No Agenda - 1805 - "Hamburger Wine"
Episode Date: October 5, 2025No Agenda Episode 1805 - "Hamburger Wine" "Hamburger Wine" Executive Producers: Matthew Lohmar Sir Ghee Karl Diethrick Jackie Greene John Bigelow Janet Gilles Sir David Killian Associate Executive ...Producers: Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning resumes. Secretary-General: Matthew Lohmar Secretary General of Water Well Drillers Become a member of the 1806 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Sir David Killian > Baron David Killian of the Illinois Prairie Knights & Dames John Bigelow > Sir John of the Techny Basin Art By: Joq 10 End of Show Mixes: B Dubz - Jeffrey Crocker - B Dubz 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) 1805.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 10/05/2025 16:32:48This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 10/05/2025 16:32:48 by Freedom Controller
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Seed oils.
Adam Curry, John C. DeVorak.
It's Sunday, October 5th, 2025.
This is your award-winning Gipman Nation Media Assassination Episode 1805.
This is no agenda.
Protecting you from social alchemy.
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.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where there's no government shutdown.
I mean, everything's working.
I'm John C. DeVorek.
Crackbott and Buzzkill
In the morning
Best thing about the government shutdown
Best thing
No chemtrails
It's perfect
It's perfect here in Texas
Chemtrail free we are, I tell you
That's because it costs money
Yeah, of course it costs tons of dough
Can't have that
Yeah
No I mean we won't notice anything
For at least another week, two weeks maybe
I mean is anything really changed
except for a couple of the parks here are closed, I guess.
Oh, no.
Yeah, the national parks.
Yeah.
You have national parks?
What national park do you have?
I think that Lyndon B. Johnson Park somehow is tied to the Park Service,
the National Park Service, is not the Texas Park Service.
Linden B. Johnson?
It sounds like a scam.
Well, all of Johnson City is pretty much a scam.
I'd say Johnson City was the epicenter of scam.
during the Johnson years.
It's where Johnson had all this bag men
to go out across the country and collect.
You know, collect.
So let's talk about the shutdown for a second.
Okay.
That's a good idea.
I have, just so you know,
I have some early morning stuff
from the Sunday morning shows when you're ready.
But you get going first.
Well, I just wanted to get this out of the way.
This is the,
there's a lot of shutdown threats.
shutdown analysis.
Yes.
And then there is Kennedy's little diatribe.
I hope I have it on here.
Yes, this is the shut down items.
Oh, okay, spelled it wrong as usual.
But this is Kennedy going off on Alcacio-Cortez.
Oh, always fun.
Basically, President Trump just said,
we want you to take some stuff out of the budget that we think is wasteful.
And we did.
And that upset the Congress.
She's entitled to be upset if she wants to.
But that really upset the socialist wing of the party.
And so we took out, and here's what they want us to put back in.
We found that under President Biden, they were spending $3 million for circumcisions and vasectomies in Zambia.
We put that, took that out.
The Congresswoman says, we're going to shut down government until you put that back in.
We found $500,000 of American taxpayer money for electric buses.
in Rwanda. We found $3.6 million for pastry
cooking classes and dance focus groups for male
prostitutes in Haiti. I can you not? I'm making this up. It was
in the budget under President Biden. We took it out.
Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez
in the socialist wing, the loon wing of the Democratic Party,
says we're going to shut down government until you put it back in.
I'll just read you a few more that we took out.
$6 million for media organizations for the Palestinians, $833,000 for transgender people in Nepal, $300,000 for a pride parade in Lesotho, $822,000 for social media mentorship in Serbia.
$4.2 million. We took out the congresswoman and the socialist wing of their party says we've got to put that back in for that open government.
$4.2 million for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex people in the Western Balkans and Uganda.
I could spend the rest of the afternoon here.
We took all that out.
It upset Congresswoman Ocasio Cortez.
It upset the socialist wing of her party.
And now that wing of her party and the congresswoman are threatening all other Democrats and saying,
you've got to shut that government down until we get what we want.
Part of what they want is to add this kind of stuff back into the...
And that's what this fight is all about.
Always a good sound bite from anybody in Congress during these shutdowns.
Yeah.
It's...
I mean, this used to be more common.
I mean, Rand Paul used to be notorious for doing it.
Where is Rand Paul?
Rand Paul should be...
There's no sound bites from him.
He's like not on the scene.
Well, he's voting against the...
He's voting with the Democrats on this.
of course he's the one guy because he loves the transgender stuff like that like that like that's what
it's all about we know that that's not true that's just you know this it's fun though but those are things
that benefit i think all that stuff is probably from USAID oh for sure that's it's like i'm hearing him
again and by the way I also suspect that that four million three million to all this money that
supposedly goes to this and that
is actually going into somebody's pocket to
do something else. Oh, yeah.
But you see, you're completely wrong.
It's not about this
at all. At all.
Your buddy.
Man Hans Welker.
Isn't that your buddy? She's the hands.
Kristen, Kristen Welker?
The one with the big
giant black laborer,
Manhans. That one?
Man Hans Welker.
She knows what this is really
about. That's only a 30 second clip. We can get back to yours in a minute. And as you know,
many Democrats have looked at your move. They say the House is not in session because you don't
want to swear in this newly elected center, the congresswoman, Democratic congresswoman from
Arizona, who would be a critical vote to releasing the Epstein files. How do you respond?
It's totally sure. This has nothing to do with that. It's another red herring. The reason the
government is closed is because Chuck Schumer and 43 of his Democrat colleagues in the Senate have
decided now to vote multiple times
to keep the government closed. We need them
to turn the lights back on so that everyone
can do their work. This is all so tedious and boring. It's the
Schumer's shut down. It's
Trump shut down. Shit, shoot, shut down.
I think the Epstein shutdown is better. It's better.
And that was right off the bat. That was the top of the morning
from her. We all know. Somebody set her up with that.
Well, of course. Some writer.
Yeah. What else do you? Like she has a brain
let me put that in there that's very funny it's good if you're going to have the speaker of the house
get him with that one right away we all know this is about epstein we all know what's going on
mike johnson well here's a couple of there's a couple of npr clips just from yesterday
shut down threats npr there's a kicker in here uh uh well okay and peter stephen fowler joins us
Good morning.
Let's begin first with the threats to fire a fair.
Hey, hey.
Yeah, I have far.
Sorry, I forgot.
No, no, that's not what I'm saying.
Yeah, Scott.
Yeah.
I mean, when we have Scott Simon, you've got to warn me so we can.
I usually put SS on the in the clip title.
I just forgot.
Suffer and succotash.
I'm Scott.
Simon.
And P.R. Stephen Fowler joins us.
Good morning.
Let's begin first with the threats to fire federal workers. Has anyone actually been let go yet?
Well, so far, they're just threats. Here's White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt speaking to morning edition yesterday.
The president is meeting with the Office of Management and Budget to try to understand what agencies are essential, what agencies do not align with the administration's priorities and values.
Here's the thing to think about, though, Scott. Any of these reductions in force or RIF efforts that would come would have to be from the leaders.
of these federal agencies. President Trump can make them happen, and neither can Russ vote the head of
the Office of Management and Budget. RIF rules are pretty particular about the amount of time
and notice they have to give before they can take effect. There's also a lawsuit that's been filed
from federal workers' unions saying that the threat of firing workers, especially during a shutdown,
is illegal. This goes right back to the Doge executive order. Good luck. Yes, exactly. And so,
and by the way, the threat, supposedly, of firing is illegal.
Oh, the threat, not the actual firing, but the threat of it.
Oh, well, that's, you're paying attention to the words, as always.
That's what they said.
Yeah, you're right.
And I think that's, I think there's some, there's some, I believe there's hate speech.
It should be illegal.
They're doing, they're suing, but there hasn't been any firings, but they're suing anyway because of the threat.
It's the threat.
It's the threat. Yes.
So here's go to the, here's the kick.
Rakeem Jeffries said this in an NPR interview earlier this week.
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da. Oh, sorry.
The Trump administration has been out of control since day one.
They've been laying people off since day one.
They've been firing federal employees since day one.
And they've been violating the law since day one.
Doge's work to cancel contracts and direct agencies to slash their workforce is an extension of Trump-in-votes long-held belief that the government should be smaller and spend less on things they don't agree with.
Even as the White House has tried to circumvent the spending and budgeting power given to Congress, which Republicans have so far allowed to happen, it's worth noting that agencies have been hiring back hundreds of workers they let go earlier this year.
And Treasury data shows spending has actually increased instead of decreased.
What?
Maybe.
So we listen to all this bull crap on and oh, they're firing.
Oh, and Jeffries goes on, they're firing everybody.
We don't know what to do about it.
We're suing them.
And the government budget has gone up because they keep hiring more people.
Are you kidding me?
Well, the budget did go up.
It went up for...
Well, the budget, the ceiling went out.
But the budget...
This is ridiculous.
They have done nothing.
Trump hasn't backed it off even an inch or an iota.
Well, Doge has done nothing.
You're believing NPR now.
I mean, come on.
We know they got at least $50 billion.
That's something.
They want their money back.
What they want is all that other stuff.
You know, a trillion and a half dollars of nonsense.
Stuff we definitely don't need.
Yeah.
Yeah, I get it.
Well, I get it.
I get it.
There's two more clips than it would be.
You can go do your thing.
Yeah.
To shut down analysis one.
Okay.
Where's this from?
Oh, NPR.
Okay.
Shut down to the U.S. government.
Since Tuesday, the U.S. Senate has taken up the same votes to fund the government temporarily with continuing resolutions.
They still don't have the votes.
Is there an agreement even on the distant horizon?
Join now by NPR congressional correspondent Barbara Sprint.
Barbara, thanks for being with us.
It's so good to have Scott back on the sheen.
Hey, thank you.
The Senate yesterday failed once more to advance competing plans to extend federal funding and end the shutdown.
How are those plans different again?
Well, one is a GOP plan that has already passed the House. It would fund the government
through November 21st. And then there's a Democratic counterproposal as well. That would
fund the government through October, and it includes an extension of health care tax credits that
were boosted up during the pandemic. Those are on track to expire at the end of the year.
Now, Republicans have said they'll negotiate on that point, but only after the government is funded.
And even then, Senate Majority Leader John Thune has said it would not be a simple process.
We can't make commitments or promises on the COVID subsidies because that's not something that we can guarantee that they're the votes there to do.
There were a few Democrats who did support the Republican proposal this week.
Has there been any more movement or are the numbers tightening?
No, they are not.
It has been the same as that first vote where we saw two Democratic senators and one independent joining Republicans.
In fact, there's been so little movement on any kind of.
kind of negotiation between the two parties that the Senate isn't even expected to stay over the
weekend and do more votes. Here's soon yesterday when asked about the possibility of weekend work.
Hopefully over the weekend, they'll have a chance to think about it. Maybe some of these
conversations start to result in something to where we can start moving some votes and actually
get this thing passed. Who is this woman from NPR? I'm not familiar with her. I like her voice. I like her
voice.
I've never heard her either.
No, no.
She has a...
It's probably a weekend substitute.
Well, she has a slick, suave, smooth kind of a vocal thing going on there.
It's not your typical vocal fry.
It's an improvement.
I'm just saying it's an improvement.
Okay, well, I try to...
I'll minimize these clips.
This is your off-handed way of this thing.
They suck.
No, not at all.
Don't they also want NPR and PBS refunded?
of that big whopping 1% isn't that also part of this?
Yeah, yeah, they have to have that money back.
Well, so shouldn't NPR disclaim and say part of the demands are to bring us money.
So just so you know, you know, that it involves us.
They should have some kind of, what do you call that?
A disclaimer.
Full disclosure.
Full disclosure.
Yeah, they should.
Yeah. I've been listening to the NPR all day yesterday to get some of these clips.
Oh, my God.
Did you need to take Advil?
Yeah, I did.
But the point is, is no.
They've never said that once.
No.
No, of course not.
Of course not.
I mean, they'll do it when they do it like a story about John Deere.
They'll say something like, well, John Deere also underwrites the show.
But here we're going to talk about it.
But they didn't know.
They have not done that and they should have your right.
Let's go with the second part of this.
The impasse is essentially this.
Because the Senate needs Democrats to reach that 60 vote threshold to pass this kind of bill,
Democrats, who of course have very little power as the party in the minority, say that demanding
that there be some kind of negotiations between the two parties is appropriate. Unsurprisingly,
Republicans do not share that view. They say Democrats are holding the American people hostage
via the shutdown. Of course, in the meantime, the White House is proceeding with plans to cut programs
and spending often in areas with lots of Democratic voters. What is the argument they make here?
Well, this is very much in line with the administration's thesis when it comes to its role in cutting programs and government workers.
Items on the chopping block include some transportation projects in New York, the home state of both the House and Senate Democratic leaders.
Press Secretary Caroline Levitt told our colleague Stevenskeep yesterday that the administration views that as minority leader Chuck Schumer's fault.
They can't show up to work right now.
So that project is currently temporarily halted because of Chuck Schumer's shutdown.
So Chuck Schumer did back to himself.
He did back to his constituents in New York.
And how do Democrats respond?
Well, Democrats have called this an intimidation tactic.
They blasted a plan from the White House's budget arm to fire federal workers instead of temporarily furlowing them, which is usually what happens in a shutdown.
Independent Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont said he thinks that plan will backfire.
And the idea that you have a president who says, hey, your state voted against me.
We're going to cut funding for you.
That is not only illegal,
not only outrageous, it is unconstitutional.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
These people are old and decrepit, and I'm tired of them.
And it's fine if you say that about me in 20 years,
but right now I'm tired of them.
And you know what they should do?
So the Democrats, they need something to save face.
Here's what I would do.
If I was the president, I would say,
okay, we'll give you your circumcisions in Albania back.
We'll give you your LGBTQ pride parade in Morocco, whatever it is.
We'll give you all that back.
Are you happy now?
Is that really what it's all about?
Is that what you want?
Give them something.
They need something.
I'm sure that the climate change stuff is what he's thinking of giving back or something like that.
That's the art of the deal.
The art of the deal.
He has to give up something sometime.
Or really just keep it going for a.
a month.
I think they should keep it going forever.
Well,
shut down that Lyndon Johnson Park.
By the way,
you can still just get in.
It's not like,
it's not like you just go in.
It's not like you can't walk
into the park.
Yeah,
a friend of ours and her friends
that were all camping out here
and they came by last night
yesterday afternoon.
And I said, well,
was the park shut down?
Yeah, we had the code
because we booked it before the shutdown.
So we just had the code and went right in.
The code.
I got a gate code.
Well, our ATC producers and our CBP producers.
How about, wait a minute.
I'm thinking, why doesn't some entrepreneurial type, you know, have the gate code and go stand there at the thing and collect money?
Take money.
Put on a uniform.
Yeah, I put up a hard hat and the orange vest.
And a clipboard.
And a clipboard.
The clipboard.
Yep.
Yep, you're on the list. I see it. Yep, you're on the list.
Hey, we should do no agenda meetups in these parks now.
Yeah. There's all kinds of good ideas.
Well, while this is going on, the president has an interview scheduled to air tonight.
He's chosen this time. He's chosen a different network.
Typically, it goes for one of the big three.
Now he's chosen O-A-N for his big interview, which I think is an interesting move,
the home of Matt Gates, although it's not Matt.
Gates to do the interview, and he's got some promises. We also might make a distribution to the
people, almost like a dividend to the people of America. How much are you thinking for that, sir?
Well, we're thinking maybe a thousand to two thousand hours. Yeah. Be great.
Inflation is completely stable. It's around target rate, and the country is ultimately taking
in unprecedented amounts of tariff revenue, more than $200 billion at this point in time, sir.
What do you believe this extra source of revenue can be put towards?
How big of a game changer is it for your administration?
Well, ultimately, you know, because we're talking about just kicking in.
They're just starting to kick in.
But ultimately, your tariffs are going to be over a trillion dollars a year, in my opinion.
We're going to do something.
We're looking at something where, number one, we're paying down debt because people have allowed the debt to go crazy.
But, you know, with growth, with the kind of growth we have now, the debt is very little relative.
are speaking. And we're going to grow our way
out of it. You grow yourself
out of that. It's not a question of paying it.
You grow yourself out.
And the numbers are so much bigger than they ever were.
The numbers we have now are bigger than
they ever were. So when you have
$36 trillion in debt
a year ago, stop.
He has this tendency when he's
bigger than ever. When he's full of it
just to repeat the phrase.
So if you back it up, he says,
the number's going to be bigger than ever.
They're going to be bigger than ever. They're going to
to be bigger than ever. You keep saying the same thing,
and they'll say it twice at least. I think
he's saying that the debt numbers are bigger than
ever, which is for sure.
You grow yourself out, and the numbers
are so much bigger than they ever were.
The numbers we have now are bigger than they ever
were. So when you have $36 trillion
in debt a year ago
or two years ago, and you have a lot less
revenue coming in, then you have 37
or 38. It's not
38 yet, but it will be.
And the numbers are so
much bigger. All of a sudden, 38, you're
under levered, whereas the 36
you were highly levered. We're not
highly levered anymore. Now, with that
being said, we'll pay back debt.
We're not highly levered anymore.
Okay.
He should say, you know, the
checks should be giant checks.
Did you know that publishers
clearinghouse went out of business?
Yeah, it's been
for a while now. A couple,
I think they went bankrupt.
Yeah. And they pulled the plug on all these
poor people that were collecting monthly benefits.
Yes, and some company bought them.
They're going to reinstate under a new name,
but the people who got screwed are not going to get any money.
You're done, yeah.
That seems like that's why you always take the cash out.
You've got to take the cash.
So I'm listening.
And if they don't give you the cash out,
you can find your various financial operations to give you callers on that.
Yeah, caller.
Get a caller.
