No Agenda - 1872 - "Lunar Economy"

Episode Date: May 28, 2026

No Agenda Episode 1872 - "Lunar Economy" Lunar Economy Executive Producers: Sir Switcheroo, Black Baron of the I-4 Corridor Dame Cici Ian Comings Luis Ruiz Jorge Hernandez Dennis Cadle Associate Ex...ecutive Producers: Lisa Perez Austin your favorite Pool Guy Sir Dixbert Eli the Coffee Guy — Gigawatt Coffee Roasters (code ITM20) Linda Lupatkin — Imagemakers Ink, Duchess of Jobs Knight and Dames: Timothy Comings future Dame Savanna Order of the Heart: Sir Switcheroo, Black Baron of the I-4 Corridor End of Show Mixes: Jus Baker (Palm Beach Whispers + Red Knight Call + Silk Threads) MVP (Rolling 90 Day Art + Trump Lake) Art By: Darren O'Neill Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman ShowNotes Archive 1867.noagendanotes.com No Agenda Peerage RSS Podcast Feed Last Modified 05/28/2026 16:31:46 by Freedom Controller  

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Never has a problem with Horowitz. Adam Curry, John C. DeVorey. It's Thursday, May 28th, 2026. This is your award-winning Kimball Nation Media Assassination, Episode 1872. This is no agenda. We're back to Buggies and bases. Broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country right here in FEMA region number six. Good morning, everybody.
Starting point is 00:00:22 I'm Adam Curry. And from Refinery Row, where we've come to the realization that Tai Chi Walking is not going to make you rip. I'm John C. DeVorak. It's Crackbott and Buzzkill. In the morning. Please tell me you haven't been Tai Chi walking. No, of course not. Of course not.
Starting point is 00:00:40 Who's going to believe that bull crap? Are you seeing these ads? Yeah, I started Tai Chi walking. Now I'm ripped. And is a guy's muscle bound? Come on. No, I haven't seen the ads. Are you paying for your services and not just letting these ads sneak into your steeds?
Starting point is 00:00:59 You mean YouTube? Everything. I pay for YouTube. Oh, you pay for it. That's why you're not seeing these ads. Well, and that's why my life is much better. Well, you're missing out. What if you wanted to do Tai Chi walking?
Starting point is 00:01:13 Well, I would have heard you say it's bull crap and I wouldn't have done it. I wouldn't. Uh-oh. Uh-oh. Stop the press. Uh-oh. Oh, this is a mistake. This is a mistake.
Starting point is 00:01:25 So, whereas we both thought it was dynamite to have. have the vice president fill in for Carolyn Levitt. Yeah. Now General Scott Besant is filling in. So Trump's got him on a rotation. Hey, you got to do a swing shift today. Oh, yeah, boom. So we went to Fox.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Boom. There's CNN. I'm waiting for CNN. Waiting for BBC. They've got a switch now. Emma now has four talking heads on screen. Come on. Huh?
Starting point is 00:01:57 Maybe these are like auditions. Yes. All right, we're going to do a screen test with you, Scott. And the way we like to do that here at WH TV is we like to put you right out there and get you in front of the crowd. And let's see what your ratings are. I don't think, well, I'll have to look at it after the show. I don't know if this is his gig. No, he's too glib. The thing about Vance is he's very pleasant.
Starting point is 00:02:30 He's got a nice smile. He plays to the crowd. He's kind of like wants to be liked. Yeah. The best is gay. What? Gay guys can be funny and entertaining. In fact...
Starting point is 00:02:45 After gay comics, maybe... Yeah, see? Right away, your network got shut off because you said the G word. You back? Yeah, here's what happened. happened. This is the network that did that just, it just disconnected. So then I went back to the other one and then you were bitching because it doesn't work. And so I'm back on it again. But this
Starting point is 00:03:09 happened once before. Yeah. I can, I, I can't recall this happening a lot. In the, in the history of the show, it has happened many, many, many, many months. No, I'm talking about the specific, specific thing. Yes. But considering you're in Silicon Valley's backyard. You would think that you could get. That's what's overused. Everyone's on the network.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Everyone's on the AI. I'd be better off in Iowa. All four. Yes, the quad screen is finally filled up with General Scott Besant. Oh, yeah. You want to put him on? Yeah, I could probably do that. Let's see.
Starting point is 00:03:49 You know he's not going to be any good. Yes, you do. Let's see. TV. He's too halting. halting is his style. Yeah, but it's not a great style. No, it's not.
Starting point is 00:04:03 You know, again, as I said before you cut off, it would be great if he did campy gay stuff. That would be... Yeah, he's not going to do that. That would be fantastic. Let's see what he has to say. Come on in general. On the other side of this, that gasoline prices will follow...
Starting point is 00:04:17 Is it on the table? Oh, they're running the table with him. The teams have been going back and forth, and President Trump has made it. very clear. He talked about it at the cabinet meeting. He's wearing a blue swatch watch. Wrong. Iran has to turn over their highly enriched uranium.
Starting point is 00:04:37 They cannot pursue nuclear weapon. And the straight of Hermuth. Hermuth? Your question of energy has to free transit. Oh, he's dying. Navigation of the seas has to be free as it was before. He can't do it. He's not going to take a bad deal. Of course not. We knew this before he started. And you know what's...
Starting point is 00:04:54 Let's see it. Oh, now they're going to go. More than that. Piling on. How long until we see your signature next to President Trump's face on a $250 bill? Well, again, as Treasury Secretary, I have two mandates for U.S. currency. Oh, he's dying a thousand deaths. By the way, I just noticed he has this, this, his mouth in an odd way resembles that of a
Starting point is 00:05:26 Elizabeth Warren. I have to see pictures now. You got to take a look at it. Trump could be. Oh, he's boring. Oh, no. There's only one thing worse than not having the answers is being boring. Yeah, he's no good at this.
Starting point is 00:05:43 Give him the hook. I mean, he's only fair when he's unfaced a nation. Trump should come out now and say, Besson, you're fired. That would be perfect for this. You're no good. You failed the screen test. Goodness gracious.
Starting point is 00:05:59 Who will be next? I would tell you who's going to be next. Rubio. Exactly. And Rubio's going to name. Well, he may be, I don't know, he may be too serious. No, I don't think so. I think Rubio, who is a performer.
Starting point is 00:06:13 Yeah. Will kick ass. He'll do jokes. He'll do stick. If he dances, extra points. Now, you've a bit about him about Besson doing some game material. it would be better if he came out kind of as like as a Rip Taylor type guy, wearing a flamboyate outfit and then doing prop comedy.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Like, no, more like carrot top. Well, Rip Taylor's the progenitor of carrot top. Yeah, but nobody in the universe knows Rip Taylor anymore. Nobody. And he's then Rip Taylor's to throw confetti in the air. That'd be a good bit. Oh, my goodness. Oh, now he's, now he's showing that.
Starting point is 00:06:56 app. He's showing the app. Oh, no. Yeah, this was... Give him the hook. This was the, you know, actually have the, I think I have... Get that dancing guy out there and have him pull him off. Here's a clip about the app. And starting today, parents who set up Trump accounts for their children can download a new app to manage the account. Treasury Secretary Scott Besson says six million children are already signed up for the IRA-style savings accounts. Parents and loved ones can contribute up to $5,000 a year into the account.
Starting point is 00:07:26 For children born in 2025 through 2028, the federal government will donate an additional thousand dollars. The accounts don't officially open for investment until July 4th. You know, the thing, it's really too bad. I mean, and I really, I'm a big Scott Besson fan. And he has done some great snide jokes when he was at the World Economic Forum. He kind of lays into him. But this is not his wheelhouse. And this app, he should just say, girlfriend, let me tell you about this app.
Starting point is 00:07:58 I mean, just throw in a girlfriend, anything, anything but this. You could never do that. That would never happen. I know. I'm just trying to help him out. The press cord. I think throwing the confetti in the air would do it and say, how's that for an answer?
Starting point is 00:08:13 So I was thinking about AI and stuff and how it's changed production, how it's changed our lives, how it's changed the art, how it's changed the end of show mixes. One of our producers reminded me, you know, Ebola. Ebola has been in our lives several times. I think it was two previous times. We've had Ebola pop up and be scary and the media being filled with it. I think it's two in the past 18 years.
Starting point is 00:08:43 Yeah, this is what you do. This is the third time. And I'm reminded about how creative everybody was. So I put together a short little medley. And in the black trumps, weighing in and over 3,000 troops, the ISIS of virus, the killer from Nigeria, Ebo! Back in town, back in town, back in town. Ballas back in town, ball is back in town.
Starting point is 00:09:35 Bola, he come from Africa and Librageta. I'll tell you this, if Ebola breaks out, the United States. United States. I'm going to quarantine myself. I'm wearing a mask. I've already got it in place for my family. Yeah. Yeah. Remember how good those were? Yeah, that was the, we had an era. We had an era where everybody was weird. L. Yankevich.
Starting point is 00:10:15 Yeah. And they could do these parody songs. And the AI won't do that. It can't. In fact, if you try to do a parody song, it won't do it. No, it's not allowed because, God forbid. Yeah, because it's, you know, because it's legal, but it's probably going to get thought of as illegal by the stupid AI.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Yes. Even me just playing that will get this episode removed from Spotify. Probably. No, even though there's not one thing there that was remotely a copyright violation. Nothing. Let's check in with Ebola real quick. There are growing concerns around the globe about the Ebola outbreak in Central Africa. The World Health Organization saying the epidemic is outpacing their efforts.
Starting point is 00:11:00 ABC's Arena Roy has the latest. Health officials are racing to contain the rapidly growing Ebola outbreak in Central Africa. Just one week after declaring Ebola a global public health emergency, the World Health Organization admitting the outbreak is outpacing its efforts. Not only is it difficult to test for, but right now it's spreading in these communities. Wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:11:23 Burks keeps telling us we need the test. And now this guy's telling us it's difficult to test for? Something's up with that. Health emergency, the World Health Organization admitting the outbreak is outpacing its efforts. Not only is it difficult to test for, but right now it's spreading in these communities faster than health officials can keep up with
Starting point is 00:11:42 and it's likely larger than documented. The WHO sending supplies to the Democratic Republic of Congo, where officials suspect at least 200 people have died from the virus. This UN plane bringing protective equipment for health workers, medication, and tents for triage. The European Union and UNICEF sending 100 tons of supplies, including testing kids. Several countries, including the U.S., now are tightening travel restrictions. Americans coming from affected areas can only enter through airports in Atlanta. Wait.
Starting point is 00:12:17 What? There's a half a ton of stuff per dead person? Huh? 200 dead, 100 tons? They're sending 100 tons of what? Stuff. Testing gear? PPP. Pea, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:12:32 And they're required to undergo enhanced screenings, including temperature checks. Temperature check. Enhanced screen. Let me take your temperature. What kind of have enhanced screening is that? Remember during COVID? And then you go to a restaurant and they'd point that thermometer at your head. Well, don't you remember pre-COVID during the swine flu?
Starting point is 00:12:55 No, SARS. And they had every airport had these thermographs as you're walking down to the airport. Oh, yeah. Remember the thermograph? Thermograph. Remember the, do you remember the thermograph? Yes. Oh yeah, and you walk by it.
Starting point is 00:13:11 Oh, you're too hot. You're too hot, dude. And they're required to undergo enhanced screenings, including temperature checks. Non-citizens are banned from traveling here at all if they've been to the impacted areas in the last three weeks. At least 10 African nations have been warned they now have an elevated transmission risk. With the FIFA World Cup less than three weeks away, fears are growing that the virus could spread beyond Central Africa. Now, despite the warnings and fears, health officials stress that the global Ebola threat remains low. Oh, it remains low, but he played this clip.
Starting point is 00:13:47 This is, I have the Ebola in the USA clip. In the USA! The CDC sending an urgent request to its staff members for help screening Americans returning to the U.S. from Central Africa for any potential signs of Ebola. The internal email obtained by ABC News and sent by acting CDC director, Dr. J. Baracharia, asking for volunteers to bolster efforts at airports to check passengers for symptoms like fever. Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas, now one of just three entry points, along with Virginia's Washington-Dulles and Hartsfield Jackson in Atlanta, for U.S. citizens who have been in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, or South Sudan in the last three weeks.
Starting point is 00:14:33 Non-Americans are currently banned from entering the country if they've recently traveled to those areas. Ebola is suspected to have killed more than 200 people. And international aid groups say this outbreak could become the deadliest on record. A dire scene in the eastern Congo, a baby born to a mother infected with Ebola, dying from the disease. Health officials warning the outbreak is spreading faster than responders can contain it. Yeah, we heard that one American aid worker in the region. That's the talking point there. The talking point.
Starting point is 00:15:09 Faster than they can contain it. From the disease. Health officials warning the outbreak is spreading faster than responders can contain it. One American aid worker in the region telling us doctors are already stretched thin. Right now we're working 14, 16 hour days, six, seven days a week. We're trying to rotate to get breaks. At least 10 African nations bordering the Democratic Republic of the Congo now at an elevated transmission risk. And David, the request for CDC volunteers to help.
Starting point is 00:15:39 help with airport Ebola screening. As millions of soccer fans are expected to travel to the U.S. in less than three weeks for the World Cup. But the CDC insists that the risk of spreading Ebola here in the U.S. remains low. So that was 80. They always have this little kicker at the end. Yeah, every one of these reports.
Starting point is 00:15:57 So I'd say the, I'd say this is, of course, it's ABC. So it's mainstream media. All of them, including Fox, are like Democrats. Hey, man. if we can't screw up Trump in the midterms, let's at least screw up world soccer. Yeah. That's all they want.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Let's want to screw stuff up. Yeah, they like to screw stuff up. I do. They do. They're doing a good job. I think they're doing a wonderful job of it. Yes. Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:16:34 The funny thing is, is that no one's ever upset about this. No one's ever upset about these things, about this, this sciop. I'm an Epstein files. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Epstein files. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:49 Yeah. Since we're going to change topics, I have a little interregnum here. Oh, you're using the interregnum term. This is something new. This is a, President Trump is an interregnum in the liberal world order. So you've been affected with the new. New World Order, Liberal World Order talking point into Regnum. Hmm.
Starting point is 00:17:15 I was unaware of this problem. I've never heard you use this word. Well, it's a good word. No, it's not a great word. It's not a good word. And I should say, I should use, what was this a foodie term when you have the little intramon? An entremont.
Starting point is 00:17:31 Entremont. You have a piece of sherbet. You have like a small spoon full of sherbet. Sorbet. I'm sorry, sorbet. Chef has specially prepared this for you and for you only here at the table. Here you go. It's one spoonful. What is an interregnum? No, just the thing in between, you know.
Starting point is 00:17:51 No, I don't think that's true. Yes, it's a moment of in-between this. Do you mind if I ask the Book of Knowledge first? Go ahead, ask. A Book of Knowledge. Give me the definition of Interregnum. People like the Book of Knowledge. Yeah, they do.
Starting point is 00:18:08 They do. There we go. According to the book of knowledge, an interregnum is a period when normal government is suspended, especially between successive reigns or regimes. It derives from Latin meaning between kingdoms and refers to any interval when there is no ruling authority or a temporary gap in leadership. Huh, thus. Yeah, exactly what I said. No, it's not at all what you said.
Starting point is 00:18:33 And you used it completely. Yes, and in between. It's specifically in between kingdoms. You're doing... Yeah, kingdoms of our clips. Oh, okay. Hey, I think I learned something. Thank you, Book of Knowledge.
Starting point is 00:18:45 I learned something here. Somebody said, hey, man, you're going to open source that? No. Have every stupid podcast in the world using our Book of Knowledge? No. No. I spent hours on that. All right.
Starting point is 00:19:04 Interregnum. I love it. It's even better now when they say it about Trump. Eterregnum in between kingdoms. So he is, by definition, not a king. No, not a king. Oh, not a king. By definition, an interregnum, he's not a king.
Starting point is 00:19:17 It's in between kingdoms. That's a good point. I'm just saying. I think you've got a point there. You can slam home as the next city council meeting. Okay. I don't know what that has to do with it, but thanks. Here we go.
Starting point is 00:19:33 This is from mid-1960s, about 65, I believe. a little dialogue on the series Dragnet, a TV show with Jack Webb. Oh, great show. Is that the dumb, da-dum-dum-dum. Yep. Dum-da-dum-dum-dum. Dun-dum-dum. You've been smoking marijuana?
Starting point is 00:19:55 Marijuana is illegal. I know that. That's right. For now. In a couple of years, things may change when all the kids grow up and start wearing ties and going to the polls. Marijuana is going to be like liquor, packaged and taxed and sold right off the shelf. I doubt it, Mr. Shipley.
Starting point is 00:20:09 Look, I don't mean to be disrespectful, but it seems to me there must be better things for cops to do than chase down wild rumors about something as innocent as marijuana. Why don't you go after the big bad guys, the heroin peddlers. I won't argue with you about them. They should be stopped. That's right. We'd like to put them out of business. That's why we're here. What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:20:26 We're trying to keep them from getting a new customer. There's a big difference between marijuana and hard narcotics. Yeah, but it's only a small step. And everybody who takes a drink is going to be an alcoholic. We know that's not true, don't we? let's face it, we're on opposite sides of the fence and there's nothing we can do about it. For you, if there's a law against it,
Starting point is 00:20:43 it's wrong, black and white. I just don't see things that way, that's all. Well, you ought to give it a try, fella. It might keep you out of jail. Maybe, but we'll change the law someday, even though your friend here thinks we won't. Believe me, it's a new world. Your laws are as outdated as bustles.
