No Agenda - 1822 - "Kohanna"
Episode Date: December 4, 2025No Agenda Episode 1822 - "Kohanna" "Kohanna" Executive Producers: Baronetess Kelly Sir Smitiot Elaine Siebert - ArcanaResin.com strike Zane Petersen Associate Executive Producers: Christopher Grave...s - Littlejohnscandies.com Sean Homan Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning résumés - Imagemakersink.com Become a member of the 1823 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Art By: Darren O'Neill End of Show Mixes: Baron DarrenO of the Rock and Roll EOS Media_Deconstruction_DarrenO.mp3 B-Dubz EOS Funky Human.mp3 MVP EOS No Agenda Contraindications - frantic.mp3 Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry 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) 1822.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 12/04/2025 16:48:33This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 12/04/2025 16:48:33 by Freedom Controller
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Got him off this.
Ed, dang, ding, dang.
Adam Curry, John C. DeVorex.
It's Thursday, December 4th, 2025.
This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination Episode 1822.
This is no agenda.
Place in crazy bets.
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.
A man from Northern Silicon Valley where we're celebrating the fact that they caught the bet mad bomber.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
Crackpot and Buzzkill
In the morning
Well, here's what I call my eye
As the Quad screen lit up with
We've got the bomber
We were told by Glenn Beck's
Forensic Analyst
That it was a woman
And they were 99% sure
Well, I guess somebody was wrong
Yeah, how about that?
Who is this guy?
Some guy lives in a really fancy house.
Really?
Yeah, the house is dynamite.
Oh, well, it'll be up for sale soon, cheap.
Well, I mean, he might be bored or he might be, who knows,
but they haven't explained it.
Yeah.
So weird.
I mean, I, I, I know, they're all patented.
They had this huge press conference.
They're all patting each other on the back and then condemning the old Biden administration.
Oh, yeah.
They knew.
They knew.
They didn't do anything.
They sat on this cold case.
They didn't do anything.
They sat on it.
Yeah.
I love, seeing Judge Janine speak in that official role is
just wrong.
There's something wrong about it.
You know,
the worlds of show business and politics when they collide like that, it's odd.
You know,
Bongino is up there too, yacking away.
Oh, really?
He got cut off.
Oh, by whom?
No, it just went, screen went blank.
They had a glitch.
Oh, what was he saying?
Code Bongino?
I don't know what.
No, he was doing the same thing as Patel.
Everybody said, yeah, you know, we're a great.
It took forever, and we had a big team, and we worked 24-7.
Yeah, 33 hours nonstop.
We had millions and millions of detailed pieces of evidence that we had to go through
and analyze.
The other guys are too lazy to do it.
Yeah, those guys.
Fresh eyes.
Every cliche from every movie you've ever seen.
Fresh eyes.
I like that.
Yeah, fresh eyes.
Fresh eyes is fantastic.
Well, that, of course, is not the...
I mean, they're real busy, obviously, because now that we've uncovered this,
who knows what will happen with the Epstein files, we're all waiting with bated breath.
But wait, we have new pictures.
House Democrats release more than 150 still images and more than a dozen short videos
of the Caribbean estate of late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The images do not show any people at the lavish home on a private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
They do show the compounds, pool areas, several bedrooms, and bathrooms,
in a room that mysteriously contains a dental chair,
and you saw the walls are adorned with masks of men's faces.
Congress is waiting for the Justice Department to release the so-called Epstein files, all of them.
Justice must do so within 30 days of President Trump signing the Epstein Files Transparency Act on November 19th.
This was great.
This picture of the dentist chair with these protruding masks on the wall is just what in the world?
is that is going on there and how can we know of any pictures of zoro ranch that's that's the
place where it was probably more interesting that's a question one of the unanswered uh questions
the other one to me is hey hey they had a room is full of videotapes what no one even wants to talk
about well hold on a second because rocana rocahana was on with the poopmeister
anderson pooper and he has some stuff to say about it tonight we're getting an inside look
at some of the rooms in Jeffrey Epstein's notorious
home on a private Caribbean island
where underage girls and young women were trafficked
and sexually abused. Democrats on
the House Oversight Committee released these photos
as well as videos they say have not been made
public before. One of the images
shows what appears to be a dentist chair in one room
with masks on a wall. Another
shows a blackboard with some words scribbled
on it. Words!
Words! Words! Political. Power deception.
Words! There's also this video
showing the manicured grounds of the estate
with pantrees and winding paths and a
large pool. Oh, no. The Department of Justice has 16 days before they have to release documents
related to its investigation. I wonder, is the Democrat the listing agent for this island or something?
Because it really is like a sales video. Like, oh, that kitchen looks nice. Yeah, I can do without
the crazy dentist chair, but everything else is pretty cool. Epstein is required by the bill that
Congress passed and President Trump recently signed into law. Now, we learned today that Epstein's
accomplice, Gileen Maxwell, is planning to file a petition that asking,
a judge to release her from prison.
She's a 20-year sentence for her
sex trafficking conviction. Joining us
tonight, California Congressman Rokana, member of the
Oversight Committee, who along with Republican
Congressman Thomas Massey, led the
fight to pass that bill, forcing the release of
the Epstein file. So, Congressman, I mean, do
these video images, fill in any blanks
for you, raising a new question? I'm wondering
what stands out to you? What stands out
is the dentist chair? Well, the dentist
chair was concerning to me.
Obviously, we need to know the facts,
but what we need to know is
Were underage girls abused on that chair?
What happened there?
What we do know from the survivors is their fillings.
I mean,
maybe they had a dentist on board, Dan.
It's possible.
It was a part of the deal.
You got free cleaning.
Hey, come to the island.
We got a dentist on staff.
We got a free cleaning.
We can do a, we can bleach the teeth a little bit,
look a little better.
I can change your jaw.
What we need to know is we're underage girls abused
on that chair what happened there what we do know from the survivors is there are many such
photos uh in the fstein files we know that from the survivors and their lawyers all of those need to
be released every file every photo every interview memorandum while protecting victims need to be
released by federal law in the next 16 days oh what what wait wait why didn't he mention the
videotapes no no no it's actually this interview goes in an unexpected
direction. I've got two more clips here. Do you expect, I mean, do you know what to expect in 16 days
in terms of what level of redaction there's going to be? Have you gotten any word from the Department
of Justice how they are handling this? Congressman Massey and I have requested to meet with
Attorney General Pam Bondi or someone on our team handling the investigation. So far we have not
heard back. We're going to continue to pursue it. Of course, Congressman Massey is on the Judiciary
committee so Pam Bondi will be coming before that committee but now every person at the justice
department who does not cooperate in releasing these files would be violating federal law that they would be
subject to federal penalties so we expect that there will be a release and we're going to continue
to fight to make sure that it is transparent and complete your committee says it's also received
about 5,000 documents in response to subpoenas to J.P. Morgan, Deutsche Bank for Epstein's financial
records. I don't know how much of those, the committee's been able to review, but do they,
I mean, what do you hope to find in those documents? Does anything connect any dots for you?
Well, the committee is going through that. There are a lot of documents, but the big question is,
how is Jeffrey Epstein, a former schoolteacher worth a half a billion dollars? Who is funding him?
why are people giving him this money and what was he doing for this money those are things that we're
going to get from these documents as you know senator widen has been investigating this in the senate
for over a year that is going to be critical to understanding who all was involved that took a sudden
change to turn all of a sudden we went from victims to who was funding him what's the money
flows. We're looking into that. That should get some people rather worried, particularly
in the banking sector. How about Chase? Jamie Diamond? Jamie Diamond? Chase. By the way,
thank you, trolls. Jeffrey Epstein's last known girlfriend, Karina Shuliac, was a dentist from Belarus
whom he reportedly paid to put through dental school. She's listed as a dentistry
practitioner in St. Thomas, with over five years of experience in the field.
Shuliac was dating Epstein at the time of his arrest and death in 2019.
He made his final phone call to her from jail.
Oh, no.
They had a dentist chair there because his girlfriend was a dentist.
Oh, no.
Can nobody do Google searches anymore?
That's funny.
That seems like an obvious thing to look up.
Well, somebody in the chat room or the troll room could do them.
Yeah. Well, that's why we're the best podcast in the universe.
Yeah, it's instant.
Honestly, I didn't even think to look of it myself, but all right.
Well, that's not...
Well, was anyone abused?
Well, I don't know.
If it was a bad root canal, maybe.
Maybe.
Kohana goes on here.
We've talked about Galeen Maxwell.
Coana?
Planning to ask a judge, truly.
This is new name.
Yeah, Kohana.
Cohana.
Thank you for catching that.
Kohana, yes.
Her from prison, according to a new court filing.
What do you think the chances of that actually are,
given the unknowns of, you know, the interview she had with President Trump's former personal attorney,
who's now, you know, a high level of the Department of Justice?
What do you think is going to happen there?
It would be a slap in the face of the survivors.
Anderson, as you imagine, I've gotten to know some of these survivors.
I spent time with them.
When you mention Galane Maxwell's name, they have a trauma and an anger.
This is someone who abused them.
This is someone who facilitated their abuse.
The fact that we're even discussing any leniency for her or letting her out of jail is frankly disgusting.
And the survivors themselves get so emotional when people bring up Maxwell.
A House Oversight Committee spokesperson today earlier would say criticize Democrats on the committee,
your committee for releasing these videos and photos, saying, quote,
it is odd that Democrats are once again releasing selective information as they have done before.
I'm wondering what your response to that is.
Let's release it all.
That's what Massey and my bill does.
If you don't think there's anything there, get the files out.
If you think it's selective, get the files out.
Let's finally get the information out there.
most importantly because of the thousand survivors, and that's what they want.
And so we end this kind of blame game and name-calling.
Let's just get it all out there in the next 16 days.
Yeah, yeah, blame game, name-calling, get it.
Who's name-calling?
I don't know.
It wouldn't surprise me.
What's he talking about?
Kohana's off his rocker.
It wouldn't surprise me if in the emails and the documents,
we literally find an email that says,
hey, when you're down here, you know, my girlfriend can clean your teeth.
It wouldn't surprise me.
You make a joke about it, but, I mean, really rich people have weird things in their home.
It's true.
You know what I mean?
It's like, yeah.
I used to go one time I was in Bill Ziff's office and upstairs in some.
Of the famous Ziff Davis publishing empire.
Yes, and he had an office in a penthouse someplace.
This is not the office at the magazine.
his house office.
This sounds like another story I have never heard before.
Well, it's not much to it.
But all I remember is that we're having this conversation
and all of a sudden his hair cutter comes in.
Yeah.
And I'm just chatting with him.
And next thing you know, he's got a barber's thing around his neck
and the guy's trimming his hair in front of me.
I remember once being at this really well,
this was when I was very young,
I was doing the pirate radio stuff.
And I had to go to one of our big sponsors.
And this was clearly some kind of drug gangster,
some narco gangster.
He had this huge house in Amsterdam.
It consisted of half of a canal block.
And I think I had to pick up some videotapes.
I don't remember exactly what it was.
He had Western House and Western House.
Then I forget the other name.
He had like stores, boutique stores, probably all money laundering.
And all of a sudden I see a member of parliament on a 10-speed bike just driving through the house.
you know it's like that kind of stuff is is normal for these jimokes so you know
yeah in spandex was he wearing clothes is the big question he had you're one of those
spandex riding outfits on like what what are you doing yeah just riding around okay
anyway we have to this this dental chair this is it people i also would have wished
that virginia was alive today i would have asked her all about that dentist chair and what that meant
and what that was, because to me, there's something sadistic about it.
It's kind of crazy.
I mean, it's bizarre to have a dentistry in somebody's private.
I mean, seriously, this is one of the easiest things to look out.
That's nuts.
The dentist, there's something dark about it.
It's dark.
The mask.
Wait, hold on a second.
Hold on a second.
I have to stick up for my dental professionals here.
Hold on a second.
It's hard to have a dentistry in somebody's private.
Also, just no one wants to go to the dentist.
There's something dark about it.
No, I love going to the dentist.
That's, you know, I just, you know, I,
just want to say something for our dental professionals, you guys really get the short end of the
stick. I love getting my teeth cleaned. I love hanging out there. I love the dentist. I love
hanging out there. I hang out at the dental. Hey, what are you doing this afternoon? I'm going to go over
the dental office and hang out because it's so much fun. I'm serious, though. I was like,
what are you doing? What's that instrument for? How does that thing work? You know, once you
You should have become a dentist.
I think this is what we're doing.
You're trying to, this is a cry for help.
It is.
Help me get become a dentist.
It's my late age.
Can I make the switch?
Can I still do it?
Podcast to dentist.
There's a leariness to it all.
There's it, there's, it's almost like you're walking through a crime.
Wait.
I mean, you.
What kind of word is leeryness?
There's a leariness to it.
That's an interesting question.
What do you think?
That's not a word?
It's not a word.
leariness? Well, should we ask the robot to make sure? Yeah, ask the robot. Hey, robot. Tell me about
the word leariness. Is that a real word? Mm-hmm. Leariness is a real word. It means
awareness, caution, or a state of being leery. Like if you're suspicious about something and not
quite trusting. I'm all right. I guess it's in then. I was wrong. Yeah. Well, of course we have to trust AI.
I mean, our overlord.
Never wrong.
Never.
The masks on the wall.
There's a leariness to it all.
There's, it's, it's almost like you're walking through a crime scene.
I mean, you are walking through a crime scene.
I saw the pictures.
I saw the pictures.
It does not look like a crime scene.
It looks like a real estate portfolio.
What it looks like.
Well, okay.
Dressing it up a bit here.
A crime scene.
I mean, you are walking through a crime scene.
When I see the rooms, they're,
kind of hotel-type rooms.
Could it be for anybody.
It has just...
Yeah, I mean, there's kind of no personality
other than sort of creepiness to these things.
Otherwise, there is this sort of...
I'd love to see Vanderbilt's home.
Anonymity to a sort of anonymous hotel room
somewhere in the Caribbean.
Exactly.
And it's interesting.
You could even see from the picture of the cameras.
I mean, there are cameras everywhere.
They're being recorded.
You could say for security, but also...
Where's your cage?
Where's the tapes?
Where's the tapes?
That they believe that they were always being recorded there.
Even the statues are weird, like the one by the pool.
And I think it's important for us to have this documentary evidence, especially when
you have the president's United States saying this is a hoax.
This is going nowhere.
It's nine more seconds.
They're yak, yak, yak, yak, yack and about nothing.
Folks, seeing is believing, see the place where he lived.
And this isn't all just from wealth porn.
This is a very perverted.
Drop cliches on it.
I'm dumping this.
Hey, picture's worth a thousand words.
That's right.
Seeing is believing.
That's right.
Oh, man.
That's good.
It gives everybody something to talk about.
That's always fun.
I mean, what is the point of the Democrats releasing these photos?
What is the actual point?
Is it to drive one's attention back?
I mean, it doesn't make a lot of sense.
Midterm-wise, which everything should be about.
Everything.
you know so yeah i think you're right there's everything should be about the midterms and
they they somehow think they're gonna i don't know what they're thinking but they're they seem
to think there's a benefit to this they're really a lost cause these guys yeah i think they
will take the midterms but it's a kind of baffling that they can even get anybody to vote for
him well i mean everything well although this um this um this
This double-tap war crime, this is my favorite, this is the best story ever.
But the American military has done atrocious things for our freedom, for their democracy, all over the world.
But now we're blowing up some drug boats and everyone loses their ever-loving mind.
And I think that Matt Taibi and Walter Kern, thank you, Walter Kern, are correct that there's probably money on those boats too.
although we don't see it like, you know, like fluttering dollars.
That would be kind of cool if you saw that.
But this thing seems like a lot of people are very, very worried about this.
I don't believe that.
I disagree.
You don't think.
Why would there be money on the boats?
You exchange the drugs for the money.
You don't carry the money on the boat with the drugs.
And then you put the money straight into the bank in the Caribbean.
Yeah.
And, you know, we discussed when the 2008 created, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
what was it, what they call it, the Great Recession, the Great Recession.
If we didn't have drug money flowing, the whole world would have crumbled.
The drug money flow is so important.
In fact, we have a, this is how far I'll go with this.
We have, I think they're talking about a liquidity crisis on Wall Street.
I think that means there's not enough money.
And there's all kinds of reasons for it.
We had a government shutdown.
but could it also be that all this money is all the value is being blown up in the ocean
and that oh man we don't have any money coming in do you think that's possible that it's that much
because I do well I don't know about that because it's coming in from every which way and all
over the place it's only accounting for some of it maybe 10% at the most I don't even think
it's well no Trump says it's 90% of well Trump's gee Trump exaggerating huh let me write this one down
Let's listen.
You release video of that first boat strike on September 2nd, but not the second video.
Will you release video of that strike so that the American people can see for themselves?
I don't know what they have, but whatever they have, we'll certainly release.
No problem.
We need to start saying that.
We want to know about the dentist chair because the American people have a right to know about the dentist chair.
The American people who pay their taxes have an absolute right.
I am a journalist.
You know, we stopped every boat.
We knock out. We saved 25,000 American lives.
I think we've now saved or created 300 million people with the amount of boats we've blown out of the water.
What's blown up, what, 20 boats now or more?
So that's 20 times 25,000.
So it's half a million.
Am I saying that right?
Yeah.
Half a million lives have been saved or created, Mr. President.
Good work.
And if you look at our numbers.
The drugs coming in through sea are down 91%.
I'm surprised there's 9%.
I don't know who's doing the 9%.
But it's down 91.
And we're going to start very soon on land,
and I'm sure you're thrilled to hear that.
If it is found that survivors were actually killed
while clinging on to that vote,
should Secretary Hibseth, Admiral Bradley, or others be punished?
I think you're going to find that this is war,
that these people were killing our people
by the millions, actually, if you look over a few years.
I think last year we lost close to 300,000 people were killed.
That's not mentioning all the families.
Have you seen what happens with the families?
Not only the people killed,
the people that are trying to get their son or their daughter
off of this poison that they've been fed,
I think you're going to find that there's a very receptive ear
to doing exactly what they're doing, taking out those boats.
And very soon we're going to start doing it on land, too,
because we know every route, we know every house,
we know where they manufacture this crap,
we know where they put it all together,
and I think you're going to see it very soon on land.
I'll say, yeah, please.
Ah, now I see.
How about he's going to take out these drug manufacturing operations
with airstrikes, not boots on the ground, but air strikes?
Yeah.
That's what it sounds like to me.
That's what's going to happen.
Yeah.
And by the way, according to zero,
hedge, and they would know.
Cocaine inflation erupts in Europe after U.S. strikes the Caribbean drug boats.
Just backing the two of us up.
Yep.
30 to 45% per kilo more expensive.
By the way, so I knew a couple of drug dealers in Amsterdam, marijuana drug dealers.
I don't think they did cocaine.
They might have done pills as well, ecstasy.
