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0:00 Adam

0:02 Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, 09/08/2016.

0:06 This is your award winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination episode eight five eight. This is No Agenda.

0:13 Drinking

0:14 the Green Green Goo and broadcasting live from the capital of the drone Star State here in Austin Tejas, FEMA Region six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where I've got a duck call,

0:27 I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. You

0:33 know, my openings are never as good as yours.

0:37 Well, I practiced this

0:39 from a very young age back in the days when I was on the radio in The Netherlands.

0:44 There was a guy before my show, Fritz Spitz.

0:48 What's his name? Fritz Spitz. A

0:52 university a professor turned top 40 DJ.

0:55 What? He was a professor, and he turned top 40 DJ. It was great.

1:00 And and,

1:01 every day, he'd do a show between, six and seven.

1:04 And at 06:00 it was yeah. Six and seven. And, he'd listen to the two minute news report just before his show, and he'd always have an opening line that played into something. And he always had it was because he was a,

1:16 a professor in, in, in Dutch language,

1:19 he always had some really,

1:22 you know, cool take on it. And I pretty much stole the idea from him. I'm not as good as he is. And he had double entendres, which I can't do.

1:30 Well,

1:31 they're still good, whatever it is that you Thank you. Are thinking. I'm not sure. Yeah. I'd have to have heard this guy, and and I'd have to be able to speak Dutch. Yeah. So You'll

1:41 to just take it from me. Yeah. Okay. I

1:45 do have the duck call. I'm happy you do.

1:49 So, I think and I used the word so at the beginning of the sentence. Yes. Yes. I believe that we have both watched

1:56 the disgusting videos. And I I wanna comment on the This is the Cleveland cough you're talking about. I don't know about why is it called the Cleveland cough? Happened in Cleveland.

2:05 She never was in Cleveland. Yes. She was. She was in oh, I'm sorry. Right? She was where was she was in Ohio. Right? Not in not in Cleveland?

2:11 I don't think so. I think she was in yeah. She was in Cleveland. I have. When when she started coughing? Hold on a second. I have it here. Let's see. Hey,

2:19 Cleveland.

2:21 There you go. Hey, Cleveland. Well, that would she goes to Cleveland.

2:25 No. I guess he yeah. Okay. Well, here here's the thing. So she had this coughing fit,

2:30 and

2:31 this has been,

2:33 you know, clipped and then memed and there's There's so much been a bunch of them, and the last one was a two minute job, but I'm still kind of annoyed that there was a following coughing fit that took place on the airplane. Well, hold on.

2:47 The actual coughing fit in Cleveland was four and a half minutes. You've not seen the full thing, and I believe there's no agenda. Maybe not right now,

2:57 but we should at least play this whole thing because it is unbelievable.

3:02 And it's not just the coughing that she can't talk.

3:05 I

3:06 don't know if you wanna do that upfront or if if you wanna do it later. It's it's really it's really sad. I'm sad for her. This woman is not well. I agree, and I I don't feel good about it either. Do you wanna play it? Do you want this to place on the airplane is the one that kinda because there was all these media people, and there was a photo that was going around at them all, like, in awe

3:25 of her. Yeah. It was a great photo, and it's on the Twitter. So play this, John. We can talk through it. The two you oh, yeah. Let's talk while she's coughing. Here we go. Hey, Cleveland.

3:35 And there are a couple of things happening in this video which are interesting in the background. We have Happy happy Labor Day. Okay.

3:43 Okay. So this is the four minute one that took place on Labor Day. When we were trying to figure out

3:47 where we could be, we all said, let's go to Cleveland.

3:52 Oh, she's hilarious. Yeah.

3:54 And I wanna thank congresswoman

3:56 Marsha Fudge

3:58 for hosting Here

4:00 it comes.

4:03 And then meanwhile, Kane is in the background,

4:06 and he's just, you know, looking concerned. He's trying to laugh everything off, and this is not going well here.

4:14 I've been talking. So But listen to her voice, that's worse than the coughing.

4:19 Is is this the Donald Trump line? What's

4:22 that? Is this the Hey. It's not something about Trump. I get allergic. Yeah. Alright. So just like seen the part. I've only seen the beginning of this. I didn't see I don't think anyone's played the whole four minutes. That's why. But hold on a second. She says,

4:34 you know, she said allergies, and she'll refer to that again later on. The pollen count in Cleveland, I looked it up

4:41 on Labor Day, was, all systems green.

4:46 Have it here. This is from, what is this? And the local TV station always has that.

4:51 You know, always has the, the pollen count. Yeah. Completely green for that day. So okay.

4:58 Maybe she really is allergic to Donald Trump.

5:05 Poor woman. The Trump Boy. Alone.

5:07 We have 63

5:09 to go. Oh god.

5:11 I feel so bad.

5:14 Now

5:19 everyone's like and someone I think someone handed her something like her. Yeah. They're cheering her on. Come on, girl. You can do it. You can talk.

5:26 Come on. I know you can do it. Now she's

5:29 given something in her hand. She puts it down on the on the lectern.

5:35 Okay. She's gonna try to speak again. Here we go. Well,

5:38 Thank you. Yes. Now she but this is so bad.

5:43 Hitting the chest. Woah.

5:54 When she made that Trump comment,

5:57 Kane jumped up and was like, wait a the next vice president, didn't you?

6:02 Gosh. What did she say there? She said you just heard the next vice president there, didn't you?

6:08 Bad. Is that she's talking about the phlegm?

6:10 No. She's she's talking about

6:13 Kane who came right before her. Well,

6:16 you just heard the next vice president, didn't you? Oh, man. This is not okay.

6:22 She can't breathe. She's having trouble breathing. In in addition to thanking

6:27 Marsha Fudge.

6:29 Oops. So thank

6:31 your great senator, Sherrod Brown.

6:37 Now

6:38 Also

6:41 Now Excuse

6:42 me. Oh, man.

6:44 Also,

6:47 two other great

6:48 members of congress, Tim Ryan Now she thinks she has back. 80. And she's gonna inhale, and then she's gonna go into it again. It's really she has it's breathing at this point. And you're mayor.

6:59 Thanks to mayor Jackson.

7:02 And

7:07 I hope I hope

7:10 that Ohio will send

7:12 Ted Strickland

7:13 to the senate.

7:14 What an endorsement.

7:17 Hey. Thanks. Thanks for the endorsement, Hillary. So. Now

7:21 I'll I'll show it later. Behind

7:23 me

7:24 are some of the great labor leaders of our country. Oh, boy. Randy Weingarten.

7:31 Nobody played this. No. Of course not. Is why we're

7:36 Trumka.

7:37 I'm

7:40 proud to be on the same stage with them. Oh, another ISO. Because they're always fighting

7:45 for for working families.

7:46 Oh, so far, I'm crying almost. And at this point,

7:51 she she you know, she's gonna grab a glass of water, and this is what people have probably seen. If not, it's in the show notes, 858.noagendanotes.com.

7:58 She takes the glass to her lips

8:01 and then spews this green goo into the glass, which I believe is probably a lozenge or something.

8:07 But then she drinks it, and that's the part that is odd.

8:11 Did

8:11 you see that? No. She reproduces.

8:15 Well, I have something else. Get over my allergic reaction.

8:18 No.

8:19 There was no no pollen that day. Let me say that

8:24 we're here in part because

8:27 we know how important this election is to Ohio.

8:32 Thirty seconds left.

8:34 It's not just,

8:36 as Tim said, that Ohio

8:39 is one of those battleground states you hear about every four years.

8:44 It's that Ohio represents

8:47 everything that's great about America

8:51 and all of the challenges and the opportunities

8:54 that we face.

8:56 Oh, man. There you go. Nope.

8:58 Why this election

9:00 is critical to every person

9:03 in this state. And

9:05 what I wanna emphasize

9:08 is I know we can't

9:10 face our problems alone. Uh-uh. We have to work together.

9:15 We believe

9:17 we are stronger together.

9:19 It's

9:20 bad.

9:23 Well, after this coughing fit, she had another one on the airplane. I've only seen one

9:31 one report of it,

9:33 and it was right during her press con- or press conference, or I don't know what you want to call it, but she was just standing in there talking to the reporters and not really answering questions, but kind of talking about how great everything is and then take a softball or two, because you always get the impression they weren't going to say anything in the airplane,

9:51 were risking getting kicked off.

9:54 And,

9:55 right in the middle of that, she's had one of these fits, and she had to go back into her toward the front. Let's

10:01 let's stop for a second about this green goo.

10:03 Yeah.

10:04 You saw this. Right? Hell, yeah. Right? And I said, right. Right. So Yeah. Right. So now there's a couple of things. Either it's I mean, it didn't look like phlegm. I mean, that was just too much. I think she just spit whatever was in her mouth that she was probably choking on some, you know, some substance that became green. I think that that lozenge may be a a adequate

10:22 explanation. However She definitely spit it out. However,

10:26 but I will say,

10:27 Revelation sixteen thirteen,

10:30 and I saw three unclean spirits like frogs come out of the mouth of the dragon and out of the mouth of the beast and out of the mouth of the false prophet.

10:39 So two more to come.

10:44 You know, it's all metaphors in the bible. So frogs are just green goo. To Hillary. Frogs is green goo. That's, that's what it meant. So I think,

10:52 you know, we can probably

10:54 I don't know if she's the dragon, the beast, or the false prophet.

10:59 But Or all three maybe.

11:01 Well okay. Yeah. It's possible. It's possible.

11:06 Do you have anything more on this? Because I I do have

11:10 I do have what I think is possibly the reason why this is happening to her.

11:14 I have nothing else on it. I just, you know, had a couple of one liners and

11:20 pretty much nothing to add to the discussion. You you had the long clip, which I think was great. I'm sure there was a long version of the clip of her in the airplane too. Yeah. I I didn't know Which that I think was her last coughing fit. I did notice something, though, with her on the airplane. Where did she get this airplane all of a sudden?

11:36 Looks like it looks like an old Continental

11:40 well, I'm sorry, United. Looks like a United aircraft.

11:43 But you can only see the you don't see the front, so I don't know if it's

11:47 you know, if she has it all tricked out. I don't think so. It's all it's all painted with the Yeah. The outside. The outside. Yeah. The outside, but not the inside. Is from the DNC. This is the DNC. From

11:57 the DNC.

11:59 I didn't know they had a big plane like that before. No. Rent it. No. They rent it. Of course. They rent it. They paint it. They rent it, and then, you know, goes to Paint job cost you know what it cost to paint an airplane. Very expensive.

12:09 Yeah. It's like I don't know.

12:11 Million plus.

12:13 No. It that's not a million A billion. A billion dollars. I'm telling you. It's crazy. It's a lot of money, though. It's like, I think it's like $30 or something. Hey. I did find the reason why this is happening to her. Okay. These health reasons. And then, you know, I'm always looking at all the people on YouTube and on the the everywhere on the webs, the interwebs, and I think I found what is happening. This is is seems like a very, very obvious

12:38 conclusion that if this is taking place, she's going to get ill and start coughing. Alright, YouTube. It's time to reveal some of my occult practice, and I'm not by far the only one doing this. It involves The ham radio guy. No. It's not the it sounds a bit like him. No. This is a guy with really long hair. He's got his

12:56 his shirt open, unbuttoned, his bare chest, and he's doing his Yeah. Well, you have to stop now and play the ham radio guy real quick and then get back to this and tell me what it sounds like. Okay.

13:05 I I think you may

13:07 may be disappointed

13:11 when you really hear him. Hold on. What is it? Ham

13:15 radio. Wasn't that it? Ham radio?

13:17 Hey.

13:21 Why can't I find it now? Oh, here we go. Hams. Perfect. Now here we have Ham Radio,

13:26 Ham Radio is the public service network of last resort.

13:32 Okay. You can get to you. Hold We're the guys who are gonna save the world. Right? Alright, YouTube. It's time to reveal some of my occult practice. I'm not A little the old Right. He doesn't say right.

13:46 Involves literally tens of thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands of participants,

13:52 some of which are aware of what's happening, many of which are not. And that's the memetic and occult attacks upon Hillary Clinton

14:00 that are driving her health downhill,

14:03 that are slowly degrading her fluency

14:06 and speech, that are making her

14:08 making people less receptive towards her message, making her sound more boring. Here's a person who not that long ago

14:14 really carried herself with a much greater degree of charisma than in the last six months or so. Even at the beginning of the Democratic primaries,

14:22 most of the degradation of Clinton that you see now I'm not talking about, oh, well, her support. That happens. There are fluctuations within politics.

14:31 But the degradation of her speaking abilities,

14:34 of her health, of people's perception of her is partially related to occultism. Not completely. Some of it's just organic politics. It's the way that things operate,

14:44 but it's being aided by memetics, especially,

14:48 in twain with occultism. For example, I'll use my own practice. I've been attacking Hillary Clinton with magic. Yeah. Absolutely. She is cursed. She's hexed, bound, whatever you wanna call it. Hillary

15:00 Clinton has people that support her that are on her teams that deal with memetics. Ted Cruz famously was directly partnered,

15:07 with a man who ran applied memetics. Now you may think that this is all just a bunch of geeky shit on the Internet. Maybe. But those viral memes affect people's psychologies on a profound level. On memetics, practically, on an organic basis, completely screws herself and literally starts guzzling down the poison of hexes and curses that are being flung every day by tens of thousands of people, myself included,

15:33 and all of these negative things begin to affect her. That is not completely coincidental.

15:40 A person can believe it is, but people's psychologies are affected by things. Even the course of events

15:45 insofar as they just involve humans and human timelines

15:49 are affected by these things. You get some story that goes completely ape shit viral, and it can delay other news stories. They will the the media will hold them back. It can delay press conferences.

16:00 It can delay meetings.

16:02 It can delay flights. It has real world implications.

16:05 This is not a joke. No.

16:07 I

16:08 like that guy.

16:11 Wow.

16:13 Wow is right.

16:17 Yeah. That's great. Yeah. Possible.

16:20 Anything's possible.

16:22 Anything's possible. It could be the power of prayer. A lot of Christian churches are agreeing.

16:27 You know, there's this thought amongst certain fundamentalists

16:31 that, you know, two people agree in a prayer and then it will happen. Yeah. And there's more a lot more than two,

16:38 after Hillary in that group.

16:40 So you never know. It's almost Since things going we're on Could be a metaphysical

16:45 thing. Could be.

16:48 Yep. Yep. Yep. Since we're Wishful thinking. Since we're hot in Clinton. Now there were two television events. CNN had, two profiles.

16:58 When was that? Tuesday, I think, or Monday.

17:01 Then they it was both called,

17:04 subtitle,

17:05 like, you know, the the essential. The essential Hillary Clinton, the essential Donald Trump.

17:10 Hillary Clinton's profile piece was first it was called unfinished business, the essential Hillary Clinton.

17:16 And then Trump was

17:18 all business, the essential Donald Trump. And it was it was not really Is that the CNN thing or is that the ABC thing? This was CNN.

17:25 Okay. It was two

17:27 hour long or, yeah, hour long specials after each other. And, you know, Trump didn't participate in this. His kids did. And it was it was it was kind of interesting. It was He knows what's going on. Yeah. Not so much what was in the piece about Clinton, but what was omitted

17:42 was her falling down accident. They went to a commercial break in the timeline, came back, and there was no mention of her concussion,

17:50 her blood clot, or any of that. That was not in the piece.

17:53 Although

17:54 40 50% of the piece was all about how she was important in college. And I have to tell you, just looking at it, I'm like, wow, she seems pretty cool. Although probably around the time Jennifer Flowers entered the picture,

18:06 I think she just became so

18:08 mad

18:09 at politics,

18:10 possibly at men

18:11 that she said, you know what? I'm gonna play this game and screw them. And Billy Boy, of course, is he's a bad boy, so he's got all kinds of shenanigans. And it probably all started there, and she just went, okay. I'm I'm just gonna you know, she she ran his comeback kid campaign in Arkansas.

18:26 She knows how to do this in the old traditional way.

18:29 Yeah. It was it was a you know, you could I actually had a little just a teeny weeny bit of compassion maybe just watching. Yeah. She she seems okay. In fact, picked up this little ditty. I always like it when she jokes about it whether she's human or not. That had been

18:43 there but suppressed because you had to get up every day, do 10 events, travel a thousand miles. Now this is about her break her meltdown in 2008.

18:51 Remember when she,

18:53 when she became really emotional and that kind of tanked her campaign at that part at that point?

18:59 She was in some coffee shop or something, and that was really the emotional moment. Because you had to get up every day, do 10 events, travel a thousand miles,

19:08 just came flooding out.

19:10 And

19:11 Imagine that was liberating. It it was surprising. Liberating. Well, and, you know, you're human, and we all have emotions. And Don't tell anybody. I meant that that's one of the best kept secrets.

19:21 Again, joking about being human or not, and always joking about it. Yeah. That is funny. And then the let me see. This is

19:28 this was the only kind of

19:31 it's just a short clip, but the only little bit they put in there showing how she speaks

19:37 privately one way and to the public another way. Publicly, the Obama administration said what happened was the result of spontaneous

19:45 protests.

19:46 Today,

19:47 we bring home

19:49 four Americans.

19:50 Privately, Clinton referred to the assault as a, quote, planned attack.

19:55 There she is with her privately and publicly discrepancies.

19:59 That was about the only thing that was negative.

20:01 And Trump, you know, Trump is all about his business. Very little about his college,

20:06 his education, you know, just mentioned it ancillary.

20:10 So it wasn't really a fair comparison.

20:14 What's CNN? I don't think it was meant to be that way either. So it was okay, but they were both nice. Now

20:19 yesterday

20:20 on,

20:22 let's see,

20:24 NBC,

20:25 we had the big commander in chief,

20:30 what we call it, town hall between the two.

20:34 Yeah.

20:36 And, this was interesting for a number of reasons. I'll stick with Clinton for a moment.

20:42 And she came up with a new excuse, which I thought was

20:46 pretty interesting for her emails.

20:50 So first it was I did, I did not send or receive. There was nothing there marked classified.

20:56 And now we know that they were marked classified at least with a small c in parentheses.

21:00 And now the story changes a little bit based on a question that came from the audience.

21:06 No. No. You have to understand it's not about

21:08 it being mark classified. It's about the header

21:12 that marks a classified. And that's, first of as I've said repeatedly,

21:16 it was a mistake, to have a personal account. The real question is

21:21 the handling of classified material, which is I think what the implication

21:25 of your question was. Classified material

21:28 has a header

21:30 which says top secret,

21:32 secret,

21:33 confidential,

21:35 nothing.

21:36 And I would I will repeat this, and this is verified in the report. This is very interesting. She says this because it is verified by it not being in the report,

21:47 you see, because I went back and looked at the report. She is, like, tricky dick. She's

21:52 astonishing at

21:54 Yes. And she continues with the lie. She figures that, well, you know, I'm alright this deep already. Yeah. I might as well just keep saying the same thing over and over. And now she's come up with this new thing about the header.

22:06 Yeah. And, nothing was marked that way, even though

22:09 it's it's kind of beside the point. Well, it And then she also but if you notice at the very beginning of this thing when she starts to answer the question, she says, well, the real question is she pulls that Oh, me listen to that. We've talked about it. Yeah. Let me listen to it. Let me listen. Million times, and here it is again. Matt, first of all, as I have said repeatedly,

22:26 it was a mistake, to have a personal account. The real question is Yes. Very good. Point for The question The real question is. No. And that's not the real question. The real question is the one I asked.

22:39 Let's listen to this thing. It's, twenty seconds. The handling of classified material, which is I think what the implication of your question was. Classified material

22:49 has a header

22:50 which says top secret

22:53 secret

22:54 confidential.

22:55 Nothing.

