Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Go Boomers!
Adam Currie, John C.
DeVora.
It's Thursday, April 24th, 2025.
This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media
Assassination Episode 1758.
This is No Agenda.
Picking pokes and broadcasting live for over 17
years from the heart of the Texas Hill
Country here in FEMA Region Number 6.
(00:20):
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Currie.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we should
be rolling out the No Agenda meme coin.
I'm John C.
DeVora.
I was at a wedding last night and
people are asking me like, what do you
think of Trump's cryptocurrency?
(00:41):
I'm like, do you really want me to
get into this with you?
This meme coin?
Oh, man.
So I'm at this wedding.
This is the former...
This is the wedding you were at when
Andrew tried to get a hold of you.
Yes, this is the former Kerrville cop with
(01:01):
anger management issues wedding.
Oh, there's nothing like a cop with anger
management issues.
Well, especially since he's now the lieutenant for
the Sheriff's Office of Gillespie County.
Okay.
Which is good.
We like knowing our buddy Mike.
Yeah, I would think so.
Don't want to piss him off.
(01:21):
So the whole, you know, there's...
There must have been 10 sheriffs, deputies, all
in uniform.
Half of them look like the mustache guy
from the village people for some reason.
It's like, you know, you look kind of
like that gay guy from the village people.
Did you say that to him?
Yes, of course.
They think it's funny.
They think it's all hilarious.
(01:42):
No good for them.
They're good guys.
Yeah.
So Andrew calls me.
I'm like, no.
So I text him, I said, no, I'm
at a wedding.
And then I just, I decided I'm going
to ghost him.
Because he's now using it as engagement farming.
He's all over X.
Like, is there a feud?
What's going on?
What's happening?
Ooh, what could be happening?
(02:03):
Oh, he hasn't texted me back.
I'm glad we can provide some promotion for
DH unplugged.
I haven't had a chance to listen to
the show.
Did he bring it up on Tuesday?
Uh, kinda.
Yeah.
Oh, did he?
Because he did send me an email early
in the week.
He was befuddled.
People are saying that we're fighting.
Is everything okay?
I presume it's an inside joke, right?
(02:24):
Right, right, right.
Come on, right?
I'm like, I think so.
I don't know.
Maybe you should listen to our show.
Well, until you listen to the show, you'll
be funneled continually.
Are we under martial law yet?
Is the main question of the day.
Oh, that was supposed to happen on Sunday.
(02:47):
Yeah, I don't.
Yeah, guess not.
I guess it hasn't happened.
And I haven't seen anybody posting about it.
Why it hasn't happened.
Because they have to have a new date.
So there was...
It's been put off to some other date.
So I make a joke about this at
(03:07):
the wedding yesterday.
And Joe was there, Laura Logan's husband.
And apparently...
Was Laura there?
No, no.
Who knows?
She's doing a speech in Atlanta.
She's all over the place.
And apparently he had already told a few
people a week ago, martial law is coming.
(03:27):
Was he a believer in this?
I guess so.
Because other people said, yeah, Joe, what happened
to that?
And I'm like, Joe, what?
That's like a libtard thing.
No, no, no.
He just wouldn't do it on Easter.
Like, come on, man.
What?
Yes.
It's crazy.
(03:48):
That's all right.
Then I hit him right back with this.
Okay.
It all changed when JFK Jr. is our
vice president.
It's...
I have a...
I'm talking about screwball things.
I have a bet with my son.
Okay.
I may have brought this up, but I
don't think I have.
Okay.
I'll remind you if you did.
(04:10):
Yeah, I'm sure you will.
He made a substantial bet.
And I have to put this down.
I have to get this in writing.
I have to send some email back and
forth because I do have one witness.
And he's just adamant about it.
Is one not enough?
Do you need more witnesses?
I...
Well...
Oh, no, wait.
I think you have brought this up.
(04:31):
The JD Vance will become president and then
Trump will be vice president.
He'll quit and then he'll become president.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And he's adamant about it.
You told me that.
We're all witnesses.
You have a million witnesses.
We've heard this.
Yeah, I know.
But it has to be...
Yeah, he's gonna...
What?
And I can't refer to a podcast.
I can't dig it up and make it...
(04:52):
How dare you denigrate the show?
No, no, it's not that.
It's that I have to keep track of
the date of this podcast, then refer to
it.
Oh, you can get it on Bing.
As opposed to something in an email, which
I can put aside.
You'll be able to go to bingit.io
and send a direct link to the audio.
We have the best resources for this.
But that's the kind of thing that's very
(05:12):
similar to...
It reminds me of the idea that we're
gonna have Marshall Loft or whatever.
And there's no reason for any of this.
There's no reason to expect Trump to pull
a stunt like that, which would irk everyone.
There's no reason for him to pull a
stunt like Marshall Loft.
All of my screens here in the studio
have identical...
(05:32):
Breaking news!
Trump on Ukraine war.
We're getting close.
We're getting closer.
It's almost there.
There's no closer.
I actually have some...
In fact, I think Russia bombed Kiev again
this morning.
Yeah, this is it.
The worst attacks on Kiev since the start
of the war.
(05:53):
In an attack on the Ukrainian capital, Russia
launched 215 missiles and drones overnight, according to
the Ukrainian Air Force, causing the collapse of
numerous residential buildings.
Some residents, still in shock, were awakened by
the explosions.
I had time to get out when it
exploded.
And then there was nothing.
The neighboring house was destroyed and everything in
(06:15):
our house just flew away.
And I didn't see anything.
I'm scared.
Others had time to find refuge in bomb
shelters.
We were sleeping when we heard the first
explosion.
It was very strong.
The windows in our apartment were damaged.
Kitchen appliances flew off the countertop.
But luckily, we were alive.
Following the attack, the Ukrainian government denounced Russian
(06:37):
President Vladimir Putin, saying he only has the
desire to kill.
President Zelensky said that Russia must stop strikes
immediately and unconditionally.
But after three years of fighting, some Ukrainians
say they no longer believe that peace is
possible.
I honestly don't know how this will all
end.
It's very scary.
I don't believe it.
I only believe that if we can stop
(06:57):
them on the battlefield, that's it.
Diplomacy doesn't work here.
You can see it from the news, from
the dead.
Attacks on Kiev, as well as Kharkiv, resumed
following a brief Easter truce.
This looked pretty bad, I have to say.
And I don't think there's been a bombing
in Kiev that has been this bad.
They'll kind of work backwards in the timeline,
(07:17):
because before what happened last night, we had
this.
Tonight, President Trump lashing out at Ukraine's President
Vladimir Zelensky on social media.
Right.
Is that not what we call hyperbole?
Lashing out.
That used to be the pet phrase of
Amy Goodman.
Lashing Vladimir Zelensky on social media, writing, He
(07:40):
can have peace or he can fight for
another three years before losing the whole country.
The man with no cards to play.
Is this Martha Radnich?
It sure is.
Radnich, Radnich.
Is she still working?
Radnich, Radnich.
Well, I don't know why I don't think
her name is Radnich.
From now on, she is Martha Radnich.
(08:01):
That's fine.
We have pet names for people in the
show.
Yes, she's still working.
No cards to play should now finally get
it done.
Nice.
I don't know if that was a quote
or editorializing.
Trump angered by Zelensky's refusal to accept a
U.S.-proposed peace deal that would prohibit NATO
membership for Ukraine and would include Ukraine giving
(08:24):
up land that Russia has seized since its
invasion.
There it is.
In addition to giving up Crimea.
Zelensky saying, There's nothing to talk about.
It is our territory.
The territory of the Ukrainian people.
Vice President J.D. Vance threatened to end
the negotiations if Ukraine does not accept the
U.S. proposal that calls for Ukraine to
(08:46):
give up land to Russia.
We've issued a very explicit proposal to both
the Russians and the Ukrainians.
And it's time for them to either say
yes or for the United States to walk
away from this process.
And what's odd about this is just around
this time, we got this news about President
Putin.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed for the
(09:07):
first time in years a willingness to hold
direct talks with Ukraine.
This marks potential diplomatic movement as pressure mounts
from the U.S. for both sides to
reach a ceasefire deal.
Speaking to Russian state media, Putin claimed Moscow
was open to discussing the possibility of halting
strikes on civilian infrastructure with Kiev.
(09:30):
How'd that work out?
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has also signaled readiness
for dialogue, proposing a 30-day ceasefire to
end attacks on civilians.
Though Russia has yet to accept the offer.
As talks intensify, the U.S. has warned
that it could withdraw its support for peace
efforts if there's no visible progress.
(09:51):
With negotiations set to continue in London this
week, the coming days could determine whether renewed
diplomacy finally leads to peace.
So it's interesting when you look at these
four screens.
So I have Fox, MSNBC, CNN, and the
BBC.
The white balance, the color of the Oval
(10:12):
Office is so different in each one.
That shouldn't be.
Oh, yeah.
So Fox is very vibrant.
MSNBC actually looks a little out of focus.
CNN looks somewhat washed out.
And the BBC, the gold behind the president
on the fireplace is just beaming at me.
(10:33):
It's interesting.
That's being done on purpose.
You got to think it.
Or no, people just don't care anymore.
Maybe they just run AI over this stuff.
Well, white balance, schmike balance.
Let the computer do it.
Well, the idea that they don't care, they're
careless or they're sloppy or they don't, you
(10:53):
know, that is possible.
But I would get the impression that they
are purposeful.
Let's look at the headlines.
But then again, you know, it's, you know,
it's the falling off of quality of MSNBC
and CNN over the years could be reflected
in a lot of different ways.
Now, it wouldn't surprise me.
(11:14):
It wouldn't surprise me.
I have the NTD version of the update
between Russia, Ukraine.
It's the Russia, Ukraine update.
President also talked about Russia and Ukraine today.
Tell us the latest on that.
Sure.
So inside the Oval Office, President Trump now
said that he thinks Russia is ready to
have a deal and that the U.S.
already had to deal with Russia.
(11:35):
But it turns out that Ukraine is now
the more difficult one to negotiate with.
Watch.
I think Russia is ready.
And a lot of people said Russia wanted
to go for the whole thing.
And I think we have a deal with
Russia.
We have to get a deal with Zelensky.
And I hope that Zelensky, I thought it
might be easier to deal with Zelensky.
(11:56):
So far, it's been harder.
But that's OK.
It's all right.
But I think we have a deal with
both.
I hope they do it because I'm looking
to save.
And, you know, we spend a lot of
money.
But this is about a lot of humanity.
Meanwhile, in the True Social Post this afternoon,
President Trump criticized Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for
(12:17):
making it more difficult to settle the war
by saying that Ukraine won't recognize Russia's claim
of Crimea, which happened back in 2014.
Meanwhile, Zelensky responded later by pointing to a
2018 statement during the first Trump term, saying
that the U.S. will never recognize Russian
sovereignty over Crimea.
(12:38):
Meanwhile, Vice President J.D. Vance today is
saying that if Russia and Ukraine don't strike
a deal, the U.S. would well just
walk away.
And meanwhile, the U.S. is focused on
talking with Russia this week with a Trump
special envoy, Steve Wyckoff, in Russia this week
to talk to Russian President Vladimir Putin for
the fourth time.
You know, the problem with all of this,
(13:01):
let's say we get a truce, end of
the war.
There are so many weapons that have now
been funneled from Ukraine into Europe.
I mean, it's undeniable.
And we're talking.
(13:22):
Assault rifles, grenade launchers, anti-tank weapons.
What would it be going to Europe and
not Africa?
Well, I would say they'd be funneled through
Europe.
But think about the people who are in
Europe, the people who have been let in.
Oh, you think there could be a fifth
column?
Yeah.
(13:42):
Well, well, fifth column.
I mean, just nut jobs, nut jobs throughout
Europe.
We kind of saw this after.
What was it?
What was the Yugoslav Wars of the 90s?
Lots of weapons throughout Europe.
And, you know, we had gangs, gangs using
(14:04):
them, terrorist attacks.
And now we've got all kinds of crazy
people in Europe.
I mean, the war could be going to
the streets.
I think Europe may not be realizing what
could possibly happen if this ends.
Well, that's kind of a grim view of
(14:26):
things.
Well, I have a kid there, you know,
so I think about these things.
Yeah, yeah, it is grim.
But, you know, weapons have a weird way
of going the other direction.
It's not that hard.
So I don't know.
I don't know.
We'll see.
I mean, demilitarized zone is what it would
have to be.
(14:47):
You keep Crimea, you get a DMZ, and
it's the end of it.
Yeah, well, they can't seem to get this
to happen.
Well, because they like the war.
The European leadership likes it.
They want, they're all in.
They can't turn back their financing and all
these.
They have, they have probably, there has to
be something behind Zelensky's reluctance.
(15:08):
Besides, it's just pigheadedness.
It's got to be the Europeans telling him,
don't worry about it, we'll back you up.
Yeah, we'll put you in the EU.
You'll become a part of Europe.
We promise, pinky swear.
Come on, come on, just keep going, keep
going, don't stop.
Here's your script.
Yeah, I would, I would think so.
I would think so.
Anyway, happy news, everybody.
(15:30):
Happy, happy days, good times.
It's all fantastic.
But there's, I got a couple of clips
on Elon Musk quitting.
Now, is it quitting or is he going
to reduce his involvement?
I think he's not quitting or reducing.
I think he's just saying all this.
(15:52):
You don't even think it's true at all.
He said there's no pullback.
He's got his team in place.
He likes to be in the...
In the know.
Well, not that, but within the power structure.
He should take a sabbatical or say he's
taking time to focus on his multiple families.
(16:12):
He should, you're right.
I think he's trying to do that, but
he's doing it in a funny way.
I've got some clips from NPR, which will
have a slant to him.
And so this is Musk out.
Okay.
Elon Musk says he'll pull back from his
work in the Trump administration to focus on
running his electric car business, Tesla.
For the last few months, Musk has had
(16:33):
massive access and power within the White House.
NPR's Danielle Kurtzleben reports on the relationship that
was mutually beneficial until things got complicated.
On election night, Donald Trump gave special attention
to one of his biggest supporters.
Let me tell you, we have a new
star.
A star is born, Elon.
(16:53):
Their political courtship was only a few months
old.
Musk endorsed Trump shortly after the July assassination
attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Musk later explained his attraction at another Trump
rally in Butler in October.
We had one president who couldn't climb a
flight of stairs and another who was fist
pumping after getting shot.
(17:13):
Fight, fight, fight.
Blood coming down the face.
Musk would go on to spend a quarter
of a billion dollars supporting Trump and other
Republicans in the 2024 election.
By the time Musk took the stage at
Trump's October Madison Square Garden rally, Trump had
already said Musk would lead a project they
called the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
(17:37):
Howard Lutnick, who is now Commerce Secretary, introduced
Musk.
How much do you think we can rip
out of this wasted $6.5 trillion Harris
-Biden budget?
Well, I think we can do at least
$2 trillion.
Yeah!
Musk brought a chaotic, chaotic, chaotic energy to
his new political role.
He grabbed headlines when he twice made a
(17:59):
straight-armed gesture that resembled a Nazi salute
at Trump's inauguration.
Musk denied that, then joked about it on
social media.
Once Trump took office, Musk was everywhere.
I keep getting notes from the EU, from
the European countries, mainly the Netherlands, who correct
me on Tesla and say, no, no, no,
no, no, you're wrong.
(18:21):
The reason some people are not buying Teslas
or renouncing their ownership is because of the
Nazi salute and his support of AFD.
They truly think he's a Nazi.
Yes, I believe this to be true.
I've noticed this following some of the foreign
(18:42):
news coverage.
There is this strong belief that he's, and
you see it even on late night comedy
shows, he's a Nazi, period.
It's not even an issue.
It's not even a question.
It's obvious.
Yeah, he did this and that's what you
do as a, I mean.
That's what Nazis do.
It's like, it's delusional.
(19:06):
Do you think?
It's truly, but it's concerning.
It's concerning that people, you know, that the
machine is so strong that people actually believe
this, whether they've even seen it or not,
or they've maybe seen a picture somewhere.
They hear people talking about it.
You have this shot of him doing his
salute.
(19:27):
I mean, Waltz did the exact same salute.
No, I mean, I know, we know that.
Everyone who's listening to the show knows that.
But that doesn't matter.
The fact that you can still launch that
into the media, into the universe, really, into
the ether, let's put it that way.
You can launch it into the ether and
(19:48):
people just go, oh yeah.
And make it stick.
And it sticks, yeah.
I mean, we all should be very worried
about that.
That is, yeah, it's a phenom for sure.
Yeah, it's amazing.
And that's why we have to, it has
to be fought.
But it's a hopeless battle.
That's why you listen to the Noah Jenner
(20:10):
show, because it makes you smarter.
It also makes you more, it makes you
more attractive to the opposite sex.
And the hit of every party.
It does.
Thank you, Daryl.
So they continue with this.
This is more, and as you listen to
this, this is kind of like an eulogy.
(20:30):
They talk about the entire Musk story.
It's more like a movie.
Oh, are they sad he's going?
Is that what's happening?
They're like, oh, well.
I can't say that's the case.
It's just like they're wrapping it.
It's like a wrap.
Maybe.
Musk wrap.
Maybe they, Musk wrap.
I like that.
Maybe it's because they had all the packages
(20:50):
and the scripts written when they told everybody
that they were going to break up months
ago.
And they're just like, oh, we still got
this stuff on the shelf.
Should we use it now, boss?
That's always possible.
I don't think NPR is that into having
these, because that's TV stuff, because you have,
it takes more work, but it's possible.
(21:11):
Here we go.
Riding on Air Force One and taking questions
with the president in the Oval Office.
Once with his four-year-old son in
tow.
Trump was generous with Musk, constantly praising him
and letting him speak at length, even at
cabinet meetings.
At the first one, Trump jokingly chided Musk
at one point.
(21:32):
At Doge, Musk had almost unrestricted ability to
look at the details of agencies that oversaw
his businesses, companies that do a lot of
work for the federal government.
He gleefully set to work reshaping the bureaucracy
he railed against as a businessman, even brandishing
a chainsaw on stage at a conservative conference
earlier this year.
(21:53):
A little bit out of context, but okay.
Under Musk, Doge has effectively dismantled some agencies
and left others.
He must have had the MMR jab as
a kid.
There's no doubt about it.
Musk is so on the spectrum, it's not
funny anymore.
Under Musk, Doge has effectively dismantled some agencies
(22:16):
and left others reeling after slashing tens of
thousands of jobs.
But big savings have been hard to find.
On the campaign trail, Musk had said he
was shooting for $2 trillion.
But by a cabinet meeting earlier this month,
the goal was much smaller.
I'm excited to announce that we anticipate savings
in FY26 from reduction of waste and fraud
(22:37):
by $150 billion.
Courts have halted many of Doge's actions, including
attempts to obtain access to sensitive data.
By spring, Trump was saying that cabinet members
would be taking more of the lead in
making decisions about their agencies.
Hundreds of billions of dollars of waste and
fraud and abuse has been found, already found.
And that doesn't mean they don't have a
(22:59):
little bit of an argument here and there
about something or maybe personnel arguments.
There were also signs that Musk was becoming
a political liability.
He spent and campaigned heavily for the conservative
in a Wisconsin Supreme Court election in April,
who then lost.
You know, the conservative television and radio media,
they don't really cop to the fact that
(23:19):
it's $150 billion, significantly less than what was
promised.
Well, there's an assumption that it's going to
continue and grow.
$150 billion isn't chicken feed.
No, this is what we gave to Ukraine.
We guess.
We don't even know that.
We don't know anything.
We know anything about the numbers.
No, we don't know anything.
It's just, we know nothing.
(23:39):
It's just numbers that people throw out there.
Who knows?
Who knows?
But, you know.
Well, you left $80 billion plus in gear
in Afghanistan that could have been retrieved.
That's $80 billion, just, well, there you go.
But you see, I'm not looking at the
actual value.
(24:00):
It's the marketing numbers.
The marketing numbers.
A billion dollars is nothing these days.
We didn't even know what came after a
million when I was a kid.
What comes after a million?
I don't know.
You know, we had no idea.
With all of our devaluation of currency through
printing, now the billionaire is the new millionaire.
(24:21):
And we don't even think about what that
means anymore.
If you went on the street and said,
how many millions is a billion?
I don't think people even know.
Well, they know.
So they've come up with 5% of
their proposed savings.
That's not impressive.
It's a lot of money, but it's not
impressive.
And they're not saying more to come.
(24:43):
So marketing-wise, I think it's kind of
a flop.
They are saying more to come.
It's that these reports aren't saying more to
come.
They're also saying he's not Hitler, but the
reports say he is.
So I'm just looking at perception of the
media.
Well, let's wrap it with the third clip.
Meanwhile, widespread Tesla takedown protests were happening at
(25:04):
dealerships nationwide.
Musk openly disagreed with Trump's tariff policy, at
one point calling trade advisor Peter Navarro dumber
than a sack of bricks.
Musk's job at Doge was always supposed to
be a temporary assignment.
Recently, Trump has been vague about Musk's future,
but complimentary as always.
(25:26):
Well, I think he's amazing, but I also
think he's got a big company to run.
And so at some point, he's going to
be going back.
He wants to.
Would you want to keep him around?
Oh, I'd keep him as long as I
could keep him.
