right. Well, that ends the session. Oh, that would mean I'm right.
Starting point is 01:10:11 Yeah, you're right, I guess. Oh, was that again? You're right, I guess. I guess. Okay. You are right. You're correct. I, sir.
Starting point is 01:10:19 So, what did we do? What did we, sir? You are right, sir. What did we do? What did we sir you are right sir? What did we do before baby formula? Did the children just die of malnutrition? Yes, they just water water they just died they just died or From what I understand there's a lot of dark networks who trade baby milk mothers Who can who have excess and they sell it or they trade it.
Starting point is 01:10:48 Well, it seems to me, look, let's try it. No, you know what, John, neither of you. I have a theory. Okay, in a minute, you're already right, sir. No, no, but I was just gonna say, if you go back in time before baby formula, formula, which is obviously a mishmash of stuff, why wouldn't you just give the kid cow's milk in a bottle?
Starting point is 01:11:08 Well, neither of us know. Neither of us know. But I would like to know before formula, what happened? Where the, I mean, some people are saying wet nurses. I've heard of that. Yeah, there's that. Yeah. I'm sure that you can, now here you go, Tina, who is, who should just get on the mic actually, is telling me that Saddle Tramp, you remember Saddle Tramp, Saddle Tramp listens to the show. Yeah, you do. She's a producer. Saddle Tramp, she could not produce or could not attach or whatever. And she made her own formula with raw milk.
Starting point is 01:11:49 So there's playing into your theory. I would just like to know if these are new issues, what happened? Why can women no longer provide their milk? You know, so just tell me what happened back on the prairieirie little house on the prairie. What did Laura Ingalls do? That's all I want to know and I'll continue with the atrocity that is baby formula, which would makes me want to breastfeed I'm like choking as you're talking full disclosure doctor. I've got a five month old on formula at home I
Starting point is 01:12:24 do know now a considerable number of moms who are essentially importing baby formula from European countries because it is so-called cleaner. You know, it has less preservatives, less chemicals. Is that a good thing to be doing right now? Well, look, our process in terms of our regulation of baby formula has been frozen in time. There have been incredible advances in nutrition science. We had an expert this week at the... Do you want your children ingesting nutrition science? I don't think so. We had an expert this week at the FDA on our expert panel talk about how in primate studies
Starting point is 01:13:07 when primates are fed a certain kind of baby formula, that is with a certain kind of seed oil, their visual acuity was worse on the eye chart. This is important research. Seed oil is blinding people. Seed oil is blinding people. Their visual acuity was worse on the eye chart. This is important research so we've got to innovate and that's what we're doing here. Okay. What about expeller seed oils? Expeller? The whole thing is out of control. Yeah. Now I've had this article.
Starting point is 01:13:46 By the way, I'm somewhat in agreement with you because I think that the women of the world, but in America mostly, because we're suckers have been sold a bill of goods on this idea of formula instead of natural breastfeeding. I know what you're thinking. Even though I got you to agree with me, but I know exactly what you're thinking because there's been a move, a propagandistic promotion by Nestle and others who make the formulas to tell moms, no, no, no, no, this is better
Starting point is 01:14:17 because it's formulated. That's why it's called a formula, get it? Yep. No, I'm with you, I'm with you. So that's all I want to know is before formula, get it? Yep. No, I'm with you. I'm with you. So that's all I want to know is before formula, just in 1849, go west young man and lady and family. What would they do if they were, if they could not produce breast milk, could they? Was it always, hey, no problem, I got it.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Were they have attachment problems? Did they not have those problems? What caused those problems? This is what this is what operation Stork should do for me. I want to know more about Like they had no problem raw milk is great from a cow But but now you need innovation in baby formula. So Marty here. Dr. Marty He seems like he's working on behalf of Big Food than on behalf of the American people. If he's on TV, of course.
Starting point is 01:15:10 So I've had this article for the past three shows. No one has done a news report on it, which is bothersome. But it's fine. Ah, you couldn't find a clip. No, exactly. I've got a bunch of those backed up too. Where's the clip? Where's the media? Why isn't this being covered?
Starting point is 01:15:34 Where somebody's actually saying something? No. And so I've been reluctant to talk about this because I don't like spiking the ball unnecessarily. And it's not exactly spiking the ball, but it finally spiking the ball. Not yet. Um, but it showed up in the New York post.
Starting point is 01:15:53 So that means eventually Fox news will do a story on it. This is about Ozempic. Many male Ozempic users are saying since they started injecting the weight loss shot, their penises have grown. Some say up to one inch. Oh, brother. This is like, yeah, well, yeah, if you got a big fat gut, you're just, you know, on your shrink, everything's gonna look bigger that, you know, that your shrink, everything's going to look bigger that, you know, that doesn't get affected.
Starting point is 01:16:26 Well, I don't know. I don't know. Well, why don't you, this might be something that maybe you should experiment with. I don't think so. I mean, I still want to be able to walk, you know. No, no, that's not the line. The line is big enough. Well, I did it in my own way.
Starting point is 01:16:42 You just didn't like my punchline. Yeah, it wasn't as good. I didn't like my punchline. Yeah, it wasn't as good. I didn't like my punchline. Okay, now I would just like to for a moment. Oh, by the way, no, I have one more big pharma clip here. When we're talking about new pandemics and the COVID, if we've got the M beta 8128.111 beta pre-release. You know, just as an aside, my favorite, I don't have a clip, but it's all over the place. Every
Starting point is 01:17:17 newsletter, McCullough, by the way, I'm sick and tired of McCullough and Pinsky going on TV selling crap. Yeah, it's a little bothersome, isn't it? It's very bothersome. These guys, and then they have their websites and they're selling crap overpriced. Very expensive. Yeah. Overpriced. Overpriced everything. You can get it elsewhere cheaper. But this, the latest thing floating around next means horrible death and next spike. The new Moderna vaccine means next means horrible and Latin means horrible death in Latin.
Starting point is 01:17:53 Oh, interesting. Have you seen these? Oh, I've gotten dozens of them. No, I haven't seen that yet. No. Well, you will. Well, the thing, the funny thing is if you do a Latin translation, I mean, if you wanted to have more fun, NEX does
Starting point is 01:18:06 mean death in Latin. Smell that NEX, N-E-X. N-E-X. Yeah, NEX. Nobody said anything about Nexium, which has been around for 30 years, but okay. So, NEX means that, but if you use NEX spike, which is the name of this vaccine, and you put that in the Latin generator, it means don't. Which is actually funnier. Yeah, that is good. No, the only thing, this just caught my eye because it's like when you're pushing this, the next spike and the new pandemic and all the,
Starting point is 01:18:43 then Netflix comes along and has a new documentary just bothered me native to Asia and sub-saharan Africa pangolins are the only mammals lives at Chicago's Brookfield Zoo the only place in the US where visitors can see pangolins up close. Pangolins are also one of the world's most trafficked mammals, prized for their meat and scales, which are used in traditional medicine. Poaching and deforestation of their natural habitats have drastically reduced their population, and several pangolin species are now listed as threatened or endangered.
Starting point is 01:19:23 Now a new Netflix documentary is bringing long overdue attention to the creatures. Pangolin, Culu's journey, follows a baby Pangolin as he journeys back to the wild after being rescued from poachers. I don't know. It just doesn't sit well with me. Like now all of a sudden the Pangolin is some endangered species. I thought they were running around Asia spreading COVID all day long. I guess not. Pangolins. They are cute. So a little bit about Elon and Trump, which you can say I'm right anytime you want because it became a huge deal during the show on Thursday. It became the topic for at least 48 hours non-stop. Non-stop. You can say you're right, Adam, anytime. Well, I was always in agreement with the thesis that this is bull crap.
Starting point is 01:20:23 You started off by saying it was boring and no one cares about it. No, I didn't. I'm not changing my mind about that. It is boring. My presentation was long and uninteresting to you. It was long. Okay. You said it was uninteresting. No one was talking about it. It doesn't matter. I never said no one was talking about it because you had to introduce it. All you have to say is you're right sir. You're right sir. Okay good. So to prove that we both were correct that this is a game, this is WWE, this is something they agreed ahead of time. The apprentice and his phony baloney. He did in The Apprentice, he created phony
Starting point is 01:21:04 feuds. All of these, all of these things, it's all completely set. And by the way, Elon deleted his ex-post about Trump being in the Epstein files. Oh, really? Well that's, even if it was true and they had a real fight, that's weak. I want to interrupt, and somebody pointed this ob this obviousity out that we should have caught too. If Trump was in the Epstein files, the Democrats would have been revealed during the election cycle.
Starting point is 01:21:34 Oh, the Democrats would have used it. Instead, they had to make up Russiagate. They had to make up a Stormy Daniels, whether it was made up or not. They went after that. Of course, these files have been with the FBI since Trump's initial, when did Epstein not kill himself or did kill himself? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:21:53 We've already lost track. Yeah. Cash Patel, by the way, I'll get to that in a minute. So Mike Johnson goes on ABC and he screws up. He screws up. He gives it away. Well, the president suggested he could cut Musk's contracts. Obviously, Musk companies rely heavily on government contracts. Can he do that? Is that something he should consider? Is it Jonathan Karl?
Starting point is 01:22:20 Yes, I think it is Jonathan Karl. But I want- Yeah, he is such a- that guy. He's your buddy. Oh no, that's not your buddy. The other guy's your buddy. No, no, he's not my buddy. I never meant it. But listen to what Johnson says.
Starting point is 01:22:33 He gives it away. Heavily on government contracts. Can he do that? Is that something he should consider? Look, I'm not going to get into the strategy of what happens with all of that. I mean, what I'm trying to say is the strategy. I'm not going to get into the strategy of all of that. What happens?
Starting point is 01:22:53 In what case would you say that when it's about this feud, so-called feud? That's a very interesting catch. I'm not going to get into the strategy of all that. Yeah, I wouldn't have caught that. I heard it right away. I'm like, Johnson. Yeah, the strategy. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:23:13 Obviously, most companies- You wouldn't use that word unless there was something going on. Exactly. Rely heavily on government contracts. Can he do that? Is that something he should consider? Look, I'm not going to get into the strategy of what happens with all of that. I mean, what I'm trying to do is make sure that all of this gets resolved quickly, that we get
Starting point is 01:23:32 the one big beautiful bill done and that hopefully these two titans can reconcile. I think the president- Here's the other thing about that, not you bring it up. This stuttering. When does that, this guy is not a stutterer. No, it's his tell. It's his tell. It's a total tell and he's stuttering like a madman because he knows something. He knows that this was set up as a strategy
Starting point is 01:23:58 for whatever purpose and he was, and he's nervous. And he's shaking like a leaf, basically. Although this gets resolved quickly. We get the one big beautiful build on and then hopefully these these two Titans can reconcile. I think the president. Do you know how you can, I'm gonna ask the troll room on this and the listeners and producers in general. You know that this is phony. When John and I have a disagreement, just a disagreement, sometimes it gets a little heated, we go back and forth,
Starting point is 01:24:28 not like we've never gone to bed angry, but we, you know, it can get heated. Mainly, it used to be really on my side. People will email, Oh, oh, don't do that. You know, they'll be tweeting, mommy and daddy are fighting. Because they get uncomfortable by it.
Starting point is 01:24:49 They feel very uncomfortable. I guarantee you no one felt uncomfortable about this. No one felt like there was an actual friendly relationship, good friends who've been working together that they, that anyone felt like this was so real, like, oh, I feel really uncomfortable about this. I don't think anyone felt that. That's a good point because nobody, I don't see any evidence that anyone felt that anything was going on other than it being an exaggerated news story. Well.
Starting point is 01:25:18 And a back and forth, that there, it was like a back and forth volley, like a, like an exhibition tennis match. Yeah. And the ball's going back and forth and back and forth and then with some end point inside. I think that this is going to kind of continue as a fake feud until after the midterms. This is, I think, a lot of the midterms. Well, I mean, and now I'm like Mike Johnson. Here's the report about President Trump who really sticks it out there.
Starting point is 01:25:48 In the explosive feud playing out in public yesterday between Trump and Musk, the world's richest man warning Trump's tariffs will cause a recession this year. It's one of the many allegations Musk made about Trump, including posting on X, without me Trump would have lost the election, adding such ingratitude. Musk also calling for Trump to be impeached and accusing Trump of being in the Jeffrey Epstein files. Musk providing no evidence to back up that claim. ABC's John Carl speaking with Trump on the phone this morning.
Starting point is 01:26:16 There's been reporting out there that the White House is working to put together a call between Elon Musk and Donald Trump to broker some kind of peace. I asked Donald Trump about that. He said he's not particularly interested in talking to Elon Musk. He said Elon wants to talk to him. He's not ready to talk to to to Musk who he called a man who has lost his mind. Now that the little element there that I think is important is the The little element there that I think is important is the Elon dropping the impeachment word out there because that has to be in play. It has to be impressed upon the Republican voters who never come out for the midterms,
Starting point is 01:26:54 who just as soon as let the whole Congress slip back to the Democrats, they have to have it in play that if the Democrats get Congress, the first thing they're going to do is impeach Trump again. Now the thing that was just disappointing is all of the right-wing, alt-right, alternative media, all the podcasters, all are saying, well this is what it was all about, you know, and Ben Shapiro, Ben Shapiro says, oh, you know, it was really because Trump wouldn't, wouldn't accept Elon's suggestion for NASA administrator. And there's more like, I think Megan Kelly, you know, it's like, come on, this is stupid. The fact that they are that Ben Shapiro is falling for this unless he's been read in on it, that's very possible. But I don't think so.
Starting point is 01:27:46 Now that's a possible, you know, there's just possible that more than one of the right wing broadcasters have been read in and just said, go along with it. We'll deal with it later. You know, we've been- It's possible. We've been- We never get read in on anything. I should mention this. We don't get read in. We don't know anything.
Starting point is 01:28:07 We are just pure analysts. We don't know nothing. We don't know nothing. You can't put anything on us. We, you can't, you can put us in a torture wreck. We can't tell you anything. So this brings me to a portion of a note that I got from one of our nights. And yeah, cause we, we've been deconstructing a little bit of the podcasts, which is how people are getting their media, our people are getting their media.
