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January 26, 2025 • 203 mins

No Agenda Episode 1733 - "Rat Note"

"Rat Note"

Executive Producers:

Dame Liz of Roxyville

Mrs. ChitChat of Harmony Homestead

Jean Naus

Brian Skelton

Associate Executive Producers:

La Jolla Salt Corporation

Eli The Coffee Guy

Sir Angel of Smyrna

Linda Lu Duchess of jobs and writer resumes

anonymous

Gary Goodman

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Title Changes

Knights & Dames

Liz > Dame Liz of Roxyville

Art By: Nessworks

End of Show Mixes: Jan Willem Navis - Sir Chris Wilson

Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry

Mark van Dijk - Systems Master

Ryan Bemrose - Program Director

Back Office Jae Dvorak

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
It would be outrageous.
Adam Curry, John C.
Devorah.
It's Tuesday, January 26, 2025.
This is your award-winning Kip on Asian
Media assassination episode 1733.
This is no agenda.
Busting up churches and schools and broadcasting live
from the heart of the Texas Hill Country
here in FEMA region number 6.

(00:21):
In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And for the Northern Silicon Valley where it's
supposed to rain, it's not raining, I don't
know, I got nothing else to say.
I'm John C.
Devorah.
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
In the morning.
Ah, I caught you unawares and unprepared.
Ooh, made another rhyme.

(00:41):
Yeah.
No, I knocked over a drink.
Oh, no.
Just before we started, so I'm in the
process of cleaning up the mess.
What was the drink?
The concoction that I make.
Oh, that thing.
Oh, that was one's tip of the day.
Yeah, that was one time tip of the
day.
Luckily the glass wasn't full of it because
I had drunk most of it, but it's

(01:03):
a gooey material that is not easy to
get off.
No, and is it in the gear?
Is it in the gear?
No, no, it fell over into the, it's
a long story.
It's not in the gear, no.
It's the chia seeds, they're everywhere, people.
It did fall over where this is.
Oh, no.
Hey, I want to congratulate Ashlyn Speed on

(01:25):
her first Mazda race at Daytona.
Did you see it?
Yeah, she posted it.
Yeah, she was cautious and did not get
entwined in the massive wreck they had.
That was pretty amazing.
You saw that big crash?
Yeah, yeah.
So she came 16 out of 34.

(01:47):
She was cautious.
Her first race, though, first race on Daytona.
I could not be more proud of her.
It's a good start.
You watch.
That young lady has a future.
And we...
We have our autographed picture, so we're good
to go.
I did not see no agenda on the
car anywhere.
Yeah, you know what?

(02:08):
Those days are over.
It's over.
We'll be happy we can get a PID
pass.
Yeah, you got that right.
That's the way it is.
So, man, I constantly have the White House
news page up these days.
You know, I just walk by the computer.
Let me do a little refresh.
Oh, wait, there's something new.

(02:29):
It's amazing what has been happening in the
past week.
Well, give us an update.
Have you seen this?
As I continue to clean up this mess.
Oh, okay.
Well, while you continue to clean up the
mess, I'm going to set you up for
your 3x3.
I believe we should definitely start with...
We should start with replacement migration in the

(02:51):
United States.
Let's kick it off with this.
Some 1,500 active Marine and Army personnel
have begun a new mission to bolster security
at the U.S.-Mexico...
Hold on a second.
Yes?
That girl's voice sounds like the voice that
we have on our clips that we're going
to die.
We're going to die, girl.

(03:12):
Does she really?
Hold on a second.
Let me see if I can match her.
Let's see.
Here we go.
Some 1,500 active Marine and Army personnel
have begun a new mission to bolster security

(03:32):
at the U.S.-Mexico border.
Among those deployed near San Diego, Marines from
Camp Pendleton.
These service members will be providing ground and
air support to assist troops already deployed.
I should probably point out that the chopper
sound you hear is the Osprey landing, which
just gave it a perfect visual.

(03:54):
Like, oh, there's that thing landing.
It's all over now.
As well as customs and border protection secure
the border.
What?
By the way, I saw this clip and
are you telling me they're hauling people out
of the country in Ospreys?
No, no.
That's where they land the troops.
They couldn't drive, you see.

(04:14):
We had to make it look cool and
spend a little extra.
So instead of driving to the border, they
flew them in the Ospreys.
No, no.
We're taking people out in C-130s.
Yeah, I know.
That's what I noticed.
But they kept showing these Osprey pics.
Those things are expensive to operate.
Very, very expensive.
And they're dangerous.
I would say so.
They'll also be assisting in the construction of

(04:35):
physical barriers.
This marks the first batch deployed by the
Department of Defense.
Following President Donald Trump's executive order to shut
down all migrant entries at the southern border.
Border security was one of Trump's campaign promises.
The American people have been waiting for such
a time as this for our department.

(04:57):
That's the new girl?
What's her name?
The new press secretary girl?
Yeah, I can't remember her name yet.
Do you hear what she does there?
Yeah, she sounds like another clip that we
have.
She throws out an Esther Mordecai for such
a time as this.
The American people have been waiting for such
a time as this.

(05:18):
For our Department of Defense to actually take
homeland security seriously.
This is the number one priority of the
American people and the President is already delivering.
Military airlifts deporting illegal immigrants have also begun.
Several flights carrying hundreds of Guatemalan migrants arrived
in Guatemala Friday from Arizona and Texas.
However, not everyone is welcoming this news.

(05:41):
I don't think we need troops in El
Paso.
I go back to saying we're a very
safe community.
ICE raids have been taking place in many
cities across the country.
ICE posted on social media there have been
593 arrests and 449 detainers lodged.
They also posted that targeted enforcement operations are

(06:03):
planned arrests of known criminal aliens who threaten
national security or public safety.
But this will not stand, say the Democrats
everywhere.
Connecticut has never quit on people.
We're never going to surrender and I am
never going to back down.
We are here to fight.
You come through my people.
You come through me.

(06:24):
Our five member delegation is planning to push
back, fight back.
Presidents in this country have broad powers, but
they are not kings.
We will not do ICE's job for them
on a whole number of fronts.
We're not going to do federal immigration enforcement.
If there is any attack on the Garden
State or on any of its communities from
Washington, I will fight back with every fiber

(06:46):
of my being.
I have one message for President Trump.
I'll see you in court.
Alright, alright, alright.
Well, most of the country...
These guys are big talkers.
Oh, yeah.
Most of the country seems pretty happy with
the criminals.
It's only removing criminals like, well, ICE can
go into schools and churches.
These are sanctuaries.

(07:07):
There is no evidence of even the word
school or church in any of these executive
orders.
I'm not quite sure where they get that
from.
And the numbers are not that massive.
When you talk about mass immigrations, if you
do the calculation, a Holman...
It was on one of the shows.
I like Holman because he's so funny.
Yeah, we're going to arrest everybody.

(07:29):
We're going to kill everybody.
Tough guy.
They're doing like 300 to 500, let's say,
a day, and they're going to do it
for every day.
Of course, everyone's all upset.
Oh, every day, every day.
That's $15,000 a month max.
Yeah.
Which is what?
A hundred is less than $200,000 a
year.
There's millions we're talking about here, and they're

(07:49):
going to maybe get $200,000 out, maybe?
But this is, as was campaigned on, these
are the criminal elements.
There's no evidence of them going after anyone
else except for the criminals at the moment,
which I think was always the intent.
People run around, are they going to deport
11 million?
I don't think so.

(08:11):
At the numbers they're going, it would take
them, well, if it's, say, $200,000 a
year to get to a million, it would
take 10 years.
Come on.
But at least they got something to yammer
about.
Yammer.
Yeah, yammer about.

(08:32):
Well, there's a couple of things.
This is screwing with some business models out
there.
So it's a real problem for some people
that President Trump has stopped the amnesty, we
got the troops at the border keeping everybody
back, and here come the complainers, and your

(08:52):
No Agenda show knows why.
With the announcement that the Trump administration will
allow ICE to arrest immigrants in places like
schools and churches I don't think that's true
yet.
We reached out to the Colorado Catholic Conference.
Where do you all stand on that issue?
We have not seen the 2025 memo or
what concerns will be around that.
We know there might be First Amendment concerns

(09:13):
with enforcement in religious institutions, but right now
there's not a lot of clarity.
So for the Catholic Church, our bishops continue
to maintain that we welcome the stranger as
a tenant of our faith.
That was Brittany Vesely, the Executive Director of
the Colorado Catholic Conference.
Vesely went on to say that the bishops
are concerned about community safety, including drugs coming

(09:33):
across the US-Mexico border, and unaccompanied minors
facing sexual abuse.
Now earlier this week, I talked to Jeanette
Vizguera, who crossed that same border and lived
in a church for three years while seeking
asylum.
She said as churches and schools figure out
what's next, as an advocate, she's creating a
safe space plan of her own.

(09:53):
I have options for continue have some people
in security spaces.
Vizguera says for safety reasons, she can't publicly
say what those safe spaces are.
So she kind of misnomered them.
It is the Colorado Catholic Bishops Conference, part
of the Catholic Charities.

(10:14):
These guys do hundreds of millions of dollars
a year in refugee resettlement programs.
The huge moneymaker.
Massive.
Their entire business model is refugees and asylum
seekers.
Now they're going to come out and say,

(10:36):
she lived in a church for three years.
By the way, she's still here.
She's not gone.
She still lives in the church or somewhere
else.
This is what it's come down to.
Now we're going to have to listen to
all of this nonsense where it's just ruining
your business model.
There's that billion dollar company in Austin that

(10:56):
President Obama himself sanctioned and opened.
This is going to change something.
By the way, that's our billion dollars.
You know, taxpayer billion dollars.
This is where you go.
Scam.
Rip off.
Now have you heard about the cute winter

(11:17):
boots yet?
I've seen references to the cute winter boots.
I have not gotten into any more details
than that, so you're going to inform me
about the cute winter boots.
Yes, and I'm sorry that I'm encroaching on
your territory of the TikToks because it is
rampant on TikTok.
Everyone out there that listens to this show

(11:37):
knows that eventually you cave.
You always cave.
Well, I had to because I kept getting
people sending me this, look at these crazies
talking about cute winter boots.
I'm like, I'm not interested in what they're
doing on TikTok until I saw this guy.
You know, I'm starting to see this cute
winter boots thing going around and I started
to pay attention to what this actually was.

(11:59):
At first I was like, it has to
do with the migrants.
I can see that, but I really wasn't
paying attention.
By the way, the guy's in his car,
of course.
Everybody's in their car.
It's your TikTok studio of choice.
Just keep popping up and popping up.
Then I started to realize that this is
code being spoken by protesters.

(12:20):
The anti-FA, yeah, anti-FA is planning
something.
They are speaking in codes through this cute
winter boots thing, how nice the winter boots
are to have.
They're talking about groups and organizations and organizing.
Yeah, something big is about to happen with

(12:40):
this cute winter boots thing.
Look it up, get on here, go in
that search bar, and start paying attention to
what these people are talking, what they're writing
on the papers.
Okay, so I did that.
I went to the search bar, I checked
it out, and then oh, I see.
What do you wear cute winter boots for?
You wear cute winter boots when there's ice

(13:01):
outside.
See, this is the...
Oh, this is good.
I'm glad you did this.
Yes, ice, as in immigration enforcement.
And cute winter boots is what you need
to protect yourself against ice, which is code
by these passive politic practicing nutjobs for guns.

(13:22):
I'm seeing a lot of videos on cute
winter boots, and there's sort of two streams
of content on this.
There are boots that you can use in
the ice, and that's not something I know
a ton about.
The other stream of content in these videos
is more about utilitarian boots, and boots that
maybe you never thought that you would ever
buy in your life, because that's just not

(13:42):
your thing.
And now you're seeing, given our environment, all
the things, you're probably going to need to
invest in just a good, solid pair of
winter boots.
And that I can help you with, because
I came late to that sort of boot
in my life.
She's in her car as well, obviously.
About ten years ago, a lot of you

(14:03):
know that I used to be the head
of marketing for The Outdoor Channel, which is
a hunting and fishing television network.
I grew up in a family that didn't
do a lot of that outdoor stuff.
When I say a lot, not at all,
right?
I go and work at The Outdoor Channel
for eight years, and lo and behold, I
get exposure to some of the biggest experts
on cute winter boots in the country.

(14:26):
And I open my ears, close my mouth,
and listen to them.
They taught me a lot, especially about what
kind of a pair of cute winter boots
would you buy if you were a newcomer
to boots like that, right?
You never thought you were going to buy
boots like that.
Got to learn a lot from them.
So everyone's, oh yeah, I got my cute
winter boots.

(14:46):
It's like, okay, you're all arming yourselves to
protect people from ISIS?
I love this fact that the whole argument
for arming for the Second Amendment is exactly
what they're doing, but they've always been in
denial.
And of course, you know, those same people,
if they ever shot a gun, they'd probably
yell eek and drop it.
Eek!
And would fire again.

(15:09):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
So we do your 3x3?
We might as well get into it.
Yeah, let's get these out of the way.
Hold on, we've got a jingle.
Experiment by Jesse Dean Comparing stories from ABC
CBS and NBC The never-ending 3x3.

(15:29):
There we go, it's not a 3x3, it's
a 4x4 with 3x3 in the title.
Oh my goodness, what are we going to
do?
Yeah, we're going to start with the 4x4
at the bonus clip, which is the CBC,
Canadian Broadcasting Company, and these are all clips
on the immigration crackdown.
Security video shown to a U.S. news
outlet shows what appears to be the tail

(15:50):
end of the raid.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE
agents with a man apparently handcuffed after being
apprehended at a seafood depot in Newark, New
Jersey yesterday.
The latest signal President Donald Trump's long-promised
deportations of undocumented migrants in this country are
underway.

(16:10):
People were fingerprinted.
Ras Baraka, the mayor of Newark, a city
that has pledged to protect migrants, says there
was no warrant.
None of these people were rapists or murderers
or criminals.
We believe that there were three people who
they say were undocumented that they detained, but
they also detained folks that were in fact

(16:30):
citizens of this country.
One person showed their military veteran identification and
was still questioned anyway.
People are scared.
Amy Torres is executive director of the Alliance
for Immigrant Justice.
And what we learned from folks that stayed
behind was that ICE walked in like it
was their empire's own conquered land.

(16:51):
They were heavily armed.
There was no prior announcement.
They were blocking off entrances and exits.
They were scrambling up delivery ramps.
They were banging down bathroom doors to make
sure no one was hiding inside.
Trump maintains the first raids will go after
criminals, repeating that message today in North Carolina.

(17:11):
They're murderers.
These are people that have been as bad
as you get, as bad as anybody you've
seen.
Now, I have a question.
This is interesting.
As far back as I can recall as
a young lad watching movies, even in my
teens watching Cheech and Chong, but it was
always kind of like INS.

(17:32):
It was like, oh no, it's INS!
And the whole kitchen would desert.
You know, everyone would be running away.
Hasn't this been a thing in America?
Like immigration going after...
It's been not only a thing, even though
it's not...
You're right.
INS, Immigration and Naturalization Services.
It was kind of a running gag.

(17:54):
And I say way before even Cheech and
Chong where they'd be...
Somebody would say...
I'm talking about in the 60s and 70s.
Some immigration guys here and then the whole
crew would scatter.
It was always been a running gag and

(18:14):
that gag disappeared from the...
And I think everyone's shocked by it because
that gag, which was always part of the
public domain, disappeared, I think, I guess during
the Obama administration.
And all these young'uns have been brought
up never knowing this joke.
The young'uns.
The young'uns don't know their comedic history.

(18:35):
We're full of it.
We're full of comedic history about rounding people
up.
Yeah.
But I'm not so sure about the validity
of that report because it's criminals.
I've only seen criminals being taken in.
These local yokels think that they're still on

(18:55):
the right side of history and they're showboating
and they're making a big fuss and they're
going to get themselves their tit in the
ring after this is over with.
Onward with the 3x3.
Well, let's see.
We should probably go to CBS next.
At a U.S. Army airfield in El
Paso, exclusive video obtained by CBS News shows
shackled detainees boarding a military cargo plane.

(19:19):
One of two C-17s to depart the
southern border carrying migrants and landing in Guatemala
Friday morning.
The deportation's going very well.
We're getting the bad, hard criminals out.
The White House calls it the official start
of their long-promised mass deportation campaign.
Posting video of Marines operating at the southern

(19:40):
border.
This week, the Pentagon announced the deployment of
1,500 service members to assist U.S.
Border Patrol.
Across the country, immigration agents arrested 538 undocumented
migrants yesterday.
They always leave out the criminal part, John.
Have you noticed that?
They don't say criminal undocumented illegal alien immigrants.

(20:03):
It's always just undocumented.
No, of course not.
That tops the average of 312 arrests per
day during the Biden administration.
What?
We're only doing 200 plus?
That makes it even worse.
Wow!
And it includes 373 alleged criminal detainees.
In Newark, ICE agents raided a business without

(20:24):
a warrant.
We can't just let this happen and not
say anything.
Newark's mayor slammed the operation.
We believe that there were three people who
they say were undocumented that they detained, but
they also detained folks that were in fact
citizens of this country.
And we've just learned there was another deportation

(20:45):
flight, a military aircraft bound to Mexico planned
this week, but it was denied access to
land.
A U.S. official tells CBS News that
flight never took off.
I don't know about that.
I like the way they say they were
detained.
There were some guys, they weren't shipped out,
but they were you know, but they make

(21:05):
it sound like these guys the American citizens
were shipped out when they were just detained.
By detained it means you raided the whole
place.
Everybody had to stop and show their I
.D. You're being detained right?
You get detained when you get pulled over
by a cop for speeding.
You're being detained.
But the funny thing is, I love that
report because it says, you know, well, we're
doing 300 a day.

(21:27):
No one was complaining about that.
No, of course not.
That was because it was Democrats.
The media has really lost the plot.
They've never had it.
So here we go with ABC.
Now we're going to get to the good
ones.
Martha Radnitz, for starters.
Tonight, for the first time, U.S. military

(21:48):
aircraft flying undocumented migrants out of the country
as President Donald Trump launches his deportation campaign.
They really, they all shared the script, didn't
they?
Undocumented migrants.
Okay.
And I think it was NPR who shared
with the world that that was now their
new style guide, right?

(22:09):
We had the clip, yeah.
I think undocumented.
You can't say anything but something like that.
The White House releasing these pictures dozens of
migrants in chains boarding C-17 aircraft.
The flights landing in Guatemala carrying roughly 160
people, men and women.
Deportation's going very well.

(22:29):
Today, the Trump administration's new borders are.
Tom Homan telling me it's only the beginning
and he has a stark warning to anyone
who's in the country illegally.
So is this what we will see every
single day ending in what the president has
promised is millions and millions being deported?
Yes, but you can see the numbers steadily

(22:52):
increase the number of arrests nationwide as we
open up the aperture.
Right now it's concentrating public safety threats, national
security threats.
That's a smaller population.
If you're in the country illegally, you got
a problem.
And that's why I'm hoping those who are
in the country illegally who have not been
ordered removed by the federal judge should leave.
Homan was very clear that those committing violent
crimes will be deported first and acknowledges that

(23:15):
the show of force, these strong warnings to
all undocumented immigrants are meant to send a
message that they should self-deport since it
would take a very long time and massive
amounts of manpower and money to deport an
estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants.
Okay.
Okay.

(23:35):
Yeah, this is the good stuff.
11 million.
11 million.
Now they're admitting there's that many.
Yeah, all of a sudden.
11 million.
We know the number.
All right.
So we go to the final one.
This is Brian Roberts, the Comcast CEO's fabulous
NBC Trump hate network.

(23:57):
Tonight a dramatic escalation of President Trump's illegal
immigration crackdown.
The first of 1500 extra troops touching down
in El Paso, Texas to support border security
and for the first time migrants being deported
not on chartered flights like before, but on
military aircraft.
Two flights landing this morning in Guatemala.

(24:18):
We're getting the bad, hard criminals out.
These are murderers.
These are people that have been as bad
as you get.
After a record 10 million illegal border crossings
over the past four years, ICE now ramping
up roundups of undocumented immigrants making 538 arrests
yesterday across the country doubling its daily average
in September.

(24:39):
Cities including San Francisco, Salt Lake City and
Atlanta.
In Newark, New Jersey, this surveillance video appears
to show ICE agents making arrests.
City officials and immigrant advocates say ICE agents
raided this local business, arresting three undocumented immigrants
and briefly detaining an American citizen, a military
veteran, while they asked him for documentation.

(24:59):
Do you plan to use city resources to
impede ICE?
We're not going to participate in what we
think is unlawful.
Newark's Democratic Mayor Rouse Baraka telling us late
today there were two more operations in his
city where more than a third of the
population was born outside the U.S. Meantime,
Gabe, you have some new reporting about Mexico's
role in all this.
Yes, Lester.

