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February 23, 2025 • 196 mins

No Agenda Episode 1741 - "Nurse Injector"

"Nurse Injector"

Executive Producers:

Ser-Tainity of the New East India company

Piers Chidley

Shaun

Crystal Gularte

Sir Donald of the Firebottles

Commodore Jstroke

Associate Executive Producers:

Cathleen C. Melody

skye kilbury

Eli The Coffee Guy

Curtis Kuhl

Linda Lu Duchess of jobs & writer of resumes

Steven Peterson

Commodores:

Commodore Aditya Trimurty

Commodore Piers Chidley

Commodore Shaun Mattern

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Aditya Trimurty > Ser-Tainity of the New East India company

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
I'm taking credit for the blurt.
Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak.
It's Sunday, February 23rd, 2025.
This is your award-winning Kibble Nation Media
Assassination Episode 1741.
This is no agenda.
Booing!
Voila!
And broadcasting live from the heart of the
Texas air country here in FEMA Region Number
6.

(00:20):
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley where the witch
is dead, I'm John C.
Dvorak.
It's crackpot and buzzkill.
In the morning.
Uh, let me guess, you're referring to Joy
Reid.
Yes.
You know what?
It's hurting the show.

(00:42):
It hasn't done anything yet.
Joy Reid is a staple.
Hurting the show.
Joy Reid is a staple.
She's going to be a podcaster, let's face
it.
But she's a...
She's going to be a TikToker, I think.
I think she'll be a TikToker.
She's done a lot of TikTok already.
Yep, could be.
She's actually more unhinged on TikTok than she

(01:04):
is normally.
You know who's going to replace him, don't
you?
Just a team of jerk-offs.
Yeah, what's the guy's name?
Michael Steele's one of them.
Yeah, exactly.
Here, I have...
Listen, this is the team that will be
replacing Joy Reid on MSNBC.
And tell me this isn't hurting the show.
What would you have us do?

(01:25):
I would actually...
You know what?
I'd just like you to show that you
give a damn.
That you got a little emotion about the
fact that people are losing their jobs indiscriminately.
That this individual sitting at down the 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue has given absolute power to one

(01:46):
man who brings his son into the Oval
Office whose son says to him, you're not
the president.
You shouldn't be in that chair.
Where did he get that from?
He got it from his daddy.
Because that's what his daddy thinks of the
man who brought him into the Oval Office.
So I just like to see somebody wake
the hell up and get excited about the

(02:06):
fact that your country is under assault.
They're not at the gate anymore.
They're in your bedrooms.
They're in your living rooms.
They're in your businesses.
They got your data, dumbass.
They got all your stuff.
Elon Musk has his tentacles in everything you're
doing.
Not just off of X, but now he's

(02:27):
in the Treasury Department.
He's in the Labor Department.
He's in the Department of Homeland Security.
And nobody seems to give a damn.
And so it's all I want somebody to
show that they care enough to get off
their fat ass and say something about it.
This is all part of the Democrats, and

(02:48):
he, of course, is supposed to be a
Republican, just going unhinged.
I mean, we've been noticing the cursing, and
he had a lot of...
The cursing's out of control.
Damn this, damn that, off your fat ass.
Did you hear James Carville?
He was cursing?
Well, he's...
No, no, no, no.
He's always cursing.

(03:09):
This is not even a cursing clip.
He is so upset.
And he was on...
What's the blockhead?
Sean Hannity show.
Was the microphone pointing up his nose this
time?
What LSU outfit was he wearing?
No, he was wearing an LSU hoodie, of
course.
And he was on with Sean Hannity, which

(03:31):
by itself is always kind of fun.
Carville was on Sean Hannity, I missed it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Listen to his voice.
I see your party screaming and yelling and
acting like lunatics, and you're smarter than that
because that's not you.
And you're kind of spinning a little on
me because you got your ass kicked in
this election, and everyone thought you were all
going to win.
Okay, I lost a point.

(03:54):
What was that?
That was his voice.
I have no idea what that was.
It was like something locked in his vocal
cords.
Listen again.
Your ass kicked in this election, and everyone
thought you were all going to win.
Okay, I lost a point.
He's doing a voice.

(04:16):
No, no, no, I did not do that.
I don't think he was doing a voice,
man.
That was very strange.
Now I have to go back and watch
that show and see what he does.
The brand new chair of the DNC, Ken
Martin.
No, that guy.
The white guy from Minnesota.

(04:36):
The milk toast from Minnesota.
Oh, the milk toast from Minnesota.
Well, even he's swearing, and it was difficult.
I don't think he wanted it to come
out this way, but he couldn't even hold
back himself.
He was talking to my new favorite show
to watch, Politics Girl.
You ever watch her?
Politics Girl.

(04:58):
Yeah, she's good.
I think she'll be a source of information
for the future.
Hey, listen to this.
We cannot show up four months before an
election, and the first conversation we have with
someone is asking them to do something for
us, to vote for our candidates or our
party.
I mean, think about this.
Why are we losing ground with Latino voters?
Why are we losing ground with young voters?

(05:18):
Why are we losing ground with every single
demographic group?
There's a million reasons, but one is because
they only see us during an election, usually
the last few months, and when they hear
from us, we're asking them for something in
return.
And then they don't see us again for
two years.
They feel like we're using them for their
vote versus actually caring a shit about what's

(05:40):
happening in their lives.
So we've got to get back to actually
showing them that we give a damn.
Where did that...
What?
Because the phrase is giving a, not caring
a.
I know, but it's so rampant throughout this
milieu that the word shit just has to
come out.
And he's not used to it.
You can tell, otherwise he would have said,

(06:01):
you know, giving a shit.
He said, we got carrying a shit.
I said shit.
He said like carrying.
I've got a pile of it in this
bucket, and I'm carrying it.
And he even ends with a damn at
the end.
Actually showing them that we give a damn.
We give a damn.
They're all in the same room, these people.

(06:23):
But the funniest, and I don't know if,
I don't think he's, I don't, I think
he's probably politically agnostic, but he is back
on the show, ladies and gentlemen, making his
re-entry.
The one and only Reverend Manning.
Elon the monkey wore a hat, a cap
into the sacred Oval Office.

(06:43):
The late, great Ronald Reagan, it is reported,
would not go into the Oval Office without
having a jacket on.
That's how much he honored the work of
Abraham Lincoln and all the other presidents, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt and John Kennedy and a bunch
of others that came before him.
Ronald Reagan wouldn't go into the Oval Office

(07:03):
without a jacket on.
And yet that Elon the monkey stood there
in a black t-shirt and a black
hat and wouldn't take the hat off while
standing in the Oval Office.
You take your hat off when you show
respect.
You take your hat off to be courteous.
You take your hat off to recognize a
power greater than you.

(07:24):
Well, Elon Musk kept his hat on because
there ain't no power greater than him.
Trump ain't greater than him.
The Constitution ain't greater than him.
And you saw that, and you know it.
You saw it and you know it.
Elon the monkey.
That's good, that's good.
It's good, I like it.
That's a good one, Elon the monkey.

(07:44):
Of course, referring to Doge, we are the
Department of Podcast Efficiency here, also known as
DOPE.
So I was listening to, well, there's a
lot of stuff that took place.
The CPAC had their annual fest.
Oh yeah, yeah, there was a lot going
on there.

(08:05):
And I have some clips from it because
I think the one thing I caught-
Explain what CPAC is.
CPAC's the Conservative Political Action Committee.
But it's also run by, it's a-
I think it's conference.
I think it's action conference.
I think CPAC is, I don't think it's
committee.

(08:26):
Well, people can look it up and then
correct me.
I'm looking it up.
Or you.
Yes, conference.
Conservative Political Action Conference, yes.
Okay, so the big conference takes place once
a year.
It's been going on forever.
It was out of the public eye for
a long time because it was a bunch
of- It was boring.
It was boring.
Yeah, Trump came along and livened things up.

(08:47):
Exactly.
But he also brought some of his cronies
into livening things up.
But I just want to play two clips
from Tom- Tom Holman.
Holman, yeah.
These are very short.
And this is the kind of thing this
guy does.
How you doing?
Look.
How you doing?
All right, right there.

(09:07):
That should just be our universal greet.
How you doing?
Look.
How you doing?
Look.
Let me start out by saying this.
If I offend anybody today, I don't give
a shit.
Don't care.
The media in the back room, I'm sure
I'll be reading a lot of hip pieces
on me tomorrow.
I don't give a shit what you think
about me.

(09:28):
I get asked all the time, does it
bother you that there's a big part of
this country that hates your guts?
I don't care.
I don't care.
Because we got a job to do.
You know, I wake up every day for
the last four years pissed off because the
Dwight administration took the most secure border in
my lifetime and unsecured it on purpose, right?

(09:49):
I worked for six presidents starting with Ronald
Reagan.
Every president I ever worked for- Hold
on a second.
How old is this guy?
He worked under Ronald Reagan?
I don't think so.
He's 63.
Well, he probably worked under Ronald Reagan when
he was in his 20s.
Okay.
Right?
He's 63, he looks 80.

(10:12):
I'm just saying what I, I don't know.
Right?
Right.
I worked for six presidents starting with Ronald
Reagan.
Every president I ever worked for took steps
to secure the border.
Even Clinton Obama took steps to secure the
border because they clearly understood you can't have
national security without border security.
They got it.
Joe Biden's the first president in the history
of the nation who came into office and

(10:32):
unsecured the border on purpose.
So for four years, I wake up every
day pissed off.
That changed November 5th.
Now I wake up every day excited because
I worked for the greatest president of my
lifetime, Donald J.
Trump.

(10:53):
When was- So they did a lot
of that kind of thing.
But I have the second Holman clip, which
I think is, I don't know what the
point of having him even talk was, just
to go up there and grouse.
Police commissioner of Boston, you said you doubled
down on not helping the law enforcement office
of ICE.
I'm coming to Boston.
I'm bringing hell with me.

(11:21):
I looked at the numbers this morning.
I counted, I stopped counting at nine.
Nine child rapists that were in jail in
Massachusetts.
But rather than honoring an ICE detainer, released
them back into the street.
You're not a police commissioner.

(11:42):
Take that badge off your chest, put it
in the desk drawer.
Because you became a politician, you forgot what
it's like to be a cop.
Oh my goodness.
84, Reagan was still in office?
Yeah, he was in office until 88.
Okay.
So he was at INS as a border
patrol agent.
Okay.

(12:03):
He started young.
And you know what?
He clearly doesn't give a shit.
He's like, this is the typical profanity.
Now we have, I'm going to play these
quickies from Trump, because I think I've caught
some new material.
Trump, they've taken a lot from his speech
that he gave on all the different networks.
They took a piece here and a piece
there.

(12:24):
Yeah, well, of course, that's what you do
is snippety up.
In fact, here's the typical example.
This is Trump's CPAC summary on NPR.
President Trump used a speech at the Conservative
Political Action Conference to tout his agenda one
month into his second term in office.
Speaking to CPAC attendees, Trump said he wants
something in return from Ukraine for the billions

(12:47):
of dollars the U.S. spent helping the
country defend itself against Russia.
Europe gave it in the form of a
loan.
They get their money back.
We gave it in the form of nothing.
So I want them to give us something
for all of the money that we put
up.
And I'm going to try and get the
war settled.
And I'm going to try and get all
that death ended.
Russian state media say preparations are underway for

(13:10):
a face to face meeting between Trump and
Vladimir Putin.
Yeah.
So, you know, it sounds like it was
actually kind of a no, that's not true
that Trump gave some pretty funny bits.
He had some new material.
OK, in fact, I think most of the
speech was new material.
I think he's working on some stuff.

(13:31):
OK, so what's and I have a few
of them.
What are his bits?
Well, here's one of them.
He this one here, he kind of abruptly
ended.
But this was his his bit on going
after Rachel Maddow.
And we have great confidence and they've lost
their confidence.
As I said, they really lost their confidence.
I watched them.
They're really screwed up.
I watched this MSNBC, which is a threat

(13:51):
to democracy.
Actually, this stone cold thing.
But there's stuttering.
They're all screwed up.
They're all mentally screwed up.
They don't know what their ratings have gone
down the tubes.
I don't even talk about CNN.
CNN sort of like that.
I don't know that they're pathetic, actually.
But MSNBC was mean.

(14:12):
Their ratings are absolutely down this Rachel Maddow.
What does she have?
She's got nothing, nothing.
She took she took a sabbatical where she
worked one day a week.
They paid her a lot of money.
She gets no ratings.
I should go against her in the ratings
because I'll tell you, she gets no rest.
All she does is to talk about Trump,

(14:33):
Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, all different subjects.
Trump this Trump that.
But these people are really I mean, they
lie.
They shouldn't be allowed to lie every night.
They are really a vehicle of the Democrat
Party.
Yeah.
Anyway, then he drops it wasn't all that
it wasn't all that funny.

(14:53):
No, I know I'm getting to the funny
one.
OK, so now we have him with talking
about Bill O'Reilly.
OK, together we've achieved more in four weeks
than most administrations achieve in four years.
We made we made a lot of progress.
I heard O'Reilly last night say Donald
Trump for the first four weeks is the
greatest president ever in the history of our

(15:14):
country.
That was O'Reilly.
Bill O'Reilly is all right.
You know, he said second was George Washington.
I beat George Washington.
I love beating George Washington.
Thank you, Bill.
OK, so that means he listens to Chris
Cuomo show.

(15:35):
Oh, because did O'Reilly say it on
Cuomo?
No, that only place I know that O
'Reilly shows up is on Cuomo.
OK, got it.
So that's kind of interesting.
And so there he goes off on what
the one we expect is Joe Biden.
And this is this I think is good.
He could go with cameras on him, television,
fake news on him, probably because he knows

(15:57):
it wouldn't cover it badly.
You know, they covered him as well as
you can cover him.
How the hell can you cover the guy?
Well, but but he had this incredible ability.
He could barely walk in the sand.
Somebody thought he looked great in a bathing
suit.
And he'd walk in the sand pulling a
thing that weighed about six ounces.
You know, those aluminum, see, aluminum is very

(16:18):
good.
You can a child.
It's meant for children and very old people
to lift, right?
So he would put it down and he'd
put it down and he'd fall into it
and he'd immediately fall asleep in front of
the media.
I could never do that.
That's the only thing.
That's the only thing I could never do
it.
Now he was sleepy Joe, but he was

(16:39):
crooked as hell.
You know, there's no question.
It was a sleepy, crooked guy.
Terrible, terrible president.
He was the worst president in the history
of our country.
I don't care, I'll say it.
Jimmy Carter passed away recently and he passed
away a happy man.

(16:59):
He was a happy man when he passed
away because he said that it's not even
close.
Joe was the worst and believe me, I
have to clean up the mess.
I'm cleaning up the mess and it is
a mess on the border with inflation.
To go over every single thing he touched
turned to shit.
Okay, every true.

(17:22):
It's true.
That's true.
Now Franklin Graham's angry at me.
You know that Franklin wrote me a letter.
He said I love your speeches.
I love them.
I love them so much.
But they'd be better if you would never
use foul language.
And I told him, I said, Franklin, you
know, Franklin Graham's a great guy, by the

(17:42):
way, does a great job.
The son of the great Billy Graham, right?
But I said to Franklin, you know, sometimes
you need it for emphasis.
You know, based on your theory of how
important the president is for culture, we're going
to have toddlers walking around saying shit this
and shit that.
No, it's terrible.

(18:03):
It's not my theory, by the way.
It's a political science thesis that every political
science course teaches in universities across the world.
Well, I'm giving that the president is the
moral authority.
I'm giving you full credit.
Yeah, I'm not going to take it.
The president is moral authority.
And so when he starts cussing, which he
does, everyone starts cussing.

(18:27):
It's just like part of the thing.
But is that maybe why you see all
these news hosts doing it as well because
of the president?
It has to be.
But they're not good at it.
I mean, it's like, it's the F-bombs
from the left that are, because I get
all these TikTok clips.

(18:48):
I try to, I don't have any today.
I have one maybe.
Dodge that bullet.
And so these poor women, they're just throwing
out F-bombs left and right as though
it's something cool.
I'm not getting what the thinking is on
this.
It's really sounding like truckers and the worst
kind of trucker.

(19:09):
Even truckers don't cuss this much.
I have a very short CPAC clip.
Like I said, all this gold at Fort
Knox, it's the public's gold.
It's your gold.
So I think you have a right to
see it.
Can I take a tour?
Yeah, I think we should have a tour.
And then the president last night was like,
I think he's in favor of it.
That'd be cool.

(19:29):
And then it should be like a live
tour.
Like you can see what's going on, open
the door, like what's behind it.
I think I'd watch that.
You know what that reminds me of?
Geraldo.
Geraldo Rivera with Al Capone's vault.
Because I think what's going to happen is
they're going to open it.
It's going to be there.

(19:51):
The gold's going to be there.
It's going to be there.
And they won't be like, oh, that was
bogus.
But for all we know, it's tungsten.
Well, we've all forgotten the tungsten scandal.
No, I haven't.
I haven't.
Could be.
It could be tungsten.
But we can, I guess weighing it doesn't
make any difference.
You've got to drill it.
Yeah, you got to drill it, otherwise you

(20:13):
can't tell what it is.
I think it's a mistake.
As a callback for people who don't know
what we're talking about.
There was a, I think this was about
10 years ago.
There's a big scandal.
People were selling gold bars, but all they
were chunks of tungsten coated in gold.
I think it's more than 10 years ago.

(20:33):
It was a while back.
It was when you were a gold bug
back in the day.
I still am.
I just don't have it anymore.
Yeah, well, we won't need to get into
that.
But you'd be loaded.
I'd be loaded.
I'd be rolling in dough.
The idea was that people were buying gold
bars because it was a big deal to
do so, but a lot of them were

(20:54):
scams because tungsten has pretty much the same
weight as gold.
So you coat it with gold and you
got a gold bar when it's really tungsten.
And I guess it was a lot of
it that was showing up out of the
blue all over the world.
So take credit for the blurt.

(21:15):
Take credit for the blurt.
I'm taking credit for the blurt.
I won't take credit for the cussing, but
I'll take credit for the blurt.
You can take credit for the blurt.
And the blurt is working.
The blurt is paying off.
And the first blurt was the Magaza blurt.
We're going to own that.
We're going to take it.
We're going to take all of Gaza.

(21:37):
We're going to own it.
We'll take very good care of it.
We're going to turn it into the Riviera.
It's going to be great.
And it is paying off in spades.
The Arab summit in Riyadh is billed as
an unofficial fraternal meeting.
Diplomatic sources say the main point on the
agenda is how to counter Donald Trump's proposed
plans for Gaza, which sparked global outrage.
The U.S. president said the U.S.

(21:58):
would take over Gaza, in his words, own
it, and turn it into what he called
the Riviera of the Middle East, and to
achieve that, forcibly displace two million Palestinians to
Jordan and Egypt.
Diplomats from those countries are attending the Riyadh
summit, along with the six members of the
Gulf Cooperation Council.
The Palestinian Authority has also been invited.

(22:20):
Egypt has already begun formulating a plan for
Gaza that would unfold over three to five
years.
It hasn't yet been published, but it's understood
it would begin with debris removal, and eventually
lead to the reconstruction of infrastructure, housing and
services, as well as steps towards an independent
Palestinian state.
The proposal could include $20 billion in funding

(22:41):
from wealthy Arab states, but financing such a
plan could be the biggest challenge.
None of those states are going to be
willing to put in, you know, finance and
begin a reconstruction process unless the political process
is in play.
We can be sure that the conditions would
be set around a political arrangement or a

(23:02):
political governing structure that they can all agree
to, and one that Israel accepts and one
that the U.S. is fully behind.
Displaced people in Gaza have been returning to
their homes, but they're finding mass destruction.
The U.N. estimates rebuilding Gaza will cost
more than $50 billion.
So right down to the amount, right down

(23:23):
to the need for political reform.
And I'm glad you got this clip.
I have another one which will lead you
into your bonus clip.
This blurt thing is interesting.
And I don't know if...
Well, before you play the second clip, then
let me just throw this interjection in, because
I didn't get these clips.
There was a PBS people went into Dearborn

(23:45):
to talk to some Muslims about this, because
the Muslim community in Michigan supported Trump in
a big way.
And so they went in and said, what
about, you know, because they hated Biden and
his policies in the Middle East.
And so they talked about this.
Well, he wants to get rid of all
these Palestinians.
He wants to do this.
He wants to get them riled up the

(24:06):
way PBS would do.
What did they say?
They said, you know, yeah, that's what he
said.
But he also wants Canada to be the
51st state, which is obviously never going to
happen.
And the Muslims, they all agreed that, no,
this is the way Trump operates.
It's not a big deal.

