No Agenda - 1856 - "CIS Lunar"
Episode Date: April 2, 2026No Agenda Episode 1856 - "CIS Lunar" "CIS Lunar" Executive Producers: Sir Anonymous Driver of the gap Lindsey Carson Associate Executive Producers: Sir Nobody of the 3d Printer Matthew Martell La J...olla Salt Corporation Eli The Coffee Guy Dame Tanya Weiman - COuntess of New York Ciy Linda Lu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning résumés mfDX of Anjou 1856 Club Members: Become a member of the 1856 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Dame Tanya Weiman > Countess of New York City Knights & Dames Lindsey Carson > Dame Lindsey of the House Hunters Art By: Blue Acorn End of Show Mixes: Darren O'Neill MVP Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman <b>NEW</b>: Gitmo Jams <b>Sign Up</b> for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1856.noagendanotes.com Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed <b>Full Summaries in PDF</b> No Agenda Lite in opus format Last Modified 04/02/2026 16:18:19 by Freedom Controller
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To the moon, Alice.
To the moon.
Adam Curry, John C. DeVorey DeVore.
It's Thursday, April 2nd, 2026.
This is your award winning,
Giponation Media Assassination, episode 1856.
This is no agenda.
To the moon!
And broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA,
region number six.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from refinery row up here in the North San Francisco Bay,
I was going to say to the moon, I'm John C. DeVorex.
We got to coordinate these. Now we can't coordinate these things.
I was going to add Alice.
Yeah, so throw in one of your trademark,
no one understands what JCD is talking about references.
Exactly.
Alice. Is that from the honeymooners?
From Jackie Gleason, Jackie Gleason. Jackie Gleason.
You remember?
Barely.
Barely.
To the moon, Alice.
To the moon.
Was that how much he loved her?
Is that what the deal was?
And that's what he's threatening to punch her.
No, he was not.
What?
What do you think it meant?
No, he meant he loved her.
He didn't want to punch her.
Are you kidding me?
He only said that when he was mad at her and he had his fist in a ball and he was swinging it around and he was going to say to the moon one of these days.
Well, show you this is exactly what I mean.
No one understands these references.
It's okay.
think they're suppressed.
Well, they should be.
It's completely misogynistic.
You can't have that kind of stuff anymore.
He never hit her.
But this is the threat and the threat is violence by itself.
Yeah.
Silence is too.
So listen to this fomer girl on NPR with the rocket going to the moon.
NASA says the Artemis 2 moon mission is proceeding as scheduled following yesterday's
launch of four astronauts.
from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
NPR's Nell Greenfield Boyce was there for liftoff.
The rocket is just arcing up into the sky.
There's a tremendous noise
and just a bright, bright, streaking star in the sky.
It was like physical.
You could feel your body shaking.
And there's a long, straight cloud, white cloud,
coming down from the rocket, which is still the blue sky.
There's four astronauts on board,
and it's amazing to think that they're on top of this thing.
And it's just going up and up and up,
but we can still hear it.
It's like a very loud flag flapping sound,
and all eyes are on this thing.
That's NPR's NPR's Nell-Field voice, the asterisk.
I love her.
Does she know that we have television these days?
Does she know?
I love the theater of the mind.
You know, it's a flapping noise,
and I can't believe that on top is this thing,
and there's a white trail behind it.
Yeah, we're watching it on television, NPR girl.
It was, yeah, well, there you go.
There's a big rocket.
It's a big rocket, and of course they launched it on April Fool's Day.
Look pretty real to me, though.
I'll be honest.
I haven't gone to a lot of work to make it not real.
All those people witnessing it.
You know, that thing's still not as big as Saturn 5.
I watched most of this coverage.
The thing is huge, but Saturn 5 is still a few feet bigger.
Well, it's not the size.
It's in the motion of the ocean.
You know, and they're going to slingshot this thing around the moon.
And this is a big deal.
I got a couple of clips.
Do you have anything on the rocket?
No, I didn't really get now.
It's just a, no, what was there to re-
No, there's no controversy.
Well, well.
You found something good.
There's always something.
Well, let's see.
Yeah, I actually got the, I got Isaacman.
He's the, the administrator of NASA.
That guy with the ears?
That guy with the ears.
He could fly to the moon.
just with his ears.
Holy mackerel.
Here he is.
Hey, you know, this is serious, man.
We're in a new space race for the moon base.
So this is the opening episode, but you're going to start seeing moon launches to the moon
almost on a monthly cadence.
A lot of uncrewed vehicles are going to go there as we start to build out the moon base.
You're going to see crude vehicles with astronauts going at some point every year,
eventually getting down to six months.
Vehicle architecture will change until you've got repeatable.
affordable missions going to and from the moon.
Yeah, okay.
And you know how they're going to do that?
They have moon partners.
I'd say we have demonstration missions, again, on the kind of peaceful civil side,
for doing on orbit boosting of satellites, on orbit refueling of satellites.
In fact, our entire lunar strategy with our two moon partners that are building our lunar
landers, space and blue origin, incorporates some degree of on orbit assembly or on orbit
triogenic prop transfer.
These are going to be game-changing capabilities for the United States.
So we are moving in that direction, for sure.
It's a little entremont here.
This came in this morning as the astronauts are talking to Houston,
and they had a little bit of a problem they thought mission control could help them with.
Yeah, go.
Why are they?
What?
Okay.
Wait, wait, stop the show.
Clip of the day.
Microsoft Outlook crashes.
I'm telling you.
I'll give you 10 points for that.
The whole thing's worth it.
Let's listen to that one more time.
Yeah, go for you.
And I also, neither one of those are for those two outlooks.
That would be awesome.
Can you remote in?
It's even worse than that.
Just to just.
That's the worst.
Remote in.
I thought that was great.
Okay, we're sending these guys to the moon and they're using Outlook.
Like, I wonder if they're on, do you think they upgraded to Windows 11 so they have support?
They better.
Anyway, this whole thing is obviously about national security.
When America returns to the moon, builds a moon base, you know, returning to the moon this time to stay, it sends a message.
It sends a message to every one of our adversaries, our geopolitical rivals around the world,
of what we are capable of doing.
It sends a message of what we're capable of doing
across every one of the most important
emerging technological domains.
I will tell you it is absolutely a race right now.
Success and failure on the moon
is going to be measured in months, not years.
Success or failure is months, not years.
And this, my friends, you may think
we're just blowing money on rockets,
blowing on a moon base.
This is a critical piece
of your Golden Dome.
I 100% believe that our
adversaries around the world understand how important the high ground of space is and what our
satellites are capable of doing again from an observation and communication perspective, and they
are doing everything they can to try and challenge it. That's where President Trump's Golden Dome
comes in. We're building out even bigger constellations of satellites. We're going higher. We're going
into cis lunar space. We're sending American astronauts back to the moon. What, cis lunar space? Did I hear that
correctly? It sounds like he said
cis. Yes,
what I heard to. Like trans or cis.
Some sort of sexual
thing. Higher, we're going into
cis lunar space. Yeah, cis lunar space.
I wonder what's cis.
I think we've looked this up.
We have a couple of times. It never
makes any sense, really.
Well,
I'm here. Data lights. We're going higher. We're going
higher. We're going into cis lunar space. We're sending
American astronauts back to the moon to build a
moon base. So. Laftel.
Laftel.
We're going higher.
We're going into cis lunar space.
We're setting American astronauts back to the moon to build.
Listen, listen.
You can hear the laugh tell.
Listen.
You're going higher.
We're going into cis lunar space.
We're sending American astronauts back to the moon to build a moon base.
So there's no doubt our adversaries are trying to counter our capabilities in space.
But this is why President Trump signs a national space policy calling for the continuation of American
superiority.
the high ground of space.
Sys lunar space, the high ground of space.
These are new terms.
We should be learning these terms.
That's the show title.
Siss lunar space is a little longer.
Yeah.
Or just Sys lunar, maybe.
CBC had a bit here as we apparently are still racing the Chinese.
And I think the Chinese, have they only banked stuff into the moon?
Have they crash landed or have they had anything land successfully?
I don't know. I think all it is was the crash lands.
I think they just crash landed.
I think.
9.
8.
For all the complexity, care, and frankly, rocket science that goes into this moment.
Three, two, one, booster ignition, and lift off.
There's little else it comes down to but the wonder of this moment.
Houston in takers.
Good.
Roll pitch.
And how wonderful it was to see.
years of planning and an estimated $93 billion pay off.
Artemis 2, with humans on board, heads off to the moon.
Today's successful launch is also a move that NASA's new administrator has been pushing for.
Jared Isaacman has criticized the pace of this Artemis program for taking too long and showing too
little. He recently revamped plans to get more missions going faster, even to establish a moon base
before competitors like China can make progress.
If there are constant Chinese missions and rare American missions,
what makes you think the language of space travel will be English?
Dean Chang is a senior fellow with the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies.
He sees China's persistence to go to the moon as a real challenge to the U.S. with timelines.
You can bet that they will move literally heaven and earth
to make sure that Chinese boots leave an impression on the lunar surface by December 31st, 2030.
Humanity's next great voyage begins.
Still, Artemis is the farthest along,
and if all goes well in days,
these astronauts will be physically farther
than any other crude mission has ever gone.
Even as they know, their job is to be the test case
so humans can go even further.
So beside the endless articles about the color of their spacesuits,
it's orange.
It really, this whole thing really does seem to be,
to have a China angle to it, which I didn't, I didn't expect that, or at least there wasn't a lot of
that in the preamble.
I thought so.
You thought there was a lot of China angle?
Yeah, I thought the whole thing was about China.
I was convinced if China hadn't been threatening to land a man on the moon that we wouldn't do
this at all.
It's too expensive.
Hey, man, it's a part of the Golden Dome.
One more clip.
This is from CNN, again, about China and the new lunar economy.
Back 50 plus years ago, the first mission to the United States.
Moon. That was a space race with Russia. Today, the race is really with China.
How much...
Doesn't Russia still make our engines?
I know Elon makes them now.
Oh, okay. But they do. I mean, you can still buy the Russian engines. I think we'd buy
some. They never said who made these engines.
Well, maybe we should buy it. I'm guessing Elon's company.
Maybe we should buy a few of these engines.
Maybe not. Race is really with China.
How much did China, has China's own space
race fueled this push to get back to the moon.
Right.
Absolutely.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Absolutely.
Did she say right?
Absolutely.
I think so.
We'll listen again.
Back to the moon.
Right.
Absolutely.
I would say it's a major.
Right.
Absolutely.
It's more like a right.
Absolutely.
Right.
Absolutely.
I would say it's a major factor.
I mean, the reason that this is a race and exactly whether it's a race is kind of
up for debate.
But certainly.
lawmakers have made clear both Democrats and Republicans that they consider us to be in a new space
race with China, and it being a national security concern if they leapfrog our deep space capabilities.
So that's the goal here, right? China clearly has ambitions to build a base on the moon.
So the United States is stepping up to that challenge and saying we want to build one too.
So the big question here, maybe isn't who lands on the moon first again, but maybe who gets
to that lunar base and establishing a new lunar economy, as NASA likes to say.
And China is certainly driving that.
We'll see.
Lunar economy.
Lunar economy.
Tina was having none of it.
She says,
but lower my gas prices.
I don't care about what we do with the lunar economy.
I think that's,
it wasn't the same.
The media made some excitement about it
when they were getting onto the,
into the capsule.
But there wasn't a lot.
You know,
are people that excited anymore the way we were?
No.
It doesn't look that way, but when they showed the crowd at Kennedy, there's a bunch of little kids who watched it, and they're all excited.
So maybe, you know, it was just us being old.
Speak for yourself, Tonto.
Hey.
Hey, you're going to be a year older.
I've got a birthday coming up.
On the fifth?
The fifth?
That should be exciting.
Is that a show day?
It's not a show day, is it?
It's Easter Sunday.
Oh, wow.
You celebrate on Easter Sunday?
Yeah.
Oh, that's great.
Isn't it?
Yeah.
It happens about once every 12 years.
Wow.
Yeah, I didn't realize that.
Easter kind of snuck up on me as well.
It's not the same.
How do they plan that?
I should know this, I guess.
Is that the Hebrew calendar?
Is that why it's so confusing?
That's a good question.
because I've been baffled by it by myself.
Sometimes it's March.
Sometimes it's here.
You know, sometimes it's July 4th.
I mean, it's all over the place.
It's never been on July 4th.
No, it's never been that.
I have a feeling, I think it's the Hebrew calendar.
But it just snuck up on me.
We should, you know, is the robot operating?
The robot, well, you mean, it's the robot talk operating?
I don't have her in talk mode.
And, you know, I'm on Linux now.
She's not compatible.
I can get her working for Sunday.
I don't want to delay the show.
We shouldn't be guessing.
We should be right here with computers in front of both of us.
Well, we have, I mean, of course I can ask my, let me, okay.
How is Easter Sunday determined?
Okay.
All right.
Let's see what she says.
And the robot says, it's calculating.
I need to put you in fast mode, robot.
See, this is the problem.
If you don't, okay.
Oh, it's the Verno Equinox.
Ah.
And the Pashaul full moon and the next Sunday.
So it has, oh, man, this is complicated.
Yeah.
So it is calendar base, it's moon base.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Okay.
Well, there you go.
That was riveting.
I'm glad to be figured that out.
Well, this week.
Hebrew calendar.
Hebrew calendar.
So what's you got?
I got my typical, I'm keeping, I'm documenting my thesis that Trump's just going to pull out.
Oh, I think you're right.
I've seen enough, in fact, I have a few, I have a few clips, but what I'm hearing now is,
hey, you know, we're going to wait for them to make a deal and then we're going to, you know what,
we don't need the Hormu Straits.
Let France take care of it.
Yeah. That's what I'm here.
Yeah.
So I've got variations of the theme here with a bunch of Iran clips, which are scattered throughout the list.
I'm going to have to give them to you individually.
Try this one. Crazy John Carl.
Okay.
Tonight with Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, causing oil prices to soar around the world,
President Trump is urging America's allies to, quote, build up some delayed courage.
Go to the straight and just take it.
In a phone call, the president told me of our allies, they can police it themselves.
Why should I do it for them?
They weren't there for me.
The president's suggesting that America's allies should be there to help, even though they didn't start the war.
France, Spain, and Italy have all expressed reluctance to get involved.
The president has acknowledged he was elected on a promise to bring down the cost of living.
But today, he told me the booming stock market before the war made it a good time to do it.
Trump insists the oil prices are going to go down. He has threatened if Iran doesn't immediately open the straight,
he will be, quote, blowing up and completely obliterating their civilian infrastructure, including power plants and water systems.
He also says the U.S. and Iran are talking, telling me, we have regime change, and this group is much more moderate and much more reasonable.
The president says his team has been talking with the Speaker of the Iranian Party.
parliament, Mohamed Ghalibov. Speaker Ghalibov has been jabbing the president on social media.
He's toned it down a lot, Trump told me, he's much better. The president then adding ominously,
we know where he lives. Let's put it that way. And on Cuba, the president telling me,
Cuba's gone. When I asked him if he was talking about a military operation against Cuba,
Trump said, I can't tell you that. I trust you implicitly, but I can't tell you.
This Cuba thing kind of bothers me.
Cuba's gone.
What's he talking about?
Does the Cuba thing bother you at all?
What do you mean?
Does it bother me?
Like, do I wake up in a cold sweat?
