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October 2, 2025 • 182 mins

No Agenda Episode 1804 - "Mucho Retardo"

"Mucho Retardo"

Executive Producers:

Sir Donald of the Fire Bottles

No Name

Commodore Semi-anonymous vegan

Associate Executive Producers:

Sir Adam of The Koch Empire.

Nathan Parker

Sean Homan

Eli the coffee guy

Anita suasso de Lima de Prado

Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning resumes

Peter Goodall

Secretary-General:

Sir Donald of the Fire Bottles - SG of Greater Idaho

Sir Occo, Secretary General of the wand of wabbits.

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Title Changes

Knights & Dames

Peter Johnson > Knight Peter of Castle Berry

Commodore Semi- anonymous vegan > Sir Occo of the land down under

Peter Goodall > Sir Slow 'n Steady

Art By: Joq 10

End of Show Mixes: Agent Looper - Jeffrey Crocker

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

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
I love it.
I'm a pig.
Adam Curry.
John C.
Dvorak.
It's Thursday, October 2nd, 2025.
This is your award-winning GiveOnNation Media assassination
episode 1804.
This is no agenda.
No shutdown here.
We're broadcasting live from the heart of the
Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region Number

(00:21):
6.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley where it's now
apparent that bald people only hire bald people.
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
It's crackpot and buzzkill.
In the morning.
Well, that's an interesting little tidbit.
I don't know if it's true.
Well, did you look at the military gathering
there in Washington, D.C.? It's like everybody's,

(00:45):
every guy, every general, every admiral's bald.
Correlation is not causation.
It's like when you, before TSA became TSA,
the modern TSA after Homeland Security, after the
9-11.
It was all Filipinos.
In San Francisco, they would just hire each
other.
Or you get a company, a gay guy
goes in there as a head of personnel.

(01:06):
Boom, the whole company's gay.
Like Apple.
This is the...
The cabal.
Situation.
It's the cabal.
It's like you're gay, you're bald.
You say, you know, I like the way
you look.
I'm going to give you the...
Wait a minute.
Could the military all be bald gay guys?

(01:26):
Anything's possible.
Well, that's good.
Yeah, well, I wasn't going there, but it's
possible.
Yeah, I guess.
Well, isn't that the definition of why we
need affirmative action?
To get people with hair back into the
military?
I don't think that was the reason.
Oh, okay.
Well, I was quite amazed when I saw
your clips come in this morning, because I

(01:47):
saw the return of a feature we have
not had for several months.
Yes, it's because this feature is produced by
Steve Jones.
Ah, the clip collector.
Indeed.
Shall we roll it out since we're talking
about bald guys?
Yes.
Hold on a second.
Hold on.
Hold on.
We've got to do the jingle, man.
Can't just stop in the middle of it.

(02:09):
Comparing stories from ABC, CBS, and NBC.
The never-ending 3x3.
Gotta have the jingle.
I mean, that's the whole point.
And, of course, the point of the 3x3
is that these guys can't do any independent
reporting.
It's all pretty much the same from different
people.
Here we go.
Let's start with NBC.

(02:30):
NBC.
The topic was shrouded in secrecy beforehand, and
security was tight.
Some of the nation's most senior military leaders
ordered to board buses at 3.30 a
.m. Oh, no.
And then wait hours for the event to
begin, according to defense officials.
This speech today is about people, and it's
about culture.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth telling generals and admirals

(02:52):
who'd flown in from all over the world
to get on board with a series of
changes.
If the words I'm speaking today are making
your heart sink, then you should do the
honorable thing and resign.
The new standards include new grooming rules that
prohibit beards and a requirement that everyone in
combat roles must meet the highest male standard

(03:14):
for physical fitness, a change that could impact
women in uniform.
If that means no women qualify for some
combat jobs, so be it.
He also plans to overhaul equal opportunity programs
and the role of the inspector general.
New recruits could also see changes, lifting restrictions
on how far drill instructors can go.
They can swear, and yes, they can put

(03:36):
their hands on recruits.
This does not mean they can be reckless
or violate the law, but they can use
tried and true methods to motivate new recruits.
Retired Lieutenant General Mark Herling is concerned about
the impact all of it may have on
troops.
To hear the kinds of things that came
out of the secretary's mouth shows that he

(03:56):
doesn't really respect them as contributors to the
combat arms or fighting our nation's wars.
President Trump today endorsing Hegseth's speech and repeating
his ultimatum.
If you don't like what I'm saying, you
can leave the room.
Of course, there goes your rank, there goes
your future.
In the president's remarks, which were highly political,
he also defended the use of troops in

(04:18):
American cities.
I told Pete we should use some of
these dangerous cities as training grounds for our
military.
Now, a couple of things.
First observation, and I'm quite sure the president
will be mad about this.
The continuous hum and buzz in the audio
was just atrocious.

(04:39):
It was across the board.
The president does not like that.
No, he doesn't.
He gets irked about it.
He knows it's not good because it's not
good for clippage.
The no agenda show, it's not good for
the no agenda show.
My boys!
And the other, just a local observation, is

(05:01):
when we elected a new sheriff here in
Gillespie County, new sheriff, my buddy Mike, who
you know Mike because I've talked about him.
He is the former Kerrville cop with anger
management issues.
Oh, yes, yes.
He's now the lieutenant.
And the first thing he did was no

(05:22):
beards and get rid of the fat guts.
It's like a thing.
This was not surprising to me.
And let me tell you, when it comes
to the Fredericksburg Police Department, although he has
no jurisdiction over that, but certainly over the
sheriff's department, yeah, we had fat sheriffs waddling
around.
And it's like PT, everybody, mandatory PT, height

(05:43):
and weight.
We got to get in shape and we
got to look good for the public.
That seems like not a very crazy thing,
but everyone was so upset about it.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
The thing they left out of that clippage
was the headset going on about how embarrassing
it is to have a bunch of fat
admirals in the Pentagon walking around.

(06:04):
I have that clip for later if you
want it.
Well, let's go to, that was NBC.
That was NBC.
Let's go to ABC.
ABC it is.
Unprecedented.
Oh.
I love this.
I love.
Actually, I think in my clip.
Radnitz is over.
She's a drama queen.

(06:25):
In my clip, I think they said Fox
News weekend host.
Did she say weekend host just to annihilate
him?
Oh, yeah, weekend host.
There it is.
They're not all combat tested.

(06:46):
I don't think that's true.
Can't you receive a star?
Who are we kidding here?
No more identity months.
DEI offices.
Now the audio is really bad.
I could not get past it.

(07:08):
Dudes in dresses.
Yeah.
No more climate change worship.
No more division, distraction, or gender delusions.
No more debris.
We are done with that.
While the generals and admirals sat largely silent
through the speech, Hegseth said military fitness and
standards will be enforced.
No more fat generals or admirals, he said.

(07:30):
I don't want my son serving alongside troops
who are out of shape.
Or in combat unit with females who can't
meet the same combat arms physical standards as
men.
For those ground combat roles, which women have
been performing for more than a decade, the
high male standard will now be the norm.
If that means no women qualify for some
combat jobs, so be it.

(07:51):
But Hegseth was not just talking personnel, but
policy.
The rules of engagement meant to protect civilians
and noncombatants, those, he said, have become too
politically correct.
We also don't fight with stupid rules of
engagement.
We untie the hands of our warfighters to
intimidate, demoralize, hunt, and kill the enemies of

(08:12):
our country.
President Trump then took the stage to address
the officers.
And if you don't like what I'm saying,
you can leave the room.
Of course, there goes your rank, there goes
your future.
Telling his audience of some of the most
experienced warfighters in their generation, the military should
practice on American cities.
I told Pete we should use some of

(08:33):
these dangerous cities as training grounds for our
military.
The trolling still works.
It's unbelievable.
It still works.
Yeah, we're going to throw them into the
cities, man.
We're going to train their urban combat warfare,
train in the cities.
I would stop the show.

(08:54):
I'm like, I'm sorry, generals, you got to
wait for a second.
We got a ground loop here.
Is that the end of that clip?
Yes, the end of the clip.
In the same way as NBC, did CBS
do anything different?
Well, not generally speaking, but CBS, I'm always
pushing these toward the end because CBS is

(09:16):
the one that's on the short leash.
Because the company's been taken over by Paramount.
So they're at the, it's like the, I'm
going to get fired anyway, so let's just
say what I feel like.
Nearly 800 of America's top military leaders were
summoned from around the globe.
Oh, he didn't use the warfighters meme.
Disappointing.
Apolitical officers who remained silent as their commander

(09:37):
-in-chief took the stage and offered this
greeting.
You can leave the room.
Of course, there goes your rank, there goes
your future.
That set the tone for more awkward moments
to come.
Did they all laugh when he said that?
I keep, it sounds to me like they're
laughing when he says that.
I watched the thing and I didn't notice
that they were laughing at the, at least
the micing that I heard.

(09:57):
That may have been sweetened, I noticed.
Everybody, no, ABC had it too.
They all had the same, maybe it's just
compressed noise, I don't know.
Staged and offered this greeting.
You can leave the room.
Of course, there goes your rank, there goes
your future.
That set the tone for more awkward moments
to come, including the president's suggestion that dangerous
U.S. cities, like those where National Guard

(10:19):
are currently deployed, should be used as training
grounds for U.S. troops.
This is going to be a major part
for some of the people in this room.
It's a war too.
It's a war from within.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth opened the meeting and
ripped into diversity initiatives put in place by
previous administrations.
Hold on a second.
He said that the troops are going to

(10:43):
be used in the cities as if it
was a done deal when Trump just said
it as kind of a joke, a troll.
Yeah.
But according to the CBS, no, that's what's
going to happen.
Which was not asserted by anybody.
No, but they did include the line, this
is a war from within, which to me

(11:04):
was the entire reason for the change of
the Department of War.
Can we treat each state as an individual,
like 60 day, does the timer reset for
each state we have a war?
Just asking for a friend.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth opened the meeting and
ripped into diversity initiatives put in place by

(11:25):
previous administrations.
No more identity months, DEI offices, dudes in
dresses.
No more climate change worship.
No more division, distraction or gender delusions.
That includes, he said, a return to the
highest male physical fitness standards.
I don't want my son male serving alongside

(11:46):
troops who are out of shape or in
combat unit with females who can't meet the
same combat arms physical standards as men.
And he took aim at the highest ranking
officers.
It's completely unacceptable to see fat generals and
admirals in the halls of the Pentagon and
leading commands around the country in the world.
It's a bad look.
Vermont Democrat Peter Welch said the meeting was
unnecessary and a bad idea.

(12:09):
It's a further effort to politicize the military.
It's very, very alarming.
There is no reason to bring all of
these people, the enormous taxpayer expense to Washington
to get a pep talk.
Hegseth told the audience they could disagree with
him.
But the words I'm speaking today are making
your heart sink.

(12:30):
Then you should do the honorable thing and
resign.
Yeah, well, it's interesting.
I'll bent out of shape over that.
Over the cost, please, Congress.
Yeah, I know.
The cost of flying them all in.
Congress takes military aircraft all the time.
Nancy Pelosi.
The military aircraft are going there anyway.

(12:53):
Hitch a ride.
Hitch a ride.
Well, there were a couple other things that
took place around the military and this and
this meeting.
I think this is from this is John
Berman from Anderson Pooper 360.

(13:13):
Some remarkable new reporting tonight on Defense Secretary
Pete.
Remarkable.
Remarkable.
Remarkable new reporting.
It's not just new reporting.
It's not just reporting.
It's remarkable new reporting.
Some remarkable new reporting tonight on Defense Secretary
Pete.
Long running battle with his own staff and
top advisers, as well as the country's top
military commanders.
It comes by the way of the Washington

(13:34):
Post.
There's the headline.
Pentagon plans widespread random polygraphs, NDAs to staunch
leaks.
Random testing and quoting from the report.
All military service members, civilian employees and contract
workers within the office of the defense secretary
and the joint staff.
Estimated to be more than 5000 personnel would
be required to sign a nondisclosure agreement that

(13:56):
prohibits the release of nonpublic information without approval
or through a defined process.
What are we going to do for our
sources?
That's according to a draft memo from Deputy
Defense Secretary Steve Feinberg.
Now, the polygraph.
No, of course, it's not new, but there's
a kicker at the end.
And a separate document also from Feinberg.
Again, this is according to the Post.

(14:17):
And this builds on earlier CNN reporting that
Secretary Hexeth had threatened then acting Joint Chiefs
Chairman Chris Grady with polygraph testing because he
believed Admiral Grady was leaking to undermine him.
Also, that his office had rolled out a
policy earlier this year requiring Pentagon officials across
the service to sign nondisclosure agreements before being

(14:37):
read in on projects, initiatives and other work
products.
And yes, it appears that all of this
from us and from the Post was leaked.
That's why it's remarkable.
I get it.
It was leaked.
Now, the president.
The president also gave us an update.
I'm not sure if this was before, during
or after.

(14:57):
It was the same podium on the on
the Golden Dome.
You know, this is our our our security
blanket all around the country.
The Golden Dome, everybody.
And we've begun construction on what we call
the Golden Dome missile defense shield.
It'll be the most sophisticated in the world.
You watch it do well until they had
some problems at the end with a little

(15:20):
bit of a lack of ammunition.
What is he talking about here?
What do we miss an update?
They had a little bit of a problem.
Was there an attack that wasn't thwarted?
Because we had a lot of noise talking
about it must be inside stuff for I
think.
I think so.
Like one of those little message you were
to the wise kind of thing that we

(15:41):
don't know.
But they've got that taken care of.
But I tell you, it's what we're doing
is so good and we deserve it.
You know, we help other countries with it.
We don't have it ourselves.
And Canada called me a couple of weeks
ago.
They want to be part of it.
To which I said, well, why don't you
just join our country?
Become 51, become the 51st state and you

(16:04):
get it for free.
So I don't know if that made a
big impact, but it does make a lot
of sense.
It actually because they're having a hard time
up there in Canada now.
Because as you know, with tariffs, everyone's coming
into our country.
We have off script now, more investment than
we've ever had before.
Seventeen trillion dollars coming in.

(16:25):
As an example, in four years, Biden didn't
have one trillion.
We have 17 trillion more than that in
eight months coming in.
Where's my check?
And they're coming in from Canada, Mexico, from
Europe, from all over.
AI auto plants.
Everybody's coming back to the United States.
But 17 trillion.

(16:46):
OK, well, that sounds that sounds interesting.
And then my favorite part of the summit
was the stair bopping.
We're witnessing the triumphant return of peace through
strength.
We have great peace through strength.
America is respected again as a country.
We were not respected with Biden.
They looked at him falling downstairs every day.
Every day the guy's falling downstairs.

(17:07):
He said, it's not our president.
We can't have it.
I'm very careful.
You know, when I walk downstairs, I come
on stairs like these stairs.
I'm very I walk very slowly.
Nobody has to set a record.
Just try not to fall because it doesn't
work out.

(17:28):
Well, I did laugh.
A few of our presidents have fallen and
it became a part of their legacy.
We don't want that.
You walk nice and easy and not have
it.
You don't have to set any record.
Be cool.
Be cool when you walk down.
But don't don't pop down the stairs.
So one thing with Obama, I have zero
respect for him as a president.
But he would bop down those stairs.

(17:49):
I've never seen that.
Did that.
Did that.
Because I wouldn't hold on.
I don't want to do it.
I guess I could do it.
But eventually, bad things are going to happen.
And it only takes once.
But he did a lousy job as president.
Just bafflingly funny.
Like, just, you know, gives a shout out

(18:12):
to Obama.
I didn't have respect from his president.
But man, he could walk stairs.
That guy was great at walking stairs.
Bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, bopping down.
Who was he?
He was dancing up there.
Was it President Ford who also tripped?
Ford tripped more than once.
Once it happens twice, you're done.
You're toast.
You're labeled.
You're labeled as a stair tripper.
And then Reuters, a fine North Sea Nexus

(18:36):
outfit, came up with this little ditty.
Another part of the Pentagon's push to reshape
the armed forces involves tapping Silicon Valley entrepreneurs
who are turning their talents to military tech.
That is the Bullfrog, an AI-powered machine
gun that tracks and shoots down drones.

(18:56):
It's built by Ellen Control Systems, founded by
Steve Simone, a former Silicon Valley star who
sold his startup to DoorDash for $125 million.
Defense and space reporter David Jeans has more
now on the entrepreneurs creating the future of
warfare.
I think what they bring with them is

(19:18):
they have a higher tolerance for risk, a
higher tolerance for failure, and a higher tolerance
for raising hype around their companies.
They also bring with them a new energy
to this space, which has disrupted the traditional
prime contractors like Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed
Martin.
David says that what's been most striking is

(19:40):
the speed at which Silicon Valley has shifted.
It was only in recent years that people
were protesting military companies and military work.
And now Silicon Valley and its investors are
all in on a more patriotic and more
military-focused approach.
I think that that has come with the

(20:02):
understanding that the world is starting to feel
like a less safe place.
And there's also an understanding that the U
.S. military is largely unprepared for the future
of warfare, and that Silicon Valley believes that
it has the answer to help it modernize.
Well, what Silicon Valley also brings is the
scam.

(20:23):
Oh, the scam angle, yeah.
And the scam, we've discussed this many times
before, but the scam angle in Silicon Valley,
probably before the AI rush, was we just
got to get users.
Well, it's still the same, of course, with
AI rush.
Eyeballs.
The eyeballs will make it up on volume.
Don't worry about it.
So right before the board meeting where you're
about to ask for more money, you go

(20:46):
to some of these companies called Monopoly, and
I forget all the names, and you buy
eyeballs, and they come by your site, and
look at these stats.
We're hockey-sticking.
We're to the right and up.
We need more money.
We need more money to be able to
cover it.
It's going great.
So Silicon Valley, they're doing the scam, and
it's working out pretty well.

(21:06):
Denmark is the main target because they've got
the money, apparently.
Denmark is on high alert after reporting several
drone incursions in recent weeks.
35 French soldiers are already on the ground.
France, the US, and Sweden have also sent
anti-drone systems.
But for many Danes, the deployment only underlines
their country's military vulnerability.

(21:28):
Some residents are now bracing for the worst.
Listen to this.
Listen to this.
Sarah just bought one of the survival kits
distributed by the Danish government.
Literally, it is a water, a foldable water
bag.
It's a cracker, and a radio flashlight.
Earlier in the year, people in the EU

(21:48):
were advised to stockpile enough food, water, and
essentials for 72 hours, part of a strategy
to increase readiness in the event of a
military attack or other national crises.
I got quite scared, and I really wanted
to do something.
I had a little less anxiety feeling.
The anxiety isn't unfounded.
Four times last week, two mysterious drones were

(22:09):
spotted over military bases and airports across the
country.
At the same time, three ships with Russian
links were spotted off the Danish coast.
Investigations are ongoing, but authorities say they may
have served as launch pads for the drones.
Denmark is among Europe's biggest donors to Ukraine,
and also hosts a factory that produces fuel
for its long-range missiles.
This is incredible, bullcrap, Silicon Valley scam.

(22:34):
I have two clips on this.
Well, let me play my final clip, because
the psyop is paying off.
Well, actually, what are your clips?
These are from Morning Edition on NPR.
Oh, yeah, good.
Yeah, let's play these.
This is good.
And this is after the drones.

