No Agenda - 1873 - "Supercycle"

Episode Date: May 31, 2026

No Agenda Episode 1873 - "Supercycle" Supercycle Executive Producers: Sir Eric Associate Executive Producers: Ryan Wickenhagen Nathan Sweem Mansour Raad Zadoc Brown Sir Jack-it (Jack Schofield) Lee...Ann Webb Linda Lupatkin — Imagemakers Ink, Duchess of Jobs Knights and Dames: Jack Schofield > Sir Jack-it End of Show Mixes: Jus Bake (Vapor Steam) MVP (Bezos Blast Off Say BOOM + Donate Your Cash + Reprobate Donate) D.A. Murphy (Donation) Art By: Capitalist Agenda 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 05/31/2026 16:09:10 by Freedom Controller  

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Fraud, ever fraud. Ever's fraud is everywhere. Adam Curry, John C. DeVore. And Sunday, May 31st, 2026. This is your award-winning Gimaud Nation Media Assassination Episode 1873. This is no agenda. We are broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Refinery Road where we're wondering, what's the fuss about the TV show Euphoria? I'm John C. DeVorek.
Starting point is 00:00:33 In the morning. Okay, I'll bite the TV show Euphoria. I don't think I've even heard of this. Of course not. Why would you keep up with what's going on with Gen Z? What is the show? I may have heard about it, but what is the show about? What about Gen Z?
Starting point is 00:00:51 I don't know what it's about. I haven't never seen it. Okay. It's supposed to be a big deal. In fact, here's this, no, BBC. Headline. Headline. Breaking.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Almost rage bait. Has Euphoria gone from it? from defining Gen Z to dividing them with a picture of Sidney Sweeney as the teaser. I don't know, man. We just started watching Dutton Ranch. So that's what we're watching. I don't even, okay. Oh, that's another Taylor Sheridan.
Starting point is 00:01:21 That's the guy, Taylor Sheridan does, you know, Landman, Yellowstone, all these cowboy shows. And it's pretty good. Dutton Ranch is good. It's not, hey, you know what? stick to one of them? Well, no, we finished all of the other ones. What are you talking about? Is Landman done? The most recent season is done, yeah. Well, wasn't he working on another season? Well, I'm sure he is. How many shows can this guy do it once and be good at it?
Starting point is 00:01:51 You know, this is what showrunners do. When you're hot, you got to do it. You got to just keep pumping him out, man, pumping him out. And then there was Madison, was it Madison, Count Madison, I think, with Kurt Russell and forget her name, Blondie. Blondie. Yeah. Another good show. There's lots of good shows.
Starting point is 00:02:14 By Taylor Sheridan. Yeah. It's like the guy Darren, what is his name, who did the Beverly Hills 90210. Darren O'Neill. Darren O'Neill, that's right. Famous from Beverly Hills 90210. And for a while, he was doing all the shows.
Starting point is 00:02:31 And then he did the new, was it the new series of sex in the city? And it was horrible. You know, he tried to rekindle that old spark that he had. I don't know. Hey, you know what? Nobody cares. I think literally nobody cares anymore about good TV shows. We might watch it and we might not.
Starting point is 00:02:51 It's not like it used to be. Not like the good old days. Where he'd be like, hey, did you see friends last night? It was awesome. Yeah, it's because we were only three channels. Pretty much. So I am just so much. So I'm looking at the at X this morning.
Starting point is 00:03:09 And you think that Paris is burning down. And, you know, because they won a soccer match. Oh, is that what it is? Yeah. The San German team won the big cup, the club cup. And there's a first time that any team except Real Madrid
Starting point is 00:03:29 has ever won at two years. a row and the French have gone nuts. So the way that plays out on X is immigrants, torching businesses, looting stores. Oh, it's a celebration of the soccer team. Which may also be true. Yeah, well, yes, but that could also
Starting point is 00:03:47 be a celebration of the soccer team. That's hilarious. Because you don't hear anything about the football match. You only are... What do you do if you listen to the BBC or the any of the... That's my point, though. people are you know you look at ex going like oh the Muslims the dads burning it up I will say pretty bad I will say we watched the last season last episode of hacks I don't think you like it with Gene Smart which he's a comedian I told you to watch it and you probably
Starting point is 00:04:16 hated I watched the first season I watched I thought it had some elements that were good but it was unrealistic well hello and so the very last one the very last like the series closer Let me guess. She gets shot by an immigrant. But they go to Paris. And Tina and I go like, this is unrealistic. Where are the Muslims? That's like whenever you see a show on this London.
Starting point is 00:04:44 Like, no, I'm not seeing it. I'm not seeing it. London's loaded. So this thing was trending on X. And it was one of those clips when I'm like, I got to go find the long. version of this. So the way this was played is Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House, wants more money for Congress. They want a pay raise, which was not even the issue at all.
Starting point is 00:05:12 So that kind of like, I hadn't heard about that. Yeah, well, I saw that. It wasn't actually what he was pushing for, but okay. No. And so what it was, what he was pushing for is more stock trading. That's exactly the way you take it if you listen to the clip. Here it is. Well, look, you know, the salary of Congress has been frozen since 2009. You know, when you adjust for inflation, a member of Congress today is making 31% less than they made in that year. It goes down every year. And over time, if you stay on this trajectory,
Starting point is 00:05:41 you're going to have less qualified people who are willing to make the extreme sacrifice to run for Congress. I mean, it's just people just make a reasonable decision as a family on whether or not they can come and move to Washington, have a residence here, residence at home, and do all the things that are required. So the counter argument is, and I have some sympathy, look, at least let them, like, engage in some stock trading so that they can continue to, you know, take care of their family. So I had the same response. You just like, oh. Yeah, that's the first thing you'd think.
Starting point is 00:06:11 Yeah. And, of course, the first clue is this is posted by the House Democrats account. So I'm like, oh, okay, let me go find the full clip. Let me see what he actually said. In fact, he is for a ban. on insider trading. Oh, that's cool. That's funny.
Starting point is 00:06:28 I mean, I'm in favor of that because I don't think we should have any appearance of impropriety here. But the other side of it, some people say, well, look, you know, you see how they cut that bit off at the beginning? I'm in favor of the ban on stock trading. And they cut that off
Starting point is 00:06:45 and then it turns into, oh, gee, that's a shocker to be. I'm glad you uncovered this scandal. Well, so here's another one. And this has been running for like a week and a half. And I want to ask you a question after we listen to this. So, you know, there's all kinds of fraud being fraud. Ever fraud is everywhere.
Starting point is 00:07:07 Especially the Somalians. And the Muslims. And so there's an audit across 50 states. Now, I'm going to see, let's see if you pick up on the same thing that I did when you hear this clip. And now we'll audit all 50 American states. looking for potentially massive fraud in the billing of autism treatment. This is happening now amid a recent explosion in spending on autism services, North Carolina alone apparently saw an 11,000 percent increase in the last four years. Why was that? Good question for
Starting point is 00:07:44 Alexandria, live in D.C. Alex, hello. Good morning. Hey, Bill, yeah, it is a good question, because according to that data coming out of North Carolina, the use of taxpayer-funded autism services is significantly outpacing the number of children being diagnosed. So something's not right there, and it's not just in the Tar Hill state. A recent analysis by the Cato Institute found that in five years, Medicaid billing has surged in every other state that makes their data public for money spent on ABA therapy. It's applied behavior analysis. That's what it's called. For reference, Minnesota's ABA spending increased by about 51,000 percent since 2018. We all know what happened there. President Trump spoke on that yesterday.
Starting point is 00:08:24 So that with millions of dollars just being stolen, everybody had autism. Everybody had autism. They said, it was incredible, actually. And I really, I mean, I've just seen, so much see what they're doing. You haven't seen anything yet. So I listened to this, and I'm thinking, well, hold on a minute. RFK Jr., the president, myself, everybody has been saying, the studies show that everybody has autism, one out of three boys.
Starting point is 00:08:59 I'm thinking this scam is much bigger than they're talking about here. Perhaps the actual study of autism of how many people have autism was the scam to begin with, an inside job before it even got to the Medicare and all of this money that was going to autism treatment. How, we've only heard, well, there was nobody with autism. when I was a kid, now everybody has autism. Is this much bigger? I mean, doesn't anyone see the connection there
Starting point is 00:09:31 between this thing that we've been told for the past five years over and over and over again that every single kid has autism? It's all because of the vaccines. Maybe some of that is overblown. For the purposes of scamming the public out of their tax dollars? Precisely. I like the thesis.
Starting point is 00:09:52 I mean, what I'm missing is, anyone else discussing the thesis. It seems like a no-brainer. Like, yeah, remember everybody had autism. The president just said it. Everybody's got autism. That's what he said a year ago. Everyone's got autism.
Starting point is 00:10:07 We've got to stop this. But now there's too much autism treatment. Something does not compute here. Something is a lot. I have a couple of things I wanted to talk about today too, which is along these same lines. Okay. Things don't make sense. And the one that's gotten into me and I started looking into it is the Freedom 250.
Starting point is 00:10:35 Oh, this is great. So here you play this, play this. This is the BBC's report on this. Yeah. Trump 250 concerts. Donald Trump has announced he's considering canceling a series of concerts celebrating the 250th anniversary of the United States and replacing them with a single act. himself. From Washington, here's Tom Simons. In his post, Donald Trump described himself as the greatest president in history, the goat,
Starting point is 00:11:05 and said he was capable of getting bigger audiences than Elvis in his prime. It was a repost to a series of music acts who've said they won't take part in the Freedom 250 celebrations, including the Funk and Songansol band The Commodores and the country singer Martina McBride. Donald Trump said he was now looking at the feasibility of putting himself on stage in an America is Back rally in just four days time on Wednesday in Washington, D.C. Now, before you comment, I have the NBC version of this, which mentions a few more artists. Tonight, with preps already underway for an event celebrating America's 250th birthday on the National Mall, a new snag. This will be a time like you've never had in your lives, America to finish. Six musical artists originally announced as performers now dropping out, many citing political concerns.
Starting point is 00:12:00 Country singer Martina McBride writing, I was presented with an opportunity to perform at a non-partisan event, but that turned out to be misleading. Rapper Young MC sang, artists were never told about any political involvement. And Poisoned frontman Brett Michaels, writing, it's evolved into something much more divisive than I agreed to be part of. The event is organized by Freedom 250, a public-private partnership launched by President Trump. We have a president that wants to celebrate 250 years of America, and that's exactly what we're doing. And that's how it was sold to performers. And not everyone is backing out.
Starting point is 00:12:38 A representative for Vanilla Ice telling NBC News, he is proud to help celebrate America's 250th anniversary. Others still slated to perform include Flo Rida, C&C Music Factors. and Fab Morvan of Millie Vanilly. Okay, okay, so I hear all these names. You know, back in the 90s, I was, um, had a top 30 hitless syndicated radio show. And the way you got it on, the way it works is you give them the show for free.
Starting point is 00:13:08 They run it Sunday morning and they get to sell, um, three minutes of air time and I got to, local air time. And then I would sell, you know, six minutes of the rest of each. hour on a national basis. It was actually very lucrative, but the only way you could get the stations to take it was if I went. Byron Allen kind of deal. Completely. It was lucrative, man. It was good. But then I sold it to Reebok and to Pepsi. In fact, I think it was Pepsi's,
Starting point is 00:13:37 Adam Curry's Pepsi top 30 hit? I can't remember. But the way to clear it is I'd have to go to all these different bad top 40 radio stations. I've been to every single one of the 50 states. And you've got to do their B-91 Summer Jam. And it was always, it was Millie Vanilli, it was Marky and the Funky Bunchy bunch. It was all these vanilla ice. It was all these track acts. This is a track act concert.
Starting point is 00:14:01 Who cares? I mean, the Commodores, it's not like Lionel Richie's showing up with the Commodores anymore. And then it's happening in four days from now? No, it's not. I got the schedule here. I don't understand that. Martina McBride was scheduled for June 25th.
Starting point is 00:14:17 That's not four days from now. No, it's not. These reports are all bull crap. In fact, Trump goes on and talks about America 250. That's different than Freedom 250. Yeah. Freedom 250 is a disaster waiting to happen. It's idiotic.
Starting point is 00:14:33 What is it? What is it? Okay. Well, here's the problem. Just as a little background. America 250 was put together by Obama. Oh. And it's still in play.
Starting point is 00:14:47 The chairman, the honorary chairman. is Obama and George Bush. We've got competing 250s. And so Trump in January came up with this Freedom 250 thing and put this bonehead, Silicon Valley guy. And I want to hear, I'm just give you an indication of what a megalomaniac this guy is. Who? Keith Cratch. So you have to go to keithcratch.com.
Starting point is 00:15:14 Oh, man. Now, this guy ran Ariba docu sign, Angie's List. He's a Silicon Valley hack. And he's rich. He's loaded. I think he's a big donor. Uh-huh. But if you go to keithcratch.com.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Is it Keith? Hold on. K-E-I-T-H. Yeah. K. Oh, K-R-A-T-C-H.com. No, I think it's C-R-A. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:42 Here, let me get it. Yeah. Please, Keith. K-R-A-A-R-A. Oh, K-R-A-C-H. Keith Cratch. Okay, who is this dude? Oh, founder and co-founder and channel the Cratch Institute for Tech Diplomacy at Purdue. Okay, so if you look at this guy's megalomaniac website, nobody in their right mind puts a personal site together that looks like this. This is great. This is me everywhere. I'm leadership.
Starting point is 00:16:12 You think he was from Bombay. This is what Indian guys do. Oh, no, I'm very important. So they do it for their moms, mostly, I'm told. Mommy, come over from Bombay. I'll show you how I'm very famous. Me president Trump. Sorry for being racist, everybody, but I can't help.
Starting point is 00:16:33 So this guy, yeah, it's not racist. So they're Caucasians. How can he be racist? Caucasians with melanans. So let's look at this act. Now, the first thing, when I think of putting together at America 250, think, what do I think, what comes to mind when it comes to like what kind of acts represent the country? Millie Vanilli? No, of course not.
Starting point is 00:17:02 So here's again, he's got this setup as Martina McBride of whoever, you know, C&W. It's okay, she's somebody, but she doesn't want to do it. No. By the way, none of these people seem to have been contacted except for Brett Michaels. No, no, no. The CNC Music Factory guy who I think now says he's not. By the way, CNC Music Factory, I don't think the guy even sang on the record. It's just the guy who dances, just like Lily Vinlo.
Starting point is 00:17:27 I'm going to give you the list. Martina McBride, CNC Music Factory, Vanilla Ice. These are all America 250. Where is Lee Greenwood? Where is Kid Rock, the kind of people that Trump like? Right. They're not on this list. What's what gave me the signal that this is bull crap.
Starting point is 00:17:43 Yeah. And it's this guy, this Keith Cratch guy running. He was given the job. This is a classic example of Trump picking the wrong guy. Yeah. He's running this, this Freedom 250 thing into the ground. It's an embarrassment for the president who's got to back the guy up. He's not got to get rid of him because he's a big donor.
Starting point is 00:18:03 Oh, wait a minute. Oh, hold on a second. This concert, so-called concert we're talking about, is part of the great American state fair, which will be on the national mall. Yes, that's exactly the kind of acts who are on the, on the fair circuit, the Westbury Music Fair.
Starting point is 00:18:22 Yes, they're losers. Yeah, with not an original, no original band. Well, Vanilla Ice is very patriotic, though, I'll have to say that. Yeah, well, he wants to do it, but, you know. But so, but where are the, you know, the real, the real people that Trump would pick. This is bull crap. This entire Freedom 250 thing is a fiasco.
Starting point is 00:18:46 And yeah, there may be a fireworks display, but it's in competition with the other thing. And it's like, seems to me to be just a poorly executed. And this guy, this cratch character who is not, doesn't seem likable and he seems like a egomaniac, he's too, he's spread too thin. If you look at his website, he's doing everything. everything. He's a professor. He's CEO. He's this. He's that. The thing that was the Rededicate 250,
Starting point is 00:19:16 that was actually quite good. I watched a lot of that. That was on May 17th. And that was, that was a pretty good show. And they had every, you know, of course, it's a, you know, a Christian Bible thumping thing, which is why I watched it. Well, that's why you would like it. Yeah. But it was also, the show was put together very well. It was tight. It was a bunch of Christian Bands. It wasn't Lee Greenwood. I think he might have been there, actually. Well, here's what's interesting.