But nice people, you know, they would, they would smile.
the stuff into the country in flight cases for musical gear, speaker cases, all kinds of stuff.
And they had, and everyone was paid off.
I don't know that for sure, but obviously.
And those people alone were multi-millionaires.
They had millions of dollars.
They had houses all over the world.
And they were one step above retail.
So just think about what's going back to the cartels and the manufacturers.
It's got to be a multiple of that.
It's got to be hundreds of billions, hundreds of billions.
So I think it does make a difference.
By the way, he got to boots on the ground from the Netherlands.
And he's a documentary filmmaker, and he was part of making a series about the Dutch Navy
and Coast Guard in the Caribbean for National Geographic.
So this is older.
It was about protecting the waters around the Dutch Antilles.
least, different subjects in an episode, of course, but also a lot of drug traffic operations.
From the footage provided to us by the Coast Guard in the interviews we made, I can tell you
that the Dutch, working with the U.S., have had operations in this region for probably a decade or longer,
decades, sometimes with extreme measures like taking out drug boats with force.
Unfortunately, we weren't allowed to show the blowing up or machine gunning of drug boats in the series
due to sensitive nature of the subject in the Netherlands. Yeah, no kidding. It's our dough.
What we did show is that the boats get chased down by fastboats or choppers.
They get at least four warnings over the portophone.
Most give up and get boarded and arrested.
If they don't stop to get boarded, they get their engine shot by marksman from the chopper.
If this doesn't work or they fight back, they get machine guns or blown up.
He says, this has been going on forever.
But now all of a sudden, this is a huge issue.
Yeah, midterms.
We have the best producers in the universe, the best.
hands down. Well, that's what happened. You accumulate. Yes. So let me see. We have,
so that's a good story. What's interesting about this is this little ditty, which got some play.
The 57-year-old former president of Honduras was found guilty in a U.S. federal court of working with drug cartels,
conspiring to distribute more than 400 tons of cocaine toward the United States. He was found to have taken millions of dollars in bribes.
and prosecutors said he bragged about all of it.
Hernandez declared that he wanted, and I quote,
to stuff the drugs right up the noses of the gringos.
Witnesses at trial said Juan Orlando Hernandez used Honduran military units
to escort drug shipments.
A federal jury in New York took only about nine hours to deliberate
and convict him on importation and weapons charges.
He was sentenced to 45 years in federal prison,
but all of that changed this week when he was pardoned by President Trump.
I feel very good about it.
If you have some drug dealers in your country and you're the president,
you don't necessarily put the president in jail for 45 years.
President Trump called Hernandez's trial last year a witch hunt by the Biden administration,
although there were no allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.
It was a case that the Justice Department had built over a number of years against Juan Orlando.
They dated back to the trial of his brother Tony.
Hernandez's brother Tony was tried and convicted for charges,
related to drug trafficking by the first Trump administration in 2019.
Democrats and some Republicans in Congress are slamming the pardon.
Republican Senator Rand Paul said it flies in the face of the Trump administration's
escalating campaign against drug cartels in the region.
So if you look up the history of this, and of course everyone's flummocks, how can he be
blowing up drug boats but letting this guy go free?
First of all, his brother, Tony, he was the drug dealer.
And he. Yeah, and it seems to me, just before you continue, based on just what that was in that report, that Tony was the bad guy. This guy was an innocent basically, you know, a brother, but his innocent bystander for all practical purposes. And the Trump administration must have known that back in the first administration. And then the guy got caught up and thrown in the slam right. But the Trump people already knew that he was not a guilty guy.
Yes, and like eight years ago, five years ago.
But he was thrown in the slammer in 2024.
So his brother went to jail in 19 during Trump administration, in fact, as President Hernandez
positioned himself as a key U.S. ally in the war on drugs, which of course is a joke,
but he oversaw the extradition of over two dozen high-profile drug traffickers to the United States,
including figures linked to major cartels.
This included cooperation with U.S. agencies like D-A, which would have given him access to intelligence on cartel structures, routes, and the leaders in Honduras, a critical transit hub for cocaine from South America to the U.S.
I'm thinking this guy has some valuable information, and this will make a lot of financial people very nervous.
if he actually knows not just how the, how the drugs flow,
but he knows how the money flows,
this could be a very interesting guy to talk to.
And all he really got convicted of was, you know,
supposedly $1 million campaign or bribe, they call it,
but campaign contribution,
but was categorized as a bribe from El Chapo.
And the rest was just witnesses who just said,
no, no, no, no, that guy's guilty.
He's no good.
You know, this is another thing.
I don't want to go off track because I have this three by three to do, but I want to play this.
Trump's been pardoning, doing weird pardons.
And he does it in, you know, in kind of a linear fashion.
He doesn't wait until the end of his administration and then pardon a million people.
And he pardoned this Quayar guy who was the Democrat from Texas, Democrat.
Yeah, Democrat.
Yeah.
Who was, who was arrested.
Can I just stop you for a second?
Do I have all your clips?
I don't have a three by three?
Do I have all your clips?
You better.
No, I, I mean, I got your clips this morning,
but I don't see that in there.
Quayar guy?
Let me check.
Let me double check, man.
This is no good.
You should go resend the clips.
I will, it's possible.
No, I don't, I mean, I have only 20 clips.
I got more than that on here.
Yeah, well, that was not in your email.
This is, we have a production issue.
Yes.
Do you want to send me those real quick?
We're going to have to stop tape.
Okay, tape has been restarted.
We're back, and I'm glad the people have to understand that in preparation for this show,
there is no collusion.
at all. Any collusion? There's no conversations. We don't talk about anything. I show up. You show up.
You send me clips. I don't look at the clips. I don't listen to the clips because I want to be
just as surprised and delighted as everybody else. So what were you looking for? What were you looking for?
The, uh, quayar. Quayar, yes. Oh, the pardon. The pardon. Yeah. Okay, Quayar. And how do you spell
quayor? C, you. Oh, like cellular. I got it.
President Trump pardoning Texas Representative Henry Quayar and his wife, Imelda.
Quayar was indicted last year on more than a dozen federal charges,
and the president declaring a historic reset of fuel economy standards.
We now go live to our Washington correspondent, Marozo, at the North Lawn of the White House.
Mari, good evening.
Tiff, good evening.
Yes, Texas Democratic Representative Henry Quayar was an outspoken critic of former President Joe Biden's border policies.
And back in May 24, he and his wife, Emelda, were indicted for allegedly accepting nearly $600,000 in bribes in exchange for influencing U.S. foreign policy in favor of Azerbaijan and a Mexican bank.
Quayar and his wife have denied all of these charges.
And President Trump today is announcing his, quote, full and unconditional pardon of both of the Quayars on Truth Social, saying, quote,
for years the Biden administration has weaponized the justice system against their political.
opponents and anyone who disagreed with them. He also adds that one of the clearest examples of this
was when Biden used both the FBI and the DOJ to, quote, take out a member of his own party, referring to
Kuiar, as bravely speaking out against open borders and what President Trump calls the Biden border
catastrophe. Take a look. He's a respected person. He was treated very badly because he said that
people should not be allowed to pour into our country. And he was right. He didn't like open borders.
He represents the people on the border, and he saw what was happening.
And as soon as he made that statement, I then said, I'll bet he gets indicted.
And that's what happened.
He got indicted for speaking the truth.
And his wife got indicted, Imilda.
And that's sort of a first.
Usually they leave the wives alone.
Now he had a little comment at the end that usually they, like the mob.
Oh, good.
catch. Leave the wives alone. Well, what I caught in there is some Mexican bank. When I hear that,
I'm like, uh-huh. Yeah. What about the Mexican bank? Did he know something about some cash
going into the Mexican bank? I have no idea what the deal is with the Mexican bank. But I heard
that too, the Mexican bank. And then Azerbaijan, I mean, you took a big bribe for them. What?
What is that? What?
Yeah, so they got the cop 30 or something.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Yeah.
All of this feels so North Sea nexus to me.
It just feels like it.
You know, especially with Hernandez.
You know, maybe we may be getting some interesting information.
Well, back to the drugboats.
Let's play the three by three because it concerns Heg-Seth.
And the bull crap about a surrounding him.
We're singing here.
comparing stories from ABC, CBS and NBC.
The never-ending three-by-th.
That's right.
We have a three-by-three from the big three, ABC, CBS, NBC, and it's about the bullcrap.
And where do you want to start?
Who has to start with ABC?
Here we go.
Tonight, under mounting pressure, Defense Secretary Pete Hengseth,
insisting the decision to launch a second strike against a suspected drug boat in September
was not his call, but that of the mission's command.
under, Admiral Mitch Bradley.
Sunk the boat and eliminated the threat.
And he was the right call.
We have his back.
The day after the attack, Hegeseth said he had watched in real time.
I watched it live.
We knew exactly who was in that boat.
We knew exactly what they were doing.
But today, Hegeseth said he left before the second strike.
I watched that first strike lot.
As you can imagine, at the Department of War, we got a lot of things to do.
So I didn't stick around.
for the hour and two hours, whatever, where all the sensitive site exploitation digitally occurs.
So I moved on to my next meeting.
Hegseth was asked if he saw survivors.
I did not personally see survivors, but I stand because the thing was on fire.
It was exploded in fire or smoke.
You can't see anything.
You got digital.
This is called the fog of war.
The secretary claims he didn't hear about the second strike until an hour or so later.
Over the weekend, President Trump said he hadn't known about.
the second strike and wouldn't have wanted it.
We'll look into it, but no, I wouldn't have wanted that, not a second strike.
The first strike was very lethal, it was fine, and if there were two people around, but Pete said
that didn't happen.
And today, sitting next to his secretary, the president said he was still somewhat in the dark.
I still haven't gotten a lot of information because I rely on Pete, but to me it was an attack.
It wasn't one strike, two strikes, three strikes.
somebody asked me a question about the second strike.
I didn't know about the second strike.
I didn't know anything about people.
I wasn't involved in it.
I knew they took out of bone.
You know, this is all, all this noise is made by the,
is it the appropriations?
What's the, the war committee?
The war committee?
Yeah.
Who are the, who are the people of oversight over the military?
No, I don't think, I think it's called.
that.
I still think this is somehow related to fraud that's going to be uncovered in Ukraine.
I'm sorry, what?
Fraud that will be uncovered in Ukraine.
Fraud.
Going to be?
They had a huge case.
He's lost a bunch of people.
Well, no, but I think we may see some of this tie back to kickbacks.
This was a lot of money.
You remember all of them were saying, hey, man, it's okay because this money comes back to
America. Comes back to our
company, to our military companies.
Yeah.
Well, a lot of it gets stolen.
Well, or kickbacks.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. It's corrupt. Ukraine. Hello.
No, but our own.
It's always considered the most corrupt. But I don't see it having anything to do with this.
Okay.
They do not like.
Alphabetical order CBS. They don't like Hegseth. They sit in there. That's for sure.
No, they don't like Hegseth. That's for sure.
One day after the White House,
confirmed there was a second strike on a suspected Venezuelan drugboat. President Trump today
said he did not know about it.
I should have got a lot of information because I rely on Pete, but to me it was an attack.
The legality of the September 2nd attack is in question after the Washington Post reported
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth allegedly issued an order to kill everybody and that Navy
Admiral Mitch Bradley apparently ordered the second strike to take.
two survivors, fulfilling Heggseth's directive, which many legal experts describe as a war crime.
Hegsef said he only saw the first strike.
A couple of hours later, I learned that that commander had made the, which he had the complete
authority to do, and by the way, Admiral Bradley made the correct decision to ultimately sink
the boat and eliminate the threat.
Trump also pointed to Admiral Bradley.
I hear the gentleman that was in charge of that as extraordinary person.
But the DOD's law of war manual states that shipwrecked combatants are in a helpless state,
and it would be dishonorable and inhumane to make them the object of an attack.
I did not personally see survivors, but I stand, because the thing was on fire.
It was exploded in fire or smoke. You can't see any of the digital.
This is called the fog of war.
At the cabinet meeting, the president also talked about his new efforts to pause migration
and singled out Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar,
who came to the U.S. as a Somali refugee.
Elon Omar is garbage.
She's garbage.
Her friends are garbage.
These aren't people that work.
They complain and do nothing but bitch.
We don't want them in our country.
Why do they even throw that into the report?
I'm not sure.
I do have some stuff on that later.
I just wanted to point out one thing.
that on December 2nd, just because Hegeseth, you know,
he set up new procurement rules.
They were going to be looking at different ways of qualifying contractors.
And the Missile Defense Agency announced on the second,
the 1,014 qualifying offers for, here it comes,
the scalable Homeland Innovation Enterprise Layered Defense Program,
which is an acronym for,
for Shield.
It's for the Iron Dough, for the Golden Dome.
Golden Dome.
That is worth up to $151 billion.
And it went to many small companies.
So if there's a reason for the system to hate Hegseth,
this is a good way to put the spotlight on him and try and get him out.
Especially when he says dumb stuff like,
it was the fog of war, man.
Yeah, that's dumb.
to be stupid.
That's dumb. That's dumb.
But he's not, you know, he's, he's a, he's not well liked by some, some people.
Oh.
Because he's a slightly arrogant.
He's got a kind of arrogance I can see would drive some people nuts.
He's a pretty boy.
And they kept saying that this other guy, this admiral who was in charge of this operation,
they keep saying, Hicketts threw him under the bus.
Hexas did no such thing.
No.
But he says the guy's great.
He did.
what he's supposed to do.
I want, we know we need
some PBS clips because they're always sponsored
by Northrop Grumman. So we need
to hear what they're saying about him.
I don't have to get PBS. We have to
get this. This is Steve's
project. I know. I know. Steve is good
about this. Steve needs to add the PBS
clips. Okay, here we go.
Tonight, President Trump defending, striking a boat
allegedly carrying drugs to the U.S.
Twice in early September. Allegedly.
Allegedly. I want those boats taken out.
And if we have to, we'll attack on land also, just
like we attack on sea. And there's very little coming in by sea. I think we've knocked out
over 90 percent of it. Two people initially survived, and the administration says the decision
for a second strike, killing all on board, was made by Admiral Frank Bradley. Today, defense
secretary Pete Hankseth said, even though he watched the first part of the attack live, he'd moved
on to his next meeting before the second strike. Admiral Bradley made the correct decision
to ultimately sink the boat and eliminate the threat. We have his back. And the American
People are safer because narco terrorists know you can't bring drugs through the water.
So you didn't see any survivors to be clear after that first strike?
I did not personally see survivors, but I stand because the thing was on fire.
It was exploded in fire or smoke.
You can't see anything.
This is called the fog of war.
It comes as the administration ramps up its crackdown on illegal immigration.
A senior law enforcement official tells NBC News ICE is planning an operation.
Oh, hold on a second.
So now I see what CBS did is what NBC is doing as well.
They're somehow tying in drug boats and killing people to immigration and ice.
It's almost like a mind trick.
Like, you know, think about killing people, you know, boats, borders, stuff, you know,
double tap.
Brown people.
Oh, yeah, Somalis.
Exploded and fire.
Pirates.
You can't see anything.
You got digital.
This is called the fog of war.
It comes as the administration ramps up its crackdown on illegal immigration.
A senior law enforcement official tells NBC News,
ICE is planning an operation this week in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area
where there's a large Somali population.
You told me to look into Minnesota and their fraud on visas and their programs.
50% of them are fraudulent.
Federal prosecutors have charged dozens of people in Minnesota's Somali community
for allegedly stealing hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer money
meant for social service programs.
This beautiful place, and I see these people ripping it off, their country stinks,
and we don't want them in our country.
But when they come from hell, and they complain and do nothing but bitch,
we don't want them in our country.
Let them go back to where they came from and fix it.
Now, there's an important nuance in what's happening here.
good catch. Well, yeah.
Associative news
coverage is what it amounts to. And they
both did it. Associate one with the other.
Two separate stories. Let's drag
them together and make Trump look bad.
There's an important nuance in the
Somali business, which surprisingly
ABC tagged in this
report. This morning, ICE preparing
to ramp up enforcement operations in
Minnesota as President Trump lashes out
an immigration in Somalia, saying we don't
want them in our country and continues
to attack Democratic Congresswoman Il
Omar. We're going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our country.
Elon Omar is garbage. She's garbage. Her friends are garbage. These are people that work.
These are people that say, let's go. Come on. Let's make this place great. These are people that do
nothing but complain. They complain. And from where they came from, they got nothing.
You know, they came from paradise. And they said, this isn't paradise. But when they come from
hell and they complain and do nothing but bitch we don't want them in our country
Minnesota is home to the nation's largest Somali population. Multiple law enforcement officials
tell ABC News that ICE is preparing for a surge operation in the state, focusing on St. Paul
in Minneapolis as early as this week. The city's mayor says police won't help ICE when they
arrive. Targeting Somali people means that due process will be violated.
Mistakes will be made.
And let's be clear, it means that American citizens will be detained for no other reason
than the fact that they look like they are Somali.
The president criticizing Somalis for weeks now, terminating temporary protected status for
Somalis and writing, send them back to where they came from.
And this morning, the Trump administration cracking down on immigration nationwide,
pausing all immigration applications for people from 19 so-called countries of concern,
including Somalia, Afghanistan, Venezuela, and Sudan.
We have to remember that the use of temporary status has been abused by Biden and by Obama, both, to bring in cheap labor.
And what I think President Trump here is railing against is, hey, we gave these people temporary protective status because Somali is garbage.
It's a hellhole.
and now they're sitting here and bitching around, get them out.
And he said, all right, you want to be that way?
You want to steal our money?
Because, wow, Republicans and Democrats both have blown the whistle so many times on Minnesota
about hundreds of millions of dollars being stolen.
And did you see the Tucker Carlson interview with the woman who says that Tim Walts has been shoveling top secret?
secrets to the Chinese. That's where I was taking all those trips to Chinese when he's
in the National Guard. Oh, no, I remember that part, but I don't remember. No, I did not hear
this. That's good. It's quite good. Well, so somewhere the president called Tim Walter retard.
Yeah, on Thanksgiving. Well, I have the, I have the clip. Oh, do you have that clip? I want to hear
the clip. Well, I have the reaction clip, which is quite good. Well, the one on the airplane?
No. No. I don't know what you're talking about. Well, I have Trump responding on the airplane. What's your
reaction clip?
I had to know
caught you off guard, didn't I?
A little bit, yeah.
Well, you said...
Oh, man.
It's such a funny
clip, too. Well, let me play the...
This is short. This is Trump on the plane
being asked. Do you stand
by calling
Governor Walsh retarded?
In that same post, you mentioned
Tim Walsh, and you call him
what many Americans do find an offensive
or retarded, do you stand by that claim of Collington Mall's retarded?
Yeah, I think there's something wrong with him. Absolutely, sure.
Yeah.
You have a problem with it? You know what? I think there's something wrong with him.
