1639 - "Pumpkin Coin"

1639 - "Pumpkin Coin"

Released Sunday, 3rd March 2024
 2 people rated this episode
1639 - "Pumpkin Coin"

1639 - "Pumpkin Coin"

1639 - "Pumpkin Coin"

1639 - "Pumpkin Coin"

Sunday, 3rd March 2024
 2 people rated this episode
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

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0:00

I'm a gas or whoa gambling.

0:03

Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. Sunday,

0:05

March 3rd, 2024. This is your

0:07

award winning Kim A Nation Media assassination episode

0:09

1639. This

0:12

is no agenda. Antivirus

0:15

for your mind and broadcasting live from

0:17

the heart of the Texas Hill Country

0:19

right here in FEMA region number six

0:21

in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.

0:24

And from Northern Silicon Valley

0:26

where we're celebrating Women's History

0:28

Month. I'm John C. Dvorak. It's

0:31

Craig Vaught and Buzzkill. In the

0:33

morning. I have not noticed much

0:35

of this celebratory month. Have

0:39

you? Well, it just started. Why no,

0:41

but it's just, it's three

0:43

days in and I haven't noticed anything. This

0:46

is weird. That's

0:48

weird. Yeah.

0:52

Oh. Well, no, wait, wait. There's a

0:54

number of Women's History events that took place. There

0:56

was the interview with Tucker Carlson. Oh,

0:59

please. How

1:01

about this? How about

1:04

this? There is a 75th

1:06

anniversary celebration

1:11

of democracy with Amy Goodman. It's

1:19

KPFA 75 years of building community trust. It's

1:24

in Berkeley right in your backyard. You can go

1:26

hang with Amy. Shelley, you

1:28

want tickets? 75

1:30

years of subversive programming over the air.

1:32

Somehow they kept their license. Hey, I

1:34

can get you tickets. Would you like

1:37

tickets? Tickets. There's

1:39

25 bucks for tickets and you

1:41

can hang out. You can rub shoulders

1:44

with Amy Goodman. Yeah. Yeah, baby. Yeah,

1:46

baby. Hey, I

1:49

mean, something beautiful happened

1:52

and it's one of those things where

1:55

it's like something cool happens and then you're looking

1:57

at what happened and then all of a sudden.

2:00

you find out it was all a setup. I

2:04

mean like every other thing that we

2:06

discuss. Yeah, yeah, true. But

2:09

this one is very interesting. This is

2:11

the German Air

2:14

Force top brass. Oh,

2:16

yeah. It's

2:18

amazing how it happens. You thought it only

2:21

happened to Victoria Newland, you

2:23

know, the famous FDU call. But

2:27

there's some more details that have come out about

2:29

this wire tap as the German

2:31

Air Force top brass was talking about,

2:34

you know, bombing stuff. The

2:36

German government says Russia wiretapped a

2:39

conversation between German Air Force generals

2:41

about the war in Ukraine. The

2:43

officers are heard discussing Ukrainian forces

2:46

using a German-made, a tower's cruise

2:48

missiles to attack the bridge linking

2:50

Crimea to Russia. The

2:52

Germany has so far refused to supply Kiev

2:54

with the long-range weapons. The

2:56

defense ministry in Berlin has also now

2:58

confirmed that the conversation, which surfaced on

3:01

social media, was tapped. Chancellor

3:04

Olaf Scholz, with clarification for

3:07

the recording. What

3:09

is being reported is very serious. That's

3:12

why it is necessary to begin

3:14

a very thorough, intensive and rapid

3:16

investigation. Alexandra, this

3:18

seems like a real embarrassment

3:21

for Berlin. Have we heard any

3:23

further reaction from Chancellor Scholz? No,

3:25

Olaf Scholz kept it cool here

3:27

in Rome. We just got this

3:29

one statement on the matter, a

3:31

statement in which the German chancellor

3:33

stressed that this is

3:36

a serious matter that is

3:38

being investigated. But then he

3:40

went on with his program

3:42

here in Rome. But of

3:44

course we know that he

3:46

also knows that he is

3:48

facing uncomfortable questions at home,

3:50

especially when it turns out that

3:53

this conversation among high-ranking

3:55

German officers was conducted

3:57

not on a secret. internal

4:00

army network but on the

4:03

Webex platform, despite repeated

4:05

warnings by Germany's intelligence services

4:10

that Russia uses espionage and sabotage

4:13

as part of its hybrid war.

4:15

And we are already hearing

4:19

from lawmakers in Germany, from

4:21

lawmakers in the opposition, but

4:23

also from members of the

4:25

coalition that... Blah blah blah.

4:28

Okay. I'm sorry you're

4:30

bored. I'm sorry you're bored.

4:33

I know I'm bored but I'm... Well, yeah, bit. But

4:35

that's not the point. I think you should have

4:40

set this clip up because I don't think a lot

4:42

of people know what you're talking about. You're kidding me.

4:45

No. Well, I just... I set the

4:47

clip up. I said there was... Not to the

4:49

extent that I think it should be set up which is,

4:51

you know, what were these guys talking about? Well,

4:54

no, no, no, wait. Wait.

4:56

I'm doing it in the other order because

5:00

this is the only news people are getting. The

5:02

only news people are getting is, oh, there was

5:04

a leaked call on the Webex. Now... Thank you.

5:08

Now we need to talk about what they were talking

5:10

about which is blowing up the bridge that goes

5:13

to Crimea and

5:15

using Taurus missiles for that, talking about

5:17

there already being British boots

5:21

on the ground, American boots on the ground, and

5:23

now we continue with the next clip. In

5:26

his speech at the Congress of the European

5:28

Socialist here in Rome, he once again said

5:31

he doesn't want to see boots on

5:33

the ground in Ukraine, that

5:35

everything needs to be done to

5:37

prevent a war between Russia and

5:39

NATO. However, we also have to

5:42

say that the argument that

5:44

was put forward by the German

5:47

government, why they are not willing

5:49

to send the Taurus cruise missile

5:51

to Ukraine, the argument was that

5:53

for that there would need to

5:55

be German soldiers on the ground

5:57

in Ukraine. And

6:00

during this tap conversation, we

6:03

learned that actually that is

6:05

not justified, that they don't

6:07

need to be German soldiers on the

6:09

ground. So we'll see how the discussion

6:11

is going to be led in the

6:13

long term, but in the short term

6:15

I don't think that the German Chancellor

6:17

is going to change his mind on

6:19

that. Now remember, just earlier

6:22

this week, the Chancellor

6:24

Schulz came out and said, no, no, no.

6:27

We're not going to send any Taurus missiles. We're

6:29

not doing that. We're not going to be a

6:31

part of that because we don't want Germany fighting

6:34

a war with Russia. And

6:36

this is the interesting part. This

6:40

call came out on

6:42

social media. Deutsche Welle is the first

6:45

one, as far as I know, that

6:47

had it in mainstream media. And

6:49

the narrative is continuously, the Russians did it, the

6:51

Russians leaked it. So

6:53

what could be Russia's aim

6:55

in publishing this kind of

6:58

sensitive intelligence and doing it

7:00

now? I would say

7:02

that it's two aims. The first

7:04

one is to signal to the

7:06

German government and to German army

7:09

leadership that Russia knows what is

7:11

being debated on the closet meetings.

7:13

So Russia has obviously kind of

7:15

access to these talks and

7:18

can tape them and can publish them. In

7:20

general, in the second one, the

7:23

Russia wants Germany

7:25

to make Germany think twice before

7:27

delivering cruise missiles

7:29

like towers to the Ukraine or during

7:31

any other kind of heavy

7:34

weapons to the Ukraine because

7:37

the question is how far can

7:39

Germany go and how far it

7:41

wants Germany go in supporting Ukraine

7:43

without becoming a part of this

7:45

war. Listen, Russia

7:49

has not claimed anything. They

7:51

have not said that they tapped this and they

7:53

put this out. And

7:55

in fact, I don't think they did.

7:58

I think this is the military. industrial complex

8:02

signaling to Schultz, dude,

8:04

yes, you will. We need

8:07

purchases. You need to buy Taurus missiles.

8:09

We need those in the field. You

8:11

need to get the, hello, we're looking

8:13

for your order. We're looking for more

8:15

orders because on

8:17

Wednesday, Deutsche Vela, same

8:19

network that has this, you know, oh,

8:22

the Russians, oh, oh, oh, this, this,

8:24

oh, boy, Webex. The

8:27

same Deutsche Vela interviewed Ben Hodges

8:29

for 20 minutes who lives

8:31

in Germany now, just as an aside. He

8:34

used to be the allied commander for

8:36

the US in Europe and

8:39

he had some very interesting things to

8:41

say about Herr Schultz. Secretary General Stoltenberg,

8:43

superb. Admiral Bauer,

8:46

the chairman of the military committee,

8:48

superb. General Cavoli, supreme allied commander,

8:50

superb. But the nations

8:53

do seem disjointed. And

8:55

I think to be candid, unfortunately,

8:58

the German Bundeskässler seems the one that

9:00

is the most out of step with

9:02

everybody else. Wait, wait, hold on, back,

9:05

back. Did he

9:07

say chancellor or chancellor? Let

9:09

me see. And I think to

9:12

be candid, unfortunately, the

9:14

German Bundeskässler. Well, he's

9:16

saying he lives there. So it's

9:19

consular in German. Are we saying consular

9:21

because, you know, that's like when Madonna

9:23

lived in London for a while and

9:25

she would have that phony accent. But

9:29

it does come out as consular, which is kind of funny.

9:32

But unfortunately, he's not on board.

9:34

Remember this is before this call

9:37

was leaked. Coincident.

9:39

Unfortunately, the German Bundeskässler seems the one

9:41

that is the most out of step

9:43

with everybody else. It must be really

9:45

painful for him to be

9:48

having to do things he's doing now, providing

9:51

aid to Ukraine, building up the

9:53

Bundeskässler, different from

9:55

what he ever imagined he would be

9:57

doing when he was a younger politician.

10:00

So we have to teach him a

10:02

lesson. But it's essential. I mean Germany,

10:04

the most prosperous, richest country in Europe,

10:07

the massive

10:09

industrial capacity has

10:12

got to help

10:14

guide. Otherwise if

10:18

Ukraine fails, we're going to be in a

10:20

terrible conflict with Russia and Europe and Germany

10:22

is going to pay a massive price. I'm

10:25

telling you, listen to this, listen carefully

10:27

what he's saying. The

10:29

military industrial complex leaked this call to

10:31

send a message to Schultz. But the

10:33

thing they always wanted to avoid is

10:36

coming back. But

10:38

we have to be fair with the

10:40

German Chancellor. No we don't. There's this

10:42

Biden-Wendler leader and they're really like increasing

10:45

the spending in the military budget.

10:47

Absolutely. That's why it's

10:50

so confusing. Yeah. Because two years

10:52

ago it was like, you

10:54

know, Biden-Wendler, 100 billion

10:56

euros. Yeah. And

10:58

even the other day. Yeah, yeah. Two years ago

11:01

he was all on board. He was like, yeah,

11:03

we're going to send you 100 billion euros. We're

11:05

buying all this stuff. It's confusing. He needs a

11:07

little prompting I think. You know he's out there

11:09

breaking ground for an ammunition factory. Another

11:12

thing I'm sure he never imagined he would do. These

11:15

are all good, positive steps. Germany

11:18

agreeing to a brigade, a brigade

11:21

of Littallen by 2027. These

11:25

are very powerful, strong signals. But

11:28

then on the other hand, here in just the last few

11:30

days, he's undone or

11:32

damaged this sense of

11:35

Germany really leaning forward

11:37

with the almost

11:40

panicky statement. Like, we're not going to put troops

11:42

on the ground. And

11:45

the absolute refusal to provide

11:47

Taurus. I mean

11:49

very clearly no way

11:51

we're going to do that, which

11:54

I think is unfortunate because that would

11:56

really be helpful to Ukraine. fly,

12:00

Schultz. I'm telling

12:02

you, we did this. We

12:05

did this. I'm not going to argue that we

12:07

did. I'm pretty sure we did this. Oh yeah,

12:10

but it's old Russian. And then the bull crap

12:12

about, oh don't use WebEx because

12:14

our intelligence services say not to, but

12:16

they did it anyway. Anyway, no. That's

12:18

not the way things go. It's

12:20

the best. If you're told by the

12:23

intelligence groups not to use WebEx, you

12:25

don't go off with a phone call

12:27

like this on WebEx. No,

12:29

of course not. And

12:32

it was really cavalier, these

12:34

guys, too. And also, Deutsche

12:36

Vela, we've determined, is an

12:39

outlet for the CIA's voice of reason.

12:41

It's a speakerphone for the CIA, so

12:44

whatever they

12:51

do is suspect. Dude, we

12:53

were tapping Angela Merkel's phone.

12:55

We were tapping Angela Merkel's

12:57

phone during Obama. Come

12:59

on, Germany. Get with it. Now,

13:01

all this was was, oh, I'm sorry,

13:03

Schultz, and you're not hearing anything about

13:05

the content of the message. Now,

13:08

all you're hearing is, oh yeah, it's

13:10

unfortunate you don't want to use these

13:12

Taurus missiles. These are great. What

13:15

does one of these Taurus missiles cost? What's

13:17

one Taurus pop? It's

13:20

also so safe. We

13:22

can look it up. Yeah, I mean,

13:24

all war is about is just money,

13:27

money, money. Money, money, money, money, money,

13:29

money. We're now printing money at the

13:31

rate of, what was it? One

13:34

trillion dollars about every 100 days,

13:36

is what I'm hearing. Have

13:38

you heard this? Is it just a meme? No,

13:40

I have not. Oh, this is from CNBC. The

13:42

US national debt is rising by one trillion about

13:45

every 100 days. That's

13:47

three months. Why

13:50

are we printing it?

13:52

Buy stuff for Ukraine,

13:55

which don't worry everybody. It goes

13:57

right here in America. gave

14:00

me a, who was

14:03

this? Eric. He said a couple

14:05

of times recently that somehow the government

14:07

is propping up the US economy by

14:10

sending money to Ukraine and it's absolutely

14:12

true. The way you calculate GDP and

14:14

economics is by adding up consumer spending,

14:16

government spending, domestic investment, basically

14:19

capital expenditures by corporations and net

14:21

exports. So when we hand

14:24

buckets of cash to the military industrial

14:26

complex, it increases government spending and when

14:28

they decide to upgrade or build a

14:30

new factory, it increases domestic investment. By

14:32

printing money and handing it to military

14:35

contractors, the GDP goes up. Does

14:37

that sound right to you? Yeah.

14:39

Well there it is. The missiles cost

14:42

a million. That's all? Yeah, they're

14:45

cheap. Well but that's wholesale. What do we sell

14:47

them for? Retail. That's

14:51

only a million bucks? Nah. Yeah.

14:54

Wow. I'm surprised by

14:56

that. No,

14:59

they need to order a whole bunch. Oh

15:01

yeah, I'd say. A thousand at least.

15:04

A thousand. A hundred. A hundred.

15:06

A hundred thousands of missiles. Nah

15:09

man, this is... These guys are getting the screw

15:11

loose. Why don't you get to the... How come

15:13

there's all this talk and no talk about going

15:16

to the negotiating table? Well that

15:18

would be wrong. Oh. Yeah. Well

15:20

we have, let's see. I mean

15:23

they're so desperate right now. Anderson

15:26

360 is like, what can

15:28

we do? Oh let's bring out Gary Kasparov. Let's

15:31

bring out the chess ball. That

15:34

makes sense. Does anyone bring him

15:36

out for anything ever? He's just

15:38

a complainer. Here he

15:40

is. In a position where Ukraine artillery

15:42

and the counter-offensive were firing, I think

15:44

it was 80 shells

15:47

a day, now they can only fire about 10

15:49

because they just don't have the ammo because Republicans

15:51

and Congress won't pass anything. You hear all the

15:53

bullets. All the time and again. That went from...

15:56

There was 20 and now it's 10. I

15:59

mean this thing is... having quicker than

16:01

Bitcoin? Oh, the GDP of the

16:03

NATO countries, of Russia, Iran, North

16:06

Korea, this coalition of masses of

16:08

evil, is 25 to one. Who

16:10

cares if Russia can fire

16:12

six, seven times more shells? I mean,

16:15

North Korea than Ukraine is. North Korea

16:18

provided more shells to Russia than the

16:20

entire Europe. Really? You're telling me that

16:22

this position is serious. Ukraine

16:25

is a bleeding, you know, defending

16:27

their country, freedom, NATO. And

16:31

also they're trying to stop this mania. And

16:35

the free world is still contemplating how we can deal

16:37

with that. And Putin, look

16:39

at him a couple of days ago,

16:41

he delivered his speech, and

16:43

he was happy. And all this

16:45

talks about, oh, let's wait for Russian people

16:48

to write. Navalny

16:50

tried. He tried to show that something

16:52

could be done in Russia. It was,

16:54

I'm not sure it was politically a

16:56

smart move, but you cannot criticize acts

16:58

of personal heroism. He paid with his

17:00

life that. They say he was not

17:02

put and had to pay. $300

17:04

billion of Russian money. Rose, what

17:07

are you waiting for? President Biden. There you go.

17:09

What are you waiting for, Biden? Take the money.

17:11

$300 billion, take the money. That's why Gary Kosbroff

17:13

is there. Put that

17:15

$300 billion. Damn it. By

17:18

the way, I found out that Zalensky

17:21

is no longer officially president of

17:23

Ukraine. What? Yeah,

17:25

they didn't have elections. The term is

17:27

up, and there's no

17:29

provision in the Ukrainian constitution, or

17:32

whatever they have, that

17:35

automatically extends his power.

17:38

So he actually, he can't really even sign

17:40

a peace treaty. He's not officially the president.

17:45

Just as a little side note there.

17:47

Yeah, this is, what do you

17:50

call it? A scam? No,

17:54

fine print. No, it is a technicality.

17:57

No, there is no fine. print.

18:01

It's no fine print. It's technicality. He still signed

18:03

the thing and nobody would say anything. What

18:07

they're making, they're not negotiating, they're not

18:09

talking about negotiating. It's

18:11

not even brought up by anybody even in

18:13

the news media. Nobody says anything about it.

18:16

No, because otherwise

18:19

our economy collapses unless we can start

18:21

a new war. Now

18:23

I think we're going to do Hezbollah but that's tiny.

18:26

This real thing is tiny, Hezbollah is tiny.

18:31

It's just too much of a bonanza. I don't see

18:33

how they can ever replace

18:35

it unless we go Iran. But

18:38

we need tanks and

18:41

this is what they like, tanks and

18:43

missiles and lots of bullets. Yeah, old

18:45

school stuff. Yeah, old school stuff. They

18:47

don't want to have something. Nuclear war

18:49

is no good. It's

18:52

no good. It'd be okay

18:54

for the rebuilding. Yeah,

18:56

but you get the... Cleanup crews. Yeah,

18:59

people you should read, was

19:03

it Diary of an Economic Hitman? Is it the diary?

19:06

Diary of an Economic Hitman? Confessions,

19:08

is it? Yeah, Confessions of an

19:10

Economic Hitman. The original version, not

19:12

the re-print, not the updated version.

19:15

John Perkins explains exactly how this goes.

19:19

And the rebuilding of Ukraine is already starting. They're

19:21

already starting in Kiev. That's

19:25

what some of the European money's for. And

19:27

meanwhile, Putin, of course, gave his annual

19:29

State of the Union address as covered

19:31

by the BBC. Vladimir Putin has been

19:34

giving his State of the Nation address.

19:36

He talked about the risks of a

19:38

nuclear war and said the West provoked

19:40

the war in Ukraine. I

19:42

will hear that in a moment. First of

19:45

all, let's take a look at some of

19:47

the claims he made. He said Russia is

19:49

gaining territory in what he insisted was a

19:51

defensive operation in Ukraine. He

19:53

thanked members of the armed forces fighting

19:55

in Ukraine and their families at home.

19:58

But he didn't mention what it might be. take for

20:00

Russia to end its military action

20:02

in Ukraine. And, nor did he

20:04

touch on what's been happening to

20:06

his political rivals, like the opposition

20:08

leader Alexei Navalny, while Vladimir Putin

20:10

had this message for Western countries

20:12

supporting Ukraine's military. They

20:16

are talking about

20:18

sending NATO military contingents

20:20

to Ukraine. But

20:23

we can recall what happened

20:25

to those who used to send their contingents

20:27

to our country. The consequences

20:30

for these potential intruders

20:33

will be much more tragic now.

20:43

They need to finally understand that we

20:45

too have weapons, and they know that,

20:47

I have just mentioned, we too have

20:49

weapons that can strike targets on their

20:52

territory. It's

20:54

everything that they're thinking of

20:56

now, everything that they use

20:58

to threaten us in the

21:00

world, that all this

21:04

is a real threat of nuclear

21:06

weapons being used which spell destruction

21:09

of civilization. Happy

21:12

times, happy times, Wod. Why

21:14

isn't he dead from cancer? Why

21:18

isn't he dead from part of the other ailments that

21:20

he had? Whatever else he had. Proposably

21:22

had, yeah. I

21:25

know there are body doubles of him because they've been

21:27

seen in the wild. So

21:30

then there was Alexei Navalny's funeral

21:32

in Moscow which was attended by

21:34

thousands of people. Deutsch

21:37

Vela had it, France 24 had

21:39

it, but CNN, oh no. We

21:41

were supposed to have CNN's Matthew

21:43

Chance at the site of Navalny's

21:45

funeral service. However, his signal

21:49

appears to be blocked. Oh no. Chief

21:51

international correspondent Clarissa Ward is joining us

21:54

now from London. Clarissa, we were able

21:56

to have Matthew talk with us a

21:58

little bit earlier on. in

22:00

the show show us some of

22:02

those crowds outside the funeral I

22:05

mean the world is watching what

22:07

are you watching today yes what are you

22:10

watching well at the moment we're not able

22:12

to watch very much because as you say

22:14

it appears that that live signal has been

22:16

jammed that's oh yeah the situation

22:19

facing Navalny's team this is this

22:21

is the new glitch that the

22:23

signal is being jammed who had

22:25

also been putting out a

22:27

live signal from the church it

22:29

was live streamed on Facebook today

22:32

is as much about who

22:34

is not there as who is there

22:36

who is not there is Alexei

22:39

Navalny's daughter Dasha his

22:41

son Zahar and his

22:43

wife Yulia Navalnya who

22:45

has been speaking publicly

22:48

and boldly against President Putin

22:51

since her husband was killed she

22:53

just addressed the European Parliament a few

22:55

days ago she met with President Biden

22:58

in San Francisco while she was visiting her daughter

23:00

Oh last week who is a student at

23:03

Stanford University and she has indicated

23:05

that she is really going to take

23:07

the mantle as it were as you

23:09

know a leading force

23:12

in Russia's opposition but very telling that she

23:14

is not there today and of course one

23:17

can only presume just how dangerous it would

23:19

be for her to even attempt to go

23:21

back to Russia at this stage Casey this

23:24

is so this whole report is just bull

23:26

crap there was no signal

23:28

jamming your stuff doesn't work CNN why

23:30

can't she go back is

23:33

she on the hit list or does she

23:35

have a scheduling conflict that

23:38

makes no sense that she can't go back for the

23:40

funeral I mean

23:43

they're not actually why is this funeral such

23:45

a big deal to any Americans whatsoever because

23:48

it's a let anybody in the world

23:50

what so Naval Navalny was a minor

23:53

character yeah yeah but you don't

23:55

understand media I

23:58

understand media there's

24:00

the quote everybody. Well

24:03

that's it, it's to make

24:05

it all scary, extra extra

24:08

scary. Yeah, well

24:11

no worries everybody, it's not gonna be

24:13

a nuclear war but there will be

24:15

more cool stuff that we need to

24:17

get into Ukraine and Schultz will buy.

