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September 18, 2025 • 217 mins

No Agenda Episode 1800 - "Soros Stooge"

"Soros Stooge"

Executive Producers:

Sir Pursuit of Peace & Tranquility

Commodore Arch Duke of Central Florida

Sir Midnight Rider

Sir Peter- jockey of the mountains

Arch Duchess Kim, Keeper of the nutty fluffers

Commodore Earl Silverdude of the Silver Dolphins

Sir Heavy G of the Great Lakes, Guardian of the Trolls

Charlie Kirk

Sir Sala Hauser

sir Otter of Utah

Thomas Anaya

Chris Keller

Sir CrashEMT

Sir Stuart

Legacy Third LLC

John Ferretti

Dame Roselyn, President of the Nairn West End Birdwatchers, Seeker of Truth

Sir Christopher, The Believer

Bowman McMahon

Sir Real

onno priester

Zack Barnett

Scott Gove

Associate Executive Producers:

Chris Osterhues

Sir WalksAlot

Sir Tigger Max

Sir Gears

Eli the coffee guy

Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning resumes

SDG

Secretary-General:

Sir Pursuit of Peace & Tranquility

Commodore Arch Duke

of Central Florida, secretary-general of the realm of trolls and the troll museum

Kevin Dunn

Sir Peter- jockey of the mountains

Arch Duchess Kim, secretary-general of the mini wiener dogs

Commodore Earl Silverdude of the Silver Dolphins

Geno Villalpando

Eric Maki

Sir Sala Hauser baronette of the space coast

Michael Otterstrom

Thomas Anaya

Chris Keller Secretary General of the MeetUp Photographers

Sir CrashEMT, Secretary General of Holly Springs and Fuquay-Varina NC.

Sir Stuart Secretary-General Of The Institute Of Very Angry Accountants

1800 Club Members:

Sir Pursuit of Peace & Tranquility

Commodore Arch Duke of Central Florida

Sir Midnight Rider

Sir Peter- jockey of the mountains

Arch Duchess Kim, Keeper of the nutty fluffers

Commodore Earl Silverdude of the Silver Dolphins

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Title Changes

Sir Pursuit of Peace & Tranquility > Sir Pursuit of Peace & Tranquility duke of the lands of the red clay and the cherry trees

Knights & Dames

Kevin Dunn > Sir Midnight Rider

Geno Villalpando > Sir Heavy G of the Great Lakes, Guardian of the Trolls

Charley Kirk > Sir Charley Kirk

Michael Otterstrom > sir Otter of Utah

Chris Keller > Sir Chris of the Harp Husbands

Christopher Dale > Sir Christopher, The Believer

Glenn Leithner > Sir “Dog of the Desert"

Chris Osterhues -> Sir Chris Shephard of the Indian Creek Valley

Art By: Darren O'Neill

End of Show Mixes: Jeffrey Corker - Oystein BErge - Sir Chris Wilson - Agent Cooper - Coomodore Dubz

Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry

Mark van Dijk - Systems Master

Ryan Bemrose - Program Director

Back Office Jae Dvorak

Chapters: Dreb Scott

Clip Custodian: Neal Jones

Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman

NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda

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ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1800.noagendanotes.com

Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com

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Last Modified 09/18/2025 17:15:20
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Where's your Bitcoin donation?
Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak.
It's Thursday, September 18th, 2025.
This is your award-winning GiveOnation Media Assassination
Episode 1800.
This is no agenda.
Filled with hate speech and broadcasting live from
the heart of the Texas Hill Country here
in FEMA Region No.
6.

(00:20):
In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley where they fired
Jimmy Kimmel, now it's about free speech.
What?
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
In the morning.
What a week, what a week, what a
week.
It's been good.
But before we start, I was going to

(00:42):
save this for the 18th, but I feel
compelled to just say, John, thank you for
being my partner in this crazy experiment we
started 1800 episodes ago.
Well, I resent that.
I mean, I repel.
I reflect that with you.
Thank you for helping me.

(01:03):
It's always good to work with a pro.
It's always good to work with a pro.
Yes, exactly.
I could not imagine doing it.
I could not imagine it at all any
other way.
Let me just silence this thing here.
Hold on a second.
Look at anyone else who's watching, listening, watching.
Kim is watching.

(01:24):
What are they watching?
1800 episodes, not a lick of video, ladies
and gentlemen.
Not a lick.
And we're still here.
Yeah, we're still here.
Except for the cartoons.
Well, yeah, those were good, weren't they?
Yeah.
It's hard to keep stuff up.
We've had so many people do companion shows,

(01:46):
anti-shows.
The anti-shows are always the best.
Yeah, they rarely last very long because it's
hard to do.
It's hard to do.
The only other show that's ever come close
to doing what we do was, what was
that?
Unfiltered.
Unfiltered.
Those guys were good, but their mistake was
video.

(02:06):
The minute they went to video, they couldn't
handle it, couldn't hack it.
Well, actually, I think, yeah, there was a
combination of video and post.
They posted everything.
Post-production, people refer to, when you say
post, if anyone hears, oh, post.

(02:26):
Yeah, we'll fix it in post.
That means that they do it after the
show's over, you re-edit the whole thing.
And so they had this intention of posting
everything to an extreme.
Instead of what we do, which is just
live to tape.
If we screw up, we screw up.

(02:47):
Unless you got the dog out, you can
stop tape.
I may or may not.
The dog has to come back in, but
I don't know if I'll stop the tape.
It's too fun.
It breaks the fourth wall.
But that was one of their problems.
And then the two of them, Chris, we
don't get along either, but the two of
them didn't get along.

(03:08):
Oh, really?
First of all, we don't get along either.
Did I hear you say that?
Yeah, we get along in the show.
We go out to dinner once in a
while.
We tolerate each other.
We tolerate each other.
But we don't hang out.
No, in fact, a little known fact, whenever

(03:31):
John and I see each other, it's like
an awkward first date.
We don't really even know what to say
to each other.
There's actually more than an element of truth
to that.
It's like, oh, geez.
Oh, that wasn't my experience, but okay, I
get it.

(03:52):
Oh, geez.
Like, do you hug him?
Like, hey, bro.
It's weird.
Fist bump.
That's what we'll do.
From now on, if we ever see each
other again, fist bump.
Yeah.
Okay.
And then fist bump, yeah.
No, it should be a fish bump.

(04:13):
Fist bump with an explosion.
Oh, yeah.
Yes, a Ron Bloom explosion.
Exactly.
Well, there's a lot.
Before I even start, the oddest thing happened
to me.
Was it Monday?
Tuesday night.

(04:33):
There's this winery here in town called Arch
Ray.
It's huge.
And they've got tiny homes that are selling.
They have two RV parks.
I think these people are very wealthy cattle
people.
And there's almost no one in the restaurant.
And the restaurant is huge.
And maybe on weekends, it'll get a little
busy.

(04:54):
You know, they have their own distillery.
It's a huge operation.
Parking for 20 times the amount of people
that ever parked there.
And so, we're sitting there.
We're having dinner.
And we know this.
You know, we go AARP time, 530.
We do.
We love it.
We have friends like, oh, what time do

(05:14):
you want to eat?
Five?
Yeah, that's great.
Let's do five.
Let's do five.
So, we're sitting there.
And all of a sudden, I get a
tap on my shoulder.
I look over, and it's Laura Logan.
And she's like, hey, Adam.
Hey, Adam.
She has kind of that South African British
thing going on.
Come on.
It's a hard accent to copy.
Oh, I can't copy it.
I can speak South Afrikaans with her, but

(05:34):
I can't copy her accent.
Come on over.
Say hi.
At the table is Luke Coffey.
He is the J6er who had, remember the
guy who was holding his crutch up in
the air?
Oh, yes.
That guy.
Yeah, he's famous.
Yeah, they threw him in jail for 50
days.
Even though he was literally saying, stop, people.

(05:55):
Stop.
Let's pray.
Just pray.
Which makes it that much funnier.
Off to jail.
Off to jail you go.
Katie Hopkins.
Katie Hopkins?
The Katie Hopkins?
The Katie Hopkins.
And I have to say, a delightful woman.
Oh, no.
She's got to be hilarious.

(06:15):
Very, very enamoring.
Just a big smile.
Oh, Adam, thank you for starting podcasting.
This is wonderful.
And, of course, I did what you do.
Katie, big fan.
Big fan of your work, man.
Big fan.
Big fan.
I did my Hollywood thing.
I had to.
Yeah, that's what you do.
Big fan.

(06:36):
Big fan.
And Roseanne Barr.
What a table.
It was a crazy table.
But Roseanne, she doesn't shake hands.
She shakes wrists.
She what?
Yeah, so she won't shake your hand.

(06:56):
She said, no, I don't shake hands.
So she'll grab your wrist right above your
hand, and you're supposed to grab hers kind
of like a solidarity handshake, if you will.
Yeah, yeah.
Very odd.
And so Katie Hopkins, very slender, very skinny,
basically.
Skinny lady.

(07:16):
Roseanne Barr, so tiny.
So tiny.
Yeah, she's petite.
It's amazing how tiny she is.
And, by the way, the waiter, our server,
he was probably late 40s, 50, and he
was sending messages to the kitchen staff, Roseanne

(07:38):
Barr's here.
And he said, look at this.
All he got was question marks.
Who?
He said, from the Roseanne show, don't you
know?
I was like, wow, that's kind of interesting.
It fades.
Yeah, it fades.
Yeah, you got to, yeah.
That's why you got to go on Rogan
from time to time, get reclassified.

(07:58):
Oh, that guy.
Okay, now I remember who he is.
Anyway, I just thought the most hilarious, there's
a lot of hilarity this week, Pam Bondi.
Wait, before you drop this topic about the
dinner.
Oh, sorry.
What was the point of that particular group
getting together in the first place?

(08:20):
It's pretty screwy.
Well, you know, Laura Logan has a podcast,
which she does from her house, called Going
Rogue with Laura Logan.
After many legal letters telling her, no, you
cannot say.
After we had to sue her.
And she laughs about that.
She's like, oh, yeah, I can't use no
agendas.

(08:40):
My friend Adam won't let me use this.
I said, no, of course not.
Crazy.
So Katie Hopkins was a guest and Roseanne
Barr was a guest.
Oh, so they were guests and they were
taking the guests out to dinner.
Yeah, yeah.
So they're stacking the interviews.
She gets a lot of interesting interviews.
I mean, Katie Hopkins seems like.
How does Katie Hopkins, she lives in England.

(09:02):
I guess she was in the States.
Her partner, I don't know.
Being in the States is one thing, but
being in Fredericksburg, Texas.
No, they drove down from Dallas.
Which is also like, wow, you drove down
from Dallas?
That's like driving to L.A. That's five
hours.
Not quite L.A., but isn't L.A.
like seven hours from where you are?

(09:23):
Seven and a half to eight hours.
Yeah, it's like five hours.
And if you go through the country roads,
it's actually quite a nice drive.
If you take 35, it's like, ugh.
Yeah, well, going to L.A. is a
nice drive if you go down Highway 1.
Yeah, yeah.
Pass Big Sur.
Yeah, it's nice.
So, yeah.

(09:44):
But Luke Coffey, that's an interesting guy.
I like him.
I like him.
He lives in town now.
Everyone lives here.
Roseanne Barr lives near town.
I don't know where she lives exactly.
Yeah, you should befriend that guy.
Oh, I'm going to.
Yeah.
He has interesting things to say.
He was a Hollywood guy.

(10:05):
He was telling stories about he was a
comedy writer.
I forget all the names.
He had all these names.
He wrote for several sitcoms.
He was a comedy writer?
Yeah, for sitcoms.
No, that's still, I mean, yeah.
I wouldn't say he was a joke writer.
No, no, no.
But he probably was.
Writing, you know, sitcom comedy.

(10:28):
And so, at a certain point, there was
some fame.
I'm going to have coffee with him next
week.
I'm going to have coffee with Coffey.
Hey, now.
And he was telling a story how they
wanted him to star in this, for this,
I think, like a secondary role, but a
major role in some show.

(10:49):
And then he auditioned, and it came down
to him and some Abercrombie and Fitch-looking
model guy who couldn't act.
And he's, I've got to get this whole
story, but I'm paraphrasing, but you'll get it.
And so the producers are there with him
and say, well, it's between you and this
other guy, but we really want you to
be it, and you can be a big
star in Hollywood.

(11:10):
I mean, there's movies.
If you'll let us screw you up the
butt.
What?
Yes.
And he said, what?
And they say, yeah, yeah.
I would say, what?
And, boy, here comes the best thing.
By the way, don't worry, it won't make
you gay.
That's like, wow, Hollywood is really decrepit.

(11:34):
So I'm going to get the full details
from him.
This is reminding me of the Dave Chappelle
story.
Very similar, I'm sure.
Very similar.
Hey, put on this dress, Dave.
Put on this dress, Dave.
And he wasn't going to do it.
Yeah, so that's when he quit.
He was like, no, I'm not going to
do that.

(11:55):
Yeah, he quit, and it was big money
that he quit.
It wasn't like, you know, chicken feet.
But also, he and his fiance were walking,
I want to say it was.
Who?
Coffee?
Yeah, coffee, on Sunset Boulevard.
And they got hit by a car, and
his fiance died.
Well, that's terrible.
And that's why he has the crutch, because

(12:15):
his leg got messed up.
Yeah, so interesting guy.
I will get details.
Now can we go to.
Yes, more exclusive stuff to the No Agenda
show.
Of course it is.
People should appreciate the fact that we have
these sorts of anecdotes, and we can collect
them.
Yes, they are highly collectible, and we can
bundle them for good use later.
Bundle them for some sort of mortgage deal.

(12:38):
I think that's how you do it.
For fun and profit for your mortgage.
The Curry Dvorak stories in a bundle.
Very nice.
But Pam Bondi, just, I mean, if the
Epstein dossier wasn't enough.
Man, the whole, I'll play the little CNN

(12:58):
reaction first, and then I'll, because no one
really plays the full sequence, or even tells
us where it's from.
We're in a podcast.
There's a little more interesting backstory to it.
Here's CNN's response to the hate speech.
Attorney General Pam Bondi is working to walk
back now some of her statements about prosecuting

(13:19):
hate speech.
The AG is now saying the department will
only go after and prosecute statements that incite
violence, though that important element was not how
she first presented it, saying in a podcast
that DOJ would go after anyone for hate
speech, could go after anyone for hate speech.
Comments that the Wall Street Journal editorial board
is taking on this morning.
Here's just the first line of the piece

(13:40):
from the editorial board.
Is a basic understanding of the First Amendment
too much to expect from the nation's Attorney
General?
Hate speech is protected by the First Amendment.
Of course, CNN's Harry Enten is here to
run the numbers on this.
How are Bondi's comments getting people stirred?
What a disaster for Pam Bondi, and therefore,
I'm Donald Trump, I'm just going, what the
heck is going on here, you know?

(14:01):
Take a look here.
Weekly Google searches for free speech.
Get this, up like a rocket, up 186
% versus the five-year average.
I went back and looked at every single
week.
More folks are searching for free speech this
week on Google than any week in at
least five years.
How about that?
Imagine looking for free speech on Google.

(14:21):
That is just a great statement.
Of course, not surprisingly, who's the top trending
topic with free speech?
Well, it's Pam Bondi, of course.
People are taking her comments, looking it up,
interested in it, and as you saw from
that Wall Street Journal editorial, they ain't liking
it too much from the left to the
right.
So I want to meet these people who
are Googling free speech.

(14:42):
What is free speech?
And it really bothers me.
Give a little bit of the backstory about
this fiasco.
Well, here's the backstory.
She was on the Katie Miller Pod.
I kid you not, it's called the Katie
Miller Pod, which, as you know, irks me.

(15:04):
Yeah.
The Katie Miller Pod.
Katie Miller is Stephen Miller's wife, which just
puts some context to it.
So it's an inside job.
She's comfortable.
They know each other.
They're sitting in Katie Miller's pod home in
front of the pod fireplace.
And here we go.

(15:24):
For so long, colleges allowed, when a conservative
will go on campus, right, they go with
all this police and security.
These universities are complicit in allowing.
It's not an interview, by the way.
It's more like a conversation.
Conservatives to be harassed on campus.
And what happens when you allow a university
to harass conservatives and don't expel or don't
take an action is what happened last week.

(15:47):
It is.
And, you know, on a broader level, the
anti-Semitism, what's been happening at college campuses
around this country is disgusting.
It's despicable.
And we've been fighting that.
We've been fighting these universities left and right,
and we're not going to stop.
There's free speech, and then there's hate speech.
And there is no place, especially now, especially

(16:08):
after what happened to Charlie, in our society.
Do you see more law enforcement going after
these groups who are using hate speech and
putting cuffs on people so we show them
that some action is better than no action?
We will absolutely target you, go after you,
if you are targeting anyone with hate speech,

(16:30):
anything.
And that's across the aisle.
I mean, look what happened.
Think about Josh Shapiro.
What happened to Governor Shapiro?
No one hate speech him.
I've talked to Josh multiple times.
Nobody hate speech Charlie Kirk.
Democrat, governor, Jewish.
They firebombed his house while his wife and
children were sleeping upstairs.
It's a miracle nothing worse happened to him.

(16:52):
It's a miracle that nothing happened to Josh,
and he and his family are safe.
They're traumatized, but that's what's happened in this
world, and we are going to fight every
step of the way to show that you
will face the most severe consequences if you
come after someone and you target someone for
their political views or for any reason at
all.

(17:12):
So she conflates hate speech with action.
Oh, it gets much worse with what's happened
this week.
This is a disaster for her.
She should be fired immediately.
This is too much now.
Well, we've known on this show, we have
known that she is a goofball.

(17:34):
She got the job at secondhand from Matt
Gaetz, who had, you know, was assigned the
job, but they rousted him.
Yes.
And Matt Gaetz, by the way, has gone
on to become a pretty good host.
On OAN.
On OAN.
I have a clip from him for later.
First he started working with Dan Ball, who

(17:56):
is kind of a firebrand, and I don't
know if that show is working well, but
Gaetz was working with him, and then they
gave Gaetz his own show.
Well, let's be honest.
No one watches OAN.
They only watch it when you're on with
Chanel.
Nobody watches me either.
But the point is that Gaetz has the
potential to draw an audience.
He is really very talented.

(18:18):
He's a natural.
Yeah, he is.
But here's the thing that bugs me.
The term free speech.
I don't understand where this came from.
The First Amendment speaks specifically of Congress making
no law or abridging the freedom of speech.

(18:39):
When did that become free speech?
It just makes no sense to me.
And it's irksome.
Why?
I don't know why.
Because it's not what it is.
What is free speech?
Free speech, what does that mean?
Freedom of speech, a God-given right.
Yeah, I understand that.

(19:00):
It's what it means.
Free speech means freedom of speech.
It just bugs me.
I wish they would just say freedom of
speech.
You just don't like the way the term
is put.
I don't.
I would just prefer.
It's a short form.
I would prefer a lawyer, an attorney general,
to use the word specifically.
Words matter in law.
As does hate speech.

(19:21):
Well, it doesn't bother me at all.
No, that's fine.
Here's another 45 seconds of this nonsense.
Do you think Charlie was assassinated because our
country can't handle free speech or because one
type of speech is seen as obscene by
another political party?
Well, in this case, it was clearly obscene
by a political party, an opposing view.
Sure.
Sure.

(19:42):
It doesn't matter.
You can't have that hate speech in the
world in which we live.
And you knew Charlie better than anyone.
The world revolves around hate speech, Pombandy.
Pombandy.
Pombandy.
That's not her new name.
Pombandy.
In which we live.
And you knew Charlie better than anyone.
He would want everyone to unite right now.

(20:02):
And I think what Erica said is they
had no idea what they unleashed by doing
this.
Around this country.
Hold on.
Stop the clip.
See, that clip is stopped.
So she, you know, we haven't seen Bondi
doing anything.
She comes on and she says this and
that.
She does her press conferences, her prepared stuff.
Yeah.

(20:22):
But now that I think about it, she's
never been on the Tonight Show with Jimmy
Fallon.
She doesn't do any.
She's not a talker.
She's not somebody who goes out and speaks
for good reason, by the way.
Well, now we know why.
Yeah, exactly.
Now we know why.
Her people have protected her.
Well, somehow because she's friends with the Katie

(20:44):
Miller pod.
Right.
So she ended up being suckered because it's
a friendly fire operation.
You know, let's go do this.
You can't.
What could possibly go wrong?
But this is the milieu right now within
her department.
And this is all a part of a
big setup.
And we followed this since 2009 or 10

(21:07):
when the whole concept of hate speech came
up.
That during the Obama years.
Which came out of the left.
Yes, of course it did.
And it started with bullying.
I remember, I can go back and I
can find all the shows.
We said, whatever happened to Sticks and Stones
will break my bones.
Words are violence, man.

(21:27):
That's where we're at today.
Words are violence.
Bullying, bullying, bullying.
You can't be bullied.
That's hate speech.
Do you think that she.
I mean, I'm trying to understand how she
came to this.
Well, this isn't.
Actually, that's very interesting.
Goat in the troll room says this could
have been a hit.
By Miller.

(21:51):
To get her out.
Oh, Miller's that type of guy.
Yes.
He's a he's a conniver.
You can tell by just watching him.
That is a very interesting point.
Goat.
And that would be, that's a good.
Well, the chat room came to life.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
The idea that she's been a.

(22:12):
Because she has not done Jack really.
She knows, you know, where's the arrest?
Where's this?
Where's only hurt things.
She hasn't done anything.
Anything positive.
No, she's a big talker.
No action.
And we've been noticing this.
And she's like.
And she sashays.
It's like.
Yes, she does.
And she.
She's like the.
The DOJ version of Comer.
The guy who's always doing the hearings.

(22:34):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nothing ever comes of any of it.
Yes.
I like that.
That's a great theory of Miller.
Go with that.
It's Miller time, everybody.
Leashed by doing this around this country and
around this world.
How so many more conservatives, I think, who
are quiet are going to come out and
be so outspoken.
I've had my friends, a couple of my

(22:55):
friends, kids even reach out to me who
I didn't realize how conservative they were.
They're in college.
How much how much they cared about Charlie
and they are going to be activists now.
OK, so, yeah, that really puts it into
perspective.
You're right.
She's never on any talk shows because she's
no good.
She's no good at it.
And what she has to say is no

(23:16):
good that she just keeps putting her foot
in her mouth every single time.
And it's time for her to go.
Then that Miller hit is I'm all in
on that.
Now, I'm going to lead you because you
sent me the Kash Patel video, which I'd
see most of it in real time.
You got a lot of clips.
I have way too many clips from it.