22:57 And I would I will repeat this and

22:59 this is verified in the report by the Department of Justice.

23:04 None of the emails

23:06 sent or received by me

23:09 had such a header. Ah, they did not have such a header. Well, this is important, and I found the deconstruction

23:16 from some guest on Megan Kelly's show,

23:20 which

23:21 will be very important if this ever you know, if this if any investigation ever continues. Now she comes up with a new new

23:29 excuse.

23:30 There was nothing with a classified

23:32 header. That all classified information has a header. First of all, that's not true. There is and the law says she is required to protect classified information whether marked or unmarked. The FBI director said she should have known. But second, if there were classified information on her server without any headers,

23:50 how did it get there? The way it got there was that she and her staff took the headers off. Classified information can't just appear. It has to be entered in. The the two systems, the classified email system and the unclass are not connected. So somebody she or somebody on her staff

24:07 put classified information onto an email without a header, which is a violation of the law, and she's using that as a defense. It's unbelievable.

24:15 Uh-oh.

24:17 That's ex and that's Huma probably. It's exactly what happened. It makes total sense,

24:22 which, of course, keeps her safe. Be Sheryl Mills. She looks like the type. You know, someone sent me an email and said, no. No. This is the although she didn't probably didn't do this with the email. There was that name that was redacted.

24:37 Where is it? It was Patrick Kennedy, I think, or something. No. No. No. It was another woman. The current let me find. She's the you gotta we gotta look at this woman. This is the

24:47 ambassador

24:48 to Jordan.

24:50 Let me get her name for a second.

24:53 Her name is yes. Here it is. Alice Wells.

24:57 This is the person we need to be looking at.

25:00 So Alice Wells

25:02 was very,

25:04 very, very

25:05 well connected. Let me see. I need to

25:08 I want the her where's her Wiki page?

25:12 Alice Wells. Do you have here it is. Alice Wells. Got it. So listen to this. She was born in Beirut.

25:18 Our father time US army officer. This is a he was

25:22 because he's, like, 60 she's from '60

25:25 yes. He's from '69, I think.

25:30 Here it is. Career.

25:32 Career member of the US Foreign Service served as political officer and political military officer in the US embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, as well as as well as political and economic officer at the US embassy in Tajikistan.

25:43 She was acting director of Egypt and North African

25:46 affairs and the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs from 2003 to 2005, served as minister counselor for political affairs at the US embassy in Moscow,

25:54 director of Maghreb affairs, also served as executive assistant to secretary of state Hillary Clinton from 2012 to 02/2011,

26:01 2012, under secretary

26:03 from 2009,

26:04 2011,

26:05 assessor

26:06 at the Foreign Service Board of Examiners, whatever that is, special assistant to the president for Russia and Central Asia, 2012, 2013.

26:15 And then she was nominated to US ambassador

26:17 as a US ambassador to Jordan.

26:20 And she was the one that announced a $1,200,000,000

26:25 assistance package,

26:28 this year as a, to Jordan

26:31 as a part of the 2016 budget bill.

26:35 She's very, very, very connected.

26:38 And I believe she her name is the one that has been taken off some of these emails.

26:44 Alice Wells. So we need to keep our eye on her. She has a Hillary look.

26:48 Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, yes. Like a clone of Hillary's. Oh, yes. Oh, yes.

26:54 And then Hillary said something very interesting in following on about this the email headers. Maybe I'm hearing it wrong. I want you to listen to it. Tell me what you hear. And director Hold on. As long as he's not playing backwards.

27:05 Isn't that very funny? Director Comey also said this after reviewing all the information. He said there is evidence to support a conclusion

27:12 that any reasonable person in secretary Clinton's position should have known that an unclassified

27:18 system has no place for that conversation. Well, Matt,

27:22 I I just disrespectfully point to the hundreds.

27:26 Now did she say I disrespectfully

27:29 point to, or did she say I just respectfully

27:32 point to? I think she said I disrespectfully. That's what I heard. I listened to it several times a Well, play play it and type tighten it up and play it again so we can see if it that's what she said. Well,

27:42 Matt, I I disrespectfully

27:44 point to the

27:46 hundreds

27:47 of experienced foreign policy Okay. Stop.

27:51 Now,

27:52 if you look at the sentence with the word just

27:55 Mhmm. I just respectfully.

27:58 That doesn't make any sense.

28:00 Well, I mean, a lot of people who talk, don't make sense. I mean Well, I guess you could just be slabbering words together, but I just respectfully it's just I just respectfully is not what kind of a sentence is that? I disrespectfully

28:15 I disrespectfully.

28:17 Let's listen to it one more time. Well,

28:19 Matt,

28:20 I I disrespectfully

28:21 point to the

28:23 hundreds

28:24 of experienced

28:25 foreign policy. I'm gonna give her the benefit of the doubt. I I think she meant to What

28:29 she was gonna do then, the way the sentence would go I I do. Yeah. Would be I just and to take the word respectfully out

28:38 is a is a complete sentence. Okay. I think she just threw it in,

28:42 perhaps as a throwaway. I just wanna do this. I just, respectfully wanna do this. Oh, yeah. Okay. Yeah. Maybe. So I think it was a toss away, and, I think that would make sense if that's the case, we'll go with it. I'm not going to read too much into it. Because disrespectfully doesn't make any sense either. It's a stupid no. She's not going to say that. But it's funny.

29:03 Hell, yeah.

29:05 That's what we do on this show. Look for little Yeah. Well little bitty things. So in the Trump version of this and there's you can say a lot about either of these. There there is some video going around that shows

29:17 Hillary Clinton with

29:19 it looks like she's doing this this commander thing,

29:23 commander in chief thing

29:26 with an earpiece in.

29:29 Now you look at the video, it really does look like an earpiece.

29:34 A very, very small earpiece in her left ear. There's a couple of shots, of course, on the the on the Internet. This has been slowed down. Do you it'd be like an ear earwig? One of those things you get pushed down the canal? It's like a small disc,

29:47 a very small disc in the

29:51 that's just right in her ear.

29:54 Now

29:55 that you know, of course, it's all conspiracy theory. However,

29:59 if If we if we go back to the the George Bush Let me let me give you something. Okay. If we go back to the WikiLeaks email archive,

30:09 the email ID 1403Niner

30:13 from Ooma

30:14 two h,

30:16 one line in the email.

30:18 This is from

30:20 09/24/2009.

30:23 Did you take your earpiece, or do I need to get it? Question mark.

30:32 Okay. Now this is before

30:35 the so called accident.

30:41 So I don't know if this is a if it's an IFB, maybe, could be. I mean, there's no context around it. I mean, you can have I mean, I have a I've I've had my, yeah, custom

30:49 fit. I've had those. Carry it around if you think you're gonna do television.

30:53 I

30:54 mean, if you're doing CNN or anything like that,

30:57 for example,

30:58 percent of the time you're going to be alone by yourself in a studio. And

31:03 sometimes even a robot camera. I'd have to have her

31:07 her calendar next to me to be able to find out. And if you have the earpiece,

31:10 your own earpiece, you don't have to put one of these even though they give you brand new ones, but they're the ones that keep popping out. Yeah. You see people on there, oh, they keep the earpiece keeps popping out because they haven't got their own custom fitted one. Right. And so they would make sense that she'd have one of those,

31:25 probably for CNN or something like that. Yeah. Could be, but I don't know. I don't know exactly what that was about. But if you look at the video, it does seem like she has something, you know, it could just be an amplifier,

31:34 although I don't know. It may look pretty small. She's hard of hearing. What

31:39 Dame Angela from Nevada found for us was the email I was looking for. Now,

31:45 this is the

31:47 the email that, Hillary was she was handed her Blackberry by Ooma in a television interview, and this is what happened. So, I mean, that is the land of unconfirmed ideas. We came. We saw.

31:59 He died.

32:01 Kill him. Kill him. Kill him. Die. Die.

32:04 Die. Yeah. So here it is. October

32:09 19

32:11 I'm sorry. 10/20/2011,

32:14 12:24PM

32:15 fits completely

32:16 with the,

32:18 with the timeline and the interview from, of course, Sydney Blumenthal. There you go. But, I mean, he seems to be like her brain.

32:27 So Sydney Blumenthal sends a note,

32:30 to Hillary

32:32 and source sources with direct access to the Libyan National Transitional Council as well as at the highest levels of European governments and Western Intelligence Security Service say late in the day, October 20, the interim president of Libya, Mustafa

32:44 oh, the way this Abdel

32:46 Jalil received reports

32:49 stating that former Libyan leader, Muammar al Gaddafi, has been killed during fighting in the city.

32:54 So that should so that is factual. She did receive an email, and that's what it said.

33:00 That's what she responded to. So then she gloated about it. Yes.

33:04 Yeah. She said she sure did.

33:07 Now Trump got trapped. This was very funny, or not really funny, interesting to watch. They set a trap for him at NBC. How are we with NBC on the leaner report? Where are they? Oh, they're all they've they've NBC,

33:20 because of its earlier connections to General Electric, think is still 49% shareholders.

33:25 NBC has always been all in for any Democrat.

33:30 They will go after any Republican and it I believe it has to do with defense,

33:36 defense spending or something that has to do with General Electric. Ah, the GE aircraft engines and stuff like that. Yeah, the big engines. Yeah. They're

33:46 way over the top with this. In fact, it's I think it's a humiliation

33:51 for anyone who thinks they're an objective journalist working for that operation. Well, if you wanna And, of course, MSNBC reflects that probably better than NBC does. If you want to learn more about that, you can go to leanerreport.com

34:03 and take a look at that.

34:05 So they set a trap for Trump. It was a good one. All the operatives were in place. You know, these things, as we know, are are,

34:11 rehearsed, including the questions. This is not you know, there's no mistake in what's gonna happen in these issues.

34:17 Trump was prepared for the question

34:20 because, of course, you know, it was rehearsed. I knew the question was coming, but he was not prepared prepared for the trap. Kind of prepared, but no. Not really. Here it is, the setup and

34:29 the,

34:30 and the the capture.

34:32 Day here who served as a radio operator in the marine corps in the Vietnam era. He had tours of duty in Southeast Asia and in Europe. He's also a democrat and Important. He's also a democrat, democratic operative. Has this question for you.

34:44 Mister Trump, I have a daughter who is interested in joining the service.

34:49 But when she researched the military,

34:51 she saw the stats on sexual assault

34:54 and decided not to go.

34:56 I have a concern

34:58 about the rape of women in our armed forces.

35:00 As president, what specifically

35:03 would you do to support all victims of

35:06 assault in the military?

35:08 It's a great question and it's a massive problem.

35:11 The numbers are staggering, hard to believe even, but we're gonna have to run it very Obviously, he was prepared for the question. System within the military. I don't think it should be out of the military. Matt Lauer's gonna spring the trap on him. Very

35:22 hard on that, and your daughter is absolutely right. It is a massive problem,

35:27 but we have to do something about that problem. And the best thing we can do is set up a court system within the military. Right now, the court system practically doesn't exist In 2000 too long. In 2013

35:38 Oops. There's the trap. On this subject, you tweeted this quote,

35:42 twenty six thousand unreported sexual assaults in the military,

35:46 only two hundred thirty eight convictions.

35:48 What did these geniuses expect

35:50 when they put men and women together? It a it is a correct tweet. There are many people that think that that's absolutely correct.

35:58 Okay. So that was a setup,

36:00 a trap, and it, and it continued throughout the rest of the evening. So, know, Matt Lauer doesn't just all of a sudden because some question comes up. Oh, wait. Let me look from my to my notes. Oh, yes. I have this tweet from 2013.

36:13 Uh-uh. Uh-uh.

36:14 Brilliantly done. Do they really think that those are done. Best Set up beautifully, and it continued,

36:21 throughout the evening on all of the news channels right after that. Every time there was a question, did Laura Laura

36:27 conveniently

36:28 had the,

36:30 the counter punch.

36:31 Oh, yeah.

36:33 And now you're much better at identifying this than I am. I did you see it at all? You didn't see it? No. I didn't. I didn't watch it. Oh, I have you know, we know I knew you would. Well, Matt of course, my beat. Matt Lauer, you know, there was some National Enquirer story about him buying Coke from somebody.

36:49 He looked a little

36:51 edgy.

36:52 Then I'd if you have a chance, I'd like you to take a look.

36:57 Okay. Yeah. I don't know. It just it hit me. No? No. Not now. Not now. No. Okay. Okay. But this continued throughout the evening. Now from NBC to CNN,

37:07 there is this woman

37:09 who is

37:10 she's a surrogate.

37:12 She's also the brand new president and CEO of Women in Need in New York, which is a huge nonprofit,

37:19 and they run,

37:20 and I think 90% of their money is from the city of New York, 10% maybe is just from grants and stuff. But they run with all the shelters. And I think they do a pretty good job. They look at their their nine ninety,

37:32 and, you know, she's making about $300,000.

37:34 But no. It's okay. It's a it's a big job, but she, is a surrogate for Hillary.

37:41 And she is fantastic

37:43 to watch

37:44 because, you know, she has she has kind of a almost like a very typical Hillary bot face,

37:50 and she's constantly

37:52 rolling her eyes, shaking her head whenever anyone else is talking the whole time. And now CNN has caught on to this, and I like what they're doing. They will bring up a split screen, a double box with the person talking, typically a Trump supporter or someone who,

38:08 you know, who is saying something negative about Hillary.

38:11 And then, you know, and the so they show on the left hand side of the screen, they show her with the eye rolls. It's really fantastic. It's really it's she's great to watch. And I I looked at her Wikipedia page. I didn't know this, but, you know, I I didn't need to know this, but it's all over her Wiki page that she's gay. And I didn't really care,

38:31 but it's one it's very important to her, apparently.

38:35 And she was a formerly speaker of New York City Council, very powerful powerful job in New York. Was also implicated in some financial scandals.

38:42 She was not,

38:44 prosecuted,

38:46 although other people were. I think she's the woman behind building the mosque on the nine eleven site.

38:54 I'd have to look into that. That's just not important, but I think she might be. And and, you know, so, of course, I'm on the on, you know, the the Wiki page. Like, oh, and let's look at her wife. I mean, they they could be they're two peas in a pod. They're perfect together. She's a lawyer.

39:08 But she did something really nasty, and Mike Rogers called her out on it. I thought that was pretty good

39:13 as they were talking about this this

39:16 tweet from Donald Trump. Now before we do that, I re and I really tried to get into the zone about this because you can interpret

39:24 this tweet

39:26 in multiple ways depending on your your bias.

39:30 So when Trump Trump says,

39:33 well, you know, we have 23,000

39:36 rape cases.

39:37 Only 200 have been prosecuted. What did they expect when you put men and women together?

39:43 You can interpret that as what he is saying as,

39:47 you know, hello. If you don't have everything set up, you know this is gonna happen. You have to have something in the background. Good to go. You've gotta have something you know, you've gotta have protections in place. What do you expect when you put people together?

39:59 That's one way of interpreting it. Yep. The way it was interpreted in general, I think, certainly by the media is,

40:06 well, you know, what do you expect? You put men that are gonna be gonna be ripe.

40:10 You know, get the women out or whatever.

40:12 And it's very hard to do this. Very hard for people to see the other side, but you you can put yourself into that zone. No. So you're pre reading. It's just, you know, you're programmed to think one way, and that's the way you think.

40:24 And I have to be honest with you that my initial thinking when I saw the trap in that tweet, I thought, oh my god. What did he say? Why would he say that? So my thinking is more on the Hillary side in that case than on anything,

40:38 which was a little jarring to me.

40:42 Here is so here's Mike Rogers, former you know, what was he? He was the the the chairman of the Intelligence Committee.

40:49 Yes. Now radio disc jockey and CNN commentator. Along They they really pulled that that radio thing from Oh, yeah. No. It's but he sucked. It's always exactly.

41:00 Here's

41:01 Christine Quinn is going to interrupt him. Clearly, and I believe this as a former military officer myself, that the military must do better on these. They're not handling it in an appropriate way. And I think senator,

41:13 Gillibrand has some some pretty good understanding

41:16 of how you fix it. It hasn't been done, which means now you have all of those women who aren't getting the justice that they deserve. So We gotta and I think the emotion of this the emotion of the talk and the debate on this thing is it's fascinating for me as a political guy. Mean chairman, the issue of rape and sexual assault is a very emotional issue. I have worked with survivors of that for many years in my career, and maybe you've not had that experience or worried about that in the same way that women do, and we often walk out shape, but let's be clear. Thing that I think is so unfair. I used to be an FBI agent to enforce the law, some notion

41:50 that because I disagree with your inflammatory notion that we don't care about it. The problem is the reality is these women are not getting the justice that they deserve, and you are and you're saying, well, and everything's okay. No. Absolutely not. You are concerned.

42:04 No. I I I that's what's so unfortunate. Clearly,

42:07 that's the what the military has done and disagreed with the military other military gentlemen is not enough. But what I've said is that Donald Trump doesn't understand the solution,

42:17 which is not to keep it in the chain of command. And with all respect, sir, if you go back to the tweet The tweet Mister Trump is the one

42:25 Mister Trump is the one who said we should have expected

42:28 this when women came into the those are his words, and he has to stand by them and what they mean. We gotta leave it there. We're way over appreciative of questions. Yeah. Give her the last word. Perfect. Thank you, Anderson.

42:42 So she pulls the the woman card. Well, you can't know about rape because you're a man.

42:48 Oh, I really, really dislike that. There is actually a huge number of men that are raped. Yes. Then not a discussion at all about that. That never gets discussed. Yes.

42:57 And I'm sure there are people right now going, oh, crap.

43:01 The funny thing, this NBC thing ended.

43:04 Let me see if I have anything else here. Yeah. This NBC thing ended.

43:09 And it was on MSNBC as well, I guess. And then so they

43:14 they cut back to is it Lawrence O'Donnell? He's on MSNBC. Right? Oh, yeah. Big time. And it's He's one of the worst. The audio is not great,

43:23 but it's the only capture I have of it. Here's what he said coming right out of this, commander in chief form. We ran out of time to analyze anything that Donald Trump said about Vladimir Putin tonight, but luckily,

43:35 MSNBC's

43:36 lies live coverage will continue.

43:42 I hope everyone caught that.

43:44 Should we play it again? MSNBC's

43:46 lies live coverage. We ran out of time to analyze anything that Donald Trump said about Vladimir Putin tonight, but luckily,

43:53 MSNBC's

43:54 lies live coverage will continue.

43:58 Truth will out. Always comes through. I love that. That's fantastic.

44:03 Perfect.

44:07 Okay. I think oh, okay. That'd It's just a slip of the tongue. Of course. You guys are making too much of too little. Yeah.

44:15 Trump made a big mistake. He made a big mistake to

44:19 this week.

44:20 He was on, I think it was O'Reilly,

44:23 and just listen to the indiscrepancy here. I mean, he's it's very dumb because he just needs to stay with his trap, is, hey.

44:31 You release your medical records, a real medical record. I'll release my tax

44:35 records, which is coming. This is coming. This trap is set, but he made a big mistake on O'Reilly. Governor Pence says he's gonna release his tax returns. Today, Hillary Clinton's whacking you again, and, know, she does it.

44:47 Whacking you now. This is I hadn't heard whacking you yet as

44:50 that's a new one. I like that. Today, Hillary Clinton's whacking you again, and, you know, it does it

44:56 almost every day, that you should release your tax returns. If governor Pence does release his, is that gonna put pressure on you to release yours? Not at all. Nobody cares about it except some of the folks in the media. Nobody cares about it. But just so you understand, I'm under audit, a routine audit. And when the audit's complete, I'll release my returns. I don't know when that's gonna be, but when the audit is complete, I'll release my returns. I have no problem with it. It doesn't matter. But the legal

45:19 about my. In

45:21 the meantime, Bill, in the meantime well, no. But nobody would recommend that. In the meantime,

45:26 she has 33,000

45:28 emails that she deleted. When is she gonna release her emails? She probably knows how to find it. Let her release her emails, and I'll release my tax returns immediately.

