No Agenda - 1885 - "Adult Day Care"

Episode Date: July 12, 2026

No Agenda Episode 1885 - "Adult Day Care" Adult Day Care Executive Producers: Arch Duchess Kim Keeper of the Nutty Fluffers - Daughter's FFA https://linktr.ee/emilie.beason Colin Fannon — Fan...non Fitness (noagenda.fit, code FAUCI) Sir Not Appearing in this Film Associate Executive Producers: Sir FungusAmungUs H.C. Roberts — author, "We Are Running Out of Time to Do Something About…" Dame Shelly Ryan Perussi Sir Tigger Max Ed LeBouthillier (Sir Rocketman) Linda Lupatkin — Imagemakers Ink, Duchess of Jobs Yair Mohr UnblockMeVPN — All-American VPN (UnblockMeVPN.com) End of Show Mixes: Jus Baker (No Agenda Formula) Jus Baker (The Revolution's on Loop) Kevin Trotman (Adam's Prompt Jockey Pointers) Paurian (Pop One for Adam) Paurian (Surfing in the Red Tide) Art By: Jeffrey Rea 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 No Agenda Peerage RSS Podcast Feed Last Modified 07/12/2026 16:47:26 by Freedom Controller  

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Starting point is 00:00:00 30 tons? Adam Curry, John C. DeVorra. It's Sunday, July 12th, 2026. This is your award-winning Kim on Nation Media Assassination, Episode 1885. This is no agenda. R-I.P. Lady G., we're sad. And we're broadcasting live from the swanky Southern District of Amsterdam, the Netherlands. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
Starting point is 00:00:24 And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're all wondering who killed Lindsay Graham. I'm John C. DeVorek. It's crackpot and buzzkill in the morning. You know, it was a little bit of a shock to me. I'm sure everyone had that feeling. Like, this is not the guy. You know, we're all waiting for Mitch McConnell, the croak. Sorry if I put it that crudely.
Starting point is 00:00:45 Mr. McConnell may have been dead for weeks. Well, exactly. We don't even know that. They have to keep that a secret because of the politics of Kentucky, which is run by a Democrat governor. And if he dies. Then a Democrat gets to, then the governor gets to put in whoever he wants.
Starting point is 00:01:02 Is that how it works? Yes. Oh, no, no. And so they have to, so they keep that under wraps. Everyone says, oh, I've had a long chat with him. Oh, yeah, 20 minutes. I had a long chat with him. He's doing great.
Starting point is 00:01:15 And so there's some deadline where after, I think, August 15, at some point in August, maybe it's the first, at some point in August, they can't change it. If he dies after that, then they have to do it, they have, they let it slide the election or something along those lines. So they're worried sick they're going to... Oh, that's why. That makes so much sense because I was wondering...
Starting point is 00:01:38 I hadn't considered Kentucky. I didn't know Kentucky had a Democrat governor. Yeah, Bashir, the famous Bashir. Bashir, that's right. Well, so when I heard this very early here, most people were asleep probably. And it's always great how many people think I don't know that Lindsey Graham died. My goodness.
Starting point is 00:02:00 Everybody, in case you hadn't heard, case you hadn't heard, I appreciate it. Well, they figure you're in Europe. Yeah, that's good. It's not news in Europe. No, no one here cares. But I do because for as much as we laughed about them, you know, Lady G, Lindy Hopp. I think at one point we even had a trigger warning. Didn't we have a Lindsay Graham trigger warning?
Starting point is 00:02:25 I don't remember a Lindsay Graham trigger warning. Let me see it. It would be something we'd do. I have the view trigger warning. I'm sure we had a... Let me see. Lindsay or Lind. I bet you we had that.
Starting point is 00:02:39 Would it be Graham? I looked for end-of-show mixes. Greyham. Yeah. Oh, here we go. Listen, I believe in a one-china policy, but I would be willing to fight for Taiwan. Okay.
Starting point is 00:02:54 Not quite a trigger warning. Not quite. It says trigger warning, but it wasn't. It wasn't what I thought. So there's the way I'm looking at this is a possibility. I mean, we know about the pricker. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:06 And these different ways you induce a heart attack. And so the suspects, if he was killed, would be, it could be Iran. It could be Russia. It could be China. Based on that last clip he just played, it also could be the Vax. No, it's so obvious. And in my opinion, it was genetics. No.
Starting point is 00:03:28 I can't believe that you miss the obvious. Which is what? Exploding microphone. Come on. The genetics is the key. No one's discussing genetics. His dad. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:03:44 As a former hospital patient in the heart wards, the thing they keep coming around. Do you have any heart disease in your family, in your family, your mom, your dad, blah, blah, blah. They go on and they make a big fuss about it. Lindsay Graham's father died of heart failure at 68. Yeah. That will do it, wouldn't it?
Starting point is 00:04:10 And that's Occam's Razor. That's the easiest explanation. I mean, we'd all like to think he was killed by the Iranians who had, you know, headed out for him. But no. To what end, though? To what end? Like, as a message somehow, what would the point be? It would be no point.
Starting point is 00:04:25 If you don't claim it. There's no point in killing Lindsay Graham. No. The conspiracy theorists are fun to listen to, but there's no point. It was genetics, plain and simple. I'm with you. I'm with you. I saw him, his last appearance there with Zelensky, and he didn't look that great.
Starting point is 00:04:46 He looked a little more staked over. Well, he's tired. He flew to Ukraine and back. Yeah. The guys beat himself up. I'm surprised he got the 71. Well, anyway, here's just, so we have it on record, one of the first. reports that came out at this hour.
Starting point is 00:05:01 We have just learned in the last few moments that Senator Lindsay Graham from the state of South Carolina has died at the age of 71. His staff said in a brief statement posted to social media just late tonight that the senator suffered from a brief illness and then passed away. This was on this, this, by the way, was annoying. A brief and sudden illness. I mean, couldn't they just say a heart attack? I mean, we know that.
Starting point is 00:05:26 Well, later this morning, I noticed, as the. reports came the later ones just before the show. Yeah. They all talked about cardiac arrest. Yeah, because someone heard that on the police scanner. That's what that was. Well, that makes a little more sense than a sudden illness. Yes.
Starting point is 00:05:43 Yeah. Well, that's why. Why can't you just say it had a heart attack? I mean, why so cryptic about a sudden brief and sudden illness? Well, I guess technically that's right. That was the press release. That's the problem. Well, that was from his office.
Starting point is 00:05:55 That's where that came from. Yeah, from his office. That was odd. I mean, why? Why don't you say he had a heart attack? Well, that's... It's annoying. It's annoying. It's annoying. It's annoying, yeah, minimally. If I die of a heart attack, tell everybody it was the Russian pricker right away.
Starting point is 00:06:11 Put out a good release. Well, definitely. So here's... I got a couple of shorties here from CNN. We're learning that longtime Republican Senator Lindsey Graham has passed away. His office says he died on Saturday night. After what they call a brief and sudden illness, The statement says Graham's family is asking for privacy at this time. He represented the state of South Carolina in the U.S. Congress since 1995.
Starting point is 00:06:38 Let's bring in CNN's Alex Michelson, anchor of the story is, Alex, you are on the West Coast there. How are you processing this news that has just come in, the shocking death of a senator who had just been in Ukraine and had just met with the Ukrainian president, and now we're learning he has died. I love that. He was just in Ukraine and now he's dead. How are you, what are you, what are you, what are you, what is this, how are you feeling in this moment? There's so this coming out of nowhere.
Starting point is 00:07:09 Now, that Lindsey Graham, one of the most important and influential voices in the United States Senate for many years. Now, this is what's kind of sickening. I mean, we'll be honest about it. We were kind of annoyed by Lindsey Graham. He was a war mong. He always wanted to bomb everything. He wanted to kill everybody. He seemed to like killing. And somehow we had affection for him. But I don't hear many people just coming out and saying, hey, man, he was kind of a crazy warmonger. You know what I mean? No, they're not going to do that. Well, why not? Well, I wouldn't they? One of the most influential voices in the Senate. You know, you speak ill of the dead. I mean, they'll get to that later, maybe.
Starting point is 00:07:54 No, I don't think so. Not the way we can do. Well, he is, he did represent the military industrial complex as good as you can get, as good as it gets. I mean, yes, absolutely. Somebody who has been one of the biggest champions of more United States military intervention. There it is. Somebody who has championed the idea of military intervention in Iran for many years. Somebody who's championed the United States relationship with Israel very closely for many years. and now all of a sudden, you know, there's been so much conversation about Mitch McConnell's medical reality right now.
Starting point is 00:08:33 Bring it in. Nobody would have thought this would come now. All right. So then we get into the who, what happens now? As we all, I think, are just in shock at the idea that Lindsay Graham has suddenly died and also reflecting on a life of decades of public service. And he was just in Ukraine. He was just meeting with the Ukrainian president. What did he accomplish on that trip? And assuming from what we saw in all of the videos, the statements that he was making,
Starting point is 00:09:05 he appeared to be in very good health, just in unusual form. There was certainly no outward indication that there was anything physically wrong. His office saying this was a very brief, sudden and brief illness, they said in their statement. And we don't know what that means. because he was posting about President Trump's trip to NATO and conversations that he was having with folks about that like two days ago. So how brief was this illness?
Starting point is 00:09:36 We don't know what exactly that means. Is that a heart attack? At this point, I think a lot of it would be speculation to try to think about that. But yeah, I mean, Lindsay Graham, by every indication, was working up until the very very, last day and certainly putting out a public image that there were no issues at all. Supposedly, President Trump spoke to him at 7 o'clock last night, getting ready for the
Starting point is 00:10:04 save. Actually, according to, he was on Meet the Press this morning. Yeah, that's what I heard. And Lynn, yeah, I heard, I watched it. I could have clipped it, but it was just Trump. Yeah, just Trump. You know Trump. With a bad, with a bad phone connection.
Starting point is 00:10:17 It had some kind of buzz in it. It's really bad. And Lindsay Graham was scheduled to do the show today. which is the funny thing. And Trump said he sounded fine. He talked to him at seven last night and then he died maybe around 8.30. He may have been the last guy to talk.
Starting point is 00:10:37 Well, he's obviously something in the house talked to him. And he says he sounded fine, except he was tired. Yeah. But by the way, what was he doing in Ukraine? Oh, I can tell you. I actually, glad you asked. He had a whole press conference. And I have, I clipped a couple of, what is it here?
Starting point is 00:11:01 I clipped a couple of his things here. Yeah, this is it. China has an oversized influence. I'd like them to use their influence for the good of the world. I don't believe Putin is there yet, but it wouldn't take much to get him there. and the sooner we can have a dialogue about peace, the quicker this war is over. I've never been more optimistic than I am today, that we have the formula to end this war. Help Ukraine be more lethal.
Starting point is 00:11:35 Let those supporting Russia to know. I love this. The formula to stop this war is let Ukraine be more lethal. Sounds like a plan. It's going to be a price to be paid if you keep doing it. And to try to find the off-ramp, not to humiliate Putin, but to end this war so that Ukraine will thrive and survive. We have a magic moment in time here. In the coming months, if we do this right, increase Ukraine's lethality. Lethality.
Starting point is 00:12:09 Get people to help us with Putin rather than propping him up, we can end this war. So his whole plan was get China to lean on Putin. What's that got to do with his trip? He could have made that same announcement in South Carolina. He doesn't have to be in, what was the real point of going to Ukraine? It doesn't make any sense. Well, he was in Turkey, you know, so is it, do you hear like, do you hear like the audio cutting out from time to time? Is that just me?
Starting point is 00:12:42 It's not happening over here. Okay. You know, he was in Ankara, you know, trying to sell stuff. And, yeah, he's probably also going over to Ukraine. Hey, man, you got to talk to those Europeans, buy some more stuff because we got stuff to sell from South Carolina. Maybe it's a sales job. Yeah, well, he is a sales guy in some funny way. The thing that makes it odd, though, besides Mitch McConnell being the obvious one, I'm telling you, I hear something.
Starting point is 00:13:09 You don't hear that. Okay. Well, I'm sorry for this. Yeah, there it is again. It's like it sounds like my roadcaster wants a reboot. This is not good. I think we should probably do that, actually. Hey?
Starting point is 00:13:25 What? I think the roadcast... It makes a noise before us, help me. Yeah, I think we should probably... Yeah, it's about to freeze up. I can tell. I know these things. Yeah, you get a feeling for it.
Starting point is 00:13:40 That's what you would... I mean, after using some gear for years and years, you would get a I think we should take it until it freezes up. No, no, no, no. That could crash everything. Hey, maybe there's some petting in there.
Starting point is 00:13:54 Some petting. Petting. Okay, stop tape. Test one, two. It is there. Okay. All right. Yeah, I think that was a wise decision.
Starting point is 00:14:27 Well, yeah. It's one of those wise decisions I make from time to time. I'm like, yeah, maybe I should, because I could hear it going, and then the next moment is it's going to be a total freeze. I won't be able to use the power button. I've got to unplug it, shake it like an etch-a-sketch. So anyway, what I was going to say is that it was weird. We had Mitch McConnell, you got, you know, we're waiting for something on him.
Starting point is 00:14:53 That's all very shady. Then we have Lindsey Graham just dying. And then the president is everywhere telling everybody that Iran's out to get him to kill him. He's number one on the list. He hasn't stopped with this. President Trump issuing a new threat against the Islamic Republic of Iran. He posted this. He's got a dead man switch now.
Starting point is 00:15:14 On truth social within the last hour saying a thousand missiles are locked and loaded and aimed at the Islamic Republic of Iran with thousands of more to immediately follow. Should the Iranian government act on its threat pronounced in many corners of the globe to assassinate or attempt to assassinate the sitting president, of the United States of America. In this case, me. Orders have already been given and the U.S. military is ready, willing, and able
Starting point is 00:15:42 for a one year period of time subject to extension to completely decimate and destroy all of Iran. He ends that post with praise be to Allah signed President Donald D.J. Trump. The praise be to Allah. It's a nice touch. He's been doing that a lot.
Starting point is 00:16:00 Yeah. So then NBC has the story that this all comes from Israel. Now to the alarming report that Israel has warned the U.S. that Iran is plotting to kill President Trump. Kelly O'Donnell is at the White House. And Kelly, this comes from Iran has Yeah, of course. So they have a show during the latter day, this funeral has gone on for days and days. Yeah. So the last photos they had of the funerals, there's people with signs written in English, red signs with white lettering, and they're carrying him to the streets of Tehran, kill President Trump.
Starting point is 00:16:37 President Trump must die. Yeah. And there's not one or two of these signs. No, the whole bunch. And there's giant banners and all the rest of it. And so they're saying, gee, this is the Israel. This Israel, they're the ones that came up with this idea. There's no proof of this.
Starting point is 00:16:51 There's no evidence. No, but that's. And they are intelligence guys. I said, no, but it doesn't, no, there's no, what, what are you thinking? Meanwhile, there's this signage. I mean, come on. Now, the alarming report that Israel has warned the U.S. that Iran is plotting to kill President Trump. Kelly O'Donnell is at the White House.
Starting point is 00:17:12 And, Kelly, this comes as Iran has publicly called for the president's death. And Tom, the White House is not commenting on that report. And yet the president said today that Israel came up with nothing. Now, this all comes as demonstrators in the streets of your. Iran carried those signs written in English, notably, calling for the assassination of President Trump. The president said, today, I've left instructions if anything happens to just literally bomb them at levels they've never seen before, end quote. New tonight, senior White House officials said Iran must issue a public statement pledging the Strait of Hormuz would remain
Starting point is 00:17:47 open to commercial shipping after Iran violated the ceasefire by firing at those ships that had been using that thoroughfare. And I again have from secondhand, but direct to Iran, that nothing has hit anything. There's no people in the way. He may be bombing sand for all we know and Karg Island, apparently, but not the pipes. And so where this goes in podcast land, you got the, I read the documents. You know exactly what's going on. We know who's behind this.
Starting point is 00:18:20 It's obvious. And Trump is going to happen. We also have top Israelis saying we need a new 9-11. That's right. Top Israelis are saying. the new 9-11 is killing Trump. You're getting really close. It's killing Trump. That's what it is.
Starting point is 00:18:31 To get America back on board with our wars, well, the new 9-11 would be President Trump being assassinated, and then Iran being blamed, and then that would probably get the American people behind a total bombardment nukes, maybe even a ground invasion, which is totally insane. Hold on a second. So the cadence is what you're missing.
Starting point is 00:18:50 Yeah, I'm not. He talks real fast and then slows down, and then talks real fast and then slows down in a very distinctive way. The problem is when I get really excited, then it's really hard for me to slow down and keep the... What do you think? Now you got that part nailed.
Starting point is 00:19:05 Jansi DeVorek, what do you think? Is this going to be a 9-11 type style of end? The American people can get behind it. This has got to hurt your voice. Possibly even a ground invasion. What do you say? What do you say? And so we have to look at Israel standing again from a Trump assassination,
Starting point is 00:19:19 especially because he set the table and opened the door that if I'm killed, it's Iran, and I want them totally destroyed, which is Israel's ultimate goal. So he's teed himself up like a golf ball on a tee or a gun that's had the bullet loaded into the chamber. That's right. And cocked it for desperate lecudniks,
Starting point is 00:19:36 for people like Netanyahu's who is convicted, who will go to jail of this war ever ends, he even admits that, wanting this greater Israel project to continue on out of desperation to kill Trump or fund some group to kill Trump. And then that way they'll have, have a more client. They think vice president or somebody, though I don't think they actually think
Starting point is 00:19:59 fans would do that, who would go along with that. So I think that's really in the cards. And I think Trump's made a big mistake saying, if I get killed and they say it's Iran, you know, just know it's Iran. I have respect for Alex. I got respect for this one. And he's very consistent with these things. I remember, I can't do it anymore. You got to remember he predicted the first 9-11.