(24:27):
Why are you taking it so seriously?
We're not.
It's an interesting template, because the news media
can't resist going all in and saying how,
and, you know, they, of course, they need
that because there's no news anymore.
It's just all opinion.
Rachel Maddow's opinion, CNN, everything's a bit Fox,
everything's opinion.

(24:48):
So they, you know, so Fox can go,
oh, we're just going to own it, we'll
clean that right up.
And then Rachel Maddow's head explodes and CNN
pretends to be all intellectual about it.
But meanwhile, he's just that believable enough that
the Egyptians, the Jordanians and the Saudis who

(25:09):
go, you know, we probably should do something
here because that guy's crazy.
He just might.
And, you know, from time to time, he's
going to have to come through on stuff
and, you know, and do something just to
keep that fear alive.
So here's the other blurt that was, well,
it's been a constant blurt about give us

(25:30):
all your minerals.
We want all your minerals.
The minerals deal between the U.S. and
Ukraine may be closer than ever.
On Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky indicated that
his country was working on a draft agreement.
Today, Ukrainian and U.S. teams are working
on a draft agreement between our governments.
This is an agreement that can add value
to our relationship.

(25:51):
And the main thing is to work out
the details so we can work.
I hope for a fair result.
U.S. President Donald Trump wants Ukraine to
give U.S. companies access to its vast
natural resources as compensation for the tens of
billions of dollars of aid delivered during the
war.
In return, Ukraine is seeking security guarantees from
the United States.
Sources say that the two sides made significant

(26:13):
progress during a visit to Ukraine this week
by retired General Keith Kellogg, Trump's special envoy
to Ukraine and Russia.
Although there is no concrete timeline on how
long such a deal would last, those talks
came just days after the U.S. President
fired several barbs at his Ukrainian counterpart, including
calling Zelensky a dictator and falsely blaming Ukraine

(26:33):
for starting the war.
Some have speculated that was a tactic to
try and rattle the Ukrainians.
And now Trump is more confident than ever
of getting a deal done.
I think we're pretty close.
I think they want it and they feel
good about it.
And it's significant.
It's a big deal.
But they want it.
And it keeps us in that country.
And they're very happy about it.

(26:54):
Ukraine's soil holds some 5% of the
world's mineral resources.
The proposed partnership would give the United States
access to deposits of critical minerals, including aluminum,
gallium and titanium.
You know, we're not going to get any
money back.
We're just going to get exclusive access to
it, which is what he wanted in the
first place to shorten, you know, to cut

(27:14):
off China's leverage.
At least that's what it seems to me.
And then we're going to give security guarantees
in exchange.
This will be, this is his new chit.
So you want security?
You're not going to get it from NATO.
You get it from me.
They still have, Zelensky's still a roadblock.
In fact, this is what this clip is
leading to the clip that you, the bonus

(27:35):
clip.
Yeah.
Now, before, before you play that, which is
a, which is Marco Rubio telling one of
the yeah, it was Harridge.
Yeah.
Was it Harridge?
Um, that the Zelensky's a two-faced liar
is what he basically says.
But I was thinking about this.

(27:57):
You have, they have this resource.
They have these resources.
They have the minerals that are important minerals.
They have oil.
We know about that.
That's been discussed in the past.
And they're the breadbasket of probably Africa and
much of Europe.
But that deal was already done.
Cargill already has it though.
No, I'm just saying, this is the, I'm

(28:17):
talking about the country itself.
It has these resources.
Yeah.
And it has a nuclear power all over
the place to power the play.
This is like a gold mine of riches.
And these, and the two bit mentality of
the Ukrainian should just be a bunch of
thieves and a crooked corrupt operate basically, you

(28:38):
know, the penny anti-corruption.
It's, it's an embarrassment.
Well, but it's all, well, yes it is.
But the, because of the resources is why
the corruption has always been so rampant.
It's just, it's just, it's all two bits
stuff because if, you know, if he really,
you know, leveraged it, you know, and did
your job, right.
You'd be making tons of money every which

(29:00):
way, but okay.
Yeah, but it's historical.
They, there wasn't, they didn't have the strong
leader to shore it all up.
And, you know, and everyone got hoodwinked into
thinking, oh, okay.
Minsk, we're good with Minsk.
And there was the Europeans, the EU who
used the Minsk two agreement to arm up
because they have their own agenda.
And they're, if anything, I'd say the European

(29:20):
union are the stupid ones.
They should be looking at it and saying,
you know, this is kind of what we
need.
And they had plenty of time to do
that, but instead they want to go fight
Russia.
So here we have Rubio sitting down with
Harwich discussing a meeting he and Vance had
with Zelensky.

(29:42):
And this is very, I mean, I'm liking
Rubio more and more as he does this
stuff because he's, he is not, he just
plays it so straight.
He has an interesting way of biting his
lower lip when he's done with a sentence.
Have you seen that?
Oh no, I'll have to look for it.
He's biting his lips so he doesn't say

(30:02):
anything off base.
He's like, I finished a good sentence, stop.
Okay.
Okay.
When president Trump posts that president Zelensky is
a dictator without elections, what are you thinking?
I think president Trump is very upset at
president Zelensky in some case and rightfully so.
Look, number one, Joe Biden had frustrations with

(30:24):
Zelensky.
People shouldn't forget it.
There are newspaper articles out there about how
he cursed at him in a phone call
because Zelensky, instead of saying, thank you for
all your help, is immediately out there messaging
what we're not doing or what he's not
getting.
I think the second thing is, frankly, I
was personally very upset because we had a
conversation with president Zelensky, the vice president and
I, the two, three of us, and we

(30:45):
discussed this issue about the mineral rights.
And we explained to them, look, we want
to be a joint venture with you, not
because we're trying to steal from your country,
but because we think that's actually a security
guarantee.
If we're your partner in an important economic
endeavor, we get to get paid back some
of the money the taxpayers have given close
to $200 billion.
And it also, now we have a vested

(31:05):
interest.
He said some of the tax, some of
the money, the taxpayer plus $200 billion.
It was kind of, no, he said, he
said it was 200 billion.
I thought it was much, I thought it
was 350 billion.
Well, he thinks the numbers are all over
the place on this.
That's a problem.
Yeah.
Let's listen again.
Country, but because we think that's actually a
security guarantee.
If we're your partner in an important, which

(31:27):
is exactly what you said one or two
shows ago, you said Zelensky saying, we're not
going to do that without security guarantees.
So we don't have to be at a
joint venture with you.

(31:50):
If we're your partner in an important economic
endeavor, we get to get paid back some
of the money the taxpayers have given close
to $200 billion.
And it also, now we have a vested
interest in the security of Ukraine.
He said, sure, we can't sell you the
whole country.
we want to do this deal.
It makes all the sense in the world.
The only thing is I need to run
it through my legislative process.

(32:11):
They have to approve it.
I read two days later that Zelensky's out
there saying, I rejected the deal.
I told him no way that we're not
doing that.
Well, that's not what happened in that meeting.
So you start to get upset by somebody.
We're trying to help these guys.
One of the points the president made in
his messaging is not that we don't care
about Ukraine, but Ukraine is on another continent.
You know, it doesn't directly impact the daily
lives of Americans.

(32:31):
We care about it because it has implications
for our allies and ultimately for the world.
There should be some level of gratitude here
about this.
And when you don't see it and you
see him out there accusing the president of
living in a world of disinformation, that's highly,
very counterproductive.
And I don't need to explain to you
or anybody else, Donald Trump's not, President Trump's
not the kind of person that's going to
sit there and take that.
He's very transparent.

(32:52):
He's going to tell you exactly how he
feels.
And he sent a message that he's not
going to get gamed here.
He's willing to work on peace because he
cares about Ukraine.
And he hopes Zelensky will be a partner
in that.
And not someone who's out there putting this
sort of counter messaging to try to, you
know, hustle us in that regard.
That's not, that's not going to be productive
here.
I agree with you.
I'm liking Rubio.

(33:13):
The problem I have with him is, one,
he, because I watched all 40 minutes of
this interview with Katherine Harridge, and she's independent
now.
She's no longer with a news organization.
She's on X, as far as I can
tell.
And he never cracks a smile, never has
a joke.
And, and he's funny.

(33:34):
I think he is.
He can be very funny.
He's made some good jokes.
No, he was, when he was trying to
be funny, when he ran against Trump the
first time in 2016.
The tiny hands thing.
That was kind of funny.
The tiny hands gag and some other stuff.
And he was doing basically a standup routine.
It was quite funny.
We played a bunch of clips from it.
It was, his timing was good.
Everything was good.
He knows he has good stage presence.

(33:55):
And then he got, of course, he lost
big time.
Bigly.
Bigly.
And he stopped doing it.
He stopped trying to be funny.
And all of a sudden he became very
serious.
And he's, you're right.
He hasn't cracked a smile.
I am happy.
I have heard from a very reliable source
that there is a team going into the

(34:17):
state department outside of Doge to check on
what they're doing, which is kind of interesting.
It's not a Doge team.
It's another team.
And I was happy to hear that because
that's, you know, you don't hear Doge going
into the state department.
Haven't heard about it at all.
And we know there's an intelligence agency in
there.

(34:37):
They've got their tentacles and everything.
Every embassy is a CIA station.
There's a lot going on in the state
department.
The techno experts, who said, do they get
fired when Hillary Clinton left?
Didn't she have 2000 techno experts?
A lot of them.
All kinds of stuff going on.
The internet in the suitcase.

(34:57):
Yeah.
I have two other shortish clips of Heritage
with Rubio, which I thought were worthwhile.
This is about Havana syndrome.
You recall at embassies, people were getting zapped
or we didn't know exactly what was happening
with them.
And what was the, what was the basic
narrative about that?
It was true.
Then it wasn't true.
It was like a microwave weapon.

(35:18):
They were weaponizing and they were aiming it
in the hotel rooms of American diplomats.
And whether it was true or not, they
still had never been totally resolved.
Well, here we go.
I want to ask a question about Havana
syndrome or AHIs, these debilitating neurological conditions.
State Department personnel, intelligence, community, military, even families

(35:40):
have directed energy weapons been used against U
.S. government personnel.
I do not believe in the conclusions that
we've seen in the past.
And I think evidence in time will prove
me correct that these things happened by accident,
that these things were a result of mass
hysteria or some preexisting conditions.
Now, in some cases, maybe.
But I have no doubt in my mind
that something caused people to be suffering from

(36:02):
these things and different posts around the world,
not just limited to Havana.
There's a lot of work still going on.
I think we're going to learn a lot
more about it over the next few years
as more work goes into it.
But I've met some of these people.
I've interacted with them for years and I
can't explain every case.
But I think there are most definitely cases
where there is no logical explanation other than
the fact that some external mechanism caused them

(36:24):
to suffer brain injuries that in many cases
look like they were hit over the head
with a baseball bat or assaulted somewhere.
We can't ignore that.
And in the meantime, what we have to
ensure is that whether they were State Department
personnel or working for some other agency, that
those people are getting the treatment and the
support that they need.
And it's a top commitment of mine to
make sure these are people we sent abroad
to serve our country.

(36:45):
They were harmed in the service of our
country, and they deserve our ongoing support, not
to be not being accused of things like
mass hysteria or, you know, they're just...
It's government gaslighting.
Well, I think it's outrageous.
And I don't know what the intent was
behind that.
But ultimately, this State Department is going to
be transparent with them.
Anything we know, they will know.

(37:06):
And in the meantime, we are going to
assume the worst and we're going to treat
them as if they were victims.
No matter what, we're going to treat them
as if they were people that were harmed.
Okay.
Well, Rubio's all over it.
And then just at the very end, it
was just interesting because I'm sitting there like,
wow, you know, this is Rubio with heritage.
That's, you know, she's a networkless person, a

(37:26):
networkless pixie.
And she brought it up.
Will you open up the State Department briefing
room to independent journalists?
Yes.
We're here today.
We're here to talk.
I was going to say, Secretary Rubio, you
could have given this interview to any reporter,
any major corporate outlet, but you chose an
independent journalist who posts on X.
Yeah.
And I don't want to hurt anybody's feelings.

(37:47):
But here's my observation.
We have to go where the people are.
And so we need to communicate with people.
We need to be able to...
This is their State Department.
It's not my State Department.
I'll be here for a number of years
and then my job is done and I'll
go back to being a private citizen.
But this will always be their State Department.
And we're making decisions every day and they
deserve to hear from us.
Where are people getting their news and information?
That's where we need to be delivering our

(38:09):
news and information.
I still talk to them.
I just went overseas.
We had a bunch of people from different
traditional outlets on our trip and we're not
going to exclude them.
But we have to be able to communicate
people where they're getting their news and information.
What we can't allow to have happen is
we can't allow our message to solely be
provided through the filter of legacy traditional media

(38:29):
outlets who's, sadly, I don't mean to hurt
their...
I'm not trying to be mean here, but
the readership is down.
The viewership is down.
The ratings are down.
We have to take our message where people
are getting their news and information and any
sort of long form interviews where you're getting
serious questions and can provide answers to nuanced
issues, not little sound bites that they run
during the cable news hour for news and

(38:52):
entertainment purposes.
So we'll engage everybody, but we'll most certainly
see a greater emphasis on independent journalism because
that's where people are getting their news and
information.
Yeah, there you go.
That's a smart move.
I want to go to my new go
-to for some analysis.
It's crazy that it comes from the CBC.
I played him on the last show, Andrew

(39:13):
Rassoulis, former defense guy in Candanavia, and he
had some good points about what the president
said at CPAC and about Ukraine.
U.S. President Donald Trump has once again
signaled that he wants to end the war
in Ukraine, but with a condition for Kiev.
Earlier today, he spoke at a conservative gathering

(39:33):
in Maryland.
Trump said he wants to recover the cost
of American military aid sent to Ukraine by
securing access to certain resources.

(40:14):
Andrew, let's start on that point that Donald
Trump was making in that speech rather defiantly,
saying we want anything we can get, specifically
zeroing in on those rare minerals.
What's behind this?
I mean, he had said he wants to
achieve peace in Ukraine.

(40:36):
He'd said that pretty much from the get
-go.
But this week, he has been really forceful
about getting President Zelensky to accept his terms.
What do you think is behind all this?
Well, it represents the major shift in Trump's
foreign policy, particularly as we see it in
Ukraine, which is not based on protecting the

(40:59):
liberal rules-based international order, which the Biden
administration has been doing.
And it's not so much a defense of
democracy versus autocracy.
What Trump is doing across the board, he
is advancing America's interests.
That is financial interests, security interests, but you
have to understand it's transactional interests.

(41:19):
And so he's saying, you know, Ukraine isn't
that important for the United States.
He said repeatedly, they're on the other side
of the ocean.
You know, we spend a lot of money
and we want to get a bit of
a financial payback.
That's exactly the line he's taking.
And that is, of course, again, a major
shift from the previous administration and from previous

(41:39):
administrations that the United States have had more
or less since 1945.
It seems very logical because, of course, we've
heard him say this over and over again.
Years ago, he went to the World Economic
Forum and said, no, no, no, patriots, our
own country first.
But this is, I mean, I'm just realizing

(42:00):
that the elites of the world, from media
to politicians, they're shocked.
They're absolutely shocked.
He only cares about America.
What?
That's not how you're supposed to play.
You're supposed to be for the rules based
liberal world order.
And they are shocked.
But this is what I wanted to ask

(42:20):
you.
I mean, how rare is this?
It's rare.
The aid that Ukraine received from the previous
U.S. administration, specifically in ammunitions, in military
aid that President Biden had promised and delivered
to Ukrainians, under no circumstances did it seem
like that came with a caveat that you're
going to have to repay us in kind

(42:42):
or in any other way.
How rare is this in terms of American
foreign policy?
It's just crazy, I tell you.
It's extremely rare.
And you have to really go back certainly
to pre-World War II and sort of
the isolationist period.
And Trump himself sees America between the Civil
War and World War I as a golden

(43:05):
age with the economic tariffs and all that
stuff.
And America was very isolationist in that period.
So it's America first, America in the Western
Hemisphere, that's also very important, and basically motivated
by enriching America's financial interests.
What a crazy idea.
How could you ever think of doing something

(43:25):
like that?
I think it's really shaking these world leaders
up a lot.
They just can't believe that he doesn't want
to play ball.
And when he says, well, there's a whole
ocean in between us and Ukraine, it's not
such a big deal for us.
And I have, if you want to hear
him, I have a couple, I have a
report by Richard Engel, our NBC resident spook.

(43:47):
Oh, yeah.
Oh, about the war, it was filled with
Nat Pops and all kinds of beautiful things.
President Trump is pushing for American access to
Ukraine's wealth of valuable minerals as part of
a deal to end the war with Russia.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, under intense pressure from
the United States, is considering the proposal as

(44:07):
President Trump's possible...
Listen to the music.
Oh, it's almost...
That's not Richard Engel.
No, no, he's coming up.
This is the intro to Richard Engel.
But the music, it's so demure, it's like,
oh, who needs it?
Oh, boy.
Approach to Zelensky raises concerns about the future
of Ukraine and the terms of peace in
the war Russia started three years ago.
Russia started.

(44:28):
NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel has
our Sunday Focus.
Three years ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered
his troops to invade Ukraine.
We were here as columns of Russian tanks
streamed across the border.
I just have to remind everybody who doesn't
know what a Nat Pop is.

(44:49):
This is a television term used by the
news producers where they just cut in bombs
and explode or screaming ladies, dying children, anything
to just get your emotions going.
Capturing Ukrainian cities on their way to the
capital, Kyiv.
Russia is picking off Ukraine's military facilities one

(45:10):
after another.
But Ukrainian troops are fighting back.
Putin said his goal was to overthrow President
Zelensky, who saw his country's future with the
United States in Europe instead of Russia.
Putin claimed Zelensky, who's Jewish, was actually a
dangerous American-backed Nazi.

(45:32):
Russia cannot feel safe, develop and exist with
a constant threat emanating from the territory of
modern Ukraine.
I got so tired just from this first
report.
It's like, oh, man, it's like this.
Putin's so bad.
And Zelensky, who's Jewish, he couldn't be a
Nazi.
Oh, no.

(45:53):
So it was a shock to Ukrainians when
President Trump this week, adopting the role of
peacemaker, blamed Zelensky for starting the war.
You should have never started it.
You could have made a deal.
And beyond rewriting history, Trump opened peace talks
in Saudi Arabia with the Russian side.
Ukraine wasn't invited.

(46:14):
Russia occupies 20 percent of Ukraine's territory.
I mean, the lies are amazing.
Yeah.
Rewriting history.
Well, no, if you look at the history,
it was kind of Ukraine saying they were
going to get nuclear weapons in and be
part of NATO that started it with our
with our coup in 2014.

(46:37):
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's no eclipse going around now.
McCain over there taking movies of the video
in the Maidan thing.
Oh, yeah.
Newland.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Don't stop.
Stop rewriting history.
Trump officials have suggested Putin may be allowed
to keep it at a school in Harkiv

(46:59):
built with USAID funding.
President Trump.
Oh, throw that little plug in.
Oh, yeah.
Teachers and staff wonder why Trump seems to
be.
This is a propaganda piece.
Yes, it is.
But it's but it's so transparent and and
almost over the top.
It's almost as done as though it's like,
let's overdo it.
So people notice that this is a propaganda.

(47:21):
Oh, no, no, no, no.
This is working extremely well on people who
are open to this type of messaging.
Trump is horrible.
I mean, he took away the USAID money
from children, from children.
I tell you, Ludmilla Ivanova is a math
teacher.
What do you make about the things that
President Trump is saying and doing about Ukraine?

(47:42):
It is very sad because we feel we
have lost a partner and a friend, and
we hope that soon President Trump will change
his position.
She said a few miles away, the troops
manning the front lines see ominous signs.
Oh, man, you have two more pieces to
this.
You want to hear it or is it
too much?
Yeah, it's pretty, pretty tedious.