45:36 Now with this being

45:38 what?

45:40 This is dumb. Yeah. That is dumb. That is dumb. Agree. I I think I've heard this before, and it's every time I hear it, you know, can't say one thing and then say the other. But not as dumb as what happened this morning on the Morning Joe Show.

45:53 Oh my goodness.

45:55 This is the gaffe of the century.

45:59 Gary

46:00 Johnson

46:01 on the Morning Joe Show today.

46:03 What would you do if you were elected

46:05 about Aleppo?

46:07 About Aleppo.

46:09 And what is Aleppo?

46:12 You're kidding. No.

46:14 Aleppo is in Syria.

46:17 It's the it's

46:18 the epicenter

46:19 of the refugee crisis. Okay. Got it. Okay.

46:23 Well,

46:24 with regard to Syria

46:27 Wow. Epic fail.

46:30 So Hey, man. I'm smoking dope.

46:33 Can you expect me to, like, remember this stuff? Aleppo, man. I wanna

46:38 remind our producers out there that

46:40 you heard about Holmes and Aleppo

46:44 four years ago when we did the pipeline episode

46:47 because that's where the pipelines are supposed to ago. I know when we did the pipeline episode, which really set us off on a pipeline thing. Yes.

46:55 Yeah. We talked about homes in particular, and Aleppo was a secondary target.

46:59 Yep.

47:00 So good old

47:02 Scarborough. Was it Chuck? Chuck Scarborough.

47:05 He jumps Johnson should be listening to our show. He'd be better off. One of his advisers listens to our show, but I haven't sent him an email yet because he's probably hiding.

47:16 Yeah.

47:17 Scarborough

47:18 jumps on this and starts to query Johnson about it just to rub it in. So Aleppo is the center of a lot of people's concerns across the planet

47:28 about,

47:29 the the terrible humanitarian

47:31 crisis that's unfolding not only in Syria, but especially in Aleppo.

47:36 You asked

47:37 what is Aleppo.

47:38 Do you really think that foreign policy

47:42 is so insignificant that somebody running for president of The United States shouldn't even know what Aleppo is, where Aleppo is, why Aleppo is so important?

47:52 Well, no. I I do understand Aleppo,

47:56 and I I

47:57 I understand

47:58 the crisis that is going on. But when we involve ourselves

48:03 militarily,

48:04 when we involve ourselves in these humanitarian

48:07 issues,

48:08 we end up we end up with a situation that in most cases is not better,

48:15 and in many cases ends up being worse. Yeah. Humana, humana. Goodbye.

48:19 That will come up in a debate. This is

48:22 poor guy.

48:24 Well, if you look at him, he just looks haggard.

48:28 Yeah.

48:29 It looks I think he's strung out on on on marijuana.

48:32 He says he hasn't smoked for months. He says that, but he doesn't look it.

48:37 Maybe he's using edibles. He I haven't smoked it. I haven't smoked it. Yeah. That's a point. That's a good point. I've smoked it. A good point.

48:44 Want a brownie? Actually,

48:47 you get these chocolate bars

48:49 and any and there's, like, a bunch of pieces any one piece will knock you on your ass.

48:53 This guy's eating chocolate all the time. It's the chocolate bar. Well, it doesn't it doesn't knock me on my ass. But I have seen I have seen edibles knock people on their ass for sure. But, you know, I I grew up with that. So Yeah. I'm just kidding. I'm I'm I'm eating brownies right now. What are you talking about?

49:10 Julian Assange was on Hannity.

49:13 Julian Assange is on everything.

49:15 Oh, he's all out. Well Hannity thing. Well, they're about to release, so here we go. You have a significant amount of information. The information itself is significant

49:24 pertaining to Hillary Clinton's campaign.

49:26 You will be releasing it in several batches

49:28 as you are finishing it from a journalistic

49:31 standpoint.

49:32 How many batches, as you describe them, do you think you'll be releasing, and how soon? Somebody's gotta help, Assassin's there. The the in his microphone

49:41 and, and the chroma key is all off. It's, like, wavy. It's like, could someone please help this guy just a little bit? Tricky question. Ecuadorian

49:50 text. I'm sorry?

49:52 Ecuadorian

49:53 text.

49:54 Dude

49:55 named

49:56 Enrique. Leasing and how soon?

49:58 Tricky question, Sean.

50:01 Well, that's actually a pretty simple one. That's not tricky.

50:03 The first the first batch is

50:06 reasonably soon. We're quite confident about it now. We might put out some teasers,

50:11 as I don't want to promise anything because you have to see how the formatting goes, but, we might put out some teasers as early as the next week, the week after.

50:20 Yay, baby. Can't

50:24 wait. Next week.

50:26 I watched that interview. Hannity does not handle Assange well, and he doesn't let Assange speak. No. And Assassin doesn't handle it well because he's so slow.

50:36 Yes. I mean, step it up a little bit. There's also

50:40 a Skype delay and all kinds of stuff going on there, I think.

50:44 Yeah. Well, you know, they could do a pre interview, put it in the show, and they could edit all that crap out if they wanted to.

50:52 They apparently don't have enough time.

50:55 I have one

50:56 more clip here in our election twenty sixteen

51:00 block.

51:02 My theory on Donald Trump's reason for visiting Mexico,

51:06 as you recall, is

51:08 what was on his mind the minute he talked about it in Phoenix.

51:12 He said,

51:13 well, we had a conversation about the drugs, about the drugs, the illegal drugs. We're talking about the drugs.

51:18 That was the thing on his mind, and I I

51:22 deduced from that that he went over and with the new Mexican president's ties

51:27 and, with Donald Trump being a builder in New York, my assertion is, you know, hey. Look. I'm gonna build this wall. I'm gonna have a door for people. I'm gonna have a door for the drugs, but we gotta talk about it. We gotta make sure this works out okay. And he's always Trump is always banging on the illegal drugs.

51:44 Yeah. They're illegal according to whatever.

51:48 So

51:49 although it's not really evidence, it's somewhat circumstantial.

51:52 The finance minister of Mexico, Luis

51:54 Videgaray,

51:56 resigned

51:57 after Trump's visit

51:59 The

52:00 because he did something wrong. And I think I know what it is. It's about the drugs. He was at the,

52:06 what is it? The the International Monetary Fund meeting. Didn't have a big meeting

52:11 recently,

52:12 or was that part of the g twenty meeting? Was the g twenty? I don't remember. Yeah. Well the g twenty. Well, here is what the finance minister said, but very a perfect English speaker. Here's what he said at the time. As always, it's it's a challenge to have a a country that that

52:27 is our neighbor

52:29 that demands these type of products, these type of legal products, and that will always create a disruption.

52:34 But the

52:36 the choice that president Benet has made is to to to to put a fight against organized crime in a way that is not only through police forces, which we're doing, and and you can see the results of that by capturing some of the leadership of these criminal organizations,

52:50 but also have a more comprehensive approach, which we use prevention tools, we use intelligence,

52:55 and and we use creating jobs and opportunities for the communities for crime not to be a social phenomenon. It's always gonna be complex, but it's also gonna be a priority of this government to to to make sure that violence is reduced and we create a safer environment for for for people the people of Mexico. And what about The US? And is there an onus on The US to perhaps do their part in

53:16 lessening the demand that we see? It's it's it's a matter of shared responsibility.

53:20 Yeah. And

53:21 just as Mexico should fight these organizations and reduce supply, all the efforts that The US that The US

53:27 can can make to reduce demand and and and to make sure that the the younger population in The US does not go into drugs, that's always gonna have first, it's gonna help The US a lot. That's gonna be very good for for the American society, but it's also gonna be good for Mexico because the demand for drugs will be lesser. So it's it's a collaboration. It's a shared responsibility. Couple ways we can interpret this.

53:47 The

53:48 obvious way is,

53:50 excuse me. Are you insane?

53:53 We're not gonna tell America to reduce the demand. Hello?

53:57 This is dumb.

53:59 There goes our money. Don't invite Trump over here to talk about reducing the demand. You you know what's going on here.

54:08 So he had to go.

54:10 That's the that's the most logical way to interpret that. That's a pretty funny idea that I mean, I think your interpretation is is not that you can't argue against it, but it's

54:18 crazy.

54:20 My interpretation of what he said is- they wanted to stop the drug, you know, they should have stopped to slow down the demand, they've done nothing to do that.

54:27 Cocaine is still like an

54:29 they don't even want to talk about how much cocaine is coming into this country, let alone the heroin. Well, the cocaine is down because it's too expensive compared to the heroin. Now that's what I'm reading. That's what No. I don't know that it's down. You can show me some evidence of that. Okay. But I've I think half of Silicon Valley is stoned on cocaine. You can tell by listening to these guys when they present.

54:49 Right. Tell Let you about what's going on. Right? Or there's people going to their nose constantly. They're always kinda doing something with them and pushing on their nose and

54:58 grabbing their nose and sniffling a lot.

55:01 Then

55:02 rubbing their nose. What just keep an eye on anybody you see on the on the media or in person that's constantly rubbing their nose or pushing their nose or kinda doing this to their nose and that to their nose. That's

55:14 it's obvious what's going on to me. Right. Well, heroin is the real problem, though, especially now it's being mixed with fentanyl.

55:22 Oh, heroin's a huge problem because it's, you know, it's hurting the sales of the,

55:26 OxyContin.

55:28 Yes.

55:29 This is the real problem. Dammit.

55:31 We gotta get our legal drugs into people's systems.

55:35 Crazy. Let me get strung out on that.

55:39 Alright. I do have one thing. It's kinda relating to this thing, and it probably requires the, the one of the theme songs. This is

55:47 Gyana

55:49 report on Russia and the election.

55:52 Well, you know what that means. We need to have

56:04 That's right, everybody. She is the star reporter for Russia today. Just look at the hair. Alright.

56:11 What is this the, Guyan turtle? Is that the, the clip? The turtle theory. Has

56:16 this story. If

56:18 you follow the US presidential race, you may have noticed that Russia has been in the news a lot lately. Russia, if you're listening. Pressure that Russia is putting on our European allies. The friendship with Russia. Russian intelligence services. Russia.

56:32 Russian people. Russia. Russia.

56:35 Hillary Clinton has persistently insinuated that the Russian president is trying to interfere

56:41 in the US presidential election and get Donald Trump elected.

56:45 Russia's hacked into a lot of things. Russia even hacked into the Democratic National Committee. So

56:51 we've gotta step up our game. In the absence of any proof of the Russian government's involvement in the leaks, Clinton has relied on the turtle theory.

57:00 If you find a turtle on a fence post, it didn't get there by accident.

57:05 I think it's quite,

57:07 intriguing

57:09 that this activity has happened

57:14 around the time Trump became

57:16 the nominee. The Clinton campaign has worked overtime to find any shred of evidence of connection between Trump and the Kremlin.

57:25 Trump's former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, at one time reportedly offered consulting services to Ukraine's

57:32 ousted president, Viktor Yanukovych,

57:34 who was widely seen as a Putin ally.

57:37 So there could be a connection, alleged the Clinton campaign.

57:40 Trump hit back, pointing to evidence that the chairman of a uranium

57:45 mining company,

57:46 Uranium One, had donated over $2,000,000

57:50 to the Clinton Foundation

57:52 Oh, yeah. Around the same time as the state department under Hillary Clinton approved the sale of that company to Russia.

57:59 The sale reportedly gave Russia control of one fifth of all uranium production capacity in The United States. The Russian president has debunked allegations of a connection with the Clinton family.

58:11 Trump, on the other hand, has expressed his ideas about Putin's possible preferences

58:17 in the US presidential election.

58:19 Putin looks at Hillary Clinton and he smiles. Boy, would he like to see her. That would be easy. Because just look at her decisions. Look how bad her decisions have been. Virtually every decision she's made has been a loser. For the candidates,

58:32 bringing up Russia to attack the opponent may be a smart play in terms election politics,

58:38 but the fears that some of the leading US media outlets help stir may have more long term implications

58:45 as even if unfounded,

58:47 they may affect policies in the future.

58:52 Yeah. It's a little wrap up. She just has these trouble making kind of, reports she does. Some bad news. Some bad news.

58:59 Turtle theory. Bad news.

59:01 Yeah. I mean, with that jingle, Chicha

59:04 Chicha Khan. So that originally, of course, is

59:08 Chaka Khan. Chaka Khan. Chaka Khan. But from the chat room, Chaka Khan and her sister have entered a drug rehabilitation program to battle their addiction to prescription drugs.

59:17 In a statement released to AP, the 63 year old Grammy winning singer says she's been battling an addiction to the same medication that led to Prince's death,

59:27 which is

59:29 oxy and and fentanyl.

59:31 Poor lady. Damn it.

59:34 Wow. 63 and hooked. Oh, man.

59:38 Love and light, Chaka. Not good. Love and light, Chaka. And with that,

59:42 I'll say in the morning to you, John C.

59:45 What the c stands for, Cleveland cough Dvorak.

59:49 Well,

59:50 in the morning to you, mister Adam Curry. Also, in the morning, it's ships at sea, boots on the ground, subs in the water, and all the dames and nights out there. In the morning to the chat room, noagendastream.com.

59:58 Already being very helpful. Thank you very much, Loopy. And in the morning to Sooner Slave,

1:00:03 who brought us the artwork for episode eight

1:00:05 five seven, title of that, Isisland,

1:00:08 which was,

1:00:10 now we don't typically do this. We don't typically mix the title and the artwork. And I don't think we even realized that ISIS land is what Bill Clinton said about having the Syrians go and rebuild Detroit.

1:00:22 And the artwork was from Sooner Slave was a logo

1:00:26 of the Detroit Syrians basketball team.

1:00:29 That was pretty funny.

1:00:31 You asked me discussing

1:00:33 that art,

1:00:34 we both when I went to the page, it was like, that art piece just made me laugh. Yeah. Oh, yeah. And I don't know why. Mean, it's not like a hilarious art piece, it's just funny for some reason,

1:00:45 and you had the same reaction to it. Oh, yeah.

1:00:48 And so you should look at just it's cute. And as an aside, I did some research

1:00:54 to figure out what the connection is between the Clinton Foundation

1:00:58 and Detroit and the Syrians. So, obviously,

1:01:01 Hillary Clinton's idea is and,

1:01:04 will be if she's president to get a lot of Syrians in and then send them off to,

1:01:08 Michigan for them to rebuild Detroit.

1:01:11 Now the connection I found,

1:01:14 the only one I could find really,

1:01:16 is with Warren Buffett's

1:01:17 Clayton Holmes.

1:01:20 And, the Intuit founder see the guy this is I thought it was, JPMorgan Chase, but it was the guy who who, the CEO of Intuit,

1:01:28 and they do lots of mortgages. And so they went in. They've they've been doing all kinds of financing of projects in Detroit. These are all friends of Clinton Buffett, of course.

1:01:36 And, Buffett's Clayton Homes, which is, you know, if you do a little bit of searching on them, there's a lot of problems with them about predatory lending practices. They exclusively

1:01:46 use

1:01:48 Intuit

1:01:49 as their mortgage

1:01:52 provider.

1:01:53 And this

1:01:55 connection between the Clinton Foundation and Clayton Holmes has been around, you know, Haiti,

1:02:00 Katrina.

1:02:01 Remember all those those trailers that had formaldehyde

1:02:04 in them? Yeah. The toxic trailers. Yeah. A lot of this comes from Clayton Holmes.

1:02:08 So it could there's a a typical with the with the Clintons. There is no paper trail that I could find, but it seems like that would be an obvious connection.

1:02:17 Hey. We need some people to go in. We need to have this population happen. This is all the tiny homes as well, you know, like trailers. And these are mobile homes,

1:02:25 all kinds of different small houses, tiny homes. Yeah. Yeah. So maybe, you know, this is a built in clientele.

1:02:31 And, of course, the relocation well, hold on. Build the damn houses. Yeah. He said that. But the relocation program from the United States government

1:02:39 gives refugees

1:02:40 money and sets them up. And whether you're giving money to have them in a shelter or some other type of facility or getting homes from Clayton Homes, I think the connections are obvious.

1:02:51 We'll we'll maybe someone will find more. That was the connection that I found. Yeah. And then you can also, you know, stuff the ballot box by bringing them all to one small area. Oh, that's always spreading them around the country. You get a vote here and a vote there, but you stuff the ballot box in Detroit by putting them all in the same spot, and then you can gouge General Motors. Beautiful.

1:03:08 There's a lot of things you can do, so it's very smart.

1:03:12 Alright, let's thank a few people for a show, 858.

1:03:16 858.

1:03:17 858.

1:03:18 David Prince in Colfax, California, $333.32

1:03:22 I did mention in the newsletter when I sent it out, there were no executive producers, and luckily a few of them showed up at

1:03:27 the last minute after being

1:03:30 The

1:03:31 second half of our donation segment's not very long, so we didn't get too many people other than a few executive producers.

1:03:36 David Prince in Colfax, California, keep up with the good fight.

1:03:41 Let's see if he says anything more. Nope.

1:03:44 That's all he says, so let's give him a karma. Of course.

1:03:49 You've got karma.

1:03:53 Sir Brian of Douglasston,

1:03:55 New York, in Douglasston, New York 33333.

1:03:59 Here's an executive producer ship contribution to help during the lean summer months. Keep up the great work, Brian.

1:04:05 Karma as well, I guess. I might as well. They're not making requests. You've got karma.

1:04:11 Yeah. And karma also for David Killian in Clinton, Illinois,

1:04:16 33333.

1:04:17 I have no,

1:04:18 no correspondence with Let him in the email or me double check. Maybe I have Yeah.

1:04:23 Hold on. I had a few. What's his name? David Killian?

1:04:27 Yeah, with two l's. Killian.

1:04:30 We have

1:04:33 absolutely

1:04:34 nothing.

1:04:36 Sorry.

1:04:37 Okay. Well, gonna I'm gonna give him a karma. Thank you for your Yes, definitely. Yeah. For your contribution. You've got karma. Yeah. Yeah.

1:04:46 Amy, Poussin in Clive,

1:04:48 Iowa,

1:04:49 24444.

1:04:50 This donation, $2.44 44, should actually be attributed to my husband, John Noonan, as a 40 birthday gift from me. Oh, that's a real woman right there.

1:05:00 By my accounting, he's been donating $33 a month since March 2013, and it and that plus this

1:05:08 definitely puts him in knight territory. Can you please knight him today on his birthday? Of course.

1:05:14 I don't know what he wants to be called, so Sir John Noonan would be sufficient for now. He's the best guy in the universe and hit me in the mouth back in 2012

1:05:22 when he was living in Germany.

1:05:24 Can I get a little kid boom shakalaka

1:05:27 and some karma for him? Of course. Boom shakalaka.

1:05:30 Boom shakalaka.

1:05:32 You've got karma.

1:05:36 Love that kid. Yeah.

1:05:38 Something ultimately hilarious about that clip.

1:05:41 Sir David Fugazoto

1:05:42 in Gladstone,

1:05:44 Missouri 23456.

1:05:46 ITM Crackpot and Buzzkill.

1:05:48 Thanks for your contributing or your continuing commitment to media deconstruction. Wanted to do my part to ensure at least a modest showing post Labor Day. Yeah, Labor Day always just gives us a bad we don't get any people A on

1:06:03 belated happy birthday to Adam as well. My last donation put me over the top to Baronet, but PayPal took that opportunity to cut my notes short. Thanks, Obama.