Starting point is 00:20:23 so um but this flows into this a whole something that I really had to go look at because it was starting to annoy me because there's one thing I was like doing is reading the n dAA because it's fun stuff in there you know during Obama the national offense authorization act um we had folded in there was the smith month um what was the exact term was it the reform act or the smith smith smith month smith because yeah the smith act reform something like that was just the repealing of the Yeah. Yeah. And so,
Starting point is 00:20:53 it became okay to, to propagandize the American people. Yeah. So now there's this new thing in the National Defense Authorization Act. And then there's also the Defense National Act. And he, Alex and his buddy there, they had a conversation about it.
Starting point is 00:21:15 I'm like, you know, you're taking it a little bit too far. You mentioned Section 224, which not many people are talking about. speak. Yeah, we'll talk about it. To Anacasparian about it yesterday. When Anacasparian and Alex Jones are on the same
Starting point is 00:21:28 page, you've got to be careful. You got to be careful. Something's wrong. Something's up. To Anacisparian about it yesterday. Something's wrong. Yes. Man, it seems like this is going to pass. That's freaking wild. That is just wild. This is just for the audience. This is, oh, you can explain it better than I,
Starting point is 00:21:45 but essentially merges the U.S. military and the IDF and also Senator Cotton's Okay. That's, so this is, the talking point that all the podcasts are on. This merges the American military with the IDF. It merges them. Complete melding. There will be no difference between the two. But essentially, yeah, I've seen this too. Military and the IDF. And also, Senator Cotton is trying to merge the CIA and Mossad and make it reverse. Oh, sure. Oh, yeah. That's going to work. Oh, yeah. Well, this is good. Just listen to this. Yeah, they're going to massage in the CIA. That's a good one. The CIA and Mossade and make it.
Starting point is 00:22:20 it irreversible. But that is so freaking wild. Yeah, when this first came out five weeks ago, first they said, it's not true. Well, you can go read 224 in the Defense Authorization Act 2027, that's now passed out all the committees and is in the full House, by to go to the full Senate. And then you have the full new intelligence funding bill that doesn't just merge Mossad with the CIA. It's all U.S. intelligence, live time, synchronicity. They use words like live time, synchronicity. Marriage. No.
Starting point is 00:22:53 No. The word marriage is not in there. Bind. Live time is used. There's a whole bunch of terms. And it says from research and development down to weapons, deployment, avionics, guidance, intelligence, all of it in live time. Fusion, integration, marriage. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:15 So this has gotten so out of control on the podcast that even. Kim Iverson, who I like. You don't really play anything from Kim Iverson because he's kind of monotonous. But this is how she interpreted it. Unfortunately, the amendment to halt the merger of the U.S. and Israeli militaries together has failed. They have shoved this into the National Defense Act and it will pass. This whole idea, which Netanyahu even says, was his idea. This was his plan.
Starting point is 00:23:44 This did not come from our Congress members. He actually put it forward. They said, okay, we'll do whatever you want. our dear leader, B. That's exactly how it went. We'll do whatever you want, our dear leader, BB. See, this is the stuff that drives me nuts. Podcasters, you're giving podcasting a bad name.
Starting point is 00:23:59 From our Congress members, he actually put it forward. They said, okay, we'll do whatever you want, our dear leader, Bibi. And they put it into this bill. The goal of this, according to Netanyahu, is to end U.S. aid to Israel. Now, you might think, oh, that's a great thing. We do want to end U.S. aid to Israel. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:14 The workaround is to no longer need aid from the United States military because you will just become the United States military. Netanyahu said, rather than being dependent on the U.S. military, we become partners. We become partners. We share everything. Here's the article from Responsible Statecraft saying Congress has refused to even allow a full-house vote on a provision that would pave the way for an unprecedented integration of the U.S. and Israeli military industrial complexes. After no debate on Monday, the Rules Committee chose to reject a bipartisan amendment introduced by reps Roe Kana and Thomas Massey that would have stripped the United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative from the bill.
Starting point is 00:24:52 This provision they wanted to squelch creates an executive agent within the Department of Defense whose sole responsibility is furthering U.S. and Israeli military tech integration across nearly every facet of the defense process. It even specifically says in this provision that we will source and look for as much Israeli tech to integrate into our military as possible. That is a bad idea. That's the worst thing I've ever heard of. So if you don't want that, call your congressman, call your senator, tell them you absolutely
Starting point is 00:25:17 want them to oppose that bill unless they strike that from it, that you will not live in a nation that is beholden to another foreign nation. I was going to say something much more grotesque, but whatever. I mean, it's just so obvious. Israel is taken over. We're not a sovereign country anymore. Okay. Okay. Now, so let's everybody just calm down for a moment. And I'll read a little bit of what Section 224 says. But do we, is this unique? Is this the most unique thing we've ever had in our military or in our intelligence? No, we have the exact same agreements with five eyes, with Japan, with Australia, UK, the Ocas.
Starting point is 00:26:00 This is not new. And this executive agent, which is what the entire section starts off with, it will be responsible for synchronizing cooperative efforts between the U.S. and Israel to expand and accelerate bilateral defense technology, research, development, testing, evaluation, integration, and industrial cooperation, which we already do. Yeah, we want to steal their stuff. Of course. Bring it in so we can take a look at it. But the way this is being sold, we're not a sovereign nation. It's all over now. Israel controls us.
Starting point is 00:26:38 No, I personally find Five Eyes much more offensive. How about NATO? Do you think there's any shit? We're about to license, literally build our Patriot missiles with that little actor-danceer boy in Ukraine. Where's the offense? Come on. I know. Well, luckily, and of course, the thing is it has to be a subsidiary.
Starting point is 00:27:02 Yes. Yeah, as you pointed out before. Yeah, actually, I got a, where was that? Uh, let me see. In fact, what we're doing is setting up shop in Ukraine. Here it is what we're doing. Here it is. This way you can't complain that we're not giving them enough.
Starting point is 00:27:20 It's making them yourself. Donald Trump made it sound easy when he promised Vladimir Zelensky at this week's NATO summit that Ukraine could make its own patriot air defense systems. The reality is much more complicated. Case in point, the U.S. granted Germany a similar license four years ago. and Berlin isn't expected to produce a single Patriot system until sometime next year. So potentially this becomes a win-win. But the devil is in the detail here because the hard work will be getting these production lines established,
Starting point is 00:27:53 getting the people trained to manufacture the weapons, testing the weapons, getting them deployed, and spinning all of that capacity up so that it can support Ukrainian air defense. As the case with Germany shows, the process of finding support. suppliers for parts and getting manufacturing online takes time. An experts say with daily attacks from Moscow, a license to make patriots will do little to meet Keeves' immediate needs on the battlefield. Exactly. Just everybody calmed down.
Starting point is 00:28:27 It's unbelievable. It's all about Israel. Israel. Israel is going to get over there. Okay. All right. you know, this is, it's okay because people will come around eventually, just like they're coming around now on the Candace Owens thing. Man, she signed her own death warrant by going on Sean Ryan for four hours and talking all that nonsense. I mean, this, this preliminary trial is, or preliminary hearing is really showing that there's a, you know, there was no, no autopsy report.
Starting point is 00:29:00 Yeah, there was. It was, it was under seal it for this very moment. Oh, my goodness. Yeah. Well, it's all right. You'll come up with something new. Even, I didn't, I should have clipped it, but your boy there who's Nick, what's his name? Nick Fuentes.
Starting point is 00:29:20 Yeah, Nick. Yeah, Nick had a whole thing today. It's like, the reason why everyone's about is anti-Israel is because you make a lot of money. You get a whole bunch of clicks. You get a lot of followers. And he goes so far as to say, I think some foreign countries are actually paying these people to say that stuff. Yeah, the internet is a mess. Gee, didn't that happen to one of our most famous podcasters some time ago?
Starting point is 00:29:43 Yeah, I think so. It's just the thought. Tim Poole was getting paid by the Russians, was it? Well, he wasn't really getting paid by the Russians. That was the Canadian girl who was getting paid by the Russians, and Tim Poole just thought he was good. Look at all this money I'm making. I'm that good.
Starting point is 00:30:00 I'm opening a skate park. And then the money dried up. up and hey, it wasn't that good. Well, he didn't get to skate park. No, I think he did. He's still making money.
Starting point is 00:30:11 Yeah, I don't know how much, though. I don't know how much. Apparently, if you have like a million views on YouTube, you can make like $20,000 off of that in a month. That's not my understanding. No, that's, well, that's what people are saying.
Starting point is 00:30:26 It seems like that. I heard it is $1,200 per million. Really? You need, you get $1,200 bucks if you get a million. No, well, then that's not worth it. Unless you're being paid by somebody else. Oh, that's where the money is.
Starting point is 00:30:40 That's what we got to try to get to. Yes. So. You know, the influencer. Yeah. We're influencing nothing. Yeah, we are. We're influencing.
Starting point is 00:30:51 We're not influencing anything that makes us money. Oh, man. Yeah. Christina's making bank, though. She's doing the influencer thing with this baby. Can't get the baby to come out before we leave. But, you know, she's like, Oh, he got baby carriages and play pens and all kinds of stuff going on.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Oh, good. She's got a, she's got. Yes. Yeah, she's learned something from you. Yes, I encourage this, of course. So let's talk about the Air Force One scandal, which the BBC went on and on about. Why has the Trump administration ordered several journalists from the New York Times to give testimony under oath over their coverage of the new Air Force One?
Starting point is 00:31:34 Four journalists from the paper have been subpoenaed to appear before a grand jury in Manhattan on Wednesday next week. It's a process that will decide if there's enough evidence to charge a person with a crime. So far, there are few details as to what the main objections are to the New York Times reporting. But in a statement to the BBC, the Justice Department said it's investigating illegal leaks of national security information. Well, last week, the New York Times wrote articles about the new Air Force One plane, gifted to President Trump personally by the Qatari government last year. Mr Trump used it to arrive at the NATO summit in Turkey just this week, but boarded the old Air Force one home.
Starting point is 00:32:16 And that raised questions as to why. Well, the Times quoted people, it said, were briefed on the new plane's capabilities who spoke on condition of anonymity. The Times reported that they suggested the new plane doesn't have all the features of the old plane and that it lacks defensive countermeasures of the previous model. We obviously asked the New York Times for an interview today. They sent us this statement.
Starting point is 00:32:41 The appearance of federal law enforcement agents on the doorstep of news reporters should shock the conscience of any American who believes in... Wait a minute, they talk to the New York Times and this Brit is the guy who answered? Where's my New Yorker talking? Or is they're just reading this? I think this whole thing is rich coming from the British. the Constitution and the press freedom it protects. Our journalists report the facts and advance the American public's right to know how their government is operating and their taxpayer dollars
Starting point is 00:33:13 are being used. This brazen act should be seen as nothing more than an attempt to prevent the public from knowing what is happening in their country by intimidating journalists from doing their jobs. But that's not what they're after. They just want to know who leaked it from the administration side. They said that, but what's funny about this is during this, this is a three-part clip. Yeah. There's never one
Starting point is 00:33:41 mention of Obama who was the worst at this. Yeah. He was. That Rosen guy was thrown in jail. Throwing jail, yeah. Thrown in jail. There was all his Obama was the worst for this. And there's never a mention,
Starting point is 00:33:57 Nari, let's say. Nari a mention. Nair a mention. Nair, a mention. of Barack, but we continue. Well, let's get some more details with Daniel Lipman. He's a White House and Washington reporter with Politico in the US Capitol. Daniel, thanks for joining us. First of all, the president has made absolutely no secret that he's very impressed with this new plane supplied by Qatar. He likes to point out how modern it is and its luxurious fittings and so on.
Starting point is 00:34:27 Some did question the wisdom of accepting a plane from a plane. foreign state in the first place though and also the security upgrade will have been very expensive surely yeah this was going to be a year-long plus process because there are various things you have to retrofit with this plane in terms of anti-missile technology other features to prevent against electromagnetic pulse attack in case of a nuclear strike on this plane And so it raised a lot of eyebrows when he flew back from the NATO summit in Turkey with the old plane, especially after Iran and the U.S. resumed hostilities. And so I think that this is an embarrassing incident for Trump.
Starting point is 00:35:20 And that's why the Justice Department is taking this as seriously to try to find out the times of sources. Now, the way I heard it is that it really was. a last, like a total last minute switch, which Trump totally downplayed and lied about, which was kind of dumb. Like, oh, yeah, the troops want to see it. And I think they might have been trying to smoke somebody out in the first place. You know what I mean? Yeah, maybe. That's what it feels like to me.
Starting point is 00:35:49 Sounds reasonable. I mean, the whole thing was, yeah, he didn't handle it. No, he handled it wrong. No, it was completely wrong. I mean, when he was on the plane with the reporters, they were moaning about having to close their windows. Yeah. He said, well, you know, it's dangerous flying around with me.
Starting point is 00:36:09 Yeah. You're taking your life in your own hands and flying around with me. They get me. They get you. Yeah, you all dead. Yeah. Part three. And can you expand a little bit more on the Times reporting?
Starting point is 00:36:21 Because they do go into some detail as to what they think might be lacking on this plane. Yeah, so it's a missile capability likely. We don't know all the details yet, and they're keeping that close to the vest. An FBI senior official told the times before their publication to urge them not to do this article, but we've seen that in cases before where there's security-related stories that major publications want to do, and the government wants to not have that in the public eye. but it is pretty chilling because you don't want to have sources fear that they're going to be sent to jail because of what they told the times. And even President Trump alluded to how it was almost like a little bit of a risky flight because it's right next Turkey is right next to Iran.
Starting point is 00:37:16 And every passenger on that plane had to pull up their window shades because of security precautions. And so there's a reason why a lot of people were suspicious of Qatar giving this plane to the U.S. in the first. This guy is breathless and he's kind of boring now. Well, that's right. Mr. Trump has been talking about his own security this week, hasn't he? As you mentioned, those comments about the plane. But, I mean, he's got reason to be fearful because only today we had more threats coming from the Iranian regime.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Yeah, and especially not saying that Qatar did anything to this plane, it seemed like this is hyperventil. This is why we have experts to look at it. But there is a lot of concern among the security community in this country that we shouldn't take a plane from a country like Qatar, which historically had pretty strong links to Iran. Hmm. Yeah, maybe. Hello? Well, that plane is kind of laughable. I had, let me see. I have two clips about this from global news. Following funeral processions in two other cities, Iran buried the late Supreme Leader in the town where he was born. Wait, that's not the one. Here it is. This is the one.
Starting point is 00:38:34 Now, the potential plot appears to have led to a plane change for the president. The trip to the NATO summit in Turkey was on the new controversial plane gifted by Qatar. To leave, Trump took the old Air Force one. The White House says because of the threats, it was using distraction and misdirection. But there are reports the new aircraft doesn't have the same defensive countermeasures, to protect it from attack. This is an aircraft that was specced out and prioritized for luxury, not safety. Trump actually changed back to the new plane for the last leg home.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Once back in the U.S., he told the New York Post he's left instructions, should Iran ever be successful? If anything happens to him, he says, it should be bombed at, quote, levels that they've never seen before. Yeah. So, in conclusion, what do we really think this is? There was a real threat
Starting point is 00:39:29 or they just wanted to smoke somebody out. It seems like one or the other. Could be both. Yeah. Whatever the case, he took the right plane and yeah, okay, he's fine. They made a big fuss about it, but then... Well, the fuss is because the,
Starting point is 00:39:46 because the journalists feel that they need to protect their sources, which they do anyway. And they should. Yeah. I agree with that. Yeah. But at the same time, they shouldn't have a bunch of leakers. If you got leakers, who's,
Starting point is 00:39:58 fault is not the journalist's fault. No, but that's why they just want to know. Who was it? Tell us. They can't make them tell them, can they? No. Doing what Obama did, which was throw him in jail. Well, most of these guys in New York Times, well, the New York Times has got a good
Starting point is 00:40:17 legal team for this. And they had, in fact, one of the guys who did the Rosen case, I think. Yeah. On one of the shows, yacking about it. And no, they can't do anything. And it's a bad look. It's a very bad look. The whole thing, everything's bad.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Everything's bad. No one's looking good at all. I think we should... Here's what I think we should do. I think we should be doing a three by three because you brought them. Okay, well, this I'm going to talk about this. Hold on. Before we do anything...
Starting point is 00:40:53 And now it's time for three by three. Experiment by JCD. Comparing stories from ABC. CBS and NBC The Never Endings That's right This is the top three news networks The top three news programs
Starting point is 00:41:09 And we listen to what they say How they say it Is it exactly the same? Do they have the same stories? They have Nat Pops. What do we have today? Yeah, well this is a return to the opens. Oh, the opens, okay?
Starting point is 00:41:23 And the reason is Because I wanted to discuss a note Someone sent us an old hack, a hack, a guy used to be in the business. Barronet Baylor, actually, a.k.a. Sir Camera, Chris. Who sent his long memo on a technique they use on these shows. And it's exemplified by these three openers. Now, the openers, I think we should do them in reverse order. In other words, the most ineffective,
Starting point is 00:41:54 and with the lowest ratings is CBS. Then comes NBC. CBS has the lowest ratings? Of the news shows, yeah. Really? So I thought Barry Weiss was going to fix everything. After I'm done, I'm now convinced Barry Weiss is incompetent. She doesn't know anything about broadcaster.
