Episode 1874
โจ Locker room bravado
Kennel Index
June 4, 2026 ยท 2h 59m
Art by Capitalist Agenda
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Episode 1874 โ Kennel Index
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0:00 You need to smile more.
0:02 Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, 06/04/2026.
0:06 It's your award winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination episode eighteen seventy four. This is No Agenda.
0:14 Black Peeling BBN
0:15 broadcasting
0:16 live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number 6. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.
0:23 Man, in California,
0:25 it does look like Tom Steyer's gonna be governor. I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the morning.
0:33 Yeah.
0:35 I don't think I won my dollar yet,
0:38 but it's looking pretty good.
0:40 What's your dollar about? The mayor of Los Angeles.
0:45 Oh, you what? What was the bet again?
0:48 You'd I'm glad it wasn't for a thousand dollars.
0:51 No. If it was a thousand dollars, I would have sent an email out and had somebody sign the document.
0:56 It's different. I said that
1:01 Pratt would not become mayor and that it would be Karen Bass. Yeah. Okay. That's yeah. That's what you said. And you said no. Because I said California's rigged and you said no no. They can't rig it. They have to let them win. You had a whole theory about it. I do. And I'm sticking with the theory that that just got nothing to do with Tom Steyer. No. I know that, but you're kind of avoiding the bet.
1:21 I'm not avoiding the bet. I'm good. I'm good for the bet. We didn't talk about Steyer. Steyer.
1:26 Steyer.
1:28 Stoney. We've talked about Pratt. I wanna talk Pratt is the is the interesting one.
1:33 Not to me. So
1:35 what is the deal? I'm not I don't live in LA. I'm telling you, Todd, this Steuer thing is more important. You're like, Pratt is gonna take it. Pratt has the best campaign ever. He's
1:44 not gonna take it.
1:46 He's gonna take it easy. Who the heck would You wanna voted for this carrot, guys. You wanna if it's rigged, double or nothing? Wanna go $22?
1:55 Double double down? Wanna double down big man? Okay. $2.
1:58 Alright. $2. So tell me about the story or Well, Steyer, here's the guy. This guy is a, you know, he's a I don't even know what he does. He's like a hedge fund guy or something.
2:08 Anyway, he spent $300,000,000
2:11 on his campaign for president, which got him nowhere. And then he drops another $200,000,000
2:17 on his own campaign for governor,
2:19 and nobody likes him. Wait a minute. He's not likable. This makes no sense.
2:25 We've been told over and over again, whenever it's Jewish money, they'd always win because they have a lot of it. Yeah. Dude, there's he put the most money in and came in third. Well, this makes no sense.
2:38 I I agree.
2:40 It makes no sense because based on what everybody's been telling us. Yeah. You put the money in, you win. Yeah. That's how it works. I I don't understand this at all. This is crazy. I get it I get it now. He's not Jewish. That's the problem. Oh, is that what it is?
2:58 Oh, man.
3:01 Sean Ryan and and Megan Kelly,
3:05 they were saying exactly
3:06 this.
3:08 By the way, what a great idea. Let's all go on each other's podcasts.
3:13 See, we had the right idea.
3:15 For eighteen years,
3:17 we've been going on each other's podcast.
3:20 That's
3:21 how you do it. No. Megan had to go on Sean Ryan's podcast and I'm sure Sean will go on Megan's podcast.
3:28 This this podcast circle jerk is kind of getting annoying.
3:32 It's very annoying.
3:34 So Podcast
3:36 circle jerk. There's a that'd be a great title for the show. I don't know
3:41 about that.
3:43 So they're lamenting about this very thing that you that California just proved is not true,
3:50 and here they are talking about Thomas Massey and how Israel
3:54 bought the election. So what does this all mean? I mean,
3:57 I thought he was gonna win. I thought for sure he was gonna win, but then he didn't.
4:02 And
4:04 Israel bought it. They bought the election. No. Okay. So we do we even vote anymore? What's the fucking Legitimately,
4:12 what's the point? It's very hard for me to argue against your cynicism.
4:17 No. Think a lot of We have a duty to vote, but but, like, why? Yeah. For what? What's what if they're just gonna I mean I mean,
4:27 ideally,
4:29 a candidate will come along who will
4:31 represent
4:32 an antidote to the system.
4:35 Tucker. Tucker. They should have said it. Come on. Say it. Tucker.
4:40 Antidote.
4:41 It has to be the end oh, the they went on, man. And because
4:45 this is not gonna work anymore, this Israel buying elections. I I just
4:50 I
4:51 just feel stuck. I mean, they're buying our elections, but it's just how do we how do we get out from under this shit? Why? Is it is it almost over? Is it gonna die with the baby boomer generation?
5:03 I mean, gen z is 85%
5:06 against These
5:07 are all the whole things. These are all good things. Like, I I have have nothing against Israel as a country. I don't I don't have anything against the people,
5:16 you know, but the government has definitely been taking advantage of us
5:19 and we've been allowing it, really. And sometimes I do worry, like, we shouldn't use Israel
5:24 as a proxy
5:25 to hide our anger at Trump. Oh, okay. Here's some truth coming out. What?
5:31 You know, president Trump's the one who made the call. He made the Netanyahu
5:35 This has been going on for a long fucking time. I agree. But I'm just saying, like, Netanyahu made an argument that he thought was in favor of his country. They go on and on about this. Here's Megan. Like, it's really,
5:46 you know, realizing that Israel owns the entire US government and the president
5:52 and the treasury
5:55 and the and the department of education and the EPA and the DHS
6:00 and anything else War.
6:02 Department of War. Sorry. I forgot that one.
6:05 It's actually good news
6:07 because realizing this is like getting a cancer diagnosis. But hold that point. Hold that thought because I do want to come back to that.
6:14 All the stuff you just said is why we should feel optimistic.
6:19 If you go to the doctor tomorrow and you find out you have cancer,
6:23 you might feel sad,
6:25 but it's actually a good day because you found out about cancer,
6:30 and it's better to know so you can do something about it.
6:34 The reality was the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow. You have cancer. I mean, this this is this is what we call black pill. They they are depressed.
6:44 They're
6:45 angry. They're mad. Now, actually, I don't believe any of that. I think they're just following the likes, the clicks, and the views. Could Megan Kelly hated Trump and she loved Trump, not she hates Trump? This is a fair weather friend. She doesn't care. But Ryan Yeah. But Ryan Don't forget when she was at NBC, she had all these trans people on. Yeah. She was so, oh, the trans is so so particularly
7:06 great. And then she puts your gets another show. Yeah. I hate the trans.
7:10 Now make up your mind.
7:12 But Sean Ryan, he's real he is really depressed. How do we how do we recorrect?
7:17 How do we get on the right course? How do we get out from Israel's thumb? How do we
7:23 stop this how how do we stop the forever wars? How do we it's just how do we get the pulse back to where it needs to be? Nothing's on the right track.
7:32 That's why I think voting for I mean, get them in in onesies and twosies. I don't I just don't feel like they're gonna last.
7:38 I
7:39 just like it needs to be a new party but that's already been tried. Oh, yeah. So now now the I'm telling you, they are just an inch away from saying Tucker's Tucker's our guy.
7:49 He's gotta be our guy. They didn't say it? Well, it keeps coming up in the conversation. We've got clip after clip of people including Cenk
7:57 Yeah. Saying
7:58 Tucker should be president. Well well. That's insane.
8:03 I'm trying to think which, was it this clip maybe? Let me see. Insurers on those questions are going to be very clear to Speaking of Chenk. Deal breakers in the next election. No one who
8:13 starts talking about their commitment to Israel has a chance in hell of getting elected. I just they just don't. So don't you think Israel will just pay them to not talk about it until they win? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Okay.
8:26 You got you got you got stealth candidates.
8:30 Oh, man. This is so crazy.
8:33 I think where was it she was talking about Chenk here? Israel had over American pop I think this is it here. That's how I see this whole problem with Israel. We didn't understand this
8:43 on the left or the right
8:45 about how much influence Israel had over American politics. Some did. Some Glenn Greenwald has been, like, sawing Oh, the alarm on this yes. Forever,
8:55 as have people like Anna Kasparian, but, like, Chenk Weger. But it's
8:59 it's been a smaller group.
9:01 This wasn't something that was either known. Cenk Wieger,
9:04 Anna Kasperian, now she's all on their side?
9:07 This is this is pretty nuts,
9:10 especially
9:12 when you take into account
9:14 the phone call the president had
9:16 with
9:17 Bibi Netanyahu.
9:19 Finally, I've been telling I've been telling the president, he's got he's got to do something about this Israel hate.
9:24 So this is how it played out in the
9:28 in the M5M.
9:30 This literally this this short of a little, little blurb from pooper. The president also acknowledged the phone call he recently had with Israeli prime minister Netanyahu during which he reportedly called him effing crazy and asked him regarding Lebanon quote, what the f are you doing?
9:45 Did you speak to him in those I did. I I always say angry. I was a little bit
9:50 perturbed at his
9:54 constantly fighting with Lebanon,
9:57 you know. At some point, I said, maybe
9:59 we gotta stop this. We gotta stop it.
10:03 Well, the prime minister was also asked about the call and the president's characterization of it.
10:09 President confirmed that he that he said, you're effing crazy.
10:13 How how did you react to that? What really happened to my I told him I'm gonna be pull him out of office. I'm in control of him. Well, I'm not gonna get into details of our conversations. We've had thousands of well,
10:24 a lot a lot of them. What's that?
10:27 Thousands, really? I guess. And if you think this is a crisis, you should be in some other conversations,
10:32 but we've always found a way.
10:34 Well, one other item on Israel and Lebanon. Shortly before airtime, the two countries announced that they have agreed to what they're calling the implementation
10:41 of a cease fire. Okay. So maybe the call works. That's but pooper can't make that conclusion.
10:47 But the thing that was interesting about this is it was Axios
10:50 who broke the story. And immediately,
10:53 everyone on X said, well, Axios is bought and paid for by the Jews. You know that. Right? So,
10:58 like, make up your mind.
11:00 Please, here's part one of the story about Axios and there's two parts. The second part which has not been discussed anywhere in M5M.
11:09 We won't get into the precise vulgarisms in the conversation between Oh, vulgarisms.
11:14 Oh, we can't say the f word or the s word. The president The United States and the Israeli prime minister.
11:20 But summarize them for us, Mark, and when this happened, why? On Monday, Donald Trump got steamed with prime minister Netanyahu because Netanyahu had launched this invasion and this attack on Lebanon and Southern Lebanon.
11:32 It had led the Iranians to say, we're done with peace talks,
11:37 and Trump got him on the horn and really lit into him, said, you're you're effing crazy. What the f are you doing?
11:43 I'm keeping your behind out of prison. Oh, we can't say ass.
11:48 And, basically, you need to know when to stop. And
11:52 the description that we were given of this is Donald Trump was really steamed. He subsequently came out on a New York Post podcast and said that, well, I wasn't really angry. I was perturbed, but he confirmed he indeed did say that to Netanyahu. And very quickly to remind the audience, Hezbollah is operating in Lebanon.
12:09 They're a terrorist proxy of Iran.
12:12 So
12:13 what what no one reported on is Miranda Devine.
12:17 Actually, it's worth hearing the whole first part and second part of of her interview with him. So this is the first part about the phone call. Now Axios reported that you had a phone call with Bibi Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, in which you were angry with him. You said, are you effing crazy? What are you effing doing?
12:38 I helped you stay out of jail. Is that true? Did you speak to him in those two days? I don't, I wouldn't say angry, I was a little bit
12:46 perturbed at his
12:50 constantly fighting with Lebanon,
12:53 you know. At some point I said, Bibi,
12:55 we gotta stop this. We gotta stop it. But I have a very good relationship. We've done well, done well together. He always says, we could never have done it, but everybody knows that we could have never done it without The United States. But we've we've I've worked very well together. I like Bebe a lot,
13:13 and I've worked very well with him. We had a
13:15 you know, where he I'm a wartime president. He's a wartime prime minister,
13:20 very important part of the world,
13:22 And I think we've done, you know, very well. We've we've gotten along very well together.
13:27 Okay. So fine. And then she asked a little bit about, you know, just on and on and on. There was a second part of the phone call which Axios reported on, but Miranda Devine didn't ask about and which was,
13:41 I think for obvious reasons, not asked about or reported everywhere else. And this is the part. There's another thing the president in your piece with Barak Ravids said to the Israeli prime minister that strikes me as interesting. He said,
13:54 the world hates Israel
13:56 and hates you for doing this, sort of saying that it's not just between you and I,
14:03 prime minister Netanyahu.
14:04 You have an image problem.
14:06 Right. And that's really important to Donald Trump who pays attention to that sort of thing. And it also means that Trump himself I mean, to verbalize it though that way. Right. Well, he's he's not only said that to Netanyahu there, he's privately said that as well. There are
14:21 I need to phrase this properly and carefully. Why? Just say it. There are people in the Trump administration who are gravely concerned that Netanyahu has been, in the words of one of them, too bloodthirsty
14:32 in the way in which he's prosecuted the war, in in Gaza
14:36 against Hamas and now against Hezbollah,
14:39 and that it has led to this circumstance. Now Netanyahu's defenders, let's be clear, say that's completely unfair. He needs to do this otherwise they were encircled by a quote ring of fire.
14:49 So I think Trump has done this in a very interesting way by because this was clearly leaked. No one at Axios heard the call.
14:57 This was purposely leaked
14:59 by two people familiar with the matter.
15:03 And the second part,
15:05 I think was critical to say, it's not Israel, it's b b netanyahu.
15:09 You're the reason why everybody hates Israel.
15:12 Channeling all of that negative black pilled energy from Sean Ryan and Megan Kelly and Tucker Carlson and everybody towards Netanyahu
15:22 and then
15:23 unfortunately Divine didn't ask about that but then he says something very interesting
15:28 about the, well, you know, clearly they tricked you into this war. Right? They tricked you. What do you say to people who claim
15:36 that Bibi Netanyahu tricked you into going into Iran? Well, they're just, you know, the enemy. They're just, you know, the Democrats, BUM.
15:45 These are Democrats. These are people that don't know what they're doing. They want men playing in women's sports, and they want open borders so the world can pour into our country, and they want transgender for everybody, surgery, and they want transgender
15:58 mutilation of our children.
16:01 No. These are just words, you know, that's all they do. It's all they're good for is words like,
16:05 I heard that the other day for the first time. Said he tricked me. I mean, I'm the one that started it because, again, I don't wanna bore anybody, but I started because we can't let them have a nuclear weapon.
16:17 So do you think it can't be that the president is not aware of the podcast circle jerk circuit.
16:25 He must know that Tucker and all these people are saying this, but he universally just says, oh, they're all democrats or democrats is his new word.
16:33 Do you think this is purposeful or do think he really doesn't know? I think he doesn't know. Really?
16:39 Well, the reason I say that is because when I talk to people who are on the left, and there's only of them around, and I'm in California Next door. Yeah. Unlike you. Yeah. That's right. So I have the different perspective in that regard.
16:52 And you they don't know shit.
16:55 They they don't know anything that's going on on the other side of the fence, and I don't see why Trump would be, although he's not a Democrat
17:04 ignoring the right,
17:05 he's a right winger ignoring the left. Yeah. But but Tucker and those guys were his team,
17:11 quote unquote.
17:12 Yeah. But his but
17:14 No. I'm I'm I'm I can honestly believe that he doesn't know that the circle jerk because we're the we follow it closely. He's got a he's got other things to worry about besides who's on what, whose podcast.
17:25 Not like Biden who apparently, according to Jill, watched Fox News all the time.
17:31 You read Which I believe. You read the book. Oh,
17:35 man.
17:36 Well, I just thought that was very interesting.
17:39 Yeah. I think so too. I'd like to figure out who was the leakers
17:43 Yeah.
17:44 Because you can't be I like, you can't if you're a Axios the
17:48 nature of the Axios news operation is I think, as follows.
17:53 If somebody's leaking to you,
17:55 you have to assume there's ulterior motives.
17:58 Mhmm. And so you wanna get leaks from somebody who's, like, slipping you cool
18:03 information that you can write on without feeling that you've been used. Right. Right. So the leaker can't be Rubio, for example. Right.
18:14 Well, he says, how do It I has to be a designated leaker. Well, if you if you listen to what the Axios guy said in that report, he says, how do I put this carefully?
18:24 Because he was talking about the leakers. Yeah. He was trying to make sure that the leaker wasn't revealed. Right. And it was people who feel that
18:32 Netanyahu is bloodthirsty.
18:35 Yeah. Well, I can see a lot of people feeling that way. I think every I think we feel that way. Yeah. I think he is. Yeah.
18:43 Anyway, I just thought that was interesting.
18:45 You know, they kill presidents, they kill JFK.
18:48 So, you know, Trump just even saying that, you know, I kept your ass out of jail and what the f are you doing? I mean, is this is this is gonna be assassinated now
18:56 according to the same people.
19:00 He's all dumb.
19:02 Well, it's funny though. Yeah. Well, there'll be So I was having a conversation with one of my friends in Los Angeles who's Wait. You have a friend in Los Angeles? Yeah. You have a friend? Wait. Stop. I do. I have a couple of friends. Couple of friends. Still still And so he
19:17 was like he's got a depressed
19:20 attitude, typical of the Angelenos.
19:22 And he's going on about how everyone's they've all fallen for the Candace Owens,
19:28 Megan, this the what you're talking about. How you started it off, these people have captured
19:35 a huge number of
19:37 otherwise conservatives down in Southern California. He's surrounded by them. It's everywhere.
19:43 And he's freaked out about it. He's like, you know, he's of the mind, Mimi's kind of of this mind too, that we have a civil war a brewing. Oh, okay. Yeah. And I'm not, you know, I completely
19:55 laugh laugh at that We're gonna blow up each other's podcasts.
19:59 Yeah. What are we gonna do? Civil war. Podcasts. So the civil war of twenty twenty six in America played out on the battlefield of podcasts.
20:07 That's all that's happening.
20:10 That's the way I see it. Yeah.
20:12 Yeah.
20:13 It's
20:14 it is well, there is some stuff happening in the house, which was just so pathetic.
20:21 This was the house resolution.
20:23 Dell, according to reporters in the chamber, those cheers that you just heard from Democrats on the Democratic side of the aisle, after that result and to be clear, it was the vast majority of people voting in favor of this war powers resolution. Democrats, This was the fourth attempt and now the first successful attempt to vote to limit president Trump's war powers, in Iran.
20:41 Remember, the house has now passed it. It would be up to the senate to pass it, to send it to president Trump's desk. There's a very good chance that he would veto this if it made it to his desk and possibly argue that the war with Iran has ended something that his administration
20:54 has already tried to, argue,
20:56 in
20:57 the past. It's worth noting that there were four Republicans who voted with all Democrats
21:01 to, end this Iran war. And those include according Say what? I'm asking the reporter because it's coming. Right? He's gonna tell you exactly who the four Democrat or four Republicans are. Yes. He is, obviously. Reporters in the chamber, Politico reporting that was congressman Brian Fitzpatrick, the Republican from Pennsylvania, a swing district Republican,
21:21 congressman Tom Barrett,
21:23 congressman Warren Davidson of Ohio, someone who's been quite vocal on war powers, and also worth noting congressman Thomas Massey, the Republican from Kentucky who just lost his primary to a Trump backed challenger just in the last couple weeks, now
21:36 clearly taking that strong step on the house floor. The vast majority of republicans, though, allowing this war to continue voting against this war powers resolution, but certainly a banner moment for critics of this ongoing war with Iran.
21:48 Oh, it's not. But I have now I have a question. I said a banner moment. It's not gonna go anywhere. No. Of course not. I mean, we've already discussed that every president,
21:57 Democrat or Republican considers the war powers resolution to be
22:02 unconstitutional.
22:03 And if they were really serious,
22:06 the house, they would pass a bill to block funding.
22:10 That is that is their
22:13 mandate. They have they have the purse. So they're not really serious about it. This is just grandstanding.
22:20 But here's here's a question I have about Massey. Revenge is a dish best served cold according to Thomas Massey
22:27 of Kentucky.
22:29 Explain why his vote might have been the deal breaker on this. Well, look, congressman Massey, someone who has in the past raised questions about The US's involvement overseas. So certainly,
22:40 his decision, you know, to to vote in favor of the War Powers Act notable on that front, but also notable because of the fact that, you know, this could be viewed in some circles as retaliation against president Trump for endorsing against him.
