No Agenda - 1793 - "Retribution"

Episode Date: August 24, 2025

No Agenda Episode 1793 - "Retribution" "Retribution" Executive Producers: Associate Executive Producers: Eli the coffee guy Scott Johnson Linda Lu Duchess of jobs & writer of winning resumes Mo...llie Landry Secretary-General: Steve Miller Secretary General of Broken Supply Chains Andrew Miller Secretary General of Parker County Sir Ichabod Count Stephen Secretary Generalship of Winder and the Great Smoky Mountains Jeffrey Rea, Secretary General of the Autonomous Region of Madeira Become a member of the 1794 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Sir Ichabod > Baron Ichabod of the Bike Path Gorble, Protector of the Seleucid Empire Knights & Dames Steve Miller > Sir Render Knot, Secretary General of Broken Supply Chains Andrew Miller > Sir Que I. Tuss (pronounced “circuitous”), Secretary General of Parker County Art By: Darren O'Neill End of Show Mixes: Robin Breedveld - Mellow D - Tom Starkweather Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1793.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 08/24/2025 16:51:36This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 08/24/2025 16:51:36 by Freedom Controller  

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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's a glowing in the dark is a giveaway. Adam Curry, John C. DeVorak. It's Sunday, August 24th, 2025. This is your award-winning give-on-A-Media assassination episode 1793. This is no agenda. Weaponizing everything and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.
Starting point is 00:00:22 And from northern Silicon Valley where Abrago Garcia wasn't mistakenly sent to El Salvador. I'm John C. DeVorak. It's Crackbott and Buzzkill in the morning. I like the whole Uganda gamut myself. I think that's pretty funny. I have some clips on this and it's quite ironic, but first I want to make this. This was on Fox this morning,
Starting point is 00:00:46 and they all say this. Abrago Garcia, the Maryland man, the Maryland dad. Oh, yeah, Maryland man. Yes. Maryland was, it was Maryland dad at first. Yes. It's become a man now. Maryland, father, father, father from Maryland, yes. So they keep saying, and this was on Fox, mistakenly sent to El Salvadorian prison.
Starting point is 00:01:09 Oh, I'm outraged that Fox would have something wrong. Please. It all sucks. They all use this adverb. This is like this, this is the same thing with Trump falsely claimed that the elections were rigged, that this is an adverb you throw at the beginning. it's that this is not reporting this is propaganda well now i need to clutch my pearls you should i think the main has msnbc changed the ms n o w yet miz now when does that happen when
Starting point is 00:01:43 does that happen i can't wait to see the logo change well that means the logo's i don't know i think it has to be taken over or it has to be somebody has to cut a ribbon I think there's a ribbon cutting involved. Yeah. I wonder. Anyway. Let's play. I got two clips.
Starting point is 00:02:06 Abrago Garcia, PBS. All right, here we go. Lawyers for Kilmar-Abrigo Garcia say the Department of Homeland Security has told him that the government plans to deport their client to Uganda. Salvador and National reunited with his family in Maryland last night after being released from a Tennessee jail. He's awaiting trial on human smuggling charges to which he's pleaded not guilty. Today has been a very special day because, thank God, I am back with family after more than 160 days, and I would like to thank all the people who have been supporting me, because after such a long time, I am realizing that many people have been by my side.
Starting point is 00:02:43 DHS ordered Brigo Garcia to report by Monday to an ICE removal office in Baltimore that came after he declined an offer to be sent to Costa Rica in exchange for pleading guilty. All right. Okay, so the whole thing was they're going to make their lives miserable, and he's not going to plead guilty to the smuggling. No, why should he? If we're in exchange, and they ship them to Costa Rica. And, but no, they say, okay, if you're not going to do that, we're going to send you, they, they do a deal with Uganda.
Starting point is 00:03:14 This is the best part. This is hilarious. We have been doing business with Uganda. We do a lot of business, just people don't talk about it. Well, we're going to do business with human people. Well, it's very good. The Brits wanted to do this with the Rwanda, and they never pulled it off. But I think we might actually send a couple of dudes to Uganda.
Starting point is 00:03:36 This is going to teach him a lesson. But there's a very strange irony to this, which makes it funny, at least to me. And this is the other clip. This is the clip from the BBC. The man who was wrongly deported by the Trump administration to a prison in El Salvador has been told by U.S. immigration officials that he may now be expelled to Uganda within days. On Friday, Kilmar Abrigo Garcia was freed from a Tennessee jail where he had been held since his return to the United States. Earlier, Kampala said it has struck a deal with Washington to accept deportees
Starting point is 00:04:13 from third countries, provided they had no criminal record. No. Well, that's interesting. So the joke is that because he won't have a criminal record... They can deport him there. They can deport him there, but if he pled guilty, they couldn't. This is a great catch-22. Well, we have been doing business with Uganda. We've been doing all kinds, including sending a lot of C-130s. I happen to know,
Starting point is 00:04:38 since it might be someone in my circle who is an international arms dealer and sends them. And as a non-s, yes, the international arms dealer here in Fredericksburg continues, well, so they're no longer, they're military.
Starting point is 00:04:53 I mean, this is how it works. This is how arms dealing works. The U.S. wants to sell or has all the C-130 transport planes, and Uganda wants to buy one. So there's an intermediary, and it'll go through France, and so they send it to France, which is a friend of ours. But they don't really send it to France. They just register in France for an hour,
Starting point is 00:05:15 and then Uganda buys it through the French entity, and then it can be shipped over legally. The great thing about it is that there's an endless demand for these C-130s, and this is the truth, as he has told me, that the pilots of these C-130s in Uganda keep crashing them because they learn how to fly on YouTube. This YouTube videos, that's how they learn how to fly them. So it's a great bit.
Starting point is 00:05:46 What a great business. I know. Guys can't fly the planes. You've got to buy another one. And the Ugandans don't seem to care. Oh, we need another one. So, uh, so anyway, so now what is going to happen to this guy? Is he, is he now finally going to go or, I mean, all the, like, Canadian media was like,
Starting point is 00:06:08 oh, and there he is. He's embracing his child and he's so good to be home. And what happened to his wife? She was out and about. Well, didn't she have a complaint against him for, for, to be, Beating him, beating her? Yeah, two complaints of beating her. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:26 Hmm. But, you know, if you're going to hang out with guys like that, you expect to be beat. Yeah, I guess. But this is a farce. It's funny. You know, it's totally funny, especially with all these people in Maryland, the governor and the lawyers and everybody and all the activists that want to save this guy because he was wrongly sent to El Salvador. Now he's going to be wrongly. I don't know how they come up with him.
Starting point is 00:06:52 with this, but this said, too, Uganda. The Uganda thing is a gem. Yeah. But no, what's going to happen is going to end up pleading out, and they're going to ship them off to Costa Rica and they'll sneak back in the country. Well, Costa Rica is nice this time of year. Yeah. It's not that bad.
Starting point is 00:07:08 It's pretty good most of the year. All right. So I'd like to jump into the Bolton, Bolton thing. Was that Thursday when they were raiding his home? Was that Friday morning? That was probably Friday. I think it was Friday. morning. Yeah. So everyone's in a tizzy
Starting point is 00:07:24 about this. We go to ABC with your buddy, Jonathan Carl. John Bolton arrived home Friday afternoon, just moments after FBI agents carried boxes out of his house. And four FBI agents were still inside. What are they looking for?
Starting point is 00:07:40 They had been in there for nearly eight hours. Okay, you stop for a second. This was one of the interesting things about it. There's been, there's three reports. One, that he was there the whole time. unlike Trump in Marilago, that I can make that comparison. The second one was he wasn't there at all, never was.
Starting point is 00:07:58 And the third one is this report, which he was there half the time. Just one foot in, one foot out. Can't anyone get it straight? Well, no. They had been in there for nearly eight hours. Sources telling ABC News the search was related to allegations that Bolton is in possession of classified records. I'm not a fan of John Ball. he's a real
Starting point is 00:08:22 sort of a low life not a smart guy but he could be a very unpatriotic guy I mean we're going to find out of Bolton's Maryland home and also his Washington D.C. office were approved by two
Starting point is 00:08:36 separate federal judges Trump insisted he knew nothing about the search. I purposely don't want to really get involved in it I'm not a fan of John Bolton. I thought it was a sleaze bag actually. I saw I just saw that I'll find out about it. But if you believe the news, which I do, I guess his house was raided today.
Starting point is 00:08:56 But my house was rated also, called Mar-a-Lago. Minutes after federal agents descended upon Bolton's home, FBI director Cash Patel posted on social media, quote, No one is above the law, FBI agents on mission. But what exactly is that mission? Enforcing the law or retribution? The big R word. This is what everyone likes talking about. Retribution. That's right. The president is just so mad about the raid on Mar-Lago. Who was that? Remember there was another raid? Who was on someone's house and CNN have been called in advance?
Starting point is 00:09:32 That's Stone. Oh, Roger Stone's house. It's like the new version of elite swapping. Swatting, I'm sorry. Elite swatting. People get swatted all the time, but now it's like, I think I'll have the FBI raid his house. Yeah, it's cool. It's retribute. Right here on this show two weeks ago, John Bolton harshly criticized President Trump. He said Trump was presiding over a, quote,
Starting point is 00:09:58 Retribution Presidency. Twelve days later, the FBI showed up at his office and his home. This is the new, this is it now. Retribution Presidency, the new R-word. This week starts right now. I'm not a fan of John Bolivia. I thought there's a sleaze bag, actually. The FBI targets President Trump's former national.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Security Advisor. Are you worried that they're going to come after you in some way? I think it is a retribution presidency. Good morning. Welcome to this week. In a moment, we'll get to the stunning developments coming into the weekend, with FBI agents swarming around the home and office of former Trump National Security Advisor John Bolton. But first, the context. This didn't happen in a vacuum. John Bolton is on a long list of Trump critics who are now facing the wrath of President Trump and his Justice Department. Trump himself has suggested that dozens of his enemies... I just love how they have no information, and it may very well be retribution.
Starting point is 00:11:00 I'm sure there's a part of that, but I just love how they just make it up as they go on. Well, this is clearly retribution. This is obvious. Trump himself has suggested that dozens of his enemies, real and perceived, belong in prison. He has said that about former presidents Obama and Biden, about former FBI director, Comy and former special counsel, Jack Smith, all of whom have been threatened with criminal prosecution. So have former Trump administration officials Miles Taylor and Chris Krebs, New York Attorney General Letitia James and Senator Adam Schiff. Those last two have been targeted by Ed Martin. He's the head of what
Starting point is 00:11:39 the Trump Justice Department calls the weaponization working group. Last week, Martin stood outside of Tish James's home in Brooklyn, New York, and posed for pictures dressed in a trench coat. Yes, very sinister. What is going on with our country? What's going on with the media? Well, yes. Okay, that's fair point. That's exactly it.
Starting point is 00:12:07 The only guy who actually had something kind of, something to say with some content, which was quite surprising, but I think he's probably right, was Michael. Cohen, of all people, a former Trump lawyer, and he was on MSNOW. What we have here is the Trump team, the DOJ, going through, for example, the book, the room where it all happened, which I actually had read while I was in solitary confinement. You know, when you're in solitary confinement, I'm pretty sure you don't get a book to read. Because that solitary confinement is the shoe. special housing unit i think the whole point is you don't get a book to read or am i wrong i have no
Starting point is 00:12:51 idea yeah well according to my uh but i i would think that you were right yeah the solitary confinement's not you know not the book reading not it's supposed to make you crazy not the book reading club which i actually had read while i was in solitary confinement and they've noticed that there are many aspects of this book that appear to be of national security importance. And that's what I believe that they predicated this raid upon. I also believe that there's no doubt that he will be indicted. They will find documents once they go through, for example, his computer, they'll find
Starting point is 00:13:31 the manuscript, they'll see emails going back and forth between John Bolton, his people, as well as maybe the attorney that reviewed it for, you know, for legal ease and for for questions, I believe that he needs to lawyer up and very much like what happened to years ago reality winner. That's a name that nobody talks about anymore. One document that was about Russian election interference ultimately had her incarcerated. She was a whistleblower, had her incarcerated for years. And I predict that John Bolton is going to suffer the same consequence. Oh, man, that would be so funny.
Starting point is 00:14:17 Well, of course, once you get into someone's computer, especially someone like Bolton, you're going to find all kinds of stuff. The military contacts I have all say, oh, no, he kept handling classified documents. But the question is what? Well, I got, I did a little research, too. Okay.
Starting point is 00:14:33 And I found out of a couple of, my research just, I called somebody. I texted, hey, you got any, yeah, yeah, yeah, here this. That was my research. A couple of people, emphasized that Bolton was a stick-up-as-type character who would never even think of having any sort of secret documents that around the house that they'd be able to collect.
Starting point is 00:14:57 Oh, okay. I was also told that he was, nobody likes him. And he was, when he was the head of the national security advisor, to Trump. Trump never listened to him, ever. Yeah, but Trump did hire him. Would that school? Yeah, but why?
Starting point is 00:15:21 Yeah, I don't know. I mean, Trump hired a whole bunch of screwballs during that first term because he was advised to. So there's that element. But then you start looking at what Bongino wrote. Bongino also posted something, which indicated that this was not about top secret documents or anything that might be listed the book.
Starting point is 00:15:41 There's some sense that he was, he may have committed some sort of treasonous act or even, yeah. Yeah. It just keeps getting fun here. And so, and this, and because you know and I know, because we generally know people, not as extreme as this character, but generally speaking, people with computers, they don't know how things are backed up. This even took place during the early era with Reagan
Starting point is 00:16:16 when they were doing the Iran-Contra stuff and all these emails that were going back and forth and then deleted were backed up. They were available. And a guy like this is not a computer guy. He's going to leave stuff on his machine. And I've always said that the reason for the terabyte drive once that was invented was just so that way it could accumulate evidence
Starting point is 00:16:40 against you. Because you never cleaned it. No, the terabyte drive is to store the Bitcoin blockchain. We all know that's the reason for it. And so the point is, is that this guy may be in big trouble. Well, I wonder what this is down at the club. I don't know. You know, the fart sniffing club in New York.
Starting point is 00:17:02 I'm still trying to get confirmation on that. You never will. Just the M5M just makes me laugh these days. You know, I'll walk by and I'm like, oh, okay, I'll probably get that story. But it's all so dumb. It's just on repeat over and over again. An MSN-O-W, I'm just going to get used to saying it. Yeah, you might as well.
Starting point is 00:17:27 MSN-O-W. Unless they back off. Or we say Ms. Now. Miss now. I'm missed now. They got that guy who's the... The president of the Washington Correspondents Association, he does the morning show on Sundays. All he can do is rant and rave.
Starting point is 00:17:47 Like, whoa, bo, oh, there's no, it's contentless. That's what it is. Contentless. Yeah. Nothing has content. Well, they, it's because they got all these hours to fill. Yeah. I mean, even when CNN had their, they used to have that one station, which became HLN, and it was just headline news.
Starting point is 00:18:13 And they had that one woman who kept reading the news all day. It was just, it was pretty much an hour of news repeated with maybe some updates every hour. You can't, there's only an hour's worth of content a day, generally. But they have to fill 24 hours with. So they jack in some people to talk about it endlessly. So they've created these 24 hour net. networks that there's nothing to talk about for 24 hours every single day. Right.
Starting point is 00:18:38 But there's plenty to clip and it's all over social media. Oh, outrage. Oh, look at this outrage. Although I see that kind of, it is ever since Rachel Maddo cut back her hours and Jen Psocky went to pretty much non-time. I even know when she's on anymore. There's just, there's no gaffs. The only thing, gosh, I really wish I could have gotten original.
Starting point is 00:19:02 Did you see the tweet going? going around the post on X, of the AP, Gwen, I want to say it is Gwen Dyer, I think her name is. Yeah, she was trying to read a simple copy and she couldn't do it. This was posted by Tim Poole. Yeah. And I want that original so bad because that will be fun to, because, you know, you can't really play it. Yeah, it's having somebody laughing over it while they're playing it. Yeah, I agree.
Starting point is 00:19:27 I looked for it when on the podcast feeds could look like it came from a podcast feed. I'm sure they removed it. but that but it was interesting because even I think even we forget sometimes what it is to people that didn't get a shot at it was it was like an hourly report from Associated Press and she's reading the copy and you know these these news reports are very staccato explaining exactly how it goes and then President Trump without evidence this kind of stuff but she couldn't get one sentence straight and she kept doing what we didn't get one whole sentence what we call pickups You know, so, let me see if I can give an example. Let me just grab a rando news headline. And so she would be, let's see, I'm just going to grab something. Here we go. Pritzker said in a statement, the state of Illinois, this,
Starting point is 00:20:21 the state of Illinois at this time has received no request. The state of Illinois at this time has received no request or outreach from the federal government. So she was doing all those pickups. Yeah, she was doing, it was all, it was every, she could not get through a sentence with having to pick it up. And I can just see the engine sound engineer rolling his eye, his or her eyes, like, oh, I got to edit all this stuff together. It's going to be a nightmare. Yeah, to make it sound like she can actually paste it out. But it was just fun.
Starting point is 00:20:50 I mean, I'm sure they're not making the hundreds of thousands of dollars that some of the, like, NPR morning show people are. But I'm sure she's doing just fine. and it's like, oh, man, she really is just only a voice. That person could be replaced by AI. That would actually be an improvement. It would save money. Yeah. It was.
Starting point is 00:21:11 And we got a lot of boots on the ground about apprenticeships. I don't know if you received any, but I got, we were talking about apprenticeships. Yeah. This was following on the, the news that plumbers now can make $150,000 a year, and I just wanted to, can I share a couple of these? Because this is very interesting. I wish you would. Gents, I was one of the youngsters who took up a lot of Gen Z years, by the way, in their late 20s. I was one of the youngsters who took up the call for skilled tradesmen. I can confirm
Starting point is 00:21:46 that after finishing an electrical apprenticeship, so there are apprenticeships, the jobs are plentiful and everywhere. And as a journeyman, wireman, now training apprentices. There's a lot of young cats joining the trade straight out of high school. Young cats. Is this? And how is this new? But it is. Well, but you know, we were pretty convinced that we're no more apprenticeships. And that is, that's the astounding thing. Yeah, I'm still not convinced it's that prevalent. Well, in the morning, this is from Tommy Breakfluid. You discussed apprenticeships on the last show. I wanted to tell you about my experience with apprenticeships. I graduated from my CNC machining apprenticeship about two years ago.
Starting point is 00:22:28 I can't speak for other states, but in Michigan, they're really starting to become more popular. Apprenticeships are regulated by the Department of Labor, and they require you to work a total of 8,000 hours, which is about four years, and take classes at trade school or college. In all the classes, I took about 90% of the class were also apprentices from other shops. Lately in my shop, we've been getting a ton of new apprentices straight from high school. And then he goes through this, quite a whole thing about how the trade schools were really good. But everybody, he said, here, the trade school I went to in high school was fine. They taught the basics.
Starting point is 00:23:02 But the college classes I took were terrible. I learned everything most of the classes were teaching because I did it every day. The machining teacher didn't even have that much experience or even machining. He was only a couple years older than me. My shop one time hired one with a degree in machining from the same school. he knew absolutely nothing about machining. So not only are they turning out, you know, people with worthless degrees, but when they do actual apprenticeships, they don't teach anything.
Starting point is 00:23:34 And then here's Alabama for plumbers, since we're talking about it. Listening today's show, I want to inform you all of a school we've created in our county, Baldwin County, in Alabama that teaches kids or whoever, the trades in replacement of traditional college. bypasses apprentices apprenticeships, baldwin prep.com. And then this is my favorite from the anonymous controller. I'd like to bring the NA family and notice about air traffic control job availability. There's currently an open off-the-street hiring for air traffic controllers. Now, before I read what he says, let's listen to the report from the M5M.
Starting point is 00:24:20 The Federal Aviation Administration is working to fill more than 3,000 air traffic controller jobs to end a decade's long shortage. Now, to help, the FAA has expanded its on-site training by nearly 30 percent, but the expectations and pressure are high. As reporter Pete Mantine found out when he toured the Training Academy in Oklahoma City. This is a rare inside look at the epicenter of ending a chronic shortage of air traffic control. that's burning out workers and delaying flights nationwide. Academy ground, Lear, one hotel delta.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Here at the Federal Aviation Administration's Controller Academy in Oklahoma City, students spend months in classrooms and simulators before moving to on-the-job training at towers and radar facilities that are struggling to retain talent. How bad is the shortage of air traffic controllers in the U.S. right now? It's at a full-blown staffing crisis. The latest estimates say the FAA is short, 3,000 air traffic controllers.