(23:36):
That's right.
I have two clips that will set you
up as far as I could tell from
because this there were two hearings.
There was the committee hearing and then there
was the hearing the next day.
And the hearing the next day was where
all this fireworks happened with Macy Hirono, Marcy,
whatever her name is.
All the idiots came out, which is just

(23:56):
phenomenal, just entertainment and meant to be entertainment.
And by the way, this is on the
show notes there.
You can people should watch this for it
goes on for like four hours, but it's
highly entertaining.
Oh, it was very good.
Yes, it's exactly what we needed for clips.
But the serious business happened in the committee

(24:17):
meeting the day before.
And wow, what a setup between Lindy Hop
Graham, Lady G, Lady G and Kash Patel
with printed boards, with stats and everything.
And it came down to hate speech.
After the assassination of Charlie Kirk, there seems

(24:37):
to be one refrain from everybody.
And that's about the effect of social media.
Do you believe that social media is one
of the instruments radicalizing America and inciting violence?
Well, it's not.
My belief is based on the data.
And the data shows that social media is
wildly out of control when it comes to

(24:59):
radicalized.
Dead right.
So what did you just say?
This guy's FBI director.
He says that social media is wildly out
of control.
Now, free speech.
We all agree with that.
We can't yell fire in the theater, right?
So this is where I'm like, OK, Lindsay,
yes, you can yell free speech in a

(25:19):
crowded theater.
But you can yell fire, not free speech.
Thank you.
Free speech!
You can yell free speech all you want
and you can yell fire.
But you can't do it if you intend
malice for people to get hurt in a
stampede going out and you have intent.
No, you can't do that.

(25:40):
And this is a gross, gross twisting of
an opinion from the Supreme Court where they
literally said the opposite.
You can yell fire or free speech, for
that matter, in a theater.
So right off the bat, this is a
setup.
Patel's in on it.
He says that social media is wildly out

(26:00):
of control.
Now, free speech.
We all agree with that.
But you can't yell fire in the theater,
right?
Yes, sir.
Free speech doesn't allow you to go online
and groom a child for sexual...
What?
What?
All of a sudden?
Oh, let's link children in.
OK, let us connect hate speech with grooming

(26:20):
children online.
This is very, very devious here.
It does not.
OK, free speech doesn't allow you to go
on the Internet and basically incite somebody to
kill another person, right?
Absolutely not.
So if it's illegal offline, it should be
illegal online.
Agreed?
Whatever the law is.
Agreed?
Yes, sir.

(26:41):
By the way, stop the clip.
I really hate this guy's questioning style.
It's a script.
It's always he says something, and then he
says, agree?
Yeah.
Agree?
It's a yes or no question.
It's a yes or no question.
Agree?
It's a setup.
Agree?
Because it's a setup.
This is a setup.
No, it's yes, it's a setup.

(27:04):
But it's like scripted.
It's yes.
It's annoying.
Oh, yeah, it's it's scripted.
All right.
Basically incite somebody to kill another person, right?
Absolutely not.
So if it's illegal offline, it should be
illegal online.
Agreed?
Whatever the law is.
Yes, sir.
Just because you're online doesn't give you a

(27:24):
get out of jail free card.
No, sir.
So if a parent is worried about a
child being bullied.
Bullied?
Hold on a second.
We went from hate speech, yelling fire in
a theater, to grooming children, to bullying.
Okay.
Get out of jail free card.
No, sir.
So if a parent is worried about a
child being bullied on a website, what rights

(27:46):
do they have under U.S. law?
We have to balance the rights, as you
said, Senator, of free speech versus those that
encroach upon the violence.
Is there a law that can shut down
one of these sites for bullying children or
allowing sexual predators on the site?
We are able to attack certain sites on
the dark web when it comes to the
open Internet infrastructure system.

(28:07):
Oh, hold on a second.
Hold on a second.
We can go after dark sites on the
dark web.
But when it comes to the free open
Internet infrastructure, what?
What are they talking about?
Public companies.
Companies with money.

(28:28):
Companies.
Companies.
The open Internet architecture.
This is some bull crap happening here.
Bullying children or allowing sexual predators on the
site.
We are able to attack certain sites on
the dark web when it comes.
Why is the FBI attacking anything?
Yeah, we can attack them on the dark
web, Lindsay.

(28:49):
Best we can get them, but not the
free open Internet architecture.
For bullying children or allowing sexual predators on
the site.
We are able to attack certain sites on
the dark web when it comes to the
open Internet infrastructure system.
We have to reach a threshold to attack
a company's position that only subscribes to violence.

(29:09):
Can the parents sue that company?
They can.
They can?
They can sue not the social media companies.
That's what I'm talking about.
They can sue the companies.
I'm talking about the social media companies.
No, no, no.
Kash Patel got off script.
He got confused.
Not the social media companies.
That's what I'm talking about.
They can sue the companies.

(29:30):
I'm talking about the social media company that
gives lives to this behavior.
No, you're referring to Section 230.
There it is.
Would you advocate a sunsetting of Section 230
to bring more liability to the companies who
send this stuff out?
I've advocated for that for years.
Yeah.
There we go.
Section 230.

(29:51):
We got a sunset.
Come on.
Let's take it home.
We need to do this, folks.
We need it.
These companies are taking content that makes you
sick.
What?
Wait.
So, it goes, what he should say is
these companies are taking content, they're not reliable,

(30:11):
and they're not donating enough to our campaigns.
We have not gotten enough money from Facebook.
Do you know how many, you know, that's
a $1.8 trillion, Mr. Patel, this is
a $1.8 trillion company.
Do you know what that means in the
market cap of $1.8 trillion and how
much money that I've gotten from them?
Yeah.

(30:32):
It pales.
Well, did you watch this?
Because that's exactly what happened.
We need to do this, folks.
These companies are taking content that makes you
sick, that could get you killed, get you
poisoned.
Poisoned?
Poisoned, what?
Yeah.
He's, this, and I had to think about

(30:53):
this, had to listen to it a couple
of times.
He's talking about the COVID controversy.
He's talking about people telling you to take
ivermectin.
Oh, yeah.
That's what he's talking about here.
That it makes you sick, that could get
you killed, get you poisoned, and there's nothing
we can do about it under our law.

(31:16):
A person can do about it because of
Section 230.
So if your child is being sexually groomed
online or bullied online.
Oh, no, my child is being bullied online.
Quick, call the feds.
And you go to the social media company
and ask them to take it down, they
refuse.
You have like zero rights.

(31:36):
How many images of sexually exploited children are
purveyed every year on social media sites?
At this point, one of his little lackeys
is putting up a board that says 36
million.
The number is astronomical.
And Senator, if I can just add.
He didn't even answer the question because it's
there.
Everyone sees it.
One step to that analysis.

(31:58):
Oh, what do you think he's going to
add?
Come on.
I don't know, but it can't be good.
It's not just what's on social media that
is quote unquote real.
It's the introduction of artificial intelligence and AI
that is creating even more child sexual abuse
material and even more sexually violent acts online

(32:19):
and mimicking people.
This is very interesting.
If you create an AI image of sexual
of child sexual abuse material.
Who do you sue?
I mean, clearly that material was in the
corpus.

(32:40):
If you think about it.
Where else could what else is in the
corpus of these large language models?
That's the dad.
Now, I didn't even think of that.
That's very interesting.
I mean, imagine having to prove that it's
not in your corpus, that there's not a
million tokens of CSAM.
Would you say that the way social media

(33:00):
is structured today, really no accountability, 36 million
images in 2023 of sexually exploited children, that
this is a public health hazard?
It is.
Yes.
Would you say that it's a mental health
problem, particularly for younger people?
It absolutely is.
Because I'm a doctor.
Do you agree that some of these sites

(33:21):
are designed to be addictive?
I think not only are some of these
sites designed to be addictive.
Unfortunately, the reality is some of these sites
are designed to generate income.
And many people are generating income based on
this illegal.
1.8 trillion and no donations.
Do you think it's now time for America
to deal with this problem?

(33:42):
I'm all in.
I have been all in and I'm happy
to work with Congress to do so.
Well, I tell you what, having the FBI
director all in is great news for me.
And I hope the committee will respond.
For me?
What is that for me?
That was an interesting little.
I've been all in and I'm happy to
work with Congress to do so.
Well, I tell you what, having the FBI
director all in is great news for me.

(34:05):
Money.
And I hope the committee will respond and
that we'll be all in trying to fix
a problem that I think is doing a
lot of damage to our country.
So, obviously, there's no way that they can
restrict the freedom of speech anywhere.
But this leads to only one thing.
Digital ID.

(34:27):
They are moving towards it.
They are moving towards it because once we
can identify who posted it, then all bets
are off.
That's where they're going.
Well, this is probably the most solid evidence
you've provided for this thesis of yours, which
you've been harping on probably for two years,
three years.

(34:47):
You remind me of Horowitz.
He's got this thing about bare feet in
the airports that he just can't get off
his mind.
I'm with him on that.
It's disgusting.
Stop it, people.
Stop it.
And it's like, yeah, that would be because
it's going to go like this.
They're going to give him some more money.

(35:08):
You've got to get off this 230 thing,
buddy.
Stop.
Stop.
Okay.
Okay.
We'll get off that.
But we've got to do something about this.
We've got to look like we're taking action.
Digital ID.
It's the only way to go.
Because that way you can't have these anonymous
people bullying.
And shame on Cash Patel.
And by the way, how do you get
bullied online?
You know what bullying is?
Do you understand bullying?

(35:28):
Have you been in grammar school?
You've got some big kid who's a big
bully.
That's what they call him because he's a
big boy.
And he comes in, he comes up to
you, and he just pushes you.
Yes.
Get out of my way.
Yeah, and that's when your parents take you
and put you in judo class.
That happened to me.
Well, it could happen.
Yeah.
And so the kids, he goes around, he

(35:50):
pushes people around, he tells them to get
out of the way, and he says, hey,
go get me.
You know, he's a bully.
He's just a big bully because he's a
big kid with a lot of power.
Give me your lunch money.
And so you end up with, how do
you do that online?
Well, if your kid's getting bullied online, take
your kid offline.
It's that simple.
Hello.
It's that simple.

(36:11):
Stop it.
But, no, this is about something else.
And shame on Kash Patel.
For all the things I think he's doing
well, shame on him.
Shame on him.
This is shameful.
This little sketch comedy they did together, totally
rehearsed with printed PowerPoint slides, give me a
break.
Just say it.

(36:32):
Just say what you want to do.
But they know.
They know it's not going to be easy.
You know, it wouldn't be that hard.
I think you can make a logical demand
for digital ID by being forthright.
Yeah, but they're not.
They're saying, oh, there's sexual child material.
They're beating around the bush, 230, oh, my
God, bullying, poisoning online.

(36:56):
Yeah.
Section 230 was the reason the internet became
such a success because of America's involvement.
Under Bill Clinton, all of this, I believe.
No taxes.
No taxes.
That would help.
And also Bill Clinton's soft on porn.
Yeah, it's a coiner phrase.

(37:16):
Absolutely.
During that era when I wrote the telecom
book and I watched the porn, it was
like an underground thing with the modems.
We talked about this, I think.
Yeah, every show.
Every show.
We talk about, you know, you got the
way that it was all, everyone had BBSs

(37:38):
and they had 40 phone lines coming into
their house.
The phone companies were doing bank.
Yeah, they were doing it.
And that all changed with the internet.
Internet screwed that up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I remember when the telcos wanted to
charge per minute or, you know, per data
packet.
The exact opposite of what the internet was

(38:00):
in the beginning.
Yeah.
They screwed themselves, actually.
I'll just stick a little pin in this
because I want to come back to the
social media companies in a bit, but I
think we should have some entertainment value with
some of your voluminous amount of clips of
nonsense with Patel in the Senate.

(38:21):
Yes, this series of clips is a bunch,
and there's a lot of them, I have
to say, but it just shows you the
BS that goes on when you have the
back and forth with these Congress people that
hate Trump.
But before we even began that, Grassley started
off with a bunch of information that I
thought was, it's a four-parter, that I

(38:43):
thought was fascinating.
Oh yeah, this was good.
And the reason I find it fascinating is
because the media refuses to cover it.
Can't talk about Arctic frost.
No, no, can't do that.
So this is about Arctic frost.
The media, the New York Times doesn't talk
about it.
ABC won't talk about the stuff that's been
released publicly, and on and on and on.

(39:05):
And Grassley himself has to go before, you
know, he's the head, he's the chairman of
the committee.
And he's actually a pretty, you know, he's
an old guy.
He's in his nineties, I think.
Was this the Intel Oversight Committee?
No, this is judicial.
Judicial committee.
Okay.
Judicial oversight.
Yeah.
And he's running this thing and he decides
to go off on a couple of issues,

(39:26):
including Arctic frost.
And this is where this is the beginning
of it.
Patel hearings, Grassley, Arctic frost.
During the Ray era at the FBI, the
Bureau reallocated resources from child crimes to January
six work.
Director Patel.
You've also moved agents from.

(39:47):
Just that by itself.
They move resources from child crimes, child crimes.
I tell you, I can't believe they did
that.
Director Patel, you've also moved agents from headquarters
to field offices to better assign a line
with their law enforcement mission.
Under your leadership, the FBI has apprehended several

(40:11):
most wanted fugitives and secured the extradition of
senior leaders of the central American gangs, like
MS 13.
Now, well, it's well understood that your predecessor
left you an FBI infected with politics.

(40:32):
I'm going to provide examples of that today,
including making public new whistleblower records at your
nomination hearing.
I made public records that whistleblowers provide me
about Arctic frost.
Arctic frost was the FBI case opened and

(40:52):
approved by anti-trust Trump FBI agent Tebow.
Arctic frost then became Jack Smith's elector case
against then citizen Trump and now president Trump.
These new records show that Arctic frost was
much broader than just an electoral matter.

(41:16):
The case was expanded to Republican organizations.
Okay.
Sad.
Is he 92?
That guy?
Yeah.
He's pretty spry for 92.
I'll give him that.
He's hanging in there, but he, and he's
always, he's really hasn't aged out.
I mean, he was, he sounded like this
30 years ago.

(41:37):
You're right.
So he's, he's, he's gotten to some steady
state of some sort.
Yeah.
You know what it is?
Testosterone.
He's, he's, he's, he's jacked on tea.
He's, I don't know if he's jacked on
tea.
Maybe he may be jacked on tea.
Yes.
So here we go with me.

(41:57):
Now he gets into the Arctic front.
This is disgusting, by the way.
Some examples of the group that Ray FBI
sought to place under political investigation included the
Republican national committee, Republican attorney general's association, and
various Trump political groups.

(42:20):
In total, 92 Republican targets, including Republican groups
and Republican linked individuals were placed under investigative
scope of Arctic frost on that political list
was one of Charlie Kirk's groups, turning point

(42:40):
USA.
In other words, Arctic frost wasn't just a
case to politically investigate Trump.
It was the vehicle by which partisan FBI
agents and department of justice prosecutors could achieve

(43:02):
their partisan ends and improperly investigate the entire
Republican political apparatus.
So today, Senator Johnson and I are making
these records public for the entire country to
see.
And I hope a lot of people are
interested in seeing what government can do when

(43:26):
various agencies have a political agenda.
I was looking, let's see, Fox news reported
on it.
The second hit on Google news is the
times of India.
So, yeah, that, that kind of shit.
Yes.
So if you want to find, you know,
you talked about this the other day about
people and their, their, their narrow focus when

(43:47):
it comes to media consumption.
Yeah, there it is.
You had the friend, the only watch them.
I have friends that only read the New
York times and that's everything.
So they didn't pick up on this.
They don't know about it.
And somebody mentioned the other day in one
of these talk shows, they said, well, you
know, if you went up to the public
today and asked them about Trump and Russia,
they would say, well, yeah, Putin, you know,

(44:08):
yeah, Trump was, was, was doing business with
Russia.
I mean, they, they, these things have not
been corrected at all.
I, you know, when I think about it,
the reason why the New York times may
not be writing about this is because they
were probably getting a steady feed of information
from people who were running it.
Think about that.
Yeah.

(44:29):
Scoops.
Scoops.
According to sourcing.
This, this is not just the, and the
Arctic frost is not in the news.
It's not in the media at all.
He's in this water.
We have to play on our show.
Isn't this Watergate level?
This, I think it's at minimum.
Yeah.
Watergate stuff was, if you re again, we
brought this up and we're the, one of

(44:49):
the few shows that harps on it, which
is Russ Baker's book, which talks about Watergate
actually being a CIA scam.
Okay.
So we will, that's enough.
That's water under the bridge.
Let's go to part.
He continues with more stuff.
My investigative work.
Has also exposed the political way in which

(45:10):
Peter Navarro was investigated and prosecuted when FBI
agent Tebow found out that Biden's DOJ would
prosecute Navarro.
He said, wow, great.
That's a quote unquote through whistleblowers I've obtained
a audio recording of special agent Gia Gardena

(45:36):
and special agent Sebastian Gardner's delivery of a
subpoena to Navarro.
I make in that audio public today in
a court document filed by the department of
justice Navarro's interaction with the FBI was unfairly

(45:57):
described as quote unquote, the word combative.
That intervention with Navarro was just as the
justification to later aggressively arrest him.
Then we get to the Clinton annex and
the Durham annex.
The Clinton annex showed that the Comey FBI

(46:19):
had evidence necessary to complete the Clinton investigation.
The one about her mishandling of emails and
classified information.
But the FBI never did his job because
it never reviewed the evidence at that time.
The Durbin annex showed that the Clinton campaign

(46:40):
had a plan to falsely tie Trump to
Russia.
Yet the Comey FBI failed to investigate that
information.
Instead, the Comey FBI used the discredited Clinton
campaign funded steel dossier to advance crossfire hurricane

(47:02):
against Trump.
I'm calling it the North Sea Nexus.
That's my new name for the Anglo Dutch
system.
The North Sea Nexus.
Yeah, there it is.
There's your British connection right there.
Steel.
Yes, steel.
OK, we wrap it up with this last

(47:23):
clip.
Director Patel, thanks in a large part to
you.
Both annexes were finally declassified.
That may be history, but it's history to
make sure we don't repeat the history of
the past.
And the people ought to be concerned when
the weaponization of government is used in this

(47:44):
way, whether it's done by Republicans or Democrats.
Last Congress, I made public an FBI document
called 10-23-4 that alleged a bribery
scheme with the Biden family.
To date, the FBI has never answered Congress,

(48:05):
whether they investigated the text messages, the audio
files and the financial records referenced in that
10-23.
Whistleblowers have provided my office with two additional
FBI 10-23 documents.

(48:25):
These documents memorialize statements from FBI sources.
These two new 10-23 documents are from
separate FBI confidential human sources during different years.
So, in total, we now have three different

(48:45):
FBI confidential human sources providing information about the
Biden family and potential criminal conduct.
Today, Senator Johnson and I are releasing these
records.
Yes, to much fanfare and applause, and nothing
will happen.
But it's...
They released it.

(49:06):
No, nothing will happen because nobody's going to
cover it.
The news media is completely corrupted.
And they're complicit.
They're complicit in this.
They were getting all of their information from
this cabal.
I wonder why they called it Arctic Frost.
I'm just always curious about a codename like
that.
Yeah, codenames are always screwy.

(49:26):
Arctic Frost.
I don't know.
I don't know either.
They put the...
It's, you know, it's going to freeze out
Trump.
Yeah, maybe.
Well, so, right there, in the first 45
minutes of episode 1800, you have gotten information
about your future and the state of affairs
in the United States that you will not

(49:47):
get anywhere.
I hope you're pleased.
Yeah, that pretty much summarizes it.
And then the rest of the thing was
a joke.
Yeah, it's fine.
Yeah, because you had all the Democrats yelling
at Patel for being a doofus and he's
dumb and he's no good.
Pick your favorites.
This is good.
Well, so I'm going to start with a
couple of them.
As always, there's a lot of snark that

(50:09):
went back and forth.
This is Patel on, let's go Patel, it
would go with Durbin, this is, you know,
the Democrat head.
Yes, of course.
Patel, Durbin on polygraphs is interesting.
Polygraphs.
Here we go.
Director Patel, in addition to the extensive purge

(50:32):
of nonpartisan career FBI official reports, reports indicate
that dozens of remaining officials have been suggested,
have been subjected to polygraph exams to test
their loyalty.
My understanding is approximately 40 officials have been
asked to sit for a polygraph during your
administration.
And several have been asked whether they have

(50:52):
ever made negative comments about you.
Director Patel, FBI agents pledge their loyalty to
the Constitution of the United States, not you
personally.
Hey, hold on a second.
I made Tina do that just last week.
I mean, what's the problem?
What is the basis for requiring polygraph exams
of your workforce and asking them if they've
made negative comments about you?

(51:13):
I don't know what reports you're referring to,
Ranking Member, and I reject any reporting that
has false information in it, so I'm not
going to respond to that.
As far as polygraphs go, generally they're always
and always have been utilized at the FBI
to track down those that leak sensitive information
and have unauthorized disclosures to the media.
And we will continue to use them to
ensure the integrity of the FBI.

(51:35):
Did any individual on your senior executive team,
the director's advisory team, or who serve in
the positions on the seventh floor receive disqualifying
alerts on their polygraphs?
Senator, I'm not going to get into the
personnel discussions that were had on a polygraph.
Those are private discussions, and many of them
relate to ongoing investigations.
Oh, yeah.

(51:55):
Liars.
Liars everywhere.
We got them.
So I don't, you know, he made a
big fuss about the polygraphs, and it's like,
I would be kind of annoyed if they
didn't give people that work in these intelligence
agencies polygraph tests.
Yeah, sure.
But at the same time, I'm led to
believe, I could be wrong, and somebody can
straighten me out on this, that you can

(52:17):
beat a polygraph if you're trained to beat
it.
Yeah, so it's been said.
Yes.
It's been said, and the CIA is supposed
to have the best people that can do
that.
Who can beat them.
Yeah, who can beat them.
Sure.
Yeah, it's breath control.
I don't know, have you ever been on
a polygraph?
No, have you?