Starting point is 00:20:57 Laws are going to have to be changed to keep pace with the new morality. They'll change or we'll have to break them. Oh, man, the Lear Foundation was already working in 1960? I don't think there was, you think that was... No, no. It seems unlikely. Was there, is there a drag net where they're talking about LGBTQ?
Starting point is 00:21:15 This is. There probably is, you know, I think somebody's got to start data mining the old dragnet shows. This is kind of like The Simpsons. Predictive, yes, predictive programming. That's very intro. Well, of course, it was the liberal media hippies who were running the show back then even. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:33 Because then in the 70s, we got all in the family, and we know that Meathead was a dope smoker. Yeah. So, hmm. Interesting. Well, I can't say that it's bad, but it's right down to the packaging and tax. That's interesting. Yeah, I know.
Starting point is 00:21:52 It was really great. That's pretty good. I like that a lot. Hey, you nailed it on those teen takeovers. I have some bunch. I had three clips on the teen takeovers. And all of, not all of them. them, but at least two of them mentioned the idea that we've talked about, which is that
Starting point is 00:22:12 parents should be arrested for these teen punks. Well, yes. I mean, I have one or two clips myself. I'd love to hear yours because when I heard how these parents are acting in this regard, I'm like, yeah, you're probably right. I only see two, though. There's another one I'll find it. It's got a different.
Starting point is 00:22:30 It's got the wrong title. Of course. What are we starting with? Let's start with the... Oh, there should be teen takeover. Okay. I'm looking for teen takeover one, but let's skip. Let's skip right to the Fox.
Starting point is 00:22:46 This is from Tampa, Florida. This is the Teen Takeover of Fox 44. Okay, so there's a new TikTok trend. You know, takeovers, going into restaurants, trash in places, meeting up, driving crazy. Listen, that's not going to work in Polk County. There's a whole lot of laws that not only hold juvenile's responsible, adults responsible, but parents responsible for your children's conduct to include juvenile curfews.
Starting point is 00:23:20 Now, summer's coming, and we want the kids to have a good time and a fun time. They worked hard in the school this year. We don't want them to start next year with a criminal arrest record. But I'll guarantee you. Who is this guy? Is he a blowhard? Is he from Dragnet? He's the cop.
Starting point is 00:23:39 He's just a drag. He's Jack Webb. He's Dragnet. Turing up people's businesses, fighting in the streets. We're going to light them up, all of them. And then Mom and Daddy, if you don't hold them accountable personally,
Starting point is 00:23:57 make sure they're home when they need to be, then we're going to come lock you up too or charge you civilly, depending on which laws we can plug in. But parents, hold your children accountable so we don't have to. We will hold them accountable if you make us, but then we're going to hold you accountable too. Think about that.
Starting point is 00:24:19 And then have a good summer. Why don't you marinate them that for a minute? Yes, the Florida law. We're going to light them up. What are you going to tase them? That's what they need. They need to be tased. Well, let me just throw an interregnum.
Starting point is 00:24:33 This is what happened in Chicago. From day into the night, Memorial Day weekend closed out with more teen takeovers. In Hyde Park, three people were shot and several arrested. It's not just messing around in Chicago. We shoot you. The past couple of years, the so-called teen trends have been a thorn in the side for police. We need to do everything we can to put a stop to these events, and that means giving the police all the tools that they could possibly bring to bear. City Council's Public Safety Committee Chairman Alderman Brian,
Starting point is 00:25:03 Hopkins has been trying to give police more tools like an earlier teen curfew, but Mayor Brandon Johnson has been against it. Hopkins says as the teen trends continue, more of his colleagues are supporting curfews and other measures. It's their voters that are calling them and demanding something be done. And it's Chicago's police superintendent demanding something as well. During a city club appearance last week, Larry Snelling says it's time to stop making excuses for the teenagers who participate. There we go. And there has to be. be accountability. The failure here is that when we don't put accountability on teenagers, because teenagers need it more than anybody. Which means having the tools to make arrests,
Starting point is 00:25:43 and there's a growing call from Snelling Alders and the mayor to make parents accountable. Because the teen trends gains steam on social media, St. Sabina's youth organizer, Lamar Johnson, says many parents are aware and even enabled their kids. Like, majority of parents, not all, but majority of these parents know exactly what their teens are doing, know where they are, Uber them, taking them down there. I doubt it. What? Accountability ordinance that would hold them
Starting point is 00:26:11 responsible if they allow their children to engage in criminal activity. In addition, City Council is working on social media ordinance that will allow police to work with companies to remove posts that could potentially result in violent behavior. Censorship. That's how it starts.
Starting point is 00:26:27 Yep. I agree. Do you agree what? That censorship, it shouldn't be done. No. but that's how it started. Oh, it's bad posts, bad posts. Well, I don't have, I can't find a clip one for, but this is part two of another series where they talk about this. Now, Chicago officials weighing, targeting parents with one representative. It's the same lady.
Starting point is 00:26:49 Proposing charging parents of minors arrested at teen takeovers after the city's 10 p.m. curfew with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, a class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to a $2,500 fine and $300. $300 fine and 364 days in jail. This strategy of potentially charging parents. That's three years. Hold on. Why don't they say three years? Let me hear it again. And 365 days in jail.
Starting point is 00:27:14 That's one year. Oh, I'm sorry. You're right. Hello. This strategy of potentially charging parents. I'm doing back in my head inaccurately. Yes. I mean, you're almost Chad GPT accurate.
Starting point is 00:27:27 Jail. This strategy of potentially charging parents, do you think it would be effective? I think that it's a start. We need to have a proactive approach from police, whereas they should be monitoring social media to establish where these meetups would be occurring. Meetups? Wait a minute. It's a meetup. It's a meetup. All of a sudden, it's a meetup. To establish where these meetups would be occurring and place the officers accordingly. One idea as desperation to rein in teen takeovers rose.
Starting point is 00:27:58 But there was stuff like this. We had weird. stuff going on as kids and we all, hey, let's go meet up there and we get all rowdy. I mean, it's really social media that makes it happen. Well, it's social media that is drawing more attention to it. When I was a kid in this. Here we go. Okay. You had sit-ins.
Starting point is 00:28:20 No, when I was a kid, and this was I believe was in the 60s, you'd go to the county fair in Pleasant in Alameda County Fair. and on 4th of July, you'd always go on the 4th of July. They stopped showing the fireworks on the 4th of July because of this. Every 4th of July, year after year after year, you could go to the 4th of July and there would be a teen takeover of the fair
Starting point is 00:28:47 where two rival gangs usually... Yes, gangs, absolutely. Rival gangs would come in and start pounding each other. No, no, no, they would rumble. Yeah, they'd... By the way, the movie, the musical, what was it? West Side Story. West Side Story.
Starting point is 00:29:09 The musical West Side Story was from this era, and these kids would come in and you'd go just to watch it. Of course you did. It's going to be a rumble. Because they never involved you. They didn't come just randomly, and they would just go after each other. And they were doing it if you watched the latest videos that come out of these teen takeovers, which I think is an interesting, the fact that they've coined a term for a teen takeover.
Starting point is 00:29:35 And they all use the same term, team takeover. When you see it, it's just two groups battling each other. They're not really, you know, you see people holding their kid to the side, and you see bystanders, but they never do anything to the bystanders. Do you remember during Obama, this was a great piece of history,
Starting point is 00:29:53 I probably don't have the clip. During the Obama administration, there was an equivalent of kind of a team, Teen takeover. And this mom, this black mom comes right up to her kid and grabs him by the ear. And do you remember this? Like, what are you doing here? And she took, and it was vaguely.
Starting point is 00:30:12 Everybody, everybody was covering this. Mom. Teen, I wonder. It might have a clip. But anyway, so this is not a new phenomenon by any means. No. When you were happening in restaurants, which I'm sure, you know, they used to be in. public events.
Starting point is 00:30:30 Yeah. And then when the cops would come, it's cops! And then we'd all run. They'd be scattered. Scatter. Scatter. Yeah, this has been going on
Starting point is 00:30:41 for the last 50 years. Longer. Maybe longer. Yeah, I'm sure it goes back to the 20s and 30s and longer than that. How about the gangs of New York? Yeah, there you go.
Starting point is 00:30:51 Basically, teen takeovers. Yeah. Oh, well. I like the parents who Uber their kids. Hey, go ahead. Go ahead. Go to the. takeover. Sounds like fun.
Starting point is 00:31:01 But this is leading to the arrest of parents and I think this is the real trend that we're looking at. It's the fuzz, man. The fuzz. Wow. Welcome to Boomer Agenda, everybody. I still think we're,
Starting point is 00:31:18 I think it's great. I think it's great that we know all these terms. You could learn something from us. Yeah. Yeah, especially if you're Zed. You know, I went to a movie screening last night of called Young Washington. Is this one of those Christian films that you rush to? It is actually. It was produced by the Wonder Network and distributed by Angel.
Starting point is 00:31:44 But it's it's more about they're releasing it on July 3rd and it's more intended. It's not, you know, it's not like all, in fact, if anything, there's a lot of blowing people up in this movie. But that's interesting that you say that. Why do you equate Young Washington with one of those Christian movies? No, I think that's the only thing you go see nowadays. In the theater? Yeah, probably. But I realize how little I know of our own country's history.
Starting point is 00:32:13 I didn't really realize. You suspect that this was accurate this movie? Yes. Yeah, I think it was pretty accurate. Was it an idealized like you'd expect? I would expect it to be idealized. Not really. I mean, here's in short, it shows that he wanted to be part of the British Army.
Starting point is 00:32:31 This is colonial Virginia. And he can't because he's just scum. He's a colonist. You know, just go back to your farm, stupid boy. And then he gets an assignment, which he was meant to fail at to go and scout out some land in the Ohio Valley. And then he finds the French. And I didn't really realize that the Brits fought. the French over the Ohio Valley.
Starting point is 00:32:59 They're fighting their French over everything. Yeah, but I'm telling you, I felt like, wow, I'm pretty stupid. I didn't really realize. What would you feel that way? These are details of history that very few people would know one way or the other, and it's not really that important in the scheme of things in today's world. How Washington came to be and why, you know, how the uniforms were chosen for the militia. It was like the prequel to Star Wars.
Starting point is 00:33:24 that's what it was good and a lot of people getting blowed up it was it yeah it was good I could do without the violence oh really it's part of our history man that's who we are we're a violent warring people
Starting point is 00:33:43 we don't want to admit it but we are this is our roots we're good at it too by the way and we were in fact George Washington was friends with the Indians In fact, this is interesting because earlier in the conversation, you went on about how it'd be cool. You didn't use the word cool, but you were implying it, to tase these poor kids and the teen takeover, come in there with tasers and just electrocute, which is a violent act. You've ever seen anyone just shot with one of these things?
Starting point is 00:34:13 They shake a lot. Well, half the people just keep walking from what I've seen of these taser videos. But I didn't. More voltage. I was only trying to extrapolate on what the sheriff said. about we're going to light them up. So I thought that maybe if you light them up, that means you're going to electrify them.
Starting point is 00:34:28 I don't know. Lighten them up. Anyway, it's a good movie when it comes out. I recommend you go see it. Yeah. I've seen one movie at a theater in the last five years, and that's about it. I watched my movies on the video.
Starting point is 00:34:44 On the video? Oh, really? Do you get you from Blockbuster? Or where do you get your video? I get my videos from the TV. I got some screwball clips here. Let's play whatever dummies. I was going to go into some real news.
Starting point is 00:35:01 We've done nothing but screwball, but okay, whatever dummies. What gas do plants absorb from the air? Oxygen. What continent is Brazilian? Brazil is in Latin America. What continent is Egypt in? Why are you asking me this question? Is this the stupid show where these women are all cute?
Starting point is 00:35:22 and then you cut four clips of that, I refuse. They're very short. Okay. Wait, wait, wait, stop. Okay. Now, now you know what it is. Wait, wait, wait. Here's the man who just said, I haven't been to the theater in five years.
Starting point is 00:35:35 I don't go to the movie theater. I sit at home and watch these dipshits on TikTok for hours, and you probably emailed me a copy of this. Didn't you? I'm sure you did. I haven't looked at your emails. No, I did not. Because you hate this show. This is the whatever podcast where this guy.
Starting point is 00:35:52 show. This is not even a show. This is dumb. Is basically this guy, okay, let's just a little background here. This guy who's kind of an obnoxious character, but he has his moments. He's good at mugging. And he brings
Starting point is 00:36:08 on only fans, girls, and whores, basically. And the difference is? There's not much difference, it turns out. But he brings them on and then he, they talk about, love and sex, and then he goes out of his way to prove that they're all idiots by asking the
Starting point is 00:36:29 simplest of stupid questions, man on the street version, and they can't answer anything. And now, you know, this show is run as a live six-hour stream every day. It's very hard to watch. I'm sure you are just, you're like, people who watch Candace Owens, you're like this for this show. No, no, I can't watch the show because it's impossible. All the streams coming on. I can't wait for the screen. You can ridicule me all you want. I'm going to. You can mock me.
Starting point is 00:36:55 You can do what you think is funny. But I'll tell you right now, the show is not watchable. So you can only get the clips from it. You've got to find someone who knows how to clip the show. But the point where they ask these idiotic questions, and then they can't answer the simplest of questions with some of the dumbest things you've ever heard in your life, I think is amusing, especially when these clips are just 54 seconds.
Starting point is 00:37:21 30 seconds, 47. I mean, these are short. I'm not killing it with these, with long, boring clips. I will in a moment. I got long, boring clips coming up. So, so these are the whatever girls. Let's just play two. I'll play two of them. No, no, no, no. We're playing all four. Let's go. Go for it. Absorb from the air. Oxygen. What continent is Brazilian? Brazil is in Latin America.
Starting point is 00:37:50 What continent is Egypt in? Why are you asking me these questions? We spoke about, we spoke about it. Wait, sorry, Egypt is where? The Middle East. What continent is Japan in? Tokyo. You are replacing this. There's no way.
Starting point is 00:38:07 What country is immediately south of the United States? Country, immediately south, the United States. Wisconsin. Wisconsin. That's a state. I don't know. I have no idea, honestly. I've never been there. Who painted the Mona Lisa?
Starting point is 00:38:24 Oh, why do I? Van Gogh. No. I'm that wrong. No. Monet. No, I actually... Monet? Were you about to say Monet? Who painted the Mona Lisa? Justin Bieber? So, this is interesting because you kind of put me down for saying that we should learn more about our history. And here you are with these... Oh, you're throwing at this... My single comment. comment back at you.
Starting point is 00:38:51 I'm very sad by this. That was, you should be. I'm very sad. This is pathetic, especially since these are hard working girls. Name three countries besides the USA. You can't repeat. Africa? Keep going.
Starting point is 00:39:09 Africa? Africa, Europe Asia? Barcelona. Barcelona. Okay, that's a country. Yeah. You know, sometimes I'm a bit harsh on the. workers, but sometimes it's the only option.
Starting point is 00:39:23 How many states are in the USA? 25, 26. How many planets are in our solar system? I don't know. I'm sorry. Well, actually, I'm going to change my mind now. I praise the guys who started only fans. These women would have been homeless and drug addicts.
Starting point is 00:39:44 I'm glad they have a job. Well, that's an interesting take. I'm glad they have jobs. This is horrible. How many letters in the alphabet? 27? Maybe 28? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:39:55 What ocean is California next to? I don't know. Atlantic? If a dozen eggs cost $3, how much is each egg? $4. What country is the Panama Canal in? I don't know, honestly. Lexi?
Starting point is 00:40:07 What country is the what the what? What country is the Panama Canalin? I have no clue what that means. Guess. Just throughout the country. Um, Spain. Where did the attack on Pearl Harbor take place? Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:40:20 Pan? What is 100 minus 66? 100 minus 66. It's very simple. It's 66. Wow, good for you. Huh? Did you... On what to number three? Number four. This is number four.
Starting point is 00:40:46 Oh, that was three? Yeah, we're at the end. Now I'm sad. You don't have more. Yeah, okay. What species are we? Oh. The genuous thing. Sorry, what? I don't know, I don't know, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:41:04 Homo, homo, homo, homo, ginoous. A little bit homophobic. No, no. Yeah, that's. There are the word close to that. I don't know. Please don't refer to people as homos. What species are we?
Starting point is 00:41:21 Just humans then? Well, we are humans, but what species are we? What was I the first one? How many states are in the USA? 52. Do you vote? No. Okay, good.
Starting point is 00:41:38 What is the capital of the USA? Albany, New York. How many planets are in our solar system? You're counting? Seven. Well, this does bring up an old story. When I entered Dutch school in fifth grade, speaking maybe 10 words of Dutch.
Starting point is 00:42:02 But I understood enough to hear the teacher tell me. Now, so this would have been 1974. No, I'm sorry, 78. And the teacher said, America has 52 states. I went, and I raised my hand. I said, no. I said, it's 50 states.
Starting point is 00:42:23 And the teacher went, they had 50, and then they bought a last. and Hawaii, you stupid American. I may be exaggerating a little bit on the last part, but that's how he made me feel. I said, no, it's really 50. I remember, now, yeah, I was a young man, and I called up the embassy that day from home,
Starting point is 00:42:47 and I recorded on a cassette recorder, and I asked them, and they told me I was 48, and we bought Hawaii and Alaska, and I took it into school the next day and played it, and I got kicked out of class. Yeah, yeah, that would happen. And I think that was when I decided I would be a podcaster. This is the gig for me.