Starting point is 00:42:18 No, she's a sub-stacker. Yeah, she's a writer type. She's a substack. And she's never worked in the business. She's never been on it. She's not like a, she hasn't even been, you know, sitting in the panels or anything that I know of. I never saw her.
Starting point is 00:42:34 Have you ever seen her? I've seen her being interviewed. I saw her making a fool of herself on Rogan once. So no, I don't think she, she's not a broadcast person. You're right. She's a writer. And that's the worst kind to put on broadcast. television. No, absolutely the worst because your idea of what works, what works in writing does not
Starting point is 00:42:58 work in broadcasting. So let's start with the worst of the group. This is the opener, the week opener for CB. This is July 10th. This is Friday shows. They're all the same from the same day. And we go, start with CBS, which is a minute. They actually stretch it out. I'm surprised it's this long. It's the shortest. It's the shortest of them. It's the shortest for sure. Sure. Everything they do is wrong. Their opener sucks. Let's listen. Good evening. I'm Major Garrett in for Tony DeCobal. Tonight. Flood emergency in the heartland, the record surge of water devastating parts of Missouri. Nearly a hundred water rescues reported many of them campers on the swollen banks of the Black River. The powerful storms threatening nearly 100 million Americans, Rob Marciano, tracking it all. Wrong target. Ice officials now saying the Mexican...
Starting point is 00:43:50 migrant who was shot and killed during a traffic stop in Houston was not the person they were looking for. The new details. Flyover controversy this July 4th salute off the coast of South Carolina triggering suspensions for the pilots. Now, the Secretary of Defense Pete Hegsef has weighed in. Royal Reunion Archie and Lillibet spent time with their grandparents and who else paid the king and queen a visit. plus Steve Hartman on the road. How a lonely little boy started a wave of kindness. Who are you?
Starting point is 00:44:28 I love you, too. From CBS News headquarters in New York, this is the CBS evening news with Tony DeCopold. Okay, okay. So first of all, it's not even their guy, the guy who is no good, Tony. Tony's on vacation. He's so bad.
Starting point is 00:44:44 So they start off with, if it bleeds, it leads. You don't start off with why. Water. Water is just not that exciting. And then to wrap it up with a Megan Markle type, the kid and everything, and then this constant incredibly, I'm really, I just want you to feel very, very excited because I've got some noise going on behind me. That means there's news people. There's news. Water and royalty.
Starting point is 00:45:10 It's no good. It's no good. It's no good. No. It's so no good that by contrasting it with the other two networks, it's embarrassingly bad. It really is. One of the worst I've ever heard them do. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:25 So I always felt the same way. So we go on to the next highest in rating, which is CBS at the bottom. So we have NBC with Yamas. And he does a full two minutes. Too long. It's too long. I agree. I think it should be a minute.
Starting point is 00:45:41 It should be under two minutes. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It should be 130. Just under two minutes. I don't care. But it's exciting. Oh, boy.
Starting point is 00:45:51 Our new reporting on the security concerns of the brand new Air Force One as combat with Iran ramps up. New video of a fresh round of attacks as President Trump cast doubt on a new deal. And why we just learned the president did not take the new Air Force One on part of his latest trip. Plus the mystery renovations at the White House, the scaffolding and tarp going up today, what the president is renovating now. New revelations in the Charlie Kirk murder case, the video of the suspect's roommate, telling prosecutors Tyler Robinson admitted to the killing and never before seen images of the rifle allegedly used in the assassination.
Starting point is 00:46:32 Inside the chaotic race to replace Senate candidate, Graham Platner, who just ended his campaign. The candidates jumping in, and we'll show you how one is even repurposing his old campaign signs from a past election. No, no. flash floods on the move, powerful storms putting millions at risk, flight delays and cancellations piling up across the East Coast. Deadly shoe factory fire, dozens killed as this building goes up in flames. Workers fleeing to the rooftop, one clinging to the building. The college athlete found dead after a July 4th party on a remote island. His parents now demanding answers. What could be the last photo of him before his death? Brooklyn Bridge Rescue,
Starting point is 00:47:16 dramatic video as the NYPD climbs 100 feet up to save a woman's life. This is like local news. Flaming propane arson attack, a man lighting a business on fire, the officers rushing in to put out the flames. Disturbing video capturing a suspect hurling a Molotov cocktail at houses of worship. And remembering Bonnie Tyler, the total blitz of a heart singer whose music transcended generations. Nightly news starts right now.
Starting point is 00:47:45 Wow. This is NBC Nightly News with Tom Yomas. That's interesting to throw a one-hit wonder in there. One song, Total Eclipse of the Heart. Uh, hmm. Again. Well, ABC does the same thing. But, yeah, they throw it in, too.
Starting point is 00:48:07 All those stories are totally different than the one CBS portrayed, which are all boring. Yeah. I mean, and they like to use mysterious new, addition. He uses a lot of teaser words in his... Here's what I'm missing. I am missing explosive diarrhea
Starting point is 00:48:23 from these stories. That's the story. That's what people want to hear. That's what I'd have. Explosive diarrhea now in 36 states. You got my attention. I'm surprised they didn't... Now, I have to assume, it was explosive diarrhea. This story's been going on for weeks.
Starting point is 00:48:41 A Friday story? It's been going on for weeks. Yeah, you're right. Okay, well, we're going to go, now we have the clear winter. The winner. And it's long. It's too long. Yeah. I agree. In fact, it's way too long.
Starting point is 00:48:57 It's over two minutes. But it's got all the right elements. Wait a minute. I got to try this for myself. Hold on. So let me try this. Because you got to do it. I think you have to do it like this.
Starting point is 00:49:09 What is it? Where's my teletype? I need my teletype. Okay. So you go. At this hour, explosive diarrhea, now on 36 states, we've got the video. I mean, that, that, if you can start it off like that, you've got a new show. Except you left out one thing which I'll discuss after we play this clip.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Now this... Sorry, wait, wait, stop. That was my cue. Yeah, it was. Okay. Play the clip. Tonight the breaking news, the U.S. strikes Iran. Then Iranian drones and missiles intercepted. The situation intensifying. Also breaking a horrific story tonight, a flight instructor jumping from the plane, leaving his student to land the plane on her own.
Starting point is 00:49:50 Good one. First tonight, the U.S. and Iran. The U.S. has dozens of Iranian drones and missiles have been intercepted in Kuwait and Bahrain, home to several American bases. Martha Radden standing by with late reporting. Tonight, that horrific story emerging, the shocking moments on a plane. An instructor jumping from the plane, leaving his young student to land the plane on her own, what she did to save her own. life. New images from the NYPD tonight of terrifying moments on the Brooklyn Bridge, saving a woman climbing the support cables. In Maine tonight, the all-out scramble to replace Graham Platner in the race for Senate. What happens now, some Democrats in that state furious saying, did we give up our chance
Starting point is 00:50:31 to beat Susan Collins? Tonight, the new and critical hearing in the case against the man accused of killing Charlie Kirk. One of former romantic partners, as Tyler Robinson said, the day after Charlie Kirk was killed. At this hour, we are tracking powerful storms right now in the east. Sam Champion is here with the forecast. Sam Champion's 100 years old. Tonight, the mom who said the flu shot killed both of her 18-month-old twins. Nice.
Starting point is 00:50:57 She railed against vaccines. Tonight, she's now facing murder charges. What? The nail-biting moment is the father and his two daughters who came face-to-face with a charging bear. What that father did. Tonight, the fiery F-16 emergency, making an emergency landing, bursting into flames. The images tonight at deadly fire
Starting point is 00:51:15 engulfing a shoe factory in what we know. On the U.S. coast, two sea lions charging towards swimmers on shore. Yeah. There's a major recall tonight involving popular eyedrops
Starting point is 00:51:26 concern over a foreign substance. And we remember Bonnie Tyler and total eclipse of the heart. Forever. And that moment with Bonnie Tyler while we were on the air covering the eclipse and me in a split screen with Bonnie Tyler is something I never thought. I would witness you'll see what she did next tonight celebrating Bonnie Tyler.
Starting point is 00:51:52 From ABC News World Headquarters in New York. This is World News Tonight with David New York. Okay, definitely some good elements. I like the bear. I like that they did. The bear is great. And also the charging sea lion. Charging sea lions is good.
Starting point is 00:52:12 This gets your attention. I like the, they didn't have to do the instructor jumps out of the plane twice. They didn't have to do that. I think that was a mistake. I think it was a mistake too. He started with it. I think it was put in at the last minute, move forward, and it was left in the script. No.
Starting point is 00:52:27 Because this was longer than their normal opener. I think that was a mistake. Yeah, I agree. And they left it in and he just was reading right from the prompter. I mean, they easily could have put in explosive diarrhea. This would have fit perfectly. You could have swapped out the second instructor jumps out of plane with explosive diarrhea?
Starting point is 00:52:45 And I agree. I have a question for the book of knowledge. Book of knowledge. What year was total eclipse of the heart a hit record? I'd like to know that for a second. This has got to be 45 years old. They don't know their audience. And maybe they do. Let's see. According to the Book of Knowledge, total eclipse of the heart, written by Jim Steinman, was released on February 11th, 1983. Come on. It hit number one in the United States on October the 1st of that same year,
Starting point is 00:53:18 spending four weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 and going on to become one of the biggest selling singles of all time. Thus, it has been written. That's a very old song. Yeah, audience is old, come on. Yeah, okay, well, maybe. So here's the, let me read this from this note. All right.
Starting point is 00:53:39 Adam, I think I know why you're noticing breaking news. At this hour. As you join us in this hour, we have breaking news. He has all the beginnings. He has the beginnings. As you join us, we have breaking news. As you welcome us into your home, we have breaking news. At the top of the broadcast, we have breaking news.
Starting point is 00:54:02 And on and on and on. And I'm going to read this. He says, I've written about this a million times. The consultants would sit. us down. I'm skipping ahead here. Sit us down and tell us how dumb we are not to lead our show with breaking news.
Starting point is 00:54:18 That's what the people want, they said. They would have examples and ratings and how they worked at station XYZ in Colorado or Mississippi or whatever. Then two years later, they would come back and say, what are you doing? That's not a breaking news story.
Starting point is 00:54:34 Save breaking news for real breaking news. Lead with another break. So So I, this note came in a while ago. So I studied this on the networks and found an interesting coincidence. Okay. ABC uses breaking news almost every show. Right.
Starting point is 00:54:56 They're number one. There you go. And if you listen to this last one, he had breaking news. Play the beginning again, just the very beginning, because he says breaking news. then he has a second breaking news. Tonight, the breaking news, the U.S. strikes Iran, then Iranian drones and missiles intercepted. The situation intensifying.
Starting point is 00:55:17 Also breaking a horrific story tonight, a flight instructor. Jumping from the plane. Let's do. Hold on. Does he have a third? Leaving his student to lamb the plane up. He actually has a third. At the end of the whole tease, he starts again with breaking news. So he uses it the most. He uses it all the time.
Starting point is 00:55:35 Second most usage. is Tom Yamas about twice a week. Twice a week? About twice a week. That's not enough. That's clearly not enough, no. But he does it about twice a week, and it's exactly the same each time.
Starting point is 00:55:51 If you look up to, I had a clip called Breaking News, which has Yamas two shows in a row. You're kind of all jacked about this. Well, it's because I think it's interesting. And I'm jacked about it because what the consultant said. I got it here. The seven second clip, is that what you're talking about?
Starting point is 00:56:07 Yeah, just, yes. Breaking news as we come on the air. Breaking news as we come on the air. The U.S. launch. Those are two different shows. Breaking news. Right. Hey, breaking news, John, what do you got?
Starting point is 00:56:18 Breaking news. We just should be doing that. Breaking news as we come on the air is what Yamis always says. At this hour. So, yeah. So they have the second highest ratings. And the laggard is Barry Weiss's, who she was. She's not going to listen to, Broad.
Starting point is 00:56:37 Podcasting consultants. Well, also, no, this is exactly because she is a writer. And she's like, this is not breaking news. It's just news. So we shouldn't tag it with breaking news. I can see her saying it. I can see her saying. I can see her saying we, nothing's breaking news basically on a TV show.
Starting point is 00:56:56 It's not breaking. Very little is breaking. Let's be realistic here. It happened hours ago or days ago. It's bullcrap. It's not breaking news. Breaking news, nobody knows anything at this hour. So the ratings follow exactly the formula that the consultant saves.
Starting point is 00:57:15 You use breaking news as much as you can. Yeah. And in fact, this is exactly what happens. And so you have a situation at CBS that as much as I disagree and I don't like Scott Pelly, I have to say he's probably right. Barry Weiss is incompetent at this. She should not be running a, TV network.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Yeah. And here's the cool thing. I really don't care because it all sucks. They're all no good. Well, it does all suck, but I'm just trying to point out. The consultants have a point. Yeah. Well, that's why the consultants.
Starting point is 00:57:53 That's maybe what we should, you know, we give away this advice for free. We should be consultants. Yeah, it would make some real money. Well, here's the thing that none of the news networks had, and I thought it would be breaking news. but it wasn't breaking news because it's just not breaking news. Early this morning, the Pentagon declassifying a bunch of videos that look weird, like this one. Look at this. What's that?
Starting point is 00:58:18 What is that? We don't know. They don't say that this is basically, you know, all they're doing. They're releasing videos with very, very little context. This one right here, a lot of people are talking about this. This is some sort of like half deflated balloon that's floating. Well, that's what witnesses apparently said it looked like as it was flying with the wind, maybe 12 feet, maybe 15 feet according to the report, but again, inconclusive.
Starting point is 00:58:48 Okay. This, by the way, is NBC talking about the latest UAP UFO video release? What about this one? Is this like lens flaring, lens artifacting, or is that actually something that is shooting off some... So this being NBC, this this, this, this. person should be fired. I mean, if you have UAPs, UFOs, there's a high amount of interest for it, it's just not grabbing people's attention anymore. And the White House has hired this guy from Harvard, Avi Lubb, Loub, L-O-E-B, but I can't help but think of L-U-B-E. And he is part of the
Starting point is 00:59:30 White House UAP Council. And this guy. Well, the Pentagon today released a new Trove of UFO files, and of the 40 new files, 19 of them are videos. They're coming from the Pentagon, NASA, the CIA, the FBI, and the Energy Department. So let's bring it Avi Loeb, who now leads the White House, UAP Council. Avi, what can you tell us? What's in these files? What are we looking at here? Well, first, thank you for having me.
Starting point is 01:00:00 We see documents dating back to 1948, 49, when a conference took place in Los Angeles. Salamos led by Edward Teller that was involving the Manhattan Project earlier and it involves quite distinguished physicists talking about green fireballs that they cannot figure
Starting point is 01:00:21 out, some objects moving horizontally and so these objects remained unresolved and then we're seeing a number of videos from recent years where so this guy is supposed to sell
Starting point is 01:00:37 this? I got a whole I'm going to play one more clip of this guy because he kind of winds it up where I think it was meant to go and this is CBS. Anything else that sort of sparked your interest that says, oh wait, we might have something here
Starting point is 01:00:52 that maybe prove some of these theories or maybe disprove them. No, at this time there is no single video image or any other data that indicates a non-human origin for any of these objects. The star-looking object that you mentioned could be just a diffraction pattern that is often found in the optics of cameras.
Starting point is 01:01:15 So I would say at the moment there is no conclusive evidence, but the good news is that the best is yet to come, that there is classified data that probably is much richer and more convincing. Wouldn't that be breaking news? There's data to come, much richer, more convincing. The solution image of one of these objects would be very revealing. And the fact that the U.S. government, those people in the White House, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Pentagon and the intelligence community and the FBI, the fact that they are reaching out to scientists like myself to try and help them figure it out implies, in my mind, that they believe that some of these objects cannot be human-made. Because otherwise, they would put the reports in a classified memo to the Secretary of War, Pete Hexed.
Starting point is 01:02:06 they would not ask me as a scientist to help them figure it out. So I think we are heading in an interesting direction into the future. The future is better than the past. And we will figure it out using the scientific method by collecting more evidence. It's not a matter of opinions. We should not pay attention to social media. You know, this is a scientific matter trying to figure out the nature of these objects. And we'll get to the bottom of it.
Starting point is 01:02:33 And this is much more inspiring. than the script of Stephen Spielberg in the recent movie Disclosure Day, because over there, the government fights scientists and crashes their car against a moving train. My car is completely intact, and I feel privileged to help the U.S. government. Give them to the Lord. Yeah. That's what I'm saying. It's like everyone gave up on this story.
Starting point is 01:02:58 Yeah, whatever. Another video. There was more, you know, they should have had the foamers out. Did you see all the fomers for the big boy, 410? for whatever that train is. Oh, this is constant. It's not just. Oh, Lord.
Starting point is 01:03:10 There's a million videos of it. I know. Why didn't they have that? They could have had a great foamer. All of this. They're missing everything. All the good stuff. And then this guy's on for 15 minutes on each of the news networks,
Starting point is 01:03:23 boring everyone to death. If you listen to the first clip over, they say this stuff was released by so and so and so and the energy department. Yes. You heard that. Yeah, I did. Why do you think the Department of Energy, where was there involvement? I have a little, just a tidbit here.
Starting point is 01:03:40 Nukes? No. No, what? So I took a tour of Nellis Air Force Base and got to sit in on a training session for some combat stuff. Wait, when was this? How come we did? This was a long time. This is years ago.
Starting point is 01:03:58 Wait a minute. When Comdex was still. Okay, let me just set the scene. You can't just throw that out there. Well, I'm just saying. So I had a conversation with one of the guys that running this, he, we started talking about Area 51. And he says to me, you know, Area 51 belongs to, right? I said, the military.