(25:20):
Two U.S. defense officials tell NBC News
that Mexico denied access to a U.S.
military deportation plane on Thursday.
As we mentioned, two planes landed in Guatemala
today.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I saw the president also had a chat
with Bukele from El Salvador.
They had a nice talk, talked about the

(25:40):
criminals.
I have to play this additional clip here.
This is from Al Jazeera.
And this is the Deportation Inc.
complaints that this was never reported.
I'm surprised that our people didn't report it
this way too, but play this clip.
The Brazilian government says it's outraged after dozens

(26:02):
of migrants deported by the U.S. arrived
in handcuffs.
Brazil ordered U.S. officials to immediately remove
the restraints.
The justice minister called it a flagrant disregard
for the rights of Brazilian citizens.
The flight carried around 80 men, women, children.
State officials distributed meals and checked on their
well-being.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So they sent the 80 guys.

(26:23):
Any of these flights, they're going to cuff
the guys because if they're the criminals, you
don't want some criminals roaming around the planes
causing havoc?
No, it's an outrage.
It's an outrage.
But so they sent these guys back to
Brazil, which was not reported in any of
our other media.
They only had Guatemala.
Guatemala.
And so the Brazilian guys got bent out

(26:44):
of shape about it.
But come on.
What's interesting is that France is cracking down
on immigration.
Don't hear much about that.
Here's how France 24 reports on their tightening
of immigration.
France is tightening its policies on undocumented migrants.
Notice the same words.
It's undocumented migrants.

(27:06):
And these are probably not even criminals.
France is tightening its policies on undocumented migrants.
On Friday, French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau circulated
an official memo to departmental and regional officials
which will restrict their capacity to grant them
legal status.
The new directive on exceptional admissions of residents
will reverse guidelines implemented in 2012 by former

(27:28):
Minister Manuel Valls which gave prefectures a certain
margin in dealing with the status of migrants
on a case-by-case basis.
If we aren't too open to offering possibilities
to grant legal status to migrants, what will
be compromised, which is already happening, is integration
or assimilation.
It's a numbers game.
Retailleau set out a number of criteria for

(27:49):
migrants seeking legal status.
Now listen to this.
Most notably, his official memo increases the residency
requirement in the country from 5 to 7
years.
Only workers in key sectors will be granted
legal residency status and their mastery of the
French language must be proved by a French
diploma or a language certification.
Undocumented immigrants who, quote, pose a threat to

(28:10):
the public order, who practice polygamy or are
subject to an obligation to leave France won't
be granted legal status in the country.
Polygamy?
If you practice polygamy?
Yeah, this is targeting the Muslim population that
practices polygamy.
Yes.
Imagine President Trump saying that.

(28:32):
It would be outrageous.
It would be outrageous.
Everyone would be losing their crap over it.
But France, the French are like, eh, oui,
oui.
Alright, we're going to stay in Europe.
I have some very, very short little snippets
from Queen Ursula, who is very, very clear

(28:54):
about everything going on in the world and
Trump has just ruined everything and we've got
to do something, we've got to work together.
But it is important that we balance the
imperative to safeguard our security against our opportunity
to innovate and enhance our prosperity.
Right.

(29:14):
In this spirit, we will need to work
together to avoid a global race to the
bottom.
Because it is in no one's interest to
break the bonds of the global economy.
Rather, we need to modernize the rules to
sustain our ability to produce mutual gain for

(29:37):
our citizens.
We have to modernize the rules.
She's trying to desperately hold on to globalism
while it's crumbling underneath her feet.
There was an interesting I don't think I
clipped it, but Tommy Smothers, I mean Davis
Hanson Tommy Smothers Victor Davis Hanson, you mean?

(29:58):
Yeah, that guy.
He had an interesting point to me.
He said that the EU, he's bitching about
the Davos thing, and he said that 25
years ago, the entire part of Europe that
became what's today's EU had the exact same
GDP as the United States.
And now after all these years of globalism,

(30:19):
25 years later, their GDP is about half
of what ours is.
Is that really true?
I didn't know that.
I didn't know that either when I'm listening
to it.
And he's not a guy who makes these
kinds of mistakes.
He's very, you know, he's a bean counter
at heart.
So, and he says and the salaries are
60% of ours.

(30:41):
It's just that this whole scheme is falling
apart, and when she says race to the
bottom, it makes some sense, because that's what
they're doing.
Their own race to the bottom.
Yeah.
So, she's now going to explain and this
is the exact opposite.
It's wonderful to see.

(31:02):
We are drill baby drill, although oil baron
Paul keeps telling me bro, we're not drilling,
we're not drilling more.
It's getting he's now up to 20 million
dollars for R&D for each well that
he drills up from 16 million.
He says we're not going to be drilling
a lot more, but okay.

(31:24):
That's our policy is drill baby drill.
In Europe, here's Queen Ursula.
The last 25 years, Europe has relied on
the rising tide of global trade to drive
its growth.
It has relied on cheap energy from Russia.
Yeah, it was good.

(31:45):
And Europe has too often outsourced its own
security.
But those days are gone.
They're gone.
They're gone.
They're gone.
You're screwed.
So she's not going to outsource her security
to us.
That's what she's saying.
These days are gone.
Good for us.
Good for us.
Now, of course, the days of cheap Russian

(32:07):
energy are gone.
You could bring them right back if you
wanted to.
Just do a deal.
No, no, no.
But we have to explain this as climate
change.
The coming years will be vital well beyond
Europe.
All continents will have to speed up the

(32:28):
transition towards net zero.
And deal with the growing burden of climate
change.
Its impact is impossible to ignore.
Well, the impact of what?
Climate change or net zero?
I think net zero, that impact will be
impossible to ignore.
But she's got solutions.

(32:49):
Here's what we're going to do.
We will have to invest in next generation
clean energy technologies like fusion, enhanced geothermal.
Oh, please.
Oh, man.
Fusion.
Fusion.
Here comes the old fusion again.
Pie in the sky.
Technologies like fusion, enhanced geothermal, and solid state

(33:11):
batteries.
Solid state batteries.
What is this nonsense?
What is she talking about?
Lead acid?
Okay, fusion.
Let's start with that.
Let's start with fusion.
That's bull crap.
They can't do it.
No one's been able to do this.
Of course, the real goal is cold fusion
where you don't have to even worry about
the heat.
But they can't seem to get that to

(33:31):
work.
And this has been worked on forever, and
everyone knows it would be great if it
ever worked, but they can't get it to
work.
It's just a money loser.
And then, so I don't know what she's
talking about.
Battery technology is old.
It's from the 1800s.
Nothing's really changed.
They've only tweaked it.
Well, let's look it up.
That's a loser.
What are solid state batteries?

(33:54):
What are solid state batteries?
What are solid state batteries?
That's either capacitors.
You know, the old capacitor battery.
Oh, wait.
They're known as SSBs.
Solid electrolyte for ionic conduction between the electrodes
as opposed to the liquid or gel polymer
electrodes found in traditional batteries.
Yeah, okay.

(34:16):
You know that...
You know, I'm going to get email for
you.
You don't know...
Dvorak's all wrong.
There's all kinds of stuff.
Yeah, if it was any good, they'd already
be implemented.
So what is the...
What was the second one?
She had fusion, which is just bogus.
Let's listen.
Energy technologies like fusion, enhanced geothermal.
Enhanced geothermal.

(34:37):
Enhanced geothermal.
Okay, so that...
You know, Iceland is largely a geothermal hotspot
and the whole country is run by the
volcano they're sitting on top of.
What is enhanced?
I guess you have to drill a little
deeper.
I don't know.
You drill a deep hole until you hit
the molten rock in the middle of the
earth and you...
I have no idea how you enhance it.

(34:59):
You either got it or you don't.
And Europe doesn't have that.
Not yet.
They need to invest in it.
Europe hasn't got oil.
They haven't got...
The coal has been dug out of...
I mean, England...
England has it.
They gave it up.
England has a lot of coal.
But the main part of Europe has very
little...
I mean, there's some fracking opportunities and they
have a lot of minerals and stuff.
They need this better to get their stuff

(35:20):
from outside.
They're nuts.
And then when they do have something like
standard nuclear like the Germans have and then
they shut it down?
That's nuts.
These people are out of control.
They're just trying to...
I think they want to get themselves into
another war between the states.

(35:40):
I didn't clip it but I watched President
Trump's speech to the Davos crowd and the
question and answer session was quite entertaining, quite
good.
And he said, hey, if you build a
factory plant here, we'll let you put your...
You won't have to be on the grid.
You can build your power plant right next

(36:01):
to your factory.
You can use gas.
Beautiful, cheap gas.
And if you want, if you need a
backup, you can use our clean coal.
Beautiful, clean coal.
I thought I heard the whole thing but
I guess it was that.
It might have been during Q&A.
Clean coal.
Well, we have clean coal.
Yeah, we do have anthracite.

(36:23):
It's a very clean coal.
It's beautiful.
And then if you have scrubbing mechanisms, the
things that can clean out the effluent, it's
dynamite.
But think about that versus all this enhanced
germal...
Germal?
Enhanced germal thermics.
And fusion and what else did she have?

(36:43):
Solid-state batteries.
And solid-state batteries.
And let's start with this before you get
your notes from the angry producers that we
have out there listening to this show nitpicking
what we have to say.
Why are...
Why are solid-state batteries any better than
any other battery?
If they were any better, they'd be in

(37:05):
the Tesla's today, I'm sure.
Wouldn't you think?
I would totally think.
And solid-state batteries.
We must also mobilize more private capital to
modernize our electricity grids and storage infrastructure.
That's what you can't do.
Yeah, we need money.
They can't do that.
They don't know how to do that part.
And then she did something very interesting because
she dropped it, which means it's in play.

(37:28):
You know, of course you've got AI.
Everyone's got to have some AI.
Gotta have some AI.
And she dropped the Q word.
From AI to clean tech.
From quantum to space.
From the Arctic to the South China Sea.
The race is on.
Yeah, baby.
This brings me to the news about AI.

(37:50):
Oh, everyone's talking about it now.
Oh, boy.
They're going to have to crank up the
quantum.
We need some pie-in-the-sky thing
that can suck up all the money that's
floating out there.
It's like $150 billion in the U.S.
markets alone just ready to invest in something
stupid like quantum because the AI game appears

(38:13):
to be over.
I go to CNBC.
First, we were reeling from the success of
China's AI upstart DeepSeek.
Now, TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, has just entered
the AI race in a big way, escalating
competition between the U.S. and China.
Deirdre Bosa has more in today's Tech Check.
Deirdre?
Kelly, I feel a little bit like a
broken record this week, but the momentum from

(38:35):
Chinese AI players has been unrelenting.
ByteDance, as you mentioned, now claims that its
model, Duobao 1.5 Pro, outperforms OpenAI's latest
reasoning model products.
And just days before you mentioned this, an
open-source model out of Chinese AI lab,
DeepSeek, was released that rivals OpenAI's O1 on
several third-party performance benchmarks.

(38:57):
But those two have something else besides performance
in common that makes it starkly different than
our American ones, and that is cost.
They were many times cheaper to build and
are many times cheaper to access.
So developers are really interested in these models.
Big American players, too, at Davos are taking
note.
Each of them, extremely influential CEOs working in

(39:20):
AI, they mention DeepSeek by name.
And so we've been digging into this lab
that's very mysterious, and also the breakthroughs that
has everyone talking.
We'll be publishing our long-form tech check
take tomorrow morning, diving into what it all
means, so don't miss that, Kelly.
So, diving into all of it, what does
it all mean?
What is the big difference?
What is the real advantage?
What is really happening?
So, going back to what TikTok is up

(39:42):
to, what's most significant about it, do you
think?
The cost.
I mean, these models coming out of China
are just built at a fraction of the
price.
When you think about OpenAI that's spending $5
billion a year, burning through billions of dollars
a year.
These models, the DeepSeek one, for example, they
say they built it for less than $6

(40:03):
million.
ByteDance as well shows that it was built
and you can access it at much much
lower prices.
So this really turns on sort of this
truth that we have thought about generative AI
for the last few years, that you need
hundreds of millions of dollars to develop bigger
and better models.
What the Chinese labs and companies are doing

(40:23):
is they're going straight to the frontier.
They're building with sort of infrastructure and outputs
that are already out there, built in many
cases by American companies and startups and they're
improving on it.
They're innovating on it and producing models that
are just as good in some cases at
a fraction of the cost.
So maybe we don't need to buy the
nuclear stocks after all.

(40:43):
Maybe we don't need a million GPUs down
in Abilene.
That's a good question.
Interesting.
It does raise a lot of questions, even
about Project Stargate, right?
What kind of infrastructure are we building here?
Is it for pre-training, like we've had
for the last two years, or is it
for reasoning and inference, which is a different
cost proposition?
Exactly, and you almost wonder if that's why
Microsoft is evolving its partnership with OpenAI.

(41:05):
Yeah, Microsoft may be the last to laugh
at this.
They're throwing out nothing.
There's no proof of anything that they said.
It's all black.
It's like you and I come up with
an AI model that's one tenth the cost.
It's one tenth the cost, Adam.
We've got it at one tenth the cost.
Tell CNBC, oh, they've got it at one

(41:26):
tenth the cost.
You said it.
It doesn't mean you did it.
The tests have actually been done.
The models have already been released.
People are testing it, and they're seeing that
the training goes much faster at a lower
cost.
Yes, because they're doing there's a bunch of
tricks that they're up to.
Oh, fine.
All right, please, please.

(41:47):
They're up to tricks A and B.
They can't get the NVIDIA chips, so they've
got to come up with some way of
doing this without going broke.
This is bull crap.
Hold on a second.
Sam Altman on the phone for you.
Thanks, John.
Thanks.
You're keeping my stocks going.
This is good.
Thank you very much.
Regardless, I'm keeping my eye on it.

(42:10):
I see the pivot to quantum coming.
They're going to start talking about it.
That's the problem right there.
What do you mean?
You can't pivot to quantum because quantum is
bull crap.
Oh, but they're going to.
Yes, of course it's bull crap.
So was Pets.com at the time.
Yes, this is the bubble.
This is the bubble.
The pivot to quantum is coming.

(42:31):
Doesn't matter.
Let's see what this means to consumers down
on the ground, you and me in the
home.
What does all this incredible investment AI result
in?
For that, we only have to go to
CES 2025, which you used to cover.
I've been to it.
I don't think either of us has been
in over a decade or longer.

(42:53):
Since COVID, that's for sure.
Or longer.
Let's get a report from KTLA's Rich on
Tech.
CES 2025 where the tech world descends upon
Las Vegas.
This year, over 4,000 exhibitors and over
130,000 attendees expected.
Everything must be there.
All the good stuff.
All the wonderful enhancements and inventions.

(43:14):
To check out innovations in AI, smart home,
cars, and, of course, TVs.
But big screens are also getting more personal
thanks to augmented reality glasses like the Xreal1.
They are connected to my phone.
Oh, wow.
Plug them into your phone or computer, and
suddenly...
I can see my phone screen now hovering

(43:34):
in space.
Mobility.
I think people want...
Stop the clip.
I saw this technology, oh, let's see, probably
in the 80s.
You could see your phone screen hovering in
space from your StarTAC?
Well, you saw...
No, these glasses that could do this.

(43:54):
It was like, and by the way, really
hard on the eyes.
You don't notice it at first.
Hard on the eyes, by the way, to
look at the person wearing them.
It's like you're wearing, like, big jam pot
bottoms.
It's bad every which way.
I can see my phone screen now hovering
in space.
Mobility.
I think people want...
Hold on a second.

(44:15):
Why did you just use the phone?
You got your phone in your hand, and
now you can see the phone screen hovering
in space?
Yes.
What's the point?
You got the phone in your hand.
What do you need it hovering in space
for?
So you can go, oh, wow.
I mean...
Spoons in space!

(44:37):
Hovering in space.
Mobility.
I think people want to take their entertainment,
their work, on the go.
On the go.
On the go.
On the go, John.
It's on the go.
Which it already is, but now it's on
your head.
It's gotta be an improvement.
Entertainment, their work, on the go.
Samsung teaming up with the Museum of Modern
Art to provide high-quality artwork to its

(44:58):
frame TVs.
Oh, haven't seen that before.
Oh, I've never heard of such a thing.
Which look like a print when not in
use.
Samsung promoting a vision of AI for all.
You're gonna be able to just live your
life and let the technology take care of
that back-end work for you?
All our back-end work, they're gonna do
the spreadsheet for us.
Fire J!

(45:19):
It's done!
It's done!
The technology's gonna do the back-end work
for us.
It's gonna just do it for you, yes.
So you feel empowered by that technology rather
than overwhelmed.
And will feel empowered.
LG wants AI to be more personal for
users.
We're looking at it as affectionate intelligence.
And affectionate intelligence means if we're affectionate, we
care.
So I think whenever you start changing the

(45:41):
name of a new technology from artificial to
affectionate, I think they're in trouble.
...and entrepreneur, Will.i.am on hand to
talk about his new LG XBOOM speakers.
He's got speakers with AI!
Which are tuned for balance and warm sound.
They also have an AI DJ to mix
personalized music.
No, brother.

(46:03):
This is the must-see show for any
tech lover.
No, I don't think so.
That is not the tech lover in me.
Oh, boy.
I did run across, just to wrap this
segment up, I ran across a very interesting
Freakonomics episode with computer scientist Ben Zhao He's

(46:29):
an AI skeptic but he has some tips
this is an early tip of the day
for artists out there how to help bring
AI to its knees to create more AI
slop with two tools which he will mention
by name.
So Zhao's solution was to poison the system
that was causing this trouble.

(46:50):
Poison is sort of a technical term in
the research community basically it means manipulating training
data in such a way to get AI
models to do something perhaps unexpected perhaps more
to your goals than the original trainers intended
to.
They came up with two poisoning tools, one
called Glaze, the other Nightshade.

(47:12):
Glaze is all about making it harder to
target and mimic individual artists.
Nightshade is a little bit more far-reaching.
Its goal is primarily to make training on
internet scraped data more expensive than it is
now.
Perhaps more expensive than actually licensing legitimate data

(47:32):
which ultimately is our hope that this would
push some of these AI companies to seek
out legitimate licensing deals with artists so that
they can properly be compensated.
Glaze and Nightshade so to the human eye
there's no difference but it does something with
the image itself and it messes up the

(47:53):
AI.
AI poisoning.
This is very intricate.
This sounds like bull crap.
Everything is bull crap to you.
It's not.
Today's theme.
Bull crap.
No, it's proven to work.
I go to one of these systems and
I download something and tell it to make
it look like a Monet and it gives

(48:14):
me some product.
What do these other things got to do
with it?
So that if you put your artwork out
there when the AI goes to ingest that
and steal your soul it will either not
be able to ingest it.
I got my artwork posted someplace.
How does glaze fit into the picture?
Do I have to put my artwork through

(48:34):
glaze and then post it that way?
Yes, correct.
So it's like a watermarking system.
No, it's not.
It's the same idea.
You embed code into the artwork and that
embedded code is like, it's just, I don't
see the difference between that and a watermark.
It's better.
A watermark is used for identification but in

(48:55):
this case it's used to screw up the
AI model.
Yes.
So everyone has to do that.
How does this change?
Picasso is not going to do that.
He's dead.
Okay.
I'm sorry I even brought it up with
you, Boomer.
No, I'm glad you brought it up because
it just shows you the futility of trying
to put a stop to it with these

(49:16):
cheap tricks.
I'm all for poisoning AI.
I just like how it sounds.
I like the whole idea.
I like being a radical.
You're nuts.
Poison the AI.
Yes, I'm all for poisoning the AI.
Why?
Because I can't take the emails anymore.
What's the emails telling you?

(49:38):
Oh, the artists.
The artists.
They're crying.
Crying.
I don't get any of these emails.
I think you're imagining this.
You must be dreaming it.
So not only is everything I play wrong
and stupid and not true.
No, there's a bullcrap game.
Now I'm lying?
You just have to put up with it.
Can you tell donations were low, everybody?

(50:00):
John is in one of those moods.
Tina even said to me, oh, John will
be something to deal with today.
You're right.
Good luck with this guy.
Why does he hate AI so much?

(50:20):
I mean, there's potential here.
Why do I hate AI so much?
I mean, why?
I don't like it.
I think it's dumb.
I think it's expensive, stupid, and it just
does images and sound and we have an
end of show mix, which is okay, done
by AI.
But it's not...
I did a test because one of the

(50:41):
artists was like...
Okay, which artist was this?
I'm not going to tell you.
No, no, no.
It's between me and the artist.
And the artist says to me, you know,
this sucks and I said, you know, it's
a tool and it still works for now
until we poison it.
But it's a tool and there's no way

(51:03):
that AI can create an image by itself
without the soul of the artist going into
it.
Now, that may go in the form of
a prompt.
I mean, when we got graphics generation programs
and...
Actually, I ought to stop you because JC,
my son who's into this stuff, he has

(51:25):
an interest.
He remarks pretty much the same way you
just did which is it can't just dream
something up.
It can't actually create which means it's not
really AI.
There's no intelligence involved.
So you're complaining about just a robotic function.
No, no.
I'm with you.