Starting point is 00:25:23 The newest moves by the Trump administration includes slashing the time candidates wait to be accepted here and giving them pay bonuses when they reach key training milestones. We're thinking creatively on how we can supercharge air traffic control. Changes are working with the FAA just announcing enrollment here is now the highest it has ever been. The FAA says it rejects 90% of applicants and of the students who do get in,
Starting point is 00:25:49 35% wash out. I don't know if this news report doesn't want anyone to apply, but here's our anonymous controller, and he or she says, the requirements are pretty basic between ages between 1831, U.S. citizen, job history of three plus consecutive years or any higher education degree, clean criminal record, English speaking, although I can tell you stories where that has been ignored, for those interested in making a career off of not letting dots crash into each other on a video game screen, making good money, full government pension, retirement, full health care benefits should apply. The process is enduring as nothing moves fast in the
Starting point is 00:26:29 government, regardless of what Duffy, that's our FAA administrator claims, go to USAJ jobs.gov, create a profile, build your resume, or on the website, and apply to air traffic control posting. Air traffic controllers are still in desperate need with the Biden administration's action in conjunction with the worthless, pathetic union during COVID. P.S., this is not a intended to take away business from Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes. We appreciate that. So there's a real gig, and I bet you it's fun. It looks fun to me.
Starting point is 00:27:02 But, I mean, again, if this podcasting thing doesn't work out, I'm in. You should go to become an air traffic controller. I'd be doing a podcast. Number 277, Bravo, 5. How you doing everybody? Good to see it. Don't crash into that dot on my screen, please. We could do it.
Starting point is 00:27:23 Yeah, just like that. Yeah. So I'm happy to hear that. This gives me hope. This Gen Z. Something happened. Gen Z flipped around. They started to get their act together.
Starting point is 00:27:32 Well, Gen C is being underrated. There's a bunch of articles. They're trying to explain this and that with Gen Z. A lot of it's bull crap. But I started the table the other day. J.C. pointed out something. He says that, according to the stats, that the Gen Z men are all republic they're coming up as Republicans yes but the
Starting point is 00:27:54 the Gen Z women weren't but now they are oh because they're like might as well get with the program here he's he says that the curve has just gone just all of a sudden taking a nose dive for the women and they're all becoming Republicans too the whole entire gen z is going to be a Republican voting block so what can we do to thwart that The Democrats are thinking. I don't know what. They don't know it's happening. And the Democrats are still under the assumption that if you're young.
Starting point is 00:28:27 You've got to be trans. Well, besides that. No, they're thinking, if you're young, you're going to vote Democrat because it's an idealistic. The idealism of the Democrats is more appealing than the conservatism of the Republicans. and so the youth will always vote Democrats. So they don't think this is anything that's worth worrying about. Well, I'm seeing it. I mean, I'm seeing it around here in Fredericksburg.
Starting point is 00:28:56 And I'm talking, you know, 25, 26-year-olds. And they're even giving up social media. The horrors. Well, that would be a good idea. Well, it would be a fantastic start. I just wonder, is this an organic change? Is this something that just happens as a cycle? You and I have witnessed four or five generational cycles.
Starting point is 00:29:18 As far as I'm concerned, everything's a cycle. So it's probably some sort of cycle. It's a new one, though. I don't know where it fits into the scheme of things. It's just got to be backlash. Backlash against, you know, looking at their millennials and going, yeah, that kind of sucks. Well, there's definitely an element of that because they do not get along with the millennials.
Starting point is 00:29:43 Yes. Well, anyway, it makes me kind of happy. I like it. I feel good about it. And also as, and I think you have a clip as well, as was obvious to us, we've got a crime bill coming and President Trump is reacting to the many calls, I guess, on social media, I've seen them, to clean up other cities besides Washington, D.C.
Starting point is 00:30:09 Chicago's on deck. President Trump says the windy city could be next as part of his federal crime crackdown. His comments coming the same day, the Pentagon started ordering National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., to carry firearms. People in Chicago, Mr. Vice President, are screaming for us to come.
Starting point is 00:30:27 The president claims crime in Chicago is out of control. Now, when he says Mr. Vice President, does that mean J.D. Vance told him, or is he looking to just have someone in the room to back him up? Or is Vance, the one who's on X looking at this stuff? Because I've seen it. What do you think that is? Vance in this situation, I think it was just a prop.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Arms. People in, only in this situation? Well, he's a prop in a lot of situation, but this is one of them. This is one of them, yes. Washington, D.C., to carry firearms. People in Chicago, Mr. Vice President, are screaming for us to come. The president claims crime in Chicago is out of control, but city data shows violent crime trending down, including homicides dropping more than 30 percent.
Starting point is 00:31:11 There's that 30 percent number. again. Isn't that interesting? This is like the Democrats who run these cities just respond in the same way. And of course, no numbers, 30% of what? Yeah, 30% of what? I mean, I listen to Darren O'Neill and he does, whenever he does Planet Ridge with Larry, he always does the Chicago shooting report. And it's, I don't think I've heard it under double digits ever.
Starting point is 00:31:40 Just from the weekend. How many people were shot in Chicago? But city data shows violent crime trending down, including homicides dropping more than 30% this year. Mayor Brandon Johnson claims, even though the Trump administration cut federal funding for gun violence prevention programs in the U.S., the city's investments in housing, community safety, and education are having a positive effect. What we're doing in Chicago is actually working. Again, 32% reduction in homicides. That's not something to just blink at.
Starting point is 00:32:10 Now, is there more work to be done? Notice the homicides. Well, you know, less people died from the shooting. There's other people maimed and full of holes. But it's good. We're trending down. Absolutely. So let's continue to do the work that's working.
Starting point is 00:32:24 Johnson says he is taking Trump's rights. Yes, that's a political term. Do the work that's working. Absolutely. So let's continue to do the work that's working. Johnson says he is taking Trump's threat seriously, something Alderman Brian Hopkins echoes. Both feel deploying troops would only increase
Starting point is 00:32:39 tensions not solve anything. If he really wants to help Chicago's law enforcement problem, he should give us a federal homeland security grant so we could hire 2,000 police officers. Chicagoans who know our city. Trump's order to send hundreds of troops to Los Angeles is currently at the center of a legal challenge. It's likely the same would happen if he tried to do this with Chicago. Johnson says they'll leave no stones unturned, including legal action, if it comes to it. We will use every single tool available to stop. this president from disrupting the lives of Chicago. The president says after Chicago, he's looking to New York and L.A.
Starting point is 00:33:19 Now, what do you know about the legality of this? Can the president do this? It's not legal. The whole thing is a bluff. Yeah. And the dumb Democrats are buying into it and they think something's going to happen. And this is all about the 2026 midterms. And Trump's going to be able to walk away saying, well, we wanted to do this.
Starting point is 00:33:38 We wanted to do that. But they were defending crime and they were lying about the crime. We already get, they're documenting left and right, the police, especially those police associations, the unions, documenting that the cops aren't doing their job when it comes to, like, reporting correctly. There's one guy that's been floating around in D.C. and he's been on waters and all the other shows. And he says, the cops, you know, the guy, some kid gets shot, his attempted murder, but they sent him to the hospital as an incident. they don't be reported as such. So the numbers are, and people are going into the computers and faking the numbers.
Starting point is 00:34:13 So all these numbers are bogus and they're documenting that. They're documenting the fact that the crime has actually gone up, not down. And then they're going to have, they're going to point the finger to the Democrats. So you want more crime? Vote for the Democrats in 2026. You're going to get more crime because that's what they're doing. And this is just, he's not going into Chicago with the troops. It's just an idle threat.
Starting point is 00:34:35 So you're telling me that the police in these cities today are fudging the numbers? Well, one guy was put on suspension in D.C. for it. And he was a fairly well-known lieutenant, I think, was his rank. And they talked about him because his superiors, the guys running the city, the commissioners and everyone else. This was in the wire, by the way, this idea. Oh, yeah, you're right. You're right. It was.
Starting point is 00:35:04 Season one, absolutely. Yeah, it was in the wire, because this is what goes on in these big cities when they're trying to make their numbers look good. They phony up the numbers and, oh, it's down, it's down, vote us in again. And it's all lies. And they're starting to document this to an extreme. And, I mean, the amount of bull crap in terms of the reporting is well known because they changed some ways of doing the reporting to the FBI. And we had this so-called downturn in crime. It hasn't happened.
Starting point is 00:35:32 This is nonsense. and they're going to document enough of it to keep the Democrats from getting votes. You know why this, why they get away with this? And I think you're right. I mean, we saw it here in Gillespie County with the previous sheriff. We got a new sheriff. There's a new sheriff in town, Sheriff Ayala. But the previous sheriff would, you know, he would never report to the newspaper.
Starting point is 00:35:56 We have a newspaper on Wednesdays only. would never report, you know, the actual things that they were doing. And they weren't possibly even doing that much of it because we're a tourist destination. So, oh, we can't have that. We can't report on the drugs in Fredericksburg. We can't report on that. We can't report on all the people driving around drunk because that's what happens in an open, open carry, open container city. State.
Starting point is 00:36:24 No, we're not an open container state. I thought all of Texas you could drive around with an open container city. beer. No. That's not what I was told. You can't drive around anywhere with an open beer. You can walk on the street in Fredericksburg. It's only one of six cities. Because somebody from Texas back me up on this. You cannot drive around with an, I'm from Texas. I'm not going to back you up because you're wrong. You're not from Texas. I've been here 15 years. You cannot drive around with an open container of alcohol in your vehicle. Anyway, beer, beer either.
Starting point is 00:37:00 No, you can have a gun. But, you know, there's no more local news. There's no city desk guy, you know, who's going in and knocking on doors and saying, hey, we're going down to be listening to the police scanner. Can't even listen to the police scanner anymore. It's all digital. That's the problem. There's no more local reporting.
Starting point is 00:37:26 So that's why everyone gets away with everything. There's no city hall reporter. Maybe Chicago has one. The rest just sit at WGN and read the press releases. Wouldn't she say it's what you do? Yes, that's what you do. The page is the same. Yeah, but we have this thing called podcast, people.
Starting point is 00:37:46 You got blogs. We got substats. Get out there and start reporting on stuff. Well, that one guy, who's the guy who reports on the, on the Chicago on the on the on the shootings it's a very popular I think it's it I don't know if it's a I think it's a blog we've talked about it at some point no I don't remember yeah well well there's so many you that you do full-time job reporting on the shootings in Chicago yeah let me see what's it about Chicago somebody knows that anyway what did you have on this
Starting point is 00:38:20 well I have a couple of things I have the there's been a lot of the the Democrats going on and on about D.C. crime. This, I picked this up of NTD. This is, the Democrats are saying, there was no crime. People are upset that, you know, they're, they hate Trump for doing this and they hate him for, because there's no real crime in D.C. It's not that bad. I live here.
Starting point is 00:38:44 They say, and it goes on and on. So, N.D. has a, this is, this is D.C. crime man on the street. Okay. And just a little more than a week into the federal take. of D.C. police, the Trump administration unveils data showing a large number of arrests happening in high crime neighborhoods. Will do residents in those areas make of the crackdown? Entities Sam Wong was out in D.C.'s Anacostia neighborhood to hear from the people. Do you feel safe being out here? Oh, absolutely. You know, other than the presence of the law enforcement, everything is, you know,
Starting point is 00:39:18 as is always has been. There has not been any altercations as it was in the past. shooting almost every other night, sometimes every week. You know, sometimes. I mean, when I say shooting, I mean day shooting all. Broad daylight sometimes, at nighttime, mostly. What you do here in the daytime day.
Starting point is 00:39:39 Have you noticed an increase of law enforcement presence around here? Yes, sir. I have noticed a lot. It's a more increase, but it's a shame that it takes Donald Trump to bring all these people in for all the police to come outside and do their jobs actually. This is my accident.
Starting point is 00:39:55 my first experience with this, the law enforcement. You know, man, it's cool. That doesn't bother me them being around here. If you're doing what you're supposed to do, guess what? Hey, they're doing the right thing.
Starting point is 00:40:07 Hey, jackass.com. That's the website. That's the guy who reports on. Hey, jackass. August. Shot and killed, 24. Shot and wounded at 156. 24.
Starting point is 00:40:21 Total shot 180. Total homicides, 26. week shot and killed eight shot and wounded 37 total shot 45 total homicides eight the year to date shot and killed in chicago 229 shot and wounded 156 total shot 1,285 total homicide 275 the guy's got graphs got all kinds of stuff he's got merch he's got merch he's got merch He's got merch. What, spent shell cases? The hayjackass.com.
Starting point is 00:40:56 Yeah. So that's the kind of stuff that we need and the people need to talk about these things. Hey, I'm going to put it in the show notes. Hey, jackass.com. It's a good one. Okay. I think we've covered that enough. Okay.
Starting point is 00:41:13 What else you got then? Well, I got some TikTok clips, but first of all. Really? Really? You're going to start off in the first? Okay. I'm going to push that off to the second half. I do have.
Starting point is 00:41:21 You know, Taylor Swift finally came on a podcast. Hold on, everybody. And now back to Real News. Yes, on her boyfriend. Yeah, her boyfriend. Kelsey's podcast. She came on to plug her album. And this is a good kind of a compressed version.
Starting point is 00:41:41 This is not safe for work, by the way, for anyone out there that's got kids. But listen to Taylor. This is kind of a surprise. Thanks for having me. This is my first podcast. This is amazing. you for coming on what took you so long to jump on podcasts you know what i i just i was waiting for you guys to invite me this is my favorite podcast okay so let's jump into the middy gritty uh who do you
Starting point is 00:42:02 think is the sexiest man alive today it can be Travis or it can be anyone else who is the sexiest man in your opinion i mean honestly and i'm sorry baby that you're going to have to hear this i honestly think president trump is the sexiest motherfucker alive i mean hot damn that man is hot. I totally agree. That is a sexy beast right there. But aren't you a Democrat? You know what? Fuck the DNC. You heard me. Fuck these woke-ass liberals telling us Joe Biden was sharp as attack. The man was fucking retarded. And why the hell did they lock us down during COVID? Whoops. I guess we lost a signal there. Can you guys hear me? Yeah, AI, of course. Very funny. What?
Starting point is 00:42:47 Yeah. The sad part. part is I had never listened to the the Kelsey Brothers podcast. They're actually not bad as podcasters go. I was quite impressed with them. You know, it was better than that AI version of it, for sure. Well, I thought this AI version, which counters the one you played last show. Yes. And so if you're going to play them, I'm playing them.
Starting point is 00:43:15 Yeah, no, that's fine. I'm totally okay with that. anything but the TikTok ladies. Let's go to the UK with some UK anti-migrant action to follow up on our flags. Yes, raising the colors movement. Anti-migrant protests have taken place
Starting point is 00:43:33 in about a dozen towns and cities in the UK focused on the use of hotels to accommodate asylum seekers. In Liverpool, more than 400 people joined a march calling for migrants to be deported. In several locations, were counter-rallies by anti-racism protesters. Our political correspondent Ian Watson says,
Starting point is 00:43:53 migration is proving a difficult subject for the Labour government. The concern over asylum hotels has put a renewed focus on Labour's records since they came to office. I think the other problem which the current Labour government has is this. Some of their MPs are telling me that in areas which are traditionally ones which they would win at a general election, some people are now becoming so concerned about migration, especially the small boat crossings that they're not listening to the party and other issues
Starting point is 00:44:20 and they're facing some regional and national elections next May and they're very concerned that unless they make greater progress on this issue, they'll start losing support to other parties. Now, it's interesting the BBC takes it purely to politics, not about the outrage of the people who pay their salary through a forced payment. Yeah, that's the BBC, of course. A forced payment, you know, the television payment scheme, I think is what I'd call, which is one of the, the oddest things they have in, uh, in the UK. I mean, they, they tax people. Yeah, I don't think a lot of people realize what it is. You should explain it.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Oh, I actually, I think I have a license. You have to buy to watch TV. Yes. I think I actually have it. Um, I had a, you can, and they float around the neighborhoods with these, with these, with these trucks with giant antennas on them because as, uh, you can, the signal comes off of a TV, even though it's a receiver. Yes. And so if they spot, they'll go by your house if you don't have a license and they'll just aim this dish at you. And then if they sense there's a television in the house, they will find you.
Starting point is 00:45:32 Yes. Regardless of what you use your television for, if you have it, and it is done by, you know, because the tuner gives off a signal, that's the problem. But also you can't buy it unless you buy a television from the guy on the street corner like it's crack. They register, you have to register your name because I live there. I went through it. And it's not cheap.
Starting point is 00:45:51 It's like 150 bucks a year, I think. Yeah, it's not cheap. That's true. And I'm not even sure what the genesis of this is. Why don't they just, you know, I think it was because they didn't want it to be a straight up tax coming out of the tax. Tax receipts. I thought originally it was designed to pay for the BBC. No, it is designed, it's specifically designed to pay for the BBC.
Starting point is 00:46:17 The reason they didn't want it to be a tax is so that it wouldn't be a political football like, I don't know, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, so that that couldn't happen. What happened here could not happen to the BBC. In contrast to that, well, not really contrast, but this is the Euro News short report about it. Protesters took to the streets across the UK on Saturday to demonstrate against hotels, Asylum Seekers in Liverpool. Crowd could be seen carrying the St. George's Cross and Union Jack Flags. Police could be seen leading people away from the abolish asylum system protest,
Starting point is 00:46:54 a term coined by right-wing political parties. Demonstrations were also set to take place in other cities including Bristol, Newcastle, and London. This week, the temporary injunction blocked housing asylum seekers in a hotel on the outskirts of London, igniting the debate. Counter protests were also held. So we got a boots on the ground from Peter. Pea. Here he is. Here in the U.K., it's worse than you and John. Thank. Almost everyone I speak to with a decent job, business, and family is despondent. That's a good word.
Starting point is 00:47:29 Wow. What does despondent mean actually? It's depressed. It's a kind of depression that is, you know, hang dog type depression. Oh, I feel so bad. They think the third world takeover is inevitable. Every town now has half a dozen vape shops, Turkish barbers, and Chihuahua Takeaways with no customers and big Merks outside.
Starting point is 00:47:53 The housing market is stalled. I've heard this from a number of people. There are eight houses for sale on our small village high street. None have sold for months. Five years ago, they would have gone within a month. Everything has gone up in price. Food inflation is out of control. highest electricity prices in the world,
Starting point is 00:48:11 property taxes jacked up and taxes on home value and inheritance are threatened. Investors are putting their money abroad and in the city of London, mergers and IPOs have flatlined. UK companies are listing in the U.S. rather than the London Stock Exchange.
Starting point is 00:48:27 I speak to so many people who want out, I've never heard so many people who are looking for places to get their family and money out of the UK. We certainly are. Right. I'm going back to the garage, the garage where I'm laying down the keel for Mayflower 2. So he wants to be a plumber in America.
Starting point is 00:48:46 Come on over, Peter. We can use plumbers. We should have special visa for plumbers. So one of our producers sent in a note mentioning that Satan is probably Amy Pope. You mean from the UN? Yeah, the international organization for migration. Yeah. Which is an operation we should revisit once in a while.
Starting point is 00:49:13 So I looked up Amy Pope. You know, she worked for Clinton. She worked for Obama. I mean, she worked for Hillary Clinton. She worked for Obama. She worked for Biden. She was in charge of, she was the real border czar that opened the borders, it looks like. And so you try to find anything.
Starting point is 00:49:28 She doesn't have a wiki entry except in Deutscheland. Oh, really? Yeah, she's got a wiki page is in, German. And even though she's in America, I don't get that why they're trying to cover it up. But she does have a sketchy, she's not sketchy in her education or anything, but she's part of, of, what's that, that how, Chatham House, you know, which is a nice six front in the UK. Chatham House and some
Starting point is 00:49:54 other spooky operations. She's got some connections to. Obviously a bad actor. And it's all funded by us. Why does the American public put up with this? Why are we dropping our money into these organizations that are all centered at the U.N.? The U.N. really, when I was a kid, when I was a kid, we used to have a pharmacy in Albany, and this during the Berkeley era, and when, you know, there was protests and all this stuff going in, and there was right wingers. And they wanted to, and they had all these bumper stickers on the window.
Starting point is 00:50:32 And one of them was always get the U.S. out of the U.N. Or get the U.N. out of the U.S. And it actually was done in such a way to get the United Nations, get the U.N. out of United States. It was some pun. Snazzy logo.