24:20

He will buy. Thank

24:23

you. Four-Gone

24:26

conclusion. Well I don't think blowing up that bridge

24:28

is gonna be a good idea. They're not gonna

24:31

blow up the bridge. But

24:33

that's what they keep talking about. Well they

24:35

already tried that. No.

24:38

That didn't work out either. But they're not sincere about it,

24:41

that's what I mean. It's like if they really wanted to

24:43

blow up the bridge, it would have blown up the bridge.

24:46

Well you listen to the thing and

24:48

you can understand German, you yourself said

24:50

that it was Cavalier in the

24:52

way it was done and I'm thinking they're just

24:54

reading from a script for the purposes of getting

24:56

it on tape. Yeah, possibly. So they can roll

24:58

out the whole thing and make a big fuss.

25:00

It's amazing how much English words

25:02

they use. I'm always surprised by that when

25:05

I go to the Netherlands how much English

25:07

is infused into the language. You know they're

25:09

talking about QT, you know like and QA

25:12

and quality assurance and quality testing.

25:15

Yeah, yeah and I think he even said

25:17

but one of I think he once said boots on the

25:19

ground. I mean it's ridiculous. That's your

25:21

listening to our show. Well there you go.

25:24

The whole thing is ridiculous. It's just to

25:26

prop up the world. They need to get

25:28

Trump in real quick. Trump loves to buy

25:30

military stuff. He doesn't like war which is

25:32

good. Trump's even better. He gets all the

25:35

spending without the killing. Yes

25:40

he does. That's actually a skill. Yeah,

25:43

it's a benefit. I'm

25:45

all on board with that. Give

25:48

everybody jobs, build up your arsenal and

25:50

stop killing. That would be great. So

25:56

I collected some clips from and the reason

25:58

for a couple of reasons. Tucker

26:00

was on Lex Friedman, talking

26:03

about Russia and this is Russia stuff. It's

26:06

very interesting that you clip this. I'm surprised.

26:08

It's interesting to me too but the clips

26:10

I have are not what you'd expect. They're

26:13

mostly screwball clips. But the thing is-

26:15

Can we talk about Lex Friedman first

26:17

for a second? Where he comes

26:19

from? Why is he all of a sudden the guy?

26:23

Before you'd say that, I want to

26:25

say you said I believe it was

26:27

about Lex Friedman some months back that

26:30

he was moving in on

26:33

the hegemony of Joe Rogan's

26:35

long form interview style. And

26:38

that was who you were talking about, right? Lex Friedman?

26:41

Yes, correct. Well,

26:43

I've never seen him before. Well

26:45

he just appeared on the scene in

26:47

2018. Right,

26:53

doing long form interviews with

26:55

extremely high profile people.

26:59

Which is not something you can just

27:01

do. Well, here's what gave him his

27:04

rise to prominence. He

27:07

co-authored a non-peer reviewed

27:09

study which concluded

27:11

that drivers, he

27:13

worked at the MIT and the autonomous

27:15

driving department. The

27:18

non-peer reviewed study that concluded

27:20

that drivers remained focused while

27:23

using Tesla's semi-autonomous system. And

27:26

then he got boosted by

27:28

Elon Musk. So

27:31

I think that's how he rose

27:33

to prominence is Elon started boosting

27:35

him. Which

27:38

is in itself interesting. And

27:40

then all of a sudden he's getting- Joe

27:43

Rogan was on his show. Joe Rogan brought him like a

27:45

$10,000 watch as a gift

27:48

which I found interesting. What? Yes.

27:52

Yeah, Joe- Why?

27:56

I don't know. I don't know. I

27:58

mean I'm- I don't know who's

28:00

ten thousand all, but I'm at it Looks like a

28:03

pretty expensive watch. I thought

28:05

that was odd. That

28:07

that's very odd at the time. To the

28:09

guy, a good couple things. In

28:12

so far as competing with Joe Rogan, he

28:14

has no charisma at all. He

28:18

has the crows, crows, mother, men in black

28:20

and mean that literally like from from the

28:22

Matrix movie. That's what he looks like that

28:24

the charisma. He has nothing more, nothing less.

28:26

He has a pile of papers a dead wouldn't.

28:29

That. Would compete with Jen Psaki pile

28:31

of papers when she was press

28:33

secretary. Yeah, Said. He goes through

28:35

so the courses are prepared. Rogan I

28:38

is used as the Turner. I would

28:40

say Rogan is closer to Larry King

28:42

in the way he does interviews according

28:44

to go to in the troll room.

28:46

Joe and Lex have been friends for

28:48

close to a decade. Really?

28:53

Okay, So. How did they

28:55

become friends? I don't know. That

28:57

decade. That's a long time. Decades. He.

29:00

I consider was Er, Mit and his studies

29:02

on autonomous driving. The other guys a Hollywood

29:04

guy. Can

29:07

get pretty obscure. Okay, well whatever the

29:09

case, So he I will keep an

29:11

eye on him. So

29:13

there was some interesting stuff that was

29:16

in this interview with Tucker and ah,

29:19

Tucker's an easy guy. obviously an easy guys

29:21

interview cause is like a woman he can

29:23

tell us around our. Best

29:26

that. Solace

29:30

Lead so I had a super

29:32

suit ones here that were a

29:34

death for short clips. That

29:37

ah I thought were interesting.

29:39

It is a start with. we

29:42

get he was skipped in i'm only

29:44

one is who want whatever you must

29:46

succeed miss go with said tucker on

29:48

on the lawyers this was interesting on

29:50

my lawyers before i left and these

29:52

are people were for a big law

29:54

firm this is not box office of

29:56

the world my lawyer bob is himself

29:58

tucker said you're getting arrested do this

30:00

by the US government on sanctions violations."

30:03

And I said, well, I don't recognize

30:05

the legitimacy of that actually because I'm

30:07

American and I've lived here my

30:10

whole life and that's so outrageous that I'm happy

30:12

to face that risk because I so reject the

30:14

premise. Okay, I'm an American. I should have talked

30:16

to anyone I want to and I plan to

30:18

exercise that freedom, which I think I was born

30:21

with. And I gave them this

30:23

long, long lecture. They're like, we're just lawyers. But

30:26

that was – let me put

30:28

it this way. I don't know

30:30

how much you dealt with lawyers, but it

30:32

costs many thousands of dollars to get a

30:34

conclusion like that. Like they sent a whole

30:36

bunch of their summer associates or whatever. They

30:38

put a lot of people on this question,

30:40

checked a lot of precedent and I think

30:42

– and they sent me a 10-page memo

30:44

on it and their sincere conclusion was, do

30:47

not do this. And of course, it made

30:49

me mad, so I was lecturing on the phone and I had another

30:51

call with a head lawyer and he said, look, a lot

30:54

will depend on the questions that you

30:56

ask Putin. If your scene is

30:58

too nice to him, you could get arrested

31:00

when you come back. And I was

31:02

like, you're describing a fascist country, okay? You're

31:05

saying that the U.S. government will arrest me if I don't

31:07

ask the questions they want to ask? Is

31:09

that's what you're saying? Well, we just think based

31:11

on what's happened that that's possible. And so I'm

31:13

just telling you what happened. So you were okay

31:15

being arrested in Moscow and – I didn't think

31:17

I was arrested in – I didn't think for

31:19

a second. I mean, maybe – I

31:21

don't speak Russian. I'd never been there before.

31:25

Everything about the culture was brand new to me. You

31:27

know, ignorance does protect

31:30

you sort of when you have no freaking idea what's

31:32

going on and you're not worried about it. This has

31:35

happened to me many times. There's

31:37

a principle there that extends throughout life. So

31:39

it's completely possible that I was in grave peril and

31:41

didn't know it. It's like, how would I know it?

31:44

You know. I'm like a bumbling English

31:46

speaker from California. That's interesting.

31:48

He's never been to Russia? I

31:50

thought – well, there's a lot that

31:52

was interesting in that. But yet, there's a

31:54

guy – I Know

31:56

I felt the same – I mean, I've been to Russia.

31:59

You've been to Russia. Russia were kind of

32:01

the hours before the fall of Communism

32:03

who stood like Sam mine Me: yes

32:05

I was there. and eighty eight, eighty

32:07

nice Were semi worldly Guys were no

32:10

Tucker Carlson. Of

32:12

so I'm always surprised by guys like

32:14

Tucker Carlson at that Been a gold.

32:17

That. He sits on. He has.

32:20

Done things like never been to receive like

32:22

as this: If you're going to be Tucker

32:25

Carlson, you have been to Russia more than

32:27

once. you would think so. Ah. So

32:30

this was his first trip so he was flabbergasted

32:32

when he was. so he never got to see

32:34

what you got to see. I got to see

32:36

for example, before the fall of Communism the. Gum.

32:39

Store The G U M department

32:41

store which was the is this

32:44

giant monstrosity of us and what

32:46

the world? Supposedly the world's first

32:48

department store that has absolutely nothing

32:51

for sale. My favorite was we

32:53

did the Moscow Music Peace Festival.

32:55

We had this huge sistine camera

32:58

truck from Sin a video in

33:00

Holland who drove there and and

33:02

before everything went up to the

33:05

to the uplink the satellite uplink

33:07

and went into this gray. Boss

33:09

with curtains. Which. Literally

33:12

had the size of a Volkswagen boss

33:14

and that supposedly was the Kgb who

33:16

are they're monitoring the signal. It was

33:18

hilarious I was picking up the phone

33:20

I had us or to want to

33:23

area code dial tone from the west

33:25

would one truck and these attacks were

33:27

significantly of Vw bus gray with with

33:29

curtains There was nothing it was he

33:31

was. it was shambles. A

33:34

shambles, a toy, and and the only thing that

33:36

was really cool is that Moscow Hell's Angels that

33:38

we met at three in the morning. Fall.

33:41

And. To Cope apparently could

33:43

just roam around, do whatever they wanted.

33:46

I send out a book about that. The A

33:48

you should and as I think the. We.

33:51

Have a publisher days you persist in did

33:53

you have a Ghost Rider those the course

33:55

we have a best decisions and rice I

33:57

can't write. I've tried to so many times.

34:00

I fail fail at writing. I'm

34:02

I'm A. I'm of odd. I'm

34:04

of verbal communicator. Mean

34:07

his budget me been up like the eggs book

34:09

gaitan as you I told her to. See

34:12

call because yeah that does. Community is

34:15

a website. I get a free Pdf

34:17

is live it up. Three out. By

34:19

the way, we have no agenda. Finally,

34:21

you think that the took forever. the

34:23

vinegar bug effects were waiting for that.

34:25

He always did. What do we have

34:27

no agenda? What? The No Agenda

34:30

Primer: the A B C's both dead j were down

34:32

and she was in high school. That's

34:35

a book. Points. You

34:37

remember is done is so long ago

34:39

has is not is up for sale.

34:42

Is going to be she's going to the printer

34:44

so to become an hour Dude we have another

34:46

website the I Gave You publishing.com which will have

34:48

that house has no memory of. has ever you

34:50

know he wanted to buy the book now years

34:52

but we don't know how to price it. Fast

34:56

Adam she says she wants to price for

34:58

thirty dollar. Know that know three hundred dollars

35:00

And ready I says I said now yes

35:02

thirty three Thirty three It sell like hotcakes.

35:07

Said kids bought take.

35:09

My friend Rossi, Mary, Elle they just

35:11

had a kid to this morning Roman

35:13

is born. I will buy a thirty

35:16

three dollar thirty three cents kids books

35:18

for Roman. Villa

35:21

was hoping this is something code saying.

35:23

so what you wanted more you want

35:26

to charge more? No such thing I

35:28

think it's it's a great items and

35:30

little biased. Ah man I'm and will

35:33

all silent. Food. hey,

35:35

my name and was thirty for

35:37

thirty three thirty three metre sign

35:39

Exit strategy his books. Who would

35:42

have thought so. The other thing

35:44

about the yeah this this particular

35:46

piece. Was. The ideas

35:48

at a top law firm would tell you

35:50

not to go to Russia. The interview potent

35:53

as a journalist. why have some kids in

35:55

my been arrested when you come back. to

35:58

those what kind of lawyers are Okay,

36:00

so there's something else, there's something going

36:02

on here with a prominent person in

36:05

Fredericksburg. I'm not going to mention it. But

36:07

the Department of Justice is going after

36:10

this person to an incredible degree. I

36:12

talk to this person regularly and... We

36:15

already know who it is. And it's trumped up... No, we

36:17

haven't discussed it on the show. No, I... And

36:20

it's quote unquote trumped up charges that should

36:22

give you a clue. And

36:25

the lawyers, it's unbelievable

36:27

to me what they're doing. I'm

36:29

like, dude, they're just making up

36:31

work here. And they're just

36:34

scaring you into stuff. You have nothing to

36:36

fear. They're just

36:38

scaring this person into, oh,

36:40

well, this could happen or that can happen.

36:42

And like, what? It's

36:45

incredible how bad in

36:48

general the legal profession has

36:50

become. And it's millions of

36:53

dollars, millions. This

36:55

is just a gouged class. Yes.

36:59

Yes. And I'll bet you Tucker said thousands and thousands.

37:01

I bet he paid $100,000 for that 10-page opinion. Because

37:07

it wasn't Bob's law firm. By the way,

37:10

Bob is our lawyer. I met

37:12

him in Fredericksburg, Robert, our

37:14

constitutional lawyer. That's Bob's lawyer. He's a

37:16

great guy. Cost? Zero.

37:20

That's why it's Bob. Yeah. Oh,

37:22

you're right. Good point. All

37:25

right. So anyway, so I found that to

37:27

be a distressing. Yes, very distressing. I thought

37:29

that was distressing. But more distressing is this

37:31

clip. This is him on Snowden. But

37:34

then there's another fact, which

37:36

is that I was being surveilled by the US government,

37:38

intensely surveilled by the US government. And this came out.

37:41

They admitted it. The NSA admitted it a couple

37:43

of years ago that they were up in my

37:45

Signal account. And then they leaked it to the

37:47

nearest. They did that again before I left. And

37:50

I know that because two New York Times reporters, one

37:52

of whom I actually like a lot, said,

37:55

oh, you're going and called other people. Oh, he's going to

37:58

interview Putin. I hadn't told anybody that. with

38:00

my wife, two producers, that's it. So

38:03

they got that from the government. Then I'm over there

38:06

and of course I want to see Snowden, who I

38:08

admire. And

38:10

so we have a mutual friend, so I

38:12

got his text and come on over and

38:14

Snowden does not want publicity at all. And

38:17

so, but I really wanted to have dinner with him. So

38:19

we had dinner in my hotel room at

38:22

the Four Seasons in Moscow and... Four

38:24

Seasons? Hold on a second. Hold on a

38:26

second. How can

38:28

the Four Seasons be operating in Moscow?

38:31

Is that not a violation of all sanctions?

38:35

Sounds like it. Everybody had to close. McDonald's,

38:39

Burger King. But

38:42

yet Four Seasons is operational. The

38:44

Four Seasons in Moscow. And

38:47

I tried to convince him, I'd love to do an

38:49

interview, shoot it on my iPhone. I'd

38:52

love to take a picture together and put it

38:55

on the internet because I just want to show

38:57

support because I think he's been railroaded. He had

38:59

no interest in living in

39:01

Russia. No intention of being in Russia. The whole

39:03

thing is alive. Anyway, whatever. All this stuff.

39:05

And he just said, respectfully, I'd rather not anyone know that

39:08

we met. The

39:10

only reason I'm telling you this... Wait a minute. Why is

39:12

Tucker saying it now? He explains it.

39:14

Oh, I'm sorry. I'd rather not anyone know that we

39:16

met. Great. The only

39:18

reason I'm telling you this is because...

39:21

And I didn't tell anybody and I didn't text

39:23

it to anybody. Okay. Except

39:26

him. Semaphore. Semaphore

39:31

runs this piece saying reporting

39:36

information that got from the US intel

39:38

agencies leaking against me using my money

39:40

and my name in a supposedly free

39:42

country. They run this piece saying

39:45

I'd met with Snowden. Like it was a crime or

39:47

something. So again, my interest

39:50

is in the United States and preserving freedoms here, the ones

39:52

that I grew up with. And if

39:54

you have a media establishment that acts

39:56

as an auxiliary of or

39:58

acts as employees of... the national security

40:00

state, you don't have a free country. Oh,

40:04

hello. Wake up call for Tucker Carlson. Wow,

40:08

Tucker. Do you not

40:10

know that everything is recorded and all they

40:12

have to do is just retrieve it when

40:14

they want to? He

40:16

doesn't mention, you know, the

40:19

amendment that removes the warrant

40:22

requirement for a FISA request.

40:25

Oh my God, someone educate Tucker. Well,

40:28

I think he says

40:31

later that he's already talked to the

40:33

intel people about the fact that everything

40:35

signal all these crazy systems

40:37

that you can, you know, supposedly are

40:39

secure, aren't secure. They got by back

40:42

doors and everything is being recorded and

40:44

he kind of knows that. So I

40:46

think he did the story so he

40:48

could slam Ben Smith

40:50

and Semaphore which is a really

40:53

dubious news operation which is out

40:55

there. By the way, what you're

40:58

saying about signal is quite

41:00

an accusation because, you know, they're

41:02

big nonprofit and they're very, very

41:07

adamant about how secure their system is.

41:10

And with that, I'd like to mention

41:12

everybody, if you're using protonmail for some

41:15

reason and I'm not against it, protonmail

41:17

has decided to send everything

41:19

to me encrypted which

41:22

is great. Just if you've had

41:24

an email conversation with me, I have

41:29

my encryption public key in my

41:31

signature file, protonmail

41:33

automatically encrypts your email to me

41:35

which is new. The problem

41:37

is if you don't include your public key,

41:39

I can't reply to you securely.

41:43

But that's a new thing. I found

41:45

that very interesting, it started happening at the beginning

41:47

of this week. Interesting. Interesting.

41:52

So anyway,

41:55

he goes on about this

41:58

meeting he had with Snowden. and

42:00

it was blowing out. Yeah,

42:02

well of course semaphore. Anything

42:05

that Professor Scott Galloway likes reading,

42:07

it's got to be compromised. He

42:10

and Kara Swisher, I was like, oh semaphore,

42:12

I love reading semaphore. Well of course, it's

42:15

run by your intel agencies, we got it. I

42:18

don't think it's that good. No,

42:20

that's why they read it. They're not informed, hello.

42:25

Okay so let's. Okay.

42:28

Kara and Scott, man. What am I

42:31

doing? I don't get it. So

42:34

here he is

42:36

talking about. This

42:41

is kind of funny because like I

42:43

said, he's a chatterbox so he can

42:45

go on and on and he does

42:47

a good self-effacing thing here which is,

42:49

he does it so casually. He's really,

42:51

over time I've actually come to admire

42:53

Tucker even though he's, like you said,

42:55

I think he's like foolish crap

42:58

about a lot of stuff and like

43:01

you said, I'm a gas. Oh,

43:03

oh, gabbling. And

43:06

so here he is with Putin,

43:09

on Putin with a little

43:11

bit on here and he goes on about this a

43:13

lot more and I'll explain what he said. Certain

43:17

topics. I don't know what it would mean

43:19

to ask a tough question, clarifying questions I

43:21

suppose they would. I guess. I

43:23

just wanted him to talk. I just wanted to

43:25

hear his perspective. Again, I've probably

43:28

asked more asshole questions than like

43:30

any living American. You know,

43:32

as has been noted correctly, I'm a

43:35

dick by my nature and so

43:38

I don't, I just feel at this stage

43:40

in my life I didn't need to prove that I could,

43:42

like, fight him and put me into the question. Sure. For

43:44

sure. You know, I think if I had been, you

43:47

know, 34 instead of 54, I definitely would have done

43:50

that because I would have thought this is really about me and I need

43:52

to prove myself. No, I just,

43:54

there's a war going on that is wrecking

43:58

the U.S. economy. away

44:00

and at a scale people do not understand the US

44:02

dollar is going away. That

44:04

was of course inevitable ultimately

44:06

because everything dies including currencies

44:08

but that death, that

44:10

process of death has been accelerated exponentially

44:12

by the behavior of the Biden administration

44:15

and the US Congress particularly the sanctions

44:18

and people's donors don't understand what the ramifications of that

44:20

are. The ramifications are poverty in the United States. It

44:25

goes into a long diet which I

44:27

could have clipped about the

44:29

sanctions and how it's driving Russia

44:31

to China and also it's bolstering

44:35

the BRICS. I

44:37

think that's a fair statement. And

44:40

the BRICS which now have like about

44:43

25 other countries that want to join.

44:47

They don't have the

44:49

combined GDP of the

44:52

United States and Europe but with

44:54

China and its GDP and

44:57

then all these little countries deciding

45:00

to put their

45:02

eggs in one basket and then create

45:04

their own currency is a huge threat.

45:07

Yes, well Saudi Arabia is in,

45:09

the Saudis are in, they're in the BRICS now. All

45:12

these people and he

45:15

really thinks this is a major

45:17

concern. Now typically we've always

45:20

worn our way out of these situations

45:23

the United States does because we're

45:25

smarter in terms of the

45:27

finances and entrepreneurship, a lot of things.

45:31

The way we use capitalism is a

45:33

little more aggressive than other people. We've

45:35

hoodwinked our people into just letting them

45:38

bring them. We have hoodwinked the world

45:40

over and over again and we haven't

45:42

stopped yet. No, I mean the hoodwink

45:44

is great. Everyone's like boy, oh dollar.

45:47

But I think the mistake was kicking

45:49

Russia off a swift and if they

45:51

do what this nut job cost per

45:54

office says, if they steal the $300

45:56

billion that will be a tipping

46:00

point for the US dollar system. That would be a

46:02

mistake. Yeah, it would be a big mistake. But it

46:04

hasn't happened yet. I'm on the side that it shouldn't

46:06

happen, it won't happen. I agree. No,

46:09

I agree with you. Oh, you do? Okay. I

46:11

think they're going to do it. I don't think they're going to do it. Okay. If

46:15

they do it, this is a grave error. Yeah.

46:18

No, I agree with you that's a grave

46:20

error but I just think that that's stupid

46:22

or arrogant. They are. Maybe they're

46:24

getting it. Arrogance is the right word. Yeah,

46:26

arrogant. There's a lot

46:29

of arrogance, especially in this particular

46:31

administration of relative dummies.

46:34

Yes. They're dumb. They're

46:36

a dumb administration. They're

46:38

dumb. Well, the press

46:42

secretary, Jean-Pierre, is a perfect example.

46:44

She just seems stupid. She's a

46:46

troll. She's a literal troll. She

46:48

looks like a troll too. Her

46:51

job is, you know, I have a

46:53

trolls. Trolls

46:55

troll because they're just projecting their

46:57

rejection, you know, their own rejection

47:00

in like the rejections they've received. They're projecting

47:02

that and that is what she's doing and

47:05

she's good at it. She trolls

47:07

the media and people everything. Do

47:10

you really think she's stupid? She

47:12

is trolling. I've seen

47:14

her on, I remember seeing her on MSNBC

47:19

years before she became the press secretary

47:21

and she is genuinely stupid. Okay.

47:24

Not all trolls. They

47:26

wouldn't live under bridges if they were smart. I mean, we'll

47:28

be honest about it. Yeah, there's other things to do with

47:30

your life. So the last clip

47:32

is a little bit about Navalny and it's

47:34

not, I don't think it kind of plays

47:36

in their earlier clues, but it's just not

47:38

that as interesting as the lawyer clip and

47:40

the Snowden clip. It's just a minute. We

47:43

can listen to it. But do we know how

47:45

we died? The short answer, no, we don't. Now

47:48

if I had to guess, I would say killing

47:50

Navalny during the Munich Security Conference

47:52

in the middle of a debate

47:55

over $60 billion in

47:57

Ukraine funding, maybe the Russians are

47:59

dumb. I didn't get that vibe at all.