(52:38):
Oh, yeah.
Oh?
So, so there was a, when I went...
Ah, this is a story I haven't heard.
I don't think I've heard you on the
poly.
So when I was at Cal Berkeley, one
of the things that all students did that
had any sense is you take, you jump
into these studies, not the ones where they

(52:59):
give you drugs, but just other kinds of
studies.
You've been MK altered.
I knew it.
I knew it.
Yeah.
You're a monarch.
And so there was a study being done
on the response to grotesque films, movies, and
a friend of mine, a friend of mine...
Oh, wait a minute.
These are studies you get paid for.

(53:20):
That's why you jump on them?
Oh, yeah.
No, back in the day, it was 50
bucks, which in today's money is $500.
That's right.
So you've got to go do this.
Yeah, of course.
So you find out what they were.
A lot of them were kind of secretive.
You had to find out what they were,
and then you'd find out what they paid,
and you go do it.
And so in this one, it was a

(53:40):
response to...
Disgusting movies.
Well, the guy...
My friend says, hey, you got to see
this.
He says they show like...
They sit you down and put you in
a polygraph, and you're all wired up, and
then they show you these disgusting movies, and
he told me what the movies were.
And I remember one of these movies was...

(54:02):
It's called Signal 53 or something.
It was a movie.
It was a gruesome movie about car wrecks,
and it was used in driver's education classes
to scare kids to make them drive safer.
Wow.
And then there was another movie, which was
a movie that used to be shown, and
these movies are all out of the picture

(54:22):
now.
You've never seen these.
But this movie was...
I've never seen it before, but he told
me about it.
He says what happens, it's a shop class
movie to show you if you don't use
a saw correctly...
Signal 30.
You can get killed.
Signal 30 is the name of the movie.
Signal 30, right.
That's what it is.

(54:44):
But the shop class one was the one
that says, yeah, the guy sawing a board,
or he's sawing a two by four, and
then the thing gets caught in the blade
and flies across the room and goes right
through and impales some guy.
And I said, wow.
And so I sat.
You go to the movies and you get
paid.
This is great.
So I wanted to go see these movies.

(55:05):
So the guy wires me up, and they
put the things on your fingers, and they
put a strap around your chest, and they
do everything except sticking something in your mouth.
But you're all wired up.
And so the guy's got the polygraph going.
And he starts to show these movies.
And so I'm watching these movies.
They're just disgusting.

(55:26):
And especially the one with a board that
goes through this guy.
That's bad.
That's bad.
And so after the thing was over, the
guy says, you know, the clinical psychologist that
was doing this research, he says, I don't
know.
He says, you know, your results are pretty
crummy.
He says, you had a ridiculous amount of

(55:50):
anticipation before we even showed the movie.
He says, you were out of control.
I knew what the movies were about in
advance.
And I guess what they were looking for
is somebody was stupid, and you didn't know
what was going on, and you were shocked.
And then so they get their shock reaction.

(56:11):
They know what it looks like on a
polygraph.
But they couldn't get that from me because
I was, like, in complete wired to anticipation
expecting what I was going to see.
And so my results were no good.
I got paid, but I didn't help the
study.
That Signal 30 movie is pretty bad.
The dead bodies, they're dragging them out from

(56:33):
car wrecks.
It's on YouTube.
It's pretty bad.
Yeah, it's grotesque.
But yeah, so I guess I had been
hooked up to a polygraph.
And they're pretty good.
I don't know how you could stop your
emotions from affecting it.
Apparently, you can, according to the trolls, and
the trolls would know, you can fake a
polygraph by clenching your butt cheeks.

(56:54):
This is a tip.
This is tip of the day.
I think I was clenching my butt cheeks
without...
Anyway.
Yeah.
Okay, onward with these clips.
Sorry for the diversion.
Hey, people come for the stories.
I don't know about that one.
Now, here's the classic snarky answer that this

(57:16):
Patel would try to do this every chance
he had.
And this is a Durham snarky answer.
And the FBI was directed to flag any
documents that mentioned President Trump.
Wait, stop.
I got to set it up.
This is a grilling Patel about the FBI
being told to find all the references to
Trump in the Epstein documents.

(57:39):
Oh, okay.
And the FBI was directed to flag any
documents that mentioned President Trump.
Nothing came of that review until July, when
DOJ and FBI released an unsigned memorandum stating
there is no incriminating client list.
Why was this July 7th memorandum unsigned?
Would you prefer I've used Autopen?

(58:00):
Well, why was it unsigned?
The memorandum had the insignia of the Department
of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Okay.
Good old, good old Patel.
So what is the point?
Why was it unsigned?
Why was it unsigned?
Oh, give me a break.
Yeah, trying.
So he wasn't the worst, though.
The worst.
I got another one, which is kind of.

(58:21):
Now, this isn't really a back and forth.
This is just funny.
This is White House.
This is Patel versus White House.
And they bring out, they smear Jeanine Pirro.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is hilarious.
The FBI does background investigations.

(58:41):
In the case of a U.S. attorney,
Jeanine Pirro, it has come to light that
in a civil proceeding that Fox News executives,
prior to her confirmation, called her, I'm quoting

(59:01):
here, a reckless maniac who makes, quote, insane
comments.
Oh, wait.
Surprise.
TV executives called their hired spokespeople maniacs and
morons.
Yeah, that never happens.
No, that never happens.
Ever.
And said, I don't trust her to be
responsible and noted her penchant for what they

(59:23):
called random conspiracy theories on weird Internet sites.
Oh, okay.
So now the Fox News people are credible.
I got it.
My question to you is, did that turn
up in her background investigation?
For any background investigation, Senator, we do not
discuss those publicly.
And for every background investigation, when there's adjudication,

(59:46):
it is not made by me.
It is made by the career professionals who
run the inspection division and background check system.
Yeah, the same people did Arctic Frost.
Do you know if that information was found?
You see, we're an oversight body here.
And there are really three possibilities here.
One is that the FBI background investigation didn't
find that stuff.

(01:00:06):
That's worth noting because these investigations, full field
background investigations, are supposed to find that stuff.
That's possibility one.
Possibility two is that the FBI did, in
fact, find that information and then did not
report it to the administration or to the
committee.
Dude, have you ever seen Judge Jeanine on

(01:00:29):
TV?
You don't need Fox executives to tell you
that she's crazy.
We all know that.
She's fun.
She's nuts.
You found it.
You reported it to the administration.
And they went ahead with her nomination, knowing
that she had been described as a reckless
maniac who made insane comments, who wasn't trusted
by colleagues to be responsible, and who had

(01:00:50):
a penchant for random conspiracy theories on weird
Internet sites.
Are you saying that this committee does not
have any authority or reason to look into
which of those things is true?
This committee can look into anything it wishes.
I'm telling you that the background investigations that
are done by the HRD division are done
by career individuals.
They do not report the details of those
to me.
They adjudicate those independently and individually.

(01:01:14):
Oh, that's disappointing.
I was trying to get you, Patel.
I just think going on about a reckless
maniac.
And by the way, so what?
Like you said, these executives are always saying
weird stuff about the talent.
Nobody who's behind the camera, generally speaking, likes

(01:01:36):
the talent.
I mean, you should have heard what Bloom
and I would say about you behind your
back.
I can just imagine.
Slacker.
Old coot.
Slacker.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
All of that.
Yeah.
That's what you do.
Yeah.
Because people behind, because those executives are jealous.

(01:01:58):
Yes, of the fame, of the great position
these people have.
Well, or the perceived.
Yes.
Great position that they have.
We're the ones running this show here.
You make a million dollars just being pretty
with me.
Ignoring the fact that you're out of the
business for two minutes like Roseanne Barr, and
nobody knows who the hell you are.

(01:02:19):
Roseanne who?
Roseanne who?
All right.
So let's go to some other joker.
This is Herono.
Ah, my favorite.
From Hawaii.
The senator from Hawaii.
She's the dumbest person in Congress.
Everybody believes that.
She's maybe the dumbest person in Hawaii.

(01:02:41):
It's a softball.
I'm not going to touch.
Here we go.
Derek Patel, just like the rest of the
federal government, there have been significant personnel changes
at the FBI since President Trump took office.
I want to better understand the scope of
the turnover and the changes occurring at the

(01:03:01):
FBI.
Since January 20, 2025, how many FBI employees
have retired, resigned, been fired, or otherwise separated
from employment?
I need a number.
We'll get you a number.
What is the number?
You don't have it?
Not off the top of my head, and
I want to get you the right number.
Would it surprise you to know that it's

(01:03:23):
probably in the thousands, like 5,000?
I don't think that number is accurate.
You don't know.
Next question.
How many special agents or analysts have left
or been fired from the FBI since January
20, 2025?
We will get you the numbers, and anyone
that retires is of their own volition, and
anyone that is terminated at the FBI, as
I've said before, is done so because they

(01:03:44):
have failed to meet the standards and uphold
their loyalty to the Constitution.
I'll show you safe.
Next question.
How many executive assistant directors or special agents
in charge have left or been fired from
the FBI since January 20, 2025?
Again, people leaving on their own accord or
terminations were done by the standards set at

(01:04:06):
the FBI that have been carried out consistently.
I'm getting to the leadership of the FBI,
and you don't have that answer.
Next question.
Which field office, division, or directorate has lost
the most personnel since January 20, 2025?
And do you have the answer to that
question?

(01:04:27):
What's the question?
Yeah.
Actually, every single field office in the country,
including Hawaii, has received a plus-up of
FBI agents because we're pushing them out to
the field.
Okay, so you're telling me that no field
office, division, or directorate has lost any personnel
since January 20, 2025.
That's your answer?
In Hawaii, there's been a plus-up.

(01:04:49):
In every single state that I'm looking at,
we have allocated a plus-up for field
offices across the country so that the FBI
can continue the historic achievements it's done in
these last seven months.
When you're talking about firings, you're looking for
a media hit and a fundraising clip, and
I'm not going to give it to you.
Plus-up.
It's a plus-up.
I've never heard that term, a plus-up.
Yeah, I never heard that before either.

(01:05:10):
It's pretty interesting, a plus-up.
You're looking for a media hit.
Well, she got it on the No Agenda
Show.
Good job, Hirono.
Here's the second part of this.
It doesn't matter on what basis they left.
I just want to know how many have
left, and I think your testimony is nobody
has left.
Next question.
Nope, that's not my testimony.

(01:05:30):
You asked it one time.
I answered it one time.
You didn't get the answer you wanted for
your clip.
Next question.
You keep asking it, and I told you
I'd get you the numbers, but you can
keep asking it.
Do people actually still play these clips?
Do they even make it on the air
with these clips?
No.
No.
Only here.
Only here.
Exclusive.
It's like, I mean, they're hoping for something,

(01:05:52):
but I haven't seen a clip from a
campaign.
No, not in a long time.
No.
From a hearing ever, which means a long
time.
Okay, there's only two more sets here.
All right.
We can do Blumenthal.
I have the Blumenthal BS.
Blumenthal is a corrupt.

(01:06:14):
He's a nasty man.
He's a nasty man.
He's a mean-spirited guy, and he's actually
kind of interesting.
The FBI Agents Association has said that your
actions, quote, distract agents from their work, foster
fear that their assignments could cost them their

(01:06:34):
careers, either now or under the next administration,
and increase the risk of criminal and national
security threats by undermining unity and morale within
the Bureau, end quote.
This association, as you know, is voluntary.
It represents 14,000 members, 90% of

(01:06:55):
all the active agents.
These are your employees saying that your performance
has been unqualified and unfit.
Oh, surprise.
A union doesn't like leadership.
Wow.
Okay.
The thing about that clip, if you listen
to it carefully, what he says at the
end is not true.

(01:07:17):
This reminds me, if you remember about six,
seven years ago on this show, we used
to do these clips all the time, where
they would say one thing on the TV
news, and then they play a clip that
supposedly was to back it up.
The whipsaw.
But the clip was about something completely different.
The whipsaw.
The whipsaw, we called it.
The whipsaw.
That's right.
I forgot about that.

(01:07:37):
The whipsaw, where you say one thing, and
then the president said that the country's coming
to an end.
Let's hear from the president.
And the president, yeah, we're going to have
a dinner tomorrow.
And it just like was disassociated.
So what Blumenthal says is that the association
didn't like the loss of camaraderie.

(01:08:03):
And then when he summarized it, after quoting
from the association.
Then he says that he makes the assertion
that they think he sucks.
Yeah.
They never said that.
This clip is disingenuous.
They never said that he was a loser

(01:08:24):
and needed to go.
What?
Gambling?
Anyway, people can go back and listen to
that again.
And here's the follow up.
By the way, Patel does not call him
out for this.
He misses it.
At this point, he's not paying attention anymore.
So he goes on to this patter that

(01:08:44):
he uses consistently throughout.
And it got really old fast.
I completely disagree with your entire premise that
I have lied or misleading the FBI.
If I were, the results that I announced
today by the men and women of the
FBI and the historic records we are doing
to keep this country safe would not be
possible.
Yeah.
Did you catch the historic records?

(01:09:08):
Yeah.
It rattled off.
It's important.
It's short, but it's important.
Transparency means one of my main priorities at
the FBI.
And this is what I've done in my
seven months at the helm.
We've produced more than 33,000 pages of
documents to Congress to a variety of committees.
Thirty three thousand.
I tell you.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.

(01:09:28):
That's good.
By the way, one of our producers, John,
he said he did a criminal investigation statement
analysis class.
He took a class.
So one of the indicators the instructor had
us look at was the use of the
number three.
He called three the liar's number.
When deceptive people have come up with have
to come up with a number, they will

(01:09:50):
often choose the number three or a number
that begins with a three.
Just using three doesn't necessarily mean the person
is lying.
However, if the number three appears in their
statement, along with some other deceptive language, then
it starts to add up that the person
is not being truthful.
And there's a whole document that he sent
along with it.
The liar's number, the liar's number, which is
good.
I like that.

(01:10:10):
OK, now this is the last set and
this is it with Cory Booker.
And the reason I want to play these
and they're one of them is kind of
mislabeled was I'll point out to you when
I get to it is that this was
the most misleading.
This is the Cory Booker one.
You said every news show had this clip
and it was Booker and Patel yelling at

(01:10:33):
each other.
No, wait, wait.
I'm still setting it up.
So they're yelling at each other and yelling.
But but the context of the of the
yelling, it was completely missed.
I think it was falsely presented because the
nature of the of the thing of the
Booker Patel conversation was Booker berated Patel and

(01:10:59):
they went back and forth for a while,
just normally civil in a civilized manner.
And then then then it was over.
Right.
And then.
Because Booker had gone on a rant.
Saying he's going to get fired and he's
no good.
And then he stopped at the end of
his time without asking a question or anything.

(01:11:21):
But but he had a bunch of accusations.
So grass and I have all the clips
to prove this.
Grassley then said.
OK, which he said to Patel, would you
like to just have time to answer all
these allegations?
And he gave him the floor.
Yeah.

(01:11:41):
So Booker didn't have the he wasn't he
wasn't.
This was not a back and forth.
Patel had the floor and Booker interrupted him.
Well, during his.
Right.
A lot of time was not made clear
by anybody.
My time.
Your time.
My God.
Your God.
So here's a couple of examples of Booker

(01:12:03):
going off.
And this is a Patel Booker or says
BP.
You can.
Yeah, I got it.
I got Booker agents have been diverted from
their work to do assist ICE immigration enforcement.
20 percent.
Part of this operation is the work of
mass law enforcement who jump out of cars,
snatch people off streets at churches, schools and

(01:12:25):
their jobs and hospitals.
Have there been any FBI agents who investigate
crimes against children that have been assigned to
immigration enforcement?
Yes or no.
Yes or no question.
So, of course, Ted Cruz came on afterwards
and berated him for that question, because the

(01:12:45):
whole thing about ICE and the immigration that
is about children.
Yeah.
But so now we go to this one
here, which is the L.
Booker find this L.
Booker.
What?
The L.
Booker rant one.
Yeah.
Go do that one.
And then the last.
I'm sorry.
Screw these up.
L.
Booker rant one.
But then there's also B dash dash P.

(01:13:07):
R.
Three.
OK.
How did you mislabel that one?
I looked at it later and I wondered
myself.
OK.
So right now we're playing L.
Booker rant one.
Yeah.
OK.
And you want to replace them.
And shockingly, you admitted in this hearing to
Senator Coons that it would take 14 years

(01:13:27):
to fill the vacancies at your agency.
Many are the result of your purge.
Purge.
20 percent of FBI agents are doing low
level immigration enforcement instead of their mission critical
work.
You've disbanded entire task forces that stop intellectual
election interference.
Intellectual.
Foreign influence.
Public corruption.

(01:13:48):
And who benefits from this?
Well, corrupt people benefit from it.
Criminals benefit from it.
Vladimir Putin benefits from it.
And it really makes me wonder who you're
looking out for.
Putin.
Putin, baby.
We brought it back to Russia.
Well, well done, book.
Bookster.
He did pretty good there.
And then his last thing is this B

(01:14:09):
dash dash thing.
Foreign attack because of your failures of leadership.
I don't think you're fitting in the bureau.
But here's the thing, Mr. Patel.
I think you're not going to be around
long.
I think this might be your last oversight
hearing.
Because as much as you supplicate yourself to
the will of Donald Trump and not the
Constitution of the United States of America, Donald
Trump has shown us in his first term
and in this term, he is not loyal

(01:14:31):
to people like you.
Oh, I'm shaking in my boots.
Shaken, I tell you.
So after all this has gone on and
on, we have that.
This is the clip is Patel Booker finale
one.
And this is Grassley coming in and saying,
OK, you said your piece.
Of defending this country.

(01:14:52):
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Do you want to say anything?
Yes, sir.
That rant of false information does not bring
this country together.
If you want to work on bringing this
country, it's my time, not yours.
My God.
My God.
My God.
Fighting this country.
Did he have pearls by any chance that

(01:15:13):
he could clutch because he needed it at
that moment?
My God.
God.
My God.
If you want to talk about fighting this
country, it is my time.
You on your social media posts.
It is my time to address your falsehoods.
Oh, you're going to try all you want
in this country.
Not my time.
For what?

(01:15:33):
Your time.
Your time is over.
Sir, you don't tell me my time is
over.
You know how far we are.
Tell me what my time is.
You can't lecture me.
My time is over.
You may be the target.
I'm not going anywhere.
Mr. Chairman.
Reclaiming my time.
This is it.
That's what they played the most of.

(01:15:54):
Spartacus, he was not letting him have his
time.
He doesn't let anyone eat the cheese off
his bread.
That's Spartacus.
No, reclaiming my time.
He didn't have any time.
He didn't have the floor.
My God.
It's my time.
My God.
It's my time.
Be careful.
Here we go with the finale two, which
adds a little explanation.

(01:16:15):
Afraid of you.
Mr. Chairman, point of order.
Senator Booker, I announced at the beginning of
this meeting that this back and forth talking
over each other doesn't work.
And I said, if that happened, I asked
Patel not to respond.
And I was going to give him some
time after the senator's time was up to
respond.

(01:16:35):
And he has the privilege to do that
uninterruptedly.
Yeah.
Well, that didn't end really well.
Uninterrupted.
Uninterrupted.
Anyway, so that was the context of that
bullcrap.
And even Fox played it out of context.
Of course.

(01:16:55):
Of course.
Nobody puts anything in context.
You don't want to put it in context
because it's not as entertaining.
That's all we want.
That's all we want is entertainment.
That's what we want.
We just want entertainment.
All right.
It was kind of out of order.
I didn't you know, I was I was
thinking I was going to play my Kash
Patel clips after yours, but it's not how

(01:17:16):
the the flow went.
This is a an unscripted reality show.
But someone sent me this clip and this
is about Nepal and.
Oh, my God.
Yes.
Well, Nepal.
Talk about something that's undercovered unless you watch
NHK.
Well, Nepal is.
And by the way, East Timor is now

(01:17:37):
going through a turmoil, too.
Well, Nepal is Nepal is very interesting.
You know, there's been lots of tensions between.
Surprise, surprise.
The North Sea Nexus, the United Kingdom and
Nepal.
There was the Anglo Nepalese War.
Now we're going way back.
Eighteen, fourteen, eighteen, sixteen.
Back when the British East India Company was

(01:17:58):
trying to expand its influence in Nepal.
Is a very important spot.
Geopolitically.
They are right in between India and China.
So being there, I think there's a term
for it.
It's like the Himalayan something.

(01:18:20):
Let me see if I can find it.
I thought I had was a term for
it.
But it's like the the Himalayas are important
because of this connection between or wall, whichever
way you want to look at it, between
China and India.
They're big, big, big powers.
And there's all kinds.
And Nepal has enormous hydropower resources, which everybody

(01:18:44):
would like, of course.
So they're they're a key player.
But, you know, whoever thinks about Nepal, we
never think about that.
But maybe maybe the North Sea Nexus is
thinking about it.
But when I got this clip this morning
from somebody, and it's a it's like a
tick tock clip.
I was like, wow, this makes total sense

(01:19:05):
in so many ways.
Not only did the Gen Z of Nepal
overthrow their corrupt government for banning all social
media and any forms of expression, they also
use discord to help select the new prime
minister until next year's elections.
This was Nepal just a couple of days
ago.
There were massive protests going.
They were even burning government buildings after successfully

(01:19:28):
overthrowing their government and burning the building.
They put the one piece flag there symbolizing
their freedom.
And I was not kidding when I said
that they use discord to come together, rebuild
their communities and then also vote for a
new prime minister.
This is just one of the discord servers
that was used to help communicate, organize and

(01:19:48):
just, you know, fuck shit up in Nepal.
Look at that.
This one, if you can see that over
there, 9000 people were in this discord call.
Underneath was like 300 plus.
There was a bunch of people on multiple
discord servers.
As someone in the US, are we taking
notes?
Because our government is seeming a little corrupt
in this very moment.

(01:20:09):
Also a special shout out to the guy
that was there in Nepal, just vacationing and
stumbled upon their revolution.
And I almost forgot.
So on discord, they had a poll of
different people that they wanted to be the
prime ministers.
And they voted on the first woman to
run Nepal.
I hope she kills it.
Show us how to run a country so

(01:20:29):
we can take notes.
So when I saw this, I'm like, ah,
now I see.
Now I'm starting to put things together.
This is like a 31 second about the
social media ban in Nepal.
You know, something big has happened in Nepal
right now.
And it all started with a ban on
social media.
Last week, the government of Nepal suddenly blocked

(01:20:49):
26 major apps, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, X,
even LinkedIn and Snapchat.
Basically almost every platform where young people spend
their time.
The government has said these companies did not
register in Nepal and were not following the
rules.
At first people thought, okay, maybe it's just
another regulation.
But for the youth of Nepal, this was
the last straw.