He's a very talented guy.
This week, Tesla reported dismal earnings, and Musk
announced to shareholders that he would be paring
back his role at Doge.
The White House has not responded to NPR's
(25:48):
questions about how much Musk will be scaling
back.
I do have, I think, a Franz Van
Contra clip that includes some of the quarterly
call.
That's the one where everybody typically calls up
and says, great queue, guys, really good.
Not so in this case.
(26:08):
It hasn't been a great year for Tesla,
the US automaker headed by billionaire Elon Musk.
For months, protesters have been vandalizing Tesla cars
and showrooms, upset at Musk spearheading mass layoffs
at major government agencies.
Now, if we were running France 24 and
this guy auditioned, would you say, yeah, that's
a go for on-air voice?
(26:30):
Play it again.
Through his work at Doge, it's been so
bad that President Donald Trump has threatened to
imprison the protesters in El Salvador.
I'd be like, no, pass.
I think it'd be more for some gay
channel.
Deliveries of Tesla's aging lineup of cars have
nosedived, and Tesla's profits have been hollowed out.
Tesla's net income has fallen 71% from
(26:53):
the same time last year.
Investors have sold off the company's stock at
a rapid pace, causing its price to drop
by about half since December.
Nonetheless, on an earnings phone call with analysts
on Tuesday, Musk defended his work with the
Trump administration.
There's been some blowback for the time that
I've been spending in government with the Department
of Government Efficiency or Doge.
(27:14):
I believe the right thing to do is
to just fight the way forward and get
the country back on the right track.
And working together with President Trump and his
administration, because if the ship of America goes
down, we all go down with it, including
Tesla and everyone else.
Yielding to investors' worries, Musk said that next
month he will begin allocating more time to
Tesla and cut back his time at Doge.
(27:36):
He returns as the company faces difficulties from
Trump-imposed tariffs.
Tesla paused imports of some China-sourced components
after U.S. tariffs on the Asian country
rose to 145%.
China has responded with tariffs of its own,
leading Tesla to suspend some orders in the
country.
I was watching a report on BYD, the
(27:59):
Shanghai auto show.
They launched the new models.
Oh, man.
Those are gorgeous.
I know.
They're really, like, cool-looking car.
I mean, I still would not want a
battery car, but they're cool-looking cars.
You know, and then you look at the
Tesla, it's like, feels kind of 2010-ish.
(28:20):
It's old-fashioned-looking.
Yeah, yeah, that's his problem.
It was good-looking when it came out.
Well, he had that designer guy, right?
He had the OG designer.
He had some designer that did a, you
know, they've been kind of, like, that guy
wasn't around anymore and everything's gotten stale-looking.
Yeah, after the S, after the S.
The S was the good-looking one.
(28:41):
Wasn't that the guy who designed the car
that kept catching on fire?
Remember that one?
Fisker.
Fisker.
Fisker.
He's just driving five feet.
Catches on fire.
I know, you know, I thought it was,
but it turns out it, I don't know
if it was or not.
I had some, I wrote something up about
the designer, and then I got people sending,
(29:01):
no, you got the wrong guy.
And so I don't know what the story
is with any accuracy on who designed the
original S.
But that guy's not there.
Whoever it was, he's not there.
He's not there, that's the point, yes.
I do have a related clip, which is
from Al Gore, who had this very, it's.
Oh, I'm glad you got the Al Gore
(29:22):
stuff.
This, he gave the speech.
Yes.
And by the way, I did mention the
newsletter.
We missed again.
Oh no, Earth Day.
I think for the 15th year in a
row.
Earth Day.
We missed our annual Earth Day promotion.
Yes.
Shame on you.
I saw the local news doing a thing
about Earth Day cocktails.
(29:44):
Earth Day cocktails.
Yeah, what's that?
Dirt in a jar?
No, it's just alcohol.
You know, it's just, you cut up the
lime so you can make it look like
the continents, and then you drink it on
Earth Day.
I'm like, what is this?
They don't even have anything to say about
it.
It's so deluded.
(30:04):
Who even organizes Earth Day?
Do we even know?
Who's in charge of this?
Hold on a second.
I think whoever designed it.
I think, didn't this start in the 70s?
Let's see here, earthday.org.
The official site.
I'm being verified by CloudFlare.
They don't think I'm a human.
Ah, I've been approved.
You've been kicked.
Here we go.
About us.
(30:25):
Aboot.
Aboot us.
Aboot.
Aboot.
Let's see, our vision.
No, it doesn't say anything.
Oh, board of directors.
Oh, a bunch of ugly people.
Let me see about, oh, they have their
history.
What's their history then?
Yes.
Every year on April 22nd, Earth Day marks
the anniversary of the birth of the modern
environmental movement in 1970.
(30:48):
You are right.
You are right.
The stage was set for change.
And the environmental movement did not begin in
1970.
No, well, but here it is.
The stage was set for change with the
publication of Rachel Carson's New York Times bestseller,
Silent Spring, in 1962.
(31:09):
Well, eight years later is what they're saying.
Yeah.
Senator Gaylord Nelson.
No, Silent Spring was a massive bestseller.
Yeah, did you read it?
Yeah.
What was it about?
It was about how we're gonna all die.
Oh, an uplifting book.
(31:30):
Anyway.
Pesticides and things.
Oh, yeah.
And acid rain.
No, that came later.
No, that's later.
Yeah.
We had acid rain.
We had the ozone hole.
I remember as a kid, we had the
ozone hole.
The ozone layer.
The hole in the ozone layer.
That was in the 70s.
We'd be looking up like, where is it?
How come I can't see it?
How do I see the...
It's because of your washing machine.
(31:53):
So yeah, so here's...
It was Freon.
It was a refrigerator that was causing the
ozone layer to pull.
Yeah, another good one.
Freon.
Yeah, Freon.
But then they came up with something else.
Ah, it doesn't use Freon.
Then it was hairspray.
Yeah, it was more toxic, but it doesn't
put a hole in the ozone.
And then there was hairspray.
Hairspray was doing it.
Hairspray, bad.
I personally am responsible for a lot of
(32:15):
bad things in the environment during the 80s
and 90s.
So Al Gore does this very interesting thing.
He says, I don't like calling people Hitler,
but you know, these guys are Hitler.
I want to note that before I agree
with what is not a precedent, I understand
very well why it is wrong to compare
Adolf Hitler's Third Reich to any other movement.
(32:35):
It was uniquely evil, full stop.
I get it.
But there are important lessons from the history
of that emergent evil.
And here is one that I regard as
essential.
In the immediate aftermath of World War II,
a small group of philosophers who had escaped
Hitler's murderous regime returned to Germany and performed
(32:57):
a kind of moral autopsy on the Third
Reich.
The most famous of the so-called Frankfurt
School of Philosophers was a man named Jürgen
Habermas.
Best known, I would say.
But it was...
Do you know who that guy was?
Jürgen Habermas?
What's his name?
No.
I know about the Frankfurt School, but I
don't know specific guys.
(33:18):
Okay.
Famous of the so-called Frankfurt School of
Philosophers was a man named Jürgen Habermas.
Best known, I would say.
But it was Habermas's mentor, Theodor Adorno.
Do we know him?
Yeah.
Yes.
He wrote a book called The Authoritarian Personality.
Oh, okay.
(33:38):
Very famous guy.
Oh, thank you.
Who wrote that the first step in that
nation's descent into hell was, and I quote,
the conversion of all questions of truth into
questions of power.
Oh, okay.
Conversion of all questions of truth into questions
(34:01):
of power.
So let's see.
How is he going to spin this to
Trump?
How is he going to spin this?
He described how the Nazis, and I quote
again, attacked the very heart of the distinction
between true and false, end quote.
Ah, we're going to do some lies.
The Trump administration is insisting on trying to
(34:24):
create their own preferred version of reality.
They say Ukraine attacked Russia instead of the
other way around.
Never said that.
I don't think they ever said that.
They said they provoked.
This is a creation talk.
See, what he's going to do.
Is lie.
He's the liar.
Yes.
But that's what you do.
You take the examples, you create a methodology
(34:47):
that you show that the other side's bad,
and then you use those techniques against the
audience.
This is really good.
He's good at it.
On trying to create their own preferred version
of reality.
They say Ukraine attacked Russia instead of the
other way around.
And expect us to believe it.
(35:07):
At home, they attack heroes who have defended
our nation in war and against cyber attacks
as traitors.
Well, he's talking about the veterans.
Remember, he said they're losers because they, you
know, John McCain.
Oh, they never lie.
Yeah, losers.
Losers, suckers, and losers.
Suckers and losers.
Yes, suckers and losers.
(35:28):
Yes.
They say the climate crisis is a hoax.
Well, yeah.
Okay.
I'll give you that one.
Invented by the Chinese to destroy American manufacturing.
Oh, a little laughter there.
Invented by the Chinese.
No, invented by you.
That's why he's laughing.
They say it's the Chinese.
(35:48):
It was me.
Yeah, it was the Chinese.
They don't know anything.
I'm the one who did it.
I'm the one who did that.
They say coal is clean.
No.
What did he say?
What was that one?
They say coal is clean.
No, they're talking about clean coal.
Yeah, clean coal.
Which is marketing.
Agreed.
But it is much cleaner than it used
to be.
Well, coal is coal.
(36:10):
The problem is coal is coal.
It's not, it doesn't change.
It doesn't, you know, lignite, which is the
good coal, which is pretty clean, doesn't change
over the eons.
It's the same damn stuff.
Except that the methodology, the floating bed burners
and all the rest of it that create
coal power, coal power energy has improved over
(36:32):
the years with scrubbers on the one end
and and the floating bed on the other.
And you get a pretty good burn job
without it being a mess.
So that's what they're referring to when they
say clean coal.
But he takes the president.
He's a liar.
Well, he takes the president's words literally by
saying, you know, because he said clean, beautiful
coal.
(36:53):
So but yeah, OK, I guess.
They say coal is clean.
They say wind turbines cause cancer.
They say sea level rise.
That's never happened either.
I don't think anyone said it.
Who said the wind turbines cause cancer?
The president may have alluded to it at
some point.
No, he made some joke about it.
Why about Martha, I can't watch the TV.
(37:13):
But people have definitely claimed to become sick
from the sound of wind turbines.
And there have been higher instances of cancer
near wind farms.
But, you know, we still don't know what
is causing all of this cancer everywhere.
We have no idea what could it be.
So anyway, they say wind turbines cause cancer.
(37:35):
They say sea level rise is creates more
beachfront property.
Well, yeah, nobody says this.
No, he did.
The joke was if if the sea level
rises, then I'll just it's what I always
say.
If we're really going to have sea level
rise, I'll have beachfront property in Fredericksburg.
That's the I have it right here for
sure.
Yes, it's a joke.
(37:55):
But OK, I guess he takes it seriously.
Their allies in the oligarchic backlash to climate
action argued that those who want to stop
using the sky as an open sewer, for
God's sake, the sky is an open sewer.
Now there's a lie need to be more
realistic and acquiesce to the huge increases in
(38:15):
the burning of more and more fossil fuels,
which is what they're pushing, even though that
is the principal cause of the climate crisis.
Oh, yeah, there you go.
You know, I actually.
So the oil and gas guys are busy.
They are very busy because all this nuclear
talk, all this talk about, you know, small.
(38:37):
I mean, even at the wedding last night,
by the way, who gets married on a
Wednesday night?
I'm sorry, what?
Who gets married on a Wednesday night?
Wednesday nights.
That's what Horowitz is asking everybody.
Yes.
Well, he's he's he's just a sheriff's lieutenant.
He doesn't have a lot of money.
So I think that's it.
Oh, Wednesday discount night for marriage discount night.
(38:59):
They ask for money for their honeymoon, honeymoon
instead of gifts, which I'm cool with.
Did they?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's cool.
I get it.
Well, as a police department, you know, they
make money, but they couldn't.
He doesn't make a lot of money.
And for getting shot at.
No, he doesn't make a lot of money
for getting shot or dealing with the public.
He runs he runs the SWAT team and
(39:20):
everything.
He's a cool dude.
He's a he's a good guy to have
on speed dial.
Let me tell you that.
He's the guy you want as a friend.
Anyway, so all this talk.
Why does he have a SWAT team there
for?
It's Fredericksburg, man.
We got MS-13.
We got Trinidad and Tobago here.
One guy.
(39:40):
According to Laura Logan.
He's like a Lyft Uber driver, does both.
No, they just live here.
You see, they don't cause trouble here.
They just live here.
This is.
We got this all last night from Joe
in the car.
It's Trinidad and Tobago everywhere.
They're here.
They're right here in Fredericksburg.
They just live here.
Oh, OK.
Well, I feel good about that then.
(40:02):
Anyway, all this talk about data centers going
on nuclear.
You know, the Three Mile Island being part
of it being fired up again.
Nuclear, nuclear, nuclear.
Bill Gates, everybody nuclear.
We can't have this.
Let's call CBS.
Hello, CBS.
We'd like to do a buy.
Yeah, we'll do triple the rate.
So we do 360s.
(40:22):
And could you make it into a package?
Why sure.
Just 15 miles away from St. Louis's Gateway
Arch, nuclear waste was stored for decades.
It was all top secret.
Linda Maurice lived near Coldwater Creek for 18
years.
The waterway ran right by the storage site.
There was a deposit site where the processes
(40:43):
and waste of the Manhattan Project had been.
The Manhattan Project?
Was that a nuclear project?
Are you kidding me?
Well, I mean, the nuclear bomb.
But but they they tested it with waste
on the ground.
I have no idea what she's talking about.
(41:05):
And it wasn't that wasn't that in the
desert somewhere?
It was out and it was in New
Mexico.
Yeah.
Where the processes and waste of the Manhattan
Project had been stored, that is to say,
dumped in the open or put in barrels
that rusted.
Eventually, Linda's mother, father and brother would all
(41:28):
die of lymphoma.
I think there are people to this day
who don't know the story.
It wasn't until 1989, 43 years after the
waste was first dumped, that the Environmental Protection
Agency classified the area as hazardous.
They said it was dangerously contaminated and ordered
a government cleanup.
(41:49):
But by that time, more than 60,000
people lived within just one mile of the
creek, including Kristen Camuso.
I had to have a total hysterectomy.
I've been diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
They found a new tumor on my remaining
adrenal gland.
And this is horrible fear mongering, the way
I see it.
Now, where was this?
(42:10):
Where was this?
Pennsylvania.
Why would they move it from all the
way from New Mexico to Pennsylvania?
When they have New Mexico and Arizona and
Nevada is like Nevada, Nevada.
Yeah.
Tell me.
Nevada.
They're loaded with deserts that could be used.
Holes can be dug.
Stuff can be tossed in there with nobody
(42:32):
nearby.
It makes no sense to me.
Well, the tell here is the Manhattan Project.
I mean, do you get nuclear waste before
the fusion, before the atoms have clashed and
the heat is generated?
Well, they were doing, they had to do
some extraction, I suppose, in the process.
(42:53):
It's possible.
Camuso is a policy director for the Missouri
Coalition for the Environment.
She's been pushing for the remaining waste to
be removed for more than 12 years.
I was quite literally laying in my hospital
bed and I promised myself.
By the way, stop the clip.
Another good reason to pay attention to the
(43:13):
tips of the day on the No Agenda
show.
And you would buy a Geiger counter.
Yes.
And you would know what's going on.
Well, now you've made me stop for a
second because I was going to talk about
this later, but something very concerning has taken
place.
Let me see if I can find it
(43:33):
here.
With the Geiger counter?
No, with the tip of the day.
Oh, there is another scandal.
Yes.
The tip of the day has become the
most scandalous part of the show.
Yes.
Yeah, now I think it has to do
with the live disc product.
(43:55):
No, no, no.
This is the scandal.
This is the Bill O'Reilly show.
Now, we have a brand new thing for
concierge and premium members called tip of the
day.
What?
Starts tomorrow.
What?
And every day on the website, I'm going
to put a tip that will make your
life better.
That's a lot of tips.
Some of them will be frothy, entertainment, there's
(44:18):
a good book to read, there's a good
movie to see, whatever it may be, that
kind of thing.
But some will be important.
Okay, just for concierge and premium members.
We should be doing it for premium members.
Yeah, concierge and the bundle, the No Agenda
bundle.
Concierge members of the No Agenda show get
their tip of the day, but only if
(44:39):
you're a concierge member.
Man, that guy just ripped us off.
Ripped us off.
He ripped off Dana Brunetti.
Dana Brunetti should be outraged.
He should send him a cease and desist.
I think so.
Last year, Camuso and the Washington University Environmental
Law Clinic analyzed the Corps' cleanup plans.
Not only are they concerned about the slow
(45:01):
pace, they say the Corps is leaving behind
nearly three times more radioactive isotopes than the
Department of Energy said is safe.
What they're finding is mostly thorium-230, and
that is an alpha emitter.
What does that mean?
So basically, it becomes dangerous when you inhale
or ingest it, and once it's in your
body, it will continue to fire for the
(45:21):
rest of your life.
The Corps told us their cleanup plans are
safe, but the Environmental Protection Agency wasn't convinced.
CBS News found that in 2020, EPA scientists
asked the Corps for specific data on the
contamination, but the Corps did not respond to
those requests.
Everybody has been touched by this legacy, and
I feel it's a responsibility of mine.
(45:44):
Now that I know this information, I can't
just sit on it.
The Corps has promised an update on the
contamination in four months when it's set to
publish its latest five-year review.
But while the people here wait for the
threat to be dealt with, the creek continues
to flow.
Okay, so I can't see that any other
way than that's oil and gas, you know,
(46:06):
like, let's get something going.
Hey, remember that thing we had in Pennsylvania
in the 70s?
Let's bring that back.
You got anybody who's dying of cancer?
Yeah, let me see.
Yeah, we got this.
That's such an interesting theory of yours, because
it doesn't really benefit anybody to do these
stories except oil and gas.
Now, we had the same thing around here.
(46:26):
We have a nuclear waste dump on Treasure
Island in San Francisco.
Yes, yes, I remember.
Over in one corner, I know exactly where
it is, and they supposedly buried it, or
I don't know what they did, but now
they put buildings over there because they've privatized
the island.
(46:47):
And wasn't Google or something going to buy
that at some point?
Do I remember something like that?
It's a bunch of these treasure ball things
going around.
It's all military.
You know, the military, or the vaunted military,
they get a hold of something and they
don't care.
So lots of fear mongering.
I only have the opening, which will tell
(47:08):
you enough.
60 minutes.
Now, of course, we need to blame everything
on Trump.
Bird flu has been circling the globe for
decades, so the discovery in 2024 that the
deadly pathogen had jumped from a wild bird
to a cow came as a shock to
virus watchers.
It came as a shock to virus watchers.
Hey, how many virus watchers do you know?
(47:30):
Be quiet.
I'm watching a virus.
Now, in just over a year, the virus
has ripped through America's dairy herds and poultry
flocks.
It has jumped to other mammals, including humans.
It has jumped to other mammals, including humans,
implying it could jump from human to human.
This is an obvious pharma segment here.
(47:53):
70 Americans have caught the virus.
One has died.
Long feared as a possible pandemic, doctors and
veterinarians fighting the virus told us Biden's government
was slow to act, while the Trump administration
has now laid off more than 100 key
scientists.
Oh, no.
As the virus keeps spreading.
(48:14):
Yeah, so when you die, you know who
to blame.
When we create this, you'll know who to
blame.
The question is, can we actually ramp up
another pandemic now that the World Health Organization
is falling apart?
He described the large sudden drop in funding
in US foreign aid as severe.
The United Nations Health Agency has no choice
(48:36):
but to slash jobs and operations.
The refusal of the US to pay its
assessed contributions for 2024 and 2025, combined with
reductions in official development assistance by some other
countries, means we are facing a salary gap
for the 2026-27.
Salary gap.
This is about, for some reason, the beginning
got cut off, but it's about the World
Health Organization saying they have to lay off
(48:58):
people.
But listen to the- I thought Bill
Gates was financing this and the Chinese.
Why do we have anything to do with
it?
When you hear the numbers, you'll understand why.
Some other countries means we are facing a
salary gap for the 2026-27 biennium of
between $560 and $650 million.
In addition to stopping- That's half a
billion dollars salaries alone.
(49:20):
Contributions the Trump administration plans to fully withdraw
from the organization next January.
In remarks to member states, the WHO chief
Dr. Tedros said they would be saying goodbye
to a significant number of colleagues.
He said the funding gap represented about 25
% of staff costs, but- It's only
25%.
Their salary is $2 billion a year?
(49:43):
For what?
Thank you.
They've got, you know, the video shows buildings
everywhere.
What are they doing?
They actually explain what they do.
Stress that did not mean a 25%
cut in the number of positions.
The leadership team in the organization's headquarters will
be reduced, and there's a possibility some WHO
offices in wealthier countries will be closed.
The agency, which coordinates the world's response to
(50:06):
health emergency, prevents disease and expands access-
It prevents disease.
Don't you hear that?
Oh, they do that?
Yeah, with the $2 billion, apparently.
Your countries will be closed.
The agency, which coordinates the world's response to
health emergency, prevents disease and expands access to
healthcare, needs to reduce its activities and re
(50:26):
-center on its core functions.
