
I'm washed up. Adam curry Jhansi Devorah tonight 2024 This Year Award winning give on nation media assassination episode 1667 This is no agenda, defying climate despair and broadcasting live from the heart of the Titans. No country here in FEMA Region number six in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry.

If another Silicon Valley where we all agree that Eric Sean on Fox is annoying. I'm John C double x.

Kill Eric who?

Yeah, it's been 25 years. Eric

Shawn. Yeah. I've never even heard of this guy.

Yeah, he shows up a lot more than you used to. But he's been there forever. He's he is the Trump hitman. And he if you see a picture of me he looks like an IRS agent who never got promoted.

I honestly, I don't have cable anymore. though. Yeah, that kind of ruins it, doesn't it?

Yeah, again, we get Fox. Well, I

have YouTube TV. So

I guess I could watch the YouTube TV has Fox I know. But I only have

that, you know, for a backup in case there's something I really need to watch. Now ever since Tucker left the fox became uninteresting. I think that's when it all went downhill. And they just became, you know, lame. They were already kind of lame. But isn't that all that we ever watched? Did you watch Do you watch Fox and Friends in the morning?

No, I watch if I've watched Fox I watched gut failed. No.

Of course you do. Yeah. That's good. Yeah.

And, and then I might watch the five. Oh, maybe I think

also ever since Jesse waters took over like the prime time spot is like, just done. It's like, he's goofy.

He is goofy. He's

goofy. You know, at least if Tucker at least we could watch and say let's see if he has what we had three days ago. Yeah.

A month ago.

Now he did the high start to catch up. It started to become like Sunday and then Monday are

catching up. They had to get rid of him. Yeah, exactly.

He got too close to the truth. Exactly right. Well, as we predicted, as we predicted on non Thursday, the heat dome is here who's to
coast tonight scorching triple digit temperatures from California to Florida, across the West. 50 million people under a heat dome all notice as carbon dioxide is accumulating faster than ever in the atmosphere. Notice

that has nothing to do with the heat dome. But no, it just says that we'll just associated we're

gonna get this report where you throw carbon dioxide it's got nothing to do with this MBC baby
site is accumulating faster. All this as Noah says under a heat dome. All this as notice as carbon dioxide is accumulating faster than ever in the atmosphere acting like a blanket over the earth and warming the planet. The EU finds globally the last 12 months have each been the hottest ever on record. We need to very seriously people are dying. People are dying mass

cold here. I mean, stop the presses. It's cold and right now to temperatures throughout cold. kinda cold, but it's 56 or so. And the heat dome was here for two days. The fog rolled and it's been colder this year than it was last year. Another record breaking cold for the Bay Area. Who are we kidding?

I love how riled up you get over this because they lie. No, they're not lying. They're saying there's a heat dome. And then she says all this as Noah says there's more carbon dioxide has nothing to do with the heat dome. But then she brings it brings in the blanket. The blanket is killing people. But that's NBC. How about the elitist voices from NPR?
The heat dome is a big pocket of high pressure that locks in heat. Okay, what is the connection between climate change generally and this specific heat event?

This is Didn't you want to know this once you would you interest there's never

been a high pressure system in the history of mankind until climate change. No

1936 We had a very big No way. Yes, it was one of the most severe heat waves that took place in the middle of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl 1936 1936 when we didn't have any climate change back then or maybe we did I don't know. But it was the same temperature but now now this high pressure system which as far as I can tell has nothing to do with carbon dioxide has everything to do with carbon dioxide According to NPR
they're intimately connected.

intimately connected there they haven't they making love out there on the beach general Li and
this specific heat event they're intimately connected save, you know, humans burn oil and gas and coal it releases planning.

Are we going to get through anything today? Are you just one Oh,

he's just one of those sorts of clips.

This is good stuff, man. This is why we're here so people can feel good about knowing that they're being bullcrap till
it releases carbon dioxide and other planet warming gases, those gases, they accumulate in the atmosphere over the course of decades and all that excess gas traps heat and that directly leads to higher temperatures worldwide directly, it helps drive these extreme heat events, temperature get even

she's kind of waffling around, like okay, so carbon dioxide, according to her heats up the air, but has nothing to do with the heat dome directly
leads to higher temperatures worldwide. It helps drive these extreme heat events, where the temperature gets really high and sees really high like what we're seeing. And in fact, scientists can say that the most intense heat waves that are happening right now would be literally impossible without human caused climate change. So

literally impossible, literally. That that does include the Dust Bowl, literally impossible without scorched the earth and resulted in everyone from Oklahoma moving into California and 30s not Texas, because they're part of a worldwide depression. Yeah, nothing like that. No, no, no, nothing

like that. literally impossible.
It's a really close connection. Our news here is a really close connection. Oh, lady that carbon dioxide levels are hitting a record. Many people who follow this are aware that the United States has been cutting its greenhouse gas emissions. How does that work?

Yeah, what
states has been cutting its greenhouse gas emissions. Yeah, yeah, that didn't happen. That's but yeah, quite small. This was last year and two years before that. The US emissions actually increased each year. So the bigger picture here is that, you know, one, the US decrease in emissions is not that big, and to a lot of other countries are not cutting their emissions. So altogether, it's definitely not enough on its own to reverse this trend of co2 accumulation.
There is the question of the rest of the world which is the majority of the world's people and the majority of the economic activity

No, no, no, we've got to kill the cows you got to eat bugs? Or is there something else we can do? Rebecca Hirscher
so how is the carbon dioxide level measured? Well, scientists continuously measure co2 in the atmosphere and every single year the peaks

how how he said how co2 amount sets
a new record because humans keep adding more co2 faster than it can break down this has been happening since scientists started measurements in 1958. And because scientists are able to use other methods as well to estimate how much co2 was oh it's an

estimation he sees she's She didn't answer the question. He said how do they do it? Well, they got other methods they estimate models perhaps
and because scientists are able to use other methods as well to estimate how much

I don't know it shows other other than what is NPR man
estimated how much co2 was in the atmosphere going back millennia? We can actually say with confidence that there's more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere now than there has been in millions of years. Millions

I don't think so.

The dinosaurs had what 10 times as much carbon dioxide so they could actually survive millions

wasn't for the dinosaurs benefit for for plants you have that much carbon dioxide plants go nuts. You need big giant plants for the dinosaur

to eat. Yes, that's why yes, giant
then there has been even this guy is going millions millions of years and millions and millions of years. Okay, so how high is this number? Well, the exact number is 426.9 parts per million of co2 in the atmosphere. That may not sound like a lot parts per million. But the earth is really really like a lot as point.

Oh 4% Are you kidding me? Yes,

of which the US is what are we responsible? 30% of that? Oh point 4% I

don't know I brought or No, I 20%. But there was just a make
per million. But the earth is really really sensitive to changes in the atmosphere. A little bit of extra co2 chops, a lot of heat, but really sticks out is that this number is significantly higher than last year. It was a really, really big jump really, really, June the atmosphere is actually accelerating. Rebecca thanks for the update. Really appreciate it. Thanks so much. Really.

Here's Rebecca Hirsch bullshit, massive bull crap mass which

the problem with this debt clip and everything else that you've been hearing is that the clip I have? Oh, this is the problem a which I find to be very distressing. We haven't talked about this too much. It does come up in the conversation. Yes, but this is the clip about The psychological effects this is typical, the psychological effects of lying to the public about all this stuff in a negative way, this is the micro climate effects on children.
A child born today will live an entire life shaped by climate change. But a new report in the journal The Lancet, finds that children may not be getting due consideration in a country's climate adaptation policies and peers Alejandra Varuna has more. Most countries in the world now have written plans for how to deal with climate change. But when a team of researchers looked at 160 of them, they found a notable gap. About a quarter didn't have any policy goals specifically aimed at
helping and protecting children. And none had any plans to address the growing problem of climate related anxiety amongst young people. Another recent analysis found that nearly 60% of kids surveyed worldwide were very or extremely worried about climate change. The researchers suggest getting kids directly involved in climate policy decisions since it's their lives that will be most affected.

Oh, you let the kids get involved? Yeah, this I think the climate change PR company has been working because Time magazine, or time.com, I should say. Also had quite the article they only they call it climate despair.

Yes, that's what the kids are experiencing climate despair. How did they get this way? Of course, from the from the teachers who are scientists, and the other idiots that are ruining their lives. So

the time starts off with forget climate anxiety, many people are either in flat out climate despair, hands up trolls, if you're in climate despair, let me see all the hands. According to this article, two thirds of Americans 65% report being worried about global warming, which of course we know every single poll puts it at the bottom. They're like, how about the economy? Good

point about all these polls do come out during the election periods and climate change is not up there.

If the threat is existential, is there value in sorting out how you feel about it? The very first step is full validation, says Lesley Davenport, a climate psychology educator, oh boy, and author of books including emotional resilience in the era of climate change, a clinicians guide, and she has seven handy tips. As it says here climate aware therapists here share their most effective coping strategy from going from overwhelmed to empowered Are you interested in hearing some tips on how to

yes and no?

What's the no part

is that this is a terrible thing to be discussing. But we I think you should at least roll out these fabulous tips and I'm sure this should be at the top of everyone's list of things to do. Okay,

first of all, top of the list talk about it. Oh,

that's what we're doing. We're number one. Yes,

climate change tends to get the religion and politics treatment people avoid talking about it. Join the don't here's here's, here's, here's part of this tip is join a climate cafe. Hello, is there join a climate Cafe these are discussed

with the hills a climate Cafe these

these are discussion spaces, both online and in person where people can talk freely about their fears and other feelings related to climate change

is like sensitivity training.

I think all I know is in this encounter group. This may be as popular as the internet cafes of the of the early 90s. Get yourself a climate cafe. Or you could shot change the good grief network, which is a peer support group that follows a 10 step approach

to Oh, we've gone from seven to 10

No, no, no, this is we're still number one. Number two is use your connections. Use your connections because you know connection

that it has connections protection, and it will save us from climate change. Is that what they said? Well, you have connections you want to have climate change. What are they talking about? Research

suggests that the lonelier and more socially isolated someone feels the higher their levels of climate distress. So freely,

it seems to me somebody's completely out of the loop. They won't even know about this.

You've got to find your people, which is of course no agenda meetups.com We're so on. We've got number one and number two. You could also join local land restoration efforts. Get involved with involved with community gardening.

Put a garden in your backyard. Oh wait, these are all apartment dwellers who we're talking about who are all into this because they can't afford a house because they're sitting around fretting about climate changes that are doing some work. Number

three, analyze your carbon footprint. This will help some people cope with climate distress by distancing themselves from the problem, they ignore it hoping it will just go away. It's more effective to take the energy of all those emotions and redirect them into constructive action. You can use an online calculator to track your carbon footprint, you'll feel better about yourself.

That would assess Yes, yes. What

about cutting co2 emissions by taking the train instead of an airplane? Be honest with yourself. Number three on the list, share your

London a calculation of a train bus to build and operate in terms of carbon footprint compared to a plane. I

just love doing these with you, you know, God felt should be ashamed of himself. He hasn't had you on the show yet. Awesome. Number three, share your views. This is no time for humility. Make sure everyone around you noticed that you're going to combat climate change. If you're surrounded by people,

wow, that's a good one.

To wear the t shirt. If you're surrounded by people who don't appear to prioritize the environment as much as you do lead by example. Rather than trying to change their minds, grow fruits and vegetables, share them with your neighbors.

It's a good idea.

We're on to the next point make it a family affair. This is how you really get to the kids. Research suggests that climate change is especially affecting young people's mental health. If your kids are coming to you with concerns, slap them upside the head, tell them to knock it off. Oh wait. That's not what it says. If your kids are coming to you with concerns, listen and validate them. Then get imaginative about your home how your whole family can take action together. Can

you imagine this? What you just described? Actually, somebody doing this What's slapping the kid worried sick as he's just got out of school. He's worried sick. He's fretting. He's was hand wringing he or she hand wringing crying perhaps about the climate? And then you're going to validate this? Yeah. Oh,

yeah. This is what you do. This is what you do. Get artsy is the next one on the list? Yes. Making art can help people regulate and work through their emotions. You're doing pattern repetitive movements and getting into a flow state. Tell them to code. It's calming.

Learn to code calming. Learn

to get into the flow state of coding. You can use colors, shapes and lines to express how you're feeling.

Really? Yes, final

one on the list. Savor time outside. Yes. spending time outside in green spaces will benefit your well being. love and grief are two sides of the same coin. Be Yes. So there's some kind of some kind of PR to the end of the show could have been our tip. No, I got it's my turn for the tip of the day. So I got a tip of the day. Oh, I have

a tip. No, don't do go to Tim. No, no link tip.

No. You said it was my turn to do the tip. You made this. Why'd you

have to start doing Yes. I didn't quite say that. But it's fine you if you have a

tip. Alright, we'll both do a tip at the end of the show. It'll be dueling Tip of the day, but only only the tip.

I like dueling Tip of the Day. All right, we'll

do Duolingo and then we should

do a vote off.

Okay, sounds good. Speaking of traumatizing terrorizing your kids, there is some actual good news. Good news. And this comes from of course, you're not going to hear much about it. They had a press conference and well, there was a little clip somewhere but that was about it. The American College of Pediatrics came out with a press conference. This was this was a little bit like the were the doctors during COVID who went on the steps of the Senate remember then they all had the lab coats on

I'm trying to think of what they were called

yeah that a kind of good name is like doctors cute name Yeah.

Doctors for doctors, real doctors. Yeah

real with real doctors.

Actual doctors line we

have the frontline the frontline doctors,

Frontline, frontline something something, whatever. So it's kind

of similar. They have a woman spokesperson. Everyone has their lab coats on that did the guy emblems you know, they look official. They are official. They've released a whole lot of survey. Data and here's what they had to say.
And we have serious concerns about the physical and mental health effects of the current protocols promoted for the care of children and adolescents in the United States who expressed discomfort with their biological sex. This declaration was authored by the American College of
Pediatricians. But really it was developed from the expertise of hundreds of doctors, researchers and other health care workers and leaders, who for years have been sounding the alarm on the harmful protocols that continue to be promoted by the medical organizations in the United States goals. Despite recent revelations from the leaked W path files, and the recent release of the final report from the cast review, these medical
organizations have not changed course. So we are calling on these medical organizations of the United States, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, The Endocrine Society, the pediatric Endocrine Society, the American Medical Association, the American Psychological Association, and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry to follow the science
and their European colleagues. And immediately stop the promotion of social affirmation, puberty blockers, cross sex hormones and surgeries for certain for children and adolescents who experience distress over their biological sex. In our declaration, we affirm that sex is a dimorphic innate trait defined in relation to an organism's biological role in reproduction, male and female. This genetic signature is present in every nucleated somatic cell in the body, and is
not altered by drugs or surgical interventions. Consideration of these innate differences is critical to the practice of good medicine, and to the development of sound policy for children and adults alike. Medical Decision Making should be based upon an individual's biological sex, it should respect biological reality and the dignity of the person by compassionately
addressing the whole person. We are here to find the claims made by these medical organizations in the US that those of us who are concerned are a minority, and that their protocols are consensus. They are not consensus, and we are speaking in a loud unified voice Enough,

enough. Amen.
Amen to that. Enough,

I saw this. Did you see at the same time this was going on there? Was that weird? a drag queen, female or guide or what it was at the Texas Democrat convention? Oh, yeah. Yeah, pretty much saying the exact same opposite. This is hopeless. The problem is the way I see it, yeah. With people like Kaiser Foundation and all these health organizations is that this is a moneymaker bonanza. It's a bonanza. And so what if the kids are scarred for life or they commit suicide three years
later? Who cares? Their money to be made from these processes is too much. And then these people that are involved with this group here that you're just played, will all be rebuked? The trying to break us there.

At the same time, what I found a little maybe even more interesting is that the covenant school Tennessee shooter Audrey Hale, they have they recovered a journal, the Tennessee star, reprinted pieces of it. Yeah,

that before just to preface what you're gonna say, we had one of the police doing that investigation, contact us and we played it, or I discussed this or read from this note, and we discussed it, he had already seen the entire thing. And it was horrendous. Well,

the part that is interesting, these are these so this is not the manifesto, but this is part of this child's journal. And I'll just quote from the piece here later Hale wrote, I will be of no use of love for any girl if I don't have what they need a boy's body a male gender. Next to these remarks, hail illustrated the words everything hurts, which
she used repeatedly throughout the journal. While the source of hails purported discomfort is unclear, mosquitoes must musculoskeletal pain is a possible side effect of medication that was prescribed to hell by staff at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, of course, but who knows what that was. But in addition to this pain, the National Institutes of Health explains the side effects of that
medication. The anti anxiety drug buce pirone include abnormal dreams, outbursts of anger, tremors and physical weakness. Hail was additionally prescribed. S Khatallah pram, better known as Lexapro and Medical News Today explains that using the depression drug with busick prone could could quote increase the risk of the side effects, which is outbursts of anger, etc. Stop putting kids on these drugs. Let's start with that. And

that's all Oh, that's no good. It's costing us money.