Starting point is 00:43:06 You decided something at that point because you realize that the system is corrupt. Yeah. Yes. There was a lot of good education that I got in Dutch school, but that was not part of it. Anyway, that was fun. Do you think the guy makes any money with that show? How does he make money? Does he have a donation segment?
Starting point is 00:43:24 No, he doesn't. I don't know how he makes money, to be honest about it. He's probably running only fans, girls. He might be. That's probably what he's doing. This is the clip I have from the one girl who's accumulated $32 million so far in her only fans of a business. Yeah. I mean, that's a business.
Starting point is 00:43:45 It's a living, but she probably doesn't know how many states are in the union either. It's unbelievable. But, you know, again. Yeah. Well, I... It wasn't between not knowing that and not knowing that that George Washington ran into some French dudes, back in the day. It was a little more than that. It's his backstory. It's the backstory. It's an important backstory. I thought it was good.
Starting point is 00:44:09 Yeah, okay. Well, I'm not going to say it's not a good movie. I'm just saying, what's the difference for not knowing some small factoid about Washington and not knowing how many planets there are in the solar system? Seven. By the way, that's seven. The girl's counting on her hand on her fingers since she gets the seven. Mars. Third rock from the sun is Mars. The moon is two. So yesterday, the president did one of his cabinet meetings. And I was watching. I was watching the stream, but then I was watching the quad screen.
Starting point is 00:44:47 And the mainstream media does the same thing every single time. They show the president's preamble. Then when the secretaries are all giving their report, they cut away and then they laugh about the president, about dummies. And I'll be honest, he went on for 10 minutes about the reflecting pool in front of the Washington monument. Oh, and the color of the water and the rest of the... He went on and on and how he, you know, he's done swimming pools and he got his guys. And now...
Starting point is 00:45:16 He's the right color blue for the paint. From a builder's perspective, it was rather interesting. Like, oh, okay, I see what you did there. And I'm sure that I haven't been to D.C. in a long time. I'm sure a construction guy would thought it was interesting and that's about it. Yeah. But it was, hey, number one rule, talk about what you know about. But it just went on and on.
Starting point is 00:45:37 And I was like, I wish I would have kind of seen this thing before he fixed it because I'm sure it was a piece of crap. He was talking about 11 truckloads of trash they took out of it. It was leaking. It was all oxidized. Nothing was working. So, you know, anyway, so then they'll do that. And then they cut back when the press is asking questions, which are usually,
Starting point is 00:46:03 that's accurate representation. Yeah, that's about right. And then the next day, you get reports like this. President Trump is adamant that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon, but exactly how he pulls that off is still an open question. The president held a cabinet meeting at the White House today where he touched on a wide range of topics. But of course, the headline was, excuse me, Iran. And he said talks with the regime are still happening, but is leaving the. door open to resume fighting if necessary.
Starting point is 00:46:32 They want very much to make a deal so far. They haven't gotten there. We're not satisfied with it. But we will be. We will be either that or we'll have to just finish the job. They're negotiating on fumes. Fumes. We'll see what happens.
Starting point is 00:46:45 The president said. Negotiating on fumes. I like that phrase. Yeah, I mean, it's, well, so did the mainstream media. M5M was all over. Although the phrase is you're running on fumes, but negotiating in fumes, maybe in the context of oil. It was interesting. Yeah. But we'll see what happens.
Starting point is 00:47:04 The president said he doesn't feel pressure to strike a deal before voters head to the polls in November for the midterms. They thought they were going to out-wate me. We'll out-wate him. He's got the midterms. I don't care about the mid-terms. People understand that they know that very simple. Iran cannot have a nuclear
Starting point is 00:47:19 weapon. I don't care about the mid-terms. Probably true. So that's one version then. Oh, he said something dumb. Oh, and there's a pooper. More breaking news tonight. Break it. Break it. Break it. Break it. It's breaking news. I'm telling it's breaking news. More breaking news tonight. New American military strikes on Iran.
Starting point is 00:47:34 That's according to a U.S. official who tells us that Iran has set out to, that U.S. carriers have struck some new sites at the Iranian nearby Iran. The official adding that the military also intercepted drones being launched from Iran. It caps a day that saw the president hold a televised cabinet meeting during which Iran. came up repeatedly. He suggested a deal is close, but also that there's no hurry to reach one, saying pressure from the midterm elections was not a concern for him. He threatened as well to, quote, blow up Oman, which is an ally of the United States in the gun. And now we all know what an ally is. Now he's going to blow up, Oman.
Starting point is 00:48:18 Iran wants control of the straight over moves. Would you accept a short-term deal that allows Iran and Oman to control the straight? And would they have to open it immediately? Or would you be open to that happening over a period of time. The strait's going to be open to everybody. And who would control it? It's international waters. Nobody's going to control it. We're going to watch over it. We'll watch over it. But nobody's going to control it.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Oman will behave just like everybody else who will have to blow them up. They understand that. They'll be fine. Again, Oman is an ally, gives access to air bases and a port to American forces. And if you think the president's statement about blowing up Amman was a slip of the tongue, the State Department posted that clip with the president making the threat.
Starting point is 00:48:58 on social media not long after he said it. As for Iran, it says 23 vessels pass through the Strait of Hormuz over the last 24 hours. That's under what it calls it security protection according to Iranian state-sponsored media with, quote, hostile vessels still not allowed.
Starting point is 00:49:14 So that was the main takeaway. Everybody had, oh, yeah, yeah, he's just going to blow up a man on an ally. And there's an ally. How come on, people. Now, just a question. Quite funny. I think this is, isn't it rather unique? I'm sorry, let me do the Tucker.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Isn't it rather unique that the president televizes his entire and allows the press to be there the entire time? I just want to, I don't remember any other president doing that. No, but no, it's not unique, but he does it a lot. Yeah, and he does some long ones. He actually, that's how we started off. And I, and I said, yeah, you know, that is kind of, that is true. That's, that's a good point. We have a lot of very happy people.
Starting point is 00:49:58 around the table because we're a great team. It's been a tremendous period of time. How many times have you heard a CEO of a company do this? This is exactly what the Monday morning management meeting was. This is like Bloom. It's a high bloom factor. All hands. No, it's not at all hands.
Starting point is 00:50:17 It's the management team. You sit down with the management team and you pep everybody up. Everybody, it's Monday morning. Okay, in this case, it's Wednesday. Monday morning, everybody. We've got a great team. All right. We're doing great. Everything's fantastic. good to have y'all here. For our country. And things are going very well.
Starting point is 00:50:32 A number of jobs. We have more people working today than we've ever had before in the history of our country. Is that true? No. Well, yeah, I guess technically because we have more people than ever before. Yes. Well, then so it's true. More people than ever.
Starting point is 00:50:48 Yeah. Yeah. And many other things. And I have a few words. Many other things. I think will be helpful. And last night was incredible. not only Texas, but so many other places.
Starting point is 00:51:00 The numbers were fantastic. And they've really been that way for a year. If you look, it's hundreds of people won. And almost nobody didn't win. Almost nobody didn't. Who didn't win? Which of his primary candidates didn't win? Do you know?
Starting point is 00:51:20 Not offhand, but there's, I think, one or two. One or two? But last night was very, very powerful. So I'm thrilled to welcome everyone to the 12th cabinet meeting of our administration, and we're doing something that no administration's ever done. We're always letting the press join us because we're very open and transparent. You like the word transparent, but we're more transparent than any administration in history. No, to the best of my knowledge, press has never been invited ever to a cabinet meeting for any reason at all.
Starting point is 00:51:53 I believe that to be true. I believe it to be true. And the thing is, they don't cover. it. They don't want you to know what's actually happening. It was kind of boring. It's not boring. Why do you think it's boring? Well, I've watched these things.
Starting point is 00:52:07 Because the first one he did, number one. Four hours. Yeah, that was boring. It went on and on. It was like, and everyone, and here's the thing that 's bothersome. And I think one of the reasons you don't have these things. I think having to press there does serve a purpose.
Starting point is 00:52:23 It keeps everybody in line. because you don't have anybody spouting off because they know that it's going to be next thing to be front page in the New York Times. So you can't have anybody blowing up or having anything screwy happening in the press. It makes it very genteel, which is probably what Trump wants. He doesn't want any, you know, because he have enough trouble with leakers that he doesn't need that aggravation in his cabinet meeting. So he just brings the press in. There's not going to be any leaking now. Right.
Starting point is 00:52:58 But the bothersome thing to me is that no one covers it. And yeah, maybe because it's boring, but, you know, like a good CEO, he goes through his motion. Well, you'd think they'd cover it better than they do because they have these press conferences and they're asking the questions. The questions are pre-answered in these cabinet meetings. Well, that's what I'm saying. They cover the president's opening to, to, to, be able to, okay. He said, he said, oh, man, you're going to blow him up. He's an ally. He's dumb. Yeah. Okay. Here, here's my take. I'm a journalist and I've got the White House. And I'm, I'm thinking,
Starting point is 00:53:38 do I want to go to this cabinet meeting and sit there for four hours and three hours or whatever the hell it is and listen to this crap? No, I'm going to go to the bar. It was only an hour and a half. It's too long. So, no. It's too long for the, no, I don't want to put the work in. I just don't want to do it. I think it's for different reasons. I think it's because they don't want to report.
Starting point is 00:54:03 So the president, like any good CEO, starts with a report. We have had zero illegals come in in the last 12 months. Murder rate is the lowest. I'm taking the perspective of the journalists. I'm going to say the same thing. I'm going to say it again. So what? This isn't interesting to me.
Starting point is 00:54:19 This is not good news. I understand. But I'm deconstructing media by showing you what they're not doing. Well, they're not doing anything, it seems like. Right. So therefore, did you know that we have the, I'm just going to presume these are true. And the fact that no one went out and said, he lied, I'm just going to say, they're probably true. Lowest murder rate in 125 years.
Starting point is 00:54:43 Yeah, this seems to be true. 11,888 murderers have been removed. Most favored nation drug prices, which I think is, in fact, he was mad about this. Under my most favorite nation agreements, this is something that I wish the media would talk about because to me it's one of the biggest things ever to happen in our country. Certainly as to medical, anything having to do with medical, because drug prices were delivering record-setting discounts on prescription drugs with price differences of 400, 500, and even 600 percent.
Starting point is 00:55:19 at the TrumpRX.gov. Now, wait, he's going to screw this up himself here. We recently added nearly 1,000 low-cost generics to the website. So we have drugs down 400, 500, 600, 600%. Now you can say 80, 90, 70, 60, 50% of you want. There are two ways. It depends on the way you asked the question. What?
Starting point is 00:55:44 Okay. He doesn't help himself with that. And he goes into most favored nation. drug prices. So a pill that costs 10 bucks in London, but 110 in the U.S. Now it's 20 for everybody. But that's a big deal. But of course, they're not going to, they're not going to. Of course, again, if you read my current substack column, devoric.substack.com, where I talk about the capture of the media by the drug companies. Yes. That was good piece. They're obviously not going to write about this because it has anything to do. Drug companies, forget it's verboten.
Starting point is 00:56:19 And then he goes into the Somalis. The Somalians, what they've done to Minnesota, the Somalians. Crooked as hell. Elon Omar. Crooked as hell, they're all crooks. And we got them. We got them. We got them.
Starting point is 00:56:35 We got them. We got them. We got them. He didn't get Omar. She's still kicking. She's still doing her thing. No, no. That's an oppressive group of guys that you have behind you.
Starting point is 00:56:48 I was watching that. And a couple of very strong women, too. But I was watching that last night. I said, I'm proud of you guys. In two months, we've exposed tens of billions of dollars of defrauded taxpayer money, prosecuted numerous fraudsters, Todd, and stopped billions of suspicious payments, very suspicious. Oh, you haven't seen anything yet. Well, you see, I'm getting reports from Todd, from JD.
Starting point is 00:57:12 I've never seen anything like it to kind of, just hundreds of billions of dollars were stolen. and no other administration would do what we're doing. And he goes on about that. And then he had a nice moment. He thanked Tulsi Gabbard, who was, she didn't speak. Before asking Vice President Vance to speak about these efforts, I want to express our tremendous gratitude to our outgoing Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, who's a terrific person, actually.
Starting point is 00:57:40 He's come up with some findings that were pretty good. And Tulsi's worked tirelessly to restore trust and focus on the intelligence and with the intelligence community, they all respected her. And it goes on about all the things she's uncovered, about Russia, Russia, Russia, and then, you know, for some reasons, and she opened up the JFK, RFK files, and then UFO files. I don't think Tulsi had anything to do with that. But then the secretary spoke, and they actually were quite interesting.
Starting point is 00:58:21 I'll skip Vance because, well, actually the beginning is kind of good. Yes, sir. Well, first of all, thank you for your leadership, sir. You always have to start with thank you for your leadership. For making it possible. I often find in the Fraud Task Force that there sometimes are barriers that we need to break down, agencies that need to coordinate, and I'll come to the President and say, Mr. President, I need your permission to do.
Starting point is 00:58:41 He'll say, for what, for the Fraud Task Force, they'll cut me off and say, yes, go do it. So the fact that we have dedicated presidential leadership is really what's made this possible because it does require, we've got great people around the table, but sometimes these agencies don't know how to work together at the lower level and that's one of the things we've had to turn on and force with the fraud task force. So I want to shout out just a few All-Stars here. Linda, the Department of Education, has been amazing at finding student loan fraud. You've got people who are either illegal aliens or aren't even actually real human beings
Starting point is 00:59:10 who are getting hundreds of millions of dollars from the Department of Education for student loans. You know, so all, most of these reports are all about fraud. And it's, it really is unbelievable how much, how much, how much, I'll never forget my dad, when I brought him into my company. We didn't really have a great relationship, but I felt bad. So, you can be in my, you can get a desk over here.
Starting point is 00:59:34 That was not a good relationship. And my, this isn't Holland. And my company was in line to get a deal with the Department of Education until we found out how fraudulent those guys were. I mean, they literally were committing fraud to pay us. I'm like, no, I don't want any part of that. And I had to go testify.
Starting point is 00:59:55 court later for that because he was so messed up. But I remember him saying, then nothing came of it? No, no, no, that guy was dismissed. You got kicked out of government.
Starting point is 01:00:05 Oh, okay. Something did come out of it. But I'll never forget my dad, a good company, man. He worked for the U.S. government for many years.
Starting point is 01:00:15 He said, this is great. Once you get on the government teat, it lasts forever. And I'm like, yeah, that's, that's,
Starting point is 01:00:23 and I've heard the sad. Well, I kind of say the same thing. I think the word teat is what bothered me the most. Oh, teat, yeah. I'm like, this sucks. I hated that. It really bothered me. Here's Todd Blanche, our acting attorney general.
Starting point is 01:00:37 I'll just continue to talk about what the vice president was just talking about. The way that we are actually, it's one thing to uncover fraud, which we've done, and that's part of it. But it's also prosecuting the bad guys that are doing it and stopping it from continuing. And that's where you have everybody in this room. them has inspector generals. And for many years, these really hardworking law enforcement members would identify fraud, and nobody did anything about it. DoJ prosecuted it, but spent very little resources on that. So what we've done, just in the past 51 days, over 400 law enforcement actions in this country related to major fraud. That's search warrants,
Starting point is 01:01:16 that's arrests, that's convictions, that's indictments that are filed, and that's just 51 days. And it's not just the great prosecutors. It's the FBI. agents, it's DHS and HSI agents. It's everybody in this room that has inspector generals that are now, they have been freed up. And it's because of you, it's because of the vice president saying this is going to be a priority of what we are going to do, not just the Department of Justice, even though we're the prosecutors that are putting bad guys in jail. It's also the law enforcement at every agency, FBI, and DHS. And so we're already seeing results. And billions of dollars was given out just very quickly before Biden left.
Starting point is 01:01:55 office, billions and billions were given out. And I mean, I know of many cases, but one, I don't know what's happened with it, but I think you're looking at it. I know Lee was involved in it, environmentally. Stacey Abrams was given $2 billion for an account that had $103 at it, an environmental fraud. So we heard about this. We heard about the $2 billion to Stacey Abrams. Did you, did you ever hear what happened to that? No, I did not. As far as I can tell nothing. So here is Lee Zeldon of the EPA. He gets to talk. He came right after Todd. Thanks to your leadership, Mr. President. That was canceled. And they no longer have access to that $2 billion. When do I get out? They wanted that money. Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:02:39 In fact, it was over $29 billion that has now been canceled at EPA. You told us to make it a priority. Now this happened as soon as you came in. After the election, before your inauguration, they were, caught on video saying that they were rushing to get billions of dollars out the door before you're swearing in because they were afraid that once you were sworn in you were going to stop it. Well, that part, they were right.
Starting point is 01:03:04 We did. So I didn't know that. I didn't know that they pulled that money back. I may have known it. You know, this is the problem. This is the problem. I didn't know there were 400 arrests. I didn't know any of this stuff.
Starting point is 01:03:23 Why would I? Because they're not reporting on it. Yeah, why would you? Because they're not going to tell you. Well, if it was Obama, they would. It's not, if they tell you, are you going to vote Democrat? I don't think so. Well, exactly.
Starting point is 01:03:37 This is, but Fox News didn't tell me either. No, well, hello. Okay. Just saying. So then we got Rubio, who had some funny things to say. Just two quick things I want to touch upon. One, two touched upon the border and security. Part of securing our border is dealing with the people.