(48:04):
I would play one more, see how it
goes.
Out here in eastern Ukraine, the fighting is
relentless with Russian drone and missile attacks coming
almost constantly, especially when the weather is clear
like today.
But now Ukrainian troops say they have perhaps
an even bigger problem.
Wondering whether they still have support from Washington.
Does it feel like decisions are being made

(48:25):
about Ukraine without Ukraine's input?
Does it feel like it?
Yes, this is exactly the feeling we have,
said Ivan, a commander of the 127th Brigade.
It does influence the mood.
It's very demotivating.
At a rehab clinic, some soldiers told us
they think Ukraine is caught between a rock

(48:46):
and a hard place and has few options.
But Vladimir Chayka is a sergeant in the
Storm Brigade.
Some critics have said that President Trump is
exploiting Ukraine, is taking advantage of its position
right now in order to- Exploiting, exploiting
Ukraine.
How are we exploiting Ukraine?
Extract resources.

(49:08):
Between two evils, you have to pick the
better one, he says.
If I have to choose between the United
States and the possibility that Russia will take
over our country, I pick the United States.
False equivalency.
I might as well play the last one
because this kind of boils it all down
to what Richard Engel is trying to communicate.
Some Republicans, Richard, pushing back this week on
President Trump's characterization of Zelensky as a dictator

(49:30):
in Ukraine, as the aggressor in the war.
But what does his hostile stance mean for
a potential deal to end the war?
Well, it makes Ukrainians, as you saw in
that package, very nervous.
They think that Trump and Putin have some
sort of special relationship that they are trying
between the two of them to carve up
Ukraine.
And Ukrainians say that if there is a

(49:52):
bad deal, if they are forced to accept
a deal that leaves this country weak and
unstable, it would only lead to more conflict
in years to come.
They see right now the future of this
country is being decided.
The future map of Ukraine is being locked
into place, at least for now.
The borders are going to be potentially redrawn.

(50:14):
And they're very skeptical, based on what they've
seen so far, that President Trump is going
to be an honest broker.
And they worry much more that he's going
to cut a favorable deal for Vladimir Putin,
potentially forcing the Ukrainians to sign away natural
resources.
But they say if they're in a weak
position, it's bad for Ukraine.
And long term, it's bad for Europe and

(50:34):
also bad for the United States.
Wow.
Everything's bad.
It's bad.
It's all.
And, you know, the thing that I'm working
on a supercut, I just don't have enough
good ones.
This guy.
No, it's Engel, man.
I don't have enough good ones yet.
But there's this ongoing messaging that I'm seeing
from M5M.

(50:56):
And the message is there's a growing backlash.
Voters are fed up with Doge and fed
up with what Trump is doing.
And they're pressuring Republican lawmakers.
They're pressuring them.
And, oh, there's a lot of pressure from
people.
I see no evidence of this.
There is zero evidence of what you just

(51:17):
said.
I'm noticing it, too.
I'm noticing on MSNBC and NBC, mostly, also
a little ABC doing this.
They're making these claims that all his numbers
are down.
But Trump's numbers are going to even PBS
will go that far, although they Brooks and
Capehart will.
Oh, you have a Brooks and Capehart.

(51:38):
Well, this is if you if I'm going
to bring this one, I'm going to it's
going to probably have a follow up.
But this is Brooks and Cape.
This is the classic example of PBS's analysis.
They bring Brooks and Cape this last Friday.
They bring Brooks and Capehart to talk about
what's going on with Ukraine and Trump.
So let's start with Ukraine.

(51:58):
No one expected Donald Trump to handle global
affairs like his predecessors, but he has fully
adopted Russia's false propaganda on Ukraine.
We didn't say playbook.
What's wrong with the script?
Rewrite that script.
Tater falsely stating that it was Ukraine that
started the war.
This this is this is the literal rewriting

(52:20):
of history that they're doing.
This is an ongoing rewrite of history, falsely
stating that Ukraine started the war.
This is amazing.
Rhetorically turning against a democracy that was invaded
in favor of the invader.
What are the implications?
Yeah, it's pretty revolutionary.
I mean, I think first you can say
goodbye to NATO and NATO is really built

(52:40):
around Article five, the promise we make to
each other that we will defend each other.
And I don't think Trump is going to
defend anybody else.
But I think the bigger story is a
shift in values that American foreign policy and
Western foreign policy has been built around democracy,
promotion, human dignity, human rights.
So we banded together to sort of promote
those causes.
Donald Trump doesn't see that world that way.

(53:01):
He sees the world as a place where
ruthless mafiosos get to do what they can.
There's a famous line from the Peloponnesian Wars
that strong do what they can, the weak
suffer what they must.
And so I think in Donald Trump's world,
there are three ruthless mafioso countries.
Russia will have hegemony over its region.
We will have hegemony over our region, and
China will have hegemony over their region.

(53:22):
And so anything that gets in the way
of ruthless mafioso is being eliminated.
And some of that is international alliances.
But some of this is just the idea
that you shouldn't interfere in other people's elections.
And some of it is the idea that
you shouldn't be able to invade neighboring countries.
And so all those rules are being rewritten
by somebody who wants to turn all of
global affairs into survival of the fittest.

(53:43):
What about that?
Are we on the precipice of the end
of the alliance as we know it?
There's nothing David said that I disagree with.
There's nothing David said that I disagree with.
There's nothing David said that I disagree with.
So is this the idea of perspective?
So when we watch PBS NewsHour, we get

(54:03):
some sort of indication that maybe we can
get some understanding of what's going on.
But no, we have two guys who agree
with each other on everything they say, all
anti-Trump.
You got the one guy, the Capehart, the
Prissy character, who just hates Trump because he's
a big Kamala supporter.
And you have David Brooks, who claims to
have once been a conservative, and he hates

(54:25):
Trump because he's always been wrong about him
from the get-go.
And so we have two haters on here,
and this supposedly gives the public perspective.
Stop giving these people money.
Why can't they find someone who can maybe

(54:46):
describe what Trump is doing in some positive
way or in any way other than, oh,
he's just a mafioso.
All he wants to do is push people
around.
Come on.
You are tilting at windmills, my friend.
I am.
Play the Trump versus Zelensky, which is another
PBS clip.

(55:07):
President Trump levied new shots against Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelensky today.
First, he told a radio interviewer that he
didn't think it's very important that Zelensky attend
meetings aimed at bringing the war to an
end.
Then President Trump stepped up his criticism while
speaking to a group of governors gathered at
the White House.
I've had very good talks with Putin, and

(55:27):
I've had not such good talks with Ukraine.
They don't have any cards, but they play
it tough.
But we're not going to let this continue.
This war is terrible.
These latest comments follow a week of escalating
tensions between Trump and Zelensky, which has seen
the president refer to Zelensky as a dictator
and falsely claim that Ukraine started the war.

(55:50):
They keep doing that.
Yeah, they falsely, falsely claimed.
Yeah.
That he started.
He mentioned in passing, there was a clip
that you played earlier where he says if
he hadn't started the war, in other words,
he didn't go right to the negotiating table
and he'd begun fighting in defense, we could
say, which is fair.

(56:11):
But it's not the same as this guy
started the war.
He never said that.
In fact, a lot of stuff that's going
on on PBS, both mostly PBS, by the
way, is false accusations that they're saying stuff
that didn't happen, didn't exist.
You can play this clip if you want
to continue this kind of thinking.

(56:32):
This is the Pentagon firings and certain kinds
of BS in this report from PBS.
President Trump's shakeup of Washington reached the Pentagon
as he fired several top military leaders, including
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the
leading the Navy.
Last night, Mr. Trump and Defense Secretary Pete
Hegseth said they were dismissing Air Force General

(56:52):
CQ Brown as the country's senior military officer.
Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the first woman to lead
the Navy.
General James Slyfe, the vice chair of the
Air Force, as well as the top lawyers
for the Army, Navy, and Air Force.
President has selected retired Air Force Lieutenant General
Dan Cain to be the new Joint Chiefs
chairman.
That job requires Senate confirmation.

(57:15):
Mr. Trump has spoken highly of Cain since
meeting him in Iraq during his first term.
Eric Edelman has served in several senior positions
in the State and Defense Departments under both
Republican and Democratic presidents.
He's now at the Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Assessments.
Mr. Edelman, how unusual is this?
A new president coming in in his first
month, getting rid of the chairman of the

(57:37):
Joint Chiefs and a bunch of other leaders.
It's crazy.
It's unprecedented, John, as far as I'm aware.
We've had presidents relieve other senior commanders of
positions.
Of course, President Truman relieved General MacArthur during
the Korean War.
President Obama relieved General Stan McChrystal.

(57:58):
But that was for cause.
And in this instance, no cause has been
given.
So it's really unprecedented as far as I
can see.
Oh, hold on a second.
Lyndon B.
Johnson, 1964, he just got in, walked in
the office, immediately appointed William Westmoreland as chief
of staff, fired the other guy.

(58:19):
You're out, you're in.
As soon as Richard Nixon got in, immediately
replaced Westmoreland with Creighton Abrams in 72, the
minute he got in.
Gerald Ford appointed William Wayland as chief of
staff in 74, served until 76.
George H.W. Bush, as soon as he
got in, appointed General Marshall Thurman.

(58:41):
This is bullcrap.
And they're just playing this straight up because
this guy comes on and says, oh, I
don't think so.
This is unprecedented as far as I know.
And this is PBS playing this as news?
Are you kidding me?
The difference here is President Trump fired them.
He should have said, I've relieved them of

(59:02):
duty.
You see, it's a little kinder.
I've relieved him of duty.
That's what it should have been, relieved him
of duty.
These reports from PBS are pathetic.
We're never going to make four more years
at this rate, people.
This is no good.
I want to get back to this backlash,

(59:23):
though, because I have a boots on the
ground report.
Tonight, the Pentagon announcing it will eliminate the
jobs of some 5,400 employees beginning next
week, the latest and one of the deepest
known cuts to any one federal department.
A DOD statement saying the termination of as
much as 8 percent of the civilian workforce
is to, quote, produce efficiencies and refocus the

(59:44):
department on the president's priorities.
A new Washington Post poll shows the president's
early actions are unpopular, supported by just 43
percent of Americans, 57 percent of respondents telling
the Post they believe the president has exceeded
his authority.
The president dismissing concerns about the cuts without
providing evidence.
No evidence.
We've polled it.
And people are thrilled.

(01:00:05):
They can't even believe it's happening.
Earlier, the president speaking to a bipartisan gathering
of governors at the White House, the president
also butting heads with Maine's Democratic Governor Janet
Mills over her state's refusal to comply with
the president's executive order seeking to ban transgender
women from women's sports, threatening the state's federal
funding.
You better comply because otherwise you're not getting

(01:00:25):
any any federal funding for every state.
Good.
I'll see you in court.
I look forward to that.
That should be a real easy one.
And enjoy your life after governor, because I
don't think you'll be in elected politics.
So just on the backlash.
And by the way, there was like now
there's a video going around of this governor

(01:00:47):
in a drag show.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
She's dancing and prancing on the stage in
some sort of weird outfit.
That's what you do.
That's what you do as governor.
So Tina and I were invited to the
annual Lincoln Reagan dinner here in Fredericksburg Friday
night.
Rick Green from the Patriot Academy invited us

(01:01:09):
to go and sit at his table.
He was emceeing the event.
And so this is I, you know, I
don't support any political party.
I don't never belong to any political party.
This was the Gillespie County Hill Country, Texas
GOP.
One hundred percent.
And Chip Roy was there and he did

(01:01:30):
a couple of minutes of of shtick saying
he really was talking about his latest resolution
to get us out of the UN.
He did talk about that.
He talked about all of the different bills
that are coming that are meant to put
the executive orders into law.
So he talked about that.

(01:01:51):
Then we also had Ellen, Ellen Troxler, I
think Troxler, she she was our our district,
this district's representative.
And she was she she did a lot
of hey guys, you know, a little waffling.
But so the keynote speaker was actually interesting.

(01:02:13):
This young Latino kid, Abraham Enrique, and he
talked about how how they got the Latino
vote for Trump.
And, you know, because it was a Lincoln
Reagan dinner, he referred to Reagan, I guess,
said at one point he says Latinos are

(01:02:34):
Republicans.
They just don't know it yet.
And his big joke of the evening was
Republicans are Latinos.
You just don't know it yet.
The kid was funny.
It's a good twist.
Yeah, the kid was good, but we like
Mexican food.
But there was there was no pushback.
No one was booing any of the things

(01:02:54):
that were being discussed.
You know, cheers for Doge.
Everything's fantastic.
The thing that that was really disappointing is
everything was Democrats are stupid.
The liberals are insane.
They're no good.
Yeah, they're no good.
I'm like you people this this is like
that's not you know, at one point, this

(01:03:17):
Enrique kid, he says, you know what Democrats
don't do and people think they don't go
to church.
I'm like, dude, like they are just as
unhinged as the Democrats.
And I think they're making a big mistake
by this rah rah rah.
It's also great.
It's all fantastic.
Spiking the ball.
And then yes.
And then the final speaker.

(01:03:38):
This was a huge mistake.
So he was like a politics nerd.
He might he might be he's doing stuff
in the Texas Senate.
And he went on.
He had 100 PowerPoint slides, you know, with
graphs and pie charts.
And he's telling everybody that.
And this is true.
I know that the the the Republicans in

(01:03:59):
the Texas House at the Capitol, they are
they're all teaming up with the Democrats just
to get get on the right committees.
And they're not really doing any of the
things that that you'd expect Republicans to do.
And he was so boring that his message
was lost.
And there was a Trump.
It's all great.
And they're missing that their own state is

(01:04:22):
in peril by, you know, I guess what
you'd call rhinos.
It was it was it was kind of
disturbing and disappointing.
It's like, no, just as you need to
have a counterbalance, a smart counterbalance in our
political system, which we don't have.
Democrat Party is all trans.

(01:04:42):
You know, you can't just sit around going
like, yeah, Trump took care of it.
You're going to be disappointed in like 24
months.
When because that's you know, this president, he
really has like 100 days to get everything
done, because then everyone's going to start thinking
about midterms and all going to be running
around trying to unseat each other.
So, you know, this was not it was

(01:05:05):
I was like, really, that's what it is.
Disappointing.
Yeah.
These kinds of things are always that way.
Yeah, I've never been to one.
So partisanship, it's just very dull.
They did have good pulled pork for dinner.
I'll have to say the pulled pork was
amazing for Texas.
Texas is not pulled pork country.

(01:05:25):
It's a beef country.
Yeah, it was good.
It was good.
Here's another.
Let's see.
Federal firings is from ABC tonight.
President Trump taking a victory lap, touting his
federal firing spree to a crowd of supporters
gathered at the Conservative Political Action Conference.
I've ended all of the so-called diversity,
equity and inclusion programs across the entire federal

(01:05:45):
government and the private sector and notified every
single government DEI officer that their job has
been deleted.
They're gone.
They're fired.
You're fired.
Get out.
You're fired.
And tonight, Elon Musk posing a new ultimatum
to federal workers.

(01:06:06):
Explain what you've done or resign.
Posting on X, all federal employees will shortly
receive an email requesting to understand what they
got done last week.
Failure to respond will be taken as a
resignation.
Musk giving no details about the criteria or
who will judge the responses.
But polls show voters are concerned.
A Washington Post Ipsos poll shows 53 percent

(01:06:29):
of Americans disapprove of what Trump has done.
Not doing it right.
This 57 percent said Trump has gone beyond
his authority as president and only 34 percent
approve of how Musk has handled his role.
Republican lawmakers starting to feel the heat.
Angry Americans across the country from Georgia to
Kansas are pushing back.
We are all freaking pissed off about this.

(01:06:51):
You're going to hear it.
And overnight, President Trump firing the nation.
They literally have one.
So Americans everywhere are there.
Oh, they're pushing back.
It's a real problem.
They have one soundbite.
It's across the country from Georgia to Kansas
are pushing back from Georgia to Kansas.
Is that across the country?
That's not across the country from Georgia to

(01:07:12):
Kansas.
It's like a like a four hour drive
across the Bible Belt right through the buckle.
But that's about it.
Angry Americans across the country from Georgia to
Kansas are pushing back.
We are all freaking pissed off about this.
You're going to hear it and feel it.
And overnight, President Trump firing the nation's top
military leadership, ousting General CQ Brown as chairman

(01:07:34):
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the nation's
top military officer, alongside several other senior leaders.
Trump aims to rid the military of leaders
who support diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, as
Brown and some of the others who were
fired had done.
The so a lot a lot of our
producers work in government and I've received a

(01:07:56):
lot of emails from people and they receive
this.
Tell me the five things you've done.
And the general consensus that I'm hearing is,
first of all, funny enough, they feel their
work life balance has improved now that they
have to go back to the office.
Ah, yes, I can see why I think
that makes sense.

(01:08:16):
That's your that's work.
And then you, you know, you go and
you go home as opposed to just being
being being working the whole time and running
back to your laptop.
And this is a very typical business move.
I mean, I've I've fired people from my
companies.
I fired people who I was friends with.
It's very difficult.
But certainly if you're like, think new ideas

(01:08:38):
was a service business and we lost the
client and the team has to go if
you can't replace it.
You can't have a, you know, eight eight
people dragging down on a slim margins as
they were.
It's very hard.
Sucks.
And then, you know, when we had 700
people at one point and then, yeah, you
say, OK, you know, we've been around for

(01:08:58):
a year and a half now.
Let's see what everyone's doing.
So we understand and we'd say, you know,
describe what you're doing.
What have you done?
But there was always a follow up.
And it was how could we make you
more productive?
And I don't know if they're going to
do that.
And and everything I'm reading from people is,
you know, our system suck.

(01:09:19):
The middle management sucks.
We we're not empowered as a big one.
We're not empowered.
So I wonder where they're going to put
the actual E in Doge into efficiency, because
something has to change in the in the
way things are done.
Yes, I think not.

(01:09:41):
You think that's not going to happen or
you don't think it's necessary?
Both.
And because a lot of this is work,
make work.
Sure, sure.
It's a giant welfare system to keep people
employed and keep the economy running.
A lot of these government jobs, it seems

(01:10:01):
to me.
And having worked in the government, I said,
you don't.
OK, well, you definitely have that experience.
Well, I'm going to lead you into another
list of clips we have, as we know,
and quite a number of Postal Service workers
who listen to the No Agenda show.
Mail carriers are big podcast listeners.
Surprise, surprise.

(01:10:21):
Well, they should be.
They should be.
They love listening to the podcast.
They're not watching YouTube.
No, they're listening to the podcast while they're
running around.
People have been there for twenty five years
or more.
And now they're very worried about what President
Trump is going to do with the post
office and the United States Postal Service.
And I see that you have a number

(01:10:42):
of clips about this.
I do.
And the thing is, again, we're dealing with
a I think a slanted reporting from PBS,
incredibly inaccurate.
There's they're they're promoting that, you know, this
is all anti-Trump stuff.
And can we just say that the Postal
Service was written up in the Constitution?

(01:11:04):
It's not like I don't think it's something
you can just get rid of.
No, you can't.
And it's also actually predates the Constitution.
Does it?
Oh, really?
I didn't I didn't realize that to these
clips.
But yes, I think it was formed in
seventeen twenty five.
I'm if I'm not I'm not mistaken.
Wow.
And it was part of the system that

(01:11:24):
was needed for it's a great idea to
have this.
Well, it's also the only I mean, we're
supposed to have true privacy where you can
send anything to the mail.
It's illegal to you.
You have a lot of yes.
And there's laws that allow us to bust
criminals for all kinds of different things.
Mail fraud.
Yes.
Yeah.
It's a handy little thing.
Yeah.
What do they call it?