Starting point is 00:19:46 So now I have an ABC report, and this talks about America 250th crosshairs. So there's already this confusion between Freedom 250, America 250, and then America 250th. There's a branding problem here. Oh, definitely. This is where Cory Booker goes off. And on this issue of the 250th anniversary of America, America. You know, you had these performers that have canceled. They don't, they didn't want to, they perform at the celebration on the mall. And now Trump is saying he's going to turn it into
Starting point is 00:20:19 celebration at the mall. No, it's a fair. It's a fair ground. A Make America Great Again rally where the entertainment's going to be Donald Trump. What are you telling people what, what should be, how should this anniversary? It's a huge moment in the country's history. How should this be celebrated? How do you prevent this from turning into simply a partisan affair? Yeah, I mean, this is the problem with Trump. He's a divider in chief.
Starting point is 00:20:52 And he's not in its intention, but reminding us what American history has always been about. It's been about the power of the people being greater than the people in power, that we're not a nation of kings, princes, or rulers. But of it, Americans who when they see power being used unjustly, whether it's the labor movement, the abolitionist movement, civil rights movement, the
Starting point is 00:21:14 story of America is Americans standing up against authoritarian figures and making our democracy more robust. This is one of those moments where we have a man that is unfortunately reminding us of the dangers of a democracy when you have an out-of-control president.
Starting point is 00:21:30 And what the, I think, the education moment is, is the only way he's ultimately going to be stopped. This is more people stand up and speak up. He's not answering the question. That's how we've advanced through crises before. And that's what's there now. Listen, I heard the CNC Music Factory guy, who I also did dates with. It's now. Pomp, bong, pamp, pamp, pamp, pamp, pamp. 100% lip sync. Good dancing. He had his little crew there. People are going around calling up these artists saying, you know, this is a Trump thing. This is not about America. It's a Trump thing.
Starting point is 00:22:10 It's a Trump thing. And he's always like, well, I don't want to lose, you know, I don't want to lose my track dates at the fair and the blue states. That's what's happening. There's a, this, this, a coordinated campaign to ruin the fair,
Starting point is 00:22:24 the state fair at the mall. Okay. Yeah. Okay. Yeah, of course. Yeah. Everything that Trump does, they, they find ways to submarine it. But they're,
Starting point is 00:22:33 and Trump doesn't help things by putting this, some of these people in charge that are shouldn't be doing it. Wait a minute. I mean, if he gave, you know, if he'd given the, just said, hey, Elon. Yeah, organized this. Can you use your skills to pick somebody to run this thing for me? He could have asked us and we've done a better job. I would think so, yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:53 And we would have done an award show and everything. Like the podcast awards, we'd slip that in. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Are we criticizing the president? Because I don't think that's our brand anymore, John. We can't be criticized. Oh, no, we can't criticize the president.
Starting point is 00:23:06 You have that note you want to read it? No, I'm not going to read it. I would read that one note. I didn't even. We got a note from some, some disgruntled listener. You guys are just, but I looked at my, he donated a couple years ago. We're not getting anyone donating during this. I'm blaming Trump for the low donations.
Starting point is 00:23:24 Yes, of course. Mainly because until he gets this Iran, Iran's Iran, Iran, Iran, thing over. Iran, yes. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, that's not. No. We need a new president. We need a Democrat president. We're just like the oil guys.
Starting point is 00:23:42 There's no difference between us and the oil bear. And, you know, so something, I'm glad you find that humorous. Something happened on the Joe Rogan show. And I saw this a week or so ago. And I was like, yeah, right on. Now, Theo Vaughn, you know Theo Vaughn, right? You know who he is? I know who he is.
Starting point is 00:24:03 I don't watch his stuff. No, no, but you know Theo. And so Theo was on Joe's show. I don't know. And Joe's on Theo's show and Theo's on Joe's show. It must have been four or five weeks ago. And Theo Vaughn was out of his gourd.
Starting point is 00:24:20 He was like... Wow, there's a phrase I haven't heard for... Oh, let me think. 66. It's the phrase that pays, baby. It's an old Jonathan Winter saying. That's how old it is. Okay.
Starting point is 00:24:37 Well, the thousand-year-old man. No, no, that's Carl Reiner. I thought that was, oh, okay. I thought he was with Jonathan. Let's not talk about it. No, no, it was Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks was a thousand-year-old man. Okay, thank you. So he was, he was nuts.
Starting point is 00:24:55 He was spiraling. He was like, Israel, you know, they're the terrorists. And Joe was sitting there like, dude, you should come and work out with us. Come and hang out with us. I mean, Theo Vaughn was. really going nutty. And Theo has, he's a lovely guy I'm sure he has all kinds of issues.
Starting point is 00:25:16 Don't we all. Like what? He's had addiction issues. He's, right now he's been trying Jesus, which are all praying for Theo in that regard. But there was something else and it is SSRIs.
Starting point is 00:25:32 And Theo is, I think he's even been vocal about it that he takes, you know, whatever Lexa Pro, whatever. it is, whatever the brand du jour is, it's all the same stuff. And so Joe's on his show talking about, talking to some other guests. And here's what he says. Yeah, Theo Vaughn's going through the exact same thing.
Starting point is 00:25:53 And last time I was on the podcast, he was explaining it to me. It freaks me out because I know Theo's had conversations before, like, even publicly. He had a Netflix taping and it didn't go well. It was like they actually never, they shelved it. They never used it. You know, there was all these stories from people that were there saying he bombed. I think he just had kind of a breakdown. And then he was talking to the crowd and there's a video of it.
Starting point is 00:26:18 We said, you know, the people were shaking. Hey, we still love you. He goes, thank you. Look, I'm just, I'm trying not to take my own life. That's what I'm trying to do right now. And like, you hear stuff like that. And you just like, oh, Jesus Christ. I've known too many people that I didn't think we're going to kill themselves and then did.
Starting point is 00:26:34 And then he goes down these spirals where he starts talking about world events and freaking out. I'm like, oh, Jesus Christ. Like, I got to help this dude. And so I send him things about people getting off of them. And apparently there's some doctors that specialize in getting people off of them. But
Starting point is 00:26:52 here's the thing about that chemical imbalance thing. That's not real. They used to think that that was what these things do, that they treated a chemical imbalance. But then recently, the studies have shown that that is not what they do. They don't exactly
Starting point is 00:27:09 know what they do. And they kind of numb you in some sort of a way that helps some people. So I even texted Joe, like, thank you for saying that, this chemical imbalance lie that they throw on everybody, which is total horse crap. Say, way to go. Excellent job. This is a bad thing. People can't get off of them. Doctors are handing out like candy. And then Joe does something, I don't think I've ever seen him do. He did an apology. But I don't think this was just an apology for Theo Vaughn. I think the pushback he got from his audience was so severe. And Joe is, Joe really doesn't like controversy about himself.
Starting point is 00:27:52 No, he really doesn't. Yeah. You know, he's always, he's always very cautious and I know him this way. He doesn't really want anyone to be bad. It's not that a lot of people just don't. Right, just don't. Yeah. And if you listen carefully to this apology that now he said this was an apology for Theo,
Starting point is 00:28:13 but I kind of had the feeling was an apology for more than just Theo, more for SSRIs and other things. I apologize to Theo. He knows I love him. And he said that and we laughed and we joked around about it. And I apologize for the way I talked about this. But I felt like I need to explain to other people too to get. it's like what was going on in my mind out and it certainly wasn't like covering for israel and it certainly wasn't like trying to paint him out like he's damaged or treat him like a child
Starting point is 00:28:47 I just want him to be okay and um when you're dealing with someone or you when you have like had experience dealing with someone that what where it winds up going very badly and then you're just left with this feeling like what could I have done you know I didn't do a good job of it you know especially like the Marcus King thing. Like that's terrible. He goes on and on about this. I think the audience freaked out on him. I think, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:15 our audience, our producers go, yeah, but here's what I did to get off of him. Yeah, they do. They do. And like my,
Starting point is 00:29:23 like, you know, it was really hard. We don't have anybody pushing back on us. No, no, but I think, and that must be the size
Starting point is 00:29:29 of the audience, too. I think a lot of people freaked out because it's a harsh reality. When someone is, telling you the truth. He said, he told that what I believe to be a medical fact, they don't know how it works.
Starting point is 00:29:42 They don't. And this chemical imbalance thing is a lie. It's a sales pitch. It's a rationale. And I think also some of the Israel people got mad at. You know, like, well, you're covering for Israel by saying Theo's just nuts on drugs. Whatever. There's an element of that. That we do get.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Yeah. Yeah, all the time. But it was just surprised. I'm like, wow, you know, the pressure must be really big. We don't, we don't, first of all, we don't really, we never really got any pushback on that. Only people who agree. It's a small group. Now, we have this 10th his audience.
Starting point is 00:30:19 Yeah, well, if that, it's a small group. I think we're, I don't know. I really don't know. I don't think anybody knows exactly how big the audience. Some say 10, 11, 12, 20 millions, 100 million. You got $500 million, whatever. I think 10 sounds about right. So talking about disasters, and to back up my prediction from the last show, the show before, I don't remember.
Starting point is 00:30:44 Okay. Here we go. This brings us to a three by three. Oh, hold on one second. That was time for three by three. Yeah, baby. Experiment by JCP. Comparing stories from ABC, CBS and NBC.
Starting point is 00:31:01 The number of reading three by three. That's why we got three stories, the big headlines from the big three. news organizations and will they say the same? Will one be different? What will the CIA broadcasting systems bring us? John has all three. In fact, in this case, they're all pretty different, but they're about the same thing. Let's start with ABC. Tonight, Jeff Bezos commercial space company Blue Origin is warning Florida residents not to touch any debris from this catastrophic explosion that incinerated one of its largest rockets during an unmanned engine test Thursday night. The enormous fireball. The enormous fireball,
Starting point is 00:31:35 lighting up the Cape Canaveral sky. Producing a mushroom cloud visible for dozens of miles. Incredibly, no injuries were reported. Frantic witnesses inundating first responders with 911 calls. There was a massive explosion in Blue Origin. A big mushroom cloud just went into the sky like an atomic bomb. There was a huge fireball in the sky. There's still a raging fire filling.
Starting point is 00:31:59 Daylight revealing much of the launch pad reduced to charred rubble. Blue Origin saying an anomaly took place during a static. fire test of its 320-foot-tall New Glen rocket, when the rocket's engines are fired, while the craft remains attached to the launch site. The explosion, a significant setback for Blue Origin and NASA, which is depending on reusable rockets from Blue Origin to send landers to the moon. Blue Origin had emerged as really a key player in NASA's efforts to return to the moon, and so this is pretty devastating to that effect. Blue Origin says they invested more than a billion dollars into that launch site in a statement Jeff Bezos calling it a very rough day, but vowing to rebuild.
Starting point is 00:32:41 Yes, this was your prediction from the last show, in fact, when we played the jacked-up NASA guy saying, yeah, we're going to have doom buggies and all kinds of stuff that we had before. Again, on the moon, it's going to be great. And we have the lunar economy, which apparently can't get off the launch pad. Not of that, but it took the launch pad with it. I was thinking about this. Of all the, if you look at historical footage, when they do a compilation of space travel before this new space travel race,
Starting point is 00:33:18 there were maybe, of course, the challenger was the big one, but maybe there were three or four explosions. It's always like, it's all great, everything's lifts, and off, everything's going. Did we have a lot of mishaps back in the day? Well, in the early days, it was laughable. That's all there was. I mean, there used to be a program. We're talking about the 50s.
Starting point is 00:33:42 Yeah. So in 1950, here's just the history for you, kids out there haven't been around and on it. That's right. This is exclusive to your no agenda podcast. In 57. We got a Paw Paw, DeVore, going to tell you about what happened back in the day. In 57, the Russians put a satellite. in the space and it was beeping away, floating around Sputnik. Also on the Sputnik, yes. And so Sputnik's going around, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, just annoying the hell out of the United States because the Russians apparently are doing space shit.
Starting point is 00:34:15 And they sent a dog in space, Latka. And they killed that dog. That dog died, man. The dog died in space. And you can still buy watches, I think, in Russia that have Latka on the dog, on the face of the watch. I think Sir Jean has a couple of them. I have one.
Starting point is 00:34:30 Oh, wow. You know, you think... I bought it during the Soviet era, and it was... And somebody said, when you, when you buy stuff on the street, which is illegal, be careful. You know? And so this guy sneaks up to me. He says, you want to watch? And he shows it to he looks left, looks right, he opens the case, and it's one of these Lodka watches.
Starting point is 00:34:51 I say, hell yeah. It's like 10 bucks or something. Yeah. And so I give him the 10 bucks. He hands me the watch, and I look up to thank you. him, he's gone. He's gone. Yeah, you think that's cool.
Starting point is 00:35:03 Glenn Beck, I think there was two or three Sputniks they had. It wasn't just one. They had, at least that's the story Glenn Beck told me because... I only remember the one. But he has one. If he has one in his museum, I saw it. A Sputnik? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:19 That guy's got way too much cash. I don't know how he got that. Okay, well, anyway, back to the story. Dog watch. So in 57, they sent up to Sputnik. And so they told everybody, all the kids, okay, everybody's got to get into science. That's when science fair started.
Starting point is 00:35:35 Science. So everyone had to get into science. And so they started launching rockets trying to get, you know, one that would not blow up. And my favorite one was the, and it was the Navy versus the Army. And the Army had these old V-2s from Germany, and the Navy had these rockets called the Vanguard. Oh, yeah. And they kept trying to launch a satellite off of ships. And they would blow up every single time. And it would be nightly news.
Starting point is 00:36:08 Another vanguard blows up. And so we got to see one rocket after another exploding because they couldn't get anything off the ground. It was embarrassing. And then somehow by 1969, they had a man on the moon. Right. Unbelievable. And now, 2026, we can't get off the launchment.
Starting point is 00:36:25 But it's seen, it's always seen as this is actually great. Congratulations, Blue Origin, because we've learned a lot. This is what Elon always said. No, it was meant to deteriorate rapidly because now we know what we shouldn't be doing. Elon's smart enough to have them do it up in the sky and not wreck the whole launch pad. No, I think they had a launch pad blowout too. That one, that was some years ago. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:50 It's very. Okay, let's go to, let's go to CBS's version of the story. Yes, here we go. any rocket launch is a controlled explosion. This moment was neither. Blue Origin's new Glenn rocket, parked on its launch pad, suddenly erupted into a mammoth fireball seen up and down Florida's space coast. That is crazy. Something went haywire during a test firing of its engines, a significant setback for more than the space company. This is a very critical problem for NASA to deal with. We simply don't know the extent of the damage to the launch pad or what it might take to fix the rocket and get it flying again.
Starting point is 00:37:30 Daylights show the heavily damaged launch pad, New Glens only launch pad, including twisted metal and a collapsed lightning tower. Repairs could take months. What's unclear, the setback's impact on NASA's Artemis program to return to the moon ahead of the Chinese. Blue origins developing lunar landers for NASA to deliver astronauts and cargo to, a planned moon base near the lunar south pole. Next year's Artemis 3 mission aims to practice docking the Orion capsule with a Blue Origin lander. And all the landers need the new glen rocket to get to space. A setback like this, obviously, is going to push those plans back a bit.
Starting point is 00:38:09 Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos posted about the explosion, it's too early to know the root cause. Very rough day, but we'll rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. NASA administrator Jared Isaacman said, the agency will assess near-term mission impacts. Tony, NASA has also hired SpaceX to help get America back to the moon, but its lunar lander is behind schedule, and after the most recent flight of its Starship rocket had problems,
Starting point is 00:38:36 it's also grounded. Observations. We are missing the term glitch. I find that very annoying. Instead, we have brought back the term haywire. Ooh, good catch. What is the etymology of this term haywire? Ask the robot.
Starting point is 00:38:58 No, Book of Knowledge. What is the etymology of the term haywire? All right, Book of Knowledge is on it. Let's find out where this comes from. It's got to be old. According to the Book of Knowledge, the term haywire originates from the baling wire used to bind hay bales in farming and logging operations. This cheap, malleable wire was notorious for tangling, and creating chaotic messes when handled carelessly, leading to the metaphorical meaning of something going awry or out of control by the early 20th century.
Starting point is 00:39:34 Thus, it has been written. So it's a 100-year-old term. Wow. Haywire. That makes sense, actually, when they explained by the robot. Glitch is the one you're supposed to be using people. I don't understand why they don't use. They're sick of listening to you complain about it.
