
Don't let them eat the cats.
Adam curry. John C Dvorak, it's Sunday,

September 15, 2024 this is your award winning giveaway nation. Media assassination, Episode 1695. This
is no agenda,

watching world war three and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas show country here in FEMA Region. Number six. Why? In the morning, everybody? I'm Adam curry from

Northern Silicon Valley, where we are not eating the dogs yet. I'm John C Dvorak. It's

crackpot and buzzkill in the morning. Yeah. Keyword, yet, yet. That's right. Oh, man, I'm slow today. Bye. No, we, we went out last night.

Oh yeah, night before a show. Well,

you want to hear about it was, was kind of interesting. It was the Fredericksburg Tea Party, boots and barbecue dinner. Yes, I knew, I knew you'd want to hear about it. Yeah, typically I would, I wouldn't really go to something of this. Certainly, anything that's a party. But the Tea Party in Fredericksburg is, I mean, you know, it's not still a tea party. It's an old school tea party. It's not, you know,
like the Ron Paul Yeah, days of tea party. So not really, it's not really a political party, but it's a reason for the good old boys and girls to get together.
And did you wear boots?

I did. Did Tina? Tina wore, like, a cute skirt and boots, and I discovered I need a hat, because I was one of the few without a hat. So of course, the Fredericksburg Tea Party, boots and barbecue was held in beautiful downtown Kerrville. There's no There's no place that can facilitate there were 350 people there. It was. It was quite a, quite a get together. Now, this is organized by Matt long. Matt is a fixture
in in Fredericksburg. He's been running the Tea Party for 15 years, and he's actually the guy who's also organizing the no agenda meetup on the 18th of October at the full moon in bed and breakfast. Plug, well, of course, it's a plug. And I met Jenny, Jenny McCombs,

who owns, oh, Jenny, I've always wanted to meet Jenny. She owns

the full moon in bed and breakfast, and she's very excited to meet everybody. And she says she's, she's a January sixer, tried, convicted. I think she even served time wise, yeah, I think she served time in prison.

She went to DC, yeah, oh, yeah. This is dedication. I like it. So I

didn't get the chat with her real long. So I'll get, I'll get the full story when we see her on the 18th. Anyway, there were some speakers, which was quite interesting, Rick Green, who runs the Patriot Academy, which is that's a place here in right near Fredericksburg, where you can go and learn how the Constitution works and how Congress works and
how you get a bill on the floor. And they educate young people, but probably they're just as well known for their four day personal self defense class.

So they're basically doing what the high schools should have been, yes, for decades, exactly.

It's like a highway, yeah, then with the four day pistol training, and it's great. He gets up, he says, Yeah, well,

he used to have gun clubs, of course, high school, of course.

He gets up says, Hi everybody. I'm Rick. He's real animate. I'm Rick Green. So what do we do right now, if right through that door in the back, the dirtbag comes in his gun. AR 15 starts shooting. How many are you prepared? So you know, 30 hands go up, at least,

all holding guns. They shoot them all in the air. That's what would really be

funny. No one actually pulled their gun up. And he said, but are you prepared to get the job done anyway? It was a good pitch. Really good pitch. Then,

this is sounded nuttier and nuttier by the minute. It was one. No,

this is great. Then, Chip, Roy spoke our chip, Roy was there. Yes, Chip, Roy was there. And very dark. Chip Roy very dark. This is it. This is if we don't win this election, we're all gonna die.

Yes, that's the pitch,

yeah. And then he gave his pitch for the Save Act, which is the, was it like? I think it's basically make sure illegals don't vote in our elections. Act, which is, which was controversial, because it kind of blew up, I think this week, where, what's our what's our? Guy that from Kentucky, Massey, he said, Now, this is all nonsense. They jam all this stuff into

the Massey, yes, I don't do we. There is a clip going around. I never took it, but Massey is the guy to do this. He is the wet blanket in the Republican, yeah. Party who doesn't put up with anything, and everybody rolls their eyes, and they all love him.

Yeah, he's kind of like a new Rand Paul. He's like, No, I'm just not going to do this nonsense. So, so chip, right? You know, he's okay, but, you know, I can't remember what it was, but he, he, sometimes he, he does stuff. I'm like, Man, I don't know. Man, he's, seems like a good old boy who got, got a little bit too much politician in him, but it was nice he was there. That was nice, but that was a lot

different than my, uh, yesterday. Well, I'm

not done yet. Oh no, I haven't gone to the headliner. Wow. Oh yeah, there's a headliner. So after chip, pardon, after chip Roy, the trumped up Texan, came in, who was a Trump impersonator, very good, and he even took questions from the audience and stayed in character. I was well impressed with that guy. But then the headliner, the one, the only Mr. Mike pillow himself, Mike Lindell,

so you got to meet me. You got to meet Mike.

I did. I met Mike and get a free pillow. He was not handing it's not going too well with my pillow.com. Why? Oh well, they pretty much canceled them out of every box store, and they've the guy. They canceled his accounts. They they his American Express account, his Merc credit card. Oh yeah, he got completely deplatformed.

You didn't know American Express canceled him. Oh yeah, for what

for? Uh, questioning the elections.

What's that got to do with mercantile acceptance of a credit card, yeah, they he got canceled. So American Express is an activist organization. Is

that what you're saying? I would say so and chase. You know, all his bank accounts got frozen. But the worst part is, he couldn't accept any credit cards, so he had to,

yeah, that sucks.

If you're selling stuff, yes, it kind of does.

And that should be illegal. Actually,

of course it should be. So a couple of observations, shorter than I thought he was. I thought he was a much taller guy. For some reason he

looked to be about five six to me, yeah, that's about maybe five

seven. Little bit tall enough, but I thought he was kind of like six foot plus, you know, and severe. I mean, severe. ADHD, this guy can't, can't look in one direction for more than three seconds. He's all over the map. You think it's Tourette's? No, it's just, it's real. ADHD, no, not Tourette's. But as he was speaking, I figured out he has a superpower. He was telling some of his history, some of it's well known, but at one point he was a professional card counter in
Vegas. I could see that, yes, and so this is why he got involved in these voting machines, because he could see the deviations, and he, you know, you know how people have that insight. They can

look at a spreadsheet. It's always beyond me, but yes, I have talked about this on the show, about how people can see what. They can see radio waves. They can visualize radio waves. They can visualize like good friend of mine can visualize every, every signal on a on a bus, like a computer card bus. You can see that you can look at these signals, you can see Whoa, that's not going to work, or, or every so often that's going to Oh, that's a conflict. That's

that's a little beyond what Mike Lindell can do. Well,

I'm just saying there are people out there with weird, whoa,

that counts for two. That's a double weird that you I didn't say two. I didn't say it twice, no, but it was so long and so pronounced, I think it's no, no.

I only got counted for one. One, okay, but I'm just saying it's astonishing to me that these skills exist so he can and, oh, he went, just one more thing. People who have this skill, these, whatever they are, the, you know, this natural skills, they don't even know it. You almost have to point it out to him. Well, he knows it. And, and, you know what, after they get older, yeah, at some point you go, Wow. I thought everyone could do this. So

he that's why he was looking at the vote. Says, no, no, this is and so that makes sense. And he dove what he spent, $40 million invest of his Oh, he says, my life savings, which I believe that sounds about right. He spent. And you just send money to people. Go ahead. Go investigate that. Go investigate that. And he had example after example, of like, Philadelphia, you know, there were

80, yes, I remember during this, this controversial era he was in, because he was on a lot of us, he was out there. Fox won't even have him on anymore. No would have him on. Oh, really. C span, and he would go on there with these different experts. So they'd be discussing the details of this. It was all including some statistical analysis guys. And this is not possible. They would exactly, exactly. So

he was giving all these different examples in Philadelphia, 80 people who had voted were who were 115 years old, just which seems, which seems unlikely. He was explaining how some people who would would initially run as an as a third party, independent in some districts, and then we're not even on the ballot, how they got votes, which, of course, is how you take votes from one and have the other person win. So he had, he actually says, he says this. He says, really, it's a
godsend. He said that Trump lost, or we'd never know how bad the corruption really is, which I thought was an interesting statement. He reminded us how years ago, Klobuchar and all those, all those people were complaining about the very same machines when they lost. Remember? Die bold. Die bold. Yeah. And so his his whole pitch was, obviously, let's go back to paper ballots. And he said the he said, The worst thing is when people show up to vote and then they say, No, you've already
voted. So his recommendation is, everybody, you should get your mail in ballot, but don't open the envelope. Just keep it sealed and then take that with you when you go to vote on voting day itself. And then if someone says, oh, you voted already, say, Nope, here I am, and here's my sealed mail in ballot. Oh, that's a good one tip, right? It's a good tip. And

what else that's assuming you don't want to just mail in the ballot. No,

no, you don't want to do that. No, you want. He says the most, yeah, he's he says it's a mess. Basically, he says it's a mess. These machines are no good. They're they've been falsified the world over. Like, okay, yeah, there you go. So a lot of oohs and ahs and then, you know, he did kind of say, like, but really what matters is the electoral college. And I think that that that was a kind of passed over people's heads, because they don't really realize, you know,
we all like, yeah, every vote I gotta count. Gotta get my vote counted. But it doesn't matter, because it's the Electoral College who elects the president, and each state, the legislature determines how those electors are nominated. So the hope is that the Republican Party has their ground game together in the states where it matters. Because, I mean, this is how you can win the the popular vote and lose the
election, is through our electoral college. I don't think people really understand how that works.

Well, we try to explain it on the show over and over,

yeah, why don't you give it another stab. You're pretty good at

it. I'm not that good. Yes, you are. The electoral college is the is a slate of electors that choose the president based on each of the states having a certain number of electoral votes that they can give to the Electoral College and and the idea is, is to minimize the large states hogging because they'll have they're overloaded with, with people hogging the popular vote. So if it was just all popular
vote, 90% of the time, it would be deterred. The President would be determined by California and New York, two or three other big states, right? And little states like Wyoming, South Dakota, North Dakota, these places, we just whatever they want. It doesn't matter. The idea was, is to balance it a little bit and to prevent the corruption of these large states which get corrupted over time. As you can tell, anyone who's been lives in California and New York with these big, giant states, they've
been taken. They usually have been captured by one of the parties, generally the Democrats. They do the better job of it. And so they would just throw all their votes into the Electoral College, or the popular vote. And but the thing is, the Electoral College votes do not necessarily represent on
a one to one basis the popular vote, right? So you can get so by manipulating the Electoral College and just making sure you win certain states in the upcoming election, that's where they're called swing states, you win those you can win the whole
election, whether you get the popular vote or not. Now, sometimes the popular vote does go the way the winner goes, which like Reagan did that, and I think Bush did it once, and generally speaking, to the Democrats, when the popular vote, because giant states,

let's say so. In a state like let's take Pennsylvania, if the if there are more votes for let's just say Harris the Electoral College can still give their vote. To Trump, correct? They don't have to. Actually depends on their specific law, on their laws, right?

Generally speaking, no, they can't just do that. But it turns out, in this upcoming election, according to everybody, Pennsylvania is the key state. That's why they talk about it so much, right? And Trump can win without winning Pennsylvania, according to these guys, really. But yes, but Harris can't.

Well, Pennsylvania was certainly helping her out. If you saw the local Philadelphia ABC station,

which, oh, the one that did the, the the interview with her,

well, so they did, and I don't know how this happened, but they, they did an interview. The raw interview was published, which, yeah, even with the even with the count, no, even with the countdown of the camera and everything. So, yeah. And so I say

somebody took it from the studio, yes. So I have to, I have a I have the begin. I have both these clips.

Oh, well, I have them too. Do you have? How long are yours? Well, mine,

I tried to keep them short, because the point can be made easily without having to play the whole thing. I was pretty boring. Let's

lose, let's use yours then. Kamala, oh, gee, which

when you went, here's this. I have the two, yeah,

we'll play the OG first. I

thought, yes, the OG, the original quality, yeah,

did you pan it? Or do I have to pan it?

I did what I could. Okay, all right, but it's going to be a little lopsided, not too bad. But this is a this is the way that this is then. This is the beginning. This is the beginning of the interview and how it started. Here we go when
we talk about bringing down prices and making life more affordable for people. What are one or two specific things you have in mind for that? Well, I'll start with this. I grew up a middle class kid. My mother raised my sister and me. She worked very hard. She was able to finally save up enough money to buy our first house when I
was a teenager. I grew up in a community of hard working people, you know, construction workers and nurses and teachers and I try to explain to some people who may not have had the same experience, you know, if, but a lot of people will relate to this, you know, I grew up in a neighborhood of folks who were very proud of their lawn, you know. And and I was raised to believe and to know that all people deserve dignity. Now,

just as a little aside, with this clip, we can confidently say that she was very good at memorizing her prosecutorial lines in the debate I had to talk 10 people off the ledge last night about the earrings. Oh, sorry, Adam. Adam, did you think that they were the she doesn't need to be prompted on that. What good would that be? No, no, those were just elitist, expensive earrings. Oh, if

you're gonna use that technology, you get an ear wig,

all different kinds of ways to do it. Yeah, you

get it. There is the, you know, this crazy earring story. Anyway, so that's the way she starts off, and it goes on and on. And this goes on and on with this 11, oh, you need dignity. And then, if this, she starts, then she starts generalizing about one thing. Here is the way they presented the same, the same this. They edited that whole part. They just edited her. They took it all out, and here's what you got.

And before I play it, I want to explain the use of naughties and edits, because you can hear in this audio how they because you watch the whole 11 minutes, what you're about to hear was not all set in succession. They edited this together as well, and just briefly. When you go sit down and interview someone with a one camera, you do the interview.
Usually you're the interviewer. The cameras over your shoulder on the subject, and then when the subject is gone, because they always have very little time, then you you do the intro. Then they're going to switch the camera around. You do the intro, and then you're going to do what are called noddies, like nodding. You're nodding. You're nodding your head yes. You put your hand on your chin. Oh, interesting. And then that can be interspersed so you don't see the edits of this one camera
shot that you have of the subject. So when you hear there's some obvious edits in here, in the answer itself, besides losing that whole front end, and they put a naughty in when we talk about bringing down prices and making life more affordable for people, what are one or two specific things you have in mind for that?
So when I talk about building an opportunity economy, it is very much with the mind of invest. In the ambitions and aspirations and the incredible work ethic of the American people. Oh,

man, do you mind if I play a little bit of the longer edit? Did you hear all the edits they put in that thing?

You might as well. But the point is, is that the funny thing to me is that even the edited version of disaster still
we talk about bringing down prices and making life more affordable for people, what are one or two specific things you have in mind? I'll ring the bell on every edit. When I talk about building an opportunity economy, it is very much with the mind of investing in the ambitions and aspirations and the incredible work ethic of the American people and creating opportunity for people, for example, to start a small
business. So my opportunity economy plan includes giving startups a $50,000 tax deduction to start their small business. It used to be $5,000 nobody can start a small business with $5,000 opportunity economy means, look, we don't have enough housing in America. We have a housing supply shortage. And what that means, in particular, for so many younger Americans, the American Dream is elusive. It's just actually not
attainable. To help people who just want to get their foot in the door, literally and so giving first time home buyers a $25,000 down payment assistance, another plan that I have that is a new approach, is to expand the child tax credit to $6,000 for young families for the first year of their child's Life.

It's better when you see the video. But anyway, they so, they really, they really did a good job helping her.

Well, do you think so? Because she's she still didn't answer the question, and her answer to, how do you get gonna fight inflation, which is what question was, just by throwing more money at it? Yes.

Well, yeah. I mean, what I'm saying is they helped her by

they at least sounded less like less, yeah, less like an

idiot, exactly. Now, her vice presidential candidate, on the other hand, really tried to help her. But the truth kind of came out, because this started, and I love this story as a young prosecutor. You

I have listened to that thing a million times. It sounds like she's he's saying prosecutor,

I think it's prostitutor, because this Yes, because it was suggested to you, I know, but listen again, because this started,
and I love this story as a young prosecutor. No,

I'm sorry.

It's one of those blue dress, silver dress things. It's great. When someone says prostitutor, then that's all you can hear.

Well, yeah, especially if you suggest it so you have an LP going on.

That's the whole idea. That's why it's so good.
But yes,

I know I saw it too. Very funny across the tutor.

And you know, do you think that Hillary Clinton is vying for a spot in the cabinet? Should Kamala Harris be elected?

I don't think so. No, you

don't think she would lie.

What were you, what did? What are you making? Much making you think this way?

Well, she, she, she's out with her book, and she's, she wants

to sell more books, some money maker, yeah,

yeah. But I was just thinking maybe back to Secretary of State against and she was

so no, it's never gonna happen. Wow.

You think she's completely done?
Yeah? Do

you don't think she Hill dogs got some fight left in her?

No Hill dog, it has no fight left in her. Would you like to hear I don't think she wants to deal with it, because she can't. The only reason she was Secretary of State, because it was supposed to be a stepping stone to be president, and since she didn't get that, and now she's got this camel situation where she's going to ruin it for all women for the next 20 years. Yeah, probably figures out. What's the point?