48:02

I don't see it, but maybe they

48:04

killed him. I mean, they certainly put him in prison, which I'm

48:06

against. But here's

48:08

what I do know is that we don't know.

48:10

And so when Chuck Schumer stands up and- Wait

48:12

a minute, he says, here's what I do know

48:14

that we don't know. What does he say? Certainly

48:16

put him in prison, which I'm against. But

48:19

here's what I do know is that we don't know.

48:21

And so when Chuck Schumer stands up and- Rawr! Joe

48:24

Biden reads some card in front of him with

48:27

lines about Navalny. It's like, I'm allowed to laugh

48:29

at that because it's absurd. You don't know. I

48:31

mean, there's a lot of interesting ideas about if

48:34

he was killed, who killed him. Because it could

48:36

be Putin. It

48:38

could be somebody in Russia who is not Putin. It

48:41

could be Ukrainians, because it would

48:44

benefit the war. Pfizer! It

48:46

could be Putin's daughter in Moscow. So yeah,

48:48

that's possible. And it could be-

48:50

Pfizer. And the United States could also be

48:52

involved. I don't think we kill people

48:54

in other countries to affect election outcomes. Oh, wait,

48:56

no, we do it a lot. Pfizer

48:59

killed him. We all know this. They

49:02

never mentioned Pfizer. Of course not. Of course

49:04

not. That's because of the control opportunities. Well,

49:06

I mean, the blood clots are caused by

49:08

any of the vaccines. I mean, even

49:11

J&J would have that issue in AstraZeneca for

49:13

sure. While we're on the

49:15

military industrial complex, Defense Secretary Austin,

49:18

if it's really Defense Secretary Austin-

49:20

Hey, I still haven't seen him

49:22

standing. That's

49:25

my key. Look, I'm waiting to see him standing

49:27

because he's a big tall guy. Although

49:29

I think you could have had the leg operate, you

49:31

know, that leg operation with his stretchers. Sure.

49:33

Yeah, he's been in hospital long enough

49:36

for them to stretch him out. Yeah,

49:38

absolutely. Absolutely. Here's an easy report. Defense

49:40

Secretary Lloyd Austin in the hot seat today.

49:43

It was a failure of leadership. House

49:45

Republicans grimly for not telling the

49:47

White House he was diagnosed with

49:49

prostate cancer, underwent surgery for it,

49:52

and weeks later was hospitalized with

49:54

serious complications. I find it very

49:56

concerning that the Secretary could be

49:59

hospitalized. hospitalized three

50:01

days without anyone

50:03

else in the administration even

50:05

noticing either the president is

50:07

that aloof or

50:10

you are irrelevant which

50:13

one is it mr secretary it's

50:15

neither democrats we're forgiving you want

50:17

to know what accountability is accountability

50:19

is having to come and sit

50:21

in front of people and their

50:23

outrage and their drama the secretary

50:25

emphasizing that someone was always in

50:27

control there was a never-elapse in

50:30

authorities or command and control but acknowledging

50:33

a breakdown in the notification process we did

50:35

not handle this right and i did not

50:37

handle it right although austin

50:39

took responsibility he also said he

50:42

assumed his staff would manage it

50:44

i never directed anyone to keep my hospitalization

50:46

from the white house on monday the pentagon

50:49

released in a summary of a classified

50:51

review that blamed the lack of notification

50:53

in part on a lack of written

50:55

guidance but also on staff not wanting

50:57

to pry into austin's health the

51:00

review recommending new procedures if any american

51:02

worker did what you did they

51:05

would be fired and the question still remains

51:08

why did it take the pentagon three

51:10

days to tell president biden his defense

51:13

secretary was in intensive care

51:15

it's unbelievable that they do news

51:17

about this who cares it's

51:20

a show the whole thing is a show and it's

51:23

a bad show no i

51:25

disagree 100 with this 100 100

51:27

i'm sorry you think it's a good show i disagree with you 95 and 25 do you

51:29

think it's a

51:33

good show i think they

51:35

know he's dead and they're

51:39

just trying to humiliate the

51:41

administration by bringing this out

51:44

and and asking

51:46

him stupid questions that they know the

51:48

answer to well let's see what abc

51:50

did with this uh with this show

51:52

it was the first time the defense

51:54

secretary appeared before congress after failing to

51:57

alert the white house about his prostate

51:59

cancer surgery and his

52:01

emergency hospitalization days later. I did

52:03

not handle it right. As

52:06

you know, I've apologized, including directly to the

52:08

president. And I take full

52:10

responsibility. Austin insisting there was no

52:13

lapse in the chain of command,

52:15

given that his deputy took control,

52:17

but Republican lawmakers showed Austin

52:20

no mercy. Someone needs to

52:22

be held accountable. Congressman

52:25

Jim Banks calling it an

52:27

embarrassment. Either the president is

52:29

that aloof, or

52:31

you are irrelevant. Which one is

52:34

it, Mr. Secretary? That

52:36

the president would go three days without knowing that

52:38

his secretary of defense is

52:40

not on the job. It's neither. The

52:43

president is not aloof. Austin said he'd

52:45

never do that. What's this aloof business?

52:47

Let's look up, let's go. Hold

52:50

it. That's a loop. I

52:55

know what aloof means, and the way they're using it

52:57

is wrong. Aloof, not

52:59

friendly or forthcoming, cool and distant. What

53:01

does that got to do with him

53:03

knowing whether or not the defense secretary

53:06

is there? I think he said a

53:08

goof. Is he a goof? Oh,

53:10

the president said a goof. Oh,

53:12

yeah, that would be it. It's not on

53:14

the job. It's neither. The

53:17

president is not aloof. Austin said

53:19

he never told staff his absence

53:21

was because of a scheduled surgery,

53:23

or that he was later rushed

53:25

back by ambulance because of complications.

53:27

When did your staff find out you were at

53:29

the hospital? Um,

53:33

I don't know when... Oh, do you hear that?

53:37

The very beginning of that, he lost his

53:39

original voice, the

53:41

real voice. Here we go. Man, this, I

53:43

mean, you're worse than I am with

53:45

the moon landing on this thing. No.

53:48

Here we go. Complications. When did your staff

53:50

find out you were at the hospital? Um,

53:54

yeah. Uh, that was the

53:56

real, the actor. I

53:58

don't know when, uh, when... You don't know

54:00

when you told your staff that you were at the

54:02

hospital. Are

54:05

you kidding me? But Democrats

54:07

defended Austin, arguing Congress's focus needs

54:09

to be passing a stalled military

54:11

aid package for Ukraine. I would

54:13

challenge any member on the other

54:16

side of this aisle to claim

54:18

that the secretary of defense, not

54:20

fully informing the president for three

54:22

days, is somehow more important than

54:25

walking away that obligation that we

54:27

have made. And that the whole

54:29

world is watching us on. The

54:31

whole world is waiting. The

54:36

whole world is watching us. No,

54:38

that's the military industrial complex watching

54:41

you. It's the CEOs

54:43

of Boeing and Lockheed. Yes,

54:45

yes. They're watching you. Meanwhile,

54:49

speaking of the president being aloof

54:51

or a goof, Dr.

54:54

Jen, she's

54:57

America's favorite doctor. She's

55:00

typically on ABC in the morning. She

55:03

stayed at the studio a little longer and she went

55:05

to The View. We

55:09

know The View is very scripted. The View, it's

55:11

admitted. Everything they say

55:14

is scripted. There's very little

55:16

room for ad-libbing. And Dr. Jen came

55:18

on with a message which was, I

55:21

think, a message for

55:23

the American people. I think, in

55:25

my medical opinion, first of all, how does he compare

55:27

to a 54-year-old woman? I

55:29

couldn't do that job. This is regarding

55:32

his clean bill of health at Walter

55:35

Reed. Biden's energy level,

55:37

because you know he sharpest attack. Yes,

55:41

sharpest attack. I think, in my

55:43

medical opinion, first of all, how does he compare

55:45

to a 54-year-old woman? I couldn't do that job

55:48

of being president. There

55:50

were some glaring omissions in that physical

55:52

report. It was about seven pages. We

55:55

all got a copy of it from

55:58

the president's physician. what's called

56:00

a review of systems anytime we do a

56:02

physical exam on someone. That

56:05

includes not only just general

56:07

neurologic evaluation but a mental

56:09

evaluation, a screening for depression

56:11

or psychiatric illness, mental illness,

56:14

anxiety, not in there, cognitive

56:17

exam, not in there, genitourinary exam,

56:19

prostate exam, not in there, we

56:21

can all... So what did they

56:23

check on him? It was comprehensive

56:25

in his doctor's

56:28

opinion but what was released

56:34

to the public if you're a

56:36

health care professional you know what

56:39

things have not been in there you

56:41

know so again... Maybe they were done but not released?

56:44

I would like to think that they were

56:47

probably done but not released. The

56:50

question is can he do the job and it looks like

56:52

he can. I am not his

56:54

physician but you know again he

56:56

does have a qualified physician and it was

56:58

a thorough report but some

57:01

things missing. Come on this

57:03

is signaling that the guys

57:05

have dead. America's favorite doctor

57:07

saying you know well you know I

57:10

didn't see a review of systems. That's

57:14

a message. The view is a

57:16

messaging system. That's a good

57:18

catch on that clip. It's concerning,

57:22

very concerning. Well everybody

57:24

knows what's going on. It's not like a

57:26

big shock to anybody that bites you've got

57:28

one foot in the grave. I love that.

57:32

Did I forget to clip that? I love where he had

57:35

phony Maloney sitting at the fireplace,

57:37

Maloney of Italy and he's

57:39

talking about dropping aid to Gaza and then

57:41

all of a sudden he starts yapping about

57:43

Ukraine and she's the funniest. She's like looking

57:45

at her paper like what's he talking about?

57:47

And she's looking at him like what's wrong

57:49

with you man? You're talking about Ukraine all

57:51

of a sudden? That was

57:54

crazy. Here

57:57

play this is my last Ukraine clip.

58:00

This is Trudeau. This

58:04

clip has been sent to us several times and

58:06

for some reason neither of us clipped it until

58:08

now. We know that Russia must win

58:10

this war. It's a story that Ukraine must

58:13

win this war against Russia.

58:15

Oh, poor guy. Can't catch a

58:17

break. He doesn't

58:20

deserve a break, that guy. Can't catch

58:22

a break, man. Let's

58:25

see. Where

58:28

do you want to go next? I mean, there's a lot

58:30

of stuff happening that people are supposed to be very

58:32

upset about. Well, I have a

58:34

series of clips which

58:37

show you that the phony

58:39

baloney, this is a four

58:41

clips and they're not long.

58:45

But this is a photo showing

58:47

the phony baloney nature of PBS

58:49

NewsHour debate between Brooks

58:51

and Capehart who kind of fight

58:53

to be in agreement with each

58:56

other. The only ratings this show

58:58

has is our show. Yeah.

59:03

I believe that to be true. Okay. So

59:06

this is the so-called public broadcast

59:08

systems in America with a so-called

59:10

point counterpoint right

59:12

left red blue discussion.

59:17

So let's start with Capehart on

59:19

immigration. Flub one. President,

59:22

the sitting president of the United States

59:25

in conjunction with the Senate

59:27

majority leader Chuck Schumer, along

59:29

with one of the most conservative members of

59:32

the Senate. Oh, my gosh,

59:34

I can't believe I'm spacing on his Langford. Like

59:37

from Oklahoma. They

59:40

sat down and hammered out a

59:42

deal after the president went before the nation

59:44

and said, everything is on the table.

59:47

I'm willing to negotiate. They negotiated. They

59:49

came up with a bill that bits

59:52

and pieces of it were leaking

59:54

out. That was so bad from

59:56

the president's base perspective that they

59:58

were raising hell about if this becomes

1:00:00

law, this is going to set immigration policy

1:00:02

back for a long time. But the president

1:00:05

thought we need to do something. They come

1:00:07

up with the bill and

1:00:09

what happened? Donald Trump made

1:00:11

a phone call or put

1:00:14

out some social media posts. They could do

1:00:16

it. I love, I love

1:00:18

this, this, this meme that even, I mean,

1:00:21

everyone is repeating it. Donald Trump stopped

1:00:23

this bill. Oh, how

1:00:27

does Donald Trump control everything?

1:00:30

He made a phone call. He made a

1:00:32

post. But here's what you really heard in

1:00:34

this clip. By the way, he made a

1:00:36

perfect phone call. So

1:00:39

here's what you heard in this clip. I get the joke.

1:00:41

Yeah. Okay. Here's

1:00:43

what you heard in this clip. He couldn't

1:00:45

remember Langford's name and it shook

1:00:47

him. Because he's

1:00:49

an operative and he should have known better.

1:00:52

He's an operative and he should know better

1:00:54

and he's and he thinks of himself as

1:00:56

slick. Oh, okay. And so when

1:00:58

he, so now it starts to,

1:01:01

and now it's eating at him and you're going

1:01:03

to hear some good stuff coming up. He's going

1:01:05

to fall apart. He's going to fall apart here,

1:01:07

right? Because he was going with clip two. Republicans

1:01:10

refused to take yes for

1:01:12

an answer and gave

1:01:14

the president, gave president Biden the perfect

1:01:16

thing to go before the nation and

1:01:18

say, I'm trying. I

1:01:21

was part of this deal. They,

1:01:23

I gave them basically everything they wanted

1:01:25

and they still said no. Those people

1:01:27

are not serious. And I think if

1:01:30

he hammers that message time

1:01:32

and time again, I think it will, I think it

1:01:34

will break through. Oh,

1:01:37

they didn't give anything that the Republicans wanted.

1:01:39

That bill's a piece of crap and it

1:01:41

didn't address the pretty much anything.

1:01:43

It's not the one that Chuck Schumer voted no

1:01:46

on. Yes. When Chuck Schumer

1:01:49

wrote and voted no on. But if

1:01:51

Chuck Schumer had voted, yes, it would

1:01:53

have passed. No. What

1:01:55

does it make any difference? Well, actually, yes, it would

1:01:57

have passed. It would have passed because it was 49. to

1:02:00

50 with the vote. And it's my

1:02:02

understanding that Schumer that

1:02:04

in order to bring a bill up again,

1:02:06

he had to vote no. Someone...

1:02:09

That's the thesis. I've heard it a million

1:02:11

times. But when is it going to be

1:02:13

brought up? When does that ever happen? Did

1:02:15

they bring a failed bill up again? That

1:02:18

is a nonsense thesis. And

1:02:20

why did Elizabeth Warren vote no? She

1:02:23

could have voted yes. Well, she's a stooge. All

1:02:25

his stooge is voted no. She's a stooge. She's a

1:02:27

stooge. He's a

1:02:29

stooge who hurt Americans with these bogus

1:02:32

over-the-counter hearing aids. It's bad for

1:02:34

you. I hate her for that.

1:02:36

I really... Wow. I

1:02:38

mean, of course, I pray for her. Man.

1:02:41

But man, she's bad. That's a call back. I get

1:02:44

it. Yeah, she's bad. Yes. All

1:02:46

right. We move on to clip three. Do

1:02:49

the thing which I think the British have done,

1:02:51

which is to say we're going to stop the asylum

1:02:53

process until we can digest all the people who have

1:02:55

already in the system. And that'll

1:02:57

at least try to impose some order, because if there's

1:02:59

just chaos, it's going to be just bad

1:03:01

news for Biden. But the only problem is, and that

1:03:04

would be a great thing to do, David, but

1:03:07

there's no money. One of the

1:03:09

things about that Senate bill was that it

1:03:11

was giving funding to allow the Customs and

1:03:13

Border Patrol to do the things you

1:03:15

were just saying. So the chaos

1:03:17

will continue, not because the president

1:03:20

isn't doing enough, but because the

1:03:23

Senate can't pass a bill that would make

1:03:25

it possible for the president to do what

1:03:27

he wants to do, but also for Republicans

1:03:30

to get done what they say needs to

1:03:32

be done for years now.

1:03:35

Okay. So he's

1:03:37

losing it. And

1:03:39

he has to be framed out by the moderator. Now,

1:03:42

what Brooks mentioned, which was

1:03:44

to stop it and let's

1:03:47

just process the people we've got before

1:03:49

we keep letting tens of thousands more

1:03:51

people in. This guy had no answer

1:03:53

for that. And now here it

1:03:55

comes. Here comes what's really

1:03:57

going on on this pro on P.

1:04:00

with this guy in particular. Let

1:04:02

me ask you this because the

1:04:04

president is weighing some executive action,

1:04:07

absent congressional action that would allow

1:04:09

him to tighten asylum rules. So

1:04:11

if there is a problem in both sides, say that

1:04:13

there is a problem at the southern border and he

1:04:15

has the authority to tighten the asylum rules, why not

1:04:17

do it? What's he waiting for? I

1:04:19

mean, I wonder, does he really have the power? I

1:04:23

wonder if the White House, and you should ask

1:04:25

me that question beforehand so I could have made

1:04:27

some calls to the White House to see what

1:04:29

they're doing. Wow,

1:04:32

I need to call the White House, get my

1:04:34

talking points. Wow. Can

1:04:36

you believe what he just said? Yes, I

1:04:38

think this discredits any more clips from them

1:04:40

ever again on the show. I'll

1:04:43

tell you this, after that he realized

1:04:45

what he said, I don't have any more

1:04:47

clips because it would have gotten tedious, but

1:04:51

he realized what he just did.

1:04:53

He said that I need to

1:04:56

talk to the White House. Not

1:04:58

much of an analyst really, I have to let the

1:05:00

White House tell me what to say. We should, I

1:05:02

told me that later, earlier, I should have known, whoa,

1:05:04

no. Oh

1:05:07

man. He was upset after that.

1:05:09

He was fumbling and mumbling, he

1:05:11

knew what he did, he couldn't

1:05:14

take it back. No. It

1:05:17

was a humiliation and that whole

1:05:20

segment, you're basically right. This segment

1:05:22

is a humiliation, it is not

1:05:24

news analysis, it's what does the

1:05:26

White House tell me to say,

1:05:28

let me say it. What

1:05:31

good is that? We can just listen to the White

1:05:33

House for that. Well, here's what the White House said

1:05:35

on February 29th, there's a screenshot in the show

1:05:38

notes just to make sure in case they decide to

1:05:40

change it. February 29th,

1:05:42

fact sheet, impact

1:05:44

of bipartisan border agreement

1:05:46

funding on border operations.

1:05:50

So this is about the bill and as it

1:05:52

says here, listen to this. The

1:05:55

bill also includes $1.4 billion

1:05:57

for cities and cities. states

1:06:01

who are providing critical services

1:06:03

to newcomers and

1:06:05

would expedite work permits for people who

1:06:07

are in the country and qualify. There

1:06:09

it is, newcomers. We

1:06:12

didn't know if it would be called visitors or

1:06:15

the – but they're just

1:06:17

taking newcomers as illegal immigrants.

1:06:20

Newcomers. Newcomers. There

1:06:23

it is. And

1:06:26

we were joking about it just two weeks ago.

1:06:29

We were joking about how I have this

1:06:31

sheet here. This is one of the CPR

1:06:33

news of Denver. Talked about

1:06:35

how they're going to do it. We're making

1:06:37

a language style change that we hope will

1:06:40

humanize people arriving in Colorado from the border.

1:06:43

What border in Colorado? They're

1:06:45

being shipped in. Yes. For

1:06:47

the past year and a half, Denverite

1:06:49

and Colorado Public Radio have been following

1:06:51

the stories of people arriving from the

1:06:54

border. Many of them travel through multiple

1:06:56

countries, multiple, risking their

1:06:58

lives and well-being to get into

1:07:00

the United States. We've

1:07:04

aired stories of news items on the radio. The

1:07:07

word migrant has been featured prominently

1:07:10

as a blanket term and it

1:07:12

goes on and says stop using migrant. Oh,

1:07:14

what do we have to use now? Newcomer?

1:07:18

New immigrants. No,

1:07:20

I just call them nimmigrants. So

1:07:23

they wanted to call them new immigrants, not

1:07:25

migrants. Or illegals. That

1:07:32

was like a month ago. You

1:07:34

have the new one, newcomers. Let's

1:07:38

move to newcomers and put that in the

1:07:40

style guide and use that. Yeah,

1:07:42

newcomers. It's one word. Newcomers,

1:07:45

one word. So

1:07:47

there was an interesting media

1:07:49

moment, surprise, as

1:07:52

both President Biden and

1:07:54

former President Trump went to

1:07:56

the border on the same day, two different

1:07:58

spots on the border. order, of course. And

1:08:01

here's Ed O'Keefe from CBS to report. The

1:08:03

president and the former president who wants to

1:08:05

replace him in the White House played the

1:08:07

blame game today along the U.S.-Mexico border. Blame

1:08:09

game. This is a Biden invasion over the

1:08:11

past three years. President Biden said it was

1:08:13

Donald Trump who urged House Republicans to kill

1:08:15

the bill that would have beefed up security

1:08:17

at the border. It's time for the speakers

1:08:19

and some of my Republican friends in Congress

1:08:22

who are blocking this bill to

1:08:24

show a little spine. After a

1:08:26

record number of illegal crossings last year, President

1:08:28

Biden, who toured the border in Brownsville, Texas,

1:08:30

is trying to show he's addressing an issue that

1:08:32

more than 60 percent of voters

1:08:34

call a very serious concern. Just hours before

1:08:37

the president's arrival here in Brownsville, the U.S.

1:08:39

Border Patrol and Texas State Police say they

1:08:41

stopped people on the other side of the

1:08:43

border from bringing across drugs. But Chris Cabrera

1:08:45

of the Border Patrol said that with illegal

1:08:47

crossings into this part of Texas down recently,

1:08:50

the president has come too late. I think

1:08:52

the timing's a little off. I mean, if

1:08:54

he would have come a year ago, two

1:08:56

years ago, three years ago. Trump

1:08:58

who visited Eagle Pass more than 300 miles

1:09:00

away continued exploiting a crisis that he couldn't

1:09:03

solve either, hoping it'll put him back in

1:09:05

the White House. Allies

1:09:07

say he's planning mass deportations and detention

1:09:09

camps if elected. Today, he

1:09:11

sought to falsely connect President Biden to the

1:09:14

recent murder of a Georgia nursing student by

1:09:16

a Venezuelan migrant who entered the country illegally

1:09:18

in 2022. The

1:09:20

monster that's charged in the death

1:09:23

is an illegal alien migrant who was

1:09:25

led into our country and released into

1:09:27

our communities by crooked Joe Biden. The

1:09:30

president, who didn't address Trump's attacks,

1:09:32

said they should work together. Join

1:09:35

me or I'll join you in

1:09:37

telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan

1:09:39

border security bill. This

1:09:42

is a very interesting strategy and

1:09:44

I'm surprised by it that

1:09:46

whoever is running Joe said,

1:09:50

okay, here's what you do. Call out

1:09:53

to Trump and say, join me. Since

1:09:55

you control the Republicans,

1:09:58

Senate and Congress, join me. Join

1:10:00

me this The

1:10:02

current of war a consulting group. I do not think

1:10:04

would have advised this. What do you think? Seems

1:10:08

like poor advice It's

1:10:10

not good. It puts him

1:10:13

in a weak position. I agree I

1:10:15

know I this definitely would not be

1:10:17

advice and somebody obviously told him it

1:10:19

is not something he dreamed up We

1:10:23

know the guy doesn't he's barely functioning

1:10:26

And you can tell it but the k-part

1:10:28

character goes on about how Trump

1:10:30

called one guy or Posted

1:10:33

something they don't know why they did but

1:10:35

he's the one responsible somehow It

1:10:38

gives him too much power. This red You're

1:10:40

not in California, but there's a series of

1:10:43

very interesting series of ads for

1:10:45

the US We have a new US senator. We

1:10:47

need to vote in. It's either gonna be Adam

1:10:50

Schiff or Steve Garvey the baseball player

1:10:52

So he that is the baseball player,

1:10:55

isn't it? I was like what

1:10:57

this is a sports ball guy Yes,

1:10:59

where he's I think was first base for the Dodgers.