22:53 In his latest primary, Massey and Trump have had this kind of rocky back and forth relationship
22:58 for many months now. In fact, stretching back to the president's first term, there were times where congressman Massey went against president Trump's will and, you know, incurred his wrath. The president, though, had in the past endorsed congressman Massey, of course, choosing a different direction this time. Congressman Massey ultimately losing that primary. But, again, notable, in fact, because of congressman Massey's decision today, whether he would have made the same exact decision
23:22 had, he not lost his primary, that, of course, is somewhat of an open question. So if Massey is such a die hard on the constitution
23:31 of the constitutional
23:32 edition that,
23:34 why would he vote for something that he should know
23:37 is inherently unconstitutional?
23:41 Congress doesn't get to I think I think you misstated it. I don't think he's a constitutional nut like Oh, that's what every oh, every that's what that's his brand. That's what the Tucker's of the world and all things. Well, they're they're foolish shit. Okay. Thank you. Lady
23:56 Vox in the troll room says, reality,
23:59 colon,
24:00 the show
24:01 and indeed the whole communite
24:03 as illustrated in No Agenda's rejection of No Agenda Social has split over Israel, Zionists, Jews.
24:11 Right or wrong, Jews have divided podcasting
24:14 and audiences.
24:16 But let me say something.
24:18 Were there were 3,000
24:19 accounts on No Agenda Social.
24:23 They left
24:25 and three so let's say a thousand of those were bogus
24:30 and 2,000 are left, people who didn't really care, all they did is troll, they didn't donate. I mean, he provided his time and talent. That's not a split,
24:40 that's a fractioning.
24:42 It's not a split. Oh.
24:47 Fractioning.
24:48 It's a fractioning. I like it. It's not a it's not like It's not a crazy argument. But it's true.
24:53 Yeah. I know. But it's funny you come up with that word. Uh-huh.
24:58 I'm impressed.
24:59 Oh, oh, goodness. Thank you. Play some clips so I could be impressed by YouTube. I feel good Well, let's start well, you're talking about the stuff going on in congress. There's a big meeting about the some detransitioner
25:11 and the action going on there about
25:13 trying to get some laws passed. I thought this was worth playing. This changes the subject a little bit.
25:20 Gets well, before we do that, let's go let's get some of the Iranian clips out of the way. Got a Iran deal won from NTD.
25:28 President Trump saying that ongoing talks with Iran are going, quote, very well, and that if a deal does happen, it'll be over the weekend. NDD's White House correspondent, Mario two, brings us the latest from the North Lawn. They're pretty close to signing a paper.
25:41 We've actually gotten along with them very well. And you know what? You saw it for the last few nights.
25:47 It takes two to tango. You understand that. We hit them very hard on something else unrelated.
25:52 And so they were responding.
25:54 I mean, if it happens and it might not happen. Yeah. Who knows? But if it happens, it could happen, like, over the weekend.
26:00 President Trump declaring that no boots on the ground will be needed in Iran, citing the military successes of operations midnight hammer and epic fury. That's as he announces that the Iranian regime has agreed to no nuclear weapon. I can tell you this.
26:13 We define victory. We define victory as
26:16 destroying their defense industrial base, significantly reducing the number of missile launchers that they possess, significantly reducing their stockpile of drones, and we achieved all of those in addition to destroying what they had left of an air force and wiping out their entire conventional navy. Those are all gone. So I consider that victory, and we did too, and that was the purpose of epic fury. And as president Trump continues to weigh whether The US will resume its strikes inside Iran, The US naval blockade on Iranian ports is holding strong with central command announcing that a 125 commercial vessels have now been redirected from either entering or exiting Iranian ports in the Strait Of Hormuz.
26:51 The president saying that The US has been clearing mines in The Strait in anticipation of its opening when a deal is signed. I
26:57 did not hear anything about us clearing mines.
27:01 Well, you just did. Well, yeah. You know, he he had a talk with a reporter from CNBC.
27:08 It wasn't recorded. The reporter gave his report of the conversation
27:13 and the president said, well, just blow him to kingdom come.
27:17 But no one picked up on it.
27:19 If he doesn't say it and it's not on on audio tape, it's not good enough. I I well, I I like that. You're right.
27:27 Let's play the second half of this. The Homo Strait will open
27:31 immediately
27:31 upon signing. Now,
27:33 subject to a couple of areas being cleaned out also of mines, which we don't think there are any.
27:38 So it'll happen very quickly, and we'll take the southern route anyway.
27:42 But immediately upon signing, we open up the Harmon Street. Oh, see. Just so everyone realizes, as I've said ad nauseam,
27:51 we control the straits,
27:52 not Iran.
27:54 Meanwhile, just about a month ahead of America's 200
27:57 birthday, president Trump is highlighting various construction and beautification projects that he spearheaded throughout the capital, including affixing 28 fountains in DC, personally contributing to renovating Lafayette Park in front of the White House, which had been in terrible condition and used as a protest site, and notably completing the final coat of protection on the Lincoln Reflecting Pool, writing, quote, this will be the first time since the day it was built in 1922
28:21 that it has worked and worked wonderfully in indeed.
28:24 And you're gonna have something you're be very proud of, and it'll last for fifty
28:29 to a hundred years before you have to do anything with it. Very strong, powerful substance that we use.
28:36 And we picked a color called American flag blue,
28:39 so it's gonna be really special. I said you'd like to see it. This new announcement coming as president Trump has tied in his beautification efforts with matters of national security,
28:49 his third assassination attempt at the White House Correspondents Dinner, renewing a push for secure event space found in the White House Ballroom. Reporting from the White House, Mario two, NTD News. And before we go to trans
29:01 Well, before we go to trans, also have one more clip in the Iran series. Alright.
29:05 I just wanna play. This is this is from the hearings. They had Ruby up there. This is just That's what I snippet from Rubio being Ruby our next president, Rubio Lubio. Is
29:16 Lubio. Lubio. Lubio. He's a wise ass. He is.
29:20 And he loves being a wise ass and he's but he doesn't he he could be he has different styles of comedy,
29:27 but the style he likes to use, I think, the most in public now after his earlier
29:33 kind of experimentation
29:35 with the small hands jokes and things like that. Yeah. Stan more standard comic fare.
29:41 He he likes to understate things and be kind of a a a deadpan.
29:46 He likes to deadpan wise ass. And this is right in the middle of the hearings, and I think this is a perfect example.
29:52 Some Democrats are making the laughable claim that Iran is stronger today than they than they were before epic fury. Can you set the record straight? They have no navy. They have no air force. They have no air defenses. They have substantial
30:05 they have they have massive
30:07 destruction to the defense industrial base.
30:09 They've lost a substantial percentage of their missile launchers
30:13 and of of of their drone launchers as well. They're not benefiting from the straits being closed because the blockade is keeping them from hundreds of millions of dollars a day in revenue. They've had their seat ships seized in the Indo Pacific. Their leadership is fractured. They have hyperinflation.
30:28 Their currency is worthless, and they're having trouble making payroll. I guess other than that, they're doing well. Yeah.
30:36 Did you the the Boston whaler thing was kind of cute too. Yeah. Watch the whaler. I I have that here. Hold on a second. Iran's
30:44 desire to build a nuclear weapon was going to be built, was going to be effectuated behind a conventional shield.
30:51 They were going to build for themselves so many missiles,
30:54 so many drones,
30:55 so many conventional weapons,
30:57 including a navy,
30:59 that at that point there's nothing you could do about it. What they tried to do is they were gonna try to build a conventional shield and hide behind that conventional shield and basically say to the world, if you come and do anything about our nuclear program,
31:10 we will overwhelm you with missiles, we will overwhelm you with drones, and we will overwhelm you with our navy,
31:15 and you will not win. You will not be able to do anything about it. They were seeking that point of immunity, which is why the president chose to act to deny them that point of immunity.
31:24 Operation Epic Fury, some of you didn't like it, some of you did. Oh, we love it. Successful in achieving its military objectives,
31:31 which is dramatically reducing
31:32 the defense industrial base of Iran. The ability to build these missiles and and to build these drones, especially the missiles program, substantially degraded.
31:41 A substantial percentage and I'll leave the exact numbers to the Department of War because I'm not a general and I'm not here to speak as a military planner. I love that. I'm not a general. But a substantial degradation in the number of launchers that they have as well. They still have a lot of drones because these are easy to make. We all know it's not an an Iran challenge. This is a global challenge.
31:58 And it's playing out every single day around the world. I mean, Mexican cartels
32:02 are using UAVs against each other. And we should imagine at some point may even use it against our own against our interest.
32:08 So this is a pervasive problem around the world. The economics of it are something we have to solve for. But nonetheless, even their drone building capability has been eroded. Today, is no Iranian navy. There is no such thing. There's a bunch of Boston whalers with machine guns on them, but there is no navy. There is no Iranian navy. It lies at the bottom of the ocean and will soon,
32:29 within a number of years, be prime fishing spots because they'll turn into reefs. I wonder if he's a boat guy.
32:36 Well, he's in Florida. Yeah. I mean, boss All boat guys. Boston Whaler. And, you know, that's not talking about some old ship with sails. I mean, a Boston Whaler is an actual type of small boat.
32:47 Yeah. I think Andrew Horowitz has one of those, doesn't he? Doesn't he have a Boston Whaler? No. He's got a he's got a more conventional fishing boat. Oh. Oh. The best though
32:57 was
32:58 just before you get to the trans clips, because these these senate hearings were fantastic.
33:04 General
33:05 Scott Besson on the down low.
33:07 Man, that guy impressive This is where he rails against Wyden? Yeah. Yeah. Here's Yeah. This was good. And Wyden, I hadn't seen Wyden in a long time. Guy looks like he's got one foot in the grave. No. The guy's looked like that for the last two or three years. Yeah. What? He's super pale.
33:24 He's got, you know Ozempic
33:27 face, kind of. Looks dead. Yeah. Yes.
33:31 Looks dead. Yeah. That that's Looks dead. Who I'm looking for mister Wyden. What does he oh, it's the guy looks dead. You'll find him. Treasury secretary
33:39 is simply out of step with the American people.
33:42 There's no better example than the fact that there's been a cover up of the massive file of Epstein's financial records for a year and a half. This is part of the effort I've made. It's the only one to follow the money Yeah. In the Epstein situation, and yet there's been denial of access to committee investigators
34:01 and lying in public about their significance.
34:04 That subject alone deserves its own hearing.
34:07 Senate investigators are trying to figure out who paid Epstein for girls,
34:13 and unfortunately,
34:14 secretary
34:16 This is interesting what he just says here. Who paid Epstein for girls? That is in fact
34:23 precisely your theory.
34:26 It's not really the Epstein
34:29 conspiracy
34:30 theory.
34:31 There's a bunch of kids and kiddie porn and and pedophiles
34:35 and children and adrenochrome,
34:38 you know.
34:39 You know what I mean? Yeah. No. It's just a prostitution operation. Yeah. But he kinda gives that away. Who paid Epstein for girls?
34:48 And unfortunately,
34:49 secretary
34:50 Bess is
34:51 involved in preventing that from happening.
34:54 The bottom line in this administration
34:57 is the machinery of government works
35:00 to the benefit of Donald Trump
35:02 before
35:03 all else.
35:04 That's the corrupt framework that pro pro produces
35:08 in Who put protects on
35:10 pedophiles and dismisses the concerns of people who are worried about being able to make rent and to feed their families.
35:17 And general Scott Besson comes back slow but strong. Thank you. And I do want I had hoped to keep this the in term
35:27 the terms of the economy. He's almost choked. He's like, uh-uh. No. Yeah. Calm down. Calm down. He he chokes. He he's a choker. He's a choker. Alright. He if he didn't have this this,
35:40 habit of choking
35:41 instead of calming down and then delivering the goods,
35:44 I mean, he'd be twice as effective, but he's effective enough with with this little blast.
35:49 In term
35:50 the, in terms of the economy,
35:52 senator Wyden
35:54 has mendaciously
35:56 slandered the Treasury Building in an attempt to cover up his son having an investment meeting with Jeffrey Epstein Runtro.
36:05 To ask for funding.
36:07 Thank
36:09 you. Thank you.
36:11 It's like Mike Droppage. Okay. Yes.
36:15 Let's be clear here. Nobody
36:19 is interested
36:20 in the ramblings of a capo Capo. Corrupt
36:24 regime in American history.
36:26 We wanna get some facts about this deal. That's what we're here for. Thank you. Well, thank you, and I will, ask my questions first today. And and we we would like to hear what Adam Wyden and Jeffrey Epstein talked about. Your son's largest
36:40 investment position
36:41 was Rick's Cabaret.
36:43 So did your son and Jeffrey Epstein talk about pole dancing
36:47 as he begged him for money using your limited credibility?
36:51 Your limited credibility.
36:53 Nice.
36:54 Nice.
36:55 He also the other problem that Besson has,
36:59 he is he has a nervous,
37:02 sound. He he sounds like he's nervous when he's delivering the goods. Yeah. He he does he doesn't have a steady voice. I agree. Yeah. That is Yeah. Is it he needs some coaching or something. Well, but it's part of his job. Mad, he gets angry, and he starts to get that voice that, well,
37:19 yeah. Yeah.
37:20 You know, it's kind of it's just it's in there. It just sounds like he's it's a nervous voice. It's not good.
37:27 But but he is, know, he he He delivers. He delivers. Delivers.
37:33 Yeah. And have you have you looked at his face yet and seen the resemblance with Elizabeth Warren?
37:40 No.
37:41 Uh-uh. And you'll when you once you see it, you can't unsee it. That's like they're from the same Indian tribe, think. There's something about it. Look at me. Yeah.
37:49 Anyway, I I
37:51 I love Scott Besson and I think Lubbio will make a great president. Vance is just, you know,
37:56 he does he's not showing the goods.
37:59 I don't think Vance
38:02 I don't think Vance is enjoying himself.
38:06 Well, but I thought he enjoyed the whole fraud thing. He kinda liked that.
38:10 No?
38:12 I I
38:13 don't know.
38:16 It's hard to say. Mean, Rubio has been around forever. He's got more he has a better handle on the government.
38:22 I mean, Vance is a newbie. Let's face it. Yeah. You don't wanna run I wouldn't wanna run him that quickly anyway. Let him
38:29 Yeah. Get him Get some Get some legs under him. Get some experience. Yeah.
38:34 So there's a yeah. There was another hearing that didn't get much, play, which is a a detransitioner.
38:40 Mhmm. And, the whole problem there because they did pass,
38:44 I think it was I don't know if it was a
38:47 executive order or legislation.
38:48 I think it was executive order. That will not allow any more of this
38:53 using
38:55 puberty blockers on kids
38:57 ruining them. Hold on a second.
38:59 If you stop taking them, you just go back to what you were.
39:03 We were told that over and over and over again by
39:07 politicians
39:08 and doctors and advocates. It is Yeah. It does turn out not to be the case. True. Oh. Senate help committee held a critical hearing on protecting children from irreversible gender transition procedures.
39:20 With growing concerns over the sharp rise in medical interventions on minors, the spotlight was on detransitioners
39:26 and Medical interventions.
39:28 Lovely. Medical experts warning about those dangers.
39:31 And today's Washington correspondent Jack Bradley has the details. The entire premise of transgenderism
39:37 is that I will take my own life if I don't transition. Right. Yet here I am today. On Capitol Hill, senators hearing testimony exposing how children are being rushed into life altering puberty blockers in surgeries,
39:51 often with devastating and irreversible consequences.
39:54 I am what is known as a detransitioner.
39:57 Chloe Cole, a 21 year old detransitioner
40:00 from California,
40:01 shared her story about how she was influenced by social media at a young age to think that she may be a boy trapped in a girl's body. She began taking hormone and puberty blocking medicine at the advice of her psychologists and physicians
40:14 at just 12 years old and had a double mastectomy when she was 15 and says that the doctors gave her parents an ultimatum.
40:23 Transition
40:24 or your child is going to kill themselves?
40:26 Yep. Yeah. We kinda pegged that one eighteen years ago. Yeah. Pretty much.
40:32 I'm so I'm so sad
40:34 that just this this went on and on and the peep and of course, it will never
40:40 the parents who've done this to their children,
40:42 they can never admit they were wrong. No. It is impossible. I mean, their brain has been wired. There's no way you could ever I mean, what a horrible thought to think you've Yeah. You're not been stuck. Suckered into this, and you've you've damaged your child.
40:57 But multiple studies have found that gender surgeries and puberty blockers do not reduce long term mental illness or suicide rates. Other countries have rightly react to this evidence.
41:08 The United Kingdom has banned puberty blockers, and the National Health Services has stopped providing cross sex hormones for youth. Cole says she was never warned about the permanent effects of the drugs and surgery she underwent. The opposite. I'm still suffering the consequences.
41:22 I still have chronic pain in my joints, in my back, in my pelvis.
41:26 I don't know if I'm going to be able to have children of my own with Cole is just one of tens of thousands who underwent such life altering procedures when they were children. I'm not alone. I have hundreds of friends who have been through the same thing. An entire generation of children were lied to. There is no such thing as a child being born in the wrong body, but there are physicians and medical bodies who prey on the confusion of perfectly healthy young boys and girls. Now the democrat senators present on the committee dismissed this hearing as a waste of time and politically charged. All of them completely avoided questioning Chloe Cole or the medical doctor from do no harm on the panel and instead brought their own witness, an LGBT lawyer who argued against government intervention. It is not the place of politicians to insert
42:12 themselves into these conversations which are so unique
42:16 to each child. But they did
42:19 over and over and over again. How many politicians
42:23 were crying and quitting and walking away and storming out and yelling,
42:28 think of the children.
42:30 We do not forget these things.
42:33 Do we?
42:37 Yeah. It's like, the thing is the Democrats,
42:40 wouldn't take part in the hearing because they're they're all in. In fact, Tom Steyer's last move, bringing back him back in the conversation,
42:47 was to was to do a video with a transgender
42:50 girl a a transgender
42:53 female
42:55 who is a male,
42:57 in women's sports and and and say, we're gonna we're for we're gonna make sure that, you know, people like you get in the get to play sports.
43:05 And it was just like the it was the icing on the cake for this guy.
43:10 And but he was sincere about it. Thought thought it was a, you know, probably a he thought it was a good progressive way to go. But the rest of the panel The regressives all feel this way. I mean, it's it's just that they have a different
43:22 perspective.
43:24 Is it perspective?
43:26 Is it perspective? Want perspective. Is that the Now that you have a third one. But is it perspective,
43:30 or is it
43:32 is it a psy op on their own party?
43:35 Well, it's hard to say.
43:37 Before we play this well, I played the third clip, then I had this the clip from Australia.
43:41 Alright. But the rest of the panel and the senate Republicans present on the committee said that it is the government's role to protect children and the vulnerable. We already have legislation that is making other forms of abuse in children illegal. This is no different. As adults,
43:55 we all have the responsibility
43:57 to look after the children around us. That is our duty. On his first day back in office, president Trump signed an executive order restricting federal funding for puberty blockers and gender procedures for children and those 19.
44:11 More than two dozen states have followed suit already banning these irreversible interventions for minors. My question still stands.
44:18 I mean, any any person in their right mind
44:22 can at least
44:24 see
44:26 the physical harm that is being done.
44:30 I mean,
44:31 psychological
44:32 part, okay, you wanna be a boy and you're a girl, okay, well, let's go dress up, whatever you want. But the mutilation part,
44:40 politicians,
44:41 I'm it it I'd love to know who really was behind this. This wasn't just a it became a milieu thing and it became a hill they were going to die on as you constantly said.
44:53 But how can you as a human being, as a parent, how can you even consider that this was okay
45:00 other than we're gonna win the election that's more important because Trump equals Nazi?
45:07 No. I don't think that I think that analysis is
45:11 headed in the right direction, but I don't think it really has that anything to do at all with Trump. Came around the eighties,
45:18 pre Trump,
45:19 and it started to build and build and build,
45:22 and it just became kind of a, all of a sudden became part of the litany
45:26 of the,
45:28 progressives
45:28 because, you know, people have to we have to love everybody no matter what they're like or just the kind of a it just got out of control. I think it it just went
45:37 out of control on its own,
45:40 and these guys painted themselves into a corner and they can't get out of it. And there's a logical issue. I got this clip, the one that says Oz.
45:47 This is at, this is a
45:50 kinda it's not congress because it's in Australia, but they there's a hearing
45:54 about,
45:56 about
45:58 sex
46:00 and
46:02 You're cutting you're muting yourself for some reason.
46:09 Hello?
46:11 You know, here's what happens.
46:13 My screen my screensaver comes on Yeah. And then when I hit the button to turn the screensaver
46:19 to turn the screen back on, it mutes.
46:22 Okay. For some unknown reason, it's happened twice today. Can you just minimize the the clean feed window? That might help.
46:29 It might make it yeah. I well,
46:33 is up for
46:34 I okay. You should Hello. I'm here for your technology support. Give me your password. I will log I in up of
46:41 use the window as a cough button.
46:44 Oh, yeah. Okay. Well, that's valid.