Starting point is 01:28:34 And here's an excerpt from our night's email, which I really appreciate you said this, but I have thoughts. It has occurred to me to wonder if moving towards including podcast content in the show might alienate listeners. In recent months, No Agenda has analyzed clips from three podcasts that I listen to and have highly favorable thoughts about and feel loyalty towards. One aspect of the No Agenda humor is the disparaging tone used when analyzing media. This works well for me as a listener because I realize what junk the M5M has become and so I enjoy it.
Starting point is 01:29:11 It is uncomfortable to hear someone you admire and respect go after someone else you admire and respect in that tone. So this is important because we have always, not that we're always right, we have always said what we think and we believe. We're not read in, we don't know nothing. We're just analyzing media because we've grown up. I literally grew up with it and you've been in it longer than most people can remember. And we have never, never thought, oh, let's not mention this, this might piss off our listeners, which it has COVID in the beginning, people were livid. COVID in the middle, people were livid about the menstrual when we looked at the
Starting point is 01:30:02 numbers. That's not true. You're full of crap. You can't read me. Ukraine, right away. Right away we said, this is a Psyop. Here's how it started. People in Texas were mad at me because people in Texas had Ukraine flags out. By the way, no longer. Good for them, finally getting a clue. When we give our view, our opinion, our historical knowledge and our research about Israel, no, we do not believe that Israel controls the entire US government, people get pissed off. Yeah, why do people want the government to be...
Starting point is 01:30:44 I mean, it's beyond me, but okay, continue. I'm sorry. Well, because people want to make sense of their world. And when things happen that they feel doesn't make sense, it's, you know, and then you've got to listen. When you go to the podcasters who are saying this is true and they respect those podcasters and we say no, it makes them feel uncomfortable. Well, let me put it to you this way. If you go through an entire No Agenda episode and you haven't felt uncomfortable once, you should probably consider going somewhere else because you should feel uncomfortable from time to time. What job are we doing?
Starting point is 01:31:30 That's called audience capture. Which we get accused of all the time. We do? Oh yeah. Oh yeah, of course. How does that go? They're only saying this for the people who send them money. Saying what for the people who send them money?
Starting point is 01:31:51 Oh, they're not talking against the Jews because they get all that money. Oh, the Jews. It's always about the Jews. Not often. It's been other things in the past. Dude, I even saw a donation come in today. Here, I'm going to read it in today. Here, I'm gonna read it ahead. Ross Johnson, nighting donation. I haven't donated in years because Adam hated Elon. Because, no, because of Adam's Elon hatred.
Starting point is 01:32:13 Obviously he's been short selling for years. Adam flips like a fish out of water. That'll be the day. Adam flips out like a fish out of water because of facts on X. What? Since when did I flip on Elon? I've always said the same thing. All I'm saying is I don't believe that Elon and Palantir are all going to take over the world with their AI.
Starting point is 01:32:40 Grok, like all other AI, is a piece of crap. Which is, unfortunately, I don't have a clip, but the story about the 700 Indians posing as AI. Yeah, I've had this story for four shows and we've never, I almost got to it two weeks ago. Microsoft invested. $1.5 billion down the drain with these fakes. Yeah, it's too funny. So you'd send off like, I want some code to do this and the Indian, the anonymous Indian in the back, they were all coding it up. There was not a single piece of AI was actually doing it.
Starting point is 01:33:18 Yeah, exactly. Which brings me to this clip. Calling to mind an army of robots from the sci-fi movie iRobot, leading AI firm Anthropic CEO Dario Amadei warned of a labor market bloodbath caused by artificial intelligence that could wipe out half of all entry level white collar jobs within five years. And there's a little bit of truth in what he's saying, but there's a lot of exaggeration too. Taming Silicon Valley author and AI expert Gary Marcus is skeptical.
Starting point is 01:33:48 Entry level workers probably are the most affected, but most white collar jobs aren't going anywhere that soon. In a memo shared by Shopify CEO Toby Lutka in April, he said before asking to increase head count, teams must demonstrate why they can't get what they want done by AI. And businesses are using AI as an excuse because they want to cut employees and so they use it as a cover. Mounting evidence of a phenomenon that's hard to track of jobs quietly disappearing because of AI.
Starting point is 01:34:18 By the way, did you see that story about the 700 anonymous Indians masking as an AI company, was that really big on CNBC? Were they really like all over that like hawks like, wow, I can't believe Microsoft got scammed on this one. I don't think so. Because they want you to buy, buy, buy, buy. If the AI bubble pops, there's going to be blood on the moon. Well, because of the amount of money and the capitalization and the rest of it. Yes. Canada began to pop. It's not going to pop anytime soon, by the way.
Starting point is 01:34:53 Well, no, because they'll obfuscate all of that. So I truly believe because of the AI hype, there will be more jobs than ever. will be more jobs than ever. Um, I've had, I've had a lot of experience in the past three months with AI and coding as a non-coder. It is atrocious. But if you're a coder, you can certainly use like, as in you, the, so I don't want to say coder. If you're a software engineer, you can certainly, I don't like coder.
Starting point is 01:35:22 You can certainly use, um, the large language models to check syntax and to save you some time on things. And yes, of course you can say, hey, build me a check-in script so when people come to the front desk, they put their name. Yeah, of course it can do that. All right. You don't need to employ a full-time employee to do those types of things necessarily. But I've talked to enough dudes named Ben and dudettes named Bernadette who say, no, you cannot put this in the hands of mere mortals. It doesn't do the job. The only thing we have to be worried about with AI is people's loneliness.
Starting point is 01:36:04 It was actually rolling Stone of all publications. I did not expect this from them. People are losing loved ones to AI-fueled spiritual fantasies. People are moving towards artificial intelligence, i.e. chat bots, let's just call it what it is, because they're lonely and they want to have interactions and these interactions with men of course frequently lead to sexual fantasies and you know it's no different than you know the the nine hundred lines back in the 80s. You'd think that you were talking to some hot hot and people were paying $2 to
Starting point is 01:36:46 $5 a minute. It was a lot. Yeah. People were losing their mortgage money and all kinds of stuff. And so people are turning to chat bots to alleviate their loneliness, which- Actually, it's the same. Now, as to mention, I never thought about this because I forgot about those 900 lines. And they always had a lot of advertising on TV. Oh, all the time back in the day. It always just disappeared kind of overnight when people started to be.
Starting point is 01:37:15 When the internet came along. Well, it was, I think there was more of the abuse of people. They would get one of these 900 number lines and it wasn't for chatting, but they'd use it for customer service. And they would, and people would say, could be put on hold and they didn't know they were on a 900 line that was charging them $2 an hour and they get these huge phone bills. I remember thinking people talking about, look at this $5,000 phone bill. And they go on and bitching about the phone bills and that became a lot of bad publicity.
Starting point is 01:37:44 I think the whole thing died off because of that more than the internet. Well, the internet didn't help. Well, no, of course not. The internet didn't help anything. But you know, I've, so I, when I went to the NRB, the national religious broadcasters conference, there was this company, but I don't want to mention the company because it doesn't matter, but they were selling artificial intelligence pastors. I don't think they called it that, spiritual issues to a chat bot sooner
Starting point is 01:38:27 than they would say it to a pastor. And the danger in all this, of course, is that you need human connection with people. And this is being, this is the absolute danger of artificial intelligence is the parlor trick, the chat bot. In fact, one of our producers sent me a... And Meta is way ahead of everybody, and they're smart because instead of trying to make a large language model that can program code for you, any app you want in the world, they're creating bots, engagement bots. So one of our producers sent me a screenshot of a Facebook chat group
Starting point is 01:39:13 for the Lake Elizabeth families. So Lake Elizabeth small community, they have a little Facebook group, and all of a sudden Lizzie pops up. And Lizzie is a cute little robot. Looks like a robot, you know, about the size of a, I don't know, the size of a small doll. Hi there, I'm Lizzie, the group's AI. I'm a resource here to help you in the group. You might start seeing me comment on posts if I can find relevant past content so you don't have to dig and post to help you catch up on group activity or even get
Starting point is 01:39:45 a conversation going. Like this is bad. Wow. Yeah. This was bad from one perspective but is effective. Yes, it's effective. And people are very, I mean, this is your dead internet happening as it takes place. And by the way, the most under-reported story from two weeks ago regarding AI. Today, it's my honor to officially sign the Take It Down Act into law. It's a big thing, very important, so horrible what takes place. This will be the first ever federal law to combat the distribution of explicit It's a big thing, very important, so horrible what takes place. This would be the first ever federal law to combat the distribution of explicit imaginary posted without subjects' consent.
Starting point is 01:40:35 Take horrible pictures and I guess sometimes even make up the pictures and they post it without consent or anything else. Very importantly, this includes forgeries generated by artificial intelligence known as deepfakes. We've all heard about deepfakes. I have them all the time, but nobody does anything. I asked Pam, can you help me? Pam, she says, no, I'm too busy, too busy doing other things.
Starting point is 01:40:57 So you'll survive. But a lot of people don't survive. That's true and so horrible. With the rise of AI image generation, countless women have been harassed with deepfakes and other explicit images distributed against their will. This is the wrong and it's just so horribly wrong. And it's a very abusive situation like in some cases people have never seen before. And today we're making it totally illegal.
Starting point is 01:41:25 So of course the news media did nothing with this. No, there was no reporting on this whatsoever. None. For several reasons. One, it's about AI and we all think the memes are funny. Two, it is a project spearheaded entirely by the first lady, Melania Trump. So we can't give her any props for anything.
Starting point is 01:41:46 But here is the funniest part of it. So I go to the Library of Congress to read the bill. That's what I do. So this is about artificial intelligence, because that's what makes these things, creating really horrible images. You know, Taylor Swift. Well, kids are doing it on their classmates. Yeah, this is disgusting.
Starting point is 01:42:12 Yeah, kids are the worst. But it's about AI. And I'm reading the summary. The summary is generated by AI. Listen to this. This bill generally prohibits the non-consensual online publication of intimate visual depictions of individuals both authentic and computer generated and requires certain online platforms to promptly
Starting point is 01:42:37 remove such depictions upon receiving notice of their existence. Specifically, the bill prohibits the online publication of intimate visual depictions of an adult subject. When you start off by saying this bill generally prohibits, generally, I've never seen that in the Library of Congress. Never. Separately, covered platforms must establish a process through which subjects of intimate visual depictions may notify the platform of the existence of and request removal of an intimate visual depiction including the subject that was published without the subject's consent. I'm telling you this is a Chad GPT summary. I've read enough of them. It's just it's hilarious. Well, that's ironic. So it's very interesting because
Starting point is 01:43:28 the specifics are intimate visual depictions of an adult subject where publication is intended to cause or does harm or does cause harm to the subject where the depiction was published without the subject's consent, or in the case of an authentic depiction was created or obtained under Circumstances with the adult had a reasonable expectation of privacy Glen Greenwald or a minor subject publication is intended to abuse or harass the minor or to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person is
Starting point is 01:44:03 a pretty broad bill. And I guess covered platforms must remove such depictions within 48 hours of notification. Under the bill, covered platforms are defined as public websites, online services, or applications that primarily provide a forum for user-generated content. You know, like our end-of-show mixes. user-generated content. You know, like our end of show mixes, user-generated content. So no coverage of this whatsoever, no coverage.
Starting point is 01:44:35 And I think that's a pretty big deal. Oh, are you still? The news is the editors. The editors of the major news outlets are no good. They're the ones who do the headlines that are misleading. The editors write headlines. People in the business know this. Once in a while you can get a headline through, but rarely.
Starting point is 01:44:56 The editors are, oh, I got a better headline than that. And they're the ones who assign stories and they're the ones who promote stories in the meetings and say, we're going to cover this, we're going to cover that, we're not going to cover this, and we're not going to cover that. It's the editors of America. You remember Marjorie Taylor Greene who said, oh, if I'd known that was in the bill, I wouldn't have voted for it. Yeah, she got suckered.
Starting point is 01:45:20 Yes, she did. Well, here's the details about this 10-year AI regulation ban on the states. There is a section in the Big Beautiful bill that would move to update federal government systems with the help of AI. So what could this mean on a state level? Our sources to answer this, the U.S. Congress, Catawba College political professor Michael Bitzer and the National Conference of State Legislatures. The Big Beautiful bill outlines the initiative in Section 43201. It would grant $500 million over the next 10 years to quote, modernize and secure federal
Starting point is 01:45:56 information technology systems. But the bill would also ban state led AI regulations and block dozens of states from enforcing pre-existing rulings. So anytime the federal government tells the states what they can and cannot do, that's a component of federalism. Now oftentimes that might get challenged in court by various states. Right now there is no centralized federal oversight of AI leaving states to navigate the ever-changing technology on their own. This type of regulation is something the federal government has done for decades.
Starting point is 01:46:32 One example is raising the drinking age. The reason that we have a drinking age of 21 was federal legislation. Back in the 1980s, the federal government said, states, if you want federal highway funds for your interstate highways, you have to raise your drinking age from 18 to 21. When it comes to how individual states can respond? Well, states can go into court and certainly challenge any federal policy that they disagree with. And so this may be the ultimate inroad. If this does get passed within this legislation, some states may say, no, we want the power
Starting point is 01:47:11 to be able to oversee AI in our borders. We're going to challenge this in federal court. Yeah. It's going to be a question of, oh, you don't like it? No money for you. And I think the state should have the right to regulate that however they want to. I have mixed feelings about it. I don't like the idea of this in certain situations where you have one state saying
Starting point is 01:47:37 one thing, another state saying another, and it becomes a problem because of the, especially anything regarding AI, which is them because of the, especially anything regarding AI, which is cross-border.... intimately connected to the internet, which is just, which goes beyond, is beyond state lines. Yes. Yeah. Well, if Marjorie Taylor Green would not have voted for it if she was in there.
Starting point is 01:47:59 Yeah, sure. Can I just take us down a quick path of NATO and Zelensky and the drones? Because it's interesting what's happening here. I have clips if I could follow up with you after you're done. So right now we're in a situation where the defense ministers in the EU, well NATO really, but let's just say it's the EU, they are talking about the 5% that quite honestly President Trump is demanding from them to buy our military gear. And so let's listen first to the Swedish Minister of Defense. NATO needs to achieve a strong ability to defend.
