No Agenda - 1866 - "Bug Bulb"

Episode Date: May 7, 2026

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I've been misgendered. Adam Curry. John C. DeVorek. It's Thursday, May 7th, 2026. This is your award-winning Gibbonation Media Assassination Episode 1866. This is no agenda. Completed. Broadcasting live from the hotel with a flaming logo at Stuple Airport in Amsterdam.
Starting point is 00:00:20 The Netherlands in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from the refinery row, where we're wondering, is that war over or what's going on? I'm John C. DeVorek. Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the morning. Yeah, you just don't sound yourself. Well, maybe it's the rig.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Maybe it's Linux. I don't know. I don't know. In the morning. Well, you're not even in the country. No. But that shouldn't make any difference. I can't,
Starting point is 00:00:46 I can't seem to get any high end out of you. And then all I get is you. That's the low end. You said it was missing. No, it's not. It's your voice. No. You've transformed.
Starting point is 00:00:57 Yeah, you've transformed. Yeah, you're trans. You sound. Yeah. You sound. trans. I don't know. He's like you sound... I'm trans now. That's good. You sound like your voice is an octave higher.
Starting point is 00:01:08 I've been misgendered. I think you're right. I've been misgendered. Yeah, here we are. Amsterdam, the Netherlands. It's been a rough couple of hours for me here. Ooh, now we have stories to tell. Well, it's not all that exciting other than we left the house at 11 a.m. yesterday.
Starting point is 00:01:30 to San Antonio. San Antonio to Atlanta went fine. And then we sat on the runway for a long time because of the storms in Atlanta. Which shortens the sleeping time on the aircraft. Because... Why don't you sleep while you're sitting on the runway? Well, you know, it's just...
Starting point is 00:01:51 Thanks. That didn't work. And, you know, so then everything's later. And then there was a lot of turbulence. And Tina, who normally doesn't normally she doesn't like turn she bopped right off she's like oh boom she's gone
Starting point is 00:02:06 I'm sitting there like I still feel the turbulence when I'm walking around so we got in much later than expected I didn't get as much sleep and I've had nothing but technical problems here today oh no yeah
Starting point is 00:02:22 and I tested the whole rig everything tested it out everything's fantastic and then the minute we got to go live the whole stream system all my credentials popped out. And this hotel two days ago.
Starting point is 00:02:36 Maybe Lennox is illegal in Holland. It will be. You know what's illegal in Amsterdam? Advertising meat. What? Yeah, you heard me. Oh, come on. Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:50 Yes. Advertising meat. So you can't, what about advertising a hamburger? No, no. You cannot advertise meat. You cannot advertise meat in Amsterdam. in just in Amsterdam or the whole country? No, Amsterdam.
Starting point is 00:03:04 Amsterdam is its own special, its own special policies. Yeah. You can't advertise. There's no advertising of meat products in Amsterdam. Wow. Yeah. And it's the climate change people.
Starting point is 00:03:18 Oh, my God. I got some climate change clips. Yeah. Well, first let me finish my report. So this, this hotel, we always stay at the airport hotel. They have a huge logo on the side of the hotel two days ago. The logo caught fire.
Starting point is 00:03:38 And they, on the outside of the building, and they evacuated all 280 people. So I guess we're kind of lucky that we didn't show up earlier. Yeah, I guess so. Yeah. And so I've literally been in the hotel room getting set, prepping, getting ready, fixing stuff, you know, the USB is disconnecting. It's just, it's one thing after another today. The Gremlins are in the machine. So I'm completely relying on you to drag us through the show.
Starting point is 00:04:09 And I can do it. And I want to remind everybody, this is a value for value production, which again, people seem to have forgotten. Which means near the end of the show. Yeah, the word, the trouble, hold on a second. People should know that, you have to go through a rigmarole, a lot of trouble. We keep doing this show when either one of us travels. I stopped traveling after COVID, but Adam still takes a trip or two.
Starting point is 00:04:38 And this is a pain in the ass, but we do it to, we do it. Yeah, we do it. We work on holidays too. Yeah, work on, I mean, I'm here to see my daughter. I'm here to, you know, to see her for a couple of days. Yeah, you could be seeing your daughter right now instead of doing this show. I could be doing a lot of things instead of doing this show. So we just ask you to support us if you get any value from it.
Starting point is 00:05:00 If this is of no value to you, then, okay, well, we'll figure something else out. I think it's the news cycle. What do you mean, the new cycle? I don't think the new cycle is attractive. Really? Oh, I think it's incredibly attractive. There's lots of fun things to talk about. Yes, but they're all minor.
Starting point is 00:05:20 They're not like big trends or anything that's going to change the world. No, I think you're wrong. No, I think you're wrong. What happened is we have too many big things. You know, it's like we barely got out of COVID, barely. You know, if you really think about it, people are still traumatized by that. That was a good one. That was a big one.
Starting point is 00:05:42 Then we've had Epstein files, but it's all unsatisfactory. You see, people, they're not getting any, they can't get no satisfaction. And so they're just mad about everything. And we're not the guys that are just cynical all the time. But we're not pumping it up. And saying everybody sucks. But let me start off with just a fun little 37 second clip, just to give everybody ideas.
Starting point is 00:06:09 Speaking of COVID. You know Questlove, Questlove. By the way, I want you to do some follow up on this not advertising meat. Okay. It's been going on for a while, but now it's official. So you know, Questlove? Questlove? No?
Starting point is 00:06:25 Yeah, I think he's, isn't he with, isn't he a Jimmy Kimball's band? Or maybe, No, I don't think so. Maybe Jimmy Fallon's band. Yeah. Fallon's band has got a name. Oh, he was a, someone's band.
Starting point is 00:06:41 He wasn't someone's band. He was one of those late night show bands. I think it could be, I think you might be thinking about other guys now off the British guy. No, no, no. No, no. I'm waiting for the troll room to tell me. Anyway, troll room.
Starting point is 00:06:58 Troll room is slow. Yeah, it was, what? Kiltow. No. Anyway, when you hear the guy, you'll recognize. I'm pretty sure he was, he was in one of those late night TV show bands. And so this guy is,
Starting point is 00:07:13 yeah, it was, Fowlands Band. See, I know I'm right. Fallon's Band. So if you're in Fallon's Band. Fallon's Band is the Roots. Yeah, Quest Love in the Roots. Exactly. Okay.
Starting point is 00:07:24 Thank you. So if you're in Fallon's band during COVID, what are you going to do? I don't know. What are you going to do? You're going to take the shot. Of course, you have to take the shot that's required. And all of your buddies are going to take the shot. They have to take the shot.
Starting point is 00:07:44 It was an edict. Listen to this. In the last year alone, and I've wondered, is there a pandemic happening that I'm not aware of? I'll say for me in the last eight months, I've lost 11 friends. Oh, yeah. I saw this. Oh, my God. Like, even the day that I found out DeAngelo had cancer,
Starting point is 00:08:11 DeAngelo was the six person in a 24-hour period that broke the news to me. And even then, it was like in humor because five other people had broke the news to me like earlier that day. I mean, this is bad. This is no good. Yeah, that's a lot of people. Yeah, 11 people that he knows. Holy crap. Yeah, that's a lot.
Starting point is 00:08:34 Yeah. So, you know, so people don't want to hear this. I don't want to hear that. Although, hold on, I know you got a three by three, but I might as well roll out this one while we're at it. The Food and Drug Administration has withdrawn the publication of studies that tracked the safety of the COVID-19 and shingles vaccines. A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services says the studies drew broad. broad conclusions that were not supported by the underlying data. Health officials say the COVID-19 vaccines and shingles vaccines are safe.
Starting point is 00:09:04 Health and Human Services Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., has expressed doubt about the safety and efficacy of several vaccines. Yes, exactly. Can you read the writing on the wall? My Lord. No, they can. In fact, it's embarrassing. And I will say this about that pulling those studies.
Starting point is 00:09:23 The pushback on that was, there they go. There's Kennedy doing this anti-vax thing. They're not paying any attention to the underlying reasons they did this, which was they drew conclusions that weren't valid conclusions to draw from the data. That's the reason they did it. And I see more anger about, oh, look at there's another example. This is just Kennedy's anti-vax thing. is known as being an anti-vexer, and this is proof.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Yeah. Well, let's go to the next one. Before we even do your three-by-three, do you have any... No, the three-by-three is about Iran. We can do today. No, no, no, we can do that in a minute. I want to do henta virus. You have a henta virus?
Starting point is 00:10:09 I may have a henta. Because I got, I'm loaded for bear on the hentor virus. Let me hit you with it. Let me hit you with a henta virus. Two cases of hanta virus have been formally confirmed after three people died in a suspected outbreak, on a cruise ship off the coast of West Africa. A British crew member requires urgent medical care and a passenger from the UK remains in a critical but stable condition.
Starting point is 00:10:33 The World Health Organization says it has identified a total of seven cases in the outbreak. Our correspondent, Pumsefilani, has more. What we've heard overnight from the cruise line owners, a company called Ocean Expeditions, is they've confirmed that they are currently working on plans to carry out a medical evacuation of two crew members who are still on board that NV Honduras
Starting point is 00:10:58 cruise ship off the shoreline of Cape Verde. Now this is because they've not been allowed to disembark the 149 passengers who are from various nationalities around the world. The local authorities there have expressed concern that they don't know
Starting point is 00:11:14 the full details of the disease and they're concerned what that would mean for the population. So they've so far I killed the clip accidentally. The point of this is that for whatever reason, Henta virus keeps coming up in our lives over and over and over again. Let me take you back to episode 1362, July 2021.
Starting point is 00:11:45 And then there's another weird report. this has cropped up many times, but it seems Orto-Hanta virus is cropping up here and there. The last time it was a big news story was in 2013, of all places Camp Curry in Yosemite. Yeah, Hanta would be places like Camp Curry. And it's mouth from mice, right? Yeah, it's mouse crap.
Starting point is 00:12:11 But if you read, if you read about it, Hanta virus single-stranded envelope negative sense RNA virus. RNA. So that already caught my eye. Like, oh, it's RNA might have something to do with it. If you look at the symptoms, man, it's very, very similar to COVID. Very, and it's, it's in your airways as well. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:38 So I don't know if that could be mistaken for it or God knows what. Yeah, Hansa's never had huge numbers. No. No. I don't know. No. So that was 2021. I didn't go back
Starting point is 00:12:49 to 2013, but this is just last year. Another health news, researchers with Virginia Tech are warning of a disease they say has pandemic potential. Pandemic potential? I like the alliteration.
Starting point is 00:13:08 Pandemic potential. It's too long, but it would have been a show title. What's that, John? Pandemic potential. Tonight, NBC News learning. Two U.S. flagships. Wait, what's going on? Did we reach what's happening here?
Starting point is 00:13:23 Stop. We hadn't heard of four years, but now all of us couldn't. Stop. Has pandemic? Oh my goodness. What's going on here? Double curry. Everything's out of control.
Starting point is 00:13:33 All right, here we go. Potential. Well, first of all, I mean, the real one would be bird flu, but it's probably measles. It's called hauntavirus. You may have heard about it recently. I should have guessed that one. Easy, easy, easy. It's called hauntavirus.
Starting point is 00:13:50 You may have heard about it recently. It's the affection that killed Gene Hackman's wife. And it also caused three deaths in California recently. The virus is commonly spread throughout rodent droppings and urine or saliva and can cause serious illness in humans. How can that be? How can that, does it transfer from human to human? How can it have pandemic potential? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:14:13 rat poop. You get it from rat or a mouse poop and saliva. I don't get this beyond me. I love how you're talking to Adam from 2025 while the clip is playing. Yeah, I'm talking. We'll get back here. That was great. That was great.
Starting point is 00:14:28 That was great. What do you mean grow up? The thing is, though, there's more than one kind of henta virus. This is the part that gets confusing. Now we're in today's world. There's lots of different hantavirus around the world. Most of it is in eastern China, where it's a different form. It's a hemorrhagic fever that's, you know, when you can have bleeding,
Starting point is 00:14:56 and it can cause kidney failure. But in the Americas, it's a different form. It's called HPS hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, where you can have sort of a cardiovascular collapse and a respiratory or pulmonary lung collapse. Unfortunately, in the Americas, it can be one of the strains is the Andean strain, and that can have a mortality between 25 and 50%. So it's the most dangerous and the most mortal of all of the Hanta viruses. Most of the Hanta virus cannot be transmitted through human-to-human content, but the Andean form can be. It's still rare, but there have been reported cases of human-to-human transmission.
Starting point is 00:15:37 In the Americas, it tends to be a respiratory virus that starts off with non-concessing. specific symptoms, fevers, gastrointestinal symptoms, but then very rapidly can affect the heart and lungs and cause a fatal type of pneumonia setup, or what we call ARDS, which stands for acute respiratory distress syndrome. Basically, the lungs can get filled up with fluid, and it's very severe. The most likely way of getting this, all forms of hauntavirus, is through close contact with rodent droppings, urine, you know, secretions, and it is not through human to human transmission. That's why the general population does not have to be concerned about getting this. This is definitely not the next pandemic. Oh, okay. All right. Well, that's disappointing.
Starting point is 00:16:23 Well, I have my cruise ship clip from NBC, which did a quick summary. It's not that great. Okay. Tonight, an urgent medical evacuation to take place at any moment. Three people suspected to have the high-risk haunt of virus on a cruise ship, now off the coast of Cape Verde in the Atlantic Ocean, expected to be transported to the Netherlands, using two air ambulance planes, according to the Cape Verde Ministry of Health and the ship's operator.
Starting point is 00:16:51 Already, three people who were aboard the ship have died. This, as new video, shows health workers in protective gear and supplies being delivered to the roughly 150 people on board, including 17 Americans. I will also show you what my remote. Jake Rosmarin is a passenger on the ship and in a new statement said that safety measures are in place, including social distancing and masking. After the medical evacuation, Spain now says the rest of the people aboard the ship will be allowed to disembark at the Canary Islands, where the ship is expected to arrive in the next several days. There, they will be examined and sent to their home countries.
Starting point is 00:17:31 It's very possible that you can be infected and not have any symptoms for weeks. Oh, here we go. Immunologists, Stephen Bradfew underscores the severity of the virus. If you get sick with the cardiopulmonary hauntavirus, on average, there is a 35% death rate. And that 35% is high when you compare it to other viruses. That's right. Influenza is far lower. COVID's around 1 to 2%.
Starting point is 00:17:57 The World Health Organization says at least some of the passengers may have contracted the virus through human-to-human contact. This is the part that I'm struggling with human to human. Yes, this is, they have the talking points. Human to human contact is one of them. And the one you caught earlier there in this clip, which was actually kind of cool, asymptomatic. Oh, yeah, of course. See, they ran the asymptomatic thing at us during COVID.
Starting point is 00:18:29 They sure did. Which is a key. It's a key to success. Asimptomatic spread. specifically. Yeah. So you could not have any symptoms whatsoever. You're not sneezing.
Starting point is 00:18:41 You're not coughing. Nothing. You're just walking around. And you're fine. You're in good shape. But you're spreading. You're like typhoid. Everybody's typhoid merry.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Listen, our trolls are so jaded. They're like, yeah, bring back Zika. We, where Zika? We want Zika. Zika was where it was at, man. Yeah. So those two Dutch people died. They died on the ship. Yeah, that's not. Yeah, that's not. Well, it's the cruise ships. The only people who I know who go on cruises are old and Andrew Horowitz. I don't understand why that guy is so big on cruises. Everything goes wrong.
Starting point is 00:19:24 Roger McGuin's another one. Well, but Roger McGuin goes on those really high-end, luxurious, like, you know, 150 rooms and he does his special show and, you know, up and down the night. He refuses to do a show. He says it's low. It's beneath him to do a show. He doesn't do a show. He does a lecture. He brings his guitar on for his lecture.
Starting point is 00:19:48 I know he does. Of course he does because he plays a guitar. If you go visit him at his house, he's playing the guitar. Can you imagine you're on a cruise ship, a high-end cruise ship with, you know, caviar. And there's a bird, an actual bird, Roger McGuyn, a bird. And then he just lectures you. No, no, no, no, I want my money back. No, of course.
Starting point is 00:20:10 We want him to play some songs. So his lecture, I'm sure is... Well, he lectures you, but he's... Sure, he'll play a song while he's legged, yeah. Yeah. You do that riff that nobody can do that. But that's different. Eight miles high riff he likes to show it off.