Yeah, well, yeah, in a cold sweat saying,
what the hell they're doing to Cuba?
I mean, it's just out of the blue.
What do you mean?
Did they let some oil in there?
No, they didn't let any oil in because...
Yeah, they let the Russians unload a whole tanker of oil.
No, that's nice.
So, no, I'm not bothered by the...
That they got some oil.
You know, the presence is going.
Okay, it's gone with this with the thesis.
Here's ABC.
This one's ABCWNT.
U.S. bombs key site.
Tonight, massive explosions ripping through this military complex in Iran.
Sending flaming debris shooting into the air.
An official telling ABC News, the U.S.
struck an ammunition storage facility in Isfahan,
dropping multiple 2,000-pound bunker-busting bombs.
For the first time in this war, the Pentagon now saying B-52 bombers are flying deep over Iranian territory.
And tonight, Secretary Pete Hegseth, saying the battle is moving into a decisive phase.
The upcoming days will be decisive. Iran knows that.
And there's almost nothing they can militarily do about it.
Yes, they will still shoot some missiles, but we will shoot them down.
Tonight, a third aircraft carrier, the USS George H.W. Bush departing for the Middle East with 4,500 sailors.
aboard. Families, emotional.
I'm just trying to be strong for him.
It's really hard being away from
someone like that.
Iran's still wreaking havoc.
New images of an oil tanker hit by an Iranian drone
near Dubai, punching a hole in the ship,
sparking a fire on board.
And tonight, an Iran-backed militia accused
of kidnapping an American journalist in Baghdad.
Iraqi officials confirming this chilling video
shows the moment Shelley Kittleson was forced into a car
and taken. Authorities arresting at least one suspect as an urgent search intensifies.
David, the State Department with a new warning tonight for Americans in Saudi Arabia about
threats to places where they gather like schools and hotels. This as Iran threatens to attack
American corporate facilities across the region. Yeah, can I play a clip to add to your thesis?
Play all the clips you want. All right. Here's the president talking about leaving Iran very, very, very soon.
I would say that within two weeks, maybe, two weeks, maybe three.
We're hitting them very hard.
Last night, we knocked out tremendous amounts of missile-making facilities, as you probably read.
I read it.
We knocked out, excuse me?
Pardon me, the U.S. would be gone or done with the war?
I think we're two or three weeks.
We'll leave because there's no reason for us to do this.
Look, probably with this fate.
A guy can take a mine, drop it in the water, and say, oh, it's unsafe.
It's not like you're taking out an army or you take it out a country or you can drop it.
Or you can take a machine gun from the shore and shoot a little few bovots at a ship or maybe an over-the-shoulder missile, small missiles.
He doesn't really know much about military gear, does he?
That's not for us.
That'll be for France.
France.
That'll be for whoever's using the strait.
But I think when we leave, probably that's all cleared up.
Today I heard tremendous numbers of ships we're sailing through it.
We're negotiating with them right now.
Again, we have had regime change.
Now, regime change was not one of the things I had as a goal.
I had one goal.
They will have no nuclear weapon.
And that goal has been attained.
They will not have nuclear weapons.
But we're finishing the job.
And I think within maybe two weeks, maybe a couple of days longer to do the job.
But we want to knock out every single thing they have.
Now, it's possible that we'll make a deal.
before that because we'll hit bridges and
we've hit some, we'll hit some bridges.
We've got a couple of nice bridges in mind.
We've hit some bridges.
But if they come to the table, that'll be good.
I like that. We have some nice bridges in mind.
Bridge too far. It's possible that we'll make
a deal before that because
we'll hit bridges and we've hit some
we'll hit some bridges. We've got a couple
of nice bridges in mind.
But if they come to the
table, that'll be good. But
it doesn't matter whether they're coming up.
We've set them back.
it'll take 15 to 20 years for them to rebuild what we've done to them.
I've got to tell you, I'm disappointed because I thought the whole plan was to control the Straits of Hormuz to be the financier of the shipping and the insurance.
And now it's like, yeah, France deal with it?
It doesn't sound.
I think the writing is on the wall.
They can't do it.
They're at a position right now where they've done enough damage.
I think they're only hanging around.
This is my thesis, of course.
They're only hanging around.
They're only hanging around because they're hoping to God that they can find that
600 pounds of uranium that enriched uranium.
Iranian dust, as the president calls it.
Nuclear dust.
He calls it nuclear dust.
But there's a bunch of it.
They think they can grab it.
That was their great hope.
And I think they're going to say, well, it's disappeared.
We're going to have to put Mossad in there later.
Maybe they can find it.
We'll come back.
But we can't stay here any longer because everyone's irked at us.
But we can still blame them for not helping us when we leave.
I think that's going to be the kicker.
When he leaves, he's going to say, well, you know, we would have stayed, but.
Yeah, I got some of those, but maybe you want to do your thing.
No, go, go ahead.
Oh, I've got, yes.
First of all, let's do boots on the ground from the region from our producer there.
He says, alive and kick.
My military guys, they're like,
that guy, you're informant, he's full of BS.
Okay.
I have a feeling that maybe the military results are not as rosy as the president as.
I mean, when they start showing you videos on network TV of a truck being blowed up,
come on.
He says, alive and kicking.
Just amazed by the number of, quote, analysts and quote experts discussing the, quote, detailed plans which are conveniently leaked through WAPO, New York Post and every single major paper on the exact approach and step-by-step ground operation to seize the islands or retrieve enriched uranium stockpiles.
The end of this seems near.
Pakistan is taking a dual role here to manage the negotiation process and China will step in as guarantor with actual skin in the game.
The problem is, how do we deal with a militarized, angry, and vengeful Iran?
That guarantees they won't aggressively rebuild and go all in.
Some voices in the region think that we need to take the chemotherapy approach and keep hitting until the entire regime collapses,
which is aligned to the Israeli approach, but the issue is at what cost?
Do we have enough interception capabilities?
Can we expose ourselves to such hardships short and long term?
Other voices believe that the regime already collapsed with the war,
itself is what keeps it fighting for survival. And what happened to the initial decapitation event was a
military coup by the IRGC, which picked a dead or nearly dead puppet as a token for the Islamic Republic
idea. There could be voices that will push the country towards a softer Islamic Republic
with acute supreme leader or towards a more pragmatic, politically savvy bureaucracy.
Iranian people are extremely smart with a wide range of political ideologies. Once sanctions are
dropped, the regime could fall through Instagram or TikTok.
I agree.
I wouldn't surprise me, to be honest about it.
Couldn't be surprising.
Okay, so NATO, yes, you are completely right.
The president has been lashing out, according to France 24.
And I've always said NATO's a paper tiger.
And I've always said we help NATO, but they'll never help us.
From jabs and scoldings to thinly veiled threats and angry outbursts,
Over the last few weeks, Donald Trump hasn't been shy in his criticism for the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
A long-time NATO skeptic, the U.S. President has now ramped up his rhetoric, telling British
newspaper the Telegraph that he was strongly considering pulling the United States out of the alliance.
Trump says NATO isn't doing enough to help the U.S. in its war with Iran, particularly when it
comes to securing the Strait of Hormuz.
A fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas would not.
normally flow through the narrow waterway, but Iran has virtually closed it since the start
of hostilities on February 28, causing global oil and gas prices to soar. When asked about Trump's
comments on Tuesday, the British Prime Minister stood up for NATO and reiterated his promise not to get
dragged in to the war. NATO is the single most effective military alliance the world has ever seen
and it has kept us safe for many decades. Whatever the
pressure on me and others, whatever the noise, I'm going to act in the British national interest
in all the decisions that I make. Okay. So they're still kind of staying at arm's length and they sent
over our boy to help ease the pain a little bit. Mark Ritter showing up on the Fox News.
All right. I want to start with some criticism. You know, the president has been sharply addressing
what he sees is NATO's failures in this current situation.
Here's what he said in the Oval Office earlier this week.
I think NATO's making a very foolish mistake.
And I've long said that, you know, I wonder whether or not NATO would ever be there for us.
So this is a great test.
Yeah.
What's up?
So NATO's making a fool.
Don't we really run NATO?
This whole thing is a charade.
Well, it's not about NATO.
It's about these all.
It's about the EU.
Screw those guys.
That's what he's saying.
Yeah, it's about the EU.
But I think NATO is just a, this is a smoke screen.
It's a code.
And you got his buddy Ruta.
Yeah, Ruta's a fake.
Yeah, well, duh.
But listen to it.
Wait until you hear what he's saying.
I long said that, you know, I wonder whether or not NATO would ever be there for us.
So this is a, this was a great test because we don't need them, but they should have been there.
Have you talked with the president?
I know that you guys have had a good relationship.
Yes, we have and we talk several times this week.
But before I get there, let me...
Before I get there, let me stay here for a moment.
Let me say something which is top of the show, top of mind.
Just say at the top of our interview
that my thoughts and prayers are obviously with the men and women in uniform
who are at this moment fighting to make the world more secure
and implement the president's vision of making sure Iran
will not get its hand on a nuclear facility,
a nuclear capability,
ballistic missile capability.
Yes, we cannot have that at all, but don't worry, we are coming with 22 nations.
I know the president was angry because he feels that European and other allies have been too
slow.
The good news here is that since Thursday, a group of 22 countries, most of them from NATO,
but also Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, the UAE and Bahrain,
most of the other countries from NATO, coming together to implement his vision of making,
making sure that the Strait of Ramos is free, is opening up as soon as that is possible.
So we are now planning the military people and others.
The military people?
The group of 22 nations and with the US.
When can we do that?
What is needed?
And how should we do this?
Okay.
Well, let me tell you.
So the 22 nations, not included in this coalition, are NATO members Turkey,
Greece, Poland, Belgium, and Hungary.
So those, they're not participating.
And even though France, Italy, Spain are participating,
Spain closed their airspace to us.
Italy denied bombers' use of the airbase in Sicily
and France has refused territory for military operations as well.
those in the coalition who are not NATO members, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand,
United Arab, Emirates, and Bahrain.
And Rubio is the one who's going out to explain this on behalf of the president.
He had a long interview with Sean Hannity.
Sean, I've been one of the strongest defenders of NATO during my time as a United States senator
because I found great value in it.
And it wasn't just about defending Europe.
I said it also allowed us to have military bases in Europe that allowed us to project power
into different parts of the world when our national security was threatened.
If now we have reached a point where the NATO alliance means that we can't use those bases,
that in fact that we can no longer use those bases to defend America's interests,
the NATO is a one-way street.
The NATO is simply about us having troops in Europe to defend Europe,
but when we need their help, not their help, we're not asking them to conduct airstrikes.
When we need them to allow us to use their military bases, their answer is no.
Then why are we in NATO?
Why are we in NATO? That's a good question. I think we should re-examine after the war is over.
So I think there's no doubt, unfortunately, after this conflict is concluded, we are going to have to re-examine that relationship.
We're going to have to re-examine the value of NATO in that alliance for our country. Ultimately, that's a...
Honey, NATO, we've got to talk.
Decision for the president to make, and he'll have to make it. We're going to finish the job here.
As I said, we're very, very close to achieving our objectives on all of these things that I've outlined.
But I do think, unfortunately, we are going to have to re-examine.
whether or not this alliance that has served this country well for a while is still serving that purpose,
or is it now become a one-way street where America is simply in a position to defend Europe.
But when we need the help of our allies, they're going to deny us basing rights and they're going to deny us overflight.
Yeah.
So it's just to screw you guys.
That's what it is.
But yes, we are NATO.
So I'm sure you saw the president last night on his national broadcast.
Yep.
I thought it was very weak.
It was terrible.
And this was perhaps the worst.
I don't know who advised him on this.
That sounds like something, oh, I got to tell people this.
This was the stupidest thing I've ever heard.
It's very important that we keep this conflict in perspective.
American involvement in World War I lasted one year, seven months, and five days.
World War II lasted for three years, eight months, and 25 days.
The Korean War lasted for three years, one month, and two days.
The Vietnam War lasted for 19 years, five months, and 29 days.
Iraq went on for eight years, eight months, and 28 days.
we are in this military operation so powerful, so brilliant,
against one of the most powerful countries for 32 days.
What is the point of that?
All you're doing is reminding people that this could last forever.
Interesting that you interpreted it that way.
I didn't think of it that way, but you're right.
That's why he's going to have to get out within the next week or two.
Well, that's what he's saying.
Two weeks, three weeks, a couple days.
We'll be out of here.
We're going to tomorrow.
He's got to just, you know, he's the problem, he didn't, he thinks he set it up.
He's a little concerned that, because, you know, Iran's going to claim victory, no matter what happens.
Yeah.
And he doesn't like that idea.
And he's worried about the political implications about going in and rubbleizing and just leaving.
That's great.
and so I think he's shaky.
Hmm.
He wants to get out like Senator John Kennedy said.
Why are we there now?
We've done what we had to do.
Let's get out.
Kennedy's aware of this going on more than any other senator.
And I think Trump just can't pull the trigger or the military guys want to test more gear or who knows what.
Oh, well, they always want to do that.
Definitely.
He reiterated that regime change was not the goal, which, okay, not explicitly, but he keeps talking about it.
Not our goal.
We never said regime change, but regime change has occurred because of all of their original leaders' death.
They're all dead.
The new group is less radical and much more reasonable.
And we still don't know who the new group is.
that's well they're the head of the parliament's one of them yeah well there's that foreign minister guy who's on
and yeah that guy you beg dad bob he's on ex all the time
he's begged that bob yeah and then we're not talking we don't know what he's talking about we're not
talking to anybody we're winning this thing and then uh rubio was sent out and he almost did a podcast
You know, like a scripted thing.
Let me just tell you, let me tell you why we did this.
This is very important.
I'm Marco Rubio.
Many Americans are asking, why did the United States have to attack Iran now?
Well, let me explain.
Iran wants to have nuclear weapons.
Of that, there is zero doubt.
If what they truly wanted, which is what they claim is nuclear energy,
well, they could have nuclear energy, like all the other countries in the world have it.
And that is you import the fuel and you build reactors above ground.
That's not what Iran has done.
They build their reactors and their facilities deep in mountains, away from the public glare.
And they want to enrich that material.
The same equipment that they could use to enrich material for energy, they could use to quickly enrich it to weapons grade.
So it is clear that they've been offered every opportunity to have a nuclear program that allows them to have energy, not weapons,
and every single time they have turned it down.
But why the attack now?
Well, what was Iran trying to do?
Iran was trying to build a conventional shield, in essence, have so many missiles, have so many drones that no one could attack them, and they were well on their way.
We were on the verge of an Iran that had so many missiles and so many drones that no one could do anything about their nuclear weapons program in the future.
That was an intolerable risk.
Under no circumstances can a country run by radical Shia clerics with an apocalyptic vision of the future ever-possessed nuclear weapons?
and under no circumstances can they be allowed to hide and protect that program and their ambitions behind a shield of missiles and drones that no one can do anything about.
Okay. Nice podcast.
Whatever.
Exactly.
So Iran is now formalizing the toll road.
Yeah, that's not going to last.
Well, it's illegal.
France 24 doesn't think it's going to happen at all.
all, but here it is. Iran's national security committee has approved a bill that would impose these
fees on the Strait of Hormuz. That's according to the Iranian Farras News Agency. And Iran has
written to the international maritime organization saying it has to check the ships going
through on the grounds of self-defense and that these checks will generate costs, thus the tolls.