(51:46):
I'm with JC.
What I'm saying to the artist is you're
wrong.
You are wrong because...
The artist.
The artist.
And I had an example which I had
the output for.
I said, I took the entire transcript of
episode 1732 so the AI had the entire
show.

(52:06):
They know what we talked about.
They know what we laughed about.
They knew all the things of all the
topics and everything.
The AI had it all.
It's an it, by the way.
Go on.
I don't know what the pronoun is.
Is AI...
It.
It.
Is an it.
Okay.
It's an it.
And I said, in fact, if you go

(52:27):
to crapart.noagendanotes.com Crap art?
Yes.
Crap art.
This is one of your new...
Crap art.
Go to it.
It's HTTP, by the way.
Not HTTPS.
And I said, this is the prompt given
to ChatGPT.
Using this transcript of the No Agenda podcast,

(52:48):
and there's the link, create an image that
displays in a humorous topical way something that
will grab...
Oh, this is interesting what you did.
Let me tell you why.
Let me finish the sentence.
Create an image that displays in a humorous
topical way something that will grab people's attention
and entice them to listen to the episode.
And then the result came back, and I
will read it first.

(53:09):
Here's the humorous and attention-grabbing illustration inspired
by the No Agenda podcast episode 1732.
It combines satire, bold visuals, and a playful
approach to the themes mentioned in the episode.
Let me know if you need any adjustments.
Now you tell me, would we choose that
art?
Oh, I have to go look at it.
I can't believe...

(53:29):
Everyone's looking at it.
But me.
But you.
Crap AI?
No, crapart.noagendanotes.com crapart.noagendanotes.com Oh,
brother.
Crap.
One word.
Crapart.
Dot.
Dot.
No agenda notes.
No agenda notes.
Dot com.
Crapart.noagendanotes.com Crapart.noagendanotes.com AI cannot

(53:54):
do what art is doing.
Here's the artwork.
This is the...
You're talking about the army of this thing?
That's what it produced, based on the entire
knowledge of the entire episode.
Well, you made your point.
Well, just tell people, would we ever choose
this?
This is a disaster.
Thank you.

(54:14):
A disaster.
Because there is no intelligence, there's no humor,
there's no soul.
Well, that's the interesting thing.
That's what I was going to say, before
you had to finish the sentence, which was
when you give professional spot artists, the guys
who do these illustrations for newspapers and magazines
and every place in between.

(54:35):
We used to do this at PC Magazine.
Mac user used to always have a piece
of spot art for my column that was
in the back of the I made a
lot of friends with these artists because I
always begged them to get the originals and
I ended up with a lot of art.
And they'd read the article and then something
that would dawn on them, that would be
a cute illustration, and that's what a spot

(54:56):
artist is good at.
You'd read the article and then you'd say,
you know, I think this would draw some
piece, a little art piece that somehow reflected
the article.
Very difficult to do.
In this instance, what you've done is try
to recreate that system, which is the way
humans operate, and the AI failed miserably.

(55:19):
Bigly.
Miserably.
Bigly.
Yes.
I mean, just look at it.
It's a complete disaster, as a matter of
fact.
It's a disaster.
Exactly.
So people should go to this website that
you have, that you can rewind.
I'm not going to do it again.
My point is that when I asked it,
I didn't say, make it like this, do

(55:40):
it like that.
That comes from the human soul.
No, you just had to do an original
piece of art.
Yeah, based upon what it heard in the
episode.
So a human can listen to our episode,
or could even read through the transcript, and
could go, oh, I know what I'm going
to do.
And they come up with ideas.
That's intelligence.
That's the human psyche.
That is, that's, it's in your DNA.

(56:01):
That's the kind of stuff that AI cannot
do.
So get to it, hop to it before
it's all poisoned.
You can still make cool stuff.
So I'm on your side.
So you were assuaging the artist.
Yes.
This part was part of your long-term
scheme to get the artist to calm down.

(56:21):
Yes, of course.
And just use the tool until it craps
out.
Correct.
Yeah, okay.
Exactly right.
I can't call you out on that.
No.
Oh, finally.
I got one.
A little bit better material.
Fifty-six minutes in, I've got one thing
you agree with.
Well, then let me spin you around, and
I'll be done for a moment.
As I predicted, or as I said, what

(56:43):
would needed to happen was, in order for
crypto to take off in the United States,
the SEC had to change their SAB-121
regulation, and they did.
They rescinded SAB-121, now permitting banks to
custody crypto, specifically Bitcoin, and it not be

(57:04):
a liability on their balance sheet.
So they can hold it now.
They can be an asset holder for customers.
And this is all in part thanks to
the new crypto czar.
Crypto and AI czar from the All In
podcast.
A podcaster is a crypto czar in the
administration.
David Sachs.

(57:25):
And I've been waiting to figure out what
they're going to do with stable coin, and
I think I have it figured out.
So this executive order bans agencies from developing
a central bank digital currency.
Why is that?
Well, CBDCs are a real threat to freedom
and liberty.
What you're talking about there is moving to
a central bank digital currency that would be

(57:46):
run out of Washington by the Fed, and
would basically gradually replace cash and catalog everybody's
transactions, and it could lead to new laws
and dictates about how people spend their money.
So I think people are very concerned that
that could be an Orwellian path to go
down.
No one wants to go down that path,
and I think we can create stable coins,

(58:07):
basically digital dollars, without doing that.
So the executive order is really clear.
We want to create a regulatory framework for
stable coins, but we don't want to go
down the path of CBDCs.
But a digital currency for a government could
be competition to Bitcoin.
Did that play into that decision?
Well, I mean, any government can create a
stable coin, but I think the U.S.
dollar is already the world's reserve currency, so

(58:28):
I'm not really worried about competition there.
I just want to extend or I believe
that what we should be doing is extending
the dollar's dominance into digital areas, extend it
online, and I think that could actually create
trillions of dollars of demand for U.S.
treasuries.
It could be really useful to us in
basically supporting our debt and also bringing down
long-term interest rates.

(58:49):
So I don't know about long-term interest
rates and debt, but I figured it out.
The regulations or the way the executive order
reads is anybody can start a company and
create stable coin, which is typically a stable
coin.
I don't know of any others.
It's pegged to the dollar one-to-one.
So here's how it works.

(59:09):
You buy a U.S. treasury, which is
debt, and let's just say you buy $1
treasury.
It doesn't exist, but a $1 treasury.
So you've spent your dollar.
You now hold the treasury, and because you
have that $1 treasury, you can create a
$1 stable coin.
You get your dollar back.
It's genius.

(59:32):
Then flood the world with American dollars in
the form of stable coins.
This will be interesting because it will result
in the biggest depression we've ever seen, but
we'll see how that works out.
It might.
I'm not going to argue with you on
that, but now I understand what they're doing.
Well, they've got to do something about this
debt.

(59:53):
Well, yeah.
At this point, they can't even do the
trillion-dollar coin because they need to make
30 of them.
37 trillion of them.
37 coins.
It's like, wait a minute.
I just thought, wow, that is an amazing
trick.
Well, we'll see how it goes.
Yeah.
I like it.
I mean, you've got to do something, so

(01:00:14):
they might as well give this a shot.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, keep our eyes on it.
And, of course, you could because Tether, the
biggest stable coin holder, which I think they're
the ones that are in cahoots with who's
the guy, the Cantor Fitzgerald, I believe that
they're also using Bitcoin to back their stable

(01:00:35):
coin, which can't be a one-for-one.
They have to do it like 50%
or something for the fluctuation.
But we'll see.
We'll see.
But the stable coin is how the American
dollar is going to just flood the world.
Everyone's going to be using it.
And that's what Trump has always wanted.
He always wants to keep the dollar.
It'll be the stable coin.

(01:00:57):
Four more years, baby.
Then we're out, you and me.
And we're done.
There'll be nothing left to talk about.
There'll be nothing left to talk about.
There'll be nothing left.
All right.
You're up.
What you got?
Okay.
Well, we got a bunch of stuff.
We can also talk about the Hegseth because
we got through.
Yeah, let's do Hegseth.

(01:01:17):
Let's do the rundown from NPR for starters.
And this is called...
These three clips are called Trump Rundown Firing
Hegseth NPR.
Okay.
Pete Hegseth was confirmed as Secretary of Defense
last night.
A squeaker of a vote.
This is part of a lightning round that
was the first week.
I love it.
The squeaker of a vote.
The squeaker.
The speaker.
You actually have his voice down pretty well.

(01:01:40):
Thank you.
The new Trump administration.
A tide of change is sweeping the country.
Sunlight is pouring over the entire world.
So this is January 6th.
These are the hostages.
Approximately 1,500 for a pardon.
Yes.
Full pardon.
I'll also be signing an executive order to
begin the process of fundamentally reforming and overhauling

(01:02:03):
FEMA or maybe getting rid of FEMA.
I think, frankly, FEMA's not good.
President Trump wielded a sharpie to sign pardons
and commutations for supporters who participated in the
riot at the U.S. Capitol four years
ago and a profusion of executive orders.
Hold on.
What is a profusion?
What is a profusion?
A bunch.

(01:02:23):
Why does it just say a bunch?
You know, NPR, profusion's a good word.
A riot at the U.S. Capitol four
years ago and a profusion of executive orders
and a profusion.
No wonder they have no listeners.
They don't understand what they're saying.

(01:02:49):
Hold on.
One of our producers made an excellent point.
They're all saying inspector generals.
It's inspectors general.
Oh, that's a good point.
Make it sound like they're generals.
These guys are...
NPR says 12.
The Washington...

(01:03:10):
I think it was the Washington Post said
15, but there's actually 17.
Nobody gets these numbers right.
I mean, how hard can it be?
It's inspectors general, not inspector generals.
According to a number of media sources, fired
at least a dozen inspector generals of major
federal agencies.
If you're going to say profusion, you should
at least say inspectors general.

(01:03:30):
NPR's Ron Elving joins us.
Ron, thanks for being with us.
Good to be with you, Scott.
What do we know about last night's firings?
The inspector general position is a kind of
in-house watchdog in federal agencies.
In-house, but independent.
It's been a source of reform and oversight,
but also a source of frustration because of
their independence and uncertainty as to whom they

(01:03:51):
answer to.
Trump sent firing notices to a dozen of
these last night, some of whom are people
he himself appointed in his first term.
And it's unclear what the legal effect of
this will be, as the law says Congress
has to get 30 days notice in advance,
and obviously that didn't happen.
Well, how do you know?
How do you know he didn't give 30
days notice?

(01:04:12):
We don't know.
That's what everyone says.
Inspector Gadget, you're fired.
Done.
Number two.
Vice President Vance had to cast the tie
-breaking vote to confirm Pete Hegseth as defense
secretary last night.
Republican Senators Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski voted
no.

(01:04:33):
So did Mitch McConnell, former Republican leader.
What's the significance?
Murkowski and Collins were expected, and there were
plenty of reasons for relatively centrist Republicans to
be unhappy with Hegseth.
His personal problems, of course, but also his
views on women and opposition to diversity in
general in the Defense Department and the Army
and Navy and so on.

(01:04:53):
But McConnell was a surprise.
He is no longer the party leader in
the Republican Party in the Senate.
He is serving out his last term as
a regular member, so in that role he
can to some degree be his own man.
And last night we saw that included the
desire to resist pressure from Trump when he
thought Trump had made a bad choice.
What do you think we're seeing over these

(01:05:14):
last few days?
We didn't call it Trump 2 or Trump
2.0. It's more like Trump 1.
More like Trump being the president that he
wanted to be all along.
Now, eight years ago, Trump came to Washington
willing to listen to people who wanted to
help him.
People who were part of the power structure
in the Congress or in the military or

(01:05:35):
within the power structure of the Republican Party
itself.
He allowed himself to be restrained by some
of his cabinet members and by his first
two chiefs of staff.
It now seems that he very much regretted
that restraint and things are going to be
quite different this time around.
Well, then it's not Trump 1 if it's
going to be different.

(01:05:56):
Collins and Murkowski.
Collins and Murkowski.
Collins is the worst.
She's the only Republican who voted for Xavier
Becerra, that guy who runs HHS who's got
no experience whatsoever.
He's worse than if you're going to compare
him to Kennedy, for example.
And she's the one Republican who voted for

(01:06:17):
him.
Why?
Every Republican said, no, this guy's no good.
No, no, I'm going to vote for him.
She had a stroke some years ago.
She's addled.
Collins?
Collins, yeah.
That's why she talks so funny.
But Mitch McConnell, he's got some neurological disorder.
Did you see the latest clip of him?

(01:06:39):
He's got brain freeze.
He just stops.
He's got something wrong with him.
He's a candidate for Neuralink.
But he's the one who said he's an
apologist for China.
He voted against Heg Setske.
He's married to a Chinese lady.
He's married to a Chinese guy.
I think she's a Chinese national, too.
At least was.
TikTok lady.

(01:07:02):
So he's no good.
He's no good.
He's no good.
I don't know what Murkowski's problem is.
Just think of the name, Murkowski.
I can't even say Murkowski.
You're a problem.
Are they going to be problems with everybody,
do you think?
Yep.
Interesting.
Final clip.
The idea seems to be to issue a

(01:07:24):
challenge, not just to his rivals or critics,
but to the entire federal establishment.
And I think he would like that description.
The main thing, he feels very empowered.
No more worries about re-election, so he
can be the kind of president he always
wanted to be.
Try and review some of those items, beginning
with the January 6th pardons and commutations.

(01:07:45):
This move may have been the biggest surprise
of the week.
The biggest surprise?
Really?
No, everyone knew he was going to do
this.
Risk.
Vice President Vance had said he supported pardons
for non-violent protesters, but not for those
who were violent, and especially not those who
beat on the police.
But then Trump pardoned almost all of those

(01:08:06):
charged, including the organizers, including the ringleaders, including
the most violent.
And how do you assess the executive orders
we've seen?
They run the gamut from pure fantasy to
cold reality.
Deportations are real.
They have begun.
But Trump's suggestion that he could really eliminate
birthright citizenship with a wave of his black
sharpie was shot down before the week was

(01:08:27):
over.
A federal judge in Seattle who was appointed
by Ronald Reagan four decades ago called it
a legal absurdity and clearly unconstitutional.
I don't know, because he was appointed by
Ronald Reagan, an old coot?
Eliminate birthright citizenship with a wave of his
black sharpie was shot down before the week
was over.
A federal judge in Seattle who was appointed
by Ronald Reagan four decades ago called it

(01:08:49):
a legal absurdity and clearly unconstitutional.
Does President Trump really want to get rid
of FEMA?
You can always get cheers at a rally
by promising to get rid of a federal
agency.
And Trump was not saying the federal government
would never provide any money, but just that
it wouldn't be up to FEMA.
He said the agency got in the way.

(01:09:10):
Yeah.
This thinking is not even that crazy.
But before we get to that, I want
to stick with Hegseth.
Because I got Elizabeth Warren here with some
choice words for our new secretary of defense.
Pete Hegseth, the Army National Guard veteran and
Fox News host who Trump nominated to lead
the Department of Defense, faces a Senate confirmation

(01:09:31):
vote later tonight.
That vote will occur amid Hegseth's own admission
that he made a $50,000 payment to
the woman who accused him of sexual assault
in 2017.
The revelation was one of the written answers
that Hegseth provided to Senator Elizabeth Warren in
response to additional questions that Warren posed to

(01:09:51):
Hegseth as part of the vetting process.
Senator Warren also had much to say about
these troubling allegations involving Hegseth's drinking habits.
Here we go.
The kind of drunk that you take work
folks to a strip club and so drunk
then that you try to get up on
stage and dance with the strippers.

(01:10:12):
The kind of drunk that stopped the Uber
because you're going to vomit drunk.
Look, I understand there are people who have
alcohol problems but we cannot trust the safety
of our country to someone who has demonstrated
repeatedly using very bad judgment with alcohol and

(01:10:33):
doing it in ways that truly have incapacitated
him.
Wow.
Well that reminds me of the smear I
have the clips here that NPR tried to
pull.
This is about a week ago.
This is Hegseth NBX smear.

(01:10:54):
Is NBX, is that NPR?
Is that like Cute Winter Boots?
Cute Winter Boots?
NBX?
From now on NPR is known as NBX
on this show.
NBX.
Here we go.
The President's nominee for Secretary of Defense is
once again facing allegations of alcohol abuse and

(01:11:15):
misconduct.
Yeah, Pete Hegseth endured a round of questions
about his past as well as his qualifications
and his nominations made it out of a
Senate committee on a party line vote.
The full Senate has yet to vote and
now his former sister-in-law has added
her own views.
She submitted an affidavit to Senators saying Hegseth
caused his ex-wife to fear for her

(01:11:37):
safety.
Unsurprisingly the affidavit is now public.
NPR Congressional Correspondent Deirdre Walsh is among reporters
who obtained copies.
Deirdre, good morning.
Good morning, Steve.
Okay, so what in this document adds to
what was already known?
This is an on-the-record signed sworn
statement from Hegseth's former sister-in-law.
As you noted Danielle Hegseth, she was married
to his brother Nathaniel.

(01:11:58):
And she states that she was asked to
provide the statement by the top Democrat on
the panel Jack Reed.
Senator Reed told me last night he made
the request for the details because he didn't
think the FBI background check on Hegseth was
adequate.
Danielle Hegseth says in her personal opinion, Pete
Hegseth is quote, unfit for the job.
She says her former sister-in-law Samantha,

(01:12:19):
Hegseth's second wife who he divorced, feared for
her personal safety during their marriage.
She often hid in a closet.
She said Samantha had a plan about texting
her a safe word or code word that
meant she wanted someone to fly to Minnesota
to help her.
Danielle Hegseth also said she personally witnessed Hegseth
intoxicated, yelling in her face.

(01:12:39):
She told the FBI that Hegseth abused alcohol
numerous times over the years, to the point
of actually passing out during a holiday gathering.
Well, what does Hegseth say about all that?
Well, NPR reached out to his attorney, Tim
Parlatori He has not responded.
But Parlatori told NBC, which first reported on
this affidavit, that Samantha Hegseth, this ex-wife

(01:13:00):
never alleged any abuse and actually signed court
documents acknowledging there was no abuse.
And she affirmed that as part of Hegseth's
background check.
I see a book deal coming.
I see a book deal.
Let's play this part two, and then I
can tell you some other details.
He maintained, Parlatori, that Danielle was, quote, an

(01:13:20):
anti-Trump far-left Democrat who was divorced
from Hegseth's brother and never got along with
the family.
He said she has an axe to grind.
In Samantha Hegseth's case, she told NBC in
a statement there was no physical abuse.
She wasn't going to comment on her marriage,
and she didn't have representatives speaking on her
behalf.
It's worth noting that during the public confirmation

(01:13:41):
hearing, Pete Hegseth was pressed about previous allegations
about excessive drinking, inappropriate behavior, which he denied.
In a broad sense, said they were anonymous
allegations and so forth.
I guess the key question here involves Republican
senators.
How are they responding to this?
You know, they're standing behind him.
I spoke with several last night after this
affidavit became public.

(01:14:03):
Most said they hadn't read the document, but
they questioned the timing, the motivation.
Hegseth's nomination is on track for a full
Senate vote later this week or over the
weekend at the latest.
I talked to Armed Services Chairman Roger Wicker.
He told reporters he had grave doubts about
Danielle Hegseth's account in the affidavit, but he
also admitted he hadn't read it.

(01:14:24):
He said he was planning to review it,
but he dismissed it as political.
So far, no Senate Republican has publicly said
they're going to oppose Pete Hegseth's nomination with
the 53-seat majority.
He could lose three Republican votes and still
get confirmed.
He's not likely to get any support from
Democrats, but he's not going to need them.
Right now, he has the votes.
So now you're going to smear this woman.

(01:14:45):
So here's the thing.
Why is this report even...
This is a smear report on the part
of NPR just to throw these details out
there about this crazy Danielle girl who's just
nuts, obviously.
And this is the same kind of bullcrap
where somebody reached out to her from the
Democrat Party saying, can you give us some
dirt?

(01:15:06):
Here's something.
Why don't you sign this?
Yeah, like the booth lady.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's just this kind of thing.
To report on this as though there's even
any hint that is possibly legit is irresponsible.
And NPR does this constantly.
Hold on.
We've cracked the code.
It wasn't NPR.