The news comes shortly after WHO member countries
finalized an historic agreement to help prevent the
next pandemic.
And they were going to help prevent the
next pandemic with an agreement.
They have paper.
So how many great pandemics have we had
over history?
Two.
Well, over recent history, we had two.
We had the Spanish flu in 1917.
(50:49):
Then we had 100 years later.
Yeah, we had COVID.
So it's about every 100 years.
Yeah, so two that I can recall.
And we had the Black Plague, of course.
That's way before.
That was, I think, the 1400s.
Yes, that was Elizabeth the Great.
But there was a Elizabeth the Great.
She was great.
What was her name?
(51:09):
It was Elizabeth the Great.
I know I'm right.
There was no Elizabeth the Great.
Yes, it was.
Yes, her name of Russia.
Catherine the Great.
That's what I mean.
Her name was Catherine Elizabeth the Great.
Catherine Elizabeth.
Good Catholic girl.
Mary Ellen Elizabeth Catherine.
Catherine Elizabeth the Great.
(51:31):
That's why there's two of us, everybody.
Just so you know.
So they happen about every 100 years, maybe.
But they keep trying to make them happen.
This is what it looks like to me.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And here's proof.
And so we cut our foot.
We just say, hey, get lost, you guys.
The next thing you know, they're going out
of business.
Were we the sole supporter of this?
(51:51):
Were we this as the U.S. taxpayer,
the sole support for all these bogus agencies
and government operations?
Hey, Doge now has saved 151 billion dollars.
It's good news.
That's how you need to look at it.
150 billion dollars.
One billion or two.
(52:13):
Let's call it two billion.
So a little more than one percent funded
the entire WHO.
Just imagine what that 150 billion could be
funding, what kind of nonsense.
And the outflows of that funding of nonsense
probably creates a lot more issues for people,
certainly in the United States.
But there's more.
(52:33):
Because now we have to keep on hammering
away at Bobby the op.
Misinformation about measles is spreading fast.
A new poll shows parents are nuts.
It's spreading like measles.
That measles, though, it's the misinformation.
Yes.
That's spreading fast.
But I like the way they they put
it together in such a way where it
were in your brain.
It sounds like measles is spreading fast.
(52:55):
This is another one of these tricks we
keep finding.
It's good misinformation of measles is spreading fast.
It's fantastic.
If you chopped a sentence up, it just
says measles is spreading fast.
It's great.
It's perfect.
Misinformation about measles is spreading fast.
A new poll shows parents are not sure
what to believe about the measles vaccine.
(53:16):
Health Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy, Jr. has amplified some misconceptions about a
link between the vaccine and the diagnosis.
That's another tricky word.
He has amplified.
Other people were saying, but he has amplified
it with his amp.
He's got an amp.
The guy can barely talk.
Health Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy, Jr. has amplified some misconceptions about a
(53:37):
link between the vaccine and the diagnosis of
autism.
An estimated six out of 10 adults have
heard a false claim about the measles vaccine.
Uncertainty has led some parents to delay or
skip getting their child vaccinated altogether.
There have been 800 confirmed measles cases across
24 states so far this year.
They forgot to mention how many dead.
(53:59):
So the memory is a funny thing.
We, I have been mentioning often about Robert
De Niro that he pulled a documentary from
his Tribeca Film Festival.
And I thought that he had created that
he was a documentary that he had created.
And I knew that he had an autistic
(54:20):
son.
And, you know, so I've been, in fact,
spouting misinformation.
It's much worse.
One of our producers sent me the OG
clip from, I think it's the NBC Today
show where De Niro and his co-founder
of the Tribeca Film Festival, Rosenthal is her
(54:42):
name, where they came on to explain what
happened.
This, to think that this is Robert De
Niro, just keep that in your brain.
This is Robert De Niro.
Now this is, I think this is 2015,
maybe.
It's at least 10 years old.
But listen to this.
Is this pre-Trump?
Oh, this is, it may even be older
(55:02):
than that.
Well, I mean, older than pre-Trump, do
you mean?
Oh, it's way older.
It's pre-Trump for sure.
Okay, pre-Trump is all we need.
Pre-Trump is all I need to know.
There was a bit of controversy, some headlines
at the beginning of this year's festival when
it was announced that this film called Vaxxed
would be screened at the festival.
Later, the festival pulled it.
Was it because of the backlash were you
(55:24):
surprised that people reacted the way that they
did?
I was shooting a movie.
I was in the middle of a lot
of stuff.
I think the movie is something that people
should see.
There was a backlash which I haven't fully
explored, and I will.
And I didn't want it to start affecting
the festival in ways that I couldn't see.
(55:46):
But definitely there's something to that movie.
And there's another movie called Trace Amounts.
And there's a lot of information about things
that are happening with the CDC, the pharmaceutical
companies.
There's a lot of things that are not
said.
I, as a parent of a child who
has autism, I'm concerned.
And I want to know the truth.
And I'm not anti-vaccine.
(56:06):
I want safe vaccines.
Some people can't get a certain type of
shot, and they can die from it, even
penicillin.
So why should that not be with vaccine,
which it isn't?
So you went public for the first time
saying that your 18-year-old son does
have autism.
That had been a very private thing for
you.
And part of the reason you wanted this
film shown was to start that conversation.
(56:28):
Absolutely.
Do you believe you'll now have a role
in that conversation going forward?
Possibly, yes.
Because the thing is, if they shut it
down, there's no reason to.
If you're a scientist, let's see.
Let's hear.
Everybody doesn't seem to want to hear much
about it.
It's shut down.
And you guys are the ones that should
be the investigating, do the investigating.
So a couple things here.
One, the documentary called Vax.
(56:51):
That's a Del Bigtree documentary.
That was his first big breakthrough.
Del Bigtree, who, of course, produced The Doctors
and all these different shows.
And it's a great documentary.
So The Backlash.
Now, do you remember where The Backlash came
from?
No.
Neither did I.
But his co-founder of the festival, Rosenthal,
(57:12):
explains it.
I think the film was controversial because people
felt that the filmmaker had been discredited.
Even he, I'm not so sure about.
At the end of the day, even him.
One thing, there weren't sponsors or donors that
were threatening to pull out of the film
festival.
It was our filmmakers.
And we're known for having amazing documentary films.
(57:35):
You can take a look at our lineup,
whether it's what we're starting with tonight or
some other documentaries that are equally controversial that
we have at the festival.
So it was our filmmakers that were pulling
out.
It was the filmmakers themselves who said, oh,
if you air that documentary, I'm pulling out.
I don't understand that at all.
(57:55):
Well, there should be more documentation of this.
Who were these filmmakers that were pulling out?
I'm glad you asked.
It's a beautiful film, but it's another thing.
It's the result of, it's not about, it's
not questioning how people, some people got autism,
how the vaccines are dangerous, if not given
a dangerous to certain people who are more
susceptible.
And they don't, nobody seems to want to
(58:16):
address that.
Or they say they've addressed it and it's
a closed issue, but it doesn't seem to
be because there are many people who will
come out and say, no, I saw my
kid change like overnight.
I saw what happened and I should have
done something and I didn't.
So there's more to this than meets the
eye, believe me.
Is that the experience you had, Robert?
Something changed overnight?
(58:37):
My wife says that.
I don't remember, but there was, my child
is autistic and every kid is different, but
there is something there.
There's something there that people aren't addressing.
And for me to get so upset here
today on the Today Show with you guys
means there's something there.
That's all I wanted was the movie to
be seen.
People can make their own judgment, but you
(58:58):
must see it.
There are other films, other things that also
just document and show.
It's not such a simple thing.
I'm sorry, the answer to your question comes
in this final clip.
But please, don't you know, Mr. De Niro,
the science is in?
Robert, it is nearly consensus in the scientific
community that there's no link there.
(59:20):
Do you believe that's not true?
I don't.
I believe it's much more complicated than that.
It's much more complicated than that.
There is a link and they're saying there
isn't.
But there's certain things.
There's the obvious one is thimerosal, which is
a mercury-based preservative.
But there are other things there that I
don't know.
I'm not a scientist, but I know because
I've seen so much reaction about just let's
(59:44):
find out the truth.
Let's just find out the truth.
I'm not anti-vaccine, as I say, but
I'm pro-safe vaccine.
And there are some people who cannot take
a vaccine and they have to be found
out and warned that they just don't give
a kid a bunch of shots.
And then something happens.
Some parents, even in this document, they say,
(01:00:06):
I knew I shouldn't have done it.
I knew I shouldn't have done it.
I talked to the doctor and he's a
doctor.
I should listen.
I should listen.
I did it the next day.
Imagine how the parent feels.
The worry is that people who hear those
words and wonder about it will then not
have their child's vaccinated, which has led to
a higher incidence of things like mumps and
measles.
I don't know if those statistics are accurate.
(01:00:28):
I'm not the one to say, but I
would question even that.
There's a kind of a hysteria, the knee
-jerk reaction.
Let's see.
As I say, everyone should have the choice
to take vaccines.
Some places it's becoming mandatory, but it does
benefit the big drug companies, funnily enough.
Okay, sorry.
He didn't answer the question.
He said he didn't know who the filmmakers
were.
Well, I think it would be nice to
(01:00:49):
bring up the liability thing, which I think
could be.
Imagine De Niro saying that now, today.
People would lose their ever-loving minds.
Yes, well, he said it then and he
meant it then.
And then they showed him a picture and
he shut up real quick.
Something happened.
It's like, probably him and Jenny McCarthy.
(01:01:10):
I have a picture of two of them.
I have the autism update clip.
Okay, well, let's go.
National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya says
the project that will study the causes of
autism will take longer than initially indicated.
NTT correspondent Jason Blair reports.
(01:01:31):
NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya says that the study
looking into the causes of autism will take
a little longer than the projected September date
by Secretary of Health Robert F.
Kennedy, Jr. Bhattacharya says that he thinks preliminary
results will be pulled out within a year.
The NIH will be leading the project that
is expected to be formally announced within two
(01:01:53):
weeks.
We're going to announce a series of new
studies to identify precisely what the environmental toxins
are that are causing it.
This has not been done before.
Bhattacharya says that he thinks to answer the
question of why autism is rising, there needs
to be large samples of people.
He says that they'd like to, quote, get
(01:02:15):
access to the medical records of a large
portion of the American population.
And these records would be a very important
part of the study.
Dr. Bhattacharya says the reason that autism is
rising is a question that is at the
front of the minds of so many parents
across the country worried about their kids.
And yet scientific progress on this has been
(01:02:38):
slow because scientists are frankly scared to ask
the question.
Bhattacharya said that the budget for the study
has not been set yet.
And health director Robert F.
Kennedy, Jr. says that the health department will
be restoring their Freedom of Information Act or
FOIA offices.
And we're going to try to get as
close as we can to total transparency.
(01:02:58):
The HHS told NTD sister media, The Epoch
Times, that these cuts were part of streamlining
operations and improving efficiency and that the FOIA
offices within the agency did not communicate with
each other or report to the department.
The papers that we produce in this agency
do not belong to us.
They belong to the American people.
(01:03:20):
Man.
So they had the FOIA offices weren't producing
any of the documents that people asked for.
Well, no, why would you?
The whole thing is, this is the most
corrupt thing I've ever seen is the entire
Health and Human Services Division.
And the tentacles of the pharmaceutical companies.
(01:03:41):
Yeah, the whole thing's ridiculous.
Headline.
The top CDC vaccine safety officers records appear
to have gone missing.
How about that?
How about the records of the payments from
Big Pharma?
The pay stubs.
Oh, Bobby, the app was very busy.
(01:04:02):
This has also been a long time coming.
From cereal to snacks to juices and yogurt.
It's hard to shop for items that don't
contain artificial dyes.
When you've got mouths to feed.
You've got kids who are nice.
Nice.
Nat pop.
Did you catch that?
I like it.
Yeah, it's a great artificial dyes.
(01:04:22):
When you like you don't.
So listen to this report.
But when you have mouse defeats, mommy, you
don't care if there's poison in there.
You need to feed your kid because your
kid's gone.
Items that don't contain artificial dyes.
When you've got mouths to feed.
You've got kids who are potentially adversely affected.
Some of what prompted a big step Tuesday
(01:04:44):
to phase out the remaining eight synthetic dyes
from America's food supply by the end of
next year.
We're going to try to work with Congress
and the White House to make sure that
we have adequate labeling.
So mothers who go into the grocery stores
know what is good for their children and
what is not.
Health and Human Services Secretary R.F.K.,
Jr. and the FDA announcing a national standard
(01:05:07):
and timeline for the food industry to transition
from petroleum-based dyes to natural alternatives.
I didn't know that they were petroleum-based.
Yeah.
It's just oil.
You can do amazing things with crude oil.
Yeah.
Petroleum-based dyes to natural alternatives.
The FDA is starting the process to revoke
(01:05:29):
authorization for citrus red number two and orange
B in the coming months and authorizing four
new natural color additives in the coming weeks.
Do you know what the natural color additives
are?
A lot of it comes from beetles.
Well, that's not what the guy said.
Stand by.
For a lot of vegetables, a beet is
(01:05:50):
a good one.
Yeah, that's a good one.
Yeah, close, close.
In the coming weeks.
For companies that are currently using petroleum-based
red dye, try watermelon juice.
Yeah, watermelon juice.
Watermelon juice.
He has a little cup of watermelon juice,
all red and sappy.
Several dyes have been linked to behavioral issues
(01:06:11):
in children or have been shown to cause
cancer in mice, not yet in humans.
But other countries have already banned the additives.
The FDA is also partnering with the National
Institutes of Health to find out what those
dyes are really doing to children.
Yeah, nothing good.
No, a lot of the kids, there are
examples of kids that red dye number two,
(01:06:32):
I think is the one of them.
Yes.
It gets them all riled up for some
reason.
So there was a huge study published in
JAMA.
JAMA.
That's the Journal of American Medical Association.
I thought that should be in the RICO
deal.
What happened to that?
Well, I don't know.
Kennedy's promise.
Well, they published this.
And this was a study, population based study.
(01:06:55):
Now, this is Finnish citizens from the Finns,
born between January 1st, 1985 and December 31st,
1997, whose demographic, health and school information were
linked from nationwide registers.
So and they followed these kids up until
their 17th year.
(01:07:15):
And the question that they asked, the question
of this study was, is having peers with
a mental disorder in the same social network
during adolescence associated with later risk of mental
disorder?
And mental disorder, of course, is everything that
you can imagine it is, from ADHD to
eating disorders, to cutting, to all this stuff.
(01:07:39):
And so the findings, the very short conclusion,
yes, the findings say that mental disorders might,
I'll give it, I'll give that to it,
might be transmitted with adolescent peer networks.
And the only thing I can think as
I'm reading through the study is social networks.
This is this turbo charges, this contagion.
(01:08:02):
Social contagion.
Social contagion.
Yes.
Affects teenage girls more than anything.
Yes.
And so this is quite the study.
I mean, there's a lot of, you know,
this is pretty robust data.
And yes, there is.
Classmates diagnosed with a mental disorder in the
ninth grade of comprehensive school was associated with
increased risk of receiving a mental disorder diagnosis
(01:08:24):
later in life.
This would account for all the dancing.
I think it's more than dancing.
But yes.
Yes.
This is what social media is doing to
your kids.
Literally social networks.
And they weren't even, they didn't even have
social media when they were doing this.
(01:08:45):
They were, this was just kids hanging out.
Well, they should do the study again.
Oh, they'll never, they'll never let that happen.
But when they find out the truth of
that, oh, it's going to be so bad.
It's going to be bad.
Yeah, it'd be so bad for my clippage.
Oh, give us some examples of social contagion,
(01:09:08):
John.
Do you have any trans Maoism TikTok clips
to share?
Actually, I do have some trans Maoism TikTok
clips.
Okay, all right.
And I want to start with this one.
I got three clips.
And this is the one, let's start with
trans wisdom.
This is a very handsome looking girl giving
us some thoughts about where trans is really
(01:09:31):
headed.
Just so that we're all abundantly clear here,
not only are trans people sacred, they are
wildly, wildly evolved human beings.
I'm going to invite you to imagine for
a moment the amount of strength, courage, self
-knowing and profound self-development that is required
in order to walk through the world in
your authentic embodiment, knowing, knowing that most people
(01:09:52):
will deeply misunderstand you.
The average person will not walk through the
world in their authentic embodiment, knowing that even
one or two people in their circle will
misunderstand them.
From a psychological and a spiritual perspective, there
is absolutely, other than love, nothing more important
or more valuable than authenticity.
That's why we come here into human bodies.
(01:10:14):
We come here to self-actualize, to know
who we truly are and to live as
our authentic selves.
That's the whole point.
Trans people are wildly evolved.
And one day we will understand them as
wisdom keepers and we will bow at their
feet.
Wow, wow, wow.
(01:10:35):
All right, I'm going to give it to
you.
That was well worth it.
Wow, I did not expect that.
Well, it's interesting that, you know, to walk
boldly with your transness as who you are
spiritually as a person is completely okay, but
don't try that as a Christian.
Interesting.
(01:10:56):
Well, here's a good example of this kind
of wisdom that we're all going to bow
down to from a trans person.
And this is the misgendered clip.
I don't understand what is so hard about
correcting other people when they misgender others.
Like, it takes you like two seconds, but
(01:11:17):
you know what it takes for me to
have to constantly do that?
A lot of fucking unnecessary emotional labor that
I already have to take on on a
daily basis just to fucking exist and be
who I am.
But you don't have the energy to speak
up and say something on my behalf?
Oh, tell me she had to GoFundMe.
She needs to GoFundMe.
(01:11:39):
Well, let's take another level up to another
transgender person.
But wait, there's more.
There's more.
Who also would be, I guess, looking for
great spiritual wisdom from this person.
So I'm coming home from a bar.
And I was kissing this straight guy.
(01:12:02):
He wanted to take me to his house
because, you know, he really liked me.
And I told him I was on my
period.
But that's not true.
I don't get my period.
I just didn't want to tell them that
I was trans.
Oh, man.
(01:12:25):
So there's a kind of trans geniuses out
there that we have to bow down to.
They are going to bow down.
They'll be the leaders of the free world.
Their wisdom.
Yes, and they will be.
Well, probably the most email topic I received
over the past week.
I'm sure you can guess what it is.
(01:12:47):
No, I can't.
Oh.
Well, who's the next pope going to be,
Curry?
Come on, Curry, come on, Curry.
Who's the next pope?
You got to know who's the pope.
You're the one.
Well, this is, I didn't guess that.
I could have because, in fact, I was
going to bring it up.
I don't have it on my list, but
I was going to bring it up with
you.
(01:13:07):
Although we have a week or so.
Oh, no, no.
We have a couple more.
A couple of weeks, a couple of weeks.
A couple of weeks.
We got a couple.
Well, we have a week before you have
to make the prediction.
Yes.
Can't do it after the.
No, no, that would not be a prediction.
That would be lame.
No, that would not be good.
And it's a tough one for me.
But first, let's play some clips and see
if we can get some insight.
(01:13:28):
Francis is the next head of the Catholic
Church.
A few names are already being mentioned.
First, the Vatican Secretary of State, 70-year
-old Pietro Parolin.
He's an experienced diplomat and seen as a
compromise candidate between progressives and conservatives.
Another Italian, Matteo Maria Zuppi, the Archbishop of
(01:13:49):
Bologna, is also a possibility.
Like Francis, the 69-year-old cardinal is
known for his social commitment to migrants and
the poor and cares little about pomp and
protocol.
Outside Europe, there's Cardinal Sergio de Rocha from
Brazil or Luis Antonio Tagli in the Philippines.
They will enter a conclave in a few
(01:14:10):
weeks.
Men who come from Ulaanbaatar, Lesotho, East Timor.
So truly from the four corners of the
world with concerns that will not be those
of the European heavyweights.
It's not just where the next pope comes
from but also what direction that pope takes
the church.
Could the keys be given to another progressive?
(01:14:30):
Jean-Marc Avelin, the Archbishop of Marseilles, shares
the same views on immigration and church relations
with other religions as Francis.
On the other hand, the College of Cardinals
could choose a more conservative leaning pope like
Robert Serra shown on the left or German
Gerhard Müller.
There's also politics at play.
We must not underestimate the influence of the
(01:14:52):
Catholic Church's very large financial sources which can
come also from the United States, from Africa
and elsewhere and which want to refocus the
church.
They want to get even with the pope
who wanted to decentralize his church and who
wanted a church that reflected the poorest and
those who suffer.
Whoever is selected, the choice of the future
(01:15:12):
pope will send a strong signal in a
context of growing tension within the church.
So there was a couple listed there.
The list is quite long of possibilities.
Thank you all for sending me all.
And by the way, the prophecy of the
last pope, that's a good one.
Oh man, it's like if it's Peter of
(01:15:34):
Rome, then this will be the last pope
and then the end times are here.
A lot of that.
No, the guy talking about Pietro Parolin.
What, of the last pope?
Is that going to be the last guy?
Because he's the Italian that's in the running.
Well, so the prophecy of the last pope.
(01:15:57):
Where did this come from?
Where did the prophecy of the last pope
appear?
Well, it appeared in my email a million
times.
It appeared in the email.
In the email.
Yeah, the prophecy.
Let me see.
It's the Malachi prophecy.