We got to boots. Did you see the email from our I asked him if I could read some of this from our producer who was in the testing industrial complex during COVID. Speaking of money, the Bonanza that it was, these was a very long email. I don't know if you read it. I didn't see it. He says the company I work for had the contracts to test about 225,000
students and staff on a weekly basis. This was the Los Angeles United school district provide a unified and the contracts to test half of the LAUSD for one school year was how much you think that was $20 million $750 million.

I'm a little low.

Just a tad. Another company had the contract to test the other half. When it started, we had 800 health care workers flown in, living in hotel rooms in and around Los Angeles getting $87 Per Diem so each day you get 87 bucks to do stuff with at the time we were the largest US customer for Hertz rent a car with nearly 500 vehicles. Eventually to help the economy. We transition to all local employees hired as temporary W tos. At the end we had 1200 employees on the
project. The lab we contracted with was in Oakland, California. So twice a day Monday through Friday. Samples were flown from Van Nuys Airport up to Oakland by a contracted company using their own aircraft. And then he goes on to say about he says working with the LAUSD was a nightmare as you can imagine the DEI bullshit was off the charts. Both the LAUSD and company I worked for suffered mightily from the incompetence inherent to dei literal effing idiots toxic, paranoid narcissists.
When no Biden's vaccine mandate came down, their true fastest nature was exposed, exposed, I had to fire people who did not want the poison Vax because LAUSD did not want the unclean in their schools. And then, our boots on the ground producer has his own confession, he says, I know I will burn in hell for what I did, which I am ashamed to admit I did out of greed, having gorgeous, I love that he's no, you will not bother
you. And I'm praying for you. Having never made a lot of money, and in the previous 10 years living outside the normal financial system, and only making about $24,000 a year I'm ashamed to say the temptation of $250,000 a year was too much to withstand. I knew all about the Nuremberg Code, but on every occasion I attempted to discuss with my superiors, I was rebuffed, I still have a lump on my head from banging it against
the wall in frustration on an hourly basis. Any attempt to improve operations or efficiency had to be measured against the potential loss of revenue. So the more inefficient and the more people required, the more money make my company made. Remember that contract was for up to $750 million? No way in hell, they would leave money on the table. Ah. So that that that's it. That's really what what is happening with these
trans kids? That's what's happening with the entire pharmaceutical system, the system, the system itself, the system? And yes, of course, there are good doctors. I got a sweet note from one of our doctors said we're not all horrible. No, of course you're not with generalizing.

It is not the doctors fault. Usually. It's the protocols. Yes, it Yeah, the doctors have to go especially if they're working for some organization. They have to follow the protocols. They're just simply get fired. And meanwhile I ever met in and hydroxy, Chloroquine and all that stuff was thrown out the door because No, no, no, it's not at a protocol you can't do and you couldn't get

emergency use authorization if there was something that could fix the problem.
And then we come to the VAX this morning chiefs defensive end Vijay Thompson recovering following a medical emergency sources say the 25 year old Thompson appeared to suffer a seizure and go into cardiac arrest during a team meeting Thursday while I'm arrowhead drive cardiac arrest. There's a doctor on site and CPR is in progress at this time. Team doctors and trainers are working to stabilize the young player before an ambulance rushed him to a nearby hospital.
The Chiefs canceling practice, but not offering any official comment. How critical are those first few minutes post cardiac event? The first few minutes and even seconds are critical. We know that every second that the heart is not pumping blood as it should to the brain and the rest of the body. The probability of having a good outcome declines precipitously as a rookie defensive lineman Thompson played in one game last season showing promise on a team that took home yet another Super
Bowl championship. His college coach writing prayers up for SFA football zone. BJ Thompson, thankful for the Chiefs medical team, as the rapid and excellent response made the difference.

Now you've been following sports ball for many, many years. Have you ever seen this many cardiac arrest round

is happening commonly. And it's the whole sub stack column dedicated to this. I think I sent you one of these ones. Everyone's will send you one because it has too many people in it. The last time he did one, I can't remember this. I have to hit the nail. You got it? Yeah, tips, put it in the tips. Yeah. But it's the guy follows all this. And he recently just did all these celebrities that that were rock and roll musicians that are starting to drop left and right.
are having these heart attacks just out of the blue. And it's it's pretty well, I have a series of clips. Peter McCullough coming up later, can

I play the payoff to this one, and then we can actually go to McCool. Actually, I

got I have an inner it's something in the middle. That should probably be played. Okay. All right. Yeah, I want to pay off. What's the payoff?

Oh, what do you want to do you want to play? You're in the middle clip, or do you want me? No, no, no,

the enemy video clip is light. Well, the question

that the experts are stumped. They cannot. They

they're always stumped. They cannot figure out their experts. By the way. They know everything about everything. But for some reason this situation stumps them they don't

understand the the cancers. They don't understand the cardiac. Right turbo cancer turbo, can't they aggressive turbo? Can they just don't have that? Is it something in the food? Is it is it something environmental? Is it stress? transfats.

Here's the latest
we turn to a health alert now and it's released today raising concerns about popular sugar substitute. Dan Thompson is here and what did we learn in Leicester. This is the latest study to find a link between a common sugar substitute and cardiovascular issues. Xylitol is in all sorts of free gum candy and baked goods, even toothpaste.

So now it's the Xylitol that's doing it.

And by the way, xylitol has been in the public domain as a sweetener for digestible sweetener, basically, that that sugary for I remember first hearing about it 30 years ago, where all the heart attacks then.

Well, Newsweek reports the latest because these pilots all I mean, people can't remember the name even No, no. Energy drinks are linked to sudden cardiac arrest. There it is. Oh, that's new on the scene. The researchers at the Mayo Clinic have warned that drinking these beverages, which often contain high amounts of caffeine and other stimulating ingredients, oh, no dangerous for people with genetic heart
disease. Yes. So they studied they examined 144 sudden cardiac arrest survivors, seven patients within this group had consumed one or more energy drinks near to the time of the cardiac event. So you could drink a monster and keel over dead. When are we going to wake up as a civilization

but you're waking up? You're like, oh, no, no,

no. Clearly waking

up doesn't know. Too much money, money, money, money.

There's 900,000 people who listen to this show. They're waking up. They're like, hey, wait a minute, I'm awake.

Well, 900,000 that's one in 300 with less than one and three. Everybody

tells 300 Friends, the whole country like the rich

wish they would.

All right, you're up to bat. Okay,

well, here this is a little break in the action. But before we get to some more serious stuff. This is interesting, because this is an ask Adam.

Oh, hold on a second. Oh, I wasn't I was not prepared. All right. You haven't asked Adam now. You mean, you're doing these and I wasn't quite you know, we haven't been

quite get it. You haven't already? I didn't

answer the question. The answer the question.

I got to ask Adam question. Yes.

Do I play it now? Yeah. Okay.
One of the country's most famous doctors is getting some long awaited recognition.

Okay, what are the most famous now you know who this is? It

can only be one of two people can only be one of two people.

And this is this over here. This is NPR so it's very important. Yes. Okay, who are the one? Who do you think it might? Okay, I'll give you the two. Are they?

Okay? It's either the truly most important doctor in Oh, I'm sorry. There's four. I'll give them to you in order of appearance one Dr. Peter McCullough two Dr. Drew three, Dr. Fauci and for Dr. Bill Jaiden

well, you're damn close.

Okay, all right. I have two answers here apparently which one do we play? You

play the number one and which is the second one just to follow
up getting some long awaited recognition. I drink Dr. Pepper and out of crowds Oh no. Dr. Pepper just surpassed Pepsi to become the second most popular carbonated beverage in America. Coca Cola is still number one. Coca Cola Classic has about 19% of the carbonated soft drink market in the US Dwayne Stanford is the editor and publisher of beverage digest. So then in second place, you got Dr Pepper with an 8.3 Share, which is now a carbonated bubble or two ahead of Pepsi.
Dr. Pepper used to market itself as the plucky underdog of soft drinks, but it's actually older than Coke or Pepsi. It was invented in 1885 started off as a regional brand in the southwest and it grew over the years and its major national player which Wayne Stanford credits to Dr. Peppers targeted marketing. They've gone really big on college football. On any given weekend during the championship bowl series, you'll see Dr. Pepper
girls football playoff trophy. Dr. Pepper, the Greek gods trophies classic. This afternoon he also has a strong presence on Tik Tok where Dr. Pepper and pickles has become a thing. Here's tic tock her and a gray stems. The pickles are in there I invested pickle juice in there for good measure. And here goes the doctor Kripa

not bad. All right. I'm very disappointed in myself for a number of reasons. One I forgot to mention Dr. Johnny fever as one of the most important doctors in America to every single no agenda show but I consume a seven and a half fluid ounce can of Dr Pepper. If that's why I knew it was established in 1885 Because it says it right on the cam and it has 23 of authentic blends of flavors. Yes. Do you know Dr. Oz is

a little more What do you know

the ingredients of a Dr Pepper? No I do not carbonated water high fructose corn syrup. Oh it's got high fructose corn residue and good caramel caramel color. Phosphoric acid natural and artificial flavors sodium benzoate caffeine and is produced under the authority of Dr. Pepper seven up Inc Hall of Fame label All right there you go Frisco Louis

aside it's just a little more foggy first of all this is a native ad Do you think and I've been finding native ads on NPR more often than not interesting and they go out of their way to promote one product even though they mentioned the competition they do a really good job it makes it sound like oh what an interesting story they came

through and Coca Cola and they're just way

out to the store without saying something but they did this is like support like news but it's not news it's a native as somebody bought and paid for this do the timing on it but I'm sure that length is right on the money in some way.
And the other thing is as interesting and they actually sell this in a store in Marin County but the when Dr. Pepper was sold to seventh up the original owners the family that owns it we're allowed to continue making the original Dr. Pepper as Dr. Pibb it's still called Dr. Pepper is has some some differences on the label and it's it tastes better and this may was sugar and not fructose corn syrup see of
course. And it's more expensive by a lot. It's a little bitty bottle and but it's good and if you can and it's I think it is still be made in Texas in Waco. Waco. Yeah, Waco is the OG so you can look it up. You can probably drink that so that crap you're drinking. Well,

you're right because it could give me a cardiac arrest.

Any minute, so I can go so if you want to finish off the native add more details. Here we go. Can't wait.
It's weird, but it's not bad. That's a standard for you. We're not bad. Dwayne Stanford says Dr. Pepper has gained ground also because of the choices by the rival it just past Petzi has invested more in their zero sugar offerings and not as much in Pepsi Cola. They believe That's the future when it comes to carbonated soft drinks. So Pepsi Cola is down Dr. Pepper is Stanford anticipates Dr. Pepper will stay in second place. So cheers to Dr. Pepper. Okay, the pickles. I know pickles. Yeah, yeah.

Wow. To be a pepper to steal still in my head from when I was six years old dynamite that's a good one John's machine Those are good for a jeep, Jeep. Wait until you hear the tip of the day jingle. But, you know, I know that the tip of the day is is is a runaway success because I'm

Brian always unlike Yeah, I was running away from

unlike the good news. I must have 20 Tip of the Day jingle. So people are liking it. They liked the idea and they're gonna have to wait until they get their daily dose of tip. Just the tip. Just the tip. Well, I know. I know. You say no one's going to know is your season have revealed as crap merited it. But
yeah, but yeah, crap. Yeah, yeah.

But the Supreme Court justices. That's really coming to a head right now. By why? Well, because of the disclosure. You heard about the disclosures? No. Oh, the disclosures
tonight Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, for the first time is officially disclosing a controversial 2019 trip to Bali with billionaire Harlan Crowe. At the time Thomas said the trips were a form of personal hospitality that justices did not have to report. Now his disclosure report said the two trips had been inadvertently omitted from his 2019 report. As for his colleagues, Justice Catan g brown Jackson reported receiving a $900,000 book advance plus for
concert tickets were $3,700 from pop superstar Beyonce. And just as Sonia Sotomayor disclosed $86,000 In Book royalties, the Supreme Court adopted a new code of conduct last year, although critics say there's no way to enforce it.

So this is really interesting, because of course, going after Clarence Thomas for these trips that he took on on someone's private jet. Meanwhile, meanwhile, Catan G Jackson Browne gets a $900,000 advance on her book, and we all know it will read and maybe you can explain how book sales work and how you get on the New York Times bestseller list?

Well, I can. No, I can't really explain how you get the New York Times bestseller list, even though it's it tends to be just reported sales for a short very, very short time from from certain booksellers. And then it's extrapolated and made into the book, the best sellers. This is not a genuine reflection of any sales whatsoever, because there's plenty of independent booksellers that sell a lot of books. And that never gets reported in New York Times in
the first place. But that's what I'm that. So that's something of a promotion of public relations. What I'm what I'm then what

I'm nudging towards is you have some friendly group, buy up a whole slew of those books and hand them out at conferences.

Yeah, that's very common. In fact, I had this I busted. I was writing for the DEC professional and I did tell them once, here we go. Is this for this story? Yeah. So I'm at the Media Lab, with their mindset

corporate MIT Media Lab. Yes.

Oh, I got an invite to go. Will Hearst asked me if I wanted to go to the as as a group, part of the Hearst Corporation and just hang out with with the with the corporation at the top guys and him and

I don't know Media Lab. I don't think I don't know the story. I don't think I know the story. You

should. Anyway, so I would go to the Media Lab. And it. Unlike reporters, normally when you go to the Media Lab, they always make you sign a bunch of non disclosures. But because they were trying to sell the Hearst Corporation on some project, there was no non disclosures involved because of just assume you're not going to be talking about. Right, right.
And so they it's a frank Beneke was there and Randy Hurst and all these, it was just a bunch of which I got the very funny conversations I got to have, and will and I and so we go in there and take the whole tour. And I get to hear the pitch from negra Ponte, about how they've pre sold the book on the Media Lab, which will be written I believe, by Stuart Brand. And he bragged about how they're going to have the marketing of this book, and
about how they're going to priests. This sold the book on a pre sale basis where you go in there and say, Look, publisher, we're going to sell 50,000 copies of this book. right off the off the top, we're gonna buy him back from you after they get printed. It was all part of the scheme to get you get become a best seller and the holes and you give the books away just what you said. Nice. And so we're going we're going through the. And they were showing us all the crazy inventions they're
having. And every time we asked about it, they're always every invention seems to have been invented in Japan or China. But they're showing all this stuff. But at the very end they would happen was the final meeting where they're going on about how they should do this and that with technology and diameter folks aren't or the Hearst Corporation folks aren't buying most of it. And then Martin does. So there's a kicker they bring in Marvin Minsky

was Epstein with him.

I don't know he was. Marvin Minsky comes in, and he sits down and immediately recognizes me. And he gets very upset. And he's in he asked him, What is this guy doing here?

What is he doing here? is

pretty much what he said. Because I wasn't non disclosed. I didn't have to do. You're

a hater. You're a troublemaker, you're
either all

and they kicked, they kicked me out. First and I both love Edwin and I both left because we was over anyway, so I already got what I needed. So later in this story. I wrote this up in a deck professional column, calling out the media laugh now.

Bars deck Digital Equipment Corporation

right ahead of magazine. I was inside I had the back cover. So I wrote this thing up and it was very critical, the whole operation. That's

why they want it you know, no wonder it

took like about three months before all of a sudden. But Negroponte was one of the primary publishers kind of a publish on or what he really did there but of Wired magazine. So they immediately did a hit piece on me.

How can you do it? What is there to hit on you? That's the point.

So they sent one of their top hit piece writers Paulina bursts bore Sook. He's

got an old Lexus. He's no good. I mean, what can you do? He likes noise they have

so they sent her after me and it was like and first thing I did is I did a little background she was a vegetarian vegan. So I took her out to dinner at greens in San Francisco and got to know her. She could not come up with anything the hit piece became a kind of a bio of me and wired look it up it's around and it's so weak and it's like they couldn't do it because I'm not a hittable. I don't really I'm not an interesting guy. No one has been around the block

boring just for title a potential show title will and I like that. That

Oh, anyways, why? Just because I know I know a few people that's for sure. But so that so that whole thing was a fiasco. And it was like and that's the way it's done is phony. I got a boots on the ground make a long story long. Yeah.