(01:15:27):
NBX is clearly NBC.
If you look at the keyboard.
Well...
Okay.
This is an NPR report about the NBC
report.
Ah, okay.
I'm with you.
I'm with you.
Got it.
Because those are the two NPR people.
I'm still going to call NPR NBX.

(01:15:50):
NBC...
They got the information from NBC and turned
it into a smear.
And NBC, of course, is another one that's
just another bad actor that they would be
the ones to do this to begin with.
Well, I'm glad you brought that up.
Because I have...
What do I have here?
I have NBC.
I have an NBC report from your girl.

(01:16:12):
Yummy?
Oh, my God.
I saw this.
I wish I had clipped it.
She's lost it.
Also this morning, President Trump is celebrating a
razor-thin victory.
His controversial pick to head up the Defense
Department, Pete Hegseth, has been confirmed thanks to
a late-night rare tie-breaking vote by
his vice president, J.D. Vance.

(01:16:33):
NBC White House correspondent Yamiche Alcindor...
Wait.
Hold on a second.
Stop the clip.
They've been in office for what?
Four or five days and this is now
a rare vote?
Well, okay.
So I happen to know what this is.
Only one other time has an appointee been
a tie-breaker and that was in 2017

(01:16:56):
and that was some woman I forget that
Trump nominated.
So a tie-breaker is not rare, but
they make it sound like this is just
crazy rare and it's too bad J.D.
Vance is there.
Kamala Harris would have voted.
I don't know what it is.
Let's get to Yamiche.
...is in Las Vegas traveling with President Trump.
Yamiche, good morning.

(01:17:17):
Good morning.
Last night the Senate narrowly voted to confirm
Pete Hegseth as the new Defense Secretary.
Vice President J.D. Vance had to cast
a tie-breaking vote when lawmakers deadlocked 50
to 50.
It was only the second time in history
a Cabinet vote needed a tie-breaker.
See, that's a lie.
It's not the first time the Cabinet has

(01:17:38):
ever had a tie-breaker.
Well, I guess if you call it Cabinet.
Maybe she's right.
But she kind of makes it sound when
she talks like this.
No, she's in tears.
It seems to come over the reports recently
that this woman's lost it.
50.
It was only the second time in history
a Cabinet vote needed a tie-breaker.
What?
She said second time.

(01:17:58):
Yeah, second time Cabinet vote.
So she's correct.
Vance stepped in after former Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell Vance stepped in.
He's like, oh, I'm J.D. Vance.
I'm here to stop the proceedings.
Vance stepped in after former Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell and two other Republican Senators, Lisa
Murkowski and Susan Collins joined all Democrats in

(01:18:20):
voting against the nomination.
Hex has got the job despite a number
of controversies including allegations of alcohol abuse, domestic
violence, a sexual assault, and the financial mismanagement
of organizations that he led.
But wait, there's much more to come.
Yamiche will be breaking, breaking all over the
place with the coming nominees.
President Trump has a number of other nominees

(01:18:42):
that still need to make it through the
Senate with hearings for RFK Jr., Kash Patel,
and Tulsi Gabbard set for next week.
Gabbard, Trump's pick for Director of National Intelligence
has possibly the toughest road ahead.
She has never worked in the intelligence world
and has been accused of amplifying Russian propaganda.
Gabbard has denied the claims.

(01:19:02):
C-SPAN is going to be on fire
this week.
Russia and Europe, you coddle up to dictators
like Assad.
It's amazing.
It's amazing.
Well, I think the hearing's going to be
dynamite with her because she's going to throw
it back.
Talking about J.D. Vance, that's the bonus

(01:19:24):
clip we might as well play.
This is J.D. Vance, I think it's
this morning, a recent clip of him on
I guess it's Face the Nation with Margaret
Brennan who's jumping all over him on these
immigrants.
This is one of those moments where you
say, well, you know, this guy could have
been a little harsher.

(01:19:44):
If we play this clip, I'm going to
coach everyone how to be a little harsher
with this.
When you talked to us in August, you
said, I don't think we should abandon anybody
who's been properly vetted and helped us.
Do you stand by that?
Well, Margaret, I don't agree that all these
immigrants or all these refugees have been properly
vetted.
In fact, we know that there are cases

(01:20:04):
of people who allegedly were properly vetted and
then were literally planning terrorist attacks on our
country.
That happened during the campaign, if you may
remember.
So clearly not all of these foreign nationals
have been properly vetted.
But there are 30,000 people in the
pipeline, Afghan refugees.
But my primary concern as the Vice President,
Margaret, is to look after the American people.
And now that we know that we have

(01:20:25):
vetting problems with a lot of these refugee
programs, we absolutely cannot unleash thousands of unvetted
people into our country.
These people are vetted.
Just like the guy who planned a terrorist
attack in Oklahoma a few months ago, he
was allegedly properly vetted.
And many people in the media and the
Democratic Party said that he was properly vetted.
Clearly he wasn't.
I don't want my children to share a

(01:20:47):
neighborhood with people who are not properly vetted.
And because I don't want it for my
kids, I'm not going to force any other
American citizen's kids to do that either.
No, and that was a very particular case.
It wasn't clear if he was radicalized when
he got here or while he was living
there.
I don't really care, Margaret.
I don't want that person in my country,
and I think most Americans agree with me.
We'll be back in one minute with more

(01:21:07):
of our interview with Vice President Banz.
Thanks for leaving that in.
So yeah, I left that in.
So the thing that she said was well,
and by the way he does a good
job of conflating the Democrat Party and the
media.
He does that pretty slickly that nobody notices.
She could have called him out on that.

(01:21:28):
But he could have called her out when
she said, well, we don't know whether this
guy was radicalized over there or when he
came over here.
And so the comeback to that would have
been, Martha, are you telling me that living
all those years in Afghanistan would have no
effect on his personality?
And then when he comes into the United

(01:21:48):
States of America, here he gets radicalized to
become a terrorist?
Is that what you're saying?
Is that what you're trying to tell me?
And that would have turned the table.
She would have not been able to deal
with that.
But he's a nice guy.
He's trying to be a nice guy.
Well, he can be pretty sharp.
He's a nice guy.

(01:22:08):
I think he missed an opportunity to throw
it at her.
Yeah.
He's already Vice President.
He's laughing.
He's like, I'm Vice President.
I don't care what you say.
Well, I'd like to have seen it.
I have a couple of quickies here as
President Trump has been doing all kinds of
interesting stuff.
Of course, we talked about some of this
on Thursday, but these are all for short,

(01:22:29):
less than half a minute.
Next tonight, President Trump has revoked the security
detail assigned to Dr. Anthony Fauci, according to
sources.
Dr. Fauci was the President's top COVID advisor
during his first term and has faced regular
threats on his life for years.
Trump has also revoked security for three other
former advisors who faced threats from Iran.
In North Carolina today, Trump said they all

(01:22:52):
have made a lot of money.
They can hire their own security, too.
Then, this has got to be my favorite,
because it is the season of reveal.
Lastly, sir, we have an executive order ordering
the declassification of files relating to the assassinations
of President John F.
Kennedy, Senator Robert F.

(01:23:12):
Kennedy, and Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
That's a big one, huh?
A lot of people are waiting for this
for a long few years.
For decades.
Everything will be revealed.
I know you totally played that clip.

(01:23:34):
You know it.
Everything will be revealed.
I had that clip.
I was saying, I'm not putting this clip
out there.
It's the year of reveal or some horseshit.
Season of reveal.
This is another promise made and kept.
Season.
This is an important one for the black
voters, because that's what this was all about.

(01:23:56):
The administration has withdrawn a proposed rule that
would ban menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars.
A menthol ban had been a top priority
for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
when former President Joe Biden was in office.
However, the Biden administration never gave the ban
the green light amid lobbying from stakeholder groups.
Menthol will stay!

(01:24:16):
Menthol cigarettes.
Very important.
MASA.
Make America smoke again.
It's good.
We're rocking and rolling.
So there used to be a product that
you could get.
People don't know this.
I see most of our audience.
The elders do.
The elders?
The elders.
You used to be able to buy these

(01:24:38):
little wooden pegs.
Very small little thing.
You'd stick it in the end of a
cigar.
And it would blow up.
And it would blow up.
I remember those.
You could stick it in.
Whatever happened to the exploding cigar?
They were great.
It was like a little match.

(01:24:58):
And you stuck it.
I did that to my mom and my
dad and they hated it.
Oh you did?
You would?
Oh yeah, definitely.
And they'd light it up and after about
three puffs, it wasn't really an explosion.
But it was funny.
It was kind of an explosion.
Like a small miniature firecracker.
I'd blow the end off the thing.
Yeah, sometimes you're like a smokestack.

(01:25:20):
It would go pow like that.
Like when it was exploded.
I remember, oh man, my mom, rest in
peace mom.
That was funny.
Those days were good.
My dad probably egged me on.
You know your mom smoked cigars, but okay.
She wore army boots too.
Cute winter boots.
Since it was discussed, here's the minute clip

(01:25:40):
of President Trump talking about FEMA.
I'll also be signing an executive order to
begin the process of fundamentally reforming and overhauling
FEMA or maybe getting rid of FEMA.
I think, frankly, FEMA's not good.
I think when you have a problem like
this, I think you want to go and
whether it's a Democrat or Republican governor, you

(01:26:01):
want to use your state to fix it
and not waste time calling FEMA and then
FEMA gets here and they don't know the
area, they've never been to the area and
they want to give you rules that you've
never heard about.
They want to bring people that aren't as
good as the people you already have and
FEMA's turned out to be a disaster.
And you could go back a long way.

(01:26:21):
You could go back to Louisiana.
You could go back to some of the
things that took place in Texas.
It turns out to be the state that
ends up doing the work.
It just complicates it.
I think we're going to recommend that FEMA
go away and we pay directly.
We pay a percentage to the state.
But the state should fix this.
If the state did this from the beginning
it would have been a lot better situation.

(01:26:42):
I think you guys agree with that.
What are we going to call the FEMA
camps?
We can't call them FEMA camps anymore.
And what FEMA region will I live in?
I'm in FEMA region number six.
You're at a crossroads here.
This is going to change the show.
Everyone knows the FEMA region they're in.
What's your FEMA region?

(01:27:03):
Six.
No, I'm in six.
Are you also?
You can't be in six.
I'm in nine.
You can't be in six.
Everybody knows their FEMA region.
I don't know.
It's probably a good idea.
It's very expensive, the FEMA.
It's a horrible operation.
Brownie.
Good job, Brownie.

(01:27:24):
So then there was the President Trump in
Los Angeles with the First Lady, man.
She's great.
She's going out with him now.
Our First Lady.
Very stylish First Lady.
Hopefully she'll be given her props.
She got her hat on.
She got her glasses on.
Then she had a beanie on, like a
Tim Pool beanie.

(01:27:45):
That was cool.
So I have two clips.
The first one is about the permits.
It was basically President Trump just railing on...
Well, not railing, but saying, you know, you're
nuts.
Well, he was railing on the Democrat representative.
He was railing less on the mayor, but

(01:28:06):
he was giving her grief, too.
He was giving everybody grief, and I have
to say the politico of them all, which
is Governor Newsom, avoided being there.
He met him at the tarmac and then
took off.
I have the tarmac clip.
A new effort is underway to recall Governor
Gavin Newsom.
I'm sorry.

(01:28:27):
That's the recall Governor Newsom.
Somewhere I had a meeting.
Anyway, yeah.
Here is the exchange with the Los Angeles
Mayor Bass.
You're going to move as fast as we
can, but we want you to be safe,
and we want you to be back in
your homes immediately.

(01:28:48):
But the people are willing to clean out
their own debris.
It doesn't cost a lot.
You should have them do it, because by
the time you hire contractors, it's going to
be two years.
The people are willing to get a dumpster
and do it themselves and clean it out.
There's not that much left.
It's all incinerated.

(01:29:09):
It's just going to take a long time.
You can do some of it, but a
lot of these people, I know that guy
right there that's talking.
I know my people.
You'll be on that thing tonight, throwing the
stuff away, and your site will look perfect
within 24 hours, and that's what he wants
to do.
He doesn't want to wait around for seven
months till the city hires some demolition contract
that's going to charge him $25,000 to

(01:29:31):
do his lot.
You have emergency powers just like I do,
and I'm going to exercise them also.
I did exercise them.
I mean, you have a very powerful emergency
power, and you can do everything within 24
hours.
Yes, and if individuals want to clear out
their property, they can.

(01:29:53):
We think within a week.
That's a long time, a week.
I'll be honest.
To me, everyone's standing in front of their
house.
They want to go to work, and they're
not allowed to do it.
A week is a long time.
They're safe.
They're not safe now.
They're going to be much safer.
A week is actually a long time, the

(01:30:13):
way I look at it.
I watched hundreds of people standing in front
of their lots, and they're not allowed to
go in.
It's all burned.
It's gone.
It's done.
Nothing's going to happen to it.
It's not going to burn anymore.
There's nothing to burn.
There's almost nothing to burn, and they want
to go in.
The people are all over the place.
They're standing, and I say, Warren, you're going
in.
We're trying to get a permit, and the

(01:30:35):
permit's going to take them.
Everybody said 18 months.
You said 18 months.
You said 18 months.
She didn't have a comeback for that because
she probably did say 18 months, but then...
Yeah, 18 months.
That's ridiculous.
No, he goes all over this, and she
kept going on about, well, there's hazardous waste.
She also had some comment about that.

(01:30:56):
It's like, what hazard?
Everything's gone.
She is terrible, and the whole operation down
there is just completely out of control.
She's useless.
She's like a classic bureaucrat, yacking away.
And then some county guy pipes in, and
this is where President Trump just brought the
humor back with sincerity.

(01:31:17):
Mr. President, we're going to be together next
week, and during the interim, many of us
are involved in, and Tom McClintock, who you
know, has been an expert on this for
years.
We are going to be putting conditions on
the money that do two things.
Require that it be done timely and affordable,

(01:31:37):
and then secondly, that we protect those who
will come afterwards.
As we speak, there are 6,000 acres
burning in my district on the Mexican border.
There will be more fires until we include,
in any disaster relief, items which will prevent
it, or at least mitigate it from happening
again.

(01:31:58):
So you're going to see us proposing both
of those.
Like water.
We're going to do that for them.
You know, the party of common sense.
Brad, we're the party of common sense.
You're not, in all fairness.
We like water to put out fires.
It's really quite efficient.
Water.

(01:32:18):
Just make sure you have water.
That's great.
It's funny.
I mean, humor in dire circumstances, of course,
because it's a total disaster.
Where are all these people?
Where are they right now?
They can't all be in hotels.
I mean, they're staying with family?

(01:32:41):
Probably with friends, mostly.
That's horrible, man.
But you know what?
If anything ever happens in Northern California, like
an earthquake or something, you can stay in
our spare room.
Yeah.
We can do the show together.
We can do briskets together.
Yeah, there you go.
I did my first brisket the other day.

(01:33:02):
Oh, really?
Yep.
Describe to me what you did.
Okay, so we had the brisket.
10 pounds.
Tina did the rub, which was a mustard
-based rub, salt and pepper.
She'd be the one doing the rub.
She rubs the best.
Okay, easy.

(01:33:24):
$2.25. Three hours.
In what?
Pit boss.
Internal temperature up to 160.
Then wrapped it in butcher paper.
How many hours did you do the $2
.25?
Three hours.
Three hours until internal temp was 160.

(01:33:45):
Wrapped it in butcher paper right there on
the grill.
Yeah, that's what everyone talks about.
Internal temperature up to 190.
Then take it out in the butcher paper,
wrap it in a towel, put it inside
a cooler, but not a cool cooler, but
like a Yeti bag cooler so it maintains
the heat for two hours.
Actually, two and a half hours.

(01:34:06):
It was dynamite.
Perfect.
Actually, 192 was the temperature I took it
to.
That sounds right.
It was the first time ever that we've
ever done a brisket.
10 pounds, you know what we pay for
that out here in cow country?
Not at the restaurant.
In cow country?

(01:34:28):
$13.
That's good.
$13 for 10 pounds?
$1.30 a pound.
No, no.
It was 10 pounds, 13 bucks.
10 pounds, 13 bucks.
That's $1.30 a pound.
Oh, I thought you said 30 bucks.

(01:34:48):
I misunderstood.
Yeah, $1.30 a pound.
Exactly.
That's a good price.
In the restaurants here, you can't even go
to the restaurants.
No one can afford them.
Yeah, I find that peculiar.
Especially beef.
Now that you bring it up, now that
you tell me that you can get brisket
meat for $1.30 a pound and the
restaurant would charge you $40 for three slices.

(01:35:11):
A couple slices and some gravy.
What's wrong with those restaurants?
I don't get it.
You order online and the guy brings it
the same day to your door.
Hey, Mrs. Curry, how you doing?
Here we go.
Here's your beef.
He's right down the road.
Yeah, that's a good thing.
That's probably why the restaurants are so expensive.

(01:35:34):
What do you mean?
Why?
Nobody in their right mind would go to
one.
Gotta make up for it in higher prices.
Do you know how many people visited Fredericksburg
last year?
A million.
Two million people.
Why?
For our cute German bakery, of course.
And for our beautiful little Main Street.

(01:35:55):
And our 150 wineries where everyone can get
hammered.
And our open container on the street.
Oh yeah, that's right.
You can drive around drinking a beer.
And smoking a joint at the same time.
People don't realize that in Texas you can
drive around drinking a beer.
No, that's not true.
No, it's not true.
But in Fredericksburg you can walk around with

(01:36:16):
an open container drinking.
Which is one of, I think, only three
cities in the country.
Maybe six.
We're very special that way.
Final clip for me for the time being.
On the media.
Which, by the way, we say four more
years.
I don't know if we're going to make

(01:36:37):
four more years.
I mean, CNN and MSNBC are going to
have nobody left.
They're firing everybody.
I don't know, what are they going to
do?
They're just going to put podcasters on?
They should always have PBS and NPR.
But NPR is also struggling.
The model is broken.

(01:36:59):
Everybody wants, like, who wants to watch Margaret
Brennan with J.D. Vance with little soundbites
and shortened edited interviews when you can watch
him on Rogan for three hours and get
an actual opinion about somebody?
The whole distribution idea of linear television is
broken.
And Fox will run into the same problem.

(01:37:21):
Everyone's rah-rah right now, but it'll run
into the same problem.
They can't do it.
It's not going to function.
So what are we going to be doing?
Just critiquing podcasts at the end of the
road?
Well, we have some clips from podcasts that
are quite entertaining.
Yeah, I know, but there'll be nothing left
to complain about.
It's just going to be a free-for
-all.

(01:37:42):
Nothing to complain about.
That'll be the day, by the way.
That will be the day.
There'll be nothing to complain about.
So on the media, there's still a fun
NBX show, formerly known as NPR, where they
supposedly give us the insights as to what
the media is doing, and they're focusing very

(01:38:03):
heavily on what to do about Trump and
his supporters.
They're not voters.
There's never going to be voters for Trump.
There's still always going to be supporters.
And loyalists.
That's the people that work with him.
They're loyalists.
And the attack vector is clear.
This is on the media this week, top
of the show, right away, a minute and

(01:38:26):
a half of this.
We will not forget our country.
We will not forget our Constitution.
And we will not forget our God.
Donald Trump's second White House boasts more confidence
and resolve than his first.
Results?
Unknown.
From WNYC in New York, this is On

(01:38:46):
the Media.
I'm Brooke Gladstone.
Just a few months ago, in a beautiful
Pennsylvania field, an assassin's bullet ripped through my
ear.
But I felt then, and believe even more
so now, that my life was saved for
a reason.
I was saved by God to make America
great again.
And so saith the clergy at his inauguration.

(01:39:09):
Fair enough.
That's the view through the prism of Trump
and his supporters.
That was Monday.
Now, unlike the Capitol riot, which everyone could
see in real life, God's reality has long
been debated.
As they say, faith is antithetical to proof,
and vice versa.
And the nature of God is viewed variously
as well.

(01:39:30):
There's a long tradition among some evangelicals dating
back at least a hundred years, of seeing
Jesus as a warrior, and the faithful as
his troops, fighting to impose their way of
life on America.
Fighting to impose our way of life on
America!
Go, Jesus!
They see the Jesus of the Gospels, helping
the poor, turning the other cheek, as effeminate.

(01:39:53):
As for those who follow the prosperity...
Effeminate!
That's pussies!
Jesus turning the other cheek is gay!
They see the Jesus of the Gospels, helping
the poor, turning the other cheek.
Wait, who's this?
This is Brooke Gladstone!
No, no, no, who is this that thinks
that?
Brooke Gladstone!
And no one else.
This is what I'm saying.
This is their attack vector.