(01:11:44):
Law enforcement benefits from the way it operates.
Yes.
So the thinking is, is they're trying to
stick Trump with Trump with Trump.
He wants to look at it, but they're
trying to they're trying to promote the idea.
And there's no evidence.
And I'll say to use that phrase, no
evidence.
It's going to be a show title one

(01:12:05):
of these days.
No evidence that he wants to privatize it.
Right.
But they're going to our mail carriers are
have been completely inundated with PSYOP.
And they are that's the number one thing
they worry about is if he privatizes it,
it's going to be too expensive.
It's going to be no good.
It's going to be horrible.
They're they're all freaked out about that one

(01:12:26):
thing.
Yes, because that's the one thing that the
PBS and the mainstream media wants to stick
on Trump, because they know to freak out
people.
And it's just a freak out mechanism.
Let's just blame Trump.
Currently, Trump's thinking about maybe incorporating the Postal
Service into the Commerce Department and leaving it

(01:12:48):
at that for what for a number of
reasons.
But the notion of privatizing is is bullcrap.
If you listen to the report, you can
kind of pick up where they kind of
imply that Trump wants to privatize it.
Trump has never said this, but let's go
with clip one.
President Trump reportedly plans to fire the governing

(01:13:09):
board of the U.S. Postal Service and
place the independent agency under the control of
the Commerce Department, a move that could be
the.
When when they say independent agency, what does
that even mean?
I don't know what it means and they
don't explain it.
And an agency under the control of the
Commerce Department, a move that could be the

(01:13:29):
first step in privatizing a service.
How can it be independent if it's under
the control?
Well, I think what they're doing is they're
trying to compare it to USAID, that that
was independent.
It's all isn't everything an independent agency.
This is all propaganda.
This is propaganda.
We'll start over.
President Trump reportedly plans to fire the governing

(01:13:50):
board of the U.S. Postal Service and
place the independent agency under the control of
the Commerce Department, a move that could be
the first step in privatizing a service established
250 years ago.
The White House initially denied that an executive
order to make that change is in the
works.
But late today, President Trump admitted that he's
considering it.

(01:14:11):
Jacob Bogage broke the story for The Washington
Post.
And he joins us now.
Thanks for being with us.
Hold on.
Jacob Bogage?
Is he the progenitor of Bogativeness?
Jason Bogus.
Nice.
Hey, great to hear from you, Jeff.
Thanks for having me.
So what are your sources telling you about
what the administration is planning and what it
could ultimately mean for the U.S. Postal
Service?
Well, step one here would be to place

(01:14:33):
the Postal Service, take it out of independent
status and embed it inside the Commerce Department.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick was just sworn in
today.
And we've reported over the course of months
that he's been engaging with then-president-elect
and now-president Trump about privatizing this agency.

(01:14:54):
So taking it out of that independent status
would be step one.
And step two would be leadership changes.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy announced he plans to
retire soon.
And the board of governors can be fired
for cause by the president.
That could be another step.
Okay.
So this report has already introduced the idea

(01:15:14):
of privatization twice with no evidence.
No evidence.
Well, this will certainly lead to legal challenges.
What have experts been telling you about the
authority the president would have to dissolve the
Postal Service leadership and then effectively move it
to the Commerce Department?
So the Postal Service has to have a
board of governors.
These are bipartisan individuals appointed by the president,

(01:15:38):
confirmed by the Senate, and then they together
select or can remove the Postmaster General.
There are powers that the Postal Service has
on things like service, on things like rates
and prices, on major investments that can only
be made by the governors.

(01:15:58):
So you have to have a board in
place.
And that's kind of what's complicating this for
the White House a little bit.
How do you take these individuals who can
only be removed for cause from an agency
that by law is independent?
You can't legally move it into the Commerce
Department.
How do you bring that under the control
of the White House?

(01:16:19):
You know, that's a legally dubious question.
He sounds dubious.
Okay.
So it's a legally dubious question, and there's
no evidence they're doing any of this.
In fact, the way they presented it earlier
is there's no, you know, there was going
to be an executive order and then there
was not going to be.
And then Trump says, well, I was thinking
about it, maybe.

(01:16:39):
This is really propaganda that we're listening to.
Just to slam Trump.
It took the media a couple of weeks
to get on their feet.
And now they're full bore.
Full bore.
Anything they can pick up on is just,
oh man, you should hear that Midas Touch
podcast.

(01:17:00):
You know, the one that has dethroned Joe
Rogan.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
It's 15 episodes a day of Trump sucks.
That's seriously.
Play this clip.
Trump sucks.
He's worried.
So this is the WTF clip of the
series.
And there's just a real eye roller in

(01:17:20):
here.
Well, President Trump, as you well know, he's
long mused about privatizing the Postal Service.
And as you mentioned, the Commerce.
Hold on.
Stop.
This is the third mention of privatized because
Trump has long mused.
Mused.
What does this even mean?
He's long mused.
Where's the evidence?
Has he written a statement saying he wants
to do this or he's just mused?

(01:17:41):
I mean, I've mused about it.
So what?
What does mused actually mean?
Oh, kind of think about it in a
casual way.
No, no.
To become absorbed in thought.
To think about something carefully and thoroughly.
It's not what you said.
Not casually.
No, he's been thinking about this.
And these people are familiar with the President's

(01:18:01):
thinking.
The Postal Service.
Yeah, they're mind readers.
Mentioned the Commerce Secretary was sworn in today.
And here's what the President had to say
about USPS during that ceremony.
Well, we want to have a post office
that works well and doesn't lose massive amounts
of money.
And we're thinking about doing that.
And it'll be a form of a merger,

(01:18:21):
but it'll remain the Postal Service.
And I think it'll operate a lot better
than it has been over the years.
It's been just a tremendous loser for this
country.
Tremendous amounts of money are being lost.
It's undeniable that the Postal Service has been
losing money.
It had a lot to do with the
way its pensions were organized.
It's lost more than $9 billion in the

(01:18:43):
most recent fiscal year.
Does that strengthen the case for privatization?
Does that $9 billion include the prefunding of
the pensions?
He didn't quite make that clear.
Well, he kind of indicated it might.
But yes, it obviously is why they lost
so much money.

(01:19:04):
How did that end?
I'm sorry.
That was it.
How did that end?
It's lost more than $9 billion in the
most recent fiscal year.
Does that strengthen the case for privatization?
Again, privatization.
Privatization.
So it's PBS and the media that are

(01:19:24):
pounding the privatization thing as though it's a
theme when it's not.
It's not a theme.
This is a creation.
This is their creation.
They may have actually pulled it off and
make it privatized because of the way they're
promoting it.
But this is their promoting it.
Nobody else is.
All right.

(01:19:44):
Sorry.
Well, President Trump, as you well know, he's
long mused about privatizing the Postal Service.
And as you mentioned, the Commerce Secretary was
sworn in today.
And here's what the president had to say
about USPS during that ceremony.
Well, we want to have a post office
that works well.
Wait a minute.
No, this is clip four.
This is clip four.
Is it the same length?

(01:20:05):
Let me see.
Clip two.
No.
Clip three.
No.
Okay.
Well, obviously, I failed to clip off the
beginning of this one.
You're going to have to play it.
I'll pick it up.
That was a blunder.
It was another one of my editing mistakes.
I take full responsibility.
People are pushing back on you, Dvorak.

(01:20:26):
People are mad.
They're pissed off at your editing skills.
The Postal Service didn't have a profit motive.
Its motive was to serve people all across
the equal and reliable service.
We changed that in 1970 for—it's a long
story we don't need to get into right
now.
But we changed that to be more of
like a crown corporation or a government sponsored

(01:20:47):
corporation.
So what do we lose without an independent
Postal Service?
Well, this is an agency that belongs to
all of us.
It doesn't belong to the White House.
Because it's independent, it has an obligation to
serve all of us equally, reach everybody's address
with the same service and the same pricing.
A privatized Postal Service or one in which

(01:21:11):
mail delivery becomes political will not have those
same motivations.
Okay.
Again, now they're just doing hypotheticals and then
imagining what bad things are going to happen
because of the privatization.
Yeah.
And there's postal union, of course, so they
can rile those people up.
This is all meant to rile people up.

(01:21:32):
And it's working.
It's working.
All right.
Now you've— And the last one is just
a little gotcha in here.
I played this little bonus ending clip, which
is like, wait a minute, let me think
about this.
To your point, in many cases in parts
of the country, it's the only mail carrier,
the only mail service.
And e-commerce giants like Amazon rely on

(01:21:53):
the Postal Service for those last mile deliveries.
So how could that affect the mail and
packages that Americans get?
Okay.
He said that in some parts of the
country, the U.S. Postal Service is the
only mail service.
Are you in some part of the country
where there's a competitor?
No, no.
I've never seen a competitor.

(01:22:15):
I think it's illegal.
That's a good point.
That's a good point.
So, but they bring it up as, oh,
in some parts of the country, the Postal
Service is the only Postal Service.
But FedEx won't deliver?
I'll bet you they will.
Well, it's beside the point.
The only one that does Postal Service, the
FedEx doesn't do Postal Service.
You know, they do messaging.

(01:22:36):
It's basically an overflown messaging service.
It's like a bike messenger, basically.
Postal Service is Postal Service.
There's no competition.
So why would you say what he's just
said that, oh, in some parts of the
country, it's the only mail service?
As if.

(01:22:57):
This is a terrible operation, this PBS.
It just gets worse by the minute.
And it's slanted and propagandistic.
And this reporting, they're part of the reason
that everyone's all worked up about privatization.
They're the ones who are bringing it up.
Nobody else is.
There's some ex-account called, that was Doge

(01:23:17):
underscore USPS.
And it's all, you know, people have been
following.
It's not, I don't think it's an actual
Doge account.
It's probably PBS put that together.
Yeah.
But they're just trying to, and I think
it's part of their methodologies to try to
regain union support.
Union, yeah, exactly.

(01:23:37):
Get the unions all riled up.
There was a good, I didn't clip it,
but Trump had a very good bit about
why he picked the Labor Secretary woman, because
she's a little left of center.
He says, he says, the Labor Party's all
supporting me.
I had to throw him a bone.
A woman, but he's a misogynist.
I mean, look at what he's done.

(01:23:58):
He's got women everywhere.
They don't say misogynist much these days.
He's also a racist.
So he brought a whole bunch of token
black people to the White House.
And I jest, of course.
And he threw them a bone.

(01:24:18):
The last administration tried to reduce all of
American history to a single year, 1619.
But under our administration, we honor the indispensable
role black Americans have always played in the
immortal cause of another date, 1776.
We like 1770s.
In the very first skirmish of the Revolutionary

(01:24:41):
War at Lexington Green, an enslaved black man
named Prince Estabrook, you know Prince Estabrook?
Yeah.
Answered history's call and fought as the minute
man alongside the other patriots of the very
small Massachusetts town.
Couldn't protect itself, but they did a good
job.
Prince was wounded in the early morning battle,

(01:25:03):
becoming not only the first African American soldier
to fight in the revolution, but among the
very first Americans to spill their blood.
One of the first in the nation to
spill blood in that very, very tough time.
Soon, Estabrook joined the Continental Army and ultimately
won his own freedom along with that of
his fellow Americans.
His legacy will endure and we're very proud

(01:25:26):
to honor him today.
It's a very important day in our country
and we honor him.
First person to spill blood happened to be
Tim Estabrook.
Today, I'm pleased to
announce that we will be including the statue

(01:25:52):
of Prince Estabrook in our new National Garden
of American Heroes.
We're going to be doing a Garden of
American Heroes.
And now that I think of it, I
didn't have, I must tell you, you know,
sadly, most of them, I guess all of
them are not with us any longer.
I was going to put Tiger in the
garden.
He's talking to Tiger Woods.

(01:26:15):
There was one interesting moment.
And I mean, he handles this in a
typical Trump fashion, where he's calling out people.
Great business leaders are here with us.
They have no idea why Albert Bourla, the
CEO of Pfizer, was there at the-
To get booed.

(01:26:36):
Yes.
Appreciate it very much.
We also have the head of Pfizer here.
So I want to thank him, one of
the great, great people, one of the great
businessmen.
Thank you, Albert.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Now, do you think he's saying thank you

(01:26:59):
just because he thinks that the microphones won't
pick up on the booing?
Or is he saying thank you for booing
him?
He smirked.
He's saying thank you for booing him?
No, I don't think he's saying thank you.
I don't think he's that crass.
I don't know, man.
But he was smirking.
He thought it was funny that Bourla was
getting booed.
It was interesting.
It was very interesting.

(01:27:19):
It was a very, very funny moment.
So Big Pharma is going nuts right now.
There's report after report about measles, and we're
all going to die in the bird flu.
And, whoa, man, there's a new...
What is this?

(01:27:39):
A global concern grows for new pandemic after
research team in China detects COVID-like virus
in bats with the same potential to infect
humans.
It goes on and on and on.
Closer to home, the GLP-1 providers, Osempic,

(01:28:00):
Wigovi, they are doing everything they can to
make sure that you do not get your
GLP-1 except in their approved...
Overpriced package.
Overpriced package, yes, which is...
Look, it has a dial so you can
never shoot up too much.
And I had to get these two clips.

(01:28:22):
This is from WGN in Chicago.
I think it's the...
Right after the morning news, it's the morning
show.
It's a coffee clutch.
And they bring in...
I think she's called an injection doctor, which
is even crazier.
I swear to God.
I think it's like injection doctor.
And she's very well versed in what she's

(01:28:45):
saying.
She's not saying the drugs that you're buying
on the black market.
She's not saying that they are not good.
She's saying you're doing it wrong and you
don't have the expert supervision of the packaging
that we have.
And your provider who...
Of course, you could only have your provider

(01:29:07):
can only give you the very expensive approved
GLP-1 products.
I'm against all of this.
And she even throws in the side effects
that you can get if you basically inject
too much.
That's what this is all about.
But it's brought to you by this team
who, of course, are ultimately being paid by

(01:29:28):
pharmaceutical advertisements as don't get the black market
stuff.
Everyone is running towards the cheapest available versions
of Ozempic and Manjaro.
But what are the dangers of getting these
injectables online?
Aesthetic nurse injector Neha Thengel joins us now.
Nurse injector.
I've never heard of someone like that.
She's a nurse injector.

(01:29:48):
A nurse injector.
Manjaro, but what are the dangers of getting
these injectables online?
Aesthetic nurse injector Neha Thengel joins us now
to break it all down.
I saw an article recently of a big
brother candidate or somebody who was on the
show who almost died from getting black market
Ozempic.
Yeah, she was on the UK Big Brother.

(01:30:09):
She almost died from getting black market Ozempic.
This is GLP-1 is not patented.
It's I don't even think it's patentable.
It's it's what does he call it?
It's a one of those things called peptide.
It's a peptide.
So, you know, it's available.
But yeah, it's black market getting black market

(01:30:31):
Ozempic.
Yeah, she was on the UK Big Brother.
Yeah.
And she said that she got this injectable
on the black market.
She took quite a bit of it, more
than her recommended dose.
So she took more.
She took too much of it.
OK, so was it the black market stuff
or that she took too much of it?
Doesn't matter because it was on TV.
It was on Big Brother in the UK.
Perfect.

(01:30:52):
She said she was puking.
She was diarrhea.
And at one point she had three bags,
bags of vomit next to her.
Oh, my goodness.
Oh, no.
And then here I just read another article.
This 26 year old, she was a social
media influencers.
You know how every company wants to use
these social media influencers to get their name
out.
They gave her the medication for free.

(01:31:12):
OK, she took five times her recommended dose.
OK, well, then that was dumb.
She took five times the recommended dose.
OK, so it's not that it's not the
stuff.
It's the dosage, the dosage.
She didn't know that.
They told her to take point five.
She took point five and ended up in
the hospital puking.
So she knew what they told her to
do still.

(01:31:33):
Apparently.
And she contacted them and their response was,
well, nausea is a side effect of it.
So, you know, good luck.
And ended up taking five times her dose.
Went back to the hospital with heart palpitations,
had some liver, elevated liver enzymes.
I mean, she could have really died.
Right.
So to get these medications online and not
knowing who you're going to go to, where

(01:31:54):
like the sterility, the sterility of the drug
and where it's being made and who you're
getting it from is such a big, big
issue out there.
This went on for seven minutes.
I only have another minute and a half.
I won't I won't torture you too much,
but it was just you're going to see
a lot of this in so many ways

(01:32:14):
in this relatable format.
This was done on network TV.
They discussed this situation.
What happened was the Ozempic people who also
make Wegovy, same group, they finally got their
supply chain down so they could start cranking
it out again to the point where there's
not a shortage of supposedly was a shortage.

(01:32:34):
That's what allowed the FDA to approve the
ability of these of these pharmaceutical or I'm
sorry, these compounding pharmacies to make this stuff.
And now they're in fact, way the reports
all ended was and now we can put
these guys out of business.
I imagine that's why they're so cheap because
you don't know what's in it.
No, because it should be cheap, right?

(01:32:56):
Because it's a jip otherwise.
What do you mean?
You don't know what's in it.
That's it's cheap.
It's cheap.
I imagine that's why they're so cheap because
you don't know what's in it.
People should be strung up.
There's no reason for the news media to
be this corrupt.
Well, to be fair, this is my thing
for today because everything you hear or every
report we're playing is just bad.

(01:33:18):
It's bad information.
This is so good.
They're lying to us.
It's so good that all time.
Now you're a little bit more expensive.
You know, I can get it on, you
know, this a little bit more.
It's like 60 bucks for one in 1200
for the other expensive.
You know, I can get it on, you
know, this website or this website for 50
bucks or a hundred bucks.
And I say, you know, you're not paying

(01:33:39):
for just a drug.
You're paying for the expertise, the knowledge, the
support.
You can go online and just ask for
the medication and someone's going to give it
to you.
But how do you know you qualify for
it?
And how do you know what drugs are
good for you and what medications and what
side effects in a given week, probably anywhere
from three to five messages I get, Hey,
I have this vial.
What do I pull the injections out to?

(01:34:00):
Or, Hey, I'm having this side effects.
What do you think I could do?
And it's like, I can't really guide you
because I'm not your medical provider.
You need to reach out to the company
that you got the medication from, but there
are just so many people that are looking
for that bargain.
And I, and Hey, look, I know times
are tough.
I'm for that bargain, but at what cost,
looking for the segment, I all of a

(01:34:21):
sudden found, you know, Facebook clickbait.
I mean, there is just no way that
you can get an injectable for $50.
Come on.
I scrolled through Instagram.
There's no way you can get an injectable
for $50.
That's just not possible.
If not expensive, it's $50 is high.
Facebook clickbait.
Oh my gosh.
It's just no way that you can get
an injectable for $50.

(01:34:42):
Come on.
I scrolled through Instagram and no more than
seven or eight different companies pop up.
And yeah, I got on there once just
to see what it was.
And I went through the profile and they
recommended three drugs they'd never heard of.
Yeah.
And I was like, lady, all the drugs
I see on TV.
I've never heard of.
I can't remember the names.
Recommended three drugs.
I've never heard of.
Yeah.
And I was like, Oh yeah, this is

(01:35:03):
a bad idea.
Well, you know, are the drugs coming from
China or like Europe or, you know, some
other drugs come from China or like Europe.
That's literally where Ozempic comes from, from Europe.
Is it from Norway?
Uh, I guess one of the European drug
makers.

(01:35:23):
Yes.
Oh, if it comes from Europe, you can't
trust it.
Let's see what it was.
And I went through the profile and they
recommended three drugs I'd never heard of.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
This is a bad idea.
Well, you know, are the drugs coming from
China or like Europe or, you know, someplace
like that?
Are they being regulated?
Um, and do you know if you're a
candidate, if you don't even have like a

(01:35:44):
meeting with a provider consultation, how do you
know that you're okay?
If you're 300 pounds, you need it.
But if you have an underlying thyroid issue
or you have elevated liver enzymes or you
really are a diabetic and have hypertension and
things like that, like I know times are
tough, but at what cost do you say
I'm going to take the cheaper route and
not go see a medical provider?

(01:36:04):
I mean, I think isn't even Kim Kardashian
marketing a GLP-1 drug now?
Is that right?
Yeah, I think so.
Maybe Chloe.
Oh, one of those.
Probably Chloe.
She looks like the type.
She looks like the type.
Um, but there's a lot of, a lot
of worry in the market about, uh, RFK

(01:36:25):
Jr. He hasn't really, I guess Monday, tomorrow
will be his first day already.
He's issued two bombshell orders on vaccines because,
you know, he's an anti-vaxxer.
It has mainstream doctors terrified.
He ordered, they're terrified.
They ordered the CDC to scrub its digital
wild to mild flu vaccine campaign.
Uh, that was too, uh, so that's good.