Starting point is 01:03:54 that are in this country unlawfully, many of whom do not want to go back to the country that they originally came from for a variety of reasons. Now, listen to this. You can't send them there or some judge ties up. And one of the key things we have achieved is now 20 countries have signed third country national agreements, meaning these are safe countries where individuals who refuse to go back to their country of origin can be sent to that country instead. We've gotten 20 countries now around the world who have signed agreements that allow us to
Starting point is 01:04:20 deport people to those places. is what often happens when you go to the person who's here lawfully and say, we're going to send you to this third country, is all of a sudden they decide they'd rather go back to their home country. No, man, don't send me to Nigeria. No, no, I'll go back to Mexico. I promise, I promise. I'll never do it again.
Starting point is 01:04:38 And this is the one clip that I did see here and there on the main scene. By the way, that was a stroke of genius to do that pull that stunt. It's a great idea. Yeah. Oh, you can't go back to Costa Rica. okay, we'll send you to Nairobi, you know, Tanzania, whatever. Tanzania or, yeah, Congo. No, no, no, no, there's Ebola there.
Starting point is 01:04:59 I don't want to go there. No, I'll go back to Mexico, I promise. And this got a little bit of play in the mainstream, Rubio on Cuba. Can I just ask you Cuba and Venezuela? What's going on there? Well, interesting. On Venezuela, that process continues, that three-phase process, you know, of obviously stabilization, recovery, and transition.
Starting point is 01:05:19 I would just say just since January 3rd of this year, okay, and I think this number's right, and Chris or Doug can correct me on this, but I think over 10 million barrels of Venezuela and oil have been delivered to the United States since the 3rd of January. That doesn't seem like a lot. 10 million barrels since January? Aren't some of these Middle East countries pumping out 5 million a day?
Starting point is 01:05:50 Yeah. So 10 million in what? Six months? That doesn't seem like a lot to me. Maybe it's more than was coming out of there. But I was like, no, that's just, that's odd. That industry is being professionalized for the first time ever. It's going to the benefit of the Venezuelan people.
Starting point is 01:06:05 They are selling oil in the market at market rates. The money's going to an account in the United States, controlled and monitored by treasury, audited by KPMG. I like that. KPMG in the in the house people. And it's for the first time ever. The money's not being stolen. It's going to the benefit of the Venezuelan people. Cuba's in a lot of trouble because, unfortunately, for them, it's run by a bunch of incompetent communists.
Starting point is 01:06:28 And being communist is bad. Being an incompetent communist is like the worst. Okay, Marco. Okay, Marco. Good one. Lubio in there. The country's been taken over by this company called Gaesa, that basically controls 70% of the economy. None of the money in that company goes to help the Cuban people.
Starting point is 01:06:46 I didn't know this. Gaesa? Group of Administration Empresarial, which was set up by Raul Castro in 1955 and does indeed, according to reports, control up to 70% of the entire economy.
Starting point is 01:07:03 Tourism, retail, finance, infrastructure, like the ports. I'm just going to give you, just to interrupt you. Yeah. Venezuela oil production. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:17 It's around, Currently, it's up to 893,000 barrels a day, but it's been as low as low as... Two barrels. It's really... You have to look at this chart. It was as high as like 3.5 million barrels a day back in 1970, and it dropped to as low as...
Starting point is 01:07:41 She's just next to nothing in 2020. I mean, it's almost... The chart is just a... the bottom. It's the number so low you can't even get it. So it's up though. That's that's the idea. It's up a bit. Yeah. It's up. Yeah. Hmm. But they're not produced. They're not anywhere near capacity. I mean, it's like ridiculous. No. No, of course. I'm sure. Which is what, you know, Trump's offering. And let's get back to cranking this stuff out. And then you can make, you know, you can, that's woman who runs the country will be rich. Is it, you know,
Starting point is 01:08:12 without being corrupt. Yes. although it's, you know. All right. So then we go to Doug, Doug Bergam. He's of the interior. And he starts to confirm some things about Alaska that I've been looking at the pipeline, the, what is it, the north slope. And so here he is on the oil, our own oil. Well, I would, President Trump, under your leadership, we've opened up lease sales on public land.
Starting point is 01:08:44 this is land that was put away for the benefit and the use of the American people like the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Alaska. The Biden administration had illegally stopped holding lease sales during their administration. President Trump famously said drill baby drill, but before you can drill, you've got to open public lands. Between the lease sales that have happened in the Permian, in the bucket and on the North Slope, just since January of this year, it's over $4 billion. of revenues come into the Treasury, that's 13 times more than the Biden administration brought in on lease sales in the entire four years that you're in office. Sir, your policies brought that in five months. So with that, a lot of excitement, a lot of activity. We also inherited. All right,
Starting point is 01:09:31 so very exciting, very exciting. Oil, oil, oil, oil, I actually check that because I keep hearing about Alaska. And he talks about how all these land leases and, you know, we know that in Alaska, the oil money goes to the Alaskans. And so that's a piece of it. A piece, yes. But the same thing is starting to happen with these public lands. And apparently there's a backlog of five or six thousand land leases for oil drilling. So I got to talk to the oil baron about it.
Starting point is 01:09:58 Who did send me a note this morning and said, your call on $60 oil is right. He sent me some long analysis. Someone who says it's probably going to go down to 62. And it won't take much. It won't take much. So here's, they're not, you know, supposedly Alaskan oil is going to China. I think it may be, but I don't think it's quite there yet. This is from CNBC.
Starting point is 01:10:23 I want to ask you, Joe just had some headlines here before we came out of the commercial break, which is basically that China may have agreed to buy U.S. oil. What can you tell us about the China meetings and China's energy purchases from the United States? Yeah, I mean, 20 years ago, we were the largest importer of oil and natural gas in the world. and today China is the largest importer of oil and natural gas in the world. So there's a natural energy trade there. We've sold them, you know, ethane for petrochemicals and oil on and off through the years, and I suspect we'll see a growth in their oil imports from the United States.
Starting point is 01:10:57 So you think you said suspect, but you think they will be a larger buyer? We know they're a huge buyer of U.S. LNG, or at least Taiwan, South Korea and Japan are, China as well. You think there'll be a bigger buyer of U.S. crude oil? I do think they will. There's huge interest in Asian buyers from more oil out of Alaska as well. You know, now our oil goes out of the Gulf of Mexico. We'll see more of that going over to China.
Starting point is 01:11:21 But in the not too distant future, we're going to see more oil coming out of Alaska that's going to supply our neighbors and friends in Asia as well. Yeah, that's the pipeline from the north slope down to the south. We'll see. And then in the Q&A, there wasn't only two kind of interesting questions in the Q&A. This one slipped in. I'm like, oh, I see what's going to happen.
Starting point is 01:11:40 happen here. Are you expecting Congress to pass a federal gas tax holiday? A gas tax holiday? Yeah, this is that a federal. Well, it's something we might talk about. Let's see what happens over the next week, two weeks. A lot of good things are happening. Gas tax holiday.
Starting point is 01:11:55 Well, of course. Of course, you want to do a gas tax holiday right before the 4th of July because that's what, that's the date. That's the date. He has to have an announcement. Do you know how much the third? federal taxes on gasoline? No, how much?
Starting point is 01:12:14 You'd be surprised how little it is. Gas prices are rising again, and President Trump is now floating a temporary suspension of the federal gas tax as a way to give drivers some relief. Let's go to Morgan Stevens with the fact check team. So we've got to talk for the numbers. Let's start with the federal gas tax. I believe it's just short of 20 cents per gallon, right? Yeah, the federal gas tax is 18.4 cents per gallon for regular and 24.4.4.
Starting point is 01:12:40 cents for diesel. Now, do you think that would make a lot of difference to people if it went down by basically 20 cents? If it went down by 20 cents. I think to some people who chew up a lot of gas, especially these truckers. Yeah, well, that's even more on oil. So that may be part of what he's thinking of doing. Oh, yeah. And I don't think the president can do that. I think it has to be an act of Congress because it's a federal tax. And that 18.4 cents has been there since the 90s. it's been there forever. I'm surprised they don't jack it up. Well, in California, I think you have almost $2.
Starting point is 01:13:19 No, I'm sorry, 70 cents, 70 cents of state tax. I'm still to understand how you get to $7 a gallon in California. Well, our blend is very specific to California. Bad blend, yes. It's a blend that supposedly reduces smog and it only can be made by a few refineries. and once those refineries get shut down by California and stupidity. Yeah, Trump talked about that. We won't have any gas at all, and then we can ride our bicycles.
Starting point is 01:13:48 And then the final question about the Abraham Accords. Even with Iran, that just calls for further talks on uranium? No. The only option. No, the basics. No, I would for some of it, you know, because it's a memorandum of understanding for speed. One of the things that will happen is the straight will open immediately, immediately. But it's got to be perfect.
Starting point is 01:14:07 I'm not going to do this. I didn't do this to get a crummy agreement. The worst agreement ever signed was by Barack Hussein Obama. What a horrible agreement that was. It was a setback for this country, for the whole world. The Middle East would have blown itself up. No. And we'd like to have the countries we were talking about,
Starting point is 01:14:25 with Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and the others. We'd like to have them immediately joined the, and Steve Whitkoff is working on that with Jared and some others, but we'd like to have them join the Abraham Accords. It'll be historic if they do. I think they owe that to us. To be honest, I think because that really would be a tremendous sign. And I think those countries owe it to us. Steve, are you going to get them to sign?
Starting point is 01:14:52 We're definitely pushing it. I'm not sure. I'm not sure we should make the deal if they don't sign. You want to know that truth. If they don't sign to join the Abraham courts, I don't know that we, you know, we have countries in there already. UAE, great. Great countries. old countries. And it turned out to be so good, so effective. And so we're, you know, requesting strongly that they, they join. It'll be great. It'll be great for Saudi Arabia. It'd be great for Qatar and Kuwait, the whole group. He's pushing. He's pushing real hard for it. Who knows? Who knows? Crazier things have happened. And I just listened to this, you know, it was overall, it was very positive, you know, a lot of good news about manufacturing and, you know,
Starting point is 01:15:38 And Besson came in and he had nothing but great news to report, of course. And I believe 80% of it is true. But no one hears this. And so as humans, we love bad news and we love living in anger and we love living in sarcasm. And it's just, it's too bad because people get so wrapped up in it. And I'll give you a point there for you talking about the algos and regarding Massey's so called affair with Bobert. I think that
Starting point is 01:16:12 people attract these algos and they just sit in that muck all day. It sucks. It's no good. It's horrible. I run into another interesting algo trick. I don't know what this is about. But I mentioned it to Mimi and she says,
Starting point is 01:16:28 oh, I don't know what you're talking about. I haven't seen one of these videos. Okay. Because I have my my my my my my algos are like he'll talk about on the show just put him on the so there's a bunch of russian chicks on that keep cropping up and there's three of them in particular there's one i i would love to see your algo because of course you're getting russian chicks after you got the the nitwits who don't know how many planets there are or
Starting point is 01:16:58 letters in the alphabet your entire out it's your brain is frying my friend so the russian chicks, there's a bunch of them, and there's also clips of Putin. And I think that Putin wants to show up a little more on TikTok. And is what a great guy Putin is and look at his security people and he's hand signals and he does this and he does that. And there's just, and there's meaningless drivel about Putin about what a great guy is. The Russian chicks are all pretty and they have funny stories about Russia and how depressing it is. is and how, but how great the Russian people are. And there's one Russian girl that's teaching how to say cuss in Russian.
Starting point is 01:17:43 You know how to cuss somebody out in Russian. And it's one thing after another. And I think that this is, I believe there's an intelligence agency behind these. And they are promoting the idea that we're going to, like, and this backs you up, by the way. I don't know why you complain about it. But this backs your theory that we're, it's Russia, China, United States, and maybe India. forming a new nexus because this is warming people up to Russia. Yes, and you're right, ad India, Lubio was just there for the week.
Starting point is 01:18:15 Right, he was there just coincidentally. With his wife. But not coincidentally. Nope. And but this, the Russian prop, the pro, it's oddly pro-Russian, even though they're cynical girls, they're all very pretty. One in particular is a beautiful girl. And she's telling us about, you know, how we should, you know, listen to the,
Starting point is 01:18:35 the Russian women. It's just crazy stuff. And they're short and they're on Insta and they're on TikTok. And I've seen them, you know, they just kind of crop up. They also show up on Twitter, but not to an extreme. And it's just fascinating because you just see it as an op. It's a sciop. Maybe.
Starting point is 01:18:57 But I think the algos, you know, whatever you're looking, the algos aren't all that smart. So yes, I think it's very easy for any agency. agency to promote things and get people who are already interested in cute women. Could these Russian chicks, could they name all the planets? Probably, I'm just guessing. Yeah, you know, they're not dummies. Right. So you can see the difference.
Starting point is 01:19:22 This is exactly what I'm talking about. People are living in this negative, in America's very much in America. It's, I just see it everywhere. It sucks. Everything's faking gay. Trump, Epstein. That's all I hear all day long. But you don't hear any of the good stuff.
Starting point is 01:19:44 And it probably doesn't even matter to them anymore. Hey, there's no more idiot illegals coming in. Oh, that's good. Hey, you know, we got a lot of people at work. Yeah, that's pretty good. Hey, we've got a lot of more jobs coming. I talked to one of our kids here the other day, Parker. I meet with him from time of time.
Starting point is 01:20:02 It's like, I'm thinking about becoming an HVAC guy. I want to make $200 grand. Yeah. Where does he hear it? On this show. Like, that sounds pretty good to me. Well, I'm talking about it since we're on the topic of good news. Let's move to this story.
Starting point is 01:20:20 NASA, moon base, big story. Yeah. Buggies and bases, everybody. They're back. Take a look at NASA's vision of a future moon base, massive. Potentially hundreds of square miles on the lunar surface, complete with astronaut living quarters, lunar rovers, and power stations with the ultimate goal of heading to Mars. And we want to be in an environment where we can learn the skills so that astronauts can go and plant
Starting point is 01:20:46 the stars and stripes on Mars someday. Splashdown confirmed. NASA's moon-based plans come just six weeks after the Artemis II mission that sent astronauts around the moon for the first time in 50 years. NASA hopes to land Artemis four astronauts on the moon in 2028. Building a moon base will come in three phases starting this year, eventually using drones and rovers to scout the best landing sites near the South Pole. In 2029, they'll begin assembling the moon base, including solar and nuclear power systems. Then in 2032, the first astronauts will begin living and working on the moon. Artemis astronauts will stay longer, explore farther, and conduct the kinds of science that advances exploration itself. With China also aiming to build a lunar base,
Starting point is 01:21:35 NASA plans to establish a perimeter around the American base. It's an ambitious timeline, and NASA will need to learn and react fast and mitigate the risks, including from long-term radiation exposure and micrometeorites that shower the moon. Now, do you think that this still inspires young people, this whole moon business, or is it more like, hey, man, get my gas down to three bucks? That's an interesting question you'd bring up. Let me contemplate it. There's a series of NASA, NASA, NASA, NASA.
Starting point is 01:22:13 NASA, yes, NASA clips. NASA has gone farther than anyone else. And so it starts with NASA, moon base, et cetera, one, this is an NBC report, and there's this three parts, and it talks about what, you know, they're trying to, because Trump wants to defund or not defund, but to pull back on the, NASA funding and give more of it to Musk. Okay. And so this is, so now NBC's pushing
Starting point is 01:22:40 back with this presentation. And Mass Administrator, Jared Isaacman, joins us now. Mr. Administrator, thank you so very much for joining us tonight. Fascinating timeline on all of this with the first part of Operation Moon Base. It seems like it's already in motion, and it also seems like the first things first is
Starting point is 01:22:58 hold on a second. Could they not come up with a better Operation Name than Operation Moon Base? Is that really all they got? Lame. Lame. Yeah, very lame. Apping out and exploring the lay of the land in as much
Starting point is 01:23:14 detail as possible with the rovers and the drones, right? What does that look like? Well, I'll tell you, we're off to a really great start, right? So Artemis 2, just a month and change ago, we got to watch those four amazing astronauts fly around the moon, bring them back safely home to Earth, reestablished
Starting point is 01:23:30 NASA back in the business of sending astronauts to the lunar environment. Artemis 3 is going to start stacking this summer and then to your point in parallel while we're getting our astronauts ready for that grand return, we're building the moon base. So today we had some credible announcements. First three missions that will go to the moon, uncrewed robotic ones later this summer, but we also announced two rovers on the lunar surface that have autonomous and crude capability. But this is just the beginning. We're talking about a $20 billion investment over the next seven years to establish that enduring presence on the moon realize it's scientific and economic potential and master the skills for where we go next and
Starting point is 01:24:07 where we go next is Mars. Oh, please do tell me what is the scientific and economic potential. What is it? I don't have no idea about I'll tell you this much if they're going to spend $20 billion to put a moon base up. I think we spend $120 billion for a high-speed rail in California that doesn't even have one inch of track laid. Well, in that regard, maybe we should take some of our money. In that regard, I think you're right. The money is rather insignificant in the grand scheme of things. But I can predict what's going to happen. I can get your Kalshi bets.
Starting point is 01:24:42 I'm going to over-predict after you're done predicting. I'm going to meta-predict. My prediction is Artemis 3, probably, but Artemis 4, when they're actually going to send people to the moon, blow up. It's going to blow up. It's going to be sad and it's going to blow up and it's going to be dead. and it's going to be no good. That's my prediction. Your meta prediction?
Starting point is 01:25:06 They're not going to do Jack. What do you mean? Nothing blows up. Nothing happens. Yack, yak, yak. They're going to talk, talk, talk. If I understand a couple of robots up there and one of them will stop working and then they won't know what to quite do.