So this is going on.
And I read on CNBC, I thought I misread the, well, I did misread the headline.
I thought it said, it said Treasury Way is minting.
I thought it was going to be a $1 trillion coin.
You know, Treasury Way is minting one trillion dollar coin
with Trump's face for U.S. 250th anniversary,
and then I realized it's a $1 coin.
I was excited.
I'm like, oh, the trillion dollar coin is back.
So.
Wait, they're going to mint a coin with Trump's head on it?
A dollar coin.
It has his head on profile.
Liberty.
In God we trust, 1776 on the other side.
I thought that was like illegal.
Or it's always assumed not, you didn't do it when the guy was alive.
It's a commemorative coin.
So you can do that.
They're all, yeah, well.
Yeah.
So, and the other side will have the iconic photo of him and the flag and fight, fight, fight, fight.
No.
Yes.
Yes.
That's corny.
It's a draft, a draft picture.
Of course it's corny.
But, you know, is a, is putting your opponent in a sombrero any less corny?
Well, no.
that's funny and it's gone out of control there's like there's at least 20 new ones out there
with different sombreros or dancing they better they better come out with the stable coin
gambit pretty quickly they got to start launching that i don't know i don't know what the plan is
but if you want to spread our debt to the rest of the world you got to get that going meanwhile
um uh senator tammy duckworth was on uh cbs face the nation with margaret
And this was actually kind of, I didn't know how annoying I thought she was.
I think, you know, because you look at her, she didn't she have, she's a veteran.
So she had think she lost a leg or did she lose two legs?
Something like that.
So, you know, you never really pay attention to her because you look at it like,
oh, man, I feel bad for her.
And thank you for your service.
But when you listen to her in audio, it's like, ugh.
So she's talking about what's going on with the.
the guardsman in Chicago.
So I have to ask you about what the president announced yesterday
in regard to federalizing 300 national guardsmen out in the state of Illinois.
We've heard this threat going back all the way to August.
The governor says these are not needed.
Do you have any idea when they'll arrive?
Well, I believe they're going to be Illinois National Guardsmen,
so they're not going to be coming from other state.
I spoke with our governor yesterday, and it looks like it's going to be about 300 Illinois
guardsmen.
She sounds a bit like Macy Hirono.
She talks a little bit faster, but she has the same kind of intonation as from Hawaii and probably just as dumb.
Who will be activated against the governor's wishes.
So there'll be homegrown Illinoisans, and they're our brothers and sisters, our neighbors.
I probably served with quite a number of them, certainly the leadership.
Probably not.
They'll be home.
We'll welcome them.
It's a misuse of the National Guard.
They're not needed in this particular role.
what President Trump really wanted to fight crime, then maybe he should stop defunding the police.
What? This is my favorite bit. So Trump is now defunding the police. This is great.
And then maybe he should stop defunding the police. He, you know, he diverted $800 million in
crime prevention efforts away from, that was appropriated away from funding for our police
officers. So, you know, they're not needed, but we're going to welcome them because they're our
brothers and sisters, and we're proud of our National Guard.
And if you look at the Chicago budget, the number one expenditure is police, which is kind
of crazy because they're not doing a great job, most people think. And most of the anarchists
in Chicago, I know a couple, they want to defund the police. They hate the Chicago police.
They hate them with a passion, which kind of reminds me back in the days, was it Mad Magazine or
cracked? I think it was cracked.
probably they always had the Chicago cops always portrayed as these horrible you know brutes was that
crack magazine am i thinking about the right the right magazine you're mad it just doesn't matter
yeah they're there's brutes but they're they're notorious and i lived in chicago when i was a kid and
then you parents my parents were from chicago and you you find out certain things like for example
on the there's a bunch of you know you always was the bribing the cops is always considered the thing you
doing it's always done the same way you keep your driver's license in a little uh cellophane pack and
there's a hundred dollar bill tucked behind the driver's license and so when you get pulled over for some
if it's usually something stupid and it's usually there's a good element of this taking place on the
route to the airport and it's the funniest thing this happened to one time i was uh a new story
something we haven't heard yet i was driving to the airport and a cop pulls me over for
doing 36 and a 35 zone or something like that.
Yeah.
You know, I was sure you were speeding.
He says, this driver's license, I showed him to the license.
He took one look.
He took a look and he flipped it over to see if there was any money or anything attached,
but then he saw it.
It said, California.
Oh, yeah.
And he figured I didn't know what the hell I was doing.
I didn't know how to bribe him.
And so he just gives me the license bag and says, move along.
Got rid of me.
No bribery.
He's not wasting his time.
Tina got pulled over the other night by,
a DPS, Department of Public Safety.
So I think the highway patrol falls under DPS,
but it wasn't highway patrol and she got pulled over.
And I know my wife.
She's a rule follower.
It's like, you were speeding.
She says, no, it wasn't.
And he's shining the light in her eyes.
It's a Friday night.
So, you know, they expect people to be drunk on the roads.
Fair enough.
He was like, yeah, you were speeding.
You don't have a front license plate.
This is a big deal in Texas.
This is this ongoing fight.
Like, we don't want it.
We don't want front license plates for some reason.
And most cars don't really have a spot for it if you buy them in Texas.
And so he gave her a warning.
It's like, how could you prove that she was speaking?
She had no proof.
Harassment.
Harassment of a pretty girl.
Of course.
So no payoffs here.
Try that.
I wonder if that'll work in Texas.
Try and pay off a cop.
I don't think that'll work.
Anyway, we continue with this lady about what's happening in Chicago.
He has surged, or the federal government has surged agents from different groups.
The FBI said yesterday they're sending folks in.
Tell me about these protests, because the images look pretty intense of what has happened.
Between people on the streets of Chicago, we're showing some of that video now around
immigration issues. As I understand yesterday, ICE authorities shot a Chicago woman in the
Brighton Park area. Secretary Nome claimed ICE fired defensive shots at this woman who was armed
who had appeared in a Border Patrol intelligence bulletin previously. She claims that federal
agents were surrounded and were threatened. What are local authorities telling you about what they
think happened here? Well, they lie, right? The Trump administration lies. We have a president
and who's a known liar.
And I'm questioning if this isn't Macy Hirono.
How can this be, I mean...
That's not Macy Hirono.
Macy Hirono, you're correct.
She talks slower and she has more of a sing-song voice.
Okay.
And she is incredibly...
And she just sounds dumb.
Is this a milieu maybe?
A milieu thing?
Well, the Hawaiian accent is very noticeable.
It's also very reminiscent of various...
American Indian tribe accents
it up talks a bit
it has it can be slow
and plotting it's a plotting
accent it's very
it can be
extremely annoying and it can it
sometimes sound stupid
they have been
bingo
they've been lying about the situation all along
and in fact
they even shot tear grenades
tear grass grenades I think
tear grass who was simply
driving by with her window open
and so we're
We're urging people. We're urging our protesters. Remain calm, peaceful protests, exercise the First Amendment rights, but video tape everything. Everybody has a phone, tape everything. So we actually have real evidence of what is happening. We know the Trump administration lies consistently. And what I am hearing is that for the large part, people are being very quiet, are being very respectful. But ICE is being very aggressive. Remember that they are zip tying children. They are raiding apartment blocks in the middle of the night separating children from their families.
police, pulling people out onto the streets naked.
They are using
with tactics in Chicago.
And this is what Trump wants to do, right?
He wants to intimidate the people of Chicago.
That's not going to happen.
And we're going to document everything and make sure, just as the judge in Portland
said, that these requirements, these orders from the Trump administration, are not
actually tied to reality.
Okay.
So I think this is really just a lead-in.
And there is a form of get comfortable with it, Chicago and Memphis and Oregon.
Get comfortable with it because we're going after crime.
And I've been doing a little bit of looking around here and there.
And I found this clip of Stephen Miller.
And it kind of fits.
Stephen Miller, the guy, the Trump administration guy?
Yeah, that guy.
He has a tick.
He's had Tourette's, by the way.
Oh, he's a brother.
His tick, I can tell you what his tick is, and people can start to look for it.
Yeah.
He has, his head will be talking to you, and then he will have an uncontrollable jerk of his entire head down about, I'd say, quarter of an inch and over to the right, always to the right, his right.
Oh, okay.
about another quarter of an inch
and he'll do it when he gets a little nervous
he'll start to do it and he can do it two times in a row
but it's it's an obvious
and having and I consider myself an expert
on this having worked with somebody for almost 20 years
but he has Tourette's.
Who would that be?
I saw that long documentary
and I kind of consider myself an expert.
You're an expert.
But I spot this stuff and if you see it,
once you see it you'll agree with me.
Yes.
Well, so there's hope for me in politics.
That can have a job in the White House.
Here's what he said.
To the Memphis Police Department, to the officers that I see sitting in front of me,
we are about to provide you with a level of support you cannot even imagine.
This isn't just a task force.
This is a all-of-government unlimited support operation.
ATF, DEA, FBI, ICE, Department of War, every resource we have.
have. And they're not going to be sitting behind a desk at a keyboard. We are sending in real
cops with guns and badges to go out with you on the street every single night making arrests.
These are people who have taken down drug trials, kingpins, the worst criminal offenders in the
United States standing with you shoulder to shoulder to shoulder. All we ask from you is to show
up at roll call every single night
with your brothers and sisters
in the federal government and to go
out and get the criminals off the street
and if you do that, I pledge
to you. We will
liberate this city from the criminal element
that has plagued it for generations.
This is not just a strategy shift.
This is an attitude
shift. We are not
going to live in an environment everywhere
where there is a street
that belongs to a criminal,
where there is a neighborhood that belongs to a
gang where there is any physical space anywhere that belongs to anyone other than the law-abiding
citizens and families of Memphis. The idea that there is a square inch of block in this city
where a citizen doesn't feel safe is unacceptable. This is Memphis. This is the United States
of America and all that bullshit is done. It's over. It's finished. There's your Tourette's right
there.
Blosset.
So this is actually part of something much bigger, I believe,
and I'm going to get to the North Sea Nexus on this one.
We heard this mentioned a while back during,
maybe one of those, I don't know,
A.G. Barbie things where they,
all of a sudden, Cash Patel started talking about Operation Summer Heat.
Do you recall that?
I think we...
No, I can't keep track of all these operations.
Well, so this op has been going on.
for the summer, and here's Cash Patel
to bring us up to speed. As I said, this
is breaking news. We've kept it quiet
for the summer. Operation Summer
Heat was a three-month surge by
the FBI with our state-local partners.
We start at the end of June, and we just wrapped
up at the end of September. And what we did
was follow one theme, crushing
violent crime, one of this administration's
key priorities. And we went into
every single field office.
We had 55 field offices, scattered
across the country. And today, we're going
to unveil the results of Operation Summer Heat.
and what law enforcement can do when you let good cops be cops.
I think a quick historical analysis is important here.
You have to recognize that there was an explosion in violent crime,
and it didn't happen in a month or six months.
It happened over the course of years due to the prior administration's laxicadaisical approach against crime.
Did he say laxicadaisical?
That's a new one.
The course of years, due to the prior administration's laxicadaisical approach against crime,
and violent criminals took advantage of that.
So the FBI, under my leadership, we came in and said, okay, violent crime's exploding.
Everybody knows that. We see that. You can't walk around these cities anymore.
People are getting shot. Kids are getting shot. Drugs are killing our youth.
We need to do what the FBI is best at and crushed violent crime.
So we targeted all the major cities in the country. You can't just walk into a city and say,
okay, there's 150 law enforcement officers here. Let's go arrest people.
You have to build a ground game of intelligence that takes months. That's what we did in Memphis.
That's what we did in Chicago. That's what we did in New Orleans.
And that's why at President Trump's direction, we went in quietly months ago into these cities to set phase zero one.
Now we're going in with the guard to complete that project.
And that's the beauty of operations like Summer Heat.
Okay. So they've been at this for a couple of months.
They've been setting it up.
And of course, this is in large part about drugs because most of the gang activity is related to.
And here are the results so far.
Summer Heat had 8,700 arrest.
In three months, Summer Heat had.
2,281 firearms ceased permanently off our streets.
Three months, fentanyl, 421 kilograms.
By the way, that's enough to kill over 50 million Americans.
50 million.
50 million.
On the low end, that's a conservative estimate.
Lethal doses off that seizure.
45,000 kilograms of cocaine.
We conducted operations that led us to 2,000 indictments and 1,400 convictions.
And the bulk of that work came from our violent crime and gang forces.
I want to highlight that because that was the,
the focus of Summer Heat.
6,500 of this casework came specifically out of that.
And here's something that's not on this chart.
Operation Summer Heat found and located almost 1,000 child victims and returned them to safety.
Sexual trafficking?
Victims of sexual trafficking, victims of home abuse, victims of rape and violent crimes
against children.
So a couple of people sent me this substack article about how Trump,
is rolling up the drug scourge once and for all.
And it was very interesting because it points directly back to the city of London and really
the Panama Papers, interestingly, about how there's $50 to $75 trillion that has been made
through drug trade.
A lot of that, of course, went to our streets.
You know, we typically, oh, Fenton will blame China.
But if you really, and we've always looked at the, you know, I think I've said many times
in the past.
if you stop the illegal drug trade, our country would collapse.
You know, it's the economy runs on drugs and probably most of the world economy runs on
illicit drugs and to some degree on legal drugs, certainly here.
We got everybody on some kind of drug.
And as I'm thinking about, we're also, we're now in season six, last season of
Downton Abbey.
And you look at, this is 1925 now, and you kind of look at these, these, the role.
extensions of the royal family, the British elite, and their, you know, their houses are
starting to crumble, they're running out of money because they never worked.
You know, how'd they get the money?
Well, they were all part of the East India Company and, of course, they had the opium wars on
China, which is their favorite way of doing it.
You know, they hooked, what was it, 40 million Chinese on opium.
They transport all the slaves to the new world.
as an aside, very prominent in the series
is the hatred for the Jews and for the Catholics.
Of course, they were Irish Catholics,
and hated the New World success,
which it's only been 100 years.
And as I've said, I don't think that has stopped
that hatred of our success.
So they continue what they're very good at
is the drug trade.
And maybe we can screw America this way.
And I got three clips here from my favorite old ladies,
Promethean Action,
who gave us a little rundown.
on the concept from the North Sea nexus.
And we start with a famous guy, Bertrand Russell.
Can you give me a little background, Bertrand Russell?
Yeah, Bertrand, Bertrand, Russell was a,
who lived to be about 100 and made the claim that he didn't like eating meat
because it was eating a corpse.
And he was, oh, I thought you meant that he'd rather eat a corpse.
Now, I understand what you're saying, yeah.
And he wrote a lot of plays and was one of the top-notch, one of the top intellectuals out of the UK.
He was considered a crem to the crem of the great thinkers.
So I could have read this, but the Promethean action ladies, they read it for us.
So here's a little excerpt from Bertrand Russell.
I just want to talk about three people today, Bertrand Russell, Aldous Huxley, and George Soros.
The three of them together described the cultural attack our nation has suffered since our elites declared the post-industrial society in 1971 and sold us out.
By the way, 1971 is an interesting year.
That's the year we got off the gold standard.
I just wanted to mention that I found that to be very coincidental.
Here is Lord Russell in 1951 in his work, the impact of science on society describing the future as you.
sought. I think the subject which will be of most importance politically is mass psychology.
Its importance has been enormously increased by the growth of modern methods of propaganda.
Of these, the most influential is what is called education. The subject will make great strides
when it is taken up by scientists under a scientific dictatorship. Sounds like Common Core and Bill Gates
to me. The social psychologist of the future will have a number of classes of schools.
children on whom they will try different methods of producing an unshakable conviction that
snow is black. Various results will soon be arrived at. First, that the influence of the home is
obstructive. Second, that not much can be done unless indoctrination begins before the age of 10. Third,
that verses set to music and repeatedly intoned are very effective. Fourth, that the opinion
in this, though, as white, must be held to show a morbid sense of exeterity.
Sounds very familiar to me when I hear all these things, you know, break up the home.
I like the song thing. I should do a little side, a little note on the side.
Yeah, please do. Please do. Which is, if you've ever visited, well, nobody does, but I was at Scott Adams' house.
And I noticed that he, he never has any, because I don't, I have, in my house, I have.
Classical Music, 24-7 Classical Music.
I have music playing in my house 24-7 classical music.
And it's for various reasons.
It's good for you.
One thing, the low notes keep varmints out.
That's for one thing, especially have a couple of 15-inch.
Wait a minute.
Hold on a second.
You'll never have problems.
The low notes keep the varmints out?
Is it bugs or just, or mice and rats?
Bugs.
Bugs.
So this is a tip of the day.
It's a good tip, by the way.
Classical music will keep bugs out of your house.
Well, if you have you, yes, but I,
I'm using some down-thrusting 15-inch woofers in the house.
Yeah, that's what you want.
It creates a subsonic sound that the bugs don't like.
And does it matter?
Can it be Vivaldi or does it have to be Wagner?
I just, we have a couple of classical streaming stations.
I just placed, you know, everything.
And also they can't hear the cries from the basement, which is kind of good.
Yeah, they're very useful.
And so, so Adams has never has any, I said, I said,
I don't, you, I don't know how it came up in the conversation, but he says, no, it's just
all, he says, you don't, you shouldn't play music because it's all propaganda. He's not talking
about classical. He's talking about pop music. People are always playing, you know, they got their
headphones on, they're all popping around. And he's of the opinion that it's all subconsciously
designed propaganda that you should not be subjecting yourself to 24-7, especially, you know,
if you're going or floating around.
And that's what I think is what
Bertrand Russell said there
in his commentary.
Well, especially the beats part.
I mean, listen, I mean, there's a whole
category of songs about
smack your bitch up and, you know,
killing each other and, you know, it's called hip-hop.