46:46 I'll just I'll just be more aware of this and I'll Okay. It's alright. I'll
46:50 correct my you were saying there was a it was a hearing? Yeah. There's they're going on about it and and I think you get some
46:57 understanding,
46:58 not quite a full understanding,
47:00 but an understanding of this skewed logic
47:04 that that the progressives,
47:07 have developed.
47:09 They painted themselves into a corner and then they have a skewed logic that they have to accept and it's and it's so screwy
47:16 that when you hear this back and forth between this person who is the,
47:20 who handles
47:21 it's it's one of the legislative
47:24 people
47:25 grilling somebody who who is in charge of,
47:28 how to,
47:30 a a discrimination
47:31 program.
47:32 And let's just play it and we'll talk about it. Australia has truly fallen. Listen to this. Is a trans woman
47:39 and she
47:41 may be asked whether or not she intends to have children,
47:44 and if she replies,
47:46 yes, I do, and then doesn't get the job because that employer doesn't want to employ
47:51 women who,
47:53 may be of childbearing age, then she may have been subjected to unlawful discrimination on the basis of potential pregnancy.
48:01 A biological male can't become pregnant. But the grounds of pregnancy includes potential pregnancy
48:08 as well as pregnancy. But if they can't become pregnant,
48:12 how can you then become potentially pregnant? It's about the unlawful treatment by the employer.
48:17 If someone is treated unfairly on the basis of pregnancy or potential
48:23 then that is unlawful discrimination on the basis of pregnancy. So if a bloke came in and they said are you going to have children which is the same question really and he said oh yeah maybe are you saying that he could also claim that ground? A man who is
48:39 seeking a position then it's not going to apply to a man They're
48:44 both biological men it makes no sense a biological man
48:48 you a biological man can't get pregnant. Am I correct?
48:52 Because if I'm not, I've gotta go back to school. I seriously do because I missed that lesson in biology. But you said a biological man can't get pregnant. That's correct senator
49:01 but someone who is a trans woman may be assumed
49:06 to be pregnant or to be able to be pregnant and to top it all off from the commission's perspective what is a woman an adult female human thank you and includes a transgender woman a biological man potential
49:21 pregnancy this is beyond insanity
49:24 taxpayer funded institutions are now twisting
49:27 sex discrimination laws so far that biological reality itself is becoming controversial.
49:32 These laws were created to protect women, actual women.
49:36 Instead, ideology is replacing common sense. Reality is being blurred, and Australians have been told ignore basic biology to avoid backlash.
49:45 Enough is enough.
49:48 Couple of comments. One, you could have run that through
49:53 Adobe.
49:55 The whole I would have normally when I don't like the clip for various reasons, but when I it it when I play it on my system, the anomalies don't appear.
50:07 No. It's just a lot of music and effects. No. That that was my mistake because there was another clip out there I could've Yeah. No. It it was just bomb But that's okay. Go back to the topic. Yes.
50:16 I think Australia should be divided in half and
50:20 the bottom half
50:22 should be returned to penal colony
50:25 and I need to throw those people there. Know a lot of in Australia who think this way,
50:32 who are like, oh, you know, it's like, yeah, that that's discrimination,
50:35 man.
50:37 And here's this brings to mind a clip. I don't have the clip. I I had
50:41 it's old.
50:43 A
50:46 girl who transitioned to a boy Mhmm.
50:49 And she was early on, and she was now probably
50:55 17 or 18.
50:57 And she was told,
50:59 and she's doing a TikTok thing, and it's serious, sure, I don't think it was fake.
51:05 She says, I'm
51:07 pregnant,
51:09 but this is ridiculous.
51:11 I can't be pregnant because I'm a boy.
51:15 Okay.
51:16 I went to the doctor and I told him how can I possibly be pregnant? I'm a boy, boys don't get pregnant.
51:23 And she was and it was she he was dead serious,
51:28 she was a girl turned, you know, who transitioned to a boy because she was Oh, kid's so she actually was pregnant, but she couldn't believe it because she believed she was a boy.
51:36 Exactly. Wow. And sincerely believed that. Look, if I've I'm a boy in a girl's body and I decide I'm gonna have to transition to become a boy,
51:47 I'm a boy now. I can't get pregnant.
51:50 This is, well, shows you the power of mind control of
51:55 Exactly.
51:56 And that's what I think is going on
51:59 with the Democrats in general
52:01 and the people that wouldn't show up to this hearing with the detransitioning
52:05 person Yeah. And and the rest of it, and the and the crazy woman in Australia
52:10 who said, yeah, yeah, that trans woman can get prey potentially
52:14 pregnant even though she can't get pregnant.
52:18 So it's really
52:19 a large portion of our political
52:21 our body politic has been MK ULTRA ed.
52:26 Well, if you wanna call it MK Ultra, it's just old fashioned brainwashing.
52:29 Yeah. Well, that's what MK Ultra is.
52:34 You know, we so we
52:37 our boy, Talarico,
52:38 here in Texas.
52:39 Oh, yeah. Your guy. Yeah. You're my guy. Yeah. My guy. He's walking everything back now now that, you know Well, he can't. He's getting Yeah. But listen listen to how pathetic it sounds. In 2021,
52:52 in a speech during
52:54 debate over transgender
52:55 issues, you said God is nonbinary.
52:59 What did you mean by that? Well, you know, I think,
53:02 I was being intentionally provocative
53:04 with that statement.
53:05 What?
53:07 I was just kidding, man. But what it means is that God can't be defined by human categories.
53:13 The apostle Paul in his letter to the Galatians
53:16 says that in Christ there is neither male nor female.
53:19 I'm always gonna stand up for Texans who are being picked on by the most powerful, most corrupt politicians Woah. In the country. Quick deflection. Being picked on. Quick deflection.
53:29 And I'm gonna continue doing that,
53:32 in this race and hopefully in the next topic. You call it intentionally provocative. You regret describing it that way or talking about God that way? I
53:41 there are some statements that I've made that I that I certainly regret. There are statements that I've made where I've missed the mark. I'll be the first to admit that.
53:48 But Ken Paxton is intentionally clipping
53:52 my cringey comments
53:54 to distract from his career of corruption. Well, yeah, son. It's called politics.
53:59 That's exactly how it works. You're trying to pander with this nonsense,
54:04 and then the other team is gonna clip that and tell everyone you're a nut job, which is you sound like you are. Let me run one more by you because again, the president and other republicans are Sure. Bringing it up. Again in 2021, though, while debating a bill that restricted transgender student athletes, you said modern science acknowledges six biological variations
54:21 based on chromosomes to argue that sex is a nuanced spectrum, not a strict binary.
54:27 Do you still believe there are six biological sexes? I know there are two men and women. I also know there's a very small percentage of people who have these chromosomal
54:37 Uh-huh. Abnormalities.
54:38 But And I believe they deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. Is that what the consultants told you to say?
54:44 No.
54:47 That's not gonna work, son. That is not gonna work. What a what a moron.
54:54 Truly pathetic. Yeah.
54:55 Wow is right. Just pathetic. Well, that guy, you know. What about did they go on after his veganism in Texas they went after that too. I'm not a this campaign is run on barbecue.
55:06 He's now Is that what he said? Yeah. I I'll get the clip for barbecued corn? What's he talking about?
55:13 Yeah.
55:14 No, man. We're we're Texans over here. The guy, just you look at him, he's he's been he's like a Frankenstein.
55:20 And the haircut,
55:22 he's like a semi bowl cut like he's been put together in a lab.
55:26 No. My guy is good. He doesn't look comfortable. No. He's no good.
55:31 But, you know, let's be honest about it. Trump is still a misogynist.
55:37 They're they're going back to that now.
55:39 Well, you know, back to the well. It worked before. Here it is. No. I'm not asking Caitlin about this because she's
55:46 got actual work to do and she doesn't need to be answering questions
55:49 about this. Hold on. Actually, think this is I start with this one. Okay. So you're this is gonna be about Caitlin Clark and his blast of her. Yeah. You don't like because I have a something I gotta read. Oh, good. In a letter justifying the firing Hold on. Sorry. I'm I'm all over the map. Here we go. Before we move on though, wanna show you another moment from that q and a with the president because
56:08 the president did something completely unwarranted. You saw some of it just now verbally attacking Caitlin Collins, but I wanna set the scene. He was answering someone else's earlier question, not hers, about his fund.
56:19 She'd said nothing to him ahead of it at this point. She was simply standing there doing her job, listening to his remarks, defending the January sixers,
56:26 and then I just wanna play what happened.
56:29 These people, their lives have been destroyed. Their families have been destroyed. Many of them. Not I'm not just talking about a few people.
56:36 Many of them.
56:39 I'm one of them. I look. I they raided my house, Mar A Lago.
56:43 That never happened. Nobody ever thought of anything like that. It turned out that it was a total fake. Everything about it was fake and corrupt. We have all the information. If only once you know, he was so close to saying fake and gay, but he he can't do it. But if he did that, it would be awesome. Never thought of anything like that. It turned out that it was a total fake. Everything about it was fake and corrupt. We have all the information here. The good advantage to sitting
57:06 here is we can get information that you wouldn't get by what we have and what we are going to be showing
57:11 over the coming weeks and months. You're not even gonna believe. Some of you will believe it. Like CNN will believe it because they knew what was going on. They're crooked as hell.
57:20 CNN's
57:21 a very corrupt organization.
57:24 But, with a corrupt reporter standing right there, never smiles. She never she's a young,
57:30 beautiful woman, never smiles. I never see a a smile off her face. I see her standing there with hatred in her eyes, like,
57:36 she has hatred because we have borders,
57:38 because we have a strong military,
57:40 because we cut our taxes,
57:42 because we do things that everybody wanted, and then we win our election in a massive landslide.
57:48 Yeah. There was a whole bunch more. I mean, they had a whole compilation of him being mad. But he always says, you're a horrible person,
57:55 not
57:56 woman. In fact, I should probably play a little bit of that just to even it out. Yeah. But I'm not asking more of it. This is good stuff. And he also mentions
58:04 there's a there's a whole thing that which I'm gonna read from a little bit from because it's bullcrap.
58:09 They you know,
58:11 Stelter
58:12 is all over this and Cooper,
58:14 Pooper's all over it.
58:16 Listen listen to the compendium. No. I'm not asking Caitlin about this because she's
58:21 got actual work to do. Yeah. I'm not gonna bring Caitlin into the conversation conversation because she's working hard. And she doesn't need to know that journalists never interview other journalists. No. About
58:31 this
58:32 kind of behavior. That's the president of The United States, a nearly 80 year old man who has no problem commenting
58:38 on her physical appearance and telling her she needs to smile.
58:42 That doesn't happen to men. No one's ever said that to me in an office setting. You're not a man. She was there like every other journalist doing her job standing around with a bunch of non smiling men by the way all behind her. Don't know if you saw that. She gets singled out. Now this, of course, is not the first time the president has focused on professional female reporters, Caitlin included.
59:01 You are the worst reporter. No wonder see CNN has no ratings because of people like you. I don't think I've ever seen a smile on your you are
59:10 an obnoxious
59:12 a terrible actually, a terrible reporter. Are you stupid? Are you a stupid person? You're a terrible person and a terrible reporter. You ought to go back and learn how to be a reporter. No more questions from you. But you know there's nothing you've ever been hanging in the box, I'm not act quiet. Quiet.
59:28 Quiet. Quiet. Quiet. Now,
59:30 I don't know if you wanna do your reading before or I have two clips, a buck and a half each, where pooper brings on a YouTuber
59:38 to talk about this, which is is Yeah. Let me just get this on. Yeah. Go ahead. Because you played part of it Okay. Already. Go ahead. Which is pooper
59:46 going on about, I'll read from this. This is from Brian Stelter's newsletter.
59:51 You subscribe?
59:53 Oh, yeah. Is it a Substack or is it a pro news? No. It's a news that comes right out of CNN. Oh, okay. Wait. Is he back at CNN? I thought he was fine. No. He does the newsletter and he once in a while does a spot. He does a hit. Yeah. He I got I got a hit from him later.
1:00:09 Anderson Cooper played the clip and reached and reached out to say, that's the president of The United States blah blah blah. Exactly what he said. Telling her she needs to smile, that doesn't happen to men. No one's ever said that to me in an office setting. Of course, you made the comedy He's Not a Man. Okay. It's
1:00:27 happened to me in an office setting in a broadcasting environment.
1:00:31 When I was at Tech TV,
1:00:34 we had these consultants that came in to try to improve us,
1:00:38 and I was always resistant to even meet with the with this woman
1:00:41 Uh-huh. Who who took me into the to tell me about what she thought of my performance. She said, do you like doing this? And I said, well, I kinda like it. I mean, I it's it's fine. And she said, well, you don't look like it. You don't look like you're enjoying yourself. You need to smile more.
1:01:01 Well, that is rude.
1:01:03 And so she says that to me and here I'm reading, no one's ever said that to me in an office and say because no and no one's ever said it to men in an office bullcrap.
1:01:13 It happens all the time to men and women. I had this when I was doing a lot of radio, I had some guys saying, oh, you know, you'd you'd go a lot further in radio if you had a smile in your voice. You know that sound? I thought you're doing. Did he follow it up? Thing I'm not gonna do that because it's not my stuff. Did he follow it up by saying, be careful, otherwise, you're gonna go straight from radio to podcasts.
1:01:35 Well, this is prepodcasting.
1:01:36 Oh, okay. But anyway, the point is this is a lie.
1:01:40 Yes. Of course, it is. But why? Why are they even doing this? Who cares? Why all of a sudden is this an issue? Why are they going back to the Trump rotation?
1:01:51 I have no idea. I I like to figure it out. Well, here is so Pooper had to accentuate this with,
1:01:58 Tara Palmieri.
1:02:00 She is,
1:02:01 wait for it, the host of the Tara Palmieri show on YouTube.
1:02:06 And she is the author and writer of the Red Letter newsletter. Now I'm you need to subscribe to this thing. The Red Letter newsletter.
1:02:14 Joining us now is Tara Palmieri, host of the Tara Palmieri
1:02:17 Palmieri show on YouTube, author of the writer and writer of the Red Letter newsletter.
1:02:23 It's
1:02:24 I mean, I don't know why I'm surprised by this. I shouldn't be, but I I just We're surprised we're
1:02:30 surprised you're spending airtime on it. I don't think guys
1:02:34 I don't think any guy would
1:02:37 I it's just bizarre that this is something he does over and over and over again. I mean, I think people do it to women all the time.
1:02:44 Yeah. Absolutely.
1:02:45 What you are seeing is a day in the life of He a
1:02:50 did this to major Garrett, if you remember during his first term. He's done it to guys too.
1:02:56 I don't remember that, but it wouldn't Oh, yeah. He told major Garrett he's a lousy reporter the same exact
1:03:03 and he's done it to other males.
1:03:05 This is a this is bulky. This is another lie. But why? I don't understand. What what is the point? What did what do they have in their in their arsenal that they're revealing? Something coming up. Mine They're setting this up. Something. It this and to bring this lady in. She's a powerful woman and he's objectifying her. And he's using a misogynistic comment about her appearance to belittle her. Because in fact, when Caitlin Collins is standing there,
1:03:32 she's a woman with agency,
1:03:33 and she has a lot of power. She represents the people of The United States Of America. Wait a minute. Wait.
1:03:39 What? I think it's the president that represents the people of The United States Of America.
1:03:45 But now somehow,
1:03:46 the woman who has agency,
1:03:48 Caitlin Collins, she represents
1:03:51 the people of The United States Of America. This is this is an interesting twist. A lot of power. She represents the people of The United States Of America, and she's holding him to account by asking him questions in the Oval Office.
1:04:02 And he does not like that. And he does not like that the vessel of a person who is asking them that per that most Vessel of a person? The vessel, like your body? What does that mean?
1:04:13 This
1:04:14 is interesting. And he does not like that. And he does not like that the vessel of a person He's a mind reader. Asking them I guess. That per that those questions that challenge him is a woman because he's used to women being around him that are people pleasers,
1:04:28 who are smilers,
1:04:29 who are secretaries,
1:04:30 who are cabinet secretaries as we've seen from the various, you know, hearings that we've actually watched on TV. Okay. So secretary in the office equals now cabinet secretary.
1:04:41 And the deference that they show him. But, also, this is a man who owned beauty pageants,
1:04:46 who was a judge in modeling competitions,
1:04:48 who's used to seeing women have to smile
1:04:51 and please him to advance in life. Caitlin is not that woman. She is a woman who has made her way in life on her own as an independent woman promising. Challenging his authority on behalf of the American people. I got it. I have to ask the robot something here for a second because I I I think there's hold on one second. Let me get the robot fired up. Book of Knowledge. Did Anderson Cooper ever judge a beauty pageant?
1:05:16 I have a feeling he did.
1:05:19 Book of Knowledge is going through all the past episodes of all beauty pageants ever.
1:05:25 According to the Book of Knowledge, Anderson Cooper spoke of reporting on beauty pageants as a way to regain perspective.
1:05:33 But he has served as a critical commentator rather than a judge hosting
1:05:37 pageant mothers on his show Anderson to examine their practices. Mhmm. Okay. Thus,
1:05:43 it has been written. He didn't pipe up or say anything about that. Like, woah, also have a lot of experience with beauty pageants. And this woman continues. There's a Yale professor named Mary Anne La France who studies this sort of thing extensively. She wrote a book
1:05:56 Science Behind Facial Expressions.
1:05:58 She says that men in these situations laugh, she said quote laugh it off as though it's a male prerogative
1:06:04 to tell a woman what to do with her body. She also says quote females are supposed to smile more than men, it's not just that they do but there is a prescriptive stereotype that they should somehow. I'm wondering what you make of her assessment. Could this be a setup to a Kamala Harris rerun maybe?
1:06:20 You know, they're trying to
1:06:22 condition everybody? That's lame if true. Well, it's CNN. It's it's
1:06:27 absolutely true. I mean, to smile is to please the other person unless you are doing it out of pure happiness
1:06:34 and you're feeling it yourself.
1:06:36 But when you are doing it in deference, which is what he wants,
1:06:40 he wants her to be happy
1:06:42 about his policies. Oh. That's what he's saying to her. You should be smiling for what I'm doing for you. Yes. You know, he sees her as someone who cannot challenge him. I think she really challenges his worldview. When he talks about make America great again, he's talking about a female archetype that Caitlin Collins is not.
1:07:01 He is talking about a woman from the time when he grew up in the nineteen sixties to the nineteen sixties Very good at who worked in a role as a secretary or an aide to a powerful man where men decided women's fate. Women couldn't even open credit cards at that point in their lives. You know, you went to college if you could, and you immediately tried to get married. Caitlin is none of those things. And if anything, president Trump keeps trying to bring back these glory days when men had more power
1:07:29 over women. And the only way for them to advance was to be beautiful and to smile. Maybe they could be models. Maybe they could be in a beauty pageant, and maybe they could have a little bit of power during that short period of time when they were beautiful and could smile.
1:07:44 I'm
1:07:45 I'm baffled by this whole segment because it came out of
1:07:49 the
1:07:49 so called slush fund.
1:07:52 The $1,800,000,000
1:07:53 slush couple clips on the slush fund going down the tubes. You wanna hit talk about Scott Pelly first?
1:08:00 I'd rather not.
1:08:02 Okay. I mean, I don't I I don't mind talking about it, but the slush fund clips are pretty decent. Alright. Let's go to your slush fund. Start with NBC.
1:08:12 I got two of it. The NBC abandonment
1:08:15 of the 1,800,000,000.
1:08:17 And I think this, by the way, this was a good idea.
1:08:21 Well, yeah. I think we both agreed on it because we know people who, whose lives were in fact ruined,
1:08:27 who hadn't Yeah. They could use some money. Yes. They could. Tonight, the Trump administration appearing to abandon plans for its $1,800,000,000
1:08:35 so called anti weaponization fund amid stiff Republican opposition and the judge's order to halt work on it. The Department of Justice is saying it, quote, disagrees strongly but will abide by the court's ruling. People were destroyed. They went to jail. President Trump had defended the fund created to compensate people he says were unfairly prosecuted by the Biden administration.
1:08:57 But it drew bipartisan
1:08:58 condemnation,
1:08:59 including a closed door clash between acting attorney general Todd Blanche and GOP senators amid concerns it could be used to pay January 6 rioters. This is just stupid on stilts.
1:09:11 Stupid
1:09:12 on stilts? I kinda like that.
1:09:15 You know, this is Stupid on stilts. The Republicans
1:09:18 themselves are the ones who response for this thing caving in. Yeah. I don't know why.
1:09:24 I don't know why they did Why? Uh-uh. There's gotta be some
1:09:28 I don't know. I think they were thinking it was gonna be used as leverage against them in an election or something because it you know, it's a lot of money. Yeah.
1:09:36 Well, that's pretty dumb.