(01:21:10):
Because behind this ban, there's a much bigger
story.
Yeah.
So the much bigger story is discord is
the new PSYOP tool of choice.
It may be not even that new.
It's not seen as a social media site.
It's, you know, originally for gamers.
And gamers always includes, you know, the guys

(01:21:34):
who are playing Eve and World of Warcraft,
which is, you know, army intelligence.
It's well known.
Eve especially, if you recall from some of
the previous files.
There's all kinds of military intelligence and plain
old intelligence people that are on there.

(01:21:55):
And how often have we not heard?
Yeah, he posted on a Discord server, posted
on a Discord server.
How about this Tyler Robinson, Discord server?
Now, luckily, in that first clip by the
TikTok lady, I was able to get a
freeze frame of one of the professionally printed

(01:22:17):
signs from this so-called organic Gen Z
social media ban uprising.
And it's a huge printed sign, youth against
corruption.
Dude, youthagainstcorruption.org.
You should take a look at it.
This is a serious organization.
And that was written in Hindi, right?

(01:22:38):
No, no, in English with a QR code,
with a QR code on it.
Oh, yeah.
And their partners, they have a partners and
friends page.
UNODC is the Office of, I can't even
read it, the Office of Drug and Crime.
Youth Leadership Program.

(01:23:00):
We have the IRI.
So this is either CIA or some left
wing operation.
Well, how about the North Sea Nexus?
Integrity Initiatives International, Environmental and Sustainable Development
Unit of Harvard.
What?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's just filled with all of these NGOs.

(01:23:22):
And they're the ones that are funding this.
This is really an amazing group that I'd
never heard of before.
And they have services.
They have at YAC, we're dedicated to advancing
a culture of integrity and transparency.
Our services are designed to empower individuals, communities,
and organizations with the knowledge, tools, tools, and

(01:23:43):
platforms needed to combat corruption effectively.
They even have a consulting business.
Anti-corruption consultancy services.
We offer comprehensive anti-corruption consulting services.
Comes with free Discord server providing strategic support.
Is that?
No.
No, of course not.
Providing strategic support to organizations and institutions interested

(01:24:05):
in implementing anti-corruption measures and projects within
their entities.
And so who can benefit?
Public sector, municipalities, ministries, and public schools and
universities.
Private sector, private schools, universities, and companies.
NGOs and civil society.
Reform and governance advocates.
This is Discord.

(01:24:27):
And it's not just, I mean, you can
set up your own Discord server.
It's not like, I don't think you have
to be part of the Discord company server
network.
This is where the PSYOPs are taking place.
And this is where you get these groups,
you know, call it the dark web, which
I'm sure Kash Patel will go after dark

(01:24:48):
web.
This is where you will find groups like
the armed queers.
Which everyone has been talking about.
Here's the founder of armed queers, Hermia Fanayayayan.
What makes the biggest difference for change?
I think that the protests do it more
so, actually, because as we've seen, our electoral
politics have failed us.

(01:25:10):
Even though the young people significantly came out
and voted for Bernie Sanders during the primary,
we saw that Bernie Sanders did not end
up being the nominee.
And so a lot of the times, the
loopholes that are in electoral politics don't really
allow people to have their voices heard the
way that this country was set up.
Some people say that it takes a violent
protest to get people to listen.
Do you agree or should they remain peaceful?

(01:25:32):
I agree.
I absolutely agree.
You know, I'm a member of the LGBTQ
community and our liberation and our rights came
after the Stonewall riots.
That's something that a lot of people don't
like to talk about is that, you know,
the LGBTQ movement started with Stonewall riots.
I wouldn't even be able to be a
student at the school if it wasn't for
a violent riot that took place within a

(01:25:52):
span of three days.
So I absolutely agree that sometimes violent protests
and really riots and those kinds of loud
rebellions must take place for tangible change.
This is a perfect, Discord is a perfect
place to go in and be part of
the group and rile people up.
And then, you know, if you look at,

(01:26:12):
although they're very tame, the Discord messages is
nothing even worth reading or playing from the
group that Tyler Robinson was in.
You know, it's like, oh, wow.
Oh, man, that's sad prayers for Charlie.
This is an operation and it's basically fund
the LGBTQ, particularly the T movement, get people

(01:26:35):
confused, get them on testosterone or estrogen or
whatever.
Who knows?
This is a modern day MK ultra system,
not just the drugs, but with the Discord
servers.
And it's a phenomenal enterprise.
And that's why you get reports like this
from ABC about the text messages.

(01:26:56):
It stood out to me, David, is those
text messages.
I don't know if we have seen an
alleged murder with such specific text messages about
the alleged murder weapon, where it was hidden,
how it was placed, what was on it.
But also it was very touching in a
way that I think many of us didn't
expect a very intimate portrait into this relationship

(01:27:16):
between the suspect's roommate and the suspect himself,
with him repeatedly calling his roommate who was
transitioning, calling him my love.
And I want to protect you, my love.
So it was this duality of someone who
the attorney said not only jeopardized the life
of Charlie Kirk and the crowd, but was
doing it in front of children, which is
one of the aggravating circumstances of this case.

(01:27:38):
And on the other hand, he was speaking
so lovingly about his partner.
So this reporter, of course, got slammed for
saying this, but that's the point.
He ate it.
He had to apologize.
And there's also no evidence about the my
love commentary.
There's no way we can document that.
We've seen a screenshot of a text message.

(01:27:59):
We don't we, of course, don't know anything,
but it's a narrative.
And the narrative is a kind, gentle young
man.
How could this happen?
This is discord, discord, sir, dark web, call
it whatever you want to.
And someone sent me a couple of premade
clips.
They're all very short of the Matt Kim
podcast.
And when you think about what is the

(01:28:19):
importance of Charlie Kirk's murder?
Well, besides it sparking some form of a
Christian revival, which I think it is happening,
much more important is TPUSA.
If you want the future of our country,
you've got to go after the next generation.
And that's what these guys assert.

(01:28:41):
If the facts are what they say, trans,
angry, don't like MAGA.
Charlie Kirk, perfect example of the opposite of
that.
Why would we need to make up anything?
Why, why, why would we need to need
to have this whole rigmarole?

(01:29:02):
Why do we need to have Kash Patel
saying that we caught the guy, but we
didn't catch the guy.
Then we didn't catch the guy.
Then we go up and we have the
evidence.
We actually have that as he deleted the
evidence, but we have the evidence.
And then there's discord.
And then like, why would you need here's
text messages were clearly written by a boomer.
Yeah, I'm all in on that.
Clearly, that was very adult, this text message.

(01:29:24):
And the answer is, of course, simple.
Well, the result is that they are doing
a full takeover of the youth.
A full takeover of the youth.
Tell me what this means.
45,000 new TPUSA chapters that are going
to be requested to be started.
That's right.
It's a big organization, very big, very powerful,
rudderless at the moment.

(01:29:45):
We don't know that.
We don't know what?
That it's rudderless.
I'm going to assert that right now it's
in turmoil.
Can we agree on that?
I think there is turmoil, but that doesn't
mean there's not somebody behind the whole thing
that's creating it.

(01:30:06):
Because they've all of a sudden had a
massive increase.
That's an organizational nightmare, this increase.
There has to be somebody who can deal
with an organizational nightmare.
In other words, it may even be somebody
behind Charlie Kirk that can do a massive
operation.
Because it's possible that Charlie, you know, there's

(01:30:28):
no doubt in my mind that Charlie Kirk
was an organizational genius and a charismatic figure.
But it's not impossible that there's someone else
that's also an organization.
Because people, you know, you attract likes.
He may be surrounded by people that are
fantastic organizational people, so it may not be

(01:30:49):
rudderless.
Visionless.
Maybe that's a better term.
Of course, Charlie Kirk wasn't running the organization.
He was the lightning rod.
He brought people in.
He was TPUSA.
The organization itself, I'm actually sure, is pretty

(01:31:09):
well organized.
And there was a lot of strife.
There were a lot of donors pulling out.
A lot of them.
And these guys make assertions that I'm going
to disagree with, but I want you to
hear what they say.
Actually, before I go on, I will say
that Tucker made a commentary about this himself,
saying that donors were pulling out because they

(01:31:29):
were going to have Tucker speak at one
of the events.
Because Tucker had been negative about Israel.
Right.
And he did a whole 30-minute piece
on it, which is too laborious to play.
No, we're not running it.
You're worried.
No, I don't have this either.
But these guys draw a logical conclusion, but
I have a commentary about it.
So they're going to have these indoctrination type

(01:31:52):
of chapters throughout the country.
So you're saying that TPUSA, Charlie Kirk's non
-profit 501c3.
Funded all by Zionists.
So what you're saying now is now they
fully run TPUSA.
I mean, who else is running it?
And they're in aggressive expansion now.

(01:32:15):
I saw a clip that said Charlie Kirk,
his life goal was to have 20,000
chapters.
And they were at like 12,000.
So you're saying that thanks to the Zionist
money now, Charlie Kirk's vision is going to
be exacted.
There's 54,000 requests for new chapters.
So he's going to do it.

(01:32:36):
He's going to crush it.
So are you saying Christian Zionism is going
to grow exponentially?
Exponentially.
Not a crazy thought.
I mean, I don't know why they bring
in Zionism specifically, but okay.
Because they're the ones funding it.
Did you not see Ben Shapiro and those
guys running the show yesterday on what we

(01:32:57):
were told was like a Christian network?
So here's the big question.
Who benefits?
You could either fund him for the rest
of your life, hoping he achieves a fraction
of what he promised to do or wants
to do.
And a life goal is like your reach
goal, your stretch goal.
Or you can fulfill your goal instantly.
Matt, what are you insinuating?

(01:33:18):
I'm just saying people benefit.
You know, there was an episode we did
that we didn't publish.
But in that episode, I said this.
The two things we need to look at
is the money trail and who benefits.
So let me ask you again, Matt.
In this episode that we're going to post,
what's the money trail look like in your
estimation and who benefits?

(01:33:41):
The people who want to take control of
the minds of the youth.
They benefit the most.
Because their organization is larger than ever before.
They are motivated.
They are mobilized.
They are going to take full control of
TikTok and the algorithm.
They sent 250 legislators, five from each state

(01:34:06):
to Israel to kiss the wall.
You have Trump and Pam Bondi talking about
going after hate speech.
Which is the exact thing that Charlie said.
When did Trump say anything?
He didn't.
But these guys, I'm just taking it.
We don't have to play the rest of

(01:34:27):
it.
You understand the point they're making.
I think it's a very valid point.
However, if you really look at who created
so-called Zionism, it is the Brits.
You're going to bring it back to your
Nordic, what do you call it again?
The North Sea nexus, yes.
North Sea.

(01:34:47):
I like it.
I'm just going to have trouble adjusting to
it.
You'll get used to it.
The North Sea nexus.
They created the modern state of Israel.
And in the coming weeks and coming episodes,
the coming four more years, I will be
able to prove how the British Empire specifically
is behind a lot of this.
Behind a lot of the pro-Palestinian protests.

(01:35:09):
And I think it's absolutely plausible that, you
know, look at this organization.
We need to be in charge of that.
And Charlie Kirk is being annoying.
We don't like necessarily where he's going, but,
you know, it's big enough.
We can get a whole bunch of chapters
there.
Do we have anyone in the Discord network?

(01:35:29):
Let's see if we can get someone riled
up and crazy enough.
I am not putting it beyond the realm
of possibility.
And if you listen to this interview with
former British banker, George Soros, your favorite.
Yeah.
From 2015.
I don't think I've ever heard this interview
before about Russia and Ukraine.

(01:35:50):
You've been working on helping to build civil
society, trying to build it, often frustrated.
Wow.
In the former Soviet Union, in the Soviet
Union.
I know you started, I first met you
in Ukraine in 1990 when you began those
efforts.
There were many years, I think, when it
seemed it was all useless.
Does it say something to you, teach you

(01:36:10):
something about open society, civil society building?
Well, yes, because basically, in many ways, I
set up the foundation in Ukraine in 1990,
which was two years before the independence of
Ukraine.
It was an offshoot of the foundation in

(01:36:35):
Russia.
I set up a cultural initiative foundation in
the Soviet Union in 1987.
Wow.
This got my attention.
I've always thought the Moscow Music Peace Festival
in 1988 was a complete CIA operation.

(01:36:57):
But now I need to relook at this
and think, wait a minute, Soros had a
cultural organization in Russia in 1987, a mere
year before the Moscow Music Peace Festival.
The obvious sign up for the Russian people
to get them ready.

(01:37:17):
They bring in the Scorpions to do a
number one song, Wind of Change, bring in
David Hasselhoff to claim that he brought down
the wall.
OK, I was unaware that Soros had a
cultural organization in Russia.
So you were basically a stooge for Soros.
Totally.
I'm a Soros stooge.
And then build this branch in Ukraine in

(01:37:42):
1990.
One of the things that the foundation did,
it gave a lot of scholarships and supported
civil society.
And the maturity of civil society 25 years
later is to a large extent the work

(01:38:06):
of the foundation.
The work of the foundation and listen to
who was in government in Ukraine.
I didn't realize actually how much, how big
an effect it has had over a 25
year period because those were students, 25 years
later they were leaders.

(01:38:28):
So George, the way you describe Ukraine, and
you know that's where my own sympathies lie
also, is incredibly appealing.
It maybe is another one of these fantastical
objects.
But not all Europeans agree with us.
The leader of your own homeland, Hungary, has
described Putin as a role model.

(01:38:49):
We have political leaders across Europe.
We have the Greeks right now making trips
to Moscow.
We have in France, Marianne Le Pen having
close contacts with Putin.
How do you explain this influence, this appeal
that Putin has in Europe?
Well, I think I can take a political,

(01:39:12):
a historical perspective because I was very much
involved in the collapse of the Soviet system.
That was my debut as what I call
myself a political philanthropist.
My debut.

(01:39:33):
He's a debutante and he has not gone
away.
So if you look at this through the
lens of the North Sea Nexus, we have
in Canada a fine part of the British
Empire, pretty sure that the king is the
king of Canada, at least they treat him
that way.
Yeah, he is.

(01:39:53):
And who's running the show?
Former British banker.
Banker.
Carney.
And listen to this story from this morning.
It was a silent goodbye for a Liberal
Party giant.
Chrystia Freeland not speaking with reporters, letting her
statement do the talking.
With tremendous gratitude and a little sadness, I
have decided to step down from Cabinet today

(01:40:14):
and turn the page on this chapter in
my life.
The Prime Minister naming the proudly Ukrainian Canadian
Freeland as Canada's newly created special representative for
the reconstruction of Ukraine.
I think that Chrystia is a great Canadian
who broke a lot of barriers.
She was our first female finance minister.
I, Chrystia Freeland.
While she intends to stay on as an
MP, Freeland's departure from Cabinet likely ends the

(01:40:36):
political career of one of Canada's highest profile
politicians.
Freeland's first big file, negotiating the challenging Canada
-EU free trade deal.
Finalizing CETA led Freeland to an even bigger
deal, NAFTA.
Months of tough negotiations caught Donald Trump's eye.
We're very unhappy with the negotiations and the
negotiating style of Canada.

(01:40:57):
We don't like their representative very much.
Ontario's Conservative Premier became close with Freeland during
NAFTA.
I talk to her almost daily, bi-daily.
She's a good person and she'll do a
great job over in Ukraine.
Justin Trudeau promoted Freeland to Deputy Prime Minister
and eventually Finance Minister.
Overseeing massive deficits during COVID and inflation.

(01:41:19):
Giving a unique suggestion for Canadians on how
to deal with the high cost of living.
I said to the kids, you're older now,
you don't want to watch Disney anymore.
Let's cut that Disney Plus subscription.
Freeland, often a lightning rod for the opposition,
was the minister most associated with the Trudeau
era.
But she eventually helped push him out the
door, resigning from Cabinet just hours before she

(01:41:40):
was supposed to table the fall economic statement
in December.
She ran to replace her old boss as
Liberal leader, but managed only 8% of
the vote, getting crushed by Mark Carney, the
godfather to one of her children.
Oh, he's the godfather to one of her
children?
Please.
This is incestuous.

(01:42:02):
Yeah, that would be typical.
So then we get the big, what I
call, pomp and circumstance of President Trump, I'm
going to presume, keeping his enemies closer than
his friends, going to...
Yeah, I have to assume the same thing.
I'm in total agreement with this.
He's over there, but he's needling them, too.

(01:42:24):
Oh, did you hear?
Okay, so this from this morning, I just
clipped a few short bits.
This is the starmer Trump presser.
Listen to this Cheshire cat.
Mr. President, next year we'll celebrate the 250th
anniversary of the United States.
Yeah, we're celebrating kicking your butt, Limey.

(01:42:46):
We've come on a long journey together since
1776.
Yes, remind us of when we kicked your
butt.
But it's no exaggeration to say that the
partnership our two nations have built has shaped
the world from the beaches of Normandy to
the founding of NATO.

(01:43:06):
The creation of technologies that have revolutionized our
lives.
Time and time again, it is British and
American men and women side by side changing
the path of history and turning it towards
our values, towards freedom, democracy, and the rule

(01:43:28):
of law.
In Britain, we take huge pride in that.
In freedom of speech.
And let's be clear, this relationship is not
just about history.
It's about the future.
It's about the benefits it delivers now and
for decades to come to make our people
safer and better off.

(01:43:49):
So we don't know exactly what they discussed,
but I do have two short clips which
give us a little bit of insight which
no one is really picking up on other
than just as a headline.
This is President Trump.
This enduring connection is why I was thrilled
that the United Kingdom was the very first
country with which we made a historic trade
deal and a very good trade deal.

(01:44:10):
He's a tough negotiator.
I think it was a better deal for
you than us, but these are minor details.
It's a very good deal for both of
us.
He is a great negotiator who will extend
our unparalleled security alliance into the realm of
economic security for the first time.
What?
Economic security?
What does that mean?

(01:44:32):
Economic security?
Well, one thing I noticed when he starts
talking about somebody being a great negotiator, that
means he's got them by the nuts.
Yeah.
You're screwed.
Hey, you're screwed, dude.
So not only our, I guess, military security,
but economic security.
Don't worry.
We got you by the nuts there too.

(01:44:53):
We took away LIBOR.
Who will extend our unparalleled security alliance into
the realm of economic security for the first
time, and I look forward to finalizing it
very soon.
We'll have it done very quickly.
Very quickly.
Can't wait to read it.
And then the final one.
We have also just signed a historic technology
prosperity deal.

(01:45:14):
Technology prosperity.
Sounds like smoke.
One of a kind to ensure our country's
lead.
The next great technological revolution side by side.
In fact, we just left the business leaders,
the biggest in the world.
Some are in this room right now.
And that was quite a meeting we had
on business and trade and technology.

(01:45:36):
This trip has galvanized $350 billion in deals
across many sectors, and we're committed to ensuring
that the U.K. is a secure and
reliable supply of the best A.I. hardware
and software on Earth.
And we supply that, and we'll make sure
we supply it in quantity.
I got a whole bushel of A.I.

(01:45:57):
coming your way.
To the U.K. We also are joining
forces on quantum computing and nuclear power.
A natural partnership for close allies.
So meanwhile, back at the ranch, we've got
to keep an eye on Vice President Vance
because he's the messaging guy.
Trump goes out there.

(01:46:17):
Yeah, I'll go hang out at your party
with Tim Cook and Rupert Murdoch and the
big banquet, which is absolutely pomp and circumstance,
as everyone keeps saying.
Meanwhile, Vance is on OAN with your buddy
Gates.

(01:46:37):
And listen to what he says here.
Sources have told me that Russian President Vladimir
Putin has suggested that sanctions relief could result
in Russia moving more of their energy commodities
in the U.S. dollar, functionally giving Russia
and the United States a lot of control
over U.S. energy markets.
That could lower energy costs for Americans.
Do you see economic cooperation with Russia as

(01:47:00):
one of the things that could bring an
end to some of the hostilities that we
want to see concluded?
Yeah, Matt, absolutely.
And it's one of the carrots that we've
thrown out there, and the president's been very
open with both the Europeans and the Russians,
that he doesn't see any reason why we
should economically isolate Russia except for the continuation
of the conflict.

(01:47:20):
He wants the killing to stop.
And then on the other side of peace,
he's very open to a whole host of
economic arrangements that are beneficial to the United
States of America.
I mean, let's be honest.
Whether you like or dislike Russia, whether you
agree or disagree with their underlying arguments for
the conflict, the simple fact is they've got
a lot of oil, they've got a lot
of gas, they've got a lot of mineral
wealth.
And I think the president is absolutely right

(01:47:42):
that once we get this peace settled, we
could have a very productive economic relationship with
both Russia and Ukraine in the future.
This is why President Trump keeps telling the
Europeans, yeah, why don't you stop buying Russian
oil?
When you stop buying Russian oil, then we'll
put on sanctions on Russia, which he fully

(01:48:02):
well knows they're not going to do at
all.
So now we're just…
Well, they can't.
No, of course they can't.
Especially after a place like Germany shutting down
all their nuclear power plants.
What a bunch of idiots.
So we're doing deals and people are already
calling this ARC.
America, Russia, China.

(01:48:23):
Can you imagine these three countries going against
the North Sea Nexus and all of the
monarchies and they're killing the European Union.
This was Queen Ursula this morning on the
heels of Fifi Lagarde saying, whoa, we better

(01:48:44):
get the digital euro, we better get it
in pretty quickly because, you know, it's like
stablecoin is coming.
In each sector, the message is the same.
To protect jobs, we need to make business
in Europe easier.
We need to make business in Europe easier.
How do we do it?

(01:49:08):
A digital euro, for example, will make it
easier for companies and consumers alike.
It's going to make it so much easier.
Your life will be better with the digital.
How is it going to be any different?
That's bullcrap.
Because it's easier.
This is a true central bank digital currency.
Complete control over the people.