(22:54):
I don't know how you can get...
The Danes are supposed to be the happiest
people on Earth.
Was it the Danes?
Yeah.
Yeah, it was the Danes.
Or the Norwegians.
I can't remember.
No, no, no.
It was the Danes.
The Norwegians are happy, but they're depressed.
They take a lot of antidepressants.
The Danes are happy.
They're happy.
They're happy.
But it seems to me, if they're happy,

(23:16):
they're so happy, and they just turn on
a dime into being, like...
Scared.
...afraid of their own shadow.
I need a radio flashlight with a hand
crank.
This is the part one.
The U.S. and other countries in NATO
have sent military troops and equipment to Denmark
to protect its capital while hosting meetings with

(23:38):
European Union leaders starting today.
Ukraine even sent some help, too.
A week of flights by unidentified drones caused
fear that Russia might be involved, but no
proof.
Terry Schultz reports from Copenhagen that many Danes
are rethinking their personal security.
The Danish government still can't say who staged
the mysterious drone flights every day and night

(23:59):
for a week.
It's a script now.
Mysterious drone flights.
It's the same as my clip.
It's all mysterious.
With ship...
Maybe launch from ships with links to Russia.
Sausage links?
With NATO allies and Ukrainian experts now rushing
to protect the capital, it's harder to tell
people not to be afraid.
Instead, Justice Minister Peter Homogaard warns them this

(24:22):
is their new reality.
We will be in a situation that is
also similar to this one again.
That is the nature of hybrid warfare.
For Trine, a hotel receptionist, the drones have
already caused too many sleepless nights.
We agreed not to share last names of
people we spoke to and requested.
Because we couldn't pronounce them anyway.

(24:43):
Given the widespread panic.
She's not the only one whose nerves are
frayed.

(25:04):
I am.
My kids are.
My family are.
We make these emergency plans.
What do we do?
So we actually, we prepped, we prepared.
That meant, she said, checking their canned food
supply, stocking up on water and reviewing their
plan with other family members in case physical
evacuation is needed.
Oh man, I have a...

(25:25):
Before we play the second clip, I have
a boots on the ground from one of
our producers, Paul in Denmark.
First of all, Copenhagen is gridlocked and helicopters
are flying overhead all the time because of
the stupid EU summit.
They're all at Christiansborg, the Parliament Palace, so
Slottsholmen is closed off and then some stuff

(25:45):
is happening in Fredrikstad where Amalie and Borg
and a lot of organizations and embassies are.
A conversation with people the last few days
gave me the following points.
Nobody believes anything.
So I don't know where they got these
Danes, but nobody believes anything.
Because the leaders, Mette Frederiksen and Lars Lokke

(26:08):
Rasmussen all point to Russia straight away while
police and defense forces still maintain they don't
know who it was.
An organized crime is an actual possibility.
So it's like, you know, I don't know
where they got these scared Danes from, but
that doesn't seem to be the boots on
the ground situation.
Well, this is the messaging that they're trying

(26:30):
to do then.
Yeah.
So this has been orchestrated.
You have clips.
You had a clip of it.
I got two clips of it.
Well, let me...
So there's somebody behind it for a reason.
We don't know what the reason is.
Oh, no, we do.
Of course we do.
Oh, to sell more junk?
Yes!
EU leaders that gathered in Copenhagen on Wednesday
gave broad support to proposals to ramp up
the development of drone and anti-drone technology.

(26:54):
Ahead of the meeting, the European Commission released
a document which outlines four projects that it
believes need to be financed and implemented as
a matter of urgency.
We need money right away.
We're all here meeting anyway.
It's not a coincidence that drones and mysterious
drones launch from ships that have links to
Russia.
We need money!
The summit and proposal come as Europe faced

(27:14):
a series of airspace violations in recent weeks.
So we have to create a European ecosystem
that will enable Europe to develop cutting-edge
drone solutions.
Yeah.
Inspired by what they are doing in Ukraine
already.
The leaders also discussed a proposal which outlines
the use of immobilized Russian assets to loan

(27:36):
money to Ukraine.
Under the plan, Ukraine would repay the loan
after Moscow agrees to compensate for damages.
Oh, sure.
The Commission would repay Euroclear, which would repay
Russia.
We are not confiscating the assets, but we
are taking the cash balances for loan to
Ukraine.
Ukraine has to pay back this loan if

(27:58):
Russia pays reparations.
The plan earned broad support, but was met
with resistance by Belgian Prime Minister Bart De
Wever.
Von der Leyen sought to assure his reservations
and clarified Belgium cannot be the only member
state to carry risks.
They've had their eye on this money for
so long.
You know, they keep looking at it.
They want this money so bad.

(28:19):
They finally have figured out a way and
it's the best plan ever.
We'll slush fund it through Ukraine.
We'll put it in our pockets because what
are we really talking about?
Some jamming devices.
These are all little tiny dumb drones.
And, you know, the 800-3 maybe get
through so it doesn't seem like we already

(28:40):
need, we already have some kind of defenses.
And, oh, by the way, if this whole
thing comes to an end, Ukraine's on the
hook.
You guys pay for it.
We're going to take it.
This is theft.
To me, it seems obvious.
They're stealing this money.
But, you know, we're not taking Russia's money.
No, we're just loaning it to Ukraine.

(29:01):
But, you know, if there's a ceasefire, if
there's a peace deal, Ukraine will pay it
back from Russia's own money, from their own
reparations.
Give me a break.
This isn't...
It's great.
It's such a scam.
It's how you do it, I guess.
It's like, wow, come on, man.
You're such a creative bookkeeper.
Very creative.
Very, very creative.

(29:21):
All right.
Do we need to play your other Morning
Edition clip or are we good on the
drones?
By the other one, there's the two about...
Oh, Pfizer.
About the drones.
The other ones are different if you want
to play those.
The other drone, yeah.
It's changing the topic.
Oh, OK.
Like other Nordic governments, Denmark urges citizens to
store enough supplies to survive a minimum of

(29:42):
three days with no access to electricity, food,
or fresh water.
Oh, man.
Since the drones first appeared...
What do they expect to happen?
And how is this going to stop the
drones?
At least I've got water.
At least I've got a candy bar and
a flashlight radio.
It's silly.
I mean...

(30:02):
And the fact that...
Give me a Starlink or something.
You know, this is dumb.
Yeah, that would be usable.
Yeah.
...food or fresh water.
Since the drones first appeared September 22nd, people
seem to be taking the recommendations more seriously
than before.
A home goods store in a Copenhagen suburb.
Sales associate Peter Sandel said 20 liter containers

(30:25):
of water were going fast.
Like hotcakes.
This morning, we have this, this, and this
full.
Alejandra and Alexander snagged the last camping stove
on the store's shelf.
They said until now they'd half-heartedly followed
the government advice on stockpiling.
But the airspace incursions were a wake-up
call.
We bought all the water and all that

(30:47):
was before the drones.
So now with the drones, we were like,
we need to get the last stuff that
is on the list.
It's been a jolt for Danish authorities as
well, says Jakob Hallgren with the Swedish Institute
of International Affairs.
Sweden also went through a period like this
shortly after the start of Russia's full-scale
war on Ukraine, he explained.
And invested a lot in renovating and expanding

(31:09):
its network of bomb shelters.
Hallgren advises the Danish government to do the
same.
Living in Denmark, you might have kind of
thought that you were shielded from these developments,
but this is obviously no longer the case.
So if they haven't, it's a really high
time to make sure that those shelters are
repaired and that there is proper information about

(31:29):
where you can find them.
In the meantime, Trine says she knows what
she'd like to do about those disruptive drones.
She joked to her policeman husband she'd like
to borrow one of his weapons.
And then my daughter, she's 20, she said,
aw, dad, give her a pursuit.
She emphasizes she was kidding.
But she hopes the Danish government does decide

(31:50):
to shoot the drones down if they show
up again.
Oh, man.
You know what?
I can almost predict what's going to happen
next.
President Trump is going to come out with,
well, you've got to give us Greenland if
you want to be safe.
Oh, that would be a great, that's a
good one.
Can almost predict it.
That would be a terrific move.
But, you know, you want to be safe.
Like, we can expand the Golden Dome to

(32:11):
Greenland.
And we'll give you a little annex over
to Denmark.
This is, I mean, well, I don't believe,
I think they've just got a bunch of
numb nuts because of our boots on the
ground.
Like, no one believes it.
They all think it's bull crap.
The drones have flashing red lights.
Yeah, that's what I'm going to do if
I'm Russia.

(32:31):
I'm going to send a mysterious drone over
and announce it with a big flashing red
light.
You know, the funny thing is about it
is they're all freaked out about the bomb
shelters and all the rest.
And like the clip we played in the
last show where they talk about the Russians
launched 900 drones into Ukraine and three people

(32:53):
were killed.
And I brought up, I keep bringing up
this lack of consistency or logic.
You said 900 drones to kill three people?
What is Denmark worried about?
They got enough people.
How many people do they have?
I don't know what their population is, but

(33:15):
it doesn't matter with four or five drones
compared to 900.
Yeah, it seems rather odd.
And they're worried that they're going to attack
Copenhagen?
Why?
Well, because they have a monarchy.
You know, North Sea Nexus.
They're under attack.

(33:36):
I mean, I really have no idea.
Well, they can spend money.
And by the way, that stupid clip you
played earlier about that automated machine gun that
uses AI to pop the drones out of
the sky.
That thing will take out a flock of
geese and it'll become the most controversial product
ever.
Oh, look at this.
There's a hundred geese.

(33:56):
They're all dead.
They're trying to go down south.
Well, I hadn't thought about that.
But it's, I mean, isn't it obvious?
It's going to definitely kill birds.
But isn't it obvious to people that the
European Union meets in Copenhagen?
I don't even know why they would go
there.
They've got offices.
It's a pretty town.
That's why.

(34:16):
They've got offices in Luxembourg.
They've got offices in Belgium.
Yeah, Luxembourg.
Copenhagen is one of the prettiest.
If anyone wants to travel, they speak a
lot of English there.
And Copenhagen is one of the prettiest towns
in the world.
Yes.
So they went there for a fun time.
And then they brought out some drones.
I could have flown that drone over the

(34:36):
airport.
Who knows who's doing that?
It's the same thing as the New Jersey
drones.
It could be some jokers.
Launched from the Chinese mothership.
And we fell for it.
I mean, we didn't, but...
We didn't fall for it.
But the people on the East Coast did.
Oh, yeah, we want to know.
But they didn't panic like these guys.
They weren't getting water and diving into the

(34:56):
bomb shelters, no.
Water.
That's true.
And radio, flashlight radios.
Come on.
The hand crank?
The hand crank ones?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, hand crank, of course.
Of course, someone had a...
China had another stockpile of those.
Throw them out.
Give them to them.
Gotta get rid of these things.
Yeah, the PSYOPs are good today.

(35:17):
Can I just take a little detour?
Just a quick one with two clips.
Because we identified these PSYOPs taking place through
Discord.
Oh, yes, yeah.
And it's now everywhere.
They even have a name.
And although they don't mention Discord in this

(35:37):
first report, they flash on the screen a
Discord login.
Listen to this.
This is Morocco.
After a crowd disperses in the city of
Wedge down the northeast of Morocco, a police
van drives straight into protesters, injuring one of
them.
An incident that happened on the fourth day
of national protests would show no sign of
dying down.

(35:58):
Initial peaceful gatherings called for a reform of
the education system and improvements to health care.
But protesters say the government has been neglecting.
Protesters by now greater in number on Tuesday
night clashed with security forces in several cities
across the country.

(36:19):
Demonstrators threw stones at police who responded with
dozens of arrests.
Here close to Agadir, vehicles were overturned or
set alight.
Violence that Morocco's Association for the Defense of
Human Rights condemned.
The violence and oppression we've seen in the
past few days are really unprecedented.

(36:39):
For the first time since at least the
1980s, the youth can't even protest.
They're being repressed, dispersed before they can even
assemble and chant their slogans.
The protest movement's organizers, the little-known collective
Gen Z212, have also called for calm.
And in a communique issued on Tuesday night,

(37:01):
Morocco's coalition government said it would listen to
the protesters' demands and that it was willing
to respond in a positive and responsible manner.
So this is the new group, Gen Z212.
They activate these kids on Discord and they're
doing the same thing in Madagascar.
Under mounting pressure from the streets, Madagascan President

(37:22):
Andre Azouel says he's dissolving the government.
The leader forced to take action after several
days of protests across the country.
Maybe we haven't lived up to your expectations.
Or listened to your cries or your fears.
What began as a youth-led movement against

(37:42):
frequent power and water cuts quickly grew into
a larger wave of discontent.
The president just keeps lying.
He doesn't listen to us.
All we want is for him to step
down.
We want change.
At the forefront of the movement is Gen
Z.
Despite the violent crackdowns, bloody clashes with police,
leaving several dead and dozens injured, the young

(38:05):
protesters are vowing to continue accusing others of
taking advantage of the unrest.
We were peaceful.
We were singing, shouting, calling for our rights,
the right to live.
But then some people took advantage of the
situation and others acted out, not really following
the Gen Z movement's peaceful approach.
Despite its abundance of natural resources, Madagascar remains

(38:27):
one of the poorest countries in the world,
with three quarters of the population living below
the poverty line.
Gen Z.
Gen Z.
This is it.
This is the new Arab Spring.
Oh, we need bread.
We don't have any bread.
There's a bread thing over there.
This is Gen Z 212.
This is an op.
And the Madagascar government, the president dismissed the

(38:50):
government over it.
Oh, well, listen to these Gen Z-ers.
The Gen Z-ers.
Oh, yeah, they're in control now.
Please.
We have a Discord thing happening here.
In San Francisco or in your house?
Well, San Francisco's where Discord is.
Yeah.
But you can set up your own Discord
server.

(39:11):
You don't need to be part of the
Discord company.
I think it's, isn't it just open-source
software at this point?
Ah, you know, the whole thing seems like
an Intel op to me.
Well, it is.
People's Sick Day.
Play this clip.
This is the latest.
Because I guess blackout didn't go anywhere.
People's Sick Day.
What if millions of us stopped working, stopped

(39:32):
spending, and stopped producing all at the same
time?
There's a movement brewing.
It's called the People's Sick Day.
And what it is is a three-day
economic blackout.
That means no work, no shopping, no production,
just pause.
Three days where we remind the system that
without us, nothing moves.
But here's the twist.
We're not giving out the dates until 48

(39:55):
hours before.
Because we don't want to give the corporations
time to plan and stop us from having
this happen.
Because let's be honest, if they knew what
we were planning, they'd shut it down before
it even started.
This isn't a protest.
This is a strategic disruption to the machine
that feeds off of our hard work and

(40:16):
labor.
If you want to be a part of
it, go to thepeoplessickday.com.
Join the Discord and join the movement.
This is how we stand up against what
is happening in our country.
We need to shut it down.
We need to shut it down.
So go to thepeoplessickday.com, sign up for
the Discord, and you can get more information

(40:37):
there.
Yeah, Discord is open source.
You can set up your own Discord.
And it feels so, you know, like underground.
TikTok is rife with people talking about the
people's Discord.
Let's see what this is.
It's a chronically ill Discord.

(40:57):
Oh, she's just chronically ill.
Okay, never mind.
She's not people sick.
She's chronically ill.
Discord, man, that's the thing.
It is an op machine.
We made Discord for gamers like ourselves, but
other engineers have found it to be a
great tool.
I'll bet they do.

(41:18):
And it's so easy.
These kids are all hopped up on medication
anyway.
Psy-op them, these Gen Z-ers.
Z-ers.
Gen Z 212.
It's a new world, John.
Oh, it's the same old world.

(41:39):
It's the same old world.
They just keep moving the goalposts around.
Now we're just supposed to hate our children.
Now we hate our children.
Gen Z children.
I hate you, child.
You're my child.
I hate you.
You're ruining everything with your people sick day.
Gen Z.
People sick day.
People sick day.
That's just going to go nowhere.
Well, no, of course not.
Because they don't have the agitators in place

(42:00):
like they do in these other countries.
And also they're not cutting the power.
I'm sure that doesn't help.
No, you got to cut the power.
Yeah, that's the best way to go.
So I have a couple, just as a
little side bit, I got a couple AI
clips here.
Okay.
Not AI clips, but AI versions of, you

(42:23):
know, they're starting to, I don't know if
you followed the sombrero scandal.
How could I not?
Well, it's possible.
One of the funniest things this year.
When I mentioned it to Mia, she said,
what are you talking about?
Really?
Well, she's busy running for city council.
So, and if anyone hasn't heard the original,
now this is not safe for work.

(42:44):
Oh.
Woo.
This is the AI Schumer.
This is what started it off.
This was the original one.
This has got a.
Oh, no beeps.
No beeps.
There's no beeps.
Okay.
All right.
This has got Schumer standing next to Jeffries,
who's wearing a sombrero with a big mustache.
Look guys, there's no way to sugar coat
it.

(43:05):
Nobody likes Democrats anymore.
We have no voters left because of all
of our woke trans bullshit.
Not even black people want to vote for
us anymore.
Even Latinos hate us.
So, we need new voters.
And if we give all these illegal aliens
free healthcare, we might be able to get
them on our side so they can vote
for us.
They can't even speak English.

(43:26):
So, they won't realize we're just a bunch
of woke pieces of shit.
You know?
At least for a while until they learn
English and they realize they hate us too.
You know, now I'm really realizing how poor
a job of AI that is.
It doesn't even sound remotely like Schumer.
I think it does.
Oh no.
They trained it on his voice.
I don't think so at all.

(43:47):
And there's a...
After that ran, there was a bunch of
press conferences about what a scandal this is
and how terrible, racist the Trump administration is.
Schumer was bent out of shape about it.
He felt very upset.
And it's gone to the point where now
Vance is going to be giving out red
sombreros that say, make America great again.

(44:09):
And so, there was a...
The last thing that came out is this,
which is the AI Vance.
This is Vance with his sombrero on.
But this is, again, this is all fake.
It's not Vance.
And his sombrero's junk.
It's just a phony looking thing.
And this is what he did.
Okay, esto es mucho simple.
El Democrat Party es mucho retardo.

(44:31):
Okay?
Mucho retardo.
Wow.
Especially el Joaquimo Jeffries y el Chuco Schumer.
They are extra retardo.
So, el Presidente and I cannot negotiate with
these Democrat retardos.
It's imposible.
Mucho imposible.
Gracias, amigos.
Oh, and make sure you el-voto for
LJD Vanso in el 2028.

(44:53):
The whole thing.
And the funny part is, is that the
whole shutdown is really playing right into President
Trump's cards.
I mean, this is part of Doge.
Like, we're going to riff people.
Reduction in force.
It's almost like it was planned, and they
took the bait.
Yeah, well, they've been doing it.

(45:14):
It's kind of consistent, taking the bait.
That's just like, wow, don't you see it?
Especially, and they like to play the old
clips.
I didn't make it.
This is all over the place, but there's
a collection of Schumer clips.
It goes back to 2009, where he goes
on and on about how stupid it is
to shut down the government, and he would
never do it, and blah, blah, blah.
And it's one clip after another of him

(45:35):
saying pretty much the same thing, which is
crazy to shut down the government.
It's just something the Republicans want to do.
We would never do it.
I would never vote for this.
And he'd just go on and on.
And I guess, according to some reports, Mike
Johnson had a reel of all these Democrats
saying pretty much the same thing that he
had running outside of his office on a
monitor.
Just a bunch of, you know, a super

(45:58):
cut after another.
I have a couple of shutdown theater clips,
which I think are probably relevant.
We're going back to the pooper box.
We believe that layoffs are imminent.
They are, unfortunately, a consequence of this government
shutdown.
In fact, that's not normally a consequence of
government shutdowns.
Furloughs are.
So is working without pay.