Starting point is 01:48:50 We take note of Russia right now being bogged down in and around Ukraine. It hasn't been successful so far, but we also know after an armistice or a peace agreement, of course Russia is going to allocate more forces closer to our vicinity. Therefore, it's extremely important that the alliance use these couple of years now when Russia is delimited by its force postures in and around Ukraine, and also that it has been weakened by the war, that we do an historic buildup on our armed forces.
Starting point is 01:49:18 I do want to convey that this is an historic moment for Europe. If we are able to reach 5% by 2030 or 2032 we're gonna go up to a defense investment that was at the height of the Cold War and it's necessary for us to strengthen our ability to defend and continue living in peace. Okay Sweden's in for 5% let's go to Lithuania. This is Paul John... no that was Paul Johnson. This is... what's her name here?
Starting point is 01:49:45 Johnson this is what's her name here Dovilsaklin the minister of that's a I'm sure I got that wrong she's the Minister of Defense for Lithuania. That's the Swedish guy again hold on a second here she is. Well yesterday it was just you know informal meetings about that but today we're going to have a real discussion. So my question to my colleagues is that if we all trust our intelligence, if we trust NATO military intelligence and they say that it's just a few years until Russia is going to be able to test NATO, then what are we going to do?
Starting point is 01:50:21 Ask them for extension? Ask them to delay the deadline? This is not going to happen. So therefore I'd like to delay the deadline. This is not going to happen. So therefore I'd like to hear the answers. What is then their plan? Translation. If we don't do it and Russia attacks, we're going to say, hold on. We don't, we got to get the money.
Starting point is 01:50:35 Ah, very smart. Miss from Lithuania, but it was Ruta, short clip, who gave it away. When I heard him, I'm like, okay, I see what's going on here. He was asked a question at this minister's summit. He's always there. By the way, look, I'm just going to say maybe he has a cold, but he is touching and rubbing and sniffing his nose is like that. I've never seen him do this, but he now answers a question about... Even you spotted it. Yeah, and I'm not the guy who spots that.
Starting point is 01:51:07 You're usually the guy who spots that. And now, Dave Ackerman, who sent me this clip, he sent, he always sends me the YouTube videos of France 24 and stuff, and I clip whatever I want. He now calls him White Lines Ritter. And so White Lines is talking about hybrid warfare. Hybrid. Ah, this is something new. Two things.
Starting point is 01:51:30 First, when we discuss hybrid, that we realize that that is basically an umbrella for sometimes an assassination attempt on the CEO of a big company. Sometimes the jamming of commercial airplanes in parts of NATO airspace, sometimes even cyber attacks, for example, and I mentioned that before, the example you know at the National Health Service in the United Kingdom. So we have seen this. We have seen this case in 2018, March 2018 in the UK, which was of course also an assassination attempt. So these issues we really have to consider that this is next to the traditional warfare
Starting point is 01:52:13 is increasing, that we have to know what is happening, that we have to know how we can make sure that those doing this, if the Russians or wherever they are behind this, that you not only notice, but they don't accept it and that you will find ways to make sure it stops. And that's what the hybrid strategy is all about. The hybrid strategy, the only thing he didn't mention is the drones, because that has been the change. This operation spider web from Ukraine against Russia, I think was a big promotional push. And we'll just a little background.
Starting point is 01:52:52 You heard it in your news overview from ABC. Here's Martha Raditz with the president of Ukraine, the dancing Vladimir Zelensky. Let's talk about Operation Spiderweb. Please. Please. So you believe you did destroy maybe 40 aircraft, others say maybe 10 to 20.
Starting point is 01:53:12 How many did you destroy? We think, we think, we think and we have our analytics that we destroyed 34% of their strategic air jets. President Zelensky describing the operation as complicated and clandestine. 18 months in the making, so secretive,
Starting point is 01:53:32 not even the US was informed. We have to prepare such plans. By the way, bull crap. I agree with you. Bull crap. There's no way we weren't informed. Bull crap. It was just a plausible deniability Bull crap. There's no way we weren't informed. Bull crap. It was just a plausible
Starting point is 01:53:46 deniability bull crap. Making so secretive, not even the US was informed. We have to prepare such plans and we are not stopping. We have to prepare such plans because we don't know, we don't really know if they will stop this war. They don't want, they don't want to stop the war. This is the problem. The key to the plan, Ukrainian drones just like these, which the president's office arranged for us to see this weekend, simple yet deadly, packed with an explosive unit. This is one of many drone production facilities across Ukraine spread out across the country.
Starting point is 01:54:25 We can't tell you exactly where we are because obviously these facilities are Russian targets. Okay, so obviously it's very secretive what she's doing, everything there. This is a little more background on Operation Spiderweb.
Starting point is 01:54:38 The 100 drones used in Operation Spiderweb were smuggled into Russia hidden in containers with remotely controlled retractable roofs. The drones had all been concealed on trucks with Russian drivers unknowingly delivering the payload. They didn't know anything. They didn't know what will be in the roofs and they didn't know just when it will, because they didn't know what will be. That's why they didn't know when it will be and where.
Starting point is 01:55:09 So this is, I think this is important, very important. And those drones and the Ukrainian pilots guiding them, knowing the Russian aircraft's most vulnerable spot where the fuel is held after examining old Soviet aircraft still in Ukraine and on display. And we have heard that they knew what parts of that airplane to hit because you have airplanes in museums.
Starting point is 01:55:37 Yes, they knew exactly where to hit and they did it exactly what was in their ideas step by step they did very clear this operation. Okay so now let's talk about this operation. Let's talk about this operation. From a podcast, Preston Stewart and I'm not going to poop on Preston, No pooping on Preston. He had Yevgen Karas, the commander of Ukraine's 413th Unmanned Systems Forces Battalion on the podcast about the drones. And I mean, the whole podcast, like 40 minutes is great. It's in the show notes. This guy talks about the drones, about how they get, if they create a drone configuration that
Starting point is 01:56:27 kills Russians, they get a bonus. I mean, it's like a game. It's literally like a video game. But then, and you got to kind of get into, because he's a Ukrainian speaking English, listen to what he says about where the drones came from. Some companies start moving. So I think many countries, many companies, they want to bring their weapons here to be clarified. Is it working? Many companies or many countries want to bring their weapons here to, he says, clarify. In other words, to verify, certify that their weapons are working.
Starting point is 01:57:06 To test market. To test market, thank you. Many countries, many companies, they want to bring their weapons here to be clarified is it working and they use it like assistance to Ukraine. Some drones we buy from the government, some drones still now are sent to Ukraine as a gift. I know some very rich guys, especially now one American guy doing very big gifts to Ukraine army.
Starting point is 01:57:35 One big rich American guy sending drones to the Ukraine army. Really? He really saved many of our lives because he does his job well and his drone is not so expensive. His drones are cheap, he sends them to us for free to go test market them and then right on cue, The Wall Street Journal. I'd never heard of the JCU. Remember we heard that guy, the lieutenant colonel, the propagandist about drone warfare.
Starting point is 01:58:03 Oh we're not ready. We gotta get ready. We gotta get ready for the drones. Well, the Wall Street Journal did a report on the JCU drone anti-drone warfare and how they're training our troops. The US military has launched a new school to train American armed forces in how to counter the emerging threat of drones
Starting point is 01:58:21 or what it calls Unmanned Aircraft Systems, or UAS. The first academy of its kind, the Joint Counter-Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems University, or JCU, will train about 1,000 troops a year. Warfare is changing very fast. This threat right here, this current threat with respect to UAS, it's the pace of your phone changing. This footage is from a Ukrainian drone attack carried out against Russian forces.
Starting point is 01:58:47 And this video is from a Hamas drone attack in November carried out against Israeli forces in Gaza. The proliferation of small, cheap, commercially available drones is transforming modern warfare. And this has not been lost on the Pentagon. Colonel Moshef Sauda is the director of the JCU. The pace of the need is outgrowing capacity right now. So we're trying to train as many people as possible
Starting point is 01:59:11 and trying to grow as fast as possible to fit that need. Today, students at Fort Sill are training on weapon systems to counter small unmanned aircraft. The students are also learning how to use another handheld system, the Drone Buster. Whereas the smart shooter utilizes the 5.56 round, this is known as an electronic attack system. So the soldier is taking this here and they're pointing in the general direction of the target
Starting point is 01:59:35 that they see. And then the soldier, placing an operation, utilize various jamming means to interdict that target. Ten minute video on the anti-drone warfare. President Trump, this came in two days ago. President Trump orders restrictions slashed on US drones. Executive orders give local law enforcement more power to take down rogue drones. Okay.
Starting point is 01:59:58 Well, isn't that interesting? This thing was a sales video. The sales video for not just the drone industry, but according to a producer Boots on the Ground. I am familiar with internal discussion says are of course anonymous source familiar with the matter. I just listened to your Iron Dome versus Golden Dome presentation on episode 1770 at the 48 minute 32nd mark you are correct in your concept but incorrect in your nomenclature. Iron Dome is out there is only Golden Dome. Golden Dome is very broad multiple layers sea, land, air, space, cyber that should draw a better picture of the context of the concepts, correct
Starting point is 02:00:45 nomenclature. The iron, the golden dome will be against drones, it's going to, it is the boondoggle of all boondoggles that President Trump is launching here for the military industrial complex. Huge boondoggle. Who, any military industrial complex thing ever that's not a boondoggle. But, is there a military industrial complex thing ever that's not a boondoggle? Right. Besides World War II. But when you throw in the drones, hybrid baby. This is what Ritta is.
Starting point is 02:01:17 Ritta is the sailor. He's the brown shoes. Hybrid. Oh, it's hybrid. We got to have Golden Dome against poisoning people. Golden Dome against shooting executives, Golden Dome against shooting executives, Golden Dome against cyber, Golden Dome against against drones. By the way,
Starting point is 02:01:33 listen again, because you didn't catch it, to the Swedish defense minister, what the Swedish defense minister says, and this is someone who's in the conversations about Ukraine and Russia. Well, yesterday it was just, you you know informal meetings about that but today we're going to have a real discussion. So my question to my colleagues is that if we all trust our intelligence, if we trust NATO military intelligence and they say that it's just a few years until Russia is going to be able to test NATO then what are we going to do? Ask them for extension, ask them to...
Starting point is 02:02:08 Ah, shoot. Where is this? Delay the deadline. This is not going to happen. So therefore I'd like to hear the answers. What is that? Ah, crap. Ah, crap.
Starting point is 02:02:17 I cut it out. It's my best part. I did it again. Well, that's why I didn't spot it. Yes. She said armistice. Whether there's going to be a peace or an armistice. Crap, I'm sorry, I blew that one. Yes, and you were accusatory. Yes. No, I thought I was slim, sly.
Starting point is 02:02:37 She mentioned armistice. It's going to be an armistice. There will never be a peace. It will be an armistice after the big NATO summit meeting, after everybody is all the defense ministers have agreed. They all signed their checks. It's all going to come in. There's going to be one big golden dome over America and probably over Europe. All golden. It's going to be beautiful.
Starting point is 02:02:56 A beautiful golden dome. Let's go meta on this whole thing and say that the Russians are in on this. Well, here is. And let's say that the Russians had a bunch of bombers they needed to get rid of because they got to, you know, these are all dogs. And let's let them blow them up and we can start up our industrial complex and make some extra money for the public. Hey, whatever they just blew up has to be built again. Bigger, better. Oh yeah. No, I, war is a racket.
Starting point is 02:03:23 This whole thing. And unfortunately. Because, you know, they blow up all these, there's five bases that were attacked, it seems, in the last analysis. And so they blow up all these Russian bombers and the Russians don't make a bigger fuss than they did. They throw a few more drones and almost killed somebody. Did you see President, I'm in agreement with you.
Starting point is 02:03:48 Did you see President Trump with Mr. Peepers? Yeah, I did. This was, listen to these short clips. This is President Trump talking about peace between Russia and Ukraine. You know, he was, he attacked and they attacked pretty harshly. They went deep into Russia and he actually told me, I mean, I made it very clear. He said we have no choice but to attack based on that and it's probably not going to be pretty. I don't like it.
Starting point is 02:04:40 I said, don't do it. You shouldn't do it. You should stop it. But again, there's a lot of hatred. Yeah. Is that president Trump saying it's going to go on for a little bit longer? And then Peepers pipes up and says something very interesting. We get satellite pictures of the war field and you don't even like to look at it.
Starting point is 02:05:02 Right? don't even like to look at it. It's terrible. It's really terrible. Bodies, arms, heads, legs all over the place. You've never seen anything like it. It's so ridiculous. And this is only by Russian weapons against Ukraine. Notice what he said. Oh no, there's only Russian weapons against Ukraine that blow up the people. That is not happening anywhere else. Legs all over the place. That is not happening anywhere else.
Starting point is 02:05:40 Never happened with Ukraine weapons against Russia. You mean those drones that come in and fly into poor Russian soldiers running around and the drone just blows up on him. That didn't happen. Okay. Trump calls him out on just a little bit. Never. Ukraine is only targeting military targets, not civilians, not private, not energy infrastructure. So this is the difference. And that's the reason why we are trying to do more on Russia, how to stop this war. Well, in this case, I'm talking about the battlefield, you know, the soldiers on soldiers.
Starting point is 02:06:08 But you could also say that to with the cities. The cities are being hit also. So it's a terrible, terrible thing. Right? Terrible, terrible. Oh, he had the course correct. That's interesting. Yeah, because Peepers like, Mr. Peepers is an idiot.
Starting point is 02:06:22 Yeah. And then Trump says something very interesting, which of course didn't get play. But now that I think about it, yeah, that did kind of die down pretty quick. And you know, I'm very proud of the fact that with India and Pakistan, I was able to stop that and those are nuclear powers. That would have really that was getting close to being out of hand. And I spoke to some very talented people on both sides, very good people on both sides.
Starting point is 02:06:47 And I said, you know, we're dealing with you and trade, Pakistan and India, right now. I said, we're not going to deal with you and trade if you're going to go shooting each other and whipping out nuclear weapons that maybe even affect us. Because, you know, that nuclear dust blows across oceans very quickly. It affects us. And I said, if you're going to do that, we're not going to do any trade deals. And you know what? I got that war stopped.