Starting point is 01:25:21 This is just get put off. 2028. They're supposed to send the Artemis up with the people? No. Okay. All right. NASA, too. If I understand this correctly, you know, extraction of human.
Starting point is 01:25:31 Helium 3, again, that is probably pretty far on the horizon. But we're talking about nuclear power that may not. Answering your question. What, they're answering my question? Your question was, what are they getting? What are you talking about? What are they going to get out of? What are we going to extract?
Starting point is 01:25:47 Helium 3. So? What is the cost of extracting helium 3 from the, what is helium 3? I think it's used for, you know. Balloons. Balloons. It's not used for balloons. For party balloons. No, it has to do with nuclear power.
Starting point is 01:26:06 Why don't you ask the book of knowledge to explain it? Okay, I shall. Book of Knowledge. What is the use of Helium 3? All right, here we go. Book of Knowledge is scribbling away and looking for answers for us all. According to the Book of Knowledge, helium 3 serves four primary earthly purposes.
Starting point is 01:26:31 Neutron detection for security screening, dilution refrigerators for ultra-low temperature physics, medical imaging including lung MRI scans, and as potential fuel for future anutronic fusion reactors. Listen to this. Nearly 80% of current helium-3 is used for security purposes worldwide. For security purposes, for scanning you at the airport. Oh, wow, I'm so happy we're doing that, Nassau. If I understand this correctly, you know, extraction of helium-3, again, that is probably pretty far on the horizon.
Starting point is 01:27:03 But we're talking about nuclear power that may not have any radioactive fallout. There's all kinds of things we could do with helium. Bull crap. Oh, all kinds of fusion. Yeah, here we go. What do you think sizable amounts of helium three would do to a space economy if we could... Space economy? All right.
Starting point is 01:27:24 How about Earth economy? Extract it from the moon. So helium three has applications for quantum computing. and to your point, for fusion power can be more... No, it doesn't. Quantum computing, everybody. Efficient fuel source for it. What I will say is there is helium three here on Earth.
Starting point is 01:27:46 We can manufacture it. In fact, a lot of the reactors up north are capable of doing it. But the question will be, will there be so much demand that helium three from the lunar surface... Oh, so much demand for quantum computing. Okay, good night, Nassau. actually sparks that lunar economy. Or maybe there is economic potential. We don't know.
Starting point is 01:28:07 We haven't been there in a really long time, and we're going back. We're putting a heck of a demand signal out there. I mean, there's going to be so many landers and rovers on the lunar surface. Certainly, we're going to have our astronauts there infrequently at first until you get to the point where it may be... Who is this the guy? Is this the... Isn't this a NASA hit guy? He's like a lunatic.
Starting point is 01:28:26 He is a lunatic. I think they found him in an insane asylum. an operational base similar to how we keep a continuous presence in low Earth orbit on the international space station. So there may be a lunar economy, but what we do know is there is water ice there, and our astronauts will work with it, again, to master those skills that are going to be imperative, because in the not too distant future, if we can put astronauts in the moon, we'll be able to put them on Mars. The hard part is how do you bring them back? Who cares?
Starting point is 01:28:52 Who cares? Who cares? On the moon is a great place to figure it out when you're four or five days away from home and really get good at it before you send astronauts. astronauts nine months a year away from home on Mars where they're going to have to be incredibly good at those skills. I'm against all of this. This is the worst idea ever.
Starting point is 01:29:11 Who cares? Open the straits. Give me $3 gas. Then we can talk about moon stuff. It's going to be, oh, the lunar economy. Okay. The price tag that you kicked around at the top of this conversation, still $20 billion, but obviously mass drivers excluded in that.
Starting point is 01:29:29 But is that realistic? Nuts. Oh, very realistic. Oh, absolutely. I mean, you take a look at the resources that President Trump has made available between the Working Family Tax Cut Act. That's a $10 billion one-time plus up in NASA. I mean, the single biggest supplemental investment since the Kennedy era, a large portion of that going into exploration, which is putting American astronauts back on the moon to stay, which is the moon base.
Starting point is 01:29:56 And then I think you take a look at the 26 appropriations, the president's. budget request, we absolutely have the resources. And not only that, to dial it up to get those landers on the moon, get the rovers there, to learn in that unique environment. You're right. We're not getting people on the moon. We're getting Waymos on the moon. Robots.
Starting point is 01:30:18 Robots. Okay. Impress me. To inform phase two and phase three to realize that enduring presence on the moon and do all the other things. Oh, the other things. Our astronauts are ex. All the other things. things. Our ex-plane portfolio, the orbital economy. What? What? We went from the lunar economy to our. That's our ex-plane portfolio. The orbital economy. A lot of agonimates going on.
Starting point is 01:30:45 Explan. The space economy, the lunar economy, the orbital economy. You know, lots of great missions of science and discovery like Roman and Dragonfly. Roman and Dragonfly. Oh, he's just throwing out words now. That's the SpaceX, though. The public should rightfully have high expectations for what NASA can deliver with the research. I have very high expectations. Of course is available. We intend to show them.
Starting point is 01:31:10 Land a dude there. All right. Show me that. Yeah. And just to put things in perspective, I mean, $20 billion for a lunar base here in California. We're still waiting for that link from L.A. to San Francisco. And that's a hundred billion. $100 billion.
Starting point is 01:31:24 Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you so much for that information. Thank you. I'm so incredibly happy. I'm so happy about this. That's great. That's just fantastic. I got to play an interregnum. Another one. Wow. No, we're interregnum full today.
Starting point is 01:31:44 Have you seen the show title? Interregnum. Oh, no, I wrote it down. Have you seen the new Ferrari? The electric one, this doofist-looking one? Yes. I mean, as a kid growing up, you had your match-box. cars, your hot wheels.
Starting point is 01:32:01 You know, a Ferrari, that was, it was like a thing you knew you'd never have, but it was cool. And you see one driving like, oh, it's a Ferrari, you know, which version, which model Ferrari it was. Oh, there goes, yeah. Yeah, you know, and then. It goes an Enzo. Yeah, an Enzo. Exactly. Where he's sitting in the middle.
Starting point is 01:32:17 Look at that, the Enzo. And then this thing comes along. I mean, what a dog. And I got this report on it, which made so much sense once I. heard about it. It is called the luce. It is the first all-electric Ferrari in the numbers. Well, at least they're impressive. 1,035 horsepower from four electric motors, zero to 60 in 2.5 seconds, five seats and a starting price, get ready for it, $640,000. That's the starting price. But the design, well, as one analyst said, the market has spoken. Ferrari shares down about
Starting point is 01:32:53 four and a half percent on concerns that the luce will cheapen the brand and add significant and cost that will be hard to recover. Ferrari's CEO Benedetto Vigno telling CNBC that the Ferrari looks different because EVs are different. This guy is about to be out of a job. When you have a new technology, you need to make sure that that technology
Starting point is 01:33:13 is properly represented in the design. By making it look like a piece of crap. So the design must be different. It's different like stupid. We have to respect the different needs, the different wishes of the clients. So we will have clients. already existing client that will take it
Starting point is 01:33:31 and some clients that are not client today some people that are not client today that will get in our community now wait for it this is what I was I was expecting this part and it certainly is different the Luce was designed with Johnny Ive they let that gay guy design it you just got clip of the day for this one
Starting point is 01:33:51 oh man it was like holy moly they didn't do that did they Clap of the Day Wow, good catch. No wonder it's a piece of crap. And it's got... Johnny Ives, yeah. I'm Johnny I.
Starting point is 01:34:08 I build the latest for I. I'm Johnny I. Looks just like an iPhone. It even uses the gorilla glass or whatever. And it certainly is different. The Luchet was designed with Johnny Ive. He, of course, being the former Apple design chief. And much like the iPhone, the Luce's body is made partly from
Starting point is 01:34:25 Corning Glass. Corning glass. What could possibly go wrong? And guys, a lot of people are concerned about that Ferrari engine sound that made Ferrari famous where they're going to do it through an electronic amplification system that takes the noise. This is the dumbest of all dumb. The rear axle amplifies it outside as well as in the cabin. And Sarah, as you said, we're just going to see how many people buy the new luce. Luce. I'm Johnny Ive. I built the luce.
Starting point is 01:35:00 I didn't know they were going to put a phony baloney sound effect on it. What's the point? Exactly. If you got an electric car, they're... One of the cool things about them is that they're so... They're super quiet or they make a nice hum. They make some, you know... Yeah, they hum along.
Starting point is 01:35:16 They hum along. I mean, they just do what they do. They're electric. But then you make it sound like a gas engine for why. Yeah, I know. There were more fun things this week. Our socialist mayor of New York met with the bankers. Yeah, I saw that.
Starting point is 01:35:34 I thought that was kind of interesting. I have two clips here. Mayor Momdani spent most of yesterday afternoon meeting with the folks who helped make New York City the financial capital of the world to try to contain that backlash that you mentioned. Mom Donnie met with J.P. Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Diamond at their new headquarters in Midtown. Momdani's office sharing with Fox business that the pair discussed, quote, how the public and private sectors can collaborate to deliver both excellent public goods and a thriving city where all New Yorkers can succeed. From J.P. Morgan's perspective, they said that the meeting was constructive and included the importance of, quote, keeping the city competitive. But J.P. Morgan has been signaling with hiring moves that they're more optimistic about other markets. The firm has reduced their headcount in New York and now has more employees in Texas than they do in the Big Apple.
Starting point is 01:36:27 That's because we got a, we have a stock exchange opening up here in Texas, in Austin, actually, I think. Mom Dani also met with Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon at Gracie Mansion. Neither the city nor Goldman Sachs has given Fox Business a readout of that meeting. These talks are the latest efforts by Mom Dani to make nice with the business community as he continues to push initiatives like city-run grocery stores, and massive tax increases on second homes. Mom Dani has also been meeting with other Wall Street executives from Bank of America and Blackstone, the world's largest commercial real estate owner. His office has also reached out to Citadel founder Ken Griffin,
Starting point is 01:37:03 whom Mamdani previously criticized publicly over his New York City penthouse with that second home tax. Citadel telling Fox business that Griffin welcomes thoughtful, serious conversations about the policies that can grow the city's economy and create more opportunities for all New Yorkers, that, quote, reckless political theater serves no purpose. No meeting has been announced yet. And there was a read at. In fact, they had a quote from Jamie Diamond about this meeting later in the day. J.P. Morkin-Chay CEO Jamie Diamond warning progressive left leaders are driving wealth and business and taxpayers out with their tax to rich agenda and socialist economic schemes. Can't demonize success. The Wall Street Titan also sending a blunt message to New York's mayor, Mamdani. saying he doesn't care what the socialist says, but he's watching what he does.
Starting point is 01:37:55 They think that somehow being anti-business is going to help the city. It's not. So we all want to pay fair taxes. That's not the point. But at one point, people vote their feet. And there are a lot of studies that have shown that all these people moved out. And they're obviously the tax, obviously New York is booming. So you're not going to see it in this year's taxes, but a lot of people are paying billions of dollars taxes left.
Starting point is 01:38:15 Why do you want that? How does that help the lower paid person in New York? Yeah, so it sounds like Jamie Domain was not so happy with that meeting. And the guy's no good. And you know who's back on the scene? Talk about Algos. The one, the only pastor Manning from Atla Ministries is back. Well, he's never gone anywhere.
Starting point is 01:38:40 No, but he's never had anything good enough. I mean, he ran for mayor and it was kind of funny. Yeah, he also turned on Trump. Yeah. Well, he turns on everybody. Yeah, he turns on everybody. But I have a clip here where he talks about Mom Donnie. Well, he'd be good on this, yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:59 Yeah, not kid friendly, everybody. So I'll give you a second to... Yeah, put your hands around your children's ears. Stick your feet. Are you okay? I'm choking the death here. Are you all right? I was chewing on a lozenge.
Starting point is 01:39:14 Ah, the lozions went down the wrong pipe. Careful with that. All right. A woman can't raise children. You can't raise children with tits. You've got to have balls. You've got to have a man. And for a man to not take responsibility to raise his children or to be executed.
Starting point is 01:39:33 You have a responsibility before God. And we don't, we don't want to hear that. Women's right. No, no, no. We got the sick of poorest, economically deficient people on the planet. The other thing is this. is that when that boy, Mandami came on the scene? This nigger is a Muslim.
Starting point is 01:39:55 He is a jihadist, if you will, interfaida, if you must. Hamas supporting anti-Jesus Muslim. And niggas are talking about he got a good program. I don't give a damn how good his program is. He's a Muslim. And Jesus is Lord. And I'm voting for him and ain't tell nobody else to vote for it. The hell's wrong with you.
Starting point is 01:40:17 I'm tired of the Democrat Party making bitches out of our women and pussies out of our men. There you go. I'm tired of it. I've had enough of it. I've had enough of it. The man needs to stand up and be a man. The Reverend never disappoints. Yeah, I don't know. I think that was disappointing.
Starting point is 01:40:38 Yeah, it wasn't that disappointing. It wasn't that good. He used to be funnier. Well, he did have some better. Not just a Muslim rant. Anyone can do that. Well, he was tired of the Democrat Party. Yeah, well, that part was okay, but he didn't have enough verve.
Starting point is 01:40:54 I don't know. Verve. More verve. Speaking of verve. Well, before you go there, since you're talking about screwball clips, this is another one. I just want to get one of my predictions out of the way. All right. It's not quite getting there yet, but it's going to happen. This is the drone show mishap clip.
Starting point is 01:41:14 Okay. A major fail at a drone show. over the harbor in Sydney, Australia, a thousand drones in the sky, almost 90 drones veering off course, dozens plunging into the water. No one was heard. Officials say it was caused by a quote unforeseen change in radio frequency. I'm predicting that somebody's going to take over one of these drones shows with a radio control and attack the crowd. Can you imagine 100,000 drones coming at you as you're watching one of these displays? Yeah, I can actually.
Starting point is 01:41:46 Of course you can't. You know the hackers in the mentality and somebody's going to do it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Local news. Texas.
Starting point is 01:42:00 Local news. Texas news. Oh. Yeah. Paxton. Yes. Paxton. Your buddy Paxton.
Starting point is 01:42:06 And but yeah. And yeah. You wanted to say so. And Corny. Yeah. So, you know, the runoff is complete. Okay. Corny got kicked out.
Starting point is 01:42:15 Yeah. Sorry. This is an Amy Goodman. A real quick one, though. And in Texas, the state's attorney general, Ken Paxton, backed by President Trump, defeated four-term incumbent Senator John Cornyn in the Republican Senate primary runoff Tuesday. Paxton has previously been indicted on charges of felony securities fraud and was impeached from office on allegations of bribery, dereliction of duty, obstruction of justice, and abuse of public trust.
Starting point is 01:42:46 Paxton is the first primary challenger to defeat an incumbent U.S. senator from Texas since at least 1980. The Republican candidates spent nearly $130 million, making it the most expensive Senate primary in U.S. history. Paxton now faces Democratic nominee, state representative James Tala Rico, in the general election in November. Now, this is the fight to watch. This is the interesting one. Tala Rico is an interesting person. Yeah, he's a screwball, isn't he? Yes. So he went to seminary school.
Starting point is 01:43:26 So he's a pastor. He says, I don't know what kind of seminary school he went to because he's all about the LGBTQ and God is a woman. And he said, a lot of interesting things. Right. God's a woman. Trans are the future. Yeah, precisely. All this sort of technical.
Starting point is 01:43:44 of stuff. So we're going, yes, well, you know, the Austinites, the Houstonites, the Dallastonians, they love this guy. Oh, he's a Christian. Oh, well, he's a Christian. So, you know, and of course, Paxton is also a Christian. And then here's the line of attack that Tala Rico will be using. Democratic Senate nominee and state representative James Talarico. Thank you so much. And welcome back to him. Okay. Hold on a second. I, I, uh, mea culpa. He said, God is non-bibir. I'm sorry. It's so much better than God is a woman. Democratic Senate nominee and state representative, James Talarico, thank you so much. And welcome back to Ion Politics. So now we know you're going to be facing Republican Ken Paxton in November. You've wasted no time. You've come right out and called him the most corrupt politician in the United States. And I'm wondering how convincing an argument will this be for voters in this Republican state? Well, I want us to step back and appreciate. the gravity of what happened last night. The most corrupt politician in America just became the Republican nominee for the United States Senate right here in Texas. Three years ago today,
Starting point is 01:44:56 Ken Paxton was impeached by his own party for using his public office, his position of public trust to enrich himself and his donors at our expense. That kind of corruption is the rot at the core of this broken system. It's it's why we can't afford anything. It's why we can't get ahead no matter how hard we work. For 50 years, billionaire mega donors and their puppet politicians like Ken Paxton have rigged this economy against us. They've rigged the political system against us. And I think in this election, you're going to see Texans coming together, Democrats, independents, and Republicans to defeat the most corrupt politician in America. And if we can do that in this race, in this year, in this state, then I think we can defeat this entire corrupt system.
Starting point is 01:45:49 And that's when we can start to unrig the economy, start raising our pay, start cutting our taxes and lowering our costs. He fails at the end, though. He's like, we got to get, you know, this guy's corrupt. He's no good. Once we get that guy out, then all of a sudden we can lower taxes. How does that make any sense? Those two don't compete. Don't compute.
Starting point is 01:46:09 I think it's going to be an interesting race to watch. I think Tala Rico. So I have a question for you. You're the Texan. Yes. I asked a question before about Cornyn and I'm asking this. Did anybody do due diligence on Paxton? Why did he get picked and knighted by Trump?