1:06:14 I was wondering if that does makes me a black Baronet.

1:06:18 If not, no worries.

1:06:20 No, it doesn't.

1:06:21 You get to be a Black Knight, and those are that's a more important story. Oh, so he's always a Black Knight?

1:06:27 No. No, he's not. No. Okay. No. I'm sorry. You just wanna be a Black Baronet, we don't even that title doesn't exist. No. Doesn't exist.

1:06:32 We are adjusting the life back in Gitmo Nation after four and a half years in Gitmo Deutschland, and as usual, your twice weekly

1:06:39 shots of sanity are key.

1:06:42 I'm surprised no one mentioned it, but since John is predicting the ultimate demise of the Star Spangled Banner, perhaps the inspiring anthem of the Gitmo Nation

1:06:51 might be a fitting replacement.

1:06:54 I request that to be played as you close out the broadcast day. Thank you for your courage. So should we play it at the very end as like, because before people who don't know, in The United States, when I was growing up in the sixties and seventies, late sixties and seventies,

1:07:07 the television stations would go off the air at midnight, typically, and they'd end, they'd have a shot of the flag waving, and they play the national anthem.

1:07:15 Do we wanna do that as the very last clip? Maybe the at after that, you know, we do a little mic drop.

1:07:21 Okay. Yeah. We'll do it like that. Yeah. It's fine. I think it's good. You're you can make that decision. And this called it right. And this gives me an opportunity as, you know, I I don't really follow sports a lot.

1:07:32 I do know my

1:07:34 brother from another mother, Steph Curry.

1:07:37 And you have been very

1:07:39 persuasive

1:07:41 about

1:07:42 what's this what's the guy's name? The Colin Kaepernick. Kaepernick. Right. Kaepernick who said, I'm gonna I'm not gonna stand up for the

1:07:50 to the flag. But, of course, it's now it's morphing into the national anthem, which is this note mentions.

1:07:56 I have a little clip of Steph Curry for you. A

1:07:59 rare sports clip for me. Are you ready?

1:08:01 I'm all ears. Do you have an opinion on Colin Kaepernick whose jerseys are sold out now across America

1:08:07 because people are supporting him? That. I mean, I love that there's

1:08:10 freedom of speech and he can stand for what he believes in. There's gonna be people that disagree with him. There's gonna be people that agree with him, which is where I think our country stands for, which would hopefully would drive the conversation to,

1:08:22 you know, bettering the the equal rights and and treatment of of of African Americans and people of color. So

1:08:28 I applaud him for taking a stand,

1:08:32 and and hopefully, the conversation is about what his message was and not the fact that is he gonna stand or is he gonna sit for the national anthem or whoever it is. The conversation will be started and and continue. There you go. Rampant, John. Rampant. Oh, no. Once it gets in there, once the media gets a hold of you and starts shaking you Yeah. Unless you have an anecdote, which we are, this show is,

1:08:54 you will be suckered into believing the bull crap that the media says. It's not about the national anthem. Kaepernick's never said it's about the national anthem. It's never been about the national anthem.

1:09:03 And he says himself, he does it because of the flag representing the

1:09:08 unequally representing the the public at large. Right. But it's been morphed into the national anthem as the issue, and that means this thing is is toast. Two things to remind everyone of. Number one,

1:09:21 the

1:09:22 national anthem is being targeted because of the third verse, which no one ever sings or knows, which was bake

1:09:29 based on slave slavery.

1:09:32 We're worried, like, kill the slaves. I mean, horrible.

1:09:35 Horrible, I tell you.

1:09:37 But also, there is United States code, although there's no provision for penalty.

1:09:42 The US code specifically states when the flag is raised and the national anthem is, played, you must face the flag, hold your if you're not a military member of the military or veteran, hold your right hand, over your heart. If you're wearing a hat, this is how old the law is, you, take your hat off, hold it in your right hand so it's draped over your shoulder so you still have your right hand on,

1:10:04 over your heart.

1:10:06 And that is a law. That is the code. That is the law.

1:10:10 Yeah.

1:10:11 So I don't think people generally know that. I didn't know it until you found it. Yeah. No. It's never discussed. Never ever, ever discussed. In fact, they came up in the conversation because we discussed my concern that people are putting their hands over their heart,

1:10:24 and it's not the pledge of allegiance. I didn't think it was proper, but then you found that that is not only proper, but it's

1:10:31 the law. You have to put your hand over your heart during the national anthem. Yeah. And as the flag goes by,

1:10:37 nobody seems to pin There's nobody's mentioned that in the mainstream media

1:10:41 at all. Even if even if it's just a a code, which is a guideline, it still could be discussed.

1:10:48 No. None of that. No. None of that. That's why you listen to this show.

1:10:52 That'll serve you right for fast forwarding through this segment.

1:10:59 We would go on to Sean Regaldo.

1:11:02 Is it Regalado?

1:11:03 Regalado. Sean Regalado

1:11:05 in

1:11:06 Saranac Lake, New York, 215.

1:11:09 Call me Sir Sean of the Adirondack

1:11:11 Adirondacks.

1:11:14 I discovered No Agenda. Is he be ignited today? What's the deal?

1:11:17 He's pink.

1:11:19 Why is this

1:11:20 pink. Why is this thing pink?

1:11:22 I don't know. Let me see. I discovered No Agenda at episode six six six,

1:11:27 a clip from maybe because the six six six, I don't But He's yeah. He's on the night list. Maybe Okay. This is gonna be knighted. I don't know why he's Eric's color is just off.

1:11:37 He's off color again. This is a, he's off color.

1:11:41 A clip from the No Agenda show regarding agenda twenty one was referenced to in a Reddit conversation about global warming. I then subscribed to your podcast. Oh. He didn't say much more, so you might as well give him just a

1:11:52 random,

1:11:53 karma.

1:11:55 Okay. Random karma. Random karma. Yep. You've got karma.

1:12:02 Larry Coates in, Springfield, Missouri, $201,

1:12:05 sent in a note. I sent in a check and a note. I request an immediate de douching as I have not donated since show July. Alright. This is interesting. You've

1:12:15 been de douched.

1:12:16 Alright. I am going to, not read something here because I don't wanna get him in trouble,

1:12:22 but and hopefully he listens to this, particular thing. But what he's

1:12:26 he has got a promotion,

1:12:29 for the show that I'm I'm just gonna warn him is completely illegal. Who is who wait. Who's who I'm sorry. I'm I'm setting something up. Who's what now?

1:12:38 I said Larry Coates Yeah. Who hopefully is listening.

1:12:42 He has a promotion for the show that is completely illegal

1:12:45 and founded on logic that doesn't actually work, and I could explain it to him, and I will do it so in an email if he wants to send me a note, dvorak@orjohnatdvorak.org.

1:12:56 It's a funny idea,

1:12:59 but don't do it. You can stop- you can stop now.

1:13:03 When we finally hear this podcast, my wife and I will be on our way to Colorado to look for a place to live and jobs,

1:13:10 So the only request I have is for jobs karma.

1:13:12 Hey, Adam, bring the Airstream of Consciousness to Pagosa Springs, Colorado sometime

1:13:18 sometime and camp at Williams Creek Reservoir.

1:13:22 You will be treated to the best view on the planet. I'll supply the cannabis

1:13:26 and microbrews.

1:13:27 Woo.

1:13:28 And you'll be in Colorado. So How can I turn it down, man?

1:13:33 Woah. Hey, man. Woah.

1:13:36 Dude.

1:13:37 Woah,

1:13:38 man. Thanks for all your hard work, Larry Coates.

1:13:43 Oh, man.

1:13:46 And that concludes our, executive associate executive producers for show eight fifty eight, and I wanna remind people we do another show coming up shortly,

1:13:54 just in a couple of days, and

1:13:57 go to dvorak.org/na,

1:13:59 and let's get back on track. One PR mention here, this came in late in the morning from sir Ramsey Kane. I'll be publishing episode 70 of No Agenda twenty sixteen this morning.

1:14:09 As we get closer to the election, people may be interested in using it for mouth hitting.

1:14:13 It's a weekly compilation of all the election coverage provided by the No Agenda show with all the other topics removed. I hadn't I forgot about this. Of course Yes. He is doing thematic CDs now. Of course, there's a segment every episode where I encourage listeners to visit noagendashow.com

1:14:28 and listen to the full show. I'm going to continue it through February, March, but we have the domain for five years. Noagenda2016.com.

1:14:35 It's a podcast. Fantastic. Thank you.

1:14:38 Thank you very much. And

1:14:41 I'm not I love our producers, man.

1:14:44 We have really figured out how interactive radio works.

1:14:47 Anonymous,

1:14:49 I want you to let you know that Clinton's plane is operated by Extra Airways,

1:14:54 That's XTRA, and I have her, her

1:14:57 call sign if you want. Oh, the tail number.

1:15:01 This is not the tail number. Okay. It's a call sign that you can You can on the on the horn? You can, yeah, you can on the horn. You can use it in,

1:15:10 FlightAware or any of these. It's

1:15:13 CXP881.

1:15:14 Charlie x-ray Papa881.

1:15:17 So you can track her. You can see exactly where she's going. Whoops.

1:15:21 Gotta love our producers. They're in all kinds of businesses. So we can get the so we can in other words, we can go onto one of those flight tracker and the different websites, and you can see exactly where Hillary's plane is? Yes. I thought you need the tail number for that. But and you can use the the

1:15:37 short code, the CTX881.

1:15:39 That should work. Because it's operated by a different company.

1:15:43 That could probably get the tail number for you too. Hold on. Let me see. Well, someone can do that, and we'll put it in the show notes. How does that sound? There's plenty plenty to do today. Maybe not the best use of our time. I think that's a great thing to do. Yeah. So we might as get Trump's too, and you could follow both of those issues. We have Trump's. Although we've Although he's been unlisted,

1:16:03 you can find it. It's like AFA something. Yeah. We've talked about that. Anyway, thank you all very much for supporting the program,

1:16:11 to our executive producers and associate executive producers. Incredibly important that you do this, and we'll be thanking, everyone else above $50,

1:16:18 in the second segment.

1:16:20 And remember, as John said, we do have a show coming up on Sunday. Dvorak dot org slash n a. And, of course, you could be tracking tail numbers or you could be out there propagating our formula. Our formula is this.

1:16:33 We go out.

1:16:34 We hit people in the mouth.

1:16:38 Order.

1:16:44 Shut up, slave.

1:16:46 I Shut up,

1:16:49 wanted to mention something to you.

1:16:51 Two sports items in a row from me today. Uh-oh. Uh-huh.

1:16:55 There was a really big game in Austin. UT beat

1:16:58 who would beat? Notre Dame?

1:17:00 Yeah. We beat Notre Dame. I guess I should have warned you about that game. Yeah. Because it must have packed the town. A 100,000 people plus in our stadium.

1:17:09 Yeah. And thanks to the genius of our new mayor, thanks to the genius

1:17:14 of our

1:17:15 democratic

1:17:16 government governance here in Austin, Texas.

1:17:20 We have no Uber. And after the game was a complete and utter disaster,

1:17:26 people were waiting for hours to get away.

1:17:29 There was no way to leave.

1:17:32 Yeah.

1:17:33 It was a And you can thank your local

1:17:36 A holes. The a holes. A holes that are protecting the public and do and working for the public.

1:17:42 I mean, really, really. It was a disaster.

1:17:46 I put a couple of, links in the show notes you can read about it. I'd be even Ride Austin, who I like because it's a nonprofit started by a couple of, you know, successful entrepreneurs who put, I think at this point, $5,000,000 of their own money into making it work.

1:17:59 If they had a record number of rides, I think they did,

1:18:02 the in the month, it did 17,000

1:18:05 rides, but they were still they just don't have enough drivers. Two and a half thousand too short, and the and the problem is that and I happen to know remember the Nicaragua driver Nicaragua girl from Uber? Yeah. Yeah.

1:18:16 So, you know, I used to use her going to the airport, you know, but just I'll just pay her privately outside of any

1:18:22 of the other you know, outside of Uber at the time.

1:18:25 She now works at Ride Austin. She does the onboarding of all the new drivers, you know, you know, takes you through the process.

1:18:32 And I spoke to her and said it's very difficult because of all this all the regulations that they have, they just can't bring the drivers in quick enough. There are drivers,

1:18:40 but some of them also just kind of fall out of the funnel halfway through the process. And I and I like Rod Eisen. They're saying, oh, this you know, we just couldn't handle the demand. The apps were failing. This is another problem.

1:18:50 You know, they were just crashing. The apps were not working anymore because of the demand and the servers, etcetera.

1:18:57 You know, there's other there's fair and there's fast and there's others here. But but I have to say I I kinda like the the local thing that's set up, which is quite good, but man, we got screwed. And how stupid are these people here?

1:19:10 Idiots.

1:19:13 It's a democratic stronghold, you know. Yeah.

1:19:17 Yes, it is a democratic Which is weird because you think they would be, you know,

1:19:22 sharing

1:19:23 ride sharing. Yeah.

1:19:26 Is really which is really why it worked because it was ride sharing. But once you turn it into a TNC,

1:19:31 which is a, you know, a connected travel

1:19:36 platform

1:19:37 community company thingamabob,

1:19:39 you know, get all these regulations. I just can't handle it.

1:19:43 I'm sad.

1:19:44 You got kind of a couple off the wall topics here

1:19:48 that are not being covered by anybody, so we might as well just get them through here. Right on. One of them is the, is the riots

1:19:56 and the dog attacks and Oh, at the at the pipeline.

1:20:00 At the pipeline in North Dakota,

1:20:03 where the a 100 Indian tribes are now there and they're making a fuss. Nobody in the mainstream media is even bothering to cover any of this, which is shameful because they because of the dog attacks, which looks like Selma, Alabama,

1:20:15 you know, in the in the fifties. Yeah. Or sixties. Yeah. So I have a couple clips to just keep people up to date on this pipeline Wait. Wait. Wait. Before we start, I and I've been holding on to this since August 7.

1:20:27 I received an email from one of our producers

1:20:30 about what we call

1:20:33 these people.

1:20:35 What is the term they want to be called? We have Native American,

1:20:39 Indian.

1:20:41 First Peoples Nation? No. The preferred term

1:20:45 is American Indian.

1:20:48 Didn't I didn't know. I thought it was native American, but okay. The preferred term is Indian. Confuses with all these names because the liberal media Yeah. Keeps changing it themselves. But this is the pipeline protest. This is the beginning of it. Yeah.

1:21:00 On Saturday in North Dakota, secure That's Amy was there.

1:21:05 She was not only there. She was reporting this. Yeah.

1:21:09 And she's the only media person

1:21:11 second tier, as I mentioned in my newsletter.

1:21:14 She's second tier. Yeah. But the mainstream media just is not going to touch this until some Indian gets killed or American Indian gets killed or,

1:21:23 some something bad happens.

1:21:25 I've been by the way, just to preface this, I've been kinda this is not going through Indian an Indian American Indian reservation. No.

1:21:34 It is but it is going into a reservoir or a water supply that they No. No. No. But I've looked at this.

1:21:41 Because it's an oil pipeline,

1:21:43 they are worried that leakage from the pipeline, which goes get into the water supply. Yes.

1:21:51 But it doesn't My understanding was the pipeline was gonna go in and down into the and then out. Oh, that's also possible. I may have that wrong. That was my impression. Whatever the case is, they're trying to protect

1:22:01 the their water Their water And their sacred

1:22:04 lands or whatever. Well, they're they claim that the bulldozers are now digging up an old graveyard,

1:22:10 which is may or may not be true, because usually if you find a

1:22:17 head or a or some An arrowhead.

1:22:20 Not an arrowhead, but a head, like a body part, the

1:22:25 the government requires you to stop. Oh, yeah. The minute you find that, it's all bets are off. You you gotta you gotta cancel immediately. So these guys, they have their own security force with dogs, and it's it was a mess. And I have the video in the show notes that which is not her video.

1:22:40 It's video of her, which is, I think, much better than what I didn't see everything that that she may have showed, but I give her props for that. On Saturday in North Dakota,

1:22:50 security guards working for the Dakota Access Pipeline Company attacked Native Americans with dogs and pepper spray as they resisted the $3,800,000,000

1:23:00 pipeline's

1:23:01 construction.

1:23:05 This guy maced me in the face. Look at it. It's all over my sunglasses. It just maced me in the face.

1:23:16 These people are just we're threatening all of us with them these dogs. And she that woman over there, she was charging and it bit somebody right in the face. The dog has blood in its nose and its mouth. And she's still standing here threatening. Why

1:23:31 are you letting their her dog go after the protesters? It's happening in the mud. Over there with that dog. Dog. I was, like, walking, throwing it over me, straight, even without any warning, you know? Look at this. Look at this. Dog did dog did it, you know? Look at this. The Dakota Access Pipeline would carry about 500,000

1:23:49 barrels of crude per day from North Dakota's Bakken Oilfield to Illinois.

1:23:54 The pipelines face months of resistance from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and members of nearly 100 more tribes from across The U. S. And Canada. The Standing Rock Sioux tribe has also sued the U. S. Government over the pipeline's construction.

1:24:05 On Friday, lawyers for the tribe filed documents showing how the very land where Dakota Access would bulldoze Saturday was, in fact, a tribal burial site. Today, a federal judge in Washington, D. C, will decide whether to grant a temporary restraining order prohibiting further construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in the area near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation

1:24:26 until the same judge rules on the tribe's lawsuit against the U. S. Government, which is expected by Friday.

1:24:33 So this is a mess. Yeah. The,

1:24:35 watching that video at a certain point, one of the dogs turns on its handler.

1:24:40 Did you see that? Yes. And in fact, I have a clip here. This is DN dog analysis from some dog expert

1:24:47 who says that these guys, these dog handlers are just a bunch of boneheads. There's experience. She's head of the consulting firm Johnny Joyce Seminars International in South Dakota.

1:24:55 Johnny, welcome to Democracy Now! Thank We just played the video of dogs attacking

1:25:01 the Native Americans,

1:25:03 hundreds of people who had come up on this site to protect

1:25:07 their land,

1:25:08 the tribal burial ground and the sacred sites,

1:25:11 The dogs that the security

1:25:14 at times unleashed,

1:25:16 that bit the horses, that bit the people, one dog,

1:25:20 the mouth and nose of the dog were dripping with blood.

1:25:24 As you took a look at this video,

1:25:27 what could you tell us about what these dogs were trained to do?

1:25:31 Well,

1:25:32 Amy, first of all, thank you for having me. I'm very happy that Democracy

1:25:37 Now was there in order to get independent video

1:25:41 in reference to what happened with the dogs.

1:25:44 Your question is, what were the dogs trained to do?

1:25:47 What the dogs were not trained to do,

1:25:51 was to be professional,

1:25:53 security dogs or professional law enforcement dogs. What

1:25:56 I witnessed on the video

1:25:59 was absolutely

1:26:00 horrific and a chaotic scene.

1:26:03 It appeared that the handlers were not trained properly

1:26:06 in order to manage a dog that has been trained in some type of controlled aggression.

1:26:12 And, basically, what it looked like was a bunch of alligators at the end of leashes

1:26:16 being put on the native Americans there that are protesting.

1:26:22 It absolutely

1:26:23 was an egregious use of canines. Can you explain what bite work is?

1:26:30 Yes.

1:26:32 Bite work is a terminology that is used in the working dog industry

1:26:38 to where a canine is taught to bite

1:26:41 a human being. And in this process, in the training process,

1:26:46 the human being is protected by gear.

1:26:50 Law enforcement

1:26:51 will utilize

1:26:53 training

1:26:54 in order to

1:26:56 protect handlers and deal with criminals

1:26:59 that need to be brought under control

1:27:02 with this level

1:27:04 of force.