Starting point is 00:50:50 And it was a bumper sticker. And they, and everyone always thought, what a silly group of people, these birchers? There's a John Birch Society bookstore about three doors down. And we always thought that they were kind of nutty. But looking back on it, They were ahead of their time. The way I see it now, was I, was I a buffoon back in the day?
Starting point is 00:51:11 I guess so. Well, okay, so you bring up an interesting point. First, you know, we have discussed Amy Pope quite a bit, quite a bit. I'll play a shorter clip from last year. She is the head honcho at the International Office of Migration. We just finished an incredible day and a half for the international dialogue for migration. We had singing, we had dancing. we had artwork and we had extraordinarily thoughtful conversation
Starting point is 00:51:37 about the impact of climate change on human mobility. Now as we move toward COP28, it is critical that we put all of these ideas into action. Action that enables people who are impacted by climate change to find better solutions, whether they're already on the move, whether they are looking for options to stay at home, or whether they need new opportunities
Starting point is 00:52:00 because climate change will cause their own options to disappear. The time for action is now, and IOM can't wait to be part of it. Okay, so there's a lot of clips. A lot of it is about climate change. And so when we look at the climate change organization, because people always want to... By the way, it is the international organization, not office. What did I say? Office? Yeah, it's got 20,000 people, big office. Well, and, but that's the point. What has grown over, not 10, not 10, 20, not 30, but probably 60 years is the climate, okay, 70 years, the group of climate scientists and climate people who are just getting billions of dollars to waffle on about climate change.
Starting point is 00:52:50 So our producer, we had a couple of producers who sent in notes like, well, you know, the, the true evil is the Black Rock, the Rand Corporation, you know, there's all these layers of headquarters in all different places and everybody wants to blame a group. And of course, you know, my favorite, the Rothschild, Soros, you can go on and on forever blaming individuals, Obama, Biden, Clinton's. We have good and evil in the world. That's just the fact. But the only, because you said it, the only people you can truly blame is ourselves.
Starting point is 00:53:32 Because we just sit around and puke on social media about how, oh, they're no good, they're doing this or doing that. Go run for your local school board, your city council, for, you know, your state house or Senate. I agree. You should stop your complaining and let the podcasters do the work for you. Well, we're actually doing something. We do highlight this.
Starting point is 00:53:55 And so when COVID is when a lot of people woke up, but then they still default back to Fauci, World Health Organization W-E-F-Davos get off your blessed assurance and go do something about it. You're allowing yourself to be treated as a doormat.
Starting point is 00:54:13 And social media is perfect. It's perfect. Everybody, oh, I feel much better now. I posted that. I trolled him. That's right. I've left a comment. No, you're doing nothing. This idea of doing this kind of public complaining, like this
Starting point is 00:54:30 predates modern social media. You'd find the same thing in the old-fashioned, you know, A-L-A-O-L chat room. Of course. I'm not just saying. It's just people just bitch and moan and do nothing. Yes, that's exactly it. Well, they should leave it to the professionals.
Starting point is 00:54:49 Well, we are professional bitches and moaners, but I think we did help a lot of people resist in whatever. There's no doubt about it. Resist against, you know, the COVID measures to at least, have an idea of what was going on, and we all really failed in many different ways, but we need to take these lessons and stop pointing fingers at groups of, every single no agenda telegram group is filled with this. The Dutch are the worst.
Starting point is 00:55:18 Oh, I love them, but I look, I look at what you're doing. Oh, look at this article about that guy. That's bull crap, man. That's just bull crap. Oh, that's the elite. There to go. The elite you're doing nothing. You're doing nothing.
Starting point is 00:55:31 It's your own fault. You are to blame. That's what the problem is. All right, I'll stop preaching now. But it's because people need to wake up. Do something. There's plenty of stuff you can do. I was part of the Screw-It-up generation.
Starting point is 00:55:51 I was having a good time in the 80s. Hey, man, I'm making bank. I'm at MTV. I'm on the radio. School board, loser. Couldn't get a better gig. Yeah. So maybe the Gen Zers are, you know, look what they're doing.
Starting point is 00:56:11 They're homesteading. They're moving out of the cities. They're homeschooling. Yes, they are. Yes, I get tons of emails. You know, the farmer's wife, she got 17 kids at home. She's taking care of them. Gives them a little bit of an injection with the No Agenda show.
Starting point is 00:56:27 but okay you can listen to this and check it out this will give an idea and the Brits God bless them they're finally saying no no no no no we don't want this now it's going to be a tough nut to crack over there because you know if you look at the video of those reports the cops are busting heads and rousting people so your wake-up call came at the beginning of the of the of 2020 if you didn't take that as your wake up call and so you can point as many people as you want but you need to be pointing at yourself
Starting point is 00:57:04 yeah well I'm going to be pointing at Amy Pope okay oh boy Amy Pope she's just a symptom of the overall problem these are lawless faithless ghoulish people who are in it for all of the wrong they're in it for pride for greed for jealousy, you know, position, stature.
Starting point is 00:57:28 I think you might be wrong on that. They might be sincere. No. No, I don't think so. I think you always underestimate sincerity. Well, regardless. The answer, it lies within everybody themselves. Use that stupid phone of yours to organize somebody and go do something.
Starting point is 00:57:53 Have you ever really shown up somewhere and said, hey, we're sick of this? Have you ever been a part of that? I'm not talking about, hey, hey, ho, Trump has got to go. I mean, like really showing up at a meeting where it matters. And not just, it's like the one, I think he's a pastor, the black guy, goes to the school board meetings, and he'll read from the books that are in the schools. Oh, yeah, that guy. And they'll shut.
Starting point is 00:58:16 And they'll shut. But that's what I'm saying. He's great. Yeah, it's great for social media. Oh, man. I can't believe they. Pulled that guy out of there. But why don't you run for the school board?
Starting point is 00:58:27 Do something real. All right. I'm done. I've said it. You said that already. Yeah, that's why I stopped. I said it. How about a moment for African news?
Starting point is 00:58:43 What? Yeah. Dude, we're going to have the lowest to troll room numbers ever. This is short clip. It's less than a minute. Or maybe it's a minute. Okay.
Starting point is 00:58:55 Nigeria, unfortunately, it says Niferia, but it means Nigeria gangs. You hear about this? I know this. No, I don't know about this. I know something else about Nigeria, but let's get this first. The Nigerian military says it's carried out an airstrike on a bandit camp in Katsin Estate in an operation to rescue dozens of kidnapped victims. Lack of security has remained a serious problem in much of Nigeria, despite, a promise by the government to tackle the issue.
Starting point is 00:59:25 More from David Bamford. Reports say 76 people were able to escape as a result of the airstrike. One child died during the rescue. The military operation on Friday evening took place at a location known as Power Hill from where the criminal gang has been raiding local communities. Last week they shot dead 30 civilians in a mosque in the town of Malumfashi and 20 others were killed in surrounding villages. gangs kidnap people for ransom and exact retribution on communities that do not pay.
Starting point is 00:59:59 Wow. Sounds great there in Nigeria. I saw a list of the richest black, no, the list of the world's black billionaires. So black being just skin color, not necessarily a black American. Yeah, black. 70% from Nigeria. Probably all scammers. Well, I think I got an email from at least five of them. But, yeah, billionaires.
Starting point is 01:00:31 I had no idea. A couple of them live in the States, couple of, I think one or two live in the UK. But the Nigerians, man, they know how to do it. Yeah. Scammers. In fact, you know that the Nigerian scam where they used to make all kinds of money
Starting point is 01:00:51 just sending notes out to people. is legal in Nigeria and is considered part of their GDP. Oh, yeah. I know they consider it part of the GDP, but I didn't know that it was just super legal. Yeah. What's illegal about it? This is scam. Well, they're scamming other people, so I guess that's good.
Starting point is 01:01:12 Yeah, they're not scamming their own. Let's check in with what's happening with Ukraine and with Russia. I would say it's all. always good to start it off with a little bit of our buddy. Yes, I know you've been waiting for it. Rita, because, you know, he's trying to keep it all together there. He's trying to keep everybody in line, which means he's trying to help President Trump get the trillat together, or at least a bilat, which seems kind of improbable now. But he's also trying to keep all the Europeans happy and trying to keep Zelensky happy. And he's talking out of his butthole.
Starting point is 01:01:49 Clearly, Ukraine and NATO, the US, Europe, Ukraine, NATO, we are all working extremely well together. Oh, really? We're working perfectly together. As I mentioned, we have jointly with Ukraine, a organization in Poland to capture all the lessons. Oh, we capture all the lessons. We are documenting it. We're taking copious notes of what happened. From this terrible war. Terrible. Terrible. And to understand what it means for all the NATO plans. the future for Ukraine itself for the build of its armed forces in the future what lessons we can
Starting point is 01:02:24 learn we have to command in wiesbada how about this don't poke the bear from which we organize together with Ukraine all the support for Ukraine in this world from NATO allies here we go what is the support we are heavily involved in making sure that the Ukrainian armed forces also longer term will be as interoperable as possible of the highest standards compared with the NATO. This is a sales talk which means interoperable means you can only have our NATO bullets and weapons.
Starting point is 01:02:57 We have the comprehensive assistance package. We have this new initiative thanks to President Trump. Ah, buy our stuff. By buying from American stockpiles from the U.S. military, lethal weapons and of course air defense systems and
Starting point is 01:03:13 interceptors to be paid for better Europeans, directly being delivered to Ukraine from NATO. So, it's a great system. America sells it to Europe. Europe pays for it, but it goes straight to Ukraine. It's dynamite, people. It's involved in all of this.
Starting point is 01:03:29 And we agreed in Washington there is an irreversible path for NATO, for Ukraine, into NATO. What? An irreversible path for Ukraine into NATO. That can be true. And it is true. But a couple of NATO allies, including the United States, but also Hungary and others have said, Not now, maybe never, this is for the future. But what we are doing in the meantime is making sure that we work as closely together as possible.
Starting point is 01:03:57 We are doing that. So don't worry, you're going to get into NATO. It's all going to happen. Not now, maybe never, but we put a little NATO flag here. You're coming. You're coming. It'll be good. My word.
Starting point is 01:04:12 So here is, here's France 24. Hopes are dim for the. the Putin-Zelensky Peace Summit. Give NATO talks. With the end of the war in Ukraine, nowhere in sight, the Ukrainian President Zelensky is saying, Russia doesn't want that. He spoke as he met with NATO chief, Mark Rutter,
Starting point is 01:04:31 to talk about security guarantees for Ukraine. The Russians will try to do something else now to avoid a meeting. The issue is not just the meeting. The issue is that they don't want to end the war. A bilateral meeting is one of the components of how to end the war. We're going to see if Putin and Zelensky will be working together, you know, that's like oil and vinegar a little bit. President Trump on Friday said in the Oval Office that the next two weeks would be crucial. What are the two ways you can go at the end of two weeks then?
Starting point is 01:05:00 Well, then I'm going to make a decision as to what we do. And it's going to be a very important decision. And that's whether or not it's massive sanctions or massive tariffs or both. Or do we do nothing and say it's your fight. Putin is ready. Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, meanwhile, said in an interview to U.S. media that there would be no Putin Zelensky meeting because a presidential agenda had not been set. And this agenda is not ready at all. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:28 So, clearly the Europeans are telling Zelensky to chill out. And the unthinkable has happened, President Trump has said, you know, I don't think we'll give those nut jobs any lethal weapons, any long-range weapons right now. because that could turn out really bad for the whole process, which, as we know, is only about President Trump wanting a Nobel Peace Prize. That's what this ultimately is all about. We all know that. So let's listen to Jonathan Carl again on ABC this week. By the way, with General Petraeus.
Starting point is 01:06:01 So when they pull a guy like that out, I'm thinking military industrial complex is worried about the current status. Let me get to something else that President Trump said this week. This is a post on social media. He wrote, in part, it is very hard, if not impossible, to win a war without attacking an invaders country. It's like a great team in sports that has a fantastic defense, but is not allowed to play offense. There is no chance of winning. It is like that with Ukraine and Russia.
Starting point is 01:06:28 He went on to say that it was Biden that wouldn't let Zelensky wouldn't let Ukraine attack into Russia. First of all, what's your take on what the president was in? to say there? It's a very valid observation. It's spot on. And interestingly, as we learned in a story overnight, it's contrary to the Pentagon policy. This is another case where it appears that the Pentagon is carrying out policies
Starting point is 01:07:00 that conflict with President Trump's inclination. Now, I can understand why they would limit the use of certain long-range systems against Russia when they think that Russia might still be willing to make a deal. but that should be very clear not to be the case at this moment. And I hope that there will be a review of that policy. Indeed, that was exactly what the Biden administration did in the past. They were overly sensitive endlessly about how Russia might react to something that they provide to Ukraine. And they were restricting the use of the Army technical missile system and others.
Starting point is 01:07:31 And so I hope that that will get a review in the White House and therefore a change in the Pentagon. Yeah, we got to kill some Russians, man. Come on. We need long-range stuff. Get it going, brother. This is a Wall Street Journal report overnight you're referring to saying that the Pentagon has been blocking Ukraine's use of those long-range missiles inside Russian territory. Obviously, the Ukrainian military has been using drone attacks, which are far less lethal. But let me get your sense of the human cost of this war, because I know this is something you've spoken about. And I find...
Starting point is 01:08:07 Listen to these numbers. astounding, you know, upwards of 20,000, just on the Russian side, getting killed every month. In a matter of just a few months, a greater death toll than the entire U.S. death toll in the Vietnam War. I mean, it's kind of hard to imagine. It's staggering, Jonathan. Again, as someone who had five combat commands as a general officer and wrote letters of condolence to America's mothers and fathers almost every single night of those commands. He's not talking about Vietnam. Is he talking about Iraq, I guess?
Starting point is 01:08:47 I don't know what he's talking about. And I like the way they talk about just generalities. They should mention that the numbers that killed in Vietnam were 50,000. It's a number. Everyone knows what it is. It's not a huge number. It's not like massive numbers. It's not like the 20,000 a month.
Starting point is 01:09:04 It's staggering, Jonathan. Again, as someone who had five combat commands as a general officer and wrote letters of condolence to America's mothers and fathers almost every single night of those commands, I can't fathom. I can't process, if you will, understand the magnitude of the losses on the Russian side. It's now estimated that over 1,000 and 60,000 Russians have been killed or wounded in this war. and of those, well over 500,000 have been so seriously wounded or killed that they couldn't even return to the front lines. This has to have over time. I think the dead of the 500,000, the dead and the 500,000 number probably couldn't return to the front line. Yeah, I didn't think so.
Starting point is 01:09:48 A very, very substantial impact on the ability of Russia just to find a civilian workforce as well. In fact, it's reported that they were actually looking in Africa for women who can actually replace some of the men in Russia. in various industries. And of course, we've seen they've also tapped North Korean military soldiers fighting on the ground in Ukraine, quite extraordinary. And again, you have to go to telegram
Starting point is 01:10:14 to see pretty much any of this death and devastation and destruction of soldiers on both sides. The Ukrainian numbers are staggering. It's just noteworthy, again, that the M5M never shows any of this, ever. Ever. Why is that? Is that because we don't want to disrupt the arms sales? Is that part of it? Boom. What do you think? That would be the only reason I can think of. We don't want people.
Starting point is 01:10:46 Well, that's a pretty good reason. We don't want people actually outraged about this war. We don't want that. No. In fact, we want, according to portray us, we want to send some deep missiles into Russia to make it worse. Yeah, because that's a great idea. And then just, to add some more humor on top of it all. We have some arrests in the pipeline bombing. Yeah, it's the sailboat guys again. This is what it looked like in the Baltic
Starting point is 01:11:12 Sea in September of 2022 following an international act of sabotage. Gas bubbling up from the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines, results of a well coordinated attack. On Thursday, almost three years later, authorities in Germany announced an arrest.
Starting point is 01:11:28 After three years of meticulous, detective work. It's truly an impressive investigative success. The explosions were so powerful, they registered as seismic activity along the gas pipelines which run from Russia to Germany and came just months after Russia launched its full-scale war against Ukraine. German prosecutors identified the suspect as Serhi K, a Ukrainian national, saying he had been taken into custody in a seaside resort on Italy's east coast. Investigators say the suspect helped coordinate the bombing, carried out by divers who chartered a sailboat from a German port using fake IDs and licenses and planted explosive devices along the underwater pipelines.
Starting point is 01:12:15 The pipelines were not operational at the time. Because of Russia's aggression against Ukraine, Germany refused to use Nord Stream 2, and Russia itself had cut off gas from Nord Stream 1 in apparent retaliation for Europe's support for Kiv. Ukraine has denied any involvement in the act of sabotage and despite the nationality of the suspect German prosecutors said the arrest demonstrated continued support for Ukraine We stand with Ukraine and we will continue to stand with Ukraine what is important to me is that we are a country governed
Starting point is 01:12:47 by the rule of law and that we thoroughly investigate crimes committed within I'm sorry, I just laugh when they always throw in the rule of law cross it in there It's Ukrainians they arrested. There's another Ukrainian they're going to arrest. But we stand behind Ukraine because they don't, you know, I'm sure they were just... Because you're good guys.
Starting point is 01:13:06 Rogue elements, yes. We stand with Ukraine, and we will continue to stand with Ukraine. What is important to me is that we are a country governed by the rule of law and that we thoroughly investigate crimes committed within our jurisdiction. German prosecutors have issued an arrest warrant for another Ukrainian man last seen in Poland. The suspect in custody is expected to be transferred to Germany to face criminal charges and possibly a trial. By the way, for this whole conflict, I think the obvious solution, if you want to reduce the deaths and the killing it, you just send in the D.C. police, they can bring it down by 30 percent. Those guys are awesome.
Starting point is 01:13:45 Yeah, overnight. And the Chicago police. They'll take care of it. Yeah. So that's what's going on there. Yeah, so that's going nowhere. No. Did we really expect it to go anywhere? They don't want to stop. They don't want it to stop.
Starting point is 01:14:02 No, and we also have the Chinese that would like to see it continue. I don't know why they wanted. More I think about that theory, which was on the last show, the guy going on about it's really about China. I don't know if the Chinese really want us, the U.S. to be ramping up our military systems to the point where we can get to overproduction. because somebody else is paying for it. We're not giving it away anymore.
Starting point is 01:14:29 Yeah. And making it profitable. I don't know if that's such a good idea for them. No. Well, in general, war is always good for somebody, just usually not the people. No, you know, of course not because they always get killed. It's the downside of wars.
Starting point is 01:14:48 People get killed a lot. Did I have anything else on that? I had, uh, yeah, it was interesting. There was a Russian, there was a lot of reporting in foreign publications, but it went nowhere here. Russian strike hits U.S. owned factory. Did you even hear about this? No, I didn't even hear about this. Well, so that's the headline, but when you dive into it, it's a Singaporean American multinational that makes toasters and other stuff.
Starting point is 01:15:19 And they have a factory in Ukraine, cheap labor, obviously. and something hit one of their factories. No one was killed. I don't think anyone was even hurt. But they really, the European press really tried to ramp that up. But for some reason, didn't go anywhere. You know, Zelensky even talked about. Last night, Russian armor set one of its insane anti-record.
Starting point is 01:15:45 They targeted civilian infrastructure facilities. American-owned enterprise, Zakaparita. Yeah. Supported by American investment. Okay. They make toasters. Yeah, that's what they make. I looked into it.
Starting point is 01:16:01 They make toasters. No one cares about that. Toasters. This is an interesting clip. This is about, we can switch topics, I think. Yeah, sure. Because I have nothing on the Ukraine thing. I do have some Gaza stuff that might be worth talking about.
Starting point is 01:16:20 Okay. It's Gaza One PBS. Yes. It's been another deadly day in Gaza. Officials there say at least 33, 33 people have been killed by Israeli strikes and shootings. That's right. Ignore the hundreds of thousands in Russia and Ukraine. Ignore that, 33. Okay. Yeah. Well, I thought that once I heard the 33, I said, okay, so this report is somewhat, this has to be bogus as a signal. Typically. 33 what it's okay we our thesis is that there's something up every time this comes up the signal has gone out yes the signal signal has gone out yes so i and i took the rest of the report kind of with like okay what are they trying what are they getting at here we go to among them were Palestinians who were
Starting point is 01:17:10 sheltering intense and who were seeking scarce food it comes a day after a u.n. back group that monitors food crises declared that a half million Palestinians living in the Gaza city area are in the grips of a potentially life-threatening man-made famine. What's more, the group, the integrated food security phase classification, or IPC, projects that by the end of September, famine will spread to much of the rest of Gaza. Earlier, I spoke with Chris McIntosh, Oxfam's humanitarian response advisor in Gaza. He's in Gaza City. Right now in Gaza, what we're seeing is exactly what we were
Starting point is 01:17:49 predicting for months, ever since the imposition of the blockade at the beginning of March. And in that time, very few trucks have gotten in, very limited amounts of food. So what we're seeing is people that are gaunt, people that are
Starting point is 01:18:04 drawn in the face, and they're boning. Without trying to downplay the devastation in Gaza, This is bull crap. This is one of the most corrupt organizations in the world, Oxfam, with the U.N. Where's the white helmets who are going to stage something? That's coming.