(46:19):
But typical or not, the White House is
doing it, and the House speaker today defended
it.
Look, if Russ Vought has to make tough
decisions, whoever is the director of the office
of management and budget in a scenario like
this has to make tough choices.
We're talking about permanently firing people.
Well, I'm not sure that hasn't happened before,
but if the authority is there and he
sees a program that is wasting taxpayer dollars,

(46:41):
you and I can both agree the government
doesn't do everything in the most efficient manner.
I mean, constitutionally, that's your job.
Article 1, that is your job.
It is until Chuck Schumer decides to hand
the keys to the president, which is literally
what he's doing.
Boom, there it is.
Yeah, it's great.
That's exactly what happened.
It was, like, played right into it.
It's unbelievable.
And, of course, it's sad because a lot

(47:02):
of people will lose their jobs.
I think we're going to see hundreds of
thousands of reduction in force, which is, if
you look at the Doge executive order, it's,
like, all in play.
It was very, very odd.
So you have another one here.
The administration is also using the crisis to
either pause or cancel billions of dollars in

(47:24):
already appropriated spending in blue states, including $18
billion for two big mass transportation projects here
in New York.
Vice President Vance was asked about that today.
Does announcing that today mean that you guys
are going to squeeze Chuck Schumer's home state
until he blinks?
Look, I haven't talked to Russ about this

(47:44):
this morning, but, look, I'm sure that Russ
is heartbroken about the fact that he's unable
to give certain things to certain constituencies.
The Russ he is referring to is Russell
Vogt, the White House budget director.
The vice president was also asked about the
racist AI videos of Minority Leader Jeffries the
president has been posting on social media.

(48:05):
This is the latest from today.
Is it helpful to post pictures of Leader
Jeffries and his sombrero if you're trying to
have good faith talks with him?
Oh, I think it's funny.
The president's joking, and we're having a good
time.
You can negotiate in good faith while also
poking a little bit of fun at some
of the absurdities of the Democrats' positions and
even, you know, poking some fun at the

(48:26):
absurdity of the Democrats themselves.
With thousands of federal workers now either working
without pay, not working at all, or even
facing layoffs, and millions of Americans not able
to access federal services, it's hard to see
this as an opportunity to, as the vice
president has said, be having a good time.
But there it is.
What I'm missing in all of these reports,

(48:47):
where's your Mexican-Americans who are all mad
about this?
We're not mad about it.
No, of course not.
They've got no sense of humor.
Of course, that's the whole point.
It's like they can't even find one Mexican
to say...
You'd think they'd find one Mexican to say
something.
You can pay one Mexican to say it.
It's racist.
Here's the continuation of this.

(49:09):
So, we played sound for Vice President Vance,
not just defending that AI racist video of
Minority Leader Jeffries wearing a sombrero, but also,
like, celebrating that video.
And it was playing on a loop in
the briefing room today.
What are you hearing from the inside about
that?
It was not only just playing on a
loop in the briefing room.
If you've never been in the press briefing
room, for those who haven't, there are loudspeakers

(49:30):
overhead, so you can hear announcements or what's
being said or if there's an event going
on with the president in the Rose Garden,
for example.
They were playing that mariachi music as well
over the loudspeakers for all the press that
was coming in and out of the White
House today inside the press briefing room.
It just kind of gives you a window,
John, into how they're dealing with this and
how they believe they have the upper hand

(49:50):
when it comes to the messaging here.
And there's a moment here.
They're being heavily criticized over this, over these
posts by the president, by Democrats.
And instead of backing off or apologizing for
it, they're leaning into it.
And they're playing the music over loudspeakers and
on repeat inside the briefing room because they
simply don't care about that criticism.
It's like playing Metallica outside the Taliban enemy

(50:10):
camp.
You know, it's like, come on.
This is so typical.
We've even done it.
It's what you do.
Remember this?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Hey!
No, no, no, no, no.

(50:34):
Hey!
Obama!
Obama!
Ah, good times.
Good times.
Miss Obama.
I miss him.
By the way, I didn't get any clips,
but did you hear Michelle in their latest
podcast with her shrink?
Oh, goodness.
I must have missed it.
What did she say?

(50:55):
She goes on a rampage about how her
and the girls, and especially her, just couldn't
take it because the way Barack chewed.
Really?
And they were on and on about it.
You're at the end of your marriage when
that's irritating.
No kidding.
That's kind of end of days.

(51:17):
I don't get it.
He's just, it's disgusting, she says, to watch
him chew.
Wow.
I remember my second wife, as it was
ending, she got mad because the way I
clinked my spoon into the bowl of cereal.
That's so annoying.
Yes, typically that is when a woman is
fed up.
She's at the end.

(51:37):
She's at the end.
It's done.
Yeah, this is what's going on here.
In fact, they played that clip on Gutfeld
when Drew Pinsky was on, and he said
exactly what you just said.
He says, this sounds like the end of
the relationship when things like chewing drive you
nuts.
The way the guy chews, I mean, come
on.

(51:57):
Here's a CBC report on the racist deepfakes.
The fight has become deeply personal after President
Donald Trump posted AI videos on social media
attacking his opponents.
One video shows Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic House
leader, wearing a photoshopped sombrero and mustache, while
an AI Schumer makes derogatory comments about Black

(52:21):
and Latino voters.
Jeffries called it fake and racist.
Oh, I think it's funny.
The president's joking, and we're having a good
time.
The vice president says good faith negotiations can
take place in this environment, dismissing concerns.
Hakeem Jeffries said it was racist, and I
know that he said that, and I honestly
don't even know what that means.

(52:41):
This is symbolic of the bitterness of this
moment.
With no sign a resolution is in the
near future.
Do you remember when, I think it was
Trump's first term, he had some Native Americans
in the Oval Office, and he was like,
you know, we've got Pocahontas in Congress.
Do you remember that?

(53:03):
Only vaguely.
It'd be nice to have a clip of
it.
I'm actually looking.
I don't think so, but it was funny.
Well, I got some government shutdown clips.
And what I'd like to know before we
get to your clips, does this bother government
employees?
We have a lot of them listening.

(53:23):
That this jokery is going on.
I don't think so yet, because it started
October 1st.
Checks aren't until the 15th.
I presume they get paid every two weeks,
right?
I don't know.
I think so.
Here's an air traffic controller.
I'm an air traffic controller in the Western
U.S. A lot of confusion regarding the

(53:44):
government shutdown in ATC.
By law, ATC must operate.
Controllers must show up to work even during
a shutdown.
The FAA has emergency funding through Thursday night
at midnight in the event the shutdown isn't
over by then.
After that, the agency and controllers will be
operating on an IOU.
By law, all federal employees will receive back
pay once the government reopens.

(54:04):
During the last shutdown in 2019, controllers missed
two paychecks.
On the last day of the $0 paycheck,
about 10 controllers at the critical Jacksonville Center
called off sick, causing severe delays.
There were also excessive sick outs at other
key facilities.
Since controllers now know that we can use

(54:25):
sick leave without being charged, there's no incentive
to come to work if we're not going
to get paid anyway.
Our union, NATCA, is spineless and basically begging
us to do the right thing and not
call off sick.
I predict once funding runs out on Friday,
there will be mass sick outs, crippling airlines,
forcing Congress to do their job and pass
a spending bill reopening the government.

(54:47):
You're servant of the skies and master of
the microphone.
So that's no one mad about the sombrero.
No one's going to get mad about the
sombrero except Jeffries and Schumer.
Yeah, yeah.
They're the targets.
Same with Customs Border Patrol boots on the
ground.
We were told to come to work tomorrow

(55:07):
no matter what.
We are HR and in charge of onboarding.
A few days ago, they were designating just
three or four employees to come in and
bring new hires on board.
As of now, though, we're all going to
work.
We'll get a paycheck for September 22nd through
the 30th and get back pay for the
rest later.
But the shutdown will only really negatively impact
us if the shutdown goes through October 24th.

(55:29):
So, you know, we have some time here
for the more sombrero videos.
The difference is five Democrats.
If they can get five, which is not
a lot, five moderates to feel the pressure
and then change their vote and the next
thing you know, it's done.
That shouldn't take too long.
I don't think they're pushing it right now
because I think they do want to do

(55:50):
what you said, which is entrap the Democrats
so they can start firing people.
But let's go with this government shutdown.
This is from NPR.
Oh, you've got a series.
Oh, goodness.
Well, I'm sorry.
No, this is from NTD.
So it's more it's more objective.
Day one of government shutdown.

(56:11):
Senate Democrats blocked a procedural vote to reconsider
a stopgap bill to reopen the government.
Our Washington correspondent, Luis Eduardo Martinez, has the
latest on the story.
Republicans thought that they could barrel us into
a shutdown because they didn't want to protect
the health care of the American people.
Well, now they've seen they can't bully us.

(56:32):
They can't barrel us.
They don't have the votes to push their
partisan bill through that did nothing to protect
American health care.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has maintained his
maximalist demands, despite that members of his conference
have already shown opposition to hold government funding
hostage.
We were elected to solve the problems of
this country, not make them worse.

(56:54):
And that's exactly what Donald Trump and his
Republican henchmen are seeking to do.
Does that language still work?
His his henchmen.
Henchmen.
By the way, what does it say?
Why did you barrel me?
What is he talking?
What barrel?
Oh, the Republicans are trying to barrel us.
What?
What?
I don't know.

(57:14):
Have you ever heard that phrase before?
Or that wordage?
Like that term?
Barrel?
Like what is it?
What is it?
Stretch over a barrel.
Pull us up.
Put us over a barrel.
Over a barrel.
Like I haven't heard it in this way.
No.
I think he just it just came to
me.
He said it once and he had to
say it again.

(57:34):
It's just he's an idiot.
Let's play part two.
It is now a messaging war.
And despite the fact that Congress holds the
power of the purse, Democrats are blaming President
Trump for the shutdown.
Republicans maintain their willingness to negotiate with Democrats
their extension of Affordable Care Act health care
tax credits that they are demanding.
This is not the time to take the

(57:56):
American.
You meant to back up.
I thought I heard him say the Horrible
Care Act.
People hostage.
Affordable.
Negotiate with Democrats their extension of Affordable Care
Act health care tax credits that they are
demanding.
Now, I would just stop you for a
second.
So what exactly are they talking about?
Because the Republicans say, well, they just want

(58:18):
free health care for illegal immigrants.
And the Democrats are saying that your Obamacare,
your affordable health Affordable Care Act premiums will
go up over 100 percent.
Which which one do you understand to be
true?
If either.
The Republican position is true.
For one thing, the change in any of
the Obamacare stuff doesn't take place until after

(58:40):
this continuing resolution is already done.
Right.
So it's not even within this period.
So that's that's bullcrap.
And if that good point is not until
2026.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's nonsense.
And so the other thing is, is it's
obvious that because they've said it.
I mean, Maxine Waters said it.
And this is what that Indian guy said

(59:00):
it, that they want to keep up payments,
top notch health care for the illegal immigrants.
Maxine Waters said it like that.
She's she was they had like it was
what's his name?
The pillow guy has his little TV network.
Mike Lindell, the pillow Mike Lindell's TV.
And they had some girl hounding Maxine harassing

(59:25):
her, basically going on and on and on.
And then got her Maxine to say, say,
isn't just just for health care for illegals.
And then she kept hounding her and Maxine
got pissed off.
She says, look, we want health care for
everybody, period.
And walked off.
Hmm.
So that's what it's about.
It's about premium health care.

(59:45):
I have, I have, I mean, I have
the clip.
I have the clip.
Hold on.
Maxine Waters snapped when a reporter asked her
about Democrats forcing a government shutdown over health
care for illegal immigrants, which is weird because
usually she loves talking about giving away other
people's money.
Well, America's quit it.
Stop it.

(01:00:06):
This is the kind of journalism we don't
need.
No, you're not.
No, you're being divisive.
No, please don't.
You don't need to ask that question.
You're just trying to get controversy here.
You're not going to get it from me.
We want to save healthcare for all people.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Congresswoman Maxine.
We're all people.

(01:00:27):
Yeah.
All people.
Healthcare.
Yes.
So that's so the Republicans are right.
Okay.
We continue.
This is not the time to take the
American people hostage.
The ACA credits don't run out until December,
but the best way to do that is
to open the government and let's get back
to this thing called regular order.

(01:00:48):
So we can have those debates.
We can have those committee hearings.
We can have those negotiations.
Senate Republicans are focusing their messaging on moderate
Democrats, calling on them to vote for the
continuing resolution to reopen government for more Democrats
are needed to do so.
She don't think it's going to be that
long of a shutdown.
This is a pure guess from the vice

(01:01:08):
president United States, because I think you already
saw some evidence that moderate Democrats are cracking
a little bit.
They understand the fundamental illogic of this.
Chuck Schumer at the behest of a bunch
of liberal far left activist groups has walked
his Democrat colleagues into a boxed Canyon.
The continuing resolution that house Republicans pass and

(01:01:31):
Senate Republicans support extends levels of government funding
set by Democrats during the Biden administration.
Republicans have also chosen not to enact the
spending cuts proposed by the department of government
efficiency.
Ultimately, Democrats have already voted for current levels
of government funding 13 times in the past.
Yeah.
Yeah.

(01:01:54):
Yeah.
So this is kind of nuts.
Let's go to part three.
Good evening, Mari.
What is the white house saying about the
government shutdown?
Good evening.
Yes.
The white house is blaming Democrats for the
government shutdown saying that it impacts active duty
troops, critical food assistance and flood insurance as
we enter hurricane season.
And vice president JD Vance today is saying

(01:02:14):
this at a surprise appearance at the white
house press briefing.
Watch whatever those disagreements are.
You don't shut down the government over it
for the first time since the Democrats have
been in politics.
They're now saying that unless we get every
policy item that we demand, we're going to
shut down the people's government.
They're trying to take a hostage and we're
not going to let them.
The white house website featuring a government shutdown

(01:02:37):
clock and the press secretary leaving this message
on the white house comment line.
Thank you for calling the white house comment.
Democrats in Congress have shut down the federal
government because they care more about funding healthcare
for illegal immigrants than they care about serving
you.
Meanwhile, vice president Vance says he doesn't think
the shutdown will be long.

(01:02:57):
He's calling on more moderate Democrats today to
join Republicans in voting to keep the government
open.
So three moderate Democrats joined 52 Republicans last
night.
We need five more.
While Republicans have offered a clean short term
budget bill, the white house criticizing Democrats for
holding the economy hostage for what it calls
free healthcare for illegal immigrants.

(01:03:18):
So Democrats say that's not what they're demanding.
Political leadership of their party has got it
into their heads that the only way to
be compassionate is to be compassionate to illegal
aliens rather than American citizens.
No, the law, the law is clear that
no Medicaid, no Medicare, no ACA can go
to any undocumented immigrants.
Hmm.
So Fetterman voted, uh, for the continuing resolution,

(01:03:43):
Cortez Mastro from Nevada and King from Maine.
That's interesting that man, they must be hating
Fetterman right now.
It turns out to be a pretty, pretty
funny dude.
Yeah.
Everyone's surprised by that.
You see, he's actually kind of down to
earth.
Yeah.
When he had the stroke, that's when he

(01:04:04):
was, became a Democrat, you know, then that
kind of ebbed away and then it became
normal again.
It says something, doesn't it?
This is part, I got part four you
play.
And Tiff, I don't know if you've seen
this, but the white house has been replaying
this meme in the briefing room.
It's, um, a post that president Trump originally
put on his truth social of house minority

(01:04:25):
leader, Hakeem Jeffries in a sombrero.
Don't cop out through a racist and fake
AI video.
When I'm back in the oval office, say
it to my face.
Hakeem Jeffries said it was racist.
And I know that he said that.
And I honestly don't even know what that
means.
Like, is, is, is he a Mexican American

(01:04:46):
that is offended by having a sombrero meme?
The president's joking and we're having a good
time.
Vice president Vance says he makes the solemn
promise to stop the sombrero memes.
If Hakeem helps reopen the government, we're going
to, we're going to sombrero meme you bro.
Wow.
Stop this sombrero memes.

(01:05:08):
It's, it's notable that Vance is really the
mouthpiece for this.
President Trump is, you know, he just reposted
what, and by the way, if that was
a, an AI meme, someone needs to turn
their large language model.
And it wasn't all that great.
No, they're talking about the AI part was
Schumer's voice.
Right?
Well, even the rest of it, that wasn't,
I mean, even when the, the faith, the

(01:05:30):
one with Vance, which we played and had
the sombrero on his head, the sombrero was
fixed.
Yeah.
So when Jeffrey's with his sombrero, when he
turned, it's like the sombrero didn't move in
at all.
It was just stuck on the frame.
It's bullcrap.
It's very poorly done to be honest.
Yes, but, but Vance is the, is the
mouthpiece that, and that's noticeable, noticeable.

(01:05:54):
I just think that's notable.
Let's put it that way.
Vance is the one that is doing the
talking here.
Of course he's, he's, he seems to be
the point man for the, for the sombrero.
Hey Vance, you take the sombrero stuff.
I'm going to go to, I'm going to
go get Greenland.
I'll get Greenland.
You get Jeffrey's.

(01:06:14):
Yeah.
Wow.
That's, that's pretty incredible.
Okay.
So I, I predict two weeks.
What do you think?
Oh, it might have not even go that
long.
I mean, the last time they, during the
Trump's first term, they did have a one
month.
It was a month.
Yeah, it took a month.
I remember that.
And that was the longest ever.
So who knows?

(01:06:35):
Hmm.
Back to AI.
Hold on one second.
They're going to have to give on something.
the, the Democrats, the Republicans.
No, the, yeah, they'll have to give the
Democrats.
They don't.
You think the Democrats will just fold because
of the sombrero?
Like, no, they're going to fold because you're

(01:06:56):
going to get some, they don't need, but
the four votes they say, I thought was
five is four.
And, and it's just the same funding that's
been going on.
There's no reason to change anything.
They're supposed to change when you actually do
a bill, not the continuing resolution.
Just keep spending the same money.
Yeah.
There's no reason to change.

(01:07:17):
Well, so they're going to, they're going to
have to give a reason to buckle.
It'll be like, we just didn't want to
subject the American people anymore to sombrero memes.
I don't know how they'll, they'll come up
with some good reason.
They have to.
So I have this, the big scandal going
on in AI is to Norway.
This is these kids.

(01:07:38):
You don't think so?
No, it's not a scandal.
It's one of the best marketing campaigns I've
ever seen.
It's outstanding.
They're basically just trying to get an agent,
an agent for some woman.
This AI model is not in movies.
It doesn't have any gigs booked.
Isn't getting sides for scripts.

(01:07:58):
No, it's like, yeah, but it's got Hollywood
all bent out of shape.
They got one person after another going, if
anyone hires her, we're going to quit the
agency.
I'm telling you, I'm telling you it's a
Dutch woman.
I think, although she has a British accent,
it is a Dutch woman.
She, she was just a genius, a genius
marketing ploy.
Like, Oh, we're shopping for agents.

(01:08:20):
That's when this, cause that's one of the
hardest things.
Breaking into show business.
The first and probably hardest step is getting
an agent.
Like, Oh, you got an agent?
No, not yet.
I'm trying to get one.
No one will take me.
Yeah.
Who's, who's your agent?
Well, you also represent, uh, you know, whoever

(01:08:40):
Julianne.
Three seasons and a podcast meet Tillie Norwood,
the world's most controversial new actor.
Can she cry on Graham Norton?
Well, she might seem real on screen and
on her social media.
Take a closer look.
Can you tell Tillie Norwood 100% AI
generated?