1:27:05 What happened there

1:27:07 at the protest, in my opinion, was an excessive use of force

1:27:11 by civilians that obviously did not have proper training in the utilization of dogs that are trained to bite humans. Wow.

1:27:21 That's a good clip. I'm glad you got that. Because I was looking at it going like, this can't be the right way to do this. If there was a helicopter, the dogs were all freaked out and confused. It was a police helicopter, I think, who did not intervene. Where are those authorities? Yeah.

1:27:36 Bad.

1:27:37 Every one of those dog bites should be a suit lawsuit.

1:27:40 Oh, hell yeah.

1:27:44 You know, and have the dogs put down. Those dogs apparently came out of Ohio

1:27:48 from some dog kennel that supposedly trained these dogs, but this carrot this guy or girl I couldn't tell, Johnny,

1:27:54 who was talking to Amy,

1:27:57 said that he looked or she looked over and over again for records about this operation, and there's no They're not licensed in the state of Ohio, you have to be licensed to train dogs in this manner, and there's no license that

1:28:08 a person could find. Oh, really? This is a disaster.

1:28:12 And again, the mainstream media, nobody's touching the story. Why is that? Why are they why do you think they're not touching the story?

1:28:18 I wonder, I you know, I've been I was thinking about

1:28:21 This has been going on for, April's when it kind of began, but it's been going on for a long time.

1:28:27 I think it's be I don't know why they're not touching this story.

1:28:30 There's nobody there covering it. Amy was like the only person that's visited.

1:28:37 I don't know. I have no idea. It's a good story, but

1:28:41 And I don't think that the mainstream

1:28:43 media folks, the corporate media, elite media, whatever you want to call them, advertising,

1:28:47 I don't think any of them had have a you know, don't wanna cover the story for some because Hillary doesn't want him to.

1:28:55 I have no idea. Odd. Very odd.

1:29:00 I thought it would be good because I have a a new clip

1:29:03 regarding influence

1:29:05 in Hollywood. I thought it would be fun to revisit a few of the

1:29:11 Martin Kaplan

1:29:12 clips from the Lear Foundation

1:29:15 about the influence of

1:29:18 this particular foundation, but really the influence that is exerted on Hollywood,

1:29:23 particularly television,

1:29:25 to portray certain messages.

1:29:28 And, again, I have a new clip, so I'm gonna play a couple of these short ones just to refresh everyone's memory. I think this was from the

1:29:36 there was from a symposium called Hollywood Health and Society,

1:29:40 and it is Martin Kaplan of the Lear who was a Lear? What was a

1:29:45 Timothy? Lear is a guy produced All in the Family.

1:29:47 Ah, right. He's producer. Right. He's a producer. Hollywood, big liberal, massive, massive liberal.

1:29:54 And

1:29:57 liberal causes, him and his wife both.

1:30:00 Here's the setup. Hollywood Health and Society

1:30:03 does outreach to the entertainment

1:30:06 industry in order to provide

1:30:08 a resource

1:30:10 free to writers and producers

1:30:13 anywhere in the entertainment industry who are covering the areas of public health,

1:30:18 climate change, and access to health care. We do it in a wide variety of ways briefings,

1:30:25 tip sheets, events at the Writers Guild West and the Writers Guild East. Tomorrow, I'm going to the lovely weather in New York for an event we are doing at the Writers Guild East on the Affordable Care Act. Alright. So let us listen to some examples of what the Lear

1:30:43 or the Hollywood Health, and Society

1:30:47 Hollywood Health and Society are doing regarding Obamacare

1:30:50 or the Affordable Care Act. Remember, this is from a couple years ago. We have a new grant from the California

1:30:56 Endowment,

1:30:57 which is about the Affordable Care Act.

1:31:00 Access to health care is a longstanding issue of public health. And now with this collaboration

1:31:08 of funders,

1:31:10 we are able to,

1:31:12 provide special attention to it. And the event that I just mentioned in New York,

1:31:17 the Affordable Care Act comedy,

1:31:19 drama, and reality

1:31:21 will will happen on Tuesday. Whoo. Beautiful.

1:31:24 How about climate change? We have a brand new aspect of Hollywood Health And Society,

1:31:31 which is to work with

1:31:33 on a topic of climate change,

1:31:36 where, again, all these different activities writer briefings, screenings,

1:31:40 newsletters,

1:31:41 and so on are an attempt to provide free resources

1:31:45 to writers who want to include climate change as one of

1:31:51 the storylines

1:31:52 that they're working on. Yay. And just to give you an example of that climate change work, a few weeks ago,

1:32:00 there was a field trip. We do something called story bus tours

1:32:04 to the JPL

1:32:08 we're to

1:32:10 years.

1:32:14 To

1:32:16 And

1:32:17 do

1:32:19 factually accurate.

1:32:21 Okay. Then the final couple one is the numbers and how well they're doing. So in the course of our work, this is in

1:32:29 the two years, 11 to thirteen,

1:32:32 three hundred and thirty five story lines that we

1:32:36 worked on

1:32:37 have been aired. We've worked with 35

1:32:40 networks

1:32:41 in the past four years.

1:32:43 91 different television shows.

1:32:46 Now

1:32:47 this

1:32:48 I think that these clips are most definitely from before the,

1:32:53 repeal of the Smith Mundt Act, so I'd we didn't know about the That's Smith Mundt Act back

1:32:59 beside the point, because this, group is private. They can do whatever they want. Well, if they're funded by government, which they are, there there's some issues there. That's I don't think so. It's not a big deal.

1:33:09 Oliver Stone sorry?

1:33:11 I was just saying this is little undermodulated,

1:33:13 those clips.

1:33:14 Yeah. They're old.

1:33:17 And and you maybe turned on your speakers.

1:33:21 No. I'm just saying they were a little low. I'll work on. Oliver Stone has a new movie coming out. It's the Snowden movie, and he was on the show, the Hollywood Masters.

1:33:30 And, so you can imagine that Oliver Stone, who is pretty much seen as a kook, a crazy guy, and a crackpot now,

1:33:37 he had to go completely independent for this movie.

1:33:40 Well, you'll hear about it in this, in this clip, but he talks specifically about the influence of the government, in this case Pentagon and C. I. A. In Hollywood. You know, I went there years ago with Platoon, I went to the Pentagon, I got their notes

1:33:54 and it was hilarious. You should see that every

1:33:57 use of an expletive was, you know, it's an idealized form of behavior. Unfortunately it's taken hold in the movie business. What you're seeing is bullshit

1:34:05 and a lot of the war pictures you see, you don't get, you you get it after the Pentagon has sanitized it

1:34:12 and they lie. They lie. As long as it's pro American, that's all that matters. I mean,

1:34:18 whatever, the Taliban, I mean, lone survivor, you can kill twenty, thirty Taliban for every American who gets it.

1:34:25 It's overdone. American sniper is another one and you know there's a lot of

1:34:32 disingenuity

1:34:33 about that.

1:34:34 And those are other issues. The Pentagon has taken over, C. I. A. Has taken over Hollywood in that sense. '24,

1:34:41 Homeland, it's all C. I. A. Did you get any you

1:34:50 get attempted interference from the C. I. A. The NSA? Get any interference? No. And the C. I. A. No. I hope not.

1:34:57 None that you're aware of? None that I'm aware of, no. They weren't tapping your phones while you were talking to Snowden or anything? Well you assumed they might, but we proceeded on the basis of honest,

1:35:07 we're making a movie, we went there on that basis and

1:35:11 as I said I think the biggest problem in the end turned out to be the self censorship

1:35:15 of scared

1:35:16 American corporations,

1:35:18 and that's the

1:35:20 truth about our society. Now what is the proof of that as opposed to maybe they just didn't think this was commercial?

1:35:26 Do you really believe that? At

1:35:29 the price we were offering and

1:35:31 script the way it was, it's very hard to believe considering

1:35:35 the path that they make. And every studio There was a political factor. Every studio turned you down. Every

1:35:41 studio turned you down. Yeah.

1:35:44 There you go.

1:35:47 Not

1:35:49 making not making himself very popular.

1:35:51 Well, you know, he's getting there, and

1:35:54 every studio turned him down for what's probably going to be a I mean, he's a good director for inter I don't care what you think of his politics one way or the other, but in terms of his ability to make an entertaining

1:36:06 movie,

1:36:08 He's right up to it with the best of them. Yep. So why would you turn him down? As far as I can tell, it's just just give him a green light and, yeah, whatever Mhmm. And then cash out.

1:36:18 Well, that's not what the CIA thinks is the the way we do it or the Pentagon.

1:36:24 So

1:36:25 Well, I wonder which group because it seems to me as though the CIA would want the movie to be done. The NSA is the one that gets blasted in the movie. Maybe he's compromised, and we don't know it.

1:36:49 Maybe it's what? Meta. Maybe this is all bullcrap. This is all promotion. He's a movie guy. He sell knows how to sell movies, and this is a good story. Alright. We're back. The CIA doesn't want you to watch it. The movie, the CIA banned.

1:37:01 Banned by the feds.

1:37:03 Yeah.

1:37:05 Yeah.

1:37:06 Clandestine

1:37:07 CIA. It's a Hollywood guy. What do you expect from him? Pentagon

1:37:11 poop. I don't know. I can't come up with the They poop.

1:37:14 Yeah.

1:37:16 Alright. Stowed in. I mean, I've seen the trailers and it's pretty dramatic. Yeah, it looks good. Considering it's just a it's really, at its base level, it's boring. Yeah.

1:37:25 You know, they show the guy running around the back of the server

1:37:28 room, sticking in

1:37:30 45s or some sort of connections and pulling plugs out and putting plugs in and looking around left and right to make sure nobody saw him doing this and the the camera doesn't work or turned off the camera. I mean, who knows? Right. It just seems like he's dramatized what is pretty mundane.

1:37:47 That's what the movies are all about. Yeah. Yeah.

1:37:52 Alright. What else you got there, boy? Is that the end of your segment? That's the end. That's all I got. That's all I got. He had something new. But that was the Oliver Stone was new. Yeah, he was new, but I thought it was more onerous.

1:38:02 Alright, I got a couple of things I wanted to just get out of the way. Made these clips before. Sorry to disappoint.

1:38:08 Talk about this and nobody understands this, so I I think we're gonna get an understanding because I have to say

1:38:13 on,

1:38:15 on Fox, they brought this guy on who's like a state assemblyman

1:38:19 or something in one of the- one of I think Illinois or one of the states that

1:38:24 has this issue with sanctuary cities.

1:38:27 Yes. And they've never been- and I took these three clips because this, I think, explains the process because Tim Cain apparently came out and said, ah, sanctuary cities are a myth, even though we have one right here called San Francisco. California. Yeah. Do we need to explain what it is or a business around the business? This is going this guy is going to explain the three or four elements of Sanctuary City, all our listeners will now have a fairly good handle on it. Let's start with clip one. I was a mayor, and I was a governor. I trust the voters of communities to hold their mayors and their police departments responsible.

1:39:01 When Donald Trump kinda goes after these phantom sanctuary cities and talks about how bad they are, basically, what he's going after is police chiefs. And I trust police chiefs

1:39:11 in terms of knowing what should be done to keep their communities safer and police departments and mayors a lot more than I trust Donald Trump. Mhmm.

1:39:20 That

1:39:21 was Tim McCain and his little statement that sanctuary cities are bogus. Yeah. So let's go on to the explanation with clip two. Despite what senator Cain says, there are about 300 jurisdictions across the country with sanctuary city policies, and that's according to the Center for Immigration Studies.

1:39:37 Joining us now to analyze from Topeka, Kansas, Republican Chris Kobach, the secretary of state for Kansas. Now, Chris, you're in Topeka.

1:39:44 Is that a sanctuary city?

1:39:46 Topeka is not a sanctuary city, but we have six sanctuary counties

1:39:50 in, in the state of Kansas. Yeah. Mister Kane needs to, do his own homework on his own state. Arlington, Virginia is a sanctuary city. They're they're all over the country, and,

1:40:02 they've been around for a long time. And they're, you know, saying I guess we should define the term, and that's where some of the people on the left get confused.

1:40:09 There are two types of sanctuary cities, don't ask and don't tell. Don't ask cities are ones where the police are not allowed to ask anybody his immigration status. And a a good example of that is Los Angeles, also New York City. A don't tell Sanctuary City is like San Francisco where they don't let their police officers tell ICE

1:40:27 if they find out that they've got somebody in custody who's an illegal alien.

1:40:31 And then we have a third kind of sanctuary county emerging now just in the last two and a half years.

1:40:37 These are counties that won't cooperate when ICE gives them a phone call and says, hey, we wanna take custody of that particular illegal alien you have just arrested because he's got a a rap sheet, a mile long, and we wanna deport him. And these counties are refusing to hand over what is usually a criminal to the to the authorities, the federal authorities ICE, and they're about they're over 200 sanctuary counties in The United States. So it's a huge problem. These aren't phantoms. Chris, who's correct me if I'm wrong, John.

1:41:06 Don't the sanctuary cities come out of executive

1:41:10 order

1:41:10 than executive order from the president, which was prioritizing,

1:41:15 you know, not picking up everybody, only going after certain people who were here illegally.

1:41:20 Is that how it was kind of created?

1:41:22 That, it was not mentioned in this piece. This is a thing that began as a civil rights thing within certain cities. The city council determines this. It's like who manages the city in San Francisco, for example. It was the city council of San Francisco and the mayor that said- that made this- they voted on it and they said, No, you can't tell anybody this is- and they gave orders to the police department because it is Police department's never independent in a city. They're told what to do by the local

1:41:52 government. But he kind of talks a little bit about the counties in this next the last clip,

1:41:57 which is the more interesting one because this doesn't stem from a popular

1:42:03 vote. Now, in San Francisco, it's the public that elected the council that made it a sanctuary

1:42:08 city because the liberals in San Francisco, which it's filled with, wanted it. Mhmm. I mean, it's not like these guys are foisting it on anybody. So I don't think it it may or may not have come or stem from the ideas the president put forth, but it doesn't seem to be the case. Sanctuary cities are usually

1:42:25 formed by city councils. They take a formal vote, and they decide to become a sanctuary city. Now these sanctuary counties are usually

1:42:33 sheriff's offices who are making a decision without any input from the voters,

1:42:37 and they're doing it because the ACLU is threatening to sue them. It's a completely bogus threat. No.

1:42:46 Really?

1:42:47 So the ACLU has more to do with this probably than the president. I'm so disappointed in ACLU.

1:42:52 They are so political.

1:42:55 You know? Because I signed up when one of those kids on the corner, you know, with the just wearing the t shirt, not at all with ACLU.

1:43:02 I'm like, yeah. I've heard about them. We'll sign up. And they have some good things, but, man, so political, so disappointing.

1:43:07 Yeah. It's very inconsistent. Yeah. It's yeah. Inconsistent. That's it. That's it.

1:43:12 At least inconsistent from any normal point of view. I mean, you I suppose if you're the absolute

1:43:17 libertarian of libertarians,

1:43:19 you'd probably think, well, that's just the way it is.

1:43:22 And how is it

1:43:24 that I completely missed my new favorite guy on the world stage?

1:43:30 And who is your new favorite guy, might might I ask? Rodrigo

1:43:34 Duterte.

1:43:36 Oh.

1:43:37 Do

1:43:39 you okay. Before we play the character Yeah.

1:43:42 You son of a bitch. Well, son of a whore. Wanna play Son of a whore is John. Son of a whore is what he said.

1:43:49 He said son of a bitch. The translation I got from The Philippines

1:43:53 was son of a whore.

1:43:55 Because son he says literally son of a bitch because you can hear the b in there. Oh, no. They're all beeped out. No. He plays it. No. He says it in

1:44:05 in Filipino.

1:44:07 He doesn't say it in English. He does. Oh, I not on the Play play the I know Amy Goodman says son of a whore too, but so play the Amy Goodman clip, which is he's got his clip in there, but they have it bleeped,

1:44:19 which doesn't make sense to me. Why would you do that? I have the clip unbleeped if you wanna hear it. But which report Well, let's play the Amy clip first. Which one is it? Well,

1:44:27 it's a good Obama versus The Philippines?

1:44:29 Yeah. Yeah. After

1:44:31 Obama's trip to China, he became the first sitting US president to visit Laos,

1:44:35 where he's pledged $90,000,000

1:44:36 to help clear Laos of unexploded US bombs left from The US secret bombing campaign of Laos during the Vietnam War. Between 1964

1:44:46 and 'seventy three, The U. S. Dropped as many as two seventy million cluster bombs on Laos. Laos authorities say as many as one third of these cluster bombs did not explode at the time.

1:44:56 His three day trip to Laos, Obama was also slated to meet with the controversial president of The Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte.

1:45:03 But Obama canceled the meeting after Duterte called President Obama a son of a whore and warned him not to ask about his so called drug war, in which police and vigilantes have killed at least 2,400

1:45:14 people in only two months. This is Philippines president Duterte.

1:45:18 I am a president of a sovereign

1:45:21 state,

1:45:23 and we have long ceased to be a colony.

1:45:27 I do not have any master except the Filipino people.

1:45:32 Nobody but nobody.

1:45:37 You must be respectful.

1:45:39 Don't just throw away questions and statements.

1:45:43 Son of a I will swear at you in that forum.

1:45:47 This comes as president Duterte declared an indefinite national state of emergency Monday after a bombing in the city of Davao killed 14 people Friday. The declaration does not amount to martial law but does give the police and military sweeping powers.

1:46:00 Militants from the group Abu Sayyaf have claimed responsibility

1:46:04 for the bombing. Now I was looking for the original

1:46:07 audio. I wanted a clip because I'm like, oh, I wanna hear him say son of a whore because that's what I heard the reporting.

1:46:12 And I went looking. And interestingly,

1:46:14 Al Jazeera

1:46:15 not only had the clip, but they also had a a pretty cool deconstruction, which I wanna play.

1:46:19 But,

1:46:21 I could not reach that. It said, you cannot reach this video from The United States. So I think I had to get a and that's Al Jazeera. That's odd for them to do that. So I think I had to go through a proxy. I think

1:46:32 think you're talking about Al Jazeera English.

1:46:35 Yes. Of course. Yeah. Well, all that stuff coming out of the out of Great Britain requires a a VPN. It's got nothing to do with Al Jazeera. Okay. Okay. Well, here is You should let me know. I could've gotten I have a I have a VPN in England. I got a I got a VPN. I got the clip. Yeah. But nobody.

1:46:52 You must be respectful.

1:46:54 Don't not just throw away questions and statements.

1:47:01 That's the that's not English. That's where he says son son of a whore You're right. You're right. You're right. I'll get you on the panel. So that's what he said. Now,

1:47:10 first, I have

1:47:11 the apologies

1:47:13 because he did have to apologize, and then we wanna talk about this guy a little bit. Didn't have to.

1:47:18 Well, he felt he had to. Yeah. And this is his spokes hole with the apology. President Duterte explained that the press reports

1:47:26 that the president Obama would lecture him on extrajudicial

1:47:30 killings led

1:47:32 to his strong comments,

1:47:34 which in turn elicited concern.

1:47:36 He regrets

1:47:38 that his remarks to the press have caused much controversy.

1:47:42 The president

1:47:43 looks forward to ironing out differences

1:47:46 arising out of the national priorities

1:47:49 and perceptions

1:47:51 and working in mutually responsible ways

1:47:53 for both countries.

1:47:57 Okay.

1:47:58 I just got a couple of emails. He apparently in Spanish says something about puta, which would be son of a of a whore, not son of a bitch.

1:48:06 Here is Al Jazeera's deconstruction with some woman from Manila.