(01:40:14):
It's so weak, but it's almost done.
They see the Jesus of the Gospels, helping
the poor, turning the other cheek, as effeminate.
As for those who follow the prosperity gospel,
favored by the president, which...
I've got to ask Pastor Jimmy, what is
prosperity gospel?
Do you know what that is?
Yeah, I do.
What is it?
Well, there's a bunch of these guys.

(01:40:36):
I think Mike Murdoch's one of them, who's
just a wreck now.
It's really a shame, because he did some
really good material.
That's the gospel that...
Gospel, if you want to call it that.
It's a way of...
There's one black preacher that really made the
most out of it.
He used to wear a sport coat made

(01:40:58):
out of dollar bills.
Well, he's on my TikTok.
That's for sure.
I don't know who it is.
Yeah, well, you'll be seeing him.
It's the idea that the more virtuous you
are, the richer you'll get.
It's all about making a lot of money,
and that's God's reward.
Ah, yes, you're right.
You're right.
Because you make all this money, by the

(01:41:19):
way, you should give us 4% as
a tithe.
Four?
What happened to 10?
Yeah, 4%.
You're right, but actually, these guys do push
for 10.
So you give us 10, and then, because
you're already rich, you're going to get 10
-fold back.
Amen.
So the 10 plus 10-fold back, plus
the money you're making because you're doing God's

(01:41:40):
work, all of it.
All of it!
So that's the game you're playing.
It's really quite entertaining.
It sounds like a Ponzi scheme.
As for those who follow the prosperity gospel
favored by the president, which holds that God
rewards the worthy with wealth in this life...
By the way, stop.

(01:42:01):
Trump has never, that I can recall, and
we've been following him very closely, promoted the
prosperity gospel.
Ever.
Find one clip where he says anything about
it.
No, but I believe that he adheres to
it.
His dad taught him a long time ago,

(01:42:23):
you give money away, it comes back to
you, because he gives a lot of money.
And not the phony baloney stuff they always
moan about.
Oh, his fake non-profit...
No, he does give a lot of money
away.
To lots of people for all kinds of
things.
But the prosperity gospel is within the church
itself.
It's not giving money away to other people.

(01:42:45):
Here we go.
As for those who follow the prosperity gospel
favored by the President, which holds that God
rewards the worthy with wealth in this life,
they would dismiss the claim that Jesus ever
said, it is easier for a camel to
go through the eye of a needle than
for a rich man to enter into the
kingdom of heaven.
In today's parlance, they'd probably call the gospel

(01:43:07):
of Matthew fake news.
Fake news!
No, they wouldn't.
Matthew is fake news, man.
Fake news!
That's their pathetic attack vector.
I think you might be right.
The left likes to use...

(01:43:28):
The left, generally speaking, is atheists.
And they like to use religion as an
attack vector even though it's a shotgun approach,
and they don't understand enough about anything to
do it well.
Because the only way it really works is
religion against religion.
It doesn't work.
Atheists against religion.

(01:43:49):
It just doesn't fly.
It's really amazing, though, how she rolled.
And that was the top of the show.
I'm like, really?
That's where you're going with this?
Good luck.
I have one clip before we take a
break.
It's kind of interesting, because it's not being
reported on at all.
And I guess they're talking about this sort

(01:44:11):
of, you know, this anti-populist mentality, which
is what you just played.
It's about the AFD protests going on in
Germany.
Oh, yes.
Yes, yes, yes.
And this is from Al Jazeera, so you
know it's going to be against the AFD.
Protests have been held in cities across Germany

(01:44:31):
against the rise of the far right.
The demonstrations come ahead of federal elections next
month.
These were the scenes at the Brandenburg Gate
in Berlin.
A similar protest was held in Cologne.
The rallies come as far-right politician Alice
Weigel launched her campaign to become chancellor.
Yes, I have a clip as well about
the AFD.
Well, tens of thousands of Germans rallied Saturday

(01:44:53):
against the far right ahead of next month's
federal elections.
U.S. tech billionaire Elon Musk once again
endorsed the AFD party, telling its supporters via
video link that their party was the best
hope for the future of Germany and Europe.
AFD is polling at around 20 percent ahead
of the February 23rd elections, a record for

(01:45:13):
the far right party in post-war Germany.
We have to wake up again in these
times because unfortunately it's going in the wrong
direction, I think.
And yes, we simply want to send a
message.
Democracy is simply a good thing and we
simply have to stand together and above all
simply show that what the AFD is doing
is not conforming.

(01:45:34):
It's not reasonable.
Elon was out there, big head on the
big screen saying, you know, if Germany goes
down then that's all of Europe.
It's going to end, which I think he's
kind of right.
I think so too.
He's far right.
He's kind of far right.
He's far right.
He's very far right.
Hey, with that I want to thank you
for your courage.

(01:45:55):
In the morning to you the man who
put the sea in the exploding seaguars.
Say hello to my friend on the other
end, the one, the only, Mr. John C.
DeMora!
In the morning to you Mr. John C.
DeMora.

(01:46:17):
All right.
Well, once again, record numbers.
2,471.
That's not a record for Sunday.
Yeah, but it's above the average.
The average is 2,400.
Yeah.
So it's record.
You know what the high mark was?

(01:46:38):
4,000 I think?
3,000?
4,000?
Yeah.
When was that?
It was after what?
It was after COVID, so it wasn't during
COVID.
I can't remember what triggered it.
Yeah.
Which is right then and there.
I should have noted what was the reason
it happened.
Maybe we do that again.
Whatever we did then, make that happen.
Make that happen again.

(01:46:59):
These trolls are all...
It was even before Trump was shot in
the ear.
No, I don't think so.
These trolls are all in the troll room.
Trollroom.io and they're listening in live and
they're trolling along as usual.
It's Sunday.
What do you mean?
I know what day it is.
It's Sunday.
People think I don't know what day it

(01:47:20):
is.
I don't actually, but I think it's Sunday.
No, you don't.
You never do.
I don't.
We don't know what day it is.
And they're also listening on those modern podcast
apps.
And if you're in China, by the way,
hello Chinese, get yourself a modern podcast app.
Because Apple, and I have to go in
and check it.
There's a tool that I can check it

(01:47:40):
with.
Apple is now allowing the Chinese government, also
known as the CCP, the communist Chinese government,
to remove episodes they don't like from podcasts.
So, if you're using your Apple podcast app
in China, and I'm sure this will, I
mean, if Apple is going to do it
for China, why wouldn't they do it anywhere

(01:48:01):
else?
They allow the government censors to go in
and delete episodes they don't like.
How about that?
They probably have a team of people.
Yeah.
Well, exactly.
And who knows?
I mean, so the modern podcast apps, they
hook up to the podcast index, which is
never going to censor anybody.
And you can get to it in a

(01:48:21):
million different ways.
You can go directly to podcastindex.org even.
So, you want to consider what you're using.
Those modern podcast apps, they're good because they
also give you the live stream, another thing
Apple hasn't figured out yet.
You know, these guys are so short-sighted.
Every single radio station in the world has
a stream.

(01:48:42):
Yeah, nowadays.
Yeah.
And now you've gotten to the point where
Netflix has decided to start the stream.
Well, not streaming radio, just streaming.
No, no, I'm just saying this.
I mean, the idea of streaming as opposed
to just stagnant content has been picked up
by everyone.
Yes, streaming is hip.

(01:49:04):
I mean, this is a podcast that we
do, so you can listen to it anytime
you want, just like any other podcast.
But it's also streamed.
It's streamed live every Sunday and Thursday.
And you can sit there and you can
say things and John doesn't look at it
because, and I understand why, but, you know,

(01:49:25):
I have peripheral vision.
I'm like, oh, okay, there's someone saying something.
Oh, okay.
And we add it in.
It's like a studio audience with a voice,
only I can't hear you, so that I
can tell people what you're saying, but you're
not just yelling it out and I don't
hear it.
That'd be great if you could get the
sound so you can just hear people in
the background yelling.
Like hecklers.
Let's do that.
That'd be kind of funny.

(01:49:47):
It would be funny.
Yeah, no, we can do a Discord where
everybody can scream and yell.
I'll try.
I'll set it up.
We'll see how that goes.
Oh, yeah, I can already tell you how
it's going to go.
I know exactly how it's going to go.
Hey, man, that's fake and gay.
Okay, that's all that's the standard line.
You suck, Curry.
Yeah, I know, I know.

(01:50:08):
That's the only line these guys have.
Very, very mature audience when it comes down
to it.
Extremely mature, but we appreciate the trolls and
they are, of course, a driving force behind
No Agenda Nation.
We love all of you.
The trolls, I'm sure that a lot of
the trolls are not actually trolls, but they're
artists and those artists participate in our value

(01:50:28):
for value model.
We talked about it earlier.
How the transition to AI, which, don't worry,
it's not going to be long.
Pretty soon we'll have quantum art.
QA.
Quantum art.
It's all coming.
Quantum art is on the way.
The pivot to quantum is happening.
But instead, I'd like to just get a

(01:50:49):
desktop quantum computer that can even add 2
plus 2.
I'd be happy with that.
Well, I run my own models at home,
so this AI stuff is like, I don't
need chat GPT.
I run my own at home on a
little computer.
It works fine.
Now, there was, once again, some complaints about

(01:51:09):
the artwork.
I got a complaint.
Wow.
Yep, I got one complaint, but I got
a complaint.
Okay, let's read the complaint.
I took the phone out of my pocket
and was very embarrassed when I pulled up
your episode.
It was not safe for work or children.

(01:51:30):
What?
That was the complaint, yes.
That's not true.
Well, this particular person, who is a knight,
by the way, said...
I appreciate the knights chiming in with their
thoughts.
Yeah, and said, it was not safe for
work, to which I replied, noted.
That's always a good one.

(01:51:51):
I learned that from you.
What did you say?
I said, noted.
Oh, yeah.
That's my reply.
Noted, like I wrote it down on a
note.
And then I said, to be fair, our
podcast is marked as explicit in the feed
and everywhere on all podcasts' apps.
So, we have signaled ahead of time that

(01:52:11):
we are an explicit podcast, whatever that means.
But, art-wise, I mean, we couldn't stay
away from it because it was...
See, this is the stuff that chat GPT...
No AI can come up with this.
Even though it's made with AI, because we
know that Francisco Scaramanga, who did this piece

(01:52:32):
for us, we know that he uses AI
exclusively.
Yes, but we can see that Davos Hospitality
wasn't put on there by AI.
AI can barely print its own name.
Quantum will be able to spell its own
name.
Q-U-W...

(01:52:53):
Okay, so this is the artwork which we
both agreed that it was the only acceptable
artwork.
You actually pushed back while I was saying
we should go with it.
You were apprehensive.
Well, I...
Okay, this is not untrue.
Noted.
What do you mean?
Noted.

(01:53:14):
This is not untrue.
The reason was because I said, you called
me out on it, I think rightfully so,
I said you know, as much as I'm
the big advocate for cheesecake, I said I
don't think we can keep just doing it,
you know, constantly, and Scaramanga loves it.

(01:53:35):
And so I kind of pushed back a
little bit, and then you jumped all over
me because I'm the one who's behind it.
I'm actually, literally this would have never been
produced by Scaramanga if it wasn't for my
commentary over the years about cheesecake being attractive
to people.
It's just attention-getting, and that's what we're
trying to do with art.

(01:53:55):
You try to get people's attention.
And a couple of big boobs holding a
plate of lemons and garlic, which is a
reference to partly of the show.
And the Davos hospitality.
And the Davos hospitality indicated that she's a
whore.
A high-end escort, I think, is what
is preferred.

(01:54:17):
I thought it was sketchy, but at the
same time it was the best piece.
It was good.
But I don't see how it's offensive.
No, I didn't say it was offensive.
No, your knight thought it was.
He thought it was not safe for work.
It's not naked woman.
Embarrassing.
This kind of outfit you can see on

(01:54:37):
the street.
It's true.
What do you mean the street?
You can see this in the grocery store.
Women walk around in yoga clothes, yoga pants,
everywhere.
Yeah.
Oh, you've noticed.
And that Sanchez woman, Bezos is hanging out.
The inauguration.

(01:54:58):
The inauguration.
Did he turn off the inauguration?
Probably not.
I don't think so.
So I'll defend the piece from that perspective.
Let me see.
We did look at a few other things.
We looked at the AI meal plan.
You like the Stargate.
I didn't push for it.

(01:55:19):
I said, what about the Stargate?
And you said, no one will know what
it is.
And I'm like, you're correct.
What else was there?
What was this pickle surprise with a French
guy?
I didn't understand that one.
I mean, a lot of this AI art
is really crap.
And it's just bad ideas by people who
can use AI, which is everybody.

(01:55:41):
That's the downside.
That's the downside.
We both kind of liked what Darren O
'Neill did.
How does Darren O'Neill even do it
where he gets an AI prompt to make
a robot painting the French artist guy?
I mean, it was just bizarrely good.

(01:56:03):
I used it for the newsletter.
Yeah, it was bizarrely good.
Because it's like, I mean, I wanted to
use something else because Darren is like producing
all this material that is like unbeatable.
Highly usable.
He really nailed it.

(01:56:23):
The art of the art.
People should call him up and make him
teach them.
Yeah.
Yeah, they should.
He should charge for it.
He could.
Yeah, he could.
So I think that was about it.
That was the only thing that we really
discussed.

(01:56:44):
I thought the comic strip blogger Trump with
his No Agenda Best Podcast Universe Executive Order
was cute.
I used that for the Bat Signal this
morning.
I thought it was just cute.
Yeah, I was going to almost use that
for the newsletter.
But it's like it's illegal.
Illegal?
To be honest about it.
And I decided I'm not going to do

(01:57:05):
it.
Illegal?
Yeah, you can't use a famous person to
promote something without compensation.
Right.
Right.
But I think we're pretty safe with the
President.
I think so too, but it's still technically
illegal.
Yes, I felt okay though.

(01:57:27):
I don't think I'm ever going to get
to sleep in the Lincoln bedroom.
Joe Rogan got there before me, but otherwise
Yeah, I don't think that Trump as far
as Trump's concerned is another picture of him
out there.
Yeah, he's good with it.
I'm good, I'm good.
So in our value for value model, we

(01:57:47):
have time, we have talents.
But anyway, people should note that by the
way.
Yeah, that's a good point.
A lot of people don't know that.
Yeah, still people, a lot of people are
like, you're breaking the rules.
Whatever.
We go to the treasure portion, which means
we thank everybody who supports us financially, which
is incredibly important because we have bills to

(01:58:07):
pay.
And this is all we have.
This is all we do.
It's a full-time job.
Let me just note for a second.
I had 79 clips.
Now that includes meetups and I don't even
have ISOs.
That's without ISOs.

(01:58:28):
You came in with 28.
Now my 78 includes five real shorties from
No, six shorties from Queen Ursula.
Yeah, I have a 30 clip maximum.
If I go beyond that, I refuse to.
Because in other words, you only use about
20 of these.
Well, we use a lot of the clips,

(01:58:50):
but the point is...
I'm just saying, it's just like if I
had to produce 70 clips, I wouldn't be
able to keep track of them.
I don't know how you do it.
I'm the podfather.
So the real work that goes into this
is a full-time gig.
Do it on vacations.

(01:59:10):
Don't take more than two shows off an
entire year.
So it's what we do.
And we've got four more years, so support
us now.
Unless you want to be two more years.
We've got eight days off coming.
What?
Eight days off?
When's that?
Yeah, two a year, you said.
Yeah, we never do them in a row,
though.

(01:59:33):
Let's do them in a row.
Let's do the next eight shows off.
Yeah, well, you can tell John's not happy.
I'm always happy because I just don't have
the same...
I don't have as many homes as John.
I don't have as many children.
It's easy for me.
John's got a whole empire to support.

(01:59:55):
Two compounds.
Yes.
We thank everybody, $50 and above, and just
like Hollywood, we like to give special props
to people who support us with more, like
executive and associate executive producers, just like Hollywood
does.
And the cool thing is you get a
credit, which is just like Hollywood's credits, because
you can use it anywhere.

(02:00:16):
Hollywood recognizes that.
So it's like being a part of Hollywood,
but not being lame.
Or, as the troll would say, fake and
gay.
So $200 or above, you get an associate
executive producer credit.
You can use it on imdb.com, your
LinkedIn profiles, your resume, and if anyone ever
questions that, we'll be happy to vouch for
you.
We have done it several times over the

(02:00:37):
years.
We'll also read your note.
$300 and above, executive producer, same credit applies,
that you can use that anywhere, that Hollywood
credits are used, and we will read your
note.
And I will start it off with our
top executive producer, which is a switcheroo from
Sean Homan.
He's in Noblesville, Indiana, and he comes in
with a with a heavenly number, the striperboost777

(02:01:00):
.77, and he says, it's a switcheroo and
birthday donation for his wife.
She becomes a dame with this donation, doesn't
get any crazier, and henceforth she'll be known
as Dame Liz of Roxyville.
Thank you for your courage, fellas.
God bless Gitmo Nation, and please visit StealthArms
.net and design your platypus today, the finest

(02:01:22):
1911 double-stack pistol that takes Glock 17
mags.
It does.
You get 17 rounds in that thing, the
platypus.
Thank you very much, and Liz will be
Dame Liz of Roxyville today.
Meanwhile, we got Sir Meister Chitchat in Little

(02:01:44):
Rock, Arkansas, 34373, and he writes in, howdy,
salutations, good day, gentlemen.
This donation is a switcheroo.
Two switcheroos at the top, first time ever.
To de-douche my wife.

(02:02:06):
You've been de-douched.
He doesn't actually give her name, which is
kind of odd.
Yeah, she's Mrs. Chitchat.
And start her path to damehood.
As a knight, Sir Meister Chitchat of Harmony
Homestead, must a lady befitting his title as,

(02:02:27):
must a lady befitting his title as they
begin their journey of forging, some people write
convoluted sentences, as they begin their journey of
forging human resources.
Having babies, I think that's what that means.
The lineage must be pure and sourced of
royal stock.
That makes sense.
Ah, I see what he's up to.

(02:02:50):
Gotta give her damehood so they have royal
stock.
We have been going through fertility treatments over
three years, and are attempting our second IVF
transfer in the next few weeks.
As such, I'd like to request prayers and
a double helping of baby-making karma.
Always a winner.
Thank you guys for all that you do
in helping us tap into the promise of,
where two or more gather in my name,

(02:03:12):
there I will be.
Huzzah to four more years, Sir Meister Chitchat
of Harmony Homestead in Little Rock.
So we'll give that to Mrs. Chitchat of
Harmony Homestead.
Yes.
And I already prayed for you when I
saw the note, so here's your baby-making
karma.
You've got karma.

(02:03:38):
Alright.
Beautiful.
Let us know, and remember, you gotta name
it after us.
Yes.
Gene Knauss is in Petrolia, Ontario, CandaNavia333.61,
which is a $500 CandaNavian donation in dollarettes.

(02:03:59):
And it's from Gene Knauss, the matriarch of
Knauss Drywalling Clan.
Get your drywall completed by Noah Jendenite, based
near Petrolia, Canada.
This donation is in honor of my wonderful
husband Herman's 76th birthday on January 27th.
Besides having an amazingly wonderful human being, besides
being an amazingly wonderful human being, he is

(02:04:20):
the patriarch of our tribe of 5 children
and 17 grandchildren.
No baby-making karma for you.
We are a family of homeschoolers, lovers of
Jesus, lovers of truth, and lovers of Canada.
Thank you, John and Adam, for helping us
wade through the nonsense that culture is trying

(02:04:41):
to present to us.
We are also thrilled to hear Adam's testimony
about his new life with Jesus.
Keep up the good work, guys!
From Gene, and we thank you very much.
And on the list, taken care of.
Brian Skelton in Cedar Park.
Oh, Brian!
Everybody knows Brian from the Noah Jenda meetups

(02:05:01):
in Austin.
Brian, he's a good guy.
333.
Well, this is a bunch of hogwash, he
writes.
PayPal won't let me change my donation amount
to less than 333.
333, but whatever.
It's been too long since John got any
of my money to so enjoy.

(02:05:22):
Thank you guys for the best podcast in
the universe in the morning.
Brian has, we know Brian very well.
He's a good guy.
We love Brian when he donates.
You love him anyway.
Now, how would I pronounce this?
Yehola Salt Corporation?
J-O-L-L-A?
Yeah, it'd be La Jolla.