Starting point is 01:46:34 Paxton sounds like a bad guy to push into this position. I think this is about the Christian vote. As I said before, Paxon is in the faith office with Paula White and that whole crowd there. He's in the West Wing all the time. He's in Trump's face. He's got Trump's ear. Yes, yes, sir, Mr. President. Yes, sir, Mr. President.
Starting point is 01:46:59 Yes, yes, yes. The lobbyists love him because the guy is a player. That's why. He'll do whatever Trump tells him to do. I don't think he's a great guy. at all. No, you've said this before. Well, I'm answering. I'm answering, basically. Yeah, he's a creep.
Starting point is 01:47:20 And he's done, you know, dumb, nasty things. Well, I don't think he's a good candidate. Just listening to what you just played. I don't think so either. And I don't think he was a very good attorney general. In fact, I think he was a bad attorney general. I will say Chip Roy did not become attorney general. I'm glad about that. I didn't like that guy either. I've seen that guy. I've met him several times. Swarmy. another guy. No, I don't like Chip-R-R-Mormy?
Starting point is 01:47:44 Smar-me? Yeah, smar-me, swarmie, shwarm-a, whatever. Don't like him. I only have one more sequence here. I want to play. Two clips. This is to show you how dishonest, surprise, surprise. Miz now is. This is, although I did like the term that was created here.
Starting point is 01:48:07 But they brought in Joe Rogan, and so I have to stick up. for Joe. Donald Trump not helping his midterm chances either with the thug fund we are seeing now bipartisan. I think thug fund is good. That's a good term. Well, I don't, I don't, well, why is it a good term? Because I don't like it. It sticks. It sticks for the Democrats. Yeah. Thug fund. Thug fund. Yeah, I think, I think it works. What does it refer to? I doesn't immediately come to. I, what the reason I don't like is because it doesn't bring anything to mind. Okay. Well, I thought it was good. We can disagree.
Starting point is 01:48:41 Donald Trump not helping. That's not what the clip is about. Donald Trump not helping his midterm chances either. With the thug fund, we are seeing now bipartisan outrage. If you tune out of the news over the long weekend, it has only been building since a contentious meeting at the end of the week. Republicans are upset and other Trump loyalists, including longtime MAGA allied podcaster Joe Rogan, also speaking out. That's so crazy. Imagine like, what?
Starting point is 01:49:07 He's mega allied all of a sudden? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. But then listen. So it's about the thug fund. It's about the $1.776 billion. Oh, it's about that money that's going to go to the people that got screwed by the Jan 6. The J6ers. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 01:49:26 And then he brings in Rogan. Including longtime MAGA allied podcaster Joe Rogan also speaking out. That is so crazy. Imagine like somebody accused you a murder. Yeah. And it turns out you weren't guilty of that murder. And then you sue them. me go, you can never prosecute me for murder again.
Starting point is 01:49:42 And then you just go straight Uday Hussay. Yeah. And they're like, it's cool. This is crazy. Rogan is not feeling it. Now, I heard that. I'm like, is he talking, is he even talking about the same thing? No, of course not.
Starting point is 01:49:56 He's talking about the fact that they had clips in the last show, which he didn't play, about Trump not getting prosecuted for IRS offenses. Right. But even if it was about that, the clip. is disingenuous. I pulled the clip. Didn't Trump do a lot of like stock purchases? He's made a fortune. He's made a fortune in this term.
Starting point is 01:50:19 They made a settlement with the IRS. I think that's why a lot of it came out recently. But like he can't be charged with anything. Yeah, they can't be. The latest thing is that he and his kids and his company cannot be audited. Oh, that's cool. That is cool. That's my settlement.
Starting point is 01:50:36 What was the settlement? What was the IRS? being sued for. What was the actization? It was for the leak. The leak of his tax returns. Okay, so the IRS leaked his tax returns? Yeah, he said they were reckless and...
Starting point is 01:50:54 Yeah, settlement of his $10 billion lawsuit. 2018 leak of his tax returns in New York Times in the U.S. is forever barred and precluded from examining or prosecuting Trump, his sons, and the Trump organization's current tax filings. according to one page document released Tuesday. That is so crazy. Imagine like somebody accused you a murder. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:15 And it turns out you weren't guilty of that murder. And then you sue them. You go, you can never prosecute me for murder again. And then you just go straight Uday Hussein. So that's, so he took a clip completely out of context. And then Joe and I think was Tom Seagor, they actually stumble upon the little bit that is also not reported about this settlement. And they're like, it's cool.
Starting point is 01:51:38 Yeah. It's fine. Oh, that's not. Now, here's the only thing that, the detail of that, is part of that settlement that says that, like the language, that they cannot be for their current tax filings. Does that mean, though, that in the future, future filings also fall under that immunity? Exactly. It's only about previous filings.
Starting point is 01:52:01 But everyone makes it look like, oh, he can never be audited again in his life. Yeah. It's a bull crap. Yeah. Yeah, good work, media. Well, good work if you work for the Democrats or people who just hate Trump. Basically, they've propagated a lie. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:52:21 You know, and it's the old you are, I am what I say you are. Precisely. Well, that's why we're here. Yeah, that's exactly right. If it wasn't for us, nobody would know anything. Yeah, breaking news, yes. How about us going to the Hunter Biden showing up on Candace Owens and the two of them windbagging? Now, was this a new interview or was it an old interview?
Starting point is 01:52:47 That was unclear to me. It was unclear to me. Whether it's Butler or Charlie or these things that. Well, it's definitely after Charlie, so it's got to be fairly new. You're right. So glaringly not right. It's almost as if they're just saying, F you. They don't even try.
Starting point is 01:53:06 We don't even get good siops anymore. And that's what I keep saying. I'm like, it's so disrespectful that we're not even getting good siops anymore. Like we're supposed to believe he survived four, what do we have, four assassination attempts, the first president that's ever survived four assassination attempts. They quietly, they lie to us about things. They make a big deal and then they make it want to, you know, it's going to go away. They're going to keep pretending and telling us that this is a totally normal grieving widow,
Starting point is 01:53:29 okay. No one's buying that. Like something's just not right here. Everyone can see that. This is not how you would react to your husband. been being shot and this sort of just, I'm fine. And I feel like two weeks later, I fully accept a narrative. I have no interest in anything else. It's over. Let's close it. I forgive him. Let's move on. You're asking us to abandon our common sense and our humanity is what you're
Starting point is 01:53:50 asking us to do. And they're that kind of seems like where we're at. Like they're insisting on this. And I'm going, where is this going to go? Because we're not doing the thing they want us to do. Like they're just constantly giving us slop all the time. I mean, even the recent White House course Spaninner. There was so much theater to it after, so much theater. And now it's kind of, okay, Secret Service maybe shot each other and we're just going to kind of quietly move on. But Trump needs a ballroom.
Starting point is 01:54:16 Like that's a normal reaction. Hey, there's a shooting duck. Hey, well, we better get that ballroom. By the way, it's going to cost a billion dollars now. And by the way, it's not from donors. And by the way, we're going to do it. Like, it's just like, it's just the constant, like, talk about gaslighting. It's been, this has been just this. And we're not even,
Starting point is 01:54:32 are we even a year into Trump's second term? We're a little over a year. A little over a second shot. And I don't think there's just been... Okay. So what I understand from this clip is they think that all of the assassination attempts are fake and that Erica Kirk killed her own husband.
Starting point is 01:54:50 Yeah. Okay. You got it. You nailed it. You pulled it right out of a hat. Yeah. Even my wife says, I don't trust Erica. There's something up with her.
Starting point is 01:55:00 Yeah. There's something up with her. And, you know, I don't go. I don't go in. we have an agreement about that. It's like, I'm just not, we're not going to argue about that. But, yeah.
Starting point is 01:55:15 All right. And, you know, and Erica, she was grooming, grooming some girl. Greta, she's very suspicious. I think that it's just a,
Starting point is 01:55:26 I think there's a market for this kind of thinking. No kidding. There's a big market for it. And it's just feeding a market and it doesn't, and it's a, it's basically, I hate to say they're NPCs, but they're kind of non-playing characters that are not important. No, I disagree on the NPC part.
Starting point is 01:55:46 I think you were right about the first part. There's a big market for this. See the Algos I was talking about earlier. And people like this. They like to think this way. It's a lot more fun. I did it for a long time. This is why people say, I got a great note the other day.
Starting point is 01:56:02 I think your Texas boomerism and financial. Security has clouded your judgment. What does that even mean? Well, one, I'm a boomer. And I'm not, but okay. There you are. I'm boomer adjacent. No, you're a boomer.
Starting point is 01:56:22 You're millennial adjacent or X-Gen or whatever it is. Yeah, I'm Gen X. You're ex-adjacent. I'm X. I was literally the face of Generation X. But okay. Three months, three months of boomer territory, call me a boomer. That's fine.
Starting point is 01:56:37 But the funniest one is your financial security. What? I look at the road ahead and like, I'm going to be doing podcasting for a long, long time. Why do you think I'm podcasting when I go away for a weekend to worship Jesus? Why do you think I'm still podcasting on a Sunday? Why? And a holiday. We're always working on a holiday.
Starting point is 01:57:01 You're killing ourselves just trying to. We're forced into this job. Well, no. and we're not forced into it, but this is our lot. Yeah, it's our lot. Same thing. It's what it is. I believe our lot is being forced into it.
Starting point is 01:57:16 It's just the way I see things. It's our lot, but we're forced into our lot. Well, I mean, hey, it's not a bad job, but financial security? No. No, that's a good job. It's a good job. We get to ridicule things and make fun of people. Yeah, it's a fun job.
Starting point is 01:57:36 It's a fun job. I get this out of the way. Cars for Kids now banned in California. You know, I had this clip, too, and you've been carrying it over for three weeks. Yeah, I know. We knew this. We knew it years ago. 13 years ago, we knew that this was a Jewish organization in New Jersey. Yeah, Hussed's.
Starting point is 01:57:54 Yeah, from Brooklyn. That had nothing to do with Cars for Kids. We were back now with that infamous Cars for Kids commercial, the jingle that probably just got stuck in your head the second I said the name. But tonight the music is stopping in California where a judge has banned the ads. Steve Patterson explains why. That Cars for Kids jingle. An earworm that lives rent-free in people's heads. Cars for Kids, a business model you don't understand and a jingle that will haunt you forever.
Starting point is 01:58:33 An 877 Cars for Kids. But if you live in California, a judge ruling that the charity has 30 days to pull the ads from state airways for violating false advertising laws. The lawsuit was filed by Bruce Puterball, who donated his Volvo after he says that melody got to him. But he says he felt misled after learning where the money actually went. According to testimony from the charity's COO, much of it goes to a New Jersey-based Jewish organization, which uses the funds for summer camps, trips to. to Israel, even a matchmaking service. He doesn't care that it's going to Jewish kids. He just wanted to know that
Starting point is 01:59:12 because maybe he wanted to send it to poor disadvantaged kids in California, which is what he thought the ads were doing. The judge finding that children, especially needy or underprivileged children, were not the exclusive recipients of the donations. The nonprofit calling the decision deeply flawed, saying it's well known that we are a Jewish organization and our website makes it abundantly clear, adding that they plan to appeal. Steve Patterson, NBC News, Los Angeles.
Starting point is 01:59:45 So here's my life. Here's my life. You bring this clip. I'm praying that I hope we never have to play this clip. I mean, I had the clip. I'm like, I didn't play it. Yeah, you're looking at the rock. This, this is.
Starting point is 01:59:58 Yes, but I see the clip every single time. You're buying out. He's recycling the cars for kids clip again. And then, okay, so then you call for it, we play it. And what's the first thing I get? WTF Curry playing the jingle on the show. It's John's clip. It's not me, people.
Starting point is 02:00:18 You know, I remember the best line is that I donated a car to the cars for kids and I never got a kid. It's not funny. It's a horrible way to go into a donation segment. it's probably the worst thing you could ever do before a donation segment. Well, I'll tell you one thing it does. It emphasizes something that we don't talk about much anymore, but we've talked about in the past. Jingles work.
Starting point is 02:00:45 This is true. We have a jingle expert that it's a part of our crew basically is ancillary. He's no agenda adjacent. Yes. And jingles work and we use them for that reason. Yes. I guess so. Probably do this one then
Starting point is 02:01:06 just to make sure people know the jingles work. It's not a jingle. Donate. It's the rousies jingle we have. Hmm, not very catchy. With that, I want to thank you for your courage in the morning to you, the man who put the C in cars for kids. Say hello to my friend on the other end,
Starting point is 02:01:30 the one and only Mr. John C. Well, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry. Also in the morning, I should see boosting ground feet, the air, there's no water names of nights out there. In the morning to the trolls in the troll room. Let me count for a second. Wow, 1385. Low.
Starting point is 02:01:48 That's very low. You know, what happened? She played that stupid clip. No, that wasn't it. Everybody ran away. I can't hear that jingle. It is the worst jingle, actually. But they work.
Starting point is 02:02:01 They work. They work. We are broadcasting live. We do it every Sunday and Thursday. You can listen to us on the No AgendaStream, noagendaStream.com. And if you want to find out how many times we talked about that bogus organization,
Starting point is 02:02:17 or at least the bogus commercial for the organization, go to Binget.io, noagenda.com, and you can just search KARS. And you'll see, we've been on this for a long time. But somehow, all of a sudden, the mainstream media. I guess they weren't, were they not spending enough ad buy on the, is that what the same? Well, the cars for kids, I think it was done as a public service.
Starting point is 02:02:40 I don't think there was any payment out. No, but maybe that they wanted them to step it up a little bit. Because, you know, they were, they were buying a lot of airtime at one point. I don't think they were buying any airtime. I thought those are all PSAs. Oh, that's a good point. I don't know. Hmm.
Starting point is 02:02:57 How come we can't get a PSA? Because we don't have any, we, we don't have any, we, No agenda for kids. Protect your kid. We're not a charity. No, that's right. And for good reason. Because then you can't talk about politics.
Starting point is 02:03:13 According to the Johnson Amendment. You can listen to it. Now, here's a cool way to listen to us. Because, you know, people are busy, lots of stuff going on in your life. However, there are these modern podcast ads. We are after all a podcast. You go to podcast apps.com. You get one of these podcast apps.
Starting point is 02:03:30 and then the modern ones, they know when we're going live. All of these live shows and No Agenda Stream, when they're going live, they send out a special pod ping, and you get a notification in your app, just like any other notifications, hey, no agenda's live. You tap on that, you're listening to Show Live. Even better, perhaps, after we publish a show within 90 seconds, we're updated on your app, unlike the Legacy Apps.
Starting point is 02:03:54 Yeah, that's the interesting part to me. Yeah, because some can take 15 minutes, a half hour, an hour, an hour. Now there's this one app that a lot of people use overcast, which is not, well, they, Marco is an interesting guy. He only makes apps for Apple and he hates me. Why? Because he is very, if you want to talk about woke, the guy is super woke. I mean, over the, over the hill woke, over the top. Is he non-binary? He could be. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:04:33 But he never liked the idea of, you know, when we started podcast index.org, we said, let me see. Actually, I should tell you exactly what we said. What did we put on the website? We put, hold on. We had a statement. The podcast, here it is. The podcast index is here to preserve, protect, and extend the open, independent podcast ecosystem.
Starting point is 02:04:56 And at one point we had in their freedom of speech. I don't see that on there anymore. We had that. But the whole thing was started because podcasts were being the platform. That's why we started. That's why Dave Jones and I started it. And he didn't like that. Oh, you're free speech, huh?
Starting point is 02:05:21 That's the freeze speech people. Yes, he's one of the, that infected the no agenda social, which we both had to bail out from. Yeah. I can't remember what the big deal was. And they always used to use the term freeze speech. So he always has to do things differently. So instead of, so one of the, we developed a couple of things with podcast index and with podcasting 2.0.
Starting point is 02:05:49 We developed the chapters and transcripts. And there's 25 other ones. So we make transcripts of our show and we put that in the RSS feed and then the modern podcast apps pick that up. If you don't have transcripts and almost every podcast host now delivers transcripts along with, you know, your files. What Apple started doing is Apple started making transcripts for podcasts that didn't have transcripts, which is, you know, okay, that's Apple. They want to do that. The idea is if I have my own transcript, my own, then you should take my transcript. You shouldn't be using your transcript.
Starting point is 02:06:34 Would you agree? Right. There's nothing but that makes nothing but sense. So do you think that once Overcast, Marco's app started to do transcripts? Do you think that he would use our transcript? I'm guessing no. No. And so here's how the transcript showed up for our previous show.
Starting point is 02:06:55 So, as the jingle played, the jingle being... Bonn and Buzzkill. In the morning. How do you think that show... Now, it shows up fine in our transcript. How does it show up in the Overcast transcript? I'm sure it's very poor. Craig Bond and Bosskill.
Starting point is 02:07:19 What? Yes, exactly. Craig, as in Craig. You're Craig? Craig. And... Bond, you're Craig Bond. Yes, and your boss kill.
Starting point is 02:07:28 B-O-L. And boss kill. B-O-S-K-I-L. Yeah. Use our transcript, Marco. He's not even listening to this show. No, no doubt. Anyway, that's why you want a modern podcast app that doesn't suck.
Starting point is 02:07:44 And we don't have ads. We don't have ads. I think the Overcast app has ads. The ads, unless you pay for it. See, you don't get ads if you don't pay for us. If you don't pay for us, then that's your own conscience you have to deal with. all we ask for is value in exchange for the value we deliver. Now, if you got no value from it, fine.