Starting point is 01:04:21 He says, no, the Department of Energy. Oh. I said, what? Yeah. Area 51 belongs to the Department of Energy. Why? He says, you got me. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:31 Well, you know, I got a guy over there. He runs the technology at the Department of Energy. He says there's a lot of activity. He's in Colorado. He hates it. I mean, he loves his job, but he's Colorado. I think the Department of Energy, because I think they're trying to find some new way of,
Starting point is 01:04:50 or anti-gravity or some form of energy. That's the only logical explanation for it. Well, yeah. Of course. We all want that. Yeah. I'm tired. energy. I'm tired of waiting for my zero point energy. Where is it? Hey, so let's just stay kind of in
Starting point is 01:05:11 technology since that's where you came from. And this was the story that was played up real big. I'm not sure it's as big as it sounds. Mackenzie Sagalos has more. Back. So Brian, Apple has just filed a federal lawsuit against Open AI accusing the AI startup of stealing trade secrets to build its own consumer hardware. Now, I have the 41 page. filing here. Apple writes that, quote, at every level from members of its technical staff to its chief hardware officer and in coordination with business partners, OpenAI has been stealing Apple's trade secrets and confidential information. Now Apple says it uncovered a pattern involving former employees who joined OpenAI. The suit specifically names OpenAI chief hardware officer
Starting point is 01:05:54 Tang Tan, accusing him of using job interviews with Apple employees to seek details about unreleased products and technologies, and then coaching departing workers on how to evade Apple's security procedures. The filing also names a former Apple product developer who allegedly brought a stolen laptop to OpenAI and used it for months to download highly confidential documents, including information from Apple's R&D lab. I think you're uniquely qualified to discuss this story. What are your thoughts? It goes on all the time. Yeah, that was my first thought. This is nothing new. In fact, Apple has stolen more stuff from other people.
Starting point is 01:06:35 And this is what all these companies do. Hey, this is a great product. Hey, oh, I'm sorry. Now it's a part of office. Well, the best example of somebody stealing from somebody, I think, is Google. Yeah, examples. Because Eric Schmidt was on the board of directors at Apple during the development period of the iPhone. That's right.
Starting point is 01:06:55 And he said to himself, hey, this is a hell of an idea. Let's start developing our own iPhone over here at Google, because he was the chairman of Google, and they made the Android operating system and the Android phones, which are worldwide more popular than the iPhone, are totally stolen. Well, they bought it. They bought the Android operating system.
Starting point is 01:07:17 I don't think they developed it. They bought it. Yeah, but it was all from knowing about the iPhone in advance. Yeah, but I think the thing that really bothers Apple... When the iPhone dropped in 2000, It dropped. Pick it up. Somebody better pick it up.
Starting point is 01:07:34 When they first dropped and broke the screen immediately because all those iPhones screens couldn't hold up. And they went to Gorilla Glass after that. Yeah. There was advanced notice. I mean, they didn't, everyone didn't start developing the Android stuff at that day. It was already started. Yeah. Yeah. Remember I had one of the first,
Starting point is 01:07:59 I think I had the first iPhone in the UK. Remember the very first iPhone. Is that the one you dropped in the toilet? Yes. Yes, I had it a week and dropped it in the toilet. And they did not recover back in those days. You put it in rice. We did that.
Starting point is 01:08:17 Rice, kitty litter, everything. It's all documented on my blog. It never came back. I think that the one thing that, I think they're just pissed about the Johnny Ive thing, though. Here's this. So they specifically, get into details of
Starting point is 01:08:30 there's one here about how Open AI was working with hardware firms to carry out a metal finishing technique that Apple had invented. So basically very specific things, also talking about circuit boards and these components that go in to hardware devices. And really, we started to see this
Starting point is 01:08:47 rift between the two companies. Because remember, they signed that landmark partnership just two years ago. It was ChatGBT BT that was baked into Apple intelligence. But then Sam decided to get into the game of Sam Altman's decided to get into the game of consumer hardware. And then he brought in Johnny Ive, who's this Apple alumni, who was a huge design chief, very important to the iPhone's evolution, who reportedly is working on very similar
Starting point is 01:09:10 devices meant for the generative AI era to what Apple's working on right now in House. I mean, I'm very curious to see what kind of device they're going to come out with. What's fantastic device will, because this is really what we need. We need a replacement for these smartphone. Something that will blow everybody away. It'll be so phenomenal. Johnny I... Yeah, right. I'm Johnny I. I created the iPhone and I built a beautiful Ferrari
Starting point is 01:09:39 with batteries. Does anyone buying that thing? Johnny Eyes is one of those guys that probably has some design genius in him, but needs like a prick like Steve Jobs. Yeah, to run him. To tell him to... No, that stinks. That's...
Starting point is 01:09:56 You know, he does no good. I could just imagine Steve Jobs looking at the Ferrari going, this sucks. Go back. Come back to the drawing board. You built me a $500,000 roller skate. That's no good. So I was listening to, I can't remember,
Starting point is 01:10:15 it might have been something with, I don't know, Ted Cruz might have been in the Oval Office. And the president said something that I thought was, it's just like oh that's your hedge because you've got all these data centers and we know that these data centers there's going to be too many of them even if AI is wildly successful then nobody needs all these data centers it just don't need it and he said this and if we let our guard down on AI if I didn't come up with the idea for electric plants producing plants they become a utility Basically, these guys producing, you might as well put them down.
Starting point is 01:10:54 Paul, I think you should mark them down as utilities, because frankly, in many ways, they're more impressed by their electric plants. And they're building them on top of the buildings, alongside of the buildings, standalones right next door. This is kind of genius. It may be completely by accident. But if the data centers don't work out, the amount of energy, gas-fired energy, nuclear energy that will have been built up in all kinds of areas where people have the inverse problem now
Starting point is 01:11:25 if data centers supposedly going to suck away all of their energy taking their electric bills up. This is kind of a distributed grid that is being built here. Here's another thing he said. But you have to see some of the electric producing the generating plants that they're making. Nobody's ever seen because they're brilliant people. And it's a fantastic thing. But if I didn't come up with that idea, maybe somebody else would have I doubt it. because it's too simple.
Starting point is 01:11:48 I mean, it's such a simple idea. Do you know that your friends, Michael, when I came up with that, and I told Mark Zuckerberg, I told Bezos, I told all of the people, AI, Sam. AI Sam. Told them all.
Starting point is 01:12:03 I said, no, no, I'm going to let you build your own plant and I'm going to get your fast approvals. AI Sam. Yeah, and so I guess I didn't believe it at first. They thought I was kidding. You know, they said, and they would submit plans without an electric plant. And I'd get calls from Lee's Eldon, who's a star, environmental, fast approvals, good approvals, but fast.
Starting point is 01:12:23 Then they call up and say, sir, these plants are not taking advantage. And I call them and said, why aren't you? They said, we thought you were, every one of them, they thought I was kidding, because they can't believe it. Number one, they can't believe that they're approved in a period of a matter of weeks. Because if this was somebody else, it would be 20 years before, they're all under construction. We get, we do rapid approvals. and some are nuclear plants because nuclear is now really hot and safe. Safe.
Starting point is 01:12:51 This could be a genius piece of infrastructure for the United States. I think this could be big, much bigger than the AI nonsense. Everybody's got some cheap energy around the corner. You think it's a Trojan horse. No, I think he was like, listen, I don't think this president is stupid. I think he's looking at this going, hmm, I keep hearing about these Chinese models. This is all happening.
Starting point is 01:13:19 But, hey, I'm brilliant because I'm going to get everybody some cheap energy. Well, I hope that's exactly right. What happens. Yes, that would be fantastic. Especially nuclear energy. They've already approved four of these small nuclear reactors. Yeah, nothing in California, of course. Well, no, no, you guys.
Starting point is 01:13:38 You hate Trump, so you don't get any. No energy for you. And, uh, Well, CNBC keeps seeing problems on the horizon. Our next guest warns that a significant slowdown and the payoff of AI could tip the economy into recession. A pollock chief economist and partner Torsten Schlock joins us with more. Torsten. Great to have you with us. So you're basically asking the question, what if it takes longer for this payoff to actually materialize?
Starting point is 01:14:04 Or what if it doesn't happen? What are the odds? How do you assess the risk and the reward here? Well, let's first agree that AI is making a huge difference on all our lives. so it will be a revolutionary technology. It continues to have a dramatic impact. But the key issue from a stock market perspective, any stock price is essentially the net present value of the future cash flows.
Starting point is 01:14:23 So the discounted net present value of future cash flows, then suddenly it becomes important. What is the slope of those cash flows that are coming in the future? And the question now, of course, is what are the assumptions in market pricing today about how quickly revenues will come to the hypers on the back of the investments that they have made? So it's really this simple observation that a lot of investments are being made. And our market is now pricing in that revenues are coming too slowly, too quickly at the right pace.
Starting point is 01:14:47 This is essentially the discussion that we're having in markets and the debate, namely, will the revenues come quick enough? This is going to be such a great collapse. It's going to be so fantastic. It's going to be so fun to watch. And people will still benefit from something from AI. There's benefits to it. But I don't know, AI Sam. I don't know, man.
Starting point is 01:15:08 AI Sam's not looking good. I like AI Sam. A.I. Sam, I am. And so just to wind out my technology segment, do you know what Pallantir actually does? Well, I don't know what they actually do if there's something behind the scenes, but, you know, they're supposed to monitor, you know, it's like an intelligence agency almost. Yes. But you tell me. Okay. So, and this is because I was watching another Whitney Webb appearance somewhere.
Starting point is 01:15:43 Oh, God. I know. And I'm like, oh, goodness, because she's a patenteer, Peter Thiel, Palantir, Peter Thiel. Flock cameras, data centers, all the data centers are going to be in the prison. And so I found.
Starting point is 01:15:57 Block cameras. People are getting rid of, the flock cameras are a problem. And the people are getting rid of them. That's because they're misidentifying stuff. Yeah, it's no good. So Carp was on Charlie Rose in 2009. And it's quite interesting to see him because he's kind of the same guy.
Starting point is 01:16:20 He's not quite as frantic as he is now on his recent CNBC appearances. And he comes from the humanities, you know. This was not, he wasn't a tech guy at all. And after 9-11, you know, the big thing was, well, we screwed up because there was no integration. We couldn't try. We couldn't figure out who was doing what. We couldn't sift through the data. And so the general consensus, I would say, is that Pallantir is just a horrible machine that is built to track everybody and kill you.
Starting point is 01:16:56 That's, I mean, wouldn't you say that's the general consensus of what people think of Pallantir? I think some people think that. Yeah. So, but there's two sides of the Pallantir system. And that's why they're in so many governments. And I thought it was interesting. So I have a couple clips here. And what we do is we use what legal scholars call a predicate-based search.
Starting point is 01:17:14 So we would look at you, and then we would go out and say, oh, there's lots of different things in your life that may be indicative of someone involved in bad behavior. But it would also be very clear how the government looked at you. It wouldn't be a wide net cast into a sea of data that brings back all of all the innocent citizens that are touched by that net. It would be a very precise, very precise operation. And each step in that operation is documented. minute. So this is what I found interesting. The reason why they're so successful is because, yes, you can use them, you can use the Palantir system to target someone individually, but the system keeps a complete record, and I guess it's indisputable, of who used it when it was used
Starting point is 01:18:01 and under what authority it was used. So he gives an example here. Okay, but it's part of your ability to see up, to see around the corner then in terms of before something, before they take it down, You can see patterns of people and or actions and or behavior. Well, what we do is we help people like we did with the Dalai Lama figure out if you actually have been infiltrated. So what kind of data is leaving? And they had been. They had been. And in a massive way.
Starting point is 01:18:25 But then two, we say these people are likely to actually be this. They appear to be teenagers. But they are teenagers that are likely being handled by this organization. Or they actually are teenagers. Or more likely when you're done. with our diagnostic, we say, we are not sure who they are, but we are sure they are in this building. Why don't you send someone to go find out who they are? Why isn't this going to collide head on into privacy and civil liberties? There it is. Charlie Rose, the one he's not asking about your
Starting point is 01:18:54 DNA, he's asking a very decent question. Well, it would if there was a contradiction between finding terrorists and protecting civil liberties, but the exact same transparency you can use to find terrorists, you can use to see what the government's using. The central question, in my view, of civil liberties is how, it's not if the government has data, because let's assume the government has as much data as a health insurance company. It's how is that data being used? Is it being used in a way that's lawful?
Starting point is 01:19:19 Meaning, do they have the right to use it? And is it being migrated into places that's not allowed to be used? We allow the enforcement of rules that the government ought to enforce. And by the way, my experience is they want to enforce, or at least know they need to enforce. And if it's framed in that way, then you can have what is the ultimate Silicon Valley solution. You remove the contradictions.
Starting point is 01:19:39 and we all march forward. You know, I don't know if it's still used that way, 2009 is a long time ago. But the general idea is kind of good. Like, we want to find terrorists, but you can't just be pinpointing, tracking every or any American citizen. So if you're doing it, you have to go through certain warrant procedures. And that is an audit trail that supposedly the Palantir system keeps track of. Well, that's not all that bad, is it?
Starting point is 01:20:07 I've never had that much of an issue with Palantir. Yeah, but the Jews. I haven't had an issue with the Jews either, or the Muslims for that matter. But this is like one of the main things of Palantir. And they target people and they kill the wrong people and they're doing all the killing. I'm like, this doesn't sound right. And yes, we're a flock. Well, flock.
Starting point is 01:20:36 Where was my Whitney Webb stuff? This is another one. Just like Candace Owens, eventually, I think eventually people will stop, you know, getting sick. Do you don't think so? And the reason is not because of their deplorable content or misinterpretation of facts. Their presentation. Candice Owens' presentation is very superior to almost anybody out there. She's really good at presenting it and being convincing.
Starting point is 01:21:10 And Whitney Webb, with that stupid smirk, she's also a convinceer. She has a look like she knows something, even though she's in Chile or someplace. She's not even in the country. Well, she was on that Jimmy Door show, and Jimmy Door loves her. I think Jimmy Door just, you know, she thinks she's hot. And what she's saying and the way she says it, I mean, it's, Stuff that we've talked about 15, 16 years ago. I mean, your basic economic hitman stuff.
Starting point is 01:21:45 You know, like, okay. Yeah, well, believe it or not, lots of money flows from governments into NGOs and NGOs go into think tanks and think tanks create policy. That's how it works. We know this, right? Right. You're right.
Starting point is 01:22:02 Right. So, but when she presents it, it's like, well, wow. I didn't know what that was happening. That there's this transnational group. So you got to use words like transnational. That Epstein was part of, but he wasn't. Got to throw in Epstein. Got to throw in Epstein.
Starting point is 01:22:19 But he wasn't important in the group, you see. The head of it, he's like middle management in it at best. And that these people exert influences over many governments. And they are not really. Nasal equality. overseen by any national government nor really loyal to any of them and that they're basically
Starting point is 01:22:44 one of the de facto ways our world is actually governed as opposed to the public governments that we all know which have basically been reduced to enabling environments for the policies made by these other people that are then filtered down through think tanks or philanthropic foundations, think the Gates Foundation for example. Okay, like we
Starting point is 01:23:05 didn't know this? I mean, this is what gets me. You're right. It's in the presentation. It's part of her look. She's got the big glasses on. She's got kind of a, kind of an interesting mouth movement.
Starting point is 01:23:19 She usually has a look. She has a perpetual smirk. A knowing, all-knowing smirk. Which is like an interesting phrase. She has an all-knowing smirk, which sells it. She wouldn't be as good on audio. In fact, just listening to
Starting point is 01:23:35 or I pick up on that nasally, which is annoying as hell. But that doesn't come through on the video so much. You don't pay as much attention to the annoying voice. But then she throws out stuff like this, which, you know, not much of a search to figure out what she's really talking about. The way she presents it is Owens-esque, I would say. One of the funds that Epstein was involved setting up was actually handling money for our current Treasury Secretary. Scott Bessent. And he refuses to release Epstein's treasury records, even though Congressman Ron Wyden asked that they do so. And he introduced the released Epstein Treasury Records Act to Congress.
Starting point is 01:24:19 Haven't heard very much about that lately, but I really hope it passes because people deserve to see what was going on there. But I have a feeling it won't. And so, you know, these financial, these oligarchs that people like Epstein front for are not accustomed. to ever being held accountable for anything. So Wexner is a good example of that, but I don't think it's exclusive to him. So when I hear that, you know, I'm a fan of Scott Besson.
Starting point is 01:24:48 I'm like, what? What? Is the gay general patent hiding something? So she says, Besson is blocking Epstein's treasury records with a fund that Epstein set up for Scott Besson. Is that how you heard it? Because that's what I heard. But that's not.
Starting point is 01:25:05 true at all. But it's not true. I mean, no, it could be that that's what she said. One of the funds that Epstein was involved setting up was actually handling money for our current Treasury Secretary. Okay. Handling money, handling money for our current Treasury Secretary. Yeah, money managed, she was
Starting point is 01:25:21 Epstein was the money manager for Bessent, which seems unlikely. Patently untrue. No, there was a Soros fund that was 50% owned by what was it? what was the name of this fund?
Starting point is 01:25:38 So Soros Fund Management and it was this Epstein Southern Trust Company and they had an intelligence research firm called Ergo and they listed Besant as a client working for Soros. That's not quite the same as handling Besant's money.
Starting point is 01:25:59 You know, so this is bull crap. Yeah. Bull crap. And so then she... Gee, there's gambling going on. I know. From Whitney Webb. And then, but she winds it up with one of these.