Saint Malachi, apparently.
(01:16:17):
Made prophet.
Apparently, yes.
We're just assuming.
Made prophecy of the end times by Roman
Catholic Archbishop Malachi.
You know, there's a whole theory behind it.
And I'm sorry, I just don't buy any
of that.
Now, actually, I will reveal my prediction today.
(01:16:37):
I might as well get it in early.
I have to say I'm very conflicted.
The last time I predicted the pope, I
was only politically minded.
And, you know, I was just looking at,
okay, Jesuit makes sense.
Yes, you're doing it the way we pick
soccer games.
Yes, exactly.
So, but I'm conflicted because, well, it was
this report that, at the end of the
(01:16:58):
report that gave me some pause to think
about it.
Because you would hope, me as a believer,
that God would have his hand on this
and that he would pick a good person.
Now, I'm not a Catholic.
And I have my questions about, you know,
is the pope really the guy that talks?
Please don't email.
Is the guy that, you know, he talks
to God.
AdamMcCree.com.
AdamMcCree.com.
(01:17:18):
I'm not going to answer it.
So I'm not a Catholic.
I just don't think that there's any guy
who's going to be bigger than anybody else.
But if that's your thing, that's fine.
People believe in John Smith and Mormon church,
whatever.
It's all good.
I got my own thing going.
I'm not a member of a religion.
But I do think there's a guy in
(01:17:38):
Africa.
And it was the first thing that came
to mind.
And I saw this report from Deutsche Welle.
Although he's not mentioned, interestingly enough, I think
I can give you my prediction.
Let's listen to this.
Pope Francis was seen by many Africans as
a champion of the continent.
Francis's anti-colonial stance and fierce criticism of
(01:17:58):
imperialism won him many fans there.
Now, with his passing, many are asking if
it is time for the first African pope.
Some African contenders' names have been circulating, but
it remains unclear how much of a chance
they really have.
In the heart of the Kenyan capital of
Nairobi, hundreds of Catholics gathered to bid a
(01:18:19):
final farewell to a man who they felt
spoke out for Africa.
With his fierce criticism of imperialism, colonialism, and
global inequality, Pope Francis became a voice for
the continent.
He was the first Latin American pope.
Now many here feel that an African pope
is not a question of if, but when.
(01:18:42):
Among the African contenders for the papacy are
Cardinal Peter Turkson, who was Pope Benedict's peace
envoy to South Sudan.
He has spoken out against criminalizing homosexuality.
Another candidate is the archbishop of Kinshasa, Fridolen
Mbongo Besungu, a critic of global oil and
(01:19:02):
mining companies.
Both have the respect of Pope Francis, and
many hope that if elected, they would continue
his legacy.
But the final choice, according to millions of
Catholics, is not solely up to the cardinals.
What we believe is that the whole process
of electing a pope is not simply in
the hands of the cardinals who do it.
(01:19:24):
We believe that it is in the hands
of the Holy Spirit, that the Holy Spirit
moves and acts in the church in order
to provide us with the leader that we
need at any point in time.
The Vatican says that over the past year,
seven million Africans have converted to Catholicism, making
the continent one of the fastest growing regions
(01:19:45):
for the church.
Many in Africa believe Pope Francis was one
of the main reasons for this.
I don't think that's true.
A lot of Catholics don't like Pope Francis.
But the guy not mentioned is the guy
I'm going to predict, and it's been on
my heart, been on my mind, ever since
the first time I looked at the list.
Like, this is the guy.
(01:20:07):
I think I even mentioned on the show,
and you scoffed at me.
Because you said...
I probably would.
Yeah, that would sound like me.
Yes.
I believe it will be Cardinal Robert Sarrah,
or Sarah, S-A-R-R-A-H.
He's from Guinea, which is West Africa.
And he's almost 80, so not a big
(01:20:28):
risk.
No, that's good.
Not a big risk.
That's good.
Not a big risk.
You want that.
He's outspoken.
He's funny.
He speaks Italian, English, French, and Guinea Spanish.
So French, English, Spanish, and Italian fluently.
He is against...
(01:20:49):
He called gender ideology a radicalization that threatens
the family.
That's Robert Sarrah?
Yes, Robert Sarrah.
S-A-R-R-A-H.
Yes, Robert Sarrah.
He is going to be my prediction for
Pope.
Okay.
Well, I have the list of the next
Pope.
(01:21:10):
I talked about this on the DHM plug
show you didn't listen to.
No, I'm sorry.
I will, though, because I've got to hear
what Horowitz said so I can lash out.
This is the list that I receive, because
I'm on mailing lists that you can't believe,
the oddspr.com.
I believe it.
I believe you're on the mailing list.
The Pope mailing list, yes.
(01:21:31):
It fires up once every 40 years.
It's a great list.
This is the list in order of the
next Pope.
Odds.
Odds.
Oh, I have odds.
Okay.
The even bet is Louis Tagli, the Filipino.
Yes, I would say I understand why they're
saying he's a possibility.
Number two pick on the list, two to
(01:21:53):
one odds, is Pietro Apparolin, the Italian guy
who is the diplomat.
Yeah, he would be the last Pope.
That would be the one everyone chooses.
That I would pick if I was picking
Popes.
But you're not picking Popes.
No, I'm not.
I'm obviously not picking Popes.
I'm the Pope picker.
(01:22:16):
And Horowitz even said that he'd bet on
this guy, because about time we went back
to the Italians being the Pope, but okay.
Let's assume that's not going to happen.
It falls off rather quickly after that.
Matteo Zuppi comes in at six to one
odds, and then a couple six to one,
six to one, six to one.
Then we get to Mark Ouellette, ten to
(01:22:39):
one.
And your man, Robert Serra, is on the
list.
Oh, he's there.
He's on the list.
Not in the media reports, but he's on
the list.
He's on the list at ten to one.
Ten to one.
Place your bets.
So it's not a long shot by any
means.
It goes up to guys like Malcolm Raniff
at 25 to one.
(01:23:00):
There's a whole bunch of them.
Fifty to one for Blaro Tisi and Blaro
with an O.
Wilfred Napier is 50 to one.
Mario Placenza is 50.
There's a lot of these.
So he's ten to one.
So he's not a complete dark horse that
you picked.
And it's interesting that you picked him at
(01:23:20):
all.
Well, you know, I think that they want,
hey, let's get a Schwarze in there.
I like the idea of, I like the
basic thing because he's so old.
Yes.
We bring our token black guy and finally
bring a black guy who's going to die
any minute.
And that is the way the church would
think.
(01:23:41):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Smart money.
Because after that Polish guy, they are very
leery.
Yeah.
We don't want anyone hanging around too long.
I was around too long.
We like the conclave thing.
It's a lot of fun.
We get good food.
Yeah.
And just in case you were wondering, thank
you, Euronews.
No, it's fake news.
(01:24:03):
J.D. Vance did not kill the Pope.
In the wake of Pope Francis' death, tributes
have been flooding social media, including from U
.S. Vice President J.D. Vance, having been
one of the last people to hold an
audience with Pope Francis before his death.
J.D. Vance wrote on X, I just
learned of the passing of Pope Francis.
I was happy to see him yesterday, although
(01:24:24):
he was obviously very ill.
Due to the timing of this meeting, many
were the jokes turned to conspiracy theories that
this meeting has sparked, claiming that J.D.
Vance killed Pope Francis.
Others claiming, can you meet with Putin next?
Amplifying these jokes was none other than JF
Kennedy's grandson, Jack Schlossberg.
(01:24:46):
He writes a similar claim on X, saying,
OK, J.D. killed the Pope, as he
also posted this image on Instagram with the
caption that reads, What did J.D. do?
VP of Little Faith meets with Pope yesterday.
Today, Pope dies.
So not much debunking to do here, needed
on this one.
These are fake claims.
(01:25:07):
The Vatican reports there was no foul play.
Pope Francis had been ill, admitted to a
Rome hospital on February 14th for life-threatening
pneumonia.
Where he was, although he was able to
hang on to one final Easter as he
delighted the crowds at the Vatican with a
surprise Easter blessing on Sunday and what is
now known as his final public appearance.
(01:25:29):
I love that they spend so much time
on that.
How did they do that?
How do they get?
Who is the editor of this operation?
This is not a story.
This is a bogus story.
She had a big smart board and she
was showing, you know, swiping up these tweets
and putting big X's on it.
And oh, yeah, it's called Verify.
It's the Verify segment.
(01:25:51):
Oh, they got that from French 24.
We had that.
I used to play a couple of clips
from that myself.
The BBC has a whole show that does
it now.
It's like misinformation, debunking everything.
By the way, right on cue.
Amazing.
Once again, ladies and gentlemen, the season of
reveal.
She stayed silent for over 30 years.
(01:26:13):
Now, Hélène Perlon, daughter of French Prime Minister
François Bayrou, is speaking out.
In an interview with Perimatch magazine, she reveals
she was a victim of physical violence by
a priest at a Catholic school summer camp.
One evening while we were unpacking our sleeping
bags, he suddenly grabbed me by the hair.
He dragged me along the ground for several
(01:26:34):
meters and punched and kicked me all over
my body, especially in the stomach.
Perlon was 14 years old at the time.
She claims she said nothing to her father
to protect him from political repercussions.
This former student was in the same class
as François Bayrou's son, the victim's brother.
He encouraged her to speak out to no
(01:26:55):
avail.
I think that because children's voices weren't listened
to at the time, she wasn't able to
express herself at home.
She may have wanted to protect her father
too, but perhaps François Bayrou wasn't very present
at home due to his political duties.
And as a child, she wanted to protect
her father.
On May 14th, François Bayrou is set to
testify before a parliamentary commission investigating abuse in
(01:27:18):
the Catholic congregation that ran the summer camp.
Bayrou says he had no knowledge of the
physical and sexual assaults reported by 200 former
students of the congregation's Notre-Dame-de-Bétrame
school.
Talk about burying the lead.
200, 200.
It was burying the lead.
My gosh.
That's really with the very end.
(01:27:40):
My God.
You know, Pope Sarah, he'll take care of
all that nonsense.
He'll clean all that out.
What's he got to lose?
He's from a different continent.
He's got millions of Africans behind him.
It'll lift up all of Africa.
Yeah, another, not a death, but resignation, of
(01:28:01):
course.
We need to just discuss this.
Klaus Schwab stepping down as...
Oh, yes.
I don't have any clips on this, but
yes, this I thought was fundamental.
Well, I don't have clips, but apparently there's
a report that Schwab stepped down after the
World Economic Forum's board of trustees called for
(01:28:23):
his resignation internally because of all kinds of
corruption.
Corruption.
You take one look at that guy, you
don't think of corruption.
Financial and ethical misconduct.
So there's a letter apparently floating out there
that Schwab used the organization's funds for personal
expenses, instructed junior staff to withdraw cash for
(01:28:44):
private use, including massages, during official trips.
I need a massage.
Get one of those.
It's not like he's buying fleets of Rolls
Royces.
Also alleged that Hilde, his wife, used WEF
money for luxury hotel stays during personal trips.
(01:29:07):
Well, that's what you do.
That's what you do.
That's what you do.
I had a company credit card.
I used to take you out to expensive
lunches all the time.
Yeah, that's what you do.
Yeah.
You had a company credit card.
Yeah, that's what you do.
And which had on it, no sweat off
my balls, written right on there.
(01:29:28):
I thought that was, I don't know how
you manage that.
I don't recall that, but I'll take it
as gospel from you any day.
Yes, that's what you do.
But he's gone.
Ding dong, the witch is dead.
I think that breaks the whole organization.
Without Schwab, it's not fun to make fun,
unless they get a real good guy, you
know, bad and other like evil person to
(01:29:50):
step in.
But I haven't seen anyone who even comes
close to what Schwab was.
David Hogg.
Now, that would be awesome.
That would be awesome.
That would be fantastic.
Yeah, we can only hope for that.
You got anything else before we take a
break here?
Some pre-break stuff.
(01:30:10):
Pre-break stuff.
It can be anything.
The floor is yours.
I yield the remainder of my time to
the distinguished gentleman from Berkeley.
Well, there's a couple of things.
This is just a short clip, but it's
worth playing.
This is the EU doing its thing and
gouging Apple and Meta just for no good
(01:30:34):
reason.
The European Commission fined Apple $570 million and
Meta nearly $230 million.
It comes after a ruling that both companies
had restricted customer choices and violated the European
Union's Digital Markets Act.
Member of European Parliament, Andreas Schwab, said European
law is becoming very costly for companies that
(01:30:54):
don't obey it.
The message is very clear.
Competition matters.
Open societies need open markets.
That's an important message for Europe, but also
for the US.
And we hope to endeavor with these decisions
to get more services for our citizens.
The Digital Markets Act, or DMA, seeks to
(01:31:14):
ensure that large gatekeeper platforms operate in a
fair way and allow room for competitors.
The European Commission found Apple imposed restrictions on
developers, which meant they could not take full
benefit of distribution channels other than Apple's App
Store.
As for Meta, the EU's fines relate to
the company's consent or pay advertising model.
EU users of Instagram and Facebook had to
(01:31:37):
choose between consent for Meta to use their
private data for advertising, or pay a monthly
subscription for an ad-free service.
Under the DMA, gatekeeper platforms must provide a
less personalized but equivalent alternative to users who
do not consent to the usage of their
personal data.
A Meta spokesperson told the Epoch Times that
(01:31:58):
the European Commission is attempting to handicap successful
American businesses while allowing Chinese and European companies
to operate under different standards.
In a statement to Reuters, Apple said it
would challenge the EU fine and called it
another example of being unfairly targeted in decisions
that are bad for the privacy and security
of users.
(01:32:18):
The fines come amid trade tensions between the
United States and the EU, notably the tariffs.
Well, can I just stay on big tech
for a second, or are they also big
tech?
No, stay on big tech.
A very concerning executive order was signed yesterday.
(01:32:41):
I don't like this one at all.
President Trump signed seven executive orders on education.
One order targets the federal government's process for
deciding what colleges and universities can access billions
of dollars in federal student loans and Pell
Grants, which go to poorer students.
It also directs the U.S. Attorney General
and Secretary of Education to investigate unlawful discrimination
(01:33:04):
by higher education institutions.
The president also signed an executive order aimed
at bringing artificial intelligence into K through 12
schools.
You don't like, you don't like the AI
part?
No, it's horrible.
Like all these guys, all the guys who
were in there, they finally got what they
(01:33:25):
wanted.
Now, of course, it's a task force, so
it's not done yet, but they have 90
days to come up with plans for the
presidential artificial intelligence challenge.
The challenge shall encourage and highlight student educator
achievements in AI, promote wide geographic adoption of
technological advancement, and foster collaboration between government,
(01:33:48):
academia, philanthropy, and industry to address national challenges
with AI solutions.
I didn't pay attention to that when it,
the whole thing, to be honest.
The whole, it's nice to know that you're
on it.
It's, it's, it's, it's, it makes part of
your, your, your one man fight, fight against
(01:34:12):
AI.
Yes, you're a Don Quixote approach to AI
windmills.
Within 120 days, this is long, I'll just,
I'm just highlighting some things.
Within 120 days of the day, this order,
the director of the NSF shall take steps
to prioritize research on the use of, research
on the use of AI in education.
Oh yes, they're going to use it in,
(01:34:32):
in, in the schools.
Utilize existing programs to create teacher training opportunities
that help educators effectively integrate AI-based tools
and modalities in classrooms.
Go homeschool.
When I was a kid, they wouldn't let
(01:34:53):
us have a calculator in the school.
Oh, and it's all going to be public
-private partnerships.
It's a bonanza.
It's, I see this really as a bailout.
Bail out of this nonsense.
It hasn't even jumped the shark yet.
(01:35:15):
It's troubling.
I don't like it.
It's troubling to me.
It's troubling.
Yes, it is.
I knew that would be the case.
Two quickies and then we can go.
All right.
Now this is Scott Besant.
He came and went and gave a lecture
to the IMF.
This is our treasurer's secretary.
The treasury secretary.
(01:35:37):
He's the guy.
He's the money guy.
He's the money guy.
I have two versions of the same, of
the same presentation.
This one's NPR and one's NTD.
And I want to play them back to
back.
But Besant lectured the IMF about how screwed
up they are.
And now I thought the NTD was so
much better than NPR.
(01:35:57):
And now you have just, just help me.
You have two Besant.
Those are dupes.
Oh, okay.
They're dupes.
All right.
Good.
Okay.
The NPR clip is the one to go
start with.
All right.
All right.
Here we go.
Treasury Secretary Scott Besant says the U.S.
wants to remain a leader in the global
economy.
Even as President Trump's tariffs cast a cloud
(01:36:18):
over worldwide trade.
NPR's Scott Horsley reports Besant spoke this morning
on the sidelines of a global economic summit.
Besant addressed a gathering of the International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank, two institutions set
up in the wake of World War II
to foster peace and global prosperity.
Besant accused the IMF and World Bank of
straying from their core missions to tackle problems
(01:36:39):
such as climate change.
He urged the World Bank to finance more
nuclear and fossil fuel projects in developing countries.
Energy abundance sparks economic abundance.
That's why the bank should encourage an all
of the above approach to energy development.
The IMF has downgraded its forecast of global
(01:37:01):
economic growth this year, largely as a result
of President Trump's trade war.
Oh, this is what the president said.
IMF stay out of politics.
Right.
So that was kind of a bland, bland,
bland and slanted.
It was bland and boring.
And it was like and they had a
little slam against Trump.
And it was the whole thing was just
(01:37:22):
as typical NPR crap.
I thought that this one was more meaningful
and it had about the same length, a
little bit longer.
It was I think it's more meaningful and
more in depth.
And I thought it hit this mark.
And this is from NTD.
China in particular is in need of a
rebalancing.
(01:37:43):
Recent data shows the Chinese economy tilting even
further away from consumption toward manufacturing.
China's economic system, with growth driven by manufacturing
exports, will continue to create even more serious
imbalances with its trading partners if the status
quo is allowed to continue.
(01:38:05):
China's current economic model is built on exporting
its way out of its economic troubles.
It's an unsustainable model that is not only
harming China, but the entire world.
Besant added, quote, treating China, the second largest
country in the world, as a developing country
is absurd.
In addition to pushing for more pressure on
China, Besant urged the IMF to reprioritize the
(01:38:28):
world economy.
The treasury secretary denounced the World Financial Organization
for devoting, quote, disproportionate time and resources to
work on climate change, gender and social issues.
Besant added, quote, mission creep has knocked these
institutions off course.
Hmm.
I didn't know the IMF was working on
(01:38:48):
gender issues.
This is out of control, this gender thing.
They're trying, but they're not getting anything.
They're not going to be able to move
this forward.
It's just not happening.
I keep reading about the Mar-a-Lago
Accords everywhere, though.
It's like, oh, we're in this.
It's time now.
It's time.
We need a new, uh, uh, what was
(01:39:12):
it called?
The original one in 47.
We need a new Bretton Woods.
Oh, Bretton Woods, yes.
Signed for the Mar-a-Lago Accords.
I keep reading it everywhere.
And I think we were the first ones
to use the term.
I don't read it anywhere.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Yeah, no, yeah, let me see.
Well, it's investing.com, whatever that is.
(01:39:34):
What the proposed Mar-a-Lago Accord could
mean for investors.
Uh, while not officially endorsed, the framework outlines
measures designed to preserve the U.S. dollar's
global dominance while intentionally weakening its value, which
is what we need.
UBS strategists note that these measures aim to
lower trade.
So the idea is to create new bonds.
(01:39:57):
Um, a hundred-year bond.
It's like the trillion-dollar coin, only upside
down.
And so everybody gets a new bond for
your old bond.
You get a hundred-year bond.
And I guess it has a lower yield,
I guess.
I don't know how any of this works.
I don't understand any of this stuff.
(01:40:20):
Did you guys talk about it at all?
Not the hundred-year bond, no.
We talked about it, but actually, the trillion
-dollar coin doesn't come up either.
Well, no, that's the stablecoin.
That's on deck.
I think that's going to be part of
the Mar-a-Lago Accord.
To finalize, though, I got a great list
of 23 subtle but alarming recession indicators.
(01:40:41):
Now, we have a recession.
We have one, I think, one recession indicator,
which is the Dvorak Law.
Maybe you'd like to reiterate it.
The one about hookers?
Yeah, that one.
That's the one.
That when in a recession, the hookers get
better looking and are cheaper.
(01:41:03):
Wasn't there another one?
Didn't we have the hairdressers?
We had the hairdresser one.
That's yours.
Yes, we had the hairdresser one, which is
women no longer get expensive hairdos, and they
start dyeing their hair at home.
But here are 23 more, which I think
is worth mentioning.
(01:41:23):
Five-dollar blackjack tables at the Aria instead
of the typical 25.
Plumbers.
Dollar blackjack tables everywhere.
Well, this is the Aria.
The Aria.
Okay, the Aria is a very special casino
in Vegas.
Plumbers showing up on time.
(01:41:45):
I like that.
I've never had an issue with plumbers showing
up on time.
Well, Berkeley is never going to be in
a recession.
Italian sandwich shops in prime locations struggling.
Companies moving overseas.
I don't think that's right.
Real estate ghost towns.
Have we seen that yet?
I don't think so.