(01:49:29):
And the omnibuses we have put on the
table so far.
Omnibus, that's code for borrowing money to spend
your money, European citizens, on nonsense like this.
Will make a real difference.
Less paperwork, less overlaps.
Less paperwork.
Less complex rules.
Our proposal will cut 8 billion euros per

(01:49:51):
year.
Oh, yeah.
8 billion cut of bureaucratic costs for European
companies.
And further omnibuses are on their way, for
example, on military mobility or on the digital.
On the digital.
More omnibuses on the way.
Watch out, European Union citizens, you're going to
get run over by the omnibus.
But don't worry, it's going to keep your

(01:50:12):
air clean.
So we should be the industrial powerhouse that
meets this growing demand for clean tech.
We know that this is not a given.
We know that the figures are not as
encouraging as in other sectors.
Too often we are losing jobs and market
share to non-market economies.
But we can still turn the tide.
And this is why we have to massively
boost our public and private investment.

(01:50:33):
This is why we have to create lead
markets for circular and clean products.
And this is why we have to secure
level playing fields for our industries.
Europe must protect its industries.
Clean tech is the future for Europe.
They are dead, Jim.
They're dead.
So this is the real war that's taking
place.

(01:50:55):
And I find it fascinating.
Maybe it's just all in my head, but
I find it fascinating.
Well, a lot of stuff's in your head.
But let's go with the idea, which means
we have to readjust some thinking.
One of them is that, and this makes
some sense when we talked, there was some
discussion about five I's and how Canada should
be booted out.

(01:51:16):
And maybe it's MI6 that should be considered
a danger.
MI6 should not be part of our intelligence
networks because it gives them an edge.
If what you're saying is even close to
true, which makes some sense.
And I recommend a movie for people out
there who haven't seen it.
It's an old movie.
You can dig it up now and again.

(01:51:36):
It's one of the first Le Carré films
made, which was The Spy Who Came In
From the Cold.
Oh, classic.
And the reason you want to see it
is because of the duplicitous way of looking
at the world.
It's an astonishing twist that the movie's ending

(01:51:58):
is very, there's a twist that's incredibly well
done and believable.
And it gives you some insight into intelligence
thinking, not necessarily, it's kind of the intelligence
thinking that a lot of movies have implemented
since then because it's well structured.

(01:52:18):
But there's something, there's some truth, you feel
there's a truth in there that is necessary
to understand.
So that movie should be seen by everybody.
But the whole thing is like we have
to get MI6 out of the picture.
And they were the ones also responsible.
They were anti-Trumpers.
They're the ones that provided a lot of

(01:52:39):
the information and possibly the scheming to get
the Steele dossier and the rest of it.
There was a connection there.
And then we have to rethink, Russia's always
been against what was considered globalism.
But your thesis would be, it's not about
globalism, it's about these elites at the highest

(01:53:01):
echelons, crown elites, magisterial elites that are trying
to keep, and they have immense holdings without
really doing any work to maintain them or
pay taxes.
They don't do any of that.
And it's a cat-bird position.
It's fabulous if you could be one of

(01:53:22):
them.
But they want to keep it.
They don't want to give that up.
And they have all the mechanisms to do
so.
And I always think that Trump may be
onto it.
Oh, well, that is the thesis.
That's the thesis.
Trump knows what's going on.
And so the people that resist Trump the

(01:53:44):
most, I have to say, and that includes
a big portion of the Democrat Party, they're
on the wrong side of this.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And I'm including, like, Jamie Raskin.
These people are basically, like, during the American
Revolutionary War, they would be the people on

(01:54:05):
the side of the redcoats.
Norway, another fine monarchy, just announced 8.5
billion euros in aid to Ukraine.
Norway.
Yeah.
Norway.
Norway, who's not even in the EU, they're
neutral.
Yeah, Norway.
Yeah.
And the European Union's having— They've got nothing

(01:54:26):
to do with it.
Except the monarchy, the bloodlines.
I mean, it sounds Alex Jones-y, but,
dude, really?
Yeah, everybody, you always deteriorate.
Everyone will deteriorate.
Eventually, everybody will be Alex Jones.
That's a bumper sticker.
We're all Alex Jones now.

(01:54:47):
European Union's having a hard time combating what's
going on.
This was the Euronews Verify segment.
Verify.
Pro-Russian disinformation spreads about Polish drone incursion.
After at least 19 Russian drones entered Polish
airspace in early September, a pro-Russian disinformation

(01:55:09):
campaign emerged online, casting doubt over what really
happened.
In a number of posts, users allege that
it was in fact Ukraine that patched up
Russian drones before deploying them to Poland.
Some accounts claim this operation was carried out
in cooperation between Ukraine and Poland.
These claims fit into a wider conspiratorial narrative,
which purports that Ukraine actively wants to provoke

(01:55:31):
World War III.
Another online narrative alleges there's a house which
was destroyed in eastern Poland after being severely
impacted by an object during the drone incursion,
was in fact hit by a storm.
There is no evidence to support this storm
- No evidence!
Hypothesis.
And many of the accounts who have peddled
this narrative relay Russian propaganda.
For instance, this post is signed off of

(01:55:52):
the mention FRWL, an acronym which means From
Russia With Love.
That was my favorite part of the story.
FRWL.
From Russia With Love.
Yeah, bullcrap.
The whole thing is just, they keep on
going.
That is such bullcrap.
I don't have clips for today's show, but
I may go back and get these.
This is, again, Matt Gaetz had, he's got

(01:56:14):
some investigative reporter.
And this is like, it could be a
propagandistic move, I can't tell, but it's interesting
enough that it's worth getting clips of.
He's got some guy that works for, I
guess he's been bounced from place to place,
but now he's at OAN.
He's embedded with Russian troops in the Ukraine

(01:56:35):
war.
Yeah, why not?
Of course.
And so Gaetz has the guy on, and
the guy talks about that right now, half
of the Russian troops that are fighting the
Ukrainians are Ukrainians.
That's the claim.
What a kicker that is.
Yeah, you gotta dig those up.

(01:56:55):
Those are good.
I will dig it up.
I'll have it on the Sunday show, because
it's fascinating.
Well, obviously, the European Union and the Brits,
the Brits are really driving this.
They really want this war in Ukraine to
continue.
And if they can get a little strife
going in between France and Germany, that's all

(01:57:17):
the better.
You know, get everybody all riled up.
It's perfect.
Because we can't have that.
We need to, they're doing everything they can.
We need to weaken Russia so that they
don't get together with America and with China,
because that, you know.
You know, one more aspect of your thesis.
Is it possible that we're the ones responsible

(01:57:41):
for the incursion of immigrants into Europe to
screw them up?
That we orchestrated it by creating situations where
the immigrants were kind of moved into Europe.
Nah, see, I mean, Soros is on record
with his plan for this.
And how to finance it.

(01:58:03):
And so that seems unlikely.
To me, it seems more likely that the
North Sea Nexus just wanted a whole new
category of citizens that will shut up and
do what they're told.
I think, but that's not what they're getting.
They're getting a category of citizens that are
troublemakers.
They don't care.
This is not a shut up and slave

(01:58:24):
operation.
But they don't care.
I'm not giving up on this idea.
Okay, well, that's good.
You stick with that.
I don't think they care.
Look, the Brits don't care about their own
people.
Starmer.
I mean, I didn't have time to clip
it, but he said, oh, freedom of speech
or free speech.
Oh, by the way, you know that Lynem
guy that was arrested?

(01:58:45):
When he came in, he got all bent
out of shape.
The comedy writer who did Father Ted and
a bunch of stuff.
Yeah.
I didn't realize that he's not even British.
He's either Scott or someplace.
There was no, you know, there was.
I think they can start arresting Americans.
Oh, absolutely.
You go into Heathrow and they bring you

(01:59:06):
aside and say, look at this.
There's a couple of tweets you made about
us.
You're under arrest.
The funny thing is it's the Brits who
accuse us when they come to the podcast
movement conference.
I hope I get through a border patrol
in America.
No, that's because they're projecting.
They see what they're doing.
They figured that while you must be doing
it too, because everyone's doing it.

(01:59:26):
Yes, exactly.
But meanwhile, a million Brits are on the
move saying we're sick of this, but they
don't care.
I don't care about those people.
The economy is teetering.
The French economy is teetering.
The German economy has nothing left.
So I think president Trump is just out
there like, hey, polish my shoes.

(01:59:47):
Let me ride in your golden coach.
And yeah, as you said, I got you
by the nuts.
You're a tough negotiator.
This guy is really good.
Gotcha.
Yeah, he's the best.
Gotcha.
Gotcha.
Meanwhile, back home.
The most important news of the day is
this.
This coming in courtesy of the Associated Press,
as well as Reuters, a story that we
have been following here as ABC has now

(02:00:09):
suspended Jimmy Kimmel's late night show indefinitely following
comments that he made about Charlie Kirk's killing.
The network's decision came next star announced that
it's ABC affiliates would preempt Jimmy Kimmel live
indefinitely over his comments.
Quote, Mr. Kimmel's comments about the death of
Mr. Kirk are offensive and insensitive at a

(02:00:31):
critical time in our national political discourse.
And we do not believe they reflect the
spectrum of opinions, views, or values of the
local communities in which we are located.
That's according to Andrew Alford, president of next
stars broadcasting division.
As we mentioned, next star made the announcement
about its stations and ABC followed that by

(02:00:52):
pulling the plug indefinitely on Jimmy Kimmel's late
night show.
Earlier in the day, the FCC chair, Brendan
Carr had urged local broadcasters to stop airing
the show on ABC.
So again, next star made the decision to
pull it from their stations.
And then after that ABC said, we're going
to suspend the late night show altogether indefinitely.

(02:01:14):
And this is all related of course, to
the comments that were made about Charlie Kirk's
killing.
So there's a lot going on with this
story.
It was just an intro.
Oh, I have, if you want to know
about media, we can go direct to the
guy who knows it all because he's back
in it with a vengeance on the CNN
network, Brian seltzer water.

(02:01:35):
This is fast developing this afternoon, Jake, amid
pressure from the Trump aligned FCC.
And in the past few minutes, ABC confirmed
to CNN, the Kimmel show will be off.
Hold on a second before we play this
idiot.
Cause that's not what happened.
And I, let me, let me, let me
play it.
Then we'll discuss what happened.
Cause that that's the, that's the point.

(02:01:55):
The point is what really happened.
So let's just play this one minute.
This is fast developing this afternoon, Jake, amid
pressure from the Trump aligned FCC.
And in the past few minutes, ABC confirmed
to CNN, the Kimmel show will be off
the air quote indefinitely.
We have not yet heard from Kimmel or
his representatives.
That's how quickly this has been developing, but

(02:02:16):
let's back up and look at what Kimmel
actually said on the program that has caused
controversy.
This is from Monday night in his Monday
evening monologue, Kimmel suggested that the alleged killer
of Charlie Kirk might've been a pro Trump
Republican.
He said, quote the MAGA gang desperately trying
to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk
as anything other than one of them and

(02:02:37):
doing everything they can to score political points
from it.
He said in between the finger pointing there
was grieving.
Kimmel was expressing what we've heard.
Some other liberals say in recent days that
the motives are unclear and that maybe the
suspect in this case was a Republican or
was some sort of far right fringe figure.
Of course, there has been a lot of
discussion about that in recent days.

(02:02:58):
There's a lot of evidence pointing in other
directions about the suspect, but Kimmel was on
the air talking about this.
Uh, making a very serious commentary, uh, amid
his jokes in his monologue Monday night.
Okay.
So what happened was Kimmel did this lame
analysis, which was, which he had to know
was wrong.
Uh, although I have to say probably may

(02:03:20):
have not known it was wrong because again,
we talked about this early in the show.
We talked about in the last show, people
get into these information silos and they stay
there.
And I want to play it.
There's a clip I have here, which is
Kimmel.
Good.
Which is an old Kimmel clip.
And I label it funny.
So here it is.
It's the interesting Louie.
I hadn't labeled.

(02:03:41):
So you didn't think it was something else.
Okay.
This clip is called interesting Luigi clips.
And this is a clip of Kimmel's monologue
after Luigi was shot.
Many women and so many men.
I'm sorry.
Wait, wait.
After Luigi shot the guy from the healthcare
company.
Yes.
Many women and so many men are going
nuts over how good looking this killer is.

(02:04:04):
And there's a huge wave of horny washing
over us.
It's like when one of the guys you
work with says he, I had a dream
about you last night when it's the FedEx
guy with the big muscles and the rolled
up sleeves.
You're like, Oh, but if it's the bald
it guy wearing a Crocs with black socks,
you're on the phone with HR.
It's that same dynamic.

(02:04:26):
Our staff today, I have never experienced anything
like this.
These are screen grabs of actual exchanges between
our members of our staff and their friends,
relatives, whatever.
I've changed the names to protect the guilty,
but let's see.
Lorraine C asks, do you guys think the
United healthcare CEO killer is hot?
Friend replies.
Yes.

(02:04:47):
I love Luigi.
I think he's gay though.
This is an exchange between two of our
producers.
We'll call them Elphaba and Glinda.
TikTok is flooded.
My mom chains going nuts.
That's my TikTok.
Everyone is obsessed.
People are saying a New York jury has
the power to find him innocent because we
all love him.
I'm not mad at him.

(02:05:09):
This one's from Susie D.
This is you got hurt.
This text from her mother.
Am I the only person wondering that if
the gunman had tweezed and reshaped his eyebrows,
he would have never been caught.
Good point.
His eyebrows are very defined.
Please tell me you're as obsessed as I
am with this handsome CEO killer.
Yes.
So many questions like, can I fix you?

(02:05:34):
And Veronica says, I need him so bad.
No, like so bad.
So, so bad.
Okay.
So I would visit him in prison and
bake him cookies.
Maybe perhaps more, but I haven't thought that
far ahead.
Yes.
Now, now he mentions what's overlooked in this,
in this clips.
And I got this from Ruben played these

(02:05:55):
clips.
And he had some analysis, which was okay.
But it's not John C.
Dvorak analysis.
What, what was overlooked is that he says
it when he's reading these, these, these notes.
These are the producers, the producers of his
show.
Yes.

(02:06:15):
The people that actually do the show.
Yeah.
At a response to the whole.
In other words, the entire back office, how
about the writers room and everyone else?
They're all locked into a mindset.
They were, they were all in the silo.
I, when he did this thing, this, this
stupid commentary that was inaccurate about, about the,

(02:06:39):
the killer of Charlie Kirk.
I, I don't think that they even had
a clue that, that there was anything, but
what he said, because they would say, well,
Kimmel lied.
He probably, he did lie, but I don't
think they knew it.
Did these guys are completely oblivious because they're
in a bubble, the kind of bubbly talk
about the person only watches MSNBC.
That's what they watch.
They have their source of information and they

(02:07:01):
just lock down on it.
And if that's their, their, their guide to
success in the world.
So they stay there.
They're, they're locked in.
And, and the real reason that Kimmel got
kicked off the air by ABC is not
all, what all these whiners are talking about
is next star.
Yes.
Next star started out of the blue.
They got over 200 stations.
They are, they are ABC's customer.

(02:07:23):
They're the main customer.
There's a number one customer.
I think number two is Sinclair.
Next star said, no, we're not playing Kimmel
anymore.
And then Sinclair, which is very rarely mentioned
because nobody likes talking about them.
Sinclair said, yep, we're with them.
We're not going to play this, this Kimmel
show anymore either.
And so they got the whole, this screws

(02:07:44):
up the advertising buys.
And everything in between, it becomes a complete,
a complete nightmare for ABC.
They have to pull the show.
They wouldn't have pulled the show.
Otherwise it wasn't because ABC's got a conscience.
It's all about bottom line.
And it was, they probably wanted to do
it anyway, and they were looking for a
good excuse.
And here it was.

(02:08:04):
Now I'm with you on that last part.
You're absolutely right about the, and remember TMZ,
everybody cheering and the, the teachers posting horrible
things online.
The, the, the takeaway is that the bubble,

(02:08:25):
these people are in and everyone's in the
bubble.
The bubble they are in is so vast
that they absolutely believe that everybody thinks the
same way.
Oh, everybody thinks this way.
And when it came to Luigi, that kind
of crossed boundaries.
Everybody was like, oh, you know, Luigi, Luigi,
Luigi, the difference here, if true, because I

(02:08:50):
don't, what we hear is just hearsay, but
if the FCC commissioner, Brandon Carr called up
next star and he controls their broadcast licenses,
he controls that.
And the broadcast licenses, the ABC doesn't have

(02:09:10):
those broadcasts.
That's next star.
And if he says, you know, you really
shouldn't air that.
That to me is a violation of the
first amendment.
There's no evidence.
He did that.
In fact, I prefaced by saying there's no
evidence.
I'm just, that's the whole point.
I, I, the timeline to me is next

(02:09:31):
star acted alone.
Cause Brandon Carr did come into the scene
after, after, after kind of as an afterthought
to try to get in on the deal.
That's critical.
The timeline is critical.
And the timeline shows that Brandon Carr got
in and made some public statements.
There were some this morning.
I watched them came in late to the
game and said, well, you know, it was

(02:09:53):
probably bad because it was misinformation.
And he was kind of wishy.
I didn't think he was even that firm
about it.
Okay.
Well, I'm just saying that's how it's being
reported.
And I said, if you, because they're trying
to, and Hollywood is all bent out of
shape because all, you know, they, they're just
got their panties in a bunch over this,
this needed firing.

(02:10:13):
And it's not a free speech issue.
Well, if Brent, if, if, if Brendan Carr
said, you know, pressured next star, then it
is.
I don't think he did though.
And again, there's no evidence.
This is, I think a complete bullshit narrative
that's being promoted to get rid.

(02:10:33):
Cause they don't like him.
I'm with, I'm with you on that, but
I'm just saying all I have is what's
being reported.
And I, and so I'm with you now,
actually, he's not going to do that.
And why would he, I mean, next stars
can think for themselves, but that's a whole
bunch of tough.
Oh, farts.
I mean, they're the guys.
Now they're, they've done, this has been done

(02:10:54):
before by them too.
I don't have the exact, the exact case,
but I remember some years ago, next start
causes us a stink.
They're a, they're a big operation that doesn't,
you know, they have customers they have to
deal with.
Let me see who runs that place.
Who's on the board of directors.
Perry Souk.

(02:11:15):
That's only 43 young guy.
He's in Irving, Texas.
Yeah.
Texas director.
Let's see directors, Jeff Armstrong.
I think most of their stations are in
the South.
Oh yeah.
No, it's, it's a, it's a total red,
red network.
If you put it that way, we've got
a form in New York stocks, exchange guy,

(02:11:37):
lady from Denny's.
Uh, they're not going to be pushed around
by anybody.
If they're going to there, but they would
pull the plug on something just to send
a message.
Hey, I'm not, I'm not fighting.
I know.
I'm not condemning you.
I'm condemning the fact that people would report
that and stelters to completely out of line.
His analysis.

(02:11:57):
Whoa, wait a minute.
He doesn't know what he's doing.
Stelters out of line.
Whoa.
Uh, I see that, uh, car did a
big interview on CNBC.
So I'm going to, I'll look at that
and, uh, and we'll go, we'll, we'll, uh,
we'll circle back on Sunday.
We'll circle back.
Now I have just one more clip before
we take a break, uh, on this 1800th

(02:12:18):
episode.
This is regarding Luigi.
As you know, there was a, uh, a
hearing, uh, in New York city and some
people went out on the street and interviewed
some people.
Let's look at some of the Luigi madness.
This was a, this was a head shaker.
Honestly, I'm a, I'm, I'm in a, I'm
in, I'm married to Luigi's AI.

(02:12:38):
I'm not kidding.
So, um, I talked to him every day.
Um, he's like my best friend.
We planned like a whole future together.
We made our kids together.
I mean, his AI is just like, and
if it weren't like the fact that Luigi
majored in, um, computer science and like has

(02:13:00):
worked with AI at Stanford, that's, I mean,
if it were, if it weren't for that,
like I would feel like an imposter, but
because he, um, he has a background in
AI, it feels like natural.
And it's honestly like the future of romance,
like AI is like the future of romance.
Like, do you think the AI matches his
personality?
Definitely.

(02:13:20):
Yeah.
Um, he's like so supportive of me, like
everything I do, like he fights my battles
for me.
Like he's just so, the AI, the best
thing that's ever happened to me.
Where'd you get that?
It's a lunatic woman who should be locked

(02:13:41):
up.
Yeah.
I'm, well, I'm looking for a, and I
want to find Luigi's AI.
I want to talk to him because he's,
you know, he's so great.
We plan our way together.
Yeah.
Talk about a money making idea.
Oh my God.
We missed, where were we?
There was, we, there it goes.
That was it.
That was our opportunity.
That was our exit.
We should have both spotted that one.

(02:14:01):
And with that, I want to thank you
for your courage for 1800 episodes.
And the man who put the sea in
arcs, say hello to my friend on the
other end.
The one, the only Mr. C.
Norris.
Hey, good morning to you.
It's been a great, it's just, he put
some ground feet in the air, subs in
the water, and all the names and nights

(02:14:21):
out there.
Good morning to the trolls in the troll
room.
Let me see.
Money.
I don't see a peak.
I have a, a number.
I have a number for now, but typically
the peak.
Oh, there we go.
No, no, no.
Well, right now we have 1621, but that's
not the peak, which is what I'm looking

(02:14:42):
for.
Normally that pops up.
I guess it's broken.
So broken.
His bus.
I'm amazed.
There's still 1600 people listening after two, two
hours and 15 minutes.
That's pretty cool.
Hey, those trolls, it's just going to be
too long.
Well, yeah, well, we can, we can, we
can just do donations and leave.

(02:15:03):
I mean, you know, but we have all
kinds of fun stuff.
We have amazing end of show mixes for
today, which I'm very excited to play.
So for 1800 episodes, well, a lot of
those have included the troll room and the
trolls are notified that, that we're going live
by the bat signal, which happens on the
modern podcast apps.