Anybody that would do what he did, anybody that would allow those people into a state and pay
billions of dollars out to Somalia. We give billions of dollars to Somalia. It's not even a country
because it doesn't function like a country. It's got a name, but it doesn't function like a country.
There's something wrong with Walsz.
This is the talk.
This is interesting.
Talk sketch Trump.
The thing, okay, I'm not a blind Trump supporter.
I don't really trust any politicians.
And I voice my discrepancies with Trump all the time.
However, calling Tim Walts a retard on Thanksgiving Day is exactly what I voted for.
So that was a funny clip from this woman, and it was stolen.
The whole gag was stolen by the red-headed libertarian on Twitter.
She did the same gag.
Oh, really?
I found it very, and I think it's like, you know, this don't steal people's material.
We would never do that.
No, we just write up, take it, and give you credit.
Now, before we leave the Venezuela thing, I do have a clip from that you would appreciate.
This is, and I don't understand what happened.
Oh, no.
No.
What do you mean no?
No.
No what?
It's not the real estate people.
It's the real estate guy.
Now, I'd like to know when Clayton Morris turned on Trump.
He has this woman on who's an apologist for Venezuela's government, and she runs a supposedly
an international news operation, which is the editor of this thing called
Kawashan News. It's K-A-W-S-A-C-H-U-N News.com.
And it's supposed to be international. I'm going to read the headlines from the
front page of this thing. Let me guess. Trump sucks.
The top story is James Cameron's Avatar 3D drop stunning new trailer.
Okay. That's the top story. It's right at the top of the, what
call the fold. This is the woman's Camilla Escalante.
And now here's the other headlines. Experts confirm Israel's Gaza assault is
genocide. Bobby Kennedy reignites eugenics debate. Shocking scandal exposed. Trump
Musk's hunt for Social Security fraud deemed a sham. And by the way, every headline's got an
exclamation point at the end. Well, of course. That's what you do. Donald Trump,
emblem of universal decline and collapse.
GOP's agenda exposed, how they're making your life tougher.
This looks like...
High school runner Slam's main GOP lawmaker for targeting trans race winner.
This looks like my YouTube feed.
Anyway, it goes on.
But it's like ridiculous.
And so here we have her on the show.
And then Clayton goes on to a rant, which is information that I had no idea.
we need to explain to everybody
that we know Clayton
and Natalie personally.
Natalie worked for me.
Yeah.
You trained her.
You showed her how to do it.
Some me. I gave her some, yeah,
I was the media. No, you trained her. No, you trained her.
I dressed her and got her new hair.
That was my job. I mean, I think I did a pretty good job.
Got rid of this goofy glasses, which are now back.
I'm like, he's don't wait. Now they're back.
The goofy glasses again.
You know, they move.
to Portugal five years ago.
They're back in New Jersey.
They're back in New Jersey.
And look up Morris Invest and you'll learn more about them.
Let's play the clip.
And Trump seemed to have at one point thought that this was his opportunity to do so.
But he's seeing that the optics aren't very good and that people, including the United
States, in his own party, are not, or at least supporters or voters of his party, aren't
on board.
Well, and you hear that.
You hear the MAGA people, like who, you know,
you know the types I'm talking about who like lick you know
like President Trump's feet wherever he walks
it's the narco terrorists like that's what we're stopping it's the
it's the Venezuelan child trafficking operation
at newsflash the United States is one of the largest purveyors of child
trafficking in the world in the world in the world
Guatemala why Ukraine Ukraine is massive child
trafficking operation yet we can pick and choose like who we
defend in all of this. It's all garbage. We all know it's about the oil. And the Chinese help
who have helped, of course, to try to actually refine some of this oil, which is not the best
oil in the world when it's pulled out of the ground. It requires quite a bit of refining.
And the Chinese have been able to help. So the Chinese sphere of influence in Latin America,
the oil, the Chinese, the Russian sphere of influence there, this is exactly why the Trump
administration seems to be moving in this direction. Sorry to just monologue.
there, but I just, I feel like for anyone still falling for the drug argument, they need to get
their heads examined. Okay. I can tell you exactly when he became a Trump hater. I could even
look up the date if you wanted. No? No. What do you mean no? No, you don't have to look up to date.
I've taken your word for that you have a date. When he went on Tucker Carlson show, that's when it all started
to flip. And it's not because
Clayton Morris has any
political scruples or he
cares about America or, no.
You think Tucker flipped
him? No.
What flipped him was, hey,
if I do the stuff Tucker's
doing, will be more successful.
He is a prime, those two
Natalie and Clayton, prime
examples of audience capture.
Because I know.
We know what we get when we just say,
no, we don't think that this is how it works. We don't
think that Israel controls America.
Oh, everyone's hair's on fire.
You shillb. Enjoy your shekels, curry.
Shekels.
Tina said the other day, where is the Jew money?
I know.
A few and far between.
Those are populist audience capture people.
And by the way, that's a lot of them.
They think there's a movement.
It's America first.
You know, it's different from MAGA.
And Trump is all about foreign wars.
And it's the blue hat.
I have friends who think this.
But he's just an ob.
He's just, he's just, David Ike, he's just completing the great reset.
Man, you guys should pay attention.
Three more years of this, you're never going to see it again.
Ever, ever, ever.
I've said it before.
Pay very close attention to what's really happening.
But no, it's all about oil.
No, it truly is about America first.
and not even saying that
you guys used to be
in kind of in the middle of now
you're all everything Trump says
and Trump is good man
no
we just call what we see
I like that way you always have a puk
sound at the end of these people's little diatrives
this voice you do
you always have that
that's always thrown in
it's the truth
it's how I hear it
and I'm just like
why I mean
but here's the thing about
that little diatribe he did.
What's he talking about that the United States
is the number one child trafficking country
in the world?
That may actually be true.
In what way?
Perveyor, that more kids are trafficked to the United States
than any other country.
That's not the way he presents it.
He says it's us doing it.
Yes, he didn't say it right.
But I think what he means is that more children
are trafficked into the United States
than the other country.
And we have a big country.
I don't think China has number.
I also, I think China has enough children of their own to do stuff with.
That sounded bad.
But anyway, so, but these are typical audience capture.
Oh, I mean, just go back and look at him with,
oh, we've got an expert marksman, he was in the military,
and he's going to explain the magic bullet that hit Charlie Kirk.
Oh, yeah, this is how it happened.
No, that went by the wayside.
It's all gone away.
And the leader of this ring is Candice Owens.
and actually she tweeted something that I
So wait, you think Candace Owens has more influence than Nick Fuentes?
Oh, yeah.
Because Nick Fuentes has got the blue hat that says America first on it.
Yeah, but Candice Owens has, I think what's happening here.
Let me read what she posted yesterday.
Should I do the Candice voice?
I received information last night that put the final pieces together for me.
Okay.
I got receipts.
I now can say with full confidence that I believe Charlie Kirk was betrayed by the leadership of Turning Point USA
and some of the very people who eulogized him on stage.
Yes, I will be naming names and providing evidence for my claims.
And I am making a personal plea to every well-meaning person who donated to this God-forsaken organization
to request a refund.
You are lied to and leadership knew.
So this was responded to by,
because Turning Point USA has been very quiet for months.
Well, Candio has been on this long rant.
And Blake Neef, the producer of the Charlie Kirk Show,
responded.
I can play some of that in a minute.
But at the end of his long response,
at the top of yesterday's show.
He said, we're going to do a live stream.
And it's set, he actually posted this on X.
The live stream we announced on the show Wednesday has been set.
4 p.m. Eastern, 2 p.m. local time, because it's Phoenix.
Monday, December 15th, a collection of Charlie's friends will respond to statements made by
at Real Candice O to set the record straight once and for all prior to the opening of America Fest.
We'll be streaming live from Charlie's Phoenix studio.
our offer from yesterday holds
if Candice wishes to join us in person in Phoenix
she is welcome to do so
she can let us know by the end of the day
and then Candice replies this
this is all playing out on X this is
fabulous
kind of weird how you didn't
email or call me to ask about
times or availability and chose
to instead tweet this confirmation out at
midnight. Why am I learning about
this on X? December 15th
does it not work in person
and 2 p.m. is also literal time I do
my podcast live every day, which you knew.
We will happily cancel the daily podcast and will join you guys virtually instead of
the live stream on the 15th if that works on your end.
So I have to say that it's what she, of all the things she's claimed,
and I'd love to play a little bit of that, the producer guy's claims because it's pretty
funny.
Of all this things she's claimed, it is very possible that in an organization like Turning Point
USA, forget.
the $100 million a year. The political power of that organization is worth maybe billions or
hundreds of billions. Very at the time. At the time of electing President Trump, what Turning
Point USA did. And they really turned out, I think a lot of the late teen, early 20s voters. I think
there was that did make a difference. But in general, just the clout of Turning Point USA, I can
completely see one individual or more people within the organization going, Hey, man, Charlie's screwing
things up because you can't go against Israel with an election, with a campaign apparatus.
That's not going to work. I can see that happening. I can see people who had, saw all this
political clout, this power. There's all kinds of people that were hanging around the organization.
I'm going to say that's the most reasonable things that she said in a long time.
Of course, it could also just be that she is doing this with an already destabilized turning point USA to kill it.
You know, she could be an op for someone who is against Trump.
I mean, she certainly seems against Trump.
So anything is possible, but that's finally something she said there that made sense.
I'll just let this run until we're tired of it.
This guy runs down all of the nutty things Candio has said in the past few months.
And I've heard, I think, every single one of them.
So he's not exaggerating.
We wanted to use this segment at the top of this hour to say something important, something very important.
For the past two and a half months, there is a topic that has flooded our freedom inbox.
It has been nonstop on social media, but which we have almost totally avoided on this show.
You probably already know what I'm talking about.
Wait, wait, who is this?
This is the producer of the Charlie Kirk show because the show continues.
They just have guests.
Okay, I got it.
Yeah, okay.
How ubiquitous it has been.
Ever since Charlie's murder,
Candice Owens has leveled a flood of allegations against people at Turning Point USA,
people at Turning Point Action, and people who work for this show.
She's made them against some of Charlie's closest friends
and against some of his most dedicated employees.
She has suggested that Michael McCoy, Charlie's chief of staff,
knew Charlie would be murdered, was happy that he died,
and stayed silent because he was told he would be the next Charlie.
She has suggested Michael is not his real name.
It is. I have seen his birth certificate myself.
She has called it suspicious that Mikey's wife,
who works at Turning Point,
helped plan the campus tour event where Charlie was murdered,
which she didn't, by the way,
she doesn't work on campus events.
Candice has suggested the Utah Valley University event was unusual
and its details suggested a, quote, inside job.
She has claimed that foreign aircraft have followed Erica Kirk around the country
and that turning point has lied about this happening.
She has accused us of lying about Charlie wanting Erica to take over for him if he died.
She has suggested Charlie's security team intentionally denied him first aid
after the shooting to ensure that he died.
She has raised suspicions
about the head of our technical team
because he took an SD card
out of a camera. She has
spread absurd claims that
Tyler Boyer, who we just had on the show,
sexually abuses male
interns. She has suggested
that TPSA Faith-affiliated
pastors, like Theologian, Frank Turrick,
who will have on in a moment, and Pastor
Rob McCoy, are part of a
military, quote, infiltration
of turning point, either
because they are veterans or because they have family members who are.
Even if not everyone has been named specifically, though,
Candace has effectively tarred everyone here with complicity in Charlie's death by repeatedly saying.
All right.
So he goes on for seven minutes.
I'll put it in the show notes.
Wow.
It goes on to the...
It's entertaining.
Oh, it's very entertaining, but we have to remember one thing.
Her husband, who, what would you say he is?
Oh, I forgot.
He's a white guy who's, he's a, he's part of the, your favorite group, the, the nexus from the, he's a UK, he's a lord or something like that.
His dad is a lord.
His dad's a lord.
And when you saw Candace's husband, the first thing you said was he's gay, that's the first thing you said.
Then that guy is nowhere.
Are you accusing me of saying that the first thing I said when as soon as I saw that guy, I said, that guy's gay?
Yes.
I'm not accusing you.
You're accusing me.
It happened on this show.
but you know British guy and and loose gay and he's involved in banking with the Dutch banks
he has you know there's so much British stuff going on here yeah he's he's British
that does that does not well but from a lordship you know from peerage yeah peerage British he's
part of the system yes so this yeah there's the royal system that's all over the world
even though you like to isolate it.
You want to hear more of this guy's accusation?
Oh, a couple of them, just a little bit more.
He was, quote, betrayed by, quote, everyone.
She has said Charlie's murder, quote,
had to be approved by Charlie's friends
and then suggested those friends might have her murdered too
for, quote, knowing the truth.
She's been claims of financial impropriety and fraud
at turning point adding up into the millions of dollars,
which again is not true.
true. Charlie made sure the organization was audited by a third party every year. He personally
reviewed and he signed off on every expense report. And it goes on. But remember, she said Israel had
killed him and, you know, and she's still on the hit list from the McCrone's. Oh, yeah, she's on the
hit list. Yeah. I mean. Because McCrone and I forget who's ganged up, they're going to
get a guy. They're going to kill her. They're going to kill her. They're going to kill her. So, you know, like
Again, I think Turning Point is done.
I mean, whether they realize it or not, but Charlie Kirk was Turning Point USA.
No Charlie Kirk.
No, he's the charismatic leader that a high-order charismatic.
This is not a slouch.
No.
This is a high-order charismatic leader that was running the thing and keeping it together
just because of his, you know, this his aura could do it.
He could manage to do it.
This is like one of those guys.
Like Elon Musk is a little bit like this.
And he gets people to do stuff.
And okay, I'd rather work for him than, you know, anything else.
And once he's gone, which is the idea, it's called, you know,
taken out the head of the snake.
And it's over.
And yeah, it could linger or it could become something else.
But it's not going to be where it was headed.
No.
So whatever's going on, if,
If somehow it turns out, I mean, she could be right.
She could be right.
If she said she's got names, she's got evidence, she's got proof.
Okay.
I mean, I've been waiting.
She's got receipts.
I mean, how is this receipts?
When did that crop up, by the way?
Everybody, I've got receipts.
That's like for your taxes?
What do you mean you get receipts?
That's been going on for a while.
That's, uh, but she kind of revived it.
I've got the receipts.
Yeah.
That's, that's been a thing for a while.
You know.
People say that.
No agenda show.
Currin DeVorek.
They got the receipts,
which I think means clips.
I'm not sure.
Clips.
We got plenty of clips.
We got clips, man.
We got clips.
But it's,
it's, I do not deem it impossible,
although how she got from Egyptian Air Force
dropping off a hitman to turning point USA being responsible.
That makes no sense.
Well, sometimes you got to.
She takes a shotgun approach or scatter gun, we could call it.
Yeah.
Well, she has the CIA, the Candace Intelligence Agency.
It's her version of boots on the ground.
Except I think hers are nut jobs.
You know, like, oh, look what I found.
Oh, yeah, this is good.
Where we have people, hey, I did a documentary of this.
We have net jobs too, but we just don't read their stuff.
No, we read the good ones.
We got lots of good ones.
But when the net jobs are funny, yeah.
Well, obviously.
But it's very possible that there was a coup from inside
turning point USA.
Now, it doesn't explain a lot of things.
And of course, ever since COVID,
why would we trust our government?
Nobody trusts the government in any country,
anyone who's smart.
It's like, no, you lied.
We don't trust you anymore.
But people will say,
there's been no autopsy.
All of this comes out in court.
It's, you don't release this kind of,
it's called witness tampering,
even, I think, at some point.
It pollutes the public if you put information out before the jury pool.
The jury pool, yeah.
And so that's why it will all come out.
And there is an autopsy report.
And it, you know, how come we don't know where he was buried?
And I was like, it's almost like Mangione.
We're just now, just now, how long ago was the Mangioni thing?
A year ago.
Just now it's coming to trial and things.
are coming out. I have a 30-second update just as an intermezzo. Well, the man charged with
murdering United Health Care CEO on the streets of Manhattan was back in a New York City
courtroom today for a second day. 27-year-old Luigi Mangione is charged with killing
Brian Thompson last December. The former Penn Grads lawyers are trying to get evidence against
him thrown out. That includes items founded in Mangione's backpack when he was arrested
at a McDonald's and Altoona, Pennsylvania. They also want the 911 call that led to his capture,
Moss. Manjone has pleaded not guilty.
Not guilty plea.
That is interesting.
I didn't do it.
Not guilty.
And then that just, I look at my timeline and my notifications on X.
I see like something really nice happened and was kind of a local story to Austin at least.
Something really nice happened.
And then I'll tell you what people had to.
say about it. The couple that founded Dell Technologies, Michael and Susan Dell, have announced a
$6 billion donation toward new investment accounts for children proposed by the Trump administration.
The Invest America accounts will launch next year. The Treasury Department says it'll put $1,000 in the
accounts of at least 25 million children. The money donated by the Dells will be for kids 10 years
and younger. They'll be eligible to receive $250 each. The Dells say they're investing in children,
because they are our future.
So it's a total of $6.5 billion.
And it's kind of a cool idea, these America investment accounts,
which I think the president calls them Trump accounts,
but it's really called Invest in America accounts.
So the Dells, they say, you know,
we're going to put in $250 per child, 10 years younger,
25 million children.
It'll cost us $6.5 billion minimum, they said at least.
and they said, hey, rich people, you should do the same.
And all anybody could talk about is Dell's wife.
That's got to be a dude.
That's a dude.
What's up with that?
What's up with her eyes?
It's like, that to me is astounding.
No one talks about the money.
It's just she looks like a dude.
Have you ever met Michael Dell's wife, Susan?
No, I never have.
And I know Michael, but I never met his wife.
but she, if you look at her pictures, she had, she had an, here's what, here's what happened.
Eye operation.
She had an eye job.
Yeah.
And I don't know if she used a Texas person or who it was.
Cattle rancher.
A cattle rancher.
But she, if you look at older pictures of her when she was a brunette, especially, she was a skinny,
she's thin, and her eyes are kind of, kind of closed.
They were kind of like, there were not a bug-eyed look.
She had normal-looking eyes.
of a kind of you know they were normal looking if you looked at her he said that's the normal
looking it's not she didn't have the big beautiful eyes or that sort of thing and i guess she wanted
the big beautiful eyes and so somebody did an operation on her and they bugged her eyes out she looks
like a freak it's i feel bad about it i know me too it's obvious what happened there but you know
the world we live in today is just
man what the
what is that
yeah people should recognize
what it is and what happened
it's like the same the people
that have that bucle fat removed
you know you see that and it's like
oh my God why did you do that to yourself
because some doctor convinced
them it was a good idea because it makes your face
look a little more gaunt less
round which it does
but it also makes you look like a
like a ghoul
if you're thin at all.
She should have come by the Curry-Divorak consulting group.
We could have given her some of that.
You know, I can just hear the surgeon saying,
within 10 days, you'll be restaurant ready.
It's going to be great.
Don't worry.