I like number seven.
(01:42:06):
A lack of Botox.
A lack of...
Okay, keep reading.
I don't know.
These are terrible, by the way.
Empty strip clubs.
Fixer cars on Facebook.
Here's one I think is true.
A used guitar surplus.
Everyone's selling their acts like, I gotta get
(01:42:29):
rid of my guitar, man.
Home cooked lunches.
Owner sold cars.
You know when you drive in a neighborhood
and you got a...
They got the car out there and it
says...
That's what Craigslist is for.
Well...
It's been going on for years, owner.
Availability at the vet office.
(01:42:50):
No.
Short fast food lines.
Hmm, I'm not seeing that here.
I haven't seen that anywhere.
They opened up a Chick-fil-A in
Fredericksburg.
Holy moly.
Oh, did they now?
Well, it's outside the town center.
Have you had the chicken sandwich?
I'd like to get a review of it.
I really don't like Chick-fil-A.
I've had it maybe once, maybe twice.
(01:43:10):
I'm not a fan.
It's just chicken mush in a sandwich.
Is that right?
I thought it was a pretty good quality
product.
I don't know.
I've never had one, so I don't know.
Well, it's right near the church.
But unfortunately, they're not open on Sunday.
Card collections on sale.
(01:43:33):
Plenty of card collections.
You know, like baseball cards.
People trying to sell stuff.
Sell their baseball cards.
Yeah.
No.
Parking.
Plenty of parking.
Declined payments.
I've seen this a lot at the grocery
store.
Declined payments.
Stand behind somebody like they got open.
(01:43:55):
Yeah, payments declined.
Yeah, that happened.
That's it.
So none of them are any good.
Yeah, I guess not.
I don't think that was a very good
list.
I think we should come up with our
own.
Well, we have two.
It's a start.
We do have two.
But mine's no good anymore since the OnlyFans
come around.
There are no more hookers.
That's the exit strategy, by the way.
Holy moly.
(01:44:15):
Some girl just retired from OnlyFans.
67 million dollars in three years time.
She's like, nah, I'm good.
I'm done.
20 million a year?
Yeah.
Oh, I believe it.
Well, she must be really a true talker.
No, and she actually never even really took
her clothes off, apparently.
She just did poses.
(01:44:36):
Sweet talker.
She knows what she's doing.
And with that, I'd like to thank you
for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man
who put the sea in John C.
Dvorak's economic woes indicators.
Say hello to my friend on the other
end.
The one, the only Mr. John C.
Dvorak!
Yeah, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam
Currie.
In the morning, strips, sea boots, and a
raffineer.
(01:44:58):
In the morning, yeah, trolls.
Let me say it.
For a second.
1,914 listening live right now.
Yeah, we're kind of on a, we're going,
we're moving sideways with this chart, people.
Sideways.
Side to sideways movement.
That's okay.
But we love the trolls, especially the ones
(01:45:19):
who hang out in the troll room and
comment, give all kinds of interesting idea.
Whenever a Jewish name comes up, you see
people with emojis going, hmm, yes, there are
a bunch of anti-Semites there.
It's great.
So there's anti-Semites in the, in the
troll room.
Gambling?
(01:45:41):
Yeah, whenever it's a Jewish name, like, oh,
oh, okay.
I don't know what is up.
I don't know what's up either.
Yeah, you can join them.
Practice your Hitler salute.
Jump on in trollroom.io. Everybody loves hanging
out and have fun there.
I have not kicked somebody off in a
long time.
Yeah, you're overdue.
(01:46:03):
I don't get mad anymore.
I just given up on being offended.
It's like, it's not worth it.
I feel much better.
By the way, I will remind you, there's
plenty of shows still to come after this
donation segment.
We have, well, we definitely have to discuss
Hegseth.
I got some, some funny clips there.
And maybe we should do some tariff stuff
(01:46:23):
just to keep everybody up, up to speed.
And of course, the tip of the day
now so popular that Bill O'Reilly is
ripping us off.
You know, we get ripped off constantly.
I think people, you know, they think it's
some sort of a secret that this show
exists.
And they listen, they have their producer listening.
I got an idea we can steal it
from those guys and no agenda.
(01:46:44):
I think, I think the thing is, we
have a pretty big audience that knows what's
going on.
Yeah.
And, and they pay attention.
And for some reason, they listen to Bill
O'Reilly.
And hey, wait a minute, Bill, what you
doing?
But of course, that's only for what was
it?
What was the term he had?
His concierge members.
We don't have concierge members.
(01:47:05):
We don't have a bundle.
We don't have no agenda plus for anything
else.
No, we just give it to you.
Club, no agenda.
Club, no agenda.
Good one.
We feel it's important that you get this
information no matter what your, no matter what
your financial status.
You know, I feel the same way about,
by the way, I, although I don't produce
(01:47:25):
as much as I should on Substack, I
have, I've decided that it will have a
value for value approach toward it.
I mean, I always have free content.
I'm never going to close it off for
the, oh, you have to be a subscriber.
And today I, I just unsubscribed to Seymour
Hersh's Substack.
(01:47:46):
Oh, interesting.
I'm still subscribed and I still pay.
I don't pay.
I refuse to pay because I'm cheap compared
to you.
I just want to support the old man
doing some work.
That's, he's got plenty of support, but it's
beside the point.
I would support him if I could read
these, some of these columns, but he just
(01:48:06):
writes teasers and then you have to subscribe
to read the rest of it.
And I'm not a fan of this idea
of writing a teaser and then trying to
make you make you subscribe because of, oh,
there's maybe something here.
If you keep reading further.
I didn't realize that.
So I just gave up.
Yeah, no, I'm against that too.
I mean, I support him because I, you
(01:48:28):
know, I just want to support his work,
but I didn't realize that he was doing
teasers and it was all, all in the
bundle.
And for concierge, so I'm a concierge member
apparently of Seymour Hersh.
Yeah, I would, I, I'm against that.
Yeah, it's not value for value.
That's just, you're being a tease.
You're a tease is no good.
(01:48:48):
You might as well be an only fans,
never taking your clothes off.
Yeah, there's, there's a visual.
I don't need of Seymour Hersh, but thanks.
I feel much better.
Well, he's not taking his clothes off.
Hey, by the way, you want to use
one of those modern podcast apps.
If you're listening to the show for a
number of reasons.
First of all, you get the, the live
stream in the modern podcast apps.
(01:49:09):
You get, you get the bat signal when
we go live and not just for our
show.
Any, almost any show on the no agenda
stream now utilizes this system.
So you want that, you want it for
the transcripts.
You want it for the chapters, you want
it for the chapter art.
And let's talk about that for a second.
Because it's what we do every single show.
We have hundreds of artists who are listening
to the show live and they're creating fun
(01:49:31):
art that we, I had actually, I helped,
I helped somebody audit their, their feed and
their podcast yesterday.
I said, cause they, it was one of
the first people ever said, Hey, we have
a pretty big successful show.
Would you mind hopping on a zoom call
with the team and, uh, and walking us
through what you think about, you know, our
feed, how we publish, are we, are there
(01:49:51):
any best practices?
And I said, I said, no one has
ever asked me to do that.
This is unbelievable what you just said.
No one has been harping on this for
not that I'm your agent.
Well, if you want a crabby job, if
I was, if you were, I would have
made money on the deal.
But no, okay.
And I didn't.
(01:50:11):
But the point is, is that this is
ridiculous that you have not been consulted on,
which, you know, it's, it's a pet peeve
of mine, not consulting the experts.
I remember when, uh, when Halsey started, uh,
CNET and you were, you auditioned there.
Yeah.
Well, I always, I got hired there, but
I, I didn't take the deal stupidly.
(01:50:32):
He ended up with a local guy.
But anyway, the point is, is he would
always find definitive people.
Uh, he would just do a little research.
Didn't take much.
And he just asked him if they wanted
to get in.
I mean, he did the thing with the,
with his website.
He found some guys that were one of
the early website developers.
And it's always, you go to the definitive
(01:50:52):
guy, the guy who invented it.
If you can find the guy who invented
the whole process, hey, get ahold of them.
See if he'll talk to you.
This never happens except there's a few guys
who understand it.
And I'm stunned that anyone got that, got
a clue.
You will even be more stunned by who
it was.
Who was it?
Chip Ingram.
(01:51:16):
Who?
You don't know Chip Ingram.
No.
Chip Ingram is a pastor.
He is on well over a thousand radio
stations, has millions of people listening to his
podcast.
Uh, it's called Living on the Edge.
And he has his board of directors.
You know, he's, uh, the, the, the, was
(01:51:36):
it the chairman of the board?
And they had the technology people.
I was like, wow, how smart are you
guys?
And he doesn't, it's not gonna, you know,
that must be a three, $4 million a
year operation or more or more.
Yeah.
I was stunned.
I was stunned by the invitation.
Like, yeah, I'll do that.
Absolutely.
(01:51:59):
That's how pros operate, man.
Where's Bill O'Reilly?
No, no, no, no.
Instead he just steals stuff from us.
Yeah, exactly.
And we usually miss the point.
Big time.
Stealing, but it only goes to the concierge
service.
Oh, please.
So back to the artist.
We always thank the artist who brought us
(01:52:20):
the artwork for the previous episode.
In episode 1757, which we titled Word Veto,
a lot of people liked this art.
It was a combo piece.
It was by Fluff Comet.
Of course, 420 was Easter.
We always work on holidays if they fall
on show day or most of that.
I think we haven't missed one once.
(01:52:40):
It was also 420, well known under the
herb lovers of the group.
So it was a bunny munching on a
marijuana leaf.
The only thing we missed was Hitler in
there for Hitler's birthday.
Otherwise, it was a perfect piece.
I think we even mentioned that.
It was a perfect piece.
And the bunny munching on the pot plant
was amusing.
(01:53:01):
It was just cute.
It was cute.
And there were many people who tried eggs.
We really don't like bunnies and eggs.
I'll be honest about it.
We're like, ah, bunnies and eggs, bunnies and
eggs, lots of bunnies and eggs.
Yeah, it was a bit too much.
In hindsight, I thought Geraldo rolling the stone
away was kind of funny.
Although I'm always religious.
(01:53:24):
Yes, yeah.
Art is not necessarily, yeah.
You're very sensitive.
I am, I'm very sensitive to it.
Yeah, it's appreciated.
Let's see, what else was there?
There was a chocolate Easter bunny and a
chocolate Jesus.
And Jesus is melting the bunny with a
hair dryer.
(01:53:45):
I thought it was a great piece, but
it was like, I don't quite get it.
The bunny is melting.
It was wrong in so many ways.
It was just, it was a screwy piece.
Now, Scaramanga, you have this guy, you know,
he's one of the more creative guys out
there.
Oh yeah, that was Scaramanga.
He keeps doing these great AI videos of
(01:54:05):
us for the podcast awards.
Do you ever, do you even see them?
He's always tagging you.
I have not seen one of them.
Oh man, he always tags you.
He must be shadow banned somehow.
Maybe.
He's always tagging Brunetti.
Come on, Brunetti, let's make the movie.
Let's do it.
Like, Scaramanga, Brunetti's never going to make a
movie with you.
And let me just tell you straight up,
(01:54:26):
not going to do it.
He's not going to make a movie with
anyone the way he's going.
No, he won't listen to advice.
He gives out the advice.
He did give the idea for tip of
the day.
Yeah, well, and there you go.
He makes no money and he's getting ripped
off.
Yeah, there it goes.
Yes, but it was voluntarily.
(01:54:46):
Yeah, well, there you go.
He gets a credit.
Oh, he gets a credit.
For O'Reilly's tip of the day.
No, it should have said created by John
C.
Dvorak.
No, created by Danny Brunetti.
That's who should get the credit.
If he just said it once, that would
be okay.
But he won't.
So lots of AI stuff.
Surprise, surprise.
(01:55:07):
Lots of AI stuff.
Then all that's coming in is AI stuff.
AI stuff.
Tons of AI stuff.
It's not working, people.
You should be, this is really going to
teach kids in school.
Great.
We'll have a country of people who can
do chocolate bunnies and Jesus being melted with
a hairdryer.
What a future.
What a future.
(01:55:29):
So we do, of course, want to thank
Fluff Comet.
And Fluff, I think Fluff Comet's a new
artist as well.
No, wait a minute.
No, Fluff Comet's done a lot.
Fluff Comet's done a lot.
A lot of graffiti stuff.
These are all top-notch artists, whether using
AI or not, I'm always impressed and we
appreciate it.
Moreover, you can contribute.
You can be a part of it.
noagendaartgenerator.com or you can be listening live
(01:55:50):
and refreshing on the fly to see stuff
as it pops in.
And again, on those modern podcast apps, just
watch along as the art changes.
Dreb Scott does that expertly for us every
single show and it's highly appreciated.
Now on to the treasure part of our
time, talent, and treasure.
The three T's of value for value, which
(01:56:11):
is the only way it works.
We'd like to close the loop by reading
notes for people.
We thank everybody, $50 and above.
If you donate $200 for a show, you
become an associate executive producer.
This is an absolutely real credit.
You can use it anywhere.
Credits are accepted.
I got a note from one of our
producers.
He was a little mad.
He's like, Curry, I don't understand it.
(01:56:32):
I became an associate executive producer.
I'm still not on imdb.com.
That's a good one.
We don't do it for you.
You know, you gotta do your own account
and he's like, Oh, and then he emails
me back.
Ha, I'm on it.
I'm good to go.
He's really happy, but no, it's not automatic.
(01:56:53):
We don't have access.
Like their dog in the show.
Let's see what we got today, Bill.
Oh, these guys, let me write it down.
Put it in there for them.
It's like we have access to the API,
you know, it just hit a button and
you're in there.
No.
So not only do you get that credit,
which you can put yourself on imdb.com
because they recognize it as a true show
business credit.
(01:57:13):
We'll read your note.
Same goes for $300 or above.
Only then you get the coveted title of
executive producer for this episode.
And we will read your note.
We kick it off with Carrie Cates, who's
in Gainesville, Texas, $500 and says, ITM gentlemen,
you are the best.
Keep up the amazing work.
He wants a de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
(01:57:35):
And along with that, a double up karma.
We are happy to oblige.
You've got double up karma.
Well, Carrie's note was short and sweet, but
I think Mike Topser from Fairmont, West Virginia,
also $500, no jingles, no karma.
(01:57:55):
Thanks, John and Adam.
Mike in Fairmont, West Virginia.
A beautiful one.
Jared Hardegree, Hardegree, yes.
Edmond, Oklahoma, comes close with 350 and 93
cents.
No jingles, gents.
Just keep up the good fight.
From Jared in Edmond, Oklahoma.
Thank you, Jared.
And now they start to get longer.
(01:58:18):
Starting with Mark Kachansky in Aurora, Colorado, $348
.90. This donation of $348.90 should complete
my knighthood.
I'd like to be known as Sir Red
Devil, and I'd like Sapporo and sushi at
the round table.
Can I get a Trump's Jobs Karma for
(01:58:40):
my son, Ryan?
And the following jingles.
She looks like she stinks.
Now, do we have that one?
Yeah, you clipped it.
You clipped it out.
No, but it wasn't stinks.
It was...
Yeah, she looks like she stinks is exactly
what it was.
Because I can't find it now.
That's why I'm confused.
No, it was something else.
(01:59:01):
Well, you may have titled it something else,
but that's what I said.
She looks like she stinks.
Followed by due to climate change, which is
a sensible combination.
Thanks for everything you do.
Here's to four more years.
Well, can you say she looks like she
stinks?
Because I can't find it.
I have to, I will.
(01:59:21):
All right.
She looks like she stinks.
Due to climate change.
You've got karma.
I'm sorry, I don't know what happened to
it.
I must have mislabeled it.
We move on to Joe Dunn, Park City,
Utah.
A favorite donation number 333.33. ITM, Adam
(01:59:46):
and John, please deduce me.
You've been deduced.
Not too long ago, Adam mentioned that he
may never go on a ski vacation again.
Yeah, I'm not going to ski because I'm,
you know, I'm going to break something.
Here in Park City, that kind of thinking
is just weird.
Skiing is a lifelong sport that brings families
together while building skills and having fun.
(02:00:07):
If you're a skier and want to improve
your skills, check out my YouTube channel, Ski
Dad TV.
As an NCAA All-American ski racer and
now fully certified ski instructor, I'll show you
how to shred and show the joys of
being a ski dad.
I think I saw his, I think I
saw him with his little kid.
(02:00:30):
That's truly coincidental.
I think I came across that video.
Do you want to touch your hip to
the snow while carving?
No.
Then check out Ski Dad TV where you
can get the best ski teaching content on
YouTube.
Ski Dad TV.
R2D2 Virality Karma, please.
Says Joe Dunn.
All right, Joe Dunn.
(02:00:51):
Good job, brother.
You thought.
Karma.
I love it.
Good one.
Baron Steve Banstra in Nashville, Tennessee.
Three, three.
He got upgraded today.
Yes.
Nice.
ITM Gents.
This donation not only elevates me to Viscount,
(02:01:12):
but also puts me ahead of Dana Brunetti
on the NA producer list, according to IMDb
and the Mueller Report.
Steve Banstra, Baron.
Now, Viscount of BNA Boogity.
Oh, he's of BNA.
Whatever BNA is.
Yes.
Boogity, Boogity Jingle, please.
(02:01:39):
Sir Haggis is in Sarasota, Florida.
Also 333.33. So he gets an executive
producer credit.
ITM gentlemen, hope all is well.
This donation is to celebrate two birthdays.
Firstly, my brother whose birthday was on 4
-20.
Sir Ramen Noodles had his 44th jaunt around
the sun.
I want to wish him a very happy
birthday.
I love you, mate.
Secondly, and more self-importantly, I am celebrating
(02:02:00):
my 50th journey around said sun.
So please put Sir Ramen Noodles and Sir
Haggis on the birthday list.
You are there.
I would also like to give a quick
shout out to my two boys who are
my greatest accomplishment in life.
So to my Hamish and Ronan, you are
my entire world.
And I love you so much.
I couldn't be more proud as a dad
to watch you become young men.
(02:02:20):
I tried to come up with some witty
jingle combo, but I'll just settle on some
karma for everyone out there in the immortal
words of Bill Hicks.
Remember, it's just a ride.
Hugs and kisses, Sir Haggis.
All right, Sir Haggis, thank you.
You've got karma.
Now we have, we go to the associate
executive producers with our first donation in that
(02:02:42):
category from a downer named Jack DeAngelis in
Emmett, Idaho.
250 bucks.
And he says, we need a Great Depression.
This nation needs to be humbled to be
healed.
That's not true.
God will hear our prayers and heal our
(02:03:04):
land.
That's how you need to think, brother.
Duke, Sir Dr. Sharky.
There he is, Jackson, Tennessee.
Hey, I haven't heard from him forever.
He's back, 234.56. John and Adam, you
continue to be the source of sanity in
this increasingly insane world.
Karma of protection as I travel to the
grand resources.
The grand resources?
(02:03:25):
What's the grand resources?
I have no idea.
Okay, Duke.
To see the grand resources.
Oh, to see the grand resources.
What are the grand resources, I wonder?
Anyway, he signs off.
Duke, Sir Dr. Sharky.
Lord of Mars.
He's going to Mars.
You've got karma.
Ronan, Colorado.
In Colorado Springs, 222.22 is a row
(02:03:47):
of ducks.
Happy birthday to John, same age as me.
Go boomers.
Number one rule for boomers is don't fall
down.
Hello to the nice people of the Antelope
Ridge Meadery that apparently provided his libation for
(02:04:07):
the day, that provided the space for our
meetup.
Love you both.
Mean it.
And coming in with 204.24, it's Eli
the Coffee Guy who says, life imitates art
as the movie Conclave is now at the
top of the charts.
That's right.
Plus, according to the internet theorist, we only
get one more pope before the end is
(02:04:27):
nigh.
See, he's heard about it.
Brings to mind the peace dove attacked by
a crow at the coronation of Pope Francis.
I forgot about that.
Do you remember that?
The dove was flying and the crow was...
Does that make sense?
I don't remember it, but it does a
lot of symbolism going on.
(02:04:47):
Still, the world is filled with small miracles.
RFK bans chemical food dyes as Klaus Schwab's
resignation from the WEF.
What an exciting time to be alive.
And that calls for exciting coffee.
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for
20% off your order.
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
(02:05:11):
Schweddy.
Schweddy.
S-C-H-W-E-D-D-Y
in McKinney, Texas.
McKinney.
M-C-K-N-N-E-Y.
Hey, John and Adam, is it time of
the year again for the annual tax return
donation?
Yes.
Annual tax return donation.
I'll repeat that.
Yes.
This plus layaway plan should give me a
(02:05:32):
spot at the coveted round table giving back
and thanking you for what you do.
Title request.
Sure.
Sir.
Sure.
Sir.
Schweddy.
Request.
Bell Haven Scottish Ale on tap.
Of course.
Of course.
Jingles.
No sweat off my balls.
(02:05:53):
And goat karma.
It's no sweat off my balls.
You've got karma.
You nailed it.
It was identical.
It was identical.
And almost at the end here with $200,
as she always does, just like Eli the
Coffee Guy coming in with $200, she says,
jobs karma, please.