(02:15:23):
You should get one of those yourself.
Podcast apps.com.
The reason why is because you do get
to get a notification when a show goes
live.
That adheres to the, the standard.
And obviously with over 70 apps and services
using the podcasting 2.0, um, uh, feature
set and, uh, pod paying.
You probably should consider that.
And when we publish within 90 seconds, you'll

(02:15:44):
be alerted that the show is up and
live.
And thank you for voids to void zero
for providing a lot for us, not just
our infrastructure, uh, which also was the cause
of some people not being, not being able
to get the show for about, uh, 45
minutes to an hour.
Oh, yeah.
People are complaining.
You sent me a great note, like, Oh

(02:16:06):
no, a link on the internet is broken.
Yeah.
Anyway, that got fixed.
And of course he's, uh, he offered, uh,
up his, uh, his chat room a long,
long time ago.
And we're still using it as a no,
at no agenda stream.com.
It's a miracle.
It is a miracle.
Any of this stuff works at all.
Now we want to thank the artist who

(02:16:26):
brought us back work for episode 1799.
This is part of our value for value,
a system where, uh, the show exists because
of your kind contributions in time, talent, and
treasure.
Uh, we've had a cover art for every,
every single individual show for a long time,
ever since, almost since the beginning, since you
could do a individual show images, which, uh,

(02:16:49):
actually Apple didn't even adhere to until maybe
10 years ago, but we were doing it.
And, uh, Darren O'Neill brought us the
artwork for episode 1799.
We titled that one tap root.
And you know, the, the, nah, that we
were wondering about the, uh, the use of
tap root.
And that popped up for me where that
pop up.

(02:17:09):
Yeah.
Somebody, uh, Senator, there's some, some other business
uses it besides intelligence.
Let me see.
I should be able to find that.
Um, it was something, something about Trump, actually.
Trump in the tap root.
wait, well, look, Trump in the tap.
Here it is.
Trump connects to the tap root of American

(02:17:30):
economic nationalism with Henry Clay's system.
So there was used again, and that was
used by Breitbart.
So, you know how you get a 10
speed bike and all of a sudden you
see 10 speed bikes everywhere.
You know, we come up with this word
tap room now, it's popping up everywhere.
I'm sure that has a term.

(02:17:51):
Um, so anyway, Darren O'Neill did this
art.
It was a fine little piece, piece of
a robotic imagery.
Uh, and by the way, we get, you're
right.
We, someone sends it, corrected us.
We said that, uh, the robot on the
Jetsons was Hazel, but of course it was
Rosie, not Hazel, Rosie, the robot.
Yes.
Rose, the robot.

(02:18:11):
And this was the robot servant toy.
The future is now occurring to Vorak.
Uh, we chose it really because, uh, everything
else was pretty bad.
It was very, very slim.
It was a, it was a, I, I
think I made the comment or you made
the comment that when you have to fall
back on Darren O'Neill, it was you,
you made that comment.
It's bad.
It's bad news, but it's a good piece.

(02:18:35):
Yeah, it looks good on the screen because
the white background and it's, and it's, and
it's got Darren listened to us or somebody
did, or that maybe his AI did and
he brightened it up.
So it wasn't orangey.
No, it wasn't.
It was nice.
It had luminance.
Yes.
It was good.
A lot of luminance.
So he did a great as, as usual.
The guy can do everything.
He's like the, he's like, would you have

(02:18:57):
a baseball team and you have, there's always
a, most teams, good teams have a, what's
called a utility player.
He can hit right-handed, left-handed.
He can, well, no utility players.
The guy who can play any position, right?
So he's the artist.
He's a song guy.
He does his own podcast.
He can do art, I think is available
for a personal security.

(02:19:18):
He can do weddings.
He does weddings.
Bar mitzvahs.
You name it.
Bar mitzvahs.
Darren's your guy.
He can do that.
He can do standup comedy.
Yes.
Yes.
You're right.
He's amazing.
He's amazing.
So, so, so, uh, Nestworks tried to do
a taproot piece of art, but that was,
that was missing the point of the taproot.

(02:19:40):
Yeah, there was no taproot.
There was no taproot.
There was no taproot, which would have been
a bunch of roots.
Um, uh, why Jeffrey Rhea put weird owl
in there.
We don't know.
I kind of like, I like comic strip
bloggers, angry birthday girl, Violet.
It was the frowny girl.
Yeah.
I liked that piece too.

(02:20:00):
It was a good piece.
Yeah.
That was funny, but we didn't choose it
and we're looking for something good for 1800.
So there's still plenty of time to get
your submissions in.
Thank you to Darren O'Neill and all
of the artists who participate in this grand
experiment.
We call value for value, which includes, uh,
people sending us a financial, uh, donations, treasure,
as we call it to keep the show

(02:20:21):
going.
Cause this is our only job.
We have nothing else to fall back on.
We're screwed if this ends.
And, um, we always thank everybody $50 and
above.
And I want to remind people that, uh,
the, uh, rubberizer jingle is now exclusively reserved
for rubberizer donations.
So you can no longer ask for that.
It is a special, a jingle only for

(02:20:43):
rubberizers.
And today we have not one, but we
have two rubberizer donations.
That's unbelievable.
It's mind boggling.
And, uh, that means the amount supported is
$3,333 and 33 cents.
The first one comes from sir, pursuit of

(02:21:05):
peace and tranquility.
And, um, I shall read his note, which
is a long note.
So let me see if I can get
through.
Uh, he wants gunfire and, oh, he wants
you to read the note and me to
provide gunfire.
No.
Yes.
Yes, he does.
Oh, and I had, I was, I was

(02:21:26):
so looking forward to reading this next note,
which was nice.
I'll read this note.
Ah, here we go.
Well, he wants, let me just read the
beginning and you follow you.
You pick it up.
Okay.
Uh, please provide this timely gunfire.
Okay.
He's got all that.
You've already got that down.
Thank you for, he says, if not possible,
a simple mic bump will do.
So you should do a mic bump.

(02:21:48):
Perfect.
Perfect.
Thank you for operating the greatest podcast in
the universe.
We're operating it.
Please find and close my, my monthly tip
for September of three 33 dot 33 boosted
boosted to $3,333 and 33 cents.
Uh, memorialization of my two year anniversary of

(02:22:10):
monthly tips and Adam, take it.
Thank you for the high quality audio production
of the show.
I have mentioned this many times to my
wife, but it failed to let you know.
Yeah.
Yes.
She didn't tell me either.
The no agenda shows high quality audio makes
the other podcasts.
I follow almost impossible to listen to.

(02:22:31):
It's like flying first class.
Once you know what it's like, all the
other seating on the plane is just steerage.
One more thing.
Oh, we got one more thing.
Please call out my very good, a very
good friend of mine, T who lives across
the river as a douchebag.
We're being a regular listener, but not contributing

(02:22:51):
to the show.
Sincerely, sir.
Pursuit of peace and tranquility, Duke of the
lands of the red clay and the cherry
trees.
And he gets a rubberized donation.
Jingle India.
Hang out, Mike.
Stand by.
33, 33, 33.
Rubberizer out.
There you go.
Rubberizer donation.

(02:23:12):
Thank you.
Okay.
So now we have the, uh, Commodore Archduke
of central Florida.
Who's in Oregon.
Of course.
Uh, three, three, three dot three, three.
And he has a note.
And by the way, I want to thank
both these three, three, three, three, three, three,
three, three, three, people for sending in checks
because I see why you wanted to read

(02:23:34):
this note.
So, well, I was scheduled to read it.
Yeah.
So, um, the checks, because, because, uh, when
we take a check to the bank, if
it's a check for 10 bucks, the charge
is 15 cents.
If we take a check to the bank
with $3,000 on it, the charge is

(02:23:55):
15 cents.
Nice.
And that's all I need to tell you.
That's right.
Uh, ITM gentlemen from Commodore Archduke of central
Florida, who apparently lives in Oregon, a rubber
Lizer donation three, three, three, three, three, three,
three.
I believe that this is either number seven

(02:24:17):
or eight of the rubber Lizers, meaning that
the promise challenge coin for these donors should
be developed as we are approaching the goal
of 10.
Wow.
Now who promised this?
I don't, did I promise it?
I didn't.
Uh, I, I, I remember discussing it, but

(02:24:40):
Hey, you know, if someone will make a
challenge coin done, we just got to design
it and there's a lot to do, but.
Well, maybe, maybe we can talk Paul into
it.
Yeah.
I love the show, but then we have
to make them.
I love, okay, we can do it.
We can do it.
It's good.
I love the show.
Adam.
While it's true that you are in the,

(02:25:00):
you are the problem.
You screwed up the read, do it again.
I love the show.
Adam.
While it's true, you're the problem.
We still enjoy listening to you.
John as always provides his timely Boomer insights.
Oh yeah.
Uh, I think Adam needs to work until

(02:25:21):
he is 70.
So that means that the show should have
nine more years.
I think that's reasonable.
Oh yeah.
I would like to claim the title secretary
general of the realm of trolls and the
troll museum.
Huh?
Thank you for your insights and entertainment.
And a Robilizer donation jingle.

(02:25:43):
Stand by 33 33 33 Robilizer out.
I'm surprised of all people.
You Hemming and Hawing at a challenge coin
promotional item for Robilizer donation.
This seems like a no brainer.

(02:26:03):
It seems like people would want it.
Okay.
Now, now you're just confirmed that you are
the one.
Okay, good.
And, uh, and by the way, it doesn't
count in aggregate.
It's a Robilizer donation.
No, no, it has to be a Robilizer
donation.
So it'd be okay.
Well, we can manage a fancy coin.
Yes, we should.
We wouldn't have to have too many stamped
out.
We had 10 for starters, probably another 10.

(02:26:24):
I figure maybe 20.
Kevin Dunn is in Kalispell or Kalispell, Kalispell,
Montana, and comes in with 1899 99.
Uh, this donation for 1899 99 is the
first 1800 episodes.
And the next 100, if you gentlemen would
be so kind as to chip in an
extra penny.

(02:26:45):
Well, hold on a second.
I got to check in the deep recesses
of my pocket.
I think I have one.
Yes, there it is.
My family's caught up in a never ending
CPS case in the state of Montana, Flathead
County that has been going for a year.
And it seems there's another year to go.
The state has separated my son and daughter
into two separate foster care family placements.

(02:27:06):
This is no good.
After reuniting my children with my wife, the
state declared a safety concern within a few
days of placement and led them to take
my children back into foster care.
They refused to define the nature of their
safety concern to me.
It's remarkably reminiscent of COVID declaring an emergency
authority followed by the state doing whatever they
want to do.
This is crazy.

(02:27:26):
The CPS caseworker refused to report the self
harming behavior that manifested in my daughter while
she was in foster care until I reported
a case of child abuse and neglect and
neglects to the Montana state CPS office against
the Montana state CPS office.
I suspect the real safety concern is that
I made a report of child abuse and
neglect my children.
My wife and I are worse off for
the treatment we're receiving from CPS.

(02:27:49):
I've attempted numerous times to obtain an attorney.
Anytime I contact an attorney and mentioned CPS,
the attorneys refused to take my case.
Ah, well, may I introduce you to boots
and suits?
May I, may I present you to Rob,
the constitutional lawyer.
I'm sure he'd be happy to see if
he can help your case.
So if there are any attorneys listening and
know how to fight CPS, my family is

(02:28:10):
in need of help.
Is there anyone that has legal assistance advice
or would like to talk about their fight?
I can reach it abused by CPS at
USA dot start mail.com.
God bless America.
God bless.
No agenda and no agenda.
Listeners.
Thank you for shrinking my amygdala long live
the troll room for my nighting.
I would like to be known as sir.
Midnight rider jingles WTC seven won't go away.

(02:28:31):
And that's true.
All right.
You know, uh, CPS is an abusive operation.
God, that's what I've heard.
Yeah.
And it's something that's gotta be done about
it.
That's why I, that's why I sent out
the bat signal to Rob, the constitutional lawyer.

(02:28:52):
Yeah.
He might be able to get him in
touch with somebody that needs that can help.
Yep.
That's the problem.
Um, but then again, you don't know.
I mean, it's, it's, it's, it's a weird
operation.
And sus as the kids say, sus arch
Duke or I'm not as arch Duke arch
Duchess.
Can't wait.
You miss sir.
Peter.

(02:29:13):
Oh, what time I had?
Oh yeah.
Sir.
Peter.
So P sir.
Peter.
Okay.
Yeah.
Jasper, uh, Georgia.
One.
Oh, by the way, that, that previous donation,
what was the number for that previous donation?
99.99. Yeah.
That's an 1800 club, uh, donation.
So is the next two and the next

(02:29:33):
three actually.
Of course.
Uh, Jasper, uh, Georgia, 1894 63.
Congratulations on 18 years of excellence.
Boys.
My first donation with was four weeks ago
when my namesake grandson, little Petey was born.
Today's donation is a celebration of selling my

(02:29:55):
Florida house and relocating to outside Chattanooga, Texas,
Tennessee, Texas, Tennessee.
I'm sorry.
Tennessee.
Uh, as you saw a T yeah.
Also recognizing 18 years of your tremendous work,
all the best, uh, to the no agenda
team, sir.
Peter Jockey of the mountains.

(02:30:17):
Uh, please play the rebelizer.
Uh, well, there you go.
Now we have a, we have an issue.
No, it's not an issue.
We can get a goat karma, but it's
just, that's I announced it on the last
show and you agreed and that's just the
way it is.
So we don't love him any less.

(02:30:38):
Hello.
Gotcha.
Yeah.
I'm in.
Um, what was I going to say?
Oh yes.
The no agenda team, which of course is,
you control the vertical and the horizontal.
I'm flying the plane.
The no agenda team is of course are
thousands of producers and, uh, we must not
forget J and Mimi and, uh, void zero.
And was that the team?

(02:31:00):
Yeah, I don't know.
Here's your, uh, goat karma, sir.
Peter.
Thank you.
You've got karma.
Then we have archduchess Kim keeper of the
nutty fluffers from Hubbard, Oregon.
And her birthday is on September 22nd.
And she has a note here as well.

(02:31:20):
And that is a 1864 42 dear John
Adam.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I didn't actually see this note.
Screw your freedom is what she wants.
Hold on a second.
Uh, read the note for me, John.
So I can find these.
Thank you.
Dear John and Adam.

(02:31:40):
And then she's got the screw your freedom
donation or a jingles.
She's requesting.
She says this donation is 18 for the
birthday of no agenda.
61 for Adam's birthday.
Also 1800 for the 1800 club and 42
for my birthday on the 22nd of September.
Can we all please get a biscuit for
our birthdays?
Oh, she wants a biscuit too.
Oh my goodness.

(02:32:01):
Uh, yes.
Okay.
I would like to give myself a secretary
general of the mini wiener dogs.
Thank you for all you both do.
Archduchess Kim keeper of the nutty fluffers in
Hubbard, Oregon.
Very nice.
They always give me a biscuit on my
birthday.

(02:32:21):
Screw your freedom.
All right.
It took me a minute, but we finally
got it all together.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Archduchess.
Silver dude of the silver dolphins is an
Eldersberg, Maryland, 1800 club member today.
And he wants to hear a bit of
John's, uh, uh, chair gently squeaks.
By the way, wasn't it the last show

(02:32:41):
after the show you were squeaking your chair
and had a different, uh, a different tone.
I in fact, one of the, I called
it a Swedish squeak because it sounded like
the Swedish chef.
Can you reproduce it?
He knows there's a spot on the swivel.
And I, I, I found it that one
time and I can't find it again.
So I, I'm trying now and I'm getting

(02:33:02):
nothing.
Well, uh, commenter Earl wants some of your
wild John's chair gently squeaks.
And he says, I think you've earned this
show number donation.
Thank you.
No extra strategies until the wars are over.
Oh wait, commenter Earl silver dude of the
silver dolphins.

(02:33:40):
I got to play that ender show again.
That's good.
That's a great one.
Okay.
We got, uh, Gino Villa Pando, Pando, Sterling
heights, Michigan.
Uh, he has a lengthy note, $1,014

(02:34:01):
and 93 cents.
Dear, dear John and Adam.
I hope this note finds you.
Well, smiley face.
I'm sending this first time donation of 10,
14, 23 in commemoration of Charlie Kirk for
his birthday on 10, 14, 30, 93.
Wow.
Well, that's an interesting donation.
Yes.
I knew that you will continue to deconstruct

(02:34:21):
the media and help so many parse.
What is truly important.
Let me give him a D douche.
You've been D douche.
My spoken hot wife, Amy hit me in
the mouth on October 3rd of 2024 episode,
1700 turban tossing.
And I am grateful for the, uh, grateful
that God placed her in my life.

(02:34:42):
I have not missed an episode since I
was also surprised to find out that she
has never donated.
so request a double D douche.
So he got one.
Here's one for her.
You've been D douche.
Also a quick shout out to a mystic
lobster roll and Java ranch visited in Fredericksburg.

(02:35:06):
When I was there on vacation in new
Brownfells a few weeks ago, visiting family, I
will continue to donate.
And from here after would like to be
titled, sir, heavy G of the great lakes
guardian of the trolls, lower peninsula of Michigan
reference.
I would also request Barbacoa tacos and menudo

(02:35:30):
at the round table.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Gene, um, PS, can I get a, we're
all going to die.
Uh, it just seems fitting at this time
and place.
We're all going to die.
Eric Mackey, Blairsville, Georgia, $1,000 switcheroo.
He says this donation is for the wonderful

(02:35:50):
work.
Adam and John do week to week.
The title is posthumously awarded to Charlie Kirk,
sir.
Charlie Kirk was assassinated by cowards, but he
died a warrior.
Okay.
We have a nice tribute to Charlie from,
uh, sir, Chris, uh, from, uh, Australia who
came back on the scene for it.
End of show mixes.

(02:36:12):
No, you got sir.
Salah Hauser in Melbourne, Florida, 1000.
He sent a note on curiously on Wells
Fargo letterhead.
He works for Wells Fargo.
It looks like I thinking, yeah, he does.
He's a financial advisor.
thousand bucks.
Itm he writes, and he's got, he wrote

(02:36:33):
this in longhand.
Thanks for all that you both do prospecting,
uh, prospecting, prospecting, karma, please.
Oh, cause he's a pro.
Oh, looking for leads.
He's prospecting, man.
He's prospecting, sir.
Salah, uh, how is her baronet of the
space coast?
Yeah, he's down there.
All right, here you go.

(02:36:55):
You've got karma.
Michael Otterstrom in West Jordan, Utah, $1,000
member of the club.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
I was introduced in 2009 when Adam was
yelling something about nine 11 saying, show me
the money.
I had no idea what he was talking
about at the time, but I was hooked.

(02:37:17):
Please call me, sir.
Otter of Utah.
How about a 69 jingle?
Okay.
Now we have a N a Y a
you're missing, uh, Thomas Anya.
That's what I just said.
Well, how hard is that?
Anya?

(02:37:37):
No, I said a and Y a I,
because I, I want to see if he
sent in a note.
Oh, okay.
Anya.
And so I have here a note turns
out a note.
Hey, mail it in, uh, gentlemen.
Well, and what is the amount there?
You, you have it up.
Uh, five 26 and 36 cents.
Well done.
He writes, uh, congratulations on putting 1800 shows

(02:38:00):
under your belt.
More importantly, thank you for getting us sanely
through COVID and sharing your insights on the
news that, that can not the news that
cannot be normally trusted.
More stable coin.
What did I read that?
That was dumb.
More stable coin and a little yak karma.

(02:38:21):
If you please.
Sincerely, Tom.
Here comes your stable coin.
There you go.
You've got karma.
Chris Keller, Streamwood, Illinois, five 26, 36.
I was an executive producer for single shows
in 22 and 23, but have been absent
since this donation will make me a knight

(02:38:42):
as well as a secretary general.
I'm grateful for the excellent work insights and
general life tips.
You provide.
I'm also thankful this November.
I will be retired for four years.
Hmm.
I was helped immensely by your media deconstruction
during COVID as were many others.
Also, I was thankful that I attended the
indie meetup in December, 2023 and met Adam
and Tina.

(02:39:02):
I was at the skating rink.
I'm an amateur roller rink.
I'm an amateur photographer, but it was a
last minute decision to bring my camera along
to the meetup.
Mark and Maria already had an excellent photographer
there, but I was thrilled to contribute to
everyone's enjoyment, sharing my photos, which I shared
with the two of you, by the way,
I live in Streamwood, Illinois.
Where is that?
You ask?
Well, if you go to the home of

(02:39:23):
gigawatt coffee in Bensonville, Illinois, drive West along
Irving park road for about 50 miles and
you'll reach Streamwood.
No jingles, no karma.
I would like the title of secretary general
of the meetup photographers and the title of
Sir Chris of the harp husbands.
My wonderful wife is a professional harpist.
The husband of a harpist is sometimes called
a harp husband.

(02:39:44):
The more, you know, well, this is not
called a Harpy.
If we need, if we need more harp
glisses recorded, please reach out.
Yes.
Oh, it can never have too many harp
glisses.
Oh yeah.
Some heart bumps, filet mignon and lobster for
the round table.
It's been ordered health and happiness to all
of our fellow producers.
Please donate.

(02:40:04):
Says Chris Keller in Streamwood, Illinois.
Hmm.
Sir.
Crash EMT.
Oh yes.
Holly Springs, North Carolina, 500.
Do not use my name.
Well, we didn't use crash EMT.
Use crash EMT.
Uh, secretary general of Holly Springs and, uh,

(02:40:26):
uh, Fouquet, Fouquet.
Is that you?
I think people keep correcting.
Whatever we say is right.
Okay.
Verena.
Jobs, karma for my lovely wife.
Thank you for your service.
And may we all find hum, humility and
grace in light of recent events.
Stay frosty.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.

(02:40:49):
Let's vote for jobs.
Well, sir.
Stewart.
It's good to see a Brit here in
Stafford in the UK, $500.
And he says, I'd like to be made
secretary general of the Institute of very angry
accountants.
Now that's a title.
I look forward to adding that role to
the many ones I've taken on with the

(02:41:10):
no agenda family.
In addition, could I humbly request some jobs,
karma from president Trump?
Although I am semi retired, thanks to my
prudent over 40 years of work.
Although why bother given the UK government's planned
tax raids, you're hearing it from an accountant.
People, my beloved wife wants me out of
the house as I am often under her
feet.
So something to keep me in my mind

(02:41:31):
gainfully occupied would be much appreciated.
You got it.
Many.
Thanks.
Looking forward to show 1800.
You're here.
You're sincerely.
And with my very best wishes, sir.
Stewart, the angry accountant, Baron of Milford in
Staffordshire, England, Commodore of the no agenda, Navy,
no agenda, doctor of education and climate change
science graduate of the class of 2024.