1:11:02

Anyway, he He was a very

1:11:04

machine like player is very nobody liked him

1:11:07

up here Because

1:11:09

he didn't play good sports ball. No,

1:11:11

cuz he was a Dodger. Oh, okay. Gotcha

1:11:15

Schiff has been doing these ads Where

1:11:18

he's promoting Steve Garvey what thing

1:11:20

is a dick Oh Steve

1:11:22

Garvey is no good for California. He's

1:11:25

terrible We've got to stop Steve Garvey

1:11:28

Steve Garvey who said that doesn't have half

1:11:30

the budget of shift He's

1:11:34

loving it he's like give me more give me more attention

1:11:37

He's getting a lot of attention. He's getting people are

1:11:39

going. Why should we stop and what has he done?

1:11:42

It me is bringing the guy to the

1:11:44

for his numbers keep going up We

1:11:47

very little advertising because this

1:11:49

idiot shift Adam Schiff Keep

1:11:52

promoting Steve Garvey is advertising. It's

1:11:54

some of the dumbest. It's the

1:11:56

stupidest thing you can do. This

1:11:58

is like Trump doesn't

1:12:00

want to keep talking about Nikki Haley. No

1:12:02

give him any more ammunition All

1:12:05

right. Let's talk about people who matter like Joy

1:12:08

Reid Cuz

1:12:10

Joy Reid now she's moved to prime time, you

1:12:12

know, this is and this is her move. Oh,

1:12:15

yeah Oh, she's everywhere. She's

1:12:17

very important now to MSNBC and I

1:12:19

think again, I'm going back to most

1:12:21

theory Fonnie Willis is taking

1:12:23

the fall for not being able to

1:12:25

stop, you know Trump legally in Georgia

1:12:27

and Boy is she is she

1:12:29

taking the fall? I mean boy is there beating her

1:12:31

up Oh, you got to feel bad for and Trump,

1:12:34

of course, you can't know you have to Pounding

1:12:37

at home. There's a woman way This is

1:12:39

funny a phony Willis who came

1:12:41

out and ran on the proposition that

1:12:43

there will be no no There

1:12:46

would be no she went on and on about it. No,

1:12:48

you can't have a little Bratnizing

1:12:52

at the office now, I thought yeah,

1:12:54

I know I know So

1:12:57

you can't feel sorry for this. I were

1:12:59

I was ironic the other one in the

1:13:01

tissue James is getting it And then now

1:13:03

we have a third black woman This

1:13:07

is I'm gonna repeat most theory. Yeah,

1:13:10

yeah the theory he said that you know all of

1:13:12

this DEI All of

1:13:14

all been, you know putting black women front and center

1:13:16

and by the way Korean

1:13:18

John Paul Pierre Abdul Jabbar is

1:13:20

also going to go They

1:13:23

will all take the fall when Trump and

1:13:25

we're just gonna presume that when he is

1:13:27

elected They are all going to be blamed

1:13:30

for it and and according to

1:13:32

Moe He said look this is it now

1:13:34

it's time for you you ladies to shine

1:13:36

time for you to go and show you better do it now

1:13:40

And it's not happening and the read the

1:13:42

readout Joy read

1:13:44

will probably be in that pile as well

1:13:46

now she had on just

1:13:48

sticking with immigration for a second Maria

1:13:51

Teresa Kumar And

1:13:55

she she's big in the

1:14:00

I think it's Latinx, Latinx

1:14:04

political rights activist. Are

1:14:08

you familiar with her? I

1:14:11

saw her picture, I might recognize her. She's pretty

1:14:13

young. She was born in 1974. She's

1:14:16

from Columbia actually. So let's see what she has to

1:14:18

say here. Well, and I think one of the things

1:14:20

that we all also have to realize is that by

1:14:22

the time that someone gets to the border, Troy, that

1:14:25

is not our immigration policy. We

1:14:27

have to recognize that the reason that

1:14:29

we got to this moment was that

1:14:31

Trump himself dismantled a lot of the

1:14:34

programs where people could go ahead and

1:14:36

file for some sort of visa or

1:14:38

work permit in their home countries. And

1:14:40

in an effort to rebuild that, you

1:14:42

had COVID that really upended Latin America

1:14:45

specifically. You had close to 16 million

1:14:47

middle class Latin Americans that went directly

1:14:50

into lower class. They went into poverty

1:14:52

and there was no response internationally from

1:14:54

any of this. So as

1:14:56

the president goes in and talks about how tricky

1:14:58

the situation is, how it's a Western

1:15:00

hemispheric issue, I hope he also recognizes

1:15:02

that there are essential workers that are

1:15:05

demanding relief that have been here for

1:15:07

10, 20, 30 years

1:15:09

that have been paying their taxes

1:15:11

who have American children who are ready

1:15:13

to vote for him if he

1:15:15

actually recognizes their contributions. But what he is saying,

1:15:17

what Trump is saying, he's going to do is just deport them

1:15:19

all. He says he's going to deport 10 million people. How is

1:15:21

he going to know who's... This

1:15:24

is fear mongering. This is her job

1:15:26

now is to, hey, you've been here for 10, 20

1:15:28

years, be very worried. This

1:15:30

is the same thing they're doing in Germany with

1:15:33

the Iveday, the alternative

1:15:35

for Deutschland. Same thing.

1:15:37

Oh, you're been here, he's going to deport

1:15:39

you. I think anybody

1:15:41

Latino is suddenly going to be targeted with

1:15:44

deportation or anyone with an accent. An

1:15:46

accent. Right. And anybody right,

1:15:48

black or brown. I mean, he's got to formulate this program. Black

1:15:50

or brown. Hey man, I got an S and I go. That's

1:15:53

going out. Cheech and Chong, better hide. Called Operation

1:15:56

Wentback, sorry for the horrible words, but that's what

1:15:58

they called it. Really

1:16:00

wanted a wife. She. Said

1:16:02

went back to listen. yes she says she

1:16:04

apologizes Light suddenly gonna be harming anybody

1:16:06

with an axe. The nice and anybody right?

1:16:09

Black and brown. I mean he wants

1:16:11

to formulate this program. the Space Dance

1:16:13

with a called operation. Went back hard. Sorry

1:16:15

for the hard work women. Operation work

1:16:17

that wasn't that in the Sigma. Vara does.

1:16:20

This look at our business I'm pretty sure. Wish

1:16:27

and when I'm finished his can beat him.

1:16:29

Second volume of the idea he was us

1:16:31

to formulate. This program is based on the

1:16:33

thing called Operation Went Back Hearts are from

1:16:35

horrible words with it. With a holiday an

1:16:37

hour or less what he wanted us to

1:16:39

stop it again. Operation went

1:16:41

back nineteen Fifty four

1:16:44

Sigma, Her. By.

1:16:46

Know as as Us said

1:16:48

policy by Us Attorney General

1:16:50

Herbert brought brown Well the

1:16:52

short lived operations is military

1:16:54

tiles styled tax tactics. I

1:16:56

can read today's to remove

1:16:58

Mexican immigrants some of them

1:17:00

American citizens from the United

1:17:02

States operation with bags in

1:17:05

the wikipedia. Some American citizens.

1:17:08

Was wouldn't disagree. My agriculture Here are some

1:17:10

horrible words about it. Would they all died

1:17:12

in our area and that's what he wants

1:17:14

to do as the Masts cruelty for remember

1:17:16

what he's seeing and on is it. people

1:17:18

are angry and they just want to see

1:17:20

something cool. The same people who didn't mind

1:17:22

slit children were being taken off of their

1:17:24

the breasts of their mothers of their breastfeeding

1:17:26

one of them for Lloyd Brown on apparent

1:17:28

that in mind that they want and that.

1:17:31

This book speed Just want to see something

1:17:33

crow. yes worse. It's like the Roman Days

1:17:36

and the Coliseum. We just want to. See

1:17:38

something cruel and something bloody this apart

1:17:40

due to the see. Don't. Level with each

1:17:42

other because one of the reasons why. We are

1:17:44

enjoy such an economic pump. Sof.

1:17:51

We're enjoying and economic bombs

1:17:54

right now. Because. Of

1:17:56

Immigration. Saw. Lights.

1:17:58

Yes, this is what. The

1:18:01

eat the economy's greatest point

1:18:03

one economies great. And

1:18:05

and because all these people who

1:18:08

are sleeping in airports and in

1:18:10

Erie purpose hotels and no rules

1:18:12

and the schools now being forced

1:18:14

to stay in people's homes. Pick.

1:18:17

In Massachusetts, this is providing

1:18:19

an economic bump. Be

1:18:23

don't level with each other because one of the

1:18:25

reasons why we are enjoy such an economic pump.

1:18:29

Felt that as across the borders and you

1:18:31

know what's in this is what we forget.

1:18:33

Billie unifies as the folks that come to

1:18:35

United States. since they come with this idea

1:18:38

that they can be the best version of

1:18:40

himself in. This country it is

1:18:42

our ancestors of entrepreneur as

1:18:44

and we forget. The saddest. The

1:18:46

lifeblood that again. Pool is afraid of

1:18:48

that, the Russians in the Chinese A we'll

1:18:50

see the very worst happen right now and

1:18:52

social media when they're trying to prove that

1:18:55

yes it's a far right but the angle

1:18:57

of incidence less are also for after spotting

1:18:59

housing that are still feel racism as that

1:19:01

are year old our most has little strange

1:19:03

smart what allows us to compete in all

1:19:06

about is a thing as so maddening is

1:19:08

it. In Russia doesn't have to

1:19:10

like exists conspiracy theories to hurt the

1:19:12

Us. I just have to take the

1:19:14

people already exists the anxiety have the

1:19:16

right by them. Throwdown around. it works

1:19:18

when it's working because people here are

1:19:20

letting at work. Or

1:19:25

does it again. So

1:19:28

good as a couple of lunatics.

1:19:30

Joy Reid is gonna go down

1:19:32

to. The mall in wonder

1:19:34

if they're all going down. So.

1:19:37

Obvious us. Feel

1:19:39

just something we forgot to talk about which.

1:19:43

I think we should probably probably mention

1:19:45

here we go. Spurs,

1:19:48

Spots sisters,

1:19:50

Everybody Moves

1:19:52

Spots. Catherine

1:19:56

Herridge. Who was

1:19:58

fired from seems. This with their

1:20:00

the latest rounds of Cbs firings Paramount's

1:20:02

in big by another, But when Netherworld

1:20:04

as like a high profile black lewd

1:20:06

we went by our was that who

1:20:08

did it in him. So.

1:20:13

Are Our initial reaction was

1:20:15

she's being reassigned. And.

1:20:18

I wonder or so and I felt

1:20:20

that a good cover already was the

1:20:22

as A the got papers to get

1:20:25

her papers. the gotta pee bursary got

1:20:27

a paper so that's crazy that's the

1:20:29

feds got her papers. And. Let

1:20:31

me make really gives her a

1:20:34

lot of credibility. Forever she lands

1:20:36

next, but now now I'm starting

1:20:38

to doubt our theory. As

1:20:40

he's being held in civil contempt for

1:20:42

refusing to divulge her source. Yeah.

1:20:46

Now based on some flaws sued

1:20:48

the school and where the. Person

1:20:51

know this Being sued is demanding that

1:20:53

they played as something a rather security

1:20:56

as chinese woman. As. A

1:20:58

very complicated case but the I disagree

1:21:00

I say the for the you go

1:21:02

down the road was just more and

1:21:04

more elbow and most credibility is so

1:21:06

now she's so now. not only is

1:21:09

he credible because. Of the

1:21:11

Feds who got her papers. Which

1:21:13

is credible because don't worry, she'll never reveal

1:21:15

you as a source. For.

1:21:18

You want best reputation and need. Wouldn't how

1:21:20

she gonna get out of this though without

1:21:22

another know this is a good question but

1:21:25

she'll get out of is somehow they can

1:21:27

continue. Now I'm I still think she's going

1:21:29

to land and a government job. That's where.

1:21:31

That's where you want her now. Kirby's.

1:21:34

Failing. Let's be honest. Kirby can't

1:21:36

He's got no credibility anymore. She

1:21:38

would be great. She could Actually

1:21:41

was way better than Kirby. Kirby's.

1:21:43

Kirby began. I see in the Defense department

1:21:45

know like rear animal we all know what

1:21:48

he is. He was kind of work in

1:21:50

his way up the ladder and it is

1:21:52

done to the point where he can't lie

1:21:54

very well. Is no

1:21:56

good at it now. And so he's fumbles

1:21:59

in mumbles and. Up there are these

1:22:01

make stupid the says dumb stuff and it

1:22:03

doesn't snow comfortable on the I doesn't look

1:22:05

where he's enjoying the jobs John Perilous I

1:22:07

she's enjoying the guy but I think C

1:22:10

C need to go down and she'll be

1:22:12

out and that would be a great spot

1:22:14

for picks. The girl for Catherine Herridge. I

1:22:16

think she would be a perfect next spokesman

1:22:18

for the President. Yeah

1:22:22

yeah to I think suits him. she's got The

1:22:24

Moon Express is gonna be trumped a list they

1:22:26

would really do a great number on that. I

1:22:28

have a good clip from two thousand and four.

1:22:32

Go back in behind the sound of the nation.

1:22:36

This is die If you

1:22:38

remember the George Bush carry

1:22:40

election. In two thousand and

1:22:43

four, there was a. Sewing. Machine

1:22:45

Scandal. It was built on the

1:22:47

T Bowls Machines Diebold. Here's what

1:22:49

I remember. I remember. It's

1:22:52

just season when you say that. The

1:22:55

first impression of I remember watching the

1:22:57

Carry It was Carries Camp live on

1:22:59

television and all of a sudden you

1:23:01

just see Carry Space go Woods and

1:23:04

his numbers just hangs. At

1:23:07

that very moment there was lazy, sued

1:23:09

surged for bush. Guess.

1:23:11

That's what I remember sued specific I

1:23:14

see you know member right near the

1:23:16

as saying was at Bush was unpopular

1:23:18

the time because he had day implemented

1:23:20

all kinds of. Things. I

1:23:23

did. Ah, the. Patriot

1:23:25

Act. Daddy's in wars with every was promoting.

1:23:27

We're going now going well and it was

1:23:29

as he was just a waste of money,

1:23:32

money or about big head. He

1:23:35

was done music. Jimmy was smart when he was

1:23:37

in Texas because he does he have the old

1:23:39

clips said he was set up and then he

1:23:41

was became kind of dopey making you wonder what

1:23:44

the dragon these guys with. And

1:23:47

so we have Now we have Jerry

1:23:49

Nadler to I believe is under Charlie

1:23:51

Rose show in two thousand and four

1:23:53

talking about voting machines is in fact

1:23:55

someone would deliberately hacking these machines. You

1:23:58

could feel millions of voters and. no

1:24:00

one would know it. And that's why the

1:24:02

methodology is problematic. Now there's no evidence that

1:24:04

happened. You can't prove it didn't either.

1:24:06

And you can't prove it won't next time. And that's why

1:24:09

we have to have a paper trail. We've

1:24:11

documented it. Any number of people documented a

1:24:14

machine in this county that recorded 11,000

1:24:16

extra votes for Bush. In that county

1:24:18

there was counting Kerry

1:24:20

votes for Bush. People who

1:24:23

pushed the, touched Kerry's name,

1:24:25

would come up Bush and they'd touch it again. They would

1:24:28

come up Bush and they'd touch it a third time and finally got it right.

1:24:30

And all kinds of things like this. One

1:24:33

machine, and when we say one machine, these are

1:24:35

large machines, like a half a county apparently. After

1:24:38

it reached 3,000 votes

1:24:40

total, every time you voted for Bush it subtracted

1:24:42

one instead of added one. When you add, pushed

1:24:44

Kerry it subtracted one instead of adding one. And

1:24:47

all these instances were instances where they were caught.

1:24:49

Otherwise it wouldn't have been reported. They were caught,

1:24:52

presumably corrected. The question obviously is how

1:24:54

many instances were not caught that we don't know

1:24:56

about. And what if any impact did that have

1:24:58

on the election if not for president, then for

1:25:00

county commissioner or congressman or

1:25:02

whatever. And it's clear that

1:25:06

we have some of these new

1:25:08

technologies, the electronic voting, replacing the

1:25:11

CADs and all that with other problems.

1:25:14

But there are no paper trails. And

1:25:16

we have all sorts of testimony before the

1:25:18

election from electronics experts that, number

1:25:21

one, we've seen a lot of what I'll call

1:25:23

honest glitches where it just didn't work right. Wait,

1:25:26

did he say honest glitches? Yeah,

1:25:28

hold on, hold on. That's the testimony before

1:25:30

the election from electronics experts that, number

1:25:33

one, we've seen a lot of what I'll call

1:25:35

honest glitches where it just didn't work right.

1:25:37

But also that these machines are hackable. That

1:25:40

a dishonest employee of the vendor or

1:25:42

a dishonest employee of a local board

1:25:44

of elections or simply someone

1:25:47

who knows electronics and has a computer

1:25:49

at home could

1:25:51

hack into these machines and put in a

1:25:53

secret instruction to disregard every 20th Democratic

1:25:56

vote or add 10% to the carrier to

1:25:58

the Bush vote or whatever. I never know it. I

1:26:01

would like to point out that Gillespie County is

1:26:04

a hand count county in Texas. We

1:26:07

have banned electronic voting machines.

1:26:11

Yeah. Well, it should be everywhere. Yeah. No

1:26:14

kidding. And this by the way, I'm going

1:26:16

to re-mention that this is

1:26:18

from 2004. There's no

1:26:20

reason that this hasn't changed, that companies are making

1:26:22

decisions. Well, hold on. I didn't

1:26:25

die-balled Sue Nadler for this

1:26:28

outrageous accusation. Because

1:26:30

Nadler's got the deep pockets of Fox.

1:26:33

Oh, okay. So here we go. And

1:26:36

we had these warnings before the election and

1:26:38

apparently they're correct. And we have

1:26:40

all these questions now and we're

1:26:42

seeing instances of so

1:26:45

far as we know honest glitches

1:26:47

that we caught. Hey dude, honest

1:26:50

glitches? That's a bober

1:26:52

sticker. The question arises, how many didn't we

1:26:54

catch? And how do you prevent that? Now

1:26:57

there's legislation pending which I'm co-sponsoring offered

1:26:59

in the House by Rush Holt and

1:27:01

the Senate by Hillary Clinton and others

1:27:03

that says that every electronic machine should

1:27:05

have a paper trail. Like an ATM machine gives you

1:27:07

a receipt. When

1:27:10

you push the carry, let's say you vote

1:27:12

for carry and A for Congress and B

1:27:14

for the Senate. And you say carry A

1:27:16

and B, you see that on the machine.

1:27:19

You should also print a piece of paper which you see,

1:27:21

you look at the piece of paper and you say okay,

1:27:23

you then press the mid cuts of the piece of paper

1:27:25

and it drops it into a box. So

1:27:27

if anybody raises questions after the election, you

1:27:30

can in fact count the paper.

1:27:32

There was one county where on some

1:27:34

local race or some referendum

1:27:37

they lost. 4,500 votes. Machine,

1:27:39

HECO, they lost it. 4,500

1:27:42

people didn't have the votes counted. And we don't

1:27:44

know if that made a difference in that referendum or local race

1:27:46

or whatever. But the system

1:27:48

is inherently subject to that kind

1:27:50

of thing. So we asked for an investigation. Congressman Conyers,

1:27:52

who is the ranking Democrat on

1:27:55

the Judiciary Committee and Bob,

1:27:57

Wechsler, Congressman from California, and I, asked for

1:27:59

a report. The government accountability of cities

1:28:01

to be known as a of an

1:28:03

accounting office mates wouldn't be nonpartisan investigative

1:28:05

arm of Congress to invest that we

1:28:07

as they investigate the efficacy voting machines

1:28:09

A new technologies how election officials responded

1:28:11

to difficult the encountered a what we

1:28:13

can do in the future to improve

1:28:15

our election systems. These companies did a

1:28:17

tremendous sales job in the two thousand

1:28:20

election in Florida Square where we had

1:28:22

almost eight I promise I Chad's I

1:28:24

everybody should get rid of these punch

1:28:26

card machines a to find a better

1:28:28

way to do with Had these. Prophecies

1:28:30

price for it Really quite ready.

1:28:32

I don't mean all these, We

1:28:34

have all these professors and these

1:28:37

computer as miss telling us that

1:28:39

the encryption algorithms are insufficient at

1:28:41

these protections are insufficient a proprietary

1:28:43

data as they kept their secrets.

1:28:45

We don't really know that they

1:28:48

wanted to sell the machines and

1:28:50

he did a tremendous sales job.

1:28:52

Op Ron Okay, well now that

1:28:54

almost got into Justin from listening

1:28:56

to Not Look For Three and

1:28:59

a Half Madison the The Two

1:29:01

Thousand election came up. I'm gonna

1:29:03

hit you right back with another

1:29:05

view clip. ah, in a conversation

1:29:08

about the Supreme court decision or.

1:29:10

Am. Schedule to discuss

1:29:12

a decision. Whether. Any

1:29:15

President, not just President Trump,

1:29:18

but if retroactively, any President

1:29:20

can be held accountable. For.

1:29:23

Crimes committed. During

1:29:26

a president's administration. This

1:29:29

is this is what is coming

1:29:31

before the Supreme Court Granted immunity

1:29:33

yes the Vm Jewish community for

1:29:35

now and and I would. Just

1:29:37

say up front. I think that they're

1:29:39

what's being ignored here. Is

1:29:42

there is a process for president

1:29:44

commits a crime or is few

1:29:46

questions about the has questionable behavior

1:29:48

The process is impeachment and after

1:29:51

the impeachment in ah in the

1:29:53

house ghost the senate making convict

1:29:55

him. right?

1:29:58

Yes! And then he can go. to normal

1:30:01

and civil court trials. Right.

1:30:04

But so there is a process if you have

1:30:06

a bogus president. Yeah. There's a

1:30:08

process. But that is just ignored by the

1:30:10

women of the view and they... So

1:30:13

what you have... I'm going to use the word

1:30:15

positive. It's very

1:30:17

interesting that if they

1:30:19

say Trump is accountable

1:30:22

and does not have immunity

1:30:24

for his mounting

1:30:27

an insurrection when

1:30:29

he was still president, then we can

1:30:31

arrest Obama for droning American citizens. You

1:30:33

can do all kinds of stuff. Yeah.

1:30:36

The ladies from the view... Yes. You're

1:30:39

going to say something? Well, I was going to say curiously,

1:30:41

I have to pull this out of the files.

1:30:45

But I have. It turns out that Obama... I

1:30:48

didn't realize this, but he not only

1:30:50

killed an O'Lockey and a O'Lockey's

1:30:52

kid... And his son. And his kid. A

1:30:55

16-year-old kid. They were having coffee. They were having

1:30:57

coffee. Yeah. Supposedly. He

1:31:02

also in the process killed Samir

1:31:04

Khan who was an American, US

1:31:07

citizen of Pakistani heritage.

1:31:10

And he also killed Jude

1:31:12

Mohammed, another American born in

1:31:14

Florida, American citizen. So

1:31:17

Obama murdered four people.