(01:09:01):
Yup.
She's fake.
Tillie Norwood is the first creation from a
new studio that develops AI actors.
And this morning, her mere existence has sparked
outrage and concern about the use of artificial
intelligence in Hollywood.
We have so far lost the plot.
What are we doing?
The backlash to Tillie Norwood igniting over the
weekend after her creator, Dutch actor and comedian,

(01:09:23):
Alina van der Velden said multiple talent agents
have shown interest in signing the AI actress.
According to deadline, that news prompting real actors
to speak out in protest.
Emily blunt, calling it really, really scary.
In an interview with Variety, urging agencies to
please stop posting a lengthy statement, defending the
invention, comparing it to animation or CGI, writing

(01:09:46):
Tillie Norwood is not a replacement for a
human being, but a creative work, a piece
of art that sparks conversation will be Goldberg.
Among those responding.
The problem with this, in my opinion, humble
opinion, don't care is that you are suddenly
up against something that's been generated.
With 5,000 other actors.

(01:10:09):
So it's a little bit of an unfair
advantage.
The debate over Tillie Norwood, just the latest
in the battle between creative artists and AI.
Where was that report from?
Is that from CBS, ABC?
Where's that from?
I think, because I have a CBS, a
CBC report from Canada, which sounded remarkably similar.
Three seasons and a podcast.

(01:10:32):
Exactly the same.
The same opening.
That's the whole.
It's the same report.
It's a package.
Okay.
It's a package.
Listen, I'll play it.
Three seasons and a podcast.
Bragging about getting gigs, battling with villains on
screen.
Oh, interesting.
A little different.
Oh, well now I have to play it.
It's not exactly the same.
Three seasons and a podcast.

(01:10:53):
Bragging about getting gigs, battling with villains on
screen in a skit.
This is Tillie Norwood, an AI generated actress
created by the company Particle Six.
Its CEO, Aline van der Velden, says entertainment
companies are interested.
By the way, I'm not familiar with this
Dutch actress and comedian.
I haven't really been keeping up, but I

(01:11:16):
don't think she's very well known in Holland.
With Tillie, you know, when we first launched
her, especially with that accent, like, oh, that's
not going to happen.
And now it's, you know, we're going to
announce who she's going, who, which agency is
going to be there.
I don't know if she does porn one
as many.
I'm out of the business.
In the next few months.
She said this during a panel at the
Zurich Film Festival.

(01:11:37):
See, that's how she did it.
She launched it at the Zurich Film Festival.
We're getting an agent for our AI.
Since then, Hollywood has been up in arms.
Actors like Whoopi Goldberg, Simu Liu, and Emily
Blunt are speaking out.
Same package.
This is a, I think Hollywood just distributed
a package to everybody.
Don't you think?
Hollywood would be the beneficiary of this.

(01:12:00):
Of course they would.
They love it.
This is cheap.
That's pesky actors.
And by the way, thinking it's cheap reminds
me of the early days of CGI.
Yes.
When, you know, they would do a few
special effects using the computers that are actually
blowing up a building.
They had a computer do it.
And then pretty soon the movies became so
CGI centric that it costs a fortune in

(01:12:23):
computing power to do it.
So you think it's cheap at first.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because more expensive.
Now I want to, the reason I want
to bring this up is because all these
people got all, I see, you see it
on all these networks, they're all bent out
of shape.
And then the fallback was always, well, don't
worry about it because the public is never
going to, you know, have the same feelings
for this sort of celebrities.

(01:12:43):
And they went on and on.
It's just because it's not a real person.
So there's not going to be any attachment.
And they all kind of ignore Hatsune Miku.
Hatsune Miku?
Hatsune Miku is a fake person in Japan
that is extremely popular.
And she's been around since at least 2012.

(01:13:06):
She's been around for over a decade.
And it's a, you can look her up.
H A T U S.
I'm sorry.
H A T S U N E.
Miku.
M I K U.
A pop star.
And everyone knows she's a fake and everyone
loves her.
Like she's like the girl next door.

(01:13:27):
And so this, this is more of a
threat than they think it is.
And everyone ignores the phenomenon.
Is she anime or is she real?
She's anime, isn't she?
No, she's not anime.
But I'm looking at Hatsune Miku and the
whole YouTube page is filled with anime.
Well, that might be full.

(01:13:48):
Maybe that page is, but there's, look at,
look at images and do an image search
and look for her.
She's real.
She's kind of a pretty Japanese girl.
Okay.
And, uh, except for once in a while,
she has cross eyes.
okay.
I see her.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And she's very popular.
So, uh, this is not something that should
be taken lightly.

(01:14:09):
Hmm.
Well, ultimately it's bad for humanity.
You know, you, you lose touch with, with
human, we just, we're, we're being psyoped into
technology.
I mean, you look at the latest AI,
by the way, what you just said is
reminding me of the meeting that, that, that,
uh, Hegseth had, because all the counter arguments,

(01:14:29):
why didn't they just send an email?
He didn't have to bring them all together
when, when the old timers in the military
said, yeah, you want face to face.
Yeah.
You want face to face.
And what you just said is a reflection
of these, the same doofus as this.
Oh, they could have sent out an email
or a zoom call would have done the
same thing.
Well, if you look, it's not true.

(01:14:50):
If you look at the popular new AI
companies, uh, loves you.
Dot AI friend, a friend.
AI is a really funny one.
I couldn't clip it because it doesn't come
across it.
The pendant you wear around your neck and
you press it to talk to your friend.
This, but this is it.
This is, this is your friend is dependent.
Well, no, your, your friend then texts you

(01:15:11):
something.
You talk to your friend by pressing the
pendant and then it sends you a text
message.
With the phone that you're carrying around incessantly
and holding in your hand as you walk
down the street.
But of course, men and women, but of
course, yes.
So, you know, this is, this is where
it's headed.
I mean, I think in, in this regard,

(01:15:33):
but who even cares about a movie with,
uh, unless we all have the same friend
AI or the same loves you.
Dot AI.
Yeah.
The gen Zedders, you know, they're all going
for, not just gen Zed, but the boomers.
Boomers.
Even I'm lonely.
Oh, I have a friend.
Now I have a friend in my phone
who listens.

(01:15:54):
My friend listens to me.
It's, it's extremely bad for humanity, but it's,
I think there's no stopping it.
It's no stopping it.
So we'll have AI movies, you know, all
generated characters.
It's, uh, I've given up.
I mean, if, if I, if I can't,
they said the slop is going to kill
it.

(01:16:14):
No, but people will love the slop.
This is, this is what I'm coming to
realize.
Oh, it's slop, but I love it.
We're like pigs.
AI slop.
I love it.
I'm a pig.
Yeah.
That, well, not everybody, but a lot of,
a lot, a lot of people are going
to go for that.

(01:16:34):
They're just, they're AI pigs.
They want more slop.
Give me slop.
I love it.
I'm a pig.
Give it to me.
Well, then there's one other little Hollywood ditty.
Now also on Monday, Donald Trump upped his
tariff war saying the U S will now
impose a 100% tariff on films made
outside the country.

(01:16:54):
It's still unclear how those tariffs would operate
since movies and TV shows can be transmitted
digitally without going through a port like a
car or electronics.
But the announcement still is making waves in
the film industry.
Here's reaction from George Clooney speaking in New
York.
It really happens.
It would be pretty damaging to the business.
Look, he's not wrong about the idea that

(01:17:15):
businesses have left Los Angeles.
They have in droves.
What we need is, uh, you know, the,
the money is the tax incentives that you
get here in New York, by the way,
they're building studios here because there's so much
work we need those.
And by the way, if he really wants
to fix it, then we should talk about
a federal incentive.
Sure.
To keep people working in, in Los Angeles,

(01:17:37):
because there are tons of below the line
people, grips and cinematographers who are losing their
jobs because work is going away.
No, Hollywood always wants to be subsidized.
Give us money so we can continue to
work.
No, no, we got AI slop coming to

(01:17:58):
everybody.
Look at the pigs.
They love it.
I love it.
The, you know, that we are also focused
on trans people, but transhumanism is just moving
forward.
You know, again, the brain computer interface is
on the way.
It's, it's, uh, you know, you'll live forever.

(01:18:19):
By the way, this show will, we'll never
end.
It'll just be John Adam.
AI's tapped into the system, creating podcasts forever.
Well, we're going to stay in the Hollywood
team.
I do have the Netflix clips.
Oh, what's I didn't think there was any
news on Netflix.
What's going on?
Oh yeah, it's scandalous.

(01:18:39):
What?
Joining us now to start, wait, wait, wait,
wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,
wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,

(01:19:14):
wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, Lucasfilm Musk
reposted a clip from the series writing quote,
this is not okay.
Market did as suitable for children, aged seven
and up.
The show includes a character who comes out
as identifying as transgender.
The character says, quote, I've never been happier.
Other kids shows that feature LGBT themes include
the Dragon Prince, She-Ra and the Princesses

(01:19:35):
of Power and the Owl House.
Well, I'm glad that you got clips of
this because I saw the story come by
and I just like, ah, more trans stories.
I'm not interested.
So clearly there's something there.
Otherwise you wouldn't have made three anals of
it.
Analysis.
Yes.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Well, I'm just reading the clip name.

(01:19:57):
Okay.
Well, let's play some of these analysis clips
starting with number one.
Joining us now to discuss is Will Hild,
executive director of consumers research.
Will, thank you so much for joining us.
Great to see you again.
Now, first, what do you make of Musk's
accusations against Netflix?
I think they're entirely accurate.

(01:20:18):
This is a company that has pushed a
woke agenda with children for years now.
Libs of Tik TOK posted a two or
three year old clip from cocoa melon, where
they have a kid cross dressing, dancing for
his two gay dads, uh, which is obviously
reignited a controversy around that show as well
today is long overdue.
And I'm glad that someone with the prominence
of Elon is pushing back.

(01:20:40):
And in your view, is there a risk
that many parents don't know that Netflix programs
their kids are watching may contain LGBT content
or themes that promote transgenderism?
Yeah, it's, it's a huge risk and it's
something that Netflix has been pushing without really,
you know, advertising it or making it clear
that that's what they're doing with kids.
They just put it into otherwise normal shows.

(01:21:00):
Like I said, coca melon I think had
like 10 or 15 seasons with absolutely none
of that in it until this past a
couple of years and they've started introducing it.
So that's the other issue is sometimes you'll
start watching a show and it's unclear that
it contains that kind of transgender ideology or
LGBTQ ideology.
And then you, you, you know, maybe leave

(01:21:21):
the room while you let your kids watch
it.
And suddenly they're being indoctrinated with this kind
of gender ideology nonsense.
Suddenly your daughter's a boy.
Cocoa melon.
Is that the name of the show?
Cocoa?
But, but I think what's overlooked in this
analysis is the fact that this only happened
in the last couple of years.
Yes.
And I've noticed it too with the memes

(01:21:41):
about Netflix.
They've done, you know, they have a Netflix
remakes.
It used to joke is always be, here's
the Disney remake.
And there'd be, you know, some white girl
would be some, you know, a, a Latino,
black Latino lesbian.
That would be the Disney remake pierced.
And, and now you have a, this meme

(01:22:04):
has been shifted to Netflix and only recently.
So there's somebody got into Netflix.
This is like the bald guys in the
military.
Somebody got into Netflix.
Higher, more of them.
Higher, more of them.
Well, who was that guy?
That guy?
Well, the guy from Biden's administration, the transportation
department, wasn't he in transportation?
The guy who kept stealing the suitcases with

(01:22:26):
women's clothes.
He was the new nuclear, the nuclear guy.
Yeah.
He went to Netflix.
That's possible.
I mean, something happened to Netflix and it's
only been within the last couple of years.
It seems.
And so now it's, it's, it's, it's kind
of getting pushed back on them with these.

(01:22:47):
And this is one of them.
I think this is going to, I think
what we're going to, what we're playing here
is the beginning of, of a pushback.
Here we go.
And will, we have seen increasing concern from
parents over the types of content being pushed
on their children from say books to TV
shows.
Now one of the Netflix shows in question
dead and paranormal park is marketed to those
seven and up.
Do you see there being a need for

(01:23:09):
regulation on what does or doesn't count as
being for kids?
That's a great question.
I'm generally loathe to have the government engaged
in the regulation of speech, but one of
the exceptions that we all pretty much agree
to is that that certainly doesn't apply when
you're talking about children.
This is something that we've seen in efforts
to prevent children from accessing pornography in a
number of different States like Florida and Virginia

(01:23:31):
and Texas.
And I think there is a question here
of whether this is something that we want
to protect children from it also, you know,
this isn't incidental.
These corporations have an agenda of pushing this
stuff.
Our organization, consumers research went after state farm
insurer many years ago because they were working
with a project called the gender cool initiative
and they were buying books aimed at kids

(01:23:53):
as young as five.
And that's not my word.
That's it was said on the book, you
know, kids five and up that we had
titles like a kid's book about being transgender
or a kid's book about being non-binary.
And they were buying these books and donating
them to public schools to get them in
the hands of children explicitly.
So it really, if this was just something
that was accidental or a writer had slipped

(01:24:15):
something in, that'd be a little different.
But it's clear that Netflix and a lot
of other corporations have an agenda to target
children with this kind of radical ideology.
That's, you know, in fact a form of
grooming in a lot of ways.
Well, it didn't take me very long to
figure it out under the new lens of
the North sea nexus.
Cocomelon produced by moon bug entertainment limited British

(01:24:36):
children's media company headquartered in London.
This is an attack on attack on the
American children by the Brits.
Let's turn them all a trans.
Yeah.
Let's, let's cause our, let's cause a ruckus
and who, let me see who owns this.
Hold on a second.
When we look at the moon bug owned
by candle media, uh, Oh, black stone.

(01:24:59):
There you go.
Blackstone, co-funded by former Disney executives.
Okay, there you go.
They, Oh, Oh, but Oh, but there, wait,
there's more.
Candle media owns moon bug entertainment, hello sunshine
and the production company of Israeli thriller series.
Oh, we got the Jews in there.
This is a, this is a quagmire, but

(01:25:20):
it's a double whammy.
Huh?
Yeah.
You always got to look at who owns
this stuff and who's producing it.
So it called Brunetti asking him about Cocomelon.
He won't know anything about it.
He doesn't know anything.
Does he?
He knows more than you'd imagine.
He knows a lot.
But I don't think he knows about this,
this sort of thing.

(01:25:40):
This sort of this sinister stuff.
So they also have done ABC kid TV,
Cocomelon.
I guess they, they launched on YouTube.
Interestingly.
So Netflix, okay.
In June, 2020, Cocomelon launched a Netflix.

(01:26:01):
Hmm.
Well, it's a, it's an attack from the
Brits.
That's, I'm just going to call it that
way.
What else could it, is it, is it
popular?
I'm not going to argue with you because
this thesis seems to be holding up.
Yes.
Let's go to the last clip.
Following Musk's call for a boycott, Netflix stock
closed down 2.3%. Now looking back, Disney

(01:26:22):
took a significant hit after it was accused
of doing the same thing.
Do you think we could see Netflix changing
its direction as a result?
How likely is that?
Well, it's unclear.
See one of the problems that we've got
in pushing back on corporate America is that
the large asset managers like BlackRock, State Street
and Vanguard control so many of the shares
of the company that they can insulate the

(01:26:43):
executive class from a lot of the bad
decisions that they're making from a consumer standpoint.
And I think that's part of what's going
on with Disney.
Disney shares have been in the tank.
They, their five-year performance, especially when relative
to the S&P 500 have been absolutely
abysmal, but they actually brought back the CEO
that took them in a woke turn, Bob
Iger.
And I think that's because of the influence

(01:27:03):
of CEOs like Larry Fink at BlackRock and
others at Vanguard and State Street.
And so I think that's a problem that
we really need to solve.
It's one of the main things we focus
on at consumers research.
We need to get these asset managers out
of the business of insulating executives from the
consequences of their decisions.
And Will, as you know, Musk is an
entrepreneur who likes to take risks.
How likely are we to see him launch

(01:27:24):
a Netflix rival?
Is there a market for that?
That's a great question.
You know, he's got his finger in so
many pies in that way.
You know, he's, you know, rocket company, a
car company, but he's also apparently going to
create a competitor to Wikipedia and he's active
in the AI space in a, in a
very aggressive way.
So it would be great if he was
to put those types of resources and his

(01:27:45):
mind power behind a alternative to Netflix.
And a lot of times what the real
allure of these stations, of these streaming stations
is, is not so much the stuff that
they make.
It's the licenses that they have purchased over
the years.
That's certainly the case with Disney.
A lot of the stuff they're making now
isn't that popular, but they hold the keys
to seeing a lot of the old intellectual

(01:28:07):
property that people beloved around Mickey Mouse and
Cinderella and all that kind of stuff.
And Netflix is the same way.
Here's what they need to do.
Someone needs to start the AI slop streaming
station and just have AI slop all day
running on it.
It's everywhere.
I think you're ahead of your time there
with that idea.
Sombrero videos, AI friends, making out with other

(01:28:31):
AI friends.
We're still analog, man.
Podcasting is pretty much the only technology left
that is just normal for normal people without
video.
We're actually digital.
Yeah, but we're not AI.
No, we're not even close.

(01:28:52):
We're analog into people's ears.
You know, no distractions.
I'm in your head.
No distractions.
I'm between your ears.
Listen to me, donate.
Donate.
So I've made a decision.
Okay.
I'm glad you made a decision.
One, just it's one a month, one decision.

(01:29:15):
I'm no longer going to complain about people
saying free speech versus freedom of speech.
I'm just going to call it speech because
putting something in front of it- That's
actually a good solution.
Yes, because it's all about speech.
You know, freedom of speech is not a
kind of speech.
It's just speech.

(01:29:35):
I have the God-given right to speech.
I can speak.
I can speech.
I can say whatever I want.
Now, obviously, if I slander someone and that's
a different issue, but it's just speech.
No, it's the same issue.
What do you mean?
It's still speech.
It's speech.
Yeah, it's just speech.
It just happens to be slander.
Well, yes, it is.

(01:29:57):
But I can still use speech, but the
government can't stop me from slandering somebody.
If I slander someone, they can get me
in trouble for lying or disparaging, but speech
is just speech.
Right.
And all this freedom of speech and free
speech, it's not good.
Just say speech.

(01:30:18):
Speech in the United States is protected.
Speech, not free speech, not freedom of speech,
just speech.
Then so Jonathan Turley, who I like, I
think- Yeah, he's great.
He's a professor at Georgetown.
I think if I was a student and
I could take one of his courses, I
think it would be dynamite.

(01:30:38):
Oh, I'd take it too.
You know, if you take, I have to
say this to people that started going to
college, and we have a few out there,
just, you know, don't take courses, take professors.
Find out the guys who are super talented
and take their courses, whatever it is.
It doesn't matter.
Just take that, because there's people that you're
learning from.
Yes.
I recommend Prof G.

(01:31:03):
I don't.
Neither do I.
So Jonathan Turley, this showed up in my
timeline, and I was like, well, that's interesting.
This is about speech and the North Sea
nexus, and in particular, the middle management of
the monarchs and the city of London.