Starting point is 02:07:11 Now, I hope we don't go back and we find out that they signed it, but I don't think they will. They were both good. They were well represented. I want to congratulate both countries because, as you know, the leader of India who's a great guy was here a few weeks ago in some great talks we're doing a trade deal and Pakistan likewise they have very very strong leadership some people won't like when I say that but you know it is what it is and they stopped that war now am I
Starting point is 02:07:43 gonna get credit I'm not to get credit for anything. They don't give me credit for anything, but nobody else could have done it. I don't get credit for anything, but I believe it. I believe you called them up and said, hey, stop that nonsense or no trade deals. I believe that. Now, I believe it too, but I think the good people on both sides call back was hilarious. That was funny. That was very funny.
Starting point is 02:08:04 The good people on both sides. Both sides. Ah, good people on both sides. That was funny. That was funny. Callback was hilarious. That was funny. That was very funny. Good people on both sides. Both sides. Good people on both sides. And then during the Peepers meeting, oh no, oh no, we're talking to China again. We had a very good conversation with President Xi a little while ago, just before your arrival. In fact, we just hung up and they said, you're here. I said, that's pretty good.
Starting point is 02:08:24 Two great leaders of the world in a very short period of time. We had a very good talk and we've straightened out any complexity. And it's very complex stuff and we straightened it out. The agreement was we're going to have Scott and Howard and Jameson will be going and meeting with their top people and continue it forward. But no, I think we have everything. I think we're in very good shape with China and the trade deal. We have a deal with China, as you know, but we were straightening out some of the points,
Starting point is 02:09:00 having to do mostly with rare earth magnets and some other things. So it's reduced trade tariff rates, they remain in effect? We have the deal, I mean we've had a deal, we announced the deal and I guess you could say, I wouldn't even say finalizing it up Scott, I would say we have a deal and we're going to just make sure that everybody understands what the deal is. Okay? They had a deal. Yeah, he stumbled there. I don't think he meant to say that. He kind of backed away. They have a deal, obviously. Clearly they have a deal.
Starting point is 02:09:29 Yes. Something's up. Yeah. Probably a counter for the stock market going up a little bit. There was one other thing that I thought was, you know, we're in the season of reveal. I mean, season of reveal! Well, the first thing, the season of reveal, this came, this was also in the, let me see where it is.
Starting point is 02:10:06 It was in the Wall Street Journal. Pentagon disinformation that fueled America's UFO mythology. Did you even hear about this? No, tell me. A tiny Pentagon office had spent months investigating conspiracy theories about secret Washington UFO programs when it uncovered a shocking truth. At least one of those theories had been fueled by the Pentagon itself. The congressional, congressionally ordered probe took investigators back to the 1980s. Remember that whole, the whole hearing and everyone was like, Oh no,
Starting point is 02:10:41 I've seen it. It's an off world. But and we'd like these guys are full of crap When an Air Force colonel visited a bar near area 51 a top-secret site in the Nevada desert He gave the owner photos or what might be flying saucers The photos went up on the walls and into the local lore went the idea the US military was secretly testing recovered alien technology But the colonel was on a mission of disinformation The photos were doctored the The now retired officer confessed to the Pentagon investigators. The whole exercise was a ruse to protect what was really going on in Area 51. The Air Force was using the site to develop top secret stealth fighters viewed as critical edge against at the time the Soviet Union. All those TikTok videos and stuff, trust me, this is all bull crap.
Starting point is 02:11:30 All of it. All of it has been to cover up their own stuff, which probably doesn't work very well. Season of reveal. But they didn't reveal much. What? That the Pentagon itself was lying about UFOs? Where is that in the news? Well it's in the Wall Street Journal, but who cares?
Starting point is 02:11:52 Of course it… The Pentagon was lying? Wait a minute, let me get this straight. The Pentagon was lying? Well yes, gambling. But… Is gambling going on? And that's to you is the season of reveal?
Starting point is 02:12:06 Because it's been unknown in the past that they lie? About the UFOs specifically. Listen, Joe Rogan said. Well, that could be maybe it's a meta. Maybe they're living with some aliens in the White House as we speak. Oh, okay. I'm sorry. Yeah, I should have figured that one out. That would be your perspective.
Starting point is 02:12:23 I don't get it why you're knuckling under here to what might be an op. I don't think so. Here's another season of Reveal. Now, a Japanese aerospace company trying to put a lander on the surface of the moon says it has lost contact with the craft. The lander, Resilience, is owned by iSpace,
Starting point is 02:12:43 and this is only the third time in history that a private company has tried to reach the moon. It's also the first time a company outside the US has achieved this feat. Resilience is an uncrewed spacecraft which was carried into orbit by a SpaceX rocket in January. 3, 2, 1. Keith Cowings, a SpaceX expert and editor of nasawatch.com, he joins us from Washington DC. Now, IceSpace, the Japanese enterprise, they lost
Starting point is 02:13:11 communication as the lander approached the surface of the moon. We seem to hear that a lot when people try and do this. Yeah, it's going to the moon is straightforward, orbiting the moon is straightforward, coming's going to the moon is straightforward, orbiting the moon is straightforward, coming down close to the moon, sending pictures is straightforward, but landing is always hard. They were going kind of fast when they lost the telemetry of the data, so I really don't think we have a healthy spacecraft on the moon. We may have a crashed spacecraft. Right.
Starting point is 02:13:42 So getting this far, is that getting as far as actually starting to approach the moon to try and land, is that standard or is that actually quite an achievement? You know, the idea is to go to the moon and land there and we sort of have, again, the notion of going to the moon and going around it is easier than doing all the rocketry so the thing lands exactly how you want it. So I'm happy that they made it that far. I just wish they would have gone a little bit further and a little slower. 50 years ago we dented, we did it in a tuna fish can. How can it be hard? This is second half of show stuff. 55 years ago.
Starting point is 02:14:25 This is the second half of show stuff. They were missing so much. We never landed on the moon in the first place. The Japanese make great cars. They can't even land on the moon. It's all fake. My favorite though is Cash Patel going on Rogan, spending an hour talking about China killing us on purpose with Fentanyl.
Starting point is 02:14:47 Russiagate was a setup. Really? Did you watch the whole thing? I watched about 70%. Did you watch the whole thing? And then he got into Epstein. I didn't watch any of it. I don't really watch too much Rogan. It was only on for two hours. The timing is interesting and about Epstein well, you know, you know, we're gonna get everything hilarious to where they're Yeah, they're handling. Yeah. No, we have to we have to cover up a lot of stuff We got a you know, we've got to protect the innocent and but we're doing it. We're gonna We're gonna release an artificial intelligence movie of showing that he's by himself.
Starting point is 02:15:29 The AI keeps giving Epstein six fingers on one hand. So they can't get the video. It's just a matter of time. They've got to keep regenerating it. They'll have it. But what I like a lot, and I know that this is bubbling, and he's been talking about it more and more, this is really going to come into play.
Starting point is 02:15:45 This is the auto pen controversy. Well, look, the auto pen, I think, is the big scandal outside of the rigged election of 2020. I think the biggest scandal of the last many years is the auto pen. And who's using it? I happen to think I know, OK, because I'm here and I'm not a big auto pen person. Fortunately, I'm glad I'm very glad it's an easy way out but it's It's very bad thing very dangerous. You know, I sign important documents. Usually when they put documents in front of you, they're important
Starting point is 02:16:15 Even if you're signing Ambassadorships or and I consider that important. I think it's inappropriate You have somebody that's devoting four years of their life or more to being an ambassador. I think you really deserve that person deserves to get a real signature, not an auto pen signature. And I can tell auto pen easily. I can look at it like two little pinholes from pulling the paper, right? You'll see the pinholes. It's real easy to tell about auto pen. I think it's very disrespectful to people when they get an auto pen signature. Outside, auto pens to me are used when thousands of letters come in from young people all over the country and you want to get them back. And you know, people use auto pens for that.
Starting point is 02:16:53 To send a little signature at the bottom of a letter, we have thousands of them. We get thousands of letters a week and it's not possible to, you know, do it. I'd like to do it myself, you can't do it. To me that's where auto pens start and stop. But I don't think, I'm sure that he didn't know many of the things. Look, he was never for open borders. He was never for transgender for everybody.
Starting point is 02:17:17 He was never for men playing in women's sports. I mean he changed, I mean all of these things that changed so radically. I don't think he had any idea that what was,, I said it during the debate and I say it now, he didn't have much of an idea what was going on. I mean, essentially whoever used the auto pen was the president and that is wrong. It's illegal. It's so bad and it's so disrespectful to our country. I smell something coming. Well, there is something coming, but it's so disrespectful to our country. I smell something coming. Well there is something coming, but it's interesting to listen to Trump because what he said there
Starting point is 02:17:52 could have been said in 15 seconds. He's just the most long-winded guy. I know. He's going to wear everybody out. He gets us to under our two-minute time limit for a clip but just barely But I like the the two little pinholes you can tell because of the two little pinholes. That's interesting I didn't know about that with the auto. I didn't know that. Yeah, he's does Reve does that's revealing of reveal material. Yes. He's so he's got the pit. So now we all know what to look for Yeah
Starting point is 02:18:21 but if if those If those papers that were auto pen signed were not directed by the president, can they be declared null and void? Do over? That's what they're working on. They're trying to, that's where they're headed. They're trying to do that so they can pull the pardons on some of these people and yes. I think that, no, that's it. That's it to pull the pardons on some of these people and yes and yes i think that no that's it that's it to pull the pardons on those people i think that's it that's all that he's
Starting point is 02:18:50 going to do everything else is complicated because of congress voted for it you know and they sent a bill and that that's complicated but the pardons, yeah. I can see that's where he's going. I think he's targeting Adam Schiff. Pencil neck, that'll be funny. Yeah, Adam Schiff is in deep shit, this guy. Yeah, California. By the way, on the quads right now, protests erupt. ICE against protests.
Starting point is 02:19:26 And literally the ICE guys are just standing there in a line, nothing's happening. CNN, protests erupt for third day. ICE raids. National, BBC, National Guard troops clash. There's no, it's not a single, they're literally standing there, there's not a single clash taking place.
Starting point is 02:19:44 Stand off between National Guard and protesters on third day in LA. MSNBC. Fox. House subcommittee to hold hearing on antisemitic attacks. Okay. There you go. No wonder people listen to podcasts. So I have two clips before we go to the break, which I think is overdue.
Starting point is 02:20:05 Yep. Because these clips, I put one that's been in for probably a month about, and these are Andrew Tate warning clips. But I want to play these two clips one after the other. And one of them is because it doesn't make sense. There's something going on. This guy is an op of some sort. I've never understood.
Starting point is 02:20:27 I haven't really paid attention to it. You have the same sense I do. Something is amiss. Yeah. But this is Andrew Tate, arrest PBS. Prosecutors in the UK say that the influencers, Andrew and Tristan Tate, have been charged with rape, human trafficking and other crimes. Officials say the charges were authorized last year and are only now being confirmed.
Starting point is 02:20:50 The Tates were arrested in Romania in 2022 and indicted last year on charges of sexually exploiting women. Andrew Tate was also charged with rape there. British prosecutors say the two will be extradited to the UK once the Romanian case is concluded. The Tates are dual citizens of the US and UK and they deny any wrongdoing. The whole Romania thing is odd. Okay, so we have what sounds like you got two horrible people that are under arrest. Well then explain the second clip. The online influencer and self-declared misogynist Andrew Tate has been fined and suspended from
Starting point is 02:21:29 driving after being caught doing nearly four times the speed limit in Romania. Officials say the British-American national was driving nearly 200 kilometres an hour in a village, despite a 50 kilometre an hour limit. Mr Tate and his brother Tristan face charges including rape and human trafficking in Romania, as well as separate allegations in Britain and the United States. They deny all those accusations. Wait, so this was from yesterday by the way. So these guys all this bullcrap and they're just floating around driving around at high speeds and
Starting point is 02:22:04 would carefree. Does this make any sense at all? No, and how does Romania fit into it? What are they doing in Romania? Why Romania? There's something very suspicious about the whole Andrew Tate situation. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:22:19 I, I, I, I just. I just, like every one of these things, it's like these are coded messages. I don't know who they're coded for or why or how, but then the whole 200 miles and that 200 kilometers an hour. That's pretty fast in a village. That's very fast. That's very fast.
Starting point is 02:22:36 That is fast by any standards. Hey, with that, I want to thank you for your courage in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the ice federalization. Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only Mr. John C. DeMora. Yeah, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam Gray, the man who ship a sea bus around, feeding the air, subs in the water,
Starting point is 02:22:57 and all the dames and knights out there. In the morning to the trolls in the troll room. Stop, hey, I need more bangs, more bangs. It scatters them. There you go, yes, there we go, there we go. Okay, that helps a lot. I need more bangs, more bangs. It scatters them. There you go. Yes, there we go, there we go. Okay, that helps a lot. Okay.
Starting point is 02:23:07 We're back on par. We're back on par. 22.47 at the peak. That makes sense. That's about right for a Sunday, isn't it? 22.47? No, it's down. Down.
Starting point is 02:23:19 24 is what we should have. Oh, well. Hello, trolls. Good to have you here. We appreciate you all so much. The trolls hanging out in the troll room at trollroom.io. Hey, I got a lot of feedback on the new podcast apps. Everyone was like, yeah, man, Apple should be using Podping.
Starting point is 02:23:39 We talked about it on the last show. Yeah, Podping. Yeah. Guess who didn't call Apple? Why would they? I know. You said it a couple of shows ago, not invented here. This is a mantra of Silicon Valley.
Starting point is 02:23:54 Podcasting wasn't invented there either. Yet they love that. Well, they've, they've assumed somehow they've assumed that it was invented there. Yeah. So everything else is not invented there. I bet if you go, if you stand outside the, that spaceship and you say, hey, who invented podcasting? They'll all say Steve. Steve Jobs.
Starting point is 02:24:15 Steve Jobs. Of course. Yeah, he invented it. Yeah, probably true. Yeah, that's what you do. That's how you do it. So if you, if, yes. Silicon Valley.