1:31:22

And in fact, it said... I'm

1:31:25

going to read from CBS. It

1:31:27

said after he killed in October 14, 2011 in Yemen, he killed

1:31:29

the kid Abdul in an extra judicial

1:31:36

killing. Some US officials called it

1:31:38

a mistake. Even the president

1:31:40

has said in some reports, we have considered it

1:31:42

a bad mistake. But the

1:31:44

former White House Press Secretary Robert

1:31:47

Gibbs, if I remember him, stated

1:31:49

that his death was

1:31:51

justified. And this was all

1:31:53

death by drone, right? Death by drone.

1:31:55

Yeah, they just murdered him. He's kind of... And

1:32:00

it basically murdered these people so

1:32:03

the people on the view have

1:32:06

to say on the

1:32:08

show that Obama which could

1:32:10

be arrested tomorrow and

1:32:12

thrown in jail for murder. No,

1:32:15

they take an entirely different unique

1:32:17

and very interesting approach. Well,

1:32:20

the Supreme Court won't hear oral arguments

1:32:22

until the end of April. Now,

1:32:26

I'm just, you know, just

1:32:28

look at a scenario where

1:32:31

the Supreme Court says, yes, he has that,

1:32:33

he has all those rights, he is immune

1:32:35

from everything. You know what Joe Biden could

1:32:38

do since he is presently president? What? Whoa.

1:32:41

Whoa. He

1:32:44

could go every Republican

1:32:46

in jail. Yeah. I

1:32:48

mean, he could. No, no, no. This is not a

1:32:50

good thing. What this means is he can do anything. Yeah. He

1:32:53

could dismiss everybody's debt. Yeah. You

1:32:55

know, a bunch of great stuff that could happen.

1:33:05

Great. Let's really look at what

1:33:07

this means. Yeah. Basically, kicking

1:33:09

the can down the road though. They're

1:33:12

not taking up this case immediately. Shut up,

1:33:14

Joy. So what's their motivation then? If we

1:33:16

all know that we can't do what you

1:33:18

just said because of the extreme power that

1:33:21

a president would have, what is their motivation

1:33:23

for not doing it right away? Unfortunately, some

1:33:25

people are saying the motivation is that

1:33:27

there are certain conservative justices that have

1:33:29

been appointed by Trump that want to

1:33:32

help him. And because we

1:33:34

know the end result is if this

1:33:36

case is not resolved by

1:33:38

the time of

1:33:41

the election and he, God forbid, becomes

1:33:43

the president of the United States, the

1:33:45

Justice Department and the policy is that

1:33:48

you cannot indict nor

1:33:50

put on trial a sitting

1:33:52

president. Right? And

1:33:54

so it's right out of jail. But

1:33:57

it's just get out of jail free card. No, no, I'm

1:33:59

saying back. I think this is a slippery slope. Because

1:34:03

if they give this immunity, they also

1:34:05

will say they're listening to these arguments

1:34:08

in April. The end of their term

1:34:10

is in June, right? They return again,

1:34:12

I believe in October. The

1:34:15

Bush-Fegor case happened real quick. Do you remember

1:34:17

that? It's been a long time since the

1:34:20

Supreme Court knows how to work real fast.

1:34:22

That was the day democracy died. What?

1:34:29

That was the day democracy died while you were

1:34:31

even doing a show. So

1:34:33

I just like the flipping

1:34:35

it on its head and saying, well, if

1:34:38

Trump has immunity, then Joe Biden can

1:34:41

just get rid

1:34:43

of everybody's debt, can throw all

1:34:45

Republicans in jail. This

1:34:49

program is not good for your health. It's

1:34:52

hard for me to even, I mean, I can

1:34:54

feel the effects just playing the clips. This

1:34:57

is really dumbing down the American

1:34:59

population and they're popular. A lot

1:35:01

of people watch it. What

1:35:05

is the deal? What is the deal? The

1:35:07

deal is whoopee's new hairdo. She's

1:35:10

got her sides are cut off and

1:35:12

she's got her hair way back. What

1:35:15

is this? She's wearing, she's got a mullet. What

1:35:19

is this look? It's

1:35:21

cool. It's just, Mo, he's an expert

1:35:23

on hairstyles. We don't touch the

1:35:25

third rail of black women's hair. That's a very

1:35:27

bad rail to touch. Okay,

1:35:31

so here's what everyone's talking

1:35:33

about online. It's none of this. None

1:35:36

of this. None of this is being

1:35:38

discussed. Here's what's

1:35:40

really grabbed everybody's attention and I have

1:35:42

an opinion on it. This

1:35:44

guy named Ian Carroll, who's

1:35:48

just a dude on X, he's

1:35:50

the one that has the most compelling

1:35:53

version of it and his

1:35:55

videos are receiving millions of views on

1:35:57

the X and this is about In

1:36:00

a lawsuit he just got the Jeffrey

1:36:02

Epstein of the music and entertainment industry

1:36:04

the new lawsuit that has dropped against

1:36:06

it. He is masses as as solo

1:36:08

that as videos that name's mean and

1:36:10

are so much that is never going

1:36:13

to fit into a single. Videos on

1:36:15

gonna do a quick overview in the

1:36:17

video anonymous do a couple part breaking

1:36:19

down all aspects of was come out

1:36:21

so far we're talking crime scenes for

1:36:23

daughter, photo evidences, celebrities like she was

1:36:25

getting, Junior for talk and record label

1:36:27

executives for doctor visits, Hammers in every.

1:36:30

Room in the house getting recordings

1:36:32

of celebrities executives followed As soon

1:36:34

as far as with celebrities and

1:36:36

underage girls with things being spies

1:36:38

with drugs those all the way

1:36:40

back to the murder of to

1:36:42

bought and paid for talking about

1:36:44

the entire rap and hip hop

1:36:46

industry and a whole music industry

1:36:48

at large. So what's happened is

1:36:50

now is that this man Rods

1:36:52

Jones whose music producer that worked

1:36:54

with Songs Holmes who is D

1:36:56

C just filed the lawsuit and

1:36:58

he didn't just filed. Against the

1:37:00

Cdc filed against the executives that all

1:37:03

the companies associated and against the companies

1:37:05

like Universal Music Group Says lawyers claim

1:37:07

that he has secured a hundreds of

1:37:10

hours of footage and audio recordings of

1:37:12

did he and his staff and his

1:37:14

gas engaging in serious illegal activity. So.

1:37:18

This is salacious. Everybody loves it.

1:37:21

Began tag Cuba Gooding Jr. with

1:37:23

got to have suppose the assure

1:37:25

all these people who are all

1:37:27

involved in what the music industry

1:37:30

has known forever. Because

1:37:32

the root of this is Clive Davis.

1:37:35

Clive Davis. Who had certain

1:37:37

point came and said hey everybody, I'm

1:37:39

bisexual really Clive week which he. And

1:37:43

all of this salacious comes through

1:37:45

from from Baton Rouge of Clive

1:37:47

Davis and Dd being gay. Ah

1:37:49

please! This is nothing new but.

1:37:52

We. now have all of this evidence

1:37:54

and am they've named all the executives

1:37:56

of the record companies and the sub

1:37:59

labels and sub labels of the

1:38:01

sub labels and the publishing companies. So

1:38:04

it's going to capture

1:38:06

everyone's imagination. What

1:38:09

this guy is doing, I don't have any further

1:38:11

clips, is he's connecting

1:38:13

this to the Whitney Web

1:38:15

reporting on Epstein

1:38:18

and J.

1:38:21

Edgar Hoover which is specious

1:38:24

at best as you and I

1:38:26

have discussed. Generally disproven. It's

1:38:28

disproven that there's pictures of

1:38:30

him and address pictures of

1:38:32

him committing fellatio. It

1:38:34

actually is all fake. There is no

1:38:36

picture. And by the way, there's more

1:38:39

evidence J. Edgar Hoover was black than

1:38:41

that he was homosexual. Yeah,

1:38:46

that's true. But

1:38:48

what this does is two things. One, it

1:38:51

distracts from the actual Epstein case because

1:38:53

now everyone will be crazy about this.

1:38:56

It's a very controlled opportunist at work. And

1:39:00

the second thing it does is it

1:39:02

distracts from Taylor Swift being a Satanist.

1:39:06

Wow, I was wondering where you were going to

1:39:08

go with this because I knew

1:39:10

about all this and just like this. And then

1:39:12

you're like, oh God, he's going to bring in

1:39:14

some showbiz stuff because you know Adam he so

1:39:16

wishes he was in the business. Oh yeah, oh

1:39:18

boy. It was so

1:39:20

much fun. Don't drop

1:39:23

the soap in the business. Yeah,

1:39:26

no, it distracts from the true evil

1:39:28

which is the women in show business

1:39:30

particularly in the music business who are

1:39:32

wiccans, they are witches, they are doing

1:39:35

all kinds of creepy stuff, they're devil

1:39:37

worshippers and sadly

1:39:39

they've captured Taylor Swift as

1:39:42

far as I can tell. And

1:39:44

so this is probably them. They're like, hey. That's

1:39:49

what's going on here. So

1:39:57

Taylor is safe, safe for a while.

1:39:59

Bye everyone. focuses on Diddy and

1:40:01

Diddy is going down, down, down,

1:40:04

down, down, down. So

1:40:07

you can rest assured everybody you don't have

1:40:09

to do much else, you can just calm

1:40:12

down, it's all good. That's good, I'm

1:40:14

sure. Calm down. This

1:40:17

rock and roll pre-show person is

1:40:19

going to be more than pleased.

1:40:22

And you're going to see Whitney Webb

1:40:24

going insane and appearing everywhere talking about

1:40:26

how she invented all this and

1:40:30

it's all the Jewish mafia. That's

1:40:33

the Whitney Webb. You wait. Speaking

1:40:36

of controlled opportunists, there's number one as

1:40:38

far as I'm concerned. You

1:40:40

can be very careful. She's doing her due

1:40:42

diligence in Chile or wherever the hell she

1:40:44

is. We have to

1:40:46

be very careful, very careful of a lot of people

1:40:48

out there. Anyone with video.

1:40:51

They're dangerous, there's no doubt about it. Anyone

1:40:53

who does video with their podcast, it's just

1:40:55

dangerous. To

1:40:58

me, that's a giveaway. If you got a podcast

1:41:00

and it's video, you're dangerous. It's just no good.

1:41:04

Except Joe, of course. Something

1:41:09

happened. Oh, let's see. You

1:41:12

know what? Do you want to

1:41:14

do some big pharma stuff? I

1:41:16

have some CDC stuff but I also have

1:41:18

a three by three about the

1:41:20

Israeli situation that probably because we're not going

1:41:22

to talk about it, I don't think, except

1:41:25

for this possibility. We

1:41:27

can jump to that war. We've

1:41:30

done so much war. We

1:41:33

can skip it for now but we

1:41:35

can go skip it. It's probably important

1:41:38

but are the clips two minutes long?

1:41:40

Are they also just to get so long? Take

1:41:42

a look. What are you saying? Let me

1:41:44

see. Let me see. Let me

1:41:46

just look at the ABC. Let's

1:41:50

do some big pharma stuff first. Let's do

1:41:53

your CDC clips. The CDC is doing it

1:41:55

with new guidelines. The

1:41:58

new CDC woman. Cindy or

1:42:00

can't know here Whatever

1:42:02

the hell her name is Cohen Amy

1:42:04

Amy Cohen Amy Amy and she's just

1:42:06

like a you know, kind of a

1:42:10

Girl who couldn't make it a cheerleading

1:42:12

team. So she's on the pom-pom squad

1:42:14

that that that one Yeah,

1:42:17

that one and so she's there

1:42:19

trying to answer questions on PBS.

1:42:21

She answers nothing. She's just a

1:42:24

she's a drone Promoting

1:42:26

the vaccine they're never gonna let

1:42:28

up on this heaven forbid They

1:42:32

could Q clip is that what you're

1:42:35

saying here? Yeah new CDC guidance kovat

1:42:37

PBS The Centers for Disease

1:42:39

Control and Prevention has changed its

1:42:41

kovat guidance for when people need

1:42:43

to isolate It's part of the

1:42:45

CDC's broader recommendations on respiratory illnesses

1:42:48

The agency now says people who've

1:42:50

tested positive can return to normal

1:42:52

activities when symptoms are improving And

1:42:54

they've been fever free for at

1:42:57

least 24 hours without medication But

1:42:59

the CDC also encourages people with

1:43:01

improving symptoms to take additional prevention

1:43:03

measures like mask wearing and keeping

1:43:06

distance in public Now you

1:43:08

see director. Dr. Mandy Cohen joins The

1:43:14

news hour, thanks for joining us Thanks

1:43:16

for having me great to be here. So this

1:43:18

is the first time you've shifted guidance Isolation

1:43:20

guidance is 2021 that was when it

1:43:22

was reduced in 10 days to 5

1:43:25

days. Why these changes in guidance right now

1:43:27

What's that based on? Well, we are in

1:43:29

a different place and that's after a lot

1:43:31

of hard work to make sure that we

1:43:33

had the tools to protect each other again

1:43:40

She asked a specific question You

1:43:43

changed it from 10 days to 5 days to now

1:43:45

you got just a couple of days. What

1:43:47

is this based on? And

1:43:50

then ever answers this question. Well, no,

1:43:52

she's on the pom-pom squad not the nothing.

1:43:54

She's not a librarian She's your leader. Why

1:43:57

these changes in guidance right now? What's that

1:43:59

based on? Well, we are in a

1:44:01

different place and that's after a lot of

1:44:03

hard work. I love that. We're in a different place.

1:44:05

The science is in, the science is settled. Come on.

1:44:08

To make sure that we had the

1:44:10

tools to protect each other against

1:44:12

COVID. What we've been seeing is

1:44:14

lower hospitalizations and lower deaths, even

1:44:16

as we saw high levels of

1:44:18

virus spread. So this past winter

1:44:20

season, we saw both in our

1:44:22

wastewater data and others that there's

1:44:24

a lot of virus spreading in

1:44:26

our community. But luckily, those trends

1:44:28

and hospitalizations and deaths continued to

1:44:30

go down. And

1:44:32

what we were seeing is that

1:44:34

really vaccination is what is continuing

1:44:37

to protect folks. So we wanted

1:44:39

to unify our guidance today, not

1:44:41

just for COVID, but across COVID flu

1:44:43

and RSV. So folks could have common

1:44:45

sense, practical solutions that they could use

1:44:48

every day that they can remember, that

1:44:50

they can implement across a range of

1:44:52

viruses. You're really going to

1:44:54

tell me that we need four clips to

1:44:57

point out that

1:45:00

we've gone from 10 days to five days

1:45:02

to just, yeah, if you don't have a fever, do

1:45:04

whatever you want. Is

1:45:06

that how long it took this Mandy? The

1:45:09

second Mandy clip is only 59 seconds.

1:45:11

It's not going to kill you. There

1:45:13

were some states, like California,

1:45:15

Oregon, others that began relaxing their

1:45:18

COVID isolation guidance as early as

1:45:20

last year, counter to

1:45:22

your guidance at the time. Is this sort

1:45:24

of the CDC kind of chasing, catching up

1:45:26

to where people have already been for a while? Well,

1:45:31

you know what, we were looking at

1:45:33

this guidance last summer and seeing if

1:45:35

we can move in this direction. And

1:45:37

then the virus changed in last August

1:45:39

and we wanted to miss where we

1:45:42

were through another winter season that those

1:45:44

trends in lower hospitalizations and lower deaths

1:45:46

continued to hold. And the good news

1:45:48

is they did. And so

1:45:50

we feel comfortable moving forward now. But

1:45:52

remember, like always, this virus is changing.

1:45:55

If anything changes in terms

1:45:57

of our effectiveness of vaccines or

1:45:59

treatments. We may be

1:46:01

back here needing to change guidance but we

1:46:03

feel comfortable aligning across COVID,

1:46:05

flu and RSV for some simple

1:46:08

solutions like vaccination, like making sure

1:46:10

you get treatment and staying

1:46:12

home when you're sick. So

1:46:16

this we don't have to play the rest of it but

1:46:18

it goes on with this poor woman

1:46:20

on PBS struggling to get something out

1:46:22

of this some actual fact. Nothing out

1:46:25

of it. And she's just

1:46:27

going to go on and on and on about get

1:46:29

vaccinated and that's about it that the

1:46:31

messages get vaccinated and we're going to have

1:46:33

a new the virus keeps changing

1:46:35

so there's going to be a new vaccine you

1:46:37

can play the actually the last clip will summarize

1:46:39

everything where she says there's new

1:46:42

stuff coming out and get a new vaccine if

1:46:44

you haven't gotten one already and that's basically the

1:46:46

message. To be fair the vaccine

1:46:48

can obviously prevent serious illness but it

1:46:51

doesn't prevent spread of COVID will people

1:46:53

isolating for a shorter amount

1:46:55

of time potentially add to the spread of the

1:46:57

virus? Oh man, do they hear

1:46:59

themselves? Please if

1:47:02

you're within the sound of my voice a

1:47:04

vaccine that doesn't prevent spread and doesn't prevent

1:47:06

you getting it is not a vaccine. It's

1:47:08

not a vaccine. Croc as shit is what

1:47:10

it is. Well the good news is when

1:47:13

you get vaccinated right you are both less

1:47:15

likely to go into the hospital but you're

1:47:17

also less likely to get long COVID and

1:47:20

you are less likely to get this virus

1:47:22

overall right so less virus spreading means that

1:47:25

we are protecting others and now we

1:47:27

want we're protecting others. We want it

1:47:29

to give simple clear kinds

1:47:32

of guidance so that folks can remember

1:47:34

them that can be really actionable because

1:47:36

if more people are using the guidance

1:47:38

we think that's going to benefit everyone

1:47:40

and look the folks who are

1:47:43

vulnerable they were top of mind for

1:47:45

us at CDC as we were thinking about

1:47:48

this guidance we all know someone who's at

1:47:50

higher risk over 65 or

1:47:52

immunocompromised I have them in my own family so

1:47:55

we were thinking about them as we did

1:47:57

this guidance we found the

1:47:59

balance. to protecting the most vulnerable

1:48:01

and having this clear and simple

1:48:03

way for most folks to protect

1:48:05

themselves. You also said this week

1:48:08

that Americans 65 and older should

1:48:10

get an additional dose of that

1:48:12

latest COVID vaccine this spring. Kill

1:48:14

them. That relaxing the guidance at the

1:48:16

same time you're asking people to go and get

1:48:18

another booster sends conflicting messages. No,

1:48:20

no, we just want to kill old

1:48:22

people. And in fact,

1:48:24

our guidance today, the very first core

1:48:27

strategy that we want to emphasize to

1:48:29

folks is about being up to date

1:48:31

on your vaccine. That's what

1:48:33

we are continuing to see protect

1:48:36

folks here. So we want to make sure

1:48:38

folks are getting those updated vaccines. And

1:48:40

I want to preview for folks

1:48:42

that we know this COVID virus

1:48:44

continues to change and we

1:48:46

need to stay ahead of it. And

1:48:48

we've already started the process CDC

1:48:51

and FDA to update

1:48:53

the COVID vaccine for later this

1:48:55

year. So right now folks should

1:48:57

start planning for this fall to

1:49:00

get both an updated COVID vaccine

1:49:02

and an updated flu shot. What does

1:49:04

that mean? Start planning? Do I have to

1:49:06

put it in my calendar? Do I have

1:49:08

to save for it? Do I have to

1:49:10

alert the neighbors, wake the children? Let's plan

1:49:12

for it. You got to start planning

1:49:14

for fall. Meanwhile, this

1:49:16

is still on deck. This

1:49:19

morning, friends, family and fans

1:49:21

are remembering Craig Rowe, a

1:49:26

former star linebacker for the University of

1:49:28

Michigan, losing his battle with colon cancer.

1:49:31

Michigan has forever been defined by guys

1:49:34

stepping up every year. He was just

1:49:36

33. Rowe was

1:49:38

diagnosed with stage four colon cancer

1:49:40

last year. His death, part of

1:49:42

a troubling trend. Colon cancer is

1:49:44

now the deadliest cancer for men

1:49:46

under age 50 and the second

1:49:48

deadliest cancer for women under 50.

1:49:51

Doctors say obesity and lifestyle can play a

1:49:53

role. What We're concerned

1:49:55

about clearly are food or environmental exposures

1:49:58

that may be there. there, but it's

1:50:00

hard to know. What we do know

1:50:02

is Basket for people under the age

1:50:04

of fifty, diagnosed with colon cancer, about

1:50:07

a third of them have some remarkable

1:50:09

family history that might have given us

1:50:11

a clue as to that having occurred.

1:50:14

Stats: Why Doctors say it's so important

1:50:16

to get screened beginning at age forty

1:50:18

five? But Americans are not getting the

1:50:20

message. Eighty percent of people ages forty

1:50:23

sized city are not getting screened, study

1:50:25

them dreading the cooling off to be.

1:50:27

There are options to do it in your

1:50:30

own home or within the fails job sales

1:50:32

job. There is sales jobs and color guard

1:50:34

for for poop in the bag ready to

1:50:36

call on off to be. There are options

1:50:39

to do it in your own home or

1:50:41

within just a few minutes and with just

1:50:43

as much accuracy as a corner. Speed knows

1:50:45

what a family history and which is a

1:50:48

lie. Always nice. It's a lie because they

1:50:50

say that this is this A in the

1:50:52

ad in the real adding said this paid

1:50:55

promotion they say could be false positive could

1:50:57

be false. Negative bringing up people.

1:51:00

Could do it all Privacy or have delivered

1:51:02

to your front door with a bag. see

1:51:05

as a corner speed knows as a family

1:51:07

history of cancer or who experience. Symptoms

1:51:09

Said: Talk to their doctor

1:51:11

about getting screened earlier. Symptoms

1:51:13

include a change in battle

1:51:15

habits, rectal bleeding, abdominal discomfort,

1:51:17

cities, and unexplained weight loss.

1:51:19

Doctor from Colorectal Cancer can

1:51:21

develop silently so early detection

1:51:23

is t and have caught

1:51:25

early the survival rate of

1:51:27

more than ninety percent. Tell

1:51:30

this is just horrible. There.

1:51:33

Is a medical community has still

1:51:35

does not understand how they were

1:51:37

this crumbling friend comes from. We

1:51:39

can't figure it out. Could be

1:51:41

lifestyles. it could be or die.

1:51:43

Oh. Well. If it's your diet than

1:51:45

less, just go to the authentic showing. By

1:51:47

the beginning of twenty Twenty Three,

1:51:49

one medicine was on everyone's. Lips.

1:51:53

Or. Three,

1:51:56

a diabetes drug with an astonishingly

1:51:58

side effect. Email.

1:52:03

Since then there's been a constant

1:52:05

drumbeat in the news has impacts

1:52:07

us at the end of them

1:52:09

back and frenzied bars on social

1:52:12

media Center is a place you

1:52:14

are did said Dallas And it's

1:52:16

not just as an bet there's

1:52:18

Majora for diabetes and would go

1:52:20

the and sat down to treat

1:52:22

obesity. All promoting significant weight loss

1:52:24

is estimated up to five million

1:52:26

Americans are taking them, a staggering

1:52:28

figure considering the weekly injections need

1:52:30

refrigeration and possibly a lifetime commitment.

1:52:32

This is a special around on N B C

1:52:34

called the Big Shots. And that

1:52:37

there's some very troubling friends.

1:52:40

The promotion of a D

1:52:42

O P One products, The.

1:52:45

Ball gets you in a moment

1:52:48

is the incessant. Discrediting

1:52:51

of compounded forms of this.

1:52:53

Because you know you have to have the

1:52:56

brand name. Otherwise for you do once and.

1:52:58

Ah, I see that say

1:53:00

even though. Me

1:53:03

and this is part promotion and

1:53:05

part discredits. Haitian. But. For

1:53:07

under no circumstances should social

1:53:09

media influencers be allowed to

1:53:11

hockey drugs online. I mean

1:53:13

that that's the nice to

1:53:15

be some kind of key

1:53:18

boss on this troubling trend.