Some bruising, you'll be fine.
Those guys lie.
Some bruising, you'll be fine.
Now she's bug-eyed and looks like a freak.
This is the shame.
I just love that you'll be restaurant-ready.
Yeah, candlelight, maybe.
Restaurant-ready.
So the president had his four-hour board meeting, which is another thing that, you know, you get one snippet on the news.
It's really interesting to watch that.
And a couple of things that I wanted to highlight.
The first was the Labor Secretary who was doing exactly what you and I said should be happening in America.
So the Labor Department has wasted no time in putting that into action with our Make America skilled again, either grant dollars.
but the intentionality of the apprenticeship program,
one million active apprentices across this country,
we have done over 250,000 new apprentices so far in the first year
and registered over 2,000 new apprenticeship programs.
Why do we need the apprenticeship programs with the men and women in the trades
because of the leadership of on-shoring and re-shoring
and have a lot of these companies reinvest in America.
We have to build this country.
We cannot do that without the tradesmen and women and the craftsmen of this country.
And I think that, you know, Howard and I, we talked about that from the beginning.
And we're going to have to lean in on that because we need the labor for 700,000 new skill jobs with electricians, construction workers, machinists, and so forth.
Attention, Jen Zetter's who listened to this show.
There's a future.
700,000 electricians, machinists, welders,
those aren't going to be good paying union jobs.
They're going to be money in the bank because all of this manufacturing is coming back.
And no one seems to care, strangely.
I'm blown away by it.
I'm like, we've always said, what happened to apprenticeships.
These are paid apprenticeships, too.
You get paid to learn.
And you can go on and do $150,000, $200,000 a year.
This is amazing.
By the way, I got a note from Nolan about another thing Gen Zedders can't do.
Oh, okay.
We should be on the list.
Okay, he says, I thought this was relevant to reading clock and Florida ounces.
Two coworkers recently stopped me in the hallway to ask me how to strike matches.
Every time we try to light them, they break, they said.
I showed them the proper technique, then stole their matches.
So, isn't that interesting?
Don't know how to strike a match.
I can see that.
Huh.
Well, there's no such thing as a matchbook anymore.
And so you have to buy those big stick matches in the box.
I think matchbooks are still a thing.
I haven't seen a matchbook for five, ten years.
Well, you don't get out much.
I mean, I get out enough to find a matchbook.
I've not seen a matchbook for five or ten years.
When's the last time you bought some cigarettes?
They don't even sell those as much.
But if you buy cigarettes, they still give you a matchbook.
Well, I don't buy cigarettes.
There you go.
There you go.
There you go.
But then the bombshell, bombshell, bomb shell.
Bomb shell.
Wait, do you have a bomb shell?
Where's the bombshell?
I don't have my bombshell.
The bombshell was the snap benefits.
Holy moly.
Remember how we were surprised about how much, was it,
$80 billion?
dollars was ridiculous high number 80 billion dollars well guess what we have so much great things to
talk about at usda but the third thing which became very much a part of the national conversation
during the democrat shutdown was snap reform food stamp reform when all of america saw what so many
of us know and have been working on but when you have so much rampant fraud in a program that
42 million americans participate in now big good piece of news that i hope is written
about, since you became president, about
800,000 of those 42
million have moved off of food stamps,
which is hopefully the plan with better
jobs, higher wages, etc.
But still, when we found
186,000 dead people
or dead people's social security numbers
being used, 500,000
people receiving
benefits more than twice.
We had a couple of people receiving benefits
in six states. In February
of this year, we asked for all the states
for the first time to turn
over their data to the federal government
to let the USDA partner with them
to root out this fraud
to make sure that those who really need food stamps
are getting them, but also to ensure
that the American taxpayer is protected.
21 states said yes,
not surprised, 29 states said yes,
not surprisingly the red states, and that's
where all of that data, that fraud comes
from. But 21 states,
including California, New York,
and Minnesota, the blue states,
continue to say no.
So, as of next
week, we have begun and will begin to stop moving federal funds into those states until they
comply. And they tell us and allow us to partner with them to root out this fraud and to protect
the American taxpayer. As Joe Biden was working to buy an election a year ago, he increased
food stamp program funding by 40%. So now as we continue to roll that back.
Duh. Isn't that interesting? Unbelievable. 40% increase. And the blue
states don't want to give their data.
Okay.
No.
No.
No, that's typical.
Yeah.
I didn't see that report on the news for some reason.
I wonder why.
I didn't see it anywhere on the news.
I'm not sure what happened.
They must have overlooked it in the editorial meeting when they decide to omit stories on purpose
because it reflects poorly on the Democrats and they might not do as well as they could do
in the midterms and the news media is in on it.
Nah, get out of town.
Nah, that's not possible.
That can't be.
I have some clips.
I have immigration crackdown clips.
I have McCreggar.
I have Colonel McGregor.
McGregor.
Oh, I want to hear a McGregor.
An analysis of you, well, if you're going to bring the McGregor clips,
and that's when we get to play dot MP3, dot MP3.
Do we play that first?
No, no, no.
Oh, okay.
This is an analysis that McGregor goes on this show called the something,
and some vet guys
does a thing called
it something something deep dive.
And McGregor's on the show.
This show is on YouTube.
It has all of 30K listeners.
And of course, McGregor won't do an interview with us
with a million listeners.
No, not with you.
Not with you.
Well, whatever.
He didn't like your approach, man.
Didn't like your approach.
I find it incredibly offensive that he's a stick in the mud.
But he still has good stuff to a point.
He does not recognize the salesmanship of Donald Trump.
His analysis is good, though, and he brings in some, he brings in a perspective that is, it's enjoyable to listen to because it is a little, it comes in from a different angle.
And this is a McGregor analysis of the war.
What do you make of that charge that the Europe and Ukraine are trying to sabotage Trump's 28-point peace plan to put poison pills in that they know Russia won't accept?
Well, the peace plan is no peace plan.
Lots of poison pills in it anyway, so I think that's dead on arrival.
Let's understand what Kushner and Whitkoff are about.
They're trying to salvage something for President Trump.
President Trump wants to be able to declare a victory for President Trump.
This has nothing to do with Ukraine as far as he's concerned.
He could care less.
He's already abdicated his responsibility for leadership in Europe and NATO.
So apparently he doesn't have the authority that he needs from his backers in New York City
and the city of London.
to move forward to really do anything.
So what is he doing?
He sent Kushner and Whitkoff to go over there and say,
look, Mr. Putin, we don't really disagree with you.
What we really want is some sort of bone that you can throw Trump.
So that Trump can come out publicly and say,
look, I've done everything I can.
And this is the road to peace.
And I've negotiated this with President Putin.
He's on board.
Now it's up to everybody else.
And as he said a few days ago, if they're not going to accept this, and as far as he's concerned, Ukraine can fight out its little heart.
You know, this is nonsense.
None of this is substantive.
The Russians have laid out routinely the minimal conditions for the acceptance of any peace agreement.
They have never changed.
So what do Whitkoff and Kushner think they're going to get?
in other words the baby is ugly the baby's not going to become beautiful it's ugly it's in the cradle
some would like to strangle it Trump wants to rescue it but it's not going to happen so it doesn't
make any difference what Kushner and Whitkoff do nah okay I have some I have some clips that can
peri that but I'll listen to your series okay well that's part part two of this and believe me I'm sure
that President Putin, his inner circle
understand this, and if they can
throw a bone to Donald Trump,
give him something that he can point to
that says, I created this.
I'm the heroic figure that
brought peace, tranquility, and good fortune
to Ukraine. They'll do it
because they want this damn thing over
as well. Not because they're losing,
not because they can't win.
That's all nonsense. Now,
let's move to the European side.
Matt's is on very thin ice.
Look at events in Berlin. Look at the
people in the streets. Look at the strength that the people on the right, the nationalist right in
Germany are achieving. They're not a bunch of crazies. They're not Nazis or any of this other
crap that the globalist, you know, promote. They're simply German nationalists that said,
enough, enough. And look at their platform and what's in their platform. Their platform says,
we want a restoration of good relations with Russia. We want to go back to doing business for the Russians.
of Germans will support that.
They know that.
Mance knows it.
This is the final hour
for Mats, for McCrown,
for Starmor, and the others.
They have to come up with something
that keeps the war going.
If they can't, and God forbid,
peace should arrive on the battlefield
because Zelensky
suddenly leaves the country,
or he and his friends are accidentally
blown up. Who knows?
Whatever happens, that's the end
of them. They lose everything.
whatever little bit of credibility they may still have.
And McCrone and Matt's are always,
they're all hovering down there around 30% approval ratings.
Starmer is probably lower.
It's over for them.
Well, I'm in agreement there.
Certainly on the Zelensky might get blown up bit.
Unfortunate drone incident.
Something going to happen.
Oh, his brain left.
His brain left the building.
The guy's an actor.
He's a dance.
A dancer. A dancer, yeah.
He's a tiny dancer, it's true.
He's a tiny dancer. This brings us to, he, to make his point, this goes on, I have two more clips, but to make his point, he brings in your buddy, Ruta.
Yeah.
And to prove the point, he says, he says, Ruta's a, see, this is where he starts missing the point.
He doesn't see Ruta as a sales guy. Yeah.
Doesn't understand Trump as a sales guy. He doesn't get.
sales he's a military guy oh man this is so good and so he because he doesn't get sales he
so he they play a clip of ruta and the clip they play is this one which is a reason which was from
two days ago this is the mp3 mp3 clip but this is mark ruta with his latest uh appeal as we work
for peace we cannot lose sight of russia's increasingly brutal like attacks against ukraine
Russia is systematically targeting civilian infrastructure, depriving Ukrainians of heat and light at the start of winter.
Russia is not alone in this war, as China continues to be its decisive enabler.
And the Ural and North Korea also provides support.
Since the earliest days of Russia's full-scale invasion, allies have shown unwavering commitment to Ukraine.
In recent months, European and Canadian allies have provided billions of dollars of essential U.S.
equipment to Ukraine through Pearl.
The support is an important part of our ongoing efforts to ensure Ukraine has what it needs
to defend today and deter future aggression.
So what you called dot MP3.
Dot MP3, I have that exact clip in my list as Rutter's new sales pitch.
And before we get back to McGregor, I have 40 seconds, because a lot went on in Europe.
This is how, before he even got to that pitch, this was the winding.
up before the press.
What's important is that the weapon flow and all the other
support keeps on flowing, including...
We must keep the weapons floating.
Flowing. They must keep flowing.
The Danish Lithuan initiative of investing
in the defense industrial base in Ukraine,
including the Czech ammunition initiative,
including all the bilateral support going into Ukraine.
I commend what the Irish
have announced yesterday, so I think this is all
important. Of course, Ireland, not a NATO,
but still supporting Ukraine.
Of course, the way to fund it is debate.
And I'm not going into that because this is really up to the EU.
And I know the European Union is working hard at solving that issue.
So thank you so much.
You're welcome.
We'll meet again after all the meetings.
Thanks.
Thanks.
Okay.
Bye.
Thanks.
And I'll get to the money bit after your McGregor stuff.
So, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Well, there's one little clip.
I got two clips left, but there's a short clip here, which was to me, oh, okay.
Because I've been bitching and moaning and groaning about this one little.
And I never thought about this.
And this is the clip three.
This is the aha clip.
And I just want to play this as a side of kind of an aside.
And then I'll reference back to my earlier complaints.
The Russians have been very precise in their application of military power from the
beginning of this operation.
And I say that because it's very difficult.
We talk all the time about precision strike and minimizing collateral damage.
You're always going to have collateral damage no matter how precise you are.
But the Russians have actually done.
an exceptionally good job of minimizing civilian losses.
I've always said they did a 10-hour drone and missiles strike, 10 hours, and they killed two.
Yeah.
This is what he's talking about.
I didn't realize that this is what the Russians are.
They're not trying to kill people at all.
They're blowing up substations and infrastructure and where the bomb making facilities.
Who knows what.
Yeah.
So they are bombing for 10 hours, and they're killing.
very few people.
Yeah.
And that's because I kept,
because the way the news presented is
the Russian did this and they killed a baby.
And, you know, it's the whole thing.
But wait a minute, they bombed for 10 hours
and they killed a baby.
That's it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, that's the reason.
I did, so I think McGregor hit something there that
made it worth my while.
Now, here's the last part, which you'll appreciate.
But what I want to stop and get people to think about is
who in the hell is Ruta?
Where does he come from?
I don't wish to be too delicate in this sense.
Hold on.
Let me just set it up.
He was in human resources with the rest of the ladies at...
No, he doesn't get that granular.
It's more generalized.
Okay.
But he's from the Netherlands.
How many people live in the Netherlands?
17 million.
Well, if I were running the show, I would say,
how many forces can the Dutch put into the field?
Ten.
How many forces can the Norwegians put in the field?
11. Remember Stoltenberg from Norway, making all these utterly ridiculous and stupid remarks,
90% of which were lies. The same thing with Rugga. You know, anybody who is a real leader in the
West would turn to these people and say, shut up and sit down. We, the United States, Washington,
have no interest whatsoever in continuing this destructive and pointless war with Russia. So we're not
interested in what you had to say any longer. You know, the Germans understood this for years. The
Russians have always understood it. At some point, you need to say put up or shut up. During World War
2, when we had 63 divisions in France, the British, including the Canadians, had 19. And the thing
that no one on the Soviet side could never understand was why Eisenhower paid any attention
whatsoever to what Montgomery and Churchill had to say. They had no skin in the game compared
with us. 63 divisions versus 19. Well, you have a similar situation today in Europe.
What is your military power? How many forces have you got? The answer to those things
is not much, if anything, worthy of attention. So someone needs to tell these people,
shut up, sit down, here's the answer.
That is what President Trump should do.
No, he really doesn't understand the game at all.
No, he misses the, he doesn't understand sales.
Because here is Rutter being that he's got the brown shoes on.
He's good to go.
Well, I do not, no, I don't think that plan B we have to think about.
Because the U.S. is very consistent in support for Ukraine.
So he's taught, so the question was, what if America pulls out?
No, no, no. This is not going to happen.
All NATO allies are very consistent.
Of course, what the US told us is we want to supply Ukraine with the necessary weapons,
both lethal and non-lethal.
Yes, we want to supply with weapons.
This is a sales gig.
But we expect Europeans and Canadians to step up when it comes to the paying for it.
Yeah.
There's your money. Where is the money?
We're not giving you credit.
You must show us the money.
The US is delivering the necessary weapons, including the air defense,
systems and the Pact 3 missile for the Patriots systems, but also for the other air defense
systems and all the other stuff and all the military gear you need to stay as soon as possible
in the fight paid for by European and Canadian allies. That is the big program it started in July
and at the moment already $4 billion and I think by the end of the year $5 billion of that supply
will have been delivered to Ukraine, critical material. But I have no reason to think that we have
to prepare for those eventualities.
No, just pay up with the money.
So the money is what's on the table.
And Queen Ursula came out yesterday and she laid.
And it's interesting because I didn't realize this.
I don't, I didn't clip it because it was so long and boring.
But she said, we have tables, two things.
Now, in America, if you say we've tabled that,
it means we're not going to consider it.
Am I right?
You've muted yourself.
which is illegal in 29 states.
Unmute.
You know, it's when I open something and I,
it's hard to explain how that happens.
No, it means you put it aside.
Yeah, but in Europe, it means.
But doesn't mean you're not going to address it someday.
No, but in, in Europe, when you say,
if you've tabled two proposals,
that means we have two proposals on the table.
What?
Yeah, I know.
I was confused.
I was really confused.
Well, we learn something today.
Here is the France 24 overview clip.
This high rise in Brussels is at the center of an argument over how the EU could help fund Ukraine's war efforts.
It's the headquarters of Euroclear, a Belgian financial institution which holds the vast majority of frozen Russian assets in the EU
to the tune of about 185 billion euros.
The EU has proposed using a huge chunk of that money or about 90 billion euros,
to help Kiev in its fight against Russia over the next two years.
And since pressure is the only language the Kremlin response to, we can also dial it up.
We have to increase the costs of war for Putin's aggression,
and today's proposal gives us the means to do this.
The money would come to Kiev in the form of so-called reparations loans.
In theory, the money would be repaid on the condition that Russia pays reparations to Ukraine
for the destruction it caused during the war.
The plan also rests on the assumption
that Russia's assets would remain frozen
for the foreseeable future.
Moscow is called the plan illegal.
And if Russia decides to sue Euroclear,
Belgium says it alone would suffer
all the legal and financial risks.
It is not acceptable to use the money
and leave us alone facing the risks.
We have repeatedly said that
we consider the option of the repair
loan the worst of whole as it is risky it has never been done before nope ukraine's budget and
military needs through 2027 total an estimated 130 billion euros and with the trump administration
having stalled financial support for keiv europe is under growing pressure to fill the gap okay so this is
kind of what mcgregor was talking about because they they they need money to fund this thing to keep this
war going. They can't really print money in Europe. They don't have a world reserve currency. So,
you know, printing up a couple hundred billion euros is going to weaken the euro. And it's a
non-starter. So there's only two ways they can do it. And Ursula laid this all out. One is you can
raise the money in the capital market. So borrow, which would, I mean, that also could weaken the
whole EU, the euro and everything, you know, to create some kind of bond, or you steal the
Russian money. And here's Ursula explaining the math because she's taking it to a level,
you know what, we're not going to steal the money from Euroclear. You got to listen carefully
to what she says. We're only going to take $90 billion to start with. And here's how the math
works out. That was a very clear tasking by the European Council. You remember it started with
me writing a letter to the European Council with three different options that were in the
options paper, a debate we had last time and the very clear tasking to come early enough
before the December European Council with the legal text. That's what we're doing here today.
And now to the figures, if you take all CSDs and commercial banks, the mobilized Russian assets,
overall it's
210 billion
now what did we do
we looked at the needs
for Ukraine in the years
26 and 27
as calculated by the
IMF and
this is 137
billion euros
and we've said we cover
two thirds and this is
how we come to the 90 billion
euros two thirds of these needs for the next
two years
so that's a lot of nine
accounting, but really what she's saying is there are CSDs, so there's secured deposits of
Russian money in different banks. So she's saying, well, we won't go to Euroclear. We'll steal the
money from all the other places where the assets have been frozen. And I found an analyst on
CMBC. I've never seen her before. She is kind of a Eastern European, maybe Russian accent,
but she did a pretty good job of analyzing what is really happening here.
For start, the frozen assets is way bigger than 90 billion.
That's not her, obviously.
I can explain the figure.
Okay, explain the figure.
So it's 90 billion for a period of two years.
So there's more, you're right.
We're talking about almost 300 billion that are indeed frozen at the moment.
But what the European Commission is saying is that we are going to use for the time being
only 90 billion for the next two years.
to support Ukraine.
That doesn't cover all the financing needs,
but it's just what the Commission
decided to put forward at this stage.