Starting point is 00:20:24 That's different than Horowitz, who likes going on this thing. Yeah, where people get henta virus, they get norovirus, they get all kinds of virus. I can't believe that he still does that. You know, and then the cruise ship gets stranded or it sinks or capsizes. It just says, you're just being a bigot according to these guys. I am a bigot, big time. I cannot believe the cruise. It doesn't have any appeal to me either. Anyway, so, so there you go. It's not the, it's not the new pandemic. When the M5M is saying that, I'm paying attention. No, it's definitely.
Starting point is 00:21:07 Well, they're hard up for, they're hard up. Yes, because. Asymptomatic, 35% death rate. Remember when COVID first showed up that had some ridiculous death rate? Yeah, it was the same numbers. It was similar numbers like that. It was, although I got to, what? And it was asymptomatic.
Starting point is 00:21:25 And if you touch something, you touch a bag of potato chips and somebody else touches the chips, don't catch it. Here's America's Dr. Celine Gowder. Dr. Gowder, thank you very much for being. here. We're in a post-COVID world. Post-COVID world, everybody. That means pay attention. We've got news for you that just might scare you. People are scared.
Starting point is 00:21:44 They hear about an outbreak and they're worried. I know you say this is not COVID. Explain to me why. So this is not COVID. The Andes... No, it's not COVID, but... Virus, which a kind of hauntavirus, requires close, prolonged contact between two people in order to have transmission.
Starting point is 00:22:00 When we've seen this happen in the past, it's been in the context of spouses, that kind of close contact. What makes it really hard to contain is the fact that it's on the ship and the timeline. So you have this long incubation period. You also have a period of time when people can be infectious before they show symptoms. So we have 140 people on this boat. 17 of them are Americans. How do you deal with that population safely? Could they in theory come home safely? Yes. The risk of spreading this on a flight is very low. They would need to be near a hospital that has a heart-lung bypass machine,
Starting point is 00:22:36 because that's what you need when you get really sick with ponta virus. But it is something that we can anticipate that some countries won't want to accept them, right? And this goes back to the Ebola days, 2014, 2015. Ebola days. These passengers may well need to quarantine on the ship. That out-of-office message just got a little longer. Dr. Gounter, thank you. Remember, she's the doctor whose husband dropped dead.
Starting point is 00:23:05 But from the shot. Come on. Yeah, he was a reporter at the, wasn't he at the Olympic Games or the World Cup soccer? Oh, right, the Olympic guy. Yeah. Yeah, I kind of like the Ebola days. Ebola days.
Starting point is 00:23:21 The Ebola days. Yeah, it was good times. Ebola days. Yeah, I remember that good old days. Remember that guy got off the plane and just, we were all waiting for him. We were all watching live on TV. The guy with Ebola.
Starting point is 00:23:34 Yeah, the guy just got off the plane and went home. He got off the plane, got into the ambulance, out of the ambulance, walked in, like, here I am, Ebola guy. Yeah. And there was also some some woman or something who just jumped on her bicycle and took off into the woods. I guess I remember that.
Starting point is 00:23:51 Yeah. So I think, but you see, this is the problem. Is we've had so much news has just jacked us all the way up that now we're just numb to it. We're just numb. Like, whatever. You know, Ebola,
Starting point is 00:24:05 Zika, Panta, Yeah, okay, war. Swine flu. Swine flu. That's got to come back. Let's do your three by three. And now it's time for three by three. It's an experiment by JCD.
Starting point is 00:24:23 Comparing stories from ABC, CBS and NBC. The never-ending three-by-three. That's right, three-by-three. John's got the big headlines from the big three. Yeah, this is about the ceasefire in Iran. And we're going to start off with, let's start off with ABC. Tonight, even as Iran fires missiles and drones at American Navy ships and our ally, the United Arab Emirates, the Trump administration insists the ceasefire is not over.
Starting point is 00:24:52 But today, a top Iranian official insisting, quote, we have not even begun yet, adding, we know full well that the continuation of the status quo is intolerable for America. Here at home, the average price of a gallon of gas, now topping $4.00. 50 cents. The highest it's been in four years. The price of beef soaring more than 15% over the past year. Yesterday, the administration launched an effort to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic. But in the past 48 hours, only two commercial ships have crossed. More than 1,500 stacked up outside. And late tonight, the president abruptly announcing he was pausing the U.S. effort. It came after Iran opened fire on some commercial vessels, including
Starting point is 00:25:37 American Navy ships, which fired back. Earlier Secretary of State Marco Rubio, emphasizing that didn't mean the U.S. had resumed attacks on Iran. This is a defensive operation. And what that means is very simple. There's no shooting unless we're shot at first. We're not attacking them. We are only responding if attacked first.
Starting point is 00:25:58 This is a defensive operation. Rubio then taking it a step further, declaring that Operation Epic Fury itself is over. This, though President Trump's goal, in starting the war to eliminate Iran's nuclear program remains out of reach. Ten weeks in, are we any closer to getting rid of Iran's nuclear material? Yeah, but look, here's the way to think about Iran. So their ability to build a shield behind which they could hide their nuclear program
Starting point is 00:26:23 was wiped out. That's a very substantial achievement, and that was the purpose of this operation from day one. You have to get their nuclear material in order for this war to end? Well, that's one of the topics that needs to be discussed. I don't know about, I think you're linking it. The operation is over. Epic Fury is the president notified Congress. We're done with that stage.
Starting point is 00:26:40 I love, I love this. It's over, man. What are you talking about 60 days, 30 days? It's over. The thing is over. It's a ceasefire. We reset. We're back to it.
Starting point is 00:26:48 We're basically, we're in March. Okay. We're in March now. There's no war. It's all good. All right. So that was ABC. Who's next on deck?
Starting point is 00:26:58 Well, let's go to NBC. Tonight, NBC News, learning two U.S. flag ships that passed through the Strait of Hormuz had U.S. military security teams on board, two U.S. officials say, part of President Trump's new Project Freedom meant to protect commercial vessels from Iranian attack. Iran still targeted both ships with missiles, drones, and armed small boats, but the U.S. military intercepted the attacks and blew up the boats. I call it a skirmish because Iran has no chance. Iran today, once again,
Starting point is 00:27:32 targeting the United Arab Emirates after this strike yesterday. Today, the day, the United Arab Emirates, the UAE saying it shot down more Iranian drones and missiles across the country. They're bombing commercial tankers. It's just outrageous. With Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying President Trump's new effort to open the Strait of Hormuz by protecting ships from Iranian attacks was a critical defensive step. There is no international law that allows you to say, I'm going to put mines in an international body of water and I'm going to blow up ships that don't listen to us and try to go through. That's what Iran is doing.
Starting point is 00:28:04 This is a criminal act, and someone needs to do something about it. That bottleneck of oil tankers continuing to drive gas prices higher, now reaching $4.48 on average in the U.S. This NBC News analysis shows the prices highest on the West Coast and across the Rust Belt. But Rubio defending the effort, he says, keeps the Iranian regime from getting a nuclear weapon. If Iran had a nuclear weapon, and they decided to close the straits and make our gas prices like $9 a gallon or $8,000, dollars a gallon, we wouldn't be able to do anything about it because they have a nuclear weapon. And just moments
Starting point is 00:28:38 ago, President Trump posting that at the request of Pakistan and others, and because progress is being made in talks, he says, they will pause Project Freedom, which protects those commercial ships in the strait. All I can think of when I hear Project Freedom is...
Starting point is 00:28:53 Project Freedom! Okay. You know, Rubio should have said $14 a gallon. It's not gonna, it's all gonna come down. It's, I was below 100. The one thing is he doesn't exaggerate well. It's below $100 today. Yeah, it dropped like a rock because Trump came out and said, he said,
Starting point is 00:29:17 we're going to get the nuclear, they're going to drop the nuke program. We're going to get the product that's buried under the ground. I don't know how they're going to do that, by the way, says it's buried under the ground. But then he's going to get it. And he made all these assertions, but he says, but if that doesn't work out, we're going to bomb them again. I mean, this is ridiculous. It's fantastic. What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:29:41 Yeah, I know. You enjoy it. We have nothing but time on our side. And here's what I keep hearing. There are hundreds of empty tankers on the way to America. Is this actually true? I don't know. We only have so much.
Starting point is 00:29:56 I see no evidence. I see no evidence of this. I keep looking at Galveston. Like, you know, where are these tankers? Yeah, it could be bull crap. I think it may be. Let's listen to your CBS version. And CBS, of course, I say for last all the time now,
Starting point is 00:30:13 because since it's been taken over by Barry Weiss, but the CIA still runs it. Come on. To the war with Iran now, the ceasefire is still officially holding, despite attacks over the past 24 hours, and despite still very limited movement through the Strait of Hormuz.
Starting point is 00:30:29 Secretary of State Marco Rubio said today, the offensive stage of the war is over, but the U.S. military is now focused on defense in the form of breaking Iran's blockade and its hold on the global economy. We have established a powerful red, white, and blue dome over the street. The Pentagon says 15,000 American service members are involved in Project Freedom, which is from two American-flagged commercial vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz safely. American destroyers are on station supported by hundreds of fighter jets, helicopters,
Starting point is 00:31:02 drones, and surveillance aircraft. More than 1,500 ships are thought to remain stranded. The Iranian regime claims it still controls the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's foreign minister referred to Project Freedom today as Project Deadlock. This is really a classic question of chicken here and who will blink first. Grant Rumley is a former Middle East advisor at the Pentagon. Do you think that the U.S. military has effectively ended the de facto Iranian bloc? of the Strait of Hormuz?
Starting point is 00:31:36 No, I don't think so. You know, the U.S. can block nine out of ten shots, but if one of those Iranian vessels gets through and scores a hit, it has a large and disproportionate symbolic effect. The U.S. says Iran has attempted to disrupt its operation in the Strait of Hormuz with cruise missiles, drones, and boats. But President Trump and other American officials said today that the ceasefire with Iran is still holding. Yeah, and there's all, there's so much.
Starting point is 00:32:04 much information of all sorts. And by the way, someone just put a map into the troll room. There does seem to be a lot of ships coming to our coastline here. But there's... You're sure that... Yeah. There's a lot of ships.
Starting point is 00:32:20 You have no idea. Nobody knows. Breaking news. Nobody knows nothing. And then, you know, this projectiles. Oh, it was struck by projectiles according to the UK Maritime Observatory. these guys sit on Twitter and they watch for someone to post something on Twitter
Starting point is 00:32:39 and like, oh, oh, we got a report. And in the news just in, a tanker has reportedly been struck by projectiles. Projectiles. What is that? It could be bananas. It could be hand grenades. This makes no sense to me. Projectiles. In the Strait of Hormuz, the vessel was targeted 145 kilometers north of the city of Fajaria
Starting point is 00:33:01 in the United Arab Emirates. according to the UK Maritime Trade Operations Agency. It is a second vessel to be hit today. The crew has been reported safe. And this came either shortly after or shortly before Donald Trump announced on truth social. That he would be escorting or the US would be starting to escort ships through there tonight. Our time.
Starting point is 00:33:25 Okay. So we have that report about projectiles. And then Ms. Now has this report. So, David, speaking of reporting, I'm going to let you sort through this one for all of us. Barack Reveed, of course, with Axis, is saying that a senior U.S. official denied that a U.S. ship has been hit by Iranian missiles.
Starting point is 00:33:47 It is obviously, we're in the early moments of this. So I certainly am not placing any sort of moral equivalency between government of Iran and the U.S. government, I will simply say we have two eyewitnesses saying that the two ships were in fact hit according to Al Jazeera. And we have one senior official right now on background telling Axi... Background means don't mention my name. ...that no U.S. ship was hit. So hard to say, and we will need to wait at least a few hours.
Starting point is 00:34:30 before we get actionable information out of that area. Okay, so no one knows anything. And the press, here's their questions. For Secretary Higseth, are there still concerns about minds in the street? And can you kind of clarify these reports of kamikaze dolphins that we've heard about? What? I've heard the kamikaze dolphin thing. It's like sharks with laser beams, right?
Starting point is 00:34:54 The threshold of restarting is a political decision above my pay grade. What I'll say is it's low harassing fire right now. It feels like Iran is grasping its draws to try to do something across the southern flank. To your question, David, their command and control structure remains very fractured, and I think they're struggling to maintain control down echelon at the edge, but it's still pretty low-level kinetics at this point in time. And I can't confirm or deny whether we have kamikaze dolphins, but I can confirm they don't. You know, it's like, what happened to the mines?
Starting point is 00:35:32 There were, oh, mines, they've mined it all. We have to close it up because of the mines. Well, how come no mines blew up the Mersk shipped that we escorted on the way out? There's no mines. This has been another hoax. This whole thing. Here's the CEO of Maersk, Maersk, saying, you know, we worked it all out and we left with the U.S. Navy. In this case here, we were approached by the U.S. government.
Starting point is 00:35:58 and the US Navy specifically saying that they wanted to take some ships out. We went through intense preparation together with them, looked at all the aspects of the mission and whether we could stand in for the safety of the crew if we were sending the ship along in that operation. Our assessment was that the US Navy had made an extremely thorough plan and that we felt comfortable. We could get the ship through without risk.
Starting point is 00:36:28 And then we conducted the operation here earlier in the week, and we're very pleased to see that everybody got safely on the other side without any incident. So a very well-executed mission by the U.S. military, and thank God for that, because then it means that the ship is free, and the crew now can get back to doing the work that they want to do and are supposed to do rather than be stuck in the Gulf.
Starting point is 00:36:52 Yeah. So where were the mines? Did all of a sudden we know where the mines are, or did our kamikaze dolphins figure that out? When will the media learn that this is all just bull crap? It really all is. This is an economic game. This is Sal Mercagliano.
Starting point is 00:37:13 What's going on with shipping? He explains a little bit of how this works. Now, this has led to meetings in London with what's called the Joint War Committee. Now, I'll have a link below for this. The Joint War Committee is made up of representatives of Lloyds, the big insurer house, and other underwriters who determined basically where insurance goes. If you look right now, the rate to go through the Persian Gulf, through the Strait of Hormuz was roughly about 0.15 to 0.25% of value to go through the straight. That's what you were paying above and beyond, and that was good for seven days. Well, what we've seen happen is the insurers canceled this. So you get stories like this from
Starting point is 00:37:59 Jonathan Sal's over at Reuters. London Marine insurers are expanding the Gulf high risk zone as the mid-east conflict escalates. So that joint war committee that met on Monday has determined that they're adding high-risk areas around Bahrain, Djibouti, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar. They're expanding out the danger area. Now, that danger area is going to require more money. The insurance rate is going to jump from 0.15, 0.25% to anywhere from 1 to 3%. 3% is going to be for U.S., U.S., U.S., U.S., and Israeli vessels, because they are viewed to be high targets. Not just U.S. U.S. U.K. is really flagged, but U.S. U.K., is rarely owned. And that is key. Yeah, that's all that this is. The Joint War Committee, a bunch of ex-spooks in the U.K.,
Starting point is 00:38:46 they go to Lloyds and say, wow, we think it's pretty dangerous over there. Why? Well, we read on Twitter that the UK maritime observers, they said that, you know, there were projectiles. Oh, okay, we better jack up those rates. The straight is closed again. It's all, it's all a scam. It's been this way for a hundred years. There's nothing to do with mines or dolphins or. I like the dolphins, though.
Starting point is 00:39:13 Yeah. Well, the idea is great. Of course, of course. So the, the dolphins aren't stupid. No, a dolphin. I don't think there's such. You can't have a kamikaze dolphin. They don't want to die.
Starting point is 00:39:24 I'm with you. I think after the first one blew up, I think the rest of it would get the idea. Hey, this is not a good thing. We're not going to do this. Yeah, you got some clips from NPR about the U.S. combat operations. U.S. combat operations are over. Yeah, didn't you know that? There's no more war.
Starting point is 00:39:43 We've heard the president say the war is over. Nearly over. We'll be over in two weeks several times now. Is it actually over this time? Yes. Yeah, I mean, we really don't know. I mean, Rubio says the focus now is on negotiations and that the U.S. is only going to be involved in defensive operations. And what that means is very simple. There's no shooting unless we're shot at first. Okay, we're not attacking them. But if they're attacking us or they're attacking a ship, you need to respond to that.
Starting point is 00:40:10 But to your point, I mean, we also heard earlier in the day Trump expressing frustration that Iran's leaders had yet to capitulate after two months of U.S. military and economic pressure. They should wave the white flag. The white flag of surrender. In hockey, they say, uh, uncle, right? You know, it just shows how things just for changing. Okay. Wait a minute. Wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Do they say that in hockey or is that? I don't know this. That's at the school yard. Isn't that where you're supposed to? And where does it? Yeah, it's in the school year, not in hockey. Where does that even come from, say uncle? Flag of surrender.