Here's a here's a little bit of the promo, the book tour. Morning Joe, former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, has a new book coming up, and Morning Joe has an exclusive first look at one key part of it, the book entitled something lost, something gained, reflections on life, love and liberty. Clinton was reporting the audiobook When news broke that President Biden
had dropped out of the race for the White House. So coincidental, she decided to record her first reaction to that monumental shift presidential politics on july 21 2024 when Joe Biden announced he was dropping out of the presidential race and endorsing Kamala Harris, the dream of seeing a woman in the Oval Office was suddenly back within
reach. It wouldn't be me, but it could be Kamala. History beckoned, but a whole lot of bigotry, fear and disinformation, not to mention the Electoral College stood in the way. Could we do it? Could we find why

would she say not to mention the Electoral College stood in the way? Why would she even mention that?

Well, they're out to get the Electoral College, and with the help of the media. I This is one of the aspect of the Electoral College I didn't mention, which is that it's it's not good for business. Go for

the invite for business. You mean their business. For the

business of advertising. For example, if you had a if everything was done by the by the popular vote, then you would then Trump would be advertising in California, which is a done deal. California is sold. It's done. It's going to go for the Democrat, whoever the Democrat is. New York's going to go for the Democrat, whoever the Democrat is. But if it was, if the Electoral College was gone, now, the advertising has to be
more spread around, a little more. In fact, you might even need more advertising
Ken, not to mention the Electoral College stood in the way. Could we do it? Could we finally shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling and prove that in America there is no limit to what is possible. When Bill and I heard the news, we were pissed off that Biden was withdrawing and endorsing Kamala, we drafted a joint statement saluting him and also endorsing her. She is talented, experienced and ready to be president, so it was an easy decision.

What was the best thing?

She said, easy decision.

It wasn't easy, or wasn't, no,

was, I think she would say, was, it was an easy decision. I can play the last bit again, experienced
and ready to be president. So it was an easy decision. There's a little

laugh in there. That's why that's probably, it's a laughter. It wasn't easy decision.
Laughter, experienced and ready to be president, so it was an easy decision.

Why would you Yeah, there's a laughter, and it's an easy decision to what say I say to right away. It was an easy decision for her to say, I'm a Democrat and I'm endorsing the Democrat presidential candidate. Yeah, yes,

I think that's it. You want to hear more? I have another minute? Yeah, sure, yeah. Why not? Some
people have asked how I feel about the prospect of another woman poised like a robot.

Yes, it's

not a great read of the book. She's not a good reader. No, some people
have asked how I feel about the prospect of another woman poised to achieve the breakthrough. I didn't, if I'm being honest, in the years after 2016 I also wondered how I would feel if another woman ever took the torch that I had carried so far and ran on with it.

She's a torch bearer with some
little voice deep down inside. Whisper is that should have been me. That should have been me. Now I know the answer. It should have been me. After I got off the phone with the Vice President, I looked at bill with a huge smile and said, Are you dead yet? This is exciting. I felt promise. I felt possibility. It was exhilarating when I imagined Kamala standing before the Capitol

on his second this is such a long does anybody believe this?

Not for a second. It was exhilarating, and I so happy for her and Kamala. I was so happy
when I imagined Kamala standing before the Capitol next January, taking the oath of office as our first woman president, my heart leaps. Dick Cheney's after hard years of division, it will prove that our best days are still ahead and that we are making progress on our long journey toward a more perfect union, and it will make such a difference in the lives of hardworking people everywhere. Yeah, it's

about to get harder for now, thinking
about this momentous she didn't

say to make a positive difference, it'll

make a difference. She knows the truth. It's going to be bad for
now, thinking about this momentous period, I find myself turning back to where this book began, as Joni Mitchell sang all those years ago, something's lost, but something's gained. Hello,

Boomer. Joni Mitchell one of her great sayings of something's lost, something's game. Wow, yes, yeah.

Boomer reference, if I've ever heard. One for Joni Mitchell, throwing a lot of more sat and you still old, I'm telling you. Wow.

Is that supposed to appeal to Joni Mitchell is

to the MSNBC crowd. I'm sure they, I'm sure they eaten it up. They love it. Meanwhile, Trump had a very interesting talk at the New York, the Economic Club of New York. Yeah, that

was a couple weeks ago.

I hadn't seen this. Oh, you missed out as I pulled the clip, because I like the question about tariffs, which is, you know, was one of the big so called debate questions about tariffs.

Well, and, you know, I have a pre clip, a pre clip, okay, before you play that, all right, my list,

let's hear that list. It's paper. Uh,

this is this, this. This was not discussed in the mainstream media, and I just think it's funny. I caught it off NHK, play this clip, and then you can talk about terrorists. Biden did what TF
the administration of US President Joe Biden has finalized a decision to raise tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles from 25 to 100% starting on September 27 the office of the US Trade Representative announced the
move on Friday. Additionally, tariffs on lithium ion EV batteries will rise from 7.5 to 25% and on solar cells from 25 to 50% the office said the hikes were made after reviewing public comments, Biden announced plans in May to increase tariffs on a range of Chinese imports, citing the need to protect us workers from what he Calls China's unfair trade practices. Well, isn't that interesting?

Isn't

that interesting? And how come nobody's discussed this? Because they made such a fuss about Trump terrorists, Trump, know, the

Trump tax,

the Trump tax, yeah. But meanwhile, Biden, not only that, but the 100% on EVs is exactly what Trump was doing, yeah.

Well, so why wouldn't so they couldn't make any noise about it, and they did it anyway, like they really care. They did it because they actually care. No, I don't believe that for a second. There has to be some kind of you know, if anything hurts,

the fact that they did it at all, and the fact that the mainstream media refuses to discuss it says enough, because they've got this narrative they're stuck with. Yeah,

says enough.

Who knows, yeah,

yeah. Well, maybe to ratchet up some tensions with China, got to get that thing going, after all, got to get that China war going. So yeah. So Trump's at the Economic Club of New York, and he gets the question about tariffs. And his answer, I thought was interesting, because it wasn't just about tariffs. The
problem with what we have with sanctions. And I was a user of sanctions, but I put them on and take them off as quickly as possible, because ultimately it kills your dollar and kills everything the dollar represents. And we have to continue to have that be the world currency. I think it's important. I think would be losing a war if we lost, if we lost the dollar as the world currency. I think that would be the equivalent of losing a war that would make us a third world
country. And we can't let it happen. So I use sanctions very powerfully against countries that deserve it, and then I take them off. Because, look, you're losing Iran. You're losing Russia. China is out there trying to get their currency to be the dominant currency, as you know better than anybody, all of these things are happening. You're losing so many countries, because there's so much conflict with all of these countries that you're going to lose that, and we can't lose that. So I want to
use sanctions as little as possible. One of the things that we have with tariffs is that I'll say to them, you don't honor the dollar as your world currency. Is that? Right? You're not going to do it. No, we're not. I said that's okay. I'm going to put tariffs all over your product, and they're going to say, Sir, we'd love to honor the dollar as the world
currency. You know, tariffs, in addition to monetary and the money that will take in, which will be bigger than you've ever seen in this country before, gives you tremendous political power. Like that. As an example, I stopped wars with the threat of tariffs.

So, you know, we forget about that. But Russia, I mean, it was kind of crazy that they were kicked off the SWIFT system. I mean that, and which, by the way, Europe had more of a hand in than we did. It's like, what was the point of that? If, if you don't want to screw the dollar, which also, for Europe, makes no. Um, no sense. That's obvious to me, seeing as the Euro Dollar is the thing.

Well, the Europeans don't like us have and the proper term is reserve currency. Yes,

not the world world currency. It's Trump, the world currency.

I know I've never, I'm never going to be convinced that the Europeans are going to work and do anything in our favor.

Well, no, in fact, it looks to me more and more because, you know, this is, it's not really well explained, this long range missile stuff, but there's, there's more than one kind of long range missile, and the one that the US talks about is the atacms.

The atacms, well, they have the atacms, yeah, but that's

not what's being talked about. No, of course, not so well. Actually, I have a couple NPR clips just to bring us up to speed on this long range missiles issue with Ukraine. Putin
said this week, such an approval of long range missiles inside Russia will show NATO is at war with Russia. Now, there's no question the White House has been worried about escalation from the start of the war two and a half years ago, and there's always concern that Russia could possibly use nuclear weapons. We've heard that repeatedly. Most analysts say that's really highly unlikely. It's

unlikely, then don't be worried about it. But Putin
has often made threats of escalation after pretty much every weapon system sent to Ukraine by the West, Patriot missiles, F 16 tanks and so forth. But critics say the Biden administration has been too slow in providing Ukraine with the necessary tools, too incremental and too concerned about escalation. Now Scott what's changed recently is in making
approval of long range missiles more likely. Is the fact that Iran has just agreed to send hundreds of missiles to Russia, and also they have trained Russian military personnel in Iran. British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said that fact has quote changed the debate.

Oh, it's changed the debate.

I have a very I think Mitch. I don't know if it's the same clip, but played my Ukraine use of missiles clip
from NPR. Ukraine is continuing to push Washington to allow Kyiv to use long range weapons provided by Western countries inside Russia.

Stop at the clip. The reason I want to play this is because this is the same clip. It's not the same because different person different Yeah, but the model for this clip is the same as that. I could have gotten you 20 of these clips. And it says the long range missiles out of that war is going to be with Iran, Russia at war on, and it's all because of Iran. Inside Iran, we pointed out the last show, Iran has been providing Russia with drones and all these things we they're all
been identified. We discussed them in the newsletter with pictures. I mean, this is not this Iran thing. They're trying to shoehorn it in. Is bull crap, yeah, but it makes

so much sense because they you can connect it to the Middle East, and you've got a Hootenanny countries
inside Russia, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer met with President Biden at the White House yesterday, but Biden hasn't issued a decision yet. By

the way, that guy who was meeting with Starmer and and and his Lloyd Austin, that was daddy longlegs. You can tell this a different hair in the back that was a different guy. He's he's still decrepit, but not like the guy with the Trump hat getting on the plane, that was a whole different Biden altogether, who is running stuff here, and that daddy longlegs,

what the Donnelly brothers, whoever those guys from Blackrock are running? Yeah, they're running
everything. And pierce Tom Bowman says new developments make this a tougher call for the President. What's changed recently is in making approval of long range missiles more likely is the fact that Iran has just agreed to send hundreds of missiles to Russia, and also they have trained Russian military personnel in Iran. British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said that fact has quote changed
the debate. Meanwhile, Russian President Putin says if those weapons are approved for use inside his country, that would mean NATO is at war with Russia. So

I have an analysis of why Putin says NATO would then be at war with Russia. This comes from the CBC Andrew rasulus, who we've played before for more now
we're joined by Andrew Rasulullah. He is a fellow with the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. He's also a retired official with the Canadian Department of National Defense. So let's just start with these, with the threats being made by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Do you see them as credible? Yes, because we have to look at the context here. What the what Putin has said is that these systems should the approval. Be given. They require Western that is American, British support to
fire them. They're not just like tanks. You see that you can give the Ukrainians a German tank or an American tank, and the Ukrainians run it. That's very different from these missile systems, which require continual Western involvement through targeting analysis, data and firing mechanism, firing the whole system. The Ukrainians cannot do it on their own. They could only do this with the support that is hands on of the
Americans, the British or the French. And so Putin is saying, because of that, that constitutes, in effect, a state of war.

Makes nothing but sense. I mean, it's already American mercenaries who are in the field and advisors, but this would be absolute proof that it is NATO behind all of this. Meanwhile, the NATO gang all got together in Kyiv for the what do you what are you hiring about?

I just realized I missed getting some clips of Stoltenberg. He just interviewed by Amanpour, and I was gonna go back. Oh, that would have been good. Ah, you should have heard this maniac. This guy's nuts. When is

the Dutch guy coming in? When's Stoltenberg stepping down, isn't

No. Stoltenberg likes to go out. He was doing a long interview with the banana and poor I've got, I will try to go back and just see if I can find it. They she does so much material, it's hard to get some of herself. They had

the Yalta European strategy conference in Kyiv, which apparently is just safe enough to have everybody go over there, hang out that it was big. Everyone was there, hookers, the whole deal, champagne, caviar, couple of those shrimp deals we like so much.

Ah, the shrimp deals. Yeah, the shrimp pile, the pile of shrimp on ice, pile

of shrimp with caviar on top. And Deutsch Avella interviewed this guy. Oh, what a card. This is Professor Francis Fukuyama. And Fukuyama is some long term strategist. He's in all the think tanks, Council and foreign relations, all those things. So he's out there advising, I guess, Blinken and anybody but the president, because the President doesn't
know what he's doing. So whoever is making decisions is not our President and this guy, this, this is the general attitude of the NATO, but I'd say, in this case, American elites of using these long range missiles. So everyone
is talking right now about the long range missiles that Ukraine is asking for. From your perspective, how important are these missiles really, and could they be game changer in the situation we are experiencing right now between Russia and Ukraine? I think the long range missiles are very important that will allow Ukraine to put the whole of Crimea within range where Russian forces, that's one of their major operating bases, and
it's very important to be able to threaten Crimea. The other basic problem is that Russia has used its own territory as a sanctuary. They can launch aircraft missiles from Russia, but there's no way that Ukraine can fight back, and the only way you're going to stop them from doing that is by targeting objectives in Russia itself. And you can't do this if you don't have those kinds of missiles. So you would say that these missiles would be a game changer
in the panorama. Well, you know, there's no single weapons system that is going to completely change the course of the war, but I think it will be very, very

helpful, very helpful. So we have to bear in mind that Ukraine has already been divvied up amongst the largest corporations in the world, the Ukraine reconstruction project. I mean, everything the minerals that Lindsey Graham keeps talking about. It's already all been divvied up. They've just got this Zelensky guy sitting in the middle. You know, try playing his part. Because the whole point is they want to own everything in Ukraine.
Ukrainians be damned. And the worst bread basket, and the worst thing that can happen is if Trump comes into office, because then, you know, it was like this one, mess it up.
Do you think that if the Western Allies wouldn't put so many conditions and limits on the support they're giving to Ukraine, do you think that the war could then be ended soon? I think that that's the only way that you're going to get any kind of settlement that isn't a Russian victory. Yes, I think that it's very important.

So interesting. He says that's the only way we'll get any kind of settlement that isn't a Russian victory. He's very important that there's a settlement because we don't want to torch Ukraine, because there's good stuff there. That we already own pre owned. We already got the down payment pre owned. It's all pre owned, so we can't have him rubbing everything. Yes,
I think that it's very limited. I wouldn't put very many limits on them. I'm not quite sure you know what people are worried about at this point. But yeah, I think that they should take off these constraints. One last question, the upcoming elections in the United States. So the government here, President zelenskyy, they're saying they would work either with Kamala Harris as a president or with Donald Trump. Do you think this would make a
big difference regarding where the war goes. Who will be president next in the US? It's night, night and day. I mean, Donald Trump is on the Russian side. So he's going to end the war by, you know, basically allowing Putin to get what he wants. So it's But President Zelensky is saying that he could work with him. Well, of course he has to say that, you know, he can't alienate Trump before he's even elected, but I think that it's going to
be the disaster for Ukraine if Trump is elected. No, it's going

to be a disaster for you. For you, we can't have Russia keeping all the good stuff that's ours. So so then, for whatever reason, I think it's kind of obvious the US is like. And as we know from the Ukraine Israel so called border deal, or the Ukraine Israel funding bill, we know that the only person who can authorize the use of the atacms, the US long range missiles, is the President, only the president at
his discretion. And now, at first I was thinking, you know, this could be kind of if they could hype this up enough, this could be a reason for Kamala to pull a quick 25th amendment. He can't make that decision. He's too far gone. We can't have him. And by the way, we can't have him making that decision. But it seems like the powers that be, the corporations who are running our government, have decided, yeah, and yet, let's not do
that. Let the Germans do it. Oh, sorry, this is Deutsche Bell interviewing Boris Johnson
for Germany for chance, or do you think it's time for the long range missiles coming from Germany? I think that Olaf has done extraordinary things already. Olaf Scholz, but I do think that the Taurus needs to be deployed here.

I do think the Taurus needs to be deployed. The Taurus missile. That is a joint German French outfit that we I don't think we have anything to do with them, the Taurus missiles. So, oh, US won't do it. Let the Germans kick off world war three. Olaf, should go all come on. Olaf, you can do a mail, you pussy man, come on. Come on, Olaf. Send them all down three things
already. But I do think that the towers needs to be deployed, and I hope very much that the German government will do that. And but I also, you know, I think we all need to do more, and that includes the United Kingdom, United States, France. We all, and we all need to do more together, and I'm sure we will. How important are the US elections for this war? Trump, as I said just now, I hope very much that America will
continue with the policy of supporting Ukraine. Whoever is the whoever is the President

this okay, by the way, just as clarification, yes, the Taurus is a German, Swedish. Oh, Swedish. I'm sorry. Sarah launched cruise missile.

Yes, Swedish. I thought the French had a role in it too. I guess that's it, all right, so, but it's the Germans. They're egging on the Germans. Now,

the Germans are suckers for this sort of thing. You

think they've done it a couple of times. They're going to start, yeah,

they were totally suckered in World War One, and then they brought them brought it on themselves in World War Two. Yeah, they have this tendency to fall into this.