Starting point is 01:18:24 Oh, it has to be coming. They've already been trying it. They've been trying it with all kinds of photos and, oh, look at this child starving to death. So we have here in, this PBS is from yesterday, actually, and they have the Oxfam guy, and there's nobody that's going to be on the other side of this discussion, by the way. as usual, PBS and NPR. Of course not. One-sided discussion with a point of view that's expressed.
Starting point is 01:18:50 And no matter what you do, it's expressed and expressed and expressed. And this kind of contradicts the photos we've seen of the trucks that are backed up that the UN won't let in. The UN's got something to do with the famine, but they're not going to talk about that. This whole thing, that's why the 33 was a trigger for me, because I can't believe any, anything anybody's telling us about Gaza or anything or anything or well anything in general but this in particular is very sketchy in every same way and so now we have the third clip which is like this goes on this guy's on by the way for 20 minutes yeah sorry wait wait so he's on for 20 minutes yaking away about one thing or another so they finally throw in a little counter argument to see what happens they don't
Starting point is 01:19:39 bring anybody else on to debate him or say anything about it. And so this is the way, this is the way it ends up. Prime Minister Netanyahu called the report an outright lie. U.S. Ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee said tons of food has gone into Gaza, but Hamas savages stole it, ate lots of it to become corpulent, sold it on the black market. What do you say to that? I say that couldn't be further from the truth, John. And just to use basic metrics to get The point across here, prior to the blockade being imposed at the beginning of March, there were approximately 600 trucks being brought into Gaza every day. And now we're looking at one sixth of that.
Starting point is 01:20:19 Okay. Is that what he's looking at? Or did he count? Ten trucks a day is what he says. So this is, this kind of, what bothers me about this, this is bad reporting. You can't bring an Oxfam guy in to just say whatever propaganda he would. wants to say. Well, he wants money. It's fundraising for us. Yeah, it's a fundraiser. But why does PBS do this? Why don't they have some, give the public what they, you know, supposedly they're
Starting point is 01:20:50 supposed to do, which is a balanced report and put somebody on that says the opposite? Because they know that they'll get lots of coverage on that podcast, which is the only coverage they get is when you bring up their clips. Let's, uh, Check out the UN because they have their own agenda and they're pushing it very hard. The international pressure on Israel is growing. There's widespread condemnation at the government's decision to expand Israeli settlements in the West Bank. 21 countries around the world, including France, the UK, Canada and Australia, signed a joint declaration saying it was unacceptable.
Starting point is 01:21:28 The European Commission's Foreign Affairs Chief also added her signature to the list. This brings no benefits to the Israeli people. Instead, it risks undermining security and fuels further violence and instability, taking us further away from peace. The plan seeks to build over 3,000 homes for Israeli settlers. All such settlements built in the West Bank occupied since 1967 are considered illegal under international law, and this is no exception. Calls to scrap the plans were echoed by the UN Secretary General. The decision by the Israeli authorities to expand illegal settlement construction, which would be divide the West Bank must be reversed. All settlement construction is a violation of international
Starting point is 01:22:12 law. The project known as E1 would effectively block the establishment of a Palestinian state. It would cut the north of the West Bank off from the south, preventing the development in the centre connecting Ramallah, East Jerusalem and Bethlehem. This is the goal of the ultra-nationalist finance minister Bezalel Smotrich. He's the driving force of this project and is urging the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to formally annex the West Bank. Yeah, it's going to be nasty there. It's going to be nasty for a while longer. And then you've got all these countries saying,
Starting point is 01:22:43 oh, we have to have a Palestinian state. We recognize it. We recognize it. Where were they in 1967? I would say that the Israelis, I think there's a propaganda war between the left and the queers for Palestine, which is part of the left.
Starting point is 01:23:04 Yes. And the Israelis, and the Israelis are losing the propaganda war. They're doing a piss poor job of promoting their position. Agreed. And there's, and I see no resolution to this. I mean, everybody's taking the side of the Hamas side, basically. But what I don't understand is they run the media.
Starting point is 01:23:29 How come they can't do a better job? Yeah, there's your. It just proves that they don't run the media. They should be doing a much better job. Yeah, they do a better job. They don't run the media. That's a joke. They have some influence.
Starting point is 01:23:43 Maybe. I don't even know if they have that. They don't run Hollywood anymore, really. Not like in the good old days in the 30s. No. When you had all these characters that were all Jewish, they gave that up. No, it's a mess. And then the Israelis have nobody to blame but themselves.
Starting point is 01:24:00 They could have done a lot. they could have taken this a lot of different ways and they could have propagandized it better. And like some people say, why don't they release the footage of the, of the brutality of that October 8th? What's at October 8th? Seventh. Seventh. Seventh invasion. Well, they have.
Starting point is 01:24:19 But it won't get shown anywhere. I remember the Toronto International Film Festival, they blocked the documentary saying that they could not show this documentary at the International. at the Toronto Film Festival, unless the makers of the documentary got permission from the Palestinians to use their likeness. Another victory for the Palestinians. Yes.
Starting point is 01:24:46 I thought that was a funny one. That's an interesting way to do it. A little bit of climate change. At first, I thought, wow, this is interesting. This is good news. Egypt has found a sunken city that's been covered for 2,000 years
Starting point is 01:25:04 but then I have to take it into a negative direction for me. A statue is hoisted from the Mediterranean as Egyptian archaeologists and divers work together to recover relics from the seabed in Alexandria. Unfortunately, we have incomplete pieces. The head is missing or the leg.
Starting point is 01:25:25 And we also found a statue of Sphinx and another statue that appears to be in your royal dress. Archaeologists say the relics were found at the site of a sunken city in the waters of Abukia Bay, which may have been an extension of the ancient city of Canova, a prominent center during the Ptolemaic dynasty and the Roman Empire. Their contract with UNESCO means they're only extracting some of the artifacts from the ruins.
Starting point is 01:25:48 The rest will remain in the depth. This fine confirms that this place was a complete residential city. The part we are in was a port. These artifacts confirmed the study that says that. that Alexandria was submerged by water as a result of a major earthquake or tsunami. This is why all the statues are missing the head and feet, which are the weakest parts of the statue. Alexandria is home to countless historic treasures, but Egypt's second city is at risk of succumbing to the same waters that claimed Canopus. The city is especially vulnerable to climate change,
Starting point is 01:26:21 climate change, climate change, and rising sea levels, sinking by more than three millimeters every year. There it is. Climate change. Climate change. We turn something good into something very negative. Let's take something negative and make it even worse. How about flesh-eating bacteria? On the medical watch today. Flesh-eating bacteria is spreading to more beaches. The vibriovoltaficus bacteria is usually found in beaches along the Gulf Coast.
Starting point is 01:26:48 But the eastern seaboard is now seeing an uptick in cases. Experts think climate change is helping the germs spread north. Eating undercooked shellfish is one way to. get infected. Another is through cuts, including... Yes, climate change or eating uncooked shellfish. Okay. This is one way to get infected. Another is through cots, including from ear piercings and tattoos, multiple surgeries, and sometimes even amputation, is necessary to treat an infection. They had to do 10 surgeries on my leg, and then I had to learn to walk again.
Starting point is 01:27:22 Cooking your seafood thoroughly, avoiding eating undercooked or raw shellfish and avoiding the waters that contain this organism are really paramount to preventing infections. Most infections are typically reported from May to October, a push-to-place warning signs at beaches with the most risk was thwarted by businesses who feared they'd lose money if tourists were scared away. This report was very confusing to me. Well, I'll tell you one thing I'm confused about immediately is this is a flesh-eating
Starting point is 01:27:54 bacteria that you get into an open sore and it goes nuts, what's that got to do with eating raw? Yes, that's my point. Are you going to get it in your stomach? Or, I mean, what is that? It doesn't make any sense. Well, the two people they had on, and it was pretty horrific, the guy's leg looked like a, it's just disaster.
Starting point is 01:28:15 They're talking about don't eat uncooked shellfish. But the whole report was all the beach and the bad people who don't want to talk about on the beach. And have you heard about the radioactive shrimp? I have heard about the radioactive shrimp. And they're selling it at Walmart. Yes, they are. Oh, they were.
Starting point is 01:28:37 Apparently, erradated with cesium 137. The FDA issuing a warning about more possible radioactive shrimp. The shrimp was sold under several brand names in nine states by a company called South Wind Foods. The only Midwest state affected is Minnesota. Those shrimp were all sold between July 17th and August 8th. Customers should throw out the shrimp or return to the store for a refund. So far, no one's gotten sick. But it comes just days after Walmart's great value brand frozen shrimp was recalled for that same reason.
Starting point is 01:29:09 So nowhere, not a single report because they come out of, I think, Indonesia. How did the shrimp get radiation? It's like, surely they asked the question. No, nowhere. BBC, George Stephanopoulos, oh, don't eat the shrimp. There's cesium 137. What is, where does Cizium 137 come from?
Starting point is 01:29:32 Oh, it's obviously a byproduct of something. It's not like caches of it that I know of. Let's take a look. Okay. Well, ask your buddy there. Ah, very good point. I will ask my buddy right now. Where does Cizium 137 come from?
Starting point is 01:29:49 Easy 137 comes from Psalm 137. Not easy one. What did she say? She said easy 137. No, no, no. It's a song? Seism 137. It's radiation.
Starting point is 01:30:04 Where does that come from? Seizium 137 is mostly a byproduct of nuclear fission, so you'd find it coming from nuclear reactors when uranium or plutonium splits. It's also released during nuclear weapons testing or accidents, like Chernobyl or Fukushima. Naturally, it's super rare, basically non-existent, in the environment without human activity. It's a radioactive isotope emits beta and gamma radiation
Starting point is 01:30:29 and has a half-life of about 30 years. That's why it's a big deal in waste management and contamination. There you go. So it's from some reactor someplace that's leaking. In Indonesia? Hmm.
Starting point is 01:30:46 And where it come Thailand? I don't think they're using nuclear power there. Well, but that's what bothers me about the report. This could be out of the Fukushima area. It could also just be a competitor launching something into the atmosphere. We don't know. We just don't know. Well, shrimp. I know. That's why if you looked at the tip of the day, you'd find that little Geiger counter. I would take that to the store. And check my shrimp. Check the shrimp before you buy it.
Starting point is 01:31:16 Scan your shrimp, people. And I like the way they say what hasn't caused anyone to get ill. that's not what it would you know if you ingest a radioactive uh substance like that it gives you it kills you over time it's nothing that you get ill about it makes you glow in the dark but you'll be okay well it's a glowing in the dark's a giveaway uh we do now we do know we do know we do know this is this is good news we now know for sure that president trump did nothing bad with Epstein. We have proof because Gislane said so. Buried inside
Starting point is 01:31:57 more than 300 pages from interviews conducted last month. Jelaine Maxwell, the imprisoned former girlfriend of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, clears US President Donald Trump of any involvement. I never saw the president in any type
Starting point is 01:32:13 of massage setting. I never witnessed the president in any inappropriate setting in any way. The president was never inappropriate with any anybody, in the times that I was with him, he was a gentleman in all respects. The interview conducted by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche was released Friday in the quote, interest of transparency. The materials show Maxwell Epstein's long-time associate repeatedly showering Trump with praise, denying that she had observed him engaged in any
Starting point is 01:32:41 form of sexual behavior. Do you ever observe President Trump receive a massage? Never. The timing of the release raises questions. The administration. The had been scrambling to present itself as transparent amid a fierce backlash over an early refusal to disclose records from the sex trafficking case. The way this administration has responded makes it feel like a cover-up. The case has drawn intense public scrutiny because of Epstein's ties to high-profile figures, including Prince Andrew and former U.S. President Bill Clinton. In the transcripts, Maxwell denied seeing Clinton act inappropriately, and she also spoke glowingly
Starting point is 01:33:19 of Prince Andrew. After the interview, Maxwell was moved to a minimum security prison camp in Texas. There, she continues to serve a 20-year sentence convicted four years ago on allegations that she lured teen girls to be sexually abused by Epstein. No, didn't see anything. Not with Clinton, not with Prince Andrew, not with President Trump. There's nothing. It's all good. Yeah, of course, that brought up nothing but speculators that say, yeah, she's just trying to get a pardon or clemency or some damn thing.
Starting point is 01:33:49 She's lying. She's a liar. But it would have been better if she said, I saw some stuff with Bill Clinton or, well, you know, Prince Andrew, but she didn't. So that's what makes it interesting and somewhat laughable to me. I mean, Prince, she let everyone off the hook. Yeah, Prince Andrew, we know that he was up to no good. I mean.
Starting point is 01:34:11 Well, maybe she didn't notice. Well, I mean, there's also the women who were the ones that pointed the finger at her. So she was the real bad actor in this whole thing. She was the one that recruited all the girls and so I don't know. Well, we don't know. That's it. Nobody knows nothing. Nobody knows nothing.
Starting point is 01:34:29 That's exactly right. But we could do a 10, a 10-hour podcast about it like everybody else is doing. Yeah. Well, I think that you have that clip. I have one clip that's even shorter and probably useless by comparison. So we'll skip it. That's how we're going to do it. Oh, come on.
Starting point is 01:34:47 It's PBS. We might as well. All right. Play it. President Trump supporters say he's been cleared up any suspicion by the transcript and recording of Galane Maxwell's interview. Wait a minute. President Trump's supporters? Is there a rally somewhere that I missed? Like, Trump is innocent. Hey, hey, ho. Trump is innocent. Let Maxwell go. President Trump supporters say he's been cleared up any suspicion by the transcript and recording of Galane Maxwell's interview with the Deputy Attorney General.
Starting point is 01:35:14 The woman who was Jeffrey Epstein's girlfriend characterized the president, a one-time friend of Epstein's, as a gentleman. and said she never saw him engage in any kind of sexual misconduct. President Trump was always very cordial and very kind to me, and I just want to say that I find, I admire his extraordinary achievement in becoming the president now, and I like him. He's the best. So that is the sum of my entire relationship with him. Shortly after the interview, Maxwell, who's serving a 20-year prison sentence for
Starting point is 01:35:50 sex trafficking was transferred to a minimum security prison camp. She's seeking a presidential pardon. Yeah, all right. You're right. Just as nonsense as mine. It's no good. Yeah, they're not going to, this is going to be the end. Well, they're going to release a bunch of documents now or something.
Starting point is 01:36:07 Oh, they released 30,000 documents, and the Democrats are saying, hey, that's, we've already seen these documents. They've probably got binders that said Epstein files. white binder yeah no we're not going to know anything yeah that white binder was a was the worst yeah so there's a somewhat of a discussion they're trying to make a headway with and PBS of course is pushing back on it because they are big supporters of the idea of mail in ballast and so there was a got a three-part clip here uh because trump is all turned against mail in ballots for obvious reasons because it has to do it 2020 and his false clip
Starting point is 01:36:50 claims. And so this is going to be interesting because this actually does reveal the fact that Trump really can't do too much without Congress's help here. With control of Congress at stake in next year's midterm elections, President Trump is doubling down on efforts and mail-in voting. In the 2024 election, nearly 30 percent of Americans who cast their ballots did it by mail. Despite a multi-million dollar Republican drive to encourage supporters to vote by mail last year, the president says it's a fraud. We as a Republican Party are going to do everything possible that we get rid of mail-in ballots. We're going to start with an executive order that's being written right now by the best lawyers in the country to end mail-in ballots because they're corrupt. He also said that the
Starting point is 01:37:43 United States is just about the only country in the world that uses them. Rickasson is a professor of law and political science at UCLA. He's also the author of A Real Right to Vote, how a constitutional amendment can safeguard American democracy. Rick, I want to begin by parsing some of what we just heard from the president. He says that just about the only country in the world that uses them as the United States. Is that true? No, it's not true.
Starting point is 01:38:06 It's used around the world and lots of other democracies, including in Canada and the United Kingdom and Germany. He says he's going to issue an executive order to end mail-in balance. Is that within his powers? So no. First of all, an executive order. is an order to the executive branch as to how to carry out the laws. It's not a royal edict. He can't just decree that we don't have mail-in-balloting anymore. The Constitution says that
Starting point is 01:38:31 each state gets to set its own rules for running elections, and in Article 1, Section 4, it lets Congress override those rules as to congressional elections. Congress also sometimes acts under its powers, for example, to enforce the 15th Amendment to bar race discrimination voting. The president's job is to take care that the laws passed by Congress are faithfully executed. So he's got a lot of powers in terms of how the federal government might interact with states, but it's primarily states that are running elections, and he has no direct authority over how elections are going to be conducted. Well, that was a poor reading of Article 1, Section 4, but as far as I'm concerned, the states have the authority to regulate times, places, and manner of elections.
Starting point is 01:39:16 I don't see how even Congress can do anything. Well, he goes on and explains how they can. Well, that counters what he said on truth social. He said the states are merely an agent for the federal government in counting and tabulating the votes. They must do what the federal government as represented by the president of the United States tells them. That's just a fiction.
Starting point is 01:39:39 That's not how things work. The Constitution does say that Congress can override. So if Congress passed a law tomorrow at either outlawed or mandated mail-in-balloting, that law would probably be upheld as applied to congressional elections, couldn't be applied to state or local elections because the power only extends to congressional elections. But the president doesn't have the power. States are more than agents. States, and this goes back to the founding, states were the primary actors that administered elections. There wasn't agreement to have national election administration, the way it is in most other countries. today. And that diversity of how elections are run, it makes for some confusion sometimes, but it can be a strength against an executive that's trying to impose its will, as we see the president trying to do here. He says he's doing this because he wants to make sure there's no fraud. We've had a long experience with mail and balance in Oregon for about 25 years.
Starting point is 01:40:38 It's the only way you can vote. What's the record is there of fraud and corruption in these things? Well, you're right that there are some states, including Oregon, Washington, Utah, and lots of where mail-in-balloting is the primary way that voting is conducted. There are lots of states like California, where I am, where many people vote by bail. And there are some states where mail-in-balloting is not all that common. It did increase during COVID because people didn't want to go to polling places. What we do know is that the president in 2020 in the midst of the COVID pandemic when he was running against Joe Biden, railed against mail-in-balloting, said that it was fraudulent. There were tons of investigations.
Starting point is 01:41:20 There were 60-plus lawsuits challenging the election on fraud grounds, and there was no evidence of any fraud related to mail-in ballots that could have affected the election anywhere in the United States. I have to... Notice the way he put down. No evidence? No evidence? No evidence of any fraud that could have affected the election.
Starting point is 01:41:42 Oh, yeah. That's the standard... Which means it was fraud. I have to rescind my previous comment. The full text of Article 1, Section 4, The Times, places, a manner of holding elections for senators and representatives shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature thereof. But, big butt, the Congress may at any time by law make or alter such regulations
Starting point is 01:42:08 except as to the places of choosing senators. And choosing is spelled C-H-U-S-I-N-E. Gee, choosing, choosing. So I guess Congress can change that. Well, and if that's true, why don't they do it? Because it behooves no one. We can't do our shenanigans if we can't do it because there's exactly shenanigans. On all sides.
Starting point is 01:42:34 And there's studies that were done in the 60s and 70s about mail and ballots, which were discussed a bit back in 2020, but then they were, nobody wants to talk about. it anymore. And these were done by Democrats showing that mail-in ballots was very easily corrupt, a corruptible system that you do the ballot harvesting and you, you know, people just get it, if you can get the blank ballots, you can put anyone's name on them. No one does any checking to any extreme. No. The whole thing is, it is a scam. Yeah. And that's why they don't want to change. In Oregon, Washington, two of the most Democrat-run states completely captured
Starting point is 01:43:11 by the party? Well, let me, allow me to ask you this question. Why in three clips, because we have a third, of PBS, did no one do what we just did? Read the actual piece of the Constitution where, I mean, even I can understand this language. Congress may at any time by law, make, or alter such regulations. Well, I mean, not by executive order, for sure.