But for shippers, there are many questions lingering on whether paying those fees would
mean going against existing international sanctions leveled at Iran.
So even if Iran formalizes it, it's unlikely to be accepted by other countries, although right
now there does not seem to be really other options to go across.
Yeah, I agree.
I don't think that's going to happen.
But the UK is now the center of the 35 countries who will be on the committee, I think,
to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
So they're trying to do the-
Oh, a committee.
Yeah, the steering committee.
They're trying to do something.
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is headed to the UK.
She will join multi-nation talks on finding diplomatic options to reopen the Strait of Hormuz trade corridor.
The meeting was called by the UK government today.
Anand says Canada will not hesitate to help secure the strait, but only if there is a ceasefire.
The liberal government has not yet decided on specific measures.
It's Canada.
Is what?
He said, he's the UK, there's Canada.
I thought I was meeting in the UK.
Did I, did I, I thought maybe.
I know what she's talking about Canada.
Well, can I do it, taking a trip aside here?
Yeah.
Just a little step aside.
Canada is nuts.
Hmm.
Okay.
Jeez.
I want to put this from a couple of days ago.
The top, leading the national, I've decided I'm going to start following the CBC now.
The National, which is a pretty good news presentation.
It's their premier, you know, the nightly news.
Yeah, it's their, yeah, it's their Tom Brokejaw.
Yeah, Brookes.
Hang in, hang in there.
Hang in there.
You can do it.
Don't do that.
Don't do that.
Don't make you laugh.
Is that the problem?
Yes, do not make me laugh.
Okay.
So Canada, this is the first time I'm going to play the teaser and then the story.
And then you tell me this is not nuts.
Canada scandal the national.
Tonight, anger across Quebec after the message of condolence from the head of Air Canada was in English only.
When you've been living in Quebec for 15, 20 years, you should be able to speak the language.
Why, it is not the first time Michael Rousseau has faced calls for an apology or resignation.
Is it because he only did in English and not in French?
This is the CEO of an airline.
He's not a politician as to speak in both languages all the time.
You know, because of the Quebecers who are trying to,
they're going to do a breakaway move again one more time,
which we haven't talked about on this show at all.
Well, it's why it's heating up, I hear.
Yeah, it's supposed to be heating up a lot.
And this may be part of it.
But so, and then they go into the story.
Here it is.
Air Canada's CEO is facing intense backlash tonight,
including calls for his.
resignation after his message of condolence to the victims of the crash at LaGuardia Airport was
delivered only in English. Michael Rousseau spoke just two French words in nearly four minutes.
The plane, which took off from Montreal, crashed into a fire truck on the runway killing both
pilots Antoine Fouiné and McKenzie Gunter. Fouquet was a French speaker from Quebec.
A criticism has been especially sharp in that province. As Sarah Leavitt tells us, this isn't the
first time, Rousseau has faced scrutiny for not speaking French.
Air Canada already had a terrible human tragedy to deal with following the crash at LaGuardia
Airport, which killed two pilots and injured many passengers. But the way it's partly handled that
has created a political crisis.
That, along with this.
We're the only two French words spoken by Michael Rousseau in a video released after the crash.
That's put the Air Canada CEO in.
in hot water, particularly in Quebec.
One of the plane's pilots, Antoine Forre, was a francophone from the province.
I'm asking him to quit his job right now.
For sure, he should apologize.
In an interview with Radio Canada, Air Canada's VP of Communications apologized on behalf of the airline
and said that despite years of lessons, Rousseau's French was not good enough to discuss such a serious matter.
The airline is subject to the official languages act, and now Rousseau has been summoned to Ottawa to explain himself in front of the official languages committee.
It's also earned him an admonishment from the Prime Minister.
It doesn't matter of the circumstance, but particularly in these circumstances, lack of judgment and lack of compassion.
Yeah, Canada, you've kind of ripped us away from Iran, Hormu Straits, etc.
but since you're moving to Canada,
I don't know if you saw any of these.
Well, I'm sorry I did that, but there was eating at me these clips.
No, it's okay.
But we're going to play, can I play my Canada girl?
Oh, it's probably the same girl I have.
Oh, really?
You think so?
I'm just guessing, yeah.
Oh, maybe not.
Here's your Canada girl.
Hello, I'm a Canadian living in the United States.
I just have a really quick question.
No, this is not my Canada girl.
Are you aware of what's actually happening in your own country?
Now, one of the things I like to do around here is I like to do research before I speak.
So I just went ahead and I made you a couple notes.
So please allow me to explain to you what literally just happened.
Yes.
So this woman is ill.
I'll just point that out that this is what you're doing with your life on the TikTok or wherever you got there.
Probably this is more like an Instagram lady, it sounds like.
It was TikTok or Instagram.
It makes a difference.
It makes a difference.
There's a difference.
Yeah, there's a difference in Canada.
Okay.
there was four public safety bills and they were all voted down.
So there's one called Bill C-246.
Have you heard of it?
If not, that's okay.
I'll sum it up for you.
So it would have made sure that sexual predators serve time for each victim.
Not a bulk discount, okay?
That was voted down.
Did you hear about Bill C-220?
No.
Okay, if not, that's okay, I'm here to help you.
It would have stopped lighter sentences for rapists and child predators
just because deportation might happen after.
That was voted down.
Okay.
Did you hear about Bill C. 243?
If not, it's fine, I'm here for you.
It would have protected victims from having to relive their trauma at parole hearings over and over and over again.
Wait a minute, just something to understand.
So she lives in America and she's telling Canadians that they live in a horrible country?
Is that what she's doing?
Yeah.
The victims actually begged for this.
It was voted down.
Did you hear about Bill C-242?
No.
If not, once again, I'm here to help you.
The Jail Not Bail Act?
Okay.
Well, that targeted repeat offenders.
cycling in and out of the system. And that was voted down too. And you know what? Can I just
give you a little big picture here really quickly? I have the time. So before you talk about avoiding
America, can you talk about... Insufferable this? What's happening at home? Violent crime has risen
significantly over the past decade, okay? Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Is that record highs. Do you like your
vehicle? How about the collapsing health care system? Millions of Canadians still don't have a family
doctor and or access to one. Housing is completely unaffordable. Food bank usage is at record highs.
The catch and release policies are frustrating even law enforcement.
Your own prime minister said that you will need to make sacrifices and suffer,
and those were his words, not mine.
Where I'm from, my tiny little town has four homeless encampments.
But sure, America's the problem, right?
Can you do me one really big favor of rental property?
Just turn the TV off just for a day.
United States is not this dystopian nightmare that you're being sold, okay?
And Canada is not this flawless utopia that you pretend it is.
Oh, give that woman a green card.
All right.
Welcome to America, lady.
Get off Instagram.
We got people in the troll room saying,
this show is single-handedly making me hate women.
So I have a...
And that's from a woman.
Yeah, right.
I have a Canadian clip, Canadian lady.
Well, questionable, whether it's a Canadian lady or what it is.
I think a non-binary conforming thing.
Did you see any of the footage from the NDP Convention?
Oh, I saw all of it.
I just had to pull at least one clip.
This, uh, I,
we want you to tell people what the NDP is,
National Democrat Party.
Yes.
Canadians, it's communists.
It's communists, yes.
The communist is, we've seen this before.
This is the,
the kind of groups that get together and you can't clap,
you have to snap your fingers.
Yes.
You have to ask for a point of privilege.
You got to do this.
Nothing ever gets done.
Everybody's a freak.
What is the type of being on Star Trek?
What was Quark?
What was Quark's race?
Was it Quark.
Ferengi.
So this lady looks like a Ferengi.
The host is the one that's the moderator.
The podium girl.
The podium thing.
And people are in line and they have different colored equity cards.
and these equity cards, from what I understand.
Who came up with this idea?
I've never seen this one before.
I love it.
So you have an equity card,
and I think you have a yellow one or a red one,
and that means you can move ahead in the line.
And it's all based on privilege and underprivilege.
And this one clip just kind of sums it up.
There's a point of privilege on microphone one,
then we'll go to microphone three.
Go ahead, delegate.
What happened in microphone, too? You're discriminating?
Yes. Hello. I was standing here with my gender equity card.
She has a yellow gender equity card.
Before you called on the previous speaker.
And she's wearing a kithiae over her shoulder.
She's all for Palestine.
Equity card before you called on the previous speaker.
That's my point of privilege.
I would like to read.
I will explain the speaking order, which is...
So, okay, if I understand she's mad because she had a point of privilege card,
a yellow one, which is not the same as a red one,
because the black lady gets a red one.
You'll hear from her in a minute.
And so she was mad that she had a gender equity card and was not called on.
Before you called on the previous speaker.
Wait, the irony of this clip is she's at the mic.
She wasn't called on.
You're being called on now.
What more do you want?
I'm mad about that.
My gender equity card before you called on the previous speaker.
That's my point of privilege that I would like to read.
I will explain the speaking order, which is fixed that I can't.
out of men, which is the pro-con rotation.
You can move yourself up a line that you're standing in.
I am pro, and I was...
We went...
You went pro-con.
We went pro-con.
Pro.
And my plan was to go con.
The speaker at Con-Might-3 also has a speaking card.
Yesterday, this card...
Now, she has a...
looks like a pink card.
A black woman with a white face mask.
...was used in an inappropriate matter.
And while I understand in Ontario, we know this as equity, even if that, this was also used inappropriate in terms of gender.
I want everyone to be mindful that these cards for individuals like myself who identify as a black woman have no value outside of this space.
I love that she identifies as a black woman because she's a black woman.
It's amazing.
This is fantastic.
It is just
And, you know, this kind of reminds
kind of brings me to No Kings Day.
Well, can I do a transverse clip?
Kind of a crossover clip that there was an interview
on men on the street at No Kings Day regarding her moves?
We both have this clip.
You got it too.
Yeah, yes.
Okay, yes.
This is an interview in the crowd.
Men on the street.
Man on the street.
And I think this guy's a comedian,
so he's doing a good job here for humanity.
And it's a little muffled,
but you'll hear he is talking about the Straits of Hormuz.
Isn't it a little bit homophobic that we're so focused on the straits of Hamos
and not the gays of Hormuz?
I agree.
Yes, for sure.
I agree.
Why do you think they're willing to leave the gaze of Hamos behind?
I think it's just history.
historically like you know gays have always been
very discriminated against which is wrong in so many levels
even in war yeah even in war and
it just takes I think more
what is it like more reform in government obviously
and then also educating society
so the gays of humus we could turn it into fire island
for sure for sure
that's the new borat as far as I'm concerned
that guy he needs to do more of this
Yeah. And so the, I got a lot of Fox clips for some reason.
The Fox, because I don't know this is the morning show. I can't remember.
They brought on a psychiatrist to talk about no kings and why people are going there and what it's doing for them.
You say that this is essentially bad group therapy.
It really does look a lot like bad group therapy. We have people on the streets across.
across America. They're venting. They're getting validation from their fellow rally goers. So it all
feels very good in the moment. Is there a reason why the left is more distressed than the right?
Well, maybe they have more to be distressed about these days. And I think largely, you know,
they're just not happy with Trump winning. We have grievance culture run wild. The left,
for the most part, loves to hate. And whether it's a CEO of a health care company,
or billionaires or a politician, the culture is grievance culture.
But is there something a little bit more serious underlying all of this that we should be actually concerned about?
Well, we should be.
And if people are so hyper-focused on a political figure and they're not able to enjoy life,
as a mental health professional, that's a huge problem that I see.
I've had people over the years who couldn't enjoy their vacation because they were so fixated on Donald Trump
They just said to me, how can I possibly go on vacation knowing that he's in office?
So we really should be concerned about this.
I think that's true.
I think people are really so upset.
And I see, you know.
And they say so.
They do.
Yeah.
Something's wrong with them.
And you drive to Austin.
We have to go over 290 and you go through a dripping springs or the drip, as we call it.
And there's older people, so older than me, 70.
and they're always at this one main intersection.
And they're always, day in, day out, rain or shine, no kings.
We hate Trump, down with Trump.
Yeah.
And, no, we have that.
Okay.
In Berkeley, over the two, there's, there's three overpasses in the Berkeley area.
One's a walking bicycle thing over the freeway.
And one's the big road and there's another one.
And.
ever says the first
No Kings
there have been people up there
with various signs
they come and they go
the signs come and change
and they're just up there
all the time.
Honk if you hate Trump.
Yeah, honk, yeah.
Honk if you hate Trump.
They do that in the drip as well.
And I don't know
it's like
it's not the most important thing
in your life. It shouldn't be.
This is our overall
general problem in America is politics has just become the most important national politics,
not even your local politics.
I mean, we have a mayoral election.
Unfortunately, I can't run, as you know.
What, what do you mean?
I don't live in Fredericksburg.
Oh, that's where you're county.
Unincorporated.
Yeah, I'm in Glisby County.
I could run for sheriff or I could run for comptroller.
That's a job, comptroller.
That's the job you want.
And, but, you know, if you walk down Main Street and say, what about Trump, you know,
someone will have opinion, you say, what about Randy Briley? Who?
No one knows that there's even a mayoral election going on. So it's, and in fact,
this psychiatrist continues here in a second clip that politics has become the new national
religion. How much of what you're seeing on the left has to do with replacing, like, you know,
liberalism also goes hand in hand with a lot of secular.
And sort of, so could they be replacing that spiritual, religious part with politics?
And so then it ends up not being very satisfying.
Yeah, absolutely.
In some ways, politics has become the new religion.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so, you know, I covered just a few days ago, this past week, when President Trump had the
Japanese Prime Minister at the White House, Sunday Takeichi, he made a joke about Pearl Harbor.
and everyone on the left, in the left media and left politicians lost their minds.
It was clearly a joke.
Like, are we at the point now where people are suffering so bad from TDS?
Like, they can't even get a joke.
Well, I also thought it was funny, but a lot of people didn't think it was funny.
You know, they're just so fixated looking for things that Trump can do wrong.
And I've long said that Trump could cure cancer, and people have signed a problem with that.
He said that, actually.
Jonathan, come back and see us because I think we're going to need more therapy.
Yeah, I love this segment.
Okay, stupid Fox.
Now, if you think it's only people on the left in America who are crazy or nuts,
and that's a fast.
Lindsay Graham, Lindsay Graham is under attack.
Since evidently, there's nothing for a senator to do in these trying times,
Lindsay Graham decided to go be where the people are down in Disneyland, which he went to and had a good old time with.
And there's been a lot of great photos that have come out of this.
But I think by far my favorite is this one.
I don't know exactly where he's at right there.
But I do know what he's holding.
That is a Princess Ariel Bubble Wand.
And do you know how I know that?
Because I own a Princess Ariel Bubble One.
Well, technically my daughter Raina does because I bought it for her.
It's a big wand with a kid's mermaid on it that plays kid music and bubbles come out of it.
And Lindsey Graham is walking around with it.
Now, Lindsay Graham is childless and single.
He was not there with his kids.
I have not seen any evidence that he was there with anyone's kids.
Now, if you were there with your friends' kids, your, I don't know, your brother's sisters' kids,
maybe you buy them the aerial bubble wand.
But as of right now, the only explanation,
is that he saw a bubble wand with Ariel on it and he had to have it.
Is he just that big of a fan of Ariel?
I do think that he is a little bit more personally anxious about that image than he wants to publicly admit.
Because now he's trying to put out other images.