But, you know, I look at all this, this has nothing to do. Well, first of all, you can walk down any street in Europe, any street in America, and say, Hey, do you hate Russians and people like, no, do you know any Russians? Yeah, I know some Russians. Are they horrible, evil people? No, you can walk down Moscow. Do you hate Americans? No, this is, this is corporate. This is the College of corporations that runs the system. It really is, and it all fits together. People
always say, Who's they? This is they? They are running this show. And it's just agendas that fit together because you get the corporations that build this stuff, the corporations who are going to own Ukraine. These corporations send money to politicians for. Election funds that, and they get tons of money into the into the lobbyists, all this plays back into Wall Street. It plays back into the banks. It's only about dollars, petrodollars, eurodollars, euros, pounds. Used to be Juan
and the rubles, this. It's all a business. And in a way, that's that's kind of why Trump is so hated, because he is not a dummy for the system, the way Harris is perfect. She's a dummy. She's dummy. She's a multi culty candidate. She's got all the things you need. I mean, even the Republican and Democrat Party, the whole idea is to give us the illusion that we're voting for the lesser of two evils, and it's always some
dummy. Yeah, it seems like the final goal is one big holding company that all these douchebags own a share of. That'll be That's your new world order, right there.

So one of the things Stoltenberg said, he went on and on about how great this war is, and how why it has to continue. He says, because our end goal. He said this, our end goal is to make sure that Ukraine is is a member of NATO, yeah, and we want to expedite that, and that's the only reason this war is going on. Yeah. Russia does not want them to be a member of NATO. They wanted, they want this just a neutral
state there, and we want them to be a member of NATO. All you have to do is change that one variable to, okay, we're not going to be a member of NATO, and the war is over. They can't bring themselves to it. And what grossed me out was, NHK had a one half hour, or even an hour, I couldn't watch more than 10 minutes of it because it was making me sick of cell phone videos of the war in Ukraine taken by the Ukrainian soldiers.

Oh, you see that stuff? It's bad. Oh,

they have some guy jumping and they point out some of the details as they as they show these cell phone videos. Russia has the the entire line there, where the between the Donbas and Ukraine, yeah, just millions of land mines and all kinds of pits and holes and and and the Ukrainians. Meanwhile, if you see some of these videos, they're in deep, you know, it's eight foot deep trenches. It
looks like World War one style fighting. It's a it's horrible, and especially with would got me finally with some guy jumping off of a tank to get to one of his buddies. And just as he jumped off, he landed right on can they had it, filmed it. This was, this is a mess.

I've been seeing this, you know, for the past two years on these telegram channels. And you see all these tanks get taken out all the time. It's like a joke,

yeah, well, me imagine that all what you've been watching over time is just compressed into a two a one hour special. Oh, God, in a NHK, Oh, yeah.

Should get a link to that so people can watch it. It's

not like, I think sadistic to watch it,

so just spitball in here. But if, if they send the Taurus missiles in, I don't think you're going to get your flattened Eiffel Tower. They're going to blow something back up in Germany.

Well, maybe that was the plan all along when they decided to shut down all the power plants, because you guys start blowing stuff up in Germany. You don't want all those things flying all over the place. And

one of octave, one of our producers in Germany sent me a note. I don't have it here, but I can summarize it. He says, It's so amazing how the psyop worked on the German people. And they also, oh, no, Energiewende, oh, we all have to go to solar and wind. They had the most advanced nuclear plants. They were so hardened that they even did a demonstration by flying an airplane into one of these nuclear plants, just to show that nothing would happen. They crashed an airplane into the
into one of those, yeah, they were advanced. They were modern, and they just convinced the German public that was okay to shut them down.

Wow, yeah. Well, the German public is seems susceptible to these sorts of programs more than any other people. Yeah. Well,

they have guilds. I

mean, I mean, I think the Americans are pretty dumb too,

but we're up there. We're up there, but this is, I've not been worth and I, you know, I also don't think nuclear war is something that is likely to happen, but a full on war in Europe, yeah, this seems quite possible, or at least expanded to Germany. This is so this is so insane, these people must be stopped. I.

Not that it must be that Trump should win. Yeah.

You know, the question is, can trump play enough of the cards with the corporations to get in? Are there enough? Is there enough agenda?

He gave that speech in front of

the Financial Group in New York. That's what I'm hoping, because otherwise, trying to convince

them that, and I think, is his trump card, trump card, so to speak, which is what he is a trump card, was this idea of losing reserve currency status for the US dollar, that would, that would ruin most international corporations. They need that, and for a lot of different reasons, including the fact that we can deficit finance and not really worry about it too much. Yeah,

which they benefit from? Everybody benefits from that. I hope so, because, you know, look, they tried to kill him already, because that's forgot about that is that ever talked about anymore? Nah, I saw this. I saw Jamie Raskin in the hall with audio. Was too crappy in the hallways of Congress saying, Oh, we have a report coming out. It will be shocking to the American people about the assassination. I'm like, oh, okay, sure, unless it shows you with your hand on the trigger.
And I don't believe it, not for a second, not for a second, by the way, breaking, breaking, breaking ABC. Whistleblower says Kamala got questions ahead of time. Did you see that?

Yeah. The funny thing about that particular report is the source, it's bullshit,

because this morning, breaking, breaking, ABC, whistleblower has been killed in bizarre car crash,
puh Lee's.

It was nothing. It was nothing. It was completely nothing. There what you so whistleblower and he signed an affidavit, which was notarized one day before the debate. It's meaningless. And by the way, you're not a whistleblower. If you're anonymous, that is not a whistleblower, that's an anonymous source. Yeah, yeah, we've gone crazy. These, this, social media is not good either. Okay, let's let me lighten it up for a second. Just lighten it up for one moment. Little, little
light to light, light stuff. This morning, this took place 200
we're bracing copy, 200 embrace, bracing for splashdown. That will be the final call we hear from Jared until contact with the ocean surface standing by for a splashdown of the polaristan crew

Standing by. Here we go,
and there you can see, as you can see on your screen and by the cheers behind us, the Polaris Dawn crew has successfully splashed down. Welcome back to planet earth. Polaris Dawn,

well done. Okay, couple things about this. One disappointing that we're still landing in the ocean with parachutes. What? How about we do with that on landing? You know, like on Earth,

disappointed starship thing from Boeing landed in the desert

looked like a pretty harsh landing to me. Second, what was the big headline of this SpaceX, Polaris Dawn mission,

what was the big headline that they walked in space? They

didn't walk in space. The guy sticks his head out the hatch, he's got one arm like it's in a cast, and then he goes back down. And they call that a spacewalk. Yeah, it was not a spacewalk. And in fact, I learned quite a bit from France 24 I think, or maybe it was Deutsche Vella, who brought in a NASA Space nerd to talk about it. And it was actually that learned a lot about what's happening and what this was about.
A new era in private space flight has begun for the first time ever to private astronauts.

Yeah, it is 20. No, no, I'm sorry,
no, have completed a space walk which saw them leave their Dragon capsule protected only by their space suit. Space X's new space suit has been years in development. I guess this was the catwalk we saw today? Well, let's pull in Keith cowring down. He's editor of nasawatch.com Keith, good to see you again. So NASA calling this a giant forward.

I want to stop it for a second. Yeah, I saw this too. I thought that this was kind of a non story, because it was like, there's some point behind it. I never could figure out you're gonna have to try to explain why you think this, what they're getting at here. Okay, now go back to play it more.

Well, what I Okay, well, you know, play continues.
Or I want to say the the commercial space industry is that what it is, yeah, you know. And there's something about this that, in some ways, this has been done before, back in the day, when I was a little kid, this is how the first Soviet and American astronauts went out. They just kind of did a little thing. They came back in. Then NASA developed and Russia developed spacesuits that have backpack. My little thing here they have a
backpack that has all their life support. But today, and of course, these spaces, by the way, NASA has been using them for 40 years. They're trying to make new ones, but it's taken them decades, and they still haven't done it. Well, SpaceX took some of Mr. Isaac his money, and went and developed these new suits. And they're kind of like brand new sexy things that are 21st century, but at the same time, they have a tether, so they don't need the backpack. They get all their
oxygen from this. So it's something old, something new, something tried, something true. It's new and old and new and old.

No, it's new and old and bull crap. What they're doing here is replaying 40 or 50 years ago, which, again, for me, is all questionable, since there's nothing, there's only one difference between the spacesuits that are as old as I am, and these are the ones that are tethered. It doesn't even have the fancy backpack, which means you can actually walk in space.

And the funny thing is, during this presentation, the guy had little action figurines that he was using to show off.

I know I actually cut that one part out. I'm like, Shut up with your action figurines. Do hilarious. You're making my you're you're weakening my argument. So, so he it's not a spacewalk. The guy comes out, not even to his waist. He's tethered, so the oxygen is coming through an umbilical cord. So they looked cooler. Maybe so was that it No, no. It's really about something that is an old trope for Adam. This
crew went three times higher than the International Space Station. Was that risky? I mean, what are the risks of going so far? It's risky in that not for the spacecraft. It can do this easily, but you go into one region near the Van Allen belts, where you get a radiation dose that's somewhat like three times larger than you'd get if you were in the space station for six months, but you only dwell or stay there for short period of time. That said, Any spacewalk is dangerous, and the
further way you are, the further way you are. But these folks had it all in hand and figured out, and they did their thing. And maybe next time they'll float around and do something more spectacular.

They're trying to shield the astronauts from the Van Allen belts for when we actually try to go back to the moon again, which, as you know, I don't believe we've ever been to. This guy is just confirming my my suspicions.

Oh no, no, if you confirm your suspicions that, well, will

you no one can determine my suspicions being confirmed, but me,

by the way, I I've been in one of the old fashioned spacesuit you've

been in one. Yeah, that's pretty cool. Points. There you got me on that one. That's

because we were doing a promotion at uh, Tech TV, and we had to get into suit,
ah, that,

if you I don't have claustrophobia, but, but I would, I would have it. It's unbelievably. It's horrible. What

have you not done? I mean, a lot. Have you been to the

sky dived?

Have you have not? No, no. Can I make a recommendation? What? Never jump out of a perfectly good aircraft? Dumb idea.

That's an old joke. Yes. Okay, very funny.

I'm telling you. It's just not a good idea, then you're gonna ask me, if I did what? Oh, if you went to the Titanic, did you go into submersible to the Titanic? That would be something. There's

plenty I didn't, haven't done it. That would be, that would be one of the top of the list of things I don't want to do. Not gonna do that.

But it's just, you know, like, go to the go to the moon already? Someone go to the moon with people. Show me. Show me.

Yeah, you can. It's just what they're working on. No,

yeah, for the first time, exactly, for the first time. So maybe that's what they're doing with those astronauts, the ones who went up on the on the Boeing Starliner. Maybe they're just checking for radiation. If we keep them up there longer than they thought, will they die? Will they get fried? How long can they stand with radiation?

There's been people up there for a couple years. One of the things that turns out is it almost completely ruins your kidneys, really. Yeah, there's a bunch of research. Just showing that having kidney problems because weightlessness, I guess she's not good for the kidneys. I don't know why. Well, kidneys

is not the only problem Boeing has. Passing drivers leaned into their
horns to show some love for the Boeing. Workers on the picket line, let's go. Workers say the deal that Boeing offered doesn't cut it. They need to fight for their family and stand up for the future employees to come. My son is in kindergarten right now. My daughter's hanging out with me today during the strike. I feel like this is a very historic part of my life. There's a real sense of unity among these workers as they stage this high visibility protest following a contract
vote that more than 90% of union members shot down. They say they deserve a living wage, and we're standing together against corporate greed, but most importantly, for a living wage, Boeing workers are demonstrating at job sites across the region, waving signs and showing their determination to hold out. Hold on. What's that?

Are you telling me that the Boeing workers are striking for a living wage. What are they paying them?

This is not true. I was going to play the whole report to tell you that, but they are it's not about the living wage. They are sickened from one of our producers. They are sick and tired of being spied on, being harassed. You know, ever since all these problems came about, now the crackdown is so harsh that they're being everyone's being watched every second of the day. They hate it. It's become an unworkable environment, which makes sense, really? Yeah, so if
you don't want to do the job, just raise the price. It's one of my business rules. And then if they give you the price, all right, well, it's a crap job, but they're paying me really good the region waving signs and showing their determination to hold out for a better contract. I
myself I'm not scheduled to be out here till next week that I thought I'm gonna come out here and do some overtime of for the Union. Well, I'm really proud of our membership for voting the way they did. It was a big sign to the company that we are going to stick together on this as long as the strike lasts, it will deprive Boeing of much needed cash that it gets from delivering new planes to airlines. The company's chief financial officer broke it down.
Any impact is going to be dictated by the duration of the work stoppage. No strike will impact production and deliveries and operations and will jeopardize our recovery. Late today, we

learned that a new round of contract talks involving the union the company, as well as a federal mediator that is set to begin sometime early next week. I can't help thinking that this is all a part of destroying Boeing, destroying it completely. Maybe the Chinese planes will have to come in.

Therefore, Chinese are building a clone of the 737, flying.

There's there's airlines. They're already using it, you know, I don't think, but the problem

is, if they destroy Boeing, where are they going to steal their designs from?

Well, the 737, is a fine design we can keep you. I

mean, there's newer designs coming out, and, you know,

they have them already.

They got those. Well, they have, yeah, but then there's going to be stalled, because they don't seem to dream it up their own

stuff. You know, everyone's switching to Airbus too. There's a lot of that going on. You know, the only problem Airbus has is, uh, slow down because of interiors. The interior guys can't keep up with all the different configurations.

But it's less SK, use as the always,

yeah, well, the full retail

approach, unfortunately, too many skews, yeah,

oh, standardized. It just feels to me like Boeing has got to go. They just wrong. They just want to screw Boeing. And you know, when does Elon announce his new airplane company? They're electric. Yeah,

you know, one thing we do, I don't. I have any clips, and I didn't come up in the conversation so far. And I just want to mention because it was mentioned in that Boeing clip Trump coming out out of the blue and saying no income tax on overtime. Yeah,

yeah. Where was that during the debate,

that he could have brought it out during the debate. He had to have that in his back. But, you know,

I don't know if that'll work as well as intended, because typically, companies will give you what time and a half for overtime, yeah, so wouldn't they just say, well, there's no taxes, so there's no time and a half. It's just times one for overtime. Or is there some log about overtime? Do you have to do time and a half? No,

there are laws. And I know in California we have laws that if you work overtime, you have to have time and a half at least. How about just no income tax, double time? There's double time. Here's here's

a tip for President Trump. How about just no income tax? I. Just like no income tax,
which is printed, I

got it all figured out, people, he's got some problems, though he's got some problems. This is the latest talking point about Trump. Earlier in
the day, the former commander chief held a news conference at his golf resort in California. It's there. He faced questions on a woman who has been traveling with him named Laura Loomer, a far right activist and a 911 conspiracy theorist who has posted racist language about Harris with some of Trump's allies now asking him to distance himself from her. Laura is a supporter. I don't control Laura. Laura has to say what she wants. He's a she's a free spirit.

What is he doing?

Well, first of all, where did this report come from?

That was, I think that's local California.

I have, what was the racist language?

Oh, I have that from, from joy Reid. If she if we offer all things race, we go to joy Reid on MSNBC,
Donald John Trump. Just look at the people he's surrounding himself with, people like Laura Loomer. Now you'd be forgiven if you have no idea who that is. She's mostly known for Hawking right wing conspiracies and bigotry on the fringiest corners of the internet. She's described herself as pro white nationalism and a proud Islamophobe, has called Islam a
cancer on humanity. In 2018 she handcuffed herself to Twitter's office building after being banned from the social media site wearing a yellow star of David and comparing her Twitter ban to the Holocaust after the passing of Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee in July, Loomer called her a quote, ghetto b word, and suggested she was going to hell. And just the other day, she posted that if Kamala Harris wins the election, the white house will smell like curry and speeches will be
facilitated by a call center racist much. It was a statement so beyond the pale that even Marjorie Taylor green called it racist,

yeah, because it'll smell like curry.

That's how is that racist? It's everything's right. Go to an Indian restaurant, it smells like curry. Being a racist, yes, you are. When I go there and say, Hey, this smells great. It's great. Smells great, terrific. By the way, people should note that racist the call center line was actually pretty funny.

I agree with that,

but what rumors and numerous kind of a screwball? There's no doubt about it. I don't think it's any question about it. And she goes go to not part of his campaign, but she's just hanging around. She's

on the plane,

yeah, but people get on the Okay, well, she's on the plane. What are they gonna do? Tell her. Did she get how did she get permission to get on the plane? Is that been explored? Trump?

He says, Yeah, let her on the plane. He's defending a universe for a fact. No, of course, I don't know it for 100% fact, but it's his plane. You know, you can't. Gotta

have a handler that handles the who's who gets on the plane is, I don't think Trump's going over the the lawn, the list of people

he defended her,

yeah. Well, he Yeah, of course, that's what he does. And and

if you walk in the supermarket, look at the rags, the tabloids. Oh, he's having sex with her.

Yeah, I saw that. Yeah, he's having

sex with her. Yeah, there you go. It's not good. He should eliminate her from his life immediately.