1:09:38 Well, here's the here's the Trump 1.5.
1:09:41 This is the ABC version.
1:09:43 Hold on. Trump's under Trump. Trump's 1,800,000,000. Got it.
1:09:48 Also
1:09:49 breaking tonight, we learned late today that president Trump's plan to use $1,800,000,000
1:09:53 in taxpayer money to potentially pay those who attack the capital on January 6 has now been scrapped after a revolt from Republicans.
1:10:02 But tonight, some Republicans are still sounding somewhat skeptical.
1:10:05 They wanna promise on this. Rachel Scott on the hill.
1:10:09 Are you gonna drop the funds? Tonight, faced with a growing revolt from senate Republicans,
1:10:14 acting attorney general Todd Blanche arriving on Capitol Hill. Is dropped? Announcing the administration is scrapping the president's $1,800,000,000
1:10:22 so called weaponization
1:10:23 fund that would have been paid for by taxpayers
1:10:26 to compensate allies,
1:10:27 including January 6 rioters.
1:10:29 We
1:10:30 are not moving forward with the fund. Oh, not moving forward ever. Correct. It comes just twenty four hours after president Trump told our John Carl he would abide by a recent court ruling, putting the fund on hold, saying we are subject to the courts at this moment. That's what it is. But that wasn't enough to satisfy Republicans. You want to see him drop it completely?
1:10:50 Yes. I've made that very clear. If he doesn't,
1:10:54 we're back to square one. Tonight, Blanche says getting rid of the fund would not impact another part of the administration settlement with the IRS,
1:11:02 barring tax audits on president Trump and his family. Democrats labeling it blanket immunity.
1:11:08 Simply put, you just gave the president's family a tax immunity to the tune of about a $100,000,000.
1:11:14 Not true.
1:11:16 And so, David, tonight, that $1,800,000,000
1:11:19 fund, some of which could have gone to January 6 rioters,
1:11:22 has been scrapped. Republicans
1:11:24 wanted a public reversal, and tonight, the acting attorney general says it will not move forward.
1:11:30 Yeah. I'm not sure why why they went all crazy about this either.
1:11:35 And and Kennedy? I heard Kennedy in there. Yep. That was Kennedy. That was interesting.
1:11:40 Yeah. What's he got against it? He
1:11:43 I mean, grandmas were thrown in jail I don't know. That weren't even in the capital. There's all kinds of miscarriages
1:11:50 of justice involved with that January 6. All the lawyer maybe all the lawyers like, come on, man. We got lawsuits running here. We don't wanna lose our dough.
1:12:00 That's the only possible explanation.
1:12:02 I can't think of much else.
1:12:05 And then,
1:12:08 they rolled out the the gerbil shepherd to try and, rile everybody up in the democrat base. We're living in the darkest moment that I've experienced on this planet. Do you recognize the voice? Do you recognize the voice?
1:12:23 Is it Richard Gere? Yes. It is. Whoever thought America could turn like this?
1:12:29 Whoever thought that a maniac like this would be president of The United States Maniac. Dismantle
1:12:35 wait. Wait. No. No. I don't know the plot. I wanna this is something for us to really communicate. Dismantle. Oh, he's he's got something to communicate for us to communicate. Alright. This is Richard, you know, hey, we need someone to communicate. We need a new slogan.
1:12:50 Hey, Richard. Richard.
1:12:52 Gerbil shepherd. We need we need a new slogan
1:12:55 and we need you to launch that so everybody hears about it. Can you do that? Well, of course.
1:13:01 Once I'm I I gotta stop protecting to bet, but I'm on my way. And I wanna applaud. I wanna this is something for us to really communicate. Dismantle all the good things.
1:13:11 America's never been a perfect place, but it has a perfect ideal that it's moving towards and always has,
1:13:17 and it's been self corrective.
1:13:19 First day,
1:13:20 this guy dismantled
1:13:22 almost everything that was good about the US government and the and The US people.
1:13:27 How is this even possible? Because we went to sleep.
1:13:30 We
1:13:32 went to sleep. Wait. Wait. It's sad. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. I I haven't done the slogan yet. Wait. Wait. Wait. We went to sleep.
1:13:39 We didn't care.
1:13:41 We didn't vote.
1:13:42 We didn't really listen.
1:13:44 But you see how quickly
1:13:46 our world can be taken from us
1:13:48 if we fall asleep,
1:13:50 and we have to see the queues.
1:13:52 We have to see the cues. Cue? Cue. Q anon. What's this with the cue? Get to the slogan, man. Asleep.
1:13:58 And we have to see the cues.
1:14:00 We have to see the cues. This this
1:14:03 this dictatorship
1:14:04 of the monsters Nailed it. How quickly it happens. We have to be vigilant. Dictatorship
1:14:10 of the Monsters.
1:14:12 Oh, Richard. That was that was genius. War of choice. That's gonna go nowhere. Of course not.
1:14:18 Could I could just see the meeting. Yeah. I'll do I'd I'm I'm gonna I'm gonna come up with something that'll stick.
1:14:23 Dictatorship
1:14:24 of monsters guaranteed.
1:14:26 It's gonna work.
1:14:27 It'll be great.
1:14:29 Yeah.
1:14:32 Yeah.
1:14:33 Sad.
1:14:34 Lame.
1:14:35 Yeah.
1:14:37 Can I pivot for a moment to Yes, please? Yeah. To to robots,
1:14:43 also known as
1:14:45 artificial intelligence.
1:14:48 So Jensen
1:14:49 Huang
1:14:50 put on his motorcycle jacket again and he was in Korea
1:14:55 for some
1:14:57 big computer conference
1:14:59 and he went through an hour and a half of,
1:15:02 I mean, you your eyes glaze over, he's holding up chips and this is for the enterprise and this and all kinds of code names and blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. But then at the very end, like the last
1:15:15 five minutes,
1:15:17 he comes out with something which I've been predicting,
1:15:20 which is we're going from as our
1:15:25 friend, Kalakana said it, from the data center to the desktop.
1:15:30 All these companies with all of their data centers and all of their energy needs and all of their models that need to run-in the cloud and your inference and on the edge, it's all coming to your desktop It's
1:15:43 all coming to the desktop And he showed this.
1:15:47 Yeah. That thing. Hold on. But that's not all. That's not all. He was trying to do a jobs. One more thing he's doing. That's not all. Look at my motorcycle jacket. But that's not all. That's not all. RTX
1:15:59 Spark is a reinvention
1:16:02 of laptop.
1:16:03 But in Of laptop.
1:16:04 What kind of English is this?
1:16:07 This is a reinvention of laptop. Is a reinvention
1:16:11 of laptop.
1:16:13 But in fact, Microsoft NVIDIA
1:16:15 is reinventing
1:16:17 all of PC. And today, we're announcing
1:16:19 a whole new line. Three revolutionary Windows machines covering desktop,
1:16:26 laptop,
1:16:27 and workstations.
1:16:29 All a 100% Windows compatible,
1:16:31 a 100% CUDA CUDA. A 100% NVIDIA AI Tensor Core.
1:16:36 Everything that runs that you see that runs on NVIDIA in all these different platforms around the world runs here.
1:16:43 This is the first completely
1:16:46 reengineered,
1:16:47 reinvented line of PCs
1:16:50 that has happened in forty years. Now, I agree
1:16:53 that it's is going to move to the desktop, to laptop,
1:16:58 but his initial rollout with Windows is showing how your agent is now controlling your Photoshop and controlling Blender and is doing things faster than you can normally do it. And he he has the right idea,
1:17:12 but I think your computer will build software for you that you really need, not this crap that you don't need or, you know, not everyone's an architect.
1:17:20 And then he says the the
1:17:23 most anti Wall Street stock, the
1:17:26 IPO type of thing,
1:17:28 this will be meter free. It's gonna run on your own machine. You won't need in you won't need OpenAI.
1:17:34 You won't need he doesn't say that, but he infers you won't need OpenAI,
1:17:38 Anthropic, or Gemini. You won't need it. It's gonna run at home. This agent could run twenty four seven meter free, and you could download your agent. You could raise your lobster in here. This is your claw. It's running all the time. No meter anxiety.
1:17:52 And it's sitting here No meter anxiety. Oops. Connected to your whole house, connected to your laptop,
1:17:58 connected to your display,
1:18:00 all the cameras,
1:18:01 your your
1:18:03 dryer, your water cooler, your Okay. This is where he loses dryer. This is where this is where he loses me.
1:18:09 You can connect What? Your Yeah.
1:18:12 This this is where he go instead of just saying, hey, you know, you can say, hey, I need a spreadsheet reader for my podcast. Hey, I need a a thing to play clips for my podcast, which I have done and which my agent, my claw, my lobster did for me. No. He's going to the, for some idiotic reason,
1:18:32 to your dryer.
1:18:33 All the cameras,
1:18:35 your your
1:18:36 dryer, your water cooler, your water heater, your everything. Whatever you want. Whatever I want. Yeah. My doors? My water heater
1:18:45 hooked to a computer for Your security system all connected to this, and this becomes your personal AI,
1:18:53 your personal AI agent.
1:18:55 And it gets smarter and smarter and smarter over time because today, we have Nemotron three Ultra. Tomorrow, we have Nemotron four What? Nemotron five. Nemotron
1:19:04 Nemotron six. Nemotron a thousand. Nemotron six. And we just keep getting us smarter and smarter and smarter. And meanwhile, this is sitting at home helping you do things. If you wanna book a travel, no problem. I wanna book a travel. I wanna book a travel.
1:19:18 His English has deteriorated.
1:19:20 I call American Express and say, I wanna book a travel. I'm I'm not dealing with that. Yeah. I'm okay. Helping you do things. If you wanna book a travel, no problem. No problem. And
1:19:31 if you if you want
1:19:33 an incredible system I do. I want one. This is a DGX station
1:19:38 for Windows,
1:19:40 compatible with Windows, wants everything in Windows,
1:19:43 and it has
1:19:45 768
1:19:47 gigabytes of memory.
1:19:48 So you could run a trillion parameter model. Yeah. This is unbelievable.
1:19:53 That is literally
1:19:55 ruining
1:19:56 the whole business model of these IPOs that are coming. And then he just does another minute of shtick
1:20:02 about his vision
1:20:04 where and I don't know if he's doing this to distract from the fact that this could put office out of business or any software system out of business, really. Instead, he goes to this vision. Something is happening here. Something is happening here. Remember,
1:20:19 fifteen, twenty years ago, we used to have an idea called a phone. Today,
1:20:23 we have an idea called a PC. We have an idea. We
1:20:27 have an idea. An idea. An idea? Phone's not an idea, it's a it's a product. We have an idea called a PC. Today, when you think about your phone idea. The one thing you don't do with it is make phone calls.
1:20:39 You do just about everything else. I do. And so that phone
1:20:43 means something very different to you than a phone of the past.
1:20:47 I am certain what's gonna happen here is that the PC ten years from now and the PC that you think about today, a tool where you launch applications,
1:20:58 click and type.
1:20:59 And this PC is going to be completely different.
1:21:03 Here's my theory. Now I agree with him.
1:21:06 Your your and your phone,
1:21:08 the idea of a phone will be different. You won't be launching apps, you just tell your robot to do something and it'll do a pretty good job of it. I can totally imagine
1:21:16 just as every house today has a home theater
1:21:20 where many houses have home theaters, big TVs,
1:21:23 lawnmowers,
1:21:25 dishwashers.
1:21:26 I could totally Stop. Imagine that Stop. Stop the clip.
1:21:29 I know. It's idiotic.
1:21:32 How many this is a classic Silicon Valley
1:21:35 kind of,
1:21:37 cloud fuzzy
1:21:39 thinking that you think that everybody's
1:21:42 got a home theater.
1:21:44 Do you have a home theater? Live in apartments. They or they have small houses.
1:21:48 How many people do you know actually have a home I don't have a home theater. I have a TV. I got a TV set with a couch. That got yes.
1:21:55 I I have we funny. We have the same. We do not say, honey, after dinner, let's go sit in the home theater.
1:22:03 No. A home theater is I I I know people that have a home theater. It's an actual theater.
1:22:08 Does Brunetti have a theater at the ranch? No. He does not have a home theater. Guy? A Hollywood guy does not Hollywood guy without a home theater. Well, then he's not Hollywood.
1:22:18 Arguably, that's correct. I don't think I think the number of people that have home theaters is even in Hollywood is a minor number.
1:22:25 Yeah. I mean Yeah. Spielberg's I mean, Lucas has got a beyond a home theater, he actually has a an actual theater What what that they built just outside his house. What constitutes a home theater? Is it a big screen and 5.1
1:22:40 Dolby surround with a subwoofer?
1:22:43 No. I think a home theater is a is a separate room used only for watching movies and TV shows in a theater like environment where you have chairs set up in a it could be modern style with, you know, just casual
1:22:59 chairs, but it's gotta but it's a it's a dedicated
1:23:03 room. Well, everyone And has not a a family room where everyone's dicking around and there's a TV set.
1:23:10 Is what everyone has.
1:23:12 So this is unrealistic.
1:23:14 His view of the of the reality his view of reality is skewed by Silicon Valley
1:23:19 craziness. You think? Houses have home theaters, big TVs,
1:23:23 lawnmowers,
1:23:25 dishwashers.
1:23:27 I could totally imagine that someday there's actually an AI supercomputer in your house and it's running all of your And we're all gonna sit there on the couch looking at it. Like, is that the is that the analog here? Agents. It's running all of your assistants
1:23:41 and they're doing all kinds of things for you all the time. They're watching the home theater for you. That's right. You can just Like what? What is it doing? Time.
1:23:49 And you have to have it in your house just like you have a home theater in your house, you have stereos in your house, you have game consoles in your house. What I'm missing is here's what I'm missing, and I I would almost wager it's coming.
1:24:02 Your agent
1:24:04 will know when you've run out of milk
1:24:07 and it from your smart fridge and it will order the milk for you. Back to the early eighties. It's coming. It's coming. It's coming. Have you do you know Ed Zitron?
1:24:17 Who? Ed Zitron?
1:24:19 He does I think so. He does a a newsletter,
1:24:23 maybe a substack.
1:24:25 He also has a podcast
1:24:26 and he is the anti AI guy.
1:24:29 And Bloomberg
1:24:30 Oh, I I I my anti AI guy is that Marcus character. Well, this guy is good too. I like Ed Zitron. And he was on Bloomberg,
1:24:39 and he's just he he said so many things. I'm like, yeah, I agree. You're right. Absolutely. What are we getting I don't wanna say we. What what are the bulls out there getting wrong about AI? Because you've you've made no secret that you don't see any there there. Yeah. So I think people are conflating a semiconductor rally
1:24:57 with an underlying successful business, which doesn't really exist. Anthropic's current revenue growth, is deeply questionable and the fact that they leaked profitability,
1:25:05 manipulated by Elon Musk, of course,
1:25:08 their growth is coming because people cannot measure how much an AI task actually costs. And a couple months ago, Anthropic started charging their enterprise customers the actual token rates.
1:25:18 What this has led to is suddenly businesses are going, oh, how much money are we spending? Uber's c I think it it was Uber's COO, Andrew McDonald, said that they are having trouble justifying by the AI spend based on the actual return that one can actually measure it. So you've got a thing where you can't measure the costs and you can't measure the return on investment. What
1:25:39 do you call that? You call it a thing without an ROI.
1:25:42 Yeah. He kinda nails it in that one sentence. There's you can't measure anything. This is all fluff.
1:25:49 Not that it's not useful. And
1:25:51 that's never happened in Silicon Valley before.
1:25:54 Well, the degree to what the to what this is happening is what is staggering.
1:25:59 It's pretty amazing.
1:26:01 What?
1:26:02 The the
1:26:04 price the mem the memory
1:26:06 stocks, Seagate,
1:26:07 Western Digital flying through their roof. Their stocks are worth a fortune. Mhmm. The of all com Micron, a dead in the water company has been sitting there Yeah. Cranking up. Now there's, like, trillion dollar company. It's unbelievable. This is, this is ridiculous.
1:26:23 So here's a guy from Bank of America on CNBC
1:26:28 talking about the financing
1:26:30 the financing of the data centers. And that that had a whole set of stuff with Whitmer, Stargate in Michigan. I'll skip all of that. It's groovy. It's great. Don't worry about it.
1:26:41 But listen to this. I think everybody under anticipated
1:26:46 the amount of debt financing that's needed. When you start to get to a deal of this scale, it's it's that's a big There's his throat. Large amount of debt for
1:26:55 the loan markets
1:26:57 in general. And then if you think about the deals that have been done prior to this and all the discussions about additional financing that's happening,
1:27:04 you know, $10,000,000,000 deals are becoming more of the standard, not the outlier or 10,000,000,000 plus for the scale of these projects.
1:27:11 And that's before you even get into chip financing and kind of other other equipment that's needed. So you're in that, you know, 30 to $50,000,000,000
1:27:20 range,
1:27:21 which is just an incredible amount of of capital needs. 30 to 50,000,000,000
1:27:26 in debt?
1:27:28 That's that that is truly insane.
1:27:32 Hey, you make it up in volume. So I have two
1:27:36 clips here, each saying something different. We'll start with this dude
1:27:41 on CNBC.
1:27:43 The problem we face right now in The United States is that the government is doing nothing
1:27:49 on AI. The government is doing nothing to stop AI from taking your jobs. The government is doing nothing to stop AI from exploiting your kid, is doing nothing to stop AI from giving advice to a terrorist, is doing nothing
1:28:03 to stop AI from being a huge cybersecurity
1:28:05 threat. And when you ask yourself why,
1:28:08 it's because these AI companies have funded massive super PACs. They're threatening to spend over a $100,000,000
1:28:16 in the upcoming elections. Wait a minute. Are they all Jewish? In order to silence people. That's wrong. We can, of course, respectfully work through the specifics of what AI policy should be, but we shouldn't be in a situation where AI companies have silenced the people's representatives and we do nothing. And that's why I'm proposing
1:28:34 this first step, a modest AI token tax to make sure that AI does not result in the mass unemployment.
1:28:41 Shoot this guy. I love the token tax idea. We don't even know how much a token is, but we're gonna tax it.
1:28:48 Now we have David Sachs who was the the AI crypto czar until his time ran out. This is from the from the All In Pod. All In Pod. It's not a podcast. It's the All In Pod.
1:29:00 And he speaks of Jevan's
1:29:01 Paradox, which was a new one to me. It's actually got a controlling belief in 2026? Yes. AI will increase demand for knowledge workers,
1:29:10 not decrease I
1:29:11 would refer you to Aaron Levy's post called Jevan's Paradox for Knowledge Workers. And the point of Jevin's Paradox is that as the cost of a resource goes down, the aggregate demand for it actually increases because you discover more and more use cases. So I think this will certainly happen with code. In the past, it's been very expensive to generate code. You have to hire engineers. There's not enough of them. It's an expensive resource.
1:29:35 So the the amount of software generated in the economy was limited by that. I think it's gonna increase massively now because the cost of generating code is coming down so much. But there's other examples too. You take a field like radiology,
1:29:46 that's frequently cited as a profession that AI is gonna put out of business. That's not what the data shows. The data shows that the number of radiologists is increasing. Why? Because the number of scans that people wanna make is increasing. And it's true that AI can do some of the work, but you still need a doctor to prompt the AI, to interpret the AI, to validate it. So you get more efficient, the cost of scans goes down. And instead of it being a super speciality that happens very rarely, that you need a referral on top of a referral to get, It becomes something that's normalized and everyone starts doing it and you start getting more and more scams that leads to better and better outcomes. I think there's gonna be a lot of those examples through the economy and we're gonna look back and see that the job loss narrative was not only wrong, but we actually got job gain. I agree.
1:30:28 I totally agree. We're gonna get more productivity.
1:30:31 It's not gonna be yes. We'll have some transition where a coder
1:30:35 coders will go away. How many coders really are there in the universe?
1:30:39 Half a million?
1:30:41 A million?
1:30:42 I
1:30:43 don't know.
1:30:45 No. I'm I'm we should have that number.
1:30:48 But I I A lot of girls. I
1:30:51 think I think everyone Learn to code, girls. I mean, I'm I'm so productive now with my robot. I could do a show every day.
1:30:59 You do a show every day damn near. Yeah. Know.
1:31:02 But I I still have Mondays doing a show every day before the I still have Mondays and and Tuesdays
1:31:08 open. And Saturday. And
1:31:10 Saturday. Saturday. Have the robot do the show. No. Let's do a g day. That's the thing. The robot can't actually do the show. That's the beauty of it.
1:31:20 The robot can't do a show.
1:31:22 That's never gonna happen. You can do a deep dive. I've
1:31:28 actually taught the robot to identify
1:31:30 the AI YouTube videos.
1:31:33 It's pretty good now.