Starting point is 01:43:39 But why don't they just read that? and tell us why this because they don't want they want they want to they have a perspective that they why don't they have a guy on for example along with this character who has maybe a different opinion about this then what good would this be for the show it would be useless they have they have something that you can stop with that bit well who's who's propagating the bit you can you can You can stop with that bit anytime you want. There are sometimes small locales where there is election fraud and it sometimes does occur with mail-in ballots, but not on the kind of scale that the president is talking about. And in his social media post, he talked about getting rid of voting machines as well.
Starting point is 01:44:26 And it's not clear what machines he's talking about. I don't know what he has in mind, not only about what powers he thinks he has, but what exactly he thinks he wants to do since Republicans in states like Arizona and Florida, rely very heavily on mail-in balloting to get out the votes of their own supporters. This morning, the Texas legislature sent Governor Abbott there, the newly drawn maps. They're trying to pick up Republican seats in the House. Do mail-in ballots favor one party over another? Well, historically, Republicans were much more likely than Democrats to use mail-in ballots in part because people who are older, richer, richer, tend to move less, and those are people who tend to use mail and balloting more. In more recent years, Democrats have achieved parity and in some
Starting point is 01:45:10 places exceeded Republican use of vote by mail, in part because Democrats realized that if they pushed early voting, they could kind of bank their votes and then they don't have to worry about as many people on election day. I would say that if the president had not been putting out all of these negative tweets and other statements about mail and balloting deriding it, you'd both Democrats and Republicans using it more and more. We do know that in 2024, an election that Donald Trump won, Republican voters expressed much more confidence in the election process and much more support for vote by mail. In 2024, the president was not really so against vote by mail. But now he's back on this and so we'll see where it goes. I don't remember that.
Starting point is 01:45:56 Yeah, I do. You do? That's true. I don't remember that. I do. Okay. You made a big fuss about it. about mail and then he saw mail and ballots were good no he said you got to do your may he didn't say they were good per se but he said we should all be doing mail and voting make sure the republicans get their votes in before the election itself i thought it was early voting not mail in but early voting he mail in was specifically mentioned i i'll take your word for it but here trump on mail in vote voting from Dada's 2020. That doesn't count. No, that's when he hated it.
Starting point is 01:46:37 No, I don't think we have any clips of it, though. Probably not, because it was not interesting. Let's play the Texas thing so we get the Texas new map on PBS, a little short clip. A redrawn Texas congressional map is on its way to Texas Governor Greg Abbott for his signature. The Texas State Senate approved the map early this morning in an 18 to 11 party line vote. Republicans designed the map. in hopes of winning five additional House seats in next year's midterm elections. Republicans have a slim majority in the House where there are now 219 Republicans,
Starting point is 01:47:12 212 Democrats, and four vacancies. Yep, well, we did that. Everything, of course, about that. That is kind of the boring thing. It's like you get a general election, like, oh, I can breathe now. And then within six months, it's all about the midterms. And then from the midterms, it'll be for the... That's all the news.
Starting point is 01:47:32 is news is all about politics voting in elections politics and war yeah that's pretty much yeah politics and war yeah that's pretty much we need more famine disease uh petchillance a pestilence that's another thing is being left out we although i think the flesh eating bacteria accounts for that we have a deal with the european union looks like we've that happened on thursday last show day it's a european union and the United States are moving from trade intentions to implementation. On Thursday, the two partners published a joint statement setting out new customs duties. The text provides for a maximum duty of 50. Did you see this clip?
Starting point is 01:48:15 Is he petting a cat? This is Euro News. They have the worst guy reading the news. This is the only guy they have read. And Euro News generally used to be pretty good. And now they have like some African guy reading their news. I don't know why. It's meant setting out new customs duties.
Starting point is 01:48:35 The text provides for a maximum duty of 15% on a large proportion of EU exposes to the US. Once again, the European Commission is defending this compromise, which has been the subject of much criticism. Let me say this clearly, the alternative, a trade war with sky high tariffs and political escalation helps no one. It hurts jobs, it hurts growth, and it damages businesses across both the EU and the U.S. We have a good deal. And this is not theoretical as nearly 5 million European jobs, including many in SMEs, would be at risk. This deal avoids that path. It's interesting how in the U.S., the general comment about tariffs is,
Starting point is 01:49:22 it's only going to hurt us, we don't need tariffs. But the Europeans are like, you know, these tariffs could really hurt. $5 million jobs. You never really know where the pain is. I'm trying to figure this. I have a clip that relates to that what you just said. Okay. Which is the something I mentioned on the show.
Starting point is 01:49:42 I'm sorry, in the newsletter. This is the, it says confused, well, it's kind of misspelled, but confused tariff, a commentary on PBS, confused tariff. And if you're expecting a package from overseas, it may be delayed because of confusion of your President Trump's decision to stop exempting small value imports from tariffs. European postal services like UK's Royal Mail and D.HL are suspending shipments until they get more information and clarity about the rule. With the exemption gone, all imports will be subject to the tariff that's imposed on the country of origin.
Starting point is 01:50:18 U.S. Customs and Border Patrol says that last year, more than a million packages with goods worth $65 billion were sent under the exempt. Before we discuss, I have the Euro News version of this confusion. Several European countries will be halting their postal services to the U.S. After Donald Trump scrapped a tax exemption on low import goods worth less than $800 or $6808 last month, the White House said it is aiming to combat illegal and abusive practices, such as the importation of illegal drugs into the United States. Letters and small parcels under $100.
Starting point is 01:50:56 or 85 euro will not be affected. The UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Holland will temporarily suspend services as of next week. While Belgium already stopped shipping packages to the US on Friday, Trump's announcement comes after the US and the European Union agreed on a new trade deal ending months of uncertainty. So they kind of explained it, but all the headlines like, oh, they're stopping all services to America. no one really goes into the de minimis conversation, which I know you know about. What? What part of it? Oh, well, that the de minimis exemption has been deleted.
Starting point is 01:51:40 It went away mainly from China. It didn't, it wasn't deleted. It was lowered. Yeah, lower to $100, from $800 to $100. Yeah, so I'm getting nothing but 10 emails a day from T. Timu and Sheen saying, come on, buy this because if you look at their stuff, it's all five, six, ten bucks.
Starting point is 01:52:00 Right. I think most of the stuff that was brought in, they just figure, okay, so I buy a $10 sweater from Timu or some whatever, a piece of junk, by the way. The stuff never fits right. It says one thing. It's made with another. It's junk, junk.
Starting point is 01:52:17 But I buy a $10 piece of junk, and then I buy another $10 piece of junk, and then another, then I buy up to $700 with the, or let's say $1,000 with the junk, $10 at a time and 10, you know, to 100 different parcels, and it still comes through. The joke of this is that if you send something, prior to all of this, if you send something to the European Union, like, I don't know, a ring, or in the case of Currie and the Keeper, a couple of glasses, we've had people wind up paying 50 euros import tax on something as small as that.
Starting point is 01:52:55 Yeah, that's the big joke. They know exactly what it is because they have those regulations themselves. I think it's good. What are you ordering this, Tim? Nobody should be paying 50 bucks for two glasses. No, I, no. My point is, it's good that we're doing this. Screw those guys.
Starting point is 01:53:11 Yeah, no, I agree with that. 65 billion. But the other thing is the thing that is baffling to me is that what you just described is the way it always worked here. When some package came in with a custom sticker on it, you paid the duty yourself at the post office. Let's find out what Democrat Chinese kiss-ass president or Congress did this. When did the U.S. de minimis tax of $800 go into a fee?
Starting point is 01:53:47 Okay, let's see. You want you ask your executive this? March, oh, this is interesting. No. It was part of the trade facilitation and trade enforcement act of 2015. Hello, who was the president in 2015? Obama? Yes.
Starting point is 01:54:13 That's right. And so prior to the TFTE, the de minimis... I wonder if he has shares in TEMU. The de minimis threshold was $200. The increase to $800 allowed goods valued at or below this amount to enter the U.S. duty-free. So that was his parting, you know, parting, well, I'm sure it wasn't just Obama, obviously. It was Congress. Well, there you go.
Starting point is 01:54:44 So that was, that was great. Oh, man, I'm going to, I'm going to look into that. I'm going to see who, who, who, someone was on the take for that, for that, for that. You think? Yeah. Someone was on the take. What? Don't, let's see, let's see who the sponsor was.
Starting point is 01:55:04 The sponsor was, um, that should be in the, in the law. It should be one Democrat and one Republican. And if Lindsey Graham's name shows up, I won't be surprised. Let me see who it was. Or Swalwell. It was a sponsor. Patrick Taberi from Ohio. Republican.
Starting point is 01:55:34 There you go. There you go. Republican. Doesn't that? I'm sure he got. Doesn't that make sense? Comfortably. Additional sponsors, Mr. Brady of Texas.
Starting point is 01:55:47 Ah, it was a pure Republican bill. Look at these guys. Yeah, one of your Texans, too. Dushbags. All of them. All of them were duches. Also, we struck a deal with Canada. And this was a big talker Carney who buckled.
Starting point is 01:56:09 What happened to elbows up? Huh? Elbows up. Oh, elbows down, Mr. Carney. Your critics are going to say that this is an elbow's down approach that you're backing down to Trump. What are you gaining by dropping these tariffs? Let's be clear. We have the best deal of anyone in the world right now. We have the lowest tariff rate on average, a little over 5.5% versus that 16% average for the world.
Starting point is 01:56:35 And in many cases, much higher. We have that confirmed, an executive order of the president, a few weeks. ago, it's important that we preserve that. We are matching something the Americans have done here first. And it's very significant, it's unique, we get the benefit. The second thing is
Starting point is 01:56:53 and I'll take your analogy and I have played some hockey over the years. And there is a time in a game, in a big game, and this is a big game. When you go hard in the corners, he elbows up. The time in a game we drop the gloves in the first period
Starting point is 01:57:09 and just send a message. And we've done that pretty uniquely in the world. But there's also a time in a game where you want the puck, you want to stick handle, you want to pass, you want to put the puck in the net. And we're moving later into the game. And we're at that time in the game. He did actually play ice hockey for Harvard, strangely enough. Well, that's the worst sports analogy I've ever heard in my life.
Starting point is 01:57:35 Well, that's the Canadians, man. So, anyway. I think there's all kinds of. different things, also for Europe with steel. There's still 50% tariffs on after a certain quota. So in general, I think President Trump is doing a good job for us. Now, my buddy who does small machine CDC parts, I think we talked about it. He says, you know, but yeah, I'm sure we did.
Starting point is 01:58:03 He says, you know, it's going to suck because it costs more for us. We have to use American steel for these parts and American aluminum. It's much more expensive. It'll take a few years before that price comes down. But, and I know you remember this, he said everything we ordered from China, 40% was defective. Yeah, junk. Yeah, it's just junk. So in general, I think in the long term, it'll be good.
Starting point is 01:58:27 I'd rather be here than the UK. I'll tell you that. Yes, they are in trouble. Yeah, they are. Okay. Anything else you got on your list? Because I have a couple of just short clips or I got the guy. No, no, what I think we should do is I'll play a lead-in to your, your favorite segment.
Starting point is 01:58:47 Hold on. The White House appears to have a case of FOMO when it comes to TikTok and its 170 million users. That could explain why it's just launched an official account on the Chinese-owned social media platform, less than a month before President Trump is set to ban it. A 2024 data protection law required TikTok to stop operating in January, unless its owner bite dance sold off its U.S. operations. Trump once called the spread of TikTok a national emergency and has said the app's data collection could give China access to Americans' personal information.
Starting point is 01:59:25 During his first term, he signed an executive order imposing sanctions on the app, but he went on to use TikTok extensively during last year's presidential campaign and has since extended the deadline for the sell-off several times. It's currently set to come into force on September 17th. You know, you're going to be in real trouble. No, reels is caught up and so is eating stuff. If they block TikTok? They actually have to TikTok clips aren't even TikTok anymore.
Starting point is 01:59:56 What are you even going to do if, I mean, you'll lose your one America now gig? Again, like I said, half the clips aren't even TikTok anymore and they're the same maniacs yaking into a camera. And by the way, talking about yacking into a camera, what is this? You might know the answer to this because it's been bugging me. Okay. There's a, there's a lot of these video podcasters, they're holding a little square microphone with a dead cat on it, a dead kitten. It's a little square thing and it's like a portable mic and it doesn't have wires. What, and they're holding, waving it around in this microphone. And I've seen it over and over again. And I can't, I don't know what it is who makes it, and it sounds decent.
Starting point is 02:00:40 Well, I'm glad you asked. This is from, the reason why is because they are given them free. And it is from my favorite company who has never sent me anything, even though I have spoken positively about their products. Road. Road. That's right. That's the road microphone.
Starting point is 02:00:58 Does they make this stupid looking thing? By the way, I think it's idiotic. It records on device, even. Oh, it's an on device recorder. That's interesting. Well, it's wireless and on device. It does both. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:01:11 Well, it's a little square. It looks dumb. I know, especially when they clip it on somebody. It's like a big... Oh, God, that is horrible. Big giant square. Big giant thing. It's got the dead kitten on it, too, which makes it worse.
Starting point is 02:01:22 Yeah, I know. I know. But it sounds good. Sounds good, for sure. Yeah, it does seem to sound good, but it's just like I've been seeing it over and over again. So I got three clips. Oh, okay. They're all the same, you know, ranting women that have lost their mom.
Starting point is 02:01:36 lines over one thing or another. Let's start with the with the bigoted hater girl. It's usually a swipe left too because we all know what that usually means now. I think the fact don't want to date Trump voters, men don't want to date Trump voters. Men who love Donald Trump struggle on the dating. Oh, 100%. If we see a man who says he's conservative, it is an automatic swipe left. It does not matter what he looks like. And me personally at this point, if I see a man listed as moderate as well, it's usually a swipe left too because we all know what that usually means now. I think the fact that conservative men absolutely refuse to listen to women when we try to
Starting point is 02:02:06 explain to them why we don't want to date conservative men, and then they choose to proceed to be conservative, and then immediately complain that they're confused as to why women don't want to date them, and they don't know why. It's an ironic, perfect embodiment of, like, the lack of critical thinking and self-awareness, you know, like the ability to step outside of your own experience and listen to others, that the conservative party embodies as a whole making a lot of women, like me, not want to date them. And a lot of this is trending in the news right now because the conservative party is about to launch their new dating app called The Right Stuff, in which I'm willing to bet every penny that I've ever made.
Starting point is 02:02:36 that the usership of this app is going to be about 90% men and 10% women with Lynn as the second part of their name. And I know the immediate complaint is always, y'all are so close-minded to anything which embodies a lot of irony coming from the right alone. But that's not true. One of my best friends used to be moderate. And our friendship ended for different reasons, kind of. But a lot of his close friends were conservative men.
Starting point is 02:02:55 So anytime... Oh, that's how it ends? Yeah, it's kind of gets cut off. So this is a woman to do bitches about self-awareness, and she's obviously not self-aware. She's a chatterbox, yack, yak, yak, wonders why. You know, I like the fact that most of these women self-identify. They got the nose ring or they got some other adornment.
Starting point is 02:03:18 If I recall she was no looker, because I think I've seen this clip. She was mad, like a seven, maybe. Well, I didn't rate her in one way or the other. You should. When you bring these clips, you need to give me a number. I'll give her a six. Okay. You're a six on the Dvorak scale.
Starting point is 02:03:39 So then we get the leftists. I got two clips here. Leftists that are on to promote their perspective on things. And this is a, this group is going to be leftist. They're going to be left into lurch. Well, now, I presume these are Gen Z women. Sounds like that. No, these are mostly.
Starting point is 02:03:59 Really? No, no, no. Well, maybe. It's hard to say, I think they're borderline on millennial. Hmm. But they could be the Gen Zs before they start to fall into the conservative camp. Exactly. That's what's happening. They're looking at their own generation. And these are the stragglers. These are the ones that haven't gotten the memo yet. This is not where you want to be. Well, they're definitely stragglers. And they, you know, I guess it's one way of looking at it. Okay, here we go, one. Getting crushed by capitalism is like so cringe. But it's like, it's happening to me. And, you know,
Starting point is 02:04:35 And, like, I got a Ph.D. from Berkeley and, like... Oh, we already understand the problem. A Ph.D. from Berkeley. I can't get a job to save my life. Like, I got a soil biology Ph.D. What kind of... What kind of Ph.D.? Soil biology. Soil biology? Is there a big market for soil biologists? Well, according to her, no. I mean, maybe in the corn belt.
Starting point is 02:05:04 Like, I got a soil biology PhD And like, now I'm a tutor and a babysitter and a dog sitter And like part of that is because like I don't want to like move to some random place in the middle of nowhere But like corn belt is like they cut all the funding for science and like the biotech market is just like absolutely cratered and like I have long COVID so it's difficult for me to work like a full time job and just like, I got on here to rant a little bit. But like, oh my God, like, what do we do? I just have to work. I just got to work.
Starting point is 02:05:47 Yes. She doesn't want to move to where the jobs are, though. That's the problem. She doesn't want to move to where soil biologists. Well, it turns out she got a bunch of grief for this report and she came out with a second posting. Oh, but there's a series. A follow-up. Yes.
Starting point is 02:06:03 And she comes out and admits what really is going on with her. And it brings up the ironies of today's modern age, especially in the ironies of the Democrat Party. And if you listen to this, this is her comeback. I know not many right wingers get this, but as a leftist, I really don't want a job. Like, I know that people make fun of leftists for not wanting a job, but like, I'm really one of them. I just... Come on, this is not real. this is not a sincere person who says this not this is not possible i believe it to be
Starting point is 02:06:37 it's the same woman that just went on their other rent it could be a fake but i i i'm liking it can't stand the idea of having to work and i don't understand why right wingers want to work either like they you know does she on social media does she like a lot of posts because it sure sounds like it like like like and i don't understand why right wingers want to work either like they are like slaves to their masters low key uh and they love it and they eat it up and but when someone like me says like i don't want to work in the middle of nowhere everybody's mad at me and it's it's pretty obvious that you're a little bit like cucked if you know what i mean uh by your circumstances and maybe i am too um but i'm in
Starting point is 02:07:31 to that so okay all right so so the i think the whether there's truth to this there is an element of i don't want to really work i should just be given a free ride i got i already worked i got my phd in soil science and uh it what it comes to mind is the democrat party who is likes these people. The Democrat Party used to be the party of the working class. And now all of a sudden you're a right winger if you like to work. Yeah, well, these parties flip all the time throughout history. Remember, it was the Democrats who were racist and then somehow was the Republicans who were racist.
Starting point is 02:08:21 Well, somehow they're accused of being racist, but the Democrats are still racist. This is correct. yeah well anyway those my that's my contribution to the good of society yes that's a very sad state of affairs um i i hope you had a nice strong cup of tea after watching that that's uh you must you must you must protect your own mind from the uh the virus that these people propagate on social media like like like and with that i like i like i want like i like i want to thank you very much for your courage the man who put the c in the cnc parts from china say a lot of my friend on the other end, will you? Mr. John C. DeVorey. DeVore. And Mr. Adam Curry,
Starting point is 02:09:07 tomorrow, shipwis and grapheney in the air, subs of the water, and all the dames and nights out there. Trolls, the morning to the trolls. Let me count you. There we go. Yeah, we're doing better. Yeah, I think people heard the message that the stream issues have been resolved. 21, 25. We're getting closer to our old numbers. This is good news. And we still are in the dog days of summer. School is school back in session? Is school back? Are people back at school?
Starting point is 02:09:32 Yeah. They just went back to school. Yeah. Like last week. When I was a kid, we went after Labor Day or whatever the holiday is in September. We let, it was in September. And we didn't get, and we quit, I think, before the, like 15th of June, all the way to this second week of September. It was summertime.
Starting point is 02:09:51 And their teachers were always, oh, those teachers that get a whole, look at all the time to get off. Yeah, teach, how come the teachers aren't up in arms about this? They should be. They should be very mad. It's, it's, I have no idea. Maybe they figure they get a month more, another month of checks. I don't have no, I don't know. Well, anyway, it's good to have you trolls here.
Starting point is 02:10:12 Trollroom.io, no agenda, dot stream. And of course, the modern podcast apps where you can always, always be notified that when we go live. This is the hot new thing in podcasting. It's been around for a couple of years, but it's starting to become very hot. You just wait. It's going to be hot. Yep, it's very, very hot.