(01:36:48):
Yeah.
That's what I would think.
He's changing the advisory committee, you know, from
shills to maybe someone who has a crush.
He cares.
And then, and this is my favorite.
Uh, when he was sworn in, uh, he
had a little speech and I'll tell you
what people have emailed me about.

(01:37:09):
Actually, I think it's in this clip in
case you didn't hear it.
There was an interesting comment by RFK Jr.
in a speech he made after being confirmed
as secretary of health and human services.
This guy, this is, this is the kind
of stuff I get emailed, but it's going
around.
It's, it's worthless.
It's only 40 seconds.
Here's the part I'm referring to.

(01:37:30):
For 20 years, I've gotten up every morning
on my knees and prayed that God would
put me in a position where I can
end the childhood chronic disease epidemic in this
country.
On August 23rd of last year, God sent
me president Trump.

(01:37:51):
We need a man on a white horse.
Kennedy's reference to Trump as a man on
a white horse is rather interesting from a
biblical perspective as the rider of the white
horse is the first of the four horsemen
of the apocalypse.
He is also the antichrist.

(01:38:12):
So Trump is the antichrist.
I just wanted to say, I'm pretty sure
that the rapture comes before the tribulation.
So if, if Trump is the first of
the four riders of the apocalypse, as long
as I'm still doing the podcast, you have
nothing to worry about.
If I get zapped away and I'm not
here anymore, then you should worry.
Until then, calm down, everybody.

(01:38:33):
Calm down.
Does that mean I get all the checks?
You get all the, you also have to
do all the production.
I can do production.
Yeah.
I just don't like doing production.
Sure.
You're so great at editing.
I mean, what could possibly go wrong?
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, um, have you,

(01:38:54):
you know, have you heard about the super
pigs?
The super pigs.
Yes.
The super pigs.
It's a, it's another plague from Canada.
Blame Canada.
Oh, I thought it was the, I thought
it was the, okay.
Man, there was like three or four ways
I could have gone with that joke and
I dropped the ball on all three.
So.
On the US Canadian border, there's an epic

(01:39:15):
battle between man and beast going on.
And it seems the beasts are winning.
Large wild hogs are wreaking havoc on ranches
and farmland on both sides of the border.
In tonight's In Depth, CBS's Adam Yamaguchi travels
to Canada to track the so-called super
pigs.
Super pigs.
We got super pigs.

(01:39:35):
As the sun sets on the Canadian prairie,
the search begins for one of North America's
most destructive animals.
These tracks are clearly quite fresh, right?
And you can see them going in both
directions.
Professor Ryan Brook of the University of Saskatchewan
has been tracking them for years.
They're here for sure.
No question.
And like lots of them, not just two,
three.
There's a lot of pigs.

(01:39:56):
It's kind of mildly alarming.
Brook is one of Canada's leading authorities on
the so-called super pigs.
He calls them an ecological train wreck.
They're crossbreeds, wild boars deliberately bred with domestic
pigs, big, smart, and prolific breeders.
Their population now spreading out of control.

(01:40:19):
Why is it so difficult to eradicate this
problem?
I think there's two challenges in Canada.
One is their biology makes them very, very
hard to get rid of.
They reproduce faster than you can shoot them.
They will eat anything to survive with devastating
consequences.
You've eaten everything that's of value off of
it.

(01:40:41):
He's lost all this.
You know, the problem is Canada needs more
guns.
We have an active tourism industry in Texas
of shooting wild hogs, the super pigs.
In fact, you can rent a helicopter.
You and your buddies can go around flying,

(01:41:03):
shooting up hogs.
Shooting pigs, look at this guy.
They'll give you a 50 Cal, whatever you
want.
They are a soup.
They're a horrible plague.
They ruin everything.
Oh, they're terrible product.
We have them in Marin County.
But they're good eating.
Let's look at the positive side.
No, I've heard that they're not good eating.

(01:41:24):
No, I've heard nothing.
But they were first, they first showed up
in Marin County because somebody brought some real
ones, some marcusans, because they were used to,
they butchered when they're young.
When they're old, I don't know what that's
like.
But when they're young, they make a terrific
bacon.
You can have wild boar bacon.
You can also have wild boar steaks.

(01:41:47):
But wild boar bacon is just dynamite.
If it's just dynamite, you can buy it.
Whole Foods has it often.
And it's yeah, no, they're delicious.
In fact, it was the idea was to
bring marcusan in for a couple of restaurants
in the Bay Area that like to serve
this wild boar.
And then they escaped into Marin County and

(01:42:09):
started breeding like nuts.
So now there's like 1000s of these stupid
pigs all over the place.
They breed real quick that they like every
six weeks or something.
They're popping out piglets.
Yeah, they have so that's an issue.
And so they haven't been able to control
them.
And in Marin County, everyone's goes, he goes
like his guns.
Yeah, you don't have exactly, you can have

(01:42:30):
the same as the Canadians attitude about these
things.
And in Marin County, they're afraid.
So the pigs are taken over.
Super pigs.
Yeah, not just pigs.
They are good.
He can show me some evidence or not.
I've had wild boar.
I used to have Marcus on it.
There's a place a restaurant in San Rafael
called Maurice and Charles, which for a long

(01:42:51):
time was the number one gourmet restaurant in
Northern California.
And they would serve these various pig dishes
from these wild boar killer.
Let me set you up.
Have you heard about the pig problem in
Canada?
Come on, come on, throw one.
You don't have one ready, at least one
of them.
What one one clip?
No one joke.

(01:43:12):
Like you had all these jokes ready.
And I said, no, I believe me.
I dropped the ball.
For some reason, I'm not on my game
today.
Choking.
You could tell that ever since I had
that one bad edit.
Yeah, which then gave me grief about later
in the show.
I have been I have not been myself.
No, but that's when you said that you
would get all the checks and you would
and you could do everything yourself.
I didn't start with the right away.

(01:43:33):
I'm dead.
You're the one that says you're going to
leave the show by going floating up into
the atmosphere out of the blue.
I get raptured.
And then you're like, all you can think
is how about the checks?
Well, that seems to be the most important
thing.
OK, on a more serious note, things are
not going well with the pope.

(01:43:54):
Well, it does seem that his condition has
deteriorated today.
The Vatican said that he had a prolonged
respiratory crisis today in hospital that required a
high flow of oxygen.
He also had a blood transfusion for a
disorder that seemed to be related to anemia.
Now, the doctors briefed the media yesterday for

(01:44:16):
the first time since Pope Francis was admitted
to hospital a week ago.
And they said yesterday one of the biggest
concerns is septus, which is a blood infection.
And if he does get that kind of
infection, it could affect his organs and ultimately
cause his demise.

(01:44:37):
So at the moment, a great deal of
concern.
The crisis has been named by the Vatican
as a crisis, and his condition has been
considered critical.
So a lot of millions, well, millions of
Catholics are going to be watching on very
anxiously at the pope's health.
What is his outlook like?
Well, the doctors who briefed the media yesterday

(01:44:59):
said that he would have to stay in
hospital at least another week now.
He's already been in there for eight days.
He's staying on the 10th floor of the
Gemelli Hospital in Rome.
He has a private suite.
And we're getting updates in the morning and
the evening.
But there is a great deal of concern
about the deterioration that we seem to have

(01:45:21):
seen today.
And tonight will be critical in terms of
what happens next.
Now, this, of course, is very bad news
for the pope.
At 88, there's talk of sepsis and double
pneumonia.
These are not good things at an old
age.
What it is good for is for the

(01:45:41):
Academy Awards vote.
And we never want to put anything past
the entertainment industry.
The movie Conclave is up for a vote.
And if you don't want to know what
the movie is about, then don't listen.
I'm going to spoil it.
Do you know the plot?
How are you going to give away the
entire plotline?

(01:46:02):
How are you going to spoil it?
It's not possible.
Yes, I'm going to give away the entire
plotline.
Okay, go.
Okay.
The pope dies right before they seal up,
you know, to go talk and blow smoke
out the chimney.
A mystery cardinal shows up and he had
the secret diocese of Kabul.

(01:46:24):
So all these scandals...
Is this the Stanley Tucci character?
I don't know who plays him.
Scandals.
The frontrunner for new pope falls from grace
after the mystery guy gets in after some
stirring speech.
But then turns out the new guy, the

(01:46:46):
mystery guy who shows up has an appendectomy.
Turns out he also has ovaries.
Only Hollywood could come up with this one.
And then there's some Islamic terrorist plots and
there's all kinds of...
Oh, brother.
Yeah, I can see what you're saying.
Spoil it by ruining the movie by telling

(01:47:07):
us it stinks.
I like the ovaries part.
That's kind of like, whoa, all right, didn't
see that one coming.
That's very interesting.
I'll probably watch it now because of that.
Yeah, good.
Give us a review when you're done.
I think there's reports coming in on the

(01:47:28):
pope are contradictory.
There's reports this morning, oh, he's going to
be fine.
He's not critical.
And they're always going to be dead tomorrow.
So you don't know.
It seems to me that he's a goner.
I think so, too.
I think so, too.
And that means we have to get back
into our predictive modes.
And that means you, mostly, as the guy

(01:47:50):
with second sense about these things.
I cannot make my prediction.
You know, this is going to be it
because you blow this one.
Then I'm done.
Then I'm toast.
Then you might as well take over the
show, take all the checks for yourself.
Take the checks and let you go float
up to the sky.
But there's more disappointments ahead, everybody.
I saw your appearance at CPAC with Ben

(01:48:11):
and with Ted Cruz.
And one of the things that you alluded
to, and this is something Donald Trump has
talked about.
He's talking to Pam Bondi.
The DOJ may be releasing the list of
Jeffrey Epstein's clients.
Will that really happen?
It's sitting on my desk right now to
review.
That's been a directive by President Trump.
I'm reviewing that.
I'm reviewing JFK files, MLK files.

(01:48:34):
That's all in the process of being reviewed
because that was done at the directive of
the president from all of these agencies.
So have you seen anything there?
You said, oh, my gosh.
Not yet.
What?
Yes.
What?
There's no, oh, my gosh, in the Epstein
client list.
What?
No, didn't she say yes?
No, no, no.
That's not what she said.

(01:48:55):
No, listen, listen.
That's all in the process of being reviewed
because that was done at the directive of
the president from all of these agencies.
So have you seen anything there?
You said, oh, my gosh.
Not yet.
Not yet.
Oh, not yet.
No, there's no, oh, my gosh.
She hasn't even looked at it, I'm sure.
They're sitting on her desk.
Bull crap.

(01:49:15):
I can't believe she said, but she has
the JFK file, the MLK files.
All on the desk.
And they got that.
Do you know the JFK files is like
a room full of documents?
How could it be on her desk?
Why?
Why?
I ask you.
Well, my question to you.
I'm just going to parray with a question.
Why are they on her desk?
They have to be disclosed.

(01:49:37):
That was the executive order.
Did it say Pam Bondi gets to check
it first?
Is she in charge of redacting?
She's ad libbing.
Oh, well, disappointment.
I, she should be saying, well, she should
have at least said, well, you know, you
never know.
I can't wait.
You know, it's on my desk.
I haven't, I haven't gotten through all of

(01:49:58):
it yet.
But instead she says, no, I'm not.
She shouldn't be going through any of it.
It's supposed to be released and released as
means of release.
Well, the Epstein list, was that in the
executive order?
I don't think so.
And what is this list?
Is it just a list of people he
knows?
Or does it have like five chicks, three
chicks, adrenochrome?

(01:50:19):
I mean, what is going to, what is
in this list?
Yeah.
You're asking the wrong guy.
I never got invited.
You only went to that owl place.
That's the only place you went.
And that was, and that was a dud
too.
The owl.
Yeah.
What was that place called again?
The Bohemian Grove.
Bohemian Grove.
And you said it was a huge dud
with a bunch of old farts.

(01:50:39):
It was just, it wasn't what everyone says
it is.
It's just a drinking club as most things.
You didn't get invited to the special party.
You didn't get invited to the freak off.
That's what happened.
I guess not.
I do have one, a Bohemian Grove story
though.
There's always just this.
There we go.
There's this story about the owl, this giant
owl.

(01:50:59):
Yeah.
That's was Gollum or whatever the hell.
The effigy that they burned.
It's a big giant owl.
It's like a giant monster's owl.
And this guy says, you want to go
see the owl?
I said, yeah, hell yeah.
I want to see the owl.
The owl is, there's nothing left.
It's rotted.
It's like a stump.

(01:51:20):
And it's like, he says, there it is.
I said, where is it?
I said, that's what's left of it.
This owl has been gone for 40 years.
It's been just rotted away from the day
they built it.
And it's just a nothing.
And it's like, well, that's kind of disappointing.
And that's not what Alex Jones is telling
us.
Wait, but there were no old guys walking
around naked, burning up the owl?

(01:51:42):
No, but I did learn something interesting.
Ah, here we go.
So I'm floating around with some guy.
I got this flashlight.
We're just roaming around at night.
And there's all these crickets and birds and
all the frogs, all this noise.
And the guy says, stop, don't move.
So you stop and you wait about 15

(01:52:04):
seconds.
All the noise stops.
It's silent.
And now take a few steps.
Add to all, there's all the frogs and
birds.
It's piped in.
No.
Yeah, it was dynamite, by the way.
I was thinking of doing it in my
backyard.
So there's motion sensors.

(01:52:24):
So you're walking around at night.
It's so interesting, you know, and there's chirp,
chirp, chirp, chirp, chirp, chirp.
And then you stop moving.
Boom, silent.
Then you move again.
Ah, there it is.
Chirp, chirp, chirp.
It was, I thought it was a fabulous
idea.
That is crazy.
That was crazy.

(01:52:45):
Huh.
A little known fact, only on the No
Agenda show, ladies and gentlemen.
And with that, I'd like to thank you
for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man
who put the C in the no evidence.
Say hello to my friend on the other
end.
The one, the only Mr. John C.
Dvorak.
And in the morning to you, Mr. Adam
McRae.
In the morning, ships, sea, blue, sun, and

(01:53:05):
ground, feet in the air, subs in the
water, dames and knights out there.
And in the morning to the trolls.
Hello there, trolls.
How you doing?
Oh, very nice, trolls.
Very nice.
Above average.
2573 on the troll room count today.
Those trolls are very spicy today, John.
I've even kicked one out just to show
them that I have power.

(01:53:26):
Which only, you know.
You're fired.
You have been relieved of your troll, trolled
rapture.
Yeah, you've been relieved of your troll duties.
They come back after five minutes.
It's okay.
It's just like refragging.
It's no big deal.
They're in the troll room at trollroom.io.
That's where you can join anytime we do
a show live.
Of course, it's the No Agenda stream, which

(01:53:48):
means you can join in anytime, 24 hours
a day.
There's always somebody in there trolling about something,
tons of live shows.
And if you want, you can also listen
on the Modern Podcast app.
Like Fountain.
And you can boost.
There's chats.
There's comments.
There's all kinds of things.
We have the chapters, obviously, of these Modern

(01:54:08):
Podcast apps.
You can find it at podcastapps.com.
And speaking of the art for the chapters,
that comes from our No Agenda artists.
They upload to one of our value for
value websites.
Which, let's be honest, every single one of
our websites is value for value.
Meaning, we didn't build them.
Our producers built them for us.
As a return in value for the value

(01:54:30):
they receive from the show.
And they do that at noagendaartgenerator.com.
And we always like to thank the artists
who we chose for the album art.
But again, a lot of this shows up
in the chapter art.
Which Dreb Scott always diligently diligently puts together
for us.
And we chose a piece by Tante Neal.

(01:54:52):
Which we have to be quick to point
out.
We did not choose it because she groused
about the one before that.
Yes, we have to mention that.
You have to mention that.
It was not my favorite, honestly.
It was okay.
It was the war of the words in
the Russian disinformation space.
I did like the font that she used.
And it was a nice rubble-ized image.

(01:55:12):
There were a couple other ones that we
looked at.
And by the way, that brings...
Where's Tante Neal on the leaderboard?
Let me see.
She's one of our Dutch masters.
She is...
Wow, where is she?
Oh, that's all time.
Let's see, rolling annual.
She's number...
She's third place on the rolling annual.

(01:55:33):
Rolling six months, she's sixth.
Rolling 90 days, she's sixth.
But all time...
Oh, she's also sixth place of all time.
Okay.
She's up there, man.
She's important.
She's a very good artist.
And she doesn't use AI, which is something
that I like.
As we look down the list, there were
a lot of female pilots.

(01:55:54):
Oh, by the way, turns out, as far
as I understand, the pilot of the Canadian
Air that landed hard and...
A Delta.
A Delta that landed hard and wound up
upside down was a 26-year-old female
pilot who...
Now, it's not...
In fact, it's quite normal for the first

(01:56:15):
officer to land...
She was first officer, so co-pilot.
Not abnormal for them to land the plane
while the pilot does the radio.
She had 1,500 hours, which is more
than enough.
She qualified, bad day.
We still don't know if it was just
a hard landing or if there was a
mechanical failure.
But it's kind of sad because now everyone's

(01:56:36):
like, well, it was a female helicopter pilot
who crashed into the CRJ.
It was a female pilot who...
This is bringing back the woman driver idea.
There's one tree in the desert and she
hits it.
And in both cases, there was a responsible...
A sexist would say.
Yes.

(01:56:56):
There was a responsible pilot in command who
is ultimately responsible for what happens, whether you're
the instructor on a check ride or if
you're the captain and you're allowing your co
-pilot to land, it's still ultimately your responsibility.
But I get all kinds of messages.
You still think female pilots are as good
as men?

(01:57:17):
Well, yes.
Meanwhile, of course, she was named and shamed.
Of course.
So she's going to be...
Oh, no.
No, she's toast.
She's scarred and it's unfair.
I mean, most...
It's unfair.
I think so too.
Yeah.
Most...
Nobody died.
That's the key.
That's what we call a good landing in
aviation.
If everybody walks away...
She's having to be upside down, but still...
Yeah.

(01:57:37):
If everyone walks away...
You got a story for life.
Yeah.
Well, she's probably scarred for life.
Because yeah, they immediately...
I'll bet she is.
I feel bad.
Was this ever happened before this exact kind
of scenario where the plane flips over?
Jeez.
Yeah.
It was quite a classic.
Well, we still don't know exactly what happened,

(01:57:58):
but we'll know eventually.
But we do know one thing.
It was upside down.
It was upside down.
Yes.
Let's see.
There were a lot of Dogecam pieces of
art.
Dogecams on dogs.
Dogecams on people.
Dogecams on chicks.
A lot of rented chickens.
A lot of rented chickens.
There was an on Gigi.

(01:58:19):
And I never met on Gigi, so I
don't know if that was a true depiction
by Darren O'Neill.
But no one would understand that piece of
art.
No one would understand it.
You kind of liked the chicken cam.
The chicken taking a selfie, which baffled me.
But I did like that piece.
Yeah.
Then there was lots of black popes.

(01:58:41):
Little too early for the pope jokes, people.
Little too early.
Yeah, I'd say.
It's like, we're not.
We're not.
Yeah, too soon.
We're not going to do that.
So in general, a lot of AI slop.
And then a very acceptable piece from Tantaniel.
I didn't see much else.
Ness Works.
No, it was pretty lame.
It was, yeah, it was light.
Light on goodness, I would say.

(01:59:03):
But you can only blame the show.
If we don't come home with the goods.
Yeah.
And deliver some interesting storylines that people can
develop art from.
It's our fault, not theirs.
Did we do anything for this show?
Do you think that we...
Not yet.
But wait, the show isn't over yet.
We still have time.

(01:59:25):
We also, in our time, talent and treasure
return of Value for Value, we'd like to
thank people who supported us financially.
It's incredibly important so that we can do
stuff like pay bills.
And we thank everybody who donates $50 and
above on every single episode.
If you donate $200 or above, not only
do we read your note, we will also
bestow upon you the title of Associate Executive

(01:59:47):
Producer, which is an actual Hollywood credit.
So valid, in fact, that you can use
it on imdb.com.
If you don't have an account, you can
open one up.
We just keep adding them.
Collect all thousand.
1,741.
$300 and above, we'll read your note and
you get an Executive Producer credit.
And that is exactly what Aditya Trimurti did,

(02:00:10):
who is from Hyderabad in Pakistan, I believe.
No, in India.
What is AP?
AP?
Yes.
It's probably the province.
Oh, okay.
Sorry, I said Pakistan.
That was a huge blunder on my part.
In India...