(01:31:23):
Free speech isn't a free fall in Europe.
There are two anti-free speech movements that
have coalesced.
One is in Europe, where it has laid
waste to free speech, Germany, France, England.
Free speech has been eviscerated, and also places
like Canada.
The U.S. anti-free speech movement began
in higher education that metastasized throughout the government,

(01:31:45):
but this has all reached our shores now.
The Berlin World Forum followed the remarks of
Vice President Vance on free speech, and the
EU was red hot.
They gathered in Berlin, and it was the
most anti-free speech gathering I've ever been
part of.
There's only two of us from the free
speech community, and they are committed, and Hillary

(01:32:09):
Clinton was there, and she really fueled the
anger.
I mean, when Twitter was purchased by Elon
Musk, she called on the EU to use
the infamous Digital Services Act, which is one
of the most anti-free speech pieces of
legislation in decades, and she called upon the
EU to use the DSA to force the

(01:32:31):
censorship of American citizens, force people like Musk
to censor.
It's an extraordinary act by someone who was
once a presidential candidate in the United States,
but they are committed to it, and after
the World Forum, they further globalized this effort,
and they are threatening companies like Axe with
ruinous fines unless they resume censoring American citizens.

(01:32:56):
This is so bad, and it's really not
even discussed properly what's happening in the UK.
It is, I mean, I've seen videos of
the cop showing up, wanting to talk to
some woman's daughter because she viewed a post.
She viewed a post.

(01:33:17):
Yeah, yeah.
Well, here's, I have a clip of the
magistrate that's reading the riot act to somebody
for a Facebook post.
I don't have the whole clip, it's too
long, but the guy got prison time.
What?
Hold on a second.
I think I've seen this.
Is this the guy with the funky wig?
I need one of those wigs.
They all have funky wigs.
Give me a break.
Those wigs are great.

(01:33:37):
UK magistrate.
To a post questioning why you wrote, "'Cause
they're over here, given life of Riley, off
the tax us hardworking people earn when it
could be put to better use.
Come over here with no work visa, no
trade to their name and sit down and
dos.
And then there's more people being put out

(01:33:59):
homeless each year.
They get top band priority on housing.
You went on to say that you did
not want your money going to immigrants who
quote, "'Rape our kids and get priority.'" Although
you said that you had no intention of
carrying out any act of violence, there can

(01:34:21):
be no doubt that you were inciting others
to do so.
Otherwise, why post the comment?
Wow.
And he got fined or went to jail?
It was up to seven years.
No.
Yeah.
Wow.
So the thing is, but the comment at

(01:34:42):
the end is why I cut it off
there.
He said, yeah, you didn't want to incite
violence, but why else would you post?
Yeah, not for your opinion.
Your opinion's no good.
No, according to this guy of this class,
and I think which brings us back to

(01:35:04):
your thesis, but of this class of people,
the assumption is that if you post at
all, you say anything, you're doing that only
to incite violence because that's the only possible
reason you do it, which is illogical.
Wow.

(01:35:24):
Yeah, and the discussion really isn't being held
over here about what's happening.
It's not that way in the EU yet,
but it kind of is.
It's just, you know, they don't have police.
Well, it is in Germany for sure.
Well, Germany, well, the reason why we don't
hear it coming out of Germany is because
if you post about it, you go to
jail.
You can't even say that they're doing this.

(01:35:47):
Right, yeah, I know.
It's really pretty.
It's quite interesting and it's subtle, but the
fact that Hillary Clinton would be over there
encouraging it tells you, but again, she was,
you know, in the Rhodes Scholar.
She's not a Rhodes Scholar because her husband
was, but she's in that, we already identified
her as part of the nexus.
Yeah.
So it makes nothing but sense that she'd

(01:36:09):
go over there and promote this idea.
She's a horrible person.
Yes, she is.
She is a horrible person.
My goodness, my goodness.
Wow.
And people are still bent out of shape
that she didn't beat Trump.
Yeah, well, you know, NPR did a poll.
This was kind of an interesting little segment

(01:36:30):
that I got about political violence, speaking of
violence.
And they polled, I guess their listeners, well,
have a listen to this.
The federal government is shut down after Republicans
and Democrats in the Senate could not agree
on a funding bill.
A new NPR PBS News Marist poll is

(01:36:51):
out this morning, and it found that more
people would blame Republicans for a shutdown.
In a few minutes, we'll speak with Democratic
Representative Rosa DeLauro about her party strategy.
First though, more details from that poll.
It found the overwhelming majority believe children should
be vaccinated before they're going to school, and
that it's more important to control gun violence

(01:37:11):
rather than protect gun rights.
NPR Senior Political Editor and Correspondent Domenico Montanaro
has all the numbers.
So Domenico, let's start with the shutdown.
What did the poll find?
This is, I mean, so this is NPR
listeners, NPR PBS.
So this is the target demo for the
Democrats.
Super liberals.
Super liberals, yes.
Yeah, Republicans get more of the blame, 38

(01:37:33):
to 27, though that's not close to a
majority.
In 2019, during what was the longest government
shutdown in history, over a month, 50%
or more blamed Trump.
Now, 31% would blame both parties equally.
Trump and Republicans get low approval ratings, but
Democrats in Congress are worse, just 25%
approve of them.
That's because of Democrats, by the way.

(01:37:55):
Less than half approve of members of their
own party in Congress.
So a lot of politics to play here
as the shutdown goes on.
Now, one thing that really jumps out in
this survey, which you've written about this morning
on NPR.org, the idea that more people
believe they might have to resort to violence
to fix things.
How many people are we talking about?
Yeah, the number is up to 30%

(01:38:16):
who think that they may have to resort
to violence to get the country back on
the right track.
That's up 11 points from when we asked
that question in April of last year.
First of all, what kind of question is
that to ask?
Hey, I know.
Let's ask people if they want political violence.
Yeah, that's a good idea.
So what do you think's driving that?
Largely, it's changed views among some Democrats.

(01:38:38):
They've gone from just 12% saying violence
might be necessary to now 28%.
That's a pretty big jump.
But Republicans are higher still at 31%.
That's also a marginal increase from last year.
And everybody wants to fight.
Even a quarter of independents are saying this
now.
You know, it's important to remember though, 70
% of people do not feel this way.

(01:39:00):
More than three quarters say political violence is
a major problem.
And other polling has shown that when specific
acts of violence are polled, the numbers are
much lower.
Still, it's pretty alarming though that people are
increasingly feeling this way.
Yeah, now, okay, let's get to free speech.
Something we've been talking about a lot since
Jimmy Kimmel was taken off the air for
a week after the Trump administration pressured ABC
and its affiliates.
So how are people feeling about free speech

(01:39:21):
in America?
Well, they're not feeling like it's very free.
Roughly eight in 10 say they think that
the country has gone too far in restricting
speech.
That crosses political lines with almost 90 Democrats
and independents saying this, as well as almost
two thirds of Republicans.
Remember, conservatives were the ones who were saying
for years that they felt that their speech,
their free speech rights were being curtailed on

(01:39:42):
college campuses and online.
So a lot of people now have gripes
with what can and can't be said in
the country.
And that's showing up in this poll.
People also believe the federal government should play
a minimal role in regulating speech.
Just 15% said they think it should
be a major role.
It should have a major role in doing
so.
44% said it should play only a
minor one.

(01:40:03):
Another four in 10 said it should play
no role at all.
It does not bode well.
No, that's actually not good numbers.
No.
Because it should be nobody.
I mean, it says right there in the
first amendment they can't do anything.
The government should be kept by the constitution
says no.
Government can't do jack about speech one way
or the other.

(01:40:23):
And can't make any laws to infringe on
it.
Which is my version of doing jack.
Yes, yes, yes.
Well, speech.
I'm just called, so long way to say
I'm just calling it speech.
Well, you can do what you want.
I'm gonna do exactly what I want.
Yeah, well, that's what else is new.

(01:40:46):
Speaking of speech and.
Wait, I gotta, since we were kind of
on the topic about free speech.
Speech.
I don't have to, I can just do
what I wanna do too.
I know, but I'm gonna contradict you.
No, you're going to, you're being a scold.
Yes, I'm going to speech scold you.

(01:41:06):
Yeah, you can do what you want.
Thank you.
This is a funny bit that ran.
It has been floating around on the Brit
card.
Oh yeah.
Have you seen this?
This is the old lady at the bus.
Yeah, the old lady at the bus.
It starts with an old lady at the
bus and she doesn't have a Brit card.
A Brit card, are they calling it the
Brit card?
Well, I think somebody must be calling it
the Brit card, but this is the digital

(01:41:29):
ID is what we're talking about.
The digital ID that some people want.
And there's one aspect of this that's completely
overlooked and I'll bring it up at the
end.
Can I see your Brit card, please?
I don't have one, I don't have a
smartphone.
Can I get another pint, please?
Sorry, sir, your Brit card says you've exceeded
your alcohol quota for this week.

(01:41:50):
Sorry, sir, your Brit card says you've already
flown twice this year.
We're having to restrict passengers with higher than
average emissions profiles.
Sorry, I'm afraid your funds have been temporarily
frozen.
Your recent social media post did not align
with the government's narrative.
Sorry, I'm afraid your Brit card says you
cannot purchase any more meat this week as
part of our commitment to achieving net zero.
I've just logged in using my Brit card

(01:42:12):
and it's saying I've already had three hours
of internet today and it's locked me out.
Okay.
So what's being, you know, and this is
all good stuff because that's exactly what would
be happening.
Computer says no, computer says no.
Yeah, but the thing that they're experimenting with

(01:42:35):
in China and their digital currency, and I've
run into this because when I went to
South Africa, I used a, I got a
bunch of traveler's checks in rams and what
the Chinese are experimenting with and which I
experienced with these traveler's checks is expiration of

(01:42:56):
funds.
Right, but that has nothing to do with
the Brit card per se.
That would be.
It would if the digital currency all of
a sudden, you got, well, it does because
a digital, you could do this with real
currency too, I mean, because they deal with
these traveler's checks.
But the idea is that you're given 50,
let's say you got $500 a week and

(01:43:18):
that money that goes into the, and it's
easier to do with the digital currency because
you can just put a tag on that
500 and that 500 expires and must be
spent within 30 days.
This is all part of the UBI concept.
So that way, you know, you have all
this money, you can't save.
No.

(01:43:39):
Because they don't want you saving because that
way you can't build up wealth.
I mean, I'm in agreement with you, but
you're kind of jumping the gun.
The EU will have their digital euro, they're
going to do that, but the UK, I
don't know, they're not there yet.
No, I think it's something you have to
bring in.
The Chinese are experimenting with it to see
if people go along with the program, but
it stinks.

(01:44:01):
Yes, it stinks.
There's only one way around it and that's
Bitcoin.
No, cash.
Yeah.
Yeah, wow.
Also gold.
Yeah, okay, yeah.
Here, can I, do you have a cheese
scraper so I can tip you?
Well, it's slightly impractical, but so is Bitcoin

(01:44:22):
for that matter.
No, Bitcoin is a lot, that is digital
gold.
It's a lot more practical.
Yeah, you got digital in there.
Yeah, but it, okay.
Well, I'm not going to argue with you
because you're a boomer.
Yeah, you're the one that's the big gold
bug until just recently.
Until 2020, yeah.
Yeah, I've- You had a brick-

(01:44:44):
A bar, a bar.
Yeah, I did.
Yeah, whatever happened to that bar?
Yeah, well, whatever happened to my two ex
-wives, I don't know.
I was looking for my leather jackets, it's
all gone.
Everything, I have no history.
I'm looking for my MTV jackets.
There goes the bar, bye-bye bar.
I told you when you got the bar
to paint it black and use it as
a doorstop, no one would ever know.

(01:45:05):
I had a, when I was working with
a guy at the air pollution district, who
was one of the supervisors- You did
tell me that, by the way, you did.
I did, I'm not, you know, I can
remember that part.
And the reason is because of this story.
This guy working at, his name was, I
can almost remember his name, but he was
one of the supervisors.
I was over at his house, and he
had all these screwball frames around his pictures.

(01:45:29):
They were all like metal, black metal around
all these photos and stuff that he had
hanging on the wall.
And he explained to me, they weren't black
metal, they were solid gold.
He was one of those gold hunters that
would go around panning.
He also had one of those metal detectors.
He'd hit the beach, the old man with

(01:45:49):
the beach.
And he said he'd pick up gold watches,
and all his gold, he kept it as
bullion, but it was dangerous to keep around.
So he said if anyone ever busted into
the house, they saw these cheap-looking frames
that were painted black.
He says no one would ever steal these
because it looked stupid.
But there was all solid gold.

(01:46:09):
It was like hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of gold in his kitchen.
I mean, it was unbelievable.
It is kind of interesting.
That gave me the idea to tell you
about painting the bar black and using it
as a doorstop.
No one would ever suspect.
It is kind of interesting, when I became
a gold bug and I was buying Krugerrands,
I still have them.
I think I gave some away, but I

(01:46:32):
have the majority of them.
I remember the price that I bought them
at.
Do you remember the price per ounce?
Around 300?
No, no, no, 750.
Okay, well, okay.
And what is it now, 3,500, higher?
38.
38, okay.
Well, I'm just saying, you know, Bitcoin today
is, let me check, 120,750.

(01:46:55):
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, so.
Anyway, what I was going to talk about
is the Pope.
The Pope?
The Pope, yeah.
Is he a Catholic?
He is a Catholic.
Worst joke ever.
But he's doing weird stuff.
You know, it wasn't.

(01:47:17):
It wasn't clippable because it's just quiet, but
he was at an international climate conference and
had a big, like a big hunk of
iceberg dripping on the stage on a little
pedestal.
And they asked him to bless the iceberg,
and he did.
And he blessed the water.
And then he was asked about, through a

(01:47:38):
different circumstance about abortion, and he moved the
goalpost, which I thought was really interesting.
Pope Leo is ordering, offering, I should say,
his views on a dispute surrounding the Catholic
Church and Illinois' U.S. Senator, Dick Durbin.
Chicago Cardinal Blaise Cupich had planned to give
Durbin a Lifetime Achievement Award for his work
helping immigrants.

(01:47:59):
But some conservative Catholic bishops complained because of
Durbin's support for abortion rights.
The Pope says there is a contradiction in
this debate.
It's important to look at many issues that
are related to what is the teaching of
the Church.
Someone who says I'm against abortion, but says
I'm in favor of the death penalty is
not really pro-life.

(01:48:21):
So someone who says that I'm against abortion,
but I'm in agreement with the inhuman treatment
of immigrants here in the United States, I
don't know if that's pro-life.
So they're very complex issues.
I don't know if anyone has all the
truth on them, but I would ask first
and foremost that there be greater respect for

(01:48:41):
one another.
The Pope said he was not familiar with
all the details of the debate over the
award, but says it's important to consider Durbin's
overall record.
Senator Durbin has declined the award.
So the goalpost move here is all of
a sudden he's talking in code about pro
-life.
Pro-life is code.
It's not, it's anti-abortion is the term.

(01:49:05):
And I'm actually flummoxed that he didn't just
say, no, I'm against abortion.
But he moved it to pro-life.
This is very strange.
Well, I don't know what he was doing,
and I don't understand Durbin not taking the
award.
Ah, Durbin schmurbin.
But the Pope, you know, we've been trying
to figure out, what is this Pope?

(01:49:26):
And he's looking a little more woke than
I thought he would be.
No, he's gonna be woke.
The last couple of Popes were woke.
They was picked by a bunch of woke
cardinals.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's disappointing.
Let's talk about the deal.
The deal, the big Gaza peace plan, which
is, I think, very interesting.

(01:49:47):
And the reason I say that is because
everybody seems to like the Gaza peace plan.
And I'm talking like New York Times, Newsweek,
which of course makes me very suspicious.
But I think President Trump did something really
smart here, and he pulled the North Sea
nexus into the deal by putting Tony Blair.

(01:50:09):
Oh, yes, yeah, that was a good move.
Warmonger Tony Blair onto the peace board, the
board of peace, which I think can only
be, it's like either you make this happen,
Tony Blair, or I'm gonna expose you for
the warmonger that you are.
I mean, it's a very interesting move.

(01:50:30):
And I think France 24 had an overview
of the 20-point peace plan.
Under Donald Trump's 20-point plan for peace
in Gaza, the first step would be an
immediate ceasefire.
Hamas would then have 72 hours to free
all hostages.
48 hostages remain in Gaza, at least 25

(01:50:53):
of whom are believed to be deceased.
In return, Israel would free 250 Palestinian prisoners
and 1,700 Gazans detained since the start
of the conflict.
The plan would see Israeli forces perform a
gradual, staggered retreat from Gaza.
Initially, the Gaza Strip would be governed by

(01:51:14):
a technocratic, apolitical board of peace made up
of Palestinians and international experts directed and presided
over by US President Donald Trump.
The former British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, would
also play a part in this organization.
Hamas would be banned from any role in
governing Gaza, while Hamas members would benefit from

(01:51:36):
an amnesty if they disarm and agree to
peacefully coexist with Israel.
The framework includes plans to invest in Gaza
and rebuild the devastated territory.
As soon as a text is signed, access
for humanitarian aid would be restored, overseen by
bodies including the United Nations and the Red
Cross.

(01:51:57):
An international stabilization force with the backing of
Arab states would keep the peace.
In the long term, the Palestinian Authority would
be allowed to take control of governing the
territory after certain reforms, and the plan leaves
the door open for an eventual Palestinian state.
But if Hamas rejects a plan or does
not follow through, Trump says Israel would then

(01:52:20):
have US backing to quote, finish the job
of destroying the threat of Hamas.
So besides putting Blair on the board of
the peace board, he's got all the Arab
countries.
They're like, yeah, we like this plan.
And then he got Israel to agree with
the Arab countries.
What do you think the chances are of
success here?

(01:52:42):
Well, I think they're still talking to Iran
because they're the ones that are behind the
Hamas because in general, they're the ones calling
the shots, it seems, and if there's a
deal to be made, it's gotta be made
there.
And they just tell them to back off
and step up to the plate or whatever

(01:53:02):
other cliches I wanna come up with and
end it.
I think at first, I think, well, more
talk because Trump's been yakking about this.
Oh, they released the hostages or else, he
keeps saying it.
Right.
And it doesn't, nothing goes on and there's
nothing and nothing and nothing.

(01:53:23):
And this seems to have gotten some, and
I think you're right.
It's bringing Blair in and the...
The North Sea nexus, bring them in.
The creeps.
The creeps, bring the creeps in, yes.
The creeps in, bring the creeps in to
have them put pressure on however they do
it.
It's a mystery.
Hmm, meanwhile, we've got the flotilla, which is

(01:53:46):
always hilarious.
It is great.
Always hilarious.
The Israeli Navy has intercepted a flotilla of
vessels trying to get to Gaza.
The boats had traveled for weeks in the
Mediterranean, drawing attention to the humanitarian situation in
Gaza.
Israel had warned them to turn back and
vowed they would not break the naval blockade.

(01:54:07):
Paul Hunter has the latest from Jerusalem.
Paul, what do we know?
Susan, I'll say off the top, we don't
know an awful lot of details with certainty
because what's been happening is out in the
Mediterranean in the dark of night, and obviously
not in front of news cameras or reporters.
Because you guys are too lame to go
out there.
It's dark at night.
It was too dark for us to go.
And though some of the various boats have

(01:54:27):
been live streaming, verifying precisely what is complicated.
So with those caveats, here's what can be
said.
A number of the boats, and there are
about 40 or 50 of them in total,
are now said to have been boarded by
Israeli authorities.
Early word was that people were being arrested
and taken to a port in Israel, it
seemed, without incident.
But later came the suggestion from the flotilla

(01:54:50):
that the Israeli Navy was using, quote, active
aggression, that water cannon was being used, and
even that at least one boat in the
flotilla had been rammed, though no reports of
any injuries.
Again, impossible to verify at this point.
Bottom line, an interception is underway.
The boats are all part of this international
flotilla carrying opponents to the war in Gaza,

(01:55:11):
some of them high-profile opponents, with aid
meant for Gazans.
Though the aid, in truth, is merely symbolic.
The point here is to try to break
the Israeli naval blockade of Gaza and open
a humanitarian corridor.
No, this is all ego.
This is just a bunch of people who
will want to be like, whoa, I'm good,

(01:55:32):
I'm great.
And of course, we know who's in the
flotilla.
The blockade has been in place since Hamas
took control of Gaza back in 2007, but
is under fire now because it's preventing access
for aid into Gaza from the Mediterranean.
At the same time, Israel controls land crossings
while its two-year war on Hamas continues.