Starting point is 00:40:47 In hockey, they say, uh, uncle. right? You know, it just shows how things just are changing all the time. Yeah. Last night, Trump also touted what he called progress towards an agreement with Iran. Has there actually been progress? Yeah, it's interesting because Trump's words were very different than some of the messaging being delivered by Rubio, who told us yesterday that the two sides were still trying to figure out what the specific issues each side were willing to negotiate about. That's the object of this diplomacy, is to come up with some level of understanding about what are the topics that they've agreed to negotiate on. We don't have to have the actual agreement written out, and one day this is
Starting point is 00:41:24 highly complex and highly technical. But we have to have a diplomatic solution that is very clear about the topics that they are willing to negotiate on and the extent and the concessions they're willing to make at the front end in order to make those talks worthwhile. I mean, Leila, that makes it sound like they're very early in the process, which again is very different than the, you know, great progress that Trump is portrayed. You know, I thought they were down to a one pager. They went from 14 points, to a one pager, which may be the same thing, I don't know. I don't know. They just say these things. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:41:58 It should all be, maybe we should just ignore the whole topic. No, no, no, you can't. Because it's a part two. It's affecting everybody with gasoline prices. That's what we share of. Yeah, well, here in California, it's $7.11. Yeah, well, that's your own fault because all the oil companies left because of, you know, just horrible California.
Starting point is 00:42:21 And you've got three, four dollars worth of taxes on top of that. So don't come crying to me, Kami-Fornia. I mean, and the big issue, right, is still the Strait of Hormuz. More than a hundred ships a day used to travel through that waterway before the war. And it's only since the U.S. and Israel started this war that Iran took control of the street. So if combat operations are over, as we heard from Rubio, what... Again, Iran, Iran. took control of the strait. What does that mean? Do they have a line of ships that are blocking everyone
Starting point is 00:42:54 from going in or out? No, what they did was they said, look, we're sitting here on the straits of her moves. We got property right here, and here's where the straits are. We're going to shell anything that tries to come through. But they didn't. They've been doing it all along. What do mean they didn't we just took a they sent drones they send missiles they send projectiles you sent so yourself all projectile we just took a ship out
Starting point is 00:43:26 where was the boom boom boom from that none of it they were there was their break you you believe the media lunch break you are lunch break yeah I mean that was Rubio's big push and he said under no circumstances can the US allow
Starting point is 00:43:42 Iran to normalize the idea that they can control the waterway but he also stopped short of saying what action would take place. Now the Secretary of State briefed the press on this latest development. Is that unusual? Well, I mean, the administration really came across the board. No, not for the future president. Yesterday with a stepped up message about the war. Defense Secretary Pete Hagseth, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Dan Kane, brief reporters. Trump also took questions. And it just comes at such a big moment in the conflict as Americans continue to feel kind of the economic pinch of all this. And Rubio said that Iran needed.
Starting point is 00:44:16 to make a sensible choice that leads them to reconstruction and prosperity. The alternative is growing isolation, economic collapse, and ultimately total defeat. I know what the right choice is for Iran. I hope that the people over there making decisions will make the right one. Yeah, I mean, the message boils down to a mix of de-escalation combined with this kind of tough talk, and it can be confusing at times. Oh, okay, NPR. All right.
Starting point is 00:44:41 So this brings us to the War Powers Act, which I find fascinating because I hadn't really ever looked into it specifically because it kind of never came up. I think maybe, not even under Bush, because that was different. You know, it was, the twin towers coming down was different. But this Twin Towers Act, this war powers act where you're supposed to have 60 days and then you can extend another 30 days. This is a very interesting constitutional issue, which goes back a long time in our history. And there's a lot of misstance. understanding about it, even in the hallowed halls of Congress.
Starting point is 00:45:20 Well, I do want to start with the Iran war. We're approaching tomorrow's 60-day deadline for the president to come to Congress set by the War Powers Act. House Speaker Mike Johnson was pressed on this deadline by my colleague Ryan Nobles. I want you to play so I want to play for you a little bit of what he had to say and get
Starting point is 00:45:36 your reaction. It's time for Congress to weigh in on the war in Iran, especially now that we're past the 60-day threshold. I don't think we have any active kinetic military bombing, firing, anything like that right now. We're trying to broker a piece, and it would be, I would be very reluctant to get in front of the administration
Starting point is 00:45:54 in the midst of these very sensitive negotiations. So we'll have to see how that plays out. But the Constitution specifically states 60 days. What? But the President is called it a war. The Constitutes, the Constit. The Constit. Well, this is, this is why I dove into this.
Starting point is 00:46:10 Listen to this. Not a war right now. I'm saying that we do not have a kinetic military action at the moment. Now, as President Trump has said, this is a war, but what do you make of Speaker Johnson saying that the United States is not at war? Well, it's a dodge from Speaker Johnson, and, you know, after the 60-day mark, we begin 30 days in which the law is very clear. The president has to withdraw U.S. forces absent a congressional authorization. being in the region not engaged actively in kinetic force or kinetic action isn't what the law says. After 60 days, he has 30 days to withdraw.
Starting point is 00:46:53 So absent congressional action, the law says the president has to bring those troops home. So I just, when I heard that like, oh, it's in the Constitution. I'm like, okay, let me go check my Constitution. Well, you know, that's not right. I don't think so. So now we go back to Rubio. The White House believed that these votes coming up in Congress, or a move point then?
Starting point is 00:47:13 Look, guys, I love talking about this topic. He's about the War Powers Act. Okay, I love it. I was hoping somebody would ask. All right, hold on, hold on. No, no, no, you don't let me answer. I got to answer the question. Okay, and I love it.
Starting point is 00:47:23 I'll tell you why I love it. Because even as a senator, I said something. The War Powers Act is unconstitutional. 100%. Now, this is not the position of me. It's not the position of the President of the United States now. This is the position of every single president that has occupied this position
Starting point is 00:47:37 since the day that law passed. It's completely unconstitutional. Now, we comply with it in terms of like notification because we want to preserve good relations with Congress, right? And we do that. But even as a senator, I would say, that the War Powers Act is 100% unconstitutional. And look, I know some of you, whatever you want to say, but this is not this president's position. That has been the position of every single presidential administration since the day that law passes. An infringement on the president's constitutional powers. We don't acknowledge the law
Starting point is 00:48:04 as constitutional. Nonetheless, we comply with elements of it for purposes of maintaining, you know, good relations with Congress, and we want them to be involved, and we want them to be informed. I have gone on Capitol Hill, I don't know, four times this year for all senators and all House members and Intel Committee and gang of eight. We want them to be involved in this, but I want to be clear on the point of the War Powers Act. It's unconstitutional. And every president and every administration has taken that position. Okay, so now I'm interested. We've got people in Congress saying, who it's into Constitution.
Starting point is 00:48:34 And then we have Rubio saying that War Powers Act is unconstitutional. so I had to dig and I dug so deep that I wound up with the great one, which was... Mark Levin. I did. He had Professor John Yu on the show, and when you learn about the War Powers Act and its history, it's actually educational. Welcome back, America. We're here with Professor John Yu, who's probably, from my perspective, the expert on the War Powers Act. He's been writing about it for 30 years.
Starting point is 00:49:05 You can go to all these journals and law reviews, and he's been... and duking it out with other professors. You know, John Ew, it's amazing. I watch Bernie Sanders. He immediately gets up and says, but Donald Trump there is unconstitutional. You got an AOC, who, of course, we always turn to
Starting point is 00:49:22 when we want some constitutional expertise. She said the president needs to be impeached. Now, these are two... That's a funny line. Radical Marxists who really are not inclined to like the Constitution, nor like our military. What do you say to them about
Starting point is 00:49:37 impeach the President over the War Powers Act? Is the War Powers Act constitutional? Let's start right there. I agree with you, Mark. I don't think it is. The Constitution sets out the war powers. Congress can't use a law to rewrite the Constitution. And the Constitution says the President is the chief executive of the United States,
Starting point is 00:49:58 and he is the commander-in-chief. The founders understood those phrases to mean that the President has the primary responsibility to protect our national security. Alexander Hamilton in the federal's paper said, Energy in the executive is a definition of good government because he was explaining why are these clauses in the Constitution. And he said it's necessary to protect the communities, our community, from attack.
Starting point is 00:50:23 That doesn't mean Congress has no power. Congress has a power to provide funds or to cut them off. That's how Congress ended the Vietnam War. That's how Congress ended the Mexican-American War of 1848. And so when you go back, to the days of Madison, and then later the War Powers Act, it was phrased differently initially, and they changed that specifically so Congress would not have this power they think they have.
Starting point is 00:50:51 It's a biggest state. Right. In fact, I think he took a lot of guts to play, Mark Levin's stuff, but he did a lecture once and explaining how Madison had it so that Congress, in the Constitution it says Congress can de facto, declare war. Yes. But the original, the original guys wanted to say
Starting point is 00:51:13 Congress can make war. Yes, here's the clip about it. And by changing it from make to declare, the president can make war. And if they want to declare it, that's just, it, dimin,
Starting point is 00:51:23 it, it, it shrunk the power. I mean, to say you declare war doesn't mean that much. No. If you can't make war.
Starting point is 00:51:31 Exactly. It's just you declare it. And it's only been done. The last time it was done was in World War II. Here's, here's you. Here's you. explaining that exact switch? The biggest mistake, as you say, the war powers resolution is that
Starting point is 00:51:43 it orders the president to pull out troops and end fighting after an arbitrary 30 days or maybe 60 days. And that means that Congress is actually interfering in the way the military is conducting combat operations, which is the president's powers commander chief. And as you say, Mark, when the Constitution was first introduced in the Philadelphia Convention, the Constitution originally had said Congress has the power to make war. And that was changed to declare war because people thought that gave Congress too much authority. And I'd even point you to something else, Madison said. In the Virginia ratifying convention, which was the key convention to approve the Constitution, Patrick Henry actually
Starting point is 00:52:23 got up and said, he might have been the Bernie Sanders or AOC of his day. And he said, I'm worried about the president going off of military ventures. How are you going to stop him? James Madison doesn't get up and say the declare war clause will stop the president. Instead, He says Congress will have to cut off funds because of the power of the purse is the ultimate check of the people on the executive branch. Exactly. That's, and how come Congress, why don't they do that? Why don't they say, we're not going to fund the war?
Starting point is 00:52:55 Why not? What you just showed in your reporting in that clip, unfortunately, is that Democrats are playing politics with the Constitution and engaging in political posturing why we have men and women in the field. The politics are apparent because, as you just pointed out, you can look at President Obama in 2011. You could look at President Biden strikes on the Houthis. The Democrats only think that the Constitution demands Congress's authorization for war when Republicans are president. When Democrats are president, these same people who are in the Congress at those times didn't raise a doubt, didn't draw anything into question.
Starting point is 00:53:33 And I have to say, President Trump put Congress on notice even more so than. any of these past Democratic presidents. Not only did he move all these forces into the region over time, but he attacked Iran just last June. If members of Congress wanted to stop the war in Iran, they had plenty of time to use the funding power, which is their ultimate power over war, between June and now. And let's just say they know how to use the funding power when they want. even when they pass a $900 billion spending bill for the Defense Department, they at the same time closed down the Department of Homeland Security because Democrats are upset about the use of the Border Patrol in Minneapolis.
Starting point is 00:54:15 So they know how to use the funding power they want to. They just don't want to because they want to engage instead in political posturing against a Republican president. I think that's part of it. I also think they're all in the bag for the military industrial complex. Sure, they have to be. It turns out somebody to do some research. There is one military industrial complex contractor in, except for maybe one or two, every single congressional district. And they're all little, sometimes little contractors, but they're always providing a lot of jobs.
Starting point is 00:54:47 The whole place has been co-opted by the military industrial complex. That's where we, that's our real source of GDP. Yes. I'm sorry. Israel, APEC. No. It's these guys. Yeah, it's what you do.
Starting point is 00:55:03 Because. And they do it. You know, they've done a hell of a job. Every single state in the union has some kind of military contractor. So there's not going to be a single representative or senator standing up and saying, whoa, we should pull the plug on that. No. No.
Starting point is 00:55:21 And sorry to let everyone. Not to want to get reelected. No, sorry to let everybody down. But we are a war nation. It's what we do. We're good at it. We are good at it. Only now we're doing it for us instead of for Britain and Europe.
Starting point is 00:55:38 And, you know, where's that clip? So, you know, there's been all kinds of issues with Germany because Mr. Peepers thought he'd be acute and say Trump has no exit strategy. I had a bunch of clips on that for the last show. Yeah, I don't have them here. But so he's trying to get back in graces. and good graces, and said, oh, we'll help out. We've got something for you.
Starting point is 00:56:06 Sent off with a fanfare in front of a crowd of curious onlookers. Fulder set sail from the port city of Kiel on Germany's Baltic Sea Coast on Monday. The German minesweeper and its crew of up to 45 sailors are now heading to the Mediterranean and not to the Strait of Hormuz, unless certain conditions are met, outlined by Germany's defense minister. We are moving it in advance to the Mediterranean, making all the preparations we can. So in the event of a ceasefire, a lasting truce or a framework under international law, we can obtain a mandate from the Bundestag and as soon as that's in place continue to operate.
Starting point is 00:56:47 Fowlder will be at sea for about two weeks. Germany has said the ship could be deployed to help clear underwater mines from the Strait of Hormuz in order to secure shipping routes, which have been severely disrupted amid the U.S.-Israel war with Iran. German Chancellor Friedrichsmerz has underlined that Berlin remains far away from such a decision. 20% of global oil and gas passes through the Strait of Hormuz. Around 2,000 ships have been stuck since the war began at the end of February. So the idea is once the war is over,
Starting point is 00:57:20 then the Germans send their minesweeper to go find mines that don't exist. All they're going to find is a bunch of kamikaze dolphin. for the troll room. When I say, yes, we are doing war for us. Yes, we're doing war for us. We have always fought wars for Europe and for Britain, except for Vietnam War, and that was a really bad one. And so what has happened? In that case, that we were suckered by the French, we kind of fought that war for the French. Thank you. So when I say we're fighting it for us, we're fighting it because we have not gotten any of the benefit of what's been going on, particularly in that region with oil.
Starting point is 00:58:02 None of it. We got screwed over and over and over again. And so now we have our own oil and screw Europe. Speaking of Roger McGuin, there's a time for war, there's a time for peace. There's a time for love. There's a time for hate. It's just a fact of life.
Starting point is 00:58:22 You're all dreamers. dreamers. And how bad is this war? It's not bad. That sounds, I know it sounds cavalier, but considering the benefit we're getting and finally we're getting because everything is changing for America. It's unbelievable how people can't see this. And maybe Trump will pull it off. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. And you know what? If you're talking about the New World Order and the they of the world, all you have to do is look at what's happening with the banking sector.
Starting point is 00:59:03 Look at what's happening with the Federal Reserve. You know, I had to look into that as well because I wasn't convinced that the chair of the Federal Reserve is the only person who determines the rates. And it turns out he's not. And this is what's happening here with, Chairman Powell saying, oh, okay, you can vote another guy in, but I'm staying on board so he can tip the scales and they have more votes to do whatever. The banks want. It's banks.
Starting point is 00:59:33 It's banks, the Federal Reserve. It's not government. It's banks. Here's Tim Scott. I think he's on the finance committee. You are also, as most people know, the chairman of the banking committee, he played a key role in moving Kevin Warsh as committee to the full. Senate, he'll be, I assume, on a party line vote at least, confirmed his pet chair.
Starting point is 00:59:54 Yep. Very soon. Jerome Powell, the man he's replacing, much to the chagrin of Mr. Trump, is staying on. What do you think about that? Staying on as Fed Governor. It is in the law that he can do it. Yeah, so he can say to the end of 2028 or maybe middle of 2020, January 31st, 2028 is when he would have to get off.
Starting point is 01:00:17 The truth of the matter is he's breaking 75. years of precedent. Every time you get a new chairman, the former chairman leaves, that's good news. Because what you don't want are these philosophies in conflict. And I think Jay Powell is making a significant mistake.
Starting point is 01:00:34 Significant decision, but really bad one. I think it's for the country and for the Fed, it would be best if he left. Right, because the Fed, as you know, the chairman doesn't have judo or lateral control, right? Just for people that don't know this, he has to rule by some sort of consensus.