1:48:10 I thought it was pretty good because it goes even deeper than Amy Goodman went into the,

1:48:15 the history that The United States has with The Philippines. Well, you know, you've gotta understand that the this president was voted into power precisely because of the and part of it is also because of that language. I mean, that when he started the campaign, he was seen as an enigma, and now he's got over 90% approval rating.

1:48:32 However, yesterday, before he flew out from Davao,

1:48:36 he was asked precisely by a local reporter who asked, what are you going to say if Obama asks you about the extrajudicial killings in The Philippines?

1:48:44 And he basically blurted out this insult and even threatened, in fact, to kick the US president. It is important to know, Polo, that it is not the first time that president Duterte hurled an insult at the US official. He did that several times at The Philippine at the The US ambassador, Philip Goldberg,

1:49:02 US ambassador to The Philippines Philip Goldberg, whom he called queer. He actually said that he's a queer son of a whore. In fact, several times, he also issued again an apology. Now it is important to note here, Foley, that there's something that has been overlooked here. Unfortunately,

1:49:16 he mentioned in his speech about the sketchy human rights record of The United States. In particular, he mentioned something that is largely endowed, the Buddhao massacre, which was committed by American troops in the early nineteen hundreds against Muslims

1:49:31 in the Southern Philippines in Sulu province. I mean, that has been completely shadowed. He should have been given basically, should have had more opportunity to explain what that was about. He was making comparisons

1:49:41 about The US sketchy human rights work record, as he said, and The Philippines, basically saying that we have our own context of human rights here, but completely overshadowed Right. By the insults and also completely overshadowed the issue in the South China Sea falling. So according to this deconstruction wasn't so much about

1:49:58 this I mean, he's gone on a tear. He's shooting hundreds of people a day. Hey. You're a drug dealer. Boom. You're dead. He's he's really trying to clean it up, which is interesting.

1:50:07 But it was about this this earlier incident, and when the president said, well, I'm coming to talk to you about, you know, your human rights.

1:50:13 And the president, of course, I think talking about, you know, oh, you're killing people,

1:50:18 drug dealers. And he said,

1:50:20 you you talk to me about human rights a hole. That's pretty much what happened. And this guy is great. I like this guy.

1:50:27 He's hilarious. I I I had this some I gotta get more clips because he says, I don't care about shit, and he's he's just he's

1:50:35 just swearing everywhere.

1:50:37 Yeah. He's my new favorite guy. Your new beat. Hell yeah. Update.

1:50:41 Update. Update.

1:50:43 Hillary Clinton, just probably listening to our show, has changed her

1:50:48 the her code for her plane.

1:50:51 New code,

1:50:53 EAL3003EchoAlphaLima3003.

1:50:58 That sounds more like a a tail code, doesn't it? No. It's not. I've I've asked our producer who wants to be anonymous if he can get me the actual tail number. He'll get it. He'll get it.

1:51:10 EAL3003?

1:51:12 Mhmm.

1:51:14 Well, she's known I think isn't she known as Eagle One?

1:51:18 I don't know.

1:51:21 I think that's Eagle like, yeah.

1:51:24 I think that their secret

1:51:26 service name is Eagle One. It could be wrong. Could be. Could be. I I may be thinking of someone else.

1:51:32 Well, let's go to, England since we're talking about Brexit the stuff or not? No. No. I do have Brexit stuff. Oh. What you got? I wanted to play this thing. There's another story that nobody's covered. It's about Menwith Hill.

1:51:44 Okay.

1:51:45 Which is a big,

1:51:46 GCHQ

1:51:49 facility with you can look at the photos of it. It's fantastic. Is this the new the new round building?

1:51:56 No. No. No. That's the big that's their main building. Now this is just a this is just a facility out in the middle of nowhere that where apparently US drones take off from. Oh, it's oh, it's a base.

1:52:07 It's a base, but it's if you look at the pictures of it, it's fantastic.

1:52:11 It's Look at all those golf balls. Yes. It's golf balls.

1:52:16 So you don't know where they're pointing. I have a little facility around here. There's one, it's in Richmond. It's just off the freeway. I always hate going by it because it's sending and receiving microwaves every which way. But it's, some sort of a screwball facility of some sort, but they don't cover the dishes like these guys do. These guys have these are just dishes inside those balls. Yeah. And that means you can't see where they're aimed or anything. It's just like really

1:52:40 creepy.

1:52:42 But let's play Men With Hill one so you can see what this is going on. There's nobody's reporting this. The latest Edward Snowden leaks detail how The US has been using a British base to conduct deadly drone strikes in possible violation of international law.

1:52:56 The leaks detail location tracking methods developed at Britain's Menwith Hill base to pinpoint targets in Yemen where The US has long waged a covert drone war. Wow. RT's Harry Fear reports.

1:53:08 So these revelations make clear that the previously secret facility is a shared spy base used by the NSA and GCHQ,

1:53:17 and the intelligence gathered there apparently used in these controversial

1:53:22 assassination drone campaigns

1:53:25 that The US has operated in Iraq and Afghanistan,

1:53:28 but also in nations where it's not at war like in Yemen. Of course, the record there of civilian loss has been so high. But this all raises questions then about how much The UK knew

1:53:40 about what exactly was going on there, how the intelligence gathered was being used. Because previously,

1:53:46 The UK's official line has always been that The US operations there are carried out, quote, with the full knowledge and consent

1:53:56 of British officials,

1:53:58 but reacting red face that today are human rights lawyers and NGOs.

1:54:03 It is now imperative that the prime minister comes clean about UK involvement in targeted killing to ensure that British personnel and resources are not implicated in illegal and immoral activities.

1:54:14 The activities at Medworth Hill have, up until now been a closely guarded secret.

1:54:19 GCHQ, a British security and intelligence agency, says that all work there is carried out in accordance with strict legal frameworks.

1:54:27 A statement from The US claims that the mission at Menwith Hill protects America and other countries around the world. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute.

1:54:35 Don't we have that? Don't we have a clip of her doing that?

1:54:41 What was it? Was it no. It was it was Hague. I think that's the that's the the creepy clip. Yeah. The the strict legal framework. This one, I think.

1:54:50 Intelligence work takes place within a strong legal framework. Strong legal framework. Operate under the rule of law and are accountable for it. In some countries, secret intelligence is used to control their people.

1:55:03 In ours, it only exists to protect their freedom.

1:55:07 Protect their freedom. Protect

1:55:10 their freedom. This is this is even better in this context.

1:55:14 It's only to protect their freedoms, people. Don't worry about it. Just protecting your freedom, ma'am. Move along. Now it turns out that this has been the the British public, because they can't keep a secret, have known about this for some time and they've been bitching and moaning about nobody's paying any attention to them until the snow thing comes out, and still, you know, we haven't heard this on mainstream media, you're not going to because it's like, you know, it says privileged. But here's part two where they talk of where the British that are living around, they say, hey, we know what this place is, creepy.

1:55:45 Well, our Menwith Hills station was also in the spotlight in 2012 when locals living near the base staged a protest outside the facility.

1:55:53 RT covered the demonstration.

1:55:55 Protesters claimed the base was completely unaccountable in its operations kept secret.

1:56:01 Claims about UK involvement in US drone strikes were already

1:56:05 surfacing back then.

1:56:06 The UK is providing a facility here that's involved in drone that we know from independent assessments,

1:56:13 killing and injuring thousands of civilians now. These are acts of war.

1:56:18 And normally, when we have acts of war, you know, parliament should

1:56:22 normally inform people that there were involved in those, and we're not being informed. We're kept entirely in the dark about them. We always knew that The UK was working together with The US on

1:56:34 these drone operations,

1:56:36 But now we have much more information that details

1:56:39 how Men with Hill has been used to collect vast amount of data that is used not just for surveillance,

1:56:47 but actually given over for military operations.

1:56:52 Yeah. You know, I I just remembered when I was living in Surrey in, Guilford,

1:56:58 I think it was captain Dan, one of the flight instructors that I would fly with from time to time. He told me about the the satellite system. The in Guilford, there's this building, and they, run a lot of the covert satellite systems from there. Do you remember that? Yeah. Yeah. A long time ago. But I didn't this man with Hill and and pretty much

1:57:17 helping target the drone strikes is

1:57:21 shocked.

1:57:22 I'm shocked, I tell you. Yeah. Shocked, I tell Shocked, I tell you. The drone Hold on.

1:57:27 Naturally.

1:57:28 Now

1:57:30 I

1:57:31 think Snowden

1:57:33 obviously has held back stuff,

1:57:35 and I think he's sick of being in Russia. Yeah. And he's going to start leaking stuff like this. It's going to get it's going to start ratcheting, so it's going to be, besides this, going be something even worse, and then something worse. Until they get him, they extract him,

1:57:48 give him assurances

1:57:50 that he's not going to go to jail or anything, they're going to have to pardon him or something, and then he's going to have to sign a nondisclosure and give back all the everything he has if he has anything left. And

1:58:00 then this will be done with.

1:58:03 So we'll probably get one or two more things out of Snowden before the government gets a clue that he's tired.

1:58:10 And, you know, we- our thesis is always that he's still working for the CIA and they haven't done anything to get him out of there.

1:58:16 And

1:58:18 I think that's that's coming to a close. I think the Snowden thing and the movie is probably gonna help because the movie Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Actually may be part of the system to get Now him that we yeah. Now now we heard

1:58:30 our friend Oliver Stone there. Because Stone is it's already said it's gonna this is a sympathetic movie. It's gonna be used as a propaganda tool so the public will, oh, Stone is not a bad guy. Even Trump who says he's a traitor. The public who thinks he's a traitor is gonna go, oh, oh, well, you know, maybe we got it all wrong.

1:58:48 Yeah. They should throw somebody in jail and not Snowden.

1:58:51 And so there's this whole thing with,

1:58:54 with Oliver Stone, maybe just bullcrap. Could be.

1:58:58 I go ahead. Well, I was just gonna say while we're in England, I do have,

1:59:03 I do have something that because they had this week was the second question time for the prime minister, so it's only the second one. Ah, the new prime minister Theresa May. Yeah, she's could come out. And I've noticed something about her. She for one thing, I do have two clips of her. One is her on the,

1:59:22 on the Brexit

1:59:23 Mhmm. Which says vid here or something. Don't know what was doing. Yeah. She- This was just an interesting little subtext of something else she was talking about. She throws in

1:59:33 the possibilities

1:59:34 that could happen because I- I- as you know, I 've never believed that they're gonna ever get get out of there. Mhmm. But she does throw this little tidbit in, and what it says to me is that everything she these are the things she's thinking about. That we can approach thinking about. Go on.

1:59:50 That we can approach the vote that took place on the June 23 in two ways. We could try and roll back on it. We could have a second referendum. We could say we didn't really believe it. Actually, we are respecting

2:00:02 the views of the British people.

2:00:06 But but

2:00:07 We

2:00:08 could have a second,

2:00:10 referendum. Beautiful.

2:00:12 Yeah. That's All that tells me is that it's on their mind. Of course. Of sounds like she's being stubborn,

2:00:19 but I think it's I think it's a sham. Now she, you know, she is the, the prime ministers over the years, and it reminds me of the best I've ever seen do this is Gilliard in Australia.

2:00:30 She

2:00:32 was mean. When she got up there and to eviscerate

2:00:35 somebody, asked a question, she was she's the nastiest I've ever heard. She was unbelievable.

2:00:40 Very talented.

2:00:41 Cameron,

2:00:42 when he'd come up, somebody would ask a question

2:00:45 and then he'd say he'd answer with kind of a formula, say this, this, and this, and this, and then he'd have a punchline,

2:00:52 a little insulting punchline at the very end that was lighthearted

2:00:56 and got everyone in the hall to laugh, even though it was mean spirited. Was mean spirited and lighthearted, very hard to do. And Cameron's cadence and the way he did these, these gags,

2:01:08 as I call them,

2:01:10 was very funny in a certain

2:01:12 way.

2:01:13 Theresa May has decided to to be to try to be

2:01:18 funny

2:01:19 and try to say something

2:01:21 cute. It's very British, I will It's very British and very hard to do correctly.

2:01:26 Yes. And she really stinks at it. She's she's annoying.

2:01:32 She she she obviously, and I have an example of this. Oh, good. She obviously hears something from the other side. In this case, it would be Corbin

2:01:40 asking a question on behalf of the labor party and that whole constituency on the other side.

2:01:47 She obviously, if you listen to this, hear something that was rehearsed.

2:01:53 She wanted to use it. She choked, she choked. Nothing to do with what she was talking about. It's like- it's like you have a gag, you know, you were talking and I have something that I thought was clever and funny. And so I decide,

2:02:05 well, I don't know how many more questions I'm gonna have to have this opportunity. Just drop it in as though I'm-

2:02:11 I'm really, you know, that I was that I'm ad libbing it because that's what you want to look like,

2:02:16 because even though we know from Tony Blair and I think some other people that have already discussed this on an earlier show, we had the clip that these

2:02:24 question time with the prime minister is completely rehearsed. The questions are all known in All known advance. Yes. Now why she decided to use this stupid joke at the end of this, little segment is beyond me, but listen to how bad it is. Mark, is really money well spent? Yeah.

2:02:42 I have to say I have to say to the right honorable gentleman that he is he talk starts off talking about the importance of people actually being able to be in their own homes and then challenges one of the measures that actually helps people to get into their own homes through housing benefit support in the private rented sector.

2:03:00 So it may be that he just has an ideological objection to the private rented sector. What I say is what this government is doing is ensuring

2:03:08 ensuring that what we are doing is looking across the board so we will see more houses being built. We are looking to ensure that there is a diversity

2:03:16 of opportunity

2:03:17 for people in terms of getting these, getting their own home. But I have to, I have to say to the right honorable gentleman that, everything that he says just tells us what all we need to know about modern labor.

2:03:30 The train's left the station. The seats are all empty. The leaders on the floor, even on rolling stock, they're a laughing stock.

2:03:42 Does anybody see this as a massive stretch of logic? Yeah. It went from Even on rolling stock they're not even talking about trains or anything. Even on rolling stock, they're laughing stock. What is You must have just thought that was a lie. What is rolling stock?

2:03:56 Rolling stock's like boxcars. Oh, okay. That's what I thought. Yes. Anything with wheels on This leg Oops.

2:04:01 That's it. No. I have That's all I got. Yeah. I got this This legislation

2:04:04 is important. The substance is right, the time is right, and the way in which it has been developed is right. It is a properly considered, thought through set of proposals

2:04:14 that will help to keep us safe at a time of very significant danger. It has been drawn up in close consultation with the police and security services. In an open and free society like ours, we can never entirely eliminate the threat from terrorism, but we must do everything possible consistent with our values as a country to reduce the risk presented by our enemies. It is a struggle that will go on for many years, and the threat we face right now is perhaps greater than it ever has been. And we must have the powers we need, powers we need, powers we need to defend ourselves.

2:04:48 Hell yeah. I

2:04:53 love that clip.

2:04:55 Stex sent us an email this morning. I I don't know if you saw it, you were on it.

2:04:59 About

2:05:00 and it's it's I love seeing this because it's a repeat of ten years ago. It's the same thing. It will not work. I'm not gonna get into all that about how you cannot monetize the network. However,

2:05:12 there was a so called upfront,

2:05:14 which is very traditional in the television business where, there's a big meeting and typically in New York and all the television producers go there and the, advertisers and the media buyers and say, oh, this is what we got. You wanna get in now, buy in early, and, be we'll give you a good deal if you buy in for advertising on our shows.

2:05:31 And this year, for the second year, this is a little bit bigger now,

2:05:35 there's one more stop on the upfront tour, podcasts

2:05:39 as mid roll media, WNYC,

2:05:42 how stuff works, podcast one, panoply,

2:05:45 NPR, ESPA, and ESPN, and Time Inc made

2:05:49 their case through an all day event put on by the interactive advertising bureau.

2:05:53 And telling that Katie Curry was there. She has a podcast.

2:05:59 Yeah. Yeah. All kinds. But here's the one. Now Mark Maron

2:06:03 pitched his

2:06:04 WTF podcast

2:06:06 to advertisers on stage. It's in the Wall Street Journal.

2:06:09 And

2:06:12 so the kind of the pitch from from the podcast front was podcast producers

2:06:17 were telling marketers that listeners are more likely to have been influenced because program hosts often read the ads and give them their own flare.

2:06:26 That can be a risk for some advertisers who are used to having full control, but podcasters like Mr. Baron, who hosts the WTF podcast, tried to assure marketers that that shouldn't be a concern.

2:06:39 And it was really the last the last quote of the entire article

2:06:45 that really got me. Here it is. Mark Marron says, I'm not going to say shit in your ad copy.

2:06:51 I can follow the rules. I'm a rule follower. So if the rule is that we have to do it, then I'll do it. So he's a rule follower? Well, just wait until the advertisers

2:07:01 start squeezing you, dude.

2:07:05 That I'm gonna show my support by donating to No Agenda. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah. That'd be fab.

2:07:13 Yeah.

2:07:14 On No Agenda

2:07:17 in the morning.

2:07:19 Won't last. It won't last. You have a few people it won't last. You know, funny thing about the yeah. Yeah. These guys have put the screws to you. And I want to talk about that

2:07:30 event a little after we do thank our people, including Jeremy Dixon and Katie Texas,

2:07:35 who contributed $99.99

2:07:37 Oh, hold on second. Hold on. I got the Boobs,

2:07:43 boobs, boobs, boobs,

2:07:45 boobs, boobs,

2:07:59 What was the boob link in the in the newsletter this time?

2:08:03 Warren Buffett. Big boob. Warren Buffett, big boob. Yes. We should have had an $800

2:08:10 something for him. Vladimir Landman in Sioux City, Iowa, he got caught at eight eighty point eight. Brian Rosa in Milton, New York, 808. Joseph Wills, Palm Bay, Florida.

2:08:23 He also was there on top of it. William M. Rank. Oh, that's it. We just have that's we only had the one, two, three boobs. Alrighty. Thank you. Thank you people for the boobs. Thank you for boob. William M. Rank in,

2:08:37 Mohapak,

2:08:38 New York,

2:08:39 6452.

2:08:40 Which represents both our ages, 64 and 52.

2:08:46 And what does he say? He says he started listening very recently, he's completely hooked. Yeah. He wants a Thank you for enlightening me. Sorry. Sorry. Oh, he wants a de douching? Yeah. I'm give you You've

2:08:57 been de douched.

2:08:59 There you go.

2:09:02 He has a he's got a nice little spiel here. Alright. Go ahead.

2:09:06 He's saying that, you know, it's thanks to us that he's thinking

2:09:10 normally.

2:09:12 Terry Wentz in Langley, Washington,

2:09:14 55. Michael Gates in Parts Under 50 Wow. That was a quick drop off. Oh, yeah. No. It drops off tremendously.

2:09:21 Yeah. Alright.

2:09:22 We wouldn't have done very well if it wasn't for the executive producers that came in late. Michael Gaines, 5280. Jeff Kenyon in Contarf

2:09:30 Contarf,

2:09:31 Queens Queensland,

2:09:32 Australia.

2:09:34 And he's got a birthday thing coming up, 5223.

2:09:37 Sir Kirk and

2:09:40 Geneseo. Geneseo.

2:09:41 Geneseo. Geneseo

2:09:43 New York.

2:09:46 Sir John AKA the Red Knight in Stratford, Connecticut.

2:09:50 Scott Wallace in San Antonio, Texas, 52. These are 52 birthday

2:09:55 Yeah. Are the birthday ones. This is Kirk, Sir Kirk, Sir John,

2:09:59 Scott Wallace,

2:10:00 happy birthday, happy birthdays. Christopher O'Brien, Brighton, Massachusetts,

2:10:05 '52,

2:10:06 and also says thank you for your courage. Joe Krueger in Montgomery, Alabama, birthday.