1:53:20

And tic toc is on

1:53:22

social media some face on

1:53:24

T V et cetera, everybody

1:53:26

around you is says. Yes and

1:53:28

then the rise of Tell a healthy I like all

1:53:30

these. Things are feeding into this is

1:53:32

your needs. A lucrative market is growing

1:53:34

so quickly we see my with other

1:53:36

categories of drugs which allows allows for

1:53:38

those of you have a post poll

1:53:40

model on the the social media which

1:53:43

was cool sort of a cultural phenomenon

1:53:45

values as says hot affirmative whole process

1:53:47

to keep up with that. Our team

1:53:49

wanted to see how easy it would

1:53:51

be to get compounded some a gluten

1:53:53

so we put it to the test

1:53:55

suite. Tell a health sites that didn't require

1:53:57

any blood. Work. We used a real. In

1:54:00

real body said by these metrics

1:54:02

have none of us should have

1:54:05

qualified for Glp one medications. On

1:54:07

one side all he had to deal with

1:54:09

inputs and basic info for like my height,

1:54:11

weight and set up a call with a

1:54:13

doctor. No, I've never tried this

1:54:16

before or after a seven minute

1:54:18

console and qualified health and five

1:54:20

questions enough I was approved type

1:54:22

of the sites we reached out

1:54:24

to, Sue approved Essence A compounded

1:54:26

some ugly tied none of us

1:54:28

a doctor. And person. Some

1:54:31

at the the tide. Is currently allowed by the

1:54:33

F t A and it's not. Approved

1:54:35

And that's an important difference.

1:54:38

There are dozens of pharmacies across

1:54:40

the country mixing their own versions,

1:54:42

sometimes adding other ingredients like B

1:54:44

Twelve months. Some of the facilities

1:54:46

are inspected by the F T

1:54:49

A says drugs they make or

1:54:51

not. For this is part. Of

1:54:54

course what you wanted to tell health

1:54:56

provider you already heard is very easy

1:54:58

just five questions lie whatever abuse though

1:55:01

prescriber to you for don't get see

1:55:03

at the compound. Know. Make

1:55:05

sure you have an approved have a

1:55:07

health provide who give you the good

1:55:09

stuff, the of the real stuff, the

1:55:11

stuff that has the brand name on

1:55:13

it. And there's something up with Oprah

1:55:16

and her leaving Weight Watchers after they

1:55:18

acquire to tell a health provider i

1:55:20

have two clips pussy. We can figure

1:55:22

it out there that the company that

1:55:24

used to be known as Weight Watchers

1:55:26

last season for said of their values.

1:55:28

Yesterday after major announcements Oprah Winfrey has

1:55:30

decided to leave it's board of directors

1:55:32

ending for long term relationship with the

1:55:34

company. Like Seattle has won the potential

1:55:36

impacts on the same as breath. When

1:55:40

he says. S.

1:55:43

For nearly a decade, Oprah Winfrey has

1:55:46

been a sea of weight watchers joining

1:55:48

the board in twenty this team when

1:55:50

she acquired a ten percent stake in

1:55:52

a company, but Wednesday the company announced

1:55:55

the media mogul was stepping down. Despite

1:55:57

leaving the board, Winfrey said in his

1:55:59

statements. I have been a long time

1:56:01

supporter of this worthy organization and I

1:56:03

am proud to continue my support. In

1:56:06

December Winfrey revealed to People magazine that

1:56:08

she uses a weight loss drug as

1:56:10

a maintenance tool and she was quote

1:56:12

done with the shaming. Dr.

1:56:15

Melanie J sat on a panel with Winfrey in fall

1:56:17

of 2023. We

1:56:19

talked about how it's not the easy way

1:56:21

out. You still have to manage the medications

1:56:24

long term. You still have to

1:56:26

make changes to your lifestyle. Although

1:56:28

Winfrey hasn't said which medication she's taking,

1:56:30

drugs like Ozempic and Wigovi have

1:56:33

soared in popularity in recent years.

1:56:35

In fact, Weight Watchers recently launched a

1:56:38

program geared toward people who use such

1:56:40

weight loss drugs. You don't necessarily have

1:56:42

to work as much on hunger cues

1:56:44

because the medications help with those, but

1:56:46

you do have to make sure you're

1:56:48

getting a protein and enough to eat some vegetables

1:56:50

and so I think people still need

1:56:53

a lot of support to do that. Winfrey herself

1:56:55

said in a statement she looks forward

1:56:57

to continuing to advise and collaborate with

1:56:59

Weight Watchers. She also plans

1:57:01

to donate her Weight Watchers stock to the

1:57:04

National Museum of African American History and

1:57:06

Culture. In part, Weight Watchers

1:57:08

said to eliminate any perceived conflict

1:57:10

of interest around her taking weight

1:57:13

loss medication. Okay, before I get

1:57:15

to Gail who was

1:57:17

her Fanny Pack wearing camping buddy, she

1:57:20

donated her

1:57:24

shares to the National

1:57:27

Museum of African American History and Culture

1:57:29

to avoid any conflict of interest. Well,

1:57:32

I find that odd because she is

1:57:34

on the museum council, so that

1:57:37

seems like a conflict of interest right

1:57:39

there. She just gave it to something

1:57:41

that she's on the board of, the

1:57:43

council, which is

1:57:46

also, if you donate it, I'm sure that's

1:57:48

a tax deduction. Oh, a

1:57:50

big one. This council is interesting. Our

1:57:53

buddy Ted Leonces is on the council. That's

1:57:56

interesting. Let's see, who

1:57:58

else is on here? the

1:58:00

Mellon Foundation, Walgreens Boots

1:58:02

Alliance, we've got Laura

1:58:05

Bush. Oh, she's dead.

1:58:07

Oh well. We

1:58:10

have... Kids? No, I'm

1:58:12

just kidding. Different Bush is dead.

1:58:14

We got the CEO of Merck,

1:58:17

former chairman and CEO of Merck.

1:58:20

We've got some bankers, some president

1:58:22

of Rutgers University. This is a

1:58:24

huge drinking club. There's

1:58:27

some army people in there,

1:58:29

the Ford Foundation. So

1:58:31

yeah, there's nothing going on there. Let's

1:58:33

see what Gail has to say about

1:58:35

this. Yeah, I've heard from reliable sources

1:58:38

that Oprah has big plans coming up.

1:58:40

Reliable sources. You mean you're

1:58:42

passing on what Oprah wants everybody to

1:58:44

know? Yeah, I've heard from reliable sources

1:58:46

that Oprah has big plans coming up

1:58:48

and I think when she donated her

1:58:50

stocks to the... Which people don't do, by the

1:58:52

way. People don't... They'll walk away with their stocks and

1:58:55

take their money and go. It's like $12 million

1:58:57

that she didn't have to do. She didn't have to

1:58:59

do because she could have... She did if

1:59:01

she had a tax liability and she wanted

1:59:03

to reduce it. It's no big deal. And

1:59:05

then still kept the money but she wanted

1:59:07

to eliminate any perception that she is now

1:59:09

whatever her big announcement is... Ah,

1:59:12

here it is. You see, she's up

1:59:14

to something. She wanted to eliminate

1:59:16

any perception. So it's... We

1:59:19

had $12 million in tax benefit, whatever. Any

1:59:22

perception for what she's

1:59:24

about to announce. Something

1:59:26

big is coming from Oprah. But she wanted

1:59:28

to eliminate any perception

1:59:31

that she is now whatever her big announcement that

1:59:33

she's going to make, I'm thinking very soon. She

1:59:36

didn't want anybody to think that she's doing it

1:59:38

because it's a money grab. Right. Yeah.

1:59:41

A money grab. Are you sure you got to

1:59:44

give up the stock? Are you sure about that? You

1:59:46

can see it in my way, Oprah. I mean, and

1:59:48

it's not illegal but I say this all the time.

1:59:50

Oprah only does. Focus on the

1:59:52

stock. Not on the big announcement yet. Not

1:59:54

on the money grab. The right thing even

1:59:56

when no one is watching. Yeah. And

1:59:59

I tell this story. traveling and you can't have more than

2:00:01

$X,000 in cash. She

2:00:03

had $10,000 in cash on her as one does.

2:00:07

As one does. The customs people came

2:00:09

on. I said, well, you can just say. No one

2:00:11

does. Yes, she does. As one does. She

2:00:13

had 10,000. By the way, that's a long-standing rule if you have more

2:00:15

than $10,000. I think is

2:00:17

it $10,000 or more than $10,000? I

2:00:22

believe it's $10,000 or more. Then you have to

2:00:24

declare that. You have to say, yeah, I'm traveling. I got 10

2:00:26

G's, man. I'm with

2:00:28

Diddy. She had $10,000 in cash on

2:00:30

her as one does. No

2:00:34

one does. She does. I

2:00:36

said, well, you can just give me some,

2:00:38

give Andre her inner circle and we'll give it

2:00:40

back to you because I don't believe in paying for

2:00:42

your own money. I said, no one will know. She

2:00:45

said, but I'll know. She's

2:00:47

honest. Oh, she's honest. This

2:00:49

is Gail letting you know that whatever

2:00:51

Oprah's got coming next, she's honest. It's

2:00:54

not a money grab. It's not a

2:00:56

conflict of interest. She's coming with

2:00:58

something big. It's not a money grab.

2:01:00

It's not. She's honest. She

2:01:02

reports her money. Yes, I have $10,000 in cash. I

2:01:06

declared it. I am

2:01:08

a law abiding citizen, I would like to

2:01:10

say, but it just strikes me that even

2:01:12

when no one is watching, she does the

2:01:14

right thing. Once again, to me, this is evidence

2:01:16

of that. Yeah, and that's the nation is big.

2:01:18

No, you're absolutely right. For the museum, of course.

2:01:21

No. It's evidence that

2:01:23

something is coming that is completely off

2:01:25

the charts when it

2:01:28

comes to conflict of interest. She's

2:01:30

going to do something with some weight loss drug and

2:01:33

it's big. It's big.

2:01:35

Just so you know, Oprah's honest. She

2:01:38

is honest. Never

2:01:41

doubt her honesty. Oh,

2:01:44

you have nothing to predict. I do want

2:01:46

to say something about the first clip you played, which

2:01:49

was a little bitty mention of the

2:01:51

fact that if you start up on

2:01:53

Ozimpic, you have to

2:01:55

take it for the rest of your life. It

2:01:58

says to be on it for... your

2:02:00

entire life. They prescribe it with that

2:02:02

in mind. For Faith and her parents,

2:02:05

they were worth a shot. Where

2:02:08

do you give yourself a shot? I give myself a shot

2:02:10

in my stomach. Yeah, I don't even like the life. You

2:02:14

can hear the clip. It's done. Wow. Can

2:02:16

you tell me what you're on and how long

2:02:18

you've been on? I've been on Manjaro since

2:02:20

May. A zimpic sit-up. Yes,

2:04:01

some are used for pain management. I

2:04:04

used one for a short time. Not

2:04:06

knowing it was an antidepressant. My wife

2:04:08

said, I was unbearable to be around

2:04:10

because it made me irrational at times.

2:04:12

I quit it quickly. And

2:04:15

then we have a nurse boots

2:04:17

on the ground. I've been a psychiatric nurse for 17

2:04:19

years. We have no reason to doubt that.

2:04:23

Perozexteen, Sarozat,

2:04:26

and Fluexitine Prozac were famous

2:04:28

for igniting impulsive conditions wherein

2:04:31

people started killing others or

2:04:33

themselves. I've seen

2:04:35

a boy who killed his disabled brother because

2:04:37

he couldn't control himself. I've seen a girl

2:04:39

who he would have to watch constantly because

2:04:42

otherwise she would kill herself. This

2:04:44

is a known side effect. It is only in

2:04:46

the first three weeks, but it is legal. How

2:04:50

about that? This is all known. It

2:04:54

also makes you vote Democrat. Did you know

2:04:56

that part? Anyone mentioned that? Yes,

2:05:01

I think that was the, my

2:05:04

wife said I was unbearable and irrational. I think

2:05:06

that was the... Yes, right there. Boom.

2:05:09

Gee. We

2:05:13

laugh, but it's really quite sad. It's

2:05:15

sad, but we do laugh. We

2:05:18

have to laugh about it. I mean, if

2:05:20

you can't laugh about it. Oh, we finally

2:05:22

got the clip from, although it's not that

2:05:24

spectacular, from the Law and Order of Vax

2:05:26

Party. From at least I

2:05:29

would count six people. Yes, six or

2:05:31

seven people. And 10 seconds

2:05:33

is the only part. It's a

2:05:36

party. There are people masked and people not masked and

2:05:38

there's a dude walking around with a syringe and here

2:05:40

we go. Why

2:05:43

are you into these days, Rich? And

2:05:46

don't say plastics. Plastics, sir?

2:05:48

Are you ready for your injection? There

2:05:50

you go. Are you ready for your

2:05:53

injection, sir? It was a little anticlimactic.

2:05:57

It was not good. Eventually, you

2:05:59

had the... gets to do that.

2:06:01

It's anti-climactic but this is what

2:06:03

it is. I

2:06:06

have an Ann Applebaum clip. She

2:06:09

just wrote another article in Atlantic

2:06:11

I saw. Oh yeah, well she's

2:06:14

a staffer there now.

2:06:16

Oh, well she's

2:06:18

a super elite. She travels in all the

2:06:20

circles. She's a spook. Ann

2:06:22

Applebaum, better for the Atlantic, had

2:06:25

this to say about Donald Trump's

2:06:27

strange acquiescence to Russia. Listen to

2:06:29

this and then let's talk about

2:06:32

it. Trump has

2:06:34

a lot of motives here. He keeps very

2:06:36

quiet about Russia and very quiet about Ukraine.

2:06:38

He knows that Russia is unpopular and rightly

2:06:41

so given the scenes that we've just seen.

2:06:44

He knows that Ukraine is still popular. Polling

2:06:46

shows Ukraine is popular in the United States.

2:06:48

The cause of helping Ukraine is supported by

2:06:50

most Americans. There's a

2:06:52

majority in Congress for supporting Ukraine. The

2:06:54

White House supports Ukraine and

2:06:57

yet he has ulterior motives. I hear

2:07:01

versions of them. Some to do with

2:07:03

oil, some to do with trading with

2:07:05

Russia, some may be personal,

2:07:07

maybe he thinks Putin will help him

2:07:10

again in his election campaign. But

2:07:14

the point is we have a leader of the

2:07:16

United States whose loyalties are

2:07:18

not to the United States. They're

2:07:21

not to American national interests. They're

2:07:23

not to America's alliances.

2:07:26

Defending Russia instead

2:07:29

of America's interests and our

2:07:31

allies our interests should be

2:07:33

automatically disqualifying. But for some

2:07:36

reason in this current

2:07:38

Republican party and in this political

2:07:40

environment, it's not even just overlooked.

2:07:42

It's embraced. And so we really

2:07:48

have to do our part this

2:07:51

election cycle to make sure that someone

2:07:53

like Trump who has proven to be

2:07:56

a traitor, not only

2:07:58

to our country

2:08:00

but to our democracy and

2:08:02

now to our allies cannot

2:08:05

win in November. That's

2:08:09

right everybody we can play all the

2:08:11

old jingles. I'm

2:08:20

happy about that. Well there's one other

2:08:22

presidential candidate who needs to be

2:08:24

discussed briefly, Bobby the Op. Now

2:08:27

is he on the ballot in any, I know

2:08:29

he's on the ballot in Utah. Can he, can

2:08:31

people keep asking me, can I vote for him?

2:08:34

I think in the presidential election I

2:08:36

think he'll be on most ballots. He

2:08:38

will be on most ballots, okay. Well

2:08:41

he did something on CNBC which I think

2:08:44

makes him electable for a lot of people.

2:08:48

It was just a, and he was, it

2:08:51

was actually pretty decent I thought and I would like to

2:08:53

share it. And I'm going to give

2:08:55

it a half, Bobby the Op on Bitcoin. Bitcoin, you

2:08:57

said you spoke at a conference, you bought it, you

2:08:59

bought something for your kids last

2:09:01

year. You more than doubled

2:09:03

your money if you're still holding. Are you still holding?

2:09:05

I mean let's have a little fun here to end

2:09:07

this. Yeah I am. I'm still holding. My

2:09:10

kids are very very happy about

2:09:12

it. What's

2:09:14

Bitcoin's real role? There are members

2:09:16

of Congress, both parties I believe,

2:09:18

that think it should be banned. Yeah

2:09:21

I mean they want to ban

2:09:23

because they're being

2:09:26

paid by BlackRock and Morgan

2:09:28

and all the big globalist

2:09:30

bankers, banking monopolies that are

2:09:32

making money on inflation and

2:09:34

making money on by the

2:09:36

Fed printing money. But

2:09:38

American people, American middle class

2:09:42

is getting rolled and the off

2:09:44

ramp from that, the

2:09:47

money printing machine is

2:09:49

Bitcoin because it

2:09:51

is hard currency. And

2:09:53

we need to make it transactionally available to

2:09:55

the middle class. We

2:09:58

need to make sure that people want it. themselves

2:10:00

against inflation can have this but

2:10:02

also that they have transactional freedom.

2:10:06

The government is not able

2:10:08

now to digitalize our

2:10:10

currencies like they did

2:10:12

in Canada and

2:10:15

when the truckers disobeyed, when

2:10:17

the truckers protested peacefully, their

2:10:19

bank accounts were shut down.

2:10:23

They couldn't pay their mortgages, they couldn't

2:10:25

pay for their children's education, the government

2:10:27

could control their speech by

2:10:30

controlling their transactional freedom and transactional

2:10:32

freedom is as important as freedom

2:10:34

of speech and

2:10:36

you only get that from Bitcoin, we're not going to

2:10:38

get that as long as

2:10:40

the government controls our digitalized currency.

2:10:43

All it needs to do now is join the libertarian party.

2:10:47

Well a couple of things there, one

2:10:49

is not hard currency, hard currency is

2:10:51

gold and silver. I'm not going to

2:10:53

get in an argument with you about

2:10:55

hard currency, it is hard currency. You

2:10:58

started it by definition, it is hard currency, it

2:11:05

is hard to make. So

2:11:08

here, oh that's interesting, I like that

2:11:10

little twist, hard to make. That's

2:11:12

what, so is

2:11:14

a pumpkin pie then. No, what is hard currency,

2:11:16

sometimes hard to make especially I haven't got an

2:11:19

oven. John's

2:11:21

new pumpkin coin everybody. So

2:11:23

now, so let's go to

2:11:26

the downside of this which

2:11:28

you didn't even think about. They're going

2:11:30

to try to sink this guy, they

2:11:32

can do it by slamming

2:11:35

Bitcoin and dropping it back down to 10,000

2:11:37

or who knows what

2:11:39

and blame him for the loss and

2:11:42

say look at this guy, he's recommended everyone

2:11:44

go into Bitcoin and look what happened. I would

2:11:47

be very afraid if

2:11:50

I was supporting

2:11:52

Kennedy and Bitcoin at this point

2:11:54

after what he did because they

2:11:56

did, somebody's out to get Kennedy.

2:11:59

I love that. this that he's positive about

2:12:01

Bitcoin. I really do. But

2:12:03

you know, I'm just, I'm pro Bitcoin. Well, you're

2:12:05

happy it says it's a clam because Bitcoin is

2:12:07

up to 62,000 or something like that. It's

2:12:10

almost back to its highs. Yes. And

2:12:12

I believe it will go much higher. As you know, of course

2:12:14

you do. You wouldn't be in it if you didn't think that

2:12:16

way. That's

2:12:18

right. Bobby,

2:12:21

the op has a shot now. I

2:12:24

think he has a shot. I think it's a good move. What

2:12:27

else is he going to do? Who else is he going to

2:12:29

appeal to? I

2:12:32

don't know. They really cordoned him off.

2:12:34

I mean, talk about a guy with

2:12:36

a lot of good messages that's been

2:12:38

marginalized. I mean,

2:12:40

he should have been running against Biden.

2:12:43

The Democrat Party should be ashamed of

2:12:45

itself. They should be. Absolutely. They completely

2:12:47

screwed him, cut him out of the

2:12:49

deal and won't give him any protection

2:12:51

to boot. Which

2:12:54

is really the lowest thing

2:12:56

you've got in your scum bags. So maybe

2:12:58

just call him Bitcoin Bobby from now on.

2:13:01

Maybe that's a better term. Bitcoin Bobby. Because

2:13:05

it defines him now. For me, RFK

2:13:08

Jr. is now Bitcoin Bobby. We

2:13:11

have been on this very podcast which

2:13:14

does not feature video. Which

2:13:17

that way you know that we're the real deal. We

2:13:21

have been talking about pig butchering for

2:13:23

months. Months.

2:13:28

Do you remember our pig

2:13:30

butchering conversations? No. Yes. Pig

2:13:33

butchering. Yes. We even took a

2:13:35

call live on the show. We

2:13:37

did. These are the text messages

2:13:39

that come in. Hi, I'm this hot Asian

2:13:41

chick. How you doing? Are

2:13:44

you going to pick me up? Are we playing

2:13:46

tennis today? You're supposed to say what? What?

2:13:50

And then they get you into

2:13:52

some phony crypto scam. They

2:13:55

get you to a website where you're buying

2:13:57

Bitcoin, believe it or not. and

2:14:00

it's off the charts and you're winning and if it's

2:14:03

not Bitcoin, it's a mother coin and

2:14:05

it's just the front and they've taken all your money

2:14:08

and they do it for months and months and

2:14:10

months. Well they finally

2:14:12

have figured out

2:14:14

where this is happening. How

2:14:17

long does it take to find any of

2:14:20

these online scammers? Oh, well there's a whole...

2:14:22

I'm sorry, a lot of them are over the

2:14:24

phone. I get phone calls all the time a

2:14:26

couple of times a day with some bogus

2:14:29

offer usually to

2:14:32

take... I get 50% off of

2:14:34

my PG&E bill. I'm from PG&E. The person says

2:14:36

they're not from PG and he barely speak English.

2:14:39

No, but this is different. This does not... There

2:14:41

are no calls. This starts with... You're not... No,

2:14:43

I'm just saying how long does it take to

2:14:46

catch these criminals? Well

2:14:48

they were uncatchable because they were in

2:14:50

scam factories. Yeah.

2:14:54

Scam factories. Now last

2:14:56

month a DW investigation revealed

2:14:58

widespread human rights abuses at

2:15:01

what are being called scam

2:15:03

factories on the Myanmar-Thai border.

2:15:06

Thousands of human trafficking victims are

2:15:08

trapped in large compounds where they're

2:15:10

forced to take part in online

2:15:12

cryptocurrency scams that target people in

2:15:15

Europe, the US and China. Now

2:15:17

if they refuse, they're tortured,

2:15:19

allegedly, or sold to other

2:15:21

factories. Now China, Thailand and

2:15:23

Myanmar have rescued more than

2:15:26

1,000 people. And

2:15:28

I just wanted to clarify, so we're

2:15:30

talking about scam factories here. So these

2:15:32

are places where people are

2:15:34

forced to get on the phone

2:15:37

and trick people into doing something they don't want to

2:15:39

do. Can you just explain that? Exactly. So

2:15:41

why we are calling them victims is

2:15:44

because these people who are forced to

2:15:46

do these drugs are being trafficked into

2:15:48

these compounds in Myanmar and other countries.