And for a competitive edge with a resume
(02:06:15):
that gets results, go to ImageMakersInc.com.
That's ImageMakersInc with a K for all of
your executive resume and job search needs.
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs
and writer of resumes.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
(02:06:35):
David Selden in Arlington, Texas.
That's Arlington.
$200.
ITM get most slaves.
I think I'm a knight, but we'll have
to look that up some other time.
Been over seven years.
Please de-douche.
You've been de-douched.
Over seven years.
I doubt if you've made it yet with
(02:06:56):
$200.
But Adam Curry has said words matter.
At Pocket Verses, we agree.
In fact, words are way more powerful than
we can understand.
God's words are the most powerful, so we've
created a small shareable cards with Bible verses
to encourage you and others.
Send a copy to Adam.
Check out pocketverses.org, a completely free service.
(02:07:18):
It's free.
Good news.
Fits in your pocket.
Carry God's word with you and pass it
on with joy.
Get yours free.
Free, it's free.
It's free.
At pocketverses.org.
Visit pocketverses.org.
Okay.
I think the message is clear.
Did someone tell them that if you say
it three times, people remember?
Is that what's going on here?
(02:07:39):
It could be.
Yeah.
And finally, our last associate executive producer is
Trevor Malkinson.
He's in Courtenay.
That's in British Columbia, Canada.
And he says, Dear John and Adam, my
wife and I have been saying for a
while that it was time to donate to
the show again.
And then I bought a beer the other
day, and my bill was $33.33. Yeah,
(02:08:03):
it got shipped.
That's one beer in Canada.
Man, that Canadian dollar is devalued.
Anyway, I knew it was time.
I'm in Canada, and Trump has many sheeple
here, very activated.
It's both hilarious and pathetic.
Anyway, thanks for everything you do on the
show.
Can you call out Chuck as a douchebag?
And for jingles, can I please get big,
(02:08:25):
beautiful dumps and the howling dog that sounds
like Pink Floyd?
Cheers, says Trevor on Vancouver Islands.
They did dumps.
They call them dumps.
Big, massive dumps.
(02:08:46):
And that concludes our executive and associate executive
producers for episode 1758 already.
Oh, man, it's really moving along.
17 years, 1700 shows.
We are just killing it, I tell you.
We will be thanking the rest of the
people who donated to the show today and
(02:09:06):
$50 or more in our second segment.
And we'd like to remind everybody, if you
go to noagendadonations.com, there are many opportunities
for you to become a knight, a dame.
Everything is on the website, including how you
become a layaway knight.
You can do this over many years, and
eventually you do get to that level.
Many people do.
Actually, we have a couple of knights coming
(02:09:27):
up in a moment.
And you can also hit us up with
a sustaining donation, which means any amount, any
frequency.
You choose.
You make it up.
noagendadonations.com.
Thank you again.
Ouch.
Thank you again for supporting the best podcast
in the universe.
Episode 1758.
Our formula is this.
We hit people in the mouth.
(02:09:55):
It's no sweat off my balls.
Uh, Hegseth.
Hegseth.
I got a couple of Hegseth clips.
Can we do a little interregnum for something
I want to do?
An interregnum?
An interregnum?
What exactly is an interregnum?
It's, you know, just a break.
(02:10:16):
Okay.
I ran into this clip while I was
going through the archives.
Uh-huh.
Our archives?
Show archives?
Yeah, our archives.
The disc of clips.
The disc.
And I just ran it because I was
looking for something else.
And I ran into this.
I didn't realize, I forgot all about this.
This was from, uh, probably 2017.
(02:10:39):
Mm-hmm.
And I don't even remember it.
But this is the kind of nuttiness that
during the first Trump administration, this is the
kind of screwball story that this was amongst
the thing where, you know, he watched Gorilla
TV and all the bogus nonsense that the
media fed us about Trump.
Yeah.
(02:10:59):
The Gorilla TV was my all-time favorite.
But this is one that I forgot.
I don't even remember, to be honest about
it.
It was so stupid.
This clip is the classic.
Mm-hmm.
Scream at the sky.
Oh, is it that time again?
Here we go.
Tonight, thousands of peoples and cities across the
country will scream helplessly at the sky one
(02:11:22):
year after the election of President Donald Trump.
The events are being planned on Facebook in
Dallas, Boston, New York, Miami, Philly, Austin, and
Washington State.
In the details section, it reads, quote, Rage,
rage against the dying of the light.
Mark the one-year anniversary of the so
-called election of the so-called president by
joining the national primal scream.
Howl at the sky.
(02:11:43):
Gnash your teeth.
Bang your drums.
And it goes on from there.
The Dallas event starts at 6 tonight on
the Continental Avenue Pedestrian Bridge.
But as the Facebook page itself warns, it
will be 48 degrees and rainy outside.
Matt Uris for CBS 11 News.
I remember this.
I remember it.
(02:12:04):
And I'm thinking we might actually have some
clips of the screaming, don't we?
There was.
I actually had the clip of the scream.
You can look it up.
I didn't put it on here because it
was pretty lame.
But just people screaming.
It just wasn't anything more than the scream
he just played.
But it's unbelievable how stupid this TDS Trump
(02:12:28):
derangement syndrome was and is.
Well, we have the science to back it
up from JAMA.
Social networks spread contagion.
Mental illness.
It makes nothing but sense to me.
Well, it's sick.
No, it's sad.
(02:12:48):
It's sad that people get so worked up.
And again, it's still COVID trauma.
None of this has gone away.
This was pre-COVID.
No, but Trump derangement syndrome now is you
can you can trigger anything with anybody.
This was pre-COVID.
I want to remind you that this screaming
at the sky was pre-COVID.
(02:13:09):
Trump watching Gorilla TV was pre-COVID.
You're right.
I'm just saying that that still is.
OK, never mind.
You get what I know.
I understand what you're saying.
COVID has created another level.
Well, you can bring anything.
It was pretty bad.
I want the screaming to come back.
How do we do that?
I we just reinitiate this.
This is a reminder.
Maybe somebody out there will get this thing
(02:13:30):
going again.
We can start screaming.
But it has to be a year anniversary.
So it would be next.
January, I guess they do it.
Well, they can do a scream in.
A scream in.
Yeah, I think we should promote that.
You know, screaming, screaming, screaming, screaming, screaming.
We should probably put that in the concierge
(02:13:51):
level.
Yes.
So the bundle, the plus bundle.
So as you astutely put in the newsletter,
Signal Gate continues completely stupid.
The whole thing is just what?
And so I went to the source to
find out, you know, what what exactly is
this about?
Can we get some details?
(02:14:13):
And NPR had the most serious reporting.
And boy, you know, NPR, they can make
a story out of nothing when they have
nothing.
They got nothing, but they made a story
out of it anyway.
It's amazing.
We're waiting to see how, if at all,
President Trump addresses the leadership at the Defense
Department.
In a moment, Democratic Senator Jack Reed calls
for a wider investigation of Defense Secretary Pete
(02:14:33):
Hexeth.
First, we report on what the White House
is doing.
One U.S. official tells NPR that the
search is underway to replace Defense Secretary.
So they've got sources.
There's a search underway.
Deep Throat in the White House says so.
Pete Hexeth publicly.
The president is standing behind him after a
tumultuous week.
Hexeth's office fired some of his aides.
(02:14:55):
Then came revelations that the secretary shared details
of impending airstrikes in Yemen again.
NPR confirmed this second chat on the messaging
app Signal, which included Hexeth's wife, his brother
and his personal lawyer.
The first chat was with top officials and
a journalist who was inadvertently included.
NPR's Quill Lawrence is here to tell us
(02:15:15):
more.
Quill, good morning.
Hey, good morning.
Good morning.
Hey, good morning.
So we'll note that you're reporting this story
with our colleague.
I like what you do with that stuff.
So now you've got me doing it.
It's unavoidable.
A journalist who was inadvertently included.
NPR's Quill Lawrence is here to tell us
more.
Quill, good morning.
Hey, good morning.
Good morning.
Hey, good morning.
So we'll note that you're reporting this story
with our colleague Tom Bowman.
(02:15:36):
What are you guys hearing?
Yeah, a U.S. official told us that
the search has begun after this second.
As sources say, an official unnamed.
Round of headlines about Hexeth.
I should add that the White House has
said our anonymous source doesn't know what they're
talking about.
But at a Rose Garden event yesterday.
What?
That was poorly phrased.
(02:15:57):
The anonymous source said they didn't know what
they were talking about.
The White House.
The White House says.
No, I know.
But it's the way it was put together.
It's like the measles, you know.
Disinformation is spreading.
Yes, I got you.
Search has begun after this second round of
headlines about Hexeth.
I should add that the White House has
said our anonymous source doesn't know what they're
(02:16:18):
talking about.
But at a Rose Garden event yesterday, the
president stood firmly by Hexeth, at least publicly.
No, he's doing a great job.
It's just fake news.
It just bring up stories.
I guess it sounds like disgruntled employees.
You know, he was put there to get
rid of a lot of bad people.
And that's what he's doing.
Disgruntled employee.
(02:16:40):
You know, so besides bringing back the scream
circle, that's a good term for it, actually.
Not to scream in, but a scream circle.
I think we should bring that back.
I like scream circle.
Disgruntled.
That's a good show title, too.
I like it.
Yeah.
Who came up with that?
Net Ned.
Besides that, disgruntled employee.
(02:17:00):
You know what disgruntled employees used to do?
They used to go postal.
They used to go postal.
What happened to those guys?
What happened to those days?
Quill, that phrase disgruntled employees.
I think Hegseth used a similar phrase in
his public remarks about this and referred to
people who were fired in his office.
What's he talking about?
(02:17:22):
Yeah, there were four senior advisors to Hegseth
who left in just the past week.
Former Defense Department spokesman John Elliott resigned last
week and then published a quite extraordinary opinion
piece calling the past month at the Pentagon
a, quote, full blown meltdown and saying that
this infighting is hurting President Trump.
He served in Trump's first administration and appears
(02:17:43):
to want to continue to serve.
Three other Pentagon advisors, Colin Carroll, Dan Caldwell
and Darren Selnick were escorted out of the
Pentagon and accused of leaking information to the
press.
They then put out as a trio, the
three of them put out a joint statement
on X saying that their dismissal was unconscionable
and that they haven't even been told what
they stand accused of leaking.
(02:18:05):
All three of them served in uniform.
They say they understand the importance of information
security.
Caldwell and Selnick, notably, are longtime associates of
Hegseth.
They've worked with him over a decade back
to when he was at Concerned Veterans for
America Policy Group.
So disgruntled employees, their version of going postal
(02:18:25):
is, we're going to write an op-ed
in the New York Times.
News says it's no good.
This is the military industrial complex trying to
worm Hegseth out.
And he's the final one.
NPR, they really have nothing.
They have nothing.
So I'm trying to figure out what all
of this adds up to.
The White House does appear to be backing
(02:18:46):
Hegseth, but he's been revealed.
NPR has confirmed the original New York Times
report that there was a second chat group
on Signal where he was sharing information about
an impending attack.
So they don't even have a chat group?
They don't have, don't have screenshots like the
first time?
It's just these disgruntled employees who said that
in the New York Times?
(02:19:06):
Is that what I'm led to believe here,
John?
I think that's what you're led to believe.
Yeah, I mean, with the first chat group,
it was against Pentagon policy to use Signal
for that.
There were a lot of security issues with
it, discussing details of an attack hours before.
What's that?
It's news that it was Pentagon policy not
to use Signal, and it was the CIA
(02:19:27):
that provided the Signal channels.
I said, this is news to me.
Yeah, I mean, with the first chat group,
it was against Pentagon policy to use Signal
for that.
There were a lot of security issues with
it, discussing details of an attack hours before
the bombs hit in Yemen.
But the people in that chat were the
vice president, the secretary of state, people who
(02:19:49):
would need to know this second group.
It appears that Hexeth was just cut and
pasting this actionable intelligence to his wife.
I can't think of any conceivable need they
would have to know this information.
I'll be bluntly honest, though.
If this was Obama or anyone else, we
would have been laughing all over.
(02:20:09):
We wouldn't have been great.
These horrible people, impeach them.
So the guy, so his wife is on
the Signal chat.
Why isn't his wife, he sleeps with the
woman?
Yeah, and his lawyer, he sleeps with his
lawyer, too.
Well, he doesn't sleep with the lawyer, necessarily,
but he might.
But this is beyond me.
(02:20:31):
Now, my understanding, I tried to figure out
what was going on here.
I thought it was like because of his
LGBTQ thing.
But then I saw some analyst on one
of the channels going on.
And she said that this is all because
Hexeth was one of the influencers telling Trump
not to bomb Iran or listen to the
(02:20:54):
Israelis at all and to get into the
negotiations instead of going to war.
Another war in the Middle East is a
bad idea.
Hexeth was largely responsible, or at least one
of the voices in that regard.
And the Pentagon supposedly is still filled with
neocons.
And they wouldn't put up with this.
I believe that.
(02:21:14):
The thing that I thought was really strange,
I don't know if you've, I'm about halfway
through it, is that one of these guys
shows up on Tucker the day later.
Right, that one of his old associates.
Caldwell.
Yeah, Caldwell.
What's up with that?
That's strange.
And he, well, he makes the claim that
(02:21:34):
it wasn't Hexeth that fired.
It was like, it was part of a,
two things happened.
One, there was a cabal because he says
he never had the lie detector test they
were threatening everybody with.
They just rousted three of Hexeth's old pals
who were also against being neocons, or they're
(02:21:56):
against the neocons.
So that may have been a political move.
And then this Elliott guy who was actually
really was fired, he's the one who got
the New York Times piece.
I mean, it seems unlikely that this would,
unless it was all schemed out, that you're
going to get a New York Times op
-ed, you know, ready to go.
I mean, come on.
Yeah, right away.
(02:22:16):
I mean, if you and I had to
write a New York Times op-ed, it'd
take us a couple days.
Yeah, it wouldn't be the next day.
I mean, I wouldn't take it.
You could crank one out if you had
it already.
If we were going to be published in
the New York Times, we would take some
time.
Yeah, you would take a day or two
to get some work done.
But it would be, this is bullcrap.
Yeah.
(02:22:36):
This is, I believe it is, I think
there's an analyst who said that it was.
Bullcrap.
That this is all about the neocons trying
to, you know, and it was part of
the Wesley Clark group, you know, Iran is
last.
I believe it.
I believe that for sure.
They wanted to bomb Iran and it's like,
oh, this guy's screwing things up.
Yeah, he's not doing a good job.
(02:22:56):
He's messing around with the Houthis.
Stop it.
Go for the, go for the big cheese.
So then he goes on Fox and Hegseth
is not good at this.
He doesn't come across confident.
And then his whole defense is, it wasn't
confidential to start with.
(02:23:17):
So it doesn't make any difference who I
sent it to.
That's his, that's his defense.
But when Brian Kilmeade introduces you in the
following manner, you've got to wonder what's really
out there in the media space.
Well, that was President Trump doubling down on
his support for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 24
hours ago, denying a New York Times report
about sharing sensitive information on another signal chat
(02:23:40):
called Team Huddle.
Here to set the record straight himself, the
former Secretary, the current Secretary of State Pete
Hegseth, former host right here on Fox and
Friends.
Wow.
How about that?
Former, and he's going to double down.
I mean, he is the Secretary of Defense,
but he says former Secretary of Defense.
(02:24:01):
How, how does he come up with that?
How does that happen?
That's a great catch.
Here to set the record straight himself, the
former Secretary, the current Secretary of State Pete
Hegseth, former host right here on Fox and
Friends.
Pete, great to see you, Mr. Secretary.
Mr. Secretary, Mr. Secretary, I'm sorry, Mr. Secretary.
I know you're never going to take my
(02:24:21):
call again.
You want to answer my text, Mr. Secretary.
So your thoughts on what's been reporting of
Team Huddle and the signal chat that the
New York Times says took place between you,
your wife and your brother and some others.
So now Hegseth is, it's just, I just
clipped a little bit of it.
He's waving his hands.
He's smirking.
He's sticking his tongue out.
(02:24:41):
This is not good, Pete.
So Brian, if you remember when this all
started, the first go around, because this is
the second go around, right?
They peddle old stuff.
They kick it back up.
I said repeatedly, no one's texting war plans.
You know why I said that?
Because I'm in the bowels of the Pentagon
every single day.
Just 10 minutes ago, I was looking at
actual war plans of things that were ongoing
or pending things to happen.
(02:25:03):
What?
What?
Is there a war pending?
What's happening?
Brian, ask him, what war plans are you
looking at?
Do you always look at war plans?
We have war plans.
Does it get, what's it going on?
Because that's the first thing I jump on.
Yeah.
And he sounds coked up or too much
coffee.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what it is?
Gigawatt.
10 minutes ago, I was looking at actual
(02:25:24):
war plans of things that were ongoing or
pending things to happen because that's on a
regular basis on classified systems.
That's my job for the war.
Did he say war pending?
Brian, if you remember when this all started
the first go around, because this is the
second go around, right?
They pedal old stuff.
They kick it back up.
I said repeatedly, no one's texting war plans.
(02:25:46):
You know why I said that?
Because I'm in the bowels of the Pentagon
every single day.
Just 10 minutes ago, I was looking at
actual war plans of things that were ongoing
or pending things to happen because that's on
a regular basis on classified systems.
That's my job for the war fighters, for
the president of the United States.
I look at war plans every single day.
What was shared over signal then and now,
(02:26:08):
however you characterize it, was informal, unclassified coordinations
for media coordination, other things.
That's what I've said from the beginning.
At the beginning, it was left wing reporters
from the Atlantic who got a hold of
it and then wanted to create a problem
for the president.
This is what it's all about.
Trying to get at President Trump and his
agenda.
I'm protecting the president.
(02:26:28):
Don't you see what I'm doing?
I'm protecting President Donald J.
Trump.
By the way, World War III is pending.
It's just pending.
It's pending.
Looking at what war plans is the first
thing I say.
Now, Hexhead was one of the reasons he
was picked because of his military service and
(02:26:50):
the fact that he is media savvy.
But to watch him go hysterical like this
is not media savvy.
No, at all.
He has to slow down and be calm
and be a little less hysterical.
He sounds like he's like an old lady.
(02:27:11):
Said the disgruntled podcasters.
That's who we are.
Says the disgruntled podcasters.
It's not a good look.
Should take him aside and say, you know,
less coffee.
It's not a good look.
Have you heard about the baby bonuses?
(02:27:34):
Yeah, well, this is an interesting situation, the
baby bonuses, because all of a sudden now
the left is saying this is terrible idea.
And the whole I hope maybe you have
the clips from the view.
I have clip.
No, no, no, no.
They condemned him.
Well, of course, the Trump administration is considering
ways to encourage more women get married and
(02:27:56):
have children, including a five thousand dollar baby
bonus.
Sounds like a good idea to me.
The money would be offered to every American
mother after she gives birth, an incentive aimed
at increasing the country's historically low birth rate.
Do you think they come in with those
big checks?
Good job, mom.
You know, with those publishing clearinghouse giant confetti,
(02:28:18):
which has declined since 2007.
That year, approximately four point three million babies
were born compared to three point six million
last year.
Since taking office, the administration has made an
effort to promote families.
So let me say very simply, I want
more babies in the United States of America.
(02:28:39):
Simone Collins is a pro natalist pushing for
easier for people to have kids.
As much as I personally love the idea
of getting five thousand dollars for another kid,
it's not going to move the needle and
it's certainly not going to be enough for
parents to decide that they can have that
next kid or their first kid.
All right.
So now that now the problem is, it's
not enough.
(02:29:00):
Trump's not doing enough.
What is the vice president Harris have?
Didn't she have three thousand?
Yes.
Thirty five hundred or something.
Yeah.
So it's not great.
It's not enough dead.
She says there are simpler and cheaper ways
the government can ease the burden on parents,
such as loosening regulations on daycare programs and
(02:29:21):
car seats.
Collins and her husband have submitted several draft
executive orders to the White House.
Loosening regulations on car seats.
Yeah.
You want the ones that kill the baby.
I don't know.
How is that better than five thousand dollars
cash money?
Sounds to me like there's a lobbying lobby
(02:29:42):
going on.
The baby car seat lobby is getting in
on the action here.
The government can ease the burden on parents,
such as loosening regulations on daycare programs and
car seats.
Collins and her husband have submitted several draft
executive orders to the White House, including one
that would give a national medal of motherhood
to women with six or more children.
(02:30:04):
We don't want to shame or walk.
Right.
If she can walk to women with six
or more children, we don't want to shame
or curse anyone into having children.
It's really a movement about making it easier
for people who really like having kids to
have the number of kids they want.
We have a lot of producers who have
(02:30:24):
eight or nine kids.
God bless them.
I know we do.
And you know what they never complain about?
You never hear them complain about money.
I said, we can make it work.
Look at Laura Ingalls.
The whole hand-me-down thing works fine,
too, that's always ignored.
Yeah.
Hand-me-down and you can start a
publishing company, can make all the kids work.
(02:30:45):
I'm sorry, that's you.
Put the kids to work eventually.
Put the kids to work, yeah.
Start a home business, have them all working
on the assembly line.
It's the American way.
You got a farm, you got kids, you
need kids to work on the farm.