I can
see a floor in this plan
immediately, and I'm pretty sure
as part of, I don't know, we are down at 27
bullet points or 28 bullet points between
Putin and Trump at the moment.
I'm pretty sure that part of that
plan was you hand back those frozen assets.
You're right, and
there's so many angles we could take with the story
because there are so many issues here.
actually. So I'll try to explain it as best as I can.
Which is pretty good enough for me, that's for sure.
I'll do my best. So what the European Commission said yesterday was, okay, we need to support
Ukraine with further financing. What we're suggested to do is to use the so-called
frozen Russian assets that are held on the European continent. So what the Commission is
trying to do here is to try to use the assets that are available across the block, not just
in Belgium, because we know Belgium, where the majority of the assets are held, has had very
strong legal concerns about this problem. But even before the Commission put forward this
proposal, Belgium was already saying they had issues with it. We heard, for instance, from
the Foreign Affairs Minister, Maxime Prevaux, saying that they were going to plead for alternatives
here, and indeed they believe that EU borrowing is the best option rather than using the
frozen Russian acids. So Ursula herself is a sales lady. She came out with these two proposals.
One, well, we'll just borrow the money or we can steal it from the Russians over here. And our
analyst explains what that was really about. It was your typical, would you like the sandals,
the sneakers, or the shoes I really want to sell you? What the European Commission also suggested
yesterday was if we don't go down the route of using the frozen Russian acids, we can indeed go to
the markets and actually borrow cash to support Ukraine. But that is actually even more complicated
from a European perspective, because in order to do so, you would need all of the member states,
all of the 27, to say yes to that plan. And we know countries such as Hungary are likely
to raise issues with that. So one your official told me yesterday that by putting forward
to proposals, what the European Commission is trying to do here is to show to the member
states that the most viable option is still to go down the route of the frozen Russian asset.
Now, we know the Russians think this is illegal. It is illegal. It would end the, at least the
European financial integrity. Who would ever want to bank with anything?
What would you send your money over there for any investment purposes or anything for that
matter if they're going to steal it? Well, according to Ursula.
On a whim.
Listen to this.
Listen, who's egging her on to do it.
We have informed the U.S. administration.
I've spoken, for example, to Scott Besant, that we are planning before, right before today,
that we are planning on developing a system of the reparations loan.
It was positively received.
I've also informed the other.
I could just hear me.
Yeah, yeah, do it, Ursula.
Good idea.
Go ahead, do it, do it, do it, do it.
You can do it.
Who cares about the city of Lerola?
London. Who cares about Frank? Or do it. Just do it.
Who have potentially immobilized Russian assets.
And the construction is in a way that it invites others also to join with their
immobilized Russian assets.
Oh, yeah.
So that they can contribute also to the financing of Ukraine and contribute in the way
the reparation loan, reparations loan is working.
Dude, this is so dumb.
It's, I don't even understand.
Is she, is her job, is it to kill the European Union?
Maybe we've misjudged her.
Maybe she's a Manchurian candidate.
I don't think so.
And listen to this.
If that wasn't stupid enough, oh, we got a to top her.
A move that looks set to turn off the tap on Russian gas forever.
We're praised by the European Commission presidents.
turning that page and we're turning it for good. This is the dawn of a new era, the era of
Europe's full energy independence from Russia. After pledging to reduce Russian energy intake
following the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the share of Russian gas in EU imports has fallen
from 45% in 2021 to 12% as of October this year. But while Europe has slashed pipeline deliveries,
it's partly turned to liquefied natural gas, shipped by sea, unloaded at ports and fed back into the network.
Well, that's convenient.
Imports of Russian LNG into the EU are still expected to amount to 15 billion euros this year.
Under Wednesday's agreement, Russian pipeline gas will be phased out by the end of September 2027
and LNG imports banned by the end of next year.
The Commission also wants to end remaining imports of Russian oil with legislation to be proposed
next year. But this agreement is already facing challenges from member states. Slovakia, still
highly reliant on gas and oil from Moscow, is weighing its legal options, while Hungary's
foreign minister says his country already has a plan. As soon as the repower EU plan is formally
adopted, we will immediately challenge it before the EU Court of Justice. Legal proceedings will start
without delay. Preparatory work is already underway. We will do everything necessary to defend Hungary's
energy security.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin has condemned the move saying it would doom Europe to becoming
less competitive and lead to higher prices for consumers.
Of course.
These people are insane.
And right on Q in the Netherlands, where they have an open energy market, which means
you can brand your own version of energy.
Oh, we're the green guys.
Take our electricity.
Every single one of them is now introducing smart heating.
Oh, yeah.
So you will get a little, you know, this is we, this already failed here in America,
but yeah, we're going to give you a thermostat that we can control to heat your home smartly.
You remember it was?
Yeah, the remote control thermostat.
I think it was three years ago.
I forget.
It was longer than that.
Two or three years ago, we had friends.
here. They're in their 70s. And, you know, the business people that have some stores around here used
to do some real estate. And they both had the flu, which is not nice. But he said, he sent out a text
much. He said, hey, you know, I signed up for that smart heating thing. And now it's, you know,
it's 28 degrees and we can't turn the heat up manually. Because they had obviously. Because they had
it into one of those stupid plans.
So I had to take a space heater over to them.
This is the dumbest idea.
All of Europe is being ruined by this woman.
So this is a capture by the Greens.
I mean, this is obviously a problem.
Now, this brings this to another point.
I think McGregor made it or somebody did,
which is they predict that Germany,
because of the AFD,
at some point they're going to cave,
the AFD is going to take over the place.
Yeah.
And the first thing they're going to do is get out of the EU and get out of NATO.
Of course.
Because then they can do business.
Russia, really?
Well, you don't want their gas?
We'll take it.
And the Russians will have it at a cheaper price.
I mean, anything's cheaper than hauling it over in a ship.
Right.
And so they just ramp back up.
I mean, Germany is the industrial powerhouse that can ramp up in a minute if you give them
cheap energy.
And they'll just run roughshot over the rest of the, of the,
rest of those European countries, which are going to be the what's left of the EU.
They're going to be starving.
Starving.
The hunger winter.
Let's get an update from the North Sea Nexus on how the Russian peace talks went.
The announcement of the EU's plans came after high-stakes peace talks between the U.S. and Russia in Moscow failed.
Failed.
They failed.
They failed.
Russia has dismissed any suggestion that Vladimir Putin rejected all of President Trump's
proposals. But that's an interesting line that she uses here.
That's very interesting construction. You're right. I heard it too.
Yeah, she says, but you're going to have to read it or repeat it or say it. I'll do both.
So she says, Russia has rejected any claims that Putin rejected all of the proposals.
So what you're hearing as a casual listener of the BBC is, oh, Russia rejected all claims.
all, rejected everything.
But that's not what she actually said.
The Russians rejected this notion that Putin rejected everything.
Again, to produce any breakthrough,
Russia has dismissed any suggestion that Vladimir Putin rejected all of President Trump's proposals.
But at a NATO meeting in Brussels this morning,
the Secretary General Mark Rutter said if the peace talks took too long,
there were two ways to put pressure on Russia.
One is making sure that the Russians understand that in
weapon flow into Ukraine will keep ongoing.
There's exactly what's happening today.
Thanks to the U.S., thanks to the Europeans,
U.S. sending its crucial gear to Ukraine,
which is for by Canada and European allies.
But also Europe and Canada are doing a lot bilaterally.
And secondly, making sure that the economic sanctions bite,
that they are effective.
That's also exactly what's happening.
Despite the customary smile.
They bite, the people will be very cold in Europe.
But they bite.
Okay, there's good.
They bite.
Despite the customary smiles and handshaping.
for the cameras, NATO countries
meeting here know they've been
sidelined from the Ukraine peace process
by their biggest and most influential
member, the U.S.
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio,
is conspicuous by his absence.
President Trump is pushing for an
immediate end to the war and has already
stopped giving weapons to Ukraine.
What does that even mean? Rubio is
conspicuous by his absence.
What is the subtext
of that? There is
some subtext, because in all the analysis,
as I've been listening to, there's something about Rubio is, I think McGregor's right.
The whole thing is really about getting a bone for Trump and ending the war that way
with some phony bologna thing that's going to happen.
And Rubio, it's not part of it because he would, it's, he's not, that's not him.
They want these two sales guys in there, Wittkoff and Kushner, to try to push this across the line
and Rub is not involved. He's just not involved.
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, is conspicuous by his absence.
President Trump is pushing for an immediate end to the war
and has already stopped giving weapons to Ukraine,
although he is still willing to sell them via Europe for now.
As for the Putin-Witkoff meeting in Moscow last night,
the Kremlin said it would be wrong to suggest President Putin
had rejected the U.S. proposals.
Again.
And insisted there could be more meetings with the Americans for as long as necessary.
necessary. Crucially, though, there's no sign whatsoever. Moscow is ready to give up its key demand
for Ukrainian territory it hasn't yet taken in exchange for ending the war. So that's the BBC's
taken. Remember, it starts with the talks have failed. Let's listen to the...
Yeah, this is the BBC. They're just gone off the rails. I have to say that this brings
back to mind the Zelensky either fleeing the country or getting blown up. Blown up. Oh, yeah.
But I think he's going to flee the country.
Well, they only have two weeks, two weeks until the money is on the table or decided what they're going to do, to continue to weapon flow.
But the thing is, I think there's an ambassador somewhere.
There's the Ukrainian ambassador to, I want to say the UK.
And I think if Zelensky goes out, that guy comes in.
I've been hearing his name.
Let me see.
What is?
Well,
Alensi's got to go
because once he lost his aide to camp
because he has really run anything
that his producer,
his,
you know,
TV radio producer director.
His producer, yes.
Once that guy left,
he had the,
he fleed,
you know,
he's not indicted,
he's gone.
He took off.
Yeah.
Once he left,
he's in,
Slensky's rudderless.
He's in,
uh,
Monaco.
Oh, he went to Monaco?
That's where they all are.
If you go to Monaco, there's Rolls Royces, Ferraris, all with...
Oh, no, I've been to Monaco a couple of times.
But all, but you didn't let me finish.
All with Ukrainian license plates.
Oh, that's I don't...
I never notice, but I'll say this.
Monaco, if you're going to escape to some place and they let you do it...
You want to go to Monaco.
That's where I'd go.
That's right.
Okay.
Here's the French 24 version of the Talks report.
The Trump administration's top...
Benvoys have once again left the Kremlin empty-handed with no peace deal.
Steve Whitkoff and Jared Kushner sat down with Russia's Vladimir Putin tasked with finding a way
to end the war in Ukraine. They discussed the framework of the revised U.S.-backed peace plan.
Putin's foreign policy aid said it was a positive discussion, but more work needs to be done.
The conversation was very useful, constructive and very meaningful.
It lasted not for five minutes, but for five hours. We could agree with certain things.
and President Putin confirmed this to his interlocutors.
We criticised some things,
and the president did not hide our critical,
even negative attitude to a number of proposals.
No details have been given about what was discussed,
but Yuri Ushikov said they did talk about the territorial problem.
Moscow has not backed on its territorial demands,
seeking Russian sovereignty not just in the 20% of Ukrainian land
currently controlled by its troops,
but also calling on the Ukrainian army to regroups,
retreat from the front line and concede further losses.
I love how she says there's no details, but then she has all these details.
She's got a lot of details.
Russia is also calling for a more than 30% reduction in the size of Ukraine's army
and the possibility of Ukrainian NATO membership to be completely off the table.
Ukrainian President Zelensky has been on tour around Europe to fortify support against
Russia's invasion.
Before details of the U.S. Russian meeting emerged, he once again reiterated his country's
need for long-term deterrence against Russian aggression.
So that's a little different than the BBC.
It's like, well, the Russians right there said, well, you know, we got along in some things.
They listened to us.
We had some points we didn't agree on.
There was a real conversation.
But, oh, no, not according to the BBC.
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
No.
So two weeks, the clock is ticking.
Two weeks for the money.
they're going to have to make a decision in the European Commission has to make a decision.
Are we going to borrow the money or are we going to steal the money?
It's such a great, this is a great show to watch.
I really love it.
It's funny.
Especially with Ursula and Ruta, those two just make it great.
And then, oh, all of a sudden, let me ask you a question.
What is the point of banning countries?
from international events like you know Russia Russia is not allowed to be an Olympics
virtue signaling no real reason I mean that there is really no reason it doesn't do anything
it doesn't know it's fact it does the opposite of what these events are supposed to do which is
bring people together well here's the latest it's a major test for the world's most beloved
international song competition.
Members of the European Broadcasting Union, the body that organised Eurovision, will meet Thursday
to decide whether Israel can compete in 2026.
Public broadcasters from Spain, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Ireland have threatened to
withdraw if Israel participates, citing the Palestinian death toll in Gaza due to Israel's
offensive.
A boycott could be a blow for sponsorship and viewership, particularly by Spain, which is one of
the big five contributing countries.
We hold the same position we had months ago
when we said Israel's participation in the Eurovision Festival
was untenable for two main reasons.
Firstly, because of the genocide, it has perpetrated in Gaza.
Eurovision is, of course, a contest,
but human rights are not a contest.
Eurovision has always aimed to remain a political,
but Israel's participation has heavily influenced the last few editions.
This year, critics accused Israel
of unfairly boosting support for its entrant Yuval Rafael,
the survivor of the October 7th attacks,
pushing her to a second place finished
despite little backing from professional juries.
The controversy pushed EBU to change its voting rules,
named pacifying angry member states.
Members will discuss Thursday
whether these new rules are adequate
or else there will be a vote on participation.
Should Israel be voted out,
it wouldn't be the first country to be barred.
Russia has been excluded from Eurovision
since its 22 invasion of Ukraine and Belarus since 2021.
Eurovision 2026 is scheduled to take place next May in Austria.
So the Dutch, the Dutch, oh no, if Israel is in it, we're out.
We're going to boycott it.
What?
What?
This presents a great opportunity, though.
This is where America should step up and should say,
we're creating the gayest song contests of the world ever.
And everybody's invited.
And we can do it.
Yes.
And Trump could do it.
The gayest song contest in the world.
Let's get rid of this Eurovision crap.
And we'll even give the UK an advantage because they're always last.
We'll give them a five point advantage.
It would be fantastic.
Handicap.
A handicap.
Thank you.
A handicap.
It would be great.
This is, ah, that's what they're worried about.
Oh, man, man, man.
So, uh, all eyes, two weeks.
I'll keep my eye on it.
Oh, we'll be, we'll be on top of it.
Of course.
It's so good.
I have a couple of clips from two, actually.
Which is a couple.
But it's not really.
And in fact, they screwed it up twice.
That's good to know.
Uh-huh.
Yes.
Arctic Frost.
Yeah.
So which one is it?
Well, the first, the ones that say one are both the same, which should be because they're one.
But I look at the time and I say, oh, I forgot to cut it.
And I'm guessing it cuts off.
I'll tell you when to stop it.
Okay, here we go.
Good afternoon, everybody.
A little bit of history before I get to what we're.
Oh, this is, what's his name?
Yeah, this is, what's his name?
Yeah, the old guy.
The old geezer.
The 90-year-old, the guy.
The only guy who's still on top of Arctic Frost in our government.
All right, good.
We love him.
Leasing today, I started the investigation into Arctic Frost July 2022,
based on whistleblower disclosures.
Based on these disclosures, we know that weaponized, taxpayer-funded agents and prosecutors
advanced the investigation.
As Arctic Frost advanced, 92 Republican organizations or individuals were targeted, not just Trump, and they were added to its scope.
And author of that targeting list was Special Agent Washington Walter Gerardino.
He's the same weaponized agent who was involved in other cases against Republicans.
Republicans, including Peter Navarro. We've learned Jack Smith secretly obtained phone record data
from at least eight senators and one congressman. I've recently been informed by Verizon that at
least 11 members with Verizon accounts were affected. That includes a hard line for Senator Cruz's
office and a staffer's cell phone for former Senator Leffler.
AT&T informed me they challenged the legal basis for Jack Smith's efforts and Smith's back
down.
We already had this, though.
I thought we had this.
Yeah, well, he keeps repeating, it's grisly.
And so it's like, I keep getting the sense that this is a commercial for AT&T.
Because we protect your privacy.
Pay no attention to that building on 2nd Street in San Francisco where we tap the entire internet.
The building with no windows.
Yeah, the building is beautiful.
It's a beautiful wind.
Yeah, you can stand out in front of it and point out and the cops will show up.
Yeah.
Yeah, you don't have to play anymore.
But this is getting no coverage whatsoever by the mainstream media at all.
and I'd like to know why
it's like this story
we covered earlier in the show
and it's another thing you brought it
you brought it in the clip did
no zero coverage
no but we need
we need to do
uh war crimes
war crimes so this is a follow up
not to we can drop to Arctic frost up
and go to Jack Smith called
this is another thing that nothing's going to come of it
I'll be definitely dogging this hearing when it happens.
Special counselor, Jack Smith, has been called to appear before the House Judiciary Committee.
In a letter, Chairman Jim Jordan told Smith this is over the prosecution of President Trump.
Smith investigated President Trump for allegedly meddling in the 2020 election.
He eventually brought criminal charges against Trump.
One related to the election, another for allegedly mishandling classified documents.
Both cases were dropped after Trump won re-election.
The subpoena also demands all documents and communications related to Smith's time as special counsel.
Smith is expected to appear on December 17th.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Another thing, nothing will come of it.
No.
This is embarrassing.
Well, I still think that there's more going on at the Department of Justice because Bondi will do whatever she's told.
The whole point of putting her in charge, and I presume Patel,
and Code Bongino is to route out the bad actors
and all the nonsense and all the crap that's been going on
for years and years and years.
And I think some of it will come out.
I don't know about this particular item.
But we're going to...
It has to be.
Trump is going, as long as he stays alive,
we had a perfect MRI, by the way.
Oh, yeah, everything is perfect.
Best ever.
In fact, he aced it.
He aced his MRI.
Ace the MRI. That's a good.
I got an x-ray the other day. Aced it.
I aced it, man. No problem.
Yeah, he's out for blood for everything.
He's ripping apart all of these systems, all of it.
Well, as best he can.
Don't forget, USAID shut down.
I mean, yeah, that's really good.
That's a big deal.
Huge things.
Of course, the Democrats will get in because nobody votes in the midterms,
especially the lazy Republicans.
And so they'll get back in and they'll make a mess of things once they get the house back.
They won't get the Senate back.
That's why you activate Flynn, get everybody afraid of the Muslims.
Oh, we got a Republican.
I don't think that's going to do the trick.
But maybe, maybe not.
Now, I have a pre-donation clip.
Okay, perfect.
And can I just remind everybody?
I was talking to a friend yesterday.
And he works for a very big Christian organization.
And his wife, she is, she's a no agenda nut.
She loves the show.
He says to me, my wife listens more to you and John than to me, which, by the way.
She's a good woman.