Starting point is 00:39:50 Let's go to the last report, which is NBC. The explosion was massive, filling the nice sky with a brilliant orange. That's not good. Capture on doorbell cameras and shaking homes. Oh, great nat pop. Oh, that's fantastic. That's not good. That's not good.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Massive. Filling the nice sky with a brilliant orange. That's not good. Captured on doorbell cameras and shaking homes and bars in nearby Cape Canaveral. It looks like there was an explosion. Blue Origins, New Glenn Rocket went up in a ball of fire during a routine. ground test, fueled by methane and liquid oxygen, no injuries. From the air, the company's only launch pad appears completely destroyed. Blue Origin owner, Jeff Bezos, posting, very rough day,
Starting point is 00:40:34 but we will rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. The disaster comes just days after NASA award a Blue Origin, a nearly $200 million contract to launch components, and perhaps eventually astronauts to a lunar base. The great return is close at hand. and we will not slow down. But now a potential delay to NASA's ambitious launch schedule set to start this fall. And next year, with the Artemis 3 flight to test docking procedures in Earth orbit, former NASA chief, Charlie Baldwin. Space flight is hard no matter who's doing it.
Starting point is 00:41:08 We know how to do it, but nature and physics and a lot of other things have a say in all this. Radiation. It was just last month that another blue-orgeon rocket failure left a satellite in a wrong orbit. and now a bigger failure as the company tries to compete with SpaceX and helps send humans eventually onto the moon. Now, no one has mentioned the possibility of sabotage. There's a lot of money, a lot of contracts out there. Sabotage, anyone? Well, it's like that time that SpaceX rocket is that you saw something headed toward it before it blew up on the launch paddock a few years back.
Starting point is 00:41:48 Yeah. No, it seems suspicious. Yeah, well, but the sabotage comes right at the same time that Space X is filing for their public offering. I'm just saying. Yeah, but the problem is, does this make the public offering more or less attractive? Well, in my mind, it's all unattractive. I mean, where is... No, well, that's not the question.
Starting point is 00:42:17 That's fine with you. but I'm just saying, does it, to investors in general, would this explosion make the offering more or less attractive? Well, I'm not allowed to have an opinion, so my opinion doesn't matter. No, you're, no, I, you don't, you can't say what you think. You have to tell me what I'm not answering the question. Okay. The answer to the question is much more attractive. I say less.
Starting point is 00:42:39 And my question, my follow-on question, though, which is in your camp, how come AI hasn't figured out all of the problems? Shouldn't the wonderful artificial intelligence have all the answers and have calculated the perfect exact things that they need so that this could not happen? Isn't that Bezos has AI? Elon has AI. I thought AI was smarter than anybody in the universe. In fact, they both have AI up to wazoo. Gavin, your take on the S-1 and I think specifically Elon Web Services. I think what's important about Elon Web Services does make me laugh. But 15 billion, That means the AI business right there is going to quadruple. Quadruple. It is already effectively quadrupled. I think what's important about that is there's a stat in it that for...
Starting point is 00:43:28 This is Gavin Baker. And if you ask me who that is, I don't have the answer offhand. Okay, go. Their first data center was 122 days. The second one, it took them 91 days. The third one... This is from the all-in podcast, so it's not going to be negative. It was, I think, 66 days.
Starting point is 00:43:47 They build data centers dramatically faster than anyone else at a lower cost. And now that you have a lower cost, but a lower cost. I'm going to dump out of that. I watched a lot of the Reagan National Economic Forum, which was about 10 hours. Did you see any of it? It was. I saw zero. It was, there were a couple of interesting.
Starting point is 00:44:17 speakers. Some things were interesting that were said. Okay. You know, it was on, I think CNBC may have had some co-sponsoring with us, saw some CNBC hosts. But it was, it was very, very long. And it was a true economic forum type thing. And I have two clips from it with Dan Armada. And this is about, this is exactly what I've been predicting, where all these big data
Starting point is 00:44:47 centers, all this important stuff from the training, the models and everything, it's all starting to fizzle out. Now, the new term is inference, or some say inference, but I'm pretty sure it's inference. I think inference is the correct pronunciation. There's a lot there I want to dig into. First, I want to get the private sector, the entrepreneurial, you know, piece of this into the conversation too. Dan, you have, you've co-founded a startup. You're the CEO of a startup called Armada. And I guess before I get your reaction to what we've just heard so far on stage, just a little bit about Armada. Yeah, so Armada is the hyperscaler for the edge. We're building modular. Oh, the hyper scaler for the edge. Yes. Wow. We can draw analogies to the late 90s from what is
Starting point is 00:45:36 happening here. So now we've gone by the language or the bull crap? Yes and yes. Yeah, so Armada is the hyperscaler for the edge. We're building modular AI data centers that can be deployed anywhere in the world, which is important. If you look at a map of the world, only about 30% of the world has these big hyperscale data centers. We're building for the 70% so that the U.S. can win this AI race that we're in right now. So the edge, that's inference. The edge is, oh, I need to have this, this, well, he actually explains it here. We're in the middle of this AI super cycle.
Starting point is 00:46:09 And what we're in the middle of this. AI super cycle. We're in the middle of this. AI super cycle. And what we're witnessing is that there's this shift that's going on. It used to just be all about training these really high-powered
Starting point is 00:46:23 large language models, and that's still important. We still need to lead in that area. But what we're now seeing is a lot of people asking, well, how do I actually deploy those in as many places as possible to boost productivity, to improve my operations, to improve decision-making? And that is about
Starting point is 00:46:39 taking those models that have been trained on those hyperscale data centers, and then running them on something like our modular data centers at the edge for inference. And fine-tuning those models to proprietary-sensitive, oftentimes data sets for national security, for energy. And we're seeing that play out globally where now people are like, okay, I've been playing with chat GPT for a couple years on my phone. What can I actually do to improve my business or improve, you know? This is the exact thought I had. I'm like, you know, I've been playing with this chat GPT on my phone.
Starting point is 00:47:12 What can I do to have it improve my business? I've seen that play out globally where now people are like, okay, I've been playing with chat GPT for a couple years on my phone. What can I actually do to improve my business or improve, you know, national security? And I think that's going to continue to play out, which is one reason why in the market you're seeing it respond. One of the things that was very interesting over the last few weeks, you've seen the spot price for H-100s and H-200s, which are Nvidia's chips that are more optimized for inference versus training. I love that there's a spot price for this. It's actually started to exceed the spot price for the GV-200s and the GB-300s, which are like the ones for training.
Starting point is 00:47:49 And I think that that's going to continue. I think another good example is we saw the, I guess, what's the right word, aqua-hire that Invidia did of GROC. That's also because they saw this shift that's coming to inference, and I think you're going to see that continue. What's aquahire? Oh, you know what an aquahire is. An aquahire is, that's what happened to drop.i-i-o back in the day.
Starting point is 00:48:09 And aquahire is where you want the people who built the product, but you don't give a crap about it. So you buy the product and you steal the people. Okay. Yeah, exactly. Now, I have some experience with this inference. Aquahire. I wish someone would aquahire this show. Well, at least.
Starting point is 00:48:28 Right? Well, yes, you, in fact, I think this is all leading into a couple of anecdotes, personal anecdotes that you have to offer. Yes, about working with AI, specifically Claude Code. Yeah, and it's for a theory. And the thing is, this is for the simplest of simple ideas that you've developed. Well, I had... It should be seamless and effective. Yeah, it should be, no, what is it?
Starting point is 00:48:59 Safe and effective. Safe and effective. So, as I was playing around with the chat GPT for years, no, I... On your phone. On my phone. I really wanted to see if this AI could help out with my production work. And I analyze myself, I went, self, what do you spend the most time doing for the No Agenda show?
Starting point is 00:49:20 Can you guess what it is? Well, I know what it is, is yacking. Yeah. Copy paste. The amount of copy and pasting that I do from show notes and clip titles and, you know, just all. And I decided, okay, let me take the. one that is the one that is the easiest to mess up as a human because it's at the end of the show. We're tired and we have to actually run through it together because I make mistakes.
Starting point is 00:49:49 You make, we make mistakes. It's the credits. It's purely the credits. I'm like, here's a great test. Today should be easy. Yes, my robot is very happy. It might get it right. So I teach, now when you teach the robot to do something, so clog code,
Starting point is 00:50:08 is an agent. And Claude Code by itself is an idiot. The reason why Claude or any of these models have problems with how many R's in strawberry is because they're just guessing. They have no intelligence, no knowledge. What they can do is build a Python script that then says, oh, the word strawberry, hold on. And then it will look at the word strawberry. It'll programmatically see how many R's and then it'll come back with the right answer. But it has to build a script for it. It doesn't actually know it itself. This is the basis of how this stuff works. And what's nice about is you just tell it what you want it to do.
Starting point is 00:50:45 So I said, robot, I want you to do the credits. Here's the spreadsheet that Jay sent me. It's an Excel file. Go in there. Find out, find everybody who's donated between $200 and $300. Put them into my show notes document under Associated. executive producers and $300 or above put that into the executive producers. Oh, that's got to be the easiest thing in the world for it to do.
Starting point is 00:51:15 And I say, in addition, look at the notes. If there's a switcheroo, you have to change the name. Oh, they're making it complicated, but that's, it shouldn't be, it should be effortless. The switcheroo part never had a problem. The, where do the names go? Every single time it does it differently. So first it'll put like two people in execs and then all the rest in associate execs. And then I go in.
Starting point is 00:51:43 I say, no, here's the here. You have a document and it makes these little memory files. They're marked down files. You have a document. You've memorized this previously between 200 and 300 is associate executive. Oh yeah, you're right. Okay, I'll fix it. It fixes it.
Starting point is 00:51:59 And then it says, I'm going to make a note of this so I don't do that again. Next show. It does that right. but then it puts in the amounts, it puts in the entire notes. I said, no, it's just the name. Ah, you're right. I'm going to make a note of it. So then I'm like, robot, you keep doing this wrong.
Starting point is 00:52:20 How can we fix this? Okay, I have an idea. You just use the word credits all uppercase, and that will trigger my memory to go look at the memory docs. Of course it does it wrong. The problem with AI or robots, as I like to call them, there's no consistency. There is no iterating. You can't iterate.
Starting point is 00:52:46 You can't say, you can do this on your own. You'll go into chat GPT or whatever. Say draw a picture of a house with a cat in the yard and the dog. Okay, great. If you say, now make the sky blue, it'll remove the dog. You know, it does all kinds of other things. Yeah. It cascades on its own.
Starting point is 00:53:07 Yes. And it can't, it's not reproducible. Use the same prompt twice and the same AI. It'll bring back two different results every single time. It is for business purposes when it work. Now, I'll be the first to say, it's actually still faster for me to yell at it, you know, and typing, I typing at it. I say, no, you did that wrong and it will fix it. It's still faster than me going.
Starting point is 00:53:33 back and fixing it. But it's very annoying. And I've given up on thinking I can never get it right. Here's the second thing. I've taught it how to make clips. Now, FFMPEG is a well-known open-source program. Now, if I say here's a France 24 clip, here's the URL, clip it. Those are usually about a minute 30, minute 40, perfect.
Starting point is 00:54:00 It does it, it clips it. I've actually gotten pretty good at teaching it not to put the reporter tag at the end. So it knows program. So it does a transcript and then it cuts based upon the transcript. It can do that. It cannot think for itself. It cannot pull a clip out based upon a full sentence that someone is saying. It can't do it.
Starting point is 00:54:23 It has no intelligence. It doesn't have ears. And it can't figure out what a good clip is, what a beat is with an intro. with an arc with a payoff at the end, a hard cut. It cannot do it. Ergo, this crap is way overvalued. And I think it's unusable for business. That said, for me, myself, it's a little, it's on par with having an intern.
Starting point is 00:54:50 As long as the intern hands me the stuff and I go back and correct everything, it saves me 30 minutes. But it, I don't see where all the, everyone's like, oh, it's just going to change me. business. We don't need people. Bullshit. It will improve existing people's productivity, but you've got to show me a lot better output than what this stuff is doing right now. And Claude is supposed to be the creme de la creme, which brings me to a boots on the ground, which I think you were copied on from Brad. And we've been talking about real jobs young people should be looking at in the new economy that Trump and General Bessant are building. And he said, hey, I heard you bring up HVAC again and the great wages and you're not wrong.
Starting point is 00:55:43 I've been a journeyman electrician for over 20 years and the wages keep going up along with heavy demand. All trades are great and provide incredible life. However, pay attention. There's one trade almost nobody talks about that is head and shoulders above. of all skilled trades, more money than anybody, complete job protection. Do you remember this email? Yeah. The job is elevator mechanic.
Starting point is 00:56:12 Highest pay by far, always in demand, no matter how the economy is doing. We have two elevator mechanics that show up at the Albany Mallard Club meetups. Oh, really? Are they driving Bentley's? No, but they, they're very probably. being elevator mechanics. Elevator unions are run like mafia families, though it can be difficult to get into,
Starting point is 00:56:36 but that doesn't mean outsiders don't get into it. So there you go. This is your tip of the day from your no agenda show, elevator mechanic. I mean, this would be, if we were doing the graduate 2026 version, instead of plastic, we say, son, elevators, get into elevators.
Starting point is 00:56:55 Elevators. People always need elevators. Elevators is good. So anyway, that is my AI experience. And maybe it'll get better. And if it does, I will certainly share the clipping stuff with you. I've been doing it for five weeks I'm using it. It sucks. But it's still a little faster than me doing everything by myself.
Starting point is 00:57:21 But for $200 a month of anthropic token credits, I could probably hire an intern. Yeah, who would probably do a better job. We got some goofball stuff here. I want to get out of the way. Okay. So there's this woman that came on one of the... Oh, I can't believe you clip this. Let's just say an attractive woman with a belly shirt.
Starting point is 00:57:50 Can we just add that to it? She's not just a woman. It's a good-looking gal. But it's beside the point. her name's Elizabeth April and she's a psychic and she's brought and she's on this podcast
Starting point is 00:58:07 of course this guy's lapping it up like every you know these podcasts hosts that do a lot of interviewing they just go along with everything seems to me yeah whatever it is you know they're doing my material from 12 years ago yeah it's funny that you're bringing the clips
Starting point is 00:58:23 we've had some kind of I feel like I'm in a new version of the movie, was it big, where they switch places? Yeah, well, we switched, I guess. So let's go with it. She's going to talk about, and I'm listening to this. I'm thinking it's reasonable what she's got to say about people being cloned. Is that my cue to start the clip?
Starting point is 00:58:47 Yeah, it was it. So many people like Simon Cowell. Wait, Simon Cowell. Have you seen the recent video? I have. So you think that's not him? No, I don't know. I can't say for sure.
Starting point is 00:58:57 weird too now? John Travolta. It looks like John B. The singer? I'm going to show her John B. Did you see him? Yeah. So what is that about?
Starting point is 00:59:05 Do you think that's like a Jim Carrey situation or? I'm not sure, but they're definitely replacing people left, right, and center. And then I have a conspiracy theory. Okay. That no one else has. Okay. So you know what I think. My big theory about cloning is they popularized plastic surgery to cover up the
Starting point is 00:59:22 differences in clones. Like Michael Jackson was the first major public clone. and he was the first major, quote-unquote, celebrity who got all the plastic surgeries and changed his appearance, and it really wasn't. It was actually a clone. But then you have Ozempic, and you have this whole, like, OZempic, GLP, whatever they're called, drugs, right? Whatever they call. Major weight loss. Right.
Starting point is 00:59:40 And they change your appearance drastically. And then you have something called endrinochrome. You guys know what that is? Of course. For those who you don't know what that is, it's essentially a substance that comes from victims, fear. It's essentially blood. And what happens is not humans drinking. this reptilians, part of the elite, they drink Andrina chrome to essentially reverse age.
Starting point is 01:00:02 They've had access to Andrina chrome, pretty much since the donning of humanity. My favorite part of this is that she says Andrina chrome, where the term is adrenachrome. This woman is, I don't know why she's on a podcast other than she can get it. She's cute. I got a belly shirt on. I'm slumped in my chair. Like, can I look at the skirt with you? This was horrific.
Starting point is 01:00:23 Okay. I won't play the second half. No, no, no, we'll play. Of course we'll play the second half. But, yeah, I think it was horrific, but, um, the sound is something screwy about it. Andrina chrome.