Starting point is 01:26:10 Look at intelligence agencies. Let's take the CIA, for example. They serve those same masters. The CIA is not the top of the food chain. So, for example, if you look at the early coups of the CIA, who were they for? Well, and Iran in 1954, it was for Anglo-American oil. In Guatemala, it was for United Fruit Company. company, you know, the list goes.
Starting point is 01:26:36 Oh, wow, the list goes on. This is like, oh, what? And she, but she presents this in a way that is just. Yeah, because the United Fruit Company was so important. Yeah, it was she's mesmerized by, people are mesmer. Glenn Beck is all in on her too. Like, oh, yeah, she's the smartest person I know. She's, she's studied everything.
Starting point is 01:26:55 No. You can go. So is the Kiriaku. Well, Kiroaku is spreading himself too thin. At least Whitney Webb, you know, kind of stays a little bit of exclusive? Yeah, no, Curiacos out.
Starting point is 01:27:08 You know, I should have taken this clip, but it was, the agency season two is out. And there's two agents talking to you. I'll go back and try to find this. Yeah. And one of the agents,
Starting point is 01:27:21 no, what we do, what we do for a living is lie. We're liars. Yes. Yes. We both lie. I lie, you.
Starting point is 01:27:28 We lie. We lie for a living. We're liars, liars, and it goes on and on. Yeah. I'm thinking of kiriaku in that piece I did about him lying about the refineries in Florida where there are no refineries.
Starting point is 01:27:44 These guys, they're just full of shit. Yeah, they are. Yeah. But, you know, podcasting. I'm glad we invented that. It's good stuff. Back to that. It's good stuff.
Starting point is 01:27:57 It really is moving culture forward. Well, talking about podcasting, I want to bring in this then. Okay. Because, as you know, one of the things that the media always used to do, and they kind of backed off from it ever since Elon took over Twitter and called it X. But they used to always take – and in Twitter they said this, and on Twitter they said that. Right. This is a clip from ABC News that same July 10th show, and Martha Radnitz going on and on about how Trump is having issues with Iran. Radnitz?
Starting point is 01:28:31 Radnitz? It's Radnitz. Raddits. Radits. Radits. Radnits. She actually looks like her name. Is radnets? Yeah, right. Oh, aptonym. There we go. She's an aptonym. So she is rambling, rambling, rambling. And then it ends with the, it ends with the Joe Rogan clip. A bombing. The ceasefire clearly broken.
Starting point is 01:28:56 President Trump saying it's over. The U.S. now expanding its targets beyond military. hitting a railroad bridge in Iran that Iran quickly repaired. President Trump insists Iran wants to make a deal, a claim he's repeated throughout this war, now five months long. They want to make a deal so badly. But Iran instead firing missiles and explosive drones at U.S. bases in Bahrain and Kuwait, with the U.S. Embassy in Jordan warning all Americans to seat cover.
Starting point is 01:29:29 Those strikes intercepted, but Iran tightly. its grip on the Strait of Hormuz. That's causing the cost of oil to rise and here at home gas prices, which had started to fall during the ceasefire, now ticking back up to $3.83 a gallon. Tonight, the endgame unclear and Trump supporters like podcaster Joe Rogan sounding increasingly dismayed the president led the country into this war. Most people are horrified by the idea because Trump was elected,
Starting point is 01:30:02 one of the pillars that he stood for apparently was that he doesn't want any more wars. Wow. Random Joe Rogan quote. Are you kidding me? That's not Joe Rogan's opinion. He's saying this is what's going on. And how did she frame that? Let me hear her again.
Starting point is 01:30:19 ...orders like podcaster Joe... $8.83 a gallon. Tonight, the endgame unclear. And Trump supporters like podcaster Joe Rogan sounding increasingly... Dismayed the president led the country into this war. That's good. That's good. He's just explaining it to someone.
Starting point is 01:30:41 Most people are horrified by the... Well, I'm just saying you don't have to play it. It's like, can you do better than... I mean, going to a podcast and then taking some random clip out of context, like you said, is worse than the old media taking the Twitter quotes. Oh, on Twitter, they say... said this. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:31:03 Somebody on Twitter said that. So good. Well, Rogan's very, you know, he does so much content that you can probably clip from him forever. Yes. Let's see. What do we have? What do we have? What do you have besides?
Starting point is 01:31:26 I have a couple of things. Let's go with the, well, first of all, let's keep up with the Iran threats, a BBC story. get that out of the way. Iran's Supreme Leader has issued a statement vowing revenge for his father's death. Ayatala Mujtaba, Khomeiniy's father Ali, was killed by an airstrike in Tehran in February. His funeral
Starting point is 01:31:45 ceremonies were held over the past week. Meanwhile, the Iranian foreign minister is in Oman for talks with mediators, but American negotiators will no longer travel there. Casranaji from BBC Persian reports. The Supreme Leader's statement stops just short of a full-scale
Starting point is 01:32:01 fatwa or religious either It's a call for the assassination of the leaders of the United States and Israel. The two leaders colluded in an Israeli bombardment of the former leaders' residence in central Tehran at the start of the war more than four months ago. The hardening of Iran's position comes on the day the United States has set as a deadline for Iran to commit to guaranteeing freedom of shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. The tit for tat? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:37 That's what it kind of sounds like. But that brings us to the British thing again we talk about on this show quite a bit. Their control of kind of a work, the scene, let's call it. And which brings me to this clip, which is of, you know, we haven't talked about the earthquake in Venezuela. There's nothing really to deconstructed. It's just news. But there was a little tidbit on one of these reports, which I have here. Yes, I didn't see that.
Starting point is 01:33:02 Another BBC report. Listen to this. This is Venezuela. Yeah, I'm glad you got this one. Venezuela's government has called for the release of frozen assets to help raise funds for its post-earthquake recovery. The interim president Delci Rodriguez has said she had written to King Charles, asking him to secure the release of about 30 tons of Venezuelan gold held by the Bank of England on the UK sanctions.
Starting point is 01:33:30 Oh, yeah. No, we're not going to give it to you. 30 tons? 30 tons? How much is that? Somebody out there should do the calculation for us. Well, hold on a second. At $4,000 an ounce.
Starting point is 01:33:47 Let's just ask the robot. 30 tons. Let's just ask the robot. And now is that British tons or American tons? Is there a difference? Who cares? Okay. It's a big number.
Starting point is 01:33:56 Book of knowledge. What is the dollar value of 30 tons of gold? All right. Let's see if you can do a calculation. Well, of course. He's a robot. He's thinking hard, though. It's tough.
Starting point is 01:34:08 Here we go. According to the Book of Knowledge, as of this very day, gold is priced at 4,121.95% per Troy ounce. And since one metric tonne contains 32,150.50.7 Troy ounces, 30 tons of gold is worth approximately $3.97 billion. Oh, well, that's not bad. Thus? It's not that much. Yeah. Yeah, you'd be surprised.
Starting point is 01:34:37 It's not that much. There's an entire day's like, I dropped four billion. Well, I'll just leave it there. It's too much trouble to bend over. That's quite a lot of money. They need it. They need the money.
Starting point is 01:34:50 But it's under British sanctions. That's interesting. Yeah, I found that peculiar. Wait a minute. So I see you have the pilot jumps from plane story. You have the full story. Yeah, do you want to hear it? Yeah, of course, I'm a pilot. I want to know.
Starting point is 01:35:05 We turn to a horrific story now emerging, the shocking moments on a plane, an instructor jumping from the plane, leaving his young student to land the plane on her own, how she saved her own life. Here's Victor Akeno tonight. Tonight, the frightening incident for a student pilot in Argentina, forced to land a Cessna 150 during a training exercise after her instructor jumped to his death midair. Authorities say 42-year-old Leandro Bertazzo had been working as a flight instructor since 2022. On Saturday, the student taking off with Bertazzo from the Flying Parrot Gordoba School.
Starting point is 01:35:39 An official from the flight school telling ABC News, the instructor told the student, you know what to do. Then he unbuckled his seatbelt, open the door, and jumped out of the plane. This was a remarkable breach of trust between an instructor and a student putting her in a very dangerous situation. The 22-year-old student alerting the flight school and managing to land the plane safely. The student actually had her license. She just didn't have the number of hours that were required to use that license. Police locating Bertanzo's body in the Toledo district around 6 p.m. According to a school official, Bertoso's family says the pilot had gone to see a psychiatrist last week.
Starting point is 01:36:18 Okay, a couple things. That's the kicker, by the way. Well, there's... He went to see a psychiatrist. There's a lot of mental health issues in aviation, which go unreported because, you know, you will not be. flying. The second thing that I'm surprised it wasn't in this report that this was actually marked up as a COVID death.
Starting point is 01:36:37 I was surprised I didn't mention. Yes. That's good. Yeah, there you go. It's kind of a callback joke, though. Yeah, it's an old one. So the president, he says the most interesting thing sometimes.
Starting point is 01:36:53 And whenever he says we're looking at something very strongly, which is just a weird English structure. I always pay attention. And I made reference today that Australia has a thing going that's very good. It's really worked out very well. We have good respect for Australia,
Starting point is 01:37:11 and that has to do with people that are working people. And it's something that also puts them in much better shape when they're retirement age. So we're going to do that. We're looking at that very strongly. We're going to be taking that, and we're going to be maybe making it a little bit sharper, a little bit even better, but we're going to be doing that. And Scott, you're working on that immediately, right?
Starting point is 01:37:35 You and the whole group, Howard, everybody. So I hear this, and I'm thinking, okay, are we doing something to replace Social Security, which I think by definition almost has no money. It's never really been funded, just a general account. Are you familiar with the Australian system? No. So I went to Sky News, who, of course, picked up on the story. I want to get to another policy issue where President Donald Trump is talking about emulating in Australia.
Starting point is 01:38:05 In Australia, we have compulsory superannuation. It's been in place for about 40 to 50 years, a labour or leftist government brought it in. But 10% or so of our salary is compulsorily put into retirement savings. And here's the president. He thinks he might follow suit. And I made reference today that Australia has a thing going that's very good. It's really worked out very well. We have good respect for Australia and that has to do with people that are working people. And it's something that also puts them in much better shape when their retirement age. So we're going to do that. We're looking at that very strongly. Yeah, well, there you go. This is not as straightforward as it seems. For instance, in Australia, people struggle, young people struggle to save a deposit to get into the housing market because 10% of their incomes go into super. This scheme massively the power of the unions. And so far at least, it hasn't really seen governments save a lot of money
Starting point is 01:39:03 when it comes to age pensions and the like, Kristen. So I think what, because I did look this up, it's a compulsory superannuation. So employers put a mandated share of wages, which I think is closer to 12% than 10% into each worker's private, individually owned investment fund. And that's why Trump likes it. He's like, well, if you just put money into the S&P 500, you know, over time, that'll, of course, all money to values, but over time, that's going to be a winner for you, for you personally, unlike Social Security, which is just a big loser for everybody.
Starting point is 01:39:41 You know, and that's why I say, Scott, you're going to work on that, aren't you? Yes, both. Change it a little bit. But that could be interesting. It's not going anywhere. Why not? You don't like the idea? Did they talk to big gaming?
Starting point is 01:39:58 about the social security is sacrosanct to use a word to use an important word yeah big word no not going to happen that's because you depend on it without without your social security when this podcast would not be able to yeah well there's that but besides beside the point it's like you know it's it already is compulsory and it shouldn't be you know the fact that it's mixed with the general fund is technically illegal. It's supposed to be a standalone insurance that has been collected and collected and collected. And it's been mixed with the other. It's been stolen from. Basically, the Social Security. If it's going to go broke, it's not because it's really going broke. It's because they've stolen the money. Yes. Yes. Exactly. And so now they're
Starting point is 01:40:50 looking for an out. Oh, God, we stole the money. Now what are we going to do? We can't put the money back. We haven't got anything. Seems like Trump is just, you know, trying to. Well, Trump is, well, he thinks like an investor. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. But, you know, public doesn't think that way. I mean, that's why he's giving all the new babies a thousand dollars. Yes, I like that.
Starting point is 01:41:15 And if my grandbaby ever comes, she has until tomorrow morning 10 a.m. And then we really have to get on the plane. I've been in a hotel room for two weeks. I'm a little tired of it. And Christina's tired of it. But this could be another week or two. As Mimi said to me. Yes.
Starting point is 01:41:35 Didn't they know that all first babies are two weeks late at least? Yeah. Yeah, we do. Oh, you didn't know. No, yeah, I knew that. But we had to be here for my mom's memorial. And, you know, I can't stay here for a month. Oh, I see what you say.
Starting point is 01:41:49 Yeah. Oh, you're just trying to do two birds with one stone. Big mistake. Hoping for the best. Yes, exactly. Ideally. So what's going to happen is if she doesn't, I'm sure, unless she goes into labor tonight, you know, obviously, then we delay our return.
Starting point is 01:42:05 We're going to have to come back in August when the baby's here, which will also be fun. But then we'll just stay in Rotterdam and do our grandparent thing for a couple days. So I put out a challenge to No agenda nation on the last show. Do you recall the challenge? No. That at least somebody. one of our people Oh yes, right, I do know the challenge.
Starting point is 01:42:27 Would have to be a Patriot Front member or know about them or know about them. And I only received one email from Sir Rocketman, Ed LaBoutier. Yeah, a very long email. But he says he's not a Patriot Front member. He knows many of them. He believes it's a legitimate organization.
Starting point is 01:42:47 He likes the Patriot Front's American nationalism approach. The reason for the masks is to avoid doxing. It makes the focus on the body of marches instead of individuals. Now, I'm thinking he knows, but he hasn't joined. But no one else, nothing at all. And then this Roswell Encinah dude who works for the National Archives, he's doing the rounds now.
Starting point is 01:43:16 So he wasn't just on CNN for that one appearance. Oh, no. Oh, no. He's on PBS. Yes. So now I'm more convinced than ever that this is definitely some form of an op, whether the participants are willing or not. Listen to this. But one set of images has drawn attention for a very different reason. They show hundreds of masked, uniformed men marching through parts of Washington on the morning of the 4th of July. The men are members of Patriot Front. That's a white supremacist group formed in the aftermath of the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Nice positioning.
Starting point is 01:43:53 Nowhere do they say they're white supremacists or hate black people anywhere. I don't think they've said that, but okay, that's what you say, PBS. Images of members of the group riding metro trains alongside other passengers have since gone viral. Amman Nevas spoke earlier with one of those passengers. Roswell Encino was on the D.C. Metro, headed to an Independence Day celebration in Maryland on July 4th. What kind of name is Roswell Encino, by the way? That's kind of a... I'm Roswell.
Starting point is 01:44:26 Roswell and Sino's a pseudonym. Yeah, spook name. To July 4th, you're on this train, you're headed to a celebration, you notice these men coming on the train, and this photo of you then goes viral. What's going through your mind at that moment in the picture? Well, I was scared. I'd be lying to you if I told you I was trying to be strong, but, you know, when a massive amount of... of men who are masked covered with sunglasses and a baseball cap and you can't identify any of them, your natural instinct is to really just like, oh my goodness, what's happening? Who are these people? What are their intentions? Oh my goodness. What are they going to do in the metro? So I kind of,
Starting point is 01:45:06 you know, kind of made myself smaller. When you look at that photo now, what goes through your mind? What goes through your mind? I mean, I still have a hard time looking at myself in that photo. It's because, you know, people take photographs of you when you're smiling, when you're happy, maybe when you're sad or excited, but you never see yourself when you're scared. But I'm really hoping, you know, when people see my photo, most importantly,
Starting point is 01:45:29 the photo of that African-American woman who was also surrounded by them, that we understand that we have our stories too, and our stories are part of the nation and that we're all part of this United States. You're sitting in a seat on a metro. So what? Part of the story.
Starting point is 01:45:46 Did anyone say anything to you? Did they threaten you? Did they threaten you? No, this guy's liking this way too much. And then, you know, from what? Is he a white guy? Oh, yeah. Well, then what's he worried about if he's a white supremacist group?
Starting point is 01:46:00 Maybe he was brown. I can't, I don't know. He didn't seem like a minority. Well, what's his name again, Roswell Encino? Encinna. Roswell Encina. Well, that's kind of a Hispanic-sounding last name. So the black woman,
Starting point is 01:46:16 now I'm not sure this is true because it's X but supposedly she was like squatting or lifting up her dress before they came on there was video of that it may be someone else I don't know that that started happening almost immediately oh yeah look what she was doing I don't know but here is PBS's take on the black woman there were those other photos as you mentioned
Starting point is 01:46:44 there was one of a black man on a metro train black man. I didn't even see the black man. Okay, this guy, I'm looking at him. He's, he is probably some sort of, I don't know what kind of Hispanic, but it's extremely gay. Well, yes. If you look at his photos, it's, I'm sorry, it's so obvious, but. I could kind of tell by the voice. Yeah. Well, you could tell, if you see these photos, you go, okay. Yeah, he's very, very gay. I don't think they're anti-gay. I don't think they've ever said we don't like. I don't think they're, don't seem. anti-anything. No. Pro-American. You know, pro-something. Here we go. There were those other photos.
Starting point is 01:47:23 As you mentioned, there was one of a black man on a metro train ride, also surrounded by members of that Patriot Front, the black woman who you mentioned, who since been identified by her family as Bernita Bolding. And I need to ask you about this, because since she was identified, there has been a real wave of some very ugly, some racist comments about her and that photo. Have you seen anything similar? and do you worry about the response now that you're out speaking publicly about it?
Starting point is 01:47:50 Sadly, yes. I can't help but see the comments towards me, the comment towards her, and it's very discouraging. Some of them are like, well, they didn't touch him. They left him alone, you know. He wasn't bullied physically. It's hard to understand
Starting point is 01:48:02 what a person of color goes through in this country, especially when you're by herself in a contained space and that position you're put in and not knowing what's going to happen next. And that's how we felt. Yeah, this is so, oppy the way this sounds?