(01:55:54):
And as any of those boats would underline,
countless Gazans are in ever more desperate need
for food and other aid right now.
Bottom line, a tense situation in the Mediterranean,
Susan.
And what is Israel saying?
Well, it calls the whole thing a stunt
and calls those in the flotilla provocateurs looking
to create some sort of incident.
Israel's even said that it would allow the

(01:56:15):
boats to drop their aid north of Gaza
with the pledge it would then be taken
into Gaza, but the boats continued toward the
Gazan coast regardless.
And there are those who suggest Israel has
no legal jurisdiction in those waters, others suggesting
if Israel can demonstrate that it's militarily justified,
then interceptions can go forward.
But even as the flotilla approached, Israel made

(01:56:36):
clear it would use any means possible to
stop it and that seems to be what's
happening.
Tonight, interceptions and arrests, and by some accounts,
no small degree of chaos.
And I'll just mention one of those now
detained, Greta Thunberg, the climate activist video emerging
now of her being picked up by Israeli
authorities on one of those boats.
As Israel put it, Greta and her friends

(01:56:57):
are safe and healthy.
All of this, Susan, is expected to continue
for the next several hours.
I mean, how can we take Greta Thunberg
seriously anymore?
Does anyone take her seriously?
Climate activists, now Palestinian activists on the flotilla,
break out the discord, people.
Get your Gen Z 212 in there.

(01:57:22):
This is just, she's a bad op at
this point.
I don't know how, they must- She's
definitely gone off the rails and she looks
silly.
Yes, she's nuts.
I guess she has a, whatever, her sister's
a pop singer or something.
No, really?
Yeah, very famous pop singer.

(01:57:44):
So famous.
Well, so famous you go, huh?
I have not heard of the famous pop
singer.
Well, oops, I gave it away.
What was that?
Did you fall in a well?
I'm in the hole!
Kimmy's in the well.
I'm in the hole!
And with that, I want to thank you
for your courage in the morning to you,
the man who put the C in the
cocoa melon, say hello to my friend on

(01:58:05):
the other end, the one, the only, the
inimitable, Mr. John C.
DeMora.
Yeah, howdy, good morning to you, Mr. Adam
Crane, your morning ship, C Bootsman Graffy, the
air service of the world.
The names are nice out there.
Yeah, counting the trolls, all of a sudden,
so.
I figured out, so we had a problem

(01:58:27):
on the last show.
I don't know if you remember after the
show, I let you go before I'd even
posted it, remember that?
Do you remember?
You remember?
You remember?
Yeah.
So, and I got all kinds of complaints.
I couldn't get into the troll room now
most of the time.
I'm like, okay.
Mimi says she only heard about done a
half hour of the show and then it
dropped dead.
She couldn't pick it up at all.

(01:58:48):
I said, you complained to Adam?
She said, I will, but she never did.
She did actually.
Turns out that we had a classic, a
DNS problem.
So people could literally not reach our MP3s,
our stream, the troll room.

(01:59:09):
And I woke VoidZero up.
Like I pulled the handle and got him
out of bed and he fixed it.
So I think that's why we only see
1691 today in the troll room.
People are giving up on this thing.
It's like, ah, well, can I listen?
Let them know people, all problems are fixed.

(01:59:29):
It's not that far off of a typical
Thursday.
No, but I think there's probably a couple
of hundred people who are like, ah, it
didn't work.
It doesn't work.
You lose people that way.
It happens.
Yeah, it's harder to get a customer back
than it is to get a new customer.
Exactly.
So those trolls.
The rule of marketing.
That's right.
Those trolls are in the troll room and
you can find it, noagendastream.com is where
you can listen live and troll around if

(01:59:52):
you feel like it.
They are there.
Troll, just bring up Israel.
Lots of trolls.
We go, oh, I gotta post something.
I gotta post something.
And of course you can listen on a
modern podcast app, which is what we recommend
because the modern podcast apps, which increasingly more
podcast apps are becoming modern, they're adding more

(02:00:13):
and more features.
It's taken, we're in our sixth year now,
I think, of podcast index and all the
new features, but sometimes that's just what it
takes.
We got a note yesterday from an outfit
and they create, they do all kinds of
stuff for blind people and people who are,

(02:00:35):
what is the term?
Less abled in seeing.
And they're like, we love your service so
much.
This really helps, because they make special podcast
applications for people with screen readers.
And so they can find stuff.
All these other podcast apps don't really have
that capability because they're not on the modern

(02:00:55):
standards.
So I'm just saying like Podverse is specifically
built for, what's the term?
It's a term for it.
Accessibility, there you go, accessibility.
All of that is going outside of the
mainstream, outside of Apple and Spotify and anyone
else, YouTube, YouTube.

(02:01:16):
And in addition to that, because we adhere
to these new standards, when we go live,
another thing you can't get on your legacy
apps, you'll be notified and you can listen
live right away to the stream.
And of course, when we publish within 90
seconds, you'll know it as well.
Stop waiting around for hours until the podcast
finally drops on your legacy app.
26th of October, it'll be 18 years of

(02:01:38):
this podcast.
We never had a fight, four more years
to go.
And we've been doing it value for value,
which means all we ask in return for
the immense value that we provide, many say,
and I think it's proven true, many feel
that, is to send us some value in
return.
Now we ask for time, talent or treasure.
We have thousands of producers.

(02:01:59):
Why?
You ask.
Because these producers deliver value in return with
boots on the ground reports, inside information, people
like Void Zero and many others help us
with technical issues.
And of course, we really appreciate people who
fund us because this is our only job
who support us financially, noagendadonations.com.

(02:02:21):
And then we have the artists or as
we call it now, the prompt jockeys who
try and create some art that we'll use
for the album art, which we've been doing
for at least a decade and a half.
Things have changed, there's no more humanity in
it.
It's all pretty much AI.
We've driven away all of the humans.

(02:02:42):
And we wanna thank the prompt jockey who
brought us the art.
And actually, Capital's Agenda, who did this piece
for episode 1803, which we titled, The Drone
Wall.
I'm pretty sure that he is not 100
% AI.
I mean, if you look at the no

(02:03:02):
agenda words clasped in the talons of this
Eagle on which the British wanker is sitting
backwards, I don't think AI can do that,
not easily at least.
I'm pretty sure he massaged that himself.
No, he probably put the no agenda on,
he had the whole piece done and put

(02:03:24):
no agenda in there by hand.
I wish he would tell us.
And Currie and Dvorak by hand.
Yeah, I wish he would tell us, that'd
be nice.
Let us know how you did it.
There's no way that's gonna happen, that's impossible.
We need you to list your LLM and
your prompt so we know exactly what you're
doing.
We need to know.

(02:03:45):
Because we looked at some other things for
artwork and there were some, a lot of
people like the word wanker.
Man, they really like wanker.
That was interesting.
Wanker, I'm not quite sure what they like
about that.
Was there anything that we looked at that
we thought, that we thought was good?

(02:04:06):
Stop playing around.
Not really.
No.
I mean, we had enough trouble picking this
piece.
Yeah, well, British girls, not quite sure what
Blue Acorn was doing with the British politician
holding up a sausage or a hot dog
with mustard.
Yeah, there was that.

(02:04:26):
Not quite sure what that was.
Other bad cartoon art.
No, there really wasn't, there really wasn't.
It's hard, you know, when people are uninspired
and it's like, oh, I do some art,
I've just been putting that no agenda, funny.
Yeah, you got to have some humor to
make it work.
Where's the sombreros?
Oh, we'll have lots of sombreros today, I'm

(02:04:48):
sure.
Which probably will not get picked.
But you don't know.
Well, I don't know yet.
So thank you very much, Capitalist Agenda.
Capitalist Agenda has been around for a long
time.
So, and he certainly does some of the
handy work himself.
He is a pro.
As part of the value for value system,
which we pioneered and we are very proud
of to see other people using it in

(02:05:08):
their podcasts.
So it's very hard.
So it's not an easy lifestyle.
We've chosen it.
It's the new international lifestyle, value for value.
We thank everybody and we tell you how
much value they supported us with.
And we do that $50 and above for
brevity and for anonymity.
And we kick it off with Sir Donald
of the Fire Bottles.
Is he not the guy he always sends
in on letterhead from the...

(02:05:31):
Yeah, that's what he did in this one
too.
United Federation of Planets.
Yes.
Starfleet Command.
Yes, there it is.
United Federation of Planets, Starfleet Command.
He sent in a Rubblizer donation, $3,333
.33. India, hang out, Mike, standby, 33, 33,

(02:05:52):
33.
Rubblizer out.
And he wrote in handwriting on this note,
gentlemen, my slide towards douchedom was stopped by
a shout out from Sir Trigger Max in
the first donation segment of show 1800.
Fearing that the Rubblizer jingle might fall into
disuse, I enclosed $3,333.33 so that

(02:06:15):
it may be heard again in Gitmo Nation,
we just heard it.
Also, I hereby beg admittance into the August
order of Secretaries General with the moniker Secretary
General of Greater Idaho.
Signed, Sir Donald of the Fire Bottles.
By the way- I thought he was
in Spokane.
I'm sorry, well, he says Greater Idaho.

(02:06:37):
I think he may have moved.
And do you see at the bottom, I'd
never seen this, you ever see this at
the bottom of his stationery?
So at the top he has United Federation
of Planets, Starfleet Command, at the bottom he
has, because there's TMs and stuff.
Yeah, and copyright.
He says 1992 Paramount Pictures, all rights reserved.
Star Trek, the next generation is a trademark
of Paramount Pictures.

(02:06:58):
What, is he worried he's gonna get sued
over his stationery?
I think he bought this from Paramount.
Oh, oh, I thought he actually was a
member of United Starfleet Command.
I thought it was real.
Oh, oh, I see.
Yeah, oh, well, okay.
I was convinced the guy's a member of

(02:07:18):
the United Federation of Planets.
Well, maybe he is, he still has to
get the copyright notice.
True.
Trademark TM.
Thank you very much, Sir Donald, soon to
be Secretary General.
We really appreciate it.
I'll read the next two, so you can
read the ridiculously long one.
No name from Waldo, Wisconsin.

(02:07:39):
Came in at three, four, five, six, seven,
and his note is dynamite.
Karma, please.
Gotta love it.
You've got karma.
So the Commodore Semi-Anonymous Vegan.
Vegan, vegan, vegan, you know?
Vegan.
Is it vegan?
Vegan.
In Mill Park, Victoria, Australia, came in with

(02:08:01):
three, three, three, dot, three, three, which he
calculates is $500, which gives him a secretary
generalship.
It does.
$500 Australian.
Three, three, three, three, three, who knew?
Yeah.
Commodore Semi-Anonymous Vegan here.
I'd like to take advantage of the secretary
general offer with my three, three, three, three,

(02:08:23):
three, which would amount to about 500 Aussie
dollars in honor of P.M. Elmer Fudd.
I'd like to be known as Secretary General
of the Wanda Rabbits, the Wanda Rabbits.
I also, it pushes me over the threshold
for a knight.

(02:08:43):
Ah, nice.
If it pleases the peerage committee, it has
to be, I have to be known as
Sir Occo of the Land Down Under.
Sir Occo, Sir Occo, Sir Occo, Sir Occo.
Sir Occo, Sir Occo, I gotcha, I gotcha.
At the round table, I'd like a slice
or two of Hawaiian and margarita pizza.

(02:09:03):
Good for you.
Soon to be launched by 404 Pizza.
Keep an eye out on Kickstarter on the
1st of November, which is World Vegan Day,
so it's a vegan pizza.
Yech.
Also, I'd like some pornographic, oh, I'm sorry,
pomegranate kombucha, which is, I would recommend against,

(02:09:27):
simply because I haven't heard of it already
here, or there, he says, there.
John, can you cash Australian checks if they
sent to you?
No.
What is the fee?
Well, probably not.
I think I can try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Commodore Semi Autonomous Vegan.

(02:09:49):
We can't even wire money from our bank,
but they'll cash an Australian check?
No, we can wire money, we do that.
I can't wire money, not online.
No, no, you can't do it online, you
have to go in, because you can't, using
Swift, you have to answer a bunch of
questions, they have to look you in the
eye, they have to say, do you know
who you're sending this to?

(02:10:09):
Wow.
Let me see your ID.
And then they gotta have somebody else sign
off on it.
Show me your Brit card.
You gotta have two or three people sign
the document, and you gotta go over all
the numbers.
Really?
It's a huge pain in the ass, and
that's why, you know, Boyd Zero, who gets
paid by us to keep the servers going,
I only pay him every other month for

(02:10:30):
two months' work, because it's a pain in
the ass.
It takes a good half hour to put
a separate wire, so they're not gonna let
you do it online, but when Stablecoin comes
in, and I always mention this to the
bankers, I say, well, you know, this is
gonna change when Stablecoin comes in, they always
say the same thing.
What?
What's Stablecoin?
Really?

(02:10:51):
Wow.
Yes, really.
Well, you could always pay Boyd Zero in
Bitcoin.
That's another pain in the ass.
Not really.
I'd have to have a wallet.
Whoa, no, no wallet, oh, God forbid.
And it would also, it's not as easy
to document for tax purposes.
Certainly it is.
Sir Adam of the Coke Empire, associate executive

(02:11:14):
producer, ship, haven't heard from him in a
while, 24568.
Greetings from the empire.
Well, the Coke Empire is undergoing some changes
at the moment.
This is, this feels like, to me, like
inside investment information.
We are transitioning from King Charles II to
Crown Prince Chase Coke.
That's the Coke brothers, K-O-C-H.

(02:11:35):
Young Chase will take the reign sometime in
2026 as he's busy in Silicon Valley spending
the empire's money on angel investing into AI
startups and other technologies with his disruptive technologies
arm.
The empire's reaching a technology and the coming
AI power needs is far and wide with
our mega companies, Molex and Deepcom Power, helping

(02:11:58):
Oracle build out its data center infrastructure.
It's sad that our King Charles II is
stepping down, but soon, down soon, but besides
being really the richest person on the planet
Earth, if he didn't have this to split
50% with his dead brother's widow, he'd
be worth over a hundred billion.
Wow.
Anyway, that sucks.
World domination.

(02:12:18):
The liberal.
Yes, world domination in all industries is progressing
as there's not a thing any Noah Jenner
slave touches in their day that didn't get
manufactured by the empire.
From toilet paper to lumber TVs to iPhone
screens, the Coke empire is all reaching.
I haven't donated in a while and that's
my fault.
I'd like to say I've welcomed a new
human resource into the world last November.
Ah, very good.

(02:12:39):
A new Coke baby.
Baby girl named Evelyn Gray.
She definitely is the best part of my
day, as she should be.
I'm afraid, gentlemen, we as a society are
careening towards the scenes from the great film,
Dr. Chevago.
He sent a clip.
Soon we will all have residency committee comrades
telling us that our homes have five bedrooms
and you only need one and that four
families will take the others.

(02:12:59):
God knows if Gavin Newsom gets in next,
we will be living out Dr. Chevago.
John, I too listened to the Michael Savage
show all those years ago when he talked
about Gavin and Kamala destroying San Francisco.
Michael tried to warn us.
RIP, Teddy.
PS, support American manufacturing.
Buy some toilet paper.

(02:13:20):
Very good.
Michael Savage is dead?
No, he's Teddy Roosevelt.
Oh.
I guess.
Nathan Parker in Seattle, Washington.
And he says, keep up the good work.
Boom, that's a note.

(02:13:41):
And 222.22, which gives me to the
second note.
No, I'll, no, you can have the second
one and I'll, yeah.
Yeah, you just look at what's long and
what can I do that's not long?
Yeah, don't worry about it.
You can read on.
Believe me, everybody's happy because it takes you
forever to get through the long notes.
Sean Holman.
Hey, isn't that Holman?
Scroll back and forth.
Yeah, it's Sean Holman.

(02:14:02):
He's a brother.
In Indiana, 21911.
Ah, that's the 1911 guys, I think.
God bless you, brothers.
Saint Maria Goretti, pray for us.
All right.
Who's Saint Maria Goretti?
I think we've been through this and I
forgot already.
Eli the Coffee Guy's up.
He's in Bensonville, Illinois.
He comes in with 21002 for today's show.

(02:14:25):
This Monday was National Coffee Day, if you
didn't know.
And we're celebrating by releasing a new organic
Ethiopian, Ethiopian.
What is this, Guji?
Guji medium roast.
Cheers to made-up days of celebrating random
things.

(02:14:46):
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com.
Use the code ITM20 for 20% off
your order.
Stay caffeinated also.
Can I get a health karma and an
F cancer for fellow coffee lover and producer,
Doug?
Stay caffeinated and thank you for your courage,
Eli.
Stop it!

(02:15:07):
You've got karma.
Saint Maria Teresa Goretti was an Italian virgin
martyr of the Catholic Church and one of
the youngest saints to be canonized.
There's your answer.
How old was she?
Young.
And then we have, oh, this is Irma

(02:15:29):
Saso de Lima de Prado from Alsemere, the
Netherlands.
I actually tried to get this note into
AI and have it speak this note.
Two problems.
One, I couldn't get a good Dutch accent
out of 11 labs.
And two, it made the note five minutes
long.

(02:15:49):
So no.
Dear John Adams, sorry for this very, oh,
it's a meetup report, but I thought better
late than never.
We, Anita and Irma, hosted our very first
meetup in Hofdorp at the day camping site
of the Highlander Meersenbosch on September 7th.
We were blessed with a wonderful sunny day.
We set up our specifically for meetups brought
party tent.
We hung up your faces and they sent
some pictures, which are quite funny, and had

(02:16:12):
a great time together.
We brought food, woke wine, beer, woke wine,
beer and all kinds of non-alcoholic beverages.
Oh, it's woke wines, no alcohol.
When it was time to light the barbecue,
it turned out we invited very helpful producers.
19 of them, including some very small ones
and one four-legged producer.
We were even blessed with a special visit

(02:16:32):
of a couple with their lovely human resource
from South Africa.
So considering this was our first hosted meetup,
I think it was very successful.
And then she says, since we, I received
one donation.
Oh, she got some donations.
I've been a regular listener since October, 2023,
after I saw you, Adam, on one of

(02:16:52):
the Jensen shows, Robert Jensen.
I was hooked and wish I knew about
your show before COVID.
Unfortunately, I had to go through that traumatic
period without you guys.
I set up a recurring donation since February,
2024.
My first human resource, Anita, supports me, but
she isn't yet a listening producer.
May I have, maybe I haven't hit her
in the mouth hard enough, clearly.

(02:17:13):
Anyway, this donation will be on her behalf.
So it will be for Anita Sousa de
Lima de Prado.
Okay, so it's a switcheroo, basically.
Let me do the switcheroo bit.
Okay, switcheroo.
All right, switcheroo.
It's a small amount, but this adds up

(02:17:34):
to 94, 80 euros.
I will chip in a little extra to
96, 30 euros because I love the combination.
Thank you both for what you do.
Your shows keep my amygdala relaxed, even though
I've donated before.
I have never been properly de-douched.
Please, we could both use a proper de
-douching.
Love you and karma for all of us.
Love you and karma for all of us.