Starting point is 02:08:04 Why are you listening? If you did get value, then you should probably consider at some point sending that value back to the show. It's a very simple system. We've been living by it for over 18 years. It's called value for value. Now, you can deliver that value to us in time, talent, or treasure. It's kind of, again, a very simple, simple idea. and value comes in many different ways when it comes to time and talent.
Starting point is 02:08:32 Many people will organize meetups, also known as, what are they teen? What is the, what is the term? Teen takeover. Teen take over. No agenda takeover. No agenda takeover. So you can do that. You can help us out with boots on the ground, always very helpful, boots on the ground.
Starting point is 02:08:55 And man, lots of people sending Kratum boots on the ground. Various, various types of feedback. Most of them saying, I've been chewing those leaves forever. I feel great. And so I'm like, well, my mom is loopy, but she may be on the synthetic stuff. Okay.
Starting point is 02:09:10 But it's all appreciated. We take it all into account. Oh, one other boots on the ground. I got a boots on the ground back from our lobbyist about the flavored vapes. And the CDC guy quitting. Okay. And she tapped her network in D.C.
Starting point is 02:09:30 And indeed, Trump forcing him to approve the flavored vapes was the reason he quit. That was the last straw, which seems like an odd hill to die on. Yeah, I'd say it is an odd hill to die on. I think he wanted to quit anyway. I think so, too. So we always want to have a nice piece of art representing the show for our. album art, another thing that we've been using for a long time, but pretty much from almost the beginning of the show,
Starting point is 02:10:02 ever since the first art generator showed up, Sir Paul Couture doing that. Another great example of value for value. No, it was Randy and we could do it was a kind of, it was also another guy, Randy. I can't remember his last name. We lost him. He's overboard. He's dead.
Starting point is 02:10:17 Maybe he's dead. Randy. Randy. I can't remember. Randy. There was the original art generator, which is missing. and then it kind of just faded and Paul Couture took over and did a whole new one
Starting point is 02:10:29 and now is the king of the art generator. But the original one still had some pieces that are lost a time. Oh, no, and then remember drop.i.O? Do you remember that? Yeah, I remember drop.io. Do you remember? So I was publishing show notes and art and everything on drop. dot I.O and that was the big lesson about Silicon Valley.
Starting point is 02:10:51 We woke up one morning and, oh, we've shut it down. We've sold to, I think it was maybe Facebook. And then all of a sudden you can't use it. Well, it was gone. All of our content was gone. That's when we started hosting things ourselves and lots of producers have stepped up for that. Anyway, the artwork, we wanted something very traditional.
Starting point is 02:11:09 We typically do that on days of importance, like Memorial Day. Blue Acorn understood it perfectly and did this dynamite piece with just an eagle, with his feathers, all like, just very energetic piece. like, yeah, don't mess with Merca. Memorial Day. It was a beautiful piece, Blue Acorn, and we unanimously decided that's the one we want.
Starting point is 02:11:33 Now, a lot of people took this to a very strange level because, hey, I can prompt, why not? And, you know, it's not appropriate to have, thanked the fallen for their courage. No, Ryan M. Scott. No, that was odd. It was very strange. We had Memorial Day alien,
Starting point is 02:11:53 combination. No, we're looking for Mother's Day, Christmas, Easter, Veterans Day, Memorial Day. We're looking for something traditional. And we got it from Blue Acorn. We also learned that, I think it, didn't we get an email from Nestworks? The previous art that we selected was a very- Nessworks in an elaborate email explaining how he uses Photoshop. Yeah. Which we suspected. Yes, that was the Flamingo with the drones. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:12:28 Yeah, and how he did it. And so it was Photoshop. It was good. We love seeing, and we just chose it because it was a good piece that proved that doesn't all have to be slopped to get chosen. No agendaartgenerator.com. That is how you support us with your photographic and prompting talent, and we appreciate that. We also thank all of our donors.
Starting point is 02:12:52 Of course, they're all producers, every single one of you. $50 and above, we will thank everybody not under $50 for reasons of anonymity. And we have a special kudos for people who are able to support us with $200 and more. Not only will we guarantee read your note, but we also give you an official Hollywood title, which is the real deal. You can go to IMDB.com. You see thousands of no agenda producers in there. some of them are actual Hollywood big name producers.
Starting point is 02:13:19 You get an associate executive producer credit, $300 or more, an executive producer credit. And while they last, we have the Red Knight Order of the Heart still available. We only made 50 of them available. This is in honor of John still living and still being with us, which we're very happy about. Not only will you get your night ring if you don't have one already, but you will get a very handsome red knight pin. And you will be admired by many at your teen takeover, no agenda meetup. And we start with $1,002 from Sir Swichero, Black Baron of the I-4 Corridor, Commodore, and he's in Orlando, Florida.
Starting point is 02:13:58 And very much appreciated. And he says, ITM, John and Adam, this order of the heart contribution signifies my love for you's guys, no homo. John, you have become too agreeable. this is understandable given what just happened to you. I'm getting a lot of this feedback from people. I'm apparently becoming too agreeable, and I'm being pushed around by you specifically. Well, who else would push back more?
Starting point is 02:14:29 Who else would push you around? You're like becoming a bully, an egregious bully, and I'm supposed to, and I'm taken too much of it. I'm putting up with too much of your mean-spirited bullying. I wish I could come over that with a synonym for bully, but I can't. Let's read the note and see what he actually says because your explanation seems a little over the top. John, you have become too agreeable.
Starting point is 02:15:03 This is understandable given what just happened to you. And I'm not talking about your heart surgery. You can't hide behind that. you experienced an immense outpouring of love after your absence. This is a well-deserved blessing that must have moved you. However, for the sake of the show, please lean into your buzzkill vibe to keep Adam sharp and the show spicy. Adam tried to be nicer to John.
Starting point is 02:15:31 You guys are the best. No jingles, no... Well, you know, I can't. John annoys me often. So I never. What? No, it's not true. You are not in my head.
Starting point is 02:15:55 I'm just saying you can, I've taken a note at face value. So try to be, I will try to be nicer. I guess an example of that would be me complaining about you bringing dumb. women clips onto the show. That is, I love the dumb women. Was I not nice? I'm just trying to keep people listening to the show is what I'm trying to do.
Starting point is 02:16:19 I'm trying to help the show. And we should mention something as an aside. I don't want to change the subject, but I should have been brought up earlier in the show. We now have an official No Agenda podcast, Insta account. Insta? No Agenda podcast. It's Adam and John are the,
Starting point is 02:16:40 are the proprietors? I'm not. We need a thousand, a couple thousand people to subscribe to this thing. So it's a no agenda podcast, all one word. Instagram. So I've been kicked off Instagram. What? Yeah.
Starting point is 02:17:01 My account, which I only use to check in on my daughter and, you know, like post a picture on her birthday. Adam C-1999. I was told when I went to log in, you need to log in from a device that has had the app used with Instagram before. Well, I've never used the Instagram app. So, okay, I installed the Instagram app, log in, it says no. No.
Starting point is 02:17:32 But, and I, I mean, it'll send an email to my email address and say, yeah, you can't reset your password or even look. log in until you prove that you are Adam by logging in in the app on a device that has been used for Instagram before. So I'm in a hole. I can't get out. I can't get in. I can't even see our own Instagram account. Well, you're there. I just searched you. Adam's there, but I can't log into my account. So whenever someone sends me an Instagram link, I can click on it. It says, install the app or continue on the web. I continue on the web and then seven times out of 10 I can see it and then it says log in.
Starting point is 02:18:17 I'm stuck. I cannot get into my Instagram. Well, I'm looking at your posts. Yeah. I think this is a benefit to society. And I'm supposed to be nice to you. I'm just saying. I don't post.
Starting point is 02:18:39 What is the last? There's tons of posts on here. What's the last post I made? you got a picture of Christina. Yeah, exactly. What I just said. Happy birthday is what I said. Well, there's one and there's a picture of you and there's a picture of a horse and then
Starting point is 02:18:52 there's a, you don't post that much. No, I don't ever. I just said that. See, here you go. Annoying me again. So what difference does it make whether you post a lot or not? I can't even see the No Agenda podcast Instagram. You just said, we're the proprietors of it.
Starting point is 02:19:08 I'm not. I can't even get on Instagram. I'll give you a password for you can do the No Agenda Podcast. I want my own account back so I can promote the No Agenda podcast account. I don't understand why you can't, this doesn't make any sense. This never happened to anybody. Can somebody help him? It happens to lots of people.
Starting point is 02:19:30 These things happen all the time. People get locked out of Google. It happens all the time. This is the Silicon Valley model. I got locked out at Twitter the other day. Yeah, well, you got back. And then it put me on some old account. I started as a joke.
Starting point is 02:19:44 And then I couldn't get out of it because you can't log out. Sir, Switzeroo, Black Baron of the I-4 Corridor, Commodore in Orlando. Thank you very much. You will be a red night today. We appreciate it. Dame Sisi in Greensboro, Georgia, 51974. A belated birthday donation for my beloved brother, Knight of the Cross-threaded wheel stud from Dame Sisi.
Starting point is 02:20:11 Very nice. Ian Cummings is in Kingsville, Texas, $450. We appreciate this. This is a lot of value you're sending back. Thank you so much. He says, this is a donation towards my father, Timothy's knighthood, as he undergoes intensive chemo for Richter's transformation lymphoma. I don't know what it is, but it doesn't sound good. He is 75 and has been hit in remission for leukemia for years before this bout of cancer hit him.
Starting point is 02:20:38 I plan to get him knighted before he passes, but hopefully he lives longer. I think we should give him an F. Cancer is what I'm going to do. Yeah, definitely. You've got karma. That sucks. Louis Ruaz in Portage, Indiana. How is this how come to reverse?
Starting point is 02:21:07 How come to Texas and U.S. are reversed on these guys? It's the same thing. Same thing with company. What are you talking about? Well, normally the second thing is usually the country. No. It's like Dame Cici, Greensboro, Georgia, U.S. They're all the same.
Starting point is 02:21:23 No, then I got Kingsville, U.S., Texas. Oh, I have Kingsville, Texas, U.S. Really? I know where mine is backwards. I'm trying to be nice to you, so I'll say. Well, that's not going to help. I wonder. How is it possible?
Starting point is 02:21:40 3.43.375. I TM, John and Adam. Thank you for the show. I look forward to it every Sunday and Thursday. It helps make me, it helps make the miles go by faster. Ah, guy in a car. No. I said, John, a picture.
Starting point is 02:21:53 Guy in a truck. Truck. I said, John, a picture that should have gone with my first donation. Can I get a love my truck jingle? Please, four more years. Do you have the I love my truck thing? No. I do.
Starting point is 02:22:12 That's right. Excellent. I was ready for it. Jorge Hernandez, Lake Stevens, Washington is up next. 33333. This donation goes to my bride-to-be in future Dame Savannah. She was born at 133 p.m. in Brownwood, Texas. I believe since she has entered my life, I've been blessed with all the 33's life has to offer.
Starting point is 02:22:35 Let's have a kick-ass wedding, rat. That's her nickname. This Saturday, no joke. Is he proposing? He don't get it either. Please pray for excellent weather to ease my future mother-in-law's worries. Jingles, karma for the both of us, and Joe Biden's, I'm going to give you the whole load today. Thank you very much, says Jorge.
Starting point is 02:22:57 I'm going to give you the whole load today. All right. It'll be good. You've got karma. Praying for good weather, my friend. Praying for good weather for you. Dennis Cato in Tampa, 333.33.3. ITM, John and Adam.
Starting point is 02:23:14 We're happy to continue to support the best podcast in the universe. And a big thank you to all the listeners who have given manuka gold.com a try over the past month. You've made the pain relief gel our new best selling and most reordered product. That's Adam who did that. Well, yeah, I have another testimonial, but finish this first. Exclusive only for no agenda listeners. don't forget to enter the code Adam 20 for Adam 20 for 20% off your purchase. Thank you, Dennis Cato, in Tampa, Florida, sent from my iPhone.
Starting point is 02:23:49 I want my code to be one Adam 12. That should be my new code. So we were coming back from Nashville. And have you ever had this on the plane where all of a sudden you just get this neck pain on one side that goes from the top of your head almost down your neck down to your shoulder? and no matter what you do, you can't fix it. You stretch, you move, you try to reposition. Have you ever had that? I probably, but I can't recall.
Starting point is 02:24:19 I'm not in a plane necessarily. I was miserable. We're in the car. We had to drive back from Austin. So I was just miserable. I come home, like, I'm getting, and I put the Manuka Gold relief gel on it. I don't know what this.
Starting point is 02:24:33 It doesn't work the same way for Tina. It worked a little bit for her. But man, I tell you. within five minutes. That was gone. I don't know what this stuff is. Well, I do. It's honey.
Starting point is 02:24:47 But is, I'm starting. That and the burn cream are now in my kit forever. I'm never leaving home without it. We need a smaller vessel, a smaller thing. I can, you know, can take with us. The container's too big. I'm doing product development here.
Starting point is 02:25:04 Yes. Thank you, Dennis. Lisa Perez, St. Gabriel, Louisiana, 257.94, our first associate executive producer. I love your show. Thanks for calling it like it is. My husband, who's already a night, are physicians and love hearing your medical interpretations. I don't know if that's a good thing. We are available to help any time, by the way. Well, the way this works is you just send an email to Adam atcurry.com. No one can spell Dvorak anyway. And when we mess up, let me know. Or if you think there's something that you can add to it,
Starting point is 02:25:36 We love that type of value as well. Thank you. Austin, your favorite pool guy, sorry. I found my bio from the screen and I thought it said foot. Roseville, California, 250. Pool guy. At the end it says stay chlorinated. I just found that funny.
Starting point is 02:26:03 Good morning, gentlemen. Good morrow. Thank you for your courage and all you do to have. help everyone's sanity. John, glad you're well. And if I don't take care of myself, I'll end up in the same boat. My grandpa had a five-way bypass. That's the big one. Letterman had five-way. That's a biggie. My letterman had five-way and he was back to work in, in, in, yes, you've, you've mentioned this several times. Yeah, I know. It's, it's galling. And you're still living with your kid.
Starting point is 02:26:36 It's because they're redoing the house is being remodeled. Are you getting one of those chairs that you sit in to take you up the stairs? Oh, yeah, sure. Those are cool. I can jog up the stairs now. It's not a big deal. Oh, okay. Then you can do help with the remodeling.
Starting point is 02:26:55 Oh, please. My grandpa had a five-way bypass. My dad had a three-way bypass at 45. That's, see, the difference is I. That's nothing. The main difference is that I'm on Medicare. Yeah. How much, do you ever get the bill for that thing?
Starting point is 02:27:13 Yeah, we'll talk about the bill in the future. Okay. So I'm probably, because I have more anecdotes. So I'm probably looking at a one-way bypass in my future, not necessarily. Magnesium, my friend, magnesium. My dad jokes around and calls the scar on the chest, our family crests, it's called a zipper scar. Shout out to my beautiful and talented daughter Marley.
Starting point is 02:27:39 Today is her high school graduation so crazy being a dad, but I wouldn't change it for anything. Kids really do change your life. Baby making karma for all the younger, no agenda listeners. We need more children. None for me, though. The wife has a bun in the oven due in August and I'm praying it's a son because there's way too much estrogen in my house. Even the dog is a girl. I need someone to relate.
Starting point is 02:28:05 to thank you guys again. Stay chlorinated. Austin, your favorite pool guy. You've got Parma. All right, thank you. Austin. Sir Dixpert. Parts unknown, apparently. 24568. My truck hit 33,33 miles on the way to the cabin over Memorial Day weekend. I didn't need a sign more obvious than that. 233 plus 33 and the fees. That's. Bussin. No jingles, no karma. Thank you for your courage, Sir Dixpert. Thank you, Sir Dixpert. Appreciate that. Busson.
Starting point is 02:28:47 Busson. Eli, the coffee guy in Bensonville, Illinois, 20528. JCD, thanks for the tip of the day. Picked up some body. Okay, I got to mention the tip of the day, which was the Badiah. And I want to tell the people over at the Doge End of Fun, and I'm going to mention this again at tip of the day moment,
Starting point is 02:29:10 because a lot of people won't listen to this segment. It's the body of no added salt version, not the regular bodya. I guess note after note, I've got to look at this thing. It's filled with salt. What are you trying to kill me? It's the no added salt bodya.
Starting point is 02:29:30 Noted. Please make changes as necessary. Picked up some body and by the way, the other stuff is good too, but if you don't care. I grilled up some pork chops over Memorial Day. You may be off the salt, but happy to hear you're back on the coffee. Care package, yes, I have a cup of coffee now and again.
Starting point is 02:29:53 Care package you're on the way, gentlemen, for everyone else out and get one nation, visit gigawatt coffee roasters.com and use the code ITM 20 for 20% off your order. Stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy. And coming in hot with $200, as she always, does. She's in Castle Rock, Colorado. Her name is Linda Lu Patkin, and she wants jobs, karma, because she says, your resume has about 10 seconds to make an impression, and most don't. For a resume that gets results, go to Imagemakers, Inc.com. Linda helps professionals and executives turn their experience into a clear story of leadership, results, and impact. That's ImageMakers, Inc.
Starting point is 02:30:33 with a K. And Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes. Jobs. Jobs. Jobs. jobs and jobs let's vote for jobs as always I want to thank these executive and associate executive producers for their very valuable contributions to the no agenda show as always these are Hollywood credits that work anywhere Hollywood credits are recognized
Starting point is 02:30:59 and that's a lot of places including IMDB dot com and for that very reason we say thank you for your courage execs and associate execs our formula is this We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Water. Shut up.