Starting point is 01:00:39 It's an andrina chrome. It's anandrina chrome. Let's play more. Let's call them from now on. Yeah. No, because people think we're idiots. What's happened since 2020 is the trafficking rings all over the planet are getting shut down, especially since the death of Queen Elizabeth.
Starting point is 01:00:55 She was like, A head reptilian, and then everyone bide for... When I saw it, because they have pictures flow flying by, it's highly edited. I remember meeting Queen Elizabeth. She may have been a reptile, but there was not much going on. I don't know how much command she had of the reptilian world. Hour after she died. After she died, no one could figure out who was going to be in charge.
Starting point is 01:01:20 What he's talking about? King Charles is in charge of the reptilians. We all know that. was fighting and slowly but surely all these pockets of like underground trafficked victim. So the supply of endrinicrome has diminished so much so that these celebrities can't get their hands on it anymore. It just came out too that Ozympic is shredding your bones. grinding like a cheese grid. I know Jim Carrey is wholeheartedly different. That's not him. And he would never accept an award. He's like, I'm not coming out again. No. Like he actually
Starting point is 01:01:50 stood on business when it came to all the superficial Hollywood bull. He was like, this is stupid. He makes fun of this, though. The thing is, like, they either take people out who aren't complying or they replace them with a clone. So I always say this. Like, if they replace someone, then just watch what they're filming in next. How come into an international law put in place by the U.N. to where human cloning is banned? Why would you have to ban it?
Starting point is 01:02:13 Why would you have to ban it across the globe? It's an international law. Because it's creepy? How about that for a reason? Well, they don't want companies doing it because the shadow government's already doing it. Exactly. The shadow government. government. Like, it doesn't exist, folks. It's illegal. You can't do it, though.
Starting point is 01:02:29 Here's another theory, too. A lot of people from Congress are old trafficked victims. Like, kids disappear all the time, right? Then they put him through a program. They emerge as some new person. They run for office and they win. How come J.D. Vance changed his name four times. That's not his name. I forgot the name, like, off the top of my head. But that's weird, though, to where you have all these different names and you're just, who are you? Well, now, now I'm going to agree with that. I'm going to, I'm going to, I'm going to, to say that I am suspicious that Tala Rico may be one of those. That's completely possible. That guy looks put together
Starting point is 01:03:01 like a Frankenstein. My goodness. Yeah, it's the And Green Crom. This is the competition, podcast competition we have. Oh, and obviously we can't keep up with it. And we're losing. We're losing. We're losing to these people. We're losing.
Starting point is 01:03:17 The reptilians. We should just maybe Thursday we just do a show like that. And we, and you know what? Less prep. It's a lot easier to do. We just call up some buddies, have them come on the show. You know,
Starting point is 01:03:32 you got to have your baseball hat. You need your baseball hat on backwards when you do this, John. Oh, yeah, definitely. You have to have, or not completely backwards, kind of backwards and sideways. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:44 Well, we're on this kind of thing. You said there was enough. Sorry. Sorry. I was going to do something else. But, okay, you need to continue this?
Starting point is 01:03:51 Really? Can we... No, I don't have any more of the cloning stuff, but I do have something that backs up one of our our other things that we've noticed, which is the idea of making Tucker Carlson the president of the United States. Ah, yes. Okay. And Chink, Chink, your buddy, Chink, Chunk, as you like to call him. Yeah, Chunk. Chunk, Chunk, Uigher. Yes, Chink. He's on board. They only have one guy who could win, and I'm worried about it. And that's Tucker Carlson.
Starting point is 01:04:20 If Tucker runs in the Republican primary, he definitely wins that primary. You can quote me on it. You could have Kevin laughing and you could rerun that tape. It'll be great. In fact, back in 2016, I was on ABCs this week with Stephanopoulos. They asked the whole panel who's going to win. At that point, they just done the Democratic National Convention and Hillary Clinton had a 10-point lead. I was the only one on the panel to say Donald Trump was going to win. And they all laughed out loud.
Starting point is 01:04:44 Populous win. The people chasing after the donors, whether it's Israel or Big Farmer or any of the other donors, nobody likes those people. Kamala Harris lost because she was bragging about how she had 90 corporate CEOs on her side. You got bad news for her. Nobody likes corporate CEOs. Sorry, Kevin. Wait a minute.
Starting point is 01:05:05 Wait a minute. This makes no sense. Because it's the exact same people like Chenko are saying that Massey was defeated by Jew money. Not the guy was, I don't still even know the guy's name. Who is now the new senator from Kentucky? Do you know his name? He's not a senator. He's a congressman.
Starting point is 01:05:25 Okay. I see, I don't even know that. Yeah, obviously. What's his name? What's his name? You don't know his name? Garrison or something. He's got some very pedestrian name.
Starting point is 01:05:37 He had no name recognition. No. But apparently it makes no difference now. He's a Navy seal. I know that. Pick, pick a lane, chank. People chasing after the donors, whether it's Israel or Big Farmer or any of the other donors, then nobody, nobody likes those people. Kamala Harris lost because she was bragging about how she had 90 corporate CEOs on her side.
Starting point is 01:06:01 I got bad news for her. Nobody likes corporate CEOs. Sorry, Kevin. Sorry me. But the reality is that's what every poll shows. It is deeply, deeply unpopular. And these days, it's pretty merited. So if you've got someone in the right lane, which is Democratic capitalism, I think they win. Yeah. Okay. Well, we'll see if Talarico win. wins in Texas. We'll see. We'll see. I don't think he can win in Texas. There's a big fight. If the Texans are not going to vote in a vegan, a vegan, period. Not to mention the fact that he's got. What? No, go ahead. Go ahead. Not to mention the fact that he's got screwball religious beliefs.
Starting point is 01:06:44 Very much so. So I have two clips here of Paxton. And I think this is one of the reasons why he won. And it's not my favorite reason, but when you extrapolate what he's really saying, he's correct. Because there's a lot of fear. What is the number one fear of everybody in Texas? Everybody in Texas is worried about one thing and one thing only. Muslims. Because we are a Christian nation. We are a Christian state, period, the end. I took on our foreign adversaries as well. Stop China from buying our land, triple border security. designated cartels as terrorists and am now taking on one of our
Starting point is 01:07:27 most growing and biggest threats, which is Sharia law and Islamification. You know, Sharia law is organized crime, period, and I will treat it as such. I also change the law to stop these radical Muslim groups like Kare and Muslim
Starting point is 01:07:43 Brotherhood from buying any property in Texas. Treating Sharia law as organized crime. Can you please unpack that? That's possible. that. Yeah, so look, we've got to make sure that everyone understands, this is not a religious liberties issue. This is not a First Amendment issue because if they're faithfully adherent to their ideology, and I call an ideology for a reason in the Quran, they see us as the infidel that they can
Starting point is 01:08:12 commit jihad against. This is an America first issue. This is a Texas first issue. This is a national security issue because they don't think we deserve the right to exist as Americans or as Christians. So he conflates a couple things here. I completely agree. Muslim Brotherhood terrorist organization. In fact, that is the backbone of most terrorism we have witnessed in the past 50 years, probably even longer than that. It was started by the British. MI6 back in the day. Council on America, Islamic relations, also bad news. Bad dudes, bad people. And we're referring to them constantly.
Starting point is 01:08:52 NPR, everybody goes to them for quotes. Why? Okay. Thank you for asking. Because liberals, and that would mainly be Democrats, but liberals, they always want to find someone who's oppressed.
Starting point is 01:09:07 So that's why gays for Palestine and that's why they're all wearing kiffy as at every protest. Now, they're stupid because they haven't studied history. because the socialist and the communists have always been used by these types of radical Islamists, which is different from Muslims, Islamists, to gain political traction. And the first thing the Islamists do when they're in power is they kill the socialists and the communists. It's historical.
Starting point is 01:09:41 But Paxton and a lot of Republicans are conflating this. And, you know, to say, I don't think Paxton's ever looked at the Quran, to say that we're the infidels. They got to kill us. You know, it's not like a, it's not like a covenant like we have in the Bible. This was specific tribes that were written in the Quran that had to be gotten rid of. You know, it's, it's, he's taking things a little too far in his interpretation. But you do. But the, but ultimately he is.
Starting point is 01:10:16 correct because this is what we've seen in Europe. We've seen liberal groups use Islamists and there go Muslims to take over countries. And you get a small country like Holland and they have a 1.5 birth rate reproduction rate, which is negative. You bring in a whole bunch of Muslims and they're going at like bunnies. And before you know it, they take over. And they took over Brussels. And they've taken over all these different cities just by sheer numbers. I don't think we have to worry about that in Texas just yet.
Starting point is 01:10:57 What's the percentage of Muslims in Texas total of the population? I'd have to ask. Take a guess. I know what it is. I'd say it's probably 4%. 2%. 2%. Yeah. So we've got a ways to go.
Starting point is 01:11:14 But it's being used by people like Paxton, which, you know, here's another one. If a bunch of Indonesians came to live in your neighborhood, would you be freaking out or would you think, hey, maybe they got some good Indonesian food? The latter for sure. I'd be very interesting. If one of them could cook, there's no guarantee that somebody comes in from a foreign culture that they can actually cook. What country has more Muslims than any other country in the world? Oh, Indonesia. Indonesia.
Starting point is 01:11:44 Number two. But they're also, Pakistan. Number three, India. Number four, Bangladesh. It's a long way until you get down to Iraq, Iran, and Somali and all these other places. And, Texas. And London. London's got more than anybody.
Starting point is 01:12:02 So I just want to say that just be careful, be careful with how Sharia. Sharia law. Sharia law. It is no different than the Talmudic law from the Jews, which a lot of people also hate. You know, got to wash your hands. Don't shake hands with your left hand, whatever it is.
Starting point is 01:12:21 Don't eat with your right hand. Don't eat this kind of food. The Jews have don't eat shellfish. That's the main part of it. It's not like Sharia. And the rest is arbitration, which even smart lawyers, like the constitutional lawyer, agree with me.
Starting point is 01:12:36 But it's become this catchphrase. You know, it's like, Sharia! But Paxson is correct. We do need to stop the Islamist groups like Muslim Brotherhood and care. And there is an entire political party in the United States, the Democrat Party, that thinks they're being smart by using them as the poor oppressed people. And they're all over the world, blah, blah, blah, free Palestine. And it's going to get really interesting if people don't get smart.
Starting point is 01:13:08 about what's happening. Here's the second clip. You said there was another part other than treating Sharia law as a criminal enterprise. You're going to be stripping away the power from these Muslim groups. How are you going to do that? Number one, we met a second degree felony to enforce Sharia law. I will make sure that that is enforced to the fullest extent. I don't even understand what that means. You can't, how about you can't enforce any other law than U.S. law. But you can't have arbitration if you want. the law. Number two, change the law to stop these no-go zones like you've seen in North Texas. Even Plano Islamic Center, Epic is one of them. They've renamed it to the meadow. They're going to
Starting point is 01:13:46 keep renaming it. But what this law... What he's trying to do here is make you think that this thing is built. It's not built. There's a mosque. There's no community. There's no meadow. None of that is real. You've only seen renderings online. But he's using it for his political game, which is the part I don't like. It does is it allows. It allows. the AG to bring an action to deny public benefit. And what is that? Sewer, water, electricity, roads, management districts. That makes sure that the meadow remains a meadow.
Starting point is 01:14:18 But the third that I mentioned earlier, probably the most powerful tool, is stopping enemy entities from owning any property in Texas that includes critical infrastructure. So we need to continue to add to that list. Right now, care and Muslim Brotherhood are on that list. We need to keep adding because what it does is prevent them from owning any property in Texas and it allows the AG and I made sure that was in the law
Starting point is 01:14:42 to bring an action to force them to divest and sell their property. We cannot allow them to own one square inch in our great state. Look, I'm never retreating from Washington, D.C. because I'm never going to Washington, D.C. I have always known that the fight is right here in the great state of Texas. I was born here and I'll be buried here. This is a. it. No. So. Going to be buried there?
Starting point is 01:15:08 And be buried there. Yeah. So, you know, yes, our problems worldwide, but certainly in the United States is Muslim Brotherhood is a huge problem. Care should be, there are 501C3 status should be taken away. They should be dealt with. They're no good. They're probably doing criminal things.
Starting point is 01:15:29 And there may be others. But let's just be careful when we just say, Muslims, because it is the individual. It is the Pakistanis. It is the Indians. It is the Bangladeshis. And the British now, I guess. Okay. Yeah. So I just wanted to get that off my chest. Ebola in Brazil. Oh, man. I had, ah, where's my, I had new Ebola jingles. Oh, hold on a second. Oh, brother. Ebola. No, no, no, brand new ones. I'll find them while I play the clip.
Starting point is 01:16:06 Health officials say they've identified a suspected Ebola case. in Brazil. If confirmed, it would be the first case outside Africa since the latest outbreak began in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Rory Gallimore reports. The Brazilian authorities say this suspected Ebola case is a man in his 30s. He has recently returned from a trip to the DRC and is now being kept in isolation at a specialist hospital in Sao Paulo state. Tests are being carried out to confirm the exact nature of his illness, but this could mark an escalation in this outbreak. Until now, the vast majority of infections have been registered in the east of the DRC, with a handful across the border in Uganda. There have been more than 240 deaths so far.
Starting point is 01:16:46 The medical charity, NSF, has described the situation as deeply alarming, but health workers have successfully contained many Ebola outbreaks in the past. Oh, that's interesting. Yeah, I have, I did find. He lost your jingles? No, I found them. I found them. Hold on a second. I'm bringing it to you right now.
Starting point is 01:17:05 These are great. I was so happy with them. Here we go. Ebola. Ebola. It has been with us two times in our lives. Now is the third. Now it's time to speak about Ebola. Ebola.
Starting point is 01:17:26 Ebola. Ebola. Yeah, baby. Bambong. AI. No kidding. Hello. Wow.
Starting point is 01:17:35 you're sharp. I am. We did see that Tedros, who talks about Des, he went to the Congo. Yeah, I thought that took a lot of nerve. And he was all dressed up in his world health organization camos.
Starting point is 01:17:55 You know, they'll have uniforms now. And here he is. The head of the World Health Organization visited Eastern Congo's Bunia on Saturday. Looking forward to stop this Ebola. Looking to be. with the community and under the leadership of the government. Of course, more logistic support, more financial support.
Starting point is 01:18:13 But while focusing on the emergency, we should use it as opportunity to build the health system. Because in every crisis, there is opportunity. And that's how we should manage this. This guy's no good. Hold on. I'll get the second part of the report here. Bernier, a city in the Ituri province, is at the heart of the Ebola outbreak in the African country. Experts warn the virus is spreading faster than the response, despite better
Starting point is 01:18:41 organized health facilities and new aid arrivals. Latest official figures show more than a thousand suspected cases and more than 200 suspected deaths. Neighboring Uganda has confirmed nine cases and one death. Is John McCain's ex-wife? Is her name Cindy? Yeah. Jenny McCain. Yeah, well, she's a part of the problem. World Food Program. Executive Director Cindy McCain is stepping down from her post Monday. During her three years at the helm of the UN agency, there have been two famines. And when we spoke with her late last week from Rome, she told us we're looking potentially at several more, among many other challenges. By the way, if you're the head of the World Food Program, you get an apartment in Rome?
Starting point is 01:19:30 That's the gig right there. Why not? What's Rome got to do with the price of bread? That's where your headquarters are. You got to be in Rome. Are you kidding? It's like being in Paris. It's great. Emergency response to Ebola in the Congo.
Starting point is 01:19:45 That's a country that's already struggling, as I understand it, with about 27 million food insecure people. I know the U.S. State Department is pledging some help here, but what are you hearing about the situation on the ground for emergency responders like yours? Yes. It's not good. Not good. It's not good. H. people in a mass way.
Starting point is 01:20:09 Mass. And there's really no way to know right now how many people have been affected by this. We know that it's a rampage now with it. So what we need to do is not only be able to get in, we run logistics, we bring in supplies, we bring in people. And we do much more than that as well just in the region. But this is going to take a real world out. This is very deadly. Very, very deadly.
Starting point is 01:20:35 Hey, maybe that's why Peter Thiel has moved to Argentina. Even following that story? No, tell me about it. Oh, so apparently he bought a house in Argentina and he's put his kids in school there in Argentina. And everyone's saying, well, what's going to happen in America if he's moving to Ardea? Did he also one of those guys who bought a place in New Zealand? Yeah, but he put his kids in school. That's the big one.