Well, hold on. We got boots on the ground from our producer in South Dakota. This is exactly how Kristi Noem gets her books on the New York Times bestseller list. Her campaign gives money to right wing groups to buy them up and give them away to donors. Yeah, that's what you do.

That's what you do is a good way to go. And it doesn't make any money.

And it helps me put them there that you know, you shot your dog that helps. I mean, it's a little better than I got kicked out of MIT, to be honest.

Yeah, I didn't shoot a dog.

Bad events back to the Supreme Court and their book deals and their and their gifts
and justices are allowed to have some outside income, but most of their outside income is capped around $30,000. Except you do not have to have a limit on book royalties and fees. So these justices who signed these multimillion dollar contracts are not subject to any cap and they can make as much as they can from these book deals,

which is clearly it's that's just as evil according to the information we've just gleaned from you, because you will

die that but these book deals and you see it all the time with somebody get you they quit office and the next thing you know they get a million dollar book deal. They're not selling a million dollars with the books based on royalties. These deals are corrupt. The idea is don't worry. Once you get out of office, we'll make it up to you and somebody I don't know how this works behind the scenes, but somebody's giving somebody a lot of money to it's money
laundering, is what it is. The publisher gets a bunch of money and gives it to the Hillary Clinton let's say or somebody saying you actually sell a few books, but most of these people can't. And next thing you know, it's like Religion, you were in office it is to favorites like people get jobs after the fact

you had made a Supreme Court ruling. We're gonna make sure we give you you get a nice fat advance on your book and we'll buy it all back. It's just as corrupt if not much more, but no, Clarence Thomas. Got to go after him. Now MSNBC, your boy, I shouldn't say that. Racist of me, Jonathan Capehart took a little different. I don't know why I said that. Jonathan Capehart. They came out with a little different take and went straight to Trump where it all really belongs. So that's part
of what this is about. Here's the intro into his guest.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has finally acknowledged the luxury getaways he accepted as gifts from a Republican billionaire. Justice Thomas updated his financial disclosure forms yesterday to include two trips he took in 2019 with mega donor harlyn CRO mega donor le didn't provide $1 value for the vacations with CRO pro publica estimated they were worth more than 500,000 bucks. Justice Thomas's friendship with CRO has fueled serious concerns, by

the way that some vacation 500,000 I mean, that must

I'm not buying just a couple of things. I don't buy that number. But the other thing is, so what is unless you can do the following and they're not doing it. Yeah. can watch him connect him. What is the connection between Pro and and Justice Thomas that would be debt. That's corrupt. I mean, it was Was there one specific thing that Tom has ruled on his theory is only one of a few I

find out? Maybe Maybe we can find out.
Justice Thomas's friendship with crow has fueled serious concerns about partisanship concerns on the High Court, especially with the consequential

clearly weighed concerns about partisanship.

Yes, you can't be you can't be partisan.

So I'm concerned about your partisan ship. That's

correct.

What does that even mean?

Well, it means that you're you're in it in the in the tank for Trump Hello.
The justices still have to release more than two dozen decisions of the next three weeks touching on several major issues from emergency abortion access to Donald Trump's claim of presidential immunity. And then there's reason to fear the worst from the court that overturn Roe v. Wade. Recently, Justice Sonia Sotomayor shared this warning about the rulings ahead. There are days that I've come to my office after an announcement
of a case and closed my door and cried. There have been those things and they're likely to be more and there are moments than Yes, even I feel desperation or

despair. Okay. This I want to give you a kudos for this because I knew about this, per saying that I've never heard a clip of it. I wish

I could take it that goes completely to the clip custodian today. And he's, he's already busy.
Joining me now Ian mill Heiser senior correspondent for Vox where he focuses on the Supreme Court and the Constitution. He's also the author of the agenda. The Republican Supreme Court is reshaping America II Thank you very much for coming to the Saturday show. I like yeah, I want to get a little time that we have. All right.

So a lot of cases in the little amount of time, let's guess what could it be about first,
there is Trump versus United States. This isn't running presidential immunity. How do we think that's gonna go? I mean, I think Trump's already won this case, like, what the court is probably going to do is they're gonna say President sometimes have immunity and send the case back back down to lower court to figure out if Trump does in this case, but none of that matters. Like the the issue is, are we going to have a trial before the election, and they've already run out the clock so
much that I think that the answer is going to be now. All right.

So there's two right one, let's go to Fisher Fisher
versus the United States. This is whether January 6 participants, including Trump can be charged with obstruction of an official proceeding. How do we think are they gonna? Are they gonna throw out these charges? I was very surprised at how the oral argument while there have been like 16 judges who have heard this claim, and only two of them have said that the statute should be read narrowly. So these January six
defendants essentially get off. Now we're talking about there's about 1200 January six defendants, including Donald Trump, and only about 300 of them have been charged under the statute at issue here. So it's not like it's going to be blanket immunity for January 6 defendants but we're still talking about a good chunk of people who participate in the insurrection, lock

up the praying grannies. So yes, erection doesn't seem like much happening there. Let's get to the case that we're also concerned about
the next one. In a couple of cases have to do with abortion, the myth of prestone case? Yeah. How do you think the justices are going to rule on that? So that is, you know, of the two abortion cases. That's the one I'm most optimistic about. I think that they'll leave it alone, they'll leave access to myth. And that's correct. I mean, almost half of more than half of abortions in the United States are performed
with Miffy per stone. And I think they realized that if they accept the lower courts reasoning to ban it, so many other drugs will be banned. But these guys don't like abortion, but they don't want to ban antibiotics. All right. And so that's the good news on abortion there. Thank you. Thank you for the hope. Neither of us have a vagina. But hopefully, and this
is what moil versus the United States, like women. Hi, this is whether federal law regulating hospitals, Trump's local abortion bans when it comes to performing emergency abortions, I think the court is going to do what I mean, I'm worried about this case. So there's a federal law that doesn't refer specifically to abortions, but it says if you go to an emergency room, and you have a medical emergency, they have to
stabilize your health condition. And so if the appropriate treatment is an abortion, the law right now says that you have a right to an abortion. I think based on the oral argument, they're likely to write that out of the statute, or at least put some kind of limits on it so that people who need life saving or health saving abortions won't be able to get them anymore. Okay.

Who cares? All right, kill babies. Good news, everybody. But here it is the one we've all been waiting for the real deal, it all comes down to this cording to your no agenda show. And now,
here's a case that I don't think a lot of people even know about, and this is euphemistically known as the chevron bias. And this is one whether to overturn the

the chevron Chevron case, he said,

but he means I says Chevron, now he means Chevron, Chevron, Chevron deference.
Yes. The Chevron guys, and this is one whether they said Right, right. I don't know. They say Chevron, right, the chevron guys, and this is now

the other guy says in the middle says right, this is to know whether
to overturn the landmark Supreme Court ruling in 1984, Chevron case that gave federal agencies leeway to interpret the law. Right. Sounds right. Right. And that explain why this, this is so dry. And yes, the most important case decision to come down from the Supreme. This is both the most hyper technical, like even lawyers to have trouble understanding a case, but also the most

podcasters seem to get it.

For some reason lawyers have no trouble understanding this. Yeah.

But this is meant to obfuscate and to confuse people. Don't listen to this. People don't listen to this part, you don't need to know about the chevron rights thing. What isn't that important? Don't just get rid of the black guy. So
there are just scads of federal laws that delegate power to a federal agency, you know, everything from like how much emissions come from power plants to what your cable rates are to who gets overtime pay is controlled by federal agencies. Chevron was a case from the Reagan era, which said that courts should generally let agencies do what they need to do and defer to them. What the court is likely to do here is essentially give itself a veto power over everything the
agencies do. So it's not just a transfer of power. And it's a huge transfer of power from the Democratic Biden administration to a Supreme Court as a six to three Republican majority. And with that have, to your point about, you know, regulating antibiotics that would give them purview over the FDA. Right, Brian Shirley. Right, it is different. The FDA has its own statute, which is different than the regulatory regime that
concerns Chevron. But what we've seen from the Supreme Court overall, they've been making up all these things with names like the major questions doctrine that they've made up, yeah, that lets them interfere with agencies. So like, this court wants to have the last word on a lot of things. Okay,

so they've made it all about, oh, if Trump comes in, then you won't be able to get your abortion drug. That's literally,

I gotta get out of the way here. It's not so the courts can do to say, Oh, we don't like what you're doing. And you see, we got six conservatives, we're going to change. This is to throw it back to the word belongs the lawmaking supposed to take place by the legislative branch, not the courts, not the executive, which is the administrative
state. It's supposed to be the legislative branch. And what this Chevron deference cases supposed to do is kick it back and make it so the legislature takes a little more responsibility for all these crazy rules that these guys dream up because they hate global warming, or whatever. And so this is a very, this is a very, I would say, dishonest report that you're listening to. Interestingly,

Katie Fang from MSNBC had little problem explaining it in 37 seconds. Chevron
deference is a 40 year old precedent. more federal judges grant federal agencies latitude on how to interpret legislative statutes. Judges are supposed to follow a two part process, one, examine the congressional language. And if
the intent is clear, the matter is settled. But two, if the language is ambiguous, and the ruling court must defer to that agency on how the law should be implemented, essentially, ask the experts and without the Chevron deference doctrine in place, everything and I mean, everything in your life could be affected.

And now the kicker, so everyone's going after Clarence Thomas, the real problem guy is Gorsuch. This is a clip from his confirmation hearing, where he discusses this quite clearly, section 706
of the Administrative Procedures Act says basically two things and I'm paraphrasing. It says the courts are supposed to defer to the factual findings of agencies. So the extent you're talking about expert biologists, chemists, whatever manner of regulatory expertise we're talking about there. The
courts are to defer to that. And to take that seriously. And we do, just as we would save the factual finding of a jury, or a district court judge, that comes to us with a presumption of correctness, clear error, standard review, very hard to meet. Section 706, however, also goes on to say that when it comes to questions of law, the courts are to interpret the law.
Despite that command from this body. The courts have created a doctrine that says that if there's any ambiguity in the law, the agency gets to make the decision about what the law means. And I have questions about that. That doctrine, I've raised questions about whether that's compatible with the plain language of section 706.

I'd say crosshairs on Gorsuch next, they got to do he

had already a target. Now, the thing that people need to be reminded of is before I think it was 84, when the Chevron deference became a became the root the law of the land, kind of you want to call it that, or the law of the land and lawless. What had what was going on before 1984. This administrative the administrative state was still there, but it wasn't running roughshod over the US public, which is doing now by Oh, you have to have all electric cars,
or else that's only recent. I mean, before 1984 there was I was working in a administrative agency for free for years. And it was before 1984. And they had all their kangaroo court they did the whole thing is pretty much the same. Except it wasn't riding roughshod over the public like it's been doing since night since the Chevron deference came into being and it took them a while to figure it out. But these bureaucrats it took them a
while. But they said once they figured out, hey, you know, we can do what we want, which is Dream stuff up who do this and that it will base it on whatever, it doesn't make any difference because we have we run the shop. And so this is what's happened in this has to be reversed.

And it appears that people in the know actually understand this is what it's about. It's not even about Trump,

but hardly about Trump now. But that's the joke of it. You bring Trump and then Trump doesn't even I doubt Trump even has a clue about any of this. To be honest about it. I don't know he might do it. Anyone who put who put that day, John Bolton in his cabinet or in his fear of influence? No shit. Well,

I watched you know, I watched last night, the the two hour interview of Tucker with Thomas Massie. Have you seen this by any chance?

No, I have not and probably never will. It is required

watching this guy is. He's funny. He's very smart. I didn't know that he had he has 30 patents on virtual reality, 3d objects that I think he sold to a lot of Silicon Valley companies. You know, this hillbilly, who created this. This is a very interesting guy. And he even talks about how the bid during COVID He jumped in his car and drove eight hours to show up for the vote for the Cares Act to stop at the to $2 trillion because he's like, No, this is this is not by unanimous
consent. And of course the rules are if one shows up, then that's not unanimous consent. And Trump was calling him like, you know, good and he just great impressions of Trump and Have McConnell? I mean, he's just out and out. John, you will love this interview. You will go watch it then. And I pulled a couple clips for you. The first one answers a very kind of answers a very important question we have about Mike
Johnson. Why all of a sudden did Mike Johnson spin around 180 degrees and fold on all this military aid and the what's the, you know, grab brushes money and ban tick tock. We've been asking ourselves this question. For months,

we had one answer to the thesis that he did it to stay in office.

Well, here's Massey's answer. Well, one of the things
he claims which I don't believe is true, and I have reason to say this, is that he says he went in the skiff, like he's had some 180 degree turns on some things like for instance, whether you need a warrant to spy on Americans using the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act 702 program. Well, he used to be on Judiciary Committee, with me and Jim Jordan, trying to reform that trying to get so he understood what it was he knew completely what we were talking about. He's
an attorney to write and he knows the Constitution. He knows this is required, but he claims he spent time in a skiff and he learned a skiff that's secure, compartmentalized Information Facility or something is where we go we have to leave our phones locked up, you know, no staff in there. He claims he spent time in skiff and learn things that changed his mind. Here's the problem. Tucker, I was in the skiff with him. We had we had DNI not just the the current DNI but the former DNI,
John Radcliffe Trump's DNI. We had CIA. We had FBI. We even had a FISA judge in there. And we spent three and a half hours it was a four hour meeting and after three and a half hour is basically a psyop where they're just trying to beat you down and do the things. And I was like, This is ridiculous. You get you haven't given they didn't give us one example of anytime ever since FISA was created, that getting a warrant would have kept them from solving or preventing an act of terrorism.
They gave hypotheticals, but they had no specific and I think FEIS has been in place since 1978. Since the 70s. Right?

I'm sorry. Yeah, I forgot to mention this was about FISA. So they sigh opt him. There's a little gotcha in there because he says it was a four hour meeting. And he was in there with him for three and a half hours. I'm thinking that last half hours when they said, Hey, Mike, look at this picture. That's what I think. But then Tucker does ask for what he thinks the truth is. So what is the truth? What
do you think changed? I think he's kind of a lost ball and tall weeds. They think he's in a position of power. He never imagined he would get to at this point in his life. He's not done anything in private practice or political arena. This prepared him for this. He took the job with a very small staff. He didn't have people to put in all positions on the field. And he had to accept a lot of suggestions in areas he didn't know a whole lot about, although
he gets no pass on FISA. Yes, he gets no pass on Ukraine. Because he does, as you pointed out, he doesn't even know how many casualties have been incurred on the Ukrainian side. If you need He's the second person in line for president after Kamala Harris. This is This is scary to me. He's He's basically getting moved around.

And he was very clear that he was all in with Marjorie. He doesn't say Marjorie Taylor Greene just calls her Marge says, I'm all in with March, we're gonna get rid of him. We don't want him back as Speaker of the House. Now, there was a clip that went viral from this interview, then when you hear the viral clip, you'll understand why, because there's a lot of people who've been waiting for proof proof that Israel runs our Congress.
Well, I have Republicans who come to me on the floor and say, I wish I could vote with you today. Yours is the right vote. But I would just take too much flack back home. And I have Republicans who come to me and say that's wrong. What AIPAC is doing to you. Let me talk to my AIPAC person. By the way, everybody by me has an APEC person like I mean, an APEC person. He's like your babysitter, your APEC babysitter, who is always talking to you for a pack,
they're probably a constituent in your district. But they are you know, firmly embedded in a pack and every member has something like this. Every I don't know how it works on the Democrat side. But that's how it works on the Republican side. And when they when they come to DC you go have a lunch with them. And they've got your cell number. And you have conversations with them. So I've had like, that's absolutely crazy. I've had four members of Congress say, I'll talk to my
APEC person. And if you watch, we call them my bad guy. I'll talk to my APEC guy and see if I can get him to, you know, dial those ads back. Why have I never heard this before? It doesn't benefit anybody. Why would they want to tell their constituents that they've basically got a buddy system with somebody who's representing a foreign country? It doesn't benefit the congressman for people to know that so they're not going to tell you that.

So this of course, this went viral because now everyone can say you see the Jews run it. They run everything. Israel runs America. They've got guys, they've got babysitters. It's, it's it's proof. It's proof. Unfortunately, it's taken out of context, because when you watch this interview, he explains very clearly what's going on. But first, a disclaimer and kind of an understanding of AIPAC, of course, the American Israeli what is it? What is the
political action committee? No, no, no, no, they have a political it's No, it's not. That's what AIPAC is. No, no, they they didn't have one years ago. AIPAC. The original AIPAC is the American but Israeli public affairs committee.