2:10:11 Rob

2:10:12 Thyssen in Rotterdam. Tyson. Tyson. Tyson. Tyson.

2:10:16 Rob Tyson in Rotterdam,

2:10:20 Holland.

2:10:21 That's a happy birthday, $52. Per

2:10:23 Ingvarsen

2:10:25 in

2:10:26 Borlaing.

2:10:26 Borlaing.

2:10:28 Borlaing. Borlaing. Borlaing, I think.

2:10:34 Trevor Merkin in

2:10:36 Babri. Sir Trevor, I believe. Sir Trevor. Yeah. It is Sir Trevor, but is he in France?

2:10:41 Yes. That's correct.

2:10:43 Well, bonjour.

2:10:45 Hassan Maynard in Bay Shore, New York.

2:10:49 These are all birthday greetings. That's great. Yeah. Rodney Adams in Forest, Virginia. Sir Rod oh,

2:10:55 sir Rod Adams. So that's these the Rod Adams. Mhmm.

2:10:59 Anonymous

2:11:00 in

2:11:02 somewhere. God knows oh, and he's in Taiwan.

2:11:06 Timothy

2:11:07 Kiernan in Plymouth, Massachusetts,

2:11:10 Michigan. Plymouth, Michigan.

2:11:12 On a second. Anonymous wanted to call out the anonymous from Taiwan wanted to call out his brother as a douchebag. Douchebag.

2:11:19 Just making sure we cross the t's, dot the i's. So everyone listening in Taiwan, it could be you he's talking about. Could be you.

2:11:26 Timothy Kiernan in Plymouth, Michigan. Kevin Kay in Holland, Michigan.

2:11:32 And last but not least, on the birthday well wishers is Brian

2:11:37 Murakod

2:11:38 or Murasan Murakod, I don't know, in Tacoma, Washington. Following people are $50 donors. His name and location, Corey McDonald,

2:11:46 John Daly.

2:11:48 Corey McDonald's in Richmond, Minnesota. Josh Daly is in Portland, Oregon

2:11:53 Justin Barber in Los Angeles,

2:11:57 Edward

2:11:58 Masarek in Memphis, Tennessee John Mayer in Xenia, Ohio Tim Abell or Abell in Bergfield, Berkshire, UK.

2:12:07 Scott Thompson, sir Roadwolf of the Tonawandas

2:12:11 in North Tonawanda, New York. He says the

2:12:14 he says, no, it's not a mountain range, Adam.

2:12:18 Okay. And Okay.

2:12:20 Jason DeLuzio in Chatsford, Pennsylvania with a check and also sir Brian Watson in Raleigh, North Carolina. I wanna thank all these people for Show eight fifty eight for keeping us going. Yes. Thank you. This is all about 50. The rest is usually under that amount for reasons of anonymity. We also have a lot of subscribers.

2:12:39 You can always go to our donation page and check out the different options.

2:12:43 The monthlies are highly appreciated. Thank you all very, very much for supporting the best podcast in universe. I think we should you know, no one requested it. Give everyone a jobs karma. You can always use more jobs karma. Jobs,

2:12:55 jobs,

2:12:56 jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.

2:13:00 You've got karma. There you go, everybody.

2:13:10 Damn. We've got Diego. Hold on. Amy Poussin says happy birthday to her husband, John Noonan, and, of course, she donated for him. He turned

2:13:17 turns 44 today.

2:13:18 $15 a month donor. Marty Williams says happy birthday to his daughter, Rachel, turning 22, and Jeff Kenyon says happy birthday to his son, Jake Kenyon, who is turning 23 today. Happy birthday from all your friends from the staff and management at the best podcast in the universe. It's your first day out.

2:13:36 Title change, sir David Fugazado becomes a Baronet. Congratulations to you. And

2:13:42 I got my blade here if you

2:13:45 There you go. That's your fairy blade. You had a little fairy what draw that thing again.

2:13:52 Nice.

2:13:56 John Alright. Newton, Sean Regalado,

2:13:59 step on up to the podium next to lectern here. Gentlemen, you both have been selected because of your support of the best podcast in the university. It might have $1,000 or more. Therefore, you not only receive a ring and a special certificate, but you get to take place at the No Agenda round table for our Knights and for our Dames.

2:14:14 And therefore, I'm very happy to pronounce the k u,

2:14:17 sir John Noonan and sir Sean of the Adirondacks.

2:14:21 Gentlemen, for you, we have hookers and blow, rent boys and chardonnay, cookies and vodka,

2:14:25 moonshine, Legos and leg warmers, crickets and cream. We've got pork ribs and pale ale, sake and sushi, ice cream with bear fillings, ginger ale and gerbils, sparkling cider and escorts, bong hits and bourbon, and, of course,

2:14:36 mutton and mead. Head on over to noagendanation.com/rings.

2:14:40 Give Eric the shill your information,

2:14:43 and we'll be sending out the ring to you post haste. And again, thank you to everyone who supported the show, and thank you to all of our producers. If you're new to the program, you've probably noticed we don't really refer to the listening audience as listeners, but as producers

2:14:57 because they actually help produce the show. This was pretty spectacular

2:15:01 this week. The amount of information

2:15:04 I could just email alone was almost enough to,

2:15:07 you know, to put together half the show. Was really good.

2:15:10 No. It's highly appreciated. Yeah. There won't be stuff like this, though. Uh-oh.

2:15:16 Now here you know, I've I've followed this for the last year, I guess, is that

2:15:21 and by the way, I do have a clip coming on the next show, on Sunday's show, from, the PBS NewsHour.

2:15:27 Okay. I just don't want to put in today's show, but it was it was a thing on climate change because these guys are freaking out against Nice some teas. Nice teas. So they have a, they have two people and they don't have a But it's not a

2:15:41 There's no skeptic, there's no scientist who's got good credentials who can go on there and say, No, this is nonsense, there's no evidence of this. It's just two people, two reporters, not even experts, two reporters, a science reporter from the Washington Post, the worst paper,

2:15:56 and then the New York Times, and it's just, they're just, yeah, you're right. Yeah, you're right. But so I've been following the kinds of- this kind of, lunacy on PBS NewsHour, but my favorite stuff is always from, Brooks.

2:16:10 Oh, Brooks of and Shields. They bring these two guys on and they're supposed to be- one's a Democrat, one's supposed to be Republican. The Republican guy has been, like,

2:16:19 made insane

2:16:21 by Donald Trump's to the point- because he said, oh, he's never gonna get this, never gonna never, never, never, never, through the campaign, all through the you know, he won't be nominated.

2:16:30 He just was endless and he still can't get over it. He's just they should get rid of him on this thing, but then they would re- when they do get rid of him for a moment, they put a Washington Post person in, which is the same thing. So this is my- one of my favorite ones of late. This goes, I think, a few shows ago.

2:16:46 This is Brooks,

2:16:47 who's just like- he's like an insane person now when it comes to Trump. And he- and he's the Republican guy? He's the- supposedly the Republican, even though he's as liberal as the other guy,

2:16:57 and I guess he's the liberal I talk about these people, the liberal, Republicans who are I think I made a joke about it in the newsletter with who are I'm a liberal Republican. I'm not one of those conservative Republicans. I'm a liberal Republican, you know, like the Rockefellers.

2:17:13 Which

2:17:15 were liberal Republicans.

2:17:17 Yeah. I mean, John Nelson Rockefeller ran for president.

2:17:21 Here's Brooks on on,

2:17:24 this is just this is Brooks on the well and, this is just, to me,

2:17:29 epitomizes

2:17:30 his anger.

2:17:34 Against Donald Trump?

2:17:36 It's his anger in general now. When he came back,

2:17:40 and and you you're saying, no. We won't actually build that wall. Well, you know, it's this isn't exactly dog whistle politics. It's just whistle, politics.

2:17:49 If you look at the NBC Wall Street Journal poll and they ask people, what are your top issues you care about in this country? Well, economy

2:17:56 National security comes up very high. Even the deficits come up reasonably high. Only 6%

2:18:01 list immigration as one of their top three issues. It's not a major issue. And the reason it's worked for Trump is because he's playing identity politics. He's playing us versus them politics, basically native whites against foreigners. And so the wall is not really a wall. I I think most people know he's not actually gonna build a wall, and certainly Mexico is not gonna pay for it.

2:18:20 Is this something you believe he's not gonna build a wall? No. Of course he's gonna build a wall. Course he's gonna build a wall. Why

2:18:27 does he say this?

2:18:29 I wonder myself.

2:18:30 That's very He's so out of touch. I mean, he hates Trump.

2:18:34 Yeah. He can't believe that he's been wrong about Trump the whole election season,

2:18:40 day after day after day, is saying he's never gonna get in, he's never gonna get vote, nobody's gonna vote for him, and he would he's just crazy. Yeah. And now he thinks Trump's not gonna build the wall.

2:18:52 That's the one thing I'm pretty sure if he's elected, he'll do. I think he may not do anything else but build the wall. Maybe. And I'm done. Alright, everybody. See you later. Here's my here's Pence. Take it away.

2:19:02 Yeah. Pretty much is what I'm thinking too. But That's great. I was taken aback by that. I understand. I understand. And but the way he says it, though, we all know. Yeah. He says we all know he's not We all know he's not really gonna build the wall. Yeah.

2:19:16 Yes.

2:19:18 Yeah. So there's your public broadcasting.

2:19:20 Yesterday, of course, I don't wanna do a full segment. I actually compiled something. Yesterday, of course, we had a new Apple announcement,

2:19:29 and it was, like, a new watch, a new iPhone. Here's a compilation of all the

2:20:06 Alright, everybody. It's time for tech news. The tech horny. Here is a compilation of every single tech podcast

2:20:11 that followed the announcement yesterday. Apparently, John, you followed as well. Here is a compilation of their response to

2:20:19 the new Apple news.

2:20:25 Apple.

2:20:27 Oh, they're gonna open up Siri. Oh, I'm gonna have a home device.

2:20:32 There

2:20:33 you go. Done.

2:20:34 What? You're actually gonna have a compilation instead of you just panting like a dog. Okay.

2:20:44 You wanna talk about this thing? So I watched this thing. I mean, was, you know, I was more intrigued by the fact that they packed

2:20:51 the Civic Auditorium, packed it to the gills

2:20:54 with all these, you know, people. And then when they showed they had this some boom or some kind of crazy

2:20:59 last ship where they had this camera that could go all over the place. It was like one of those cameras you see on the basketball game on a string, you know, it just floats around and they, or maybe there was a drone in there. I have no idea, but- A drone. When they showed when the as he was giving his presentation, Tim Cook comes out and he's the guy is just dull.

2:21:18 He comes even though at the beginning of it, they had him with James Corden sitting in the That was car cute. I saw it. It was cute. It was it was in I guess it was cute. Anyway, so they have the shot from the behind. I don't know how you can really make presentations nowadays because when you look down from the back,

2:21:36 down the audience into- onto the stage and you see the little figure on the stage,

2:21:41 Everybody's

2:21:41 got a phone in their face. Yeah. The place up, it looks like a Christmas tree

2:21:46 because everybody, as they're listening to the presentation,

2:21:49 they've all got their phone open and they're looking at it or poking at it or they're doing something. It's really strange.

2:21:55 It's a very strange thing to see. Yeah. But, you know, it's like they're holding the candles up. They used to hold the cigarette lighter up. Now they can do the phone. All they do is flip the phone around. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

2:22:05 It was nothing I didn't see anything interesting except they took the gold watch away. They're not going to make that anymore, I guess, and they had this ceramic

2:22:14 white watch. This is a big deal. And they have a and the watch now spits.

2:22:19 It'll spit. Yeah. Spits the water out if you go underwater. Spits the water out, and,

2:22:25 the phone, I didn't see anything interesting, so they took the jack away. We knew that was gonna Well, there is one interesting thing which was not mentioned on the stage. I thought it was a mister well, I'm sure there's all kinds of political reasons why. This will have the, the extended LTE,

2:22:40 frequency radios in it, which is, specifically great for T Mobile.

2:22:46 So it will have, like, you know, the you could do 500

2:22:49 megabits of, you know, write. We'll see that when it happens. But it has extended range, that's really good for the show because when I'm on the road, then I can get faster bandwidth and hopefully better reception

2:23:00 with my T Mobile just using the iPhone should there be, you know, some kind of connectivity. You use t mobile for the little for your No. I use Verizon for the, for the dongle. I need to have two because, you know Yeah. T mobile doesn't have coverage everywhere. But the Verizon, oh my god.

2:23:16 You know, when I went camping with Christina,

2:23:18 we went into the woods when she was here, and I did the show from there. But also, you know, she's like, oh, daddy, I wanna watch WWE,

2:23:25 the Monday night slam down or whatever it is. I'm like, come on. Butt slam. Yes.

2:23:30 I the Monday night butt slam. Exactly.

2:23:33 And

2:23:35 so, you know, I had to get an account and, you know, stream it. You go over your limit with those guys. It gets really expensive. I think I got, like, a 5 or $600

2:23:45 bill for all of the extra data that I use. Verizon is a jip. Oh, yeah. Woah. You got butt slam. Big time. Woah.

2:23:55 Woah. Big time. T Mobile is free. It's just all you can eat.

2:24:00 Didn't know Verizon did. That's what Oh, my wife I have 20 Her fiber went down and she was using the Verizon. She's got the MiFi thing. MiFi. MiFi. Mhmm. And she's using it and then she stopped. She said, I can't use it anymore because I'm going get Once you go over And she was explaining this to me. I said, that can't be because I didn't think that was as bad as you just described it.

2:24:20 And she so she was internet

2:24:22 Facebook free for like two or three days till they fixed the fiber.

2:24:25 And she was just beside herself, like one of those commercials where somebody is on the internet, oh, they're coming through withdrawal, you know, they can't talk straight, they're starting to babble,

2:24:35 that sort of thing. You

2:24:36 get 20 gigabyte you can get different plans, Because I don't use it all the time, I have 20 gigabytes per month, which is still, you know, $80

2:24:44 or whatever. Well, how much gigabytes do you use on an hour of doing the show on Skype? Why and so using

2:24:49 the if if I go away with the Airstream of Consciousness between prep and show,

2:24:55 I get pretty close to the I get about seventeen,

2:24:58 eighteen gigabytes to do everything.

2:25:00 Okay. So So anything above that is I think it's

2:25:05 I'm gonna say it's very expensive. I think it's $15

2:25:08 per gigabyte. It's crazy.

2:25:10 Yes. My wife said 20. Yeah. It could be 20. Yeah. It's crazy. She says, oh, it's $20 a gigabyte. I said, oh, so you're just gonna get your email. Yeah. Right. Right. Right. Right. Not.

2:25:21 No. That's a chip. I'll say. But so I'm very happy about that that I need to get the phone for that reason because otherwise, I really don't care. I dropped my my iPhone and broke the screen.

2:25:33 And so I I called Who's this?

2:25:36 Last week.

2:25:37 I've never dropped my phone. It doesn't happen to me very often. In fact, it's never happened. I understand you dropped in the toilet once. That was the first iPhone when I was living in The UK, and Chris, Chris Jacob had had gotten one for me, and I was using it. It was cool, and I dropped it in the toilet, and it was over.

2:25:55 There's some of those pictures of me putting it into a Tupperware with kitty litter and trying to trying to get it to dry out. It didn't happen.

2:26:03 But, you know, it was, to me oh, yeah. So And what I'm gonna say about the Talking about Verizon, they overcharge,

2:26:11 and it it cost you a fortune to watch a movie.

2:26:14 No. It it was that was back to the Apple thing for

2:26:18 Oh, yeah. What else was at the Apple event? They don't have headphones anymore or headphone jack. They got a dongle. Yeah. This is an inter well, you you can plug in a new you get I guess the iPhone comes with a Why do they put let me ask you a question just in general. Most of these I've got my old Nexus phone, which I still use, and I see it with this phone here. Why do you put your dongle connection

2:26:38 and all the rest of it at the bottom of the phone? And I ask that because many times when you're using one of these phones, like in the car, when I would say I hook the phone Yeah, you have the holder and then it's in the way. You have like a little, well, if you have one of those suck on holders, it's fine. But even then, no, even then you have issues because of the way the suck on thing works. It clamps the phone, and then if it does, if it clamps it sideways, it's one way, if it clamps it up and down, it's different. But

2:27:03 I usually just drop the phone into one of those receptacles that holds cups.

2:27:08 Yeah. You know, like a- It's called the cup called cup holder. Crap coming out of the bottom.

2:27:14 You know, I got the charger that plugs in the bottom, and so the thing is it doesn't

2:27:18 fit in there right. It's because there's the bottom just got some interference because it's got some coming out of the bottom.

2:27:24 Is there just do you guys have problems figuring this out that you the bottom is not the best place to put these things? Mhmm. I think I don't know. That may it may be just a design question.

2:27:36 It could be interference with the antenna question. It could be placement of

2:27:41 of just the way this the phone is built. So oh, that's what I was gonna say. So I dropped my phone, broke the screen.

2:27:47 And I and I contact,

2:27:50 one of Tina's daughters who works at the Apple Store. Hey. You know, should I come and get a fix? You know, seven's coming out, you know, you know, wait. But it was pretty busted. So we go to the fix it, the iFixit here in Austin.

2:28:03 This is an outlet for $99.

2:28:05 They'll fix your screen.

2:28:08 I'm like, okay. Wow, man. This is what a what a great business this is. So I watch him do it. I watch him do the it's pretty quick, but the screen the replacement screen in no way whatsoever

2:28:20 is it a replacement for what I had. It is a cheap piece of Chinese

2:28:26 poop.

2:28:27 And in fact, the you know, I dropped the phone again yesterday because now I'm just careless.

2:28:33 And it didn't break, but it actually separated. It popped up, and I could see the the backlight. And I just and I pressed it down, and it closed again. And it's not rounded at the edges. It's complete counterfeit crap.

2:28:44 But it didn't break when I dropped it, which was kind of interesting.

2:28:47 Yeah. Yeah. I think they want it to break. Oh, planned obsolescence,

2:28:51 obviously, is is part of this. Obviously.

2:28:55 I don't yeah. I really don't mind what they're doing. I don't care. I I can see where wireless is you know, a lot of people already use Bluetooth, and you I still wrote a column on this for PC Magazine, and I realized I haven't plugged anything into my

2:29:07 headphone

2:29:08 jack

2:29:09 for probably two or three years.

2:29:13 I do.

2:29:14 When I'm on the plane, I always carry my headphones for the show, because I don't wanna carry multiple headphones. And it's the same ones I'm using now, the Sony studio headphones.

2:29:23 And I've just un, you know, unscrew the the big connector jack and plug it into my phone. And I like that because I don't you know, I like these headphones. I like the way they sound. I don't wanna have to now carry a different set of wireless headphones in order to to use it. So that's

2:29:37 for me, personally, I don't like that. And also who and you saw these these new what are they called? The AirPods?

2:29:45 They look like ear they look like earrings.

2:29:47 Yeah. I really wanna have a transmitter on both sides of my head now. I'm very happy with this. Sides. That way Radiating into my freaking skull.

2:29:55 Yeah. This does not make any I'm not I don't like the Bluetooth stuff. I don't like any of It's not good.

2:30:02 You know what I'm saying?

2:30:04 I don't you know me. Yeah. I'm free air. You know, put some speakers in front of me and turn them on. And time to close it up. When it's time for now The only good phone's a landline, and the phone should be made out of Bakelite. That's right, everybody. That's your tech news for today. All the tech horns are happy

2:30:20 new iPhones. Alright.