Starting point is 01:21:02 in school. Maybe he just doesn't want to live in New York. He has kids? He's gay. Yeah, but you can have kids. Well, I never heard that he has kids. Well, that's interesting. I never heard that he was married to a guy or a girl or anybody in between. Hmm. Well, now you make an interesting point.
Starting point is 01:21:24 I don't think I've ever heard that either. A book of knowledge. Does Peter Thiel have kids and is he married? Here we go. Oh, Peter Tio is what the book of knowledge understood. Let's see if he figures that one out. According to the book of knowledge, Peter Thiel is married to Matt Dan Zyson,
Starting point is 01:21:44 and they have two daughters born through surrogacy. Oh, there you go. Thus, it has been written. What do you know? I guess I didn't know that. He keeps it doing himself. On the down low. He keeps it on the down low.
Starting point is 01:21:58 The down low. We've gone from being the down low. Well, the last thing you want is to be a homeowner in New York City. Here's the latest from the socialist mayor, Mamnani. Through our new citywide campaign, Fix the City, we will focus on the worst landlords in New York City. When necessary, we will take aggressive legal action
Starting point is 01:22:19 to remove negligent owners and property managers. Oh, no. Get them out of here. We will work to transfer ownership to responsible stewards. Stewards that include community land trusts, non-profits, Or even the tenants themselves. We're going to remove you. I love that. That'll be fun to watch.
Starting point is 01:22:41 The court case will be fun to watch. He's not going to get anywhere with that bull crap. Well. So what was interesting is the response to the Jill Biden book and her interview. And I think I had, let me just. I'll play. I thought he was having a stroke. Yeah, this is exactly.
Starting point is 01:23:07 I only play that clip. This is the one that everyone's all up in arms about. When she arrived at the first presidential debate of 2024, she saw that President Biden wasn't feeling well. But then Joe always, even if he was off a little bit, he'd always rally. And I thought, okay, so he'll get in there in that debate and he'll be fine. He's going to rally. But he got in there, he got into the debate and he didn't.
Starting point is 01:23:36 Making sure they were able to make every single solitary person. This was great. I love this package because that wasn't in the clip that everyone was posting on X. They actually put in the pieces, and this was from CBS this morning, they put in the pieces of the debate. And when you hear it, it's just like, wow, it really was really, really, really bad. The debate, and he didn't.
Starting point is 01:24:04 Making sure that we're able to make every single solitary person eligible for what I've been able to do with the COVID, excuse me, with dealing with everything we have to do with, look, if we finally beat Medicare. Will you horrified? You remember how bad that was? Yeah, I remember the whole thing. As you saw it on. I wasn't horrified. I was frightened
Starting point is 01:24:36 because I had never ever seen Joe like that before or since. Yeah, right. Yes. Or since. You've never seen him like that. Never. Never. Why did it happen? I don't know
Starting point is 01:24:52 what happened. I mean, as I watched it, I thought, oh my God, he's having a stroke. And it scared me to death. and then he never seemed to find himself after that. But then I have to tell you as we were walking out he said I really and I'm not going to use the words
Starting point is 01:25:14 because it's morning TV but I really sort of messed up didn't I? So remember when we were talking about this and how that went down and how we were pretty sure that this whole thing was sabotaged that, you know, they didn't give him his meds or a shot or whatever they typically... Yeah, you know, nobody gets a shot that snaps them out of it. And then when Jill Biden went to vote, she was wearing a red dress.
Starting point is 01:25:42 And I think we kind of floated the idea like, oh, maybe she switched sides. Maybe she's doing this to help Trump. You know, there was a lot of weirdness about that whole period because that was when, you know, it was obvious Trump was going to win and then they did the switcher-roop. So now this book comes out. And this book is, the timing is interesting. Why now? Why right now?
Starting point is 01:26:10 Is he, you know, why does her, Jill Biden has a book and she's writing about all this stuff. And it's kind of on the cusp of the midterms. And it has thrown the Democrats for a loop. And the example I have is the Pod Save America. a podcast. And these are, aren't there two of those guys, the former speechwriters for Obama? Yep, two of their speechwriters for Obama. And they're kind of insider elites for the Democrat Party.
Starting point is 01:26:39 They like to present themselves as such. So they are so mad, they do what all Democrats do when they're mad. They start cussing like crazy. So you're foreworn. Hold on a second. Just to back you up on this a little bit, it would be then, it would be interesting that she has appeared on CBS. Yes, but not the other networks.
Starting point is 01:26:59 Good point. Good point. Well, these guys, the insider elites to the Democrat Party, are mad and cussing ensues. I don't think they appreciated being fucking lied to, who didn't just lie about the debate performance, but gaslit everyone, and told us we were all overreacting bedwetters, that their polls were fine, that the fucking debate was fine. And now, Joe Biden's like, oh, yeah, we were lying the whole time. And they went after us personally. I went from feeling kind of bad about the whole situation to be like, oh, okay, fuck you then. The people who are saying, why don't you let it go, why are you talking about this? I didn't make Joe Biden write a book and then whine about how Joe Biden was.
Starting point is 01:27:35 Oh, you're talking over the good parts here. They went after us personally. Yes. I went from feeling kind of bad about the whole situation to be like, oh, okay, fuck you then. The people who are saying, why don't you let it go, why are you talking about this? I didn't make Joe Biden write a book and then whine about how Joe Biden was mistreated by our podcast, Nancy Pelosi, the party, right? You know who's mistreated? The American people. There was never a second of remorse or an apology for their utterly disastrous decision.
Starting point is 01:28:01 And people don't trust the Democratic Party. And it's not going to bite us in the ass in the midterms. But it will bite us in the ass in 2028. I promise. No, there you go. There they go. It's turmoil, I tell you, turmoil. I can't think, I can't think that that's not something that was planned.
Starting point is 01:28:17 I kind of liked it. I'm like, yeah, okay. There's something going on there. Well, I'm not going to I like it. I'm liking that thesis. We should keep it eye on. I want to go back to the Reagan National Economic Forum. General Bessent did a whole keynote,
Starting point is 01:28:37 which is, I'm not going to play it, but the clips that will be in the show notes. People can listen to it. It was quite good. You know, he started with Reagan and, you know, how, you know, America does one thing right. When we mess up, we admit it. We move on and, you know, America was asleep.
Starting point is 01:28:55 That'll be the day. But he sat down with the cudlo and I have a couple clips. Oh, Cudlow. Who cares about Cudlow? Don't get all you, don't get panties in a bunch about Cudlow. I'm telling you, is Cudlow? He's on Fox, right? Is he on Fox?
Starting point is 01:29:11 Yeah, he's got a show on Fox that's on Fox business. Let's get that right. Yes, yes. And he never talks about business. Why would you? And the two things that I'll pull out of this, because General Besson mentioned something here. And I was like, huh, okay, hold on a second. We heard this briefly on episode 1872, and it was the $250 bill.
Starting point is 01:29:42 Do you remember this? Yeah, it was in the newsletter. Yeah, right. So you remember it because it was, you don't send me the newsletter anymore for, review. Why is that? Because we have two guys copy editing it. But then, but see, then I don't know that the, what's in the newsletter because the newsletter goes to my enormous newsletters bin because it has the word newsletter and unsubscribe in it. And I, and I forget to parse through my email. And I feel bad that I haven't seen the newsletter. Could you just send you the test? Could you please? Not the test.
Starting point is 01:30:16 Just send me, but I want it from you. No, the test is the, no, the test also goes to my news. newsletter bin. It goes to the wrong. Well, that's all we can do now. The, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the workflow has changed. Workflow. What are you using AI for this thing? By the way.
Starting point is 01:30:31 I'm just telling you. Okay. Geez, you got all these little gotchas and your, oh, you can't do this. You can't do that. I send you an email. I get a, a, a, a kind of a response of two weeks later, typically. Yeah, I saw that video. That guy's an idiot.
Starting point is 01:30:51 Okay. Oh, that video I sent you two weeks ago. Yes, you send me videos to watch. I'm a busy guy. I'm producing my part of the show. You're busy. All you talked about at the beginning of the show is watching TV. Yeah, all right.
Starting point is 01:31:07 So the $250 bill. What is your take? What did you say in the newsletter about the $250 bill? Nothing important. I just said that Trump wants to do one and no one's going to do this. It's not going to happen. So the $250. bill. First of all, I called our bank and I said, bank manager, his name is also Adam. Hey, Adam,
Starting point is 01:31:28 if this thing comes out, I want one. Reserve one for me. I got to have one of these. So Besson is asked about this and an interesting term came up. So you were mentioning in your talk, we are here at this conference celebrating 250th birthday of America and looking ahead for the next couple of hundred years. I can't help but ask you, are we really going to have a $250 bill with Donald Trump's picture on it? The whole world is waiting. So for the 150th, there was a Calvin Coolidge coin. Oh, God, I love that. With his image on it, we are going to have the image of President Trump on a coin.
Starting point is 01:32:15 And there is a proposed legislation in the House to put President Trump on. the $250 bill. As Treasury Secretary, I am only mandated to do two things with the design of the currency. At present, it has to be someone who is not living, and it must say
Starting point is 01:32:35 in God we trust. Do whatever else I want. And I think that if you were the president, just like Calvin Coolidge was, for the 150th, if you're the president for the 250th, President Trump should be on there. And, you know,
Starting point is 01:32:51 For any of you who want to geek out in monetary theory, there's something called seniorage. So we print treasury, prints currency, the Fed distributes it, and we have about $2.5, $2.6 trillion outstanding, and that's a free loan. So we put currency out there, and we don't have to pay any interest on it. So with seniorage, I think that you get the $250 bill. A lot of people were just going to put those away and hold them.
Starting point is 01:33:23 I'm sure it's a good free loan. So I really like this seniorage. If he made enough of them, it's an interest-free loan, which they can write treasury bonds against and get interest on. Yeah. It's a great idea. Yeah, it's an interesting idea. He's not going to get his picture on the bill.
Starting point is 01:33:43 Well, it has to be approved by Congress. Well, there's a bill in Congress to do this. And you think guys like Thomas Massey and all, all these other pissed off Republicans are going to vote for it? No. You think a Democrat's going to vote for it? No. And they got, what, leeway of about five votes? No, they're not going to get it through. Well, you miss the other possibility. You're dead.
Starting point is 01:34:06 Yeah. Not living. So he needs to be unalived and then we got our money. It's a lot of money. So this isn't happening. All right. My might have to go to polymarking. it on this one. I think it will happen. I think
Starting point is 01:34:22 Bessent will somehow make this happen. Bessent, he's the general, man. He's got good, he wants to do it, but it's not going to happen. He's got juice. It's just like the moon shot. He's got juice, man. He's got juice. I'm telling you. He can do it. I like
Starting point is 01:34:41 the idea, though. The whole idea of, uh, of, uh, it's a cute idea. And we need something other than the hundred. We used to have $500 bills. Let's bring those back into play. No, no one's going to, you can't spend that. We can barely even spend a hundy. Hondo. It's a hundee.
Starting point is 01:34:58 Rig D's always called it a hundee, not a hondo. So we have a new obesity drug. Oh, goodness. We do? Eli Lilly. Oh, yeah, is this a pill? I'll bet it's a pill. The next generation of obesity medication is getting closer to reality.
Starting point is 01:35:16 Eli Lilly is studying a new drug. Test results show it's more powerful. even more powerful than the obesity shots and pills already on the market. NPR Pharmaceuticals correspondent Sidney Lupkin is here to tell us about it. Good morning. Good morning. I'm so glad you're the one who's going to pronounce the name of this new drug. What is it?
Starting point is 01:35:34 The new drug is called Reda Trutide. So it's a weekly injection just like Wagovi and Zepbound, but it's a little different. Wagovian Zepbound target the GLP1 hormone. This new drug works on three hormones, GLP1, GIP, and Glucagon, and that makes it more powerful. When you say more powerful, you've got to sell me because I have seen the results in human beings of the existing drugs. How powerful is it?
Starting point is 01:35:59 Yeah, so Eli Lilly, the company that makes Reda Trutide, says that in the clinical trial, people taking it for 80 weeks lost an average of more than 70 pounds at the highest dose. For comparison, patients taking the placebo over the same period,
Starting point is 01:36:12 they lost five pounds. Those were the latest findings from its phase three clinical study. I asked Dr. Carolyn Frankavilla, who is the vice president of the Obesity Medicine Association, what she thought. I have goosebumps. Of course, we've seen some preliminary data about this before, so it's not shocking. But to have a medication that can have an average of 28% weight loss is truly game-changing.
Starting point is 01:36:38 This is essentially bariatric surgery, but in a weekly injection. Wow, wow, NPR bringing the shills in. Oh. You think? You know, I've been reading studies about GLP1. And what it really does is it takes away your joy. Oh, yeah, that's an interesting little tidbit. That seems to be documented quite well.
Starting point is 01:37:05 You don't want to do anything. You're just a dud. Well, in that regard, it takes away your joy from eating food, from drinking wine, from smoking cigarettes, from snorting coke. But it just takes away your joy. I've heard sex too. Yes. People are I don't really want to have sex.
Starting point is 01:37:22 You know, and all the other stuff about, you know. But you look so good. I don't care. However, in that regard, it's a gateway drug to SSRIs because your joy is gone. You're going to be depressed. Boom. Lexa Pro. Interesting idea.
Starting point is 01:37:39 Another, number three in today's thesis count. Got to write them down. So to compare people taking Zepadman and McGovey lose around 20% of their body weight over time. So if it ends up that this drug is closer to the results for bariatric surgery, that's significant because surgery is risky. But nothing is without side effects. Redatrutides were similar to other GLP1 drugs such as nausea and other gastrointestinal issues. Is this drug good enough that people, assuming it's approved by the FDA, will want to switch to it? You know, it won't be for everyone.
Starting point is 01:38:10 In fact, Frank Vila said it may be too powerful for some people. Too powerful. That's why having options is really important. and now we have Zepbound Wagovi, the Wagovi Pill, Foundaio. Here's Frankavilla again. We're really going to have to think about, you know, moving forward which medication makes sense for which patients. But I mean, if you would have told me this a decade ago, I would have thought it was a lie.
Starting point is 01:38:34 It's amazing. Of course, a big issue is access. The obesity drugs already in the market are expensive and a lot of insurance plans don't cover them even though obesity is considered a chronic condition. If you're willing to go outside your health insurance, obesity drugs are available at a discount from Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk directly, but a lot of people still can't afford them. How expensive is a new drug likely to be? You know, we don't know yet. It's still early days for Reda Trutide. The company hasn't published these study results yet in a peer-reviewed journal.
Starting point is 01:39:06 Red of Trutide is not yet approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Eli Lilly says it's planning to submit it for approval by the end of the year, and then it could be a while before the FDA doesn't approve it. That said, Dr. Frankavilla has heard about people supposedly buying a knockoff version of this drug off the internet. She says, don't do that. You don't know what you're getting. And it could be dangerous. Oh, you can make it at home. Well, that's good to know. I want to lead into a boots on the ground that we got, but it comes first with a pre preceded by a few clips regarding the price of oil, which no sooner had I said, watch it come down. then it came down. And as we've been discussing, if we take a look at oil prices,
Starting point is 01:39:47 you can see down today moves off more than 1% both for Brent and WTI. Again, after the US and Iranian negotiators, apparently reaching an agreement to extend the ceasefire. On the month, if we take a look at oil prices, you can see big losses there to the tune of 16 to nearly 19% for both WTI and Brent crude. again, oil markets seem to be looking past the more, they seem to be optimistic that a deal would come through.
Starting point is 01:40:18 So we see those big double-digit losses in the oil moves. I like how it's called losses when everyone else is cheering. Yay, it's like 87 bucks now, the WTI. 8776. And Brent is what, 91? 776. It's a 250th anniversary. So the CEO of Chevron.
Starting point is 01:40:41 who previously in the week would be saying, oh, it's going to be $200. We're getting at the bottom. We're scraping the bottle. At the bottom of the barrel is no good. He's on Bloomberg. A little different story. Let's talk about the reason for this conversation
Starting point is 01:40:53 in central banks right now, at least one of them. Crude. On track, at least for now, for its steepest monthly decline since 2020. Optimism building for a resumption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. As many producers are highlighting the risk of an extended closure, Sheffron's been warning, quote,
Starting point is 01:41:08 we will start to see physical shortages. The CEO. Mike Worth, I'm very pleased to say, joins in the studio. Mike is good to see you. Good to see you, John. Welcome back to the program, sir. I get this question a lot. You're the expert. Help me answer it.