Okay. And get there's a little issue here there. I want to bring up because you saw this interview I didn't, which is that if there's an AIPAC contact with your cell phone number, did John Tucker bring up the Orsay? Is there a guy from the petroleum industry that

he did, actually, it was very funny, I didn't clip it. He said, Hey, do you have a Germany guy? Do you have an alien guy? No, no, he does. Isn't that only only AIPAC. But he says it's very, I think I have the clip is very similar. It's very similar to the NRA who are all about guns. Oh, you'll get to it. But first, the real problem, because AIPAC, as we've discussed, is funded by the AI F, which is the American Israel Education Foundation. And its donors are Lockheed Martin,
north of Grumman and General Atomics amongst others. So here's Massey saying, This is why he doesn't want to deal with with any any of these guys, because this is who he is.
I'm not against Israel. I've never voted to sanction Israel. I've never said anything, particularly, you know, critical of Israel, you know, other than, for instance, right now, they're bombing, they've killed 1% of the civilian population in Gaza. That's concerning to me. But so what do they do now? You get elected 2012. Do you hear from them again? I vote my conscience, which they
won't tolerate. So they ran with their 501 C four, before they had a super PAC, they they were running educational advocacy ads against me saying that, you know, I'm bad on Israel. They didn't say don't vote for him. They just said he's, he's a bad guy. And so I said, All right, well, you're not welcome in my office anymore. Because for years, I invited him into my office. Let's talk this through. Let me explain to you, I'm a libertarian leaning Republican, I'm gonna vote for foreign aid
for anybody. So don't be offended when I don't vote for your foreign aid. I don't vote for wars anywhere. So don't be offended if I tell you that I'm for free speech, even if it's abhorrent. And yeah, we used to talk but now they're banned from my office. The situation from bad to worse, this election cycle, they spent $400,000 against me. So

the point he's making is that they basically call him an anti Semite and a Jew hater for not wanting to talk to them. But here's the real reason why. Now, to
your point, they should be registered with Faraj, this is what Faraj is, is where there's gray area, where it's an American representing a foreign country. Let's let's look and see if you're getting any money from that foreign country. Are you a dual citizen with that foreign country? Are you being directed by for instance, is Netanyahu speaking to your group advising you on your next move? Those are you getting money from the military industrial complex? Like because to understand
AIPAC? I think it's easiest to model them as a military industrial lobby. Like their biggest thing is they want more equipment, more military equipment from the United States going to Israel. In fact, when they used to be allowed in my office, the thing that the argument that would make is, oh, we're just stimulating the US military industrial complex, because every single penny of the 3.8 billion that they
nominally Get it now they're getting way more than that. But Israel normally gets goes to US military contractors.

And this is what we heard over and over again. So now you can point out the people who got a call from their AIPAC guy. Hey, man, make sure everyone needs to know this is about our defense industrial base. Of course, Israel. 3.8 billion is nothing. But this is where AIPAC shines.
Now, that didn't make me warm and fuzzy. Okay. But that is their argument. And if you notice what they advocate for, I think sometimes they advocate for things that even Israelis wouldn't advocate for. I believe that, like they would, I think be okay with a war with Iran, like all out, you know, apocalyptic war with Iran, whereas there are people in Israel say, Whoa, hold on a second. We we'd rather not have a war with Iran. But AIPAC does things that lead us in that
direction. And so they're kind of like, what the NRA is to gun owners, AIPAC is to Israel, or what the Farm Bureau is to farmers, AIPAC is to Israel in other presents a faction right. They represent a faction, but usually a corporate faction, that and they're using the imprimatur of grassroots that they've diluted or confused into bullying congressman,

so the way I see it is actually the exact opposite the real money, which is in case anyone missed it, $900 billion a year or this most recent year, more than that. Now, a trillion cool trillion total, since we added some extra money. It's the opposite. The defense industrial base is abusing the Jews and the playing the Jew card, to force people into signing off on weaponry, especially if it's against Iran. Hello, Lindsey
Graham. And it's worse because then you take the Christians who are like, Oh, Jews, the chosen people, let's get them in on the deal, too.
They didn't have a political action committee at the time, they couldn't spend hundreds of 1000s or millions of dollars against me at that time. It was just sort of like a whisper campaign to try to Hey, don't vote for him, blah, blah blahs. Why? Because at that point, they sensed I wouldn't do what they want. And what did they whisper against you? What
were they saying about you? Well, they would do it through for instance, churches, evangelical churches, they've got an organization called Christians United for Israel, really sort of CO opted evangelicals. People think it's a grassroots movement in Kentucky. It's actually a top down movement from AIPAC so that people who aren't even Jewish will feel like they've got to support Israel, you know, no matter what. And even if it's a secular state that funds
abortions, they just sort of forget that part. And we've got to fund Israel. So they have networks. So it's more than just about the money.

And then just one bonus clip, which is, which just completes the whole circle about Afghanistan and Russia and Ukraine and Israel.
Why are we in a war with Russia? I've never figured that out. Why Russia? It almost seems like they picked it off. Like, why would we be at war with Russia? No. What's interesting is we were in Afghanistan. And I was tracking this, I talked to the Special Inspector General, John Sopko, about twice a year about the money that was being wasted
in Afghanistan, it was about $50 billion a year. And it was glad to see us get out of Afghanistan, but kind of like feathering the clutch and shifting gears, we just went from second gear to third gear, because as soon as we quit spending $50 billion a year in Afghanistan, we started spending more than $50 billion a year in Ukraine. There's a military industrial complex, they call it the defense industrial base. Now in the United States, they say we have to, they're hungry, and
we got to keep them fed. And since we don't have any of our own wars, and we don't have a reason to deplete our stocks, and our bombs, and weapons that we have, we engage in these other things to keep them healthy and thriving. In fact, the Biden administration even made that argument in a letter to Congress for why we should do this supplemental foreign aid to Israel to Ukraine to Taiwan, they made the argument that the
defense industrial base needs to be strong. And so we need to spend this money and they gave a list of all the states in the United States that would benefit from this spending. And that's why they said we should do it.

And that's what Trump does. That's exactly what Trump was doing. That's the only manufacturing we have the and Trump if I think Trump will come in the he's going to figure out a way to get more money into defense, but eventually, I mean, do we just start more wars in Africa or I mean, you have to deplete the stuff to create more.

But that Africa is a good target. Yeah, we didn't notice this.

Exactly. But then unfortunately, we'll have to play African news which will kill the show.

No, we're not gonna play African news. That's the idea. They're not going to play Africa. The news so we can waste money down there and they want to kill the show. I thought did Trump coming in and maybe auditing the Defense Department and see what, who's ripping us off? We're spending too much money for what we're getting for the bang for the buck. I don't care about throwing, wasting bombs and all the rest of it seems to me that there's some, there's some hidden money here.
It's like black energy.

He's never even hinted at doing that. I mean, the only thing I could think of is Trump would come in and say, All right, you guys are all wasteful. And we have enough weaponry now. Boeing Why don't you stop doing that dumb stuff with your, your strike fighter, your joint fighter? Yeah. Why don't you build a real plane? One that I can fly in. And then you know, all these other companies once you start building good cars that people want, I mean, that could be something

that'll be the day instead of

instead of tanks build this car. I

mean, the trans trend because it medical associated medical operations go well, yeah, hell with that money.

Well, anyway, I like maths

sounds a good yeah, we sounds a good guy.

Yeah. He's, he built his own house, himself with wood he collected on his land.

I know that type

the guy. The guy's funny, he said, and he got a Tesla battery to power it. And he says it was crazy. I bought this Tesla battery and I had to get special permission to transport it because it's considered a hazardous material.

It is totally yet that strapped lithium bomb strapped onto

your car. The guy's funny. He's funny. Okay,

we will definitely listen to him. Yes. Yes. He's under a lot. He is under attack. Oh, he's part of the Marjorie Taylor Greene. Yeah, this Cabal, very small group is only maybe five or six people. Yeah.

Well, he definitely is, I think a no agenda type guy. When you hear what he's how he talks like, Yeah, makes a lot of sense.

Well, now I can do a whole series of clips from Peter McCullough. Yes. Which is a lot of subs because he was on a show called The courageous discourse.

Is this a podcast? Yeah. Oh, excellent.

He's on a podcast. And I just found this to be the series of very alt. He names names, who's doing the bio weapon development. He's Excellent.

This is why there's two of us, John, I'm watching Massey, you're watching makalah. We come together on Sunday, Bada bing, bada boom, what a show we got.

He names names, he points the finger. He's very funny. He likes to laugh about stuff. And he is so knowledgeable. It's like listening to him. You know, you know, that guy's on top. And it's just amazing to me that he's not like, you know, the surgeon general or so he's he's just pushed a little bit pushed. You Can't a guy like this is so powerful and is the intellectual pursuits that you can't kick him to the curb. And he'll just keep cropping up here and there. And
this is one of the best examples I think. And it's about stuff that you haven't heard and it shouldn't. It should enrage the public this some of this is going on but let's go with Macola on courageous A's on the podcast courageous discourse is number one.
I want to have you on particularly to talk about this disease X you know, your disease access, not Twitter disease. X is a theoretical disease that that people in this biopharmaceutical complex have been writing about for years, including Peter desiccate, the equal Health Alliance has been writing I said Can't wait for disease X. It's going to infect mankind, it's going to have a high kill rate. So we're seeing 20 times that of COVID. The
global vaccine Alliance disease x is going to be bird flu. And I think they were right.

You're in my backyard Dvorak.

Yep. I tell you, you get you get a kick out of these clip. I

have my you have my attention for sure. Because go

to two, they've been
talking about bird flu for years. I remember back during the Obama administration, they would have these bird flu, sere campaigns in the media and nothing ever really came of it. What is going on with bird flu, has a lab finally hit the jackpot in terms of making it very contagious for humans? Is that what we're talking about here?
There has been gain of function research on bird flu for decades now researchers have been working on this to doctors Dr. Merrick how that university was constant Dr. Ron foo che at Rotterdam, the Netherlands. They've been trying to make this virus jump from human inhuman for a decade or more, it's nothing's been in the open more than this bird flu infects chickens largely, sometimes cat all the Chinese started vaccinating for this back in the 90s. It's made it way worse. So
now the birds spread it around even more. The main method of handling it is kill all the birds when one bird gets a bird flu kill the whole poultry flock, I think that's been a disaster, they're going to have to let the birds get some natural immunity. We're talking about highly pathogenic h five and one avian influenza, also known as bird flu, about 800 to 900 human cases when it spreads from the animal to the worker.
And historically, there's had a 52.7% mortality rate, largely because of people lots of handling the birds Southeast Asia, no medical care presenting late. The most recent outbreak, we've had three human cases in the United States, two of them were pinkeye, one with some respiratory symptoms all easily treated. So I don't think bird flu is going to be much of a human threat unless it starts spreading human to human and if it does, believe me, we're gonna kneel the gain of function guys
who've been working on this. And the southeastern poultry Research Center in Athens, Georgia, we think that's where the most recent strain came out of does.

Dr. McCall at any point mentioned that the birds aren't real
word you know what they were doing? They were doing experiments in mallard ducks, migratory waterfowl, what a mistake. One of those guys gets out. They fly everywhere. You know, the media has not been asking the question, why did it spread from Texas to to Iowa to Michigan managers happened magic? They didn't ask the question. They just think it spontaneously arising. No, it's been spread by the ducks that are flying all over. Wow. And do we have any recourse to stop this or sue this lab for
spreading a migratory bird with a novel disease? All these experts are saying we have to get ahead of nature. That's what disease X researchers that we have to get ahead of nature. We have to make it invade humankind and then come up with vaccines. So disease X vaccines, the Coalition for epidemic preparedness innovation as the Global Center founded by Gates Foundation World Economic Forum gave an entire over 100 page white paper on disease X. It said the whole reason to study
disease X is to have a disease X vaccine. Sure enough with bird flu CSLs Aquarius biotech company has the Odense vaccine, it was FDA licensed in 2021. With no human data, ready to go for bird flu, they developed it with BARDA, a research unit of the military 2021. And now the US has purchased, you know, enough doses for millions of administration's why would the US military be developing a bird flu vaccine? And why in 2021?
Now, news was out this week that you know, Pfizer Maderna are talking to the federal government about messenger RNA vaccines. CSL has a self replicating messenger RNA vaccine and development Cepi with the Koreans have a self replicating messenger RNA vaccine. So

coming back to our boots on the ground. I mean, the testing industrial complex must just be salivating to by the way, you know how you test for bird flu? I came across this last night via what the test is. You swab your eye?
Oh, yeah, yeah.

If your nose wasn't bad enough, where they jammed it into your brain now they're going to put a cotton swab in your eye to see if you have bird flu. And we need to remind newer listeners, Peter McCullough is highly decorated. But this is a they can't use undie platform bubble now they're just not putting them on mainstream news anymore. But they can't get rid of him because he has so many podcasters say a big

threat that's what it was what the clip we had recently where they claim that podcasters were like the big threat Yes. Again clearly schemes yes

clearly clearly we the podcasters are the problem problematic podcasters

Yes, again, because one of those guys enjoys talking that he does, but it's like he has so much at the tip he's not using any notes at all he never looks down and he just off the top of his head has every all the stats and the right to the number the right to the point something and he just goes on and on with this. He's great. This is part four.
I gotta tell you that bird flu is disease x because people have an aspiration of mass vaccinating the world again COVID Wasn't enough now it's game on disease X bird flu, I

know how disease X spreads, it spreads to the internet.
So is this going to be potentially more lethal than COVID? Or what? What is your thoughts on this? So far? You know, it's early, but the cases appear mild, it looks like this strain and what we're tracking is h five n one clade two point 3.44. B, we actually got it down to the clade n and the mutation that came out of the Athens Georgia lab. This one luckily so far appears to be very benign pinkeye and something easily treated with the you know,
iodine nasal sprays and gargles. Also, Tim Avira, Tamiflu hydroxychloroquine, it's all gonna cover it easily. So it doesn't appear to be very dangerous to humans. The reason why it's dangerous to animals is because they are incinerating all the animals instead of letting them get through it.
Yeah, this is a mild version. I think we ought to have some observational studies to just see what is the mortality rate in birds we can't destroy every last chicken, because the mallard ducks are going to continue to spread it around

it all. I love that. The only danger to chickens is they're gonna get incinerated. Man, it all fits together with the culture of lab chicken meat and everything. It all kind of fits together though, doesn't it? It's a nice little puzzle they built here. And it's always pretty well they benefit

mallard duck thing he's really on that he just thinks is horrible that they would effect a duck. I mean,

this even affects reality TV shows what will Duck Dynasty do? They'll be out of business?

I think they'd been out of business. Now. They're

pretty popular. My man. pretty popular.

I onward. Next I think is we're under what four by five? Five?

Yeah. What about
the I've heard of the news, they've been saying that. They're concerned about the virus being spread by the raw milk drinkers. The Count of people that are drinking raw milk unpasteurized from cows are the ones that are going to spread the bird flu. How does that narrative get started? And what's coming on? What's going on with that? Yeah, I doubt it. Most of it is going to be through respiratory or touching the cases of conjunctivitis, invariably, the
workers handle the animals and they touch their eyes. There's been a few tests of products in the store where they find some viral particles. And again, they're doing PCR testing. So we're talking about grossly inflated positive tests that are false positive tests, but even what they found is not active in the grocery store. Now they're kind of zeroing in on who drinks
raw milk. I doubt that that's going to be a route of spread it largely it has to be airborne and come in through the nose and mouth a

couple of articles to backup this disease X hype CNN with bird flu infecting dairy cattle FDA is now asking states to curb sales of raw milk. From right here in the backyard bird flu detected in Austin wastewater who hair on fire has blue blue hair on fire and stats sta T that's the medical shill publication that we've discussed in the past they basically take money to write articles. Allegedly, here's the title how co2 helps viruses stay alive longer in the air. So the guy

saw that article that says hilarious so I was gonna put a newsletter actually, we really Larry, we really

got everything we need. I mean, we've got the climate change. We've got the we've got the vegans we've got the lab meat, we've got the vaccine industry we've got the testing industrial complex, I mean it really is perfect.