(02:00:30):
Yeah, oh yeah, you insulted him.
He'll never donate again.
Actually, Aditya emailed me a longer note.
Let me see if I can find this.
About censorship.
And this will probably make Aditya never donate
again, because Aditya will probably get rolled up.
But Aditya said that freedom of speech in

(02:00:54):
India is almost gone.
And he says, our Prime Minister Modi is
a mixture of Robert Mugabe and Idi Amin.
And he's been weaponizing agencies, throwing people in
jail.
You know, there was a cartoon of Modi

(02:01:14):
that he had everybody, every magazine was forbidden.
It was forbidden to actually print it.
It got scrubbed off of the internet.
He cut off Facebook, YouTube, and X.
Or whenever he wants to, he gets them
to shadow ban accounts.
And he says, that stupid ignorant bitch, Palki

(02:01:38):
Sharma, that you and John rely on for
Indian news is Modi's mouthpiece now.
So...
Not me.
No, I'm not relying on her, but at
least she's understandable.
No offense.
But, you know, it's like Africa news, you
know.
Africa news, us white people here in the
West can't understand it.

(02:01:59):
This freedom of speech issue around the world,
Germany, UK, India.
And I can't even imagine what's going on
in some of these other countries.
It's pathetic.
It is.
And remind me, I have a clip about
that after we're done.
So Aditya sent us $733.33. We love

(02:02:20):
that.
Thank you.
And said, thank you so much, Adam and
JCD.
Jingle requests is jobs, jobs, jarbs.
Jarbs?
Jobs, jobs, jarbs.
And karma for all.
And please de-douche my fellows in India.
You've been de-douched.
And Aditya becomes a knight with this donation
and requests a samosa and Johnny Walker blue

(02:02:43):
at the round table.
Johnny Walker blue.
That's...
Is that any good?
The Johnny...
Have you ever had the Johnny Walker blue?
The Walker blue is the top of the
top.
Yeah, it's the expensive stuff.
Is it good?
Is it any good?
It's really good.
You know, but for the money, I would
tell people to get the green.
I think Johnny Walker green has a just

(02:03:05):
delicious scotch flavor that is for the, for
the price.
There's no comparison for the price.
Okay.
By the way, my knight name will be
Sir Tenty of the New East India Company.
All right.
Sir Tenty, as in certainty.
Sir Tenty of the...

(02:03:25):
Certainty.
Certainty.
Yes, sir.
Another pun.
Certainty.
Yes.
Thank you very much.
We appreciate you.
Piers Chidley.
Oh, wait, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I had to do the jobs, Karma.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
So we got Piers Chidley.

(02:03:48):
I'm guessing Chidley, C-H-I-D-L
-E-Y in Brighton East, Victoria, Australia.
Chidley, probably.
Chidley.
I'd just guess.
I'm going to stick with Chidley.
Okay.
He came with 526.36, which is, if
that's American money, that's a lot of Australian
dollars.

(02:04:08):
ITM gentlemen, medium time listener, first time donating.
So please de-douche me firstly.
You've been de-douched.
Been listening for about six months from Melbourne,
Australia, and can't get enough.
Had to get myself...
There's another country with issues with free speech.

(02:04:28):
Yes, a lot of issues.
Had to get myself some Commodore ship.
Love your work, guys.
Thank you.
Okay, well, thank you.
You got it.
Just got a message on Telegram.
Bro, bro, your quote, she doesn't use AI
about Tantaniel and no agenda is wrong.
She used AI for the last two artworks

(02:04:49):
that she won, just for your info, because
truth matters if you want to go to
heaven.
Okay.
Thank you.
I'm happy.
I'm good to go now.
Yeah, thanks for the input.
Sean in La Habra, California, 51538 and says,
I'll take Commodore over douche bag any day.
Just a thorough de-douching and some jobs

(02:05:11):
karma from my friend Sam.
You've been de-douched.
Thank you, John Adam, my in-check amygdala.
And I appreciate you, Sean from La Habra,
California.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
Karma.

(02:05:35):
Yeah, now we go to a note that
came in from Crystal Galarte in Napa.
Napa, Napa, Napa, $333.33. And the note,
which is handwritten, says, ITM, John and Adam,
please add this donation to the Randy Goulart
Contributions, 333.33. Thank you for the perspective.

(02:05:58):
This is, in other words, for his knighthood,
I guess.
Thank you for the perspective on current events.
You are our entertainment on morning walks and
long car rides.
Yes.
Yes.
And there we have Sir Donald of the
Fire Bottles, written on United Federation of Planets
Starfleet Command letterhead, which I just noticed is

(02:06:20):
trademarked.
Is that an intergalactic trademark, or is that
just a trademark for the U.S.? I
noticed that.
Gentlemen, and this is 333.33, I feel
douchebaggery creeping up on me.
To dispel the evil vapors, please accept this
one-tenth of a Rubilizer donation.

(02:06:40):
Long live the North Idaho Sanity Brigade.
No jingles, no karma.
Sir Donald of the Fire Bottles.
Commodore J-Stroke?
Yep.
In Norton, Ohio?
J-Stroke?
Yeah.
Commodore J-Stroke.
333.
Hey, John and Adam, I'd appreciate John not
dismissing my note with a hum.

(02:07:02):
Can I get a harumph?
Check out chopacabra...
Check out chupacabracanoe.com.
For some great content and gear.
What is that?
Chupacabra.com.
I'm sorry, chupacabracanoe.com.
You guys are the best.

(02:07:23):
In four more years, give me a China
is asshole, sign Commodore J-Stroke.
Donald Trump don't trust China!
China is asshole!
I'm looking at it right now.
Do they sell canoes?
Let me see.
They sell...
Oh, they sell...
That's hoodies.
Okay.

(02:07:44):
All right.
So much for the canoe.
Kathleen C.
Melody, St. Clair Shores, Minnesota.
Michigan, I'm sorry.
The first associate executive producer for the bunch.
$250.56. Hello, Adam and John.
My dear friend, Mike, turned me on to
your show.
It is indeed the best podcast in the
universe.
Can I get two screaming goats, please?

(02:08:06):
Thank you and good business to you both.
All the best, Kathleen C.
Melody.
There's one.
And there's two.
Sky Kilbury in Belfair, Wash...
Belfair?
I've never heard of that town.
Washington.

(02:08:27):
$210.60. I want to congratulate my son,
Airman Aaron Kilbury, for graduating from the U
.S. Air Force basic training.
God bless.
No agenda and the USA.
Beautiful.
Eli the Coffee Guy, Bensonville, Illinois is here.
$202.23. He says this donation is for
John's literary wit in the newsletter.

(02:08:49):
When describing the newest manifestation of Trump derangement
syndrome, he quotes your newsletter, Democrat women largely
represented by liberal women online who dropped more
F-bombs than a...
What is this?
A stevedore.
Stevedore fired from an all-girl ocean voyage.

(02:09:09):
That is quite some wit there, John.
I'm killing it.
Yes, you are killing it.
That line had me rolling.
Those who haven't signed up for the newsletter
should do so.
It's always good for a laugh.
Jingles.
Oh, eating the dogs.
I hadn't seen you wanted eating the dogs.
Okay.
I got eating the dogs for you.

(02:09:30):
What else does he want here?
Producers in need...
In need of fantastic fresh roasted coffee should
visit...
Oh, here it comes.
gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20
% off your order.
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
They're eating the dogs.

(02:09:53):
Curtis Cole.
Uh, cool.
Uh, cool.
That's how you pronounce it, actually.
It's cool.
It's cool.
I knew a guy named Joe Cool.
No.
Yep.
Did he smoke camels?
No.
East, uh, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.
200.
No, Joe Cool was a notorious, uh...
This is a period way back in the

(02:10:14):
day when we were building cars from scratch.
I had a Sterling.
I built it.
Wait a minute.
You...
Oh, stop.
Here's a story I don't know.
You built a car from scratch?
Well, you buy the body from a, you
know, fiberglass operation.
These were called Sterlings.
You can look them up.
Yeah, they were kits, right?
Yeah, a car kit.
And yeah, I had a Volkswagen mid-frame

(02:10:34):
with a Porsche engine.
I put a Porsche in it.
You had one of the...
These are awesome looking cars.
Yeah, I had one for a couple years.
It's like a Corvette that's been stepped on
and elongated.
It's smashed, yeah.
Wow.
It was fun to drive, too.
Nice.
So the problem was is that the taillights
were never approved properly.

(02:10:56):
Uh, so you had to get a different
back end for the thing because of the,
uh...
Because this guy, Joe Cool, who had bought
one of these Sterlings, was driving around ditching
cops and they finally caught up to him
and they threw the book at him and
then they threw the book at the car.

(02:11:17):
So they impounded his car?
Well, they took the car and they made
it so everything that was on it was
illegal, you know, because it was pretty, you
know, you look at the car, it's obviously
there's some issues with the legality of the
thing.
And so the taillights were the big sticking
point.
So they had to swap out the taillights
on all the cars.
No thanks to Joe Cool, who, I don't

(02:11:39):
know whatever happened to him, but that was...
Did you complete the kit?
Yeah, I had driven it for a couple
years.
And it says here the price of the
kit was $2,100?
Yeah, yeah.
It's cheap.
What happened to it?
I sold it to some auto mechanic down
in San Jose after I put in mothballs

(02:11:59):
because there's a couple of features, just a
couple of things that fell off.
Like brakes didn't work.
No, the brakes were...
No, the car worked fine.
The thing, the hardest part was getting a
Porsche engine onto the Volkswagen transmission and it
took a...
It was an experience in itself based on...

(02:12:19):
It had all had to do with the
flywheel.
And so you had to get a flywheel
from a fastback, some screwball Volkswagen.
I finally got the right one and everybody
was...
It was unbelievable.
I gave up on doing anything mechanical.
You know what they should do?
They should do one of these kits where
you just take a Tesla car engine and

(02:12:43):
the chassis basically, and then you could build
your own car on top of it.
The guy who used to run BoardWatch Magazine
has essentially started, has been doing this.
Really?
What you just described.
Really?
Well, there goes that idea.
Another exit strategy ruined.
So Curtis Cool in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania came

(02:13:08):
in with $200.
Halfway to knighthood with this $200.
Keep up the Commodore going for a while
longer.
I want a star and an anchor on
my shoulder too.
Commodore.
Um, okay.
Please call out my older brother, Doug is
a douche bag.
Tina's right.

(02:13:29):
Tina's right.
Tina.
Tina.
Tina, my wife.
Is right.
He says, he writes this down very emphatically
that Tina's right.
You guys could handle a few chickens.
I think there's a thing going on at
the household there.
Yes, I believe so.
I believe so.
Yes.
He says, she's right.

(02:13:50):
That Tina, your wife, Tina is right.
We got the message.
We have 12 chickens with two coops and
they're pretty easy to care for.
Sure.
They care for, yeah.
Get some meat rabbits instead if you don't
want.

(02:14:10):
I can just imagine the rabbit poop is
cold fertilizer and can be put directly into
a garden.
I'm with you, Curtis.
This is not a good idea.
She will never hear this segment.
I will cut it out.
And $200.

(02:14:31):
There she is, Linda Lou Patkin from Lakewood,
Colorado.
And she asked for jobs, karma, and she
has changed the copy.
She says beat the job bots and get
a competitive edge.
Go to image makers inc.com for all
of your executive resume and job search needs.
That's image makers inc with a K and
work with Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and

(02:14:51):
writer of resumes.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
Stephen Peterson in Kingaroy, Queensland, Australia.
We got a lot of Aussies today.
That's a good thing.
That is good.
$200.
Greetings from Queensland, where we are fast becoming

(02:15:14):
a Starmer state.
Starmer-ish, he says.
Starmer-ish, which is, you know, the head
prime minister of the UK who's a dick.
Thanks for your entertaining.
Wait, wait, wait.
You can never go.
You can't go to that wedding in the
UK now because they're going to arrest you
at the airport.
I just said he's a dick.
Yeah, you can't.
Who knows that?
You cannot say that.

(02:15:36):
You can't.
Thanks for your entertaining.
Well, okay.
I'm sorry.
Too late.
That doesn't count.
Thanks for your entertaining and informative work.
No jingles, no karma.
Well, thank you for the help from down
under.
Yes.
And even though it's, I guess that's Queensland
dollary dues.
Yeah, well, it doesn't get to the three.

(02:15:57):
It's all right.
Well, he gets in as an associate executive
producer, along with other associate executive producers and
executive producers.
And we do have some Commodores to welcome
on later on.
Thank you all very much.
We will, of course, thank everybody, $50 and
above in our second segment.
Go to noagendadonations.com to support the show.
It's value for value.
Whatever you get out of the show, just

(02:16:17):
send it back to us, noagendadonations.com.
And you can always set up a recurring
sustaining donation.
That's any amount, any frequency.
It's all up to you, whatever it's worth
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That's why you don't get plus bundles.
You don't get any hoops, no Patreon levels,
no tote bags, no subscriptions, and no ads.
Please go to noagendadonations.com.

(02:16:39):
Sorry, that's not what I meant to play.
Go to noagendadonations.com and sponsor the show.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the
mouth.

(02:17:03):
So there's a lot of news about privacy.
And we were just talking about the UK
and your friend, the prime minister over there,
your buddy.
As the UK had said to Apple, we
have to be able to access everybody's stuff.
You cannot encrypt it.
And here it is.

(02:17:24):
Apple scraps encryption security feature after order to
create a backdoor for big brother Starmer to
access British iPhone users' texts, audios, videos, and
pictures.
Yes.
Yes.
They had this.
So you have an end-to-end encryption
feature on Apple that also goes into iCloud,
which means you encrypt it and then it

(02:17:45):
can't be decrypted on the iCloud.
That's what they say.
That is now no longer available to UK
users of the iPhone product.
So they are easy to buckle.
In the Netherlands, looks like the Netherlands will
be the first with a digital ID from
the government.

(02:18:05):
Yay.
Yes.
So you will have to authenticate for all
kinds.
Everything in the Netherlands is digital.
You will need this government digital ID in
order to access any services with the government,
which means, of course, it's just one small
step away from, I don't know.

(02:18:27):
Chipping.
Well, no.
To be authorized or authenticate yourself in order
to use social media.
Oh, and then take your money away.
Social credit score.
And well, yeah.
I mean, you will be known.
And this is apparently also there's a bill
for this in the UK.

(02:18:47):
But don't worry.
You don't have to worry.
Don't worry, people.
Don't worry.
A new piece of legislation introduced last week.
Where I say it's a new piece of
legislation, it's a rehash of an old piece
of legislation that the Tory government had attempted
to push through, but didn't get it through
in time before the general election.
This is called the Data Brackets Use and
Access Bill.
And the scope of this is all encompassing.

(02:19:08):
And the aspect of this today that I
want to focus on is digital identity.
One type, this is going back a couple
of years, one type of digital identity which
could be developed under the trust framework is
similar to a wallet, but created securely on
your device.
It lets you store various trusted pieces of
information about yourself.
We call these pieces of personal information attributes.

(02:19:29):
The really excellent thing that the government has
now announced, and everybody will be extremely impressed
by this, I have no doubt, is the
Office for Digital Identity and Attributes.
This has been launched in the last few
days.
This organization is all about enabling digital identities.
And they say in this blog post, to
prove who you are across the economy today,
you have to use a patchwork of paperwork

(02:19:51):
from the government and the private sector, proving
your age in the supermarket, opening a bank
account, buying a house.
These processes are complicated, time-consuming and expensive.
There is a better way to check that
someone is who they say they are.
We call this digital identity.
Digital identity can make people's lives easier and
unlock billions of pounds of economic growth.

(02:20:12):
And they say in this blog, we're doing
this without any form of government identity card.
So don't worry, it's all absolutely voluntary.
This system does not involve a centralized database,
they say.
Using a digital identity will be completely voluntary.
You will be in control of your data
and who it's shared with.
And they say that instead of a centralized
database, you'll be able to choose from a

(02:20:32):
range of digital identity and attribute providers based
in the private and charity sectors.
I think No Agenda should register to be
an attribute provider.
OK.
I think that's a great idea.
You know, already I'm getting emails from people
saying, I want to move to the States.
Will you vouch for me?

(02:20:54):
See, I won't sponsor you, but yeah, I'll
vouch for you.
Sure.
You're a good producer of the No Agenda
show.
That's what I will say.
You're a solid person.
People are leaving the country.
I can see why.
I mean, and the fact that they say,
don't worry, don't, and whenever the government says,

(02:21:14):
don't worry, don't worry, you're probably in trouble.
Now, there was one thing that, I don't
know exactly where the $5,000 number came
from, but President Trump is talking about the
savings of Doge.
Or as Kara Swisher likes to say, doggy.

(02:21:35):
Which is exactly what Matt, she got that
from Rachel Maddow.
She's the one who developed that joke.
Yeah, but she has to keep saying doggy.
That's what I call it.
Doggy.
That's what I call it.
Doggy.
That's what I call it.
It's not even cute.
It's dumb.
Anyway.
I meant that sarcastically.
Yeah.
He says 20%.

(02:21:56):
What was he saying?
20% will go to pay off the
debt.
60% will go towards the budget for
next year.
And 20%, he's going to give to Americans
cash, a check, $5,000.
Have you heard about this?
Oh, yeah.
I think Musk is the one who introduced
the idea to Trump who ran with it.

(02:22:18):
I mean, can they even do that?
He can't do that.
This is another blurt.
It's a blurt.
Okay.
All right.
I get the check for five grand out
of the blue.
I'll be happy.
According to New York Democrat Jasmine Crockett.

(02:22:40):
Oh, yeah.
What a dipshit she is.
Now, President Trump says he likes the idea
of giving some of the savings from Doge
back to Americans as kind of a dividend.
Would you support that?
Listen, he's just telling a lie.
He's not the one that had anything to
do with the $1,200 refunds that people
had during the that was done by Democratic
House and Democratic Senate.

(02:23:01):
Right now, what they're going to do is
say, hey, we want to give you a
refund, but Congress won't let us because they
already know that there's just no money for
that.
The only reason that those refunds came before
was because we were living in different times.
This was a time in which hopefully we
won't ever go through again.
We had a once in a lifetime pandemic.

(02:23:23):
The bad part is that I don't know
if it's once in a lifetime because we
know that Ebola, unfortunately, was detected right here
in New York here recently.
And if we continue down this road of
getting rid of scientists or deciding that we
don't want to rely on experts as relates
to what they're telling us to do, or
we don't want to deal with vaccines and
medicine in this country, then we may be

(02:23:45):
facing not only our next pandemic, but our
next two, three or four pandemics because of
their incompetence.
So, no, we are not in the business
of giving out money.
And honestly, I don't know what $5,000
will do for you.
What?
Okay, this woman.
Five thousand.
I can do a lot for me.

(02:24:06):
I do a lot from anybody.
So she is like they're grooming her to
be the next presidential candidate.
They're really pushing her.
She's got it.
She has a machine behind her.
Yeah.
Huh?
This is because she's a chatterbox and she
can keep yakking away.
I think they can mold her into something

(02:24:27):
that's important.
She's in total dipshit.
You know, let's talk about Germany.
They got the elections coming up.
Their results are coming in today.
It's taking place as we speak.
And it looks like, let me see.
I have the latest here.
I don't think we have a full count
yet.
According to the two parties, the two main

(02:24:48):
parties, each lingering near the 5% market
just barely crossed the threshold, razor thin margin.
If the numbers holds a final outcome, Friedrich
Merz will not be able to build a
coalition.
And the Alternative for Deutschland has doubled their
amount of percentages and supposedly seats in the
German parliament.