(02:17:54):
You've been de-douched.
And a little bit of karma.
Thank you very much.
You've got karma.
Good job on the meetup.
19 people is very good.
It's very good for a first one.
Linda Lopatkin, Lakewood, Colorado.
Jobs Karma, $200 for a competitive edge with
a resume that gets results.
Go to ImageMakersInc.com for all your executive

(02:18:16):
resume and job search needs.
That's ImageMakersInc with a K.
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs
and writer of winning resumes.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You've got karma.
Oh, wonderful.
Thank you very much.
Our executive and associate executive producers.

(02:18:37):
We, of course, will have some secretaries general
to be announcing.
And I believe we even have a couple
of nights in this lineup.
So stay with us for that.
We'll thank the rest of our producers, $50
and above in our second segment.
And you can always send your value to
us.
You don't have to wait for something.
You don't have to wait for the newsletter.
You can just do it whenever you want.
Value for value means no levels, no secret

(02:19:00):
things you have to do.
Just send whatever you felt the value got
out of the show.
Any number, any amount.
You can set up a recurring donation, any
amount, any frequency at noagendadonations.com.
Thank you again.
These credits are real.
Associate executive producer and executive producers.
You can use them anywhere Hollywood credits are
usable, which is apparently now in the world

(02:19:21):
of AI and George Clooney's New York.
So congratulations.
Thank you for supporting No Agenda.
Our formula is this.
We go out, we hit people in the
mouth.
Shut up, slave.

(02:19:42):
Shut up, slave.
Yeah, I should also mention that value is
also highly appreciated from Clip Custodian, Clip Collector,
all of these people who help us out
on the show.
It's really, it's appreciated.
It makes life interesting.
I have some, oh, there's new data.

(02:20:03):
New data.
Did you hear about the new data?
It's always new data.
There's new data.
New data from the Centers for Disease Control
show more people are coming down with the
common cold.
The virus is currently at the highest level
since 2022.
Oh, what could this be?
Could this be an ad or is it
just information?
It's new data.

(02:20:23):
School is starting.
We're moving more indoors.
That increases the risk of transmission.
There's also other variables that are difficult to
predict.
Changes in weather, humidity.
The CDC reporting nearly a third of tests
are coming back positive for rhinovirus and enterovirus.
Rhinovirus is the most frequent cause of the
common cold and enterovirus is a type of
respiratory infection.

(02:20:44):
There's also viral competition where last season we
saw certain viruses rise.
That means that we'll see other viruses decrease
and that leaves the community with an immunity
debt.
That means that many of us had not
seen these viruses in quite some time and
that increases our risk of susceptibility.
While there's no vaccines for the common cold,
there are ways to reduce your risk of
catching or spreading it.
Healthcare professionals say have good hygiene.

(02:21:05):
Now notice what she says.
While there's no vaccine.
Seeing these viruses in quite some time and
that increases our risk of susceptibility.
While there's no vaccines for the common cold,
there are ways to reduce your risk of
catching or spreading it.
Healthcare professionals say have good hygiene like washing
your hands, covering your mouth when you cough
or sneeze, opening windows for cleaner air and

(02:21:27):
staying at home from work or school if
you're sick.
Experts say flu activity typically follows with illness
rising at the start of October and peaking
in December and February.
And when it comes to the flu, healthcare
professionals say the flu shot is the best
defense against not only the flu but also
severe complications from it.
It's recommended annually to everyone over the age

(02:21:48):
of six months.
So they went from there's no vaccine for
the cold but you better get your shot
for the flu.
What's immunity debt supposed to mean?
It's a great term.
We have immunity debt because you're not vaccine
enough.
Don't you get it?
Immunity debt?
Immunity debt.

(02:22:09):
Yes, immunity debt.
Yeah, it's a little too long for a
show title, but I like it.
I don't think so.
You think immunity debt is, I'll write it
down.
You think so?
I mean, I like Gen Zed 212.
We already used Zed.
Didn't we use Zed in a previous thing?
Yeah, no, but that was just Zed.
Now it's Gen Zed 212.

(02:22:30):
Oh, that's promoting something.
I don't like it.
I thought this, finally someone caught on.
Kill all humans.
So we need to promote the AI slop.
This trend has been bugging me for a
while and the NBC Today show finally did
a piece on it.
And I think it's kind of hilarious.

(02:22:52):
We're back 739.
Today's consumer all about protein.
Yeah, it is surging in a big way
this year being added to all sorts of
products.
Even your morning cup of coffee.
NBC's business and data correspondent, Brian Chung here,
looking into the growing trend.
It does seem like protein is omnipresent.
Yeah, and by the way, in your coffee,
they're doing cold foam and now also milk
infused, at least at Starbucks.

(02:23:13):
So the latest to jump on this trend,
announcing the release in this line of protein
powder drinks today.
It's a move that many big names in
the restaurant and retail business are making in
the hopes of getting more customers in the
door and boosting sales.
Have you been following this, the protein drinks?
Which is- No, I have not been
following this.
And this obviously sounds like a native ad
for something.
Well, of course it is.

(02:23:34):
And it's, so they're adding milk, or you
would say milk product to fizzy drinks.
And it's protein, you have to have protein.
And they actually have the, it's a roundabout
way to get to the native ad, but
here we go.
From sugarless to fat free.
You'd think we'd seen it all.

(02:23:55):
Yep, protein never tasted this good.
But the era of protein packed products has
arrived.
Though not everyone is on board.
I just went to Walmart the other day
and found out there's a protein popcorn.
Why do I need protein in my popcorn?
Starting today, Starbucks is jumping on the bandwagon,
offering a new line of protein lattes made

(02:24:17):
with boosted protein milk.
But the coffee chain isn't the only big
name capitalizing on the trend.
Lots of protein, all under 500 calories.
Subway's new Fresh Fit menu also joining the
movement.
If you are a restaurant right now, is
this kind of the hottest place to be?
If you have a protein focused menu, that

(02:24:38):
is considered healthy.
It not only generates sales for the restaurant,
it improves the consumer perception of that restaurant.
Retailers are also hoping to boost sales.
Supermarket chain Kroger recently launched 80 new protein
focused products under its Simple Truth brand.
And PepsiCo announcing it will be adding protein

(02:24:58):
to some of its name brands by the
end of the year too.
Do you want in on this?
On what?
Dude, a protein shake.
I said, let's buff in your arms.
The push for protein even making an appearance
on the small screen.
Valium from Vanilla Farmer Protein.
To the phone screen with influencers and celebrities
like Khloe Kardashian getting in on the craze,
promoting protein products of their own.

(02:25:19):
Cloud Popcorn, my protein popcorn.
Pretty good, right?
And there's proof of the push.
In a recent survey, 70% of Americans
said they're trying to consume more protein.
Yet health experts say where you get your
protein from really matters.
Consumers might not be realizing that they're getting
added sugars with the added protein.

(02:25:39):
Whereas if you're eating eggs, meat, yogurt, that's
unsweetened, you're getting this protein source in a
whole food form that's unprocessed.
You see, we were told in the movie,
Idiocracy, that it would be electrolytes from Gatorade.
But it's protein.
Everything has, no agenda.
Now with protein, everything has got to have

(02:26:01):
protein in it.
And there's a reason it took them a
long time to get to it.
But here's the payoff.
The reason for all these products with protein.
All right, so clearly it's the latest trend.
But could there be anything else that might
be driving folks to get more protein or
try and consume more protein?
Yeah, well, Craig, these GLP-1 drugs and
Ozempic is a big reason behind this too

(02:26:21):
because as people eat fewer meals as a
result of being on these drugs, they want
it to be more efficient, trying to get
as much protein as possible.
That's the reason why I think a lot
of these protein bars that are protein maxing,
get as many grams in one packaged item.
That's a big story here.
But for everyone else, I want to point
out, doctors usually say you're getting enough protein
as is.
So if you're going to try to change
your diet, just make sure you talk to

(02:26:41):
your doctor first.
So all these freaks who are on GLP
-1s that can't eat anymore.
If I'm going to change my diet, I
have to talk to my doctor?
Yes, you should, right away.
Hey, doc, I'm going to have, there's a
protein bar.
If I eat that, is that something I
should be aware of?
Is that something I should concern myself with?
No, not really.
I will say, by the way, the copay

(02:27:03):
there, that's 50 bucks.
Thanks.
Everybody needs to have protein because they're not
eating food anymore.
So, well, I can't eat because I'm puking
from Ozempic.
So I still need to force down some
protein.
Got to get some protein.
Eat protein.

(02:27:23):
If you're not going to eat, you need
protein.
We have warned since the day these things
came out, we said, this is not a
good idea.
This doesn't sound healthy.
All of the bad side effects we've been
tracking.
And I'm afraid that we're not going to
get to the erectile dysfunction because now the

(02:27:44):
GLP-1s are in trouble.
Ozempic has exploded in popularity as both a
diabetes and a weight loss drug.
But now it's at the center of a
legal blowback kind of situation.
More than 18- Kind of situation?
What is that?
Kind of situation?
It's reporting.
It's reporting.
It's reporting, yeah.
Of a legal blowback kind of situation.

(02:28:06):
More than 1,800 lawsuits have been filed
over adverse side effects with the liability estimated
at more than $2 billion.
Drop in the bucket.
Our legal expert, Whitney Traylor, is here to
break this down.
So let's talk first about the claims against
Ozempic.
Yeah, so we went back to school.
So all these 1L students that just started
law school, you're going to be learning about

(02:28:27):
this stuff.
This is a civil tort is what we're
dealing with.
So this is product liability, complex civil litigation,
mass tort liability.
And essentially they're saying that, hey, you marketed
this drug and you downplayed.
They're claiming that they downplayed the potential harm

(02:28:48):
that it would cause.
And it's causing these very severe side effects.
And so people are now bringing these lawsuits.
There's a bunch of, if you go online,
you'll see a bunch of law firms just
highlighting this case in particular.
And actually it was over 1,800, but
as of this morning, I think it's 2
,100.
How are the damages decided?

(02:29:09):
Is it individually based?
Do they look at the side effects?
How does that even get decided on?
Yeah, well, that's why we have a jury
system.
And so the jury actually looks at that
and they will decide a number of different
factors.
So there's a number of terrible side effects.
Some people are going blind.
They're having intestinal issues.

(02:29:29):
Get him off the air.
There are digestive issues, just some really severe
type of issues.
And the jury will come back and decide
and say, hey, we think this is what
it's worth.
And so you have to calculate both the
physical damage, the emotional distress, the loss of
consortium.
Then if people can't go to work, their
lost wages, if they can't provide for their

(02:29:50):
families.
So it's going to be different for different
folks.
So of course, the Noah Jenner Show has
been warning you about this, about these horrible
side effects.
And if you still didn't listen to us,
don't worry because Rob, the constitutional lawyer, the
boots and suits, will be glad to sue
these companies for you.
No problemo.

(02:30:11):
If you're going blind, call Rob.
Let me know, I'll forward your email to
him.
But luckily, luckily, we have not one but
two disclaimers now.
They're now 30 seconds, the disclaimers.
They're starting to creep up a little bit.
The disclaimer, the ads with their disclaimers.
Here is the competitor to Ozempic, ZepBound.

(02:30:35):
Tell your doctor if you get a lump
or swelling in your neck.
Stop ZepBound and call your doctor if you
have severe stomach pain or a serious allergic
reaction.
Severe side effects may include inflamed pancreas or
gallbladder problems.
Tell your doctor if you are experiencing vision
changes, taking a sulfonylurea or insulin, having suicidal
thoughts, if you're nursing, pregnant, plan to be,

(02:30:56):
or taking birth control pills.
Side effects include nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting, which
can cause dehydration and worsen kidney problems.
That doesn't sound too bad.
Suicidal thoughts.
How about this new one, which is Kamzios.
Kamzios.
Kamzios.
Kamzios is if you have OHCS, I think

(02:31:18):
it is, obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
I'm not sure what it is, but here's
the drug disclaimer for it.
Kamzios works by targeting what's causing OHCM, and
it's proven to reduce obstruction in the heart
four times more.
Kamzios may cause serious side effects, including heart
failure that can lead to death, a risk

(02:31:39):
that's increased with serious infection, irregular heartbeat, or
with certain other medicines.
Do not stop, start, or change medicines or
dose without telling your doctor.
You must have echocardiograms before and during treatment.
Seek help for new or worsening heart failure
symptoms.
Kamzios is only available through a restricted program.
Before taking Kamzios, tell your doctor about all
your medical conditions and current or planned pregnancy.

(02:32:00):
Kamzios, first in its class to treat symptomatic
OHCM.
I mean, I mean, what happened to good
old anal leakage?
Now we've got death, death.
You just, you might die.
Give it a shot, you might die.
Of course, it will be available at TrumpRx.

(02:32:22):
Our president, he's a hoot, man.
TrumpRx, really?
It's .gov, I believe.
I'm pretty sure it's .gov. It's better than
a monument.
Get a domain name, TrumpRx.gov. I went
to CNBC to get the lowdown on the
finances of this thing.

(02:32:44):
Oh, here we go.
President Trump announcing a drug pricing deal with
Pfizer, which will voluntarily sell its medications for
less, including discounted drug prices for Medicaid.
Pfizer is up 5% on the news.
Angelica Peebles joins us now with more.
There was a teaser too that other drug
companies would have announcements to come also.
That's what the president said.
We haven't heard anything yet.
I've been checking in.

(02:33:04):
Nothing to announce there, but this is interesting,
right?
Of course, we've been hearing from all these
companies.
Yesterday, we talked about it.
Everyone's been saying they've been in negotiations, but
today, Pfizer, the first company to actually strike
a deal with the administration.
So what's happening?
They're committing to a few things.
They're going to lower prices in Medicaid, and
then they're getting a three-year exemption from
tariffs on the condition that they invest more

(02:33:26):
in the U.S. They're also agreeing to
sell some of the drugs to this new
website called TrumpRx, which is a DTC, direct
-to-consumer platform.
And they're also promising to launch new drugs
at parity, so the same price here in
the U.S. as other countries.
Now, it sounds like a big deal, but
I do want to take a little bit
of a measured approach here because some of
these drugs, right, the drugs that they're selling

(02:33:47):
directly to consumers, only one of them is
actually broken out in the earnings report.
So these are older drugs.
They don't make a lot of money.
These are not the huge blockbusters that you
might be familiar with.
And so even though it sounds like, yes,
these prices are coming down, these are significant
discounts, Pfizer's not really giving up a whole
lot here, and also Medicaid already gets the

(02:34:08):
lowest prices around.
So, you know, clearly this is working out
for Pfizer, and it gives them certainty.
You can see the stock move today, but
not giving up a ton here.
Yeah, scam.
Well, I have a report on the same
thing, but this is from NPR.
Okay.
What's it called?
Oh, Trump announces deal with Pfizer.
Here we go.
President Trump says he's making good on his

(02:34:30):
promise to lower drug prices for Americans.
He announced a deal with Pfizer on Tuesday
and also announced a new government website called
TrumpRx.
NPR Pharmaceuticals correspondent, Sidney Lupkin is following this.
So he said- Hold on.
They have a pharmaceuticals correspondent.
Yes.
Give me a break.
Right next to the climate desk, I'm sure.

(02:34:51):
Oh, let's roll that back for a second
here.
Pfizer on Tuesday and also announced a new
government website called TrumpRx.
NPR Pharmaceuticals correspondent, Sidney Lupkin is following this.
Hey, Sidney, so what's in this deal?
The splashiest part involves Pfizer selling its drugs,
such as Zeljans for rheumatoid arthritis, directly to

(02:35:11):
consumers at a discount.
Consumers could access the deals through a website
operated by the federal government called TrumpRx.
Trump has talked about bringing drug prices in
line with what other developed countries pay and
making those other countries pay what he calls
their fair share.
Here's Trump at the press conference.
The United States is done subsidizing the healthcare
of the rest of the world.

(02:35:32):
It's a big thing.
I can't tell you how big this is.
The deal also includes discounts for Medicaid and
a pledge from Pfizer to sell new drugs
at the same price in the US as
in other developed countries.
Trump says similar deals with other drug makers
are in the works.
How did President Trump get the drug makers
to come to the table?
Yeah, it started with an executive order back

(02:35:53):
in May on what the president calls most
favored nation drug pricing.
That would link US prices to those elsewhere.
Over the summer, he upped the ante with
letters to 17 drug makers that gave them
60 days to come up with plans.
And then came closed-door negotiations.
During the press conference, Health Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr. told reporters that negotiations went late
into the night.

(02:36:13):
Pfizer CEO Albert Borla was at the press
conference too, by the way.
He said this deal came with a three
-year grace period from certain tariffs.
And he added that tariffs were the quote,
most powerful tool to motivate behaviors.
So it's clear the threat of them played
a role here, though the many details of
the deal aren't public.
Yeah, and there's still no website, which is
very bad form.

(02:36:34):
No, it's supposed to be in December.
They already said that.
From, here's, apparently Cuban, who owns his own
drug purchasing website, Cost Plus Drugs, says, I've
been told it's just a listing site and
won't actually sell anything.
So they'll just have links to other online.

(02:36:58):
That would make sense.
Yeah, it's a marketing website.
It's a landing page.
Yeah, well.
A landing page.
Okay.
This is Consolidated's part two to this, by
the way.
But what would this mean for consumers, Simon?
You know, a lot of them probably won't
notice a difference.
In Medicaid, for instance, beneficiaries already pay very
little or nothing for drugs.

(02:37:20):
And it's not yet clear how much money
the Medicaid part of the deal would save
taxpayers.
As for TrumpRx, direct-to-consumer prices mean
that consumers are not using their health insurance.
So while, on average, prices may drop 50
% through TrumpRx, that's still 50% off
a big number.
And it still might be unaffordable.
Insurance co-pays could be cheaper.

(02:37:41):
But if someone needs a drug that isn't
covered by insurance and it's offered on TrumpRx,
it might be an option.
All right, so when is TrumpRx supposed to
get going?
Yeah, the TrumpRx.gov website is supposed to
launch in early 2026.
And the new Medicaid prices are supposed to
take effect around the same time.
As for the promise of launching new drugs
at the same price in the U.S.

(02:38:01):
as abroad, that's an ongoing process.
In fact, some other companies have already said
they'll do that.
Bristol-Myers Squibb, for instance, says its new
schizophrenia drug will be sold at the same
price in the U.K. as it is
here.
But that won't save American patients any money.
New schizophrenia drug?
A new schizophrenic drug is gonna be sold
cheaper.
No, it's not.
Yes, it is.

(02:38:24):
Wow.
New schizophrenic drug.
For all the schizophrenics.
They worked that one in.
The check is in the mail, girl.
Good job.
Okay, what do we have?
Well, I got a couple of things here.
There's a couple of, for example, the man
on the street was done by NTD asking

(02:38:47):
people just randomly on one of the malls
whether they think Trump's gonna run for a
third term.
I thought this was amusing.
You only want this in there because of
the $500 bet you have with your son.
Am I right?
No, I don't want it in there for
that reason.
I already got that bet.
That's done.
Yeah, okay, you wanna throw it.
Would you support President Trump running for a

(02:39:08):
third term?
NTD's Sam Wong was out on the National
Mall in D.C. We need to hear
from the people.
President Trump's been talking about potentially running for
a third term.
Perhaps a joke, perhaps not.
Would you like to see that happen?
Yes.
I would like to, but it's not gonna
happen.
That's not right.
He does say and do some things that
even we don't agree, but I don't think
that will happen.
You say you would like to see that
happen?
I would like it, yes.