Starting point is 01:48:21 Yeah. All right, one more. It's in your work now. You were at the Library of Congress before that. You know better than anyone. The First Amendment protects your right to say what's on your mind and they're right to gather peacefully as they did
Starting point is 01:48:34 on that day and say what's on theirs. How do you think about that? It's very complex. I'm hoping when people look at our photos or think back on the 4th of July in Washington that it starts a It starts a conversation, which is part of democracy. I really think that really will help us understand each other. We've always had disagreements. However, we've always found a way to move forward.
Starting point is 01:48:56 You know, there's been a lot of talk clearly because it's been the Fourth of July of the Declaration of Independence and that all men are created equal. And when you think of that, you know, that declaration that Thomas Jefferson wrote 250 years ago, nowadays it feels more like a, you know, a mission statement. that I feel like each generation has done their part to try to achieve it. You know, from, you know, women's suffrage to the 13th Amendment, to landmark legislation like the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights Act to LGBT rights nowadays. I think we've all, each generation has played their part to make that a reality.
Starting point is 01:49:32 LGBTQ rights. Yes, Thomas Jefferson wrote about the LGBTQ rights. Yeah. So since we do not receive anything, I'm just going to have to continue to think, that this is some form of an op. And maybe these guys don't even know it, but they're being used as one, that's for sure.
Starting point is 01:49:51 I agree. Yeah. And then Marco Rubio, our next president, he had the very brief, very good statement about America and about everyone's obsession with politics. I think politics has made us crazy. Everybody in this country has lost their minds on politics. and we have forgotten that America is not a government.
Starting point is 01:50:18 America's not a president. America's not a Congress. Let me tell you what America is. America is your family. America's your faith. America's your community. That's America. That's what our adversaries don't understand,
Starting point is 01:50:30 and that's what we need to remember. That is how we're going to rebuild this country and turn the page and have a future even brighter than our past. Oh, yeah, this is. And so that's why I feel so strongly about this. Amen, brother Marco. Yes. This is a president.
Starting point is 01:50:44 style speech. Absolutely. Absolutely. That is bull crap. He is practicing. He's doing a good job. I like it. Oh, he's great. I agree. I think he's going to be the one. He's good. It's perfectly good. I mean, everyone's, there's a group that wants Vance.
Starting point is 01:51:00 Yeah. Nah, we don't. I don't think Vance is going to... Only if he becomes Fat J.D. Then he would be great. And dances a lot. And dances. Hey, did you see Nick, your boy, Nick, who's foreboughton in California, the YouTuber, the, what's his name? Fuentes?
Starting point is 01:51:21 No, no, no, no. Nick, Nick, the guy, Nick Shirley. Nick Shirley. Yeah. Okay, so I already, we already thought that this was, the administration was kind of a part of this, Nick Shirley, because there's always a dude next to him. There's something screwy about it. Bob or Dave.
Starting point is 01:51:40 And Bob has all the pay. paperwork and Dave knows exactly where to go. And then Nick Shirley goes in and says, I'm just asking questions. Well, he was out. He was out in New York with Dr. Oz. This is a war on fraud, the likes of which you have never seen.
Starting point is 01:51:57 I feel like Johnny Cash. I've been everywhere, man. I've been to California, Iowa, Ohio, Minnesota. Today, New York City, flushing Queens. You take you to the front lines wherever we're going. Here, social adult day care centers, the biggest fraud you've never heard of. I walked through here and I wonder, how is it possible that you would have this many pharmacies in such close proximity to each other?
Starting point is 01:52:19 Are we going to start counting? Are you ready? Yeah. Okay. So we got one here. One right there. Number two. Look at this. This is the durable medical equipment supplier.
Starting point is 01:52:29 Those are all the things they sell, wheelchairs and automatic scooters. These are expensive. Then we have another pharmacy. Another pharmacy. I'm losing track. Yeah. It's like a game show. You get a pharmacy.
Starting point is 01:52:40 You get a pharmacy. So now they just throw the guy. You know what? Bob and Dave, good job. Just take Oz. Take Oz out. This would be good. And then they go past all these Chinese pharmacies and cash only.
Starting point is 01:52:54 It's all kinds. It's like, is everyone just co-opted? You know, this is fine and dandy. I hate to mention this, but Oz is part of the government. Why doesn't he do something about this? Well, he says. Instead of going out with Nick Shirley and bitching about. about it. Well, he said something about it here.
Starting point is 01:53:13 This business entity, this social adult daycare center, which I'm pretty sure none of your... Adult daycare center. How can I get in on that? Your listeners have ever heard of, right? It generated $2.5 billion over the last three years in New York State, of which, almost all, $2.1 billion was right here in Washington Queens and Brooklyn next door and, you know, the surrounding areas. You go 10 miles along Ireland from here, doesn't exist, doesn't happen. So if you're me, and I'm supposed to protect the federal tax dollars, it makes you very concerned. Something's wrong.
Starting point is 01:53:45 When all the money spent in one place and what the problem is, it's now starting to metastasize. This bad idea, the fraud is starting to spread. If you're a fraudster, run. Because we are coming after you. Yeah, I'm with you. I'm with you, by the way. This was all positioning, bravado,
Starting point is 01:54:01 and like, well, how come you don't, you're not there with the SWAT team? Busting in right now. It's like, this is fraud. None of that. Yeah, they're just floating around with the camera. Although, uh, JD Vance going after H-1B now. Finally, finally, at least he says so.
Starting point is 01:54:19 Now, I want to talk about another fraud crackdown, and this is almost hard to believe. But, you know, we have a program called the H-1B visa program. This goes to show how broad-based the fraud tax force is. Is we're fighting for your taxpayer money, but we're also making sure that fraudsters don't take advantage. of these visa programs. Now, why does this program exist? This is a visa program that was set up to ensure that if you were a brilliant technology person or a brilliant scientist or a brilliant doctor, you could come to the United States and get access to this visa program. But you know what's happening way too much? Is that big corporations and fraudsters overseas are using this program
Starting point is 01:55:03 to undercut the wages of American workers. So you know what we're doing in the Trump administration? we're saying no more. If you were trying to take advantage of that visa program, you are not allowed in to the United States of America. Today, I'm proud to announce that the Federal Department of Labor has started
Starting point is 01:55:24 dozens of subpoenas and investigations into foreign fraudsters who are trying to take advantage of the H-1B visa program. Here's a simple principle. Ladies and gentlemen, American jobs ought to go to
Starting point is 01:55:40 American workers and not foreign fraudsters and the Department of Labor is fighting back against it. So that's his version of the presidential speech. Marco is about family? No, not at all. Show me some results. Well, he hasn't been doing it as long as Rubio. But back to the H1B, when I was doing the show Silicon Spin in the 90s. There you go.
Starting point is 01:56:03 There used to be a professor up at Cal Davis. I can't remember his name offhand, but he was all. always moaning about H-1B. We had him on, I think, and at least we discussed him. This has been going on since the 90s. Yeah. The H-1B, he's claimed it was all, mostly the real problem with Silicon Valley hiring Indians to do, you know, jobs that Americans that would get paid too much to do.
Starting point is 01:56:32 And it was the whole thing, there was always a way to get cheap labor. Yes. It was a roundabout way. and it was Silicon Valley was the bad actors. Oh, that's changing now. Yeah, sure. We got, we got, that's changing my ass. Sheriff, Sheriff J.D. on the case.
Starting point is 01:56:53 Oh, boy. All right. So let's talk about the socialists for a second. Oh, yes. Let's talk about the socialists. Because you played a clip of some socialist yacking about one thing. I got to clip, the two-parter, of the socialist chick. who comes on and this is the kind of going no which one which socialist chick this was the one this
Starting point is 01:57:15 was the the the infiltrate there's this girl i can't remember her name she's a a uh YouTuber who does infiltration yeah and she infiltrated a webinar or something where they're explaining a webinar she's infiltrated a socialist democrat socialist or a PSL i which i'm not sure but something socialist League or something. It was a webinar she infiltrated. And I just, I thought these clips were kind of nailing what they like to do, what they want to do in the future and what their ideals are. And I wrote about this in the newsletter. This is bull crap. These people are never good. This is a bunch of talkers. When I was a kid in college, I remember hearing the same stuff. It's all revolution, the revolution. We're going to have revolution. There's no revolution. Yes, comrade. It's just a bunch of,
Starting point is 01:58:07 It's a bunch of talk and a bunch of voting Democrat. All right, here we go. We're excited to have each and every one of you to join us for this important discussion about. I'm already sold. This is already good. Is that that Encina guy? Is he also in this group? No, we're excited to have each and every one of you to join us for this important discussion about what socialism is, the history of socialism,
Starting point is 01:58:30 and what a socialist revolution could look like in the United States. Because the main thing that we talk to with all members, with the, action network and with our communities is how do we actually achieve it. A foundational step in the socialist reconstruction of society would be the creation of a new constitution. The new socialist government will take possession of all the existing capital's banks and create one people's development bank. The electoral college would be abolished.
Starting point is 01:59:00 The House of Representatives could be replaced with the National People's Assembly that would not only be made up of delegates elected from local election districts, but would also include delegates from the many mass organizations of millions of workers, students, and more. And the Senate could be replaced by the Assembly of Oppressed Nations to correct the historic injustices imposed on the indigenous peoples and the Black nation. This Assembly of Oppressed Nations will consist of delegates from oppressed nationalities and peoples. The reorganization of society, including the transition of society to green technology and renewable energy, will be carried out by the people themselves.
Starting point is 01:59:49 Mass organizations will have a central role in a socialist society. These voluntary-based organizations will be involved in the day-to-day management of the affairs of society. So the reorganization of housing under socialism has to do with the rational distribution of this abundance created by capitalism, but is being held hostage by the capitalist class. Oh, this is great. You know, I would like to invite her to come to Holland and live here for a bit or try the UK or anywhere with Poland. and Comrade, you will see what your end result will be like. Looks good for a moment when the sun is shining. Yeah, well, it just gets worse.
Starting point is 02:00:37 But it's so ludicrous. Your play part two. Now, some in the socialist movement want to distance themselves from the efforts of the hundreds of millions of people in the world in the global south to construct socialism over the past century. since 1917 when the first successful socialist revolution took place. Wait, 1970, successful socialist revolution? 1917, the Russian Revolution.
Starting point is 02:01:06 Yeah, that's very successful. How'd that work out long term? It seems to have fallen apart, to be honest about it. But we in the PSL uphold both the achievements and the lessons of those socialist projects and see our efforts here today in the U.S. as a part of that historical project. It's easy to condemn, but they made revolution and reorganized society on a socialist basis and have taken on all of the challenges that come with the reorganization of the political and economic system. The socialist government would move to shut down the over 800 U.S. military bases across the world.
Starting point is 02:01:47 we would bring the troops home and the U.S. would be denuclearized. So a wave of revolutions would likely take place in the world if people win socialism here in the U.S. Socialist projects can actually advance beyond the first stage. So socialist reconstruction in the U.S. is not only possible, but it's a historic responsibility to ourselves and the people of the world. Thank you so much. Oh, this is great. Yeah, I would really like AOC to run.
Starting point is 02:02:18 That would be just so nice. Yeah, Newsom is trying to horn his way into the socialist scene because he thinks that, you know, he sees the inevitable ability of... He sees that as the way to go. Yeah, well, he's an idiot. I think we, you know, anyone who's met the guy, he's like... Have you met him? When he says he was not that bright in school...
Starting point is 02:02:42 Have you met? And he had low SAT scores. He's right. But have you met him? I met him, yeah. I met him when he was owner of the Belboa Cafe, and he came around when he was running for mayor. I was sitting at the table, and he comes around.
Starting point is 02:02:57 Yeah. I'm sitting with Hearst, actually. Uh-huh. And he comes around, introduces himself, and we have a long chat because he's going to change news. And he just seemed like this, he seemed very frat boy. Yeah, he looks like a bit of a frat boy. But, but yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:15 He's mad about what they're doing to him and his wife, which is not, I don't think it's even driven, but from Washington. That's his, that's from California's, his own inspector general was going after him. And that's not even a Trump guy. Well, the whole thing started with Biden, too. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 02:03:36 You know, there's some, there's some, I think he's, forces at work. I think he could end up in jail like, Blagojevich. Wow. That was harsh. They take him out like Blago. I think it's possible.
Starting point is 02:03:54 Wow. That's why he's panicking. Just to give Kamala another shot? I mean, what are we thinking here? Camel is not going. She's, I mean, Camelow looks good in the polls right now, but when she actually goes out in campaign,
Starting point is 02:04:08 she can't get anyone to support her. Yeah. She's, nobody likes her. AOC, man. That's it. I think AOC'd be great, but I don't know if they got the guts, the guts to try to do that. Well, what are the, what choices do they have? I think Bashir is up there.
Starting point is 02:04:24 Bashir. The, the Kentucky governor? Yeah, the Kentucky governor. Andy Bashir. It's not a good, good, looking guy. It's not a good name for President. But he's not, he's not a socialist enough. You're going to run a socialist.
Starting point is 02:04:43 Yeah. going to be fun. It's going to be fantastic. But we still have to wait a couple of years. The real battle is going to be between the Republicans. It's going to be whether J.D. or Rubio can pull it off. Rubio is more presidential right now.
Starting point is 02:05:00 Well, we'll probably be here for that. Yeah, it's coming up. I say probably. We'll try. We'll try to be there. We'll really going to try. It's not easy. This will be our fifth time around. A fifth time around doing that. And with that, for today, only one time,
Starting point is 02:05:18 I'd like to thank you for your courage, say in the morning to you, the man who put the C in the adult daycare center, say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only mister, John Cidomero! Yeah, I'm sorry, you with Sam Cramer, see you put some of graphene there.
Starting point is 02:05:35 Subs in the water and a damesonite's out there. In the morning, two trolls in the troll room. Oh, wow, look at that. Ooh, look at that. 1855. Wow. Yeah, it's because they want to know. Oh, yeah. They want to know about Lady G. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:05:54 That's right. And then they got disappointed. No, they didn't. Well, maybe. They may have been disappointed. I mean, because all the notes I get, or who killed him? I told you, exploding microphone. It's obvious. We all know that.
Starting point is 02:06:09 No, unfortunately, I have to agree with. you. I mean, unfortunately, because it would be great for the show, but yeah, when you bring in the genetics and the traveling and the altitude, and it's just totally possible. Just had a widow maker. Pop, done, you're gone. It doesn't take that long. Look at you. About the same. Yeah, it could happen to me. Yeah. No, you can't because we still have to get to the AOC. I'm going to 90. I don't care what anyone says. 90? That's all? Yeah. I'm going to 90. I might get further. I'm going the 98. My voice will start to fade. I mean, I listen to
Starting point is 02:06:43 Bill O'Reilly, who's like 82. His voice sounds weak. He sounds... He's like Bill O'Reilly. His voice is weak. He's like, say, blah, me, blee, me. It's like, what happened? Do that again. I think you kind of nailed
Starting point is 02:06:57 it. He said, Bill O'Reilly. It's sad. Yeah, it's kind of sad. It's just not good. No, and you think he can get some, you know, I don't know, can you do exercises or, I mean, singers. I mean, I was watching this thing of the 50s.
Starting point is 02:07:17 I don't know why they're doing that. Nobody's alive from the 50s, but the 50s music. And they had Frankie Lane, who is like this singer from the 40s, really. We know Frankie. And he's up there singing. He's like in his 90s, and he still has a voice. So can I just ask you something about genetics? How old is your dad when?
Starting point is 02:07:39 he passed. Well, my dad died from a blood transfusion problem. Oh. So it was nothing to do with his genetics. My mom. Why did he have a blood transfusion? Because they gave him a blood transfusion. He had an ulcer that was operated on.
Starting point is 02:07:54 They gave him bad blood. No way. Yeah. How old was he? He was like 60s. Oh, that sucks. But my mom, who died of natural causes. Phyllis.
Starting point is 02:08:08 Phyllis. Phyllis. She died at 90, so. Oh, okay. Well, good. Good. You got some years left in you. Phyllis. Yeah. Yeah. My concern is my voice is going to, I hear Bill O'Reilly. I said, holy crap. Could that happen to anybody? No. What it is.
Starting point is 02:08:27 I mean, there's like Pat Sumerill, these guys that were sports announcers until they're late 80s and they sound fine. I think because you are projecting into a microphone in front of your face, that that's what keeps it alive. Once you go video and you know, you can't have the cans, you're like, Bill O'Reilly doesn't have a mic in front of his face. He's not, he's not, he's not shouts. He's not shouting down a tube. He's not spitting in a tube. He's laved up like a wimpy boy. Then that's when it ends. I mean, the days, It could be. Seriously. Um,
Starting point is 02:09:07 I mean, the days of, where is it? Oh, that was, that was not, wasn't it Bill O'Reilly who said would do it live? Yeah. We'll do it live. See? See? Where's O'Reilly would do it live?
Starting point is 02:09:22 Here we go. Do it live. I can, I'll write it and we'll do it live. See, you got to be doing that. You got to be, if you're not doing that. He lost his oomph. Then you lose your, umph it's a constant practicing in fact it would probably be better longer term for you i know you
Starting point is 02:09:39 don't like this if you put your headphones on because then then you're really i can hear myself modulate yes i agree with that yes how about some in ears you know like like all the cool musicians use you know molded to your ear let me consider this and hey if you're worried about you about your voice going you know you will be projecting better uh if you i'll start to moduli, I start to sound like this. Yeah. How you doing? Maybe not such a good idea.