Starting point is 01:00:49 Exactly. And he would be there. So how do you get rid of him? Prayer. Lord. We need some prayer on this issue. Honestly, I think it's going to be his decision. All signs point to his departure before 28.
Starting point is 01:01:07 But I do think he's maybe just poking the president in the eye a little bit. I don't think so. I think it fully intends to stay on. And here's how the actual interest rate decisions are made on the FMOC. Fed governor is appointed to 14 years, and once they are in that seat, they are extraordinarily difficult to remove by design, both to keep the Fed independent from political pressure and to stop governors from bowing to whoever happens to be in the White House in that decade. And it is actually the governorship, not the chairmanship, that carries most of the real power. Each governor gets a vote on the Federal Open Market Committee, which is the committee that actually sets interest rates. This committee is made up of seven governors from the Fed in Washington, of which one is the chairman, as well as,
Starting point is 01:01:50 representatives from five out of the 12 regional Federal Reserve branches to make a total of 12 voting parties. Out of this group, the chairman is more of a first amongst equals kind of role, responsible for communicating what the Fed is doing, running the meetings, and managing the institution's public face through press conferences. But the actual decisions on rates themselves are made by a vote, between everybody on the committee with everybody getting an equal vote. Now, this is a problem for an administration that wants to use the chairmanship as a lever to crank down rates because even a friendly chairman can be outvoted by the other 11 people in the room, which creates an even bigger problem for the administration.
Starting point is 01:02:26 Exactly. So Trump wants the rates lower. Everybody wants rates lower. Everybody. I want rates lower. Everybody wants rates lower, yep. Everybody wants rates lower. But they're political.
Starting point is 01:02:38 They're political. And I think that, you know, you lower the rates for banks. It's not necessarily good for banks all the time. I think they're very concerned. That's why Powell is staying on. and this is how it balances out. And Warsh, as good as President Trump thinks he is, will have no power. Based on the current board makeup, are there people there who will disagree with Warsh
Starting point is 01:02:58 who would push back on some of these changes? Absolutely. And remember, monetary policies made by a committee, the seven governors in Washington and five of the 12 Reserve Bank presidents out in the region. And at today's meeting, three of those presidents basically fired a shot across Kevin Warsh's bow. they said they did not want a statement that implied that the Fed's next move is to lower interest rates. So he's not going to be able to do anything on interest rates very quickly because so many of the policy members are against him. And he still has to deal on major changes in Fed communications and stuff.
Starting point is 01:03:34 He'll need a consensus of the board. So I suspect this will be a slow process. Exactly. So it ain't over. It ain't over. at all. And so what are they doing? They're rebuilding the international world order, formerly known as the New World Order, with the bankers. And here is the central banker's central banker, Prime Minister Carney of Canada. And he's telling us exactly what they're going to do.
Starting point is 01:04:04 The world is undergoing a rupture across several dimensions in technology, in energy, in commerce, and geopolitics. integration is being used as a weapon by some and the rules are not constraining the hegemonts. Now we have to absolutely take on the world as it is not as we wish it to be. We know nostalgia is not a strategy
Starting point is 01:04:28 but we don't think that we're destined to submit to a more transactional, insular and brutal world. And gathering such as these point to a better way forward. In closing, we're here because of your invitation. Again, thank you for that. But we're here because of the moral and security imperatives of our cooperation in the Caucasus, in the Baltics, in Ukraine, across Europe, and also because of the immense potential for our partnerships to build a better, more prosperous, sustainable,
Starting point is 01:05:02 and just world for our citizens. And I'll close with this. It's my strong personal view that, as the international order will be rebuilt, but it will be rebuilt out of Europe. And so I'm very appreciative of the symbolism of this invitation. Yeah, right, buddy. Yeah, out of Europe. And you know, you notice the code words he had in there that implied Trump. Yeah, of course. When you use the word trans, what is it, transactional.
Starting point is 01:05:29 Yeah, transactional means Trump. Trump. Yeah, because Trump is breaking that apart. And it looks like the Macron brothers are the ones. that are going to try and save the world or their world. The president of France, Macron, goes to China, spends about six hours meeting with Xi Jinping. And then on the flight back, he talks to a bunch of reporters.
Starting point is 01:05:51 And here's what he told the reporters. He told the reporters, number one, that it's time for Europe to break away from the United States, not to depend on the dollar, not to depend so much on us, to become their own third superpower. The second thing he says, what I found really interesting, was that Europe needs to make sure that they're, don't get involved in conflicts that are not their conflicts, specifically that Europe should not be
Starting point is 01:06:12 picking sides on Taiwan between the United States and China. And so I think this is a good moment for us to ask Europe. Does Macron speak for all of Europe? Is Macron now the head of Europe? Is he now the most powerful leader in Europe? Because if he is, then there's some things we're going to need to change. Number one, Europe, including France specifically, has depended heavily on the United States for 70 years for their own defense. In fact, when Macron tried to play global superpower and send troops to North Africa to fight terrorists, he couldn't even get his own troops there. We had to fly them there, and we had to fly them back.
Starting point is 01:06:44 He couldn't even get his own troops there. So if they're going to break off on their own and follow Macron's lead, that's going to save us a lot of money. Okay, okay, future president. So here's Queen Ursula, and she's stepping up to the plate now. Continent like ours, with limited fossil fuels resources, should lead the world on electrification. This is the reason why last December we proposed the Grids Packers.
Starting point is 01:07:08 Its goal is to make our energy and infrastructure fit for the electrification age. And I'm very glad that last week in Cyprus, the European Parliament, the council agreed to speed up the negotiations. And as a next step, we will put forward our electrification action plan. Are they going to electrify everybody? I mean, didn't we go through the electricute? Didn't we go through the electrification age in like the 18, late 1800s? And these people are insanely stupid. By the summer, with an ambitious electrification target.
Starting point is 01:07:44 And speaking of finances, in the current European budget, we have set aside almost 300 billion euros for energy. 95 billion of which are not used so far. I know I'm preaching here almost in the wrong church. But let us use this to make the switch now to electricity, not just in transport, but also in industry. So she's talking about using electricity and industry. So are you going to use windmills and solar panels for your steel? Is that what I'm hearing? This makes no sense.
Starting point is 01:08:20 And here's the numbers. This is the second energy crisis within four years. And the lesson should be very clear. Our over-dependency on imported fossil fuels makes us vulnerable. They have a whole North Sea filled with fossil fuels. Let me give you two figures. By the way, where does this electricity come from? So what she's saying, or implying, I would say, she's implying,
Starting point is 01:08:51 that all the electricity, none of the electricity is going to become from coal-powered generators or natural gas-powered generators or anything other than solar and wind and maybe some water. No, nuclear. She's going to add nuclear back into the mix. Oh, well, nuclear's okay, but. But they killed the four reactors. If she wants to add nuclear, why did they shut down all the German reactors? To kill Germany, which happens to be the industrial heart of the EU.
Starting point is 01:09:25 They want serfs. They want dumb slaves to clean their homes. They're suicidal. What? The culture. Suicidal. We've known this all along, that the Europeans are suicidal. It's where they want war all the time.
Starting point is 01:09:42 I mean, like you said, we've been selling arms and ammunition. We still will be doing that. Yeah. That's what we do best is make this stuff. And they can go kill themselves. So what is the show title that needs to write down? I don't know. What?
Starting point is 01:10:01 I hear your computer bleeping. Is that? No. Yeah. Oh, no. No. Okay. Let's continue.
Starting point is 01:10:08 No, it's not me. It's nonsense. In just 60 days of conflict, our bill for fossil fuel imports has increased by over 27 billion euros, without one single molecule of energy in addition. So the way forward is obvious. We must reduce our over-dependency on imported fossil fuels. And we must boost our homegrown, affordable, clean energy supply from renewables to nuclear in full respect of technology neutrality. Of technology neutrality. What does that mean?
Starting point is 01:10:48 I don't know. But the problem is, with the green agenda in the EU, you'll never get new nuclear plants. It'll take decades. Decades for that to happen. already today member states suicidal i said yeah suicidal but suicidal culture suicidal queen suicide and we got to come up with us more low carbon sources in their energy mix are less impacted by the crisis take a country like sweden if they're the gas price increases by one euro per megawatt hour the electricity bill only increases
Starting point is 01:11:28 by 0.04 euros per megawatt hour. Because almost all of Sweden's electricity comes from renewables and nuclear. So this is how we insulate ourselves from future shocks. And this is the path to independence of Europe. The problem with Sweden is they got immigrants burning cars all day long. So it's not all that fantastic. in Sweden. And luckily, this is a dead man walking.
Starting point is 01:12:03 This is the Polish member of European Parliament, Dominique Tarzinski. And he laid it out. And I hope he has good security. You must have lost your minds. In Spain, they just legalized residents of half a million illegal aliens. In France, they throw
Starting point is 01:12:21 grenades into hair salons in a broad daylight. In Germany, not a single day goes by without someone being murdered with a knife. In Sweden, for example, you have bomb attack every other day. I can continue, but you just don't care. Those are not real problems for the European left-wing politicians. No, you are going to solve the situation in Minnesota. You are seriously discussing here the rule of law in United States
Starting point is 01:12:49 and criticizing American government for deporting illegal aliens, for deporting criminals out of their territory in the same time when Western European cities are gradually turning into a war zone. We should do exactly the same. We should deport them from Europe and not legalize their stay. We should listen to them and not what you are proposing to all of us. Everybody can see, no, you are enemies of Europe. You hate Europe.
Starting point is 01:13:15 You hate our nations and you want to destroy the future for our children. We should stop you, we should defeat you politically if we want to survive. otherwise it will be the end of Europe. Yes, exactly. The end of Europe. The classic's been floating around. That's good. The guy's great.
Starting point is 01:13:30 He's great. Yeah, he's the Nigel Farage of the era. Yeah. Without the understatement. No understatement with this guy. No, more of him, more of him. So something that we've been talking about on the show for at least five years. ever since I met Texas Slim.
Starting point is 01:13:54 And I'm going to play these clips because it shows you how long it takes government to get anything together, to get anything done. Even in a government that actually wants to get stuff done. This is about the meatpackers. And Texas Slim was, you know, was screaming this to high heaven. Like, you know, there's a cartel, the meatpackers, they're not even American companies. they're screwing the ranchers. This is why we have the lowest herd count ever, not because of drought and all these other bull crap reasons.
Starting point is 01:14:29 No, because there has been an absolute cartel of beef in the United States. And so now they're doing something about it with the new A.G. Barbie, A.G. Ken. A.G. Ken Barbie, Todd Blanche. All right. Good morning, everybody. Today we are here to talk about our progress here at the Justice Department to hold meat packers accountable. As you all know, last November, the President tasked the department to investigate the costs and prices of beef. As a result, we prioritized investigating potential antitrust violations in U.S. cattle and beef markets. In the beef industry, the big four processors control over 85 percent of the beef processing market.
Starting point is 01:15:20 Two of the big four are primarily foreign owned. Multiple plant closures across the country, the current market structure, and high concentration in the industry indicate anti-competitive activity. Since the president's executive order, the department has been actively investigating with a review of over three million documents, hundreds of industry participants, including ranchers, cattlemen, producers, and processors. have been contacted and many interviewed as part of this ongoing investigation. More broadly, the department has also executed on the President's Executive Order to stop anti-competitive behavior in the broader food supply market. Later this week, we will be announcing an historic settlement
Starting point is 01:16:10 that will directly affect the prices of proteins like chicken, pork, and turkey. This business model allows competitors to exchange. change competitively sensitive information on every aspect of the protein industry and has raised the prices on chicken, raise the prices on pork, and raised the prices on turkey. So it's good that they're doing that. It's good they're breaking up this cartel. And, you know, luckily there's still, you know, Texas Slim, somehow he got beef.com. I don't know how he did that. So he's got beef.com and you can find your local rancher and do lots of stuff. And I like all this.
Starting point is 01:16:53 I like what Blanche is doing. But then the most un-American thing is like, I want our justice department. I want these guys and SWAT teams. I want them busting into these offices. I want boxes being carried out. I want JBS and Cargill and Tyson executives. I want him in handcuffs. I want perp walks.
Starting point is 01:17:13 No. What do we do? Yeah. We want snitches. There is more work to do, and we need your help. I want to remind everyone and anyone in the industry that if you have information about antitrust crimes, about price fixing, bid rigging, market allocation, or even procurement fraud, the Department of Justice wants to hear from you.
Starting point is 01:17:36 Through our whistleblower rewards program, which is we do in partnership with the United States Postal Inspection Service. What? The Postmaster General's involved in this? Come on. You can be financially rewarded for coming forward with information about this behavior. Just to put a fine point on it, if your report, if the information you provide helps us secure a criminal penalty in excess of $1 million, you can be entitled to recover and receive 15 to 30% of that of the money. that we recover. So whether you're a farmer, a purchaser, a processor, you can help protect food security in America by reporting these types of violations and potentially criminal conduct.
Starting point is 01:18:28 We will use every law enforcement tool available to help reduce food prices and vigorously enforce the anti-trust laws to ensure every aspect of the agricultural industry competes on a fair playing field. If you see something, say something. I don't want this. You know what this tells me. Snitching. What?
Starting point is 01:18:50 They got nothing. They got nothing on these guys. This is all hope. This is the snitching thing. Hopium. Oh my God. We can't prove a thing. These guys are on the up and up from what we can tell because we can't prove anything.
Starting point is 01:19:05 Maybe, you know, we can get some snitches. Maybe and maybe that'll do something. because they got nothing. They're not going to get anywhere with this. This is a dead end. This is not going to go anywhere. I don't like it. Long ago, people that are involved in price fixing knew how to do it.
Starting point is 01:19:23 You do it through third parties. You do it by looking at what the airlines do. What is the United charging for this flight to Chicago? What are we going to charge? Let's charge the same thing. I mean, this is nonsense. These four, these big four are dominating, and they're going to continue to dominate unless they boil down to two or they become monopolist but with this with four
Starting point is 01:19:47 of them they look competitive they're not yeah but it's like the light bulbs the westinghouse light bulb scandals in the past for price fixing the light not not just price fixing but length of burn fixing yeah that's the whole thing wasn't it five was it by the way us rad LEDs do that now too they crap out. Of course. Let me, I'm going to tell my LED story I told it before. First explain the Osram scandal.
Starting point is 01:20:15 That's what that was. It was price fixing amongst the light bulb manufacturers, not in price per se, but how many hours the light bulb would last? And I believe there's still a light bulb today that has been burning for over 110 years. There's plenty of cool light bulbs that burn forever. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:34 But the LEDs should burn forever, at least a lifetime, anybody that's living. So I, you know, I bought an LED bug bulb for the front porch 25 years ago. It was one of the first LEDs, American made LED light bulb. They couldn't get much power out of it. It was nice and yellow. And so I put it up. Bug bulb. A bug bulb. Bug bulb. Oh, there's a show title. Bug bulb. I like it.
Starting point is 01:21:05 So the bug bulb, it's still burning. Meanwhile, all these Chinese lamps I buy that are LED, they burn out in a year. They're like filaments. What happens? They start to blink, blink, blink. They start flashing. You can't stop. You turn it on and off.
Starting point is 01:21:24 Maybe it stops for a while. And then it starts blinking and flashing because the circuitry in the bulb is no good. The junk, junk, I tell you. Every LED bulb you buy should last forever. Your lifetime. Good for life. It should be good for life. And none of them are except my bug bulb.
Starting point is 01:21:44 Wait, no. And your bulb's in your 2009 Lexus. There's another interesting. No, no, no, it's not, it was a 2000. It was 2009. No, no, no, no, no. No, 2009, that's a new car. It was a 2003, I think.
Starting point is 01:22:05 It's a 30-year-old car. And, yes, how does that work? Every bulb in the Lexus, the interior lamps, the headlights, the taillights, the everything, the bulbs never burn out. Where do they get these bulbs? We're being screwed, Mr. DeVore-Act. We're being screwed. The whole thing is a giant scam.
Starting point is 01:22:33 I am so busy right now marking the recording. I've got so many great openers from you. Giant scam. Well, you want to hear scam. All right, I'm going to set you up. I'm going to set you up with this. Here's the setup. Pennsylvania's Hershey Company says it's seeing a jump in the sales of mints and gum.