Starting point is 01:41:19 Why is crude at 100 at 90, and not close to the 200, given this straight has been shut for three months? You know, it's a little hard to explain. We really are saying... Because we just jacked the price up on you for no reason, that's why.
Starting point is 01:41:33 Markets tighten. Inventories draw. Demand for products around the world still very strong. I think there's this belief, and we, you know, we're experiencing it again the last few days, that the end is near, the conflict is nearly resolved and flow through the straight will resume very quickly, and that has kept the back end of the curve lower than it might otherwise have been. And I think of the psychology of the market has been, this is closer to the end rather than the beginning.
Starting point is 01:42:02 Not just that, though. There's some other things at play that you know agenda show is mentioned. How far are our way away from having pipelines that connects some of these countries to the mainland and their production without having to traverse the strait at all. Well, there's a couple that exists now that you've talked about in Saudi and the UAE. The UAE sanctioned a project last year, which is about 50% complete to get more of their production over to Fijira and outside of the strait. So I think you'll see more of that, Lisa. The one opportunity there is, countries like Iraq and Kuwait that are deeper up in the Gulf
Starting point is 01:42:38 don't have access to those pipelines. And for them, the route could be through the north and ultimately then into the Mediterranean, maybe through Turkey, where we see a pipeline comes out of the Caspian Sea over into the Mediterranean in Turkey. And so I do think one of the responses to this will be infrastructure investments that will allow these energy flows to avoid the Strait of Hormuz. And that's underway now. And I think you'll see that in the years that follow. There's your Turkey, John. That's why Turkey was weaseling in on the deal.
Starting point is 01:43:11 Yep. Hey, boys, we got a pipeline over here. Come on, bring it over here. This is going to be fine. Now, the problem is July 4th. It's going to be a little tricky if the president somehow, if he, I don't think he can do it, but if Congress decides to remove the federal tax, which is 18 cents, that may make a difference. We got boots on the ground from Sam, and Sam runs a gas station, an independent gas station,
Starting point is 01:43:36 in King County, Washington. And he does about a million gallons a year, a thousand customers a day. He's unbranded. And it was a nice note. I put the whole note in the show. It was a good note. It had a lot of information in it.
Starting point is 01:43:51 Yeah. Now, he's in Washington State. So he says, you know, we got hidden fees. 78 cents per gallon at the pump. 52 cents per gallon refinery carbon credits, which has doubled as operating costs. he says there's absolutely no difference between brand gasoline and unbranded gasoline. It's the exact same stuff, comes to the same pipeline, the same mix, everything is all the same.
Starting point is 01:44:17 The main thing he wants everybody to know is that he's on two-week contracts. So his gasoline will not go up or down immediately. It takes about two weeks because he just doesn't have the purchasing power that the big brands have. so Trump has got to do something very, very quickly in order to get a significant drop by July 4th is possible, I guess. And the other thing he wants everybody to know is please, please, please, please,
Starting point is 01:44:44 go to your unbranded gasoline station and pay and cash. What do you say? Gasolina. I like the sound of it. Do you mind? No, it sounds like code or something. You're trying to make a point about something or you're speaking pigeon Spanish. I'm not sure what you're doing there.
Starting point is 01:45:04 Well, I guess if you say gas is so confusing because gas could be natural gas, liquid natural. I like gasoline. So you want me to say gasoline will make you feel better? Gasoline. Well, it's gasoline, not gasoline. Well, we also call the Secretary of State Lubio. Well, that's his name in China.
Starting point is 01:45:26 One of our producers said me a note, said, I heard some guys at the coffee shop. Then he literally called Rubio Lubio. And I was going to go over and give him in the morning, but I'd chickened out. I'm like, you would have been guaranteed. Oh, yeah, absolutely. No one else calls Rubio Lubio but are people. Yep.
Starting point is 01:45:44 Anyway, back to Sam. He says, please pay and cash. He says it's so much, it's so much better for the. Well, debit card, same thing. Is there no processing fee for the gas station? on a debit card? Typically in California there's not because they have the debit card prices that is the same as the cash price.
Starting point is 01:46:06 I think in, I don't know if I'd have to look. Hmm, that's a good, that's a good point. Well, we'll, Sam, we'll have to send a follow up. But cash or debit card, if possible. Although I've, I've paid with debit card. The thing with debit cards is it gets declined half the time. and the other, you know, five out of ten times you use it, your number gets jacked and you have to get a new card. Debit cards are dangerous.
Starting point is 01:46:36 I have used a debit card for the last 25 years and I've had none of these issues and it never gets declined. Tina always gets popped. Always. Yeah. Her credit cards, too. It's amazing. Well, it's her then. That's what I keep telling her.
Starting point is 01:46:51 She won't. She won't believe me. Won't believe me. Anyway. So it's already gone down. I think gasoline went down by 8 or 10 cents I saw here in Texas. It's already down somewhere. Well, you're in California.
Starting point is 01:47:07 You got special rules for everything. But we'll see. It's going to be tight. It's going to be real tight. It's got to do something quick in order to get it down substantive. You know, it was Newt Gingrich, I think. Do I have that clip still? Gingrich.
Starting point is 01:47:27 Gingrich. Maybe you don't. Gingrich was saying the other day, if Trump can get gasoline in the... Screw that. I thought I had this clip.
Starting point is 01:47:41 If Trump can get gasoline down to about three and a half dollars, which I don't think is possible, he says the Republicans will win the midterms. That's New Gingrich. That's what he says. there's a lot going on. There's a lot going on. There's a lot of change in
Starting point is 01:47:58 electoral maps. There's stuff going on. They may pull it off. I don't know. They're not pulling off nothing. Okay. You want to put a bet on it? Want to put a bet on it? Okay. So what would the bet be? For one dollar, of course. No, well, okay, I can do a dollar bet, but what would the bet before? I mean, what would be the structure of the bet? Okay. Republicans keep the House and the Senate.
Starting point is 01:48:26 Are you going to put a dollar on that? Well, I can do a buck 50. I will do a dollar's fine. I'm a podcaster, man. Let's listen to a little NPR's plug for one of their shows. AI gods. You like this one. Millions of people are already turning to AI for spiritual guidance,
Starting point is 01:48:48 asking it moral questions, seeking comfort, even chatting with AI version. versions of their gods. Yeah. Is this a full show? Of their gods? How many people have gods? Oh, the...
Starting point is 01:49:01 Hindus? I think Hindus have gods, yeah. They have multiple gods. Is this for a show or an episode? Must be for an episode. No, it's for a podcast. For one episode of a podcast. Yeah, I think.
Starting point is 01:49:17 Well, they have that whole AI thing they're doing. Yeah. Well, this comes on the heels of the Pope's encyclical. Well, the Pope has some negative things to say about AI. Yeah, you know, I listen to it. He doesn't know what he's talking about. I'm sorry. He's just, you know, like, well, it's horrible.
Starting point is 01:49:36 And yeah, I completely agree that I've always said the chat bots, no matter what you're asking it for, spiritual advice, for, you know, relationship advice. What would you be asking spiritual advice for from a computer? Hello? There is a large amount of people who do not want to speak to their pastor about certain things who are turning to AI chatbots, particularly glue.com, G-L-O-O-O-O. Never heard of it.
Starting point is 01:50:08 Oh, they're pretty big. Glue-G-L-O-O-O, or maybe dot AI, which is a specific Christian faith-based AI, and they are pouring their hearts out to these chat bots. And I think it's a very bad idea. But people don't want to speak to a human being about things anymore. I mean, come on. You can't say that this is not happening, that people aren't talking to these chatbots. They wouldn't do a whole podcast about it.
Starting point is 01:50:37 I got another plug from an NPR show for something I want to ask you about. Okay. ID Tech. ID Tech. All right. Here we go. This message comes from ID Tech. The original tech.
Starting point is 01:50:51 Camp, Experience Camp Crunch Labs, IRL, BattleBots, and more held at Stanford, UC Berkeley, and San Francisco State. Hold on, hold on. This message comes from ID Tech, the original tech camp. Experience Camp CrunchL, R.L., Battlebots, and more held at Stanford, UC Berkeley, and San Francisco State. Yeah, it's a summer camp, ID Tech. The original, it says it's the original tech camp. Since when? Well, when is the last time you went to camp?
Starting point is 01:51:24 So this thing's all over the country. I looked it up. ID tech, yeah. It's huge. It's monstrous. It's done by some couple. What do you do there at ID tech? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:51:36 I have no idea. You learn how to do a battle bot. A bottle. Did you say battle bot or bottle bot? It must be battle. You know, the robots that fight. Yeah. That show has gotten boring.
Starting point is 01:51:49 I look at it. I'm like, eh. Okay, I got another one for you. This is from K. KQED, gender expansive cuts. Non-profit serving girls... Which is kind of funny.
Starting point is 01:51:59 Just by itself. Non-profit serving girls and gender expansive youth in the Bay Area in L.A. lost $113 million in funding last year under the Trump administration. That's according to a new report from the Non-profit Alliance for Girls, which calls the loss an existential crisis. Chantal Hildebrand is the organization's executive director. So either they've shrunk and are no longer able to serve as many young people as they were before or the being canceled in their entirety because there's just no more funding for it. So that means that it's also a less of an investment in the actual young people as well as not having services in some of our communities that are the most vulnerable. She says non-profits need more public support in the form of volunteers and donations.
Starting point is 01:52:50 the money supply from the government got cut off that's what it sounds like to me yeah but what's it goes to gender expansive what does that even mean well it's on the girls it's for girls but what money are we talking about what i i know kids nobody's got there there's no money going into their pocket they don't get any special places to do anything what are they talking about this is bull crap i don't know did you look it up creation did you look it up did you look it up? No, there's nothing to look up. I can't figure it out.
Starting point is 01:53:24 Oh, they cut $110 million away from what, I don't know. Okay, well, you seem very upset by it. I'm very upset about this. This is just constant waste of money. There's a lot of money being wasted, definitely. And what's gender expansive? I don't know. I would expect you brought the clip.
Starting point is 01:53:49 You would have looked it up. I looked up, I couldn't figure it out. Well, then I don't have the answer with gender expenses. Okay, let's go to another annoying clip I can get mad about it. Oh, brother. What does he just, does John's get mad? I'm in a bad mood. Why? Climate.
Starting point is 01:54:02 Why? Why? Why are you in a bad mood? Because climate, because the donations are just terrible today. It's embarrassing. In a controversial move, state regulators have approved major changes to a key state climate program. California's Air Resources Board voted yesterday to create a $4 billion fund for big polluters to invest in decarbonization projects. But climate, transit, and affordable housing advocates worry it might mean significantly less money for their programs. Judson True is with the San Francisco Municipal Transit Agency.
Starting point is 01:54:41 Transit, including Muni, is crucial to achieving our climate protection goals and ensuring affordability. and this vote is a setback for both of those causes. The decision comes months after industries warned that compliance with current rules would drive them out of the state and increase energy prices. Okay. I don't know. You're just playing stuff that makes you mad. Yeah, I know.
Starting point is 01:55:10 I got a bunch of it, too. I'm not this one. No, no, no, no, no. I got to stop you. I have to stop you from hurting yourself. You just, your blood pressure's up. I want to ask you a question after I played this clip. This is Pratt.
Starting point is 01:55:24 Pratt with all the cool commercials. He's, I think this is Tom Lamas, Namath, Lamas. Governor Gavin Newsom just endorsed Karen Bass today, saying, quote, the work Karen Bass is doing in L.A. is making our entire state strong. What a joke? It's a joke that Karen Bass is doing good work. Let's finish the coach. Governor Gavin Newsom just endorsed Karen Bass today, saying, quote,
Starting point is 01:55:47 the work Karen Bass is doing in L.A. is making our entire state stronger with an 18% decline in homelessness, while a group nationally historic drops in violent crime, boosting film production in L.A. and protecting our communities against ICE. She has my full support for re-election. Do you think that endorsement is going to help Karen Bass? I think that endorsement, these two are co-conspirators. They're criminal partners in the negligence that led to 7,000 houses burning down. You think Governor Gavinusim's a criminal? In my opinion, it's criminal negligence. When you fail, your taxpayers and they burn alive because of choices you made with your state park that you're
Starting point is 01:56:22 responsible from. Same with Mayor Karen Bass. Again, it's my opinion. I believe if you let people burn alive because of your negligence, that becomes criminal negligence. Now, first of all, Pratt is very smart here because Llamas tries to nail him on the, do you think he's a criminal? You're going to say it's a criminal right now? And Pratt goes, now, in my opinion, you're criminally negligent. So he's very smart. No, Pratt's sharp. I, however, do not think he's going to win.
Starting point is 01:56:56 Okay. He's not. They're going to cheat. They're going to steal. Whatever it is, he will not win. I just don't see California is too rotten for him to win. I have the opposite opinion because I've heard this before.
Starting point is 01:57:12 Okay. My opinion is that they can't afford to rig the election against him because he's got too much momentum. And it's going to become obvious that the state is full of scams and it would cause a backlash.
Starting point is 01:57:31 So they can't take a chance. It's just a minor office. It's the mayor of L.A. who cares. And Karen Bass isn't endeared herself to anybody. She's a communist for all practical purposes. So they're going to let him win. Well, if they let him win,
Starting point is 01:57:47 he will probably fail spectacular. You've got to think the whole city council, the whole system is completely rotten and corrupt to the core. How long is the tenure for a Los Angeles mayor? How many years is that? I don't know. Ask the robot. I think it's four years. I'll ask the robot.
Starting point is 01:58:06 Book of knowledge. How many years does the mayor of Los Angeles serve? I'm glad we have the robot today. It's getting a lot of good use out of the robot. Okay. According to the book of knowledge, the mayor of Los Angeles. serves a four-year term with a limit of two consecutive terms. Okay, four years.
Starting point is 01:58:25 Thus, it has been written. Four years. It's going to be very hard for me. If he wins, very hard to get anything done. But I don't know. They are insane people. They're crazy. Well, I have to agree with that.
Starting point is 01:58:41 The second thing, which is another reason they'll let him win because he can't do that much damage. Or he can't damage. He can't fix the damage that easily with the city. council being a bunch of boneheads. This happens in San Francisco. The city council is completely out of control. Yeah. Why do you still live that? You love it. I think you really, I think you just love having horrible people. I don't live in San Francisco. I don't live in Los Angeles. Just live in a small community. Yeah, with people who read the New York Times all up and down the street. I know. It's great. And then in New Jersey, it seems like no sooner do we have a Democrat,
Starting point is 01:59:18 this is my old state, New Jersey. I love New Jersey. Lots of friends still in New Jersey. So they bring in a Democrat governor. And right away, she's doing exactly what the party wants. Oh, let's stir up some crap. Let's make ice look bad. Let's make Trump look bad.
Starting point is 01:59:35 All the people are wearing cafes on the street. I haven't seen the professionally printed signs yet, but they're coming. Tensions continue to flare outside the Delaney Hall immigration detention center. Newark, by the way, is not exactly the same as New Jersey. Newark, New Jersey. Protesters who say living conditions in the building are inhumane clashing with immigration enforcement supporters Saturday morning. This, following a night of violent encounters between ICE officers and demonstrators being met with tear gas and pepper spray Friday. Just hours earlier, New Jersey Governor Mickey Sherrill announced plans to set up a safe zone for protesters to avoid a repeat of the chaos that envelopes.
Starting point is 02:00:18 the streets of Minneapolis between ICE agents and American citizens just months ago. We know what ICE has done in other states, and we know American citizens lost their lives. Kill people! And I refuse to let that happen in New Jersey. The escalation and protests comes after 300 miles. Can you back at it? That woman is in the same milieu as Pam Bondi. She sounds just like her.
Starting point is 02:00:43 Oh, interesting. Let's listen again with a critical ear. We know what ICE has done in other states. And we know American citizens lost their lives. And I refuse to let that happen in New Jersey. Yeah, that's a good observation. Hmm. Maybe the same law school?
Starting point is 02:00:58 The escalation in protest comes after 300 migrants went on a hunger and labor strike inside the detention center due to poor living conditions, including reports of detainees being burned by scalding hot showers and maggot-infested food. Here's what I don't understand. They want a hunger and labor strike? Are they in the, did they have to work in the detention center? Were they making IKEA furniture? Maybe license plates.