Starting point is 02:10:13 Hey, ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to the No Agenda show, the show that we do as a public service, and we prove it by not forcing you into any monetization scheme at all, whatsoever. No ads. Not trying to sell you something. Just trying to give you the best media deconstruction. we can deliver.
Starting point is 02:10:35 And something's working because we're, you know, in our 19th, almost 19 years. It'll be 19 in October. And we can, and we, we still want to see AOC and Rubio. So we're going to continue for as long as we can. And we do that because it's value for value. And the value for value is just such a beautiful system because there's no obligation to you. It's only in your heart when you feel like, oh, man, these guys are doing it for me.
Starting point is 02:11:02 Right now it's a 10. 20 p.m. I'm here on so-called vacation baby watch. Setting up, setting up, you know, screens or computers and hotel rooms, going through TSA nonsense every single time I travel, getting the whole thing unpacked and then repack it properly. You know, all of that, because we want to deliver the show. We just want to continue to do it. John, I mean, he was barely out of a double bypass hospital surgery. He was back on the Mike. Yep. And you hardly had it. You know, you voice, it was pretty bad. You've, me, talk about it. Now you're back to full strength. But it took a bit, you know,
Starting point is 02:11:41 family, small American family business had the wife pitch in there for a while. That's because we're serious about what we do. And all I ask is that from time to time, even every single show would be nice. Like, you know, that was pretty valuable to me. I had a good laugh. something interesting that made me feel smarter, because we don't actually make you smarter, but you feel smarter, an angle that you hadn't thought of, maybe a punchline, all of it.
Starting point is 02:12:09 It's just there. Send us some value back. And this is the beauty of value for value. Nobody knows what value is to you, what number you put on value. $5 could be a lot of money to you. We're just as happy with you sending that as someone who sends us $5,000.
Starting point is 02:12:28 admittedly, $5,000, I get a little warm feeling. Hasn't happened in a while, has it? Oh, we had the rubbleizer donation last show. We did have a rubbleizer. And one time we had a $10,000 donation. That was our people in Bastrop. That's right. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:12:46 Who now apparently, I think they're in D.C. I think they moved. I think he's working for the government now. Hmm. I'm not sure. But I believe they sold the Bastrop Place. It was a dynamite place. And value can also be done.
Starting point is 02:13:01 You know, you can give us value in different ways. Starting, you know, organizing a meetup. I got a cool jingle today. I haven't been able to use it. A jingle? A jingle. A jingle. You know, I'm not talking about my AI woes today.
Starting point is 02:13:18 But I got, what is it? Kevin Trotman sent me a jingle. A jingle if I tell you how to do the AI right. which models with Adam's prompt jockey pointers. Adam's prompt jockey pointers. Yeah. So there you have it.
Starting point is 02:13:39 Value. Very valuable to me. Now, one of the things people do, excuse me, is create artwork. This has been valuable from the first day we did it. Artwork for the album art
Starting point is 02:13:51 that we put into the MP3 and everywhere we post the show. It shows up on no agenda show.net. because this gets people interested in what's happening. What is this image about? What's, oh, it might be funny or it's topical. And this was admittedly the simplest piece from Intero Bang. I don't know if Intero Bang has ever,
Starting point is 02:14:14 has we even seen Intero Bang previously? Let me see it in Tarot Bank's page. I don't think so. And nothing that won. No, I think Intero Bang's pretty new. Yeah, Intero Bang came in July 2nd with the first piece of art. And this was admittedly quite simple. It was the no agenda, Karenda Karin DeVorek, our door to the consulting company, I guess.
Starting point is 02:14:37 And it says, we accept AI tokens. Now, it wasn't that, I mean, let me see. There was something we're going to say about, oh, I remember what it was. Yeah. We just didn't want to give it to Darren O'Neill. Am I right? This is the truth. Because Darren did the no agenda battery.
Starting point is 02:14:58 which was a good piece, has been done a hundred times. We used the No Agenda Batteries in the newsletter. Jay picked it because she picks that. And if I don't like it, I'd call her and tell her to change it. But she picked this piece. And not only did she pick the Batteries piece, which is a killer piece. Yeah, it is. I got a note from one of our producers saying,
Starting point is 02:15:24 how can I help promote that great meme, the No Agenda Batteries. Really? Yeah. It was like, I've never had that. The No Agenda Batteries piece, which was, again, using the newsletter and I posted on both. This tells me something important that we made a bad decision. It was the right decision because we really just didn't want to give it to Darren.
Starting point is 02:15:48 You were up front. You're like, man, we just don't want to give that to Darren. Am I right or am I right? It was actually you, but it doesn't matter. We both agreed. and then we discussed, and I'm going to bring it back up. Yeah, here we go. Editorial meetings.
Starting point is 02:16:03 Yes, this is how it goes. When you work in a newsroom or an editorial position in any newspaper magazine or periodical, and they do these awards, like best of this, best of that, it's always corrupted by that kind of political, political discussions. Like, we can't give it to Darry, he's winning too much. and you're the one that said the following. Well, here we go. To quote you, you said, it's going to discourage other artists.
Starting point is 02:16:34 That's exactly what I did say that. Because Darren is just pooping out so much AI art. That's quite good. It's beyond good. If we let Darren win again, it will discourage other artists. That's right. We like to, yes.
Starting point is 02:16:52 So there's a political angle to picking things. Yes. And this goes on in newspapers and magazines. They have the top 10 list. And I have plenty of stories because I've been on many. Newspapers and a judging panel. How about the Oscars? Academy Awards.
Starting point is 02:17:06 Come on. They're all. The Golden Globes. It's all corrupt. And we're just as corrupt. It's corrupt. We're just as corrupt as the rest. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:17:14 There's a political aspect to all these selections. Yeah. And that was exactly the consideration was no. Darren is getting too damn good at that. this because he'd just be winning every week. I'm seeing, but Darren, of course, Darren doesn't have a job. He only has to cook for his wife. You know, he's doing podcasts.
Starting point is 02:17:37 You know, and so he's got it, man. I'm looking at what he's put in today. It's like there's some dynamite stuff in here. There's still people. There's still a chance. Don't let it all be Darren, please. You know, we have, it's astonishing how much talent that we have, I would say, generated from the show.
Starting point is 02:18:02 The show, the existence of this show, has produced, has attracted and created and developed. Talent. Incredible talent. I mean, look at the No Agenda Stream. Listen to it. Listen to the incredible talent that's on there. I mean, I'd take credit for Nick the Rat, too. Yes, I do.
Starting point is 02:18:28 Okay. Yes. And Darren O'Neill's doing 18 shows. You're doing a show with Gene, doing a show with Larry, you know, doing the rock and roll pre-stream show. Yeah, you're right. It's talent. It's talent.
Starting point is 02:18:45 We are the hitmakers, my friend. Currie and DeVorek. Hitmakers at large. That's right. You know, I'm surprised people who have not given it, have not called to say, hey, you know what? Can you help us do this? We'll pay you big dough. Okay. That's not how it goes. Hey, who could help us with this? Well, is that Kareen Dvorak? Oh, those boomers. I don't think so.
Starting point is 02:19:09 That's exactly how that people don't think about us that way. Only those of you in the know who are here, all 1,800 of you, who are listening in the troll room chock full. Good to have you here. Well, there's people that will be picking this up later. Yeah, well, later, yes. So we always thank everybody who sends money to us. Let's just call it that. It's time, talent, and treasure. We need the money because that's the only income we have, except John has some social security.
Starting point is 02:19:39 Tina's taking early social security to make ends meet. I never took it early. Well, I said, hey, could you take that early? Donations are down. take your social security early. Well, I'm definitely taking social security, but I'm beyond early. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:19:58 No, I understand. So there you go. But I wasn't talking about you. It was talking to my situation. And I... Oh, can you take it early? No, I can't take it early. No, I can.
Starting point is 02:20:10 You can take it early until, what, 63, I think? I don't know, but I wouldn't do it. Well, easy for you to say, my friend. So we thank you. everybody, $50 and above, never under 50 for reasons of anonymity. And we appreciate all amounts, all donations. We do have some
Starting point is 02:20:28 extra benefit for people who support us, $200 or above. With that, you get at Hollywood Credit, Executive, Associate Executive Producer, and we're guaranteed to read your note. We may truncate some of them. I look to the spreadsheet today. I'm like, hmm.
Starting point is 02:20:45 That first note is a whopper. But it's from the Archduchess Kim Keeper. the nutty fluffers. That's different. That is different. We break for these types of people. And then we have $300 and above. You get an executive producer credit and we will read your note. And these credits are completely legit because we are legit. We come from legacy media. So therefore, when we hand these titles out, you're legitimized. You can go to IMDB.com.
Starting point is 02:21:15 And if you don't have an account, you can open one up with your executive or associate executive producer credit. And we start today, and you are right, and this really saved us today, $2,000 from Archduchess Kim, Keeper of the Nutty Fluffers. She's in Hubbard, Oregon. And she says right off the bat, she wants some jingles. I get those. She wants screw your freedom, a little girl, yay. ITM Adam and John. Sorry for the long note in advance, John, but you know it's me, so whatever. whatever. Now here it is. She would like to ask the No Agenda community
Starting point is 02:21:53 for some assistance with her daughter's FFA project this year. What is an FFA project? Future Farmers of America. Ah. Oh, here you go. She bought a lamb and has put a lot of blood, sweat, and tears into bringing him to market.
Starting point is 02:22:08 She just finished the market class yesterday where she placed 15th in 200 plus lambs. That sounds pretty good. The amount you can give with an add-on donation is greatly appreciated as it goes to help her recoup expenses from this year and buy her lamb for next year. I have included her buyer's letter that takes you to her website where you can send in a donation, add-ons end 18th of July, which is coming up quick. Can you guys please add it to the show notes? Well, of course. On that same note, I wanted to bring to your attention
Starting point is 02:22:39 the Oregon Peace Act IP 28 that could be on this November's ballot. If past, it will ban hunting, fishing, and livestock breeding along with other things. Well, that sounds un-American and certainly an Oregonian. In Oregon? No livestock in Oregon? Are you kidding me? No hunting fishing. Well, you can have livestock.
Starting point is 02:23:03 You just can't breed them. Oh, yeah, okay. Hey, kids, go behind the barn. Go over to Idaho and pick them up. This is huge and we need to do all we can to not let this pass. This would be detrimental not only to F. FFA and 4H, but also make any meat production in this state illegal as it will ban slaughtering.
Starting point is 02:23:24 Now, where's your Muslims? Thank you so much for all that you guys do. I hope to make it to Grand Duchess this year, but I'm still waiting on my Rubelizer challenge coin. Oh. So, so this is hurting the show. Where's our rubbleizer challenge coin? We're back on it.
Starting point is 02:23:43 We're back on it. This is hurting the show. It's hurting the show. hurting the show. Well, I guess it is. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Archduchess Kim Keeper of the Nutty Fluffers and at request. Screw your freedom.
Starting point is 02:23:57 Yay! There you go. I can watch you get the next one and I'll get, because I have a letter, I have the note from the third one. Here's another shorty from Colin Fanon in Madowan, Michigan. 333.
Starting point is 02:24:16 33 cents. I'm the owner of Fanon Fitness, where my mission is simple. Personalized fitness. Oh, I know, Colin. He's still waiting for me to fill out my onboarding sheet. Personalized fitness for people with real constraints, like a podcaster. Through my online coaching program, I work with clients across the country to create customized training and nutrition plans that fit their scheduled lifestyling goals,
Starting point is 02:24:41 whether they're looking to lose weight, build strength, improve their health, or simply feel better every day. I've helped women navigate PCOS and menopause. Youth athletes prepare for their sport and the weight room. Older adults improve bone density and reduce their risk of falls. And middle-aged men ditch dad bod and regain their confidence. Can you help me with my low tea? Whatever your goal or your constraints, fan and fitness can help you build a plan that works in the real world. Visit noagenda.comfit. Well, there's a domain for you. Noagenda.comfit. And use promo code Fauci. Fouchy.
Starting point is 02:25:21 To save 10% on your monthly subscription, but he also loves bartering. He'll trade you for meat, roofing, firearms, and IT services. All right, I like this. Info at fan and fitness.com. Info at fan and fitness.com. Go to noagenda.com.
Starting point is 02:25:41 He'll trade you for meat. Ladies and gentlemen, beautiful. All right. Thank you. Colin, I think it's getting to the point where I really, please send me another email. I've lost it all. I really need your help. Yeah, I'm getting so much grief from the keeper.
Starting point is 02:25:58 Oh, you're going to die. You used to be a spin class guy? Yeah, I used to be a spin class guy. We don't have a spin class here. But I should just be working out, just, I just pumping a bit of iron. Because every, you know, we're at the age now. We're people of dying. You know, it's like, oh, Lindsay Graham.
Starting point is 02:26:14 Well, there you go. There you go. That's going to be you. You got 10 more years. You're going to die like Lindsay. Don't be like Dvorak. Oh, okay. Okay. Okay. I got you. So, Colin, I'm ready for you. Come at our dame early turtle 333.33. I have a note. Pretty short. On a nice piece of paper with a cat on it. Dear John and Adam, this is actually her printing
Starting point is 02:26:46 looks like a font. Oh, yeah? It looks like a font, but no, it's, I think, a real printing. This is a switcheroo. Okay,
Starting point is 02:26:56 you got to write this down. The robot won't catch this one. No. This is a switcheroo for my brother Eric, Sir, not appearing in the film. Okay. Keep that, will you?
Starting point is 02:27:11 Keep that note, so I can... Yeah, don't worry, I will. The robot will catch you. Got some life-changing news end of June. It doesn't say what. Humbly requesting a, oh, I can figure it out. An F-cancer karma and prayers for him. Okay.
Starting point is 02:27:30 Respectfully, Commodore Dame, Early Turtle. I got you covered on the prayers, especially because John will give me your name because the robot won't forget all about it. Got you covered, brother. You've got karma. Remind me to tell you about my book. Okay. I started writing it.
Starting point is 02:27:55 Oh, good. And I want Gateway Publishing to publish it. Yeah, no problem. And can I make any money with that? Can you give me an advance? Maybe. Really? No, you're kidding.
Starting point is 02:28:09 You're kidding me. You don't know. You're kidding. Oh, all right. Give it a kind of advance you'd be getting from the big boys. Yeah. Fungus Amongus, I'm going to go on in Colorado Springs, 257.94. No jingles, no karma.
Starting point is 02:28:24 Surefungus among us. H.C. Roberts, Middletown, Ohio, 250, a USA 250 donation. And he wrote, we are running out of time to do something about a Vonnegut-style satirical novella about crises we love. Amazon and Kindle and Paperback. Search the title and author H.C. Robb. I'll show us H.C. Roberts, because he wrote, we are running out of time to do something about.
Starting point is 02:28:51 All right. That's a promotion of some sorts. Yeah, we got a lot of promotions nowadays. Dame Shelley in Grand Forks, North Dakota, 250. Happy B-Day, America and Sir Chadwick of Fargo, North Dakota, July 8th. Do you know GLP1 helps with glaucoma? What isn't it good for? ITM Dame Shelley, 250.
Starting point is 02:29:16 It helps by rotting your eyes out. Isn't that how it works? So then the glaucoma is taken care of? I've heard that, you know, maybe. Ryan Perusi, Phoenix, Arizona, row of ducks, a long row 222.22. I love you guys. Keep her up. Shout out to Just Baker's stork in delay.
Starting point is 02:29:32 Just Baker's been really nailing it with the end of show mixes. I can't stop listening to it. Incredible song. Ryan Perusi, P.HX, Arizona, Phoenix, Arizona. Yes. Sir Tigger Max in Willis, Texas, 2222. John has a note. Hey, look, I got a piece of a note on it. How come I didn't get the notes? You only got the notes. What's up with that? It was Jay's birthday yesterday.
Starting point is 02:29:58 Ah, yes, it was. And I decided to pick up all the checks and do all this note stuff, and I wasn't going to scan it. It was Tina's birthday yesterday, too. Yeah, everybody's birthday. Yeah. Greetings, gents. Every time you bang all. way on NPR and PBS, my checkbook starts vibrating and says, donate. Good.
Starting point is 02:30:22 Those two organizations will go down in history as the ultimate Trojan horse of American socialism. Also, a reminder for the fans to look at JCD's tip of the day collections. Better than the old Sears and Roebuck catalogs. No jingles, no karma. Stay safe. Oh, that's good. Sir Tigger Max. Yes, that's good.
Starting point is 02:30:46 The old Sears and Roebuck. Oh, how we love that catalog. There he is. Ed LaBoutier, Tucson, Arizona, $200. Thank you, Ed, and really appreciate your note that you sent in about the Patriot Front, and we appreciate you.
Starting point is 02:30:59 He says, you guys are the best, and we thank you for that compliment. And that brings us to Linda Lupatkin 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.
Starting point is 02:31:20 Linda helps professionals and executives position their experience so employers see their value. That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K. And Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning a resume's best, Linda. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got time line. I really love these small one-man shops and small family businesses who support the show and throw in their plug.
Starting point is 02:31:53 There's something really endearing about it. There really is. It's cute. Yeah. I like it. And I like it when they cross-promote each other. And I can see, you know, people are trying it out. I will say, it only works if you do it every show.
Starting point is 02:32:06 It doesn't just work a one-off, you know. That's what's a Linda Leopac can figure that out. You know, and, you know, you can drop out once in a while like Eli the coffee guy or like the Little John's candies. But they always come up around holidays. Oh, but did you get Little John's candies caramel marshmallow stuff? I've been here in Holland. It's probably... Oh, and this came a while ago before you left.