2:15:52

And they have been trained and forced

2:15:54

to reach out to people in

2:15:57

Europe, in the US, in China build

2:16:00

up a relationship and then to persuade

2:16:02

them to invest mostly

2:16:04

in cryptocurrency fake

2:16:06

websites and then they're leaving

2:16:08

them with and the people

2:16:11

lost a lot of money which is also

2:16:13

called big butchering. Big

2:16:16

butchering, there it is. And

2:16:19

so sadly these are slaves. So

2:16:22

you know whenever you go like hey you know

2:16:24

I'm not gonna you get the one of those

2:16:27

text messages like oh I recognize your number but

2:16:29

I don't have you my phone book. Who are

2:16:31

you? And you know I say

2:16:33

hey I know I'm not interested in your

2:16:35

scam, your crypto scam and

2:16:37

they get really mad at you and

2:16:39

start calling your names but that's now

2:16:42

I feel bad because they're slaves. You

2:16:44

almost want to help them out. Thousands,

2:16:48

they have pictures, these are

2:16:50

huge compounds. Blue

2:16:52

cream is up to you. Somebody's good at

2:16:54

management. Definitely. Quick

2:16:58

update on the Clor- Clormaquat

2:17:02

that has been found in Oat products

2:17:04

like Cheerios and Oatbrand.

2:17:07

Little report, of course you get no

2:17:09

follow-up from the M5M. Little

2:17:12

report here, Oat Miller's recommended not

2:17:14

to use manipulator. So apparently

2:17:17

this a Clormaquat just exactly

2:17:19

as our producer said we're

2:17:22

using this product called manipulator

2:17:25

on oats and

2:17:30

that's what was getting it into our food supply.

2:17:33

Who is watching these people? Who

2:17:35

is watching this stuff that was put on the

2:17:38

market? Now they're too

2:17:40

busy pushing the vaccine. Exactly. Exactly.

2:17:45

Your no agenda show is

2:17:47

watching out for you. That's

2:17:49

who's looking out for you.

2:17:52

A quick rest in

2:17:54

peace for Bob Heil. Yeah.

2:17:56

Kilo 9 Echo India Delta. Yes, I mean

2:17:59

back in the... are the first

2:18:01

mics we all use for our podcast was

2:18:03

the Heil PR Forden but

2:18:05

I would say we

2:18:07

do a disservice by saying that Bob

2:18:09

supplied the ham radio industry and the

2:18:12

podcast industry. I mean he did entire

2:18:14

sound systems for Grateful Dead, The Who,

2:18:17

Joe Walsh, Frampton.

2:18:20

Yeah we had a interview with

2:18:22

him back in show I think 728,

2:18:25

724 something like that. Oh did we put that on

2:18:27

the air? We put the interview on the on the

2:18:29

air. Glad you're keeping up.

2:18:32

I can't remember. Did

2:18:35

we? Yeah. Oh.

2:18:37

Wasn't the archives? Did we do a special with

2:18:40

Bob or was it just... It was one of

2:18:42

those filler shows that I do a couple of

2:18:44

interviews. I did one with Scully and Heil in

2:18:46

that day. Oh right.

2:18:48

Scully oh my goodness I forgot about

2:18:51

that one. In the 700s so

2:18:53

it was so long ago you'd easily forget.

2:18:55

Yeah. Wow.

2:18:57

Well Bob he was young

2:18:59

too. What was he? He was 82 I

2:19:02

think. That's not very old. Or 83. 83.

2:19:06

83. There's a nice

2:19:08

guy. I never met

2:19:11

him but I like this product and I

2:19:13

still use the... Tina uses the Heil

2:19:15

PR 40. Sounds good for her voice. Thank

2:19:19

you. It's got a good range. Yeah it's

2:19:21

a very good range. Thank you to all

2:19:23

the producers who also calculated that no way

2:19:25

was there ever a leap day pod show

2:19:27

day for no agenda.

2:19:30

Wow. The last... I know we got great people.

2:19:33

We got great nerds out there. Hey let me

2:19:35

think. Let me take a look. The

2:19:37

last time a leap

2:19:40

year was on a show

2:19:43

day was 2004. That was a

2:19:45

Sunday so of course we didn't have the show in 2004. The next time it

2:19:49

will happen. So the next... you get ready? Put

2:19:51

it in your calendar. 2033. 30 2033. That's

2:19:57

the next time. The magic number. Yes. next

2:20:00

time a leap year will happen on a show

2:20:02

day. Wow. And I think

2:20:04

we should hold out for it. Okay. That'll

2:20:07

be a special show. We'll have to get a special

2:20:09

donation amount. I'm

2:20:13

already working on the gimmick. With inflation

2:20:15

at that point, it'll be like

2:20:17

a $10 donation today. $10

2:20:20

is $20,000. With

2:20:24

that, I'd like to thank you for your courage in the

2:20:26

morning to you, the man who put the sea in the

2:20:28

newcomers, ladies and gentlemen, say hello to my friend on the

2:20:30

other end, one and only Mr. John C.

2:20:32

DePaul! Hey,

2:20:36

in the morning, Mr. Adam Curran, in the morning, our ship

2:20:38

is sea boots and ground feet in the air subs in

2:20:40

the water. And

2:20:42

all the dames and apes out there. And

2:20:44

in the morning to the trolls in the troll

2:20:47

room, hold on a second, trolls, let me count

2:20:49

you for a second. Go down, there you go.

2:20:51

Oh, well, well, well,

2:20:53

okay, good news. Last

2:20:56

Sunday was 2,103 trolls listening live. We're

2:21:00

up by 7, 2,110. It's

2:21:03

going in the right direction. We've got a

2:21:05

positive trend, a positive troll trend. I'm liking

2:21:08

that a lot, trolls, which you

2:21:10

can join at trollroom.io. Now you

2:21:12

don't want, you know, people, you may

2:21:14

want to hang around because a lot of fun stuff

2:21:16

happens in this portion of the show. All

2:21:19

kinds of things pop up that are

2:21:21

unexpected. So I'm just saying. And

2:21:23

if you'd like good news, you definitely want to

2:21:25

hang around. Now you

2:21:27

can join the trolls any Thursday or

2:21:29

Sunday. You actually want to join trollroom.io

2:21:31

a couple hours early. We

2:21:34

have the two-hour blues show on before Darren

2:21:36

O'Neill, who does two hours before We

2:21:39

Go Live. It's actually 24-7

2:21:41

on noagendostream.com, which you can

2:21:43

get at trollroom.io. Or

2:21:45

you can also get, and I am

2:21:47

going to promote a new modern podcast

2:21:49

app, Podverse, which also

2:21:52

alerts you when we go live. It has

2:21:54

the live stream. Isn't that the one you

2:21:56

did last show? No, I did Fountain on

2:21:58

the last show. Fountain. I'm

2:22:00

doing podverse. There's 16 of them so you can

2:22:02

count them all. Collect

2:22:05

them all. Collect them all. You should collect

2:22:07

them all. And what you want

2:22:09

to do is you want to support these

2:22:11

small podcast apps because they are truly the

2:22:13

only avenue left for freedom of speech. It's

2:22:16

not a platform. Maybe

2:22:18

one day we'll get blogs to come back but

2:22:20

seems unlikely at the moment. But

2:22:22

when it comes to freedom of speech, your

2:22:25

podcast app is very important and

2:22:28

it is independent. It is an independent

2:22:30

index that powers it. It's not connected

2:22:32

to anything Silicon Valley and

2:22:34

you can import all your existing podcasts

2:22:36

and you get all the 27 new

2:22:38

features which includes

2:22:41

updating within 90 seconds

2:22:43

of publishing of

2:22:45

this podcast, you will be alerted in your podcast

2:22:47

app. That alone should make you

2:22:49

say, I want that. I

2:22:51

want to be alerted immediately. We

2:22:56

are at a value for value podcast which

2:22:59

I'm proud to say this has become

2:23:01

a term that is being

2:23:03

used everywhere now. People

2:23:06

don't even know where it comes from which

2:23:08

I'm kind of proud of that. I

2:23:11

hear people talking about value for

2:23:13

value on Noster, value for value

2:23:15

in the beef industry, at least

2:23:18

in the independent beef industry. People are using

2:23:20

this term and we coined it and

2:23:23

we've been using the concept for 16 years

2:23:26

which excludes creepy corporate

2:23:28

money. It excludes commercials.

2:23:31

It excludes levels

2:23:33

and tote bags and subscriptions

2:23:36

and all kinds of things that you

2:23:39

know. We don't

2:23:41

price it for you. Whatever this podcast is

2:23:43

worth to you, we ask you to put

2:23:45

that into a number and send it back

2:23:47

to us. But it's not just that. It's

2:23:50

time, talent and treasure so you can

2:23:52

help us in many different ways. Look at

2:23:54

the boots on the ground we received and listen to some

2:23:56

of the clips that have been found like so many. people.

2:24:02

Go to the trouble of finding the artist

2:24:36

who we chose for the last

2:24:38

episode. This was Mountain Jay, which

2:24:41

I think is actually Lady Mountain Jay because

2:24:44

we've misgendered Mountain Jay. We used

2:24:46

to know. We misgendered

2:24:48

Mountain Jay several times and

2:24:51

you know I think

2:24:54

we both looked at this and

2:24:56

went okay AI clearly but it

2:24:58

was kind of funny we had the

2:25:00

frog leaping over the brown paper bag,

2:25:02

we had a sandwich and

2:25:05

it was it was watercolor. It was a

2:25:07

watercolor prompt. I'm sure

2:25:09

the prompt was frog jumping over

2:25:11

brown bag lunch watercolor. So

2:25:14

you know. Thank you for all

2:25:17

that effort Mountain Jay. The

2:25:19

one I like the most which

2:25:21

you nixed. Oh wait

2:25:24

a minute. With extreme prejudice.

2:25:27

Which one was that? The dirty

2:25:29

Jersey whore Texas's burning clip. Yes I

2:25:31

did. I did. I said there's an

2:25:34

arthard that's a nice piece. It's a

2:25:36

probably it's a pretty it's stunning it

2:25:38

sticks out like a sore thumb and

2:25:40

you said not on my

2:25:42

watch. Exactly what I said. I am never

2:25:45

gonna accept this too soon. People in Texas

2:25:47

are suffering and they're mocking it and you

2:25:49

went on and on and on. I was

2:25:51

like okay okay okay. We got

2:25:54

a note from Nicole and

2:25:56

she says I know this won't

2:25:58

be right on the show. Well there you go. ago. Boots

2:26:01

on the ground report from my grandmother

2:26:03

and my uncle's houses were both burned

2:26:05

completely to the ground in

2:26:07

Stinnett, Texas. She had her home for 60

2:26:10

plus years. Everyone's okay and they

2:26:12

are taken care of and have a home for now. Just

2:26:15

a little comment that this exact same

2:26:17

thing happened last year. My grandma was

2:26:19

evacuated just this time. It started the

2:26:21

exact same spot. This is a yearly

2:26:23

thing up here. This time the

2:26:25

winds were just too intense. So

2:26:27

please stop with the lasers

2:26:29

from sky. Stop

2:26:31

with the – Hey, you're the one that

2:26:33

dreams that stuff up and you're now condemning

2:26:35

our listeners. No, because even

2:26:38

in Texas, this is just like the

2:26:40

Maui fires. No, no. I

2:26:42

want to remind everybody how the Maui fire started

2:26:44

which we'll never hear the truth. The

2:26:47

Maui fire started when the power lines

2:26:49

went down, the power company turned off

2:26:52

the power but there were huge generators

2:26:54

for the hotels that had been jacked

2:26:56

back into the grid and they reactivated

2:26:58

those lines that were down. We

2:27:01

have this on good authority from

2:27:03

people who've seen the logs from the power

2:27:05

companies and that there were surges through the

2:27:08

lines that were down that restarted the fire

2:27:10

after the fire department already left. And

2:27:14

this in Texas, this just happens. And

2:27:17

no, painting your roof blue will not stop the

2:27:19

eye in the sky from zapping you when they

2:27:22

do it for real. That

2:27:24

drives me nuts. Oprah

2:27:26

had her house, her roof painted blue, that's why

2:27:28

they didn't burn her house. I

2:27:31

mean seriously. Yeah,

2:27:33

I heard that too. A

2:27:36

little much. What else did

2:27:38

we look at here? You liked it

2:27:41

pretty much. That was it pretty much. No, you liked

2:27:43

the cow in the drive-through which I asked if you

2:27:45

were on drugs. I did kind of like that. I

2:27:47

also like Brown Baggett the Nestworx piece with the In-N-Out

2:27:50

Burger logo. But the frog

2:27:52

jumping out of the bag was just too silly

2:27:54

looking and well done by

2:27:56

whatever art generator was being used. It

2:28:00

was really just well done. It

2:28:02

was cute and funny. I

2:28:04

think that when you use

2:28:06

an AI, it would be

2:28:09

helpful to us if you told us which one

2:28:11

you used just so we could know. Where

2:28:14

are they going to put that in the, how are they going to let

2:28:16

us know this? In the title,

2:28:18

you can put it in the title. Yeah,

2:28:21

I guess you could. I just like to, I

2:28:23

mean I'm interested which is the doing this. Okay,

2:28:26

well now you changed it. I

2:28:28

have to because it's all AI. I mean everyone's

2:28:30

doing AI. I mean it's

2:28:32

easier. Mountain Jay was literally on Macedon

2:28:34

talking about how she had to change

2:28:36

the prompt a hundred times to get

2:28:38

the desired result. I mean okay, that's

2:28:41

fine but I just like to know. It's not my

2:28:43

work. You can do it by hand. Some people scare

2:28:45

a manga I believe. He uses very little AI. I

2:28:48

think he does once in a while. That's fine. I

2:28:50

just like to know. But he, I think sometimes can

2:28:52

be just as fast doing it by hand if you're

2:28:54

good as prompt engineering.

2:29:00

Which I now have a name for. Prompt

2:29:02

Jockey, PJs. Like

2:29:06

that prompt jockeys. Prompt jockeys. Prompt

2:29:08

jockeys. I'm interested because look we

2:29:11

have to give into it. AI is

2:29:13

clearly, we don't have to but

2:29:15

we did already. We have to. People

2:29:17

are using AI. No, we don't have to. Artists are

2:29:20

using AI. That's just the bottom line. No,

2:29:22

we don't have to. We just, we get no art.

2:29:25

There you go. We have to. We

2:29:27

have to. We have to. There's

2:29:30

no way around it. We already did long ago.

2:29:32

No way around it. Thank you very

2:29:34

much MountainJ. The curious thing,

2:29:36

it was once comic strip blogger

2:29:38

who started the whole phenomenon. When

2:29:40

he was doing it solo and

2:29:42

producing good pieces, you were dead

2:29:44

set against all AI art. But

2:29:46

once everyone else started using it,

2:29:48

it was okay. So you really

2:29:51

do hate comic strip blogger. Well,

2:29:53

doesn't everybody? Yeah, I guess so.

2:29:57

Now he's gonna send a note to Aaron,

2:29:59

or please block. Adam Curry for my mastodon.

2:30:01

He say horrible things to me. He's

2:30:06

the guy that's saying, you better get a new

2:30:08

job because AGI is going to take it within

2:30:10

a year. AGI

2:30:13

is going nowhere fast. AGI

2:30:15

is going to be the end of it. None

2:30:18

of this stuff. The only thing

2:30:20

that's really working is audio,

2:30:23

video and images. Is there

2:30:25

some humor? Images

2:30:27

are kicking ass. Yeah, images are

2:30:29

great. Do you

2:30:31

still want to license our content to

2:30:33

one of these LLM bakeries? I

2:30:37

don't think it's a bad idea if we can get some money. I

2:30:41

could get any money. No

2:30:44

one pays us. No one cares.

2:30:48

We have so much good three hours for

2:30:50

like years, 16 years of material about

2:30:53

public events, the current affairs, everything

2:30:56

in between, 16 years of content.

2:30:58

A lot of it has already been moved

2:31:01

to normal outputs.

2:31:05

You can read it. I think

2:31:07

it would be great if somebody offered us some money. Well,

2:31:11

no one's offering so far. Well, we're just

2:31:13

at the beginning of this. They're giving it

2:31:15

to Reddit. Reddit's cleaning

2:31:17

up. We're not getting anything. I

2:31:20

can't believe Reddit is kind of cleaning

2:31:22

up, but once they go public and

2:31:24

they have their show in, I mean, it's going to

2:31:26

be one hit of money and then what? Yeah.

2:31:29

Does Reddit have a business model? Do they make

2:31:31

money? Not that I know of. Yeah, annoy people.

2:31:34

See if you can get anything from them. I

2:31:37

don't think they have a model. There

2:31:40

you go. Thank

2:31:44

you very much to Mountain Jay.

2:31:46

We appreciate it. We really appreciate you and all

2:31:48

of the artists who participated

2:31:50

in our Value for Value program. And

2:31:54

now let's thank some of our executive and associate

2:31:56

executive producers. Now, here's how this works. We'd like

2:31:59

to thank everybody. who returned

2:32:01

value in the amount of $50 or more

2:32:04

and the top, so that's 300 plus, you also

2:32:08

get a credit as an executive producer which

2:32:10

is just, that's exactly how Hollywood works

2:32:12

so you can use that credit to

2:32:15

impress your friends, potential

2:32:18

mates. You can put it

2:32:20

on your LinkedIn, put it in your resume, you

2:32:22

can also open up if you don't have one,

2:32:25

an IMDB profile and to prove

2:32:27

it like hey baby, look

2:32:30

at me, I'm an executive producer. Between

2:32:32

200 and 300, associate executive producer and of

2:32:34

course everybody's a producer no matter what you

2:32:36

do to return the value to

2:32:38

the show and we love doing it, we're doing it for

2:32:40

16, we're not 16th year, 16th, what

2:32:43

are you 16 years now? 16

2:32:45

years. What are you headed

2:32:47

towards? 17th anniversary. You're rocking and rolling. Let me

2:32:49

kick it off with Duchess Kim from

2:32:52

Hubbard, Oregon who

2:32:54

comes in with a big boob

2:32:56

donation, 882 cents. Have

2:33:03

we ever had a boob donation that size? I

2:33:07

don't know. That's big. Well she has

2:33:09

a note. Those are big boobs. Big boobs, she

2:33:11

says, oh and she has a couple of requests

2:33:13

here, she wants Screw Your Freedom, Hell

2:33:16

Girl Yay and

2:33:18

F Cancer and R2-D2 Karma. Okay, so

2:33:20

we have all that. I can have

2:33:23

all that lined up. Good. In

2:33:25

the morning John Adam, there's been a lot of boob

2:33:28

talk as of late and I felt this was my

2:33:30

cue to chime in. After

2:33:32

losing over half of my sweater puppies

2:33:34

to stop breast cancer, I say let

2:33:36

them fly. Be proud of

2:33:38

your ladies, ladies. Men just stare because

2:33:40

they're jealous. If they had boobs, there

2:33:42

would be no war because they would all be at home

2:33:44

playing with them. I

2:33:47

love a humorous woman. Us

2:33:50

women are the only ones in the world that can

2:33:52

handle this type of responsibility. Also I want

2:33:54

to answer a question. Sir Kevin Duke of

2:33:56

Luna, lover of American boobs, asks yes, they

2:33:58

can put squeaky toys them. I

2:34:01

asked my plastic surgeon but I'm an avid

2:34:03

runner. I did not think it would be

2:34:05

appropriate running across the finish line squeaking not

2:34:07

to mention the pack of dogs I would

2:34:09

have chasing me. You two are absolutely wonderful.

2:34:11

I look forward to the podcast twice a

2:34:13

week. I don't know if there's anyone who

2:34:15

could replace either one of you. Keep

2:34:19

up the good work and stay safe. Duchess

2:34:22

Kim, keeper of the Nutty Fluffers from

2:34:24

Hubbard, Oregon. Thank you very much Duchess

2:34:26

Kim. We appreciate that. Screw your freedom.

2:34:28

Wow! You thought.

2:34:31

Karma. Yes,

2:34:40

we should also mention the Duchess Kim that there

2:34:42

may be an opening for a writer on the

2:34:44

Gutfeld Show. She might want to learn. She

2:34:47

would be good for it for sure. Bowman,

2:34:50

Bowman, Bowman, McMahon in San

2:34:52

Antonio, Texas 333.33 and has

2:34:54

the best note of the

2:34:58

day. Thanks you all. Well

2:35:00

there you go. Give them a double up karma for that. I'll

2:35:03

stand in. I'll stand in. You've got.

2:35:06

Then we

2:35:10

go to Surplus. Surplus

2:35:12

from Glenn Osman in

2:35:15

Australia. Yeah,

2:35:18

Australia. Australia. ITM,

2:35:20

John and Adam, groups of three have been appearing so

2:35:22

I feel obliged to donate. That's how it works. You

2:35:24

get the magic numbers. You know what you have to

2:35:26

do. One of my blocks

2:35:28

of Shiraz yielded 33 tons this week. Whoa!

2:35:33

Blime maker. Yeah. And I

2:35:35

had a Chenin Blanc. Am I pronouncing that

2:35:38

right? Chenin Blanc. With

2:35:40

a pH of 3.33. Good

2:35:43

number. My 333USD donation was a shade

2:35:45

over 510 in dollar redos and in order to capitalize on the

2:35:53

woeful exchange rate, which is woeful indeed, I

2:35:55

would like to reach out to Gitmo Nation.

2:35:57

I'd be interested in expanding our

2:36:00

distribution to cover the... United States.

2:36:02

My winery specializes in preservation free

2:36:04

wines. Preservative. I'm sorry.

2:36:06

Thank you. Preservative free

2:36:09

wines. If you're interested,

2:36:11

please reach out to

2:36:13

admin at templebrewer.com.au. That

2:36:16

is t-e-m-p-l-e-b-r-u-e-r.com.au. Thank you for

2:36:19

your curd, surplus keeper of

2:36:21

the Federal Reserve. John, this

2:36:23

sounds like an exit strategy

2:36:26

for you. I'm

2:36:28

getting the wine distribution. Why not? I mean, you

2:36:31

could. Yeah, you sit here and yak, yak, yak

2:36:33

or go out and actually do some work. Nah,

2:36:35

I think I'll stick you. Please write a book

2:36:37

about it. That'd be great. Well, I could. How

2:36:41

about a vinegar book first? Please. Don't

2:36:43

get me started. Frannie

2:36:45

Knudsen, meanwhile, in Plantation, Florida comes in with

2:36:47

333.33 and she leaves no note whatsoever.

2:36:51

So she gets a double up comment and

2:36:53

she sends something in. You've got... Carmer.

2:36:58

And hold

2:37:01

on

2:37:05

a second. Where's

2:37:07

the... That's true setup.

2:37:09

That's weird. Hold on. That's...

2:37:13

I know the next one, I have to have

2:37:16

that ready. I'm surprised for some reason that didn't

2:37:18

happen. Here we go. Clayton

2:37:21

Moses, Anchorage, Alaska.

2:37:23

333. Please dub me

2:37:25

properly as Sir Delicious-alicious. Pronounced

2:37:29

Al-o-wicious. Sir

2:37:31

Delicious-al-o-wicious. Got it.

2:37:33

The blade of the black pines. Please

2:37:36

say hello to my friend Vern.

2:37:38

I guess he's becoming a knight

2:37:40

today. Love the show, you boys.

2:37:42

Jingle request. China's ass-ho. That's true.

2:37:44

And JCD, me no likey. That's

2:37:50

easy. Lovely. We'll see you

2:37:53

in a bit, Clayton. Angela

2:37:55

Wang, Wang in Whittier,

2:37:57

California. 233.33. associate

2:38:00

executive producer. Greetings from Shanghai.

2:38:02

She's not in weir. She's

2:38:05

in Shanghai. Three is my birthday and a show day

2:38:07

so it seems like a good time. I don't think

2:38:09

she's on the birthday list. Otherwise

2:38:11

it would be yellow. Angela Yang.

2:38:14

So it seems like a good

2:38:16

time to send some love. Thank

2:38:18

you for keeping me entertained and

2:38:20

informed. Please send

2:38:22

Karma for everyone and you're going to

2:38:24

need a Bitcoin. Shanghai meet up soon.