We have a guy another tester out there that does the wastewater stuff and he says you his bull crap. Bull crap says you centrifuge everything until you say there's no really you just keep reducing and reducing reducing and then you can test that and there's always going to be you can fight anything you want. The only in

there the only problem in fact, the only person who doesn't benefit from the scam is Mimi. I mean too many eggs.com is just it's going to be a problem when there's no way that she could well no she can write a follow up not enough eggs, no eggs. No eggs.com
six so what is being done if anything just trying to stop her hold these people accountable. It seems like the only politician you hear about who still does these ongoing about this matter and try to hold people accountable is Senator Rand Paul. I know there's a few others too but from your you're very much involved. of this fight for transparency and accountability. What are you hearing in terms
of? Is there going to be any accountability for the folks like Peter de Zack and Fauci regarding this gain of function research that they've lied about? It's been slow progress, but credit to Brad wenstrup Marjorie Taylor, green chip Roy and others in the house, they they've been plodding through this. They got to the point where Datsik clearly is one of the CO conspirators and one of the creators of SARS cov Tussaud's Anthony Fauci, Ralph
Berek at UNC Chapel Hill and Dr. shingling. Lee in China, for people who created COVID that got us sick. Fauci was pretending the whole time that he he was responding to this yet he knew it was, he was part of the creation of this, and it was all covered up. By the way, that's the interesting that emails show the cover up. The recently had David morons in who is Fauci, he's assistant, and they were using personal email accounts, you know, changing characters and letters to try to
throw off the FOIA requests. I mean, these guys knew what they were doing was wrong. Me. They created a virus, they got the whole world sick, and then they tried different vaccines on us. So

Oh, makalah. Man, what is he doing as a guest on podcast? He needs his own podcast.

With his family, he's got a foundation, which is doing a lot of work.

Needs a better mic is what he needs.

Yes, yeah, he does. Well, he needs a

better rig, he needed to rig in his rig, something he needs to be give me a call Dr. McCall, I'll send you a rig. This is embarrassing.

So this anyway, this interview went on for almost an hour and a half.

I mean, the seven clips is a lot even for you.

And you're very I usually cut it I and so I kind of moved into one little spot. I wanted to just get this little last bit in there. And the rest of it, people can go to the discourse, podcast and listen to the whole thing. If they want to. I should send you the link to the for the show notes. The show notes. Yeah. And but I just thought this little bit at the end here was was worthwhile. I just pulled it out of
the blue. And you know, and all the government agency websites and National Security Administration, for instance, says, Well, we think it came out of nature, but with the low probability, then they say, but it's not a bio weapon. Well, why do they say that? Why do they have to front that? It's because in 1975, we actually have some legislation saying that we can't be in the business of creating biological weapons. And so they tried to put that out there, but it clearly it was a biological
threat. We all got sick from it. There's a paper by Farkas in military medicine that's evaluated SARS cov tool along with three dozen criteria for biological weapons and they've concluded you know, SARS, cov, two meets criteria for this two papers by Yen also show that so, I mean, we have to ask the question, was our government in the business of creating biological threats and then creating countermeasures, therapeutics and vaccines? What

Of course they are that's what you do you create a biological threat and you have to have the antidote so that when you know when your guys get it you can still be okay and go in and

Danny, but it's illegal

gambling going on there. My goodness, of course, it's illegal killing civilians also illegal

that so the point is that he makes it with throughout this thing is that these guys conspire to create the COVID to virus that kill that anyone out there whose family member anybody died, should really be outraged by by any of this.

The many more to come who will die suddenly.

And then the many Brian and the people who just kind of have been dropping dead left and right as you brought out the early part of the show, this should be outraged by this and they should be outraged about this lab in Georgia and they should be outraged by the North Carolina operation. They should be outraged by all of it, but nobody's outraged by any of it. We're not even that outraged. We're just like, Oh, brother, there we go. Again. They're

either outraged about the appeal to heaven flag or the trans flag. That's our outrage. That's our level. Flags. Yep, yep, yep, yep. Yep. Yep.

What do we do in the olden days? Oh,

here we go.

I think the public would be with torches. And Hangman's knots looses and be Dino no burning down that no July No. Mal, no, we're

gonna post memes we'll get I'm gonna post memes when a troll um, that's what we do. We're weak. We've had good times, it creates weak men. We're about to go into tough times. We'll see what it creates you and I'll sit back in our rocking chairs and laugh for more years. And with that, I'd like Thank you for your courage and say what right just

can't find my my been cleaned up.

Thank you for your courage to say in the morning to you the man who put the sea in the courageous discourse, ladies and gentlemen say hello to my friend on the other end the one and only Mr. John Cena

in the morning to you Mr. Adam curry in the morning all ships to see boots on the ground feet in the air subs in the water and all the names and nights out there in the morning

to the trolls and the troll room stop running. See, let me see. Now we are a little late. We're a little later than, than usual. In fact, we're about 40 minutes over time for this break. But how could we not just stop and wait for Dr. McCulloh? 2119 on the last Thursday right now we're at 1989 So I call it a wash. I think we're pretty good. I think the trolls are pretty good. I think the trolls are Hey, the trolls
are hanging in there because it was good. You know, and and they're they're already they're already you know, they're already teeing up their memes. The teen up the memes. Yeah. Hey, man. That's what we do. Make it all good. I think that sounds pretty good. Good. There you go. The trolls can be found at troll room.io. And every single Thursday and Sunday actually is 24 hours a day. The no agenda stream runs and no agenda chat room or as we call it here, the troll room is wide
open. You can jump in anytime troll room.io or use a modern podcast app where you get alerted when we go live or any show that any podcast that you follow. You subscribe to the podcast, you'll get the update 90 seconds from the minute it's published. And if the show goes live, you also get an alert you can tap right into the stream and Listen Live. It's beautiful how that works is so smart. And it can't You can't be the
platform for all this stuff. We built it that way. That's why the broadcaster's are problematic you say because you can't do platform them anymore. As those two podcasts are making trouble for authors no good. We'll be celebrating 17 years in October 17 years of value for value. No, I was listening to home man. NPR did a whole thing on Alex Jones. So you happen to catch any of that.

That caught a little bit of it there. Definitely bloating. Yeah.

And in fact, when we when we play one of these clips here as a bonus, Alex Jones
is one step closer to paying the families who sued him for defamation and Perez Tobia Smith has been following the story topia. Good morning. Good morning. What does chapter seven liquidation mean? Well, it would basically mean that there'd be a fire sale controlled but a swift sale of everything from Jones's ownership in his company called free speech systems to his personal gun collection. And it means the ball could get rolling pretty quickly on at least some payment for those Sandy Hook
families who won that defamation suit. But the payment wouldn't
be anywhere close to what these families are owed. Jones's assets are estimated now at about $10 million, which might mean just around a couple $100,000 for each of the plaintiffs, at least initially, and I say initially because a chapter seven trustee would have authority to hunt down any assets that Jones may have hidden and this hunting license as some call it would be a forever thing because Jones's case unlike most bankruptcy cases, where debts are washed
away and you could get a fresh start. The judge ruled in Jones's case that can happen because his wrongdoing was intentional and malicious. So bottom line, the families will have a claim on Jones's future earnings for the rest of his life.

This is why I'm so happy. We never went the route of a lot of these other guys and made 10s of millions of dollars with no target. were unimportant.

To us, what would I do with all that money?

We're completely unimportant. Like, we're gonna take all of your assets you'd be like, what's this? What is this thing? What is this pile? DeVore Abkhaz? Oh, no, we don't want any of that. No, we can't have that collection. What's curry God who has a dog? All right, good. Dog we have we have just gone the value for the value for value route. As long as you can still pay our rent. We're still doing the show. That's always been the mission. That's always been how we run it and it has
been working so then we're happy. We're gainfully employed, gainfully employed, I tell you, so one of the ways that you can help us is through donating money, treasure, we need it. Obviously everybody needs to make money to pay your bills. We also like time and talent. We have boots on the ground. You heard a couple of reports during the show. We have and believe
me, we have doctors, dentists, nurses. We have the law enforcement officers military pilots, we you cannot think of a single thing we have people who test wastewater Hello, this is the best podcast in the universe. That's what's so cool. We

do have I was a cadre of, of producers who have high expertise in extremely specialized areas of society. Yes. And they're all you know, that's not you know, that's not the same as a legislative guy or anybody, which is who is a generalist. These are people that are specialists, and very seldomly get the recognition. They deserve to be honest about it.

That's right. And even then they usually want to be anonymous. They just want to help out the show. Well, there's other reasons. They also like their life. Yeah, of course. But yeah, so that's how we know this wastewater testing is just more bull crap. It's a bonanza, no doubt, you know, the testing industrial complex. In general, we heard a big bonanza. So this is this is how you can contribute. We also have artists and these artists, they work and it's amazing, because, you know,
we're talking about experts. Many of these artists, in fact, the majority are Dutch masters. And they create artwork for us on the fly while listening while at work while slaving away at their jobs, they still find time to create some artwork in between. And it's great because we use those for the show. And it always looks good, it's fresh, it looks great in the podcast apps looks good when you put it out there and promote the show, which is another way you can provide value back to us.
And lo and behold the episode art for 1666, which was titled weird spelled wy rd came from none other than the very controversial Francisco scatter manga. And he created a very nice D Day piece. Which wasn't wasn't like we weren't overly enthusiastic, like jumping up and down. But it was D Day. We did the was Yeah, we did the show on D day itself. And then we got a lot of positive comments. People say that's great with that. Thank you for honoring my grandfather or
whatever else, by the way. So some someone from the Pentagon got in touch with me. Again, our producers right, and said, Hey, give me your your, your grandfather's date of birth. So I happen to have this and he dug up my grandfather's draft card. That's sweet. Why it gets better. He says every person who landed at Normandy ought automatically qualifies for a French, like Legion, Legion donor or slaughter. Yeah, the Legion of Honor. And so as any said, Hey, we're looking at your
family history. It looks like because he came from Germany. It looks like it came from Prussia, you may actually have royal blood in you. Which, which means our lizard.

Part lizard Adam, yeah, I believe this to be true.

I'm very excited about learning. This is better than 23. And me, this is the kind of producers we have other pieces. Thank you

for oily creations apart. That explains a lot I'm part reptile,

baby. There you go. Let me see other pieces that we looked at. There was a lot of let's

start off by saying a couple of things. Please do first of all Scarah manga has turned out to be something of an a whole by being goaded into condemning the show on the no agenda, no authority website, which I find to be I found to be very offensive. You didn't even want to use this piece because you were so upset about it. And I and I'm very irked by the whole thing, and I might as well make the statement now I am not going to no authority for anything. I've had
it with that website. I don't I think Aaron has done a very piss poor job of moderating. He basically says I'm not moderating. So we have a slew of a holes on there that are doing nothing for positive for the show. They just say negative things and they just condemn you. They condemn me. They condemn everybody in between and they get people like Scaramanga all jacked up in a situation where they shouldn't be mad and
mad. And so if that site is dead to me, I'm not going to if anybody wants to contact me using that site, you're not going to get to go go back to Twitter. Because I have refused now to be it's just like everything else is some of these guys start up and you have some body like Aaron are running it. They don't do their job properly. They're above it all they won't take advice from anyone. And it's like no authority early in the in the I'm sorry, no agenda social now
nor authority. And before that, that no agenda forms. We've had this happen over and over and over again, where people take it upon themselves to be jerks. And so don't look for me they are I'm not happy there.

I mean, this is a little bit of projection because I mean, we are the ones taking the Joomla So, you know, that is kind of our own fault.

Yeah. Where's that jus money by the way? Where is it? The more CIA money but we don't get enough enough of that.

I have to say check the PIO box.

Once in a while we get some agency money, but it's rare. Very rare.

Very rare. Anyway, moving right along we had let's see, we had another Normandy D Day piece by Thomson nail. Man, you kind of liked the D Day diapers from St. Paul couture. They did which were they it was it was small. I mean, there was just technically some things that I think were probably didn't like it. I didn't know.

Not that I didn't like it using devils ever. No.

Not using devils who not you know, what's

the point and we both kind

of like damn Kenny Ben's baseball hitting the mouth. No, the idea true i like i like to you didn't like you thought it was too gruesome.

No, it was just the opposite. I liked it. And use you threw back at me as to gruesome.

Well, I repent. You said dry

await him as you're violating your own gruesome rule.

I repent. It's actually pretty good piece. Now well,

it does. I think the point is well taken is a little gruesome. Yeah.

And then sir Suge did a, like a wheel of fortune. Which I guess was supposed to be adios. mofos I guess.

Oh, I didn't figure right money. Now the reason adios mofos

the reason why it's kind of interesting is you know Pat's a jack, this is why I think he did it. Pat say Jack is ending his 40 year run as the host of we'll afford last Friday. It's done. On on May 30. There was a rather interesting episode, which I had not heard about. And quite frankly, I'm surprised seeing the the level of maturity of most of our listeners and of us. Here's a clip. Our
first toss up is worth $1,000. Category is phrase and off we go.

Maurice, right in the back. He thought the answer was right in the butt, which obviously fries not. Wow, that aired.

That aired. Yeah, well, why not?

Find rather interesting. Anyway, we thank and congratulate Francisco Scaramanga with his win for episode 1666. Now we move over to the treasure portion of the value for value model. These are the executive producers who come in with $300 and above and we read your notes and the Associate Executive producers which is $200 and above and we read your note as well. And this is a quite the anomaly that has
taken place here we have two of the same donations. These are only the second and third of their kind in the show's history. And it does, it's a recently coined donation amount and we start with the Duke of Central Florida from Winter Park 333333 The very coveted robber lies your donation from the Duke of Central Florida also a double show number donation he says I'm trying to encourage others to match this donation so we can
all collect our challenge coins. Love the show thanks to you and the other producers here of course is the jingle in the
standby 3333 33

You've got karma I mean wow.

Yeah, yeah. And it's pretty spectacular. And

well if that wasn't enough random number theory.

Yeah, if that wasn't enough, someone we haven't heard of heard from for a while Sir Donald of the fire bottles came in and he uses the end he found some more of his internet inner United Federation of Planets Starfleet Command letterhead. And he also from Eastern Washington donated three three, which is very strange that we have this two in a row like this amazing. And we'll get them both those showed number
donations. Yes. He says I enclose 333333 33333 3.33 Which I believe is the second Webalizer donation to no agenda. Exactly third thing third it's the third now it's the third now Yeah Please play the rebel iser number station jingle. Same request this is classic random numbers should have more often this donation is part of an inheritance from a dear friend who passed away last year. And that's Ian's it cheers Sir Donald unbelievable in the tank
333 33 otherwise you've got karma

now if I recall I think we should make a challenge coin for this

for the three three yeah

the rough Are you kidding me for the for the donation could you can we can we talk to Jay about that?

We could also talk to Paul couture who actually designed all this right

that's right he did all the the challenge coins yes

but he you know but I think it only we need the design and contact who who to manufacture I think this

is that's dynamite I you know I was telling Tina about this and she's like first of all she's like oh wow, this is so unbelievable. So she's so grateful whenever that happens whether it was all donations because you know my portion she takes right away and she takes it and says what are they getting? I said they get verbalize her donation says what do you don't even get some she said don't think get a drone or something like a drone? Nobody drone but I think the I think
the challenge coin is a great idea. So thank you both are working on Baronet Paul is in Fort Worth Texas. 350 93 So it's probably a 333 I'm thinking this donation brings me to Baron status should the peerage committee approval of course we
do. Jobs contracts and sales karma I can vouch for Linda loose stellar services as Linda Lou packin at image bankers Inc with a k.com Everyone complimented me on my resume and the intro letter she wrote are super useful, as well as the schooling I got from her on finding potential consulting clients. She's the best. Please de douche, my girlfriend, Masha Joon, who also who asked me to stop playing no agenda in the
car. She really she really enjoyed the Iran coverage as her family isn't as Isfahan is worse is for hon

ammonoid It must be

de deuced we continue to do that of course please have baby making karma for sureno Pam in Knoxville Tennessee. Wait I have I have

the baby making the

baby Carmen You're right. Yes we do. All right. Got the baby karma over there. Where is he's in Knoxville, Tennessee where he'll be setting up a meet up soon. Very good. Please look out for the pet treats for my startup bark bite.com All right another another cool thing in the

people I think you should send the BART the some samples to the to the kennel up in Port Angeles. There you go. Recreate the wet nose in you can. It's listed.

Does it come with vibrating beds the wet nose in sounds kind of creepy. We're creating homemade dog and cat treats. We're using all natural ingredients and using technology technology to optimize the recipes. I'm an industrial engineer after all, no weird ingredients. We'll be starting at Fort Worth area farmers market soon. And then expanding to our website. Stay tuned for delicious and healthy options
for your furry friends. We'll also be able to produce custom treat recipes for dogs with illnesses and specific nutritional needs. How about that? Trumps jobs karma? Why are you rapping? Shut up slave that's true little girl. Yay. And thank you for the sandy thank you for your courage. So there's two commas in there a lot of crime was requested and happy to do it for you long enough. Why are you laughing?
Shut ups. Slave it's true you've got no and I was hoping that seems like my system just froze up. Out there we go jobs,
jobs, jobs

there's so many jingles that everything froze up.