(02:05:43):
La Jolla Salt Corporation!
La Jolla.
I'm guessing it's in La Jolla.
It doesn't say.
No, it doesn't say at all.
Decimate dry skin with a luxurious sea salt
scrub from LaJollaSalt.com.
Enjoy the dazzling moisture and exfoliating power of
our small batch sea salt scrubs, handmade by

(02:06:05):
the sea in the village of La Jolla.
For complete decimation, kick it in for a
bundle of 10 at LaJollaSalt.com.
Putting the sea back in sea salt scrub.
LaJollaSalt.com.
Man, thank you for your courage.
See, you're almost doing this right, LaJollaSalt Corporation,
LaJollaSalt.com.
You need to send some to John and

(02:06:26):
I so we can try your products.
We can't say anything.
We can't say if it's good.
We can't say anything.
We don't know.
I would like a luxurious sea salt scrub.
Yeah, you could use one.
Wow, really?
What?
You're rude.
That's not disparaging.
Eli the Coffee Guy in Bensonville, Illinois 20126.

(02:06:50):
The last episode was dynamite.
Ever since listening, I've been using ChatGPT to
plan my meals.
A lot of lemon, I guess.
There was somebody who did a posting that
they did the whole meal and recipes and
everything, and then they produced it.

(02:07:10):
This was on Twitter.
It was aimed at us.
They did the whole thing, and they found
these, and they produced it, and they said,
it tasted pretty good, but he had a
picture of this food.
Oh my God, it looked like somebody threw
up on a dish.
That's AI slop.
There it is.

(02:07:31):
If I keep it up, he continues, my
guess is within a year, I'll get at
least one recipe for bugs.
Let us know when you do.
I also asked ChatGPT what the best brand
of roasted coffee was, and what do you
know?
The AI told me it was gigawatt coffee.
It's crazy.
It also advised me to use code ITM20

(02:07:54):
for 20% off my order.
Gotta love technology.
Stay caffeinated, Eli the Coffee Guy.
$200 and 20126.
I'm drinking the gigawatts this morning.
The espresso.
Yeah, we noticed.
Please, you already made that joke 5,000
times.
I know I...

(02:08:14):
Maybe.
I hate it when people do that.
Oh, okay.
Well, good.
Then I shall remind you when you do
it.
Yeah, you should.
It's bad form.
Sir Angel of Smyrna, who was knighted on
the last show in Smyrna, Georgia.
$200.
Associate Executive Producer credit for him.
And he says, thank you for the advice
on your Thursday show.

(02:08:34):
Ah, this is our stock tip guy.
I created a sub stack where my story
and stock market theory will be published in
full.
Noah Jen the Nation can find it at
For anyone who missed the Thursday show, the
theory details how the Federal Reserve appears to
be overtly influencing market direction, specifically the S

(02:08:57):
&P 500 in conjunction with a broader consortium
of actors that are orchestrating events in the
world around us.
All chapters will be published by 7.05
Eastern Time on Saturday, so it will be
available to everyone by the time you read
this note on the show.
I'm not expecting to make any money for
what I'm sharing, and we'll publish everything for
free publicly.

(02:09:17):
I'm following the value for value model that
you've pioneered, so I've included a PayPal donation
link within the story for anyone feeling generous.
Donations are appreciated but never expected.
Yours truly, Sir Angelofsmyrna.
And if you make money on it, send
some to your Noah Jen the Show.
I'm just saying.
He's going to make money.
The reason is, he's got a screwy...

(02:09:38):
It's very crazy, but I think...
But the thing, that's what the market players,
they're just borderline inveterate gamblers.
We've talked about this type of personality before.
And the people that play the market, it's
very similar.
Some people are very lucky, they're very good,
they have a sense of things, but they're
always looking for an edge that nobody else

(02:09:59):
has.
This guy has one of those, possibly, possibly,
there's no way of knowing for a while,
whether he has this edge, but it always
takes someone who's a little nutty to come
up with something that might just work.
And so I bet you he does very
well.
I think so.
And we got him started.
We did.
We got him to sub-stack.

(02:10:21):
It was our fault.
By the way, Clip Custodian in the troll
room says that Trump is bad for the
show.
This Trump 2.0 is no good.
He needs to do something wacky.
There's something to it.
Trump is not good for the show.
I disagree.
I disagree.
And so with Linda Lupatkin, who's in Lakewood,
Colorado.

(02:10:41):
She's up next.
And she says, and she came in with
200 bucks and asked for Jobs, Carmen, for
a resume that gets results, she writes.
Visit ImageMakersInc.com, your go-to for all
your executive resume and job search needs.
That's ImageMakersInc with a K.
And work with Linda Lu, Duchess of Jobs

(02:11:01):
and writer of resumes.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
Karma.
And we're almost at the end of our
associate executive producers and therefore this donation segment.
Anonymous comes in with $200 and says this
donation is because you've ruined all other podcasts

(02:11:22):
for me that have commercial interruptions.
Thanks.
You're welcome.
Wow.
Yeah.
Good.
That's what we're here for.
Last on the list is the Indie No
Agenda Meetup in Greenwood, Indiana.
And they have a switcheroo that came with
200 bucks.

(02:11:43):
It's the Indie No Agenda Meetup.
Raffle donation on behalf of Gary Goodman.
All available karma to Gary and those who
need it.
Oh, okay.
So we'll do a karma there.
And my nose will do a goat.
You've got karma.
And we do have a meetup report from
the Indiana crew.

(02:12:03):
Damonette put that together for us.
It's always a good one.
We have several good meetup reports today including
one from Tokyo.
So look forward to that in our second
donation segment.
Thank you to everyone who supported us today.
We'll be mentioning the rest of our donors
and supporters in the Value for Value model.
$50 and above in the second segment.
And once again, thank you to our executive
and associate executive producers for episode 1733.

(02:12:26):
Our formula is this.
We hit people in the mouth.
Order!
Order!
Shut up!
Shut up!
I have a couple of clips about RatNote.

(02:12:48):
RatNote?
Well, that's what they're calling it, at least
on NPR.
When TikTok looked doomed in the U.S.,
many users quickly signed up for another Chinese
-owned app called Trolls.
Xiaohongshu in protest.
Known as RedNote in English.
What happened next was a surprise as NPR's
Owen Tsao reports.

(02:13:09):
TikTok refugees.
That's how American users are describing themselves as
a connect with the Chinese community on RatNote.
Until last week, the app was mainly used
in China.
However, frustration over a potential ban has led
many TikTok users to switch to RatNote.
I'm a female farmer, so of course I
convinced my husband to let me get pigs

(02:13:29):
for Valentine's Day last year.
31-year-old Tyler Ross is one of
them.
Her day job is in human resources, but
she also posts videos on RatNote of her
life on a farm in Central Virginia.
She says her lifestyle is far from the
typical image of American farming, and the response
she's got has exceeded her expectations.
It's, I think, interesting to see people's reaction

(02:13:51):
when they only know things from the media
or TV, to see different types of ways
of doing things.
Everyone's been super friendly.
They all love our animals.
The videos of chickens and dogs she posts
gained her 18,000 followers within two days
of starting her account.
Once all the chickens have had their breakfast...
Now, a week later, that number has nearly

(02:14:12):
tripled, surpassing her TikTok followers.
Lizi Shen, a teacher from eastern China, is
one of Ross' new followers.
She shared a picture of her own garden
in the comments.
She says that seeing videos on RatNote has
given her a strong connection to ordinary Americans.

(02:15:52):
percent of you guys own homes is mind
-boggling.
It is like seriously almost impossible to own
a home anywhere in the US.
You have to work immensely hard.
How about y'all's law school is like
$800 a year and I think that your
homeless rate is like 0.18%. I have

(02:16:14):
people living in outside the tents outside of
my building like it's terrible here.
What?
I saw somebody say earlier that a cancer
medication that they get is about $20 in
China and they are paying $22,000 a
month in the US for that same medication.

(02:16:35):
What?
A lot of you guys were also thinking
that it's propaganda that our kids sometimes if
they can afford it and their parents want
to we'll put them in a bulletproof like
backpack to go to school.
They also do stand up and do the
Pledge of Allegiance every single day before class
starts.
This whole experience might just be the most

(02:16:56):
awake and united I think I've ever seen
this country.
We are pissed at our government number one.
Number two, astounded.
Absolutely astounded.
Yeah well listen talker, rat note.
Do you think that they can talk smack

(02:17:17):
about their government?
I don't think so.
No of course not.
They won't even let episodes in on Apple
podcasts please.
No but they love clips like this.
Yeah.
I have a man that the propaganda wheel
is turning up again because it's just I
mean forget about Stargate, forget about a simple

(02:17:39):
blood test that Joe Ellison, formerly known as
Larry, will immediately result within 48 hours of
a personalized cancer vaccine.
Who needs any of that?
It's the only thing ozempic can't do.
Ozempic is it is the magical mystery drug.

(02:18:00):
Dr. Mike tell us all about it.
In medical news new research shows the diabetes
and weight loss drug ozempic could cut the
risk for kidney disease.
Fox Medical Team's Dr. Mike joins us live
now this morning with more on this.
Kidney disease John it's amazing.
Dr. Mike, second time of the day, how
did I get so lucky?
Almost every day, Danielle, Debra, Caroline, all of

(02:18:23):
you have to hear this.
Even in patients who have diabetes it's been
shown now to reduce the risk of kidney
failure and even heart problems and even death
by 24%.
So the data just keeps going and going
and going.
Recently there was a study looking at the
same drug for congestive heart failure, a significant

(02:18:46):
reduction in risk of stroke, heart attack, as
well as congestive heart failure symptoms.
So it's the real deal.
Now why is this effective?
Some people think it has to do with
inflammation.
That's what it's all about.
Inflammation, it reduces inflammation.
John it reduces inflammation.

(02:19:08):
That's what it's all about.
Inflammation.
They're going crazy.
They're letting any Yahoo doctor on, oh you
gotta get it.
Don't worry it's not for everybody.
I mean if you just want to lose
five pounds, you don't want it, but you
really do.
So Dr. Mike, you know we've been hearing
about you know now it can help cut

(02:19:30):
kidney disease.
You won't drink as much alcohol or maybe
you don't smoke as much.
You're losing weight.
I mean that seems like a lot of
benefit, but we know that there is you
know some negative to this as well.
So I mean but the benefits sound really
good though too.
Well yeah look there's always something that can
happen in terms of nausea, vomiting, bloating, constipation.

(02:19:55):
Some people just don't tolerate this and it's
not for everybody.
People with multiple endocrine neoplasia one syndrome, people
with a history of pancreatitis should not be
using this.
But the proof is in the pudding and
the amount of data coming out showing tremendous
benefit is really a game changer.

(02:20:15):
And so when it comes to either diabetes
or obesity, then it's a win-win situation.
By the way I'm not talking about people
that just want to lose five pounds.
I'm talking about people with real issues that
will benefit from this.
So I looked at this study because the
data just keeps on coming.

(02:20:35):
It's been around, this drug has been around
for 20 years, but it still just keeps
on coming.
We never knew.
It's amazing.
They will, the FDA says it will update
the label to apply for patients with chronic
kidney disease.
It may be, may be effective in treating
blood clotting, respiration, and infection.

(02:20:58):
All of this was unexpected as reported in
the Washington Post.
In addition, this study supports research that GLP
-1 drugs can improve mental health and reduce
the risk of suicide.
Yes, you won't need your your Prozac anymore.
This is, it's amazing.

(02:21:20):
It's just an amazing drug.
Well they still haven't got to the big
boy.
They're waiting for that one.
Yeah, it's in the book.
Yeah, it's in the book.
Erectile dysfunction.
We're waiting for the big boy.
Meanwhile across town we have, we have a
change, we have a change, we have a
change.

(02:21:40):
Bird flu, there's a change.
Here's the change.
Mass cull of poultry has been ordered after
an outbreak of bird flu on a farm
in Yorkshire.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
says all poultry on the premises near Hornsey
in the East Riding will be humanely killed.
A protection zone of three kilometers has been
put in place around the site which hasn't

(02:22:02):
been identified.
Tests found the H5N5 strain of the highly
pathogenic avian influenza virus was present at that
Hornsey site.
It is the first case of the strain
found in poultry or captive birds in England
during the current outbreak.
Notice it's the H5N5.
Yeah, I noticed that.
Not H1N5.
No, it's H5N1.

(02:22:23):
Either way, it's not there.
And this is what really, now I know
something's up because they brought Rachel Maddow back.
They said, listen, look, you're getting 13 mil
a year.
You've got to do a show every night
of President Trump.
No, she's getting 25 million a year.

(02:22:44):
Listen.
Down from 30.
Listen, we know we cut you back to
25 million a year.
I know you want to be a podcaster
real bad because we know that's where the
money is, but we can only pay you
25 million a year and you have to
do one show a day during the first
100 days of President Trump's 2.0. And

(02:23:09):
this is what she does.
You know what else isn't a popular idea?
Bird flu.
Bird flu.
Today in Long Island, New York, a duck
farm that has been in operation since 1908
shut down.
They had to shut down to start the
process of euthanizing their entire flock of 100
,000 ducks.

(02:23:29):
Because at that farm in Long Island, New
York, they've got a confirmed outbreak of bird
flu.
Where do you think this report is going?
I don't know.
Okay.
Trump.
And bird flu has now killed more than
130 million birds in the United States in
all 50 states.
No, no, no, no, no.
The people have killed 130 million birds.

(02:23:51):
The bird flu didn't kill them.
The people killed them.
It's in 28 states.
They're now testing their dairy cows for it
as well.
Because it has jumped from birds to cows.
Raw milk.
Cows.
Yep.
Which means one of the risk factors they're
now alerting people to for this thing is
consumption of or contact with raw milk.

(02:24:14):
It's a risk factor now for bird flu.
Contact.
Contact with.
You can't even get it on your hand.
You can't even touch it.
Don't touch it.
Nearly 70 people in the United States have
been infected with bird flu thus far.
We've even had deaths of people's pet cats.
Because the cats have drunk raw milk meant
for human consumption.
The raw milk was from cows infected with

(02:24:36):
bird flu.
It gave the cats bird flu.
And then the cats died.
The cats died.
Say it's not so.
Well, can the CDC help?
The CDC just sent urgent guidance to American
hospitals.
Urgent guidance.
Urgent guidance.
Advising hospitals that when people appear at the
hospital with flu this flu season, people shouldn't

(02:24:59):
just be tested for normal flu.
They need to be tested for bird flu
as well.
Testing.
Because that needs to be handled differently.
And anybody who tests positive for bird flu
needs to be separated from other patients.
Hospital staff need to know about it in
order to wear appropriate protective clothing to protect
themselves.
You need PPE to be around raw milk

(02:25:20):
and bird flu.
I say the CDC just sent that urgent
advice to American hospitals.
But when I say they just sent it,
what I mean specifically is they sent that
advice last week while President Biden was still
president.
Because now that President Trump is president, he
has ordered that the CDC and all US

(02:25:43):
health agencies should no longer release any information
to anyone on anything.
This is the new one, you see.
This is how they're gonna try and do
bird flu or whatever by saying Trump wouldn't
let the CDC report anything.
We don't know.
We're in the dark.
We could be under extreme threat from H5N5
and raw milk.

(02:26:05):
Not just to the public, but to scientists
and doctors and hospitals.
And that includes the CDC's flagship health alert
publication for doctors and scientists called MMWR, Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly Report.
This week, CDC was scheduled to publish several
MMWR reports, including three about this burgeoning bird

(02:26:26):
flu outbreak that is happening and rapidly progressing
right now.
Oh my god, so you were kind of
right in both cases.
It's about raw milk and about Trump.
It's a twofer.
Meanwhile, Trump's nominee to run Health and Human
Services for the US government reportedly approached one
of the nation's largest raw milk producers, asking

(02:26:48):
him to please become an advisor to the
FDA in Washington.
This is a man whose company has been
the subject of at least 11 different lawsuits
stemming from contamination of his raw milk products.
This farmer has also been the subject of
13 recalls, including for E.
coli and listeria and campylobacter and salmonella and,
yes, bird flu in his raw milk.

(02:27:10):
His products are currently barred from sale in
California for making so many people sick.
One salmonella outbreak his company is being sued
for resulted in a hundred and seventy-one
people being sickened, including some people who got
kidney failure.
Oh my goodness, well, or as I would
say, goodness gracious, here is the final one.
This is an epidemic where the CDC...

(02:27:31):
Wait, stop.
Why didn't she name this guy or the
company?
It's McAfee Farms, but she didn't...
I don't know why she didn't name him,
but that's who it is, McAfee Farms.
Here's the kicker.
This is an epidemic where the CDC is
advising hospitals how to deal with people coming
in with flu, making sure they're tested for

(02:27:51):
it, telling hospitals how they can protect patients
and protect their own health workers.
The CDC is warning that raw milk from
an infected cow, not only just drinking it,
but potentially even just being splashed in the
face with it.
Yes.
Contact with raw milk from an infected cow
is one of the ways people can be
exposed to this emerging epidemic of bird flu.

(02:28:15):
And while that is how the last administration
was trying to get their arms around this
emerging threat as recently as the end of
last week, this new administration this week says,
first of all, let's get the raw milk
people here to Washington to advise the FDA,
presumably on all the benefits of raw milk,
and in the meantime stop releasing any information
on this bird flu thing, anything.

(02:28:35):
Honestly, it sounds scary.
Scary.
Maybe if we don't talk about it, maybe
it'll go away.
And by the way, pay no attention to
the price of eggs.
We're all paying attention to the price of
eggs.
So that's it.
So stretching so far now that that's all
they got.

(02:28:58):
Well, they got something.
They got something.
They do have something.
But man, oh, man, oh, man.
I think that relates to this clip, which
is the born age stoppage.
Oh, yes.
Yeah, there's a lot.
Oh, yeah.
There's another Al Jazeera report.
The day he was inaugurated, President Donald Trump
signed an executive order basically saying a pause

(02:29:19):
needed to happen for 90 days when it
comes to U.S. foreign assistance.
Now, it's not unusual for presidents and their
incoming teams to pause future contracts.
But we now know that is not what
is happening here.
The secretary of state, Marco Rubio, signed a
memorandum basically pausing all U.S. foreign assistance
spending as of right now.
So in the middle of the night, local

(02:29:40):
time, all of these people and companies and
contractors started getting memos basically saying stop work
notice.
So what exactly does that mean?
Except for aid to Israel and Egypt and
immediate food assistance, it means all U.S.
foreign assistance is going to be paused.
What does that do?
That's about 68 billion dollars in 2023.

(02:30:03):
It went to things like building democracy, peace
forces and security, building schools, building hospitals, mind
clearing, a program that gives aids to people
with HIV.
That's going to.
Did she say a program that gives aids
to people with HIV?
That's what it sounded like.
Let me hear that again.

(02:30:23):
Forces and security, building schools, building hospitals, mind
clearing, a program that gives aids to people
with HIV.
Wow.
Yeah.
She said a program should be stopped.
I agree.
Do not give aids to people with HIV.
That's not good.
Building schools, building hospitals, mind clearing, a program

(02:30:45):
that gives aids to people with HIV.
That's going to be paused.
So it is going to have a very
large impact on the community here that does
this sort of work.
But really across the globe, people are going
to see this impact immediately.
For example, if your town has a school
being built with U.S. foreign assistance, that

(02:31:06):
construction is supposed to stop immediately.
This is very interesting as an American, as
an American citizen.
I think it's I think I presume he's
doing this to take stock of what we're
actually giving to whom and where.
I know there's, you know, there's been all
kinds of and a lot of this is
through NGOs.

(02:31:27):
Exactly.
All the NGOs where they're the cutouts.
Sucking us dry.
Yes.
And I think it's a lot of money.
And so maybe we'll get a little appreciation
of what we've been doing for other people
without helping ourselves.
I know I can just hear the Europeans
going, you only care about yourself, stupid jack.
I have an NPR report on this if
you're interested.

(02:31:48):
For sure.
I don't know if it's that guy.
An internal memo obtained by NPR calls for
U.S. humanitarian and development programs to stop
their work.
And blocks virtually all new foreign assistance.
Yes, there is.
The directive expands on an executive order that
President Trump issued earlier in the week.
NPR Global Health Correspondent Fatma Tanis joins us

(02:32:10):
now.
Fatma, thanks for being with us.
Thanks for having me, Scott.
And please tell us about this memo.
So it was signed by Secretary of State
Marco Rubio and it says that U.S.
foreign assistance will be frozen while a comprehensive
review of all programs can be undertaken to
quote ensure that all foreign assistance is aligned
with President Trump's foreign policy agenda.

(02:32:32):
Now the memo says the review will be
completed within 85 days and that means for
nearly three months there's going to be no
new funding for any foreign assistance and programs
that have already been approved for funding will
have to stop work.
There are some exemptions such as foreign military
financing for Israel and Egypt and also emergency
food aid.