It's a lot of violence in the music.
It's called modern hip-hop.
Yes, very violent.
So, and it's definitely with beats.
Okay, so that's one.
Aldous Huxley, of course, no stranger to the show.
Aldous Huxley was part of Russell's Nest.
and British intelligence, along with the savedness, Alyssa Crowley.
He played a huge role in the 1970s counterculture, speaking to a 1961 conference sponsored
by the voice of America, Huxley said the following.
There will be, in the next generation or so, a pharmacological method of making people
love their servitude and producing dictatorship without tears, so to speak, producing a kind
of painless concentration camp for entire society.
so that the people will, in fact, have their liberties taken away from them,
but will rather enjoy it because they will be distracted from any desire to rebel by propaganda
or brainwashing, or brainwashing enhanced by pharmacological methods.
And this seems to be the final revolution.
And I'd say that's spot on.
I mean, Adderall, Ritalin, microdosing of ketamine.
I mean, all of this is going on.
And that kind of folds into Neil Postman's amusing ourselves to death,
because now I'd say the pharmacological piece is one part,
but we also have the doom scrolling is another part,
which kind of shifts the responsibility a little bit.
But I just thought, yeah, okay, that makes sense that all those Huxley would say that.
And, of course, we can't leave out the mega-brit George Soros.
George Soros's career has been sponsored.
at all times by major British financiers, including the Rothschilds and the Queen.
He has played a major public role in implementing this policy in the U.S. and Latin America,
along with the U.S. and British governments.
From 1979 forward, Soros, through his Drug Policy Institute, led campaigns for drug decriminalization
and legalization.
When you hear someone say, the war on drugs is a waste of money and an offensive.
to personal freedom. That's the manufactured belief this campaign created. In addition,
Soros, the National Endowment for Democracy and USAID, led campaigns throughout Latin America to overthrow
nationalist governments and support the drug cartels. This picture, showing the head of the New York
Stock Exchange, embracing Roll Reyes of the drug-running FARC in Colombia, speaks a thousand words.
So if I look at the second Trump administration's track record, you know, Department of Education, USAID, now going after the drugs on the street, but not just on the street.
This really hasn't gotten a lot of play because of the shutdown. It's gotten the play. And that's the drug boats from Venezuela.
Admiral, I want to ask you about, turn to Venezuela. You've seen those attacks, those U.S. strikes on boats that the president said are drug smugglers, our drug traffickers, drug cartels.
What's your take on that?
Well, we always people think of me as the NATO guy, but I spent almost four years as commander
as Southern Command.
I would have been in charge of those operations.
So as a commander, you're thinking what are we trying to do here?
I think what we're trying to do tactically is knock down drugs.
We're trying to deter drug smugglers.
We're trying to send a pretty strong signal to Maduro.
And we're sending a larger signal to Cuba and Nicaragua.
So I can see the impetus for all this.
My concern would be, if I were the commander right now,
how strong is the evidence that I'm holding in hand that can allow me to consider these people enemy combatants?
We really haven't seen much of that evidence.
I think the administration would be wise to release at least some of that so they can justify these kind of extremely aggressive military strikes.
And just quickly, if you can, the legality of this.
He says that it is armed conflict with drug cartels.
It's right on the edge.
And that is why, C, paragraph one, let's get the evidence out, not the sources and methods,
but what are we basing this on?
And then let's also capture a few of them alongside the more aggressive means because you want the intelligence.
You want to be able to interrogate.
You want to be able to hold those drug smugglers accountable.
our court system so it's right on the edge it's really interesting the amount of people who are
pushing back on this blowing up the drug smuggling boats uh you know oh well you know Trump's just
killing people willy-nilly and this can't be done and I'm like uh why you know I find it
what I find the contrast to be interesting here is because of what Obama did with his kill list
yeah one every Tuesday and he would blow these guys up all over the place in in sovereign
he wouldn't do it on the open seas he would be in a sovereign country he'd blow up a bunch of guys
and then he did which was really disgusting was the double tap yes yes exactly the minute they came back
yeah no it was when the when the when the when the as soon as they said they blow up a pack
what he said was a bunch of terrorists and you know may may not have been and he decides to blow
him up. He blows them up with the drone, with a predator drone, and he joked about it in one
of the correspondents that was about predator drones, blows them up, and then they wait, wow,
so all the ambulances and Red Crescent, whatever comes to help these people, then they
hit them again to kill those people. That seems a little more extreme, especially on the
sovereign nation, then blowing up a boat on the open waters, which they're making a big fuss.
about but let's come on let's go back and be realistic here if we're going to be critical and of
course we saw some of that in the in the videotape that Glenn Greenwald got they also showed the
video of the blowing up of the of the terrorist cells yeah and which of course was shut down
real quick that's not talked about anymore even by Glenn Greenwald that's not talked about anymore
but of course that didn't affect the actual money the the drug money that I think a lot of people
that we're unaware of are benefiting from.
So I was looking for some analysis on this,
and I found a report from Deutsche Well, we'll kick it off here.
The United States has announced that it has carried out a new strike on a boat off
the coast of Venezuela, the fourths in recent weeks.
This one comes after President Donald Trump declared that the U.S. is at war with drug cartels.
He made the designation in a notice sent to Congress on Wednesday,
which has been seen by multiple media outlets.
Now, it says, the president determined these cartels are non-state armed groups,
designated them as terrorist organizations,
and determined that their actions constitute an attack against the United States.
Last month, the U.S. said it carried out three deadly military strikes on boats in the Caribbean
in international waters near Venezuela.
It alleges that they were smuggling drugs.
The U.S. has also built up its naval.
forces in the area and dispatched 10 F-35 aircraft to Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory. It's the biggest
military deployment in the Caribbean in decades. The strikes have raised questions about whether
the U.S. military is legally entitled to kill alleged cartel members under domestic and
international law. By declaring the U.S. is involved in an armed conflict with the cartels,
the Trump administration aims to provide a legal rationale for its actions.
Well, the attacks have also increased tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela. Venezuela's left-wing authoritarian president, Nicholas Maduro, has accused Trump of a covert bid to oust him.
The Trump administration accuses Maduro of being a narco-terrorist and a drug cartel leader and is offering a $50 million bounty for his arrest.
So they bring in an expert on this. Christopher Sabatini. Listen to his resume.
Senior fellow for Latin America at Chatham House, a lecture in discipline in the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, Spooks, also on the advisory board of Harvard University's LASPAU, the Advisory Committee for Human Rights Watch America's division and of the Inter-American Foundation.
he's also an HFX fellow
with the Halifax International Security Forum.
You could not get a better guy to defend this.
You want to say something?
No.
Oh, here we go.
And to find out what exactly is going on here,
I'm joined now by Christopher Sabatini.
He's a senior fellow.
Yeah, let's find out exactly what's going on here, shall we?
Let's get our information from this guy.
For Latin America and Chatham House,
that's an international affairs think tank based in,
London. Mr. Sepertini, it's good to have you with us. President Trump says that the U.S.
is at war with drug cartels. I'm wondering, first, what's the point of this notice to Congress,
in your opinion? Well, frankly, this is an attempt to cover their argument. They're trying to
demonstrate that this is a war that legitimates, in their view, attacking civilians without due
process. Yeah, hold on. There is an interesting little milieu.
usage there that I thought was interesting.
What's that?
The term that you normally use would be legitimize, not legitimate.
Is that not just an anglophilian thing?
No, I don't think so.
There's something fishy about using that term.
Okay.
I just think it's a marker.
I would look at it as a marker.
Yeah, marker.
Yeah, marker.
Well, I don't think, I think his resume kind of already told us.
Yeah, no, he's already marked, but it's just another, you know, a marker for others.
So he's actually going to push back again.
You know, so again, Department of Education, we're getting the illegals out.
What's the USAID?
Hopefully going after the, was it for democracy, the endowment for democracy.
Yeah.
All of these things are all bad for America.
And so now we're going after the drugs on the street and the supply lines.
and Chatham House is having none of it.
Well, frankly, this is an attempt to cover their argument.
They're trying to demonstrate that this is a war that legitimates, in their view, attacking civilians without due process,
that in which they are the equivalent of combatants in a war zone.
Questions have been raised across the aisle by both Republicans and Democrats that by declaring this war on narco-terrorists,
is the term they like to use,
it is in violation of the War Powers Act.
And it is even in violation of international norms
because they're killing civilians without due process.
Right, wait.
Without them actually...
Wait, wait.
I like the way he does this.
Another good one, another good bet he just pulled,
which is a violation of...
Not in violation of international law,
mind you, which is a legitimate thing to complain about.
No, it was a violation of international norms.
Good point.
Boying, good catch.
Which is meaningless.
Yeah, my norms.
Yeah, the New World Order norms.
It's a violation of that.
We don't do that.
And then he says the war powers act.
But the way you couch it, it makes it sound like it's a violation of international law.
Right, but that's not what he said.
But also he's full of crap because the president sent his letter to Congress.
He said, this is a war.
These are terrorists.
Here's my executive order, who I've all said as a terrorist, including Antifa.
And these guys are terrorists, so I'm going after them.
So he's, I guess he has 60 days or whatever, but he's within the War Powers Act, which, of course, is super broad, but, you know, that's beside the point.
Yeah, and if they don't like it, they can, they can, they can repeal it.
They don't do that.
Narco-terrorists is the term they like to use.
It is in violation of the War Powers Act, and that it is even in violation of international norms.
Good point.
Because they're killing civilians without due process, without them actually being armed threats.
So he's trying to draw this, I think it's a very.
loose and tenuous connection between drugs and armed combatants, which, quite frankly,
a number of U.S. senators, again, on both sides of the aisle, are not quite buying.
Okay. Well, we'll pay our attention to which senators are not buying it.
Let's get a list of those guys. Yes, we'd like to know who exactly is in with the British invasion
here. So how does Maduro fit into this? You know, at the center of this U.S. war on drug cartels
is Venezuela and its president, Nicholas Maduro. Can you
tell us, what role do they play
in international drug trafficking?
They're large international drug traffickers
as a country. They're not
producers, and they're not producers at all
of fentanyl. Fentanyl, when it crosses
the board in the U.S., comes from
Mexico, oftentimes, from Chinese
precursors materials.
But in the case of Venezuela, what they are
is they are a transshipment point for cocaine
that's leaving Colombia.
But they really only, the cocaine that
leaves Venezuela, most of it's actually
bound for Europe, only about five
percent of the cocaine consumed in the United States comes across Venezuelan airspace or
maritime space. Hold on a second. This guy seems to know a lot about it. He has percentages and
everything. Like airspace. Are we going to shoot down planes now? What is this? I think that that was
highly unusual. Hey, by the way. A little bit too granular. This is not our main supply line. This is just a little
bit-y-bit. Only about 5% of the cocaine consumed in the United States comes across
Venezuelan airspace or maritime space. Most of the cocaine that enters the United States
comes from the Pacific or up through the isthmus of Central America and through Mexico.
So this is really an attempt to try to engage in another agenda that the Trump administration has,
which is to try to engage in regime change, to take out the Nicolas Maddo government.
they've named Nicolas Maduro
and a number of his...
I love how all said in Maduro
he's fucking very much
like a venous in the government
as being members of the
Cartelis de los Sol.
Which is a...
I'm here to collect my check.
...claiming as a narco-terrorist organization
and they're claiming that that gives them
the license to effectively take them out.
A little detour here for the Pentagon
releasing the video of the hit.
Tonight, the Pentagon releasing
this video of a deadly
military airstrike on what officials say, without providing evidence, without any evidence,
was a drug boat attempting to smuggle narcotics into the U.S. The massive explosion,
sending debris raining down in international waters just off the coast of Venezuela, flames
shooting from the vessel. Wow, so graphic. The U.S. says four people were killed. The president
has directed these actions, these strikes against Venezuelan drug cartels and these boats,
consistent with his responsibility to protect the United States interests abroad.
Secretary Pete Hankseth saying,
Our intelligence without a doubt confirmed that this vessel was trafficking narcotics.
The people on board were narco-terrorists.
Today's strike is the fourth known U.S. attack on suspected Venezuelan drugboats since early September.
We have proof.
What you have to do is look at the cargo that was like it spattered all over the ocean.
Big bags of cocaine and fentanyl all.
all over the place. Big massive bags. You all saw it.
And the Trump administration has now told Congress as rationale for the strikes that they
consider drug smugglers' unlawful combatants with whom we are involved in armed conflict.
But critics question the legality. Oh, the critics. Oh, the critics. We'll finish up with
this Maduro shill here. By the same token, they've also doubled a bounty on Nicolas Maduro's head
to $50 million. So if you happen to have any information to be able to turn him over,
over to U.S. authorities. You can make yourself a quick, quick $50 million. That, by the way,
is more than the U.S. placed on the head of Osama bin Laden. And it demonstrates just a general
trend across this entire rhetoric and policy, which is hyperbolic. It's unclear really
whether Carted de Los Solis actually exists as a hierarchical organized cartel, as it's
being described by the Trump administration. It's unclear what extent Nicolas Maddo. He probably
is very well aware of narcotics trafficking, flying over Venezuelan airspace and leaving
Venezuelan shores. But it's unclear whether this is truly an organized operational cartel with
him sitting at the head. But that's very much what the Trump administration wants to portray.
But again, UNODC, UN Office of Drugs and Crime, as well as independent investigators who really
questioned the logic and evidence that the Trump administration is putting forward to make these claims.
Everybody's in on this.
They're all in on the money train with this as far as I'm concerned.
And what's interesting is that we've blown up four of these boats.
It really doesn't get the same amount of play on mainstream media as the shutdown.
You know, Epstein, of course, so that's gone down a little bit, diddy, et cetera.
And online, we are obsessed with one thing and one thing only.
Here's Nick Flintess.
So who owns your mind?
Zuckerberg runs meta, which is Facebook and Instagram.
Jewish. Alphabet, which owns Google and YouTube, is run by a couple of Jews. Larry Page,
Sergey Brin, okay? So that's YouTube, Google, Facebook, Instagram. TikTok is now owned by Larry
Ellison. So that's TikTok as well. Those are your social platforms. Out of the big media
conglomerates, you got Disney, which is run by Bob Iger. You got NBC and Universal, which are
run by Jews. You have CBS, Warner Bros., Paramount Studios, now run by David Ellison. You've got the
Salem Radio Network and Brad Parscale working on behalf of Israel.
You've got Fox News, Wall Street Journal, under the Murdox, they're friends of Israel.
You've got Daily Wire, Prager University, Breitbart, all run by Jewish editors, Jewish owners.
Are you starting to get it?
This is what, this is so phenomenal.
He's on TikTok.
He's on YouTube.
He's on X.
He can say whatever he wants to say, but somehow they're controlling your mind.
He goes on about the
NBC and whoever was he listed there
owned by Jews. That's Brian L. Roberts is not a Jew.
Is he kidding?
Well, he didn't mention Elon, friend of Israel.
Yeah.
And Sergei Brin doesn't run Google.
That's Sundar.
No, he hasn't been doing it.
Actually, I take it back.
Roberts was born into a Jewish family.
Ah, there you go.
So once again, the Jews are running.
And every single day, John.
I get emails.
Are you convinced yet?
Well, you should.
You should.
People get Adam and curry.com.
It's easy to remember.
Aren't you convinced yet that the Zionists run our country?
Aren't you sure of it?
And at this point, and Nick Fuentes, I mean, I don't know where he makes his money or how he makes his money,
but that guy is some sort of an op.
And people love him.
And he got Kanye in on it.
Oh, the Jews, the Jews, the Jews are taking it all all away from me.
And you can hate Israel.
hate the government of Israel. That's fine by me. That's okay. But the danger is that we start
to all hate the Jews, just like the Brits do, which is why I think, you know, it's my thesis.
The Brits created the modern state of Israel in the first place. Send them all there.
We can blame them for everything and we'll do stuff in the Middle East and get our BP and all
of our oil and anything else we want. And by the way, America has quite a history of hating Jews.
I was watching a Dutch review, book review of Mind Kumpf, which was quite interesting.
And Hitler was a big fan of Madison Grant.
Madison Grant wrote this book called The Passing of the Great Race.
And he was the chair of the New York Zoological Society.
Zoological.
I said Zoological.
I started to say zoo, but then I said zoological.
which later, and today is now known as the Wildlife Conservation Society,
then he, you know, which is all the green agenda,
which is, you know, the whole green thing.
That's totally functional fascism.
And if you look at the European Union with Ursula,
it's basically the Nazi party dream.
But my point is to say that we get suckered into this stuff so easily.
And now it's become part of the podcast,
grift. I just have to say it because now you have to do stuff. Listen to this.
Was it podcast grift? Yes, podcast grift. I like that term.
Because you got to add in there that obviously Israel killed Charlie Kirk and Israel is to
blame for, they run our country, they run Trump, they run everything. So now if you do a podcast,
you've got to say stuff like this. I would never. This is Theo Vaughn, by the well.
I would never take my own life. I'm grateful to God for his grace in my life.
life. I love my siblings. I have so many friends and people that love me and people that I want to see
their children grow up. I'm hopeful that I get to have a wife and meet my and meet my own children
one day. Like there's a ton of things in my life that keep me alive and hopeful, right? I want to be
able to have an impact in the world. Those are just a few of them probably, you know? I mean,
so many just moments we've shared on this show that I'm like, oh, I live for those things.
I would never take my own life.
I would never take my own life.
Okay?
You hear that is real?
This is what you've got to say.
Oh, wait, it gets better.
Listen to this.
Here's Candace.
Well, Marjorie Taylor Green has been very loud about how she is against that.
She has grown increasingly vocal.
And she feels the need as she did a couple of days ago to publicly clarify that she is not suicidal.
I mean, it's ridiculous.