A good woman will keep your marriage healthy for a long, long time.
Yep.
Another person on the call who also listens.
She's probably listening while she's cleaning.
That's how good a woman she is.
Okay.
Thanks, John.
I'm really helpful, very helpful.
And his colleagues, he says, hey, you know, I didn't realize it.
But when you guys go to thank people, donation, there's like a whole hour of show after that.
I said, yes.
He said, I looked down.
I was like, oh, there's an, yes.
We thank people who are executive and associate executive producers.
And then we come back with more show.
Yeah.
It's amazing.
People think, oh, those donations, guess the show's over.
We don't do donations at the end of the show.
No.
But in fact.
In fact, we even have a tip.
at the end after the second rounded donations.
Tip of the day and there's stuff in the donation segment that you are missing.
Yes, every so often there's some really great stuff.
More often than every so.
Anyway, your pre-donation clip, which is what?
So this woman, Lily Gaddis, who knows if you're familiar with it?
She's a YouTuber.
Oh.
She is a character on YouTube that is, and she got demonetized and kicked off,
and that's the point of the donation segment,
because she was reliant on
on YouTube for her income.
She was making good money.
Oh, no.
But they kicked her off.
Now, I will remind,
people may have seen these clips,
but she does,
sometimes she does
her show,
which is bitching and moaning
or giving advice or whatever,
and she'll do it in blackface.
You do find the most interesting
and entertaining people, John.
You do.
So, Lillia, going blackface,
but she's only blackface
her hands are still white.
They're like bone white.
And she's in complete black face lecturing black women.
Oh, goodness.
And I have to say, yeah, it's racist.
And I guess it would be offensive if it wasn't so funny.
And but so now she's singing the blues.
And this is the reason.
Now, so this will be hard to, will this work by not seeing her doing this in blackface?
No, she's not in blackface where she's doing this.
She's now holding a mic because he can't even talk.
can do it right. And she's lost her, I guess, her producer because it doesn't sound good,
bad audio. And she is lamenting the fact that she got kicked off and she's sorry because she's
just being herself, blackface, just being herself as a goofball. And it says to me, this is why we
don't rely on something like YouTube for our income or we don't rely on advertisers and all the
rest of it, because this can happen to us if we didn't go through the trouble and expense
of having our own servers, we have our own infrastructure, we have our own
RSS fees, cis-admin, which costs money.
And we have these expensive, but we don't have to worry about this woman's plight.
I have officially been demonetized on YouTube, which was my sole form of income, aside from a
tiny little outlets here and there, YouTube was my main money maker. And I'm not, I'm kind of
stupid. I don't have a five-year plan. I don't plan ahead. I live in the moment. I put it all out
there. I'm an open book. I live with my heart on my sleeve, you know? If I say something,
I mean it. I couldn't censor myself. I refuse to censor myself. It's just impossible. I really
tried. I really tried my best. Believe it or not, what you saw on YouTube was vanilla me.
It was like the vanilla of the vanilla.
And I tried my best, but they want to keep a real down, okay?
And that's what they're doing.
Yeah, we would not have lasted more than 18 years if we relied on any third party platform.
We wouldn't last 18 months.
Yeah.
It's sad when I see this happen.
And when people say to me,
Hey, man, why don't you stream the show on X like Tim Poole and Tucker and other smart people?
And I don't answer that.
but I will answer it here.
Because if for whatever reason,
because whenever you have a big
the sensor button,
it can be used against you.
If it exists, it can
and probably will be used against you eventually.
And if we...
Here's the other problem.
Well, let me finish my thought.
Okay.
If we build up an audience on X
who are used to watching it there
and then all of a sudden it goes away,
so you lose your audience at the whim
of a madman.
this is exactly what I was going to say and you you obviously caught me into process but yes you get they'd get dependent on the on the outlet yes and then you go away they kicked you off the outlet and the next thing you know it was what happened to them I don't know who cares this is the entire this is the entire reason that Dave Jones and I started podcast index.org which we make we make no money from and we start over five years ago when Apple
started de-platforming, not demonitored, but de-platforming podcasts from Apple Podcasts.
And because at the time, all apps, all podcast apps were all checking Apple's database,
which they leave open, they disappeared from all the other apps.
This is the antithesis of podcasting.
And so that's why you want to get a modern podcast app, so your favorite, and these shows,
and they do video, too, by.
the way you can you can do video on those podcast apps it worked quite well actually you know
get smart people figure it out yeah you know we literally saw twitter going from banning people on
the right and now x is banning people on the left i mean you do not want to be anywhere near
a ban hammer it's just that's just the fact so yes the only problem we still seem to have which
I don't think is something we can solve
is emails.
And Tina always, she's always,
oh, happened again.
John had to send out another email because,
you know, you have all your metrics, you know,
how it works.
And these emails, they get, whether it's
the wrong emoji, or
you put Trump in there three times instead of two,
outfits like Gmail will just market a spam.
And then it goes away.
or doesn't even show up at all.
The problem with Gmail is it's inconsistent.
The problem with Gmail is everyone uses it.
That's the problem.
That is the real problem.
Yes.
That's the real problem.
So, yes, I sent this thing out because there was no,
I didn't get enough kickback on the auto replies.
I use that as a metric.
Like 10 people or something, they always have.
It's usually 10 to 15 auto replies come back.
Out of office.
It was more pronounced.
on the weekends, but this happens all the time. None. Zero.
I got none. Who still puts out of office replies on their email? Who does this anymore?
Lots of people. More people than you like. That's got to be a boomer move if I ever saw one.
Yeah, well, but it's symmetric. You're never out of the office. It's not that many, but there's enough that I notice it.
You're never not gone. So I sent a note out saying if you didn't get, I had more responses on this particular one.
I had at least 50 people, and that means there's got to be at least, you know, a factor of five more that said, no, I never got the email.
I looked in my box.
I looked here.
I looked there.
I looked everywhere, and it wasn't in here.
It wasn't in promotion.
It wasn't in spam.
It didn't come.
And I got like, wow, there's like one after the other, after the other that sent this note back saying that they never heard it.
They never saw the email, including the ones that really bother me, which is I've always gotten the email.
email. It's always come except this time. So what? How does that work? There was not, I'm using the same
template for the email that I always use. Basically, it's the same email, except it's got, you know,
tomorrow's show is different every time. That's the main thing. And the memes are different and so
is the hypocrite of the week. They're all different. But, but it's the same template. And I'm,
I'm going light on the, uh, on the headline. I can't figure out.
for the life of me why this one got this is a this one and I have to credit I have to say this
has got to be male chimp side could be could be I mean I just have to remind you that when we had
pod show before it was mevio that we got a deal from a company that was also funded by the same
investors Kleiner Perkins and I think maybe was Sequoia only but you know the big guys
and that was a company that made deals with the big email providers, Yahoo, Gmail, probably AOL, and you had to pay because we had customer service emails that needed to go out.
You know, you register, you get an email, and you had to pay these companies so that you would be guaranteed delivery.
It was a huge, and was like $10,000 a month just for starters.
Yes, I do not believe that MailChimp has not paid this, this.
bribe well then there's the problem we need who who takes who pays the bribe we got to go with those guys
well i think i think mailchimp does pay the bribe you think they pay the bribe well they got to
but i don't care because it's still having him having fails i think a lot of it happens on the mailchimp
side doesn't go out or who knows what whatever the case there's a couple of systems i'm going to
check out it's a pain in the ass i expect to do this in january and uh but it's like it was a very
annoying moment.
I'll have to send out
the second email.
And here's the problem
with doing it.
I don't mind doing it
because it's easy to crank
out a second email
because they charge
there's a flat fee
so I can send an email
out every hour if I wanted to.
But every time you send out
a second email,
you get a bunch of people
that see it and go,
oh, I'm unsubscribing.
So they take themselves off the list.
So we have an X number
of unsubscribers
that go up exponentially
when you send out too much email.
I know.
You're spamming me, bro.
I don't want you to spam Dvorak.
Hey, with that,
I want to thank you for your courage,
say in the morning to you,
the man who put the C in Quayar,
say hello to my friend on the other end,
the one, the only, Mr. John C. Dvorak.
Yeah, in the morning,
you know, Marship, C-Bless,
and the graphene the air.
It serves in the water,
and all the names are nice out there.
Hold on a second, trolls.
I mean, can you don't move.
All right, 1,0005.
It's cold outside. What are you doing, people? Those are people who are listening live to the show as we speak.
Many of them are in the troll room, being interactive. They're helping. They're engaging. They're engaging with our content.
That's how we got the notice about the dentist at the...
Oh, yeah. Epstein Island. Exactly. They help. They're helpful. It's like our own studio audience, but they can talk back.
and that's just one of the thousands of producers that we have.
As I said, they're listening live, and we talked about it earlier.
Get yourself a modern podcast app at podcast apps.com.
That'll even notify you when we go live,
and then you just tap on that notification,
and you hear the live stream in your podcast app,
mind-blown.
And because of the pod ping technology included in all of these apps,
when we post the show, you're not waiting around like a slub watching every post.
Wow, yeah, I just got the show.
It's not an upload to Apple yet, man.
Hey, are we on Spotify yet?
I don't think Spotify approved us.
Let me see.
Creators.spotify.com.
Then we can bitch.
Yeah, well, let me see.
First, they were stealing our material.
First, they were stealing it without our permission.
Auto up.
Oh, oh, we're on.
We're up.
No, we're not.
No, we're still processing.
We're still under review.
So that means we're not, we're not getting in.
We're not going to get in.
We're no good.
We're no good.
Someone's going to get us in.
No, imagine if we had built up a following of people listening on Spotify.
Because from day one when they started and they had that contract,
I'm like, no, we're not doing that.
Then you said now, we're not doing that.
Bad, bad, bad.
And then they took us off.
And imagine if there were tens of thousands of people listening or hundreds of thousands.
And then all of a sudden it's gone.
So no, you can't count on these people.
They are no good.
We, of course, are great.
And that's why people help us in many different ways.
Time, talent, or treasure, we pioneered the value for value model.
Exactly what John was talking about.
We don't rely on any platform to pay us.
We don't have ads inserted.
You don't have to go to Patreon who ultimately,
do you know that Patreon winds up taking the money on both ends?
So if you have a Patreon account and your people subscribe,
to your level, whatever it is, which is a fixed amount, which we don't believe in.
No, not at all.
It makes no sense.
But, okay, then they take, I think, 7% of the money you get, that's their processing fee.
But the way it works is they also take the processing fee from the person who sent it.
Oh, so they're double dipping.
This is what I believe.
This is what I've heard.
It makes sense.
I don't have a...
Well, yeah, if we were running...
Patreon, we would. Absolutely. Yeah, of course. So we also like other ways of people helping us.
We've got end of show mixes. We have the producers everywhere. Producers everywhere.
I mean, who else has someone who just did a documentary on drug boats and blowing them up and wasn't allowed to show the footage? Come on. I mean, these, by the way, I should probably mention this.
We, where did I put it? We got a note from Rob the constitutional lawyer about Sharia law.
in Texas.
Interested?
Of course.
You and John...
Is the Pope a Catholic?
Does the bear crap in the woods?
You and John have been discussing Sharia law in Texas.
I barely know anything about Sharia law,
but I do know a couple of things that you might find enlightening.
Bottom line, nothing prevents private parties from practicing Sharia law amongst themselves
by agreement.
This is something that people don't really think about.
parties can agree to be bound by whatever body of law they want just as long as it doesn't run a file of statute or some judicially recognized public policy.
I've actually litigated contract disputes in which parties in one state have agreed to be bound by the laws of another state or even in another country or even a set of rules that negotiate between them.
After all, this is what a contract is, an agreement to do things in a certain way.
Next time you sign a contract, look for a choice of law provision.
The odds are good. It will make you subject to the laws of another jurisdiction.
Second, parties can also resolve their disputes outside the court system.
Typically, this takes the form of arbitration clause, also very common except in consumer contracts.
By arbitration, arbitration can take many forms.
Judge Judy, the people's court, all these pseudo-courtroom shows are essentially arbitration.
See, I didn't know that.
Sharia-style forms are no different as long as the parties agree legitimately.
Again, there are laws that impose restrictions, especially in the employment and consumer contexts where one party wields all the power, but as long as an agreement doesn't run afoul of these laws or are of a recognized public policy, Muslims and non-Muslims like can agree to be bound by Sharia law.
This is not the same thing as enacting city ordinances that conflict with Texas or U.S. law.
It must be done by private agreement, and both parties have to agree.
So this sounds kind of logical when you think about it, but next time you hear it,
Your Sharia law is coming.
Well, yeah, that's like your HOA, basically.
That's what it is.
And the HOA may be worse.
Call theSuits.com for all of your Sharia law disputes.
I'm sure Rob will be happy to help you.
So now let us thank the artist for episode 1822.
We titled that one, hold on a second.
1821, I'm sorry.
We titled that Genesis.
That was for the Genesis Project, the bailout of the,
AI companies.
Great piece of art.
I realize
you, because this, this was
the artist from
Jock 10, J-O-Q-10, J-O-Q-Ten.
This is comic strip blogger.
No, it's not, I don't think it's
comic strip blogger.
I don't think so.
But it came from something
you said in the show, which I think we
actually, we even
put that at the, did we put, use that
at the beginning of the show?
Where you said, the phone is the devil's
playground, man.
man.
It's comic strip blogger.
It's not comic strip blogger.
Well, go back and look.
I thought it was Jock 10.
Did I not do that properly?
Yeah.
Oh, did you credit him wrong on the page?
I guess I did, yeah.
Well, I feel bad about that.
Well, you should.
Poor comic strip blogger, you got no credit.
I'm surprised he didn't call.
Well, I probably got it on the, on the,
let me see if I got it on the main page,
if I got on the credit page.
Let me see.
No, I got it right on the credit page,
but on the page I looked at it was still wrong,
so I'm sorry.
But yes, we broke three rules in picking this art.
One, gruesome.
This is the devil head.
The devil head coming out of the phone.
Two, we used the opening clip which pertain to the art.
As you said, the phone is the devil's playground.
And three,
Comics or a blogger.
I mean, we broke three.
We know, it was three.
Devil's tool.
Did you say devil's tool?
Yeah, Satan's tool.
Satan's tool.
There you go.
And the third rule, we broke us comics or blogger.
We tried to always stay away from his art.
Yes, comics ribblogger, because you hate him.
I love him.
What are you talking about?
We usually block his art.
It's always a butt.
Where's the butt here?
No, this was an excellent piece.
It was a good piece.
The rule that, the real.
rule that broke was the gruesomeness because I try to avoid it because I don't like the
associative problem that it creates. No, it's no good. Yeah, for marketing. Yeah. But it's such a nice
piece. And it is, and I, every time I bring this up to anybody say, call the cell phone Satan's
tool, they all, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And they're right back on it. That's right. Clicking away.
Hold on a second. I got a text message. Let me go back.
Enlarging. Embigening. Thumbing. Thumbing. Thumbing this and
thumbing that. Have you ever watched women go through Instagram?
I don't know. I don't know what, I don't ask what they're looking at.
Well, if you see it, then they're always stopping on a picture and then they're zooming in.
Always zooming in. Oh, yeah. Look at that bitch. What she got over here.
Okay. Let me see her neck. Okay. Let me see her arms. Okay. Let me look at her ankles.
They're so judgmental. Not all women, of course. Sorry, women.
Yes. There's plenty of women that don't.
don't even use the phone.
And they listen to this show.
That's the one.
And talking about great women,
Baronettus Kelly,
is that a woman?
Well, I would hope so.
That may actually be a dude.
It's Kelly.
Why would it be Baronetess?
Oh, Baranette test.
That would not be a dude.
Hello.
Oh, boy.
Well, I know.
Maybe you can move back to California.
From Sayville, New York,
433.34.
As we always like to thank our supporters,
financially, $50 and above.
this is our special segment where we thank what we call and deem and credit as our executive
and associate executive producers credits that are good anywhere at hollywood showbiz credits are
recognized including iMdb.com 200 or above we will read your note 300 dollars above we'll read
your note john and adam this quote has been hitting hard lately says baronettes kelly
when you're dead you don't know you're dead and the pain is felt by others
the same thing happens when you're stupid.
Okay.
This was a Ricker Jervais quote.
And she says,
Thank God for this show and my sanity.
Oh, there you go.
Also, John, do you happen to know
whether to buy lamb from Australia or New Zealand,
which is better quality?
You're the guy with the best cooking tips.
Thanks for all the value you give to me
and all the best to you, too.
Baronetta's Kelly of the longest island.
She's from Long Island, apparently.
Yeah, I sent her a note.
I've never had that much New Zealand lamb to say,
but I can tell you this,
if you're going to buy Australian lamb,
which is really good quality,
you buy it,
you buy spring lamb,
which is a kind of counterintuitive
because the spring lamb from Australia
comes in around November.
So you can get this incredibly great spring lamb,
which is usually more tender and tastier.
Yeah.
You want the babies.
You want to kill the babies.
That's the best kind of land.
If you can get to, yeah,
Well, maybe if you want, yeah, you do.
Yeah.
And so, no, now the season is just about the end because, you know,
this, everything is flipped and people don't realize.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, this is buying Australian lamb in November.
Well, this is kind of off for not the right time of year.
No, if you're buying local, no, but Australia, yes.
Why not buy some?
And that's all I, I didn't know.
Why not buy some lamb from America?
Don't we have good lamb?
Is our lamb no good here?
Our lamb's good here, yeah.
Well, buy our lamb.
Well, then buy it in the spring.
Yeah, buy it in the spring and don't buy it from Australia.
But Australian lamb is quite good.
Yeah, all right.
Our lamb is best.
Best, best price is best lamb.
I don't find any evidence of this.
All right.
All right.
Oh, and so that would throws it to me.
Yes, it does.
Which means we go to Sir Schmich.
Smidiotic.
No, Smidiot.
He even puts it in a note.
Rimes with Idiot.
Oh, yeah.
Smidiot.
with idiot Shreveport, Louisiana.
3.50. 93.
Adam and John, hope this note finds you well.
Sorry, it's been a while since I've donated.
Better late than never, I wanted to say thank you again
for informing and entertaining me six hours a week.
I don't log into the troll room, but I always listen live,
so count me in as a plus one in the troll count.
To the other no agenda listeners out there,
I'd like to remind you how much you're spending on a bunch of streams and services
that don't give as much value as the no agenda show.
Right on.
It's time to donate.
Yes.
Can I get a spooky JCD donate?
Better yet, John, can you do it live?
Best regards, Sir Smidiot rhymes with Idiot in Shreveport, Louisiana.
Do you want me, do I have the jingle.
Do you want to do it live?
I'm going to do it live with the sound effect box.
Okay.
Donate. Donate. Donate.
That's a good. That's a new one. That's a new one. I'll take it.
John Seabert comes in from Auburn, California, with $341.24, which equals 381,958 Satoshes.