Starting point is 02:31:22 Shut up. And now for the rest of our producers, $50 and above, never under $50 for reasons of anonymity. And Anonymous actually comes in with $199. Just shy of the associate executive producership for reasons unknown from Monroe Township in New Jersey. M.K. Ultramark is in Parlin, New Jersey with 133. Sir Roland Lincoln, Nebraska, with 133. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 from Dame Monica and Greenville, Indiana. And she needs house-selling car.
Starting point is 02:31:55 I'll give that to you at the end. Douglas Murray, Missoula, Montana, 101.01. Probably a couple minutes late for showday, but squeeze me and no, you're in, no problem. Dame Pompeu from Los Angeles, 100. And there's Kevin McLaughlin with his boob donation, $80.8.80.8. In Concord, North Carolina, he is the Archduke of Luna. Love of America and boobs. And as always, he says, God bless America and melons.
Starting point is 02:32:19 7227, nice palindrome from Dame Dana in Loughlin, Nevada. John Albarini, $70.26. Dame Rita, she's always there. Sparks, Nevada, $68.33. And she says, cheers to the best podcast in the universe. Dame Tracy and Sir Cain Break in St. George, Louisiana, double nickels on the dime. $55.10. Sense.
Starting point is 02:32:42 Surprise of astonishment is in Yukon. Oklahoma, 5444. Now we have Nathan Gwynn in Jackson, Tennessee, 52, 72, Foster Birch, New York, New York, 52 72, Brad McDonald, our first of the 50s, he's in Mason, Ohio, Richard Gardner, a $50, $10, Aaron Weiss Gerber, Bend, Oregon, 50, Catherine Fonthal in Rotterdam, 50, thank you, and Bobby Bow in Bluegrass, Iowa, $50. Thank you all very much for your support of the No Agenda Show. we will not go below 50, but we see you 49-99s.
Starting point is 02:33:16 We see you 33-33s. We see you 12-12s. We see you 11-11s. What is the lowest number we have on the spreadsheet? Fours. We've got fours. We've got a couple of dollars with one dollar. And you know what?
Starting point is 02:33:28 Yeah. Every single penny counts. Every single one is appreciated. Thank you all very much for supporting us. No agenda donations.com. For those to need the karma here it is. You've got karma. No agenda donations.com.
Starting point is 02:33:42 Now, before I continue, we have a make-good note for Sir Vincent James. I think he had a red heart donation. Am I correct? Maybe. I think so. Celebration of John. My father had, yeah, so this is a make-good. My father had the surgery and lived a vibrant life afterwards.
Starting point is 02:33:58 Sounds like he's not with us anymore. I'm sure John will be renewed with strength and his famous fighting spirit soon. Well, apparently he's gone, he's gone weak. I've gone soft. Also, I'm wishing both of you and all of Gitmonation a very happy Memorial Day week. as we move forward to celebrate a 250th year for the Declaration of Independence, I pray the celebration reignites our patriotism that is badly needed for our country. Yes, go and see Young Washington.
Starting point is 02:34:22 That'll get your spark going. This donation moves me to the level of Earl. I would like to be known as Sir Vincent, Earl of the Rocket City, protector of the GCC. That's the Gulf Coast Countries, I think it should be. Take care and God bless, Sir Vincent. Okay, we've got that noted. title change is on deck.
Starting point is 02:34:41 And I also would like to give a shout out to noagendashop.com. They have this, you know, they've had very busy. They're trying to keep their heads above water. The No Agenda Shop has been with us for a long, long time. And they have the No Agenda Shop sticker club. And I received, they put me on the sticker club. I received the stickers. They're really cool.
Starting point is 02:35:04 And we've been a big proponent of stickers. I don't think toll booths work anymore because, now we have the easy pass, and so you just kind of blow through them. There's still a few toll boosts here and there. Yeah, but you can put these stickers anywhere. I know, you can't, you know. Put them on cop cars, you know, all kinds of great places. Put them on your laptop.
Starting point is 02:35:22 People love the stickers on the laptop. I advise against putting them on a cop car. That's not a good idea. What am I thinking? But thank you very much, noagenda shop, noagenda shop.com. And thank you all for supporting no agenda. Noagenda donations.com. That is where you can go to support us anytime, any amount,
Starting point is 02:35:38 whatever you feel like, whatever is value to you is value to us. Noagenda Donations.com. You can even set up a recurring donation. And again, any amount, any frequency. Noagendidonations.com. It's a birthday, birthday. For the past couple of weeks, you've had almost no birthdays. It's the oddest thing.
Starting point is 02:36:01 Remember to send a note to notes at noagendashow.net if you want to be on the birthday list. And Dame Cici wishes her beloved brother, Night of the Christ. Cross-threaded wheel stud. A very happy birthday, and that's the only one we have on the list. So we say happy birthday from everybody here at the best. Podcast in the universe. It's your birthday, yeah. Title changes.
Starting point is 02:36:22 Turn and facelessly. That's changes. Don't want to be into space. Yes, indeed. That is the title change we just discussed. Sir Vincent now becomes Sir Vincent Earl of the Rocket City Protector of the GCC. Now it says Gulf Coast counties, but I don't know if it should be counties or countries, but it says counties twice.
Starting point is 02:36:43 So I'm going to take that as what it is. Otherwise, we'll do another make-good. No problem. Congratulations. Thanks to your additional $1,000 in aggregate of supporting the Noa Gena show, which is the best podcast in the universe. Behold the purpose right from the start. Quantities, but we are very proud and glad to welcome Sir Switcheroo
Starting point is 02:37:15 as a red knight in the order of the heart. Sir Switzeroo, of course, is the Black Baron of the I-4 Corridor, and he is a Commodore. And now also a red knight, congratulations to you, sir. Behold the cure of purpose right from the start in the morning break. Go to the team takeover. Instead, go to no agenda meetup. It's much safer.
Starting point is 02:37:57 You won't get arrested. And it's a lot of fun because you meet people and children from other lands. from all over. You have one thing in common, the best podcast in the universe. Knights, dames, Earls, Viscounts, Barrens, you'll see them all there. And just plain old douchebags. They show up as well and welcome them with open ours. Noagenda meetups.com is where you can find all of them listed. And here is a meetup report. We've been waiting for this one from the Squim, Washington Too Many Eggs Meetup. Hey, everybody. This is welcome you to the No Agenda Meetup and Squim of Madness here.
Starting point is 02:38:32 I just want to pass the phone around. Whichever want a great day. Here we go. Hey, this is Miguel at madfarmer.com. And I am the Duke of Dushbaggery. Good to be here, Brol. I can't find John still. Hello, everybody. This is Chris from the Madness in Squim report.
Starting point is 02:38:52 I'm waiting for my too many eggs.com book to be signed by Mimi. Total chaos here. Giving out a 15% discount on heat pumps. There's no better way to show you love the planet than buying a Douglas Eapub from Tuttle Electric. In the morning, Dame Laura of the Golden Mean. Just want to give a shout out to Leo Bravo and the Flight of the No Agenda gang down in Los Angeles. See, I really am from Washington. Hi, this is Sarah.
Starting point is 02:39:22 Do it for your big mama. Do it for your pop pop. This is Max Power. WTC7 won't go away. Hey, this is Dame Jen from Idaho. and out here in Squam, enjoying the local community and getting to know everybody. It's awesome. Todd wanted to hear more of Mimi on the No Agenda. I think that's it. And wrap it up for the day. Glad everyone was here. It was a good turnout. Appreciate everyone. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:39:47 In the morning. Now, this was a fun meetup report. They sent me an IKEA package, in essence, of four different recordings, and there was an opening. And I had to, I mean, I spent probably 11, 12 minutes editing all of that together. But it was worth that, I tell you. It was nice to hear Mimi in there who still can't find you apparently. This is just one of the
Starting point is 02:40:11 many meetups. There is one taking place this Saturday, the tiny amygdala of Anchorage Unite, actually, to celebrate somewhere 2 o'clock, that'll be Alaska time, at the Campbell Park Airstrip Trailhead in Anchorage. There's a lot of people in Anchorage
Starting point is 02:40:27 and a lot of people in that area. Looking forward to a meetup report from your no agenda meetup. In the month of June, which is coming up, the fourth, Raleigh, North Carolina. The six is the big one in Ukraine, Bilat Cereska, Kiev Oblast, Boise, Idaho on the 13th, Franklin, Tennessee, on the 13th, Indianapolis, Indiana on the 14th, Charlotte, North Carolina, on the 18th, Rotterdam on the 26th. And then we're already into July, August, I see September, October. Things are being planned ahead, people. You should plan accordingly. Go to no agenda meetups.com. Find one that is near you. And you know what's cool? If you can't find one, there's no fee. There's no TEDx.
Starting point is 02:41:04 You don't have to go through a committee. You just put it in like, hey, we're going to be at this bye. We're going to hang out. And it'll be announced here on the show. And if you send an a meetup report, I'll be happy to play. We play almost every single one of them. Go to Knowagenda Meetups.com. Always easy and always a party.
Starting point is 02:41:19 Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days. You want to be where you aim was the same. It's like a party. Still to come. John's tip of the day. They've been good lately. See, I'm being nice. They've been very,
Starting point is 02:41:44 they've been so good. Your tips are there. Just so fantastic. You're the best. Is it working? Yeah. Okay. I'll keep it up.
Starting point is 02:41:52 Also, end of show mixes. We've got some dynamite ones today, including the entire President Trump reflecting pool. Now in song, interestingly. Before that, though, we have a couple of ISOs. brought two today. John has two. It's an ISO off. This is what we play at the very end of the show. I will go first. This is incredible.
Starting point is 02:42:15 Okay. I'll play my second one. This is so good. Okay. That's what I have. Okay. Well, I went with celebrities again. Okay. All right. Let's start with Jordan Peterson. Young men should get their act together and all listen to the No Agenda podcast. A little long, but sounds very close, very close to... It's close. It's not great.
Starting point is 02:42:43 Not great, no. And then we have, this is Morgan Freeman. I just love these two guys and this podcast. They don't, he doesn't say no agenda. Could have been any podcast. This will be stolen by other podcasters. And be like, hey, look at Morgan Freeman said about our podcasts. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's really good.
Starting point is 02:43:04 I just love these two guys. and this podcast. And there's some kind of weird edit in there. No, I think Peterson wins on this. No, no, that was him. That was part of the voice. Well, it's no good. It's no good. We're going to use Peterson.
Starting point is 02:43:16 Peterson is good. I like Peterson. He's long, but it's good. We'll use him. But we will use him after we do John C. DeVorex tip of the day. Great advice for you and me. Just the tip with JCD.
Starting point is 02:43:32 And sometimes Adam. Okay, first of all, for the people that are documenting these tips. The last tip was not, it was not mentioned that the Badiya that I'm talking about has no salt, there's no added salt. It's a special version. You just said that.
Starting point is 02:43:48 I know, I'm repeating it because people don't listen to the donation segment. Oh, they just tune in for the tip of the day? They don't listen to this either, but it's beside the point. I'm making it clear. And so,
Starting point is 02:44:01 please make that correct. There's another correction involving that tip is that doesn't cut. you can't get it in a big giant bottle. It's only a small pack. Tiny pack. Tiny pack. All right. No,
Starting point is 02:44:12 that's good. I'm excited. I have ordered. I'm excited to try it. It's a correction. Okay. So today's tip of the day is, now I'm looking at these.
Starting point is 02:44:24 I'm thinking what we paid is too much, but I'm not sure what the cost was on these. Because there's a million different versions of this product. And you're going to have to try. different ones to see which ones you like, but I'm telling you, the best snack I've run into in the last decade, freeze-dried blueberries. Huh. These things are unbelievable.
Starting point is 02:44:51 They taste like they have the quality of corn pops, so they're just crunchier than it. They're just crunchy. And you can, you just can't eat enough of them. In fact, the bag that I got from Trader Joe's, and you can get. He's at Trader Joe's in their, Trader Joe's is in 43 of the 52 states. So you can go get them there. You can cross the state line to get him, son. And so Trader Joe's has them.
Starting point is 02:45:19 But they also, if you go to Amazon, there's about 30 vendors of these things. And there's all different kinds of freeze, dried fruit. What is the sugar? What is the sugar content per serving? It's pretty low. Really? Blueberries don't have a lot of sugar anyway. They're a good source of protein.
Starting point is 02:45:37 It's a good source of a lot of things, and they're very low in sodium and low in potassium. They're outstanding product. High antioxidant value. Yes, high antioxidant. But the one pack turns out to be one serving, and there's quite a few of them in here, but you end up, you can't stop eating. They're worse than olives. Oh, olives. Oh, man.
Starting point is 02:45:59 Olives, I hear you. Oh, man. I hear you. Have you ever had the Louisiana pickles? Louisiana pickles? I don't know what that is. What is special about him? Oh, now this is a producer and he does,
Starting point is 02:46:12 you haven't gotten those Louisiana pickles? No one sent me anything. Oh, okay. I'll have him send some to you. Yeah, send some. The sweet, Swedish. Oh, it's great. Okay.
Starting point is 02:46:22 Anyway, back to your blueberries. Anyway, so freeze-dried blueberries. Check it out. Freeze? Is this the kind that, that tries to run down the hotel hallway? Huh? No, you don't remember.
Starting point is 02:46:38 Oh, the blueberry that was in the hall. Yes, there it is. Free stride blueberries, everybody. Find out more. Tip of the day.net, noagenda fun.com. Created files for you and me. Just the tip with JCD. And sometimes Adam.
Starting point is 02:46:55 Created by Dana Burnetti. And there it is. The end of another broadcast day. Created by Dana Brunetti, everybody. Now, if you stay tuned to the No Agenda Stream or in your modern podcast app, up next, you will hear, Who Are These Broadcasters? And that's a fun show to listen to. It's not Who Are These Podcasts?
Starting point is 02:47:19 No, it's who are these broadcasters. It says it right there on my cheat sheet, so I'm going to have to think that's the correct title. We will be returning on Sunday, which is always fun, Sunday, Fun Day. Look forward to doing that. Before we let you go, though, we do it. have some great end-of-show mixes from our superstars MVP and Just Baker, sandwiched in between there. And as always, we hope that you will consider supporting the show with some value for the value we bring you by going to knowagenda donations.com. And I am back at home and happy to be here coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, Fredericksburg, Texas.
Starting point is 02:48:03 In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Refinery Row, I'm John C. DeVorek. We return on Sunday. Please join us then. And as always, remember us at no agenda donations.com. Until then, adios, mophos, or hooey-hooey, and such. From the digital artist, the deconstruction phase, on the no-agenda show the cover art we praise.
Starting point is 02:48:37 Blue Acorn is prompting the truth we can see. while Nessworks designs for a land that is free Darren O'Neill brings the style and the grace And Francisco Scarmanga puts boobs in our face Oh, the ice our heart is in the modern daylight Wait No agenda keeps us strong in the fight With the voices of freedom
Starting point is 02:49:07 The brave and the bold And Currie and Devorak with story waiting to be told Dan O B, GYN is charting the corpse Jeffrey Ria creates with a power it boy And creates while high Nick the mixed strip blogger Country move
Starting point is 02:49:44 And Ryan and Scott Brings it home with the cheer For the no agenda show That we hold so damn dear DC and DC is looking beautiful The fountains are almost all open We had 28 of them And we have one in particular
Starting point is 02:50:06 A very long lake we call it They're reflecting lake between the Lincoln Monument Nobody's ever seen anything like it And it was a problem about things And hundreds of millions was spent The Biden administration and the Obama administration and spend hundreds of millions of dollars trying to get it to work and they failed
Starting point is 02:50:26 and we'll be spending. You'll give me a number. And for the most part, it didn't work. I mean, they wouldn't even have water in there, but when they did, it was just dirty, filthy water that leaked out and we got to work on it. And they were supposed to cost almost 400. Think of it.
Starting point is 02:50:41 Four hundred million dollars because it's like putting the skin on a skyscraper, but bigger, much bigger, many skyscrapers you could almost say, other than for the world. So I think of it. Feet. So we went to work. And over the years, I built hundreds of pools.
Starting point is 02:50:58 I built them every... Always liked to build the Olympic-sized swimming pools. And I was very aware of swimming pool. What goes into making a swimming pool? $400 million, I don't know. You never know with cost overruns. And seven minutes later, POTUS was still talking about his Trump Lake. The most beautiful blue, very thick.
Starting point is 02:51:29 You think of it as a very sophisticated form of rubber. No leaks, no problems. And it's beautiful. It's called American flag blue. That was the color we chose. Rise in July 250, America birth celebration stage. I ran hairless monster, no central golf cells, and depending on a subversive rage.
Starting point is 02:52:10 Weapons and resources like nobody left to negotiate or engage. And they said weeks ago, declared victory, pull out, drop choice bombs on the exit page. sale be still breathing now jadie vans 2028 in the fire toasted departure left him abandoned no partner bit wide open for the higher mark or rubio steps up trump velocity he tracks closer cure a strategy in his empire vpian under rubio historic first no agenda sees it and a and a sin home worker claims whole story screwy and i'd n yt quo hits i'm just your typical stay at home
Starting point is 02:53:01 mom only i don't do household chores or have a husband or have kids that's the fraud president no show barrenaptic what secrets they hold and we don't see We're for show No Agenda connects, I'll celebration for the free. No Agenda fam, get knighted now and it's sure we're out. Mofo. Young men should get their act together
Starting point is 02:54:07 and all listen to the No Agenda podcast.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.