But we do all have to say.
if you have influence and you're speaking out against Israel,
you do have to kind of make that statement.
We do have to make that.
This is why we don't make these statements, John,
because we're covering for Israel, obviously.
We're covering for the Zionists.
So this is the new grift.
I'm not suicidal.
You know, when I talk out about Israel.
What is the benefit of taking this approach?
Because people are sucked up into hating Israel, the Zionists,
they run everything.
It's rampant.
Dude, this has been going on for years.
Yeah, I understand that.
But what is the benefit?
I still don't understand the benefits.
I mean, besides not getting hate mail to Adamatcurry.com, but, which is, you know.
Well, it's audience capture.
Everybody want, just go look at my ex time.
Oh, audience capture.
You might be right.
No, I'm completely right.
That's what it is.
Don't you see now that your donations are going down?
Alex Jones has been bleeding.
audience. Yeah, it's always, donations are going down because they're not hating on people.
What they're saying is, if you don't say Israel is running everything, and we just don't believe it, we believe, in fact, quite the opposite.
And I'm going to, I think we can prove that once again.
It's so obvious that they're not running everything.
They're not running anything.
If I have a, there's a couple of clips.
Well, I got one more clip.
We'll get to that.
So, you know, the whole point is if you don't think, if you don't think and say out loud that Israel runs America and all of our politicians,
through A-PAC, then you're going to lose money.
So it's basically either I listen to what you say and don't lose money, or I take money from
Israel.
I mean, that's really the binary bullshit.
Where's their money from Israel, by the way?
Exactly.
Has it come in yet?
So Marjorie Taylor Green.
Now, she has a good point because she is, this is her own grift.
She's playing on this in a very obvious way.
And we know this from one of the last things Charlie Kirk did.
with all the Gen Ziers, they're all saying, look, look, we, look, we want, we can't pay our rent.
We have, you know, it's a crappy situation in America, and why are we sending all this money to Israel,
which is 10 billion?
Let's say it's 50 billion.
I don't care what it is.
Why should we be doing that?
And, of course, the answer is because that's our military base in the Middle East.
Fine, people can believe me or not.
but that's literally aircraft carrier in the sand is how it was set up and what it was called in the 70s.
We played all the clips.
But if you look at the money we send elsewhere, just the military in general is a trillion dollars.
Look at the money we're sending all over the world.
We sent 10 years worth of Israel money to Ukraine.
Those flags drop pretty quickly.
So Marjor Taylor-Green is using this for votes and for popularity, which equals.
votes, and I can't blame her, but she is doing the same thing as the podcast grift.
Here she is with Matt Gates on OAN.
We got to talk about APAC attacking you, sending out fundraising emails saying that you are not
acting in the interests of our country.
Marjorie Taylor Green, your reaction to APAC's fundraising emails attacking you.
Yeah, and Matt, I'll go ahead and be straight and honest about this.
I'm absolutely furious.
And as a matter of fact, APAC needs to register as a foreign lobbyist.
because they're breaking U.S. laws by donating to members of Congress
and by taking them on a fully funded trip to Israel every single freshman member of Congress's year.
They just took them over just recently and had them meet with the Prime Minister of Israel.
But let's frame that correctly.
They take them over to meet with the secular government of nuclear-armed Israel.
Israel, who is in less than $400 billion in debt,
Israel, who has taxpayer-funded health care in college, Israel is not hurting, and they've already
proven that they are more than capable of not only defending themselves, but annihilating their
enemies to the point of genocide. And that's what's happening in Gaza. And Matt, the reason why
A-PAC is attacking me is because I dared to tell the truth. As a matter of fact, I've been saying
America first for a long time, but I'm getting to the point of saying America only. And I'll tell you
why Matt, it's because pretty much
if you're under the age of 40, you have
no hope for the future. We're $37
trillion in debt. People can't
afford to buy a house. They can't afford
rent. They can't afford insurance.
They can't afford their bills. And we
have HB1 visas stealing
all these American jobs. And I'm
sick and tired and fed up with it. But listen,
if AAPC wants to come after me
and accuse me
of betraying my American
values, APAC,
you know what? You can bring it
on. I am totally ready for this
and this is a fight that I will fight
and I will give it my all.
And I can guarantee you, you're going to lose
because America is fed
up, Matt. They're fed up
to here with funding
foreign wars, funding foreign
causes, funding foreign countries
for foreign reasons that have
nothing to do with Americans
while Americans work their ass
off every day and pay their taxes
and come home and they're
living paycheck to paycheck, and
their credit cards are matched out. I don't care anymore. I honestly don't care. So I'll burn
this bridge to the ground and I will let the flames light the way because this is a fight that
needs to happen. So she is playing into feelings that are rampant online fueled, I'm sure,
by ops like Fuentes, to blame it all. Because when you blame it on Israel, it goes right to the,
I've seen this movie before. It's happened many times in history. It winds up with Jews getting killed.
nice people everywhere in the world getting killed is just how it always winds up then but she's
pretending like it's it's is real no apac funded by the american israeli education foundation
foundation which is funded by the military industrial complex the very the very thing that
president ishenhower warned us about yeah lockheed rathion they fund it they're the ones
that are going in there and they're yeah because it's money in their pockets and they're horrible too
because there's, they're like, oh, well, do it under the guys of Israel.
Oh, you got to do it for Israel.
Play on your Christian values, blah, blah, blah.
But at the same time, you cannot deny that President Trump is now very clearly in charge of the situation with this Gaza deal.
In fact, let me just play.
I have clips too.
I got two clips and then I'll be done.
Here he is, listen to who he thanks for this deal.
I want to thank the countries that help me put this together, Qatar, Turkey, Saudi, Saudi,
Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and so many others, so many people fought so hard. This is a big day.
We'll see how it all turns out. We have to get the final word down in concrete. Very importantly,
I look forward to having the hostages come home to their parents and having some of the
hostages. Unfortunately, you know the condition they're in, come home likewise to their parents
because their parents wanted them just as much as though that young man or young woman were alive.
So I just want to let you know that this is a very special day, maybe unprecedented in many ways.
It is unprecedented.
But thank you all.
And thank you all to those great countries that helped.
We were given a tremendous amount of help.
Everybody was unified in wanting this war to end and seeing peace in the Middle East.
And we're very close to achieving that.
Thank you all.
And everybody will be treated fairly.
Doesn't sound like a very pro-Israeli speech to me,
thanking all of the Arab nations.
And now he's out openly trolling Netanyahu.
Noga, good morning.
It seems things are moving full steam ahead.
And Donald Trump is continuing to pile pressure on both sides.
He is.
He has not lost interest, Alison.
And it is interesting to observe.
so that yesterday, hours after he posted on his truth social media website,
a sort of another threat to Hamas saying, basically, get a move on,
you don't have a lot of time to release the Israeli hostages or else.
Subsequently, he posted, he made two posts that are sure to have severely irritated Prime Minister Netanyahu.
In one, interestingly, he posted.
an image of the
more than 100,000 Israelis
who gathered yesterday in Tel Aviv
who rallied to demand
and end to the war. This is
a weekly event, in smaller
numbers, a daily event, and
somehow Trump has become aware of these
things. It's the second time he posts
and it's important, you know, Netanyahu
refers to these protesters
as enemies of Israel
as draft dodgers in the worst
possible terms. So that was
an interesting thing. And shortly there,
after the President of the United States posted a map of the withdrawal lines that he proposes for this 20-point peace proposal,
and he announced unilaterally that Israel had agreed, thus removing quite a bit of Israeli leverage in the discussions that are going to start in Egypt,
the negotiations that are going to start in Egypt as of tomorrow, as of Monday.
So it is interesting to see him not lose interest and keep pressuring both sides.
basically every few hours since he announced this deal.
Sombreros are coming.
That's next.
It's obvious who's running the show here.
It's so obvious, but okay.
All right, what you got on the...
Well, let's go with these.
I have some, these are from PBS, and these are, this is Hamas.
This is the story with a bunch of analysis, but this is the opener.
It's Hamas, PBS, version one.
President Trump is sending envoy, Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner to Cairo.
weekend to try to nail down a deal with...
Oh, Kushner, another Jew trying to make money off the deal!
Sorry, I have to give color commentary.
President Trump is sending envoys Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner to Cairo this weekend
to try to nail down a deal between Hamas and Israel to free the remaining Israeli hostages.
The president hopes that would be the first step toward ending their war, which is to enter its
third year on Tuesday.
In Gaza, the skies were relatively calm.
Palestinian hospital officials say Israeli bombing has significantly subsided, though not stopped entirely.
They said at least five Palestinians had been killed.
Israeli officials say the IDF has shifted to a defensive posture in Gaza.
On social media, the president said the next steps were up to the Palestinian militant group.
Hamas must move quickly or else all bets are off.
I will not tolerate delay or any outcome where Gaza poses a threat again.
Let's get this done fast.
In Khan Yunus, displaced Palestinians said Mr. Trump's pressure should be directed elsewhere.
My message to Mr. Trump is to pressure Israel for a ceasefire.
He is feeling for us and aware of our situation.
This is enough.
Did PBS mention the post he made about the Israeli protesters, the enemies of Israel?
They have a bet.
I think their analysis is better, and it starts right with his next clip.
Aaron David Miller was a U.S. Middle East negotiator.
in Republican and Democratic administrations.
You're a former negotiated.
You hear the things that Israel is saying that Hamas is saying.
Do you get the feeling that we're on our way to a deal?
You know, usually my sense is pretty negative,
given the gaps between Israel and Hamas over the last couple of years.
But, yeah, I think we are at least on the way to the release of hostages
in exchange probably, probably for an end to Israel's comprehensive
military campaign in Gaza. Beyond that, it is really difficult to say because both the yes
but from Israel and the yes but for sure from Hamas to the president's 20 points basically
reflects still the impossibility right now of reconciling what the Israelis want for an end state
and what Hamas does. But I think, John, closer than ever,
Although in Arab-Israeli-Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, ever is a kind of a problematic idea.
Explain what the sticking points are on each side.
What in the deal is Hamas not crazy about?
What in the deal is Israel not terribly excited about?
I think both are not excited about any of it, except the president is the most excited,
because what he is going to be able to accomplish if it holds is the return of all the hostages living and dead.
and likely, as I mentioned, an end to Israel's comprehensive military campaign in Gaza.
Hamas wants to survive, and they will be looking for two commitments that I don't think this Israeli government will be willing to give.
I think the statehood part is the big carrot, which will never take place.
Yeah, well, all Trump, it just seems, if you listen to this guy, that all Trump really wants to accomplish is stop.
Yes, stop the killing.
Stop, and then, you know, let's just stop.
And so, but there's a key, but it also, as it will be revealed in the next couple of clips,
there is, Trump does have a lot more leverage over Netanyahu than people know about.
Withdraw all Israeli forces from Gaza and a formal end to the war where the Israelis will not continue to exercise the right to preempt or prevent if Hamas resurges.
As far as Mr. Netanyahu is concerned, he wanted, quote-unquote, total victory as he has maintained these many months, which would have meant the end of Hamas as an organized military organization.
I think he probably, the Israeli defense forces have achieved that, what they have not achieved.
And I think this is going to be extremely difficult.
This is the end of Hamas's political influence in Gaza and its existence as an insurgency.
So, again, Netanyahu's end state and Hamas is still, in my judgment, usually irreconcilable.
This is happening, yes, Hamas is under pressure.
It's happening, yes, the Arabs are more united.
But it is happening for one primary reason.
You have an American president.
I was part of administrations from Jimmy Carter to Bush 43.
You have an administration at president that has exercised unprecedented pressure.
on an Israeli prime minister, not since Eisenhower, who threatened David Bangorian with political
and economic sanctions, has an American president been this tough with an Israeli prime minister
and actually threatened a quote or else. And this Israeli prime minister, since he needs
Donald Trump to wage a successful election campaign to remain prime minister, probably in the spring,
or maybe the fall of 2026, couldn't say no.
Oh, yeah.
Don't worry.
We'll get you in jail, Beebe, unless you send the boys from Shabbat on me.
That won't happen.
Of course not.
That's a good clip.
That's good.
That accentuates the point.
Yes, and he robs it with less of an accentuation here.
Is that surprising, given the relationship we
saw between Mr. Trump and Mr. Netanyahu during Mr. Trump's first term, and also we keep
hearing Netanyahu say, Israel has had no better friend in the White House than Donald Trump.
I mean, Trump fashions himself is the most pro-Israeli president in human history. And the reality
is during Trump 1.0, I think Donald Trump created what I would describe as a sugar high for
the Israelis. He applied no pressure, ample amounts of honey, but no vinegar. This time around,
given the fact that he wanted to claim success in not ending the war.
Let's be clear.
The war between Israel and Hamas is going to go on.
But Trump, like in Ukraine, wanted to end the fighting but not the war.
Here, he's going to get the hostages out most likely.
And he will ameliorate or diminish the comprehensive military campaign
that the Israelis have waged over the last year.
where they now occupy 75 to 80 percent of Gaza, where the Israelis are going to withdraw to,
will Hamas's weapons be decommissioned, as it says in the president's proposal?
Is there going to be an Arab stabilization force?
Will aid humanitarian assistance and reconstruction to provide two million Palestinians finally
with a secure source of potable water, sanitation, access to proper medical care, and enough food?
all of those issues, all of them, remain to be negotiated.
It's the best of all scenarios.
Stop the killing.
Keep the threat of war going so we can continue to sell stuff.
That's what we do.
That's why A-PAC is still around.
We can continue to sell.
I guess sign off.
We've got to build this.
We've got to do this.
We're doing it in Europe too.
It's coming later.
I'm going to interject with two quick Rubio clips from this morning.
He did all the morning shows.
This is Manhans Welker.
Mr. Secretary, I want to read point 19 of the president's peace plan.
I'll put it up so folks can see it.
It says, quote, while Gaza redevelopment advances.
And when the Palestinian Authority Reform Program is faithfully carried out,
the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination
in statehood, which we recognize as the aspiration of the Palestinian people.
Does the Trump administration now support Palestinian statehood?
Mr. Secretary?
Hamana, how many?
Well, look, first of all, that provision was very important to the countries that signed on with us
and Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, et cetera.
They all really, that's a very important point to them.
I think the most important point to read out of that is that you have to have somebody
to turn it over to, right?
Someone that you can hand that over to.
We've always said that if there's going to be a two-state solution that has to be negotiated
with Israel, it has to make sure that Israel's security is taken into account.
And so I would argue that.
I wouldn't say this is a new policy position.
What I would say is you want to be able to have in Gaza a place, Israel has no interest in governing Gaza.
They want to turn it over to somebody, some organization that will govern it, that will not build tunnels and sponsor terrorism and come across the line and kidnap rape and murder Israelis.
That's who they want to turn it over to.
And right now that doesn't exist.
That has to be built.
But Mr. Secretary, we need you to say that you are for a Palestinian state.
But, Mr. Secretary, in terms of where the administration stands, yes.
Yes or no? Does the Trump administration support?
That's not a yes or no question. That's a process.
No, but that's not a yes or no question. That's a process.
Ultimately, at the end of the day, we've always said this has been the consistent position of this administration of myself and of a lot of people that have watched this for a very long time.
In order for that aspiration to even be credible, it has to be realistic.
We can't have a Palestinian state that's governed by Hamas or by some terrorist organization whose stated purpose for existence is the destruction of the Jewish state.
That would never work.
Until Gaza is governed by people that are not interested in destroying Israel, until there are no security threats emanating against Israel from Gaza, you're not going to forget about statehood. You're not going to have peace. So we have to create the conditions for that. That's going to take a while. And that's going to be part of what these negotiations are about in the days to come. But right now, the priority, number one, is to get the hostages released. If we can't even get an agreement on the hostages being released, you ain't going to have long-term peace here. So let's get that piece done. It's the
most important, and then we can move to face two.
And it'll give momentum to the rest of the effort.
But this is not going to be easy.
No one said this is going to be easy.
We are dealing with something that's been going on for a very long time.
Yeah, there you go.
That's the 20-point plan and all the Arab...
Where is Onimus of Dog Patch?
Where's a dude named Muhammad?
We need some boots on the ground.
What is Iran thinking?
He'd give us some information.
He's probably floating around.
He's probably part of it.
So...
He's in Doha.
He's in Doha at the moment.
He's in Doha.
So we have, I want to play this.
This is the NPR version of what we play for PBS.
But I only think I have to play clip one here, which is because they decided something came down.
Now, most of these operations, these large scale operations of whether it's the New York Times, the Associated Press or NPR, PBS, they all have style guides.
And so you have to keep an eye on the style guys.
In other words, the style guy will tell you as a writer or a reporter what terms you can use.
Ah, yes.
And how to put him.
That's how you get, you know, a birthing person shows up kind of thing.
And everyone's all of a sudden saying birthing person.
Pregnant people.
Stuff like that.
Front hole.
Front hole.
So they have.
So the style guys.
And I just caught this.
And I see if you can catch it.
it's kind of a, do I edit it as kind of a giveaway, but I thought this was quite interesting.
This is the NPR one clip.
Reaction to President Trump's plan and the nearly two-year war in Gaza is being viewed
cautiously by residents there.
Both Israel and Hamas say they endorse Trump's 20-point plan, but details have yet to be
worked out.
NPR's Carrie Khan reports.
Residents in Gaza like Iman Abuak Lane, a 48-year-old mother of four, says the news of a deal
is some relief.
It's like we've been bottled up so tightly
and now we can take a breath.
Just a small one as we are still living in a nightmare, she says.
Israel's military says it's getting ready
to implement Trump's plan
and has moved to a defensive only position
according to an official not authorized
to speak to the media on the record.
However, Gaza health officials say
airstrikes continued overnight, killing and wounding
Gazans.
Okay.
killing gossins, not Palestinians.