I'm all for it.
I encourage it.
I will come and give you a baby
bonus.
(02:31:07):
A big medal.
We should have no agenda medals for that.
So many ideas.
Well, in general, of course, I know we
have the clips.
I'm not going to look them up.
But this was a racist idea because what
they're really saying is we want more white
babies.
If they have, it'll come back again.
(02:31:29):
They'll start saying it.
They're only talking about white babies and they
want women to be baby factories.
We're in the handmade sale.
You can bet on it.
It's coming.
Good idea.
That's what immigration was about.
The Democrat Party idea was, hey, we're not
having babies.
(02:31:50):
Open the gates.
Bring them on in.
They're cheap.
Whereas the cheapest labor is your own kids.
Five bucks a week.
And I'm serious.
I'm not being flippant.
It's great for kids to be doing stuff
around the house.
If you have a family, start a side
hustle.
Have them packing up products.
(02:32:13):
That is truly the American way.
I'm not being flippant, man.
It's true.
You're the living example of that.
Let's play this clip on food poisoning.
Oh.
That's a segway.
That's a downer.
Help us understand just how safe our food
is in the U.S. Sure.
(02:32:34):
So the U.S. food supply is...
Sure, said the British lady.
Sure.
Sure.
Sure.
So the U.S. food supply is generally
considered safe.
But foodborne illness is still very common.
There is the equivalent, essentially, of one in
six Americans getting sick from foodborne illness every
year.
That's about 48 million cases annually.
(02:32:56):
Oh, my God.
How bad is that?
There's vocal fry.
And by the way, yeah, I know she's
got vocal fry and she's got an accent.
That means everybody, with every six years, everybody's
gotten food poisoning.
Yeah, well, no.
No.
And as you mentioned, there are...
Yeah, that's the stat.
One in six per year.
So that means every six years, everybody will
(02:33:19):
have food poisoning.
I mean, it's basically statistics.
Thank you for that lesson.
There is the equivalent, essentially, of one in
six Americans getting sick from foodborne illness every
year.
That's about 48 million cases annually.
And as you mentioned, there are a fraction
of those cases that end up with people
in hospital and even about 3,000 people
(02:33:40):
who estimated to die of foodborne illness every
year.
So there are some things that have improved.
There are testing methods that have gotten better
where you're able to use genetic analysis, whole
genome sequencing to be able to trace back
outbreaks to specific sources of food.
But rates of infection from things like listeria
and salmonella and E.
coli have not improved in the ways that
(02:34:01):
folks were hoping.
Well, this is very uplifting.
And you have a second one, which makes
it even more fun.
Well, I'm just saying the food supply in
this country is no good.
Oh, I don't know about one of the
six people.
There's a new video that's flown around.
I saw it today.
It's a fat, a really fat chick, a
(02:34:21):
big fat chick.
And her thing is to show what she
eats.
She has big bones.
Oh, no, this is Tina finds these all
the time.
Like 400 pound women and then showing what
they eat.
And it's, it's, it's, it's mesmerizing.
It is mesmerizing because most of the stuff's
(02:34:41):
coming out of packages.
All of it.
Always tearing over, tearing open little pack bags
and things.
Bags and things with barcodes.
All of it.
Bags of who knows what.
And they're just gobbling it all down.
Now, that kind of holds up with another
one.
I saw an interesting video.
Some, some black guy.
(02:35:02):
Who is talking about bitching about chicken being
watered back because with injections and, and he's
on camera eating raw chicken.
And that's all he's doing.
Well, what could possibly go wrong with that?
What is wrong with these people?
But anyway, this is part two of the
clip.
And you report a story about a pretty
(02:35:22):
bad E.
coli outbreak that hit 15 states last November.
And the FDA chose not to publicize this
outbreak.
Why?
So the FDA managed through their investigation to
trace the contaminated lettuce back to one farm
and one food processor that purchased the lettuce
from that grower.
(02:35:43):
But the agency didn't disclose who either of
those companies were.
The FDA said that they were prohibited from,
by federal law from disclosing that information.
And that essentially there wasn't any contaminated left
lettuce left to buy on the market.
So consumers didn't need that information.
But there are many folks I spoke to
who, who believe the public has a right
(02:36:04):
to know who those companies were.
The Trump administration has also laid off thousands
of workers from the FDA.
Almost the entire staff responsible for communicating these
outbreaks.
Oh, there it is.
You got food poisoning.
Blame Trump.
Yes, Trump's fault.
Are things different under Trump now for the
FDA and for food safety?
(02:36:25):
Oh, yeah.
So these are really significant cuts that have
been made to staff working on all sorts
of aspects of food safety, including communicating about
outbreaks of food.
They shuttered an entire food safety testing lab
in California.
And there were also almost the entire staff
that worked on the safety of imported food.
So there are significant concerns about what that
(02:36:48):
will mean for these programs and the impact
on public safety and public health.
The Trump administration has said that these are
cuts that are essentially getting rid of administrative
staff, that this is sort of waste in
federal spending.
And that public health won't be affected and
(02:37:08):
communications about outbreaks won't be affected.
But these are changes we have not seen
the likes of in any recent history.
We have an epidemic of vocal fry.
What station was this?
What broadcast?
One of the local PBS stations.
Well, probably WAMU maybe.
She's probably somebody's wife.
(02:37:30):
Yeah, honey, you can do it.
You've got a great voice for broadcast.
You've got a great voice for broadcast.
I do have a couple of tariff things
I think we should.
Oh, there's that.
Oh, you're giving me crap for uplifting stuff.
Well, terrorism.
(02:37:50):
No, not tariffs, not terrorism.
Tariffs.
Oh, tariff.
They said tariff.
Tariffs.
Not much happier than terrorism.
But this clip, I'm glad that this report
was put together.
Let me see.
This was put this together.
(02:38:12):
This is I think this is also from
Euronews.
It was a good report because I've seen
these videos.
There was a whole slew of them for
a moment there, probably about two weeks ago
when the tariffs just started.
And it's something we've discussed over the years
many times.
Of course, our thoughts are completely wrong.
(02:38:34):
But let's discuss after we talk about the
US-China trade war as it took to
TikTok.
The ongoing trade war between the US and
China is now all over TikTok and European
fashion houses have found themselves sandwiched somewhere in
the middle.
A bag from a high-end European fashion
house such as Hermès, Louis Vuitton or Prada
can cost hundreds of thousands of euros.
(02:38:56):
But on TikTok, individuals claiming to be Chinese
manufacturers say they are the ones really making
these goods.
Speaking in English and referring to prices in
dollars, they appear to be targeting American consumers
known for buying these goods.
For the past more than 30 years, we
have been OEM factory for most of the
luxury brands around the world.
Gucci, Prada, Coach, Louis Vuitton, you name it.
(02:39:18):
Real OEM factory for those luxury brands.
We are the same group of people.
30,000 USD.
And do you know how much it costs
from us?
If you buy from us, only less than
one-tenth of its price.
On their website, Hermès lists locations where it
produces and manufactures but does not mention China.
The same goes for Louis Vuitton.
(02:39:39):
Meanwhile, the EU stipulates that for goods to
be labeled made in Europe, their last substantial
transformation must occur in the country of production.
Investigative journalist Noemi Leclerc told Euroverify that the
majority of these TikTok videos in fact display
counterfeit products.
Leclerc added that these videos are being posted
as the Chinese government moves towards encouraging counterfeit
(02:40:00):
production in a bid to retaliate against US
tariffs.
Despite this all, the luxury goods industry is
shrouded in secrecy and protects the finer details
of its supply chain.
According to experts, luxury brands such as Ralph
Lauren and Prada do manufacture in China at
stages of the production process.
(02:40:40):
So if you're a significant manufacturer, well, I'd
say putting the gold lame clasp on it
that says Prada or Gucci or whatever is
probably how they get around that.
I think you and I are both of
the opinion that this is absolutely Chinese crap.
It's not even crap.
It's good stuff.
I've been to China enough.
(02:41:00):
I bought, I probably have more Armani stuff
that I picked up in various stores.
Armoni, Armoni, but okay.
No, it says Armani.
It's got the real label on there.
It's dynamite and it's actually a good product.
You wear Crocs.
I've never seen you in anything Armani.
I have never worn Crocs in my life.
Nah, they're Adidas knockoffs.
(02:41:20):
But no, I'm telling you, Armani is not
a, I'm not talking about the, what shoes?
I don't know.
I'm saying I've never seen you in Armani.
I'd love to see you.
No, I have shirts, shirts and ties.
In a tie.
I've never seen, you would look great in
a tie.
I have a ton of, I used to
collect ties.
I still have a huge collection of ties.
Okay.
I can take some photos of my collection.
Please.
(02:41:40):
Anyway.
Armani.
You can buy Armani over there and it's
just the price is like two bucks.
It's for the shirts.
Yeah.
And with the labels.
And then there's also, you can get the
tailor-made suits over there.
But then, you know, you'd probably talk them
into putting an Armani label in there because
they probably have them.
(02:42:00):
But it's beside the, the whole thing is
a joke.
And Korea is the same way.
You can go over there and buy all
this.
One time I went to Korea and I
bought a bunch of Eddie Bauer stuff as
gifts for a bunch of people when I
came back.
And it was all Eddie.
It just looked like Eddie Bauer stuff to
me.
And they make it all over there and
they have a lot of overruns.
And then they take the overruns and sell
(02:42:22):
them on the street.
LVMH.
Now they own a lot of, what is
LVMH?
Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy.
Do you know what their net profit was
in 2024?
Some billions of billions.
13 billion.
Yeah.
Because they make, I mean, this is what
(02:42:42):
I liked about these videos because they show
you this stuff.
It's like, hey, these Nike shoes, two bucks.
Tell me it's not true.
Of course it's true.
That's how all these, this is the biggest
psyop.
This is the true magic of American marketing.
Is that we have convinced consumers that if
(02:43:02):
it has the brand on it, it's the
real deal.
It is the real deal.
That's the point.
But they're marking it up by thousands of
percents.
It's the real deal.
And it's marked up because it's the real
deal.
If somebody can bypass the real deal and
you get the best price, you get the
(02:43:23):
Chinese price.
Yeah.
That thousand dollar deal is like, uh, you
know, 50 bucks, 20 bucks, 10.
And where did COVID start?
Right there where all the Chinese come in
with all these bags under their arm into
Italy.
And they slap the label on.
They brought it.
Remember?
Yeah, of course it's true.
We remember it.
It's a part of Italy where there's all
(02:43:44):
these Chinese.
Yeah.
Yes.
And they're always coming over, going back and
forth.
What's that in your bag?
Oh, nothing.
Just a couple million dollars worth of Hermes
bags.
And so, and we discuss this always in
the context of Canal Street in New York.
I don't know if that still exists.
I think.
Yeah, it's still okay.
It's not what it used to be when
I was a kid.
Oh, here we go.
(02:44:05):
So, and then, uh, I used to go
buy, I bought phony watches.
I have a somewhat of a collection, but
there's some killers that are just, you wouldn't
know the difference.
They got the sweep secondhand.
I mean, the cheap ones don't.
But that, but that to me is a
little different.
A handsome, beautiful Swiss time piece that you
(02:44:25):
don't own.
You just pass it on to the next
generation.
So I take, so one of my favorite
things is a story.
One of the, I think it was associate
publisher of PC Magazine.
She was, uh, she knew I was always
going to, uh, picking stuff up at, uh,
on Canal Street.
She said, can you get me a Rolex?
A nice Rolex.
(02:44:46):
I said, what do you want?
Do you want some diamonds all around it?
What do you, what could, give me a,
so I get, she gave me a description.
So I went and bought her a lady's
Rolex.
Beautiful at a sweep.
Second, it was the more expensive ones that
had the sweep secondhand.
So it really looked legit.
It's got all the stampings on it.
But that, that's, that is clearly counterfeit.
Let me finish the story.
(02:45:06):
So I give her the Rolex.
It's a holy crap.
This was like a real Rolex.
And I said, yeah, very much.
So she puts it on and about a
week later, she comes up to me.
She says, here's the Rolex back.
I said, what do you, you didn't like
it?
She says, no, I was great.
So I knew it wasn't real and I
didn't feel comfortable wearing it.
(02:45:27):
It was just a, it was a response.
I did not expect.
That's the story.
Yeah.
The story is that people that you can
tell him it's the same, say, it's the
same exact product, the Louis Vuitton bag.
They would rather, you know, buy one, pay
the 1500 bucks instead of 15 bucks.
(02:45:48):
Because, you know, it's, it makes him feel
more comfortable.
The whole thing is they've been, they've been
brainwashed.
So I look at it a little differently.
And my hope is, I know Don Quixote,
I know.
My hope is that American consumers, which is
what we are.
We're all just consumers for the rest of
(02:46:09):
the, of the world.
That we look at that and go, huh,
that's kind of dumb.
What I'm doing is kind of dumb.
What you're doing, you mean by buying bags
at all?
By buying non-value for value products just
based on status.
(02:46:31):
Yeah.
That's, I mean, it's dumb.
You know, buy it.
Buy a good solid American product that's made
well and looks good.
I know we have to come up with
those products, but eventually.
We don't have those anymore.
We have the pearl boot company.
They're perfect.
Don't buy one guy.
Well, it's a start.
(02:46:52):
One guy is a start.
It's one guy.
Speaking of Rolex is an expensive watches television
tip for you.
I don't think you can watch it.
You don't have Apple TV plus though.
Do you?
No, you don't have that.
What is it that I should be watching
on the Apple TV plus?
Your Friends and Neighbors starring Jon Hamm.
Is it a good show?
(02:47:13):
Very good show.
Hedge fund manager gets fired.
I'll give you the synopsis.
Start stealing from his Friends and Neighbors.
And it's Jon Hamm.
It's very good.
He starts stealing?
Yeah.
Like a cat burglar?
Well, he just, yeah.
Like a cat burglar starts stealing, you know,
(02:47:34):
$300,000 watches.
You know, they won't miss it anyway.
That might be interesting.
Yeah.
But you have to get Apple TV plus.
I don't think that's not something you would
get.
Does it feel like a Dvorak channel?
Apple TV plus not happening.
No, I knew it.
I knew it.
(02:47:55):
I already got subscriptions to Hulu, whatever it
is, the top level of Hulu.
Disney plus.
So you don't get all these ads.
Disney plus, concierge service.
I don't get Disney plus.
Now forget Disney plus.
Hulu, Netflix and Amazon, that's all you need.
How much more entertainment feeds do you need?
(02:48:15):
You don't.
You don't.
I'm in total agreement with you.
Don't need it at all.
We need to come up with some good
American products.
That it's clunky and ugly, but it's American
and priced right.
We can't do it anymore.
I think this whole thing's a pipe dream.
Here's something right up your alley though.
Imagine this.
Maybe you should watch movies before you vote
on them.
(02:48:36):
Oscar voters will no longer be able to
skip watching some of the nominated movies.
It's unreal that they were able to before.
It is just one of the new updated
rules announced by the Academy of Motion Pictures,
Arts and Sciences.
Members will now be required to watch all
nominated films in each category in order to
be eligible to vote in the final round
of Oscar voting.
Hold on, stop the clip for a second.
This is a funny clip because I guess
(02:48:59):
some steering committee came along and looked at
all the movies that won the awards and
said to themselves eventually, did anybody actually watch
these films?
That's exactly what happened.
How do we get some movies that have
been winning awards suck?
Members will now be required to watch all
nominated films in each category in order to
(02:49:21):
be eligible to vote in the final round
of Oscar voting.
Now it's even Steven.
The Academy also updated its rules to clarify
the use of artificial intelligence in movies.
It says the technology will not disqualify a
film from being able to nab an Oscar
nomination.
Buried the lead on that one too.
Where's the outrage?
(02:49:42):
Scaramanga has a shot.
He does.
In the ultra short movie category of 30
seconds or less, only published ever on X,
Francisco Scaramanga.
I thought that, yeah, I thought it was
interesting.
Here's the story.
Yeah, you play the great China story.
(02:50:02):
The great China.
Earlier today in the Eastern District Court of
New York, Linda Sun and her husband, co
-defendant Chris Hu, appeared alongside their attorneys for
a court conference.
The polished look couple allegedly earned millions of
dollars in kickbacks for their ties to the
Chinese regime.
During the court meeting, a prosecutor revealed that
(02:50:23):
they are finalizing Chinese translations of evidence against
Sun.
Those include text messages, emails, and other communications
between Sun and Chinese officials.
These materials are expected to be made public
during the trial.
Sun served as New York Governor Kathy Hochul's
top aide in charge of Asian affairs.
In 2023, Sun was fired for misconduct without
(02:50:45):
specifying reasons.
Last September, federal law enforcement arrested her and
her husband.
They now face multiple criminal accounts.
The Sun is accused of acting as an
unregistered foreign agent of communist China, making her
case one of the most high profile cases
of its kind.
The government accuses Sun of furthering Beijing's interest
(02:51:06):
while being a state official, including disclosing internal
COVID-related meetings to Chinese diplomats and blocking
Taiwanese officials' interactions with two New York governors.
Images show Sun had attended multiple meetings hosted
by China's spy agency and other state entities.
Yeah, we had that clip.
We had that story.
(02:51:26):
It was buried.
This is from NTD.
Where's the mainstream media talking about this Kathy
Hochul and Governor Cuomo's aide?
They finally busted her.
I mean, they really threw the book at
her.
Well, you had a three by three even
on this.
Yeah, but they haven't followed up at all.
You want to play one of those, the
NBC version from September 2024?
(02:51:49):
Sure.
The former top aide to New York Governor
Kathy Hochul was arrested today on charges of
acting as a secret agent of the Chinese
government.
Chief Justice Contributor Jonathan Deans is following this.
And John, according to prosecutors, how did this
work?
Yeah, well, prosecutors say Linda Sun betrayed her
official office by instead acting on requests of
(02:52:10):
Chinese communist government officials.
Sun is charged with acting as an unregistered
foreign agent.
Her husband was also arrested today.
He's accused of laundering millions of dollars from
China into the U.S. The couple pleaded
not guilty in federal court.
According to the indictment, the scheme went on
for years.
In return, Sun and her husband were allegedly
(02:52:31):
given business opportunities in China and luxury gifts.
The FBI says the pair used that money
to buy a $4 million home on Long
Island and a $2 million condo in Hawaii.
Governor Hochul's office says Sun was fired last
year after evidence of misconduct was discovered, Lester.
Yeah, so it just covered up?
(02:52:52):
It just ended right there.
Yeah, well, Hochul is the queen, man.
She's like the Red Queen.
You can't go messing with her.
Before you know it, you get Eric Adams.
Poor guy.
All right, two-minute warning.
Do you have one more clip you want
to get in there?
I think I may have had, since you
mentioned Eric Adams, I may actually have an
(02:53:13):
Eric Adams clip.
What do we got?
Yeah, make sure you stay on the mic,
though.
Here, Rikers Island fiasco.
Two-parter.
Anne Holman today also criticized New York City
officials for blocking the mayor's executive order that
gives ICE agents access to Rikers Island jail.
NTD's Arlene Richards has the latest.
(02:53:35):
A clash between Mayor Eric Adams and New
York City officials has led to a court
order on Monday blocking federal agents from access
to Rikers Island jail.
Where borders are, Tom Holman says several terrorist
gang members are being held.
You got the city council filing a lawsuit
to shut down our memorandum of understanding, the
(02:53:57):
executive order he signed to get us in
Rikers Island.
A New York judge ordered city officials to
temporarily halt a plan allowing federal immigration agents
to operate within the Rikers Island jail complex.
Judge Mary Rosado barred the city from taking
any steps toward negotiating, signing, or implementing any
memorandum of understanding with the federal government before
(02:54:18):
an April 25th hearing in a suit challenging
the plan.
Adams said years ago, city council member Robert
Holden suggested ICE presence at Rikers Island.
It was interesting.
The first person that brought that to me
about utilizing Rikers, ICE on Rikers was Councilman
(02:54:41):
Holden.
This is before this administration took off.
Holden reached out.
As a matter of fact, I got a
few texts.
What is wrong with him?
He can't, he can't get three words out
at the same time, concurrently.
Rikers, ICE on Rikers was Councilman Holden.
(02:55:03):
This is before this administration took off.
Holden reached out.
As a matter of fact, I got a
few text messages from him that's saying, listen,
why aren't we doing this?
Holden said with Adams' permission, immigration and customs
agents were able to successfully collaborate with state
and local law enforcement, leading to the indictment
(02:55:24):
of 27 suspected members of Venezuelan gang Trende
Aragua.
This is out of control, this resistance.
Yeah.
By the Democrats.
Now they want to let Rikers, the guys
(02:55:44):
that are in there, they can just go
grab them.
But no, no, no.
Unbelievable.
This is part two.
We send a strong message to Trende Aragua,
we're going to keep doing this to every
TDA member, MS-13 members removed from the
country.
Attorney General Pam Bondi announced on Tuesday that
27 alleged members or affiliates of Trende Aragua
had been charged under the RICO statute, a
(02:56:07):
law with widespread application that was historically used
to break up a mob organization.
ICE agents previously had a presence on Rikers
Island, but they were banned from operating there
in 2014 under New York City's sanctuary laws.