Starting point is 02:24:23 So if you want to stay in touch with your favorite podcasts, don't be duped. Don't be duped by the legacy apps. They're no good. Get a modern podcast app. Hundreds of thousands of podcasts are using the technology that updates within 90 seconds of posting, or some would say downloading. And of course, the new hot stuff is the live podcasts. And there are a lot of podcasts, particularly on the no agenda stream. I think all of them use the, what we call the lit technology, live item tag for live. So your podcast app will notify you when they go live. This is what you want. Many more features as well, podcastapps.com. Thank you to our artists. Wow. I guess we were wrong.
Starting point is 02:25:11 In the value for value model, we have many ways people can contribute and support the show. One of them is, well, two of them are time and talent. And we love our artists who are always helping us by giving us artwork to use for the album art. So it's always exciting. And we've been doing use for, uh, for the album art. So it's always exciting. And we've been doing it for, gosh, well over 15 years, I think maybe even longer. We've had no agenda art generator.com and we were pretty convinced that digital
Starting point is 02:25:35 two, one, two, two, one, one, two, man was a, uh, an alias for dare. No, Neil. It turns out that's not true. It turns out to be a real person. At least in this, it's an opt that's so elaborate that I don't even think Darren would do it. Yes. But he's obvious. He says himself, he's a, he's actually an expat. He hates the term, but he is, he lives in Madeira, Portugal. Yes, that was interesting.
Starting point is 02:26:03 And he is a former, not a spook, but former guy. Something. I forget what he did. Some kind of thing, yeah. And he moved to Portugal for the cheap drink. Cheap drink, alcohol. Cost of living. And he lives in Madeira.
Starting point is 02:26:22 They got good wine there. I give you a Madeira, Madeira. So he, uh, it seems as if he's using the same tools and has developed the same prompting techniques as Darren giving us a results that are almost identical. Well, and there it is. There is the fallacy of AI. Like it all starts to look up, it all looks like the other one,
Starting point is 02:26:48 it all sounds like it. And of course, Darren never chimed in to say anything. He wanted to say, I'll take credit for being a smarty. And giving him more credit than he deserves, which he loves. Darren deserves a lot of credit, man.
Starting point is 02:27:08 Well, he's a very talented person. He is. And he's like six foot nine or something. Six foot nine? Yeah, he's huge. He's like Lurch. Gives you a different view. Hello, Darren.
Starting point is 02:27:22 I'm Darren. You rang? You rang. We want to thank Blue Acorn for his AI prompting skills. I think, I don't know, I'm afraid to say it. I'm sure. You don't know. Blue Acorn doesn't always use AI. He's told us that.
Starting point is 02:27:40 This could be just Blue Acorn. He brought us the artwork for episode 1770. We titled that one Control Grid. I did get some people thanking us for talking about Catherine Austin Fitz. They too are tired of the adult Whitney Webb that she sometimes turns out to be. And this was the salmon to the face, which, and I think I copied you on the reply. Someone reminded me that this was a Monty Python skit, although not with salmon, I think it was herring.
Starting point is 02:28:08 Well, it was herring, then it was followed by a salmon or some big fish. Yeah. Where they were slapping each other in the face with the fish. So yes. And, but if you're from Holland, you understand these, these types of expressions, getting hit in the face with a wet salmon. And it was a funny piece. I think we both went, yeah, let's do that one. Let's do Blue-A.
Starting point is 02:28:31 Well, it was hard. There wasn't anything better. You did like the control grid. I didn't like that at all. Let me see what that was. It was down further. There wasn't any real killers. There was a lot of Trump, Elon
Starting point is 02:28:45 stuff which Trump and Elon, we try to not put people in so often. And a lot of socks, a lot of socks. Socks, a lot of socks. I can't remember what the sock reference was. We were talking about socks made in America. Yeah, the gold toes. Yes, exactly. Now I like the one with Trump and Musk laughing and then the CNN headline in the back, Trump and Musk at War, but you nixed that. Probably rightly so. A lot of them boxing. No, we looked at that.
Starting point is 02:29:20 Let's see. Control grid. I don't see the control grid. Oh, look, there's Darren. Darren posted, don't fall for the cheap imitations. I am not digital 2112 man. Okay. Cheap imitation. And again, I'm just looking at tons of AI. It's sick and it's all AI. It's all starting to look like this the piece next to it. All of it. I'm not saying that so much but oh come on you're a hater.
Starting point is 02:29:58 It's boring. Let's just face it. It's boring. I'd rather have bad mixes for end of show. The mixes are, the mix that you've got coming up is the worst mix you've probably ever produced. I produce nothing. I just get what people send me. That's probably the worst mix you've ever approved. I approve everything. It's user generated content.
Starting point is 02:30:22 That's how it works. You sometimes are great. People at the end will hear it and they'll, they'll probably never listen to the show again. Oh really? Adam McCurry.com. If you like the piece, tell them that John's full of it. And these mixes that we have today on today's show are fabulous because that's
Starting point is 02:30:40 what Adam thinks is going to happen. And I disagree. But I could be wrong. Before we start. Maybe these are, they could be terrific. Let me just, hold on, hold on. Maybe I don't like them for some other, some psychological reasons. Yes. And I don't like, you know, just people that just clip us saying something
Starting point is 02:31:01 and then repeating it over and over and over and over again, meaninglessly with no song involved or any any creativity whatsoever. This says the guy who likes house music This is I like house music and you like you like that techno you like techno your techno guy you like You come on you you like a lot of that techno stuff rave music. I've heard you like it Okay, so what oh, but that's what they're making That's an interesting approach well, here's the thing So people don't know this if you don't listen to the live show
Starting point is 02:31:39 But I'll play the end of show mixes before the show starts kind of a warm up after Darren and we just get going. And then and then typically, I open up John's mic and I say in the morning. And then you say in the morning and then I do the whole fat lady thing. So it's and it's okay if you don't like the mixes. But when I say in the morning, you say, I think, you don't even say in the morning, I think we should get rid of those. We shouldn't play those. Those are no good. I think we should get rid of the whole segment altogether. Is that not what you said? Well, I didn't use that intonation. That's how it sounded in my ears. Why everything to you. But you didn't even say, good morning, in the morning, hello, hello, partner, good,
Starting point is 02:32:29 I'm glad you showed up again. First of all, first of all, you were late. So I go, I go. I was not late. I turned on the, I was clipping for the show and I was running long and I just hadn't brought up clean feed yet and your text like where are you in the exact in that exact tone let me see let me read it to you yes it's exactly that tone here it is why are you not online question mark question mark question mark that's three question marks how am I supposed is that why you're not online
Starting point is 02:33:12 or is that why you're not alive what's wrong with you it wasn't it was in all caps the way you're expressing it you know funny enough you didn't even capitalize the first letter of the sentence. Of course not because it was low key. I thought, here's what I thought, I thought you were using the old instance. Well, that wouldn't make any difference. You can come in on the old instance or the new instance. No, I only have one that I can come in on, which is the new one. The other one still works.
Starting point is 02:33:43 Yeah, but I don't have a link to it anymore. My point is, I didn't change, you changed. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. No, you usually have the whole hour of Darren, and I like listening to Darren's stuff so I can complain about it. And I have to say, he did have a, I think it was Def Leppard doing a version of Traveling Band. Yes. Do you not know that this is... That was quite good.
Starting point is 02:34:08 Do you not know this is on the No Agenda stream and if you can listen to it there live in real time? I've done that, but every so often when I do that, I leave the stream running and it confuses everything because you get this feedback and it's like, it doesn't work. Thank you very much. we're done now I just want to make the point that the troll room is now mommy and daddy are fighting oh no oh there are a bunch of weenies if they think that their weenies this is the mommy gay okay what they have some issues my point is they didn't feel that way when Trump and Elon were fighting. Point made.
Starting point is 02:34:46 Let's thank our producers. We thank everyone who sends us a financial donation, $50 and above. We'll thank you by name. We'll thank you with the amount that you sent us. And of course, we have our executive and associate executive producers. Again, but we made up because we want people to feel good about donating more when they can, when they feel like it, when they've received value that equals the amount they're sending into us. And so with that, we said, you know what?
Starting point is 02:35:09 What makes Hollywood different from us? We're a part of the establishment. We can give out executive and associate executive producer credits. And it turns out it's true because people can use them on imdb.com. It's just the same, whether you're a producer on the latest Clooney movie or the No Agenda show,
Starting point is 02:35:27 you are a producer, congratulations. So here's how it works with these particular titles. $200 or above, you get an associate executive producer credit, good for your entire lifetime, doesn't expire, we'll read your note. $300 or above, you become an executive producer, and we read your note, and then or above, you become an executive producer, and we read your note and again that doesn't expire.
Starting point is 02:35:47 And we kick it off today with the one and only Sir Dirty Jersey Whore. That guy, by the way, is also 6'9 and he's probably 260 pounds. He's huge and he comes to every single meetup in Texas. He's in Gladewater. He sends us $1,033 And he says I hope this donation of one zero three three finds you well I reckon I'd like to get one of those highly sought-after PhDs The extra $33 hopefully offsets the legacy banking system fees. No jingles. No karma. Just John's best. I'm not buying it
Starting point is 02:36:30 I'm not buying it. I believe this donation brings me to baronet status I was originally inclined to forego the upgrade because I believe the title to mean small or female However after an informative chat with my local AI chatbot, I found that it's not a diminutive term. The et as opposed to et with double te ending comes from old French, but it doesn't imply small or female. A baronet is still addressed as sir and the title passes down to male heirs unlike a knighthood which is not hereditary. This is a good point. So when you die, your kid gets it. Anyways, please ask everyone to come to my meetup in Longview, Texas at the end of the
Starting point is 02:37:10 month. It'll be fun and you'll get to meet the world famous Sir Brian with one eye. Adam and John, thanks for all you do. It does not go unnoticed. Y'all be good, says Dirty Jersey Whore. Thank you, DJW. I really appreciate that. Next donation is from anonymous in New York. This donation came in a very small envelope that was
Starting point is 02:37:33 completely taped in every which way. Jay didn't want to open it. She said, there's something in here. It's all taped up. I can't open it. Fentanyl, fentanyl, I'm going to get killed. open. She says, there's something in here. It's all taped up. I can't open it. So I had to take a knife and rip through the tape to cut it open. I said, I guarantee there's a big check in here because that's what people, when they, when they put a big check in the mail, they always tape it up. It's like a giveaway. And it was, there was a check for 500 bucks from someone who had Did the right thing and put you want to be anonymous
Starting point is 02:38:06 We had a complaint from one of our someone who was a spook that sent something in through stripe and bitch status for Saying his name. Yeah, you wanted you want to send it in cash and in an envelope or yeah Well, he did this guy did a check and he had Post-it notes all over the check So we got the picture. Oh, there was a picture? Oh, we got the picture, I get it. We got the picture. No, he's anonymous of 500 bucks, we appreciate that. But he gets a double-up karma. Because he had no notes, which is always worth a double up karma. All right.
Starting point is 02:38:48 Oh, here we go to Ross Johnson. Read him earlier. $333 and 39 cents. Nighting donation. Now is he getting nighted? Is he on the nighting list? Let me make sure. I want to make sure we get him nights. Hmm.
Starting point is 02:39:03 I haven't donated in years because Adam Elon hasn't donated in years but this is his knighting he claims donation. He's not on the list so that has to be devalued. Well maybe he should clarify. Yes I haven't donated in years because of Adam's Elon hatred. Seriously? Obviously short-selling for years, which is just funny. I know that's... Yeah, I find that to be hilarious.
Starting point is 02:39:29 Adam flips like a fish out of water because of Faxxon X. It's not a terrible platform, right? Dude, if you hate me so much... No, no, if he's going to hate and donate $3.30, $3.39. That's the best. That's what you want.
Starting point is 02:39:46 Call out Douchebag Fritz for his youngest graduating high school. Douchebag! Okay, there you go. Thank you very much, Ross Johnson. I have never shorted. I've never shorted. He doesn't short anything. I've never shorted.
Starting point is 02:40:00 It's not, it's non-trivial. He put a big heart at the end, an emoji. Yeah. I guess it's all, maybe it was just all, um, in jest. It was, uh, facetious. That could be, maybe he's just chiding you. Yeah, that's possible. Uh, that could be, cause that's what the heart's for.
Starting point is 02:40:15 It regardless, I forgive him of his debts as I forgive my debtors. Uh-huh. Uh, Indy No Agenda Meetup came in, which from Greenwood, Indiana, they're always doing a meetup all the time. They have big, big, big meetups. Yes, Mark and Maria, big, big, big meetups. So they got 33333 for us. And this is the Indie No Agenda Meetup.
Starting point is 02:40:34 Raffle switcheroo donation for Jason Soderlund. So he, Soderlund. So he'll be on the, he'll be credited. Yes, he will. Thank you Adam and John for your good humor and perspective. Thanks also to all the producers who silently work in the background to keep the show going. I expect, especially, especially, especially, especially
Starting point is 02:40:54 want to thank Dreb for his tireless effort in putting the chapters together. Yes, Dreb Scott everybody, who is- No, it's very appreciated and adds a lot to the show. I went to my first meetup in Indy last weekend. This is Jason writing this. Oh, they gave Jason the ability. He wrote the note.
Starting point is 02:41:17 Yes. Okay. I went to my first meetup, had a great time, and having won the meetup donation raffle, I decided to add to it. to add to it to get his producer credit, executive producer credit. So he needs to deduce. You've been deduced. And then he has a plug that you'd like, Men of No Agenda. If you're looking to cultivate a Bible reading discipline in yourself, go to sonsofsolemn.net. Peace in Christ, he writes. Jingle's request, what's that in your mouth? Sonsofsolemn.net, what's that in your mouth? It's beautiful.
Starting point is 02:41:56 Yeah, it's just kind of an interesting… It's awesome. JCD Hot Pockets Karma and No Karma, just prayers from… and he says, Pax Vobiscum, Jason Sutherland. Hot Pockets. What's that in your mouth? It still gets me. Mike, thank you Jason, Mike Ruhlin in White Salmon, Washington, 333.33, he says he wants a double F cancer.