William Ericsson in East Boston, Massachusetts. Three Three. The shows have been on fire lately. I've had to ask for a closing deal karma at work for a large software purchase to hopefully close soon your newfound faith suit you very well, Adam. And JC de continues to be a lovely curmudgeon. Yes, I'm a lovely, lovely, lovely good to blend together like a fine wine. Oh, really? Keep it.

Okay, and Aspirus

get into the phonology of the whole thing. Keep it up and you'll never find an exit strategy or may not may you never jingles. I'm gonna come and ooh, you can see that juice. I'm gonna come.

Oh, gosh. Can you see that juice? There you go. Agent 99 is here from LaGrange, Texas, home of ZZ Top 250 Associate Executive Producer. Thanks so no agenda for all you do. I found no agenda on the Joe Rogan experience. We haven't done one of these in a while. I think I have a have a new yes I do have a new Rogan donation donation. Since then, you've made since then made it a part of every Thursday and Sunday avid follower of podcasting 2.0 love how we are delivering V
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You've got karma. Scott, the welder Watkinsville. Georgia 233 75. Might have been a row of ducks. Hi, John. Um, couple things here. My father ended up passing away in December due to his debt to Cubitus ulcer. Is that what it is? Thank you. Thank you, everyone in the knowledge in the nation for their prayers. My son and I were with him at the hospice. When he passed on to the other side. He was deeply religious. And I'd been reading him Bible verses when he started
to pass. We left them a hot cup of black coffee by the open window for the road. My dad had a good sense of humor and as we had said our goodbyes I told the nurse at the front desk. If you could give us a hand we could just put him in the work van and we could take him over to the crematorium herself to save a couple of bucks. She had a good laugh. Those hospice nurses that ride the line between life and death everyday are so awesome.
They made that experience magical and peaceful. Please let me clarify that I left Brooklyn for greener pastures in Athens, Georgia at the end of 2020. And close to businesses due to New York City government lockdowns the business I am most proud of taught over 4000 people how to weld enforce and short for our classes. The most popular one being how to make a cube I finally gotten gotten around it's not easy actually. I finally gotten around to offering classes again so that I
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I'm also I worked at a sheetmetal shop for two years and I can weld we're well I will say this. There are some people that can weld and there's some people that can weld and there are some people Yeah, and you look at the weld some people do it's like oh my god, how good are you? It's just like beautiful it's almost art.

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Scott, the wellness, Linda lose getting a lot of the ancillary promotion. Well, she's always Eli the coffee guy by the reason Bensenville Illinois. He came in with two under $6.09. And he says, I loved the last show. Or I loved the last show art and wanted to recognize and celebrate D Day A salute to the greatest generation as a
millennial. I can't help but notice the difference in generations between those who are younger and our grandparents cutting the wars of the first half of the last century made for some tough s o B's. Good times make for soft men. Soft men make make for hard times and hard times make for hard men. What I just said is what you said you stole it from me. Can I get a build back better jingle producers who love coffee by the way visit gigawatt coffee I'm having the Costa Rican light roast.

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Use the code ITM for 20%. off your order. Stay caffeinated Eli, the coffee gets a gigawatt coffee. Yes, it's a good product for
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Yes, indeed. Thank you Linda Lou package
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs.

And that concludes our executive and Associate Executive producers for episode 1667. By the way, a lot of people notice that 1666 fell on six six which some people just blew their minds and blown mind blown, baby. Thank you to these producers. Of course, these are credits that you keep forever. You can use them anywhere credits are recognized, for instance, on your resume or what are you drinking?

Your your favorite Topo Chico? From

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drink it all Mexico actually.

Yeah, but we well, that's we own Mexico when we took most of it.

Oh, sure. The Mexicans love hearing that. Yeah,

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Our formula is this we go out we get people in the mouth

shut up Yes, shut up so they just shut up. Oh, actually, I have a interesting just a little update, no, no clip, no clip to play but that's right, the ever ongoing vape wars. After remember, the the FDA, US Food and Drug Administration really went after vape juice and vapes in general and made it so that if you even wanted to introduce a vape juice onto the market, you had to pay them $1 million per flavor per nicotine level, which pretty
much cleared everybody out. Everybody fell apart. The whole industry went dead, including jewel. And guess what? Now they've reversed their decision on the jewel vape Ha, what are the chances? What are the chances that they ruin an entire industry? And then let the incumbent big wig back in? This is why we need Chevron deference What a bunch of horrible people. Yeah, I'd say it's really it's really unconscionable what they did there. But of course you want

I have a cannabis clip from NPR. Oh,

let's spark it up here. Researchers
at UCLA say roughly one in five adults seeking routine health care or using cannabis details from NPR is will stone that one in five statistic comes from a large study of electronic records collected from about 175,000 patients. They had been asked about cannabis use ahead of their annual wellness visit in the UCLA health system, the majority of patients using
cannabis said they did so to manage symptoms. The most common being sleeplessness, pain and anxiety, about 40% said they use cannabis weekly inhaling cannabis was about as common as ingesting it. The results generally aligned with previous research. Those between the age of 18 and 29 were much more likely to use cannabis than people over 60.

Yeah, I don't know, I don't think this is true. I think people over 60 aren't going to say Tell the doctor that they're using cannabis. If you go to those stores, you'll find as especially outside of California find that the the pot stores are filled with old ladies.

Yeah, I never thought it was a good idea to have the pot stores and you got to show your ID and then you're on record somewhere and then all of a sudden they're doing studies on you and then doing news articles. But there's a lot that they're doing, particularly when it comes to products of addiction, etc. One of them being the internet itself. On the medical
watch for you this afternoon. Excessive use of the Internet is reshaping teenage brains. That's according to a new study by researchers at the University College London. Alison cranek is a licensed counselor with Northwestern medicine McHenry hospital. She is an expert on treating children and teens who are experiencing an internet addiction. Allison, thanks for being with us. Thanks for having me already. First of all, let's clarify what is an addiction?
And what is a teenager just being a teenager? Sure. So sure. Last, there's not currently a diagnosis for Internet addiction. However, there are several similarities between what we refer to as substance use disorders and the problems we see associated with heavy smartphone use and social media use. So this includes things like cravings to use unsuccessful attempts to reduce their use, feeling powerless to change their use, and a negative impact on relationships as a
result of us. So when you start to see these things, that's when we start to think there might be more of a problem versus teens just being teens. In some regards. It's a bit like alcohol or anything else when it starts affecting other areas of your life. And this study essentially said much like some other things we get addicted to, it can rewire the brain a little bit more about that.
Yeah, that's exactly right. So we know that when we overuse things like smartphones and social media, it kind of it gets into our reward system in the brain, which involves this chemical dopamine, which is essentially we do something good, feels good and we want more.

So then it goes on and on and on about okay, okay, fine. We get it is but what's happening is studies like this are popping up, and they're now using it for the following. This is happening in New York we
have breaking news right now is one step closer to having two new laws that will protect kids online. Both measures have just made it through the legislature and Governor vocal says that she will sign them. One statute is designed to restrict algorithms that hook kids on social media and the other will limit the collection of personal data. The governor says that the state will lead the nation in online safety by implementing these new laws

look for the following mean blocked for social media is as addictive as cigarettes as cocaine as Oreos. And this will require some form of ID to be used to sign up for your social media website. Elon is salivating Believe me, because Oh, you might as well just give me all your details. So I can open a bank account for you it's all gonna be groovy baby. Just trust me. This

is a couple of clips on this but I wanted to preface it with with something that happened to me there's a guy there's an expert on addiction I forgot his name. He's a professor and he was notorious for being the king of a you know, discussing true addiction Tiger king. And he I don't know who to remember, this was like 25 years ago, and I was writing a column about it because I had this thesis at the
time. That the that the mouse was an addictive implement, because it was like a slot machine lever.

Wait a minute, wait a minute. This was this after the infamous no evidence article. Yes, it was

after that no evidence. And so I had this theory about you know, the mouse and you hit the reward. So you get addicted to the computer and you're clicking on you're clicking, you're getting results. So I got a hold of the professor to discuss this with because I needed I just need one attribution so I could throw it in their garage, right?

That's how we always do it. Yeah.

And he says, No. He says, No, this is bullcrap. This is all these phony baloney, addictions aren't addictions. Hmm. And it he was very strict about what's an addiction. It's something you really you know, it's literally an addiction where you'd like hooked on do heroin or something like that the rest of this is all habituation, and all these other things that happen to you. None of it's an addiction, there is no such thing as an Internet addiction. And yeah, that's what I said. But

that doesn't sound by the way, I

wrote the column anyway, without

it if the evidence doesn't if the experts don't agree, just just say it.

Everybody else in the media. So why be honest? Well done. Yeah. So. So I so I take some of these stories, you know, because I actually took that to heart. And you know, none of that there's not an addiction. If I didn't even I believe he would say that cocaine was never an addiction. It's just a habituation. So it's because people can just stop it. So I have a series of clips on teens in screen time. Here we go. And this was border line. Tip for the end of the show. But
if Doug wasn't going to do it, just go too long. But I'm thinking about doing this as this sort of thing is a Tip Tip. But this is again, back to NPR and, and this is more thinking and some advice. This is advice for you and your teens. And I think I think this is actually quite good.
early adolescence is a time when kids are becoming more independent and spending more time on social media. When it comes to curving screen time in this age group. New research suggests that what parents do really matters. And parents Maria Godoy reports. I'm the parent of a tween and a young teen. So when I saw the findings of a new study on parenting strategies and screen use among young adolescents, the first thing that jumped to my mind was Taylor Swift.
Yes, parents screentime influences how much kids use them. That was one of the study's key findings. Dr. Jason Niigata is a pediatrician at UC San Francisco and the study's lead author, it's really important to role model screen behaviors for your children because one of the biggest predictors of your child
are teenagers screen uses actually parents screen use. The study looked at data from more than 10,012 and 13 year olds and their parents who were asked about their screen use habits, including texting, social media, video chatting, and watching and browsing online. Even if teens say that they don't get influenced by their parents. It actually the data does show that actually parents are a bigger influence than than they may think. Oh, I'm sure

that the kids see their parents. Dream scrolling all the time.

Yeah, well shaped in this household. Yes, this is tricky. Guess where my phone is?

I'm just gonna guess it's in the drawer. Exactly. Okay.

And it's been in the drawer for the last year and a half. And I don't know if it's affected anybody you do a dinner. Everybody still pulls her phones out, but not as much as they used them.

What do you do when when people were okay, so when you're at the dinner table, and all the all the young uns pull their phones out? What do you do? Do you make fun of them? Do you say something?

Something important, I should know about? I'll do that to do the ridicule. I'll also say, Oh, hey, can you look something up for me? You know, one of the things I've always tended to dinner tables, so there'll be a little debate about something I said, Well, who's got a phone let's look it up. And I make make the slaves look this information up for me? Because I don't have a phone. And so it's and they generally do although I think this is a resentment that takes Yeah, take like that.

Like look it up for me. it up for me. Yeah, I like how you say that. I like I like that. I

like that. Yeah, it works. After a while they get a little tired of it. Now just

to check. Do you still have a landline? Of course. Okay, good. Is it one of those phony VoIP landlines that you get from your I mean, I

hate to admit it, but it's actually comes off the Sonic the digital I shouldn't have

like a wire out the window.

Exactly. Because it has its own power supply so the whole place goes everything goes dark. Exactly. Yeah, I don't have that. I I'd rather have but I don't Okay, it's part two
of this Dr. Genuine dusky is a pediatrician at the University of Michigan who studies kids and digital media. She says she hears parents expressed feelings of guilt about their own screen use all the time. Our immediate response is like, I am terrible. I'm so bad at this. But instead of beating ourselves up, she says parents should realize that we too are vulnerable to technology that's deliberately designed to keep our attention glued.
We have been asked to parent around an increasingly complex digital ecosystem that's like actively working against our limits setting for ourselves and for our kids. But that doesn't mean work. completely powerless. And a god test study found that keeping mealtimes and bedtimes screen free are effective strategies. Interestingly, the study found that using screens as a reward or punishment actually backfired. It was linked to kids
spending more time on their devices. Instead, researchers recommend parents work with their kids to come up with consistent family guidelines about when it's okay to use screens. And to question what we're really getting out of it. Whenever we feel compelled to keep scrolling. I

do not like her voice very bit annoying. There's a way that her voice is annoying, and

she's very annoying. And the other thing is the use of the word screens when they're talking about cell phones. Yeah, yeah, because that's what we're talking about here. And it's screens, they means on screens, I did at the tip in there was that using screen time as a reward is a bad idea. So

there's two movements here in Texas, one have a name for it's like eight or something, eight, eight, I can't remember what it is. But the parents are now joining together. And they're all because you know, if they've one, one household doesn't have phones, it's no good. So the all the parents are now saying, let's not give in the local school here. Let's not give our kids phones at all until eighth grade. And they're having some success with that.

But you know, a kid need a phone for in the sixth grade.

They don't that's the point. Now, the other thing is, instead of a phone, like give them a gun, Hey, you want a gun instead of a phone? Now you're taught? Yeah, and the kids, you know, that teaches you some real responsibility. You know, then they and they go to the shooting range, whether they

get hold up the kid, the parents for a phone, turn around and give

me a phone mom. Yeah, oh, these things work quite well. Actually, I have some AI stuff, including a little bit of boots on the ground, which I thought was kind of interesting. You know, Adobe, updated their terms and service, their terms of service. And Tom Starkweather, one of our one of our producers, our top producers. He quit Adobe. He's very mad. Have you heard about this? I mean, he quit it was working for Adobe. Now he quit using it. He closed his account.
And many, many Adobe users are very angry about point 4.2 licenses to your content. Where you know, there's the usual You grant us and not because it's all cloud based. You grant us a non exclusive worldwide royalty free sub licensable license to use reproduce publicly display, distribute, modify, create derivative works based on publicly performing translate the content. And even though they came back with a clarification, because so many people were mad, and we're quitting Adobe, well, people

get mad easily, especially when these companies try to take your stuff.

Yes, for AI. That mean that's the whole that's the whole issue is like you're taking my stuff and you're baking it into your LLM. And you're in essence using my stuff to sell to other customers. They're trying to kind of waffle around it, but it's not working. And I think this is a crack this is a interesting crack in the in the armor okay, I didn't know about this armor of AI. And yet this clip led me to a little bit of research is from the rising
free speech or free will. Former CEO of Twitter Jack Dorsey argued at the Oslo Freedom Forum for the latter actually

that's not that's not that clips not interesting. I'm sorry, I don't even need the clip to accentuate we've been seeing these open AI people writing letters, open letters to the world. Here's an article open AI safety staffers are jumping ship, the jumping ship, because, you know, they feel that that you know that they're not being responsible about the AI. Political here inside the culture clash, dominating. I
didn't even know this. But there's a whole lobbying group from open AI and other artificial intelligence companies that are all in Washington DC. And, and an old favorite came back when I kind of understood what had happened here, because you know, of course, we got Biden's executive order all the senators had a closed door meeting, because there's hundreds of millions of dollars. That's a 10s of
millions of dollars, maybe hundreds. That is going into lobbying for AI and of course, everybody wants to be the most important AI on the block. But all of the people they sent all of the safety people, the board members that were kicked out of open ai ai, every single one of them including The person who most recently quit, the co founder was kind of kicked out. And this guy, Daniel, Coco, Taj, Hilo, Taj, Lo, all of these people have one thing in common. Can you guess what it is?

There investors in AI,

they are effective altruists. Oh, no worse. So none of these people are actually technology people. Then as I've looked into it, there, they all, they all had this idea that they're going to save the world with math, this is what AI is going to do. And they're all so worried that one day One day, you maybe in 1020 or 50 years, will have an actual human acting artificial intelligence. And they're worried about the future me the future self, this is all part of this call this Effective
Altruism. And that's why they're jumping ship not because there's any actual magic sauce going on there this doing anything. They just don't like that, that you know that it's not being done for good. And that people are making money on it. It's not right. This whole thing is a farce. This is Dave

reminded, I'm reminded of the singularity people what happened to them

the same nut jobs hidden so this Daniel guy who left their nut jobs, he wrote, I agree, he wrote a paper. Just listen to and I read this to Tina, I say can you tell me what this means? And they have, you know, this is how all these people speak with the it's like, it's like they literally use
chat GPT listen to this abstract of his paper. First, we argued that the appeal of Effective Altruism, henceforth, eta depends significantly on a certain empirical premise, we call heavy tail hypothesis, which HTH wishes to show title, which characterizes the probability distribution of
opportunities for doing good. Roughly, the heavy tail hypothesis implies that the best causes interventions or charities produce orders of magnitude greater good than the average ones constituting a substantial portion of the total
amount of good caused by altruistic interventions. Next, we canvass arguments that effective Ultras have given for the existence of a positive or right heavy tail and argue that they can also apply in a sort of negative or left heavy tail, where counterproductive interventions do orders of magnitude more harm than ineffective or moderately harmful ones.