In February, Adams announced he would allow agents
to return to Rikers to assist with gang
(02:56:28):
and drug related investigations.
Council members in their lawsuit accused Adams of
agreeing to plan as a way to pay
off the Trump administration in exchange for dropping
criminal charges against him.
Oh man, they're still doing that.
It's all no good.
This is not a good way to go
out.
(02:56:49):
No, well, you mean of the show?
Yeah, of the show.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, do I have anything funny?
Yeah, no, I got nothing.
I shot my wad on the funny.
I'm all done.
We should have done the...
I could do the faded tattoo.
Faded tattoo is good.
Okay.
All right.
This is your last chance.
This is it.
Sure.
This is all right.
In 2021, a company announced a new kind
(02:57:11):
of temporary tattoo, one designed to fade after
nine to 15 months.
Ephemeral Tattoo is the company, and it was
perfect for Ramey Isofano.
Someone who knew that they did not want
a permanent tattoo ever.
Isofano says tattoos are cool.
She's just not a long-term commitment kind
of girl.
So a few years ago, she thought, what's
(02:57:32):
the worst that could happen?
Little did I know that almost three years
later, my silly chicken on a skateboard tattoo
would still be on my upper arm.
Ouch.
Emily Kager got her ephemeral tattoo in 2022.
She's the proud owner of two dogs, Shaggy
Goldendoodles.
And she thought, why not get one in
(02:57:53):
space with an astronaut?
And let's even throw a few stars around
them.
I actually didn't even see the final design
until the day of, which at the time
felt fine because I wasn't expecting it to
stick around forever.
And yet Kager's space dog is also still
around.
Almost three years later, she said she recently
had to cover it in a foreign bathhouse
(02:58:13):
where exposed tattoos are not permitted.
Well, not ever.
Well, I'm glad that our tax money is
still going to NPR.
That is really good.
The faded tattoo story.
Excellent, John.
Excellent.
If you were wondering what's going to happen
next, we got tip of the day, we
got end of show mixes, we got nights,
we got Commodores, we got meetups, we got
(02:58:34):
all kinds of stuff.
I'm going to show my support by donating
to No Agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
First, we'll give you a smattering of funny
little one-liners from the people who supported
us $50 and above.
(02:58:56):
We want to thank everybody as always for
supporting the show financially so that we can
continue to do this as a public service
and never, ever have to go to a
concierge level.
John is going to read them for us.
Yeah, I am.
As a matter of fact, this is exactly
what I'm going to do.
Starting with Ian Field, $100 parts unknown.
Dakota Cole in Sherwood, Oregon, a hundred.
(02:59:18):
Ryan Rickenhagen in Townsend, Georgia, $100.
He's spreading the ITM gospel in Southern Georgia.
All right.
Good barbecue down there.
Sir Chris, not a spook in Arlington, Virginia,
(02:59:39):
which you know what that means.
He is a spook, obviously.
$88.73. Kevin McLaughlin, there he is, $808.
He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of America
and boobs.
That's followed by Cameron Linga in North Branch,
Minnesota.
And he says he's here and $77.33
(03:00:00):
from him.
And he's here for John's chimes.
The chimes, yes.
Yeah, that's a good thing to be here
for.
Brian Kaufman, Scottsdale, Arizona, $75.75. Matthew Elwhart
in Weatherford, Texas, $6.006. Andrew Foreman in
(03:00:20):
Boca Raton, Florida.
He needs some jobs karma, so we'll give
him that.
Oh, listen to what he says here.
He says he's facing a reorgan work.
It's a testimonial.
And Linda Lou Patkin has me prepared, thanks
to the show.
Huh?
$55.55 from him.
And he also says the show keeps him
(03:00:40):
sane.
Well, that's because we're not concierge level.
Carl Vogler in Dillon Beach, California, $55.10.
Sir Luke in London, UK, $55.00. He
wants collective karma for everybody.
Brett Morgan, $52.72. This is a newsletter
(03:01:02):
donation.
Newsletter donation.
That's the only one.
Sibode Pet in Metairie, Louisiana, $52.72. Here's
a dollar for each one of Dorian Gray's
50 kids, plus fees.
Baron Henry of Outpost West, and he's in
(03:01:26):
Rancho Palos Verdes, $52.42. Jeff Valks, he's
also in London, but he's in London, Ontario,
Canada, $50.50. And he wants karma, so
we have a lot of karma.
Karma's coming, yeah.
(03:01:48):
Priya in Korea, there you go, $50.50.
And it's a birthday shout-out to her
husband.
I would love to surprise him.
We are driving back home after our camping
trip.
Thank you so much.
Well, that's nice.
Happy birthday to Nate in shining armor.
(03:02:08):
Hope you enjoyed your phone inside the drawer
moments looking up at the stars.
With love, Priya in Korea.
Forrest Martin, $50.05. Andrew Benz in Imperial,
Missouri, $50.05. And now the rest are
$50 donors.
There's a few of them.
Starting with Douglas Mook in Cochranton, Pennsylvania.
(03:02:32):
Bold City Virtual Tours in Jacksonville Beach, Florida.
Alexa Delgado in Aptos.
Melissa Alvarez in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
A lot of beach lovers today.
Brett Denton in Boise.
(03:02:52):
Angus McBride in Manchester, UK.
We got some Brits today.
We do.
That's good.
Good.
Robert Vinson in Mars, Pennsylvania.
Sir Greg in Newport, North Carolina.
And last on our list, short list, I
might add, very short.
Michael Myers in Mandeville, Louisiana.
(03:03:14):
I want to thank everybody that helped us
out here on show 1758.
And again, thanks to our executive and associate
executive producers.
We appreciate what you do.
You've got your credits.
And of course, everybody who came in under
$50.
We never mentioned those for reasons of anonymity.
And we always have those sustaining donors.
(03:03:34):
Any amount, any frequency, it is so much
appreciated.
Karma.
So we want Karma and Jobs Karma.
So we'll add the Jaws.
We'll add a goat to it.
Jobs.
Jobs.
Jobs and Jobs.
Let's vote for Jobs.
Karma.
Noagendadonations.com.
Please support the show.
(03:03:54):
Noagendadonations.com.
And there we have Sir Haggis wishing his
brother Sir Ramen Noodles and belated happy birthday.
He turned 44 on 420.
Ria in Korea.
Happy birthday to her husband, Nate.
They're on their way back.
Oh, it's so nice.
And Sir Haggis himself turns 50 years old.
Happy birthday to him.
(03:04:15):
And everybody who celebrates his birthday today on
behalf of the best podcast in the universe.
And that's where Baron Steve Bansra of the
BNA comes in.
He upgraded thanks to an additional $1,000
(03:04:37):
over time that he supported to the show.
So he can now proudly call himself Viscount
Steve Bansra of BNA.
And we appreciate your contribution, Sir.
We have two Commodores.
It officially ends May 1st.
So if you want that handsome Commodore certificate,
you got to hurry up.
Go to noagendadonations.com.
Or is it noagendarings.com?
(03:04:58):
Or is it noagendacommodores.com?
Where can we find out about the Commodore
promotion, John?
Is it noagenderings.com?
I think at noagenderings you'll find it.
Okay.
We welcome the following two Commodores.
Commodore Cary Case and Commodore Mike.
Both of you now official Commodores of the
knowage of the show.
Commodores, arriving.
(03:05:19):
We got a layaway note, night note, from
Pierre Lamouche.
Hey, that was a pretty good bosun whistle
you got there.
Pierre says, Hey, John and Adam, in the
morning.
Or in my case, in the afternoon.
A bit long overdue, but my donations have
passed the threshold.
Time to make it official.
Chevalier.
Chevalier Pierre Lamouche de Francophine.
(03:05:41):
Maybe chevalier.
Chevalier.
What is a chevalier?
It's like a horseman.
I don't know, but I was thinking that
might replace the Commodore thing.
Chevalier.
Look that up while I'm reading here.
Chevalier.
I'll look it up.
Pierre Lamouche de Francophonie.
Chevalier.
Hoping for something with more culture at the
Fête du Round Table.
Normandie Brie from Costco.
(03:06:02):
Wow.
Oh, man.
Did I order these?
Normandie Brie from Costco.
Orangina.
Oh, yeah.
I don't like Orangina.
I think it was more classic than a
Costco.
And some vache qui rit, which isn't that
the laughing cow?
Yes.
Yes, that's exactly what it is.
And for the other night, cheese for other
(03:06:23):
nights, some culture.
Pardon me.
Chevalier is a knight and a member of
certain orders of knighthood of modern France.
Such as the Legion of Honor.
I like that, Chevalier.
I knew it was a knight.
I knew it had Cheval.
I knew it had something to do with
a horse.
Historical British.
Also the title of James and Charles Stewart.
(03:06:46):
Pretenders to the English throne.
So this is our one French guy.
He says, please give him our one French
guy.
This is it.
Please give Emmanuel Macron double goat karma with
hopes he might repent and break up the
father-son duo.
Because we all know.
Repenting.
Is he talking about his wife?
His wife being his father?
(03:07:06):
I don't know.
I think so.
Repenting sufficiently to free the French people from
the grip of EU tyranny.
If his demons can be cast out, he
might even let Marine Le Pen have a
fair election as next president.
Oui, oui, oui.
All the way home.
Merci for your ongoing courage.
May your exit strategy remain every loose serve.
(03:07:27):
Sorry, but we love you guys.
Selfishly want to keep you around.
Pierre Lamouche.
Yeah, I don't know what I'm doing.
I'm doing my best here.
So that means that we not only knight
him, but we also knight two other gentlemen.
So if you can grab your blade there
for a second.
Yeah, I got it right here.
Very good.
Here we go.
So step on up here.
(03:07:47):
Pierre Lamouche.
Marc Kaczorski.
And Schwede.
All three of you now become knights of
the Noah-Jenner roundtable.
Or as some would say, a chevalier.
So I hereby pronounce the KD as Sir
Chevalier Pierre Lamouche de Francophonie.
Sir Red Devil and Sir Schwede for you
at the roundtable.
By request, we have Hookers and Blow, Rent
(03:08:09):
Boys, and Chardonnay.
But also we have Sapporo and Sushi, Bellhaven,
Scottish Ale on tap, of course.
Normandy Bree from Costco, Orangina, and a little
bit of the Vashti.
Along with that, we always have the Bonget,
Suburban, Sparkling Cider, Nesquik, Ginger Gerbils, Breast Milk,
and Pablum.
And of course, the mutton and the mead.
Head over to NoahJennerRings.com.
(03:08:29):
Gentlemen, that is where you will find the
beautiful and handsome knight ring.
It's a signet ring.
So we give you two sticks of wax.
You can do anything you want with it.
But we suggest using it to seal your
important correspondence.
And as always, a certificate of authenticity.
Welcome both to the roundtable.
And thank you so much for your courage
and for supporting the best podcast in the
universe.
(03:08:56):
Yes, the Noah Jenner Meetups can be found
at NoahJennerMeetups.com.
This is where you get together with other
slaves of Gitmo Nation all around Gitmo Nation.
It is a global phenomenon.
People like to organize these all the time
and frequently.
Again, you can find the list and the
calendar at NoahJennerMeetups.com.
Connection gives you protection when you go to
these meetups.
These are the people who will help you
(03:09:17):
out.
They are truly your first responders in an
emergency.
I've been requesting people put their servers into
their meetup reports.
And the TooManyEggs.com Southwest New Hampshire Meetup
took it very seriously.
In the morning, gentlemen, this is Crypto Duke.
We're at the TooManyEggs.com Meetup number 11
here in Keene, New Hampshire at Margarita's.
(03:09:37):
I'm going to pass the phone around to
other people here.
Thank you, Josh.
Sirloin of beef.
How are you doing, guys?
It is an interesting day because we had
months ago a trainee waiter who is actually
six months ago.
And at this point, he has announced he
is leaving.
So we had his first day in this
(03:09:58):
position and his last day in this position.
You will hear from him later.
His name is Chase.
Hey, you two.
It's Joanne.
Thank you for your courage.
Hi, guys.
This is Chase.
And yeah, they came in when I was
first starting here about six months ago training.
And now today comes my last day and
I got him again.
(03:10:18):
And obviously, it was great.
You know, I try to do my best
and I just hope that everyone loves the
place.
You know, come back.
And I got my trainee Jade here with
me today as well.
So kind of a full circle moment going
from the trainee to the trainer.
But yeah, now I'm wrapping up here.
Here you go.
In the morning.
Yeah, in the morning, guys.
(03:10:39):
All right, let's review.
No, that was not what I was talking
about.
A quick hello.
I'm the server.
I love no agenda.
But anyway, thank you very much, Chase.
A couple of meetups taking place today.
The North Georgia two-year anniversary meetup, six
o'clock at Cherry Street Brewing in Alpharetta,
Georgia.
It's like a party in Sacramento in a
few hours.
It's six o'clock at Sackyard in Sacramento,
California.
(03:10:59):
On Saturday, the No Agenda Central Ohio meetup.
That kicks off at noon at Jackie O's
in Columbus.
And the Michigan Local One tariff-free meetup.
No tariffs.
Three must have some kind of concierge package.
333 Brewer Becker in Brighton, Michigan.
That's Saturday.
Also on Saturday, Flight of the No Agenda
number 62.
(03:11:19):
Leo Bravo does it again.
333 at Proud Bird in Los Angeles.
And our last meetup also on Saturday.
Escape from Chicago at four o'clock in
Reggie's in Chicago, Illinois.
I guess you go there and then you
plan your escape.
Many more happening around the world.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
This is where you can find every single
one of them.
If you can't find one near you, here's
(03:11:40):
a bright idea.
Start one yourself.
noagendameetups.com.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with
all the nights and days.
Bum, bum, bum.
You want to be where you won't be.
Triggered or hella lame.
You want to be where everybody feels the
same.
(03:12:02):
It's like a party.
It is just like a party.
Just like a party.
And let's see.
Oh, yes, it's time for the ISOs.
This is where John comes up with some
stupid AI stuff.
And I tried to beat him.
I tried to beat the machine.
This is now my...
Do you even have ISOs today?
(03:12:24):
No.
You have no ISOs?
So your whole premise is bullcrap.
Well, you just gave up.
It's like because you couldn't come up.
You didn't want to pay the 20 bucks
to 11 labs to come up with new
voices.
You just gave up.
No, I've got some in advance.
I'm having an outsider do some.
Why did you give up for today?
(03:12:46):
You have to have at least one ISO.
I have nothing because I just completely dropped
the ball.
OK, well, I only have two.
Bring up that best podcast in the universe.
That was no good.
That sucks.
I think this is the one.
I'm not AI Boomer.
That's no good.
This is better than anything, than nothing.
(03:13:06):
The first one was better.
I'm not AI Boomer.
I'm not AI Boomer.
You don't like that one?
No, I can't.
I can't understand her.
It's the kid named Wave.
Well, but then what are we going to
do?
Would you play the first one again?
Hold on a second.
I can cut it off.
I mean, I could make it short.
It's too long.
(03:13:31):
This is bad.
But I have this one.
That's a lot of tips.
I can't hear that one either.
Bring up that best podcast in the universe.
Well, we're going to have to go with
that one.
If you take the second yeah off, that
would be OK.
The second yeah is gone.
But now it is time for the moment
you've all been waiting for.
(03:13:51):
This is the original John Tip of the
Day.
So I've been getting these.
This is another.
This happens about once a month.
Do a cleaning tip.
(03:14:13):
And this is another one.
And these are all these brands, these brands
I never heard of, but they seem to
make really good quality products.
And this one in particular is Grandma's Secret
Spot Remover.
This is a laundry spray that has no
chlorine, no bleach.
I need this.
(03:14:33):
Toxin free.
A stain remover for clothes.
A fabric stain that takes out oil.
Blood, paint and pet stains.
Wow.
Goes for about 18 bucks for two bottles.
You can get it on Amazon and elsewhere,
but it's called.
But the brand is Grandma's Secret.
Now, does it also take out wine and
(03:14:54):
tomato sauce?
Because those are my two favorite spots to
make.
It should.
OK.
Kind of an anti-climax there.
Well, I don't know.
I don't know.
I haven't used it.
This is one of Mimi's tips.
You know, Bill O'Reilly, at least he
uses the stuff that he recommends.
This is like a Mimi tip.
(03:15:15):
There's a couple of things in abeyance that
I put aside because I haven't used them,
but people have recommended them.
I have to go check them out.
But Mimi, I trust her.
She knows what she's doing when it comes
to cleaning.
Why don't we just get Mimi on the
show for the tip of the day?
This is one tip from Mimi and I'll
tell her that you hate her.
(03:15:35):
No, because I need the tax information.
Don't tell her just yet.
Wait until I get the K-1.
All right, everybody.
There it is.
John C.
Dvorak, tip of the day.
tipoftheday.net and noagendafund.com No,
(03:15:56):
ow.
No concierge level needed for your tip of
the day here at the No Agenda Show.
In fact, you don't need anything to enjoy
the media deconstruction that we bring to you
twice a week now in our 18th year.
We are proud to do it as a
public service.
However, if you get any value from the
show, consider supporting us.
noagendadonations.com Yeah, and get in on the
(03:16:17):
Commodore ship before it ends.
Yes, and the Chevalier ship.
We have three end of show mixes, which
are all brand new.
Sir Michael Anthony.
We got Professor Jay Jones and Sound Guy
Steve.
It's been a while.
He's back as well.
I think you'll enjoy them.
They are definitely ones for the archives.
And coming up next on the live stream
in your modern podcast app, trollroom.io, noagenda
(03:16:40):
.stream, the Millennial Media Offensive.
This is already episode 166.
Everybody loves the MMO show.
It's a big hit over there in the
troll room.
And I am coming to you from the
heart of the Texas Hill Country where JFK
Jr is coming back.
And any minute now, we're going to be
(03:17:00):
under martial law.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
I'm from Northern Silicon Valley where we don't
see martial law coming in, but the fog
is coming in.
I'm John C.
DeVore.
We return on Sunday.
Please join us then.
And remember us again, noagendadonations.com for a
good time.
Go to noagendadonations.com.
Until then, adios, mofos, hui hui and such.
(03:17:23):
Hello, this is Klaus Schwab, the founder of
the World Economic Forum.
You may have heard of me by now.
I am retiring.
Yavol, yavol.
I give up.
The new world order is kaput.
We are losing.
(03:17:43):
But we will do everything in our power
to drag you down with us.
This is not over.
Hasta la vista, baby.
By September, we will know what has caused
the autism epidemic.
Government will know what causes autism by September,
you guys.
Mark it on your calendars.
(03:18:04):
Maybe it's some spray that we spray that
other places don't spray.
No, no, Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
Those of us who didn't get it never
regretted not taking it.
Time will tell whether he totally cucks out.
Why are there so many kids on this
planet?
Scientists do not know exactly what caused it.
What made the numbers rise?
(03:18:26):
Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
Autistic babies have increased exponentially.
It's an illusion.
Pharma got nothing to hide.
Eighty percent of autism is vaccine-induced.
Proud we were so, but most prefer deceivers.
Autism experts.
(03:18:47):
Something went wrong with vaccines.
Now, now, Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
One day he'll find it.
Partly compromises or gradually reveals the vaccine action
proof.
Bobby, the best Kennedy.
Virology is a fake science entirely pretending the
vaccines are an extension of that fictional science.
(03:19:09):
Who said that every stone could be inspected
when studies don't go so far?
They just need a couple more centuries to
do some research, you guys.
Great release, copy that, most dupes believe.
Scientists do not know exactly what caused it.
(03:19:30):
The cause of autism is anti-sensicism.
Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
Watching them roll up the sleeves.
Bitch about Coachella.
One day he'll find it, the spectrum connection.
(03:19:52):
Bobby, the best Kennedy.
What Trump did with this comment, and I
have a term for this, what Trump's doing,
it's called the blurt.
The blurt, the blurt.
This is basically what he did with, they're
eating the dog.
What I say is what I say, and
(03:20:13):
honestly, if you don't like it, I'm sorry.
They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists.
This is the legacy of Hillary Clinton.
Death, destruction, terrorism, and weakness.
In Springfield, they're eating the dogs.
I like the blurts.
Trump just did it on the fly, I
(03:20:34):
don't care what anybody thinks.
The U.S. will take over the Gaza
Strip, and we will do a job with
it too.
He has also said that the United States
is not going to pay for the rebuilding
of Gaza.
And we will pursue our manifest destiny into
the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the
stars and stripes on the planet Mars.
I got another blurt.
This is a boomer blurt.
(03:20:56):
We're telling Ukraine they're a very valuable rare
earth.
So we're looking to do a deal with
Ukraine where they're going to secure what we're
giving them with their rare earths and other
things.
He didn't say he wasn't going to invade
Greenland, but he didn't rule it out either.
We have to have Greenland.
It's not a question of do you think
we can do without it?
We can't.
(03:21:16):
Rocket Man is on a suicide mission for
himself.
They will be met with fire and fury
like the world has never seen.
I'm not going to give you a question.
You are fake news.
Let's find out if they're friends or foe,
and if they're foe.
I wish they'd make us.
They call us Pocahontas.
(03:21:37):
They're eating the dogs.
The best podcast in the universe.
Adios.
Mofo.
Dvorak.org slash N-A.
Yeah!
Ringle up that best podcast in the universe.