Starting point is 01:22:51 And they say it's all due to the rise of GLP1 weight loss drugs. The company says the sales of their icebreaker's mints rose 8% in the first quarter of the year. Dental experts have linked the drugs to dry mouth. And some have complained of bad breath over dehydration caused by the medication. Yes, and I want to say that I've noticed this. I've noticed women who are on the O, on the OZMPIC, that they have bad, yeah, OZMPIC, that they have bad, bad breath. This is very noticeable, particularly in church. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:23:28 Particularly in church. I'm not pointing anybody out, but I'm just like, you know, girl, you're on the O and your breath is hawking. What does it smell like? Death warmed over? Just nasty. You know, it has to do, I think it has to do with, what is it, what is the word? Ketones. Ketones.
Starting point is 01:23:52 Thank you. Thank you. Ketones. Yeah, it has to do with ketones. Rapid weight loss can do that. But it doesn't matter because here is a no agenda show prediction come true in the worst possible way through our president. Today, I'm thrilled to announce that starting on July 1st,
Starting point is 01:24:13 we will also provide Medicare patients with the coverage for weight loss drugs like OZEPB. There it is. There it is. We knew it was coming. Now, it's not the bonanza they thought it was going to be. Zep pound, Wegovi. Wegovi. We'll be available for $50 a month. $50.
Starting point is 01:24:36 Wow. 50? Now, think of that. $50 a month. So, it was $1,300. Now it's $50. And the $1,300 doesn't cover a whole month. So it's really even more than that.
Starting point is 01:24:51 The fat Vax. So it's now down to $50. So that's where you get it. And also, and you remember, when I cut insulin... Oh, yeah, and it goes into the whole insulin thing. Blah, blah, blah. So there it is. Now, it's not the bananas that they wanted it to be.
Starting point is 01:25:07 and I think you still have to pay for it yourself. I mean, is Medicare picking up a piece of the cost, or how does that work? It must be. I mean, I can't imagine that they're like, okay, 50 bucks. No, no, there's Medicare is being drained. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:25 You know, it's being eviscerated by these various, you know, overpriced drugs that they were overpriced on purpose. and a ridiculous amount of prescriptions that are going out. Yeah, that's why it's going to be bankrupt in no time. I'm going to be one of the last people on Medicare. I'll never make it. I don't think so. They're going out of there.
Starting point is 01:25:49 You can just see, you can, you can sense it when you're in the system, that they're doing everything they can to drain it. Yeah. Any life force. So, So, RFK Jr., trying, trying to do some stuff, trying. But I...
Starting point is 01:26:08 He's hopeless. I think it is hopeless. Here he is on the SSRIs, which we call the modern MK Ultra. In Washington. The United States does not just face the mental health crisis. We face a dependency crisis driven by over-medicalization. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced a plan yesterday. to rein in what he's called Americans' overuse of antidepressants.
Starting point is 01:26:34 We will no longer treat them as the default. We will treat them as one option. Kennedy has narrowed in specifically on SSRIs, the most widely prescribed class of antidepressants. That includes household names like Zoloft, Paxil, Prozac. The user base is huge. Roughly one in six Americans reported taking an SSRI this year. One in six.
Starting point is 01:26:58 Kennedy acknowledged that patients. that patients can benefit from them, and he stressed that he wasn't telling anyone to just stop. But he argued that too many people start taking the meds without knowing how long they'll stay on them, and with no plan to come off. He has singled out SSRIs before. He's previously claimed without evidence
Starting point is 01:27:18 that they are partly responsible for the rise in school shootings, and that they can be harder to quit than heroin, something he repeated yesterday. For his new effort, Kennedy and, announced several initiatives like trainings and new guidelines to nudge clinicians to help patients get off medications and consider other treatment options like therapy or exercise. No major medical organizations were represented at yesterday's event. Of course not. Of course not.
Starting point is 01:27:48 But so this news is slowly, slowly getting through the. And you and I agree that there's probably a lot of people who listen to our podcast who are on SSRIs. One in six. So we say this not to scorn you, but to try and help you. Because we've been following the SSRI MK Ultra for a long time. And they stopped reporting on shooters. If they were on SSRIs or not, you can never get that information. And you can't get that information because they're advertised on television.
Starting point is 01:28:21 Another thing, RFK Jr. said that he would stop with the swipe of a pen. If he was president, I guess. If he was president. Somebody pointed out that this comments were running. He was running for president, even though he should have the exact same goals. Yes. And this president should be able to do that. And he should.
Starting point is 01:28:40 So here is Ella Emhoff. Yeah. You know, that's just funny because I was looking at this clip and I said, I get this clip of Ella. And I decided against it, but I'm glad you got it because it's an example of people that are stuck on these. And by the way, shocker she takes these things. Yeah, she was crocheting in Brooklyn when she heard the news. I'm just sitting here crocheting.
Starting point is 01:29:08 Just so people know, Ella M. Off is Kamala Harris' stepdaughter. I'm just sitting here crocheting, waiting for a friend. And I was just listening to this podcast that the Wall Street Journal put out about SSRIs and anti-anxiety meds and kind of the over-prescription of them in America. and it was making me think a lot because I've been on SSRIs for over a decade, almost 15 years probably, and they were calling out the lack of research on long-term use of these things. They were calling out the lack of information that doctors give about coming off of these meds and kind of the psychological effects they can have. and it really got me thinking how little I've thought about that, naively, obviously,
Starting point is 01:30:00 but I've noticed that every time I've gone off of it for a week or missed it or for whatever reason, like it has been really hard for me and I've had a really hard time. And I guess this is just something I was wondering if you guys have thought about or relate to or kind of consider when you're thinking about going on meds like that. Because I don't know if this is something. that I feel like is being talked about enough because I feel like so many of us are on these meds and this is like actually happening. Like people get off of them and they kind of break down and it could be really bad.
Starting point is 01:30:39 So yeah, I guess I just want your general thoughts. Yeah, my general thoughts are, girl, I pray for you. And you know, it's very difficult to quit these meds because you get brain zaps and all kinds of horrible things. And you know agenda show is going to go one step further. We are going to play a clip, which may be shocking to some. So parents, younger children probably shouldn't hear this. They may not understand all the words necessarily. This is a health and human services testimony from a woman named Lauren.
Starting point is 01:31:12 And she is testifying about PSSD, which we've talked about on the show before, which may be responsible for the incredible low birth rate we have, because people on these meds don't want to have sex, and sex, in fact, is not pleasurable for them. Love is not even capable for them. So the hallmark symptom of PSSD is genital numbness. Yes, like complete loss of sensation in your genitals. For me, I clearly hate to talk about this,
Starting point is 01:31:42 but my clitoris is completely numb as if it's the back of my elbow. I have no sensation internally. I'm 23 years old. Suffers also lose the ability to orgasm permanently. for the rest of their lives, and their libido entirely, which for me and what a lot of other people experience, is a sudden onset, like, chemical asexuality that just never goes away.
Starting point is 01:32:03 And in my opinion, I don't think it's sensational to say that this is a form of chemical castration, that it is permanent. But beyond that, PSSD is not just a loss of sexual function, but a loss for some people of emotional function as well. That has been the case for me. Before this, I was a super emotional, empathetic, loving, caring, like Sylvia Plath, reading and resonating girl.
Starting point is 01:32:28 And the day I woke up with this injury, I quite literally felt my soul leave my body. Like, I'm so serious. It was the most unbelievable, inorganic thing I've ever experienced, and it's a common symptom of people who have this condition. To this day, it's been years from me. I'm 23 now. I can't feel love for my own mother, which is the hardest thing on earth. Dude, this is poison. This is poison.
Starting point is 01:32:55 This is very bad. You know, they're not going to play this on CNN. Because that's their bread and butter. They're bread and butter. That's a terrible situation. So you sent me two clips. You sent me a clip of trig, trigonometry, what is the podcast? Yeah, the podcast.
Starting point is 01:33:18 Trigonometry and an Adam Carolla podcast. and they were both about this woman Helen Andrews, who wrote an essay, which after you sent me those clips, I've heard about this lady, I go look it up. Yeah, the essay is famous. Yeah, there's a famous essay. And so I was able to pull three really short clips all around 40 seconds from a speech she gave.
Starting point is 01:33:41 And she, in this essay, which is linked in the show notes, she very clearly explains how wokeness and the fet, really she calls it the feminization of America, but really the world is ruining us. Do you want to add anything to it before I played these schools? Well, I thought Carolla's take on it, and I'm not a Carolla fan. You know, he invented podcasting, you know.
Starting point is 01:34:11 Yeah. Yeah, that's what I've heard. I thought his take on it was quite, it was a little nonchalant, it takes. that was mostly reflective of what's going on in Los Angeles. And, of course, we have this Spencer Pratt guy that's kicking ass with almost a daily new AI ad. That's phenomenal.
Starting point is 01:34:34 They are getting some great models. They're getting some traction, that's for sure. Yeah, which it was just, which derives a bit from this one. But he says he's been working on his thoughts for 15 years about this, about this issue, about the feminization issue. Yeah, also. And part of it was just to summarize, women like to talk
Starting point is 01:34:58 and they're satisfied by talking about fixing something, but it's the men who actually get the work done. Women do get work done, but they can also just talk, talk, talk, and never get anything done. Here's the intro. The libertarian economist, Tyler Cowan,
Starting point is 01:35:20 once wrote a blog post describing all of the revolutions he's seen in the course of his lifetime, starting with the moon landing when he was a little boy and going up chronologically to today's advent of AI. And there were only seven revolutions on this list because this was only the greatest and most earth-shaking ones. And right there, between the fall of communism and the invention of the Internet, was something called the Great Feminization. That is not a phrase that a lot of Americans know, but future historians may will rank it as having greater importance than almost any other revolution on that list. Including communism. So here's a brief description. I have referred several times so far to feminization without defining what that means. I'll have a lot to say about it in just a moment.
Starting point is 01:36:11 But if you want to put it in a single sentence, you could say that feminization equals wokeness. everything you think of as wokeness is simply an epiphenomenon of demographic feminization. Think about all the things that wokeness means, valuing empathy over rationality, safety, over risk, conformity and cohesion over competition and hierarchy. All of these things are privileging the feminine over the masculine. And it makes so much sense that the Democrat Party uses this, because it activates women. It really does activate them.
Starting point is 01:36:53 When you have a class that is suppressed, like, oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, no, this is horrible. Yeah, we have to do something about that. This is the Karen's, the white liberal women of America, certainly. And it's kind of frightening when you read this essay and you see all. All the fields that have been now really taken over by women, education, psychology, medicine. Medicine, yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:32 Oh, yeah, how about COVID? Burks and Wollensky and was it Wollensky? Wollenski, I think her name was. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, shut it down, shut it down, shut them in. Everybody stay home. There was no masculine. Female mayors.
Starting point is 01:37:46 female mayors, how about Queen Ursula? All of this stuff. And she has, and she is also skeptical that this can be turned around, but she does have one recommendation where we should start if we want to defeminize. So that's agenda item number one. Get rid of all the HR ladies. Who's with me? Just fire them.
Starting point is 01:38:14 And then we'll see how it shakes out. If your company has too few women, that might indicate that you have a problem with your recruiting pipeline. On the other hand, it might not. Either way, we're not going to send a team of lawyers after you to second guess you. Yeah, and it's not that women are bad. It's just when women control certain sectors or industries or policy. They don't necessarily have a get it done way of doing things. Climate change is another great example.
Starting point is 01:38:43 You know, how many meetings, how many hundreds of billions of dollars do we not have in meetings about doing, and they never get there, ever, because it's nothing, nowhere to get. Any meetings. Yeah, just meetings and meetings and meetings and meetings. That's because they need for consensus. Consensus, yeah. And I think a lot of women will read this and go, hmm, that's interesting. Yeah, a lot of them would be irked about it. Yeah, probably.
Starting point is 01:39:10 Your sexism doesn't help. My sexism. Really now. Yeah. See, what we need is a president who says stuff like this. We provided 100% expensing and bonus appreciation, which is tremendous. One of the biggest things that you have. I mean, people have no idea how big that is, the businesses do,
Starting point is 01:39:35 so that businesses can deduct 100% of the cost of new facilities, equipment, and capital investment in the first year. It used to take 38 years of deduction. Now you get it done in one. You can take one so you can expand. I think that's what made us so successful in the first term. But now we have it for a 10-year period. So you have it for a while.
Starting point is 01:39:55 I really was going to make it for a one-year period. That would mean you spend all your money immediately. Now, unfortunately, I gave you too much time. I was sort of against that. I said, let's do it for a shorter period of time. But we did it. It's the right thing. And this way, when I get out of office in, let's say,
Starting point is 01:40:12 or nine years from now. I'll be able to use it. I'll be able to use it myself. Yeah, baby. It's great. Let's talk about climate change for a minute. All right. All right. Climate change.
Starting point is 01:40:30 I got to do some funny clips here. But there's a very interesting follow-up clip. This climate, New Orleans needs to prepare. New Orleans is a vibrant city. Home of the French Quarter. and the birthplace of jazz. Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans? It's hard to imagine that it all might disappear.
Starting point is 01:40:54 Yet that's the verdict of a study published this week in the Nature Sustainability Journal. It finds that sea level rise means the city could end up being surrounded by the Gulf of Mexico by the end of the century. Jesse Keenan is one of the studies co-authors. He's the director of the Central on Climate Change and urbanism at Tulane University. And he joins me now. Professor, good morning.
Starting point is 01:41:16 Thank you so much for having me. Is New Orleans doomed? Well, what we see is that currently atmospheric temperatures are roughly where they were during the last interglacial, about 125 to 150,000 years ago. Now, there's a lag between global temperatures and sea level rise, but when we begin to add it up, there's a recognition that New Orleans has a matter of generations
Starting point is 01:41:40 to prepare for a transition north to the mainland and away from the coast. So a transition, is relocation the only option for New Orleans? Well, we don't really get into the engineering specifics, but it's generally agreed that it would be nearly impossible to engineer a multi-purpose levy and dike system around New Orleans. About 80% of New Orleans land area is underwater, or below sea level, I should say. It's essentially a bull. You can think about it in those terms.
Starting point is 01:42:09 So to be surrounded by open water and be exposed to increasingly stronger hurricanes, the land itself is sinking and the seas are rising. So that combination really makes it nearly impossible to be able to engineer a solution to keep New Orleans afloat. Did you see that Mexico City is sinking by half an inch a year? Yeah, it's been doing that forever. Yeah. Well, doesn't that eventually, don't they wind up in Australia or something? It looks China. China.
Starting point is 01:42:42 Yeah, it's been doing that forever. Well, so is Venice. Yeah, well, Venice, yeah. Venice is definitely, I mean, that thing's underwater every three weeks. I mean, it's constantly sinking, wow. Yeah. Let's go to part two of this and then we can get the, then we bring an expert in.
Starting point is 01:42:59 Now, it's important to note the study predicts the surrounding of New Orleans and even the possible submersion of New Orleans sometime in the future. And you don't know exactly. Fish flopping on the streets. And that will be. But is anyone actually making plans for this possibility in the future? Well, I wouldn't say it's so much of a prediction is that the geological evidence and the paleoclimatic evidence points us in the direction that Norlands will be surrounded by open water. And it is very likely that it will be inundated.
Starting point is 01:43:28 That question, whether we have decades or maybe over a century to go, is in a way open to science. But the real question is when and what is it? mean to begin to plan a transition of the population, of businesses, of capital, and that's the challenge we have ahead of us in terms of public policy. There is not currently planning by the city or the state to begin this transition. What we have seen in recent years, which is critical as we highlight in our work, is that there has been sediment diversion from the Mississippi River that can build land. And by building land in and around New Orleans, you can buy time. And buying time is the the most critical aspect here. Now, that project was killed by the governor just last year,
Starting point is 01:44:11 as not being particularly cost effective as it was argued. The reality is much of the expense of that project was actually paid for by BP oil spill money from a number of years ago. So the reality is that every decade that we can buy to help transition is critical for the success of environmental management, environmental quality, what we leave behind, but also the humane treatment of people that are otherwise going to find themselves in a very difficult situation in the decades to come. I still don't understand exactly what climate change has to do with it, and what is the solution that they're proposing? Moving the city.
Starting point is 01:44:49 Oh. Moving the city? Moving the city? Yes, move it. Get it out of the air. It's going to sink. So here's this guy. That's good.
Starting point is 01:44:59 I thought this would be a nice counterbalance. this guy Greg Braden, a professor logical climatologist guy's not bought off. Listen to this little piece by this
Starting point is 01:45:18 by this guy on climate change in general. Another example, I'm going to use climate change as a geologist. I'm very passionate about this. You believe in it? Climate change is a fact. I've been talking about it.