Well, if she was smart, she'd eliminate herself. She should. She know she's doing the campaign. She's hurting things

now she she's a narcissist, yeah? Probably, probably,

if you're memorized,

yeah, exactly by definition. Let me see, there was some other funny stuff.

Well, I got a funny clip this from tick tock, which is a little different topic. It's about gender ideology. Well, I

wanted to stay with Trump. Okay, you gonna switch away? Oh, you gotta I got Trump, yeah, just I wanted this for this funny, I can take you and

we're gonna say, I wait. I got two Trump clips. I want to get out of the way. All right. Now this one PBS, because we still have this background to thinking that Trump is the guy they want in

Yes, yes. To deal with the war in Germany, the war between the German Russ jermo, jerma Russo war. How are we going to call it Russo Russo German, German Russo war.

I thought these are two clips, one on Trump and followed up by a clip on Harris from PBS his trmp up. I thought this was a gratuitous clip that was just semi complimentary from PBS NewsHour.
Ongoing foreign wars played a part in. US presidential campaign with former President Donald Trump making this pledge to voters during a campaign stop last night in Las Vegas, I will end the chaos in the Middle East, and I will settle the war in Ukraine, as I will settle that as President Elect. Would anybody like to be in war with Russia if necessary? We would when that, you know, but preferably not,

no, no, preferably not.

So that was, like unusual, I thought, because it wasn't slamming Trump for one thing or another, was kind of like, okay, and then they played the little thing on Harris to balance it, and you get this vice
president Kamala Harris in her first solo TV interview since becoming a Democratic nominee, said she offers a new generation of leadership with a different purpose than her opponent. Most Americans want a leader who brings us together as Americans, and not someone who professes to be a leader who is trying to have us point our fingers at each other.

Yeah, that's her main talking point right now, we're so tired of it, which is actually not bad from a persuasion standpoint. We're so tired of being divisive. We're so tired of being so there are the divisive lines. Well, hello, what you said, being yourself. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, I
was not a Taylor Swift Fan. It was just a question of time. You'll probably, probably pay a price for it at the in the marketplace. What makes you think that the way you think should influence other people? You sing for a living? Just deal with that. Su Taylor Swift, well, look we, we admire Taylor Swift's music, but I don't think most Americans, whether they like her music

or this is a little, it's a little Melange, a little this is obviously coming back to Joy,

really, this, I understand, yeah, but who does I'd like to know who likes Taylor Swift's music. Can you even hum one of her songs?

And the haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate. That's the one. That's the only one that
the way you think should influence other people use, by the way,

I'm sorry, we have someone who can sing every single Taylor Swift song,

and that person is Darren O'Neill.
That the way you think should influence other people you sing for a living. Just deal with that. Su Taylor Swift, well, look, we we admire Taylor Swift's music, but I don't think most Americans, whether they like our music or fans of hers or not, are going to be influenced by a billionaire celebrity who I think is fundamentally disconnected from the interests and the problems of most America. Look

at the nonsense our media is discussing this is such nonsense. Look,
when grocery prices go up by 20% it hurts most Americans. It doesn't hurt Taylor Swift, well, that's pretty much what you would expect from Donald Trump in the mag world following Taylor Swift's endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris after the debate this week, all because she had the audacity to share her thoughts with her fans about the upcoming election and reminding them to register to vote despite the Maga outrage, the Swifties assembled with
reports of an increase in voter registration. Get this by 400 to 500% since her endorsement, and now Maga world has set its focus on its latest target, following swiftgate, WNBA star, Caitlin Clark, why? You may ask. Well, because she dared to simply like Swift's Instagram post. Apparently, that's all it takes to set these people off. It seems the mega nut does not fall far from the Trump tree. Morning. Taylor Swift is not a psyop. Taylor Swift is not a
sign Taylor Swift is not a Swift is not a psyop. Taylor Swift is not a psyop. Taylor Swift is not a Taylor Swift.

She's a psyop.

I never heard that that the psyop, psyop has good huh? No, I guess it's going around. That was the Sinclair Broadcasting.

Exactly. Taylor Swift is not a psyop. No,
of course not.

Okay, now you can go into trans Maoism, because we're there,

we're there. You that, since you play the the non story, yes, of Taylor Swift, I have the worst non story ever from NPR. And you i This is a one minute clip. I put it on the list. It was actually on the last list, and it's like such a non story that I'm going to say in advance, this is a waste of one minute of your life. Oh, we'll never

get it back. People, a
secret chamber 30 feet deep was recently uncovered under the National Mall in Washington, DC. Not exactly Harry Potter's Chamber of Secrets, but still cause for a lot of speculation about the question, what was it for a
construction crew discovered? At the cistern while renovating a part of the Smithsonian known as the castle, they only found this hole because of a long term effort to revitalize this part of the historic building, the first in half a century, built in 1847 the structure's main function was gathering rainwater. But 120 years ago, it was sealed off entirely until this construction
crew discovered it last month. While there are some false rumors and Hollywood blockbusters alleging that a labyrinth of archives or secret tunnels lie underground, there's nothing out of the ordinary about this cistern, except maybe that it still exists at all. Yes, we must disclose zero secret symbols, zero ancient archives were found in the rainwater receptacle after it was uncovered. Sorry to burst your bubble. National Treasure fans, don't
look over here. Nothing to see you look at that. Yeah, no.

Sorry to burst your bubble. This was they dig it. They found a cistern, and they made a story out of it.

Yeah, because they have to cover up the tunnels. We all know. We all know there's an underground network of tunnels that connects everything, Denver to Washington, DC with high speed trains. Come on this

70s. In the 70s, there was a fad of hitchhiking in this country. Yeah, and every friends of mine that hitchhiker. Everyone was hitchhiking all over the place, and so I picked up a hitchhiker once, and I think it was a it was there's a lot of cute girls hitchhiking. This didn't last for long, for obvious reasons, and with a with just deadpan, she told me about this, about the submarine bases that are under Lake Tahoe. Yeah, that did submarines come into Wait.

I need to back this story up. So you picked up a hitchhiker. Yeah, okay. First, what car are you driving?

I was driving a Mustang.

Oh yeah, JCD, bam, bam, hey baby. Now wish did she was she just thumbing it? Or did she have a sign?

Did she have a sign? Let's beside you want to hear the basis for the story. You just want to get look for lewd, lascivious details that don't exist.

You had a Mustang with a glass pack muffler. Baby Bump, bump. Where you going? Going My Way? Mm, hmm. I'm just trying to visualize it

for everybody. You're a legend. Schiff is what you doing. You're a legend.

Okay, so

the idea was, and it was just with a dead straight face and total seriousness. And I've run into California's loaded with these people. The submarines come into San Francisco Bay, into an underground tunnel that's, I guess, big enough to carry submarines. And the submarines go all the way through California. You know, I think it's like 200 miles to get to Lake Tahoe, and then they then they're based there.

So how many tabs did you guys eat together? I'm

just saying it's just like, who comes up with this stuff, and why would they base and what's the point?

Does it matter? It's, it's, it's what we do in America, we think about our government like we're in some some space age sci fi movie. And I will point out that RFK Jr himself said that he was taken to the underground base in the 60s, and they had a McDonald's, an old city there. You think they didn't expand that?

It could have been in Quebec. I mean, if you go to Montreal, there's a whole underground city, and there's one in Toronto, and there's one in Edmonton. They're huge, and they have McDonald's down there. So I can see Kennedy being stoned on something, and then going down underneath the York hotel. I mean, the York hotel is one of the end butt ends of one of the tunnels underneath Toronto. He was

in DC. They didn't drug him, and he was a kid. It was probably

down where the subway

is, all right, what you got,

this is the kind of insane person that's out there. This is a girl is telling she's giving you dating rules if you're going to date her, Oh, there's rules. Okay, if you're going to date her, you're going to have to live with this situation with her, because she's gender fluid, and she wants you to know what you're going to have to do, because it's all up to she calls the shots on this no matter what, and so if you're going to date her, you're going to have to follow these rules. Here we go.
Since discovering my gender expression and how fluid it is, I've come to a realization that if you want to date me, you have to be okay with the fact that you might. Wake up to a little boyfriend, a little androgynous partner, or a little femme girlfriend. You might have a boyfriend one day and a girlfriend the next day, depending on how I'm feeling in my gender expression. And I love that about me. I love that I'm
not being put in a box anymore. I mean, I think I'm the only one that put myself within boxes, but I'm glad I'm taking myself out of the box, and like allowing myself to be more fluid with my gender expression. Previously, in the past, I would date people that loved being with a mask. Okay? They were like, I only want to be with a mask. I am femme for mask, 100% you cannot be anything else. And they loved that about me. They
loved that I was androgynous, more masculine. They loved that I would wear chest binders, and that half the time, I would be perceived as a boy. I literally dated people who were like, Oh my God, you just got called Sir, I love that. What do you mean? You love that? Because I didn't love that. I didn't love that I'm non binary. I don't like being called ma'am or sir. Okay, I didn't love that. Why do you love it? And I hated that. Okay?
It was terrible. So if you want to date me, you have to be okay with the fact that some days you have a boyfriend, some days you have a girlfriend, and some days you have a little androgynous partner. Okay, that is what I need. That is what I want, because that is who I am.

And you found this peculiar, because why

she's nuts.

I love those, uh, those posts. They circulate on Twitter from time to time, just like I'm looking for a boyfriend. Here's the boyfriend I want. Must be between 27 and 33 years old, must be six foot two or taller, must make between 300,000 $500,000 a year. Must have brown eyes. I mean, it's like what is wrong that we're living in a fantasy world. These children have been these children have been programmed by some horrible external force through our schooling system. So
here's a non binary gender fluid trigger clip. I hurry up. Have
you ever been paid to be hate crimes? Well, I have. So let me tell you about it. Okay, so yesterday, I was at work serving this family that was sitting there like the three wise men, and then all of a sudden, out of the mom's mouth, I hear the trigger words, non binary and gender fluid. And court is in session, and my ears are turned on. Let's do this. So basically, the mom was trying to explain to the dad what it meant
to be non binary or gender fluid. After a few minutes go by, the dad responds in the same way that every guy that looks like him would, and says, you know, I understand where they're coming from, but if you are biologically a male or female, that's what you are. And then I'm standing there on the spot. Oh, oh,

no, horrible.

I saw this clip. I think we you know, she looked and she looks like the type of person that you just don't even want to be around.

Parents. You should just take these phones away from kids. It's over. It's done. Everybody a dumb phone back to flip phones, and then we have these kinds of organized, I'm

glad you're, you've, you've warmed up. My, my desire to get these clips out there in the public domain. Yeah, and you've, actually, this is the first one you've done.

Yes, well, as for me, it's a lead in into part of the problem when this is being exaggerated and encouraged by organizations.
In just a few hours, the first ever gender liberation March will take place in DC. The event comes as the US Supreme Court has agreed to take up the case challenging Tennessee's ban on gender affirming care. Arguments will be heard in the
fall, and a decision is expected next summer. The demonstration was coordinated by the gender liberation movement, which states that they are marching for bodily autonomy, self determination, collectivism and the pursuit of fulfillment in the face of increasing restrictions on communities on the margins. I

don't want to sound Boomer ish, but whatever happened just burning your bra back in the 70s, that was cool, like burn the bra

ladies gender liberation movement.

Well, what this is about, and all the words are tricky. You know, gender was a gender based health care you know, it's like, I'm ill. I want to perpetuate this illness, please. Would you enable me with the operations and medications? And these organizations are the ones that are doing this to young people, not gonna say children, but even young people. Before you're 25 You're a moron. You don't know what you're doing. That's cool. Oh, it's cool. Now sounds like,

what about the transition transitioned six year olds? Yeah. Well, that's

that is, of course, child abuse. The parents should be arrested here well, but the parents have been told if you don't do this to your child, your child will kill itself. That's what they've been told. So it is an evil, evil, demonic scheme. And here's one of the organizers, Raquel Willis, joining
us now, is one of the core organizers of the march author and activist. Raquel Willis, Raquel, thank you so much for joining us. We appreciate it.

But now, how do you think Raquel is going to sound?

She's gonna sound like a gay male.
Thanks for having me wet. So Raquel, let me ask you. First, how did the idea for this March come about, and how long have you been you

already heard these clips, or is it just an educator?

I have not heard these tips, but I've as I've been collecting these clips longer than you have. I know exactly what's working on your legs. Yes,
it's true. Here we go. Well, we like to say that this March is years in the making. We there have been so many attacks on various communities on the margins, especially LGBTQ, plus folks. But of course, folks who need access to abortion and reproductive justice. So in the last we started to build a bit of a coalition of different leaders and organizations who believe that we all deserve to make our own decisions about our bodies. Y'all

and with the vocal fry, it's fantastic. Okay, I have more. I have two more of these, just to make it worse. Yeah, no, you're loving it. Yes. Did you ever see Victor Victoria? By any chance that that was a great play. Julie Andrews,

days are over. Being a woman play beyond that. Well, that

was a that was a mind bender. It was Julie Andrews playing who as a woman, playing a man, playing a woman. I mean, that was tough. That was, that was, that was complicated person.

Yes, she was.
And if counter protesters come out today, how is the organization working to make sure that participants stay safe? Stay safe? Well, we definitely have a robust and strong safety team that is there, guiding us through the streets. We're going to take our voices and our bodies past the Capitol. We're going to go past the Supreme Court, as you said, and then we're also going to
take this right outside of the Heritage Foundation. As many folks know the Heritage Foundation are, you know, they are a key architect of project 2025, we know that that plan that they are putting forth will restrict so many of our rights as queer and trans folks, as women, as folks of color, and we just want to let it be known that we're not going to have that we're going to raise our voices and continue to fight

so this was the clear giveaway. And to me, I think the whole thing, all of this transgender the amplification of transgenderism is has been political from the from day one, it's not about people or children or or anything. It's just, it's just another thing like like Kara Swisher, though they they're just going after trans kids because they hate the gays. The Republicans hate the gays, and they got gay marriage, and they hate that. It's all political,
all of it. But then the key question, this is ABC, by the way, the key question. And Raquel,
as you know, some of the things that you're advocating for have become controversial political issues in this really divided country.

Oh, really, you don't say that's what she's about wit that
we're in right now, several Republican led states have taken steps to bar access to gender affirming care for transgender minors, which for people under 18, that typically involves using reversible hormones to delay reversible

hormones. Oh, boy, really have they invented something we didn't hear about. That's a lie,

that's a lie,

that's a big fat lie.

That's a Disney, Disney,

Disney. There you go. By the way, you I would cancel your Disney subscription. They're controlling your kids, mind controlling
them minors, which for people under 18, that typically involves using reversible hormones to delay puberty. So what do you say to people who may have nothing against the trans community at all, but just believe that miners are simply too young to be making these life changing decisions?

Oh, you want to put any, any, any prop bets on the answer?

Prop bet your lexicon? Yeah, you prop

bet finally. Prop bet. You want to bet on this one.

What is the answer. What would be the prop? It would it be? She was only a binary situation. She's gonna say. She's gonna have some bogus reason that it's good. I can't. I can't. I actually might be surprised.
Well, I would suggest that folks get to know trans folks across all ages. You know, our experiences are not new, not something that just kind of fell out of the sky yesterday, as many folks have thought, we have elders. We have ancestors and transces. Who ancestors

transcesters.

This is good. Holy moly. What a show title
mind us that queer, trans and non binary folks have always existed, and actually one of the key struggles for a lot of our people has actually been having access to the health care that we deserve. So we understand folks may have questions, but let's actually hear and be in dialog with folks
who know. Know firsthand what a trans or non binary or gender nonconforming experience is. Overwhelmingly, the folks pushing this regressive legislation don't know queer and trans and nonbinary folks, and they are trying to fearmonger and dig into ignorance. So

did you have no answer on your bingo card? Because that was what she did, no answer.

I did not have no answer. She just beat around the bush. These

people are dangerous to our children. They're a danger. They're a danger. Shouldn't be you know, you want me to wrap it up with some Neo pronouns for you.
I'm in. So this is a video for neoprono users to duets, or, if you're considering,

wait, stop stuff, she said, This is a video for what, what was the phrase she used? So this is a video. Let's listen.
So this is a video for neoprono users to duets, Neo

I can't understand that actually neoproninians

or something. This
is a video for neoprono users to duets. Neo

pronoun use, I think, is what she's saying.

We slow down because

they're on speed, they're on drugs, they're on drugs, they're all on uh, meds, heads. So
this is a video for neoprono users to duets, or if you're considering neopronouns for yourself, maybe even try a blind react, however, safety first, before you do either of those things, make sure you're in a mental state where if you do get misgendered, you will be okay. Are you ready? Let's get started. Do you see this person next to me is my friend C's had to put up with a lot to get to where per is today. I just want to let Glenn know that phone is valid, that for pronouns are
valid, and that Sarah identity is valid. I wish Boyd all the best and look forward to maybe even seeing some of their lovely content someday. Please treat them with respect, and I'm sure a will respect you too. A so how did that feel? Are there any Neo pronouns that stuck out to you that you might want to use for yourself? Good luck on your pronoun journey. Good luck.

Good luck on your pronoun journey.