Starting point is 02:01:25 For days, ICE has refused most of our request, raising serious questions about what it's trying to hide from public view. Yesterday, the New Jersey Department of Health sought to inspect the site, but it was denied full access as well. I have a court order here that allows me to come in. Here come the New York representatives come, to make a big scene out of stuff. These are people who aren't even representing New Jersey.
Starting point is 02:01:52 Wednesday, a group of U.S. lawmakers went to Delaney Hall to see the conditions for themselves and hear from detainees. It's MAGA infested, I tell you. The women told us that they were being mistreated. Mistreated. And then? Women there are under attack. Oh, then they're under attack.
Starting point is 02:02:10 It's a quick pivot. And they gave us a list of the masks. This facility, this detention. Center must shut down. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Mark Wayne Mullen denies the allegations of unfit conditions at Delaney Hall but said, quote, it isn't a holiday inn. Holiday in suck too.
Starting point is 02:02:33 Yeah. Now, it's a program. It's, you know, it's no different than everything else. It's all about the midterms. All about it. Yeah. That's all that it is. Yeah. But at least we have Jill Biden on our team now.
Starting point is 02:02:47 That's cool. Making the podcasters cuss. It's amazing. Making podcasters cuss. Yeah. Yeah. All right. I've got a couple of little things.
Starting point is 02:02:59 How about the little, let's finish something light. Okay. Again, of course, a homeschooled Indian is the spelling bee champ. Yeah. Yeah. This is good. Nearly 300 spellers competing at this week's Scripts National Spelling Bee. After nine exciting rounds, judges declaring a tie. Prompting a dramatic spell off, a lightning round, 90 seconds to spell as many words as possible.
Starting point is 02:03:27 Denevola. D-N-E-B-L-A. F-A-D-O-D-O-D-O-O-D-O-O-O-U-S. Kowathai. C-Y-W-Y-D-A-U. Slotchley. T-L-A-C-H-T-L-I. M-A-D-O-U-A. Rishi Arias. R-E-T-I-R-I-U-S.
Starting point is 02:03:44 Then the anxious wait for the winner to be announced. The spell-off results are in. Shrey, during the spell-off, you correctly spelled a total of 32 words. E-S-A-C-E-S-E-N-C-E-C-E-C-E-C-telled of 25 words and that that Shrey, you are the 21st-year-old Shrey Parreek, an eighth grader from Rancho Cucamunga
Starting point is 02:04:13 California, declared champion. Correctly spelling 32 words in the final round, a new record. That's great. There was one of those videos going around like UCLA students who can't spell. Which is
Starting point is 02:04:30 funny. Actually, I have it here. My favorite stuff. It was quite funny because it was an ad. But, you know, that's not the way it's presented on X. Because as we know, on X, everything is fake and gay. So here it is. UCLA. Oh, hold on.
Starting point is 02:04:52 UCL. By the way, UCLA people could never spell. Well, there's that. So UCLA students struggle with basic reading. The sentences, the best, beneficiary tried to embellish the extortion scheme. Here it is. The ben, beneficicry tried to ambush the extortion scheme. What does that mean?
Starting point is 02:05:20 I don't even know. I can't say that. I tried to emblish the extortion. the extortion scheme. What does that mean? I don't know. So it's actually a part of a commercial for Unishak off campus housing. But people post that as, look at these idiots in California.
Starting point is 02:05:48 You can't trust anything. Well, what are you going to do? You can't trust anything. You can't trust anything anywhere. However, you can trust the value for value system. system. Now, if John and I can trust it today is a different story, but you can trust that your no agenda show always delivers you value without any commercials, without any corporate interests or anything like, in fact, we, to our detriment, speak our mind continuously. And we've done this for
Starting point is 02:06:18 18 years. We've been through the cycle. We know how it works. But we are always proud to say that we thank you for your courage, the man who put the sea in Charles in charge, say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only Mr. John C. In the morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry. Also, in the morning, all ships, the seatboots and the ground feet and the air subs in the one and the dames and nights out there. In the morning to the trolls in the troll room, let me count you. There we go.
Starting point is 02:06:44 That's pretty good. 1728, peak trollage, listening to us live on no agenda stream.com and in the modern podcast apps, which is the only app you want to use is from podcastapps.com. You know, there was this whole group who came out of secret hiding. They've been meeting in secret. And they call themselves AMP.
Starting point is 02:07:11 Ant? Amp. Amp. A-N-T? A-M-P, Alpha Mike Papa. Amp. Amp. Yes. And Amp stands for Alliance for Measurement in Podcasting.
Starting point is 02:07:26 Oh, okay. And they, and so they had a secret offsite, which they called Get Ready for it, the AMP Accords. Oh, brother. Yeah. And they have a website, ampacords.com. A billion dollars of demand is sitting on the sidelines,
Starting point is 02:07:44 which is why leading platforms, advertisers, publishers, and creators have come together to create the first podcasting measurement framework. So I'll skip right to the point of this. The podcast measurement sucks. It's based on downloads.
Starting point is 02:08:01 no good. And so these guys want that YouTube money. They want to get the YouTube money because YouTube is calling their videos podcasts. So they're trying to redefine with a podcast. They're doing it all wrong. They're doing it all wrong. And it's Spotify, Sirius XM, you know, draft kings, better help. There's the advertisers. Libson, Podscribe. And UTA, the UTA creators union. They're doing it all wrong. And this is what I've told. I said, if you want to have the same type of measurement as YouTube to get your YouTube money, you've got to cut the podcast apps in on the deal.
Starting point is 02:08:43 And I don't understand why people have such trouble seeing this. Every media always puts the distributor in the deal. Television, radio, newspapers, podcast apps, not in the deal. The podcast apps know exactly who heard the commercial. They know exactly how many people skipped. They know what they have what they call first party data. If you cut the podcast apps in on the deal, you're going to be golden. You'll win everything.
Starting point is 02:09:12 You'll win all the YouTube money. I don't know if they'll listen to me. Well, let me think. And by the way, I wasn't. You're right. They won't listen to you. I wasn't invited to the offsite either, which is, as you know, and why would you be?
Starting point is 02:09:27 Baffling. Always baffling. You don't know, Jack. I don't know what I'm. I'm talking about. Get a modern podcast app. Not only will you be notified when we go live, many of the No Agenda Nation podcast go. And then we're not just us, lots of podcastsers are now starting to do this going live
Starting point is 02:09:43 and you'll then be notified and you can listen to it live in your podcast app. But probably more important within 90 seconds of publishing the podcast, you will be notified that it's in your podcast app ready to enjoy. Just ready to enjoy. Don't mess around with those legacy apps. Now I mentioned value for value. this is what we've been living by for 18 years. It's a roller coaster ride.
Starting point is 02:10:04 It's up. It's down. When it's up, we're happy. When it's down, we're not happy today. It's not the happiest of days. And please go on X and tell me the reason why is because I'm not critical of Trump. And John is up. And John is not hating on the Jews.
Starting point is 02:10:22 That's the main reason. And John is no longer critical after his open heart surgery. He's had too nice a guy. Too much love. Yeah. No, we are, and people like, you've changed. You're a Christian. Yeah, I've definitely changed.
Starting point is 02:10:37 But I don't think I've changed in my criticisms. It's just people don't like it when you don't criticize someone. You have to criticize everybody. Everybody. I criticize you and then. You said Candice Owens. She's the one that's taken to our audience. People are being hypnotized by Candice Owens.
Starting point is 02:10:59 Yeah. And Tim, and Tim Dillon. And LP never hurt. And Tim Dillon. Who? Tim Dillon. You don't know anything. You're watching those dumb chicks on that podcast.
Starting point is 02:11:13 I love the dumb chicks. Oh, now, there's my, this is what I've been waiting for. Fine. Let me just mark that. Finally, I have my opening for the show. Perfect. Thank you. Value for value comes in many different ways.
Starting point is 02:11:28 We love when people support us. We got some great boots on the ground today. Perfect example. Thank you for helping us with clips. Thank you clip collector, Steve Jones. He may have done your three by three. I don't know if he did, but Steve is very good at stuff like that. We appreciate it.
Starting point is 02:11:42 People giving us encouragement. Even some of the negative stuff can sometimes be encouraging. It's like, oh, I'm going to delete this. Now I'm encouraged. Thank you. Oh, I'm going to block that guy. I'm encouraged. If you have nine followers and you've changed a screen name five times since 2019,
Starting point is 02:12:00 you're getting blocked because you're a bot or you're an NPC. And the other way that people can support us with their time, talent, and treasures by creating artwork. It does work with prompting. Some people do actual work still with Photoshop, which is appreciated. And some just really, really don't do a lot of work at all, but then still will win. And that example is Darren O'Neill, who brought us the artwork for episode 1872, which aptly was titled Lunar Economy. We saw the lunar economy blow up on the launch pad. And once again, the No Agenda Show predictions are on par.
Starting point is 02:12:37 You said it. You said it's going to blow up. It's not going to happen. It'll be delayed. And literally two days later, something blows up and the moonshot is delayed. But why listen to us? So Darren made the cars for podcasters, which was cute. It was a cute.
Starting point is 02:12:57 It was a different AI model. I had not seen the crayon model yet. Have we seen this a lot? This particular... I think we may have seen it once or twice. Possibly. But it's just well done. I mean, Darren is the master at this.
Starting point is 02:13:12 Darren is quite the master of this. I don't know how, you know, it's amazing in some situations. Like, what? I don't get that to work. He's very good at it. Lots of people prompting away. Oh, my gosh. I did enjoy the...
Starting point is 02:13:28 It doesn't have our names on it, at least that I can see, which is the no agenda. Over next to Darren's piece, there's a waffle house done in the style of no agenda. I kind of thought that was a cute piece. And I like the kids sucking on the, on the moon helium. Yeah, the moon helium. Well, I think we, I think we debated between moon helium, cars for podcasters. And I think, oh, you like the moon base by Darren. That's what you like.
Starting point is 02:13:55 You like the no agenda moon base? I like the helium one and the cars. I think you may have been the one that pushed the cars one. I wanted the rumble waffle and you said, that's racist by Scaramanga. Yeah, it was racist. It was not racist. I said, who is fighting at these teen takeovers? Yeah, but it doesn't say teen takeover.
Starting point is 02:14:17 It just says rumble waffle as like it was a waffle house with a fight going on outside. Okay. Not to make teen takeovers at Waffle House. get your ass kicked. Ever been to one of those places? I've not been to an awful house in a long time. Well, the Waffle House has got a, which is good,
Starting point is 02:14:39 I would recommend going there, but there's a lot of rough customers in there. Rough customers. And I'd say a honorary mention to Nestworks, who once again tried to do something, non-AI, didn't quite make it. He has this new style with kind of a line and, you know,
Starting point is 02:14:59 what style would you, is Algo tricks? What style would you call that? Because it's minimalist. Minimalist, yeah. Didn't quite cut it. But it's, we appreciate the fact that people do this at all. It gives us good feedback to know what you liked and what struck a chord during the podcast. That's also, that's one, another good reason for doing some artwork.
Starting point is 02:15:21 It gives us some feedback in an interesting way. And you can upload that at, No Agendaartgenerator.com. And we appreciate what everybody does. And thank you very much, Darren O'Neill. It keeps them up in the standings. Now we will go to the treasure portion of our time, talent, and treasure. And that we have one executive producer.
Starting point is 02:15:43 And what do we have in total here? Seven associate executive producers. Of a lot of people, we have 1,800 people listening. Not everybody supporting us. not today not today but we will thank sir eric from opalika alabama i think it's opalika isn't it is it opalica opalica our town names our city names are pretty atrocious yeah no we do we watch them constantly but i think it is opalika but it does come in with our favorite executive producer number three hundred and thirty three dollars and thirty three cents and as a reminder if
Starting point is 02:16:20 you are fortunate enough to support us with two hundred dollars or more you get into Associate Executive Producership, $300 or more, executive producer credit, which is Hollywood level. You can use anywhere Hollywood credits are recognized, including IMDB.com. And we are guaranteed to read your note. We thank everybody $50 and above because we're very grateful. And Sir Eric says, ITM citizen John and citizen Adam, here are some V for V. Can I please get some good sumo and no injury karma for me and everyone competing in the third annual Sakura Cup? next weekend. Whoa.
Starting point is 02:16:56 Do we have a producer who's a sumo wrestler? I have no idea. And I don't know what the Sakura Cup is. I don't either, but send pictures. We've got to see your fat butt. You've got karma. If we have a no agent, this is an advertising opportunity. Can you put stickers or embroidery on the sumo thong?
Starting point is 02:17:17 No, you can't put anything on it. The best you could do is have a tattoo and I don't think they like that. Yeah. What? The sumo, the sumo, the sumo, um, association? I, I've watched sumo for probably 40 years and I've never seen a tattoo on a sumo restaurant. You have not been keeping us up to speed on the most recent sumo developments. I know. Opa Lika, you're right. Thank you, sir. Byest Grace.
Starting point is 02:17:46 You're up next. Ryan, Ryan Wicken, Wickenhagen and Townsend, Georgia. 275. Your John and Adam had decided to make my contribution quarterly as opposed to my random here and their donations, because I'm coming more and more to the conclusion that your show might be one of the few places left where the middle still exists. You call things for what they are, regardless of which side it comes from, and that is greatly appreciated and sorely needed.
Starting point is 02:18:23 How come this guy, I think this guy's imposed on my, on my Twitter timeline. I get, nothing but the opposite. No agenda. Sounds like you have an agenda. Jew agenda. His real agenda. Trump agenda. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:18:38 That's what I get. Jew agenda. You guys have built the most important component of any civilization community. You've allowed there to be a middle. I have phlegm. Okay, you want me to take over? Do you need me to jump in? Hold on.
Starting point is 02:18:56 Hold on. I'm going to mute you while you do that. I'll continue while John is, uh, I'll just wait here for a second. And are you done? Component. No, I'm not good. I muted you. I muted you.
Starting point is 02:19:06 I didn't want the phlegm to come through. Go ahead. No, I got to, I got to, I muted myself and cleared my throat. Good. You've allowed there to be a middle. And if there's an able to look to the left of the right to make a choice, then we have no choice. And if we have no choice, we have no freedom. If we have no choice, we have no freedom.
Starting point is 02:19:23 freedom, so we go in the middle. The no agenda show might be the only thing left that can save the Republican. I'm grateful for you both. I'm writing my congressman to demand we have Adam and John's face on the $250 bill instead of Trump. That means we have to be dead. Yeah, we'll put it off. I thank you literally for your courage and for your attention to this matter. Oh, you're welcome. Thank you. That's a very encouraging note. Thank you for blessing us with that. Swim, well, I think is a new donor. I don't recall a Nathan Swim
Starting point is 02:19:59 from Central Point, Oregon. $263.22 Nathan does not have a note, so Nathan send it to us if you want us to do a make good on that. In the meantime, you'll receive a double up karma. You've got Karma.
Starting point is 02:20:18 Mansour Rod in Alpharetta, Georgia, 25794. ITM. and happy birthday America. This is American. Yeah, I know what he means. Zadok Brown, Pukalani,
Starting point is 02:20:30 Pukalani, Hawaii, 257.94. One of the few producers left allowed to listen to the show in Hawaii. And no note, but that does mean another double up karma. You've got. Karma. Jack Schofield in Yankee, Yankee Town, Florida. Really?
Starting point is 02:20:53 town in Florida. $250. Short comment. So John does not bust my balls. This gets me to night status. To join Dame Susie Boot. Scooter.
Starting point is 02:21:10 Is that right? Susie Boot. Scooter of the nature coast. It's Dame Susie Boots scooter of the nature coast. Boot scooter. Yes. Wow. What is, okay. of the Nature Coast and to celebrate 54 years of wedded bliss.
Starting point is 02:21:27 Holy moly. 54 years and they never had a fight. Very nice. Call me, sir, Jacket. Yes, he will be knighted shortly. Oh, there's Leanne Webb, spouse and better half of Steve Webb, OG Godcaster. She's in Riverside, California, 2337. These are associate executive producers.
Starting point is 02:21:48 ITM Adam and John, sorry it's been so long. California, she says, go vote. this Tuesday is election day. For true change, the only sane choice for governor is Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco. Do you know of Chad Bianco? Yeah, he's in fourth. He's in fourth. The other Republican, in quotes, is being propped up by Democrats who know they can't beat Bianco in November.