Oh, good catch.
Oh, it's already shifting.
It's starting to shift.
Now, we'll see if we start hearing the term Gossens.
Gossens.
Instead of Palestinians.
It's like saying New Yorkers.
Swapping out a term here.
There's a reason for it.
Very good catch.
I found that to be, that really stopped me in my tracks.
that's where I ended the clip with it.
Yeah, that's good.
There's a part two to this if you want to hear it.
It just kind of wraps it up.
Well, it was very short, I think.
Yeah, of course.
Israel is preparing a team for face-to-face talks
as the U.S. also sends envoys to Cairo,
according to two people briefed but not authorized to speak publicly.
Okay, of course, sources.
Nothing there.
Meanwhile, this Gen Z color revolution around the world is very,
very interesting.
Yeah, I have a clip on this, too.
Okay, you want to play yours first?
Well, mine is just about specific.
It's a specific one of these Gen Z.
And this, we picked this up when it started in Nepal.
Yes.
This is the Gen Z-212.
Morocco's biggest anti-government process of years turned deadly this week.
The demonstrations are led by a coalition of Moroccan youth who call themselves Gen Z-212 named for the nation's dialing code.
The group says the government is pouring billions of dollars into infrastructure for the 2030 FIFA World Cup while neglecting domestic issues like health care and education.
Demonstrations began across Morocco a week ago and some have become violent.
This week, three protesters were killed.
So the Nepal thing was actually staring me in the face because, you know, I looked at the map, Nepal between India and China.
Oh, hello, they wanted to join bricks.
Well, no, you're not joining bricks.
You're not going to connect India and China to make it a whole brick segment there.
You're not going to do that.
I'm going to send the Gen Zs on you.
I have a little bit longer clip of Morocco, which is still going on, the Gen Z 212.
And what's very obvious is that it's very much like the BLM riots.
You get everybody out there for social means.
Like, hey, you know, it's like, we're spending all their money to Israel.
We're against that. We don't want that.
And then you send in the agitators, the people with the umbrellas who start smashing the windows and throwing the fire bombs.
And then you've got a mess.
And then it's still the, it's the Gen Zs who are very upset about how the government is spending money and not on them.
Anger has not abated in Morocco.
For nights on end, protesters have united against the government demanding better public services.
In some instances, it has turned violent.
Buildings have been set alight and properties destroyed.
Many citizens feel the isolated incidents undermine demonstrators' legitimate demands.
We support the protests but reject the destruction.
If we all want to protect public freedom, demand dignity and call for social justice.
We must understand the social justice means giving everyone their rights.
As a Moroccan youth, I reject this ugly behavior of destruction and violence.
Through peaceful protests, we came out demanding our legitimate rights to proper health care and education.
The initial peaceful gatherings began on Saturday, loosely organized by Morocco's Gen Z-212 group.
So I found it was mind-blowing on, this is France 24?
Yes, they had a whole segment on Gen Z, on all the Gen Z revolutions, which I thought was very interesting.
Do all these protests have in common?
Yes, they are all protests across Asia and Africa, but there is something more.
Corruption, lack of jobs, poverty, block of social media platforms.
These are just some of the problems stretching from Sri Lanka to the Philippines, Bangladesh,
Nepal, Morocco and Madagascar.
Protest have been ongoing for months, all starting in one main way, led by Gen Z,
the generation born between 1997 and 2012, and organized through social media.
In Morocco, protests were launched by the anonymous youth collective called Gen Z-212 on the platform at Discord, referring both to Generation Z and the country-styling code 212.
The more than 120,000 members demand reforms in health and education and criticize the sums invested in the 2030 World Cup at the expense of public services.
In Kenya, with the hashtag Ruto must go and the telegram group, Gen Zee Revo 2, Genzi has mobilized.
against unemployment, tax hikes and high living costs, sweeping protests across Nairobi
and even breaching the walls of parliament.
Madagascar, one of the world's poorest nations, has seen Genzi Group rise up against
blackouts and water shortages, leading to the dissolution of the government, but also leaving
at least 22 people dead.
In Nepal, Genzi outrage erupted after thousands of young people reposted images and videos
online, showing the luxurious lifestyles of politicians' children, share with hashtags like
Nepal kids and Nepal babies. Despite social media ban, youth has organized mass protest against
corruption and inequality. And the Philippine have seen the student and youth network
Tamana, along with others, leading the recent marches in Manila over alleged corruption in
flood control and infrastructures project. Everywhere, the youth led and dressed, the use of digital
platforms for organization, the cross-border inspiration, these mobilization do not necessarily or
immediately result in lasting reforms. But it's clear that this generation doesn't want to survive
in a falling system. They want to voice their grievances and transform it radically.
So this is some bull crap right here. Oh, Gen Z, the Gen Z is the most wussy generation ever.
They're not starting any revolt.
This has a written all over, and it has an intelligence agency written all over, but which one and why?
I'm going to tell you.
Asia and Africa.
Who has the interest in Asia and Africa?
It's always been the British Crown, Canada.
I'll give the North Sea Nexus a break on this one.
So I was corrected by many people about Discord, because all this starts on Discord.
It starts on Discord.
And I said it's an open source platform.
I was corrected by a number of producers.
No, no.
There's a lot of open source projects that are run and managed on Discord.
But Discord is a complete company product.
You get it for free.
Now, when you get something for free, you're actually the product.
We know that.
The business model is very odd of Discord.
You can have turbo Discord where you can actually give the company money
and raise money for your Discord server.
and get extra benefits and more expansive features.
They do have some advertising.
I'm looking at this company.
And it's founded by two nerds who are gamers.
But if you look at their timeline on their Aboots page,
Spring 2025, Jason, he's one of the co-founders, one of the nerds,
announces his transition from CEO to board member and advisor
and Humam Sakhnini becomes Discord's new CEO.
Sacknini brings deep gaming industry experience
from leadership roles at Activision, Blizzard, and King.
So I go look at this guy.
Well, isn't this guy very interesting?
He initially worked for the investment bag,
Nesbit Burns, Canadian Crown,
for the Department of Finance in Canada.
This is a London city of London guy.
participated in the 20th annual meeting of the Canadian Economics Association, Calgary,
authored three of the Department of Finance's fiscal policy and economic analysis branch working papers.
He argued in favor of pre-funding pension plans.
This sounds like a gamer to me.
He later founded and co-directed the Financial Technology Group firm IS Group,
which provided services to mutual funds and hedge funds.
Let's look at his education, shall we?
graduated Bachelor of Arts in the Economics from the University of Western Ontario
before receiving a Master of Arts in Economics from the Queen's University.
He earned a Masters of Business Administration degree from Yale.
This guy is an op.
And the minute he comes in, not three months later,
all of a sudden Discord is the platform of choice for all of these Gen Z revolutions.
There's your op.
It's blatant right there.
Spend eight years as partner at McKinsey and Company.
Yeah, you know what?
This guy's absolutely a gamer.
He joined London-based King in April 2016 as chief financial officer.
And of course, that's where he led the acquisition of Activision Blizzard.
And you know what?
Well, I don't think he's an op.
He's a spook part of the op.
And it's clearly the Brits who are doing this.
They have all the interests historically in Asia and Africa.
it's it's like okay we see what you're doing and they have just as much benefit to not seeing bricks succeed as anybody else they still have the pound it's still a big deal to them so be very aware of discord gen z revolutions in our own country which will be a bunch of soy boys and girls go what do we want we want democracy when do we want it we want it whenever you give it to us
Yeah, and then...
We have a lot of Gen Ziers that listen to this show
that are more than happy to tell us what they think.
Yes, I'm looking forward to it.
And the...
Calling them out as a bunch of wimps is probably not the...
Not necessarily 100% true.
I'm generalizing, obviously.
I'm generalizing.
You're generalizing.
Yeah, of course.
Obviously, I'm generalizing.
Meanwhile, we've got Europe...
But I'm with you.
I don't believe that.
that there is a, this 2-12 thing and all the rest of it in these obscure countries
where you have this, where they're rioting and there's this, it's just obviously been
co-opted as the old, we get some old terms here, old communist terms of co-option.
These guys were co-opted in some way and they're got leaders.
It's not leaderless and it's, but the leader's probably not Gen Z at all.
And the whole thing is corrupted, sure.
Gen Z is a generalization by itself.
It's like boomer, like all boomers.
I mean, I'm not even officially, well, okay.
I don't feel like a boomer, but put me as a boomer.
Whatever.
I feel like a teenager.
Finally, finally an opening for the show.
I've been waiting for it.
Well, yeah, you have the sense of humor for it.
So meanwhile, let's sigh up the European Union a little bit more because we still need to borrow all these hundreds of millions for the omnibus to get the drone wall implemented.
We need the drone wall.
We need more money, more money, more money.
I have an idea.
Oh, check this out.
Munich Airport says it is gradually resuming flights
after more drones were spotted early this Saturday.
The airport shut down Friday evening for the second day in a row over drone sightings,
with dozens of flights and more than 6,000 passengers affected.
More delays are expected throughout the day.
Airports in Denmark, Norway, and Poland have all recently suspended flights due to unidentified drones.
Some European countries have...
directly blamed Russia, but Moscow has denied allegations.
Here's Germany's Interior Minister.
We are in a race between drone threats and drone defense.
It's a race.
We want to and must win this race.
That is why it is important to take the necessary measures at the European level
to upgrade our technology, pool our expertise,
and ensure that drone defense technology is also developed in Europe,
in cooperation with partners from Israel and Ukraine.
I'll bring in Israel. Perfect.
Yeah, we need the drone technology.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah, drones.
Yeah, we've anti-drones because that'll stop an ICBM.
Oh, and then flights are canceled.
It's because of the Russian drones.
What a sigh up.
And then Ursula, the moron that she is,
we're going to call her Herr Ursula from now on.
Herr Ursula
She
Well you could be spelled
H-A-I-R
Oh that's a good one too
Hair Ursula
She's got to
You know
We're not done Europe
We're not done
The AI race is just getting started
It's not too late
For us to get in on this scam
Too often I hear that Europe
Is late to the AI race
The skeptics say
We will repeat the main mistakes
Of the past
and another generation of European talents will be forced to leave.
I strongly disagree, not only because the AI race is still warming up,
but also because I've seen what Europeans can do when we set our eyes on a goal.
Yeah, what has Europe done for me lately?
What fantastic technology has Europe brought us?
Well, you know, when AI is in the loop.
Because when AI is in the loop, we reach better solutions.
Fast, reliable, affordable.
Reliable and affordable.
It's safe and effective.
Some of your startups are already pioneering it.
I don't know of a single one.
Let me tell you I'm a medical doctor by training.
I'm amazed what AI can do in medicines.
AI can assist doctors in diagnosing cancer much, much earlier.
Or accelerate innovative medicines discovery.
The big promise of AI, innovative medicine discovery,
and detecting cancer.
Well, what she's talking about?
What's it got to do with Europe?
It's all Ellison.
It's all Oracle.
That's the promise of Stargate.
But you know what?
Europe can do it.
We will spare no effort to make Europe an AI continent.
That means no expense.
An AI continent?
What she said.
I know.
We will spare no effort to make Europe an AI continent.
We will spare no effort to make you choose Europe.
Because this is the great mission of our times.
Thank you for inviting me.
And long live Europe.
Long live Europe.
Thank you.
Long live Europe.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
My lord.
That is insane.
Well, at least she didn't mention quantum.
No.
Well, I haven't seen the whole speech.
I'm sure she did.
Now, before we move on,
I just need to stop because we have now reached peak AI.
This is an amazing thing that is happening.
And this is SORA 2.
Have you heard of seen it or are you aware of SOR?
Oh, yeah.
But J.C. has brought me up to speed on it.
Sora 2.
I have a two-parter here of Sibb Sibbh talking to a wired reporter.
because, of course, if you really want to know what's going on on technology,
talk to them.
Wired is still relevant.
SORA is it, baby.
Today, we're announcing the SORA app, powered by the all-new SORA-2.
Well, that may look and sound just like OpenAI, CEO Sam Altman,
but it's actually a video generated completely by AI using the company's new app, SORA 2.
OpenAI says it allows people to create and share AI-generated video.
clips featuring themselves and their friends.
Now, the clips posted by the company online show how unrealistic scenarios can look
hyper-realistic using this tool.
All right, I've got to bring in Zoe Schiffer, the director of business and industry at Wired
Magazine.
Zoe, these videos are incredible.
Tell us a little more about this AI tool and what people can do with it.
Yeah, so Open AI first released SORA, their video generation model, about a year ago.
And since then, a lot of other companies have kind of jumped into the space and the technology has been moving really, really fast.
During this time, Open AI CEO Sam Altman basically directed the team to start working on an app.
And the thinking was that just like ChatGPT allowed people to kind of realize the potential of generated text, creating kind of a TikTok-style app to watch and create AI-generated videos would be like a huge unlock to make people really.
realize the potential for video generation.
Now, I have some analysis about this SORA to at,
but first we just have to finish with this wired reporter.
I think you and I universally would agree that most technology reporters are whores for
the technology companies.
And when you actually say that you're not, that's like a red flag.
Yeah, you've got to wonder what some of these Hollywood directors are thinking about some
of these videos because they look so realistic.
So realistic.
So really.
You can put yourself in Avatar, some of these big blockbuster films.
It's amazing to see what they're able to do.
Amazing.
Are they approaching, though, the safety concerns as this technology becomes more and more advanced?
I mean, there's some scary set that can come out of this too.
Yeah, absolutely.
And far be it from me to, like, act as an open AI spokesperson, but as someone who's reported on this company pretty deep.
What does that even mean?
Far be it for me to act as an open AI spokesperson,
person, why would you even say that?
Are you...
Be it for me, which is some phrase you very...
I don't think I've ever used in my life,
but I've heard it.
Far be it from me, which is just crazy,
if you think it was trying to figure out what it means,
I would be an AI spokesperson.
To act as an AI spokesperson.
Yeah, it's like, it's almost like a scripted comment.
Well, she's been read in.
and she's spouting the company line.
That's what I think it means.
Yeah, absolutely.
And far be it from me to, like, act as an open AI spokesperson.
But as someone who's reported on this company pretty deeply, I will say that I actually...
Which means she's got inside knowledge, which means she has access.
Yeah, and then she uses a performative of, I will say.
Yes.
Why don't you just say it?
Why do you say, I will say and then you say it?
Why don't you just say it?
Exactly.
Yeah, absolutely.
And far be it from me to, like, act as an open AI spokesperson.
person, but as someone who's reported on this company pretty deeply, I will say that I actually do
think they're taking these concerns extremely seriously. Earlier this week, the company rolled out
parental controls to help parents, you know, have a little more oversight into the accounts of
their children and specifically their teenagers. When the SORA app rolled out, they like kind
of baked in some of those parental controls specifically to allow parents to stop their kids from like
doom scrolling. So I think that they're trying to be proactive.
get ahead of at least some of the major concerns.
And to be clear, this is an app that you can use, anybody can use on their phone or tablet or
computer, correct? Yeah, exactly. So you can download it now in the app store. I think at least
today you need a code from someone that's using it, but it's already kind of taken off.
There's a lot of people jumping in. There are some restrictions. Like if you try and
generate a video of, say, Taylor Swift or even like Darth Vader, it'll stop you. It'll say that
like there are, you know, copyright restrictions that are baked in and it won't allow you to do that.
Yeah, her full performative was, um, I will say I actually do believe that's a, that's a, it's a mouthful.
So this is a brilliant move by Open AI, uh, because this is going to be high, like you already see it, highly addictive.
People love it.
Scaramanga got put out of business in like one fell swoop or possibly he can open a business, depending on how he,
how he manages his time.
The whole point of this, if you look at the app,
what is the first thing it wants you to do?
Scan your face.
This thing is fresh content for open AI's large language models.
And every numb nut is going to do this.
Oh, yeah, I put myself in this movie.
Let me show you my face.
Yeah, you got it?
You got it?
Oh, look at this.
Of course they're going to be sued into oblivion.
But by then they'll already have what they need.
They needed fresh photographic, videographic content
because they know where it's going.
They know that this whole notion of it's for business.
Nah.
They need to be generating video and pictures
and they need new content.
And I will never put my face on it.
I would say, I think if there's pictures of us out there,
I think you should just fill the entire.
internet with slop of us, but I'll never put my face on it because Taylor Swift shouldn't
have any more protection than I have by my my likeness.
So this, I think this is a move that is blowing everybody out of the water and Google is going
to try and run and catch up and it's going to cost them more and more and more money.
And that's where the next trillion dollars is going to have to come because we're almost there,
boys, we just had another trillion dollars.
It would be really, one of our young friends, she works for a, worked for an AI recruiting
company in Austin, not that they were recruiting AI people, but the, they used AI to match
job openings with candidates.
And she said, it was 30, 70.
30% will be great.
70% would just not work.
and they're about to close the doors.
They just couldn't make it word.
They always kept saying to their investors,
if we just have a little bit more,
we're almost there.
We can almost do perfect matches every single time.
You can't.
The stuff is hallucinating.
You can't.
You can't get 100%.
You can get maybe up to 70, maybe 60.
This is a losing proposition.
So Altman just extended his life,
I don't know, his business life by maybe several years.
because this thing, I think it's going to overtake TikTok.
It's this, you want addictive?
I disagree completely.
You disagree with it.
It's going to overtake TikTok?
Yeah, because it's a piece of crap.
I've watched the, I got the lecture about this.
I was shown all the videos and the, and even J.C. admits that this stuff is not watchable.
Yeah, it's very good.
I mean, you see very high resolution images of something happening that doesn't exist in real life.
And a lot of it looks like this has to be a real person, well, but it's not.
But it is, there were some of these videos, they were 30 seconds long and you couldn't watch
five seconds before you were bored stiff.