I'm just gonna use that when I just say goodbye to somebody here in the hill country. See you tomorrow on your pronoun journey. Yeah, good luck on your pronoun journey. You know, I was talking about the ADHD and I had this from the last episode. I'll just play a little bit of it. It's the oddest thing. But they're now saying that high doses of ADHD drugs are linked to a greater risk of psychosis. No kidding,
and I don't understand how this made it onto NBC. This morning, doctors are issuing a new warning to patients who are prescribed stimulant drugs like Adderall and by Vance. This comes from a new study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry. It found that taking high doses of these drugs, which contain amphetamine could put people at a much higher risk of developing psychosis or mania. In fact, one
estimate shows that nearly a third of patients are prescribed dosages that may increase their risk of developing these psychotic symptoms. NBC News, medical fellow doctor, Akshay Saleh joins us now to explain what this study found. Doctor say, all good to have you with us to walk us through drugs for tests, walk us through these drugs in this study and just how much of a risk doctors found they could pose to patients?
Yeah. Guys, good morning. Guys, yeah. So that the link here between psychosis and mania and amphetamine stimulants isn't new. That's something that we've known for a while,

but what since? When has this been discussed? It is discussed,

but we know, you know, you speed freaks is to be called, course, as
what is needed, you know, just as

one of them, by the way, yes, he
was, is it was sort of getting some information about what doses are required to sort of increase your risk here, developing those symptoms like psychosis, Romania. And you can see here, what we found is that you know, if you take more than these doses on the screen, so more than 40 milligrams of Adderall, more than 100 milligrams of Vyvanse, or 30 milligrams there of dexedrine, you have a 5.3 greater likelihood of developing psychosis, and that

these are normal prescription levels, 40 milligrams of Adderall, 100 milligrams of Vyvanse. So psychosis, which is that, right? Yes, at normal, it's in the story here somewhere. I think the normal is 40 to 60. Is your typical prescription? No, the medium dosage of Adderall is 20 to 40. That's medium. That's

medium. That means as many as above as below, yes,

50 to 100 for vivant. So hundreds at the top ends, but it's all medium range. So you Yeah, that

means most people are getting or but half the people are getting a psychotic dose. Yeah.

And do you think that you could do. Stuff like, I don't know, shoot up a school or do something.

That's interesting theory, but I've never heard such an idea. But it really

doesn't matter, because pretty soon, schools will just have a machine. The machine will be a dispenser. You go into the machine, you talk to the machine, the machine will say, Yeah, I think you need to up your up your meds. The Doro
app uses AI technology like chatgpt to offer users early mental health intervention.

Oh yes, there's an app. There's an app for early men listen if you're on an app you already need early mental health help.
The user types their symptoms and questions in a chat field, and Doro calling from information available to it, tailors a treatment and writes back. So we, for example, deliver ti PP, which is a set of like things that you should do when you when you have a panic attack, what's your face with cold water or try to do some breathing.

I'm having a pan attack. Let me go to the app and ask what I should do.

So if you see some of the panic attacks, just throw the your glass of cold water right in their face. That's right. That'll help. The
app, according to rasoli, is also programmed to glean if a person is experiencing serious or potentially dangerous symptoms like severe depression or suicidal ideation. This is the point that if you realize the symptoms are too serious, we refer them to the therapist. Oh

yeah, yeah. Get that guy in apps, like doors.

Hold on a second. Have you noticed the use of the word ideation when they when they bring up suicide? I don't remember as a kid, anyone ever saying suicide ideation? I think it's an interesting phrase,

which means you're toying with the idea? No, I

think it means you're idealizing the advantages of suicide. I think there's

no, no, no, no ideation. This is a, that's a real so let's look it up. Ideation, ID, ideation, okay, the capacity, oh, here, the capacity for the act of forming or entertaining ideas. So you're ideating which it's like we used to use this at me. VO, yeah, we were ideating on that.

Well, it sounds like a Silicon Valley, yes, yeah, we were, we were ideating on I've never heard anyone say ideating in my life. Well, you heard it, so now, now I have, I can't say this. You've heard it severe depression or
suicidal ideation. This is the point that if you realize the symptoms are too serious, we refer them to the therapist. Yeah, the therapist

will prescribe you drugs. It's so obvious.
Apps like Doro seek to help fill a gap, especially for young adults and teens who tend to report higher rates of mental health problems. This

is a portal. This is a portal to suck kids into getting them on drugs. A 2022
study by Canadian Alliance of student associations revealed that one in three students said campus mental health resources did not meet their needs. The entry of AI and psychiatry is a polarizing issue for experts. Eduardo Bungay, professor of psychology at Palo Alto University, who specializes in children and adolescents, sees mostly positive outcomes. So this is a very good first line of treatment that may not be, huh? Would you say? So

What school did they say? It's Palo Alto unit. There is no such school. Let
me listen again. Entry of AI into psychology and psychiatry is a polarizing issue for experts. Eduardo Bungay, professor of psychology at Palo Alto University. There's

no such thing as the Palo Alto. You

I've never heard of Palo Alto, and this is not in in the Bay Area, at some other Palo Alto, someplace else, but Palo Alto University.

This is new to me. Here it is Palo Alto University. Yeah, is, where is it? I'm going to look a boot. Let me see private nonprofit, Palo Alto University, a private nonprofit university. Look what kind of university is that? Of his nonprofit, located in the heart of Northern California, Silicon Valley. That's where you are. Is dedicated to addressing pressing and emerging issues and specializing in behavioral health to equitably meet the needs of today's diverse communities.

Boy, this is some bogus operation That

sure sounds like it doesn't well. I

mean, it's allegedly bogus, I'll say that, but because they may be litigious for all I know, I've never heard of them, and I'm in the Bay Area, and I've never heard of them. Well, they bring some guy, and they couldn't bring a Stanford guy in, or a Berkeley guy, or a Santa Clara guy, or a San Jose State guy or or any mate. You know, we have major universities in the area, but they bring in a guy from
Palo Alto University, this like the singularity. University, they're going to bring that guy in next

at Pau, you can expect a transformative education tailored to your needs. Our programs offer one to one, advising, practical experience through internships and placements, expert faculty, guidance and supportive community. Graduates from Pau find themselves well prepared for careers in psychology, counseling, social work and behavioral health. This is some kind of outfit, man,

they definitely specialize. Yeah, that's
that's for sure. Eduardo Bungay, professor of psychology at Palo Alto University, who specializes in children and adolescents, sees mostly positive outcomes. So

this is like a very good first line of treatment that may not be sufficient, may not be enough, but it's better than nothing. This is to

get the guy from a Woody Allen movie.

Listen to this. So they specialize in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender mental health, cognitive behavioral approaches to childhood anxiety disorders, pediatric psychology. This is, this is a frightening group gender issues. They must be pumping out salesmen for. Gender health care could be

it's definitely specialized, yeah,

all right, well, then let me finalize all this nonsense with the latest we have to worry about for your teens,
a new study is revealing unusual changes in teenagers brain development during the pandemic.

Yeah, that was a good one. That was a good time kids.
It's not that surprising to know that their actual brain changes that happened during the pandemic, given everything that teens, especially teen girls, faced,

this guy sounds like he's a graduate of the Palo Alto University. The
study found covid era lockdowns ended up aging teenagers brains faster than the usual rate, more than four years faster than usual in girls, compared to just over a year faster in boys. The authors hypothesized that adolescent girls were affected more than boys, because they may be more dependent on that social interaction and being able to connect with their friends.
Back in 2018 researchers began tracking brain changes in 160 people ages nine to 17, they found lockdowns contributed to an increase of anxiety, depression and behavioral disorders causing their brains to mature faster. The same type of accelerated brain aging has been documented in teens who
suffered severe trauma, stress and neglect. But it's important to note that these studies don't exactly tell us what the long term effects are, or if the process can be reversed or slowed down with the right type of emotional support moving forward.

Oh, man, we screwed up the world.

This is on purpose. Yeah,

lockdowns was a good idea, wasn't it? Guys, two weeks to flatten the curve. President Trump, flatten that curve. All
right, so we've got to talk more about this. We want to bring in ABC News Medical contributor, Dr Lok Patel,

yeah, please. Patel, look.
Dr Patel, it's good to see you sort of explained for us in that story what happened. But how concerned should parents be about this new finding parents already being concerned about what happened to the kids during covid, and can the negative impact here be reversed in any way?

By the way, I would say to all the producers listening right now, don't believe any of this nonsense. Don't fall for it. Don't take your kid to the doctor. Don't be looking if your kid is feeling older. This is all just medical sales. It's a sales job, every single bit of it, which kid on some some med. So be fine. Good.
I think parents should be just more aware about the true impact of the stress of the pandemic, stress from all around us that that's had on those developing teen brains. What the study really does is it adds some physical evidence to what we already know about how sensitive teen brains are during
those critical years and how fragile they really are. Now the headline is alarming, but it's important for people out there to understand that our brains go through changes with age, with maturity, and so some of these changes are not necessarily bad
on their own, but they can be accelerated with stress. So I don't think parents should really panic from the headline, but what they should be doing instead, is really doing what they can to pay attention to the emotional well being of their teens and their young kids and

use the proper pronouns so you don't stress them more. Whatever happened to our kids, what do we do to them? Do. See any behavior of this in your children? No, no, no, me, neither you know why, because they listen to the no agenda show, and actually they don't know. They don't. And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage say in the morning to the man who put the C in the atacms, the one and only, Mr. John Cena morning

to you. Mr. Adam curry, the morning all shifts and see boost in the ground, feeding the air subs in the water, and all the Dames and nights out there. And in

the morning to all the trolls. I'm waiting for cotton gin to come in. We have 2076 but we are late. We're late with the donation segment today. So I don't have subs in the tunnel, I don't have a peak count, but there's enough trolls. They're all hanging out there in the trolls low

number. We're

one hour and 50 minutes. We're one hour and 50 minutes into the show. So I'm sure it was more like 2300 you can say that I am saying that because I know maybe building it may be higher. Well, let me see, I thought I had a link to that. I thought I had a link to the somewhere there was a link to the there's a chart. Could see cotton gin. Cotton gins down. Where's cotton gin anyway? The trolls can be found at trollroom dot,

even he's not listening, it's so

bad cotton gin is not even listening. Trollroom.io is where you can log in and listen to the live stream. There's plenty of stuff going on 24 hours a day. Or use a modern podcast app, which you can find@podcastapps.com it'll alert you when we go live, which is the, really, the modern way of broadcasting, and if you can't catch it live, like cotton gin, then that. Oh, wait, here's the cotton here it is. Here, control, count, hold on. I got it here. Oh, the peak was 2190
so it is a bit low. But yeah, 2190
Is it that bad?

That's terrible. I

don't know about terrible. Also, with these modern podcast apps, you get chapters and transcripts and all kinds of fun things, and now you can it's also when you're if you're listening to us right now, look for the little the little dollar sign, or little stack of bills you click on that takes you right to no agenda donations.com which is like removing a whole bunch of steps. You don't have to think about, where do I go to paypal? What do I do now? Just click on that
button. It's easy, and that means that we operate under value for value, which is without doubt, the best way to operate a podcast there's, there's so many people struggling, trying to figure out how to monetize their show and grow it. Well, forget about it. Forget about it. I mean, this is, this is the the era of media being small. You just get your group, you get your people. Those people support you, and if you're any good, then you'll continue. If not, you won't.
It's survival of the fittest out here, narrow casting. Oh, I don't like narrow casting. That's what it is. No, that's Hello, 1985

I'm not saying it's a new term. No, it's

not narrow casting. It's micro services, media.
It's different.

You don't like that one either, do you?

Well, no, actually, I'm thinking about it. Maybe there's some element in there that is micro services. We're all

using little micro services and we're media. So the idea behind value for value was funny. I sent out a link. There were a whole bunch of artists, I think was the Bitcoin Conference. They wanted a panel. They're all talking about value for value, and they're talking they're doing it perfectly. I mean, to the T they're explaining exactly what it is like. You just put your stuff out there. If people listen to it, if they like it and they value it, they send you back
value, even using time talent and treasure. This was for musical artists, or talking about people helping them with their merch, or helping them with their concerts, or booking venues, merch, merch, merch, like we have no agenda shop.com and and I was, I was really proud. Like, look at this. People are using the term that we've been using for, well, for more than 15 years as we come up on our 17th anniversary, and, and people like these kids are not even giving you credit.
You're missing the point where they

aren't. This is true. But so what? It's okay we have, when you get into this, this point of in media, in general, everything gets stolen. Yes,

the way, it's that works, but it's okay. I want to, I want all

the clips we play. We're not necessarily. I have to, sometimes even ask where some of these clips come from. It's

true. Yeah. Yes. So a great example of value for value is all the work that our producers do. They send us ideas. They send us links. Some of us send us ready to make clips, although those usually aren't that usable, except for the Jones brothers, of course, Jones brothers, they do a great job.

No, it takes skill to to do clips it

does and to label them properly. That's

it, that well, there is a skill I don't have. Well, I'm used to your

labeling, so it's okay, but keeping it within time limits. You know, if you count it up like today, we have in our bin 112 clips. Now we won't play them all, but, you know, we put on this, this show, this performance, and we weave in and out, and then it's like, hey, you've got something, I got something. We just make it look easy, but it's a lot of clips.
And so some of that comes from our producers. What also comes from our producers is our continuously changing and entertaining album art, which they upload to no agenda Art generator.com, another website we didn't build, because if we did, we'd be poor. There's just no way you can't there's no way you can have producers on payroll. No instead, we credit people. We help them. We we've helped them launch their own podcast. We do whatever we can. We send more value back to them
in many ways. And in this case, we have producers who, most of them are Dutch masters, such as data. We have an or data, I should say data, who hasn't come in in a while, but data's been out there.

Oh yeah, he's hard working on and off for years. Yes,

and oh, by the way, Martin JJ is alive. We did a Well, nice check. Yeah, did. We did? I tell you about that. I thought you wanted to know.

I thought I already knew he was alive. No, where'd you find out? Well, we did it. Well, I guess I made the assumption I wasn't. Like,

no, we did. We did a wellness check. He checked in on the mastodon. He's alive, but he had a job change so he can no longer listen live and do art. So his his life changed. But he actually says he likes it, because now he can just listen to the show and enjoy it instead of

working, oh, instead of fretting about the art. Exactly. So Dave, yes, well, he was still when it when he was on a roll, which was years ago. He was winning every week. I think he had the longest streak of of accepted art. Oh, yeah, any artist, yeah, that was at one time. And in fact, he started gloating to the point where says, I'm gonna stop, because I'm taking I'm taking up too much space. I'm too good. I'm too good. Good.

I gotta step back. Let some other young people do some work here. So data brought us this delightfully cute little kitty sitting inside a can of cat food, only called feline delight. Which do you think that was? It looks like that must be AI. I mean, it's so good. The

Well, yeah, it also has a flaw.

What is that?

Well, the the flaw is the tab on the on the lid is on the wrong side.

Ooh, good catch. Yes, yeah, yes, you're right, interesting, but

that's the only, but the rest of it's just just such a cute cat head. Yeah, it was sticking out of the can. It was a tomato soup can, a big tomato can. It just was too much to not choose. There was,

there was a lot of interesting pieces that people came in with. There was a lot of cat and dog stuff being eaten or being prepared to eat. Let me see, we had, of course, lots of camel and Trump stuff, which, although it does happen, we are unlikely to use, a lot of round stuff from comics or bloggers prompt work. I kind of liked Taunton Neal's Springfield Paw Patrol, but I but the kitty just it was hard to beat that cute kitten. I mean, you put a cute kitty in a can, we're kind of
good to go. I mean, that's, yeah, it's pretty tough one to beat. Anything else that you wanted to talk about really?

I mean, I use the camera buttons for the newsletter the childless, catless ladies and a dog in every pot

for Camelot, yeah, appropriate use for the

news. Springfield was a good one from comic strip blogger. That was good.
Yeah, exactly.

So, no agenda, Art generator.com, that's where you can participate. You could not, first of all, you can just take a look at it. You can, if you're listening live, you can scroll. You can just refresh that page and see it as it comes in. Or you can, or you can participate by uploading your own starting. Account there. And as usual, Dr Scott the Bruce Wayne of podcasting 2.0 he is always using many of these pieces for our chapter art. And if you're using a modern podcast app, will
be will change topics. Boom, the art will change. You get another chuckle. It's beautiful. That's the time and the talent portion. Then we have the treasure portion, which is value that you send in monetary units back to the show, very much needed, for sure. And it's very simple. You just send us whatever the show is worth to you. And $5 may be a lot for you every single month, that's fine. Then support us that way, and it doesn't matter what amount it is, as long as you support the show, we can
keep going. And we read every donation above $50 not below 50, for reasons of anonymity. And of course, the sustaining donations, which you can set at no agenda donations.com set your own frequency, your own amount. We do like to highlight our executive and associate, executive producers. Associate, $200 above, we read your note. Executive, $300 above, and we read your note. And wouldn't you know it?
Wow,

we have a rubbilizer donation coming in from let me see, did I? Did I get the rubbilizer? Rubbilizer? Here we go. We have, sir, not sure, from monument Colorado, coming in with three sought, $3,333.33 rubbilizer. Out. That is a rubbilizer donation. He says ITM Sir, not sure, Baron of the tri lakes. This donation brings me to Viscount status. After getting rid of the noodle people from work, I find my finances to be much better, and I felt I should send a bit of treasure
your way as a thanks for all that you guys do. Please. Let's run a business. Yes, and he got rid of the noodle the noodle kids, yeah. Good for him, yeah.