1:31:35 It's pretty good. It figures it out. Oh, this is YouTube
1:31:39 videos. Oh. And and what benefit is this to you?
1:31:42 For clipping.
1:31:45 For clipping.
1:31:48 Search
1:31:48 and clip.
1:31:50 That's a great benefit to me.
1:31:52 You know, go through, hey, I saw something funny that
1:31:57 Rubio said.
1:31:58 Go find funny clips. It it does a pretty good job. It misses a lot of good ones because it's in essence an
1:32:06 intern with autism,
1:32:08 but it it does okay. You know, it has different humor than me.
1:32:12 Alright. Okay. Well, let's jump back to some
1:32:16 current events.
1:32:19 And this I found peculiar because this is from NTD.
1:32:23 And it was like, did you know Ukraine attacked Saint Petersburg?
1:32:27 No. I did not know this. This is not did not hit my robot's
1:32:32 purview.
1:32:34 Yeah. How come that is? Here we go. It's Ukraine. It's Saint Pete. Ukraine today, striking Russia's second largest city, Saint Petersburg.
1:32:43 This has Russia is holding a major economic form in that city. Moscow is already vowing retaliation.
1:32:50 And today's international correspondent, Erin Pastor, brings us the war update. New footage shows smoke rising into the air and explosions ringing out in Russia's Saint Petersburg.
1:33:00 Ukraine struck an oil terminal, a naval base, and another military facility in the nation's second largest city. The attacks coming just hours before Russian president Vladimir Putin kicked off an economic forum, an apparent Ukrainian attempt to embarrass the Russian president.
1:33:17 It's the fifth time the annual St. Petersburg International Economic Forum is taking place during the Ukraine war. Ukraine confirmed the attacks, releasing video footage of the drone strikes on multiple targets.
1:33:29 President Vladimir Zelensky saying such deep strikes allow Ukraine to negotiate with Russia on equal terms. Good luck. Through our midrange and deep strikes,
1:33:40 Russia is facing clear clear fuel
1:33:43 shortages in so
1:33:45 through What? These Wait. Wait. Russia's facing fuel shortages?
1:33:52 Well, this is news to me. How does that work? They're sitting on nothing but oil.
1:33:56 Fuel shortages? Blowing up their refineries that they there's one, I guess, around Saint Pete that they hit with a with the drone. Alright. Allow Ukraine to negotiate with That's an act of war. Russia on equal terms.
1:34:08 Through our midrange and deep strikes,
1:34:12 Russia is facing clear clear fuel
1:34:15 shortages. And so
1:34:17 through
1:34:18 these pressure, we are making Russia choose between diplomacy
1:34:24 and further loss.
1:34:27 Zelenskyy added that he's ready for direct peace talks with Putin. Russia, meanwhile, vowing retaliation.
1:34:33 I'd
1:34:36 like to remind you of the statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
1:34:39 which said that our responses will be systematic in nature, and indeed, they already are.
1:34:46 The spokes man added that Russia will make sure to prevent such Ukrainian attacks in the future.
1:34:53 It sounds to me like the Euro birds,
1:34:57 along with Starmer that they're going all out now. And they're sat they're gonna sacrifice Zelensky. This guy's gonna get blowed up.
1:35:05 He's this is a problem. This is Well, I, you know, I I think we both
1:35:09 have thought this for a while that Zelensky has a, you know, short window in his life. Mhmm.
1:35:16 But it it
1:35:17 it's not happening. Yeah. But this is, you know, now you're now you're hitting where it hurts.
1:35:24 Well, here's part two. Ukraine strikes on Saint Petersburg come just days after Russia attacked multiple Ukrainian cities, killing over 20 civilians.
1:35:33 NATO chief visiting
1:35:35 one of those sites on Wednesday. This is a department store which has been heavily hit.
1:35:40 Hey. Who is this? Who is this? That's what you think it is. This is Marc Rutte. Is this my boy? Hey. This is a department store which has been heavily hit,
1:35:49 a sort of shopping mall, but also a subway station. And the rescue workers, they work integratedly.
1:35:56 These missiles are in forty minutes after each other. So here, one of their colleagues have been killed
1:36:02 because of the second missile impact.
1:36:08 Is in Ukraine for a meeting of the NATO Ukraine Council where different nations advocate for Ukraine to join the military alliance.
1:36:17 NTD News. You know, hey, Vladimir, we we just, you know, this Iran war thing is getting too much coverage. You could do we gotta ramp this up a little bit. You got any drones, man? Can you do something a little more spectacular and then, you know, just do something good.
1:36:32 This Petersburg.
1:36:34 Yeah.
1:36:35 Can I do a little native ad for Mimi?
1:36:38 Yes, please.
1:36:40 Egg prices are coming down fast, but not for the reasons some are claiming. I'm Brandon Gomez, CNBC's food and consumer wellness reporter. And, yes, the egg market is still kind of a scramble.
1:36:51 After last year's bird's eye shop left shelves light and prices high, things have now flipped. There are too many eggs and not enough pantries to handle them. Too many eggs.com.
1:37:01 In stores, a dozen eggs is actually dropping below a dollar.
1:37:06 Good news for shoppers, your breakfast just got cheaper. Bad news for producers. Their margins are getting whisked away. So what happened? Well, farmers rebuilt their flocks after the outbreak. But now the industry No. Not after the outbreak.
1:37:19 After Trump came in and the ag secretary along with Kennedy went, hey, stop vaccinating these chickens.
1:37:26 Let the ones, you know, die who need to die. Stop killing all the chickens and let's just get back to business. Well, farmers rebuilt their flocks after the outbreak, but now the industry's got more eggs than demand can handle. And here's the twist that really makes this bad timing for egg producers. Americans are eating more eggs than before. A new survey shows
1:37:47 Americans have focused on protein more than they were five years ago, and most say eggs are weekly go tos.
1:37:54 The industry should be capitalizing on that demand, but input costs haven't gotten any easier for the industry,
1:37:59 so feed, fuel, and labor are still eating into their profits and bottom line. That's the American system at work. A buck a buck for a for a dozen eggs.
1:38:09 Yeah. They can't be very good.
1:38:12 You know, Tina bought these jumbo eggs.
1:38:16 Oh, jumbos are the best. You know, they I'm suspicious.
1:38:20 I'm suspicious.
1:38:21 No. Jumbo eggs, the chickens
1:38:23 sometimes when they're at the end of their life cycle, chickens will start to produce jumbo eggs and then they Uh-huh. Either get egg bound. Most of those chickens get killed and eaten.
1:38:33 They
1:38:34 only reason I know this is because I got a lecture about it from the expert. From me me. And so because I love jumbo eggs because sometimes jumbo eggs even have double yolks. Yes. Yeah. That's freaky.
1:38:46 And
1:38:47 It's freaky. Yeah. And so the jump but the I said, oh, jumbo eggs, jumbo eggs, and Mimi's tummy. Well, you know, if you're encouraging jumbo eggs, you're encouraging the death of chickens because Oh. Chickens that produce jumbo eggs have to be taken out because they can't keep they can't do it for long because it hurts. And then they get egg bound and the other things happen and they get they get all slaughtered. It hurts.
1:39:10 But, yeah, no. Jumbo eggs are dynamite.
1:39:13 Okay. So they're not, like, like factory
1:39:16 freakishly
1:39:17 No. No. Not at all. It's a great natural phenomenon with most chickens. Oh, okay. Alright. I just thought they came from really big chickens.
1:39:27 And here is the breaking news we've been waiting for for the almost two decades of this podcast. The question
1:39:34 finally posed
1:39:35 to Gail King.
1:39:37 It could only happen on a podcast. What is the one thing we want to know about Gail and Oprah?
1:39:43 Are they gay?
1:39:44 People literally to the point have made comments
1:39:47 that they are like, there's no way this isn't a romantic relationship. I know. It used to really bother me. Mhmm. I I was recently divorced, and there was the National Inquirer did a story about that's reason for the divorce because they're secretly gay. Number one, if we were gay, we would tell you because
1:40:03 believe me, there's nothing wrong with It's just Hold on. Stop the I prefer
1:40:07 If they were gay, they'd tell you because we know for a fact that all gays
1:40:12 always tell everybody that they're gay.
1:40:17 Give me a break. If we were gay, we would tell you because,
1:40:20 believe me, there's nothing wrong with it. It's just I prefer a man. A man. I prefer a man. A man. So so we would tell A her man. And then I would say to her, you've got to say something on your show because it's hard enough for me to get a date on a Saturday night, and now people think I'm a lesbian.
1:40:36 You've got to say something. And she said, no. We should just leave it be. I said, no. You've gotta say she she said, no. Just leave it alone. Leave it alone. So, well, that's fine for you to say. You have somebody. I don't.
1:40:48 It used to really bother me. And now, even today, there's still people that say, well, you know, the truth is, I don't care. But we do have a very unique bond. I got in trouble once when I said, you know, because I'm single, alert, and available. I said, I could meet a guy that was like Oprah, I'd be done.
1:41:03 And then people took that all out of context as they often do. I mean, I said, you know, when I die, I'd like to come back as one of her dogs. They travel very well, Alex. Cashmere private planes, sign me up. There you go. It's official.
1:41:19 There's nothing to see here.
1:41:22 Well, I find it peculiar you'd bring in this gossipy clip. I thought it was fun. This is the one thing everyone's always come
1:41:30 on. Gossipy clip.
1:41:32 Oh oh, I'm sorry. Bring back the lady with the Andrino chrome.
1:41:37 Bring bring back that The Andrinochrome. Bring back that four part series, please. Here's a little here's a little clip. Who is this I think this I don't know if Trump is doing a goof or what's the deal. But why are they replacing Tulsi Gabbard with this Bill
1:41:53 Pulte character?
1:41:56 He's got no in no
1:41:58 anything to do with with national security. You know about this. Bill Pulte Yeah. Yeah. Replaces Gabbard. I have clip. Yeah. Where's Bill Pulte? He's around here someplace. He's done a what a great job. Federal housing finance chief Bill Pulte, close confidant of the president, will now be the highest ranking intelligence official in the government despite having no experience in spycraft, or national security. I see no
1:42:20 no evidence of any qualifications for that job. The move sparked bipartisan concern. He's ill equipped to oversee the nation's spy agencies, including the CIA.
1:42:29 The White House, represented at the daily press briefing today by Medicare chief doctor Mehmet Oz Good afternoon, everybody. Dodged questions about his qualifications.
1:42:36 You're a heart surgeon or a heart doctor? Yeah. Would you recommend a patient go see someone who isn't? You're asking the question with a premise that Bill Pulte is not qualified. I don't know anything about his situation. Democrats note Pulte used his perch at the Federal Housing Finance Agency to send criminal referrals to the justice department, accusing president Trump's political enemies of mortgage fraud. The idea that president Trump
1:42:58 picked this guy, I fear,
1:43:00 to use all the information in the intelligence agencies
1:43:03 and to potentially go after Trump opponents.
1:43:06 News of Palti's appointment came as secretary of state Marco Rubio on Capitol Hill once again called for the reopening of the Strait Of Hormuz.
1:43:13 Today, The US disabled the tanker trying to evade the American blockade. That has to open immediately,
1:43:20 and that has to open immediately
1:43:21 in exchange, not for anything else other than us lifting the blockade. But he faced a tough grilling Wrong. From Democrats. You keep telling us how we're winning this war. The president keeps saying Well, the war's over. Clearly annihilated.
1:43:31 The war is not over.
1:43:33 And yet the American people see how we're losing at the pump and with their costs, and yet this thing still hasn't been resolved.
1:43:41 On top of serving as the acting intelligence chief, Bill Pulte is set to continue leading the Federal Housing Finance Agency and serve as chairman of the government backed mortgage giants,
1:43:50 Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
1:43:52 Yeah. This is there's a strategy behind this, I think.
1:43:56 Yeah. What is it you think? Well, this is senate has to confirm this guy and they won't.
1:44:03 So then Sarah Lynn I agree with that. Sarah Lynn Pickett.
1:44:06 And and
1:44:08 and I think Sarah Lynn or Sarah I don't know. Tell me about this. Well well, first,
1:44:14 as acting,
1:44:16 I think he's acting now so he can do some stuff,
1:44:20 so he can go nuts.
1:44:22 He can throw all kinds of stuff out there, anything he wants to say because whether he has the job or not, they see him now as the acting
1:44:30 DNI.
1:44:32 So there's he's just gonna be blah blah blah blah. He's gonna be spewing all kinds of stuff. Some of it was probably true.
1:44:40 And so he won't get confirmed.
1:44:42 And meanwhile, Sarah Lynn Pickett,
1:44:45 she's been the
1:44:47 the
1:44:49 assistant director.
1:44:51 Assistant or deputy? Should we have Is it deputy? Probably deputy. Let me see who Let's see deputy.
1:44:56 She's been there for a couple years. She was a DHS before that.
1:45:01 She is
1:45:04 Department of Defense, six years. She's a lawyer.
1:45:08 So she, you know, you know how he always likes to have someone as a backup?
1:45:12 Yeah. That that actually does the job.
1:45:15 Yeah. Let me see.
1:45:17 Let me just check and make sure deputy
1:45:20 assistant.
1:45:22 Hold on.
1:45:24 Someone else is Yes. The the robot.
1:45:27 Yeah. I could, but I'm already doing it myself.
1:45:30 Okay. Let's ask the robot.
1:45:32 Book
1:45:34 of Knowledge. Who is the current deputy
1:45:37 director of national intelligence?
1:45:41 Alright. Book of Knowledge is searching.
1:45:43 Here we go.
1:45:46 That's a tough one.
1:45:48 According to the Book of Knowledge,
1:45:50 Paul Lucas has served as the principal deputy director of National Intelligence since 2025,
1:45:58 though Bill Pulte has now been named as acting director of National Intelligence
1:46:03 following Tulsi Gabbard's resignation. Aaron
1:46:06 Paul Lucas.
1:46:08 It has been written. So Aaron Paul Lucas, did you look him up? No. Why don't you ask the robot who this other woman is? What'd she do? Well, let me find Aaron Paul Lucas first. Hold on a second. Well, I think it's just we've been distracted by the robot. No. The robot you called for the robot. The robot is has she is the assistant.
1:46:27 Aaron Paul Lucas is the deputy.
1:46:29 I believe deputy is above assistant. No? Yeah. I would think so. Okay. So book of knowledge.
1:46:35 Give me a brief bio of Aaron Paul Lucas. Let's see who this dude is.
1:46:39 Because Trump always wants to have someone
1:46:42 in the background who's gonna do the real job.
1:46:46 According to the Book of Knowledge,
1:46:48 Paul Lucas is an American intelligence officer Ah. Born 05/18/1971
1:46:54 Spook. Who spent more than twenty years at the CIA as an analyst and operations officer Oh, wait. Before serving as station chief for a former Soviet country a a before becoming intelligence aide to Richard Grinnell and deputy senior director for Europe and Russia at the National Security Council. There you go. Major spook. There's the real guy. That's the that's the guy who's doing all the work in Yeah. The In
1:47:19 the behind the iron curtain. Yes. That's Yeah. Okay. That's what you do. That's the person you get. Yeah. And he's just a CIA stooge. Yeah. Well, he worked for Grinnell,
1:47:29 the gay guy. Yeah.
1:47:32 So,
1:47:33 you know, it's all part of the cabal, man. That's a web of deceit.
1:47:38 Yes, it is a web of deceit.
1:47:42 A little update on the
1:47:44 $250
1:47:45 bill. I still got my eye on it. I know you're skeptical. Could president Donald Trump soon be featured on a $250
1:47:52 bill? Well, the Washington Post says US treasurer Brandon Beach has pushed the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to expedite the process that would place the president's portrait on a new $250
1:48:03 bill. According to a mock up design obtained by the Post, the bill would also feature Trump's signature and a logo commemorating America's two hundred and fiftieth anniversary.
1:48:12 But even with Trump's backing, the bill would technically be illegal.
1:48:16 So current law forbids anyone living to be featured on US currency, and that law goes back to 1866.
1:48:22 Another law stipulates which denominations of US bills can be produced, and a $250
1:48:27 bill is not one of them. Trump allies on Capitol Hill are pushing legislation that would clear the way for the bill, but that effort has stalled in Congress. Bees reportedly called for the bill's design in anticipation of that legislation passing. Treasury secretary Scott Bess and echoed that at the White House briefing this week. So we have to prepare in advance. You you you can't throw something up the day before. But even if the legislation does pass, it takes years for bills to be designed requiring coordination with the Federal Reserve, the Secret Service, and other partners. Well, seems like they already designed it.
1:49:01 It's already designed.
1:49:02 I don't think so. Yeah. They just they just said that. They obtained a design.
1:49:07 They said it in the report.
1:49:09 PBS
1:49:10 has really obtained design. That's Trump's signature on his face.
1:49:14 So I think they designed it.
1:49:17 No. It would be great. Nowhere. It doesn't matter. Trillion dollar loan loan interest free loan to America. It's a good idea.
1:49:25 It's a good idea.
1:49:27 But alright. Okay.
1:49:31 You're up.
1:49:32 Okay. Let's do a little little rant here from John Turley on free speech. I was kind of unaware I mean,
1:49:40 John Turley, the professor at Georgetown who's on Fox a lot, very smart guy. He's a podcaster too. He's a podcaster. Oh, he's a pod well, he so
1:49:50 what? Everyone's a podcaster. Hey. Hey. Hey. Hey. Don't don't diminish our our vocation,
1:49:55 man.
1:49:56 Well, no. But I'm not.
1:49:59 But still Okay. We're in good company. Yeah. Yeah. John C. He's one of ours. Alright.
1:50:05 Yeah. So here he is talking about free speech. I thought this was I found this to be an interesting little lecture. There are two anti free speech movements that have coalesced.
1:50:14 Mhmm. One is in Europe where it has laid waste to free Germany,
1:50:18 France, England.
1:50:19 Free speech has been eviscerated,
1:50:22 and also places like Canada.
1:50:25 The US anti free speech movement began in higher education, then metastasized
1:50:29 throughout the government.
1:50:31 But this has all reached our shores now.
1:50:35 The Berlin World Forum followed
1:50:37 the remarks of vice president Vance
1:50:40 on free speech, and the EU was red hot. They gathered in Berlin,
1:50:45 and it was the most anti free speech catherine I've ever been part of. There's only two of us from the free speech community.
1:50:52 Free speech community. And they are committed. And, you know, Hillary Clinton was there, and she really fueled the anger. I mean, she, when Twitter was purchased by
1:51:02 Elon Musk, she called on the EU to use the infamous
1:51:06 Digital Services Act, which is one of the most anti free speech pieces of legislation in decades.
1:51:13 And she called upon the EU to use the DSA
1:51:16 to force the censorship of American citizens, force people like Musk to censor.
1:51:21 It's an extraordinary act by someone who was once a presidential candidate in The United States.
1:51:27 But they are committed to it, and after the World Forum,
1:51:31 they
1:51:32 further globalized this effort and they are threatening companies like Axe with ruinous fines unless they resume censoring
1:51:40 American citizens.
1:51:42 Yeah. Now this is I think this is a a little rant he did about a year ago or so.
1:51:47 Yeah. Well, he's been ranting about this for a while. Yeah. I what I'm kinda Yeah. I didn't know about the Hillary thing. I didn't realize she was such a bad actor. What I'm curious about is what is this free speech community
1:52:00 he speak how how come we're not members of the free speech community?
1:52:04 We are.
1:52:05 No. But it sounds like there's a club.
1:52:08 Nah. Well
1:52:10 It's a cell. It's like it's it's set up like communist party. Along
1:52:14 those lines, here's what the EU is doing. Say hello to Quant.
1:52:18 Move over, Google. Hello, Quant. Quant?
1:52:22 That's the European parliament's new default search engine replacing a tool so ubiquitous it's become a verb.
1:52:29 Never mind that the French service has a modest 6,000,000 monthly users.
1:52:33 It's a symbolic part of the EU's push for tech sovereignty.
1:52:37 Today,
1:52:38 we simply rely on non EU providers
1:52:41 for over than 80%
1:52:43 of our digital products, services, and infrastructure.
1:52:48 And this is huge problem for Europe's security of supply,
1:52:51 and this has to change.
1:52:54 The long awaited tech sovereignty package includes a new CHIPS Act to boost supply and demand for European made semiconductors,
1:53:02 a new law on cloud computing and artificial intelligence to build more data centers,
1:53:07 a push for the public sector to use more open source software to ensure greater control Linux. And a strategic road map for digitalization and AI in the energy sector that powers data centers.
1:53:19 We need to integrate digital infrastructure
1:53:22 in our energy system in a sustainable way because there can be no digital sovereignty
1:53:28 without energy.
1:53:29 Yeah. Okay. So they're so they're
1:53:32 pushing the new search engine quant,
1:53:36 which when you say it in Dutch sounds kunt. Doesn't quite sound as good. Kunt.