(02:39:30):
He deserves to be in there because he's
moving everything forward, and that's great.
Sure, yeah, but I don't think he can.
Is it the 22nd Amendment?
I'm not 100% sure.
I don't even wanna comment.
I certainly think he will.
By the time it comes around, it'll be
legal to do so.
And would you be behind that?

(02:39:51):
Hell no.
Pretty soon, it'll only be Republicans that can
own guns, too.
President Trump has been talking about potentially running
for a third term.
Would you be on board with that?
Yeah.
I'm not a huge political person, but I'm
very turned off by the Democrats and just
liberals and just all of that.
I don't think anybody should be on two
terms.
That's been a tradition in our country, and

(02:40:13):
I think it's been pretty well established.
How about Vans 2028?
What do you think?
Ah!
No.
No, please no.
I don't have that many years left on
this planet.
I don't want this to go down like
this.
I see that happening, yeah, yep.
Would you be supporting him?
Yes.
Probably a continuation of what Trump has started,

(02:40:38):
just finishing it out and carrying it through.
I really, to be honest, don't know exactly
what he's doing right now.
I haven't really followed his speeches or interviews.
So if it's not Trump, then for sure,
Vans.
I won't close off to it.
I liked what he said a lot more
before the election than when he joined the

(02:40:58):
ticket.
So you're open-minded?
I try to be.
How about Vans 2028?
Yeah.
That would be a good call.
There's a couple other guys that could be
in the running as well.
We'll have to wait and see because we
really don't know much about Vans right now.
But if you ever watch, did you ever
watch his movie that he made about, well,
he didn't make it, but they made it

(02:41:19):
about his life and where he came from
to where he is today.
It was only God that did that.
But I would definitely vote for him in
28.
Brother.
Well, we could have done without that.
Goodness gracious, man on the street.
By the way, here's another clip that you'll
be burped about.

(02:41:39):
Make it funny.
Well, this is Crowder who puts himself back
on the pedestal and he's complaining about, hey,
you know, he gets threatened too.
I didn't get any of the Tim Poole
ones because Tim Poole has been saying the
same thing.

(02:42:00):
But Crowder's stuff is like a little out
there.
Crowder said he pulled back from these campus
events due to security issues with those in
the audience that opposed him turning violent.
When I did Change My Mind, it started
in 2016.
The idea was, hey, calling the left on
their bluff, civil dialogue with anyone to the
tune of billions of plays and hundreds of
hours.

(02:42:20):
And it got increasingly violent.
And what I didn't tell people, I told
people out there, go do this on your
own campus, have these conversations.
I advocated for it.
And Charlie took it to another level.
He was unbelievable at it.
I didn't tell people about the threats because
I didn't want copycats.
I didn't tell them about terrorists from Yemen
through Sweden showing up in East Grand Rapids.
I didn't tell them about concrete milkshakes.

(02:42:41):
I didn't tell them about my tires getting
slashed, about people trying to firebomb my car.
Turning Point's national tour continues with some of
the biggest conservative names, including Tucker Carlson, Megyn
Kelly, and Glenn Beck.
We have a- Yemen terrorists coming through
Sweden?
We have a term for a guy like
this in the old country.
We call it like a picker.

(02:43:02):
Say it with me now.
Like a picker.
It means what?
It means he's someone who picks off the
remains of dead bodies.
He's just trying to make a name for
himself off of Charlie Kirk's assassination.
I can't see it any other way.
Oh, look at me.
I'm so brave.
Yeah, I'm not gonna argue with that because

(02:43:23):
I found the thing peculiar.
What is a concrete milkshake?
Whether it's a milkshake that has concrete in
it and they throw it at you.
So it's like basically like a brick.
Yeah.
Well, they just throw a brick at you.
Yeah.
This is- It's like a lot of
work.
This is disappointing.
I saw him walking there with all his

(02:43:44):
security guys.
Oh yeah, I'm a big man.
I'm going on campus.
Look at me.
I'm so brave.
I was doing it before Charlie.
That's basically what he said.
Yeah, that's what he said.
That was the theme there.
Yeah.
Well, now you've just bummed me out.
Good.
Good.
Good.
Good.
Imagine all the people who could deal with
us.
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
♪ Yeah, on no agenda, in the morning.

(02:44:10):
♪ Well, and since you played that clip,
I'm going to force you to read all
of the donations that came in $50 and
above for the people who love us and
get value from this program.
If they're still listening after that- You
overlooked the good news part of that.
You overlooked the good news part of that.
There was no good news.
Yeah, you gave us a new Dutch term.
Like a picker.

(02:44:31):
Like a picker.
Am I pronouncing it correctly?
Yeah, pretty good.
Like a picker.
Like a picker.
Yeah, so like is a dead body.
Picker is picking, you know, taking stuff from
it.
Like a picker.
We need to use this.
Like a picker.
Interesting.
Yes.
Hey, thank our producers here, John.

(02:44:52):
Oh, and starting with Amy Harmon in Nashville,
North Carolina, came in $177.60. And she
has this, and she designates this as a
Charlie Kirk Freedom of Speech donation.
Ooh, I like that.
Heidi Quant in Centerville, Virginia, $140.15. And
she's got a birthday call out and a
note.
Ash in Texas, in Flower Mound, $138.38.

(02:45:15):
And this is a Who Shot JR donation.
Yeah!
There's two, two people.
Two people.
Two people, love it.
Eric Hochul in Mulrose, Deutschland, $104.
That's good, he's up there.
The top of the list now.
Baron Ladecken in Houston, Texas, $100.
Kevin McLaughlin, the Duke of Luna, lover of
America, lover of boobs, in Concord, North Carolina,
$8008.

(02:45:36):
Dame Dana Carroll in Laughlin, Nevada, $72.27.
Greg Kohler in Evansville, Indiana, $65.02, the
chip donation.
We get one of those every other show.
Dame Nancy of the Confused, $57.21. Donating

(02:45:57):
is good for the show and your soul,
she writes.
That's true, fact.
Dame, fact.
Dame Tracy and Sir Canebrake in St. George,
Louisiana, $55.10, double nickels on the dime.
Sir Price, Knight of Astonishment in Yukon, Oklahoma,
$54.44. John Bassano in Madison, Alabama, $52

(02:46:18):
.72. Steven Veneman, Veneman, Veneman in Genoa, Illinois,
$52.71. And now we have $50 donors.
We have a makeup, there's a lot of
them today compared to the last show, which
was four, I believe.
Bobby Bosch, oh, Bo, I'm sorry, Bobby Bo
in Bluegrass, Iowa.

(02:46:41):
These are all 50s.
Leif Thompson in Meridian, Idaho.
Nathan Knoll in Nederland, Texas.
Nederland.
Joshua.
Nederland.
You been there?
Yeah, I know where it is.
It's Nederland.
It's Nederland?
Nederland, yeah.
Oh, it's Nederland.
Yes, Nederland.
Well, it says Nederland.
I know, but it's really Nederland.
You need to have two Es instead of

(02:47:02):
one.
Joshua Johnson in Omaha.
Terrence Clark in Jacksonville Beach, Florida.
Tony Lang in Castle Pines, Colorado.
Scott McCarty in Lodi.
Sean Pendergast in Vista, California.
For Foster Birch in New York City.

(02:47:24):
Daniel Laboe in Bath, Michigan.
Matt Frazee in St. John's, Florida.
And Sir Luke Rayner, the East of London
and the Southwest, UK.
50.
Linda Walker in Roseburg, Oregon.
$50, that's a Bitcoin donation.

(02:47:45):
No, it's not.
So what's the green?
It's Stripe.
Oh, Stripe.
It's a Stripe donation.
Our buddy over here in San Francisco, Aichi
Kitagawa.
And last on the list, Sir Michael in
Snohomish, Washington.
It's people that helped us do show.
1804.
That's right, 1804.

(02:48:07):
18th anniversary coming up on the 26th of
October.
It's been quite the ride.
Thank you all very much.
And again, thanks to our executive and associate
executive producers for this episode.
And you can always support us at any
time.
Anytime you feel like it, whenever you're hitting
the show, even months from now, like I
got some value.
Let me send it back to him.
Noagendadonations.com set up a recurring donation today.

(02:48:27):
You'll see we actually have a layaway night
coming up and that night we'll get a
ring, of course, and all of the accoutrements
that go with it.
Any amount, any frequency, anytime you feel like
it, noagendadonations.com.
♪ It's your birthday, birthday ♪ ♪ On
No Agenda ♪ A real quick one.
We only have one on the list.
It doesn't happen often, but Heidi Quant wishes

(02:48:49):
Stephen Milling a very happy birthday.
He celebrates his 40th today and we celebrate
with him.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best
podcast in the universe.
And not one, but two, Secretary's General with
a jingle that says it wrong, but here
we go.
♪ All hail to the Secretary's Generals ♪
♪ Cause they are the ones who need

(02:49:11):
hailing ♪ ♪ All hail to the Secretary's
Generals ♪ ♪ On the No Agenda Show
♪ You heard him earlier.
Sir Donald of the Fire Bottles came in
with a Rub-A-Lizer donation, and of
course, automatically becomes a Secretary General.
He will henceforth be known as the Secretary
General of Greater Idaho.

(02:49:32):
And Sir Harko, he will now be known
as the Secretary General of the Wand of
Wabbits.
The Wand of Wabbits, I should say.
Secretary Generals, go to noagendarings.com.
Let us know where to send your certificate
because it is official.
You are now a Secretary General.
Congratulations.
♪ All hail to the Secretary Generals ♪

(02:49:52):
♪ Cause they are the ones who need
hailing ♪ ♪ All hail to the Secretary
Generals ♪ ♪ On the No Agenda Show
♪ And in today's segment, we also have
three knights to bring up on stage, including
Peter Goodall, who says, John Adam, I'm glad
to let you know that I've been listening

(02:50:12):
since 2013.
I was an irregular donor, then decided to
set a small bimonthly donation of $20.20
in the year 2020.
In the year 2020.
I made one small modification to it in
2022 and basically forgot about it since then.
Well, I just totaled it up and it
has made me long overdue for a knighthood

(02:50:32):
after amassing the pricely sum of $2,211.
Thank you very much.
I would like to be knighted Sir Slow
and Steady as in slow and steady wins
the race.
If possible, could I also get an associate
producer credit for this current episode?
I have to ask John.
I think on a request like that, I

(02:50:53):
think especially with the kind of overpaid for
the knighthood, sure, why not?
Okay, you consider it done.
He says, I would like to add it
to my LinkedIn profile.
So you are good to go and let
us bring out the swords.
Here's mine.
I'm always at the ready with my sword.
Here you go.
A nice blade he brings out Peter Johnson.
You're here as well.
Peter Goodall, step up Sir.

(02:51:14):
And Commodore Semi-Anonymous Vegan.
All of you support the No Agenda Show
in excess in many cases of $1,000
or more.
Therefore, I'm very proud to pronounce the Kate
all of you as Knights.
Knight Peter of Castleberry, Sir Akko of the
Land Down Under, and Sir Slow and Steady.

(02:51:35):
Gentlemen, for you, we have Hookers and Blow,
Red Boys and Chardonnay, a slice or two
of Hawaiian and margarita pizza soon to be
launched by 404 Pizza and pomegranate kombucha.
Along with that, we've got Bon Hits and
Bourbon Sparkling Cider, Eskimos, Ginger Edel and Gerbils,
Breast Milk and Pavlova, and as always at
the round table, the Mutton and the Mead.
And you can head over to noagendarings.com
and let us know what ring size you

(02:51:57):
have.
There's a little guide there that shows you
how to do it.
And along with that, we will send you
some wax to use with your signet ring
to seal your important correspondence.
And of course, as always, a signed certificate
of authenticity.
Welcome to you three, to the Knights and
the Dames of the No Agenda Roundtable.
No agenda, me up.

(02:52:19):
And there's a party going on as we
speak.
Actually, it's about to kick off the Northern
Wake Pumpkin Spice Showdown in Raleigh, North Carolina.
That'll be at six o'clock at Hoppy
Endings.
Go and check them out.
On Saturday, the tiny amygdala of Anchorage.
They will be uniting in Anchorage, Alaska at
two o'clock at Campbell Park.
Go there and send us a meetup report.

(02:52:41):
You haven't heard from Anchorage in quite a
while.
I'd love to get a meetup report and
include your server if you can.
Coming up in the month of October on
the 9th, Parker, Colorado, Johnson City, Texas on
the 10th.
That's right down the road, about 45 minutes
away.
But Fredericksburg, Texas will be on the 11th
and Tina the Keeper has confirmed she will
be there as well at J6 or Jenny's

(02:53:02):
place.
Also on the 11th, Garden City, Idaho.
The 16th, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Coleyville, Texas.
Colleyville, Texas on the 18th.
Fort Wayne, Indiana on the 18th.
Columbus, Ohio as well.
The 19th, Lansing, Michigan.
Los Altos, California.
The 25th, the 26th, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.
The 31st, Leiden in Zuyt Holland, the Netherlands.
And on the 15th of November, is this

(02:53:24):
another one that you're going to attend, John,
in Albany, California?
At the Mallard Club?
That sounds like it.
John will be there.
Those are the No Agenda Meetups which you
can find at noagendameetups.com.
Remember, when you go to a No Agenda
Meetup, you will make connections that will give
you lifelong protection.
These people will be your first responders in

(02:53:45):
an emergency.
Noagendameetups.com.
If you can't find one near you, start
one yourself.
It's easy.
♪ Sometimes you wanna go hang out ♪
♪ With all the nights and days ♪
♪ Call me triggered or hella lame ♪
♪ You wanna be where everybody feels the

(02:54:07):
same ♪ ♪ It's like a party ♪
Yeah, baby.
It's like a party every single time.
It's just like a party.
And before we get to John's tip of
the day and our outstanding end of show
mixes, we like to select our ISOs here
for the end of show.
I have three, John has two.
I'm sure they're AI'd, so I'll just do

(02:54:28):
my real people ISOs first.
Is this true?
Which I thought was pretty good.
I kind of like that one.
We have this one.
I mean, you can't make this up, okay?
And this one I thought was just funny.
Brought to you by Pfizer.
Well, I like the Alex Jones one of

(02:54:50):
the three.
Okay.
Now I have, I don't know how this
is AI or not, but this is the
W-A-W-D.
What are we doing?
No, it doesn't sound like AI.
What are we doing?
Because it's not.
No.
And this one here could be just a
real person.
This is the Wowie clip.
Wowie Fawlty, what a fabulous show.

(02:55:11):
No, that's AI.
That is just so AI.
What?
Wowie Fawlty, what a fabulous show.
What is she even saying?
Wowie Fawlty?
Wowie Fawlty, what a fabulous show.
Who's Fawlty?
What I put in there was Wowie and
then basically a random number of letters.
Just gibberish to see what it would say.
Yeah, I don't like it.

(02:55:32):
I mean, you can't make this up.
I think that's the one we're gonna have
to go with.
Hey, everybody, it's time for John's tip of
the day.
Well, this is a screwball tip.
This is something I didn't think I'd ever

(02:55:53):
do, but I'm gonna do it.
I'm going to recommend that people go watch
a PBS show.
What?
And you can get it over on Amazon
Prime.
They have it over there and it's on
the PBS.
You can dig it up, but it is
a terrific show that everyone who listens to
No Agenda should watch.
This is, it's a recent American experience called

(02:56:13):
The Hard Hat Riots.
And it's about the hard hat riots in
New York in the late 60s, early 70s,
which is a history.
A lot of it, I didn't, I was
completely unaware of it.
It was, a lot of the stories were
suppressed.
They were not in the media, but it's
the genesis during the Nixon administration, the genesis

(02:56:34):
of the working class moving toward the Republican
Party, how it all came about, how the
Democrats had switched over to just pretty much
supporting the banker class right in that moment
when the CIA came in during the Russ
Baker, in that Russ Baker book and pointed
out the fact that the CIA was behind
the Watergate scandal, which got Nixon kicked out,

(02:56:54):
made him quit, and so they got back
on track.
Wait a minute, what is this called again?
It's called The Hard Hat Riots.
It's one of the best histories I've seen.
I know part of it.
I was there pretty much, but I don't,
I'm watching this going, this is all news
to me.
It's fascinating.
Huh.
Is that like the OG people sick day?

(02:57:18):
Is that kind of what that is?
No, not at all, actually.
It was about, it was not about any,
it's just, it's an unimaginably good documentary on
the American experience.
Considering it's from PBS and you're promoting it,
it really must be a doozy.
It's a doozy, it's a killer.
I love it.
There it is, everybody.

(02:57:38):
John's Tip of the Day.
Find them all at tipoftheday.net.
Great advice from you and me.
Just a tip with JCB.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Brunetti.
And there you go.
That is our show for today.
I saw Hakeem Jeffries do a press conference,

(02:57:59):
so more sombrero will be forthcoming by this
evening, I'm sure.
No doubt about it.
Retardo.
I was thinking about Mucho Retardo as a
show title.
Mucho Retardo is a good show title.
It's not bad.
It's a decent idea.
Hey, coming up next on the No Agenda
Stream, it's Nick the Rat from the sewers
of New York City.

(02:58:20):
This is his 508th episode.
It's titled Dill Slop.
So you gotta wonder what that's about.
So stay tuned for it on your modern
podcast app or if you're listening to the
stream right now, directly at noagendastream.com.
End of show mixes.
Agent Looper is back with some thoughts and
prayers and Jeffrey Crocker with a great, a

(02:58:41):
great parody.
It's been a while, but the jury is
still out whether it's AI or if he
really can sing like that.
Coming to you from the heart of the
Texas Hill Country in picturesque Fredericksburg where it
is Oktoberfest, everybody.
In the morning, I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley where I remain,

(02:59:01):
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
We'll talk to you on Sunday with another
one, two, three hours of media deconstruction.
Until then, remember us at noagendadonations.com.
Adios, mofos.
Ahoy, ahoy.
And such.
Gather round, bitches.
Bitches, gather round.
Gather round, bitches.

(02:59:22):
Bitches, gather round.
Go in hands and bow our heads.
Oh, thoughts and prayers.
Thoughts and prayers.
Thoughts and prayers.
Bitches.
I posted a video offering thoughts and prayers.
Oh, thoughts and prayers.

(02:59:43):
Thoughts and prayers.
Thoughts and prayers.
Oh.
I met her in a school in the
north of France where she taught me to
act and wear tie-dye pants to see
my boner, B-O-N-A, boner.

(03:00:08):
She walked up to me and she asked
me to dance.
She asked me my name and in a
high-pitched voice I said, Macrona.
E-M-A-N-U-O, Macrona.
M-M-M-Macrona.

(03:00:30):
Well, I'm not the world's most physical guy,
but when she squeezed me tight, I knew
that she'd be Mrs. Macrona.
Well, I'm not dumb, but I can't understand
why she walked like a woman but talked
like a man.
She's Macrona.

(03:00:52):
M-M-M-Macrona, boner.
Well, we drank champagne and danced all night
under electric candlelight.

(03:01:13):
She picked me up and sat me on
her knee and said, little boy, won't you
come home with me?
Well, I'm not the world's most passionate guy,
but when I looked up to me, Mrs.
Macrona.
M-M-M-Macrona.
M-M-M-Macrona.

(03:01:36):
Bridget Macrona.
M-M-M-Macrona.
The best podcast in the universe.
Adios, mofo.
Dvorak.org slash N-A.

(03:01:57):
I mean, you can't make this up, okay?
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