Starting point is 02:10:30 Podcastapps.com. Podverse is still the number one alternative app for this show versus Apple number one, Podverse number two, podcast guru number three, zero Spotify, of course. We're not on Spotify. And people seem to not have a problem with that. I'm like, okay, it's not on Spotify. I'll just use a different app. Spotify are no good.
Starting point is 02:10:51 We don't want to be a part of that cabal. They are evil. But we are somehow on the IHeart app. Did you submit us? Are we? Yeah. Did you submit us to the IHeart app? Were we on Podbean? That's what I like.
Starting point is 02:11:07 I'll have to take a look. See if we're on Podbean. That is kind of a necessity. We have to be on Podbean to be an official podcast. Value for Value is the way we've been operating on this program. It'll be 18 years in October and episode 1800 coming up in, seven short episodes. Do you have a date yet? Do you know the date of our 1800th episode? No, I just look at the calendar. You can figure it out.
Starting point is 02:11:35 Well, that's why I ask you. I have not taken. I haven't done that yet. When I get to show 1798. Yeah, then we'll start thinking. It should be next week plus one show. Got it. Value for value means that you can, you don't have to listen to ads. Oh, man. but I was listening to radio the other day. I don't understand. Oh, it's impossible to listen to. It's all ads.
Starting point is 02:12:01 Especially if you want to listen to like me. I like country music and I listen to, you can't listen to it. Hello there, buddy. It's not quite where country music is anymore. In fact, country music is not like Merle Haggard anymore. But it's unlistenable. I mean, no wonder people just listen to a playlist. Why would you listen to music radio just in general?
Starting point is 02:12:22 It's just stop for ads. 20 minutes an hour. No. And you know what's really annoying about these ads on these radio stations? Well? They all use, they pretty much all use the same generalized clock. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 02:12:36 So the ads all hit at the same time. Yeah. So it comes to an ad segment, you change channels, add, ad, add, add, no matter, the other channel, channel, channel, channels, ads, ads, ads, ads, you can't. There's no moment of relaxation. It's all ads. When I was working at the legendary W-H-T-Z-Z-100 in New York under the guidance of Michael Scott Shannon
Starting point is 02:13:03 who invented the Z-Morning Zoo. Oh, he invented the zoo? Oh, yeah. Well, he's credited. I believe he did. I've always wondered who did that. Yeah, that was in New York. The first zoo was in New York.
Starting point is 02:13:15 No, no, I think he started it in Jacksonville, Florida. I think that's where he was first. I heard it was started in Florida. Yeah, I think it wasn't. And there's still some zoo shows in Florida. If you go down there in the morning driving around. WAPE, the big ape, everybody, good morning. Woo!
Starting point is 02:13:30 That's Rose. My daddy was a beetle. Yeah. It's always the same. You got at least two guys yakking at each other. And then there's a girl who's part of it and she makes snide comments. And then there's a sports guy. And then there's a gay guy who does entertainment news.
Starting point is 02:13:49 Correct. And there's always a wacky guy who calls up. Here's Mr. Leonard and his lime green pinto. Hi, morning, Scott. I'm here. Lime green pinto. Yes, it will be one guy who calls in and he can usually do voices. And he calls in his Clinton or he calls in his Trump or he calls.
Starting point is 02:14:09 And that guy calls 10 radio stations every morning. And he deals with every single one of them. Anyway, what Scott Shannon had, because of that clock format, and it really went to 46 past the hour. That was the big thing. You'd go 46 past the hour. Then you'd have about five, six minutes of ads. And then you wanted to come out of that block with the biggest monster hit you could play.
Starting point is 02:14:35 This is before Internet children. Well, the Internet was around, but there was no streaming. And he had four light bulbs in the studio, old school light bulbs. One was for PLJ, 955. one was for WBLS. I forget who the two others were. Maybe, I don't remember. So you would see the light bulbs come on
Starting point is 02:14:59 when the other stations went into commercials and the trick was you wanted to be out of commercials into the monster hit before those other light bulbs went off. That's how competitive it was. Well, that's interesting. You've never told that story before. No, I haven't.
Starting point is 02:15:14 Well, the more you know. That's an interesting trick. The more you know. Oh, the other trick was the radio ratings were done. Now they're, and I think they're all done by Nielsen now. But back in the day, they were done by a company called Arbitron. Right. And Arbitron, they mainly did diaries.
Starting point is 02:15:34 So they would have, you know, I don't know, the 100 or 1,000 families. And you would keep a diary of what you listen to throughout the day. So whenever the Arbitron diaries went out, Scott Shannon would do a promote. motion with these cheap wristwatches called Armitron. And so it would be like, Ibigolo 100, you'll win an Armitron watch. The idea was people were thinking Arbitron, Arbitron, and so they would remember Z-100,
Starting point is 02:16:03 they would associate it with Arbitron whenever they had to fill out the diary. It's a scam, I tell you. Wow. That's all scams. That is admirable marketing. Scott Shannon, man. The guy's a genius. Yeah, well, that's why he was going to make good.
Starting point is 02:16:18 Good money, too. Now, unlike Scott Shannon, we just ask people to support us with your hard-earned cash. We don't want to have to think about tricks like that. Can you imagine? Downloads, everybody. Subscribe using the Apple podcast app so it auto downloads, and we can trick our advertisers to thinking that we had more people listening that is true. So, no, instead of that, we just asked you to send us whatever you think the show was worth to you.
Starting point is 02:16:41 If you get something out, if you learned something, maybe there was something that you heard and was a good investment tip. You stayed alive. I mean, that has also happened here. Or maybe you just wanted to sound a little bit smarter than the rest of the NPC drones at work around the water cooler. Now, you can do that with your time, your talent, or your treasure. We love many different ways of time and talent, including the artwork that people used to make by hand, slaving over it, hours while listening to the show. Now it's just prompt jockeys. But, okay, you still got to have a good idea.
Starting point is 02:17:16 So we do appreciate that. there's more than ever. Anybody can participate at no agenda art generator.com. And we want to thank a digital 2112 man who brought us the artwork for episode 1792, the snappy title of Maloney in the middle, which I kind of did like. And this was a very happy piece of art. Back to school. No agenda backs to school, vaccination, a happy little school kid, just smiling as the
Starting point is 02:17:47 nurse, jabs a needle into the kid's arm. It's a very, very happy moment. We thought it was not ghoulish enough to be vetoed, but yet, well, you didn't like it at first. No, I still, this is not my favorite, but, you know, there wasn't much else. I mean, what, what did I like? I liked the plumber butt, but no, we're not going to do that. There's something else.
Starting point is 02:18:11 Oh, you like to get, you like the corn, saluting corn. Yeah, and it's, yes, corn. Cornscription didn't make sense, although we talked about conscription. I said something else. It wasn't corn transcription, I don't think. But I just thought that was a cute piece of art. You didn't like it. Comic Street blogger came in with the corrected version of you're a body double.
Starting point is 02:18:32 Yeah, good luck, pal. After you failed the first time, we're not going to use it. It was too late anyway. And there was some apprentice stuff, Eloni Maloney, lots of thermosol. I kind of like the trade school guy with the toilet plunger you didn't really like that Right, you liked that one
Starting point is 02:18:55 That's the one I think you picked right off the bat Yeah, but why didn't you like it? It was a mess Yes, it was an AI mess And so just looking at what we had Yeah, I think Looking at all the pros and cons The back-to-school vaccination was
Starting point is 02:19:15 just cute and funny enough that it was that it worked then i i didn't know one threw bricks at me on the street so did you get any comments do you do you look at the your x timeline when we post the show sometimes and did you see any comments about it no okay well there you go a reasonable job digital 2112 man is all over this thing now he's just like he's just going for broke he's all he's not even listening to the show she's like oh yeah it's up there Oh, yeah. I'll prompt this one. I'll prompt this one. Thank you, Digital 2112, man, for the artwork for episode 1792. We also thank all of our treasure supporters who support us $50 and above.
Starting point is 02:20:00 We will always mention your name or whatever alias you want to use. And it's a special good deal, just like Hollywood. You'll see the credits on Hollywood movies and productions, lots of people on the credit role. But if you're an executive producer or associate executive producer, the big title up front. That's just how the world works. You may not like capitalism, but this is it. $200 or above will you get the exclusive title of executive producer for this episode will be 1793 of the Noagena show, and we'll read your note. $300 or above, you get the title of executive producer, and we will read your note as well. Dana Brunetti sent me a very
Starting point is 02:20:38 disturbing video. What was it? He said, did I complain about him? Don't. I think I did. Well, you're always complaining about him. So he sends me a video of you having a dinner and wine at a very upscale restaurant. And it was him filming it. And then he said, Devorak ate your part of the donation. So now, so just so you know, when he takes you out to dinner, he considers that a donation to the show. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:21:14 Yeah. And he had a pair, yeah, we went to his place and he was in town. So he went to a one-star restaurant, which was not close to being one-star in quality, which irked me. I'm sorry. Because I know what a one-star restaurant should be like, and this was not one-star restaurant by any. I'm talking about Michelin Stars.
Starting point is 02:21:36 So he has a pair of those glasses that takes videos. Oh, how lame is that? well he took him he didn't have them on for long he put them on the dorkiest looking things and the worst part about it is that they there's a little light that lights up it's like like i'm a dick um but is it bolt does it pulse yeah the light is flashing code morse code i'm a dick i'm a dick i'm a dick i'm a dick i'm a dick i'm recording you i'm a dick wow wow wow so he had those glasses and i i don't know even who's i didn't even ask who's brand they were but I'm sure it's Facebook. It's meta stuff.
Starting point is 02:22:16 Yeah, probably. Yeah, I'm pretty sure meta has it. So that's what he's spending his money on. Well, anyway, I told him, I replied, said, no, you're just a cheapskate. You just don't want to donate real money. I can't remember what he replied, but he had no real reply after that. You know, turns out these Hollywood guys, once you just slap them down, they got no fights.
Starting point is 02:22:38 They're Hollywood guys. Hollywood guys, yes. And you too can be like a Hollywood person and because these credits are as valid as any Hollywood credit. You can use it anywhere Hollywood credits are accepted and recognized, including imdb.com. And our first executive producer goes to Steve Miller from Alito, Texas, who's been donating frequently of late, $1,000. And he says, this combination of my Thursday donation, and today should get us two knighthoods and general, a secretary general ships,
Starting point is 02:23:09 one each from my son, Andrew Miller, and myself. West Coast IPAs, Philly cheese steaks from gyms and Basil Hadek, dark rye old fashions should be the perfect mix for our first roundtable. Okay, I've ordered it. Andrew would like to be named Sir Q-I-T-T-U-E-I-T-T-S. So, Sir, Q-U-E-I-T-S. Pronounce, Circutus. Secretary,
Starting point is 02:23:40 Circuidus. Secuidus. Sycuitous. Thank you. So it means roundabout. Circuidus. Secretary General of Parker County. And I'd like to be Surrender not, with a K,
Starting point is 02:23:55 Secretary General of broken supply chains. This is a big one. We have a big ceremony now for our Secretary General. Oh, you have it? Yeah, of course. Hey, I do production on this show, of course. I didn't know you were ready to do that one already. Well, of course.
Starting point is 02:24:11 I'm stunned. I'm taken aback. I have that. Oh, geez. What do you mean? Oh, geez. Come on, man. I got my.
Starting point is 02:24:22 Yeah, I got. And I have a music to go with that. Please also give Andrew some new house karma as he buys his first house escaping from Colorado to Texas, good man, and explores the true meaning of house poor. That's right. and a little L. Sharpton, please, just for grins. Thank you for your courage, says Steve Miller from Alito, Texas. R-E-S-P-I-C-T. You've got karma.
Starting point is 02:24:56 Now we have, Sir, Iqabod, Iqabod, Iqabod from Lake Forest Park, Washington, or as they said, they're Washington, 6666.66. And he, this is a check that came in with a, note. Crackpot Buzzkill. I have been remiss lately, so I'm playing catch up with my donations. Here's 33 for the last 200 shows. Wow.
Starting point is 02:25:20 That's a good way of doing it. That's very good. I like it. 200 shows, $3.33 a show. I can't believe I have given this kind of money to a product. I can't believe I have given this kind of money to a podcast, but you have been worth every penny over the last 11 years. that I've been listening.
Starting point is 02:25:40 It's fitting that the first episode I listened to was titled Slavery Enrollment. Wow. What episode was that? That's 11 years ago. Slavery. This donation takes me over at the baron level. Please update my title to Baron Iqabod of the Bike Path Gorbill, protector of the Seleucid Empire.
Starting point is 02:26:05 Salucid. Adam, even though you don't like it, Could you please use the Bob Dylan version of these titles are changing for the ceremony? I don't know that he doesn't like it. I didn't never say. By the way, slavery enrollment was episode 666. Oh, that's the six. I get it.
Starting point is 02:26:27 So hence the donation. Adam, the reason you don't understand many of John's references because you are not a boomer. This is not true. He is a boomer. I don't know why. I refused to believe as a kid I was led into the headbanger's ball each week by a boomer posing as some cool hip VJ. But then I'm Gen X, so meh, who cares? Lastly, I'm a huge fan of Ashland's speed.
Starting point is 02:26:54 That no agenda sticker on a race car deserves actual sponsorship. Ashton, if you're listening, send Adam an email if there's a way that Gitmo Nation can help you out of your value for, help you in value for value. you'd like to send you $500 that you can use for a plane ticket to the next race, maybe buy an extra tire, or an extra tire is what she needs, or a handful of those side-view mirrors you like to knock off rubbing elbows at 100 miles an hour with other boys and girls in the track. Good luck for the rest of the season. Jingle, F-35 Karma for Ashland at the Virginia International Raceway
Starting point is 02:27:30 this weekend, sincerely Sir Iqabod of the bike path, Gorbill. got karma ah thank you very much sir cabot count stephen is in oswego illinois 51538 it may be 500 with fees please set me up as secretary the secretary general ship of winder and the great smoky mountains could use some relationship karma as well and this comes from count there be winder i don't know maybe it is winder uh i'll pronounce it properly during your Ceremony. Count Stephen of Winder and the Great Smoky Mountains. You've got Karma.
Starting point is 02:28:15 Jeffrey Ray in Maricopa, Arizona, 51538. Jeffrey Ray, Secretary General of the Autonomous Region of Madeira, aka Digital 2112 Man. Oh, there he is. Oh, that's who this is. Mm-hmm. Is it possible to please email a PDF of of the certificate, because we got into it back and forth on this. I guess he
Starting point is 02:28:40 is, he doesn't have, he might not be the same guy. Yeah, it is. He doesn't have a wall. No, no, I don't know. We'll work it out. We always work it out. We'll take care of you, brother. $350.95 of 93 cents from Sir Scovie from Charlotte, North Carolina. Thank you. Scovy. Sir Scovy.
Starting point is 02:29:04 Jingles, Sharp, and respect. Bush, just send your cash, Klobuchar sounds pretty good. Itm, gentlemen, please accept this donation of 33.33.33 plus fees. Fellow producers, he says, I have an offer for Gitmonation for every 33.33. Donation made up to and including show 1800 on September 18th. There it is, John. September 18th, I will match the 33.33.33 donation on the following show. This offer is good for up to six donations.
Starting point is 02:29:31 It's a matching donation. I think that's the first. No, maybe not the first. Well, no, somebody else, I think, did that at a meetup. This is, I think, non-profits, nonprofits love to do this because you can say, we've got a matching donation, everybody. And he continues by saying, no agenda, no agenda is the best podcast in the universe. Let's give John and Adam another reason to know us as the best producers in the universe.
Starting point is 02:29:58 Love and Light, Sir Scovey, Duke of the Piedmont, Ph.D. ESPICT. I know a lot of people want to send blankets or water. Just send your cash. I think that sounds pretty good. Classic. Weird wizard in Valparaiso, Indiana, 350, 93. Elder Zuma here. Just turned 28. Yay. Been a lister since Adams' appearance on the JRE back in 2020.
Starting point is 02:30:33 Broke a donation. a relationship with God in part due to Adam. He's talking about his journey and have found prayer to be, or praying to be a great way to end each day. I'm debt free, which is a big deal, by the way. Have a great job I enjoy and recently purchased a house. Woo! No, he's on a roll and met the love of my life.
Starting point is 02:30:58 Holy moly. This is great. She inspires me like nothing else that ever came, I ever came close to. Sadly, it seems it is not. meant to be at this moment of our lives asking for a deduishing you've been deduished and some relationship karma thanks for keeping me relatively sane well okay relatively sane we're trying all the best weird was spelled with a why weird wizard of valparaiso indiana you've got karma
Starting point is 02:31:36 Balance, balance, balint. He's in Parkville, Maryland. It's 350.93. That's a 33.33.33 with fees. I've been listening since 2020, 21. I very much appreciated you guys and the work that you do. I made my first donation of 33.33 a few years ago. Here's a bit more value for the value that you create for us all.
Starting point is 02:31:57 Shoutouts to my wife, Anne, who makes living in the reality of the neo postmodern world so much better and funnier. And to my friend Jamie for the initial introduction to the next time. agenda. My friend Sir Jonathan of the Fan Mountain Ugnauts and James A. The Jolly Wizard and of course my friend, a collaborator of 25 plus years, John B. A.k.a. Snackmaster on Bandcamp
Starting point is 02:32:18 Escape the Mind Games. My community of immunity. You guys are all part of what makes life worth living. Oh, wow. I also want to plug out there for my dad Bart Balance book. It's titled The Giant Clam and other visions. I
Starting point is 02:32:34 had that vision one time. It's available on Amazon. He's been dealing with cancer for a number of years, and last year completed his memoir of his life and experiences. In my view, he is an extraordinary individual. His birthday is August 28th. Happy birthday and thank you, Dad, for everything from Chris.
Starting point is 02:32:52 Yeah, go get his book. This sounds like a good one. The Giant Clam and Other Visions. Sir Baron, Cometor, PhD, guest cadaver. Is there really a place called Doom? No, no. It's Guest cadaver and it's Doren, it's an Arn and Doom. No, that's...
Starting point is 02:33:11 Doran, Doran, Holland. 340, 375. ITM, Adam and John. No specific reason. Just a token of appreciation for your clarification and exposure of the M5M idiocy and for bringing it to the attention
Starting point is 02:33:29 of all the producers, douchebags, and non-donating, profiteering listeners. That's a sentence for you. There it is. Our appreciation is huge. And shrinking our amygdala is incredibly healthy for all of us. Shout out to all the no agenda producers and communities.
Starting point is 02:33:50 Limousine will be ordered to pick up Sir Baron Commodore Ph.D. Guest. Cadaver. Hoost. Hey, there's Eli the Coffee Guy from Bensonville, Illinois with 20824. 824. You know what he does. He always adds the date in there.
Starting point is 02:34:07 He says, I'll keep it short and sweet. I love that you guys called out John Bolton as a fart sniffer. Keep up the great work. For producers who want great tasting coffee, visit gigawatt Coffee Roasters.com and use code ITM 20 for 20% off your order. And whatever you do, stay caffeinated, says Eli, the coffee guy. Scott Johnson in Kissing Me, Florida, 204.77, he sent a check-in to the note.
Starting point is 02:34:35 The note says in the morning, Adam and John, I've first discovered the best podcast in the universe back when John would unabashedly plug no agenda on this week in tech. And speaking of plugs, let's talk about my photo expert export iPhone app. Effortlessly convert and export your photos to PNG or JPEG and videos to MP4 with photo export. All core features are available for free, free, free, no subscriptions, free, free, free, Unlock batch exports with a one-time in-purchase app. In-app purchase. In-app purchase.
Starting point is 02:35:10 Imagine being able to resize and export hundreds of photos at a time with just a few taps on the screen. It's free. Photo export is perfect for photographers, creators, and anyone needing fast, reliable media transfers to a variety of destinations. Look for photo export on the Apple App Store. Remember, it's free to use. Free, free, free. Also works on iPad and Mac and no subscription required. For more details, visit my website 4.7.
Starting point is 02:35:40 Okay, the number 4.77 number.com. No jingles. Blessings to all from Scott Johnson. All right, Scott. Good luck with your app, ma'am. Hey, there's Linda Lopatkin from Lakewood, Colorado, with $200. We know she wants jobs, karma. And she says, are you worried about AI?
Starting point is 02:35:58 For a resume that gets results, tells your unique story and highlights the value you bring, go to ImageMakersink.com. That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K. And work with Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and Writer of Winning resumes. Jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.