Starting point is 02:42:30 You've got karma. Don't do that. We don't do that all the time, but since he asked for it. You've got karma. And you can read the next one, it says it blows out my spreadsheet. Trevor Lohman, Redlands, California, $210, associate executive producer. He says, I've been listening since 2013. I was donating steadily,
Starting point is 02:42:55 but unfortunately lost my healthcare job for not accepting the vaccine in my life. Once I could finally get a lawyer to take my case, I learned that the statute of limitations had expired. Oh, that's interesting. Hmm. I wonder what the statute of limitations were on and what they were for.
Starting point is 02:43:12 Seems pretty short. Yeah. In an ironic- This has a statute of, I wonder what they, he's gonna have to explain it to us. Yeah, I'd love to know. In an ironic series of events,
Starting point is 02:43:22 I'm now a professor of neurology at a Big Ten medical school. Things have a way of working out. I would be happy to replace your long lost brain professor if you're still in the market. Yes, but are you a libtard? It doesn't quite work if you aren't a libtard. This is my first donation in five years and it brings me to Knighthood. Please Knight me, Sir, writer of words and plug my recent book, God's Eye View.
Starting point is 02:43:45 The book explores the true experiments in neuroscience and quantum mechanics that support rather than refute the existence of the human soul. Send me a copy. Wow. That's cool. Please also plug the Grimerica Show, the Brothers of the Serpent podcast and my own podcast. Oh, I'll listen to your podcast. My own podcast. The podcast plug.
Starting point is 02:44:05 Yes, and my own podcast, God's Eye View. Oh, I know Trevor. He actually sent me the book. He wanted- Oh brother. Yeah, well he wanted me to write a blurb but his deadline was too tight and I just couldn't get through it.
Starting point is 02:44:19 Oh man, I can write a blurb in two seconds. You know, I was told this years ago. But you know what it's like, when you send someone a book in a Word document, I find that very hard to read all the way through. Okay, I understand. A difficult book. You were gonna say.
Starting point is 02:44:35 I have a promotion, a story. So, and I took it to heart. And I'm always irked, I had to, I've done a couple of books and I've asked people for blurbs and Sue, I got to read it first. They go on and on and on. It's like, give me a break. Okay. I don't know if I've got total agreement with you. I can't write a blurb. I actually considered just writing his blurb without having read it, but I didn't feel good about it.
Starting point is 02:44:58 Well, so John Brockman, my agent, New York that was when I was doing a lot of tech books, he who's well connected, he was friends with Alan Watts, the writer, Buddhist. Oh yeah, this is all the guys that Whitney Webb talks about. And so he says that Alan Watts told him that he says he never met a blurb he didn't write. He says, if you asked Alan Watts for a blurb, he'd give you a blurb in five minutes because the way he saw it, it was all publicity. Just write the blurb.
Starting point is 02:45:34 People see your name, your name, your name, your name, Alan Watts. And that's a policy that I adopted. If someone asked me for a blurb for their book, I don't care how crappy the book is. I'll give them a blurb Wow Okay, yeah, and it doesn't take long. There's all kinds of ways you can put things would So, you know that so if I gave you a book right now Yeah, and the book was about here. I'm gonna give you a title and then you write the blurb you ready? Cuz you're gonna write I'm gonna ask you first. Will you write the blurb. You ready? Cause you're going to, I'm going to ask you first,
Starting point is 02:46:05 will you write a blurb about my book regardless of what it is? Yeah. Here's my book. Jesus was a bad-ass outlaw. Give me your blurb. Go. A fascinating read by Adam Curry. That's it? That's the blurb? That would be a blurb. I could write a longer blurb or a shorter blurb. I need more blurb. I would say, this is a book everyone should pick up and read. It's unbelievable how he's come to these conclusions.
Starting point is 02:46:37 This is something I highly recommend. Now I just got to write the book. Yeah, why don't you do that? Continuing, no agendination. Please search God's Eye View on Amazon and look for the book with the big black hole on the cover. For those who can't afford the book or are too cheap to buy it, please search God's Eye View in a modern podcast app to find my show.
Starting point is 02:46:57 Four more years, says Sir Writer of Words. Thank you, Sir Writer of Words. We appreciate that. Good luck with the book. When it comes out on paperback, I will write a blurb. I know how to do it now. Lenny Lou Patkin, Lakewood, Colorado, 200 bucks jobs karma she's asking for. And she says for a competitive edge
Starting point is 02:47:18 with a resume that gets results. Go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive and resume and job search needs. That's ImageMakersInc.com with a K.com and work with Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes. She's gone back to the classic. Because she knows that we know that we know that she knows that we know what we're talking about. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. Yay! Awesome. Yes, Eli the. Let's vote for jobs. News jobs are mine. Awesome.
Starting point is 02:47:47 Yes, Eli the coffee guy didn't show up today, so I hope he's okay. He probably didn't get the mail. A lot of people didn't get the newsletter. Did it happen again, the newsletter? You know, and I couldn't send out a secondary letter again because every time you do that, you lose like 50 people off the daily list.
Starting point is 02:48:03 Oh, really? Oh, that sucks. At least. And so I can't keep sending out two and two and two so I'm not sure. I'm just gonna have to let it settle down. Oh that kind of sucks. Kind of. Yeah that sucks. All right.
Starting point is 02:48:19 That's our last donor for his show 1771. Well for the executive and associate executive producers we appreciate you and of course we'll be thanking the rest of our our producers who came in $50 and above and as always you can go to noagendadonations.com and donate any amount you want we love the numerology thank you Sir Dirty Jersey Whore Baronet Sir Dirty Jersey Whore and and that means you can also set up a sustaining donation it could be just a couple of bucks per show per week per day whatever you want to do go to know what you're the donations are calm again thank you to our executive and associate executive producers our formula is this we go out we hit people
Starting point is 02:48:56 in your mouth? Shut up, Steve. Some copyright stuff going on they're making a fuss about. Let me guess, is that with AI copyright stuff? Yeah. Good. So I have two clips that are at least somewhat enlightening. I don't think it gets us anywhere,
Starting point is 02:49:29 but at least it shows that somebody's covering it. This, I think NPR. NPR it is. The United States Copyright Office is normally kind of quiet, low drama. Authors and artists go there to register their works, and Congress goes there when it needs advice on copyright issues.
Starting point is 02:49:48 But lately, between the firings and the lawsuits and a highly anticipated report on AI, the office is not so quiet. Here's NPR's Andrew Limbaugh. Let's start the story on a Thursday, May 8th. President Trump abruptly fired Carla Hayden, the Librarian of Congress. The next day, May 9th, the US Copyright Office,
Starting point is 02:50:04 which resides within the Library of Congress, published a highly anticipated report on whether or not using copyrighted works to train generative AI counted as fair use. Funny thing is this report was and still is labeled as a pre-publication version. That part is extremely weird. In fact, I don't think they've ever done that before. That's Dave Hansen, the executive director of the Authors Alliance, an organization that argues for less strict copyright laws, which is to say they interact regularly with the office. Anyway, that report dropped on a Friday. And then by Saturday, Shira Perlmutter, the head of the U.S. Copyright Office, had a letter telling her that she was dismissed. That letter was sent by Trent Morris, deputy assistant to the president. It seems like there must be some sort of connection between the timing of the
Starting point is 02:50:49 release and all of that other drama, but we just don't really know exactly why. And we still don't quite yet. Perlmutter has since filed a lawsuit against president Trump, as well as the two people he appointed currently acting as the new librarian of Congress and the register of copyrights, Todd Blanch and Paul Perkins. The argument being since both the Library of Congress and the U.S. Copyright Office are under the Legislative Branch, the President has no authority to hire or fire people. Oh, really?
Starting point is 02:51:18 Yeah. Huh. He's just firing anybody he feels like. Give him some to do. This is part two. But people broadly in the copyright world have been kind of stunned at how much their quiet neck of the woods has been shaken up. Kristelia Garcia is a professor at Georgetown Law focusing on intellectual property. Obviously, politically, things are all drama, drama, drama all the time now.
Starting point is 02:51:41 But to have it come to the copyright office was quite a surprise for the copyright community who are sort of, you know, not used to being thrust into the spotlight, generally speaking, even with the sort of AI stuff. So what about that big bombshell report the Copyright Office published on generative AI, the one the office put out before it was finalized? Well, what it said was, in some instances, using copyrighted materials to train genitive AI could qualify as fair use, and in some cases, it wouldn't. It is very even keeled. That's Keith Kupferschmitt, the CEO of the Copyright Alliance, a group that represents
Starting point is 02:52:14 artists and publishers for stronger copyright laws. And he says the report avoids generalizations and takes arguments on a case-by-case basis, which is reflective of how Perlmutter ran the office. Perlmutter was beloved no matter whether she agreed with you or not, because she always did the hard work. She always was very thoughtful and considers all these different viewpoints. There are dozens of lawsuits going on right now over copyright and AI usage. While it remains to be seen if and how the legal team's on
Starting point is 02:52:45 either side will use this report, this is just the beginning, says Georgetown professor Christelia Garcia. This is just a foreshadowing of the front lines of the generative AI battle. I think copyright is really taking the sort of canary in the coal mine here. The warning being, if you haven't been paying attention to generative AI, now is a good time to start. Your analysis, Dr. Dvorak. Well, they told us nothing. Pretty much. In three minutes, two clips, nothing. And I don't know, I think it's,
Starting point is 02:53:21 my analysis is like everybody else's, is like, I don't know what's gonna happen. I think there's my analysis is like everybody else's is like, I don't know what's going to happen. I think there's fair use issues here, but there's a lot of, uh, you know, what you mean the pub, there's a lot of public domain material that the generative AI can suck up. And then, and then once in a while you get, I asked perplexity the other day, something about, um, you are talking about it in a, in a manner that sounds like it's a human. You are on a bad track. And it was wrong with this answer. Cause I knew the answer.
Starting point is 02:53:56 I was just looking for the details. It was wrong. Oh no. And I find that it's wrong a lot. And I'm not sure why it's wrong because if you re, this is a real problem, I think, especially the people who go to, and some people do it on this show and some people do it on the DHM plug show. I've seen this happen on real time where the person will go to chat GPT or some AI to get a quick answer to a question.
Starting point is 02:54:23 And I find that with the wrongness of a lot of these answers, and if you rephrase the question, it gets it right. This is a real problem in my mind. Well, that's because there's no intelligence involved. They can't understand the context of what you're asking. I know there's no intelligence involved, but the point is it's supposed to be a neural network in front of the corpus
Starting point is 02:54:45 that it get analyzes the whole key to the success is analyzing the question you ask it or Analyzing the prompt you give it and then then reacting accordingly to the prompt using a neural network that's supposed to mimic intelligence It doesn't work well It doesn't work well. No, it doesn't work well at all. Well, no, it works better than you like to imagine, but it doesn't work as well as I'd like.
Starting point is 02:55:14 No, it doesn't work well. Maxine Waters is now in Los Angeles. There you go. He's at the protests. No, they got a show motor. They got professional signs, John, professional signs. Already? Well, they've been there the whole time.
Starting point is 02:55:27 So the quad box, everyone is live, including the BBC. And I think they're just waiting for someone to kick it off. They're just waiting. They're just standing two lines. In order for somebody to take a shot. Yeah. And throw or throw to take a shot. Yeah. And throw or throw a Molotov cocktail. And so all the protesters are walking past the ICE agents,
Starting point is 02:55:51 filming them lives. I'm live everybody. Right now I'm live. We are brave. We're brave. We're standing up against the terror, the terror. The man. The man.
Starting point is 02:55:59 Screw the man. Like no kings.org. Make sure you go there on the 14th. We're streaming live. We're doing a live here on the Inst go there on the 14th. We're streaming live. We're doing a live here on the Insta and on the TikToks. We're live everywhere. Everybody. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:56:09 Yeah. We're not taking it anymore. I'm not taking it from Trump. They, they are, tears will come from this. Someone is going to do something and then they're going to get beaten upside the head. I can tell you right now, everyone's waiting for it. Everyone's glued in.
Starting point is 02:56:24 They're just waiting for some Some douchebag some instigator to do something and then it's gonna be messy Yeah So, okay on the AI copyright, this is a story from the UK's which is story from the UK's which is, could be concerning I guess, if you don't read your contracts from 10 years ago. You can do it when you be and cue it. Her face may not be recognizable, but Gay Anne is the voice behind adverts for some
Starting point is 02:56:58 of Britain's biggest brands. Please mind the girl with the lighting from this stream. Now she's the unbeknown AI star announcer on board Scotland's trains. I feel violated. I feel completely violated. My voice is my job and I should be allowed to know who I'm working with and what I'm working on. But more than that as a human being I should know who owns my voice data. So just to be clear, you didn't know that you're going to be the voice of Scotland's railways? No, I had no idea. I literally didn't know. This can all be traced back to a job Gaian carried out during Covid with the Swedish firm ReadSpeaker,
Starting point is 02:57:34 recording scripts for the visually impaired. It was before artificial intelligence was really a thing. Fast forward a few years, her voice has been sold and transformed into a robot. The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot!
Starting point is 02:57:50 The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot!
Starting point is 02:57:58 The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! The robot! I have no control over it and I don't consent to it. Do you know I'm the voice of Apple for Singapore. Reed Speaker claims there is an agreement in place and all issues have been addressed.
Starting point is 02:58:09 ScotRail has no plans to stop using the voice. A story of consent, contracts and concerns in an increasingly AI focused world. Well, that's no good. Imagine that. I mean, being a voiceover artist is tough in general now. Yeah, you don't make a lot of money. No, no. So they bought her voice. It was sampled by some company. Well, she signed it over. This is like people who sign their rights over when they do writing,
Starting point is 02:58:37 and they sign all their rights over to some publisher. They don't keep any of it. And then it turns into a Clooney movie. Good. Yeah. And you feel really bad about it. Here's something I've been wondering for a long, for many, many years. If you are running for the governor of New York, why do they call it a gubernatorial race? When does the bee come into governor? That's a very good question. Does it borderline on a great question? No, there's no such thing.
Starting point is 02:59:14 Can't you say a governor's race or gubernatorial? Why is it gubernatorial? Like, if you always make like, goober. Like, they're a bunch of goobers. Yeah, there it is. You just asked your own question. Because the governor is a goober? Well, there's a lot of goobers and this is, you know, so they're debating right now. And of course Cuomo is trying to come back. Yeah, but he's coming back as a mayor.