Starting point is 01:45:32 No, I've been talking about it. No, I've been talking about it. talking about since 1979. It's also a fact that humans are not causing it. Humans are not causing it. And the real scientists know this. The cow farts. It's not the cows. Cow farts. I'll just, I'll tell you, I mean, NASA knows this. NASA knows that over 90% of the CO2. There is an increase in CO2. Okay, it's just, I made a statement and I want to, I just want to justify this. Is there more CO2 in the atmosphere now than there was 10 years, 20, 50, 100 years ago? The answer is absolutely yes. Is it a bad thing? The answer is no. Is it the most we've ever had?
Starting point is 01:46:04 We're right about 440 parts per million right now. In geologic history, we're looking Cretaceous over 1,000, or the Jurassic over 1,000 parts per million, Triassic, 2,000 parts per million. The Earth was lush, the Earth was green, life was abundant during that time. And what we see in geologic history, and this is fascinating me,
Starting point is 01:46:23 there are times when CO2 levels are high and the temperatures are low. And times when just the opposite is happening, it's not necessarily a one-to-one correlation. Where's the CO2 coming from? NASA knows. I've got a bunch of videos on this. Over 90% of the CO2 is coming from the oceans, warming.
Starting point is 01:46:43 Warm water holds less gas. Here's the kicker. The oceans are warming from underneath, not from the top. It was from the CO2 on the top. You know, the warming of the air, it would be coming from the top. It's warming. The glaciers are melting from underneath. The CO2 is coming.
Starting point is 01:47:00 the oceans are warming from underneath from tectonic processes that happen about every 12,500 years that people just don't want to talk about. It is a tectonic process. It begins in the core, translates perturbations into the mantle, into the crust, the weak areas of the crust. You see more tectonic activity, more volcanic activity. It was exactly what we're seeing. Give this guy the hook.
Starting point is 01:47:25 He's not a... He said the wrong things. That's not right. Yeah. So your point being, we still got to move New Orleans. Yeah, well, move New Orleans. Move New Orleans. Probably don't have to. Here's a question.
Starting point is 01:47:44 Probably don't have to. Here's a question for you. Did you ever meet Ted Turner? I never met Ted Turner. Will Hurst told me a couple of stories because he's met Ted Turner. and his only story about Ted Turner is there is a, there was a line to the bar and there was somebody standing there. It looked like they were in the line, but they weren't in the line,
Starting point is 01:48:09 and the line moved, and Ted was behind these people. Hurst witnessed this. I just thought it was a funny story. And he says, Turner says that the guys, hey, are you in the line, get drinks? And the guy said, no, I'm just standing here. So they get the fuck out of the way. And he says that was Ted Turner.
Starting point is 01:48:28 That sounds like Ted Turner. And I would just say, you do not want to be proclaimed dead by me on the podcast. Because I think I said he was dead just a couple weeks ago. And so now he's dead. Thank you very much. 18 and 3 eighths yesterday. Ted Turner was never a man to shy away from a challenge on land or sea. Time to go.
Starting point is 01:48:52 Whether bringing the America's Cup back to the U.S., saving the American bison, getting the Atlanta Braves to the World Series, or changing the way we all consumed news. The skies over Baghdad have been illuminated. Cover wars now largely because of the way CNN covered the First Gulf War live. We intend to cover all the news all the time. She was a hard-drinking cigar-smoking adventurer. He had kind of an earnest Hemingway vibe just with deeper pockets.
Starting point is 01:49:24 I get thousands, millions, and billions mixed up. Turner had all kinds of nicknames, the mouth from the South, and Captain Outrages. In 2018, though, he disclosed to CBS Sunday morning's Ted Koppel that he was fighting Louisbody dementia. It's a mild case of what people have as Alzheimer's. His memory back then hadn't forgotten his three marriages, especially the one to Jane Fonda. Have you ever quite got over her? No. Do you think you ever will?
Starting point is 01:49:57 No. When you love somebody and you really love them, you never stop loving him. He never got over his love of the American West either, and his philanthropic efforts will live on in perpetuity. We don't really own anything, he said. We just borrow it for a while. Yeah. He still made 87. That's pretty good, considering how he lived.
Starting point is 01:50:23 Yeah. You know. He definitely had some insights into cable. Oh, man. He was so right about that. And they laughed at him. They laughed.
Starting point is 01:50:34 He had WTBS first, right? Superstation TBS? I can't remember the whole history. But the fact is that they laughed at him a lot and said he's full of. He didn't know what he was doing was very, yes, very common in the early days of cable. Yeah, Superstation WTBS. that was that was so it was TBS Turner Broadcasting Yeah so that was a super station first
Starting point is 01:50:58 Which meant he syndicated all through a whole bunch of television stations And later via satellite or maybe the distribution was through satellite But the big thing he did Is he would take old movies Cheap or cheaper than you know first run stuff He'd take old movies and he would play them at 1105 And 8.5 and 805
Starting point is 01:51:22 because he knew that when people had seen the headlines on the news and were bored, they would be switching around, and then they'd hit the beginning of one of his movies. And it was genius until podcasting came along. Yeah, which changed everything. It sure did, baby. I got to cut one more Tucker Carlson thing I want to get out of the way. Oh, man.
Starting point is 01:51:53 I finally watched that whole Lulu interview with him. It's kind of nutty. Well, he's like, there's something's up. I'm convinced now that either he's got a mental condition. Meds. Or there's meds. Meds. Meds.
Starting point is 01:52:11 Meds. And the fact that he forgot, he didn't, well, I don't know what the antichrist is and all that stuff. We played those clips last show. I thought we're very revealing about, maybe it's a Christ. for help. Maybe it's a signal. Maybe it's code. I don't know. But he pulls the stunt with he pulls a similar stunt with Dave Rubin who got irked about it. Tucker casually says Dave, he said, he didn't know who Dave Rubin was. And Dave Rubin played the clip on his show and then blasted Tucker because Tucker even blurbed his book and he'd been to his house
Starting point is 01:52:50 and on and on. And this is the Tucker Redux Dave Rubin piece. Dave Rubin, whoever that is, is he conservative? Okay. I guess. Whatever.
Starting point is 01:53:01 You know, it's funny, Tucker. Is he conservative? Well, first off, as I often point out, I'm actually not a conservative in the strictest capital C sense of conservative, but I do believe that defending my liberal positions has become a conservative value. Yeah, that's true.
Starting point is 01:53:15 That's true. But also, Tucker, you blurbed my book on classical liberalism. You read it for you. Here, I'll even put it, I know you are a big fan of doing this because it makes you look like you're smart. Dave Rubin is one of the bravest, smartest people I know as well as a tremendous television presence. So who changed since then?
Starting point is 01:53:32 Is it me or is it you, buddy? Is it me or is it you? It's not me. Tucker also literally walked into my house because I was one of the first people to have the home studio and gone independent and I think his actual quote was, holy effin' shit.
Starting point is 01:53:50 You did it. You did it. The blurb of the book, when he signed his last book to me, he said, you're doing it for all the guys stuck at corporate jobs or something like that. Again, I tried to broker a piece with him and Ben. But the reason I'm doing this, you know, I don't, as you guys know, I don't like doing the things about people that I've known or I was friends with or just when I've been through just that I knew Jank and Hassan and Candice and all of these people.
Starting point is 01:54:14 It's weird. I think about it a lot. Like, how did this happen to me? but this guy he is a fraud like there were plenty more videos we got into it before the show because there were so many of them that it's like how many times did this guy have to expose himself
Starting point is 01:54:26 and people realize he's making things up no this this is I think this is something else this is the video the video thing this is this is why we're still here hanging on by our fingernails but we're still here is once you get into video people need
Starting point is 01:54:46 it's just, it's like an obsession. You know, and you have to fight with somebody else on video. It's the thing. It's the error we're in right now and everyone thinks video, video, video, and we need to be on video. I can be on video and then I can fight Candace and Candace can fight Erica and Erica can fight Ben Shapiro and Ben Shapiro and Ben Shapiro can fight Tucker and Tucker can fight. Ben Shapiro can fight Dave Smith and Dave Smith goes on Joe Rogan and Joe, it's like blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. blah, blah, and it's going to implode. Well, it's definitely boring.
Starting point is 01:55:21 Yes. But watching these guys do a rotation. But I still think there's more to it than that with Tucker because something's up. And now we're starting to see some attacks. Do you think it could be an actual illness? I don't want to make light of it. Well, that could be, it's possible. But I think whatever the case is, they're going after Tucker.
Starting point is 01:55:41 Listen to this guy. Well, of course. This is a podcast. This is what you do. They're going after the fact that he's hooked up with the Qataris, but he's not really, but yes, he is. Oh, man. Play this clip. Did you guys know that when he started the Tucker Carlson Network, do you know who started up the funding of his network?
Starting point is 01:55:59 This is public knowledge. The guy's name, he runs a company called 1789 Capital, an investment firm that was founded by Omid Malik. He funded the launch of the Tucker Carlson Network. He's a Muslim man. $15 million he gave to Tucker Carlson. Many other credible sources are saying that since January, Qatar, wealthy Islamic nation, is funding Tucker Carlson. If you give me $15 million, I might not think Sharia law is that bad either.
Starting point is 01:56:34 Exactly. Yeah, whatever. We shouldn't participate in this. Yeah, we should. No, no. I love it. I know you did. But you don't have to.
Starting point is 01:56:45 I can get the clips. And then you'll poach me later when you get a good one. Well, I mean, someone's got to save the show. Yeah. So here's the fight that I am interested in, which is just not a lot of information about it. And I guess there's no cameras in the courtroom. This Elon Musk versus Sam Altman. Yeah, it's right here in Oakland.
Starting point is 01:57:14 This is interesting. I have one clip from CNBC. All right, developing story, getting some news now in the Blockbuster courtroom fight between Sam Altman and Elon Musk. Kate Rooney has that for us. What are we learning? Hey, Scott, so we're learning a bit from Greg Brockman. He was the president of Open Eye, or is the president of Open Eye now. He was the co-founder, wrapping up his testimony this afternoon over in Oakland. It's week two of this Elon Musk versus OpenAI tribal trial. We did get news that OpenAI plans to spend $50 billion in compute, at least for the rest of this year. that was one big headline. Brockman, as I mentioned, co-founder the company. He answered a lot of
Starting point is 01:57:48 questions about his personal financial ambition. So he has what he described as a $30 billion stake in this company at this point. He kept a journal to document professional events in his life, personal events. That has been a big highlight and a big piece of evidence in this trial. Musk's personality and leadership style also came up in Brockman's testimony. Musk has claimed that he is responsible for helping recruit some of the key players at Open AI and therefore. deserves a lot of credit, and has talked about that in his own testimony. Brockman talked about his reputation of being extremely hard driving, and that certain candidates were very attracted by that, but others didn't like it as much,
Starting point is 01:58:26 and it actually wasn't as big of a deal in terms of recruiting. So that just was a big topic of conversation. Overall, he did also talk a bit about overall Musk's just leadership style. We did get a moment that he talked about of Musk tearing a painting of a Tesla off the wall, Scott. But that's the latest. he's wrapping up that testimony and we are expecting to get Chavon Zillis, who's a close, close executive of Musk, also the mother of his children. The backdrop here, of course, Musk has suit opening on Sam Altman,
Starting point is 01:58:56 Fred Brockman, alleging that they essentially, as Musk put it, stole a charity. What do you think is going to come out of that? I mean, it does, the way they finagled that, turning a nonprofit into a for-profit, it seems sketchy. I think what's going to come out of is Musk is going to get his money back. That would be the easiest way for him. Yeah, and that would be, it's not that much compared to what they claim they're spending. But the thing about Musk, I have to say, is you have to judge the results, not the commentary.
Starting point is 01:59:29 And when they, I have to assume, and I could be wrong, but I don't see how it could, I don't see how it could be. But Musk is, has to be a judge of character in terms of people working for him. that is unparalleled. He has to be the guy who picks people that know what they're doing or do it well. And I think his influence on that company probably was more than this guy. Musk sent a few people over, but they were no good or we didn't like him or whatever. I'm not buying it. I think that Musk, to run the SpaceX and all these other operations
Starting point is 02:00:09 and to do the kind of financial dealings and to sue in a certain, way and to get billions of dollars left and right. He's got to have a skill set that is just that we can't fully understand. And it has to do with picking people, which I always thought that you get a guy who knows how to pick an executive to help him run a business smarter than you. You got certain kinds of skills that might be dependent a little bit. Is non-trivial. Yeah, you really want Musk and Trump together. Musk to high. hire and trump to fire. That would be the good combo.
Starting point is 02:00:48 Yeah. That would be a good combo. Yeah. Yeah, Musk could be the, he should be the head of personnel. Well, we're going to see. I mean, things are going to start moving
Starting point is 02:00:58 in this AI world and we're already seeing AMD and all these CPU companies. People are figuring it out. It's like, oh, we don't need all this compute. We just needed our computers at home. I can see. this coming.
Starting point is 02:01:16 It's coming. And then... Well, something's coming. It's not going to be pleasant when it blows up. It'll ruin the show for sure. And with that, I want to thank you for your courage. Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the climate change. Cow fart.
Starting point is 02:01:29 Say hello to my friend on the other end. The one. The only Mr. John C. DeMoor! Yeah, in the morning of you, Mr. Adam, and Green, Mr. Cbo's on ground and subs of water. And dames and nights out there. Oh, hold on.
Starting point is 02:01:42 I'm still stuck. in that mode. Hey, in the morning to the trolls of the troll room. Let me count y'all. Let me see. Show count. Let me do an actual troll count. And we see 1453 of the trolls in the troll room listening live at noagendastream.com. And we are doing this as a public service for you. It is currently 1020 in the Netherlands. I've been awake for 20 hours, but I'm still here doing the show because that's what we do. then we're going to Nashville later this month and it'll be on a Sunday and there's things
Starting point is 02:02:17 I could be doing but I'm going to do the show because we care about the show and we think that it's important that people understand the world that's going on around them from a different perspective not just yelling into the void because we're on video and that's what seems to be happening the whole podcast industrial complex is now everyone's crazy about video and you know what they're doing they're doing a horrible disservice to podcast podcasting. Podcasting should be audio. I mean, it's something you should be able to do while gardening.
Starting point is 02:02:47 You can't watch a video while gardening. So what is happening is all of the, not all, but most of the big hosting companies, they are offering video podcast, but it's no longer RSS based. It's done with an API. Which means it's not podcast. Exactly.
Starting point is 02:03:09 It's done with an API. and so your video gets published to Apple. It gets published to Spotify. Oh, by the way, we're back on Spotify. I got someone to, I got a representative who emailed me. Hey, is there anything? Spotify?
Starting point is 02:03:26 Yeah. They said, hey, is there anything we can do for your show? I said, yeah, how about you put our show on? I've been trying to get it on for four months. Oh, hold on me, check. And they check and they come back. Oh, yeah, well, we had a son. Okay.
Starting point is 02:03:40 So we're on Spotify now. RSS based. But all this video stuff, it's all, it's all being done through an APR. I thought we weren't on Spotify because they wanted to run ads. Yeah, well, they don't. They have new terms of service. They don't run ads.
Starting point is 02:03:55 Oh, okay. Yeah. So I said, okay, we'll go back on then. That's fine. If they run ads, then we'll take it off. But that was the whole thing. So they're breaking the R. And in fact, if Spotify, if you have audio,
Starting point is 02:04:08 if you have an audio podcast, upload video, they then take the audio from your video and your RSS feed is completely broken for audio. I think Apple may be doing the same thing. Why are they doing this? I think the reason they're doing this is they understand that if they just have an open RSS feed that can come into their platforms, their podcast platforms, it'll be filled. with porn and other things
Starting point is 02:04:43 they don't want. I would think that's a concern. Yeah. But it's not a podcast. Now you can be deplatformed in seconds by the exact people that I built the podcast index for with Dave Jones.
Starting point is 02:04:58 For this very reason, because you will get, when the ban hammer is there, it gets used. So anyway, enjoy your video experience. We're just going to stay audio and we remain value for value. I should probably mention,
Starting point is 02:05:14 you want to get one of those modern podcast apps to listen to this podcast. First of all, you're supporting independent developers, which is important, especially if you get their premium package, which is usually $2.99 a month, gives you all kinds of extras. We suggest you do that.