2:30:22 I have only one more segment, but I'm gonna, open up the floor to you first. I have one clip. Okay. I have a bunch of clips, I have the one that needs to be played. Alright. Because this one was just like

2:30:32 you look you watch this, you shake your hand, you go, what? You know, you No Soros is behind the Black Lives Matter. Yes, he's financing You know that Black Lives Matter closed

2:30:43 down an airport in England. I think they've done this a couple of times. They

2:30:47 tried to do something at Heathrow and then they closed down a runway- That's because of

2:30:51 American racism there over there in London. Makes so much sense. Well, turn, that's that's the thing. It's not about American racism. Pay possibly, it never was.

2:31:00 Uh-huh. It's just so you know? And and It's a sorrow thing. Yeah. Of course. You don't know what's going on. So I think you figure out what's going on here with bullcrap, this Black Lives Matter thing is if this is gonna be what their message is. The London City Airport shut down flights this morning after nine Black Lives Matter activists locked themselves together on the runway to protest the climate change impact of air travel on black people worldwide.

2:31:23 A series of tweets sent out by Black Lives Matter U. K. This morning, the group highlighted how many majority black nations in Africa are most impacted by climate change, even though majority white white nations, like Britain, are most responsible for causing climate change. The protesters erected a tripod and chained themselves together, delaying flights for hours before being arrested. This is clip of a video put out by Black Lives Matter UK explaining the protest.

2:31:49 The UK is the biggest per capita contributor to global temperature change and the least vulnerable. According to the UNHCR,

2:31:57 by 2050,

2:31:58 there will be 200,000,000

2:32:01 climate refugees.

2:32:04 Oh, yeah. Of course.

2:32:06 Of course. It's all about climate change. Climate refugees. Of course. Yeah. It makes nothing but sense. So Black Lives Matter is really a climate change front organization.

2:32:17 Yes.

2:32:18 This has not been revealed to the public, especially the American public, yet. Do you think that's all they are, or maybe it's that's just one of the many issues they like to they're instructed to, to attack?

2:32:30 I think they'll attack a few things, but I actually think looking at Soros and the way he invests and what he likes to put money into,

2:32:36 I think this is really what's going on. I don't know how I think the The United States, think they're going to get called out if they try to pull this off,

2:32:45 but Black Lives Matter and now they're talking about African Black lives. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Mhmm. Because of climate change. Mhmm. And then they have a video. I only I cut the video short. I just left the two things in there because it went on for, thirty seconds of people talking about client black people Mhmm. Talking about client in a with the British accent, talking about climate change.

2:33:06 It was unbelievable.

2:33:07 Fabulous.

2:33:09 Speaking of which, today,

2:33:11 September

2:33:12 1899.

2:33:14 It

2:33:15 was 108 degrees in Missouri.

2:33:19 Yeah. Apparently It was hotter. Yeah. It was it's not a 108 there today.

2:33:24 No. Alright. My final bit,

2:33:28 I thank you to Gary who's who alerted me to this,

2:33:31 is from

2:33:34 BBC NewsHour with David l Phillips.

2:33:37 Had not heard of this guy.

2:33:39 Quite an impressive resume.

2:33:41 Director of the program on peace building and rights, Columbia University's Institute for the Study of Human Rights.

2:33:49 He served as foreign affairs expert, a senior adviser to the US state Department of State and senior adviser to the United Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

2:33:58 He's worked at academic institutions as executive director of Columbia University's International Conflict Resolution Program, director of America University's program on conflict prevention. He has no Wikipedia page, by the way, which really,

2:34:11 points strongly to him being a spook.

2:34:14 Senior fellow at Harvard University's future of diplomacy project, fellow and fellow at Harvard University Centers for Middle East Studies,

2:34:22 professor at the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna. I mean, goes on and on and on. Yeah. That's got Wikipedia page written all over it unless Unless. Exactly.

2:34:32 So he's on, and

2:34:34 he's talking about the most recent

2:34:39 fighting going on in Jerabolos. Jerabolos

2:34:43 which is Syria

2:34:44 and Jerabolos

2:34:46 where Turkey of course is right on the Turkish border the Syrian Turkish border and I learned a lot from this very, very interesting

2:34:54 guy. And I'm not quite sure well, guess he he wasn't actually he was an adviser, so he wasn't really a paid member of the State Department perhaps, so he feels comfortable

2:35:03 saying these things.

2:35:05 So Turkey came in in Jeriblos, and what we heard was, in fact, even Joe Biden went to went to Turkey around

2:35:12 the same time that this happened

2:35:15 and said, you know, he was hanging out there and trying to kind of smooth everything over.

2:35:19 And we

2:35:22 learned from our friend here, from David L. Phillips,

2:35:25 that something else entirely happened. So the way it was played to us in the media, if you heard about it at all,

2:35:31 is that the Turks are now they came in. They did the right thing. They kicked kicked the Islamic State out of, Jerablos,

2:35:39 and, good to go. Here's David l Brooks telling us what actually happened. So let's be clear about the nature of this operation,

2:35:46 in Jerablos.

2:35:47 It was not targeting the IS.

2:35:50 It was targeting

2:35:51 Syrian Kurds.

2:35:52 In fact, there was a deal precooked between Ankara and the Islamic State

2:35:57 whereby

2:35:58 the Islamic State fighters merely changed their uniforms to look like the free Syrian army.

2:36:04 This was an a rescue of the Islamic state in Jerablos

2:36:08 from the PYD

2:36:09 offensive.

2:36:11 It didn't advance the goal of,

2:36:14 killing Islamic state fighters

2:36:16 or

2:36:17 help The United States and the multinational coalition

2:36:20 in its drive to contain

2:36:23 jihadis?

2:36:25 So I had not heard about this.

2:36:28 So the whole thing was phony. Yes. And what they It was the rescue that ISIS folks which we we have talked about Turkey being in bed with ISIS for a long time. Well, the second clip that I have here, he explains it in a little more detail,

2:36:42 and

2:36:43 you need and we'll talk about this after after the clip. You need to understand

2:36:47 the, problem between Turkey and the Kurds. And so our friends have always been the YPG,

2:36:52 that's the Kurdish, fighters,

2:36:54 And those are guys that, know, we support along with the free Syrian army. But what they what Turkey pretty much did is they came in and they wiped out all of the YPG fighters who are I guy our guys, and they protected

2:37:07 ISIS

2:37:08 by just having them put on free Syrian army uniforms, which, man, this is a trick that goes back to World War two.

2:37:14 I mean, this is this is a this is a old one. So listen goes back before then. Oh, of course. Well, listen to the second bit. And let's recall that for several years, Turkey was the principal

2:37:23 sponsor of the Islamic State.

2:37:26 It gave the Islamic Sorry to interrupt. I mean, that's obviously something

2:37:30 that they would strongly disagree with. They had disagree with it, but they but they're lying. They

2:37:35 supported the Islamic State. The evidence is ample.

2:37:39 Everyone knows that from 2014

2:37:42 to the beginning of 2016,

2:37:44 Turkey was the primary benefactor

2:37:47 of jihadis,

2:37:48 including Islamic State fighters.

2:37:51 The US knows full well that its most reliable ally in Syria

2:37:56 are the people's protection forces of the PYD.

2:38:00 It doesn't buy this propaganda from Erdogan that a no fly zone and a security area is somehow going to be a humanitarian intervention.

2:38:11 It's purely an effort to limit the influence of Syrian Kurds

2:38:16 and for Turkey to project its power into Syria.

2:38:19 The peace process in Syria is complicated

2:38:22 by Turkey's presence on the ground and at the negotiating table.

2:38:27 The US is fully aware of that. It's just tiptoeing around Erdogan because it doesn't wanna insult

2:38:34 a NATO ally, particularly

2:38:36 after Turkey's made such a stink about The US involvement

2:38:40 in the recent coup and its unwillingness

2:38:43 to hand over and extradite

2:38:46 So nice that he brought in Futulagulla there. So I I started to do a little bit of research on this, and it

2:38:52 he writes a lot of things, this this guy, and I put a couple of his of his writings in the show notes. And he writes about Roja Roja Rojava, R O J A V A. I know it was Rojava, Rojava, how you pronounce it.

2:39:06 And,

2:39:07 if you look at Wikipedia, Rojava has an entry. It has a flag. It is after well, so the Ottoman Empire started disbanded.

2:39:15 And,

2:39:16 the what we now know, you know, the western powers that be propelled us into this entire region where they split it up. You know, the Ottoman Empire,

2:39:25 was housed in, Constantinople.

2:39:27 That was the the

2:39:28 capital, the and that, of course, is Istanbul today. And when they when when the western powers cut it all up as it was falling apart, that's how we come up with Iraq, Iran, Syria, Jordan, you know, all

2:39:39 these different

2:39:40 so called countries.

2:39:42 But the Kurds

2:39:44 always wanted their own state called Rojava.

2:39:48 Rojava. I need a pronunciation guide on that. And it was it's pretty much the entire landmass between Turkey and Syria. So we know on the the

2:39:59 Southwestern part of Turkey is where they have a big part, and they have, of course, have the Syrian Kurds.

2:40:04 And the piece they've been wanting to close is,

2:40:08 Jerabolos.

2:40:09 And the reason, of course, why the Turks don't want this is, you know, they're going to say, oh, hold on. You wanna cross our border? You want your oil to go in? Or you want to to have your,

2:40:20 fighters or the supplies for ISIS, come through our turf? No. No. We're gonna lock that off, and we're gonna make a problem for you. And, of course, this is also this all Djerabla is also where the oil goes through its pipelines, its trucks, etcetera.

2:40:33 So I really didn't realize

2:40:36 all these pieces. And I would suggest looking at a map so you can really, really understand it. But now it makes so much sense, all the things that are going on. And I we've already said this, but, yeah, Turkey is

2:40:49 bad effing news.

2:40:52 And you get you get Biden going up there trying to smooth it over.

2:40:58 He's you know, we've heard this in several other clips. Erdogan is out of control,

2:41:02 and I don't think

2:41:04 this current administration wants to touch any of that with a 10 foot pole.

2:41:09 They really just want to be a let it all They want to get out. They want to get out of office. Yeah. Because you can't and but, of course, we can't, you know, Nate Turkey being a NATO ally, you can't just go, hey, man.

2:41:22 Like, screw you.

2:41:24 It becomes a huge international embarrassment. So it's it's

2:41:28 a conundrum. It really is a an odd conundrum. Because NATO is a problem.

2:41:34 NATO is a big problem. But, you know, Donald Trump's crazy.

2:41:37 We all know that.

2:41:41 Alright.

2:41:42 I do have I'm I'm keeping this guy on watch because I really Yes. I would like to be his really like what he's what he's doing. And keep your eye on Me too. Jerabla.

2:41:52 Jerabla blah.

2:41:54 Okay. I have Last one to play us out.

2:41:58 Oh, we got the Syrian thing at the Union League. I got Van Hovel bitching about something. No. Yeah. You didn't you didn't play that.

2:42:04 Nah. She's, you know, the one Mary she's the the editor in chief or publisher of the Nation, which is a complete progressive

2:42:11 operation, but she seems to have issues with everybody about the Russians because,

2:42:16 she's married to our favorite Russian analyst, going. Oh, really? Oh, cool. Should we play this? Yeah. Play it.

2:42:23 The editor of the Nation magazine, Katrina Van Hervel, says that anyone calling for a debate is typically blacklisted by the Clinton campaign.

2:42:32 The Clinton campaign and the Clinton campaign supporters,

2:42:35 I think, are dangerously using

2:42:39 a new McCarthyism

2:42:40 to impugn the integrity of those who simply say we need a debate

2:42:45 about what a new US Russian relationship would be. Let me be clear. The nation believes Donald Trump, his visceral contempt for Muslim immigrants, women, and facts is unfit to be president.

2:42:55 But at the same time, it is very dangerous

2:42:58 to use a tactic

2:42:59 to to say that those who are calling for a different relationship and calling for a debate that this country needs To send are Kremlin agents. Prayers.

2:43:10 Yeah. Apparently, she's had a falling out with Hillary. Puts her into an interesting light along with professor Cohen.

2:43:17 Yeah. Well okay. Something up with that. I just thought I'd run that through. I like it. The other one is, I think ABC

2:43:24 Oh, wait. You have another clip? Yeah. I'm Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Yes. I think you can play it underneath. It's short. I think ABC is not getting enough people

2:43:32 of Dial, let's say Dial, use Dial soap,

2:43:36 Irish Spring,

2:43:39 some of these other companies that make these these these anti

2:43:42 disinfectant

2:43:45 soaps and then washes and stuff. Like Neutrogena?

2:43:48 Maybe. Maybe. Neutrogena might be there. Mhmm. I think they're not coughing out. They're not advertising enough, so let's do this. ABC chemicals may do more harm than good. Another consumer alert tonight, a surprising finding about a common high soul household item. The FDA is banning the use of 19 chemicals commonly found in antibacterial

2:44:07 soaps, saying not only do they not do any good, they may actually do harm. ABC's Cana Whitworth explains.

2:44:16 She didn't explain.

2:44:18 We're

2:44:19 all gonna die. There we go. That's That's that's her explanation. That's all you need to know. Alright. Alright. I'm good. Alright. Me too, man. Alright. Well, see you on Sunday, of course.

2:44:30 Sunday, Sunday. Sunday, And,

2:44:32 of course, we have such a large production staff.

2:44:37 We have a lot of Hillary Cleveland cough mashups for the end of the show. Can't help it. They're just on the ball. You know?

2:44:45 They are just on the ball.

2:44:48 Gotta love it.

2:44:51 Any sports I should watch? No. No. Nothing tonight. Right? Today's Thursday. Yes. Actually, I think tonight's the first NFL game Oh. Wow. Of the season. And I'm not I don't remember who's playing, but it's a big game. It'll be Thursday night football, and, you know,

2:45:06 I don't of this is important until you get to the last couple of weeks of these gay of these these

2:45:12 commercial operations that are putting together these

2:45:16 questionable events. It might be worth watching just to watch the beginning and see if anybody doesn't stand up for the flag. For the flag, yes. National Anthem. Gotcha. This seems to be cropping up here and there. It's not gonna go away for a while. We'll be back on Sunday with another show. Remember us at dvorak.org/na.

2:45:31 Until then, coming to you from the Crackpot condo here in the Skyscraper downtown Austin Tejas.

2:45:36 Region 6 if you're looking for me. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley,

2:45:41 I'm John C. Dvorak. We'll be back on Sunday right here

2:45:45 on No Agenda.

2:45:47 Adios, mofos.

2:45:49 Okey dokey, artichokey.

2:46:50 Let's go to Cleveland.

2:47:00 I've been talking so

2:47:06 every

2:47:11 time I think about Trump, I get allergic.

2:47:18 We have sixty three days to go.

2:47:22 Wow. I am really high. When we were trying to figure out where we could be, we all said, let's go to Cleveland.

2:47:49 We

2:47:56 have sixty three days to go.

2:48:01 Woah. You got butt slam.

2:48:05 Adios,

2:48:09 mofo. Dvorak.org/na.

2:48:15 Ladies and gentlemen, please rise for your Gitmo Nation

2:48:19 National Anthem.

2:48:22 In the Morning Gitmo

2:48:25 Nation,

2:48:27 we are all charged up to

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  • No ISOs recorded.

End of Show Mixes

  • No Agenda Producers โ€” Hillary Cleveland Cough Mashup
  • No Agenda Producers โ€” Butt Slam / Adios Mofo Mix
  • No Agenda Producers โ€” Gitmo Nation National Anthem

Notable quotes

  • "Frogs is green goo. That's, that's what it meant. So I think, you know, we can probably I don't know if she's the dragon, the beast, or the false prophet."

    โ€” Adam ยท Pithy biblical riff on Hillary's green-goo cough

  • "Once it gets in there, once the media gets a hold of you and starts shaking you, you will be suckered into believing the bull crap that the media says."

    โ€” Adam ยท Encapsulates the show's media-deconstruction thesis

  • "I really wanna have a transmitter on both sides of my head now. Radiating into my freaking skull."

    โ€” John ยท Memorable skeptical take on the new AirPods

  • "He's got Wikipedia page written all over it unless... Unless. Exactly."

    โ€” John ยท Wry running gag about a figure being a spook because he has no Wikipedia page

  • "Keep your eye on Jerabla. Jerabla blah."

    โ€” Adam ยท Lighthearted close to the serious Turkey/Syria segment

People mentioned

News clip sources

  • FOX 3 clips
  • NBC 3 clips
  • RT 3 clips
  • ABC 2 clips
  • CNN 2 clips
  • MSNBC 2 clips
  • Al Jazeera 1 clip
  • BBC 1 clip
  • PBS 1 clip

Buzzword tally

  • karma ร—14
  • climate change ร—8
  • in the morning ร—8
  • executive producer ร—7
  • mainstream media ร—6
  • producer ร—6
  • gitmo nation ร—5
  • best podcast in the universe ร—4
  • de-douching ร—3
  • hit people in the mouth ร—3
  • agenda ร—2
  • crackpot and buzzkill ร—2
  • jobs karma ร—2
  • media deconstruction ร—2
  • boobs ร—1
  • boom shakalaka ร—1
  • deboonk ร—1
  • itm ร—1
  • narrative ร—1
  • pr campaign ร—1
  • shut up slave ร—1
  • value for value ร—1

Around the world this episode

  • Syria

    ISIS, refugees, Turkey/Kurdish conflict, Snowden/drone strikes, Clinton's resettlement idea

  • Turkey

    Erdogan, NATO ally accused of sponsoring ISIS and attacking Syrian Kurds

  • Aleppo, Syria

    Gary Johnson's 'What is Aleppo?' gaffe on Morning Joe; refugee crisis epicenter

  • Cleveland, USA

    Hillary Clinton's prolonged coughing fit during a Labor Day campaign speech

  • Jarabulus, Syria

    Turkey's operation targeting Syrian Kurds while rescuing ISIS fighters

  • Mexico

    Trump's visit and finance minister Videgaray's resignation over drug demand comments

  • North Dakota, USA

    Dakota Access Pipeline protests; security dogs attacking Standing Rock Sioux protesters

  • Philippines

    President Duterte calling Obama a 'son of a whore' and his drug war killings

  • Detroit, USA

    Clinton Foundation plan to resettle Syrians to rebuild Detroit; Clayton Homes connection

  • Austin, USA

    UT vs Notre Dame game traffic disaster due to lack of Uber/ride-sharing regulations

  • London, UK

    Black Lives Matter UK shutting down London City Airport over climate change

  • Menwith Hill, UK

    Snowden leaks reveal UK base used for US drone strikes in Yemen

  • Jordan

    Alice Wells as US ambassador announcing $1.2B assistance package

  • Laos

    Obama pledging $90M to clear unexploded US bombs from the Vietnam War era

  • Yemen

    US covert drone war using intelligence from Menwith Hill

Books, movies & media

  • tv All in the Family โ€” Norman Lear

    Mentioned re: Norman Lear, the producer behind the Lear Foundation Hollywood Health and Society

  • movie Snowden โ€” Oliver Stone

    Oliver Stone's new Snowden movie discussed; CIA/Pentagon influence on Hollywood and self-censorship

  • movie Platoon โ€” Oliver Stone

    Stone recounts taking Platoon to the Pentagon for notes years ago

  • movie Lone Survivor

    Cited by Stone as a sanitized pro-American war picture

  • movie American Sniper

    Cited by Stone as a disingenuous war film

  • tv 24

    Stone says it's all CIA โ€” Hollywood taken over by CIA/Pentagon

  • tv Homeland

    Stone says it's all CIA

  • podcast WTF with Marc Maron โ€” Marc Maron

    Maron pitched his WTF podcast to advertisers at the IAB podcast upfront