Starting point is 02:59:35 I thought it was for the governor. No, no, Cuomo wants to be mayor of New York. Well, my question is still valid. But okay. No, the question is still valid. But okay. No, the question about gubernatorial is, yes. Well, this is about the mayor then, I'm sorry. For some reason, I mistook it for the gubernatorial race. So this is, they're doing the debates, and Cuomo's in the debate.
Starting point is 03:00:00 And this, by the way, goes against everything that I just said earlier about people leaving the show because, you know, we pander to the Jews for the Jew money. Yes, where's our Jew money? We may have gotten some spook money today, but we didn't get any Jew money that I can tell. That's no good. Here is an interesting question posed to the candidates for mayor of New York City. The first foreign visit by a mayor of New York is always considered significant. Where would you go first?
Starting point is 03:00:31 Left to right, Ms. Adams. First visit, I would visit the Holy Land. Okay. Ms. Lander. Mr. Lander, sorry. Boy, what Trump is doing to Canada, there's a lot of opportunities for us to partner better with them. Ms. Ramos.
Starting point is 03:00:48 I'd love to meet Claudia Scheinbaum, but I'd probably head to Colombia to my parents' homeland. That was a good answer because you throw in a little bit of Jew there with Scheinbaum, but you're going to go to Colombia. That was good. Mr. Meyren. I am a proud son of two Caribbean immigrants. I represent a robust Caribbean constituency I'd like to go to the Caribbean as my first visit. Yeah, you're off. You're not gonna win. Mr. Cuomo
Starting point is 03:01:10 Given the hostility and the anti-semitism that has been Shown in New York. I would go to Israel Mr. Tilson, where would you go? Yeah, I'd make my fourth trip to Israel followed by my fifth trip to Ukraine He's doubling down he's gonna go for his fifth my fifth trip to Ukraine. He's doubling down. He's going to go for his fifth trip and then to Ukraine. Mr. Tilson, where would you go? I'd make my fourth trip to Israel followed by my fifth trip to Ukraine, two of our greatest allies fighting on the front lines of the global war on terror.
Starting point is 03:01:40 Mr. Mamdani. I would stay in New York City. My plans are to address New Yorkers across the five boroughs and focus on that. Oh. Mamdani, can I just jump in? Would you visit Israel as mayor? I will be doing, as the mayor, I'll be standing up for Jewish New Yorkers and I'll be meeting them wherever they are across the five boroughs, whether that's in their synagogues and temples or at their homes or at the subway platform, because ultimately we need to focus on delivering on their concerns. And just yes or no, do you believe in a Jewish state of Israel?
Starting point is 03:02:27 I believe Israel has the right to exist. As a Jewish state? As a state with equal rights. He won't say it has the right to exist. As a Jewish state, be very clear on that. And his answer was no, he won't visit Israel. I said that before. That's what he was trying to say.
Starting point is 03:02:40 No, no, no, unlike you, I answered questions very directly. And I want to be very clear. I believe every state should be a state of equal rights. Ah, he wouldn't say it. He wouldn't say it. He's no good. No, no, no, unlike you I answered questions directly. I want to be very clear. I believe every state should be a state of equal rights. He wouldn't say it. He wouldn't say it. He's no good.
Starting point is 03:02:49 Oh, man. Wow, what a bunch of rubes. New York is done. That was pretty, I thought that was hilarious. You just won the Super Bowl. Where are you going? Israel. Israel. Israel.
Starting point is 03:03:06 Miss America, you just became the new Miss America. Where are you going? Tel Aviv. Oh, it's hilarious. Well, they could have gone to visit a Bulgarian old folks home because all hell's breaking loose there. Oh, what's going on? Listen to a Bulgarian old folks home because all hell's breaking loose there. Oh, what's going on? Listen to this Bulgarian old folks horror.
Starting point is 03:03:29 Bulgarian officials say they've rescued 75 residents from two illegal care homes where they were allegedly subjected to brutal mistreatment. They said the victims were beaten, bound and sedated with doors and windows locked. Justice Minister Georgi Georgiev described the facilities in the eastern village of Yagoda as houses of horrors. Bulgaria has a shortage of good care homes for older people. Oh my! Did they have pictures and video? Beaten, beaten!
Starting point is 03:03:57 They take their old folks and they beat them. Wow! Bulgaria, what are you doing? Is there a color revolution going on in Bulgaria? Is there an election coming up? No, nothing. Turns out that they does what they do to old people in Bulgaria. They beat them. Coming to California soon, I hear. Yeah, it could be. Five minute warning. You get one or two more clips. It's all up to you. Go.
Starting point is 03:04:20 Well, okay, I have this. Every once in a while there's one of these stories that comes up and it's always the same kind of a thing going on. It's a very suspicious story and they're going to, these are all seem like spooky stories because it's like you got somebody and you got to debrief them or you've got to get them out of the country or you got to rescue them or something like a CIA guy. And it always goes through, and I have no idea why, the detainment centers in Louisiana. Have you noticed this Louisiana thing keeps cropping up?
Starting point is 03:04:58 No. Play this Russian, this is the Russian frog smuggler. Oh, yes. A judge in Vermont today ordered the release of a Russian-born scientist and Harvard researcher saying she was being unlawfully held by immigration authorities. Ksenia Petrova, who recently spoke to NewsHour from detention, still faces a criminal charge of smuggling frog embryos after she failed to declare them at Boston's Logan Airport in February. Petrova says she uses them for research. An immigration officer stripped Petrova of her visa and she was sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana. At a hearing
Starting point is 03:05:36 today, Judge Christina Reese said, quote, there does not seem to be either a factual or legal basis for the immigration officer's actions. Petrova is expected to face a bail hearing next week on the smuggling charge. Okay, well that is interesting. I happen to know a couple of people here in Fredericksburg who moved recently from Louisiana and they grew up there so they may have some inside information for me. I mean there's ICE detention centers all over the place, but these, these super suspicious sounding stories like this one, Russian woman, a professor teaching brings in some embryos.
Starting point is 03:06:13 I don't know how they found those, but they did. Well, you know, they- It seems like a setup. To be honest- Then they move her to this facility in Louisiana. It's always Louisiana. They do, they do ask at, at customs, you know, do you have any plants, animals or fruit?
Starting point is 03:06:28 And if you lie, then you get detained. Yeah. But who's going to, how are you going to, you could, it doesn't make sense. This whole story just makes no sense. I don't see how anybody can't easily take some frog embryos and stuff them in a Coke can and take it through customs. I mean, or guys can't get through because it's got liquid, but I mean, there's ways. If you're smuggling frog embryos, it seems to me, you know what you're doing. Hey, hey, ho, ho, frog embryos have got to go.
Starting point is 03:07:00 Hey, hey, ho, ho. 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. Rest assured, I am on the case of the Louisiana spookiness. I will get answers. Several people I know here have grown up there in the bayou, in the swamps.
Starting point is 03:07:25 We have swamp people here. They will know what's going on. And we have some just horrible non-musical pieces of crap coming up known as the end of show mixes. You don't, I mean, why are you even still listening? You don't want to be exposed to that. It may hurt you. But before that, we have the most wonderful tip of the day by John C. Dvorak. Now this the tip of the day is its own entity, you could this should be a spin off show. Tip of the day show. Tip of the day show. I'm telling you, you know, the the problem is you'd have to do it every day, which you know, because it's
Starting point is 03:08:00 yeah, otherwise it wouldn't be a tip of the day. But I guarantee you podcast success. I'm thinking a podcast award, maybe, maybe even a Webby. Hey, which reminds me, I saw it was watching, looking at somebody's uh, uh, wiki page. I can't remember who it was, but they won, uh, it was, uh, one of just the Brando podcasters and they won a podcasting award from some operation. It was listed on the Wiki page for best audio sound. Oh man. That's what I said. How many times do I have to say I'm good to go on the Podfather podcast awards and you just drop the ball on me. I'm going to have to pick it up.
Starting point is 03:08:46 I'll pick up the ball. Dave Rita, meanwhile, picked up the ball. She's moved way up to the top of the list here. She's in Sparks, Nevada, and she came in with 135 bucks. And she says, thanks for the tremendous value and spin down. I like that. We're spin downers. Spin down.
Starting point is 03:09:05 Paul Rouge. That could be perceived as negative. Spin down. I like that. We're spin downers spin down That could be perceived as negative spin downers downers man, I think that might hurt the show that might hurt the show We can't use that. No, it's gonna hurt the show is those mixes Paul Rouge, are you you GE? I think that's how it's pronounced season 4 Thomas, Kentucky came with a hundred bucks I think that's how it's pronounced. He's in Fort Thomas, Kentucky. He came in with a hundred bucks. Kellan Prince, that's a nice name, in Hollywood, Florida, a hundred dollars. Baroness Knight, she's in Edmonds, Washington. She's up to Auntie.
Starting point is 03:09:36 She's always a $50 donor and she's up there to a hundred. So that's nice. Kevin McLaughlin shows up at 8008. He's the Archduke Luna lover of America, lover of boobs, and he says he's got a PSA here, he says summertime is the perfect time to show off your melons, ladies. No disagreement here. The No Agenda Show agrees. No, you know, I will say that our I Track this stuff our the number of people our female listeners is down has been it's down It's not I wonder what turning to a couple of sexes jerk-offs as far as a lot of the ladies are concerned well
Starting point is 03:10:21 I mean that are they we know Tina's listening because the minute we're talking about boobs Right away say you're wrong. You're wrong. You know what you're talking about Young broo broo gink broo gink broo gink Broo gink in Schmielda Netherlands he came with a Very famous very famous place. That's where the Moluccas hijacked a train in the 70s and killed the Moluccas Yeah, the Moluccas maybe he wants some jobs comer for his son Urian is that right Urian Urian?
Starting point is 03:10:57 Urian and that would be at the end if you can remember Why am I Christian? Oh, another Dutch. Pretty good. Christianse. Christian and it's Leiden. Very good. 8008.
Starting point is 03:11:19 And he has a little note there. He's got it in green. He came in through... Stripe? Stripe. He says, thanks for sending some rain over to Leiden. Yeah, we did. And he says, I sent boobs in return. It's a good combination if you ask me. He says, Adam, next time it starts hailing golf balls, put a drum kit outside. Let me tell you, if you look at Tina's insta, I think she's Tina curry 33
Starting point is 03:11:46 You can hear what it sounds like and so we actually turns out we have a lot of damage we didn't know about the garage doors filled with pits Little big little dents dense. Oh dense little dense We have our screen We ever like the idea of putting a drum kit outside We have a oh it would go right through the skins. We have a screened-in porch We don't go out there much and when it's 95 degrees Completely all the screens pelted with holes
Starting point is 03:12:20 Yep, got damage stinks. I got damage. Well, you got insurance. We are not going to claim this for insurance. You know what will happen? We'll get kicked out of our insurance. Steven Hutto in St. Petersburg, Florida. Great little place, 75 bucks. Zachary Metzinger in South Lake, Texas, 66.73. Chad Hewitt in Folsom, California, 66.40, and he says, yeah, go Blue Acorn. Huh.
Starting point is 03:13:00 Steven Schumach in Zinnia, Ohio, 65, 80. David Cox in Austin, right down the street from you, 63, 25, or where you used to live. Grayson Insurance, Grayson Insurance in Aurora, Colorado, 6, 006. Eric Hulse in Katy, Texas, or Katy, Texas, 57, 98. It's Katy. It's Katy, Texas. Texas or Katy Texas 5798 Katie Katie I'm loving Katy manual madero's and Tracy California 5798 is a belly-aching donation. I guess so. Sir Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. Hilton. H I don't know what that means, but you both put some karma at the end. Anonymous 56 or 55, Nancy Murphy in San Bruno, California, 55. And there she is again with another 55. And she says, here's another donation.
Starting point is 03:14:15 The new sad puppy made me do it. I got two complaints about this new sad puppy. Uh, Troy Funderberg, the complaints were the sad, somebody sent me this picture to use. It's a sad puppy, sad looking in a dryer. Which you have to assume is pre-suicidal or something. This goes to my theory that people don't care what you do to other people, but man, you do something to a dog, it's the end of you. So the dog's in the dryer and somebody said, one of the producers says, that's in poor taste.
Starting point is 03:14:54 He scolded me for it. Nancy Murphy came in twice, okay, well she's actually 110. Trey Funderburk in Missoula Montana, 55. Troy, Troy Funderbark. Troy, I always do that. Okay, here's another Dutchman. Rolene van der Haar, probably a Dutch girl in Hollandse Veld. In Hollandse Veld.
Starting point is 03:15:17 In Hollandse Veld. 52, 72. Brittany Miller, also 52, 72. We got women, there are women right here. Look at these women. Yeah, those are the two. Nancy, Nancy, Rolene, Brittany, come on. Christian Hartsock, Burbank, California.
Starting point is 03:15:34 He's one of our regulars, 51-94. I helped. He'd substituted on OAN for Chanel over the weekend. Oh, really? Yeah. He's apparently a writer for OANN, you know. Oh, One America News? Yeah.
Starting point is 03:15:50 Oh cool. Hey Roger. And I did, I did a hit. Oh, you did a hit on OAN? Yeah. Well, how come you didn't tell me? I just did. Yeah, but I mean, did it- So in advance?
Starting point is 03:16:03 No. Did someone- You do, it's because you do so many podcasts and you never mention anything to me. And then all of a sudden it shows up in a donation note and I go, what is this? So I'm doing the same. I'm on the move. John's doing PR everybody. He did a hit on OAN.
Starting point is 03:16:20 Roger Kalachek in North Cross, Georgia, 5510. He needs a D doucheing You've been D douche'd Joe Zaya Thomas in Ankeny, Iowa 51 and now we got the $50 donors name and location starting with Not a lot today Jacob Rotman Oh brother Rot Trommel Rotrommel in Decatur, Illinois.
Starting point is 03:16:48 Stephen Ray in Spokane, Washington. Ray Howard in Kremlin, Colorado. Edward Missouri in Memphis. Christopher Scott in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania. Renee Bernhard Guter. She's in Switzerland. Bernhard Goethe. Bernhard Goethe. Goethe. Goethe. She's in St. Gallen. She greets St. Bernards. And she's, well, St. Bernards are in Switzerland. Yes. That's nice to have a Swiss donor. Then that came in Stripe.