1:53:43 This is dumb.
1:53:46 I I don't think this is a very smart thing. And and all the parliament has to use this search engine,
1:53:52 which, gee They have to use this as they can't use Google? No. No. They have to use Quants. Why? Well, because it's you're you're you're I'm using some of the AI systems like You're helping No. The
1:54:03 No. No. They have to use,
1:54:05 European stuff. The Quants. Quants.
1:54:09 Hey, got a great name because it, you know, it's it sounds future I'm gonna start doing some searches on it and see how what it gets me. Can you get on to quant? Can you even use quant?
1:54:18 I could get on to quant. I'm sure. Get on to quant. Well, here's something as I as we start to get a little closer to wrapping here
1:54:26 that we knew we knew this five years ago.
1:54:30 In fact, it's the whole reason I'm not dead.
1:54:34 And
1:54:35 Theo Vaughn had
1:54:38 McCullough on. We we hold McCullough in high regard. I'm a little weirded out by his
1:54:44 his Commercialization
1:54:45 of himself? Yeah. His pharmaceutical
1:54:48 you should buy my pills.
1:54:50 I have the De Quack Incorporated pills.
1:54:53 You take these pills and all your ills are gone. Yeah. I'm a little weirded out by that. But here's Theo Von. I think what Theo Von is trying to do,
1:55:03 he's trying to get McCullough to tell him
1:55:06 that COVID was bioengineered
1:55:10 so that it would kill everybody except the Jews.
1:55:14 There anybody who was immune to,
1:55:16 like, any genetics or demographics,
1:55:19 or cultures that were immune to COVID nineteen?
1:55:23 There were a few papers,
1:55:24 indicating that, children were largely immune, that they had a lot of cross exposure with other coronaviruses,
1:55:30 almost no serious cases in children. There was an occasional child with cystic fibrosis or some problem who got really sick, but children largely immune. School teachers, because they have so much there was no
1:55:42 significant spread of serious illness from children to the school teachers. But no. Was there any, like, was there any, like, a Norwegian person couldn't get it, or was there, like, somebody
1:55:52 from Zimbabwe? Like, was there any, like Stop the trip for a second. Yeah.
1:55:56 If you recall when this thing first broke,
1:55:59 there was a thesis that the Han Chinese,
1:56:02 in particular,
1:56:04 were either not going to get COVID nineteen because they were the thing was designed so they wouldn't
1:56:10 it wouldn't attack them,
1:56:12 Or on the other hand, it was designed to kill
1:56:15 all the Han Chinese
1:56:17 and it would attack them, and that's the reason that the Chinese shut shuttered the country pretty much.
1:56:22 Remember that? The Han Chinese rumor? Yes. And I also remember that Well, that's what this is just a this is just an extension of that.
1:56:31 Well, I think what he's
1:56:34 what he's going for is when Kennedy said,
1:56:39 r f k junior that is, he was saying that, Ashkenazi Jews couldn't get it.
1:56:45 You remember that? Oh, remember that. Yeah. That was another which was an extension
1:56:50 Yes. Of the same thinking. Yeah. So when I hear Theo Von, who we know is out of his gourd about Israel being the fault of everything and controlling everything,
1:57:00 and he's saying, well, how about Norwegians? Or how about Zimbabweans?
1:57:03 Or how about there's gotta be
1:57:06 I don't wanna say it, but you know what I'm going for, McCalla. School teachers. But no. Was there any, like, was there any, like, a Norwegian person couldn't get it? Or was there, like, somebody
1:57:15 from Zimbabwe? Like, was there any, like,
1:57:17 There's one adult group. You're gonna laugh, but there's one adult group. No specific ethnicity or culture.
1:57:24 You know what group it was?
1:57:27 Bookers?
1:57:29 You're gonna laugh.
1:57:30 Smokers.
1:57:32 Smokers didn't do this. They got it very mild cases,
1:57:36 and they don't get long COVID. Yes.
1:57:39 Nicotine, baby. Smokers maintain a level of nicotine in the bloodstream. They actually smoke frequently enough. Blood nicotine blocks the spike protein
1:57:49 as it's,
1:57:51 interfacing with the nicotinic,
1:57:53 acetylcholine
1:57:54 receptor. Smoking blocks the spike protein. It's amazing. I thought smokers were gonna go down. Well, who knows now then? All those years of this, all those smoking advertisements ended up probably saving people's lives forty years later. Well, you know what? We use now use we use a nicotine,
1:58:10 patch,
1:58:11 seven milligram patch, even in nonsmokers to help them through long COVID. We use it in addition to the McCullough protocol. Yes. Which you can get at McCullough there it is. Mcculloughprotocol.com.
1:58:21 Get your seven milligram patch, everybody. It's only $25.
1:58:25 Yeah. Yeah. It's kinda What bothers me about the McCullough protocol and doctor Drew and all the wellness company Yeah. That's the is one. That whatever they're selling,
1:58:35 if you if you do the proper search
1:58:38 for, you know, whether whether it's a parasite cleanse or whatever it is, there are alternative companies with the exact same product, exact same. Mhmm. There's one I forget the one that Bongino was pushing, was, an alternative,
1:58:53 product.
1:58:54 But they're half the price. The wellness company
1:58:58 and and doctor,
1:59:00 and McCullough and doctor,
1:59:01 they're they're rip off artists.
1:59:04 It bothers me to to an extreme that they're overpriced. Well, is I think the wellness company,
1:59:10 which a lot they've sponsor a lot of podcasts.
1:59:16 And they seem to me, they just feel a little sketchy.
1:59:19 Well, they're sketchy. They they have the it's not unusual what they're doing because there's other people doing it except for the fact that they're
1:59:27 because they got all these brand name characters working there Yeah. They're they're the prices are two x. It's it's ridiculous.
1:59:36 You know? Do some research on these things and then find the alternative that's cheaper.
1:59:41 You know, I got a lot of emails about that pill you talked about on the last show. You must have received some emails about it. Retribution.
1:59:53 The email Retribution.
1:59:54 Ret yeah. Everyone's emailing Oh, was
1:59:57 everyone emailing me saying,
1:59:59 oh, well, you know, that's just the peptide and you can get that, you know Oh, the peptide nuts.
2:00:05 My son is one of them. We got a lot of peptide people out there.
2:00:10 Yeah. I I'm skeptical about the peptides.
2:00:14 Well, you might as well be.
2:00:16 Ret ret retrutide.
2:00:20 Retrutide. Retrutide.
2:00:21 Retrutide. Retrutide. Do you do you have you even have you done any research into the peptides?
2:00:27 My son, again,
2:00:29 is the peptide expert in the family, so I'll defer to him if I have a question. But no.
2:00:35 He he claims there's a good facial cream that's got a lot of peptides in it and keeps you younger looking and you can he he various peptide pills or do this and that and the other thing, but you know Isn't isn't the g o p one? Isn't that a peptide?
2:00:50 I don't know. You're asking the wrong guy. I defer to my son. I'm pretty sure it is. I think that Well, ask the robot.
2:00:57 Okay.
2:00:59 Book of You always go you always did give me a big sigh
2:01:02 when I asked for your robot to get involved with the show and it's your robot that you put on the show on purpose. The the sigh and the eye roll that you can't see is because I was hoping that you would have the answer because this I'm not peptide
2:01:18 expert. Book of knowledge I'm not clavicus or whatever that guy is. Clavicus?
2:01:23 That guy. I Claudius.
2:01:25 Book of knowledge, is GLP-one
2:01:28 a peptide?
2:01:33 Alright. Here we go.
2:01:36 Answer me. According to the book of knowledge GLP-one
2:01:40 is indeed a peptide of 30 amino acids produced
2:01:44 by the differential processing of proglucagon.
2:01:48 Thus what?
2:01:49 It has been written. What? You wanna Proglucagon.
2:01:52 What did he call it? Proglucagon.
2:01:55 P r o g l u c a g o n.
2:01:59 And
2:02:00 okay, since since we're discussing that,
2:02:04 but I think I yes. I have a clip about that. The Washington Post has an interesting look at scientists examining the impact of GLP ones on the brain. The University of Colorado study that looked at brain scans of women who had taken GLP ones found an increase in brain regions that are involved in attention and processing important stimuli.
2:02:23 One leading theory as to how and why this is happening is that the drugs might target inflammation in the brain. No. I know what this is.
2:02:31 You take the GLP one, you vote democrat.
2:02:34 I know what's going on.
2:02:36 That would make sense. Yeah.
2:02:39 Well, I'd love to have some information about peptides on the next show. If you if you happen to see JC and he feels like oh, okay. Talk your head off.
2:02:49 It's not like it's like a whole show of discussions about peptides.
2:02:53 But let's do let's both do I'll tell you what. Okay. Let's both do a deep dive. A deep dive on the peptides and then give it two shows Uh-huh. So we can spend some time letting it,
2:03:05 you know, simmer. Yeah. And we'll get some input from some of our we have people out there who are peptide nuts. Peptide people. Peptide people. Will send us give us links
2:03:15 to to clips that may be useful. Yes. And then we'll roll out and we gotta find some peptide
2:03:20 skeptics.
2:03:22 Yes. Peptide people, now is your chance. This is what makes you great. This is what makes this the No Agenda show great because we have more producers and they are in fact the best producers.
2:03:33 We have a
2:03:34 I talked to people about it. We have a we have about just around a million just under a million people that listen. This is a population of a very large city.
2:03:44 And this This is a larger than the cities that Trump's gonna be giving money to. And cities have they have people who die, people who are born. We have all these things and they have we have doctors, lawyers, firemen. We have everything. This is a city. And so we can do so when we ask for peptide people,
2:04:02 there's gotta be 25 people out there that are peptide nuts. Well, they've all 20 have already emailed me about this one peptide that you brought up. And, I would say 95%
2:04:14 are like, it's the best thing ever
2:04:16 and you need to get on this peptide.
2:04:19 Meanwhile, I'm I'm taking I don't even remember the clip.
2:04:23 It was your Eli Lilly clip.
2:04:26 Oh, about the new,
2:04:28 the weight loss product. Yeah. Yeah.
2:04:30 Yeah.
2:04:31 Lilly. Let me see. Next yeah. The next gen. Here it is. The next generation of obesity medication is getting closer to reality. Eli Lilly is studying a new drug. Test results show it's more powerful,
2:04:43 even more powerful
2:04:44 than the obesity shots and pills already on the market. NPR Pharmaceuticals correspondent Sydney Lupkin is here to tell us about it. Good morning. Good morning. I'm so glad you're the one who's going to pronounce the name of this new drug. What is it? The new drug is called retrutide.
2:05:00 Retrutide. So it's a weekly injection just like Wegovy and Zepbound, but it's a little different. Wegovy and Zepbound target the GLP one hormone.
2:05:08 This new drug works on three hormones, GLP one, GIP, and glucagon, and that makes it more powerful. When you say more powerful, you gotta sell me because I have seen the results in human beings of the existing drugs. How powerful is it? Yeah. So Eli Lilly, the company that makes retreutide,
2:05:24 says that in the clinical trial people taking it for eighty weeks lost an average of more than 70 pounds. Because they were just a bag of bones. Highest dose. For comparison, patients taking the placebo over the same period they lost five pounds. Those were the latest findings from its phase three clinical study.
2:05:42 I asked doctor Carolyn Franklin Right. So everyone that emailed me was saying, this is bull crap. They're just taking something that's already available. You can get it. It's a peptide. You can get it from the peptide dealer. Maybe we should become peptide dealers.
2:05:55 Peptide. This is the last thing in the world I wanna be, is a peptide dealer. That's right. Can you imagine the freaks who keep the pep yeah. Peptide freaks. Hey, man. You gotta need a, you know, the
2:06:07 whack a mole peptide, you know, it makes your dick fall off, that one.
2:06:12 I mean, what is it? That's the one I want.
2:06:17 I don't I don't know if there's a peptide for that. Well, there's a peptide for everything. Rogan's into peptides. He's big into that. Oh, that what a shocker. Yeah. Yeah. He's a guy young middle aged guy who's loaded on on Peptides. And on no. He's loaded on on testosterone,
2:06:36 which is like he's a little young for that, it seems to me. But okay. Joe is about he's I guess he's about 58 now, think.
2:06:43 Yeah. Well Meanwhile,
2:06:45 you know, I I I agreed
2:06:48 to because you know, we had the blood test and like, oh, your testosterone is 300. It should be between four hundred and twelve hundred. I'm like, okay, I got low t, whatever. All of my friends.
2:06:59 You you you won't even know how good you can feel.
2:07:03 I didn't know how good I could feel until I started taking testosterone. I said, okay, I'm I'm game. But I'm not gonna inject anything. K? I'm not I'm just not gonna do There's two ways you can go with the testosterone.
2:07:15 One is you're right. There's an injection
2:07:18 and you have to go every week and you gotta get a shot. That's no good.
2:07:22 Then there's the various things you can rub on. Yeah. Have the rub on. So I got the rub on. You you got some? Yes. And I got the rub listen to this. Which one? What was the percentage? It's compound. Oh, I'd I'd have to look at it. But just listen to the results.
2:07:36 So after
2:07:38 six
2:07:39 weeks or eight weeks, I go to and I'm not I I do not like blood draws but okay, I do the blood draw.
2:07:45 My testosterone
2:07:47 went from 300
2:07:49 to 200. It went down.
2:07:53 Alright. It went down? It went down.
2:07:55 I'm like Oh, poor thing. Yeah. And then, alright, so we'll do it. We'll do another six weeks.
2:08:01 It went from 200 to one sixty eight. I said, stop. First of all Your dick's gonna fall off. I said, first of all, I don't feel any better. I don't feel any worse. You know what I got? Pimples.
2:08:15 I had a pimple on my forehead,
2:08:17 got one on my chin.
2:08:19 Said, this is crap.
2:08:21 And and it was like, you know, I'm still an animal. I think it's I think it's whatever
2:08:26 who who
2:08:27 who is this a commercial product or something somebody blended for you? It's compounding. With a with a warring blender that It's compounding. With an osterizer. Here, drink this. It's from a compounding pharmacy here in town. No. No. Why do you mean no no no? You gotta get androgel
2:08:45 or one of the No. I No. That's what the lesbians use. I don't want androgel.
2:08:52 The the lesbians are onto it. They they know what they're doing. I even said, well, shouldn't I use andro gel? No. No. No. No. No. We're gonna compound something for it. Oh, well, they're comp
2:09:03 out of a out a
2:09:06 I can't
2:09:06 keep using the same gag over and over, so they're compounding out of something that you're not gonna like.
2:09:12 What do you mean?
2:09:14 That that sounds like they they don't know what they're doing.
2:09:17 Well If your numbers keep going down, how does that make any But but here's my question.
2:09:23 Why would my numbers go down by 50%
2:09:27 anyway within,
2:09:28 excuse me, within five months?
2:09:32 Am I dying? Am am I wilting away? Is my manhood diminishing before my very eyes? Am I becoming a girl?
2:09:39 I don't That's beside the point. I don't I don't believe in any of this stuff. So
2:09:46 Peptides, testosterone Your testosterone is gonna naturally drop through the floor as you get older, period. Well Whether you like it or not. I've turned the heavy duty
2:09:55 exerciser and you're trying to build bulk,
2:09:58 your testosterone will naturally go up. You can do that to get it back up. How is it possible
2:10:04 that somehow
2:10:06 Tina, who I think is taking estrogen, that that's rubbing off on me and is counteracting it? Am I is this a estrogen? No. Versus 10. You'd get you'd have both Why do my boobs hurt? What's going on?
2:10:20 Sensitive nipples? Is that what's going on in the dentist? Something is wrong. Reconsider.
2:10:25 It's all a scam. All of it. Well, it's medicine.
2:10:30 It's medicine.
2:10:32 I'm rubbing this This is a I'm rubbing this stuff on my balls twice a day. This is You're supposed to do that? That's what I was specifically told.
2:10:41 What? Where are you supposed to rub it? The nor I'm telling you, this is why Somebody's been playing a gag on you. I'm telling you. You're being punked.
2:10:51 Let's see if he let's hey. I have an idea, Bill. I bet you I can get this numb nuts to rub some of this shit on his balls and see what happens. This is literally
2:11:01 you're telling me this is wrong?
2:11:04 Yeah.
2:11:05 What do you mean? When did the testosterone
2:11:07 therapy Where is That's the last place you're supposed to put it. Well, this is literally what I was told. I'm the testes.
2:11:15 Wow. Yeah. Where where did you rub it?
2:11:20 Well, you rub it place got nothing to do with the testosterone and rubbing it. Now,
2:11:25 hey yo. So no. The the androgel is rubbed on the
2:11:30 on the Forearm.
2:11:32 Yeah. The forearms and the and the biceps. Yeah. And then it's a you've and then across the stomach, maybe. And
2:11:39 and it's and it just it's absorbed through
2:11:43 the skin.
2:11:44 But you're you're definitely not supposed to put it on your face No. Or your balls. The
2:11:51 it's even on the label.
2:11:54 It says Yeah. But the label's a phony label. It's not like a a commercial product. It says rub on your balls. It says it right there.
2:12:01 R o y b. I'm telling you, you're being punked. Okay. Well, you know what? I believe you. I mean, I'd like to hear from some doctor
2:12:10 out there who's got who does, hormone replacement therapy about rubbing
2:12:16 testosterone
2:12:16 treatments on the balls.
2:12:19 My whole email inbox is is, by the way, the height of our show. We're reaching a peak here with this discussion.
2:12:27 Alright,
2:12:29 everybody. With that with that We should get some donations for this this
2:12:33 vast knowledge.
2:12:35 Thank you. We are in fact feeding the book of knowledge with what we've got here. I wanna thank you for your courage saying the morning to you, the man who put the c in the
2:12:45 what do we have? The freedom, the free speech community.
2:12:49 Everybody say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, only mister John
2:12:53 C. Dvorak.
2:12:55 Well, in the morning you must say I'm Korean. In the morning, ship C. Boots and ground feet in the air subs in the water and Dame's Knight's out there. Day in the morning, you trolls in the troll room. Can't thirteen
2:13:06 fifty, which has no bearing on donations and no donations were nice today. I saw that. Thank you all for thinking of us. Did you throw out a sad puppy? I didn't see a sad puppy. No. There was no sad puppy. Oh, it was good. But you know, you you but but
2:13:19 But but Just banging the mic. Yeah. I know. So
2:13:23 No. But Mimi had a theory. Okay.
2:13:26 So we had lousy donations last show, they were total I think of 25 above 50
2:13:32 or 23 above 50, very low number. Yeah. And she says that she's noticed
2:13:38 that the kennel
2:13:41 Oh. In Port Angeles is full to the rim Wow. With a waiting list when we have bad donations.
2:13:48 So it's a vacation thing.
2:13:50 And it turns out that that that last show was when everyone started to go on their vacations, the school was out, graduation was over, and people put their dogs in the kennel.
2:14:02 Yes. Well, that makes sense. So there's a kennel index
2:14:06 The kennel index. That will predict our donations.
2:14:09 How about this? This When coincident indexes are very famous for working. Yes. But how about this?
2:14:15 How about we use the kennel index and when the kennel is full, we take a day off? How about that? That's just a thought. I mean, come on. And we're working our butts off here. I'm exposed I agree. I'm exposing my inner secrets. I'm telling you what I do.
2:14:30 I mean Yeah. It's it's embarrassing.
2:14:32 It's embarrassing that it's not working. That's what's embarrassing.
2:14:37 Anyway,
2:14:40 hopefully you are listening to us if you're streaming us live in a modern podcast app. You wanna get one of these, stop with that legacy stuff. It's gonna catch you eventually.
2:14:48 We publish the show within ninety seconds. It's in your modern podcast app. And when we go live, the bat signal is sent, you hear it, boom, little notification, you tap on that, you're listening live, if you can.
2:14:59 And we are Value4Value.
2:15:01 Yes.
2:15:02 We don't sell you we're not selling you any peptides.
2:15:06 We're not selling you any Yeah. Not yet. Not yet. It's still an option, but we're not selling them yet. Exactly.
2:15:14 No. Instead, we decided a long time ago that the best way to stay honest and stay in the game and stay on our toes and never get lazy is to use a system we call the Value4Value
2:15:27 system or Value4Value model. It's very simple. And work on holidays. Yeah. We work whenever we can. We're on holidays, we're on vacation trips, whenever we're always working. We couple
2:15:36 shows well, mean, you you cowardly took several shows off. We had to bring Mimi in because, know,
2:15:43 had some kind of heart thing going on. But otherwise, you know, if if you physically I tried to broadcast from the hospital but they didn't have a good WiFi connection.