These people are know nothing but since

Yeah, exactly. I knew you would like it. These people are crazy. They're in a cult. There's a weird sex angle to all of this polygamy. Same goes with a lot of polygamy. So that's the kicker. Look at Sam Altman, and tell me that guy is now on the spectrum in a very creepy way. And they have nothing. They've got a cool demo. Yes. You know, the millennial male went back and forth with me. She says, Hey,

I'm a millennial male still around. I bailed out. I

know, she's in Portland. So she is she's having a rough time. Exactly. Very happy.

That's worse than New York City.

She, she says, hey, you know, I don't want to convince you of anything. But you know, I find it I've been able to code some stuff. I said, Look, yes, absolutely. You can, it can help you code. It can help you write. You know, for an unskilled coder or an unskilled writer, even the even the GitHub copilot, it definitely helps with coding, anything that has to do with language, it can help. It's not going to be creative. You can't say build me something build me the next
awesome iPhone app. It has no idea what to do. And the biggest problem is it cost too much money. And right now, and right now you're getting it for free, or almost to $20 a month is free for what it really costs to do this stuff. And that's the phase we're in in any tech bubble. Eyeballs. Baby eyeballs is all about eyeballs. That's, that's all they're doing.

I think it's interesting. I was more kind of fascinated by the heavy tail, which is a derivative of long tail, which was a huge trend. Oh, it's long tail, which was a another Silicon Valley of one of the many buzzwords that comes out of Silicon Valley. And they're always derivative. So heavy tail, it makes no sense. It doesn't make any I mean long tails. You can kind of understand it if it's explained. But heavy tail. What does that mean?

I don't know. I don't know. What does it mean? I don't know. But I don't know. But they're all very concerned with the world. And you know that the guy who started this whole Effective Altruism, some Brit. Now he's like, I give away hat. They're doing everything wrong. I give away half of my money, you know to good cause that half of my

money half my money Bill Gates came up with that scam. Yeah, yeah, give away half your money to us. Yeah. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation so we can invest it

to the no agenda show what's wrong with you? Well, that's

what I'd like to hear. We got a little of that from murasky. That's for sure.

So this end, and everyone's falling for because you get these you get easy for you get the they are, you get these really complicated. Actually, the

was a intellectual explanations are very appealing to a lot of people what

you get with technology press in particular. And the New York Times has a technology guy who is not very bright in my opinion. And all they do was fond, fond, fond, because they want the founder interview. And if you don't find he don't suck up to the PR people who send you free gear and give you free accounts, then you'll never get the founder interview. Because of course, we all want to interview Elon or we all want to interview Sam Altman. These are the gods,
their false idols. I'm telling you, that's how it works. And, and I mean, my God, man in video. It's unbelievable. I was watching the keynote by the CEO. I want I tried to clip it. I didn't know how he's talking about NIMS. And these modules, and it's going to be the new world of manufacturing. This is the new industrial revolution. I'm like, this isn't this is a middle aged Asian guy in a motorcycle jacket. Give me a
break. No. It's nuts. I mean, yes, with enough power, which is what they're talking about.

The power required for their new stuff is just out of out of this and how

effective altruists How does that work with climate change? EAS how's your heavy tail on that?

Back to invidious and she mentioned him. I met this guy I had dinner with him some years ago, before it the company was what it is today. This

guy the Asian guy in the leather jacket. Yeah. Jensen, Jensen. Yeah.

He very sharp guy. I think he's at this point in over his head with this with the latest stuff. And the question comes to mind if I was going to ask him, which I'll probably never get to see him again. Because you know, I'm washed up certainly not.

After the show, after, after Thursday show of John and I were talking and about being invited. We never get invited to parties. And John literally goes with a bit of sadness in his voice. I'm washed up. So that's where that came from. Washed

up. So So is what is the deal with this power consumption. I mean, they've always been kind of invidious, always been kind of cavalier about their power consumption. While the whole world is going in the other direction, about God, we gotta keep the power down, we got to keep the power down. They've never thought that way. And now it's gotten to the
point where it's ludicrous. The amount of power that is chewed up by their chips, they're doomed to failure, because is it in the right going in the wrong direction, especially in a world of climate change. But

that doesn't seem to matter. That doesn't hit the heavy tail. I'm just going to keep using this all the time. You know, the heavy tail hypothesis of this is that climate change

is big. But once you use that, oh, it's

not the same. But yeah, I mean, yes, with enough power, I guess. I mean, we can't even get back to the moon. And the reason why is we don't have enough power. We don't have enough rocket to get there. This the whole idea of you string enough computers together, I guess you can get something out of it. But it's just predictive. It's not smart. It's not intelligence. It's just nonsense. And, I mean, all that needs to happen is one, we need one company to say, Yeah, we're
scaling back on this. We're not in anymore. What will be

the who is going to be the first company to say that I don't You can't predict that. That's gay, I guess jet GPA, which company is going to scale back on AI first, okay.

Chet GPT. Which is chat dot open. ai.com. Okay. All right. Prompt jockeys. Okay, what is that? What am I asking it? Give me the which

company will scale back on? It's a I plans first. Okay. It won't answer the question. I guarantee it.

Well, okay. First, I got to be a prompt jockey. And I'm going to say you are you are a stock market analyst. Okay. All right. Oh, no sits that won't work analyst. Okay. Here's the question. All right, here we go. Let's see, searching. Google is the company that is scaling back on its AI plans first. There you go. They say there is this where's the evidence, Google decided to reduce the use of AI generated answers in its
search results. So that's kind of weak. Google's decision to scale back involves limiting AI generated content for certain queries, man, that's not a real that's not really good answer. That's, that's just chat. GPT slagging off Google not I mean, that's just

especially at GPT. Looking at the news stories, Yahoo. Yeah, exactly. Yahoo News and saying, Oh, look at this well looks like just because Google didn't make this announcement. Because it's such a failure. Yeah. And it laughable failure, and it's creating nothing but ridicule for Google. So they said that in a press release, and so they picked the press release up, and that was their answer. Okay. Pretty much, pretty much about it. It's all you can come up
with. Yeah. I know. They haven't dissolved the department. No,

no. But we heard from our other boots on the ground guide Microsoft, who said, you know, it's so expensive. We had 20 people on one, one thing, and it was, what was it? $2,000 a day or something? I mean, come on. It's crazy, Chris. You're

just a hater.

I'm not a hater. It's just I want to know what else we're going to talk about. And we happen to understand how this scam works. We've been around Silicon Valley long enough we see it. It's a hype. In Vidya now is this one stock keeping the the s&p 501

stock is keeping the market propped up.

That's amazing. It's amazing. It

is amazing. I have to say it's amazing. What else is amazing. Is this China's secret police. That was the greatest segway I've ever done.

I'm probably the worst, I'd say right up there with some of mine.

But I do have a couple of clips I want to get out of here. They've had these for a while I think. Yes, they're not new, but it's going on all over the place and nobody cares. Okay, here we go. A
rare peek into the inner workings of China's secret police operation. A former Chinese spy spilled the beans after defecting to Australia. He spoke with NTD about Beijing's tactics to snatch dissidents overseas, a confession from a former Chinese spy. For 15 years he worked as an undercover agent helping Beijing track dissidents around the world and northern back to China. Anyone that's against the Chinese Communist Party on Xi Jinping could become a target.
The former spy goes by the name Eric, after defecting to Australia has now going public, lifting the veil on a global operation to snatch those critical of Beijing. Key to the operation is a unit inside China's top police agency called the first Bureau it's in charge of agents like Eric. It's a bit like starting with the KGB orca estoppel of Nazi Germany is a political repression tool. It has only one goal that is to maintain the Chinese Communist Party's controls.
And that includes controlling voices outside China's borders. Eric was but one agent spinning China's web across the globe, tracking dissidents and waiting for the right moment to bait and trap them. According to reports from safeguard defenders, Chinese authorities were able to coerce 12,000 people to return to China from over 120 countries over the past decade. Many were sent back to China without even their host countries even being
made aware. Eric says he was responsible for tracking down dissidents in Australia, Canada, India, Cambodia and Thailand. My main job was to collect information such as getting inside the target circle to establish relationships with you also to learn their plans and how they need to know what they're going to do next. This is really important to the morphism simply arresting an Irish person

what does it have to do with the price of bread?

I find it interesting that they've got these agents all over the world grabbing their own people dragging them back they then they stupidly get somehow get them to volunteer I think sometimes they black bag them. But get into vol cow go back you know, whatever you say. And they go back and get thrown in jail.

Good. Get them out. Get rid of it, take them, take them China take them. You can wait from at the border.

And then here's the rest of it.
Here's how it works. My handler was send over a list of targets. For example, they want to coerce someone to return to China. And I will talk to them to come up with a plan for how to approach that person online and in person to see if I could learn them to a place where it's easier to take control of him. One of the targets was a political cartoonist called red pepper. His satirical cartoons often mocked the Chinese Communist Party and its leader Xi Jinping.
It was about the end of 2016. Derek messaged me on Twitter, saying he likes my cartoons and wanted to chat privately. He later communicated through email, he approached me as someone that was pro democracy. Posing as a real estate agent, Eric asked red pepper to design
a logo for a project. It went smoothly. Two years later, this was a contract to win my crush, we'll assume that once the logo was done, Eric extended another job offer with one condition that red pepper had to go to Cambodia for the job interview. I don't know. But I have a bad impression of Southeast Asian countries that they're not safe. I don't trust them because of their human rights records, especially Cambodia. So I replied to him
saying I wouldn't go to Thailand, Burma, Laos. These countries are the top choices for Chinese secret police trying to patch dissidents. Governments turn a blind eye to Chinese operations. And sometimes we've been worked with Chinese agents. Red Pepper was in the dark about the plan to snatch him until the reporter from the Australian Broadcasting cooperation reached out to him to confirm Eric's story. Turns out the error and that was in communication with me defective.
Eric said he was coerced into working as a spy and always want it to flee. asked why he went public with his closely guarded secrets. Of course, I have my own reasons. Some of them I can't really disclose. But also like what the news report says, it fits into my values. I have always believed that the inner workings of the secret world should be disclosed one day, Donald Trump don't trust China, China is as HoH I wonder how

much of this stuff we do.

None of it. None of that. Oh, we're not gonna bring people back. We tax you on the way out? No. I'm gonna bring us back down to earth here with just two clips. These are very important clips because the latest thing that everyone was all concerned about concern we've moved, moved to threat level concerned about Donald Trump concerned about his revenge
tonight dank on the campaign trail for the first time since he was convicted of 34 criminal counts. Former President Donald Trump increasingly focused on revenge through a rigged trial in New York. In a series of interviews, Trump implying that if he's reelected, he will see payback against Democrats, including Joe Biden, look, when this election is over, based on what they've done, I would have every right to go after them. And it's easy because it's Joe Biden in an interview with Dr. Phil,
he doubled down and we're you have so much to do. You don't have time to get even. You only have time to get right. Well, revenge does take time. I will say that does and sometimes
revenge can be justified. Phil, I have to be honest, you know, sometimes it can in another interview dodging a question about whether he would order the Justice Department to prosecute Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, who brought the case that led to his conviction, saying, quote, we're going to see what happens you're gonna see

what happens. Yeah, this is all mind reading. Listen, carefully parse this what Trump has been saying and he's I've saw it seen all these I saw the bill thing and all the rest of it. He's, he's mostly saying this has to stop and I don't want to continue it. You know, we can't keep going like this. It shouldn't happen to another guy. Like, what happened to me shouldn't happen to anybody again, I don't care who it is. He's really going out of his way to say just the opposite
of what this reporter is saying. This is a lie. What is basically is this is dishonest reporting.

What is so cool about this, where did it come from? By the way, that was CNN? No, I'm sorry. That was ABC.

Yeah, what CNN would make a lot of sense, but Well, here's inexcusable. So

here's a CNN clip. Laura Coates. And she has Eric Holder, former Attorney General. On the show, too, we

should have been arrested. Talking

about this revenge. This is probably the most perfect example of Vetches f being itself Mitch a cop door to health

lawyer. This is I will I want to help you out here. I'm going to preface this for you. This clip is being used a lot by the right to show exactly what you said. But I say you are I am. It is a terrific clip. You just
describe a little bit in terms of the role of how it transforms an attorney general we're not looking at things truly from the facts purely from the evidentiary but And then how to meet it, but instead taking directives on who to prosecute from the president united states, sure, if the President told a compliant Attorney General, I don't like what this congressman said about me or did about me, did to me the course of the last two, three years, whatever,
opening an investigation on that person, that attorney general could tell a compliant United States attorney to do just that. Talk to a compliant FBI director who could be replaced by the the President, to open any investigation, and then to just look through that person's life and look for anything that you possibly can find. And close to say what you find in any
person's life that might run afoul of the law. And even beyond that, the fact the mere fact of an investigation of a person who is a public figure can be reputation ruining, can be politically damaging, not even if you find anything, just
the fact that the investigation itself exists. And if you've got the full weight of the Justice Department, the full weight of the presidency, the full weight of the FBI, focusing on somebody like that, that can be extremely damaging to not only that person individually, but to our democracy writ large.

Exactly what they've done, exactly what they've done. It's an unbelievable clip.

And, you know, this is a pre tip. This is before you get the tip, this is just showing you the tip, if someone we are a constitutional Republican American, a constitutional representative Republic, actually, if anyone says, that's a danger to democracy, or you're a danger to democracy, your answer should be You're darn right. It is. Democracy, the founding fathers called the democracy, which is what these people want. This has to stop, we have to change our
words, stop using democracy. Democracy is a threat to democracy. Yeah, it's all a threat to democracy as it should be. That was my pre tip.

Okay, you

know, like, I don't have my pre trip, I'm sorry. Back

to this. I do like it. So I have a couple of clips from the last show that I want to lay out because I've decided that and I have a thought on this. These are the two clips of Trump off the hook. One of them is very short. They're both pretty short. But let's start with Trump off the hook. Georgia,
former President Donald Trump won two legal victories today. In Georgia, the Court of Appeals is delaying any action on the election interference case against Trump until October at the earliest. And a federal judge in Florida is postponing key hearings in the classified documents case pending there.

It's all except there's another clip that says pretty much the same thing. And I was listening to this stuff. And I'm going oh, that's Oh, yeah, the reason is because all they wanted to do was be able to use the term convicted felon. And so these other cases are now who cares what there was as a mag, we already have him convicted felon on 3234 felonies. And so that's all you need. That's all they wanted. That's what they got. And so these other cases are all going
to fall by the wayside. They're never going to conclude we're never going to hear about him anymore about the documents and Mar a Lago or anything else because they got what they wanted the moniker that's all they wanted was that they can use in their in their promotions for Joe Biden to get reelected and

I think you've seen many of because you're on Tiktok all the time. I'm think you've seen the clips where people go, Bob, yeah, I'm voting for a convicted felon. I like it. I mean, this is people are saying this over and over again. Yeah, I'm voting for for the guy who who's a lesser criminal of all of this stuff. It's a total backfire. And you still gotta wonder, isn't a just exactly done to get him elected, so that can do the big rug poll, and then have everything collapse,
including Nvidia. All of it, all of it in one go.