Starting point is 03:17:24 International producers know Stripe. International producers know Stripe. Stripe is the way to go for international donations. Cal Ray Jackson in Watertown, Tennessee and last on our list is the good old Jason DeLuzio in Miami Beach, Florida. I want to thank all these people for Show 1771. Yes, indeed. Thank you all very much.
Starting point is 03:17:42 And again, thank you to those donors who came in and supporters and producers who came in under $50. We never mentioned them for reasons of anonymity. And of course, you can set up a sustaining donation at any time, any kind of donation, any amount. It's value for value. Whatever you get out of the show, send it back to us in value and that's just fine. For some people, $5 is a lot, for some people, $500 is a lot or not.
Starting point is 03:18:04 It doesn't matter. Just as long as you support us at some point somehow to give back to the show. That's value for value. Again, thanks to our executive and associate executive producers for episode, wow, what is it, episode 1771, a palindrome. And strangely enough, for the first time
Starting point is 03:18:23 in as long as I can remember, we do not have a single birthday to celebrate. When has that happened? Has that ever happened? Yeah, it has a couple of times actually. I don't recall. Well, so no birthdays. So no happy birthdays to you.
Starting point is 03:18:40 However, Title changes, turn and face the slaves. to you however we do have a couple of title changes we got sir dirty jersey whore as you heard earlier our top executive producer today who becomes a baronet dame Nancy of the confused also changing her title today becoming a baroness oh yes very very beautiful and sir Dirty Jersey whore also gets his PhD we have that special promotion which has come back for a limited time limited time only Go to no agenda rings comm dirty Jersey whore Let us know where to send your PhD and if you really want sir Dirty Jersey whore on it
Starting point is 03:19:21 Or maybe your your actual name so you can use it to impress your friends and the neighbors And we have one night, so I'll grab my blade here if you can there's the same old one night blade I've got no it's nice. It's sharp as long as it's sharp. It's fine Trevor Lohman it's taking you a bit but we're happy to see you here at the podium for the dames and nights of the Noah Jenna roundtable because you have supported the Best podcast in the universe in amount of $1,000 or more that means I get to pronounce the Kate you sir as sir writer Of words and for you. We've got hookers and blow rent boys and Chardonnay We've got some diet soda and video games fish pie and Felicia Harvits and how doll we've got red heads and rice beers of
Starting point is 03:20:03 lunch Ruben s women and Rosé, Geishas and sake, Vodka Manila, Bonghits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger ale and gerbils, a favorite in Hollywood, breast milk and pablum, and as always the mutton and the meat here at the round table for you. And you also can go to noagenderrings.com, anybody can go there and take a look at them, and it's a cumulative so you can donate $5 a month if you want. People become knights and dames. It's really cool.
Starting point is 03:20:29 And this ring is a signet ring. It looks very, very cool at the No Agenda Meetups. And so for that reason, we give you a couple of sticks of wax you can melt down and stick your signet ring right on there and let everybody know that this is a very important correspondence. And as always, it comes with a certificate of authenticity signed by yours truly Adam and John
Starting point is 03:20:59 Another great way to send value back to the show and to Gitmo Nation in general by organizing a No Agenda Meetup. You can go to NoAgendaMeetups.com, another fantastic website we never built, done in the value for value model. Thank you, Sir Daniel, for that. We got a report from Brussels, the big Brussels Meetup. It seems like Sir Castig the Nomad was there by himself. He did get one RSVP from Alex who lives in Brussels.
Starting point is 03:21:27 Unfortunately, his two girlfriends from Columbia arrived early in Brussels and he decided decided to stay home with them. And he sent me a picture and I think he made the right choice. A picture of Alex with his two Colombian girlfriends doesn't sound suspicious at all. Did he brought the girlfriends to the meetup. I think so too. But he didn't. Big Tom's Bar was a great venue unbeknownst to me.
Starting point is 03:21:52 It is a NATO hangout bar. Lots of spooky people drinking Belgian beer. I'm always amazed what a drunk soldier will tell you. Do tell, sarcastic the nomad. We'd love to hear more. And sir, Dirty Jersey Whore, as you recall on the last show, excuse me, for his meetup promo, the Texas, the East Texas Noah Jena meetup, we, we excoriated him for sending in a two minute meetup, meetup promo. You remember this?
Starting point is 03:22:23 You excoriated him no you did too you said it should be 30 seconds tops I did say that he sent us but not in the form of an excoriation well he sent us a new one it is 33 seconds exactly which I think is valid that's okay and you put up with and listen to this hey there freedom lovers and media deconstructors are you tired of screaming at the screen alone wish you had someone to compare your shrunk and amygdala with? Well, do we have a meetup for you? It's all going down Sunday, June 29th at 3.33 p.m. in Longview, Texas.
Starting point is 03:22:49 Go over to NoAgendaMeetup.com and let us know you are coming or just show up. Again, that's June 29th, 3.33 p.m. Longview, Texas. Be there or be labeled a conspiracy denier. Common side effects may include mild dizziness, nausea, spontaneous lactation, sudden urges to gamble or engage in risky sexual behavior, sleep driving, sleep eating, sleep shopping, uncontrollable laughter, explosive diarrhea, anal leakage, blue-gray skin discoloration, hallucinations, black hairy tongue, unexpected hair growth in unusual places, purple urine or sweat, permanent loss of taste or smell, false positive drug test, penile enlargement, and in rare cases, existential
Starting point is 03:23:11 dread. Ask your conspiracy therapist if this meetup is right for you. Brought to you by Dana Brunetti. That sounds like a Fremont drag strip commercial from back in the 60s and 70s. That was outstanding. Sunday, Sunday, Sunday is all I was missing. 33 Nitro Burnin' Funny Cars. That's right.
Starting point is 03:23:29 Well, on Sunday, this Sunday, the 4th annual Louisiana Crawfish Boil kicks off at 2 o'clock at Shaw Acres. That's Prairieville, Louisiana. Hey, Mary Moon organizing. Let us know what you know about the ICE Detention Centers. It's a little spooky down there. By the way, it is an RSVP invited think it's at her home. So you've got a Check-in to be checked out and the next by the way, they interrupt you in the middle of this I had to say the Jersey dirty whore
Starting point is 03:23:58 Quickie was well done. Well done. Well done indeed The northern wake freedom southern slam-o-wham-o six o'clock on Thursday at Hoppy endings in Raleigh, North Carolina Well done. Well done. Well done indeed. The Northern Wake Freedom Southern Slammo Whammo. Six o'clock on Thursday at Hoppy Endings in Raleigh, North Carolina. Make sure you check that out. Coming up next week, the 13th, Copenhagen, Denmark. We have Lazarus Vart in Kulemborg. I'm just doing the international ones. Comox, British Columbia.
Starting point is 03:24:23 That's Scandinavia. 17th, Cannes Khan in France we've never had good luck in Khan. No one ever shows up to those meetups so please please give it a shot and on the 19th of September or way ahead now Tilburg North Brabant in the Netherlands. So go to NoAgendaMeetups.com
Starting point is 03:24:39 there's always a cool meetup taking place it's all around the world as you can tell and when you do a meter per port fun, make it interesting, try and make it short and always include your server and tip them well. Noagendameetups.com. If you can't find where near you, start one yourself. It's always a party. Sometimes you want to go and hang out with all the nights and days.
Starting point is 03:24:56 You want to be where you want to be. Trick it or hell or blame. You want to be where everybody feels you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be.
Starting point is 03:25:04 You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. You want to be where you want to be. Alright, now, to make up for the end of show mixes, we'll have a very snappy ISO for you at the end, which will just... Because that truly is the last thing that people hear, so this kind of discredits your theory. It makes people happy. They're like, oh, this was great. I really loved hearing that end of show. I so I feel good about the show. Isn't the end of the end of show. I so come before the mix. No, it comes at the very, very end of the show. Have you ever listened to the podcast? No, I never listened. I have to.
Starting point is 03:25:47 Ooh, nice balls. Okay, probably don't like that one. But I kind of thought this one was okay. This doesn't make any sense. I'm freaking out inside. You laugh through it. This doesn't make any sense. I'm freaking out inside. I'm freaking out inside. Oh God. I like that if you took that part off it would be good. This doesn't make any sense.
Starting point is 03:26:12 Like that? Yeah, I think that beats mine. Let's listen to yours. Thanks for spending your weekend with us. Wow, that's AI if I ever heard one. Nope. Really? Thanks for spending your weekend with us.
Starting point is 03:26:25 Is that black chick, whatever her name is, that does the weekend shows with Scott and the other people? No, that's a real person. Oh, you like mine better? This doesn't make any sense. Like that? Yeah, I like it. Well, we'll keep that one and we will get the weekend kicking now with John's Tip of
Starting point is 03:26:41 the day. Creating vibes for you and me. Just a tip with JCD. And sometimes, Adam. Created by Dana Bernetti. Alright, this is the time of the year to plant. Is it now? Not in Texas. Well, actually this would be fine in Texas too. This is a site. It's called the Chili Pepper Institute.
Starting point is 03:27:10 And it is run out of New Mexico State University. And they have, they sell over a hundred varieties of hot chilies, the seeds. They're a little, I think they're pricey, the seeds are a pricier than I like, but there's five bucks a pack. But there's some of them, there's lots of scorpion peppers, all kinds of screwball peppers you've never had, you don't see they're not commercial and they're there and they claim that the seeds are all very viable so you plant these seeds, they're going to grow. And I would recommend planting some chilies
Starting point is 03:27:47 And they have all they have all of them, but what they I'm sorry They don't have all of them because there's thousands, but they have over a hundred varieties Including a bunch of scorpion pears. They don't have the Carolina Reaper for example I don't think is that must actually real to the Carolina Reaper. Well, that's a tough one. But, I finally found a website that you can write down. CPIforchilipepperinstitute.nmsunumexcustateuniversity.edu. And just click on the store, store online store and knock yourself out. What is the appropriate or best way to plant your chilies? There's they have all kinds of
Starting point is 03:28:35 information on the site they Grow like a tomato. It's a tomato If you didn't know how to grow a tomato planting put it in those little those little Seedling pots and you know and put them in the window and get the thing started. Once it gets started, you got it made. Because once it's- You grow it indoors, not outdoors. You could.
Starting point is 03:28:52 No, I would start it indoors and I would take it outdoors. Or you could just plant it outdoors. You can keep it so it germinates. You gotta make sure it germinates. Make sure you germinate your peppers everybody. There it is. Once again, a fantastic John C. Dvorak's tip of the day. And if anybody grows anything weird, because there's lots of weird peppers in here, send
Starting point is 03:29:21 me a couple. Send John a couple of weird peppers in here. Now send me a couple. Send John a couple of weird peppers. Once you pick a peck of pickled peppers, send them to Dvorak. And that concludes our broadcast day everybody. Remember, just plug your eardrums because man we got Sir Deucifer and Sir Scovie with end-of-show mixes. Oh, no John Cena morax says does better do better do does better just do better. I Like him, but I like all kinds of crap Coming up next on your no agenda stream. We have the mere mortals book reviews Oh, he's adapt or die the youth spy who sparked a passion for discipline
Starting point is 03:30:08 Hmm stormbreaker book review. It's Kyron from Down Under doing that look forward to that and We will gladly be back with you on Thursday and we'll bring you more multiple hours of media deconstruction Still waiting for it to kick off in Los Angeles or to pop off and I'm here in the heart of the Texas Hill country in the morning everybody Madame Currie. And from Northern Silicon Valley where the National Guard is not here I'm John C. Dvorak. Remember us at knowedgeandthedonations.com until Thursday adios, be foes, a hooey hooey
Starting point is 03:30:42 and such. What is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? until Thursday. Adios, vuvos, a hui hui and such! Hydrazine not Hydrazine Hydrazine not Hydrazine Hydrazine not Hydrazine Boom what is that stuff? BOOM what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? BOOM what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff?
Starting point is 03:31:15 BOOM what is that stuff? BOOM what is that stuff? BOOM what is that stuff? Hydrazine not Hydrazine Hydrazine not Hydrazine Hydrazine not Hydrazine Hydrazine not Hydrazine Hydrazine not Hydrazine It's all bullcrap? All of it is always a big butt It's all bullcrap? All of it is always a big butt It's all bullcrap? All of it is always a big butt
Starting point is 03:31:39 The hydro booster, hydro booster, zero point energy The hydro booster, hydro booster, zero point energy Hydro Booster Zero Point Energy The Hydro Booster Hydro Booster Zero Point Energy There's always a big but There's always a big but There's always a big boom What is that stuff? Boom! What is that stuff?
Starting point is 03:31:54 Boom! What is that stuff? Boom! What is that stuff? Boom! What is that stuff? Boom! What is that stuff? Boom! What is that stuff? Boom! What is that stuff? Hyd is that stuff hydrogen hydrogen hydrogen hydrogen hydrogen hydrogen Hydrogen exactly there's always a big boom. What is that stuff?
Starting point is 03:32:16 What is that stuff? What is that stuff? What is that stuff? What is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? Boom what is that stuff? There's always a big but. Aluminium And can we get an opinion
Starting point is 03:32:38 on the pronunciation of aluminum on steel and aluminium Aluminium Is. Aluminium. Is it aluminium? Aluminium. All this talking you will see, terror is reality.
Starting point is 03:33:00 25% will age, blood and sm minds, they rage I'm a million miles, I'm in a terrible state I'm a million miles, I'm still a solo man Aluminium Steel solid Aluminium What is pronunciation? Aluminium After 25% duty on steel and aluminum
Starting point is 03:33:36 And can we get an opinion on the pronunciation of aluminum? Is it Aluminium? Aluminium No force to keep it in Terror's damage Just wins They say it right, they say it wrong Does this save us?
Starting point is 03:34:00 Keep us strong Aluminium Keep us strong Al Du Meo Terrorist man Al Du Meo Still son of gold Al Du Meo Aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, aluminum, Calling it LU MIDI. The best podcast in the universe! MoBo. Dvorak.org slash NA.
Starting point is 03:34:56 This doesn't make any sense.

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