I have a different opinion.
A real, a real good TikTok video of a fat chick falling on her butt off of a bicycle is far superior
to the garbage that this thing is producing.
But the difference is you can put yourself and your friends in the movie.
Oh, who cares? Nobody cares. I think that's, I'm not interested in that.
It will be the, no, you're not. I'm not either. It will be the number one app within one month.
I don't think a lot. You are, we have to assume that we're not alone in our thinking.
I'm giving you my input. I'm giving you my opinion.
You agree with me that we're not interested in putting.
our faces on all this sorts of things. We aren't because we're smart. We, we, we, you and I are in
the majority. You don't even use a phone. So you're not, you're in the minority. You are in the
minority. You don't do selfies. I am not in the minority when it comes to, when it comes to
not using the phone or keeping it in the drawer to be, to be straight about it. And you bring it up
with anybody, they fall in love. Oh my God, I wish I could do the same thing. I wish I wish I
wish I wish. I am in the majority. I just happen to be the only one to follow through.
Oh, okay. Okay. You are the only drug addicts who got out. Yes. You are a winner. Winning.
John C. DeVorek is a winner. But that is not the majority of people. The majority of people are
losers and they are addicted to their phones. And now they can put themselves into the movie.
Ah, no. This is going to fly. But we'll see. We'll see.
I'm willing to admit defeat.
I'll give it one month.
This is the number one app.
Everyone's talking about it.
Every news show.
All these.
All these new bags.
Well, you know, you can make something the number one app
even get these news idiots to push it to an extreme.
You don't fall apart.
Ego, man, is ego.
People love themselves.
That's what the whole selfie thing is about.
An entire, an entire device was created for this very reason.
I'm not going to argue against you on the selfie thing.
It is bothersome.
It's a selfie move.
it's what they're going to love it
people will love it
they will love it and it's
completely free
how much
this guy is burning cash
that's why that's why they need
to have this be successful and they will
make it successful come hook or crook
oh there's a Jew reference for you
they're going to make it successful
Aldman
taken over
taking over everybody's going to be
going to be sciopping everybody with this
Laura to this right.
Everybody loves Israel.
They're going to make it the number one app
because he needs another couple of trillion dollars
to finally get to the business stuff
that's actually going to work,
which we know it just won't.
In the meantime,
Spotify removed...
Well, you have to give the guy credit for keeping...
I give him a lot of credit.
I get him a lot of credit.
He's got a bunch of plates.
He's spinning them around.
There's another one.
There's another one.
That's what you do as an entrepreneur.
How long does this go on?
Hey, as long as he can keep putting plates up, he can spin them.
And Spotify, now they're in trouble.
Spotify's in trouble.
Because they had to...
You keep saying that, but they keep making money.
Well, that's kind of the point.
They had, they deleted 75 million songs from their catalog.
And they, and the reason they did that is because the majority shareholders of
Spotify, even in the public markets, are the publishing companies.
And the publishing companies, like, hold on a second.
We can't have this.
We can't have every Tom, Dick, and Harry, making our money off of these AI songs.
So I think that you're going to see some other platforms picking this up.
I would.
If I had a music platform, I'd be like, all AI all the time.
Bring it over here.
Make money.
Make money with your songs.
So you think that Spotify made a mistake when they ran these fake bands and they ran them as legit and they were found out and then the public, the music publishers making actual music?
Yeah, the owners.
The owners got very mad about it.
The owners decided, hey, wait a minute.
Yeah, the true owners.
Yeah, they got very mad.
Well, you know, easy money.
So I don't know.
We'll see what Apple and Amazon does.
But I mean, people were loving this.
Like, hey, I just made a song.
it costs me 20 bucks a month to make a thousand songs,
and I'm making five bucks on royalties.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Hey, you know, more trucks.
I'm monetizing, man.
I'm monetizing.
Monetizing my creativity, my prompting creativity.
Please, more of it.
Please, fill the Internet with as much of this slop as possible.
Keep it going.
Just keep it going.
Nothing is usable.
I mean, already, if you just, I was looking for,
I was looking for a story on Nepal with a Gen Z thing and that included Discord.
Well, you have to wade through at least 15 AI generated news stories to find something.
And even then, it's like still dubious.
It's filling, it's filling everything up.
And still the podcast, industrial complex.
We need to tag.
We need to tag this AI.
We can't have AI, AI podcast, brer, blah, please.
Why?
Yeah, because the advertisers are getting fleece.
That's why the advertisers are getting mad.
Well, the advertisers got to get a clue.
They will.
They will.
But they always do.
And then they get, they, they drop off.
And of course, it does a shakeout.
You have an Armageddon, a podcast.
They all go out of business, the ones that try to make money.
And then all of a sudden, something.
changes and the advertisers are suckered back.
They always get suckered back.
They will.
Look at these numbers.
Hey, Bob, have you seen these numbers?
I think we've got an opportunity here.
And with that, I want to thank you for your courage, say in the morning to you, the man who put the C
in the one and only AI continent, say hello, my friend on the other end, the one, the only
Mr. John C.
DeVore!
In the morning, New York City,
Seabus and the graphie and the airships in the water
and all the names are nice out there.
In the morning to the trolls in the troll rooms.
Stand still.
Let me catch you for a second.
There we go.
Dog days of summer.
2,158 listening live.
And they are listening on noagendousream.com,
which should be fixed.
Tell your friends.
Tell your neighbors.
Everything works again.
They are trolling along in the troll room.
Trowroom.io, also noagendastream.com.
You can use your modern podcast app,
which may or may not have some AI slop in it.
But, of course, the biggest downside to podcasting is there's no discovery mechanism.
So it's also its biggest protection.
So there's no algo that's shoving podcasts in your face all the time on the podcast apps.
Yet.
No, it's decentralized.
It's impossible to happen.
It's impossible.
It will not happen.
which is good.
And the more slop, the more people will want to hear two old dudes yacking away.
Oh, it feels so comfortable, doesn't it?
Just to hear people make mistakes.
It does feel kind of good.
Oh, they disagree.
Oh, no.
They actually sound emotional about something.
Oh, oh, my.
You and your noisemakers.
Oh, good Lord.
You and your noise makers.
I got another one here.
I've got the sign noisemaker.
Modern podcast apps, go get yourself one of those.
It's your protection against AI slop.
Go to podcast apps.com.
Pick one up.
They're all pretty darn good, I would say.
And with that, of course, you will also be alerted when we go live.
You can listen live in your podcast app.
What legacy app does that?
Let me think none of them.
And within 90 seconds of publishing, you will be notified as well.
Which legacy app does that?
Let me think none of them, of course.
That's why we want to be ahead of the times and on top of the news.
wasn't that
was that
New York Daily?
Was it the Daily Post?
No, I don't think so.
I had a head of the times on top of it.
I didn't.
I lived in New York for a while.
I remember these things.
The extra E.
Yes.
Drop the extra S for savings.
Dial a mattress.
I remember that.
Crazy Eddie's prices are insane.
So, the 26th of October will be 18 years that we do in this podcast.
And all that time, John's been studying my Tourette's, and he is now an expert, which is amazing.
I am.
Because we've only seen each other twice in the last 10 years.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, just once is enough.
Ditto, right back at you, Bubba.
So we accept time, talent, or treasure in return for the value that we provide you.
and we think that after 18 years, people agree.
Four out of five doctors will say that the No Agenda show provides value,
and you can provide that back to us in many different ways.
Monetary is the one that makes the show guaranteed to continue,
but we also accept other things such as A.I. Slop.
And we get that from our No Agenda artists, who are now prompt jockeys,
and one day, one day, the actual artist will return.
You can wait for it when everyone's listening to AI Slop songs,
eventually, you know, a Ramones comes along or, uh, uh, I think they said the same thing about
Photoshop.
Well, clip art, Photoshop, everything.
And it was, it was all a problem.
Everything.
Technology is always a problem.
We don't want to be Luddites, but there you go.
Hey, we had a new artist check in.
He'd only been a no agenda artist for two weeks.
And we liked his, his AI sloppiness.
His name is Jock 10, J-O-Q-10.
He did the art.
artwork for episode 1804, which we titled Mucho Retardo.
It was good.
We liked that.
And it was a fat general in the submarine.
He couldn't get in or he couldn't get out.
And people liked it.
And we liked it too.
It was an admiral.
How do you know it's an admiral?
Because it's a submarine.
Oh, thank you.
Good point.
Thank God you know about these things.
Fat Admiral.
F.A. Fat Admiral.
And of course, these are as uploaded to no agenda art generator.com.
If you're having trouble uploading a piece of art,
you need to have the exact dimensions as specified.
That's just a little tip for those of you having trouble.
It needs to be the exact dimensions in order to upload.
And let me see, we looked at everything, of course.
There was a lot of, well, there was the battle ready from Blue Acorn.
That was a fat soldier eating a don't.
I'd say that was probably a close second.
We had lots of stairs running up and down.
You'd like the John Adams' bugout kit for some reason.
Yeah, it was too small.
It was too small.
But it included a handgun, a revolver, a flashlight, a cracker.
I like the one cracker.
Like a Graham Cracker kit and some water.
Let me see.
What else was there?
A lot of sombreros.
A lot of sombreros, which didn't really work.
Again, we see people using collapsing models, the mastermind.
Your model's collapsing that you're using.
Yes, you have to, yes, that's right.
We made a point to mention him.
The mastermind has needs to take his pieces and either put him in Photoshop
or someplace to brighten them up, get rid of the, you have a, they're dull.
Yeah.
They're very dull.
And it's not a big deal.
You can put them in Photoshop and there's a couple of filters.
You can just pop, make them pop.
Yeah.
But it's just interesting to see that there's model collapse.
Whatever you're using, it's collapsing.
Well, this has been one or two models that I don't know what he's using, but it's getting worse.
It's muddy.
This is the worst I've ever seen it.
It's getting worse.
It's getting worse.
It's just bad.
No, you are so optimistic about your reward.
I am.
I am the optimist of the two of us.
Why don't you go live with some?
Sam Albin. I'm sure he'd love to have you.
Let's just go hang out with Sam. Get a room.
Get a room with Sam Altman, you.
No AgendaRGenerator.com is where you can upload your slop, and we do appreciate people
doing it at all, to be honest.
I'm already looking at today's art.
There's plenty of opportunity to win people.
Plenty of opportunity.
Just typing in drone EU flag.
No agenda is not going to get you a winning nod.
That's not going to happen.
As part of this Value for Value Model,
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Does you see Manhands by blue egg?
Roll on a second.
No.
Hold on a second.
Let me see.
Man hands.
You're jumping ahead of the game.
Where's manhands?
Oh, man.
That is gross.
Yeah, it's gross.
That's gross.
That's gross.
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John? We don't have a suicide pact. I'm not going to kill myself. Are you? Israel? Oh,
Hey, top executive producer today.
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ass. Figured I'd get my secretary general certificate and claim the title as Secretary
general of water well drillers.
That's a good one.
As such, can I humbly request karma for my small water well business.
Hoss services.
Any no agenda producers, welcome to contact me with well questions.
Actually, I have some well questions for you.
Oh, you have a well question.
I do have a well question.
I would like...
This is our well guy.
This is the well guy.
I would like a little more water pressure.
We have our own well.
I know how it works.
and I know where the thing is buried, you know, the canister.
Is there anything I can do to up the water pressure?
Do I have to have that thing dug up in a new one put it?
You put a pump in.
You pump it up to a tower outside your house.
You build a tower.
But we haven't, I should get it in before the HOA kicks off.
Yeah.
Yeah, get that tower up.
Put some ham antennas in there, too.
You know, Curry Farm on the tower, put some lettering on there.
And one of those windmills with a vein, with the one of those metallic windmills.
pumping. Yeah, it'll do the pumping. That's right. Yeah, that's a good idea.
So the little wind, pump it all up to the tower, and then the tower will provide the pressure.
And on the tower, it's put petticoat junction. That would be funny. Yeah, well, yeah, you could do that too.
Ha, services. Put some dresses hanging on the thing. Any no agenda producers, welcome to contact me with well questions.
And producers in the northern Illinois area can get a free service call. Contact information is down below.
Currently doing some research on the new fuel pumps out in the wild that,
play ads all the time while buying gas or diesel.
I'm interested in that.
We need a report.
The fuel distributor I got, I used, got new pumps.
And for a while, the ads were all flu shot ads.
Well, it's called Remnant Inventory.
More will follow when it becomes available.
Do have a tip of the day if needed any time.
Matthew Lomar, Hoss Services at Hoss Wellandp.com.
H-O-S-W-E-L-L-A-N-D-P-U-M-P dot com.
And here is your carmissor.
You've got karma.
This is like Haas Cartwright.
Yeah, Haas.
Sir Guy and Brackley, North Hampshire, UK, 333.3.3.
Yeah, they're alive. They're still alive.
Good. We're glad to hear from you. Don't say anything too bad to storm roll arrest you.
Yeah.
Hey, both.
Some well-deserved an overdue karma donation, paying it back.
Love you loads. Sir Guy, that's spelled.
G-H-E. You've got
Karma. Carl Dietrich,
Lakeland, Florida, 333.33.
Love that number. The last time I donated,
he says, Adam was helping me
troubleshoot album art on my Windows phone.
Holy crap. So it's been
a while. Yeah.
Man, when did the Windows phone get
discontinued 10 years ago?
It's been a long time.
What was the name of that phone, Windows?
Well, 2007 is when it was
pretty much wiped out.
So that's a while back.
What was it called again?
The Windows.
Was it just Windows phone?
It doesn't sound right.
I had a Windows phone.
It was called something.
It's been a while.
Long past due for another donation.
Thank you for your courage.
Well, thank you.
I appreciate it much.
And there we have Jackie Green, our guitarist.
Jackie Green, the famous guitarist in Orange Vale, California.
33333, another musician that listens
of the show. No jingles, just love, and God bless y'all.
Oh, God bless you too, brother. John Bigelow, Glenview, Illinois, 33333.
Even though I've been donating $33 and $33 since Adam's first Rogan appearance,
the sad puppy got to me. I'm well past knighthood, so please dedush me.
You've been deduced.
And I'd like to be knighted, Sir John of the Tekney Basin. I'd like Ribai and Malbeck at the
roundtable. It has been ordered.
Adam for coming up with a possible identity for the they in all my conspiracy theories. Yes,
the North Sea Nexus. Thank you, John. See you at the roundtable.
Janet Giles or Giles or Giles, Giles, Giles, Giles, Giles, Giles, in San Marcos, Texas,
which is just where you are. 333. She's got no note that I can find, and so we have to give her a double up karma.
Yeah, on the way. You've got.
Double up.
Karma.
And there's $300.
coming to us from the Indy No Agenda Raffle.
We do have a meetup report.
That's Greenwood, Indiana, and it's a switcheroo for Sir David Killian.
So let me do that right away.
Make sure we get that because he won the raffle.
This is Instanite Sir David Killian.
I actually sent a note at the end of this email back in 2017, but it was never read on the show.
I sent in $1,000 back in episode 498, obey the giant voice system.
Wow.
That's a long time ago.
I looked it up on noagenda.
clipgeney.com.
John might remember that I was always,
that I always sent in bill pay checks with no note,
but something in the memo.
Do you remember this?
Let's see, that was 15 years ago, no.
After that, I would send in 333.33 every quarter for several years,
so I'm at least four times night or a baron,
if the peerage committee agrees.
I've heard nothing, so.
It sounds fine to me.
There's the peerage committee.
I would like to be called Baron David Kill.
of the Illinois Prairie.
Please play Donald Trump.
Don't trust China.
They're eating the dogs.
And Trump, Trump, he's the president.
Yes, I've actually found that one.
I've labeled it properly this time.
And he goes on to say,
my podcast player for iOS recommendations,
for no agenda chapters with rotating artwork,
Pod Home and Podverse.
These are modern podcast apps.
I like the best, but long initial low delay.
For non-chapter-supported podcast,
I prefer Pocketcasts, also a 2.0 compliant app.
Nice to meet the Indiana meetup organizers and the other attendees.
Indianapolis, Indiana meetup organizers, Mark and Maria of the Greenwood, Fort Wayne, Indiana,
meetup organizer, and her Shannon for a great meetup as well.
Thank you, soon to be Baron David Killian of the Illinois Prairie.
Donald Trump, don't trust China. China is asshole.
They're eating the dogs.
He's Trump. He's Trump.
The president.
There you go.
That's it.
Then we dropped down to one lone associate executive producer, seems.
And guess who it is?
It's Linda Lupacken who never misses a beach.
She's in Lakewood, Colorado.
Asked for Jobs, Karma, and says for a competitive edge while a resume.
And so we got Linda Lupakin in Lakewood, Colorado, $200.
Jobs Karma for a competitive edge with a resume that gets results.
Go to Image Baker's Inc.
com for all your executive resume and job search needs that's image makers ink with a k
and work with linda loo duchess of jobs and writer of winning resumes jobs jobs jobs and jobs
let's vote for jobs there you go our executive and associate executive producers for episode
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we go out we hit people in the mouth
they're eating the dogs
shut up slave
shut up slave
that was pretty funny
John Stewart
I don't have a clip I should probably get a clip from it
he's like he doesn't understand
why Trump hasn't gone after him yet
Hey man
Come after me
I need the attention.
Hey, man, I'm being ignored.
I need the...
Over here on Comedy Central Mondays.
Yes, I need the attention.
Come on, Trump, you used to hate me.
What happened?
You don't hate me anymore.
It's no good.
I need one of those comeback shows like Jimmy Kimmelhead.
Please.
Pathetic.
That is.
That's pretty pathetic.
Very pathetic.
As if.
Yeah, right.