2:15:52 I know that if you could have, you would have. I I know that It know it would great. Would have been quite interesting. But you also didn't have your voice back and everything. So but but but as a part of that, this roller coaster international
2:16:05 lifestyle,
2:16:07 all we do is we just give you the best possible value that we can in our in our show every single time we do a podcast, which is twice a week, Thursdays and Sundays.
2:16:16 Then all we say is, hey, at this point where you're thinking, hey, this is funny, I learned something,
2:16:22 here's an important thing you learned, don't don't rub the stuff on your balls because it doesn't work. I mean, that by itself is worth the price of admission.
2:16:31 And the fact that we have thousands of producers
2:16:34 who can also contribute value back to us with their time, their talent, their information, their skills. This is what makes us the best podcast in the universe.
2:16:43 And we appreciate all kinds of things that people do. For instance, one thing people do is they prompt their they prompt their
2:16:50 guts out by
2:16:52 making artwork for us,
2:16:54 which we then use for
2:16:56 art in our m p three file and in the podcast apps and this was a nice one that we chose last time by Capitalist Agenda.
2:17:06 Pretty sure this was a combo platter
2:17:10 minimum,
2:17:11 at minimum a combo platter of
2:17:13 AI and
2:17:15 Photoshop.
2:17:16 Great piece
2:17:18 with the Curry Dvorak consulting group door,
2:17:22 big pool sign on it and there's a little robot with AI in his back trying to push it open. I mean,
2:17:28 a lot of people who don't even listen to our show thought it was fantastic.
2:17:31 Like, yeah, that's it. That is exactly what AI is.
2:17:35 And we loved it. We thought it was a great piece.
2:17:37 There were some other contenders,
2:17:39 think, not much.
2:17:41 Do you remember
2:17:42 any of the other Let
2:17:44 Let me take a look. I like the one that I used for the newsletter, which is the Mechagodzilla
2:17:49 or whatever the hell it was. Oh, yeah. Used that for the bat signal this morning. That was good. But that that was
2:17:55 that was something that came in after the show, I think.
2:17:59 Yeah. We had Yeah. It could be. Let's see what we had. There's a lot of l a lot of lizards. I kind of like the sumo, but Yeah. You like the sumo, but I didn't like it. No. And you said you you said you couldn't read.
2:18:12 The Curry and Dvorak is too small. You always bitch about things being too small. It didn't look too small to me. Well, it looks too small to me. Oh, well, and that's why we didn't argue about it.
2:18:22 What else was it? I I kinda like the debit card a little bit. Yeah. Talk about Curry Dvorak being small.
2:18:28 Yeah. No. I agree. That's why I just said I like that and said I wanted to use it. We like our name upfront. And, you know,
2:18:35 a lot of people have been tweeting about this Dvorak
2:18:39 micro dosing stuff. Are you familiar with this?
2:18:41 Oh, Dvorak. Yeah. There's a Botanicals? Company that makes Dvorak gummies. Yeah. Is that weed gummies?
2:18:48 Yeah.
2:18:50 They're send some to Brunetti. Are you getting a piece of that? Or No. I said somebody named Dvorak who does the name is not, you know, unusual. Oh, it is unusual, but it's not uncommon. And it's, from Tennessee or someplace. I don't know. I get I've gotten two or three people saying, you you got you got any piece of this? Yeah. That's my exact question.
2:19:11 Yeah. No. I got I wish.
2:19:13 Yeah. Sounds like a good deal. Well, you could have we could have Dvorak peptides. It's not too late to do that.
2:19:20 So yeah, I think that was pretty much it. There was there wasn't much else that we thought was really great. So thank you very much Blue Acorn. Good piece, we enjoyed it very much.
2:19:31 We also, as always, are very happy to thank our
2:19:35 associate executive producers. These are the people who support us with the third and final tea, perhaps the most important one, the treasure.
2:19:42 We thank everybody $50 and above and we have a number of people who came in strong today,
2:19:48 probably wanting to get in on that Red Knight
2:19:52 pin
2:19:53 which means you not only become an Instant Knight but you also receive a handsome order of the Heart pin which is a nice pin and it comes in a dynamite packaging, it has a certificate of authenticity, of course.
2:20:07 And today that goes to right off the top, sir Lauren, who was already a knight.
2:20:13 He is in Bruno, Minnesota.
2:20:15 Comes in with $1,033
2:20:18 and said, oh, this is he's already no. I is he already in the mail? He says, first donation. So he wasn't a knight, yet he calls himself sir Lauren already. Alright, sir Lauren. Dedouching in place. Oh,
2:20:28 sorry.
2:20:30 There it Dedouching in
2:20:32 You've been dedouched.
2:20:36 And says first donation, my pal Adam hit me in the mouth during the scandemic.
2:20:42 I used to be so angry.
2:20:44 Now I laugh a lot more. Thanks to you. Jingles,
2:20:48 mac and cheese, screw your freedom,
2:20:50 w t c seven. At the round table, muffins and moxie soda, thank you for your courage says sir Lauren.
2:20:59 You
2:21:02 and cheese. Mac and cheese. Macaroni and cheap cheddar melted together. Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Mac and
2:21:10 and cheese. Hey, everybody. Screw your other podcast. This is the best.
2:21:16 WTC
2:21:17 seven won't go away.
2:21:20 Give me your freedom. There we go. I got punked by by your fake Arnold clip.
2:21:26 So have you ever had moxie soda? No. I have no idea what it is. Yeah. It's a soda, very localized.
2:21:33 I think it's in the from New England or someplace. Mhmm. I've had it. Okay. It's actually it has a very distinctive flavor.
2:21:40 Okay. It's good. Is it like kvass?
2:21:44 Yeah.
2:21:45 A little bit. Because I like kvass. I like kvass.
2:21:48 A little bit. Okay. I mean, I think it it has a it has certain kinds of malty taste. Well, we have it here at the round table so we can both have a a red solo cup full of it.
2:21:58 Earl Nagel
2:22:01 in Hempstead.
2:22:03 Hempstead?
2:22:04 Hempstead,
2:22:05 North Carolina. I'm sure it's pronounced fine. Hampstead,
2:22:10 North Carolina 103026.
2:22:13 ITM,
2:22:14 please name me sir Crazy Carl of the Great Carolina Pine Forest. Karma for all. NASCAR hot wife jingle, please.
2:22:32 You've got karma.
2:22:36 Oh, boy. Now we have, oh, this is always nice. A very long note from Caddy Bones in Rio Rancho, New Mexico.
2:22:45 $1,030.26.
2:22:47 So this must be with the fees.
2:22:49 And Caddy Bones says, I recently wrote it, made my husband Jim sir j bones a posthumous red knight. Ah, yes. Remember. Here's my donation to make me his red dame. Oh, this is lovely.
2:23:01 Since this is my first donation, I could really use a de douching. Yes. You can. You've
2:23:08 been de douched.
2:23:11 She continues. Jim and I started listening to your show together in 2014. We learned so much more from listening to you both than we ever learned from the M5M.
2:23:19 I'm not exactly sure how we first discovered your show, but once he started listening, I quickly glommed on and it became our thing.
2:23:27 Every week. Yeah. The word glom. It's a good word. It's a good word.
2:23:31 Jim and I started listening to your show together in I'm sorry. Every week, I counted down the days until Thursday and Sunday nights. It was our time to hang out with each other, you guys, and all of No Agenda Nation. We learned so much from listening to you. Thank you both for making our lives better and for keeping our amygdalas in good shape. Now, as I tune in by myself,
2:23:51 it reminds me of those good times. Not only you not only teach me something new every week, but you also bring comfort to a grieving heart.
2:23:59 As I listen, I can still imagine him sitting here right beside me and each week I will continue to be out here missing him and listening for the both of us.
2:24:08 Sincerely, sir Jane Jones loving wife and future Dame, Caddy Bones, She would like to be, her Dame name to be Dame Caddy Bones and for Jingles she wants Climate Gate and Fear is Freedom and for the round table,
2:24:21 she would love Dion's Pizza which comes from Albuquerque, New Mexico. We have ordered that for you, it's here. And some yellow so be energy
2:24:30 to wash it all down. And we thank you very much, Caddy. See you at the round table.
2:25:02 I hadn't heard that one in a while. Walter Ostler.
2:25:06 Ostler.
2:25:07 Ostler.
2:25:08 In Jerome, Idaho, 1,000 another thousand dollars.
2:25:12 And he sent a note, notes on a sheet of paper.
2:25:17 You can tell it's a sheet of paper by the noise.
2:25:21 Dear John and Adam, I've been a listener to the show since episode seven twenty eight, I've always enjoyed your analysis with this donation. I become a red knight of the No Agenda round table. I wish to be knighted as sir Zeppelin
2:25:33 of the Snake River Plain.
2:25:35 Mhmm. No requests for the round table as the selections are more than enough to satisfy.
2:25:41 John, have you seen the Pathfinder one airship flying over the bay this past year? No.
2:25:48 No. Oh.
2:25:50 If so, could I get a zeppelin report to replace the old Zephyr report? I have not seen a zeppelin flying
2:25:58 over the bay this year. No. I haven't seen one in a long time myself, actually. Plug, if anyone in Gitmo Nation needs the services of a cartoonist or illustrator,
2:26:09 please visit my website,
2:26:11 walk Walker Walker,
2:26:14 w a l k a r what is it? Did I say Walter?
2:26:17 Yeah.
2:26:18 Walker
2:26:20 ostler,
2:26:20 o s t l e r, w a l k e r o s t l e r dot com. I have a traditional style that eschews,
2:26:29 all caps, the use of artificial intelligence. Oh, alright. Call out Mark Ward for hitting me in the mouth but never donating. He's a douchebag. Douchebag.
2:26:40 In the show request, a full version of the Russia connection
2:26:43 sent in during Trump's first term and sung by yours truly. He did the Russian connection song.
2:26:50 Jingle
2:26:51 the original karma.
2:26:53 Keep up the good work,
2:26:55 Walker.
2:26:58 You've got karma. I'll have to dig that one up. It might have to be for the next show.
2:27:03 It's about time though.
2:27:06 Thank you, Walker.
2:27:07 Sir Cliffy is in Morganfield,
2:27:10 Kentucky, $547.45
2:27:13 and also sent in a note.
2:27:17 Dear John Adam, in the morning, you two are the best. Thanks for all you do. Please find the enclosed enclosed donation because John loves checks
2:27:25 for more years.
2:27:27 Please
2:27:29 play mac and cheese.
2:27:30 Sorry.
2:27:31 I didn't have mac
2:27:33 and cheese
2:27:34 and
2:27:37 maybe should we do a different one? I'll do a different one. We'll do an Obama one. And a little girl yay.
2:27:44 Okay. We'll do those two. Roll. When it comes to the the holidays every year. Well, I'm the hostess in chief. We host a That's no good. I don't like that one.
2:27:54 Where's my other mac and cheese?
2:27:57 Mac and cheese.
2:27:58 Yeah. But we have a different one. We have
2:28:01 what's the mac and cheese life?
2:28:04 Mac
2:28:05 cheese life? Don't we have the living yeah. There we go.
2:28:12 Mac and cheese. Yay.
2:28:14 There you go. I knew I could do it. Yeah. Thank you, sir Cliffy. He says thank you for your courage.
2:28:20 David
2:28:22 Chapman in Holly Springs, North Carolina 500.
2:28:25 Thanks for the insights and deconstruction in a world where independent thought has become a controlled substance.
2:28:31 Keep the signal coming as some of us still prefer thinking for ourselves.
2:28:36 Consider this my act of non compliance.
2:28:42 Dennis Cato, Tampa, Florida 33333.
2:28:45 Oh, yes. So Ashley Slater sent me a note. We know Ashley.
2:28:50 Yep. And she said that she often gets this tension headache
2:28:54 which, isn't like I had, goes down the side of her neck. For years, she has tried to everything
2:29:02 to get rid of it. She says, I didn't believe it, but I got some Manuka Gold and it went away and she's a happy customer.
2:29:09 And this is from Dennis Kadle of Manuka Gold, manukagold.com,
2:29:13 and they are happy to continue to support No Agenda.
2:29:15 As they say, we'd rather put our money towards a cause we believe in.
2:29:20 Right now we're giving away a free $25 jar of our relief gel with every purchase over $49.
2:29:27 Also exclusive for No Agenda listeners, we're extending the 20% discount at manuka gold dot com with the code Adam 20 through the end of June. So you can get both the discount and the free gift.
2:29:39 That's something we're only doing for No Agenda out of tremendous gratitude
2:29:43 for all the support.
2:29:45 Dennis Cato, Tampa, Florida, love your product, need a smaller jar to take with me on the road. Just a product suggestion.
2:29:54 Right. Redux.
2:29:55 You've done that a couple times now. Well, I'm sorry.
2:29:58 No. I think it's good. You can remind him three times and see what happens. Yeah.
2:30:03 And it's not a bad idea to have travel sizes.
2:30:06 Yes.
2:30:07 So you don't get stopped at the airport
2:30:10 and shaken down Yep. With the goo. It looks like c c three or whatever that explosive is.
2:30:17 C four. C four. I'm always getting the number wrong. It doesn't look like c four.
2:30:23 Well, if you don't know what c four looks like, it could. Yeah. That's true. And don't name your product c four. No. Bad this is not a product suggestion.
2:30:32 Sir Michael of the Midwest and doctor of philosophy in Cedar Rapids, Iowa 31415.
2:30:40 ITM dude's name, Ben
2:30:44 Two Pi Phi. Two two Pi Phi? 2PiPhi? 2Phi?
2:30:49 2Pi is an authorized No.
2:30:51 Has a pronunciation guide. 2PiPhi
2:30:56 at the bottom. Where is it?
2:30:59 Oh, it's pronounced two put
2:31:01 it at the top.
2:31:03 Two PiFi. Okay. Two PiFi is an authorized
2:31:06 Starlink reseller
2:31:08 offer we should be a Starlink reseller. Yeah. You have Starlink. It works well. Yeah. We should have be reselling
2:31:13 Starlink,
2:31:14 Andra Joe. Mooseheads,
2:31:16 junk jewelry,
2:31:19 all kinds of opportunities. Peptides.
2:31:21 Peptides.
2:31:23 Offering turnkey installations,
2:31:25 public static IPs,
2:31:27 twenty four seven, 100% US based support,
2:31:30 headquartered in Iowa,
2:31:32 specializing
2:31:32 or no. My name is Jim, I a s I m, in Iowa,
2:31:38 specializing in fixed wireless of all wavelengths
2:31:41 as well as managed broadband and wow. This guy's a This guy this is this is a
2:31:47 this is a an RF guy. An RF guy. Yeah. The guy knows what he's doing here. Yeah.
2:31:51 And
2:31:53 care carrier
2:31:54 grade dedicated
2:31:56 solution. Don't
2:31:57 it's a dedicated solution. It's a carrier grade.
2:32:01 Check out our page at
2:32:04 gettopifi.
2:32:06 That's the number two with apifi..com/noagenda.
2:32:11 Sir Michael of the Midwest and doctor of philosophy.
2:32:14 PS is pronounced two pi phi. Two pi phi radians is a circle
2:32:19 plus fidelity.
2:32:21 Alright.
2:32:23 Nice. Nice. Well, thank you very much.
2:32:26 And now we move to our associate executive producers kicking it right off with $206.04
2:32:31 because he always adds the date to his $200 donation. It is from Bensonville, Illinois, Eli the coffee guy. And he says SpaceX is going public on June 12, valued at nearly $2,000,000,000,000.
2:32:44 Overvalued IPO likely.
2:32:46 Elon's pitching Mars in a market that doesn't even exist yet. Gotta hand it to him, best salesman alive, selling a dream priced like it already came true. Pump and dump or moonshot, we'll soon know enough. Either way, somebody's gonna make money. But
2:33:01 if you want a sound investment that's fairly valued,
2:33:05 visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com
2:33:07 and use code ITM 20 for 20% off your order. A good cup of coffee pays dividends.
2:33:14 May I just say,
2:33:15 best copy ever. Eli is always
2:33:19 always working on his copy.
2:33:21 I I I have to give it to him. Then he says stay caffeinated. Eli the coffee guy.
2:33:28 Yeah. He has his own
2:33:31 He knows roasting curves and He knows everything what in
2:33:34 he's doing, man. God knows what he's doing.
2:33:37 Stefan Trockels
2:33:39 in
2:33:39 Zust Zust. Deutschland. Zust. $200.
2:33:44 Jingle.
2:33:45 No conflict.
2:33:47 No conflict.
2:33:49 Frick. Reverend l Sharpton, please, you two are
2:33:53 de besten.
2:33:55 There's no real conflict.
2:33:58 And there's Linda Lupatkin from Castle Rock, Colorado. She comes in with $200 as always, and we thank her as well. Jobs karma, she's on it and she wants. And she says your resume has about ten seconds to make an impression and most don't.
2:34:11 For a resume that gets results, go to imagemakersinc.com.
2:34:14 Linda helps professionals and executives
2:34:17 turn their experience into a clear story of leadership results and impact.
2:34:21 That's ImageMakers Inc with a k and Linda Lou, she is the Duchess Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.
2:34:27 Jobs,
2:34:28 jobs,
2:34:29 jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've
2:34:33 got
2:34:35 And last on our list here is Bob.
2:34:38 Just old Bob. Bob. Hello, Hey,
2:34:41 Monmouth or Monmouth. Monmouth. Monmouth. Oregon. Monmouth. $200.
2:34:47 I don't know how you pronounce it. Monmouth.
2:34:49 Okay. Monmouth. Monmouth.
2:34:52 He just has a little saying here, I'll quote it up,
2:34:56 from Bob. He says, we used to have kingdoms that were ruled by kings.
2:35:01 Then we had empires
2:35:03 that were ruled by emperors.
2:35:05 Now we live in countries.
2:35:09 Took me a second.
2:35:13 I like that one. I talking
2:35:15 about The UK. Yes. Okay. Correct. Correct. Thank you, Bob. And thank you to these executive and associate executive producers. As always,
2:35:23 it works like this. You can donate any amount anytime you want to No Agenda, only you can determine what value is. If you're able to support us with $200 or more, not only do we guaranteed read your note, but we also give you the elusive title of associate executive producer, which is a real title. You can use it anywhere Hollywood credits are recognized including imdb.com.
2:35:43 $300 or more, that includes our Red Knights.
2:35:46 That gives you an executive producership.
2:35:48 Again, we read your note and they are valid wherever
2:35:51 Hollywood credits are recognized.
2:35:53 Thank you, in both categories, associates and executive producers for your courage. Our formula is this.
2:35:59 We go out,
2:36:01 we hit people in the mouth.
2:36:09 Order. Order. Shut up, slave.
2:36:13 Shut up, slave. And here's the rest of our list, $50 and above. At the $100 level, we have Baron Ladak in from Houston, Texas. Thank you very much. John Fitzpatrick,
2:36:22 also $100 from Heber Springs,
2:36:25 Arkansas.
2:36:26 He says, did y'all forget the 50 to one ninety nine producers Sunday? What? Did I? No. We almost had none.
2:36:34 What is he talking about? I don't know what he's talking about. Countess Knight, Edmunds Washington a 100 and John Buell from Vista, California, also $100.
2:36:43 $90 from Goony in the Boonies, Tennessee. Thank you, Goony. Jason Shepherd, Trinidad, Colorado, 80 and 76ยข.
2:36:51 That's interesting. Didn't quite make the boob donation,
2:36:54 which is $8.00 $0.08 and Sir Fast Eddie of Alameda, the island of boobs came in with that. And he had a peerage update, after two years of boobs, I've become a Baronet. I'd like to retain the title of Sir Fast Eddie of Alameda, the island of boobs. I'd like the f 35 guy played after my title and tacos at the round table. Well, you've already you're already a knight.
2:37:14 We'll add the tacos,
2:37:16 but I don't know how the f thirty five guy fits in. I'll see if I can find him. Actually, I probably can. Hold on. Where's the where's the f thirty five guy?
2:37:25 F thirty five karma,
2:37:27 I think I can add for you.
2:37:31 There we go. F thirty five karma. You know what? Why don't I play that for you now?
2:37:37 You've got
2:37:41 karma.
2:37:43 And the OG boob man, Kevin McLaughlin. He is the Archduke of Luna, lover of America and boobs. He's in Concord, North Carolina 8008.
2:37:51 Donation, God bless America and melons. Theresa Andrews
2:37:55 in Camarillo, California 7533.
2:37:57 Nico in Flissingen in The Netherlands, 57. Thank you very much. Bit of value back to you from tipoftheday.net.
2:38:04 Oh, it's Nico signed. Thank you, Nico. Dame Rita, Sparks, Nevada. She's there almost every single show.
2:38:09 Fifty five thirty three ITM to you. Brian Furley,
2:38:13 Parts Unknown, double nickels on the dime, $55.10.