The way to go. No,

maybe it may be because we we told him that he should indirectly, well and directly, please add me September 17 and my sister, Dame Marie, on the 14th to the birthday list and give her a biscuit for her birthday. See, I got a biscuit for her birthday.
They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.

I would like thee. I love my truck, and I love what I do. Jingle. Keep up the good work, and thank you for your courage. That's Mark rush Schall, also known as Sir, not sure, soon to be Viscount, and that'll have to come from you, John,

what, I'm sorry, what?

I love my truck. That's not an actual jingle. I'm

sorry I was your noise maker, the birthday list, yeah, I was double checking something. Sorry, but what so I love my truck, and I love what I do.
India. Hang out. Mike standby, 3333

33 rubies are out. Awesome, sir, not sure. Thank you so much. That is very much appreciated.

Yes, that that was a big deal. Amos in Port, Lavaca, Lavaca, Lavaca, Texas, who's also came in with a good number, 1776 dot 33 huh? Wow. 76 Oh, yes. Freedom, dearest, dearest JCD and pod father. This donation is in honor of Sir and Mrs. Heck of Engle Ford shale. Engle Ford shale, shale company, in the words of warrior poet Alexander Jones, the solution to 1984 is 1776 Yes.

Warrior poet Alexander Jones, that's good.

Alexander. Seemed appropriate. There's still a far cry from what, what? Both you and they deserve my introduction to no agenda is one of the is one of innumerable blessings, to granted me, to granted me, I'd say granted me through the hex. Oh, they, they the hex did it. The hex did it. Hex did it. We're words cannot capture my appreciation for all they have done, nor you for that matter. So I won't belabor it from the kid that was told to never stop asking questions. Thank you, God
bless signed, Amos. God

bless you. Thank you very much. Janet Webb is in Gilbert, Arizona, $900 and she has a note which is handwritten. I have it here. ITM John Adam. This donation is through the best podcasts in universe. Nice handwriting, by the way, along with our $100 quite. Interest.

The handwriting is, yes, it's unique.

Along with our $100 donation last year will bring me to damehood. I would like to be Dame Janet of the TP, of the TP Wyoming

jazz. Does it say Jasper?

Where does it say Jasper?

Doesn't it Jasper, no filming. Oh, it does say, sorry, yeah. The tea, I have a copy here, yes.

Well, your copy sucks. I can see it just fine. At the round table, I'd like spaghetti and carbonara and a bottle of excellent dry red wine chosen by John. Hold on. Let me get my list here so I can do this. So we have spaghetti and carbonara and a bob Brunello, Brunello, Brunello. What is do we have a year for the Brunello?

I'll have to dig up the year.

By the way, we got a number of reports from Costco. Noticed from Costco. David Mike, Costco

still hasn't got the wine in yet. Yeah. David producer,

David said, Hey guys, thanks for the help. I asked an employee where they were hiding the Costco, yes, the four, the crate of four uh Bordeaux. And the guy said another guy was in here earlier, looking forward to from some podcasters advice. And someone also let me know that I think this is completely due to your complaints. Costco has brought back the rotisserie boxes for the Oh yes, really, yes, the road, their boxes are back.

Make the Brunello a, 2016

Okay, 28 2016 Bruno, that was a good year for brunellos.

I'm reliably informed. Really, you just been reliably informed. Uh, you two

bring information and humor into our lives. What could be better? Please credit this $900 to The Sims, to the Sunday, September 16 show. It was the 15th as that's our 40th anniversary. So maybe their anniversary is on the 16th, and she was confused. So Happy Anniversary in advance 40 years they never had a fight. And Happy belated birthday to Adam. Thank you, blessings and may you never find an exit strategy soon to be in this episode, Dame Janet of TP Wyoming, thank you, Dame Janet, very kind.

Yes, that came in last show and Jade decided to archive it.

Oh, and she also wants, I love my truck and I love what you do. Since she has a Toyota four runner, she's changed it to, I love my four and I love what I do, but I think you have to hit the jingle
again. Oh, I love my truck and I love what I do, and I know you to cook it if you don't use fresh vegetables.

Wow, the extended remix, and I love this next one.

Yeah. Well, this is, uh, supposedly from Jason Cali Candace in San Francisco, even though he lives in Austin, his most of his life's been spent in Los Angeles. But okay, we'll assume it's Jason Cali Candace, even though I doubt it.

Dude, he literally, right after the show, sent me a Twitter DM, and I'm pulling it up now. Here it is. He said, he sent me. He said, I do a great Adam curry. I don't have a lift. And he sent me. He sent me a copy of the PayPal receipt for 333 it's, it's really him, he I told you, he listened. I can't believe you're now doubting that it's him. It is him.

Did 333 and no note, no. So he gets, he gets a double up karma, doesn't he? He sure does.
You've got karma.

I thought it was great. Well,

it is. If it's well, it's never sent us to

John. It's him. Would you please just thank Jason nicely. Thanks,

Jason. There you go. And I won't you don't have a list. The voice that I do love you. Is it more of a Sylvester, the cat sort of thing? Well,

sorry. And welcome to Texas. Jason, welcome Scott. Have

Adam over to the ranch, yeah,

did you just do that again? Ranch? Did you just do that?

No, I did not. He's

gonna have me over to the ranch. I'm gonna record a little bit for you. I'm gonna have him record

a bit. Oh, he'll do my voice. He's
very

similar to the voice that Mimi does when she does me.

Oh. Should hear the one she does about you when you're not in the room. I know what it sounds like. Scott Cohen is in Volga, South Dakota, and comes in, oh, our first Associate Executive Producer, and comes in with $250 and says, I'd like some baby making karma, please. Okay, remember name him after Adam and John. Oh, karma.

Brian D O, I believe in Fishers Indiana, two to two of the duck row of ducks being that this is my fifth row of ducks. Donation, please, Knight me, Sir Ryan diazio. Diazio diazio diazio, the knight who couldn't give a who couldn't give a single duck, but couldn't give a duck, get it and provide Chilean sea bass and a Cortese of John's choosing, on, uh, on the at the RT,

at the brown tube, round tube. Oh, okay,

so a corteze. What's a Cortese?

I don't know a bit. You're the wine guy.

God bless no agenda and well, he and goat comedy or what. There used to be a winery called Cortese in California, but since he's in Indiana, I'm sure he's not.

It's an Italian wine. It's a white, white wine grape variety.

Oh, a Cortese grape. Yes. Wow. I don't know any wine is made with that grape. I just don't.

Well, you're you're ill prepared,

yes, well now that I'll look it up and give a selection after the next couple of donations,

tell us that John, I'm just writing it in here. John will give eventually. Okay, nice. All right. Well, way to go. That's

the best I can do.

Up next, we actually, this is Florida Lawn solutions. Who hopes that that you'll do this read,

oh, go look back at that. I see The Cortices here. It's some of them are quite expensive. Oh, Florida Lawn solutions. They're in Panama City or Panama City Beach, Florida to 1171 from Florida Lawn solutions. I hope JCD gets to do this. I started listening since the end of 2021, going through the archives of 2020, to 2021, on long weekdays have been worth my donation. Ah, just getting some of the covid material. Yes, thanks for adding that value and your courage. I
remember that you were running out of deducings. It seems that the supply is back in stock. Do you need a new supplier? Oh, no, we get it from Florida Lawn solutions.
You've been deduced

Florida long solutions for all your deducing needs. Eli the coffee guy, is in bensonville, Illinois, and he'd like to do a switcheroo and donate toward the knighthood of one of our customers. Andrew garland, Oh, now he's hooking up his customers. How about that to expedite his journey to the roundtable. Thank you to all the no agenda producers and who we've talked to, from Canada to Guam, what an awesome group of
people. We are lucky to be a part of it. For all those in Gitmo nation who want delicious, fresh, roasted coffee, visit gigawatt Coffee roasters.com use code ITM 20 for 20% off your order and stay caffeinated. Eli, the coffee guy,

okay, get him a 2021 gavi degavi,

okay, hold on, a 2021 gavi degave. Gavi degave, how much is that? Is it expensive? Because I got,

I don't have a price. This doesn't matter. We pay for it. Okay, good. Got it. I can look up the price. I'm not sorry. You're gonna do something is cheap, and some like $80 a bottle. It seems a little high for Italian white wine that I've never heard of. I'll

do this. Next one is from the Indiana meetup in Greenwood, Indiana, Sir Mark de Maria, of course, who always organize that $200 it's a switcheroo for Annette Miller. Aha, because Annette Miller won the raffle for this for this meetup. Yeah, congratulations, Annette. Thank you for helping me make sense of the world around me in all these years. And even more so I thank you for the no agenda family I found in
Indy. Please give a shout out and some karma to my son, sir Ryan Thomas, who hit me in the mouth a very long time ago. Peace from Annette Miller, you've got karma? Yeah, we have a meet

up report.

We got a meet up report from Indy coming up. It's always a great meetup. You.

And last on our list here a short list, actually, is some big, top heavy Linda lopatkin, our friend in Lakewood, Colorado, asks for jobs karma, and she says for a gorgeous resume that gets results. And she has gorgeous in all caps, you

gotta do gorgeous, gorgeous.

Visit imagemakers. Inc.com, for all your executive resume and job search needs, that's image makers. Inc, i n k with a K, and work with Linda Lou Duchess of jobs and writer of resumes, jobs,
jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got karma. And

that wraps up our executive and Associate Executive producers for Episode 1695, thank you to all of you, especially, as you said, top heavy, wow. It's really been a very good, good donation segment for us, and we're looking forward to thanking the rest of you came in $50 and above in our second segment. Remember, we also have those meetups. We've got the end of show mixes. We have your tip of the day and some more media deconstruction again. Thank you for supporting us. No agenda donations.com.
Put some more in the mouth. Spread the word and donate.

Thank you again to our executive and Associate Executive producers.
Our formula is this, we go out. We hit people in the mouth. Shut

up. Who you, who you, who you, who

I got another screw, screwball story from North Korea or from NHK. Another thing I've never heard of, okay, this is the North Korea abductions. Have you heard of this? Tell me you've heard of this. I

have not heard of the North Korean abductions, but I'm ready to listen.
The 88 year old mother of a Japanese woman abducted decades ago by North Korea has again called on the government to take immediate action. Yokota sake told NHK time is running out to recover her daughter. It's been nearly 22 years since North Korea admitted to abducting Japanese nationals at a summit with Japan, 13 year old Megumi Yokota was abducted in 1977 while on her way home from school in Niigata city on the
Sea of Japan Coast. Sakia spoke to NHK about megumi's struggle since that day, how patient she must be to keep calling for help for 47 years. That really makes me feel so frustrated. Megumi is just one of 17 citizens the Japanese government says were abducted by North Korea in the 1970s and 80s. Five have since returned, but the others are still unaccounted for.

What are they? What are they? Is the girl on her way home from school gets abducted by the North Koreans, and then they drag her over there and make her live there and do work, I don't know is this is a screwball story? Well,

it's a screwball station.

Hello, okay, screwball station.

I must have received, I don't You got any, but I must have received five different emails from people around the United States to complain about with the simp complaints, very similar to Aurora and Springfield. And I think it's worth the just mentioning, because it's all it's all the same. They all have the same complaints, and this plays right back into the wage suppression. And it's, I can, I think I can pretty well summarize what's going on and
how it works. And one of our producers is in Utica, New York, and he says, In the 90s, the city brought in around 5000 Bosnian refugees as a result of our Kosovo War. And he says what happens is a local immigration non profit pops up, lobbies the local government to pass legislation to welcome the
newcomers, done under the guise of rebuilding a failing city. In Utica case, the economy collapsed when Bill Clinton closed the local military base and signed NAFTA, this decimated the region's manufacturing sector, which is only 10% so I think you'd be more destruct destroyed. The city was desperate for a rebound. The nonprofits promised an avenue to revitalize, to revitalize these communities with the importation of cheap labor. And he shows me the refugee, refugee
resettlement services for Utica refugees. And if you look around. Found there's one of these in almost every single community where there's an overflow of immigrants. And if you look at Springfield, the organization there is called the national youth advocate program, they receive $160 million a year to settle the immigrants. That would be the Haitians. Marvina twig the executive director or president and CEO, her annual
salary is $1.169 million do you see what's happening here? This is we, and we've been on this refugee resettlement thing. There's a huge one in Austin, also with million dollar C suite pay packages. Many of them are faith based, which is even more excruciating to look at, disturbing. Disturbing is the right word. So this, again, is the, is the College of corporations. You know, it's like, okay, we've got some refu we got, we've got a refugee situation in Haiti with, well,
there's some people over there. Hey, we'll give them temporary protective status, and we'll set up this NGO over here. We'll give them some money from the National Endowment for Democracy, that's and USA. Id give them the money. They go to the corporation say, hey, everyone there is drugged out in Ohio on opioids. You want some cheap workers? Yeah, great. But what happens is they give these, these newcomers, as we like to
call them. They give them housing. How do they do that a apartment building guy, Hey, listen, you got cheap rent over there. We'll give you a 30% more. If you kick everybody out, we'll put some Haitians in there. Okay, no problem. You're out. Pay a Dole or Hey, machine manufacturing, car plant manufacturer, we got some cheap labor. Okay, good. But then they also, they give the the newcomers housing money, they give them debit cards with with money for groceries, and they
get their $19 an hour. So there's no way the local citizenry can compete. And then what? Just to poke everyone's eyes out all these the Haitians in in Springfield, they're driving BMWs. They're like 345, year old beamers and Mercedes and so they don't care about the citizens. They do not care the whole system is set up, and it's happened all across America, all across it. I email after email with the same story. I don't know. I don't know how you stop it, but this, this is the
gambit. And Germany just signed a deal to welcome Kenyans, 250,000 Kenyans, because the Germans apparently are no good anymore.
Did you hear this?

No, but I'm not

happy about it. Berlin has agreed to allow skilled and semi skilled Kenyan workers into Germany in a controlled and targeted labor migration deal. This is your new world order. This is the whole plan,

yeah, and it's cheap labor, is it? The base of it? Cheap labor? Cheap? No, not for the taxpayer we're paying. It's not cheap. We're pay. We're paying the taxpayers are paying for this. Yes, so it's being subsidized by the US taxpayer who's being kicked out of the apartments that you have, aforementioned apartments you talked about. Yeah, this is ridiculous. This is worse than Oh, you know, this Indian guy came in. I had to teach him my job so I could get fired. This
is worse than that. It's much worse than that.

Oh, man, that's

what's really to me. Is somewhat ironic, because I was thinking about this is that when California, we had a system for farm labor, which has still been an issue. It's always an issue in California, and you can't get enough people to work in the farmlands, and we and so they, they had a program called the Bracero program, because right now, Mexican nationals will sneak over and they'll do farm work and send the money back to Mexico, to Mexico, sorry. And the Bracero program
would brought the Mexicans up in busses to do farm labor. They got paid the same amount, and then they shipped them back on the same busses when they were done and when the harvest was over, and they just took the money with them, yeah, which is okay. Well, that was that was not good enough. So he had to end that program because it was cruel or something. But now we're doing this instead.

Yep, and, and to make matters worse, have you seen what they're doing with inmates in Alabama? No, it's. So what is Kamala Harris is, by the way, nobody,

no, no wonder nobody's in the troll room. We're depressing now.

No, I think we're confirming their fears, and we're we're helping them understand what, what's going on in their world. This is not meant to be depressing. After the show, you turn it off and go smoke a dupe. Everything you're good to go. Everybody

was having the Alabama prisoners.

So we have, for many, many generations in America, we've always enjoyed using our inmates for cheap labor. You know, making Ikea furniture license plates is kind of the old joke, but they still actually make license plates in jail and and the I think most of the inmates make between nine and 13 cents an hour, depending on on what job you're in. So Alabama has a new twist on this.
Well, a lot of people are calling it modern slavery. Does that feel right? Just about to say that's slavery, that's slavery. You took away the Wilkes, but you put the paperwork, took away the Masters, and you gave put them in uniform. Same difference, Same difference. It kind of appears that there is a coordinated system in order to protect the labor that's created by the prison system. Walk into a McDonald's in Alabama and the worker flipping
your McDouble could be an incarcerated person. It's a sad situation a way, they getting rich off of the Alabama Department of Corrections farms out incarcerated people to work at hundreds of private companies and government agencies across the state. McDonald's, Burger King, Golden Corral, Wendy's. They got a Wendy's contract right now. State troopers office, they'll send
everybody everywhere. They'll send you everywhere. Yes, the parole office, and even though Adoc trusts these incarcerated people to leave prison every day and work alongside the general public. Many of them are still denied the chance at real freedom.

So you're incarcerated, you're in jail, but we're going to let you out to go flip burgers at McDonald's,

probably pennies on the dollar in terms of pay.

Yes. How does this make sense?

And we're always bitching and moaning about the Chinese,

right? Exactly. We're worse than the Chinese. We've commercialized it. That's slavery. That is real slavery, right there. If you if you're safe enough to go out into society, which is the whole part of incarceration, then you shouldn't be incarcerated.