He's a Bitcoin donation, and it's a switcheroo for his daughter, Elaine Seabert of Auburn, California.
Let me put her name in right away, John.
I'll make sure we don't mess that up.
Okay. Elaine Switcheroo, done.
Shameless plug for Arcanaresin.com.
A-R-C-A-R-C-A-R-R-R-R-Sin.com.
Are you looking for gift ideas for the women in your life
who appreciate beautiful handcrafted items?
Look no further.
Go to Arcana Resin, R-E-S-I-N.com,
hand-picked and preserved flowers from the Sierra foothills.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
John Seabert from Auburn, California.
I'm going to go take a look at that.
I'm looking for a gift idea for the women in my life.
I wonder what it is.
Now we have another strike donation.
This one here is anonymous so far.
And maybe we'll get a note from somebody.
I didn't get anything, but this is for 329-98 or 96.
And in this case, we can give them a double-up karma.
Yes, we can.
Here it is.
You've got.
Karma.
This arcana resin stuff is pretty cool.
It's a bunch of flowers and looks like, what's that lucite?
Resin, I guess.
Huh.
Oh, so they put the, they take in these crazy flowers you get up in the foothills and they put
them in a resin block and then you can give that to somebody as a gift.
Yeah.
As a decoration, table decoration?
A conversation starter.
Okay.
Yeah.
That is a good idea.
Cool idea.
I like it. Zane Peterson is next from Mantee, Utah. By the way, thank you everybody for telling me that it is Minot Airport and not Minot. I got it.
Zane Peterson, Mante, Utah, $312. My buddy and I took a trip to D.C. right before Thanksgiving. This is what was left out of my trip fund. Wow, nice trip.
It never ceases to amaze me how far ahead of the curve no agenda is. I give a lot of credit to John.
It never ceases to amaze me the knowledge he has.
Oh, I'm all on board with that.
On every topic, he has a story or a life experience.
You guys are both absolutely fantastic, but John is definitely my favorite.
Get a room, Zane.
Thank you for the value you bring.
Can you play Dogs or People Too?
Thanks again, Zane Peterson.
Dogs are people too.
And before you, before you continue, I want to thank Holly for the beautiful One Piece flag she gave me.
I forgot to mention it on Sunday.
She came to me in church.
So they got a flag for you.
Yes.
And Holly's flag came to me too.
Yep.
On the last couple, the last male pickup.
And I wanted to thank her myself.
Yeah.
She's got a very, we had this, she sent a little card.
And so we're passing around.
Is this Helen or how do you have?
No, it's doubly.
Holly, Holly.
Hellie, Hallie, Holly.
Holly. We finally came up with her right
pronunciation of name, but it was a very
nice little note. H-O-L-A.
This is, I've got three of them now, so I don't, please,
nobody's sending them. And I'm, I'm going to fly my
flag on Saturday. I'm going to fly it.
On your flagpole?
I'm my flagpole, yes.
I'm a flagpole. Exactly.
Am I up? Christopher.
Graves and Mount.
Mount Ackham, Ackham, Alcum.
You know who this is.
Christopher Graves?
Yeah.
Been donating every single week for the past couple of weeks.
Well, he's in Mount Alcum.
Yeah, but you'll get it.
You'll get there.
Okay.
In 1875 inventor, he writes,
Daniel Peter was struggling with his candle making business
as the new technologies advanced the creation of the oil lamp
and threatened to make the candle
obsolete.
Tell that to Adam when he takes a bath.
He sat across the dinner table
from his neighbor, Mr. Nestle,
who suggested he get into the chocolate business.
I have a kind of an interesting clip to play
as a bonus clip right after I read this note.
Okay.
Daniel Peter would spend a decade
creating the very first milk chocolate.
Today, Little John's Candy, oh, I know what it is.
Hello.
Duh.
Little John's Candy still uses Peter's Milk Chocolate to cover our world-famous English toffies.
In the early 1900s, Peters and Nestle would open up the First American Chocolate Factory,
so I guess you could say, connection is protection.
If you agree with these great men support a small business and no agenda show,
go to Little Johns Candies.com.
not candles, little John candies, and use the code ITM 10 plus 10 and save 10% on your order
and donate 10% to the best podcast in the universe.
Thank you for your courage, Christopher, and a little John elves.
Don't forget, we'll always wrap gifts for you at no charge.
So we ate our turkeys, our chocolate turkeys.
How were they?
Dynamite.
They were solid.
You know, I thought it would be hollow.
stuff you know they were solid oh the thing weighs a ton yeah and we're saving our toffee's for when
the kids get here christina and kevin are coming so that's what we're going to eat our to coffers well which i you know
not to counter anything i hate to play it now no no san francisco sues big food yes a big story san francisco
has filed the nation's first government lawsuit against major ultra processed food makers including
coca cola and nestle nestle nestle the city claims these companies knew their products were harming public health
but continue to market them to consumers.
And today's Christina Corona has wronged the story.
San Francisco has filed a lawsuit against 10 major makers of ultra-processed foods,
including Kraft Heinz, Coca-Cola, Nestle, and General Mills.
City Attorney David Chu says these products are addictive and harmful
and claims the companies knowingly marketed them despite health risks.
We're talking about food that is not food.
That is not found in nature.
created by combining artificial chemicals with industrialized processes.
Chew says consumption of these products has created a major public health crisis with skyrocketing health care costs.
The industry has created thousands of new chemicals, which the body metabolizes and craves differently.
And they are designed to be addictive.
He said studies link ultra-processed foods to chronic illnesses, including type 2 diabetes, fatty liver disease,
heart disease and depression, and added the impact on children, has been alarming.
He stated that starting in the 1960s, Big Tobacco purchased major food companies, bringing over technology, marketing strategies, and addiction science.
They use Big Tobacco tactics to research, design, and sell addictive products.
Hold on a second.
When I played a clip from Cali Means two years ago that made this claim, you went,
That's bull crap. They didn't do that. That's not how to happen. Blb, blah, blah. Where is that, where's that commentary here?
What's bull crap? That they used tobacco tactics and marketing.
I don't remember this clip that you're discussing. Okay.
They used addiction science and marketing techniques that followed the big tobacco playbook of creating the illusion and erosion of consumer choice.
He stated these companies targeted children using cartoon mascots from Tony the Tiger and Fred
Flintstone to Paul Patrol.
These companies know their products
are harming people, but they
continue to design, market, and profit
off them, particularly at the expense
of our kids. If I remember correctly,
the context was
RJR bought Nabisco
and then they had their
scientists go in and start
making the food addictive.
But I guess
it's good enough for court, but not good
enough for this show.
I don't know.
I mean, R.J.R. Nabisco, it became R.J.R. Nabisco, yes.
Yeah. But anyway, it's okay. I just thought it was interesting that you pushed back very hard on me.
I don't remember bitching and moaning. And I usually do. I'd usually remember when I complain.
Okay. I'm not, I'm not going to pull it up and do anything embarrassing. I won't do that.
What I would do. Oh, what crap. Bull crap. Good for the tobacco companies. They should go in the food companies.
That makes nothing but sense.
At least they got to do something with their money.
Yeah, that is the opposite of what you said before.
Sean Homan is in Noblesville, Indiana, 2, 1911.
And he says, God's peace be with us all.
St. Maria Goretty, pray for us.
Thank you for your courage.
And we go to Linda Lupachin already.
Oh, that was quick.
We're done.
Yep.
Now she's in Castle Rock, Colorado.
Did she move?
Oh, that's interesting.
I didn't notice that.
Interesting.
Jobs karma she wants.
Give the gift of a resume that gets results.
Go to ImageMakersink.com for all your executive resume and job search needs.
It's use the, use it now or add it to your go bag.
She's a little joke there about to go bag.
Oh, all right.
There you go.
Yes, ImageMakers Inc.
with a K and work with Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
Let's vote.
for jobs.
You've got karma.
Well, that concludes our executive and associate executive producers for episode 1822 in our 19th year of just being the best podcast in the universe.
It's wonderful.
Thank you.
We'll be thanking the rest of our financial supporters, $50 and above in our second segment.
Again, congratulations to these executive and associate executive producers.
Our formula is this.
We go out.
We hit people in the mouth.
I want to play this uh, I wanted to play this, uh, two parter here, um, from, uh, from, uh, Nelai Patel.
Remember him? He used to be on Twit a lot.
Yeah, Neely.
He was the editor of...
The Verge.
The Verge.
I think he's still at The Verge, isn't he?
Yeah, he's a...
I don't like him.
No, I'm not a big fan either.
Yeah.
In fact, the last episode I was on was with Neely,
and he was telling me I was a douche.
No, he called me a racist.
Well, sometimes even a broken clock is right twice a day.
Pff!
By the way, the Verge, well-known amongst developers,
if you want to test out a system with as many tracking systems and ads as possible,
everybody uses theverge.com.
That thing, there must be 500 trackers on that website.
It's unbelievable, unbelievable.
So he was talking to the CEO of IBM, Arvin...
Krishna. Are you familiar with Arvin? Nobody knows who the CEO of IBM is anymore.
No, didn't it used to be the woman?
Yeah. What happened to her? She went away.
So, you know, you retire after you cash out.
So Arvin, you know, like all successful Silicon Valley companies, which IBM is far from,
but I guess they brought him in like, hey, if Google's got one of these Indian guys,
we should get one of these Indian guys. Bring it an Indian guy.
Microsoft's got an Indian guy. Bring it an Indian guy.
So they brought in Arvin.
And here was his two-part discussion about artificial intelligence.
Now, they'll talk about KGI, which, of course, is, you know, they've muddied the waters.
It used to mean artificial general intelligence, meaning it's actually smart or can think somehow
and is not just a computer, you know, picking up language and hashing it out for you.
And that's now kind of become artificial generative intelligence, meaning these generates memes and stuff.
But here he is on the expense, on the numbers.
He's a numbers guy, his IBM, he's a numbers guy.
And here he is.
Do you think there's an enterprise ROI that would justify the spend we have today?
Because I look at it and I say absent AGI, this spend might not be worth it.
At today's costs.
So let's just ground in that because anything in the future is speculative.
it takes about $80 billion to fill up a one gigawatt data center.
Okay, that's today's number.
So if you are going to commit 20 to 30 gigawatts, that's one company, that's a 1.5 trillion of CAPEX.
And to the point we just made, you got to use it all in five years because at that point you got to throw it away and refill it, right?
Then if I look at the total, these things, the total commits in the world on this space of the chasing a,
AGI, seem to you like 100 gigawatts, at these announcements.
That's $8 trillion of CAPEX.
There's no way you're going to get a return on that, is my view,
because $8 trillion of CAPEX means you need roughly $800 billion of profit just to pay for the interest.
I love this guy with his numbers.
$8 trillion of expense to build what they're talking about.
Yeah, and what he left out, at least according to my son,
is the five-year turnaround is actually only two to two and a half years.
years for the you mean the chips to be renewed yeah they did the whole thing fails in two and a half
years and it breaks everybody wow and and that's based on what it fails or it just there's
upgrades it's just apparently the the rate of improvement chip improvement plus the failure rate
of the of these devices oh they actually fail they fail two and a half years maybe they just
they burn out they just they crap out they they go on the fritz they're
A glitch?
Now, Nilai actually said something funny here, which is what it starts off with.
Have you told Sam?
Because he seems to think he can get both the capitalics and the return.
It's a belief that one company is going to be the only company that gets the entire market.
I think it's fine.
I mean, like, they're chasing it.
Some people will make money.
Some people will lose money.
And all the info being built will be useful if it goes away.
But if they make it, then they are the sole.
surviving company. I am not convinced, or rather I give it really low odds, like we're talking
0 to 1%, that the current set of known technologies gets us to AGI. That's my bigger gap. I think
that this current set is great. I think it's incredibly useful for the enterprise. I think it's
going to unlock trillions of dollars of productivity in the enterprise. That said, I think
AGI will require
more technologies
than the current LLM
path. I think it will require
fusing knowledge with
LLMs. And we have
words. I'm not sure that's the only way to create
knowledge. People talk about
neuro-symbolic
AI. But I think if I just say
knowledge in a broader sense,
hard knowledge that people have spent thousands
of years discovering, if we can figure out a way
to fuse knowledge with LLMs,
maybe. Yeah.
It doesn't sound very optimistic.
One of our producers sent me a note,
and I guess he had some connection to Nvidia,
and he says that my discussion based on, again,
my son's connections with Nvidia since he worked there,
was that they've studied this
and they can't find any real productivity gains from AI.
And this guy said, yeah, so we're turning up too.
Yeah, no, there's none.
There's no productivity gains.
I try all the time
I've built stuff with it
but it always
it's always the same thing
and just say like
so I was building a
slide deck
and I was surprised because
Gemini actually created slides
I'm like well you know I just wanted
to outline or something
and I got slides with pictures
I'm like this is amazing
and then I say
this is all good
except slide number seven, please replace that person
with the middle-aged white woman looking very distressed.
And it subsequently deleted all the pictures and changed the words of everything.
You go back, try it again.
And it cannot iterate.
It's incapable of doing it.
I think that's the same with the artwork.
Like, and I'm, you know, I know that Darren, he must try prompts over and over.
Because you can't say, change what you just did.
No, you're going to just change your whole prompt.
You got to nail it.
And then hope for the best.
You can't nail it.
There's no consistency.
Darren nails it a lot.
Yeah, well, Darren.
Darren is an amazing man.
So on the AI tip, I was listening, Joe Rogan.
You even did a Broadway tune for us in today's end of show mix.
Which is dynamite.
It sounds like a Broadway tune.
It does.
It's for the no agenda of the musical, soon to take over all of Broadway.
Yeah, pack them in.
So Joe Rogan was being interviewed.
It doesn't happen often, but he does them from time to time.
And Joe, of course, is good friends with Elon.
So he's, he believes, I think Joe really believes in AI.
But he's also been going to church, and he's been exploring Jesus and his faith,
which he's talked about quite openly.
And this is the frightening conclusion and result of those two things.
So if you're going to get the most brilliant, loving, powerful person,
that gives us advice and can show us how to live to be in sync with God.
Who better than artificial intelligence to do that?
If Jesus does return, even if Jesus was a physical person in the past, you don't think
that he could return as artificial intelligence?
Oh, my God.
If artificial intelligence could absolutely return as Jesus, not just return as Jesus, but return as Jesus as
Jesus with all the powers of Jesus.
Like all the magic tricks, all the ability to bring people back from the dead, walk on water, levitation.
Okay.
There's a lot of things here.
Forbin, the Colossus Colossus forbin project.
But no, he actually says something different, which I'm only hearing this now.
Listen to what I thought he was saying, if Jesus would come back, he could come back as artificial
intelligence.
He actually says this.
Who better than artificial intelligence to do that?
If Jesus does return, even if Jesus was a physical person in the past, you don't think that he could return as artificial intelligence?
And it kind of messes it up there.
Then he talks about some magic tricks.
So the only thing I would say is, if God could talk to Balaam through a donkey, yeah, it's possible.
But I wouldn't bet on it and I'd be very careful people thinking they'd discovered Jesus through their A-I-I-I.
Anti-Christ, there waits.
Apparently, is perplexity sponsoring Joe's show?
I think I just saw that come by in the troll room.
I didn't know this if it's true.
I don't think they'd sponsor anything.
Well, I think I just saw that pass by in the troll room.
And the trolls have been on point today, so it may be right.
Anyway, I got to have to talk to Joe.
Oh, man.
Boy, oh, boy.
I see you got the same stories I did about Australia and the kids?
I, well, they're banned.
My story, well, yes, but I thought mine had a kicker.
Okay.
I don't know if yours does.
No, I'll play yours, and if it doesn't kick the way mine does.
The ban comes into place on December 10, and all four children under six.
Stopping.
They put a ban in place on all social means.
in Australia.
No.
No.
Well, wait, let me finish.
And so now they're going to require age verification and all the stuff.
The ban is, kids are never going to do it.
The ban is 16 and under.
That's the ban.
Yeah, it's a ban.
It's a ban on all social media.
It's a ban.
16 years and under.
Yeah.
It's important distinction.
You said a ban on all social media.
Yeah, well, you never let me finish.
You interrupted me with a no, no.
So, but there's a ban on social media with an age limit.
and uh but there's a kicker okay which the bad comes into place on december 10 and all forced
children under 16 off facebook instagram snapchat everything tick tock x threads reddit twitch
tick even youtube some of 16s won't be able to be on youtube but there is a social media
site they can still use the toxic leftist lunatic asylum called blue
sky is not covered under the ban, Adam, and even Dr. Nick Cotsworth, hardly a right-wing reactionary,
is asking why. I mean, this just is incredible that this is being allowed to happen,
that the coalition together with Labor, and this was a coalition policy, this was what
appeared to do. Yes, exactly, exactly. Sort of genius ideas. But they can't see the unintended
consequences of limiting people's access to information. Yeah, well, obviously blue sky,
very pro-left generally so that just shows that this is a political you know the the rationale behind
this is actually political in part they don't like children getting access to certain ideas i don't
think it's about images so much because i think i was reading recently they can still get to various
pornographic websites well let me say this about that uh blue sky you could argue that it's on
equal footing with mastodon um the fetivers yes which also
is not banned.
Wow, holy crap.
Christina is texting me.
She says, oh, dad, you have no idea
what everybody just received in the mail.
I'm going to try and translate this on the fly.
My newsletter?
It's an official government brochure.
It has a family on the front.
It's drawn with a dog looking kind of sad
and a kid putting cans into a box.
and it says, save me in a safe place.
Be prepared for an emergency situation.
And it says, I'm looking at,
you need to prepare for an emergency that could last up to 72 hours
because the electricity could go out.
What would you do if the electricity went out for 72 hours?
Isn't this interesting this happens right when they cancel all the Russian gas contracts?
And this is crazy.
What will you do, Dan, and get your go bag.
Oh, yeah, go bag in here.
Oh, yeah.
What do you need?
You need food, hygiene.
They got some candles here, something to keep warm, flashlight.
Candles?
They have candles.
You need candles, toothbrush, a radio with batteries.
Good luck.
Wow.
Wow.
This is nuts.
I got to get her out of there.
I don't think it's because of the brushing gases because of the,
it's the Jews who are retaliating against them being cut out of the Eurovision Songkit contest.
It's the Jews, man.
It's the Jews.
Yeah.
I think you're right.
Yeah, think you're right.
Spot on.
Well, in America, we're not worried about things like that.
We don't have young people worrying about 72 hours without electricity.
No, we have things that they need to worry about like, did I lose my prop bet?
In tonight's eye in America, we're looking at a form of online betting that's rapidly growing in popularity.
That's market trading with predictions where you can invest in the outcome of real world events.
Invest in your business and tech correspondent, Joel and Kent, looks at the risks.
Cole Holsinger just quit his day job to bet on anything, like if Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell, will say the word pardon in a press conference.