Starting point is 02:22:16 Living in Riverside, Steve and I know he is the real deal, a man of integrity who loves the Lord. During COVID, Sheriff Bianco fought to keep California open. Refuse to enforce mask mandates and refuse to close churches. Don't listen to the fake polls, like the one John just mentioned. Turnout is predicted to be low, making your vote matter even more. If we all show up for Chad, we make the vote too big to rig. Help us fight the evil running this state. Blessings to you both, Gitmo Nation and California.
Starting point is 02:22:48 We really need God and Chad Bion. Yanco right now. Thank you for your courage, says Leanne Webb. Thank you, Dame Leanne. Good to hear from you. Uh, uh, just ended up picking away here and there we go. Linda. Oh, is this Linda? Am I on Linda? You're on Linda. Linda Lup Atkin in Castle Rock, Colorado, Jobs Karma. Your resume has about 10 seconds to make an impression and most don't. For a resume that gets results, go to Imagemakersink.com. Linda helps professionals and executives turn their experiences into a clear story of leadership, results, and impact. That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K.
Starting point is 02:23:27 And Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes. $200. Jobs. Jobs. Jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got. My love. And we still have a number of people to thank. $50 and above. Those were, of course, our executive and associate executive producers
Starting point is 02:23:45 for episode 1,873. Congrats and enjoy the credits. Our formula is this. We hit people in the mouth. Shut up. And coming in with $85.35 and we're appreciative of that. John Hoybore in Bristol, Tennessee. That is Dutch for a hay farmer.
Starting point is 02:24:18 Just letting you know, as in H-A-Y, hay farmer. Dakota Walker, Boise, Idaho, the first to come in with a boob donation, $80.8. I sent Adam an email. please read and potentially ask for help on, oh yes, I will read this for a second. But I have his note here. Yeah, where is he here? Yes, Sir Dakota. We break for knights.
Starting point is 02:24:45 He is actually soon to be Knight, Sir Dakota, just moved his family from Idaho to Maine. And he is shocked by Maine's elimination of all childhood vaccine exemptions outside. of medical. So you can no longer get it based on religious exemptions. He's very upset because his kids now can't go to school unless they get all of these shots. And he needs help finding an accommodating doctor. I think that's code medical professional or organization who will sign for a real medical
Starting point is 02:25:19 contradiction. And you can contact him at Walker 6607 at gmail.com. Our next boob donation, and we have three of them today, is Kevin McLaughlin. We know him from Concord, North Carolina. He is the Archduke of Luna and lover of America and boobs, and the $80.8. It's there. God bless America in melons, he says. Zobin, X-O-B-I-M, Zobim, Zobim, in Leiden in the Netherlands, our final three boobs.
Starting point is 02:25:52 Greetings from Leiden, right under the European heat dome. Yeah, the heat dome is bad. Christina, you know, she is with child. She should be delivering the child in about six weeks. And it's very, very hot for her right now. It's very unpleasant under the heat dome, which of course is due to climate change. Dame Rita, $68.33. She always supports us every single show.
Starting point is 02:26:18 Thank you so much. Dame Rita, she's in Sparks, Nevada. Cheers to the best podcast in the universe. Peter Carnowski, $61, parts unknown. Dan the quiet man in Kenton, Georgia, small boobs, $606.606. He's going through a major home remodel, and I think I'd go nuts if I didn't have the No Agenda Show. That's why we're here, brother. Les Sarkowski, also with the small boobs from Kingman, Arizona.
Starting point is 02:26:41 Scott Alde in Coral Springs, Florida. And he wants to use, this $55. He wants to use this donation to deduished his friend, $100 Eric. You've been deduished. Eric brought him to No Agenda when Scott Adams died and when Scott was adrift. He says, thank you both for your courage. Oh, you're safe here. Just hang on to the No Agenda Life raft.
Starting point is 02:27:07 Joshua Hopple in Nanjimoy, Maryland. I've never heard of this. How do you pronounce it? I don't know. Why not? That's the robot. I'm not going to ask. Nan G.
Starting point is 02:27:21 Moe. Nan G. Moe, Maryland, $51 and $0.50. D-duishing if time allows. course. You've been deduced. He is the irrelevant artist. There's Dame Rita again.
Starting point is 02:27:34 I think one of these Dame Rita donations is a missing one from a previous show that bounced up here. Well, we're going to thank her again. $50.33.33. ITM. Gentleman, thank you for the twice-weekly weekly dose of sanity and laughter. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:27:47 We always love seeing your name on the list. Dame Rita. Here are the 50s. Terrence Clark, Jacksonville, Beach, Florida. Nathan Knoll in Netherland, Texas. Joshua Johnson, Omaha, Nebraska, Tony Lang from Castle Pines, Colorado, and winding out the list of $50,
Starting point is 02:28:02 Sir Michael from Snohomish, Washington, and the rest are under 50. We do not mention those for reasons of anonymity. 4999s, we see you, the 333s, the 2115s, the 11-11s, the 12, 12s, the 4s, the 3s, all the way down to the ones. Every single amount is appreciated. That's how value-for-value works.
Starting point is 02:28:23 Whatever you get out of the show, send the value back to us. We can't determine what's valuable to you. Only you can do that. As long as you do it. That's all we ask for. In fact, you can even set up a recurring donation. Go to noagendaddonations.com.
Starting point is 02:28:37 Any amount, any frequency is appreciated. Noagendidonations.com. I have no birthdays today, which... Yeah, it's a real... That's short every which way. It's very odd. Yeah, I thought so. I mean, that doesn't happen that much.
Starting point is 02:28:54 much. No. You can get on the birthday list by sending your birthday note to notes at noagendashow.com. So what we do have is we have one night to bring up to the round table. So if I got my blade, luckily. Ooh, nice, nice. That's your fancy one. Very nice.
Starting point is 02:29:14 Jack Schofield, hop on up, sir. Well deserved. And of course, this is an aggregate of $1,000 over time. You keep your own accounting. We trust you. It is time for me to officially pronounce the cake you as Sir Jacket. And with that, we say, welcome to the No Agenda Roundtable of the Knights and the Dames. And, of course, for you, we have Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay.
Starting point is 02:29:37 We have Harlitz and Halldoll, Red Heads and Ries, Beers and Blunts, Cowgirls, and Coffin Barnex, a great combo. Ruben-Assad, Women, and Rosea, Gason, Hussein, vodka, Vanilla, Bonnet, Suburban, Sparkling, Cider, and Esk, and As Forge, Ginger, and Jerville, and Pablam. And, as always, at the roundtable, we have the mutton and the me. just for you. And you could head over to noagenda rings.com. Take a look at those handsome no agenda knight and dame rings. They are signet rings, so they are accompanied in your package
Starting point is 02:30:04 when you receive them after sending us to your official size and address. Some wax to seal your importance of correspondence with just like all those fancy old school period piece series that we watch on PBS and a certificate of authenticity. And welcome once again to the Noagena roundtable. Reminder, we still have a few of those red nights.
Starting point is 02:30:23 order of the heart pins available for those you want to get in on this offer because that is going away very soon because clearly John is healed. He's as grumpy as ever. No agenda. No agenda meetups. First thing we do here is play the meetup reports we've received. And this is from the 3BR distillery in Keyport, New Jersey. This is Sir R. Daniels coming at you from the 3BR distillery in Keyport, New Jersey, where my pronouns are Viscount and Commodore. and we drink and know things. I need a drink edition. This is Jersey James, calling from 3BR. I really screwed up the organization for this one, by the way.
Starting point is 02:31:08 In the morning, this is Brian. My first time joining this crew. It was a real pleasure. I will be back. It's fun. Go to your meetups. In the morning, this is M.K. Ultramark. Hanging out at the Central Jersey meetup.
Starting point is 02:31:24 Loving life right now. In the morning, this is Joe. really thirsty because the data center keeps stealing our water. Thank you for encourage, Sean and Adam. In the morning. Now, I thank you for the report. We love getting those. Go to no agenda meetups.com to become part of no agenda nation.
Starting point is 02:31:44 It's very simple. It doesn't cost any money. You just look up and meet up near you and go visit one. It's super cool. Like today, if you're in Raleigh, North Carolina, you can go to the Northern Wake June. Fun Times meetup. Six o'clock today at Saints and Scholars in Raleigh. The rest of this month, on the six, it is the Ukrainian meetup. We are excited to get a meetup report from them.
Starting point is 02:32:08 It'll be in Bilat, Cirque, Kiev Oblast. It's a very disputed area. Lots of farms over there. So we're looking forward to see how many Ukrainian meetup attendees will have. Boise, Idaho on the 13th, along with Franklin, Tennessee, Indianapolis, Indiana, the big one on June 14th. Charlotte, North Carolina on the 18th. Rotterdam, the Netherlands, on June 26. We have several in July, August, September, going through to October, almost through to Christmas time. It's amazing how many people love the meetups. Go hang out together.
Starting point is 02:32:39 You have one thing in common. You are children from other lands and you all listen to the show. Noadentametups.com. This is where you get connection that always brings you protection. Every single one of the people you meet at the meetup will be your first responders in an emergency. Noagentametups.com. If you can't find one knee you at no agendameetups.com, start one. yourself, it's easy and always guaranteed a potte.
Starting point is 02:33:01 We have end of show mixes on the prompting people are doing this. They're getting good. And I think the reason why they're good is because they're not using the typical voice that we've heard a million times. they also have very targeted no agenda lyrics, very subliminal. Every single end of show mix tells you to donate. It's very subliminal.
Starting point is 02:33:44 So make sure you listen to it and listen to it loud. And John's tip of the day is coming up. But first we have a couple of ISOs. This is a tradition on the show where we select something that we will use at the very end during the mic drop. I'll go first. I have two. Comedic gold. Comedic gold.
Starting point is 02:34:04 And there's this one. are right about everything. I kind of like that one myself. What do you have? Do you still have celebrities? Now I have politicians, but I'm going to tell you something. I'm going to put these off to the next show and giving you their right about everything. Oh, wow. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 02:34:23 I appreciate that. Hey, but don't worry. There's more John with Tip of the Day. Great advice for you and me. Just the tip with JCP. And sometimes Adam. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:34:43 I know I caught me off guard. Yeah. Okay, we're going to go. Tip of the day is a, you know how garbage bags or these garbage bags, if you're doing anything that's like clearing weeds or brush or you're clearing out your house? They tear. The thing pokes through them. Yeah, they're not very sturdy.
Starting point is 02:35:05 They're made of cheap plastic. Well, they're made a good plastic, but they're not very sturdy. Right. So you want this product, and these are called Durasack, woven contractor cleanup bags. And they're woven. And things don't poke through them. I like Dura sac. I just like Dura sac.
Starting point is 02:35:27 Dura sac. the box that you buy for 19 bucks of 16. It's a 16 pack, Durasack, holds up to 110 pounds of stuff. Wow. Of stuff? Yeah. And without having issues in it, and you can reuse them. You can dump the stuff out and you reuse them again. They're heavy duty contractor cleanup bags. Now, is that spelled D-U-R-A-S-A-C, or do they put a K at the end? D-U-R-A-S-A-C-K-Bags.com. DurasackBags.com. Yeah, your sack will be durable.
Starting point is 02:36:14 Now, I want to tell people to get on our Instagram. Oh, hey, hey, good news. Good news. One of our producers, I don't know who, but I love you and I thank you, I complained about being kicked off of Instagram and I just on a whim I'm like, let me see if I get, and I logged in and was perfect.
Starting point is 02:36:34 I've been restored. Yeah, that's what our people do. Our people are the awesomest. Yeah. So Instagram, no agenda podcast, official site.
Starting point is 02:36:46 We got approved to being the official. Now, what do I do? Can I tag you or how does Instagram work? Now that I'm back on. Oh, how does Instagram work? You just follow us.
Starting point is 02:36:58 Oh, okay. And that's enough. I just follow the Insta, the No Agenda. Yeah, you click on follow. Hold on. Let me do it right now. Hold on a second. So I go to Instagram.
Starting point is 02:37:07 I don't do Instagram. I've never done Instagram. Okay. You have pictures, a ton of pictures on Instagram as you put up there. No, that's not a ton. It's only my daughter for her birthday and father's day. So it's all. Okay.
Starting point is 02:37:21 And no agenda. What is it called? No agenda official? No agenda podcast. Look at this. There's a no agenda show. There's a no agenda show. Who runs no agenda show?
Starting point is 02:37:32 I don't know. We can't find out. No agenda podcast. Follow back. Oh, you're already following me. Okay, how many followers do you guys have? 780. We're official.
Starting point is 02:37:44 We need... What do we need? A thousand? We need a thousand, but we need 5,000. If people want to see photos of my studio. What? But. Yep. You're going to show, I've, okay.
Starting point is 02:38:03 I've only been to your house once in the entire two decades. We've known each other. And I was forbidden from seeing your studio. You would not let me go upstairs. And now, as a cheap, as a cheap gimmick, you're going to post, just a cheap gimmick is what it is. You're going to post, you're going to post pictures of your studio on Instagram. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:38:25 Wow. Wow. Darren says that you asked him to create AI images of his studio. Is that true? No, that's bullcraft. He's lies. He lies. Everybody go get your Durasack and go to No AgendaFund.com for more tips. Created lies for you and me. Just the tip of JC. And sometimes Adam, created by Dana Birdhead. The fact that Darren O'Neill, who started 11 this morning and is still listening, just makes me feel warm all over. It does. Hey, coming up next on the No agenda stream, a friend of the show, Nick the Rat.
Starting point is 02:39:09 And this will be from his Nick the Rat radio.com, the Baltic Bedlam. And a reminder that on Thursday, I need to be, I need to tell you guys about tech. Texas Slim. He's having some stuff going on. He needs lots of prayer, but I will be bringing you some updates on him and the Beef Initiative. End of show mixes today come from Just Baker and MVP, and they are dynamite. And we will see you on Thursday. Make sure you have a good weekend. What's left of it. Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, Fredericksburg, Texas in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And I'm from Refinery Row. I'm John C.
Starting point is 02:39:52 borac. Please visit Knowagintendatonatonatonatcom. The value for value works. If you participate in it, we think we delivered the value to you today once again. Until Thursday, adios,
Starting point is 02:40:05 mofos, hooey, hooey, and such. They think a little surgery changed my mind. Please, I'm just getting started. You are more reprob. They're all the producers boo-hoo, saying John's gone soft, his old edges is skew. Adam's sitting there laughing, thinks he's won the debate.
Starting point is 02:41:01 just because my new ticker regulates the heart rate but don't get it twisted I'm still the king of the cynical view I just take a little longer to rip the meteor into they want the old buzzkill well open your ears
Starting point is 02:41:22 I've been standardizing misery for many long long I'm the master curmudgeon the original shade You can't bypass the premium Venom I made The crackpot can dream But I'm holding the fort
Starting point is 02:41:43 A grumpy old captain And this is my cart You want more Rep probate Donate They're negotiating on fuel No agenda in the morning, let's ride. Trump at the table dropping Kofax, no cap clean.
Starting point is 02:42:21 Navy gone, Air Force, junk, whole regime running on vapor steam. Missiles turn the scrap economy flatline, last dropping the tank supreme. But the corporate press got a whole different scheme lean. They leave a deal unclear, caveat stacked like rubble in the bombing scene. Moolah's desperate. Nah, they call it fragile. Twist the narrative machine. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:42:42 Fuming harder than the targets that got cream. Media matrix spinning copium while I rams out of gasoline. They're negotiating. On fumes, but the media is huffing. Copium, clown world carousel, twisting every single zooms in the game. It never stays the same. Take down, play the leverage, call it reckless, just beating. Ignore the wreck fleet, and the sanctions that completed the beating.
Starting point is 02:43:16 It's all about the oil, straight, clothes, prices, heated, press, stay in full, coat retreating deleting every tweeting wapo footnotes flying sources they're repeating reality screaming now rann's been thoroughly beaten left and right boat spinning in their bias intrafuge but only one side's car actually ran out of juice fumes it's over 90 seconds hold up we're not done on fuse media is no agenda value for value y'all support the show donate your cash today hey adam and john shernie They need your dough. C-A-S-H, don't you know.
Starting point is 02:44:16 John and Adam need your stash. Donate your cash today. Hey, hey, yeah, yeah. Donate your cash today. Adam and John sure need your dough. C-A-S-H, don't you know. John and Adam need your stash. Donate your cash today.
Starting point is 02:44:37 Hey, hey. Mopo. Devorac.org. Slash-N-A. They were right about everything.

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