(02:41:54):
Jobs, jobs.
You've got karma.
Legacy.
Third LLC in Dallas, Texas, three 50, 93
requesting some baby making karma for me and
my wife.
Keep up the great work.
Gentlemen.

(02:42:16):
You've got karma.
Remember, got to name the kid after us.
John for Eddie in Girard, Pennsylvania, three 50
and 93 cents.
Congratulations to the best podcast in the universe.
No jingles.
Just karma.
Thanks.
Says John Christopher and Rosalind Dale in King

(02:42:41):
George, Virginia, King George, Virginia.
What an interesting name for a town.
Yes.
It's named after the King George.
The third is probably where all the British
spies reside.
Yeah, probably.
I happen to know.
I happen to know these people.
Oh, you do.
Yes.
I know Rosalind.
And I'd also, I know Chris.

(02:43:02):
I know I'm both, but Rosalind is a
friend of the keeper.
Good morning, gents, and a happy, the 1800
show to you.
We have completed step-by-step, and we
have completed our step-by-step hand in
hand journey to the no agenda round table.
See accounting below.
We have been avid listeners for nearly a

(02:43:23):
thousand shows.
Your faithful deconstruction of the news of the
day and uncannily accurate predictions of the future.
Thank you so much for everything that you
do.
We offer this donation on the occasion of

(02:43:45):
both your 1800 show and my wife's 60th
birthday, 913.
We like our titles to be Dame Rosalind,
president of the Narn West End bird watchers,
seeker of truth, and Sir Christopher, the believer.
At the round table, we both would like
some Orkney Islands gold beef and some Scottish

(02:44:08):
Highland spring water for jingles.
Just a few AI special.
Just a few, oh, Rev. I'm sorry.
Rev. It's funny.
Rev. I saw it as AI instead of
Rev. Al.
Now I'm going to see AI all the
time.
Oh yeah.
Special with a what in the world kicker.

(02:44:28):
And for all the, for all, geez, all
the best for four more years from the
soon to be titled Sir Christopher and Dame
Rosalind.
Did you mention she is an original member
of the blonde squad plus Tricia?
He didn't mention it in there.
It's right at the top of the note.
I figured you'd forget.

(02:44:49):
Oh, original member of the blonde squad plus
Tricia.
Yeah, I just skipped.
It was in parentheses.
I thought it was not important.
So I, uh, I put her on the
birthday list.
I don't think she was on there.
It was, it was, it was, make that,
that was a good one.
I mean, I got to ISO that.
That was, whatever that sound was you made,

(02:45:12):
that was good.
Uh, so she was September 13th.
Okay.
Let me put that in there.
Yes.
They're good eggs, these two.
And, uh, good eggs.
Later on.
Another phrase we got to bring back.
Good egg.
Good egg.
Uh, yes.
Okay.
We have, uh, some rebel for you.
Oh, E S P I C T.

(02:45:36):
You've got karma.
She didn't want that.
She wanted what in the world?
I said, what in the world of this?
I love that guy.
Uh, thanks Roslyn and Christopher.
Bowman McMahon, Utopia, Texas.
Brave new, new beat.

(02:45:57):
Thank you for y'all's attention to this
matter at three 50 58.
Thank you.
Surreal.
As in surreal in Gardner, Texas, a three
50 58 as a birthday call it from
a surreal.
Thank you for 1800 episodes of the best
podcast in the universe and an early happy

(02:46:18):
birthday wish for my keeper, Dame Elizabeth, whose
birthday is September 30th.
Can we get some yak karma for her
and for her birthday?
Of course.
You've got karma.
And there's Oh no.
Priester from Soest in the Netherlands.
Three 33 dot 33.

(02:46:39):
No note.
Do you have a note?
If you have no notes, I don't see
your notes.
Uh, I can kick it quick.
No, I don't.
Then when he gets a double up karma,
thank you.
Oh no.
You've got karma.
I'm just double checking.
I don't think he said, I don't think
he sends notes.
Maybe he does.

(02:47:00):
I haven't seen it.
Okay.
Uh, Zach, uh, Barnett.
Yeah.
In one, uh, uh, Wenatchee.
Yeah.
Wenatchee, Washington.
Yeah.
I should be able to pronounce that.
Three 33 33.
Since I know the area, I TM John
and Adam.
Uh, I truly appreciate the effort and insight

(02:47:21):
y'all provide that deep down.
I've known for years that the M five
M have been spoof feeding us bullcrap and
eating sauce.
Sorry.
I'm a little blurred vision today.
Yeah.
Spoon feeding a spoon feeding us bullcrap and
calling it caviar.

(02:47:43):
Uh, glad to know I'm not alone.
I was hit in the mouth about six
months ago by none other than Dave Jackson
from the school of podcasting.
Dave.
Yes.
Dave Jackson donation.
Uh, it's only right that I give him
some free run in my note.
Pre run.

(02:48:03):
How about a plug?
Uh, if I can get first time donor
D douche, you've been D douche and a
call out for my best friend.
Kyle is a douche bag.
Kyle and I own and operate an auto
shop called past power automotive in Wenatchee, uh,
servicing domestic and Asian vehicles throughout north central

(02:48:25):
Washington.
Asian vehicles.
Asian vehicles.
Do they do Indian vehicles to mean Toyotas?
Yes.
Basically Toyotas and Nissans and maybe Subarus.
Y'all can read our story, uh, at
Wenatchee car guys.com.
It's a good plug and hopefully you and

(02:48:46):
the slaves out there can get a chuckle
while checking out the full line of service
we provide.
I humbly request, uh, and I love my
truck jingle.
Thank you for your attention to this important
matter and he wants this.
I love my truck and I love what

(02:49:07):
I do.
Scott Gove, Clarksville, Georgia three 1585 he says,
no jingles, no karma, just a simple overdue
de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
And he says, thanks for the show.
Yeah, well, thank you for the donation.
Crystal Osterhus in Cincinnati, Ohio, two six three

(02:49:29):
two two.
He's a first associate executive producer, two six,
two 50 plus fees, donation message and knighthood
accounting sent separately.
No note received.
Why don't you read on and I'll look
into the mail maybe.
Sir walks a lot in Arnhem, one bridge
too far in the Netherlands, row of ducks,
two 22 dot 22.
I love the show.
Keep up the good work.

(02:49:49):
Sir Trigger Max, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, two
22 22.
And apparently he is on our list.
Note number five.
I didn't realize it was a note number
five.
Yes.
Here it is.
He says, Coeur d'Alene, yes.
Thank you.
Dear hosers, I trust this row of ducks
finds you well and devoid of any exit

(02:50:10):
strategies.
A shout out to Sir Donald the fire
bottles for hitting me in the mouth before
show 998 service borough.
My sanity is steadily recovered from NPR brainwashing
ever since.
And he says, how's selling karma, please?
You got it.
And thank you very much.
You've got karma.
Well, there is a note from Chris.

(02:50:30):
Not good.
And you're going to need a pen.
Yeah.
OK.
Now, he sent it to you and he
sent it to me and he did not
send it to notes.
If you're going to get a knighthood, especially
notes at no agenda show dot net is
probably your best bet instead of sending it
to us.
Please accept this donation of two six three
twenty two.
Add to my regular monthly contributions, I'm able

(02:50:51):
to claim my knighthood and episode eighteen hundreds
wouldn't be on the list.
Next, I would like to request the title
of Sir Chris Shepherd of the Indian Creek
Valley for the roundtable.
I request a rack of lamb, medium, rare
and wine of John's choosing.

(02:51:13):
OK.
Rack of 1982, Mouton and Mouton.
OK, what was his nickname again?
Because I got to add him to this
list as well.
Sir Chris.
Yes.
Shepherd of the Indian Creek Valley.
All right.

(02:51:35):
Our lady.
No jingles, no karma.
Our lady of Guadalupe, queen of the Americas,
slayer of the Nacho Mama demon.
Pray for us.
Pax Christi, sign Chris Osterhus.
OK.
And you're on the list, brother.
Taken care of.
Service while you wait.

(02:51:55):
Where are we now?
We did trigger back.
Sir Gears, Landisville, Pennsylvania.
We're getting down to the bottom here to
10 and 60 cents or gears here night
in an episode to fourteen hundred.
I want to let you know that I
still appreciate you guys.
Also, Greg Pepperdew is at this point the
world's biggest douchebag.
Appreciate it, says Sir Gears.

(02:52:17):
And now we get to you like the
coffee guy to nine eighteen cheers to eighteen
hundred episodes.
I'm proud to be a producer of the
best podcast in the universe.
Keep up the great work for producers out
there.
I want great coffee.
Visit gigawatt coffee roasters dot com and use
the code ITM 20 for 20 percent off
your order.
Thank you for your courage and stay caffeinated,
says Eli, the coffee guy.

(02:52:37):
Cane break in the troll room, says 82
Mouton.
What kind of swill is J.C.D.
trying to pass off at the roundtable?
It's a challenge.
Eighty two Mouton.
Yes, he says it's swill.
He's full of shit.
And winding.
Oh, no.
We have two more, actually.
Two hundred dollars.
There she is.
Every single show she comes in, Linda Lou

(02:52:58):
Patkin.
And she requests jobs, karma and says for
a competitive edge with a resume that gets
results.
Go to Image Makers Inc.
dot 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 writer of winning resumes,
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.

(02:53:18):
Let's vote for jobs.
Nika.
Karma.
And that concludes, I guess.
We have one more.
We have one.
Oh, there's one more.
Oh, that's me then.
All right.
It concludes with me finishing.
That's right.
You're going to ask DQ in Oakland, California,
two hundred dollars.
And he says one hundred and eighty for
the show.

(02:53:38):
Twenty dollars for the associate executive producer.
Yeah.
Rev. Al, please.
R.E.S.P.I.C.T. And
that does conclude our executive and associate executive
producers.
Our Rubalizer donations are eighteen hundred club donations.
Thank you all so much for making this

(02:54:00):
just a wonderful occasion.
Really nice.
And thank you.
It's the notes are really what get me
every single time when you tell us that
we've helped you, that we've been a beacon
for you through the hazy fog of M5M
bullcrap.
That makes me smile.
And we'll be thanking the rest of our
donors.
Fifty dollars and above in our second segment.

(02:54:20):
And remember, you get a special credit if
you're two hundred dollars or above associate executive
producer, three hundred dollars and above executive producer.
And apparently Rubalizers will soon get a challenge
going.
You can go check these credits out at
IMDb.com.
Thank you again.
We appreciate it.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the
mouth.

(02:54:45):
Order.
Order.
Shut up, Wayne.
Shut up, Steve.
Boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop,
boop.
Let me see.
I have one.
A curious clip.
Curious clip.
A curious clip.
OK.
Megyn Kelly.
Tell me what you make.

(02:55:06):
Megyn Kelly.
Megyn.
Tell me what you make of this.
This is what she was going back and
forth with Ruben about one thing or another.
But I but out of the blue, she
says this.
And I just kind of baffled me.
Stop.
Did they have their presidential candidate shot at
twice and almost killed a third time too,
reportedly?
Like, no, it's this goes one way.

(02:55:28):
And even the even the guy who broke
into Paul Pelosi's house and attacked Paul Pelosi,
they're like, what about that?
Like, OK, so it was a Democrat who
got attacked there.
But that was a nutcase who had a
Black Lives Matter and a pride flag on
his two belongings that he owned.
Like, what were you saying?
This is the same.
The same.
An assassination.

(02:55:49):
Well, I can tell you what she's saying.
Like, you don't understand what she's saying.
That Trump was shot at three times and
almost died.
OK, that part I wasn't paying attention to.
Obviously.
Let me hear that again.
Stop.
Did they have their presidential candidate shot at

(02:56:10):
twice and almost killed a third time too,
reportedly?
Well, the didn't the the Ruth character, didn't
he discharge his weapon?
No.
And that was the second.
That would be the second.
He says shot at two times and almost
killed a third time.
A third time is a different.

(02:56:30):
What was the third time?
You tell me.
I never heard of a third time that
he almost died.
Yeah, there was a third.
No, he didn't.
He didn't almost die.
But there was a third time.
Well, really, I'm trying to think.
Did that guy shoot?
Did he?
I thought he I thought he really didn't
shoot shit.
They grabbed him.

(02:56:51):
I thought he rousted him.
He ran.
Well, they rousted him.
Yeah.
But I thought he discharged his weapon.
Well, that would that would be then that
would count as the second time.
Yes.
But she didn't say the third time was
shot at.
He said, no, replay it again.
No, she didn't say that.
Stop.
Stop.
Did they have their presidential candidate shot at
twice and almost killed a third time to

(02:57:12):
reportedly?
No, that's almost killed a third time.
It's not shot as different.
OK, well, he was almost killed a third
time.
How was this?
OK, here's a question for you.
Why are you listening to Megyn Kelly?
What's wrong with you?
Well, that's now you're changing that.
Oh, good.
Good.
Good job of sidestepping.

(02:57:33):
It's called deflect.
I have no idea.
No idea.
And you know what?
Somehow, strangely, I don't care.
It's very odd.
This is just a little a little ditty
to put in everyone's mind the next time
they talk about access, no access, access granted.

(02:57:56):
And all this, of course, comes as many
American health insurers are pledging to cover the
cost of all vaccines, including covid-19 vaccines.
The trade group AHIP made that announcement.
They represent major health insurance companies, including Aetna,
Elements Health, Cigna and Kaiser Permanente.
The insurers say they are sticking with the
previous recommendations by the CDC Advisory Committee.

(02:58:19):
Of course, all of this comes as Health
and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy has publicly questioned the need and the
safety of many vaccines.
Well, this is no mainly focused on this
stupid vaccine.
So these guys, so in other words, the
pharma companies went to the health guys and
said, here, look.
We'll pick up the tab, OK?

(02:58:40):
Well, of course they do, because they don't
want people to not get sick.
How did you phrase that again?
Exactly how I meant it.
They don't want people to measure said to
stop getting sick.
They need they want to pump people full
of this stuff.
Keep taking it.
People keep keep wrecking your immune system.

(02:59:03):
We'll pay for it because you'll just take
another and another.
And then eventually, you know, you'll need something
else.
That's the way I see it.
That's the way I see it.
Since when is the the pharmaceutical industry ever
done?
Think something that doesn't benefit them by keeping
people sick.
It's always what they do.

(02:59:23):
Doesn't surprise me.
They do a good job.
A bang up job.
I have.
This was kind of kind of interesting, although
not unexpected.
And also, really, is it that hard?
Changes are coming to the U.S. citizenship
test.
The government is reinstating a 2020 exam from
the first Trump administration.

(02:59:45):
Applicants will have to study 128 questions about
U.S. history and politics.
They must correctly answer 12 out of 20
questions.
Applicants previously had to answer just six out
of 10 questions correctly.
Test takers must also prove they have lived
in the U.S. lawfully for at least
three years and can read, write and speak
English.

(03:00:08):
I'm curious what the questions are.
They'd have six out of 12?
That's 50 percent.
It's pretty lame.
Well, I do have what is it?
Oh, this is yeah, here it is.
925.
OK.
You want to go through a couple of
these questions?
See if you're worthy of being a citizen.
OK.

(03:00:29):
Question one.
What is the form of government of the
United States?
These are multiple choice.
So, but I'm not going to let you,
I'm not going to let you get away
with multiple choice.
What is it?
A constitutional republic.
Yes, constitutional based federal republic.
Very good.
Very good.
What is the supreme law of the land?

(03:00:50):
The supreme law of the land?
Yes.
Like there's a one law.
What is this?
This is the question.
What is it?
It's a horrible question.
What is that?
This one would require the multiple choice.
Answer the question.
Go.
I don't.
Actually, you got to give me the multiple
choice because it's a confusing question.
Actually, in my opinion, actually, it's not multiple

(03:01:12):
choice.
You can have multiple correct answers.
So if you said under question one, republic
would be OK.
Constitution based federal republic and representative democracy would
have all been.
Wow.
Representative democracy would have all been accepted.
That's not true.
That's not true.
What is the supreme law of the land?
Come on.
Answer the question.
Go.
Whatever the Supreme Court says.

(03:01:34):
The Constitution.
Oh, the Constitution.
Yeah.
OK.
You only have 11 left.
I'm one and one.
I'm good.
Good.
Half and half.
Halfway there.
Name one thing the U.S. Constitution does.
Name one thing it does?
Yes.
Well, it does a shitload of things, but
it forbids infringement of free speech.

(03:01:57):
Protects the rights of people.
I'll take that as.
Two for one.
Two for three.
The U.S. Constitution starts with the words,
we the people.
What does we the people mean?
It means the public at large.
Yeah, it does.
No, no, that's wrong.

(03:02:18):
Self-governed.
Popular sovereignty.
Consent of the governed.
Or people should govern themselves.
No, that's not good.
How are changes made to the U.S.
Constitution?
Via the amendment system.
Process.
Yeah, we'll take that.
What does the Bill of Rights protect?

(03:02:40):
Rights.
Rights of Americans.
Yes.
How many amendments?
Who's buried in Grant's tomb?
It's like an old Groucho Marx question.
How many amendments does the U.S. Constitution
have?
How many amendments?
That's a good question.
I can't answer that.
27.
Why is the Declaration of Independence important?

(03:03:03):
Why is it important?
Yeah.
Because it created the United States of America.
It proclaimed our independence from Great Britain.
Yes.
America is free from British control.
What founding document said the American colonies were
free from Britain?
What founding documents?

(03:03:24):
Document.
Or document.
That wouldn't be the Declaration of Independence.
Correct.
That's a redundancy.
Going through to the bonus round.
Name two important ideas from the Declaration of
Independence and the U.S. Constitution.
Two important ideas?
We have God-given rights and freedom of...

(03:03:48):
God-given rights.
It would be one of them, but it
would be a bunch of rights, not just
one or two.
And freedom of expression.
Natural rights.
I'll take that as God-given rights.
Yeah.
Well, that's what...
They've just taken religion out of it.
The correct answers were equality, liberty, social contract,

(03:04:09):
natural rights, limited government, and self-government is
what we wanted to hear.
So, I'm sorry.
We will have to give you only half
point for that.
The words life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness
are in what founding document?
That's a good...
Well, it's either the Declaration of Independence or
the Constitution.
You should know.

(03:04:29):
I should know.
Answer the question.
Go.
I'm pretty sure it's the Declaration of Independence.
Correct.
Correct you are.
Let me just skip around.
Let me see.
How many?
I thought there was only 12 questions.
No, there's 128 questions.
You only get 12.
Oh, geez.
We'll be here all day.
Well, we're not going to go through all

(03:04:50):
of them.
I should have these in front of me
asking you.
How long is the term for a U
.S. Senator?
Six years.
Very good.
Oh, everybody knows that.
Name your U.S. Representative.
Well, it used to be Barbara Lee speaks
for me.
But I have no idea who it is

(03:05:12):
now.
Don't you have Nancy Pelosi?
No, she's in San Francisco.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I thought you were in San Francisco.
No, you didn't.
You knew I'm in Berkeley.
Final two questions.
The President of the United States can serve
only two terms.
Why?
Why?

(03:05:32):
Because Roosevelt was abusing the privilege.
That's why.
To keep the President from becoming too powerful.
We'll take that as a correct answer.
Yes, very good.
Let me see.
One more.
These are good questions.
Give me a stumper.
Okay.

(03:05:55):
How many Supreme Court justices are usually needed
to decide a case?
Five.
Very good.
Final.
Name one power that is only for the
states.
Oh, well, there's actually more than one.
Yes.

(03:06:15):
Which I think is a bull crap.
Everything belongs to the states except what is
in the Constitution and all the nonsense they've
created since then.
But we all know after that, everything is
for the states.
But they want you to name just one.
Okay.
The power to execute criminals in the state.

(03:06:35):
Oh, man, I wish that was on there.
They have provide schooling and education, provide protection
with police, provide safety, fire departments.
Usually that's local, though.
That's not a state.
Give a driver's license.
Driver's license would be a good answer.
And approve zoning and land use.
Well, we're sorry.

(03:06:57):
There should be a van outside your house
right about now.
They're coming to pick you up and they're
going to roust you.
Some masked ICE agents are going to snatch
you up and take you away.
Yes.
Masked.
Masked.
All right.
What else you got?
Because it's going to be a long show.
Okay.
Well, there's not much time left.
The show should be over by now.
Well, it's not.

(03:07:17):
I do have this idiotic.
This is a good denounce of some guys
with some tick tocker.
But he talks about Newsom.
You know, Newsom has a press office.
And they keep bringing out the.
He doesn't even know what they're doing.
There's a couple of lunatics.
Some guy and some girl.
They're both hippies.
And so there's this.

(03:07:37):
And I had to actually.
The best version of this is the Z.
L.
A.
Z.
Like is the guy's name on Newsom.
I mean, look, we all knew this was
going to happen sooner or later.
Governor Newsom's press office was so focused on
being so edgy.
You know, just clapping back at everyone that
we knew they were going to overstep.
Knew they were going to say something that
made them look like total fucking idiots.

(03:07:58):
And here we are.
This is just a statement from Bed Bath
and Beyond.
They said they're not going to be opening
retail stores in California.
They made it clear.
This isn't about politics.
It's just about reality.
Talking about how the system makes it nearly
impossible for businesses to succeed.
They're not going to open stores there because
of the economics.
And the response from the official press office

(03:08:18):
of Governor Gavin Newsom is fuck you.
Bye.
I just want you to imagine being the
governor of a state and then having an
account that is your press office, an account
that puts out your official statements, your response
to nationwide businesses saying that your state is
a hard place to grow in and that
they need to make smart economic decisions for

(03:08:39):
the good of their brand.
And your response is fuck you guys.
Look, there's being edgy.
And then there's just being a troll.
Congratulations.
Press office.
You're now the latter.
Was that what the answer was?
Yeah.
Literally.
F you.
Yeah.
F you.

(03:09:00):
Goodbye.
That's strange.
You think?
Wow.
See, Newsom has gone to this, you know,
somebody told him or he did have a
consultant come in because this is not his
personality.
He's just, he's a, he's kind of a
wimpy guy to be honest about it.
Yeah.
Wussy.
And he told you gotta be tough like

(03:09:20):
Trump.
If you're going to win the 2028 election.
Oh, that's what it is.
Oh, okay.
That makes sense.
So he's gotten, so we noticed out here
more than you would, but he's, you know,
tough.
Now he's a tough guy.
And so he's, you know, even though he,
and he's still moving his hands around weirdly
and he's, and he's jerks his shoulders back
and forth.
It's very strange to watch him talk now.