Starting point is 02:05:30 They are on board with the modern podcasting standards, podcasting 2.0, which has all these extra features. These are being slowly adopted by the big boys, but if you want to stay ahead of the curve, then you want to be with us. In addition to that, one of those features is the live. We call it lit, the live item tag. So when we go live with the podcast, which more and more podcasts are now doing,
Starting point is 02:05:54 you get a notification in your podcast app. And then when we publish it, you're not waiting around for 15 minutes, half hour, an hour, sometimes longer. No, within 90 seconds, you'll know that your podcast, your best podcast in the universe has been updated. So value for value I talked about at the beginning of our podcast. It's very simple system. We exist by the producers who produce the show.
Starting point is 02:06:17 That is every single one of you who is listening. We don't consider you listeners. We don't consider you an audience. We don't consider you lesser than. We don't consider you fans. Oh, man. How many people like, how many fans do you have? We've got zero fans.
Starting point is 02:06:32 In fact, we have more hate listeners than fans, but they're all producers. and the way you fans. Do you have any fans, John C. DeVorg? Do you have any super fans? Do you got a fan? Someone's a fan over there?
Starting point is 02:06:45 No, no fans? No fans. So we decided in week three of our podcast that, well, we don't want to do that. We don't want to be a fan club. We don't want to be beholden to advertisers. No, at all. We don't want to force people into paying things
Starting point is 02:07:05 that they maybe can't afford. But from time to time, if you're listening and now we're well into two hours, if you think, you know, I did get some value out of this. I learned something. Maybe there was something that triggered you, but like, oh, I could talk about this with my family or I could approach this topic in a certain way. Or maybe I could stay away from certain people who are on meds. Or maybe you could save somebody who's on meds, whatever it is.
Starting point is 02:07:31 Oh, you might be on meds. Yeah, maybe we're helping to save you. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. Yeah, it's hard to get off these things. That's the idea. Try Jesus. That's my recommendation. You can try anything. Yes. So just send us some value back. If you get value from the show, you can do that with time, talent, or treasure. Many people help us with time and talent. And one of those ways is through the album art that we always change up for every single episode. 1865, our previous episode, we titled that The Wide Awakes. And this art came from Jeffrey Rhea. And it was controversial for us. And speaking of the meds, this was the SSRIs, the SSRI Army coming towards you, looking very, you know, starting happy and then getting less happy, then becoming devilish and then coming at you with knives and with a noose and with a gun.
Starting point is 02:08:24 And of course, it's AI generated. The thing that was controversial is we typically will deny art if there is a glaring AI generation error in the art, which this one had. Yeah, it did. There was a dude with three arms, but... Yeah, but in the context of the fact
Starting point is 02:08:45 it wasn't a dude with three arms, it was a pill with three arms. A pill could have any number of arms that it wants to have. And that's how we got around our band. Did you ever figure out the Greek letters that are around?
Starting point is 02:08:59 No, it's just a bunch of alpha-O-Mega stuff. I have no idea. Yeah, well, yeah, there was alpha. Omega X-Lon. Pie is in there. I didn't quite understand that. Jeffrey Ria, thank you very much for bringing us that artwork. We appreciate that. Let's take a look and see if there was anything else that we discussed at the time. I don't think there was anything. Wasn't there?
Starting point is 02:09:22 We had trouble with finding this piece. Well, we both thought Francisco Scaramanga's passport, but photo rejected was funny. Yes, it was. The guy at the back of his head. You were very enamored by static lullaby. Static lullaby's fake money, fake $33 bill. You thought it was good for some reason. No, I thought it was something frameable.
Starting point is 02:09:52 I didn't think it was for the show because we don't do pictures of ourselves. No. I thought it's something you should. I suggested that you get him to send you a copy autographed. And so you're hanging on your wall. That's what I was talking about. That's what it was. I messed that up.
Starting point is 02:10:07 And of course, comics or blogger with a butt. This time it was a cat. Yes. In fact, that was going to be. Jay was wrapping up the newsletter. I wrote the copy,
Starting point is 02:10:18 but she puts it together. And she was going to choose that piece. Really? And I caught it before it went through and I changed it. Because I don't think a puckered butthole is necessarily something that's great. Well, the butthole was the clawed logo. So I kind of understood where comics or blogger was coming from. Oh, I see.
Starting point is 02:10:43 Yeah. Yeah, a little clawed in scene yet. No. So we love to thank people who support us with their treasure. $50 and above, never under $50 for reasons of anonymity. We go through the list. And we have a special reward for every single person who can support us with $200 or more. not only will we guarantee read your note,
Starting point is 02:11:05 but also we will give you the title of associate executive producer for this episode. It's in the credits, in the show notes. It's a credit that is recognized by Hollywood people, because you can even put it on IMDB.com in addition to your LinkedIn or your social media profile, $300 and above, same note reading, and you get the title of executive producer. So we'll start off with Countess Knight from Edmonds, Washington, who hits us up with $400, and she will become a countess.
Starting point is 02:11:36 And that's all she had was Viscountess, countess. No, no, she becomes a Viscountess. She is a countess. Is that how it works? Viscountess bigger than Countess? Yes. Yeah, I think so. I think so, yes.
Starting point is 02:11:50 And that's her entire note. So thank you very much. Countess. She started off as Dame Knight. She made a point. I don't want to use my name. I want to be Dame Knight. And so, and she would scold us if we read it because it would come through PayPal
Starting point is 02:12:05 with her name on it. So we've memorized. And Jay, everybody. Okay, yeah. And so now it's going to have to be Vite Countess or Countess. No, it moves to Countess. Yes. I think Vycantus is lower.
Starting point is 02:12:20 Hold on. Yes. I thought Vy Countess came before. I'm going to look it up. Yes, please do. We need to get this right. I need a browser here. Drong Quotron.
Starting point is 02:12:34 What? Yeah, Browning. I'll say what. You say what? Peeridge. Peerage. You hear the, what you're hearing right now is the Peeridge Committee at Work. This is a rare insight into the...
Starting point is 02:12:50 I'm sorry, it's peerage.htm. Okay. Devorak.org. slash peerage. H.C.m. Yeah. It may have a blink tag. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:13:01 people are having trouble with your sign-up link to the newsletter. I noticed this. You have to keep hitting it over and over and then eventually it goes through. I have no idea what's going on. I'm going to have to create a new one. Oh, please. You don't have the password to that server. You can't create anything there.
Starting point is 02:13:22 Okay, five-time night becomes a Viscountess. Yeah, she's going to be Viscountess now. Viscountess. Okay. So that's bigger. She's bigger than Countess. Perfect. Yeah. Yeah. Love it. Love it.
Starting point is 02:13:36 I don't even see Countess on here, to be honest about it. All right. Onward was Sir Lawrence in Logan Port, Indiana, 333-88. And he sent in a note or she or he, Larry, Larry, Larry Stewart, Sir Lawrence of Logan's Port, Indiana. John, it's actually a postcard from Route 66. John, just what you need. Jesse James Hideout. Happy Recovery.
Starting point is 02:14:12 Had the same procedure in 2018, and I'm still here. Wow. Larry Stewart. Okay. We're glad you're here. Glad you're here. Yeah, we are. Sir Iqabod is in Lake Forest Park, Washington,
Starting point is 02:14:26 and he sends us $333.34, which I think is an anomaly, because he says, Dear Crackpot and Buzzkill, here's my latest installment of 33 for the last 100 shows. So we got an extra penny out of it. I'm usually playing catch up with my podcast, so I end up listening to the greatest podcast in the universe a week or two after the fact.
Starting point is 02:14:49 With that amount of time to further digest what has happened in the world, I'm always amazed at how spot on your analysis is as things are happening just at the moment. I figured out how. For a long time listeners, we might remember that Adam isn't a boomer. He's from the future and even had a time machine that we could all ride in. It's been a long time.
Starting point is 02:15:12 Adam, can you set the time for just returning to now so we don't have to come back? But I would love to go for a ride, please. I love that nauseating feeling it gives me. Plus, I'm worried about Sparky the dog. It's been a long time since I haven't heard him bark. Did anyone leave him water? so he is requesting the time machine, the dimension time machine, which we indeed have not ridden in in quite a while.
Starting point is 02:15:37 So I dug it out. It's been in the podcast bag. So I have that. He also wants a little girl, yay. He says, damn, it's good to hear your voice, John. Your humble servant, Sir Iqabot of the bike path, Gorbill, Baron of the Sillucid Empire. Sillucid, Sillucid, empire.
Starting point is 02:15:56 There we go. All right, everybody, get ready. Here we go. Are you ready? Stand by. It's going to hurt just a little bit. You might get dizzy. It's going to be only America first.
Starting point is 02:16:09 Oh, here we go. There's sparky. There he is. Wow. Woo! If you're dizzy, just look at the ground. It'll all go away. Thank you, Sirriqab.
Starting point is 02:16:32 That was a fun ride. Yikes. Okay, so I have to correct myself. I did find it. Countess comes next after Viscount. Ah, okay. So she becomes a countess. From Viscountess to countess.
Starting point is 02:16:48 Got it. Makes sense. So that's a seven times night. Seven X. Onward. With Sir Greg Birch, our buddy in Port Angeles, Washington, the dentite. Wishing John good health and offering local assistance if needed. Well, that's nice.
Starting point is 02:17:09 5666, 6th, my 60th celestial orbit. What? Naps now legal. You can take naps whenever you want. Whatever you want, yes. Yeah. Sir Greg, so he's got a birthday
Starting point is 02:17:25 coming up is $250. Thanks, Greg. Austin Allen, Roseville, California, 225. He writes in, says, hello, gents. It's Austin Allen, not to be mistaken with Cole Thomas Allen, and no affiliation with the Wide Awakes. your favorite pool dude representing hell. I mean California.
Starting point is 02:17:42 Making sure your pool feels great and not like the disgusting high chlorinated public pools and hotel pools. Thank you guys so much for all you do. I listen to you guys during my pool route and try to hit all my clients in the mouth. That's part of your responsibility as a producer. I love letting him know about the No Agenda podcast and how it helps relieve people from the fear porn of the legacy media.
Starting point is 02:18:03 Your pool guy has about 10 seconds to make a good impression and most don't throw back to Linda Lupakken. For the best pool service in the greater Roseville area, email Aston at MD. Austin MD. Pool C.A. at gmail.com. That's MD for Marley's Dad Pools and CA for California at gmail.com. So it is MD Pools, CA at Gmail.com. Named after a super amazing daughter, Marley, who I love so much.
Starting point is 02:18:31 Stay chlorinated. Says Austin the pool guy and the frogs are gay. Oh, I didn't. get the frogs are gay. Hold on a second. You know, whenever we play these jingles, that's immediately when people request the jingles. It's uncanny that way.
Starting point is 02:18:46 I don't like them putting chemicals in the water that turn the friggin frogs gay. There you go. You got it. Jordan Tierney in Oral, South Dakota. Yeah. New 1060. I found you guys in 2020 after watching a saddle tramp story. No saddle tramp.
Starting point is 02:19:06 where she talked about the podcast in 2020. I was Miss Rodeo America, and due to the pandemic, the pandemic served until the end of 2021. This is Jordan is a woman. Yes. The Jordan, it's a Jordan woman.
Starting point is 02:19:23 Thank you so much for keeping me sane during that time. You're welcome. You guys help me during everything, keep everything in perspective. And to see through the BS, I did the $50 a month payment, starting in 2024 and reached the full amount of Damehood in early 2025. I would like to be known as Dame orodeo queen.
Starting point is 02:19:47 And at the round table, I would like a bottle of Cabernet. Ooh, wait. I think I did that. Which Cabernet do we want for her? Let's do what Cabernet. Not just any old Cabernet. We want a good cat for her. No, we'll give her a good.
Starting point is 02:20:01 Just go half, you know, just the top of my head. I think a bottle of 2020 BV Private Reserve would do. BV Private Reserve Cab. Okay. I have ordered it. It will be there. And then she says, I think I did that correctly. Please edit anything you need out.
Starting point is 02:20:26 We did fine. No jingles, no karma. God bless Dame Rodeo Queen. Now, I want to know Dame Rodeo Queen. Are you a barrel rider or that's my favorite rodeo? Barrel racing. Is it barrel racing? Not barrel rider.
Starting point is 02:20:42 Okay. I'm sorry. Let me get on that barrel. I'll write it. I think you can call her a barrel racer. She may have been a barrel racer. My first wife was a barrel racer. You had a first wife?
Starting point is 02:20:58 What? Stop the show. What? Is she still alive? Yeah. Do you ever talk to her? I don't, maybe, I haven't talked to her for a couple, since COVID. Did she, was she listening to us during COVID?
Starting point is 02:21:12 I got this since COVID is my go-to now. I haven't done this since COVID. I haven't traveled since COVID. I haven't talked to my first wife since COVID. I haven't changed my underwear since COVID. That's right. Well, can I ask what her name was, her first name only? Yeah, Vicki.
Starting point is 02:21:29 Vicki. Hmm. The more you know. Even the- She could jump on a horse bearback and take off like a rocket. Oh, man. You never cease to amaze me, John Cedar Warwick. Nor does Eli the coffee guy, who is in Bensonville, Illinois.
Starting point is 02:21:46 He comes in with 205 and 7 cents. That is, of course, a $200 associate executive producer donation along with the date. And he says, living in Chicagoland suburbs, I've noticed the flag at the local schools and library has been at half-staffed more often than full masks in recent years. It started around COVID and there it is, since COVID, and just kept going. It used to be the half staff meant something serious had happened. 9-11, real tragedies. Now it feels like it's done to demoralize us.
Starting point is 02:22:16 Hard to feel like the country is standing tall when old glory ain't. Thanks, Pritzker. Nothing helps pick up the morale like a good cup of coffee, though. Please visit giggle-out coffee roasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20% off your order. and as always stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy. Bob Dietrich in good old flower mound, Texas, $200 from 1864 pointcast. Just Baker. Just Baker.
Starting point is 02:22:48 He did the mix. Just Baker, just the mind-blown maker. Just Baker, the mind-blown maker. The little rhyme there. The end of the show mix from the last Thursdays. podcast was incredible. With the distorted organ intro to the next
Starting point is 02:23:07 gen rap, I was blown away. Boom! After 20 replays in the car, I decided to, I decided the automobile speakers weren't cutting it. Some more of these, please. I don't know if it's an original or sparked from another artist, but Bravo. No,
Starting point is 02:23:25 it's all, it's all Suno. Just Baker. Just Baker's new on the scene. He competes. and he competes. And also, if you want to talk about competing, then you want to know about Linda Lupatkin from Castle Rock, Colorado. She supports us almost, I think every single show with $200, and she just wants jobs karma.
Starting point is 02:23:44 And she says, rightly so, your resume has about 10 seconds to make an impression. And most don't. For a resume that gets results, go to ImageMakersInc.com. Linda helps professionals and executives turn their experience into a clear story of leadership, results, and impact. That's Image Makers, Inc. with a K and Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and Writer of Winning Resumays. And she wants some jobs, Karma. Jobs, Jobs, Jobs, and jobs.
Starting point is 02:24:11 Let's vote for jobs. You've got Karma. So I got an email from a recruiter. This must be a scam. Do you ever get emails from recruiters? If you get it, you know it's a scam. but do you give an email from a recruiter? No, I don't think so.
Starting point is 02:24:30 He got this from, you know, he has a LinkedIn, but he's got a Gmail address. And he's like, you know, you with your decentralization and with your podcasting 2.0 experience, I think I have the perfect opportunity for you in a leadership role. I'm like, okay, I'll bite.
Starting point is 02:24:47 And then, you know, I said, well, if you're more interested, then I will, then I will, I'll send you more information. And then, you know, he sends me like, I say, okay, what is this a job? Is this a consulting gig? Is this, what is it?
Starting point is 02:25:00 Oh, no, it's leadership at Adobe. I'm like, what? That makes no sense. What? Yeah, exactly. Well, they give you a job at Adobe? Well, he's a recruiter. I don't think.
Starting point is 02:25:13 But you want you to work at Adobe? It must be a scam. The next thing he sends me, it's got to be. Yeah, the next thing he sends me, he's got to be. Well, if you take this test and give us $50, then we'll, we, you get, yeah. Continuing with our supporters, $50 and above,
Starting point is 02:25:30 Christopher Myers is in Dallas, Texas, and he sends us $185 and says, donate better. Yes, definitely low donations. We would like to see more value coming back to us. Maybe for Mother's Day. You know, Mother's Day is next Sunday. That's the next show.
Starting point is 02:25:47 Yeah, it's true. And maybe people would, for a change, because only we notice this, by the way. They don't, people who listen to. People hate their moms except during the COVID year. That's right. That's when it was stellar. And after that, it's like, ah, it's just mom.