He put out this tweet saying,
Spend some time breaking clays in Edgefield County today doesn't get much better than that.
And oh boy, doesn't he look butch?
He's got his leather vest.
He's got a shotgun.
He really enjoys doing this.
He's not a Disney guy.
He just happened to walk through there or whatever.
He really wants to be shooting those clays.
I think that the Lindsay Duff protest too much.
This is TMZ who's doing this.
TMZ.
Well, you know, that guy sounds like an acolyte of Glenn Beck.
Well, he's Young Turks.
That's from Young Turks.
But it's TMZ that put out a call.
In fact, uh...
Oh, TMZ is out of control.
They're opening up a DC.
office. No, they're smart. They're smart. Where is the show business fun? It's all in D.C. I mean,
where else can you get a story about Christy Knoem like this? Shocking photos have leaked from an online
fetish community that allegedly feature Brian Knoam, the husband of former Secretary of Homeland
Security, Christy Knoam. The Daily Mail obtained hundreds of messages, purportly sent between
the former Secretary of Homeland Security's husband and three women who are involved in so-called
Bimboification fetish scene.
Leaked picks reportedly show
Brian wearing comically oversized
lopsided breasts, complete with
fake protruding nipples.
Other pictures show the South Dakota insurance
mogul, who has three children with gnome,
clad in pink hot pants,
and a skin-tight, flesh-colored crop top.
Did you see any of these pictures?
You didn't see the one in the newsletter that you approved?
Oh, that's exactly where I did see it, yes.
But that doesn't mean that you saw them.
I saw them. No, no, it doesn't.
I mean, you saw.
I'm the one who found that picture that went to the newsletter.
I get these from Tina.
Balloons made to resemble massive cock-eyed bazungos.
According to reporting by the Daily Mail, Brian chatted up women from the online fetish scene,
in which adult performers augment their breasts with massive amounts of saline to achieve a Barbie doll-like appearance.
Representatives of Christy told the post, the former DHS chief was, quote, devastated by the salacious allegations of her husband,
and that the family was, quote, blindsided by this.
In a 2022 interview with Elision,
Christy Nome said that their family was an open book and transparent.
The Daily Mail also spoke with national security experts,
who said the existence of the scandalous photographs
could have made Christy the subject to potential blackmail threats.
Former CIA officer Mark Polymeropoulos told the outlet
that the photos could be a, quote, tantalizing lead for a hostile intelligence service.
Cock-eyed bazungas.
potential show title.
They're like the ones that that,
yeah,
that shop,
it's the shop teacher.
Oh, man,
do we still,
maybe they're friends.
You know,
there is a number of websites
where you can buy that crap.
How would I know?
I don't know.
Tina would.
Uh-huh.
I don't wonder,
do we still have clips of that teacher?
Yeah.
Whatever happened to that guy?
I think they bought him off.
He probably walked away with a lot of money.
He might have.
Because he was totally playing that up.
Like, well, what's wrong?
How come I can't identify as a woman with...
Cock-eyed Zungas.
I can't remember this.
The other angle of this, of course, is that...
I don't have the clip.
I should have had it.
Is Christy Nome testifying
and refusing to answer questions about having an affair with...
What's his name?
Oh, we had, yeah, Mimi had those.
Yeah.
Yeah, she gave it to me.
I don't drop the ball there.
But she's having an affair with, what's that guy's name?
He was in the campaign.
Yeah, Corey Lewandowski.
Yeah, Corey Lewandowski.
Yeah.
I guess she's having an affair.
You say that.
And then she wouldn't answer any questions about saying,
who is tabloid, tabloid?
You know, we can't get into this.
So she's screwed up to.
You know, she's no.
good. She was not good from the get-go. And I'd say the same thing. The next way they're talking about,
there's gossip. Bondi. Gossip. Yeah, gossip. Gossip. Yes. I saw the gossip. Bondi.
Yeah, Bondi. Got to go. Everybody's up for being fired. Everybody is.
That rubio. No, no, not Rubio. And Vance. He's got solid people. Where's Vance? Where's Vance?
Vance is like a hit man. He comes and goes. He hasn't done any hits. He hasn't done any hits.
He hasn't done any hits.
Any hits at all.
He's around.
Rubio's a top.
And then you got your,
your A gay.
He's also.
Yeah, Scott.
Talented guy.
The gay general patent.
Yeah.
He's talented.
He's very talented.
Tina's like, is he gay?
Like,
hello.
He has a handsome husband and they have handsome children.
Just saying.
They look,
they're a handsome couple.
together. Well, you put good looking people together and their children come out beautiful.
Hmm. Let me see. How does that work? Okay. I got lots of stuff, but you, so do you. And how are you feeling, if you don't mind me asking? How are you sleeping? A little, little help. I still have not got a normal sleep in. I'm short a couple hours today. So I'm kind of, I don't sound great.
Well, you sound better than you sounded Sunday for the first hour.
You sound a lot better.
You said I livened up on Sunday.
What was the deal?
Yeah, you livened up after the first hour.
Then it's, I don't know.
I think you pushed through some barrier with your voice.
Because you sounded a bit like Soros.
It was somewhere between Kissinger and Soros.
I'm not going to do that because it's not the way to do things.
So how do you feel?
feel in general.
I feel terrible.
Is there any improvement?
Oh, yeah.
There's a lot of improvement.
Some stamina improvement.
It's a terrible thing to go through.
No kidding.
I should have a couple of horror stories.
Yeah, you don't have any.
You know, you heard that.
Yeah, one element of the whole thing that was not discussed is during the procedure.
I had a collapsed lung.
See, now your memory is shot.
because we talked about that on the last show.
Oh, nuts.
Yeah, nuts.
Yeah, nuts, exactly.
So I got a lot of fluids.
You know, and they don't let me drink water.
So I'm kind of parched, which doesn't help my voice.
That's part of the problem, by the way.
And so I get this kind of, I kind of enjoy having that a little bit.
But if I could do Alex Jones, I think Alex Jones is going to be a lot better than yours by the time
I'm done.
Brogs.
Unlikely.
Yeah, I can do it.
I can do it.
I can do it.
I can do it.
I can do it.
I can do it.
That's unlikely.
We did get some good news as your health and human service secretary, along with Dr.
Oz, it's the tag team.
The Maha tag team, they heard your complaint.
The other announcement that we're making today is that Dr. Oz sent out a health and safety notice.
every hospital in this country at 11 o'clock this morning,
asking them now to align their food purchases with the dietary guidelines
in order to enjoy continued eligibility for Medicaid and Medicare payments.
We're going to bring all the hospitals in the country in line with good food,
and this is not something that we need to force hospitals to do.
They want it.
They want it.
We talked with them.
No, they don't.
And this is going to help them with their procurement companies,
the fact that it's on now, essentially a federal mandate.
But it's, again, it's something the hospitals wanted.
It's something that they needed.
And we want to do this very, very quickly.
As Dr. Oz pointed out, food in hospitals is so uniformly in a...
Yeah, so uniformly sucky.
We have one of our producers.
You don't think this is going to happen.
He said, he said, if you want Medicare money, you've got to, you got to get brand name Jello.
Well, you can't have, that's as far as it's going to go.
You can't, well, how do you know that?
Why are you so, why he's so negative, bro?
Well, a couple of things.
One is, I, not that, I, I'm very affable in the hospital.
I've never been in the hospital before, but I keep.
Hold on. Hold on.
Affable?
Yeah, I'm affable.
Like you're nice?
Yeah.
I don't get that on the show.
Where's that?
I'm nice.
I'm also, I'm nice.
And I always have a one-liner.
I mean, my, my first, for the first, I don't know, a couple of days, they kept rotating
people in and out.
And my one-liner was always the same.
And someone would come in, the new shift nurse, the shift sub-nourst, the nurse, the nurse-a-practitioners,
whoever.
One after the other, after the other, after they always check your polls and do all this stuff and charge Medicare.
And we're doing it over and over and over.
And every time they'd come in, they'd introduce themselves and say, how are you doing?
And I'd always say, I'm in the hospital.
And did they think that was funny, the 20th time you did it?
I thought that was funny.
Yeah, that was funny.
That was good.
I mean, if I didn't get a laugh, I would have stopped doing it.
but I did it about, I'd say, a hundred times.
And so in the process, the food thing would come up in the, in the conversations.
And I'd bitch and moan about the food complaining I can't eat it.
And it's just, you can't swallow it.
It's like eating, you know, sand.
And so they say, well, yeah, yeah, it's not good.
They'd all agree with me, except one nurse who said, oh, no, I think the food here is great.
you've never had the food at the VA.
Oh, yeah, you, your memory.
I told this story.
Your memory is shot.
No, I remember telling this story before.
Now that I bring it up, I'm worried about you.
I know.
They did something to your memory.
The reason I'm telling this story is because you asked specifically why do I think this isn't
going to happen.
And when she said that, which I've said it before, when she said that, I realized
that institutionally, it can't happen because it's not good, because they don't care.
And if you like the food from the VA, there's a lack of care.
Now, we had one of our producers wrote a long, very nice note about how he took over a hospital
and started actually turning into a profit center.
He took over the cafeteria because everything was canned.
It was all from Cisco or worse.
And it was, they didn't make anything there.
They couldn't even, you know, you didn't even.
They couldn't even slice a pat of butter.
You had to buy it pre-cut.
I mean, it was a nightmare.
And he could do it.
He says, it's doable.
But once you, but it takes a maniac to do it.
There's no impetus, no impetus whatsoever.
This is never going to happen.
Well, you heard it here first.
Guy stays in a hospital once in his life and now he's an expert.
That's right.
I am.
Believe me, I studied the process.
this.
Well, millions of experts around the world, particularly in America.
You know, you can tell you, if you go into a company, you've done this,
you can go into a company and you can see the corporate culture is no good.
And it's not going to change.
Well, yeah.
You're probably right.
They're probably right.
No, that's too bad.
Unless you get a guy like that guy, our producer guy.
Our producer, our guys are, yeah.
Our guys know how to run a hospital cafeteria.
But he gave up and went.
do something else to make more money. Exactly. There you go. Our guys just want to make more money.
So back to other experts around the world, particularly in the United States, are rejoicing today.
If you're a ballistics expert, you're rejoicing today. We have breaking news about the bullet that killed Charlie Kirk.
There's a new court filing in the case of Charlie Kirk's alleged assassination.
Lawyers for the man accused of shooting Kirk say the bullet,
doesn't match the gun investigators say
was used in the crime. Prosecutors
say beyond that bullet, they have DNA
evidence that connects Tyler Robinson
to the shooting. It happened back in
September while Kirk spoke at
events on the campus on Utah Valley University.
Robinson's attorneys
are asking to delay his preliminary
hearing. They want more time to review
evidence. Robinson has not
yet entered a plea. Prosecutors
intend to seek the death penalty.
CBS News, legal contributor
Jessica Levinson says this is not
unusual. It is sometimes difficult to match bullets that were recovered at autopsy with bullets
that are associated with a defendant's gun. And that could be based on lack of evidence and lack of
markings on those bullets. This makes it all very skeptical. The bullet shattered.
Oh, no. No, that by itself was not possible. No, the bullet's getting shattered. It's gone through.
It's a 30-od six. 30-odd-six. You go right through him.
Candice Owen shooting back to the top of the podcast charts on YouTube.
Is she really?
Oh, people love her.
There's women here who are four,
it's 4 p.m.
I'm sorry, I turn my phone on silent.
I'm watching Candace.
It's time for Candice.
Yes.
I wonder if Candice Owen has ever realized
what a natural presenter
she is.
Oh, she's very nice.
natural at it. Yeah, she's very good. She's nuts, but she's very good at it. She's nuts,
but she is very good. Yeah. So something really cool happened in the world of big tech and
AI as anthropic accidentally leaked to the source code or public. Go ahead. I talked to J.C.
about this morning to get it straightened out. Well, shall I play the clips and then you can give me
Yeah, play the clip.
Well, I can, yeah, play the clip.
This is one of those YouTuber guys.
So I'll just give you the synopsis.
They published a new version of Claude Code and application.
But the way they did it is they accidentally included all of these source code.
Yesterday, the most ironic thing ever happened.
Anthropic, a $380 billion startup built on the idea of safety first
that advocates for closed source software for the supposed benefit of humanity,
a company Elon calls Miss Anthropic, whose logo is definitely not a sphincter,
whose CEO has been warning us for years that human programmers will be replaced by AI in six months.
It just accidentally leaked Claude Codd's entire source code to the internet at 4 a.m.,
officially making Anthropic more open than OpenAI.
I love this guy because he's kind of, he's like a young JCD, a little snarky,
and he throws in the, whose logo does not.
not at all look like a sphincter, and then you have to look at the logo like, yeah, you're right.
It does look like a sphincter.
So here's how it happened.
But how did this code end up leaked in the first place?
Well, as I mentioned, the source map was accidentally packaged in an NPM release, but that's
weird because build tools normally strip out source maps automatically.
Well, Claude Code is built on BunJS, which, as you might recall, was recently acquired
by Anthropic.
And it just so happens that about three weeks ago, somebody opened up an issue on GitHub
about BunJS serving source maps in production.
Wouldn't it be ironic if the fastest JavaScript runtime in the world
also turned out to be the fastest way
to ship your entire code base to the internet?
And so, while that is all relatively interesting,
I mean, I'm not like running off to go fork the code.
I don't know if I didn't do anything with it.
But I had no later than a few days
after I said that this whole AI run these models locally,
it's the new Tomaguchi.
Boom.
Like there's a hidden capability under a feature flag,
called Buddy, which appears to be a new Tomogachi-style companion that every developer can customize
and raise like a little digital pet. This might just be Anthropics' April Fool's Day joke,
but there are also references to Opus 4.7 and a new model called Capibara, which might be their
new recently teased Mythos model. There's also things like ultra-planned, coordinator mode, and demon mode,
but perhaps the most interesting is Chiris, which is a Greek word for an exact moment in time,
or God's time. I hate to beat off a dead horse here, but it's a bit I
ironic that Anthropic didn't get to reveal Chiris at the exact time it wanted to, and instead, God chose the right time.
The feature itself seems to be some kind of background agent that keeps a daily journal, uses dream mode to consolidate memories, and does work for you in the background on a specific schedule.
Pretty cool, but at the end of the day, this leak is a pretty huge setback for Anthropic, which hopes to IPO later this year and offload their bags to the retail public.
And it's yet another reminder that your top secret application is just one NPM publish away from becoming open source.
whether you'd like it or not.
So my takeaway is this is not really a big deal.
It kind of shows that, you know, it's all about the prompting,
and this is a big piece of code that they've refined for their prompting.
The Claude code is quite fantastic, I have to say,
the way it interacts with their model.
I don't think it's going to hurt them in any way.
What did J.C. have to say?
He says this is exaggerated.
It's not the, there's, there's, there's,
pieces of what they're doing that was not, were not broken out.
He says there's a battle within the company.
They put some of the stuff open source anyway.
And it's possible they put it out there because they need to get some feedback.
And it's basically said it's bullshit.
And it's also distracting from the Mercur hack, which is apparently a massive hack that these guys are doing AI training using experts.
you should look into that.
And their stuff, all of it got released.
And it turns out they're breaking the law.
There's all kinds of vial.
It's just a whole slew of problems for this company that's being,
nobody's talking about that.
And they're talking about this anthropic thing.
And it's not important.
What is Mercur?
You got to look it up.