Starting point is 02:32:31 Well, yes, I've had that. I have had that. With the caramel over a handmade marshmallow? You can't eat that. No, I know, but I had one. But you didn't have one of the Louisiana dill pickles? Not yet. Oh, you got to have one of those.
Starting point is 02:32:50 And, you know, the Manuka Gold, it's so about Tina. So last night we're in bed. I'm like, you know, and I spoon her, like, happy birthday. And I rub her leg because that's how she goes to sleep. Oh, God. And I say, wow, your leg is really smooth. She says, yes, that's the Manuka Gold Everything cream. And she says, I won't even give it to my friends.
Starting point is 02:33:18 They want it, but they're not getting it. She's hoarding it. Why don't she just tell them to buy some? She did. She looked at it. She said, oh, it's only 30. No, why don't she tell her friends to buy some? Well, that's what she's doing now.
Starting point is 02:33:31 But everyone's like, oh, yeah. It's only $39.95. It's a bargain. I don't know how those people make money. Anyway, thank you very much, Linda Lu Patkin. Something must be working for her. Then Yarmour, Yarr Moore, where do I know this name from? Is that, is, oh, he's from, uh, he's from Israel.
Starting point is 02:33:52 Oh, he's from Jew money. Here we go. It's about time. Yes. By the power and finances bestowed on me by Bibby Net and Yahoo. I hereby send shekels for the show. Shekels for the show. Now, there's a show title.
Starting point is 02:34:08 Sheckles to the show. There's a jingle waiting to happen. Sheckles for the show. And a birthday shout out for myself. 41 on July 12th. That's today. Happy birthday. Hit them in the mouth.
Starting point is 02:34:20 And if it doesn't work, bomb them. Oh, he wanted the jingle. Bomb them, bomb them and bomb them again, eh? Here we go. Bomb them, bomb them, bomb them again. Yeah. All right, shekels for the show. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:34:37 That's finally. Much appreciated. Finally. Finally. All that work. Yeah. Unblock me VPNs are last on the list in Honolulu, Hawaii, 200. ITM, please dedoosh us.
Starting point is 02:34:52 You've been deduced. We're a new, no agenda motivated, all-American VPN. Wow. Protect your privacy and freedom with Unblock Me VPN. wherever you are in the app store and Google Play Store or online at UnblockMeVPN.com. Try it today for free. Give thanks. So what do you think this is? Because, you know, there's a lot of VPN services out there. Yeah, I use a couple. Yeah, I use some too. But is Unblock me VPN? Is that if you're like your IP addresses blocked?
Starting point is 02:35:32 Like, because you're a troll and now you want to come in from some other place. And that's why I use Unblock Me VPN. I'm just wondering what their hook is, what their pitch is. That would be a good pitch. There's a couple of people in the troll room right now who've had that problem. You get on a block list, you know, your IP address gets on a block list and you're in trouble. You want a VPN. You do.
Starting point is 02:35:56 Everyone should have a VPN one form or another. You got to have a VPN. I'll check this one out. Yeah. I know you will. For free. I will. But it's only for App Store and Google Play.
Starting point is 02:36:07 So it's for your phone. You have to use it for your phone. Or online. Maybe you can get it for your computer. Maybe you can go to dot com. I'll check it out. All right. Hey, thank you very much to these executive and associate executive producers for
Starting point is 02:36:20 episode 1,885 of the best podcast in the universe. We really appreciate this. That's why we give you those special Hollywood credits. They're real. They're valid for a lifetime. wherever you go, use them at your LinkedIn, use them on your social media profile, use them to pick up people in bars.
Starting point is 02:36:38 Thank you very much for supporting the best podcast in the universe. Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. And we continue with our Thanks for everybody, $50 and above. The hundreds here, Forrest S. Brinkley in North Canton, Ohio. Sir Alan Bean, Beaverton, Oregon, $100.
Starting point is 02:37:09 You have a note, apparently, John. I want to say something. You got a note. You got a note that says right here. Normally we don't read notes at this level, but Alan Bean has been giving to it. Yeah, he's been given for ages, ages, I tell you. He's been giving us $50 a month forever. And he said in his original $50 note, when he used to live in Oakland,
Starting point is 02:37:30 he said, I'm going to keep sending you this money as long as the show stays, it's a good show. As long as it stays a good show. Okay. It stays a good show. All right. So we're still good. Now he says, listen to the little note, I'm stepping up my monthly donation.
Starting point is 02:37:49 Wow. Given the inflated environment and the dedication you fellows have exhibited over all these years, thanks, boys. Oh, thank you. Thank you, Sir Allen. So now we'll be hearing from Ellen. He's, by the way, he's a Baron. Yes.
Starting point is 02:38:03 Baron Bean. Barron Bean. Barron Bean. Followed by Countess Knights from Edmonds, Washington with 100. And coming in, faithful as always, he's the old faithful of the show, the Archduke of Luna, lover of America and boobs, Sir Kevin McLaughlin from Concord, North Carolina with $8.08. It's the boobes donation. God bless America and boobs.
Starting point is 02:38:27 Rocket Boy. Brownsboro, Alabama. Yes, we heard from Rocket Boy. It's his birthday, July 14th, and you get a present. Now you're talking, $65.80. That's, he's got his Gen X donation plus fees. He says, thank you for your courage. Rocket Boy, thank you.
Starting point is 02:38:46 Jennifer Falawill in Sun City, West Arizona. Second annual Gen X donation is an honor. Oh, this is interesting. So this is connected, I guess. Maybe not. Second annual Gen. No, just a Gen X donation. In honor of my sister, Julie Knowles, 46th birthday on Tuesday, July 14th.
Starting point is 02:39:05 Love you, sister. Jennifer Falawill. Steven Schumake, Zinia, Ohio, $64. $0.60, $1,000 with small boobs, $60. $60.06. Christopher Dexter, 5,678. Always love that one. Sir Patrick Cobal.
Starting point is 02:39:23 I'm going to talk about royalty from Franklin, Tennessee with double nickels on the dime to Duke of the South. We'll be at the Asheville meetup on the 14th and the Charlotte meetup on the 15th. Hope I can see some Dukes named Kevin and all of y'all in the Carolinas. All right. Hey, when Patrick Colbel is at a meetup, it's a meetup worth going to. Cameron Ling, North Branch, Minnesota, double nickels on the dime. Happy birthday.
Starting point is 02:39:48 Merry crab tree with double nickels on the dime. Ecton, Tennessee. Crab Claw's smoking hot wife. Is Elkton? It's Elkton. Yes, Elkton. 5150 from Commodore Crummy in El Cajon, California. Dame Rita, Sparks, Nevada, $50.33 and $33.
Starting point is 02:40:06 Always wonderful to see here on the list. I, team, gentlemen, happy birthday, Jay DeVorek, you're the best. Alexander Beattie, Tombalt, Texas, $50, and a penny. Here are the 50s. Tim Delvecchio, Blanton, Pennsylvania, Gary Mao in Woodland Hills, California. Sir Alex Zavala, Kyle, Texas, Dame Patricia Worthington, Miami, Florida, Brandon Savoy, Port Orchard, Washington, Crab Claw from Prospect, Tennessee.
Starting point is 02:40:32 Wants to deduishing. You've been deduced. And rounding out our 50s, Ox Otherx, Otherx, from Parts Unknown with $50. Thank you all very much for supporting the No Agenda Show. It's very easy. Anybody can do it, and you should. It's a good idea.
Starting point is 02:40:48 Support this very small family business as we move towards 19 years and hopefully towards 20. We continue to bring this to you as a public service because we love doing it and we would love to continue doing it. All we need is a little bit of support. Everybody should and can pitch in. So go to noagenda donations.com. Any amount is welcome.
Starting point is 02:41:11 We love the numerology. And if you want to, you can even set up a recurring donation. Any amount? Any frequency? Noagenda donations.com. James Shelley. is Sir Chadwick of Fargo, North Dakota. A happy birthday. He celebrated on the 8th.
Starting point is 02:41:30 Yarmore turned 41 today. Dave Jones, my brother from another mother, he is my compatriot on Podcasting 2.0, podcast Index.org. He celebrates on the 14th. Rocket Boy celebrates with him on the 14th as well. And Jennifer Falaw will wishes her sister Julie Null. A very happy birthday.
Starting point is 02:41:51 She'll be 46 on July 14th. Happy birthday from everybody here at the Best Podcast. The universe. No knights, no dames, no title changes. The red nights is over, no nothing. We got nothing, baby, but we do have some meetups. No agenda, meetup. First, a meetup report.
Starting point is 02:42:19 This is from the East Texas meetup. Hey, this is Rudy. Reporting here for the No Agenda. Happy Birthday Daniel slash East Texas bimonthly meetup. Rottullos today. We are having a grand old time celebrating Daniel's birthday and let's check in with everybody else. This is Patty in the morning. Happy National Paul Bunyan Day. This is Sir Tim of the Domestead. And Dame Mary of the Domestead. AI Data Centers, Nomas, Tucker Dode. This is Melinda. Happy birthday, Daniel White. She meant Dirty Jersey whore. Hey, this is Dirty Jersey Hoare. Uh, here.
Starting point is 02:43:02 at the Longview meetup. There's a rumor that there's somebody's birthday, but I don't know who's. Anyway, in the morning, y'all be good. What's up, guys? This is Neil. I've been a server for these guys for a minute to come about every trivia, and I love these guys to death. They make me laugh, make my day even better. I'm also a tattoo artist in Longview. If y'all want to come check me out, it's the Iron Iron Dragon Alpine Tree Road. But yeah, Runtolo is a great pizza place. We have trivia every Thursday and Sunday. These guys are awesome. I don't know where I'd be in Matt Ritolo's without these guys.
Starting point is 02:43:35 So thank y'all. That's what I'm talking about. Why we don't get every single server doing that or owner of the bar is beyond me. What a great opportunity to plug your business. And thank you, Dirty Jersey whore for your East Texas birthday meetup. There is a meetup company. There are actually two meetups this Tuesday. Now the 14th, the Scottsdale No Agenda Meetup, Tacos, Margarita.
Starting point is 02:44:00 and media deconstruction starts at 6 o'clock at local patron brewery or patron brewery in Scottsdale, Arizona. The Keller South Lake meetup, 6 o'clock, Dallas-Fordworth. That is what's on tap, Watt, WOT, in Keller, Texas. And it's a bring your own food operation there, just so you know. I guess you can get a drink. On Wednesday, the 15th, the Duke of the South will be in North Carolina at 630 at Highland Brewing and Asheville, North Carolina. and he will be at Charlotte's Thursday, Thursday, monthly meetup at 7 o'clock at Edge Tavern in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Starting point is 02:44:36 How about that? Coming up this month, San Pedro, California on the 18th, Fort Wayne, Indiana, the 25th, Anaheim, California, the 25th, the 26th, Squim, Washington, and the 30th Alpharetta, Georgia. We have tons of meetups taken up, taking place all the way through almost the end of the year. I see Bangkok, Thailand on the 8th. I see, let me see. Let me see. That's a big international one. The thing is, go to no agenda meetups.com. This is a place, well, it's a website, but when you go to a meetup, this will be a place where you will find your tribe, I guess is what I want to call it. You're going to fall in line right away with everybody. It doesn't matter what your background is, how old you are, how tall, how sweaty.
Starting point is 02:45:22 It doesn't matter. We got a lot of sweaty people at these meetups. I've been a sweaty person at the meetup. And it doesn't matter because everybody will just dig you. I'm telling you, the people you meet will be your first responders in any emergency. We have so many that no agenda telegram groups, people always connecting with each other, talking a lot of smack to. Connection.
Starting point is 02:45:46 That's what you get. And you know what connection gives you? It gives you protection. Go to no agenda meetup. You will not regret it. I guarantee it. Noagendametups.com. If you can't find one, start one yourself.
Starting point is 02:45:57 I want to go hang out with all the nights and days. Drink it on everybody feels the same. It's like a party. Yeah, baby. Always like a party. John's tip of the day is coming up. It's the Sears and Roebuck part of the show, as well as some fun end-of-show mixes.
Starting point is 02:46:24 As we move towards 11 p.m. here in Gitmo Nation Lowlands. Time for the ISOs. This is where we select something. We'll play at the very end of the show. John put his two in forbearance. Is that the word? That's a good word. That's a good word.
Starting point is 02:46:42 So I don't even think I'm going to win, but I'll play my three first and then we'll see how yours work out. It's so funny, dude. This one's too long. We want to thank you very much. We've had a tremendous time and I think a great success. No. And there's always going back to the well. We're out of here.
Starting point is 02:47:02 No. I think it's going to be one of yours, no doubt about it. Okay, well, I got to, I went to a lot of trouble to get the... A lot of trouble, a lot of prompting. Let's start with, it turns out Obama. That was a great show. Kudos to No Agenda. Yeah, it's kind of realistic, kind of.
Starting point is 02:47:24 How about Biden? That was a great show. No joke. I'm serious. Not kidding. Now go out and donate to No agenda today. No. We got to go with Obama.
Starting point is 02:47:33 Biden is just so boring that even if it was spot on, he's just boring. The guy's boring. He's hurting the show. That was a great show. Kudos to no agenda. We'll have to take it. Hey, but before we even get to that, it's time for John's tip of the day. Green advice for you and me.
Starting point is 02:47:51 Just the tip with JCD. And sometimes Adam. So I'm going back to the well with cleaning products. Mimi is going. back to the well with cleaning products. And I have a bag of these right here. This is the Blue Land
Starting point is 02:48:11 Toilet Bowl Cleaner Tablets. Is this something you throw in the tank? Three and one. No, you throw in the toilet bowl. Mm-hmm. And it foams up. Oh, a foamer. Or it bubbles up. And then you take a brush and it
Starting point is 02:48:25 does an amazing job. This is better than using typically Ajax or or Comet or one of you know, you dump it in there try to get the thing clean. This is a very good product. And blue land. Especially. And there's no plastics.
Starting point is 02:48:41 These little tablets are like you have to touch them. There's no plastic around. They don't want microplastics going down the drain. And it's especially handy in these days of explosive diarrhea.
Starting point is 02:48:57 Yeah, there you go. It's a very... Very timely. Lemony, very lemony. I would love to know. Just like the Patriot Front, I'm now thinking this explosive diarrhea is just another hoax. Do we have anyone within the no agenda listening audience who has had explosive diarrhea this recent bout of it? Or do you know someone? Do you know?
Starting point is 02:49:19 And I want to know the severity of it. Was it truly explosive? This is very descriptive, this explosive diarrhea. Yeah. And if you email me and you give me the description, I will personally send you a pack of today's tip of the day, which is, name it again, the product. Blue Land, Toilet Bowl Cleaner comes in a bag.
Starting point is 02:49:44 Blue Land Toilet Bowl cleaners. Hey, find all the tips at Tip of the Day.net. Create advice for you and me, just the tip with JCD. And sometimes Adam. created by Dana Burnettie All right everybody Hey So let me check my phone
Starting point is 02:50:04 Let me see Still no baby As far as I can tell Baby Baby, no baby I guess I'll be coming home tomorrow Which means We'll be coming to you
Starting point is 02:50:15 From the Texas Hill country For Thursday show Before we have to turn around And go back to see the baby Oh it's great It's going to be great Thank you all very much for being here, for supporting us. You should continue to support us by going to noagenda donations.com.
Starting point is 02:50:35 Up next on the No Agenda Stream, if you stay tuned, we've got, oh, for the first time in a year and a half, grumpy old Benz. But the show's been off for a year and a half? Yeah, yeah, yeah, it'll be Chef Bemrose and Chef Darren O'Neill celebrating Christmas in July. How about that? End of show mix is from Just Baker, Kevin Trotman, and Purian, and we thank them for their courage as well. So from here, the swanky southern district of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.
Starting point is 02:51:13 And from Northern Silicon Valley, I'm John's C. DeVorak. That's right. We'll be back on Thursday till then, everybody. Thank you. No one to the donations.com is where you can send your value. Adios, bo-fos, a hooey-hooie. And such. Learning lords like we're smartles
Starting point is 02:51:31 With Adam's prompt Yo dudes, I totally read like Half a pamphlet That's something free That super rad like ocean breeze Chairman says we all can chill Long as somebody pays the bill No equations, no debate
Starting point is 02:52:06 Just good vibes and confiscate Oh, details then Don't need facts, just good vibrations See at the demonstrations Cowabunga comrades Red time So She starts off stringer
Starting point is 02:52:35 It's gone She's start of stringer Debate She's about to pop Will Adam still be there to see the baby drop the family has gathered the weather's getting hot
Starting point is 02:52:59 nor even into clumped when's the waiting gun to start and she's ready to explode before the next episode Value for value That's the only honest loop
Starting point is 02:53:41 Return what the show delivers Keep the signal in the groove Random V4V DIY no corporate middle man in sight Fuel the frequency producer Make the independent light burn bright
Starting point is 02:53:55 They pioneer the model When most were still chasing corporate ad cash Random do-it yourself donations Every producer has their own stash Executive producer credit hits different Forever etched on the bio A lifetime passed 250 for the 250th anniversary Help the show make that history last
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Starting point is 02:54:34 but the one that keeps the listeners in the mix. The value you return is the fuel that keeps the engine from stalling in the corporate rain. Sustaining subscriptions are the vitamins. Without them, the show catches the mainstream flu and fade. So ask yourself, do your ear every week. Then return some value back. That's the pack that makes the strong stay. unique value for value no strings no griff just the real deal keep no agenda running strong
Starting point is 02:55:03 donate a producer that's the appear that most fun mopo devorak dot org slash n a that was a great show kudos to no agenda

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