(02:32:53):
Okay, you want to hear more?
Do we hear more from NPR?
Let's play that out and they have a
follow-up clip.
NBX.
What kind of programs are likely to be
affected?
It's everything from the building of roads to
vaccination programs and there are also aid efforts
in sensitive conflict zones.
These are often logistically complicated programs so once

(02:33:15):
you pause them it's hard to get things
running back up again immediately and you know
Scott we're talking about a lot of investment
about around 60 billion dollars worth that's how
much the U.S. provides in foreign assistance
annually and it's the biggest financial supporter of
development aid in the world so this is
going to have a huge impact across the
board.
And there's a lot that's still unclear there

(02:33:37):
are questions about how this is going to
affect you know aid to Ukraine and Taiwan
for example also critical global health programs like
PEPFAR that's the U.S. effort to combat
HIV around the world and it's credited with
having saved 25 million lives.
By giving aids to people with HIV.
What might happen to people who work for
these programs?
So until this review is over these U

(02:34:00):
.S. funded programs are likely going to have
to cease operations even furlough or lay off
their staff.
Employees of USAID the agency primarily responsible for
administering humanitarian and development aid will be keeping
their jobs for now but I should also
note that many of the organizations that partner
with the U.S. on foreign assistance are

(02:34:20):
based in the U.S. and they employ
people here and overseas so this is going
to impact overseas staff in the short term
but it will also lead to layoffs in
the U.S. if it continues.
Yeah okay that's a third clip but what
do you want to play as a follow
-up?
I'll play the third clip now play mine
which is about the pulling the money from
the WHO.
Oh okay what kind of reaction from aid

(02:34:41):
groups?
People are shocked and really worried.
A senior official at USAID told me that
quote the work stop order is completely reckless
and disruptive and said it was draconian.
The official asked for anonymity because they were
not authorized to speak on behalf of the
agency.
I also spoke to the leader of an
organization that partners with USAID they offer humanitarian

(02:35:04):
assistance and that person told me the administration
has quote thrown a grenade right into the
middle of foreign assistance.
This person also spoke on the condition of
anonymity fearing retribution against their organization for speaking
out.
They said that they would have to pull
out their staff who are providing critical services
in the field and also lay off U

(02:35:25):
.S. staff.
The person said that quote we can't afford
to keep funding our programs because we don't
know if we will be reimbursed per our
contracts with U.S. agencies.
Now aid experts are also warning that this
move could have a destabilizing effect in countries
where humanitarian aid is critical.
I spoke to Abby Maxman she's the president
of Oxfam America it's a charity that does

(02:35:47):
not take funding from the US government and
here's what she said.
No they just steal it and lose it.
It's having seismic impacts for the entire global
aid system.
Everything's about the aid system I don't know
there's something about AIDS here.
It's having seismic impacts for the entire global
aid system and really frankly it's a cruel

(02:36:08):
decision that has life-or-death consequences for
millions of people around the world.
She's called on the Trump administration to reverse
the move before it's too late.
I bet it's a lot more than 60
billion I bet it's just an enormous amount
maybe 60 million a billion a month.
It's a lot.
Those NGOs this crazy that's all the refugee

(02:36:31):
resettlement program in Austin alone is 1 billion
a year.
These guys are just stealing our money.
Yes.
All right WHO.
There's another money waster I didn't realize I
was under the impression that well maybe there's
some sharing going on but I guess the
WHO is gonna go under.

(02:36:52):
The World Health Organization says it is reviewing
its priorities to cut costs following US President
Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the body.
The United States is the largest donor to
the WHO but shortly after his inauguration on
Monday Trump signed an executive order stating his
country's withdrawal.

(02:37:13):
The AFP news agency reports WHO Director General
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus sent an email to its
employees on Thursday.
In it he said the US decision has
made the organization's financial situation more acute.
He said they are now reviewing which activities
to prioritize with a reduced resource envelope.

(02:37:36):
He went on to say that recruitment will
be frozen except in the most critical areas
and that travel expenses will be dramatically cut
back.
Oh there goes my sweet.
WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier described the US decision
as a concern for global health.
He noted the WHO both provides critical information

(02:37:59):
to the US and receives information from it
so as to have the best possible response
in case of outbreaks.
Another issue for Rachel to pick up on.
Oh she will.
Yeah.
Some war news now, war news.

(02:38:20):
President Trump.
I got war news too.
Well let me start with my war news.
My war news may be better than your
war news.
I mean I've got good war news.
Donald Trump has always insisted there would have
been no war in Ukraine if he had
been president at the time.
On Friday Vladimir Putin backs him up also
taking the opportunity to repeat Trump's false claim

(02:38:41):
that he won the 2020 election.
It's a claim.
It's just a claim.
It's not a false claim.
It's a claim.
But Putin backs up his false claim.
I must agree with him that if he
had been president, if his victory hadn't been
stolen in 2020, then maybe there would not
have been a crisis in Ukraine that emerged
in 2022.
Putin said he was ready for talks with

(02:39:02):
the new US president.
This has got to gall everybody and these
reporters must be beside themselves because this is
what Trump's been saying all along.
Yeah yeah whatever.
And so now Putin comes out and says
it?
Oh brother.
Well even better he says if it hadn't
been stolen then the war would never happen.
If you guys hadn't stolen that election.
If his victory hadn't been stolen in 2020,

(02:39:23):
then maybe there would not have been a
crisis in Ukraine that emerged in 2022.
I mean Putin loves trolling as well.
He's good.
Putin said he was ready for talks with
the new US president on ending the fighting
but was waiting for signals from Washington.
This despite Trump saying even before his inauguration
that he had been working on setting up
a meeting.

(02:39:44):
Trump has upped his rhetoric this week saying
he would put pressure on Moscow by lowering
global oil prices and he threatened new sanctions
and tariffs on Russia if the war didn't
stop.
But Putin dismissed this possibility.
He is not only a smart person, he
is a pragmatic person and I can hardly
imagine the decisions will be made that harm

(02:40:04):
the American economy itself.
For Ukrainian president Vladimir Zelensky, Putin's latest statements
are a naked attempt to flatter Trump.
Specifically, he is trying to manipulate the US
president's desire to achieve peace.
I am confident that no Russian manipulations will
succeed any longer.
What?
This is a huge blunder.

(02:40:25):
Yeah.
Yeah, you can't say that well Trump is
a dumb shit because he's gonna get manipulated
by Putin and expect him to give you
money.
This was a huge blunder.
I am confident that no Russian manipulations will
succeed any longer.
Kiev has warned against any Putin-Trump peace

(02:40:47):
talks that exclude Ukraine and European allies but
the Russian president says there can be no
serious talks with Ukraine unless the West pushes
Zelensky to cancel a 2022 decree that prohibits
him from negotiating with the Russian leader.
No, don't worry about that.
All right, I have more war news but
your war news is up next.

(02:41:07):
I got some offbeat war news.
It's like because it's not being reported.
You know anything about the Syria returning home
story?
Probably not.
No, you don't.
You have to go to Al Jazeera.
The head of the UN's refugee agency says
there's been a huge increase in the number
of Syrians who want to return home.
Almost 30% of the Syrian refugees living

(02:41:28):
in Middle Eastern countries now say they want
to go back.
That's up from almost none last year.
The shift follows the ousting of President Bashar
al-Assad in December.
Oh, that's good.
That's like 200,000 people.
Meanwhile, President Trump is seemingly threatening to drop
the bomb.

(02:41:49):
President Trump says he would like to see
Jordan, Egypt, and other Arab nations increase the
number of Palestinian refugees they are accepting from
Gaza.
Trump says he would like to, quote, clean
the whole thing out.
He also says that he will now allow
the U.S. to send 2,000 pound
bombs to Israel, which had been paused by
President Biden.
Hamas and Israel agreed to a ceasefire deal

(02:42:10):
last week.
So far, seven of the remaining hostages taken
by Hamas militants in the 2023 attack have
returned to Israel.
For its part, Israel released 200 Palestinian prisoners.
Meanwhile, Israeli defense forces say they will not
be able to withdraw from southern Lebanon today,
which is a violation of the ceasefire agreement
with Hezbollah.

(02:42:31):
Both sides have 60 days to remove soldiers
from the region, but Israel is now accusing
Hezbollah and the Lebanese army of not upholding
their side of the deal.
Lebanon says Israel is getting in the way
of doing their job.
Yeah, not in this report.
President Trump apparently has said, hey, I got
these 2,000 pound bombs I'm going to
give to Israel.

(02:42:52):
That's interesting.
I have the Al Jazeera report about the
Lebanon.
Overlook.
Overlook.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is blaming Lebanon
for the delay in implementing the terms of
the ceasefire there, saying the Lebanese army isn't
upholding its end of the deal.
Israeli troops were supposed to withdraw on Sunday,

(02:43:14):
but Netanyahu says there aren't enough Lebanese soldiers
in border villages for them to do so.
He also says Hezbollah has not pulled back
sufficiently from the border region.
Lebanon denies the claims and is urging Israel
to respect the deadline.
The November deal ended more than a year
of cross-border hostilities between the Israeli army
and Hezbollah, as well as two months of

(02:43:34):
a large-scale Israeli assault on Lebanon.
Al Jazeera's Zaina Hodder has more now from
southern Lebanon.
We are in Burj al-Malouk, a village
in southern Lebanon, roughly four kilometers from the
border with Israel.
Early on Saturday, Israeli troops and bulldozers approached
the village, and they closed one of the
main roads using earth mounds and barricades.

(02:43:54):
The Israeli army will not be pulling out
from territory along the border in line with
a ceasefire agreement, that 60-day deadline.
They're supposed to leave Lebanon by early Sunday.
The Israeli prime minister is saying that Lebanon
is not upholding its side of the agreement.
It is claiming that the Lebanese army is

(02:44:17):
still not able to ensure that Hezbollah doesn't
re-establish its military presence along the border.
Now, Lebanon and Lebanese officials are demanding that
Israel respects that ceasefire agreement.
They believe that these are excuses and that
the army is not able to deploy simply
because of the presence of Israeli troops.

(02:44:38):
Israel's position is supported by the Trump administration,
with the White House saying, quote, there is
an urgent need for a short and temporary
extension of that ceasefire deal.
That's still a mess.
There's one thing that's interesting and no one's
picked up on, which is the ratio of

(02:45:00):
Palestinian...
because of the nature of the...
you could say it was racism or it's
like this is just something that no one's
picked up on.
You had the release of four more hostages
from the Hamas and then 200 Palestinians were
released, which means that one Jew is worth

(02:45:22):
50 Palestinians.
Now, the idea that one Jew is worth
50 Palestinians and which is a pretty much
the ratio for all these exchanges, is kind
of an insult to the Palestinians at some
point.
But no one has done anything with this
ratio and ridiculed it.

(02:45:43):
You know what we call that?
Best price.
Our producers never cease to amaze me.
I should have done this a little bit
earlier when we're talking about Newsom's Inferno.
One of our producers wrote in, and this
is verified, I don't know who he is.
He was there when the Vistra ML 300
battery power storage facility was built, which I

(02:46:06):
think is still on fire.
Do you know?
The one at Moss Point?
Yeah, the Vistra, the Vistra battery storage.
Yeah, I think it still is on fire.
Yeah, listen to this.
The original control system was Fluence and that
was a miserable failure that they replaced it
with Ovation.

(02:46:28):
So he's getting into the details of what
these systems were.
The risk of fire was always known at
this facility.
In fact, it was a high-risk register
item for corporate.
The problem is that the batteries were put
into an old turbine building from a previous
power plant that was on the site.
This was considered a good thing because no
new building was needed to be built, or

(02:46:49):
permits I presume.
However, during the fire this became a hindrance
because the batteries were very close together and
had limited fire suppression.
This is a big blow to the California
battery push.
The chemistry of these batteries is extremely dangerous
if they ignite.
Think of all the EV fires you've seen
and multiply that by a thousand.
From a corporate standpoint, batteries were a big

(02:47:11):
play for Vistra and their push for net
zero.
This may change things.
My former boss, who still works for the
company, called me about the fire when it
happened as I and others had raised some
risk questions in the past.
Another big problem with the battery sites is
the digital inverters at the utility scale are
not holding up.
No.
Yeah.

(02:47:33):
People are just telling him, like, no, it's
not a good idea.
It's not a good idea.
By the way, you want to say hi
to Rick Nelson and his lovely wife?
We're in Fredericksburg this weekend.
Hi Rick.
I just want to say hi.
It's an old DJ thing.
You always want to say hi when someone's
in town.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, it's just me.
DEI, little DEI laughs?

(02:47:56):
Yeah.
Okay.
Joy Reid, how could you go wrong?
Federal employees are receiving emails warning that they
could face repercussions if they do not snitch
on their co-workers who work in diversity,
equity, inclusion, and accessibility positions that might have
gone unnoticed by government supervisors.
DEI efforts date back to the civil rights

(02:48:18):
movement to create more diverse and inclusive workplaces.
No, I don't think so.
That's not true.
But on Thursday, Trump slammed them as absolute
nonsense in remarks to the World Economic Forum.
My administration has taken action to abolish all
discriminatory diversity, equity and inclusion nonsense.

(02:48:40):
And these are policies that were absolute nonsense
throughout the government and the private sector.
With the recent, yet somewhat unexpected, great Supreme
Court decision just made, America will once again
become a merit-based country.
What Supreme Court decision is he talking about?
I have no idea.

(02:49:01):
That's interesting.
I think he must be referring to that
older one where they, I think it was
against Harvard, where the Asian students couldn't get
in because they were Asian, and they were
like, wait a minute.
Yeah, that's some DEI for you.
And a final one.
Federal employees are receiving emails.
I already got that one.
Sorry, it's the same one.
It's just longer.
Never mind.
Never mind.
Let's play a funny clip.

(02:49:22):
Okay.
TikTok clip on smelling hair.
I was watching a clip of J.D.
Vance's kids, just being kids, yesterday, and that
was awesome.
But you know what I picked up on
immediately?
Trump never tried to smell them.
Not one sniff was given.
Okay, that's good.

(02:49:43):
You know that Bill Gates thing where he
talked about his meeting with Trump?
Yeah.
So there's more to that.
There's two more pieces to that that I
don't think anyone saw because, you know, why
bother?
Why bother and go look and see what
else there was?
So he talked about meeting with President Trump,

(02:50:04):
and he had this three-hour dinner, and
la-di-da was also great, but he
also talked about RFK Jr. What do you
make of RFK and vaccines and what he's
saying about it and the position he's been
given in this incoming administration?
Well, he wrote a book saying that Tony
Fauci and I kill millions of children and

(02:50:25):
make billions of dollars with vaccines, and, you
know, people can judge for themselves whether that's
that's correct or not.
Ahead of Trump's election, the Wall Street Journal

(02:50:46):
reported Gates donated around $50 million towards a
pro-Harris super PAC.
But you didn't actually ever publicly endorse him.
Why was that?
In my role as chairman of the Gates
Foundation, you know, we've had incredible relationships with...
I missed that one myself, hold on.
In my role as chairman of the Gates

(02:51:07):
Foundation...
Wow!
In my role as chairman...
there's a lie coming up.
Here's a lie, here's a lie.
I did give $50 million to the super
PAC, but I'm gonna lie about it.
In my role as chairman of the Gates
Foundation, you know, we've had incredible relationships with
every administration.
You know, the progress since the year 2000,

(02:51:29):
you know, cutting childhood death in half, cutting
HIV deaths in half, you know, that's due
to partnerships with rich world governments, where the
U.S. is, in absolute, the most generous.
And so, you know, I look forward to
working with every...
together with every administration.

(02:51:50):
And then the final one, and I'm so
surprised that no one got this.
I mean, all they had was Bill Gates
having dinner with President Trump, but this is
the killer.
The Journal previously reported on Gates' ties to
Jeffrey Epstein, including that Epstein threatened Gates over
an affair he had.
The two met a few times, Gates says,

(02:52:10):
to discuss philanthropy.
Do you think, looking back at that moment,
that you were being played?
Well, Jeffrey, in retrospect, I was foolish to
spend any time with him, and he sort
of, you know, got time with various people
by spending time with other people.

(02:52:31):
So, yes, I think I was quite stupid.
You know, I thought it would help me
with global health philanthropy.
In fact, it failed to do that, and
it was just a huge mistake.
Has it made you more wary of connections?
Definitely.
I mean, are you kidding?
Now, you're not elected, but I think it's
fair to say that you could probably pick

(02:52:53):
up the phone to any world leader out
there.
Who's the last world leader that you spoke
to?
Because of how engaged the foundation is in
these global health issues, I talked to world
leaders a lot.
You know, so in the last month, I've
talked to President Macron, Ursula von der Leyen.
Do any of them ring you up and
ask you for advice on how to handle
Donald Trump?
No, I've never had that.

(02:53:16):
You know, I've had people be quizzical about
maybe what they should do, but I'm, you
know, they'll have to, they're on their own
on that one.
That guy's a scourge.
He's a scourge.
Did you see the Jon Stewart podcast with
AOC?

(02:53:37):
I only saw clips, a part of it.
I did not sit down and actually watch
it, which I should do.
Well, no, you shouldn't.
She's off the rails.
Yes, she went way off the rails with
Jon.
He's off the rails, too.
Yeah, he is.
Yeah, I don't know why he's still doing
his podcast.
I mean, he's got gigs and stuff.
It's not a great podcast, but this was

(02:53:59):
a humorous little moment.
There need to be Democrats who walk the
walk and talk the talk.
There is an insane amount of hypocrisy, and
the hypocrisy is what gets...
What was that?
Yeah, he grunts into the microphone a lot.
What was that noise?
That was horrible.
He's going...
An insane amount of hypocrisy, and the hypocrisy

(02:54:22):
is what gets exploited to use cynicism.
And wherever there's a hypocritical window, for example,
I think one of the most biggest examples
of this is insider trading in Congress.
Dude.
Dude.
I don't know if I...
Do I give snaps?
I don't know what the kids do anymore,

(02:54:43):
but dude.
Dude.
Yes.
That's so crazy.
It's so crazy.
It's crazy.
I mean...
Do you think they think it's crazy?
Are they just discovering this?
You know what Jen, the show has been
talking about this for how long?
15, 16, 17 years.
And this is the thing.

(02:55:05):
People think that everyday people are stupid.
I'm like, do you all really think that
people don't see this shit?
They sit on a committee.
They get information about a drug or a
contract or a thing.
They immediately make a call.
The stockbroker changes things, and their portfolio swells.

(02:55:26):
Explodes.
It explodes.
What are we doing?
And you're doing this on public trust, on
taxpayer finance, public facilities.
You're regulating the market that you're trading on.
Exactly.

(02:55:47):
You run the casino.
And then we're supposed to act like money
only corrupts Republicans?
Give me a fucking break.
Yeah.
Welcome to the party, AOC.
With the cussing.
Again, with the cussing.
Yeah, the cussing.
So much cussing.
And this is what I mean by, I
don't know if we're going to make four
more years, because she won't say that on

(02:56:09):
MSNBC.
Then she's all...
I mean, this is only on podcasts.
We've been such front runners of this.
I don't know what to do.
It's going to get hard.
It's going to get very hard.
All right.
I'll let you play one more clip.
Never going to get hard.
That's what she said.
How do we get out of here?

(02:56:29):
You got something?
Well, let's see.
We can play a little.
We can do the Korea thing.
We can do the justice back off on
abortion clinics.
We can do the overlay where you did
that.
Porn site age verification is interesting, and I
have a comment about it.
Now there you're talking.
The Supreme Court heard a challenge today to
a Texas law that requires age verification for
adult websites.

(02:56:50):
A trade group representing adult entertainment performers and
companies argues the law violates the First Amendment.
After two hours of oral argument, a majority
of the court signaled that states should be
able to impose some kind of age requirement
for such websites.
This is to ensure that minors can't easily
access obscene material online.

(02:57:10):
But several justices also flag concerns that their
ruling could spill over and affect other First
Amendment rights.
A decision is expected by this summer.
The Texas law from 2023 is similar to
19 others enacted around the United States.
Under the Texas law, adult websites must require
all users to submit personally identifying information verifying

(02:57:33):
that they are at least 18 years old.
Challengers, including the American Civil Liberties Union, argue
the law is an unacceptable burden to access
constitutionally protected free speech.
Some adult sites have responded by blocking access
entirely in states with age verification laws.
No porn in Texas.

(02:57:53):
Well, it's probably good for you.
Yeah.
So this is never going to fly.
No one's going to put their...
prove your...
Besides that, there's a couple of things.
This is ludicrous.
What is the internet age?
We're not living in the dark ages here.
So someone says, hey, verify that...
scan your driver's license to prove that you're

(02:58:14):
such an age.
So I'm a kid and I got my...
I look at, hey, dad, can I borrow
your driver's license for a second?
Yeah, sure.
What do you need it for?
Oh, it's a school project.
Okay.
And boom, you scan the dad's license.
You scan somebody else's license.
You do something.
Kids, when I was a kid, when I
was a kid...