Well, so you can't tell me.
Well, I can tell you.
It's a company that it is a...
Mercor.
Mercor.
Mercor.
Yeah.
M-E-R-C-C-O-R.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They, they, they train AI using experts to train the, I mean, it's,
it's a completely different approach, which is very effective.
And unfortunately, it's all, it's all gone.
Well, this is not unfortunate.
This is great.
The more, it is great for me.
It's like the more this stuff is open source and we can run it at home, the better.
I see, I see it as fantastic.
And there's, there's no stopping this.
I mean, these Chinese models they keep coming out with.
Oh, and by the way, according to J.C.,
it would happen at Mercur or Mercor, the Chinese will gobble up.
Yes, and they'll make a compressed version of it.
Stuff, you know, it's quite fascinating what you can do with this stuff at home.
And that's where this whole bubble is going to pop.
I'm not against these models.
they're definitely good uses for them.
I mean, I now, I finally loaded that model, the 11 Labs voice.
I have canceled my subscription.
They lost me as a customer because I can run it at home on a Raspberry Pi
with an old graphic, a GPU from Nvidia, an old one that someone gave to me.
You know, I'm not making ISO's way that don't worry.
But still, it's like, why should I worry?
Because, you know, 11 labs,
your go-to?
I've moved on.
And so now Oracle,
who are big in the data center game,
they are doing whatever they can
to keep raising money through debt
to keep building data centers,
which I think is a big mistake.
Trying to bounce off some session lows here.
Let's get to our Simomodi with a news alert on Oracle.
Hey, CIMA.
Carl, I can confirm from two insiders
that Oracle is laying off thousands of employees.
Notifications were sent out today.
It comes as the company continues to double down on its massive AI bed developing and leasing data centers across the country.
As we know, it's gone to the debt market to fund these bets.
Now looking at another option by reducing its workforce as a way to drum up more cash.
In fact, there was a TD Cowan report last month suggesting that 20 to 30,000 layoffs would free up about around $10 billion.
So I look into this story.
They're like, well, who are they firing?
And why are they firing?
And most of these companies, well, you know, AI is so efficient.
We don't need any more.
We don't need programmers.
So we just get, that's what everyone's using now as an excuse to unload employees.
But in Oracle's case, I came across this clip, Indian news source.
It's kind of believable.
Fire the Indians.
Because just days ago, we told you that Tech Giant Oracle was planning mass layoffs.
And now that moment has arrived.
Tech Giant Oracle Corporation has begun a mass.
round of layoffs across its global office, employees in the U.S., India, and other regions are reportedly receiving termination emails.
TORI, with many, informed that the same day would be their last working day.
There was no prior notice, no HR call, and no discussion with managers, just a formal email from the company leadership.
Well, there is no official confirmation yet on the scale of layoffs, posts from individuals claiming to be affected or aware of the situation,
suggest that multiple teams in India may have been impacted.
Some users allege that entire team saw significant reductions,
while others claim that even managers were not informed in advance about who would be let go.
Teams across multiple divisions, including key tech and operations units,
have reportedly seen significant job cuts with some teams losing nearly 30% of their workforce.
Oracle's India operations, including its development centers,
have also been impacted with employees across roles.
and levels affect it.
The company has offered severance packages
but only after employees
signed separation documents.
For India, the severance is expected
to follow the standard N-plus-2 formula
while unvested stock benefits will not be paid.
Reports suggest that this
could be one of Oracle's
biggest restructuring exercises
with estimates indicating up to
30,000 job cuts globally.
The move is being linked to the company's
aggressive expansion into AI,
infrastructure, which has significantly increased financial pressure.
I think it's valid to say that you can get rid of a bunch of Indian programmers.
That seems pretty valid.
Yeah.
Get rid of them, 20,000 of them.
And what's the wrong, Phoebe?
Why are you barking?
Okay, I have a few clips now.
All right.
Let's start with the Kid Rock clip.
You hear about this, right?
I've heard about it.
I somehow was able to avoid it.
Tonight, the breaking headline after those U.S. Army of patching attack helicopters,
covered over Kid Rock's house, the performer saluting them.
Tonight, what's now happened to those Army pilots.
Let's get right to Martha Raditz.
David, tonight a major reversal.
Early today, the Army said they had suspended the four crew members of those Apache
attack helicopters, which were seen in that video doing a low-level flyby in front of the home
of Singer Kidrock in Nashville.
He can be seen waving and then saluting the crew.
The Army is saying they take any allegations of unauthorized or unsafe flight operations.
operations very seriously. President Trump, who is a friend of Kid Rocks, even said they probably
shouldn't have been doing it. You're not supposed to be playing games. But shortly after the president
made those comments, Secretary Pete Hegseth said on X, the U.S. Army pilots suspensions lifted,
no punishment, no investigation. Carry on patriots, he said, and thanked Kid Rock.
All right. I have some personal experience with this, but your commentary is welcome.
What?
You know, it was goofy.
They probably shouldn't do this stuff.
It's a waste of the taxpayer's money.
So I went to Iraq in 2003.
And we were there with the Dutch Marines.
We made one excursion.
It was about a six-hour drive to Basra base.
And that's where the Dutch heli detachment was.
And they were running all the Chinook helicopters.
And so we hung up without.
We were doing documentary.
We're filming.
We're doing live radio show from Camp Smitty in Samawa province.
And it was known that I had my helicopter license.
I was flying helicopters at the time in Holland.
And so these guys like, you know, we'll fly you guys back.
Now, I cannot confirm or deny if they let me fly the helicopter at 150 foot above the deck.
But anyway, so you make friends.
You know, you make friends.
So you got to fly a Chinook?
I can't confirm or deny.
but yeah, heck yeah.
You know how that works?
It's the easiest helicopter to fly in the world
because there's no torque.
There's no counter torque because of the two rotors.
Right.
So you don't have to, you know,
coordinate your feet with your...
Oh, that's cool.
And so what they do is they have a GPS moving map display
and they overlay a piece of plastic,
you know, like when I was...
For anyone who remembers, the overhead projector,
what's that called?
Was it called the overhead projector where you put the slides on?
They were called overhead projectors.
Thank you.
The cellophane and you'd have, and those would be transparent.
Foils, foils, foils.
Oh, man, you got to go look that one up, kids, to see what we had before you had video projectors.
We had a box of light and you put a foil on it that had, you know, drawings on it and letters,
and it would project up to a mirror, and the mirror would then project onto a screen.
or the wall.
And you'd move these foils back.
The good old days.
The good old days.
So they had one of those foils and they had a line on it and he said, just follow the line.
And you had to go 150 feet because if you're any higher, the RPGs could get to you.
That's what they said.
So, and now, I'm flying 150 feet.
It was like a video game.
It was so easy.
And then it's like, okay, you're going to do it 40 degrees right, three, two, one.
So did that.
did the whole thing. We landed at our base. But we became friends. And when I would fly from
the castle, oh, the days were good when I had money. We'd fly from the castle up to Amsterdam
because I had a helipad at the house. Oh, man, I miss having that. Anyway, spent it all.
Burned it in the air. And I'd fly past the helicopter base. And so sometimes they'd come out with
two Chinooks and they'd fly side by side.
I'm in my little helicopter.
And sometimes they say, okay, we're forcing you to land.
We're forcing you to have coffee.
Okay.
And so I'd land at the base.
But from time to time, they would come over the house,
over the castle in Belgium.
With the Chinook, they'd open the loading bay door.
And they'd wave.
And it was incredibly destructive because plants were flying all of the place.
Coi were flying out of the pond.
And it was fun.
And I was like, it's, it's not really wasting any money.
They're in the area.
They just fly by.
They go, hey, Curry.
And they wave and they fly off.
So then, you know, I'm, why this is such a big scandal?
I don't know.
It's like, it's kid rock, you know.
Everything.
It's a Trump.
No, well, yeah, they hate Trump.
Yeah, it's true.
Which brings us to the other scandal.
I was going to get to this one.
This is an update on the ballroom.
The troll room was like, you had coy?
Yeah.
Boy. Ballroom update.
A new stop work order from a federal court on President Trump's passion project, the White House ballroom.
That order halts construction unless Congress approves the plans.
The administration quickly appealed. The president clearly frustrated.
Basically, he's saying I need congressional approval.
And he's so wrong.
Judge Richard Leon had granted the request of a preservation group.
with a pointed message for the builder-in-chief.
The President of the United States is the steward of the White House
for future generations of first families.
He is not, however, the owner.
The ballroom is never far from the president's mind,
publicly balancing his wartime duties and construction management.
I'm so busy that I don't have time to do this,
but fighting wars and other things.
This is very important.
His vision, gigantic, with seating capacity for up to 1,000 guests.
The cost swelling to $400 million, privately funded, he says.
Buried below...
The military is building a big complex under the ballroom.
This new legal fight spurred by that October surprise.
The destruction of the East Wing ended century of history.
Reckage without the typical oversight.
The federal judge writes, the president went to,
far. No statute comes close to giving the president the authority he claims to have.
And Kelly O'Donnell also live at the White House tonight for us. Kelly, construction continued
today, though? The judge does allow that they can finish up projects so that they don't leave
the site unsafe. Well, the president said the entire project is about safety, and he suggested
they can keep going. I can't wait until this thing is finished, the ballroom. I think Marco Rubio is
going to get the boys back together. That would be good.
dance. Put on the show. For a little show. Well, there was a follow-up to this, which was always,
you know, kind of half conspiracy, half, like, well, makes sense. And Carolyn Levitt had to answer
the question in the briefing room. Can you tell us more about this massive military complex
underneath the president's new ballroom? I cannot tell you more about that, actually, as a matter of
fact. However, the military is making some upgrades to their facilities here at the White House. And I'm
not privy to provide any more details on that this time.
Yeah.
Mass.
Upgrade.
Upgrade.
You know what that means.
Under the White House, the military is already there.
Yeah.
With a bunker.
Yeah.
Well, I don't think that was a surprise, was it?
Well, I, yeah, a little bit.
Well, I'm kind of expected.
The White House.
The president lives there.
What is, what's going on underneath the, in the basement?
Important stuff.
Well, the first, have you not?
Watch Paradise.
Don't you know how this works?
I love that show.
Yeah, it's probably one of those shows you watch 30 seconds and went,
It's on Hulu.
The second season, just, I think the second season is almost over.
What's it about?
Oh, massive event, volcanic eruption, and then everyone starts shooting off nukes at each other.
And some Silicon Valley billionaires had built an entire underground.
ground city in a bunker in Colorado in the mountains and the presidents and these billionaires
all go there and there's, I don't know, 20,000 people and they live in a bit of a, what is it,
what was the movie with Jim Carrey?
A Truman Show.
A bit of a Truman Show world.
Well, there's a fake sky and they have, you know, they've got Waffle House and they all live
their little lives.
but people on the outside survived.
And so then the people on the outside
and trying to get on the inside.
And it just goes on from there.
Sounds far-fetched.
Not really.
Oh, you see?
Oh.
Not really.
Well, I mean, the whole world underground was pretty elaborate,
but it's a pretty good show.
I mean, you know, what else are we going to watch?
Well.
Exactly.
Chinese television like you to learn how to
speak Chinese. How's that working on? Mandarin. Yeah, Mandarin. Yeah. Also.
Yeah, also yourself. Okay. So, have you heard the Matt Gates stuff? No.
All right. Well, now you're going to hear it. Good. Matt Gates on aliens.
I think the most important information will be the biologics that are not human that have been discovered.
And like, even some of the briefings that aren't classified just need just need to be out in the public.
had someone come and briefed me who was in a military uniform, worked for the United States
Army that was briefing me on the locations of hybrid breeding programs where captured aliens
were breeding with humans to create some hybrid race that could engage in intergalactic
communication. An actual uniform member of the United States Army briefed me on that.
What the F is going on, wait a second, you had whistleblowers tell you this kind of thing.
Do you please unpack that?
Yeah, I had a, this is a four-minute clip. We play in the whole thing.
Oh, I thought I broke it into two.
Well, I have a number two.
Well, you tell me when to stop.
There is a number two that's 32nd.
Stop it there.
Stop it.
We're playing number two.
What do you mean non-human biologics?
Well, that was the testimony of David Grush before the House Oversight Committee, which I joined.
And the testimony was that in crashes of craft that had been recovered by the CIA
and through a special program that the CIA had.
for crash recovery, that it wasn't just, you know, the hard materials.
It was also biologics, but that they couldn't identify a human source of those biologics.
Nah, David Grush, isn't he the guy that makes alien movies?
Let me check.
I'm pretty sure that's the guy.
Yeah, he says he's a whistleblower, but hasn't he been working, making movies?
for over a decade.
The whole thing is sketchy.
It is.
I mean, look, I flew to go meet an alien one time.
I was all in on this stuff.
I've only been disappointed time after time after time.
Yeah, you're going to meet in a...
This is not...
During the show...
Yes.
The show era.
Yep.
You were going to meet an alien.
I was promised.
You were all jacked up about it.
Yes.
And cocky, I might add.
Well, this was in my second wife days.
Or was it my first, though?
I don't remember.
No, no, no.
This was before your second wife.
Did go on.
Well, I was going to say that.
I wanted you to confirm that.
Yeah, yeah.
It was around that time.
I remember I had the airplane.
So.
You had a lot of stuff.
And you are also a big believer in spraying water into gasoline or something.
No, no.
I had a hydroxy booster, which created hydrolysis and that created a gas,
automobile efficiency.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, yeah, that was that era.
And then because of the alien guy not showing up,
you bummed out on the whole thing.
Yeah, because I got screwed once again.
I'm not buying it anymore.
That's what it looks like.
Yeah.
You got screwed on that deal.
Well, so the whole thing is going on around and around because it's because of the Spielberg movie.
Oh.
Oh, do you have a clip?
What is the Spielberg movie?
It's the last year that remember that movie, Disclosure.
Oh, they're going to blow the lid off everything and they had all these people.
That wasn't a Spielberg movie, though.
No, no, I'm just saying that I'm saying last year.
Last year, there's a movie called Disclosure and it was, or something like Age of Disclosure, some damn thing.
And they had all, you, Rubio was in the movie.
Oh, yeah, you know, they told us that there was aliens.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, there's one guy after another, just bogus testimony.
No evidence, no photos, no alien autopsies, no nothing, the whole thing.
And so now this year, Spielberg's got a movie coming out just shortly called Disclosure Something.
You can look it up.
I'm looking it up now.
Spielberg's movie.
So, uh, hold on a second.
There's got to be a trailer.
Let me see.
Spielberg.
I don't know if the trailer's out.
Disclosure trailer.
Oh, maybe.
Usually these things.
If you're talking about it, here we go.
Three weeks ago.
Here we go.
Let's see.
I'm looking about it.
I got it.
Secrets.
Oh.
Oh.
The data they paid me to protect.
Oh, he's got special access.
Are they people?
No.
They're aliens.
What?
Oh, no.
Crop circles.
They got crop circles.
Man, remember the crop circles?
Oh, yeah.
In England, every week there was a new crop circle.
And I was all in on that, too.
Like, these are real, John.
This is not some...
Yeah, you were quite convinced.
I know, and people miss that about the show.
But what can I say?
I know.
That's why I'm bringing this in.
Oh, please.
Hold on. Let's listen to this some more.
From directors.
Good morning, Kansas City.
Let's take a look at today.
Oh, no.
She's having a brain freeze.
Let's...