Starting point is 02:36:16 You've got karma. And last on our list is Molly Landry in Houston, Texas, 200. This donation is in honor of my husband, Toby Landry's 40th birthday. He's a regular list. of your show and frequently mentions how it keeps him sane. Nice.
Starting point is 02:36:36 He will be totally embarrassed by this, by his name being mentioned on the air. So please make sure to do so. Well, you have done so, Molly. Yeah, and he is on the list, indeed. Thank you all very much. And, of course, we'll be thanking $50 and above supporters of this episode in our second break coming up in a little bit. As always, we want to remind you that these titles are real can be used anywhere.
Starting point is 02:37:00 and, of course, we now have some secretary's general who we shall be congratulating and giving their official, what is the, I guess, ceremony, is there, is there, what do we have for a secretary general? What is it, is it? I think ceremony. Ceremony, it is. We'll be doing that. And you can always support us any amount, any reason.
Starting point is 02:37:23 Usually it's for reasons of appreciation for the value that you receive. Go to no agenda donations.com. to become a sustaining donor very easy you can set it up recurring donation any amount any frequency it's all up to you it's value for value congratulations again to these executive producers our formula is this we go out we hit people in the mouth I think that sounds pretty good Ah, federal reserve. No, maybe not.
Starting point is 02:38:08 Federal Reserve. Do you know Muhammad L. Arian? No, I don't know. He's not known. Muhammad L. Aryan. Well, Margaret Brennan had him on, and it was in response to, I guess the Friday, was it Friday, the stock market just went kabumi, cabooey. wasn't there a record close for the Dow Jones?
Starting point is 02:38:32 Yeah, and it was all based on this, all based on this. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell used Friday speech to signal the central bank is open to cutting interest rates ahead of its next decision in September. The baseline outlook and the shifting balance of risks may warrant adjusting our policy stance. Powell, whose term as chair expires next May, has faced intense pressure from President Trump to lower interest rates. He spoke today about continued economic uncertainty over the administration's immigration and tariff policies. This year, the economy has faced new challenges.
Starting point is 02:39:06 Significantly higher tariffs across our trading partners are remaking the global trading system. Tidary immigration policy has led to an abrupt slowdown in labor force growth. President Trump backed off previous threats to fire Powell, but is now targeting another Fed board member, Lisa Cook. What she did was a bad. so I'll fire her if she doesn't resign. Cook was appointed to the Fed's board of governors by former President Biden. This week, a Trump administration official accused her of mortgage fraud and called for an investigation. In a statement, Cook says she has no intention of stepping down.
Starting point is 02:39:43 I love how, you know, this monumental sentence by Powell, first, you're going to cut race. And then, of course, Trump bad, because someone else, one of her colleagues, execuse her of mortgage fraud, which sounds pretty much par for the course, I guess. So Margaret Brennan had this Muhammad Al-Aryan guy on. I guess he's a big bond dude, according to the trolls in the know. And here's what he had to say. We turn now to the U.S. economy. Muhammad Al-Alarian is the chief economic advisor at Alianz, and he joins us this morning
Starting point is 02:40:19 from Greenwich, Connecticut. Good morning to you. It's from Alianz in Connecticut. Good morning, Margaret. So we saw the Federal Reserve Chair signal on Friday that the Fed is going to, as expected, begin lowering rates very soon. But he's also cited slowing economic growth and a cooling job market. So why then did the financial markets rally? What is the with the left-tell, Margaret?
Starting point is 02:40:46 That's not needed. Because he finally pivoted to the risk that matters most for the U.S. economy right now. by construct the Fed has to deliver two things maximum employment and price stability and the Fed is looking at slightly higher inflation and a weakening labor market and what Powell finally did and many of us feel he should have done this earlier
Starting point is 02:41:09 is he said the risk to the employment side is higher than the risk to the inflation side and therefore an interest rate cut is warranted as you know many of us felt he should have cut last month It sounds like he's a Trump guy. I don't even know why she has him on. He's saying what the president has been saying for a long time. Well, the Fed chair said significantly higher tariffs are remaking the entire global trade system.
Starting point is 02:41:37 Tighter immigration policy has slowed labor growth. And there are big tax and regulation changes. You can't quite, you know, quantify at this point. But it's a lot of uncertainty. Since economists have to build off of models and data, how do you predict where we're going if basically he's saying throw out your models she's laughing again so one of the problem huh did you notice that she said she made it it was a self-contradictory statement she says that the the slower migration or no migration is creating a tighter labor market
Starting point is 02:42:14 is that what she said yes something it was just completely wrong let's listen tighter immigration has slowed labor growth. Tighter immigration policy has slowed labor growth. Is that, so and Powell is worried about labor slowdown. Is labor growth slow because of the lack of cheap labor? Does that make sense?
Starting point is 02:42:38 Cheap illegal labor. Illegal labor is ruining the country. That's what we're talking about? Yeah, I think so. So one of the problems is he hasn't looked forward enough. He's been very data dependent. and therefore he has tended to be late. Look, there is something promising in our future,
Starting point is 02:42:56 and that is productivity enhancement that comes from exciting innovation in AI, in life sciences, in robotics, and other areas. We just have to manage a challenging few months in the period ahead. And if that challenge is mishandled, we will not be able to get the opportunities that we have that offset a lot of structural headwinds, and that includes high debt and high deficits.
Starting point is 02:43:22 Uh-huh, uh-huh, what? She's like, mm-hmm, I don't know, I don't know. So what does this mean, John? This is this mean we'll be printing money again, or what does this mean? It doesn't mean anything. It's just blatherers, typical financial stuff. They just talk, talk, talk. You know, anything that benefits the markets,
Starting point is 02:43:39 the stock markets specifically is great. So there's an interesting, one of the big AI product companies that provides, I don't know if I'm allowed to say who this is. All right. I'll say it. But it's a company that is very heavily into AI and they had, they took their, they decided to eat their own dog food, which is an old term that used to be used in Silicon Valley. Did they use AI for their, uh, for their company balance sheet?
Starting point is 02:44:10 They, no, they decided to take 1,000 people that work there and have them and study their use of A.I. to see what effect it had on productivity. And it probably degraded productivity. No, it did nothing. Nothing at all? Nothing at all, one way or the other. Huh. And you got this from Buzzkill Jr.? Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, you don't have to say it. So nothing at all happened. And so the CEO is like concerned about this. It's like, what's the point? And so the more studies are expected from different companies to see what kind of, you know, if AI, because it's, oh, yeah, you've got to use AI, you can increase your productivity. And it shows, I think it does increase productivity with it, like, for example, our artists, but it doesn't mean that it's good. No, I mean, but we would, if we were a commercial operation and we were looking for commercial viable art, we would pretty much say no,
Starting point is 02:45:14 everybody, so they would have to go back and do it anyway. Well, anyway, something's amiss, and this, he says that this is why Altman came out with his commentary about, well, you know, maybe we're going too far as a bubble, blah, blah, because he doesn't want to get blamed for what, when it finally starts to appear that AI is a dud insofar as really being of use in terms of productivity. I mean, it's fun. It's very fun. It's fun.
Starting point is 02:45:45 You have fun with it more than anybody. I got lots of fun. And it's fun, but it's not productive necessarily. And it's going to be a, and he's now my son, who is an AI. He is on board with your thinking, which is the end is near. AI winter is coming. But I also. What's his timeline?
Starting point is 02:46:07 Did he give you a timeline on when he thinks it's going to happen? You know, I threw back at him his own thoughts. thoughts earlier about jumping the shark and after jumping the shark you have a period of time to two or three year period before it actually anything it was just a marker and I said when is it jumped the shark that you're going to get the marker you're always talking about and so he can't he doesn't have it's not happening tomorrow let's put it that way no it won't happen tomorrow but when it will happen when he says three years it'll happen when people actually have to pay the actual cost of this this stuff that's when it's going to happen.
Starting point is 02:46:42 And I think Open AI is starting to show those signs where $200 a month and you still get limited on chat GPT5 and, you know, it's getting pricey now. There's one other AI story that I just wanted to put on your radar because you also watch YouTube from time to time. There's a lot of YouTubers who are claiming and circumstantial evidence shows it that when they upload VIII, video to the to the YouTubes that what comes back excuse me what comes back
Starting point is 02:47:22 appears to be AI upscaled is what they're saying and what it really means is everything looks kind of AI-ish you know it's like enhanced hair looks more enhanced
Starting point is 02:47:37 it looks kind of you know how scaramangas videos look kind of slick and slimy and then glossy. Slimy, yeah. You know what I mean, right? AI has a certain look. There's a look.
Starting point is 02:47:48 There's a look. And they're all saying, they're AI upscaling, but I'm like, what I think is happening is that YouTube has had to, or Google has had to change so much of their architecture to do all this generative AI stuff that they've had to take all of their YouTube
Starting point is 02:48:05 encoding machines and make them AI generative friendly just to be able to. handle the load, and they're like, well, screw it. We'll just make everything look that way. I would have a different take. What's your take? That somebody, a bean counter, said, can we make these files smaller and look better?
Starting point is 02:48:28 Same thing. Yeah, I know, but it's for a different reason. The reason is this overhead. No, no, it's the same reason is we needed the machine, so just do it all this way. So let's shrink these things and make them look good. trunk. So the file size is smaller.
Starting point is 02:48:45 And we can just free up some space on our drives. On our drives. Hey, man, our drive's getting full here. Let's free up some space. AI, AI, all that stuff. Drive is full. Go for it. We can do it.
Starting point is 02:48:59 We can do it. Yeah. All right. I'll keep my eye on that. I haven't really caught him in the wild. I have not seen any evidence of this, but it's probably, I don't watch enough, I guess. No, neither do I. This wasn't interesting.
Starting point is 02:49:16 There's some DEI stuff. This was kind of an interesting take. This is, I believe, I'm not sure which network this is from. Well, Target CEO now plans to step down after struggling to turn around weak sales. Brian Cornell announced today that he would leave the position on February 1st after 11 years at the helm. He will be replaced by Target's chief operating officer. The change in leadership comes at the same time Target reporting. reported another quarter of sluggish results.
Starting point is 02:49:44 The company has seen flat or declining sales in eight out of the past 10 quarters. The retail giant was the target of a nationwide boycott several months ago after backtracking on its DEI initiatives. So this report leads me to believe that people are not going to target because they got rid of their back-to-school rainbow stuff. I think this is true. And I've always been on the DHM plug show
Starting point is 02:50:12 I've always condemned target for being too woke and ruining the business and the CEO has to quit and I've been saying this for years and now these guys quit it'll be interesting to see what happens although he didn't really fully quit he's been boosted to the chairman of the board and they brought in his CEO as the new
Starting point is 02:50:29 CEO so it's probably going to be the same I'm guessing but you know everybody's handled this poorly except Costco Costco is the only operation that got they avoided this this dilemma which is what we have here at target and by Costco saying we're not changing any of our DEI policies. We're going to stay the course. They don't really have any DEI policies. So they're just this bull crap. They barely have any
Starting point is 02:50:57 people working on the floor. I mean they have people but they don't have that man. Yeah, they handed out snacks. Would you like a cracker? So they did the best job of it by saying they're not changing anything. And so a bunch of these pressure groups, and there's one group in particular, a new one that just came around. I don't know if I don't have a clip of him, but a new guy who's, he's in the footsteps of Jesse Jackson and L. Sharpton's another guy's another pastor. And he's the one creating, going to create a, he's creating boycotts against Target and
Starting point is 02:51:31 the old, the old extortion scam that works. It's good. It works. It's a great gig. It's great. Well, the other DEI news was President Trump and the Smithsonian. This country cannot be woke because woke is broke, wrote U.S. President Donald Trump on his website, Truth Social Tuesday. The latest target in his administration's culture war, the Smithsonian Institution, which encompasses 21 museums, 14 education and research centers and the National Zoo, mostly located in Washington, D.C. The museums throughout Washington, but all over the country, are essentially the last remaining segment of woke. The Smithsonian is out of control, where everything discussed is how horrible our country is, how bad slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden of Ben.
Starting point is 02:52:19 Nothing about success, nothing about brightness, nothing about the future. Traditionally, the Smithsonian has operated with independence. The administration first targeted the historic educational institution in a 27 March executive order, which sought to rid it of a so-called divisive race-centered ideology. On August 12, the White House sent a letter to the institution announcing its intentions to start the process by former review. Tuesday, Trump said his lawyers would begin. We are not going to allow this to happen,
Starting point is 02:52:48 and I've instructed my attorneys to go through the museums and start the exact same process that has been done with colleges and universities, where tremendous progress has been made. This is not the first time the Trump administration has attempted to purge policies and ideas as it deems to progressive or favoring minorities. A 20 January executive order took aim at DEI
Starting point is 02:53:07 or diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in the government, universities, and across the nation. Just nine days later, the Smithsonian Institution announced it would end its office of diversity. How much money, you know, art can be anything, and I'm fine. I'm, you know, do whatever you want when it comes to art. But, you know, when it's... Well, Smithsonian's not really an art museum.
Starting point is 02:53:30 No. no um but it's but they receive over a billion dollars in federal grants yeah they're all upset i have a clip that you have to look up in the database it's from show 90 it's the smithsonian supercut and it has to do with everybody bitching and what trump wants to do with the smithsonian and this is a bunch of people uh everyone's against it because you know i have to forbid that we change to make the story a positive story i learned in history class that this is how authoritarian's operate. They take over the arts. They take over the culture. They take over the museums. Purging history and pilfery museums is pretty high up on the autocratic checklist.
Starting point is 02:54:09 I'd be worried about the Black Lives Matter exhibit. Others would say this sounds like a Stalinist purge. All of these things together, you know, harken to a lot of people to the kind of countries that, you know, Vladimir Putin would feel very comfortable. This has just kind of a Soviet feel, too, a Stalinist feel to it. Yeah. Well, all I saw was, and that was in the New York Times, they were very upset about the painting of, it was like a black trans woman as the Statue of Liberty. Yeah, there you go. I'm like, all right. Yeah. Well. A black trans woman as the Statue of Liberty.
Starting point is 02:54:56 Oh, yeah. With the torch is some. flowers and, you know, the typical kind of stuff is entertaining, but yeah. It's out of control. Yeah, it is a little bit out of control. I have a couple of clips. I got the, I want to play this clip. This is which galls me personally because I'm the one. I am the writer in the late 80s who uncovered the fact that it was Seuss Dr. Seuss, who invented Dr. Seuss, who invented the word nerd
Starting point is 02:55:30 in 1950 in a book that he wrote called If I Ran the Zoo. I think we've talked about this on the show. Yeah, yeah, we have. And now it used to be, nerd was always assumed before I wrote about this, and it got good coverage, and it changed a bunch of dictionaries,
Starting point is 02:55:46 because before I wrote about this, it was always said, well, it was a diminution of the term ne'er-do-well. Ah, yes, I remember this now. And that was nerd, but no, it wasn't it at all. It was just, this looking, this nerdy character,
Starting point is 02:56:03 this nerd character that was in the book who looked exactly like an AI guy back in the day called McCarthy. It looked just like him. So, NPR decides to do a rundown on this. Of course, I get zero credit
Starting point is 02:56:19 and they assume that this is, they leave a lot of good stuff out. Of course, I'm, You know, I don't expect to get credit from NPR for doing anything, as you never even get credit for inventing podcasting, and it's rare that you get invited anywhere. But this is a common complaint that we have, the two of us, about people, their memory, and all the rest of it. And so I found this very irritating to listen to this nerd report on NPR. What comes to mind when you think of a nerd, Steve Urkel from Family Matters, maybe? Sheldon from the Big Bang theory, well, you might be able to picture a nerd, but the history of the word itself is less clear.
Starting point is 02:56:59 For our latest Word of the Week feature, we nerd out on some etymology. Here's NPR's Joe Hernandez. Nerds. Nerds. Nerds. What is a nerd? The movie Revenge of the Nerds was released in 1984 and pitted some brainy college students against their jock tormentors.
Starting point is 02:57:17 It solidified the nerd stereotype. By that point, though, the word had been around for decades, but nobody's exactly sure where it came from. Adam Alexic is a linguist and a content creator who goes by the name the etymology nerd. I've been making videos as the etymology nerd for a while, and so it's my job to know what the etymology of nerd is. But the problem is that it's a little bit obscure. Perhaps the first known instance of nerd appearing in print was in the 1950 Dr. Seuss book, if I ran the zoo. According to the online etymology dictionary, it's a little. potentially developed from the 1940s word, nerd, an alteration of the word nut that meant a
Starting point is 02:57:55 quote, stupid or crazy person. Alexic says if Seuss actually came up with the word, it's what linguists call a nonce formation, meaning it was created for one purpose and then reused. So if Dr. Seuss did coin the word nerd, he's probably going off other words like nerd, which was around or nuts, or it just sounds like something that could be a nerd. And then he goes with it and then other people are like, yeah, that sounds like a nerd. Let's go with it. 70s and 80s, nerds were all over film and TV, and then toward the turn of the millennium, they started becoming kind of cool. Pop culture historian and author Matthew Klixstein says things like the 90s independent film movement and rock bands wearing thick-rimmed glasses.
Starting point is 02:58:35 Started making the weirdos, the misfits, the outsiders, the nerds, the geeks, cool. Okay, so what exactly, what's the credit that you want? that I'm the one who found a Dr. Seuss reference. I even talked to Seuss and his associates about it with a phone call because he was alive at the time and they were unaware of the fact that he's the one who coined the word. I want an email writing campaign. I want everybody to write NPR
Starting point is 02:59:07 and tell them that you are very disappointed in their non-accreditation of historian columnist John C. DeVorek that they did not credit him in this article and you demand, demand a correction. Yeah, and they're going to do what they do, which is ignore these anybody's notes. You're just wasting your time. I just found it annoying. I'm with you. Yeah, I'm with you.
Starting point is 02:59:39 I'm highly annoyed. you even? In fact, to this day, we still be thinking it came from someplace else until I dug it up. And it took a little work. I think we should have a new word. Let's bring back some old words. How about square? It's square, man. He's a square, man. Or how about drip? My mom used that a lot. Drip. Drip's still a good word. He's a drip. Yep, drip. We can use drip. Yeah, I would say Adam Schiff would be a drip. He's a big drip. All right. Right, one more. You get five-minute warning here.
Starting point is 03:00:14 Well, what do we got? Well, you're the one with the clips. And I have a few left. Okay, well, we got the Bush. I don't do that. Here, this is a good one. This is kind of a politically correct. They're still in Germany.
Starting point is 03:00:28 They can't get over it. So here's German. They changed the name of a street. They did. The street name in Berlin has officially. Sorry, because it's racist. The street name in Berlin has officially been changed after. after campaigners successfully argue that the original version was racist.
Starting point is 03:00:45 Morin Strasser translates as Moore Street, referring to slaves brought to Germany in the 18th century. Here's our Europe regional editor, Paul Moss. The word more was used for the people of North Africa. It was how Shakespeare described Othello. But in Germany, Moore was a derogatory term for African slaves. And the presence of a Morenstra in the middle of Berlin was long a cause for complaint.
Starting point is 03:01:09 The local council agreed to change the name, five years ago, but some locals wanted the original retained. Now, following a long political and legal battle, the name has been changed to Anton Wilhelm Amorstrasser, after the first African philosopher to teach
Starting point is 03:01:25 at a German university. Morstrasser. You know, the Dutch have a treat. Usually comes in a pack of eight, I want to say. And it's kind of marshmallow covered with chocolate on a little
Starting point is 03:01:41 cracker and it looks a bit like a mini boob. Are you familiar with this? No, I've never seen it. So you bite into it. It's nice chocolate with kind of a marshmallow-y. You know, it's not really a marshmallow, marshmallow. And when I was growing up, they were called Nechersuna, which means Negro kisses. Well, obviously that had to change throughout the years. And you know what they're called? More Copa. More heads. So that shouldn't take too long before they have to change that. Now that the Moors. I never thought of Moore as anything other than a black person from North Africa that was and they were populating different parts of Europe.
Starting point is 03:02:23 And they were called them Moors. It wasn't derogatory. It was just a comment of, it was his description. And then Shakespeare used it. But I guess in Germany it was derogatory. We don't know that. That could be bull crap. The Germans are off the race.