(02:58:34):
There we go.
There were, you know, everybody in high school
had a fake ID so they could go
drinking.
The girls mostly.
Because in those days, before you got your
actual license, you had a temporary license that
was a piece of paper that could easily
be changed, counterfeited, forged, whatever.
So every girl who...

(02:58:55):
Every 16-year-old that I knew had
a fake ID saying they were 21.
And if they put enough makeup on, they
can get away with it.
And this is not going to work.
It's dumb.
I think what they're all angling here, this
is a globalist push, which is a big...
ID, universal ID.

(02:59:15):
Yeah, it was a big conversation in Davos.
It's not going to happen.
It better happen.
I know you think it is.
I'm saying now.
I think it is.
I think it is.
Yeah, well, you would.
Well, I would, yes.
Because I like it.
I think it's good.
You don't think it's good.
You're just paranoid for no good reason.
Login.gov is essentially already your digital ID.

(02:59:36):
And you know what they do when you
do AML, KYC type stuff?
You know, it's like they...
It's not just your driver's license.
They also force you to take a selfie,
and then they compare the selfie.
So you have to say, Dad, can I
borrow that for a second?
And then, hey, Dad, look over here.
And then you have to get his picture
in the little room.

(02:59:57):
You always have...
You're going to have pictures of your dad
on your phone anyway.
No, no.
No, it's not.
I'm telling you, it's a lot more difficult
than you think.
Kids are smarter than you think then.

(03:00:20):
You heard it here first.
Kids are smarter than you think.
That's some boomer talk for you.
We're just two old guys.
What do we know?
And we do know that we have several
people we'd like to thank who supported the
show today.
Value for value, $50 and above.
John is going to take us through it.
And it's not that many.
No.

(03:00:43):
Brian Keefe is the top of the list
in Sierra Vista, Arizona.
One, two, four, three, three.
I'm just going to read...
These are the guys...
This is the last of the Trump inauguration
donations.
And by the way, Bryant in Sierra Vista,
Arizona says, Please tell John that the hardcover

(03:01:03):
egg book is beautiful.
We love it.
Nice.
TooManyEggs.com.
Aaron Joyce in York, Pennsylvania.
One, two, four, three, three.
I'm just going to read the names and
locations.
Lauren Matthew in W-E-A-R-E,
New Hampshire.
I'm not sure how to pronounce that.
Sir Alan in Midlothian, Virginia.
Baron Victor in Corvallis, Oregon.

(03:01:27):
Jason Stewart in Manchester, Missouri.
Garrett Fothery, I guess, in River Oaks, Texas.
I-T-M.
Eric Hanna in Chicago.
And that's our group.
He says, Eric says, The show is fantastic.
Oh, yes.
Yes.
Reminder that he asked me personally to remind

(03:01:50):
everybody.
Reminder, reminder, reminder, reminder.
There's a Chicago meetup at Reggie's on the
near the south side this upcoming Saturday.
Saturday, Saturday.
Reggie's, Chicago.
Okay.
Did it.
People get it.
You could have done it a little better.
Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina, shows up with
8008.

(03:02:10):
Once again, he's the Archduke of Luna, Lover
of America, and Boobs, which is what 8008
means.
Sir Island Dog in Fernandina Beach, Florida, 7377.
This is a switcheroo to recognize his lovely
wife's birthday, Dame Janet of Dog Nation.
She turns the big seven zero.
Wow.

(03:02:30):
Nice.
She's on the list.
Wayne Larkham in Sunny Hills, Queensland, Australia, $65.
Jonathan Sagers in Bree, Belgium.
Oh, we're getting into the Belge.
Yes.
6333.
Surprise, The Night of Astonishment in Yukon, Oklahoma,

(03:02:52):
5444.
Forrest Scott Brinkley in North Canton, Ohio, 5272.
Brett Denton in Boise.
50.
Oh, now they was at the 50s already.
Already at the 50s.
And starting with Brett Denton, then Melissa Alvarez
in Ponte Verde Beach, Verdre Beach.
Diane Schwannabach in Edison, Illinois, George Wuschert in

(03:03:15):
La Vernia, Texas.
And we're already done with Alex, Alexis, I'm
sorry, Alexis Robles in Chula Vista, California, calling
herself the Mexican Hobbit.
And so that's it.
Yes.
And Diane said congratulations to David Schwannabach on
his 17 years of leadership at Twin Piping.

(03:03:36):
If you want some piping, if you want
some piping, Twin Piping are the guys for
you.
That's right.
Thank you all very much.
Especially you want to thank those who came
in under 50 because they don't get mentioned,
but that's for reasons of anonymity, which is
important that we do not blow their cover.
So I see you, $49.99. And of
course, we have that wonderful opportunity to give

(03:03:57):
us a sustaining donation by going to knowagendadonations
.com, sending any amount you want.
Yes.
And there's one note you're going to have
to read because it's a knighting note on
line 67.
Line 67.
67.
Yeah, no, I have the note.

(03:04:18):
It's all set.
Yeah, that's Sir Nathan Lee.
Yes.
We have that note in the preparatory documents,
which soon will just be done by AI.
You don't have to worry about it.
AI is going to take care of everything
for us.
It's going to be great.
knowagendadonations.com.
Set your own amount and the frequency.
Make it recurring.

(03:04:39):
It is highly appreciated.
knowagendadonations.com.
Thank you for supporting us.
It's your birthday, birthday on Know Agenda.
Alex J.
Myers, which is his daughter Jacqueline Wednesday Myers.
A very happy birthday.
She turned one year old yesterday.
Gene Knauss says happy birthday to her wonderful
husband Herman, turning 76 on the 27th.

(03:05:02):
Sir Island Dog, which is his wife Dame
Janet of Dog Nation.
A very happy one.
She turned 70 on the 27th.
And Sean Holman of StealthArms.net, which is
his wife Liz.
A happy birthday.
And of course, we join in the celebrations
to say happy birthday from everybody here at
the best podcast in the universe.

(03:05:27):
Yes, indeed.
We have a title change for Sir Nathan
Lee.
He becomes a baron today and he says,
I'm long over baron.
Just wanted to announce that on this occasion.
1733 is an important note, a date, a
show number for him because that's when modern

(03:05:48):
Freemasonry began.
So we'd like to take this opportunity.
He wants his baron title to be Baron
Nathan Lee of Nantucket, whose title so long,
you'll love it.
He says with a grin.
knowagendadonations.com.
I would like to thank you for your
courage.
Protectorate of Massachusetts owned island of Nantucket.
If that passes the board, I believe so.
Very good.
Happy to accommodate.

(03:06:09):
Feel free to just say Baron Nathan Lee
of Nantucket.
Well, there you go.
And of course, you may know him as
a cult fan, dark journalist for you UFO
truthers.
Baron Nathan Lee.
Welcome, brother.
Thank you very much for your continued support.
He also does the Red 33, Red 33
meetups in Boston.
And he is a longtime supporter.

(03:06:32):
We appreciate it.
Then we have the dame, which came through
a switcheroo.
So if you can grab a blade there,
that'd be very helpful.
There you go.
The big boy.
Step on up.
Thanks to your hubby who loves you very
much.
You become a dame today.
And I'm very proud to pronounce you as

(03:06:53):
Dame Liz of Roxyville.
For you, we've got the Rent Boys and
the Chardonnay.
We have warm beer and cold women and
probably one like that.
What else do we have?
We have Masticholi and margaritas.
Maybe nice beer and blunts.
How about that?
Gases and sake.
I don't know.
Vodka, vanilla, bong hits and bourbon, sparkling cider
and escorch.
How about some ginger ale and gerbils?

(03:07:13):
It's always a favorite.
Also, we have the breast milk and pablum.
But for you, Dame Liz, I'm thinking that
mutton and mead will serve you just right.
Your husband did not ask for anything else
at the round table.
But you, Dame Liz, go to noagenderrings.com.
There you will find our very attractive rings
for nights and for dames.
It's a signet ring.
If you can actually hit someone in the

(03:07:33):
mouth, it'll leave a mark.
Or you can seal your important correspondence, your
envelopes with the wax that we provide with
it.
And as always, it comes with a certificate
of authenticity signed by John and myself.
You are a knight.
I mean, a dame.
Congratulations, Dame Liz.

(03:07:54):
That's right.
Connection is protection at the No Agenda Meetups.
It's where you meet the first responders in
your life.
You'll be able to count on them.
This is where you're awkward, you're perfect.
That's what the No Agenda Meetups are all
about.
You can be yourself, because it doesn't matter
where you come from.
You have one thing in common.
You are all members of No Agenda Nation.
You're citizens of No Agenda Nation.

(03:08:15):
You all have the show in common.
You all have the media deconstruction in your
mind.
It is a perfect opportunity to meet people,
to hang out with people, have a drink.
It's a good reason to go to a
bar.
And we have some meetups.
The Indy Meetup.
This is from January.
Always a killer.
Hello, this is Dame Maria, straight back from
Amsterdam.
And this is Sir Mark Murray, the Dame

(03:08:35):
Maria.
Sir Benny, through wind, snow, sleet, or hail,
we're going to show up for a goddamn
No Agenda Meeting.
In the morning, Dame Swanee.
In the morning, John and Adam, Sir PBR
Street Gang.
Just a reminder to everyone out there and
get donation that Indy still has the A
number one meetup.
Thank you.
In the morning, Dame Trinity, having a great

(03:08:56):
time in Indy as always.
Thank you for your courage.
Adam and John, this is Shannon visiting from
Fort Wayne.
And Adam, I submitted a sound sample to
the Maury Povich Show, and you'll never guess
the result.
You are the podfather.
Prisky here, just drinking some beers at the
Blind Isle.
In the morning, John and Adam, this is
Emily, and I'm over this cold.
Gary here.
As of the recording, eight more days until

(03:09:16):
the third act of the movie starts.
Grab your popcorn, people.
This should be interesting.
In the morning, News Mod of the Midwest,
happy new world order.
In the morning, John and Adam, this is
Nick.
California is going to fall into the ocean.
China is going to occupy the place.
And John C.
Dvorak will still be like, oh, it's great.
I love it here.
This is Granny here at the Blind Isle,

(03:09:36):
hanging out with this riffraff and giving them
some drinks and having a good time.
Adios, mofos.
Bye, bye, bye, dude.
Yeah, I love it when you bring in
your servers.
That's always fun.
Thank you, Damonette, for putting that together.
Now we go to Fredericksburg, Virginia, for the
Arcade Party Meetup.
Hi, it's Happy in Virginia at the Arcade

(03:09:59):
Meetup in Fredericksburg, again, back by popular demand.
This is Roundy.
I played a lot of video games here
and picked up a nice virus.
Uh, Jeffress Springfield in the morning.
Hey, this is Sir William of West Pennsylvania
from Alexandria.
Train's good, plane's bad, and that's it.
Hi, this is Roy from Spotsvania, Virginia, and
the beer's great.

(03:10:20):
Sir Harry Pilgrim here at the Baron of
Massaponix.
I realized I'm not quite the pinball wizard
I used to be.
People are playing games so hard, night rings
are falling off onto the floor.
Yeah.
Hi, this is Sarah from Richmond, and as
always, life is a scam.
ITM, where's the Due to Climate Change ringtone
on Phone Boy?
This is Tom Starkweather.

(03:10:41):
I'm enjoying our second Reclaim Arcade Meetup.
In the morning!
I gotta tell you that Roundy, Roundy always
makes these beautiful no-agenda signs, and he
takes them to the meetup.
Like, you know, like, not just, like, actual
letters that stand on the table.
It's really cool.
I wouldn't mind having one of those.
It's just, he's, he's a great participant.

(03:11:03):
Doesn't do any more art for us, because,
you know, he's getting paid for it, and
so he doesn't do that.
He won his couple of times, and that
was...
Now I got a job.
I'm good to go.
I'm not gonna do this anymore.
And have you ever wondered what happens if
you give a world-renowned, award-winning architect,
garage band, and a meetup, and a phone,

(03:11:26):
and tell him, hey, put together a meetup
report?
Well, that's what you get from Tokyo with
Sir Mark.
Hi, John and Adam, Tokyo calling.
We're having a really great meetup here tonight.
We have 14, 15 people from all over
Japan, some visitors from the U.S. as
well.
It's been really amazing.
We're holding it at Ten Cups in Shibuya.

(03:11:46):
Really fantastic bar, and everybody wants to say
hi.
Hey, guys.
This is El Mexicano.
This is Tokyo in the morning.
Hi, guys, and this is his wife that
he punched in the mouth.
And a little human resort.
Sir 3D, Whiskey 5, India Tango Mic.
I flew here from ITM, Osaka airport, to

(03:12:10):
check out this hui hui.
Hey, Adam and John C.
This is Brandon.
This is David.
This is Harold.
In the morning, John and Adam, this is
Casey.
In the morning, John and Adam, this is
Alexander.
I've got hairy legs.
This is producer Pete in Japan.
Yo, yo, come back.
Come back, Adam.
In the morning, boys, this is the pursuit

(03:12:30):
of peace and tranquility.
Okay, Adam, John.
Hi, Adam and John.
Dame Astrid here in Tokyo, where we also
like the weather report.
It's a beautiful starry night, and it's seven

(03:12:53):
degrees.
I also like those two words, and I
was waiting to get them out to you.
It's unvarnished veracity, and it's so fitting to
No Agenda.
See ya.
Hey, I'm just in the edit, and I've
realized I've lost producer Steve's clip.
I'm so sorry.
Anyway, we want to thank everybody for their

(03:13:13):
courage for coming out tonight to the No
Agenda Tokyo No Cheesecake Meetup.
See you soon.
Moshi moshi.
Unvarnished veracity.
That's who we are, according to Dame Astrid.
I kind of like that.
You know that there's some dudes in there
who said something really rank in Japanese.
Yeah, of course.

(03:13:33):
That's what you do.
That's what you do, exactly.
Hey, the PSYOP seasonal meetup is underway today
as we speak at Toby's Bar and Grill
in Toronto.
The Cow Peak No Agenda Meetup of the
Black Hills also underway at Crow Peak Brewing
in Spearfield, South Dakota.
The TMI EVAC Zone Fortune Cookie Meetup also
underway in Evergreen Brewing, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.

(03:13:54):
You can probably still catch them.
On Thursday, our next show day, the North
Georgia Monthly Meetup will kick in at six
o'clock at Cherry Street Brewing in Alfreda,
Georgia.
And a special note, the Northern Silicon Valley
Get John Out of the House Meetup 6
.0 is taking place, I believe, on, is
that February 1st, John?
Are you booked for that?
I believe so, at the Mallard Club.

(03:14:15):
And you're going, right?
Because people love hanging out with you.
That's it.
On No Agenda Meetups, there's many more that
can be found on noagendameetups.com.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
You can search by location, by time, by
calendar, by date.
Thank you, Sir Daniel, for keeping that running,
and Mimi, for doing all the back office
work.
Soon to be taken over by AI.
It's going to do all that work for

(03:14:36):
us.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start
one yourself.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with
all the nights and days.
You want to be where you won't be,
triggered or held to blame.
You want to be where everybody feels the
same.

(03:14:57):
It's like a party.
It always is.
It is always like a party.
I love hearing those reports from all over
the world.
It makes us sound so international.
You know, because we are.
We're international.
It's not just America.
It's international.
People love it.
So we have an ISO off.
We only each have one ISO, which makes

(03:15:18):
total sense.
You have the carryover from last show, which
I think is a good one.
I will play it.
I remember it.
It's two guys.
These two guys are so cute.
And all I have to compete with you
is this one.
It's so crazy.
It's crazy.
Muddy.

(03:15:38):
These two guys are so cute.
That's the one we're going with.
And now, of course, it's time for the
only at John Sipper today.
So I have a sense with this theme

(03:16:01):
of today's show seems to be AI.
I'm jumping to an AI product.
OK, wow.
And this is a thing called hot.
It's hot pot.
Dot A.I. is the website.
Hot, hot, hot, hot.
They can't do a hot spot because that's

(03:16:21):
been somebody sitting on that.
But it's hot pot.
Yes.
Dot A.I. And it has a million
different functions that are mostly free to use.
But they have this system.
They want to try to make money.
Sorry, I have to laugh.
OK, they're going to try to make money
using a tokens, a tokenized system, which is

(03:16:43):
the way where you say, I'm going to
buy X number of credits.
And for this, I need three credits.
And for that, I need two credits and
do this.
I got five credits to buy 100 credits.
You buy a thousand.
It's just OK.
They've gamified it.
Good luck.
But this thing does.
I mean, this is the most comprehensive series

(03:17:03):
of A.I. products I've ever seen.
It'll create art.
It will edit photos.
It will do.
It'll create posting robots, posts, logos.
I mean, people should look at this.
It's a really fascinating.
Can it do the spreadsheet for us?

(03:17:24):
That's coming.
And the meetup calendar, all that can be
done.
Yeah, all that's coming.
And also do stuff that, you know, these
phones have these things, they remove someone from
a picture.
It'll do that rather effortlessly, you know, change
backgrounds.
It's actually pretty powerful.
It's something people should play with.
Can it code?
And our A.I. experts, I'd like to

(03:17:44):
get some feedback from.
Can it can it code?
Can it code?
No, this doesn't code.
It doesn't code.
And what's it called again?
Just so we can put it in the
right hot pot as in the, you know,
the Chinese dish.
Yes.
Hot pot.
Dot.
A.I. Hot pot.
Dot.
A.I. That, ladies and gentlemen, is your
tip of the day.
The one and only John C.
Dvorak delivers it to you every single show.

(03:18:13):
And sometimes Adam created by Dana Brunetti.
Yes.
Thank you very much, Dana Brunetti, for creating
it.
What would we do without Dana Brunetti?
We'd be lost.
There'll be almost no show.
I'm telling you.
Hey, that's it for today.
Too long.
Too long.
We delivered the value.
We'd love for you to consider sending some

(03:18:34):
value back.
We're not just doing it for our health,
you know, or maybe we are coming up.
We are doing it for our health, for
our mental health.
That's right.
Our mental health.
And we're doing good work.
And soon we can just take Ozempic and
not have to do this for our mental
health.
It's going to be great.
And for our E.D. It's fantastic.

(03:18:56):
Coming to you.
Wait, before I say that, we have up
next on the stream at trollroom.io, the
modern podcast apps and noagenda.stream, podcasting 2
.0. It's the weekly board meeting with me
and Dave Jones.
It's the booby trap where Dave has he
needs help.
He's a cry for help.
So you better listen to it if you're
a developer.
Coming to you from the heart of the

(03:19:17):
Texas Hill Country in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain.
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
Remember us at noagenda donations.com and enjoy
a classic end of show mix about immigration
in the classroom and young villain Nafis with
a Ritter.
Until then, adios, ho ho's, a hooey hooey

(03:19:38):
and such.
Hey, hi, hello, hi, hoi, it's Mark, Rook,
T, Ian, hello, hey, hi, how's it go?
I'm sure you know I'm now the boss
from the NATO That's not for nothing to
say so After years of searching, I'm the

(03:20:02):
only one they know That can slow the
orange man or say, bro, ho, NATO, NATO,
NATO Don't call me Rudy, call me Mark,
and let me show That if you also
don't like singing war Play safe and let
NATO in your cookie jar You know a

(03:20:23):
France man says, not NATO, but OTAN It's
same, same, same, just in derriere spoken Let
me explain to you how to pronounce it
as a pro If you say origami, sensation,
atlantique, don't know All macarons know that, not
cheese But pieces, what about it goes?

(03:20:44):
Those kids are alone, they are in cages,
they are given peanut butter on tortillas They're
given frozen sandwiches that still have ice in
them Is that the kind of environment you
would want your kid to be in?
We don't need no immigration We

(03:21:08):
don't need no border patrol No peanut
butter enchilada Donald, leave the
kids alone Hey, Donald, leave

(03:21:37):
the kids alone All on its own, all
for funding you want All in all, it's
all, all for funding the wall Kirsten Nielsen

(03:21:59):
will not think that we are ruining your
dinner She is the secretary of DHS ICE
rips children apart from their families every day
They lock them up in cages, they sleep
under those silver blankets here Because Kirsten Nielsen's

(03:22:20):
staff tried to reunite them with their parents
Peanut butter
on tortillas, they're given frozen sandwiches that still

(03:22:41):
have ice in them That was a very
interesting comment, I thought That the idea of
giving these children tortillas with peanut butter And
some of them were out of the fridge,
they still had ice on them Is just
despicable to this woman It's just the whole
idea Meanwhile, I don't know if she has

(03:23:03):
kids, but she's probably feeding them mac and
cheese If they see any weakness, they will
come by the millions If they see any
weakness Zero tolerance for criminal aliens Zero, zero
When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending
their best They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime,

(03:23:26):
they're rapists And I will have Mexico pay
for that The best podcast in the universe
Adios, mofo Dvorak.org slash N-A These
two guys are so cute
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