Starting point is 02:26:01 Yeah. We totally kicked ass during the COVID year for the moms. Yes. And now, well, you know, whatever. Yeah, whatever, exactly. Mansour Rod in Alpharetta, Georgia. I hope I pronounce that, right? One, two, three, four, five.
Starting point is 02:26:25 We see what you do there, what you did there. Thank you very much. We appreciate that. Then we have Jim Carlson from Denver, Colorado. We sends us $100, but he also had a note, which I'm going to bring up here. And I liked it because it was here, John and Adam, a short note, greatest podcast ever. I enjoy your podcast. John, keep getting better.
Starting point is 02:26:50 I am turning 80 on, is it? this 12th May, 12th of May, I think, or 17. I think 12th of May, 26. And I do not want to be any younger. Cat man's, what? What? Why are you laughing? Why you're roughing? Why you're laughing? It's silly. Cat man something. Jim Carlson. Cat man do. No, Catman do. Anyway, 80 years old. And he still listens to the best podcast in the universe without wearing his hearing age. how many people we have who are octogenarians that listen to this show?
Starting point is 02:27:29 Well, they better donate quick. I think you guys, yeah, you're ready. $80 donation, $80 donation for the you oxygenaries. Just saying, get your donation in now. You don't want to get up to heaven. Actually, I went back and forth with one of our producers who's 83, 84, 85 is in the mid-80s. Yeah. And he says, I've got to get my knighthood in before I'm gone.
Starting point is 02:27:58 I told him he's got a bad attitude. Very bad attitude. Don't look at that rock when you're driving your motorcycle. Exactly. That's what I told him, the old rock thing. Yes. Rian Kossinsky, Karsland, Alberta. That's in Scandinavia, 8374.
Starting point is 02:28:12 And also wants to add birth to the birthday list, Josh of BC from Zach and Rian of Alberta, Canada. And a switcheroo donation and deduishing for his birthday. You've been deduced. He hit Zach in the mouth many moons ago before COVID, and thanks is in order. John, so glad you're okay. You have me worried for a beat. Ha!
Starting point is 02:28:34 Thank you for your courage, says Rian. Jason Shepard, Trinidad, Colorado, $80.76. And there's Sir Kevin McLaughlin, Archduke of Luna, lover America and Boobes. He is the OG Boob Donator, and he comes in with $80. And $8. God bless America and boobs. We have Jurek. Coach Jack from Prague.
Starting point is 02:28:57 I think that's how he pronounced it. Yeah, you pronounce it Prague. And he wants an F. Karma, which I'll hit him with right away. You've got karma. And next on the list, she's always there. Dame Rita from Sparks, Nevada, 6833. Thank you so much, Dame Rita. Gwen Sobisky, Kettering, Ohio was 67.
Starting point is 02:29:19 David Cox from Austin, Texas, 6325. Dame Teresa Martine, Camerillo, California, 61, 61. Uh, that's, uh, something with a sticks and a dix. I forget what that is. Eric Fleenor, Palmyra, Palmyra, um, Michigan. Is that right? Yeah, I suppose to. Mississippi.
Starting point is 02:29:44 Oh, you're doing your Mississippi. Michigan. Uh, George Sousa Hillmark, she is 55 55. George Sousa, Hillmark, California, 53, 33, Jorge Hernandez, Lake Stevens, Washington, 53. 33. Gregory Brahman in Saginaw, Michigan, 5272. Donation to the best podcasting universe for the best mom in the universe. Wendy Brayman is how you pronounce it. Wendy from Gregory. There you go, Mom. There's a first Mother's Day donation. And Bradley Bowman in Duluth, Minnesota, 5218. We've got Josiah Thomas in Ankeny, Iowa with 51. Here are the 50s. Foster Birch, New York, New York, Alex Savala, Sir Alex, the winning Sir Alex Savala in Kyle, Texas.
Starting point is 02:30:27 Maserick in Memphis, Tennessee, Stephen Ray, Spokane, Washington, Carl Vogler in Dillam Beach, California, Frankie Perez, and San Diego, Carrie Jackson, Watertown, Tennessee, Jason Delusio, Miami Beach, and Aichi Kitigawa checks in from San Francisco, California with $50.
Starting point is 02:30:44 Thank you all very much for those you who do support us. We would like to see more of that, please. It is value for value. We really feel like we're putting the value in. We're bringing a lot to the table. It's worth it. It's good. If you don't support, then things do tend to go away. And, you know, I don't know if we can do four more years at this point.
Starting point is 02:31:05 You know, I may have to get that gig at Adobe. Yeah, I think you should go to work for Adobe. Yeah, thanks. You'd fit right in. I would not fit in at all. That's a horrible idea. I don't want to work at Adobe. The other one was, what's that AI company?
Starting point is 02:31:23 He had two for me. Snowflake. I'm not going to work at any company. You know, it's named Snowflake. That's a horrible idea. I'm an executive vice president at Snowflake. Thank you very much. Oops.
Starting point is 02:31:36 Thank you very much to our executive and associate executive producers. We're producing episode 1866. Our formula is this. We go out. We hit people in the mouth. You. What? Order.
Starting point is 02:31:54 Shut up. Shut up. There you go. I should have done that earlier, but we thanked everybody, $50 and above as we always do. Noagendaddonations.com is where you go to support the show with your treasure. Noagendaddonations.com. Any amount, anytime you want to. We love the numerology. It's always fun to do. It supports the show. It keeps the show going. Keeps the wheels grinding. Keeps the machine humming. You can even do a sustaining donation. Any amount, any frequency. Noagendatendidonations.com. It's a birthday, birthday. I don't know much as you. And here's our list.
Starting point is 02:32:32 Sir Greg Birch, turn 60 on May 6. Happy birthday to him. As Zach and Rianna of Alberta, Canada, wish Josh of British Columbia. Very happy birthday. He celebrated today, actually, May 7th. And Jim Carlson turns 80 years old on May 12th. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
Starting point is 02:32:53 It's your birthday, yeah. Oh, we have title changes. Boy, it's been a while since we had one of those. Title changes. Turn and faceless late. Night changes. Don't want to be a douchebag. No, douchebags for our Viscountess, who today becomes a countess.
Starting point is 02:33:13 That would be the Viscountess Knight. We always remember her name as Viscountess Night. But now she'll be known as Countess Night. Thanks to an additional $1,000 support to the best podcast in the universe, and we thank you very much. have a dame and we have a knight to bring up today, John. So if you can, there's my sword, if you can grab
Starting point is 02:33:30 yours. Here you go. Right here. Yeah, you're getting stronger. Bigger blade. Jordan Tierney and Rob Butcher. Both of you step up. You have supported the No agenda show in the amount of $1,000 or more. And that means I'm very proud to pronounce the as Dame Rodeo Queen
Starting point is 02:33:50 and Sir Jimmy Chimkins of the Bloody Goiter. Wow, that sounds nasty. See, for you, we've got hookers and blow, rent boys, and chardonnay. We actually have a bottle of 2020 BV private reserve cab by request. Along with that, we've got Harlitz and Haldol. We've got beer and blunts. We've got Calgirls and Coffin varnish, Rubeness, Women and Rosei, Gais and the Sockes, sparkling, sider, and escorts, gingerl and jurbels, and always at the roundtable. We've got some mutton and some meat.
Starting point is 02:34:18 If you've been waiting for your ring, I think the rings are in. also we have the pins they're there in as well for the the red knight's order of the heart so all of that is coming your way soon and of course our brand new dame and knight you need to go to no agenda rings.com
Starting point is 02:34:34 check out those beautiful rings they're for dames and for knights they're signet rings which means you get some sticks of wax enclosed in your shipment you can use that to sign and seal your important correspondence with and as always we have a certificate of authentic
Starting point is 02:34:50 That is you. I saw it come through from you. That is your computer beeping. No. Yes, I saw it. I saw it. That was not the one you were bitching about earlier. It's the exact same one.
Starting point is 02:35:05 That's like you're getting an email or text or Only fans notification. You have mail. Something's going on. That's right. The Noagena Meetups. This is where you get connections. It always brings you protection.
Starting point is 02:35:23 The people you meet at a no agenda meetup. will be your first responders in any emergency that keep you stable to make you able. Go to no agenda meetups.com to find out where you can meet other people who listen to the show and they happen all around the world. And sometimes they even send us meetup reports like this one from the Three Mile Island Meetup. This is Chris at the TMI, Evak Zone Spring Meetup where we hit a whole music festival in the mouth. The lead singer said that Adam Curry is the Gibbs looking guy. Don't kill me, bro.
Starting point is 02:35:56 Hey, this is Sir 737. We're microdosing micro bruise. I'm feeling very protected today because I'm connected. Sarcastic than nomad, thank you for your courage. Microdosing. I'm macrodosing. Yeah, yeah, we've had better reports. I don't know what that recording was about.
Starting point is 02:36:17 That was bad. But we appreciate it no matter what. Hey, there's a meetup taking place tomorrow. A couple of them, actually. We have the May 8th Happy Hour. Our Buda meetup. Ah, that would have been right down the road from me, but I'm not there at the time. So that'll be at Astra in Buda, Texas.
Starting point is 02:36:33 Yes, it is pronounced Buda. The National Dutch Amygdala checkup. Now, this will be in Locale 1650 in Leiden in the Netherlands. That'll be at 8 o'clock Dutch time. Unfortunately, I won't be able to attend. I'm going out to dinner with my daughter. Sorry. Saturday.
Starting point is 02:36:52 Make your daughter to the meetup. She'd love to meet people. seven months pregnant. She doesn't really want to go anywhere at the moment. Oh, I... The Treasure Valley Boise meetup, 3 o'clock at the old state saloon in Eagle, Idaho. Make sure you catch that one. They can all rub her tummy. Also on Saturday, the Sonoma Wino Country Meetup.
Starting point is 02:37:11 That'll be at 3.33 p.m. in Santa Rosa, California, and that'll be at field work. And mum's the word in Nashville. 6 o'clock at 10fold in Nashville, Tennessee. That is also on Saturday. Make sure you go to these meetups if you can. in the month of May, we still have. Unionville, Ontario on the 13th, Raleigh, North Carolina on the 14th, Collieville.
Starting point is 02:37:32 I got it right this time. On the 16th, along with Fort Wayne, Indiana, Los Banos, California. The 21st, Charlotte, North Carolina, the 23rd, Wilmington, Delaware, Los Angeles, California, Hickson, Tennessee, and Franklin, Tennessee, dueling Tennessee meetups on the same day. And on the 24th, Vancouver, British Columbia, and Squim, Washington, where Mimi will be the Too Many Eggs.com Book Lady, and John's much better half, that'll be on May 25th.
Starting point is 02:38:01 And that's it. Of course, there's a lot more taking place, which you can find in no agenda meetups.com. You head over there, find one near you. If you can't find one, here's a novel idea. Start one yourself. It's free of charge. All you got to do is find a place, advertise it,
Starting point is 02:38:20 and let's get it going. Noagentametups.com. Always fun, always easy, and always a party. Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days. It's triggered or hell's lame, but it feels the same. Yeah, baby. We have end-of-show mixes coming up, which I think you will enjoy.
Starting point is 02:38:48 We also have John's tip of the day, but first we're going to choose the end-of-show ISOs. I see you, I have two. I'll go. I have four, so let me hit you with mine. Okay, you ready? Hit it. I agree with you. There's one.
Starting point is 02:39:04 Oh, my goodness. Goody, goody gun drops. You're going to love him. I love he's still on the air. That's it. We're done. And the final one. This is incredible.
Starting point is 02:39:16 I kind of like that one. I like the incredible one. That's better than the other one. Yeah. It was future tense for the Alex Jones one. Get closer to the mic, man. You're cutting out. Get closer to the mic.
Starting point is 02:39:30 Yeah. Let's start with fabulous. It's over. Fabulous show. Donate now. Not at all. AI. Okay.
Starting point is 02:39:44 What? It needs more energy. I wanted it to be soft and demanding. No agenda. This was no agenda, except no substitutes. Okay. That's taken from, what was it? what was the
Starting point is 02:40:01 TV show that had that? I don't know. Yeah, we'll do that one. I like that. Except no substitutes. That's true. And there is no substitute for John C. DeVorex, tip of the day. Green advice for you and me. Just the tip with JCB.
Starting point is 02:40:21 And sometimes, Adam. Okay. Of course. Oh, get closer to the morning. Okay. I haven't changed anything. Uh-huh. So everyone's moaned and groan about the last tip.
Starting point is 02:40:38 So I'm going back to the well and going back to the wine tips, which everybody seems to love. We love our wine tips. 19, 19, 2023, Kirkland's signature, Shabli. Oh, another Kirkland. Yeah, there was Costco. You know, people can go to Costco. It's cheap. I lost track of the price, unfortunately.
Starting point is 02:41:03 Oh, couldn't have been more than $9. They don't charge much more than that for their wines, do they? Not for these Kirkland ones, no. It's just a plain Shabli. Now, here's the thing. This one in particular, let me get this label I got here. Pierre Brissy winemaker on the back of the label. This says Pierre Brissy.
Starting point is 02:41:24 Okay, so Pierre did the wine. So Chablis is an area of the north. northernmost part of Burgundy. And they're known for making, and the grape used in Shabli is always Chardonnay. And so it's a Chardonnay, which is, you know, the ABC folks may or me not like. But it doesn't taste like a California Chardonnay so people shouldn't complain about it too much. And it says Chablis. It doesn't say Chardonnay.
Starting point is 02:41:52 So I guess that would benefit people who hate Chardonnay. But it's not the typical Chabli. in the normal low carbon dioxide years of the of your uh with the climate change not being what it was tends to be steely they describe it as steely flinty sharp hold on a second are you telling me that climate change i.e more parts per million of our co2 makes the wine better oh yeah the Germans will tell you this right to go to the Rhine and ask around and tell you and let them tell you what they think. Well, this is an argument that has never been used.
Starting point is 02:42:37 I think we should. I think we've mentioned it once before on the show. I can't recall, but I like it. Well, winemakers think it's a big deal. Yes, more. So some of these areas that make this sketchy, you know, sometimes good, sometimes bad wines, Burgundy is a good example. They're basically every vintage is good.
Starting point is 02:42:55 And so this shabli is not like the flinty, harsh, you know, acidic shablies that people expect. It's a very soft, gorgeous wine. And I would say, I would check it out, especially all the people that hate, you know, the California shards. Shards. I'm using this thing. Shard. I sharded, man. That's right.
Starting point is 02:43:21 Hey, there it is. There's a dynamite tip of the day from John C. DeVore. I get them all at no agenda fund.com tip of the day.net. Create advice for you and me. Just the tip with JCD. And sometimes Adam. Created by Dana Burnettie. Let's see how we do.
Starting point is 02:43:41 Right on schedule. Perfect. Hey, y'all. Remember us at no agenda donations.com, if you would please. I'll be here Sunday night. Once again, John will be here Sunday afternoon. bringing you the best podcast in the universe breaking down all the media,
Starting point is 02:43:59 the deconstruction that you need to function. I think that's kind of a rhyme. If you stick around, up next we have random thoughts. That'll be on the no agenda stream. Just keep it running in your modern podcast app. Or if you're listening in a web browser, not on YouTube, that's for sure.
Starting point is 02:44:20 End of show makes this from Just Baker, Chris Mattson. I got two that I'm moving to, Sunday from MVP, and we have that No Agenda Donation song, the one that John chose. That'll be the second one in the lineup. Coming to you from Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Starting point is 02:44:38 In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from the refinery row where I want to tell Adam, go get something to eat. I'm John C. DeVorek. All that's open right now is the Burger King, unfortunately. Hey, we'll be here on
Starting point is 02:44:53 Sunday. Until then, adios, foes a hooey-hooey and such and remember us at no agenda donations.com. In the morning. Spirit Airlines grounded, Waffle House of the skies. 17,000 jobs toast. No more budget flights to buy. Jet fuel through the roof from that homer's oil ghost. Stranded passengers screaming while the media
Starting point is 02:45:34 There's just bad luck folks. Out on the Atlantic antivirus on the cruise, pre-passengers down. Now the whole ship's got the news. Rodin born terror on your floating vacation, very rare. They tell you pure no agenda fascination. It's Adam Curry and John Cedar, Barrett, cutting through the media, slop on the no agenda. Now it's your turn to kick in.
Starting point is 02:46:03 Thank you for your courage. Well, that's so. Brain effect. Modern M.K. Ultra. Well, this is a new thesis. I like it. That's o'fo. Devorac.org.
Starting point is 02:50:12 slash N.A. This was no agenda, except no substitutes.

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