Today is...
She's stroking out.
Is it a vaccine injury?
Oh, no.
Oh, no.
Her head is changing.
What's happening?
Oh, no.
It's about to explode?
Oh, the nuns are watching.
What?
I understand what she's saying.
Okay.
I can't wait to watch that one.
Yeah.
Dog.
Exciting.
So I have a very long clip here.
I didn't intend to put it in the show, but it's about Spielberg.
Okay.
And...
There's this hack.
This guy, it's a hack.
I'm just quite not really a hack.
But this guy, Peter Duke, who's been a showrunner.
He's been in Hollywood forever.
And he's on one of the, he's on the ripple effect podcast.
Oh, that's a popular podcast.
It's very popular.
I think it's well done.
It's, you know, they hate Jews and they get, you know, standard stuff.
It's your go-to.
That kind of thing.
But, and the, and, you know, it's, you know,
What's your podcast about?
We hate Jews, you know, stuff like that.
You know, that's our podcast.
That's what we do, man.
It's simple.
It doesn't take a lot of effort.
So they had this guy on talking trash about Spielberg.
And I thought it would got interesting.
If you, I think the first minute and a half,
you can play this Peter Duke ripple effect.
If you play the first minute and a half,
he claims with some justification that Spielberg has always worked.
work for the Pentagon.
Oh, yeah, it wouldn't surprise me.
Let's play this.
On the show, Richard Grove, he did a great documentary.
He still one of probably my favorite documentaries and one I recommend quite often.
A state of mind of psychology of control, which really goes into the whole history of social engineering
and how far back it goes.
And these techniques have been used over and over again to control the masses.
I guess when you talk about that, it kind of highlights what you're saying in regards to
the Zein Geist movement got a lot of shit from religious people.
Peter Joseph, but I think one of the things he was trying to highlight in this first film was the fact that you can use religion to control the masses, right?
He was kind of opening up talking about all these techniques to control the masses from false flags and these events that spark emotion and empathy and revenge and then use that like September 11th to go into Iraq and Afghanistan or you use spirituality, religion, scripture, this higher power,
to convince you that you're doing something for the greater good.
So, yeah, these are all techniques to control people.
Somebody else we brought up quite a bit, and I wanted your thoughts on it,
because it's a complete left turn, but I'm kind of curious.
You talked about Steven Spielberg.
What do you think of his new movie disclosure or disclosure day?
There's a lot of conversations about why he's doing a movie like this.
I know he's always kind of been, people say he's always been fascinated with the topic.
Do you think it's just him being fascinated with the topic,
or is it more like you mentioned?
Is there a reason for the timing?
I think Steven Spielberg is part of the Pentagon.
And he's very good at what he does.
I mean, one of the things that they're very good at,
the Office of Net Assessments, I think,
goes out and assesses people, right?
And I think that Steven Spielberg was assessed
as very competent at what he does
because he is very competent at what he does.
And it's funny because when I worked at the Show of Foundation Institute,
my title had been at every other company that I worked at,
creative director, but I wasn't allowed to have that title.
And I wasn't allowed to have that title
because Stephen doesn't believe that creativity is human.
He believes that it's a gift from God
and that you can be a design director,
but you can't be a creative director,
which I always thought was,
so he's very specific about words.
But now that I'm so specific about words,
I totally understand where he's coming from.
But I've had several friends who were personal assistance to Steven Spielberg in different capacities.
But like in the room with him every day, you know, following him around, taking notes, getting stuff done.
One of my friends told me that he was working at Ambulin, which was down the drive.
I was at stage 35, which doesn't exist to this day.
But in the 1990s, when I was working on a lot of Universal, when I worked for Joel Schumacher, I work.
I hate that.
All right.
Well, this.
Wait, wait.
You can stop it there, but you have to let this finish because he has a really good story.
Okay.
In the producers building, which is next to what they call the black tower in the front of the studio.
This is the problem.
He's doing a shaggy dog.
Hold on.
People out there who do, if you're going to start doing podcast, Mimi does this.
You get to the point.
He's getting to the point, but all of a sudden now he's talking about this and that.
He's roaming away.
the shaggy dogging the thing, it's annoying.
So do you want me to shuttle for?
No, no, you play now that I've warned everybody they can put up with it.
When I worked at GameWorks, I worked on stage 35, which was an old sitcom stage.
I mean, was my helicopter story too shaggy dog?
I didn't think that was too shaggy dog.
No, no, not at all.
When you do shaggy dog, believe me, you noted my displeasure.
Yes, yes.
It was in the back lot.
close to where they have all of the outdoor scenes sets.
And it's just down the drive.
The reason I was on that stage is because it was just down the driveway from Amblin.
And Amblin is a building that Lou Wasserman built for Steven Spielberg after I think Jaws came out.
Lou Wasserman didn't want Steven Spielberg to ever leave Universal.
And he basically built him a little palace on the back lot at Universal, which is still there to this day.
So my friend who worked at Amblin told me that they used to ask the same question that I asked when I worked in the producers building, which is how do they decide what movies they're going to make?
And he told me about an event that happened where Stephen went and was gone for a couple of weeks and met with some people and he didn't go into any details about who the people were.
but at one point Stephen called into the office and they had an all-hands meeting and everybody came
into the conference room and everybody at Amblin came into a conference room with their yellow
legal pads and their pens and Stephen was on the speakerphone and he told them what the nine
projects were that they were going to do that year. He just dictated him out. We're going to make a
movie about this. We're going to make a movie about that. We're going to make a television series about
this. We're going to make a television series about that.
And everybody got their marching orders.
And then they went and they made those movies and made those TV shows.
So that story to me makes me think, well, he was getting read in.
You know, he was meeting with the Tavistock people or the Tavistock people.
You mean the trans people?
No.
Let it finish.
It's almost done.
You know.
It's literally five and a half minutes.
You owe me.
That's why I said you had to break it up.
that she gets his marching orders from.
And they tell him, this is what you're going to go make.
These are the movies and the TV shows that you're going to make this.
Why don't you just go on that podcast?
I mean, you're playing a podcast on a podcast.
Yeah, okay.
So the point he's trying to make, which you won't let it finish.
I'll let him finish.
I think that's the way it works.
I think that's the same way it work with Chris Carter
and the same way that it works with Mark Burnett
and with Sam Ismail and all of the other show running.
who's the guy who did Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
These people get marching orders.
Oh, I get it.
The Jews.
And they march.
Not the Jews.
And I mean, he's talking a more general.
He's talking about, I agree with this.
He's talking about slow-mo and Weisenheimer and all those guys.
I'm telling you, these, how did these things get?
Who picks what and how?
You know, Brunetti, I sent him to this clip and he was, he had no pushback.
on it. He was offered to
go to one of these meetings
and given marching orders. He's
Brunetti, so no, I'm not going.
But this is not surprising. Is this surprising
to you? Well,
a little bit for a guy like Spielberg.
Oh, no, he's the top guy.
Think of all the movies he's done that have been
important for social engineering.
Absolutely.
Oh, no, it doesn't.
In fact, I think this is why
Open AI had to shut down SORA.
It's like, you can't do that.
We can't have everybody
sciopping everybody else with movies.
You got to shut that stuff down.
And what did they do?
Oh, look, we got a great camera for you, Hollywood.
I'm convinced of it.
You've got to stop that.
We can't have people making their own propaganda movies.
In fact, I got a clip here.
Where's this from?
This is from Global, the Canadian guys.
And they're talking about the propaganda,
which is done with AI by both Iran or Iranian actors
and America or American actors or Jews.
I don't know.
The propaganda war over Iran has taken a strange turn.
The White House and the Iranian regime
are trolling each other online in a war of memes,
posting videos like these on their official
social media channels.
It started with the White House, posting videos of real air strikes on Iran, edited together
with clips from American action movies and video games, even SpongeBob's Squarepants.
You want to see me do it again?
With captions such as Justice the American Way and wake up Daddy's Home.
This obscene focus on mortality and the celebration of violence, this focus on a gaming culture
where victims vanish from moral consideration.
is utterly immoral.
Tehran is now firing back.
By the time a satellite finds me, I'm already gone.
The regime's propaganda studio producing these animations.
Many depicting Lego figures of the U.S. President, Israeli Prime Minister,
and the devil plotting attacks on Iran to distract from the Epstein scandal.
A lot of this stuff would seem silly if it wasn't obviously such a serious situation.
Is this stuff actually effective?
I mean, I think it's effective in functioning as rallying cries.
We are talking about content that's been viewed in the billions.
What started as a propaganda war between the American and Iranian governments
has now spiraled into an online free-for-all,
with other, apparently, ordinary users deploying AI technology to produce not only memes,
but deep-fake videos of the war.
This video purports to show an Iranian attack on the U.S. Navy in the Australia.
of Hormuz.
Well, this one claims to show Israel's airport being struck by an Iranian missile.
Both are fake.
The use of AI is just shedding doubt everywhere.
So it's making things more believable, but it's also making things not believable in the sense that anything and everything can be edited or fully AI generated.
This parallel information war is blurring the lines between real and fake.
So this is the real issue at hand.
And the video stuff, you know, movies is definitely the way to go.
Remember, the CIA was all over the Moscow Music Peace Festival,
and I didn't even know it at the time, other than I got interviewed by some dudes who came into my manager's office and said,
oh, you're going to Russia, stay away from hookers.
They're all KGB.
stay at the hotel. You don't want to go anywhere else. You want to be careful.
But as it turns out, that was, you know, listening to the Wins of Change podcast.
That whole thing was a SIEOP to get kids to get ready to bust out when the wall came down.
And they, you know, we all know that it was David Hasseloff who premeditated that.
But the real SIE ops is social media.
And if we believe them or not, here's a blast from the past.
Steve Pichenic, we haven't talked about him in a long time.
Is this recent?
No, no, no, no.
This is from back in the day when we were still talking.
Steve Pachennick was quite explicit in telling me that DARPA had been experimenting with social networks.
Now, probably not the way we have them today, but online social networks, probably more along the lines of
news groups, stuff like that.
And maybe even America online and the CB simulator to see how...
The CB simulator.
How that was CompuServe.
How you could manipulate people and how you could have multiple actors online,
you know, talking for and against each other.
And the social media networks of today are a gold mine.
It's just a gold mine for this type of operation.
I see it all the time on my ex account.
And you'll see people who are saying things.
People, bots, I'm convinced 70% of them are bots.
And they'll be commenting on comment.
You go look at them, you know, no followers, numbers in the name, account from 2016.
Like, okay, yeah, that makes sense.
And this was the subject of a bit here on.
Deutsche Villa.
What looks like real online debate during elections could be AI.
Researchers warn that networks of AI agents might coordinate disinformation campaigns
during elections, flooding social media with propaganda, autonomously, and at scale.
In a recent study, scientists tested this on a simulated social platform similar to X.
They created 50 AI agents.
Some acted as regular users and others as operators with the goal of promoting a fictional
candidate. They tested three scenarios, agents with just a goal, agents who knew their teammates,
and agents that could plan strategies together. The key result? Simply knowing who was on the same
team was enough to create coordinated behavior, almost as effective as planning together. What
followed looked like real online conversations, different opinions, replies, and growing support
around one message. This is very different from traditional bot campaigns. Older bots follow simple
scripts, post this, retweet that, which makes them easier to detect. But AI agent systems behave more
like real users. Even though this was just a simulation, the implications are real. Such systems could
shape public opinion and increase division in the elections to come. And they may be way harder to
detect because it's not just about what individual accounts post, but how networks of accounts act
together. And whether platforms can keep up is still unclear. Now, I'm convinced. I'm convinced.
this is taking place.
Oh, you don't have to be convinced.
Yeah.
And none of it's good.
Well, how different is that?
What's the difference between that and having, like, in Russia or Ukraine or wherever,
a building full of people on the computer acting as, you know, as one under, with marching orders,
to say 500 people
making an extra amount of money
and all they do is post all day.
It's cheaper.
I think it's cheaper?
I think the AI is cheaper, yeah.
It's a lot cheaper.
But it's the same thing.
Yeah.
But, you know, they can do it 24-7.
They can micro-target, stupid podcasters.
Let's get after that curry.
Yeah, let's do that.
He gets all worked up and he does a voice.
I'm telling you.
Somebody said that to you.
What?
No, I know.
People say that all the time.
When people email me,
read this in your libtard voice.
That's the one I'm not going to read, okay?
That's not how it works.
Anyway, no sciops here.
And with that, I want to thank you for your courage in the morning to you,
the man who put the sea in the cock-eyed bazongas.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one,
the only Mr. John C. DeBoer.
Well, in the morning, you, Mr. Adam Curry.
Also, in the morning, you know, ships and sea boots on the ground,
Fendiary, something of the water, names are nice out there.
In the morning to the trolls.
We got 1404, 1,404 trolls listening live to us as we speak.
And what?
What?
It's not that good.
Well, you know, you're not that good.
You know, you're not up to strength.
You know, you're...
It's true, but it doesn't mean they have to abandon me.
Oh, they abandoned you right away.
The minute Mimi came in.
Like, oh, well, that was fun.
will it last, stupid DeVorek.
It's nothing to do with Mimi.
It's just you.
You know, it's bad for the show.
Well, it's the truth.
And have you contacted Void Zero about the email?
Working on it, working on, working on.
So that's a...
Hey, you know, I'm running at 50%.
Hey, I'm the first one to say,
I'm amazed that you're doing this show at all.
No, I appreciate that, too.
At all.
People forget.
And they forget.
They have no idea.
Your chest was cracked open.
You're going to be 74 years old on Sunday.
So, you know, you're not, you know, wretchedly old, but it's, you know, it's a big procedure.
And within a week of coming out of the hospital, you're like, here I am.
I'm doing the show.
I appreciate that.
I do. I also think that you need to do the show. It's a part of your healing process.
Yeah. Well, it gets me to, yes, I do.
So support John if it's only just to keep him alive.
This is the whole point of the newsletter.
Support the show. Support the show. Support the old man living.
Those trolls are listening at noagendastream.com, and they are, many of them are trolling along in the troll room.
It's always much appreciated.
And of course, you can always listen on a modern podcast app.
This is what we recommend because then when we fire off the bat signal,
you will be notified.
And if you're in the car, if you're, let's your job.
Some of these modern podcast apps are pretty, they're pretty elaborate.
Yes.
Have you tried any of them?
Which ones are you trying?
Yeah, I've Podverse recently.
Very impressed.
Wait until you see Podverse next generation.
Mitch has been building on that for over a year.
And Martin's come back with a pod friend.
It's a friendly podcast app.
It's very fun.
And he has all kinds of comments and stuff you can do.
And this, the people just keep building.
They keep on building, all part of podcasting 2.0,
which I just do for the love of it.
Now you can listen tomorrow.
We do the show live.
The boardroom, we call that.
About 400 people who listen total.
So these modern podcast apps, when we go live,
this is something we developed, then boom, you get a notification and you can listen live to the show or within 90 seconds of publishing.
You will get the show in your app.
No waiting for these legacy apps.
Don't wait around for those anymore.
That's new podcast apps.com.
No agenda show has a pioneered the value for value model.
And the way that works is we don't have any ads.
We don't have any forced subscriptions.
Gosh, there was a great post.
Someone showed me there.
I forgot where that was.
I should have saved it.
You know, we're not, there's no bonus content that you get if you're a member, you know,
no special meetings, you know, no special handshakes.