How's she gonna get the cheap labor? We win. Win. We need.

We need a new sheriff in town. Oh, I know. Let's bring in Sheriff Harris. She'll fix it all for us, my goodness,

but she actually kept there was a, I mean, the Tulsi Gabbard slam against her, which is probably, we have a clip of it. She mentioned that she wouldn't some guys were supposed to get out of jail, and she kept them in there to get them in so they could do slave labor with them? Yeah, yeah. Once a slave owner, always a slave owner.

We're just reporting it. People don't hate the players hate the game.

So we can talk a little bit about about

claim it. Week. Oh, how did I miss climate week?

I don't know. I was wondering myself.

Oh, man, this is an important week, another scam of epic proportions.

It's a beauty. I have two. These are both promotional. They were on NPR. Okay, start with the new show called reveal. This is the this is a teaser for the show. I don't have the show because it's coming up. Is the teaser that

climate? Climate teaser? Okay,
we want to be the next Vanguard, the next Blackrock for the climate conscious consumer, because we don't believe that those companies will do what we need them to do to get us out of this climate crisis that we're currently in. That's next on

reveal. Well, I like that the climate conscious consumer. It's the Triple C nice,

a person that only exists in few areas of the world. Yes, California, we have client, the climate week promotion from NPR. There are
a lot of ways for humans to both slow the pace of climate change and adapt to our new reality. NPR is spending a week exploring areas where we can improve addressing food waste turns out to be one of the biggest climate solutions. Of them all join us. For a look at the future of food with NPRs, annual climate solutions week, explore with us at npr.org/climate

week, oh, now I understand why Tedros came out World Health Organization, yeah, yeah, yeah. He made a statement for climate week.
Our food systems are harming the health of people and planet. Food Systems contribute to over 30% of greenhouse gas emissions and account for almost 1/3 of the global burden of business transforming food systems is therefore essential by shifting towards healthier, diversified and more plant based diets, plants, if food systems delivered healthy diets for all, we could save 8 million lives per year. Who is committed to supporting countries?

I don't know

what. How are we saving lives or creating

them. If
food systems delivered healthy diets for all, we could save 8 million lives per year. Who is committed to supporting countries to develop and implement policies to improve diets and fight climate change? I'm therefore very pleased that over 130 countries have signed the cop 28 UA Declaration on climate and health, together, we can protect and promote the health of both people and planet.

Well, let's start with the Haitians. They're eating the dogs. All right, stop eating dogs. Stop eating the dogs. Oh, boy, there. There's

a I don't have the clip anymore because I just never got to use it, which is the guy who comes out says farming is responsible for all climate change. We must stop all farming. Oh, yet they have so they have a mixed message going on. Here. They can't seem to get it together. Here it is. In fact, there it
is. Farming needs to stop. That's the single biggest driver of climate change. Oh,

so farming is the problem, but we need to eat plants.

Yeah. So I don't know where they get in this, but so my last climate clip is the one where the bread, eat bread, bread will solve the problem.

What if you could help address climate change by eating more whole wheat bread? It is not the biggest solution, but it might be the tastiest. No, not brown bread. Mom, here's 100 Burundi explains, oh, Sammy, you're saving the Earth. It's
warm and fragrant at the Washington State University bread lab, where a group of scientists and professional bakers have gathered to taste slices of soft, mahogany Brown 100% whole wheat loaf just out of the oven. That's the best ever. That is amazing. That's Stephen Jones. He's a wheat breeder and Baker, and until he retired recently, he led the bread lab. He wants to help Americans learn to love whole wheat, because when wheat gets turned into white flour. Joan says the rest of the kernel is
discarded. We could increase the amount of food that we get per wheat acre by 30% if we just eat the whole wheat. Turning more food grown into food eaten cuts the climate impact.

I just want everyone to know that we can't vote our way out of this situation, daddy Trump is not going to fix all of our problems. We need to kill the elites. We need to stop the nonsense and eat them. Eat them. Yes, we need to eat them. We need to take a stand and say no, no, no to your climate change nonsense. Oh,

you're in the minority. That's the problem. No, we're

not in the minority. It's all it's

just so, no, well, Chris, I'm in California, so I you're

in the minority. Yeah, I'm definitely. And while we're at it, chop off California now that earthquake was a good start. Yeah, it's gonna take a while. Well, there's gonna be a big one. It's gonna break off and float away, and we're not gonna throw you a life raft.

I think it's going in the other direction. What California is pushing in for more.

I hope not.

You know the there's, if you want. I don't know if I had a presentation for this before, but there's a lot of thinking about, how did the Rockies form? Because they, they know how impact. You know, when you have the tectonic plate shifts, it creates mountain ranges. And they're all They're
all accounted for. But except the Rocky Mountains, can't be perfectly explained unless you unless you make the assumption this is these guys would spend their time on this stuff, that when the when the giant one gob of Earth mass, uh, started moving away from split off of Europe and Africa, and started
moving to toward the west. Uh. That it impacted something that may have been in the middle of that giant Pacific Ocean that another landmass has never been accounted for, which turns out to be California, and it rammed into it with big, solid chunk, and that's what pushed up the Rockies, because there's nothing else that could have possibly done it, except, yeah, uplift,

except, God, that's my that's my story.

Yeah, well, I'm assuming that the nature is set up to do certain things, and uplift is one of them. And so that means that California, and I'm convinced of this, California and much, much of the West, are very where we are is not part of the big group that moved over. It was always here, and it's always been a different situation. That's why the land here is somewhat toxic.

So, yes, exactly. It's always been a hellscape, and the land is toxic. It's

always been a hellscape. Traditionally, it's always on fire. There's a lot of earthquakes. Yes, and it's toxic. You can't agriculture. That's why the wine in Napa Valley isn't as good as you get from France. It's just filled with vinegar. It's got the

whole place. I'm we agree 100% Yeah, California is toxic. It's always on fire.

It's always

been, yes, whatever happened to breaking off as your own state over there? I always thought that was a good idea.

Yeah, you'd think that. But you're Texas, you're Texas, always wants to do that. So why don't you do it there first,

sure

you know as your own country, not only, good

luck charging your EV on wind power, and we're not going to export any oil and gas to you. We

have plenty of oil and gas here that they refuse to exploit Exactly,
exactly.

And now, it turns out, since my my son in law, married to Jay, works at Chevron, oh, one of the biggest oil refiners on the West Coast.

Oh, you're a fossil fuel family. Yeah,

they're thinking of shutting down the refinery completely and moving the whole thing to Houston, exactly

the prop in the Republic of Texas.

And, this is and then we have situations like, I think there's a we have a clip here on California gasoline prices.

Yeah, yes, you do, yeah, I'll play it. Yes. Gas prices
are up nearly $2 more per gallon across northern California when compared to the rest of the country, California's oil market watchdog Ty milder attributes this to refineries going offline for maintenance without enough backup supply. Gas prices in California are going up at the same time that national gas prices are going down. Governor Gavin Newsom has called a special legislative session to
require companies to keep more supplies on hand. Industry groups have said that could increase costs by forcing refiners to keep fuel in storage and off the market.

I think is great. We cut off California. You keep your social media companies keep Silicon Valley. We can use Android. We don't need iPhones.

Just keep all that comes out of California too,
Google, yeah, but

we don't need to buy Google. It's we have open source Android. We're just going to use open source over here. Y'all, I

have to mention something about the California this is a this is a blooming problem, and the Democrats are too stupid to figure it. Figure it out, they've changed. The problem with California gasoline is that some years ago, somebody pointed this out to me, and I was bitching about the taxes on the gasoline. And Chevron is one of the companies that makes gasoline for California. And I say for California because the gasoline blend for California is different than the entire rest
of the country. Oh, it's a low smog version. It's got some some stuff in it. I don't know exactly what the makeup is, but there's work.

Does it work? Well,

it's gasoline. It works fine. You know, the people don't realize that gasoline is a blend of just this of witches brew of explosive chemicals that are all mixed up with all kinds of volatiles in there, like butane, and there's all kinds of weird stuff in gasoline. But it's not the same. From tank to tank, you're always running different stuff through but California has to have some some elements of something or other in their gas, supposedly to lower pollution, and it's nobody
else makes this gas, except a couple of refineries. And so if Chevron moves to Houston that we won't have enough gasoline to do anything. That's why I think they're trying to move everyone to electric cars here in California faster than. Anybody else, but then we haven't got it's a mess. It's a ridiculous, mismanaged, corrupt state,

and it's toxic,

and it is toxic too. Yeah, you have to deal with that. Now, I have one other clip from California, since we're on the topic, yeah, now they want to do a I legislation first in the country? Yes. Okay, I don't know what this legislation is going to do, but this is going to be a huge problem for Newsom, because he doesn't know what to do about this. And this is the clip. Is a I Kelly, California
Governor Gavin Newsom is considering whether to sign or veto an artificial intelligence bill and pierce Bobby Allen reports the measure of past would be the strictest AI regulations in the country. The AI Bill has fiercely divided the tech industry. Supporting it, AI researchers who warn about the societal risks of the
technology. It also has won the support from Ai startup anthropic and Elon Musk, but opposing the bill are chatgpt, maker open AI high profile venture capitalists and AI startup founders, they say the regulations would slow innovation and allow other countries to leapfrog the US and AI development criticism of the bill did lead to a softer version being passed, but it still requires AI companies to conduct safety tests and requires firms to be able to
enable a kill switch if AI systems go rogue, there are no federal laws regulating AI in the US, Governor Newsom has until september 30 to act on the bill.

Well, finally, Elon Musk has done I was about to send him back to California, but we'll keep him now, if he's supporting bogus Legislation in California,

that's true. You have to have a kill switch, and you have to have testing. I don't know what this testing is. What do you how do you test? You know, algorithms like this and and who's going to enforce these laws? That's the other thing that you need an enforcement department, which is really expensive. This is prep bull crap, and I think you should be. I'm surprised that you're

that I'm not all over it.
Yeah,

you're the AI hater of the two of us. I am.

I am the AI hater. Have you? Have you seen the latest that they're doing with with AI? Maybe? There it's notebook LM is what it's called. Don't know it so notebook LM, I guess, is some kind of it's like a closed loop AI system, so you can put in documents that that only you care about, and then you can do AI stuff with it, whatever that means,

query it. Probably, yeah.

You could, yeah. You can query it. But now they have an extra I'm looking for it. I thought I had a link. I think I do. Now you can put in an extra thing, and you can say, make a podcast out of these documents, which, by the way, if it was any good, I would be all for it, but it makes these, let me see, oh, man, I hope I have this here. It makes a podcast. Yes, yes, it
makes a podcast. Okay, so this, in this case, this guy put in 100,000 word document of like random nothing, of random text titled it patent, dot text, gave it to the notebook and listen. So this thing that makes a podcast, by the way,

you know, I want to stop you here and say, I really, uh, admire the fact that you are, you act. You are the pod file. You keep track of everything that has anything to do with podcasting at the most minute level. I never heard of this.

Somebody has to protect the medium.

And that's actually the way you see it. Yes. Funny,

yes, I do here. Listen, so we've got another head scratcher this week. These,
these patent files you sent in had me a little bit stumped. I gotta say, yeah, it's we've got a bunch of text files, okay, all named patent, but with these little numbers tacked on, right, patent to patent for that kind of thing. Interesting. And I open these things up. Why

is that interesting?

This? This is what is that interesting? This is what the AI thinks a podcast should sound like between two people. Oh, this is the podcast we're listening to. Yes, you're listening to the podcast. This is an

dipshit. These are fake voices, yes. And so we have a guy, and this is, like a typical, this is, like fashioned after NPR, some guy, exactly, and a dipshit woman who's going, yeah, oh, some moron, yes. And okay, now I'm interested basically

pivot the pivot podcast. Please start

it over. Okay. Okay, so another
head scratcher this week. These, these patent files you sent in had me a little bit stumped. I gotta say, yeah, it's we've got a bunch of text files, okay, all named patent, but with these little numbers tacked on, right, right, patent to patent for that kind of thing, interesting. And I open these things up, and it's just line after line of binary. Oh, wow, ones and zeros, as far as the I can see. Okay, so that's our challenge. Today. We are diving headfirst into the world of,

well, binary code. Now I think that what I like about this particular AI is it adds the UHS and the ums to it. But for some reason, the podcast format has to be someone taking the lead on talking and the other someone going, Oh yeah, yay, right, yeah, shoot. Let's do get let's do it. Do it
to see if we can crack this code to figure out what in the world is going on. Absolutely so before we get too far, I think it might be helpful, sure, for some of our listeners to do a little bit of a binary one,

hold on. She's a little too this is a they gotta tone. They gotta turn her down a little bit. She's She's, it every phrase just she's throwing a bit in there. It's like, oh, ah, yeah. There's too much of that. They gotta fix that. Hey, unfixable.

I'm looking looking forward to the day when we just throw a bunch of clips and and and show notes stories into a bin, and then I stay in bed on Thursday and Sunday and the show is just the show, just
the very basics. What are we even talking about when we say binary code, right? So at its simplest, binary is really just a way of representing

now they're gonna switch roles. She's talking and he's gonna do the Oh yeah, really, oh yeah. She's
using only two options, okay, so instead of our 10 digits, like we use in our everyday lives, you know, zero through nine, right, right. Binary uses just zero and one. Got it those two digits, that's all we need to build even the most complex information. So it's kind of like a light switch, exactly. It's either on or off. That's it one or zero to

kill myself. Now.

Okay, stop. Yes. Clip of the Day. Well,

thank you. I What this? It wasn't even intended to put it on the list today, but I'll take

it unbelievable, yeah, but I like the kibitzing, the constant never ending, not like we do. I interrupt each other, kind of in a different way to stop things, but it's but this is always encouraging. All right?
Oh yes, okay,

oh yeah, good, yeah. Like, interesting,

yeah, very good. Keep going, yeah, yeah, yeah. This is why I have no fear of AI at all.
I'm gonna show my food by donating to no agenda. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.

Well, we do have a bunch of AI donations which have come in, which is all automatic. It comes from PayPal. We've programmed it so that it just sends money to us from your PayPal account. Thank you very much. It even adds little notes, and sometimes we'll read them $50 and above. Right now, we thank all of these. Producer AIS for supporting the best podcast in the universe. John, take us through them. First

of all, I'd like to say I've heard worst podcasts.

Yeah, the AI and on Tiktok. Yes, we have, we have Lucas

Williams starts us off, and he is in the fabulous town of Roswell, New Mexico. Yeah, 100 bucks. Uh, Debbie hyphen, oh, what do you think heifer hyphen ish, maybe, yeah, maybe in spring Texas, she came in with 100 but she has a little thing I want to say she wrote this is because John is nagging online. I do love the shows, and should probably donate more often. Don't let them eat the cats. Be a theme forever. There you go. Adriana Marshall in Shrewsbury, UK, a
100 up already. This a very short list. Kevin McLaughlin, 808. He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of American boobs, sir bachaviche in Miami, Florida, 6776 is for his daughter, Josephine. Maybe a switcheroo, not sure. Uh, circus media, the Baron of Bozeman, in Bozeman, of all places, Montana, 6180, and is a happy birthday to you. Adam. Oh, thank you.

Thank you.

Uh. David Weicker, wicker, Jackson wicker, wicker,

that's served by His grace at. Yeah, you mispronounce his name every single time, and it irks him. But

I can say, keep saying wicker. Would

you keep saying Wiker? Weicker?

Yeah, Weicker. I had this. It's a I can kind of, I think it's because it was a congressman or somebody named Weicker that I can't get it out of my head. Okay. Well, you're excited. He's got another Happy birthday to you. 6006 he's in Jacksonville, Florida. Robin, no

no, wait, no wait. He has a happy birthday for his dad, his dad, who turned 83 on 911 best dad ever. Thank God for great fathers. They make all the difference. That's what he says.

Robin Tolbert in Topeka, Kansas, 60 another. Happy birthday to you. This is dragging on. Yeah. David in coming Georgia, 5809 Christopher dector In Parts Unknown, 5678 these are all $50 donations, basically. Uh, well, that's kind of a high no as much No. That's that's not okay, right? No. Ronald mills in Florence, South Carolina, 5345 that sounds like a 50 mark. Hardwick in Alito, Texas, 5333 Lydia Terry
dominelli, 53 A Silent Night zero. Picorillo, picarillo, or picture RELO one of the two in Hendersonville, North Carolina. 5272 answering the call of the sad puppy. Dame Jan in Athens, Georgia, and the sad puppy keeps showing up on Sundays, Dame Jan in Athens, Georgia, 51 and this is a note you can read because it's a Daming.

Yes, we go, dear John and Adam. I've reached another $1,000 with my bi monthly donations, and I'm gifting a dame hood to my daughter, Sonia for her 18th birthday. Also added to the birthday list for Wednesday, September 18, she's on it. Please Knight her or Dame her, simply Dame Sonia. And for the round table, please add Maryland steamed shrimp and lobster tails, nice, if at all possible.
Add to the end of show mixes the Beatles parody. You know, you know, since she used to sing it around the house after it first aired, it was my first real introduction to the show. Also happy birthday to dad, Joe, turning 51 on September 20. This is from Dane Jen, and since it's only 20 seconds long, instead of adding it to the end, I'll play it now. Yeah, no, yeah, no, yeah, no, you're saying yeah, you'll say no, yeah, no, yeah, no, you know, yeah, no,
I don't know why you're saying yeah, while saying

no, yeah, no, yeah, no, yeah,
no, I don't know why you're saying yeah while saying no, yeah,

no, yeah, no, yeah, no, yeah, no, you

Know a classic, classic jingle.