(02:25:08):
So that will be very interesting to see
what happens.
We really won't know until tomorrow, I guess.
We're going to play these clips about the
elections.
And again, it's a public broadcasting propaganda.
And let me guess, far right, extreme right,
Nazi.
There's a little of that, but it's more
subtle in this case.
They're talking about the dangers, of course, of

(02:25:31):
the AFD.
But the other thing is they keep making
the assertion that the Trump administration is supporting
the AFD and it's counter to American interests
and the Trump administration supporting them and blah,
blah, blah.
When in fact, Elon Musk is indeed supporting
them.
And then what JD Vance said at the

(02:25:53):
Munich Security Conference, where he scolded the EU
in general and Germany specifically about their freedom
of speech issues.
He never said anything about the AFD, but
they're making the implication that because he said
that, that means he's supporting the AFD.
In the German capital of Berlin today, a
man was critically wounded in a knife attack

(02:26:14):
at the city's Holocaust Memorial.
And the suspected attacker was arrested hours later
near the scene with blood on his hands.
All this just two days before voters go
to the polls in an election dominated by
concerns about immigration.
The country is expected to reject the incumbent
left-leaning Chancellor Olaf Schultz in favor of
a center-right candidate followed closely by an

(02:26:36):
anti-immigration party that has the backing of
the Trump administration.
Special Correspondent Malcolm Brabant reports now from Germany.
Magdeburg in former East Germany.
Two months have passed since the terror attack
by a Saudi Arabian doctor who drove his
car into a packed Christmas market, killing a

(02:26:56):
nine-year-old boy, five women and injuring
300.
The tributes have diminished, but not the grief
of El Capet.
There have since been two more Islamist attacks
in southern Germany that have claimed four lives
and driven Magdeburg street food vendor Diana Daum
to despair.
One attack after another happens.

(02:27:17):
How far does it have to go?
The attacks have galvanized support for the anti
-immigrant AFD, the Alternative for Germany party.
Now is the time for our security, says
leader Alice Weidel.
Now is the time for a new beginning.

(02:27:41):
You know, this other guy, Mertz.
Yeah, he's, uh, it looks like he and,
uh, he's this, um, the Christian Democrats and
the CSU.
What does that stand for?
The Christian Democrat Union.
Okay, so they, they, it looks like they
are claiming victory.
They should win.
And this Mertz guy who's, as I mentioned

(02:28:02):
in the newsletter, and there's a photo of
him compared to Mr. Peepers, a character from
the 50s.
He does look like Mr. Peepers, doesn't he?
He looks just like him.
He's a wimpy guy, just total wimp.
And he, but he speaks, his English is
really good.
Oh, okay.
Do you have a clip of him speaking?
No.
Oh, great.
I mean, there may be him speaking within

(02:28:23):
these clips, but this is just a rundown
of the election and the propaganda that somehow
Trump is supporting the AFD when that's not
true, but the PBS wants to push that
narrative because they're far right, far right, far
right, far right.
While the AFD has doubled its popularity since
the last election, it's expected to come second,
but barred from joining the next governing coalition.

(02:28:45):
Barred.
All the opinion polls suggest that the center
-right Christian Democrats, the CDU, will win the
election and lead Germany's next government.
They've accused the outgoing left-leaning coalition of
being soft on immigration.
The CDU is promising to restore law and
order and make the country safe again.
Unless there's a major upset, Germany's next chancellor

(02:29:08):
will be Friedrich Merz, a pro-business lawyer.
During a debate with Social Democrat rival Olaf
Scholz, Merz warned of the consequences of failing
to tackle migration and Germany's flagging economy.
Then we will finally slide into right-wing
populism, and I am standing here to avoid
exactly that.

(02:29:28):
I will only sign a coalition agreement that
includes a turnaround on migration and a turnaround
on the economy.
Scholz, the outgoing chancellor, also signaled his willingness
to get tough on immigration.
Perpetrators must be severely punished, and if they've
committed such offenses and do not have German
citizenship, then they must certainly expect that we

(02:29:50):
will return them to their country of origin.
I have big talk.
Big talk.
Big talk.
Where were you years ago, dude?
Yeah, dude.
Dude.
So, on with three.
Despite its popular support, the AFD is regarded
as beyond the pale by all the mainstream
parties, and they've agreed a so-called firewall

(02:30:11):
to keep the far right out of office.
But can Merz create a stable coalition government
without the support of the AFD?
Catherine Kluver-Ashbrook is a German-American political
scientist.
If that coalition hold is strong enough in
terms of its majority, then he can absolutely
push out and sideline the AFD.

(02:30:31):
Now, is that majority going to be stable
enough for the AFD to not hit the
coalition with a lot of obstructionism and make
their life very hard?
Those are what the numbers on Sunday will
show.
Right now, those numbers are very, very tight.
Helped controversially by Elon Musk, who declared his
support for the AFD when he interviewed Alice

(02:30:53):
Weidel on X.
Only AFD can save Germany.
End of story.
Yes, because you rightly said there is a
difference of making a law and then enforcing
it.
Then Vice President JD Vance entered the fray
at the Munich security conference.
What German democracy, what no democracy, American, German

(02:31:13):
or European will survive is telling millions of
voters that their thoughts and concerns, their aspirations,
their pleas for relief are invalid or unworthy
of even being considered.
Vance's intervention played well in Magdeburg.
We want to be heard, but we're not

(02:31:34):
being listened to.
The politicians up there do whatever they want.
They lie to us and serve only themselves
instead of serving the people.
They call themselves Democrats, but behave in a
way that is far from democratic in my
eyes, especially because they always refer to German

(02:31:54):
history.
This exclusion and marginalization, we've seen that before.
And it must never happen again to anyone,
not even to the AFD.
So this Merck's guy is a former BlackRock
board member.
BlackRock.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Kind of makes sense.
Looking at him, you know, like one of

(02:32:16):
those guys.
So the idea that you can hear it
there, they at the beginning of the report,
the PBS NewsHour claimed that Trump administration was
supporting the AFD.
And throughout the report, we have Musk, who
is, but he's not the Trump administration.
And J.D. Vance, who just talked about

(02:32:37):
free speech, he's got nothing to do with
it.
So that was basically just another propagandistic lie
on the part of PBS.
But can't they now say Trump's no good
because he failed, he didn't get AFD to
win?
Yeah, that's what they'll do.
Yeah.
Was that the last clip?
No, no, there's one more.
Here we go.

(02:32:57):
But there was outrage elsewhere.
We respect the presidential elections and the congressional
elections in the U.S. And we expect
the U.S. to do the same here.
Whether it's the defense minister or the chancellor
or the president, but also average people feel
highly offended by the fact that somebody would
attempt to officially meddle in the way that

(02:33:19):
they perceive the functionality of their democracy.
But the AFD's deputy leader, Beatrix von Stork,
couldn't be happier.
How important is the endorsement of the United
States vice president?
I don't think it shifts numbers, but it
shows to our enemies that they maybe should
be a bit careful and that we have

(02:33:41):
got strong allies.
We have got strong connections towards the United
States and towards Russia.
In recent weeks, there have been large protests
against Germany's lean to the right actor and
musician Herbert Grönemeyer.
Our democracy is under fierce attack, be it

(02:34:02):
from smear campaigns, disinformation, fake news trolls, or
from enemies of democracy in the parties and
in the media who do not just want
to jeopardize our peaceful liberal coexistence, but destroy
it.
Yeah.
There you go.
There you go.
Well, all right.
Scrambling.
Yeah.
They really hate populists.

(02:34:23):
They don't want to listen to the public.
It's just sort of the global guys.
The global.
Dead end.
What do we call those global guys?
You know, there's like the global guys.
Those guys.
I do want to call out the Daily
Caller for stealing your line.
Headline, Daily Caller.
It appears Democrats have finally picked a hill

(02:34:44):
to die on.
That is, that's lifted right from you.
Well, there you go.
Democrat lawmakers.
We get a lot of stuff lifted from
this show, by the way.
I'm sure they do.
Yeah.
And they say the Democrats are dying on
the hill of trans.
Yeah, they are.
Well, the way I'm seeing it is that

(02:35:06):
they have one last shot because they're true
believers.
And people should, there's a good book by
Eric Hoffer called The True Believers, required reading
for anyone with an actual education.
Or not.
It's just required reading.
And you're subscribed to such an extreme and

(02:35:27):
you're sincere.
That's the thing that's always overlooked by the
right.
The right thinks these people are insincere, but
I don't.
They're sincere and they're going to give it
one more go round, which takes them right
through the midterms.
Like, yeah, no, this is, we're going to
stick with this because it's the right side
of history and it's the way, because everyone
should be trans.

(02:35:48):
And we should, you know, love our trans
people.
And make people trans and introduce them to
the ideology of trans.
And then after the midterms, that's when the
rebuke will take place where they get serious.
So they're going to lose the midterms.

(02:36:09):
It seems to me the Democrats, which normally
they wouldn't.
Well, if they keep going at this pace.
They're not going to stop.
Why would they stop?
I had, it was kind of funny.
Because of James Carville lecturing on that guy.
Let me see.
No, the, that guy who I played the

(02:36:31):
clip from earlier, the, yeah, Ken Martin.
So he's the guy that's supposed to provide
the direction for the party, right?
He's the, he's the chair of the DNC.
Isn't he supposed to?
The milquetoast.
Yeah, milquetoast.
What do we call him?
I already forgot what we called him.
I had a good name for him.

(02:36:52):
Milquetoast Martin.
There we go.
Milquetoast Martin.
Milquetoast Martin.
Yeah, perfect.
So here's another clip of him on Politics
Girl, which is interesting.
No one watches it, but it's an interesting
podcast.
And I think the thing is, is that
you were saying in the campaign for DNC
chair, that one of your biggest concerns coming
out of the 2024 election was America's perception
of the two parties, right?

(02:37:12):
That they had switched somehow.
That people somehow think the Republicans are the
party of the working class, and Democrats are
the party of the elites, which of course,
based on policy, couldn't be further from the
truth.
So what do we do about that?
Because the Republicans clearly have used their extraordinary
messaging machine to paint the Democrats as the
enemy.
So how does the party then redefine itself

(02:37:33):
under those constraints?
Here you go.
I mean, this is straight from the horse's
mouth.
We're going to find out exactly how they're
going to do it.
Define itself under those constraints.
Well, I think it's really important to realize,
and I don't know when this happened, Lee,
but our party started to message to smaller
and smaller parts of our coalition, right?
And while I think that worked to a

(02:37:55):
certain degree, what we lost is the thing
that connects all parts of our coalition, all
of these disparate groups of folks, right?
In Minnesota, I'll use an example.
I mean, what connects a corn farmer in
southern Minnesota with a steel worker on the
Iron Range with a new refugee in the
Twin Cities?
It's economics, right?
It's kitchen table issues.
It's a belief in the American dream.

(02:38:17):
The belief that if you work hard, no
matter where you're from, no matter where you
live, no matter who you are or who
you love, you should be able to actually
achieve economic success and climb the economic ladder,
build a better life for your family, right?
Yet so many people right now, and this
has been happening for some years, so many
people who are part of our coalition feel

(02:38:39):
that they can't achieve that American dream, that
there are obstacles in their way, that they're
being forgotten and left behind, right?
They're working their asses off.
They're working harder than they ever have before,
and they don't feel seen or heard by
a government, whether it's state and local government
or the federal government, they don't feel seen
or heard by politicians.

(02:39:00):
But that doesn't sound like much of a
strategy to me.
But it does lead to a clip.
Bingo, boom, shakalaka.
This clip, this is the cult clip.
This is, I got this off of Twitter,
and I like to see the whole thing.
You got it off the net.
I got it off the net.

(02:39:20):
And they're discussing which party is a cult,
and they talk about how the Democrat Party
is a cult.
And what he described kind of fits into
what this woman's saying about being an ex
-Democrat, a cult member, because they don't let
you talk to them.
They shut you down.
Here we go.
I think both sides are very tribal.

(02:39:41):
Yeah.
But in terms of cult, at this moment
in time, I think the left is more
cult-like.
I was in it for 20 years.
What's known today as the woke left, but
we used to call it social justice left,
progressive left.
Known by conservatives as woke.
Right.
But here's some of the characteristics that I
think make it more cult-like than perhaps
the conservative side.

(02:40:01):
One is that if you had questions, you
had to check your privilege, or there was
always some line that they would use to
get you to stop asking questions, which is
sort of cult-like.
And then the other thing was, there was
this encouragement to separate from people who didn't
agree with you.
And so I slowly over time whittled my
world down to just people who were in
the social justice left.

(02:40:23):
And there was really, for people who left,
which they did eventually, which was a long
process, it's a bit like you become an
apostate.
You don't just leave or have different opinions.
It's like once you leave, you can't come
back.
Oh man, this reminds me of a story.
I didn't hear this story firsthand.
I heard it from Tina, who heard it

(02:40:43):
from someone here at the women's group.
One of the many women's groups, a lot
of women's groups here, and I learned a
lot from them.
New, relatively new people moved from California to
Texas.
And they had a dinner party, and they
had a big mansion, and so everyone's in
there, and so it's a big to-do.

(02:41:06):
There's all kinds of other details, which I'm
going to leave out.
I'll tell you later about those details.
And so at the table, the topic of
the Dixie Chicks comes up.
And I had to look it up.
The Dixie Chicks said something disparaging about then

(02:41:28):
-president H.W. Bush, W.
And I had to look up what it
was.
It was kind of funny in hindsight, because
they said on stage, we're ashamed that our
president is from Texas.
That was the entire line.
And they got deplatformed.

(02:41:48):
They had the number one song on the
country charts, the number one album for three
years.
They could not get their record played on
country music stations.
And they ultimately wound up changing their name
to the Chicks, which I thought was kind
of odd, you know.
It's like Lady Antebellum just had to change

(02:42:12):
her name to Lady A, because they're all
so woke.
And so the hostess says, what do you
think of that for the Dixie Chicks?
And someone said, well, I thought it was
kind of ridiculous.
The hostess picks up her plate, slams it
down on the table, and storms out and
didn't come back for the rest of the
party.

(02:42:34):
What?
Yeah.
Completely unhinged.
But what was she unhinged about?
That they didn't agree that the Dixie Chicks
were straight up heroes for saying they were
embarrassed the president was from Texas.
And that someone had the audacity in her
home to say, well, no, it's kind of

(02:42:54):
ridiculous, that whole thing.
So this woman that stormed out was a
Republican?
No, she's from California.
Hello.
See, I'm not getting the gist of this
then.
Because she didn't defend the Dixie Chicks as
being righteous.
Yes, then the hostess, who was clearly-
And so the hostess in California thought that's

(02:43:14):
because she should have.
Yes, but she's in the Democrat cult, got
so outraged that she lifted up her full
plate of food and slammed it on the
table and then stormed out.
Wow.
That's cult, man.
That's cult behavior.
Yeah, very much.
I guess you had to be there.

(02:43:36):
Would have been better.
I'd like to have been there.
Well, I don't think we're going to get
invited now.
That ship may have sailed.
A little interesting tidbit about Newsom's Inferno here
in California.
By the way, I think that battery plant
is still igniting as we speak.
No, it reignited.

(02:43:57):
Yeah, that's why I said it reignited.
The word still is not in the plot
yet.
I'm sorry.
It reignited.
It reignited.
Well, there's some lessons to be learned about
filling up your state with battery cars.
With its sun-drenched lifeguard towers, bronzed surfers,
and bikini-clad volleyball players, Will Rogers State
Beach is one of the most recognizable stretches

(02:44:19):
of sand in the world.
Thanks to the global cult classic Baywatch.
But now the iconic beach is barely recognizable.
Surrounded by the ruins of burned homes and
palm trees, the parking lot is a sorting
ground for hazardous waste from the wildfires.
The beach babes have been replaced by Environmental

(02:44:40):
Protection Agency crews in hazmat suits.
The decision to sort through hazardous waste along
the coast has prompted protests.
Sort the hazardous waste in its place.
Sort the hazardous waste in its place.
The EPA says there is no ideal spot
and that speed is of the essence.

(02:45:01):
Steve Kalinog is the EPA's incident commander for
the L.A. fires.
What about all those Teslas and electric cars
that were incinerated?
Where did they go?
The lithium-ion batteries is a unique phenomenon
in our modern day life.
When lithium-ion batteries are damaged, and in
this case by high heat and flames, they

(02:45:22):
have the potential for reigniting and exploding days,
weeks, months after they've been impacted.
So we have to treat them like unexploded
ordnance, or as the military calls UXL.
We have to process them so they can
be transported safely to a recycling or disposal
facility.
Yeah, who knows where that facility is?

(02:45:45):
It's over here, over here on Moss Point.
Throw it in here, no one's going to
know, they'll think it's part of the old
fire.
Months later, it can reignite?
Yeah, this stuff, this is bad, bad stuff.
This is not a good product.
Well, since you brought this up, here's the
L.A. fire chief, the mayor fired her.

(02:46:07):
That was funny.
The mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, dismissed
the city's fire chief today over her handling
of last month's deadly wildfires.
In a statement, Bass said she's removing Chief
Kristin Crowley effective immediately, adding that 1,000
firefighters that could have been on duty on
the morning of the fires broke out were
instead sent home on Chief Crowley's watch.

(02:46:30):
The Palisades fire erupted in early January and
went on to destroy or damage 8,000
homes and other structures.
At least 12 people were killed.
Because they don't mention it as part of
a back-and-forth because the fire chief
blamed the mayor, and then the mayor went
to Africa, and then meanwhile, the associate, whoever,

(02:46:50):
the assistant fire chief murdered the other lesbian,
murdered.
What?
She murdered her?
She got murdered.
I didn't hear about that.
Oh yeah, she got murdered, and they think
it may be the wife.
No.
She, the wife can't be found, at least
as of a couple days ago.
Did you hear that?
Yeah, she got murdered, stabbed to death.

(02:47:11):
I didn't hear about that.
In her own house.
That's the big burly one, the one that
says, ah, you know, if you're in it,
far too bad.
She got stabbed to death?
Yeah, she's dead.
Did you hear the so-called, I don't
know if it was, actually, the mayor of
Los Angeles, Karen Bass, that call about her
trip that, you know, that got leaked?

(02:47:33):
You heard this from, I think this is
from CJF, so that's O'Keefe.
Did you hear this call?
No, I don't think so.
Listen to this.
Just in terms of my trip, just so
you know, I'm missing two work days.
That's it.
And if President Biden extends me an invitation,
I took it.

(02:47:54):
And hopefully you can read in between the
lines.
But I would just appreciate, just, and it's
hard for me to tell you this, but
hold tight.
You will understand soon.
Ooh, creepy.
I couldn't understand a word she said.
Well, that's why I didn't clip it.

(02:48:16):
She says, I'm going on this trip and
President Biden, I'm only going to miss two
work days.
President Biden extended an invitation to me and
just hold on.
You will find out in just a few
days.
Yeah, it's a lot of insinuation.
Find out in a few days about what?
Well, that was a few days before the
fire, of course.

(02:48:36):
So insinuating that she knew that there was
going to be a fire.
Yeah, that's O'Keefe, man.
You know, I was like, I got props
for O'Keefe.
He's doing interesting stuff.
But you just never know.
So here is the, what I call the
wow clip for the day.
Oh, a wow clip.
We'll take a wow clip.
Although this has been played up a little
more than at the time this came out.

(02:48:57):
This was a clip of another lawsuit against
NBC that they're just whatever.
This is the way it goes.
NBC has settled a defamation suit filed by
a Georgia gynecologist who had been falsely labeled
a uterus collector.
NPR's David Fulkenflik reports the segment aired on
the shows of MSNBC.

(02:49:18):
The coverage at issue kicked off in September
2020 after advocacy groups presented a whistleblower complaint
to federal authorities.
The whistleblower was a former nurse at a
facility run by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement.
She alleged the doctor had performed mass hysterectomies.
The presiding judge ruled in June that, quote,
the undisputed evidence establishes that multiple NBC statements
are false and found that the plaintiff, Dr.

(02:49:40):
Mahendra Amin, had performed only two hysterectomies there.
NBC was not protected by the fact it
was relaying false claims by others, the judge
noted.
The announcement in court papers of the settlement
follows a number of high profile settlements of
cases by media companies, several involving President Trump.

(02:50:22):
Give him a hysterectomy.
And it was if I understand the case,
it wasn't so much about the the incorrect
reporting was more about Rachel Maddow and others
saying he was the uterus collector.
I think that was part of it.
That was malice.
Yes, it's malice.
What's the difference between malice and what's the

(02:50:43):
what's the other term?
I don't know.
Well, yeah, you can sue slander.
You got slander.
You got a slander and libel.
No, malice is an element.
Slander and libel, one's in print, one's by
saying something in public.
But the malice is meaning that you're doing
it on purpose to defame.