Everything is out in the open.
We give you the best that we have, which is really only 50% because John is Sligin.
So, well, I mean, with my hundreds, it's 75%.
So we can do better.
But, you know, bear with us.
He'll get back to speed.
He'll be as grouchy and grumpy as always.
And it'll be pushing back more.
I mean, you're not pushing back.
the main complaint. You let Adam get away with everything now.
Well, okay.
Just saying, just giving you some feedback, show feedback.
I wonder who said that?
People, just people.
Bots, bots on X.
So the way we do it is value for value.
We give you all the value we have, and it is everything.
We put it all out there.
All the value we have, a lot of work goes into the show.
John came loaded for bear.
Did you get some clips from the clip collector from Steve Jones?
I have a net.
I have, yes.
Okay.
Because I encouraged him to do that.
He's helping me out.
Yeah, I saw.
And I have to, I have to.
I have to, I have to, get together with him so I get.
So he uses my, uh, your system.
My system.
Your naming system.
Yes.
I recognize his number, his numbering and naming system.
Oh, okay.
So, so now the clip collector, he's making decisions.
over which clips to give me and which clips to give you.
That's nice.
So the way I see it, he gave half of the clips to you.
Actually, more than half.
He gave me a lot of clips.
He did.
You did.
Very nice.
So that's one of the ways you can return value.
We consider everybody who's listening to the show,
not to be a fan or audience or listener.
You're a producer.
This is something we do it all together.
So your job is to help us produce,
and you can do that by return.
turning value in one of the three T ways, time, talent, or treasure.
That's all we ask for.
So helping produce clips, boots on the ground reports, or we have artwork, which we
always appreciate people doing their best to come up with some prompts that make it funny.
Now, the episode 1855, which you did on Sunday, was titled Gooder.
There's no way we couldn't use that.
And this piece of art, a lot of people came in with gooder arts, good or art pieces, and totem poles.
Totem poles were a big hit for some reason.
Yeah.
And so we had to say.
I got a note from one of our producers.
You're full of crap.
The totem poles aren't only in Washington and, uh, and, and B.C.
We have them in Alaska.
It's the same basic group of Indians.
It is.
Uh, first nations, people.
All right?
Yeah, whatever.
So Dan OBJ.
just old enough in having had a heart attack, I can say what I want.
You know, you can, have you ever tried this on your kids?
You're giving me a heart attack.
I mean, you should try that.
It's a little too late now.
You can say, you're giving me another hot attack.
Dan OBGYN4 is the one we chose.
We like this one.
It had a lot in it.
It had John's order of the red heart.
It had a microphone.
It had 33s.
had a, would look to me like a Mac Plus baked into it and then Curry DeVorak totems behind it.
The whole thing was good.
The clouds, no agenda.
Do you think this was completely AI or did he do some work to it?
I think it's completely AI.
Well, it's dynamite.
He's dynamite, I tell you.
But he nailed it.
He did.
Let's take a look at some of the other pieces that people sent in.
He had another version of this.
which wasn't quite as compelling.
Oh, with like this, that looked like Super Mario Brothers.
I didn't quite like that one.
The one I, I kind of, we don't do our faces.
I did like Scaramanga's version of you with tats and a white t-shirt and you had a, you know,
a bandana and on the wall it says no agenda is gooder.
I kind of like that one.
That was, that was kind of cool.
But we don't really like using our faces, our likenesses.
Can we explain why?
No, I don't.
Have you forgotten?
I've forgotten why.
Is it a copyright violation?
No.
The first three or four years of the show, every single piece of art was just the two of us in various poses.
Oh, yeah.
It was us every, every.
And it was getting to the point where it was like, no, no, no.
We got sick of ourselves.
We were sick of ourselves.
We got sick of it.
And we banned it.
We said no more pictures of.
of us because there's at least a thousand.
And people still do it.
They don't know about the ban, apparently.
Yeah, no, it's banned.
Yeah, it's banned.
But Commercher blogger, keep doing the butt.
You're not going to get chosen, but it's always, it's always fun.
We can say, oh, you did point out that comics or blogger nailed your Walker on his piece here.
Yeah.
With the handbrakes.
Yeah.
How are you doing with that?
thing. Are you getting around?
I mean, I only use it when I'm out, you know, when I'm out.
Here's the reason you have to have it.
Well, you're out hitting on the lady. Hey, lady, hey, girls.
Because you had your chest ripped open and you're, and you have, the breastplate and everything
has to heal. It, they glue it back together and staple it and all. It takes like
months and months to get it to the point where it's secure. So if you fall, if you fall, if you
fall under the circumstances that I'm currently existing within, you have to be taken back
to the emergency room.
They're going to have to put you up.
It breaks it open.
Yeah, we don't want that.
So that's where you have this loose.
And I only use it outside if I have to walk around.
And I can walk pretty fast.
It's not the walk.
It's not the problem.
It's just the accident, the possibility of a trip.
And in fact, they tell you this at the hospital.
If you fall within the next four months,
you don't let anyone try to pick you up.
Call 911.
That's the nature of it.
If that doesn't drive you to grabbing one of these devices, nothing will.
Okay.
All right.
There you go.
Now, more horrors.
Yes.
Horrors.
More horrors.
No one.
I felt super bad because Tina went to the PO box
and she got our Little John's Candies co-lab with Eli the coffee guy,
gigawatt, which you can't have either. You can't have chocolate or coffee.
Right.
Oh, man, that stuff is so good.
Yeah, I know. That's what everyone says. And has little cherries in there.
And they sent us some chocolate Easter bunnies. Also, who's the, who's the Joker who sent us
the pool water? Did you get, did you get a box of pool water?
I did not get a box of pool water.
So it's, it's artisan pool water. They're like a metal kind of aluminum,
bottles. It's like a novelty thing. It's water. It's just water.
From the swimming pool? Well, that's, it's called pool water. So yeah, that's kind of, it's funny.
But they sent it in a box marked media mail, which I believe is intended for stuff of like
media, like photographs. Yeah, it's a discount. Well, right. And so Tina picks it up. I wish I was there.
the Pakistani lady got in her face.
You're stealing from me.
Seems like, what are you talking about?
You're stealing.
This is stealing from the post office.
It seems like, well, this is, I didn't order this.
Someone sent it to me.
Well, next time I send it back or I charge you.
She got really mad about it.
And it's like, well, but it's from one of my husband's millions of listeners.
Well, I don't care about him.
What is he?
Podcasta.
I can go away.
So don't do that, people.
don't rip off the post office.
They got mad at us, the recipients.
Not supposed to do that.
Yeah, you're not supposed to do that, I guess.
I didn't know.
But it's appreciated, the pool water,
but not as much as that little John's candies gigawatt stuff.
It's a dynamite combination.
So we want to thank all of our producers
who support us financially.
That is the treasure part of time, talent, and treasure.
And we will thank everybody, $50,
and above. We have special spots reserved for those who can afford more. Just like any big Hollywood
production, you can be an executive or associate executive producer. If you got the goods,
so $200 or more, you receive the title of Associate Executive Producer, which is an absolute bona fide
production credit. You can use it anywhere. Hollywood credits are recognized, including IMDB.com.
Go take a look. You'll see. Thousands are in there. And we'll read your note.
$300 and above, same deal, only then you're an executive producer, and we'll read your note.
and we start off with $1,333.13.13 cents from Sir Anonymous Driver of the Gap.
And he says, John, glad you're getting better.
I can't deal with another loss this year.
Oh, goodness.
Oh, so sad.
We lost our son in the third trimester late last year, and this month we lost our four-year-old puppy unexpectedly.
The podcast is a constant that I truly love and look forward to.
No more losses.
only additions in this year ahead, with one exception.
No more AI ISOs.
They cheapen the product, he says.
He wants F-22 Karma, which I'm sure he won't mind if upgraded to F-35 Karma.
And when I'm thinking of you, Sir, anonymous driver of the gap.
You've got Karma.
Is your foot hooked in the mic cable again?
No. Lindsay Carson and Raseka?
Resica?
I don't know, Georgia.
Resica?
Resica.
Probably Rescica.
Could be Rusaka.
Rasaka.
Rasaka.
Anyways, 86765.
Another big donation.
That's pretty good.
Dear John and Adam,
ITM, Jens, this day has been a long time coming.
Please dedush me.
Here's a D.
Sorry.
It's wrong.
You've been deduished.
Wrong button.
Play that one.
What, the one I just played?
Yeah.
Hold on a second.
Let me load it up again.
Here we go.
Here's a D-D-D-D-D-Sh for the re-dush.
I was D-D-D-Dush for the re-dush.
Yeah, it's my mistake.
I have now finally paid my value-for-value penances with the dameworthy donation coincidence
that I made the largest sale of my real estate career in the same week,
in the same week that J-C-D returned from the lucid dead.
I think not.
my sister Lauren and my friend Alex both hit me in the mouth a very long time ago and I'm
grateful for all things no agenda I can hear my voice you want you want me to pick it up because
this is a long time I'm going to finish this one I'm going to I'm going to plow through it you can do it
I like it right I really can't overstate how transformative the learning live media
deconstruction it's been for me I just graduated my oldest daughter from homeschooling
And having the show's coverage of political and world events and especially all the wild stuff happening in schools has been a huge part of keeping me determined to stay the course with her and with her two sisters.
Yes, of course.
You don't want your kids to be nut jobs like the rest out there?
Yep.
The lifeline the show became during COVID also stands out in my experience.
The show jargon jingles, the ISO's mixes, and inside jokes are a constant source.
of entertainment and make me feel like I'm part of something special.
You are.
But my favorite story arc in the time I've been listening is witnessing Adam's faith conversion.
What a testimony.
Anyway, Z, Z, Z, I am beyond thrilled that I will, I don't know what that means.
Oh, anyways.
Okay.
I'm beyond thrilled that I have a chance to celebrate the 11th anniversary of my 33rd,
33rd birthday this year by attending my first meetup with my sister and fellow.
and resources in Fredericksburg.
Woo!
I'd like to be known as Dame Lindsay of the House Hunters,
and if any of the Noah Genenation,
needs a relitter in Northwest, Georgia.
Google me, and let's connect.
Rose and Hot Cheetos for the roundtable.
Jingle requests a foamer, and you've got prayers,
and you've got prayers should do it.
Thank you for your courage, Lindsay.
Oh my God!
Listen to that horn!
You've got prayers.
Let me see.
I don't think I got the...
Guys, did we order the Cheetos, the Cheetos and the Rose?
They always have Cheetos.
They eat them.
Cheetos and hot rosé.
Okay.
And that was 86765.
We see what you did there.
Associate Executive Producership for Sir Nobody of,
buddy of the 3D printer in Parlin, New Jersey, 23 and 30 cents.
Hey, John Adamie says, I'm seeing 33s everywhere, so I must be grateful and donate.
I figured I'd plug a friend's Kickstarter.
I was at it.
I was at it?
It's for a movie follow-up from the makers of Missouri Breaks, the Ballad of Missouri Bilturn,
an indie film that made it to Amazon streaming.
Oh, we should all stream that then, the Ballad of Missouri Billtern.
I like building up small projects to get through the nihilism that has seemed to have inhabited mainstream media for some reason.
Tinfoil hat people have fun with why nihilism is going on.
Where even shadows fear to tread, phase one.
That's the Kickstarter.
I'll put that in the show notes.
I thank you as always for the show.
It breaks up the long hours of logistics work with two jobs that are 24-7.
So nobody of the third 3D printer.
definitely working on a title change.
Got to look up the account, Jersey, James, Scott,
and we thank you very much for your courage.
Onward to Matthew, our buddy, Matthew Martel in Brumall, Pennsylvania.
The employee retention rate at Martel Hardware is less than the no-agenda email newsletter open rate.
Come on, Void Zero.
Please help JCD.
visit martelhardware.com.
Use coupon code
Sir dash exiles dash maniac.
Sir Exiled Maniac
for an additional 10% off your order.
JCD Hot Pockets.
Hot Pockets.
I don't think it's Void Zero's problem.
No, it's not.
Then we go to La Jolla Salt Corporation.
Void Zero is not doing the mailing.
No, he's not doing it.
I thought he's going to help you.
Yeah, it's going to help me.
But it's beside the point we had.
There's a lot of things that play all at once.
Okay.
There's a lot of things that play.
La Jolla Salt Corporation comes in with $210.60.
And we are very thankful.
They say, decimate dry skin with a luxurious sea salt scrub from La Jolla Salt.com.
Enjoy the dazzling moisture and exfoliating power of our small batch sea salt scrubs.
And handmade by the sea in the village of La Jolla.
All things being equal, select to scrub, rinse, and then tug to avoid chafing.
People, please support the show. It's good to have you back. Buzzkill, happy birthday.
Thank you for your courage and go podcasting.
I'll read this one. Eli the coffee guy, of course, in Bensonville, Illinois, who has that coffee.
204 or two might not be a coincidence at Artemis II launched on April Fool's Day.
and is being pitched as our return to the moon, a little too on the nose.
Nonetheless, I wish the lunar travelers godspeed.
It's the perfect feel-good distraction from Iran, high gas prices, and the usual background noise.
Maybe the moon shot still works as a national therapy.
For coffee that's out of this world, visit gigawatt coffee roasters.com and use code ITM20
for 20% off your first order.
Stay caffeinated, Eli, the coffee guy.
And look who is back.
Yeah, how about that?
Dame Tanya Wyman from New York, New York with $201.
It's good to see your name on the list, Tanya.
We hope you're doing well.
And she says, JCD, get well and happy birthday.
Sending many soft hugs because I can't squeeze that chest.
Ladies, stop squeezing the podcast host.
This one brings me to Countess,
level plus an associate executive producer credit.
Well deserved.
Put me down for the Countess of New York City.
John, when you can drink again, I'll buy you something fancy.
And you bet you will.
Fancy.
Fancy.
Fancy.
The Nidlupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado, $200.74 cents jobs karma.
Your resume has about 10 seconds to make an impression.
And most don't.
For a resume that gets results, go to Imagemakers Inc.com.
Linda helps professionals and executives turn their experience into a clear story of leadership, results, and impact.
That's image maker Zink with the K and Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and Writer of Winning resumes.
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs, and Jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
We've got a few more people to thank who did not make the title arrange.
But Dame Rita, she's always there from Sparks, Nevada, 174-74.74.
That's for your birthday, John. ITM, she says, cheers to another birthday.
Thank you both for the best podcast in the universe.
MFDX of Anjou, in somewhere in California, 143.55.
He's glad that you're back.
Johnny's afraid that Adam would eventually start prodding Mimi for Milton Burrell stories.
Hey, there's Mark Pugner from Los Angeles, California, $100.33 cents.
Baron Latterquin with 100 from Houston, Texas.
Sir F.A. I.N. Beck of Schiffwood Forest, Vista, California, 100. Thank you so much.
Kay, the Woodlands. K from the Woodlands, Texas.
88, 88, welcome back, JCD, spending another Sunday night listening.
Wish I could listen live and interact. I've got thoughts.
Mark Hardwick, Alito, Texas, 88, 88, happy birthday. He says,
Baronet, Sir, Fat Dad, $80.8.
It's a boob donation from Baronet, Sir, Sir, Fat, Deb.
Fat Dad, and our official Arch Duke of Luna,
lover of America and boobs.
Kevin McLaughlin from Concord, North Carolina.
And as always, he gives us a boob donation.