2:38:26

I think wasn't there a saying I

2:38:28

meet up recently? I don't remember but

2:38:30

yeah we'll go meet Angela in Shanghai.

2:38:32

That's got to be a that's the

2:38:34

place. There are a lot of bars

2:38:36

there that's for sure. You're

2:38:40

saying that all hell is going to break loose and

2:38:42

you're going to need a Bitcoin. You've

2:38:46

got Karma. Then

2:38:49

we have another great note from Sir

2:38:52

Hugger of Kitties and

2:38:54

this is an associate executive producer just like

2:38:56

Angela Wang. He is from Zondum the Netherlands

2:38:58

row of ducks 222.22 and

2:39:02

he says hug more kitties. Yeah

2:39:05

love that. Well Harbin Sweet.

2:39:08

Sir pursuit of peace and tranquility 222.2

2:39:11

another row of ducks and he

2:39:20

sent us checking in and a note that

2:39:23

says in the morning boys please accept

2:39:26

the shorter row of ducks for the

2:39:28

month of February to keep myself current

2:39:31

bringing my total contributed treasure to 333 $33.32

2:39:33

Adam. If you would kindly throw in a

2:39:35

penny. Yes

2:39:42

hold on. I got to dig in

2:39:44

my pocket. You

2:39:46

can throw it in as there it is

2:39:48

333.33 counting below. Thanks

2:39:50

boys. Keep it keep me it

2:39:52

brief. Sincerely Sir pursuit

2:39:55

of peace and tranquility in the lands

2:39:57

of the red clay and the cherry

2:39:59

tree. We

2:40:02

move on to GigaWatt coffee roasters in

2:40:04

Bensonville, Illinois. I got my new cans.

2:40:08

There it is. I drank a cold

2:40:11

fusion this morning. I'm

2:40:13

feeling good. I'm feeling good. Yeah, I bet you're wired.

2:40:17

This is... Okay, stay just

2:40:19

completed. Here we go. This

2:40:22

is... Just completed my 44th cycle around

2:40:24

the sun on March 1st, which was

2:40:26

celebrated with goat burgers and some fine

2:40:29

craft beers. With every year

2:40:31

we gain a better perspective, I want to

2:40:33

express my gratitude for this beautiful gift of

2:40:35

life, family, friends, good food, and libations. And

2:40:37

of course, the Noah Jenner Show for helping

2:40:39

prevent swollen and midglot. Can I get a

2:40:41

goat's cream and a brisket for my birthday?

2:40:43

Well, we have biscuits. I don't

2:40:45

know about briskets. We'll give you a biscuit. And

2:40:48

for producers who love

2:40:50

coffee, visit gigawattcoffeeroset.com and use code

2:40:52

ITM20 for

2:40:56

20% off your coffee order. Stay caffeinated.

2:40:58

They always give me a biscuit on

2:41:00

my birthday. You've

2:41:03

got karma. There

2:41:08

was something in there. Oh yeah, a

2:41:10

goat burger. I've never had a goat burger.

2:41:13

I think that sounds good. Goat meat.

2:41:15

People should note if you can find

2:41:17

it. You can usually get it at

2:41:19

a Muslim butcher. Or in

2:41:21

Jamaica. Maybe.

2:41:24

I've never done it. We

2:41:26

have a lot of Muslim

2:41:28

butchers around here. So you can get

2:41:31

goat. Yeah. Remember goat is

2:41:33

delicious. It tastes like a... People

2:41:35

always think it's going to taste like crap. It

2:41:37

actually tastes like a mild lamb.

2:41:40

Do you remember my Uber driver

2:41:42

in San Francisco, Tony the Terrorist?

2:41:45

Yeah, Tony. Good old Tony. Yeah. I miss Tony. Do you

2:41:47

remember that one time he picked me up and he had

2:41:49

a dead goat in the trunk? I

2:41:52

don't remember this story about the dead goat.

2:41:54

It was for Ramadan. He had a dead

2:41:56

goat. Yeah, that's what you do. You carry around a dead goat in the trunk.

2:42:00

I miss those days. Good

2:42:02

times with Tony the terrorist driving the Uber.

2:42:04

Good times. I'm

2:42:07

going to skip. You're going to read this one.

2:42:09

I'm going to read Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado

2:42:11

comes with 200 bucks and she wants jobs karma.

2:42:14

For a resume that gets results, go

2:42:16

to imagemakersinc.com. That's imagemakersinc.com.

2:42:18

It's not a big deal to do.

2:42:21

She's doing very well for herself, she says.

2:42:24

That's imagemakersinc.com. Read her

2:42:26

Linda Lupatkin Duchess of Jobs and writer

2:42:28

of resumes on the producers list and

2:42:31

thank you for the additional $200. Jobs,

2:42:35

jobs, jobs and jobs.

2:42:37

Let's go for jobs.

2:42:41

Karma. Yes. Then

2:42:43

we have Adam Christman or

2:42:45

Christman with double N. Love the show

2:42:47

Adam and John. This is a switcheroo

2:42:49

for my amazing friend Jonathan D. All

2:42:52

right. We'll just switcheroo that for Jonathan D.

2:42:55

He introduced me to the show in the early

2:42:57

days of COVID. I've been a listener ever since.

2:42:59

Well, then you are healthy. Jonathan

2:43:02

epitomizes your connection as protection slogan. I

2:43:04

travel often and JD is always looking

2:43:06

out for my family when I'm gone.

2:43:08

He gives me peace of mind by

2:43:10

being so supportive. He recently made sure

2:43:12

my driveway got plowed. Also changed

2:43:14

a flat tire for my wife. A

2:43:16

little producer credit is the least I could-

2:43:19

They didn't have it reversed. I

2:43:23

hear there's an opening on Gutfeld's Hill. A

2:43:26

little producer credit is the least I could do

2:43:28

for such a wonderful friend. Thanks Jonathan and thank

2:43:30

you all for such a great show and we

2:43:33

appreciate that. Thank you very much. I

2:43:35

think we should also mention Spencer

2:43:37

Sumner. He

2:43:41

donated $230.23 in Canadian

2:43:43

dollarets which we honor those

2:43:45

although how much longer we can honor this

2:43:48

clearly devalued monetary unit

2:43:50

is questionable. Listen,

2:43:53

we should put a deadline. We

2:43:55

should end it at some point.

2:43:57

When it's 50% maybe. What's

2:44:01

getting there? It's $172.13 but

2:44:04

we will give you the Associate

2:44:06

Executive Producership Spencer Sumner from Sherwood

2:44:08

Park, Alberta, Canada. Thank you very

2:44:11

much. And thank you

2:44:13

of course to everyone who came in under $50 and

2:44:15

John going to take you all the way through there

2:44:17

in a moment and then we'll get to our nights

2:44:19

and our birthdays and our meetups. Yeah,

2:44:22

Brian Warner starts to solve in Battle Creek, Michigan

2:44:24

for 105.35 and Baron Latiken, our

2:44:27

Baron Latiken in Houston, Texas, 100. Then

2:44:31

we go to

2:44:33

Dame Relatastic, Relatastic,

2:44:37

I think, in Auburn, California.

2:44:42

She sent me an email about the

2:44:44

Too Many Eggs book. I'm

2:44:47

not sure if anyone did this already. What is this?

2:44:49

I don't know what she's talking about. John Robynet

2:44:51

in 100, Dame Relatastic was 100. Aaron

2:44:56

Weiberg, Roberts, Wisconsin, 8438. Kevin

2:44:59

McLaughlin, there he is, 8008, Concord, North Carolina. Hi,

2:45:04

my name is Kevin. I have an addiction to

2:45:06

boobs, we noticed. Sir

2:45:08

K. Christopher Patrick Hill in Parkerville,

2:45:11

Washington, 8008. I'm

2:45:13

sorry, Parkerville, Western Australia.

2:45:18

Ryan Lane in Huntington Beach,

2:45:20

California, 6611, another dangling balls

2:45:23

double dicks. Showing support for

2:45:25

his Idaho and Cali chicks.

2:45:27

Ooh, it rhymes. Gerald,

2:45:32

okay, it's Prebsesky in

2:45:35

Peru, Indiana. He

2:45:41

sent a pronunciation guy because I

2:45:43

would have pronounced this Prebszewski, but

2:45:46

Prebsesky is the way it goes. Peru,

2:45:49

Indiana. That's a Glambeck donation. It's

2:45:52

a Glambeck donation. Can you believe it,

2:45:54

6009? I need to

2:45:57

go back on that show. Yeah,

2:45:59

actually you should. Beck loves you. Don't

2:46:03

pick up the soap. Sir Ladyboy

2:46:05

in Mount Laurel Township, New

2:46:07

Jersey, 6006. Used

2:46:11

to be Bobby Brindlehorse. Lawrence

2:46:15

Cornell in Battle Creek, Michigan,

2:46:17

5986. Martin

2:46:19

in Bellingham, Washington, 5937. Sir

2:46:22

Beboop in New Brighton, Minnesota,

2:46:24

5676. Brian

2:46:28

Furley in 5510, Double Nichols on

2:46:30

the Dime. Sir Harry Pilgrim in

2:46:33

Fredericksburg, Virginia, 5510. That's

2:46:37

a birthday. We had a birthday coming up.

2:46:39

Well that's Sir Harry Pilgrim who has been with the

2:46:41

show a long, long time and

2:46:44

we appreciate you Sir Harry Pilgrim. It's

2:46:46

his birthday, 55 Double Nichols.

2:46:48

You got it brother. Herbert

2:46:50

Garrett, Raleigh, North Carolina, 5510. Nicole

2:46:54

Wilson, Farmington, New Mexico.

2:46:58

Another birthday call out to

2:47:01

his smoking hot pregnant wife

2:47:03

Nicole Wilson, 33 March 1st. Happy

2:47:05

birthday babe. Peter

2:47:11

Garten in Edina,

2:47:13

Minnesota, 5272. Hugo

2:47:17

Salgado, Minuteman donation 5272.

2:47:22

Top notch heating in air. Unfortunately, you don't have the

2:47:24

town for this top notch heating in air but if

2:47:26

you ever see them, use their services 5005

2:47:28

or 5050. Timothy

2:47:32

Quatt. What? Coil?

2:47:34

I think it's coil. Yeah, it's

2:47:37

coil. You should

2:47:39

read this note. It's important St. Lucie's

2:47:41

in for $50.01. It's very

2:47:43

important because we need to have

2:47:45

Karina Coyle daimed. I've

2:47:47

emailed the accounting twice, need pickles at

2:47:50

the round table and she wants me,

2:47:52

Timothy Coyle Jr., her husband, called out

2:47:54

as a douchebag. Listening

2:47:57

since the beginning, sort of, but not donating

2:47:59

to I met her and she told me

2:48:01

to start donating. That's a woman.

2:48:04

That's a good woman. Every show day at midnight she

2:48:06

hits me in the mouth and we kiss at every

2:48:08

33 throughout the day. Oh

2:48:11

boy. That's beautiful. A

2:48:13

shot of scotch would probably be good too. Yeah,

2:48:16

that's beautiful. A kiss and a shot of scotch.

2:48:19

Pickles at the round table, you got it. Pickles.

2:48:21

Pickles. Pickles.

2:48:24

Pickles. Pickles. Pickles.

2:48:27

Nuts. Nino.

2:48:59

Nino. Nino. Now

2:49:01

you get criticized for not pronouncing it correctly even though I've

2:49:03

been there. BC, Canada.

2:49:06

Charles Peterson in Albuquerque, New

2:49:08

Mexico. Jacob Martinez in El

2:49:11

Monte, California. Alex

2:49:14

Wienka in Neosho, Wisconsin.

2:49:16

Sir Mix in

2:49:18

Fort St. John, BC. And last

2:49:20

on the list, J-B-Y-O. K-A-T-L-R

2:49:24

in Amsterdam, Holland. K-T-L-R.

2:49:29

K-T-L-R. And he says, I

2:49:31

think he needs to deduce him, he says,

2:49:33

I've been the biggest douchebag ever, probably apologies,

2:49:35

I've been with Adam since the Daily Source

2:49:37

Code. Well, you've been around for a

2:49:40

long time and yes. You've

2:49:43

been deduced. And that's our

2:49:45

group of producers, well-wishers and

2:49:47

supporters for show 1639. And

2:49:51

everyone who came in under $50, which is

2:49:53

for many reasons of anonymity, we will never

2:49:55

mention anything under 50, SCU 4999. Thank

2:50:00

you to all of those on

2:50:02

sustaining donations which is a recurring

2:50:04

subscription. There are many different versions

2:50:06

available at noagendadonations.com or you can

2:50:09

just make one up yourself, whatever you want. A

2:50:11

lot of people like the 33's and we appreciate

2:50:14

you. We thank you for

2:50:16

sending back value to the program. It keeps everything

2:50:18

going. And of course, our

2:50:20

executive and associate executive group 1639. The formula is this.

2:50:25

We go out, we hit people in

2:50:27

the mouth. We

2:50:48

congratulate Eli the Coffee Guy who is

2:50:51

44 on March 1st, Nicole Wilson 33

2:50:53

on March 1st, and Harry Pilgram who

2:50:56

is turning 575, and also Angela

2:50:58

Wang who is celebrating today. And

2:51:00

we say happy birthday and welcome

2:51:02

to Gimo Nation. Roman who was

2:51:05

born this morning right here in Fredericksburg.

2:51:07

Happy birthday from everybody here at the

2:51:09

Best Podcast in the universe. So

2:51:13

we have no title changes but we do

2:51:15

have one night and one dame. So

2:51:17

I'm always happy to draw the

2:51:20

sword. There you go. Oh,

2:51:23

that's a pretty one. I like that. Corinna Coyle. Coyle.

2:51:26

Pope Moses. Hop on up here. Both

2:51:30

of you are about

2:51:32

to become members of the Noagender Roundtable of

2:51:34

the Nights and Dames. I am

2:51:37

very proud to pronounce the name Corinna

2:51:39

Coyle and Sir Delicious Aloysius

2:51:41

the Bumblebee. The Blade of

2:51:43

the Black Pines for you

2:51:45

we've got by request. Pickles.

2:51:47

Also, Rents Boys, Chardonnay, Hookers

2:51:50

Blow. I mean it's all here.

2:51:52

We also have Fish Pie and some Felatio if that's

2:51:54

what you're into. We got Harlots and Hal Doll, Beers

2:51:57

and Blunts. We got Ruben X women and Rosé, Deis,

2:51:59

and so on. We

2:52:01

have ginger and gerbils, pressed milk

2:52:03

and pavlums, sparkling cider and escorts.

2:52:07

Mutton and mead anybody? Of course, that's

2:52:09

always the fan favorite. Now you can

2:52:11

have some pickles on your

2:52:13

mutton. It might taste good. Don't put it in the mead

2:52:16

though. And while you're munching

2:52:18

away, go over to knowagendarengues.com. That's

2:52:20

where you can select the ring of your choice, which

2:52:22

is the same for both sexes. You

2:52:24

do need to give us your ring size. We

2:52:27

have a handy sizing guide there. And of course,

2:52:29

every single Knowagenda Night and Dame Ring comes with

2:52:31

its wax to seal your important correspondence along

2:52:34

with a certificate of

2:52:36

authenticity. And we really appreciate you. Thank

2:52:38

you so much for supporting the Knowagenda show.

2:52:41

Knowagenda, Peter. In

2:52:51

a world where everybody is searching, a

2:52:53

whole generation of search, and

2:52:55

all it results in is people just begging for

2:52:58

likes. This is not a

2:53:00

life. This is not anything. Life online

2:53:02

is just deteriorating. So the way to

2:53:05

top yourself up to get a little more

2:53:07

connection, which as you know, provides protection, is

2:53:09

to go to a Knowagenda meetup. You can

2:53:11

find them at knowagendameatups.com. This is a great

2:53:13

value for value production by

2:53:15

our Knight Daniel, Sir Daniel, who

2:53:17

supports that. And of course,

2:53:19

we have Mimi from toomanyeggs.com, who always sorts

2:53:22

everything out, makes sure it gets posted. Nothing

2:53:24

bogus is in there. And

2:53:26

we had a meetup in Georgia, the North Georgia

2:53:28

meetup, who sends in a report. In the morning,

2:53:30

Adam and John, it's Sir Bob here from the

2:53:32

North Georgia monthly meetup. Once again, we had a

2:53:34

great turnout. We had great food, great drinks, and

2:53:36

obviously great conversations. The next one will be Thursday,

2:53:39

March 28th. So come one, come all.

2:53:41

Let's hear what everybody had to say. In the

2:53:43

morning, this is Andy. This

2:53:46

is Sir E. Connection is protection.

2:53:48

Hey, this is Naira. Great to be

2:53:51

back to see all the new faces. In

2:53:53

the morning, this is Sir R. I

2:53:55

want to give a shout out to

2:53:58

cousin Vito and all the peeps. who

2:54:00

are currently getting together in the

2:54:02

Mile High City. I would

2:54:04

call on everyone to come out to Jasper for

2:54:06

a meetup in two weeks. Got

2:54:08

lots of chickens. This is Rowan,

2:54:11

North Georgia, here for my second meetup in

2:54:13

the morning. In the

2:54:15

morning. So the

2:54:17

conversation started about Pastor Jimmy, went through

2:54:19

the Monroe Institute, landed on Sean Ryan,

2:54:21

and then I learned

2:54:24

a lot more about black soldier fly larvae than I

2:54:26

ever thought I would. This is

2:54:28

Sam. In the morning. Hey, M.A.,

2:54:30

Dr. Sir, Mike Rock. I'm

2:54:32

not a spook. I'm

2:54:35

just incredibly weird. Hi,

2:54:37

I'm Judy, and we need a free smoky. This

2:54:40

is Cody Tensley here with Cherry Street Brew

2:54:42

Pub in Alpharetta, Georgia, hanging out with these

2:54:44

wonderful fine folks tonight. Twisting

2:54:47

elbows and slinging drinks. Cheers. Oh,

2:54:51

spart ball! Okay. Spart

2:54:54

ball. It's always a good

2:54:56

idea to get your server in on the

2:54:58

meetup report. I like that a

2:55:00

lot when you do that. Because then you can say, hey, go listen to that

2:55:02

show. And before you know it, you've hit them in the mouth. And

2:55:05

maybe the whole place. That's

2:55:07

what I'm thinking. You get a bartender going. Yeah.

2:55:10

They like to talk. Oh, they love it. They

2:55:12

love it. We have a couple of meetups taking

2:55:14

place today. The Don't Be a Douchebag meetup, 5.30

2:55:17

at McNellies in Tulsa, Oklahoma. And

2:55:21

on Thursday, the Northern Wake Spring

2:55:23

Cleaning Soiree kicks off at six

2:55:25

o'clock at Hoppy Endings in Raleigh,

2:55:27

North Carolina. And

2:55:29

in the week, we got San Antonio, Texas. Oh,

2:55:31

that's good, San Antonio. On the

2:55:33

ninth, also Mount Laurel Township, New Jersey

2:55:36

on the ninth, Pontiac, Michigan, Anchorage,

2:55:38

Alaska, Middleburg, the Netherlands. On

2:55:40

the ninth, and then on the

2:55:42

next Sunday, we'll have Albuquerque, New

2:55:44

Mexico, Johns Island, South Carolina, Indianapolis,

2:55:46

Indy meetup. That'll be their March

2:55:48

meetup. You can find all of

2:55:50

these at knowagendameetups.com. Go

2:55:53

there if you'd like to find out where there's one near

2:55:55

you. If you can't find one, here's what

2:55:57

you do. Go to your favorite bar. Make sure you

2:55:59

schedule it. And you can start

2:56:01

one yourself. It's very easy. All instructions

2:56:03

how to do it. noagendameatups.com Connection

2:56:06

is protection people. Sometimes you want

2:56:08

to go hang up with all

2:56:11

the nights and days. You

2:56:14

want to be where you want me. You

2:56:18

want to

2:56:20

be where everybody feels the same. It's

2:56:25

like a party. Well,

2:56:29

I have a feeling

2:56:31

that you're probably going to get

2:56:33

the winner for ISO

2:56:36

because I only have one. That's

2:56:38

not a great one at that. Great play.

2:56:40

God, I mean, geez. What?

2:56:45

Yeah, I know. I know. I know.

2:56:47

From the Tucker Carlson. No, that was

2:56:50

Anderson Cooper. Oh, they

2:56:52

got four. Oh, boy. Which

2:56:55

one are we going to choose? We start with had

2:56:57

enough. Had enough.

2:57:00

We're doing this. Oh, I see. I've

2:57:03

had enough. Okay.

2:57:07

Yeah, I like it. That's not bad. That's

2:57:09

not bad. It's not bad. How about hey,

2:57:11

hey. Hey, hey. Okay.

2:57:16

Would you play it? I thought you

2:57:18

were saying it. Okay. No, no. I played

2:57:21

it. Yeah. Okay. Let's go with winner. Winner.

2:57:27

Low blow. Low blow

2:57:29

on trying to slip that one in as a winner.

2:57:33

And last, which I think is the

2:57:35

winner personally, but you can go

2:57:37

with anything. Thanks, Nancy. Thanks,

2:57:40

Nancy. Yeah. No, you're right. Thanks, Nancy.

2:57:42

It's good. Thanks, Nancy. Because

2:57:44

neither of us is Nancy. I mean,

2:57:46

you know. Or both. You're

2:57:48

so sharp. I think the Gutfeld gig is yours.

2:57:51

I'm there. Good

2:57:53

news. Good news. Good news.

2:57:55

Good news. Good news. All

2:57:58

right. Good news, everybody. This is what we. do at the

2:58:00

end of our show so that regardless of all the

2:58:02

things you heard today and there were several things that

2:58:04

you might have laughed at, you thought it was news

2:58:06

but funny news, we brought you up

2:58:09

to speed on most things today. Now let's end

2:58:11

it with some really good news so you feel

2:58:13

good as you go into your Sunday evening or

2:58:15

Monday whenever you're listening to it. Okay,

2:58:18

this is a dead baby. A dead

2:58:21

baby story. Dead babies. How can

2:58:23

that be good news? It's good news

2:58:25

because it's not a dead baby. It started

2:58:27

off as a normal work shift, turned

2:58:29

into a night-long branch firefighter David

2:58:31

Phillips says he will never forget.

2:58:34

I started opening the door and was

2:58:36

met by a family. It

2:58:39

was a mother, a father and a

2:58:41

daughter, probably like teenage age. And

2:58:47

they were screaming, banging on the doors. And

2:58:51

as the door opened maybe

2:58:53

about a quarter of the way, they

2:58:55

handed me a lifeless

2:58:59

baby. He says since the parents could

2:59:01

not speak English, their eldest daughter had to

2:59:03

act as a translator. And

2:59:05

once the baby was placed in his hands,

2:59:07

his training instantly kicked in. I

2:59:09

realized that the child was not breathing.

2:59:13

It did have a pulse. The baby did have a

2:59:15

pulse. And I

2:59:17

immediately went into what we

2:59:20

call back blows to try to dislodge

2:59:22

whatever was obstructing the baby's airway.

2:59:26

Because that's the most important thing. Once we got

2:59:28

the airway back, I

2:59:30

was able to clear

2:59:32

the airway, secure the airway. And

2:59:36

shortly thereafter, I felt her take

2:59:38

a breath in my left hand.

2:59:41

Coach says they immediately gave the infant

2:59:43

oxygen and called the ambulance. Captain

2:59:45

Carl Griffin says he is proud of how

2:59:47

the situation was handled and happy they were

2:59:49

able to save a life. Something

2:59:52

like this, I think was great

2:59:55

because that family came to the right place And

2:59:58

came to the right people.

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