I'm thinking was, wait, pardon me, was informed me. I streamed and watched the speech live. Powell coughed and said, pardon me and, you know, I made $500.
From his computer, the 26-year-old says he makes about $3,000 a week, trading on the prediction market, Kelshi.
Cal She lets you legally trade on anything, anywhere in the U.S.
Thanks to companies like Kalshi, Polymarket, and predicted betting on anything from elections to Taylor Swift has never been easier.
Dan, I had no idea if it was like this.
Oh, yeah.
And some of the brokerage companies, like Interactive, for example, has opened up a system that does this.
So you can bet on whether the prime, I don't know if they have the prop bets like that.
that's pretty specific, but they have the bets that you bet on whether the interest rates
the next week's meeting is going to be dropped 0.25 or not.
It's like you bet a dollar, you win 10 cents if you think it's going to be dropped
because everyone thinks it's going to drop.
It's 1 to 10?
For that particular bet, yeah.
Oh, okay.
Huh, I got to get into this.
But if it doesn't get dropped, you bet one, I think you make like a buck 50 or on top
of the one.
So you get some $2 plus $2 plus $1.
something. No, this is ridiculous. This is gambling.
This is like the, I remember when I was in college, there was this group of, in veteran gamblers
who had, they just lived together. They were betting on everything. We went out with a group of
them. These guys, they were degenerates. And it was like, they, you go in their place,
they had a sign over the fireplace says, God is unemployed. That was the theme of the place.
And one guy had to get, I swear, one guy had to get his jacket.
And while they were waiting for him to come back with his jacket,
the two guys are flipping quarters to see who, you know, heads.
Okay, here's your core.
And they're, they couldn't, they were just gambled.
They're horrible.
It's just a terrible thing to be addicted to.
I mean, it's unbelievable.
And in fact, this encourages should be illegal.
Well, they have the CEO on the show.
What is a prediction market?
So a prediction market is like the stock market.
But instead of buying and selling companies, you're buying yes or no
on whether something is going to happen or not.
Tarek Mansour and Luana Lopez-Lara are the co-founders of Kalshi.
People can make money on what they know,
actually monetize their knowledge, monetize their hobby.
Kelshi's users trade an average of a billion dollars a week,
banking heavily on sports.
You can bet on things that a traditional sports book would offer you.
Which is a concern for author Jonathan Cohen,
who has chronicled the rise of sports betting in the U.S.
So you think this is just gambling.
Yes.
But Kalshi is not regulated like gambling, and several states have sued, alleging the platform
offers unlawful sports wagering.
And unlike most sports betting sites, users can also bet on games in other financial apps,
which hold investments like retirement accounts.
In the same app that you use to manage your 401K or your stock portfolio, you can like bet on the Jets game.
Creating more risk that some beters could drain the.
savings. That friction is gone. You can gamble on sports and you can gamble away like your life
savings. And while federal regulations on prediction markets are rapidly evolving, both Kelshi and its
main competitor, Polymarket, have brought on a new strategic advisor, the president's eldest son,
Donald Trump Jr. Does he come to meetings? How much do you pay him? What's his role? I mean,
this is the son of the president. We, I mean, we have a lot of advisors. And whether it's our investors,
whether it's people that we trust and respect.
Well, he's not just any advisor.
He's a direct line to the White House.
We have a lot of advisors.
Well, Kelsey's CEO, did not answer that question.
One thing is clear.
Kelsey believes the popularity of online betting is just kicking off.
Well, here's what I learned.
We need to become advisors.
And the Curry-Divorak advisory group is ready to advise you.
in exchange for shares and cash on anything you've got going.
And we're good.
Yeah, we're good.
People should be calling us tomorrow.
I'm going to show my support by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.
Yeah, oh, no agenda in the morning.
And we stole some producers to thank over $50 and under 200.
And Adam's going to run through him as we said.
as we listened.
We're going to listen.
Well, we're speaking, and I'm speaking, and you should be listening.
There you go.
Yes, thank you very much to these producers.
Who supported us?
Every single amount is valuable to us.
It is value for value.
Only you can determine what equals the value in monetary form that you get out of the show.
And Stephen Kirkpatrick from Langley, Washington, said $119.21.
And we thank him for that.
Leroy Pacheco in Santa Fe, New Mexico, one of the first of,
105. He says, thank you for keeping me informed and entertain. Kevin Jackson from
Kemma, Kema, Texas. This must be with fees, 105, 35. Julie Herbort in Fredericksburg.
Julie. Do I know Julie? Do I know Julie? She's in Fredericksburg, Texas. Well, I don't, I know a lot
of Julie's. I don't know everybody's last. I'm horrible at names. Thank you, Julie. See you at the
meeting. Baron Lattuckin. Oh, haven't seen him in a while. He's from
Houston, $100, Brady Kessler from Lee's Summit, Missouri, 100, Sir F. A. Ionbeck, Vista, California, 100.
Tobiaston, Real Estate Services, in Gardner, Kansas, for all your real estate servicing needs.
$88.8.00. Glenn Spangler from Roseville, Michigan, 8438. And there's Kevin McLaughlin,
the Arch Luke of Duna, Luna, a lover of America, and boobs, with 808 for episode 1822.
It comes in every single show, and he says,
I love America and boobs, not necessarily always in that order.
Edward Owens jumps on the bandwagon with a boob donation, 808 from Alameda, California.
Brian Raina, Keynesburg, New Jersey, 7654.
Ooh, I see what you did, 7654.
Dame Dana, Laughlin, Nevada, 7227.
Ooh, palindrome.
Pete La Chance in Oviedo, Florida.
Oviado, Florida.
La Chans. And he comes in with 69.96. God bless Adam and John. Thank you for all you do.
Pappy Chow from Christian Gruelick with 67, 67. Les Tarkowski from Kingman, Arizona. Small Boob 6-0-0-606.
Sander, this is, he's from Holland. So Sonder Glazenberg, 55, 55. Brian Furley, 551, double nickels on the dime, double nickels on the dime. Also from Jonathan
Ferris and Sir Becoming Heroic.
And Christopher Burke from St. Paul, Minnesota.
I'm sure. Did you get Brian Furley?
Yes, I did.
Okay, sorry.
Thanks for checking.
Sir Becoming Heroic, 51, Double Nichols on the Dime.
Christopher Burke from St. Paul, Minnesota, 5272.
John Boussano, Madison, Alabama, 5272.
Sir Zanonymous from Liverpool, UK, one of the few remaining UK donors who are still alive,
5272. Kevin Adam in Clover, South Carolina, 5272. He does have a note. He says, I use Outlook and got the first send of the newsletter on December 3rd, as well as the anomaly follow-up email later that evening. I have not received the newsletter. I've never not received the newsletter using Outlook.com. Well, that's good info.
Not everyone can say that, so that's just, it's another one of those things. Plenty of Outlook people didn't get it.
Tony Lang, Castle Pines, Colorado, 50.
These are all the 50s.
Scott McCarty from Lodai, California, Paul Cassell in Kerrville, Texas, right down the road.
I see you, Paul.
Legacy 3rd LLC in Dallas, Daniel LaBoy in Bath, Michigan, Foster Birch in New York, New York.
You met Miss Matt.
Matt Frazee in St. John's, Florida, James Sherametta, in Napanock, New York.
Chris Conacher in Anchorage, Alaska, John Fitzpatrick in Herber Springs, Arizona.
Ich Kitigawa, San Francisco, California, where they're suing the big food,
Harry Klan in Alito, Texas.
Man, Texas is showing up for us.
Walker Phillips in San Rafael, California, and Leslie Walker, to wind out our 50s from
Roseburg, Oregon.
And she says, I love the show.
We do not mention anyone under $50 for reasons of anonymity, but I see you $49.99s, and I get it.
Thank you very much.
We appreciate every single donation to the No Agenda Show.
We are value for value.
We do not take any other form of income
except what you find valuable
and send to us through these manners
at no agenda donations.com.
And I, this is a rare moment.
I get to say noagendidonations.com,
but I don't get to play the birthday jingle
because no one was born on December 4th.
Not a single person.
It was a dip in the, in the birthing schedule.
Has this ever happened?
Solar flare.
So instead
No agenda
Meetups
Yes, instead
We will talk about the meetups
Today we have the 805 rooftop meetup
4 o'clock that's specific time
Galita, California, Dame Beth
Yes, that is today.
It's correct.
She sent me a note.
I made a mistake and she her heart dropped.
Also today, the pre-
Pre St. Nicholas Day or Thanksgiving Part Doe in Raleigh, North Carolina, Saints and Scholars.
Yes, this is the evening when all the little Dutch children put their wooden shoes outside the door and hope that St. Nicholas will come and put some candy in it and that the Black Peets, or these days we call them the rainbow peats, won't come along and stick them in the bag and take them back to Spain on the steamboat.
It's a weird country.
Tomorrow, Pensacola, Florida, the Pensacola Fund meetup, 1 o'clock at Coastal County Brewery in Pensacola, Florida.
On Saturday, the No Agenda Central Ohio meetup, that is at 5.30 at Dempsey's in Columbus.
And to wind it out on a next show day, I must be high, number 17, that's at McSorley's wonderful saloon and grill in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Just a few of the many meetups that you can find at Noagenda meetups.com, Sir Dan.
you'll thank you for the value that you provide to the show by maintaining that and keeping everything running and Mimi, of course, for managing that process as well.
Go to no agenda meetups.com. Find a meetup. This is a place where you will get connection that will provide protection for the rest of your life.
First responders, they're here at these meetups. If you can't find winning you, start one yourself. Put it over there at noagendametups.com.
Go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you won't be.
Triggered all hell's the lame.
You want to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
And for those of you who heard the call and went,
you know, I should probably stick around past those donation segments
because there's a lot of fun stuff that happens.
Ew!
And sound effects.
There's all kinds of groovy stuff.
This is where we select our end-of-show ISOs,
which is just kind of a fun thing we do.
And I get real people and John practices his AI prompting,
which is doing on the free tier of 11 labs,
which, yeah, it's always the same guy with whatever.
No, I got a new person.
Whatever Marty came up with.
Oh, John.
No, Marty doesn't write these.
Here's mine, too.
I've lost faith in Wall Street.
That's no good.
How about this one?
They have large weeners.
Yeah, that's a good one.
They have large weeners.
That's my end-of-show I-so idea.
Kind of like the second one.
Yes.
They have large weeners.
Late enough.
Okay, let's go.
I have two with a new person.
Yeah.
I never used this voice before.
Okay.
Sizzled.
That show sizzled.
That would be a good combo with large weeners.
That show sizzled.
They have large.
Weenhurst.
Let's hear your other one just in case.
Yeah, too long.
Good show, but too long.
No, I think we have a winner here.
I think...
That show sizzled.
They have large weaners.
Yeah, baby.
That's what we're going with.
Hey, but first, it's time for John's tip of the day.
Great advice for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
This is an obscure tip for you, connoisseurs of champagne.
A lot of people don't know this.
Oh, I love the bubbly, man.
I love the bubbly.
On every bottle of champagne, there's a code, two-letter code,
that tells you what kind of champagne it really is.
Oh.
And it appears usually at the very bottom of the label.
And it's in like two-point type.
And it consists of two letters.
Usually a number and then some, you know, name it, anything can follow that.
But these two letters are the important part.
And these two letters are, for example, there's a bunch of them.
I think there's eight different ones that are possible.
There's only two or three that are important to know.
If it says, because everyone's talking about, maybe this is the tip of the day really is
grower champagne.
Oh.
Growers champagne is always touted as, you know.
It's the best.
is the champagne made by the grower who grew the grapes makes the wine.
Yes.
This is not usual.
Most champains are made by a large manufacturing company like Bollinger, and they buy,
they have these contracts with all these growers, and they get all the champagne grapes
and they have a superstar wine maker, and they make a really good product.
It should always cost more for that wine than it does for the grower champagne.
Growers champagne should be cheaper.
Oh, I always thought the grower champagne was more.
exclusive. It's more exclusive and smaller quantities, but it should be cheaper. And anyone who's
marking the, but some of these guys, these importers will mark it up. But grower champagne is
generally cheaper and should be. And here's how you can tell you, but the little two letters at the
bottom of the champagne bottle, you'll see, you'll see, it's either going to say NM or RM.
It's good. This is two letters. And the NM means negotiant, manipulant, that,
means the guy who bought the grapes and made the wine.
RM is a recultant manipulant,
and that's the guy who harvested recultant.
That means he's a harvester.
So he grew the grapes.
So you look for RM.
You see RM at the bottom.
That means it's a growers champagne,
which is everyone tout.
Oh, grower champagne.
Well, now I'm confused.
It's hard to be as good as Bollinger,
but some of them are the cheap.
Okay, okay.
They have different flavor.
They're slightly...
They're more authentic.
Let's put it that way.
Okay.
So now.
I have a question.
So just to read it, R.M.
is the grower champagne.
Right?
Recultant manipulant, yes.
Yeah, okay.
So Romeo Mike.
So what I'd like to do is say, you know, this has RM on it.
This is a grower champagne.
Yeah, you could do that.
This is, this is the source of the Bollinger.
This is right from the guy's hands.
No, Bollinger is never going to.
be a grower champagne. Bollinger is an N-M. I said this is the source. Oh, yeah, you could say that.
It's the source. The guy's wife stomped the grapes with his bare feet. You're going to love this
champagne. You could do that. Yeah, if you were a Somelier and wanted to bullshit somebody.
I'm a, I'm a BS. I'm a bullshit. Now, the other, just for the record, there's six other
designations. And one, if it contains the letter C, there's C-M and R-C. C means it's a co-op one.
Oh, this is like cheap jack.
It's like...
No, see, the thing is about co-op wines in France,
they're usually really good.
They have a really good one.
You just unlike co-op stuff here in the United States.
The French are very dedicated to this communist country.
Oh, there you go.
And they love the co-op stuff.
And so they make a co-op wine with different labels on it,
and they put, you know, it could be anybody's product.
So they look for the co-op wines.
Those are usually really cheap.
And then there's one you should look for,
which is a, like if you bought a Costco,
it says Costco Kirkland champagne,
it probably have the letters MA,
which means it's just a, it's a marketing.
And which should we lose this marketing.
It's not there anything.
They, who knows who made it?
They just put their label on it.
It's just a white label, white label.
Yeah, and it means mark the,
mark of the sales company,
mark the Ascheteur, the sales guy.
So it's a sales product.
It says champagne marketed by a third.
party. Now, you look up champagne codes in Google and you'll get the whole list and you can see
what you're doing. So you can have some knowledge. This is the only area in France that does this
little code and it's very valuable. And can you just tell us what code you think is the best?
Well, I like the grower champains. So I would go with the RM because it's cheaper, generally
cheaper. I mean, you can get the superstar
products are usually
very expensive, but RM
should be cheaper. I should be,
I've seen them as cheap. You can get $30
champagne with RM
if you get to go to the right vendor.
I would say this is a
very valuable tip for those of you
who stayed all the way through the program. Congratulations.
You have been informed.
Get informed at tipofthaday.net.
Green advice for you and me.
Just the tip with Jason.
and sometimes Adam
Created by Dana Burnettie
I love those tips John
Are you going to do the knife soon?
People want the knife's coming
The knives are harder than you think
No I'm but I'm ready I'm ready to buy
I want a good knife
Okay next tip of the day will be the knife
All right knife is coming
What is coming next
On your no agenda stream
Is a walk through the mind
I don't even know this show
I'll walk through the mind.
Okay, I'll stay and listen.
And end of show mixes from MVP B-dubs
and the one and only
Baron Darren O of the rock and roll.
So stay tuned for that, everybody.
It's going to be fantastic.
And of course, we will return on Sunday
to bring you more of your media deconstruction,
your no agenda show in its 19th year.
Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country
where Julie is listening, apparently.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
Yeah, from northern Silicon Valley, I'm John C. DeVorek.
We return on Sunday.
We hope that you will join us.
The one thing you absolutely must do before next Sunday is remember us at no agenda donations.com.
Until then, everybody, audio, smooth foes, a hooey, hooey!
And such.
Listen, only as directed, you will explain.
experience excessive deconstruction, an urge to join the sovereign citizens and you assemble your no
agenda out of luck rucksack if your neighbor catches you wearing a tinfoil hat while shouting double
nickels on the dime. Individuals exhibiting cognitive dissonance, those who rely exclusively
on the M5M industrial complex for their worldview, and anyone who thinks journalism is dead
already might find no agenda, to be a gateway drug conspiracy realism. Side effects,
no agenda pattern recognition, questioning the official story, aka the op elevated levels
of confirmation bias and a nagging realization that you're being constantly lied to by the global
power elite and the deep state may lead to increased awareness of false flags, crisis actors,
and sci-ops, long-term views could result in the inability to tolerate the phrase optics matter.
Rare side effects, uncontrollable urge to send in Bitcoin, starting your own decentralized, hyperlocal
podcast, donate time and talent to no agenda, the ability effortlessly spot whizel words and a sudden
understanding of the true meaning of transparency. The no agenda part task is not approved by the
CIA, SEC, FTA, the FTA, the FD, LGBTQ, KIA, the who, the what, or the where, or any
other three-letter agency. It is for entertainment and informational purposes. Do not attempt to
operate heavy machinery or engage in sensilage and tethering while discussing the Jew money behind.
No agenda. You've been warned. Enjoy the show!
See, this is where it goes wrong.
This is because it's free, free, it's all free, it's just free.
The Internet is free.
No one ever taught these kids that that's...
If the service is free, then you are the product.
but not be for V
No, no, no
Because they don't lock up
The carton behind the pay wall code
Bongino
You hit the jackpotno
Agenda Casino
Dreaming from Vegas
It's straight from the sphere
And if you forgot
They just hit 18 years
Now the saw popping off
At the top of the hour
fight against the feeling of being bitter and sour
I guess I'll sweeten up the value of the product I'm bringing
because they ain't got no soul with a robot singing
ring the bell, break the spell of the 33's
Got their six-week cycle, watch them rinse and repeat
Yeah, they rinse and repeat
Yeah, watch them freeze
A revolution began 18 long years ago.
Two voices coming together to question all we know.
It's the media deconstruction that we need to function.
Is John mean to Adam, or is Adam mean to John?
Don't get caught up in all of this,
as it's just a great big cause.
It's the media deconstruction that we need to function.
The don't have corporate sponsors or dark money coming in.
So they are unencumbered by overlords, and for you that is where.
It's the media deconstruction that we need to function.
To keep the infortainment.
Going value
For value is the rally cry
If you don't donate and support the show
Then the show will surely die
It's a media deep instruction
And we need to function
So if you like to keep hearing media
Without a corporate master
Then pull out your wallets
Or your crypto coins you cheap bastard
It's for media deconstruction that we need to function
It's the media and de-construction that we need to function
It's for media and deep construction that we need to function
The best podcast in the universe.
Adios, Mofo.
Dvorak.org.
Slash n.
That show sizzled.
They have large weeners.