(02:51:06):
You're purposely defaming somebody with malice.
That means malice.
If you did it by accident, then that's
different.
Then the lawsuit's harder to throw at you.
But if you're doing it because you're just
a mean prick.
So if she just reported straight up without
her typical snarky editorial, that probably would not

(02:51:29):
have been a strong lawsuit.
That's kind of what I'm driving at.
Yeah, I think that's probably true.
Yeah, she does her normal snarkiness.
Don't be snarky, Rachel.
But the thing is, it's a $30 million
settlement that person gets, which is a nice
payout.
But that was Maddow's salary.
So there's a spit in the bucket for

(02:51:50):
NBC and Brian Roberts, the guy who's the
CEO of Comcast, who really is behind all
this, I might add.
It sets a dangerous precedent because now, you
know, she says something snarky.
They should be suing and more suits should
happen, I think.
Before we go into our break, I'd love
to hear your Mangione clip.
It's just an update on Mangione's.

(02:52:10):
Here we go.
Also in New York, Luigi Mangione, the man
accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, appeared
in court today for the first time since
his arraignment on state murder and terror charges
two months ago.
His attorney said there were search and seizure
issues during Mangione's arrest.
Outside the courthouse, she said a number of

(02:52:31):
factors are complicating his right to a fair
trial.
He is being publicly treated as guilty and
having the presumption of guilt, as opposed to
the presumption of innocence, which is what he
is entitled to.
Mangione has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
He faces a separate federal case that could

(02:52:53):
carry the death penalty.
That's interesting because I got a text from
the Zoomer in New York and she said,
I'm boots on the ground, I'm boots on
the ground.
And there were tons of people, free Luigi.
They all had free Luigi masks on.
They're all running around, people with free Luigi
written on their bald heads.
There was a lot of pro.

(02:53:15):
Well organized.
Yeah, pro Luigi stuff.
Here's kind of a related clip.
Tonight, as Luigi Mangione's murder case moves forward,
reports that the Justice Department is now investigating
UnitedHealth Group's billing practices.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the new
civil probe is looking into allegations the company

(02:53:36):
profited off false diagnoses.
Last summer, the journal reported UnitedHealth added diagnoses
to patient records for conditions they weren't treated
for, triggering an extra $8.7 billion in
payouts to insurers.
News of a DOJ investigation sending UnitedHealth stocks
plunging 7% yesterday, a $30 billion loss
in market value.

(02:53:57):
The company calling reports of fraud misinformation.
And as for that federal investigation into UnitedHealth
Group tonight, the DOJ declining to comment.
Yeah, yeah, I think they're going down on
that.
I think so too.
This whole thing is going to implode.
And Kennedy's and Bondi together are going to
make life miserable for a lot of these

(02:54:19):
operations, which are scammers.
Yes.
And by the way, I'd love to have
a free Luigi hoodie.
I finally got my, I got a bunch
of people finally chimed in and I'm getting
me myself some Ohio State gear.
Yes.
I want to thank everybody for giving me
a shout out, or not a shout out,

(02:54:40):
but an email.
The notes I saw were like, the reason
no one sends it to you is because
you called it a third-rate institution.
That's what, that was so long ago and
it had nothing to do with the football
team.

(02:55:05):
They're like elephants there, man, in Ohio.
You got to be careful.
When you say something disparaging, they remember.
Well, I'll tell you something, the people that
aren't third-rate are our donors.
That's correct.
Starting with Jonathan Halper in Charlotte, North Carolina,
16346.
That's a belated Valentine gift to Zelensky.

(02:55:28):
Aww, to Zelensky.
He wants some jingles you might want to
add at the end, maybe.
Anonymous UK accountant in Bromley, UK, 10535.
He wants some karma too.
Sir Andy, I'd like to know where this
is.

(02:55:48):
Niceville, Florida.
Niceville?
Niceville.
Oh, that sounds nice.
10101, it's a happy birthday to Christy.
And she needs a biscuit for her birthday,
we'll give her that maybe.
Yeah.
Ian Field, 100.
Daniel George in Danbury, Connecticut, 100.
ITM from FEMA Region 1.
Let me give you the biscuit, I just
found it.
They always give me a biscuit on my

(02:56:09):
birthday.
It took me a minute to find it.
Yeah, that's Kamala.
No, it's not.
Brian Lillard in Prosper, Texas, 8888.
Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina.
He is the Archduke of Loon, a lover
of American boobs, 8008.
He continues his stretch.

(02:56:31):
Sir Herb Lamb in Sugar Hill, Georgia.
We haven't heard much from recently, but there
he is with 8008.
He's the Duke of the Deep South.
He said he's been a bit overboard since
before the holidays, but I guess he's back.
Welcome back, Duke.
Richard Lindquist in Squim, Washington, 7903.

(02:56:52):
Matthew Elwart in Weatherford, Texas, 6006.
Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona, 6006.
Kurt Labanowski in Ramsey, New Jersey, 57.
By the way, some donations from Matt using
Apple Pay and Stripe work.
Oh, way to go.

(02:57:13):
So you can just do it right from
your phone.
You go to knowitinthedonations.com and you can
hit it where you can pay right on
your phone.
Because it doesn't get much better than that.
Yeah, you hit the donation button.
It comes up and it'll give you a
little thing.
You can click on that and boom, you're
good to go.
Troy Zellman in Roscoe, Illinois, 5555.
These are de-douching.
You've been de-douched.

(02:57:34):
Sir Glenn in Raleigh, North Carolina, 5510.
Organic Hemp Society in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, 5333.
Baron Henry in Rancho Pelos Verdes, California, 5242.

(02:57:54):
Future Sir of Cascadia in Portland, 5150.
He needs a de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
So special shout out to John in his
modern hype machine powerhouse of a newsletter.

(02:58:15):
Modern hype machine powerhouse, nice.
Forrest Martin in Parts Unknown, 5505.
Now we got to the $50 donors and
there's not a lot of them.
Michael Sikora in New Richmond, Wisconsin.

(02:58:35):
Matty, Matty Strozak in Hickson, Tennessee.
Alexa Delgado in Aptos.
Commodore Crummy in El Cajon.
Nice.
David Moreno, M Moreno in Atlantic, Iowa.

(02:58:57):
He's actually in Davenport.
He has a website, DaveMorenoSoftware.com.
I wonder what he does.
I bet he does some sort of software.
Oh, software, wow.
Yeah, well, shareware.
Already we're...
Oh, I'm not kidding.
He does freeware and donationware.

(02:59:20):
Oh, does he now?
Yes, DM File Note.
DM File Note allows you to create descriptions
for any file or folder, regardless of type.
And last on our very short list, and
we're padding obviously, Sir Greg in Newport, North
Carolina, 50 bucks.
So we want to thank all these people
for supporting show 1741 with their help and

(02:59:43):
contributions to keep this thing going.
And thank you to everyone who came in
under $50, which is never mentioned for reasons
of absolute anonymity.
It is assured.
Of course, there are people down there who
also support us with much smaller amounts, and
that is typically a sustaining donation, which are
highly appreciated.
You can go to noagendadonations.com, enter any

(03:00:04):
amount and any frequency, and it'll be automatic.
And check if you have one of those.
We've got a couple people who checked, saw
that their sustaining donation had expired.
So please check that.
And again, thank you to our executive and
associate executive producers for episode 1741.

(03:00:25):
And not a very long list today.
Scott wishes his dad Brian Tweed a happy
birthday.
He turns 69 tomorrow.
And Sir Andy says happy birthday to Christy.
And finally on the list is Kurt Labanowski.
Happy birthday to these people for everybody here
at the best podcast in the universe.
We do have three Commodores as the promotion

(03:00:47):
continues, but only of course, if you subscribe
to the newsletter.
Every single No Agenda episode show notes contains
a link for you to subscribe to said
newsletter.
And we would like to welcome Commodore Aditya
Trimurti, Commodore Pierce Chidley, and Commodore Sean Mattern.
Welcome and go to noagendarings.com to give

(03:01:08):
us an address to send your certificate of
Commodore-ship.
Commodores arriving.
Ah, close.
Almost made it.
And then one night, it's our Indian night.
So I'm going to grab out a nice...
Oh, this is a nice Indian blade.
It looks good, this one.
Ah, look at this one.
They're encrusted in jewels.

(03:01:28):
Oh, jewels, I tell you.
Aditya Trimurti, thank you very much for braving
the censorship of your country and supporting the
best podcast in the universe.
Thanks to your support of $1,000 or
more, I'm very proud to pronounce you as
certainty of the new East India Company.
Because certainty is certain that a new East

(03:01:50):
India Company is coming.
That's quite the theory on that.
For you, we've got hookers and blow, rent
boys and chardonnay.
But as you requested, we have samosa and
Johnny Walker blue.
It's the good stuff, along with that bong,
hits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger
ale and gerbils, breast milk and pablum, and
the mutton and the mead, which I'm sure
you will enjoy consuming.

(03:02:12):
You should also go to noagenderings.com and
there you will find a ring sizing guide.
Make sure you get us the right size
and an address.
We'll send that off to you.
And it is a signet ring.
So if you hit someone in the mouth,
it'll leave a nasty mark, or you can
use it to seal your important correspondence with
the provided wax and also a certificate of
authenticity.
Thank you and welcome to the round table.

(03:02:40):
And we do have a couple of meetups.
The producer organized groupings that take place.
There's going to be a big one in
the sky, John, but you're not going to
be a part of that.
Everyone's real sad.
You're just going to sit here and take
all the checks.
But there's one Sunday.
There's a couple happening today.

(03:03:00):
There's another one.
The checks that float up with you.
That's no good.
I'm taking my Bitcoin with me.
Hey, here's the meetup from Arlington, Virginia.
This is DC girl at the Arlington meetup
at Astro Donuts and Beer Hall.
Jeff from Springfield.
Glenn here.
John and Adam, I feel so plugged in
like a battery for the New World Order.
This is Sir Bob, Black Knight of the
Chesapeake Bay.

(03:03:21):
Not a spook.
Hi, Adam and John.
This is Edgar the Puppet.
And I dropped Adam's name in order to
score an interview with Lara Logan at CPAC
yesterday.
I'm so proud of myself.
Hello, Adam and John.
This is Paulo.
Scott Horton sent me.
And this is Sir William of West Kentucky.
Don't forget to wax your ceiling.
This is Roundy.
I had nothing to do with that puppet.

(03:03:43):
Now I got to check Edgar.
So Roundy gets himself on this thing twice?
Yeah, as Edgar and as Roundy.
One as a puppet and one as himself?
Now I have to go see what he
did with Lara.
Lara Logan, she hasn't yet a new podcast,
John.
She's got a new podcast.
It's Going Rogue with Lara Logan.
Available on YouTube and Rumble.

(03:04:06):
Yes.
So it was Lara Logan.
I thought I heard her say Laura Loomer.
But no, no, I said Lara Logan.
And he dropped my name.
So she'd be like, oh, yeah, I know
him.
He's my neighbor, Adam Carolla.
Anyway, meetups.
She's actually, wait, did I tell you that
story?
No, we were at the opening of some
bar here on Main Street.

(03:04:27):
The White Elephant, I think, is what it's
called.
And she's there and she's my neighbor.
And she said, and she's introduced me to
Adam Carolla.
Hey, I want to introduce you to Adam
Carolla.
And I'm like, oh, brother.
No.
Yeah.
She felt bad about it because someone corrected
her.
She felt bad about it after someone corrected
her?
Well, yeah.

(03:04:47):
Shouldn't she have caught herself?
No.
No.
Oh, my God.
It's a common mistake.
It happens.
What?
It happens more often.
I mean, how many people used to say,
hey, man, I love your dad's work?
Referring to Tim Curry, the actor.
That's kind of died off.

(03:05:08):
Yeah, that's died off with the years.
Yeah, I used to get a lot of
that.
Today, the Orlando Yoga and Lunch Meetup.
It's actually underway at Great Southern Box Company.
The yoga is optional.
It's in Orlando, Florida.
But of course, it's organized by the very
entertaining Dame Meowters.
And so I expect a good meetup report
from her.
The Indie No Agenda 33 Days of DJT

(03:05:32):
Huzzah.
Also underway as we speak in Indianapolis at
the Dugout Bar.
They're always good for a fantastic report.
It's a big group.
Over 100 people usually show up.
On Thursday, our next show day, the North
Georgia Monthly Meetup.
Six o'clock at Cherry Street Brewing in
Alpharetta, Georgia.
And that's what's coming up in the near
future.
We do have San Francisco, California just at
the end of the month on the 28th.

(03:05:52):
And many more actually to be found all
around the globe, including the Netherlands, Osaka, Japan,
Culemborg.
Also in the Netherlands, Tilburg.
Wow, the Netherlands are going crazy, man.
And also Wisconsin and New Jersey.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
That's where you can find an entire beautiful
calendar.
It's a fantastic website with lots of features.

(03:06:14):
You can send people RSVPs, replies, updates, all
kinds of things.
Thank you very much to Sir Daniel for
providing that very valuable website.
noagendameetups.com.
If you can't find anything on there near
you, you should just start one yourself.
It's easy, and it's always a party.

(03:06:48):
It's like a party.
Yeah, baby, always a party.
Tim Curry, 78.
Nah, he's too young.
Too young to be my dad.
Um, I have, uh, it's been quite the
struggle.
He could have had a kid when he
was 18.
Yeah.
Yeah, possible.

(03:07:09):
But then I wouldn't be working.
I'd be rich.
Living off daddy's teats would have been great.
Instead of just podcasting.
Um, it's been a struggle to keep up
with your end of show isos.
You have had so many good ones.
So I'm gonna, I have three, you have
three.
It's time to determine which iso we will
stick at the end of the show, and

(03:07:31):
I'm gonna go first.
Elon the monkey!
No, I guess not.
I like it as a clip.
Yeah.
But I don't, you know, it's in the
show.
I don't think.
You're fired!
No.
No.
How about this?
This reveals a perverted mind.
That's actually pretty decent.

(03:07:51):
Not bad.
Not bad.
That's not great.
It's not bad.
Let's try.
I'll start with a maze.
That was a maze balls.
Oh man.
Already you've knocked my clip off the board.
Here we go with crazy.
It's crazy.
No, it's not.
I don't like the.
You know what that was?
No.
Jon Stewart and AOC.

(03:08:14):
Yeah.
No, no.
Let's try top that.
Try and top that for a killer show.
That was a maze balls.
I think a maze balls.
Try and top that for a killer show.
Hold the top that one because.
That was a maze balls.
That's just too good.
Where did you get that?

(03:08:35):
That came from a book.
I can't think of which one.
These books.
People start looking at books and get me
some clips.
I need some end of show isos.
And now as always time for Jon's tip
of the day.
Great advice for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.

(03:08:56):
Created by David Letty.
So this tip comes from the last show
we did.
Where I had to move my gear over
to another machine.
And you went on and on.
How great I sounded.
Yes, you did.
You actually sounded great.
Well, then after the show was over and
I moved stuff around.
I noticed that as great as I sounded.

(03:09:18):
I was actually coming in from South America
on a VPN.
Oh, really?
Yeah, that's what I said.
That's interesting.
So I want to recommend a VPN.
The one I use.
Okay.
The one I use was I've done enough
research on VPNs.
I don't like the fact that this VPN

(03:09:39):
exists in the United States.
Because it could be a spook operation.
But I'm not sure.
But it does a really good job.
But it does a fabulous job with bandwidth.
You send out a fast signal.
Megabit or gigabit.
I have gigabits material here.
Goes out and comes back faster than you'd
imagine.
Last show we did came in from South
America.
So I had to.
I'm shipping my voice to South America.

(03:10:01):
It's doing a turnaround and coming back into
Texas.
And it sounded great.
As Adam said.
So this.
So this product is private internet access.
And this will be the VPN I recommend.
Yeah, it's PIA.
Just one letter different from you know who.
PIA.

(03:10:23):
So yes, from CIA.
So that's probably you don't know.
But it's good.
Only use it for your podcast, people.
Just use it for the podcast.
If you're doing a podcast with me, it's
perfect.
So the VPN comes in handy for any
kind of illicit activities.
Yes, which you don't.

(03:10:44):
It also prevents you from getting certain kinds
of diseases off the net.
It doesn't prevent you from getting various malware
from what I can tell.
But it does a good job of keeping
you isolated.
And poison pen letters.
Perfect idea to have one.
Don't want to get in trouble.
And it's a good product.
And it works well.

(03:11:04):
And you and they have nodes all over
the world and all over the United States.
If you have to stay in the country.
You want to watch some videos that are
that are that are.
You have to be part of that country.
You have to be in the country to
watch the video.
This is when we gather news.
We need to do this once in a
while.
You put a VPN up, put yourself in

(03:11:24):
the UK, and you can get stuff that
you might not be able to get over
here.
And what is the cost of said products?
Ah, it's pretty cheap.
It's like 10, 10 or 12, 15 bucks
a month, something like that.
Because I got the you know, Christina's in
this reality show in Holland.
Did I tell you that?
Yeah, you told us a couple of times.
Yeah.
So I, I wanted to watch.
And it's so crazy that it streams on

(03:11:48):
a thing called Videoland, which is an endemol
service.
And so she gave me her login.
I'm like, okay, I'll go get a VPN.
And I got the ProtonMail VPN.
Those guys are pretty reliable, right?
And they've got, I would, I would go
with that.
They got tons of servers in the Netherlands.
And so I hook it up to a

(03:12:10):
Netherlands server.
And right away, the Videoland says, no, that
video is not available in your country.
How does it know?
I tried all the different VPN servers in
Holland.
I mean, I guess they must know that
that, I mean, and by the way, There
is, there is a blacklist that floats around.

(03:12:30):
I've found there's some of this PIA stuff
sometimes hits one of these lists, depending on
which, which nodes you're coming in from.
And you have to be aware of that.
And so you have to try a different,
different provider.
Well, I'm going to try PIA.
The crazy thing is I would pay for
it if they just let me, but no,
no, you're not in Holland.

(03:12:51):
So you can't pay for it.
Is that crazy?
Or are these people insane?
Yeah, they're insane.
Exactly.
Not insane as John's tip of the day.
Find it at tipoftheday.net.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Brunetti.

(03:13:12):
That's right.
Also, noagendafund.com, which has all kinds of
other groovy things that we do, such as
our, our book list, our movies list.
And find that at noagendafund.com.
Of course, tipoftheday.net for all of those
tips of the day, which is a fan
favorite.
We are going to shut down the broadcast

(03:13:34):
for today, but we will return on Thursday
to bring you the latest media deconstruction.
I'm sure there will be a plenty.
Probably from some stuff from, I don't know,
EU, NATO, Ukraine, Deutschland.
The usual suspects.
The usual suspects, yes.
But we love doing it for you and
keep those, keep those far right.

(03:13:56):
Coming up next on the No Agenda stream,
you can just keep listening if you're in
trollroom.io. It's a brand new value for
value music show.
It's the Mountain Music Happy Hour.
So check that out.
And we'll be back on Thursday.
End of show mixes.
Only two.
I had to cut one out.
We've got Sir Michael Anthony with the Aunt

(03:14:17):
Gigi Psy mix and David Kekta.
Both perfect end of show mixes.
Coming to you from the heart of the
Texas Hill Country in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And I'm from Northern Silicon Valley where I
remain.
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
Until then, adios, mofos, hui hui, and such.

(03:15:11):
I just filed my paperwork at the courthouse
and you can see right here the date
of separation.
It's just super cool.
I'm not just doing this because of the
action of booing.
I'm doing this because of everything that it
represents in our relationship.
I have loved Taylor Allison Swift since I
was 12 years old.
That's not a man.
That's a boy.
And when you see that, you can't really

(03:15:31):
unsee it.
Get an MRI.
Get a 360 MRI of your head.
Have you ever noticed how Elon Musk has
a resting, rich, asshole face?
Get a 360 MRI of your head.
HIV is important.

(03:15:54):
She raised her asshole face.
We're learning now about mitochondria and viral impact
and brain fog and the changes in our
neurons and the cells that nourish our neurons
that really allow us to think and move.

(03:16:28):
That was amazeballs.
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