I mean, the networks are just dying with these late-night shows and they're not making any money.
high budget hundreds of people working there and they're trying to get rid of him so let's blame
Trump yeah yeah and even that backfired yeah that didn't even know it works so Kim will pull the
stunt and they ended up still on the air and then Disney guys have got to be shaking their heads saying
what do we have to do to get rid of this guy and do something that makes us some money yeah maybe
he should be suicided by Israel there you go mm-hmm yeah you have Israel a call
Call Mossad, 1-800-M-O-S-A-A-D.
Hey, this story, and maybe I'm wrong,
but if I recall, isn't Chevron leaving California?
Was it Chevron?
I didn't say that.
No, I'm asking.
No, they're closing the Richmond Refinery.
and the refinery that got
that got
itself in trouble
is the El Segundo Refinery,
the big boy down in Southern California.
Wouldn't that make for a perfect
withdrawal from California altogether?
Yeah. Well,
yeah, but it didn't really destroy the refiner.
It just made a mess.
Well, if you listen to this report.
Overned a massive explosion
at a Chevron refinery,
sending a massive fireball into the night sky.
Firefighters rushing to the scene
in El Segundo,
California around 9.30 last night trying to tackle that gigantic blaze, several fires burning
within the facility. Yeah, we have heavy flames showing from the refinery. I'll need a truck
company with a massive strain to respond to this. Towering flames and billowing smoke turning the
night sky red. The inferno could be seen for miles. That blasts so strong. Residents say they
thought it was an earthquake or a plane crash. Earthquake. That was terrible explosion.
Very loud sugarhouse, like more than any earthquake ever before.
Terrible.
Out of control, for sure, and, I mean, didn't know what was going to happen next.
Those residents were told to stay indoors and shelter in place after concerns about the air quality.
There are several massive flames coming from the refinery.
That right there appears to be the epicenter of this explosion that occurred.
At times, it seemed like the fire was under control, and then it would flare back up again.
The smoke traveling to nearby L.A.X.
blanketing the planes on the tarmac.
That oil refinery is the largest on the West Coast, spanning two square miles.
It supplies more than 40% of the jet fuel and more than 20% of the motor vehicle fuel for Southern California.
Not yet clear what caused this explosion, but no injuries have been reported.
I'm just saying if I wanted to get out of California altogether with the big FU,
I'm like, oh, our plant blew up.
Get some insurance coverage.
Yeah, it's probably not a bad idea.
Just thinking.
It's a concept.
And the property is worth a lot of money.
You could resell it.
We'd have to do a cleanup first.
The California...
It'd take a while, especially after years and years of making leaded fuel.
The California Riviera, baby.
Right there.
It's beautiful.
It's a nice spot.
Yeah.
I just thought that to be rather suspicious.
Yeah, this happened before.
before there, though.
Suspicious.
They have some maintenance.
Chevron's always been sloppy.
Here's my story about the maintenance at these places.
So I worked at these refineries, and I was an inspector at Chevron in Richmond, but I worked
at the Union Oil refinery, and there used to be this big thing before it was taken over
by the cheapies that own it now.
But when Union Oil had it, they used to paint their tanks, all these pastel colors.
It was a very pretty sight when you drove through it.
Did you see that when you landed at LAX, or is that a different place?
No, we're talking about up here.
Oh, okay.
And it's relating to Chevron to talk about their fact that they're cheap with their maintenance.
Yeah.
This is a roundabout story.
I don't have to tell it.
Yeah, you do.
So they used to paint their tanks.
And so when I started as an inspector at Chevron, their tanks were all rust buckets.
They were just looked terrible.
It was an embarrassment when you looked at it.
My God, this place is a wrecked because the tanks were.
all rusting and falling apart.
So I talked to one of the managers about this and compared to the union place where they painted
the tank's beautiful pastel colors and they kept painting them and maintaining them.
And he said there was a cost of effect, there was a cost analysis that Chevron did that show
that yes, you can maintain the tanks will stay in place a longer time, but the cost of maintaining
them with the paint actually is more expensive than letting them rust fall apart and rebuilding
a new tank.
Yeah, sounds like the American way.
The American way.
And so then over time, what was the irony of the whole thing was that Chevron,
because they were getting so much grief for these ugly looking rust-that rusted out tanks,
had the perfect solution.
Instead of painting the tanks white and letting them rust,
they painted them rust-colored.
That's a blend in.
It was genius.
Oh, that's great.
See, I'm glad you told that story.
That was worth it.
And they're very pretty.
The rust-colored tanks are really pretty.
It's just like, okay, well, that works.
I mean, they blow up, but otherwise.
Well, they rust out and leak, and it's a mess.
Oh, that's good.
That was well worth it.
I like that.
You got some other errand stuff here.
I have some stuff here.
I can talk about COVID, the bullcrap long COVID.
Oh, let's do Diddy. Let's do Diddy. Let's do Diddy.
Oh, that's just a one, yeah, this is just a summary of what happened with Diddy.
Sean Combs has been sentenced to.
Scott Scheiman, everybody.
Yeah, Sean Combs has been sentenced to more than four years in prison after a lengthy hearing in Manhattan yesterday.
The rapper, producer, and businessman was convicted in July on two prostitution-related charges.
Chloe Malas has covered the Combs trial for NBC News.
She joins us from an airport now.
Shore Airport.
Thanks for being with us.
Thanks for having me.
Good morning.
He was acquitted of the most serious charges, sex trafficking and racketeering.
One of the two charges of which he's now been found guilty?
Those are two counts of something called the Man Act.
It's transportation to engage in prostitution.
And he was found guilty by the jury over the summer of those two counts.
But like you said, he was acquitted of the more serious charges,
which he faced a life in prison sentence if convicted on those.
Well, tell us more about this sentence of about four years, because the judge could have handed down something lengthier, couldn't he?
So the judge could have given Combs up to 10 years on each count of the man act, which means he could have faced up to 20 years in federal prison.
The judge giving him four years in two months is actually quite a surprise because it is less than what the probation department recommended, which was between five and seven years.
Now, it is not what Combs' legal team wanted, which was 14 months.
I actually spoke to one of his attorneys, Brian Steele, last night outside of the courthouse, following the judge's decision.
And they said that they are very disappointed in this and that all they want is Combs to come home and that they plan to appeal.
We certainly heard a lot from Sean Combs' alleged victims during the trial.
How did they receive news of the sentence?
One of the first individuals to react to the news of Combs' sentence was Cassie Ventura, his long-time girlfriend, who was a key witness in this trial.
And in a statement through her attorney, she says that nothing can undo this trauma.
But basically, this is a step in the right direction that this shows the serious nature of his crimes.
So they need to get this guy back doing those beats, you know.
Hey, bitches, that's right.
You got to get some beats going on to side.
up the kids. This pisses me off, actually.
Why?
My friend, the ER doctor, who worked through COVID as an ER doctor, who got SIOP during
COVID into a Medicare scam, honey potter. Yeah, you're a guy.
Your guy there. Yeah, honey potted by the Justice Department itself, pretending to be
patients. This guy was an ER doctor, not sophisticated in scams. He's serving 10 years
for like a couple hundred thousand dollars over several years,
which he legitimately did not have,
and no way of knowing it was a scam,
and this guy walks with four.
This is dumb.
Yeah, I guess you were they, I think you're right.
That bothers me.
It bothers me.
Apparently.
Let me go visit him again in November.
Talk to my Metallica boys.
They're the guards.
Hey, boys, I'm coming.
So there is a, I have a series of clips from, I think it's PBS, I'm not sure, but it's a, but long COVID and it's a bunch of BS, it seems to me.
Okay.
And it finishes with what I called the crock.
Long, so long COVID, let's just establish whatever you think, and by the way, you don't have to email me because I get, whenever we talk about long COVID, people tell me it's real.
And I'm not saying that it's not real that you don't feel something and you feel bad or you have something.
But calling it long COVID is bull crap.
It's a cop out.
Well, I believe after listening to these clips and listening about long COVID over the five years.
I believe it to be part of an effort to keep the word COVID in play so you can sell more Vaxes.
Because a lot of people...
Especially the new super spike or whatever it's called.
Super Spike.
A lot of people have chronic fatigue disease.
That's real.
But even one of the guys here goes to our church, he's in his late 40s, I think, maybe 50.
And he was diagnosed with all this long COVID.
But really he had heart arrhythmia.
You know, and so it's like, just say long COVID for everything.
Yeah, the COVID triggered it, probably.
Maybe.
I mean, or the Vax.
No, no, no, not Vax.
Not Vaxed.
Come on.
He's not Vaxed.
But did he ever have COVID?
Well, you know, a lot of people here test.
So who knows?
Oh, I have COVID.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
Okay.
Well, did he think he had COVID?
Yeah.
For sure.
So here we go with the long.
B.S. And the thing is, it's two things, keeping COVID in the public brain and then also money.
Yes. It's been more than two years since the pandemic ended, but millions of Americans are still living with
masking up. That's a catch-all term for COVID symptoms lasting at least three months after testing
positive. Symptoms can vary from person to person, but they range from mild to severe to physically
disabling. Recently, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. kicked off new efforts to address
long COVID with a roundtable discussion with doctors, researchers, and patient advocates.
In the past, the response to epidemics of this kind has been to pump a lot of money into
ivory tower science to try to solve the problem. We've already put $1.5 billion into NIH to solve
long COVID, and we've got literally
nothing from it.
Allie Rogan spoke to two members of
the long COVID community.
Dr. Michael Paluso, a physician and
researcher at UC San Francisco,
who attended that roundtable meeting.
And Megan Stone, the executive
director of the long COVID campaign.
So can I get the zip
code for the long COVID community?
Yeah, the long COVID community.
Oh, my goodness. It's just south of you.
Yeah. Community.
All right.
All right, go on.
Michael and Megan, thank you both so much for joining us.
Michael, first to you, we just heard Secretary Kennedy say that there's been nothing to show
for HHS's investments so far in long COVID research.
What do you say to that?
Well, I think many of us agree that progress has really been too slow.
There are a lot of patients really suffering, a lot of disability, a huge economic cost.
At the same time, there's a lot of commitment on the part of clinicians caring for patients with
long COVID, researchers really trying to figure out the answers for these patients.
What I think we need and what I hope that this roundtable will be the beginning of is a really
clear, both a short-term plan and a long-term plan for figuring this out.
We need a broader organized strategy.
So what would make up, Michael, sticking with you, that long and short-term plan?
term plan in order to make this strategy work. What's needed? There are actually three specific things
that I advocated for at this meeting. And I think that there was kind of broad agreement on these
things. The first is real investment, real investment, real investment in a diagnostics and
biomarker program, both to help people get a diagnosis of long COVID in the clinic, but also to
help us identify individuals who may benefit from a specific treatment strategy or for participation
in a specific clinical trial. The second thing that we really need is a rapid scale up of the number
of clinical trials that are happening. We've seen some improvement, some increase in the number
of clinical trials over the last couple of years, but I'd like to see a dozen more clinical
trials right now testing all of the different possible leads for what might cause long COVID
and how we might help people feel better.
Translation, we don't really know what it is either.
It's just, it's pathetic.
Yeah.
But give me, give me some money and I can tell you what it is.
Money, money, money, money.
And then the third thing that we really need to help that happen is we need the pharmaceutical
industry to get off the sidelines and to really connect to participating.
in clinical trials, putting their drugs up for testing, investing deeply in this problem
so that we can get answers for people who are really debilitated from this condition.
Megan, as somebody who is a patient and an advocate, how are you feeling about the commitments
that have been announced recently? Well, right now today, there's about 20 million Americans,
just like me, who are living with long COVID, and many of us were in the prime of our careers
and lives, and now are disabled and chronically ill. And so,
the administration's announcements that Secretary Kennedy made were welcome.
It was really good to see the HHS secretary having a high-level meeting,
bringing together all the parts of government that we really need to work together to find a solution.
And that's really what we need to see so that parents like myself can get back to volunteering at our kids' schools.
We can go back to our workplaces and patients can finally get the tests and the treatments that we've been waiting over five years for now.
I'm just going to guess that your final clip should not be three minutes and 10 seconds.
Let me take a look.
Probably not.
Generally speaking, I can explain how that happens once in a while, but I'm not going to.
No, why bother?
I'll tell you when to cut it off.
It'll be around the, you know, we'll see.
A buck 20.
Megan, you've been working on these things and advocating for your community for these five years.
on your experience, what are your hopes for what happens next? And also, where do your concerns lie?
By the way, this is so scripted. I mean, you can hear an NPR shows or it's PBS scripted.
By the way, when I play the Boeing, it'll be over.
Surprise.
Based on your experience, what are your hopes for what happens next? And also, where do your
concerns lie? Like many patients, the long COVID campaign has been calling for biomarkers.
so that we can do research and figure out if treatments are going to work and hopefully get a test so that people in the United States, Americans who are disabled, can more easily qualify for disability, that we can see insurance coverage.
We really want to see the FDA move more quickly, and we're hoping with these announcements from the administration that we'll see them, more rapidly approved clinical trials with the endpoints that we need, and then work together on approving treatments and therapies that families and Americans living with long COVID urgently need.
need, we didn't see the progress we needed under the Biden administration. And I know so many
patients are ready to work with this administration in an earnest way to actually solve this problem.
And for both of you, COVID-19 and long-COVID are things that many Americans have quite simply
moved on from. And yet there are many, many more people who are living with this every single day.
First to you, Michael, what do you want people who haven't been affected by long COVID to know about
this community?
I think it's really important that people understand that this can often be an invisible disease
and that there are a lot of people really suffering and really debilitated by it.
And, you know, I think that the investment in addressing this problem is likely to have benefits
that extend beyond this problem.
Long COVID is a really, really challenging disease to study, to research, to treat,
and it'll be a big problem to solve.
But I think that if we have the resources and the strategy and the long-term plan to do it, this should be a problem that we can solve.
And Megan?
Americans may feel like the pandemic's over or that COVID is in the rearview mirror.
But even in just the last few months, we saw the announcement that long COVID is now the most common childhood illness in the United States.
It even surpassed asthma.
So it's still what?
What?
It's surpassed asthma.
The most common childhood disease in America is now long COVID.
When did that happen?
When you're a kid, you can't even get COVID.
It's almost impossible.
But somehow it's become the number one childhood disease.
Surpassing asthma.
According to these Jomokes, I'd like to see some data on that.
Give me your Tay-Lou Swift, a phony story.
What is this, Taylu Swift?
Okay, this is a, I got this.
This is a, this is, you know, they have to talk about Taylor Swift on NPR.
Of course.
Because it's Taylor Swift.
But this is kind of, I consider this even though they kind of couch it as like a positive thing.
She's a good marketing woman and all this and that.
But this to me just says she's a big phony.
Taylor Swift talks about her musical and personal style in eras.
Researchers say those eras have also influenced.
how she speaks. Matthew Wynne of the University of Minnesota co-authored a study that analyzed her speech
from 2008 to 2019. Oh my. As a person moves to different cities and different communities,
they have motivation to change how they speak. While most people don't record themselves from
location to location, Swift's career allowed for that. We have this timeline of her voice throughout
the years. Swift was raised in Pennsylvania, then moved to Nashville. When analyzed this clip of
Swift speaking from her time in Nashville.
My role models in country music are
Shania Twain, Faith Hill, Dixie Chicks.
Part of what it means to be a country musician
is to speak with that southern accent.
And just to make sure that she was welcomed into that community,
maybe that was something that helped that process.
When Swift released Red in 2012,
her speech seemed to change.
A return to her Pennsylvania accent
seemed evident in a live webcast in 2013.
A huge inspiration from my imagination.
She was exiting country music and entering pop music, where a southern accent wouldn't have necessarily fit in as well.
Then, after she moved to New York, the pitch of her voice dropped, as in this 2019 interview with CBS Sunday morning.
And he has 300 million reasons to conveniently forget those conversations.
Wynne explains.
This was a time when she was being much more vocal about social and political issues and the autonomy of musicians over their own work.
And so I think she did what a lot of people do.
She took those issues very seriously.
She started speaking with a lower voice.
This was what university now?
Oh, I don't.
Pennsylvania or something.
Taylor talks about her musical and personal style in eras.
Researchers say those eras have also influenced how she speaks.
Matthew Wynn of the University of Minnesota co-auth.
Minnesota.
If you go to the University of Minnesota, drop out immediately.
They are misusing your tuition.
Well, this is like Harvard and having that drag queen give a course in...
In drag queenery.
What was the name?
She's got this crazy name.
I guarantee that at least five people in the troll room will come up with her name.
And it's a course and it's just a crazy nutball course and it's Harvard.
It is. There's coming.
No, I'm waiting for it.
I'm looking in the...
Did we have a clip?
No, I don't have a clip.
It's dumb.
So that's dumber than what I just played.
All right.
What you do have is you have a podcast clip.
Let's end on a podcast clip.
Do you have a podcast clip?
Yeah, podcast about Buckees, noteworthy.
Oh, yeah.
This is...
It says noteworthy.
Noteworthy, that's why it's an afterthought of the show.
It's noteworthy because I have a commentary about this clip.
But this is about a podcast coming out that's going to spend an hour or two talking about Buckees.
All right.
In a town in southern Colorado, there's a proposal to build a Buckees, a massive convenience store slash gas station, known for its beaver mascot and endless gas pumps.
The proposal has divided neighbors and cost officials their jobs.
It's just all this wild human nature that has erupted over.
A gas station and Beaver Nuggets.
Why don't you just sit there and shut your mouth and listen to White Fees?
I'm Bento Berkland.
On this episode of Purpleish from CPR News,
how plans for a Bucky's Travel Plaza sparked a larger-than-life controversy?
Hit the button below now to start listening.
Okay, your noteworthy commentary.