2:38:16 Sir John, Omaha, Nebraska, also double nickels on the dime. 55 from your favorite pool guy Austin in Roseville, California.
2:38:24 Andy j, Holly Springs, North Carolina 51 and 50ยข. He's donating on behalf of his beautiful wife, Sarah. It's our seventeenth anniversary and I would like to give her the gift of de douching. Love you, baby. Baby. You've
2:38:39 been de douched.
2:38:42 Sir Cubopedia
2:38:43 in Wazata,
2:38:45 Minnesota.
2:38:46 $50.12.
2:38:47 His eldest daughter begged him to donate for her twelfth birthday back on May 23. Don't tell her I missed a donation day by a few. Love you, Gwen. Sir Cubopedia.
2:38:58 Better late than never. Daniel LaBoy, Bath, Michigan, $50. Oh, we're hitting the fifties here. James Charameta,
2:39:04 Nappanock, New York. Joe from Syracuse, New York. Longtime listener, hit my son in the mouth years ago, now he's a huge fan. So glad Adam has seen the light and I'm praying for John's health. God bless. Foster Birch, New York, New York, Alex sir Alex Valor from Kyle, Texas, now has an important
2:39:21 job there in in Kyle,
2:39:24 the school district. Leslie Walker, Roseburg, Oregon.
2:39:27 Eichi Kitagawa in San Francisco rounds out our $50 donors. We don't mention anything under 50 for reasons of anonymity. We see the $49.90 nines and we thank you very much. Every single donation is appreciated.
2:39:40 All you have to do is go to noagendadonations.com.
2:39:42 You can determine
2:39:43 all by yourself what you want the donation to be because that is value for value. We can't determine what value something is to you, only you can determine that. You can even set up a recurring donation,
2:39:54 any amount, any frequency, noagendadonations.com.
2:40:03 And at least we have two today. It's been kinda sparse on the birthday list. There's Koobopedia.
2:40:08 Happy birthday to his daughter, Gwen. She turned 12 years old on the twenty third. Happy birthday. And Henry Mackie. Oh, Henry. He celebrates on June 1. So happy birthday in advance, and happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
2:40:33 And there he is, sir Fast Eddie of Alameda, the island of boobs. He has continued to donate his his boobs off, and he becomes a Baronet today. And we say thank you very much, and congratulations,
2:40:45 sir. Welcome to, another step on your peerage ladder.
2:41:03 Yeah. We got a lot of knights coming in for the Order of the Heart. We have special knight rings
2:41:09 and Red Heart pins for sir Lauren,
2:41:13 Carl Nagel,
2:41:14 Bones,
2:41:15 and Walker Osler.
2:41:17 Congratulations
2:41:18 to all of you. You are now official Knights and Dames of the Order of the Heart.
2:41:23 Behold
2:41:24 the Order of the Heart,
2:41:27 Alright.
2:41:38 We got well, we have a knight to bring up. Well, actually,
2:41:42 Knight Anodym. So there's the blade. If you can grab yours, John, then we can get this Yeah. Here you go. Get that party going. That's right. Caddy Bones, hopping up here, girl.
2:41:51 You are part of our family.
2:41:53 And Carl Nagel, both of you have supported the No Agenda show in the amount of $1,000 or more and that means you joined the very exclusive club of No Agenda nights and days. What about Walker?
2:42:03 I don't what I don't where's Walker?
2:42:06 Well, Walker became Order of the Heart. Yeah. So did Carl and Caddy. Well, I'm just looking at what I was given. It doesn't have it because on mine, it has two knights. Well,
2:42:17 so walk.
2:42:18 Okay. Stop.
2:42:20 Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop. I I don't You didn't get the same note I got? I guess not. Let me double check. Oh, that's unusual.
2:42:28 Let me double check. Hold on a second. Oh, you don't have the note up? Well, no, because I put it in Oh, okay. Yeah. That's right. You'd have the robots do all the work. No. I put it in no. I hand pay copy paste
2:42:41 and oh, she sent oh, tricky dicky. She sent two
2:42:47 notes to me
2:42:49 and the first one
2:42:52 didn't have Walker there.
2:42:54 Well, that's odd. Hold on a second. Let me put Walker.
2:42:58 Alright.
2:42:59 Alright. There we go, everybody. I'll edit that out. No one will ever notice the difference. Never had nobody would notice. No one ever notices. They call me the blade for nothing. Yes.
2:43:10 Hop on up here. Carl Nagel, Walker, Osler, Cat Bones. There we go. I'm very proud to pronounce KB as Dame Caddy Bones. Sir Crazy Carl of the Great Carolina Pine Forest and sir Zeppelin of the Snake River Plain. For you, we have Hookers and Blow, Red Boys and Chardonnay, muffins and moxie soda, Dion's Pizza from Albuquerque along with yellow soapy energy. Oh, it's so lovely. Along with that vodka vanilla bong, it's bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger oil, and gerbils, breast milk, and pamphlet. And, of course, we have the mutton and the mead. The three of you, enjoy yourselves here at the round table. It's a it's a good group. It's a fun group to be with. And, why don't you grab your phone, go to noagendarings.com
2:43:53 and select,
2:43:55 select the wonderful ring that we have for you, Knight and Dame ring.
2:43:59 And when you get that, after you tell us the address and your ring size, there's a ring sizing guide on the website. It will become it will be accompanied by a certificate of authenticity and of course a couple of sticks of wax because they're signet rings you can use it for your official correspondent. It looks great. It's a it's a conversation starter at every single party. Thank you very much. And welcome once again to the round table, our brand new Dame and brand new Knights.
2:44:23 No one should have meetups.
2:44:28 Alright.
2:44:31 Yes. The meetups is where you get the connection that always brings you protection. The people you meet at the meetups will be your first responders in any emergency. Today, there is a meetup in Raleigh, North Carolina.
2:44:42 It is the Northern Wake June Fun Times meetup. Kicks off at 06:00 in Saints and Scholars on Saturday.
2:44:49 The first Ukrainian
2:44:50 clogs on the ground meetup. This will be at 06:00
2:44:53 at the fat moose, and this is in Belize
2:44:56 Cherkva,
2:44:58 Kyiv, Kyiv, Oblast, Ukraine. I
2:45:01 suggest you get there before Vladimir Putin obliterates the entire country. So and please, please, I don't care if it's just one person, send us a meter report from Ukraine. We desperately wanna hear how many people showed up. Wanna hear that you had fun and get your server on that recording as well. Coming up this month, Boise, Idaho on the thirteenth. Franklin, Tennessee also on the thirteenth, Indianapolis, Indiana on the fourteenth, Charlotte, North Carolina the eighteenth, Rotterdam, The Netherlands on the twenty sixth, Fort Wayne, Indiana twenty seventh, the twenty eighth is Longview, Texas. And then we go into July and, wow, we have August, September, October. This stuff is filling up. You can find all of them at noagendameetups.com.
2:45:41 This is where you can just enter in your zip code or or country, wherever you wherever you live and you will find out where the closest
2:45:50 meetup is taking place. But you can also start one. It's very simple. All you do is just say, hey, I'm doing a meetup and you select the place, you fill out the information, it gets put up on the website. Thank you, sir Daniel. Thank you, Mimi for always managing that and get that
2:46:04 meet up going.
2:46:06 They're fun. I guarantee it. No agendameetups.com.
2:46:10 Always fun, always a party.
2:46:31 Yeah. We still have John's tip of the day coming up along with our end of show mixes. But first, it's time for some ice o's. I have four today. I'm loaded for bear. I'm ready to go. You wanna hear all my all my four? Because you've got oh, you have the, the celebrity ones I see.
2:46:46 Yeah. Are holdovers from the last show. I don't think you can beat mine today. I've got a lot of really good ones. Well, I can hold these over one another show. Well, here we go. Let's listen to number one. Excellent job.
2:46:56 Okay. Yeah. No. I enjoy that. I think it's great. Mhmm. Come on. Come on. They're getting better.
2:47:03 We got way too many eggs.
2:47:07 Subtle. Subtle.
2:47:08 I think this one actually. This production utterly blew me away.
2:47:13 It's a little bit of Heather from the Dark Horse podcast. Any of those you like or do you think yours are better?
2:47:19 I didn't like any of them. I thought I said the Eggs one maybe. Maybe. Well, let's try mine. Let's start with Joe Biden. Alright. If I was still president, no agenda would be required listening.
2:47:32 It's pretty good, man. That's pretty good. Can Obama top it? Let's find out. Wow.
2:47:37 I wish I knew about the No Agenda podcast back in the day. Wow. The back in the day is almost perfect.
2:47:44 It's hard. You shouldn't have done these two in in one go. You should have thrown in like a loser
2:47:49 and you could have had two winners. If I was still president,
2:47:53 No Agenda would be required listening. Mhmm. Wow.
2:47:56 I wish I knew about the No Agenda podcast back in the day.
2:48:00 Which one do you prefer? Because they're both dynamite.
2:48:05 I think the Obama one is a little better. Really? Because I kinda I like them both. I agree with you. They're both why don't you run them back to back?
2:48:13 No. That's lame.
2:48:16 I'm just saying. It's a suggestion.
2:48:18 Well,
2:48:20 pick one. I wanna pick Biden. I think I think Okay. Biden wins. Because, you know, Biden will be dead soon and we'll still have Obama. Yeah. Right. It'll be better. Alright, everybody. Stand by. It's time for John's tip of the day.
2:48:32 So
2:48:40 I'm cleaning out my office in anticipation of having to take a picture of it
2:48:46 for the newsletter. Yeah.
2:48:49 And I ran into a product I forgot about.
2:48:52 This was some this is something that Eastern Europeans use a lot of. It used to be an era when we used to use iodine
2:48:59 for for
2:49:00 for cuts and bruises and and gashes. And then we moved to Mercurachrome,
2:49:05 which was poisoning the public because it's mercury based.
2:49:09 I when I was a kid, my mom, oh, you got put some Mercurachrome
2:49:13 on it. Mercurachrome.
2:49:14 I think I probably if I if anybody should have mercury poisoning, it's me. Use Mercurochrome.
2:49:21 I have,
2:49:22 fillings with a lot of mercury in them,
2:49:26 because it's where they used to do it. Yeah. And also, I used to play with mercury
2:49:31 and turn turn pennies into dimes. As a kid, you just played with mercury?
2:49:36 Yeah.
2:49:38 Yeah. You'd rub it on a penny. It'd go right into the penny. How did you get a hold of this? And how and how can you still be alive is the question, I think it may must be bogus. Mhmm. So
2:49:50 the the the thing they used to instead of methylate
2:49:53 methiolate would took over
2:49:56 Rome. And now it's either
2:49:59 Neosporin
2:50:00 or Yeah. Neosporin. Bacti Bactine, I think, first came in, then Neosporin. Mhmm. So what they used what they used in in Eastern Europe,
2:50:09 commonly
2:50:10 and a good friend of mine who was visiting there says, yeah. You go in with your
2:50:16 get a cut, a big gash on you. And they said, just put some of the green stuff on it. Just use the green stuff. The green stuff.
2:50:25 And that was the green stuff?
2:50:27 The green stuff is a product. You can get it on Amazon. You can get it all over the place.
2:50:32 It's called and it's a dye. It's a dye called Brilliant Green.
2:50:37 You should Wikipedia it.
2:50:39 You can ask about it. It kills all
2:50:43 gram positive bacteria
2:50:45 and funguses.
2:50:47 Wow.
2:50:49 It has a drawback.
2:50:50 I have used it.
2:50:53 What I wonder what the drawback is. The drawback is it's a green dye.
2:51:00 Takes about a month before it to to to go away.
2:51:13 Created by Dan Bernardi. There you go. Noagendafun.com.
2:51:17 Tips of the thetipoftheday.net.
2:51:19 Go get some green stuff.
2:51:21 Yeah. Brilliant Green is the name of it. Brilliant Green. Oh, man. And don't play with mercury, kids. This is not a good idea. No. Don't. Do yourself a favor. Don't play with mercury.
2:51:32 End of show mixes.
2:51:34 We have some Just Baker, some MVP, and with
2:51:39 an original tune,
2:51:41 which he played and recorded himself. It's dynamite.
2:51:44 Wow. Yeah. He did. Next up on, your No Agenda stream, That Larry Show.
2:51:50 Oh, this is episode 500. It's a big one for for Larry.
2:51:54 And he will be ranting about adult infants, America's biggest threat. None of those here on the No Agenda show. No siree.
2:52:03 And we will return to your airwaves, your earbuds, your speakers, your car system on Sunday for another edition of your biweekly media deconstruction on the No Agenda show.
2:52:17 Until then, coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country where, man,
2:52:21 the super El Nino is turning us into the new Napa Valley. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.
2:52:28 And from Refinery Row where the No Agenda
2:52:31 podcast Instagram account is now an official Amazon influencer. I'm John C. Dvorak. We'll see you on Sunday. Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
2:52:40 Until then, adios mofos, a hooey hooey and so much.
2:53:01 The
2:53:01 sky.
2:53:05 Trump saying very interesting why the normies asking why. Fieldberg got the disclosure day dropping June 12. Aliens looking friendly, but we know its narrative well. Wowswell reruns. Grouch in the capital pushing the act. Hollywood and the feds doing the same old. Predictive pact. Adam and John breaking it down. Second half gold. Is it limited
2:55:45 cool,
2:55:47 clear data.
2:55:48 Data,
2:55:50 data,
2:55:51 data.
2:55:52 Cool,
2:55:53 clear data.
2:55:55 With a prompt, I shape the scene just right.
2:56:00 But each iteration
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Producers of this episode
A genuine show-notes credit, earned by a producer's giving to this episode.
- Loren Executive Producer
- Carl Nagel Executive Producer
- Catty Bones Executive Producer
- Walker Ostler Executive Producer
- Cliffy Executive Producer
- David Chapman Executive Producer
- Dennis Cadle Executive Producer
- Michael of the Midwest and Doctor of Philosophy Associate Executive Producer
- Eli the Coffee Guy Associate Executive Producer
- Bob Associate Executive Producer
- Stefan Trockels Associate Executive Producer
- Linda Lupatkin Associate Executive Producer
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Red Book
- No red-book predictions in this episode.
Jingles
Tip of the Day
-
Brilliant Green antiseptic
Instead of iodine, Mercurochrome, Neosporin or Bactine, use 'the green stuff' โ a dye called Brilliant Green commonly used in Eastern Europe. It kills all gram-positive bacteria and funguses. The drawback is it's a green dye that takes about a month to wear off. Available on Amazon and elsewhere.
ISOs
- โ If I was still president, no agenda would be required listening. (Joe Biden) chosen
- Excellent job.
- We got way too many eggs.
- This production utterly blew me away. (Heather, Dark Horse podcast)
- I wish I knew about the No Agenda podcast back in the day. (Obama)
End of Show Mixes
- Jus Baker โ Sky / Trump disclosure mix
- MVP โ Cool Clear Data
- Oystein Berge โ Oh McElon Session
Notable quotes
-
"So the civil war of twenty twenty six in America played out on the battlefield of podcasts. That's all that's happening."
โ Adam ยท Pithy summation of the podcast feud narrative
-
"It's not a split, that's a fractioning. It's not a split."
โ Adam ยท Coining a new word to describe the No Agenda Social exodus
-
"This is just stupid on stilts. The Republicans themselves are the ones who responsible for this thing caving in."
โ John ยท Memorable phrase on the slush fund collapse
-
"It's in essence an intern with autism, but it does okay."
โ Adam ยท Vivid description of his AI clipping assistant
-
"How about we use the kennel index and when the kennel is full, we take a day off?"
โ John ยท Joke about the new donation predictor theory
People mentioned
- Donald Trump ร40
- Benjamin Netanyahu ร20
- Marco Rubio ร12
- Caitlin Collins ร10
- Thomas Massie ร9
- Bill Pulte ร8
- Megyn Kelly ร8
- Scott Bessent ร8
- Jensen Huang ร7
- Anderson Cooper ร6
- James Talarico ร6
- Jeffrey Epstein ร6
- Peter McCullough ร6
- Ron Wyden ร6
- Sean Ryan ร6
- Tucker Carlson ร6
- Tara Palmeri ร5
- Tom Steyer ร5
- Ed Zitron ร4
- Elon Musk ร4
- JD Vance ร4
- Joe Biden ร4
- Theo Von ร4
- Vladimir Putin ร4
- Volodymyr Zelensky ร4
- Barack Obama ร3
- Brian Stelter ร3
- Cenk Uygur ร3
- Gayle King ร3
- Gretchen Whitmer ร3
- Jonathan Turley ร3
- Miranda Devine ร3
- Oprah Winfrey ร3
- Pete Hegseth ร3
- Richard Gere ร3
- Sam Altman ร3
- Scott Pelley ร3
- Todd Blanche ร3
- Tulsi Gabbard ร3
- Chloe Cole ร2
- David Sacks ร2
- Dr. Mehmet Oz ร2
- George Santos ร2
- Hillary Clinton ร2
- Jake Tapper ร2
- Joe Rogan ร2
- Karen Bass ร2
- Ken Paxton ร2
- Mark Rutte ร2
News clip sources
- CNN 6 clips
- CNBC 4 clips
- NTD 4 clips
- C-SPAN 2 clips
- NBC 2 clips
- NPR 2 clips
- Scripps 2 clips
- ABC 1 clip
- Bloomberg 1 clip
- CBS 1 clip
- Euronews 1 clip
- France 24 1 clip
- PBS 1 clip
Buzzword tally
- karma ร8
- round table ร8
- book of knowledge ร7
- in the morning ร6
- de douching ร5
- courage ร4
- m5m ร4
- meetup ร4
- producers ร4
- value for value ร4
- donation ร3
- hit people in the mouth ร3
- no agenda ร3
- best podcast in the universe ร2
- black pill ร2
- deconstruction ร2
- gitmo nation ร2
- kennel index ร2
- shut up slave ร2
- agenda ร1
- amygdala ร1
- jobs karma ร1
- narrative ร1
Around the world this episode
-
Iran
Trump-Iran war feint, negotiations, blockade, Strait of Hormuz, war powers vote
-
Israel
Trump's 'crazy' phone call with Netanyahu, accusations of buying elections
-
California, USA
Governor race (Tom Steyer), LA mayor race, 23andMe lawsuit, mosquito release
-
China
Hegseth China speech, US-China relations under Trump/Xi, AI dominance race
-
Lebanon
Netanyahu's attacks on Lebanon/Hezbollah, ceasefire announced
-
Ukraine
War with Russia, deep strikes, Zelensky peace talks, NATO chief visit
-
Europe
EU tech sovereignty, Quant search engine, anti-free-speech movement, Scale-Up Fund
-
Strait of Hormuz
US naval blockade, mine clearing, vessel redirection
-
Australia
Sex discrimination hearing on transgender potential pregnancy
-
Saint Petersburg, Russia
Ukraine drone strikes on oil terminal and naval base during economic forum
-
Texas, USA
First US New World Screwworm case in Zavala County, Talarico Senate race
-
Florida, USA
Florida AG sues OpenAI/Sam Altman over FSU mass shooting, mosquito release
-
Michigan, USA
Stargate AI data center project, Whitmer interview
-
Washington, DC, USA
Trump beautification projects, $250 bill, 250th anniversary celebration
-
Republic of Congo
NIH scientists smuggled mpox vials from Brazzaville
-
Singapore
Hegseth Shangri-La Dialogue doctrine speech on China
-
Taiwan
Hegseth Taiwan position - speak softly big stick
-
United Kingdom
Banned puberty blockers for youth
-
Bahrain
Iranian Revolutionary Guard coordinated attack
-
Kuwait
Iranian Revolutionary Guard attack on airport, one death
-
Montana, USA
NIH Biosafety Lab where mpox-smuggling scientists worked
Books, movies & media
-
other Brian Stelter newsletter โ Brian Stelter / CNN
John reads from Stelter's CNN newsletter about the Trump-Collins smile story
-
podcast The Tara Palmeri Show โ Tara Palmeri
Mentioned as her YouTube show when she appeared on Anderson Cooper
-
other Red Letter newsletter โ Tara Palmeri
Her newsletter referenced when intro'd on CNN
-
book Why Smile? The Science Behind Facial Expressions โ Marianne LaFrance
Cited by Tara Palmeri (in a clip) re: Trump telling women to smile; discussed by hosts
-
podcast All In Podcast โ David Sacks et al.
Source of David Sacks clip on Jevons Paradox for knowledge workers
-
other Jevons Paradox for Knowledge Workers โ Aaron Levie
Blog post referenced by David Sacks about AI increasing demand for knowledge workers
-
podcast Call Her Daddy
Gayle King discusses Oprah lesbian rumors
-
podcast Theo Von podcast (This Past Weekend) โ Theo Von
Dr. Peter McCullough appearance on smokers and COVID immunity