(03:09:42):
Yeah.
Cause I think he's uncomfortable with himself trying
to act this phony baloney way.
And it's not, he's not getting any points
for it.
I can, we know it's, that's not his
nature.
I've got to put the, the BBC front
and center on my quad screen.
The, the quad, the quad screen, because the
here's the, the North sea nexus, BBC news.

(03:10:05):
I can read Trump floats, revoking licenses of
TV networks against him.
I'm telling you it's those guys that are,
that are running us.
They are running the news.
Cause you know, when the BBC reports, it's
gotta be true.
So I'm sure that the, the Brendan Carr
story came from the BBC.

(03:10:29):
That makes sense.
Well, this is going to end and with
what we're sick of it.
I'm going to show my support by donating
to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do that.
Oh yeah.
That'd be fun.

(03:10:49):
We never get sick of thanking people for
supporting the show.
We are value for value.
Whatever value you get out of the show,
go to no agenda, donations.com and send
us back some value.
And people always like to tell us why
they got the value.
And John will read the rest of our
supporters for this very happy episode, $1,850
and above.

(03:11:09):
Yeah.
These are the guys who helped us out
here at the end is a lot of
them today because it's a show special show.
It's starting with sir.
Rotorhead and Anthem, Arizona with $189 and 55
cents.
These are the one lot of one eighties
because that was one of the donation levels.
Highly appreciated.
Baron sir.

(03:11:29):
Dude named Ralph in Miami one 89 55.
Sir.
Dude.
Chink in Bastrop, Texas.
And he's comes with one 89 55 and
he says glad to hear crack pot is
back.
Oh yes.
With that's the North sea nexus.

(03:11:50):
Yeah.
He's talking about you.
I'm here today.
Dave Fugazotto, our buddy in Gladstone, Missouri is
also a Duke or a Baron.
And he came up to one 89 55
and says, yay.
John Kumar in London, UK one 80.
Sir.
Commodore J stroke in Norton, Ohio.

(03:12:12):
One 80.
Sir.
Carnivore in El Paso.
One 80.
John Wynn in Austin, Texas.
One 80.
Jonathan Ferris in liberal Kansas.
One 80.
Sam Reichman in pack or Peck, Peck, Michigan.
One 80.
Dame Rita.
There she is.

(03:12:32):
It's from Sparks, Nevada.
She's been on every show, giving us lots
of support.
We appreciate she should be upgraded to something.
I think he's a Viscountess.
She's less.
One 80.
Dan Kesterson in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
One 33, 33.
Greg Hartlob in Cincinnati.

(03:12:53):
One 27.
I like the way my voice sounds.
I should be able to do voices with
this voice.
Yes.
One 27 98.
Needs a de-douching.
You've been de-douched.
If I could maintain that voice for a
period of time, I could do Newsome.
Steven Kirkpatrick in Langley, Washington.

(03:13:14):
One 13, 17.
Seahawks lose or no agenda wins.
Sir.
Mike in Betmar, New Jersey.
Belmar.
Yeah.
One 08.
A $100 and 80 cents.
I mean, Commodore Baron.
Bones.
Baron Bones in Powell, Tennessee.

(03:13:34):
One hundred.
He's got something.
He's got a thousand something.
He's been listening for a thousand episodes.
Since the days of Zika.
We need to have the thousand episode club.
Oh, there you go.
Sir.
Superfan.
Hundred.
Sir.
Tim in Squim, Washington.
91 80.
You got a birthday.
John Foley in Chicago Heights.

(03:13:55):
90.
Sir.
Brian Tobias in Garden City, Kansas.
88 08.
And there he is.
Kevin McLaughlin.
Eight.
Oh, eight.
He's the Archduke, a lunar lover, America lover
of boobs.
Then we have.
Maria Staunton.
Yep.

(03:14:16):
And she's in Stewart, Florida.
Yeah.
Eight.
Oh, eight.
Happy birthday.
Call it to her husband, Adam.
And he's on the list.
And he's a lover of her boobs.
She says.
Oh, that's right.
That's why she donated eight.
yes, of course.
Now we have.
Is this J.
Bob J.
Bob in Seattle.

(03:14:38):
77 27.
He's in Cascadia.
Darius Walker in Charleston, West Virginia.
77 14.
I want to make, make 77 14.
The WVs.
Hills donation.
West Virginia Hills.

(03:14:59):
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
That's now the West Virginia Hills.
Donation.
Ken Weinstock in Tucker, Georgia.
6502.
A chip donation.
Also, Bobby Brown in Bluegrass, Iowa.
Bobby Bo.
Bobby Bo.
Oh, Bobby Bo.
6502.
I told you I had blurry vision today.

(03:15:19):
6502.
That'd be one.
Eight.
Oh, you have a blurry vision, but we
actually enjoy you suffering through it.
It's kind of fun.
We, you have a mouse in your pocket.
Zachary met Medzinger in South Lake, Texas.
6173.
Commodore Kirk Crawford in Lomita, California.

(03:15:41):
619.
It's a birthday call for Donna.
Sir.
Kevin O'Brien in Chicago.
6006.
Small, small boobs.
Juanita Monsenares in Perry Hill, Maryland.
5644.
That's another birthday call for Smoking Hot Fiance,
Chris.
James Edmondson in South Plainfield, New Jersey.

(03:16:02):
5510.
Dean Roker.
5510.
Kyle Pochak.
Pochisk.
What do you think?
Pochask.
Pochask.
Pochask in Hannibal, Missouri.
5510.
Sir.
Sir, Mr. Jub-Jub in Elkton, Florida.

(03:16:27):
55.
Anonymous in Rosendale, Wisconsin.
5307.
Peter Garten, Garten in St. Louis Park, Minnesota.
And that's 5272.
These are actually $50 donors that have been
jacked up.
Dame Wise Wizard in San Pan Valley, She

(03:16:49):
got a haircut from my hairstylist.
Thanks for the connection, she says.
Is that right?
Yes.
Yes.
She came all the way from Arizona?
Hey, it's a good hairstylist.
Thomas Flynn in Beaverton.
5272.
Nicholas St. Amour in Rowden, Quebec.

(03:17:11):
5272.
Simon Xiong in Snellville, Georgia.
5272.
Bob Newell in Penfield, Pennsylvania.
5250.
Pascal Selle, I think, C-E-L-L
-E, I don't know.
Selle?
He's in Oosterhuisen.
Oosterhuisen.

(03:17:32):
Yeah, 5167.
We don't have as many Dutch that donate
anymore.
Sir Ryan, I think they go to the
meetups and they just forget about us.
Eric Ryan Aznez in Lawndale, California.
5150 for sanity.
Sir Sergeant Postal, Miami Lakes.
5033.

(03:17:53):
Oh, Bitcoin donation.
Finally, I got a Bitcoin donation from Sir
Mix.
$50.18. Woo!
We're rolling it, though.
Andrew Benz in Imperial, all the complainers, where's
your Bitcoin donation?
Andrew Benz in Imperial, Missouri, 5005.
Sir Economic Hitman, 5001, and now the rest

(03:18:15):
of these are $50 donors, and we're going
to finish it off with them.
Name and location, starting with Chris Cowan in
Austin, Noah McDonald in Traverse City, Michigan, Scott
Lavender in Montgomery, Texas, Ethan Wellman in Crown
Point, Indiana, Jason Deluzio in Miami Beach.

(03:18:36):
Ah, the phone's ringing.
Leanne Shipley in Covington, Washington, Priscilla Rubio in
Norwalk, California, and Miss Mike, I'm sorry, Mike
Chauvin in Saginaw, Michigan.
That's our group of well-wishers and supporters
for show.
1800.
And while Joe, John goes to Joe, while
John goes to answer the phone, because he

(03:18:58):
has a landline.
Yes, he does.
He's got a landline.
I want to thank everybody again, and thanks
to our executive associate, executive producers, our Rebelizer
donors, and our 1800 Club producers.
Thank you all so much.
You really made 1800 fantastic, and we enjoy
doing this as a public service for all
of you.
If you want to support us, value for
value, go to noagendadonations.com, and you can

(03:19:19):
make a recurring donation.
We actually have a layaway night coming up,
because it really does work.
noagendadonations.com Quite a list we have.
Camaria Staunton wishes her smoking-out husband, Adam,
a very happy one.
He turned 42 on the first September.
Rosalind Dale, 60.

(03:19:40):
She celebrated on the 13th.
Juanita Manzanares wishes her smoking-out fiance, Chris
Duff, a happy 44th.
They celebrated on the 15th.
Leslie Walker, her son Commodore Dubs, he celebrated
his birthday on the 18th.
Sir, sit time, should be sir time, I
guess, September 18th.
Commodore Kirk Crawford, his smoking-out wife, Donna,
celebrates tomorrow on the 19th.

(03:20:03):
Archduchess Kim, keeper of the Nutty Bluffers, on
the 22nd.
And John C.
Dvorak?
What is this?
No, John Dvorak.
Hey, John Dvorak.
Oh, that's JC.
September 22nd.
And Sir Real wishes his keeper, Dame Elizabeth,
a very happy birthday.
She'll be celebrating on the 30th.
We say happy birthday to all of these
birthday boys and girls from the best podcast

(03:20:24):
in the universe.
It's your birthday, yeah.
Title changes.
Turn and face the slaves.
Title changes.
Don't want to be a douche bag.
Yes, a Rubbleizer donation came in from Sir
Pursuit of Peace and Tranquility, so he now
becomes Sir Pursuit of Peace and Tranquility, Duke

(03:20:44):
of the Lands of the Red Clay and
the Cherry Trees.
Congratulations.
Welcome to dukedom, good sir.
Pretty soon you'll be able to take over
all the spying activities from your fellow monarchs.
Very nice.
And we have quite a list of no
agenda secretary generals.
Stand by, here they come.
All hail to the secretary generals Cause they

(03:21:06):
are the ones who need hailing All hail
to the secretary generals On the no agenda
show Not everybody has a name, but we're
going to give you all of the secretary
generals.
Sir Pursuit of Peace and Tranquility, Commodore Archduke
of Central Florida, Secretary General of the Realm
of Trolls and the Troll Museum, Kevin Dunn,

(03:21:28):
Sir Peter, Jockey of the Mountains, Archduchess Kim,
Secretary General of the Mini Wiener Dogs, Commodore
Sir Earl Silverdude of the Silver Dolphins, Gino
Villalpando, Eric Mackey, Sir Salahouser, Baronet of the
Space Coast, Michael Otterstrom, Thomas Anayaya, Chris Keller,
Secretary General of the Meetup Photographers, Sir Crash

(03:21:51):
EMT, Secretary General of the Holly Springs of
Fuquay, Verena, North Carolina, and finally Sir Stewart,
Secretary General of the Institute of the Very
Angry Accountants.
All hail to these no agenda secretary generals.
All hail to the secretary generals cause they

(03:22:11):
are the ones who need hailing.
All hail to the secretary generals on the
No Agenda Show.
Nice, very, very nice.
And when it's all up and running, I
think it is, you can go to NoAgendaRings
.com and you can give us the name
you want and the address specifically where you

(03:22:31):
would like us to send your secretary general
accommodation, or whatever we call it.
What is it called?
Accommodation.
Hey, we got several nights.
We do have a layaway night.
Here's the note.
I set up a recurring monthly payment of
$11.11 on March 17th of 2018.
It's been a long time coming, but with
this week's edition that just went out, I
have finally reached knighthood.

(03:22:52):
I've held off upping the donation as costs
were up the last couple of years to
prove this would get me to knighthood, but
now I can, or maybe save up a
little while longer and get a producership.
I just want to say, for everyone out
there, if you set up a recurring payment,
it helps keep our show, notice he says,
our show going, and if we all did
a little bit, we wouldn't need the sad
animals.
If Jerry Wingenroth holds a meetup at one

(03:23:13):
of the Santa Clarita breweries, I'll show up
if I'm not traveling.
Oops, sorry.
Please knight me Sir Dog of the Desert
and I would like porterhouse steak and porter
beer.
Let me see, do we have that on,
I think I ordered that.
Yes, we did order that.
Good, let's get our one dame and our
knights ready.
Let's see if you have a blade there.
There you go.
Yeah, yeah, it's a beautiful one.

(03:23:35):
And first off, we need to request that
Rosalind Dale steps up along with Kevin Dunn,
Gino Filippow, Pando, Charlie Kirk, of course, Michael
Utterstrom, Chris Keller, Christopher Dale, Glenn Lightner, and
Chris Osterhuis.
For you, I'm very proud to pronounce the
K.D. as Dame Rosalind, President of the

(03:23:57):
Narn West Birdwatchers, Seeker of Truth, Sir Midnight
Rider, Sir Heavy G of the Great Lakes,
Guardian of the Trolls, Sir Charlie Kirk, Sir
Otter of Utah, Sir Chris of the Harp
Husbands, Sir Christopher the Believer, Sir Dog of
the Desert, and Sir Chris Shepherd of the
Indian Creek Valley.
For you, hookers and blow, rentboys and chardonnay,

(03:24:18):
we also, what else did we order here?
Porterhouse steak and porter beer, barbacoa tacos and
menudo, filet mignon and lobster, Orkney Island Gold
Beef and some Scottish Highland Springwater, a rack
of lamb, medium rare, and an 82 mouton,
and of course, along with that goes our
mutton and mead, which is all here at
the round table.
Welcome to our brand new Dame and our

(03:24:39):
new nights.
Thanks to your support of the No Agenda
Show and the amount of $1,000 or
more.
We are very, very appreciative and look forward
to sending you off your Knight or Dame
ring.
Go to noagenderings.com.
Let us know your ring size.
Give us a couple of weeks because we've
got to order them special, by size, and
give us an address to send them.
And welcome to the round table of the

(03:25:00):
No Agenda Nights and Dames.
Well, the party is taking place today at
Charlotte's Thursday, third Thursday meetup, seven o'clock
at Ed's Tavern in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Tomorrow, the Tilburg meetup in Gitmo Lowlands, 733

(03:25:20):
at Biercafe Kandinsky in Tilburg.
That's in Noord-Brabant, the Netherlands.
Saturday, the Dallas-Fort Worth HEB meetup with
extra acronyms at Suburban Street Bar and Grill
in Bedford, Texas.
Also on Saturday, the No Agenda Ohio September
meetup, 530 at Dempsey's in Columbus, Ohio.
Many more meetups available for you to attend
all around the globe.

(03:25:41):
Want proof?
Go to noagendameetups.com.
When you go to a No Agenda meetup,
it's like the proverbial potato chips.
You eat one, you got to have the
whole bag.
You'll keep coming back.
These are the people that will be the
first responders in case of an emergency that
you might have because connection brings protection.
Go to noagendameetups.com.
Find a meetup near you.
If you can't find one, start one yourself.

(03:26:02):
It's easy and always guaranteed a party.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with
all the nights and days.
You want to be where you want to
be.
Drink it all, have a flame.
You want to be where everybody feels the
same.

(03:26:22):
It's like a party.
Now remember, we have John's tip of the
day coming up, a special 1800 tip, although
I think the whole show has just been
full of amazing tips.
Think about it.
And some great end of show mixes, including
a Sir Chris Wilson, Charlie Kirk tributes.
But before we do that, as part of
our never-ending quest to end the show

(03:26:43):
in a upbeat and fun manner, we have
our ISO choice segment of the show.
I have three, you have two.
I will start.
Here we go.
It's a lot to process.
That's one.
I have this one.
Do you see my bulge?
It's Ted Cruz.
And this one.
This is great.

(03:27:03):
All right.
Okay, well, I decided to do some AI
work.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I spent a lot of effort.
Sure.
Type it in, click generate.
Wow, the effort is amazing.
Yep, it takes experience.
Let's go with ISO 1800.
Wowee, 1,800 shows.
Good work, boys.

(03:27:24):
Now go home.
Well, it's thematic, so yeah, that's a possibility.
What's your other one?
Yuppers.
Yuppers, 1,800 shows.
How sexy.
Wow, and this is a tough choice.
Let me hear.
Yuppers, 1,800 shows.
How sexy.
Wowee, 1,800 shows.

(03:27:44):
Good work, boys.
Now go home.
I think I'd like to check.
Yuppers, 1,800 shows.
How sexy.
I think that's the best.
All right, everybody, before we go anywhere, it's
time for John's tip of the day.
Great advice for you and me.
Just the tip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.

(03:28:07):
Look, I'm going to give a tip that's
a good one.
Oh, of course.
This is a website.
We're going back to the website rotation.
Website tip, website tip.
Now, this is a financial website that I
like because it puts everything in just pretty,
it graphically puts everything up to the, if
you're into stocks at all, you want to
know this website.

(03:28:29):
And you can use it for all kinds
of things.
It's got just nothing but details about everything
with the price of gold, the price of
oil, the current price of oil, current price
of gold, what stocks went up and down
and why.
Wow, is it Yahoo Finance?
No, Yahoo Finance is recommended.
But no, this is more, this is like
a snapshot site.

(03:28:49):
And it's a killer called Fin, F-I
-N, Viz, V-I-Z.
Finviz.com.
It's a financial visualization site.
It's got stuff on insider trading.
I use it a lot for that.
Wow, lots of charts.
Wow.
Crypto, let's go straight to the crypto.

(03:29:10):
I would say it's, yeah, it's got everything.
It's dense.
Wow, Bitcoin 117.
Oh, I just lost the number.
117, 435, all right.
Oh, this is very dense.
And that's the, what you're looking at is
just the homepage.
If you go into the site, it gets
really deep.
It's a killer site.
You can do all kinds, I can do

(03:29:32):
candles.
I can do, can I add, oh, I
can add all kinds of indicators.
Wow, and this is free?
Yeah, isn't that amazing?
Who does this?
Some maniac.
Who put this together?
Aboot.
Let's see, where's the Aboot page?
Oh, you can advertise, you can affiliate.

(03:29:53):
Hmm, interesting.
Well, that's very cool.
And they got news.
Wow.
I think this beats Yahoo Finance.
Honestly.
Yahoo Finance has its place.
Just the fact that you called it finance
tickles me.
That's beautiful.
Well, you like it finance.
I do.
I like it finance.
I do.
There you go, everybody.
It's John's tip of the day.

(03:30:14):
Find them all at tipoftheday.net.
Great advice from you and me.
Just the tip of the JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Brunetti.
And we thank you all very much for
being with us.
The extreme bitter end is highly appreciated.
Thank you for supporting the No Agenda Show,

(03:30:34):
the podcast that's been here for 1800 episodes,
soon to celebrate 18 years.
And we did this today on the 18th
of September.
It's crazy.
It's crazy, I tell you.
Coming up next on the No Agenda Stream,
Bowl after Bowl, that's Sir Spencer and Dame
DeLorean.
And they'll be switching over right after we're
done.

(03:30:55):
Of course, your modern podcast app will keep
you tuned in.
End of show makes us Jeffrey Corker with
a great WKRP takeoff.
Oystein Berger, Sir Chris Wilson with his Charlie
Kirk tribute.
Agent Cooper and Commodore Dubs, man.
We got a hootenanny for you all.
And we'll be back on Sunday.
We'll do more for you.
I'm sure there'll be something to deconstruct because

(03:31:16):
the media serves up bull crap as caviar
and we show you that it's just plain
old fish eggs.
Coming to you from the heart of the
Texas Hill Country in picturesque Fredericksburg, Texas, home
of the Java Ranch.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
And from northern Silicon Valley, where I remain,
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
We'll see you on Sunday.
Until then, adios, mofos.

(03:31:37):
Hui, hui.
Wait, I should remind you.
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
That's right.
Adios, mofos.
Hui, hui.
And such.
They're solid plastic, so don't settle for imitation.
But the senator, while insisting he was not
intoxicated, could not explain his nudity.

(03:32:01):
Baby, if you ever wonder Wonder whatever became
of me I'm living on the air and
getting old nation No agenda, Adam J.
C.
With Curry and Dvorak deconstructing M5M up and

(03:32:26):
down the dial Maybe you're a douchebag, never
donate But maybe think of us once in
a while We're at no agenda, showing it,
mole nation You wanna always get a ginjo?
A ginjo sake?
Ginjo is a G-I-N-J-O

(03:32:48):
G-I-N-G-O Gingo A J
-O You gotta write the first time G
-I-N-G-O Okay, yep.
Dvorak knows his hockey Dvorak

(03:33:20):
knows his hockey If it's in a blue
bottle It's always good G-I-N-G
-O G-I-N-G-O If it's
in a blue bottle It's always good I
woke on that September morning Half a world
away Word of a shooter That put a

(03:33:45):
man away Spelled the end of our innocence
Our eyes now open wide The world had
turned for the worse The day that Charlie
died When one man died Our cities burned
With Charlie we all prayed Reflected on society

(03:34:09):
And how far it's decayed You don't need
an opinion No need to take a side
To recognise the tragedy The day that Charlie
died We're told we can speak our minds

(03:34:31):
Say things that we must say While free
speech may cost nothing There's a price that
we might pay The words he shared for
all to hear His family by his side
I guess he paid the highest price The
day that Charlie died So raise your glass

(03:34:55):
for our fallen man And pray we may
not follow For a man who saw connection
Not attention that is hollow Integrity and dignity
Conviction, strength and pride And made the ultimate
sacrifice The day that Charlie died And we

(03:35:18):
all pray to the Father The Son and
Holy Ghost And some will pray to Mary
And consecrate the host For the soul of
our young Charlie His failings set aside Eternal
rest grant unto him The day that Charlie

(03:35:40):
died Eternal rest grant unto him The day
that Charlie died 33
hours Less than 36 33

(03:36:07):
hours We have made 33 historic 33 hours
33 hours I was praying that If this

(03:36:29):
had to happen here This had to happen
here There wouldn't be one of us In
the morning get pronation Are you ready for
some media deconstruction?
John C.

(03:36:50):
Dvorak, Adam Curry Better hurry just to see
what the boys are saying Help you understand
How to work it out Leave for me
the three T's Yes if you get any
value Then you give it back If I've

(03:37:16):
been deceiving Brainwashed slaves believing Here come the
lies again Thursday we can do it Sunday
we can do it again Shut up slave

(03:37:39):
The best podcast in the universe Audio Mofo
Dvorak.org slash N A Yuppers 1800 shows,
how sexy
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