Mimi, of course, is running for office in the Port Angeles area
and runs into this all the time, which is that the council and the county commissioners and
everybody in between, you can present them with petitions, you can have the places packed with
people that tell them to do this and that. You see it in school boards, you see it on your
YouTube videos, and they refuse to act. These local officials, for some reason, over the last
few decades have not become
responsive. They've become unresponsive
to the local communities.
And this Bucky's story, I'm sure, is exactly
the same. This is completely out of
control. They've gotten
something into their heads where they don't have to
listen to the public anymore.
Well, why would they? That's why
me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me,
for city council. Thank you, Digitup.
The troll room is on the ball.
Headline, Harvard hires drag queen.
as visiting professor in gender and sexuality studies.
New courses include Rue Politics,
drag race and desire, and queer ethnography.
The name of the drag queen?
You ready?
Lahore Vagestan.
Yeah, a pun.
I'm going to show my soul by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, oh, no agenda in the morning.
We've got some pretty good meeter purports coming, the one from Indiana.
Always fun to hear the ones that Damonette Miller puts together for us.
John's tip of the day, we got to end the show mixes.
And right now, we will thank the rest of our Value for Value Supporters, $50.
Very short list because, yeah, very short list, only 24 people total donated today.
Wow.
Starting with John Robine, $100 and Steve Brown, 100 bucks.
and Matthew Gill in Raleigh, North Carolina, 8338.
Kevin McLaughlin's already up at the top there.
It's 8008.
He's the Archduca Luna Lover of America lover of Melons.
Darius Walker and Charleston, West Virginia, 7414,
Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona, 6-06.
Steve Bansstra, 5993.
I don't know.
I'm sure there's some meaning to that.
Then we have Elizabeth Barish, I think, for her husband.
This is a switcheroo for Jeff Barish, who is going to be turning some age, I think.
Of course, she's on the birthday list.
These birthdays on Saturday.
So there you go.
55, 55.
Probably 55.
That's my guess.
He's turning 55.
Brian Furley, 5510, Sir Selverin in Silverin in Silver Spring, Maryland, 52, 72.
You know, I always thought it was Silver Springs.
I always thought that, too.
Silver Springs, Maryland.
I've always said that.
But it always comes through as Silver Spring.
Maybe it's wrong.
Maybe it's wrong.
I don't know. Wrong.
James Sherameda, Napanock, New York, 50.
And these are all 50s, the last few, and very few, I would say.
Chris Conacher in Anchorage, Alaska, Alex Zavala, and Kyle.
Kyle, or Kyle.
The Nick you dead, the Nick you dead, Alex or Alex.
uh, Carrie Jackson in Waterton, Tennessee, Walker, Phillips in San Rafael, California.
And last on a very, very, very, very, very, very short.
How short is it?
Very.
Troy Funderberg in Missoula, Montana.
I want to thank these folks for show, uh, 1805, which is a good show.
Yeah.
I think we had fun, and we delivered some value.
If you'd like to return it, time, talent, or treasure, go to no agenda donations.com.
We also have a P.O. box.
Oh, thank you, by the way, Natalie Taylor, I got your salad dressing.
Did you get your salad dressing?
Yes, I did.
Have you tried said salad dressing?
Yes, I did.
What did you think?
Well, I think that season is a well-designed salad dressing, except at least for my taste,
It's extremely salty.
I thought so.
Tina wouldn't use it, wouldn't try it.
It has seed oils in it.
She looked at the back right away.
What seed oils?
I'm not going to try this.
Something to be said for that.
But we appreciate it, Natalie.
Thank you very much to be said, but okay.
Seed oils will kill you, man.
Seed oils.
There you go.
Go to no agenda donations.com to support the show.
We appreciate everything everybody does.
Again, thanks to our executive
and associate executive producer is episode 1805.
You will be in the credits.
And again, go to noagenda donations.com to help.
It's a birthday, birthday.
I don't know what you got.
Here she is, Elizabeth Barrett,
wishing her smoking hot husband, Jeff.
A very happy birthday you celebrated yesterday.
I guess we turned 55, didn't we?
And Kevin McKenna, happy birthday to his daughter, Anison.
She turns nine years old.
Happy birthday, Anison.
For everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
And there is one of our top changes, turn and facelessly.
Nice to change.
And there he is, one of our top executive producers for today, Sir David Killian.
He comes in as Baron David Killian of the Illinois Prairie, thanks to his exceptional amount of donations four times night.
There you go.
We appreciate it.
You are now officially on the peerage map.
And now we do have one Secretary General.
All hail to the Secretary Generals, because they are the ones to be hailing.
All hail to the Secretary Generals on the No Agenda Show.
I really wish we could get a redo of that jingle.
People keep telling me it's wrong.
I know it should be Secretary's General, I know.
Hey, John Bigelow, thanks to your support today.
you become a Secretary General, my friend, and you gave us the name.
The name was, let me see, Secretary General, I'm sorry, not John Bigelow, my mistake.
You named the wrong guy?
I named the wrong guy.
I'm sorry, the wrong, sorry, it's Matthew Lomar, that's who I meant.
Who's Bigelow?
A little confusion in the control room.
Matthew Lomar, congratulations.
You shall now firmly be known as Secretary General of Water Well Drillers.
Yes, all hail to the Secretary General.
All hail to the Secretary Generals, because they are the ones who need hailing.
All hail to the Secretary Generals on the No Agenda Show.
There, now we got Bigelow.
Bigelow becomes a night today, so get out your blade for John Bigelow, if you wouldn't mind, please.
got it
very nice
oh that's the sharp one too
hey john bigelow pop up on the podium here
you sir are about to become knighted
you will be a knight of the no agenda roundtable
thanks to your support of the no agenda show
in one thousand dollars i'm very proud
to pronounce the kb as
sir john of the techney basin
for you we've got hookers and blow rent boys
and shard-day we've got a ribeye and mulbeck
that's what you really wanted along with that
harlots and howled all redheads and rise beers and blunts
cowgirls and coffin varners, Rubeness,
women in, rosé, gaites, and sake, vodka, and vanilla,
bonghits, and bourbon, sparkling cider, and escorts,
ginger ale, and gerbils, breast milk, and pablement, as always.
We've got the mutton and the mead here for you.
Congratulations, sir.
You go to noagenda rings.com.
The same, of course, goes for our Secretary General, Sir David,
Matthew Lomar, go to Noagenda Rings.com.
That's where you can get your Secretary General information in.
For the Rings, you, it's a beautiful signet.
ring. So it gave you some wax to seal your important correspondence with a certificate of
authenticity. Just give us the place where we want to send it to and your ring size.
There's a ring sizing guide on the website. And welcome to the roundtable, Sir John of the Techni Basin.
No one should have. Meetup.
Well, we had a couple of parties going on in the past couple of days. We have a meter purport,
Leo Bravo, out there in Los Angeles. They just, they never quit.
The Los Angeles, they just stay there, keep meeting.
This is flight number 67 of the no agenda.
Yo, yo, yo.
It's Leo Bravo at meetup number 67.
The crew has things to say.
This is Myra from Moccholo.
Come join us anytime after 11 a.m.
This is Eric reporting from downtown Los Angeles, where there's nothing happening on the streets.
Except for Comic Con going on across the street.
And we're here all just as furries pawing our Mexican food.
In the morning.
Okay, now we go to Indiana.
Day Manette always puts together a great meetup report
because there's always a lot of people at the indie meetups.
This is Day Maria.
And Sir Mark.
We are so happy to be back in Indiana with our family here.
It's amazing.
In the morning, this is syrup over the maple,
and today was a hot meetup due to climate change.
Gary here.
Sorry I've been gone for the last few months,
but my reprogramming for her spook is taking a little longer than I thought.
Hey, this is Emily, and if you keep saying four more years,
We essentially have y'all at least seven months into the next administration, so four more years.
Bruce here, just drinking some beers with Emily the Fed.
Nodder from Indianapolis.
I'm here.
Should not have ate that whole pizza, but it's still good to see Mark and Maria.
In the morning, this is Matt, finally driven in from the wilds of southeast Indiana.
Only Mark and Maria could bring me back from my ranch out in the woods.
Dame Trinity having a great time in Indy.
It is great to see Mark and Maria back in the States.
In the morning, John and Adam, Sir, PBR Street Game, here from Port Wayne.
loving to see Mark and Maria back again.
This is Ted from Batesville, part of the walking wounded.
Glad to see Mark and Maria back here.
This is Chris from Indianapolis.
Newby, just came for the free wine.
There's free wine?
Oh, this is David, and I'm from Illinois.
My first meet up in Indy.
I'm glad to be here in the morning.
In the morning, Dame Swan.
I'm next to Sir David, who just won the raffle.
I didn't.
Sir Benny here, and I'm sitting next to the most fabulous Dame Swanee I could ever imagine.
In the morning, John and Adam, this is Nick.
There's a lot of pressure for me to be funny, so I'm just going to say, Cash Patel's eyeballs.
Hey, this is Grady at the Blind Owl, playing crowd control over these crazy folks.
Maybe some of you guys can get your servers to partake a little bit.
In the morning, see you in Balala.
Okay, wonderful.
Hey, there's a meetup taking place on Thursday.
It is the Dakota Tavern in Parker, Colorado on the 9th.
That's Thursday.
Thursday at Dakota Tavern kicks off at 5.30 p.m.
And coming up.
We've got the Johnson City, Texas meetup on October 10th, followed by the Fredericksburg, Texas meetup on October 11th.
Going to be a lot of no agenda superstars there.
I'm sure Sir, Sir, Sir, Sir, Dirty Jersey whore will be there.
I think Sir Mark, the filmmaker is going to be there.
Tina the keeper will be there.
I'll be there at the same time, October 11th, Garden City, Idaho meetup.
Charlotte, North Carolina, the 16th.
Collieville, Texas on the 18th, Fort Wayne, Indiana, on the 18th, Columbus, Ohio, on the 18th, Lansing, Michigan,
on the 19th, Los Altos, California on the 25th, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania on the 26th, and
Berlin, Deutschland.
This has to be some kind of illegal move.
They're going to do a meetup and talk about things.
That's October 27th.
Send us a report.
Light in the Netherlands on 31st to going into November, Albany, California, get John out
of the house meetup on the 15th.
And January 3rd, we already have a meetup on the book, Santa Rosa, California.
Those are just a few of the Noagena Meetups, which you can find at NoagenaMeetups.com.
go there because you will love these meetups.
Connection is protection.
You get it at the meetup,
the people who will be your first responders in an emergency.
No AgendaMeetups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start one yourself.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you won't be.
Triggered or hell to blame.
You want to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
Always like a party.
Guaranteed to delight.
Time for our ISO off.
Iso off.
Iso off.
We both have two, I see, except one of yours is named Oso.
Your spelling mistakes are getting better with the years.
They're funnier.
I actually load, I thought that was a different podcast clip you had.
I'm like, oh, it's an ISO.
I see.
It's really short.
I got it.
Okay, I'll play mine.
Then we'll play you.
or see which one we choose for the end of the show.
Here's my first.
Utterly breathtaking.
Non-A.I. and utterly breathtaking.
Or this one.
This is a big one.
All right.
What do you have?
Huh.
Uh-huh.
It does it tough.
Yeah. Thank you.
Well, I have a...
I don't do AI.
I've got ISO hosts.
This show gets better with age.
Like the hosts.
Not AI at all.
Gee, you fooled me, John.
Well, yeah, the show gets better with the age like the hosts.
This show gets better with age, like the hosts.
Okay, speak for yourself.
And there's the one, best podcast.
Best podcast.
I can go with this one.
This show gets better with age, like the hosts.
I can go with that one.
Yeah, of course you can.
It's cute.
Of course I can.
Hey, everybody.
Cute.
Here it is.
It's John's tip of the day.
and me just the tip with JCD and sometimes Adam I'm going to do my I do this about six of these a year
and this is a wine tip oh good we love a John C. DeVorek wine that I have it every so often and
every time I have it I say why don't I plug this wine it's and it's interesting because I'll
give you a little backstory about some of these cheap California wines that are done
by Gallo and they they bring out this fabulous wine that the turning leaf was a good example
if you can remember back that far came out the cabernet it was like 10 bucks nine bucks
tasted like a 50 dollar wine and then the next year tastes kind of like a 20 dollar wine and then
the next year it tastes like a five dollar wine and then they folded but they made lots of money
I bet they did so this is different this these guys have yet to have dropped the quality of
this product. This is a screwball wine that I think came out of the, this came out of a bunch of
purchases. Actually, I have a bottle here that Robert Mondavi did before he died. Oh, Robert.
Robert Mondavi. This is a Robert Mondavi wine. And he bought a bunch of California wineries all
over the place to use as estate taxes so he could just dump the winters and the kids would still
have the main winery. But it turned out that the president changes, whatever happened.
happened he ended up with owning these places and they changed the names of them and i don't remember
which one this was in specifically but it's one of the valley wines from san joaquin valley i think
but it's it's sold as robert mondavi and i'll tell you what what it says on the label and it's like
nine bucks maybe maybe up to 12 some places can i get it can i get it at costco
will have it but all kinds of places have it they make a ton of it okay and it's a black label
wine called Robert Mondavi
Private Selection, which
is always a giveaway for what?
Come on. Nine bucks, ten bucks. And it's
a black label? Isn't it always
black label wine? Isn't it always black label?
No, Robert Mondavi has a
tan label. Well, this always has a black label
because it's not really Robert Mondavi. It's not
a nap of wine. It's not made there either.
But it says Robert Mondavi. It just
says Robert Mondavi. Robert Mondavi,
private selection, bourbon barrel-aged Cabernet Sauvignon.
Ooh, that's very popular.
And this wine for a year, I've been drinking this on and off for about five years as a kind of a, just a quick wine, if you want to have a dinner, hamburger wine.
After breakfast.
After breakfast.
Hamburger wine.
It's good for, it's good with eggs.
Hamburger wine.
It's a total hamburger wine.
And it is just, it's got, it's the, for a California wine, it's dull.
dark. It's got some
Cabernet character. It's got a lot of oak.
And it's a bourbon style oak. If you don't
like oak, don't get this wine. But if you like
oaky wines, this is a
very well-made wine.
I'm going to see if H.E.B. has it. I'll talk to
Matt at H.E.B. And I'll tell him to push it.
It's a cheapie. I'll tell them to put like one of those
sticker. Put a sticker on it. John C. DeVorek
tip of the day wine. I'm telling you.
Yeah. We should have those. John C. DeVorac tip of the day wine.
There it is. Find all of John's
tips of tip of the day.net. What a good one.
Create advice for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Burnettie.
Wow. I always love it when you do a good wine tip.
Especially when they're cheap. Which are most of your wine tips, actually.
No, I try to keep them cheap. And they have to be readily available, too.
I mean, you just can't have, you know, something up here.
I can't wait. I'm going to go to H.E.B. tomorrow.
Say, hey, man, I need that Robert Maldaldi, private selection, black label,
the bourbon barrel.
Bourbon barrel age, yes.
Yeah, it's very popular here in Texas, the bourbon barrel age,
along with Texas Heritage Wine, whatever that means.
Have you got an end of the show mixes from B-dubs and Jeffrey Crocker.
And coming up next on the No Agenda Streams,
oh, abs in a six-pack.
It'll be episode number 270.
We need another live show after our...
our live show. Where are the live shows, people? Give us a live show. Coming to you from the heart of
the Texas Hill Country, soon to be the place of another meetup here at J-6 or Jettys Place, Fredericksburg, Texas.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain,
I'm John C. DeVorak. Meet us here again on Thursday. We'll do it all over again for you with
more media deconstruction. Until then, remember us at no agenda, donations.com. Adios,
and mofos, a hooey-hooey, and such.
Good evening, Mari.
What is the White House saying about the government shutdown?
Tiff, good evening.
Yes, the White House is blaming Democrats for the government shutdown,
saying that it impacts active-duty troops,
critical food assistance, and flood insurance as we enter hurricanes.
Republicans thought that they could barrel us into a shutdown.
They can't barrel us
They can't bully us
He's an idiot
He's an idiot
He's got the blues on the left
What is he talking?
What's the barrel?
Oh, the Republicans are trying to barrel us
They can't barrel us
They can't barrel us
Ladies and gentlemen, if you take a sixpence,
for the ganges are here.
Ladies and gentlemen, if you take a six-pence,
which in Deutsch is Fulman-Swanzig-Fennig,
and you go on the bus, upstairs,
the on the buses,
the on-the-buses we have put on the table so far
will make a real difference.
Make no mistake.
This is a fight for our future.
And this is why we have to massively boosts the omnibusiness.
You are plasticity.
The omnibus is.
But the truth is that the world of today is unforgiving.
And it is for all these reasons, companies and consumers alike.
And the omniburacies.
And further on, the buses are on their way, for example, military mobility, or on the digital.
Or on the digital.
They can feel the ground shift beneath them.
We simply cannot wait for this storm to pass.
The omnibus is.
It's for all these reasons that a new Europe must emerge.
The omnibus is slow.
But people will love the slop.
Oh, this baby loves the slop.
Loves it, eats it up.
It's the slop.
Born a slap.
There's no stopping it.
Loves it, eats it up, loves it, eats it up,
born a slop, born a slap, it needs to slop, it needs to slap.
They're AI pigs.
They want more slop.
Loves and eats it up. Born a slop.
Needs the slop.
Oh, this baby loves a slop.
Give me slop. I love it. I'm a pig. Give it to me.
Loves it eats it up. Loves and eats it out. Loves and eats it out. Born to slap. Born a slap. Born a slap. Oh, this baby loves a slop.
We're like pigs. We're like pigs. We're like pigs.
Me, me, gimmee, me, gimmee, me slob, me slob, me slob, born the slap, born the slap, needs the slag. It's the slag. It's the slug. It's the slag. This show gets better with age. Like the hosts.