It is a classic onwards story, economic hit man in tumble, Texas, 5001 and now we got the $50 donors. I'll start and just name a location. I'll start with Brandon Savoy and port orchard, Washington. Jared yaw in Nashville, Tennessee. Dame Patricia Worthington is still with us. And she's in Miami, Florida. Christian Freeman in San Marcos, Texas. Kevin dills in Huntersville, North Carolina. Diane back in johnsburg, Illinois. Michael Thompson in
new brown fells, Texas, bronze. Oh, yeah, I turned Braunfels, yeah, Braunfels is he used to make a great product. There a barbecue pit. It was the Hondo.

Hondo was another town nearby

my and then they stopped. So now you gotta it was such a great product. Michael peratch in Salem, Oregon, North Stonington, Connecticut, gives us easy landscapes. Philip Ballou in Louisville, Kentucky. Chris Lewinsky in Sherwood Park, Alberta, sir. Chris Carl Vogler. Vogler in Dillon Beach, California, sir. Jerry wing and Roth in Saugus, California. And last on the list is Dame Tracy and Sir cane break in St George, Louisiana. I want to thank these people for helping us finish off
and complete show 1695. Five shows away from show 1700 1700

shows. And coming up in October, our 17th anniversary running at value for value we cannot thank you enough for the value you return, time, talent and treasure. Thank you to everyone who came in under $50 anonymity always assured under 50, and of course, our sustaining donations, we recommend everybody do that to keep the show going through the slower periods by going to no agenda donation. Dot com, and you can set your own amount and frequency that you'd like to
donate. There's no other levels or firewalls or paywall firewall. The premium content is upfront, and it's all there for you to enjoy, whether you support us or not. But if you're still listening, what are you doing? Remember us at no agenda, donations.com. Thank you again. Very, very much. And as we said, David wicker says Happy Birthday to his dad. He turned 83 on September 11, sir, not sure about to become Viscount, which is his sister, Dame Marie, a very happy one
that's she celebrated yesterday. Hans is celebrating on the 17th, sure, not sure himself, also on the 17th. Dame Jen says Happy Birthday to her daughter Sonia, turning 18 on the 18th, and her husband Joe turns 51 on September 20. All Virgos in the family. Happy Birthday to everybody here at the best podcast in the universe, and coming in real big with a whole bunch of threes today, sir, not sure. Baron of the tri lakes now
become sir. Not sure vi count of the tribe tri lakes. And we thank him very much for his incredibly generous donation. Follow his example. Be like Sir, not sure the Viscount of tri lakes. And we really appreciate that you did that for us. We have a layaway noting knighting from Hans, who says ITM John and I don't let me be clear, I've finally reached knighthood with a $4 weekly donation since february 14, 2020, and a one time donation of 5333, my dream of joining the roundtable has
arrived. Living in New York City is sometimes like participating in absurdist theater, but it's the business I've chosen specifically. My business is that of a performing musician. For any jazz fans out there, I'll shamelessly plug my website, Hans lukes.com that's H, A, N, S, l, U, C, H, s. Take a look at that right now. Hans lukes.com where you can check out my music, if you like. Oh, you should get it on
wavelake.com Get it on value for value. Thanks so much to John and Adam and the rest of the no agenda community for producing the best podcast in the universe. May you never find an exit strategy. Oh yes. I'd like to be knighted, Sir Hans, Knight of the West Side Highway. I'd love for some enchiladas, a mole poblano and a modelo negra et modela. Do I pronounce that right? Model Modelo, Modelo, modelo modelo Negro at the round table. It is ordered. There's a lot of good things at the round
table. And thank you very much for see it works, even the layaway nights $4 a week for four years. And he's here at the round table. He's gonna get one of those swanky rings. So why don't we get

out? Don't forget, Kurt. I don't have Kurt. It's right under this other note.

I do not have it. I don't have Kurt. Oh,

do you have Yeah, I got Curtis right here. Oh, can you read that? Kurt? Patrick, he says, Dear John and Adam, I've been contributing $50 a month in my layaway night pun since November, my 20th payment was made on June 2, and I've yet to be knighted. Please refer to me as sir. Say it wrong of ni naimo. Naimo, I have a scotch and scallops at the round table. That's what he wants. Scotch and scallops

right on time. Okay, anything else?

No, that's the end of it. Oh,

great. I somehow I missed that. Must have not seen that in the email. Well, good. That's why there's two of us. Thank you very much. Layaway knights, we are now going to bring you into that exclusive cub. Here is a blade. We got lots of people right here. That's beautiful, all right? Up
on the round table here, I mean, up on the podium. We welcome Janet Webb, we welcome Sonya Hans, Kirkpatrick, Ryan diazio And ladies and gentlemen, I am very proud to pronounce the KV as Dame Janet of TP Wyoming, Dame Sonia Sir Hans, Knight of the West Side Highway, sir say it wrong of the Nymo sir. Ryan
dizzio, knight who couldn't give a single duck for you? We have hookers and blow rent poison, Chardonnay, spaghetti and carbonara and a bottle of 2016 Brunello Chilean sea bass and a 2121 Gabe degave Cortis Maryland, steam shrimp and lobster tail, enchiladas and mole pobano and modelo Negro and scotch and scallops. And can I just please fit the mutton and meat in there? There's a lot of the Round Table. I don't think we've ever had a feast like this. Congratulations to the
five of you. Go over to no agenda rings.com. You can see the handsome and beautiful night and Dame ring that we have on display there. It's a signet ring. So not only do you get this ring sized to your finger, there's a handy ring sizing guide there. So. Send that to us with an address. It comes with wax to seal your important correspondence, and, as always, a certificate of authenticity. A great day for the show, when we can welcome so many Knights and Dames to the round table. Congratulations.
Yeah, yeah. I'm excited about that October 18 meetup in Fredericksburg. We've never had a Fredericksburg meetup. It'll be a home game. Home Game. Very excited. People have already apparently called over to the full moon in and they're coming from Pennsylvania, of course, lots of people coming from Austin, but they're already calling and checking and I think they may have an in there. I think you could even stay there. So curry and the keeper will be there in the house. It'll be
exciting. Couple of meetup reports. Here's a where we have three of them. First one from Sonoma, the Wino country, the Wino country meet up. This
is Brian from work. We're here at the Sonoma County Wino country meet up here at Old Kaz beer. Everyone knows it takes a lot of beer to make good wine, and so that's why we're trying all that beer. This is Sir Rick Halston, crazy Steve the second, and after this party, we're all going back to my house for a Haitian barbecue wannabe gonna be Dame Linda of the Shire. No agenda meet ups. Makes life fun again. Captain
Luke loving my local brew pub. Hey, this is Jason. First time, long time listener, and I check with the city manager here in rohner Park, and there's no cats on the menu. This dude named Ben, named Ben Duke of San Francisco. I've escaped the fog today for this lovely of low facts, no agenda, meetups, golf winch from Rohnert Park California, changing Harris for Biden. It's kind of like crap in your pants and then changing your shirt. Connection is protection. I'm Sean, longtime listener, June,

and we have two reports from Indiana, Fort Wayne, first,
Adam and John. This is Shannon helping host in Fort Wayne. We had a great turnout. We did not sing karaoke, and my kale salad tasted like crap. This is Mike from Fort Wayne in the morning. This is Ryan from St Joe's my first meetup. This is great time. Nice to meet Shannon and Mike. Hope we have a better turnout next time, get to meet more lovely people in this crazy area in the morning. This is Haley, great people in the morning. All

right, in the morning to all of you. And then the final report comes from our big group there in Greenwood, the indie meetup. Always a lot of people, probably about 100 This
is day Maria and Sir Mark, a wonderful day here in needy to have in your Meetup. And it's so nice out here, except it might be getting a little warmer due to climate change. Hey, this is Emily the Fed, not a fed and hot take. I just don't like Kamala Harris. Please don't vote for her. Y'all, oh, Emily, was that really necessary? Risky here in the morning? Hey, it's Annette Miller. I'm so excited. I won the cash today. It's only
my second donation, though, but I'm not a douchebag. I buy at least 20 bucks worth of raffle tickets every time I go to a meetup, and somebody else gets the donation someday, a dame in the morning, John and Adam. This is Nick. I survived the fever and colts traffic. Adam, the fever and Colts are sports teams. What a wonderful meet up today. I think everyone here is my friend. If I have anything to say about it, in the morning, this is Kyra from Carmel. Just want to thank all of Joe agenda
nation for getting out that vote. Don't forget to vote. AC, JD, in the morning, with AI self hypnosis. Mud club. Tom not from Carmel. This is Archduke Quinn from the Zionsville Highlands. I do believe 100% Google Gaga in the morning. Adam and John. This is Shannon visiting from Fort. Wayne. These new cough lozenges from ISIS, our great Hezbollah in the morning.
Dave Trinity, having a great time in Indy, as always. Thank you for your courage in the morning, John and Amster PBR street gang, Adam, please step stop and steep Yeah, stop, yes. Stop stepping all over the bat. Lady, Hi, I'm Lindsay. I am a server at prodigy burger. I work today and serve for the no agenda group. They're a great group. I'm kind of interested to listen to the podcast. Yeah.

You know, when the proverbial shit hits the fan, I want to be an indie. That's where you got some protection, because that's the connection that no agenda. Meet up to bring you. You should try one. It's like, it's like, Pringles. You can't stop you'll keep wanting to go on. You'll meet new friends, children from other lands. It's going to be great, particularly today we have the seafood in Sangria meet up. You probably are already there. It's at Harry's seafood Bar and Grill
in St Augustine, Florida. The two hot Tucson meetup will kick off at four o'clock at Canyon's crown in Tucson, Arizona. The. In September, meet up 630 this evening. Oh, I'm sorry, Thursday at Lincoln's Roadhouse in Denver, Colorado, and also on Thursday, Charlotte's thirsty Third Thursday monthly meet up seven o'clock at edge Tavern in Charlotte, North Carolina. So many meetups are now being like it's meetup season for some reason, all over the world, from the Netherlands to Scandinavia,
to Down Under, to well all over the states, here in America. And of course, one more plug for that October 18 Fredericksburg, Texas meetup. Looking forward to see y'all there. Go to no agenda meetups.com. If you can't find one on the calendar near you, start one yourself. It's easy and always a party. Sometimes
you want to go hang out with all the nights and days. It's like a

party. How many, how many ISOs Do you have?

None? You

got none. Yeah, well, what are you phoning it in today,

I forgot.

How could you forget?

I did,
all right.

Well, I have, I luckily, I'm over isoed, yeah,

there was a sense. I had a sense I could feel it. I could feel it. Luke, feel it.

Okay, Luke, here we go, ghetto b word there's one. No, this is
exciting. I like that. I do believe it's possible.

No, I want to thank you for your courage.

And the final one, preposterous and weird. Hmm. No, no, you like the hill dog?
This is exciting. Yeah.

All right, Hill dog on deck. And now, ladies and gentlemen, it's time for your favorite part of the show, John's Tip of the Day. Green bass for you
and me. Just I

don't everyone's excited to find out what the last tip of the day was. Great. We have increased Costco stock by Costco is is loving us. What do you have for us? John,

oh, this is gonna this time, it's gonna be Amazon. You know how we used to drink tea when you lived in England, but you don't do it anymore. I'm still a fan of PG Tips, which is the English everyday drinking tea, yeah, but I drink a lot of green tea, but green tea, depending on where you get, is really expensive, and I have found a kind of a PG, tips of green tea, besides things like gunpowder, this is just a very
specific green tea. You get a pound of it for 13 bucks. And it's like, you use a for a big pot, you use like, Don't you have to be careful to use, like a kind of a level teaspoon, maybe because this stuff just blows up into all the full leaves. And it's a tea that sells for 13 bucks, for 16 ounces. It's called Tian hushan T I A n, H, U, S, H, A N. It's also called Yin Hao, y, I N, H, A, W, right from China. It is, I
just drink to stuff like crazy. It is a, it is an outstanding just drink, drink, drink product, and you do it, and you also double pour into it. And the second pouring, which is the Chinese do all the time. Americans don't do it. In other words, you make your tea, and then you pour off the finished green tea, and then you pour another batch of water into the used leaves. And in China, they think this is the better part of the of the of the batches, the second pouring is better we
need. In this case, I don't even see the difference. It's almost like at the same you just doubled the amount. It's, I don't know how long it's going to take to get through the 16 ounces. Is this

might take years a small batch. The this, this producer, this

all in Chinese. I have no idea if it's small batch.

I think, you know, you need to do a web page with these tips of the day. So people kind of think we're going to have to do that. Yeah, get Jay on the case. She's good at that. Well, actually, we

may have some volunteers out there. I was asking for some volunteers for a couple of things, and maybe there's somebody out there that can do some coding, or somebody produce I like somebody can just make a list of the tips that we've done, some summaries that would be good. What I would I need somebody could do a PHP server for me, so I can do my own mailing product, own mailing list. Oh, this

is a very bad idea. What that is a very bad idea to do your own mailing list, server, very, very bad idea.

There is a good product out there that has everything but the server product is

not the problem. Them, it's the white listing these companies that you use, and I would actually say substack is probably better these days, they have been whitelisted with all of the big email providers, mainly Gmail, and they have to pay a VIG we've been through. I understand that, yes. So if you, if you just show up as no agenda@dvorak.org you're going to get blocked everywhere because you're not paying the fee. So I recommend against this. Okay,

well, I'd still like to experiment. No, it's Oh,

rough times ahead. Tears will come. Tears will come. That's it, ladies and gentlemen. Are you looking
for good advice? Perhaps something practical or something you really need try the new agenda. Tip of the day, professional quality tips from the best podcast in the universe.

There it is no lie. Professional quality tips from the best podcast in the universe. You heard it here. I wish we had a our tea supplier in Portugal. He passed away. Unfortunately, I'd love it. Yeah,

no, that's too bad. Yeah, he didn't. He was really into a permitted tease. He didn't have too much green tea.

Well, he had no agenda teas, which was just kind of cool. Just love that, love that idea. We still have some of that. We've got our coffee guy. Eli. Just need a tea guy. Maybe Eli can expand on the way. We've got end of show mixes from David kekta Sir TJ, the raffle and the clip custodian himself. Neil Jones checks in. That's nice. Always love it when he has a mix and coming up next on the stream, no agenda stream.com, trollroom.io, and your modern podcast app is the podcasting
2.0 board meeting for this week titled helpful little wizard. So you can stay tuned for that, learn about the latest podcasting coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, home of the meetup on October 18, Fredericksburg, Texas, FEMA Region number 16 The Morning everybody. I'm Adam curry,

and from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's foggy, I'm John C Dvorak. We

return on Thursday with another deconstruction of your media. Meet us there and remember us at no agenda. Donations.com, until then, adios, mofos, a hooey, hooey and such. They're eating the dogs. We
know that the companies and we're seeing some of the comments from Elon Musk overnight, so they see themselves above the law, and the Australian law here should apply equally in the real world as it does online. As Phil was pointing out before, you would be sued for defamation, and you would be taken before the courts under various acts for publishing some of that which freely flows on the internet.
And there's an age verification regime, which has been recommended by the Safety Commissioner from 2023 we think that's something the government should pick up. Well, this is a very dark day in Australia's history, ladies and gentlemen, because this week respected work and other matters. Amendment Bill 2024 was passed in Queensland Parliament. What does this mean for you? Well, from now on, we're going to have the police our thoughts and our speech very carefully on social
media. Here's why, any post made on social media now is deemed by this bill to be a public act. And any public act found offensive by a reasonable person of the minority community that it describes is then chargeable under Section 52 A of the Criminal Code, and these charges carry a maximum sentence of three years in jail time. These are truly unprecedented times. 25 years in the parliament, I've
never seen legislation like him. This is not the country I grew up in, and is heading in direction that I fear for future generations. Kamala DeVille. Kamala Deville, if her cackle, don't scare you. Her policies, well, your unborn child, she would gladly kill Kamala. Is horrible. Still,

this is rarely brought up, and it's true, and these people are demonic in that way. This chick, I'm saying, chick, called a DC District of Columbia clinic, and she recorded it. I'm
looking to have an abortion. I'm 34 right now,

eight months. An
abortion at any stage is actually much safer than delivering a term pregnancy. You do what we call the fetal injection. We'll assist you in sort of pushing in the induction and then remove all of the product of conception,

the product of conception, it is true. Of course it's true, but people need to hear that. That's this is sickening, but this is
what they have done to our country by allowing these millions and millions of people, people can't go out and buy cereal or bacon or eggs or anything else. The people of our country are absolutely dying. They're eating the dog. People that came in, they're eating the cats. My dogs been taken my dogs so they've destroyed the economy in Springfield. They're eating the pets of the people that live there. You people, millions and millions of people, people. It's bad, you know? This is exciting. You.