Starting point is 03:02:41 I'm going to show myself by donating to no agenda. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fab. Yeah, on no agenda in the morning. Well, they may be off the rails, but that doesn't matter because we have people
Starting point is 03:02:59 on the rails. Those are the people who support us. $50 and above, and still to come, we have some dynamite end-of-show mixes, John's tip of the day. And we'll be welcoming our brand-new secretary's general. After John, thanks the rest of our supporters for this episode. Yeah, and the top of the list is our buddy Dame Rita there in Sparks, Nevada. She comes in
Starting point is 03:03:20 every show now. $108.24. And she does the date, too, if you have noticed. Yes, she does. 824. We love it. Milton Mize, 10535, followed by the anonymous South African in exile. and he's in Bucharest, Romania. He's a long way from home. He's a long way from home. And this is his annual donation, he says. He needs some divorce car.
Starting point is 03:03:50 If that's a thing. I don't know. I've had some myself. So, yeah, so we'll take care of you at the end there. No problem. He says, again, calling out my fellow anonymous South African in exile on another continent, that's twice the douchebag he was last year.
Starting point is 03:04:10 I don't know who that guy is, but he should be called out by name. Yeah, really. Dame Early Turtle in Topeka, Kansas, cute little town, 103. Dame Denise in Camden, Ohio, $100.85. And she's got a note here, switcheroo for somebody, for Lee Ann Taylor. And Dame, can I be a douchebag for a daughter who, please de-docher, Leanne. You've been deduced. She's the queen of cobalt, co-balt programmers.
Starting point is 03:04:56 I'll bet she is. Well, there used to be a machine called a cobalt. Yes, of course. I think you have one. Yes, the blue cobalt machine, I sure do. In-field, $100, Daniel Fisher in Gwings. Win, Michigan 100. Kevin Sullivan and Wallingford, Connecticut, 100.
Starting point is 03:05:16 He's been listening for 10 years. Wow. He's getting married. He wants a shout out to his future, smoking hot wife, Morrell, named after the tasty mushroom. David Razorsesek in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 8-0-8. He's got a happy birthday call out. for someone who will have that later. Kevin McLaughlin,
Starting point is 03:05:42 Conquerque, North Carolina, is Archie Dugaluna, lover of America, lover of boobs and melons, 8-0-O-O-8, Nicholas Leary in Columbus, Ohio, 7272, Joshua Jones,
Starting point is 03:05:53 or Jones, I don't know, and Shannon, Illinois, J-O-E-N-S. This is 69-69 smart fart-sniffing donation.
Starting point is 03:06:02 Okay. We don't need that. But okay, Frank, Chiapida, Chia Peta, Chi, Chi, Chi, Chi, Chiapeta. Chiapeta. Asian Carpentersville, Illinois.
Starting point is 03:06:18 6502. From the Moss 6502 chip. We need more of those. Matthew Elwart in Weatherford, Texas, $60. Sir Baez Grace in Jacksonville, Florida, 5510. Sir Dave Knight, with an end, in Boise, Idaho. 5333. Fall Lane Farm in Box Springs, Georgia, 5272.
Starting point is 03:06:48 Okay. Welcomeing him. He was overboard. He's back. He's back. He was overboard. He's back. Bob Newell and Penferell.
Starting point is 03:06:59 I don't know how to pronounce that in Pennsylvania. 52. 50. Baron Henry of the Outpost Rest and West in Rancho Palos Verdez. 52, 42, and that brings us to the $50 donations and there, we just do names and locations. Oh, did I say Andrew Benz? He's in Imperial Missouri, Imperial Missouri.
Starting point is 03:07:20 You missed Forest Martin, too. Okay, then Andrew Benz is 505 also. But here's the 50s. Alexa Delgado and Aptos, California, Melissa Alvarez in Ponta Verda Beach, Vedra Beach, Florida. Brett Denton in Boise, another Boise Brandon McDaniel
Starting point is 03:07:42 in Groveland of Florida Michael Myers in Mandeville, Louisiana Sir Greg in Newport, North Carolina Dame Knight in Edmonds, Washington. And last on our list is our Baron Allen Bean in Beaverton, Oregon. I want to thank
Starting point is 03:07:59 all these people for making show 1793, a reality and a pretty good show. And of course thank you again to our executive and associate executive producers for episode 1793, and we thank everybody who came in under $50. We do not mention those for security that we will not blow out someone who wanted to be anonymous. And of course, we have our sustaining donors who, they just sign up for anything, man.
Starting point is 03:08:24 And we love it all. Value for value, only you can determine what the value is, and it can be very different for you from another person. So we appreciate the $4, the $3, the $33, we appreciate it all. Noagendidonations.com. Go there to support us. Any number is appreciated. And we love the numerology. Of course, your sustaining donations are welcome. Any amount, any frequency. Go to no agenda donations. A nice list today. David Razasek, wishes his son, Sarsaparilla. There we go. He turned 17 on the, or he turned 17 on the 20. Sir Andy and Dame Kylie, wish their beautiful son, Eddie, a happy one. He turned 16 today. Sir Tom XXV, happy birthday. Dame Rhonda turns 57 today.
Starting point is 03:09:17 Dame Denise, her daughter, Leanne Taylor, turns 40 today. And Molly Landry, her husband, Toby Landry, turns 40 on the 28th. And Chris Ballant wishes his dad Bart, a very happy birthday. August 28th, happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. Come gather round doucheback, producer and slaves Is we all thank your brothers and sisters who gave And some of them knights, some of them dames For the titles are a change
Starting point is 03:09:57 Yeah, maybe the titles are a change And by request for Sir Iqabod, who now becomes Baron Iqabod of the Bike Path Gorbil, protector of the Seleucid Empire. And I remembered for you. I do have to hand out the karma for those requested earlier. You've got karma. And now, ladies and gentlemen, for the very first time,
Starting point is 03:10:20 we are proud to present our Secretaries General who've supported the No Agenda Show in the amount of $500 and have requested to be Secretary's General, and we are very happy to hand these certificates to them. Steve Miller, Secretary General of Broken Supply Chains, Andrew Miller, Secretary General of Parker County, Sir Iqabod, Count Stephen, Secretary-Generalship of Winder and the Great Smoky Mountains, and Jeffrey Ria, Secretary General of the Autonomous Regions of Madeira. These are very special people. They shall always be addressed as the Honorable. Please welcome, brand new Secretary's General of the New Secretary. No Agenda show.
Starting point is 03:11:05 Go to noagenda rings.com to let us know where to send your secretary general certificates. Welcome to the Secretary General. What do you think? I think it's good. Well, this is very underwhelming. Well, I mean, I don't know what you want me to say. I mean, your presentations of these things is always a high standard. I take it seriously, man. Secretary General is a real title. It's important.
Starting point is 03:11:39 Well, it is. Yeah, it is. Everybody. All right. Now, now, no, it's not over. Oh, wait, before we get there. We missed a Secretary General donation from DJ Skyler Firestone. And he, I guess it's important that I say that he was here to represent the best plumbing company in the Austin area, Mango Plumbing. We offer free estimates and are here to provide you with excellent plumbing repairs
Starting point is 03:12:07 at an affordable price. Mango Plumbing. Those guys make $150,000 a year, but they will fix your pipes. No problem. Awesome. All right. Now, here's my blade. Give me your blade. We've got two knights here today.
Starting point is 03:12:23 Here you go. I got it. Perfect. There we go. Oh, I love it when we have knights and dames. I haven't had some dames in a while, But Steve Miller and Andrew Miller, both of you hop up here because, well, we saw Steve support $1,000. So that means I get to pronounce the case the as Surrender Not, Secretary General of Broken Supply Chains, and Sir Cuitous, Secretary General of Partyr County. You both are nice, so for you, we've got hookers and blow, rent boys, and chardonnay.
Starting point is 03:12:54 And we have IPAs, Philly Cheesenake from Jims and Basil Hayden, Dark Rye, old-fashions, along with our sparkling cider and escorts, Jindrail and gerbils, breast milk and pamplement, of course, the mutton and the mead. Go to noagenda rings.com. Take a look at those. Well, you're going to be there anyway
Starting point is 03:13:10 for your secretary, do we have it up yet? The Secretary General form for people to submit. Is it on noagenda rings.com? To where it will end up, yeah. Okay. I'm not sure it's up yet. It'll be up there soon.
Starting point is 03:13:25 I can't wait to see, I can't wait to see how beautiful these are going to be. go there no agenda rings.com. Let us know what ring size you gentlemen want and we'll send it off to you with some sticks of wax because they are signet rings and that enables you to seal your important correspondence in grand fashion and style. And as always, all rings are accompanied of a certificate of authenticity. No agenda meetups. Yep, no agenda meetups. Not just a place to find the first responders in an emergency. You can get connected. there that will always give you protection with these people. And you know what? Instead of just hanging out talking about the show, talk about what you can do to make your community better,
Starting point is 03:14:07 to change things, to take away the elite's power, you can do it. I'm sure the local 512, the Austin people, can do a fine job because they do a lot of cool things including the float meat. We have Sir Ducifer here with his reports. All right. This is Sir Ducifer.
Starting point is 03:14:23 We are on the San Marcos River. This is the meetup report. In the morning. This is Sir Doug. We're having a wonderful time, thanks to no agenda. All right, so it's kid-friendly, not kid-approved. This is Brendan from Local 512, saying, in the morning. Butt-up is something we say when we hit the low parts of the river. Bud up.
Starting point is 03:14:43 Three hours later. All right, this is Sir Duceifer. We're at I-Far's River Pub, and this is the second half of the meetup report. This is Ditch Walker. Great time. This is Brendan from Local 512 saying in the morning, we had a great time on the river. In the morning, this is Dame Shan Arkie. Connection is protection.
Starting point is 03:15:01 In the morning, this is Baron Sertanan. In the morning, Baron Chris in North Austin. Hello, citizens and slaves. This is Baron Scott, thanking my co-host, Rob Duceford, for taking over the float portion for me in the morning. This is Patrick Dew from Lumberton, Texas. I just want to let you know that the vibe here is quite chill. It's a little too chill for my taste.
Starting point is 03:15:25 I don't see enough people angry, enough people slamming tables. turning things over, demanding justice. All right, we had a few kids here. There's a little human resources. It was a lot of fun. All right, I'm John Zabenden, and we're at Ivar's River Pub. How are we today? You guys were good.
Starting point is 03:15:41 You guys were good, uh-huh. Light drinking, light drinking, yeah. Good barbecue food in the morning. We're about to go hit the shoots. All right, there you go. They got the server in there. Very nice. McKinney, they had their meetup.
Starting point is 03:15:54 Let's hear the report. So what was the name of this meetup? McKinney Media Macri I'm Sir Joe Sir Chris of Saxey Sir Shweddy Here's our server
Starting point is 03:16:08 You just want me to say In the morning You got it There you go In the morning In the morning And what's your name? Bianca
Starting point is 03:16:17 Bianca McSwigans Excellent Excellent All right people Getting their servers involved This is going to catch fire People Northeast Ohio Bring it on in
Starting point is 03:16:27 Hey guys, I'm at the Northeast Ohio. Sorry, it's been so long meetup. I'm going to pass the mic around. This is Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake. This is Sir Real Estate at the Northeast Ohio meetup. I'm sure my wife said something very lovely about me. In the morning, this is Sir Jobiwan. Leave Dave Smith alone. This is Audrey, in the morning. Hey, this is Nick from Medina. In the morning. This is Tracy Previd from Cleveland, Ohio. In the morning, this is Sir Christopher of Macedonia. Report. Meetup report. No agenda is still king, but Bitcoin is the prince. Need a report. We had a wonderful time. A lot of conversations. Great people. Love the people.
Starting point is 03:17:08 Everyone is great. Everyone's looking at me right now. I'm going to go into my spiel, but not for longer. A wonderful time. In the morning, this is Miss Be the Bag Lady, and Sir NMNFT is handing out Labuboos. In the morning. Tell me you don't want to be a part of something like that. You can be a part of that by going to Noa Gen and Meet Up. There's a meetup taking place as we speak in Carmel, Indiana. That is the Outback Steakhouse Beef Tallow meetup. That is Outback Steakhouse in Carmel, Indiana. Still to come in this month, the Los Angeles flight number 66 of the NOAA Gendez.
Starting point is 03:17:44 Leo Bravo hosting that on the 30th and Medford Lakes, New Jersey on the 31st. We still have Madison, Alabama, Houston, Texas, Hofdorp, Nord, Holland, the Netherlands, South Slokan, British Columbia, at Keyport, New Jersey, Oakland, California, Tilburg, Nord Brabant, the Netherlands. Again, no, that's a different Netherlands. Wow, there's so many groups. And October 11th, right here in Fredericksburg, Texas. That'll be a fun one.
Starting point is 03:18:08 I will be attending. I hope to drag the keeper along with me. No agenda meetups. This is where you get your connection. It gives you protection. You can start one yourself. If you don't have one near you, go to noagendametups.com. Always easy and always a party.
Starting point is 03:18:26 and dames You want to be where you won't be Triggered all hell's a blame You want to be where everybody feels the same It's like a party If I recall, this is where we do the end of show I so If I recall you had two you were keeping in abeyance From the last show
Starting point is 03:18:49 You have three, I see, three Yeah, I do All right, well, let's start with yours. Which one do you want? Well, let's start with the one, the new one, which is taken from it. I thought this was interesting. This is therapy. Will they save you money on therapy, do you think?
Starting point is 03:19:06 Kind of muddy. I'm a little muddy. Yeah, it is muddy. Okay, well, then we'll go to the Bance ones. All right. We have Amazing. That was amazing. Okay, not bad.
Starting point is 03:19:17 Not bad. And sleep. Do these guys ever sleep? Great show. Wow. I can beat that. I can beat that. Not with this one, though.
Starting point is 03:19:27 I think everybody loved it, all right? I think the one that beats it is this one. Donate to the best podcast in the universe. Huh? Come on. I couldn't understand it. You couldn't understand it? Something about the best podcast in your world.
Starting point is 03:19:42 What was the beginning? Donate to the best podcast in the universe. Okay, I'm in. There we go. He's not only in. He has your tip of the day. Ladies and gentlemen, stand by. Here he is, John.
Starting point is 03:19:54 C. DeVorek. Create advice for you and me. Just the tip with J.C.D. And sometimes Adam. So here's a cooking, not a cooking product, but a salad product, I think is salad. Salad products. And it is pumpkin seed oil. It's a seed oil.
Starting point is 03:20:17 It's going to kill you. It's extracted, expelor extracted. You want the good stuff since it won't kill you. But pumpkin seed oil, you can not have it if you don't want it. But I discovered it, didn't discover it. It was foisted upon me and a visit to Slovenia of all places where it's used constantly in all the salad bars and all over town. They always have a jar of this pumpkin seed oil that they put on everything. Mostly on salads.
Starting point is 03:20:45 Like there's a normal salad dressing, you add some pumpkin seed oil. And I was told there, and you can look this up, it might be true. that it prevents prostate cancer. Oh. And so I, so pumpkin seed oil, which you can get, you can usually get the good French stuff from various sources that have a, like carry a lot of different kinds of variety of oils. And you can also buy it on Amazon.
Starting point is 03:21:12 And you want to, you don't want the pumpkin seed tablets or anything like that. You want the oil so you can use it for the following recipe, which is perfect for this tomato season. We're in tomato season right now, right in the middle of the tomato season. season, take and get a ripest tomato you can and slice it, put it across the plate, and salt it with some Florida cell, and then use pretty much equal amounts of basalmic vinegar
Starting point is 03:21:38 and pumpkin seed oil, which looks like basalmic vinegar. It's a dark, this is a toasted oil, so it's a, it's a dark oil. And just the combination of basalmic vinegar and pumpkin seed oil and the salt and the tomato, absolute killer. Hey, tomato season, most people just go to the supermarket and they see tomatoes all the time. Is it tomato season for American tomatoes? Yeah, for our tomatoes. Do you recommend?
Starting point is 03:22:08 The good fresh ones, do you want to get at the farmer's market? You don't want to buy grocery store tomatoes. No, they're no good. You got that Bill Gates wax on it. Yeah. So you go to a farmer's market, everyone's got a farmer's market, especially down in the south. there's tons of them where you can get the fresh super fresh tomatoes that are you know just picked off the vine or grow some tomatoes yourself do you recommend a particular type of tomato
Starting point is 03:22:32 for the you know one of the best tomatoes that generally grows well everywhere is an ace tomato it has a good tomato flavor uh it's not an heirloom by any means but it's a good tomato and uh you know beef steaks and all the rest of them are all good they're tasty and so especially if they come out right. But this pumpkin seed oil and basalmic vinegar on a tomato right now is dynamite. There it is, ladies and gentlemen, your tip of the day. Get them all at tip of the day.net. Creative buys for you and me, just the tip with JCD.
Starting point is 03:23:11 And sometimes Adam, created by Dana Burnettie. Wow. No, I'm going to go get me an ace tomato. At the H.E.B. I'm sure they have them. Or maybe not. You never know. I do love it when you do food tips.
Starting point is 03:23:26 I think that's a good way. People love the food tips. People always love food tips. You should do a book about this stuff. Maybe a book about vinegar. It's coming. Yeah, I know it is. Stay tuned to your no-agenda stream,
Starting point is 03:23:43 noagenda.com. If you want to hang out, if you're already listening on a modern podcast app, you're in good luck. Because it's coming right up after we shut down our broadcast stream. Mere Mortals, the book reviews, World Building on Steroids, Fellowship of the Ring. It's a book review from Kairn. Kyrn and the gang there at the Mare Mortals.
Starting point is 03:24:06 You will not regret it. End of ShowNet mixes. We have Robin Breedfeld. We have Melo D. And we have Tom Starkweather. And I'm coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill country, which will soon be the location of the meetup on that, well, 11th of October. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
Starting point is 03:24:25 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain. I'm John C. DeVorek. We'll be back on Thursday with more media deconstruction just for you. Remember us at no agenda donations.com. Until then, adios, mophos, a hooey-hooie, and such. A clip of the day. Clip of the day. Clip of the day?
Starting point is 03:24:45 That's a clip of the day. Slip of the day. Clip of the day. Good one. That's a clip of the day. I'm going to give you a clip of the day. Give yourself a clip of the day for pulling this one out. Clip of the day, man.
Starting point is 03:25:00 That's a clip of the day. Give yourself clip of the day for pulling this one out. Good one. I'm going to give you a clip of the day. Clip of the day. That's a good one. Clip of the day, man. That's a clip of the day.
Starting point is 03:25:15 Clip of the day. That's a good one. I'm going to give you a clip of the day. Clip of the day. Good one. Clip of the day, man. That's a good one. Clip of the day.
Starting point is 03:25:28 That's a clip of the day. Clip of the day, man. Give yourself clip of the day for pulling this one out. I'm going to give you a clip of the day. Clip of the day. Are you hiding? If you're not hiding anything, prove that to the American people.
Starting point is 03:25:41 And if you are trying to hide something, as many of Donald Trump's MAGA supporters apparently, believe, then Congress should actually work hard to try to uncover the truth for the American people. He's dead. He's done. Epstein died from suicide. Epstein died from suicide.
Starting point is 03:26:04 Epstein didn't kill himself. Epstein died from suicide. Jeffrey Epstein conducted a conference called Confronting Gravity. I don't know who Jeffrey Epstein was, but I'll certainly bet money that he was the product of at least one, uh, were telemed intelligence. Those are ours. And it was Gates was there, all these guys. And I guess Epstein was there.
Starting point is 03:26:28 So I could have the opportunity to be Epstein and say, well, what a creep or whatever I'd say? I don't know. I'd probably wouldn't say anything. Epstein died of suicide. Epstein died of suicide. Epstein killed and took him. He's dead. He's gone.
Starting point is 03:26:42 Crime medical. Look. Look. Look. Wait. Crime medical. Look. Look. Wait.
Starting point is 03:26:48 Crom medical. Look. Look, look, wait. You'll eat us for them. Where's my ice cream? Oh, thank you. Oh, I give them a B-plus. I appreciate a bit more fire and spice.
Starting point is 03:26:59 There's an audience beyond the Senate. And that is John Bolton's politicization of the intelligence he gone on Cuba and on other issues. Why would we want some with that lack of credibility, I can't understand. Clearly, that's what John Bolton represents. He would tell in a captivating way that the public would watch the most pernicious part. part of the president's scheme. And his love of conspiracy theorists, theories. Partly him playing to their base and playing to their audience, you know, the credulous
Starting point is 03:27:32 boomer-rooad demo that. Conspiracy theorists, theories. Crammed to go. Look, look, look, wait. Crammed to go. Look, look. Wait. I think at the end of the day, it all glows down to this.
Starting point is 03:27:48 Rick, that was a good one. I needed that.

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