It says, God bless America and boobs.
Anonymous in Columbus, Ohio, 7747.
Thanks for all you do.
Happy birthday, John.
Bauca Overbosch in Leowardin in the Netherlands.
Happy birthday, John, 7747.
Happy to have you back.
And to hear you are going strong again, says Bauca.
Brian Keefe, Sierra Vista, Arizona.
glad you're still here. Happy birthday, John.
That's 77. These are all 7747s.
Sir Mainframe, Ventura, California, and that's a switch route to Jimmy Brown, as he's no longer a douchebag.
You've been deduced.
James Powers, Carnegie, Oklahoma.
Happy birthday, JCD.
Jonathan Ferris, Liberal Kansas, Sir Selvaren, Silver Springs, Maryland, Best Wish is John.
Shake a leg, but don't break a hip.
Sir, hold my beer. Happy birthday, J.C.D. He's from Austin, Texas. Richard J. Lindquist and Squim, Washington. Glad you're back, John.
Went through the same thing nine months ago. You'll notice the milestone improvements with a big one at 12 weeks when your sternum stops moving around and at six months when you realize how good you feel. We got stuff to look forward to.
Carl Snyder, Lake Bay, Washington, four more years. Glad you are still among us. Dwayne Gambetta in Glen Olden, Pennsylvania. And he says,
Hey, Martel hardware, start a Delco meetup.
Okay.
That's from the Delco douchebag.
Scott Matthewson in Gallatin, Tennessee, also 7747, listening on and off to you for approximately 15 years.
This is my first donation.
He says, oh, you need to deduished.
You've been deduced.
By the way, my wife's birthday is April 5th.
My birthday is September 1st.
What are the chances?
I'm September 3rd.
Close.
That woman in Etobicoke, Atobicoke, California?
I've never heard of Atobicoke.
And I never either.
7747.
And then that's not in California.
No.
Maybe it's Canada.
Canada.
Well, it shows up here.
That's why we never heard of such a thing.
Simon Bennett, Ipswich, that's in the UK.
Happy birthday, JCD.
Glad you're around for another one.
David, uh, home money.
Ho money.
He's home.
Home money.
I think is home money.
Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. Happy birthday, John.
Glad to have you back and are praying for you.
Jason Shepherd, this is 7488 from Trinidad, Colorado.
Happy birthday. Welcome back, John.
74 for the birthday, 88 for continued improving health.
Duke, Sir, Dr. Sharkey, St. Peters, Missouri, 74, 74.
Happy birthday, John.
Glad you got your ticket fix because I need about 15 more years from you both.
ITM.
Kevin McLaughlin, again.
for the birthday, 74, 74, 1856.
Happy birthday, JCD, donation.
God bless y'all.
Jonathan Peckham, Bristol, Rhode Island.
If I could donate more, I would, he says, 74, 74.
Baronet Baylor, Grafton, Wisconsin.
Happy birthday, John.
Could you also add a belated happy birthday to my human resource number three?
Anya turned 7 on March 24th.
Baronet Baylor, aka Sir Camer, Chris Cocoa, FL, Florida.
Okay, P.S. check out my Twitter for sweet picks of the Artemis 2 launch.
Hugger of Kitties. There he is in Zandum. Hug more kitties. Feel better soon. Health, karma for both of us.
Put that at the end. Happy birthday idiot, he says. That's very nice. Sir Latte of Bremerton.
Happy birthday, John. Glad you didn't die. Certifiably Tal-Tal. He's in Berlin. Regardless of whatever the name shows up, this is from certifiably tal-tale from Berlin. All right. Forgive me for the recent dutabaggery. You are forgiven.
74, 74 from Sarah Gardner from Wilmington, North Carolina.
Happy birthday.
John C.V. Hawk, Wellington, New Zealand.
Happy birthday, JCD, keep up the good fight.
Ryan in Tampa, Florida.
Happy birthday, John.
They couldn't take you out that easy.
Dame, Dana Carroll, Laughlin, Nevada, 727.
Jeffrey Paul, Fergus Falls, Minnesota, 5798 for JCD's birthday.
Brian Furley, double nickels on the dime, 55, 10.
Dame tracing, sir, cane, break, St. Georgia, Louisiana, 55, 10, and his birthday is on April 2nd.
Noted, we got it on the list.
John Bassano, Madison, Alabama, 5272.
Dame Nancy, San Bruno, California, 5244, happy Easter John and Adam.
Love from Dame Nancy.
Rick Ciotti, Longhorn, Pennsylvania.
D-Dooosh me.
You've been deduced.
And producer Paul comes in from Copenhagen.
in Denmark, a call for all the Danish producers to donate 333.33 Danish Kroner, which is about
$35. And come to our meetup. He wants an F-cancer. You know, I should probably, I'll do an F-cancer for you.
Let's see, where's our F-cancer? Here we go.
That's his mom. Bought her to hospice yesterday, 1st of April, her 70th birthday. We're hoping
she makes her birthday brunch on Sunday and then goes quietly without pain, praying for her producer Paul.
Here are the 50s. Tony Lang, Castle Pines, Colorado, Daniel LaBoey, Bath, Michigan, Christian Gruelick in Winterhaven, Florida, James Sherrimetta, Napanoch, New York, Ichi Kitigawa, San Francisco, California, Michael Kemmerer, Snohomish, Washington. And that's it. Those are the 50s. We see you 4999. We will not mention you for reasons of anonymity. Of course, that's the way we always do it here at the NOAA Jenna show. And we thank everybody for supporting us, in particular, our executive and associate.
executive producers is very much appreciated.
You too can support us with your treasure, your time,
your talent, go to no agenda donations.com.
We take Bitcoin, we take circle, stable coin.
We take anything you got for us.
Just think about what the show is to you.
Is it valuable?
What kind of value is that?
Turn that into numbers.
Send it back to us.
No agenda donations.
Oops, noagendidonation.com.
And here they are.
You heard some of them.
Baronette Baylor.
Happy birthday to his Human Resource Number 3. Anya, turn 7 of March 24th.
Sir Cain Break celebrates today.
Scott Matthewsitt.
Happy birthday to his wife, April 5th, name is John.
And Chris Knowles wishes his smoking hot wife, Alison Knowles, a very happy birthday.
And we say to say, happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
There we go.
Don't want to be into show.
And we're so happy to see her back on these lists.
Dame Tanya Wyman from New York City.
She ups her level on the peerage ladder.
She's now the Countess of New York City,
and you better call her that when you see here.
So good to hear from you again, Dame Tanya,
Countess of New York City.
We do have one dame for today.
That's Lindsay Carson, so I don't know how you are with your blades.
You still got the portable.
The little teeny one, yeah, it'll do it.
So Lindsay Carson step up here on the podium.
You're about to join that a very exclusive club of No Agenda Knights and Dames because of your support
and the best podcast of the universe, the amount of $1,000 or more.
I'm proud to pronounce the Kate B as Dame Lindsay of the House Hunters.
And for you, we have, well, hookers and blow, but certainly rent boys and chardonnay.
And by request, rosé and hot Cheetos.
What a combo that is.
please enjoy our beers and blunts.
We got some cowgirls and coffin barners,
gaseas and sake, bacca manila,
bung, it's a bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts,
ginger ale and gerbils,
breast milk and pablum,
and as always at the round table,
we got your mutton and you meet you,
you are brand new dame.
You go to know agenda rings.com.
Let us know what size ring you need.
Give us an address to send it.
We'll send it off to you accompanied with wax,
sticks of wax.
You can use that to seal your important correspondence.
and, of course, certificate of authenticity.
Noagenda rings.com, everybody else, if you want to support the show,
noagendadendidonations.com.
I missed a note on the previous episode, but we didn't receive.
The note was a $500 donation from Sir E-61 Black Sheep.
And he says,
Yo, Adam, the videos I've sent acknowledge the North Sea Nexus,
heading to Kuwait when the company can get me in.
Boots on the ground when I get there.
Ants and Rev. Al, then smoking hot wife.
I didn't see all of this.
Thanking God.
What?
It's like code.
Well, no, it's ants is, uh, that's, uh, that's, you know, that's, I got ants.
Oh, okay.
Oh, what is happening here?
Hold on a second.
Oh, let me see.
Ants got ants.
Okay, I can do this on the fly.
Uh, isn't it, what is that called?
JCD ants.
Ants.
Where's your ants?
There's your ants.
There is.
Ants.
What else does he want here?
He wants boogity, boogety, boogiety.
Okay, boogity.
We'll give you a boogiety.
I can do it.
Now, what's the rest of your note here?
Thanking God for all he's done.
Every day, I thank him for another day.
Then it's for my friends and the service members.
Mimi was actually better.
But John being back is a warm blanket.
Love you both.
John, get Jesus.
Hope to meet you both, Sir E61, Black Sheep.
And here we'll play a little bit of the ants.
And then we'll roll it out with a boogie.
Boogety, boogity for your wife.
I got ants.
I got ants.
And thank you again to everybody who supported us.
No Agenda Donations.com.
Meetup reports today, which is always sad to say.
But there is a meetup taking place in North Carolina at 6 o'clock today.
It's the Northern Wake, No Agenda,
counter North Sea Nexus Planning Committee meetup.
And that'll be at Saints and Scholars.
Go check them out.
They're always fun there in North Carolina.
And on Saturday, the Osaka Castle, Cherry, Blossom viewing, and amygdala shrinking meetup.
133 p.m. in Osaka, Japan.
I'm looking forward to a meetup from those guys and gals.
Coming up in the month of April, the 11th is going to be big.
Eagle, Idaho.
Are you going to make it to the Albany, California meetup, John?
You're going to make it?
I'm going to try.
You're going to try.
With your walker.
No, I'm not going to, I don't need, won't need the walk around.
Yeah, you do.
You don't want to fall.
No, Brennan next to me.
That's, you know, you take a roll.
It's not normal walker people.
You know, unless you see the picture that comic strip blogger did, it's, uh, it's, it's,
it's awkward in a public environment like that.
Yes, it is.
Couldn't do it.
Remember, ladies, we're looking.
Move out of the way.
I'm coming through.
Remember, ladies, we're looking for you to dress up as hot nurses for the
picks. Lafayette, Louisiana, also on the 11th, and the big Fredericksburg, Texas
meetup will be on the 11th, and I will be there, along with Tina the Keeper.
Charlotte, North Carolina on the 16th, Fort Wayne, Indiana on the 18th, Franklin, Tennessee,
the 18th, the 19th, Indianapolis, Indiana, Vancouver, British Columbia on the 19th,
Schaefeneg in the Netherlands of the 25th, Brighton, Michigan on the 26th, and April 30th,
Leipzig in Saxony, that would be in Deutschland. Hello, Deutschland.
This is just a few of them for the next few weeks.
You can go to no agenda meetups.com to find the entire list of everything that is going on with the meetups.
People who go there get connection that truly deliver protection.
The people you meet at the no agenda meetup will be your responders and your first responders in any kind of emergency.
Go to noagentametups.com.
If you can't find a meetup there, which is pretty easy to do, even easier to start one yourself.
Check it out.
Noagenda meetups.com.
You won't be.
Drink it all hell's lame.
You and everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
Now, we, before we get to John's fabulous tip of the day,
that's just fabulous tip of the day.
I got a couple of ISOs to go through.
I see you only have one.
I have four, so why don't I try to live?
My mine.
What's that?
Blame I won.
You're one?
I have an appointment with anywhere but here.
That's actually not bad.
It's not bad.
I have an appointment with anywhere but here.
Okay.
Here's what I have.
It's amazing to think that they're on top of this thing.
Call back ISO.
Everybody who loses gets a podcast.
Okay, maybe.
It was great.
Yeah, it's a classic.
And then, this is so good.
All right, I'll let you decide.
I think so good.
Oh, you like that one, huh?
This is so good.
All right.
Or that or the Trump.
Well, the Trump is kind of classic.
Everybody who loses gets a podcast.
I kind of like that.
I kind of like that one.
All right.
Go for it.
All right.
We'll go for that one.
In the meantime, stand back.
It's time for John's tip of the day.
Great advice for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
So you know when he had the tip about the honey?
Manuka.
Manauka.
Yeah.
Sure.
The one honey in the world that's got a composition deep within the honey that's somewhat different than all other honeies.
Well, it turns out, and I've probably known about this years ago, I probably wouldn't have had the heart attack.
It turns out that, Chris is going to dramatize that.
Yeah, right.
Keep going.
That there's an olive oil that has, that there's a one spot in the world that makes an olive oil.
whose composition includes a lot of polyphenols
that are healthy for their heart and anti-inflammatory
that are part and parcel of the oil itself.
And you can go all over the world.
And everybody should note that olive oil is not just from Italy or Greece or Spain.
Most South American countries make it,
and I always recommend trying it because you have different flavor profiles.
California has terrific olive oil, by the way.
And France has terrific olive oil.
But this health-oriented olive oil, which is also cheap because nobody knows about it.
And it comes from a kind of a lower income area is from Morocco.
So it's Morocco olive oil.
And the one I've been using is Atlas, which is available on Amazon for a liter for 24 bucks, rather medium priced, not expensive at all.
but Moroccan olive oil.
Hmm.
You can do a little research and you'll find out about it.
So is this, so I've heard, correct me if I'm wrong,
that you are indeed in the final completion stages of a cookbook.
Yeah.
And the family cookbook.
Oh, it's a family cookbook.
And I understand that you are folding the vinegar book into the family cookbook.
So I, and I understand that somebody in the family obviously tipped you off to humiliate me to get back to work.
And will you be including some olive oil tips in this family cookbook?
Oh, there's a whole chapter on olive oil, yeah.
And what is the, do we have a name for this cookbook yet?
The DeVorek family cookbook.
What, what?
No one can pronounce that.
They'll be like, I want that cookbook.
Okay, well, you come up with a good name and we're going to use.
Use it.
The family that cooks together stays together.
Well, there's some truth to that.
There is, everybody, your tip of the day.
Knowagenda fun.com.
Tip of the day.com.
Create a fides for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Burnettie.
Yes.
Cooking with dork.
Cooking with the dorks.
There's some other ideas.
Cooking with the dorks.
There you go.
Some good ideas coming through on the troll room as we speak.
Family tastes good together.
The gooder cooking book.
Okay.
Cooking in the morning with the Dvorax.
Yeah.
The Buzzkill cookbook Bible.
Hey, we got Planet Rage coming up next.
That's Darren and Larry.
And keep those ideas coming.
I kind of like that.
I like seeing those cookbook ideas.
and we will return on Sunday, on Easter Sunday, that's right, we work on the high holy days
because it's John's birthday too, and he has resurrected. He's back. We're happy to have him.
End of show mix is from the one and only Darren O'Neill and MVP with a whole bunch of jingles in yodling format.
We look forward to seeing...
Love the yodling one.
Yeah, the yodeling is good. Look forward to seeing y'all then.
Please remember us at noagendadonations.com coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill country where we're going to have a meetup in one week from Saturday.
In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern, I go again from the refinery.
Oh, I've lost the whole plot here.
My voice is gone, but I'm not. I'm John C. DeVorek.
Adios, Mofos.
He's back
JCD is back
Sure he had a heart attack
But JC
bumping it too
spew in the tips
Of the day for you
He's back
He's back
Sure he had a
JCDation
Or he might just kick your ass
Who we are all just grateful
JCD action
The little girl, yay says yeah
Loses gets a podcast