Man was played. I missed some analysis clips. I want to play this one. There's two of them. Actually. They're pretty good dissent. This is NPR they bring an analyst and they talk about stuff. Play NPR analysis, Trump 34. This is about that.
been more than a week since Donald Trump was convicted on 34 felony charges? Still early, of course. But any indication if it's changing votes, I think we can say that the conviction has overall been a net negative for Trump, but really only marginally. I mean, that's what polls had showed coming in that that was most likely and it seems to be playing out that way. So far, it's only been a week. Since the conviction. We'll see if this is
just a bump or something more lasting. More important is whether this moves any key groups that had been wavering about voting for Biden, in particular, younger voters who had been the most likely to say beforehand that they could be moved depending on on the on the verdict. This election you know is expected to be close. Any movement on the margins could be decisive, of course,

way he saw he talks about any key groups that might be affected by this. And he doesn't mention mentioned black males. Well, no, no, they started younger people are gonna think twice about this. Black

males don't exist anymore for people at NPR. There's not a row not exist. You nailed it. Yeah, they're not less than males are out. That's right. They're no longer important. Screw

you black males. So streamers like blackmail? Yeah. So I got one. Let me play this clip to this the NPR analysis about Ukraine and Trump. President
Biden is in France, as we speak, to observe the 80th anniversary of the D Day landings in Normandy. speech, he said the heroes of that day are so many of us now. They're not asking us to do their job. They're asking us to do our job to protect freedom in our time, to defend democracy, to stand up aggression of democracy and at home
to Medeco. He didn't mention Donald Trump by name. But well, this is a huge dividing line foreign policy between Biden and Trump very different approaches to the world and their Biden is implicitly warning against creeping isolationism and separation from allies suddenly in Trump has really made a hallmark of his own foreign policy, really
turning more inward. Biden is more of a traditionalist believing that American involvement moral leadership is very important around the world as obviously was the case in World War Two and after it? Of course, the backdrop of all this is the war in Ukraine, you know, Biden supports more funding of the war and standing behind the country under siege from Russia.
With Trump, on the other hand, you know, there are lots of questions about maybe how much territory would he encourage Ukraine to give away to Russia in order to get the war to end? This is very different approaches that we've seen from Biden and from Trump, and very different ways in which our allies see the approach that the United States could take, depending on who wins

this election. Your analysis, your analysis, yeah,

P. Trump is an obvious peacenik. And he'll do anything to end a war, he doesn't see any benefit in it. He's a real estate guy, not a military industrial complex guy. And that's what's going to happen. They have to do a reset here. Now, taking it a little more in depth where we think that you know, this whole thing may be a setup, just to get Trump in for some reason or other might have some influence on that. But now he's, he's not going to let this continue.
Right. As far as I can tell, I'm going to be wrong. It's going to turn into a war monger. I don't see any evidence of it. Of

course, the real news is the the the new thing that is sweeping, tick tock. Do the Biden have you seen the dude the Biden meme?

Yes, actually, I I reposted it this morning. Yeah. Do the body do the Biden where

you just kind of squat down? Like poop like you're pooping? Yeah. It's like everyone's doing it. Now. Do the Biden dance. It's it's a very slow dance,

slow dance.
I'm gonna show my school by donating to no agenda. Imagine all this evil who could do that? Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.

We do have a couple of meetups. We do have a knighting. And we have some title changes and of course some birthdays. And we have some people to thank our producers who came in $50 and above right under the executive producer level. John, take us through the 50s

Well, let's start with Natalie. Is s o l o t e s I'm not sure how to pronounce it. She's in Claire's in New York. And she came in with 150 bucks, but she has a heartfelt note that I read part of his writing to make a donation on my fiancee, Shani. hassy hasta Qian, I think your podcast has played a pivotal role in his life and writing both intellectual stimulation and a crucial anchor anchor on his journey to sobriety. Oh, about we have a sobering podcast.

Who would have thunk?

Then she goes on she was very flattering. Deborah King and Mary at a Ohio 133 33 Sir Rob, with a birthday in Tacoma, New South to home my New South Wales Australia.

And a switcheroo for a smokin hot wife Rhonda has that sort of 62nd birthday. Excellent. Yes.

Which are really they fight a lot when he says

but the making up 20 to 55 with their normal couple. Yeah. And they said the makeup afterwards is out of this world.

Marilyn Osborne 105 35 another switch your rooms serve pokey in Rochester, New Hampshire with 100 bucks and this donation is on behalf of Steven Noseworthy.

In loving memory of his father Don knows, knows where they went a great last name and he wants a de douching for Steve.
Ben de deuced

Teresa Andrews in Camarillo, Camarillo Brillo, California. $100 Chien is a de douchey deed deuced three jumped to Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina. 808 Our only boob donation of this show Brian Williams in Elgin, Illinois. 7373 Michael A Vivi err in Santa Thornton, San Burton, New Hampshire. 6633. You want some jobs cover for the dude's name? Ben. We'll put that at the end. John Bigelow in Glenville, Illinois. 6102, Grayson insurance in Aurora, California,
Colorado, Aurora, Colorado. 606 mile boobs. Sir jaunty in Omaha, Nebraska. 60 sir Eric in Murfreesboro, Tennessee 50 to 72. He needs travel karma and we'll put that at the end. For his sister Cheryl. Dame Nancy of the confused in San Bruno California. 5244. Josiah Thomason, and Kenny, Iowa 51. Bad idea supply parts unknown, but if you have a bad idea, they've got what you need. 5050 Edward Mazurek and Memphis, Tennessee 50. These are all $50 donors, and we'll wrap it up
with them. name and location Ray Howard in Kremmling, Colorado, Robertson home in Flint, Michigan, Justin Cruz and tacha B. Steven ray in Spokane, Geron Pat, in Essex, UK Nisa de douching. You've been de deuced William Kidwell in Dover, Delaware, Sir George rachet in La vernia, Texas, Capek Chiropractic in Capek, Michigan, William Spain in Springdale, Arkansas, Louis Louis Paulin Werth in Medford, Oregon, Frankie Perez in Portland Oregon. Epson Don Santos in
Luanda II or Angola Oh, Luanda, Angola. Oh, hello.

Go there we go.

You send us some African news. We won't use it but said no, we will. We need to backgrounders any we need

Africa boots on the ground or bare feet on the ground.

Gentlemen, bolter and ranch ranch Santa Margarita. If the search Jason de Lucia Arias, he's in Miami Beach. And last on the list is quarry Jad Jack's a joke. Joe ethic is misspell is Jackson, I'm pretty sure. Thanks for waters in Tennessee. And that's our group of producers for show. 1667

Yes, thank you again to everybody who produces the show with your time, your talent and your treasure again, thanks everyone under $50. Remember that the sustaining donations are extremely valuable to us. They help during the slower shows. And if everyone did it, well, the donation segments will be much shorter as well. You get more bang for the buck. But that's just a pipe dream. So thank you, of course to our executive and Associate Executive producers and are
Webalizer donations today. What a wonderful thing. Thank you. And here's the jobs karma jobs, jobs, jobs,
jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs. Karma,

no agenda donations.com. And Megan Schultz is turning 33 The magic number tomorrow sir Rob says Happy Birthday to his wife Rhonda. She turned 62 and Sir Alex wishes his smokin hot wife Jen. And this two human resources Mia and Emerson Happy Birthday all on the same day, I wonder. And we say a big happy birthday to the governor of El Dorado Mr. Dana Brunetti, he turns 52 on the 11th Happy birthday 51 On the 11th we say happy birthday to you from
everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. I can't believe I screwed screw that one up after we wrote it down so meticulously. I'm sorry. Don't Why don't we have a couple of title changes? You've heard the donations coming earlier Sir Alex now becomes Baronet Alex the NICU dad that's right we know the NICU dad he's a frequent attendee of the Austin no agenda meetups by Count
hugger of kitties now becomes count hugger of kitties. Good to see that and Baronet Paul becomes barren Paul the trusted advisor all thanks to a another level up in the peerage ladder due to another aggregated $1,000 In total donation doesn't matter how long it takes you can take years you can become a new tech you can get a new title or you can become a knight or a dame we have one on the list for today. So if you can grab your blade deck it should be a nice one because it is Scott the welder
Scott step on up here out of the podium buddy. Thanks for your contribution to the best podcast in the universe. I'm very proud to pronounce the k d as Sir Scott the welder blacksmith of the East for you. We had nothing nothing special at the round table so we of course have hookers and blow for you my friend or rent boys and Chardonnay if that's what you're into. It's all good redheads and rise. We got beards of blondes.
We have Rubenesque woman and Rosie geishas and sock a buck of vanilla bong hits a bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts ginger ale and Jerboas breast milk and pablum, but the favorite is always here at the round table for you it is the mutton and the meat enjoy while you head over to no agenda rings.com You can give us your ring size, there is a handy ring sizing guide there and we'll send that off to you post haste it is a signet ring so you can see all your important
correspondence where they actually want to thank oh I got one of those in the PIO. I love it when I get A a note in the PIO box that sealed with with with nightclub with night
sealing wax with nice ceiling wax. Now this is actually from one of our producers he is Darius Dickerson, he is Sir Darius unity night of the sand hill people and he sent me his book, unseen views of oaf Operation Iraqi Freedom and so we published this book and this pictures that he took in his rock in in Iraq during his tour there and he writes a little story under each page has a picture and the one of the funniest ones there's this this is cement wall and spray painted
you know kind of look at the military letters that they use that they spray paint on all their gear. It says Google W T C seven please so the whole thing is great Darius Dickerson wartime snapshots Thank you very much so that's what another thing you can do with your with your night ring and your ceiling wax no one always like a party we heard earlier connection is protection you know it is that's why you need to find your tribe but uh, no agenda meet up no agenda meetups.com The 11th northwest
Houston meetup sir economic hitman says it was a success. We had myself the economic hitman Ben H. David and Aleksey Tim, who is Timbo slice on NAS our first non listener first fediverse attendee fonder from Palast POA s dot SPO a.st. We talked about depositions, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the fediverse, Trump COVID And Samuel L. Jackson. Next meet up either late July or early August. Find my contact info by going to the latest meetup pages on no agenda meetups.com. And we
got a recorded report here from the Denver meetup. Hey, folks,
welcome from the Denver City parks meet up. It's the 80th anniversary of D Day. And with all due respect from Joe Biden, I think a lot of people shit themselves on the beach of the day. This is Colin, this is the thing I am saying right now and I hope you are having a great day in the morning. This is Sir soothsayer. I'm working on building my bus. And I for one did not put myself today.
It's just assumption we're just checking in in the morning over at the city park and come by and visit us next time

for me to out. Sounds like someone brought the gummies Alright, thank you very much Denver meetups on the horizon. Today there is a southwest New Hampshire meetup, which is underway as we speak at Keene local burger. We've got the Thursday the meet of 333 central golf balls meet up at Riverside Park, the leech Amphitheater in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. And coming up we've got Virginia Mosley, Virginia, Ohio, San Diego, of course the big meet up on June 15. at
Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands. I will be there. I think over 100 people have already registered it's going to be a Hootenanny, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Fort Wayne, Indiana Edmonds, Washington, Central Ohio, Tilburg, the Netherlands on the 23rd. The list goes on and on. All the way through to July is what I'm seeing here, but they even are registered beyond that. Go to no agenda meetups.com to find out exactly where you can find Your tribe,
your people. And there's never an argument at these at these meetups net Well, there may be discussions but no one ever gets mad. There's never no fist fighting breaking out. It's just a good time and you will have a group of people typically they get a telegram group together and you all talk to each other and you organize things and you're protected because you have been connected no agenda meet ups.com If you can't find one near you start one yourself. It's easy and a party
with all the nights and days you won't be triggered. You wouldn't be safe

is like a bar. Like a pie. Like a party everybody like a party? I have to I suppose. You have a lot. Why don't you go first? You got a lot of ISOs today. So

these are all experimental. ISOs Okay,

experimental ISOs it is everybody who

can happen. Start with the top one. Enjoy. Okay, here we go. They'll enjoy the food. Yeah, okay. Forbidden which
is forbidden in Islam.

Okay. Horrible. Horrible. The I liked that one. Nice and clean.

Thank you.
Thank you. very

experimental, and a classic

is a new Wow. Wow. That's

probably the best one. That's a good wow. But I don't know I may. I may have you beat here. Let's try this one country. ganda hell. Come on.

Come on. Get to do the show.
That is insane. Yeah.

Borderline borderline Well, what do you what do you like? Man, I

think was the rest of yours.

I only had to I don't wish that I had to. Thank you. I think the Thank you. Maybe I can do that. Wow. Thank you. And while together, let me see. Because that might actually be a little better. Hold on. Let me see.
Thank you. Wow.

It's still at the other way around.

Wow. Thank you. Wow, thank you. You call it Which way do you want it? I know it's hard to grow.

Thank you is it doesn't have the same intonation as the wow.

I think thank you. Thank you. And then how about horrible and

horrible and thank you

see, I didn't like the horrible.
Horrible Thank you know, just

do Thank you. I'm done with this. We'll just do thank you. And now ladies and gentlemen. It is time for you know what it's time for.
Mastery. You just JC? And sometimes.

Hey, ma'am. That's a jingle that's a jingle right there. Thank you. Sure. All right, what's your tip?

Let's say you had to know

you were going to do a tip off. You do the tip than I do a tip.

I got a tip. Want you to do this for people who this is a tip for people who have the habit of drinking soda or water or whatever. And dosh dashing it with a bunch of apple cider vinegar is either for health benefits, gut health and have a leaky gut, gut health or losing weight. Go to go to amazon.com and get the hengstenberg 13 fine herbs flavored German vinegar seasoning instead. And use that
instead of apple cider vinegar. It is delicious in in like I'm using it now that Topo Chico, you dump a bunch of onion, like a tablespoon of the vinegar into the water and you get something that's refreshing and delicious. It's Kingston hengstenberg. You can look it up by putting herb flavored vinegar and you'll find a bunch of people that make these things. Alright.

I have three tips actually, for my tip, tip one read Yes. Tip one. Never ever asked your wife to help you with the tip. She was very mad that you should do your own tip. Second tip. Sending email to me. Mark important puts you to the bottom of the list. Do you see this? People who send email and then go through the trouble of marking it important and then even asking for a return receipt. bottom of the list.

I haven't had that probably for 10 years.

Oh it has happens every day in my email program which

because you never answer your email, I'm very, very good at answering emails, or

you don't even answer my email. What are you talking about? Now because on Thunderbird which I've been using to great success Thunderbird, actually, it shows up as red and then it's very annoying. So I just delete

it when I see okay, well that's no good. And disable that coloring.

And finally, if you are if you are a fan of, of making coffee with ground coffee, so in a filter or the way I do it, which is with the French press, put a dash of salt on top of your coffee. It not only reduces bitterness, but it also brings prosperity to your family. Hmm

Yeah, them some dead dad some dangerously good
tips. John C. With the tip of the day, he's gonna tell us what he would do in every possible way. John, just

There you go. We got to work on it. The jingles are better than the tip so far, but we're working on it, working on it. And some other tips but I decided against them. Just gonna go with these tips. Thank you all very much trolls for tuning in. I wouldn't go away if I were you because coming right up on the screen we have that Larry show that Larry who donates to this show. He is the one with the big pipes. The big heavy voice and he will be unmasking demons on today's show. Whoa,
whoo. We got some major show mixes Professor Jay Jones, winds it all up for us with he's from China. So be careful before they route you send you away or back or whatever it is. And where are the people doing songs John wanted to know we need more parody songs coming to you from the heart of the Texas hill country here in Fredericksburg, Texas in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry.

And from Northern Silicon Valley, where everybody's wondering why we haven't got good end of show mixes anymore. I'm John C. Dvorak.

Remember us at no agenda donations.com or for the old schoolers. DeVore ak.org/na. until Thursday, everybody have a great Sunday. Adios mofos a hui Hui, and such
data that tell the truth is a bad idea. You want to call it a difficult game these days? Want to wait for us to get vaccinated? When you make it difficult for people in their lives their ideological bullshit telling the truth can be dangerous. Dangerous business is that brilliant. When you make it difficult for people in their lives they lose their ideological bullshit children in school. were put in class dangerous business forced to
wear masks. muzzled no one there still and the truth is, is scary to you belong in prison, Dr. Fauci while you and all your cronies get paid from big pharma your repulsive evil science telling the truth every day. Honest and popular don't go in the county or something. If you admit that, you know you're gonna live in this world that brilliant.
This is your own email. You just keep effective in keeping out of the virus when you make it difficult for people in their lives for crimes against humanity to understand many respected their ideological bullshit while you and all your cronies get paid. You were lucky when Dr. Fauci did that to you because Dr. Idea don't understand the meaning respect to telling the truth becomes this huge. Dr. House where are you in our rock and roll band? Training School were printed plastic bubbles.
Is that brilliant? Everybody by me has an AIPAC person. It's like you're babysat or you're a pack babysitter. Little wall tape sticks to the wall. sent me in and they picked Person C sharp and got your cell number. Like Gil. Now that's wrong what AIPAC is doing. Let me talk to my AIPAC person. Has the Congressman been to Israel and all the others fight? They don't have a Germany dude. I'll talk to my APEC guy and see. Is there any other Republican who has to do something?
Why would they want to tell their constituents? I wish I could vote with you today. Brooke, every member has some interest firmly embedded in AIPAC. I'll talk to my AIPAC person. They've got your cell number. Is there any other Republican who has your study by me has an AIPAC person like your babysitter, your APEC, babysitter? They don't have a job. That's wrong. What AIPAC is doing. Let me talk to my APEC person has an APEC person. I'll talk to my APEC guide mobo boruch.org/in Wow.